<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14842" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/14842?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-03T08:47:59+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="47619">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/5ab68bd14c22f20d9fca6e2e70306f08.pdf</src>
      <authentication>5b6cfc7934c515c7a3a654f783e0ce1c</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="47726">
                  <text>•

10--The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday. March 7, 1980

Militants might back out on transfer deal

Hostage tr~sfer Saturday

RONALD CLAY

Ronald Oay
promoted
Ronald L. Clay was promoted to
the position of Unit ·Supervisor at
Ohio Valley Electric Corporation's
Kyger Creek Station effective Feb.
16, according to L. R. Ford, Jr.,
plant manager.
Clay joined OVEC in 1957 as a
laborer in the labor department. In
1960 he transferred to the operations
department as a utility operator and
In 1974 was promoted to equipment
operator.
Clay is a graduate of Chester High
School and has served two years in
the U.S. Army. He resides at Chester
with hts wUe Gayann, son Ronald
Todd, and daughter Suzarme.

installers, clea.ilers
must be registered
•
Sewage disposal system installers/cleaners must he registered
and bonded with the Meigs County
Health Department.
It has come to the attention of the
department that some non·
registered Installers/cleaners are
operating in the county. Home
owners should make certain that
they are licensed and bonded Installers to Insure that they are adequately
protected
from
unscrupulous installers/cleaners.
' Those persons who wish to become
licensed and bonded in Meigs County
may do so by contacting the Meigs
County Health Department at 236
West Secon~ Street, Pomeroy .
When a sewage system is Installed
in Meigs County, a sewage disposal
pennlt must be obtained from the
Meigs County Health Department.

By Tbe Associated Press
The American hostages probably
will be transferred from the U.S.
Embassy in Tehran to a new
location Saturday in hapes "they
will he treated better," and as soon
as they are moved the U.N. commission will be allowed to see all of
them, Iranian Foreign Minister
Sadegh Ghotbzadeh said today.
He also said the three American
diplomats held at the Foreign
Ministry will be allowed to rejoin the
other hostages if they wish, and that
the U.N. panel had already visited
the three - Charge d'Affaires L.
Bruce Laingen, political officer Victor Tomseth and security chief
Michael Hoiland.
Asked by The Canadian Press
correspondent in Tehran whether

Rio Grande College has received a
one million dollar bequest from the

WILL DISCUSS BANQUET
The Southern Junior High Athletic
Boosters will meet at 7:30p.m. Monday at the junior high building.
Parents of girls basketball team
members, cheerleaders and boys
playing football and basketball are
asked to he present to discuss a
banquet for the group.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Thera
Stewart,
Cheshire; Michelle Lee, Pomeroy;
Maggie Gilmore, Racine; Tammie
Curtis, U&gt;ng Bottom; Patricia
Smith, Middleport.
Discharged--Eva McKinney,
Phyllis McMillan, Tammy Pierce,
Cathryn Mees, Mae Lightfoot,
Alison Tromm, Asa Hoskins, Milford
Frederick, Laura Scott, June· Fred,
Gladys Barnett.
MEETS MONDAY
The Racine Baseball Association
will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at
Racine Elementary School not
Pomeroy Elementary as was announced.

CORRECTION

,

The Pomeroy Bohers defeated the
Harrisonville Bobcats In the Meigs
Elementary Fifth Grade Tournament 28 to 22 not 38-24 as was
reported.

A special meeting of the Eastern
- - - - - - - - - - - , Local School District Board of
Education to discuss personnel will
be held at 7 this evening at the high
school.

1980_AMC
SPIRIT LIFTBACK February•••
RIVERSIDE AMC.JEEP
Gallipolis, Ohio

(Continued from page I)
more than three decades.
In its economic forecast released
just a liWe more than a month ago,
the administration predicted that inflation would slow to 10.4 percent
this year.

POMEROY NATIONAL BANK
OFFERS BIG and SMALL SAVERS
GUARANTEED
HIGH MONEY MARKET
INTEREST RATES
THE 6-MONTH $10,000
MONEY MARKET
CERTIFICATE
14.792 effective rate
through March 12
$10,000 minimum deposit
Here's the best short·
term
interest rate
available at our bank .
Your investment is
guaranteed and insured
by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation .

OUR BRAND NEW2'h·YEAR
CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSIT
11.75% rate this month
$100 minimum dep!lsit
This is a big-money in·
terest rate for small
saver funds . Insured by
FDIC and available in
any amount from $100
up .

The effective yield on u.s.
Treasury Bills is higher than
!he quoted discount rale.
There-Is A Svbstant lllll nterest Penally For Early WIIMdr"wtl

pomeroy
rutland
tuppers plains

pomeroy
nationa
bank .
the bank of
the century
established 1872
ft)lC

,,
~----~~----------~-·

late Loren M. Berry, Dayton, the
founder and developer of Yellow
Pages advertising.
The gift was 1,000 shares of
preferred stock in the Loren M.
Berry Co.
He has been a supporter and
benefactor of the college for many
years; a member of the Rio Grande
College Board of Trustees from 195~
1979; and In 1979, he became a
trustee emeritus.
He was given an honorary doctorate in Business Administration In
1959.
Also receiving bequests were Harding Psychiatric Hospital, Worthington, $500,000; Dayton Law
School, one million dollars In
preferred stock; as well as several
other gifts to other institutions. His
estate was in excess of $10 million.
,
Berry was a prime motivator

behind the community college concept, said Jerry Toops, director of
college relations.

Racine council sets
village clean up days .
Racine Village Council is
proclaiming March 28th and 29th as
clean-up days in the village of
Racine.
Council members ask that
residents clean up debris from yards
and vacant lots. The village truck
will' pick up trash if placed along the
curb. Debris is to be placed in boXes
or bags If possible.
Council's order doesn't Intend for
residents tQ clean basements or outbuildings just yards and vacant lots.
Anyone wishing to assist others in
the clean-up would be appreciated.

News briefs. • •
(Continued from page I)
robbery in an appearance Thursday before Swmnit County Common
Pleas Judge Theodore Price. A charge of aggravated burglary in the
incident was dropped.
Price sentenced the teen-ager to two consecutive terms of 5-to-25
years at the Ohio Reformatory at Mansfield.

W ahama ousted, 69-63
BY GARY CLARK
A disappointing end to an other·
wise highly successful cage season
came Thursday night when the
Waharna White Falcons fell prey to
the Ravenswood Red Devils, ~.
in the finals of the Region One Section Four tournament.
The White Falcons\ ran into :.
blistering Red Devil quintet which
made an amazing 64 percent of their
field goal attempts and 75 percent of
their free throw tries.
Despite the hot shooting by the
hosts, Wahama managed to stay in
the game down into the waning
minutes of the final stanza.
Although the bend area team failed to advance into regional tournament play they did receive some
consolation In the selection of two of
their seniors on the all-tournament
team.
Senior Guard Rick Bamtiz, who
finished the game with 18 points, and
senior forward Tim Roush were
named to the all sectional team
along with Brian Barker of Spencer,
and ronnie PBMell, Jim Comer and
Craig Easter aU of Ravenswood.
The Red Devils sizzled from the
opening tip by making 8 of 12 field
goal attempts in the first period, 5 of
8 in the second, 8 of 12 in the third
stanza and 3 of 5 In the final eiglt
minutes. To make matters even
worse, the Jackson Countians sank
their first fourteen charity tosses
before they missed and finished with
21 of 28 for the game. Wahama shot
41 percent from the floor and 61 percent at the free throw stripe.
Ravenswood began to pull away
midway through the opening canto
with Jim Comer, Ronnie Pannell
and Craig Easter making
everything they threw towards the
basket. By the quarters end
Wahama had fell into a ?D-12deflcit.

The Red Devils opened up a 14
point bulge with 4:55 remaining in
the half at :12-18 but the locals baWed
back to within five at the intermission break at 38-33.
Gary Richards bucket to open the
third pectod cut it to three at 35-38
but that was as close as the bend
area team could get. Down by five at
46-il Wahama gave up nine
unanswered points to fall to 55-43 gc&gt;ing Into the final stanza.

Forest Acres Park
opening postponed
Robert Miller, chairman of the
Leading Creek Water Shed Assn.,
Inc., announced today that the
Water Shed Association's Forest
Acres Park, near Rutland, on Coun~ Road 3, New Lima Road, will not
he opening April 15 due to a shortage
of funds.
The Water Shed Assn., he said, has
applied to the Meigs County Commissioners for financial assistance
for the park and If the assistance
cannot be obtained It will he Impossible to open the park due to
financial reasons.
AREA SQUAD RUNS
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called to Brick St. at 1:29 a.m.
Friday for Delores SWDIIDiers who
was ill. She was treated on the scene.
At 3:28a.m. Friday, the squad was
called to the sherifrs office for
William Lewis, Racine, who refused
treatment.
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was call.ed--to S. Fourth St. at 7 p.m.
Thursdliy,for Joe McCloud, who was
ill. He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Albany man dies in accident
Thomas R. Hollon, 26, Route 1,
Albany, was killed Instantly Thursday night in a truck-motorcycle accident on State Route 618 North.
According to reports, the Hollon
motorcycle and a pickup truck hit
head-on. The motorcycle was
demolished. The state Highway
Patrol in Athens was investigating
the accident and Charges are expected to be filed against the driver
of the truck, It was reportad. Mr.
Hollllll was within a mile of hla home ·
wllen the accident ocCurred.
He was born In Muon CoWity, a
. son Of · Delmar A. and VIrginia
Likens Hollon, Route 3 Albany.
He was an employe of the Athens
Mental Healtjl Center and a
graduate of the Alexander High
School. He was a member of

By The Assoelated Press
Moslem militants said they would
give up custody of the American
hostages In Tehran Saturday af·
temoon but the transfer fell through
just as the agreed time approached ·
and the militants indic,ited they
might back out of the deal completely. '
The ruling Revolutiooary Cotmcil,
which was to take CllQtrol of the approximately 50 Americans ,
scb¢uled a night meeting to discuss
the hostages, a reporter for the of·
flclal Pars ~Ws agency said, adding
that the ~er most likely would
be put off Wltll after the talks.
The J;liaj&lt;ir .JIC!Int of contention appeared .to be the designation of

mission would meet today to
arrange for the council to take
custody of the hostages. He also indicated Iran's conditions for their
release are unchanged.
Ghotbzadeb did not identify the
other comrnillsion members.
The militants holding the hostages
announced Thursday they would
deliver them to the ruling council
because of pressure put on them by'
the Iranian government.
The announcement was critical of
the ruling body and brought a crowd
of 2,000 to the embassy gates Thursday night. The demonstrators burned . an American flag, shouted
slogans in support of the militants
and called on the government not to
compromise with the United States.

Rio Grande receives $1 million
gift from L. M. Berry Company .

SPECIAL.MEETING

Shorter overall length
than Ford Mustang for
greater maneuverability.

the hostages would he moved from ·
the 27-acre embassy compound
seized Nov. 4 he replied, " Most
probably yes." Asked how soon he
responded, " Probably tomorrow."
'' As soon as the hostages are Iran· .
sferred, the meeting (with the U.N.
commission) will he held," he said.
But he declined to say where the
hostages would continue to he held
by the Iranian government. "Let's
do it first and then we'll announce
it," he said.
· Ghotbzadeh added tbat he is
heading a special commission set up
by the ruling Revolutionary Council
to take over responsibility for the approximately 50 Americans, who
began their !25th day in captivity
today.
Ghotbzadeh said the special com-

Harrisonvtlle . Masonic Lodge 411,
F&amp;AM.
.
Surviving besides hts parents are
his wife, Donna J. Calendlne Hollon;
twosons, ThomuWayneandShawn
Allan, and a daughter, Dawn Renee,
all al home; two brothers, Ronald
and Blll, Albany; a sister, Ann
Nlcholaon of Wilkesville; hla paternal grandparent., Mr. and Mrs. E.
' R. Hollon, Chester. His patemal
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Liken, preceded him.In death.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Sunday at the Blgonr.Jordan .
Funeral Home In Albany w!tb the
ReV. Frank Hare officiating. Burial
will be In the Alexander Cemetery.
The family Will received friends at
the funeral home from 2 to t and 7 to
9 P·lll· Saturday.

NEW REALTY OFFICE - Charles Hayes of Hayes Realty, Athens,
BMounces the opening of a branch office at 382 E. Second Street,
Pomeroy, with NeacU E. Carsey as branch manager. Jacqueline Sue
(Jackie J Carsey, daughter of Jack and NeacU, will he associate representative. NeacU received her real estate license after completing courses at
Rio Grande College and Ohio Career College, ColumbWI. The company
will handle all types of real estate, residential, commercial, farms and !no
dustrial. Jackie received her real estate license after attending Rio Grande College and Ohio Career College, ColumbuS. She Is associated with
Hayes Realty In Athens and Pomeroy and resides In Athens. The offices,
located below the Pomeroy Bowling Lanes, are newly decorated with attractive wall paneling and carpeting. Open house will be held Sunday,
March 9, from I p. m. to 5 p. m. Resldenllt of the area are welcome to attend. Pictured are Neaci\; seated, and Jackie, standing.

Two chains announce
freeze on groceries.
By Tht; Associated Press
Safeway Stores Inc. and the Great
Atlantic and1Paclfic Tea Co. Inc. two of the nation's largest supermarket chains - say they are
freezing prices on some products In
response to a plea from the Carter
administration for help in fighting
inflation.
About 50 of the nation's largest
food chains were asked to participate, but few had aMounced
their decisions by Thursday.
Company officl.als said prices on
private label products were frozen
for 30 days, effective immediately at
the 2,500 Safeway stores and 1,500
A&amp;P groceries nationwide.
"This action is In response to
request by the Carter administration that food retailers con·
sider voluntary approaches to control food prices to halt Inflation,' •
said David R. Morrow, president of
AxP, based In Montvale, N.J.
"This is the strongest move we
could think of,'' he said.
Peter A. Magowan, chairman and
chief exe&lt;;Utive of the Oakland,
Callf.-based Safeway, said the action was taken "at the suggestion of
Esther Peterson, President Carter's
special assistant for consumer af-

a

on Its generic prescription drugs and
notions.
"We hope volume (of sales) will
Increase as a result of this
program," said Barry Scher,
spokesman for · the Washingtonbased chain. He would not comment
on how much the proposal might

cost.
The Giant freeze covers about 3'1$
Items, while the number of Safeway
products affected - Scotch Buy
brands ranging from detergent to
peanut butter - will vary from area
to area, officials said.
Safeway, with stores In 'II states
and five countries, reported sales of
$12.5 bUllon last year.
Michael Rourke, A&amp;P vice
president for corporate affairs, aald
the freeze on.Anne Page brands and
generic foods and products would be
evaluated after 30 days. He told the
New York Times the 'brands account
for 20 to 30 percent of sales. The
company's sales volume last year
totaled about $6 billion, the
newspaper said.

Meigs Local district
schedules conferences

fairs."
"The president has asked me to

Meigs Local Schoo~ District
students will have Saturday off from
determine what more we can do to classes, but they'll be getting a day's
keep the cost .of food from rising so crediimakeup time.
rapidly," Mrs. Peterson said.
Pa t-Teacber conferences have
She said she had written to about been
up for all day Saturday,
50 supermarket chains across the from 8: !l.m. to 3 p.m. and parents
country proposing they begin a are urged to report to schools atvoluntary ceiling plan to "esse the tended by their children to cooler
Inflationary pressures that are with teachers on aspects of their
causing such hardships to all con· children's work.
swners."
/
Students will he given credit fori
She said Giant Food Inc. was the the day as though It were a normai
first to respond, promising a 21-week class day and thereby will be
freeze on Its private brand food and · making up a day of time lost during
household Items as well as a freeze the teachers' strike.

ELBERFELDS

JEANS
SALE
'

FOR THE
ENTIRE FAMILY
THE SAVINGS
·
.
ARE GREATI

fXCE!IENT
SELECJION OF
STYLES AND SIZES

representative of the council, but not
to the foreign minister.
In a day of cimfuslbn and conflicts
that seemed to be building toward

another confrontation between the
militants and President Abolhassan
Bani-Sadr's government, thts was
the sequence of events.

- Tehran radio quoted Ghotbzadeh as saying he would "receive"
the hostages, held stitce Nov. 4,
following the ''order of'the Imam,''

9&amp;30 to 5 PM
I

.

ELBERFELD$

-

POMEROY

W18nimOUS. ''

-The militants said they would
turn over control of the Americans
to council representatives headed by
Ghotbzadeh at 5 p.m. (8:30 a.m.

Federal Reserve Board may take breather.,
NEW YORK (AP) - A report that
shows the amount of money in circulation in the United States has
dropped $2.8 bUllon has raised hapes
In the financial community that the
Federal Reserve Board may take a
breatherafteraseriesofaggressive
credit tightening moves.

In the bond markets, where prices
have tumbled recently because of
spiraling interest rates, prices rose
slightly after the Federal Reserve's
announcement late Friday.
"Psychologically, I think the
markets .needed some goOd news,"
said Bob Sinche of Bear, Stearns and .

•

Co. "There is some reason to believe
that there will be slower growth" in
the money supply after weeks of
surging growth.
The Federal Reserve's report for
the week ended feb. 'II showed MIA,
a narrow ·definition of · money,
declined to a seasonally ad lusted

-Qnly hours before the transfer,
Khomelnl's office issued a
statement denying the revolutionary
leader had approved the move.
-The militants balked, saying
Ghotbzadeh had falsely claimed the
transfer . had been approved by
Khomeini , and no turnover was
Continued on A-3

·tntitte

_VO_L--:-1_5......N_O._G_ _-:-:---::-___:G:.:.::AL~-::LI.:...::PO:.::LI.:..S. .:. P: .:.OI:.:.:NT_:_P_::LEA::S: .:AN:.:_:T_ _ _ _~SU:_::NDAY, MARCH 9, 1980

Jury gets
homicide
Ford trial

EST) .

average of ""'4.7 bUllon from ~- 5
billion In the previous week.
MIA includes cash In circulation
and most checking deposits at commercial banks.
The more broadly defined MlB
also includes deposits at other flnan·
Continued on A-3

MIDDLEPORT -POMEROY

'

~J

PRICE 35 CENTS

Name Father Myers
Gallipolis pastor
sessions at the University of Dayton.
A graduate of Dayton Chaminade
High School, Father Myers was ordained May 17,1969 at Holy Name
Cathedral in Stubenville and was first assigned to St. Francis of Assisi in
Toronto as an assistant to Msgr.
Angelo Cappelli and as an Instructor
of religious education at Steubenville Central High School.
He remelned In Toronto for four
years before moving to St. Anthony
in Steubenville for four months and
then to Holy Name Cathedral for six
months as Instructor of religious
education at St. John Central High
School in BeUalre.
After five years with the high
school, Father Myers continued hts
position of administrator of AU Saints until hts newest appqintment.

GAWPOI.JS - Father WUllam
R. Myers, 40, formerly Ad·
miJiistrator of AU Saints Parish at
Blaine, Ohio, is the new pastor of St.
Louis Catholic Church here.
The appointment from Bishop
Albert H. Ottenweller, Bishop of
Stubenville, became effective March7.
Father Myers succeeda Father A.
J. Golubiewski who retired prior to
moving to Florida earlier this month.
Father Myers is a graduate of the
College of Steubenville, having
received his B.A. Degree there. He
attended St. John Vianney Seminary
in Bloomington, Ohio from 196U9
and the St. Gregory Seminary In Cincinnati from the fall of lfJM-61 .
He has attended many summer

WINAMAC, Ind. (AP)- The jury
in Ford Motor Co.'s reckless
homicide trial begins deliberating
Monday in a case that could help
define Industry's legal responslbllityto the public. A conviction
could send ripples through boardrooms across the nation.
FATHER WILLIAM R. MYERS
For the first time, a jury is being
asked to decide whether to convict a
corporation on .a criminal charge of
reckless design of a product and
failure to warn the public ot the
dangers.
A conviction, attorneys for hoth
sides agree, could send a message to
GALLIPOLIS-Next Saturday
businesses around the nation,
(March
15) will be "tum in" day for
trigger other such prosecutions and
family
histories
featured by copying
increase claims in civil product
of
old
prints
to
accompany the
liability cases - including as many
):..f!:A[)j!:RSmP DiNNER MONDAY- Shown above are three M~son
In
Volume
One
.of the Gallia
stories
as 50 suits related to the Pinto.
Coun~s'artii:Tri-State Council Boy Scouts of America Executive Robert
County
History
book.
.Ford Is charged with reckless
Cree';; standl!lg; who will participate In the. aMual Mlii!on-GallllrMelgs
Autlwrs may bring their family
In a crash In which three
homicide
BSA Dilltiict Sustaining Membership Dinner set for Monday evening,
to the Dr. Samuel L.
manuscripts
teen-agers burned ~o death in August
· r.Ja~4JI:l;,t~~·-· ~ G~.s . ;l'!l~. ~n Countians, Dr. George
Bossllrd..¥emqrial
Library, 651 Se1978. Their 1973 Pinto sedan ex·
Nibert ;rl!d ~WU!fii/ii 1\ec:k; ·~ from left, and Vltus Hartley, Jr.,
cond
Ave.,
aiOitg
Witli
a'picture with .
ploded In flames , when hit from
~ ·at ,illptt;)lold !leY posts In tll!l' pnn~ fund drive. Hartley Is
each, and~.~ Columbus newspaper
behind by a van on U.S. 33 near
dinner chalnfum, Dr. Nibert, sustaining membership chairman for
photographe~ will copy the· picture
GAWPOI.JS - Multiple charges Rt. 2, Gallipolis, was asked by the of· Goshen, Ind. Conviction could result
Mason CoWlty and Peck, family campaign chairman tor the County.
"at
cost"-.:1.25,
re~
the
have
been filed against a Gallipolis fleers to leave, he became disorIn fines of up to $10,000 on each of the
Speaier for the dinner will be ABC Sports commenlator and author Dave
original
and
one
of
two
copies
to
the
man
hospitalized
as the result of a
derly and assaulted Pti. Branthree counts.
Dllea.
.
.
owner
on
the
spot.
fight
Friday
night
at
Haskins
deberry.
'
"I think this would open a new era
This announCement was made by Lounge Involving two Gallipolis City
in regards to businesS and product
"
Henny
Evans, co-chainnan of the Policemen who were attempting to
safety," said William Conour; an In·
Bing· was restrained and tranbook
conunittee
of the Gallia County remove him from the Second
dianapolis lawyer and prosecution
sported to· Holzer Medical Center,
Historical Society. She said that the Avenue tavern.
adviser. "If Ford is convicted,
where he was admitted for treatphotographer is Paul Myers of the
According to a report filed with
ment of injuries - reportedly a
businesses will know they are going
Columbus Dispatch, .virtually the city department, tavern owner
to run the risk of a stigma of
broken arm and broken thumb donating his time 9 a.m. to 4:30p.m. Jim Haskins notified officers that he
criminal prosecution If they are
sustained during the scuffle.
unreasonably dangerous. I think this · Saturday, with ·an hour off for lunch had an unruly patron he wished
Officer Brandeberry was treated
12to I p.m.
escorted from the premises.
would lrjterject a new note into the
and released at HMC for minor inMORGANTOWN Harold district trustee for the Independent
Mrs. Evans emphasized that the
Patrolmen Roger Brandeberry
boardrooms of America."
juries.
Wiseman, 49, GaffiPoiis Insurance lnsuran~ Agents Association.
session
is
not
a
r~
photographic
and
Charles Reynolds were dispatAnd
says
Ford
attorney
Richard
Bing has been charged with two
executive, died suddenly around
Survivors Include his wife, four
qulrement, for both the picture and a
nooo Satilrday at the Snowshoe Ski children, and parents, Ernest N. and Steinbronn, "assuming the theory is 500-word family history are free of ched to the scene. According to the counts of assault, resisting arrest,
department report, when Carl Bin~. and disorderly conduct.
upheld, it has added a new dimenwinter resort, a popular spa in the Alice Wiseman.
charge.
However,
some
of
the
old
sion to product liability:•'
West Virginia Panhandle.
WUlls Funeral Home will anphotos, she said, are irreplaceable Is
Ford was indicted under a state
Heart attack was the suspected nounce arrangen,.•nts.
lost,
and to copy them when they're
law allowing criminal prosecution of
cause of death.
In on "turn In" day March '
brought
corporations. The prosecution has
He spent his basiness life with the
15
will
preserve
them.
been limited to a $20,000 budget and
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The education.
Wlsel!)an Agency, was secretary of
Deadline
for
manuscripts and
help
against
the
volunteer
state Board of Education opens
The board also will consider
the Wiseman Agency Corporation,
photographs Is March 30.
automaker's fat purse.
hearings Monday on the distribution teacher educatiOI) proposals on the
and wall a veteran Insurance agent.
Members of .the book committee
Money bas proved a sore point,
of $950,000 for lnservice teacher university level. Defiance College
Harold Wiseman !lad . devoted
will work In shifts at the library.
with prosecutor Michael Cosentino
. training at 12 universities In Ohio.
wants a unit on teacher preparation
yeara to public service In Galllpolis,
WASHINGTON (AP) - Nuclear
If the press of work for the Gallia
Ninety-nine proposatS, including in reading. Four schools- Mount St
havlnc been a member qf the city Regulatory Commission in- calling Ford attorney James F. Neal County
History book is not too great, one to help teachers learn to deal
Joseph on the Hill, Ohio stat~
boar\:! of education, the recriation ve~~_tigators reaffQ'IIIed Friday there of Nashville, Tenn., an "overpriced Mrs. Evans
said, Myers will
lawyer"
in
court.
Neal,
a
former
with
stress,
have
been
submitted
to
University, Ectgecllff College and
COIIIIIIIIIslon GallipOlis Rotary Club,
was no evidence that operators of .Watergate prose&lt;;Utor and the only
photograph the faces of the !IUthors, the board. The funding level is 88 the Univel'!lity of Dayton - have
and Galllpolla Golf Club. He was a
the Three· Mile Island nuclear plant attorney to gain a conviction against
should they want their pictures with percent higher than last year's.
proposed adding programs for
· attempted to cover up the. Teamster president James R. Hoffa,
their stories.
"This year, teacher institutes will teachers of the moderately, severely
. seriousness of last year's acident.
has denied reports he .will receive a
also offer training In .basic skills and profoundly retarded.
Instead, they said Information·
$1 million fee.
dev:elopment, malnstreaming hanIn other action, the board is exgaps during the I!Ccident probably
dicapped children, discipline and pected to consider approVing $17
: . were caused by "coofusion and lack
dealing with teacher stress," said million in new construction bonds
· of competence."
·
Franklin . D. Walter, state school from four districts. The !llstrlcts and
Private lawyers Mitchell Rogovin
GAWPOI.JS - One driver was superintendent.
the amount proposed are: Sciotoand George T. Frampton, Jr., hired
cited following a twc&gt;-vehicle acThe teacher Institutes offer in- Darby City, $14 million; Ross Local, ,
bY the NJtC to·lnvestigate las~ year's
cident Investigated Friday by the service training in reading, con- $3.2 million; Bethel-Tate Local,
accident near Harrisburg, Pa., had
Gallia·Melgs Post, Highway Patrol.
servation and envtronmental protec- $37,020; and Blanchester Local,
reported their findings in January.
Called to the scene In Meigs Coun- tion and special and vocational $37,000.
But the NRC, at the urging of Rep.
ty on SR 7, at the junction of SR 124,
Morris Udall, D-Arlz., requeSted a
at 3:55 p.m., officers report a north
closer look at whether employees of
bound · auto operated by Michael
Metropolitan Edison Co., the plant's
Martin, 26, Sciotovllle, had stopped
· operator, deliberately withheld vital
In traffic. The brakes of a north
Information on the seriousness of the
boWid auto driven by Brenda K.
accident during its first few days.
WUllams, 16, Rutland, failed and the
. In their new memo to tile NRC,
CHESHIRE .- The Gallla·Meigs
necessary due to the backlog of un:
WUilams vehicle struck the 1!fartln
Community
Action
Agency
will
no
Rogovln ·and Frampton said, "We
processed applications on hand. Per:
auto In the rear.
longer
accept
applications
from
found no direct evidenee of willful
sons requiring assistance after
Willlams.-was cited on a charge of
Meigs
County
residents
for
the
withholding
of
critical
information."
today are requested to apply at thi
operating a vehicle without ·brakes.
.
'
In New York, ' the ·head of
Crisis ASsistance Program
Energy
IW\OLD WJSEMA!il
Meigs County Welfare Department.
· Both vehicles Incurred moderata
eff~ve Immediately. This action ~
Presiden~ Carter's Three Mile
·
damage.
Island Public Informatiim Task For'
ce ~~&amp;ld the press should hire experts
· Gallipolis fire causes .
to report 1m such accidents.
David M. Rubin, an associate
$1,700 damage Friday
l&gt;aiti.Y cloudy' Sunday, ~ high In professor of j0Uf1111llsm at New York
tile' 1011' to riJid.4011. Tbe 'chance of University, also ilaid industry ofGAWPOI.JS - Fife 'caused an
preclpltatlail: 10 percent. .
' flcials should bang up on ill•
=:a!~J!;l!!'U::SJ~ to 8 Area~~ • ~ ••..•.•••..•..•......... , ......... ; : . .. A4
' .
lnfonned repbrters. •
Called io the. scene at 539 Thlrd Claallfted Bda ••••••••• • ' • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••• • D-!-7
FILES PETlTJON- Chester
Rubin said lack of communication
J!. WeU.. Route 1, LoDg Bottom,
Ave., at 8: 17 p.m, the Gallipolis City F.dllorlal page ••...••••••.•.••.••••••.• , •• ".•••••.. , • • A-!
by IndustrY, goveminent and the
!Bed
Jill
Pelltiou
o1
candlda~y
for
Fl~ Department reports trash ill a F
n
·
news ,media. caused the accident to
1 of ·a bc:rne
bib
on
the
·
side
j)oreh
arm
ewl
•
•
..
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
E-Z
l1ie
Demileratle
IIOIIIiDatloa
'
f
or
a
, · be reported as 11 "worst-case
.c•unty' tommlllioaer's post, ·. · owned by· L. ClaUde Miller, !~~~~e~• ,' ··· · • · • · · • • • • • • •• •• • •• • • •• • •• •• • • • • • • • •~ • • B-1-8
, ~~eeO.rio . :. of tneltdbwri and China
tftm I'UIIIIIng to Jan.·!, 19851 Witb
Gallipolil, ar)d occupied by Thomas ~De~ , ·- • • ••• ", ••• ~ ••• , •••••••••.• ~ •• , •• ~., · ~ •••• ·. ·A~
S"""""~e."
,
~ "\- ~·
.
-~. '
the
._IP
c-ty
Board
0(
EleeM.t·~vana,
he
i~teil spreading ~es ' , State ilDd national ••..••...••.• ••• ·••• , . ,·. , ••.•••• ·.\ •• D-1
· 'Speaking to the NYU Faculty of
to
exterior wall 81\d ceiling of the Spo....,
.e · ~: e ·
·'
· · e • C.l-8
·
·~ and Science!!, R~bjll said many . tioU Friday. Welis, a·Dimocnt,
J. ¥'P e
e •
e
e
.
.
.
t.
DOW
letviDg
OD
the
bGard
structure
of the reporters·at Three Mile Island
· bavilq bees appolated to flll the
The cause of· the flre renutins1 un- 'I'V' 'guide • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••••• ·•••••••
~
!". ~1
were poorly versed ,lri atomi~ e11ergy
aelqllred
~of
James
a-n.
\letennlned.
technology. ,,.
l. ·

'Turn in' day

next Saturday

.M ultiple charges
filed after fight

Harold Wiseman,- 49,
dies unexpectedly

Money will he Monday topic

No evidence
ofcovenip

DefeCtive brakes
cause minor wreck

Because of backlog, CCA not taking
any more applications in Meigs area

'

-· weather

AND SATURDAY

Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, 8l'ld
with "the approval of the
Revolutionary Council, which was

Money circulation down $2.8 billion

tmes

!'I

SAVE FRIDAY
9130 TIL. PM ·,

'IN

Iranian Foreign Mil\i!lter Sadegh
Ghotbzadell to receive the hostages.
The militants say they would turn
over the Americans to another

to~y. • •

Inside

...

I.

I

f

It t

t

I

f

f

I

f

I

I

I

I

f

I

I

I

I

t

t

1

I

I

(

.~

t

t

•

I

t

• • • •• • •

t

I

t

;

f

t .. . .

•••••••

�A-3-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, March~. 1980

A-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, March 9, 1980

junbaJJ

~imts-

Census expected to show changes ·in way Americans live

jtntintl

BOWUNG GREEN, Ohio (AP) The 1980 census will document some
dramatic changes in the way
Americans live, according to two
Bowllng Green State University
sociologists.
They predict the 19110 census will
prove reports that fewer people are
having children, more people are
living longer, more YOWI8 people are
living together, ahd more

Opinions and Comments
~unblt)J t'imes- ~mtintl
Published ever)' Sunday by The Oho Valfey Publlsh.l.n~ Co.· MuJtunedia,lnc.

l..dttn of opinioo are wel(.'(ll'l)td . They ·should be less than 300 words long tor subject lO reduclim by the editor) and must bf' signed with the signee's address. Names may _be withheUI upon
publicaUoo.. However. on request, n.amt!l'l will be tllitciORd. r...ett.m; should be Ul good taste, addteaing issues, oot personalities .
GALLIPOLIS

DAIL \' 11UBUNE

I2S 1bird Ave., GallipoW. Ohl() ~1.
Published every weekday evening ucept Saturday. Second Class Postage Pald at Gallipolia,

Ohlo..w:n.

!.. '" " . I .

•

THE DAlLY SENTINEL

111 Court st., Pomeroy, 0 . 45769. Published every week day evening except Satllrday. Entered
u lf!!COOI1 class rnailintl matter at Pomeroy, Otuo P06t Offict.
By carrier daily and Sunday 90c per week. MotorrouteS3.00 per month.

have a census, we can make reliable
projecti01111."
Both men say critiC!! of the census
don't know the value of a head count.
CritiC!! says its $1 billion price tag is
too high, and the government is
asking too many personal questions.
"The value of the census more
than justifies the expeMe," said
Stockwell. "Political representation
is based on numbers of people. If you
don't get counted, you don't get

households contain fewer people.
Edward G. Stockwell and
H. Theodore Groat have been
keeping tabs on infonnatlon the census bureau has collected since 1970,
when the most recent census Willi
taken.
"U we didn't have a census," said
Stockwell, " estimates of changes in
society would become less and less
reliable as time Roes 011. Because we

TbeGaWpoUJ Daily Tribune in Ohio and West VirginiH one yeHr $33.00 ; stx moolhlll7 .50; three
month! '10.50 . Elsewhere $38.00 per year; sli mMths $1!1.00 ; three mmths $1 1.00 ; motor route

13.90 monthly .

The O.Uy SenUnel. one year $33.00; Six months '1 7.50; three months gi.OO. Elsewhert S38.00;

siJ: mootl:a! $20.00; three months 111.00.
1be Auociated Pres.'! i1J ~dwlive l y entitled to the u.se for publication of all news ditlpatches
credited to the newspaper and ~tlso the lOCH I news published herein.

AP news analysis

WASIUNGTON (AP) · Gerald R. Ford calls the Republican presidential campaign a wide-open ball game, and he's warming up to take the
field. They're playing hardball out there, not goH, and it could be a tough
season lor the fanner president.
In the opening phase of the 1980 presidential campaign, Foro was
treated as an honored, elder statesman by the Republican presidential
campaigners. In more than one campaign debate, he was extolled as an
example of sound Republican management, with a 4.8 percent inflation
rate cited as a prime exhibit.
Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr., who folded his futile candidacy on Wednesday, used to tell campaign audier*es that Ford bad "rassled inflation
to the ground," and said he wanted to do the same thing. Fonner U.N.
Ambassador George B:JSh would say that the way to combat inflation was
Ford's way, w;thvetoes of excessive spending bills.
Even Ronald Reagan, his old rival, was relatively cordial- until Foro
pronounced Reagan too conservative to win the White House. Reagan
then got off one of the better lines of the season by suggesting that
perhaps Foro was coming out of political retirement because he'd
developed a slice.
But nothing enrages an active campaigner more than the sideline jeers
of a potential candidate who suggests he is going to rescue the party from
a field of losers.
Foro isn't putting it quite that bluntly, but that's what it comes down to.
"The polls, as I recall, do not show that any of the Republican candidates
thus far can defeat President Carter," he said Wednesday night. He said
those soundings indicate that he would do better than any of them.
''Mr. Ford does not need to disturb his candidacy and ride to the rescue
of the Republican Party," retorted Rep. John B. Anderson, campaigning
to build on his strong second-place showings in the Massachusetts and
Vermont primaries.
Those are two states Ford won easily over Reagan in 1!116, which points
to one of his problfl!llS this time. It's already too late for him to compete
for nearly half the 1,994 nominating delegates at the Republican National
Convention. Filing deadlines are pressing now for the la~season
primary elections, and that set includes southern and western contests in
which Reagan abnost overtook him four years ago.
And to compete there, Ford will have to become an avowed candidate
by Tuesday. Stuart Spencer, his 1!116 campaign manager, said that's the
deadline "from a technical standpoint of what's available in the
primaries that would still be open~o him." ·
At the moment, Foro is inviting Republicans to invite him into the race.
He says if his supporters will •come forward and identify themBelves
publicly, he'll have a hard time saying no.

.
Today zn history. ..
-

Today is Sunday, March9, the 69th
day of 1980. There are 2'.fl days left in
the year.
Today's highlight in history:
In 1!114, seven lonner aides to
President Nixon pleaded innocent to
charges of a cover-up of the
Watergate scandal.
On this date:
In 1451, Amerigo Vespucci, the
Italian navigator lor which America
is named, was born.,
In 1862, the first battle of ironclad

ships was fought in a Civil War encounter between the Monitor and the
Merrimac near Hampton Roads, Va.
In 1916, Mexicans led by Pancllo
Villa attacked Columbus, N.M., and
killed 15 people.
One year ago: A judge issued a
temporary order prohibiting
publication of an article in the
Progress! ve lllllgazine that, charged
the government, told how a
hydrogen bomb worked.

Berry's World
•

,

" The oil business has be-en good to me and, I ·
guess, being filthy rich DOES h(lve its
moments."

•

••
J'

.

•

NO defections!"

''This is a great day for the Soviet people,

•

Ohio perspective

.

Decade marks change in school financing
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - There
has been a marked change during
the last decade in the way Ohio's
school districts are funded, a private
study group says. But John Q. Taxpayer is still the ultimate source of
the cash.
State government's contribution
to public elementary and secondary
education increased by 233 percent
from 1969 to 1979, the Ohio Public
Expenditure Council says.
But locally-voted property taxes
for school operating purposes increased by 86 percent during the 10year period.
The state figures represent money
allocated through the school foundation program. Also included are
state reimbursements to Schools for

operating revenue lost as a result of
the 10 percent real property tax
relief granted taxpayers in 1979.
Federal money, other state aid
and minor local revenues were excluded. Combined state-local aid to
Ohio's public schools amounted to
$1,652 per pupil in the 1!119-80 year.
State government provided 45.5
pen:ent of the total, compared to 31.8
percent 10 years ago.
The addition of special state
school "aid, outside the school foundation program, iridicates the state
share was about 50 percent in !97980, up from 33 percent a decade
earlier.
The councU estimates that state
and local per pupU aid this school
year wlll range from $1,082 in the

Western Brown Lacal system in
Brown County to $4,613 in Cuyahoga
Heights Local District in Cuyahoga
County. Ohio schools will receive
more than $1.5 billion in state aid
during the current school year.
In addition, public schools wlll
receive state aid fo'r school bus purchases, disadvantaged pupils,
driver education, educational
television and other programs. The·
costs of such programs were not included in the coun~il's report.
"Trooper Tom" managed to win an
endorsement from the state Controlling Board this week, but not until the fiscal watchdogs were
satisfied about the cost of the safety
program.

:

The hignway safelY csepartment
had asked the board to approve tne
release of funds for 250,000 "'rroopeiTom's Bike Club" books. lbey are to
be distributed to pupils in the third ·
through sixth grades.
"Who's going to vote against
Trooper Tom?" Sen. Stanley J.
Aronoff, R·Cincinnati, asked
jokingly.
•
"At $5.M per copy?" Sen. Harry .
Meshel, D-Youngstown, shot back.
"SomebodY may," Aronoff said. ,
Safety department officials
quickly pointed out a typographical
error on the fonn Meshel was
reading. The cost w&amp;S actually 5.M
cents per copy.
·
The request was unanimously approved.

But not of the United States

The ·man who would be president
By Tim Tiede
BROWNSVII).E, Texas (NEA)Jimmy Carter, Ted Kennedy,
Ronald Reagan and George Bush
are spending more money. New
Hampshire, Florida and California
have received more attention. But
the most imaginative presidential
campaign this year may be that of
Herbert M. Williams on the Mexican
border.
As are the others, Williams is
concerned with taxes, inflation and
the threat of Annageddon. The
thing is he doesn't think that
Washington is the place to do very
much a bout them.

You see, he's not trying to be

president of the United States. '
He's campaigning to head a whole
new country.
Williams says he owns a small
island in the Rio Grande River that
could become the world's 181st
sovereign nation. He wants to
establish a new government, flag
and lead it all as chief executive. It
will be a democracy, he adds, but in
the purest sense: "We won't make
.the mistake the U.S. did."
That mistake Is big government.
Williams, 69, is a retired Air Force
colonel who insists that bureaucratic
administrations have strangled

Week's business

'Inflation like toothpaste'
NEW YORK (AP) - \'Inflation is like toothpaste," a West German
banking official was quoted as sa)'in8 recently, "Once it's out, you can
hardly get It back in again. So the best thing is not to squeeze too hard on
the tube."
·
While Europe is elqierlenclng some Inflation problems, the evidence is
abundant in the United States that someone hall squeezed the tube too
much.
The Organization of PetroleWII Exporting Countries is a popular target
to blame for the inflation squeeZe.
A government analysis of the 13.3 percen~ Inflation }"lite last year ln.
dicates that. gasoline and home heatin&amp; oU price increases accounted for
3.4 percentage points of that.
Rising Interest rates, another frequently cited culprit, which shows up
in conswner prices largely through higher mortgage rates, added
another U percent of last year's 13 percent inflation. ·
.
But that left conswner prices IIII all other goods rlalng at rate of 8.5 percent, or close to the lnflatioo rate on aU goods In 1978.
So far this year, things seem to be getting worse. 1be consumer price
report for January showed. inflation running at lui annual rate of more
than 18 percent. Producer and wholeaale price repOrts for January am
Febnu~ry showed ihose prices jumping at clolle to a 31 percent rate.
''There are still substantial price lncreues, working their way through .
the economy to the conswner," Silld Lawrence Chlmerine, chairmal) of
OJase EconometiCII, a forecasting company lri suburban Philadelphia.
He predicts that jnllaUon In the flllt hall of the year will average 15 per- ·
cent, upfroma13percentaMualrateattheendoflast year.
, White Hqtl!e economic advisors, who in January forecast J0.4 percent
inflation for 1980, also clearly are worried.
And, Presldent,Certer Ia In the procesa of drafting an lnfiation-figbUng
package that is ~ to Include steep budget cuta. other steps, Including credit contrOls to rea~ct borrowing, are ll!!lllg reviewed by the
admlnlatratim.
In other buslneu developments thla put week: . Business bon'o!ring
costs CCIIIUnued to prasthe prime Jelldinl ~te 1'0111! ~-~111;~17% lind
· 18 percent at major )lanD. The nte baa 1plraled from at •l5¥• percent .;
. Feb. 15, when tiM&gt; Federal ~ lJ~ U.lllt... effort (jJ al.W 1o,
Dation and curb =:,~::ltyby lll8llq J1111!18Y llilrllcr to obtain.•
'-'lbe nation's
· • Rte d!pp.hllptly In February to 6 per- ·
. · · ·
centf.tom6.%perceut in January. · ' . ,
-A number of supermarllet Cbalna, l!lcludln&amp;sBfnay Sores Inc. BJidr.
The Great Atlantic I• Pacific Ttl Co.; 8lliiQiill'ed that th8y would comply
wJtha government req~ to try !let a voluntary ceiling on focld prices.

,,

"what used to be the greatest and people from Mexico will also be
country in the . world." For this asked to become citizens. Unforreason he insists his new nation in tunately, immigration in the ·new
the river will be a place where nation will have to be severely
"everyone is genuinely free."
regulated: there are only 183 acres
To begin with, Williams intends to on the island property.
call the place Cherokee Nation. He
But immigration will be one of the
is part Indian himself and sees this few things regulated in the Cherokee
as a way of restoring dignity to Nation. Williams says the political
abori~inals.
Williams thinkS the and social philosophy of the country
U.S. government has made second· · will be private enterprise and unclass citizens of Indians, and so he fettered .initiative: "We won't have
will invite them to live in equality in laws that sap the energy or spirit of
the Che1·okee state.
the people; we won't allow rules that
The state won't be aU Indian, stifle folks."
however. Williams says Americans
Hence there will be no taxes in the_
will be welcomed regardless of race, Cherokee Nation.

Letters to the
Commissioner
commended
•
Dear editor:
Commissioner Rich Jones deserves commendation for having the
courage to put what he believed the
best interesta of his constituents
above any poUtical aspirations he
might have by Casting a lone no vote
on a money spending issue recently
brought bef11re the Meigs Co1111ty
Boaro of Commissioners.
I am npt talking about the merits
of the issue: Only about the "back·
bone" to be' the only 011e to say
"NO."
We need mOre political office
holders who!are wllling to cut spending in t~m;es like these wlten the
nation Is on the llrink of ·financial
disaster. I~s · rilce to ~ a little
restraint so cllll!e to home.
,
Undoubtei!lly, Mr. Jones woui!lllke
to hav!! concurred because be Is a
man of l!onsiderable fiscal ex·
pertlse. B~t in •his judgement the
money must not have been there. Gayle Price, Portland;O. ·

'Con1Tratu/a...:~ns
· ·
• '"0. _

extended

.." '

.

'

editor ~.

paid.
'
Mr. Hysell doesn't talk about
doing something to belp the youth,
be does it Counseling and helping In
any way possible to keep kids out of
trouble.
·
·:
Carl is appreciated and ·reepec:Wd
by Ill!! young people be tries to be!p.
MeigS Cowity would be ' a better
place to raise children If there were ·
1p0re people like Carl Hf8ell.
Roger Stewart, Route 1, Middleport, OH 45760.

u • to.nc'-J
itv

n,18
o·~

'J

C'L..;ot
n • ...,

To the editor:
I would like to cODimeitt on
something that,ia so obvi~ to me,
I'm surprised others haven't seen lt.
Perhaps It's be!:8i1Se I'm !I bistqry
buff but whilt I fall to lee and will
never understan4 Is why tbb·~l'&gt;''
JesusofNazarethhasnot lleengtV,en
due recGgniliqn in our sc:boc!IIUtOry
books? ·

· •·

It's histOrical fact tha~ He lived
bei-e on earth fqr 33 yeara. ·we even
~time by His bi11h (B.C. and
1
A.D.) and .yet He 1an t taught as
reality iDitll college level.

~doesn't have to be taUiht
to .brjDg 9Ut the hlltorical 1mTo the eCIIJor:
,, . '
portance of W. man and Hla Impact
I would like · to take this op- ' on hlltcJry, He put fortb .tbe best
' portunlty 1to c01181'11tulabr Henry ' ~ ,fqr llvi!Ji U.t'thla woa:ld
- ..

nev-:

,Wells · and Chester Wella, ,Who WlU ~ ~. . . . lh c!d1d
· recOIDIJlended the long overdue ·lelmld .anythjna else .lie woald do
' raise, illv!!h to Carl HYsell. FQr Carl ....U to Ieani of thls JIIAI\:and ~
spendS many· lb!lg houri ~ • fiPV"'' ahrhat,!fe tl118flt1
.
with and for the youth in our area,
Tbanll )loa. - ~'7 u.t.r,
and is worth· mucl} mQI'e than lie Ia Hopemont, W. \Ia.
·

-

COIN SHOW - The OH KAN Club has completed
for Ita 18th annual
show. Some of the club officers pictured, I to r, include Vaughan Spencer,
secretary; Donna Davidson, hostess; Edward Burkett, president, and John
'Bryan, sergeant-at-anns. Other officers are Doug Litl!e, vice president, and
David Edwards, treasurer.
'

:Development.of
'.colleges topic
GALLIPOU8-Dr. Paul C. Hayes,
president of Rio Grande College'Community College, described the
'development of the colleges Thurs'dsy aftenioon to 52 people attending
the first quarterly luncheon meeting
·of the Gallla County Retired
Teachers Association.
Introduced by Program Chairman
Marguerite Hineman, the speaker
Silld that he was not without contact
with the elderly-his mother is 93
years of age. The meeting was in the
college dining hall.
Legislative Chairman Albert R.
Durose brought 75 postal cards,
' printed with a message to Gov,
.. James A, Rhodes requesting that he
.Include an increase for teachers'
.;.retirement In Ohio's biennial
budget.
., Other speakers were Irene Brannon. eastern area vicepresident of
: the Ohio Retired Teachers Assocla·
" tion, and Wendell Wagner, director
of District VII of the state assocla·
.'.tlon with headquarters in

City police· probe
three wrecks Friday
citation was issued.
Officers were called to the scene of
a two-vehicle collision on the 700
block of Third Avenue at 1:21.p.m.
Police report a truck operated by
William Balas, 50, Youngstown, and
an auto driven by William E. Mit·
chell, 57, Gallipolis, collided as both
vehicles attempted to park.
There was severe damage to the
MltcheU auto, no damage to the
truck. No citation was issued.
In further action, city police
issued two citations Friday.
Delmas Goff, 23, Langsville, was
cited on a charge of possession of an
open container in a public use area.
Clinton Murpby, 21, Gallipolis,
was cited on a chal'!le of litterine.

GALLIPOLIS - One driver was
cited following three accldenta investigated Friday by Gallipolis City
Police.
Officers were called to the scene rJ.
a two-vehicle mishap on Eastern
Avenue, just south of Burger Ave.,
at 2:17p.m.
Police report an auto operated by
Cindy L. Bootell, 21, Bidwell, pulled
from a commercial drive Into the
path of a vehicle driven by Bruce
McDonald, 72, Gallipolis.
Booten was cited on a charge of
failure to yield. Both vehicles incurred slight damage.
A pickup truck driven by Trudl
Ann Burltz, 22, Gallipolis, incuiTed
severe damage during a two-vehicle
accident on the 100 block of Cedar
Street Friday afternoon.
Called to the scene at 2:40 p.m.,
police report tOO Burltz vehicle
struck a parked truck owned by
MFR Enterprises, Columbus. No

(Continued from page l)
cial institutions. It fell $2.9 billion to
$391.2 billion in the latest reporting
period.
While money market analysts
cautioned against drawing con·
elusions based on a single week's
figures, the unexpectedly large
decline should give policy makers
"a head start on the down side" in
trying to control money growth in
March, said William Griggs, vice
president at J. Henry Schroedel"
Bank and Trust Co .
"It is too early to reflect results of
the Fed tightening which started
back in mid-Febnu~ey. But I would
say It wlll. give the Fed a chaitce to
catch Its breath," said David Jones
of Aubrey G. Lanston and Co.
The tight money policy resulted in
one bank lifting Its prime interest
rate to 18 percent Friday and most
banks went to 17% on their loans to
their most credit worthy corporate
customers.
Jones suggested the sharp drop in
money figures might partiaiiy
reflect an unwinding of the S6 billion
bulge in the basic money supply that
occurred between Jan. 23 and Feb. 6.

BOARD TO MEET
GALLIPOLIS - · The regular
meeting rJ. the GaUta CouniY
District Library Board of Trustees
will be held Tuesl\ay, March 11, at 5
p.m, in the Rare Book Room of the
Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memorial
Library, 641 Second Ave .

•••

&lt;l9alltpoli!)

"

~iarp
By J. Samuel Peeps

The collective infonnation is
valuable for government, industry,
and even the census bureau i18eH.
Groat said the bureau used its own
infonnation to develop this year's
fonns.
This year there wlll be no "head of
the household" category, reflecting
the trend of people living together.
"There will be tremendous emphasis on ethnic groups, which have

been the hardest to count,'' he said.
The census begins March 28. Moet
persons will get a short fonn in the
mail that takes about 15 minutes to
complete. One in six households wlll
get a longer lonn that takr about 45
minutes to complete. Census takers
wlll also visit jails, resorts and bus
or rail stations. Those persons who
do not return their completed fOI'IIlll
will get a phone call or a personal
visit from census takers.

1- 1926 artist : Ernest H. sh~pard)

exhibit choice items, or any unusual
Other officers include Doug tittle,
items they may own. All competition vice president, Vaughan Spencer,
wlll be non~ompetitive. Lockec;l secretary, David Edwards,
metal security cases will be treasurer, Bob Pooler and John
provided for that purpose by the host Bryan, sgt. of anns.
organiZation. Club members wlll be i""lhir&gt;n~;Hi:;r;;;;-.~~~;+:H:
on hand to offer free appraisals or
identification of any items offered.
Members feel that many ·persons
have material at home, without
knowing what they own, or its value.
The OH KAN Coin Club was ~
organized in March 1962 at Point
Pleasant, W. Va. with 22 members.
~
.,
For eleven years, monthly meetings
were conducted there. In 1!113 its
headquarters was moved to Mid~ INDIVIDUAL INCOME TAX
dieport, Ohio. Its monthly meetings
PREPARATION AND
offer numismatic education, trading
11sessions, auctions, and social enIt ACCOUNTING FOR SMALL.
joyment to its 75 members. New
MEDIUM AND LARGE

:o~~u~~~~.R:re solicited
....--------------!

' COLO\' - .
,

..

I,,.,,,, , •

ONE WEEK
Friday thru Thursday

·

*
*
**
*
!

t

11-statements.

*'
~

...

t

tast~~~a::!. l

A tempting
edy for adults who can
COUnt.

~---------....11

BUSINESSES.

JOINS STAFF - Lawre~~ce
Beu, ~ County, Ky., Is lbe
oew Ullslut to lbe sapervllor of
tbe Farmen - Home Ad·
mlDIIItradoa, Pomeroy ofttce.
Bell II a graduate of Morehead
State Uulvenlty witb a B.S.
degree ID qrlcultare. Beu 8Dd
bla wife, Terri, 8lld IOD Mlcbael,
qe elgbt moatbs, reside ID
RaclDe. Beu wiD uaume biB
dattes 1111 Feb. 1L Areble Slega)l,
eaaaty llllperYIIor of FHA stated
that FHA offers • wide variety of
lou JII'Oil8ml for nual raldealll
wbJ.eb IDehlde .,_IDg 1-. for
low iliad moderate laeome

•• GAWPOU8-Members of the Library of Gallla County.
new Gallla County History book
The two co-chairmen urge: "Don't
., conunlttee have set the gears in mo- miss the opportunl~ to see that your
Uon for the processing rJ. the first family history is reCorded for the
group of fainily histories, which has future."
'
begun to arrive.
GRANDMA GWOOD's diary: Oct.
Great care is taken to assure that
each story is properly fUed after 20, 1911-Will's , cousin, Melvin
proofreading and word counting. Sheela, returned after 30 years, and
famlllea. Loaa1 11re also .
, _,Also Individual photographs are fU· Will took him by boat to Big Creek to
avdallle to fum femmes to Jill!""
"'ed for safekeeping and recorded so visit relaUves. Melvin wanted to see
elllle or ea1ar1e alllilll farma
·, as to be assured they're placed wJth bls mother's grave at Clay Chapel
u well u 1ou1 for operatll!g Jill!""
, ,the proper stories.
(Ed. Note ()ne: she ltied 63 years
,_., Fjrmen Home lllecated
... Co-chainnen Mary Allison and . before this date) and jon the return
oa tbe lllCODd Door ol lbe Jl'ar"' Renny Evans issued a reminder that trip got off at R1gp 1Landlng, and
met'l IIIII* buBdiDg. Tile pboae
:.~tbe deadline for turning in a story is Mrs. Rigga located tb\l grave. (Ed.
oo!'lber
IlHZ Mll.
30-just three weekS away. Do Note Two: There is a ,~eat Clay
'"notdelay!
Chapel that is lnscribed-"Sbeets
1
"II The limit ts 500 words per Loulsa,wifeofMa~
,dledNov.3:
,. hpusehold and one picture, free ~ 18l8; age 25 years 1 months 1~
• • •
;,,.clllli'ge. Additional words may be days). She lies ~de:
Infant.
· (Continued from page l j
• purchased at 10 centa a word. Ml'II. . Nov, 6, 19 u-Master ,.,.. Don Pope,
poulble wJth the foreign minister In
"Almon and Ml'II. Evans are getting a four years old, and fatnllv boarded charge.
'
.
. lot of questions from people who do the tr · f T
=:;~the ba ·
-Ghotbzadeh announcild lie would
1"not 'have ancestors bere-"we want
8lh or eus,
re Y, ve address the nation sometime Satur- ·
a ranch. (J!id. Note
: Gallipolis cia night
.
:"Nlwcomers' stories as well," they
of
Y
•
',:'say. ·
·
had a populationlosa ~IQ).; ~"'~I '
-Tehran radio reported tens of
- ;,.( .. . ..
Dec. 28, 1911-:Vncle oms -.,bin ·
.
;~ '"newer you liave llved In Gallla II! playing at~ thea • Mrs. Pope tbousanda of II:anlans demonstrated
~~~ ~!'0 days, 20 years, or all ' Sr. and I ,'!fent. Isaw. inally years . for1the third iltralgllt rlay outside the
;)'our days, YOUR story Is wanted. · ago, Nov. 5,. 1811 ~ · , 31, 1811 _ em..,_yinaiiiJilCrloltbemllltBnis.
~Everyt.QillYorboUI!ehbldunitlsen- Gallipolis 8lld Galli.il County ~ • · -fl spak11111111111 for the· mllltantt.
.
. are ~ to get the ' 00111 back. I • COPtacted by telephone, said they
· t!Ued to a free story. .
U YQU ~ ~ye a 'thwnbprlilt hope everYbody voteii • • (JW. Noll' might refue to transfer the
,)
·
lloltagel altogether If' support f9r
" letter, you may pick ooe up at the Four: 'lbeyWILLtbla
Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memorial
·
'
thelrlltand~tobulld

:::MarCh

Militants

..

*
..

*
'******************'
: Spring Valley Plaza, Gallipolis
,.
PHONE 446·7600

Green plan!A. Green
carnations. They"re a
natural for St. Patrick"•
Da&gt;·· Nnl ~mly becauoe
of their color. bill for the,
warmth and joy they bring.
Stop by or jlive ue a call. Let a
all celebrate the wearin11
nf the 11reen by l(ivint~ it.

• ial••• St. Flali !d..\ Day
with fbi: II I lnl11l ...

RfMfMifR TO ORDER
fARL Y FOR fASTER

.•POntO PLANTS •DISH GARDENS •TERRARIUMS
•SILK AND PERMANENT ARRANGEMENTS
•CUT ROWER ARRANGEMENTS

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
Mrs. Millard Van Meter
Ph. 992·2039
•106 BuHernut Ave.
or 992-5721
Pomeroy, o.
We accept all major credit cards and we wire flowers
everywhere.

GALLIA COUNTY FAIR

HOUSING CENTER

The Fair Housing Center is designed to educate and inform the
community of Fair Housing laws and· goals. The Center reaches
future prospectivll renters and buyers by holding programs in the
area schools.
These students are made aware that each person ' has rights
that are protected. They know that they CAN'T be denied, housing.
because of race, sex, religious beliefs, or handicap. They also know
that there are local and state agencies that can be of assistance to
them.
Isn't it time you knew your basic rights?
If you feel that you hae been denied your equal housing op·
portunities, or need some questions answered, contact the Fair
Housing Center at 446-~016 or visit the office at 414 Second Avenue,
Room 204, 'G;:Uiipolis, Ohio.

'

**
*
t
!

BOB LANE'S
~...
"COM PLETt
l
BOOKKEEPING l
&amp; TAX SERVICE ~

NOTICE

•'

t*
*t
*t*

II- Are you getting lhe benefit of all.+
It the deductions, expenses and lt-*credits thai you are allowed? ulllt you have any doubts, see an ex-*
*pert! Is your bookkeeping system IIII- up to par - For mosl businesses II*we offer computerized financial Jlo

r---=-==::--------1 :

"l~~ARDS'

'

Federal•..

"""'

.J

•

Chillicothe.
' who has been
Beulah JohnsOn,
secretary for tiM!,past two years but
was constitutionally ineligible to
succeed herself, substituted as
secretary 'flni$Iay for Jewell
Bnunfleld, ill in Colwnbus.
Musical entel'llllnment was by the
Olde Tyme Choi'us of the Gallla
County Senior Citizens Center and a
solo by Frank Claytor.
President D. , 'Lester Davis
distributed copies of the retired
teachers' bulletin, which contailll
the names, addresses, and telephone
numbers of the 108 members.

dition, dealers accept trades of old
pocket watches, knives, and
anything made of gold, silver, or
platinum. Evaluations will be free.
J;&gt;oor prizes of U. S. mint sets will
be given every hour throughout the
show. Special souvenir wooden
nickels, coin magazines, and
newspapers will be given free for as
long as they last. At 5 p.m. a grand
prize of gold coins or $400 wlll be
awarded to ~me lucky person. Last
year's show attracted a thousand
registered persons. This year's
event, largest ever pla!Uied, a
record crowd is anticipated.
The public will have a rare opportunity to view historic coins and
paper currency vintage of the last
two hundred years of United States
mint products. Every type coin, or
paper currency, large or small will
be available for viewing. An array of
United States postage stamps, and
first day covers will also be
available.
Individuals are encoUraged to

GALLIPOUS - Coin collectors of
all ages, coin dealers, and the public
from Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky will have their day here Sunday, March 16, when upwards of a
quarter million dollars worth of rare
coins, paper currency, stamps,
medals and related Items will' be on
exhibition or for sale in the banquet
rooms of the Holiday Inn, Kanauga.
The occasion is the 17th &amp;Mual
coin show hosted by the OH KAN
Coin Club of Middleport, Ohio. The
event, held regardless li the
weather, is open to everyone with no
admission charge. Activities open at
9 a.m continuing tillS p.m. Plenty of
easy parking is available. This annual event is the only one scheduled
in this area of southern Ohio each
year.
Edward Burkett, club president,
reports that fourteen coin dealers
from out-of-town have secured booth
display space, and will have a vast
assortment of coins and other
materials for sale or display. In ad-

..1 ~· --------~---....

•••
•••
••

72 years.

17th annual coin show slated March 16

MAIL
SUBSCRIPTION RATES

Is Ford warming up
to take the field?

represented."
Groat defends the census bureau's
questions on personal income, which
some say is an invasion of privacy.
Those figures are valuable in deter·
mining low-income areas and
programs for the poor, he said.
Both say the census bureau has a
proven record of protecting the
privacy of individuals. The bureau is
required by law to keep infonnation
on individuals under lock and key for

~

�A-3-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, March~. 1980

A-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, March 9, 1980

junbaJJ

~imts-

Census expected to show changes ·in way Americans live

jtntintl

BOWUNG GREEN, Ohio (AP) The 1980 census will document some
dramatic changes in the way
Americans live, according to two
Bowllng Green State University
sociologists.
They predict the 19110 census will
prove reports that fewer people are
having children, more people are
living longer, more YOWI8 people are
living together, ahd more

Opinions and Comments
~unblt)J t'imes- ~mtintl
Published ever)' Sunday by The Oho Valfey Publlsh.l.n~ Co.· MuJtunedia,lnc.

l..dttn of opinioo are wel(.'(ll'l)td . They ·should be less than 300 words long tor subject lO reduclim by the editor) and must bf' signed with the signee's address. Names may _be withheUI upon
publicaUoo.. However. on request, n.amt!l'l will be tllitciORd. r...ett.m; should be Ul good taste, addteaing issues, oot personalities .
GALLIPOLIS

DAIL \' 11UBUNE

I2S 1bird Ave., GallipoW. Ohl() ~1.
Published every weekday evening ucept Saturday. Second Class Postage Pald at Gallipolia,

Ohlo..w:n.

!.. '" " . I .

•

THE DAlLY SENTINEL

111 Court st., Pomeroy, 0 . 45769. Published every week day evening except Satllrday. Entered
u lf!!COOI1 class rnailintl matter at Pomeroy, Otuo P06t Offict.
By carrier daily and Sunday 90c per week. MotorrouteS3.00 per month.

have a census, we can make reliable
projecti01111."
Both men say critiC!! of the census
don't know the value of a head count.
CritiC!! says its $1 billion price tag is
too high, and the government is
asking too many personal questions.
"The value of the census more
than justifies the expeMe," said
Stockwell. "Political representation
is based on numbers of people. If you
don't get counted, you don't get

households contain fewer people.
Edward G. Stockwell and
H. Theodore Groat have been
keeping tabs on infonnatlon the census bureau has collected since 1970,
when the most recent census Willi
taken.
"U we didn't have a census," said
Stockwell, " estimates of changes in
society would become less and less
reliable as time Roes 011. Because we

TbeGaWpoUJ Daily Tribune in Ohio and West VirginiH one yeHr $33.00 ; stx moolhlll7 .50; three
month! '10.50 . Elsewhere $38.00 per year; sli mMths $1!1.00 ; three mmths $1 1.00 ; motor route

13.90 monthly .

The O.Uy SenUnel. one year $33.00; Six months '1 7.50; three months gi.OO. Elsewhert S38.00;

siJ: mootl:a! $20.00; three months 111.00.
1be Auociated Pres.'! i1J ~dwlive l y entitled to the u.se for publication of all news ditlpatches
credited to the newspaper and ~tlso the lOCH I news published herein.

AP news analysis

WASIUNGTON (AP) · Gerald R. Ford calls the Republican presidential campaign a wide-open ball game, and he's warming up to take the
field. They're playing hardball out there, not goH, and it could be a tough
season lor the fanner president.
In the opening phase of the 1980 presidential campaign, Foro was
treated as an honored, elder statesman by the Republican presidential
campaigners. In more than one campaign debate, he was extolled as an
example of sound Republican management, with a 4.8 percent inflation
rate cited as a prime exhibit.
Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr., who folded his futile candidacy on Wednesday, used to tell campaign audier*es that Ford bad "rassled inflation
to the ground," and said he wanted to do the same thing. Fonner U.N.
Ambassador George B:JSh would say that the way to combat inflation was
Ford's way, w;thvetoes of excessive spending bills.
Even Ronald Reagan, his old rival, was relatively cordial- until Foro
pronounced Reagan too conservative to win the White House. Reagan
then got off one of the better lines of the season by suggesting that
perhaps Foro was coming out of political retirement because he'd
developed a slice.
But nothing enrages an active campaigner more than the sideline jeers
of a potential candidate who suggests he is going to rescue the party from
a field of losers.
Foro isn't putting it quite that bluntly, but that's what it comes down to.
"The polls, as I recall, do not show that any of the Republican candidates
thus far can defeat President Carter," he said Wednesday night. He said
those soundings indicate that he would do better than any of them.
''Mr. Ford does not need to disturb his candidacy and ride to the rescue
of the Republican Party," retorted Rep. John B. Anderson, campaigning
to build on his strong second-place showings in the Massachusetts and
Vermont primaries.
Those are two states Ford won easily over Reagan in 1!116, which points
to one of his problfl!llS this time. It's already too late for him to compete
for nearly half the 1,994 nominating delegates at the Republican National
Convention. Filing deadlines are pressing now for the la~season
primary elections, and that set includes southern and western contests in
which Reagan abnost overtook him four years ago.
And to compete there, Ford will have to become an avowed candidate
by Tuesday. Stuart Spencer, his 1!116 campaign manager, said that's the
deadline "from a technical standpoint of what's available in the
primaries that would still be open~o him." ·
At the moment, Foro is inviting Republicans to invite him into the race.
He says if his supporters will •come forward and identify themBelves
publicly, he'll have a hard time saying no.

.
Today zn history. ..
-

Today is Sunday, March9, the 69th
day of 1980. There are 2'.fl days left in
the year.
Today's highlight in history:
In 1!114, seven lonner aides to
President Nixon pleaded innocent to
charges of a cover-up of the
Watergate scandal.
On this date:
In 1451, Amerigo Vespucci, the
Italian navigator lor which America
is named, was born.,
In 1862, the first battle of ironclad

ships was fought in a Civil War encounter between the Monitor and the
Merrimac near Hampton Roads, Va.
In 1916, Mexicans led by Pancllo
Villa attacked Columbus, N.M., and
killed 15 people.
One year ago: A judge issued a
temporary order prohibiting
publication of an article in the
Progress! ve lllllgazine that, charged
the government, told how a
hydrogen bomb worked.

Berry's World
•

,

" The oil business has be-en good to me and, I ·
guess, being filthy rich DOES h(lve its
moments."

•

••
J'

.

•

NO defections!"

''This is a great day for the Soviet people,

•

Ohio perspective

.

Decade marks change in school financing
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - There
has been a marked change during
the last decade in the way Ohio's
school districts are funded, a private
study group says. But John Q. Taxpayer is still the ultimate source of
the cash.
State government's contribution
to public elementary and secondary
education increased by 233 percent
from 1969 to 1979, the Ohio Public
Expenditure Council says.
But locally-voted property taxes
for school operating purposes increased by 86 percent during the 10year period.
The state figures represent money
allocated through the school foundation program. Also included are
state reimbursements to Schools for

operating revenue lost as a result of
the 10 percent real property tax
relief granted taxpayers in 1979.
Federal money, other state aid
and minor local revenues were excluded. Combined state-local aid to
Ohio's public schools amounted to
$1,652 per pupil in the 1!119-80 year.
State government provided 45.5
pen:ent of the total, compared to 31.8
percent 10 years ago.
The addition of special state
school "aid, outside the school foundation program, iridicates the state
share was about 50 percent in !97980, up from 33 percent a decade
earlier.
The councU estimates that state
and local per pupU aid this school
year wlll range from $1,082 in the

Western Brown Lacal system in
Brown County to $4,613 in Cuyahoga
Heights Local District in Cuyahoga
County. Ohio schools will receive
more than $1.5 billion in state aid
during the current school year.
In addition, public schools wlll
receive state aid fo'r school bus purchases, disadvantaged pupils,
driver education, educational
television and other programs. The·
costs of such programs were not included in the coun~il's report.
"Trooper Tom" managed to win an
endorsement from the state Controlling Board this week, but not until the fiscal watchdogs were
satisfied about the cost of the safety
program.

:

The hignway safelY csepartment
had asked the board to approve tne
release of funds for 250,000 "'rroopeiTom's Bike Club" books. lbey are to
be distributed to pupils in the third ·
through sixth grades.
"Who's going to vote against
Trooper Tom?" Sen. Stanley J.
Aronoff, R·Cincinnati, asked
jokingly.
•
"At $5.M per copy?" Sen. Harry .
Meshel, D-Youngstown, shot back.
"SomebodY may," Aronoff said. ,
Safety department officials
quickly pointed out a typographical
error on the fonn Meshel was
reading. The cost w&amp;S actually 5.M
cents per copy.
·
The request was unanimously approved.

But not of the United States

The ·man who would be president
By Tim Tiede
BROWNSVII).E, Texas (NEA)Jimmy Carter, Ted Kennedy,
Ronald Reagan and George Bush
are spending more money. New
Hampshire, Florida and California
have received more attention. But
the most imaginative presidential
campaign this year may be that of
Herbert M. Williams on the Mexican
border.
As are the others, Williams is
concerned with taxes, inflation and
the threat of Annageddon. The
thing is he doesn't think that
Washington is the place to do very
much a bout them.

You see, he's not trying to be

president of the United States. '
He's campaigning to head a whole
new country.
Williams says he owns a small
island in the Rio Grande River that
could become the world's 181st
sovereign nation. He wants to
establish a new government, flag
and lead it all as chief executive. It
will be a democracy, he adds, but in
the purest sense: "We won't make
.the mistake the U.S. did."
That mistake Is big government.
Williams, 69, is a retired Air Force
colonel who insists that bureaucratic
administrations have strangled

Week's business

'Inflation like toothpaste'
NEW YORK (AP) - \'Inflation is like toothpaste," a West German
banking official was quoted as sa)'in8 recently, "Once it's out, you can
hardly get It back in again. So the best thing is not to squeeze too hard on
the tube."
·
While Europe is elqierlenclng some Inflation problems, the evidence is
abundant in the United States that someone hall squeezed the tube too
much.
The Organization of PetroleWII Exporting Countries is a popular target
to blame for the inflation squeeZe.
A government analysis of the 13.3 percen~ Inflation }"lite last year ln.
dicates that. gasoline and home heatin&amp; oU price increases accounted for
3.4 percentage points of that.
Rising Interest rates, another frequently cited culprit, which shows up
in conswner prices largely through higher mortgage rates, added
another U percent of last year's 13 percent inflation. ·
.
But that left conswner prices IIII all other goods rlalng at rate of 8.5 percent, or close to the lnflatioo rate on aU goods In 1978.
So far this year, things seem to be getting worse. 1be consumer price
report for January showed. inflation running at lui annual rate of more
than 18 percent. Producer and wholeaale price repOrts for January am
Febnu~ry showed ihose prices jumping at clolle to a 31 percent rate.
''There are still substantial price lncreues, working their way through .
the economy to the conswner," Silld Lawrence Chlmerine, chairmal) of
OJase EconometiCII, a forecasting company lri suburban Philadelphia.
He predicts that jnllaUon In the flllt hall of the year will average 15 per- ·
cent, upfroma13percentaMualrateattheendoflast year.
, White Hqtl!e economic advisors, who in January forecast J0.4 percent
inflation for 1980, also clearly are worried.
And, Presldent,Certer Ia In the procesa of drafting an lnfiation-figbUng
package that is ~ to Include steep budget cuta. other steps, Including credit contrOls to rea~ct borrowing, are ll!!lllg reviewed by the
admlnlatratim.
In other buslneu developments thla put week: . Business bon'o!ring
costs CCIIIUnued to prasthe prime Jelldinl ~te 1'0111! ~-~111;~17% lind
· 18 percent at major )lanD. The nte baa 1plraled from at •l5¥• percent .;
. Feb. 15, when tiM&gt; Federal ~ lJ~ U.lllt... effort (jJ al.W 1o,
Dation and curb =:,~::ltyby lll8llq J1111!18Y llilrllcr to obtain.•
'-'lbe nation's
· • Rte d!pp.hllptly In February to 6 per- ·
. · · ·
centf.tom6.%perceut in January. · ' . ,
-A number of supermarllet Cbalna, l!lcludln&amp;sBfnay Sores Inc. BJidr.
The Great Atlantic I• Pacific Ttl Co.; 8lliiQiill'ed that th8y would comply
wJtha government req~ to try !let a voluntary ceiling on focld prices.

,,

"what used to be the greatest and people from Mexico will also be
country in the . world." For this asked to become citizens. Unforreason he insists his new nation in tunately, immigration in the ·new
the river will be a place where nation will have to be severely
"everyone is genuinely free."
regulated: there are only 183 acres
To begin with, Williams intends to on the island property.
call the place Cherokee Nation. He
But immigration will be one of the
is part Indian himself and sees this few things regulated in the Cherokee
as a way of restoring dignity to Nation. Williams says the political
abori~inals.
Williams thinkS the and social philosophy of the country
U.S. government has made second· · will be private enterprise and unclass citizens of Indians, and so he fettered .initiative: "We won't have
will invite them to live in equality in laws that sap the energy or spirit of
the Che1·okee state.
the people; we won't allow rules that
The state won't be aU Indian, stifle folks."
however. Williams says Americans
Hence there will be no taxes in the_
will be welcomed regardless of race, Cherokee Nation.

Letters to the
Commissioner
commended
•
Dear editor:
Commissioner Rich Jones deserves commendation for having the
courage to put what he believed the
best interesta of his constituents
above any poUtical aspirations he
might have by Casting a lone no vote
on a money spending issue recently
brought bef11re the Meigs Co1111ty
Boaro of Commissioners.
I am npt talking about the merits
of the issue: Only about the "back·
bone" to be' the only 011e to say
"NO."
We need mOre political office
holders who!are wllling to cut spending in t~m;es like these wlten the
nation Is on the llrink of ·financial
disaster. I~s · rilce to ~ a little
restraint so cllll!e to home.
,
Undoubtei!lly, Mr. Jones woui!lllke
to hav!! concurred because be Is a
man of l!onsiderable fiscal ex·
pertlse. B~t in •his judgement the
money must not have been there. Gayle Price, Portland;O. ·

'Con1Tratu/a...:~ns
· ·
• '"0. _

extended

.." '

.

'

editor ~.

paid.
'
Mr. Hysell doesn't talk about
doing something to belp the youth,
be does it Counseling and helping In
any way possible to keep kids out of
trouble.
·
·:
Carl is appreciated and ·reepec:Wd
by Ill!! young people be tries to be!p.
MeigS Cowity would be ' a better
place to raise children If there were ·
1p0re people like Carl Hf8ell.
Roger Stewart, Route 1, Middleport, OH 45760.

u • to.nc'-J
itv

n,18
o·~

'J

C'L..;ot
n • ...,

To the editor:
I would like to cODimeitt on
something that,ia so obvi~ to me,
I'm surprised others haven't seen lt.
Perhaps It's be!:8i1Se I'm !I bistqry
buff but whilt I fall to lee and will
never understan4 Is why tbb·~l'&gt;''
JesusofNazarethhasnot lleengtV,en
due recGgniliqn in our sc:boc!IIUtOry
books? ·

· •·

It's histOrical fact tha~ He lived
bei-e on earth fqr 33 yeara. ·we even
~time by His bi11h (B.C. and
1
A.D.) and .yet He 1an t taught as
reality iDitll college level.

~doesn't have to be taUiht
to .brjDg 9Ut the hlltorical 1mTo the eCIIJor:
,, . '
portance of W. man and Hla Impact
I would like · to take this op- ' on hlltcJry, He put fortb .tbe best
' portunlty 1to c01181'11tulabr Henry ' ~ ,fqr llvi!Ji U.t'thla woa:ld
- ..

nev-:

,Wells · and Chester Wella, ,Who WlU ~ ~. . . . lh c!d1d
· recOIDIJlended the long overdue ·lelmld .anythjna else .lie woald do
' raise, illv!!h to Carl HYsell. FQr Carl ....U to Ieani of thls JIIAI\:and ~
spendS many· lb!lg houri ~ • fiPV"'' ahrhat,!fe tl118flt1
.
with and for the youth in our area,
Tbanll )loa. - ~'7 u.t.r,
and is worth· mucl} mQI'e than lie Ia Hopemont, W. \Ia.
·

-

COIN SHOW - The OH KAN Club has completed
for Ita 18th annual
show. Some of the club officers pictured, I to r, include Vaughan Spencer,
secretary; Donna Davidson, hostess; Edward Burkett, president, and John
'Bryan, sergeant-at-anns. Other officers are Doug Litl!e, vice president, and
David Edwards, treasurer.
'

:Development.of
'.colleges topic
GALLIPOU8-Dr. Paul C. Hayes,
president of Rio Grande College'Community College, described the
'development of the colleges Thurs'dsy aftenioon to 52 people attending
the first quarterly luncheon meeting
·of the Gallla County Retired
Teachers Association.
Introduced by Program Chairman
Marguerite Hineman, the speaker
Silld that he was not without contact
with the elderly-his mother is 93
years of age. The meeting was in the
college dining hall.
Legislative Chairman Albert R.
Durose brought 75 postal cards,
' printed with a message to Gov,
.. James A, Rhodes requesting that he
.Include an increase for teachers'
.;.retirement In Ohio's biennial
budget.
., Other speakers were Irene Brannon. eastern area vicepresident of
: the Ohio Retired Teachers Assocla·
" tion, and Wendell Wagner, director
of District VII of the state assocla·
.'.tlon with headquarters in

City police· probe
three wrecks Friday
citation was issued.
Officers were called to the scene of
a two-vehicle collision on the 700
block of Third Avenue at 1:21.p.m.
Police report a truck operated by
William Balas, 50, Youngstown, and
an auto driven by William E. Mit·
chell, 57, Gallipolis, collided as both
vehicles attempted to park.
There was severe damage to the
MltcheU auto, no damage to the
truck. No citation was issued.
In further action, city police
issued two citations Friday.
Delmas Goff, 23, Langsville, was
cited on a charge of possession of an
open container in a public use area.
Clinton Murpby, 21, Gallipolis,
was cited on a chal'!le of litterine.

GALLIPOLIS - One driver was
cited following three accldenta investigated Friday by Gallipolis City
Police.
Officers were called to the scene rJ.
a two-vehicle mishap on Eastern
Avenue, just south of Burger Ave.,
at 2:17p.m.
Police report an auto operated by
Cindy L. Bootell, 21, Bidwell, pulled
from a commercial drive Into the
path of a vehicle driven by Bruce
McDonald, 72, Gallipolis.
Booten was cited on a charge of
failure to yield. Both vehicles incurred slight damage.
A pickup truck driven by Trudl
Ann Burltz, 22, Gallipolis, incuiTed
severe damage during a two-vehicle
accident on the 100 block of Cedar
Street Friday afternoon.
Called to the scene at 2:40 p.m.,
police report tOO Burltz vehicle
struck a parked truck owned by
MFR Enterprises, Columbus. No

(Continued from page l)
cial institutions. It fell $2.9 billion to
$391.2 billion in the latest reporting
period.
While money market analysts
cautioned against drawing con·
elusions based on a single week's
figures, the unexpectedly large
decline should give policy makers
"a head start on the down side" in
trying to control money growth in
March, said William Griggs, vice
president at J. Henry Schroedel"
Bank and Trust Co .
"It is too early to reflect results of
the Fed tightening which started
back in mid-Febnu~ey. But I would
say It wlll. give the Fed a chaitce to
catch Its breath," said David Jones
of Aubrey G. Lanston and Co.
The tight money policy resulted in
one bank lifting Its prime interest
rate to 18 percent Friday and most
banks went to 17% on their loans to
their most credit worthy corporate
customers.
Jones suggested the sharp drop in
money figures might partiaiiy
reflect an unwinding of the S6 billion
bulge in the basic money supply that
occurred between Jan. 23 and Feb. 6.

BOARD TO MEET
GALLIPOLIS - · The regular
meeting rJ. the GaUta CouniY
District Library Board of Trustees
will be held Tuesl\ay, March 11, at 5
p.m, in the Rare Book Room of the
Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memorial
Library, 641 Second Ave .

•••

&lt;l9alltpoli!)

"

~iarp
By J. Samuel Peeps

The collective infonnation is
valuable for government, industry,
and even the census bureau i18eH.
Groat said the bureau used its own
infonnation to develop this year's
fonns.
This year there wlll be no "head of
the household" category, reflecting
the trend of people living together.
"There will be tremendous emphasis on ethnic groups, which have

been the hardest to count,'' he said.
The census begins March 28. Moet
persons will get a short fonn in the
mail that takes about 15 minutes to
complete. One in six households wlll
get a longer lonn that takr about 45
minutes to complete. Census takers
wlll also visit jails, resorts and bus
or rail stations. Those persons who
do not return their completed fOI'IIlll
will get a phone call or a personal
visit from census takers.

1- 1926 artist : Ernest H. sh~pard)

exhibit choice items, or any unusual
Other officers include Doug tittle,
items they may own. All competition vice president, Vaughan Spencer,
wlll be non~ompetitive. Lockec;l secretary, David Edwards,
metal security cases will be treasurer, Bob Pooler and John
provided for that purpose by the host Bryan, sgt. of anns.
organiZation. Club members wlll be i""lhir&gt;n~;Hi:;r;;;;-.~~~;+:H:
on hand to offer free appraisals or
identification of any items offered.
Members feel that many ·persons
have material at home, without
knowing what they own, or its value.
The OH KAN Coin Club was ~
organized in March 1962 at Point
Pleasant, W. Va. with 22 members.
~
.,
For eleven years, monthly meetings
were conducted there. In 1!113 its
headquarters was moved to Mid~ INDIVIDUAL INCOME TAX
dieport, Ohio. Its monthly meetings
PREPARATION AND
offer numismatic education, trading
11sessions, auctions, and social enIt ACCOUNTING FOR SMALL.
joyment to its 75 members. New
MEDIUM AND LARGE

:o~~u~~~~.R:re solicited
....--------------!

' COLO\' - .
,

..

I,,.,,,, , •

ONE WEEK
Friday thru Thursday

·

*
*
**
*
!

t

11-statements.

*'
~

...

t

tast~~~a::!. l

A tempting
edy for adults who can
COUnt.

~---------....11

BUSINESSES.

JOINS STAFF - Lawre~~ce
Beu, ~ County, Ky., Is lbe
oew Ullslut to lbe sapervllor of
tbe Farmen - Home Ad·
mlDIIItradoa, Pomeroy ofttce.
Bell II a graduate of Morehead
State Uulvenlty witb a B.S.
degree ID qrlcultare. Beu 8Dd
bla wife, Terri, 8lld IOD Mlcbael,
qe elgbt moatbs, reside ID
RaclDe. Beu wiD uaume biB
dattes 1111 Feb. 1L Areble Slega)l,
eaaaty llllperYIIor of FHA stated
that FHA offers • wide variety of
lou JII'Oil8ml for nual raldealll
wbJ.eb IDehlde .,_IDg 1-. for
low iliad moderate laeome

•• GAWPOU8-Members of the Library of Gallla County.
new Gallla County History book
The two co-chairmen urge: "Don't
., conunlttee have set the gears in mo- miss the opportunl~ to see that your
Uon for the processing rJ. the first family history is reCorded for the
group of fainily histories, which has future."
'
begun to arrive.
GRANDMA GWOOD's diary: Oct.
Great care is taken to assure that
each story is properly fUed after 20, 1911-Will's , cousin, Melvin
proofreading and word counting. Sheela, returned after 30 years, and
famlllea. Loaa1 11re also .
, _,Also Individual photographs are fU· Will took him by boat to Big Creek to
avdallle to fum femmes to Jill!""
"'ed for safekeeping and recorded so visit relaUves. Melvin wanted to see
elllle or ea1ar1e alllilll farma
·, as to be assured they're placed wJth bls mother's grave at Clay Chapel
u well u 1ou1 for operatll!g Jill!""
, ,the proper stories.
(Ed. Note ()ne: she ltied 63 years
,_., Fjrmen Home lllecated
... Co-chainnen Mary Allison and . before this date) and jon the return
oa tbe lllCODd Door ol lbe Jl'ar"' Renny Evans issued a reminder that trip got off at R1gp 1Landlng, and
met'l IIIII* buBdiDg. Tile pboae
:.~tbe deadline for turning in a story is Mrs. Rigga located tb\l grave. (Ed.
oo!'lber
IlHZ Mll.
30-just three weekS away. Do Note Two: There is a ,~eat Clay
'"notdelay!
Chapel that is lnscribed-"Sbeets
1
"II The limit ts 500 words per Loulsa,wifeofMa~
,dledNov.3:
,. hpusehold and one picture, free ~ 18l8; age 25 years 1 months 1~
• • •
;,,.clllli'ge. Additional words may be days). She lies ~de:
Infant.
· (Continued from page l j
• purchased at 10 centa a word. Ml'II. . Nov, 6, 19 u-Master ,.,.. Don Pope,
poulble wJth the foreign minister In
"Almon and Ml'II. Evans are getting a four years old, and fatnllv boarded charge.
'
.
. lot of questions from people who do the tr · f T
=:;~the ba ·
-Ghotbzadeh announcild lie would
1"not 'have ancestors bere-"we want
8lh or eus,
re Y, ve address the nation sometime Satur- ·
a ranch. (J!id. Note
: Gallipolis cia night
.
:"Nlwcomers' stories as well," they
of
Y
•
',:'say. ·
·
had a populationlosa ~IQ).; ~"'~I '
-Tehran radio reported tens of
- ;,.( .. . ..
Dec. 28, 1911-:Vncle oms -.,bin ·
.
;~ '"newer you liave llved In Gallla II! playing at~ thea • Mrs. Pope tbousanda of II:anlans demonstrated
~~~ ~!'0 days, 20 years, or all ' Sr. and I ,'!fent. Isaw. inally years . for1the third iltralgllt rlay outside the
;)'our days, YOUR story Is wanted. · ago, Nov. 5,. 1811 ~ · , 31, 1811 _ em..,_yinaiiiJilCrloltbemllltBnis.
~Everyt.QillYorboUI!ehbldunitlsen- Gallipolis 8lld Galli.il County ~ • · -fl spak11111111111 for the· mllltantt.
.
. are ~ to get the ' 00111 back. I • COPtacted by telephone, said they
· t!Ued to a free story. .
U YQU ~ ~ye a 'thwnbprlilt hope everYbody voteii • • (JW. Noll' might refue to transfer the
,)
·
lloltagel altogether If' support f9r
" letter, you may pick ooe up at the Four: 'lbeyWILLtbla
Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memorial
·
'
thelrlltand~tobulld

:::MarCh

Militants

..

*
..

*
'******************'
: Spring Valley Plaza, Gallipolis
,.
PHONE 446·7600

Green plan!A. Green
carnations. They"re a
natural for St. Patrick"•
Da&gt;·· Nnl ~mly becauoe
of their color. bill for the,
warmth and joy they bring.
Stop by or jlive ue a call. Let a
all celebrate the wearin11
nf the 11reen by l(ivint~ it.

• ial••• St. Flali !d..\ Day
with fbi: II I lnl11l ...

RfMfMifR TO ORDER
fARL Y FOR fASTER

.•POntO PLANTS •DISH GARDENS •TERRARIUMS
•SILK AND PERMANENT ARRANGEMENTS
•CUT ROWER ARRANGEMENTS

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
Mrs. Millard Van Meter
Ph. 992·2039
•106 BuHernut Ave.
or 992-5721
Pomeroy, o.
We accept all major credit cards and we wire flowers
everywhere.

GALLIA COUNTY FAIR

HOUSING CENTER

The Fair Housing Center is designed to educate and inform the
community of Fair Housing laws and· goals. The Center reaches
future prospectivll renters and buyers by holding programs in the
area schools.
These students are made aware that each person ' has rights
that are protected. They know that they CAN'T be denied, housing.
because of race, sex, religious beliefs, or handicap. They also know
that there are local and state agencies that can be of assistance to
them.
Isn't it time you knew your basic rights?
If you feel that you hae been denied your equal housing op·
portunities, or need some questions answered, contact the Fair
Housing Center at 446-~016 or visit the office at 414 Second Avenue,
Room 204, 'G;:Uiipolis, Ohio.

'

**
*
t
!

BOB LANE'S
~...
"COM PLETt
l
BOOKKEEPING l
&amp; TAX SERVICE ~

NOTICE

•'

t*
*t
*t*

II- Are you getting lhe benefit of all.+
It the deductions, expenses and lt-*credits thai you are allowed? ulllt you have any doubts, see an ex-*
*pert! Is your bookkeeping system IIII- up to par - For mosl businesses II*we offer computerized financial Jlo

r---=-==::--------1 :

"l~~ARDS'

'

Federal•..

"""'

.J

•

Chillicothe.
' who has been
Beulah JohnsOn,
secretary for tiM!,past two years but
was constitutionally ineligible to
succeed herself, substituted as
secretary 'flni$Iay for Jewell
Bnunfleld, ill in Colwnbus.
Musical entel'llllnment was by the
Olde Tyme Choi'us of the Gallla
County Senior Citizens Center and a
solo by Frank Claytor.
President D. , 'Lester Davis
distributed copies of the retired
teachers' bulletin, which contailll
the names, addresses, and telephone
numbers of the 108 members.

dition, dealers accept trades of old
pocket watches, knives, and
anything made of gold, silver, or
platinum. Evaluations will be free.
J;&gt;oor prizes of U. S. mint sets will
be given every hour throughout the
show. Special souvenir wooden
nickels, coin magazines, and
newspapers will be given free for as
long as they last. At 5 p.m. a grand
prize of gold coins or $400 wlll be
awarded to ~me lucky person. Last
year's show attracted a thousand
registered persons. This year's
event, largest ever pla!Uied, a
record crowd is anticipated.
The public will have a rare opportunity to view historic coins and
paper currency vintage of the last
two hundred years of United States
mint products. Every type coin, or
paper currency, large or small will
be available for viewing. An array of
United States postage stamps, and
first day covers will also be
available.
Individuals are encoUraged to

GALLIPOUS - Coin collectors of
all ages, coin dealers, and the public
from Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky will have their day here Sunday, March 16, when upwards of a
quarter million dollars worth of rare
coins, paper currency, stamps,
medals and related Items will' be on
exhibition or for sale in the banquet
rooms of the Holiday Inn, Kanauga.
The occasion is the 17th &amp;Mual
coin show hosted by the OH KAN
Coin Club of Middleport, Ohio. The
event, held regardless li the
weather, is open to everyone with no
admission charge. Activities open at
9 a.m continuing tillS p.m. Plenty of
easy parking is available. This annual event is the only one scheduled
in this area of southern Ohio each
year.
Edward Burkett, club president,
reports that fourteen coin dealers
from out-of-town have secured booth
display space, and will have a vast
assortment of coins and other
materials for sale or display. In ad-

..1 ~· --------~---....

•••
•••
••

72 years.

17th annual coin show slated March 16

MAIL
SUBSCRIPTION RATES

Is Ford warming up
to take the field?

represented."
Groat defends the census bureau's
questions on personal income, which
some say is an invasion of privacy.
Those figures are valuable in deter·
mining low-income areas and
programs for the poor, he said.
Both say the census bureau has a
proven record of protecting the
privacy of individuals. The bureau is
required by law to keep infonnation
on individuals under lock and key for

~

�••

•

.·. ..·

A+-The Sunday Times-sentinel, SwtdayLMarch 9, 1980

Mobile homes beating housing blues
CINCINNATI(AP)- Therewasa
time when living In a mobile home

indicated to many people that times
were rough and probably wouldn 'I
get much better.
But rising interest rates and a
tight housing martet are changing
all that. Fewer than 15 percent of the

.•* . • .

..

Fred H. McConihay

Dora Birchfield

POMEROY- Mrs . Dora ,ir·
chfleld, 89, or Findlay, fonnerly of
Meigs County, died Friday at the
Blanchard Valley Hospital in
Findlay.
She was preceded in death by her
husband, Eli, and four children. Sur·
viving are five sons, William, Harry,
Olarles Robert, Larry Lee and
Lewis, all of Findlay, and three
daughters,
Annabell Moore,
·' . · ..
. .. . Findlay, Opal Biggs, Pomeroy, and
Virginia Smith, Clifton, W. Va.
Funeral services will be held at
1 :30 Monday at the Coldren Funeral
Home. Burial will be VanLue, Ohio.

·.
..
.
·.
.·

.
.-

.....· .. Edith R. Brewster
·'·' ..

...,
'

..

..

,•

..

·',-.

..

~

.

.·

·'

.- ·'

WAR, 1W. Va. - Edith Rebecca
Brewster, 58, War, W. Va.,motherof
Mason County Schot&gt;1 Supt. Robert
J. Brewster, died Friday in St.
Mary's Hospital, HW1tington.
Additiohal survivors include her
husband, Robert D. Brewster; a
daughter , Mrs. Pat Fullerton,
Huntington; two other sons, Tom J.
Brewster, Tazewell, Va., and
Richard A. Brewster, Squire,
W.Va.; and eight grandchildren.
Services will be held Monday at
the Peery..Sinclair Funeral Home in
Tazewell. Burial will take place in
Grandview, Va.

Charlene Lynn Castle

.

Cynthia Lynr Castle

'

.-•

PT. PLEASANT - Joint services

for Char!ene Lynn CasUe, 25, and
•'
Cynthia Lynn Castle, 4, Flatrock,
will be conducted Monday at 1:30
p.m. at Wilcoxen Funeral Home
with the Rev. John Icenhower of·
ficiating. Burial will follow in the
Forest Hills Cemetery at Letart.
The mother and daughter lost
their lives in a fire which destroyed
.·..· their home early Friday mornir •
Friends may call at the fu~eral
.···· • home
after 4 p.m. Sunday.

...

..•,-.
.•'

Carson Hayes

..

.
.'·
'.'

•
•'
::
;:
·:
'·

•
:
:
•

.: •

..

.•

..,· .

POMEROY - Carson S. Hayes,
116, a resident of Syracuse, died at his
home Saturday morning .
He was born in Zaleski, Ohio on
July 6, 1894, son of the late Olarles
and Mary Hallam Hayes.
Mr. Hayes married Hazel Shut·
tleworth Oct. 11, 1915. She survives,
along with the following children:
Raymond, Pl. Pleasant; Olarles,
Pomeroy; Vlrgll, Columbus; Carson, Jr., DesPlains, Ill.; Robert,
Ghana, Africa; William, Metropolis,
Ill.; two daughters: DaMaeBowers,
Etna, Ohio and Helen Grace
Rusche!, Pomeroy; three sisters:
Esther King, Columbus; Helen
Nease, Minersville and Grace
Gabriel, Columbus; twenty-six
grandchildren, 23 greatgrandchildren. One son and two
brothers preceded him in death.
Mr. Hayes waa a coal miner and
auto mechanic for 40 years. He
worked at the Walter Miller garage
in Pomeroy and the R. H. Rawlings
and Son garage in Middleport.
He was a member of the Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene for 22 years.
FWJeral services will be held 1
p.m. Tuesday at the Syracuse Church or the Nazarene. The body will lie
in state at the church one hour prior
to service.
Burial will be in Greenlawn
Cemetery in Nelsonville, with Rev.
Harold Holmes and Rev. Dale Bass
officiating.
'
Friends may call at the Ewing
FWleral Home in Pomeroy Bfter 7
p.m. Sunday.

PT. PLEASANT - Services for
Fred H. McConlhay, 76, Charleston
Road, will be conducted today at I
p.m. at the Wilcoxen Funeral Home
by the Rev. George Weirick. Burial
will he in the Forest Hills Cemetery,
Letart.

WELCOME WAGON CLUB
ACTIVITIES

Wednesday, MarCh 12 - Get
Acquainted Coffee, 10 a.m. at Sakina

Doctor's.

Josephine McKee
DETROIT - Mrs. Josephine
McKee, 79, Detroit, fanner Coolville
resident, died early Saturday mol'ning in Detroit after a long illness.
Bam March 3, 1901, in Pike CoWIty, Ky., the daughter of Smith and
Minnie Stacy Hatfield, she had lived
in Detroit for nine years.
Survivors include two daughters,
Mrs. B_etty Lukowski, Detroit, and
Mrs. Majel Dunn, Moundsville, W.
Va.; three sisters, Mrs. Dixie McCoy, Athens; Miss Enuna Hatfield,
Williamson, W. Va.; Mrs. Perline
Kinunerly, West Union, Ohio; one
brother, James Hatfield, Hardy, Ky.
There are also 25 grandchildren
and 18 great-grandchildren.
Preceding her in death were her
husband, Abrahsm McKee, and two
daughters, Mrs. VIrginia Hatfield,
and Juanita McKee.
Services will be held at 2 Tuesday
afternoon at Torch Baptist Church,
Torch, Ohio, with Pastor ,James
Hodge officiating, and burial will be
in Bartlett Cemetery, Bartlett, Ohio.
Friends may call at the White
Funeral Home at Coolville from 7-!1
tonight (SWiday) and at any time
Monday. The body will lie in state at
the church for one hour before the
services.

Thursday, March 13 - Luncheon
Bridge, 12noonatFranShaw's.
Saturday, March 15 - Couples
Bridge, 7:30p.m. at Trolke's.
Monday, March 17 - General
meeting, 7: 30 p.m. at the Jackson
Pike Office of the Ohio Valley Bank.
Bev Louden, guest speaker.
Thursday, March 20 - Evening
Bridge, 7:30 p.m. at Garren
Snyder's.

.·

..

i

..

,...
,..

BAUM TRUE VALUE

-.

~

...·-'
1. , •

*

·~r

•
j

i~

.

r. •

·",..'
~

-·...--

your prescriptioni'

•R

~

..

Open 9 Til 7 O.lly

ClosedSun!My .

-

The Medi cal Shoppe ( )

~

Ill -

Ph ~"lrrTlclf~Y

71}

.1.'

Pill•- 1N1IlD fUIA •IIIJ.ftl$. 00111 4161'

-~~---

4

.

OHIO

PHONE 446-959G

Prices Effective through Saturaay, March 15, 19811

GOLD KIST

Pork Loin

'1 t.

Mixed Fryer

COUNTRY
SPARE RIBS

.,,9
. LB.

ICEaURG

WASHERS AND DRYERS
IN STOCK FOR
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY.
CALl 446-2770

FRESH FLORIDA

HEAD LETTUCE
HEAD

Davis

or Nita Morris

ORANGES

39~

'109

5 LB•
BAG

0. 5. NO.1

Ask about Sears
credit plans
While quantities last.

20 LB.
BAG

Its the new Central Certificate.•.

the savings break you've beenwaiting for•
If you thought you'd never be
able to take advantage of hi gh yield,
guaranteed 6 Month Money M&lt;trket
rates, Central Trust has the pi&lt;J n for you .
We call it the Central Certificate.
In order to qualify, all you nee-d is
a minimum of $3.000 Ccntrnl Trust
will loan you the difference between
your initial deposit nnd ~. 1C.JOO At the
end of the Zli week period .. two th illJ.!~
happen . Fi~st, you receive your initi:1l
deposit back plw; interest at the high
money market rate on $10,000, less a
loan fee charged at a rate of I%:1bove
the money market rate on the amount

Second, the ·balance, of
the certificate nutomatic;1 lly pays off
the lo:1n.
The hi gh interest rates of Money
M:1rket Certificates :1rc now availnble
to you with only a minimum deposit of
$~.000. ;1 nd nrc insured hy the Feder&lt;li
Deposit Insurance Gorpormion.lf yot1
hnve nt lc:1st $1,000, come in now. Take
adv:mt;lf'l' p( this nut~t:mding savings
opportunity tod:1y.
*For example, if you deposit $3,000, the amount of
your loan will be $7,000 due in 26 weeks with a total 1

To ANtJOVNCG=A ~D NBVADDmOf.{ ...
A PLAN t!ALLED'~NI~:
'EARN IE:' IS A p~ 11-'A\ L.ETs '(OJ ~t Yo~ Mt&gt;Ne\' FT?.O~
YOIJR. SAYttJGS AcrouNT AND You~ M~ ~tJ\ YOtJe .a.ltc~NG.
A.C.COVNT ,AtiP C~1b A ct\ECKJtJCb:;:sA'II~ PLAN SOYOVCA~
c~N 5.4-~ DAILY INI~&amp;SfON ALL OF rr.(WHEW) AND '(OV
CA~ snu.. WRrrE.C . S-, TO~lf.-~£ T~JTl(I:AJ:NI&amp;' /S
iHINb. Ti-41\T.S ~~NED A12CUND: ~t
CHB1CIN' CCOUNt !JASJNV~NTa&gt;. ~VtN6'S

$6000
$9000

on the six-month '(26week) maturity Central Certificate
interest rate in effect from March
7th to March 12th which is . 14792.
The annual yield assumes you
reinvest the principal only at
.

1'

'

Deposit

---..---

MELODY MAID

CHOCOLATE DRINK
GALLON
PLASTIC

'129

.

t

L-...:..;.'
•_ _

,,'
;

MEMBER: FDIC

__.__GA_LLIPOLIS, OHIQ and MIDD_LE....,-~O~R_T,_O_HI_
O~-----'------'-·---,...J
'

c
69 DOZ.
Q:~q(kian

lctd
(.

J

CAN

~99

MRS. BtmERWORTH
PANCAKE SYRUP
36 oz.
BOmE

DOVE

UOUID
1S• OFF- LABEL
I

bottle

89~

~-':"--

WISK ---..,. .-,

22 oz.

DETERGENT

SOUTHERN OHIO DIVISION

' .

LARGE EGGS

Special

.

Valley·

GRADE -

r:--- _., This Week's

·CENTRAL 1ROsr
·COMPANY
..

F89

oz.

17 oz.
CAN

Bevetlgeware

1HE

17

SWEET PEAS

420.59
'656.82

maturity for another six months at
.the same rate however, different
/ rates may be in effect at those times.
Federa I Regulations prohibits the
compounding of interest on these
certificates.

ARGO
WHOLE KERNEL CORN

ARGO

1

Better Banking Service.Thaes The Central Idea.

'

Four location• to aerve youiJetter.
Member: FDIC ·
I
.

'119

Rate of .15792.

14058
.14636

B~sed

· StOP IN AND. AS\( ~ \-\IN\.
1

8-16 OZ. BOTILES

YOUR DEPOSIT NET ANNUt\L lNTEREST NET INTEREST EARNED
YIELD Cl\1 YOUR DEPOSIT
(26 Weeks)
1
$3000
12324
184.36

Nrxil ~ou fd.low WHY WE, ilAt.L \41"'\ ·-~NIE'_ · ·
Expect more ((om

or Din PEPSI

payment of$7.551.20 which is an A'nhual Percentage

This chart shows you the.interest you
can earnwith the new Central Certificate

OH-IO VALL.f ;'( BA.t-.l.K IS PlaJUD

2% MILK

borrowed ~-,

c

I

'1 09

VARitTIES
POUND PKG.

FRESHEST PROiJUCE !N TOWN

r

I

LB.

LUNCH MEATS

'1'~-

froin loads of features
to fit your need s,
priced for your budget.

Ask for Willard

~

4

PORK CHOPS

CHOOSE

ACCOUNT' lNtEB:SI ~D CJ4tct'/Nb A€rlJJN( ~V£MitNCt.

.

VINE STP.fl;, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

9 to 11 CHOPS

on many washers and
dryers; laundry pairs

1'----------------------....L----------------------·

-rnt:

are to be .
••

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

PORK CHOPS
7

·'

1

~ -,.

98~3301

1~71

SUPERIORS

40411CXIND A~ o - ·~111111111~ -IIICNI CIIIIIOCiaTY

STRIKE ENDS
NILES, Ohio (AP) - A strike by
Niles pollee ended with a contract
agreement Friday night, less than 11
hours after the walkout started,
Police Chief John Ross said.
Ross, the only policeman working
during the walkout in the city of
23,500, said other officers were
beginning to return to work at about

SEN'IOR CITIZENSRemember every Thursday is Doilbl~
Discount Day, 10% + a·nother 10% ()ffon
every prescription.
·

..
· ":

fill

~ .- w

$87,400 project is almost finished. It
will help meet customer requests for .
higher grades of service and nonnal
growth.
,
Rutland is a part of General's
Athens district. It serves more than
825 customers in an 86.6-square-mile
area of Meigs County.

..

'The most important thing we'll

do today is

RUTLAND - Customers in the
northern portion of Genera 1
Telephone Co. of Ohio's Rutland exchange soon will benefit from a
major expansion of outdoor cable
distribution, the company announced today.
Jim L. Parker of Athens,
customer service manag•r. said the

OVRDC officers for
elected.

Parts

Ready to be slipped on your finger.
All in our wide seleclion of heavenly diamonds
in glorious mounlings. At down-lo-earth
prices. We'll show you many different shapes ...
many different sizes. Come choose your
dazzler that puis heaven close at hand brill ianlly.

SINe£
1

_.
.,.............. ,
.,.., ""••· ••

....... ...... •J' ....

Pit.

ARE OUT-Of-THIS WORLD

~COLD •

•·

.

J

UuR WITHIN-YOUR-REACH DIAMONDS

IS GETTING

..

"

o.......... .. oo- .............. .... ..

JlJS\ A"Bour 11ft
....

" 0 , . • "!.,&lt; • .. ~ ...... 0 •¥' . . . .

year, and to make appointments to
functional area conunittees. New

45

STEAK

.'
.,..

$87,400 project nears completion

... .............
·- .. ....... ,, -·····

WE HAVE OVER

SAID YOUR

,•
'•

t!

~

*

*

YOUR WIF E

•'

$355

human services director , will address members with an upda~e on
OVRDC activities and achievements
of the past year.
Members from Adams, Brown,
Clermont, Gallia, Highland ,
Jackson, Lawrence, Pike, Ross,
Scioto and Vinton counties will
caucus in individual sessions to
review membership and select their
executive board members for the

'60tol90

*

DAN,

..

.•

Hayden listed some advantages to
mobile home buying. ~e home
manufacturers are controlled by the
federal government. Most are approved by the FHA and VA. Mobile
homes can be financed over as many
as 25 years, and they're trading
today as If they were conventional
homes.
Midland vice-president Michael

BUY

. CHILUCOTHE - The annual
organizational meeting of the Ohio
Valley Regional Development Commission (OVRDC) is scheduled Wed·
nesday, March 19, at the Holiday Inn
here, beginning with a dinner at 6
p.m.
During the full commission
meeting, after the dinner, Robert
Schwable, OVRDC executive direc·
tor, and J elf Spencer. OVRDC

SAVE

.

-.

1978.

VRDC annual meeting slatedMarchl9

LB.

·'

,

~

Conston said mobllebomes ~
~I $18 pewlthrSIIIJ8!"! (:' ~ build;
CIJmpared
abOut ~1 or COli'
venttonal ~·
;
Hayden pointed out that more ansl
more areas of the United States are
seeing ''st!ck·bullt" ~ neJ.t
factory-built. He said its impoeslbl~·
to tell the difference between 1118;
two. Older, more heavily populated:
cities don't see as JII8JIY mobil
homes as lt:dll populous areas, hC:
sal~, because older cities generaiJx:
don t have the land.
-;:
•
"

ilselfinastrongerpositionthanever
before. Sales totaled ~.7 million in
1978, compared with $46.8 million In

David F. Napper, Sr.
POMEROY - David F. Napper,
Sr., 69, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, died early
Saturday morning at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Napper was born April1, 1910
in Vinton County to the late Elmer
and Lucille Freeman Napper. On
Nov. 9, 1940 he married Mary E .
SearleS Napper who preceded him in
death Aug. 21, 1959. He was also
preceded in death by three sons, one
daughter, three brothers, two sisters
and one granddaughter. He was a
coal miner .
He is survived by five sons, David,
Jr., Rutland; Darrell, Harrisonville; Charles and Raymond at
home, and Leonard Napper Oiler,
Colwnbus; five daughterss, Mrs.
Carl (Mary) Still, Middleport; Mrs.
Richard (Violet) Riggleman,
Newark; Mrs. Stephen (Shirley)
Might, Rutland; Mrs. Walter
(Dollie) Brewer, Columbus, and
Mrs. Charles (Betty) Patterson,
Harrisonville; 21grandchildren,one
great-granddaughter, two brothers,
Clarence Napper, Racine, and
Wilbur Napper, Marietta; one
sister, Mrs. Thomas (Edna) Oiler,
Colwnbus, and several nieces,
nephews and cousins.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the Walker
Funeral Home, Rutland, with the
Rev. lloyd D. Brimm, Jr., of.
ficiating. Burial will be In Miles
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home after 2 p.m. Monday
until time of services. Tbe family
will receive friends at the funeral
home Monday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m .

A-6-'l'bll Sunday Time&amp;.'ientinel, Sunday, March 9, 1960

.------------------------1

llp.m..

·'

people who want their own homes
can afford them, according to Jay
Janis, chalnnan of the Home Loan
Bank Board. That figure is about
half of what it was 10 years ago.
"Many young marrieds today can·
not afford the subdivision house that
once was the dream house," said
J.P. Hayden, Jr., president of the
Midland Co., a Cincinnati-based
mobile home manufacturer. The
cost of a new house averages $72,000.
The cost of a fully-fUmishe&lt;j, doublewidth mobile home is about $20,000
excluding land.
"Manufactured housing has
gained acceptability," said Hayden.
"That will continue to be the caae
not only because the unit of merchandise is better, but because of the
economy (ofbuyingthem)."
The Midland Co. suffered through
the collapse of the mobile home
market during the 19'14-75 recession,
made some changes, and now finds

-.

\

'

Tea

'2491

35• QFF LABEL

64oz.
bottle
• JohnsOn's

I
. 'I
•I

'

�••

•

.·. ..·

A+-The Sunday Times-sentinel, SwtdayLMarch 9, 1980

Mobile homes beating housing blues
CINCINNATI(AP)- Therewasa
time when living In a mobile home

indicated to many people that times
were rough and probably wouldn 'I
get much better.
But rising interest rates and a
tight housing martet are changing
all that. Fewer than 15 percent of the

.•* . • .

..

Fred H. McConihay

Dora Birchfield

POMEROY- Mrs . Dora ,ir·
chfleld, 89, or Findlay, fonnerly of
Meigs County, died Friday at the
Blanchard Valley Hospital in
Findlay.
She was preceded in death by her
husband, Eli, and four children. Sur·
viving are five sons, William, Harry,
Olarles Robert, Larry Lee and
Lewis, all of Findlay, and three
daughters,
Annabell Moore,
·' . · ..
. .. . Findlay, Opal Biggs, Pomeroy, and
Virginia Smith, Clifton, W. Va.
Funeral services will be held at
1 :30 Monday at the Coldren Funeral
Home. Burial will be VanLue, Ohio.

·.
..
.
·.
.·

.
.-

.....· .. Edith R. Brewster
·'·' ..

...,
'

..

..

,•

..

·',-.

..

~

.

.·

·'

.- ·'

WAR, 1W. Va. - Edith Rebecca
Brewster, 58, War, W. Va.,motherof
Mason County Schot&gt;1 Supt. Robert
J. Brewster, died Friday in St.
Mary's Hospital, HW1tington.
Additiohal survivors include her
husband, Robert D. Brewster; a
daughter , Mrs. Pat Fullerton,
Huntington; two other sons, Tom J.
Brewster, Tazewell, Va., and
Richard A. Brewster, Squire,
W.Va.; and eight grandchildren.
Services will be held Monday at
the Peery..Sinclair Funeral Home in
Tazewell. Burial will take place in
Grandview, Va.

Charlene Lynn Castle

.

Cynthia Lynr Castle

'

.-•

PT. PLEASANT - Joint services

for Char!ene Lynn CasUe, 25, and
•'
Cynthia Lynn Castle, 4, Flatrock,
will be conducted Monday at 1:30
p.m. at Wilcoxen Funeral Home
with the Rev. John Icenhower of·
ficiating. Burial will follow in the
Forest Hills Cemetery at Letart.
The mother and daughter lost
their lives in a fire which destroyed
.·..· their home early Friday mornir •
Friends may call at the fu~eral
.···· • home
after 4 p.m. Sunday.

...

..•,-.
.•'

Carson Hayes

..

.
.'·
'.'

•
•'
::
;:
·:
'·

•
:
:
•

.: •

..

.•

..,· .

POMEROY - Carson S. Hayes,
116, a resident of Syracuse, died at his
home Saturday morning .
He was born in Zaleski, Ohio on
July 6, 1894, son of the late Olarles
and Mary Hallam Hayes.
Mr. Hayes married Hazel Shut·
tleworth Oct. 11, 1915. She survives,
along with the following children:
Raymond, Pl. Pleasant; Olarles,
Pomeroy; Vlrgll, Columbus; Carson, Jr., DesPlains, Ill.; Robert,
Ghana, Africa; William, Metropolis,
Ill.; two daughters: DaMaeBowers,
Etna, Ohio and Helen Grace
Rusche!, Pomeroy; three sisters:
Esther King, Columbus; Helen
Nease, Minersville and Grace
Gabriel, Columbus; twenty-six
grandchildren, 23 greatgrandchildren. One son and two
brothers preceded him in death.
Mr. Hayes waa a coal miner and
auto mechanic for 40 years. He
worked at the Walter Miller garage
in Pomeroy and the R. H. Rawlings
and Son garage in Middleport.
He was a member of the Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene for 22 years.
FWJeral services will be held 1
p.m. Tuesday at the Syracuse Church or the Nazarene. The body will lie
in state at the church one hour prior
to service.
Burial will be in Greenlawn
Cemetery in Nelsonville, with Rev.
Harold Holmes and Rev. Dale Bass
officiating.
'
Friends may call at the Ewing
FWleral Home in Pomeroy Bfter 7
p.m. Sunday.

PT. PLEASANT - Services for
Fred H. McConlhay, 76, Charleston
Road, will be conducted today at I
p.m. at the Wilcoxen Funeral Home
by the Rev. George Weirick. Burial
will he in the Forest Hills Cemetery,
Letart.

WELCOME WAGON CLUB
ACTIVITIES

Wednesday, MarCh 12 - Get
Acquainted Coffee, 10 a.m. at Sakina

Doctor's.

Josephine McKee
DETROIT - Mrs. Josephine
McKee, 79, Detroit, fanner Coolville
resident, died early Saturday mol'ning in Detroit after a long illness.
Bam March 3, 1901, in Pike CoWIty, Ky., the daughter of Smith and
Minnie Stacy Hatfield, she had lived
in Detroit for nine years.
Survivors include two daughters,
Mrs. B_etty Lukowski, Detroit, and
Mrs. Majel Dunn, Moundsville, W.
Va.; three sisters, Mrs. Dixie McCoy, Athens; Miss Enuna Hatfield,
Williamson, W. Va.; Mrs. Perline
Kinunerly, West Union, Ohio; one
brother, James Hatfield, Hardy, Ky.
There are also 25 grandchildren
and 18 great-grandchildren.
Preceding her in death were her
husband, Abrahsm McKee, and two
daughters, Mrs. VIrginia Hatfield,
and Juanita McKee.
Services will be held at 2 Tuesday
afternoon at Torch Baptist Church,
Torch, Ohio, with Pastor ,James
Hodge officiating, and burial will be
in Bartlett Cemetery, Bartlett, Ohio.
Friends may call at the White
Funeral Home at Coolville from 7-!1
tonight (SWiday) and at any time
Monday. The body will lie in state at
the church for one hour before the
services.

Thursday, March 13 - Luncheon
Bridge, 12noonatFranShaw's.
Saturday, March 15 - Couples
Bridge, 7:30p.m. at Trolke's.
Monday, March 17 - General
meeting, 7: 30 p.m. at the Jackson
Pike Office of the Ohio Valley Bank.
Bev Louden, guest speaker.
Thursday, March 20 - Evening
Bridge, 7:30 p.m. at Garren
Snyder's.

.·

..

i

..

,...
,..

BAUM TRUE VALUE

-.

~

...·-'
1. , •

*

·~r

•
j

i~

.

r. •

·",..'
~

-·...--

your prescriptioni'

•R

~

..

Open 9 Til 7 O.lly

ClosedSun!My .

-

The Medi cal Shoppe ( )

~

Ill -

Ph ~"lrrTlclf~Y

71}

.1.'

Pill•- 1N1IlD fUIA •IIIJ.ftl$. 00111 4161'

-~~---

4

.

OHIO

PHONE 446-959G

Prices Effective through Saturaay, March 15, 19811

GOLD KIST

Pork Loin

'1 t.

Mixed Fryer

COUNTRY
SPARE RIBS

.,,9
. LB.

ICEaURG

WASHERS AND DRYERS
IN STOCK FOR
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY.
CALl 446-2770

FRESH FLORIDA

HEAD LETTUCE
HEAD

Davis

or Nita Morris

ORANGES

39~

'109

5 LB•
BAG

0. 5. NO.1

Ask about Sears
credit plans
While quantities last.

20 LB.
BAG

Its the new Central Certificate.•.

the savings break you've beenwaiting for•
If you thought you'd never be
able to take advantage of hi gh yield,
guaranteed 6 Month Money M&lt;trket
rates, Central Trust has the pi&lt;J n for you .
We call it the Central Certificate.
In order to qualify, all you nee-d is
a minimum of $3.000 Ccntrnl Trust
will loan you the difference between
your initial deposit nnd ~. 1C.JOO At the
end of the Zli week period .. two th illJ.!~
happen . Fi~st, you receive your initi:1l
deposit back plw; interest at the high
money market rate on $10,000, less a
loan fee charged at a rate of I%:1bove
the money market rate on the amount

Second, the ·balance, of
the certificate nutomatic;1 lly pays off
the lo:1n.
The hi gh interest rates of Money
M:1rket Certificates :1rc now availnble
to you with only a minimum deposit of
$~.000. ;1 nd nrc insured hy the Feder&lt;li
Deposit Insurance Gorpormion.lf yot1
hnve nt lc:1st $1,000, come in now. Take
adv:mt;lf'l' p( this nut~t:mding savings
opportunity tod:1y.
*For example, if you deposit $3,000, the amount of
your loan will be $7,000 due in 26 weeks with a total 1

To ANtJOVNCG=A ~D NBVADDmOf.{ ...
A PLAN t!ALLED'~NI~:
'EARN IE:' IS A p~ 11-'A\ L.ETs '(OJ ~t Yo~ Mt&gt;Ne\' FT?.O~
YOIJR. SAYttJGS AcrouNT AND You~ M~ ~tJ\ YOtJe .a.ltc~NG.
A.C.COVNT ,AtiP C~1b A ct\ECKJtJCb:;:sA'II~ PLAN SOYOVCA~
c~N 5.4-~ DAILY INI~&amp;SfON ALL OF rr.(WHEW) AND '(OV
CA~ snu.. WRrrE.C . S-, TO~lf.-~£ T~JTl(I:AJ:NI&amp;' /S
iHINb. Ti-41\T.S ~~NED A12CUND: ~t
CHB1CIN' CCOUNt !JASJNV~NTa&gt;. ~VtN6'S

$6000
$9000

on the six-month '(26week) maturity Central Certificate
interest rate in effect from March
7th to March 12th which is . 14792.
The annual yield assumes you
reinvest the principal only at
.

1'

'

Deposit

---..---

MELODY MAID

CHOCOLATE DRINK
GALLON
PLASTIC

'129

.

t

L-...:..;.'
•_ _

,,'
;

MEMBER: FDIC

__.__GA_LLIPOLIS, OHIQ and MIDD_LE....,-~O~R_T,_O_HI_
O~-----'------'-·---,...J
'

c
69 DOZ.
Q:~q(kian

lctd
(.

J

CAN

~99

MRS. BtmERWORTH
PANCAKE SYRUP
36 oz.
BOmE

DOVE

UOUID
1S• OFF- LABEL
I

bottle

89~

~-':"--

WISK ---..,. .-,

22 oz.

DETERGENT

SOUTHERN OHIO DIVISION

' .

LARGE EGGS

Special

.

Valley·

GRADE -

r:--- _., This Week's

·CENTRAL 1ROsr
·COMPANY
..

F89

oz.

17 oz.
CAN

Bevetlgeware

1HE

17

SWEET PEAS

420.59
'656.82

maturity for another six months at
.the same rate however, different
/ rates may be in effect at those times.
Federa I Regulations prohibits the
compounding of interest on these
certificates.

ARGO
WHOLE KERNEL CORN

ARGO

1

Better Banking Service.Thaes The Central Idea.

'

Four location• to aerve youiJetter.
Member: FDIC ·
I
.

'119

Rate of .15792.

14058
.14636

B~sed

· StOP IN AND. AS\( ~ \-\IN\.
1

8-16 OZ. BOTILES

YOUR DEPOSIT NET ANNUt\L lNTEREST NET INTEREST EARNED
YIELD Cl\1 YOUR DEPOSIT
(26 Weeks)
1
$3000
12324
184.36

Nrxil ~ou fd.low WHY WE, ilAt.L \41"'\ ·-~NIE'_ · ·
Expect more ((om

or Din PEPSI

payment of$7.551.20 which is an A'nhual Percentage

This chart shows you the.interest you
can earnwith the new Central Certificate

OH-IO VALL.f ;'( BA.t-.l.K IS PlaJUD

2% MILK

borrowed ~-,

c

I

'1 09

VARitTIES
POUND PKG.

FRESHEST PROiJUCE !N TOWN

r

I

LB.

LUNCH MEATS

'1'~-

froin loads of features
to fit your need s,
priced for your budget.

Ask for Willard

~

4

PORK CHOPS

CHOOSE

ACCOUNT' lNtEB:SI ~D CJ4tct'/Nb A€rlJJN( ~V£MitNCt.

.

VINE STP.fl;, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

9 to 11 CHOPS

on many washers and
dryers; laundry pairs

1'----------------------....L----------------------·

-rnt:

are to be .
••

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

PORK CHOPS
7

·'

1

~ -,.

98~3301

1~71

SUPERIORS

40411CXIND A~ o - ·~111111111~ -IIICNI CIIIIIOCiaTY

STRIKE ENDS
NILES, Ohio (AP) - A strike by
Niles pollee ended with a contract
agreement Friday night, less than 11
hours after the walkout started,
Police Chief John Ross said.
Ross, the only policeman working
during the walkout in the city of
23,500, said other officers were
beginning to return to work at about

SEN'IOR CITIZENSRemember every Thursday is Doilbl~
Discount Day, 10% + a·nother 10% ()ffon
every prescription.
·

..
· ":

fill

~ .- w

$87,400 project is almost finished. It
will help meet customer requests for .
higher grades of service and nonnal
growth.
,
Rutland is a part of General's
Athens district. It serves more than
825 customers in an 86.6-square-mile
area of Meigs County.

..

'The most important thing we'll

do today is

RUTLAND - Customers in the
northern portion of Genera 1
Telephone Co. of Ohio's Rutland exchange soon will benefit from a
major expansion of outdoor cable
distribution, the company announced today.
Jim L. Parker of Athens,
customer service manag•r. said the

OVRDC officers for
elected.

Parts

Ready to be slipped on your finger.
All in our wide seleclion of heavenly diamonds
in glorious mounlings. At down-lo-earth
prices. We'll show you many different shapes ...
many different sizes. Come choose your
dazzler that puis heaven close at hand brill ianlly.

SINe£
1

_.
.,.............. ,
.,.., ""••· ••

....... ...... •J' ....

Pit.

ARE OUT-Of-THIS WORLD

~COLD •

•·

.

J

UuR WITHIN-YOUR-REACH DIAMONDS

IS GETTING

..

"

o.......... .. oo- .............. .... ..

JlJS\ A"Bour 11ft
....

" 0 , . • "!.,&lt; • .. ~ ...... 0 •¥' . . . .

year, and to make appointments to
functional area conunittees. New

45

STEAK

.'
.,..

$87,400 project nears completion

... .............
·- .. ....... ,, -·····

WE HAVE OVER

SAID YOUR

,•
'•

t!

~

*

*

YOUR WIF E

•'

$355

human services director , will address members with an upda~e on
OVRDC activities and achievements
of the past year.
Members from Adams, Brown,
Clermont, Gallia, Highland ,
Jackson, Lawrence, Pike, Ross,
Scioto and Vinton counties will
caucus in individual sessions to
review membership and select their
executive board members for the

'60tol90

*

DAN,

..

.•

Hayden listed some advantages to
mobile home buying. ~e home
manufacturers are controlled by the
federal government. Most are approved by the FHA and VA. Mobile
homes can be financed over as many
as 25 years, and they're trading
today as If they were conventional
homes.
Midland vice-president Michael

BUY

. CHILUCOTHE - The annual
organizational meeting of the Ohio
Valley Regional Development Commission (OVRDC) is scheduled Wed·
nesday, March 19, at the Holiday Inn
here, beginning with a dinner at 6
p.m.
During the full commission
meeting, after the dinner, Robert
Schwable, OVRDC executive direc·
tor, and J elf Spencer. OVRDC

SAVE

.

-.

1978.

VRDC annual meeting slatedMarchl9

LB.

·'

,

~

Conston said mobllebomes ~
~I $18 pewlthrSIIIJ8!"! (:' ~ build;
CIJmpared
abOut ~1 or COli'
venttonal ~·
;
Hayden pointed out that more ansl
more areas of the United States are
seeing ''st!ck·bullt" ~ neJ.t
factory-built. He said its impoeslbl~·
to tell the difference between 1118;
two. Older, more heavily populated:
cities don't see as JII8JIY mobil
homes as lt:dll populous areas, hC:
sal~, because older cities generaiJx:
don t have the land.
-;:
•
"

ilselfinastrongerpositionthanever
before. Sales totaled ~.7 million in
1978, compared with $46.8 million In

David F. Napper, Sr.
POMEROY - David F. Napper,
Sr., 69, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, died early
Saturday morning at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Napper was born April1, 1910
in Vinton County to the late Elmer
and Lucille Freeman Napper. On
Nov. 9, 1940 he married Mary E .
SearleS Napper who preceded him in
death Aug. 21, 1959. He was also
preceded in death by three sons, one
daughter, three brothers, two sisters
and one granddaughter. He was a
coal miner .
He is survived by five sons, David,
Jr., Rutland; Darrell, Harrisonville; Charles and Raymond at
home, and Leonard Napper Oiler,
Colwnbus; five daughterss, Mrs.
Carl (Mary) Still, Middleport; Mrs.
Richard (Violet) Riggleman,
Newark; Mrs. Stephen (Shirley)
Might, Rutland; Mrs. Walter
(Dollie) Brewer, Columbus, and
Mrs. Charles (Betty) Patterson,
Harrisonville; 21grandchildren,one
great-granddaughter, two brothers,
Clarence Napper, Racine, and
Wilbur Napper, Marietta; one
sister, Mrs. Thomas (Edna) Oiler,
Colwnbus, and several nieces,
nephews and cousins.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the Walker
Funeral Home, Rutland, with the
Rev. lloyd D. Brimm, Jr., of.
ficiating. Burial will be In Miles
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home after 2 p.m. Monday
until time of services. Tbe family
will receive friends at the funeral
home Monday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m .

A-6-'l'bll Sunday Time&amp;.'ientinel, Sunday, March 9, 1960

.------------------------1

llp.m..

·'

people who want their own homes
can afford them, according to Jay
Janis, chalnnan of the Home Loan
Bank Board. That figure is about
half of what it was 10 years ago.
"Many young marrieds today can·
not afford the subdivision house that
once was the dream house," said
J.P. Hayden, Jr., president of the
Midland Co., a Cincinnati-based
mobile home manufacturer. The
cost of a new house averages $72,000.
The cost of a fully-fUmishe&lt;j, doublewidth mobile home is about $20,000
excluding land.
"Manufactured housing has
gained acceptability," said Hayden.
"That will continue to be the caae
not only because the unit of merchandise is better, but because of the
economy (ofbuyingthem)."
The Midland Co. suffered through
the collapse of the mobile home
market during the 19'14-75 recession,
made some changes, and now finds

-.

\

'

Tea

'2491

35• QFF LABEL

64oz.
bottle
• JohnsOn's

I
. 'I
•I

'

�-f

.....

A~ The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday,

First annual meeting set

.••..

........

COLUMBUS - The Ohio Rural
Health Association will hold Its first
Annual Meeting, Wednesd'ay, March
26, 180 at the Ramada IM, I-71 and
Stringtown Road here.
Membership in the Association Is
open to any individual or agency interested in the promotion of quality
health care for residents of rural
Ohio.
,
Among the guest speakers at the

i

~

(
~
~

...~

i

~
:ii

.;:

"'•....

·&gt;'

t

meeting will be Dr. Willlam Fllnn,
Associate Chairman, Department d.

II,

••
«·

'...
-'!

••

iZ

••
••
••

GALLIPOLIS - A Gallipolis man
found guilty earUer this week dW'ing
a jury tr;al to a charge of DWI was
sentenced in Gallipolis Municipal
Court Friday. Phillip Bocook, 42,
was.sentenced to a $300 fine, plus a
six month sentence: Judge James A.
BeMett additionally suspended
Bocook's llcense for a period of three
years.
Five other cases were terminated
in Municipal Court Friday.
Charles A. Beach, 25, Vinton, forfeited po on a charge of improper

Development; State • Senator H.
Cooper Snyder; Jim Kennelly, Appalachian Regional Commission;
Jim Arndt, Rural Health Initiative
programs, DHEW and Bob Unstrolil, Olalnnan d. the Ohio
Association of Areawide Healto
Planning Agencies.
A registration fee d $10 is
required for the meeting. Reser- ,i
vations may ~ made by contacting
the Ohio Rural Health Assoctation,
M
Mid Ohio Health Planning
Federation, 47'k East Main Street,
Chillicothe ; The Ohio Valley Health
Services Foundation, 1 Blue Une
Avenue, Athens, Ohio or the
Southern Ohio Health Network, 4030
Mt. Carmel, Tobasco, Road, Cincinnati, Ohio.

Agricultural Economics and Rw-al
Sociology, Ohio state University;
Robert Stutz, Manager of Local
Govenunent Serllces, Department
. of Economic and Community

JUVENILE COURT
POMEROY - Seven juveniles appeared before Judge Robert E. Buck
all on traffic chargea.
VeteraJIS Memorial H011pltal
Fined were Dale Curry, 16,
Admissions - Margaret Justice,
Pomeroy, $15 and cOOs, speeding;
Middleport; Hobart Raub ,
Lawrence Cundiff, 17, Rt. 1, Racine,
Pomeroy; Eleanor Gordon, St.
$12 and costa, speeding; David
Clairsville; Leslie Whittington, Jr.,
Wilkes, 16, Rt. 1, Rutland, $10 and
Middleport; Antone Lu~ke,
costs,
speed in excess; Clifford
Syracuse; Ithmer Neal, Middleport;
Murray,l7,
Pomeroy, $11 and costs,
Murl OW's, Long Bottom; Betty
speeding;
Kevin
Ferrell, 17, Rt. 1,
Reed, Pomeroy; Adam Riffle,
Middleport,
$12
and
costa, speeding,
Pomeroy; Addie Pullins, Pomeroy;
as
a
repeat
traffic
offender
Ferrell's
Abna Young, Pomeroy; Michael
operating prlvlleges were suspenAmodio, Middleport.
Discharges - Cloyd Brookover, · ded; Greg Walker, 17, ' Rt. 1,
Florida Casto, Noell Dawson,, Rutland, t5 and costa, left of center;
Desmond Jeffers, Douglas Kitchen, Kenneth Haning, 17, Middleport, $15
and costs, speeding.
Michele Lee, Ruth Larkins .

~

~·

A-?COURTimNEWS:SuntUt~ ~===~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!;!!!!!

March 9, 19110

Waiving $30 on a charge ol inGallipolis.
Fined or forfeiting bond on
charges ol excessive speed were
Cllff Vixon, 50, Gallipolis, $31 ;
Richard E. Lewis, 35, Gallipolis,
$32; and, Margaret E. Layne, 19,
Bidwell, po,

TRUSTEES TO MEET

.GALLIPOLIS
Marlin
Wedemeyer, Rio Grand~ mayor,
was elected president of the Gallla
County Health AdviSory council at
its recent meeting.
.
Other officers elected were Gary
Bane, vice president and Pam Ramsey, secretary.
·
·
Dr. Gerald Vallee, county health
commissioner, presented a report on
the various program initiated by the
Gallla County Health Department
including the school athletic
pbyslcals, mosquito control and the
soUd waste and disposal program.
He noted a big specific concern was
the ellmlnation of the Green Box
program.
Dr. Vallee, also, presented a
report on a comparatively new
program, W. I. C. (Women, Infants,
and Children), which Is under the
direction of PhYllis Brown. At the
present time, there are 253 participants in this govenunent funded
program.
Although the W. I. C. is a
relatively new program, it appears
to be initially successful.
Frank Ruff was re-elected to the
Gallia County Health Board for
another five year term which ex·
p~ April30, 1985.

~­

......

PRIZE WINNER - Winner of a $15. cash prize,
second place, given as an award in a safety contest
staged by Foote Mineral Corp., Graham Station, W.
Va., for children with relatives working at the company's plant was Deena White, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Darrell White, New Haven. A third grader, taught
by Sue Thacker at the New Haven Elementary School,

o'(

Does your car suffer
from tired
front-end parts?

.~:,.,
:.
.'·.,;,.,
,~

Deena is pictured receiving her prize from Richard R.
(Dick) Rupe, Pomeroy, production manager of the
plant. Under the rules of the contest, students one
through six, wrote do's and don't's for home safety.
Deena is the granddaughter of Mrs. Mary Jane Tennant, a Foote Mineral employe.

Seven out of every ten cars and light trucks
on the road today need steering and suspension work. Come In today and let us check the
front-end. II could be the most Important lew
minutes you've ever spent.

... Shortage

in applicants,
!~ making hiring difficulty

"'••...,.&lt;

.&lt;•'

:i

;:
~

v

~

~

:1

!1
j
~
~
~

.1;
~
~
~

PORTSMOUTH - A shortage of
skilled and technically trained applicants is making more difficult the
task of hiring minorities for jobs at
the nuclear energy plant in Pike
County, Diggs Dalton, affinnative
action officer for Goodyear Atomic
Corp., told Ohio Valley Regional
Development Commission (OVRDC) minority caucus members.
Speaking to the group in OVRDC
offices, Dalton said he hopes to work
with the caucus members in order to
promote training so that minorities
will be available to positions earmarked for minority groups.
"There is a great demand for

minority engineers, and few
qualified to take the jobs," he said.
"We also are faced with a problem
of skilled minority craftsmen in this
area. We can't find enough qualified
people to fill existing vacancies for
minority and women technicians."
Dalton suggested that caucus
members encourage young people to
prepare themselves through
specialized training, and noted that
Shswnee State College Is offering
four introductory courses which
would qualify minority applicants
for jobs.
He said it appears that young
people are not aware that the

TOM'S
AUTO
CLINIC
SPRING VALLEY PLAZA GALLIPOLIS

technical training is available, and
that such training is required for
available jobs and jobs which may
open in the future through plant expansion.
"If you hope to see more minority
hiring, you'll have to help with better technical training,':' he told the
group. Caucus members agreed to
assist in any way possible to encourage technical training and to
help inform potential employes of
available training facilities.
Members are to discuss the ·
situation further when they caucus
at the full commission meeting Mar·ch 19at Chillicothe.

••,,•
·· p;.~~~~~~;;;;;;;;~~~
L!

I

REBA TEl REBATEI REBA TEl

~ NOW "THALER FORD" JOINS FORD
~

...••.

446-4744

Point Pleasant Federa·l

SHOWER RESCHEDULED
The shower for the Rev. Noah
Burgess family who lost everything
. in a fire recently has been_
rescheduled for Saturday, March 8
fmn 2-4 p.m. in the Town house~
Morgan Center. This Is being sponsoed by the Morgan Center Mission .
Everyone Is welcome.

IS NOW EVEN BETTER!
Now, you can choose from two floating rate certificates
at Point Pleasant Federal!-Our short-term, high yielding 6month money market certificate has a new partner ... a new
21!2-year money market certificate with a guaranteed ihterest rate which is determined mcnthly in accordance with
the average 21f2.year yield for U.S. Treiltsury Securities.

NEW

OMBER

&amp;·MONTH
MONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE

.

.792%

.r

,·'•'

;••

..'·

THA

••
::.: ll:iiiiiii~~---;~~~·"~lT~~~T~A~K~E~S~A~M=IN~U~T~E~T~O~T:R~A~D·E~"""~-~;;;~~

:!
~

i:

,.
Iii.

~

....,

j

1979 GRANADA
vinyl roof, 302 V·8, autom ., w-s-w ,

split bench seats, tilt wheel, air,

buck. seats, air cond., stereo and
more.

speed control, V·B, autom. , wsw,
stereo and more.

V-8, autom., air, p.s., p.b., P.
seat, wsw, speed control, stereo,

$7469.00

59103.00

Sticker
Discount
Was
Thaler Rebate

NOW

579.00
$6890.00
500 .00

'6390

1979
MERC. MAROUIS
II 362 , 2 door Brougham, silver
meta l lic , v. roof. 351 V ·8, P. seats,

twin comfort, wsw, autom., tilt
wh eel, cruise control. air, am-fm
stereo &amp; lots of other options.
Sticker
59348.00
Discount
lS48.00

New Price·
Thaler Rebate

'1979 FORD F-250

11• ton, dark blue, 133" w .b., wide
bed, 351 V·8, automatic, p.s .• p.b.,
limited slip axle, 10 ply t;res, au)( .
spr .. 700 gvw pk . R/sted .
New Truck
$85~5 . 00

New Price
Thaler Rebate

NOW

Sticker
Discount
New Price
Thaler Rebate

2215.00
1380.00

1513.00
7590.00
500.00

'7090
1979
MARQUIS
774, Brougham 4 door, pastel

am·fm and more .
Sticker
Discount
New Price
Thaler Rebate

$10,093.00
1681.00
.58410.00

NOW

~

chamois, w/alr, 351 V -8, autom,

p.s" p.b., v. roof, 6-way p. seat,

am-fm stereo, speed control, plus

more&amp; more .
Slicker
Discount
New Price

Tahter Rebate
NOW

NOW

Price
Discount

N610, 4 door, demo., dk. Corovan,

$10,025.00
1665.00

8:UO.OO

1979 FORD
II 27, 2 door sedan, demo. , dove .
gr•v. 351 V·8, p.s., p.b., air,
au tom ., split bench seat, wsw, tilt
wheel. speed j:ontrol, air &amp; lots

more .

Sticker
Discount
New..,.Price
Tha1er Rebate

FAIRMONTS ·ZEPHYRS

Price

FROM FORD '500 REBATE

Thaler Rebate

09

SAVORY SLICED

BACON .................. ~.

CHICKEN

·-·

'.

Drumstick oR Breasts.·.
Chicken Thighs.....~
·USDA CHOICE BONELESS

59

Chuck

59130.00
200.00
7130.00
500.00

NOW

7-1980 4x4 PU's

Bow cushloJ1 and padded
back rests, sfbrage compart·

"
,.•

...
H
~

$5110 minimum depoelt. New ratee eet
monthly. Interest compounded delly from
·
day or depoalf through maturlfy;

·'

••'

•.

~

•..
~

"
~

•
••

'

So,. if you want the best for your
savings dollar,
.
Ta.lk to us at .Point Pleasant Federal
Stlbltantlallnternt PtniiiY lOr Early Withdrawal

"·

.. ,

..

••• ·

:
••
•

•
•
•"•
••
•
w

Point Pleasant.. ......
.FSLIC
.Federal .
-·-•..,-c
_.__ ......... .
.Savings
&amp;
Loau
Assotjation .
·
.
.

F

Thaler Ford Instant Rebate

'

.......

.

612 V141nd Street

.

675·2500
.I

,.

'415 Mli• Strt.et

· 'Optional equipment for copvert!ng this runabout to a
fishing bo•t are: the drop·in
deck section .with plastic well
beneath that serves as a base
for the forward deck, folding
choir with a lift out pedestal
for e8Sy handling, an electric
1111 pump and electric clr·
cu!atlng pump which make ·
the rear cooler Into an al\rated
live well, and a bow panel with ·
vo11meter, 12124 vo!\ plug, '
c!gare"e lighter and tilt
switch. Option•! \!(!Uipmentto
further dress up your r19 In·
elude : a vinyl .fop with stor,age
boot, a vinyl walk thru cur·
t•ln, clear vinyl side curt•lns
and vinyl rear curtain.

ICE CREAM ....... ~.~
VALLEY BELL
FtAVORITE
'
$
M
·ILK.... .-.... ~~ ....
2%
M-ac. &amp;"Chees&amp;.7.4/$
PlASTIC

675·6890 .
••

99
·.
J

•

69 :

..

EXTRA LARGE

·.fRANCO-AMERICAN··
.
'

.

'

.

EGGS....•............~.

SpagheHi-:0 ... :~.~

•"NAVY BEANS .

'

FLA

TOILET
TISSUE
'
.8 ROU
$139
PACK
Limit 1 Per customer

"TWO'S BEnER THAll ONE"

'

under the bow seat. ·
reclining lounge seals, an In·
sulated ~oo!er, a full aft deck
with separate hinged !Ids tor
access to fuel lank and battery
and bilge area, molded sur'
· laces In the deck for trolling
motor mount,lng, tempered·
gloss walk thru windshield,
electric bilge pump, Inland
rule
navigation
lights,
mech•nlcal steering, and a
lock!nil glove box. Exclusive
Flberk!ng foam sandwich con·
strucllon.
m~nts

EFFECTIVE ANNUAL YIELD OF 12.75%
EF-rECTIVE MARCH 1st, THRU .MARCH 31st, 1980

R~ul,..sa

•

FlAVORITE

1,2 .00%

e Federal Regulations

LETTUCE
...........
~~~.
...

SPORTSMASTER

351 V·8, automatic, p.s. , p.b ..
" Ranger Pk .", 10 ply tires, R.
step bump .• T. glass, r•dlo.
·New Truck

New Price

7-1980 BRONCOS

58552.00
1282.00
57270.00

21f2·YEAR
MONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE
...1

'I• ton bronze, 133" w.b. wide bed,

Discount

A PORK LOIN .... ~.~

1

MA~CH 12th, 198~
$10,000 minimum deposit. New rates. set
weekly. ·Federal regulations prohibit c.om·
pounding or lntereefduring
term or account..
.

NOW

THUNDERBIRDS • COUGARS
FROM FORD '300 REBATE

Ground

$ 49
Beef.........L!~~

EFFECTIVE MARCH 6th THRU

1979 MERC.
GRAN MARQUIS
11 537, 4 dr. sedan, dk . blue, 351

N 223, 2 door , demo., dk. blue,

1979 LTD LANDAU

PRICES EFFECTIVE

BOATS
for 1980

;

01

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
SATURDAY, MARat 15, 1980

Wedemeyer neJJIUlll!R
advisory council

CHESTER - Chester Township
Trustees will meet Tuesday, March
11, at 7:30p.m. at the Chester Town
Hall.

.

~
...

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

secure load was Ronnie L. Angel, 31,

.!;

}.:

Mon •.sat. 8 am-10 pm

passing.

••
••~
.r
.,.
••
t"",,.,

Store HouiS:

· $00CI Onlv at Powell's
ott,tr Expires Nlllr. 1980 · .

2LB.
PKG.

09

.
Limit 1 Per (:ustomer·,

Powell'I

19•

-

BABY FOOD

·21'l .

~ood. Only itr

GERBER
STRAINED~-.
.

•

4.50 oz.

·6/$1.

MAXWELL. HOUSE

·coFFEE
2 LB.
ALL GlliNDS
. (05015 .

$599
.
..
. .

�-f

.....

A~ The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday,

First annual meeting set

.••..

........

COLUMBUS - The Ohio Rural
Health Association will hold Its first
Annual Meeting, Wednesd'ay, March
26, 180 at the Ramada IM, I-71 and
Stringtown Road here.
Membership in the Association Is
open to any individual or agency interested in the promotion of quality
health care for residents of rural
Ohio.
,
Among the guest speakers at the

i

~

(
~
~

...~

i

~
:ii

.;:

"'•....

·&gt;'

t

meeting will be Dr. Willlam Fllnn,
Associate Chairman, Department d.

II,

••
«·

'...
-'!

••

iZ

••
••
••

GALLIPOLIS - A Gallipolis man
found guilty earUer this week dW'ing
a jury tr;al to a charge of DWI was
sentenced in Gallipolis Municipal
Court Friday. Phillip Bocook, 42,
was.sentenced to a $300 fine, plus a
six month sentence: Judge James A.
BeMett additionally suspended
Bocook's llcense for a period of three
years.
Five other cases were terminated
in Municipal Court Friday.
Charles A. Beach, 25, Vinton, forfeited po on a charge of improper

Development; State • Senator H.
Cooper Snyder; Jim Kennelly, Appalachian Regional Commission;
Jim Arndt, Rural Health Initiative
programs, DHEW and Bob Unstrolil, Olalnnan d. the Ohio
Association of Areawide Healto
Planning Agencies.
A registration fee d $10 is
required for the meeting. Reser- ,i
vations may ~ made by contacting
the Ohio Rural Health Assoctation,
M
Mid Ohio Health Planning
Federation, 47'k East Main Street,
Chillicothe ; The Ohio Valley Health
Services Foundation, 1 Blue Une
Avenue, Athens, Ohio or the
Southern Ohio Health Network, 4030
Mt. Carmel, Tobasco, Road, Cincinnati, Ohio.

Agricultural Economics and Rw-al
Sociology, Ohio state University;
Robert Stutz, Manager of Local
Govenunent Serllces, Department
. of Economic and Community

JUVENILE COURT
POMEROY - Seven juveniles appeared before Judge Robert E. Buck
all on traffic chargea.
VeteraJIS Memorial H011pltal
Fined were Dale Curry, 16,
Admissions - Margaret Justice,
Pomeroy, $15 and cOOs, speeding;
Middleport; Hobart Raub ,
Lawrence Cundiff, 17, Rt. 1, Racine,
Pomeroy; Eleanor Gordon, St.
$12 and costa, speeding; David
Clairsville; Leslie Whittington, Jr.,
Wilkes, 16, Rt. 1, Rutland, $10 and
Middleport; Antone Lu~ke,
costs,
speed in excess; Clifford
Syracuse; Ithmer Neal, Middleport;
Murray,l7,
Pomeroy, $11 and costs,
Murl OW's, Long Bottom; Betty
speeding;
Kevin
Ferrell, 17, Rt. 1,
Reed, Pomeroy; Adam Riffle,
Middleport,
$12
and
costa, speeding,
Pomeroy; Addie Pullins, Pomeroy;
as
a
repeat
traffic
offender
Ferrell's
Abna Young, Pomeroy; Michael
operating prlvlleges were suspenAmodio, Middleport.
Discharges - Cloyd Brookover, · ded; Greg Walker, 17, ' Rt. 1,
Florida Casto, Noell Dawson,, Rutland, t5 and costa, left of center;
Desmond Jeffers, Douglas Kitchen, Kenneth Haning, 17, Middleport, $15
and costs, speeding.
Michele Lee, Ruth Larkins .

~

~·

A-?COURTimNEWS:SuntUt~ ~===~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!;!!!!!

March 9, 19110

Waiving $30 on a charge ol inGallipolis.
Fined or forfeiting bond on
charges ol excessive speed were
Cllff Vixon, 50, Gallipolis, $31 ;
Richard E. Lewis, 35, Gallipolis,
$32; and, Margaret E. Layne, 19,
Bidwell, po,

TRUSTEES TO MEET

.GALLIPOLIS
Marlin
Wedemeyer, Rio Grand~ mayor,
was elected president of the Gallla
County Health AdviSory council at
its recent meeting.
.
Other officers elected were Gary
Bane, vice president and Pam Ramsey, secretary.
·
·
Dr. Gerald Vallee, county health
commissioner, presented a report on
the various program initiated by the
Gallla County Health Department
including the school athletic
pbyslcals, mosquito control and the
soUd waste and disposal program.
He noted a big specific concern was
the ellmlnation of the Green Box
program.
Dr. Vallee, also, presented a
report on a comparatively new
program, W. I. C. (Women, Infants,
and Children), which Is under the
direction of PhYllis Brown. At the
present time, there are 253 participants in this govenunent funded
program.
Although the W. I. C. is a
relatively new program, it appears
to be initially successful.
Frank Ruff was re-elected to the
Gallia County Health Board for
another five year term which ex·
p~ April30, 1985.

~­

......

PRIZE WINNER - Winner of a $15. cash prize,
second place, given as an award in a safety contest
staged by Foote Mineral Corp., Graham Station, W.
Va., for children with relatives working at the company's plant was Deena White, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Darrell White, New Haven. A third grader, taught
by Sue Thacker at the New Haven Elementary School,

o'(

Does your car suffer
from tired
front-end parts?

.~:,.,
:.
.'·.,;,.,
,~

Deena is pictured receiving her prize from Richard R.
(Dick) Rupe, Pomeroy, production manager of the
plant. Under the rules of the contest, students one
through six, wrote do's and don't's for home safety.
Deena is the granddaughter of Mrs. Mary Jane Tennant, a Foote Mineral employe.

Seven out of every ten cars and light trucks
on the road today need steering and suspension work. Come In today and let us check the
front-end. II could be the most Important lew
minutes you've ever spent.

... Shortage

in applicants,
!~ making hiring difficulty

"'••...,.&lt;

.&lt;•'

:i

;:
~

v

~

~

:1

!1
j
~
~
~

.1;
~
~
~

PORTSMOUTH - A shortage of
skilled and technically trained applicants is making more difficult the
task of hiring minorities for jobs at
the nuclear energy plant in Pike
County, Diggs Dalton, affinnative
action officer for Goodyear Atomic
Corp., told Ohio Valley Regional
Development Commission (OVRDC) minority caucus members.
Speaking to the group in OVRDC
offices, Dalton said he hopes to work
with the caucus members in order to
promote training so that minorities
will be available to positions earmarked for minority groups.
"There is a great demand for

minority engineers, and few
qualified to take the jobs," he said.
"We also are faced with a problem
of skilled minority craftsmen in this
area. We can't find enough qualified
people to fill existing vacancies for
minority and women technicians."
Dalton suggested that caucus
members encourage young people to
prepare themselves through
specialized training, and noted that
Shswnee State College Is offering
four introductory courses which
would qualify minority applicants
for jobs.
He said it appears that young
people are not aware that the

TOM'S
AUTO
CLINIC
SPRING VALLEY PLAZA GALLIPOLIS

technical training is available, and
that such training is required for
available jobs and jobs which may
open in the future through plant expansion.
"If you hope to see more minority
hiring, you'll have to help with better technical training,':' he told the
group. Caucus members agreed to
assist in any way possible to encourage technical training and to
help inform potential employes of
available training facilities.
Members are to discuss the ·
situation further when they caucus
at the full commission meeting Mar·ch 19at Chillicothe.

••,,•
·· p;.~~~~~~;;;;;;;;~~~
L!

I

REBA TEl REBATEI REBA TEl

~ NOW "THALER FORD" JOINS FORD
~

...••.

446-4744

Point Pleasant Federa·l

SHOWER RESCHEDULED
The shower for the Rev. Noah
Burgess family who lost everything
. in a fire recently has been_
rescheduled for Saturday, March 8
fmn 2-4 p.m. in the Town house~
Morgan Center. This Is being sponsoed by the Morgan Center Mission .
Everyone Is welcome.

IS NOW EVEN BETTER!
Now, you can choose from two floating rate certificates
at Point Pleasant Federal!-Our short-term, high yielding 6month money market certificate has a new partner ... a new
21!2-year money market certificate with a guaranteed ihterest rate which is determined mcnthly in accordance with
the average 21f2.year yield for U.S. Treiltsury Securities.

NEW

OMBER

&amp;·MONTH
MONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE

.

.792%

.r

,·'•'

;••

..'·

THA

••
::.: ll:iiiiiii~~---;~~~·"~lT~~~T~A~K~E~S~A~M=IN~U~T~E~T~O~T:R~A~D·E~"""~-~;;;~~

:!
~

i:

,.
Iii.

~

....,

j

1979 GRANADA
vinyl roof, 302 V·8, autom ., w-s-w ,

split bench seats, tilt wheel, air,

buck. seats, air cond., stereo and
more.

speed control, V·B, autom. , wsw,
stereo and more.

V-8, autom., air, p.s., p.b., P.
seat, wsw, speed control, stereo,

$7469.00

59103.00

Sticker
Discount
Was
Thaler Rebate

NOW

579.00
$6890.00
500 .00

'6390

1979
MERC. MAROUIS
II 362 , 2 door Brougham, silver
meta l lic , v. roof. 351 V ·8, P. seats,

twin comfort, wsw, autom., tilt
wh eel, cruise control. air, am-fm
stereo &amp; lots of other options.
Sticker
59348.00
Discount
lS48.00

New Price·
Thaler Rebate

'1979 FORD F-250

11• ton, dark blue, 133" w .b., wide
bed, 351 V·8, automatic, p.s .• p.b.,
limited slip axle, 10 ply t;res, au)( .
spr .. 700 gvw pk . R/sted .
New Truck
$85~5 . 00

New Price
Thaler Rebate

NOW

Sticker
Discount
New Price
Thaler Rebate

2215.00
1380.00

1513.00
7590.00
500.00

'7090
1979
MARQUIS
774, Brougham 4 door, pastel

am·fm and more .
Sticker
Discount
New Price
Thaler Rebate

$10,093.00
1681.00
.58410.00

NOW

~

chamois, w/alr, 351 V -8, autom,

p.s" p.b., v. roof, 6-way p. seat,

am-fm stereo, speed control, plus

more&amp; more .
Slicker
Discount
New Price

Tahter Rebate
NOW

NOW

Price
Discount

N610, 4 door, demo., dk. Corovan,

$10,025.00
1665.00

8:UO.OO

1979 FORD
II 27, 2 door sedan, demo. , dove .
gr•v. 351 V·8, p.s., p.b., air,
au tom ., split bench seat, wsw, tilt
wheel. speed j:ontrol, air &amp; lots

more .

Sticker
Discount
New..,.Price
Tha1er Rebate

FAIRMONTS ·ZEPHYRS

Price

FROM FORD '500 REBATE

Thaler Rebate

09

SAVORY SLICED

BACON .................. ~.

CHICKEN

·-·

'.

Drumstick oR Breasts.·.
Chicken Thighs.....~
·USDA CHOICE BONELESS

59

Chuck

59130.00
200.00
7130.00
500.00

NOW

7-1980 4x4 PU's

Bow cushloJ1 and padded
back rests, sfbrage compart·

"
,.•

...
H
~

$5110 minimum depoelt. New ratee eet
monthly. Interest compounded delly from
·
day or depoalf through maturlfy;

·'

••'

•.

~

•..
~

"
~

•
••

'

So,. if you want the best for your
savings dollar,
.
Ta.lk to us at .Point Pleasant Federal
Stlbltantlallnternt PtniiiY lOr Early Withdrawal

"·

.. ,

..

••• ·

:
••
•

•
•
•"•
••
•
w

Point Pleasant.. ......
.FSLIC
.Federal .
-·-•..,-c
_.__ ......... .
.Savings
&amp;
Loau
Assotjation .
·
.
.

F

Thaler Ford Instant Rebate

'

.......

.

612 V141nd Street

.

675·2500
.I

,.

'415 Mli• Strt.et

· 'Optional equipment for copvert!ng this runabout to a
fishing bo•t are: the drop·in
deck section .with plastic well
beneath that serves as a base
for the forward deck, folding
choir with a lift out pedestal
for e8Sy handling, an electric
1111 pump and electric clr·
cu!atlng pump which make ·
the rear cooler Into an al\rated
live well, and a bow panel with ·
vo11meter, 12124 vo!\ plug, '
c!gare"e lighter and tilt
switch. Option•! \!(!Uipmentto
further dress up your r19 In·
elude : a vinyl .fop with stor,age
boot, a vinyl walk thru cur·
t•ln, clear vinyl side curt•lns
and vinyl rear curtain.

ICE CREAM ....... ~.~
VALLEY BELL
FtAVORITE
'
$
M
·ILK.... .-.... ~~ ....
2%
M-ac. &amp;"Chees&amp;.7.4/$
PlASTIC

675·6890 .
••

99
·.
J

•

69 :

..

EXTRA LARGE

·.fRANCO-AMERICAN··
.
'

.

'

.

EGGS....•............~.

SpagheHi-:0 ... :~.~

•"NAVY BEANS .

'

FLA

TOILET
TISSUE
'
.8 ROU
$139
PACK
Limit 1 Per customer

"TWO'S BEnER THAll ONE"

'

under the bow seat. ·
reclining lounge seals, an In·
sulated ~oo!er, a full aft deck
with separate hinged !Ids tor
access to fuel lank and battery
and bilge area, molded sur'
· laces In the deck for trolling
motor mount,lng, tempered·
gloss walk thru windshield,
electric bilge pump, Inland
rule
navigation
lights,
mech•nlcal steering, and a
lock!nil glove box. Exclusive
Flberk!ng foam sandwich con·
strucllon.
m~nts

EFFECTIVE ANNUAL YIELD OF 12.75%
EF-rECTIVE MARCH 1st, THRU .MARCH 31st, 1980

R~ul,..sa

•

FlAVORITE

1,2 .00%

e Federal Regulations

LETTUCE
...........
~~~.
...

SPORTSMASTER

351 V·8, automatic, p.s. , p.b ..
" Ranger Pk .", 10 ply tires, R.
step bump .• T. glass, r•dlo.
·New Truck

New Price

7-1980 BRONCOS

58552.00
1282.00
57270.00

21f2·YEAR
MONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE
...1

'I• ton bronze, 133" w.b. wide bed,

Discount

A PORK LOIN .... ~.~

1

MA~CH 12th, 198~
$10,000 minimum deposit. New rates. set
weekly. ·Federal regulations prohibit c.om·
pounding or lntereefduring
term or account..
.

NOW

THUNDERBIRDS • COUGARS
FROM FORD '300 REBATE

Ground

$ 49
Beef.........L!~~

EFFECTIVE MARCH 6th THRU

1979 MERC.
GRAN MARQUIS
11 537, 4 dr. sedan, dk . blue, 351

N 223, 2 door , demo., dk. blue,

1979 LTD LANDAU

PRICES EFFECTIVE

BOATS
for 1980

;

01

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
SATURDAY, MARat 15, 1980

Wedemeyer neJJIUlll!R
advisory council

CHESTER - Chester Township
Trustees will meet Tuesday, March
11, at 7:30p.m. at the Chester Town
Hall.

.

~
...

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

secure load was Ronnie L. Angel, 31,

.!;

}.:

Mon •.sat. 8 am-10 pm

passing.

••
••~
.r
.,.
••
t"",,.,

Store HouiS:

· $00CI Onlv at Powell's
ott,tr Expires Nlllr. 1980 · .

2LB.
PKG.

09

.
Limit 1 Per (:ustomer·,

Powell'I

19•

-

BABY FOOD

·21'l .

~ood. Only itr

GERBER
STRAINED~-.
.

•

4.50 oz.

·6/$1.

MAXWELL. HOUSE

·coFFEE
2 LB.
ALL GlliNDS
. (05015 .

$599
.
..
. .

�A.a.- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday , March 9, 1980

Racine man fails to·obtain treatment

Mining bill awaits
governor's signature
COLUMBUS - State Represen·
tative Ron James ([).Proctorville)
reported that the bill be sponsored to
improve emergency medical care at
mine sites has now passed both the
Ohio House and Senate and needs
only the governor's signature to
become law.
When effective, H.B. 419 will
require that operators of all underground mines provide emergen·
cy medical care and transportation
for injured or sick employees. To do
this, there will be miners trained in
emergency medical techniques on
duty ·at the mines at all times, and
there will be an emergency medical
service available on call at all times.
The mine operators will be required
to provide emergency medical
training to mine employees in order
to obey the new law.
Operators of strip mines will also
have to meet n' w emergency
medical care standards. If the strip
mine has twenty-five or more em·
ployees per shift within a ten mile
radius, the strip mine will have to
meet the same requirements as underground mines. Smaller strip
mine operations will only have to
provide the emergency medical ser·
vice that will be available on call to
furnish medical care and transportation to a hospitaL
The Ohio Division of Mines will
alao be required to furnish its four
rescue stations, located in Athens,
Cadiz, Cambridge, and Shadyside,
with the equipment necessary to
provide emergency medical ser·
vices and to employ rescue crews.
At least one member of the rescue
crew must be certified as an
"emergency medical technician,"
who has been trained at an in·

POMEROY - A Racine man
allegedly struck by a car early
Saturday morning at the Tall TiJn.
SQUAD RUNS

stitution accredited by the State
Board of Ellucation or State Board
of Regents.
Any violation of the provisioilB of
the bill by an operator of an underground or strip mine will be a
•
minor misdemeanor.
Although the major provisions of
the bill will not be effective until
January I, 1981, Representative
James indicated that most mine
operators are already providing
much of the emergency medical
care required by the bill, but now it
becomes mandatory.

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Emergency Squad was called to
Will's Hill near Pomeroy at 8:21
p.m. Friday for Alma Young who
was taken to Veterans Memortal
Hospital.
The Middleport Emergency Squad
went to 692 Plum St., at 1:19 a.m.
Saturday for Ell Ebersbach, a
medical patient, who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

bers Nile Club appal'I!IIUY walked
away without receiving treatmeJt
after being taken to •Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad.
According to the report filed by
Meigs County sheriff's deputies,
William Lewis, 19, Racine, was
struck or was lying on the ground in
the parking lot at the establlsbment.
William D. Lavender, Middleport,
was identified as the driver of the
car involved.
Meigs County Sheriff James J .
Proffitt reports his department will
be conducting a home security check
for the residents of Meigs County,.

Purpose of the program is to make · c:becks are Wlled to call the sheriff's
the residtnts of Meigs County aware
office at IJ92.3371 or 992-388t at 8JIY
of the CRIME PREVENTION
time and a schedule will be set up to
needed In our area, and that the
meet the convenience of residents.
primary JIIII'IIOIIe as law offlvers Is to
prevent crimes, however CRIME
MOVJENIGBTBEGINS
PREVENTION IS everybody's
business and everyone's support is
JUO GRANDE - The classic ,
movie night (Star Dates series) is· ·
needed. .
March 10, beginning at a p.m. '1bree ·
Deputies Randy Forbes and Keith
Wood have attended Crime Prevenfilms will !&gt;! shown: "A Star Is. f
tion sessiOIL!I at Hocking Technical Born," 193't version; "The Red. •.
College In Nelsonville and they will Shoes," and "Way Out West," with..;
be conducting the security checks Laurel and Hlitdy. Admission to.:
for interested residents of the coun- non-ticket holders at the door Ia $5.' ::,
ty.
The films will be shown In the •
...
Those interested In the security college cafeteria.

B
The Flags··Sue
Taylor,
Linda
Eason, Debbie
Reiser, Jellllifer
Wells, Patty Mltcbell, Rbooda
Mithcell, Margo
Martin, Jean Hor·
loa, Sbella Horky,
Kelly Rougbt,
Carla Smltb ,
Jamie Slssloo, ·Katby Qulcey,
8lld Rochelle MeDaniel.

OPEN DAILY 10.9; SUNDAY H

DINNER
RACINE - The Racine Emergency Squad will hold a public hamturkey dinner at the Southern High
School today from 11 a.m. to2 p.m.

·THE SAVING PLACE

·MO
.

.

rings
C·
97
Nylon Knee-Highs

Twin-size Sink Set

Sheer stretch nylon with nude heel,
reinforced toe. Fit sizes BY2·t 1.

Drainer , drain board, soap dish, cut·
lery bin ,was her. In colors. Shop now.

'

6-Pr. Pkg .
Our 1.37

9~Pc.
Set
Our Reg, 3.44

Golden Regime Color Guard

Luckeydoo installed as
'"

new Rotary member
MIDDLEPORT Roger
Luckeydoo was installed as a new
member of the Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary at their regular meeting
Friday night held at the Heath
United Methodist Church. Vernon
Weber was the installing officer.
Seventeen members attended the
meeting which was presided over by
Jack Walker, president. Mrs.
Luclteydoo attended as a guest.
Ladies of the church served the din·
ner.

Super smooth fit plus
comfort! Nylon /Ly''
era"' spandex blend
briefs in white. beige:
colors. One size fits
5 to 7.
"'DuPont Reg.""

DERIFIELD
JEWELRY

1
!~eg. 2. 27
Big 3-Lb. • Crisco··

"Across from
the theater''
417 Sec. Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

SfAR OF AFRICA

DlAMCN'DS·

11

' Our Reg.

1.37-1.47

J 88

our Reg. 3.88

Anti-fatigue Door Mat
18x30" vinyl mats are comfortable
to stand on , can be used indoors or
out . Marbleized or .vivid solid colors .

Save on vegetable shortening fo r
cooking , baking , frying . Shop now.

2 Days!

!R42C

YOUR FREE COPY

Jergen's 3-0z. •
Facial Soap

SAVE
21c

The world's favorite coun·
try music newspaper is in·
serted in next weekend's
issue of your newspaper!!

..

ssc~~r
Fantastik ·
Cleaner

Lotion-mild soap with
an ev e r-so-pleasing
fragran ce . Save now.

All-purpose house·
hold cleaner in 32·
oz.' trigger bottle .

" N•t w1

·F1. oz.

57

MUSIC CITY NEWS
publishes the latest country
music news, bluegrass news,
fan club rlews, and feature
articles with exclusive pic·
tures of your favorite coun·
try music entertainers.

..-

·~

POMEROY-snappy maneuvers,
colorful costuming, and upbeat
music give that special spark to the
newly organized Meigs Golden
Regime Color Guard which laSt
week~nd captured two trophies in its
first competition.
The 14 flag and six rifle bearers in·
maroon and gold outfits present a
combined dance and precision
routine to a recording of broadway,
disco and jazz music.
, And it's fascinating to watch!
Randy Hunt, Meigs High School
band director, Alan Hunt, his assis·
tant, and Vern Felt of Columbus, the
flag advisor, organized the Golden
Regime Color Guard in January.
"Purpose was to give the flag and
rifle corps an opportunity to make
up for some of the lost experience
due to the strike during the band
marching season last fall," Hunt ex·
plained.
Sponsored by the Meigs Band
Boosters which pay most of the ex·
penses, the Color Guard practices
twice a week. The basic routine re'

Our Reg. 2.57

mains the same, Hunt reports, but
changes are made in details of the
program before each performance
in.an effort to hike the judges' score.
The judges, according to the band
director, are everywhere, taking in
the general overall effect from the
sidelines, seeing howthe routine fits
together with the music, and actual·
!y going onto the floor to check in·
dividual performance.
The first weekend on the indoor
competition trail netted two third
place trophies for the Golden
Regime. The next competition wiU
he held March 15 and 16 at Sandusky
and Freemon!.
The highlight of competition will
come on April 20 when the Color
Guard goes into the flag and rifle
division of the All-American DriU
Team Association finals at Dayton.
The Meigs Golden Regime Color
Guard is one of the charter members
of the Ohio Color Guard Circuit
which consists of high school and in·
dependent corps throughout Ohio,
Michiganand Indiana

"I

By Charlene Hoeflich

Competition is not only against
other high school guards, but In·
dependent guards as well.
Other corps in the Ohio Color
Guard are St. Mary's High School at
Sandusky, New Philadelphia High
School at New Philadelphia, Lex·
ington High School at Lexington,
Bloomington High School at Bloom·
ington, Ind., the Blackhawks of
Dayton, the Militaires of Freemont,
the Rangerettes of Brooke Park, and
Fantasia of Marion.
Paula Horton, RoxaMe McDaniel
and Angie Hatfield carry the colors
for the Meigs Golden Regime. The
rifle bearers are Cathy Korn, Connie
Bailey, Carin Bailey, Rhonda
Southern, Brenda Williams and
Julie Spencer, and the flag bearers
are Sue Taylor, Linda Eason, Debbie Reiser, Jennifer Wells, Patty
Mitchell, Rhonda Mitchell, Margo
Martin, Jean Horton, Sheila Horky,
Kelly Rought, Carla Smith, Jamie
Sisson, Kathy Quivey and Rochelle
McDanieL

K mart· Auto
Air Filters
Sizes for most U.S . and
foreign cars. Save!
Alr Breather Replace·
ment Element .. , , 96'

As a subscriber, you can
cast your ballot in the fan
voted
MUSIC
NEWS
"Cover" Awards!!

'·'

snappy, vibrant, and fun!

LYCRA® STRETCH BRIEFS

I ct.

Save $2.00 when you
subscribe by enclosing the
$2.00 discount coupon on the
boHom of this page with your
complete subscription blan'k
and payment. This $2.00 dis·
count coupon offer available
through March 29, 1980. Act
today and subscribe!!
: ~~ . ··--~--------- - --- --- -i~j

Don't forget your friends.
Send a MUSIC CITY NEWS
subscription to a friend to·
day!

141~

1

HIICOliJCIItrll lllt i YOUIG il. IC
all lilt rttwl t r . II 00 IH"•C t tl I I•
111 1 IU IIIet oJ IIOII UU .Of 2 · ~ H rl
It MU J IC CITY '-~•W I - lh
WDrl~' l lt vtr!lt CO IIftl f 'f "'W I IC

I

ntw i U~tr

:
1

I

'

'
1
:

'

'I

.

...

:'

•Cannot be included in mail
subscription papers.

t

I
:
I

''

Jtt~d U .Co or II• 10 "'''h yowr

I

I

.. . ....... d acldf UIIO

'

'I
I

'-\UIIC( ITYNIWI

:

I

~ I~

11' .0 lo o llfll
OM UUIIOft
t llaw lf .

,.,

'

t ~ tll cr l,lltft

~

j

l~~~o~;!~~:~·:~·:~"~:~:-~::::~~4:-J

------------------------------,

ll )$9,00 · 1 yr. u.s .

IC
I

( )$10.00 · 1 yr. Canada

)$".00·2yr.U .S.

(

)$11.00 · 1yr. foreign

9 '

'·'

Per!l
12 Eltp.'

I&lt;

Develop.And
Pri,.t Special

1
I Ham•·- -- - - - - -- - - ' - - - - - - - - - -

Get' beautiiul bord'e rless
prints from Focal" or
Kodak" color print film .

&lt; l$60.00 • 1 yr. Airmail
)yes, I want to subscribe to MUSIC CITY NEWS - Country's llestl
J Enclosed, please lind
!check or money order · PIYible
JIR u .s. dollars only) for
year(sl subscription to MUSIC
JCITY NEWS.
slftd to:
1110

~Address
'

1.

.

I City
I

•• ,.,,,•• '"m
.

State

Zip

.

.

JMAIL TODAY TO : MUSIC CITY NEWS&lt; P.O. Box 22975, Nashvllle, ) N

1vm

lu

~~~

/

Ea. sale.._P-ric_e...;.of"'""'

Mirror Tiles

form to a combination of broadway, jau and
disco, upper rlgbt.
the color bearers,
Augela Hatfield,
Paula Horioo and
Roxanne Me·
Daalel.

The rlfies, above,
calhy Kora, eo.
ale Bailey, Carin
Bailey, RbQnda
Southern, Brenda
Williams and
Julie Spencer.
Tbe Melp Golden
C~lor Gilanl' per-

And now tile
crltlqne··Corpa
members gather
nJUDd as Randy,
Hunt, Melga H.S.
baad director,
Vem Felt, tbe.flal
advilor, .00 Alaia
Hunt, aseiataat
director, diiCIIII
waya of 'lm·
proving
lhe

12x1,2" plain tiles for decorating.

~~ Box of 12 Plein Mirror Tllea, 7.92
·'Antique' Or 'Gold Vein' Tllea,
2.95 for 20 exp.
Each 87• •.••.•• Box of 12, to.aa
. 3.46.!or&lt;24 exp.

n~Utlne.

•

·

~------~-~-~-----------------~-'

, .'t

'•
I

I

�A.a.- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday , March 9, 1980

Racine man fails to·obtain treatment

Mining bill awaits
governor's signature
COLUMBUS - State Represen·
tative Ron James ([).Proctorville)
reported that the bill be sponsored to
improve emergency medical care at
mine sites has now passed both the
Ohio House and Senate and needs
only the governor's signature to
become law.
When effective, H.B. 419 will
require that operators of all underground mines provide emergen·
cy medical care and transportation
for injured or sick employees. To do
this, there will be miners trained in
emergency medical techniques on
duty ·at the mines at all times, and
there will be an emergency medical
service available on call at all times.
The mine operators will be required
to provide emergency medical
training to mine employees in order
to obey the new law.
Operators of strip mines will also
have to meet n' w emergency
medical care standards. If the strip
mine has twenty-five or more em·
ployees per shift within a ten mile
radius, the strip mine will have to
meet the same requirements as underground mines. Smaller strip
mine operations will only have to
provide the emergency medical ser·
vice that will be available on call to
furnish medical care and transportation to a hospitaL
The Ohio Division of Mines will
alao be required to furnish its four
rescue stations, located in Athens,
Cadiz, Cambridge, and Shadyside,
with the equipment necessary to
provide emergency medical ser·
vices and to employ rescue crews.
At least one member of the rescue
crew must be certified as an
"emergency medical technician,"
who has been trained at an in·

POMEROY - A Racine man
allegedly struck by a car early
Saturday morning at the Tall TiJn.
SQUAD RUNS

stitution accredited by the State
Board of Ellucation or State Board
of Regents.
Any violation of the provisioilB of
the bill by an operator of an underground or strip mine will be a
•
minor misdemeanor.
Although the major provisions of
the bill will not be effective until
January I, 1981, Representative
James indicated that most mine
operators are already providing
much of the emergency medical
care required by the bill, but now it
becomes mandatory.

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Emergency Squad was called to
Will's Hill near Pomeroy at 8:21
p.m. Friday for Alma Young who
was taken to Veterans Memortal
Hospital.
The Middleport Emergency Squad
went to 692 Plum St., at 1:19 a.m.
Saturday for Ell Ebersbach, a
medical patient, who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

bers Nile Club appal'I!IIUY walked
away without receiving treatmeJt
after being taken to •Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad.
According to the report filed by
Meigs County sheriff's deputies,
William Lewis, 19, Racine, was
struck or was lying on the ground in
the parking lot at the establlsbment.
William D. Lavender, Middleport,
was identified as the driver of the
car involved.
Meigs County Sheriff James J .
Proffitt reports his department will
be conducting a home security check
for the residents of Meigs County,.

Purpose of the program is to make · c:becks are Wlled to call the sheriff's
the residtnts of Meigs County aware
office at IJ92.3371 or 992-388t at 8JIY
of the CRIME PREVENTION
time and a schedule will be set up to
needed In our area, and that the
meet the convenience of residents.
primary JIIII'IIOIIe as law offlvers Is to
prevent crimes, however CRIME
MOVJENIGBTBEGINS
PREVENTION IS everybody's
business and everyone's support is
JUO GRANDE - The classic ,
movie night (Star Dates series) is· ·
needed. .
March 10, beginning at a p.m. '1bree ·
Deputies Randy Forbes and Keith
Wood have attended Crime Prevenfilms will !&gt;! shown: "A Star Is. f
tion sessiOIL!I at Hocking Technical Born," 193't version; "The Red. •.
College In Nelsonville and they will Shoes," and "Way Out West," with..;
be conducting the security checks Laurel and Hlitdy. Admission to.:
for interested residents of the coun- non-ticket holders at the door Ia $5.' ::,
ty.
The films will be shown In the •
...
Those interested In the security college cafeteria.

B
The Flags··Sue
Taylor,
Linda
Eason, Debbie
Reiser, Jellllifer
Wells, Patty Mltcbell, Rbooda
Mithcell, Margo
Martin, Jean Hor·
loa, Sbella Horky,
Kelly Rougbt,
Carla Smltb ,
Jamie Slssloo, ·Katby Qulcey,
8lld Rochelle MeDaniel.

OPEN DAILY 10.9; SUNDAY H

DINNER
RACINE - The Racine Emergency Squad will hold a public hamturkey dinner at the Southern High
School today from 11 a.m. to2 p.m.

·THE SAVING PLACE

·MO
.

.

rings
C·
97
Nylon Knee-Highs

Twin-size Sink Set

Sheer stretch nylon with nude heel,
reinforced toe. Fit sizes BY2·t 1.

Drainer , drain board, soap dish, cut·
lery bin ,was her. In colors. Shop now.

'

6-Pr. Pkg .
Our 1.37

9~Pc.
Set
Our Reg, 3.44

Golden Regime Color Guard

Luckeydoo installed as
'"

new Rotary member
MIDDLEPORT Roger
Luckeydoo was installed as a new
member of the Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary at their regular meeting
Friday night held at the Heath
United Methodist Church. Vernon
Weber was the installing officer.
Seventeen members attended the
meeting which was presided over by
Jack Walker, president. Mrs.
Luclteydoo attended as a guest.
Ladies of the church served the din·
ner.

Super smooth fit plus
comfort! Nylon /Ly''
era"' spandex blend
briefs in white. beige:
colors. One size fits
5 to 7.
"'DuPont Reg.""

DERIFIELD
JEWELRY

1
!~eg. 2. 27
Big 3-Lb. • Crisco··

"Across from
the theater''
417 Sec. Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

SfAR OF AFRICA

DlAMCN'DS·

11

' Our Reg.

1.37-1.47

J 88

our Reg. 3.88

Anti-fatigue Door Mat
18x30" vinyl mats are comfortable
to stand on , can be used indoors or
out . Marbleized or .vivid solid colors .

Save on vegetable shortening fo r
cooking , baking , frying . Shop now.

2 Days!

!R42C

YOUR FREE COPY

Jergen's 3-0z. •
Facial Soap

SAVE
21c

The world's favorite coun·
try music newspaper is in·
serted in next weekend's
issue of your newspaper!!

..

ssc~~r
Fantastik ·
Cleaner

Lotion-mild soap with
an ev e r-so-pleasing
fragran ce . Save now.

All-purpose house·
hold cleaner in 32·
oz.' trigger bottle .

" N•t w1

·F1. oz.

57

MUSIC CITY NEWS
publishes the latest country
music news, bluegrass news,
fan club rlews, and feature
articles with exclusive pic·
tures of your favorite coun·
try music entertainers.

..-

·~

POMEROY-snappy maneuvers,
colorful costuming, and upbeat
music give that special spark to the
newly organized Meigs Golden
Regime Color Guard which laSt
week~nd captured two trophies in its
first competition.
The 14 flag and six rifle bearers in·
maroon and gold outfits present a
combined dance and precision
routine to a recording of broadway,
disco and jazz music.
, And it's fascinating to watch!
Randy Hunt, Meigs High School
band director, Alan Hunt, his assis·
tant, and Vern Felt of Columbus, the
flag advisor, organized the Golden
Regime Color Guard in January.
"Purpose was to give the flag and
rifle corps an opportunity to make
up for some of the lost experience
due to the strike during the band
marching season last fall," Hunt ex·
plained.
Sponsored by the Meigs Band
Boosters which pay most of the ex·
penses, the Color Guard practices
twice a week. The basic routine re'

Our Reg. 2.57

mains the same, Hunt reports, but
changes are made in details of the
program before each performance
in.an effort to hike the judges' score.
The judges, according to the band
director, are everywhere, taking in
the general overall effect from the
sidelines, seeing howthe routine fits
together with the music, and actual·
!y going onto the floor to check in·
dividual performance.
The first weekend on the indoor
competition trail netted two third
place trophies for the Golden
Regime. The next competition wiU
he held March 15 and 16 at Sandusky
and Freemon!.
The highlight of competition will
come on April 20 when the Color
Guard goes into the flag and rifle
division of the All-American DriU
Team Association finals at Dayton.
The Meigs Golden Regime Color
Guard is one of the charter members
of the Ohio Color Guard Circuit
which consists of high school and in·
dependent corps throughout Ohio,
Michiganand Indiana

"I

By Charlene Hoeflich

Competition is not only against
other high school guards, but In·
dependent guards as well.
Other corps in the Ohio Color
Guard are St. Mary's High School at
Sandusky, New Philadelphia High
School at New Philadelphia, Lex·
ington High School at Lexington,
Bloomington High School at Bloom·
ington, Ind., the Blackhawks of
Dayton, the Militaires of Freemont,
the Rangerettes of Brooke Park, and
Fantasia of Marion.
Paula Horton, RoxaMe McDaniel
and Angie Hatfield carry the colors
for the Meigs Golden Regime. The
rifle bearers are Cathy Korn, Connie
Bailey, Carin Bailey, Rhonda
Southern, Brenda Williams and
Julie Spencer, and the flag bearers
are Sue Taylor, Linda Eason, Debbie Reiser, Jennifer Wells, Patty
Mitchell, Rhonda Mitchell, Margo
Martin, Jean Horton, Sheila Horky,
Kelly Rought, Carla Smith, Jamie
Sisson, Kathy Quivey and Rochelle
McDanieL

K mart· Auto
Air Filters
Sizes for most U.S . and
foreign cars. Save!
Alr Breather Replace·
ment Element .. , , 96'

As a subscriber, you can
cast your ballot in the fan
voted
MUSIC
NEWS
"Cover" Awards!!

'·'

snappy, vibrant, and fun!

LYCRA® STRETCH BRIEFS

I ct.

Save $2.00 when you
subscribe by enclosing the
$2.00 discount coupon on the
boHom of this page with your
complete subscription blan'k
and payment. This $2.00 dis·
count coupon offer available
through March 29, 1980. Act
today and subscribe!!
: ~~ . ··--~--------- - --- --- -i~j

Don't forget your friends.
Send a MUSIC CITY NEWS
subscription to a friend to·
day!

141~

1

HIICOliJCIItrll lllt i YOUIG il. IC
all lilt rttwl t r . II 00 IH"•C t tl I I•
111 1 IU IIIet oJ IIOII UU .Of 2 · ~ H rl
It MU J IC CITY '-~•W I - lh
WDrl~' l lt vtr!lt CO IIftl f 'f "'W I IC

I

ntw i U~tr

:
1

I

'

'
1
:

'

'I

.

...

:'

•Cannot be included in mail
subscription papers.

t

I
:
I

''

Jtt~d U .Co or II• 10 "'''h yowr

I

I

.. . ....... d acldf UIIO

'

'I
I

'-\UIIC( ITYNIWI

:

I

~ I~

11' .0 lo o llfll
OM UUIIOft
t llaw lf .

,.,

'

t ~ tll cr l,lltft

~

j

l~~~o~;!~~:~·:~·:~"~:~:-~::::~~4:-J

------------------------------,

ll )$9,00 · 1 yr. u.s .

IC
I

( )$10.00 · 1 yr. Canada

)$".00·2yr.U .S.

(

)$11.00 · 1yr. foreign

9 '

'·'

Per!l
12 Eltp.'

I&lt;

Develop.And
Pri,.t Special

1
I Ham•·- -- - - - - -- - - ' - - - - - - - - - -

Get' beautiiul bord'e rless
prints from Focal" or
Kodak" color print film .

&lt; l$60.00 • 1 yr. Airmail
)yes, I want to subscribe to MUSIC CITY NEWS - Country's llestl
J Enclosed, please lind
!check or money order · PIYible
JIR u .s. dollars only) for
year(sl subscription to MUSIC
JCITY NEWS.
slftd to:
1110

~Address
'

1.

.

I City
I

•• ,.,,,•• '"m
.

State

Zip

.

.

JMAIL TODAY TO : MUSIC CITY NEWS&lt; P.O. Box 22975, Nashvllle, ) N

1vm

lu

~~~

/

Ea. sale.._P-ric_e...;.of"'""'

Mirror Tiles

form to a combination of broadway, jau and
disco, upper rlgbt.
the color bearers,
Augela Hatfield,
Paula Horioo and
Roxanne Me·
Daalel.

The rlfies, above,
calhy Kora, eo.
ale Bailey, Carin
Bailey, RbQnda
Southern, Brenda
Williams and
Julie Spencer.
Tbe Melp Golden
C~lor Gilanl' per-

And now tile
crltlqne··Corpa
members gather
nJUDd as Randy,
Hunt, Melga H.S.
baad director,
Vem Felt, tbe.flal
advilor, .00 Alaia
Hunt, aseiataat
director, diiCIIII
waya of 'lm·
proving
lhe

12x1,2" plain tiles for decorating.

~~ Box of 12 Plein Mirror Tllea, 7.92
·'Antique' Or 'Gold Vein' Tllea,
2.95 for 20 exp.
Each 87• •.••.•• Box of 12, to.aa
. 3.46.!or&lt;24 exp.

n~Utlne.

•

·

~------~-~-~-----------------~-'

, .'t

'•
I

I

�..
•

•

-

u

8-2- TheSWldayTimes-Senlinel,SWlday, March9, 1980

•

-. '
.

.

"

".

..

.,

GALUPOUS - With the theme ,
"Make Art the Plus in Your Life/'
the French Art Colony membership
drive enters its second and final
week, c&lt;H:haired by Jan Thaler and
Anita Tope. This is the lOth Annual
Membership Campaign. ..
Area restdents are bemg con·
tacted by the campaign committee
to add new members to this vitally
important organization. The French
Art Colony provides monthly
exhibits .that are without charge to
the public m the GaUenes at Rtverby, the home of the French Art
Colony, along with an outstanding
educations) program of classes and
workshops throughout the year.
This w~k, De~~n . McNamara,
Ph.D., will be liUtiating the 1980
season of . t~e Poet-in-Residence
Ili'Ogram m the Gallia CoWlty
Schools. She will be in classes at
Kyger Creek High School aU week.

Next week Dr. McNamara ':'ill
spend ftve days at North Gallia H1gh
School, while Robert R. Fox, the
Poet·I?·R~s!dence for the Ohio Arts
Council wtll be at Hannan Trace. for
the week. All of this IS made possible
through the Ohio . Poetry-m-theSchoo.ls · Comm~ty Progra~,
~rdinated by the Ohio Arts CoWlcil
With partial funding by the National
Endowment for the Arts through
grants to state . arts agencies. and
other cooperating orga!ll'ations,
and the support of the Gallia CoWlty
Schools. This 15 the fifth poetry
res1dency brought to the commuruty
under the a usptces ofthe French Art
Colony.
.
As. a spec1al feature on Thursday
everung, March 20, Dr. McNamara
and Bob F~ wtll 1om Wayne Dodd,
Ph. D., Ohio Umverstty profess~r
who 1s conductmg a ser~es of seven
creative writing workshnops at

try. These three very talented
:::recognized authorities 00 poetry
will present a "Potpourri of Poetry"
from 7 p.m. until 10 p.m. that
evening, open to the public at no
charge.
The continuing support to the
residents of the area, aloog with
businesses and organizations, is
vital to the life of the French...Art
Colony. Of extreme importance is
the volunteer staffing of the
Galleries at Riverby, open to the
public at no charge four days a
week, to maintain the very existence
of the French Art Colony.
A wide variety of classes in many
media for both children and adults,
take place throughout the year at
specified times, with an outstanding
faculty . Children's workshops are
scheduled frequently. Open to both
children and adults will be the series

proverb, "Women hold up baH the
sky," is gaining strength in this

natioo of nearl,y 1 bllUoo people.
Women In China today do IIGIIle of
the·same work as men, for the same
wages. Women ditch diggers or
steamroller drivers are a common
sight. Schooling for aD iB compulsory.
.
However, women sUlJ handle most
of the housework, cooking and child
care in addition to their labors out·
side the home.
More than 17,000 women attended
a stadium rally here Friday, where
Kang Keqing, head of the National
Women's Federation, urged them to
help make Chins a modern, industrial nstion by the turn of the century.
Over the next week, films about
women will be shown in Chins's
major cities. An exhibition of
products made by women opened

KANAUGA - Fair Haven United
Methodsit Women of Kanauga met
with Pins Ward Thursday afternoon
for their March meeting.
Meeting was opened by singing,
"Beautiful Garden rJ Prayer,"
4ollowed by prayer by Lena Mae
Raike. Five members answered the
call by scripture veraes relating
:to ''prayer."
: Presentations of World Day rJ
:Prayer Worship Service was "Over.
;coming the World."
·
: Introduction, "Call to l'tayer,"
was presented by Evel,yn Rothgeb.
:Part I, "Pardon," was presented by
l&gt;ina Ward, followed by group

NASA shuttle series: Ron johnson

'Make Art the Plus in Your
Life ' FA C fund drive J.~f!,.ff,!e_ ~

PEKING (AP) - China, once a
land of bound feet, child brides and
coni:ubines, is celebrating International Working Women's Day
todjly with time off from work, mass
raJUes and women's pledges to help
modernize the nstiao.
Women workers get half a day off
today to mark the holiday, first observed here in 1924.
During that first observance,
women workers in the silk and cotton mills of Shanghai staged a rally
and tea party for women's rights. At
the same time in Canton, women
held demonstrations and passed out
leaflets urging equal rights for
women, protection of child laborers
and pregnsnt women and the banning of· polygamy, prostitution, concubines and child brides.
• Many of those demands have been
met or are becoming reality. Child
brides, concubines and polygamy
have ·vanished and the old Chinese

Friday in Peking, including electric
irons, washing machines, curling
irons, rhinestone rings and high
heeled shoes.
More than 150 women scientists
gathered Thursday in Peking's
Great HaU of the People, where Vice
Premier Chen Muha , a woman,
, urged medical workers to improve
health standards. The group was
also told to help raise the level of
Chinese technology;
In semi-feudal China, women from
privileged classes endured the tor·
ment of foot binding, a process in
which the feet are purposely deformed, wrapped in yards of bandages
to keep them smaU. In their 60s and
70s today , women who went through
foot binding years ago often hobble
with canes and are escorted by friendS to steady them. Peasant women
escaped the ordeal because they had
to work in the fields.

Kanauga UMW meets

·..

of three Kite Workshops, starting on
March 22, and meeting 'on three consecutive Saturday afternoons, and
taught by Gary Bone, an art teacher
in the Gallia County Schools. Bone
has made a special study of kites,
their origin and history, the oriental
influence, and their constrution.
This three week series is open to
children, age 6 and older, as well as
adults. For further information and
registration, caD Janet E. Byers, at
446-1903.
Throughout the year, special activities involving members and their
families take place at Riverby, for
aU to enjoy. An individual membership is only $12 for a year, and
family membership, $20.
·Area esidents can MAKE ART
THE PLUS IN THEIR LIFE by
. joining the French Art Colony.
Anyone interested may contact any
member of the committee which includes Alice Bush, Janet E. Byers,
Vivian Kirkel, Saundra Koby, Gwen
Longbotham, Dorothy McConnick,
M'Lou Morrison, Carol O'Rourke,
Marjorie Rinehart and Dorotha
Suiter, along with Mrs. Tope and
Mrs. Thaler. Membership application forms are available also at
PJ's, and printed In the local
newspaper along with this article.
The campaign ends March 17,
1980, but membership is open
throughout the year.

Salem Center plans
book fair this week

Women's Day in China celebrates
end of child brides
and. concubines
.

,,

. ~.

~The Swlday 'l'irnes-Sentinel, SWlday, March 9, 1980

•

singing of "My Faith Looks Up To
1bee": part n, UPeace/' was

presented by Florence Allen; part

m. "Power" was presented by Lens

May Ralke with scripture Romans
8::1&amp;-27 being read by Ethel Wright.
The group sang, ''Sweet Hour rl
Prayer," after which each member
gave individual testimonies.
Bible questions were asked by
Lena May Ralke; Pins Ward gave
the benedlctioo.
The business meeting followed
witb 35 sick calls being reported, and
two cards being sent to the sick.
The next meeting will be with
Lens Mae Ralke in the afternoon.

ron

Community Corner
Save 25% on
Arabia dlnnerwarel

Mora: happens in 3's?
Bottom, is bedfast for the most part
as she receives treatment for
rheumatic fever. Her two children,
eight and four, are being cared for
by the family. Her days are long and
she reaDy enjoys visitors and mail.
Meanwhile, Mrs. Purley Karr is
out of the hospital but has to wear a
brace on her knee for a time. Her address is 518 50th Ave., Plaza West,
Bradenton, Fla. 33507. she will be
returning to her Meiga County home
In a few weeks now.
And Woodrow, wellhe'sflnenow.

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Tlmea&amp;DIIneiStGry Writer

The perfect choice for your Bridal Registry .
Now ... for a limited time ... our entire stock of Arabl,a dinnerware at a
fantastic 25% savinQ. It's an opportunity you cant afford to r:n1ss.
These are your favorite Arabia patterns. The beautiful, functional
shapes you love. Oven-to-tableware that's perfect for microwave cook·
ing. Perfect for today's easy, breezy lifestyle .
.
,
come In today and save 25% on the Arabia .d,nnerware you ve
always dreamed of owning .

Bob Thomas is a name familiar to

:all garden club members and It was
:for his seminar that Janet Bolin, acby her husband, Joe,
:wenttoFlorids. a weekorsoago.
: Thomas, an
:outstanding Inter- .
·national flower

:compani!!d

Open stock .

Peddler's Pantry

' r r a ng e r ,
•a

State &amp; Third---- -- - - - - - Ga IIi polls--:-

Sr. Citizen
Calendar

:directed the
:seminar of the
1\merican Flower
Arrangers Guild
Bill and Louise Stewart who have
In TIIDipa. Janet
lived in Athens for many years will
1aid there was an
::t•out of the world" prog!'8ll) m . be returning home in a few weeks
ldactoJUIBS, the different types, what now.
The two are in the process of seU·
lhey mean, and how to use them,
ing
their house in Athens and have
:)long with a novel presentation on
::Olorecl llght, classical music . and purchased a place in Racine, Bill
retired sometime ago, and Louise
~ower arranging.
- While In Florida, Joe and Janet will continue working at the Univera car and drove aU over the sity until August when she, too, will
:piace taking in the sights. In retire. Both are native Melga Coun:Edgewatter they visited Lula Curry, tians.
lonnerly o!'Rutland.
Geraldine Parsons who bas contributed
so much as a member and
: Kathryn Mora Ia a flflll believer
officer
of
the American I,egicll Aux'ihat thingll happen in threes after
Iliary,
both
local and district, has
=Ler recent family esperience.
resigned
as
the district junior ac: All lq one day, her daughter was
:::il1agnoiJed , as having rhewnatic tivities chairman. Geraldine' suf·
:lever, her husband, Woodrow, was ferecl a heart attack during the
:)rought home from work with a holidays and while she is getting
along alright, her activitia~ have
::lleV~flll muscular SJIIIlllll, and her
::JIIOther In Florida fell and was . had to be restricted. Mary Martin
::Japltalized for a knee Injury.
. has been appointed to fill·the district
- The 1\!ora's daughter, Jackie positioo.
"1i'I'OIIt, who lives at Route 1, Long

POMEROY - Meiga Senior
Citizens Center activities located at
the Pomeroy Junior High School is
open 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m., Monday
through Friday.
Monday, March 10 - Candy
Making, 10 a.m.·12 noon; Square
Dance,l2:30-3 p.m.
Tuesday, March 11 - Chorus,
12:46-2 p.m.
Wellnesday, March 12 - Social
Security Representative, 9:30 a.m.12: 30 p.m. ; Games, 1-2:30 p.m.
Thursday, March 13 - Candy and
Craft Making, 10 a.m.-12 noon; Kitchen Band, 12:46-2p.m.
Friday, March 14 - BowUng, 1-3
p.m.
Senior Nutrition Progrwn, 12 noon
to INS p.m., Monday through
Friday, menu:
Monday- Johimy Marzetti, green
beans, cottage cheese, salad,
peaches, bread, butter, milk.
Tuesday - New England boiled
ham dinner, potatoes, cabbage,
carrots, onions, yeUow cake, lemon
sauce, cornbread, butter, milk.
. Wednesday - Liver and onions,
baked potato, buttered spinach, fruit
cocktail, biscuit, butter, milk.
Thursday - Fried fish, escalloped
PDb!toes, stewed tomatoes, ice
cream, bread, butter, milk.
Friday - Fried chicken, mashed
potatoes, gravy, buttered peas, apple cobbler, bread, butter, milk.
Coffee, tea and a choice of whole
milk or buttennilk served daily.
Please register the day before you
plan to eat. Pomeroy, !m-7886. The
Racine Satellite Is temporarily
closed. Please call for transportation to the Pomeroy Center.

'

·-

,_ ;_

.:;,;

·'·

SEE YOUR LOCAL HOOVER DEALER TODAY &amp; $AVE!
THE BEST
THERE IS!

~

Rupi(,

WusJter
see~
on

TV

'

Plugs into standard elecrrical outlet /
• 31#"" 11 2-1 '" 11 1 6 ~'.. " • No spec1 at w1ring
• No 'vent in'g requi rad • Ro lls on w heels
• 3 M!p;trale cycles . A~u l a 1 , Permanen1
Press. Fluff &amp; Tumble • Cool down period

Mrs. Betty Reed, Tampa, Florida
and Mr. Tom V. Reed, 7625 L·•c~s
Pike, Plain City, Ohio announce the
engagement of their daughter,
Paula Ann, to Mark A. DeVal, son ci
Mr. and Mrs. Harlan R. DeVal.
The bride-elect is a graduate of
Jonathan Alder High School and
Central Ohio Joint Vocational
School. She is employed by Columbus and Southern Electric Company.
Her fiance is a graduate of
Jonathan Alder High School and
New MeXico Military Institute,
RosweU, New Mexico. He is currently attending Ohio State University
and is employed by Columbus and
Southern Electric Company. He is
also Second Lieutenant in U. S. Ar·
my National Guard.
DeVal is the grandson of Mrs. Inez
P. Waugh, Gallipolis, and the late
Amos M. Waugh. Paternal grandparents were the late Harley and
Lina RusseU DeVal of Middleport.
A December wedding is being
planned by the couple.

stimulates research
All
Built-Ins
KDS-19

or

Byllllellaillld~SwN~per Ellti!rprfle Auu.

All Corwer.t.ible·
Portables
Stainle$s Steel'
Disposers

THE¥·GOITA GO

KDS-18

nov/-build in later.,
No conversion kit needed.
• Hardwood Cutting ' · \
Board top.
• Energy Saver button for ,
heat-off dryin~ .
• HURRY! LIMITED
SUPPLY

•Use

All Ttash
Compactors .
• Larae~ t capa.city . •
• Exclusive Litter Bfn'"
door for small items.
• Exclusive Tilt-Away
· basket. Use with or
w;tl'n"l bags.

•

•

One · survey indl!:&amp;tes tbat

are

mtch

. gardeners
~ likely to
The rapid growtf! of home garden- , to wood heat and adopt CO!IIIeriation
l!lg is stimulating nmch new meaeures faster tllan nonresearch and fact-finding among gardeners. Organit or nal!Jral

garden
authorities
and
'org&amp;nlzatons.
We've been collecting same of this
array of growing lore. Here's a
roundup of what's new on the garden

scene.

.

gardeners, It seems, are even more
intent·on COIIIei'VIItioo measures of
aD types, and often more innovative
with COSWeducttoo and tJm&amp;.saving
ideas.
•
Another major inlrvey reveals that
total · retsil value of produce from
home garde111 topped $13 biWonlast
.year. The ~ gantiii was
• 111611QU1re f*t. 'Average aitbould

Today, America's estimated 32
mlllim-plus backyard and comIJIIIIIIty prdeners ~ Diaking a major contribuliolt to energy COIIIerVI'tion. Evmp!ei It 11 estimated th8t ,;.. COup in lSIINr,morereeent~
gardenen eliminate the need to Indicate.
· 1
tnlillport nior\1. than t14 billiOn
Here are ~ lli8nlficin\ flliJres
wOrth . of frelh vegetable~~ fnm fniiD tbe . u.s. ~ or
fBl'DII to marketa. 'lbllt saVill Agriculture aJ!d private auh8ya of
millions rJ pJlonl fl. guollne.
gardening. AbQut 2 In 10 pn~eners
Best estlnl8.. 'are that average P.'DW. plants in contilinen -l!ow~.
~ .00 2 1o 10 boun eadl some vegetablel, plul ~plants.
"'Week in their gardens. 'lbllt, too, is Molt P'11'11•r Vfllelable remalna the
. lime out fnm driVInc. Garden\nc tomato, ,.tth c;uCuml!era llid lettuce
allci leada to.sln!Jlwr interesb, •ildl . clole jlehind. Brllllell • Qata ·r&amp;u
~ uid
maininlutplaoe;
. ~IUppleqbt.J,
-·
.
.
I

-..e.o

science, nature, crafts,

EVANGELISTTOSPEAK .
POMEROY - Rev. Richard
Jaymes, Mt. Vernon, will be the
evangelist for revival services at the
Mt. Hennon United Brethren Church, Texas Community, March 12
through March 23.
There will be special singing each
evening with services to be held at
7 :30 p.m. nightly.
On March 15 and 22 "Russ and the
Gospel Tones" will be featured and
on March 17 and 16 the "Soul
Seekers." Public is invited.

40

0/
OFF
/0 LIST PRICE
STOP IN TODAY

DAR LUNCHEON FRIDAY
POMEROY - The ai)Dual charter
day luncheon of Return Jonsthan
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution, will be held at
I p.m. Friday at the Trinity Church
in Pomeroy. The three seniors of
Meigs County high schools who are
the good citizenship contest winners
this year will be honored and the
program will be "Variety in Music"
presented by Mrs. Robert Robinson.
Mrs. Robinson will be introduced by
her husband, the Rev. Mr. Robinson.

:TIMLlL)S C~APJ'1

COUNT~

WINTER SPECIAL
Buy Now and Save $240
Reg. $1165.00

· - - - - --

\

ClASSC

Special '925.00

·-

by

Have it aet in tne spring.
Small dpwn payment.
IL-'-~-------....;---"we have many more memorials.
Up to 30% Discount
Write for booklet showing memorials.

RIVIERR
Better Time Than Now to

LOGAN MONUMENT CO., INC.

Home ,Improve

VINTON, 0.

POMEROY,O.

Leo L'. Vaughan, Mgr.

James 0. Bush, Mgr.
Ph. 388·8603

Ph.99H518

Estee Lauder

THE BEAUTY CARE-TAKERS

Let Estee' Lauder
take care of you, give
you crisp, clean
beauty from top to
toe. It's all inside
this navy quilted .
travel !lag:

myst~ry ,

and reference books. The collUluttee
is working with Educational
Reading Service, a professional
book fair company, to furnish an in·
dividual selection of books for the
fair.

CABINET SALE

presents-

Home gardening growth

THEY GOITA GO
The Matching Hoover Dryer!!

Engagement
reported

The Home Gardener

•It rolls on wheels
• No plumbing needed
• Does 24 Lbs. in 30 min.
• Rapid spin dryer
• Family size capacity
• Use it at any So11k
• Store in any room
• Real miser on electricity hot water-detergent

OR MORE
ON WASHER
OR DRYER

Paula Ann Reed

. \:

:rented

-

The book fair display will include
attractive new books from many
publishers in all popular pr1re
ranges; books to read or give as gif·
ts. All reading interests will be
represented including classics, fie·
lion, biographies, adventure stories.

SALEM CENTER - The Salem
Center Elementary School will spon·
sor a student book fair from
Tuesday, March 11, through Saturday, March 15.
Students will be able to browse
and purchase books. The book fair
will be open during the hours of 8
a.m. and 3:30 p.m. Tuesday through
Friday, 7-9 p.m. Tuesday, and 4:3(1.
7:30p.m. Saturday. Books will be on
display in the auditoriWJI Tuesday
through Friday and in the first grade
room Saturday.
The book fair committee invites
all students, parents, and visitors to
attend the fair. The fair will encourage student interest in reading
and in building home libraries, and
will also contribute to a worthwhile
project. All profits will be used for
t::~ Salem Center School library and
for reading supplies.
The Salem Center School is sponsoring this event, with Jane Bourne,
Title I teacher, serving as book fair
chairperson. The committee includes Melvin Felts, Margaret Johnson, Darla Hawley, and Linda
Stobart.

From
a beautiful
offer!

A 25.00 Value.
Only i:SO with any Est('e Lauder purch9se-' _,

-

e Tender Lip Tint
•Azuree' Single
Application
Shampoo
• Cleansing Bar
And Travel
Slze ·Soup Box
• Dally Moisture
Supply
eMaxlmum
_
. care BOdY Lotion

,.... ,.

··"'

-.... ,.
.-»»:,"\'

"''

!

. /"'"'

'

I~~'
--;-.,

~

_....;
'·
'
)

.
'

'

I,

I

.

.

!'

'

•

• ' \..

.u
·

"o

.

~

•

• 300 Second '(llve.; GaUipoll~, OH "fn the LafayeHe Mall.''

•

'

'

�..
•

•

-

u

8-2- TheSWldayTimes-Senlinel,SWlday, March9, 1980

•

-. '
.

.

"

".

..

.,

GALUPOUS - With the theme ,
"Make Art the Plus in Your Life/'
the French Art Colony membership
drive enters its second and final
week, c&lt;H:haired by Jan Thaler and
Anita Tope. This is the lOth Annual
Membership Campaign. ..
Area restdents are bemg con·
tacted by the campaign committee
to add new members to this vitally
important organization. The French
Art Colony provides monthly
exhibits .that are without charge to
the public m the GaUenes at Rtverby, the home of the French Art
Colony, along with an outstanding
educations) program of classes and
workshops throughout the year.
This w~k, De~~n . McNamara,
Ph.D., will be liUtiating the 1980
season of . t~e Poet-in-Residence
Ili'Ogram m the Gallia CoWlty
Schools. She will be in classes at
Kyger Creek High School aU week.

Next week Dr. McNamara ':'ill
spend ftve days at North Gallia H1gh
School, while Robert R. Fox, the
Poet·I?·R~s!dence for the Ohio Arts
Council wtll be at Hannan Trace. for
the week. All of this IS made possible
through the Ohio . Poetry-m-theSchoo.ls · Comm~ty Progra~,
~rdinated by the Ohio Arts CoWlcil
With partial funding by the National
Endowment for the Arts through
grants to state . arts agencies. and
other cooperating orga!ll'ations,
and the support of the Gallia CoWlty
Schools. This 15 the fifth poetry
res1dency brought to the commuruty
under the a usptces ofthe French Art
Colony.
.
As. a spec1al feature on Thursday
everung, March 20, Dr. McNamara
and Bob F~ wtll 1om Wayne Dodd,
Ph. D., Ohio Umverstty profess~r
who 1s conductmg a ser~es of seven
creative writing workshnops at

try. These three very talented
:::recognized authorities 00 poetry
will present a "Potpourri of Poetry"
from 7 p.m. until 10 p.m. that
evening, open to the public at no
charge.
The continuing support to the
residents of the area, aloog with
businesses and organizations, is
vital to the life of the French...Art
Colony. Of extreme importance is
the volunteer staffing of the
Galleries at Riverby, open to the
public at no charge four days a
week, to maintain the very existence
of the French Art Colony.
A wide variety of classes in many
media for both children and adults,
take place throughout the year at
specified times, with an outstanding
faculty . Children's workshops are
scheduled frequently. Open to both
children and adults will be the series

proverb, "Women hold up baH the
sky," is gaining strength in this

natioo of nearl,y 1 bllUoo people.
Women In China today do IIGIIle of
the·same work as men, for the same
wages. Women ditch diggers or
steamroller drivers are a common
sight. Schooling for aD iB compulsory.
.
However, women sUlJ handle most
of the housework, cooking and child
care in addition to their labors out·
side the home.
More than 17,000 women attended
a stadium rally here Friday, where
Kang Keqing, head of the National
Women's Federation, urged them to
help make Chins a modern, industrial nstion by the turn of the century.
Over the next week, films about
women will be shown in Chins's
major cities. An exhibition of
products made by women opened

KANAUGA - Fair Haven United
Methodsit Women of Kanauga met
with Pins Ward Thursday afternoon
for their March meeting.
Meeting was opened by singing,
"Beautiful Garden rJ Prayer,"
4ollowed by prayer by Lena Mae
Raike. Five members answered the
call by scripture veraes relating
:to ''prayer."
: Presentations of World Day rJ
:Prayer Worship Service was "Over.
;coming the World."
·
: Introduction, "Call to l'tayer,"
was presented by Evel,yn Rothgeb.
:Part I, "Pardon," was presented by
l&gt;ina Ward, followed by group

NASA shuttle series: Ron johnson

'Make Art the Plus in Your
Life ' FA C fund drive J.~f!,.ff,!e_ ~

PEKING (AP) - China, once a
land of bound feet, child brides and
coni:ubines, is celebrating International Working Women's Day
todjly with time off from work, mass
raJUes and women's pledges to help
modernize the nstiao.
Women workers get half a day off
today to mark the holiday, first observed here in 1924.
During that first observance,
women workers in the silk and cotton mills of Shanghai staged a rally
and tea party for women's rights. At
the same time in Canton, women
held demonstrations and passed out
leaflets urging equal rights for
women, protection of child laborers
and pregnsnt women and the banning of· polygamy, prostitution, concubines and child brides.
• Many of those demands have been
met or are becoming reality. Child
brides, concubines and polygamy
have ·vanished and the old Chinese

Friday in Peking, including electric
irons, washing machines, curling
irons, rhinestone rings and high
heeled shoes.
More than 150 women scientists
gathered Thursday in Peking's
Great HaU of the People, where Vice
Premier Chen Muha , a woman,
, urged medical workers to improve
health standards. The group was
also told to help raise the level of
Chinese technology;
In semi-feudal China, women from
privileged classes endured the tor·
ment of foot binding, a process in
which the feet are purposely deformed, wrapped in yards of bandages
to keep them smaU. In their 60s and
70s today , women who went through
foot binding years ago often hobble
with canes and are escorted by friendS to steady them. Peasant women
escaped the ordeal because they had
to work in the fields.

Kanauga UMW meets

·..

of three Kite Workshops, starting on
March 22, and meeting 'on three consecutive Saturday afternoons, and
taught by Gary Bone, an art teacher
in the Gallia County Schools. Bone
has made a special study of kites,
their origin and history, the oriental
influence, and their constrution.
This three week series is open to
children, age 6 and older, as well as
adults. For further information and
registration, caD Janet E. Byers, at
446-1903.
Throughout the year, special activities involving members and their
families take place at Riverby, for
aU to enjoy. An individual membership is only $12 for a year, and
family membership, $20.
·Area esidents can MAKE ART
THE PLUS IN THEIR LIFE by
. joining the French Art Colony.
Anyone interested may contact any
member of the committee which includes Alice Bush, Janet E. Byers,
Vivian Kirkel, Saundra Koby, Gwen
Longbotham, Dorothy McConnick,
M'Lou Morrison, Carol O'Rourke,
Marjorie Rinehart and Dorotha
Suiter, along with Mrs. Tope and
Mrs. Thaler. Membership application forms are available also at
PJ's, and printed In the local
newspaper along with this article.
The campaign ends March 17,
1980, but membership is open
throughout the year.

Salem Center plans
book fair this week

Women's Day in China celebrates
end of child brides
and. concubines
.

,,

. ~.

~The Swlday 'l'irnes-Sentinel, SWlday, March 9, 1980

•

singing of "My Faith Looks Up To
1bee": part n, UPeace/' was

presented by Florence Allen; part

m. "Power" was presented by Lens

May Ralke with scripture Romans
8::1&amp;-27 being read by Ethel Wright.
The group sang, ''Sweet Hour rl
Prayer," after which each member
gave individual testimonies.
Bible questions were asked by
Lena May Ralke; Pins Ward gave
the benedlctioo.
The business meeting followed
witb 35 sick calls being reported, and
two cards being sent to the sick.
The next meeting will be with
Lens Mae Ralke in the afternoon.

ron

Community Corner
Save 25% on
Arabia dlnnerwarel

Mora: happens in 3's?
Bottom, is bedfast for the most part
as she receives treatment for
rheumatic fever. Her two children,
eight and four, are being cared for
by the family. Her days are long and
she reaDy enjoys visitors and mail.
Meanwhile, Mrs. Purley Karr is
out of the hospital but has to wear a
brace on her knee for a time. Her address is 518 50th Ave., Plaza West,
Bradenton, Fla. 33507. she will be
returning to her Meiga County home
In a few weeks now.
And Woodrow, wellhe'sflnenow.

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Tlmea&amp;DIIneiStGry Writer

The perfect choice for your Bridal Registry .
Now ... for a limited time ... our entire stock of Arabl,a dinnerware at a
fantastic 25% savinQ. It's an opportunity you cant afford to r:n1ss.
These are your favorite Arabia patterns. The beautiful, functional
shapes you love. Oven-to-tableware that's perfect for microwave cook·
ing. Perfect for today's easy, breezy lifestyle .
.
,
come In today and save 25% on the Arabia .d,nnerware you ve
always dreamed of owning .

Bob Thomas is a name familiar to

:all garden club members and It was
:for his seminar that Janet Bolin, acby her husband, Joe,
:wenttoFlorids. a weekorsoago.
: Thomas, an
:outstanding Inter- .
·national flower

:compani!!d

Open stock .

Peddler's Pantry

' r r a ng e r ,
•a

State &amp; Third---- -- - - - - - Ga IIi polls--:-

Sr. Citizen
Calendar

:directed the
:seminar of the
1\merican Flower
Arrangers Guild
Bill and Louise Stewart who have
In TIIDipa. Janet
lived in Athens for many years will
1aid there was an
::t•out of the world" prog!'8ll) m . be returning home in a few weeks
ldactoJUIBS, the different types, what now.
The two are in the process of seU·
lhey mean, and how to use them,
ing
their house in Athens and have
:)long with a novel presentation on
::Olorecl llght, classical music . and purchased a place in Racine, Bill
retired sometime ago, and Louise
~ower arranging.
- While In Florida, Joe and Janet will continue working at the Univera car and drove aU over the sity until August when she, too, will
:piace taking in the sights. In retire. Both are native Melga Coun:Edgewatter they visited Lula Curry, tians.
lonnerly o!'Rutland.
Geraldine Parsons who bas contributed
so much as a member and
: Kathryn Mora Ia a flflll believer
officer
of
the American I,egicll Aux'ihat thingll happen in threes after
Iliary,
both
local and district, has
=Ler recent family esperience.
resigned
as
the district junior ac: All lq one day, her daughter was
:::il1agnoiJed , as having rhewnatic tivities chairman. Geraldine' suf·
:lever, her husband, Woodrow, was ferecl a heart attack during the
:)rought home from work with a holidays and while she is getting
along alright, her activitia~ have
::lleV~flll muscular SJIIIlllll, and her
::JIIOther In Florida fell and was . had to be restricted. Mary Martin
::Japltalized for a knee Injury.
. has been appointed to fill·the district
- The 1\!ora's daughter, Jackie positioo.
"1i'I'OIIt, who lives at Route 1, Long

POMEROY - Meiga Senior
Citizens Center activities located at
the Pomeroy Junior High School is
open 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m., Monday
through Friday.
Monday, March 10 - Candy
Making, 10 a.m.·12 noon; Square
Dance,l2:30-3 p.m.
Tuesday, March 11 - Chorus,
12:46-2 p.m.
Wellnesday, March 12 - Social
Security Representative, 9:30 a.m.12: 30 p.m. ; Games, 1-2:30 p.m.
Thursday, March 13 - Candy and
Craft Making, 10 a.m.-12 noon; Kitchen Band, 12:46-2p.m.
Friday, March 14 - BowUng, 1-3
p.m.
Senior Nutrition Progrwn, 12 noon
to INS p.m., Monday through
Friday, menu:
Monday- Johimy Marzetti, green
beans, cottage cheese, salad,
peaches, bread, butter, milk.
Tuesday - New England boiled
ham dinner, potatoes, cabbage,
carrots, onions, yeUow cake, lemon
sauce, cornbread, butter, milk.
. Wednesday - Liver and onions,
baked potato, buttered spinach, fruit
cocktail, biscuit, butter, milk.
Thursday - Fried fish, escalloped
PDb!toes, stewed tomatoes, ice
cream, bread, butter, milk.
Friday - Fried chicken, mashed
potatoes, gravy, buttered peas, apple cobbler, bread, butter, milk.
Coffee, tea and a choice of whole
milk or buttennilk served daily.
Please register the day before you
plan to eat. Pomeroy, !m-7886. The
Racine Satellite Is temporarily
closed. Please call for transportation to the Pomeroy Center.

'

·-

,_ ;_

.:;,;

·'·

SEE YOUR LOCAL HOOVER DEALER TODAY &amp; $AVE!
THE BEST
THERE IS!

~

Rupi(,

WusJter
see~
on

TV

'

Plugs into standard elecrrical outlet /
• 31#"" 11 2-1 '" 11 1 6 ~'.. " • No spec1 at w1ring
• No 'vent in'g requi rad • Ro lls on w heels
• 3 M!p;trale cycles . A~u l a 1 , Permanen1
Press. Fluff &amp; Tumble • Cool down period

Mrs. Betty Reed, Tampa, Florida
and Mr. Tom V. Reed, 7625 L·•c~s
Pike, Plain City, Ohio announce the
engagement of their daughter,
Paula Ann, to Mark A. DeVal, son ci
Mr. and Mrs. Harlan R. DeVal.
The bride-elect is a graduate of
Jonathan Alder High School and
Central Ohio Joint Vocational
School. She is employed by Columbus and Southern Electric Company.
Her fiance is a graduate of
Jonathan Alder High School and
New MeXico Military Institute,
RosweU, New Mexico. He is currently attending Ohio State University
and is employed by Columbus and
Southern Electric Company. He is
also Second Lieutenant in U. S. Ar·
my National Guard.
DeVal is the grandson of Mrs. Inez
P. Waugh, Gallipolis, and the late
Amos M. Waugh. Paternal grandparents were the late Harley and
Lina RusseU DeVal of Middleport.
A December wedding is being
planned by the couple.

stimulates research
All
Built-Ins
KDS-19

or

Byllllellaillld~SwN~per Ellti!rprfle Auu.

All Corwer.t.ible·
Portables
Stainle$s Steel'
Disposers

THE¥·GOITA GO

KDS-18

nov/-build in later.,
No conversion kit needed.
• Hardwood Cutting ' · \
Board top.
• Energy Saver button for ,
heat-off dryin~ .
• HURRY! LIMITED
SUPPLY

•Use

All Ttash
Compactors .
• Larae~ t capa.city . •
• Exclusive Litter Bfn'"
door for small items.
• Exclusive Tilt-Away
· basket. Use with or
w;tl'n"l bags.

•

•

One · survey indl!:&amp;tes tbat

are

mtch

. gardeners
~ likely to
The rapid growtf! of home garden- , to wood heat and adopt CO!IIIeriation
l!lg is stimulating nmch new meaeures faster tllan nonresearch and fact-finding among gardeners. Organit or nal!Jral

garden
authorities
and
'org&amp;nlzatons.
We've been collecting same of this
array of growing lore. Here's a
roundup of what's new on the garden

scene.

.

gardeners, It seems, are even more
intent·on COIIIei'VIItioo measures of
aD types, and often more innovative
with COSWeducttoo and tJm&amp;.saving
ideas.
•
Another major inlrvey reveals that
total · retsil value of produce from
home garde111 topped $13 biWonlast
.year. The ~ gantiii was
• 111611QU1re f*t. 'Average aitbould

Today, America's estimated 32
mlllim-plus backyard and comIJIIIIIIty prdeners ~ Diaking a major contribuliolt to energy COIIIerVI'tion. Evmp!ei It 11 estimated th8t ,;.. COup in lSIINr,morereeent~
gardenen eliminate the need to Indicate.
· 1
tnlillport nior\1. than t14 billiOn
Here are ~ lli8nlficin\ flliJres
wOrth . of frelh vegetable~~ fnm fniiD tbe . u.s. ~ or
fBl'DII to marketa. 'lbllt saVill Agriculture aJ!d private auh8ya of
millions rJ pJlonl fl. guollne.
gardening. AbQut 2 In 10 pn~eners
Best estlnl8.. 'are that average P.'DW. plants in contilinen -l!ow~.
~ .00 2 1o 10 boun eadl some vegetablel, plul ~plants.
"'Week in their gardens. 'lbllt, too, is Molt P'11'11•r Vfllelable remalna the
. lime out fnm driVInc. Garden\nc tomato, ,.tth c;uCuml!era llid lettuce
allci leada to.sln!Jlwr interesb, •ildl . clole jlehind. Brllllell • Qata ·r&amp;u
~ uid
maininlutplaoe;
. ~IUppleqbt.J,
-·
.
.
I

-..e.o

science, nature, crafts,

EVANGELISTTOSPEAK .
POMEROY - Rev. Richard
Jaymes, Mt. Vernon, will be the
evangelist for revival services at the
Mt. Hennon United Brethren Church, Texas Community, March 12
through March 23.
There will be special singing each
evening with services to be held at
7 :30 p.m. nightly.
On March 15 and 22 "Russ and the
Gospel Tones" will be featured and
on March 17 and 16 the "Soul
Seekers." Public is invited.

40

0/
OFF
/0 LIST PRICE
STOP IN TODAY

DAR LUNCHEON FRIDAY
POMEROY - The ai)Dual charter
day luncheon of Return Jonsthan
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution, will be held at
I p.m. Friday at the Trinity Church
in Pomeroy. The three seniors of
Meigs County high schools who are
the good citizenship contest winners
this year will be honored and the
program will be "Variety in Music"
presented by Mrs. Robert Robinson.
Mrs. Robinson will be introduced by
her husband, the Rev. Mr. Robinson.

:TIMLlL)S C~APJ'1

COUNT~

WINTER SPECIAL
Buy Now and Save $240
Reg. $1165.00

· - - - - --

\

ClASSC

Special '925.00

·-

by

Have it aet in tne spring.
Small dpwn payment.
IL-'-~-------....;---"we have many more memorials.
Up to 30% Discount
Write for booklet showing memorials.

RIVIERR
Better Time Than Now to

LOGAN MONUMENT CO., INC.

Home ,Improve

VINTON, 0.

POMEROY,O.

Leo L'. Vaughan, Mgr.

James 0. Bush, Mgr.
Ph. 388·8603

Ph.99H518

Estee Lauder

THE BEAUTY CARE-TAKERS

Let Estee' Lauder
take care of you, give
you crisp, clean
beauty from top to
toe. It's all inside
this navy quilted .
travel !lag:

myst~ry ,

and reference books. The collUluttee
is working with Educational
Reading Service, a professional
book fair company, to furnish an in·
dividual selection of books for the
fair.

CABINET SALE

presents-

Home gardening growth

THEY GOITA GO
The Matching Hoover Dryer!!

Engagement
reported

The Home Gardener

•It rolls on wheels
• No plumbing needed
• Does 24 Lbs. in 30 min.
• Rapid spin dryer
• Family size capacity
• Use it at any So11k
• Store in any room
• Real miser on electricity hot water-detergent

OR MORE
ON WASHER
OR DRYER

Paula Ann Reed

. \:

:rented

-

The book fair display will include
attractive new books from many
publishers in all popular pr1re
ranges; books to read or give as gif·
ts. All reading interests will be
represented including classics, fie·
lion, biographies, adventure stories.

SALEM CENTER - The Salem
Center Elementary School will spon·
sor a student book fair from
Tuesday, March 11, through Saturday, March 15.
Students will be able to browse
and purchase books. The book fair
will be open during the hours of 8
a.m. and 3:30 p.m. Tuesday through
Friday, 7-9 p.m. Tuesday, and 4:3(1.
7:30p.m. Saturday. Books will be on
display in the auditoriWJI Tuesday
through Friday and in the first grade
room Saturday.
The book fair committee invites
all students, parents, and visitors to
attend the fair. The fair will encourage student interest in reading
and in building home libraries, and
will also contribute to a worthwhile
project. All profits will be used for
t::~ Salem Center School library and
for reading supplies.
The Salem Center School is sponsoring this event, with Jane Bourne,
Title I teacher, serving as book fair
chairperson. The committee includes Melvin Felts, Margaret Johnson, Darla Hawley, and Linda
Stobart.

From
a beautiful
offer!

A 25.00 Value.
Only i:SO with any Est('e Lauder purch9se-' _,

-

e Tender Lip Tint
•Azuree' Single
Application
Shampoo
• Cleansing Bar
And Travel
Slze ·Soup Box
• Dally Moisture
Supply
eMaxlmum
_
. care BOdY Lotion

,.... ,.

··"'

-.... ,.
.-»»:,"\'

"''

!

. /"'"'

'

I~~'
--;-.,

~

_....;
'·
'
)

.
'

'

I,

I

.

.

!'

'

•

• ' \..

.u
·

"o

.

~

•

• 300 Second '(llve.; GaUipoll~, OH "fn the LafayeHe Mall.''

•

'

'

�I
t

~The Sunday Times-Sentinel. Sunday, March9, 1980

~The Sunday Times-Sentlnl!l, Sunday, March 9, 1980

Betty Starn Class·guest of Godwins

' ·4 .f'Jl

GAUJPOLIS - Pastor ·and Mrs.
Joseph Godwin Invited the Betty
Starn claM to hold its regular March
meeting at their home.
Nineteen class members were
present, four members of the Godwin family and Emerson Corbin,
who drove tnebils.
Grace was given by president
Hazel Halley. We theo enjoyed a
potluck meal and wann fellowship
in the Godwin home.

meeting in prayer. The evening was
a very enjoyable time for all.

After the meal, the business
meeting was called to order by the
pcesident and after a short session
Gladys Amllbury gave devotions,
reading the tOOth Psalm and several
poems. She then asked each member to tell how the Lord had recently
blessed him. She closed with prayer.
A gift was presented to the Godwins to help show thanks for their
hospitality.
Nevie North then closed the

The conunlttee was as follows :
chairiady, Lucllle Sarrett, Hazel

Halley', Lillian Carter, Evelyn
Evans, Gladys Amsbary, Nevolene
North• Esta Reese
and Marcella
•
Baker.

•

nual Daffodil Days
·~rut'rway .in Gallipolis
The Gallia Counof the American Cancer
Socj'eiy (ACS) will be participating
(:=~ third lime in the annual
n
observance of Daffodil
Friday and Saturday, Mar2SI. During these two days,
ol beautiful yellow clafthe flowers ol hope, will
''flower power'' to raise
for research, education and
on behaH of local cancer
U..Jli"U'Lili -

+

SPECIAL

29

POMEROt-Mrs. Donna Gilmore

MONDAY
POMEROY PTA, Monday night,
7:30p.m. at the Pomeroy Elementary School. Parent-teacher discus·
sion on student related topics. Book
fair will be held for the parents.

WANTA
.REAL
ESTATE
.
LICENSE?
It's so eesy to be I

SOUTHERN JUNIOR High"School
Athletic Boosters meeting, 7:30 p.m.
Monday at the junior high school.
Parents of girls basketbaU team
members, cheerleaders and· boys
football and basketball teams urged
to attend to plan banquet.
FtACINE BASEBALL Association
meeting, 7 p.m. Monday at Racine
Elementary School. AU parents invited as well as any persons in·
terested in managing a team.
BETHEL 62, International Order
of Job's Daughters, 7:30 p.m. Mon·
day at I be Middleport Masonic Temple. Initiation to be held.
SYRACUSE PTO Monday 7:30
p.m. Refreshments.

Crispy Fish, Tasty Shrimp, Fresh Cole Slaw,
Crunchy Hushpuppies, Golden Fryes

GALLIPOUS
..
IUSINISS

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

~-----/.)--

Good only at:

STATE ROUTE 7, SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER

44'-4367

the children were Shannon and Brett
Newsome, Christy Sjlears, Jennifer

:

Cross, Gina and Rhonda Gibbs, Penny, Patsy and Patrick Aeiker,
Danielle and Lucianna Scott,'
Elizabeth and Timmy Lawson, Jodie
Schaekel, Michelle and Tim, Tom
and Tammy Capehart, Sherrie and
Del Laudennllt, Patti and Mony
Wood.
Eleanor Lawson, Cathie and Bob

I
:

0

l

No.

bb1hdaysofFr.ankNew&amp;mne
:lt!t:wo~.sons::: , Rodney and Terry
recently.
Mr. Newsome's birthday,
...... - and Sharon Bailey of Five
&gt;Nilb. entertained with a dinner at
The loth birthday of
and the 6th birthday of
RollliltY was celebrated with a party
DBn!nts' home.
or presenting gifts to

~/

I

COWGE
Rodney, Te"y
&amp; Frank Newsome

·,-------------------------------~
·

JOHNSON'S

Wood, Pat and Cindy Aeiker, Shirley
Gibbs, Cheryl Laudermilt, Phyllis
Cross, Austin New&amp;mne, Sharon and
Brenda Bailey, and Ben and Chris
Spears.
Suelmboden, Mary Salding and
Bob, and Lela Redfern of Detroit,
Mich.

was hostess for a l'ecent meeting of

r---Social Calendar .

Mn. Slllnn 446-4:167.

cekbrated by 3 in same family

Mrs. Gilmore hosts meeting
of Missionary Fellowship

Susanna Wise

THRU APRIL 6, 1980

member of a fast gr-lng
profession. Stert n-, by
studying at GIC, 2 .II' 3
evenings • wHk.
we offer tile eccredltecl
Protrem of class work
you're required to cemplete before taking lilt
Olllo Stete Board 8xeminatlon.
Complete In only . 123
weeks, enroll n-1 Clesltl
will bttln Mercll 1. For
more InformatiOn conte·ct•

Bonnie Allen, R.N., Lynann Dale,
R.N., Janet Johnson, R.N., and Judy
Warehime. Any one of these committee members will be delighted to
accept advance orders for the daffodils, available individually for a 25
cent donation or $2.50 for a bouquet.
Gallipolis Jaycee-ettes will assist
the committee again this year
throughout Gallia County, in the sale
ol the Daffodils on March 28 and 29
at the Silver Bridge Shopping Plaza,
Spring Valley Shopping Plaza, the
local Banks and downtown
Gallipolis. Advance orders before
March 24 may be placed by calling
any committee member of the local
Cancer Soeiety office al446-7479.

.

I

....;,

I

'dl.te&amp;..,
,..,...~ C/

:

!

FACCALENDAR
Exhibit for the month of March A dual exhibit. "A Group of Six : Cincinnati Printmakers." 24 worb by
six artists who share the same studio
in Cincinnati. "Amnesty In·
temational.'' 16 posterS designed by
an extraordinary group of leading
contemporary artists who volunteered • for the Amnesty International project.
Gallery Hours - Tuesdays and
Thursdays, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. ; Saturdays and Sundays, ! p.m.-5 p.m.
Now through March 17- Tenth Annual Membership Campaign for the
French Art Colony, chaired by Jan
Thaler, co-chaired by Anita Tope.
For infonnation call 446-1819 ur 4462457.
Week of March 10 - Full week of
Poet in Residence at Kyger Creek
featuring Devon McNamara, Ph.D.
Week of March 17 - Full week of
Poet in Residence at North Gallia
featuring Dr. McNamara and at
Hannan Trace, Bob·Fox.
March 20, 7 p.m.-10 p.m. - Potpourri of Poets with Wayne Dodd,
Ph.D., Devon McNamara, Ph.D.
and Bob Fox, all at Riverby for an
exciting evening, open to the pub)lc.

MOBILE HOMES

:/HERE'S $50 TO SPEND AT
THE SINGER STORE.
~ ("·

'.

the Women's Missionary Fellowship
International of the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church.
Mrs. Ann Mash gave the devotions
from Isaiah 64 and a reading,
"strangers are Friends We Haven't
Met." Mrs.; Jean Wright read

==--~

';.

~"'-

f.:'~ •
z;~

·

r lrv T I'IF hr n•
1. mac rnetl
• ht! reearm mach rne that comes wrth 12
tlu il t-rn Slllches. a Htep buuo n-

-------.
- -

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

haler, sl ant needle. self-wrndrno

You deserve the best'home VALUE your money can buy.
Our homes offer the greatest val he today at an
exceptionally low price. All our homes include a 5 year
owners satisfaction plan for your peace of mind.
Our owner satisfaction plan guarantees your home against
defects in material and work!Tlanship for five full years.
Pleuntop in and look over our large
seleetion of homes and ask about our

lor free·111m use . l·step

· button l1 tting buttor.holer. push·
,
button self -wtndmg bobb tn
'

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

(" Touch·Tronrc•2QOOme morv
.Amlchme· louchabuttonto

rnc ludrng mend ing &amp; blrnd
hemstrtchea , ~p~' pan el

_con ~erts

-

-- --- - -~ --

\

·• ~~ bobbm
.,. ~.
~ .

., ___ ·-. ----

J)Touch-TrRnrc 2001m emory

mac~rne- fouchtosewany

sew any or 25 pre-programmed
Shtches Solrd-S!Ite trrcur try

oll7 pre.r;rrcgrammed ttrtches
Touch tQ seleC1 strtch length llnd

1eplacn 350 mechlln1tal pa1ts
1-step button ltt!tng l&gt;unonholer,
~P..lit'tt panel Elect rente solt C.
state speed control

w1dth PusM·btmon self ·Windn'lg
bobbtn, ICIJUIIIblt soli touch labnt
letd. l·SIIP but ton ltlt tng
buuonholet and much more

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

: ~THIS IS NOT PLAY MONEY.
'

, ·5 : Year·Owner's

.

$at'sfaction.Program.

·~
In these inflationary times, earning S50 may be easy. But saving-550 isn't.
. ~.; So Singer"is ple~sed to iive you a S50 bill (above) that you can apply toward
;hhe purchase of one of our fihest electronic or mechanical sewing machines ...
· models that-seldom go on sale.
"'\
And then you can start on a rear savings spree. Because the clothes you make
•l!jf'lir.lrtr&lt;.o•lf cost less than half~ much a5 the ready-to-wear you'd buy In the store.
cut out our SSO bill With the sewing machines on the face of it and take it
the ·
Store or a participating Singer dealer. You'll find it's worth every bit
much as a U.S. S50 bill With President Grant's face on the face of it. Offer expires
rAD.ril 26, 1980.
,

2110
Eastern ..Avenue
. .
-j~ Gallipolis, OH.
'

RUTLAND-Pamphlets oo salt
and the control of it in the daily diet,
and citrus fruits and their nutritional value were distributed to
members at the weekly meeting of
the morning TOPS OH 1466, RuUand
class, by Shorty Wright, leader.
Mrs. Wright also presented each
member with a ribbon marked with
weight loss in February. The TOPS

28 former Rio students ·and
alumni gather in Florida
RIO GRANDE - Twenty-eight
former Rio Grande College students,
alumni and teachers met for a luncheon at the Sweden House
Restaurant in Brandenton, Florida,
Saturday, February 9. ·Mrs. James
Richards chaired the occasion and
welcomed the group. This was the
15th year for the meeting.
Mrs. Ode.ll Pittenger (Pauline
Hall) gave a memorial for three
members who passed away during
the year: Murl Robinson Darling
and Lester Berridge and a former
music teacher, Mrs. Robert
(Ulllan) Sargenl An original poem
closed her remarks.
Ray McKinnlss, Director of Alumni Re)atlons and Wayne Canine,
Director for Development attended
the meeting and spoke on the growth
and future plans for Rio Grande
College and Community College.
Those attending the Florida
meeting were: .Mr. and Mrs. Odell
Pittenger, Mr. and Mrs. P. C. (Jack)
Lambert, and Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Lemon (Genevieve Williams),
'Bradenton; Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
SOUP SUPPER WEDNESDAY
RACINE - A soup supper - bean
and vegetable - will be held at the
Wesleyan United Methodist Church
in Racine from 4 to 7 p.m. Wednesday. Corn bread, sandwiches and
ple will also he available. Those
wishing carry out orders are to take
their containers.

..__....,..._58 COU~T ST.

"

•

.

1
:

MMtnteteNd By

.

National Warranty Corporation

·1

•
I

·~--------7
4 --~~----~~----~.

Ofi'!EN TUE,, WED.. tH uN~ .. iA T, fiLJ fi .M',

GA!I IPOLIS. Ot; .o---....o

.

-

•

. MASON!! TO MEET

.

POMEROY - A regular Jlle!!tlng
of P,omeroy Chapter so, Royal Ai-ch
Masons, will be held at 7 :30 p.m.
Wednesday. At 8:30 p.m. a regular ·
meeting of Bosworth ~ell 46,
Jwyal and Select Masons will be
held.
~
.
~

'

GALLIPOLIS - The spring
meeting of the Garden Clubs of
Gallia County will be held on March
20, at 7:30p.m. at the Senior Citizens
Building at 220 Jackson Pike,
Gallipolis. Mrs. Earl Dean, . a
designer fr&lt;m Meigs County, will
present a program of flower
designing. She is being soonsored by

the Galllpolis Garden Club. Mrs.
Linda Myers, County Contact Chairperson, will preside over the meet
and The French City Garden Club is
the host club.
All garden club members are
urged to be present. Friends and
guests are welcome.

BEGINNING MARCH lOTH

MILSTEAD. BAKERY INC.
NEW STORE HOURS

ONE AND
TWO PIECE
STYLES

NOW OPENING AT

$2rx'

6:30 AM TIL 7:00 PM
Junior and
Missy Styles

__ilstrab'.a ialtrr
INC.

Davis, Sarasota; Mr. and Mrs. Ben
Evans (Margaret Jooes) and their
guests, Mr. and Mrs. David Jones,
Venice; Mr. and Mrs. Clark Baker,
Worthington, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs.
George Broyles and Mrs. Paul
Haskins (May Phillips), Lake
Placid; Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Russell
(Flossie Loe), Palmetto; Miss Clara
Poston and sister, Freda, St. Petersburg; Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Grodin,
Lakeland; and Clyde Thompson,
Largo; Mrs. Briggs Kirby and Mrs.
James Richard&amp;, Cortez.
Greetings were read from Mr. and
Mrs. Roland Will (Helen Knight),
Mrs. Melvin Dunbar (Ruth Peters),
Mrs. Fred Smith (Mary Morgan),
Canle Dale, Maxie McCarley, and
Jennie Elliott.
Regrets were received from Louis
Boyd, Dr. Russell Bane, and Myron
Fowler.
Plans were made to meet in 1981 at
the Sweden House.

Slmi4( ()~

EWOTl'PROMOTED
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford E. Manley,
South Second Ave., Middleport, have
received word of the promotion of
their son-in-law, Harold F . Elliott, to
Staff Sergeant.
S_gt. Elliott, who is serving with
the u. s. Army' is stationed at Ft.
Knox, Ky., along with his wife,
Cathy and cbildren, Mandy, age
seven, and Frankie, age two. They ·
_have just returned from a three year !
tour of duty in Gennany.
1

GIGANTIC
CLEARANCE!
In order ·to prepare for this sole
• we will not be open
Monday,
Tuesday and .Wednesday.
.

jM AU t&gt;ua4iDfl4

PHONE 446-4122 - GALLIPOLIS, OHI0- 244 THIRD AVE.

NEW LIVING ROOM SUITE SALE

UP
TO

50%

We buy.direct from the factory, which is a tremendous savings.
Instead of keeping that savings for ourself, we PB that savings
\

along to you, and throw in a big savings to boot, giving you the
lowest prices on living room

su~es

ever.

ALL SUITS MARKED WAY BELOW
REGULAR SUGGESTED RETAIL 'PRICESf
•

New 1 pc: . Llv . Rm . Suite which Includes
l cusnlon couch &amp; mlltching chair with
strong Hercuton cavtr. Tilt price on thh
sullt Is untMHtvabt•~ un~•t•bl e and
unreiSOfttblt . Mltctlinglovesnt ext re .

NEW 2 PC. LIVING ROOM SUITE
REG.

'99

·199.95

95

SAVE

'100

,

~EG.

1299.95

'199'5

_SAVE

'·100

DOORS OPEN THURSDAY,
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY FOR OUR

WINTER CLEARANCE
SAVINGS OF
.
OVER

50%

SAI,E DATE$: MARCH 13, 14, 15

~

CiTy fAbRic SltoppE

OP•NAI.L DAY THURSDAY

,

pledge and officers' reports were
given to open the meeting. Nellie
Haggy was the queen for the week
showing the most weight loss, and
was presented a red ribbon award.
Runner-up for the title was Phyllis
Clay.
An exercise program followed the
meeting. Iniormation on joining the
club may be obtained by telephoning
742-3062.

,,,

· .·

FR~Nclt

GAUJPOLIS - The Dr. Samuel
L. Bossard Memorial Ubrary .!lfl'
nounces the following new books .
have been released :
Fiction - Some · Die Eloquent,
Catherine Alrd; Time After Time,
Karl Alexander; The Court of Silver
Shadows, Beatrice Brandon; The
Bleeding Heart, Marilyn French;
Kennedy For The DefenSe, George
Higgins; The Globes ,of Llarum,
Gene Lancour; Next of Kin, Oliver
Lange; The Bourne Identity, Robert
'•4ldlum; My Cousin's Death, Mary
McMullen; Conspiracy of Silence,
Mel'Silverstein.
Non-Fiction - Free to Choose,
Milton Friedman; Truth Is My
Sword, Bo Hi Pali; The Bureau: My
Thirty Years in Hoover's FBI, Wm.
Sullivan; Planet Medicine, Richard
Grosslnger; Tbe Leprecha.un's
Kingdom, Peter Halning; The
American Gun; Janet Sartin on
Beautiful Skin, Janet . Sartin;
. KnightS of the Air, Ezra Bowen..

"World Day of Prayer", and Mrs.
Iva Powell had prayer. Boxes sent to
Rhodesia last year were noted in an
acknowledgement read by Mrs.
Doris Shook. Mrs. Tina Jacobs will
host the next meeting. Others a ttending were Mrs. Tina Jacobs and
Mrs. Della Curtis.

Monday, March 10 - Carpenter,
Laura's Store, 2:45-3 :!5; Dexter,
Church, 3:45-4: 15; Langsville,
Small's Grocery·, 4 : ~; Rutland,
Pomeroy National Bank, 5:1!Hl
(Short fibn at 5:30); Rutland, Depot
Street, 6:1f&gt;.7 (Short film at 6:30);
Bradbury, Red Bam, 7:lf&gt;.7 :45.
Tuesday, March 11 - Portland,
Proffitt's Store, 2:30-3; Success
Road, Near 39060, 3:4ii-l:l5; Reedsville, Reed's Store, 4 : ~:45 (Short
film at 4:45) ;' Tuppers Plains, Arbaugh Housing, 6:Jf&gt;.7 (Short film at
6:30) ; Rock Springs Church, 7:30-8.
Thursday, March 13 - Coolville,
Post Office, 9:4f&gt;.l0:15; Arcadia
Nursing Home, 10:30-11 ; Tuppers
Plains, Lodkin's Market, 11 :30-12;
Sr. Citizens Center, Pomeroy, II :30; Pomeroy Health Care Center,
Rock Springs Rd., (Starting Feb.
14), l :4f&gt;.2:30 ; Syracuse, Larry's
Grocery, 2:45-3 :15 ; Letart Falls, Effie's Restaurant, 3:4$-4:30 (Short
film at 5l; Racine, Wagner's Hardware, 5:30-6:15 (Short film at
5:45); Syracuse, Pool, 6:30-7:45
(Short !ibn at 6:45 ).

TOPS distributes pamphlets

New books released
SINGER AN D PARTICIPATING DEALERS WILL ACCEPT THIS 050 BILL AS lEGAL TENDER
TOWARD PURCHASE Of ANY OF THL&gt;E SINGER ' SEWING MACH INES

prised of Meigs, Gallia, Jackson and
Lawrence Counties.
Susanna has been active in Job's
Daughters for the past three years
and has held the offices of librarian,
senior custodian, marshall, guide,
junior princess, senior prinl:ess.
She is an active member of the
Heath ·united Methodist Church
where she has served as an acolyte
and is treasurer of the youth group.
She is also a nursery attendant.
A freshman at Meigs High School,
Susanna ls enrolled in the college
preparatory course, is a member of
the band, the gymnastics team, and ·
has played girls' softball for three
years. She was a member of the
track team last year and for five
years was active in girl scouting.

MIDDLEPORT-At the reception
held in the 12th Masonic District at
Rio Grande College recently honoring the Grand Master of all Masons
in Ohio, four "Excellent in Youth"
~warda were presented by the
Grand Master, Charles A. Brigham,
Jr., Cincinnati.
One of the recipients was SusaWI8
Wise, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Roscoe Wise, Third, Ave., Middleport.
The awarda were given to youth
representing Order of Job 's
Daughters, Rainbow Girls, and
Order of DeMolay. Susanna is
honored queen of Job's Daughters
and was recommended by Pomeroy
Lodge 164, F. and A. M. Pomeroy.
The 12th Masonic District is com-

Two 9f your favorite seafoods
in one special meal.

ved variously as secretary,
treasurer, superintendent of the
Sunday School, as member of the
Council on Ministries, the Admlnlstratlve Board and as a trustee.
He is an el18111ple of people who are
making ministry a "second career."
Koch was a lieutenant in the Anderson Township Fire Department
in greater Cincinnati before entering
the millistl1. He and his wife, the
former Betty Mae Jenneil, longtime member of Clough church,
have two. cbildren, Fred, 28, and
Pamela Jean Koch Best, 26.
The Kocp will. live lnAntmu..

Gallia gardeners to meet

Receives 'Excellent in. Youth ' honor

Former Meigs minister goes
•
to ch~ch in Darke ·County
United Methodist Churches in two
Darke County communities have a
new minister, the Rev. Harvey W.
Koch Jr., Bishop Dwight E. Loder
announced last week.
The Rev. Koch will serve at Ansonia and Rossburg, succeeding the
Rev. Jaines Waugh who was appointed .earlier this year to New Knoxville.
A Cinclnnllti community fireman
when he decided to enter the
ministry, Kock prepared for the
ministry by taking a course of study
at Garrett-Evangelical Seminary,
Evanston, lll., and, on Aprill, 1977,
became minister to United
Methodist Churches in Meigs County
- Syracuse, Asbury and Forest Run
and Minersvllle.
Kock was issued a license to
preach by his home church, Clough
United Methodist, in Cincinnati six
years ago. During 16 years as a
member of Clough Church, he ser-

.

Hours : ~
9:30io5:00·
Mon. lhru ~a• .

~,;~~!~a,oo

KIDDIE SHOPPE
lrtl St .
PO~E:n.OY,

0.

,

New 2 pc. pillow arm
living

rm.

suite. This is

a bargain If there ever
w~sone

.

'449~

5

SAVE

'150

''

.

�I
t

~The Sunday Times-Sentinel. Sunday, March9, 1980

~The Sunday Times-Sentlnl!l, Sunday, March 9, 1980

Betty Starn Class·guest of Godwins

' ·4 .f'Jl

GAUJPOLIS - Pastor ·and Mrs.
Joseph Godwin Invited the Betty
Starn claM to hold its regular March
meeting at their home.
Nineteen class members were
present, four members of the Godwin family and Emerson Corbin,
who drove tnebils.
Grace was given by president
Hazel Halley. We theo enjoyed a
potluck meal and wann fellowship
in the Godwin home.

meeting in prayer. The evening was
a very enjoyable time for all.

After the meal, the business
meeting was called to order by the
pcesident and after a short session
Gladys Amllbury gave devotions,
reading the tOOth Psalm and several
poems. She then asked each member to tell how the Lord had recently
blessed him. She closed with prayer.
A gift was presented to the Godwins to help show thanks for their
hospitality.
Nevie North then closed the

The conunlttee was as follows :
chairiady, Lucllle Sarrett, Hazel

Halley', Lillian Carter, Evelyn
Evans, Gladys Amsbary, Nevolene
North• Esta Reese
and Marcella
•
Baker.

•

nual Daffodil Days
·~rut'rway .in Gallipolis
The Gallia Counof the American Cancer
Socj'eiy (ACS) will be participating
(:=~ third lime in the annual
n
observance of Daffodil
Friday and Saturday, Mar2SI. During these two days,
ol beautiful yellow clafthe flowers ol hope, will
''flower power'' to raise
for research, education and
on behaH of local cancer
U..Jli"U'Lili -

+

SPECIAL

29

POMEROt-Mrs. Donna Gilmore

MONDAY
POMEROY PTA, Monday night,
7:30p.m. at the Pomeroy Elementary School. Parent-teacher discus·
sion on student related topics. Book
fair will be held for the parents.

WANTA
.REAL
ESTATE
.
LICENSE?
It's so eesy to be I

SOUTHERN JUNIOR High"School
Athletic Boosters meeting, 7:30 p.m.
Monday at the junior high school.
Parents of girls basketbaU team
members, cheerleaders and· boys
football and basketball teams urged
to attend to plan banquet.
FtACINE BASEBALL Association
meeting, 7 p.m. Monday at Racine
Elementary School. AU parents invited as well as any persons in·
terested in managing a team.
BETHEL 62, International Order
of Job's Daughters, 7:30 p.m. Mon·
day at I be Middleport Masonic Temple. Initiation to be held.
SYRACUSE PTO Monday 7:30
p.m. Refreshments.

Crispy Fish, Tasty Shrimp, Fresh Cole Slaw,
Crunchy Hushpuppies, Golden Fryes

GALLIPOUS
..
IUSINISS

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

~-----/.)--

Good only at:

STATE ROUTE 7, SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER

44'-4367

the children were Shannon and Brett
Newsome, Christy Sjlears, Jennifer

:

Cross, Gina and Rhonda Gibbs, Penny, Patsy and Patrick Aeiker,
Danielle and Lucianna Scott,'
Elizabeth and Timmy Lawson, Jodie
Schaekel, Michelle and Tim, Tom
and Tammy Capehart, Sherrie and
Del Laudennllt, Patti and Mony
Wood.
Eleanor Lawson, Cathie and Bob

I
:

0

l

No.

bb1hdaysofFr.ankNew&amp;mne
:lt!t:wo~.sons::: , Rodney and Terry
recently.
Mr. Newsome's birthday,
...... - and Sharon Bailey of Five
&gt;Nilb. entertained with a dinner at
The loth birthday of
and the 6th birthday of
RollliltY was celebrated with a party
DBn!nts' home.
or presenting gifts to

~/

I

COWGE
Rodney, Te"y
&amp; Frank Newsome

·,-------------------------------~
·

JOHNSON'S

Wood, Pat and Cindy Aeiker, Shirley
Gibbs, Cheryl Laudermilt, Phyllis
Cross, Austin New&amp;mne, Sharon and
Brenda Bailey, and Ben and Chris
Spears.
Suelmboden, Mary Salding and
Bob, and Lela Redfern of Detroit,
Mich.

was hostess for a l'ecent meeting of

r---Social Calendar .

Mn. Slllnn 446-4:167.

cekbrated by 3 in same family

Mrs. Gilmore hosts meeting
of Missionary Fellowship

Susanna Wise

THRU APRIL 6, 1980

member of a fast gr-lng
profession. Stert n-, by
studying at GIC, 2 .II' 3
evenings • wHk.
we offer tile eccredltecl
Protrem of class work
you're required to cemplete before taking lilt
Olllo Stete Board 8xeminatlon.
Complete In only . 123
weeks, enroll n-1 Clesltl
will bttln Mercll 1. For
more InformatiOn conte·ct•

Bonnie Allen, R.N., Lynann Dale,
R.N., Janet Johnson, R.N., and Judy
Warehime. Any one of these committee members will be delighted to
accept advance orders for the daffodils, available individually for a 25
cent donation or $2.50 for a bouquet.
Gallipolis Jaycee-ettes will assist
the committee again this year
throughout Gallia County, in the sale
ol the Daffodils on March 28 and 29
at the Silver Bridge Shopping Plaza,
Spring Valley Shopping Plaza, the
local Banks and downtown
Gallipolis. Advance orders before
March 24 may be placed by calling
any committee member of the local
Cancer Soeiety office al446-7479.

.

I

....;,

I

'dl.te&amp;..,
,..,...~ C/

:

!

FACCALENDAR
Exhibit for the month of March A dual exhibit. "A Group of Six : Cincinnati Printmakers." 24 worb by
six artists who share the same studio
in Cincinnati. "Amnesty In·
temational.'' 16 posterS designed by
an extraordinary group of leading
contemporary artists who volunteered • for the Amnesty International project.
Gallery Hours - Tuesdays and
Thursdays, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. ; Saturdays and Sundays, ! p.m.-5 p.m.
Now through March 17- Tenth Annual Membership Campaign for the
French Art Colony, chaired by Jan
Thaler, co-chaired by Anita Tope.
For infonnation call 446-1819 ur 4462457.
Week of March 10 - Full week of
Poet in Residence at Kyger Creek
featuring Devon McNamara, Ph.D.
Week of March 17 - Full week of
Poet in Residence at North Gallia
featuring Dr. McNamara and at
Hannan Trace, Bob·Fox.
March 20, 7 p.m.-10 p.m. - Potpourri of Poets with Wayne Dodd,
Ph.D., Devon McNamara, Ph.D.
and Bob Fox, all at Riverby for an
exciting evening, open to the pub)lc.

MOBILE HOMES

:/HERE'S $50 TO SPEND AT
THE SINGER STORE.
~ ("·

'.

the Women's Missionary Fellowship
International of the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church.
Mrs. Ann Mash gave the devotions
from Isaiah 64 and a reading,
"strangers are Friends We Haven't
Met." Mrs.; Jean Wright read

==--~

';.

~"'-

f.:'~ •
z;~

·

r lrv T I'IF hr n•
1. mac rnetl
• ht! reearm mach rne that comes wrth 12
tlu il t-rn Slllches. a Htep buuo n-

-------.
- -

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

haler, sl ant needle. self-wrndrno

You deserve the best'home VALUE your money can buy.
Our homes offer the greatest val he today at an
exceptionally low price. All our homes include a 5 year
owners satisfaction plan for your peace of mind.
Our owner satisfaction plan guarantees your home against
defects in material and work!Tlanship for five full years.
Pleuntop in and look over our large
seleetion of homes and ask about our

lor free·111m use . l·step

· button l1 tting buttor.holer. push·
,
button self -wtndmg bobb tn
'

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

(" Touch·Tronrc•2QOOme morv
.Amlchme· louchabuttonto

rnc ludrng mend ing &amp; blrnd
hemstrtchea , ~p~' pan el

_con ~erts

-

-- --- - -~ --

\

·• ~~ bobbm
.,. ~.
~ .

., ___ ·-. ----

J)Touch-TrRnrc 2001m emory

mac~rne- fouchtosewany

sew any or 25 pre-programmed
Shtches Solrd-S!Ite trrcur try

oll7 pre.r;rrcgrammed ttrtches
Touch tQ seleC1 strtch length llnd

1eplacn 350 mechlln1tal pa1ts
1-step button ltt!tng l&gt;unonholer,
~P..lit'tt panel Elect rente solt C.
state speed control

w1dth PusM·btmon self ·Windn'lg
bobbtn, ICIJUIIIblt soli touch labnt
letd. l·SIIP but ton ltlt tng
buuonholet and much more

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

: ~THIS IS NOT PLAY MONEY.
'

, ·5 : Year·Owner's

.

$at'sfaction.Program.

·~
In these inflationary times, earning S50 may be easy. But saving-550 isn't.
. ~.; So Singer"is ple~sed to iive you a S50 bill (above) that you can apply toward
;hhe purchase of one of our fihest electronic or mechanical sewing machines ...
· models that-seldom go on sale.
"'\
And then you can start on a rear savings spree. Because the clothes you make
•l!jf'lir.lrtr&lt;.o•lf cost less than half~ much a5 the ready-to-wear you'd buy In the store.
cut out our SSO bill With the sewing machines on the face of it and take it
the ·
Store or a participating Singer dealer. You'll find it's worth every bit
much as a U.S. S50 bill With President Grant's face on the face of it. Offer expires
rAD.ril 26, 1980.
,

2110
Eastern ..Avenue
. .
-j~ Gallipolis, OH.
'

RUTLAND-Pamphlets oo salt
and the control of it in the daily diet,
and citrus fruits and their nutritional value were distributed to
members at the weekly meeting of
the morning TOPS OH 1466, RuUand
class, by Shorty Wright, leader.
Mrs. Wright also presented each
member with a ribbon marked with
weight loss in February. The TOPS

28 former Rio students ·and
alumni gather in Florida
RIO GRANDE - Twenty-eight
former Rio Grande College students,
alumni and teachers met for a luncheon at the Sweden House
Restaurant in Brandenton, Florida,
Saturday, February 9. ·Mrs. James
Richards chaired the occasion and
welcomed the group. This was the
15th year for the meeting.
Mrs. Ode.ll Pittenger (Pauline
Hall) gave a memorial for three
members who passed away during
the year: Murl Robinson Darling
and Lester Berridge and a former
music teacher, Mrs. Robert
(Ulllan) Sargenl An original poem
closed her remarks.
Ray McKinnlss, Director of Alumni Re)atlons and Wayne Canine,
Director for Development attended
the meeting and spoke on the growth
and future plans for Rio Grande
College and Community College.
Those attending the Florida
meeting were: .Mr. and Mrs. Odell
Pittenger, Mr. and Mrs. P. C. (Jack)
Lambert, and Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Lemon (Genevieve Williams),
'Bradenton; Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
SOUP SUPPER WEDNESDAY
RACINE - A soup supper - bean
and vegetable - will be held at the
Wesleyan United Methodist Church
in Racine from 4 to 7 p.m. Wednesday. Corn bread, sandwiches and
ple will also he available. Those
wishing carry out orders are to take
their containers.

..__....,..._58 COU~T ST.

"

•

.

1
:

MMtnteteNd By

.

National Warranty Corporation

·1

•
I

·~--------7
4 --~~----~~----~.

Ofi'!EN TUE,, WED.. tH uN~ .. iA T, fiLJ fi .M',

GA!I IPOLIS. Ot; .o---....o

.

-

•

. MASON!! TO MEET

.

POMEROY - A regular Jlle!!tlng
of P,omeroy Chapter so, Royal Ai-ch
Masons, will be held at 7 :30 p.m.
Wednesday. At 8:30 p.m. a regular ·
meeting of Bosworth ~ell 46,
Jwyal and Select Masons will be
held.
~
.
~

'

GALLIPOLIS - The spring
meeting of the Garden Clubs of
Gallia County will be held on March
20, at 7:30p.m. at the Senior Citizens
Building at 220 Jackson Pike,
Gallipolis. Mrs. Earl Dean, . a
designer fr&lt;m Meigs County, will
present a program of flower
designing. She is being soonsored by

the Galllpolis Garden Club. Mrs.
Linda Myers, County Contact Chairperson, will preside over the meet
and The French City Garden Club is
the host club.
All garden club members are
urged to be present. Friends and
guests are welcome.

BEGINNING MARCH lOTH

MILSTEAD. BAKERY INC.
NEW STORE HOURS

ONE AND
TWO PIECE
STYLES

NOW OPENING AT

$2rx'

6:30 AM TIL 7:00 PM
Junior and
Missy Styles

__ilstrab'.a ialtrr
INC.

Davis, Sarasota; Mr. and Mrs. Ben
Evans (Margaret Jooes) and their
guests, Mr. and Mrs. David Jones,
Venice; Mr. and Mrs. Clark Baker,
Worthington, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs.
George Broyles and Mrs. Paul
Haskins (May Phillips), Lake
Placid; Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Russell
(Flossie Loe), Palmetto; Miss Clara
Poston and sister, Freda, St. Petersburg; Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Grodin,
Lakeland; and Clyde Thompson,
Largo; Mrs. Briggs Kirby and Mrs.
James Richard&amp;, Cortez.
Greetings were read from Mr. and
Mrs. Roland Will (Helen Knight),
Mrs. Melvin Dunbar (Ruth Peters),
Mrs. Fred Smith (Mary Morgan),
Canle Dale, Maxie McCarley, and
Jennie Elliott.
Regrets were received from Louis
Boyd, Dr. Russell Bane, and Myron
Fowler.
Plans were made to meet in 1981 at
the Sweden House.

Slmi4( ()~

EWOTl'PROMOTED
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford E. Manley,
South Second Ave., Middleport, have
received word of the promotion of
their son-in-law, Harold F . Elliott, to
Staff Sergeant.
S_gt. Elliott, who is serving with
the u. s. Army' is stationed at Ft.
Knox, Ky., along with his wife,
Cathy and cbildren, Mandy, age
seven, and Frankie, age two. They ·
_have just returned from a three year !
tour of duty in Gennany.
1

GIGANTIC
CLEARANCE!
In order ·to prepare for this sole
• we will not be open
Monday,
Tuesday and .Wednesday.
.

jM AU t&gt;ua4iDfl4

PHONE 446-4122 - GALLIPOLIS, OHI0- 244 THIRD AVE.

NEW LIVING ROOM SUITE SALE

UP
TO

50%

We buy.direct from the factory, which is a tremendous savings.
Instead of keeping that savings for ourself, we PB that savings
\

along to you, and throw in a big savings to boot, giving you the
lowest prices on living room

su~es

ever.

ALL SUITS MARKED WAY BELOW
REGULAR SUGGESTED RETAIL 'PRICESf
•

New 1 pc: . Llv . Rm . Suite which Includes
l cusnlon couch &amp; mlltching chair with
strong Hercuton cavtr. Tilt price on thh
sullt Is untMHtvabt•~ un~•t•bl e and
unreiSOfttblt . Mltctlinglovesnt ext re .

NEW 2 PC. LIVING ROOM SUITE
REG.

'99

·199.95

95

SAVE

'100

,

~EG.

1299.95

'199'5

_SAVE

'·100

DOORS OPEN THURSDAY,
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY FOR OUR

WINTER CLEARANCE
SAVINGS OF
.
OVER

50%

SAI,E DATE$: MARCH 13, 14, 15

~

CiTy fAbRic SltoppE

OP•NAI.L DAY THURSDAY

,

pledge and officers' reports were
given to open the meeting. Nellie
Haggy was the queen for the week
showing the most weight loss, and
was presented a red ribbon award.
Runner-up for the title was Phyllis
Clay.
An exercise program followed the
meeting. Iniormation on joining the
club may be obtained by telephoning
742-3062.

,,,

· .·

FR~Nclt

GAUJPOLIS - The Dr. Samuel
L. Bossard Memorial Ubrary .!lfl'
nounces the following new books .
have been released :
Fiction - Some · Die Eloquent,
Catherine Alrd; Time After Time,
Karl Alexander; The Court of Silver
Shadows, Beatrice Brandon; The
Bleeding Heart, Marilyn French;
Kennedy For The DefenSe, George
Higgins; The Globes ,of Llarum,
Gene Lancour; Next of Kin, Oliver
Lange; The Bourne Identity, Robert
'•4ldlum; My Cousin's Death, Mary
McMullen; Conspiracy of Silence,
Mel'Silverstein.
Non-Fiction - Free to Choose,
Milton Friedman; Truth Is My
Sword, Bo Hi Pali; The Bureau: My
Thirty Years in Hoover's FBI, Wm.
Sullivan; Planet Medicine, Richard
Grosslnger; Tbe Leprecha.un's
Kingdom, Peter Halning; The
American Gun; Janet Sartin on
Beautiful Skin, Janet . Sartin;
. KnightS of the Air, Ezra Bowen..

"World Day of Prayer", and Mrs.
Iva Powell had prayer. Boxes sent to
Rhodesia last year were noted in an
acknowledgement read by Mrs.
Doris Shook. Mrs. Tina Jacobs will
host the next meeting. Others a ttending were Mrs. Tina Jacobs and
Mrs. Della Curtis.

Monday, March 10 - Carpenter,
Laura's Store, 2:45-3 :!5; Dexter,
Church, 3:45-4: 15; Langsville,
Small's Grocery·, 4 : ~; Rutland,
Pomeroy National Bank, 5:1!Hl
(Short fibn at 5:30); Rutland, Depot
Street, 6:1f&gt;.7 (Short film at 6:30);
Bradbury, Red Bam, 7:lf&gt;.7 :45.
Tuesday, March 11 - Portland,
Proffitt's Store, 2:30-3; Success
Road, Near 39060, 3:4ii-l:l5; Reedsville, Reed's Store, 4 : ~:45 (Short
film at 4:45) ;' Tuppers Plains, Arbaugh Housing, 6:Jf&gt;.7 (Short film at
6:30) ; Rock Springs Church, 7:30-8.
Thursday, March 13 - Coolville,
Post Office, 9:4f&gt;.l0:15; Arcadia
Nursing Home, 10:30-11 ; Tuppers
Plains, Lodkin's Market, 11 :30-12;
Sr. Citizens Center, Pomeroy, II :30; Pomeroy Health Care Center,
Rock Springs Rd., (Starting Feb.
14), l :4f&gt;.2:30 ; Syracuse, Larry's
Grocery, 2:45-3 :15 ; Letart Falls, Effie's Restaurant, 3:4$-4:30 (Short
film at 5l; Racine, Wagner's Hardware, 5:30-6:15 (Short film at
5:45); Syracuse, Pool, 6:30-7:45
(Short !ibn at 6:45 ).

TOPS distributes pamphlets

New books released
SINGER AN D PARTICIPATING DEALERS WILL ACCEPT THIS 050 BILL AS lEGAL TENDER
TOWARD PURCHASE Of ANY OF THL&gt;E SINGER ' SEWING MACH INES

prised of Meigs, Gallia, Jackson and
Lawrence Counties.
Susanna has been active in Job's
Daughters for the past three years
and has held the offices of librarian,
senior custodian, marshall, guide,
junior princess, senior prinl:ess.
She is an active member of the
Heath ·united Methodist Church
where she has served as an acolyte
and is treasurer of the youth group.
She is also a nursery attendant.
A freshman at Meigs High School,
Susanna ls enrolled in the college
preparatory course, is a member of
the band, the gymnastics team, and ·
has played girls' softball for three
years. She was a member of the
track team last year and for five
years was active in girl scouting.

MIDDLEPORT-At the reception
held in the 12th Masonic District at
Rio Grande College recently honoring the Grand Master of all Masons
in Ohio, four "Excellent in Youth"
~warda were presented by the
Grand Master, Charles A. Brigham,
Jr., Cincinnati.
One of the recipients was SusaWI8
Wise, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Roscoe Wise, Third, Ave., Middleport.
The awarda were given to youth
representing Order of Job 's
Daughters, Rainbow Girls, and
Order of DeMolay. Susanna is
honored queen of Job's Daughters
and was recommended by Pomeroy
Lodge 164, F. and A. M. Pomeroy.
The 12th Masonic District is com-

Two 9f your favorite seafoods
in one special meal.

ved variously as secretary,
treasurer, superintendent of the
Sunday School, as member of the
Council on Ministries, the Admlnlstratlve Board and as a trustee.
He is an el18111ple of people who are
making ministry a "second career."
Koch was a lieutenant in the Anderson Township Fire Department
in greater Cincinnati before entering
the millistl1. He and his wife, the
former Betty Mae Jenneil, longtime member of Clough church,
have two. cbildren, Fred, 28, and
Pamela Jean Koch Best, 26.
The Kocp will. live lnAntmu..

Gallia gardeners to meet

Receives 'Excellent in. Youth ' honor

Former Meigs minister goes
•
to ch~ch in Darke ·County
United Methodist Churches in two
Darke County communities have a
new minister, the Rev. Harvey W.
Koch Jr., Bishop Dwight E. Loder
announced last week.
The Rev. Koch will serve at Ansonia and Rossburg, succeeding the
Rev. Jaines Waugh who was appointed .earlier this year to New Knoxville.
A Cinclnnllti community fireman
when he decided to enter the
ministry, Kock prepared for the
ministry by taking a course of study
at Garrett-Evangelical Seminary,
Evanston, lll., and, on Aprill, 1977,
became minister to United
Methodist Churches in Meigs County
- Syracuse, Asbury and Forest Run
and Minersvllle.
Kock was issued a license to
preach by his home church, Clough
United Methodist, in Cincinnati six
years ago. During 16 years as a
member of Clough Church, he ser-

.

Hours : ~
9:30io5:00·
Mon. lhru ~a• .

~,;~~!~a,oo

KIDDIE SHOPPE
lrtl St .
PO~E:n.OY,

0.

,

New 2 pc. pillow arm
living

rm.

suite. This is

a bargain If there ever
w~sone

.

'449~

5

SAVE

'150

''

.

�~The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, March9, 1980

Wedding
plans made
GILLETT, Arkansas - Donna
Kemp, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Allred Workman, Gillett, Arkansas.,
and Rick Barnett, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Arnold Barnett, Gallipolis, will
be united in marriage at the Gillett
United Methodist Church, March 16,
at2p.m.
Barnett was recently discharged
from the Navy.
The couple will reside in Gillett.

.MITCHELL ARRIVES
FOR DUTY
MIWDENHALL, England
Sergeant Edward L. Mitchell,son of
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert F. Mitchell of
Langsville has arrived for duty here
at RAF Mildenhall.
Sergeant Mitchell, an airborne
electronic teclmician, was previous·
ly assigned at HeUenikon Air Base,
Greece.

·'

·Brazilians hopes dashed
on seeing genuine ]ovians

Katie 's Korner.

RIODEJANIERO, Brazil (APJ had been hot news in this nation of
thousands to the !ann, about 75
About 50,000 Brazilians hoping for a 120 million since last weekend when
miles east of Rio. They kept watch
close encounter with a space ship " Brazilian fanner told a national
through the night, many sitting in
from Jupiter jammed onto a !ann television audie!\ce he had learned
cars and others sprawled across the
near Rio today, only to have their ex- by "te!fpathy" that the space ship
rolling valley ringed by mountains.
pectations dashed when the predic· from .iupiter would be landing on his
Tempera l"res hovered around 70
ted dawn arrival time came and farm today at 5:20a.m.- 3:20a.m. degrees as dawn broke and the
went without a sign of Jovian EST.
arrival time passed with the sun the
visitors.
That news brought tens of only visible orb in the sky.
''A lot of people were frustrated of
course," said Heralmir Ramirez, r-,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
police chief of the nearby town of
Casimiro de Abreu. "But most are
leaving calmly and we haven't had
any incidents of violence. What we
do 'have is a tremendous traffic

'100 DISCOUNT

jam."

Ramirez, who estimated the
crowd at 50,000, had called in 350
state and federal police to deal with
the mass of people flooding his tiny
hamlet of 6,000 residents.
Word of the forthcoming "visit"

At the top of the scale this week
are Albert (13Abe) and Ora E. Hill,
Racine.
One of the nicest couples you could
ever meet will be celebrating their

52nd wedding anniversary on MondaY, March 10.
The couple are the parents of three
chlldren, Billy, Bob and Shelba
Jean. They have 11 grandchildren
and five greit-grandchildren.
Best wishes and may you enjoy
many more celebrations.
Charles Wright, 30 Riverview,
Middleport, has been a patient at
Pleasant Valley Hospital for the past
three weeks.
He would appreciate being
re111embered. His room number is
212.

TELEVISION

Brenda Lee Caldwell

A Message from the

Granddaughter of local named
valedictorian of university

POMEROY HEALTH CARE CENTER

WARRENSBURG, Mo. -Brenda
Lee Caldwell, the daughter of Col.
Jinunie D. Caldwell has been
declared the Valedictorian. of the
Class of 1980, at Missouri Central
State University, of Warrensburg, a
suburb of Kansas City, Missouri.
Caldwell has been a student at
many schools, first and second
grade at Fairborn, Oh., third grade
at Montgomery, Nabama, fourth
grade at Fairborn, fifth at
Gallipolis, sixth, seventh, eighth,
runth, tenth and eleventh at Fairfax
Virginia, graduated from high
school at the H. H. Arnold School
Weisbaden, Gennany, first year of
college at Ohio University, second,
third and fourth years of college at
Missouri Central State.
She majored in Learning
Disability, and expects to teach. She
will graduate May 18, 1980. Living in
Gennany with her parents, Brenda
speaks Gennan very fluently. Her
father is a Colonel in the U. S. Air
Force, and his assignment was the
cause of Brenda's having ·to attend
so many different schools, and the
family tried to be near to the
Colonel's station. Besides Brenda,
the family consists of the mother,

Jane, the twins, James and Julie,
who are students at Central State
and younger sister, Kelle, who is at
home, 5464Splitrock Drive, Dayton.

Philomathean
resumes after
winter break

I am happy to an nounce that we will be opening
Wing B of our fa ci lity 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 .
1 appeal to any nurses working out of the county or
are "in retirement" 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 s,
Monday through Friday, at992·6606.

make the county fourth and fifth
grade .tournament a huge success.
They extend thanks to all those
who helped .in any way especially to
the parents and public for their excelleRt support.
Greg Davis, Minersville, wiill be
leaving soon for •Arizona where be
has accepted employment on a
"dude ranch."
Boy, have things changed! Instead
of driving in the cattle on horseback,
they now use four wheel vehicles.
As the song goes, "Don•t Fence Me

In."

CONGRATULATIONS TO Carl
Wolfe's Southern Tornadoes. What a
ball club.
We wish you the best of luck come
next Tuesday.

HAVE AGOOD WEEK.

25" diagonal COLOR TV/25YM08Ml
EARLY AMER ICAN STYliNG .. thew01mth and charm
o r t'odtllonol Eo,YY American cabinetry. Oishessed
tlght pine finish o n p1ne solids, wood com poSition
bomd ond stmutoled wood accents.

112" alae~ TV'S
&amp; Whole ,

Pomeroy Landmark
"Serving Meigs, Gallia
and Mason Counties"
Main Street
Pomeroy
Store Hours : B: 30toS:30
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Mill Closed at S:OO P.M .
Phone 992·2181

GALLIPOLIS - After a two month recess during the middle of winter, the Philomathean Club will

truth of St. Paul's comment in
Philippians 4:13 when he said: " I

can do all things through Christ who
strengtheneth me." II our sufficiency is indeed of God, surely we
ought to allow our worldly fears and
groundless anxieties to vanish. We
also ought to make WORSHIP and
PRAYER a part of our daily routine.
An upward look in prayer to our
Lord will ann us with special grace
in this troubled age. Rather than
throw up our hands in frustration .
and say, "What's the world coming
to• ," let's look upward and realize
what's coming to the world; namely,
God's grace, His strength, His help
in times when we need Him most. (By' Rev. Richard Thomas, Northeast f:luster U. M. Churches) .

Cekbrates one year

POMEROY - Orella Riffle, vice
president of Outreach of
Southeastern Ohio, will be speaker
when the Pomeroy Chapter of the
Women 's Aglow Fellowship meets at
the Meigs Inn Thursday night.
Mrs. Riffle is the wife of a minister

CUSTOMER
APPRECIATION
SALE

NOW IN PROGRESS!
300 Second Ave., Gallipolis
In the Laf'lyette Mall

Ryan McKinney
12 oz.
.
PKG.

RUMMAGE SALE

NEXT WEEKEND
CENTENARY- There will be a
rummage sale at the Centenary
Townhouse March 14 and 15, sponsored by the Calvary Pentecostal
Church.

BONELESS

TAVERN HAM

Hits five big onesI
Mrs. Johnson &amp; infant
-·

LETABT;-"W. Va. - Mr. and Mrs.
~rdJohnson, Letart, W.Va., announce the birth of a son, Richard
Keith, bom Feb. 26, at Holzer
Medieal Center. The infant weighed
seven pounds and nine and one-half

ounces.

Matemal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Surface, Middleport, and the late Robert Lynch.
Patemal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Johnson, Letart. Maternal great-grandparents are Mrs.
Eo•'• Haggy Odegard and Mrs. Mae
Lync)l, Mrs. Johnson is the fanner
Diana Lynch.

POMEROY-Aaron Card, son of
Paul and Sharoq Card, Racine,
celebrated his fl{th birthday recently at his borne.
Gifts were presented to him and a
train cake macfe by his mother was ·
served with Ice cream and koolaid.
Attending were his ·grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Holter, Racine,
Mrs. Jim Werry, Randy and Ricky,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Holter and
Jamey, Mr. and Mrs. Ron Holter,
Debbie, Tammy and Ryan, Martha
Clonch, Kevin Holter, Paul Moore,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Card, John Paul
and Tracy.
Aaron received a telephone call
from his cousin, Jimmy Werry, stationed at Fort Knox, Ky. His address
is Pvt. James Werry, 300-'mml,
D-3-1, 5th Pit., Fort Knox, Ky . 40121.

Fully
Cooked
Ready
Eat.

GALLON
PLASTIC JUG

FOR MORE INFORMATION
245·5353 EXT. 200

CAMPBELL'S
Mr. and Mrs. Jolm Arnott, 109
Union Ave., Pomeroy, are announcing the birth of a six pound, six
OWICe dliughter, Erica Reft::-~­
Lelgh, · on Feb. 26 at St.
Hospital in P~el'$burg.
Matemal grandmother is Mrs.
Betty Curfman, Syracuse, and
paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. WUllam Arnott, Letart Falls.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnott have two other ·
children, Becky,12, andK. C., 5.

CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP

ASSORTED
4 ROLL PKG.

Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Abbott, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy; amounce the birth of a
son, Darin Michael on Feb. 28 at
Holzer Medical Center. The infant
weighed eight pounds and.seven oolrJ.,

ces.

RCor

.

Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Horace Abllott, Pomeroy, and Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Lambert, Pomeroy.
G~t-grandparents are Mr . .and
Mrs. Arlee Abbott, Pomeroy, Mrs.
Clary&amp; Stack, Albany, and James E.
Stack, WWlalDSport, Ohio.
The couple are also the parents of
Jason Allen, age three.

More than one million winners!
Win exciting food prizes and $5
Wendy's Gift Certif,icates just by
rubbing the spots off our Hot 'n
Juicy Sweepstakes playing cards
and coming up with a match. You
could even become one of our
lucky $100 cash winners and be
automatically entered in our big'
$2.5,000
Grand
.
. Prize Drawing.

WATCH REPAIR
We're ready to extencl helping hands
when your Jewelry and watches need
first-rate care . Whether It 'a a major or
minor matter, our speclalletscan effect
good-es-new performance and
appearance.

CLARK'S JEWELRY STORE
342 SECOND
GAUIPOLIS, OHIO

..,...

ODDS CHART
S6l.021

Pf!OITYS

§6J.tJliJ

CHILI U

9:1',110

~-

••

,./ ..,
You ""'Y abllln • Hat

'n Juicy SWIIPIIIIkft
tlcktt by Yllitlng
your loclll Wendy'•

.

··~_~:~ .

'·

.~

:~

r..lluront. No
purchloo
Or, i l(ot 'ri Juicy
SweepotokH llcllet
moy ~ obtolned
~
by aendlng 1 ·
.I
Mlf·eddreoald, ·
'
ateinpld trwtlope to:
Hot 'n Juicy
.
•
$weepotak•• '•
. "t

-•ury.

•I

Heedq!III'IM, P.O. BOll ,

2511, DUbNn, OhiO
;''
43o17. OMi requut per ;~

..,..tope, ..... ..

.r,

..

.,,

•

If!&gt; .

..0. 01"~

Mill

.I 1101. SOH DAIN!( .'
I

~·&lt;-~

..

l

,,

i7. 17Q

; .

f

,,
•'
.+;

....
....
~.~.·-. .~ ·oo,_·~.~.'····~-~.~•.
. . . . .~~..................~..................~. .~~. .~~--~. .· -~. ..~...~..~.~.~
'

"

.·

't~~

and mother of three. She has been in
faith ministry for the past m years.
Reservations for tbe March
meeting are to be made by March II
by calling, 992--3'118, ~. 67~
· ·3273, 949-2325, or 446-7444 in the
evenings. Dinner is $3.50 per person.
Doors will open at 6; dinner is at 7
and the speaker will be presented at
Bp.m.

The Sale Especially for You!

Ryan Lee McKinney, son of Anna
McKinney and Roy Bareswilt,
celebrated his first birthday on Feb.
2. The party was held at the home of
his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
WUllam McKinney, Middleport.
A Bert and Ernie cake and a Raggedy Andy cake were baked for
Ryan by his aunts, Barbara
McMann and Shirley Tyree. Cake,
pop, coffee, and potato chips were
served to Carla McKinney and ·
Yvonne Bareswilt, Ryan's grandmothers, Bernice McKinney, Shawn
Fife, Bill, Myra and Jessi McKinney, Heath Richmond, Nakuma
Tyree, Love Batey, Tanuny and
Jeremy Johnsoo, Jeff McKinney,
Sherr! and Amber Colmer, Lynn and
Charlie Miller, Jan and Niki Roush,
Debbie and Micah Maiden, Tracie
and Jeff McMann, Marilyn Biship,
Mandy Roush, and Ryan's parents.
Sending gifts were Chuck Tyree,
Lucy 1\lcKinney, and Bud McKinney.
After the Bible, the most widely
distributed book in history is
Quotations from the Works of Mao
Tse-tung.

Aaron Card

I

It requires no great intelligence
to see that our world is in a " heap of
trouble." Historians are already ter·
ming our age the "Age of Un·
certainty." Tbe assorted worries,
pressures, stresses, and strains of
daily life have taken a tremendous
toll on the well-being of great nwnbers of Americans. To wbom can we
turn?
We can turn to Christ. Centuries
ago, Jesus offered the perfect
remedy for anxiety and care in
times of great uncertainty when lie
declared: " Lei not your hearts be
troubled. Believe in God, believe
also in me/' (Jolm 14:1). Through
Christ, we can maintain our confidence, oo matter how difficult our
circwnstances may outwardly a~
pear. We can realize the sublime

AGWW FELLOWSHIP
RESERVATIONS DUE

Good luck.

I·New arrivals ,\

resume
their starting
regular schedule
of 1f - - - - - - - - - - -----------------'L-----:-------==--====:::=:::::=:::::::::::='"'"::
meetings,
Thursday
evening at the home of the president,
Shirleen Wiseman at 30 Oakwood
Drive in Gallipolis.
Presenting the program will be ,
Phyllis Thomas, as she reviews
Peter Jenkins' "A Walk Across
America." This is a true story,
telling in great detail the adventures
and experiences of a young man
who, following graduation from
college, felt disillusioned, depressed
and full of questions to which he
could not easily find the answers.
~--::--------;- . From liis home in New England in
early 1973, he and his dog began
· their lengthy adventure of walking
across the country of the United
SUNDAY
States. Along the way they meet
GARDEN Clubs of Gallia County, people in cities and small towns, the
7:30p.m., at Senior Citizens' bldg., author takes jobs and gets involved
Jackson Pike. Mrs. Earl Dean, with the real cross section of
program; all garden club members American life. As he stops for
welcome.
periodic stays on his walk, lie lives
RODNEY United Methodist Church
with a number of families.
Fellowship Room, 7:30p.m. Speciai
Through his experiences which
Lenten Service. The film, "One Who span a number of years, he not only
Was There." All welcome.
finds the answer to his questions
PEP, Bowling at Skyline Lanes all about life in America , but in the
process, totally changes his thinking
of family; 6:30p.m.
'
about the American way.
"ONE Who Was There," Rodney
This is a thought provoking
United Methodist Church, 7:30 p.m.
review, and members are urged to
Religious Film. Everyone welcome.
attend the first meeting of the year
THE REV. Hennan George of Whar· 1980 at Mrs. Wiseman's home to
ton, W. Va. (fonnerly of this area) . hear Mrs. Thomas' program.
will be preaching at the Morgan CenAny member who is unable to at·
ter Gospel Mission Church Sunday, tend should contact Mrs. Wiseman
March 9, at 7 p.m. Everyone by phone at 446-2878.
welcome to attend.

Remember

.'

Hills to celebrate 52 years

. The Meigs Elem&lt;.mtary Basketball
Boosters extend their sincere thanks
to the many persons who helped

perFormance

Sermonette

DIET RITE COLA

tv1oc1e1 LHA 6900
Washer

Model LHE 6900
Dryer

• Inner baskei measures a f~ll 2.71 cu ff -washes
up !P 181bs:·of heavy denim and lwill garmenls
.' (Wnlrlpool se lected load\
• Double-duly Supe r SUAGILATOA'. agtlator
provides lh'Orough wa,hing lor both large and
·· small loads
.• Water-savi ng load-size selector allows you 10
· match the amount of water to the load size
· • MAGI C CLEAN ' self-c leaning lint·itlter'

• Custqm dry control aulomalically shuts dryer off
when clothes reach desired degree of dryness
• 3 Temperature setli ngs include HIGH. LOW and

Remember

.MONDAY

BLUE DEVIL Boosters, 7 p.m.
~~Library ~ex.

.

wASH!NGro~ prA, 7:30 p.m. II).
caf~;

Ma4rflalltoperfomi.

~Ai.LIA 00. ·Republlcan ,WO!ilen, '
7:.30 p.m., munlcip81 bldg., . Jqe

Bennett'• eourtrm.: Dues, $3; brfil&amp;
friend,
'··
.

GRA:CE GUILD; Grace UM Church, ·
t:u:n::.~ for )'.tonday lw . .

' If yOur washer dqtins mto a laundry tuh. penod•cally check

follow.

'

•·'

-

. .

Repnuntatives Ill 50 nations
liped the charter of the United

N8tim.mlM&amp;¥tSanFranctsco. ,

'

.'

'

,

lure for washable kntts
• Extra-large lint screen
• Full-width hamp~r door
• Much more

AVAILABLE NOW AT• ••
f,

,

$599~~
•

~

• Knit setfing provides the necessary tempera-

· C1r ~ 1 11 stra•nor since lint accum.ulalton could ctog laiJndry lub
d1a1n.

mE JU£GlJI.lAR ' ~ ~ the
- ~ COunty, Board of .Mental

ReWdltkll will be beld at 7 p.m.
Manday, Match 10, at 2111 Fint..Ave.,
. '
.
G•lltpolfl
ANNUAL 1~0!1. GaWpolls
Chapter O.E.S. No. 283 Malonic
Temple, 7:80 p.m. ~~~~

AIR

·~

COLORS EXTRA .

.WHITE

~ -

1
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

SAVE $1.10 WITH COUPON
MAXWELL HOUSE

INSTANT COFFEE
10 oz.
JAR

$449

With
Coupon ,

Good Only at Barr's Expires 3·12·80

II

..II
I
I
I
I
I

-----------------------------·
·CRISP
.

'

HEAD.

·

,LEltuCE ............... ~~·.

39~

�~The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, March9, 1980

Wedding
plans made
GILLETT, Arkansas - Donna
Kemp, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Allred Workman, Gillett, Arkansas.,
and Rick Barnett, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Arnold Barnett, Gallipolis, will
be united in marriage at the Gillett
United Methodist Church, March 16,
at2p.m.
Barnett was recently discharged
from the Navy.
The couple will reside in Gillett.

.MITCHELL ARRIVES
FOR DUTY
MIWDENHALL, England
Sergeant Edward L. Mitchell,son of
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert F. Mitchell of
Langsville has arrived for duty here
at RAF Mildenhall.
Sergeant Mitchell, an airborne
electronic teclmician, was previous·
ly assigned at HeUenikon Air Base,
Greece.

·'

·Brazilians hopes dashed
on seeing genuine ]ovians

Katie 's Korner.

RIODEJANIERO, Brazil (APJ had been hot news in this nation of
thousands to the !ann, about 75
About 50,000 Brazilians hoping for a 120 million since last weekend when
miles east of Rio. They kept watch
close encounter with a space ship " Brazilian fanner told a national
through the night, many sitting in
from Jupiter jammed onto a !ann television audie!\ce he had learned
cars and others sprawled across the
near Rio today, only to have their ex- by "te!fpathy" that the space ship
rolling valley ringed by mountains.
pectations dashed when the predic· from .iupiter would be landing on his
Tempera l"res hovered around 70
ted dawn arrival time came and farm today at 5:20a.m.- 3:20a.m. degrees as dawn broke and the
went without a sign of Jovian EST.
arrival time passed with the sun the
visitors.
That news brought tens of only visible orb in the sky.
''A lot of people were frustrated of
course," said Heralmir Ramirez, r-,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
police chief of the nearby town of
Casimiro de Abreu. "But most are
leaving calmly and we haven't had
any incidents of violence. What we
do 'have is a tremendous traffic

'100 DISCOUNT

jam."

Ramirez, who estimated the
crowd at 50,000, had called in 350
state and federal police to deal with
the mass of people flooding his tiny
hamlet of 6,000 residents.
Word of the forthcoming "visit"

At the top of the scale this week
are Albert (13Abe) and Ora E. Hill,
Racine.
One of the nicest couples you could
ever meet will be celebrating their

52nd wedding anniversary on MondaY, March 10.
The couple are the parents of three
chlldren, Billy, Bob and Shelba
Jean. They have 11 grandchildren
and five greit-grandchildren.
Best wishes and may you enjoy
many more celebrations.
Charles Wright, 30 Riverview,
Middleport, has been a patient at
Pleasant Valley Hospital for the past
three weeks.
He would appreciate being
re111embered. His room number is
212.

TELEVISION

Brenda Lee Caldwell

A Message from the

Granddaughter of local named
valedictorian of university

POMEROY HEALTH CARE CENTER

WARRENSBURG, Mo. -Brenda
Lee Caldwell, the daughter of Col.
Jinunie D. Caldwell has been
declared the Valedictorian. of the
Class of 1980, at Missouri Central
State University, of Warrensburg, a
suburb of Kansas City, Missouri.
Caldwell has been a student at
many schools, first and second
grade at Fairborn, Oh., third grade
at Montgomery, Nabama, fourth
grade at Fairborn, fifth at
Gallipolis, sixth, seventh, eighth,
runth, tenth and eleventh at Fairfax
Virginia, graduated from high
school at the H. H. Arnold School
Weisbaden, Gennany, first year of
college at Ohio University, second,
third and fourth years of college at
Missouri Central State.
She majored in Learning
Disability, and expects to teach. She
will graduate May 18, 1980. Living in
Gennany with her parents, Brenda
speaks Gennan very fluently. Her
father is a Colonel in the U. S. Air
Force, and his assignment was the
cause of Brenda's having ·to attend
so many different schools, and the
family tried to be near to the
Colonel's station. Besides Brenda,
the family consists of the mother,

Jane, the twins, James and Julie,
who are students at Central State
and younger sister, Kelle, who is at
home, 5464Splitrock Drive, Dayton.

Philomathean
resumes after
winter break

I am happy to an nounce that we will be opening
Wing B of our fa ci lity 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 .
1 appeal to any nurses working out of the county or
are "in retirement" 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 s,
Monday through Friday, at992·6606.

make the county fourth and fifth
grade .tournament a huge success.
They extend thanks to all those
who helped .in any way especially to
the parents and public for their excelleRt support.
Greg Davis, Minersville, wiill be
leaving soon for •Arizona where be
has accepted employment on a
"dude ranch."
Boy, have things changed! Instead
of driving in the cattle on horseback,
they now use four wheel vehicles.
As the song goes, "Don•t Fence Me

In."

CONGRATULATIONS TO Carl
Wolfe's Southern Tornadoes. What a
ball club.
We wish you the best of luck come
next Tuesday.

HAVE AGOOD WEEK.

25" diagonal COLOR TV/25YM08Ml
EARLY AMER ICAN STYliNG .. thew01mth and charm
o r t'odtllonol Eo,YY American cabinetry. Oishessed
tlght pine finish o n p1ne solids, wood com poSition
bomd ond stmutoled wood accents.

112" alae~ TV'S
&amp; Whole ,

Pomeroy Landmark
"Serving Meigs, Gallia
and Mason Counties"
Main Street
Pomeroy
Store Hours : B: 30toS:30
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Mill Closed at S:OO P.M .
Phone 992·2181

GALLIPOLIS - After a two month recess during the middle of winter, the Philomathean Club will

truth of St. Paul's comment in
Philippians 4:13 when he said: " I

can do all things through Christ who
strengtheneth me." II our sufficiency is indeed of God, surely we
ought to allow our worldly fears and
groundless anxieties to vanish. We
also ought to make WORSHIP and
PRAYER a part of our daily routine.
An upward look in prayer to our
Lord will ann us with special grace
in this troubled age. Rather than
throw up our hands in frustration .
and say, "What's the world coming
to• ," let's look upward and realize
what's coming to the world; namely,
God's grace, His strength, His help
in times when we need Him most. (By' Rev. Richard Thomas, Northeast f:luster U. M. Churches) .

Cekbrates one year

POMEROY - Orella Riffle, vice
president of Outreach of
Southeastern Ohio, will be speaker
when the Pomeroy Chapter of the
Women 's Aglow Fellowship meets at
the Meigs Inn Thursday night.
Mrs. Riffle is the wife of a minister

CUSTOMER
APPRECIATION
SALE

NOW IN PROGRESS!
300 Second Ave., Gallipolis
In the Laf'lyette Mall

Ryan McKinney
12 oz.
.
PKG.

RUMMAGE SALE

NEXT WEEKEND
CENTENARY- There will be a
rummage sale at the Centenary
Townhouse March 14 and 15, sponsored by the Calvary Pentecostal
Church.

BONELESS

TAVERN HAM

Hits five big onesI
Mrs. Johnson &amp; infant
-·

LETABT;-"W. Va. - Mr. and Mrs.
~rdJohnson, Letart, W.Va., announce the birth of a son, Richard
Keith, bom Feb. 26, at Holzer
Medieal Center. The infant weighed
seven pounds and nine and one-half

ounces.

Matemal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Surface, Middleport, and the late Robert Lynch.
Patemal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Johnson, Letart. Maternal great-grandparents are Mrs.
Eo•'• Haggy Odegard and Mrs. Mae
Lync)l, Mrs. Johnson is the fanner
Diana Lynch.

POMEROY-Aaron Card, son of
Paul and Sharoq Card, Racine,
celebrated his fl{th birthday recently at his borne.
Gifts were presented to him and a
train cake macfe by his mother was ·
served with Ice cream and koolaid.
Attending were his ·grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Holter, Racine,
Mrs. Jim Werry, Randy and Ricky,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Holter and
Jamey, Mr. and Mrs. Ron Holter,
Debbie, Tammy and Ryan, Martha
Clonch, Kevin Holter, Paul Moore,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Card, John Paul
and Tracy.
Aaron received a telephone call
from his cousin, Jimmy Werry, stationed at Fort Knox, Ky. His address
is Pvt. James Werry, 300-'mml,
D-3-1, 5th Pit., Fort Knox, Ky . 40121.

Fully
Cooked
Ready
Eat.

GALLON
PLASTIC JUG

FOR MORE INFORMATION
245·5353 EXT. 200

CAMPBELL'S
Mr. and Mrs. Jolm Arnott, 109
Union Ave., Pomeroy, are announcing the birth of a six pound, six
OWICe dliughter, Erica Reft::-~­
Lelgh, · on Feb. 26 at St.
Hospital in P~el'$burg.
Matemal grandmother is Mrs.
Betty Curfman, Syracuse, and
paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. WUllam Arnott, Letart Falls.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnott have two other ·
children, Becky,12, andK. C., 5.

CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP

ASSORTED
4 ROLL PKG.

Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Abbott, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy; amounce the birth of a
son, Darin Michael on Feb. 28 at
Holzer Medical Center. The infant
weighed eight pounds and.seven oolrJ.,

ces.

RCor

.

Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Horace Abllott, Pomeroy, and Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Lambert, Pomeroy.
G~t-grandparents are Mr . .and
Mrs. Arlee Abbott, Pomeroy, Mrs.
Clary&amp; Stack, Albany, and James E.
Stack, WWlalDSport, Ohio.
The couple are also the parents of
Jason Allen, age three.

More than one million winners!
Win exciting food prizes and $5
Wendy's Gift Certif,icates just by
rubbing the spots off our Hot 'n
Juicy Sweepstakes playing cards
and coming up with a match. You
could even become one of our
lucky $100 cash winners and be
automatically entered in our big'
$2.5,000
Grand
.
. Prize Drawing.

WATCH REPAIR
We're ready to extencl helping hands
when your Jewelry and watches need
first-rate care . Whether It 'a a major or
minor matter, our speclalletscan effect
good-es-new performance and
appearance.

CLARK'S JEWELRY STORE
342 SECOND
GAUIPOLIS, OHIO

..,...

ODDS CHART
S6l.021

Pf!OITYS

§6J.tJliJ

CHILI U

9:1',110

~-

••

,./ ..,
You ""'Y abllln • Hat

'n Juicy SWIIPIIIIkft
tlcktt by Yllitlng
your loclll Wendy'•

.

··~_~:~ .

'·

.~

:~

r..lluront. No
purchloo
Or, i l(ot 'ri Juicy
SweepotokH llcllet
moy ~ obtolned
~
by aendlng 1 ·
.I
Mlf·eddreoald, ·
'
ateinpld trwtlope to:
Hot 'n Juicy
.
•
$weepotak•• '•
. "t

-•ury.

•I

Heedq!III'IM, P.O. BOll ,

2511, DUbNn, OhiO
;''
43o17. OMi requut per ;~

..,..tope, ..... ..

.r,

..

.,,

•

If!&gt; .

..0. 01"~

Mill

.I 1101. SOH DAIN!( .'
I

~·&lt;-~

..

l

,,

i7. 17Q

; .

f

,,
•'
.+;

....
....
~.~.·-. .~ ·oo,_·~.~.'····~-~.~•.
. . . . .~~..................~..................~. .~~. .~~--~. .· -~. ..~...~..~.~.~
'

"

.·

't~~

and mother of three. She has been in
faith ministry for the past m years.
Reservations for tbe March
meeting are to be made by March II
by calling, 992--3'118, ~. 67~
· ·3273, 949-2325, or 446-7444 in the
evenings. Dinner is $3.50 per person.
Doors will open at 6; dinner is at 7
and the speaker will be presented at
Bp.m.

The Sale Especially for You!

Ryan Lee McKinney, son of Anna
McKinney and Roy Bareswilt,
celebrated his first birthday on Feb.
2. The party was held at the home of
his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
WUllam McKinney, Middleport.
A Bert and Ernie cake and a Raggedy Andy cake were baked for
Ryan by his aunts, Barbara
McMann and Shirley Tyree. Cake,
pop, coffee, and potato chips were
served to Carla McKinney and ·
Yvonne Bareswilt, Ryan's grandmothers, Bernice McKinney, Shawn
Fife, Bill, Myra and Jessi McKinney, Heath Richmond, Nakuma
Tyree, Love Batey, Tanuny and
Jeremy Johnsoo, Jeff McKinney,
Sherr! and Amber Colmer, Lynn and
Charlie Miller, Jan and Niki Roush,
Debbie and Micah Maiden, Tracie
and Jeff McMann, Marilyn Biship,
Mandy Roush, and Ryan's parents.
Sending gifts were Chuck Tyree,
Lucy 1\lcKinney, and Bud McKinney.
After the Bible, the most widely
distributed book in history is
Quotations from the Works of Mao
Tse-tung.

Aaron Card

I

It requires no great intelligence
to see that our world is in a " heap of
trouble." Historians are already ter·
ming our age the "Age of Un·
certainty." Tbe assorted worries,
pressures, stresses, and strains of
daily life have taken a tremendous
toll on the well-being of great nwnbers of Americans. To wbom can we
turn?
We can turn to Christ. Centuries
ago, Jesus offered the perfect
remedy for anxiety and care in
times of great uncertainty when lie
declared: " Lei not your hearts be
troubled. Believe in God, believe
also in me/' (Jolm 14:1). Through
Christ, we can maintain our confidence, oo matter how difficult our
circwnstances may outwardly a~
pear. We can realize the sublime

AGWW FELLOWSHIP
RESERVATIONS DUE

Good luck.

I·New arrivals ,\

resume
their starting
regular schedule
of 1f - - - - - - - - - - -----------------'L-----:-------==--====:::=:::::=:::::::::::='"'"::
meetings,
Thursday
evening at the home of the president,
Shirleen Wiseman at 30 Oakwood
Drive in Gallipolis.
Presenting the program will be ,
Phyllis Thomas, as she reviews
Peter Jenkins' "A Walk Across
America." This is a true story,
telling in great detail the adventures
and experiences of a young man
who, following graduation from
college, felt disillusioned, depressed
and full of questions to which he
could not easily find the answers.
~--::--------;- . From liis home in New England in
early 1973, he and his dog began
· their lengthy adventure of walking
across the country of the United
SUNDAY
States. Along the way they meet
GARDEN Clubs of Gallia County, people in cities and small towns, the
7:30p.m., at Senior Citizens' bldg., author takes jobs and gets involved
Jackson Pike. Mrs. Earl Dean, with the real cross section of
program; all garden club members American life. As he stops for
welcome.
periodic stays on his walk, lie lives
RODNEY United Methodist Church
with a number of families.
Fellowship Room, 7:30p.m. Speciai
Through his experiences which
Lenten Service. The film, "One Who span a number of years, he not only
Was There." All welcome.
finds the answer to his questions
PEP, Bowling at Skyline Lanes all about life in America , but in the
process, totally changes his thinking
of family; 6:30p.m.
'
about the American way.
"ONE Who Was There," Rodney
This is a thought provoking
United Methodist Church, 7:30 p.m.
review, and members are urged to
Religious Film. Everyone welcome.
attend the first meeting of the year
THE REV. Hennan George of Whar· 1980 at Mrs. Wiseman's home to
ton, W. Va. (fonnerly of this area) . hear Mrs. Thomas' program.
will be preaching at the Morgan CenAny member who is unable to at·
ter Gospel Mission Church Sunday, tend should contact Mrs. Wiseman
March 9, at 7 p.m. Everyone by phone at 446-2878.
welcome to attend.

Remember

.'

Hills to celebrate 52 years

. The Meigs Elem&lt;.mtary Basketball
Boosters extend their sincere thanks
to the many persons who helped

perFormance

Sermonette

DIET RITE COLA

tv1oc1e1 LHA 6900
Washer

Model LHE 6900
Dryer

• Inner baskei measures a f~ll 2.71 cu ff -washes
up !P 181bs:·of heavy denim and lwill garmenls
.' (Wnlrlpool se lected load\
• Double-duly Supe r SUAGILATOA'. agtlator
provides lh'Orough wa,hing lor both large and
·· small loads
.• Water-savi ng load-size selector allows you 10
· match the amount of water to the load size
· • MAGI C CLEAN ' self-c leaning lint·itlter'

• Custqm dry control aulomalically shuts dryer off
when clothes reach desired degree of dryness
• 3 Temperature setli ngs include HIGH. LOW and

Remember

.MONDAY

BLUE DEVIL Boosters, 7 p.m.
~~Library ~ex.

.

wASH!NGro~ prA, 7:30 p.m. II).
caf~;

Ma4rflalltoperfomi.

~Ai.LIA 00. ·Republlcan ,WO!ilen, '
7:.30 p.m., munlcip81 bldg., . Jqe

Bennett'• eourtrm.: Dues, $3; brfil&amp;
friend,
'··
.

GRA:CE GUILD; Grace UM Church, ·
t:u:n::.~ for )'.tonday lw . .

' If yOur washer dqtins mto a laundry tuh. penod•cally check

follow.

'

•·'

-

. .

Repnuntatives Ill 50 nations
liped the charter of the United

N8tim.mlM&amp;¥tSanFranctsco. ,

'

.'

'

,

lure for washable kntts
• Extra-large lint screen
• Full-width hamp~r door
• Much more

AVAILABLE NOW AT• ••
f,

,

$599~~
•

~

• Knit setfing provides the necessary tempera-

· C1r ~ 1 11 stra•nor since lint accum.ulalton could ctog laiJndry lub
d1a1n.

mE JU£GlJI.lAR ' ~ ~ the
- ~ COunty, Board of .Mental

ReWdltkll will be beld at 7 p.m.
Manday, Match 10, at 2111 Fint..Ave.,
. '
.
G•lltpolfl
ANNUAL 1~0!1. GaWpolls
Chapter O.E.S. No. 283 Malonic
Temple, 7:80 p.m. ~~~~

AIR

·~

COLORS EXTRA .

.WHITE

~ -

1
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

SAVE $1.10 WITH COUPON
MAXWELL HOUSE

INSTANT COFFEE
10 oz.
JAR

$449

With
Coupon ,

Good Only at Barr's Expires 3·12·80

II

..II
I
I
I
I
I

-----------------------------·
·CRISP
.

'

HEAD.

·

,LEltuCE ............... ~~·.

39~

�C.l-The_$undayTimesoSentinel, SWlday, ! ~arch 9, 1980
~The SWJday Times-sentinel, Sunday, March 9. 1980

,

Washington PTA to celebrate Slinderella
Founder 's Day here March 10 class meets
GAlLIPOLIS - On March 10 at
7:30p.m. in the school cafeteria, the
Washington School PTA will meet to
celebrate Founders' Day and honor
the following past presidents of
Washington School PTA : 1928-29,
Mrs. Frank James; 1929-31, Mrs. E.
Wood Mills; 1931-32, Mrs. Ben
Eachus; 1932-34, Mrs. C. C. Richards ; 1934-35, Mrs. Aldeth Jenkins;
1935-'16, Mrs. Gilbert Bush; 1936-37,
Mrs. Mrs. Starbuck; 1937-38, Mrs.
Hollis Wood ; 1938-39, Mrs. George
Lear; 1939-40, Mrs. Dwight
Wetherliolt; 1946-41, Mrs. Ruth
Masters; 1941-42, Mrs. Horace
Ecker; 1942-44, Mrs. Emmett
Morrison; 1944-45, Mrs. Francis
Shane; 1945-46, Mrs. Keith Suiter;
1114&amp;-47, Mrs. Raymond Gooch; 194748, Mrs. R. E. Jenkins ; 1943-49, Mrs.
Hobart Wickline; 1949-50, Mrs. D. M.
ELliott; 1951-62, Mrs. Marcus
Magnussen; 1952-53, Mrs. R. D.
Thomas; 1953-S4, Mrs. George ·
Fuller; 19M-55, Mrs. Jolm L. Evans;
1955-56, Mrs. B. B. Matthews'; 195&amp;57, Edwin Edelblute; 1957-58, Dr.
Keith Brandeberry; 1953-59, Mrs.
William James; 1959-60, Mrs. James

Sr. Citizen
Calendar

Northup ; 1960-61 , Mrs . John
Markley; 1961~2 , Mrs. Jolm North,
Jr. ; 1962~3. Mrs. Silas Hamilton ;
1963-04, Mrs. Harold Wiseman; 196465, Mrs. Carroll Snowden; 1965-&amp;i,
Mrs. 1. c. Walker; 1964H;7, Mrs.
Miles Epling; 1967-68, Mrs. Donald
Robinson; t~9 . Mrs. Russell Bibbee; 1969-70, Mrs. Eldon Thomas;
197().71 , Mrs. Lewis Schmidt ; 197172, Mrs. Gene Wetherholt; 1972-73,
Mrs . Dovel Myers; 1973-74, Mrs. ~ob
Marchi ; 1974-75, Mrs. Richard
Mackenzie; 1975-76, Mrs. Russell
Wood; 1976-77, Mrs. Robert Daniel;
1977-78, Mrs . Donald O'Rourke:
1978-79, Mrs. Dean Evans.
This year's president is Mrs.
Bryce (Nancy ) Smith. Each year a
gift is presented to Washington
School in honor of the past presidents. This year's gift has not yet been
decided.
Some of the past presents that
have been presented on Founders'

cl~ssrooms, television cable for individual classrooms, stage curtains
and book sets.
The Gallia Academy High School
Madrigals, under the direction of
Anne Fischer, will present a musical
program after the business session
in the auditorium.
The PTA wishes to thank all who
participated in the recent, "Right to
Read Week" - the parents who attended, plus the teachers for
allowing the day to be interrupted .
Eighty-three years ago on
February 17, 1997, PTA founders
Alice McLeilan Birney and Phoebe
Apperson Hearst gathered together
a small group to protect the neglect
of children. The main. objective
of
PTA has not cha ng ed smce thatda Y,
say members.
There will be no April meeting of
the Was hington School PTA. The
next meeting will be the May Family
Picnic held at the Kyger Creek Park

F&amp;AMTOMEET
RACINE - ' Racine Masonic
.Lodge 41il, F&amp;AM, will meet in
regular session at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday. All Master Masons are invited.

TOOL SALE PLANNED

EAST MEIGS - Plans for a tool
sale and the annual band banquet
will be made when the Eastern Band
Boosters meet at 7:30p.m. Tuesday
in the band room of the high school.

A film, "Total Fitness in 30
Minutes a Week" was shown at at
theSiindereila Diet Classes held this
k
w~t Ute Monday night Mason class
Judi Fry lost the most weight and
Zeila Riley and Sharon Ashley were
runners-up. Five new members
were welcomed at the Mason Tuesday morning class with Pearl Briles
and Kate Stone losinl~ the most
weight. Peggy Hill received her 20 .
pound ribbon and -:ertificate at the
Tuesday oight Middleport class
while Arizona Stewart was the one
losing the most weight, and Susie
French was the runner-up.
The Mason classes are held at the
Mason Catholi c Church , 7:30 ,p.m.
and 10:30 a.m. and the Middleport
class is held at Heath United
M thodist Ch h 7 30
I
e
urc ' :
p.m. ""
fonnation on class enrollment can
be obtained from Mrs. Jo Ann
Newsome.

c

Ironton girls retain district title

A MeS$C1ge from the

POMEROY HEALTH CARE CENTER

THE PLA:INS - Coach Doris Han·

non'11 lronton Lady Tigers retained
~ Class M District girls basket·

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
1time.
·
1 appeal to any nurses working out of the county or
are " in retirement" to consider working at our new,
beautiful facility in Meigs County.
w e 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 re~nd.
Ronald E . Zidian, Administrator
Please call me from 9 to s,
Monday through Friday, at 992-6606.

ball crown Saturday aftemoon here
by turning back Gallipolis, 51-41, in
~ champlonship game. .

Ironton, now Zl-2 on the year, will
advance to the Class AA Regional
Tournament, to be held this weekend
at Dayton.
Coach Jackie Knight's Gallipolis
Blue Angels, their !().game winning

streak snapped, bowed out with a 203record, bestintheschool'shistory.
Ironton led 14-10 after one period.
The Lady Tigers, using a full..court
press in the second stanza, scored 22
points and permitted GAllS only
eight to take a 36-18 halftime lead into lockerroom.
After being down by 22 points in
the second period, the Knightwomen
came storming back in the final half
to cut Ironton's lead to seven points.

but the big first half deficit was too
much of a handicap to overcome.
Ironton Jed 41).32 going Into the
final period. GAllS outscored Iron·
ton~ in the last stanza.
Ironton placed three players in
double figures, led by Lauren
Triplett's 16 points. Beth Rist tossed
in 15 andJayna Riggs added 11.
Gallipolis placed three players in
double figures. Sarah Evans led all
scorers with 18 points. Nancy Evans

and Shirl Stoney eaCh had 10 for
GAHS.
The Blue Angels connected on 16 ol
53 field goal attempts for 31 percent. .
Gallia was nine of 14 at the foul line
for 64 percent. GAllS had 42 rebounds, 16 by Sarah Evans and 10 by Nancy Evans. The losers had six assists ,
three by Jane Stoney and eight
steals, three by Sarah Evans.
Gallipolis had 24 turnovers.
Ironton hit 21 of 67 field goal at-

COIN SHOW MARCH 16
The Oh Kan Coin Club of Middleport is hosting its 17th ArutUal
Coin Show on Sunday, March 16, in
the Banquet Room of the Holiday
Inn at Gallipolis. Show time is 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Fourteen dealers from
three states will be present to buy,
sell, or trade collector items. Money
exhibits from 1793 to date will be
featured. Hourly prizes will be awar·
ded. No admission will be charged
for the only scheduled coin show in
this area this year.

NOTICE

SMELTZER'S
STEAM WAY

Blue c Olt on

II
1

REGULAR
12.59

denim. Fancy
bock pockets.
Slim, Regu lar
sizes 7 to 14.

167

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP)Purdue's unstoppable Joe Barry
Carroll, scoring almost at will,
poured in 36 points Saturday as the
20th-ranked Boilermakers held off a
second-half rally and beat No. 13 St.
John's, 87-72 in the second round ol
the NCAA Mideast basketball tournament.
No. 14 Duke played unranked Pennsylvania in the second game at
Purdue's Mackey Arena.
With Carroll scoring nine points ·
during a 13-2 Purdue spurt early in
the second half, the Boilermakers
jumped to a seemingly safe 18-point
lead at 54-36.
But, the aggressive St. John's

MEMBERS of the Meigs High School Wrestling team are pictured
here ready to go tQ the district tournaments at Washington Courthouse
Friday. L tor are Jim Sheets, coach; Brill King, Jeff Peckham, Steve

•a.n

1

Jrs.' Sheri SINn
Stretch lorry Tepa

Misses' Soft 1._11

Short SINn I op
1REG.
2.H

2"

'
$
644
~

1

Cotton/nylon .

Reg.

Nylon, b lends . So lid colors ,
s1ri pes. As§or ted neck lines .

:o tt o n / polyester ._V. ne ck .
So li d co l ors , w h1te tr i m .

BOYS' POPULAR
BOOT..CUJ STYLE
FaSHION DENIMS

TERRY BIKINIS

Cotto n crotch.
One size 4-7.

REG. '1.17

'

SAVE '2

---------------------- ---leya' Splder-M•ne&gt;
1

.

I

Pre -washed cott on
in d igQ-denim. Co ntra s t st i t c h i ng .
S lim s i zes 8- 16
and r@Qulor 6 - 18.

or H•ll•" T-Shlrh
REG.

'OuPonl

•2,97

CM
!!Dupont

Poly/cotton. Solid colon.

1M

~ M ar ... el

WINTUK • ,._PLY
ORLOif'l ACRYLIC KNiftiiiO YARN
Ou r brand . 4-oz. so lid SAVE
colors. 3'1&gt;-oz. omb res.

.

Com1c\'

.. p

·-------------

78C

30%

227

SK.

-

273 and a 12-4 average.

Capt. Greg Thomas had four pain·
ts before fouling out. He is also a
senior. And Jay Minton added a field
goal before also fouli11g out for the
last time in the spangles of the Redand-Black. ,
The two junior starters were Ron
Cremeens and Glenn McClellan.
Glenn popped in nine markers and
snatChed seven retrieves. Cremeans
scored eight and had three reboWJds.
In the final analysis, the polished
quintet from South outshot the Big
Blacks from the floor, 55 percent (26for-47) to 46 percent (18-for-46).
They were also wann at · the foul
line, coining ll).of-21.
The Patriots also had a distinct

Soundeslgn"'

.AM·FM

. ------------------------;.

PORIAIU

RADIO

94
15
SAVE'G

......... ..."...

MURPHY'S
OWN FINE
BRANDl

So l id slate . l *h" speaker . Bui l l - in
AC co rd , or uses baner ies (extra).

TISSUIS

Briggs ond Slrotton engine
has re co il start . Throtlle
control movnied on fo lding
handle . Spring-loaded grou
deflector . 7-inch wheel, .

losing basketball season here in
PT. PLEASANT - Midnight
seven years, but only the first for
struck early for the Cinderella Point Coach Barnette.
PleaSant , Big Blacks and their
South, virtually an all-senior
carriage turned into a pumpkin team, had too much firepower,
around"8:45 Friday night.
height, experience, and rebounding
It Willi the finals of the Class AAA ability.
Rceillon Two section one loiJioiwnent
Four of the· visitors scored_ in
with Coach Latry Edwards' Parker· double figures, with 6-2 Lance Cansburg South Patriots pulling away to Uey sinking 20 and pulling down
turn back Coach Lennie Barnette's · eight rebounds to lead. Joe Anderson
Big Blacks, 8H3, for the cham- was close behind with 18, 6-7 Mark
pionship.
.
McKinnl.ss spWJ home 11 and also
South, rated No. 11 in the state last grabbed eight caroms, while All·
-k, moved Its record to 1&amp;.6 and State quarterback Tim Stephens acwill play In the Region 'I'wo-AAA coWJted for 10.
.
tourney in Clarksburg Saturday.
For PPHS, 5-10 senior David
The Red-and-Black YOWJgsters Raike pumped home 17 to peg down
will be hanging up their thinclads the scoring leadership on the local
with an overall 5-17 log, the first squad. He finished up the year with
BY JACK ROGERS

84C

II
I

Carson, David Davis, Brian King, Troy Bauer, Jolm Blake, and Hank
Cleland. Cleland provided the 'van for the team to travel to the competition.

Pt. Pleasant cagers eliminated, 67 -43'

Comfortabl e stretch st rops.

I
White . _Sizes 32A to 40 C:
J ---------------------1
Comlert-StnJh

1
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

56

C

BOX

OF 125

Pr i n ~ or deep- tones.

---

I

,,. r--·&lt; 1: ' •

."dl

edge Wider the glass on both ends of
the floor, latching on to 37 rebounds
to 18. In the turnover department,
the Big Blacks conunitted only six
while South was bobbling 16.
Strategy called for PPHS to play a
deliberate, non-shooting game for
the first six minutes and It\did not
come off. They managed only two
free throws in the first period and
fell behind z-9.
Fact is, the game had moved into
the 4:44 point in the second canto
before th~ locals hit their first
fielder, a goal by McClellan. South
was leading 1).15 and behind CanUey's marksmanship opened the ·
spread to 11·27 at halftime.
From: then on the locals elected to
run with the Patriots and all five
PPHS starters lit up the scoreboard,
with Raike's eight points leading. At
the third pole, PPHS had shaved
South's lead to twelve, 29-41.
Lance CanUey continued to flick
the wickets in the run ·for the wire,
aided and abetted by Joe Anderson
and Mark McKinniss . Ron
Cremeans was now finding the hoop
for the Big Blacks. But Greg
Tbomas drew his fifth foul, and Jay
Minton did the sme moments later,
and PPHS had had it. Both coaches
flooded the floor with reserves, and
South out-pointed the locals 26-14 to
win going away.
Box score :
PAJIKEIISBURG SOU111 (17 ) - Anderaon 7+
II; cantley 1+211; \'o'Ucox 1~2; Slepheru H-10;
MclCinnlu 2-7·11; Surbaugh 116&lt;1; Dines 1~2:
WbytoeU 116&lt;1 ; Hintle 1.0.2; SlepheM 116&lt;1; Ambrole 1.0.2; Footer 116&lt;1, norAUIII-lltot7.
PT. PLEASANT (&lt;!)-Minim 1.0.2; l!atite7-$17; 111omu~; McCiellanf-.1-9; Cremeans.f-0..
I; McDermllt 116&lt;1; Bamel!e 0&lt;1&lt;1 ; Noll 0-:!-2 ;
Chambers ()..1·1; BWTiJ&amp; I).().G ; Stewart 0.0.0.

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

' TOfAL!lll-74 .

I
I
I
____________________ JI

I "Cnlllt Canl'' LCD
ELECIIOIK CALCILATOt
1Smal l, ye! perform! sq. roots, per·
1ce n! s. 4-key memo~y . Wi!h bo lleries.
I MODEI3550
'

Scort..,. qurten:
Parl&lt;enburgSoulh,
?t. Pleasant

I

·r ~'101 1"

1

1.

REG. 'II,H

$147

YO· YO'§ mo~ p~ ~10 rl111~ ""'OrT(

txiostrngooovt

COusP'¥ 1·11. ,.1 '' ·•'•
comfortable bouncv !JOI! ,,. "· •

lrest"'. raw stviEX
IOo/'9 Sporty

ll:)lJ

11 aQYllur.~r .

CQ'IOQI 0"d OI&gt;'S\1 ,•, .,..

wdl lrf yOoJI sl&gt;i'O And coer&gt; .-:o«• ·~
wrlh t13 own lrf)(l'CIOH• do'..,gr~o~c ~

to make yOIJI

CiYln•~

I
I

Yo Vo&lt;

Clelrnitely wct11"' oooJtrr,g Ot?C'u'

"'

Briggs &amp; Slrallon 3'11 H.P.'
engine. Side discharge.
Manual he1ght ad1usten,
Under deck wash-outfM1'1
'

TEAM '

~--'""

5" BLACK &amp; WHITE
3 WAY POWER
CARRYING STRAP

I
I
I
I
I

Reg.~

..
13 ':-

t i SIPER HOT CYCU
:~~~:r~~~~~~
h~~~~~
visible colors. Ages
.

3-s. Sold urossembted. .

Oil

SAVE •3 .

AVAILABLE AT G. C. MURPHY DOW.NTOWN STORE 348 SECOND AVENUE

o

I

2 9 11 1+-43

ALL GAMES
W L

P

OP

Chillicothe
17 2 1026 824
WMelersburg
17 5 1548 1309
Portsmouth
17 5 1397 1189
lronton·x
16 5 1236 1061
Waverly
15 B 1377 1218
Atnens
13 7 1348 1068
Galllpolls·x
13 8 1216 1107
Wellston·x
12 9 1459 1364
Logan
9 11 1088 1149
Marietta
8 13 1329. 1374
court House·x
8 13 1017 1097
Pt. Pleasant·x
5 17 1172 1404
Jackson-x
3 18 989 1290
Meigs,x
2 19 1052 1424
X.. Colflp!eted "'a son.
March 3, result:
Waverly 87 Unloto66
March 4 results:
Pt. Pleasant'36 Rlpley33
Marlett~ 72Galllpolls 58
Logan 47 L:apcoster 43
Portsmouth69 Rock Hl1164
Court House 48 Miami Trace 47 12

I
I
I.
I

9 II 1&lt; 7&amp;-47

Cage stand.i'ngs·.

I~---------------------':1

SIL,•PilOPILLID
22"MOWI• .
8

defense forced Purdue into repeated
turnovers, and the Redmen clawed
back behind Bernard Rencher and
Curtis Redding, and closed within
six points with five minutes to go.
Carroll; the Boilermakers' 7-foot-1
All American, then hit 10 straight
points. Keith Edmonson and Steve
Walker followed with consecutive
three-point plays, and Edmonson
sank two more free throws for a 7559 lead with under four minutes left.
St. John 's, which never led in the
game, came no closer than 12 points
after that, and Purdue built the lead
back to 19 at the free throw line in
the closing minutes.

Louisville wins
overtime battle

644
Reg.

1.0.2; S. Eva1117...f..18; M. Evans Q-0.0; N. EVDM
..:!-10; Willlam3oo H -I. TOTALS 11-1·41.
Score by qiUirien :
1rool&lt;&gt;n
14 22 9 6--{il
Gallipolis
108149-41

I

IIILS' PIE-WASHED

FllterfiiiPa.....
CROSSOVER BRA

6-3-1~ ; Vinson z.o...t; Triplet1
7-:lo-18. TOtALS 11-HL
GAU.IPOLIB I&lt;II- S. Shoney ..2-10; J . Stoney

Sweenty l._Z; K1sl

Purdue tops
St. John's

STRAISHI LEI JEANS

WALLS CLEANED

brand new Yo-Yos
updated versions
you'll positively love

IRONTON 1!11) ~Riggs 4-.\.11 ; Bryant l·l·3 :

Day
are blacktop
for equipment,
the school ,- ~o~n~M=a~y~l9~,~1980
=-a=t~6~p.=m=·----------~---_::...__[~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
playground,
playground
public address system, electric
water fountains, television sets for

GAU.IPOUS - Activities at the
Senior Citizens Center, 220 Jackson
Pike, for this week are:
Monday, March 10 - Chorus, 1·3
p.m.
Tuesday, March II - S.T.O.P.,
10:30 a.m.; Physical Fitness, 11:15
a.m.; Bible Study, l-2 p.m.
Wednesday, March 12 -Nutrition
Education, 10:30 a.m.; Card Games,
1-3 p.m.; World Religion Class, 1
p.m.; Macrame Class, 1-3 p.m.
Thursday, March 12 - Choking
Seminar at Crown City, 11:30 a.m.;
"Best Foot Forward" Style Show r - - - - - - - - - - - - ;
(Fashions and Hair Styles for age 40
and over),l2: 30-3 p.m.
Friday, March 31 - Art Class, 1·3
p.m.; Spaghetti Supper, 5-7:30 p.m. :
Your pa1nted
Social Hour, 7 p.m.
walls and
ce111ngs l'ltll
The Senior Nutrition Program will
look l1 ke new
serve the following menus :
41ter ( ! e~ rllnl(
With newly
Monday ,... Soup beans and ham,
' nvenl ed
beets, celery and carrots, cornsc 1ent 1fi c
mach1ne .
bread, butter, plums, milk.
Re aso n ~bl e . All
Tuesday - Meat loaf, mashed
work guarant~~d .
Free Estima te
potatoes, green beans, bread, butier, rice pudding, milk.
Wednesday - Baked chicken,
dressing, cranberry gelatin, peas,
rolls, butter, apple crisp, milk.
Thursday - Beef • noodle
casserole, stewed tomatoes, tossed
We have added the famous
salad, bread, butter, chocolate pud- · Von Schrader Dry Foam
ding, milk.
'
Carpet Deterger and IH'e
Friday - Fish, potato salad, brocVon
Schrader Wall
coli, bread, butter, fruit gelatin, .
Deterger to give you even
milk.
better cleaning service.
Choice of beverage served with
These machines with our
each meal.
Steamway Carpet Cleaner
''Services rendered on a non·
give us the equipment for
discriminatory basis."
all types of household and
industrial cleaning. For
the best in cleaning service for walls - furniture GARDEN CLUB TO MEET
carpet or anything thats
POMEROY-The Winding Trail
dirty
Garden Club will meet Tuesday
CALL
night at 7:30 p.m. at the home of
Mrs.Pat Thoma. Mrs. Peggy Cra ine
will give the garden calendar, and
the program on aMualsual for show
will be presented by Mrs. Thoma.
"Spring Awakens" is the arrangement topic and forced branches are
446-2096
to be used.

boost about

tempts for 31 percent. IHS was nine
of 17 at the foul line. Ironton had 44
reboWJds.
Box score :

JAYIIINTON (12) aboola fl'llm the floor in Friday senior starter~~ Greg 11.'11cmU and David Raike, saw
mpt'l flnlll Ill the Region Two Section One basketliaJI ' their career wiLh .1:e Big BlackS come to an end at the
hands of Uoe ?arkersburg South Patrl,ob.
toamameal at Point PI-t. Minton and two other

' March sresults:
Piketon« Ironton 43 (otl
Waverly 60 Hillsboro 59
March 6 result:
Wheelersburg 72 Portsmout~ West
59
March 7 results;
Waverly 56 Court House 53 .
Portsmouth 50 Chesapeake 47
Sheridan 71 Nelsonville-York 58
Parke t•burg South ·67 Pt. Pleasant
54

I

UNCOLN, Neb. (AP) - Tony
Branch hit a -15-foot jumper with one
second left in overtime, his only
basket of the game, and lifted No.2
Louisville paat stubborn Kansas
State 71~9 Saturday in a nationallytelevised second round of the NCAA
Midwest Regional.
No.9 Notre Dame and No.l6
Missouri met in the other second
round match.
The Cardinals, 29-3, got possession
. of the ball with 2:20 left after Rolon·
do Blackman's two free throws knot·
ted the store at 6~9 .
With all-American guard Darrell

Griffith on the bench with five fouls,
the Cardinals played for the last
shot, winding down the clock to set
up Branch's winning shot. '
Blackman had sent the game into
overtime with a followup ·shot with
one second left in regulation to make
it67~7.

Griffith, who wound up with 18
points, hit the only other overtime
bucket.
Kansas State; ending its season at
22-9, was led by Blackman with 19
points and Glenn Marshall with 16.
Derek Smith had 20 for the Car·
dinals.

Iowa -slaps 77-64
loss on W olfpack
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP)- Vin- 16-7, a little more than halfway
ce Brookins came off the bench to through the first half. But strong
scor.e 17 points and lead an Iowa free-throw shooting and a wellcomeback in the second half as the ' executed offense brought Iowa to a
Hawkeyes defeated North Carolina tie, 24-24, with 6:28 remaining in the
State 77-64 in the second roWJd of the first half.
NCAA · East Regional Tournament
N.C. State took a three-point, 29-26
on Saturday.
lead into the dressing room at the
Iowa meets the winner of Sunday's end of the first half.
.
Syracuse-Villanova matchup in
But Brookins, who hadn't scored
Philadelphia.
in the first period, led a Hawkeye
In Saturday's second game of the
charge that saw Iowa go up bt eight,
second roWJd, Maryland met Ten- 43-35, with 13:42 remaining in the
nessee at the Greensboro Coliseum.
game. At one point in the second
The Wolfpack took a quick lead in haU, the Hawkeyes led by as much
the game and was up by nine points,
as 16.

Language no barrier
for Rfds prospects

Latin players.
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - The shops in
Classes will be held two or three
Tampa's Spanish community annights
a week after minor league
nounce that Spanish is spoken inside
players
arrive at Redsland next
- aqui se habla Espanole weekend.
welcome news to the many young
"We've had some experience with
Latin American ballplayers who
Latin players having trouble orcome to the United States. ·
dering food and things like that,"
The players wlto wind up on the
Woodward said. "It's hard for us to
Cincinnati Reds farm club in Tampa
appreciate the problem unless
will find the city not unlike home.
you've been to a Spanish-speaking
They will have little trouble ordering
country
and the shoe is on the other
· food in most places or getting
foot."
around town.
The program was begun because
But the young players could just
club
President Dick Wagner wanted
as well end up at Cincinnati's farm
his
minor
league staff to become
clubs In Billings, Mont., Eugerie,
Ore. or Ceda~ ·Rapids, -Iowa where mo11: ~nv.!lrsant !P Sl!!!nish 11nd the
Idea ol sending Latin players to
huevos rancheros are lar less comEnglish class came later, Woodward
mon than pancakes and sausage for
said.
·
breWdast.
·
Ron Plaza, the Reds first base
Tbat's one big reason the Reds are
coach, knows from m own ex·
sending their young Latin players to
(lel:ience bow Latin players feel
night school during spring tralng.
'when
they come to this country and
"We'll try to deal with things
speak
very little English.
relevant to baseball, eating and
"
In
11154, the first year I played
travel," ~d Woody Woodward, the
·winter
ball in Guadela~ra , Mexleo,
Reds' field ' coordinator f!lr player
the
club
put me In a hotel with the
deveopment. "It will be mandatory
.
native
ball
players. None of them
for the minor league players, and
I'm sure we'll make it available if could speak English," Plliza Sllid.
"I happened to hit it off with a man
~body · (on the to-man major
In the hotel who ran a tour service.
league roster) wants it."
The Reds have eight players fl'llrn He went a Jot of places with me and
Puerto Rico, Venezuela or tbe helped me with the language. In
Oomlnl&lt;;an Republic on their major ab9ut 2"ii mont)Js I spoke pretty
league roster ancl numerous others decent Spanish."
Plaza still resorts to Spanish for
assigned to their minor league clubs.
some
lnstrucU0111 that Latin players
Spanl8h instructors at the Ul)lvermlghi
not be able to unilerstaJicl bi
slty of_South Florida a~ helping set
English.
But with so many Latins in
up the, cla•ses ·which ·will provide
the major leagu~. he Cllll't coach
Spanish lessona to Reds coacheS and
si!IH as well as teach English to during ag!lme the way he did years
'
'
,
ago.

�C.l-The_$undayTimesoSentinel, SWlday, ! ~arch 9, 1980
~The SWJday Times-sentinel, Sunday, March 9. 1980

,

Washington PTA to celebrate Slinderella
Founder 's Day here March 10 class meets
GAlLIPOLIS - On March 10 at
7:30p.m. in the school cafeteria, the
Washington School PTA will meet to
celebrate Founders' Day and honor
the following past presidents of
Washington School PTA : 1928-29,
Mrs. Frank James; 1929-31, Mrs. E.
Wood Mills; 1931-32, Mrs. Ben
Eachus; 1932-34, Mrs. C. C. Richards ; 1934-35, Mrs. Aldeth Jenkins;
1935-'16, Mrs. Gilbert Bush; 1936-37,
Mrs. Mrs. Starbuck; 1937-38, Mrs.
Hollis Wood ; 1938-39, Mrs. George
Lear; 1939-40, Mrs. Dwight
Wetherliolt; 1946-41, Mrs. Ruth
Masters; 1941-42, Mrs. Horace
Ecker; 1942-44, Mrs. Emmett
Morrison; 1944-45, Mrs. Francis
Shane; 1945-46, Mrs. Keith Suiter;
1114&amp;-47, Mrs. Raymond Gooch; 194748, Mrs. R. E. Jenkins ; 1943-49, Mrs.
Hobart Wickline; 1949-50, Mrs. D. M.
ELliott; 1951-62, Mrs. Marcus
Magnussen; 1952-53, Mrs. R. D.
Thomas; 1953-S4, Mrs. George ·
Fuller; 19M-55, Mrs. Jolm L. Evans;
1955-56, Mrs. B. B. Matthews'; 195&amp;57, Edwin Edelblute; 1957-58, Dr.
Keith Brandeberry; 1953-59, Mrs.
William James; 1959-60, Mrs. James

Sr. Citizen
Calendar

Northup ; 1960-61 , Mrs . John
Markley; 1961~2 , Mrs. Jolm North,
Jr. ; 1962~3. Mrs. Silas Hamilton ;
1963-04, Mrs. Harold Wiseman; 196465, Mrs. Carroll Snowden; 1965-&amp;i,
Mrs. 1. c. Walker; 1964H;7, Mrs.
Miles Epling; 1967-68, Mrs. Donald
Robinson; t~9 . Mrs. Russell Bibbee; 1969-70, Mrs. Eldon Thomas;
197().71 , Mrs. Lewis Schmidt ; 197172, Mrs. Gene Wetherholt; 1972-73,
Mrs . Dovel Myers; 1973-74, Mrs. ~ob
Marchi ; 1974-75, Mrs. Richard
Mackenzie; 1975-76, Mrs. Russell
Wood; 1976-77, Mrs. Robert Daniel;
1977-78, Mrs . Donald O'Rourke:
1978-79, Mrs. Dean Evans.
This year's president is Mrs.
Bryce (Nancy ) Smith. Each year a
gift is presented to Washington
School in honor of the past presidents. This year's gift has not yet been
decided.
Some of the past presents that
have been presented on Founders'

cl~ssrooms, television cable for individual classrooms, stage curtains
and book sets.
The Gallia Academy High School
Madrigals, under the direction of
Anne Fischer, will present a musical
program after the business session
in the auditorium.
The PTA wishes to thank all who
participated in the recent, "Right to
Read Week" - the parents who attended, plus the teachers for
allowing the day to be interrupted .
Eighty-three years ago on
February 17, 1997, PTA founders
Alice McLeilan Birney and Phoebe
Apperson Hearst gathered together
a small group to protect the neglect
of children. The main. objective
of
PTA has not cha ng ed smce thatda Y,
say members.
There will be no April meeting of
the Was hington School PTA. The
next meeting will be the May Family
Picnic held at the Kyger Creek Park

F&amp;AMTOMEET
RACINE - ' Racine Masonic
.Lodge 41il, F&amp;AM, will meet in
regular session at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday. All Master Masons are invited.

TOOL SALE PLANNED

EAST MEIGS - Plans for a tool
sale and the annual band banquet
will be made when the Eastern Band
Boosters meet at 7:30p.m. Tuesday
in the band room of the high school.

A film, "Total Fitness in 30
Minutes a Week" was shown at at
theSiindereila Diet Classes held this
k
w~t Ute Monday night Mason class
Judi Fry lost the most weight and
Zeila Riley and Sharon Ashley were
runners-up. Five new members
were welcomed at the Mason Tuesday morning class with Pearl Briles
and Kate Stone losinl~ the most
weight. Peggy Hill received her 20 .
pound ribbon and -:ertificate at the
Tuesday oight Middleport class
while Arizona Stewart was the one
losing the most weight, and Susie
French was the runner-up.
The Mason classes are held at the
Mason Catholi c Church , 7:30 ,p.m.
and 10:30 a.m. and the Middleport
class is held at Heath United
M thodist Ch h 7 30
I
e
urc ' :
p.m. ""
fonnation on class enrollment can
be obtained from Mrs. Jo Ann
Newsome.

c

Ironton girls retain district title

A MeS$C1ge from the

POMEROY HEALTH CARE CENTER

THE PLA:INS - Coach Doris Han·

non'11 lronton Lady Tigers retained
~ Class M District girls basket·

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
1time.
·
1 appeal to any nurses working out of the county or
are " in retirement" to consider working at our new,
beautiful facility in Meigs County.
w e 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 re~nd.
Ronald E . Zidian, Administrator
Please call me from 9 to s,
Monday through Friday, at 992-6606.

ball crown Saturday aftemoon here
by turning back Gallipolis, 51-41, in
~ champlonship game. .

Ironton, now Zl-2 on the year, will
advance to the Class AA Regional
Tournament, to be held this weekend
at Dayton.
Coach Jackie Knight's Gallipolis
Blue Angels, their !().game winning

streak snapped, bowed out with a 203record, bestintheschool'shistory.
Ironton led 14-10 after one period.
The Lady Tigers, using a full..court
press in the second stanza, scored 22
points and permitted GAllS only
eight to take a 36-18 halftime lead into lockerroom.
After being down by 22 points in
the second period, the Knightwomen
came storming back in the final half
to cut Ironton's lead to seven points.

but the big first half deficit was too
much of a handicap to overcome.
Ironton Jed 41).32 going Into the
final period. GAllS outscored Iron·
ton~ in the last stanza.
Ironton placed three players in
double figures, led by Lauren
Triplett's 16 points. Beth Rist tossed
in 15 andJayna Riggs added 11.
Gallipolis placed three players in
double figures. Sarah Evans led all
scorers with 18 points. Nancy Evans

and Shirl Stoney eaCh had 10 for
GAHS.
The Blue Angels connected on 16 ol
53 field goal attempts for 31 percent. .
Gallia was nine of 14 at the foul line
for 64 percent. GAllS had 42 rebounds, 16 by Sarah Evans and 10 by Nancy Evans. The losers had six assists ,
three by Jane Stoney and eight
steals, three by Sarah Evans.
Gallipolis had 24 turnovers.
Ironton hit 21 of 67 field goal at-

COIN SHOW MARCH 16
The Oh Kan Coin Club of Middleport is hosting its 17th ArutUal
Coin Show on Sunday, March 16, in
the Banquet Room of the Holiday
Inn at Gallipolis. Show time is 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Fourteen dealers from
three states will be present to buy,
sell, or trade collector items. Money
exhibits from 1793 to date will be
featured. Hourly prizes will be awar·
ded. No admission will be charged
for the only scheduled coin show in
this area this year.

NOTICE

SMELTZER'S
STEAM WAY

Blue c Olt on

II
1

REGULAR
12.59

denim. Fancy
bock pockets.
Slim, Regu lar
sizes 7 to 14.

167

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP)Purdue's unstoppable Joe Barry
Carroll, scoring almost at will,
poured in 36 points Saturday as the
20th-ranked Boilermakers held off a
second-half rally and beat No. 13 St.
John's, 87-72 in the second round ol
the NCAA Mideast basketball tournament.
No. 14 Duke played unranked Pennsylvania in the second game at
Purdue's Mackey Arena.
With Carroll scoring nine points ·
during a 13-2 Purdue spurt early in
the second half, the Boilermakers
jumped to a seemingly safe 18-point
lead at 54-36.
But, the aggressive St. John's

MEMBERS of the Meigs High School Wrestling team are pictured
here ready to go tQ the district tournaments at Washington Courthouse
Friday. L tor are Jim Sheets, coach; Brill King, Jeff Peckham, Steve

•a.n

1

Jrs.' Sheri SINn
Stretch lorry Tepa

Misses' Soft 1._11

Short SINn I op
1REG.
2.H

2"

'
$
644
~

1

Cotton/nylon .

Reg.

Nylon, b lends . So lid colors ,
s1ri pes. As§or ted neck lines .

:o tt o n / polyester ._V. ne ck .
So li d co l ors , w h1te tr i m .

BOYS' POPULAR
BOOT..CUJ STYLE
FaSHION DENIMS

TERRY BIKINIS

Cotto n crotch.
One size 4-7.

REG. '1.17

'

SAVE '2

---------------------- ---leya' Splder-M•ne&gt;
1

.

I

Pre -washed cott on
in d igQ-denim. Co ntra s t st i t c h i ng .
S lim s i zes 8- 16
and r@Qulor 6 - 18.

or H•ll•" T-Shlrh
REG.

'OuPonl

•2,97

CM
!!Dupont

Poly/cotton. Solid colon.

1M

~ M ar ... el

WINTUK • ,._PLY
ORLOif'l ACRYLIC KNiftiiiO YARN
Ou r brand . 4-oz. so lid SAVE
colors. 3'1&gt;-oz. omb res.

.

Com1c\'

.. p

·-------------

78C

30%

227

SK.

-

273 and a 12-4 average.

Capt. Greg Thomas had four pain·
ts before fouling out. He is also a
senior. And Jay Minton added a field
goal before also fouli11g out for the
last time in the spangles of the Redand-Black. ,
The two junior starters were Ron
Cremeens and Glenn McClellan.
Glenn popped in nine markers and
snatChed seven retrieves. Cremeans
scored eight and had three reboWJds.
In the final analysis, the polished
quintet from South outshot the Big
Blacks from the floor, 55 percent (26for-47) to 46 percent (18-for-46).
They were also wann at · the foul
line, coining ll).of-21.
The Patriots also had a distinct

Soundeslgn"'

.AM·FM

. ------------------------;.

PORIAIU

RADIO

94
15
SAVE'G

......... ..."...

MURPHY'S
OWN FINE
BRANDl

So l id slate . l *h" speaker . Bui l l - in
AC co rd , or uses baner ies (extra).

TISSUIS

Briggs ond Slrotton engine
has re co il start . Throtlle
control movnied on fo lding
handle . Spring-loaded grou
deflector . 7-inch wheel, .

losing basketball season here in
PT. PLEASANT - Midnight
seven years, but only the first for
struck early for the Cinderella Point Coach Barnette.
PleaSant , Big Blacks and their
South, virtually an all-senior
carriage turned into a pumpkin team, had too much firepower,
around"8:45 Friday night.
height, experience, and rebounding
It Willi the finals of the Class AAA ability.
Rceillon Two section one loiJioiwnent
Four of the· visitors scored_ in
with Coach Latry Edwards' Parker· double figures, with 6-2 Lance Cansburg South Patriots pulling away to Uey sinking 20 and pulling down
turn back Coach Lennie Barnette's · eight rebounds to lead. Joe Anderson
Big Blacks, 8H3, for the cham- was close behind with 18, 6-7 Mark
pionship.
.
McKinnl.ss spWJ home 11 and also
South, rated No. 11 in the state last grabbed eight caroms, while All·
-k, moved Its record to 1&amp;.6 and State quarterback Tim Stephens acwill play In the Region 'I'wo-AAA coWJted for 10.
.
tourney in Clarksburg Saturday.
For PPHS, 5-10 senior David
The Red-and-Black YOWJgsters Raike pumped home 17 to peg down
will be hanging up their thinclads the scoring leadership on the local
with an overall 5-17 log, the first squad. He finished up the year with
BY JACK ROGERS

84C

II
I

Carson, David Davis, Brian King, Troy Bauer, Jolm Blake, and Hank
Cleland. Cleland provided the 'van for the team to travel to the competition.

Pt. Pleasant cagers eliminated, 67 -43'

Comfortabl e stretch st rops.

I
White . _Sizes 32A to 40 C:
J ---------------------1
Comlert-StnJh

1
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

56

C

BOX

OF 125

Pr i n ~ or deep- tones.

---

I

,,. r--·&lt; 1: ' •

."dl

edge Wider the glass on both ends of
the floor, latching on to 37 rebounds
to 18. In the turnover department,
the Big Blacks conunitted only six
while South was bobbling 16.
Strategy called for PPHS to play a
deliberate, non-shooting game for
the first six minutes and It\did not
come off. They managed only two
free throws in the first period and
fell behind z-9.
Fact is, the game had moved into
the 4:44 point in the second canto
before th~ locals hit their first
fielder, a goal by McClellan. South
was leading 1).15 and behind CanUey's marksmanship opened the ·
spread to 11·27 at halftime.
From: then on the locals elected to
run with the Patriots and all five
PPHS starters lit up the scoreboard,
with Raike's eight points leading. At
the third pole, PPHS had shaved
South's lead to twelve, 29-41.
Lance CanUey continued to flick
the wickets in the run ·for the wire,
aided and abetted by Joe Anderson
and Mark McKinniss . Ron
Cremeans was now finding the hoop
for the Big Blacks. But Greg
Tbomas drew his fifth foul, and Jay
Minton did the sme moments later,
and PPHS had had it. Both coaches
flooded the floor with reserves, and
South out-pointed the locals 26-14 to
win going away.
Box score :
PAJIKEIISBURG SOU111 (17 ) - Anderaon 7+
II; cantley 1+211; \'o'Ucox 1~2; Slepheru H-10;
MclCinnlu 2-7·11; Surbaugh 116&lt;1; Dines 1~2:
WbytoeU 116&lt;1 ; Hintle 1.0.2; SlepheM 116&lt;1; Ambrole 1.0.2; Footer 116&lt;1, norAUIII-lltot7.
PT. PLEASANT (&lt;!)-Minim 1.0.2; l!atite7-$17; 111omu~; McCiellanf-.1-9; Cremeans.f-0..
I; McDermllt 116&lt;1; Bamel!e 0&lt;1&lt;1 ; Noll 0-:!-2 ;
Chambers ()..1·1; BWTiJ&amp; I).().G ; Stewart 0.0.0.

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

' TOfAL!lll-74 .

I
I
I
____________________ JI

I "Cnlllt Canl'' LCD
ELECIIOIK CALCILATOt
1Smal l, ye! perform! sq. roots, per·
1ce n! s. 4-key memo~y . Wi!h bo lleries.
I MODEI3550
'

Scort..,. qurten:
Parl&lt;enburgSoulh,
?t. Pleasant

I

·r ~'101 1"

1

1.

REG. 'II,H

$147

YO· YO'§ mo~ p~ ~10 rl111~ ""'OrT(

txiostrngooovt

COusP'¥ 1·11. ,.1 '' ·•'•
comfortable bouncv !JOI! ,,. "· •

lrest"'. raw stviEX
IOo/'9 Sporty

ll:)lJ

11 aQYllur.~r .

CQ'IOQI 0"d OI&gt;'S\1 ,•, .,..

wdl lrf yOoJI sl&gt;i'O And coer&gt; .-:o«• ·~
wrlh t13 own lrf)(l'CIOH• do'..,gr~o~c ~

to make yOIJI

CiYln•~

I
I

Yo Vo&lt;

Clelrnitely wct11"' oooJtrr,g Ot?C'u'

"'

Briggs &amp; Slrallon 3'11 H.P.'
engine. Side discharge.
Manual he1ght ad1usten,
Under deck wash-outfM1'1
'

TEAM '

~--'""

5" BLACK &amp; WHITE
3 WAY POWER
CARRYING STRAP

I
I
I
I
I

Reg.~

..
13 ':-

t i SIPER HOT CYCU
:~~~:r~~~~~~
h~~~~~
visible colors. Ages
.

3-s. Sold urossembted. .

Oil

SAVE •3 .

AVAILABLE AT G. C. MURPHY DOW.NTOWN STORE 348 SECOND AVENUE

o

I

2 9 11 1+-43

ALL GAMES
W L

P

OP

Chillicothe
17 2 1026 824
WMelersburg
17 5 1548 1309
Portsmouth
17 5 1397 1189
lronton·x
16 5 1236 1061
Waverly
15 B 1377 1218
Atnens
13 7 1348 1068
Galllpolls·x
13 8 1216 1107
Wellston·x
12 9 1459 1364
Logan
9 11 1088 1149
Marietta
8 13 1329. 1374
court House·x
8 13 1017 1097
Pt. Pleasant·x
5 17 1172 1404
Jackson-x
3 18 989 1290
Meigs,x
2 19 1052 1424
X.. Colflp!eted "'a son.
March 3, result:
Waverly 87 Unloto66
March 4 results:
Pt. Pleasant'36 Rlpley33
Marlett~ 72Galllpolls 58
Logan 47 L:apcoster 43
Portsmouth69 Rock Hl1164
Court House 48 Miami Trace 47 12

I
I
I.
I

9 II 1&lt; 7&amp;-47

Cage stand.i'ngs·.

I~---------------------':1

SIL,•PilOPILLID
22"MOWI• .
8

defense forced Purdue into repeated
turnovers, and the Redmen clawed
back behind Bernard Rencher and
Curtis Redding, and closed within
six points with five minutes to go.
Carroll; the Boilermakers' 7-foot-1
All American, then hit 10 straight
points. Keith Edmonson and Steve
Walker followed with consecutive
three-point plays, and Edmonson
sank two more free throws for a 7559 lead with under four minutes left.
St. John 's, which never led in the
game, came no closer than 12 points
after that, and Purdue built the lead
back to 19 at the free throw line in
the closing minutes.

Louisville wins
overtime battle

644
Reg.

1.0.2; S. Eva1117...f..18; M. Evans Q-0.0; N. EVDM
..:!-10; Willlam3oo H -I. TOTALS 11-1·41.
Score by qiUirien :
1rool&lt;&gt;n
14 22 9 6--{il
Gallipolis
108149-41

I

IIILS' PIE-WASHED

FllterfiiiPa.....
CROSSOVER BRA

6-3-1~ ; Vinson z.o...t; Triplet1
7-:lo-18. TOtALS 11-HL
GAU.IPOLIB I&lt;II- S. Shoney ..2-10; J . Stoney

Sweenty l._Z; K1sl

Purdue tops
St. John's

STRAISHI LEI JEANS

WALLS CLEANED

brand new Yo-Yos
updated versions
you'll positively love

IRONTON 1!11) ~Riggs 4-.\.11 ; Bryant l·l·3 :

Day
are blacktop
for equipment,
the school ,- ~o~n~M=a~y~l9~,~1980
=-a=t~6~p.=m=·----------~---_::...__[~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
playground,
playground
public address system, electric
water fountains, television sets for

GAU.IPOUS - Activities at the
Senior Citizens Center, 220 Jackson
Pike, for this week are:
Monday, March 10 - Chorus, 1·3
p.m.
Tuesday, March II - S.T.O.P.,
10:30 a.m.; Physical Fitness, 11:15
a.m.; Bible Study, l-2 p.m.
Wednesday, March 12 -Nutrition
Education, 10:30 a.m.; Card Games,
1-3 p.m.; World Religion Class, 1
p.m.; Macrame Class, 1-3 p.m.
Thursday, March 12 - Choking
Seminar at Crown City, 11:30 a.m.;
"Best Foot Forward" Style Show r - - - - - - - - - - - - ;
(Fashions and Hair Styles for age 40
and over),l2: 30-3 p.m.
Friday, March 31 - Art Class, 1·3
p.m.; Spaghetti Supper, 5-7:30 p.m. :
Your pa1nted
Social Hour, 7 p.m.
walls and
ce111ngs l'ltll
The Senior Nutrition Program will
look l1 ke new
serve the following menus :
41ter ( ! e~ rllnl(
With newly
Monday ,... Soup beans and ham,
' nvenl ed
beets, celery and carrots, cornsc 1ent 1fi c
mach1ne .
bread, butter, plums, milk.
Re aso n ~bl e . All
Tuesday - Meat loaf, mashed
work guarant~~d .
Free Estima te
potatoes, green beans, bread, butier, rice pudding, milk.
Wednesday - Baked chicken,
dressing, cranberry gelatin, peas,
rolls, butter, apple crisp, milk.
Thursday - Beef • noodle
casserole, stewed tomatoes, tossed
We have added the famous
salad, bread, butter, chocolate pud- · Von Schrader Dry Foam
ding, milk.
'
Carpet Deterger and IH'e
Friday - Fish, potato salad, brocVon
Schrader Wall
coli, bread, butter, fruit gelatin, .
Deterger to give you even
milk.
better cleaning service.
Choice of beverage served with
These machines with our
each meal.
Steamway Carpet Cleaner
''Services rendered on a non·
give us the equipment for
discriminatory basis."
all types of household and
industrial cleaning. For
the best in cleaning service for walls - furniture GARDEN CLUB TO MEET
carpet or anything thats
POMEROY-The Winding Trail
dirty
Garden Club will meet Tuesday
CALL
night at 7:30 p.m. at the home of
Mrs.Pat Thoma. Mrs. Peggy Cra ine
will give the garden calendar, and
the program on aMualsual for show
will be presented by Mrs. Thoma.
"Spring Awakens" is the arrangement topic and forced branches are
446-2096
to be used.

boost about

tempts for 31 percent. IHS was nine
of 17 at the foul line. Ironton had 44
reboWJds.
Box score :

JAYIIINTON (12) aboola fl'llm the floor in Friday senior starter~~ Greg 11.'11cmU and David Raike, saw
mpt'l flnlll Ill the Region Two Section One basketliaJI ' their career wiLh .1:e Big BlackS come to an end at the
hands of Uoe ?arkersburg South Patrl,ob.
toamameal at Point PI-t. Minton and two other

' March sresults:
Piketon« Ironton 43 (otl
Waverly 60 Hillsboro 59
March 6 result:
Wheelersburg 72 Portsmout~ West
59
March 7 results;
Waverly 56 Court House 53 .
Portsmouth 50 Chesapeake 47
Sheridan 71 Nelsonville-York 58
Parke t•burg South ·67 Pt. Pleasant
54

I

UNCOLN, Neb. (AP) - Tony
Branch hit a -15-foot jumper with one
second left in overtime, his only
basket of the game, and lifted No.2
Louisville paat stubborn Kansas
State 71~9 Saturday in a nationallytelevised second round of the NCAA
Midwest Regional.
No.9 Notre Dame and No.l6
Missouri met in the other second
round match.
The Cardinals, 29-3, got possession
. of the ball with 2:20 left after Rolon·
do Blackman's two free throws knot·
ted the store at 6~9 .
With all-American guard Darrell

Griffith on the bench with five fouls,
the Cardinals played for the last
shot, winding down the clock to set
up Branch's winning shot. '
Blackman had sent the game into
overtime with a followup ·shot with
one second left in regulation to make
it67~7.

Griffith, who wound up with 18
points, hit the only other overtime
bucket.
Kansas State; ending its season at
22-9, was led by Blackman with 19
points and Glenn Marshall with 16.
Derek Smith had 20 for the Car·
dinals.

Iowa -slaps 77-64
loss on W olfpack
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP)- Vin- 16-7, a little more than halfway
ce Brookins came off the bench to through the first half. But strong
scor.e 17 points and lead an Iowa free-throw shooting and a wellcomeback in the second half as the ' executed offense brought Iowa to a
Hawkeyes defeated North Carolina tie, 24-24, with 6:28 remaining in the
State 77-64 in the second roWJd of the first half.
NCAA · East Regional Tournament
N.C. State took a three-point, 29-26
on Saturday.
lead into the dressing room at the
Iowa meets the winner of Sunday's end of the first half.
.
Syracuse-Villanova matchup in
But Brookins, who hadn't scored
Philadelphia.
in the first period, led a Hawkeye
In Saturday's second game of the
charge that saw Iowa go up bt eight,
second roWJd, Maryland met Ten- 43-35, with 13:42 remaining in the
nessee at the Greensboro Coliseum.
game. At one point in the second
The Wolfpack took a quick lead in haU, the Hawkeyes led by as much
the game and was up by nine points,
as 16.

Language no barrier
for Rfds prospects

Latin players.
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - The shops in
Classes will be held two or three
Tampa's Spanish community annights
a week after minor league
nounce that Spanish is spoken inside
players
arrive at Redsland next
- aqui se habla Espanole weekend.
welcome news to the many young
"We've had some experience with
Latin American ballplayers who
Latin players having trouble orcome to the United States. ·
dering food and things like that,"
The players wlto wind up on the
Woodward said. "It's hard for us to
Cincinnati Reds farm club in Tampa
appreciate the problem unless
will find the city not unlike home.
you've been to a Spanish-speaking
They will have little trouble ordering
country
and the shoe is on the other
· food in most places or getting
foot."
around town.
The program was begun because
But the young players could just
club
President Dick Wagner wanted
as well end up at Cincinnati's farm
his
minor
league staff to become
clubs In Billings, Mont., Eugerie,
Ore. or Ceda~ ·Rapids, -Iowa where mo11: ~nv.!lrsant !P Sl!!!nish 11nd the
Idea ol sending Latin players to
huevos rancheros are lar less comEnglish class came later, Woodward
mon than pancakes and sausage for
said.
·
breWdast.
·
Ron Plaza, the Reds first base
Tbat's one big reason the Reds are
coach, knows from m own ex·
sending their young Latin players to
(lel:ience bow Latin players feel
night school during spring tralng.
'when
they come to this country and
"We'll try to deal with things
speak
very little English.
relevant to baseball, eating and
"
In
11154, the first year I played
travel," ~d Woody Woodward, the
·winter
ball in Guadela~ra , Mexleo,
Reds' field ' coordinator f!lr player
the
club
put me In a hotel with the
deveopment. "It will be mandatory
.
native
ball
players. None of them
for the minor league players, and
I'm sure we'll make it available if could speak English," Plliza Sllid.
"I happened to hit it off with a man
~body · (on the to-man major
In the hotel who ran a tour service.
league roster) wants it."
The Reds have eight players fl'llrn He went a Jot of places with me and
Puerto Rico, Venezuela or tbe helped me with the language. In
Oomlnl&lt;;an Republic on their major ab9ut 2"ii mont)Js I spoke pretty
league roster ancl numerous others decent Spanish."
Plaza still resorts to Spanish for
assigned to their minor league clubs.
some
lnstrucU0111 that Latin players
Spanl8h instructors at the Ul)lvermlghi
not be able to unilerstaJicl bi
slty of_South Florida a~ helping set
English.
But with so many Latins in
up the, cla•ses ·which ·will provide
the major leagu~. he Cllll't coach
Spanish lessona to Reds coacheS and
si!IH as well as teach English to during ag!lme the way he did years
'
'
,
ago.

�'·

'

Today's

Sports World

The long-distance champion ~
migratory birds · is the arctic tern,
which makes a round-trip journey rl ·
25,000 miles from near the North
Pole to Antarctica and back, says
the National GeograpllicSociety.

C-3--The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, M&amp;rch9, 1980

Huskies lose 93-73 in NIT
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP ) Nevada-Las Vegas Coach Jerry
Tarkanian made a change in biB
starting lineup for his team's
opening round game in the National
Invitation Tournament playoffs and
it worked like a charm.
"It gave me confidence going out
there as a starter," sald&amp;-foot-8 center Michael Johnson, who was inserted into the lineup and responded
by scoring 23 points to lead his team
to a · 93-73 victory over the
Washington Huskies Friday night.
Johnson hit on eight cll4 field goal
attempts and was perfect in seven
attempts from the free throw line.
He also ted hiS team with 14 reboun-

By WUI Gri~D~Iey
AP Correspondent

Work keeps Perry young
POMPANO BEACH, Fla. (APIThe big rangy guy wearing No. 36 on
his Texas Rangers uniform was hitting grounders to a tyke in a T-shirt
fielding the balls left-handed.
"'l'llilt's it- get down, stay in front
of the ball,'' directed the older man.
" Now you've got it - good, good,
good!"

"Thanks, Pop," said the kid.
The youngster's shirt was adorned
with a picture of sparsely-clad
bathing beauty crawling out of a
peanut shell. Under the picture was
the inscription : " Gaylord Perry's
Peanut Farm, Williamstown, N.C."
It's easy to SE'" what keepS
Gaylord Jackson Perry yoWJg.
"Work, that's wbat," snapped the
gray-templed farmer late!- while his
son, Jack, age 12, scampered off to
get up a fWlgo 'game with another
YOWJgster.
"Naw, he's not playing hookey,"
explained Perry, nodding toward his .
offspring. " There's so much snow in
North Carolina the schools are all
closed."

This marks the 19th season for the
raw-boned, ageless Perry, who is the
longevity king of modem pitchers.
He also is a charter member of
baseball's "Over the Hill Gang,"
which includes such celebrities as
Carl Yastrzemski, 40, of the Boston
Red Sox; Kim Kaat, 41, and Luis
Tiant, 39, of the New York Yankees;
Phil Niekro, 40, of the Atlanta
Braves and the incomparable Pete
Rose, 38, of the Philadelphia Phillies
and Willie Stargell, 39, of the Pittsburgh Pirates.

4 Door, dark red, color with matching red vinyl trim, radio, air
oond ., •automatic trans., power
steering &amp; brakes. Rally wheels.

1977 CHEV. MONTE CARLO ·
Local 1 owner. 350 ·V -8 engine,
auto., P .S.• P.B., air cond ., good
tires, landau model, solid white
col or .

P.S.,

.~·~·

EASTERN'S junior high basketball team placed
third in the 1980 Southern junior high tournament
recently. Pictured above, first row, left to right· are
Jeff Bissell, Todd Tripp, Ron Hemsley, Karl Smith,

Local bowling
Thursday Swingers league slandingl for Feb.
· 21, 1980 are:

Team

bucket and Cleveland quickly locked
up the game with a nine-point ad·
vantage with 31 seconds left.
Birdsong paced the Kings with Tl
points and Scott Wedman added 25.
"We didn't want to TWl with
Cleveland," Kings Coach Cotton Fitzsinunons said of the Cavaliers' fastbreak game. "But they pretty much
took it to us. It was JJeir ball game
from the start to the end."
Looking to SWlday's game against

:end

; 1~100,

.

Mitchell • and Don Ford, who
' fliiished Wtth 17, each added a

•

Miller,

Jim Weber: John
Mgr. Jim Caldwell. RearCoach Tim Simpson; Paul Colllns, Bill Smith, Keith
Stout, Mark Shrivers, Ken Riggs and Jay Carpenter.

Federal Hocking captures
junif)r high cage tourney

M. E. Jollll/lon Supermarket
Hand C Plant Food

130 $1
102 82
97 8'1

Hockenberry Phannades

C l!l1d N Part.l

77 !Ill

Jol1118on'oMarllel
IS 1111
l'rmrtpliOII Shoooe
74 110
lllih game and oert.. , M. E. Johnoon'a, Opal
Cuto 2116, Marilyn B.......rtng 1039. Hand C Plant
Food, Bormle Gennan 174-441. llocl&lt;enberry
Pharmacies, Nancy Manuel 131, Joan Cba&amp;se
134-;!90. C and N Parlll, K4ndy Nuce 144, Riebel
Whil&lt;halr 374. Jol1118on'o Marte~ Vonda Jortlan
17D·410. l're!laipli011 Shoppe, Karen Cbatlln 178,
Flll Anne Rlffle 449.
ScllJU converted: Joan Chasse &gt;7 and Lucille
Hiclanan 4-6-7.

average of .260.
"I feel I've improved a lot as a hitter," he said. "I want to Show people
what kind of ballp}aYer I am. This
year I have to pro e I am a good
player.
"But what happens is up to what
(manager John) McNamara will do
or the front office will do.''
It's possible that Geronimo and
Collins both could be starters for the
Reds this season because of the announcement earlier'· last week that
contract negof,iations with Ken Griffey had reached an impasse.
Reds president Dick Wagner said
failure to sign Griffey, who would be
eligible to become a free agent after
this season, could lead to a trade.
That likely would put Colllns back In
right field, wbere he subbed wben
Griffey had knee surgery.
That also would allow McNamara
to platoon Geronimo with Heity
Cruz, 11 right·handed hitter, as he did
laet season.
·

Seattle, FitzSimmOII!I said he hoped
for a stronger offensive showing
from forwards Reggie King and Bill
Robinzlne, who combined for only 10
points against Cleveland.
But Albeck, noting that the Kings
have dropped two straight home
games, said: "They're going
through a spell. They're just not accustomtid to playing in Kemper.
Maybe they'd be better off if they
went out on the road."

By Scott Wolfe
RACINE - The Federal Hocking
Lancers defeated the Southern Tor·
nadoes 38-27 in the finals of the .
Southern Junior . High Invitational
Tournament Thursday.
Coach Danny Ifise's Lancers took
home the victory and the first place
trophy while host Southern received
second place honors.
The winners jwnped out to a 6-2
first quarter lead, then held on to a
14-11 margin at the baH. As the
second half got underway Southern's
Scott Schultz led the way as his team
fought to an~ third quarter tie.
Schultz, who bad a game high 14
points, tried to lead·his team down
the comeback trail the final canto,
but his efforts weren't enough to

penter also nelted four that period.
In the final ~tanza the Eagles used
the charity stripe to maintain their
lead and coasted in for the victory
39-27.
Collins had 12 for the winners, Carpenter 11, while Shrivers, Hemsley,
Miller, and Weber had four each.
Shade's talented guard King _'!.e!·
ted 14 markers, Hartley nine, while
Stoncil and Milligan had two apiece.
The two Meigs county
cheerleading squads put on out·
standing performances as did the
other squad's cheerleaders.
Southern's cheerleading squad took
top· honors over a very talented
group of Eastern girls.

2 Dr., 6 cyL, auto.

1977 DATSUN PICKUP
13995
5 sp. w/topper
1976 CHEV. lfz T.
1
PICKUP SPORT
2995
1976 WV PICKUP '3295
4 SP. &amp; 4-WH. DRIVE
LUV IN STOCK

NEW

CHEVI
AVAilABLE ·.·

lmmedfate Delivery
Chevette 2 Qr. &amp; 4 Dr.
I.M•onJ:a Cpe 2+2 and Cl
Coupe (4 spd. l
Citation 2 Dr. &amp; 4 Dr. V-6

POMEROY MOlOR
I'CIIEIOY

!19z.ltM

rii~iiiiijij;=jjijii~~jii~j!ii~i;iiii'

overtake
the talented
Lancers.
The
Lancers·outscored
the hosts
1~ that
final period and coasted in for the 3627victory.
Coach Bill Hensler's Tornadoes
were led by Schultz's 14, Darin
Roush with 8, Greg Nease and Steve
Teaford with two apiece, and Kevin
Teaford one. The Lancers were led ·
by Hamilton with 12, Matlack 11, and
Howell with eight.

Coffman and james Bush. Rear, Wade Cannally,
Trevor Card011e, Kevin Curfman, Jason Hill, Dennis
Teaford, Corey McPhail, Tony Riffle and Coach Jim

Lawrence.

.

:Southem eighth graders
:finish third in tourney
'

FLO~~~~~~~~

I'

•

I

CUT
$5

remaining.

Washington, now 11H1, was led by
guard Bob Fronk with 12 points.
The Rebels shot 55.1 percent from
the floor, while Washington hit only
38.5 percent of Its field goal at-

$41~h

tempts.

trade-in
This battery provides up to 435
cold cra nking amps for year round starting power. Vajue!

RIO GRAND£
COLI..EGE

B-4309
• Now on sale in our "8" catalog s upplement • Shipping, installation on tires extra • Prices are catalog
prices • Ask about Sears credit plans

COMMUNITY cou.EGE
Offers

Manufacturing
Technology

Moat. men:handlac available
ror pack ·up within. rew day•

Rio Grande, Ohio

CLEARANCE ON ALL REMAINING
1979 MODEL IN STOCK •••
HONDA
XL500

$1650

• Powerful4-valve 497 cc
four-stroke single
• Exclusive c law action
dual aclion tires
• Easy starting with
automatic compression
.
release
• Dual counterbalancers
lor smooth running

Enduro

powerXR250
Honda-tough for lun I rails or com petition. 249cc four-valve. OHC
engine. Exclusive Honda claw·
action enduro tires. Headlight/
number plate combination

.Captain D's.

1980 Dodge Aspen Value Coupe; out best inflation fighler!
This road -ready two door wi th its low base price is now on display in our
showroo m ... come In and test drive one today I

SIJNMY·MOfliDAY

drlv. TOTAL PERFORMANCE In a compact car, Ast..n

WAS
1
1600

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE
COURT &amp;lHIRD S1S.

SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO.

Hit the trails

·WAS '1895
3 IN STOCK
• POWIII STIIIII". • 'IOIIQUIIIITIII-nC I'IIAJI1MIIIION
• CIOnt f. VINYL IINCN su.nNI • kA1IT-IIll INIINI• IIIUIU'WNUL COVIll
• TOIUION lila riiONT IUSPIIIIION • WIIIIIWAI&amp; RAIW R l l l l • - u•
MOLDIN• • IODT SIDI TANITIIINS • ,._II.UAIIDI riiOIIT f.IIIAII
• nVI-MUIN-.a IOOMIND&amp;

GIIWPOI.IS

WEPAY

CASH

MTS

FOR YOUR

COINS

top price for sliver

WANTED

•CLASS RINGS [marked lOKI GOLD BANDS
•STERLING, SILVER and GOLD COINS

GOLD

BUYING 10K,14K, and i8K
Scrap Gold: Rings, Watches; etc.
Top. price
qaid for coins or scrap.)
.

~ELLING "AiL FYPES OF RARf.·~.ND
SfMI·RARf .U..J. COI.HS

OPEN· W~
&amp; lHURS.
NIGHT•Rant
6:30.u.s.
~ 8:~ .
·
.
Coins

MTS COIN SHOPOhio
; 2, state Street ·

Gallipolis.

OF HONDA •••

WE..' WILL
,TRY OUR BEST TO
.
DRIVE YOU? HA~P.YIII ·

MANY 1980 models
are In, all 18t up
and ready to
ride•••

19-7 9 ·Pontiac Grand PrJx One
· s99i.
.Owner.~•••••••••••••••••••••••
.
1971 Iuick Regal V6 T~rbo-Charge •••••• :~ ••••••••••••••••••••••5595
'1017 Pontiac Grand Prix. Loaded •••••••••·••••••••• ~••••••••••• 't159S
19.7 7 Pontiac Tran.•AM.. Nlca •••••••••••• ~.~•••••• ~ ••••••••••••• .-~·4495.1976 Chevrolet V•ga .W~gon .. •••••••••••~••••••••••~••••••~···.'2695·
1t75 ·f ord Van 1 Ton •••• ·.~ ••••· ··•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~•• '2095 .
'i975 Chevr~let Caprice •••••••••••••••••• ~ .............. .,~ ..... '2195
.
'·
1974 Chevrolet Monte Carlo ................................... '1595
197• Chevrolet .,;2 Ton Plckup ........'••• ~ ••••••••••••• ~.·~·····"69S
,o7~ Cacl
2·
.•••••• ~.~.~••••'••••••••••••••~' ••••'~••

XL250
• 249 cc OHC four-stroke

single cylinder engine
• Four-valve PantroofTM
combustion chamber
• 23-lneh front wheel, ex·
elusive dual purpose tires
• Hot-sparking capacitor
discharge ignition

S329
'

UPPER RT.

.I

992-2174•
Jl'

$1275
·'

BIKES THAT GET UP TO

125 MPG.

WAS '1495

BETZ
HONDA SALES·

••"' " ( · IN' ·~· [ " t •·~ C' I

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

\

I

sch'oOil

.

HONDA

~~

.:~:.~~;·~·

&lt;next to

$1350

A NEWDICADI

AND WE CAN ·WITH ON~; OF THESE

OPEN WED. &amp;THURS.

Green

The Rebels, 21·7, took a 4~ lead
at halftime and expanded the
margin to 31 points, 86-65, with 4:30

MIDDLEPORT - Second I'OWid action on the fourth and fifth grade
level was held In the Meigs Elementary Basketball Tournament at the
Meigs Junior High Thursday
evening.
Tile Pomeroy Bombers defeated
Bradbury Drenner, 23-18, with high
scorers for Pomeroy being Easoo
with 12; Elliott with eight and
Cassell with seven.
In the second game which went Into overtime, Rutland defeated
Hatrlsonvllle No. 2, 31·23 with BIIJ'trum being high scorer for Rutland
with 23. High scorers foe Harrisonville were Jessie Howard with 10 and
HaniD8 with five.
In the final game, Bradbury Kitchen defeated Harrisonville No. I,
31·12. High scorers for Bradbury
was Beeker with 18 and Kitchen with
8. Scott Williams wu high scorer fw
Harrlsonvllle with 10.
Second round actioo In the annual
tournament 011 tile sixth grade level
will be held at 6:30 p.JJL Monday
with Bradbury going against
Salisbury followed by the Pomeroy
Cyclones . versus the Pomeroy
Devils. . .

Indian

plays at Michigan (16-12) .
In the other first·round games
over the last week, Long Beach State
beat Pepperdlne 104-87; St. Peter's
topped Connecticut 71-56; IIUnols
State defeated West Texas State ID63; Virginia downed Lafayette 67-66;
Dlinois blasted Loyola ~ Chicago
llrHI'I ; Alabama trinuned Penn
State 53-49; Texas toppled St.
Joseph's, Pa. 7G-61 ; Murray State
nipped Jacksonville 53-49; Minnesota bombed Bowling
114-60.
Also in the first round, It was
Southwestern Louisiana 74,
Alabama-Birmingham 72; TellBS-EI
Paso 58, Wichita State 56; Boston
College 95, Boston University 74;
Michigan 76, Nebraska 69;
Duquesne 65, Pittsburgh 63 and
Mlssillsippi 76, Grambling 74.

Sears 3b battery

ter."

Second round
action beg:jns

'
By &amp;ott WoUe
. Coach Jim Lawrence was proud of
: STEWART - In recent Junior ' his team not only for winning third
High basketball action the Southern
place but also of the Individual efeightll grade Tornadoes defeated the
forts ~three of his players; Kevin
~elgs Marauders 4&amp;-36 to take third
Curfman, Wade Connally, and JJen.
place In the Federal Hocking In- nls Teaford who made the All·
vitational Tournament.
·
toumament team.
' The young Tornadoes whirled to a
Curfman also received an award
lG-6 first quarter lead behind the ef· for the longest field goal of the tourforts of Dennis Teaford and Kevin nament and Dennis Teaford was
Curfman, who each scored four poln- awarded for the best foul shooting
111 apiece.
percentage making 9-11 for 81 per·· In the second go-round Wade Con- cenl
qally had the bot hand and poured in
Southern completed the season
six pointa for the Tornadoes, while
with an 8-6 record.
Meigs' Nick rugp was putting on
quite an offensive performance of
bls own. The two Meiga county
· teams went to the locker room with
Rlta
Sjluthem on top :!'J-15.
Marla
won
the
$5,000
featured
seven:As the secood baH got underway
Meigs' Nick Riggs again came alive • th race at Latonia on Friday night
ai he netted 11 of his game high 18 . and paid $8.80, $4.60 and $2.80.
Lady Mlnuta Waltz pia~ $11.60
P9Ints- However Riggs' effort just
4 ±'t.&lt;-enough to . overhaul the and $3.31 and the show borse, Too
dJwerful .Tornadoes, and they went . Tough To Touch, paid$2-:lll.
: The 9-6 double cl AlmOBt Cauglt
On for the 48-36 win.
: and Sorokin paid $94.31. Attendance
~ Southern's scoring was well baJan.
C!'d with Wade Connally ripping the :was 4,941 and the mutuel pool totaled
neta for 16 points, Kevin Curfman 12, :$606,347.
.
aDd Dennis Teaford 10. Brian Allen
a'nd Tony Riffle had four points . 'r
IWtes. • •
apiece and Mark Salser two.
: Besides Riggs' 18, Perrin, Barr,
TIJU&gt;ON, Ari2. (AP) -CUff John· smashed badly when Johnson got It
IID'i Burdett each netted four and ~on,
the Cleveland Indians' caught under a barrel In an accident
Kennedy, Crow, and Bishop each
designated hitter much of last at biB home In San Antonio.
sCored two.
season, arrived in training camp
The Injury Is expected to keep him
:Southern shot a hot 46 percent
1bursday night and worked out with out~ action at least a month.
fiom the floor and had 31 reboWlds
some~ the players Friday_
Johnson came to the Indians from
1M by Teaford with 7 and Riffle with
The middle finger on Johnson's the New York Yankees last JWIIl.
5; Meigs shot a line 44 percent with right hand Is In a cast. It was
caroms.

"Wng

In the preliminary contest Coach
Tim Simpson's Eastern Eagles
downed Shade 39-27 to gain third
place to\11'118Jnent honors. The young
but talented Eagles jwnped out to an
1~ haHtime. lead and were never
seriously challenged although the
Shade quintet never gave up. The
third quarter proved to be an offensive bout that was deadlocked at
12 all. Eastern's leading scorer
: Collins canned six of his 12 points
during that stretch. Teammate Car:-

NO. 1 RECEIVER.
· BOONE, N.C. (AP)- Most defensive backs In football learn to play
offense but few get the chance, short
of a run with an Interception. Rick ·
!)easley of Appalachian State did,
1towever.
A defensive back as a freslunan in
1977, Beasley was switched to wide
receiver in 19'18, his sophomore
season, and tied for fourth in p11a1r
catching In the major college
division.
In 1979, the 6-foot, 16G-poWJd
player from Virginia Beach, Va. ,
really hit the jackpot. He was No. 1'
among major college .receivers
'

SOUTHERN'S junior high school basketball team
finished third in the recent Federal Hocking post.
season toumamenL Pictured above, first row, left to
right are Brian Allen, Tony Deem, Mark Salser, Ed

1974 FORD MAVERICK 11395

wltopper.

t' .

I

. locking differential, air condi tioning, clean interior, green .

li'.L

lt

' Tile King5, now 42-29, hold a two:pme lead over the Milwaukee
:Bucks In the National Basketball
:Assoclatiqn's Midwest Division. The
•Bucks did not play Friday.
: Kansas City led by one oint at the
II the first quarter, but
-Cleveland eased to a 41-36 lead five
' mlnuteSlnio the second quarter and
never again trailed.
Tile Cavalle!lled by as many as 14
In .the second hall. but with 1:32
~inlng' in the game Otis · BIJ.'.
dSong pwnped In a three-pointer to
, bring the Kings back to within five,

3895

1

4 door, small V-8, automatic,

Kansas City was 'no surprise'

't_....nn.

Runs

power steering, power brakes,.

Albeck says Cavs thumping by

said Albeck. "Tonight, we were able
.to jump out in front and control the

gOOd tires.

\977 CHEVROLET

41

season.
" No team in the league has played
them (Kings) closer than we have,"

P.B.,

perfect.

" Now, I believe I will have a very
TAMPA, Fla. (AP)- Quiet Cesar
goodyear."
Geronimo, breaking a year-long
Geronimo declined to say what
silence with the news media, says he
prompted his change in attitude, but
isn't going to hand over his starting
made it clear he isn't running away
job in center field with the Cinfrom a challenge.
cinnati Reds just because Dave
-He acknowledged that Collins has
Collins has annoWlced his intention
the best speed on the club, but he
to play there.
said there is more to playing the out·
"I want to play too," Geronimo
field than rWIDing fast.
said Friday, breaking his silence to
"I have good speed, but the jump
talk about his future. "I've always
(when
the ball leaves the hat) is the
been fighting for my job, so this is
main thing," Geronimo said. "That
.nothing new for me.''
Geronimo, the Reds reg · . &lt;:!:1.!- is something you don't learn; that's
ter fielder since 1972, deci ed laS!' a natural thing."
Geronimo said he had a good winyear that he dida't want t talk to
ter season in the Dominican
writers. He politely, but firml
_.Republic where he lives, hitting
declined to comment a
"about .300" and that he's ready to
anything, even the reason f his
shed
, the reputation he's acquired
silence~,
over the last few years of being a
1 d: _.
sons,
light hitter.
Gero · ' sai . 'Last y
Although Geronimo has won four .
bad season ( .239
Gold
Glove awards for his fielding,
and I have to blame t on myself.
he
has
hit over .300 just once in the
My attitude wasn't as good as it
National League and has a lifetime
' 'I!O'uld have been.

chell with 23 points, stifled a fourthquarter surge by Kansas City in
their second victory against the
Kings In as many meetings this

2895

van conversion includes · bed,
sink, refrigerator, V-8, ·auto.,

'wants to play centerfield'

less."
Tile Cavaliers, led by Mike Mit-

The win moved the Rebels into the
second roUI'Id competition. The
Rebels will host Long Beach State,
21·11, Monday night.
Freshman Sidney Green was
moved to forward to make way in
the Nevada-Las Vegas lineup for the
Wpound Johnson. Green contributed 18 points and also grabbed
10 r,ebounds.
The victory helped salve the wounds caused on the Las Vegas team by
118 exclusion from the NCAA playoffs.
"Not going to the NCAA playoffs
gave us a killer instinct and didn't
allow us to get our pride down," said
Johnson. "It ·only made us play bet·

1

1974 DODGE VAN

Indeed it is, especially for this 6foot-4, 21S.poWld righthander who
looks about as fragile as an army
tank.
He is the only pitcher in baseball
history to have won the Cy Young
Award in both leagues. He did It with
the Cleveland Indians with a 24-16
mark in 1972 and With San Diego
with a 21-6 record in 1978 when he
was 40 years old.
His statistics are staggering: A
total of 4,592 innings pitched in the
majors, the equivalent of 510 nineinning games; 285 complete games;
50 shutoJts, 3,141 strikeouts, second
only to Walter Johnson's 3,508. He is
only 21 games short of the 300 victory plateau.
"Is that a goal?" someone asked.
Perry shrugged. "I just take it a
year at a time. I don't set goals for
myself."
·
"You must want to overtake
Walter Johnson in strikeouts,"
someone suggested.
"Not especially," Perry replied.
" Nolan Ryan will pass it before I
will, maybe Tom Seaver. Both
probably will go over 3,000 this year.
Ryan can get 250-300 a year."

ds.

'3695

there.'''

Geronimo breaks silence,

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) Cleveland Coach Stan A! beck, whose
Cavaliers rolled into Kansas City
with a t&gt;-31 road record, says his
team's 111·104 thwnping·9f the Kings
Friday night was no surprise.
"This was not art Wlusual night for
us," said Albeck, who Is nursing a
28-43 record so far this season.
"We're not that bad of a team.
We've lost 17 games by four points or

_ l43$~

1978 PLY. HORIZON

Referring to this club of
magnificent old codgers, a reporter
indirectly commented: " You guys
are really banging in there."
"What do you mean hanging
in.' " Perry shot back, a tender nerve struck. " You' got a lot of 23-yearold kids not even making the cut. I
think it's more than 'hanging In

"I was real pleased with the way
we ran the offense tonight," said
Tarkanlan. "We moved the ball
aroWld extremely well, and that
allowlld us to do what we wanted on
offense.
"I wouldn't say that was our best
played game of the season, because
we played so well against Kentucky,
but tonight would be right up there.
There will be seven other secondround games Monday night that will
pare the field to eight.
In those matchups, Boston College
(1~9) Is at Virginia (~10 ) Murray
State (22-7) plays at Alabama (11111 ); Illinois (19-12) hosts Illinois
State (20-8); St. Peter's (21-8) is at
Duquesne ( 18-8) Southwestern
LouJs1ana (20-8) is at Texas (19-10) ;
Mississippi (17-12) Is at Minnesota
(111-10) and Texas-El Paso (~7)

RT.7

PH. 446-2240

.

�'·

'

Today's

Sports World

The long-distance champion ~
migratory birds · is the arctic tern,
which makes a round-trip journey rl ·
25,000 miles from near the North
Pole to Antarctica and back, says
the National GeograpllicSociety.

C-3--The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, M&amp;rch9, 1980

Huskies lose 93-73 in NIT
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP ) Nevada-Las Vegas Coach Jerry
Tarkanian made a change in biB
starting lineup for his team's
opening round game in the National
Invitation Tournament playoffs and
it worked like a charm.
"It gave me confidence going out
there as a starter," sald&amp;-foot-8 center Michael Johnson, who was inserted into the lineup and responded
by scoring 23 points to lead his team
to a · 93-73 victory over the
Washington Huskies Friday night.
Johnson hit on eight cll4 field goal
attempts and was perfect in seven
attempts from the free throw line.
He also ted hiS team with 14 reboun-

By WUI Gri~D~Iey
AP Correspondent

Work keeps Perry young
POMPANO BEACH, Fla. (APIThe big rangy guy wearing No. 36 on
his Texas Rangers uniform was hitting grounders to a tyke in a T-shirt
fielding the balls left-handed.
"'l'llilt's it- get down, stay in front
of the ball,'' directed the older man.
" Now you've got it - good, good,
good!"

"Thanks, Pop," said the kid.
The youngster's shirt was adorned
with a picture of sparsely-clad
bathing beauty crawling out of a
peanut shell. Under the picture was
the inscription : " Gaylord Perry's
Peanut Farm, Williamstown, N.C."
It's easy to SE'" what keepS
Gaylord Jackson Perry yoWJg.
"Work, that's wbat," snapped the
gray-templed farmer late!- while his
son, Jack, age 12, scampered off to
get up a fWlgo 'game with another
YOWJgster.
"Naw, he's not playing hookey,"
explained Perry, nodding toward his .
offspring. " There's so much snow in
North Carolina the schools are all
closed."

This marks the 19th season for the
raw-boned, ageless Perry, who is the
longevity king of modem pitchers.
He also is a charter member of
baseball's "Over the Hill Gang,"
which includes such celebrities as
Carl Yastrzemski, 40, of the Boston
Red Sox; Kim Kaat, 41, and Luis
Tiant, 39, of the New York Yankees;
Phil Niekro, 40, of the Atlanta
Braves and the incomparable Pete
Rose, 38, of the Philadelphia Phillies
and Willie Stargell, 39, of the Pittsburgh Pirates.

4 Door, dark red, color with matching red vinyl trim, radio, air
oond ., •automatic trans., power
steering &amp; brakes. Rally wheels.

1977 CHEV. MONTE CARLO ·
Local 1 owner. 350 ·V -8 engine,
auto., P .S.• P.B., air cond ., good
tires, landau model, solid white
col or .

P.S.,

.~·~·

EASTERN'S junior high basketball team placed
third in the 1980 Southern junior high tournament
recently. Pictured above, first row, left to right· are
Jeff Bissell, Todd Tripp, Ron Hemsley, Karl Smith,

Local bowling
Thursday Swingers league slandingl for Feb.
· 21, 1980 are:

Team

bucket and Cleveland quickly locked
up the game with a nine-point ad·
vantage with 31 seconds left.
Birdsong paced the Kings with Tl
points and Scott Wedman added 25.
"We didn't want to TWl with
Cleveland," Kings Coach Cotton Fitzsinunons said of the Cavaliers' fastbreak game. "But they pretty much
took it to us. It was JJeir ball game
from the start to the end."
Looking to SWlday's game against

:end

; 1~100,

.

Mitchell • and Don Ford, who
' fliiished Wtth 17, each added a

•

Miller,

Jim Weber: John
Mgr. Jim Caldwell. RearCoach Tim Simpson; Paul Colllns, Bill Smith, Keith
Stout, Mark Shrivers, Ken Riggs and Jay Carpenter.

Federal Hocking captures
junif)r high cage tourney

M. E. Jollll/lon Supermarket
Hand C Plant Food

130 $1
102 82
97 8'1

Hockenberry Phannades

C l!l1d N Part.l

77 !Ill

Jol1118on'oMarllel
IS 1111
l'rmrtpliOII Shoooe
74 110
lllih game and oert.. , M. E. Johnoon'a, Opal
Cuto 2116, Marilyn B.......rtng 1039. Hand C Plant
Food, Bormle Gennan 174-441. llocl&lt;enberry
Pharmacies, Nancy Manuel 131, Joan Cba&amp;se
134-;!90. C and N Parlll, K4ndy Nuce 144, Riebel
Whil&lt;halr 374. Jol1118on'o Marte~ Vonda Jortlan
17D·410. l're!laipli011 Shoppe, Karen Cbatlln 178,
Flll Anne Rlffle 449.
ScllJU converted: Joan Chasse &gt;7 and Lucille
Hiclanan 4-6-7.

average of .260.
"I feel I've improved a lot as a hitter," he said. "I want to Show people
what kind of ballp}aYer I am. This
year I have to pro e I am a good
player.
"But what happens is up to what
(manager John) McNamara will do
or the front office will do.''
It's possible that Geronimo and
Collins both could be starters for the
Reds this season because of the announcement earlier'· last week that
contract negof,iations with Ken Griffey had reached an impasse.
Reds president Dick Wagner said
failure to sign Griffey, who would be
eligible to become a free agent after
this season, could lead to a trade.
That likely would put Colllns back In
right field, wbere he subbed wben
Griffey had knee surgery.
That also would allow McNamara
to platoon Geronimo with Heity
Cruz, 11 right·handed hitter, as he did
laet season.
·

Seattle, FitzSimmOII!I said he hoped
for a stronger offensive showing
from forwards Reggie King and Bill
Robinzlne, who combined for only 10
points against Cleveland.
But Albeck, noting that the Kings
have dropped two straight home
games, said: "They're going
through a spell. They're just not accustomtid to playing in Kemper.
Maybe they'd be better off if they
went out on the road."

By Scott Wolfe
RACINE - The Federal Hocking
Lancers defeated the Southern Tor·
nadoes 38-27 in the finals of the .
Southern Junior . High Invitational
Tournament Thursday.
Coach Danny Ifise's Lancers took
home the victory and the first place
trophy while host Southern received
second place honors.
The winners jwnped out to a 6-2
first quarter lead, then held on to a
14-11 margin at the baH. As the
second half got underway Southern's
Scott Schultz led the way as his team
fought to an~ third quarter tie.
Schultz, who bad a game high 14
points, tried to lead·his team down
the comeback trail the final canto,
but his efforts weren't enough to

penter also nelted four that period.
In the final ~tanza the Eagles used
the charity stripe to maintain their
lead and coasted in for the victory
39-27.
Collins had 12 for the winners, Carpenter 11, while Shrivers, Hemsley,
Miller, and Weber had four each.
Shade's talented guard King _'!.e!·
ted 14 markers, Hartley nine, while
Stoncil and Milligan had two apiece.
The two Meigs county
cheerleading squads put on out·
standing performances as did the
other squad's cheerleaders.
Southern's cheerleading squad took
top· honors over a very talented
group of Eastern girls.

2 Dr., 6 cyL, auto.

1977 DATSUN PICKUP
13995
5 sp. w/topper
1976 CHEV. lfz T.
1
PICKUP SPORT
2995
1976 WV PICKUP '3295
4 SP. &amp; 4-WH. DRIVE
LUV IN STOCK

NEW

CHEVI
AVAilABLE ·.·

lmmedfate Delivery
Chevette 2 Qr. &amp; 4 Dr.
I.M•onJ:a Cpe 2+2 and Cl
Coupe (4 spd. l
Citation 2 Dr. &amp; 4 Dr. V-6

POMEROY MOlOR
I'CIIEIOY

!19z.ltM

rii~iiiiijij;=jjijii~~jii~j!ii~i;iiii'

overtake
the talented
Lancers.
The
Lancers·outscored
the hosts
1~ that
final period and coasted in for the 3627victory.
Coach Bill Hensler's Tornadoes
were led by Schultz's 14, Darin
Roush with 8, Greg Nease and Steve
Teaford with two apiece, and Kevin
Teaford one. The Lancers were led ·
by Hamilton with 12, Matlack 11, and
Howell with eight.

Coffman and james Bush. Rear, Wade Cannally,
Trevor Card011e, Kevin Curfman, Jason Hill, Dennis
Teaford, Corey McPhail, Tony Riffle and Coach Jim

Lawrence.

.

:Southem eighth graders
:finish third in tourney
'

FLO~~~~~~~~

I'

•

I

CUT
$5

remaining.

Washington, now 11H1, was led by
guard Bob Fronk with 12 points.
The Rebels shot 55.1 percent from
the floor, while Washington hit only
38.5 percent of Its field goal at-

$41~h

tempts.

trade-in
This battery provides up to 435
cold cra nking amps for year round starting power. Vajue!

RIO GRAND£
COLI..EGE

B-4309
• Now on sale in our "8" catalog s upplement • Shipping, installation on tires extra • Prices are catalog
prices • Ask about Sears credit plans

COMMUNITY cou.EGE
Offers

Manufacturing
Technology

Moat. men:handlac available
ror pack ·up within. rew day•

Rio Grande, Ohio

CLEARANCE ON ALL REMAINING
1979 MODEL IN STOCK •••
HONDA
XL500

$1650

• Powerful4-valve 497 cc
four-stroke single
• Exclusive c law action
dual aclion tires
• Easy starting with
automatic compression
.
release
• Dual counterbalancers
lor smooth running

Enduro

powerXR250
Honda-tough for lun I rails or com petition. 249cc four-valve. OHC
engine. Exclusive Honda claw·
action enduro tires. Headlight/
number plate combination

.Captain D's.

1980 Dodge Aspen Value Coupe; out best inflation fighler!
This road -ready two door wi th its low base price is now on display in our
showroo m ... come In and test drive one today I

SIJNMY·MOfliDAY

drlv. TOTAL PERFORMANCE In a compact car, Ast..n

WAS
1
1600

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE
COURT &amp;lHIRD S1S.

SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO.

Hit the trails

·WAS '1895
3 IN STOCK
• POWIII STIIIII". • 'IOIIQUIIIITIII-nC I'IIAJI1MIIIION
• CIOnt f. VINYL IINCN su.nNI • kA1IT-IIll INIINI• IIIUIU'WNUL COVIll
• TOIUION lila riiONT IUSPIIIIION • WIIIIIWAI&amp; RAIW R l l l l • - u•
MOLDIN• • IODT SIDI TANITIIINS • ,._II.UAIIDI riiOIIT f.IIIAII
• nVI-MUIN-.a IOOMIND&amp;

GIIWPOI.IS

WEPAY

CASH

MTS

FOR YOUR

COINS

top price for sliver

WANTED

•CLASS RINGS [marked lOKI GOLD BANDS
•STERLING, SILVER and GOLD COINS

GOLD

BUYING 10K,14K, and i8K
Scrap Gold: Rings, Watches; etc.
Top. price
qaid for coins or scrap.)
.

~ELLING "AiL FYPES OF RARf.·~.ND
SfMI·RARf .U..J. COI.HS

OPEN· W~
&amp; lHURS.
NIGHT•Rant
6:30.u.s.
~ 8:~ .
·
.
Coins

MTS COIN SHOPOhio
; 2, state Street ·

Gallipolis.

OF HONDA •••

WE..' WILL
,TRY OUR BEST TO
.
DRIVE YOU? HA~P.YIII ·

MANY 1980 models
are In, all 18t up
and ready to
ride•••

19-7 9 ·Pontiac Grand PrJx One
· s99i.
.Owner.~•••••••••••••••••••••••
.
1971 Iuick Regal V6 T~rbo-Charge •••••• :~ ••••••••••••••••••••••5595
'1017 Pontiac Grand Prix. Loaded •••••••••·••••••••• ~••••••••••• 't159S
19.7 7 Pontiac Tran.•AM.. Nlca •••••••••••• ~.~•••••• ~ ••••••••••••• .-~·4495.1976 Chevrolet V•ga .W~gon .. •••••••••••~••••••••••~••••••~···.'2695·
1t75 ·f ord Van 1 Ton •••• ·.~ ••••· ··•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~•• '2095 .
'i975 Chevr~let Caprice •••••••••••••••••• ~ .............. .,~ ..... '2195
.
'·
1974 Chevrolet Monte Carlo ................................... '1595
197• Chevrolet .,;2 Ton Plckup ........'••• ~ ••••••••••••• ~.·~·····"69S
,o7~ Cacl
2·
.•••••• ~.~.~••••'••••••••••••••~' ••••'~••

XL250
• 249 cc OHC four-stroke

single cylinder engine
• Four-valve PantroofTM
combustion chamber
• 23-lneh front wheel, ex·
elusive dual purpose tires
• Hot-sparking capacitor
discharge ignition

S329
'

UPPER RT.

.I

992-2174•
Jl'

$1275
·'

BIKES THAT GET UP TO

125 MPG.

WAS '1495

BETZ
HONDA SALES·

••"' " ( · IN' ·~· [ " t •·~ C' I

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

\

I

sch'oOil

.

HONDA

~~

.:~:.~~;·~·

&lt;next to

$1350

A NEWDICADI

AND WE CAN ·WITH ON~; OF THESE

OPEN WED. &amp;THURS.

Green

The Rebels, 21·7, took a 4~ lead
at halftime and expanded the
margin to 31 points, 86-65, with 4:30

MIDDLEPORT - Second I'OWid action on the fourth and fifth grade
level was held In the Meigs Elementary Basketball Tournament at the
Meigs Junior High Thursday
evening.
Tile Pomeroy Bombers defeated
Bradbury Drenner, 23-18, with high
scorers for Pomeroy being Easoo
with 12; Elliott with eight and
Cassell with seven.
In the second game which went Into overtime, Rutland defeated
Hatrlsonvllle No. 2, 31·23 with BIIJ'trum being high scorer for Rutland
with 23. High scorers foe Harrisonville were Jessie Howard with 10 and
HaniD8 with five.
In the final game, Bradbury Kitchen defeated Harrisonville No. I,
31·12. High scorers for Bradbury
was Beeker with 18 and Kitchen with
8. Scott Williams wu high scorer fw
Harrlsonvllle with 10.
Second round actioo In the annual
tournament 011 tile sixth grade level
will be held at 6:30 p.JJL Monday
with Bradbury going against
Salisbury followed by the Pomeroy
Cyclones . versus the Pomeroy
Devils. . .

Indian

plays at Michigan (16-12) .
In the other first·round games
over the last week, Long Beach State
beat Pepperdlne 104-87; St. Peter's
topped Connecticut 71-56; IIUnols
State defeated West Texas State ID63; Virginia downed Lafayette 67-66;
Dlinois blasted Loyola ~ Chicago
llrHI'I ; Alabama trinuned Penn
State 53-49; Texas toppled St.
Joseph's, Pa. 7G-61 ; Murray State
nipped Jacksonville 53-49; Minnesota bombed Bowling
114-60.
Also in the first round, It was
Southwestern Louisiana 74,
Alabama-Birmingham 72; TellBS-EI
Paso 58, Wichita State 56; Boston
College 95, Boston University 74;
Michigan 76, Nebraska 69;
Duquesne 65, Pittsburgh 63 and
Mlssillsippi 76, Grambling 74.

Sears 3b battery

ter."

Second round
action beg:jns

'
By &amp;ott WoUe
. Coach Jim Lawrence was proud of
: STEWART - In recent Junior ' his team not only for winning third
High basketball action the Southern
place but also of the Individual efeightll grade Tornadoes defeated the
forts ~three of his players; Kevin
~elgs Marauders 4&amp;-36 to take third
Curfman, Wade Connally, and JJen.
place In the Federal Hocking In- nls Teaford who made the All·
vitational Tournament.
·
toumament team.
' The young Tornadoes whirled to a
Curfman also received an award
lG-6 first quarter lead behind the ef· for the longest field goal of the tourforts of Dennis Teaford and Kevin nament and Dennis Teaford was
Curfman, who each scored four poln- awarded for the best foul shooting
111 apiece.
percentage making 9-11 for 81 per·· In the second go-round Wade Con- cenl
qally had the bot hand and poured in
Southern completed the season
six pointa for the Tornadoes, while
with an 8-6 record.
Meigs' Nick rugp was putting on
quite an offensive performance of
bls own. The two Meiga county
· teams went to the locker room with
Rlta
Sjluthem on top :!'J-15.
Marla
won
the
$5,000
featured
seven:As the secood baH got underway
Meigs' Nick Riggs again came alive • th race at Latonia on Friday night
ai he netted 11 of his game high 18 . and paid $8.80, $4.60 and $2.80.
Lady Mlnuta Waltz pia~ $11.60
P9Ints- However Riggs' effort just
4 ±'t.&lt;-enough to . overhaul the and $3.31 and the show borse, Too
dJwerful .Tornadoes, and they went . Tough To Touch, paid$2-:lll.
: The 9-6 double cl AlmOBt Cauglt
On for the 48-36 win.
: and Sorokin paid $94.31. Attendance
~ Southern's scoring was well baJan.
C!'d with Wade Connally ripping the :was 4,941 and the mutuel pool totaled
neta for 16 points, Kevin Curfman 12, :$606,347.
.
aDd Dennis Teaford 10. Brian Allen
a'nd Tony Riffle had four points . 'r
IWtes. • •
apiece and Mark Salser two.
: Besides Riggs' 18, Perrin, Barr,
TIJU&gt;ON, Ari2. (AP) -CUff John· smashed badly when Johnson got It
IID'i Burdett each netted four and ~on,
the Cleveland Indians' caught under a barrel In an accident
Kennedy, Crow, and Bishop each
designated hitter much of last at biB home In San Antonio.
sCored two.
season, arrived in training camp
The Injury Is expected to keep him
:Southern shot a hot 46 percent
1bursday night and worked out with out~ action at least a month.
fiom the floor and had 31 reboWlds
some~ the players Friday_
Johnson came to the Indians from
1M by Teaford with 7 and Riffle with
The middle finger on Johnson's the New York Yankees last JWIIl.
5; Meigs shot a line 44 percent with right hand Is In a cast. It was
caroms.

"Wng

In the preliminary contest Coach
Tim Simpson's Eastern Eagles
downed Shade 39-27 to gain third
place to\11'118Jnent honors. The young
but talented Eagles jwnped out to an
1~ haHtime. lead and were never
seriously challenged although the
Shade quintet never gave up. The
third quarter proved to be an offensive bout that was deadlocked at
12 all. Eastern's leading scorer
: Collins canned six of his 12 points
during that stretch. Teammate Car:-

NO. 1 RECEIVER.
· BOONE, N.C. (AP)- Most defensive backs In football learn to play
offense but few get the chance, short
of a run with an Interception. Rick ·
!)easley of Appalachian State did,
1towever.
A defensive back as a freslunan in
1977, Beasley was switched to wide
receiver in 19'18, his sophomore
season, and tied for fourth in p11a1r
catching In the major college
division.
In 1979, the 6-foot, 16G-poWJd
player from Virginia Beach, Va. ,
really hit the jackpot. He was No. 1'
among major college .receivers
'

SOUTHERN'S junior high school basketball team
finished third in the recent Federal Hocking post.
season toumamenL Pictured above, first row, left to
right are Brian Allen, Tony Deem, Mark Salser, Ed

1974 FORD MAVERICK 11395

wltopper.

t' .

I

. locking differential, air condi tioning, clean interior, green .

li'.L

lt

' Tile King5, now 42-29, hold a two:pme lead over the Milwaukee
:Bucks In the National Basketball
:Assoclatiqn's Midwest Division. The
•Bucks did not play Friday.
: Kansas City led by one oint at the
II the first quarter, but
-Cleveland eased to a 41-36 lead five
' mlnuteSlnio the second quarter and
never again trailed.
Tile Cavalle!lled by as many as 14
In .the second hall. but with 1:32
~inlng' in the game Otis · BIJ.'.
dSong pwnped In a three-pointer to
, bring the Kings back to within five,

3895

1

4 door, small V-8, automatic,

Kansas City was 'no surprise'

't_....nn.

Runs

power steering, power brakes,.

Albeck says Cavs thumping by

said Albeck. "Tonight, we were able
.to jump out in front and control the

gOOd tires.

\977 CHEVROLET

41

season.
" No team in the league has played
them (Kings) closer than we have,"

P.B.,

perfect.

" Now, I believe I will have a very
TAMPA, Fla. (AP)- Quiet Cesar
goodyear."
Geronimo, breaking a year-long
Geronimo declined to say what
silence with the news media, says he
prompted his change in attitude, but
isn't going to hand over his starting
made it clear he isn't running away
job in center field with the Cinfrom a challenge.
cinnati Reds just because Dave
-He acknowledged that Collins has
Collins has annoWlced his intention
the best speed on the club, but he
to play there.
said there is more to playing the out·
"I want to play too," Geronimo
field than rWIDing fast.
said Friday, breaking his silence to
"I have good speed, but the jump
talk about his future. "I've always
(when
the ball leaves the hat) is the
been fighting for my job, so this is
main thing," Geronimo said. "That
.nothing new for me.''
Geronimo, the Reds reg · . &lt;:!:1.!- is something you don't learn; that's
ter fielder since 1972, deci ed laS!' a natural thing."
Geronimo said he had a good winyear that he dida't want t talk to
ter season in the Dominican
writers. He politely, but firml
_.Republic where he lives, hitting
declined to comment a
"about .300" and that he's ready to
anything, even the reason f his
shed
, the reputation he's acquired
silence~,
over the last few years of being a
1 d: _.
sons,
light hitter.
Gero · ' sai . 'Last y
Although Geronimo has won four .
bad season ( .239
Gold
Glove awards for his fielding,
and I have to blame t on myself.
he
has
hit over .300 just once in the
My attitude wasn't as good as it
National League and has a lifetime
' 'I!O'uld have been.

chell with 23 points, stifled a fourthquarter surge by Kansas City in
their second victory against the
Kings In as many meetings this

2895

van conversion includes · bed,
sink, refrigerator, V-8, ·auto.,

'wants to play centerfield'

less."
Tile Cavaliers, led by Mike Mit-

The win moved the Rebels into the
second roUI'Id competition. The
Rebels will host Long Beach State,
21·11, Monday night.
Freshman Sidney Green was
moved to forward to make way in
the Nevada-Las Vegas lineup for the
Wpound Johnson. Green contributed 18 points and also grabbed
10 r,ebounds.
The victory helped salve the wounds caused on the Las Vegas team by
118 exclusion from the NCAA playoffs.
"Not going to the NCAA playoffs
gave us a killer instinct and didn't
allow us to get our pride down," said
Johnson. "It ·only made us play bet·

1

1974 DODGE VAN

Indeed it is, especially for this 6foot-4, 21S.poWld righthander who
looks about as fragile as an army
tank.
He is the only pitcher in baseball
history to have won the Cy Young
Award in both leagues. He did It with
the Cleveland Indians with a 24-16
mark in 1972 and With San Diego
with a 21-6 record in 1978 when he
was 40 years old.
His statistics are staggering: A
total of 4,592 innings pitched in the
majors, the equivalent of 510 nineinning games; 285 complete games;
50 shutoJts, 3,141 strikeouts, second
only to Walter Johnson's 3,508. He is
only 21 games short of the 300 victory plateau.
"Is that a goal?" someone asked.
Perry shrugged. "I just take it a
year at a time. I don't set goals for
myself."
·
"You must want to overtake
Walter Johnson in strikeouts,"
someone suggested.
"Not especially," Perry replied.
" Nolan Ryan will pass it before I
will, maybe Tom Seaver. Both
probably will go over 3,000 this year.
Ryan can get 250-300 a year."

ds.

'3695

there.'''

Geronimo breaks silence,

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) Cleveland Coach Stan A! beck, whose
Cavaliers rolled into Kansas City
with a t&gt;-31 road record, says his
team's 111·104 thwnping·9f the Kings
Friday night was no surprise.
"This was not art Wlusual night for
us," said Albeck, who Is nursing a
28-43 record so far this season.
"We're not that bad of a team.
We've lost 17 games by four points or

_ l43$~

1978 PLY. HORIZON

Referring to this club of
magnificent old codgers, a reporter
indirectly commented: " You guys
are really banging in there."
"What do you mean hanging
in.' " Perry shot back, a tender nerve struck. " You' got a lot of 23-yearold kids not even making the cut. I
think it's more than 'hanging In

"I was real pleased with the way
we ran the offense tonight," said
Tarkanlan. "We moved the ball
aroWld extremely well, and that
allowlld us to do what we wanted on
offense.
"I wouldn't say that was our best
played game of the season, because
we played so well against Kentucky,
but tonight would be right up there.
There will be seven other secondround games Monday night that will
pare the field to eight.
In those matchups, Boston College
(1~9) Is at Virginia (~10 ) Murray
State (22-7) plays at Alabama (11111 ); Illinois (19-12) hosts Illinois
State (20-8); St. Peter's (21-8) is at
Duquesne ( 18-8) Southwestern
LouJs1ana (20-8) is at Texas (19-10) ;
Mississippi (17-12) Is at Minnesota
(111-10) and Texas-El Paso (~7)

RT.7

PH. 446-2240

.

�---

-..
,,

·C+- The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, March 9, 1980

.--- - - · - - - -

l Alcorn State survives first round, 70·62
By HERSCHELNISSENSON
AP Sporla Writer
The Alcorn Stale Braveo are off.
and-running in their very first NCAA
Basketball Tournament. Oops, better make that off-and-walking .
Although they boast the nation's
longest winning streak - 'J:/ gameo
- and are the higheot scoring team
in the country with a 91.2 average,
• the run-and-gun Braves survived
their lowest output of the season to
·• defeat South Alabama 7~2 in a fir·
·. st·round Midwest game Friday
night.
._
The victory earned the
·• predominantly black institution the
dubious honor of meeting thirdranked Louisiana State on Sunday.
"Yeah, South Alabama did hold
the score down, " said Coach Davey
Whitney of 28-1 Alcorn, "but it was
-......... . because of the type of offense they
..... were rurming. They were running
. ~- ..:: &lt; sort
of a delay game anc •heir
..
patience
helped keep the score
"··
.... ,:-..- down. We just played well enough to
... ;
win. We work against the slow.&lt;Jown
:·
;
-:
type
of game in practice."
·... ~
.'·
In
the other half of the Midwest
. ... ... '

.

~.

.:::..:
• .

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

··..
·-·-...
......

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

'

"

Cleveland drops

Fl1dar'• Retlllu
Clall AAA TOW'IIlllmtl

Austi.ntown-Fitch88, WarrenHowland44
Barberton T1 , Akron Eut 110

exhibition tilt

•'

·~

MEXICO CITY. (AP) - Rene
Chavez and Eleno Cuen combined on
a six-hitter, pitching the Mexico City
Red Devils to a 4-0 victory over the
Cleveland Indians in an exhibition
baseball game Friday night.
Chavez worked the first six innings and Cuen finished up. They
were backed by six double plays and
an enthusiastic crowd of 30,000.
The Red IJevils scored two runs in
the first inning off Cleveland star·
ting pitcher Len Barker on a basesloaded single by Alejandro

..

Lizarraga.
Sergio Robles doubled home a run
in the fourth inning and Sergio
Gomez tripled in the fmal run in the
sixth.
Barker and Wayne Garland pitched three Innings apiece lor the Indians, while Steve Withol and Sid
Monge each worked one.
The Red Devils played the San
Diego Padreo in Tucson Saturday in
another exhibition game and the Indians met the Puebla Angels.

dribbled downcourt, where he was
fouled on a layup attempt by David
Thirdkill to set up the winning free
· throws. Prior to that, Houston was
Bradley's hero, coming off the bench
to score 17 points, including a threepoint play for a 53&lt;illead with 1:00
to play.
Kiki Vandeweghe scored a career·
high 34 points to lead UCLA over Old
Dominion. The Bruins never trailed,
leading 36-28 at halftime, and
building it to 17 with 13:19
remaining. Old Dominion got within
six with 3:18 left but UCLA scored
nine straight points to pull away
again.
"There were a lot of raised
eyebrows when we got Into the tour·
nament," said UCLA Coach Larry
Brown, whose Bruins finished fourth
in the Pacific-10 Conference with an
overall 17-9 record. "But I believe
that we were one of the top 48 teams
in the country."
Arizona Slate's front tine of Alton

Uster, Kurt Nlmphius and Sam
Williams combined for 38 points and
controlled the the backboards as the
Sun Devils crushed shorter Loyola.
II was never in doubt after a 17-4
burst early in the second hall.
Dale Solomon, scoreless in the fir-

Can. McKinley 59, Cin. O.kllill&amp;50
Cleve . MarsballM, Cleve. Lincoln-West 51
Cleve. St. IHJllltius ISS, N. Royalton M
Col. Brooktiaven 73, Col. Central72
Col. South 66, Newark 52
Findlay 59, Lima 47
Lake Cath. 62, Euclid60
Middletown 17, Fairfield 54
Mid view 00, Amherst Steele 56
New Philadelphian, WintenvUle 7~
Solon 68, E. Cleveland Shaw 54
Spring. Sooth 77, Sidney 61
Tol. Central 58, Tol. start 41
Tol. Whltmer39. Clay 31
Clau AA Toumame•tl
Bellalre 91, Union Local 5I!
Bn:lll:tiield 61 , Garrettsville Garfield 52
Cantoo C.th. 511, Canal Fultoo NW56. 2 ot
Chagrin FaUs 75, Cleve. Orange 46
Cleve. Central Cath. 50, WarrensvWe Hts. 46
Col. Centennial 55, River Val. 48
Col J:lartley TJ , We.stfali71J

Col. Sl. Charles 73, Grandview 66
Col. Watterson 70, OlenLangy 60
Coshocton 88, Claymont 52
Hebron l..akewood Bl, Lcndon80
Kansas Lakota It, Clyde~

st hall," erupted for 20 points In ~~
second half and added the decisive"
basket in overtime as Virginia Tech
squeaked past" Western Kentucky~
Solomon helped Tech overcome an.
Ill-point halftime deficit with a 1~2 ;·
burSt at the start of the second half. · ;
y

event

.'

._,

'

"You people found deduc.ions and
redits I didn't know about. I shout
have come here last year:·
'

''

Boys tournament scores
.,.. Balbtball
By 'l'be Aaodaled Preu

0

•

Iona vs. No.ll Georgetown in the
East, Florida Slate vs. No.4 Kentucky and Virginia Tech vs. No.7 In·
diana in the Mideast, Alcorn vs. LSU
and Texas AXM vs. No. I~ North
Carolina In the Midwest and UCLA
vs. No.I DePaul and Arizona Slalf
vs. No.IOOhioState In the West.
Alcorn trailed South Alabama in
the early going but rallied for a 'J:/·18
halltime lead behind the outside
shooting of Eddie Baker, who scored
12 of his 18 points in the first 20
minutes. Larry Smith, who scored
only two points in the first half, led
the way with 16 after the intermission.
Asked what the Braveo would
have to do to beat mighty I.SU, Whitney said: "Well, it looks like we're
going to have to take a player who is
&amp;-foot-4 and guard a guy on their
team who is &amp;-9. That will be a a pret·
ty tough matchup." ,
Texas A&amp;M's Golf stole the ball
from Bradley's Hasan Houston and

~llfPS.IIool

~

. ..
.
. ..
'

doubleheader at Denton, Texas,
Dave Goff stole the ball with five
seconds left and made a pair of free
throws four seconds later to give
Texas A&amp;M a 5$-53 victory over
Bradley.
Three other twin bills completed
the first round of the 411-team NCAA
extravaganza, which winds down to
the Final Four at Indianapolis, Ind.,
March 22·24.
In the West at Tempe, Ariz.,
UCLA, which has won more national
titles thsn any other team, whipped
Old Dominion 87-74 - the Bruins will
meet top-ranked DePaul on Sunday
- while No.l8 Arizona State cn..shed ·
t Loyola, Marymount 99-71.
A Mideast doubleheader at
Bowling Green, Ky., saw Florida
Slate edge Toledo 94-91 while
Virginia,Tech· nipped Western Kentucky 89&lt;l5 in overtime on the losers'
court. The East's first·round took
place at Providence, R.I., with No.19
Iona downing Holy Cross 84-78 and
Villanova thrashing Marquette n59.
Sunday's complete lineup finds
Villanova vs. No.6 Syracuse and

...

Kenton RitJ&amp;e·s.&amp;, Spring. NE 441
Logar. Elm62, Col. Independence61
Napoleon 71, Paulding 43
Oberlin 7•, Wellington 58
Olmsted Fall! 54, Keystone SO
Orrville 82, Akron &amp;uth S9
Ottowa Glandorf 72, Kenton 04
Perrysburg 110, Stritch sa
Pnrumouth 5(1, Chesapeake 47
Sheridan 71, Nebonville-York58
WarrenChampion60, La8rae54, 2ot
Waverlb56, Was~CH53
Wells vi e 53, St. ChunvWe 51

~~~

.........

H&amp;R Block preparers are carefully trained to ask lhe right questions.
They d1g for every honest deduction and credit. And they want to
make sure you pay only the taxes you owe.

W. Branch 70, Petersburg Spring. ~

Yowtgs. Rayen60,"YOUI1g.!. East 48
Cla11 A Ttw'l&amp;lllleac.
Berkshire 56, Asht. St. John 52
Calvert 57, Buckeye Central 53
Covington t7, Arcanum 40
E. Canton 69, Rittman 611
Hooeweli-Louden 83, St. Wendelin 59

2nd &amp; BROWN ST.
MASON,W.VA.
OPEN TUES.
THURS. &amp; SAT.
9A.M.·5 P .M .
PHONE 773·9121

Kalida 56, l.el~ic 33
Lorain Clea!"VIew 73, Lutheran W. 48

Mi.nenl Ridge 70, Bloomfield 56
Mlssissinawa Va1 .67, Antonia &amp;t, ot
N. Central60, Edgerton 57
'
Ottoville 52, Delphos Jefferson 2tJ
Peebles $3, Paint Val. 4fl
St. Henry 78, Spencerville 47
Sandusky St. Mary 's88, Monroeville$7
Tol. ottawa Hills 89, Ayersville 51
Upper Scioto Val. &amp;8, Ridgemont 55
VanBurtn 73, Cory-Rawson52

618 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY,O.
OPEN 9 A.M. TO
6 P.M. WEEKDAYS
PEOPLE 9-SSATURDAY
PHONE 992-3795

H&amp;R BLOCK
THE INCOME TAX

Corner Sycamore &amp; Second
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 446·0303
Open 9 am·6 pm Weekdays, 9·5 Sat.

LAYAWAY
NOW

APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

Pro

OSU president supports Miller
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
State University President Harold
Enarson gave basketball Coach
Eldon Miller his full support Friday
while scolding fans who bemoaned
the learn's perfonnance this season.
"You finished the regular season
with a flourish that makes all
Buckeye fans look forward to the
NCAA playoffs with great anticipation," Enarson told Miller in a
letter.
But just as important, he said, .
"you finished the regular season
with class. Following last Sunday's
game, one that had to be deeply
disappointing to you and the team,
you conducted yourself with dignity,
with coolness, and in a way thai
brought great credit to you, to the
coaching profession and to Ohio
State University."
Ohio State lost its bid for the Bfg
Ten championship Sunday by losing
to Indiana at Bloomington. Enarson
made no mention of Indiana's hoi·
tempered Coach Bobby Knight, who

.•

•

....•
·.
•.

..,. Nicklaus far

..

.

,_ •

·. ·hack in field

...
..··.
..·

.·
-·

,·

.·

•

\'

LAUDERHILL, .Fla. (AP) -Mike
Hill put himself in position to win the
golf tournament. He said he might
not do it, but he's having fun - unaccustomed fun - in any event.
Johnny Miller . put himself in
position to win the golltoumament. ·
He said he doesn't expect to win, but
he, too, is having fun and won't he
upset if he doesn't take the title In
the $300,000 Jackie Gleason·
Inverrary Classic.
Jack Nicklaus took himself out of
position to win the tournament and
didn't say a word about having fun.
"I'Ql still determined to keep on
working on my game until I'm com·
pletely satisfied," Nicklaus said af.
ter a struggling, no-birdie round of
76 Friday put him far back in the
pack at 145 and provided another jolt
to his attempted comeback.
"As to when that will be •"
Nicklaus said, "I don't know. But I'll
keep trying until everything works

out."

•
•

"Whether I can win again or not, I
am at peace with myself," Hill said .
He credited a more relaxed attitude
with an assist iq the~. no-bogey,
:i-under-par 67 that gave him a !-shot
lead at the tournament's halfway
point.
Hill had a !·stroke lead over firstround pace-setter Danny Edwards,
who had a 71for 137.
Miller, once golf's Golden Boy but
a struggllng aJ.so.ran for the last few
years, was in a group· of three at 138.
He ~hot a 68 in the warm, IIIIIUlY, windy weather,.and wat tied 'with Jim
SimcJruj and Bob Murphy. MUi'phy
had a 71, Simons 70.

•

.•

'

'

"

threw a Sports Illustrated writer out
of the Indiana dressing room during
a televised news conference
following the game.
" ...1 want you to know that you
have my full support and Bl&gt;'
preciation, not only for your ability
as a coach but for continuing the
tradition of dignity and good sportsmanship that has characterized •
Ohio State's basketball program for
many years," Enarson told Miller.
The OSU president added that he

FOR SPRING

standin_gs

gets "a little impatient with armchair coaches who expect instant
perfection from any group of young
men, no matter how talented, or any
group of coaches, no matter how
able they may be.
"What they so quickly forget is
that under your leadership the fine
teams of the past few years have reestablished Ohio State's winning
tradition in basketball. We are, in
anybody's book, a national power
once again.''

Sports briefs.

,97

MODEL 528847

A--

NI--AIIoelaU.O

AIAGiuee

lly'l'llo "'-\aledi'No
IDIItlrl Cal awe

Torommmer 900

. W.LP«. OB
5! II .779
50 18 .'135 !

H 3li
..• az 38
30 41
C..tniD4%'11
31i31i
3338
31 38

.mu
.us 24\1
.11011

.500 7\t

.411 9
.443 lilt
184! .!94 IS

---

18 53 .232 "'

w..... c.teNMt

XolwuCity ·

CASH FACTORY

••

42 211 .192
41)

Denver

REBATE! .

Cl&gt;kqo
Utah

--

!2 50 .301120\t

GENERAL

ADELPHI, Md. (AP) - With con·
secutive games of 268 and 290 midway through the finsl round, Nelson
Burton Jr. charged into first place
and stands one game away from his
l~th career Professional Bowlers
Association championship.
Burton won seven straight mal·
ches In the sixth round of the Fair
Lanes Open before losing his last
game :m-185 to Mike Aulby.
Aulby qualified second, 141 pins
behind the lead, with Matt Surina
claiming third place. Steve Hiscox,
with scores of 279 and 223 in his IBBt
two matches, claimed fourth, while
Teata Semiz got fifth.

SIERRA BLANCA, Texas (AP) Two members of the Texas Southern
University baseball team were
killed and seven other players were
injured when their van overturned
about 55 miles east of El Paso.
The dead were identilied as Daryl
S. Quinn, an 18-yea('oo{)ld freshman,
and Dale Crwrunie, 21, both of Los
Angeles.

Loo Ao&amp;eleS
Seollle

MONTREAL (AP) - Clarence
Campbell, fonner president. of the
National Hockey League, has spent
one "symbolic" day in prison and
has been fined $25,000 for conspiring
to bribe a senator.

~··a....e.
NowYorhtAtlanta
• PlllladeiDbla at S.. Antoolo

-

Pwtland

SanDtego
Goldeolllate

31 .5&amp;3 2

:Ill 44 .371 15\t
24 48 .343 17\t

BOWLING

50 :Ill .714
II II .700 I
41 24 .1$7 4

12 38 .457 II

:12 Sll .457 1B

Zl 411 .800 1Jl

f'rllllr'• a.-

Ughtwelght, balanced. Completely
automatic line feed . . . simply tap
trimmer on ground, spring ·loaded
head feeds line to proper lt.ngth.
Heavy duty motor. Double insulated
and UL listed. Built-in cord lock.

.4113 18\t

Terrific Buy Now!

LAYAWAY NOW
FOR SPRING

11-HP,·36-In.
Riding Mower

PLANT
STARTER ~IT

• Key Ignition slarting • Heavy-duty
dilecl drive lransa•le w / disc brake
and automolive differenlial section
• 6 forward speeds, 1 reverse • Rear
discharge cutting deck • Twin bio"des
for full 36" cui • Synchro-balanced
engine • New hood and grille design

11"X13" SELF WATERING
TRAY WITH 20 PLASTIC on .....

- I l l . Pldladolphlo 92

w.-tiiii,Detrolttllll
Atlantltl, IDd1anl H
Houltallll, N.,. Jeney no, 2ot
aev.Luldlli,XolwuCity 104

NewYort llli)S..Ant...lo 112

PhoeaixllO, taht4

Pwtland IIJ, Denver 104
LooAnlleloolOI, Chtcajio_fi

•

RE'CORD AND TAPE

BEAUTIFUL
SELECTION ••
..•
OF SCENIC
•
DESIGNS ••
..•.

Woubllwtao a t -

S.W.a!Kanouetty

D$UiatNewJeney
Clevoludatlndlana
(]llcqoat. LooAnllelooatl'ortland
1 Goldeii"Btate at San Diego

BONANZA

......,•• Guw:s
Nopmaocboduled

THE

STATLER BROTHERS
OHHAPPVDAY

PLUS A

PWSA
$lop,

DELUXE 23 5 CU . FT. REFRESHMENT CEIH ER
WI TH ICE &amp; WATER THRU THE DOOR
II Adjustable door shelves in cab inet section

rJ 4 Freeze r shelves in door and cabinetll!l
Removable freezer baskel • Juice can dispenser El Rol ls-oui· On·wh eels.

•

'·

$100 DISCOUNT

•
•

Including :
How Great ThOu Art / Caddy Sang Bass
Are You Washed In Tnt B lood
"J ust In nme/Oh Happy Dlly

...•

..''"

DISOOUNT

•

USB F.UTOIT IEIATE
fOI THE Pill!' .

cet
In the

euervmonth

• subst•ntlallnterest penalty required lor early wlth'!&lt;iwal.

••••nn

DEL.YIRIN'
RECORDED LIVE IN CONCI:.Ill
~
INCLUDING:
C"MON/'1EAP THAT MUSIC/A MAN ll l&lt; EME
GRAND JUNpiON/1GUESS YOU MADE n
'
\
.

Ol}'ttt

U odel Ol82880A

DELUXE 13 CYCLE BUlLT-IN
POTWASHEA1"' DISHWASHER!

PLUS A

$50 REBATE

'

i ;'

P~USA

$50 REBA11 .
!"'TE: $20 -"e DIIt 1/SCU~Q//Ible on W,flfl~ MOditl WLW4 700A
l ncl 0/'/fl ,\ IQrJt/ DL8265ClA., fl() f /1/us/ratea. ·
.
&lt;

·R omeroy
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

88

includ ing:
Mom /T im e l s OnVour Side

Make It With You/Remember The Children
Where HaW! All The Flowers Gone

. '"'P.
•

MOC•I RHIIMGY

PLUS A

REG.

0

'

'54.95'

$100 DISCOUNT
'

I

I.

i·

IJand~a~k
I

.THE ATHENS COUNTY

EARTH"WJNDUFIRE .
IASTDAYSANDTIME

'

I"'•

OUR BIGGEST
SELECTION

ALBUMS
ONLY

$ 98 .

EVER
8 TRACK TAPES '3.98

3-D PHOTO WALL CLOCKS
BEAUTIFUL CORDLESS ClOCKS FEATuRE SILK SCREENED
GLASS FOR DIMENSIONAl EFFECT. EACH IS 20"X26"
SIZE WITH A WIDE WOOD FRAME.

J.

SALE ENDS SAT., NIARCH 15TH

LAYAWAY NOW Foir· MOTHER'S DAY

�---

-..
,,

·C+- The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, March 9, 1980

.--- - - · - - - -

l Alcorn State survives first round, 70·62
By HERSCHELNISSENSON
AP Sporla Writer
The Alcorn Stale Braveo are off.
and-running in their very first NCAA
Basketball Tournament. Oops, better make that off-and-walking .
Although they boast the nation's
longest winning streak - 'J:/ gameo
- and are the higheot scoring team
in the country with a 91.2 average,
• the run-and-gun Braves survived
their lowest output of the season to
·• defeat South Alabama 7~2 in a fir·
·. st·round Midwest game Friday
night.
._
The victory earned the
·• predominantly black institution the
dubious honor of meeting thirdranked Louisiana State on Sunday.
"Yeah, South Alabama did hold
the score down, " said Coach Davey
Whitney of 28-1 Alcorn, "but it was
-......... . because of the type of offense they
..... were rurming. They were running
. ~- ..:: &lt; sort
of a delay game anc •heir
..
patience
helped keep the score
"··
.... ,:-..- down. We just played well enough to
... ;
win. We work against the slow.&lt;Jown
:·
;
-:
type
of game in practice."
·... ~
.'·
In
the other half of the Midwest
. ... ... '

.

~.

.:::..:
• .

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

··..
·-·-...
......

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

'

"

Cleveland drops

Fl1dar'• Retlllu
Clall AAA TOW'IIlllmtl

Austi.ntown-Fitch88, WarrenHowland44
Barberton T1 , Akron Eut 110

exhibition tilt

•'

·~

MEXICO CITY. (AP) - Rene
Chavez and Eleno Cuen combined on
a six-hitter, pitching the Mexico City
Red Devils to a 4-0 victory over the
Cleveland Indians in an exhibition
baseball game Friday night.
Chavez worked the first six innings and Cuen finished up. They
were backed by six double plays and
an enthusiastic crowd of 30,000.
The Red IJevils scored two runs in
the first inning off Cleveland star·
ting pitcher Len Barker on a basesloaded single by Alejandro

..

Lizarraga.
Sergio Robles doubled home a run
in the fourth inning and Sergio
Gomez tripled in the fmal run in the
sixth.
Barker and Wayne Garland pitched three Innings apiece lor the Indians, while Steve Withol and Sid
Monge each worked one.
The Red Devils played the San
Diego Padreo in Tucson Saturday in
another exhibition game and the Indians met the Puebla Angels.

dribbled downcourt, where he was
fouled on a layup attempt by David
Thirdkill to set up the winning free
· throws. Prior to that, Houston was
Bradley's hero, coming off the bench
to score 17 points, including a threepoint play for a 53&lt;illead with 1:00
to play.
Kiki Vandeweghe scored a career·
high 34 points to lead UCLA over Old
Dominion. The Bruins never trailed,
leading 36-28 at halftime, and
building it to 17 with 13:19
remaining. Old Dominion got within
six with 3:18 left but UCLA scored
nine straight points to pull away
again.
"There were a lot of raised
eyebrows when we got Into the tour·
nament," said UCLA Coach Larry
Brown, whose Bruins finished fourth
in the Pacific-10 Conference with an
overall 17-9 record. "But I believe
that we were one of the top 48 teams
in the country."
Arizona Slate's front tine of Alton

Uster, Kurt Nlmphius and Sam
Williams combined for 38 points and
controlled the the backboards as the
Sun Devils crushed shorter Loyola.
II was never in doubt after a 17-4
burst early in the second hall.
Dale Solomon, scoreless in the fir-

Can. McKinley 59, Cin. O.kllill&amp;50
Cleve . MarsballM, Cleve. Lincoln-West 51
Cleve. St. IHJllltius ISS, N. Royalton M
Col. Brooktiaven 73, Col. Central72
Col. South 66, Newark 52
Findlay 59, Lima 47
Lake Cath. 62, Euclid60
Middletown 17, Fairfield 54
Mid view 00, Amherst Steele 56
New Philadelphian, WintenvUle 7~
Solon 68, E. Cleveland Shaw 54
Spring. Sooth 77, Sidney 61
Tol. Central 58, Tol. start 41
Tol. Whltmer39. Clay 31
Clau AA Toumame•tl
Bellalre 91, Union Local 5I!
Bn:lll:tiield 61 , Garrettsville Garfield 52
Cantoo C.th. 511, Canal Fultoo NW56. 2 ot
Chagrin FaUs 75, Cleve. Orange 46
Cleve. Central Cath. 50, WarrensvWe Hts. 46
Col. Centennial 55, River Val. 48
Col J:lartley TJ , We.stfali71J

Col. Sl. Charles 73, Grandview 66
Col. Watterson 70, OlenLangy 60
Coshocton 88, Claymont 52
Hebron l..akewood Bl, Lcndon80
Kansas Lakota It, Clyde~

st hall," erupted for 20 points In ~~
second half and added the decisive"
basket in overtime as Virginia Tech
squeaked past" Western Kentucky~
Solomon helped Tech overcome an.
Ill-point halftime deficit with a 1~2 ;·
burSt at the start of the second half. · ;
y

event

.'

._,

'

"You people found deduc.ions and
redits I didn't know about. I shout
have come here last year:·
'

''

Boys tournament scores
.,.. Balbtball
By 'l'be Aaodaled Preu

0

•

Iona vs. No.ll Georgetown in the
East, Florida Slate vs. No.4 Kentucky and Virginia Tech vs. No.7 In·
diana in the Mideast, Alcorn vs. LSU
and Texas AXM vs. No. I~ North
Carolina In the Midwest and UCLA
vs. No.I DePaul and Arizona Slalf
vs. No.IOOhioState In the West.
Alcorn trailed South Alabama in
the early going but rallied for a 'J:/·18
halltime lead behind the outside
shooting of Eddie Baker, who scored
12 of his 18 points in the first 20
minutes. Larry Smith, who scored
only two points in the first half, led
the way with 16 after the intermission.
Asked what the Braveo would
have to do to beat mighty I.SU, Whitney said: "Well, it looks like we're
going to have to take a player who is
&amp;-foot-4 and guard a guy on their
team who is &amp;-9. That will be a a pret·
ty tough matchup." ,
Texas A&amp;M's Golf stole the ball
from Bradley's Hasan Houston and

~llfPS.IIool

~

. ..
.
. ..
'

doubleheader at Denton, Texas,
Dave Goff stole the ball with five
seconds left and made a pair of free
throws four seconds later to give
Texas A&amp;M a 5$-53 victory over
Bradley.
Three other twin bills completed
the first round of the 411-team NCAA
extravaganza, which winds down to
the Final Four at Indianapolis, Ind.,
March 22·24.
In the West at Tempe, Ariz.,
UCLA, which has won more national
titles thsn any other team, whipped
Old Dominion 87-74 - the Bruins will
meet top-ranked DePaul on Sunday
- while No.l8 Arizona State cn..shed ·
t Loyola, Marymount 99-71.
A Mideast doubleheader at
Bowling Green, Ky., saw Florida
Slate edge Toledo 94-91 while
Virginia,Tech· nipped Western Kentucky 89&lt;l5 in overtime on the losers'
court. The East's first·round took
place at Providence, R.I., with No.19
Iona downing Holy Cross 84-78 and
Villanova thrashing Marquette n59.
Sunday's complete lineup finds
Villanova vs. No.6 Syracuse and

...

Kenton RitJ&amp;e·s.&amp;, Spring. NE 441
Logar. Elm62, Col. Independence61
Napoleon 71, Paulding 43
Oberlin 7•, Wellington 58
Olmsted Fall! 54, Keystone SO
Orrville 82, Akron &amp;uth S9
Ottowa Glandorf 72, Kenton 04
Perrysburg 110, Stritch sa
Pnrumouth 5(1, Chesapeake 47
Sheridan 71, Nebonville-York58
WarrenChampion60, La8rae54, 2ot
Waverlb56, Was~CH53
Wells vi e 53, St. ChunvWe 51

~~~

.........

H&amp;R Block preparers are carefully trained to ask lhe right questions.
They d1g for every honest deduction and credit. And they want to
make sure you pay only the taxes you owe.

W. Branch 70, Petersburg Spring. ~

Yowtgs. Rayen60,"YOUI1g.!. East 48
Cla11 A Ttw'l&amp;lllleac.
Berkshire 56, Asht. St. John 52
Calvert 57, Buckeye Central 53
Covington t7, Arcanum 40
E. Canton 69, Rittman 611
Hooeweli-Louden 83, St. Wendelin 59

2nd &amp; BROWN ST.
MASON,W.VA.
OPEN TUES.
THURS. &amp; SAT.
9A.M.·5 P .M .
PHONE 773·9121

Kalida 56, l.el~ic 33
Lorain Clea!"VIew 73, Lutheran W. 48

Mi.nenl Ridge 70, Bloomfield 56
Mlssissinawa Va1 .67, Antonia &amp;t, ot
N. Central60, Edgerton 57
'
Ottoville 52, Delphos Jefferson 2tJ
Peebles $3, Paint Val. 4fl
St. Henry 78, Spencerville 47
Sandusky St. Mary 's88, Monroeville$7
Tol. ottawa Hills 89, Ayersville 51
Upper Scioto Val. &amp;8, Ridgemont 55
VanBurtn 73, Cory-Rawson52

618 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY,O.
OPEN 9 A.M. TO
6 P.M. WEEKDAYS
PEOPLE 9-SSATURDAY
PHONE 992-3795

H&amp;R BLOCK
THE INCOME TAX

Corner Sycamore &amp; Second
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 446·0303
Open 9 am·6 pm Weekdays, 9·5 Sat.

LAYAWAY
NOW

APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

Pro

OSU president supports Miller
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
State University President Harold
Enarson gave basketball Coach
Eldon Miller his full support Friday
while scolding fans who bemoaned
the learn's perfonnance this season.
"You finished the regular season
with a flourish that makes all
Buckeye fans look forward to the
NCAA playoffs with great anticipation," Enarson told Miller in a
letter.
But just as important, he said, .
"you finished the regular season
with class. Following last Sunday's
game, one that had to be deeply
disappointing to you and the team,
you conducted yourself with dignity,
with coolness, and in a way thai
brought great credit to you, to the
coaching profession and to Ohio
State University."
Ohio State lost its bid for the Bfg
Ten championship Sunday by losing
to Indiana at Bloomington. Enarson
made no mention of Indiana's hoi·
tempered Coach Bobby Knight, who

.•

•

....•
·.
•.

..,. Nicklaus far

..

.

,_ •

·. ·hack in field

...
..··.
..·

.·
-·

,·

.·

•

\'

LAUDERHILL, .Fla. (AP) -Mike
Hill put himself in position to win the
golf tournament. He said he might
not do it, but he's having fun - unaccustomed fun - in any event.
Johnny Miller . put himself in
position to win the golltoumament. ·
He said he doesn't expect to win, but
he, too, is having fun and won't he
upset if he doesn't take the title In
the $300,000 Jackie Gleason·
Inverrary Classic.
Jack Nicklaus took himself out of
position to win the tournament and
didn't say a word about having fun.
"I'Ql still determined to keep on
working on my game until I'm com·
pletely satisfied," Nicklaus said af.
ter a struggling, no-birdie round of
76 Friday put him far back in the
pack at 145 and provided another jolt
to his attempted comeback.
"As to when that will be •"
Nicklaus said, "I don't know. But I'll
keep trying until everything works

out."

•
•

"Whether I can win again or not, I
am at peace with myself," Hill said .
He credited a more relaxed attitude
with an assist iq the~. no-bogey,
:i-under-par 67 that gave him a !-shot
lead at the tournament's halfway
point.
Hill had a !·stroke lead over firstround pace-setter Danny Edwards,
who had a 71for 137.
Miller, once golf's Golden Boy but
a struggllng aJ.so.ran for the last few
years, was in a group· of three at 138.
He ~hot a 68 in the warm, IIIIIUlY, windy weather,.and wat tied 'with Jim
SimcJruj and Bob Murphy. MUi'phy
had a 71, Simons 70.

•

.•

'

'

"

threw a Sports Illustrated writer out
of the Indiana dressing room during
a televised news conference
following the game.
" ...1 want you to know that you
have my full support and Bl&gt;'
preciation, not only for your ability
as a coach but for continuing the
tradition of dignity and good sportsmanship that has characterized •
Ohio State's basketball program for
many years," Enarson told Miller.
The OSU president added that he

FOR SPRING

standin_gs

gets "a little impatient with armchair coaches who expect instant
perfection from any group of young
men, no matter how talented, or any
group of coaches, no matter how
able they may be.
"What they so quickly forget is
that under your leadership the fine
teams of the past few years have reestablished Ohio State's winning
tradition in basketball. We are, in
anybody's book, a national power
once again.''

Sports briefs.

,97

MODEL 528847

A--

NI--AIIoelaU.O

AIAGiuee

lly'l'llo "'-\aledi'No
IDIItlrl Cal awe

Torommmer 900

. W.LP«. OB
5! II .779
50 18 .'135 !

H 3li
..• az 38
30 41
C..tniD4%'11
31i31i
3338
31 38

.mu
.us 24\1
.11011

.500 7\t

.411 9
.443 lilt
184! .!94 IS

---

18 53 .232 "'

w..... c.teNMt

XolwuCity ·

CASH FACTORY

••

42 211 .192
41)

Denver

REBATE! .

Cl&gt;kqo
Utah

--

!2 50 .301120\t

GENERAL

ADELPHI, Md. (AP) - With con·
secutive games of 268 and 290 midway through the finsl round, Nelson
Burton Jr. charged into first place
and stands one game away from his
l~th career Professional Bowlers
Association championship.
Burton won seven straight mal·
ches In the sixth round of the Fair
Lanes Open before losing his last
game :m-185 to Mike Aulby.
Aulby qualified second, 141 pins
behind the lead, with Matt Surina
claiming third place. Steve Hiscox,
with scores of 279 and 223 in his IBBt
two matches, claimed fourth, while
Teata Semiz got fifth.

SIERRA BLANCA, Texas (AP) Two members of the Texas Southern
University baseball team were
killed and seven other players were
injured when their van overturned
about 55 miles east of El Paso.
The dead were identilied as Daryl
S. Quinn, an 18-yea('oo{)ld freshman,
and Dale Crwrunie, 21, both of Los
Angeles.

Loo Ao&amp;eleS
Seollle

MONTREAL (AP) - Clarence
Campbell, fonner president. of the
National Hockey League, has spent
one "symbolic" day in prison and
has been fined $25,000 for conspiring
to bribe a senator.

~··a....e.
NowYorhtAtlanta
• PlllladeiDbla at S.. Antoolo

-

Pwtland

SanDtego
Goldeolllate

31 .5&amp;3 2

:Ill 44 .371 15\t
24 48 .343 17\t

BOWLING

50 :Ill .714
II II .700 I
41 24 .1$7 4

12 38 .457 II

:12 Sll .457 1B

Zl 411 .800 1Jl

f'rllllr'• a.-

Ughtwelght, balanced. Completely
automatic line feed . . . simply tap
trimmer on ground, spring ·loaded
head feeds line to proper lt.ngth.
Heavy duty motor. Double insulated
and UL listed. Built-in cord lock.

.4113 18\t

Terrific Buy Now!

LAYAWAY NOW
FOR SPRING

11-HP,·36-In.
Riding Mower

PLANT
STARTER ~IT

• Key Ignition slarting • Heavy-duty
dilecl drive lransa•le w / disc brake
and automolive differenlial section
• 6 forward speeds, 1 reverse • Rear
discharge cutting deck • Twin bio"des
for full 36" cui • Synchro-balanced
engine • New hood and grille design

11"X13" SELF WATERING
TRAY WITH 20 PLASTIC on .....

- I l l . Pldladolphlo 92

w.-tiiii,Detrolttllll
Atlantltl, IDd1anl H
Houltallll, N.,. Jeney no, 2ot
aev.Luldlli,XolwuCity 104

NewYort llli)S..Ant...lo 112

PhoeaixllO, taht4

Pwtland IIJ, Denver 104
LooAnlleloolOI, Chtcajio_fi

•

RE'CORD AND TAPE

BEAUTIFUL
SELECTION ••
..•
OF SCENIC
•
DESIGNS ••
..•.

Woubllwtao a t -

S.W.a!Kanouetty

D$UiatNewJeney
Clevoludatlndlana
(]llcqoat. LooAnllelooatl'ortland
1 Goldeii"Btate at San Diego

BONANZA

......,•• Guw:s
Nopmaocboduled

THE

STATLER BROTHERS
OHHAPPVDAY

PLUS A

PWSA
$lop,

DELUXE 23 5 CU . FT. REFRESHMENT CEIH ER
WI TH ICE &amp; WATER THRU THE DOOR
II Adjustable door shelves in cab inet section

rJ 4 Freeze r shelves in door and cabinetll!l
Removable freezer baskel • Juice can dispenser El Rol ls-oui· On·wh eels.

•

'·

$100 DISCOUNT

•
•

Including :
How Great ThOu Art / Caddy Sang Bass
Are You Washed In Tnt B lood
"J ust In nme/Oh Happy Dlly

...•

..''"

DISOOUNT

•

USB F.UTOIT IEIATE
fOI THE Pill!' .

cet
In the

euervmonth

• subst•ntlallnterest penalty required lor early wlth'!&lt;iwal.

••••nn

DEL.YIRIN'
RECORDED LIVE IN CONCI:.Ill
~
INCLUDING:
C"MON/'1EAP THAT MUSIC/A MAN ll l&lt; EME
GRAND JUNpiON/1GUESS YOU MADE n
'
\
.

Ol}'ttt

U odel Ol82880A

DELUXE 13 CYCLE BUlLT-IN
POTWASHEA1"' DISHWASHER!

PLUS A

$50 REBATE

'

i ;'

P~USA

$50 REBA11 .
!"'TE: $20 -"e DIIt 1/SCU~Q//Ible on W,flfl~ MOditl WLW4 700A
l ncl 0/'/fl ,\ IQrJt/ DL8265ClA., fl() f /1/us/ratea. ·
.
&lt;

·R omeroy
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

88

includ ing:
Mom /T im e l s OnVour Side

Make It With You/Remember The Children
Where HaW! All The Flowers Gone

. '"'P.
•

MOC•I RHIIMGY

PLUS A

REG.

0

'

'54.95'

$100 DISCOUNT
'

I

I.

i·

IJand~a~k
I

.THE ATHENS COUNTY

EARTH"WJNDUFIRE .
IASTDAYSANDTIME

'

I"'•

OUR BIGGEST
SELECTION

ALBUMS
ONLY

$ 98 .

EVER
8 TRACK TAPES '3.98

3-D PHOTO WALL CLOCKS
BEAUTIFUL CORDLESS ClOCKS FEATuRE SILK SCREENED
GLASS FOR DIMENSIONAl EFFECT. EACH IS 20"X26"
SIZE WITH A WIDE WOOD FRAME.

J.

SALE ENDS SAT., NIARCH 15TH

LAYAWAY NOW Foir· MOTHER'S DAY

�C-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, March 9, 1980

Second breach of contract suit filed
SAN FRANCISCO (AP I - The
blizzard of state and federal lawsuits
swirling around the Oa kland
Raiders' effort to move to Los
Angeles got another flake with the
filing of a second action in the
National Football League's breach
of contract suit
And in Los Angeles, to further
complicate matters, a Memorial
Coliseum lawyer Friday filed an
amended complaint to a federal
&lt;'Ourl suit there that demands $53
million in damages in the event the
NFL succeeds in blocking the
RBiders from the1r southland season
opener
:A removal petition aimed at get·
ting the NFL ouit switched from
state to federal court wa s filed
Friday at 5 p.m. just before weekend
closing of the San Francisco federal
court clerk's office. The petition was
authored by the Raiders' attorney,
former Snn Francisco Mayor Joseph
L. Alioto,
Couri sources said filing of the
new petition cannot affect any or·

ders already 1ssued by the Alameda
County court in the case until they
are dissolved or modified by the
federal court.
Alioto said the NFL's opposition to
his petition was a "power play" in
view of the upcoming league
meeting at Palm Springs next week.
After filing a breach of contract
suit Tuesday, the NFL was granted
a temporary restraining order Thursday that bars the Raiders from
signing any agreement to play in Los
Angeles.
Also Friday, the state Court of A)&gt;'
peal denied the Raiders' request to
overturn a restraining order the city
of Oakland obtained Feb. 22 in
Alameda County Superior Court to
prevent the move south.
A federal -court wag said a
scorecard would not be out of line in
trying to keep track of the profusion
of legal gymnastics pulling and
pushing on the team's desire to hit
the road 400 miles to the sunny
southland, where 80 percent of all
Californians lives.

Girls tournament scores
ctu. .u 1'uarumeo11

Ohio Hlcb School

I

The NFL franchise is mired in a
bewildering array of state and
federal lawsuits filed, Including an
action by two boys ~ged 9 and 10.
Jon and Erick Hockaday, aged 10

'

and 9, sued the Raiders in Small
Claims Court, claiming the move
would leave them stuck with $200 In
worthless team jackets, jerseys and
souvenirs.

McCoy to head association
SYRACUSE - Officers were elec·
ted when the Syracuse • Minersville
Athletic Association met Thursday
night at the Syracuse Fire Station.
Elected were Barry McCoy,
president; Mike Stewart, vice
president; Rex Cumings, treasurer,
and Glenna Rununel, secretary.
It was decided that baseball and
softball sign up will be Thursday,
March 20, from 5:30 to 7 p.m. at the

fire station. Forms will be
distributed at the school and
children are to have their parents
sign the fonn.s and then return them
to the school on the date of the
signup. All coaches are asked to be
present during the signup hours and
a short business meeting of the
association will begin at 7 p.m.,
following signup.

Darkness force d Clerc and
McEnroe to suspend the rest of their

10.

Here in GaiJia County

Allstate can save -you lOX
on ~~Good Hands" insuran~e
for -your new home.
For years, you've

seen and heard ·
e advertising about
Allstate Homoowners insurance.
And now, it's available here, at our
·agency. But, did you know that if
your house is 5 years old or less, you

may qualify for All state's "New

Sport briefs. . •
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (API
- Guillermo Vilas beat Brian Got!·
fried 7-5, 6-4, 6-3 and Jose-Luis Clerc
took a 6-3, 6-2, 4-6 lead over Jolm
McEnroe as Argentina took a H
lead over the United States In their
opening round Davis Cup matches.

Village HaU. A&lt;$6 registration fee ill
to be paid at the time of signup. The
Pomeroy Youth League sponsors
program for pony league, ages 1315 ; little league, ages 10.12; pee wee,
8-9 ; tee ball, S-7, and girls softbaU, 8-

ANNOUNCE SIGNUP DATE
POMEROY - The signup date for
youth wl8hing to participate in the
Pomeroy Youth League summer
baseball program has been set for
next Saturday fl'(lll\ 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
on the second noor of Pomeroy

House 10 Percent Discount" on your
basic premium?

Allstate has found it costs less

match at the Buenos Aires Lawn
Tennis Club until today.
In other Davis Cup matches, New
Zealand and Australia split the
opening singles matches in their
Eastern Zone final; France led
Finland ~ In their European Zone
competition and Switzerland took a
2-1 lead over Hungary in their
European Zone Aquarterfinal.

to insure newer homes, and they 're
passing this savings on to you . .
Give us a call and get in on the
savings!

~7...:..The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, March 9, 1980

Newt Oliver's 291 free throws in season smash record
BY JAMES SANDS
GAWPOlJS - Heading lpto the
1947-411 season, the Ohio collegiate
record for the most free ·throws
made In .one season was 127 and the
uational record was 155.
After six games Rio Grande's
Newt Oliver had made 67 free
throws and was on hiS way to a new
United states record. By season's
end be had made 291 free throws,
almost double the old mark. Oliver
hit on about 78 percent of his charity
toi!ISe.!l that year.
Gell Helms CltatiOD
In addition Oliver's 725 points led
tbe nation In scoring and be set an
all-time Ohio mark for the most
points in a season. Newt was named
to the AU-Midwest team as well as
honorable mention All-American;'
and received the prestigious Helms
Citation for his scoring achlevementll.
OUver mariliged-22 pointS"a game
for a ~ Grande te8m that average

who claimed that the game was
clearly 20 minutes longer than It
would have been with a good clock.
Coavertll Z3 of2S
In that game, Newt Oliver set
another record as he converted on23
out a( 29 free throws.
In mid-February state attention
was directed to Rio Gfande's Commwlity Hall as Ollver set out to
break the Ohio scoring record against Wilmington. The game was even
mroe closely watched because of the
feud between the twl) coaches,
Stoneburner of Rio and Shetley of
the Quakers. The coaches did not
disappoint the first packed house in
some years as the twl) got Into a
shouting match at midcourt.
lteClord lor fatUity

But Newt Oliver wa8 way off his
game, getting only six as Rio lost 4930. 113 a team Rio Grande shot 11

I

percent from the fioor, wblcb has to

N0t1hhrwk, II.

ByTIIeAIIodaledPreu
' BASEB'LL
AmerkuLeone
CALIFORNIA ANGEl.'! - Renewed contracts
ol Dave Fr"'Ol, Dave Schuler aod Bob Ferris. pit-eben, Tom Dooobue, catcher, and Dickie Tbon,
bueman. Slped Steve Eddy, pitcher,
Brian Harper, catcher, and John Harru, lir!tt
buemln.
OAJtLAND A'o- NIUJJOd WoltM Jockotty rann '

Now Available Through The

McGINNES5-STANLEY AGENCY, INC.
Nick Johnson, Accountant Executive
452 2nd Ave.
Phone 446· 1761

Gallipoli~ ,

director.
SEA'ITU!: MARINERS -

At Wll'ftll

C1eve. Glenville 52, Cleve . Collin woo:! Sl
E . Cleve lalld Shaw 70. Cleve . E Tech 58
AI CIDdiULitl Tecb
Cin. Mercy 65, Amelia 3$
AI Hubberd
Sa!em66, Youngs. Mooney62, ot
At Panni Valley Forge

LaBrae 4B, Warren Champion 39
Clan AToorumeats
At BeUefoataioe

Lehman 48, Miami E. 46

AIZ&amp;ne!vWe

Lant:aster 67, Athens 4:i

HOMELITE'S I

ollvetll

Wrl h nwmm ~ d r!. p lay ,md in le rc hang cable pr int-wh eel

Electric Typewriters

Keeps heat out ...

.. .in summer

20%

87 OLIVE ST.

FORT

HAYS STATE -

Announced

ratgnatl.oa of PhU Wilson, atbletic director and
heed bUebOII eoocb, effective June30 ,
PIT!' - Anrwunc&lt;d reoJonaUoo I1 rl Tim
Grnrtdl bead buketball coach.
RICE - Named Lee KoeMin&amp; offensive coor-

NORTH GAILlA FROSH HAVE GOOD YEAR ~
North Gallla's 197~ freshman buketball team completed Its campaign with an excellent 11·2 record. Pictured above in this school photo are, first row, left to

W1dlln dRJ r.uty Blnlt
........, 1,1111

WL
42 II
31 II

::

211 ill!,

14 tz
Ind. IIIII&gt; Game - Marlene Wliloo Ill; lkUy
Wbllloldlllll; Marlene Wlloon 174.
Ind. HIII&gt;Serlel- Marlene w~~~onm: DoMa
McP'II'IIDd4tl· MoryV..,41t.
Toom IIIII&gt; Q;.;;; - Rlebels u..d Can 11108;
HoyaJ Cmntllll; Kine Bllil*n 1111.
,
101111 IIIII&gt; Serlel - Relbel'o Uoed Can M2;
RoyalCmnt844!; Rlebel'sUoedCan631.

OVER THE COUNTER

Motorcrafl

dinator.

.
right, Don Mays, manager; Eric Russell, ~ Meal

SOITI'IIERN ME'IHODIST - Slped Dove
Blla, head basketball coach, to a fiv~year contract.

and Eugene Adkins, manager. Rear - Ed Moore,
coach; Bobby Adkins, Tony Eggers, Mike Mays, Dean
Hess and Paul Hollingshead. Not pictured - Howard
Neekamp.

w

Fo~--"-~

We&lt;l .. Feb, Z'l,l ...

W.L

Team
Jloo,lberry'a Pennzoll

41 31

Lany'•Gro.

41 Sl

Pnlftitt'•Gro.
40 S2
starSupp!y
31 M
WMPO
34 Ill
Mclntyro's Small Engine ,
30 42
Ind. game - Pat 116, Jane Zl9; Jane 182; Pat
)10 ; PatliO, TbelamB.
TI!IIDI- WMPO MO, 819; Lan-y'a Gro. l5:l, 183;
WMPOQI ,I\Iclntyro Small En!dne in,

5.25=5.46

Sure, and it's fun,
with Hallmark
partyware, favors,
decorations and
accessories!

Series- Pat ~16, ~91; Jenny U9, '70; jane i19.

Ma'J'516.
WMPO I*· 1713; Mclnl)'ro Small EnCIIIIl
1176, 1814; Larry'sGro. l156, 1546.
;

38

HeodqUuten

35

TOII)''ICirrl'Out -

35

42

.

~r;Sbop
=
Ind.
Sorleo, Men -Lorry lllipn 1114; Ray

PRODUCTS

' Rooeb

AT Bl6 -SAVINGS!
- - - - -- -

.

- ' l.oiT)I ~ 213;

Ind. IIIII&gt; Game, Lmy Dut!an !101.

. lod. IIlah Sorleo, w..,... - Pat Canon 570;

. lkUy WbltlalcbNO.

Ind. Hlatl Game, Wcmen - Pat Canm

ANNUAL RATE

TeoaJ

I'll.
.SO

Rf!uter· Brogao Ins.
COn rlch Cool
Roya l Crown Cola

\

-49
-43
41
3.5
22

Melg!~lnn

Frlel'ldl y Tavern
Hlndy E lec:lr h:

ALSO!

High lndlvldv•l oame ·· Bev Henstev 203 ; Candy Brothers190.~ Gerrl R:ougtlt 18l.

High serle' .. Be11 l-lensley .S:U ; M ..lne Dugan

S06; Gerrl RotJg ht 505 .
Team hlg" game ·· Friendl y Taver•S13.
Team high series ·· Reuter-Bragan Ins. l.ol.

11~9 ;

© 11110

I'll.

48
48
Ill
38
34

Jld:'aJ)airy Bar
• Royal Cmnt
.. Sin ODe

· ~Hardware

' Waldlll.l1'nlcldni

' Sarlb C"lbbl.
Dop. ftatl.
34
llllb Ind. Serlel. Men - Jr. Pllelpo lllll;

•J:lttlftll ()upa 533.

SanlllO, Jau H
Paul Westphal and Walter Davis
each scored 24 points and eacb had
10 of them In the fourth quarter' as
Phoenix upended Utah. The Jazz got
19 points from Terry l'urlow.

7~/1~

'

•

-

A NEW 21h YEAR 'CERTIFICATE
MARCH RATE

ALSO!

Limited QuantHies

13~

The -Chalet

for rustic beauty, comfort
· and durability

each

All Sales Fin1l
•

•

,•

•

i
)

~

THALER FORD SALES
RT. 160 &amp; 35 WEST

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

'

I,

.
.........

"·=:t::.- LMel
w.t..

ROLI'N A ·LUI\AJIER &amp; .SUPPLY

CO.

312 Sixth Street
.
',6.,5·116b
·
' ·Point Plaisant
.Store Hours • Monday thru Friday 8 a.m. To 5 p.m., Saturday 8 a.m .. 12 noon

" ltt.l

•

.

ilno'o~

,

.

'

:II II
M II

,

II II

.-·
.... ....... .. -·
~;. -··!lilt _...

.

'
.J .. -!lao,
.,.

i D '.

. _ - 1t111i1'- 1'!;- lilY
·--~··;--Cu­
_._ .....

.•

Dlll&amp;o -

:.-

,"-

ID; -

Jt. -

· ...

·~~""Cf~-Dono, . _ ,__ ......,a. ....

____ ...,.,Gait...

. \1,

~

11.75 = 12.65
ANNUAL RATE

ANNUAL YIELO

Paying an interest rate r,lated to 1111 aver~ge 2'h year yield af
treasury ~ecurlties. Minimum deposit $500.00. Interest must r.emaln
on dtf*ll a full year to earn annual yield. Subltontlallnterest penalty
. upon early withdrawal.
.
•
. ,

Crown City, Ohio 45823

,. ~ ~

.· .

.,

Rustic Ent81])1ises
RR ~1. Box 208

111 ·a.eh'a0UD.Shop '

OFFER ENDS MARCH 31, 1980

,•

;

:...
""· ,._

.
9
2-01
fHRU WED.,
14•7 IO 'MAR. 12
Each Depositor Insured Up To
$40,000 By The FQIC, An
Agency of the Fed~ Gov't.

T.om Ind. Sertea - Sarah Glbba, Dep. Roc..
• IIIli.
!, Teom lll&amp;b Gome - S.!Ob Glbl&gt;o, Dep. Rei·

.•.

$10,000 MINIMUM

discount rate offered. Federal regulations require a substantial In·
teres! penalty lor premature withdrawal ol certificate funds.

PLUS!

~ ~~~~~w-Mupm wyatt
.., • .
Bamettll2.

6-Month Certificate

ANNUAL RATE

r-: - - - - - - - - - - - - -...1.._..:.,._ _;....._ _ _ _ __ ---j

Inc[ Gam!!', Men - Jr. Pllelpo 212;
. Domllj)upallll,
• ~Sorieo,WOO&gt;On -Siephonle llomett

Bank SafelJ and Security
For Your Savings

The actu al rerurn ro investors on Treasur';' Bills Is higher than the

42 Court Gtillipolis,
·Mon· thn• Sat 9:30 to 8:00

, IIIII&gt;

••

ANNUAL YIELD•

,,

PLUS!

lkUyWhlilatebllll.
'l'olm llilb 8ertea - Tony'I Cirri' Oull1113,
Teom lll&amp;b GIIDI! - Tony'a Carry Out '102.

LIMITED TIME ONLY!

More Interest On Your
PASSBOOK SAVINGS

NOW!

Shamrock
Celebrations!

I'll

Smill&gt;NellooSwllbor-Loboel&gt;rup

SHOES

:mu Second ,\ve.

{~hio Valley Bank
GoGetlen

~·~
Froncla Florill

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

The
Shoe Cafe

Local bowling

TMml

ONLY

\

CALSTATE-FULLEH1UN- Named George
MtQulrn boacl ~ coacb.
DAVI'ON - Named Tom Fn!rUb athletic
director. Anllowlc;ed Doo Donoher, heed baskethill coach, wtll rolllmneot.....,..

...........
Rlebela
Royal Cmnt

CHESTER, OH.

.•

In! Hoc:by Leone.
COLLEGE

I
985-3308

.

•

"a
=isLANDERS - Returned Garth
MacGulpn, cent.r, to lndiBnapollo rl the C....

Calculators

Sales Representatives:
Susan Finn is and George Sloan
MARCH 13,15 AT 11 O' CLOCK
WHARF ROOM II A
HOLIDAY INN, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

.•,,.

Genuine leather Sunjuns ~ by Bass' . Naturally cool , cushioned
co mfor1 in a ch oice or heels to ma tch your mood. Choose your height
of 1ash1on tr am America·s quality
101' over a hundred years .

HOCKEY
Na-HodleyLeone
BOSTON BRUINS - RecaUed \"ves Belanger,
f.~~· l'nm Blncl\amloo rl the American

Cordially Invites You To
See the latest in office machines:
Cop p iers

. FlniNov.-La.Vegutl, WuiJiniloo 73

year contract..

SEE ONE TODAY

ASHLAND OFFICE SUPPLY

N•~lnltaU.. .T..,..._.t

Na-..-D l.eo&amp;u&lt;

• Installs inside
• Do-lt-Yourself
• Clear, rigid plastic
• Airtight fit ... Stop drafts
• Paint trim with latex paint or stain
• Save up to 32% on heating &amp; cooling costs

Super E -Z

EuiRelooa M, Holy Cross 18
·
Villanova n,MarqueUe59
.
.
Mldautaep.w
f1onda St. ~.Toledo 91

, MINNESOTA VIKINGS - Named Torn Ceccbllll do!OIIIive Uno coacb.
SEA'ITU!: SEAIIAWKS - Signed Joasle
Green, wide receiver, to a aeries of three one-

OFF

ET 221
Electronic Typewriter

UCLA 87, Old Domlnloi174
ArhonoSI. til, Loyola, Callf, 71

Na-~

Keeps heat in...
•. .in winter

Features simple triple option with compression release for easy starting. - 16" power tip
buide bar to put the power to the wood. -With
automatic or manual cll'lin oiling pump for
various cutting conditior -s&gt;
'

weot~

Ftntlltud

ATLANTA BRAVES- Ann~ that Brion
A.udo!Jne, outfi~contract .......

Storm WindOw

PERFORMANCE•. LEADER

Signed Silane

pitchers, and Joe Sim-

). Cannon, outfielder, and Allrodo Griffin, shor·
Utop.

~In-Sider~

SUPER E-Z A LIGHTWEIGHT

s.

Alabama A 1114M51, Bndley 51

HEIGHTS
OF FASHION

pomlllld RA&gt;dney en!(, ootllelden.
TORONTO BLUE fAYS - Rollewed contract
rl n. .. Steib, Butdl Edge and Paul Mirabella,
Ditcbera, l:!mie Wbittand PatKeUy, eatchera, J .

Save Energy with ...

AI keat Roo.evelt

E. Canton60, Maplelon43
Salineville S. 43, Richmond Ht.s. fl
At NeW Coacerd Gleaa
Buckeye Trail 52, Lakeland 31
Garaway 40, Strasburl!l3ti

Norton 59, Va lley Forge 5:l

Raw~1 and Du O' Brien,

Newt Oliver later became buketball coach at Rio Grande during the
Bevo Francis years, and followed
Francis Into the pro ra.nks as coacb
of the Boston Whirlwinds. In 19'18 ,
Newt was elected a commissioner of
Clark County, Ohio.

Vlrglnla Tech It, W. KeotuctyC, Ill
Mid..... _
Alcom St. 70, Alabamal2

Friday'• Coneae
BullelllaiiS.:....
., 1be Allo&lt;laledPreN
NCAAT.........,.1

I

Transactions

signed in 1952 with the Harlem
Globjllrotters. stevenson alao had
the dubious distinction of playing on
one ri the wont defensive teams In
Rio Grande history - the 1949-410
team which lost to Capital 110-46,
Marietta 114-66, Ohio Wesleyan 11538 and Morri.9-Harvey 100-M.
Of course, as most people !mow,

College result$

AIIM!oLo 1.-uro"""' Com""~'

At CiDdllD.Itl Tech
New Rlctvnond 59, Ctn. Wycwn~.ng ~
AlHar1vWe
Fairless 5.", ChJppewaS l

G irls Basketball
By 11Je A1180('iated Press
Frlday 'a Results
Cla111 AAA Tounameotl
At Beaumont

one game under .500.
Oliver averaged 18 a game, but the
Redmen's big man Bob Davis left in
mid-season to sign with the
Philadelphia Athletics. Taking over
In the front line for Davis was
George Stevenson out of
Youngstown. Stevenson made racial
history in Kentucky becoming the
first black player to play in the gymnasium of two Kentucky colleges.
Broke Newt's records
It was Stevenson who would break
many of the records set by Oliver.
George scored I ,581 points in his
career for an average of 24.1 and

be an all-time Rio record for futility.
Probably the Redmen's best
overall game was a 68-62 win over
Steubenville, and Oliver's best game
was a 39 point perfonnance in a loss
to Youngstown.
The next· season the Redmen
recz;uited their first btg man six-foot
eight Bob Davis along with two Pennsylvania forwards Bob Young and
Sam Zemen along with Cadmus'
Emmett Carter. Later In the year
George Stevenson came along.
Oliver clearly did not need to shoot
as much.
Newt scores39
Oliver still topped the 20 point
mark eight times that year, scoring
39 against Kentucky Christian; and
Rio had some impressive showings
twite beating Villa Madonna and
Cumberland. But the Redmen still
were Inconsistent as they lost their
final game to Wooster 93-45 to finish

game, the Conununity Hall clock
failed to operate. There were some

only about 55, and won only 14 of 33
games.
Seven times Rio had held below 40
points and In what must have been
one of the worst games Rio ever
played, lost 83-28 to tiny Lawrence
Tech. Dayton beat the Redmen 77-33
and Denison applied an 83-35 drubbing.
AU-time reeord
The Redmen on the other hand
twice scored over 100 points, beating
Wilberforce 11&amp;-116 in three overtimes and thrashing Kentucky
Christian i34-39 to set an aU-time
scoring reCord.
The Wilberforce game played at
Communily Hall was one of the most
exciting galnes ever played in
college ball and was featured nationwide on Bill Brandt's "Inside Spor·
·ts" on the Mutual Broadcasting
System. The game was probably one
of the longest io college basketball,
not only because of the overtime, but
because several times during the

\

(614)266-194fl

,,

''

·&amp;tt.·, J!;o;,9,

'

•

•

.hdiMtoJJ,:I . .
*Minimum deposli $5.00. lnteresf must
retain on deposito fUll yeor to earn on· .
nuol yield.
·

ALTA,INOUSTRIES LTD.
··sEND U .OO FOR C&lt;,iiWLETE
'"LbG HOME PORTFOLIO •

'· ·

.·.

,,

•

�C-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, March 9, 1980

Second breach of contract suit filed
SAN FRANCISCO (AP I - The
blizzard of state and federal lawsuits
swirling around the Oa kland
Raiders' effort to move to Los
Angeles got another flake with the
filing of a second action in the
National Football League's breach
of contract suit
And in Los Angeles, to further
complicate matters, a Memorial
Coliseum lawyer Friday filed an
amended complaint to a federal
&lt;'Ourl suit there that demands $53
million in damages in the event the
NFL succeeds in blocking the
RBiders from the1r southland season
opener
:A removal petition aimed at get·
ting the NFL ouit switched from
state to federal court wa s filed
Friday at 5 p.m. just before weekend
closing of the San Francisco federal
court clerk's office. The petition was
authored by the Raiders' attorney,
former Snn Francisco Mayor Joseph
L. Alioto,
Couri sources said filing of the
new petition cannot affect any or·

ders already 1ssued by the Alameda
County court in the case until they
are dissolved or modified by the
federal court.
Alioto said the NFL's opposition to
his petition was a "power play" in
view of the upcoming league
meeting at Palm Springs next week.
After filing a breach of contract
suit Tuesday, the NFL was granted
a temporary restraining order Thursday that bars the Raiders from
signing any agreement to play in Los
Angeles.
Also Friday, the state Court of A)&gt;'
peal denied the Raiders' request to
overturn a restraining order the city
of Oakland obtained Feb. 22 in
Alameda County Superior Court to
prevent the move south.
A federal -court wag said a
scorecard would not be out of line in
trying to keep track of the profusion
of legal gymnastics pulling and
pushing on the team's desire to hit
the road 400 miles to the sunny
southland, where 80 percent of all
Californians lives.

Girls tournament scores
ctu. .u 1'uarumeo11

Ohio Hlcb School

I

The NFL franchise is mired in a
bewildering array of state and
federal lawsuits filed, Including an
action by two boys ~ged 9 and 10.
Jon and Erick Hockaday, aged 10

'

and 9, sued the Raiders in Small
Claims Court, claiming the move
would leave them stuck with $200 In
worthless team jackets, jerseys and
souvenirs.

McCoy to head association
SYRACUSE - Officers were elec·
ted when the Syracuse • Minersville
Athletic Association met Thursday
night at the Syracuse Fire Station.
Elected were Barry McCoy,
president; Mike Stewart, vice
president; Rex Cumings, treasurer,
and Glenna Rununel, secretary.
It was decided that baseball and
softball sign up will be Thursday,
March 20, from 5:30 to 7 p.m. at the

fire station. Forms will be
distributed at the school and
children are to have their parents
sign the fonn.s and then return them
to the school on the date of the
signup. All coaches are asked to be
present during the signup hours and
a short business meeting of the
association will begin at 7 p.m.,
following signup.

Darkness force d Clerc and
McEnroe to suspend the rest of their

10.

Here in GaiJia County

Allstate can save -you lOX
on ~~Good Hands" insuran~e
for -your new home.
For years, you've

seen and heard ·
e advertising about
Allstate Homoowners insurance.
And now, it's available here, at our
·agency. But, did you know that if
your house is 5 years old or less, you

may qualify for All state's "New

Sport briefs. . •
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (API
- Guillermo Vilas beat Brian Got!·
fried 7-5, 6-4, 6-3 and Jose-Luis Clerc
took a 6-3, 6-2, 4-6 lead over Jolm
McEnroe as Argentina took a H
lead over the United States In their
opening round Davis Cup matches.

Village HaU. A&lt;$6 registration fee ill
to be paid at the time of signup. The
Pomeroy Youth League sponsors
program for pony league, ages 1315 ; little league, ages 10.12; pee wee,
8-9 ; tee ball, S-7, and girls softbaU, 8-

ANNOUNCE SIGNUP DATE
POMEROY - The signup date for
youth wl8hing to participate in the
Pomeroy Youth League summer
baseball program has been set for
next Saturday fl'(lll\ 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
on the second noor of Pomeroy

House 10 Percent Discount" on your
basic premium?

Allstate has found it costs less

match at the Buenos Aires Lawn
Tennis Club until today.
In other Davis Cup matches, New
Zealand and Australia split the
opening singles matches in their
Eastern Zone final; France led
Finland ~ In their European Zone
competition and Switzerland took a
2-1 lead over Hungary in their
European Zone Aquarterfinal.

to insure newer homes, and they 're
passing this savings on to you . .
Give us a call and get in on the
savings!

~7...:..The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, March 9, 1980

Newt Oliver's 291 free throws in season smash record
BY JAMES SANDS
GAWPOlJS - Heading lpto the
1947-411 season, the Ohio collegiate
record for the most free ·throws
made In .one season was 127 and the
uational record was 155.
After six games Rio Grande's
Newt Oliver had made 67 free
throws and was on hiS way to a new
United states record. By season's
end be had made 291 free throws,
almost double the old mark. Oliver
hit on about 78 percent of his charity
toi!ISe.!l that year.
Gell Helms CltatiOD
In addition Oliver's 725 points led
tbe nation In scoring and be set an
all-time Ohio mark for the most
points in a season. Newt was named
to the AU-Midwest team as well as
honorable mention All-American;'
and received the prestigious Helms
Citation for his scoring achlevementll.
OUver mariliged-22 pointS"a game
for a ~ Grande te8m that average

who claimed that the game was
clearly 20 minutes longer than It
would have been with a good clock.
Coavertll Z3 of2S
In that game, Newt Oliver set
another record as he converted on23
out a( 29 free throws.
In mid-February state attention
was directed to Rio Gfande's Commwlity Hall as Ollver set out to
break the Ohio scoring record against Wilmington. The game was even
mroe closely watched because of the
feud between the twl) coaches,
Stoneburner of Rio and Shetley of
the Quakers. The coaches did not
disappoint the first packed house in
some years as the twl) got Into a
shouting match at midcourt.
lteClord lor fatUity

But Newt Oliver wa8 way off his
game, getting only six as Rio lost 4930. 113 a team Rio Grande shot 11

I

percent from the fioor, wblcb has to

N0t1hhrwk, II.

ByTIIeAIIodaledPreu
' BASEB'LL
AmerkuLeone
CALIFORNIA ANGEl.'! - Renewed contracts
ol Dave Fr"'Ol, Dave Schuler aod Bob Ferris. pit-eben, Tom Dooobue, catcher, and Dickie Tbon,
bueman. Slped Steve Eddy, pitcher,
Brian Harper, catcher, and John Harru, lir!tt
buemln.
OAJtLAND A'o- NIUJJOd WoltM Jockotty rann '

Now Available Through The

McGINNES5-STANLEY AGENCY, INC.
Nick Johnson, Accountant Executive
452 2nd Ave.
Phone 446· 1761

Gallipoli~ ,

director.
SEA'ITU!: MARINERS -

At Wll'ftll

C1eve. Glenville 52, Cleve . Collin woo:! Sl
E . Cleve lalld Shaw 70. Cleve . E Tech 58
AI CIDdiULitl Tecb
Cin. Mercy 65, Amelia 3$
AI Hubberd
Sa!em66, Youngs. Mooney62, ot
At Panni Valley Forge

LaBrae 4B, Warren Champion 39
Clan AToorumeats
At BeUefoataioe

Lehman 48, Miami E. 46

AIZ&amp;ne!vWe

Lant:aster 67, Athens 4:i

HOMELITE'S I

ollvetll

Wrl h nwmm ~ d r!. p lay ,md in le rc hang cable pr int-wh eel

Electric Typewriters

Keeps heat out ...

.. .in summer

20%

87 OLIVE ST.

FORT

HAYS STATE -

Announced

ratgnatl.oa of PhU Wilson, atbletic director and
heed bUebOII eoocb, effective June30 ,
PIT!' - Anrwunc&lt;d reoJonaUoo I1 rl Tim
Grnrtdl bead buketball coach.
RICE - Named Lee KoeMin&amp; offensive coor-

NORTH GAILlA FROSH HAVE GOOD YEAR ~
North Gallla's 197~ freshman buketball team completed Its campaign with an excellent 11·2 record. Pictured above in this school photo are, first row, left to

W1dlln dRJ r.uty Blnlt
........, 1,1111

WL
42 II
31 II

::

211 ill!,

14 tz
Ind. IIIII&gt; Game - Marlene Wliloo Ill; lkUy
Wbllloldlllll; Marlene Wlloon 174.
Ind. HIII&gt;Serlel- Marlene w~~~onm: DoMa
McP'II'IIDd4tl· MoryV..,41t.
Toom IIIII&gt; Q;.;;; - Rlebels u..d Can 11108;
HoyaJ Cmntllll; Kine Bllil*n 1111.
,
101111 IIIII&gt; Serlel - Relbel'o Uoed Can M2;
RoyalCmnt844!; Rlebel'sUoedCan631.

OVER THE COUNTER

Motorcrafl

dinator.

.
right, Don Mays, manager; Eric Russell, ~ Meal

SOITI'IIERN ME'IHODIST - Slped Dove
Blla, head basketball coach, to a fiv~year contract.

and Eugene Adkins, manager. Rear - Ed Moore,
coach; Bobby Adkins, Tony Eggers, Mike Mays, Dean
Hess and Paul Hollingshead. Not pictured - Howard
Neekamp.

w

Fo~--"-~

We&lt;l .. Feb, Z'l,l ...

W.L

Team
Jloo,lberry'a Pennzoll

41 31

Lany'•Gro.

41 Sl

Pnlftitt'•Gro.
40 S2
starSupp!y
31 M
WMPO
34 Ill
Mclntyro's Small Engine ,
30 42
Ind. game - Pat 116, Jane Zl9; Jane 182; Pat
)10 ; PatliO, TbelamB.
TI!IIDI- WMPO MO, 819; Lan-y'a Gro. l5:l, 183;
WMPOQI ,I\Iclntyro Small En!dne in,

5.25=5.46

Sure, and it's fun,
with Hallmark
partyware, favors,
decorations and
accessories!

Series- Pat ~16, ~91; Jenny U9, '70; jane i19.

Ma'J'516.
WMPO I*· 1713; Mclnl)'ro Small EnCIIIIl
1176, 1814; Larry'sGro. l156, 1546.
;

38

HeodqUuten

35

TOII)''ICirrl'Out -

35

42

.

~r;Sbop
=
Ind.
Sorleo, Men -Lorry lllipn 1114; Ray

PRODUCTS

' Rooeb

AT Bl6 -SAVINGS!
- - - - -- -

.

- ' l.oiT)I ~ 213;

Ind. IIIII&gt; Game, Lmy Dut!an !101.

. lod. IIlah Sorleo, w..,... - Pat Canon 570;

. lkUy WbltlalcbNO.

Ind. Hlatl Game, Wcmen - Pat Canm

ANNUAL RATE

TeoaJ

I'll.
.SO

Rf!uter· Brogao Ins.
COn rlch Cool
Roya l Crown Cola

\

-49
-43
41
3.5
22

Melg!~lnn

Frlel'ldl y Tavern
Hlndy E lec:lr h:

ALSO!

High lndlvldv•l oame ·· Bev Henstev 203 ; Candy Brothers190.~ Gerrl R:ougtlt 18l.

High serle' .. Be11 l-lensley .S:U ; M ..lne Dugan

S06; Gerrl RotJg ht 505 .
Team hlg" game ·· Friendl y Taver•S13.
Team high series ·· Reuter-Bragan Ins. l.ol.

11~9 ;

© 11110

I'll.

48
48
Ill
38
34

Jld:'aJ)airy Bar
• Royal Cmnt
.. Sin ODe

· ~Hardware

' Waldlll.l1'nlcldni

' Sarlb C"lbbl.
Dop. ftatl.
34
llllb Ind. Serlel. Men - Jr. Pllelpo lllll;

•J:lttlftll ()upa 533.

SanlllO, Jau H
Paul Westphal and Walter Davis
each scored 24 points and eacb had
10 of them In the fourth quarter' as
Phoenix upended Utah. The Jazz got
19 points from Terry l'urlow.

7~/1~

'

•

-

A NEW 21h YEAR 'CERTIFICATE
MARCH RATE

ALSO!

Limited QuantHies

13~

The -Chalet

for rustic beauty, comfort
· and durability

each

All Sales Fin1l
•

•

,•

•

i
)

~

THALER FORD SALES
RT. 160 &amp; 35 WEST

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

'

I,

.
.........

"·=:t::.- LMel
w.t..

ROLI'N A ·LUI\AJIER &amp; .SUPPLY

CO.

312 Sixth Street
.
',6.,5·116b
·
' ·Point Plaisant
.Store Hours • Monday thru Friday 8 a.m. To 5 p.m., Saturday 8 a.m .. 12 noon

" ltt.l

•

.

ilno'o~

,

.

'

:II II
M II

,

II II

.-·
.... ....... .. -·
~;. -··!lilt _...

.

'
.J .. -!lao,
.,.

i D '.

. _ - 1t111i1'- 1'!;- lilY
·--~··;--Cu­
_._ .....

.•

Dlll&amp;o -

:.-

,"-

ID; -

Jt. -

· ...

·~~""Cf~-Dono, . _ ,__ ......,a. ....

____ ...,.,Gait...

. \1,

~

11.75 = 12.65
ANNUAL RATE

ANNUAL YIELO

Paying an interest rate r,lated to 1111 aver~ge 2'h year yield af
treasury ~ecurlties. Minimum deposit $500.00. Interest must r.emaln
on dtf*ll a full year to earn annual yield. Subltontlallnterest penalty
. upon early withdrawal.
.
•
. ,

Crown City, Ohio 45823

,. ~ ~

.· .

.,

Rustic Ent81])1ises
RR ~1. Box 208

111 ·a.eh'a0UD.Shop '

OFFER ENDS MARCH 31, 1980

,•

;

:...
""· ,._

.
9
2-01
fHRU WED.,
14•7 IO 'MAR. 12
Each Depositor Insured Up To
$40,000 By The FQIC, An
Agency of the Fed~ Gov't.

T.om Ind. Sertea - Sarah Glbba, Dep. Roc..
• IIIli.
!, Teom lll&amp;b Gome - S.!Ob Glbl&gt;o, Dep. Rei·

.•.

$10,000 MINIMUM

discount rate offered. Federal regulations require a substantial In·
teres! penalty lor premature withdrawal ol certificate funds.

PLUS!

~ ~~~~~w-Mupm wyatt
.., • .
Bamettll2.

6-Month Certificate

ANNUAL RATE

r-: - - - - - - - - - - - - -...1.._..:.,._ _;....._ _ _ _ __ ---j

Inc[ Gam!!', Men - Jr. Pllelpo 212;
. Domllj)upallll,
• ~Sorieo,WOO&gt;On -Siephonle llomett

Bank SafelJ and Security
For Your Savings

The actu al rerurn ro investors on Treasur';' Bills Is higher than the

42 Court Gtillipolis,
·Mon· thn• Sat 9:30 to 8:00

, IIIII&gt;

••

ANNUAL YIELD•

,,

PLUS!

lkUyWhlilatebllll.
'l'olm llilb 8ertea - Tony'I Cirri' Oull1113,
Teom lll&amp;b GIIDI! - Tony'a Carry Out '102.

LIMITED TIME ONLY!

More Interest On Your
PASSBOOK SAVINGS

NOW!

Shamrock
Celebrations!

I'll

Smill&gt;NellooSwllbor-Loboel&gt;rup

SHOES

:mu Second ,\ve.

{~hio Valley Bank
GoGetlen

~·~
Froncla Florill

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

The
Shoe Cafe

Local bowling

TMml

ONLY

\

CALSTATE-FULLEH1UN- Named George
MtQulrn boacl ~ coacb.
DAVI'ON - Named Tom Fn!rUb athletic
director. Anllowlc;ed Doo Donoher, heed baskethill coach, wtll rolllmneot.....,..

...........
Rlebela
Royal Cmnt

CHESTER, OH.

.•

In! Hoc:by Leone.
COLLEGE

I
985-3308

.

•

"a
=isLANDERS - Returned Garth
MacGulpn, cent.r, to lndiBnapollo rl the C....

Calculators

Sales Representatives:
Susan Finn is and George Sloan
MARCH 13,15 AT 11 O' CLOCK
WHARF ROOM II A
HOLIDAY INN, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

.•,,.

Genuine leather Sunjuns ~ by Bass' . Naturally cool , cushioned
co mfor1 in a ch oice or heels to ma tch your mood. Choose your height
of 1ash1on tr am America·s quality
101' over a hundred years .

HOCKEY
Na-HodleyLeone
BOSTON BRUINS - RecaUed \"ves Belanger,
f.~~· l'nm Blncl\amloo rl the American

Cordially Invites You To
See the latest in office machines:
Cop p iers

. FlniNov.-La.Vegutl, WuiJiniloo 73

year contract..

SEE ONE TODAY

ASHLAND OFFICE SUPPLY

N•~lnltaU.. .T..,..._.t

Na-..-D l.eo&amp;u&lt;

• Installs inside
• Do-lt-Yourself
• Clear, rigid plastic
• Airtight fit ... Stop drafts
• Paint trim with latex paint or stain
• Save up to 32% on heating &amp; cooling costs

Super E -Z

EuiRelooa M, Holy Cross 18
·
Villanova n,MarqueUe59
.
.
Mldautaep.w
f1onda St. ~.Toledo 91

, MINNESOTA VIKINGS - Named Torn Ceccbllll do!OIIIive Uno coacb.
SEA'ITU!: SEAIIAWKS - Signed Joasle
Green, wide receiver, to a aeries of three one-

OFF

ET 221
Electronic Typewriter

UCLA 87, Old Domlnloi174
ArhonoSI. til, Loyola, Callf, 71

Na-~

Keeps heat in...
•. .in winter

Features simple triple option with compression release for easy starting. - 16" power tip
buide bar to put the power to the wood. -With
automatic or manual cll'lin oiling pump for
various cutting conditior -s&gt;
'

weot~

Ftntlltud

ATLANTA BRAVES- Ann~ that Brion
A.udo!Jne, outfi~contract .......

Storm WindOw

PERFORMANCE•. LEADER

Signed Silane

pitchers, and Joe Sim-

). Cannon, outfielder, and Allrodo Griffin, shor·
Utop.

~In-Sider~

SUPER E-Z A LIGHTWEIGHT

s.

Alabama A 1114M51, Bndley 51

HEIGHTS
OF FASHION

pomlllld RA&gt;dney en!(, ootllelden.
TORONTO BLUE fAYS - Rollewed contract
rl n. .. Steib, Butdl Edge and Paul Mirabella,
Ditcbera, l:!mie Wbittand PatKeUy, eatchera, J .

Save Energy with ...

AI keat Roo.evelt

E. Canton60, Maplelon43
Salineville S. 43, Richmond Ht.s. fl
At NeW Coacerd Gleaa
Buckeye Trail 52, Lakeland 31
Garaway 40, Strasburl!l3ti

Norton 59, Va lley Forge 5:l

Raw~1 and Du O' Brien,

Newt Oliver later became buketball coach at Rio Grande during the
Bevo Francis years, and followed
Francis Into the pro ra.nks as coacb
of the Boston Whirlwinds. In 19'18 ,
Newt was elected a commissioner of
Clark County, Ohio.

Vlrglnla Tech It, W. KeotuctyC, Ill
Mid..... _
Alcom St. 70, Alabamal2

Friday'• Coneae
BullelllaiiS.:....
., 1be Allo&lt;laledPreN
NCAAT.........,.1

I

Transactions

signed in 1952 with the Harlem
Globjllrotters. stevenson alao had
the dubious distinction of playing on
one ri the wont defensive teams In
Rio Grande history - the 1949-410
team which lost to Capital 110-46,
Marietta 114-66, Ohio Wesleyan 11538 and Morri.9-Harvey 100-M.
Of course, as most people !mow,

College result$

AIIM!oLo 1.-uro"""' Com""~'

At CiDdllD.Itl Tech
New Rlctvnond 59, Ctn. Wycwn~.ng ~
AlHar1vWe
Fairless 5.", ChJppewaS l

G irls Basketball
By 11Je A1180('iated Press
Frlday 'a Results
Cla111 AAA Tounameotl
At Beaumont

one game under .500.
Oliver averaged 18 a game, but the
Redmen's big man Bob Davis left in
mid-season to sign with the
Philadelphia Athletics. Taking over
In the front line for Davis was
George Stevenson out of
Youngstown. Stevenson made racial
history in Kentucky becoming the
first black player to play in the gymnasium of two Kentucky colleges.
Broke Newt's records
It was Stevenson who would break
many of the records set by Oliver.
George scored I ,581 points in his
career for an average of 24.1 and

be an all-time Rio record for futility.
Probably the Redmen's best
overall game was a 68-62 win over
Steubenville, and Oliver's best game
was a 39 point perfonnance in a loss
to Youngstown.
The next· season the Redmen
recz;uited their first btg man six-foot
eight Bob Davis along with two Pennsylvania forwards Bob Young and
Sam Zemen along with Cadmus'
Emmett Carter. Later In the year
George Stevenson came along.
Oliver clearly did not need to shoot
as much.
Newt scores39
Oliver still topped the 20 point
mark eight times that year, scoring
39 against Kentucky Christian; and
Rio had some impressive showings
twite beating Villa Madonna and
Cumberland. But the Redmen still
were Inconsistent as they lost their
final game to Wooster 93-45 to finish

game, the Conununity Hall clock
failed to operate. There were some

only about 55, and won only 14 of 33
games.
Seven times Rio had held below 40
points and In what must have been
one of the worst games Rio ever
played, lost 83-28 to tiny Lawrence
Tech. Dayton beat the Redmen 77-33
and Denison applied an 83-35 drubbing.
AU-time reeord
The Redmen on the other hand
twice scored over 100 points, beating
Wilberforce 11&amp;-116 in three overtimes and thrashing Kentucky
Christian i34-39 to set an aU-time
scoring reCord.
The Wilberforce game played at
Communily Hall was one of the most
exciting galnes ever played in
college ball and was featured nationwide on Bill Brandt's "Inside Spor·
·ts" on the Mutual Broadcasting
System. The game was probably one
of the longest io college basketball,
not only because of the overtime, but
because several times during the

\

(614)266-194fl

,,

''

·&amp;tt.·, J!;o;,9,

'

•

•

.hdiMtoJJ,:I . .
*Minimum deposli $5.00. lnteresf must
retain on deposito fUll yeor to earn on· .
nuol yield.
·

ALTA,INOUSTRIES LTD.
··sEND U .OO FOR C&lt;,iiWLETE
'"LbG HOME PORTFOLIO •

'· ·

.·.

,,

•

�...'

• ....•
·,•

.-•
.....••

c.&amp;- The Sw1&lt;lay Times-Sentinel, Sunday. March 9, 198o

"'

Celtics outlast 76ers, maintain first place in division
.I

By Tbe Associated Press
For the Boston Celtics and
Philadelphia 76ers,l4 games remain
in the National 13asketball
Association's regular season. That's
more than enough time for a threegame divisional lead to be whittled
away, according to Boston Coach
Bill Fitch.
"This doesn't give us a commanding position," said Fitch after
his fil'!lt-piace Celtics downed the
second-place 76ers 111-92 Friday
night in a malchup of Atlantic
Division leaders. ''We'll be in a commanding position when there's two
games left and we're three games
up."

Philadelphia Coach Bill Cun-

Utah Jau llo.!H, the PorUal1d Trail
ningham was more concerned.
little mistakes for three or four days.
Blazel'11
beat the Denver Nuggets
" Right now they are the best team This one you just write off,"
113-101
and
the lAs Angeles Lakers
Boston had five men in double ·
in the league," he said. "Now we
trimmed the Chicago Bulls 101-99.
need help from other teams to have figures, led by Larry Bird with T1
\
BulletlllM, Plalelu 105
a chance of catching the Celtics."
points, Cedric Maxwell with 20 and
Elvin Hayes scored 25 points, 11 of
The Celtics extended their season.
Rick &amp;bey with 18. Robey also
them in the fOIIl'tiHjuarter that
high winning streak to nine games. snared 12 rebounds, one less than
roWed Washinglon to its victory
The 76ers, who had a six-game win- Erving's gam.e high of 13.
ning streak snapped, made just 38.4
In the other NBA games Friday over Detroit. Greg Ballard also had
25 points for the Bullets, who squan· night, the Washlngtan Bullets edged
of their field goal attempts.
d~red a 12-point halfUme lead and
Despite 26 second-half points by the Detroit Pistons 106-105, the
trailed 101·100 .with 2t minutes to
Julius Ervin~, Philadelphia came no Houstoo Rockets nipped the New
play before a Larry Wright layup
closer than 11 points after in- Jersey Nets 111-110 in double overgave them the lead for good.
time, the AUanta Hawks bested the
termission.
John Long scored 'rl for Detroit.
'Td rather lose by 20 points than IndiaJw! Pacel'!l 99-94, the Cleveland
Rockel&amp; Ill, NelllllO
Cavaliers
downed
the
Kansas
City
one" said Erving, who led all
Robert
~id ignored the fans
scorers with 36 points and has scored Kings 111·101, the New York Knicks
waving
pictures
of naked women undefeated the San Antonio Spurs 11&amp;Ill over his last three games. "In a
der
the
basket
and
made two foul
one-point loss you worry about the 112, the Phoenix Suns blasted the

shots with 11 seconds left In the
second overtime to give HOU.!ton 1111

victory over New Jersey.
"The 11icture.s ticlcled me a little
bit," said Reid, "but like (team-mate) Rick Barry says, foul shots
just take concentraUoo."
Moses Malone led Houston scorel'!l
with :rT polnls, the same total
amassed by Mike Newlin of New
Jel'!ley.
BawbH,PacenH
The HAwks got ?3 points from Dan
&amp;undlleld to power past the
Pacers.
.Indiana got 15 points apiece from
George McGlrulls and Mickey John-

•

8011.

CaVIIIIen 111, XID&amp;IlM
_;
Mike Mitchell scored 23 potnta to;:.
pace Cleveland's front-running ~!
tory over Kansaa City. The Kings got ...
'rl points fnm Otis Birdsor!B and 25
from Scott Wedman but saw their :.
Midwest Oiv!sicn lead over the :;.
Milwaukee Bucks cut to two gam&amp;!l. : ,
Xl!J"b 118, Spun 1U
Toby Knight scored 33

..!:

points,-:,

helping New York survive a 40opo1nt;;
perfonnance · by San Antonio'•"'
George Gervln as the Knlcb handed!:
the Spurs their se"enth ~tive :
1~:&amp;.
·:

Athens Marathon scheduled March 30
ATIJENS
The 13th annual
Athens Marathon will be held Sun·
dsy, March 30. The marathon is one
of the older in the United States.
More than 250 runners from
around the country are expected to
compete on the :&gt;Jl mile, 385 yard
course that winds through the
Athens County countryside . • Last

year's winner, Daniel Sekerak, of
Granville, Ohio covered the route in
just over two hours, 30 minutes.
The race hegins at noon on the 30th
at Peden Stadium m tbe Ohio
University campus.
A laurel crown, nown from
Athens, Greece will be awarded to
the winner with silver bowls being

given to the first 15 finishers and
group winners In four age groups: 30
to 39; 40 to 49; 50 to 59; and over 60.
Each of more than 200 finishers in
1979 received a certificate signed by
the M8yor of Athens.
This year's top male and· female.
finishers will receive an expense
paid trip to the 1980 Columbus

Marathon this fall.
Entry blanks may be obtained
from Ellsworth Holden, 26 Northwood Drive, Athens, 45701. They
are due by March 25.
1be marathon is sponsored by the
Hockhocldng Track ClUb. Sigma .Nu
fraternity is the Ohio University
campus sponsor.

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S

Bond.issue action crash course in finance
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - If
Ohio's Statehouse were a Wliversity
and its lawmaker-tenants were
students, action last week might
have been described by some as
Bond Issues 401 : A Crash Course in
lllgh-Powered Finance.
The story was that some fledgling
l~glslators watched in awe but
joined in as the Senate and House
ground out approval of a multibillion dollar highway bond issue for
the June 3 ballot.
'Bond issues, of course, are a way
of. borrowing money, and they are
not new in state government. The
state gets a big break on interest
rates, by offering its "full faith and
credit," and can t::ke up to 30 years
to'repay.
'But when a whopper of a bond
issue gets passed and approved by
voters, it usually is a long time
before another Legislature gets a
crack at spending billions of dollars

and letting future generations of
Ohioans foot the bill.
There are arguments on the other
side, too. In recent years, with the
advent of out~f·sight interest rates,
the $1 billion Ohio borrowed in the
1960s at 3 percent and 4 percent for
highway construction, under Gov.
James A. Rhodes, looks today like a
pretty good investment.
Inflation was sauntering along at
about 1 percent a year when Rhodes
first became governor in 1963, compared to about 18 percent overall
now and more than 40 percent a year
in the· highway construction industry, state officials say.
Although the pending plan is open
ended, except that the Legislature
must give advance approval, sponsors say about $500 million in bonds
could be sold in the next four years,
attracting three times that amount
in federal matching funds.
This sounds fine , for a crumbling

~unbau ~imts
~

VOL 15 NO. 6

CONTINUES 1 MORE WEEK

THE GRATE BOYS

ARNOLD GRATE

ITH SA

LIVING ROOM
SUITE

SAL.E
2 PC. TRADITIONAL LIVING ROOM SUITE

SALE , 599•95

Rust Brown.
Reg. $699.95
1

3 PC. EARLY AM. LIVING ROOM SUITE
Old Mill Stream.
Reg. $1,100.00

SALE '899.95

2 PC. EARLY AM. VELVET LIVING ROOM SUITE

13" COLOR 1V WAS '439.95
191' COLOR 1V WAS '499.95
23" COLO~ lV MAPLE, PECAN WAS '699.95
25" COLOR TV '799.95
WAS '799.95
.
.
25" SPACE COM. TV WAS '949.95
25" COLOR TV WAS '899.95

COMPONENT WITH 8 TRACK FM, AM, RECORD PLAYER,
- SPEAKERS, COMPONENT CAB AND SPEAKER
'STANDS WAS '748.$4 ......................... NOW 1599.95
(1) USED VCR TAPE RECORDER FOR TV
NEW '1025.00 ..... .•.. .. .. .. .••.. .. ...... USED '699.95
(1) R.OOR MODEL STEREO REG. 449.95
1

SALE '599.95

Reg. S799.95

2 PC. EARLY AM. VELVET LIVING ROOM SUITE
SALE '599.95

Reg. $799.95

NOW '399.95

(2) MAPLE, OPEN.FRONT CHINA
NOW •1

. Reg.$239.9S

Velvet, tree pattern.

DOUBLE PEDESTAL DESK

Reg. S1f9.9S 1\]0W

BUNK BEDS

•

NOW 139,9.~5..
NOW '449.95
NOW 1599.95
NOW '699.95
NOW '849.95
NOW '699.95

sss

BEDROOM·
SUITE
SALE
4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE,-OAK, WAS 1599.95. .. NOW '499.95:

4 PC. BEDROOM SUIT[, BASSm, PECAN
WAS $799.95••••••••.•••••••••••••••••••.•.••.•.••• NOW' '699.95
4 PC. BEDROOM SUIT[, BASSETT, OAK,
·
·.
NOW
WAS '899.95 ...••.•..•••••.•.••••
I II •••••••••••••••

4 PC. BEDROOM SUIT£, BASSm, PINE,

.

:

WAS '899.95••••.•• ·•. ••••••••••••••••.•..••.•••••.• N()W' ?99.~.

4 PC. BEDROOM SUIT[, WEDD, UGHT PINE,
WAS '999.95. . ~ •.. •. ...•.••.••..•..•....•.. ......•. NOfl 'i99.95
4 PC. BEDROOM SUIT[, WEBB, DARK PINE,
'WAS '999.95
·4 PC. RIVERSIDE, MAPlE, WAS
I

NOVI '899.95
'1999.95.... -NOW

FREE MATTRESS AND BOX SPRING
FULL OR .
WITH EVERY 8EDROOM SUITE

$1.4995
.

Complete

.

'

3 PC. EARLY AMERICAN
UVING ROOM SUITE ............... NOW '299.95

9PC.

U~ING

ROOM SUITE ................. NCW#'399.95
3 PC. EARLY AMERICAN
UVING ROOM .SUITE
·Antron

·:elvet

I I 0 . I 1 ,!--1, 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 I

0 I I • 0 0 I

Save $40.00 to $100.00 on each piece. Refrigerator, gis
a!'d electric ranges, washers and dryers,' chest &amp;
upright free:rers.

.

.

CLOSEOUT GIBSON FREEZERS
..
15 cu:ft. Chest
Reg. S39US
SALE 5329.95'
· 25 cu. U. Chest
Reg. $499.95
SALE $399.95
?:t-cu. t.t. Upright
!leg. S49US
SAL• $399.95
'16
cu.'.
f
t.
Uprltllt
Reg.
$439.95
SALE $399.95
.
.

REG. $299.95 NOW

7

~tntintl
PAGE l·D

SUNDAY, MARCH 9, 1980

-WASIDNGTON (AP)- President
Carter's advisers are close to completing a "substantial tightening" of
the 1981 budget as part of the administration's new anti-inflation
strategy, the president's top
economic adviser says.
Charles L. Schultze, cbairrnan of
the Council of Economic Advisers,
afso said Friday that "round·theclocj'! discussions are underway
between the administration and
- Congress. "We are close" to final
decisions, he said.
' .However, it was learned from
sources in the administration and
Congress that Carter may not be
ready to unveil his program until the
middle of next week, if then.
The urgency behind Carter's effort to develop a new anti-inflation
plan was underlined by the government's latest wholesale price report
Friday that showed those prices in·
creased in February at an annual
rate.of nearly 20 percent.
The one·month increase in
wholesale prices of 1.5 percent
followed a 1.6 percent rise in
January. Since changes in wholesale
prices are soon reflected in higher
retail prices, th&lt;! increase means
more bad news for inflation-plagued
cOnsumers.
The grim inflation news also con- ·
tributed to another increase in the
prlme interest rate to 18 percent by
some banks Friday, a level that
would have seemed out of the
question just a few months ago. The
prime rate is the interest charged by
b~nks to their most favored
borrowers.
And the National Association of

Realtors reported that existing
housing sales ran at an annual rate
of 3.21 million in January, down 4
percent from December's 3.35
million level. Since Oct. 6, when the
Federal Reserve Board initiated its
tight credit policies, existing home
sales have plummeted 17 percent,
said Jack Carlson, chief eonomist of
the Realtors group.
Nevertheless, Carlson said home
prices are "holding up remarkably
well," with the median price rising
$1,400to $57,900 in January.
Schultze said that unless {he
government succeeds in damperung

inflationary expectation, "We face a
very serious worsening of inflation."
He told reporters at the White
House that "there is a very
dangerous spreading" of higher oil
prices into other parts of the
economy that is showing up in
higher prices for plastics, footwear,
rubber and other goods.
The Labor Department's
wholesale price report showed that
wholesale energy prices increased
7.5 percent in February, the largest
rise for any month since March 1974,
during the Arab oil embargo.

Ford draft move speeding up
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
leader of a drive to draft former
President Gerald R. Ford for
another White House race said
Friday the effort is "moving very
fas~" Ford said he was still un·
decided.
Thomas C. Reed, a former Air
Force secretary who launched the
draft effort, said, "The response so
far has been very enthusiastic."
Larry Speaks, a spokesman for
the draft group ·and a former
assistant press secretary in the FoNl
White House, said Reed was soun·
ding out Republican governors and
other political leaders lor support.
He said Reed woqld aMounce new
backers of the draft movement at a
press conference in Washington
Monday.
Govs. William Milliken of Ford's
borne state of Michigan and James
A. Rhodes of Ohio were expected to
be on that list. Both stoles have

primaries with large delegations,
which Ford might hope to share if he
announces in time to get on their
ballots.
In Maryland, state Senate
Republican Leader Edward Mason
said he had been informed by the
Ford organization that the former
president's name will remain on the
ballot for Maryland's May 13
primary. Fred Wineland, the
secretary of state, had tentatively
listed Ford last week, an action
which requires a specific
declaration of withdrawal for the
name to be ramoved.
"If Gerald Ford's name is going to
be on the ballot in Maryland, I'm
going to work for him, " Mason said.
"My impression is that he's going to
run . ~~

The deadline for getting on the
Ohio ballot is next Thursday and the
deadline for Michigan is the
following day.

without having to raise taxes.
fixed and the interest repeatedly apThe plan calls for the bonds to be
plied to the unpaid principal. The
paid off over 25 years, however, and
payments become lower from year
the revenue estimates over such a
to year, freeing additional " seed"
span are impossible to calculate,
money for new bonds.
everyone agreed.
Concerns were expressed last
At one point, Transportation Chief
week, however, and never fully anDavid
L. Weir admitted that some of
swered, that the $38 mlllion~
the
presumptions
even over the next
million currently is being used to
five
years
were
made
"on a hope
belp pay operating costs of the tranthings
are
going
to
get
better."
sportation department.
For instance, the first presumpSome House members claimed
tion is that the 40 percent increase in
losing the $37 mlllion-$38 million will
construction costs last year will be
make it necessary to raise taxes to
40 percent again in 1980, 30 percent
keep the department operating,
in each of the next two years, and 20
even though the bond issue was
percent each in 1984 and 1985, he
hailed by Rhodes and others as an
said.
alternative to a tax hike.
In addition, the plan envisions the
But with assurances of the .
state
paying 7 percent interest on the
nationally known bond counsel firm
bonds
over the next five years. Ohio
of Squire, Sanders, &amp; Dempaey, of
sold
some
similar general obligation
Cleveland, a majority of the
bonds
on
Feb.
20,1980, at 7.3percent.
Legislat~ was convinced that the
On the other hand, the Legislature
state can sell about $500 million in
built in some safeguards that were
bonds in the next five years or so.

needed to muster support lor the
new bond plan, especially among
Senate RepuQ!icans.
The safeguards said no bonds
could be issued without legislative
approval, and proceeds from bonds
must go for permiHI"ent improvements. Bonds could not be
issued for projects that would not be
in use when the same bonds were
retired.
Further, the Legislature would be
required, if the issue is finally approved, to prohibit use of . bond
proceeds for salaries or equipment
purchases in the transportation
department, or for any other types
of operating costs.
Also included was specific
language saying that the state
auditor, as well as the Legislature,
must certify, before they are sold,
that there is a sufficient "debt service base" to retire them.

Ohio's tax structure
will undergo change~
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - QUo's
tax structure would undergo
sweeping changes under a citizeninitiated bill now before the Senate.
It was introduced last week after
the Ohio Fair Tax Initiative Committee got the signatures of more
than 97,000 voters.
Senate Ways and Means Chairman Neal F. Zimmers Jr., [).
Dayton, whose panel will consider
the proposal, said he thinks Ohio's
tax system needs revised, especially
in the area of property taxes which
have soared as a result of inflation.
"But I don't know if this (the
initiated proposal) is the right approach," he added. Zimmers said
the proposal will get thorough
hearings, starting in about two
weeks.
The bill, drafted by the Ohio
Public Interest Campaign, raises
corporate income taxes and closes
what it calls corporate "loopholes,"
hikes the personal income tax of persons earning more than $30,000 a
EIGHT CHILDREN PERISH
OPELIKA, Ala. (AP) - A fire
swept through a mobile bome,
killing eigbt cblldren who ranged in
age from 1 to 13, autliorities aald
Saturday.
Opelika Police D.epartment
spokesman Steve Meadows confirmed that the bodies of eight
cblldren were fOUDd in the blaze at
the Pine Acres Trailer Park inside
tbe city limlts of Opellka.
"We received a call at 11:53 p.m.
of a fire at a mobile home,"
Meadows aald. "Tile mobile home
was totally engulfed in flames 8lld
the bodies of eight children ranging
in age from 1 to 13 yean old were
were IOUDd in tbe two bedrooms."

year, lowers property taxes, and
gives small businesses a tax break.
MariLynn Cappelletti, the
organization's legislative director,
said the bill provides about $150
million in property tax relief while
raising $650 mllli9n for the state's
financially troubled schools and
other state services.
Specifically, the bill writes new
brackets for the corporate franchise
taxes. Currently, this tax is 4 percent on the first $25,000 of aMual in·
come, and 8 percent on all above
that level.
·It provides for 3 percent on the fir-

st $25,000; 7 percent on the next
$25,000, and 10 percent on all above
$50,000.

In the area of so-called
"loopholes," the bill repeals existing
laws which allow local govenunents
to grant real estate tax abatements
to large corporations.
It would do away with the exemption from the corporate franchise
tax currently extended to banks and
savings and loan associations, and
eliminates exemptions from the
sales tax on items purchased by
businesses, but not used directly in
product manufacture.

Riffe opposing convention
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - From balanced."
the start, House Speaker Vernal G.
But he added that "my experience
Riffe Jr., D-New Boston, has op- tells me that those proposals
posed an Ohio resolution requesting marketed as a simple solution to
a U.S. constitutional convention to remedy problems often create new,
balance the federal budget.
unknown and complicated
And be still "hasn't changed my problems." I'
position," he said Friday.
In addition, Riffe said he sent
Riffe was questioned about those Snyder a copy of a letter he received
views following charges by George from Carter on March 20, 1979, inE. Snyder, head of the National Taxvolving the issue. Carter opposes a
payers Union and a former constitutional convention, and Riffe
Maryland state senator. Snyder said he had requested the
claimed Thursday in Cincinnati that president's views on the matter.
80 percent of Ohioans favor "a •
The president wrote, in part, that
required federal budget,'' according
he was "totally opposed to the conto polls.
vening of a constitutional conRiffe brushed aside the criticism.
vention; and just as importantly, I
But he provided a copy of a letter he believe any balanced budget amendwrote to Snyder on March 5 after the
ment approved by such a convention
former lawmaker had asked about
would, if ratified, be not only
Riffe's views and the status of the dangerous for the country but
convention resoluUon in Ohio.
clearly counterproductive to our
In the letter, Riffe told Snyder that current efforts to reach a balanced
he favors a balanced budget, adding
budget in a responsible and fair
that "since January 1959, every
IDanner.''
state budget I have voted for was

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

METAL WARDROBE &amp; KITCHEN CABINET SALE
REG. '79.95 ............................ 0 '49.95 EA.
SEALY Klf4G SIZE MAnRESS
Reg. $499.95
Reg. S1288.00
SALE '799.95 AND dOX SPRINGS
SALE '188~00 Set REG. ~.95 ............................ N(M '49.95 EA.'
3 PC. EARLY AM. LIVING ROOM SUITE
&amp; MISMATCHES
SEALY MAITRESS &amp; NEW,
REG. $129.95:.........:...................... N(M ~.95 ·
Gold· Plaid or Velvet.
$&amp;·ggsAndUp 42" METAL KITCHEN ·CA81NET
Reg. S799.95
SALE '599.95 BOX SPRING
.
2 PC. EARLY AM. VELVET WITH WOOD TRIM
REG. $189.95 ............................... NCM S99.95 ·
APPLIANCES SALE
Reg. $999.95
.30'" METAL KITCHEN cHINA CABINET
·.
SALE '799.95
WE SERVICE WHAT . W~ SELL
.
REG: $139.95:................................ NaN 579.95,
GIBSON, FRIGIDAIRE, MAYTAG
3 PC. LIVING ROOM SUITE
BASE CABINET REG. '69;95...... 0
AND SUNRAY
Reg. $399 ................................. NCM '249.95.

3 PC. MODERN
SOLID
BROWN
LIVING ROOM SUITE
·(Fun)
,

Starting At

but once proud Ohio highway
system.
But who pays, how, and when?
The taxpayers pay, obviously,
through sales and other taxes that
have been eannarked by law, as a
legal bind to the bondholders, to pay
off bonds. The gasoline tax is a good
example.
Right now, the state is paying off
the 1960s highway issues with I cent
of its 7-cents-a-gallon gasoline tax,
and the axle mile tax paid by truck
owners. The penny brings in about
$56 mlllion a year, and the axle tax
$53 million.
Debt service - principal and interest - on the 1960s bond issues
totals about $71 mlltion a year,
leaving $38 million-$39 million in a
debt retirement account which
would back bonds envisioned by the
June 3 proposal.
The state makes payments, just as
homebuyers do, with the principal

President's
advisors close
.
io completing tight budget

/)

D

classified

$16
'1.2995

Wahama band students receive top honors
, MASON - Several members of
the Wahama High School Senior and
Junior Bands recently parUcipated
in the 197~ Tri-state Solo and En·
semble Festival held at Marshall
Umverslty Music Center in Huntington.

Each student's perfonnance was
judged and given an overall rating
with Superior (I) heing the highest
rlltlng that could be received. _ _
"embers of ihe ·Senior Band
~eiving Superior (I) rating for solo
~rformances inclu"ed ·Arnold Fry,
tlllla; Todd Tucker, tuba; Kelly
W.eaver, trumpet; . Heidi Huber,
~pet; Brett Grinstead, tronr
~e; Maurlca Goodnite, clarinet;
Jqlia Stevens, clarinet; Melanie
Mossman, clarinet; lllena Vanmeter, clarinet; Terri Johnson, flute
arid piccolo; and Karen Brown,
note.
..Jan Riggs, a junior band student,
also received a Superior (!) rating
for her al!o saxophone solo.
• ·Senior B'and members receiving.
S~Jperlor (I) ratings ·(or ensemble
Performances were John VanMeter
alld Jerry Ofdaker, percussion du~t :
.Jtl)ie ~rke ; Miriam SlssQn, KeUr
1
Vfjlllver and Heidi Huber, ~rumpet
qPrtet; •Julia Steven~. IJat'ol Mit·
c:!Jell ani! Lila Pidtens, clarinet trio;
and· Terri Johnson and Karen
Bioown, piccolo duet.
..Men1bers • of the Senior Band
r~vlng. Excellent (IJ) r~tiugs

were Peggy Douthit, trombune;
Miriam Sisson, trumpet; Michelle
Bond, trumpet; Jeff Bumgardner,
alto saxophone; John VanMeter,
Jerry Oldaker, Eddie Wildman,
Mike Richardson and Chris JohnsOn,
percussion quintet; Miriam Sisson
and Heidi Huber, trumpet duet ;
Peggy Douthit, Jill Taylor, Richard
Fry and Brett Grinstead, trombone
quartet ; Edle Shephard, Tarruny
Yoho, Chris Richardson and Alice
Roush, clarinet ensemble; Edie
Shephard, Tammy Yoho, Almabelle
Dayo and Ulena VanMeter, clarinet
. quartet ; Angie Lawhorn, Jenny
Clark and Becky Fields, flute trio;
and Tammy Yoho and Edie
Shephard, clarinet duet.
Stephanie Clark, Valerie Cole and
Cheryl Lewis, junior band members,
recevied an Excellent Ill) rating for
their clarinet trio. Richard· Fry
received a Good (III) rating lor his
trombone solo.
Todd Tucker, tuba player; and
'ferri Johnsol) 1 piccolo player, were
also 'presented Honors Finalist
applica\ions for their outstanding
solo Mrformanres. at the festival.
They will be in competitiop with
other high school band students
across the ·state to be selected to
perfonn at the West Virginia Music
Educators Conference at Parker·
sburg in March. Bot~ Todd and Terri
have already been selected to
perfonn with the AU-state Band ~:
the con!erence. w

Jf' i

1
\

''

r ~ ,, I

1

. SUPERIOR PERFORMANCES were given by these Wahama
High School Senior Hand members durin~ the recent Tri.State Solo and
Ensemble Festival at Marshall Univer~lty:S Music Center. First row,left
'tO rigpt : Karen Brown.TPrri .J&lt;»•n~n Melanie Mossman, Kelly W!aver,

second

Carol Mitchell, Julia Sievens and Lila Pickens;
row, ieft to right:
Heidi Huber, Miriam Sisson, Brett Grinstead, llena VanMeter, Maurlca '
Goodnlte. Todd Tucker, Arnold Fry, John VanMeter and Jerry 'Oldaker.
Also 'ratP&lt;\)':noerior (!) ,but not pictured are Jal\i.Riggs and Juile Clark.

�...'

• ....•
·,•

.-•
.....••

c.&amp;- The Sw1&lt;lay Times-Sentinel, Sunday. March 9, 198o

"'

Celtics outlast 76ers, maintain first place in division
.I

By Tbe Associated Press
For the Boston Celtics and
Philadelphia 76ers,l4 games remain
in the National 13asketball
Association's regular season. That's
more than enough time for a threegame divisional lead to be whittled
away, according to Boston Coach
Bill Fitch.
"This doesn't give us a commanding position," said Fitch after
his fil'!lt-piace Celtics downed the
second-place 76ers 111-92 Friday
night in a malchup of Atlantic
Division leaders. ''We'll be in a commanding position when there's two
games left and we're three games
up."

Philadelphia Coach Bill Cun-

Utah Jau llo.!H, the PorUal1d Trail
ningham was more concerned.
little mistakes for three or four days.
Blazel'11
beat the Denver Nuggets
" Right now they are the best team This one you just write off,"
113-101
and
the lAs Angeles Lakers
Boston had five men in double ·
in the league," he said. "Now we
trimmed the Chicago Bulls 101-99.
need help from other teams to have figures, led by Larry Bird with T1
\
BulletlllM, Plalelu 105
a chance of catching the Celtics."
points, Cedric Maxwell with 20 and
Elvin Hayes scored 25 points, 11 of
The Celtics extended their season.
Rick &amp;bey with 18. Robey also
them in the fOIIl'tiHjuarter that
high winning streak to nine games. snared 12 rebounds, one less than
roWed Washinglon to its victory
The 76ers, who had a six-game win- Erving's gam.e high of 13.
ning streak snapped, made just 38.4
In the other NBA games Friday over Detroit. Greg Ballard also had
25 points for the Bullets, who squan· night, the Washlngtan Bullets edged
of their field goal attempts.
d~red a 12-point halfUme lead and
Despite 26 second-half points by the Detroit Pistons 106-105, the
trailed 101·100 .with 2t minutes to
Julius Ervin~, Philadelphia came no Houstoo Rockets nipped the New
play before a Larry Wright layup
closer than 11 points after in- Jersey Nets 111-110 in double overgave them the lead for good.
time, the AUanta Hawks bested the
termission.
John Long scored 'rl for Detroit.
'Td rather lose by 20 points than IndiaJw! Pacel'!l 99-94, the Cleveland
Rockel&amp; Ill, NelllllO
Cavaliers
downed
the
Kansas
City
one" said Erving, who led all
Robert
~id ignored the fans
scorers with 36 points and has scored Kings 111·101, the New York Knicks
waving
pictures
of naked women undefeated the San Antonio Spurs 11&amp;Ill over his last three games. "In a
der
the
basket
and
made two foul
one-point loss you worry about the 112, the Phoenix Suns blasted the

shots with 11 seconds left In the
second overtime to give HOU.!ton 1111

victory over New Jersey.
"The 11icture.s ticlcled me a little
bit," said Reid, "but like (team-mate) Rick Barry says, foul shots
just take concentraUoo."
Moses Malone led Houston scorel'!l
with :rT polnls, the same total
amassed by Mike Newlin of New
Jel'!ley.
BawbH,PacenH
The HAwks got ?3 points from Dan
&amp;undlleld to power past the
Pacers.
.Indiana got 15 points apiece from
George McGlrulls and Mickey John-

•

8011.

CaVIIIIen 111, XID&amp;IlM
_;
Mike Mitchell scored 23 potnta to;:.
pace Cleveland's front-running ~!
tory over Kansaa City. The Kings got ...
'rl points fnm Otis Birdsor!B and 25
from Scott Wedman but saw their :.
Midwest Oiv!sicn lead over the :;.
Milwaukee Bucks cut to two gam&amp;!l. : ,
Xl!J"b 118, Spun 1U
Toby Knight scored 33

..!:

points,-:,

helping New York survive a 40opo1nt;;
perfonnance · by San Antonio'•"'
George Gervln as the Knlcb handed!:
the Spurs their se"enth ~tive :
1~:&amp;.
·:

Athens Marathon scheduled March 30
ATIJENS
The 13th annual
Athens Marathon will be held Sun·
dsy, March 30. The marathon is one
of the older in the United States.
More than 250 runners from
around the country are expected to
compete on the :&gt;Jl mile, 385 yard
course that winds through the
Athens County countryside . • Last

year's winner, Daniel Sekerak, of
Granville, Ohio covered the route in
just over two hours, 30 minutes.
The race hegins at noon on the 30th
at Peden Stadium m tbe Ohio
University campus.
A laurel crown, nown from
Athens, Greece will be awarded to
the winner with silver bowls being

given to the first 15 finishers and
group winners In four age groups: 30
to 39; 40 to 49; 50 to 59; and over 60.
Each of more than 200 finishers in
1979 received a certificate signed by
the M8yor of Athens.
This year's top male and· female.
finishers will receive an expense
paid trip to the 1980 Columbus

Marathon this fall.
Entry blanks may be obtained
from Ellsworth Holden, 26 Northwood Drive, Athens, 45701. They
are due by March 25.
1be marathon is sponsored by the
Hockhocldng Track ClUb. Sigma .Nu
fraternity is the Ohio University
campus sponsor.

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S

Bond.issue action crash course in finance
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - If
Ohio's Statehouse were a Wliversity
and its lawmaker-tenants were
students, action last week might
have been described by some as
Bond Issues 401 : A Crash Course in
lllgh-Powered Finance.
The story was that some fledgling
l~glslators watched in awe but
joined in as the Senate and House
ground out approval of a multibillion dollar highway bond issue for
the June 3 ballot.
'Bond issues, of course, are a way
of. borrowing money, and they are
not new in state government. The
state gets a big break on interest
rates, by offering its "full faith and
credit," and can t::ke up to 30 years
to'repay.
'But when a whopper of a bond
issue gets passed and approved by
voters, it usually is a long time
before another Legislature gets a
crack at spending billions of dollars

and letting future generations of
Ohioans foot the bill.
There are arguments on the other
side, too. In recent years, with the
advent of out~f·sight interest rates,
the $1 billion Ohio borrowed in the
1960s at 3 percent and 4 percent for
highway construction, under Gov.
James A. Rhodes, looks today like a
pretty good investment.
Inflation was sauntering along at
about 1 percent a year when Rhodes
first became governor in 1963, compared to about 18 percent overall
now and more than 40 percent a year
in the· highway construction industry, state officials say.
Although the pending plan is open
ended, except that the Legislature
must give advance approval, sponsors say about $500 million in bonds
could be sold in the next four years,
attracting three times that amount
in federal matching funds.
This sounds fine , for a crumbling

~unbau ~imts
~

VOL 15 NO. 6

CONTINUES 1 MORE WEEK

THE GRATE BOYS

ARNOLD GRATE

ITH SA

LIVING ROOM
SUITE

SAL.E
2 PC. TRADITIONAL LIVING ROOM SUITE

SALE , 599•95

Rust Brown.
Reg. $699.95
1

3 PC. EARLY AM. LIVING ROOM SUITE
Old Mill Stream.
Reg. $1,100.00

SALE '899.95

2 PC. EARLY AM. VELVET LIVING ROOM SUITE

13" COLOR 1V WAS '439.95
191' COLOR 1V WAS '499.95
23" COLO~ lV MAPLE, PECAN WAS '699.95
25" COLOR TV '799.95
WAS '799.95
.
.
25" SPACE COM. TV WAS '949.95
25" COLOR TV WAS '899.95

COMPONENT WITH 8 TRACK FM, AM, RECORD PLAYER,
- SPEAKERS, COMPONENT CAB AND SPEAKER
'STANDS WAS '748.$4 ......................... NOW 1599.95
(1) USED VCR TAPE RECORDER FOR TV
NEW '1025.00 ..... .•.. .. .. .. .••.. .. ...... USED '699.95
(1) R.OOR MODEL STEREO REG. 449.95
1

SALE '599.95

Reg. S799.95

2 PC. EARLY AM. VELVET LIVING ROOM SUITE
SALE '599.95

Reg. $799.95

NOW '399.95

(2) MAPLE, OPEN.FRONT CHINA
NOW •1

. Reg.$239.9S

Velvet, tree pattern.

DOUBLE PEDESTAL DESK

Reg. S1f9.9S 1\]0W

BUNK BEDS

•

NOW 139,9.~5..
NOW '449.95
NOW 1599.95
NOW '699.95
NOW '849.95
NOW '699.95

sss

BEDROOM·
SUITE
SALE
4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE,-OAK, WAS 1599.95. .. NOW '499.95:

4 PC. BEDROOM SUIT[, BASSm, PECAN
WAS $799.95••••••••.•••••••••••••••••••.•.••.•.••• NOW' '699.95
4 PC. BEDROOM SUIT[, BASSETT, OAK,
·
·.
NOW
WAS '899.95 ...••.•..•••••.•.••••
I II •••••••••••••••

4 PC. BEDROOM SUIT£, BASSm, PINE,

.

:

WAS '899.95••••.•• ·•. ••••••••••••••••.•..••.•••••.• N()W' ?99.~.

4 PC. BEDROOM SUIT[, WEDD, UGHT PINE,
WAS '999.95. . ~ •.. •. ...•.••.••..•..•....•.. ......•. NOfl 'i99.95
4 PC. BEDROOM SUIT[, WEBB, DARK PINE,
'WAS '999.95
·4 PC. RIVERSIDE, MAPlE, WAS
I

NOVI '899.95
'1999.95.... -NOW

FREE MATTRESS AND BOX SPRING
FULL OR .
WITH EVERY 8EDROOM SUITE

$1.4995
.

Complete

.

'

3 PC. EARLY AMERICAN
UVING ROOM SUITE ............... NOW '299.95

9PC.

U~ING

ROOM SUITE ................. NCW#'399.95
3 PC. EARLY AMERICAN
UVING ROOM .SUITE
·Antron

·:elvet

I I 0 . I 1 ,!--1, 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 I

0 I I • 0 0 I

Save $40.00 to $100.00 on each piece. Refrigerator, gis
a!'d electric ranges, washers and dryers,' chest &amp;
upright free:rers.

.

.

CLOSEOUT GIBSON FREEZERS
..
15 cu:ft. Chest
Reg. S39US
SALE 5329.95'
· 25 cu. U. Chest
Reg. $499.95
SALE $399.95
?:t-cu. t.t. Upright
!leg. S49US
SAL• $399.95
'16
cu.'.
f
t.
Uprltllt
Reg.
$439.95
SALE $399.95
.
.

REG. $299.95 NOW

7

~tntintl
PAGE l·D

SUNDAY, MARCH 9, 1980

-WASIDNGTON (AP)- President
Carter's advisers are close to completing a "substantial tightening" of
the 1981 budget as part of the administration's new anti-inflation
strategy, the president's top
economic adviser says.
Charles L. Schultze, cbairrnan of
the Council of Economic Advisers,
afso said Friday that "round·theclocj'! discussions are underway
between the administration and
- Congress. "We are close" to final
decisions, he said.
' .However, it was learned from
sources in the administration and
Congress that Carter may not be
ready to unveil his program until the
middle of next week, if then.
The urgency behind Carter's effort to develop a new anti-inflation
plan was underlined by the government's latest wholesale price report
Friday that showed those prices in·
creased in February at an annual
rate.of nearly 20 percent.
The one·month increase in
wholesale prices of 1.5 percent
followed a 1.6 percent rise in
January. Since changes in wholesale
prices are soon reflected in higher
retail prices, th&lt;! increase means
more bad news for inflation-plagued
cOnsumers.
The grim inflation news also con- ·
tributed to another increase in the
prlme interest rate to 18 percent by
some banks Friday, a level that
would have seemed out of the
question just a few months ago. The
prime rate is the interest charged by
b~nks to their most favored
borrowers.
And the National Association of

Realtors reported that existing
housing sales ran at an annual rate
of 3.21 million in January, down 4
percent from December's 3.35
million level. Since Oct. 6, when the
Federal Reserve Board initiated its
tight credit policies, existing home
sales have plummeted 17 percent,
said Jack Carlson, chief eonomist of
the Realtors group.
Nevertheless, Carlson said home
prices are "holding up remarkably
well," with the median price rising
$1,400to $57,900 in January.
Schultze said that unless {he
government succeeds in damperung

inflationary expectation, "We face a
very serious worsening of inflation."
He told reporters at the White
House that "there is a very
dangerous spreading" of higher oil
prices into other parts of the
economy that is showing up in
higher prices for plastics, footwear,
rubber and other goods.
The Labor Department's
wholesale price report showed that
wholesale energy prices increased
7.5 percent in February, the largest
rise for any month since March 1974,
during the Arab oil embargo.

Ford draft move speeding up
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
leader of a drive to draft former
President Gerald R. Ford for
another White House race said
Friday the effort is "moving very
fas~" Ford said he was still un·
decided.
Thomas C. Reed, a former Air
Force secretary who launched the
draft effort, said, "The response so
far has been very enthusiastic."
Larry Speaks, a spokesman for
the draft group ·and a former
assistant press secretary in the FoNl
White House, said Reed was soun·
ding out Republican governors and
other political leaders lor support.
He said Reed woqld aMounce new
backers of the draft movement at a
press conference in Washington
Monday.
Govs. William Milliken of Ford's
borne state of Michigan and James
A. Rhodes of Ohio were expected to
be on that list. Both stoles have

primaries with large delegations,
which Ford might hope to share if he
announces in time to get on their
ballots.
In Maryland, state Senate
Republican Leader Edward Mason
said he had been informed by the
Ford organization that the former
president's name will remain on the
ballot for Maryland's May 13
primary. Fred Wineland, the
secretary of state, had tentatively
listed Ford last week, an action
which requires a specific
declaration of withdrawal for the
name to be ramoved.
"If Gerald Ford's name is going to
be on the ballot in Maryland, I'm
going to work for him, " Mason said.
"My impression is that he's going to
run . ~~

The deadline for getting on the
Ohio ballot is next Thursday and the
deadline for Michigan is the
following day.

without having to raise taxes.
fixed and the interest repeatedly apThe plan calls for the bonds to be
plied to the unpaid principal. The
paid off over 25 years, however, and
payments become lower from year
the revenue estimates over such a
to year, freeing additional " seed"
span are impossible to calculate,
money for new bonds.
everyone agreed.
Concerns were expressed last
At one point, Transportation Chief
week, however, and never fully anDavid
L. Weir admitted that some of
swered, that the $38 mlllion~
the
presumptions
even over the next
million currently is being used to
five
years
were
made
"on a hope
belp pay operating costs of the tranthings
are
going
to
get
better."
sportation department.
For instance, the first presumpSome House members claimed
tion is that the 40 percent increase in
losing the $37 mlllion-$38 million will
construction costs last year will be
make it necessary to raise taxes to
40 percent again in 1980, 30 percent
keep the department operating,
in each of the next two years, and 20
even though the bond issue was
percent each in 1984 and 1985, he
hailed by Rhodes and others as an
said.
alternative to a tax hike.
In addition, the plan envisions the
But with assurances of the .
state
paying 7 percent interest on the
nationally known bond counsel firm
bonds
over the next five years. Ohio
of Squire, Sanders, &amp; Dempaey, of
sold
some
similar general obligation
Cleveland, a majority of the
bonds
on
Feb.
20,1980, at 7.3percent.
Legislat~ was convinced that the
On the other hand, the Legislature
state can sell about $500 million in
built in some safeguards that were
bonds in the next five years or so.

needed to muster support lor the
new bond plan, especially among
Senate RepuQ!icans.
The safeguards said no bonds
could be issued without legislative
approval, and proceeds from bonds
must go for permiHI"ent improvements. Bonds could not be
issued for projects that would not be
in use when the same bonds were
retired.
Further, the Legislature would be
required, if the issue is finally approved, to prohibit use of . bond
proceeds for salaries or equipment
purchases in the transportation
department, or for any other types
of operating costs.
Also included was specific
language saying that the state
auditor, as well as the Legislature,
must certify, before they are sold,
that there is a sufficient "debt service base" to retire them.

Ohio's tax structure
will undergo change~
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - QUo's
tax structure would undergo
sweeping changes under a citizeninitiated bill now before the Senate.
It was introduced last week after
the Ohio Fair Tax Initiative Committee got the signatures of more
than 97,000 voters.
Senate Ways and Means Chairman Neal F. Zimmers Jr., [).
Dayton, whose panel will consider
the proposal, said he thinks Ohio's
tax system needs revised, especially
in the area of property taxes which
have soared as a result of inflation.
"But I don't know if this (the
initiated proposal) is the right approach," he added. Zimmers said
the proposal will get thorough
hearings, starting in about two
weeks.
The bill, drafted by the Ohio
Public Interest Campaign, raises
corporate income taxes and closes
what it calls corporate "loopholes,"
hikes the personal income tax of persons earning more than $30,000 a
EIGHT CHILDREN PERISH
OPELIKA, Ala. (AP) - A fire
swept through a mobile bome,
killing eigbt cblldren who ranged in
age from 1 to 13, autliorities aald
Saturday.
Opelika Police D.epartment
spokesman Steve Meadows confirmed that the bodies of eight
cblldren were fOUDd in the blaze at
the Pine Acres Trailer Park inside
tbe city limlts of Opellka.
"We received a call at 11:53 p.m.
of a fire at a mobile home,"
Meadows aald. "Tile mobile home
was totally engulfed in flames 8lld
the bodies of eight children ranging
in age from 1 to 13 yean old were
were IOUDd in tbe two bedrooms."

year, lowers property taxes, and
gives small businesses a tax break.
MariLynn Cappelletti, the
organization's legislative director,
said the bill provides about $150
million in property tax relief while
raising $650 mllli9n for the state's
financially troubled schools and
other state services.
Specifically, the bill writes new
brackets for the corporate franchise
taxes. Currently, this tax is 4 percent on the first $25,000 of aMual in·
come, and 8 percent on all above
that level.
·It provides for 3 percent on the fir-

st $25,000; 7 percent on the next
$25,000, and 10 percent on all above
$50,000.

In the area of so-called
"loopholes," the bill repeals existing
laws which allow local govenunents
to grant real estate tax abatements
to large corporations.
It would do away with the exemption from the corporate franchise
tax currently extended to banks and
savings and loan associations, and
eliminates exemptions from the
sales tax on items purchased by
businesses, but not used directly in
product manufacture.

Riffe opposing convention
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - From balanced."
the start, House Speaker Vernal G.
But he added that "my experience
Riffe Jr., D-New Boston, has op- tells me that those proposals
posed an Ohio resolution requesting marketed as a simple solution to
a U.S. constitutional convention to remedy problems often create new,
balance the federal budget.
unknown and complicated
And be still "hasn't changed my problems." I'
position," he said Friday.
In addition, Riffe said he sent
Riffe was questioned about those Snyder a copy of a letter he received
views following charges by George from Carter on March 20, 1979, inE. Snyder, head of the National Taxvolving the issue. Carter opposes a
payers Union and a former constitutional convention, and Riffe
Maryland state senator. Snyder said he had requested the
claimed Thursday in Cincinnati that president's views on the matter.
80 percent of Ohioans favor "a •
The president wrote, in part, that
required federal budget,'' according
he was "totally opposed to the conto polls.
vening of a constitutional conRiffe brushed aside the criticism.
vention; and just as importantly, I
But he provided a copy of a letter he believe any balanced budget amendwrote to Snyder on March 5 after the
ment approved by such a convention
former lawmaker had asked about
would, if ratified, be not only
Riffe's views and the status of the dangerous for the country but
convention resoluUon in Ohio.
clearly counterproductive to our
In the letter, Riffe told Snyder that current efforts to reach a balanced
he favors a balanced budget, adding
budget in a responsible and fair
that "since January 1959, every
IDanner.''
state budget I have voted for was

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

METAL WARDROBE &amp; KITCHEN CABINET SALE
REG. '79.95 ............................ 0 '49.95 EA.
SEALY Klf4G SIZE MAnRESS
Reg. $499.95
Reg. S1288.00
SALE '799.95 AND dOX SPRINGS
SALE '188~00 Set REG. ~.95 ............................ N(M '49.95 EA.'
3 PC. EARLY AM. LIVING ROOM SUITE
&amp; MISMATCHES
SEALY MAITRESS &amp; NEW,
REG. $129.95:.........:...................... N(M ~.95 ·
Gold· Plaid or Velvet.
$&amp;·ggsAndUp 42" METAL KITCHEN ·CA81NET
Reg. S799.95
SALE '599.95 BOX SPRING
.
2 PC. EARLY AM. VELVET WITH WOOD TRIM
REG. $189.95 ............................... NCM S99.95 ·
APPLIANCES SALE
Reg. $999.95
.30'" METAL KITCHEN cHINA CABINET
·.
SALE '799.95
WE SERVICE WHAT . W~ SELL
.
REG: $139.95:................................ NaN 579.95,
GIBSON, FRIGIDAIRE, MAYTAG
3 PC. LIVING ROOM SUITE
BASE CABINET REG. '69;95...... 0
AND SUNRAY
Reg. $399 ................................. NCM '249.95.

3 PC. MODERN
SOLID
BROWN
LIVING ROOM SUITE
·(Fun)
,

Starting At

but once proud Ohio highway
system.
But who pays, how, and when?
The taxpayers pay, obviously,
through sales and other taxes that
have been eannarked by law, as a
legal bind to the bondholders, to pay
off bonds. The gasoline tax is a good
example.
Right now, the state is paying off
the 1960s highway issues with I cent
of its 7-cents-a-gallon gasoline tax,
and the axle mile tax paid by truck
owners. The penny brings in about
$56 mlllion a year, and the axle tax
$53 million.
Debt service - principal and interest - on the 1960s bond issues
totals about $71 mlltion a year,
leaving $38 million-$39 million in a
debt retirement account which
would back bonds envisioned by the
June 3 proposal.
The state makes payments, just as
homebuyers do, with the principal

President's
advisors close
.
io completing tight budget

/)

D

classified

$16
'1.2995

Wahama band students receive top honors
, MASON - Several members of
the Wahama High School Senior and
Junior Bands recently parUcipated
in the 197~ Tri-state Solo and En·
semble Festival held at Marshall
Umverslty Music Center in Huntington.

Each student's perfonnance was
judged and given an overall rating
with Superior (I) heing the highest
rlltlng that could be received. _ _
"embers of ihe ·Senior Band
~eiving Superior (I) rating for solo
~rformances inclu"ed ·Arnold Fry,
tlllla; Todd Tucker, tuba; Kelly
W.eaver, trumpet; . Heidi Huber,
~pet; Brett Grinstead, tronr
~e; Maurlca Goodnite, clarinet;
Jqlia Stevens, clarinet; Melanie
Mossman, clarinet; lllena Vanmeter, clarinet; Terri Johnson, flute
arid piccolo; and Karen Brown,
note.
..Jan Riggs, a junior band student,
also received a Superior (!) rating
for her al!o saxophone solo.
• ·Senior B'and members receiving.
S~Jperlor (I) ratings ·(or ensemble
Performances were John VanMeter
alld Jerry Ofdaker, percussion du~t :
.Jtl)ie ~rke ; Miriam SlssQn, KeUr
1
Vfjlllver and Heidi Huber, ~rumpet
qPrtet; •Julia Steven~. IJat'ol Mit·
c:!Jell ani! Lila Pidtens, clarinet trio;
and· Terri Johnson and Karen
Bioown, piccolo duet.
..Men1bers • of the Senior Band
r~vlng. Excellent (IJ) r~tiugs

were Peggy Douthit, trombune;
Miriam Sisson, trumpet; Michelle
Bond, trumpet; Jeff Bumgardner,
alto saxophone; John VanMeter,
Jerry Oldaker, Eddie Wildman,
Mike Richardson and Chris JohnsOn,
percussion quintet; Miriam Sisson
and Heidi Huber, trumpet duet ;
Peggy Douthit, Jill Taylor, Richard
Fry and Brett Grinstead, trombone
quartet ; Edle Shephard, Tarruny
Yoho, Chris Richardson and Alice
Roush, clarinet ensemble; Edie
Shephard, Tammy Yoho, Almabelle
Dayo and Ulena VanMeter, clarinet
. quartet ; Angie Lawhorn, Jenny
Clark and Becky Fields, flute trio;
and Tammy Yoho and Edie
Shephard, clarinet duet.
Stephanie Clark, Valerie Cole and
Cheryl Lewis, junior band members,
recevied an Excellent Ill) rating for
their clarinet trio. Richard· Fry
received a Good (III) rating lor his
trombone solo.
Todd Tucker, tuba player; and
'ferri Johnsol) 1 piccolo player, were
also 'presented Honors Finalist
applica\ions for their outstanding
solo Mrformanres. at the festival.
They will be in competitiop with
other high school band students
across the ·state to be selected to
perfonn at the West Virginia Music
Educators Conference at Parker·
sburg in March. Bot~ Todd and Terri
have already been selected to
perfonn with the AU-state Band ~:
the con!erence. w

Jf' i

1
\

''

r ~ ,, I

1

. SUPERIOR PERFORMANCES were given by these Wahama
High School Senior Hand members durin~ the recent Tri.State Solo and
Ensemble Festival at Marshall Univer~lty:S Music Center. First row,left
'tO rigpt : Karen Brown.TPrri .J&lt;»•n~n Melanie Mossman, Kelly W!aver,

second

Carol Mitchell, Julia Sievens and Lila Pickens;
row, ieft to right:
Heidi Huber, Miriam Sisson, Brett Grinstead, llena VanMeter, Maurlca '
Goodnlte. Todd Tucker, Arnold Fry, John VanMeter and Jerry 'Oldaker.
Also 'ratP&lt;\)':noerior (!) ,but not pictured are Jal\i.Riggs and Juile Clark.

�w-The Sunday T1t11 •..SOOtinel Sunday MJ&gt;n:h 9 UMIO
D-2- The Sunday Tlmes-Sentmel Sunday March 9 1980

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT
OF
TRANSPORTATION

Sec t ons 0 6 and 3 6 bv
ove av ng
he conc r e te
deck s w th dense cone ete

w m an

on of us ng
Ia ex mod t ed cone ete
rep ac ng br dge ra n~

Columbus Oh o

February 29 1980
Contract Sales
Legal Copy
No 80 69
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
SR 979i6l

Sealed proposa s w
be
rece ved at the off ce ot he
D rector of he Oh o Oepar
tment at Transpor afior)
Columbus Oh o unt 10 00
AM Oh o Standa d T me
Tuesday Apr 1 1 19BO o

mprovements n

Gal a County Oh o on
Br dge Nos GAL 233 00 6
!length 120 teet
w dth 36
fee1}, over Black Fork of

Symmes Creek and Ga
233 0376 length - 29 feet -

w dth 32

o~t

f eet) over Jenny

Creek on State ~oute 233

PakiStan IS constructing
four additiOnal energy centers w1th a grant of $1 8
nullion from the U N
Development Program
The centers Will p JVIde
electncal
power
for
lighting
1mgat10n and
small agnculluraI uruts
such as flour nulls They
Will help reduce the
nation s dependence on un
ported petroleum
After a campaign lasting
more than 12 years the U
N
World
Health
Orgamzatlon has an
nounced the complete
eradication of smallpox
The cost of the campaign
was approxunately $112
million

and

app oach guardra

a do her ela ed w ork
Pro ec L eng h
149 12

feet or 0 027 m ile

Work Length
teet or 0 099 m e

530 17

The Oh o Department of
Transportal on
hereby
not f es a I b dde s hat
w 1 aff rmat vely nsure
that n any contract en
tered nto pursuan o fh s
advert sement
m nor ty
bus ness en erp ses w II be
affo ded ful oppo tun ty to
subm b ds n esponse to
h s nv ta on and w I no
be d scr m nated aga ns
on the grounds oi race
color or nat ana or g n n
cons derat on
l or
an
award
M n mum wage rates
o th s pr o ect have been
predeterm ned as requ r ed
by law and a e set o th n
t e b d proosa
The date se for com
plet on ot th s work shall be
set forth n the b dd ng
proposal
Each b dder sha I be
equ ed of lew h h s b d
a ce 1 f ed che c k or
cashier s check to
an
amoun equa to f ve per
cent of h s b d but n no
event more than f fty
housand do Ia s o a bond
to ten per cent of h1 s b d
payab le o the o rect or
B dders mus appl y on
tor
the proper torms
qual f ca ti on at east ten
days pr or o the da e set
for open n~ b ds n ac
cordance w lh Chap ter 5525
Oh o Rev sed Code
Plans and spec t cat ons
are on f e n he Depart
ment ofT anspo tat on and
he off ce of the D st c
Deputy D rector
ihe 0 ecto
reserves
he r1ght to re ec t any and
a I b ds

PUBLIC NOTICE
Pub c water suppl es are
requ red
by
Sta te
Regula! on Chapter 3745
81
Oh o Adm n s at ve
Code to rou nel y man tor
the m crab o og cal qua ty
ot he dr nk ng water n
lhe r d sir but on system
The sampl ng conducted
for fhP Pomeroy water
system nd ca ed tha t the
max mum
perm ss ble
m crob c log cal
con
tam nant evel spec f ed n
he Oh o Adm n strat ve
Code was exceeded n 2
out of 11 samp es co lee ted
n July 1979
Col form bacter a are
used as an nd cator of the
m crob olog ca qua ty of
dr nk ng water Wh le the
co l form bacte a
hem
se ves may post no threat
o hea th their presence
does nd cate that d source
of cent am nat on ex sts
somewhere n the water
system Such an nd cat on
s adeqva e us f cat on for
an nvest ga on to deter
m ne the nature and scope
of the poss be health
hazard
A
subsequen
n
vest gat on and add anal
samp ng nd cate that any
prob em has bee., correc
led
Boa d of
Pub I c Alta rs

LEGAL NOTICE
TO BIDDERS
Not ce s hereby given
that sealed b ds w II be
rece ved by the C ty
Manager of !he C ty ot
Gall pols Oh oath soli ce
n the Mun c pal Bu d ng
for one ( l) 1979 or 1980 4·
door sedan automob le
BfdS wtll be rece ved at
the above named off ce un
1 I 12 00 Noon on Tuesday
March 25 1980 and publ ely
opened and read at that
hour and place B d forms
may be obta ned n the Of
f ce of the C ly Manager
51B Second Avenue C ly of
Ga ll pol s Oh o
March 9

6

LEGAL NOTIC E
TO BIDDERS
Not ce s hereby g ven
that sealed b ds w II be
rece ved by the C ty
Manager ot the C ly at
Gall pol s Oh oat h s off ce
n the Mun c pal Bu ld ng
for two (2) 1979 or 1980 J4
Ton P ck Up Trucks
B ds w II be rece ved at
the above named off ce un
1 1 12 00 Noon on Tuesday
March 25 l9BO and publ ely
opened and read at that
hour and place B d forms
may be obta ned n the Of
f ce of lhe C ty manager
51B Second Avenue C ly of
Ga ll pol s Oh o
March 9 16
LEGAL NOTICE
TO BIDDERS
Not ce s hereby g ven
that sea led b ds w II be
rece ved b y t he C ly
Manager o f the C ty of
Ga ll pol s Oh oa h soli ce
n he Mun c pa I Su ld ng
for aggregate I mestone
and asphalt c concrete
B ds w II be rece ved at
the above named off ce un
t 112 00 Noon ocal t me on
Thursday March 20 1980
and publ ely opened and
read at that hour and place
B d form s may be obla ned
n the 011 ce of the C ty
Manager
518 Second
Ave nue City of Ga pol s
Oh o

DAV D L WE R
DIRECTOR
Rev B 17 73
March 9 6

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
1 Iron
6 Aches
11 Nearest
18 lrntates
19 Heron
20 Rest
2 1 Closter
23 Journ ey
24- l nco n
26 Saltale
27 01 part
29 Pee Wee or
Del a
30 Foray
31Th~ sweet
sop
32 Hard wood
I ee
33 Pel I on
34 Forme y
35 Posl
36 Each
38 Tax I me s
40 Fondle
41 Buckel
42 F sh sauce
43 Dutch town
45 Cook n
oven
46 Pad not ce
47 Gul like
u rd
48 Untamed
49 0 d woman
sh
51 Exact
52 Art f c a
anguage
53 El h op an
I lie
54 Sacred
55 Substances
57 Knght
58 Chem cal
compound
60 Possess ve
pronoun
6 1 Rocky h1 l
62 Climb
64 TenSile

strenglh
(abbr I
65 P onoun
66 Inlets
67 Ph pp ne
nat ves
69 Ivan and
N cho as
71 Monge
73 Seesaws
74 Grafted
Hera dry
76 Ejects
79 By oneself
8 I La r
82 Con unci on
84 We rd
85 Recom
pense
87 Commun s s
90 Gallops
92 Perform
93 Fa! hers
95 M st us
97 Loved one
98 Above
99 Stal e Abb
10 I Atltt:s
103 Poem
104 Moun! an
ake
I 05 Cub c meier
108 Soak
110 Harveslers
112 Needle! sh
PI
113 Bake s
product
114 lnleqecl on
115 Godd ess ol
d scor d
117 As an co ns
118 Vended
119 Wagers
1200dn s
brol he
121 Valleys
23 Aller H S T
124 Fork prong
125 Sma

126 Dry as w ne
127 Be presenl
129 Come nto
vew
131 Funct on
132 Gasp
133 Plural end

lng
134
136
37
138
39
40
141
42
43
44

46
48
49
150
151

Moray
Ire and
H gh
Debate
Place of I he
sea Abb
Unasp rated
Short sleep
Dry
Produced
Da las
Cowboys
runn ng
back
M says
R dge
Decla es
Grow ng out
of
Sharpe ned

DOWN
1 Clergyman
2 Perch
3 Ire land
4 Cralty
5 Steamsh p
(abb )
6 Danger
7 M atu ed
8 Vex
9 Compass

i'tl

10 lnacl ve
11 Men scus
12 French a 1
c le
13 Greek
mounta n
14 Throe
15 Conjunct on
16 Sa~nle

(abb 1
17 Tel ur um
symbol
21 Mak e eady
22 Allar screen
23 Scut
25 Insect
27 Quest
28 Bed cane
pes
30 Shower
31 lm 1aled
33 Scorches
35 Planet
36 Partner
37 Redacts
39 Sma I ch ld
41 F u I
42 Is II
44 Choose
47 Woody
p an t
48 Became
more
unp easant
49 Home run
k ng
50 Expunge
54 Warm ng
dev ce
55 Add 1 on a
56 To s
59 Hurls
60 Hastened
6 1 P eposton
63 Great Lake
66 Scale note
67 Manuscr pi
(abbr )
68 Norm
70 Rasp
71 Veh c e
72 Rubber t ee
73 Fr ght
75 Goes n
77 Tw tch ng
78 Depos I
80 Metal fas
t e ner

83 Col ege off
cal

86
88
89
90
91

Put off
Entrances
Foam
Cent (abbr )
Railroad
(abbr I
94 Sedate
96 Ex1st
98 Southwest
ern nd ans
99 Pre dom
nate
100 Inflates
102 Shovel
104 Story
105 Poses
106 1ncome
107 Bu111
109 T ps
111 lngred ents
112 Departed
113 Man s n1ck

name
11 6 D ocese
11 8 Omen
119 Statement
122 Scoffs
124 Three base
ht
125 Danng
126 Drooped
128 Th ck
130 Eon
13 1 L fl
132 Ta kld y
135 Og le
137 Waste
al owance
138 Solar diSk
140 - Angeles
142 Man s name
143 Theater
sign Abbr
144 D stnct
Allorney
(abbr I
145 Tee
typewr ler
(abbr)
147 PrepoSit on
148 Exclamat on

LEGAl. NOTICE
TO BIDDEI!S
Not ce s hereby g ven
that sealed b ds w II be
rece ved by the C ty
Manager of the C ly ot
Gall po s Oh o at h s ot
f ce
n the Mun c1 pal
Bu ld ng for Fa thful Per
formance Pos t on Bond
Cove age and Fa thfu Per
formance 8 anket Bond
Coverage for the em
ployees at the c ly of
Gallo pol s
B ds w II be rece ved at
the above named off c:e un
t 12 00 Noon loca t me on
Wednesday March 26 19BO
and publ ely opened and
read at tha t hour and place
B d forms may be obta ned
n the Ott ce of the C ly
Manager
518 Second
Avenue C ty ot Ga ll pol s
Oh o
March 9 16

Announcements
Card of Thanks
The family of Emma F n
dl ng w shes lo thank
relat ves fr ends ne gh
bars for the r k nd nesses
du ng her
llness and
death Spec al thanks to the
Home Health Care Nurses
Mem o r al
v e t era n s
Hos p tal staff
the Dr
Dayo s pa llbearers Rev
Thomas E(IJ ng Funeral
Home and the Summer
Commu n t y for flowers
The t a m es of Emma F n
dl ng

The tam ly of Tal y Ho
Vernon Hysel woul d I keto
extend our hearlfe I !hanks
to the Pomeroy Emergen
cy
Squad
Veterans
Hasp tal Ew ng Funeral
Home Mr and Mrs Ar
nold Grate
fo r the
beaut fu songs to Rev An
c I W se for h s words of
comfort to the pallbearers
and 1o the Carpenle s
Loca 650 the Eagles and
th e A mer en Leg on fo
the r touch ng M I tary Ser
v ce also the wonderful
fr ends and ne ghbors and
relat ves ot Ta ll y s who
sent
flowers
who
helped
n any
way northe
death
of
our son and brother Tally
May God B ess each and
everyone He s gone but
never forgollen by mother
Mary Huysell
Brother
Dale Hysell and s sler Mrs
John A Jeffers (Rober a)

2

Then sweet ly reca lled her
wthgrace
o Heaven
To dwel l peacefu ly n h s
own embrace
Sadly m ssed by Relal ves
and Fr ends
n lov ng memory of my
dear husband Par ey T
Karr who passed away
March 7 1975
There comes a t me for all
of us
When we must say good
bye
But Fa th and Hope and
Love and Trust can never
never d e
GrelJtly m ssed by w fe
Altana
sons Pau
and
Horace Karr and daughrer
Kathryn Mara
grand
ch dren
an d
g reat
grandch dren

Announcements

GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAYlPM FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY RACIN E
GUN CLUB
GUN
SHOOT
Rae ne
Vo unt eer
F re
Dept
Every Saturday 6 30 p m
AI the r bu d ng n Bashan
Factory choke guns on y
GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 00 Factory choke only
Corn Hollow Gun C ub
Rutland Proceeds donated
Ia Boy Scout Troop 249
BUYING U 5
S LVER
CONS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER
(ANY
AMOUNT) DON T LOSE
MONEY SIMPLY P CK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 992 5113
BROWNS
I PAY highest pr ces
possible for gold and s lver
cons rings 1ewe1ry etc
Contact Ed Burkel! Barber
Shop Middleport
GOLD
Slt.VER
FOREIGN COINS
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS ALSO
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR CHECK WITH
OSBY (OSSIE) MAR T IN
BEFORE
SELLING
PHONE 992 6370 ALSO
DO APPRAISING

Announcements

7

SWEEPER and sew ng
mach ne repa r parts and
suppl es
P ck up and
del very Oav s Vacuum
Cleaner one half m le up
Georges Creek Rd
Call
446 0294
FOR THE BEST ~y n
d amends &amp; 1ewelry go to
Tawney Jewelers Com
pare pr ces and values
You can save a fortune
shopp ng at Tawney s 422
Second Ave Gall po s Oh
many of our 1tems pr ced at
200 gold and 9 00 sol ver
FOR THE MONTH of Feb
Drehel s Ceram cs Green
ware 30% off Glazes 20%ott 50 N Second Ave M d
dleporl 01 o 614 992 2751
Beef ne Spr ng Style Show
at M e gs Inn March 10 7 30
p m Everyone wel co me
$200 draw ng tor lash on
door pr zes
Due
to
II ness
no
t respass ng at the Carol
Tr plell res dence on Cor
nell Rd Pori and OH
w thout wr tten per
m ss on

Process ng
Jones Mea
Slaughter fac I t es now
open Wash ngton County
Rd 248 Litle Hock ng
OH 667 6133
P ck ng up an Easy play
organ
n your area
Look ng for a r espons•b e
party to take over paymen
ts Call cred1t manager
collect 614 592 5122

JOY S SALON OF
BEAUTY
March 10 thru 14
Reg 30
Now for S20
Reg $20 Now tor SIB so
Owner IS
Joy Ray R fe
367 7526

~;===~~~===~
BROTHERS
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
Fmest quality at lowest
pass ble pnces
Call
now for free estimate
Commerc1al or res den
loa I
256 1562

In Memonam

IN LOVING Memory of
Ramona Hoover Stout who
passed away one year ago
on March 9 1979
God loaned us one prec ous
angel
He bount fu y blessed her

3

3

MARCH SPECIAl.
Apple trees &amp; grape
v1nes dormant spray &amp;
prunong Economy land
scap1ng at economy
pr.ces
Call379 2114

~~;;~;:;:;:;;;:;;~~~
DISCOUNT
PRICES
Hotpomt and
General Electrrc
Appliance
Sales &amp; Serv1ce

LANDMARK
Jack W Carsey
Mgr
Phone 992 2181
G1veaway

ANY PERSON who has
anyth ng to g1ve away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad In lh s
co umn There w II be no
charge to the advertiser
MALE SHEPHERD black
&amp; grey Loyal loves al
tentloo Free to a gOOd
home Call 446 0515 after
500pm
COCKER SPANIELS 2
females To a good home
Call 38B 9865
5 WHITE PI Samoyed pup
p1es 6 wks ca II 446 1324
PUPPIES
Mixed small
breed Call245 5800

7 COON HOUND puppies
Cal 379 2164
&lt;., U NIE
PIG
g veaway Call 3B8 8492

6

to

Lost and Found

lost Brown clutch purse
benoeen Jones Boys In
Pomeroy
or
Racine
Reward offered 992 259B

7

Yard Sale

4 FAMILY
GARAGE
SALE March 10 lt 12 13
14th from911113

8

Public Sale

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN
We self 1nytlllng for
anybody a! our "uctlon
.. ,n or I• your Mtilt For
fnformallon and pickup
Mrvlce call zu 1H7
Sale Every Sf!turday
Nlghla17p m

SWAIN

NOI1010S

AUCTION SERVICE

Kenneth Swain "ucl
Cor"nerThkd &amp; Olive

4 Fam11y garage sale l:i3
Park Dr Nea r Burger
Chef Po nt P easant W
Va March 10 11 12 13 14
93

8

Public Sale
&amp; AUctiOn

ASTRO•GRAPH

Public Sale
&amp; AUctiOn

Bern1ce Bede Osol

BRADFORD Auctioneer
Complete Service Phone
949 2487 or 949 2000 rac~ne
Oh o Crill Bradford

8

~"Wr

~ 'Birthday

Publtc Sale
&amp; AUctiOn

ll•rch t 1110
You can tmprove you lot n 1te
th s com ng year by ut lz ng the
nc eased sp rlt or adventure and
en terprise you possess Howev
er don t take far out lsks n the
p oceas for ha would be coun

PUBLIC AUCTION
STATIONARY TOOLS
SHOP EQUIPMENT
POWER AND HAND TOOLS HARDWARE PLUS
MANY OTHER ITEMS USE Dl N THE HOME

te p oduc ve
PISCES lfeb

20-Merch 20)
Joint ventures w I not wo k ou
the way you hope oday unless
you are prepared to put your
we ght Be a helpe no t a h nde
er -F nd out more of what lies

FRIDAY, MARCH 14, 1980

ahead fo you n lhe yea fo tow
ng your birthday by send ng or
you copy or Astro G aph Lette
Ma I S1 for each o Ast o--Graph
BoK -489 RadoC y Stat on NY
100 19 Be sue o spec ry b th
date
AltfES (Merch 21 April 11) Pu
al your ca ds on he tab e when
dealing f you expect others to
do the sa me w th ycu Th s s not
a day for playing h de--and seek
TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) Th s
ca n be a rewa d ng day bu
don t expect th ngs to be handed
to you on a sl ver p atter II you I
wo k hard you I succeed
GEMINI (M•J 21 June 20) Don t
base imponant judgmehte on
one slded views You must look
at s tuat ons f om every angle n
01de to ge 8 clea unde ste.nd

BEGINNING AT 7.00 PM
For your convemence th1s merchand se has been
moved lo Meogs H gh School

Name Brand Items Sk B ack &amp; Decker Stanley
Rockwell Ch cago Pneumat c Rodac Herbrand
DeWalt Campbell Haust eld
Channel t.ock
Wr ght lngerso Rand Rosco Vaughn All ed
Tr umph lrw n Kraeuler Wilton Cummins con
t nental and more
STATIONARY TOOI.S
Floor and table model mach n sl dr I presses w lh
rap d rack and p n on sw ng around tables 12Speed
I ght work area morse taper chuck and other
outstand ng features
12 to 5 h p Campbell
Hausfeld a~r compressors portable and sla
t onary Ba nbr dge mel a I cut off saws cut up to
10
Beam 1 2 Ia 3 ton V k ng floor 1acks Double
wheel bench and I oar mode grinders up Ia 2 h p
Floor model ballery chargers Portable floor Vacs
Tool chests Inventory sub1ec1 to change due to sup
pi ers ava lab ly
HAND TOOLS AND MISCELLANEOUS
AI s zes socket sets gr nders torque wrenches
vises hydrau lc 1acks electric dr lis drill bits
eleclr c and a r mpact tools all s zes and types
pliers and cutters stee measunng tape screw
pr vers hex key wrenches hammers axes
sledges electr cal tape trouble lghts extension
cords low chains crescent wrenches tune up
kits power pulls bolt cutlers p pe wrenches a r
and acet ylene hoses boIs nuts washers garden
hose gloves flashl ghls llashllghl batteries
houseware terns plus many more

ng

CANCER IJu.. 21-.fulr 22) The
examp e you set for coworke s
today s ext erne y mpo I ant
They won t be w I ng to p educe
you take too many coffee
b eaka
LEO (Julr 23-AUV 22) Even
though you may feet you can
manage matters bette than you
companions be very carefu not

to behaved ctatorla ly
VIRGO (AUV 23-Sept 22) You
mate may be a bit ext avagant
today whe e taml y f nances are
concerned Have an unde staf'ld
ng that nether of you wll spend
s zable sums wl hout he other s
consent
L•RA (Bopl 23-0cl 23) You
have good eadershlp quallt es
tOday and ttl s Is commendable

but not everyone w I be look ng
for a boss Be careful of whom

TERMS cash All sales made by number system
V1ew.ng one hour pnor to sale Not responsible for
acc1dents
SALE SPONSORED BY MEIGS FHA
Auct1oneers Dan Smtth and Jem Carnahan
9491033 949 2708
NOTE The lnd anapol s lndustr al Too Company
s based n Wh testown ln d ana and s not affll ated
w1th any other too company of 11s type If you are 1n
the need of good tools be sure and not m1ss th1s sale
These tools carry taclory warrant es and
guarantees For add1tonal nformat on call Noble
Ratts 217 769 6767 or 317 769 6135 If your club or
orgamzat1on needs a fund ra smg pro1ect call on us
or your local auct1oneer

you Issue ordefs o

SCORPIO (Ocl 2&lt;-Hov 22)
F nsnc al cond tlons cou d be a
m xed bag today because you
8 e both sh ewd and ex rava
gan Unfortunately you ndul
gent wh ms may rule
8AGmARIUS (Nov 23-Doc 21)
You friends nd you an en oy
able compan on because they
I ke the way you treat them Be

: sure to show equel conce n lo
fam ly and loved ones
CAPRICORN (Doc 22..,.n 11)
The e a a poss blllty you may not
th nk as much of your capabll
ties today- as you should Modes
ty s becoming but negat ve
thoughts a e self defeating
AQUARIUS IJon 20-Fob II) As
long as )'OU do everything n
• accordance wt h your highest
1 Ideals today will be a ser es or
pleaaant events Should you
show slgna of self ahnesa t 1 be
• a dlfferen maUer

FARM AUCTION
SATURDAY, MARCH 15, 1980
11:00 A.M

NEWSP"fER ENTEAPA SE 4SSN

LOCATION From Vonton OhiO take Rl 325 So to
Roy Holcomb Rd ( approx 3 m l go to Ml Tabor
Rd turn right Ia Coal Valley Rd turn left - !be
2nd farm on !be r~gbt From Rt 325 at R1o Grande
goNE approx 7 mo Ia Roy Holcomb Rd WATCH
FOR SIGNS
OWNER MR &amp; MRS HOWARD CHILDERS
AUCTIONEER TOMMY JOE STEWART
Ph 446 9760- 446 7222

&lt;lATALYTIC
CON
VERTERS
(Used) cop
per
brass
alum num
lead batteries radiators
automatic transmissions
(junk) beef hides furs and
Gmseng Call Rober! L
Harper 675 3616 or 675
5202
DIAMONDS
old coins
wedding bands
estate
1ewelry class rings etc
TAWNEY JEWELERS
422 Second Ave
· OLD LAW BOOKS and or
: ~9";~~ro~:.~n~~~~:r~r
•would consider entire
: ubrarv contact Ken Wise
•367 723~

MILKING EQUIPMENT 500 gal Solar stainless
steer bulk m lk lank sta nless steel wash vats w/5
hP compressors 1 set Chore Boy 6 un 1 milkers
w/ p pe I ne Clay 3 on a side milk ng parlor 40 gal
holwaler lank

Help Wanted

Would you Ike to be paid for
going to college? You can
gel thiS and extras flke a
$1500 00 bonus free Iran
sportatlon to exotic
paradises like Hawaii and
Puerto Rico
l,.lfe tn
surance and more just for
one weekend a month and
15 days a year In !he Oh o
A r National Guard
To
lind out how lh s dream can
come true for you call
MSgt M1ke Gilmore at
(614) 474 7048 (collect)
n ghls
(614)
497 0607
(collect) days
NEEDED
Experienced
body technician at Thaler
Ford Call 446 3575 See
John Smith
HAIR STYLIST WANTED
Apply 10 person at Across
the Street Halrslyl ng
Salon
600 Th rd Ave
Gallipolis Tues thru Sal
for Interview or call 446
9510
POSITION OPEN FOR
Director of Mason Co
Chlldrens home a small
group home for teenage
girls Masters degree In
Social Work counseling or
Psycology preffered Will
consider a B A degree or
B S W degree plus several
years of experience Inch ld
welfare
or
chlldrens
programs
Salary
negotiable depending on
education and experience
Please send resume to Mrs
Paula Anderson
Mason
Co Chlldrens Home 306
12th Sl
PI Pleasant
W VA 25S50

13

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
IN
SURANCE been
can
celled?
t.ost
your
operator s license? Phone
992 2163
SANDY AND BEAVER In
surance Co has offered
services lor f~re nsurance
coverage In Galha County
tor a Imost a century
Farm home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet m
dlvldual needs Contact
Emmell Church
your
neighbor and agent
15 Schools

~1

Help Wanted

DISCRAFTSHOP
446 2134
Free Easter candy making
demonstrations
Wed
nesday 7 p m Saturday 1
p m Everyone IS welcome
now thru March 31st
16

AUCTION

RON S TV SERVICE
Specializing In Zenith
House Calls Call 1 304 576
2398 or 446 2454
18

WILL DO House cleaning
moderate rates call 446
8626 or 675-6060
WILL Care tor elderly In
my home
Reasonable
rates experienced
Call
256 9301

Money to Loan

22

FINANCING VA FHA LO
ANS LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE
IREl..AND MORTGAGE
77 E STATE ATHENS
614 592 3051

201~

Want someone to stay wllh
) nvalld husband and son
while wife Is In hospital
)92 32~

)

Flnanc1al

·------~~------'Need babysitter In Racine
•area
Must have very
:rlextble hours 949 2347 or

:----~--~---------­

SAT., MARCH 29, 1980

Wanted to Do

FHA VA Convenllal Home
Loans
Columbus First
Mortgage
Co
loan
representative
VIolet
&lt;Cookie) Viers 463 Second
Ave Gallipolis Oh 446

114'1

COMING UP

RadloTV
&amp;CB Repatr

pET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
d earn good money plus
me great gills as a Sen
nel route carrier Phone
~s right away and gel on
the eligibilitY list at 992
2156 or 992 2157

F,

SIGNMENT MACHI

I nstructlon

DISCRAFTSHOP
446 2134
Tole Painting and dlmen
s onal tole classes now lor
mlng Call tor r egistration

Employment
Services

eAUCTIONEERS NOTE All the farm equ pment
and m lk ng equ pmenl s n excellent condlllonbe there at 11 00 sharp as there are very few small
tems
LUNCH SERVED
TERMS CASH OR CHECK WITH I D
SNol responsible for acc1denlsS

All Farmers Are Invited to Buy or Sell
Your Production Credit Association Is offering as a
serv ce to tile farmers a chance to buy or sell used
farm equipment al pub lc auction This will be an
opportunlly for you to sell any excess machinery
you njjly have for the top dollar as well aJ to chOOse
from a large selection of good used machinery to fill
your current needs
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS
NOTE Allll~ms on conlr•cl by'March 14 1980 will
be adverii.Jed In 10 pal)frs Loading unloading rest
rooms no junk or- unoperable equipment will be ac
cepted ~ commission per llem S5 00 minimum
Equipment will be received on fv\arch 26 27 28
from lOAM unlll5 PM
David R Altlur ~alii polls office 614 446-3391 tron
ton Office 614 532 2U4 Athens Office 614 St3 3573
Jackson PCAOfflce614 216-,_,.1
Number system
All sales final
Terms cash
Pleaae K..p This Ad
/
SPONSORED BY
JACKSON PRODUCTION CREDIT ASSOC
Gallipolis Ohl0614 dHm
John E Ross
Auctlon..rs
Daniel A; .JJou

Wanted to Buy

9

FARM MACHINERY 2 Oliver BB farm tractors (1
d esel &amp; 1 gas) J D J.5 fie d chopper (with hay
head) M H N 25 blowers 2 yrs o d Grove silage
wagon Coby silage wagon
2 Platz s1lage
d sir butors l Plalz s Ia un oader 16 20 40 9
metal blower p pe 40 9 plasl c blower p1pe 1 Plait
50 cha n bunk feeder 2 tripods for SilO unloader 1
wagon runn ng gears J D pull type plows 5 bush
hog porlab e P T 0 Alternator power plan! (120
volts
240 VOIIS) 25 KVW I ke new J 0 Flald
manure spreader 12 4 auger With motor 10 6
auger w lh motor 10 belt elevator w/ motor drag
elevator 6 !on bri ck bulk feed b n (like new) 2
automat c ca lf waterers w/ heaters

BEGINNING AT 11 AM
LUNCH SERVED
Located at P C A offic:e 228 Upper R1ver
Road Gallipolis, Oh1o

11

Wanted Someone to haul
!lOme
furnishings
Ia
l=lorlda
Approximate
weight 3 tons Will load
~~ unload myself 992
I

Man experienced In com
lnerclal
roQflng
and
rlpalr Phone 949 2763
LABRATORY TECHNIC I

~~r

General labratory
work Must have an M L T
~ASCP) or equivalent Ex
cellentfrlnge benefits Con
'act Labratory Supervisor
l&gt;ll&lt;e Co
Hosplla I
waverty OH 45690 or call
~14947 2186 An Equal OpPDrtu!IIIY Employer

I

7172

Mortgage
money
available New homes old
homes and reflnanclhg
your present home CON
VENTIONAL 5 Pet down
VA
no down payment
FHA low down payment
FHA
2A5 graduated
payment program FHA
265 subsidy program Call
for details
1RELAND
MORTGAGE CO
77 E
Slate st Athens 592 3051

23

P.rofesslonal
Services
INCOME TAX
SERVICE
Audrey Canaday
25 LOCUli 51 Galllpolll
9 5 MOll sat evenlnta
bYIPIMIInfment
PIIOM-~

liiABYSITJER needed for 3
~hlldren Call 446 0910

'
!FULL
time live tn position
land part time week and
~eekend poeltlon for group
1JOITI• for five. men who are
Odevelapm.ntaJIY disabled
~n Gellfpolls area Se~d
:l:nume to Buckeye com
unlty Sei'vlces P 0 box
J~son OH
~
qual OpPorl~nl~ Em

E

J»loyer

~·
•
'

'

~-

KOTALIC
LANDSCA!"ING
RH~Ial &amp; commer
Cfll T'r'etl &amp; ShrubS Ill'
atallft, dttlgnlng &amp;
(IIIRHIII Plan for sprIng plantings
at
reuonalllt
ntes

..... u ..

... ::,"r..,.

~111.-lls, Ohio

Profess1ona1
Servic:es

23
CALL

34 Busmess Bu1ldmgs

for
your
photograp~lc needs
Por
Ira I
passports
com
mere al and wedd1ng
photography
Tawney
Studios 424 Second Ave
31

US

Homes for Sale

BY OWNER 3 bdr house
kitchen F R wood bur
nlng fireplace lg level 101
Call 446 3100
HOME 3 bdr and bath 1 6
acre of ground 51 Rl 553
12 m le off Rl 7 S16 000
Call256 1270
MODULAR HOME lo trade
for house In Gall polls area
Modular home features 3
bdr bath kitchen din ng
room large I v ng room
nice large size lot located
on Georges Creek Rd For
more Information call 446
4765 anytime or 446 9595

30x46
acre
trade
equa&lt;

35

Lots &amp; Acreage

2 13 acres all wooded
Green Schoo l bldg lot only
446 3063 after 6 p m
CENTRAL
FLORIDA
SACR IFI CE Half acre n
exclus ve community Lg
lake boa! ng flshmg san
dy beach pulling green
ball field
tennis $700
down
ASSUME
B'l•
LOAN
Low payments
Mrs F Scott 141 7th 51
5 w w nler Haven Fla
338BO or call (813) 293 S7BO

Rentals

41

Houses for Rent

Modern 3 bedroom home
basement with fireplace
central air fully carpeted
located on 612 acres near
Racine on Racine 8ashan
Rd 94'1 2836 alter 5 and
weekends Larry Wolfe
12x60 Hillcrest 2 bedroom
Furnished or unfurnished
992 6140

FOR RENT 5 room house
n Crown C1ty $120 mo
Call256 6664

Well built 3 bedroom hom
situated on 3 acres
overlooking the Oh o River
Aller 3 30 p m ca II 247
2032

42

1972 14x70 Beaullfui Vln
dale Mobile Home
2
bedroom expando living
room 2 bay windows por
ch
Electric
stove
refrigerator
dishwasher
carpeting and drapes 992
6135
Roomy 3 bedroom home
with bath natural gas
Leading Creek water
utility room I mmedlate
occupancy $9 500 Phooe
742 2460

Mob1le Homes
for Rent

2 BDR u N F trailer on
N G H S garden space
Call388 B794
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park Route 33 north of
Pomeroy Large lois Ca II
992 7479

44

Apartment
for Rent

NICE 3 bdr home unf
total feleclr c Located at
Evergreen Ref &amp; dep
req $260 Call 446 3192

Will am Fred Sm1th Sr
532 5 3rd Middleport OH
4 room house and bath All
new carpel 992 5871

32

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap
Is Phone 992 5434

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1973 Fairpoint 14x65 2
bedroom
1971 Cameron 14xi&gt;S 2
bedr
1971 Fleenvood 14xt.S 3
bdr bath 12
1971 Shakespear 14x65 2
bedroom
191&gt;5 Yanor 12x52 2 bedr
1968 Fleetwood t2x6J 2
Bdr
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES PT PLEASANT
wv JO.f 675 4424
1971 12xi&gt;S Trailer com
plete y furnished
A
very good condition On a
lot !hat can be rented
Ready to move Into $6500
firm 992 53(),1

c

1971 Freedom Mobile
Home 14x~ 3 bedroom In
eludes full length awning
central air located on
spacious lot which can be
rented
S7 900
Contact
Kingsbury Home Sales at
992 7034
1970 Fleetwood 2 bedroom
mobile home furnished
must move II 949 2182

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

WINTER SALE
Prices
reduced on used mobile
homes
TRI STATE
MOBILE HOMES CALL
446 7572
1973 Fairpoint 14xi&gt;S 2 bdr
1971 Cameron 14xi&gt;S 2 bdr
1971 Fleetwood 14xi&gt;S 3
bdr 1'12 bath
1971 Shakespeare 12x65 2
bdr
191&gt;5 Yanor 12X60 2 bdr
1968 Fleenoood 12x 60 2
bdr
B&amp;.S
Mobile Home Sales
PI Pleasant W VA
675 4424
1977 WINDSOR 14 x 70 un
turn Call675 6930
1968 VINDALE
12x63
good cond call446 2472
1971 12x60 HOMELITE
mobile hOme 2 bdr 1V2
baths good cond call 367
0205
2 BDR MOBILE HOME
extra nice with washer and
a~r cond
underpinning
and awning S4 000 Call
446 4053
19~ NEW MOON

10x60
central healing 53 000 Ci!,ll
446 2928

33

Farms for Sale

45 ACRfii FARM 3 ml from
Rio Grande 20 to 30 A
tillable tObacco poundage
of 1 069 lb old house 4
rooms and bllh House
needs rtmodeled S30 000'
firm 245-9210 245 9130

34 Bullntss Buildings
OFFICE BLDG
near
Spring Valley ShoPPing
Center 1650 SQ fl sulteblo
tor OptQIMtl'lt11 Beautv
Salon
R•ltor or In
suranc.. fllent~ 01 parking
Call44611239

RENTER 5 assistance for
senior Citizens In v llage
Manorapls Call992 7787
45

Furnished Rooms

Sleeping room for working
man $27 50 per week Cal
992 6022
SLEEPING ROOMS
rent Gallla Hotel

for

Space for Rent
2 TRAILER SPACES
Comcrete patio and walk
900 block In town Large
lawn area water paid S60
mo Call 446 4416 afler 5
pm

47

Household Goods

51

BLOCK BLDG on 95
of land su 500 or
for motor home of
value Cal1446 3395

LARGE home B rm and
bath l m11e fro m CIIY
lim Is comp carpeted fur
nace heat relrldgerator
and stove furn basement
ref and dep req wood
burn ng stove S300 mo
c a II 446 0239

1

•

POMEROY

4

8

Yard Sale

BundeJ lhrch g

Wanted to Rent

TRY THE NEW
PILLOW SOFT
SERTA
PERFECT
SLEEPER
THE ULTIMATE IN
SLEEPING COMFORT

Household Goods

GOOD
USED
AP
PLIANCES
Washers
dryerS
refndgerators
ranges
Skaggs Ap
pllances 1918 Eastern Av
ce 446 7398
LAYNE S FURNITURE
Sofa chair rocker ol
loman 3 tables S500 Sofa
cha~r and loveseat 5275
Sofas and chairs priced
from $275 to 5550 Tables
$33 $60 $7 ©
and SBS
Sofabed and chair S150
Hide a beds $300
queen
slle
S325
&amp;
UP
Recliners
$125
$150
S160 S175 and S225 Lam
ps from $18 lo S50 5 pc
dinettes from $69 to $325
Wood !able and 4 chairs
527S Table two leaves 6
chairs (high ba¢kedl S400
Hutches SJOO and 1350
maple or pine finish
Bedroom suites
S275
(while)
532S
(pecan)
$350 (oak) Bassell Oak
S550 Basse!! Cherry S67S
Bunk bed complete wllh
rT\attresses $175
1250
$275 captain s beds S250
comple)e Baby beds 175
Mattresses or box springs
full ... twin
firm 165
and 575 Queen sets 1185 4
dr chest S42 5 dr chests
$49 Bed frames 520 En
terlalnmenl centers S40
and 150 Desks 538
USED
Ranges
refrigerators
dressers
TV s
head
boards and beds Hutch
table and ~ha rs Chest
bedroom slllle
swivel
rocker bar stools desks
3 miles out Bulavllle Rd
Open 9at!f to 8pm Mon
tflru Frl 9am to 5pm Sal
446 0322

m

FIREWOOD
Sp II I
seasoned oak &amp; h ckory '
cross t e ends Ca 446 453
or 446 2329

'.;

52

All populr s zes In n eke
Cadm um
baller es
rechargabl~ for 1 000 or
more t1mes We have bat
tery chargers C B s base
and mobile
antennas
mast ng all s ze co axel
wire and hardware for 1n
stallal1on Stereo systems
with or w thou! malchln~
tables
portable color
teiev slons and scanners
prog rammable with lac
lory rebate up lo $25
Crystal type w th four tree
crystals France TV and
Electronics 39260 Brad
bury Rd M ddleporl OH
992 2276

Ant1ques

53

ATTENT ON
(IM
PORTAN T TO YOU) W I
pay cash or cerllfled check
for ant ques and coll ec
t1b1es or ent re estates
Nolh ng too large Also
guns pocket watches and
con collections Ca l 614
767 3167 or 557 3411
ATTENTION
(IM
PORT ANT TO YOU) W II
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec
tibles or entre estates
Nolh ng too large Also
guns pocket watches and
con collecllons Cal 614
767 3167 or SS7 3411
54

M1sc Merchamse

COAL
LIMESTONE
sand
gravel
calc um
chloride
fer! llzer
dog
food and all types of sail
Excelsior Sail Works Inc
E Main 51 Pomeroy 992
3891
APPLES
ROME beauty
apples a! S4 per bu Best for
apple buller Call 669 3785
F11tpalnck Orchard SR
689

EMERGENCY
power
alternators - own t he best
-- buy Wlnpower Ca ll 513
788 2589
IN STOCK for lmmed ate
delivery vanous s zes of
pool k1ls Do II yourse f or
let us nstall for you D
Bumgardner Sa les Inc
992 5724
Apples Rome Beauty at
S4 00 per bushe Exc for
p es sauce and buller F 1
zpalrlck Orchard
Stale
Route
689
Phone
W lkesv lie 669 3785

Wanted ResponSible party
to take over low monthly
payments on spinet p ana
Can be seen locally Write
cred1t manager P 0 Box
537 Shelbyville nd 45676
Living room furniture 1
green and gold brocade
traditional sofa 96 Inches
long Love seal cui vel vel
oyster wh1te w th ol ve
green tnm 4 piece set of
Italian provlnc al while
marble top end tables All
exc cond 985 3595

Decorated cakes for all oc
caslons Character cakes
and sheet cakes Call 992
6342or992 2583
Two gun cabinets
One '.4 cherry 10
capacity !he other
I nlsh 6 gun capacity
5078

new
gun
oak
992

Singer
Fashoon Male
sewing machine Cal 992
3039 or f no answer ca ll

992 3090
Bobcat M 700 Hydrostatic
30 H P $3 950 Bobcat M 611
Diesel like new JO H P
$7 900 Ditch Witch J 20
S4 500 ca111 614 457 3139
FREEZER Chest type 23
cu II $180 Good cond
can 37~ 2617
45 CAL MUZZLE loading
rifle wllh kll tor making 45
cal balls Call446 40'18
LADIES lovely size 12 and
14 spring and summer
clothes Includes noo coal
and dress ensembles noo
dress and 1aoket sulls
other dresses worn only on
ce or not ~~ all Call 992
3283
LADIES size 14 peach color
leatller coat Cost $295
never worn Will sacraflce
tor $90 Also new size 12 fur
lackel Call992 3283
ANTIQUE ~In S Roll lop
desk old Butcher s block
c'II24S 505ol

Pets for Sale

POODLE GROOMING
Ca ll Judy Tay or at 367

7220

F R EWOOO
H ckoryr,
red wh e &amp; b ack Oak
Sugar Maple $35 true ~
oad we also have Ca I 446)7145 alter 6

S&amp;E G fl Shop (Syracuse)
10 Percent Oft on all !ems
during March

51

BRIARPATCH
KEN
NELS
Boarding and
groom ng
AKC Gordon
Sellers
Engl sh Cocker
Span els Call446 4191

955 Second Avenu e
Gallipolis Ohoo
45631
PHONE 614 446 1171

WAN2 or 3 bdr home n
rountrv call ,4.46 0492

Merchandise

FIREWOOD
seasone d
oak ash and h ckory P h
446 9442

CORBIN and SNYDER
FURNITURE

Pawn Broker golf and
guns used silver 19~ or
earlier for purcnases John
Teaford 614 9BS 3961

Wan! Ia rent Muse located
rn Pomeroy Middleport
area Phone 992 2946

56

40 LB Box of West V rg n a
Chunks low ash ow su tv r
Fosler Coa Co 446 2783

WANT to rent 4 bdr house
tor manager and faml y
moving to Gallipolis Call
446 7070 ask for Hank

WANT TO RENT 1 or 2
bdr apart private turn
within 5 m11e radius of
Gall pol s Call446 2342 and
Ask lor Mark

54 Mt5C Merchandtse

DRAGONWYNO
CAT
TERY
KENNEL AKC
Chow ChOW dogs CFA
H malayan Pe san and
S amese cats Orders for
spr ng pupp es and k ttens
are be.ng accepted Cal
446 3844 after 6 p m

SP INE T P ANO Console .
wanted Respons bl e part y
to take over low month! y
payments on sp nel p a no) .
Can be seen oca ly Write
erect t manager P 0 bo
537 Shelbyv lie N D 46176

AKC Reg Cocker Spa els
call 245 5892

BUY DIRECT Elm nate
them ddle man l6xJ2xB n
ground poo l comp ele w 1h
l adders
sk mmer an d
f ler $3 245 Ca ll loday l
BOO 2B2 510B

AKC Reg Toy Poodle Ca ll
895 3926

POOLS POOL S POOLS !
AI new 1979 model sw m
m ng pool s must go a t on
ce S1 640 buys a g an I
31x16x6 poo compl et e w t h
fen ce pat o deck F lier
and pump Complete y n
stalled help us make room
for our l9BO s Ca 1 BOO)·
2B2 510B

,.
e

AKC REG Old Engl sh
Sheepdogs
Mal es
wh leheads ca 1 JBB B441
3BB 1704 or 446 807 4

57

CLARI NET
S gnet
Selm ar Spec1a l wooden
Good cond t on Call 446
B570
WANTED
Respons be
party to take over low man
thly payments on Sp net
P a no Can be seen local y
Wr te Cred I Manager
P 0 Box 537 Shelbyv I e
NO 46176

:

200 ba es of hay 75 cent $
per ba le call446 1052

24 Ft t ra vel tra ler sel f·

,.

conta ned fu I bath sleep $
4 Tandem wheels Cal 367
0205

!an k
hose

,_

1976 LARK fold down ca m
per w th gas stove ele
refr dgeralor $1 750 Ca~i
379 2430

ELECTRIC cook ng rang e,
a mend color used J mos.
Cal l446 4179
CUSTOM BUILT knott y
p ne k tchen cab nets 9x 12.
Priced $950 Cal 446 1552
LOWREY GENIE 44 Elec:!ric organ Sunray doubl e
oven elec
range
an 1_.
s nger tread e sew ng.
mach ne AM FM stereo
radio and cassete p layer
auto water softener Ca ;i
367 72 12
HALLEY S DOG SUP'·
PLIES Just below Racoon
Br dge on St Rt 7 cal 256
6551
Boalman suppl es
King Of Sport teed 2~
prot en 50 lb S9 00 100 lb
$17 00 Hours for Marc h
pm toBpm

•·

.;

MOVING 3 rugs for sale
qreen b ue and rust exc
cond call446 4461

ss

Bu1ldmg Supplies

ALL TYPES of bu ld ng
materials
bock
bnck
sewer pipes wmdows
n
tels etc Claude W nters
R o Grande 0 Phone 245
5121 alter Spm

;:
::

KACH ALL PORTABLE
BLDG All sizes 6Xl0 I 0
12x40 See al 123 2 P neSt
446 27B3 or 3 houses below'
Bowling Alley on Rl 7 446
1279
MUST SELL NOW
AI I
steel b dgs
40x72x14
$5 69 S
F 0 B
a Is 0'
40x48xl4
$4 395 F 0 B
Cal l now
51327B4B2 i
collect

56

Pets for Sale

HOOF HOLLOW English
and Western Saddles and
harnes s
H orses
and
ponies Ruth Reeves 614 698 3290
Bard ng and
RIding Lessons and Horse
Care products Western
boots Children s SlS 50
Adu liS $29 00
RISING STAR Kennel
Boarding Call 367 0292
POODLE
GROOMING
Judy T•ylor 614 367 7?20

MUSICal

Instruments

GOOO MI XED HAY
$
bale or w II trade for ca
lie Call446 1052 alter 5

Farm Supplies
&amp; L1vestock
61

Farm Equ1pment

ECHO CHAIN SAW S
hydrau lc wood spllllers
saw cha n bars and a I
wood cull ng suppli es
Charles McKean Fa rf eld
centenary Road 446 9442
62

AKC registered while
female German Shepherd
9 mos old 985 4288 $50

•

Wanted to Buy

CHIP WOOD Po es max
d a meter 10
on largest
end $12 p er ton Bund ed
slab $10 per ton Del vered
lo OhiO Pal et Co Rl 2
Pomeroy 992 2689
ANTIQUE S
F UR
NI T URE
glass
ch na
anylh1ng See or ca I Ruth
Gosney ant ques 26 N
2nd M ddlepor t OH 992
3161
OLD COl NS pocket wat
ches class r ngs wedd ng
bands d amends Gold or
s ver Call J A Wams ey
742 2331 Treasure Chest
Co n Shop A! hens OH 592
6462
GOLD
SILVER
OR
FOREIGN CO NS
OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS AL SO
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
TEMS WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR CHECK WITH
OSBY (OSS El MART N
BEFORE
SE LLIN G
PHONE 992 6370 ALSO DO
APPRAISING
Now acceplng logs at our
log yard 7 30 3 30 week
days High price~ tor good
qual IY logs with a I m led
amount of low grade
Payment upon del very
and seal ng Blaney Har
dWoods Box 66 Vincent
OH 45784 614 67B 2960

GOLD
AND
COINS OF THE WORLD
R NGS
JEWELRY
STERLING SILVER ANO
MISC ITEMS PAYING
RECORD
HIGH
HIGHEST UP TO OATE
PRICE S CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP
MIDDLEPORT
OHIO OR CALL 992 3476
Wanted to buy a newer
car to lake over payments
N2 3080

OLD FURNITURE
ce
boxes brass beds Iron
beds desks etc complete
households Wnle M 0
Miller Rl 4 Pomeroy or
ca 1992 7760
OLO FURNITURE
Ice
boxes brass beds Iron
beds desks etc complete
households Wrlle M o
Miller Rt 4 Pomeroy or
ca 1992 7760
RENTAL houses and ren
BUY SELL TRADE hor
ses and ponys Hay for
sale Call 256 1507
63

Wanted
Immediately
registered golden retriever
stud serv1ce 742 2957

HAY

Extra good m x

Alta f a and Brom ca

245

5029
&amp; HAY
J D
Jc R 7 &amp; Hdnnan
T ace Rd Ca 1256 6537

Poll

Transportation
71

Autos for Sale

1976 Hond a 1974 V\azoa
1976 G em n ca r Realty

Inc 446 7tlB
1976 CHEVROLET 9 pass
wagon A
very gd con d
$1 995 Ca 446 4 41 aller 6
or on wk ends

CARS FOR SA LE
Ca
446 0020 between 6 and
pm
1973 FORD Sta on wagon
Good unn ng cond c"
367 7187

l974MU STA "JG
Bes of
fe takes t Call 388 8436 or
446 3543 and ask or Dave
Dunn
1968 FORD CUSTOM B
cyl
rad o au o tra ns
runs good S595 Ca 446
4223
79 CHEVY Chevette aulo
trans a r 4 dr 2 tone b ve
rad as B 000 m $4 395 76
Ll NCOLN
Con nenta l
Town Coupe 2 dr l oaded
56 000 m $3595 69 CHEV
Stat on Wagon sma V 8
std trans rad a s n ce
wo k C8 $595 Ph 245 97 0
or 245 9130
1973 0 ds Omega hat
c hback 350 eng ne au o
trans
ps powe
d ~c
brakes 56 000 actu a m es
must se ll
mm ed a e y
Sl 000 or bes oil er AI er 5
ca 1 446 32 o
1975 FORD Mu stang
4
spd 6 cy pb ps AC AM
F M stereo 446 3B70
1964
good
3636
1975 DOD GE CORO NoT
H T 4 dr good cond ca 1
446 3253
1974 VAL ANT
64 000
m les good m p g AM
rad o a r cond exc body
Call after 5 or weekends
446 OB56
1976 TRANS AM 27 000 ac
tva m es exc con d
a
446 3437
1952 CHEVY p Ck up
ev ery h ng or g na
C I
367 72 2
1974 SUPER BE ETLE
Volkswagen Good cond
$2 500 cal 256 6B26
1~2 DODGE POL ARA
One owner w I cons der
best offer Call 446 0298 at
ler 5 p m

1976 Camaro 305 eng ne
crager mags a r shocks
$2 BOO 00 992 3169

1977 Th underb rd
PS
P B
AM FM
rad als
$2 BOO 247 3594
1976 Chevy Mal bu 4 door
6 cy l p s p b good cond
Anx ous Ia sell $1600 Ra ph
Trusse I 949 2660
1972 Camaro 350 V 8 eng
New battery new exha ust
runs good $300 9B5 357 4
1976 Ford Granada am fm
8 track
ac
reel n ng
bucket seats v ny top 2
dr 302 auto $1 400 949
2619
Good gas saver 1919 Mer
cury Bobcat 3 dr hat
chback 4 cyl m ot a auto
ps
I nted glass back
glass defroster
sports
m rror remote cant r ght
and left Rad alI res super
seal rust proof ed AM FM
rad o 6 000 actual m es
$4 000 949 2B20
1973 Ford Maver ck very
good cond
small V 8
auto good tires SS 000 ac
tul m les 985 4346
76 Monza 4 cyl nder 4
speed 59 000 m es 2 snow
!~res
nc uded Ca
992
7060

. tal property Cal 1446 7627

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breeds Clean
Indoor outdoor facilities
Also
AKC
registered
Dobermans 614 446 7795
HUMANE
SOCIETY
Adopt a homeless pet
Healthy shots wormed
Donations required 992
6~60 noon 7 p m

M xed Hay 60 cen s 11 bole
992 5866 or '1'12 398 1 at er 6
pm

CORN

BURROUGHS Bookkeep n,_ HILLCREST KENNEL
g mach ne $50 Ca
446)- Board ng al breeds c lean
ndoor outdoor fac I t es
2342
Also AKC Reg Oobe
mans Call446 7795
WORLO
BOOK
EN .
CYCLOPEDIA
Spec a I
BEAUTIFUL Wh te male
Sa e
$100 ott regu lar
Sp tz N ce 4 H p o ect Ca l
pr ce Pi! ment p lan Ca II
446 419
675 3775

•

Hay &amp; Gram

64

Livestock

Nice Pigs 949 2857
H&amp;N Day old or started
eghorn pullets both floor
or cage grown available
Poultry
Hous i ng and
Automation
Modern
Poultry 399 W Main
Pomeroy Phone 992 2164
PIGS

Hamp

York Call

446 4999 or 446 8539

73

vans&amp; 4 w

o

1978 CJ 5 Jeep black 6 cyl
eng
low mlleoge exc
cond Ca I 446 0859
FOR SALE OR TRADE
1972 Ford F 250 4 W 0 pick
vp Good r unn~n g con~
call 367 0397 afler 5

77

Auto Repa1 r

ROB ERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE 24 nr wrecker
service All types of repa r
Upper Rt 'I Call 446 2445
days and 446 4792 n1Qhls

�w-The Sunday T1t11 •..SOOtinel Sunday MJ&gt;n:h 9 UMIO
D-2- The Sunday Tlmes-Sentmel Sunday March 9 1980

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT
OF
TRANSPORTATION

Sec t ons 0 6 and 3 6 bv
ove av ng
he conc r e te
deck s w th dense cone ete

w m an

on of us ng
Ia ex mod t ed cone ete
rep ac ng br dge ra n~

Columbus Oh o

February 29 1980
Contract Sales
Legal Copy
No 80 69
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
SR 979i6l

Sealed proposa s w
be
rece ved at the off ce ot he
D rector of he Oh o Oepar
tment at Transpor afior)
Columbus Oh o unt 10 00
AM Oh o Standa d T me
Tuesday Apr 1 1 19BO o

mprovements n

Gal a County Oh o on
Br dge Nos GAL 233 00 6
!length 120 teet
w dth 36
fee1}, over Black Fork of

Symmes Creek and Ga
233 0376 length - 29 feet -

w dth 32

o~t

f eet) over Jenny

Creek on State ~oute 233

PakiStan IS constructing
four additiOnal energy centers w1th a grant of $1 8
nullion from the U N
Development Program
The centers Will p JVIde
electncal
power
for
lighting
1mgat10n and
small agnculluraI uruts
such as flour nulls They
Will help reduce the
nation s dependence on un
ported petroleum
After a campaign lasting
more than 12 years the U
N
World
Health
Orgamzatlon has an
nounced the complete
eradication of smallpox
The cost of the campaign
was approxunately $112
million

and

app oach guardra

a do her ela ed w ork
Pro ec L eng h
149 12

feet or 0 027 m ile

Work Length
teet or 0 099 m e

530 17

The Oh o Department of
Transportal on
hereby
not f es a I b dde s hat
w 1 aff rmat vely nsure
that n any contract en
tered nto pursuan o fh s
advert sement
m nor ty
bus ness en erp ses w II be
affo ded ful oppo tun ty to
subm b ds n esponse to
h s nv ta on and w I no
be d scr m nated aga ns
on the grounds oi race
color or nat ana or g n n
cons derat on
l or
an
award
M n mum wage rates
o th s pr o ect have been
predeterm ned as requ r ed
by law and a e set o th n
t e b d proosa
The date se for com
plet on ot th s work shall be
set forth n the b dd ng
proposal
Each b dder sha I be
equ ed of lew h h s b d
a ce 1 f ed che c k or
cashier s check to
an
amoun equa to f ve per
cent of h s b d but n no
event more than f fty
housand do Ia s o a bond
to ten per cent of h1 s b d
payab le o the o rect or
B dders mus appl y on
tor
the proper torms
qual f ca ti on at east ten
days pr or o the da e set
for open n~ b ds n ac
cordance w lh Chap ter 5525
Oh o Rev sed Code
Plans and spec t cat ons
are on f e n he Depart
ment ofT anspo tat on and
he off ce of the D st c
Deputy D rector
ihe 0 ecto
reserves
he r1ght to re ec t any and
a I b ds

PUBLIC NOTICE
Pub c water suppl es are
requ red
by
Sta te
Regula! on Chapter 3745
81
Oh o Adm n s at ve
Code to rou nel y man tor
the m crab o og cal qua ty
ot he dr nk ng water n
lhe r d sir but on system
The sampl ng conducted
for fhP Pomeroy water
system nd ca ed tha t the
max mum
perm ss ble
m crob c log cal
con
tam nant evel spec f ed n
he Oh o Adm n strat ve
Code was exceeded n 2
out of 11 samp es co lee ted
n July 1979
Col form bacter a are
used as an nd cator of the
m crob olog ca qua ty of
dr nk ng water Wh le the
co l form bacte a
hem
se ves may post no threat
o hea th their presence
does nd cate that d source
of cent am nat on ex sts
somewhere n the water
system Such an nd cat on
s adeqva e us f cat on for
an nvest ga on to deter
m ne the nature and scope
of the poss be health
hazard
A
subsequen
n
vest gat on and add anal
samp ng nd cate that any
prob em has bee., correc
led
Boa d of
Pub I c Alta rs

LEGAL NOTICE
TO BIDDERS
Not ce s hereby given
that sealed b ds w II be
rece ved by the C ty
Manager of !he C ty ot
Gall pols Oh oath soli ce
n the Mun c pal Bu d ng
for one ( l) 1979 or 1980 4·
door sedan automob le
BfdS wtll be rece ved at
the above named off ce un
1 I 12 00 Noon on Tuesday
March 25 1980 and publ ely
opened and read at that
hour and place B d forms
may be obta ned n the Of
f ce of the C ly Manager
51B Second Avenue C ly of
Ga ll pol s Oh o
March 9

6

LEGAL NOTIC E
TO BIDDERS
Not ce s hereby g ven
that sealed b ds w II be
rece ved by the C ty
Manager ot the C ly at
Gall pol s Oh oat h s off ce
n the Mun c pal Bu ld ng
for two (2) 1979 or 1980 J4
Ton P ck Up Trucks
B ds w II be rece ved at
the above named off ce un
1 1 12 00 Noon on Tuesday
March 25 l9BO and publ ely
opened and read at that
hour and place B d forms
may be obta ned n the Of
f ce of lhe C ty manager
51B Second Avenue C ly of
Ga ll pol s Oh o
March 9 16
LEGAL NOTICE
TO BIDDERS
Not ce s hereby g ven
that sea led b ds w II be
rece ved b y t he C ly
Manager o f the C ty of
Ga ll pol s Oh oa h soli ce
n he Mun c pa I Su ld ng
for aggregate I mestone
and asphalt c concrete
B ds w II be rece ved at
the above named off ce un
t 112 00 Noon ocal t me on
Thursday March 20 1980
and publ ely opened and
read at that hour and place
B d form s may be obla ned
n the 011 ce of the C ty
Manager
518 Second
Ave nue City of Ga pol s
Oh o

DAV D L WE R
DIRECTOR
Rev B 17 73
March 9 6

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
1 Iron
6 Aches
11 Nearest
18 lrntates
19 Heron
20 Rest
2 1 Closter
23 Journ ey
24- l nco n
26 Saltale
27 01 part
29 Pee Wee or
Del a
30 Foray
31Th~ sweet
sop
32 Hard wood
I ee
33 Pel I on
34 Forme y
35 Posl
36 Each
38 Tax I me s
40 Fondle
41 Buckel
42 F sh sauce
43 Dutch town
45 Cook n
oven
46 Pad not ce
47 Gul like
u rd
48 Untamed
49 0 d woman
sh
51 Exact
52 Art f c a
anguage
53 El h op an
I lie
54 Sacred
55 Substances
57 Knght
58 Chem cal
compound
60 Possess ve
pronoun
6 1 Rocky h1 l
62 Climb
64 TenSile

strenglh
(abbr I
65 P onoun
66 Inlets
67 Ph pp ne
nat ves
69 Ivan and
N cho as
71 Monge
73 Seesaws
74 Grafted
Hera dry
76 Ejects
79 By oneself
8 I La r
82 Con unci on
84 We rd
85 Recom
pense
87 Commun s s
90 Gallops
92 Perform
93 Fa! hers
95 M st us
97 Loved one
98 Above
99 Stal e Abb
10 I Atltt:s
103 Poem
104 Moun! an
ake
I 05 Cub c meier
108 Soak
110 Harveslers
112 Needle! sh
PI
113 Bake s
product
114 lnleqecl on
115 Godd ess ol
d scor d
117 As an co ns
118 Vended
119 Wagers
1200dn s
brol he
121 Valleys
23 Aller H S T
124 Fork prong
125 Sma

126 Dry as w ne
127 Be presenl
129 Come nto
vew
131 Funct on
132 Gasp
133 Plural end

lng
134
136
37
138
39
40
141
42
43
44

46
48
49
150
151

Moray
Ire and
H gh
Debate
Place of I he
sea Abb
Unasp rated
Short sleep
Dry
Produced
Da las
Cowboys
runn ng
back
M says
R dge
Decla es
Grow ng out
of
Sharpe ned

DOWN
1 Clergyman
2 Perch
3 Ire land
4 Cralty
5 Steamsh p
(abb )
6 Danger
7 M atu ed
8 Vex
9 Compass

i'tl

10 lnacl ve
11 Men scus
12 French a 1
c le
13 Greek
mounta n
14 Throe
15 Conjunct on
16 Sa~nle

(abb 1
17 Tel ur um
symbol
21 Mak e eady
22 Allar screen
23 Scut
25 Insect
27 Quest
28 Bed cane
pes
30 Shower
31 lm 1aled
33 Scorches
35 Planet
36 Partner
37 Redacts
39 Sma I ch ld
41 F u I
42 Is II
44 Choose
47 Woody
p an t
48 Became
more
unp easant
49 Home run
k ng
50 Expunge
54 Warm ng
dev ce
55 Add 1 on a
56 To s
59 Hurls
60 Hastened
6 1 P eposton
63 Great Lake
66 Scale note
67 Manuscr pi
(abbr )
68 Norm
70 Rasp
71 Veh c e
72 Rubber t ee
73 Fr ght
75 Goes n
77 Tw tch ng
78 Depos I
80 Metal fas
t e ner

83 Col ege off
cal

86
88
89
90
91

Put off
Entrances
Foam
Cent (abbr )
Railroad
(abbr I
94 Sedate
96 Ex1st
98 Southwest
ern nd ans
99 Pre dom
nate
100 Inflates
102 Shovel
104 Story
105 Poses
106 1ncome
107 Bu111
109 T ps
111 lngred ents
112 Departed
113 Man s n1ck

name
11 6 D ocese
11 8 Omen
119 Statement
122 Scoffs
124 Three base
ht
125 Danng
126 Drooped
128 Th ck
130 Eon
13 1 L fl
132 Ta kld y
135 Og le
137 Waste
al owance
138 Solar diSk
140 - Angeles
142 Man s name
143 Theater
sign Abbr
144 D stnct
Allorney
(abbr I
145 Tee
typewr ler
(abbr)
147 PrepoSit on
148 Exclamat on

LEGAl. NOTICE
TO BIDDEI!S
Not ce s hereby g ven
that sealed b ds w II be
rece ved by the C ty
Manager of the C ly ot
Gall po s Oh o at h s ot
f ce
n the Mun c1 pal
Bu ld ng for Fa thful Per
formance Pos t on Bond
Cove age and Fa thfu Per
formance 8 anket Bond
Coverage for the em
ployees at the c ly of
Gallo pol s
B ds w II be rece ved at
the above named off c:e un
t 12 00 Noon loca t me on
Wednesday March 26 19BO
and publ ely opened and
read at tha t hour and place
B d forms may be obta ned
n the Ott ce of the C ly
Manager
518 Second
Avenue C ty ot Ga ll pol s
Oh o
March 9 16

Announcements
Card of Thanks
The family of Emma F n
dl ng w shes lo thank
relat ves fr ends ne gh
bars for the r k nd nesses
du ng her
llness and
death Spec al thanks to the
Home Health Care Nurses
Mem o r al
v e t era n s
Hos p tal staff
the Dr
Dayo s pa llbearers Rev
Thomas E(IJ ng Funeral
Home and the Summer
Commu n t y for flowers
The t a m es of Emma F n
dl ng

The tam ly of Tal y Ho
Vernon Hysel woul d I keto
extend our hearlfe I !hanks
to the Pomeroy Emergen
cy
Squad
Veterans
Hasp tal Ew ng Funeral
Home Mr and Mrs Ar
nold Grate
fo r the
beaut fu songs to Rev An
c I W se for h s words of
comfort to the pallbearers
and 1o the Carpenle s
Loca 650 the Eagles and
th e A mer en Leg on fo
the r touch ng M I tary Ser
v ce also the wonderful
fr ends and ne ghbors and
relat ves ot Ta ll y s who
sent
flowers
who
helped
n any
way northe
death
of
our son and brother Tally
May God B ess each and
everyone He s gone but
never forgollen by mother
Mary Huysell
Brother
Dale Hysell and s sler Mrs
John A Jeffers (Rober a)

2

Then sweet ly reca lled her
wthgrace
o Heaven
To dwel l peacefu ly n h s
own embrace
Sadly m ssed by Relal ves
and Fr ends
n lov ng memory of my
dear husband Par ey T
Karr who passed away
March 7 1975
There comes a t me for all
of us
When we must say good
bye
But Fa th and Hope and
Love and Trust can never
never d e
GrelJtly m ssed by w fe
Altana
sons Pau
and
Horace Karr and daughrer
Kathryn Mara
grand
ch dren
an d
g reat
grandch dren

Announcements

GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAYlPM FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY RACIN E
GUN CLUB
GUN
SHOOT
Rae ne
Vo unt eer
F re
Dept
Every Saturday 6 30 p m
AI the r bu d ng n Bashan
Factory choke guns on y
GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 00 Factory choke only
Corn Hollow Gun C ub
Rutland Proceeds donated
Ia Boy Scout Troop 249
BUYING U 5
S LVER
CONS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER
(ANY
AMOUNT) DON T LOSE
MONEY SIMPLY P CK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 992 5113
BROWNS
I PAY highest pr ces
possible for gold and s lver
cons rings 1ewe1ry etc
Contact Ed Burkel! Barber
Shop Middleport
GOLD
Slt.VER
FOREIGN COINS
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS ALSO
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR CHECK WITH
OSBY (OSSIE) MAR T IN
BEFORE
SELLING
PHONE 992 6370 ALSO
DO APPRAISING

Announcements

7

SWEEPER and sew ng
mach ne repa r parts and
suppl es
P ck up and
del very Oav s Vacuum
Cleaner one half m le up
Georges Creek Rd
Call
446 0294
FOR THE BEST ~y n
d amends &amp; 1ewelry go to
Tawney Jewelers Com
pare pr ces and values
You can save a fortune
shopp ng at Tawney s 422
Second Ave Gall po s Oh
many of our 1tems pr ced at
200 gold and 9 00 sol ver
FOR THE MONTH of Feb
Drehel s Ceram cs Green
ware 30% off Glazes 20%ott 50 N Second Ave M d
dleporl 01 o 614 992 2751
Beef ne Spr ng Style Show
at M e gs Inn March 10 7 30
p m Everyone wel co me
$200 draw ng tor lash on
door pr zes
Due
to
II ness
no
t respass ng at the Carol
Tr plell res dence on Cor
nell Rd Pori and OH
w thout wr tten per
m ss on

Process ng
Jones Mea
Slaughter fac I t es now
open Wash ngton County
Rd 248 Litle Hock ng
OH 667 6133
P ck ng up an Easy play
organ
n your area
Look ng for a r espons•b e
party to take over paymen
ts Call cred1t manager
collect 614 592 5122

JOY S SALON OF
BEAUTY
March 10 thru 14
Reg 30
Now for S20
Reg $20 Now tor SIB so
Owner IS
Joy Ray R fe
367 7526

~;===~~~===~
BROTHERS
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
Fmest quality at lowest
pass ble pnces
Call
now for free estimate
Commerc1al or res den
loa I
256 1562

In Memonam

IN LOVING Memory of
Ramona Hoover Stout who
passed away one year ago
on March 9 1979
God loaned us one prec ous
angel
He bount fu y blessed her

3

3

MARCH SPECIAl.
Apple trees &amp; grape
v1nes dormant spray &amp;
prunong Economy land
scap1ng at economy
pr.ces
Call379 2114

~~;;~;:;:;:;;;:;;~~~
DISCOUNT
PRICES
Hotpomt and
General Electrrc
Appliance
Sales &amp; Serv1ce

LANDMARK
Jack W Carsey
Mgr
Phone 992 2181
G1veaway

ANY PERSON who has
anyth ng to g1ve away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad In lh s
co umn There w II be no
charge to the advertiser
MALE SHEPHERD black
&amp; grey Loyal loves al
tentloo Free to a gOOd
home Call 446 0515 after
500pm
COCKER SPANIELS 2
females To a good home
Call 38B 9865
5 WHITE PI Samoyed pup
p1es 6 wks ca II 446 1324
PUPPIES
Mixed small
breed Call245 5800

7 COON HOUND puppies
Cal 379 2164
&lt;., U NIE
PIG
g veaway Call 3B8 8492

6

to

Lost and Found

lost Brown clutch purse
benoeen Jones Boys In
Pomeroy
or
Racine
Reward offered 992 259B

7

Yard Sale

4 FAMILY
GARAGE
SALE March 10 lt 12 13
14th from911113

8

Public Sale

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN
We self 1nytlllng for
anybody a! our "uctlon
.. ,n or I• your Mtilt For
fnformallon and pickup
Mrvlce call zu 1H7
Sale Every Sf!turday
Nlghla17p m

SWAIN

NOI1010S

AUCTION SERVICE

Kenneth Swain "ucl
Cor"nerThkd &amp; Olive

4 Fam11y garage sale l:i3
Park Dr Nea r Burger
Chef Po nt P easant W
Va March 10 11 12 13 14
93

8

Public Sale
&amp; AUctiOn

ASTRO•GRAPH

Public Sale
&amp; AUctiOn

Bern1ce Bede Osol

BRADFORD Auctioneer
Complete Service Phone
949 2487 or 949 2000 rac~ne
Oh o Crill Bradford

8

~"Wr

~ 'Birthday

Publtc Sale
&amp; AUctiOn

ll•rch t 1110
You can tmprove you lot n 1te
th s com ng year by ut lz ng the
nc eased sp rlt or adventure and
en terprise you possess Howev
er don t take far out lsks n the
p oceas for ha would be coun

PUBLIC AUCTION
STATIONARY TOOLS
SHOP EQUIPMENT
POWER AND HAND TOOLS HARDWARE PLUS
MANY OTHER ITEMS USE Dl N THE HOME

te p oduc ve
PISCES lfeb

20-Merch 20)
Joint ventures w I not wo k ou
the way you hope oday unless
you are prepared to put your
we ght Be a helpe no t a h nde
er -F nd out more of what lies

FRIDAY, MARCH 14, 1980

ahead fo you n lhe yea fo tow
ng your birthday by send ng or
you copy or Astro G aph Lette
Ma I S1 for each o Ast o--Graph
BoK -489 RadoC y Stat on NY
100 19 Be sue o spec ry b th
date
AltfES (Merch 21 April 11) Pu
al your ca ds on he tab e when
dealing f you expect others to
do the sa me w th ycu Th s s not
a day for playing h de--and seek
TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) Th s
ca n be a rewa d ng day bu
don t expect th ngs to be handed
to you on a sl ver p atter II you I
wo k hard you I succeed
GEMINI (M•J 21 June 20) Don t
base imponant judgmehte on
one slded views You must look
at s tuat ons f om every angle n
01de to ge 8 clea unde ste.nd

BEGINNING AT 7.00 PM
For your convemence th1s merchand se has been
moved lo Meogs H gh School

Name Brand Items Sk B ack &amp; Decker Stanley
Rockwell Ch cago Pneumat c Rodac Herbrand
DeWalt Campbell Haust eld
Channel t.ock
Wr ght lngerso Rand Rosco Vaughn All ed
Tr umph lrw n Kraeuler Wilton Cummins con
t nental and more
STATIONARY TOOI.S
Floor and table model mach n sl dr I presses w lh
rap d rack and p n on sw ng around tables 12Speed
I ght work area morse taper chuck and other
outstand ng features
12 to 5 h p Campbell
Hausfeld a~r compressors portable and sla
t onary Ba nbr dge mel a I cut off saws cut up to
10
Beam 1 2 Ia 3 ton V k ng floor 1acks Double
wheel bench and I oar mode grinders up Ia 2 h p
Floor model ballery chargers Portable floor Vacs
Tool chests Inventory sub1ec1 to change due to sup
pi ers ava lab ly
HAND TOOLS AND MISCELLANEOUS
AI s zes socket sets gr nders torque wrenches
vises hydrau lc 1acks electric dr lis drill bits
eleclr c and a r mpact tools all s zes and types
pliers and cutters stee measunng tape screw
pr vers hex key wrenches hammers axes
sledges electr cal tape trouble lghts extension
cords low chains crescent wrenches tune up
kits power pulls bolt cutlers p pe wrenches a r
and acet ylene hoses boIs nuts washers garden
hose gloves flashl ghls llashllghl batteries
houseware terns plus many more

ng

CANCER IJu.. 21-.fulr 22) The
examp e you set for coworke s
today s ext erne y mpo I ant
They won t be w I ng to p educe
you take too many coffee
b eaka
LEO (Julr 23-AUV 22) Even
though you may feet you can
manage matters bette than you
companions be very carefu not

to behaved ctatorla ly
VIRGO (AUV 23-Sept 22) You
mate may be a bit ext avagant
today whe e taml y f nances are
concerned Have an unde staf'ld
ng that nether of you wll spend
s zable sums wl hout he other s
consent
L•RA (Bopl 23-0cl 23) You
have good eadershlp quallt es
tOday and ttl s Is commendable

but not everyone w I be look ng
for a boss Be careful of whom

TERMS cash All sales made by number system
V1ew.ng one hour pnor to sale Not responsible for
acc1dents
SALE SPONSORED BY MEIGS FHA
Auct1oneers Dan Smtth and Jem Carnahan
9491033 949 2708
NOTE The lnd anapol s lndustr al Too Company
s based n Wh testown ln d ana and s not affll ated
w1th any other too company of 11s type If you are 1n
the need of good tools be sure and not m1ss th1s sale
These tools carry taclory warrant es and
guarantees For add1tonal nformat on call Noble
Ratts 217 769 6767 or 317 769 6135 If your club or
orgamzat1on needs a fund ra smg pro1ect call on us
or your local auct1oneer

you Issue ordefs o

SCORPIO (Ocl 2&lt;-Hov 22)
F nsnc al cond tlons cou d be a
m xed bag today because you
8 e both sh ewd and ex rava
gan Unfortunately you ndul
gent wh ms may rule
8AGmARIUS (Nov 23-Doc 21)
You friends nd you an en oy
able compan on because they
I ke the way you treat them Be

: sure to show equel conce n lo
fam ly and loved ones
CAPRICORN (Doc 22..,.n 11)
The e a a poss blllty you may not
th nk as much of your capabll
ties today- as you should Modes
ty s becoming but negat ve
thoughts a e self defeating
AQUARIUS IJon 20-Fob II) As
long as )'OU do everything n
• accordance wt h your highest
1 Ideals today will be a ser es or
pleaaant events Should you
show slgna of self ahnesa t 1 be
• a dlfferen maUer

FARM AUCTION
SATURDAY, MARCH 15, 1980
11:00 A.M

NEWSP"fER ENTEAPA SE 4SSN

LOCATION From Vonton OhiO take Rl 325 So to
Roy Holcomb Rd ( approx 3 m l go to Ml Tabor
Rd turn right Ia Coal Valley Rd turn left - !be
2nd farm on !be r~gbt From Rt 325 at R1o Grande
goNE approx 7 mo Ia Roy Holcomb Rd WATCH
FOR SIGNS
OWNER MR &amp; MRS HOWARD CHILDERS
AUCTIONEER TOMMY JOE STEWART
Ph 446 9760- 446 7222

&lt;lATALYTIC
CON
VERTERS
(Used) cop
per
brass
alum num
lead batteries radiators
automatic transmissions
(junk) beef hides furs and
Gmseng Call Rober! L
Harper 675 3616 or 675
5202
DIAMONDS
old coins
wedding bands
estate
1ewelry class rings etc
TAWNEY JEWELERS
422 Second Ave
· OLD LAW BOOKS and or
: ~9";~~ro~:.~n~~~~:r~r
•would consider entire
: ubrarv contact Ken Wise
•367 723~

MILKING EQUIPMENT 500 gal Solar stainless
steer bulk m lk lank sta nless steel wash vats w/5
hP compressors 1 set Chore Boy 6 un 1 milkers
w/ p pe I ne Clay 3 on a side milk ng parlor 40 gal
holwaler lank

Help Wanted

Would you Ike to be paid for
going to college? You can
gel thiS and extras flke a
$1500 00 bonus free Iran
sportatlon to exotic
paradises like Hawaii and
Puerto Rico
l,.lfe tn
surance and more just for
one weekend a month and
15 days a year In !he Oh o
A r National Guard
To
lind out how lh s dream can
come true for you call
MSgt M1ke Gilmore at
(614) 474 7048 (collect)
n ghls
(614)
497 0607
(collect) days
NEEDED
Experienced
body technician at Thaler
Ford Call 446 3575 See
John Smith
HAIR STYLIST WANTED
Apply 10 person at Across
the Street Halrslyl ng
Salon
600 Th rd Ave
Gallipolis Tues thru Sal
for Interview or call 446
9510
POSITION OPEN FOR
Director of Mason Co
Chlldrens home a small
group home for teenage
girls Masters degree In
Social Work counseling or
Psycology preffered Will
consider a B A degree or
B S W degree plus several
years of experience Inch ld
welfare
or
chlldrens
programs
Salary
negotiable depending on
education and experience
Please send resume to Mrs
Paula Anderson
Mason
Co Chlldrens Home 306
12th Sl
PI Pleasant
W VA 25S50

13

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
IN
SURANCE been
can
celled?
t.ost
your
operator s license? Phone
992 2163
SANDY AND BEAVER In
surance Co has offered
services lor f~re nsurance
coverage In Galha County
tor a Imost a century
Farm home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet m
dlvldual needs Contact
Emmell Church
your
neighbor and agent
15 Schools

~1

Help Wanted

DISCRAFTSHOP
446 2134
Free Easter candy making
demonstrations
Wed
nesday 7 p m Saturday 1
p m Everyone IS welcome
now thru March 31st
16

AUCTION

RON S TV SERVICE
Specializing In Zenith
House Calls Call 1 304 576
2398 or 446 2454
18

WILL DO House cleaning
moderate rates call 446
8626 or 675-6060
WILL Care tor elderly In
my home
Reasonable
rates experienced
Call
256 9301

Money to Loan

22

FINANCING VA FHA LO
ANS LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE
IREl..AND MORTGAGE
77 E STATE ATHENS
614 592 3051

201~

Want someone to stay wllh
) nvalld husband and son
while wife Is In hospital
)92 32~

)

Flnanc1al

·------~~------'Need babysitter In Racine
•area
Must have very
:rlextble hours 949 2347 or

:----~--~---------­

SAT., MARCH 29, 1980

Wanted to Do

FHA VA Convenllal Home
Loans
Columbus First
Mortgage
Co
loan
representative
VIolet
&lt;Cookie) Viers 463 Second
Ave Gallipolis Oh 446

114'1

COMING UP

RadloTV
&amp;CB Repatr

pET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
d earn good money plus
me great gills as a Sen
nel route carrier Phone
~s right away and gel on
the eligibilitY list at 992
2156 or 992 2157

F,

SIGNMENT MACHI

I nstructlon

DISCRAFTSHOP
446 2134
Tole Painting and dlmen
s onal tole classes now lor
mlng Call tor r egistration

Employment
Services

eAUCTIONEERS NOTE All the farm equ pment
and m lk ng equ pmenl s n excellent condlllonbe there at 11 00 sharp as there are very few small
tems
LUNCH SERVED
TERMS CASH OR CHECK WITH I D
SNol responsible for acc1denlsS

All Farmers Are Invited to Buy or Sell
Your Production Credit Association Is offering as a
serv ce to tile farmers a chance to buy or sell used
farm equipment al pub lc auction This will be an
opportunlly for you to sell any excess machinery
you njjly have for the top dollar as well aJ to chOOse
from a large selection of good used machinery to fill
your current needs
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS
NOTE Allll~ms on conlr•cl by'March 14 1980 will
be adverii.Jed In 10 pal)frs Loading unloading rest
rooms no junk or- unoperable equipment will be ac
cepted ~ commission per llem S5 00 minimum
Equipment will be received on fv\arch 26 27 28
from lOAM unlll5 PM
David R Altlur ~alii polls office 614 446-3391 tron
ton Office 614 532 2U4 Athens Office 614 St3 3573
Jackson PCAOfflce614 216-,_,.1
Number system
All sales final
Terms cash
Pleaae K..p This Ad
/
SPONSORED BY
JACKSON PRODUCTION CREDIT ASSOC
Gallipolis Ohl0614 dHm
John E Ross
Auctlon..rs
Daniel A; .JJou

Wanted to Buy

9

FARM MACHINERY 2 Oliver BB farm tractors (1
d esel &amp; 1 gas) J D J.5 fie d chopper (with hay
head) M H N 25 blowers 2 yrs o d Grove silage
wagon Coby silage wagon
2 Platz s1lage
d sir butors l Plalz s Ia un oader 16 20 40 9
metal blower p pe 40 9 plasl c blower p1pe 1 Plait
50 cha n bunk feeder 2 tripods for SilO unloader 1
wagon runn ng gears J D pull type plows 5 bush
hog porlab e P T 0 Alternator power plan! (120
volts
240 VOIIS) 25 KVW I ke new J 0 Flald
manure spreader 12 4 auger With motor 10 6
auger w lh motor 10 belt elevator w/ motor drag
elevator 6 !on bri ck bulk feed b n (like new) 2
automat c ca lf waterers w/ heaters

BEGINNING AT 11 AM
LUNCH SERVED
Located at P C A offic:e 228 Upper R1ver
Road Gallipolis, Oh1o

11

Wanted Someone to haul
!lOme
furnishings
Ia
l=lorlda
Approximate
weight 3 tons Will load
~~ unload myself 992
I

Man experienced In com
lnerclal
roQflng
and
rlpalr Phone 949 2763
LABRATORY TECHNIC I

~~r

General labratory
work Must have an M L T
~ASCP) or equivalent Ex
cellentfrlnge benefits Con
'act Labratory Supervisor
l&gt;ll&lt;e Co
Hosplla I
waverty OH 45690 or call
~14947 2186 An Equal OpPDrtu!IIIY Employer

I

7172

Mortgage
money
available New homes old
homes and reflnanclhg
your present home CON
VENTIONAL 5 Pet down
VA
no down payment
FHA low down payment
FHA
2A5 graduated
payment program FHA
265 subsidy program Call
for details
1RELAND
MORTGAGE CO
77 E
Slate st Athens 592 3051

23

P.rofesslonal
Services
INCOME TAX
SERVICE
Audrey Canaday
25 LOCUli 51 Galllpolll
9 5 MOll sat evenlnta
bYIPIMIInfment
PIIOM-~

liiABYSITJER needed for 3
~hlldren Call 446 0910

'
!FULL
time live tn position
land part time week and
~eekend poeltlon for group
1JOITI• for five. men who are
Odevelapm.ntaJIY disabled
~n Gellfpolls area Se~d
:l:nume to Buckeye com
unlty Sei'vlces P 0 box
J~son OH
~
qual OpPorl~nl~ Em

E

J»loyer

~·
•
'

'

~-

KOTALIC
LANDSCA!"ING
RH~Ial &amp; commer
Cfll T'r'etl &amp; ShrubS Ill'
atallft, dttlgnlng &amp;
(IIIRHIII Plan for sprIng plantings
at
reuonalllt
ntes

..... u ..

... ::,"r..,.

~111.-lls, Ohio

Profess1ona1
Servic:es

23
CALL

34 Busmess Bu1ldmgs

for
your
photograp~lc needs
Por
Ira I
passports
com
mere al and wedd1ng
photography
Tawney
Studios 424 Second Ave
31

US

Homes for Sale

BY OWNER 3 bdr house
kitchen F R wood bur
nlng fireplace lg level 101
Call 446 3100
HOME 3 bdr and bath 1 6
acre of ground 51 Rl 553
12 m le off Rl 7 S16 000
Call256 1270
MODULAR HOME lo trade
for house In Gall polls area
Modular home features 3
bdr bath kitchen din ng
room large I v ng room
nice large size lot located
on Georges Creek Rd For
more Information call 446
4765 anytime or 446 9595

30x46
acre
trade
equa&lt;

35

Lots &amp; Acreage

2 13 acres all wooded
Green Schoo l bldg lot only
446 3063 after 6 p m
CENTRAL
FLORIDA
SACR IFI CE Half acre n
exclus ve community Lg
lake boa! ng flshmg san
dy beach pulling green
ball field
tennis $700
down
ASSUME
B'l•
LOAN
Low payments
Mrs F Scott 141 7th 51
5 w w nler Haven Fla
338BO or call (813) 293 S7BO

Rentals

41

Houses for Rent

Modern 3 bedroom home
basement with fireplace
central air fully carpeted
located on 612 acres near
Racine on Racine 8ashan
Rd 94'1 2836 alter 5 and
weekends Larry Wolfe
12x60 Hillcrest 2 bedroom
Furnished or unfurnished
992 6140

FOR RENT 5 room house
n Crown C1ty $120 mo
Call256 6664

Well built 3 bedroom hom
situated on 3 acres
overlooking the Oh o River
Aller 3 30 p m ca II 247
2032

42

1972 14x70 Beaullfui Vln
dale Mobile Home
2
bedroom expando living
room 2 bay windows por
ch
Electric
stove
refrigerator
dishwasher
carpeting and drapes 992
6135
Roomy 3 bedroom home
with bath natural gas
Leading Creek water
utility room I mmedlate
occupancy $9 500 Phooe
742 2460

Mob1le Homes
for Rent

2 BDR u N F trailer on
N G H S garden space
Call388 B794
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park Route 33 north of
Pomeroy Large lois Ca II
992 7479

44

Apartment
for Rent

NICE 3 bdr home unf
total feleclr c Located at
Evergreen Ref &amp; dep
req $260 Call 446 3192

Will am Fred Sm1th Sr
532 5 3rd Middleport OH
4 room house and bath All
new carpel 992 5871

32

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap
Is Phone 992 5434

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1973 Fairpoint 14x65 2
bedroom
1971 Cameron 14xi&gt;S 2
bedr
1971 Fleenvood 14xt.S 3
bdr bath 12
1971 Shakespear 14x65 2
bedroom
191&gt;5 Yanor 12x52 2 bedr
1968 Fleetwood t2x6J 2
Bdr
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES PT PLEASANT
wv JO.f 675 4424
1971 12xi&gt;S Trailer com
plete y furnished
A
very good condition On a
lot !hat can be rented
Ready to move Into $6500
firm 992 53(),1

c

1971 Freedom Mobile
Home 14x~ 3 bedroom In
eludes full length awning
central air located on
spacious lot which can be
rented
S7 900
Contact
Kingsbury Home Sales at
992 7034
1970 Fleetwood 2 bedroom
mobile home furnished
must move II 949 2182

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

WINTER SALE
Prices
reduced on used mobile
homes
TRI STATE
MOBILE HOMES CALL
446 7572
1973 Fairpoint 14xi&gt;S 2 bdr
1971 Cameron 14xi&gt;S 2 bdr
1971 Fleetwood 14xi&gt;S 3
bdr 1'12 bath
1971 Shakespeare 12x65 2
bdr
191&gt;5 Yanor 12X60 2 bdr
1968 Fleenoood 12x 60 2
bdr
B&amp;.S
Mobile Home Sales
PI Pleasant W VA
675 4424
1977 WINDSOR 14 x 70 un
turn Call675 6930
1968 VINDALE
12x63
good cond call446 2472
1971 12x60 HOMELITE
mobile hOme 2 bdr 1V2
baths good cond call 367
0205
2 BDR MOBILE HOME
extra nice with washer and
a~r cond
underpinning
and awning S4 000 Call
446 4053
19~ NEW MOON

10x60
central healing 53 000 Ci!,ll
446 2928

33

Farms for Sale

45 ACRfii FARM 3 ml from
Rio Grande 20 to 30 A
tillable tObacco poundage
of 1 069 lb old house 4
rooms and bllh House
needs rtmodeled S30 000'
firm 245-9210 245 9130

34 Bullntss Buildings
OFFICE BLDG
near
Spring Valley ShoPPing
Center 1650 SQ fl sulteblo
tor OptQIMtl'lt11 Beautv
Salon
R•ltor or In
suranc.. fllent~ 01 parking
Call44611239

RENTER 5 assistance for
senior Citizens In v llage
Manorapls Call992 7787
45

Furnished Rooms

Sleeping room for working
man $27 50 per week Cal
992 6022
SLEEPING ROOMS
rent Gallla Hotel

for

Space for Rent
2 TRAILER SPACES
Comcrete patio and walk
900 block In town Large
lawn area water paid S60
mo Call 446 4416 afler 5
pm

47

Household Goods

51

BLOCK BLDG on 95
of land su 500 or
for motor home of
value Cal1446 3395

LARGE home B rm and
bath l m11e fro m CIIY
lim Is comp carpeted fur
nace heat relrldgerator
and stove furn basement
ref and dep req wood
burn ng stove S300 mo
c a II 446 0239

1

•

POMEROY

4

8

Yard Sale

BundeJ lhrch g

Wanted to Rent

TRY THE NEW
PILLOW SOFT
SERTA
PERFECT
SLEEPER
THE ULTIMATE IN
SLEEPING COMFORT

Household Goods

GOOD
USED
AP
PLIANCES
Washers
dryerS
refndgerators
ranges
Skaggs Ap
pllances 1918 Eastern Av
ce 446 7398
LAYNE S FURNITURE
Sofa chair rocker ol
loman 3 tables S500 Sofa
cha~r and loveseat 5275
Sofas and chairs priced
from $275 to 5550 Tables
$33 $60 $7 ©
and SBS
Sofabed and chair S150
Hide a beds $300
queen
slle
S325
&amp;
UP
Recliners
$125
$150
S160 S175 and S225 Lam
ps from $18 lo S50 5 pc
dinettes from $69 to $325
Wood !able and 4 chairs
527S Table two leaves 6
chairs (high ba¢kedl S400
Hutches SJOO and 1350
maple or pine finish
Bedroom suites
S275
(while)
532S
(pecan)
$350 (oak) Bassell Oak
S550 Basse!! Cherry S67S
Bunk bed complete wllh
rT\attresses $175
1250
$275 captain s beds S250
comple)e Baby beds 175
Mattresses or box springs
full ... twin
firm 165
and 575 Queen sets 1185 4
dr chest S42 5 dr chests
$49 Bed frames 520 En
terlalnmenl centers S40
and 150 Desks 538
USED
Ranges
refrigerators
dressers
TV s
head
boards and beds Hutch
table and ~ha rs Chest
bedroom slllle
swivel
rocker bar stools desks
3 miles out Bulavllle Rd
Open 9at!f to 8pm Mon
tflru Frl 9am to 5pm Sal
446 0322

m

FIREWOOD
Sp II I
seasoned oak &amp; h ckory '
cross t e ends Ca 446 453
or 446 2329

'.;

52

All populr s zes In n eke
Cadm um
baller es
rechargabl~ for 1 000 or
more t1mes We have bat
tery chargers C B s base
and mobile
antennas
mast ng all s ze co axel
wire and hardware for 1n
stallal1on Stereo systems
with or w thou! malchln~
tables
portable color
teiev slons and scanners
prog rammable with lac
lory rebate up lo $25
Crystal type w th four tree
crystals France TV and
Electronics 39260 Brad
bury Rd M ddleporl OH
992 2276

Ant1ques

53

ATTENT ON
(IM
PORTAN T TO YOU) W I
pay cash or cerllfled check
for ant ques and coll ec
t1b1es or ent re estates
Nolh ng too large Also
guns pocket watches and
con collections Ca l 614
767 3167 or 557 3411
ATTENTION
(IM
PORT ANT TO YOU) W II
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec
tibles or entre estates
Nolh ng too large Also
guns pocket watches and
con collecllons Cal 614
767 3167 or SS7 3411
54

M1sc Merchamse

COAL
LIMESTONE
sand
gravel
calc um
chloride
fer! llzer
dog
food and all types of sail
Excelsior Sail Works Inc
E Main 51 Pomeroy 992
3891
APPLES
ROME beauty
apples a! S4 per bu Best for
apple buller Call 669 3785
F11tpalnck Orchard SR
689

EMERGENCY
power
alternators - own t he best
-- buy Wlnpower Ca ll 513
788 2589
IN STOCK for lmmed ate
delivery vanous s zes of
pool k1ls Do II yourse f or
let us nstall for you D
Bumgardner Sa les Inc
992 5724
Apples Rome Beauty at
S4 00 per bushe Exc for
p es sauce and buller F 1
zpalrlck Orchard
Stale
Route
689
Phone
W lkesv lie 669 3785

Wanted ResponSible party
to take over low monthly
payments on spinet p ana
Can be seen locally Write
cred1t manager P 0 Box
537 Shelbyville nd 45676
Living room furniture 1
green and gold brocade
traditional sofa 96 Inches
long Love seal cui vel vel
oyster wh1te w th ol ve
green tnm 4 piece set of
Italian provlnc al while
marble top end tables All
exc cond 985 3595

Decorated cakes for all oc
caslons Character cakes
and sheet cakes Call 992
6342or992 2583
Two gun cabinets
One '.4 cherry 10
capacity !he other
I nlsh 6 gun capacity
5078

new
gun
oak
992

Singer
Fashoon Male
sewing machine Cal 992
3039 or f no answer ca ll

992 3090
Bobcat M 700 Hydrostatic
30 H P $3 950 Bobcat M 611
Diesel like new JO H P
$7 900 Ditch Witch J 20
S4 500 ca111 614 457 3139
FREEZER Chest type 23
cu II $180 Good cond
can 37~ 2617
45 CAL MUZZLE loading
rifle wllh kll tor making 45
cal balls Call446 40'18
LADIES lovely size 12 and
14 spring and summer
clothes Includes noo coal
and dress ensembles noo
dress and 1aoket sulls
other dresses worn only on
ce or not ~~ all Call 992
3283
LADIES size 14 peach color
leatller coat Cost $295
never worn Will sacraflce
tor $90 Also new size 12 fur
lackel Call992 3283
ANTIQUE ~In S Roll lop
desk old Butcher s block
c'II24S 505ol

Pets for Sale

POODLE GROOMING
Ca ll Judy Tay or at 367

7220

F R EWOOO
H ckoryr,
red wh e &amp; b ack Oak
Sugar Maple $35 true ~
oad we also have Ca I 446)7145 alter 6

S&amp;E G fl Shop (Syracuse)
10 Percent Oft on all !ems
during March

51

BRIARPATCH
KEN
NELS
Boarding and
groom ng
AKC Gordon
Sellers
Engl sh Cocker
Span els Call446 4191

955 Second Avenu e
Gallipolis Ohoo
45631
PHONE 614 446 1171

WAN2 or 3 bdr home n
rountrv call ,4.46 0492

Merchandise

FIREWOOD
seasone d
oak ash and h ckory P h
446 9442

CORBIN and SNYDER
FURNITURE

Pawn Broker golf and
guns used silver 19~ or
earlier for purcnases John
Teaford 614 9BS 3961

Wan! Ia rent Muse located
rn Pomeroy Middleport
area Phone 992 2946

56

40 LB Box of West V rg n a
Chunks low ash ow su tv r
Fosler Coa Co 446 2783

WANT to rent 4 bdr house
tor manager and faml y
moving to Gallipolis Call
446 7070 ask for Hank

WANT TO RENT 1 or 2
bdr apart private turn
within 5 m11e radius of
Gall pol s Call446 2342 and
Ask lor Mark

54 Mt5C Merchandtse

DRAGONWYNO
CAT
TERY
KENNEL AKC
Chow ChOW dogs CFA
H malayan Pe san and
S amese cats Orders for
spr ng pupp es and k ttens
are be.ng accepted Cal
446 3844 after 6 p m

SP INE T P ANO Console .
wanted Respons bl e part y
to take over low month! y
payments on sp nel p a no) .
Can be seen oca ly Write
erect t manager P 0 bo
537 Shelbyv lie N D 46176

AKC Reg Cocker Spa els
call 245 5892

BUY DIRECT Elm nate
them ddle man l6xJ2xB n
ground poo l comp ele w 1h
l adders
sk mmer an d
f ler $3 245 Ca ll loday l
BOO 2B2 510B

AKC Reg Toy Poodle Ca ll
895 3926

POOLS POOL S POOLS !
AI new 1979 model sw m
m ng pool s must go a t on
ce S1 640 buys a g an I
31x16x6 poo compl et e w t h
fen ce pat o deck F lier
and pump Complete y n
stalled help us make room
for our l9BO s Ca 1 BOO)·
2B2 510B

,.
e

AKC REG Old Engl sh
Sheepdogs
Mal es
wh leheads ca 1 JBB B441
3BB 1704 or 446 807 4

57

CLARI NET
S gnet
Selm ar Spec1a l wooden
Good cond t on Call 446
B570
WANTED
Respons be
party to take over low man
thly payments on Sp net
P a no Can be seen local y
Wr te Cred I Manager
P 0 Box 537 Shelbyv I e
NO 46176

:

200 ba es of hay 75 cent $
per ba le call446 1052

24 Ft t ra vel tra ler sel f·

,.

conta ned fu I bath sleep $
4 Tandem wheels Cal 367
0205

!an k
hose

,_

1976 LARK fold down ca m
per w th gas stove ele
refr dgeralor $1 750 Ca~i
379 2430

ELECTRIC cook ng rang e,
a mend color used J mos.
Cal l446 4179
CUSTOM BUILT knott y
p ne k tchen cab nets 9x 12.
Priced $950 Cal 446 1552
LOWREY GENIE 44 Elec:!ric organ Sunray doubl e
oven elec
range
an 1_.
s nger tread e sew ng.
mach ne AM FM stereo
radio and cassete p layer
auto water softener Ca ;i
367 72 12
HALLEY S DOG SUP'·
PLIES Just below Racoon
Br dge on St Rt 7 cal 256
6551
Boalman suppl es
King Of Sport teed 2~
prot en 50 lb S9 00 100 lb
$17 00 Hours for Marc h
pm toBpm

•·

.;

MOVING 3 rugs for sale
qreen b ue and rust exc
cond call446 4461

ss

Bu1ldmg Supplies

ALL TYPES of bu ld ng
materials
bock
bnck
sewer pipes wmdows
n
tels etc Claude W nters
R o Grande 0 Phone 245
5121 alter Spm

;:
::

KACH ALL PORTABLE
BLDG All sizes 6Xl0 I 0
12x40 See al 123 2 P neSt
446 27B3 or 3 houses below'
Bowling Alley on Rl 7 446
1279
MUST SELL NOW
AI I
steel b dgs
40x72x14
$5 69 S
F 0 B
a Is 0'
40x48xl4
$4 395 F 0 B
Cal l now
51327B4B2 i
collect

56

Pets for Sale

HOOF HOLLOW English
and Western Saddles and
harnes s
H orses
and
ponies Ruth Reeves 614 698 3290
Bard ng and
RIding Lessons and Horse
Care products Western
boots Children s SlS 50
Adu liS $29 00
RISING STAR Kennel
Boarding Call 367 0292
POODLE
GROOMING
Judy T•ylor 614 367 7?20

MUSICal

Instruments

GOOO MI XED HAY
$
bale or w II trade for ca
lie Call446 1052 alter 5

Farm Supplies
&amp; L1vestock
61

Farm Equ1pment

ECHO CHAIN SAW S
hydrau lc wood spllllers
saw cha n bars and a I
wood cull ng suppli es
Charles McKean Fa rf eld
centenary Road 446 9442
62

AKC registered while
female German Shepherd
9 mos old 985 4288 $50

•

Wanted to Buy

CHIP WOOD Po es max
d a meter 10
on largest
end $12 p er ton Bund ed
slab $10 per ton Del vered
lo OhiO Pal et Co Rl 2
Pomeroy 992 2689
ANTIQUE S
F UR
NI T URE
glass
ch na
anylh1ng See or ca I Ruth
Gosney ant ques 26 N
2nd M ddlepor t OH 992
3161
OLD COl NS pocket wat
ches class r ngs wedd ng
bands d amends Gold or
s ver Call J A Wams ey
742 2331 Treasure Chest
Co n Shop A! hens OH 592
6462
GOLD
SILVER
OR
FOREIGN CO NS
OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS AL SO
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
TEMS WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR CHECK WITH
OSBY (OSS El MART N
BEFORE
SE LLIN G
PHONE 992 6370 ALSO DO
APPRAISING
Now acceplng logs at our
log yard 7 30 3 30 week
days High price~ tor good
qual IY logs with a I m led
amount of low grade
Payment upon del very
and seal ng Blaney Har
dWoods Box 66 Vincent
OH 45784 614 67B 2960

GOLD
AND
COINS OF THE WORLD
R NGS
JEWELRY
STERLING SILVER ANO
MISC ITEMS PAYING
RECORD
HIGH
HIGHEST UP TO OATE
PRICE S CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP
MIDDLEPORT
OHIO OR CALL 992 3476
Wanted to buy a newer
car to lake over payments
N2 3080

OLD FURNITURE
ce
boxes brass beds Iron
beds desks etc complete
households Wnle M 0
Miller Rl 4 Pomeroy or
ca 1992 7760
OLO FURNITURE
Ice
boxes brass beds Iron
beds desks etc complete
households Wrlle M o
Miller Rt 4 Pomeroy or
ca 1992 7760
RENTAL houses and ren
BUY SELL TRADE hor
ses and ponys Hay for
sale Call 256 1507
63

Wanted
Immediately
registered golden retriever
stud serv1ce 742 2957

HAY

Extra good m x

Alta f a and Brom ca

245

5029
&amp; HAY
J D
Jc R 7 &amp; Hdnnan
T ace Rd Ca 1256 6537

Poll

Transportation
71

Autos for Sale

1976 Hond a 1974 V\azoa
1976 G em n ca r Realty

Inc 446 7tlB
1976 CHEVROLET 9 pass
wagon A
very gd con d
$1 995 Ca 446 4 41 aller 6
or on wk ends

CARS FOR SA LE
Ca
446 0020 between 6 and
pm
1973 FORD Sta on wagon
Good unn ng cond c"
367 7187

l974MU STA "JG
Bes of
fe takes t Call 388 8436 or
446 3543 and ask or Dave
Dunn
1968 FORD CUSTOM B
cyl
rad o au o tra ns
runs good S595 Ca 446
4223
79 CHEVY Chevette aulo
trans a r 4 dr 2 tone b ve
rad as B 000 m $4 395 76
Ll NCOLN
Con nenta l
Town Coupe 2 dr l oaded
56 000 m $3595 69 CHEV
Stat on Wagon sma V 8
std trans rad a s n ce
wo k C8 $595 Ph 245 97 0
or 245 9130
1973 0 ds Omega hat
c hback 350 eng ne au o
trans
ps powe
d ~c
brakes 56 000 actu a m es
must se ll
mm ed a e y
Sl 000 or bes oil er AI er 5
ca 1 446 32 o
1975 FORD Mu stang
4
spd 6 cy pb ps AC AM
F M stereo 446 3B70
1964
good
3636
1975 DOD GE CORO NoT
H T 4 dr good cond ca 1
446 3253
1974 VAL ANT
64 000
m les good m p g AM
rad o a r cond exc body
Call after 5 or weekends
446 OB56
1976 TRANS AM 27 000 ac
tva m es exc con d
a
446 3437
1952 CHEVY p Ck up
ev ery h ng or g na
C I
367 72 2
1974 SUPER BE ETLE
Volkswagen Good cond
$2 500 cal 256 6B26
1~2 DODGE POL ARA
One owner w I cons der
best offer Call 446 0298 at
ler 5 p m

1976 Camaro 305 eng ne
crager mags a r shocks
$2 BOO 00 992 3169

1977 Th underb rd
PS
P B
AM FM
rad als
$2 BOO 247 3594
1976 Chevy Mal bu 4 door
6 cy l p s p b good cond
Anx ous Ia sell $1600 Ra ph
Trusse I 949 2660
1972 Camaro 350 V 8 eng
New battery new exha ust
runs good $300 9B5 357 4
1976 Ford Granada am fm
8 track
ac
reel n ng
bucket seats v ny top 2
dr 302 auto $1 400 949
2619
Good gas saver 1919 Mer
cury Bobcat 3 dr hat
chback 4 cyl m ot a auto
ps
I nted glass back
glass defroster
sports
m rror remote cant r ght
and left Rad alI res super
seal rust proof ed AM FM
rad o 6 000 actual m es
$4 000 949 2B20
1973 Ford Maver ck very
good cond
small V 8
auto good tires SS 000 ac
tul m les 985 4346
76 Monza 4 cyl nder 4
speed 59 000 m es 2 snow
!~res
nc uded Ca
992
7060

. tal property Cal 1446 7627

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breeds Clean
Indoor outdoor facilities
Also
AKC
registered
Dobermans 614 446 7795
HUMANE
SOCIETY
Adopt a homeless pet
Healthy shots wormed
Donations required 992
6~60 noon 7 p m

M xed Hay 60 cen s 11 bole
992 5866 or '1'12 398 1 at er 6
pm

CORN

BURROUGHS Bookkeep n,_ HILLCREST KENNEL
g mach ne $50 Ca
446)- Board ng al breeds c lean
ndoor outdoor fac I t es
2342
Also AKC Reg Oobe
mans Call446 7795
WORLO
BOOK
EN .
CYCLOPEDIA
Spec a I
BEAUTIFUL Wh te male
Sa e
$100 ott regu lar
Sp tz N ce 4 H p o ect Ca l
pr ce Pi! ment p lan Ca II
446 419
675 3775

•

Hay &amp; Gram

64

Livestock

Nice Pigs 949 2857
H&amp;N Day old or started
eghorn pullets both floor
or cage grown available
Poultry
Hous i ng and
Automation
Modern
Poultry 399 W Main
Pomeroy Phone 992 2164
PIGS

Hamp

York Call

446 4999 or 446 8539

73

vans&amp; 4 w

o

1978 CJ 5 Jeep black 6 cyl
eng
low mlleoge exc
cond Ca I 446 0859
FOR SALE OR TRADE
1972 Ford F 250 4 W 0 pick
vp Good r unn~n g con~
call 367 0397 afler 5

77

Auto Repa1 r

ROB ERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE 24 nr wrecker
service All types of repa r
Upper Rt 'I Call 446 2445
days and 446 4792 n1Qhls

�,..=
..
o:i-

.,

The Sunday Times-&amp;ntinel, Sunday, March 9, 1980

D-S-- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, SWlday, March 9, 1980

For Best Results Use Sunday
Times-Sentinel Classifieds

;For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
I !_7_~UCI'p~h~ol~s.'.!te'-!.rLy_
81

Business Services
"

EEN Dl
DANCE
}J; The Orchid Room
~M.in 51. Pomeroy, 0 .
. •' •
EVERY
j ATURDAY NIGHT
'if~ 1:00 Tll11 :30
t.r;"Oisco Lithllnt"
llllmlsslon $2.00 Single
,.,
Sl.OO Couple
iiifRsored by Music
UnHmlted . Choperones
*Ill be present. No
·~holic beverages per·
ll)fffecl. For further in11':, coli 992·6051.
2-26·1 mo.

'ff

HAIR STYUNG

PAYING
'20.00 AND UP
FOR
SILVER DOllARS

Men or Women
by Diann Jewell
at

B. A. BEAUTY
SALON
Wed. &amp; Thurs.
Call for Appt .
949·2320
Racine, 0 .

PH. 949-2801
No sunday Calls

2· 11 mo .

2-28·1 mo .

Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service
..

Business-Farms-Partnerships
-~,
and Corporations
Nyrolls, profit and loss statements all
ftderal and state forms.
'

Roger Hysell
Garage
11 milE~

Rutland .

ftR BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION
~]'E. Main
.. .

Pomeroy, Oh .

992·3795

2-25-lmo .
73

BLOWN
•1NSUI.ATION
Vinyl &amp;
~. .

~lvininum

Siding
· · ulatlon
m Doors
nnWindows

u .

A&amp;H
UPHOLSTERING
"FREE
ESTIMATES"

lacement

3rd St. in
Syrcuse, Oh.
Ph. 992-3752
or 992·3743

Windows
. llree Estimate

~MES KEESEE
-. J PH. 992·2772

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

i

'G\.tter

work, down
,,.,s, some concrete
"!•tit, walks and
tll"'veways.
(FlEE ESTIMATES)
.;

t C. YOUNG Ill

2·18-1 mo .

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING
All types toof work, new
or repair gullers ana
downspouts,
gutter
cleaning and painting.

Reasoftable Prices
Call Howard
949-2162
1·22-lfc

We Do Roofing,

NOW HOLDING
TOLE ·&amp; DECORATIVE
PAINTING CLASSES
-We will be having

~; ~ing
1JEE ESTIMATES"
. n in Business
' f"or s Years
' CIU. 992·3238
-:"8« FOR DAVE
1

-Now
carrying
chocolate wrappers and
molds lor candy making
-Full line of Krall sup·
plies
-Special rates for
organizations

3-2-1 mo.

••.

12Years
Experience
Greg Roush
'Ph. 992-7583
2·24-1 mo.

GEORGE'S
~;

•ROOFING

llliollng,

siding,
g~er,
built-up
I'~ and home
r_.,ir.
("

'-r•e Estimates
.
381·9759

'· .

2·14-llc

~Ldiu

LAIR CONST . - Block,
brick, fireplaces , new
homes, remodeling, call
379·2123.

STANDARD
Plumbing-Healing
215 Third Ave., «6-3782
SOUTHERN

OHIO VALLEY
SHEET METAL
ISO Third Ave.
Gut1ers &amp; downspouts
installed &amp; repaired.
Free estimates
446·7887

C&amp;W CONTRACTORS
All types home im ·
provements - Roofing
gutters -spouts -concrete work. Ph. 367-0427,
367-6194, 367·0141. Free

estimates.

"I Made it Myself"
.... Crafts are tun!
L.._...;.:..::...;._ _ 2·18-1 mo.

MASSEY
SANITARY SERVICE
Septic tank service,

residential &amp; commer·

cial. Electric eel ser·
vice, chemical toilets.
367-0527

,.PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.
Hours9-1 M .. w., F.
Other limes by appoint·

ment.
107

Sycamore CRear
Pomeroy, 0.

CALL 992·7544

72

gas · electric · repair of
electric hot water tanks.
Service on all mobile home
lurnaces. Call John at 3677131.

Realtors

repair.
Free Estimates
388-9759

HOME
IMPROVEMENTS
Storm
Windows,
Storm
Doors 1•
Replacement
Wind,ows,
Patio
Covers;
Aluminum
Sidin,g
and
Accessories. Call

. BIU:S
446-2642

1973 350 l'h ton !ruck
parts,
call
446 · 1
any11me.

1977 FD.RO F -100 pick up, 6
cyl., Jspd ., good cond., call .
367:0507 .

For Sale 1973 GMC 1 ion
fruck With utility bed . C•ll
992-3467.

lt?9 Jeep'f/egoneer, 4 dr.,

fully equl~ . exc . cond.
57.500. 742·3117 after 5 p.m .

- -------

BMR-333 - Modular home on 1.23 Acres, 2 miles
below Eureka . 3 BR, FR with w.b., home is fully .
carpeted . All electric! This may FHA!

guaranteed.

BMR-342- New Listing - 3 BR ranch, fully equipped k lichen. New carpet throughout .
BMR ·J34 - 1.3 acres of bare land. Owners will con sider land contract. Excellent commercial location.

HEY! YOU WON'T
BELIEVE 3 BR
frame Muse. Carpeted
&amp; paneled, on a qu iet
street in Racine. Close
to schools &amp; stores.
Won't last long . 521.000.
MIDDLEPORT 3
bedroom home, new
vinyl siding, Insulated,
new FA gas furnace,
WOOdburnlng fireplace,
equipped kitchen, l'h
baths, mostly carpeted,
two blocks from
downtown.

NEW LISTING - This 2
bedroom home has new
carpeting, modern kit chen, aluminum siding,
new roof, and sits on a
large 101. GOOd Value at
$18,300.00.
MINERS DEAL- Centrally located near all 3
miles on Route 124. 5
rooms and a bat~. Partial basement, forced
air heat and an extra lot
with its own water tap.
Needs a little repair.
Only $16,500.00.
IN THE COUNTRY - 6
acres near town, with a
7 room, 1112 story home.
Gas hot water heat,
water sottener, and 2
ou1buildings . Mostly
carpeted .
Nice
at
$29,500 .00.
RENTAL INCOME - 2
apartments,
always
, rented. Each has 2
bedrooms, living room,
kitchen and bath. Also,
a four car garage and
approx. 1 acre. Yours
for only 513,300.00.
WELL BUILT HOMEOne floor plan home
with a full basement,
block garage, nice front
porch, and a garden
space. Has 3 bedrooms,
a bay window in tne din·
ing room, and a
firepl•ce )n !he living
room. Just $26,700.00 .
OFFICE HOURS ON
FRIDAY TILL I P.M.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992·6191
ASSOCIATES
Dollie &amp; Roger Turner
742·2474
Jean Trusseii9BS-2660
FULL TIME
OFFICE PHONE
992-2259

Furniture Stripping
and Refinishing
county Road 6
Thurman, Ohio
Caii24H513
or 446·3896

)Frank Rose Const. Co.

Remodeling repair, new

construction, all types.
Free estimates, all work
fully
guaranteed .
Residential, commer·
cial, industrial &amp; .mht•
g, tlectrical work .
MSHACert.
446·4627

MOBILE HOME
SERVICE
Anchoring. Skirting,
Awnings,
Patio
Covers,
Carports,
Roof Paint, Sat-up
and Re-levelill!l· Call

BilL'S
446-2642

BMR·33S - Older home in downtown Gallipolis, in
need of repairs. Has gOOd potential for rignt buyer.
Must be seen. Call now!

Realtors

***~***********************~

~ DILLON ' ~,.

ESTATE AGENCY ~,.
,.
,,..
BOB LANE
SALES MANAGER

Spring Valley Plaza

Phone 446·7900
or 446· 2730

TWO BEDROOM home
located on one acre,
Middleport area, trailer
hookup for.additional in·
come. $11,000.

Bob Lane, Sales Manager
Home: 446·1049

GALLIA COUNTY'S OLDEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

MIDDLEPORT AREA.
2 bedroom home ,
paneling and carpel,
eat-in kitchen . 510,500.

It

BMR·339M - 1976 Mobile home, 14x70 Kirkwood, 2
B R all electric. Excellent .condjtion.

It

,.Jt
,,..
,.

In Patriot, an older two story home on

BMR ~ 340-

'12 A. lot. southwestern school district. Call now!
BMR-341 -Brick L ·snaped ranch on 356 A. close to
Holzer Hospital. In excellent condition. Full of ex·
tras! Natural gas heat.

**

BMR-C-341-In Middleport, grocery store, wllh·C--2
beer and wine license. Priced to include all stock
and equipment. Ready for complete operation!
BMR·33B Fumish~d!

In Midqleport - 12 unit apt. building.
&lt;;l]llfgr..,d etails . •
McGhee
$ales Assoc.

JUST OFF SR 7, 2
bedroom home, hardWOOd floors, new panelIng, on four acres of
land, barn, In Middleporlarea, will sell on
land contract, $12,500.

Dona McGhee
Sales Assoc.
446·0552:

4~6 - 0SS2

.BAIRD&amp;· FULLER

NEW LISTING - IN TOWN - Maintenance free
siding, natur,el gas furnace with central air con·
ditioing, carpet thf.oughout, all appl iances, and
some furnishings are included in this attractive
home. Call for appointmenl today !

DillON
REAL ESTATE.

rMnl, well-lnsultted, re.aonable

utility bills, located on two lots,
Mulberry Ave ., Pomeroy,
OH . Owner Will hel p tlnti'K:I fO .
responsible l),erty .

RemOdtltd home on l ecrn
feoturlng fruit trttes, well bUilt
barn, ponlble trailer lots. Home

has complete kitchen, den with
flrePiau. 3 bedrooms, forced tlr
heat . BV appointment oolv .

'·

Rill Estate. ·.

-Reese Trendlilt&amp;
&amp; Bacwioe ~...vtce

JUST LISTED - FIRST TIME OFFERED Recently redecorated Inside and cot. New
maintenance free siding outside and recarpeted and
painted inside. Just 3 miles from town. In Gallipolis Jt·
City School District. Priced In the thirties.
·
~

Ntw L.lsti~NR ·Ji, New tPIIt·
tevet. Mme; )111 blfhs, 3
btc:lrooms, bllebOird electric
hrtlt, thermopiM windOWS, ptul
•2 car ger.oe. Appro)( , 111•1Cr4.
TuPpers Plelnt, Ohio . Only

NIACIL

I~

'$200.00 MONTHLY $2,500.00 . QOWN -'
CHEAPER T _
H AN RENT- ')wner llv.-soutof town
and Is willing to sell o.nll\ ·ontract. 3 bedrooms, 1
bath, car~ted , pall~" air heat with' ~ent1 al '
air, Ph acres, ,and a _ ~4'x28' garage. Local ~on a '
state highway ·'

........

lu&amp;l'tftS O,erhlftlty -

NR•S1,

·&amp;11rll~ham

Store,12m11Hfrom
PomeroY on Rt. 33, complete

~J~~r'O.stOre room, wcten
SHI:e , l'ld fr.. Pl~lllnt .
...,.lnprltldln~towSWs.
i

CARSEY .: ·

IRANCH MANAGER. .

·

HA v*'s REAL .J•STATE
CHAS. M. 'HAYES,

B~KER

•

:

It-

NICE HOME
PRICED RIGHT
3 bedrooms, 2 baths with
showers, familY room,
dining area. Total 8
rooms, modern kitchen
with electric range,
refrig "
dishwasher,
garbage disposal· &amp; lot
of cabinets. F.A.F., also
woodburner,
Gallla
rural water service,
slor~ge
building,
carefree alum. siding,---..,..-----..,..
nice landscaped lot. Ap- r
prox. 1 acre. House ap·
prox. 4 years old . See
this one now.
1 384

COMMERCIA-L LAND
BUSINESS BUILOl\!RS
We now have approx. 14
A . available, just off Rt .
35 West, with a close ac cess to clfy sewer &amp;
water, &amp; near thriving
business community.
PRICED TO SELL. Can
sell in 1 A. Plot.
1 2t7

LUCKY YOU
This home delivers the
kind of living demandec
by loday ' s tastes in a
very handsome design . ·
Large lovely klichen
has all the modern con
venlences a wife would
want plus a large dining
area, eat at bar, family
room, 3 large bedrooms
an" 2 ful,l baths. Very
tastefully de&lt;:orafe,d

·

NEW LISTiNG -197614'x70' KIRKWOOD- WILL
CONSIDER LAND CONTRACT - Extra nice
Jt-mObile home sltuat~d on 'h acre lot. This beautiful
Jt-hOme Is complete with underpinning', carpetln~,
Jt-Central air, sec~rlty light, utility building, bullt·in
Jt-lppllances, and pa1 11•1 furniShings, Gallipolfs
- ~SChools. Fllntastlc buy with 11 percent Interest I
Jt- BEAUTIFUL 1 YR. OLD LOG HOME - If you are
Jt- tooklng for an unusual home, lhlslsltl 1,850 sq. ft. of
Jt- 1uxurJous living area . All appliances and draperies
Jt-lncluded. 10·1' rnlnutes from town.

*

LAND CONTRACT - Smdll down payment will buy
you a house wllh 2 aPartments and a mobile home In
Rio Gra(lde. Call today . 525,000. .
N0250

-*

NICE HOME WITH RENTAL Ranch, w .b:
fireplace In living room, full basement. 2 car
garage, also 2i bedroom block house, 1.76 acres,
$51,000.
'0051

It
lt-

it
JtJtJt-

~

,...
Jt-,
'
,,

~LISTINGS NI~DI!D IIOWIII WI HAVE .SOLD
' ;j:PAACTICALLY,EYERYTHirtG WE HAD IN THE
~tS:W.OOO TO $50,000 !tANGI! )N THI! PAST .fii!W
Jt-WEEKS. . ..
•
·

~

_.~.-,

.·

.

'

'

E~ENINGS

· ' ·.

•

CHaRYL CUNNINGHAM

..._1......

....- .,..

I

'

5 ACRES $6,200.

•

i~

;

lt-

•

Has a gOOd building site, some woods.

93 ACRES- Vacant land, gOOd Investment proper·
ty, some- timber, all mineral rights, located In Ad·
dlson.Twp. $23,000.
1 1032
BUSINESS !)PPORTUNITY- Service station do·
lng good buslne_
ss, excellent building; large shop. If
you're interested In owning your own business and
mak'lng money, stop Inand SOKt.us tor
. details.. 11100

Evening, CaH
'

;,

==
1.1r*****************··~·····1ft!!~'
~·

aoa L.ANa
·· ·sua
ROUSH

NEW LISTING - Attractive 3 bedrooll' nome, bath,
dining room ; storage building, nice level lot•. only
$27,500.
~ IS72
PORTER - Nice 12x50 mobile home with addition
on back, furnished and air cond .. large garage and
large lot, 516,900.
·
, .
I 0941

. '

DaiVin Bloomer, Assoc. 446·2599
--OsCar Baid, Realtor ~32
John. Fuller, Realtor' 446-4327
'

LEVEL LOT
2/3 acre M. or L. for
residential.
mobile
home and garden. Frontage· on Palrioi-Camdus
Rd.
Rural
water
available. Asking price
only $4500.00.
1362

YOUR RENT DOLLRS- WILL BUY
I can
THIS HOME I buy !his home for S12,900. Needs
I
I POND
LARGE BRICK HOME - 3 ACRES - Perfect for those seeking

SUMMER, SP,RING
WINTER OR FALLA HOME FOR
ALL SEASONS!
A pond filled wltn Bass!
- 10 acre larm . A hill
lor tobogganing! Roast
ches1nuts , from your
own tre"es 1n Autumn! A
nandsome brick, air
conditioned hous~ wit"
living room, · tnree!' bedrooms, full ~ath and
· two half baths plus
shOwer . . Kitchen with
built· in cabinets, sunken
dining room leading to
large
back porch
overlooking brealhtaki·
ng rolling hills . FamilY
room, billiard room
with table, summer kit ·
chen . · Heated garage,
au•lliary
b~iiQjng• .
plus! - Call
Information.

·

paint &amp; some'"repairs. Nat. gas heat, 3
large bedrooms, kitchen, living room &amp;
bath. Nell Ave.

·I

privacy in the woods. S beQrooms, 2
baths. 21ireplaces, 2 patios, huge fami ly room. equipped kitchen, heat pump,
large circular drive, small pond and
lots of trees . City schools.
•
EXCELLENT NEIGH-BORHOOD ....!
CITY SCHOOLS- A real bargain ex ists on this 3 bedroom brick &amp; fram*: .
· Family room with fireplace, eat-in kit chen, 1 1h baths,2carg,e~rage, nat . gas&amp;
cent . air, $49,900. Assumable loan at
91Jz%.
OWNER WILL HELP FINANCE Nearly 3 bedroom ranch, full basement,
w/famlly room, workshop and lots of
storage . Eat-In kitchen, 2 baths, formal
dlnlng.1 Located on over 2 acres of land .
Near Rio Grande. Southwestern
Schools. $45,000.

I

I

tiOME &amp; STORE
BUILDING
On Stale H'ghway. 5
room and bath frame
home. Garden . Its own
water system. 4 apple
trees, 1 peach. Large
store room ls~ floor, has
an upslai rs. Basement.
'Lots of possibility, like
feed store, hardware,
~antique
store, etc ,
• Phon~ for details. I 348

CLOSE TO ENO - Nice 1970 Rebel mobile home,
12x60, In excellent condition, furnished, front porch
, &amp; a carport, storage building and an Oliver tractor.
located on 2 acres of nic"e land, better hurry, only
$16,500.
'
#0561

*
*
*
Jt-

JUST LISTED - FRAME RANCH WITH FULL ItBASEMENT Plenty of walk,ln closets, equipped.kll· itchen, nice garden spot. Located ot~ Rt. 1 with It
beautiful view of the OHio River. VA or FHA Priced
ln-10'5.
.
·
'·
• '
·:

with garage on
lots . Reedsville, ·
Call us,

Now taking listings and we hav• porentlal buyers.
CALL Me:
- . .
.
CGIIIIa C01&lt;nty
Certified)
ILIIC:~ BI!IS, Wate~ end .
t.:lnes, E tectric
P\lle B•lldlngs.

COUNTRY HOME
5 BR. nice fron1 porch, nice kitchen
with built-in cabinets, double s-s sink
Bath with shower, lots of shade trees
and fruit Ires. Nice garden spot. Tnis
home has blown In Insulation. Located
beside 51. Highway 160. 84 acre of land .
More can be purchased whh this home.
2 mobil ehomes that now are bringing in
a rental of$175.00 per month plus a total
ol 3.84 acres of land . All located beside
Stale Highway 160. CALL FOR ALL
DETAILS .
#266

LOHIO!!!
OF IT
Tastefully decorated home . Liv ing
room with brick ·fireplllce, eat-in kitchen with built-i n cabinets, ba1h &amp;
patio. Storm doors and windows with
carefree alum . siding . In addition a
large 30'x30' cinder block garage with
flourescent lighting, plenty of electrical
plus &amp; water . Pefect for hobby or
workshop or just a place for the husband to hide and putter. All this plus 1
A. of land m . &amp; I. with room for a
garden . Asking only $34,500. In city
school district .
1387

Why pay r-ent when ou

.

For the Best in
Re$idential,
Commercial,
Industrial,
Farms
and Rental

Tupptn Pl•lns .t.ru-

:.....··

LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT - Attractive ranch, 3
bedrooms, large living room, tullY carpeted, full
basement wllh 12x24 family room. central air, 1 car
garage, located in Kyger Ck. Sch. Dlst., only
$«,500.
, S44t

New . Llstlng-NR · 52,
Comfortable 4 bedroom
home on approx. 1 acre,
storage building, G:o.
Rd. 1 nur mines. Just
$19,900.

remodeled, new ctrpet, bue·

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

Hoborl Dillon, Broker
FIY "Manley,
Branch Mgr. ,
Phone 992-2591

We're I.Qcated 382 E. 2nd St., Pomeroy, Ohio
Just below the
Lanes

lxec:utlve Llsting-NR •S1, l
bedroom home, comp letely

Gallia County's Fastest Growing Real Estate Agency '

REALTY

FIRST LISTING- Nice BHevel , 3 bedrooms, 2full
alhs, garage with electric opener, heal pump with
central air. Close to hospital on 2 acres with WOOds.
$46,500.
I 146S
GOOD FAMILY LIVING - This lovely ranch' has3
bedrooms, family room wllh woodburner, large 2
car garage, beautiful 18x36 pool with large patio,
close to town, 559,900.
.
11995

SUNDAY, MARCH 9
1TIL5PM ~

7 million miles
to find you a-home.

oan
Ass.o c
Ph. Home: 446·3294

BMR ·339F - In Rio Grande, 30 acres wllh 2 story
house in need of repa ir . Make us an offer!

Tom While
Sales Assoc.
444•9557

INVESTMENT PROPERTY
Well
established business in
the heart of Middleport,
on corne~ lot, plus 4
apartments all presently rented. Sell all or
part.

We cover o..-er

BMR-337 - Need a gpod starter nome? Two
bedroom frame in city limits, has basement and
nal. gas neat. Under $30,000.

'

HOBART DILLON ,
BROKER

Associate

BMR-336 - (4) BR in city limils. house has lots of
space throughout. Includes 6 acres. Call for details!

HAYES REAL ESTATE

Investment Property NR-54 ,
Middleport
business building, 4
rented
for
ncome . C~ll

1914 CHEVY Pick up, good
cond., $950. Call 367·7187 or
675·2608.

1f14 International Pickup
1UOO mi. 992·5864
el'992·~f illler 6 p.m.

BMR ·l61 - Two story frame home with 3 extra lots
in Rio Grande. Very good condition .

Realtors

992·2U9

In Eureka, 3 BR, trame house in very

BMR·C360 - ~ommercial building in downtown
Gallipolis. Can be purchased as going business or
building alone. Call for details!

Sale Ends Saturday, March IS

DILLON
REAL ESTATE

WANTED TO BUY - Rental
houses and r en tal property.
Call 446-7627.

BY OWNER
Down 51 . Rl . 7; 5
minutes from City Park .
2 story frame : 4 B. R .•s,
living room with W. B.
fireplace , eat -in kit - ·
chen. Ba sement and
garage . Priced in low
40's .
Call : Daytime. 446-1615
Aller 5: 446-1244

BMR·IS9 - 4 BR home in Gallipolis. Excellent location . Natural gas heat. Under $30,000.

Grand
Opening

1976 FORD pick up with
topper. Call «6·740-4.

l?'U&lt;k.

BMR-157 -

Commercial &amp; Residential
Finest q11ality at the lowest possible
prices.

Realtors

Block of mineral righ1s,
Ohio or w. va . w illing to
pay lop dollar . Write P.O.
Box 293, Nelsonville, OH .
45764. 1-875-2041 . evenings.

RIVER VIEW HOME
.FOR SALE

good condition includes 32 A. more or less.

GALLI POLIS, OHIO
256·1562

completely

basement, buildings, barn,
some !Imber, all m.lneral
rights. $77,000. 992 -7559 .

Real Estate
wanted

BMR-147 - Located on Rt. 7 · Crown Clly. Metal
commercial building on 90 x 180 lot. Pr-iced under
$18,000!

BROTHERS UPHOLSTERY

work

36 acres farm w i th 9 r-oom
1'12 story house, fu II

36

.

LAST SALE OF THE MONTH

All

Farms for .Sale

BMR-139 - Two story home In clly of Gallipolis.
Good condition. Less than $30,000 !

Call now for your free estimate. No jOb
too~mall or too large.

Picking up a piano in your
ar-ea . Looking for a respon·
Sible party to take O'('er
paym ~ nts .
Call credit
manager collect. 614--5925122.

Realtors

1977 CHEVROLET Step
side pick up. Short wheel
base. Call «6-3395.

1978 DODGE pick up, 0 150, Adventurer, 318 auto .•
p.s., p.b., lilt wheel. sliding
rear glass, spoke wheels, 2·
tone blue. $3.950. Call «69369.

Upholstery

33

COUNTRY HOME witn
stocked pond for swimming
or fisnlng, 9 rooms, batn ,
car peted . 3 to 17 acres
available. Located appro• .
7 miles lrom Pomeroy off
R t . 7 or 33 . 446-2359 after 6.

BMR-137A - Brick ranch on 120x180 flat lot . An ex cellent buy . Call now!

rv .

Buying u.s. silver coins
dated 1964 or earlier. Also
gold items, don't lose
money, simply pick up the
phone and dial614·992·5113.
Brown's .

SERVICE

BMR-948 - Older 2 story house in Cheshire .
Natur-al gas tleat, excellent condition . Call for
details!

011r labor price incl11des tightening -&amp;
regl11eing frame where needed, retying
springs, tone finish wood, extra padding
where necessa

wanted : Locust fence
posts. U inch used tires.
Bernie 992-7275.

CO. · Furnace repair - oil -

NATIONAL HOME
RELOCATION
Serving 6,000
Communities
421 Second Ave.
C.ll446.0552 Anytime

GEORGE'S ROOFING
Roofing, siding, guHer,
build ~ up
roof, home

rrucks for Sale

1977 CHEVY PICKUP
custom deluxe, 112 ton, 305
eng., p.s., auto., disc
brakes, sliding back win·
dow, new fiberglass topper.
Call «6-3139 after 5 p.m .

17 -

Realtors

Realtor·Auctioneer

This week only, any standard si1e sofa &amp;
chair for On,ly 5160 Labor Plus 10% Discount on fabric, plus Free armcaps &amp;
head flaps. Free pick · up &amp; delivery,

ELWOOO
BOWERS
REPAIR Sweepers,
toasters; irons, all small
eppliancts. lawn mower.
Next to Slate Highway
Gara ge on Route 7. 9853625.

REMODELING · General
repair, concrete work, fr-eeestimates, Leslie Lemley,
ca ll 367·0666 after 5 p.m.

Will do odds and ends,
paneling, floor t ile, and
ceiling tile. Call Fred
Miller, 992-6338 .

~~

1976 FORD F 250, V -~, 4
spd, looks rough, runs
gOod. $1,000.388-8319.
750, exc.
extra parts.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Phone «6-3888 or 446·..77

Realtors

ATTENTION!
UPHOLSTERY SPECIAL

Electrical
R efridgeration

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs ,
service ,
all
makes. 99~ · 2284 .
The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales
·and Service . We sharpen
Scissors.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

82

GENE PLANTS
AND SONS
Plumbing · Hea1ing - Air
conditioning. 300 Fourth
Ave . Ph . 446·1637.

PAINTING . Residential interior and e)(terior barn
and mobile home roofs.
Free estimates . 15 yr exp.
Call 367 7784 or 367 -7160.

AVOIO CHIMNEY FIRES
- Safe, dustless cleaning,
The Cnimney S'4'eep, 1·373·
6057.

84

'

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTER'(; SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave .• Gallipolis.
446 7833 or 446·1833.

-- I

and

PIANO TUNING - Lane
Ollniels Quality service sin·
ce 1965. Call 742 -2951 or 9922082 .

CARPENTER . WORK
complete remodeling by AI
Tromm, 742·2328. References .

JIM MARCUM roofing,
spouting and siding . 30
years e)(perience . Free
est imates . Remodeling .
Call 386-9857 .

WALL PAPERING
painting. 742-2328.

DEWITT'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160 at Evergreen
Phone «6·2735.

Home
Improvements

81

QUALITY
MAIN TENANCE · Electr ical ,
plumbing,
heating,
specializing i n oi l and gas
lurnaces . Call386-9698.

THEISS INSULATION, l nsu lmaster foam insulation .
New homes, old homes,
commercial structures .
For free estimates ca ll 4.46·
1971.

ROOFING, Gullering and
remodeling . William Mit·
chell, 388·8507 .

Services

s &amp; G Carpet Cleaning.
Steam
cleaned .
Free
estimate .
Reasonable
rates. Scotchguard . 992·
6309 or 7~ · 2211 .

&amp;

STUCCO,
plastering,
plaster repair, te xture
cei lings, free estimates .
Ka 112S6·1182.

vans&amp;4 w.o .

macr1me classes.

REAL ESTATE
FlNANCING
Feder•l Housing &amp;
Veterans Admin. Loans .

lectrica I work
M11501nry work

FOR BEST In Carpet
Cleaning
Call Sme-ltzer-'s
Steamway . Call 614-4462096 .

Free Estimates

..OMaROY,O.
992·621Sor
"2-7314
1·28-1 mo.

~ers and

M cC ORMICK
&amp;
ST ILLMAN
lor
remodeling , Rooting, con ·
crete, and gen . home main ·
tenance. Call 675-577• and
evenings. 675-1298.

ADVANCED SEAMLESS
GUTTER &amp; DOOR, INC .
Overhead Garage Doors.
Electric Door Operators,
Con•tinuous no-leak guttering
Day · 698-8205 - Night

1979 Ford 150 4x4, auto.,
p.s., p.b., topper. Positive
traction front and r-ear . 985·
4339.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

Upholstery
BROTH ERS
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
F=inest Quality at the
Lowest Possibl e Prices .
Caii2S6-1S62.

a.

87

Home
Improvements

81

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 · 5682
4 30-lfc

All work guaranteed.

,.

·~

off Rt. 7 by-pass

on St. Rf . 124 toward

. Home
Improvements

39,900.00
Nice comfortable 2 BR
located on 1.1 A .. ol nice
landscaped yard and
large garden area. Par ·
. tlal finished basement.
F .A. furnace, garage,
storm doors and wir'l ·
aows. Tnis properly has
iots of shrubbery, shade
trees, fruit trees (3 apple, 2 peach), grape arbOr, strawberry and
raspberry bushes. No.
369

-

CABiN30R
4ROOM
Fishing, vacation, 1 or :)
bedroom
cab i ne I
loca)ed lacing Raccoon
Creek and Blue Lake.
NIce large wooded lotMake. ypu&lt; life a year
round vacation. CALL
US NOW. ~o. 366

I
I
1
I
I
I
I
I
I

HOME &amp; 3 ACREs - S40,0l)0 - 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 w ith excellent garden spot.

LET THIS SLIP BY - A
remarkably well kept 2 story 3 or
I DON'T
nome on Rt. 141 '12 mile from
town . Includes lamily room, large
I·1bedroom
equipped kitchen, basement, nat . gas
heat. dining room &amp; nice fenced yard .
S29,900. Cityschools.
I JUST RIGHT FOR YOUR SMALL
FAMILY - You couldn't ask for a belI ' ter
l ocation for this cozy 2 or 3 bedroom
Located justolf U.S. Rt . lS, thiss
I home.
room
4

frame home offers dining room..
nice• kitchen, bath, carport and large
yard. $34,500.

I
I
I
I ~ru~::'t':~:d:ar::&amp;.~~r~~~~;~~n~~:
10
I

$16,500 2 BEDROOM COTTAGE - An
lne&gt;&lt;pensive home tor a retired couple
njence. Close
•snapping center·• · I mmedjate possession.

READY TO BUILD? - we have some
excellent buii(Hng lots in a super loca ·
tlon between !he Ohio River and Rae
coon Creek . Central sewage, rural
water , recreation area, streets to be
paved &amp; c ity sctlool s. Sever al to c hoose
from ..
TURN OF THE CENTURY - You
won 't have to remodel th is one . The
owners nave taken great care of tnis 2
story 4 bedr-oom tlome in town. Double
fireplace, family room, den , tor m a l dining. A real gem . $69 ,900.
COUNTRY LIVING - You ' ll like wnat
lOis has to offer . A ni ce 5 room house
located on 1 acre in city sctlool dlst. In·
eludes large kitchen &amp; 2 bedrooms.
large m eta l buildiflg (excellent for
workshop) &amp; 2 car garage, barn. plus
an excellent garden. $20's.
YOU CAN ' T BEAT THIS! - It will be
hard to find a home with this muctl spac
ein this good condition for $29,000. 2
story 3 bedroom home with family
room, equipped kitchen, basement ,
garage &amp; large fenced yard . 112 mile
from town .
9 ACRES 2 BEDROOM HOME This clean rancn frame is for tnose who
want oul In tne country . Located near
Gall Ia. this home offers nice equipped
kitchen, woodburner-, 2 car garage or
barn , double rd. frontage, elect. fen ce &amp;
~~~:; L:;'~g;s. A perfect place for

I

!
'

Ike Wiseman, Broker, 4-'6·J776, Eve .
E. N. WIHrMn, Broker, 446-4500 Eve.
Jim Cochr1n, Associate, 446·7111, Eve.

----

-500-SECONDAVE. .

.

. -

, ... :

I · ;'

1 ·
I
I
I
I
I
I
1
1
I .. _
•,

·

KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS - A dandy' • . ; • ;
-·
cellent location . 2 bedrooms, large kit' ~ ".
chen, covered patio, detached garage &amp; .
workshop, '4 ac. flat lot. Very well kept
_:·~
home . 6 miles from townn. $43,500.
HOME
_
CLEARVIEW
3
- An attractive rustic,
~droom home .n~arlv com~~·~~~.:~;
.• &gt;
eludes ceda.' s~~~~· ~~~~~g room. 2
bebadthrso,omcalwhe''d~al ceiling, 2 car. garage
••
4 yr. old ranch style home in an ex·

~.::

and more . City scnools.

L

ow

sos

·

DESIGNED FOR TOTAL LIVING Just Imagine yourself owning this love·
ly 4 bedroom home in assuper

~~~~~~;~~~c~:~s :_f J;~~~~, ~'~adt ~~

1

1

family &amp; rec. room, full basement plu~
'h acre with 16x3~1)001 , u.s. Rl . 35 .

WORD

Dan Evans, Associate, 311-8111 Eve.
B. J . Halrslon, Assocllle, 446-4240, 'E~
Nancy Smith, Associate, 446-4910, Ev~.
:

, . ' _

1
1

I' -

N~~TES

I'WISEMAN.IS A HOUSE ,.SOl~·
I

I
I
I
II
I
I

?~LLIPOLIS " .

I ·
1
I
1
II
·

1:

1:
I
...

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

:-.;,

�,..=
..
o:i-

.,

The Sunday Times-&amp;ntinel, Sunday, March 9, 1980

D-S-- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, SWlday, March 9, 1980

For Best Results Use Sunday
Times-Sentinel Classifieds

;For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
I !_7_~UCI'p~h~ol~s.'.!te'-!.rLy_
81

Business Services
"

EEN Dl
DANCE
}J; The Orchid Room
~M.in 51. Pomeroy, 0 .
. •' •
EVERY
j ATURDAY NIGHT
'if~ 1:00 Tll11 :30
t.r;"Oisco Lithllnt"
llllmlsslon $2.00 Single
,.,
Sl.OO Couple
iiifRsored by Music
UnHmlted . Choperones
*Ill be present. No
·~holic beverages per·
ll)fffecl. For further in11':, coli 992·6051.
2-26·1 mo.

'ff

HAIR STYUNG

PAYING
'20.00 AND UP
FOR
SILVER DOllARS

Men or Women
by Diann Jewell
at

B. A. BEAUTY
SALON
Wed. &amp; Thurs.
Call for Appt .
949·2320
Racine, 0 .

PH. 949-2801
No sunday Calls

2· 11 mo .

2-28·1 mo .

Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service
..

Business-Farms-Partnerships
-~,
and Corporations
Nyrolls, profit and loss statements all
ftderal and state forms.
'

Roger Hysell
Garage
11 milE~

Rutland .

ftR BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION
~]'E. Main
.. .

Pomeroy, Oh .

992·3795

2-25-lmo .
73

BLOWN
•1NSUI.ATION
Vinyl &amp;
~. .

~lvininum

Siding
· · ulatlon
m Doors
nnWindows

u .

A&amp;H
UPHOLSTERING
"FREE
ESTIMATES"

lacement

3rd St. in
Syrcuse, Oh.
Ph. 992-3752
or 992·3743

Windows
. llree Estimate

~MES KEESEE
-. J PH. 992·2772

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

i

'G\.tter

work, down
,,.,s, some concrete
"!•tit, walks and
tll"'veways.
(FlEE ESTIMATES)
.;

t C. YOUNG Ill

2·18-1 mo .

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING
All types toof work, new
or repair gullers ana
downspouts,
gutter
cleaning and painting.

Reasoftable Prices
Call Howard
949-2162
1·22-lfc

We Do Roofing,

NOW HOLDING
TOLE ·&amp; DECORATIVE
PAINTING CLASSES
-We will be having

~; ~ing
1JEE ESTIMATES"
. n in Business
' f"or s Years
' CIU. 992·3238
-:"8« FOR DAVE
1

-Now
carrying
chocolate wrappers and
molds lor candy making
-Full line of Krall sup·
plies
-Special rates for
organizations

3-2-1 mo.

••.

12Years
Experience
Greg Roush
'Ph. 992-7583
2·24-1 mo.

GEORGE'S
~;

•ROOFING

llliollng,

siding,
g~er,
built-up
I'~ and home
r_.,ir.
("

'-r•e Estimates
.
381·9759

'· .

2·14-llc

~Ldiu

LAIR CONST . - Block,
brick, fireplaces , new
homes, remodeling, call
379·2123.

STANDARD
Plumbing-Healing
215 Third Ave., «6-3782
SOUTHERN

OHIO VALLEY
SHEET METAL
ISO Third Ave.
Gut1ers &amp; downspouts
installed &amp; repaired.
Free estimates
446·7887

C&amp;W CONTRACTORS
All types home im ·
provements - Roofing
gutters -spouts -concrete work. Ph. 367-0427,
367-6194, 367·0141. Free

estimates.

"I Made it Myself"
.... Crafts are tun!
L.._...;.:..::...;._ _ 2·18-1 mo.

MASSEY
SANITARY SERVICE
Septic tank service,

residential &amp; commer·

cial. Electric eel ser·
vice, chemical toilets.
367-0527

,.PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.
Hours9-1 M .. w., F.
Other limes by appoint·

ment.
107

Sycamore CRear
Pomeroy, 0.

CALL 992·7544

72

gas · electric · repair of
electric hot water tanks.
Service on all mobile home
lurnaces. Call John at 3677131.

Realtors

repair.
Free Estimates
388-9759

HOME
IMPROVEMENTS
Storm
Windows,
Storm
Doors 1•
Replacement
Wind,ows,
Patio
Covers;
Aluminum
Sidin,g
and
Accessories. Call

. BIU:S
446-2642

1973 350 l'h ton !ruck
parts,
call
446 · 1
any11me.

1977 FD.RO F -100 pick up, 6
cyl., Jspd ., good cond., call .
367:0507 .

For Sale 1973 GMC 1 ion
fruck With utility bed . C•ll
992-3467.

lt?9 Jeep'f/egoneer, 4 dr.,

fully equl~ . exc . cond.
57.500. 742·3117 after 5 p.m .

- -------

BMR-333 - Modular home on 1.23 Acres, 2 miles
below Eureka . 3 BR, FR with w.b., home is fully .
carpeted . All electric! This may FHA!

guaranteed.

BMR-342- New Listing - 3 BR ranch, fully equipped k lichen. New carpet throughout .
BMR ·J34 - 1.3 acres of bare land. Owners will con sider land contract. Excellent commercial location.

HEY! YOU WON'T
BELIEVE 3 BR
frame Muse. Carpeted
&amp; paneled, on a qu iet
street in Racine. Close
to schools &amp; stores.
Won't last long . 521.000.
MIDDLEPORT 3
bedroom home, new
vinyl siding, Insulated,
new FA gas furnace,
WOOdburnlng fireplace,
equipped kitchen, l'h
baths, mostly carpeted,
two blocks from
downtown.

NEW LISTING - This 2
bedroom home has new
carpeting, modern kit chen, aluminum siding,
new roof, and sits on a
large 101. GOOd Value at
$18,300.00.
MINERS DEAL- Centrally located near all 3
miles on Route 124. 5
rooms and a bat~. Partial basement, forced
air heat and an extra lot
with its own water tap.
Needs a little repair.
Only $16,500.00.
IN THE COUNTRY - 6
acres near town, with a
7 room, 1112 story home.
Gas hot water heat,
water sottener, and 2
ou1buildings . Mostly
carpeted .
Nice
at
$29,500 .00.
RENTAL INCOME - 2
apartments,
always
, rented. Each has 2
bedrooms, living room,
kitchen and bath. Also,
a four car garage and
approx. 1 acre. Yours
for only 513,300.00.
WELL BUILT HOMEOne floor plan home
with a full basement,
block garage, nice front
porch, and a garden
space. Has 3 bedrooms,
a bay window in tne din·
ing room, and a
firepl•ce )n !he living
room. Just $26,700.00 .
OFFICE HOURS ON
FRIDAY TILL I P.M.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992·6191
ASSOCIATES
Dollie &amp; Roger Turner
742·2474
Jean Trusseii9BS-2660
FULL TIME
OFFICE PHONE
992-2259

Furniture Stripping
and Refinishing
county Road 6
Thurman, Ohio
Caii24H513
or 446·3896

)Frank Rose Const. Co.

Remodeling repair, new

construction, all types.
Free estimates, all work
fully
guaranteed .
Residential, commer·
cial, industrial &amp; .mht•
g, tlectrical work .
MSHACert.
446·4627

MOBILE HOME
SERVICE
Anchoring. Skirting,
Awnings,
Patio
Covers,
Carports,
Roof Paint, Sat-up
and Re-levelill!l· Call

BilL'S
446-2642

BMR·33S - Older home in downtown Gallipolis, in
need of repairs. Has gOOd potential for rignt buyer.
Must be seen. Call now!

Realtors

***~***********************~

~ DILLON ' ~,.

ESTATE AGENCY ~,.
,.
,,..
BOB LANE
SALES MANAGER

Spring Valley Plaza

Phone 446·7900
or 446· 2730

TWO BEDROOM home
located on one acre,
Middleport area, trailer
hookup for.additional in·
come. $11,000.

Bob Lane, Sales Manager
Home: 446·1049

GALLIA COUNTY'S OLDEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

MIDDLEPORT AREA.
2 bedroom home ,
paneling and carpel,
eat-in kitchen . 510,500.

It

BMR·339M - 1976 Mobile home, 14x70 Kirkwood, 2
B R all electric. Excellent .condjtion.

It

,.Jt
,,..
,.

In Patriot, an older two story home on

BMR ~ 340-

'12 A. lot. southwestern school district. Call now!
BMR-341 -Brick L ·snaped ranch on 356 A. close to
Holzer Hospital. In excellent condition. Full of ex·
tras! Natural gas heat.

**

BMR-C-341-In Middleport, grocery store, wllh·C--2
beer and wine license. Priced to include all stock
and equipment. Ready for complete operation!
BMR·33B Fumish~d!

In Midqleport - 12 unit apt. building.
&lt;;l]llfgr..,d etails . •
McGhee
$ales Assoc.

JUST OFF SR 7, 2
bedroom home, hardWOOd floors, new panelIng, on four acres of
land, barn, In Middleporlarea, will sell on
land contract, $12,500.

Dona McGhee
Sales Assoc.
446·0552:

4~6 - 0SS2

.BAIRD&amp;· FULLER

NEW LISTING - IN TOWN - Maintenance free
siding, natur,el gas furnace with central air con·
ditioing, carpet thf.oughout, all appl iances, and
some furnishings are included in this attractive
home. Call for appointmenl today !

DillON
REAL ESTATE.

rMnl, well-lnsultted, re.aonable

utility bills, located on two lots,
Mulberry Ave ., Pomeroy,
OH . Owner Will hel p tlnti'K:I fO .
responsible l),erty .

RemOdtltd home on l ecrn
feoturlng fruit trttes, well bUilt
barn, ponlble trailer lots. Home

has complete kitchen, den with
flrePiau. 3 bedrooms, forced tlr
heat . BV appointment oolv .

'·

Rill Estate. ·.

-Reese Trendlilt&amp;
&amp; Bacwioe ~...vtce

JUST LISTED - FIRST TIME OFFERED Recently redecorated Inside and cot. New
maintenance free siding outside and recarpeted and
painted inside. Just 3 miles from town. In Gallipolis Jt·
City School District. Priced In the thirties.
·
~

Ntw L.lsti~NR ·Ji, New tPIIt·
tevet. Mme; )111 blfhs, 3
btc:lrooms, bllebOird electric
hrtlt, thermopiM windOWS, ptul
•2 car ger.oe. Appro)( , 111•1Cr4.
TuPpers Plelnt, Ohio . Only

NIACIL

I~

'$200.00 MONTHLY $2,500.00 . QOWN -'
CHEAPER T _
H AN RENT- ')wner llv.-soutof town
and Is willing to sell o.nll\ ·ontract. 3 bedrooms, 1
bath, car~ted , pall~" air heat with' ~ent1 al '
air, Ph acres, ,and a _ ~4'x28' garage. Local ~on a '
state highway ·'

........

lu&amp;l'tftS O,erhlftlty -

NR•S1,

·&amp;11rll~ham

Store,12m11Hfrom
PomeroY on Rt. 33, complete

~J~~r'O.stOre room, wcten
SHI:e , l'ld fr.. Pl~lllnt .
...,.lnprltldln~towSWs.
i

CARSEY .: ·

IRANCH MANAGER. .

·

HA v*'s REAL .J•STATE
CHAS. M. 'HAYES,

B~KER

•

:

It-

NICE HOME
PRICED RIGHT
3 bedrooms, 2 baths with
showers, familY room,
dining area. Total 8
rooms, modern kitchen
with electric range,
refrig "
dishwasher,
garbage disposal· &amp; lot
of cabinets. F.A.F., also
woodburner,
Gallla
rural water service,
slor~ge
building,
carefree alum. siding,---..,..-----..,..
nice landscaped lot. Ap- r
prox. 1 acre. House ap·
prox. 4 years old . See
this one now.
1 384

COMMERCIA-L LAND
BUSINESS BUILOl\!RS
We now have approx. 14
A . available, just off Rt .
35 West, with a close ac cess to clfy sewer &amp;
water, &amp; near thriving
business community.
PRICED TO SELL. Can
sell in 1 A. Plot.
1 2t7

LUCKY YOU
This home delivers the
kind of living demandec
by loday ' s tastes in a
very handsome design . ·
Large lovely klichen
has all the modern con
venlences a wife would
want plus a large dining
area, eat at bar, family
room, 3 large bedrooms
an" 2 ful,l baths. Very
tastefully de&lt;:orafe,d

·

NEW LISTiNG -197614'x70' KIRKWOOD- WILL
CONSIDER LAND CONTRACT - Extra nice
Jt-mObile home sltuat~d on 'h acre lot. This beautiful
Jt-hOme Is complete with underpinning', carpetln~,
Jt-Central air, sec~rlty light, utility building, bullt·in
Jt-lppllances, and pa1 11•1 furniShings, Gallipolfs
- ~SChools. Fllntastlc buy with 11 percent Interest I
Jt- BEAUTIFUL 1 YR. OLD LOG HOME - If you are
Jt- tooklng for an unusual home, lhlslsltl 1,850 sq. ft. of
Jt- 1uxurJous living area . All appliances and draperies
Jt-lncluded. 10·1' rnlnutes from town.

*

LAND CONTRACT - Smdll down payment will buy
you a house wllh 2 aPartments and a mobile home In
Rio Gra(lde. Call today . 525,000. .
N0250

-*

NICE HOME WITH RENTAL Ranch, w .b:
fireplace In living room, full basement. 2 car
garage, also 2i bedroom block house, 1.76 acres,
$51,000.
'0051

It
lt-

it
JtJtJt-

~

,...
Jt-,
'
,,

~LISTINGS NI~DI!D IIOWIII WI HAVE .SOLD
' ;j:PAACTICALLY,EYERYTHirtG WE HAD IN THE
~tS:W.OOO TO $50,000 !tANGI! )N THI! PAST .fii!W
Jt-WEEKS. . ..
•
·

~

_.~.-,

.·

.

'

'

E~ENINGS

· ' ·.

•

CHaRYL CUNNINGHAM

..._1......

....- .,..

I

'

5 ACRES $6,200.

•

i~

;

lt-

•

Has a gOOd building site, some woods.

93 ACRES- Vacant land, gOOd Investment proper·
ty, some- timber, all mineral rights, located In Ad·
dlson.Twp. $23,000.
1 1032
BUSINESS !)PPORTUNITY- Service station do·
lng good buslne_
ss, excellent building; large shop. If
you're interested In owning your own business and
mak'lng money, stop Inand SOKt.us tor
. details.. 11100

Evening, CaH
'

;,

==
1.1r*****************··~·····1ft!!~'
~·

aoa L.ANa
·· ·sua
ROUSH

NEW LISTING - Attractive 3 bedrooll' nome, bath,
dining room ; storage building, nice level lot•. only
$27,500.
~ IS72
PORTER - Nice 12x50 mobile home with addition
on back, furnished and air cond .. large garage and
large lot, 516,900.
·
, .
I 0941

. '

DaiVin Bloomer, Assoc. 446·2599
--OsCar Baid, Realtor ~32
John. Fuller, Realtor' 446-4327
'

LEVEL LOT
2/3 acre M. or L. for
residential.
mobile
home and garden. Frontage· on Palrioi-Camdus
Rd.
Rural
water
available. Asking price
only $4500.00.
1362

YOUR RENT DOLLRS- WILL BUY
I can
THIS HOME I buy !his home for S12,900. Needs
I
I POND
LARGE BRICK HOME - 3 ACRES - Perfect for those seeking

SUMMER, SP,RING
WINTER OR FALLA HOME FOR
ALL SEASONS!
A pond filled wltn Bass!
- 10 acre larm . A hill
lor tobogganing! Roast
ches1nuts , from your
own tre"es 1n Autumn! A
nandsome brick, air
conditioned hous~ wit"
living room, · tnree!' bedrooms, full ~ath and
· two half baths plus
shOwer . . Kitchen with
built· in cabinets, sunken
dining room leading to
large
back porch
overlooking brealhtaki·
ng rolling hills . FamilY
room, billiard room
with table, summer kit ·
chen . · Heated garage,
au•lliary
b~iiQjng• .
plus! - Call
Information.

·

paint &amp; some'"repairs. Nat. gas heat, 3
large bedrooms, kitchen, living room &amp;
bath. Nell Ave.

·I

privacy in the woods. S beQrooms, 2
baths. 21ireplaces, 2 patios, huge fami ly room. equipped kitchen, heat pump,
large circular drive, small pond and
lots of trees . City schools.
•
EXCELLENT NEIGH-BORHOOD ....!
CITY SCHOOLS- A real bargain ex ists on this 3 bedroom brick &amp; fram*: .
· Family room with fireplace, eat-in kit chen, 1 1h baths,2carg,e~rage, nat . gas&amp;
cent . air, $49,900. Assumable loan at
91Jz%.
OWNER WILL HELP FINANCE Nearly 3 bedroom ranch, full basement,
w/famlly room, workshop and lots of
storage . Eat-In kitchen, 2 baths, formal
dlnlng.1 Located on over 2 acres of land .
Near Rio Grande. Southwestern
Schools. $45,000.

I

I

tiOME &amp; STORE
BUILDING
On Stale H'ghway. 5
room and bath frame
home. Garden . Its own
water system. 4 apple
trees, 1 peach. Large
store room ls~ floor, has
an upslai rs. Basement.
'Lots of possibility, like
feed store, hardware,
~antique
store, etc ,
• Phon~ for details. I 348

CLOSE TO ENO - Nice 1970 Rebel mobile home,
12x60, In excellent condition, furnished, front porch
, &amp; a carport, storage building and an Oliver tractor.
located on 2 acres of nic"e land, better hurry, only
$16,500.
'
#0561

*
*
*
Jt-

JUST LISTED - FRAME RANCH WITH FULL ItBASEMENT Plenty of walk,ln closets, equipped.kll· itchen, nice garden spot. Located ot~ Rt. 1 with It
beautiful view of the OHio River. VA or FHA Priced
ln-10'5.
.
·
'·
• '
·:

with garage on
lots . Reedsville, ·
Call us,

Now taking listings and we hav• porentlal buyers.
CALL Me:
- . .
.
CGIIIIa C01&lt;nty
Certified)
ILIIC:~ BI!IS, Wate~ end .
t.:lnes, E tectric
P\lle B•lldlngs.

COUNTRY HOME
5 BR. nice fron1 porch, nice kitchen
with built-in cabinets, double s-s sink
Bath with shower, lots of shade trees
and fruit Ires. Nice garden spot. Tnis
home has blown In Insulation. Located
beside 51. Highway 160. 84 acre of land .
More can be purchased whh this home.
2 mobil ehomes that now are bringing in
a rental of$175.00 per month plus a total
ol 3.84 acres of land . All located beside
Stale Highway 160. CALL FOR ALL
DETAILS .
#266

LOHIO!!!
OF IT
Tastefully decorated home . Liv ing
room with brick ·fireplllce, eat-in kitchen with built-i n cabinets, ba1h &amp;
patio. Storm doors and windows with
carefree alum . siding . In addition a
large 30'x30' cinder block garage with
flourescent lighting, plenty of electrical
plus &amp; water . Pefect for hobby or
workshop or just a place for the husband to hide and putter. All this plus 1
A. of land m . &amp; I. with room for a
garden . Asking only $34,500. In city
school district .
1387

Why pay r-ent when ou

.

For the Best in
Re$idential,
Commercial,
Industrial,
Farms
and Rental

Tupptn Pl•lns .t.ru-

:.....··

LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT - Attractive ranch, 3
bedrooms, large living room, tullY carpeted, full
basement wllh 12x24 family room. central air, 1 car
garage, located in Kyger Ck. Sch. Dlst., only
$«,500.
, S44t

New . Llstlng-NR · 52,
Comfortable 4 bedroom
home on approx. 1 acre,
storage building, G:o.
Rd. 1 nur mines. Just
$19,900.

remodeled, new ctrpet, bue·

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

Hoborl Dillon, Broker
FIY "Manley,
Branch Mgr. ,
Phone 992-2591

We're I.Qcated 382 E. 2nd St., Pomeroy, Ohio
Just below the
Lanes

lxec:utlve Llsting-NR •S1, l
bedroom home, comp letely

Gallia County's Fastest Growing Real Estate Agency '

REALTY

FIRST LISTING- Nice BHevel , 3 bedrooms, 2full
alhs, garage with electric opener, heal pump with
central air. Close to hospital on 2 acres with WOOds.
$46,500.
I 146S
GOOD FAMILY LIVING - This lovely ranch' has3
bedrooms, family room wllh woodburner, large 2
car garage, beautiful 18x36 pool with large patio,
close to town, 559,900.
.
11995

SUNDAY, MARCH 9
1TIL5PM ~

7 million miles
to find you a-home.

oan
Ass.o c
Ph. Home: 446·3294

BMR ·339F - In Rio Grande, 30 acres wllh 2 story
house in need of repa ir . Make us an offer!

Tom While
Sales Assoc.
444•9557

INVESTMENT PROPERTY
Well
established business in
the heart of Middleport,
on corne~ lot, plus 4
apartments all presently rented. Sell all or
part.

We cover o..-er

BMR-337 - Need a gpod starter nome? Two
bedroom frame in city limits, has basement and
nal. gas neat. Under $30,000.

'

HOBART DILLON ,
BROKER

Associate

BMR-336 - (4) BR in city limils. house has lots of
space throughout. Includes 6 acres. Call for details!

HAYES REAL ESTATE

Investment Property NR-54 ,
Middleport
business building, 4
rented
for
ncome . C~ll

1914 CHEVY Pick up, good
cond., $950. Call 367·7187 or
675·2608.

1f14 International Pickup
1UOO mi. 992·5864
el'992·~f illler 6 p.m.

BMR ·l61 - Two story frame home with 3 extra lots
in Rio Grande. Very good condition .

Realtors

992·2U9

In Eureka, 3 BR, trame house in very

BMR·C360 - ~ommercial building in downtown
Gallipolis. Can be purchased as going business or
building alone. Call for details!

Sale Ends Saturday, March IS

DILLON
REAL ESTATE

WANTED TO BUY - Rental
houses and r en tal property.
Call 446-7627.

BY OWNER
Down 51 . Rl . 7; 5
minutes from City Park .
2 story frame : 4 B. R .•s,
living room with W. B.
fireplace , eat -in kit - ·
chen. Ba sement and
garage . Priced in low
40's .
Call : Daytime. 446-1615
Aller 5: 446-1244

BMR·IS9 - 4 BR home in Gallipolis. Excellent location . Natural gas heat. Under $30,000.

Grand
Opening

1976 FORD pick up with
topper. Call «6·740-4.

l?'U&lt;k.

BMR-157 -

Commercial &amp; Residential
Finest q11ality at the lowest possible
prices.

Realtors

Block of mineral righ1s,
Ohio or w. va . w illing to
pay lop dollar . Write P.O.
Box 293, Nelsonville, OH .
45764. 1-875-2041 . evenings.

RIVER VIEW HOME
.FOR SALE

good condition includes 32 A. more or less.

GALLI POLIS, OHIO
256·1562

completely

basement, buildings, barn,
some !Imber, all m.lneral
rights. $77,000. 992 -7559 .

Real Estate
wanted

BMR-147 - Located on Rt. 7 · Crown Clly. Metal
commercial building on 90 x 180 lot. Pr-iced under
$18,000!

BROTHERS UPHOLSTERY

work

36 acres farm w i th 9 r-oom
1'12 story house, fu II

36

.

LAST SALE OF THE MONTH

All

Farms for .Sale

BMR-139 - Two story home In clly of Gallipolis.
Good condition. Less than $30,000 !

Call now for your free estimate. No jOb
too~mall or too large.

Picking up a piano in your
ar-ea . Looking for a respon·
Sible party to take O'('er
paym ~ nts .
Call credit
manager collect. 614--5925122.

Realtors

1977 CHEVROLET Step
side pick up. Short wheel
base. Call «6-3395.

1978 DODGE pick up, 0 150, Adventurer, 318 auto .•
p.s., p.b., lilt wheel. sliding
rear glass, spoke wheels, 2·
tone blue. $3.950. Call «69369.

Upholstery

33

COUNTRY HOME witn
stocked pond for swimming
or fisnlng, 9 rooms, batn ,
car peted . 3 to 17 acres
available. Located appro• .
7 miles lrom Pomeroy off
R t . 7 or 33 . 446-2359 after 6.

BMR-137A - Brick ranch on 120x180 flat lot . An ex cellent buy . Call now!

rv .

Buying u.s. silver coins
dated 1964 or earlier. Also
gold items, don't lose
money, simply pick up the
phone and dial614·992·5113.
Brown's .

SERVICE

BMR-948 - Older 2 story house in Cheshire .
Natur-al gas tleat, excellent condition . Call for
details!

011r labor price incl11des tightening -&amp;
regl11eing frame where needed, retying
springs, tone finish wood, extra padding
where necessa

wanted : Locust fence
posts. U inch used tires.
Bernie 992-7275.

CO. · Furnace repair - oil -

NATIONAL HOME
RELOCATION
Serving 6,000
Communities
421 Second Ave.
C.ll446.0552 Anytime

GEORGE'S ROOFING
Roofing, siding, guHer,
build ~ up
roof, home

rrucks for Sale

1977 CHEVY PICKUP
custom deluxe, 112 ton, 305
eng., p.s., auto., disc
brakes, sliding back win·
dow, new fiberglass topper.
Call «6-3139 after 5 p.m .

17 -

Realtors

Realtor·Auctioneer

This week only, any standard si1e sofa &amp;
chair for On,ly 5160 Labor Plus 10% Discount on fabric, plus Free armcaps &amp;
head flaps. Free pick · up &amp; delivery,

ELWOOO
BOWERS
REPAIR Sweepers,
toasters; irons, all small
eppliancts. lawn mower.
Next to Slate Highway
Gara ge on Route 7. 9853625.

REMODELING · General
repair, concrete work, fr-eeestimates, Leslie Lemley,
ca ll 367·0666 after 5 p.m.

Will do odds and ends,
paneling, floor t ile, and
ceiling tile. Call Fred
Miller, 992-6338 .

~~

1976 FORD F 250, V -~, 4
spd, looks rough, runs
gOod. $1,000.388-8319.
750, exc.
extra parts.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Phone «6-3888 or 446·..77

Realtors

ATTENTION!
UPHOLSTERY SPECIAL

Electrical
R efridgeration

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs ,
service ,
all
makes. 99~ · 2284 .
The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales
·and Service . We sharpen
Scissors.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

82

GENE PLANTS
AND SONS
Plumbing · Hea1ing - Air
conditioning. 300 Fourth
Ave . Ph . 446·1637.

PAINTING . Residential interior and e)(terior barn
and mobile home roofs.
Free estimates . 15 yr exp.
Call 367 7784 or 367 -7160.

AVOIO CHIMNEY FIRES
- Safe, dustless cleaning,
The Cnimney S'4'eep, 1·373·
6057.

84

'

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTER'(; SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave .• Gallipolis.
446 7833 or 446·1833.

-- I

and

PIANO TUNING - Lane
Ollniels Quality service sin·
ce 1965. Call 742 -2951 or 9922082 .

CARPENTER . WORK
complete remodeling by AI
Tromm, 742·2328. References .

JIM MARCUM roofing,
spouting and siding . 30
years e)(perience . Free
est imates . Remodeling .
Call 386-9857 .

WALL PAPERING
painting. 742-2328.

DEWITT'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160 at Evergreen
Phone «6·2735.

Home
Improvements

81

QUALITY
MAIN TENANCE · Electr ical ,
plumbing,
heating,
specializing i n oi l and gas
lurnaces . Call386-9698.

THEISS INSULATION, l nsu lmaster foam insulation .
New homes, old homes,
commercial structures .
For free estimates ca ll 4.46·
1971.

ROOFING, Gullering and
remodeling . William Mit·
chell, 388·8507 .

Services

s &amp; G Carpet Cleaning.
Steam
cleaned .
Free
estimate .
Reasonable
rates. Scotchguard . 992·
6309 or 7~ · 2211 .

&amp;

STUCCO,
plastering,
plaster repair, te xture
cei lings, free estimates .
Ka 112S6·1182.

vans&amp;4 w.o .

macr1me classes.

REAL ESTATE
FlNANCING
Feder•l Housing &amp;
Veterans Admin. Loans .

lectrica I work
M11501nry work

FOR BEST In Carpet
Cleaning
Call Sme-ltzer-'s
Steamway . Call 614-4462096 .

Free Estimates

..OMaROY,O.
992·621Sor
"2-7314
1·28-1 mo.

~ers and

M cC ORMICK
&amp;
ST ILLMAN
lor
remodeling , Rooting, con ·
crete, and gen . home main ·
tenance. Call 675-577• and
evenings. 675-1298.

ADVANCED SEAMLESS
GUTTER &amp; DOOR, INC .
Overhead Garage Doors.
Electric Door Operators,
Con•tinuous no-leak guttering
Day · 698-8205 - Night

1979 Ford 150 4x4, auto.,
p.s., p.b., topper. Positive
traction front and r-ear . 985·
4339.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

Upholstery
BROTH ERS
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
F=inest Quality at the
Lowest Possibl e Prices .
Caii2S6-1S62.

a.

87

Home
Improvements

81

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 · 5682
4 30-lfc

All work guaranteed.

,.

·~

off Rt. 7 by-pass

on St. Rf . 124 toward

. Home
Improvements

39,900.00
Nice comfortable 2 BR
located on 1.1 A .. ol nice
landscaped yard and
large garden area. Par ·
. tlal finished basement.
F .A. furnace, garage,
storm doors and wir'l ·
aows. Tnis properly has
iots of shrubbery, shade
trees, fruit trees (3 apple, 2 peach), grape arbOr, strawberry and
raspberry bushes. No.
369

-

CABiN30R
4ROOM
Fishing, vacation, 1 or :)
bedroom
cab i ne I
loca)ed lacing Raccoon
Creek and Blue Lake.
NIce large wooded lotMake. ypu&lt; life a year
round vacation. CALL
US NOW. ~o. 366

I
I
1
I
I
I
I
I
I

HOME &amp; 3 ACREs - S40,0l)0 - 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 w ith excellent garden spot.

LET THIS SLIP BY - A
remarkably well kept 2 story 3 or
I DON'T
nome on Rt. 141 '12 mile from
town . Includes lamily room, large
I·1bedroom
equipped kitchen, basement, nat . gas
heat. dining room &amp; nice fenced yard .
S29,900. Cityschools.
I JUST RIGHT FOR YOUR SMALL
FAMILY - You couldn't ask for a belI ' ter
l ocation for this cozy 2 or 3 bedroom
Located justolf U.S. Rt . lS, thiss
I home.
room
4

frame home offers dining room..
nice• kitchen, bath, carport and large
yard. $34,500.

I
I
I
I ~ru~::'t':~:d:ar::&amp;.~~r~~~~;~~n~~:
10
I

$16,500 2 BEDROOM COTTAGE - An
lne&gt;&lt;pensive home tor a retired couple
njence. Close
•snapping center·• · I mmedjate possession.

READY TO BUILD? - we have some
excellent buii(Hng lots in a super loca ·
tlon between !he Ohio River and Rae
coon Creek . Central sewage, rural
water , recreation area, streets to be
paved &amp; c ity sctlool s. Sever al to c hoose
from ..
TURN OF THE CENTURY - You
won 't have to remodel th is one . The
owners nave taken great care of tnis 2
story 4 bedr-oom tlome in town. Double
fireplace, family room, den , tor m a l dining. A real gem . $69 ,900.
COUNTRY LIVING - You ' ll like wnat
lOis has to offer . A ni ce 5 room house
located on 1 acre in city sctlool dlst. In·
eludes large kitchen &amp; 2 bedrooms.
large m eta l buildiflg (excellent for
workshop) &amp; 2 car garage, barn. plus
an excellent garden. $20's.
YOU CAN ' T BEAT THIS! - It will be
hard to find a home with this muctl spac
ein this good condition for $29,000. 2
story 3 bedroom home with family
room, equipped kitchen, basement ,
garage &amp; large fenced yard . 112 mile
from town .
9 ACRES 2 BEDROOM HOME This clean rancn frame is for tnose who
want oul In tne country . Located near
Gall Ia. this home offers nice equipped
kitchen, woodburner-, 2 car garage or
barn , double rd. frontage, elect. fen ce &amp;
~~~:; L:;'~g;s. A perfect place for

I

!
'

Ike Wiseman, Broker, 4-'6·J776, Eve .
E. N. WIHrMn, Broker, 446-4500 Eve.
Jim Cochr1n, Associate, 446·7111, Eve.

----

-500-SECONDAVE. .

.

. -

, ... :

I · ;'

1 ·
I
I
I
I
I
I
1
1
I .. _
•,

·

KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS - A dandy' • . ; • ;
-·
cellent location . 2 bedrooms, large kit' ~ ".
chen, covered patio, detached garage &amp; .
workshop, '4 ac. flat lot. Very well kept
_:·~
home . 6 miles from townn. $43,500.
HOME
_
CLEARVIEW
3
- An attractive rustic,
~droom home .n~arlv com~~·~~~.:~;
.• &gt;
eludes ceda.' s~~~~· ~~~~~g room. 2
bebadthrso,omcalwhe''d~al ceiling, 2 car. garage
••
4 yr. old ranch style home in an ex·

~.::

and more . City scnools.

L

ow

sos

·

DESIGNED FOR TOTAL LIVING Just Imagine yourself owning this love·
ly 4 bedroom home in assuper

~~~~~~;~~~c~:~s :_f J;~~~~, ~'~adt ~~

1

1

family &amp; rec. room, full basement plu~
'h acre with 16x3~1)001 , u.s. Rl . 35 .

WORD

Dan Evans, Associate, 311-8111 Eve.
B. J . Halrslon, Assocllle, 446-4240, 'E~
Nancy Smith, Associate, 446-4910, Ev~.
:

, . ' _

1
1

I' -

N~~TES

I'WISEMAN.IS A HOUSE ,.SOl~·
I

I
I
I
II
I
I

?~LLIPOLIS " .

I ·
1
I
1
II
·

1:

1:
I
...

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

:-.;,

�~- The Sunday Times-sentme l, Sunday, March 9,1980

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found ~ in the Sunday Times-Sentinel
Realtors

Realtors

84

Realtors

Electrical
&amp; R efridgeration

Lennox

bath, full basement. ga s fu rnace, storm windows &amp;
doors . Owner wi II help t inance it you need if. $17,500.
MIDDLEPORT Large doub le corner lot on
Loc us t 5 1., three bedroom , 2 bath, garage 8.
workshop . $25,000.·
RUTLAND - Older home needs some rc p.Jir s on
Salem Stree t. Ni ce corner lot $9900 .00 .
BUILDING OR TRAILER LOT - H ysell Run Road
- 5 acres. $7 ,000 .
SYRACUSE - Old hou se on a ni ce lot, $ 11 ,600 .
LOT IN MIDDLEPORT - We will build a house on
this one i f you choose - South Second Ave .

CALL 992-2342
·---------------------RODNEY DOWNING . BROKE R- HO . 992·37 31
BILL CHI _L DS , BRANCH MGR . -HO . 992-2 449

OOWNIN~ILDS

AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE

SERVING SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE 1868
ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US.

992-2342
DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY, INC.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Heating and ai r

i n sul&lt;~t ion . 446 8515 or 446
0445. Ca l l after .4 :JO.

D DAY
REFRIDGERATION

21 0 E . ·Second Street

MIDDLEPORT - Three bedroom , l 1 1 bath , ni ce lot
iust one block f rom heart of town . $25,000.
POMEROY - On L1ncoln Ht s. - Two bedroom and

Residential.

Phone
1-(614 ) -992 -3325

com mer cia l ,
388 8274,

-

·--

WATER

or

M. H. Repair

BILL ' S MOBIL E HOME S
and Home J mprovements .
Free es t 1m'ates . Call 446
2642 .

Dri lling

and clea ning . Pumps sold
and insta ll ed. Call W .T .
Gra nt , .:146·8508

ELMER
M U RREL
FOLDE N , Dozer work, 446
9835.

388 9963.

MOBILE HOME - 1972
three bedcroom, 2 bath ,
furnish ed
M i dland
mobile home on 718 of
an acre ot land with
country sett ing .
2 SET -UPS
t or
trai ler s on 4 ilcres of
land near town on State
l' ":oure for onv $12 ,500.
CHEAPY - One floo r 5
room building wi t h bath
and fl ue for wood
burner . Only$11,000 .
·OUT OF TOWN
La r ge 2 story home with
2 renta l s. Has cit y
wa ter , central heating ,
and large lot. Conve·
nient location. Come
take a look .
INCOME - Six r entals
in Middl eport . Will pay
out in a few yer s. Wi ll
help supplement your
S.S. or income .
NEW LISTING - One
floor p la n . 3 nice
bed rooms with closets .
Large living, format
d ining , lots of cupboards
in the kitchen, natural
gas heat, storm doors &amp;
windows and 2 lots in
Racine out of high
water .
WE CAN SELL IT IF
ANYONE CAN . CALL
992-3325 or 992-3876.

----

W ELL

-------

heating, cooling, elec t rical
service. Call

86

E "&amp; R Tree Service . Pain·
t1ng and excava t i ng . Cal
388 8797 or 388 8860 .

condit ioning . Rapco Foam

WE HAVE FINANCING AVAILABLE
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN AND 30 YEARS
TO PAY, ON MOST HOMES .

Ex ca vat i"n-,_.g.___

83

RUSS AND MAX
ELLIOTT

REAL ESTATE

-----:-::c---:--

JOHNSON Wa fer Delivery

Call446 · 1004 anytime .

L IMESTONE , gravel a nd
sand . A ll sizes . At Richards
and Son, Upper River Rd .,
Gallipol is, Ohio. Call 446 ·
7785.

.[ . . .
411t

a............

WILL HAUL Limestone,
sand , gravel, till dirt , 8 to 5
daily , 4460592 after 6 cal l
446 2731 .

FOR LEASE ·
4800 Sqoare Feet, next
door Bob Evilns Steak
House. 800 sq. fl. office,
4,000
w.areho ... se

Lime-stone for driveways .
Pomeroy Mason area . 367
710 1.

II·

.

I

.

....~I

.

~~~=~ .,.I~IM

I~

tN

..

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE Remode led
homr~ inc lud es 5 rms . &amp; bath, carport, stove, refriQ .,
dishwasher, mob ile home pa d, almost 6 acr es on 588
2 m i. from town . $30,000 .
FREE_ GAS - 100 acrfs m· l, vacant land n'ea r
· Bulavtl le, approx. 40 _ac r es wooded, balance rolling
pastureland, some t1 mber re ported . 7 miles out,
$55.000.
RACCOON CREEK FARM 50 acres, 38 A . bottom,
11 A . pasture, lovely modern br ick home with J Brs .,
2 baths, ca thedral ce ilings, firepl ace, large su n deck
and lots of other extras, new meta l pole barn , crib
1
0adi ng chute , approx . 1700 ft . c reek frontage:
oca ted 4 m i. from M eigs Mine No. J .
WHAT DREAMS ARE MA,DE OF -

Mat ure land-

s~ apin.g &amp; rich green lawn highlight thi s enchanting

rtverv tew home . owner has been tra nsferred &amp;
m ust se ll . this c':' stom built 3 BR home . LR, dining
rm .,_ eq u• ped . k1tchen , foyer with open stairwa y,
fam rly rm. w•th FP , basement &amp; 2 ca r garage are
only a few of the special features. Located on Route
7 south of town with frontage on the Oh io River .
GREEN TOWNSHIP- PASTURE FARM - 155 A.
M ·L loca ted on SR 141 approx . 6 mi. west of town .
La nd is ap prox. 60% clea red &amp; 40% woods &amp; in ·
etudes 2 ponds &amp; a good barn. Pri ced at $500 per
acre .
RODNEY BIDWELL RD. - Sect ional home, 24x60,
4 BR , 2 baths, large LR , equipped k itchen, cent . air,
concr ete block garage, l acre. $22, 500 .
FARMER ' S FARM - VINTON AREA - 93 acres
M ·L , mostly cleared, some bottom land, large hay
fields , 35 acres total cropland, fen ced &amp; cross f enc·
ed, pond &amp; cr eek for wa ter , 60x60 barn formerly us·
ed f or dairy , 2 silos, sheds, house has 6 rms., ba1h &amp;
ce llar , lots of road frontage. Call for appointment .
ROOM TO ROAM - I think you would say that this
sprawling brick tri ·level is one of the nicest country
homes you've ever seen. Thi s beau ty is situated on
4Vl acres of land about J•h miles from Rodney , Why
~ot le t y~ u~ famtly en joy 5 BR's, 3 baths, large liv ·
1n_
g and d1n1ng room , complete kitchen, family room
w1th stone fireplace and 2 car garage. Be the first to
see this one

NOtiCE OF
INVITATION
FOR BIDS
FINANCIAL
AUOIT OF THE
GALLI A
METROPOLITAN
HOUSING
AUTHORITY
The Board of Co m m iss ioners
of
Gallia
M etropolitan
Housing
Authority will open sealed
bids at their office, 16 St ate
5tr eet. Ga llipolis. OH , on
March 19, 1980, at 2:30
p.m ., for the audit of the
f inancia l records of th e
Housi ng Authority .
The Audif musf be con·
due led by a Cer tifi ed
Public Accountant in ac·
cordance w ith t he "Slate of
Ohio Audit Guide For
Metropolitan
Housin g
Authorities.' '
Bids must be submitted
by 12 :00 noon on March 19,
1980. Anyone interested
should contact John P .
Roderus, Executive Dlrec·
IO!J (614) 446-0251.
I he
Board of COm missioners of the Gi!tlli8
M etropol itan
Housing
Authority reserves · the
r ight to reject any or all
bids.

GOA~II:I.U

THIS TIME
The ow ner s have loved this home but they are moving. You will know the ca re it has had as soon as you
open the door. Just eight years old. 3 bedroom
ran ch ; living room , kitchen with built-ins, dining
area, modern bath, 1 car finished garage, all this on
a ni ce size lot located only one and a half miles from
tt'!.e city. Price d in the mid 40'S.

March 2 . 9

In these times, saving for

~

1~

MA!i1

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

:~~r ·

AROUND$3,400.00
DOWN PAYMENT
Wifhof only 91!2% Int.
and own this lovely
Cedar Ranch only 2
yrs.old. 3 bedrooms, 2.
baths, modern built·in
ki tchen, d ining area.
Thi s home is only Ph
miles from city . Owner
has been transferred
and is very anxious to
sell .
BEAT THIS
5300.00 PER MONTH
Including principal , In·
taxes and in·
Only 9% int.
t ra nsferred and
anx ious to sel l. Ci ·
schools, acre of
l ~lro,und more or less, l iv·
om ,
2 w .b .
,.,,,.,-.,
kitchen &amp;
Full ba se~
iced in $40's .

..

CROUSE BECK ROAD - Restri cted building lot,
1.22 acre, ni ce wooded setting, city schools, $5,950.

AT THIS PRICE
YOU CAN MAKE
INFLATION WORK
FOR YOU!
Cozy 3 bedroom home,
l ar ge modern kitc hen,
liv ing room , Oath, utility
room and a storage
building . All setting on 3
acres of ground in the c ity school di stri ct. Pric·
ed in the 30's .
DAIRY FARM
135 acres m or e or less.
1.3 miles Raccoon Creek
bottom , 40 acres creek
bottom , 60 acres tota l
tilab le. U sed as a Grade
A dairy · operation, 4
milkers with automatic
washers, 800 gal . bulk
tank s, 2 si los (800 tons
total)
with
silo
unloading a uger . STruc·
lu res : 40x80 metal,
172x40 milk house with
f eed roo m , 40x 170 con crete slab f eed lot . All
structu res have con·
crete
fl oors .
1,000
walnut and poplar trees
on farm ; Clay Twp ., Ci ·
ty Schools.

PERRY TOWNSHIP-- 78 ac r es, 15 A . Si mm s Creek
bottom, balance ro lling pasture &amp; woods, nice
modular home, large bar n, several other buildings,
tab. base, corner of SR 1.41 &amp;. th e Vernon Wood s R ~ .
FINISH THIS ONE YOURSELF &amp; SAVE MONEY
- Unfi ni shed one story home with 3.4 acr es on RAC ·
COON CREEK. Locat ed on the Green Saunders Rd .
near Northup . $18.500.
CHESHI'R E_-:- S26,000 - Remodeled 1'12S tory , 2 BR ,
bath, LR , dtnmg rm ., kitchen, part base m en t, dou ·
ble ca rport, storage bui lding anQ.a large corner lot .

'

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE - - ~0%'
DOWN - Older 2 story farm home wi th 6 rms. &amp;
bath, cellar hou se, sheds, large shade t r ees on ap·
prox. 4 acres. Located 4 mi. south of Rio Grande on
the Tom Wood s Rd. $19,900 .
RIO GRANDE AREA - Approx . 45 acres vacant
land, county wa ter, pond, some t imber, nice
building sites, city schools, $18,000.

~,

BA""':H

M '

-

I

~ --- ----,

l Ob '

-

JLincoln ~ark
,,

I

w cJ

£1{

B~~:Oii~OO~

''

-

.

I

1-

\

MOBILE
HOMES

&gt;/"&lt;!. "''

I ;

o. ,.,N(.

'

Roo M

"'

_,

LJ
'

SAY HELLO TO
ANEW FLAME I
On long cold Winter
nights you can cuddle up
next to a nlcP cozy )wood
fireplace.,(\ 'inll~ly a
plus foe;.~vuvely brick
homt -;o ealurlng
3
bedrot. ns, 1112 baths,
modern buill-in kitchen
and all applia_nces. Formal dining area . Utility
room, gas forced air
heat. .Excellent loca tion.
State Rt . 35 .

!

I

( li. NT~

a5.cWoo,..,
!30 '

NEW LISTING - Near
Rio Grande turnlshed
mobile home on a half
acre . Franklin wood burner and storage
building . Buy now tor
$12,500.00 .

M , .,.,~l'~

LIVINC,

I

Roo"'

17 ·- 6 ..

91 "

r-

'

r~./\ ~n

I

'

FINANCE! FINANCE!
FINANCE!
.
Owner will help finance
with a down paymen1
and carry the balance
on a land contract.
St ately 2 story pillary
posts, 3 bedroom , for·
mal eotry and large
open w.nding staircase ~
Family room with plank
floorinJ
and w . b .
fi replace. Formal" living
room, spacious eat-in
kitchen with loads of
knotty pine cabinets.
This and much more
setting on 3 acres. Can
buy only one acre. City
school!:! . Give us a call
for m ore details.

NEW SECTIONAL
4 mos. old, J

JUST ARRIVED - WITH ALL THE USUAL LINCOLN .PARK FEATURES - WALK-A-BAY WINDOWS IN LIVING
ROOM - FURNISHED - CARPET THROUGHOUT - AM RADIO AND INTERCOM SYSTEM.

QUALITY
PLUS BEAUTY
This is a family home,
all
brick
with 4
bedrooms and a sparkling full bath up. Large
kitchen lined with pretty
ca binets. Large foyer
and formal living room
and dining . Full basement - fireplace In fami ly room , 2 car garage attached, also a workshop
and a barn. Situated on
aproxlmately 5.9 acres.
This home reflects
tender, lov ing care and
t rue value.

SCENIC OHIO
RIVER ACREAGE
!5 Acres of good farm ,
You ' ll love this modern
4 bedroom brick home
with full basement, 2'12
baths. Family room
with
woodburnlng
llreplace, two kitchens,
Good barn, fences,
tobacco base, producHve cropland . Call for :
an appointment .

I

1100 E. MAIN

FOR THE FINEST IN MANUFACTURED HOUSING •
992-7034

446-3087
24 STATE STREET
GALLI POLIS, OH 10
WE DO OUR HOMEWORK!

I
I
I

I
I

I

I
I

Stutes Peal E:state

POMEROY, OHIO
"

'

'

WHAT YOU ARE LOOKING FOR Reconditioned 3 bedroom - . k •tchen
comp let e for the lady ?f the hous~,
large
fam ily rm . wtth
Frankltn
fireplace and beautifu l new carpet_. Uv .
rm., 1 bath, utility rm . and over SIZed 2
car garage. Situated on 1/2 acre and
wi thin walking di stance of the sc hool .

NEW LISTIN'G PAMPER HER
WITH THIS - Spacious one floor p lan
a ll brick ranch, loaded with amen iti es
throughout. 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths, 15 ACRES PLUS - 12x65 Kirkwood
large living room with fi re p lace a nd mobile home, barn, corn crib, pond,
bui lt· in wood burner, kitchen complete, l and fenced and lots of shade trees.
forma l dining room, laundry room and Land ca n be sol d without mob ile home .
2 ca r garage in a choice location .

NEW LISTING Restored 2 story
home, marble f ireplace, open stai r ·
case, 4 bedrooms. dining room, kitchen,
family room, 2 baths, attached storage
room, 3 car garage, fenced yard , good
location . Vv ill trade for small farm .

ANY HOUR

Ohio

an investment for
ALL TII'IES!

AFFORDABLE
Country surround·
ings, fenced lawn, modern 3 B R home,
attached garage, Kyger Creek schools,
5 miles from city . $27,500.

90 ACRES - Nearly
2,000' rd . frontage, 55
acres pa sture , 20
acres timber, rest
lillabl e. $95.900 .

7S ACRES Excellent bldg. si tes,
nea r Hol zer Hospital.
$63,900 .

A·RETREAT from the problems of 1he day. Family
ROLLING LAND - Woods beyond,
· quiet country road, wonderful place tor
ch ildren and horses. 3 BR colonial of·
fers all the space you'll need. 14 acres
only 5'12 miles from city . $40,000. Just
Listed!

5 p A c E - 4 Br., 2112 baths, base·
ment, fireplace, screened porch, formal dining, nerly an acre, just outside
city . $53,900.

room for gatherings. Space enough (2800 sq . ft .) to
be apart when you choose. 4 BR, 3 full baths . For mal dining, basemen t recreation rm. plus hobby
rm. 2 car garage. A profusi on of good taste i n
design, construction and decor . Ove r l'h acres.
very desirable loca tion . Assume $49,000 mortgage
at 9.5%. $91,000.

21'12 ACRES - Over
600'
rd . frontage ,
blacktop rd ., rural
water, meadow and
wood e d hillside ,
beautiful. $20,900.00. ,.

84
ACRES
Breathtaking view of
Ohio River and sur·
rounding area, wood·
ed, vert private, city
schools . $37,500.

CENTENARY- N~IOral cedar ranch ,
nearly an acre lawn, 3 BR, family rm.,
2 car garage . A showplace! $61 ,900.

~...'==
"··~~
.__
.
rs

1

l
!

I f.

"8 . r .

rof

ST ACRES - Rolling
meadows, wood ed
hillside , pond , pine
grove . $25.700.

~,

A HIDEOUT But only ··a few minutes
from city, 2 story frame home has 3 BR,
enormous living rm. w11h fireplace. eatIn 'kitchen equipped with range,
refrigerator, concrete block garage. CI ty schOOls, $37,500.

SPRING FEVER- may come early as
you drive the winding country, cross
Raccoon Creek to this immaculate
brick ranch. Last year the owner raised
the beSt garden we've seen, and the
lawn is like velvet. Inside there's 3 BR ,
Ph baths, beautiful formal living room ,
fully equipped kitchen and laundry, 2
car attached garage, city schools.
$56,500.

NEW LISTING - Adamsville · Har·
risburg Road - 4 acres of land .
1.667 ACRES f lat land .

No restr uctions. Nice

BUILDING LOT - Appo . 'h acre in the
city school district . Water and sewage
avai labl e. Private road fa beput in and
in a high and ~ry area.

446-3636

2_tloc~__St.L

APPRO)(. 1'12 ACRES - Lovely roll ing
land . KC schools, $4,000 .

SO ACRES - Over
1,000' frontage along
Cherry Ridge Road.
Partially wooded .
Excellent building
si tes. $65,000.

L·SHAPED BRICK, cedar and stucco tudor ranch, 3
bedrooms, 2 full baths, family r oom with raised
hearth fireplace and sliding doors that open onto
1errace, fully equipped kitchen, f ormal entry hall
opens into family, kitchen and living room, 2 car
finished garage. Electric heat pump, cen . air. NearlY an acre level lawn . $57,900.

WE BRING PEOPLE HOME
AFTER HOURS PHONE
Willa Davis, Associate
446-0844
Beckv Lane, Associate
446-0458
Vickie Hauldren, Associtke
446-4042

STOP
L.:.ooking for a small
farm with room for
chickens, a few p igs and
a garden spot? This is
if! 61J2 acres, good
frarne home w it h forced
air
fu r nac e,
rural
water . 4S'x 45' barn ,
ce llar
house.
On
blacktop road about 10
miles from city . City
school district. Beller
hurr y ! Just l isted .

ENERGY MISER LOW , lOW gas bill. Only a
few miles from city, so
you save Of1Q"1aSOiif:'e
too ! 3 Br 0\, oge, krt·
chen h.'&gt;. range &amp;
refrig ., cabinet space .
Attached gar•ge, level
f e n ced
ba cKy hard .
$36,000.
CHESHIRE

VILLAGE

- 3 BR, 11/:2 story home
in good con~~ 2 cargarage .
lots.
Within wa ..... ,ng distance
grocery,
c hurch .
$19,900.

:so'- .,

CROWN CITY - Nice 3
BR home on lg . 78'x221 '
lot. Fuel oil furnace ,
drilled well. Can be
bought furnished or un
furnished . $16,000 .

COLONIAL - New well
nome by
known
builder, C:,O\.- .•~, stone
firelace, . car garage,
city sc hools .

"'"0

SERVIC_E STATION,
garage and rest aurant
located on busy Rt . 7.
Great location for soft
i ce cream and sandwich
shop . Full detail s to
ser ious buyer .
COMMERCIA -l
BUIDING DOWNTOWN
GALLIPOLIS - Bri ck.
2 story, presently leased
for tavern , upstairs
apt., lg . building in rear
suitable tor garage.

WHY RENT? You can
afford a home of our
own at t his prir~! 3 BR ,
large n-- o\..0 .rpeted
kitchen,
ndry room,
new vinyl siding, gas
heat . Level fenced lawn .
In city. $27 ,000 .

s. .. .

TRAILER PARK - Set
up tor 12 trailer pads.
All
utilities
under
ground , ca 11 for more
details . $35,000 .
REMODELED BUN GALO - Cute and c ozy ,
new carpet and kitchen
cabinets, 2 BR , lg . li ving
rm . plus familv rm . or
den, rilling lawn . Extra
large storage b l dg .
$27.500.
NEW
ON
THE
MARKET - Brick and
frame ranch, 3 BR, 1112
baths, fully carpeted.
Attached
garage.
Across the street from
Spring Valley Shopping
Plaza.
Newly
re decorated . $45,000.
CHARMING BUT AF ·
FOROABLE Take
time to view this 3 BR
ranch, energy saving
heat pump, cen. air, ful ·
IY carpeted except kit·
chen . llh baths , at tach·
ed garage. $42,500.

HANDY WITH A HAMMER? Better bring a
paint bru~t-o! This
home n•c;,O'-~o ir but is
worth i .. frame w.lth
alum. siding. gas heat,
barn, trailer hok.·up.• 4
acres, 1 mile from CI1Y.
$19,900.

WANT TO

SELL?
CALL
446-3636

WE NEED
LISTINGS I

r unners for a 12x60
trailer, se pti c tank ,
rural water available.
Very reasonable.

I
I

KINGSBURY HOME :SAlES

SUPERB CEDAR RANCH - First rate
craftsmanship throughout. 4 bedrooms,
double closets, 2 full baths, co mplete
built·in kitchen with Corning top range,
formal dining, lg . fami ly rm . w ith
woodburner. Redwood deck and 2 lll}r
garage. 3fc acre lot. Call for appoi'"'t·
ment .

RODNEY -CORA RD.

I

INSPECT OUR I.OT(

PLATTEO AND READY TO BUILD
ON - Building lots 120'x100 located in
subdivison i n KC school district .

CANADAY REALTY
A 1 I (l ~'

Realtors

Realtors

.58 Acre, mobil ehome

· I•

QUALITY ALL THE WAY -

bedroom ~

Realtors

2 baths, fam ily room
li ving room and dining
room. Modern built -in
k itchen . Woodburner .
Take a look al th is real
nic ehome. All setting on
one and half acres In fhe
city school distric1.
Priced in the 30's.

Bonnie L Stutes, Realtor, 446-4206
James R. Stutes, Assoc. 446-2885
Jose.ph L Leath, Assoc. 245·9484;

I

~

a rainy day won't get you

so much as the plice of an
wnbrella.

···~· -

Realtors '

(';r-f'/ }AH ·
h~7-

WM. D. TONEY • BROKF~

Pomeroy, 0.
Ph. 992-2259

WATCH FOR SIGNS!!!

lH
10% LOAN AVAILABLE
This home is just w a iting to be yours. You ' ll bubble
with e)(C itement when you sip the features this luxury home offers. F oyer, flooring, formal living
room , w.b. fireplace, cedar mantel track, lighting,
new plush carpeting, formal dining room, bel:lutlful
family room w ith la_rge sliding door leading to
bea utiful pool and pat1o area , terraced ground with
lots of shrubbery, as grill, idea l for entertainment, 3
bedrooms. 2 ba th s, large kichen with unusual
breakf ast bar , cherry, walnut wood, full basement
cen tral air. garage and openers . Th is home 1$
beautifu.lly ~e~ora ted . All new custom draperies.
Looks ltke tt 1ust c am erlght out of an interior
decorator' s magazine . One of the finest. I ' m sure It
will be love at f irst sight.

MINI FARM -- Owner s moved t o Florida and a:-e
selling thi s love ly 3 BR brick home Thi ::; 6 vr. old
beauty offers lots of goou liv ing tor some lucky
fam ily with a large kit chen &amp; dining rm ., LR, fami ·
ly rm . with fireplace, garage &amp; barn . Loca ted on
State Route 160 approx . 6 mi . from HM C.

• • •

608 E. Main

Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636
·Audrey ·.Canaday, Realtor 446-3636

CAMPGROUND !FORMERLY CLARK CHAPEL
ACRES) Make somethinq of this property again. 71
A., 2 acre lake, s~veral tuitdings tn need of repair,
dumping station, 2 water s ;stems, lots of pine trees.
Fix this dandy place up &amp; star t making money, OP·
portun i ty knocks.

0

862 Pearl St.
Middleport, Ohio

~!

RESTRICTED
BUILDING LOTS
Debby Drive all
utilities available .
STROUT
REALTY ,
446-0008 .

•

AFFOROABLE Nice 1971 mobile
home, siTuated on .82 of an acre. Exta
room added on. Metal storage build ing
included . Located on Graham School
Road , off Rt. 141 . Priced at 16,500 .

TONEY "REALTY (0

2 to 5 P.M.

IN THE LAP OF LUXURY - That' s where you will
be the ~ay you move into thi s brand new J B R, 2'h
bath tn-l_evel. This home will fulfil l your every
drea":l w tth the large L ·shaped famil y rm ., equip·
ped kth:hen &amp; 2 car garage . Located in Clearview
Estat(&gt;s &amp; shown by appointment .

'

HOme At

SUNDAY, .MARCH 9TH

BEAT THE INTEREST-RATE RAP!
"Today's rates are a heavy penalty. W~1~
not beat the rap with these home buys."

Introducing

OF

$45,9()000

~l!n11d 111111~ ll:ttlfJ1111~

•

- ------,,--,----

Realtors
-----,--

1ht

lljll

New J bedroom, llltal electric home with
many nice features .
WATCH FOR SIGNS .

LOW DOWN P.\YMENT - SUPER BUY- FHA ·
VA - CQNVENTIONI\L - This 3 yr. old bi -level ;s
like neW &amp; must be sold th is month .' 3 or 4 B R 's, 2lfz
baths, family rm ., heatalator fireplace, low heat
bills, Clay grade sc hool, Gallia Academy High
School. Call tor Appointmellt.

Realtors

Realtors

Realtors

J~NfiJIIIIII.,.,.~r .,~,'("liHr r~~~

446-0008
SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP - Appr ox . 6 acres
level &amp; gent l y rolling land, cou nty water, nice
bu ilding si tes, located on the f l oyd Clark Rd . ap
prox . ~h mi . off Route 160 near Por ter . Askin,
$15,000 .
-

Realtors

Realtors

Housing
Head uarters

OWNER FINANCIN(; JIV .AI~A!!h!' - $6,500 down
- 9% - Asking $33,000 - Rem• deled 2 story home,
3 BR 's, LR, den, family rm .. d ning, kitchen, 2 W B
fireplaces , 31h acres. Located on State Route 233
between Gallipolis and Oak Hill.

other commercialt.~se. ·
Call Ike Wi seman
446-3643
The Wiseman Agency

•

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found zn the Sunday Tzmes-Sentznel

storage, garage or any

Realtors

Drive on St. Rt. 124 to Langsville. Turr.
right on County Road 10 (across from
Small's Grocery) about4/5 mile.

WILL HA UL any grade of
limestone ton or more for
$7. 15 per t on Delivered
anywhere in the Ga llipolis
area . Ca ll Leroy Ca ldwe ll,
446-4851.

WIL L HA UL limestone and
gravel. Also , lime hauling
and spreadi ng . Leo Morris
Tr ucking. Phone 742 -2455

Realtors

HOBSTffiER REALTY
SUNDAY, MARCH 9th
2 - 5 P.M.

LIME STONE
Delivered
13 mil e rad ius , Gal li polis,
Pt . Pleasant, fr ee estimate
of driveways. Cal l367·710 1.

For Lease

JIM 'S
DEPE NDABLE
water delivery . Ca ll 256
936B anyTime .

Realtors

85 General Hauling

85 General Haulin_g__

~7-TheSundayTimes-Sentinel, Sunday, March9, 1980

·'

21 LOCUST
STREEt
4q-42jJ'

FARM~CLOSE IN
Three miles down river from city
llml15: 3 BR home. The kitchen and llvlng room are- the showplace of the
house. You will be Impressed at the
remodeling and how mother has kept it
so clean and charming. 54 acres, some
timber, pasture, and tillable land. Good
bern, tobacco bse. This Is what more
asil for. Please call, we will explain . /!...
goodbUy.Don'lwalt,
#446

ON 4'1• ACRES
A fine ranch in the country, seven miles

011 this new home located off .

__

Creek Road . Spill entry. LR,
area, 3 BR, bath, kitchen
dishwasher, n i ce cabinets. Single car
garage, full basement. Rural water
available. 2.92 wooded acres. House Is
dnott1nlshed. Take a look at this one toay 1
# U7

ALMOST PERFECT
Nothing is perfect but this cozy home is
('lEW LlirtiNG - PEAS IN A POD
as close as a person can find . 2
·couldn't lee I more snug than 'what you
bedrooms, Iaroe living room, Im •.will be In this attractive 3 bedroom Hoi·
pressive
built -In
kitchen,
new
ly ·Park mnoblle home and lot. Separate
dishwasher, new gas furnace. patio,
dining room with lmpre.sslve wood . - storage bUilding, lf•acre . &lt;.ooklng for
grain flooring . -Step yp Irving room.
the rlghf home. make an appointment
Plenty of built-I n storage space, Ap·
todaY, Within 4'h miles ·of Holzer
pllances Included. Underpinned , anH_ospilal.
t 421
chored. Best of all o~y 4,4 miles from
town, City school district. Cafl for an
A BIT OF'COUNTIIY
appolnlmenlloday.
.
1431
This farm house needs some work, but

·jusT LIS;TED - A nice mobile h&lt;)me
on a clean and .well kept two and one·
half acre lot, Located on a blacktop
road near Porter. Minutes from town .
Rural water.
427

*

NEW LISTING
.
You can't beat the price of this 2
l:!ed..OOin mobile home and lot. Situated
at Rt. 554. Priced at $10,000.00. Call for
an appol ntmentloda'v.
1424
1

••

•

.

.·

INIIES&gt;TMIENIT LAND
more

when you buy it you ' ll gel I barn, cellar
and cellar house, county water, but also
old fashion dug well where water never
tastes beller winched up with a rope
and bucket. Fruit trees and a nice yard.
Three bedrooms, bath . Today only
$23,000.
440

.

*

' LOAN 1\SSlJMPTION POSSIBLE
House approx. 2 yrs. Old. 3 bedrOOil)S,
bath, kitchen and service area. large
living room, baseboard electric heal,
supplemented iNIIh &lt;oat . and woodburner, cou~ly water system. 519,000
mortgage cM be assumed at 1~ rate
for 15 yrs. Cheshire area. Listing Price
$32,000.
'
, 435

from Gallipolis. Six room modern
house, 3 BR, bath, full basement. fuel
oil forced air furnace, blown in insula·
tlon. County Water plus large ·cistern for
e•tra uses. ~prlng will soon be here.
What a place for your lomlly and
fr iends. Well stocked pond, good fences .
Beautiful acres. Call today . This showing will be convincing .
t 449
WISE LAND lfiiVESTMENT
ThiS land should make you money . 115
acres, 50 acres seeded down in good
grass, should cut several thousand
bales soon as season w ill allow . 40 acres
pasture land. 25 acres of woods, lots of
pines. Some limber to cui. These acre.s
are estimated. Barn Is In good condr·
t lon, pond, fences average. County
water available, 1200 lb. tobacco base.
All mineral rigHts Included, $40,000.
Don't pass this up.
t 40S

BB ACRE FARM
If vou' re look ing for a home for yourselff
AND your animals ... then took no tur- ·
ther! 33 good, level, tillable acres.
Some woods, some pasture, n ice size
barn. Located 15 min . .frorn Gallipolis
on a blacktop road, thi s gentleman' s
farm has that "down . home feel ing" .
Home consists of 3 BR. llvlng •rl)l ., din·
ing rm .,· ki h. hen, bat ~ and go_od !l ize
utility room. Call for more ·spclfics.t 419

,.

43 ACRES
vacant land, po_
s slbiiiiY of coal and
agrlculturallime.
1322

BEEFFARt.y
we have several farms, but this one is
special. Land in good condition, tiled.
limed, fertilized . Fences kept up. 1800
tbs. tobacco base . 2 barns , good set up
for co.w and calf" operation. L~t· s not
forget the modern house . 2 or 3
bedrooms, nice large bath . This one Is
readv to use . We'd like to show tt to you.

'

1448

THE BEST OF THE BEST
You can't do any better tha~ the best,
and th is fine 3 bedroom home IS the
best, and one you'll be proud to own.
Brealhtak;ng fam i lY
room with
fireplace, 2 baths, l iv ing r()()m and din · ,
;ng room have luxurious carpeting, 2
car garage . No ma intenance ederior
and Interior in absolutely perfect condi t ion. A MUST TO SEE!
1353
SEEMS LlKE OLD TIMES
when dollars had cents, as 1 write this
ad about our new listing, L ·shape ranch
on a Iaroe corner lot 1J' xl50' . Envision
a spaclovs livi ng room 11'x26', a lovely
kitchen with 30' ca binet space . 11'x19'
family room , one balh with shower. 3
nice size bedrooms. FA fur,.ace, new
woodburner, dril led well , county '#ate,r
available. M any more features. Don I
b'! sorry tomorrow, call today ,
N 422
INVESTMENT PROPERTY
High prior ;!y . 7 acr es on SR 35, Springfield &amp; Green Twp. Landscaped and
rady to sell , plenty water taps
.!vall able . Don' t wiat. Th is should sell .
, 350

.
I

® Rc-gbu:rt"d Tnldt:m ink uf Ct"nlu ry 21

Rn1 EILIII C' Corporation . Pr1mrd In

U~ ,

0 19'19 Cl'nl ul)' '2 1 Rtat E!lllllt Coll&gt;Or&amp; IIOf\. Equal HOUSIIltl OpportuoJiyw
J:ado omee l•ladcpeacl t e.dy o••ed ••d opcr•ted.

BEAT THE HIGH INTEREST
For 12% Interest and a reasonable down payment
you can become the owner of thiS-qua illy built brick
home . Living room, 3 bedrooms, Jlh baths, full
finished basement with family room, 2 fireplaces,
kitchen equipped w11h appliances, polio doors in
dining area . Extra lot with 12xl6 storage building .
Quiet neighborhood . Best of all LOW healing bills.
Make an appt. to,see this fine home.
392

*

•

MOBILE HOME - 12'X6.4' good condition, looks
very neat, 2 BR, underpinned, county waer, pro·
pane gas heat , Lot .98 of an acre, wel l landscoped.
Please call for more Information . Priced to sell
$16,200.
, 441

LANDI 90..7 1 acres bordered by Ra ccoon creek. 2~­
acres cropland, 27 aCres WOOdland, balance In
pasture . 2 nlr.e size barns, several sheds, corn crib,
·2,3161b. tobacco base, hog barn has a concrete floqr
with a 1.780 lb. automatic feeder . Good wafer supply. Callnoworstopby .
#4264
l,OTS PRICED TO SELL
Build to suit yourselfon these 1 acre lots. Frontage
on blacktop road . County water available. If you' re
IQOking tor a pretty country setting, call today .
$5,000 per acre. No restrictions.
# 4\7
NEW \.I STING ~ Double wide 24'X60', allractlve
setting . Far enough trom road, but never hard.lo gel
to. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, good condition, countY
water. Moat all appliances Included. An•iouslo sell.
Make us en offer.
I 430

�~- The Sunday Times-sentme l, Sunday, March 9,1980

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found ~ in the Sunday Times-Sentinel
Realtors

Realtors

84

Realtors

Electrical
&amp; R efridgeration

Lennox

bath, full basement. ga s fu rnace, storm windows &amp;
doors . Owner wi II help t inance it you need if. $17,500.
MIDDLEPORT Large doub le corner lot on
Loc us t 5 1., three bedroom , 2 bath, garage 8.
workshop . $25,000.·
RUTLAND - Older home needs some rc p.Jir s on
Salem Stree t. Ni ce corner lot $9900 .00 .
BUILDING OR TRAILER LOT - H ysell Run Road
- 5 acres. $7 ,000 .
SYRACUSE - Old hou se on a ni ce lot, $ 11 ,600 .
LOT IN MIDDLEPORT - We will build a house on
this one i f you choose - South Second Ave .

CALL 992-2342
·---------------------RODNEY DOWNING . BROKE R- HO . 992·37 31
BILL CHI _L DS , BRANCH MGR . -HO . 992-2 449

OOWNIN~ILDS

AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE

SERVING SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE 1868
ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US.

992-2342
DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY, INC.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Heating and ai r

i n sul&lt;~t ion . 446 8515 or 446
0445. Ca l l after .4 :JO.

D DAY
REFRIDGERATION

21 0 E . ·Second Street

MIDDLEPORT - Three bedroom , l 1 1 bath , ni ce lot
iust one block f rom heart of town . $25,000.
POMEROY - On L1ncoln Ht s. - Two bedroom and

Residential.

Phone
1-(614 ) -992 -3325

com mer cia l ,
388 8274,

-

·--

WATER

or

M. H. Repair

BILL ' S MOBIL E HOME S
and Home J mprovements .
Free es t 1m'ates . Call 446
2642 .

Dri lling

and clea ning . Pumps sold
and insta ll ed. Call W .T .
Gra nt , .:146·8508

ELMER
M U RREL
FOLDE N , Dozer work, 446
9835.

388 9963.

MOBILE HOME - 1972
three bedcroom, 2 bath ,
furnish ed
M i dland
mobile home on 718 of
an acre ot land with
country sett ing .
2 SET -UPS
t or
trai ler s on 4 ilcres of
land near town on State
l' ":oure for onv $12 ,500.
CHEAPY - One floo r 5
room building wi t h bath
and fl ue for wood
burner . Only$11,000 .
·OUT OF TOWN
La r ge 2 story home with
2 renta l s. Has cit y
wa ter , central heating ,
and large lot. Conve·
nient location. Come
take a look .
INCOME - Six r entals
in Middl eport . Will pay
out in a few yer s. Wi ll
help supplement your
S.S. or income .
NEW LISTING - One
floor p la n . 3 nice
bed rooms with closets .
Large living, format
d ining , lots of cupboards
in the kitchen, natural
gas heat, storm doors &amp;
windows and 2 lots in
Racine out of high
water .
WE CAN SELL IT IF
ANYONE CAN . CALL
992-3325 or 992-3876.

----

W ELL

-------

heating, cooling, elec t rical
service. Call

86

E "&amp; R Tree Service . Pain·
t1ng and excava t i ng . Cal
388 8797 or 388 8860 .

condit ioning . Rapco Foam

WE HAVE FINANCING AVAILABLE
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN AND 30 YEARS
TO PAY, ON MOST HOMES .

Ex ca vat i"n-,_.g.___

83

RUSS AND MAX
ELLIOTT

REAL ESTATE

-----:-::c---:--

JOHNSON Wa fer Delivery

Call446 · 1004 anytime .

L IMESTONE , gravel a nd
sand . A ll sizes . At Richards
and Son, Upper River Rd .,
Gallipol is, Ohio. Call 446 ·
7785.

.[ . . .
411t

a............

WILL HAUL Limestone,
sand , gravel, till dirt , 8 to 5
daily , 4460592 after 6 cal l
446 2731 .

FOR LEASE ·
4800 Sqoare Feet, next
door Bob Evilns Steak
House. 800 sq. fl. office,
4,000
w.areho ... se

Lime-stone for driveways .
Pomeroy Mason area . 367
710 1.

II·

.

I

.

....~I

.

~~~=~ .,.I~IM

I~

tN

..

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE Remode led
homr~ inc lud es 5 rms . &amp; bath, carport, stove, refriQ .,
dishwasher, mob ile home pa d, almost 6 acr es on 588
2 m i. from town . $30,000 .
FREE_ GAS - 100 acrfs m· l, vacant land n'ea r
· Bulavtl le, approx. 40 _ac r es wooded, balance rolling
pastureland, some t1 mber re ported . 7 miles out,
$55.000.
RACCOON CREEK FARM 50 acres, 38 A . bottom,
11 A . pasture, lovely modern br ick home with J Brs .,
2 baths, ca thedral ce ilings, firepl ace, large su n deck
and lots of other extras, new meta l pole barn , crib
1
0adi ng chute , approx . 1700 ft . c reek frontage:
oca ted 4 m i. from M eigs Mine No. J .
WHAT DREAMS ARE MA,DE OF -

Mat ure land-

s~ apin.g &amp; rich green lawn highlight thi s enchanting

rtverv tew home . owner has been tra nsferred &amp;
m ust se ll . this c':' stom built 3 BR home . LR, dining
rm .,_ eq u• ped . k1tchen , foyer with open stairwa y,
fam rly rm. w•th FP , basement &amp; 2 ca r garage are
only a few of the special features. Located on Route
7 south of town with frontage on the Oh io River .
GREEN TOWNSHIP- PASTURE FARM - 155 A.
M ·L loca ted on SR 141 approx . 6 mi. west of town .
La nd is ap prox. 60% clea red &amp; 40% woods &amp; in ·
etudes 2 ponds &amp; a good barn. Pri ced at $500 per
acre .
RODNEY BIDWELL RD. - Sect ional home, 24x60,
4 BR , 2 baths, large LR , equipped k itchen, cent . air,
concr ete block garage, l acre. $22, 500 .
FARMER ' S FARM - VINTON AREA - 93 acres
M ·L , mostly cleared, some bottom land, large hay
fields , 35 acres total cropland, fen ced &amp; cross f enc·
ed, pond &amp; cr eek for wa ter , 60x60 barn formerly us·
ed f or dairy , 2 silos, sheds, house has 6 rms., ba1h &amp;
ce llar , lots of road frontage. Call for appointment .
ROOM TO ROAM - I think you would say that this
sprawling brick tri ·level is one of the nicest country
homes you've ever seen. Thi s beau ty is situated on
4Vl acres of land about J•h miles from Rodney , Why
~ot le t y~ u~ famtly en joy 5 BR's, 3 baths, large liv ·
1n_
g and d1n1ng room , complete kitchen, family room
w1th stone fireplace and 2 car garage. Be the first to
see this one

NOtiCE OF
INVITATION
FOR BIDS
FINANCIAL
AUOIT OF THE
GALLI A
METROPOLITAN
HOUSING
AUTHORITY
The Board of Co m m iss ioners
of
Gallia
M etropolitan
Housing
Authority will open sealed
bids at their office, 16 St ate
5tr eet. Ga llipolis. OH , on
March 19, 1980, at 2:30
p.m ., for the audit of the
f inancia l records of th e
Housi ng Authority .
The Audif musf be con·
due led by a Cer tifi ed
Public Accountant in ac·
cordance w ith t he "Slate of
Ohio Audit Guide For
Metropolitan
Housin g
Authorities.' '
Bids must be submitted
by 12 :00 noon on March 19,
1980. Anyone interested
should contact John P .
Roderus, Executive Dlrec·
IO!J (614) 446-0251.
I he
Board of COm missioners of the Gi!tlli8
M etropol itan
Housing
Authority reserves · the
r ight to reject any or all
bids.

GOA~II:I.U

THIS TIME
The ow ner s have loved this home but they are moving. You will know the ca re it has had as soon as you
open the door. Just eight years old. 3 bedroom
ran ch ; living room , kitchen with built-ins, dining
area, modern bath, 1 car finished garage, all this on
a ni ce size lot located only one and a half miles from
tt'!.e city. Price d in the mid 40'S.

March 2 . 9

In these times, saving for

~

1~

MA!i1

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

:~~r ·

AROUND$3,400.00
DOWN PAYMENT
Wifhof only 91!2% Int.
and own this lovely
Cedar Ranch only 2
yrs.old. 3 bedrooms, 2.
baths, modern built·in
ki tchen, d ining area.
Thi s home is only Ph
miles from city . Owner
has been transferred
and is very anxious to
sell .
BEAT THIS
5300.00 PER MONTH
Including principal , In·
taxes and in·
Only 9% int.
t ra nsferred and
anx ious to sel l. Ci ·
schools, acre of
l ~lro,und more or less, l iv·
om ,
2 w .b .
,.,,,.,-.,
kitchen &amp;
Full ba se~
iced in $40's .

..

CROUSE BECK ROAD - Restri cted building lot,
1.22 acre, ni ce wooded setting, city schools, $5,950.

AT THIS PRICE
YOU CAN MAKE
INFLATION WORK
FOR YOU!
Cozy 3 bedroom home,
l ar ge modern kitc hen,
liv ing room , Oath, utility
room and a storage
building . All setting on 3
acres of ground in the c ity school di stri ct. Pric·
ed in the 30's .
DAIRY FARM
135 acres m or e or less.
1.3 miles Raccoon Creek
bottom , 40 acres creek
bottom , 60 acres tota l
tilab le. U sed as a Grade
A dairy · operation, 4
milkers with automatic
washers, 800 gal . bulk
tank s, 2 si los (800 tons
total)
with
silo
unloading a uger . STruc·
lu res : 40x80 metal,
172x40 milk house with
f eed roo m , 40x 170 con crete slab f eed lot . All
structu res have con·
crete
fl oors .
1,000
walnut and poplar trees
on farm ; Clay Twp ., Ci ·
ty Schools.

PERRY TOWNSHIP-- 78 ac r es, 15 A . Si mm s Creek
bottom, balance ro lling pasture &amp; woods, nice
modular home, large bar n, several other buildings,
tab. base, corner of SR 1.41 &amp;. th e Vernon Wood s R ~ .
FINISH THIS ONE YOURSELF &amp; SAVE MONEY
- Unfi ni shed one story home with 3.4 acr es on RAC ·
COON CREEK. Locat ed on the Green Saunders Rd .
near Northup . $18.500.
CHESHI'R E_-:- S26,000 - Remodeled 1'12S tory , 2 BR ,
bath, LR , dtnmg rm ., kitchen, part base m en t, dou ·
ble ca rport, storage bui lding anQ.a large corner lot .

'

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE - - ~0%'
DOWN - Older 2 story farm home wi th 6 rms. &amp;
bath, cellar hou se, sheds, large shade t r ees on ap·
prox. 4 acres. Located 4 mi. south of Rio Grande on
the Tom Wood s Rd. $19,900 .
RIO GRANDE AREA - Approx . 45 acres vacant
land, county wa ter, pond, some t imber, nice
building sites, city schools, $18,000.

~,

BA""':H

M '

-

I

~ --- ----,

l Ob '

-

JLincoln ~ark
,,

I

w cJ

£1{

B~~:Oii~OO~

''

-

.

I

1-

\

MOBILE
HOMES

&gt;/"&lt;!. "''

I ;

o. ,.,N(.

'

Roo M

"'

_,

LJ
'

SAY HELLO TO
ANEW FLAME I
On long cold Winter
nights you can cuddle up
next to a nlcP cozy )wood
fireplace.,(\ 'inll~ly a
plus foe;.~vuvely brick
homt -;o ealurlng
3
bedrot. ns, 1112 baths,
modern buill-in kitchen
and all applia_nces. Formal dining area . Utility
room, gas forced air
heat. .Excellent loca tion.
State Rt . 35 .

!

I

( li. NT~

a5.cWoo,..,
!30 '

NEW LISTING - Near
Rio Grande turnlshed
mobile home on a half
acre . Franklin wood burner and storage
building . Buy now tor
$12,500.00 .

M , .,.,~l'~

LIVINC,

I

Roo"'

17 ·- 6 ..

91 "

r-

'

r~./\ ~n

I

'

FINANCE! FINANCE!
FINANCE!
.
Owner will help finance
with a down paymen1
and carry the balance
on a land contract.
St ately 2 story pillary
posts, 3 bedroom , for·
mal eotry and large
open w.nding staircase ~
Family room with plank
floorinJ
and w . b .
fi replace. Formal" living
room, spacious eat-in
kitchen with loads of
knotty pine cabinets.
This and much more
setting on 3 acres. Can
buy only one acre. City
school!:! . Give us a call
for m ore details.

NEW SECTIONAL
4 mos. old, J

JUST ARRIVED - WITH ALL THE USUAL LINCOLN .PARK FEATURES - WALK-A-BAY WINDOWS IN LIVING
ROOM - FURNISHED - CARPET THROUGHOUT - AM RADIO AND INTERCOM SYSTEM.

QUALITY
PLUS BEAUTY
This is a family home,
all
brick
with 4
bedrooms and a sparkling full bath up. Large
kitchen lined with pretty
ca binets. Large foyer
and formal living room
and dining . Full basement - fireplace In fami ly room , 2 car garage attached, also a workshop
and a barn. Situated on
aproxlmately 5.9 acres.
This home reflects
tender, lov ing care and
t rue value.

SCENIC OHIO
RIVER ACREAGE
!5 Acres of good farm ,
You ' ll love this modern
4 bedroom brick home
with full basement, 2'12
baths. Family room
with
woodburnlng
llreplace, two kitchens,
Good barn, fences,
tobacco base, producHve cropland . Call for :
an appointment .

I

1100 E. MAIN

FOR THE FINEST IN MANUFACTURED HOUSING •
992-7034

446-3087
24 STATE STREET
GALLI POLIS, OH 10
WE DO OUR HOMEWORK!

I
I
I

I
I

I

I
I

Stutes Peal E:state

POMEROY, OHIO
"

'

'

WHAT YOU ARE LOOKING FOR Reconditioned 3 bedroom - . k •tchen
comp let e for the lady ?f the hous~,
large
fam ily rm . wtth
Frankltn
fireplace and beautifu l new carpet_. Uv .
rm., 1 bath, utility rm . and over SIZed 2
car garage. Situated on 1/2 acre and
wi thin walking di stance of the sc hool .

NEW LISTIN'G PAMPER HER
WITH THIS - Spacious one floor p lan
a ll brick ranch, loaded with amen iti es
throughout. 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths, 15 ACRES PLUS - 12x65 Kirkwood
large living room with fi re p lace a nd mobile home, barn, corn crib, pond,
bui lt· in wood burner, kitchen complete, l and fenced and lots of shade trees.
forma l dining room, laundry room and Land ca n be sol d without mob ile home .
2 ca r garage in a choice location .

NEW LISTING Restored 2 story
home, marble f ireplace, open stai r ·
case, 4 bedrooms. dining room, kitchen,
family room, 2 baths, attached storage
room, 3 car garage, fenced yard , good
location . Vv ill trade for small farm .

ANY HOUR

Ohio

an investment for
ALL TII'IES!

AFFORDABLE
Country surround·
ings, fenced lawn, modern 3 B R home,
attached garage, Kyger Creek schools,
5 miles from city . $27,500.

90 ACRES - Nearly
2,000' rd . frontage, 55
acres pa sture , 20
acres timber, rest
lillabl e. $95.900 .

7S ACRES Excellent bldg. si tes,
nea r Hol zer Hospital.
$63,900 .

A·RETREAT from the problems of 1he day. Family
ROLLING LAND - Woods beyond,
· quiet country road, wonderful place tor
ch ildren and horses. 3 BR colonial of·
fers all the space you'll need. 14 acres
only 5'12 miles from city . $40,000. Just
Listed!

5 p A c E - 4 Br., 2112 baths, base·
ment, fireplace, screened porch, formal dining, nerly an acre, just outside
city . $53,900.

room for gatherings. Space enough (2800 sq . ft .) to
be apart when you choose. 4 BR, 3 full baths . For mal dining, basemen t recreation rm. plus hobby
rm. 2 car garage. A profusi on of good taste i n
design, construction and decor . Ove r l'h acres.
very desirable loca tion . Assume $49,000 mortgage
at 9.5%. $91,000.

21'12 ACRES - Over
600'
rd . frontage ,
blacktop rd ., rural
water, meadow and
wood e d hillside ,
beautiful. $20,900.00. ,.

84
ACRES
Breathtaking view of
Ohio River and sur·
rounding area, wood·
ed, vert private, city
schools . $37,500.

CENTENARY- N~IOral cedar ranch ,
nearly an acre lawn, 3 BR, family rm.,
2 car garage . A showplace! $61 ,900.

~...'==
"··~~
.__
.
rs

1

l
!

I f.

"8 . r .

rof

ST ACRES - Rolling
meadows, wood ed
hillside , pond , pine
grove . $25.700.

~,

A HIDEOUT But only ··a few minutes
from city, 2 story frame home has 3 BR,
enormous living rm. w11h fireplace. eatIn 'kitchen equipped with range,
refrigerator, concrete block garage. CI ty schOOls, $37,500.

SPRING FEVER- may come early as
you drive the winding country, cross
Raccoon Creek to this immaculate
brick ranch. Last year the owner raised
the beSt garden we've seen, and the
lawn is like velvet. Inside there's 3 BR ,
Ph baths, beautiful formal living room ,
fully equipped kitchen and laundry, 2
car attached garage, city schools.
$56,500.

NEW LISTING - Adamsville · Har·
risburg Road - 4 acres of land .
1.667 ACRES f lat land .

No restr uctions. Nice

BUILDING LOT - Appo . 'h acre in the
city school district . Water and sewage
avai labl e. Private road fa beput in and
in a high and ~ry area.

446-3636

2_tloc~__St.L

APPRO)(. 1'12 ACRES - Lovely roll ing
land . KC schools, $4,000 .

SO ACRES - Over
1,000' frontage along
Cherry Ridge Road.
Partially wooded .
Excellent building
si tes. $65,000.

L·SHAPED BRICK, cedar and stucco tudor ranch, 3
bedrooms, 2 full baths, family r oom with raised
hearth fireplace and sliding doors that open onto
1errace, fully equipped kitchen, f ormal entry hall
opens into family, kitchen and living room, 2 car
finished garage. Electric heat pump, cen . air. NearlY an acre level lawn . $57,900.

WE BRING PEOPLE HOME
AFTER HOURS PHONE
Willa Davis, Associate
446-0844
Beckv Lane, Associate
446-0458
Vickie Hauldren, Associtke
446-4042

STOP
L.:.ooking for a small
farm with room for
chickens, a few p igs and
a garden spot? This is
if! 61J2 acres, good
frarne home w it h forced
air
fu r nac e,
rural
water . 4S'x 45' barn ,
ce llar
house.
On
blacktop road about 10
miles from city . City
school district. Beller
hurr y ! Just l isted .

ENERGY MISER LOW , lOW gas bill. Only a
few miles from city, so
you save Of1Q"1aSOiif:'e
too ! 3 Br 0\, oge, krt·
chen h.'&gt;. range &amp;
refrig ., cabinet space .
Attached gar•ge, level
f e n ced
ba cKy hard .
$36,000.
CHESHIRE

VILLAGE

- 3 BR, 11/:2 story home
in good con~~ 2 cargarage .
lots.
Within wa ..... ,ng distance
grocery,
c hurch .
$19,900.

:so'- .,

CROWN CITY - Nice 3
BR home on lg . 78'x221 '
lot. Fuel oil furnace ,
drilled well. Can be
bought furnished or un
furnished . $16,000 .

COLONIAL - New well
nome by
known
builder, C:,O\.- .•~, stone
firelace, . car garage,
city sc hools .

"'"0

SERVIC_E STATION,
garage and rest aurant
located on busy Rt . 7.
Great location for soft
i ce cream and sandwich
shop . Full detail s to
ser ious buyer .
COMMERCIA -l
BUIDING DOWNTOWN
GALLIPOLIS - Bri ck.
2 story, presently leased
for tavern , upstairs
apt., lg . building in rear
suitable tor garage.

WHY RENT? You can
afford a home of our
own at t his prir~! 3 BR ,
large n-- o\..0 .rpeted
kitchen,
ndry room,
new vinyl siding, gas
heat . Level fenced lawn .
In city. $27 ,000 .

s. .. .

TRAILER PARK - Set
up tor 12 trailer pads.
All
utilities
under
ground , ca 11 for more
details . $35,000 .
REMODELED BUN GALO - Cute and c ozy ,
new carpet and kitchen
cabinets, 2 BR , lg . li ving
rm . plus familv rm . or
den, rilling lawn . Extra
large storage b l dg .
$27.500.
NEW
ON
THE
MARKET - Brick and
frame ranch, 3 BR, 1112
baths, fully carpeted.
Attached
garage.
Across the street from
Spring Valley Shopping
Plaza.
Newly
re decorated . $45,000.
CHARMING BUT AF ·
FOROABLE Take
time to view this 3 BR
ranch, energy saving
heat pump, cen. air, ful ·
IY carpeted except kit·
chen . llh baths , at tach·
ed garage. $42,500.

HANDY WITH A HAMMER? Better bring a
paint bru~t-o! This
home n•c;,O'-~o ir but is
worth i .. frame w.lth
alum. siding. gas heat,
barn, trailer hok.·up.• 4
acres, 1 mile from CI1Y.
$19,900.

WANT TO

SELL?
CALL
446-3636

WE NEED
LISTINGS I

r unners for a 12x60
trailer, se pti c tank ,
rural water available.
Very reasonable.

I
I

KINGSBURY HOME :SAlES

SUPERB CEDAR RANCH - First rate
craftsmanship throughout. 4 bedrooms,
double closets, 2 full baths, co mplete
built·in kitchen with Corning top range,
formal dining, lg . fami ly rm . w ith
woodburner. Redwood deck and 2 lll}r
garage. 3fc acre lot. Call for appoi'"'t·
ment .

RODNEY -CORA RD.

I

INSPECT OUR I.OT(

PLATTEO AND READY TO BUILD
ON - Building lots 120'x100 located in
subdivison i n KC school district .

CANADAY REALTY
A 1 I (l ~'

Realtors

Realtors

.58 Acre, mobil ehome

· I•

QUALITY ALL THE WAY -

bedroom ~

Realtors

2 baths, fam ily room
li ving room and dining
room. Modern built -in
k itchen . Woodburner .
Take a look al th is real
nic ehome. All setting on
one and half acres In fhe
city school distric1.
Priced in the 30's.

Bonnie L Stutes, Realtor, 446-4206
James R. Stutes, Assoc. 446-2885
Jose.ph L Leath, Assoc. 245·9484;

I

~

a rainy day won't get you

so much as the plice of an
wnbrella.

···~· -

Realtors '

(';r-f'/ }AH ·
h~7-

WM. D. TONEY • BROKF~

Pomeroy, 0.
Ph. 992-2259

WATCH FOR SIGNS!!!

lH
10% LOAN AVAILABLE
This home is just w a iting to be yours. You ' ll bubble
with e)(C itement when you sip the features this luxury home offers. F oyer, flooring, formal living
room , w.b. fireplace, cedar mantel track, lighting,
new plush carpeting, formal dining room, bel:lutlful
family room w ith la_rge sliding door leading to
bea utiful pool and pat1o area , terraced ground with
lots of shrubbery, as grill, idea l for entertainment, 3
bedrooms. 2 ba th s, large kichen with unusual
breakf ast bar , cherry, walnut wood, full basement
cen tral air. garage and openers . Th is home 1$
beautifu.lly ~e~ora ted . All new custom draperies.
Looks ltke tt 1ust c am erlght out of an interior
decorator' s magazine . One of the finest. I ' m sure It
will be love at f irst sight.

MINI FARM -- Owner s moved t o Florida and a:-e
selling thi s love ly 3 BR brick home Thi ::; 6 vr. old
beauty offers lots of goou liv ing tor some lucky
fam ily with a large kit chen &amp; dining rm ., LR, fami ·
ly rm . with fireplace, garage &amp; barn . Loca ted on
State Route 160 approx . 6 mi . from HM C.

• • •

608 E. Main

Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636
·Audrey ·.Canaday, Realtor 446-3636

CAMPGROUND !FORMERLY CLARK CHAPEL
ACRES) Make somethinq of this property again. 71
A., 2 acre lake, s~veral tuitdings tn need of repair,
dumping station, 2 water s ;stems, lots of pine trees.
Fix this dandy place up &amp; star t making money, OP·
portun i ty knocks.

0

862 Pearl St.
Middleport, Ohio

~!

RESTRICTED
BUILDING LOTS
Debby Drive all
utilities available .
STROUT
REALTY ,
446-0008 .

•

AFFOROABLE Nice 1971 mobile
home, siTuated on .82 of an acre. Exta
room added on. Metal storage build ing
included . Located on Graham School
Road , off Rt. 141 . Priced at 16,500 .

TONEY "REALTY (0

2 to 5 P.M.

IN THE LAP OF LUXURY - That' s where you will
be the ~ay you move into thi s brand new J B R, 2'h
bath tn-l_evel. This home will fulfil l your every
drea":l w tth the large L ·shaped famil y rm ., equip·
ped kth:hen &amp; 2 car garage . Located in Clearview
Estat(&gt;s &amp; shown by appointment .

'

HOme At

SUNDAY, .MARCH 9TH

BEAT THE INTEREST-RATE RAP!
"Today's rates are a heavy penalty. W~1~
not beat the rap with these home buys."

Introducing

OF

$45,9()000

~l!n11d 111111~ ll:ttlfJ1111~

•

- ------,,--,----

Realtors
-----,--

1ht

lljll

New J bedroom, llltal electric home with
many nice features .
WATCH FOR SIGNS .

LOW DOWN P.\YMENT - SUPER BUY- FHA ·
VA - CQNVENTIONI\L - This 3 yr. old bi -level ;s
like neW &amp; must be sold th is month .' 3 or 4 B R 's, 2lfz
baths, family rm ., heatalator fireplace, low heat
bills, Clay grade sc hool, Gallia Academy High
School. Call tor Appointmellt.

Realtors

Realtors

Realtors

J~NfiJIIIIII.,.,.~r .,~,'("liHr r~~~

446-0008
SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP - Appr ox . 6 acres
level &amp; gent l y rolling land, cou nty water, nice
bu ilding si tes, located on the f l oyd Clark Rd . ap
prox . ~h mi . off Route 160 near Por ter . Askin,
$15,000 .
-

Realtors

Realtors

Housing
Head uarters

OWNER FINANCIN(; JIV .AI~A!!h!' - $6,500 down
- 9% - Asking $33,000 - Rem• deled 2 story home,
3 BR 's, LR, den, family rm .. d ning, kitchen, 2 W B
fireplaces , 31h acres. Located on State Route 233
between Gallipolis and Oak Hill.

other commercialt.~se. ·
Call Ike Wi seman
446-3643
The Wiseman Agency

•

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found zn the Sunday Tzmes-Sentznel

storage, garage or any

Realtors

Drive on St. Rt. 124 to Langsville. Turr.
right on County Road 10 (across from
Small's Grocery) about4/5 mile.

WILL HA UL any grade of
limestone ton or more for
$7. 15 per t on Delivered
anywhere in the Ga llipolis
area . Ca ll Leroy Ca ldwe ll,
446-4851.

WIL L HA UL limestone and
gravel. Also , lime hauling
and spreadi ng . Leo Morris
Tr ucking. Phone 742 -2455

Realtors

HOBSTffiER REALTY
SUNDAY, MARCH 9th
2 - 5 P.M.

LIME STONE
Delivered
13 mil e rad ius , Gal li polis,
Pt . Pleasant, fr ee estimate
of driveways. Cal l367·710 1.

For Lease

JIM 'S
DEPE NDABLE
water delivery . Ca ll 256
936B anyTime .

Realtors

85 General Hauling

85 General Haulin_g__

~7-TheSundayTimes-Sentinel, Sunday, March9, 1980

·'

21 LOCUST
STREEt
4q-42jJ'

FARM~CLOSE IN
Three miles down river from city
llml15: 3 BR home. The kitchen and llvlng room are- the showplace of the
house. You will be Impressed at the
remodeling and how mother has kept it
so clean and charming. 54 acres, some
timber, pasture, and tillable land. Good
bern, tobacco bse. This Is what more
asil for. Please call, we will explain . /!...
goodbUy.Don'lwalt,
#446

ON 4'1• ACRES
A fine ranch in the country, seven miles

011 this new home located off .

__

Creek Road . Spill entry. LR,
area, 3 BR, bath, kitchen
dishwasher, n i ce cabinets. Single car
garage, full basement. Rural water
available. 2.92 wooded acres. House Is
dnott1nlshed. Take a look at this one toay 1
# U7

ALMOST PERFECT
Nothing is perfect but this cozy home is
('lEW LlirtiNG - PEAS IN A POD
as close as a person can find . 2
·couldn't lee I more snug than 'what you
bedrooms, Iaroe living room, Im •.will be In this attractive 3 bedroom Hoi·
pressive
built -In
kitchen,
new
ly ·Park mnoblle home and lot. Separate
dishwasher, new gas furnace. patio,
dining room with lmpre.sslve wood . - storage bUilding, lf•acre . &lt;.ooklng for
grain flooring . -Step yp Irving room.
the rlghf home. make an appointment
Plenty of built-I n storage space, Ap·
todaY, Within 4'h miles ·of Holzer
pllances Included. Underpinned , anH_ospilal.
t 421
chored. Best of all o~y 4,4 miles from
town, City school district. Cafl for an
A BIT OF'COUNTIIY
appolnlmenlloday.
.
1431
This farm house needs some work, but

·jusT LIS;TED - A nice mobile h&lt;)me
on a clean and .well kept two and one·
half acre lot, Located on a blacktop
road near Porter. Minutes from town .
Rural water.
427

*

NEW LISTING
.
You can't beat the price of this 2
l:!ed..OOin mobile home and lot. Situated
at Rt. 554. Priced at $10,000.00. Call for
an appol ntmentloda'v.
1424
1

••

•

.

.·

INIIES&gt;TMIENIT LAND
more

when you buy it you ' ll gel I barn, cellar
and cellar house, county water, but also
old fashion dug well where water never
tastes beller winched up with a rope
and bucket. Fruit trees and a nice yard.
Three bedrooms, bath . Today only
$23,000.
440

.

*

' LOAN 1\SSlJMPTION POSSIBLE
House approx. 2 yrs. Old. 3 bedrOOil)S,
bath, kitchen and service area. large
living room, baseboard electric heal,
supplemented iNIIh &lt;oat . and woodburner, cou~ly water system. 519,000
mortgage cM be assumed at 1~ rate
for 15 yrs. Cheshire area. Listing Price
$32,000.
'
, 435

from Gallipolis. Six room modern
house, 3 BR, bath, full basement. fuel
oil forced air furnace, blown in insula·
tlon. County Water plus large ·cistern for
e•tra uses. ~prlng will soon be here.
What a place for your lomlly and
fr iends. Well stocked pond, good fences .
Beautiful acres. Call today . This showing will be convincing .
t 449
WISE LAND lfiiVESTMENT
ThiS land should make you money . 115
acres, 50 acres seeded down in good
grass, should cut several thousand
bales soon as season w ill allow . 40 acres
pasture land. 25 acres of woods, lots of
pines. Some limber to cui. These acre.s
are estimated. Barn Is In good condr·
t lon, pond, fences average. County
water available, 1200 lb. tobacco base.
All mineral rigHts Included, $40,000.
Don't pass this up.
t 40S

BB ACRE FARM
If vou' re look ing for a home for yourselff
AND your animals ... then took no tur- ·
ther! 33 good, level, tillable acres.
Some woods, some pasture, n ice size
barn. Located 15 min . .frorn Gallipolis
on a blacktop road, thi s gentleman' s
farm has that "down . home feel ing" .
Home consists of 3 BR. llvlng •rl)l ., din·
ing rm .,· ki h. hen, bat ~ and go_od !l ize
utility room. Call for more ·spclfics.t 419

,.

43 ACRES
vacant land, po_
s slbiiiiY of coal and
agrlculturallime.
1322

BEEFFARt.y
we have several farms, but this one is
special. Land in good condition, tiled.
limed, fertilized . Fences kept up. 1800
tbs. tobacco base . 2 barns , good set up
for co.w and calf" operation. L~t· s not
forget the modern house . 2 or 3
bedrooms, nice large bath . This one Is
readv to use . We'd like to show tt to you.

'

1448

THE BEST OF THE BEST
You can't do any better tha~ the best,
and th is fine 3 bedroom home IS the
best, and one you'll be proud to own.
Brealhtak;ng fam i lY
room with
fireplace, 2 baths, l iv ing r()()m and din · ,
;ng room have luxurious carpeting, 2
car garage . No ma intenance ederior
and Interior in absolutely perfect condi t ion. A MUST TO SEE!
1353
SEEMS LlKE OLD TIMES
when dollars had cents, as 1 write this
ad about our new listing, L ·shape ranch
on a Iaroe corner lot 1J' xl50' . Envision
a spaclovs livi ng room 11'x26', a lovely
kitchen with 30' ca binet space . 11'x19'
family room , one balh with shower. 3
nice size bedrooms. FA fur,.ace, new
woodburner, dril led well , county '#ate,r
available. M any more features. Don I
b'! sorry tomorrow, call today ,
N 422
INVESTMENT PROPERTY
High prior ;!y . 7 acr es on SR 35, Springfield &amp; Green Twp. Landscaped and
rady to sell , plenty water taps
.!vall able . Don' t wiat. Th is should sell .
, 350

.
I

® Rc-gbu:rt"d Tnldt:m ink uf Ct"nlu ry 21

Rn1 EILIII C' Corporation . Pr1mrd In

U~ ,

0 19'19 Cl'nl ul)' '2 1 Rtat E!lllllt Coll&gt;Or&amp; IIOf\. Equal HOUSIIltl OpportuoJiyw
J:ado omee l•ladcpeacl t e.dy o••ed ••d opcr•ted.

BEAT THE HIGH INTEREST
For 12% Interest and a reasonable down payment
you can become the owner of thiS-qua illy built brick
home . Living room, 3 bedrooms, Jlh baths, full
finished basement with family room, 2 fireplaces,
kitchen equipped w11h appliances, polio doors in
dining area . Extra lot with 12xl6 storage building .
Quiet neighborhood . Best of all LOW healing bills.
Make an appt. to,see this fine home.
392

*

•

MOBILE HOME - 12'X6.4' good condition, looks
very neat, 2 BR, underpinned, county waer, pro·
pane gas heat , Lot .98 of an acre, wel l landscoped.
Please call for more Information . Priced to sell
$16,200.
, 441

LANDI 90..7 1 acres bordered by Ra ccoon creek. 2~­
acres cropland, 27 aCres WOOdland, balance In
pasture . 2 nlr.e size barns, several sheds, corn crib,
·2,3161b. tobacco base, hog barn has a concrete floqr
with a 1.780 lb. automatic feeder . Good wafer supply. Callnoworstopby .
#4264
l,OTS PRICED TO SELL
Build to suit yourselfon these 1 acre lots. Frontage
on blacktop road . County water available. If you' re
IQOking tor a pretty country setting, call today .
$5,000 per acre. No restrictions.
# 4\7
NEW \.I STING ~ Double wide 24'X60', allractlve
setting . Far enough trom road, but never hard.lo gel
to. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, good condition, countY
water. Moat all appliances Included. An•iouslo sell.
Make us en offer.
I 430

�...

-~

0-&amp;-The Sundav Times-&amp;!q~ine l , Sunday, March 9, 1980

r-----------------------1
1

Beat. • •

I

1

Of the Bend

I

I

By Bob Hoeflich

I

I

Another former Meigs resident
has been returned here to become a
resident of the new Pomeroy Hea lth
Care Center.
She is Mrs . Flossie Story of the
Hemlock Grove area. Mrs. Story has
been confined to the Whetstone Convalescent Center since becoming
quite ill in November. She is
stronger now and friends are more
than welcome to visit her at the local
care center.

Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews marked a birthday anniversary over the weekend and
Friday already had three birthday
cakes. We should warn you , Mayor,
that when the great revolution takes
place, there will be a more even
distribution of the birthday goodies.

The Harrisonville Senior Citizens
Club members are quite aware of
the value in keeping a clos..check on
blood pressure and so again Tuesday
will stage a free blood pressure
clinic from 10 a .m. to 12 noon at the ,
Harrisonvill~~t- Town hall, weather
permitting. Mrs . . Ferndora Story,
R.N., will be present to take the
pressure of clinic visitors.

Pat Lochary, well known Pomeroy
resident, remains confined to
Veterans Memorial Hospital but is
reported to be improving. Meantime, since Pat's hospitalization, his
wife, Clara, has been "down" at
home with one of the current
viruses. The Locharys' granddaughter, Susie Lochary, attending
Ohio University has come down to
Pomeroy to lend a helping hand .

A jazz band festival- a first - will
be staged at the Meigs High School
on May 3 under the sponsorship of
the Meigs Band Boosters.
High school jazz bands from Ohio,
West Virginia, Permsylvania, Kentucky and Indiana have been invited

....

The weather is breaking - now if
we can just avoid a flood ... keep
smiling.

~~w..

,-.:._~.

'.'..&lt;:'·'&lt;&gt;

Rl R
RD, IN ••
y
WE'LL MA E
RIN

DETROIT (APl - A Z.year-old
boy was "hot to death by his 3-yearold brother as the youngsters played
with a .32-caliber pistol and a
shotgun, police say.
Clarence Smith Jr . was hit in the
chest with a bullet from the pistol
Friday as he and his brother,
Cozena, played with the weapons a t
the home of their grandparents,
where they were spending the night,
police said.
.
The yo•mgoters' mother also was
spending the night at the home, officials said, but the boys apparently
got up before other members of the
family.
According to authorities, the
revolver was obtained from a
dresser drawer . The boys apparently had filled the shotgun with ,
pennies.
No charges were filed.

I

to compet e in the festival and
already nine bands have registered.
Only 24 will be accepted. The competition - open to the 'J)ublic - will
begin about 9 a. m. in the morning
and runs until sometime around 10
p.m. at night. Trophy and cash
awards will be given winners selected by out of the county judges.
The band boosters who are
preparing an advertising program
for the event will also operate concession ,stands for the public during
the festival.
Pa rticipating bands are divided
into classes based on the number of
students in the upper three grades of
the high school they represent and
each band presents its own "show"
so to speak, for judging.
The Meigs jazz band, being the
host unit, will not be in the competition.

Be sure to catch the " Price Is
Right" show on channel 8 on Wednesday at II a. m. and you'll see
Ivaunna Powell, granddaughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cleland,
Racine, as a contestant.
Ivaunna at one time attended
Southern High School in Racine and
is now attending college to become a
dental hygienist. Her parents are MSgt, and Mrs . Ivan Powell, sta tioned
at the Vandenberg Air Force Base in
California .
The show was taped in January . I
don't know the end result - you'll
just have to watch.

A nother gun tragedy

.
:

When Yon Buy One Of Our Buckets
Of Tin.·Prices Are So Low
•

..~~::.t

'"'.-&lt;o:.o&gt;:&gt;ii::t" "-"

-~

Tins TW(}STORY FRAME house at Flatrock served as a deathtrap for a young mother and her fouryear'{)ld daughter who failed to escape after the struc-

'

lure caught fire early Friday morning. Two other
children were led to safety by the mother before she
perished attempting to rescue the little girl.

Ohio could benefit from program
WASHINGTON (AP)- The head
of the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation
says he's glad to see a national
program lor converting some major
utilities from oil and natural gas
back to coal-burning boilers.
But Executive Director C. WiUlam
Swank says that program does not
go far enough.
President Carter sent a $10 billion
program to Congress Thursday that
would fund mandatory conversions
foc major utilities in 16 states by
1985. Most of th!lSe states, excluding
Ohio, are located in the Northeast.
Some $400 million in federal fundis
- 75 percent for coal washing

facilities and the rest for better air
pollution control equipment - was
included in the program, said
Gerald Pfeffer, deputy administrator of the Economic
Regulatory Administation. Although
not a part of the overall program,
Ohio utilities could apply for a share
of the grants.
Swank had advocated such a
nationwide step at a meeting of coal
miners and farmers in Steubenville,
Ohio, in January. The reconversion

You Can See BottoIn!

BUYING
U. S. SILVER
COINS

.

~--

18uy One. Of Our
Sleds Before
Winter Is Over.

· • Silver Dollars 1935 &amp; Before
• Hall Dollars, Quarters, Dimes
1964 &amp; Before

years. He also asked that grants be
provided tO utilities in the Southeast,
Southwest and California, which
voluntarily are to change to coal by
1990.
Supporters of the program say it
won't be easy to get it passed,
however, since pollution safeguards
are excluded. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency also
has warned that sulfur dioxide
emissions will rise by 25 percent in
the Northeast without stringent

.

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

OUR PRICES ARE SO LOW I MEAN SO

Hurry

PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS

1979 FAIRMONT

LOW • WE CAN'T POSSIBLY MAKE ANY

Hulfry ·

Also buylnv old gold. Stamped-10
KT, 14 KT and 11 KT.

Don't Sigh This Is The Best
Buy

~--.Hurry

Valentine Special
You Guessed lt. It's Red.

MONEY • WHO CARES THOUGH WE'LL

auto. trans., p.s., air cond.

HAVE FUN

'4494.99

Gallipolis

446- 1641

of
oiltoand
back
coalgas-fired
would be utility
"a stepboilers
in the r~c~lea~n~a~i~rs~ta~n~da~r~ds~.~----1~~~~~~~~~~~
right direction" for relieving U.S.
dependency on foreign oil, he said.
The program may be mentioned
when Swank and other farm bureau
leaders visit the White House ·next
week to discuss a federal grant foc
building a gasohol facUlty tn Clark
County, Ohio, he said.
Under the program, no state
would be able to get more than 20
percent of the money, which is intended primarily for coal producers.
Some Ohio utilities operate their
own coal mines.
This part of the bill is aimed at attacking the "acid-rain" problem,
which several states east of Ohio
•
When considering the purchase or construction of a new home, one
• of the major considerations should be a good floor plan . What do 1
have c&lt;implained about, Pfeffer
e mean by a good floor pion?
said. As a result, "Ohio would be a
•
Most Impor-tantly, a sound floor plan is one where you can get to
logical focal point for the proposal,"
•
the separate areas of the house without going through another area (a
mistake most often found in bedrooms) . The d ifferent areas should be
he added.
•
well
separated. The kitchen should be easily accessible from the din·
The proposal came, in part, from a
•
ing room and recreation area .
study written by The President's
•
Proper placement of closets and stairs should add convenience.
•
Bedroom closets are better placed on inside walls to function as a
Commission on Coal. The, come sound barrier between bedrooms. Improperly placed or oversized win·
mission, headed by Gov. Jay
dows can make furniture arrangement impossible . Naturally, the size
•
•
Rockefeller of West Virginia,
•
of the rooms will vary from house to house, but the living room should
•
•
be large enough to contain at least one conversation group and allow
e
studied the issues for more than a
room for movement and circulation . A good fl oor plan is only ap·
e
year. Its findings were presented to ' - predated
when you hve suffered through a bad one .
.
•
e I
.
the administration last week.
•
If there is anything we can do to help you in the field of real estate
•
In his proposal, Carter asked
e please phone or drop In at LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE, Sl2 Second e
Congress to require 50 power plants
• Ave .. Gallipolis. Phone 446· 769, , We're here to help.
e
in 16 states - most in the Northeast
- to switch to coal in the next five

'

''·

-·

~'

';,·'

&gt;;.

'

Ne~ ~!J91\old J]p ~~~!lilper

The Tic • Tic'r

T~Ja.,;i~~~~'f J?~O: ~odel •
'95\i..Os More Fo~ ~arne Car

••
••
•

.

.

_· .~o~d.,
00

am-fm
stereo,
st1cker '7,924.
•u
, ....
~

•t

Mark-'' DD.wo !lf7$ .~

i£ ~ AM . JII · 44

••
•

I~-,v
~":'"

..,

,!IP!W'•

...-..

'

,.....

.,...

.!

~

~

Best Of The Bunch

1

A Real Bur · Engine Tic's
It's A lust 115 Years Old .
I

1977 PINTO
RUNABOUT

~ZK~v-:~a~e.
~u~~~.T
wheel drive

.1974 LeMAN$

~

~.~.f;;:.P~~~f:~n~!·

.Get'em Up Scout
J

1~ft.
Jillijl.ns
.
..

••
••
••
•••

AGOOD FLOOR PLAN

.

4

4 cyl., auto. trans., white wall tires

PONTIAC

lt.lllJallt eyeq 1•t J.OII to work. ~ut
.-.. -~Hf'.·i Fori! tow"t;u'cl' around )list '
hi case.

~863. "he

.•4,969.69

-'F ake4t AwaY"'

and iets _great gas mileage, 13,000
miles, one &amp; only one -owner.

'3131 •31

•

....

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

CHAMBER HONORS CHARLES LANHAM - W.C. McMahan, president of the Point Pleasant-Mason County
Chamber of Commerce, right, presents Charles Lanham with the Community Service Award given at last 'night's
36th Annual Meeting and Dinner of the Chamber. At left is out-going Chamber President Michael Sellards, also
honored with a plaque. Over 200 people attended the dinner featuring renowned West Virginia publisher Jim
Comstock as the keynote speaker.

Business
borrowing
,
CODtinUeS tO SOar
NEW YORK (AP) - Business
borrowing costs continued to soar
Friday as the prime lending rate
tose by as much as three-quarters of
a point to a record 18 percent at one
majoc bank and to 17%percent at
most others.
Bankers and economists attributed the rate spiral to moneytightening by the Federal Reserve,
acting to curb 18 percent-a-year inflation, and to a borrowing surge by
businesses fearing higher rates or
the imposition of credit controls by
the govenunent.
"I think there's a speculative
surge going on," said BobSinche, an
economist at the brokerage house of

ANOTIIER DISPUTE DEVELOPS

HAMILTON, Ohio (AP ) Secretary ri State Anthony J.
Celebrezze again is embroiled in a
dispute with Butler County Common
Pleas Court Judge Robert Marrs
over membership on the county
board of elections.
Marrs on Friday ordered
Celebrezze, a Democrat, to appear
in court on Tuesday to show why he
should not be found in contempt of
an earlier court order.
Celebrezze broke a deadlock on
the board by voting to name Betty

r-- -- - - - - - - - - - -- - - ---------1

J&amp;J GOLD &amp;SILVER

Bear, Steams &amp;Co.
But the boom "inevitably has to
come to some sort of crashing halt,' '
lllid Charles M. Bliss, president of
Chicago's Harris Trust &amp;Savings
Bank, the nation's 24th-largest,
wblcb hiked its charge on loans to
IAJI)-rated companies to 18 percent
from 17~percent.
No major banks immediately matdied the move. No. !-ranked Bank of
America tn San Franciso, No. z.
r:allked Citlbank and No. 3 ranked
Manhattan Bank in New
Yllrk, and most others raised their
prime rate to 17%percenl from
l'Wopen:ent. UMB Bank &amp;Trust Co.,
1 llll8IJ New York financial in·
-!tim, went to 17't'•percent Thur-

a-

Jdly.

a-

Econl)metric Associates

lac. atlmatea each one-point in. _ In bustness loan rates adds

_ , titan .a billion to cerporatlons.
' Mfr lltnpenses.
I

McGary, a Democrat, as director of
elections. He refused, however, to
name Republican Joyce Thall as
deputy director . ·
Celebrezze had been ordered by
Marrs to name the director and
deputy director from two specific
candidates: Mrs. McGary and Mrs.
Thall.
Marrs and the secretary of state
were involved in a similar dispute '
late last year when Celebrezze fired
Mrs. Thall for alleged irregularities
in office.

•WILL BUY GOLD 10.14-16 &amp; 18K
•SILVER •STERLING •999
•SILVER COINS •SILVER DOLlARS
•RINGS •DIAMONDS
•GUNS

ELBERFE . DS WAREHOUSE
.

'

305 Upper River Road
Across from Silver Bridge Plaza
P~&lt; ·

E 446-2227

"

.""'

One WI&amp;On we hope JOU'II take
on a Sa,tari and h•ve a elephant
step -~" it.

GET R aDY FOR SPRING
WITH NEW

CARPET AND VINYL FLOOR COVERING

Dog Sled Has Sides •
D.9or8 ·Top and Rubb.e r Band
I
Make U8 An Offer

Peaches and Dream
A Nice Boat • Neat As A Pin·
Sharp!

We'll Sell Anything lEven
Chevies) This Dead Sled Has
It's Repair Orders Again8t It

1975 MALIBU
CLASSIC
-

1978 LTD II

• No. 2050 No. 2156 ect ......

.•2.180.80

STATION WAGON

hard-wearing carpet that will stand

•1,599.

1975-CAPRICE

2 door, •dark blue, auto.
AIR; 'V-8 engine, 34,000 miles

•

Bright, sparkling colors in rugged

STATION WAGON
We beg JOU take it.

'3555.35

00

'1398.

00

Bring In Your Old Car Or Truck.
Those Crazy Salesman Will Probalbly Give You Way Too Muc}dfl

.

up beautifully under hard use.
Dining Room and Kitchen Carpet,

'

Bedroom, hallway, stairs and living
..ocal ·Yokel .

room carpet, porch and patio turf.

Help .... Anybody

f ·

Hot Rod · {

Rough Rider

.•

1•11 FORD ·
..' LID. II.' .

Speedy Delivery
and Installation
·Available

. ::.or~ llai- Schllol teacher
...

j

...Onlr Dron··on Sun.diis

.
Durable vinyl linoleum by Arm.

'2·3 33.33 '

1976..F-100
PICKUP

1976 PONTIAC
FORMULA

V·8, ·3 so&amp;ed trans.

. white

1974 FORD
F-150 4X4

Priced Too Hi&amp;h
- "Ole''
Hoss reaiiJ •ot us. buried in this
one we need help .... · · · ·

Heeds a home take it awar .Jor.

T. l.C.

'

'2777.77'

Red In Color. Needs

'2279.80

Ontr'1999e

00

~trong

and Congoleum features:
"No Wax" ~eauty for a carefree
shine. Excellent stock of pat·
terns in 12ft. and 9ft. widths.

ASSURED CURRENT MARKET PRICES

BALDWIN'S

J971=AfD
WA·G ON .

"

We Will. Trad~ for Anythlngl

.,

Sa Fari Anyone??
,. .

'

.

•WATCHES

FINE
GUNS ·

,.,

You Can See

'I

.

'

ELBI;RFELDS WAREHO'-'SE ON. M!=CHANIC ST.

ElBERFELDS I~ N POMEROY .

RD,, I c.

Plt&gt;ase
Come
In 4nd Keep. Us Company
.
''
'

.'

·•

~

675·1490

Point Pieasant
'.

~

' .

�...

-~

0-&amp;-The Sundav Times-&amp;!q~ine l , Sunday, March 9, 1980

r-----------------------1
1

Beat. • •

I

1

Of the Bend

I

I

By Bob Hoeflich

I

I

Another former Meigs resident
has been returned here to become a
resident of the new Pomeroy Hea lth
Care Center.
She is Mrs . Flossie Story of the
Hemlock Grove area. Mrs. Story has
been confined to the Whetstone Convalescent Center since becoming
quite ill in November. She is
stronger now and friends are more
than welcome to visit her at the local
care center.

Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews marked a birthday anniversary over the weekend and
Friday already had three birthday
cakes. We should warn you , Mayor,
that when the great revolution takes
place, there will be a more even
distribution of the birthday goodies.

The Harrisonville Senior Citizens
Club members are quite aware of
the value in keeping a clos..check on
blood pressure and so again Tuesday
will stage a free blood pressure
clinic from 10 a .m. to 12 noon at the ,
Harrisonvill~~t- Town hall, weather
permitting. Mrs . . Ferndora Story,
R.N., will be present to take the
pressure of clinic visitors.

Pat Lochary, well known Pomeroy
resident, remains confined to
Veterans Memorial Hospital but is
reported to be improving. Meantime, since Pat's hospitalization, his
wife, Clara, has been "down" at
home with one of the current
viruses. The Locharys' granddaughter, Susie Lochary, attending
Ohio University has come down to
Pomeroy to lend a helping hand .

A jazz band festival- a first - will
be staged at the Meigs High School
on May 3 under the sponsorship of
the Meigs Band Boosters.
High school jazz bands from Ohio,
West Virginia, Permsylvania, Kentucky and Indiana have been invited

....

The weather is breaking - now if
we can just avoid a flood ... keep
smiling.

~~w..

,-.:._~.

'.'..&lt;:'·'&lt;&gt;

Rl R
RD, IN ••
y
WE'LL MA E
RIN

DETROIT (APl - A Z.year-old
boy was "hot to death by his 3-yearold brother as the youngsters played
with a .32-caliber pistol and a
shotgun, police say.
Clarence Smith Jr . was hit in the
chest with a bullet from the pistol
Friday as he and his brother,
Cozena, played with the weapons a t
the home of their grandparents,
where they were spending the night,
police said.
.
The yo•mgoters' mother also was
spending the night at the home, officials said, but the boys apparently
got up before other members of the
family.
According to authorities, the
revolver was obtained from a
dresser drawer . The boys apparently had filled the shotgun with ,
pennies.
No charges were filed.

I

to compet e in the festival and
already nine bands have registered.
Only 24 will be accepted. The competition - open to the 'J)ublic - will
begin about 9 a. m. in the morning
and runs until sometime around 10
p.m. at night. Trophy and cash
awards will be given winners selected by out of the county judges.
The band boosters who are
preparing an advertising program
for the event will also operate concession ,stands for the public during
the festival.
Pa rticipating bands are divided
into classes based on the number of
students in the upper three grades of
the high school they represent and
each band presents its own "show"
so to speak, for judging.
The Meigs jazz band, being the
host unit, will not be in the competition.

Be sure to catch the " Price Is
Right" show on channel 8 on Wednesday at II a. m. and you'll see
Ivaunna Powell, granddaughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cleland,
Racine, as a contestant.
Ivaunna at one time attended
Southern High School in Racine and
is now attending college to become a
dental hygienist. Her parents are MSgt, and Mrs . Ivan Powell, sta tioned
at the Vandenberg Air Force Base in
California .
The show was taped in January . I
don't know the end result - you'll
just have to watch.

A nother gun tragedy

.
:

When Yon Buy One Of Our Buckets
Of Tin.·Prices Are So Low
•

..~~::.t

'"'.-&lt;o:.o&gt;:&gt;ii::t" "-"

-~

Tins TW(}STORY FRAME house at Flatrock served as a deathtrap for a young mother and her fouryear'{)ld daughter who failed to escape after the struc-

'

lure caught fire early Friday morning. Two other
children were led to safety by the mother before she
perished attempting to rescue the little girl.

Ohio could benefit from program
WASHINGTON (AP)- The head
of the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation
says he's glad to see a national
program lor converting some major
utilities from oil and natural gas
back to coal-burning boilers.
But Executive Director C. WiUlam
Swank says that program does not
go far enough.
President Carter sent a $10 billion
program to Congress Thursday that
would fund mandatory conversions
foc major utilities in 16 states by
1985. Most of th!lSe states, excluding
Ohio, are located in the Northeast.
Some $400 million in federal fundis
- 75 percent for coal washing

facilities and the rest for better air
pollution control equipment - was
included in the program, said
Gerald Pfeffer, deputy administrator of the Economic
Regulatory Administation. Although
not a part of the overall program,
Ohio utilities could apply for a share
of the grants.
Swank had advocated such a
nationwide step at a meeting of coal
miners and farmers in Steubenville,
Ohio, in January. The reconversion

You Can See BottoIn!

BUYING
U. S. SILVER
COINS

.

~--

18uy One. Of Our
Sleds Before
Winter Is Over.

· • Silver Dollars 1935 &amp; Before
• Hall Dollars, Quarters, Dimes
1964 &amp; Before

years. He also asked that grants be
provided tO utilities in the Southeast,
Southwest and California, which
voluntarily are to change to coal by
1990.
Supporters of the program say it
won't be easy to get it passed,
however, since pollution safeguards
are excluded. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency also
has warned that sulfur dioxide
emissions will rise by 25 percent in
the Northeast without stringent

.

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

OUR PRICES ARE SO LOW I MEAN SO

Hurry

PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS

1979 FAIRMONT

LOW • WE CAN'T POSSIBLY MAKE ANY

Hulfry ·

Also buylnv old gold. Stamped-10
KT, 14 KT and 11 KT.

Don't Sigh This Is The Best
Buy

~--.Hurry

Valentine Special
You Guessed lt. It's Red.

MONEY • WHO CARES THOUGH WE'LL

auto. trans., p.s., air cond.

HAVE FUN

'4494.99

Gallipolis

446- 1641

of
oiltoand
back
coalgas-fired
would be utility
"a stepboilers
in the r~c~lea~n~a~i~rs~ta~n~da~r~ds~.~----1~~~~~~~~~~~
right direction" for relieving U.S.
dependency on foreign oil, he said.
The program may be mentioned
when Swank and other farm bureau
leaders visit the White House ·next
week to discuss a federal grant foc
building a gasohol facUlty tn Clark
County, Ohio, he said.
Under the program, no state
would be able to get more than 20
percent of the money, which is intended primarily for coal producers.
Some Ohio utilities operate their
own coal mines.
This part of the bill is aimed at attacking the "acid-rain" problem,
which several states east of Ohio
•
When considering the purchase or construction of a new home, one
• of the major considerations should be a good floor plan . What do 1
have c&lt;implained about, Pfeffer
e mean by a good floor pion?
said. As a result, "Ohio would be a
•
Most Impor-tantly, a sound floor plan is one where you can get to
logical focal point for the proposal,"
•
the separate areas of the house without going through another area (a
mistake most often found in bedrooms) . The d ifferent areas should be
he added.
•
well
separated. The kitchen should be easily accessible from the din·
The proposal came, in part, from a
•
ing room and recreation area .
study written by The President's
•
Proper placement of closets and stairs should add convenience.
•
Bedroom closets are better placed on inside walls to function as a
Commission on Coal. The, come sound barrier between bedrooms. Improperly placed or oversized win·
mission, headed by Gov. Jay
dows can make furniture arrangement impossible . Naturally, the size
•
•
Rockefeller of West Virginia,
•
of the rooms will vary from house to house, but the living room should
•
•
be large enough to contain at least one conversation group and allow
e
studied the issues for more than a
room for movement and circulation . A good fl oor plan is only ap·
e
year. Its findings were presented to ' - predated
when you hve suffered through a bad one .
.
•
e I
.
the administration last week.
•
If there is anything we can do to help you in the field of real estate
•
In his proposal, Carter asked
e please phone or drop In at LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE, Sl2 Second e
Congress to require 50 power plants
• Ave .. Gallipolis. Phone 446· 769, , We're here to help.
e
in 16 states - most in the Northeast
- to switch to coal in the next five

'

''·

-·

~'

';,·'

&gt;;.

'

Ne~ ~!J91\old J]p ~~~!lilper

The Tic • Tic'r

T~Ja.,;i~~~~'f J?~O: ~odel •
'95\i..Os More Fo~ ~arne Car

••
••
•

.

.

_· .~o~d.,
00

am-fm
stereo,
st1cker '7,924.
•u
, ....
~

•t

Mark-'' DD.wo !lf7$ .~

i£ ~ AM . JII · 44

••
•

I~-,v
~":'"

..,

,!IP!W'•

...-..

'

,.....

.,...

.!

~

~

Best Of The Bunch

1

A Real Bur · Engine Tic's
It's A lust 115 Years Old .
I

1977 PINTO
RUNABOUT

~ZK~v-:~a~e.
~u~~~.T
wheel drive

.1974 LeMAN$

~

~.~.f;;:.P~~~f:~n~!·

.Get'em Up Scout
J

1~ft.
Jillijl.ns
.
..

••
••
••
•••

AGOOD FLOOR PLAN

.

4

4 cyl., auto. trans., white wall tires

PONTIAC

lt.lllJallt eyeq 1•t J.OII to work. ~ut
.-.. -~Hf'.·i Fori! tow"t;u'cl' around )list '
hi case.

~863. "he

.•4,969.69

-'F ake4t AwaY"'

and iets _great gas mileage, 13,000
miles, one &amp; only one -owner.

'3131 •31

•

....

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

CHAMBER HONORS CHARLES LANHAM - W.C. McMahan, president of the Point Pleasant-Mason County
Chamber of Commerce, right, presents Charles Lanham with the Community Service Award given at last 'night's
36th Annual Meeting and Dinner of the Chamber. At left is out-going Chamber President Michael Sellards, also
honored with a plaque. Over 200 people attended the dinner featuring renowned West Virginia publisher Jim
Comstock as the keynote speaker.

Business
borrowing
,
CODtinUeS tO SOar
NEW YORK (AP) - Business
borrowing costs continued to soar
Friday as the prime lending rate
tose by as much as three-quarters of
a point to a record 18 percent at one
majoc bank and to 17%percent at
most others.
Bankers and economists attributed the rate spiral to moneytightening by the Federal Reserve,
acting to curb 18 percent-a-year inflation, and to a borrowing surge by
businesses fearing higher rates or
the imposition of credit controls by
the govenunent.
"I think there's a speculative
surge going on," said BobSinche, an
economist at the brokerage house of

ANOTIIER DISPUTE DEVELOPS

HAMILTON, Ohio (AP ) Secretary ri State Anthony J.
Celebrezze again is embroiled in a
dispute with Butler County Common
Pleas Court Judge Robert Marrs
over membership on the county
board of elections.
Marrs on Friday ordered
Celebrezze, a Democrat, to appear
in court on Tuesday to show why he
should not be found in contempt of
an earlier court order.
Celebrezze broke a deadlock on
the board by voting to name Betty

r-- -- - - - - - - - - - -- - - ---------1

J&amp;J GOLD &amp;SILVER

Bear, Steams &amp;Co.
But the boom "inevitably has to
come to some sort of crashing halt,' '
lllid Charles M. Bliss, president of
Chicago's Harris Trust &amp;Savings
Bank, the nation's 24th-largest,
wblcb hiked its charge on loans to
IAJI)-rated companies to 18 percent
from 17~percent.
No major banks immediately matdied the move. No. !-ranked Bank of
America tn San Franciso, No. z.
r:allked Citlbank and No. 3 ranked
Manhattan Bank in New
Yllrk, and most others raised their
prime rate to 17%percenl from
l'Wopen:ent. UMB Bank &amp;Trust Co.,
1 llll8IJ New York financial in·
-!tim, went to 17't'•percent Thur-

a-

Jdly.

a-

Econl)metric Associates

lac. atlmatea each one-point in. _ In bustness loan rates adds

_ , titan .a billion to cerporatlons.
' Mfr lltnpenses.
I

McGary, a Democrat, as director of
elections. He refused, however, to
name Republican Joyce Thall as
deputy director . ·
Celebrezze had been ordered by
Marrs to name the director and
deputy director from two specific
candidates: Mrs. McGary and Mrs.
Thall.
Marrs and the secretary of state
were involved in a similar dispute '
late last year when Celebrezze fired
Mrs. Thall for alleged irregularities
in office.

•WILL BUY GOLD 10.14-16 &amp; 18K
•SILVER •STERLING •999
•SILVER COINS •SILVER DOLlARS
•RINGS •DIAMONDS
•GUNS

ELBERFE . DS WAREHOUSE
.

'

305 Upper River Road
Across from Silver Bridge Plaza
P~&lt; ·

E 446-2227

"

.""'

One WI&amp;On we hope JOU'II take
on a Sa,tari and h•ve a elephant
step -~" it.

GET R aDY FOR SPRING
WITH NEW

CARPET AND VINYL FLOOR COVERING

Dog Sled Has Sides •
D.9or8 ·Top and Rubb.e r Band
I
Make U8 An Offer

Peaches and Dream
A Nice Boat • Neat As A Pin·
Sharp!

We'll Sell Anything lEven
Chevies) This Dead Sled Has
It's Repair Orders Again8t It

1975 MALIBU
CLASSIC
-

1978 LTD II

• No. 2050 No. 2156 ect ......

.•2.180.80

STATION WAGON

hard-wearing carpet that will stand

•1,599.

1975-CAPRICE

2 door, •dark blue, auto.
AIR; 'V-8 engine, 34,000 miles

•

Bright, sparkling colors in rugged

STATION WAGON
We beg JOU take it.

'3555.35

00

'1398.

00

Bring In Your Old Car Or Truck.
Those Crazy Salesman Will Probalbly Give You Way Too Muc}dfl

.

up beautifully under hard use.
Dining Room and Kitchen Carpet,

'

Bedroom, hallway, stairs and living
..ocal ·Yokel .

room carpet, porch and patio turf.

Help .... Anybody

f ·

Hot Rod · {

Rough Rider

.•

1•11 FORD ·
..' LID. II.' .

Speedy Delivery
and Installation
·Available

. ::.or~ llai- Schllol teacher
...

j

...Onlr Dron··on Sun.diis

.
Durable vinyl linoleum by Arm.

'2·3 33.33 '

1976..F-100
PICKUP

1976 PONTIAC
FORMULA

V·8, ·3 so&amp;ed trans.

. white

1974 FORD
F-150 4X4

Priced Too Hi&amp;h
- "Ole''
Hoss reaiiJ •ot us. buried in this
one we need help .... · · · ·

Heeds a home take it awar .Jor.

T. l.C.

'

'2777.77'

Red In Color. Needs

'2279.80

Ontr'1999e

00

~trong

and Congoleum features:
"No Wax" ~eauty for a carefree
shine. Excellent stock of pat·
terns in 12ft. and 9ft. widths.

ASSURED CURRENT MARKET PRICES

BALDWIN'S

J971=AfD
WA·G ON .

"

We Will. Trad~ for Anythlngl

.,

Sa Fari Anyone??
,. .

'

.

•WATCHES

FINE
GUNS ·

,.,

You Can See

'I

.

'

ELBI;RFELDS WAREHO'-'SE ON. M!=CHANIC ST.

ElBERFELDS I~ N POMEROY .

RD,, I c.

Plt&gt;ase
Come
In 4nd Keep. Us Company
.
''
'

.'

·•

~

675·1490

Point Pieasant
'.

~

' .

�'
E-2-TheSundafTimeS-Senlinel, Sunday, March 9,1980

1

County agent's corner

Cooperattve htension Sel\ltCe
The Ohto State Untvtrsit~

By Jollll C. Rice
Eneuloo Agent

11 WAS NICf OF ','OUR DAD

10 HELP

lilt:

Lj-H CLUB

Agriculture

Wl111 fHflR C.OfYlMUNlTY

Meigs County
POME,ROY - The Cooperative

SERV\C!';: PROJECT OF
GE1f1NG PWPL£ fo IHEPDUS oN w :c110N DA'I!

SHOPPERS EXPE~IENCE
REAL FOOD VA-LUE

You will be provided opportunity to
participate In planned activities and
programs conducted by the agencies
Involved. Once enrolled, you will be
011 a mailing list to receive
educational information and announcements of planned activities
and progratns. This includes special

Extension Service and other
agricultural agencies are initiating
a Small Farm Family Program. The
program is designed espectally for
smallfarms. .
The Small Farm Family program
is voluntary Involving a coordinated
effort to provide educational
material and technical assistance to
small fanners In making effective
use of available resources. A small
prospective youthful employee to
By Fred J. Dee!
farm is a farm family producing
operate
a farm tractor and most
County Agent, f.H
agricultural products with less than
related
farm
equipment. Howev _._
GALUPOUS - Youtha In Gallia
$20,000 sales. ·
there
are
certain
f~ jobs an4 -:._
County who plan to seek emThe purpose of the program is: (1)
selected
pieces
d
ligrlculturaJ&gt;.· . .
ployment in certain agricultural
to assist the small farm family in
related jobs in the coming mon~ · equipment that represent prohibited~­
making the best use of available
must be certified according to employment for all youth until tbi :::;:
resources to achieve family goals;
regulations put forth by the U. s. age of 18. Youth under the age of 1• :;;::
(2) to "Increase crop yields through
Department of Labor. Many farm may qualify for the special cer'r ~=­
the use of recommended soil fer-jobs involving the use of tractors and tiflcation course but may not be ::;.:;:
tility, production, ITIBrketing and farm machinery are considered to issued a certificate until they rea~ ::;t
management practices; (3) to ex- be hazardous for youth who are WI- the age of 14. There are few, If any: .-..
pand livestock production by
der 14 years of age while there are farm jobs related to the use of traco
utilizing improved. breeding,
few restrictions on employment of tors and fann machinery at willet} ;:;
feeding, managing and marketing
youth under the age of 14 can• be em.to -t'. .s'
youth over the age of 16. Youth aged
practices; (4) to improve the Income 14 and 15 can be exempted from
played off the home farm.
,for small farmers by Increasing the most of the hazardous jobs Identified
The Extension Service In our coun': ;:;:
productloo of horticultural and by Labor Department officials if ty will offer a special 20 hour
specialty crops, agronomic crops, they produce a certificate of exemp- tiflcation course for all ellgtbl~
livestock and other enterprises.
youth In the county starting oo Marl
tioo to a "prospective employer. The
Small farm families participating job restrictions do not apply to a · ch 18 at GAHS F.F.A. room, 7 p;~
tn the program will be provided youth working on the home farm.
. Interested youth should cdQtact tbl!
educational materials and teclmical
County Extension Office located on
The exemption certificate
assistance on the production, allowing 14 and 15 year olds to be
the third floor of tiJe Counhouse oi
management and marketing of farm · employed off the borne farm can be
call 44&amp;-4612 ext. 32 to enroll tn th8
products. Information and help on granted to youth who participate in a
program and. for detalla regard~Rg
setting family goals, family resoureligibility,
course content, duratioq
special20 hour classroom course on
ce management and family member
·and
locatioo
of the course. Proepec!
farm tractor and machinery mainrelatiolll!hips are available, This intive
enrollees
should act · liD"
cludes f.H, which provides learning tenance and safety and successfully
mediately as an enroninent des~
pass a written and machinery sltill
experience for boys and girls 9 to 19
isnear.
..
test.
This certificate allows the
years of age. There is also op•
portunity and need for adults to ser-ve as volunteer advisors .
1How to Enroll: Farm families in•
terested In the program should con. tact the County Extension Office.

Youths seeking jobs
mzist" be certified

. Agriculture andl our community

Homemakers'
Circle
IY Bn'TIII!: CUU

By Bryson R . (Bud) Carter
Gallia County Extension Agent

.

.

GAWPOUS - Gallia County
farmers who want to try our N()-Till
Corn planting before investing in a
planter have the opportunity to renting a tw()-row planter this spring
from either the Gallia-Meigs office
of the Jackson Production Credit
As!ociation or Gallia Roller MillsBidwell Mill Outlet.
Since several farmers will be wanting to use the planters, each farmer
is limited to one day's use. There
will be a small charge for its use.
Transportation of the planter is the
farmer's responsibility.
Sign up for use of the planter will
be on a first-eome-first-serve basis.
Call Rick Altizer at his office - 4463391 or the Bidwell Mill - 388-8630 to
get your name on the list.
GrowiDg N()-TIU Com
No Tillage farming is saving
millions of gallons of fuel annually in
Ohio as well as 7-8 tons of soil per
acre which otherwise would be lost
through erosion with qJnventional
tillage practices.
Planting corn without plowing has
been made possible today with planter changes and inexpensive, effective weed control chemicals.
Weed competition and poor plant
stands are important concerns. If
you don't control competition from
weeds, no-till will result in lower
yields than with your conventional
plowing systems. Currently, there is
no effective control available for
Johnsongrass in fields planted in nDtill com.
Many things can cause a low-plant
population or stand. A big problem
In nD-till is placing the seed where it

will stay moist while being warmed

up enough to germinate and grow
quickly. The roo!, your com planter,
must be equipped to place heavy
pressure on each planting unit to err
sure the equal see-soil contact with
conventional tillage.
Insect damage tends to be more of
a problem in nD-till fields because
mulch r.IBterials are left on the surface rather than being buried wilh a
plow. Mulch cover keeps soils cooler
hence germination is slowed and
chance for insect damage is increased.
Steve Hibinger of the Soil Conservation Service here in Gallia
County says thai of the 61,000 potential crop acres in Gallia County,
38,000 of these acres would be
suitable for n(}-till com production.
However, Steve points out that 21,000
acres of the 38,000 would need
erosion control practices; 1,000
acres out of the 6!,000 would be too
wet for n()-till com production.
These notes are meant to point out
that n(}-till is a bit more derrl3nding
than regnlar tillage. You should
start with a limited nwnber of acres
to reduce the.cost of mistakes. N(}till com planting will improve
tilnely planting, reduce soil losses on
sloping fields, save fuel, increase the
nwnber of acres that can be safely
row cropped on your farm, and often
increases com yield. Talk to Jim
and Bill Howard, Harry Hofert,
Glenn Graham, Dick Neal, Ray
Hughes, Dr. Dan .Notter, the Taylor
BrotherS and others to get their
views ... or call me or Steve If we can
be of assistance.

BY :
DIANA S. EBERTS
COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT
HOME ECONOMICS
MEIGS COUNTY

RECYCLING YOUR WARDROBE

POMEROY - Making your war-drobe work may mean using your
creativity to update some of your
garments. After reading about the
new fashions and shopping the
market, you should have good ideas
about what is "in fashioo" now. Are
there some garments you can
restyle, refit, recombine or recut to
make them fashionable and
wearable'
Recycling a garment can be quite
a job to tackle. Before you make a
fins! decision to redo 8" garment, ask
yourself these questions:
Is the garment in good enough condition so that minor changes could
improve its appearance?
Can the garment be reworked,
altered or reshaped into a suitable,
wearable item without looking IT13de

over or '' home-made?''
Can the clothing be recut to make
a different garment? If so:
- Is the fabric in good condition?
Are there thin spots that can be mended or cut around?
- If making a garment over for a
child, are the color and fabric
suitable to the age and sex of the
child and something your child will
lik e.?

Wheu Dlness Slrliles
"Flu." lbat "virus that's going

around everywhere." Measles.
Mwnps, Strep throat, The Cocrunon
cold, usually not worrisome.
Hepatitis, potentially quite hazar.
dous, Infectious diseases, like these
and otiwlrs, are a fact of family Ufe.
They're bound to happen at some
time, in some fonn, with more or
less seriousness.
When such illnesses strike, two
priorities stand out: Doing
everything necessary from a
medical standpoint to speed the
patient's recovery, Including consultatioo with your physician; and
taking every step possible to stop the
illness from spreading to other
family members - to prevent crossinfection. The patient, with resistance already weakened, must also be
shielded from any new and complicating infections that might be introduced by other members of the
family.
Fortunately, there are a nwnber
of simple, basic precautions you can
take to help protect both patient and
family from cross-infection. 'l'besl;
are a matter of care, knowledge and
couunon sense.
Patient-Family Contact
You can't care for your patient
without some physical contact. At
the same time, It's Important to
reduce the risk of cross-infection.
What can you do?
-Avoid any WUiecess&amp;ry physical
contact with the patient.
- Wash your b!mds tborougblJ

with soap and hot water both before
and after each contact with yoiD'
patient.
- With highly contagious diseases
' for exam-hepatitis or strep throat,
ple - wear a coverall apron or
smock in the patient's roilm. Take
off the garment before leaving ·and
keep It in the room.
- Where necessary, wear a
disposable mask over your nose and
mouth while in your patient's room.
Dispose of masks in the room in an
ordinary paper bag, and remove the
bag to a covered trash container or
an incinerator.
- Be sure to disinfect thoroughly
dishes and glassware for serving
your patient meals and liquids, or
use disposable plates and cups.

another fabric to complete a garment?
- Can you salvage buttons, zippers, hooks, snaps, interfacwg and

- Are the sections of the old
lining?
clothing large enough to use? Gar·
Do I have the enthusiasm to comments without a definite waistline
plete the project?
seam can be adapted more easily.
Do I have the necessary skills to
- What are the sizes, shapes and
alter or make the garment changes?
number of secti~ from the old
ls It worth the time, work, and
clothing? Do the pieces suggest ,
money Involved to remodel the old
ways you can reuse the fabric or
garment or would It be wiser to buy
recombine the garments?
a new Item or sew a garment from
- Is there enough fabric to work
new fabric?
with, or can · you combine it with

IENDERI!fST · REG.!THICMHIN

Sliced Bacon

,__ _ ·•- QtOICE BEEF

FRESH lEAII

FRESH • WHOLE BOSTON BUTT

Boneless
Chuck Roast

Pork Steaks

Pork Roast_
'

"lb.g

=a

AVG. .

$ 59

LB.

LB.

cer: ':-"

..

Officials say
disease Up
WASHINGTON (APJ _ New
cases of pseudorabies, also called
Aujeszky's disease or mad Itch, increased 10 percent among the
nation's swine last year, says the
Agriculture Department.
Jim Downard of the department's
Animal and Plant Healtli Inspection
Service said Thursday some 1,155
new cases were rellorted Ialit year,
compared to 1,0521n 1&amp;'18. However,
the incidence was lower than in 1977,
when 1,256 cases were reported.
Psuedorabies Is a recent problem.
Only 125 cases were recorded in
1974, the first year USDA tabulated
the disease.
The disease is a ·virus that
primarily affects swine, and losses
are highest' among suckling pigs.
13 t 1't also •"ects ttl
bee
ca e, s p,
u
...,.
dogs, cats and some wild animals. It
does not affect hwnans, either
through contact with diseased
animals or from eating meat from
diseased animals.
Officials said Iowa, the leading
hot! producer, led last year with 566
new outbreaks, compared to 476 in
1978.
eon PlaDIIDg Underway
It may be difficult for Iowa far-mers to swallow, but the Agriculture
Department ·says com planting is
under way In warmers parts of the
nation.
As of March 2, officials said Thursday tn a weekly weather and crops
"review that corn planting had
progeslled "as high as 3 percent
complete in Texas." But the report

FOODLAND FAMILY PACKS

USDA CHOICE BEEF
'

Tasty Tleet

COUNTRY STnE.CUIIlO BEEF

IIIITTERIIAl1

Turkeys

89$

4-JO
Lb. l'l. lb.

Bucket Steaks

lb.

2.29
1 1.99

lb.

1

OOUNTRY PRIDE FRESH GRADE ACHICKEN

99C

Drumsticks &amp; Thighs lb.

Jumlto B~logna

1

Lb.

1

1.19

Corned Beef Brlsklts

1.59

Dinner Franks

CHOICE BEEF BONELESS

1.99
I lb. '1.39
Pkg.
lb. 1

TENDERBEST SLICED ·

Blade Steaks

Tree farnls--private ownerS'
system for growing timber

I lb.
Pkg.

~eats

Lb.

Chopped Sirloin

Lb.
PRIDE • FRESH GUDE A

•1 • 39

OTheChlck

POMERO~elg~.=~arm." This
sign stands oo many farms along
Ohio's roadways. It says the farm is
privately owned by someone who Is
growing trees for harvesting.
Farms which have the large green
and white "Tree Form" signs differ
from many other farms that have
trees. These private lands have been
certified by an inspecting forester,
and they belol'lg to the American
Tree Farm System, .a private- industry way of promoting the
growing of tiinber for harvest on
private lands. Certified tree farmers
in Meigs County include Wallace
Bradford, Erwin Gloeckner, Edwin
Hamilton, Carl Kaiser, Robert Mat·
tox, Donald Mora and John Thornpeon.
Tree fanns can be smaJJ - the
Farmer Brown type - or rather
large corporate holdings, like those
of a paper company- And some
sawmills own several hundred
thousand acres. Some tree farms
are very large, but they are private
land, and they are following a
management plan to grow Umber as ·
well as to produce the other kipds of
services that come from a forest,
like wildlife and water production.
And there is the aesthetic value of
looking at the trees as they grow. So,
a tree fann is not strictly a treegrowing program, even though
that's where most of the emphasis
is.
The tree farm system is not a
government program. The system is
sponsored by the American Forest
Institute, a program set liP by most

29

l~Oz.4
.
5
Cans

15' OFF
LA~El

fRANCO AMERICAN

•ath Soap
DOWNY • IS' OFF lABEl

Balh
Size

33 Oz.
Size

29'
89'

lpagheHios
IRAFT · 1£1 PUFf

Marshmallows
FOODIAND

Cocoa Mix

2

2

3

Moat

- l ' OFF lABEl

2lb.
Size

Sausage

2

29% Oz. 5209
Pkg.
3 Oz.

Cans

THIU

Apple Pie Fllllag
FOODIAND

5 Oz.

Drink

Cans

$199 COlGATE

ilw•.. •.h

·

-uuoran . s;,.

00

still living up
to its reputation

CENTRAL

SOYA \

When you're looking to buy or
build, stop in and talk to the
long-term farm credit specialists
at your Land Bank Association.

.3RD

·-'·.. ..
"

d
...an
Bank·

'· ..
!·
...'

&amp;

ifh8

~·

.

.

.
Yo~ 9'W telli_tJ&gt;Y t):le
automotive-type chassis· '
.and .the direct drive trans·
mission with no,cha{na
Of belts. Tell by the .
qule!4fuahjo~ed ·
. engine mount~, extra :
•" ' Insulation' plus a •
. super-sized muffler. .
And by the·t,.dl·
, · tiorial hjgM trade· '~ ·
' )n value .. YOu ~n dL,·}: ~:;:::
~a~:~~~~~·!I::~~~:;•·Main!anance Minder'' l• ·
that tells you w
periQdio m~lntenance:
It's just one way we helP, keepyo~r Cub Cadet running .
.
like new long aftel others quit.
International" Cub gadet, lo!J! modela12 to 16 hp,
your No. 1 buy, And the J,lme If right now: .
. ·1
Cub Cadet Lawn
·
.. · and GardelfTractota·
·,
_
ft~ fr

_

··..•,'..
":·

5
y

c

228 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, Ohio

A
M
0
R

•

..

E

..

~"'
' ~~((,Q 4-"

~ ~ -~
0-4
c;

TOBAcCo .
SOPPUEs :e.

. . ~,o

s~tp

. ~

DISYSTON
DOWFUME MC2'
· Applicators

·~

DID YOU Drl'l._ _

~

' ~'Q ·

~ 1'"'

~'0

BUY EARLY!·AVOID
THE SPR.ING RUSH!

•

.· ·. iJ'-' ·

quality priced u low as . You could

n-;

....

G
A

L
L

I
p
0
L
I

s'

,;'

.· ·· ,

.

·

~ulne

own

a ge-

1nternatlonal
r..l . ~ ,C:u~ Cadetfor ••·little

~

}':'68.74

A_~on~

wlttt mlnTmum down

Sweet

•

::~~NsJt:r.l o; '.Gciicieii ·............

4 LBS.. •1 00

• •

DELICIOUS APPLES~ .......... .. ...... 3 LBS. 1.00

~~':... ,........................51-lB. BAG •1.00
Snow ·BaH

·.

CAULifLOWER .......... ~.................

Yellow

16 Oz.
Pkg.
,
'It &amp;II.

Ctn. · '··

HEAD •1 00
•

OINtOI~ .$115 .••....•.. ·~ •..•...•..•..••. 2. LBS. •1.00 .

.MRS. PAULS LIGHT BATTER

Fa~!!! o!~sh ·Sticks

~····-- ·~··
Oran••
.
fOOOWIII
. .

-· Juice .

Btl.

89(

14'=~.:o~FREE BONUIH~ Dt. $149

8"·

':

3/'1

59'

32 Oz.

Toothpaste ~.'!!

II§.

HEAD lETTUCE

Can

WAGNER

Shampoo ·~~~-

CRISP

16 Oz.

89' Saltines

IRECI

Cub Cadet;.••

HAS

'1.29

ByhuydA.Rath
Soli Couservad011 Service

added that "low temperatures may r-of-,thep;;;lal'l(;;;;e;;;;ln;;;;dustri;;;;;;;es;:;-~p~lyw~ood,~;;;;;;;;;;:~~;;;;;;;;;::~~-=
have damaged" some of the newly
emerged crop.
It will be another month or so
before com planting gets Into gear in
the major productioo areas of the
Midwest.

... your Land Bank about money
to buy land or improve your farm.

1.99

Boneless Swiss Steaks lb. '2.09

... your long·range.ba!l1aln

'

Lb. 1

JUMBO PAl • BEEf SIIOUI.DfR

SIIPERIOR JUMBO

lb.

89$

lb.

Piece

FOR ST. mRICKS DA.l

PRIDE FRESH GRADE A CHICKEN

.ltalves wllibs

JUMBO PAK · EXTRA UAN

Any
Size

'

1

~· ·

�'
E-2-TheSundafTimeS-Senlinel, Sunday, March 9,1980

1

County agent's corner

Cooperattve htension Sel\ltCe
The Ohto State Untvtrsit~

By Jollll C. Rice
Eneuloo Agent

11 WAS NICf OF ','OUR DAD

10 HELP

lilt:

Lj-H CLUB

Agriculture

Wl111 fHflR C.OfYlMUNlTY

Meigs County
POME,ROY - The Cooperative

SERV\C!';: PROJECT OF
GE1f1NG PWPL£ fo IHEPDUS oN w :c110N DA'I!

SHOPPERS EXPE~IENCE
REAL FOOD VA-LUE

You will be provided opportunity to
participate In planned activities and
programs conducted by the agencies
Involved. Once enrolled, you will be
011 a mailing list to receive
educational information and announcements of planned activities
and progratns. This includes special

Extension Service and other
agricultural agencies are initiating
a Small Farm Family Program. The
program is designed espectally for
smallfarms. .
The Small Farm Family program
is voluntary Involving a coordinated
effort to provide educational
material and technical assistance to
small fanners In making effective
use of available resources. A small
prospective youthful employee to
By Fred J. Dee!
farm is a farm family producing
operate
a farm tractor and most
County Agent, f.H
agricultural products with less than
related
farm
equipment. Howev _._
GALUPOUS - Youtha In Gallia
$20,000 sales. ·
there
are
certain
f~ jobs an4 -:._
County who plan to seek emThe purpose of the program is: (1)
selected
pieces
d
ligrlculturaJ&gt;.· . .
ployment in certain agricultural
to assist the small farm family in
related jobs in the coming mon~ · equipment that represent prohibited~­
making the best use of available
must be certified according to employment for all youth until tbi :::;:
resources to achieve family goals;
regulations put forth by the U. s. age of 18. Youth under the age of 1• :;;::
(2) to "Increase crop yields through
Department of Labor. Many farm may qualify for the special cer'r ~=­
the use of recommended soil fer-jobs involving the use of tractors and tiflcation course but may not be ::;.:;:
tility, production, ITIBrketing and farm machinery are considered to issued a certificate until they rea~ ::;t
management practices; (3) to ex- be hazardous for youth who are WI- the age of 14. There are few, If any: .-..
pand livestock production by
der 14 years of age while there are farm jobs related to the use of traco
utilizing improved. breeding,
few restrictions on employment of tors and fann machinery at willet} ;:;
feeding, managing and marketing
youth under the age of 14 can• be em.to -t'. .s'
youth over the age of 16. Youth aged
practices; (4) to improve the Income 14 and 15 can be exempted from
played off the home farm.
,for small farmers by Increasing the most of the hazardous jobs Identified
The Extension Service In our coun': ;:;:
productloo of horticultural and by Labor Department officials if ty will offer a special 20 hour
specialty crops, agronomic crops, they produce a certificate of exemp- tiflcation course for all ellgtbl~
livestock and other enterprises.
youth In the county starting oo Marl
tioo to a "prospective employer. The
Small farm families participating job restrictions do not apply to a · ch 18 at GAHS F.F.A. room, 7 p;~
tn the program will be provided youth working on the home farm.
. Interested youth should cdQtact tbl!
educational materials and teclmical
County Extension Office located on
The exemption certificate
assistance on the production, allowing 14 and 15 year olds to be
the third floor of tiJe Counhouse oi
management and marketing of farm · employed off the borne farm can be
call 44&amp;-4612 ext. 32 to enroll tn th8
products. Information and help on granted to youth who participate in a
program and. for detalla regard~Rg
setting family goals, family resoureligibility,
course content, duratioq
special20 hour classroom course on
ce management and family member
·and
locatioo
of the course. Proepec!
farm tractor and machinery mainrelatiolll!hips are available, This intive
enrollees
should act · liD"
cludes f.H, which provides learning tenance and safety and successfully
mediately as an enroninent des~
pass a written and machinery sltill
experience for boys and girls 9 to 19
isnear.
..
test.
This certificate allows the
years of age. There is also op•
portunity and need for adults to ser-ve as volunteer advisors .
1How to Enroll: Farm families in•
terested In the program should con. tact the County Extension Office.

Youths seeking jobs
mzist" be certified

. Agriculture andl our community

Homemakers'
Circle
IY Bn'TIII!: CUU

By Bryson R . (Bud) Carter
Gallia County Extension Agent

.

.

GAWPOUS - Gallia County
farmers who want to try our N()-Till
Corn planting before investing in a
planter have the opportunity to renting a tw()-row planter this spring
from either the Gallia-Meigs office
of the Jackson Production Credit
As!ociation or Gallia Roller MillsBidwell Mill Outlet.
Since several farmers will be wanting to use the planters, each farmer
is limited to one day's use. There
will be a small charge for its use.
Transportation of the planter is the
farmer's responsibility.
Sign up for use of the planter will
be on a first-eome-first-serve basis.
Call Rick Altizer at his office - 4463391 or the Bidwell Mill - 388-8630 to
get your name on the list.
GrowiDg N()-TIU Com
No Tillage farming is saving
millions of gallons of fuel annually in
Ohio as well as 7-8 tons of soil per
acre which otherwise would be lost
through erosion with qJnventional
tillage practices.
Planting corn without plowing has
been made possible today with planter changes and inexpensive, effective weed control chemicals.
Weed competition and poor plant
stands are important concerns. If
you don't control competition from
weeds, no-till will result in lower
yields than with your conventional
plowing systems. Currently, there is
no effective control available for
Johnsongrass in fields planted in nDtill com.
Many things can cause a low-plant
population or stand. A big problem
In nD-till is placing the seed where it

will stay moist while being warmed

up enough to germinate and grow
quickly. The roo!, your com planter,
must be equipped to place heavy
pressure on each planting unit to err
sure the equal see-soil contact with
conventional tillage.
Insect damage tends to be more of
a problem in nD-till fields because
mulch r.IBterials are left on the surface rather than being buried wilh a
plow. Mulch cover keeps soils cooler
hence germination is slowed and
chance for insect damage is increased.
Steve Hibinger of the Soil Conservation Service here in Gallia
County says thai of the 61,000 potential crop acres in Gallia County,
38,000 of these acres would be
suitable for n(}-till com production.
However, Steve points out that 21,000
acres of the 38,000 would need
erosion control practices; 1,000
acres out of the 6!,000 would be too
wet for n()-till com production.
These notes are meant to point out
that n(}-till is a bit more derrl3nding
than regnlar tillage. You should
start with a limited nwnber of acres
to reduce the.cost of mistakes. N(}till com planting will improve
tilnely planting, reduce soil losses on
sloping fields, save fuel, increase the
nwnber of acres that can be safely
row cropped on your farm, and often
increases com yield. Talk to Jim
and Bill Howard, Harry Hofert,
Glenn Graham, Dick Neal, Ray
Hughes, Dr. Dan .Notter, the Taylor
BrotherS and others to get their
views ... or call me or Steve If we can
be of assistance.

BY :
DIANA S. EBERTS
COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT
HOME ECONOMICS
MEIGS COUNTY

RECYCLING YOUR WARDROBE

POMEROY - Making your war-drobe work may mean using your
creativity to update some of your
garments. After reading about the
new fashions and shopping the
market, you should have good ideas
about what is "in fashioo" now. Are
there some garments you can
restyle, refit, recombine or recut to
make them fashionable and
wearable'
Recycling a garment can be quite
a job to tackle. Before you make a
fins! decision to redo 8" garment, ask
yourself these questions:
Is the garment in good enough condition so that minor changes could
improve its appearance?
Can the garment be reworked,
altered or reshaped into a suitable,
wearable item without looking IT13de

over or '' home-made?''
Can the clothing be recut to make
a different garment? If so:
- Is the fabric in good condition?
Are there thin spots that can be mended or cut around?
- If making a garment over for a
child, are the color and fabric
suitable to the age and sex of the
child and something your child will
lik e.?

Wheu Dlness Slrliles
"Flu." lbat "virus that's going

around everywhere." Measles.
Mwnps, Strep throat, The Cocrunon
cold, usually not worrisome.
Hepatitis, potentially quite hazar.
dous, Infectious diseases, like these
and otiwlrs, are a fact of family Ufe.
They're bound to happen at some
time, in some fonn, with more or
less seriousness.
When such illnesses strike, two
priorities stand out: Doing
everything necessary from a
medical standpoint to speed the
patient's recovery, Including consultatioo with your physician; and
taking every step possible to stop the
illness from spreading to other
family members - to prevent crossinfection. The patient, with resistance already weakened, must also be
shielded from any new and complicating infections that might be introduced by other members of the
family.
Fortunately, there are a nwnber
of simple, basic precautions you can
take to help protect both patient and
family from cross-infection. 'l'besl;
are a matter of care, knowledge and
couunon sense.
Patient-Family Contact
You can't care for your patient
without some physical contact. At
the same time, It's Important to
reduce the risk of cross-infection.
What can you do?
-Avoid any WUiecess&amp;ry physical
contact with the patient.
- Wash your b!mds tborougblJ

with soap and hot water both before
and after each contact with yoiD'
patient.
- With highly contagious diseases
' for exam-hepatitis or strep throat,
ple - wear a coverall apron or
smock in the patient's roilm. Take
off the garment before leaving ·and
keep It in the room.
- Where necessary, wear a
disposable mask over your nose and
mouth while in your patient's room.
Dispose of masks in the room in an
ordinary paper bag, and remove the
bag to a covered trash container or
an incinerator.
- Be sure to disinfect thoroughly
dishes and glassware for serving
your patient meals and liquids, or
use disposable plates and cups.

another fabric to complete a garment?
- Can you salvage buttons, zippers, hooks, snaps, interfacwg and

- Are the sections of the old
lining?
clothing large enough to use? Gar·
Do I have the enthusiasm to comments without a definite waistline
plete the project?
seam can be adapted more easily.
Do I have the necessary skills to
- What are the sizes, shapes and
alter or make the garment changes?
number of secti~ from the old
ls It worth the time, work, and
clothing? Do the pieces suggest ,
money Involved to remodel the old
ways you can reuse the fabric or
garment or would It be wiser to buy
recombine the garments?
a new Item or sew a garment from
- Is there enough fabric to work
new fabric?
with, or can · you combine it with

IENDERI!fST · REG.!THICMHIN

Sliced Bacon

,__ _ ·•- QtOICE BEEF

FRESH lEAII

FRESH • WHOLE BOSTON BUTT

Boneless
Chuck Roast

Pork Steaks

Pork Roast_
'

"lb.g

=a

AVG. .

$ 59

LB.

LB.

cer: ':-"

..

Officials say
disease Up
WASHINGTON (APJ _ New
cases of pseudorabies, also called
Aujeszky's disease or mad Itch, increased 10 percent among the
nation's swine last year, says the
Agriculture Department.
Jim Downard of the department's
Animal and Plant Healtli Inspection
Service said Thursday some 1,155
new cases were rellorted Ialit year,
compared to 1,0521n 1&amp;'18. However,
the incidence was lower than in 1977,
when 1,256 cases were reported.
Psuedorabies Is a recent problem.
Only 125 cases were recorded in
1974, the first year USDA tabulated
the disease.
The disease is a ·virus that
primarily affects swine, and losses
are highest' among suckling pigs.
13 t 1't also •"ects ttl
bee
ca e, s p,
u
...,.
dogs, cats and some wild animals. It
does not affect hwnans, either
through contact with diseased
animals or from eating meat from
diseased animals.
Officials said Iowa, the leading
hot! producer, led last year with 566
new outbreaks, compared to 476 in
1978.
eon PlaDIIDg Underway
It may be difficult for Iowa far-mers to swallow, but the Agriculture
Department ·says com planting is
under way In warmers parts of the
nation.
As of March 2, officials said Thursday tn a weekly weather and crops
"review that corn planting had
progeslled "as high as 3 percent
complete in Texas." But the report

FOODLAND FAMILY PACKS

USDA CHOICE BEEF
'

Tasty Tleet

COUNTRY STnE.CUIIlO BEEF

IIIITTERIIAl1

Turkeys

89$

4-JO
Lb. l'l. lb.

Bucket Steaks

lb.

2.29
1 1.99

lb.

1

OOUNTRY PRIDE FRESH GRADE ACHICKEN

99C

Drumsticks &amp; Thighs lb.

Jumlto B~logna

1

Lb.

1

1.19

Corned Beef Brlsklts

1.59

Dinner Franks

CHOICE BEEF BONELESS

1.99
I lb. '1.39
Pkg.
lb. 1

TENDERBEST SLICED ·

Blade Steaks

Tree farnls--private ownerS'
system for growing timber

I lb.
Pkg.

~eats

Lb.

Chopped Sirloin

Lb.
PRIDE • FRESH GUDE A

•1 • 39

OTheChlck

POMERO~elg~.=~arm." This
sign stands oo many farms along
Ohio's roadways. It says the farm is
privately owned by someone who Is
growing trees for harvesting.
Farms which have the large green
and white "Tree Form" signs differ
from many other farms that have
trees. These private lands have been
certified by an inspecting forester,
and they belol'lg to the American
Tree Farm System, .a private- industry way of promoting the
growing of tiinber for harvest on
private lands. Certified tree farmers
in Meigs County include Wallace
Bradford, Erwin Gloeckner, Edwin
Hamilton, Carl Kaiser, Robert Mat·
tox, Donald Mora and John Thornpeon.
Tree fanns can be smaJJ - the
Farmer Brown type - or rather
large corporate holdings, like those
of a paper company- And some
sawmills own several hundred
thousand acres. Some tree farms
are very large, but they are private
land, and they are following a
management plan to grow Umber as ·
well as to produce the other kipds of
services that come from a forest,
like wildlife and water production.
And there is the aesthetic value of
looking at the trees as they grow. So,
a tree fann is not strictly a treegrowing program, even though
that's where most of the emphasis
is.
The tree farm system is not a
government program. The system is
sponsored by the American Forest
Institute, a program set liP by most

29

l~Oz.4
.
5
Cans

15' OFF
LA~El

fRANCO AMERICAN

•ath Soap
DOWNY • IS' OFF lABEl

Balh
Size

33 Oz.
Size

29'
89'

lpagheHios
IRAFT · 1£1 PUFf

Marshmallows
FOODIAND

Cocoa Mix

2

2

3

Moat

- l ' OFF lABEl

2lb.
Size

Sausage

2

29% Oz. 5209
Pkg.
3 Oz.

Cans

THIU

Apple Pie Fllllag
FOODIAND

5 Oz.

Drink

Cans

$199 COlGATE

ilw•.. •.h

·

-uuoran . s;,.

00

still living up
to its reputation

CENTRAL

SOYA \

When you're looking to buy or
build, stop in and talk to the
long-term farm credit specialists
at your Land Bank Association.

.3RD

·-'·.. ..
"

d
...an
Bank·

'· ..
!·
...'

&amp;

ifh8

~·

.

.

.
Yo~ 9'W telli_tJ&gt;Y t):le
automotive-type chassis· '
.and .the direct drive trans·
mission with no,cha{na
Of belts. Tell by the .
qule!4fuahjo~ed ·
. engine mount~, extra :
•" ' Insulation' plus a •
. super-sized muffler. .
And by the·t,.dl·
, · tiorial hjgM trade· '~ ·
' )n value .. YOu ~n dL,·}: ~:;:::
~a~:~~~~~·!I::~~~:;•·Main!anance Minder'' l• ·
that tells you w
periQdio m~lntenance:
It's just one way we helP, keepyo~r Cub Cadet running .
.
like new long aftel others quit.
International" Cub gadet, lo!J! modela12 to 16 hp,
your No. 1 buy, And the J,lme If right now: .
. ·1
Cub Cadet Lawn
·
.. · and GardelfTractota·
·,
_
ft~ fr

_

··..•,'..
":·

5
y

c

228 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, Ohio

A
M
0
R

•

..

E

..

~"'
' ~~((,Q 4-"

~ ~ -~
0-4
c;

TOBAcCo .
SOPPUEs :e.

. . ~,o

s~tp

. ~

DISYSTON
DOWFUME MC2'
· Applicators

·~

DID YOU Drl'l._ _

~

' ~'Q ·

~ 1'"'

~'0

BUY EARLY!·AVOID
THE SPR.ING RUSH!

•

.· ·. iJ'-' ·

quality priced u low as . You could

n-;

....

G
A

L
L

I
p
0
L
I

s'

,;'

.· ·· ,

.

·

~ulne

own

a ge-

1nternatlonal
r..l . ~ ,C:u~ Cadetfor ••·little

~

}':'68.74

A_~on~

wlttt mlnTmum down

Sweet

•

::~~NsJt:r.l o; '.Gciicieii ·............

4 LBS.. •1 00

• •

DELICIOUS APPLES~ .......... .. ...... 3 LBS. 1.00

~~':... ,........................51-lB. BAG •1.00
Snow ·BaH

·.

CAULifLOWER .......... ~.................

Yellow

16 Oz.
Pkg.
,
'It &amp;II.

Ctn. · '··

HEAD •1 00
•

OINtOI~ .$115 .••....•.. ·~ •..•...•..•..••. 2. LBS. •1.00 .

.MRS. PAULS LIGHT BATTER

Fa~!!! o!~sh ·Sticks

~····-- ·~··
Oran••
.
fOOOWIII
. .

-· Juice .

Btl.

89(

14'=~.:o~FREE BONUIH~ Dt. $149

8"·

':

3/'1

59'

32 Oz.

Toothpaste ~.'!!

II§.

HEAD lETTUCE

Can

WAGNER

Shampoo ·~~~-

CRISP

16 Oz.

89' Saltines

IRECI

Cub Cadet;.••

HAS

'1.29

ByhuydA.Rath
Soli Couservad011 Service

added that "low temperatures may r-of-,thep;;;lal'l(;;;;e;;;;ln;;;;dustri;;;;;;;es;:;-~p~lyw~ood,~;;;;;;;;;;:~~;;;;;;;;;::~~-=
have damaged" some of the newly
emerged crop.
It will be another month or so
before com planting gets Into gear in
the major productioo areas of the
Midwest.

... your Land Bank about money
to buy land or improve your farm.

1.99

Boneless Swiss Steaks lb. '2.09

... your long·range.ba!l1aln

'

Lb. 1

JUMBO PAl • BEEf SIIOUI.DfR

SIIPERIOR JUMBO

lb.

89$

lb.

Piece

FOR ST. mRICKS DA.l

PRIDE FRESH GRADE A CHICKEN

.ltalves wllibs

JUMBO PAK · EXTRA UAN

Any
Size

'

1

~· ·

�-----

--~

~

,

•
•

OPEN DAILY 10T09
SUNDAY 1 T07

OPEN DAILY 10 TO 9
SUNDAY1T07

BASSER OR flOUTER

BERKELEY

SKIN PAK

6Y2' SPINNING ROD

LUI~

•a••

CAIVAS

SKIRTS

fJJ•ral&gt;l' canvaa
handbJ..,a cOme In
•·-~~~~·net
wide H 1.ctton or

CHOICE

compl•m•nt anr

wa"*obe.

CHOICII

L1

.~.

10W40
~

AUTOMATIC

.

line Capacltl•e-Automatle fly rHII will
hold 1ny ltvel, weight forward or dooble
taper fty line 11p to #8. Single action rHII
ar. t.tter 1ulted for handiii\Q tarow linea.

s·

.....

0(1

M·

.! -

.. I
..

~-­ :;...

I'IIMILL ·
••IHHJTII

•-•

.

•

.

POCKET PAKSIDER

Tough polyethylene conatructlon, won't
dent. ruat or corrode. UMi aquare 8. volt
lantern baH.-y. (Batt.-y not Included.)

Opens fr~nf either side. 2 rugged, clear
AcryUte l1d!!li allow con tents to be e;aily
a~en . ToUO~ ASS Ocean Blue body . Hanga
on belt or hla In tackle boJC or jacket pock et

•

IIA'III . . .

"''·

...

""

. ,"

• •lUll .., .

------------~~------------+------·•

$3-111

........,.

GIRLS'
IIITSIY CLAIIK

,. '

•• •

· ~·

..c;lll'S RSQ, 580 lUll

.

'

PRINT PANTIES

'

e IIIIFS Ill IIIIIIS

·-

.,...

.1714" xe•

WINDOW SHADE

HaC~~Q, $188

..., .....,,

Dependable. Eveready lante~n bat·
terlea provide 6 volta of contin·
uoua power.

$133

CANOPI!NER
.
.

'1il.lld1 Fr. ." 0Mr11101'1-pod6on Ml'l. f"lll ~.
1411 go-11 .:h11t1 ott 111t~lctilly. "E111~ C~111" ,..
tnCWible cuttftQ -~­
HIIIdy cord 8f0111CM. OYI'I'

ble Lei.IITI IUint houhUI •

. "~Ngnet Mid• lid front, ••

"""

WAFFLE.BAIER &amp;GRILL
Cof!VIIItftl ll:ltchen flppience
olf•• llttll Qrldelll Ifill grill

""'"·Top toldllkNn to ball:1
waH'Ie1 liM! ~·• or '''"'
"' rot . . o4 coOII.ftg aurlte.
II lortddlf.

$26"
HaCK'S RaQ.

taa.oe

GlllildAL ILIICTRIC
t~QW!AUIY

SPIAY4JIA'MIIIOI

STIIR

e L~Qh~We~aht, ~
-1 IM.e ~1o. hold. ...., to
ttendll-.......

lroft.eCooJ-t~

•

-

'J 7''
~

·
(
88

HCK'I RIG.

tUO

. 1. . . .,,;;,.

tlOFif~HPJ'.

HICK'S fiiG.

SLACK · RACK

~ . . . . . . . ....

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

HICK'S
,..a.
tlt.te•

S1.tSPR.

$•••

.

t11·Ge

Jlrtfttr

llll'r.

llOUSIWAII 1111'1•

~··

""

••.1.

• 011

__ _

c.. .,., a.- VI-

HICK'S RaG.

.,, Up"olllery, P'l ..tlo

Piotr Mlt1, Root Llllerl

..._
....
a.-..111 .... ...

t17.88

~':::!-·­

llAIIWAII ""'·

---.·s1" .

SIT OF ll
WOODIN

GIANT

EXPAIDO RACk

.....

HUll'S MG.

HaCK'S
RaG.
U1.oo

HaCK'S RIG;
• 1.50

$1511

88(

.

'2211

.....
··-111.1
t1.4aD.

'

SITOP!l
SITOP2

WOOD

. CIOICI

HaCK'IIIIIG.

.

KODAK
INSTA.ATIC '

'CAMERA liT

Get bigger color prtnta wtth ttle KO·

DAK INSTAMATIC1 X- 15F Comara.
Tt!it pe,.nnlal favorite Ia eaey to u1e
and priced low ao lt'a •••~ to give.

$14Mf
.&amp; - -

Ou!lll lncludeo!llm ond lllpllaoh.

HICK'S RaG.
1115.00

Jftrfttr 1111r.

,

HAll SPlAY

·t. •cl••ca

.

sac

llOUSIWUI JIPr.

. 01101.
1111-AUOSOL

.ITAI:-

TROUSER
HANGERS

M

BLOUSE TR.EE
·llaCK'aAa••

t1,St '

HECKS'S REG.

· HICK'' tlaG.

~~~,.

.

.

,
'

$1 .l!le

1

88(
.

WOODIN

SUIT HANGER
HICK,•s

RIG~

.1.511

aae .

AM/FM POITAILI IAIIO
e WITI I YIACI PLAYII

f'Ot1&amp;blt 8·fr1cll

Pia~«

wl AM

i'J': BR~1:}'":~o::~~ ~~:fek
play~ ltfllllttl FlrA I AW Rodla. A~ ·

IO·MIIIIII) prog11m alleCIIOR ,

BWH'a eya ;rovram lndiCalor

shO'o'• l c~er!y wMI ptOQIIf\1 Ia
Ptanl!' 11111nad lo . Volullle CtN'I ·
uol. s mooth t apa running
mechanism . Fold · dow ~ csrry.
ing hi~. hpa tradlo 1111c·
IQ!" swiletl. Witll AC cord. C)c)t;r·
' ' " Ofl 4 C alta balter•u (fiG!
tncluded}

59

5

99

Jftrlllr .,,,,

•otSDIMJiiif.

$31.99,

,,

&amp;1 .SII

~----+-------------~------~~-----

e11HD111

F1ELDERS GLOVE'

HICJt•s RIG.

llOISrirAJE JII'F.

WHITEIAII
HAll SPRAY

"MIKE SCHMIDr'

SKIRT HANGERS
I

7.501.

RAWLINGS

li

$11 88

FOAM CLEAIER

HaCK'S RaG.

-aac••
~ICK'SRIG.

Wltll'ltood- •

•uliiiiY

6VOLT
llUERI BATTERY

CHOICI

GDIIRAft. aL.aCTRIC

'

HaCK'S RaG.

. ...

HECK'S fiiG.

3aAIS SIOO

.....I I t-.~~
".!~
.
HKK'''
.... 3·"

SPOITS .JEPr.

e POll 11011a AIIID AUTO UIL

HaCK'IRSQ,

.~

'I'

SILICONE SPRAY ·
LUBRICANT

DEODOIAIT
SOAP

•:
IOID:IASTIIAaiT
,, ,

UIIION CARIIDI

IIISI SPill' ·

PDCOAAITIC

SHIJ'I.IPJ'.

Cltrii•C JIPJ'.
" PLANO

i

6 VOLT LANTERN

aa.a•u.

SNifSHn.

- ....
I

FISHING CAP

MCK'IRaG.

• _).J
·'
~

' -

5 QT. PULP IUCIEi

$3!!

MCK'IRaQ.

::Pinn """·

FLY REEL

Moat popolar aotomallc fly rHI. SialniHa
oteol line protector. Walgho only 8.5 ou.

....,

........

QUART

I"

-CHOICI

..
ete:;:..-..·
TOILGf*- .

MOTOR OIL

SPOITS llfPr.

Rawnlde lacing. " OHp Well 1' pocket. ~ 11ngtl'l Pigskin palm
lining, vln\1 1 blnaing, ~ llnglh split leather, flngerback linIng , spliT leather welting, X·laced finger,, adlu,tab le thumb

Ladin ' fashion skirts in pre-washed denim or painter
Iabrie . 2 &amp; 4 pocket stylu in natural , light blue and new .
Sizes 5 115.

coiore th vt will

HI!CK'S RI!G.
T0$4.23

+

LADIIS'

HAIDBA~S

Heck's Reg. '10.99

loop.

LADIU'

M•PP'S

Q

8)... iJ b ))m

.

J

..

�-----

--~

~

,

•
•

OPEN DAILY 10T09
SUNDAY 1 T07

OPEN DAILY 10 TO 9
SUNDAY1T07

BASSER OR flOUTER

BERKELEY

SKIN PAK

6Y2' SPINNING ROD

LUI~

•a••

CAIVAS

SKIRTS

fJJ•ral&gt;l' canvaa
handbJ..,a cOme In
•·-~~~~·net
wide H 1.ctton or

CHOICE

compl•m•nt anr

wa"*obe.

CHOICII

L1

.~.

10W40
~

AUTOMATIC

.

line Capacltl•e-Automatle fly rHII will
hold 1ny ltvel, weight forward or dooble
taper fty line 11p to #8. Single action rHII
ar. t.tter 1ulted for handiii\Q tarow linea.

s·

.....

0(1

M·

.! -

.. I
..

~-­ :;...

I'IIMILL ·
••IHHJTII

•-•

.

•

.

POCKET PAKSIDER

Tough polyethylene conatructlon, won't
dent. ruat or corrode. UMi aquare 8. volt
lantern baH.-y. (Batt.-y not Included.)

Opens fr~nf either side. 2 rugged, clear
AcryUte l1d!!li allow con tents to be e;aily
a~en . ToUO~ ASS Ocean Blue body . Hanga
on belt or hla In tackle boJC or jacket pock et

•

IIA'III . . .

"''·

...

""

. ,"

• •lUll .., .

------------~~------------+------·•

$3-111

........,.

GIRLS'
IIITSIY CLAIIK

,. '

•• •

· ~·

..c;lll'S RSQ, 580 lUll

.

'

PRINT PANTIES

'

e IIIIFS Ill IIIIIIS

·-

.,...

.1714" xe•

WINDOW SHADE

HaC~~Q, $188

..., .....,,

Dependable. Eveready lante~n bat·
terlea provide 6 volta of contin·
uoua power.

$133

CANOPI!NER
.
.

'1il.lld1 Fr. ." 0Mr11101'1-pod6on Ml'l. f"lll ~.
1411 go-11 .:h11t1 ott 111t~lctilly. "E111~ C~111" ,..
tnCWible cuttftQ -~­
HIIIdy cord 8f0111CM. OYI'I'

ble Lei.IITI IUint houhUI •

. "~Ngnet Mid• lid front, ••

"""

WAFFLE.BAIER &amp;GRILL
Cof!VIIItftl ll:ltchen flppience
olf•• llttll Qrldelll Ifill grill

""'"·Top toldllkNn to ball:1
waH'Ie1 liM! ~·• or '''"'
"' rot . . o4 coOII.ftg aurlte.
II lortddlf.

$26"
HaCK'S RaQ.

taa.oe

GlllildAL ILIICTRIC
t~QW!AUIY

SPIAY4JIA'MIIIOI

STIIR

e L~Qh~We~aht, ~
-1 IM.e ~1o. hold. ...., to
ttendll-.......

lroft.eCooJ-t~

•

-

'J 7''
~

·
(
88

HCK'I RIG.

tUO

. 1. . . .,,;;,.

tlOFif~HPJ'.

HICK'S fiiG.

SLACK · RACK

~ . . . . . . . ....

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

HICK'S
,..a.
tlt.te•

S1.tSPR.

$•••

.

t11·Ge

Jlrtfttr

llll'r.

llOUSIWAII 1111'1•

~··

""

••.1.

• 011

__ _

c.. .,., a.- VI-

HICK'S RaG.

.,, Up"olllery, P'l ..tlo

Piotr Mlt1, Root Llllerl

..._
....
a.-..111 .... ...

t17.88

~':::!-·­

llAIIWAII ""'·

---.·s1" .

SIT OF ll
WOODIN

GIANT

EXPAIDO RACk

.....

HUll'S MG.

HaCK'S
RaG.
U1.oo

HaCK'S RIG;
• 1.50

$1511

88(

.

'2211

.....
··-111.1
t1.4aD.

'

SITOP!l
SITOP2

WOOD

. CIOICI

HaCK'IIIIIG.

.

KODAK
INSTA.ATIC '

'CAMERA liT

Get bigger color prtnta wtth ttle KO·

DAK INSTAMATIC1 X- 15F Comara.
Tt!it pe,.nnlal favorite Ia eaey to u1e
and priced low ao lt'a •••~ to give.

$14Mf
.&amp; - -

Ou!lll lncludeo!llm ond lllpllaoh.

HICK'S RaG.
1115.00

Jftrfttr 1111r.

,

HAll SPlAY

·t. •cl••ca

.

sac

llOUSIWUI JIPr.

. 01101.
1111-AUOSOL

.ITAI:-

TROUSER
HANGERS

M

BLOUSE TR.EE
·llaCK'aAa••

t1,St '

HECKS'S REG.

· HICK'' tlaG.

~~~,.

.

.

,
'

$1 .l!le

1

88(
.

WOODIN

SUIT HANGER
HICK,•s

RIG~

.1.511

aae .

AM/FM POITAILI IAIIO
e WITI I YIACI PLAYII

f'Ot1&amp;blt 8·fr1cll

Pia~«

wl AM

i'J': BR~1:}'":~o::~~ ~~:fek
play~ ltfllllttl FlrA I AW Rodla. A~ ·

IO·MIIIIII) prog11m alleCIIOR ,

BWH'a eya ;rovram lndiCalor

shO'o'• l c~er!y wMI ptOQIIf\1 Ia
Ptanl!' 11111nad lo . Volullle CtN'I ·
uol. s mooth t apa running
mechanism . Fold · dow ~ csrry.
ing hi~. hpa tradlo 1111c·
IQ!" swiletl. Witll AC cord. C)c)t;r·
' ' " Ofl 4 C alta balter•u (fiG!
tncluded}

59

5

99

Jftrlllr .,,,,

•otSDIMJiiif.

$31.99,

,,

&amp;1 .SII

~----+-------------~------~~-----

e11HD111

F1ELDERS GLOVE'

HICJt•s RIG.

llOISrirAJE JII'F.

WHITEIAII
HAll SPRAY

"MIKE SCHMIDr'

SKIRT HANGERS
I

7.501.

RAWLINGS

li

$11 88

FOAM CLEAIER

HaCK'S RaG.

-aac••
~ICK'SRIG.

Wltll'ltood- •

•uliiiiY

6VOLT
llUERI BATTERY

CHOICI

GDIIRAft. aL.aCTRIC

'

HaCK'S RaG.

. ...

HECK'S fiiG.

3aAIS SIOO

.....I I t-.~~
".!~
.
HKK'''
.... 3·"

SPOITS .JEPr.

e POll 11011a AIIID AUTO UIL

HaCK'IRSQ,

.~

'I'

SILICONE SPRAY ·
LUBRICANT

DEODOIAIT
SOAP

•:
IOID:IASTIIAaiT
,, ,

UIIION CARIIDI

IIISI SPill' ·

PDCOAAITIC

SHIJ'I.IPJ'.

Cltrii•C JIPJ'.
" PLANO

i

6 VOLT LANTERN

aa.a•u.

SNifSHn.

- ....
I

FISHING CAP

MCK'IRaG.

• _).J
·'
~

' -

5 QT. PULP IUCIEi

$3!!

MCK'IRaQ.

::Pinn """·

FLY REEL

Moat popolar aotomallc fly rHI. SialniHa
oteol line protector. Walgho only 8.5 ou.

....,

........

QUART

I"

-CHOICI

..
ete:;:..-..·
TOILGf*- .

MOTOR OIL

SPOITS llfPr.

Rawnlde lacing. " OHp Well 1' pocket. ~ 11ngtl'l Pigskin palm
lining, vln\1 1 blnaing, ~ llnglh split leather, flngerback linIng , spliT leather welting, X·laced finger,, adlu,tab le thumb

Ladin ' fashion skirts in pre-washed denim or painter
Iabrie . 2 &amp; 4 pocket stylu in natural , light blue and new .
Sizes 5 115.

coiore th vt will

HI!CK'S RI!G.
T0$4.23

+

LADIIS'

HAIDBA~S

Heck's Reg. '10.99

loop.

LADIU'

M•PP'S

Q

8)... iJ b ))m

.

J

..

�E-7-The SWiday Times-sentinel , Sunday, J&gt;4arch 9, 1980

wASHIN~N &lt; A~~~: ~~~~or~ ~era~U!ugh a~~~!!smn, ~~~~'J :d}~ nwttt!?.!?£~rl!l~~ti~~

f1rst time ever, the nat!~ s federal
courts ~mselves are bemg ordered
to provide eqli;Bl job opporturuttes to
rac1al rnlnonttes and women.
And federal judges are on notice
thallhe•r,leaders ~ it is "inap,
propnate. f~ any JU~e to belong to
a? orgaruzat10n that
1nvulious ~rurunation. . The U.S.
Judicial Conferenc:, a kind of board

·.rcttces

aU facets of persOMel management
including recruitment, hlrlng,
promotion and advancement."
The plan provides a chance for in~vtduals seeking court jobs or onthe-job advancements to "seek
timely redress of discrimination
complaints."
Spaniol said the plan was imposed
as ~ result of a request made last
June by a coalition of civil rights
groups which, in effect, asked the
courts to practice what they preach.
The groups had charged that the
ju~clary's conunltment to "equal
problctlon as applied to ~ practices of private and public employers" had not provided equal job
opportunities within the courts

system, reported both developments
Thursday.
Conference spokesman Joseph
Spaniol said the afflnnatlve •action
plan for . some 12,000 federal court
empleyeesis to begin immediately.
It does not contain hiring and
promotional goals or quotas, but
states that "eacb court will promote
equal employment opportunity

Unemployment rate declining
WASHINGTON (AP) The
nation's unemployment rate dipped
slightly to 6 percent in February, offerlng another sign of the economy's
stubborn refusal to enter the longanticipated recession.
The jobless rate had jumped from
5.9 percent to 6.2 percent in January,
the highest level sinej! July 1978, the
Labor Department said today.
" February's figures show that one
month does not a recession make,"
said a departmenl'economlst. "The
spurt in joblessness in January ·ap,
parently has not been sustained.' •
The Carter administration Is
trying to ~reel the economy into a
mild recession as a strategy to cool
off rising inflstion. It is p~cting
an unemployment rate of7.5 percent
by this fall.
February's dip in unemployment
was actuaUy slightly less than twotenths of a percentage point because
of distortions due to rounding, the
Labor Department said. "Had there
been 1,000 more people unemployed,
February's percentage would have
been 6.1."
In a companion report, the depart·
ment said the purchasing power of a
worker's paycheck declined 5.2 percent in the 12 months ending in
January as inflation outstripped
salary increases.
The actual nUmber of people
unemployed in February came to6.3
million, about 100,000 less than in the
previous month.
Following are the Labor Department's unemployment rates for the
r .10 most populous states in February,
;::;compared with January: California:
:.:6.1 percent, up from 5.8 percent in

New Jersey: 5.4 percent, down
from6.9 percent.
New York: 7.6 percent, down from
7.7 percent.
Ohio: 6.1 percent, down fn:m 6.3
percent.
Pennsylvania: 6.8 percent, down
from 7.2 percent.
Texas : 4.9 percent, up from 4.8
percent.

...

invidious

"

Our Best Selling
Stratolounger® Recliners

95

•29

~mselves.

Speaking to reporters at the conclusion of the conference's two-day

UMITEDTIME

t-=----------------------:--~

SPECIAL

PIPE SALE
Str.tolounQI!r't fomous &gt;IP ' CloM ·Up ' ~sign with Klh.
chormel boclo a nd yrut wrap·0\11!1 orms Ptnltion 11
c lo !M to th11 walland you I'\I!Wr 1111116' to mo11e rt -~ .,.n when
pillow~

fully r@dined' Ttw poPrfect choio:&lt;! for smaller rooms

and sumpt uous

d11vp

as c omfo rtabk&gt; 1ultlooh!

"nothaor fa mout "clost -IO · Ihc ·woll"

Suoto!Gun~r .....:~l&lt;h~~....~~J~~

posWon com fort an d ha nd10 mely pluth dtii!p ·tultii!d crnh ·
toni ng, Gen"roUI proponlonl make lt_rh ldlli'al ch.1ir lor rtw
ra ll~:~r man .

SUNDAY; MARCH t.1980
5:30--Church Service 11: 6:00-Amerlc an
Problems
&amp;
Challenges 10 ; , Between lhe
Lines 17 .
6:30--Chrlstopher Closeup 3; Better
Way 8; Treehouse Club 10.
7:QO-Thls Is the Life 3; Jerry
Falwell 8; Urban League 10;
Action Newsmaker 13; II Is
Written 17.
7:30-TV Chapel 3; Eddie Saunders
6 ; Jerry Falwell 10: The Bible
Answers 13 ; Jimmy Swaggart
15; Rev . Terry Cole· Whittaker
17.
8:QO-Mormon Choir 3; Day of
Discovery 8; Grace Cathedral 6;
Evangelical Outreach 13; WTBS
Funhouse 17; Sesame ST. 20,33 .
8:30-Cral Roberts 3; Rev, Leonard
Repass 8; Contact 6; James
Robison 10; Open Bible 15;
Lower Lighthouse 13.
9:QO-Gospel Singing Jubilee 3; Oral
Roberts 10; Rex Humbard 6;
Christian Center 8; Rev. Jim
Franklin 13; Ernest Angley 15;
Bill Dally's Hocus Pocus 11 ;
Mister Rogers 20; Studio See 33.
9: 30-Robert Schuller 8; It Is
Written 10; Rev. R. A. West 13;
Sesame St. :!0; Big Blue Marble
33.
10 :QO-Rex Humbard 3; Kids Are
People
Too
6:
Movie
'"Masquerade" 10: Jimmy
Swaggarl 13; Gospel Singing
Jubilee 15; Leave II To Beaver
17; Consumer Experience 33.
10:30-Ernest Angley 8; Movie "The
House on 92nd Street" 17; 3·2·1
Contact 20.
11 :QO-Human Dimension 3: Rex
Humbard 15; Rev . Henry Mahan
13; Elec . Co. 20; Growing Years
33.
11 :30-BIII Dance Outdoors 3;
Animals, Animals, Animals 6, 13;
Face The Nation 8; Big Blue
Marble 20.
.
12:00--Atlssue ·3; lss.ues&amp;Answers
6,131 VIewpoints; The Issue 10;
This Is Th!! L1fe 15; Bill Moyers'
· Journal 20 ; Movie "Hit ' the
Saddle" 33.
12 :30-Meet· the Press 3,15;
Directions . 6; Championship
Fishing 8; Face The Nation 10;
Kids Are People Too 13;' Movie
"Brave Warrior" 17.
1 :QO-NCAA Basketball 3,15; NBA

Basketball

8, 10;

America's

Black Forum 6; Movie "The
Secret Agent" 20 ; Movi e
" Mother Worf1 Tights" 33 .
1:30-Fishln' Hole 6: HI .Q 13 .
2:00-Superleams 13; America 's
Athletes 6; Movie " Mutiny at
Fort Sharp" 17.
l :QO-NCAA Basketball 3,15; Movie
"l nlerval"6 ; Vlbrallons20; Live
trom the Grand Ole Opry 33.
3:15-Boxlng 13; 3:40-Auslln City
Limits 20.
4:QO-Golf 8,10; Movie " Way ... Way
Out" 17.
4:30-Wide World of Sports 6, 13.
S:QO-Sporlsworld 3; Insight 15; La
Grantie Par\lde Du Jazz 20.
5:30-Pop Goes The Country 15: ·
5:40-Gienn Miller 20.
6:00--News3,8,10; ABC. News6; Trl
Slate: Today &amp; Tomorrow 13:
Better Way 15; Wrestling 17:
Free to Choose 33.
6:30-NBC News 3,15; ABC News 13;
CBS News 8, 10; News 6.
7:00-Disney's Wonderful World
3, 15; Movie '"Sinbad &amp; the Eye of
the Tiger'" 6, 13; 60·Minutes 8,10;
Speaking of Love: Leo Buscaglia
33; Nashville on the Road 17; La
Grande Parade Du Jazz 20.
7:30-Porter Wagoner 17; 8:00-Tenspeed &amp; Brown Shoe 6, 13;
Archie Bunker's Place 8.10;
Voyage of Charles Darwin 20:
Movie "The Lion &amp; the Horse'"
17; FredAstaire: Pullin' On His
Top Hal 33.
'
8:30-Cne Day AI A Time 8,10.
9:QO-Movle '"The Murder That
Wouldn't ·ote" 3, 15; Movie
'"Amber Waves" 6,13; Allee 8,10;
Masterpiece Theatre 20.33.
9:30-Jeffersons 8, 10.
10 :00--Trapper John, . M.D. 8,10:
Winston Churchill 17; Voyage of
Charles Darwin 33.
10 :30-Ruff House 17 ; Carmen
McRae In Concert 20.
11 :QO-News 3,6,8,10,13,15; Open Up
17; Firing Line 33.
11 :15-ABC News 6; CBS News 10;
PMA Pulse 15.
11 :30-Movle "A Dispatch from
Reuter's'" 3; Alter Benny,
Thames Presents 6; Come Hear
the Musl.c Play 8; Movie "The
C!!vern" 10; PTL Club 13;
Wrestling 15.
12 :oo-FB I 6; 12:30-News 15.
l:QO-Movle "The Burning Hills'"
17 ; 1:30-ABC News 13.
3:oo-Movle "The Crimson Pirate"
17; 5:1o-Love, American Style
11.

·-

Magnrfiteni Srra~loung.r XP"' r~llner. Tht chill that glv~5
yOYIXITa position rtla~•llon from TV to full reclining comfort
Stunning uphol1ttred leg ttyllng and bCautiM ~ detailed
upholllery glw thl l chair atalk ·trbo~ d!lCOUrilorlook.
1

TAWNEY JEWELERS

Proper limit jump raises
lhen go to three of his
partner's suit as what was
then called the raise to two
and a half.
S landard American today
sltll plays all single jump rais·
es as forcing. but in the last 30
years expert bidders have
been using limit jump raises.
Our suggestion is thai you
try to learn their use . You
play them as showing from
lO-plus to 13·minus support·
mg pomts .
You expect partner to go on
jl10re tha n 90 percent of the
llme . But if he has opened
w1th someth ing like S - A Q 7 3
2 H - Q 5 4 D · K 7 6 C - Q 2, he
shou ld pass a three-spade

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Son lag
In the early days of
contract, single jump raises
were . faorly strong bids , but
defJmtely not forcing.
By 1932, expert players saw
that some forcing raise was
essential and the limited tech·
nology of that d ay added single jump raises to the gamelorcmg category. Tliis change
led to one of the silliest bid-

ding

sequen~es

w_here respon·

der would hrst btd a suit and
13; Merv Grift in 15: Gilligan's Is.
17.
S:oo-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; My
Three Sons 17 ; Mi ster Rogers
20,33 .
5:30-Mash 3: News 6: Play the
Percentages B; Elec . Co. 20 ;
Mash 10;. Happy Days Again 13; I
Dream of Jeannie 17;

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

1j ~~~1.'\..0 fruit

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~S

Doctor

by Henri Arnold and BobLH

I KJ J

Who 33.
6:00- News 3.8 , 10 . 13.15 : Carol
Burnell 17 ; 3-2-1 Contact 20,33.
6:30-NBC News 3.15 ; ABC News 13:
CBS News 8,10; Carol Burnett 6;
Bob Newhart 17; Villa Alegre 20;
Wild Wild World ol Animals 33.
7:00--Cross-Wits J ; Tic Tac Dough
8; Newlywed Game 6, 13;
MacNeii · Lehrer Report 33 ;
News 10; Love, American Style
15; Sanford &amp; Son 11: Dick
Cavell 20.
7:30-Thal Nashville Music 3:
Muppet Show 6; Joker 's Wild 8:
Dick Cavell 33; Family Feud
10, 13; All In The Family 17 ;
MacNeil· Lehrer -Report 20.'
8:00--LIIIIe House •on the Prairie
3,15; That's Incredible! 6,13 :
WKRP In Cincinnati 8,10; Movie
"'His Majesty O'Keefe" 17 ;
Natlona.l Geographic 20; Fred
Astalre: Change Partners &amp;
Dance 33.
8:30-Lasl Resort 8, 10.
9:00--From Here to Eternity 3,15;
Family 6;13 ; Mash 8,10 ;

CYDUH

I

rJ

1

·-·

HIWALE

WHA'"T iH5 GUM
'TYCOON D\17 "TO

[j r

r

HIS 61AFF.
Now arrange the clreled letters to

J
Answerhere.(I III X]THEM( I I)
J

1

Yesterday's

I

form the surprise answer, as sug·

gesled by the above cartoon.

(Anlwet'a Mondoy)

Jumbles: LURID SHEAF MUFFLE ELDEST
Answer: What the surgeon said when the patient

objected to slilchos-"SUTURE" SELF

Am#tl"lr"n Shnrt Storv 20: Movie

"'Three Little Words'" 33.
9:30-House Calls 8.10.

PRICES EFFECTIVE

.1&gt;'-. '
One o llh t moll e)t(:lrlng recllnll'lgchalrstyles we "veever •€e n'
Sle~ ~ untllevtr arms highlight the duply padded M il l 11nd
b11d And su rpriM ! Thil luxurlou~ T~&lt;d l nlng ch11h 11 a Qlll'nlle
amll\!laxlng rocking &lt;hlllr liS well!

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1910
5:40---World at Large 17; 5:45Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL Club
13.
6 :00--700 Club 6,8; Listen 17; PTL
Club 15; 6 : 15-Athletes 17.
6 :30-For OUr Times 10; News 17 ;
6 :45-Mornlng Report 3; A.M.
Weather 33.
6:55-News I~; 7:QO-Today 3.15 :
Good Morning America 6.13 ;
Monday Morning 8; Batman 10;
WTBS Funhouse 17.
7:30-Famlly Affair 10; Sesame St.
33; 7:55-Chuck While Reports
JO.
8:00--Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Lucy
Show 17.
8:30-Romper Room 17.
9:oo-Bob Braun 3: Big Valley 6;
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Jeffersons
10; Phil Donahue 13,15; Family
Affair 17.
9 :30-Bob Newhart 8; One Day AI A
Time 10; Green Acres 17.
10:00--Card Sharks 3,15; Ed9e of
Night 6; Jeffersons 8; Joker's
Wild 10: Morning Magazine 13 ;
Movie " Carson City" 17.
10: 30-Hollywood Squares 3,15 ;
S20.000 Pyramid ' 13; Andy
Griffith 6; Whew 8,10.
10: ~CBS News 8; House Call 10.
ll:oo-High Rollers 3,15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6,13; Price Is Rlghl8,10;
Elec. Co. 20 .
11 :3Q-Wheel of Fortune 3.15;
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.
12:30-Ryan's Hope 6,13 ; Search tor
Tomorrow 8, 10; Password Plus
IS; Movie '"The Jazz Singer" 17 ;
· Elec. Co. 33.
I :00--0ays ofOur Lives 3, 15; All My
Children 6,13; Young &amp; the
Restless 8, 10.
2:QO-Doclors 3,15; One Life to Live
6,13; As The · World Turns 8,10;
2:25--News 'Rfr
3,15;
' 2:30-Anofher
'·World
Glgglesnort Hotel 17.
3:00-General
Hospital 6, 13;
Guiding ;Light 8,10; I Love Lucy
17; Bill Moyers' Journal 20.
3:30-FIIntstones 17: 4:0G-Misler
Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 6;
Petticoat Junction B;. Sesame ST.
20,33; Gomer Pyle 10; Real
McCoys 13; Little Rascals 15;
Sepclreman 17.
4:30-LoneRangerJ; GomerPyle8;
Bunch 10; Tom &amp; Jerry
-Brady
.
.

.,.

...,January.
:; Florida : 5.2 percent, up friXll 5.1
• .percent.
:~ lllinois: 7 percent, down friXll 7.1
: :Jlercent.
:: Massachusetts: 4.8 percent, down
:;from 5 percent.
•: Michigan: 10.3 percent, up from
.:!J.S percent .

bold lllllllberlhlp 1n an

also

BRIDGE

SllD:fJ.:!\Y and Monday's TV Log

08

response. Improve the hand to
S · A Q 10 9 5 H - Q 10 4 D · K
7 6 C - Q 2 and he should go on
10 game.
When you use limit jump
raises. you can handle the
forc mg raise by simply bidding a new suit, but there are
many ways to use artificial
bids for that purpose. The
chief ones are the Jacoby two"
notrump; the lngberman three
notrump and various conven·
t1ons with the general name of
Swiss. They are aU too complicated for a bridge col umn,
but all have some merit.
Now for a word of warning.
Don 't try limit jump raises
unless you can persuade your
partners to use them with you.
When we use plus or minus,
we mean that when you have
tens and nines to support high
cards or have your points in
ace and king, you have a plus.
Low spot cards and queen and
jack points are minus.

MONDAY

THRU

424 SECOND AVE•

SATURDAY

·'I
•'•

IT'S WORTH THE DRIVEl
TODAY- SUNDAY, MARCH 9th
9 AM TIL 5:30 P.M. -

NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED.

MICRO GOLD BUYERS IS PAYING .

NO AMOUNT TOO
SMAll OR 100
lARGE.
FREE

IMMEDIATE CASH FOR YOUR

GOLD

GOLD &amp; SILVER

ClASS RINGS
Men's

PARKING!

Ladies

PAYING
70' EA.
FOR WAR
NICKL£S
1942-1945

ISN'T CASH

NEW SNACK·CRACK·ER
FROM NABISCO t(

Also buying 111 10K, 14K, 18 K
wedding rings, told wotches
dentol work, gold coins:
lewelry, etc. Jewelry can be
llroken or bent.

IN THE BANK
BrnER THAN SCRAP
IN YOUR DRAWERS?

.

WHY NOT GET PAID

.

PRICES

FOR HOUSECLEANING
AT tHESE HIGH

'~

'

CHEDDAR·
. ...
1RIAN.G-LES ~..
.

.

'

MARKET CHANGES

PAYING CASH FOR
SILVER COINS
DATED 1964 OR BEFORE

STERLING SILVER
Forks ........•.•••••.••• S14
Teaspoons •••. _ ......... _ $11
Soup Spoons _............. $11
Salad Forks ........ _.. _.. $11
Tablespoons ....... _... ,. $14

SILVER DOLLARS ••••. ·................. 119 EA.

Knives . ~ .•..•....••.•..• ~ S6
.We buy anything sterling .or
solid s!lver.

FRESH
SLICED

HALf IX)L.LARS
'

'

I ' • • • • • •,

'

QIJARTERS ••••••

sg EA.
'4.50 EA.

............ 0 • • • •
I

I • • • • ; • • • • •· • • • • • • • • • • •

t

DIMES •••.••..•....•...••..•..•••••••••'1~ EA.
"
HALF J)OIJ.US....................... .'US EA.
. (1965-1970)

·twDIAN SiLVER
19&amp;6 -OR--olDER
•
•

i. e

.I

PAYINGBOIR

HO~IDA¥
INN
.
ROUTE t - NORTH..OF GllllrOLIS .
.
.

'

' "

FRESH SIDE.................................~~; ..79c
BOSTON

aun

.PORK ROAST. ...·........... ~~: ..$1

'

BACON .........~ .............1•2.~~!.~~-.

SUPERIOR
N0.1

'

/85.
'

..

'

29

ggc

O~LY

TUESDAY

REGULAR
OR 'S.UGAR FREE
'

DR. PEPPER
8 PACK 16 OZ. Bn. erN.

•• ~

'

"!'···· .•....

• ..I..

"IN 1HI LO. .r" .

.

.8 OZ. BOX

'I

BEEF LIVER: .....................L~; •.39c.

HEARTH FARMS

FRESH...-CRISP
.

BUTTER. SPLIT

·CARROtS

WHEAT
.
BREAD.

, GREEN BELL

'

'

•

J.

PEP~ERS
.
...

. p
.

.

~

RJR '

'

.

.. '

..
'

i9°

"

'

•

•

I

T

'

,

•'

'

S4Vt; 10• .LOAP

79 ,.

20 01. uw

'

'

�E-7-The SWiday Times-sentinel , Sunday, J&gt;4arch 9, 1980

wASHIN~N &lt; A~~~: ~~~~or~ ~era~U!ugh a~~~!!smn, ~~~~'J :d}~ nwttt!?.!?£~rl!l~~ti~~

f1rst time ever, the nat!~ s federal
courts ~mselves are bemg ordered
to provide eqli;Bl job opporturuttes to
rac1al rnlnonttes and women.
And federal judges are on notice
thallhe•r,leaders ~ it is "inap,
propnate. f~ any JU~e to belong to
a? orgaruzat10n that
1nvulious ~rurunation. . The U.S.
Judicial Conferenc:, a kind of board

·.rcttces

aU facets of persOMel management
including recruitment, hlrlng,
promotion and advancement."
The plan provides a chance for in~vtduals seeking court jobs or onthe-job advancements to "seek
timely redress of discrimination
complaints."
Spaniol said the plan was imposed
as ~ result of a request made last
June by a coalition of civil rights
groups which, in effect, asked the
courts to practice what they preach.
The groups had charged that the
ju~clary's conunltment to "equal
problctlon as applied to ~ practices of private and public employers" had not provided equal job
opportunities within the courts

system, reported both developments
Thursday.
Conference spokesman Joseph
Spaniol said the afflnnatlve •action
plan for . some 12,000 federal court
empleyeesis to begin immediately.
It does not contain hiring and
promotional goals or quotas, but
states that "eacb court will promote
equal employment opportunity

Unemployment rate declining
WASHINGTON (AP) The
nation's unemployment rate dipped
slightly to 6 percent in February, offerlng another sign of the economy's
stubborn refusal to enter the longanticipated recession.
The jobless rate had jumped from
5.9 percent to 6.2 percent in January,
the highest level sinej! July 1978, the
Labor Department said today.
" February's figures show that one
month does not a recession make,"
said a departmenl'economlst. "The
spurt in joblessness in January ·ap,
parently has not been sustained.' •
The Carter administration Is
trying to ~reel the economy into a
mild recession as a strategy to cool
off rising inflstion. It is p~cting
an unemployment rate of7.5 percent
by this fall.
February's dip in unemployment
was actuaUy slightly less than twotenths of a percentage point because
of distortions due to rounding, the
Labor Department said. "Had there
been 1,000 more people unemployed,
February's percentage would have
been 6.1."
In a companion report, the depart·
ment said the purchasing power of a
worker's paycheck declined 5.2 percent in the 12 months ending in
January as inflation outstripped
salary increases.
The actual nUmber of people
unemployed in February came to6.3
million, about 100,000 less than in the
previous month.
Following are the Labor Department's unemployment rates for the
r .10 most populous states in February,
;::;compared with January: California:
:.:6.1 percent, up from 5.8 percent in

New Jersey: 5.4 percent, down
from6.9 percent.
New York: 7.6 percent, down from
7.7 percent.
Ohio: 6.1 percent, down fn:m 6.3
percent.
Pennsylvania: 6.8 percent, down
from 7.2 percent.
Texas : 4.9 percent, up from 4.8
percent.

...

invidious

"

Our Best Selling
Stratolounger® Recliners

95

•29

~mselves.

Speaking to reporters at the conclusion of the conference's two-day

UMITEDTIME

t-=----------------------:--~

SPECIAL

PIPE SALE
Str.tolounQI!r't fomous &gt;IP ' CloM ·Up ' ~sign with Klh.
chormel boclo a nd yrut wrap·0\11!1 orms Ptnltion 11
c lo !M to th11 walland you I'\I!Wr 1111116' to mo11e rt -~ .,.n when
pillow~

fully r@dined' Ttw poPrfect choio:&lt;! for smaller rooms

and sumpt uous

d11vp

as c omfo rtabk&gt; 1ultlooh!

"nothaor fa mout "clost -IO · Ihc ·woll"

Suoto!Gun~r .....:~l&lt;h~~....~~J~~

posWon com fort an d ha nd10 mely pluth dtii!p ·tultii!d crnh ·
toni ng, Gen"roUI proponlonl make lt_rh ldlli'al ch.1ir lor rtw
ra ll~:~r man .

SUNDAY; MARCH t.1980
5:30--Church Service 11: 6:00-Amerlc an
Problems
&amp;
Challenges 10 ; , Between lhe
Lines 17 .
6:30--Chrlstopher Closeup 3; Better
Way 8; Treehouse Club 10.
7:QO-Thls Is the Life 3; Jerry
Falwell 8; Urban League 10;
Action Newsmaker 13; II Is
Written 17.
7:30-TV Chapel 3; Eddie Saunders
6 ; Jerry Falwell 10: The Bible
Answers 13 ; Jimmy Swaggart
15; Rev . Terry Cole· Whittaker
17.
8:QO-Mormon Choir 3; Day of
Discovery 8; Grace Cathedral 6;
Evangelical Outreach 13; WTBS
Funhouse 17; Sesame ST. 20,33 .
8:30-Cral Roberts 3; Rev, Leonard
Repass 8; Contact 6; James
Robison 10; Open Bible 15;
Lower Lighthouse 13.
9:QO-Gospel Singing Jubilee 3; Oral
Roberts 10; Rex Humbard 6;
Christian Center 8; Rev. Jim
Franklin 13; Ernest Angley 15;
Bill Dally's Hocus Pocus 11 ;
Mister Rogers 20; Studio See 33.
9: 30-Robert Schuller 8; It Is
Written 10; Rev. R. A. West 13;
Sesame St. :!0; Big Blue Marble
33.
10 :QO-Rex Humbard 3; Kids Are
People
Too
6:
Movie
'"Masquerade" 10: Jimmy
Swaggarl 13; Gospel Singing
Jubilee 15; Leave II To Beaver
17; Consumer Experience 33.
10:30-Ernest Angley 8; Movie "The
House on 92nd Street" 17; 3·2·1
Contact 20.
11 :QO-Human Dimension 3: Rex
Humbard 15; Rev . Henry Mahan
13; Elec . Co. 20; Growing Years
33.
11 :30-BIII Dance Outdoors 3;
Animals, Animals, Animals 6, 13;
Face The Nation 8; Big Blue
Marble 20.
.
12:00--Atlssue ·3; lss.ues&amp;Answers
6,131 VIewpoints; The Issue 10;
This Is Th!! L1fe 15; Bill Moyers'
· Journal 20 ; Movie "Hit ' the
Saddle" 33.
12 :30-Meet· the Press 3,15;
Directions . 6; Championship
Fishing 8; Face The Nation 10;
Kids Are People Too 13;' Movie
"Brave Warrior" 17.
1 :QO-NCAA Basketball 3,15; NBA

Basketball

8, 10;

America's

Black Forum 6; Movie "The
Secret Agent" 20 ; Movi e
" Mother Worf1 Tights" 33 .
1:30-Fishln' Hole 6: HI .Q 13 .
2:00-Superleams 13; America 's
Athletes 6; Movie " Mutiny at
Fort Sharp" 17.
l :QO-NCAA Basketball 3,15; Movie
"l nlerval"6 ; Vlbrallons20; Live
trom the Grand Ole Opry 33.
3:15-Boxlng 13; 3:40-Auslln City
Limits 20.
4:QO-Golf 8,10; Movie " Way ... Way
Out" 17.
4:30-Wide World of Sports 6, 13.
S:QO-Sporlsworld 3; Insight 15; La
Grantie Par\lde Du Jazz 20.
5:30-Pop Goes The Country 15: ·
5:40-Gienn Miller 20.
6:00--News3,8,10; ABC. News6; Trl
Slate: Today &amp; Tomorrow 13:
Better Way 15; Wrestling 17:
Free to Choose 33.
6:30-NBC News 3,15; ABC News 13;
CBS News 8, 10; News 6.
7:00-Disney's Wonderful World
3, 15; Movie '"Sinbad &amp; the Eye of
the Tiger'" 6, 13; 60·Minutes 8,10;
Speaking of Love: Leo Buscaglia
33; Nashville on the Road 17; La
Grande Parade Du Jazz 20.
7:30-Porter Wagoner 17; 8:00-Tenspeed &amp; Brown Shoe 6, 13;
Archie Bunker's Place 8.10;
Voyage of Charles Darwin 20:
Movie "The Lion &amp; the Horse'"
17; FredAstaire: Pullin' On His
Top Hal 33.
'
8:30-Cne Day AI A Time 8,10.
9:QO-Movle '"The Murder That
Wouldn't ·ote" 3, 15; Movie
'"Amber Waves" 6,13; Allee 8,10;
Masterpiece Theatre 20.33.
9:30-Jeffersons 8, 10.
10 :00--Trapper John, . M.D. 8,10:
Winston Churchill 17; Voyage of
Charles Darwin 33.
10 :30-Ruff House 17 ; Carmen
McRae In Concert 20.
11 :QO-News 3,6,8,10,13,15; Open Up
17; Firing Line 33.
11 :15-ABC News 6; CBS News 10;
PMA Pulse 15.
11 :30-Movle "A Dispatch from
Reuter's'" 3; Alter Benny,
Thames Presents 6; Come Hear
the Musl.c Play 8; Movie "The
C!!vern" 10; PTL Club 13;
Wrestling 15.
12 :oo-FB I 6; 12:30-News 15.
l:QO-Movle "The Burning Hills'"
17 ; 1:30-ABC News 13.
3:oo-Movle "The Crimson Pirate"
17; 5:1o-Love, American Style
11.

·-

Magnrfiteni Srra~loung.r XP"' r~llner. Tht chill that glv~5
yOYIXITa position rtla~•llon from TV to full reclining comfort
Stunning uphol1ttred leg ttyllng and bCautiM ~ detailed
upholllery glw thl l chair atalk ·trbo~ d!lCOUrilorlook.
1

TAWNEY JEWELERS

Proper limit jump raises
lhen go to three of his
partner's suit as what was
then called the raise to two
and a half.
S landard American today
sltll plays all single jump rais·
es as forcing. but in the last 30
years expert bidders have
been using limit jump raises.
Our suggestion is thai you
try to learn their use . You
play them as showing from
lO-plus to 13·minus support·
mg pomts .
You expect partner to go on
jl10re tha n 90 percent of the
llme . But if he has opened
w1th someth ing like S - A Q 7 3
2 H - Q 5 4 D · K 7 6 C - Q 2, he
shou ld pass a three-spade

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Son lag
In the early days of
contract, single jump raises
were . faorly strong bids , but
defJmtely not forcing.
By 1932, expert players saw
that some forcing raise was
essential and the limited tech·
nology of that d ay added single jump raises to the gamelorcmg category. Tliis change
led to one of the silliest bid-

ding

sequen~es

w_here respon·

der would hrst btd a suit and
13; Merv Grift in 15: Gilligan's Is.
17.
S:oo-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; My
Three Sons 17 ; Mi ster Rogers
20,33 .
5:30-Mash 3: News 6: Play the
Percentages B; Elec . Co. 20 ;
Mash 10;. Happy Days Again 13; I
Dream of Jeannie 17;

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

1j ~~~1.'\..0 fruit

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~S

Doctor

by Henri Arnold and BobLH

I KJ J

Who 33.
6:00- News 3.8 , 10 . 13.15 : Carol
Burnell 17 ; 3-2-1 Contact 20,33.
6:30-NBC News 3.15 ; ABC News 13:
CBS News 8,10; Carol Burnett 6;
Bob Newhart 17; Villa Alegre 20;
Wild Wild World ol Animals 33.
7:00--Cross-Wits J ; Tic Tac Dough
8; Newlywed Game 6, 13;
MacNeii · Lehrer Report 33 ;
News 10; Love, American Style
15; Sanford &amp; Son 11: Dick
Cavell 20.
7:30-Thal Nashville Music 3:
Muppet Show 6; Joker 's Wild 8:
Dick Cavell 33; Family Feud
10, 13; All In The Family 17 ;
MacNeil· Lehrer -Report 20.'
8:00--LIIIIe House •on the Prairie
3,15; That's Incredible! 6,13 :
WKRP In Cincinnati 8,10; Movie
"'His Majesty O'Keefe" 17 ;
Natlona.l Geographic 20; Fred
Astalre: Change Partners &amp;
Dance 33.
8:30-Lasl Resort 8, 10.
9:00--From Here to Eternity 3,15;
Family 6;13 ; Mash 8,10 ;

CYDUH

I

rJ

1

·-·

HIWALE

WHA'"T iH5 GUM
'TYCOON D\17 "TO

[j r

r

HIS 61AFF.
Now arrange the clreled letters to

J
Answerhere.(I III X]THEM( I I)
J

1

Yesterday's

I

form the surprise answer, as sug·

gesled by the above cartoon.

(Anlwet'a Mondoy)

Jumbles: LURID SHEAF MUFFLE ELDEST
Answer: What the surgeon said when the patient

objected to slilchos-"SUTURE" SELF

Am#tl"lr"n Shnrt Storv 20: Movie

"'Three Little Words'" 33.
9:30-House Calls 8.10.

PRICES EFFECTIVE

.1&gt;'-. '
One o llh t moll e)t(:lrlng recllnll'lgchalrstyles we "veever •€e n'
Sle~ ~ untllevtr arms highlight the duply padded M il l 11nd
b11d And su rpriM ! Thil luxurlou~ T~&lt;d l nlng ch11h 11 a Qlll'nlle
amll\!laxlng rocking &lt;hlllr liS well!

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1910
5:40---World at Large 17; 5:45Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL Club
13.
6 :00--700 Club 6,8; Listen 17; PTL
Club 15; 6 : 15-Athletes 17.
6 :30-For OUr Times 10; News 17 ;
6 :45-Mornlng Report 3; A.M.
Weather 33.
6:55-News I~; 7:QO-Today 3.15 :
Good Morning America 6.13 ;
Monday Morning 8; Batman 10;
WTBS Funhouse 17.
7:30-Famlly Affair 10; Sesame St.
33; 7:55-Chuck While Reports
JO.
8:00--Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Lucy
Show 17.
8:30-Romper Room 17.
9:oo-Bob Braun 3: Big Valley 6;
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Jeffersons
10; Phil Donahue 13,15; Family
Affair 17.
9 :30-Bob Newhart 8; One Day AI A
Time 10; Green Acres 17.
10:00--Card Sharks 3,15; Ed9e of
Night 6; Jeffersons 8; Joker's
Wild 10: Morning Magazine 13 ;
Movie " Carson City" 17.
10: 30-Hollywood Squares 3,15 ;
S20.000 Pyramid ' 13; Andy
Griffith 6; Whew 8,10.
10: ~CBS News 8; House Call 10.
ll:oo-High Rollers 3,15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6,13; Price Is Rlghl8,10;
Elec. Co. 20 .
11 :3Q-Wheel of Fortune 3.15;
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.
12:30-Ryan's Hope 6,13 ; Search tor
Tomorrow 8, 10; Password Plus
IS; Movie '"The Jazz Singer" 17 ;
· Elec. Co. 33.
I :00--0ays ofOur Lives 3, 15; All My
Children 6,13; Young &amp; the
Restless 8, 10.
2:QO-Doclors 3,15; One Life to Live
6,13; As The · World Turns 8,10;
2:25--News 'Rfr
3,15;
' 2:30-Anofher
'·World
Glgglesnort Hotel 17.
3:00-General
Hospital 6, 13;
Guiding ;Light 8,10; I Love Lucy
17; Bill Moyers' Journal 20.
3:30-FIIntstones 17: 4:0G-Misler
Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 6;
Petticoat Junction B;. Sesame ST.
20,33; Gomer Pyle 10; Real
McCoys 13; Little Rascals 15;
Sepclreman 17.
4:30-LoneRangerJ; GomerPyle8;
Bunch 10; Tom &amp; Jerry
-Brady
.
.

.,.

...,January.
:; Florida : 5.2 percent, up friXll 5.1
• .percent.
:~ lllinois: 7 percent, down friXll 7.1
: :Jlercent.
:: Massachusetts: 4.8 percent, down
:;from 5 percent.
•: Michigan: 10.3 percent, up from
.:!J.S percent .

bold lllllllberlhlp 1n an

also

BRIDGE

SllD:fJ.:!\Y and Monday's TV Log

08

response. Improve the hand to
S · A Q 10 9 5 H - Q 10 4 D · K
7 6 C - Q 2 and he should go on
10 game.
When you use limit jump
raises. you can handle the
forc mg raise by simply bidding a new suit, but there are
many ways to use artificial
bids for that purpose. The
chief ones are the Jacoby two"
notrump; the lngberman three
notrump and various conven·
t1ons with the general name of
Swiss. They are aU too complicated for a bridge col umn,
but all have some merit.
Now for a word of warning.
Don 't try limit jump raises
unless you can persuade your
partners to use them with you.
When we use plus or minus,
we mean that when you have
tens and nines to support high
cards or have your points in
ace and king, you have a plus.
Low spot cards and queen and
jack points are minus.

MONDAY

THRU

424 SECOND AVE•

SATURDAY

·'I
•'•

IT'S WORTH THE DRIVEl
TODAY- SUNDAY, MARCH 9th
9 AM TIL 5:30 P.M. -

NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED.

MICRO GOLD BUYERS IS PAYING .

NO AMOUNT TOO
SMAll OR 100
lARGE.
FREE

IMMEDIATE CASH FOR YOUR

GOLD

GOLD &amp; SILVER

ClASS RINGS
Men's

PARKING!

Ladies

PAYING
70' EA.
FOR WAR
NICKL£S
1942-1945

ISN'T CASH

NEW SNACK·CRACK·ER
FROM NABISCO t(

Also buying 111 10K, 14K, 18 K
wedding rings, told wotches
dentol work, gold coins:
lewelry, etc. Jewelry can be
llroken or bent.

IN THE BANK
BrnER THAN SCRAP
IN YOUR DRAWERS?

.

WHY NOT GET PAID

.

PRICES

FOR HOUSECLEANING
AT tHESE HIGH

'~

'

CHEDDAR·
. ...
1RIAN.G-LES ~..
.

.

'

MARKET CHANGES

PAYING CASH FOR
SILVER COINS
DATED 1964 OR BEFORE

STERLING SILVER
Forks ........•.•••••.••• S14
Teaspoons •••. _ ......... _ $11
Soup Spoons _............. $11
Salad Forks ........ _.. _.. $11
Tablespoons ....... _... ,. $14

SILVER DOLLARS ••••. ·................. 119 EA.

Knives . ~ .•..•....••.•..• ~ S6
.We buy anything sterling .or
solid s!lver.

FRESH
SLICED

HALf IX)L.LARS
'

'

I ' • • • • • •,

'

QIJARTERS ••••••

sg EA.
'4.50 EA.

............ 0 • • • •
I

I • • • • ; • • • • •· • • • • • • • • • • •

t

DIMES •••.••..•....•...••..•..•••••••••'1~ EA.
"
HALF J)OIJ.US....................... .'US EA.
. (1965-1970)

·twDIAN SiLVER
19&amp;6 -OR--olDER
•
•

i. e

.I

PAYINGBOIR

HO~IDA¥
INN
.
ROUTE t - NORTH..OF GllllrOLIS .
.
.

'

' "

FRESH SIDE.................................~~; ..79c
BOSTON

aun

.PORK ROAST. ...·........... ~~: ..$1

'

BACON .........~ .............1•2.~~!.~~-.

SUPERIOR
N0.1

'

/85.
'

..

'

29

ggc

O~LY

TUESDAY

REGULAR
OR 'S.UGAR FREE
'

DR. PEPPER
8 PACK 16 OZ. Bn. erN.

•• ~

'

"!'···· .•....

• ..I..

"IN 1HI LO. .r" .

.

.8 OZ. BOX

'I

BEEF LIVER: .....................L~; •.39c.

HEARTH FARMS

FRESH...-CRISP
.

BUTTER. SPLIT

·CARROtS

WHEAT
.
BREAD.

, GREEN BELL

'

'

•

J.

PEP~ERS
.
...

. p
.

.

~

RJR '

'

.

.. '

..
'

i9°

"

'

•

•

I

T

'

,

•'

'

S4Vt; 10• .LOAP

79 ,.

20 01. uw

'

'

�...
~The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday,

.•
,

~

March 9, 1980

Rideau, prisoner with a life worth living
1'1

ANGOLA, La. (APJ - In the harsh world of the swampy, IH,IJOO-acre
plantation known as Angola State
Penitentiary, Wilbert Rideau is one
d the few lifers deemed to have a
life worth living.
Rideau's is a· prison success story
the likes of which are seldom seen a murderer who is also an awardwinning editor and a writer who
free-lances articles on life and death
and love among convicts.
As editor of The Angolite, he has a
free hand at his work - with(n
reason - and sweet recognition
keeps flowing his way.
The latest prize: A George Polk
Award, on Feb. 24, for special interest reporting, shared with
associate editor 13illy Sinclair. The
citation praised two articles, one
dealing with homosexual rape, the
other with the aftermath of murder.
"We are silting on a mountain of
stories and (have) no competition,"
Rideau said in reaction to the honor.
Rideau has been grabbing awards
for the past two years. Once paid in
cigarettes for writing letters for
fellow inmates, he recently earned
$1,000 with a single magazine article. He has a literary agent and a
deal with a publisher to do a book
and if- he is freed.
Now 38, Rideau is working through
year 19 of a life sentence. Freedom
is a distant memory. "The life I was
leading back then, I would have been
dead long ago," he said.
"Back then," he was a !~year-old
black kid who tried to end his poverty by holding up a hank in Lake
Charles, La. He tried to cover the
crime with murder.
The episode showed little class or
criminal intelligence. In fact, it was
about as dumb as a holdup can gel
In the first place, Rideau was known
at the bank - he used to do odd jobs
there.
He struck just as the bank opened.
He left with $14,279 packed into a
cheap suitcase - and all the employees, two female tellers and the
branch manager.
On a deserted road, Rideau ordered them out of the car. He shot all
three, then slashed Julia Ferguson's
throat before fleeing. She was the
only one who died.
Rideau was arrested 80 minutes
after walking into the Gulf National
Bank branch With a drawn gun. But
then the law stumbled, aod Rideau
had his first brush with the news
boBlness. It saved him from electrocution In the state's rough-hewn
old death chair.
, Sheriff Ham Reid, proud of his
quick catch, took Rideau to a
television studio. In an interview
Jilter broadcast on a news program,
Rideau admitted his guilt.
That televised confession led to a
1963 U.S. Supreme Court ruling
reversing Rideau's murder conviction. He was ordered retried.
· But two more convictions were
overtum_ed. one because of a fault in

when-

jury selection, the other when the

Supreme Court hlled the state's
capital punishment law unconstitutional. Everyone sentenced
to death under the old law had his
punishment reduced to life in prison.
By that time, Rideau had spent 13
years on Death Row. Men on Death
ROw do not sweep or hoe the fields or
do any other work. They sit in small
cells, catching flies , killing time.
"They didn't even allow exercise
In those days," said Rideau. "You
went in and were locked down and
you stayed locked down. They dido 't
believe in books, neither. On Death
Row, you could read the Bible. It
was bread and water if they caught
you with anything else."
That regulation was eventually

abolished. Other reading matter
became available.
••1 had to do something to hang onto my sanity so I read," said Rideau.
" I came in with an eighth grade
education but I passed my time
reading. The only other thing to do
was write. At first, I wrote letters for
guys who couldn't write. For a let·
ter, I charged a pack of cigarettes.
"Then one day they moved me out
of the cell and into the Big Yard of
what was then the bloodiest prison in
the nation - 40 inmates killed from
1972 to 1!115. There were 350 who
received stab wounds serious
enough to require hospital treatment .... Everybody had a knife.
Some had guns."
Rideau quickly established him-

Children won't be returned to parents
PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) - Two
children hospitalized for
malnutrition after being kept on a
strict vegetarian diet will not be
returned to the custody of their
parents pending a neglect hearing
next week, a judge ruled Thursday.
Assistant Prosecutor Mitch Ribitwer said Oakland County Probate
Judge John J. O'Brien denied the
request by Norman and Christine
Schroeder following a session in the
judge's chambers.
Meanwhile, the two children will
remain hospitalized in Pontiac, officials said.
Information from doctors and
nutritional specialists was being
gathered in preparation for the March 13 hearing, Ribitw~r said.
Norman Schroeder, 26, the father,
said the children's illness was
caused by his wife's spiritu,al beliefs.

Schroeder said earlier that he
would tell O'Brien that he believed
his wife , neglected his children
through nutritional deprivation by
keeping them on a strict vegetarian
diet.

sell as a man best unprovoked. He
wanted to write so he set up Lifer's
Magazine, naming himsell editor.
In 1976, state Corrections Director
Paul Phelps named him editor of the
existing newsletter, with a mandate
to report news. The Angollte is
published every two.rnonths and has
a circulation of 2,000.
"The magazine was moved to the
direct supervision of the warden's
office," Rideau said. "The move
was iniportant because if a prison official objects to something we write
for the magazine, as a prisoner I
can't very well tell him to·jump off a
cliff. Associate Warden Peggy
Greham can do that, and she does."
Rideau said The Angolite wins
awards because it is unique. "We
engage in investigative journalism
+ which is totally foreign within the
context of imprisonment," he said.
Gov. Edwin Edwards' refused to
commute Rideau'~ sentence last
month.
"I knew it wouldn't go through by
what I was reading in the
newspapers," said Rideau. " .. .It
was corrunon sense that the man

wasn't going to commit political

Khomeini repudiates council

Uncertainty surrounds hostage situation

suicldeforme."

[REDWINQ

16iJ'

WORK SHOES THAT WORK
WE'VE GOT THE WIDEST
SELECTION OF STYLES
AND SIZES AROUND

{gil
Dan Thomas &amp; Son

By Tbe A8SC&gt;j!iated Press
Ayatollah Ruhollah KhOfJleini said
today the U.N. commission can
question U.S. Embassy hostages involved in crimes against Iran, but
the panel can not see all the captives
unless it issues its report in Tehran,
the state radio said. "We shall fight
against the U.S. government to the
end of our life," Khomeini said.
His statement appeared to
repudiate the decision by the ruling ·
Revolutionary Council, Its chief,
President Abolhassan Bani-&amp;dr,
and Foreign Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh that the militants holding the
approldmately 50 hostages for 128
days allow the panel to meet all the
hostages or band them over to
government custody. However,
Ghotbzadeh denied it was a setback.
Khomeini's statement also or-

dered the embassy militants "to
detiver copies of all documents concemlng the U.S.Intervention and the
traitor shah" to the U.N. commission. The statement was issued
after 10 members of the council met
with him · in hopes of resolving the
deadlock with the militants.
"The panel can meet with those
hostages involved in the crimes of
the U.S. and the shah for
questioning," Iran's 7!1-year-old
revolutionary leader said. "If the
panel issues its report on the crimes
of the deposed shah and in·
terventions of the invading U.S. in
Tehran it will be allowed to see aU
the hostages."
Khomeini concluded by saying, "I
express my support for the
Revolutionary Council and the
honorable president and ask all the

VOL. 28, NO. 230

This Week's Special

- -·~'f&lt;'' .WiliWft'tf-M:S!&lt;11'j!!i'.::-'shlil' iiftiiilctlve&amp;ii&lt;t"'.f~·~ · 'towtt'tcf ciige play at' ciill.lfcoilie-iOincirro\VI1ll!ht. ·

COKE. TAB.

,

SPRITE
8-16oz.
Btls.

e·
w. .enfoot\~W~.Wt\lt~~';:-'l'he 81

~-.~,~were made ~,Y_~me
at

~~

$129

Worftu!,on ~ Pn)lf#c""',!re·'dll~'~;~~n.
Dee !-Brown, Rita Mathews, Vlrglrilii mes, Be1rly
Wicllune, and Megan Manuel.
'

Tornado
on display
lilgh school, were conStructed for Sou ern's trip

!.,_, .''

·· ·

PIUS Tax &amp; Deposit

.

·

cu Mea Cf~

tCO'W'IIII'. $ bondt. 10

~ Aft'M Cr,o$·

·

' cl'IOMell 4 freeCr~-

IIOIII {$2(l ~ ,

lclsl($20 ~

reod~)

rel0ii¥01Ye)

ConvertS orry e-ww
-~"""'

MANILA, Philippines - Terrorists threW hand grenades Into two
. movie theaters and an outdoor singing contest, killing at least 24 persons and wounding more than 200 in two southern Philippines towns,
the official news agency said Sunday.
President Ferdinand E. MarcOs ordered Manila medical teams sent
to Ommls City and IUgan City and told the air force to bring critically
Injured persons to the capital for treatment.
The Philippine News Agency said the eiJ)loslons were believed to be
the work of the Moslem-led Moro National Liberation Front or the
fttplst New People's Army. There was no Indication of which group, if
eldler•carried out the attacks.

mto a
IMJ ·octb'l~

10p9 plafef

'

ra:tio. 2 txJf'1d.. 4
chomell 2 r~ee Crt'·

,...

Connally withdraws from race

.'
JiOUSTON (AP) - Jollu B. Connally, declaring that Ronald Reagan
"18 still the champion," withdrew fl'!lm the Republican presidential
race Sunday, one dily after he was soundly thrashed by Reagan In
their first primarY battle In the South.
'The former TeiBS governor, who became a candidate one year ago
and spent nearly $10 million In a losing battle, told a news conference
that after his disappointing loas to Reagan in the Soul)! Carolina
primary, it no longer would be "to the good of my party and the nation
for me to.continue my Cjllldidacy."

"*''eon ~ MoOIII
IMn:1l !lldlest

.,....... """""' or
tq\· Dtlll~

I·Ho \MF, IM't\.HF

-- -~($tO M.Jgg851ed

retoii\'Cllue)

l~fw8igni. I)O'!Otll8

non 4-cto'lnel

KDY'el. 2 Free 0¥J·

101111$Wl II.QOelted
retaij YOioe)

AifCtOftlttf bondl
2 Free Oys!dll ($10
suggested retail VQIO&amp;J

...,.,_

4 bondi;O ctaw1eb.

C4XJblliel ton arT¥

alhet hord·hflkt
2 keeOy&amp;tailll [S10

~raotoii\IOk»J

Ayala favoti ''bloodless solution"
· BoGoTA, Coloml!la \~l - Presldept JuUo Cesar Turbay Ayala

p. p a "C n;t- Sec•nirs
BOB'S ELECTRONICS ·
UPPER ·RT. 7

=

said ~Y he favors a ~loodless solution" to-the s(flld91f at the .
can RepubJ!c EmbasSy whj;re at least two dozen hostages, litU.S. Arnbaaalidor l)lego Asencio,,spent their 12th day In cap- '
tlvlty at the hands of leftist guerrillas.
·
·
The Jl)'elil~t declined to say what
· would take to achie~e a
meet the guerrillas' key
settlement and refused to say if he
demand- the release of hundreds of
·
prisoners.

' GAWPOLI$, OHIO

"Ac. fiom The Silver Bri4ge Plaza"
1.

I

'

So!)thpm To·~ ·~J Chilllcothe.
' .e 'VI"' Dame, 1"'
...-.. This

team's vis t Tuesday night In the Cla:SS A District at

trip to district competition.

Reagan works toward Southern sweep

we now carry E'c~rlch Lunch

of fre e c rystals for the fre quencies of your c hoice.
So get on· the receiVing end.
A Bea rc af Crysfql Scanner.
Plus. free crystals in the bargain. VIsit our scanner display
soon. Don't fool around until
April 1st.

FINIS~D PRODUCJ -

''"""'"'~e!!''_,"'u~L~~\!.!:.
-.• ·
fu1 were b .- 'OverctDe
ena'P""I"'ru'IS·SigriS

.

Meats for your party needs.

scanning. Plus. up to $20 worth

'Que)

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

6% COLD BEER
AND WINE

wta1 you tlJy aBeatut' Crystd Sccnler.

~ttoreo~•
P\o,;J "' r'l"llCCIJes 1e1
y&amp;.J isler11o ~
Slt'.gle Of two.txrd
corrOootlon. '

enttne

.

.Buy any Beorcot Crystal Scan n ing Ra dio betwe en Feb. t
and March 31. 1980-ond 11"1
up to S.20 worth ol cr'{5tals free
(4 cr~tals. a $20 retail value) I
Thofs right. You'll 11"1 all the
e)(c;:lterrient of llve ~ o c tl o n

ICaY'Ifiiiii,Jit,t/f'rt: 01

Ghotbzadeh said the militants' ·
demand for a radio broadcast was
aimed at attracting a crowd to the
embassy so they could claim they
(Continued on paJ&lt;e 8)

CARRY
OUT
709 First Ave.

free

m::w'Ul!Cf1011"191
Mlilld:nA freeOYfIoiii (520 ~
1 reiOIIQAJ
IMrcof -t2

cil' s decision.

ICE CO.
DRIVE THRU

TeiTOrists' bombs kill 24 people

2 tx:Jnds. 6 cl'1alr"oK
4 &gt;ree Oysldsl (520
1UQ01'15!eel ffiiOII

" We are not eager to hand over the
hostages," a spokesman for the
militants said Sunday, " but since we·
want to prevent any deviation and
conflict with the authorities of the
country in spite of our will, we are
prepared to hand them over. "
Ghotbzadeh after a meeting of the
Revolutionary Council Sunday night
that the militants had until tonight to
decide whether they would allow the
U.N. panel to see the captives and
whether they would surrender them
to goverrunent custody. But he did,
not say what the govenunent would
do if the militants rejected the coun-

GALLIPOLIS

WASHINGTON (AP) - Congress, confronted with growing voter
concern over inflation, tries again this ~eek to-find ways to balance
the 1981 federal budget.
The struggle to balance next year's budget has become the focal
point of co~ional action on inflation, even though most
eQODomists agree It will do little to slow rising prices.
Coogressional leaders met extensively last week with Treasury
Secretary G. William Miller and other White House economic
policymakers in an effort to work out a consensus on where to trim
spending.

leoreol6

visit to them by the U.N. commission probably would take place
Saturday. But the militants balked,
saying Ghotbzadeh lied when he said
he had the backing of Khomeini.
The Revolutionary Council again
demanded the militants surrender
the hostages and allow the U.N.
commission to see them. The
militants agreed to a transfer Sunday, then balked again and set forth
their new conditions.
They said the state radio had to
broadcast details of any hostage
transfer eight hours in advance, that
Ghotbzadeh had to be removed as
the council's representative in
arranging the transfer, and that
they would stay inside the U.S. Embassy after the move to continue
revealing documents from the "den
of spies."

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO, MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1980

Congress trying to balance budget

"·txrld.k:f'ooMel

at

e

revolutionary regime's charges of
mass murder and plunder against
Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and
to try to ease the crisis between the
United States and Iran over the
hostages.
The Carter administration hoped
the commission 's visit would result
in the speedy release of the
Americans. But after the panel got
there, Khomeini said the hostages'
fate would be decided by Iran's new
parliament, which won't be fully
elected until April 3, and the
secretary -general of the
Revolutionary Council said no
decision could be made until midMay.
The militants announced Thursday they were ready to turn the
captives over to the council. Ghotbzadeh said Friday the transfer and a

•

•

· 324 Second Ave.

By The Associated Press

leGroot •

nation to help and support them."
There was no immediate corrunent
from Bani-8adr, the militants, or the
U.N. panel, whose mission appeared
in very shaky straits.
But Ghotbzadeh, interviewed by
ABC-TV News In Tehran, called
Khomeini 's ruling a positive
development. He said he hoped the
U.N. panel would stay in Tehran for
two or three more days to meet with
several of the hostages, as Khomeini
outlined, then issue a "declaration,
not a report" of its findings so it
could then meet with the rest of the
captives. Asked when the hostages
might be freed, he reiterated, "This
is a decision of the Parliament,"
which won't be In a position to
discuss the issue until May.
1'he U.N. commission arrived in
Tehran Feb. 23 to Investigate the

J

By Tbe Associated Press
only 15 percent of the vote, and said
Ronald Reagan worked Sunday at in Florida that "I like the
turning his South carolina primary vibrations" there.
The momentum that Bush once envictory Into a clean sweep of three
Deep South states this week. His joyed seemed to have shifted to
vanquished conservative rival, John ' Reagan, who campaigned Sunday
B. Connally, dropped · out of the for the heavy Cuban vote In Miami.
Republican race.
The former California governor
Connally bowed out at a news con- charged, without offering specifics,
ference in Houston one day after his that Carter administration officials
defeat by Reagan on Saturday by a had "goneoutoftheway .,. to harass
convincing 54 percent to 30 petcent those who are sympathetic with the
in South Carolina. Connally declared freeing of Cuba."
that Reagan "is stili the champion."
Reagan all!o said he opposed U.S.
It was in South Carolina thai Con- recognition of the Castro governnaUy had concentrated his efforts ment "until Cuba is out from under
and predicted that his campaign for Soviet domination.''
the GOP P\'"Sidential no~tion
Reagan and Bush appeared
would get off the ground. Wtth the separately at a Cuban festival in the
backing of Sen. Strom Thurmond, R- "Little Havana" section of Miami.
S.C., and former pov. James Ed- Reagan also attended a Spanishwards, Connally Sank upwards of language Roman Catholic Mass and
$350,000 of private campaign funds lald a wreath at a monument
Into the primary.
hOIIorlng "the heroes of the Bay of
He ended his campaign strapped Pigs" Invasion of Cuba In 1961.
for cash, having disdained accepting
Reagan also was hoping that his
federal campaign matching funds. South Carolina victory would help
His withdrawal was certain to in- him in the Georgia and Alabama
crease the pressure on former l&gt;rimarles, which are being held on
President Gerald R. Ford to enter 'tuesday along with the Florida
the race in a bid to stop the con- • primary.
Hep. John B. Anderson of Illinois.
servative Reagan.

=:~~r~~=;~~~=!:

GOP candidate George Bush

•

Vandalism checked
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department is Investigating an act of vandalism that occurred at Southern
High School in Racine.
Acc~rding to a report l'I'Ceived
Sunday a window in the media center was broken out with a rock
sometime between midnight and 6
a.m.
Randy Roberts of the Racine Fire
Department discovered the br9[ten
window when the firemen went to
the high school: The fire department
was using the cafeteria for a fund
raising dinner.

Mv.stiy cloudy with brisk winds
and a good chance of showers early
tonight and ·snow flurries ,later
19night. Low , tb,night 25 to 30.
Variable cloudin~Tuesday, Higu
35 to &lt;10. Chance of ecipitation : 50
tonigM an 10 percent
Tuet&lt;fft¥·
'
. ·
•

+

who bypassed the South Carolina
primary in favor of campaigning for
a good showing in the March 18
Illinois primary, made appearances
in Chicago and Milwaukee, Wis.
Anderson said that "I honestly
believe" the GOP race bas narrowed
to himself, Reagan and Bush. He
predicted he would do "sufficiently
well" in the Illinois primary to be

able to invite an endorsement from
Gerald R. Ford, who is considering
becoming a candidate himself.
Also in Chicago was Sen. Edward
M. Kennedy, who in a nationally
broadcast Interview questioned the
truthfulness of the Carter administration's explanation of . its
mixup over the U.S. vote for a U.N.
resolution condemning Israel for its
settlements policy.

Two cited following mishaps
One person was injured during a ·failure to yield.
Officers investigated a second actwo-vehicle accident investigated
Sunday by the Gallla-Meigs Post,
cident at that Meigs CoUnty location
Highway Patrol.
at 6:20p.m.
Called to the scene in Meigs CounOfficers report autos operated by
ty on SR 124, just west of CR 1, at
Clarence Freeman, OS, Pomeroy,
2:45 p.m., ·officers report an auto
and June Baker, 39, Racine, were
east bound on 124.
operated by Laura J. Self, on,
Racine, pulled from a private drive
A west bound vehicle operated by
into the path of a south bound vehicle
Jacob Roush, 31, Pomeroy, swerved
operated by Harry W. Richards, 61,. to avoid collision when the Freeman
auto turned left into a private drive.
Long Bottom.
Self claimed injury and was tranThe Roush and Baker vehicles insported by the Syracuse Emergency
curred moderate damage as the
Squard to Veterans Memorial
collided. Freeman was cited on a
charge of improper turning.
Hospital for treatment.
Sell was cited on a charge of

F
l
d
•
b
ll
· ue a ·1ustment i vote slated

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - There
would be fewer surprise Increases in
monthly electric bllls under
legislation which is nearing the end
of a more than. year-long trip
through the General Assembly.
Senators are scheduled to vote
Tuesday on a House-passed bill
barring the state's electric utilities
from automatically passing on to
conswners Increases In the cost of
fuel which is used to generate electricity.
Ohio's ei~ electric companies
reported a record $2 billion in such
charges undet the fuel adjustment
clause during 1979.
The measure, which bars such
automatic Increases, would instead
require' the Public Utilities Cornmission of Ohio to conduct hearings
and adjust a. utility's rates each .six
months to refleet 'an Increase or
decrease In · fuel acquisition · and
delivery cOBts.
Senators return from a, weekend
recess ~or a Monday night floor
session, while the House reconvenes
Tuesday morning.
·
·
The fuel adjusilnent bill was In·

traduced in the House on Jan. 2, 1979,
and cleat:ed the lower chamber last .
June27.
But it was amended by the Senate
Energy and Public Utilities Committee, which is headed by Sen. Ken·
nethR. Cox:
The Barbel'lon Democrat expects
the measure to go to a conference
committee to iron out differences
between'the House aod Senate.
Cox said that the bill provides a
"much fairer" method of billing
customers. "No longer will It be
possible for a collllumer to receive a
monthly electric · bUI wlilch is
-drastically higher than the previous
month's simply, because the utility
company purchases more expellllive
fuel," he said.
One amendment adopted by the
panel would allow the PUCO to readjust fuel charges more often than
every six months. Cox said It would ·
apply if changes in operating costs
have caused at least a 20 percent Increase or decrease in the 'fuel component of the 'customers' bill.
Another key Senate amendment
would prev,nt ~tilities which own or

control coal mines from cl.almlna
higher costs for their own coal than
for coal being sold by similar independent rniries.
The bill also deletes current
requirements under which electric
bills must show which charges are
attributable to dell~ery and·
acquisition costs.
But it requires companies to print
new disclosures on each custmner's
bill which would eiJllain that tbe
amount being charged Includes
about 4 percent In 'gross' receipts
taxes and assessments to hli1p' 111po ·
port the operations of the PUCO and .
the Collllumers' Counsel.
Consumers'. Counsel Wllliam A.
Spratley f!Bid the amount of fuel cwt
recoveries continued to r1ae 11at
year.
Monthly repOrts filed by the com- •
panies show that they ~ a
total of ~.1 billion In such CCllta 'lil ·
1979 and that they recoveree! au
pe~nt of that money, Spratley
said
·
The recovery rate wu per.
cent in 1978 lind 92.8 pe~ In 11'17 .
headded,1
'
"

'• u

(

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="124">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2696">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="47728">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="47727">
              <text>March 9, 1980</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1820">
      <name>birchfield</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4061">
      <name>brewster</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1507">
      <name>castle</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="88">
      <name>hayes</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1007">
      <name>mcconihay</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3351">
      <name>mckee</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1477">
      <name>napper</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="247">
      <name>wiseman</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
