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..
Rule suicide in
woman's death

'Round·
Meigs
Local
By Supt. David L. Gleason
Kindergarten registration time
poses many problems for parents
and school employees. It is a
frustrating time if we do not spend
ample time preparing.
As parents you probably have
many questions that need to be answered. I hope this evening's article
will provide you with some of the
necessary information needed to
begin your preparation for
registration day.
Parents wishing to enroll their
children in kindergarten for the 1~
81 school year need to provide complete records of immunization (4
DPT, 3 Polio Sabin, 1 measles, 1
Rubella, and a recent TB skin test )
at the time of registration. The
parents also need to provide the
child's birth certificate.
Any child whose fifth birthday
falls on or before September 3{) is
eligible for kindergarten next year.
We are asking you to help us do a
better job by enrolling your child
during the following days and times:
Pomeroy Elementary - May 5 from
8:3{) a.m. to 4 p.m., Middleport
Elementary- May 6 from8:3{) a.m.
to 4 p.m., and Rutland Elementary
- May 7 from8:30a.m. to 4 p.m.

Plans for kindergarten next year
are very similar to this year's as we
anticipate holding classes in
Pomeroy, Middleport and Rutland.
Questions concerning this
registration may be &lt;\irected to the
principals' offices at the respective
schools.

~---x~~~-n~aih~--~
Woodrow Call, Sr.
Woodrow (Red) Call, Sr. , 66,
Sycamore St., Middleport, died
Friday morning at the · Holzer
Medical Center following a lingering
illness.
Mr. Call was born Feb. 10, 1914 in
Middleport, a son of the late John W.
and Margaret Cook Call. He was
also preceded in death by a brother
and a sister.
Surviving are his wife Grace
Motley Call; a son and daughter-in·
law, Woodrow W. and Mary Ann
Call, Pomeroy; a son, Donald H.,
Middleport ; three sisters, Mrs.
Chester (Nellie) Fry, Bellaire; Mrs.
Harley (Do rothy) Gilmore,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. William (Ruth)
Criner, Middleport; two brothers,
Delbert Norman Call, Athens, and
John William Call, Long Bottom,
five grandchildren, two greatgrandchildren and several nieces
and nephews.
·Mr. Call attended the House of
Prayer and Praise. He was employed as production manager for
the Royal Crown Bottling Co. for 40
years.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Sunday at the Rawlings-CoalsBlower Funeral Home with the Rev .
Keith Adkins offi ciating. Burial will
be in Riverview Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home from 2
to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday.

TO END MARRIAGE
Filing for dissolution of marriage
Thursday in Gallia County Corrunon
Pleas Court were Beverly J. Carpenter and Charles D. Carpenter.

vice Station in Pomeroy at 2:38p.m.
Thursday. Police said a car driven
by Mark Hall, Chester, drifted
into the rear of a car driven by
Lamar Lyons, Tuppers Plains, stoi&gt;'
ped at a stop sign. Wednesday night,
light damages were reported to a
ca r driven by Ralph Hawk ,
Delaware, on Locust St., when the
accelerator stuck and he struck a
parked car owned by Betty Moore,
Pomeroy, and ran into two yards on
the street.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Inez
Randolph,
Pomero y; Esther DeMoss,
Pomeroy; John Young, Racine;
Roby Rife, Dexer; Robert Shamblin,
Pomeroy; Candace Brothers,
Pomeroy ; Paul Burton, Racine.
Di sc harged--Blanch Gibbs ,
Eunice Cooke, James Count.s,
Woodrow Kuhn, Sheryl Aritett,
Clara Adams.

Area squad nms

I

Pomeroy, first place, Goessler Jewelry Store, Trisia
Michael, Syracuse, second place, Pomeroy National
Bank, Joe Bobby Schuler, Cheshire, third place,
Marguerite Shoe Shop; back, nine to 12 age group,
Dina Shuler, Rt. 2, Racine , first place, Pomeroy
National Bank, Veronica Provo, Minersville.- .second
place, Marguerite Shoe Shop, and Tahnee Johnson,
Rutland, third place, Goessler Jewelry Store.

~

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MEETS TONIGHT

The Official Board of the Alfred
United Methodist Church will meet
at the church at 7:30 this evening.

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MIDDLEPORT, 0.
I

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

SUNDAY, APRIL 20, 1980

Chr.istmas If she was alive
anywhere," Lockhart said.
Christmas passed with no call. In
early January, the parents traveled
to Miami Beach and met with
Officer Frank Azcarate, a
policeman the Lockharts knew and
liked. The previous year Karen quit
writing to her parents for a while.
A2carate had located her and convinced her to get In touch again.
Azcarate was sympathetic and
helpful, but reminded the parents o£
Karen' s previous hiatus: He said
Miami Beach pollee iss ued a
teletype alert to other police
agencies.

"But there wasn't really anything
to go on," Azcarate said. "We ean·~
physically look for aU these people.
There's lust too many." Computer
flies at the Florida Crlnie Information Center in Tallahasaee hold
just Wider 4,000 missing-penon reports at any given time.
Back In West VIrginia, Lockhart
prayed for hls da11gliier.lle'begin to
notice something disturbing.
" It would seem llke I could get
nothing back," he said. "It wu a
blank wall. It made me feel like !!he
was dead." His wife said there was
still hope.
I Continuea on page A·JJ

From

Press

Firestone workers face layoff

BY DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

AKRON, Ohio - The Firestone Tire &amp; Rubber Co. will indefinitely
lay off 930 production workers at five radial passenger and truck tire
plants that previously had escaped major employment reductions.
Tile new layoffs, revealed Friday, come a month after Firestone announced It Is closing slx plants and eliminating 8,500 jobs nationwide in
the biggest shutdown in the industry's history.
Tile latest round of layoffs are to occur at Firestone facUlties at
Albany, Ga.; Decatur, Ill.; Oklahoma City; Des Moines, Iowa, and
Nashville; Tenn.
.

Expert says hospice coming thing
Easing the pain of tenninally ill patients in
specially designed hospice units Is the coming trend In American
hospitala, according to an internationally-known authority on the care
of the terminally Ill.
Dr. Richard Lamerton, a ~f member of St. Joseph's Hospital in
London, Englal\d, said Friday in Cleveland that hospices will be commonplace in the United States In 10 years.
ClEVELAND -

Three daughters left behind
UMA, Peru - A CUban refugee said 'she and her husband were so
eager to escape Fidel Castro's "police state" that they left their three
young daughters behind.
"With pain in our hearts, we bad to leave our children because we
could no longer relllllin in CUba in that sitlliltion," Mrs. Caridad Maria
Bobadilla de Regalado told reporters Friday at a Red Cross refugee
camp here. She said the children remained with her mother and
mother-in-law.

Oil company executive escapes
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras- An American oil company executive

I -GUESTSPEAU:R-Norma
Glenn, R.N., B.S.N, Coordinator
of the Pra~Ucal NIII'!Ilng School at
Buckeye Hills Caree~ Center,
was guest speaker for capping
and recogultfpn ceremoules of
the fresbmao class from Holzer
Medical Ceoter School of Nursing
receotly. (See story and additional pictures on D-1).

Students
fight for
control

escaped from gunmen who kidnapped him in an apparent attempt to

disrupt Sunday's elections in this Central American nation. Police said
they had arrested a suspect.
Arnold Quiros, vice president of Texaco Caribbean Inc. of Honduras,
was kidnapped Thursday and escaped Friday. U.S. Embassy officials
said that Quiros, 38, was born in Costa Rica and is a naturalized U.S.
citizen w~ family llves in Miami.

Church cuts 10 from UMW force
CHARLESTON, W.Va. - United Mine Workers President Sam
Church has laid off 10 employees at the union's headquarters, as part
of a plan to reduce the UMW's bureaucracy and tighten its
organization.
"Since the first of the year, we've had many resignations, and I intend to lay off some more," Church told delegates Friday at UMW
District 17's constitutional convention.

Matter taken under ad\isement
CINCINNATI -A federal appeals court was told Friday that de£endants In Tennessee's clemency-for-cash trial first wanted a milltrial,
and then £ought the decision when lt was made.
Attomeys £or the four defendants In last fall's trial - who include
three former aides to ex-Governor Rl!y Blanton- claimed that 'they
had not urged a mistrial, and that another trial would place them in
double jeopardy.
Tile appealll court took the matter under advisement.

Weather forecast
Partly cloudy Sunday. Hlgh In the mid 70s. The chance of rain is
near 10 percent Sunday.

'
EXTENDED
FORECAST
Moaday lbroaP WedMiday: Fllr IUid ceaerally warm. Hl&amp;bllln the
•Iaiiie -~~~ MCIIIday 1111 Ill the 7111 '1\tHday and Wedllellday. Ovel'
aipt leWIID tile 1ljlper :lila and 4Gll early Mooday and In the mld 40s to
midi!! tarlyTIIelday and Wedoesday.
.~

Max Tawney
tells about trip
to China. . .D-3

tntint
MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

PRICE 35 CENTS

Area residents beginning
to feel inflation pinch

World focus

SALEM, Ore. -The bleak news just seel)lS to keep piling up for the
Northwest's big timber industry, already reeling from the effects of
national tight money policies and the resulting building slump.
Some recent examples :
-Louisiana-Pacific Corp. reported a 21 percent decline in earnings
for the first quarter of 1980.
.
-Georgia-Pacific Corp. announced a cutback of more than $100
milllon in planned capital expenditures.
-Tile Portland-based Western Wood Products Association
estimated that 44,000 timber Industry workers are idle in 12 western
states.

$349

. , before the name goes on"'

•

Timber industry feels pinch

95

.A~

6-3• •. C-1

OUR ABC'S OF BANI&lt;ING

INTEGRATEIJ
STEREO·

• ALLEGRO TUNEDPORTSPEAKERS

The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called at 8 p.m. Thursday for
Vona B. Gillenwater, Middleport, a
medical patient, who was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
The Pomeroy Ell)ergency Squad
answered three calls Thursday. At
7:04 p.m., the unit went to Prospect
Hill for Richard Shamblin who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 9:48p.m., the unit went
to Crow's Steak -House £or an em·
ploye, John Sanders, who bad burns
from grease. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital f9r
treatment. At midnight, the squad
went to the sherif£'s quarters £or Bill
Lewis who had head injuri r •. He
was taken to Veter~ns Memorial
Hospital also.

CONTEST WINNERS - Six youngsters were winners in the Easter coloring contest ·sponsored by the
Daily Sentinel in cooperation with area merchants.
There were three winners in the four to eight age group
and three winners in the nine to 12 age group. First
place winners in each age group received $15, second
place $10 and third $5. Four to eight age group and participating merchant were front, 1-r, Chad Carson,

QUALITY

• 8-TRACK TAPE
/.&lt;::&gt; RECORDER

Area deaths • .•...•.•.....•.. . ..... .• ....•.... . A-7
Classified ads .. • •.. .. .... . ..... .. ...... . .... 0-5-11
Editorial page ......... ....... .... ... ... . •..... A-2
Farm news . • .. .......•. .. . . .................. 0 ·4
Loca I news . . ... ..... ..... ... ... .... ..... . . .. A· J-8
Lifestyle ....... . .................... . ...... . B·l -12
State and nationa I ..• . .... . . .. . . ........• . ..... 0-1
Sports ......... . ................••.... • . .... C-1 ·8
TV guide .. ." . •..• ... .. ..• . .. ..... . .. .... . ... . . D-1

trip Marauders,

PUBUC INVITED
The Rev. Larry Lewis of near Cincinnati, £ormerly o£ Mason, will be
the guest speaker at the local
SalvationArmy Corps Sunday at 10
a.m. Accompanying Rev. Lewis will
by his wife, Karen and children,
John.and Angel. The public is invited
to attend.

/

~~

Fort Lauderdale. She had been shot
twice in the head and once In the
stomach. The body was still warm.
It carried no identification.
Tagged only as BME 102().79, she
was placed In the chill of the
Broward County morgue. Ulcal
newspapers published a composite
sketch and periodically carried
stories about the mystery victim.
There was no word.
In Miami Beach, Miss Lockhart's
roommate had notUled pollee and
called Lockhart, 55, pastor of the
First Church of · God In Point
Pleasant and his wUe, Ruth.
"We thought she would call WI at

Where It Is Inside

Blue Devils

CHECKING accounts
and all kinds of Certificates that earn a
sparkling array of
interest rates, the
highest payable by law.
Makes a nice second
income that you can
always depend on .

~~~

In Fort Lauderdale, she was a
could really hillp you out," he said.
body with no name.
"There's just too many homicides."
Pollee in neighboring jurisdictions
In Florida last year, there were
worked separately to solve the 1,084 reported murders. Roughly
puzzle, Investigating and sending three out of 10 remain unsolved.
out teletype notices. They dldn 't
Friends say Miss Lockhart, 25,
make connections.
disappeared In the unlikeliest of
"It's the system," says homicide circumstances - a dinner date at
Sgt. Dale Adams of the · Broward the Fontainebleau Hilton, luxurious
County Sherlfrs 'Office. "It just flagship of Miami Beach hotels. Her
doesn't work all the time."
date told police he left her at the
"We have ' good communications, hotel for about an hour to help
but unfortunately with the mass another friend who was moving. She
·
amount or suicides, homicides, · vanished.
unattended deaths, plane crashes Early the next morning,'the body
It's 8o demanding you don't have o£ a pretty, dark-haired young
time to do • lot or the basics that woman was found in a grove west of

Two autos received light damages
in an accident near the Beacon Se!'

M. Merle Jacobs .
Mrs. M. Merle Jacobs, 62, North
Gate Trailer Park, Parkersburg,
former Pomeroy resident, died
Thursday at Camden Clark
Hospital.
Mrs. Ja cobs was born in Jackson
County, W. Va., tothelateJamesM. ·
and Mattie Belle Skinner Shepard.
She was also preceded in Math by
her husband, Harry Jacobs, three
sisters and two brothers. She was a
member of the Pomeroy Church of
Christ.
She is survived by one son,
William Franklin Jacobs, Florida;
three sisters, Mrs. Nora Gilmore,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Ora Nohe, Bellville,
W. Va., and Mrs. Hazel Goodwin,
Parkersburg; one brother, Arlie
Shepard, Rockport, W. Va.; one
grandson, William Franklin Jacobs,
Jr., Florida, and several nieces and
nephews.
· Funeral services will be held
Saturday at I p.m. at Ewing Chapel.
Burial will be in Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home after 7 p.m. this
evening.

MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) - It
took four months for Pastor Grant
LQckhart or Point Pleal!8llt, W.Va.,
to find out that his beautlful
·daughter had been shot to death and
dumped at the edge of the
Everglades after she vanished from
an opulent hotel. ·
Yet, for all but one ·daY. of that
time, she .was not actually missing.
' She was simply unidentified, a body
In a COW!ty morgue not 30 mlles from
the hotel where she disappeared.
In death, Karen Ruth Lockhart
became two people.
In Mllirnl Beach, she was a
millsing person with a name.

Check minor accident

Parent-Teacher Conference Day
is tomorrow in the Meigs Local
Schools. If you have not scheduled a
conference and want one, please call
the school early tomorrow morning
and arrange it. We are looking forward to seeing you tomorrow.
· An in-service day is planned
tomorrow for all of our cooks at 8
a.m. at the high school. General
Foods and Chef's pantry will be
cooking several items and putting on
a display. There also will be a milk
shake demonstration by Paul
Bushong.
Other non-certified personnel will
be working on Saturday in their
respective buildings. Custodians will
be doing many spring cleaning
chores while the aides will be
assisting the principals in whatever
capacity so deemed by the principals.

Murder victim .daughter of area minister

The Monday morning shooting
death of Audrey Mitchell, 45, Rt.l ,
Cheshire, has been attributed to a
self-inflicted gunshot wound, a
spokesman for the Gallia County
Sheriff's Department said today.
That ruling came as the result of
an investigation by the sheriff's
department, the Gallia County
Prosecutor, and Acting Coroner Dr.
David Berkich.
Mitchell, whose body was
discovered in a garage adjacent to
her Little Kyger Road residence by
a family member, sustained a fatal
U()-guage shotgun blast to the right
side of the head shortly after midnight Sunday.

By The Associated Press
Conservative Moslem students
fought with young leftists on university campuses across Iran late
Friday and early Saturday in what
Tehran's leading Moslem
newspaper called the opening shot of
an Iranian "Cultural Revolution."
At least one youth was reporte&lt;l
killed, and many - perhaps hundreds - injured.
Informed sources in Tehran reported that several schools, including
the teachers' college in the Iranian
capital, changed hands several
times as rival student groups fought
for control.
The violence was touched off by a
decree of ,Iran ' s ruling
Revolutionary Council ordering that
"non-Islamic groups" close their o£fices at the nation's universities.
It appeared aimed primarily at
Marxist-influenced groups and other
non-religious student political
organizations that have flourished
since the overthrow of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi's regime 14 mon·
thsago.
Leftists jQined with devout
Moslems, who abhor Mar:xlsm as a
godless ideology, in the anti-shah
revolution led IJy Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomelni. But since its victory, £riclion has grown between the two factions, and early this month
Khomeini called for a purge of' 'antiIslamic" elements £rom the univer·
sities.
Besides suppressing student
political groups, the Revolutionary
Council last week also announced
that university curricula would be
changed to reflect Islamic teachings .
and law.
Report.'! reaching Iran Friday said
Moslem students had begun taking
over university administration of·
fices In the northern cities of Tabriz
and Babolsar and elsewhere In Iran.
By Saturday, it was reported that
some student groups had organized
(Continued on pag&lt;? A -3)

News Editor
GALUPIOUS - As the current
recession takes hold across the
nation, residents o£ the Gallla·Meigs
area not previously affected by the
bad economy situation have started
to feel it where it hurts - In the
pocketbook.
Not only has inflation severely put
a crimp In the family budget, but
some bread ~amers are haVing a
hard time of finding or keeping
steady jolis.
'
·
During the past two weeks,
several plants have been forced to
lay off employes because their
products are sold on the basis of
seasoll!ll customer demands.
In Gallia County, 25 hourly employes of the Chris Craft Corporation, Gallipolis, were given
what plant manager J . P. Schirmer
called a short term layoff, an in·
definite period of between two- four
or more weeks.
Schirmer said high interest rates
which have helped curtail retail
financing and sales forced the cutback.
During normal production the
plant has approximately 60 em·
ployes. Since 1978, it has been
operating with 36 employes.
If the economy picture brightens,
Schirmer hopes to recall those
furloughed along with some others
laid of£ two years ago increasing the

work force to 40.
According to recent statistics
compiled by the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services, Columbus,
Gallia County's unemployment rate
was 5.2 percent, down surprisingly
from 7.6 percent during the same
period a year ago.
According to the report, Gallia
had 700 unemployed people out of
14,200 prospective workers.
One plant located in the county,
Robbins and Myers (which employs
some 440 hourly employes) reported
production was back to normal
there. The plant had a cutback in
·March.

Another Gallia plant, Federal
Mogul, has not been affected by the
economic picture. A spokesman
said, "There have been no layoffs.
We have maintained a steady
producton."
Other businesses In the county
have not had as many turnovers as
in the past.
Personnel managers in the
medical and mental health field say
people are holding on to their jooo
because of the uncertainty caused
by inflation and the recession.
In Meigs County, the unemployment rate for February stood at
the current annual rate of seven !lercent. Seven-hundred were unemployed out of a potential work force
of 14,200.
Even though that figure ap!lears
high, it is still below the 1!179

PERFECJ' DAY FOR ROTARY RELAYS - It
was a perfect spring day for the 13th annual Gallipolis
Rot .ry Relays on the Stanley L. Evans Field in Rio

February level when the rate was 7.9
percent.
Latest to file for unemployment
benefits in Meigs were 15 hourly em-; •
ployes of Kelly Manufacturing Co.,.
Middleport, who were victirJIIrot the' ·
"economy." Normal plant work fol'
ce Is 30. Kelly Manufacturing makes
tops for Jeeps.
Midwest Steel in Pomeroy h8S' ·
eight of its 75 hourly employes on t111f
layoff list.
.
..
' Thus far, only a few employ~:· , .•
have received a pink slip at Imperial '
Electric in Middleport. A plant
spokesman said there has been no
major layoffs and that the.work force remalps normal, 120 people.

.

With the nation's two biggest
automakers, General Motors and
Ford announcing massive layoffs, It
appears the nation's economic trend
will continue downward.
Last Wednesday, General Motors
Corp. announced the Indefinite
layoffs of 12,000 production workers.
Earlier, Ford said 5,000 blue and
white collar workers were laid off.
An additional 17,000 GM workers
are on temporary layoff, for either a
week or more.
Among the five major U. S.
automakers, both kinds of layoffs .
now account £or more than a quarter
of the production workforce of about
780,000. At one point In the 1975
recession, about 350,000 auto
work""• were out of work.

Grande Saturday. Above, GAHS slau.tlclanl.!ipe!ICW
Suskln, left, and Dennla Fravel, center,IDIIIICII 111 ba&amp;o
dogs while checking ·results at the offlclolll _ . ,
tail~Jl . .

�. .

A-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, April20, 1980

Publiahedevery ~Y by lbeOho Va!Tey PublWUns Co.· Multi.media, Inc.
Letters ol optnloo are welcomed. They should be leas than D words long (or subject to reductioo by t;he editor) and must be sijned with_the si8.11ee'a address: NI:UlleS m~:~y be withheld upon
publi ~atl~. However, on ~uest. names WIU be disclosed. Lett.ers should be in good U:t.ste ~:~d-

ou~
'FOt.k:S
OCOEE. HA

DAILY TRIBUNE

~EW ~OUSE

At-.10

L,lOU AIJD (,)OUR

WI~E' RE BUI,ll IJ'••.
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MAIL

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months SI0.50. Elsewhere $38.00 per year ; six month.s ~.00; three months $1 1.00; motor route
ts.90 monthly.
·I
The Daily Sentinel, one year $33.00; SU; months Sl7.50: three mooths 120.00. Elsewhere $38.00;
!II lll001tbs 120.00; three months lli.IIO.
The AssoCiated Preas is excltl!lvely enUUed to the 1.a1e for publication of aU news dispatche.:i
credited to the newspaper and abo the IOCBJ news publl!hed hereln.

TI-l AT'S
JUST TI-lE
HJTE~EST.

~~~-~·~m·-

Ohio bills enacted
Gov. James A. Rhodes has signed into law a bill UP"
dating the state program which helps homeowners in
blighted areas obtain property insurance.
The program, known as the Ohio FAIR (Fair Access to
Insurance Requirements) plan, utilizes a shared-risk pool
in which insurance companies in the state are required to
participate.
Under the newly signed law, the FAIR plan is divorced
from a similar federal program which bill sponsors said
imposes unnecessary red tape on the state.
It makes several other administrative changes, including the addition of public and insurance industry
representation on the FAIR plan board of directors.
The measure, which takes effect July 18, 1980, was one of
11 signed by the governor Friday.
Also signed by Rhodes was a measure providing college
tuition waivers for the children of park district officers
killed in the line of duty. Similar waivers already exist for
the children of police and firefighters who are killed while
on duty.
An emergency clause in the bill allowed it to take effect
immediately.
Other bills signed by Rhodes, which all take effect July
18, include measures that will:
-Authorize state grants to local governments, community improvement corporations and nonprofit groups
for redevelopment of land strip mined prior to 1972, when
the state's reclamation law took effect.
-Exempt dentists from a consumer law requiring written estimates in advance of patient treatments.
-Increase from three to five years the amount of time
townships and counties are allowed to pay off debt on
'newly acquired equipment.
_ -Authorize townships to rent or lease buildings and
recreational facilities.
-Prohibit use of township zoning powers to prevent a
landowner from making wine and selling it on his own
property, if the ingredients for the wine are grown there.
-Establish a separate workers compensation fund for
: marine industry employees.
· -Require county mental retardation boards to require
tuition payments from private children's homes for
. providing special education to youngsters.
-Allow educators and school employees to participate
. in state-approved tax shelter and deferred compensation
: plans.
-Prohibit the false representation by a person that he is
an independent insurance agent.

Auditor intervenes
State Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson told the Public
Utilities Conunission of Ohio on Friday he should be
allowed to intervene in a hearing on Ohio Bell's measured
rate service.
Ferguson filed a brief with the PUCO responding to a
petition submitted earlier in the week by Ohio Bell opposing the auditor's intervention.
Ohio Bell contended that Ferguson cannot intervene
because he is not represented by the attorney general's office as required by law.
The company further argued that the auditor is not the
legal agent to contract for telephone services and the
issues raised by him already have been resolved by the
:Ohio Supreme Court.
· Ferguson countered in his brief Friday that his office
has "a direct, material and substantial interest in the rate
:case, both as an Ohio Bell customer and as the state agency that audits and pays the state's bills."
· He said the Supreme Court has ruled it is the auditor's '
:responsibility "where reason exists to question the legality
:of a claim, to investigate or require further proof of a
claim presented to him before he may authorize
payment."
·
Ferguson and Ohio Bell have been at odds for several
.months over the fact that the company's measured rate
billings of nine cents per local call do not include !i detailed
list of specific numbers called.
· Ferguson claims that Without such documentation it is
impossible to properly detennine the validity and accuracy of the bills.

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"resistance centers" to fight the
pressure (rom the Moslems, most of
them members of the Islamic
Society of Students.
Between one and four persons
were killed and at least 40 injured in
fighting at the Tehran teachers'
college, it was reported by the
Tehran newspaper Jomhori Islami,
official organ or the clergy-led
Islamic Republican Party.
It identified only one victim, a
high school student who it said was
strangled.
Tehran Radio said Moslem
student occupations continued at
Tabriz University and clashes broke
TRUCK OVERTURNS - A semi rig hauling sand
said the rig was driven by Eric Brown, 33, Cambridge.
out at the university in Shiraz, 400
overturned Saturday morning after rounding a curve
He and a passenger, Jerry Shaffer, 29, Hopewell, sufmiles south of Tehran. Some reports
on SR 7, four tenth.\l of a mile south of CR 26 in Meigs
fered minor injuries. There was moderate damage to
reaching the capital said 500 persons
County. The Gallia-Meigs' P05t State Highway Patrol
the truck.
were injured in Shiraz.
The student resistance centers
tide be their daughter?
claimed
hWJdreds of persons had
not blame any of the policemen
On April 5, the I..ockharts were
been arrested and hundreds injured
involved.
back In Florida. Dr. Garvin
He hopes their investigation will across the country. The Tehran cen!Continued from page A-1)
discouraged them from looking at
ters issued leaflets condemning the
end in an execution.
"We would go back and forth,"
the body; BME 102ll-79 had begun to
"I'm a Christian minister," he Revolutionary Council's decision as
l..ockhart recalls. "It was real
mununlfy. They identified Karen
said, "but I do believe in capital a "plot to purge all anti·dergy, antiagony."
from an earlier morgue photo.
punishment as a deterrent to this · imperialist and independent groups
Spring came. Dr. Keene Garvin,
On April 6, Karen Lockhart was
from the universities,
kind of thing."
deputy Broward medical examiner,
cremated. It was Easter Sunday.
A banner headline in J omhori
Karen Lockhart did not return to
suggested It was time to bury BME
On April 7, about 30 mourners
lslami
proclaimed, "This is the
West Virginia. Before they left
103l-79. "It's a shame this girl's gathered at the First Church of God
Florida, her parents, two brothers beginning of the Cultural Revolution
parents will never know what
In Hollywood, Fla. Sitting quietly
and two sisters walked together onto in Iran." In the famous Chinese
happened to her," Garvin said.
among them was Detective Leslie.
a weathered fishing pier that juts Cultural Revolution of the late 1960s
Homicide Detective David Leslie Perhaps the killer would show up at
into the Atlantic from the seaside and early 1970s, communist purists
wanted just a little more thne. Leslie the funeral , he said.
sought to purge China of aU
community of Dania.
had worked the case from the first
On April 10, Karen's 26th birthday
They prayed and read scripture. " bourgeois" tendencies.
day. He spent many hours on It, passed.
"We'll see you again, " they said.
puzzled and frustrated
On April 11, Detective Leslie
Weather
Grant Lockhart took a small plastic
On March 25, The Fort Lauderdale suHered a heart attack. He remains
Partly cloudy Sunday. High in the
bag from a small cardboard box.
News published a story about the hospitalized In fair condition.
mid 70s. The chance of rain is near
Aveil of ashes drifted softly to the
growing problem of · "n~name"
"It's not the kind of work where sea.
10 percent Sunday.
corpses like the pretty, dark-haired you can put In eight hours and go
murder victim. The Associated home and forget about it," said his
Press distributed the story.
boss, Sgt. Adams. "What happened
At the First Church of God In Lake
Is mainly beca115e the guy gives a
Placid, Fla., a inember of the damn." David Leslie is 32. A
colleague has taken over the
congregation read the story In the
Lockhart investigation.
local newspaper. Back in January
the woman had met the Lockharts
Pastor Lockhart says he was
saddened by t~ long delay in
and heard of their search for Karen.
learning his daughter's fate but does
Could the mystery victim In the ar-

NOW

'69~

for your SILADIUM, class ring In addition to your name
and favorite act1vity. you get these elrtra features free to

Murder...

For lack of a lobby the poor were lost.
By Robert Walters
WASHINGTON (NEA) - Why
must chropically ill children,
malnourished elderly people and indigent members of our society be
forced to bear the burden of reducing government expenditures and
balancing the federal budget?
Because they are the people whose
wrath politicians fear least especially in an election year- since
they lack any semblance of the
"political clout" that allows others
to influence the decision-making
process in this capital.
No detennined lobbyists make
compelling presentations to leaders
of the executive and legislative
branches of government on behalf of
disease-prone babies.
No political action committees
make generous contributions to the
campaign treasuries of presidential
and congressional candidates in the
name of the aged and infinn.
No sophisticated lawyers circulate
among this city's power brokers to
subtly but convincingly plead the
cause of hard-working but impoverished Americans.
As a result, it's hardly surprising
that the poor and powerless are the
principal victims of the budget cuts
now being proposed by both the
White House and Congress.

Many domestic social programs
whose funding is to be slashed,
delayed or eliminated in the current
round of fiscal belt-tightening
deserv~ that fate because the

Public Health found equally striking
results."
The president originally called for
$970 million in federal spending on
the WIG program, then cut the

Political comment
evidence indicates they are ineffi·
cient, extravagant, unnecessary or
otherwise failed experiments.
But when President Carter
belatedly decided to offer a balanced
budget for the 1981 fiscal year, he
also proposed cuts in the funding of
many useful programs that sland as
a tribute to our society's generosity
toward its less fortWJBte members.
One nolable example involves the
little known but' high!~ successful
Agriculture Department Special
Supplemental Food Program for
Women, Infants and Children,
known as WIC.
"A recent study conducted by the
Yale Medical School found drama tiP
reductions in infant mortality as a
result of the WIC program," said
Carter's original 1981 budget pr()o
posal. "Another study conducted at
the Harvard University School of

figure to $900 million in his revised
budget. The Senate Budget Commit·
tee has slashed the figure again, to
$8SO million.
To save another $388 million in the
coming fiscal year, the president is
calling for a year-long delay in initiating the Child Health Assistance
Program, designed to provide
preventive medical care to those
who need it most ·but can afford it
least.
A series of cuts in the food stamp
program- some justified but others
unwarranted - would save another
$433 million Wlder Carter's revised
budget.
"Carter eviscerated those pr&amp;grains with the fiscal equivalent of a
butcher's knife," says Barbara Bode
of the Washington-based Children's
Foundation. " But Congress, anxious
to outdo him, is hacking away with a

meat cleaver.''

A Senate proposal, designed to cut
another $1.2 billion from the food
stamp budget, would eliminate
alleged "duplication" by slashing
aid to families whose children ,
benefit from federal school lunch
programs.
The average monthly bonus ill
purchasing power received by food;
stamp recipients amounts to $32.82
monthly. That's slightly more than a
dollar a day or 3li cents per meal but the Senate proposal would
eliminate 51.6 cents for every school
lunch served to children in a family .
receiving food stamps.
Where are the concomitant cuts in
ill-advised subsidies to the maritime .:
industry, inflationary price supports ·
paid to dairy farmers and overpric-";
ed weapons system contracts doled:·
out to the aerospace industry?
What about hospital cost containment, increased waterway . user
charges and repeal of the generous
depletion allowance enjoyed by oil
and gas producers?
Nobody either in the White House
or on Capitol Hill has had the temeri· -;
ty to suggest that the well-organized ·
special interests who benefit from :
those programs should make the •
same sacrifices now being demand- . ~
ed of the poor.
•

Crash injures two persons
GALUPOLIS - Two persons
were injqred, one seriously Friday
during a fiery crash along SR 7, at
the junction of. SR 248, in Meigs
County.
Called to t)le scene at 3;30 p.m.,
the Gallia-Meigs Post, Highway
Patrol, reports a south bound auto
operated by Edwin Thomas, j/,
Leon, W.Va., swerved to avoid a
bicyle ridden by Dana Nynon, 11,
Pomeroy, that had traveled onto the
roadway.
The Thomas vehicle went left of
center, struck a bridge and burst in-

to flames. Thomas and his wife were
pulled from the flaming wreckage
by a passing motorist.
With incapacitating injuries the
two subjects were transported by
the Pomeroy Emergency Squad to
Camden-Clark Hospital in Parkersburg for treatment.
Thomas is in serious condition
with fractures of both legs and a
fractured· arm. Mrs. Thomas is
listed in satisfactory condition with
a fractured ann and abrasions.
The accident remains under investigation.

ds at 6 percent they put into savings
accounts at S.5 percent because,
they had always been told, saving is
prudent. And it used to be, that's
true, before 18 percent inflation.
For their efforts, of course, the
savers not only lost much of their
~oney but they paid taxes on the interest "earned." Their profits were
an illusion; they really lost badly to
double digit inflation.
Moreover, they're taxes went up.
Despite tax cuts, and despite many
assurances that it wasn't so, a
greater share of the gross national
product now goes to taxes than in
any year since the 1940s.
The bondbuyers, the savers, the
insured - have they been robbed?
You know who they are. They're
the people who personify the

American ideals of family, hard
work, thrift, hope in the future, faith
in institutions, confidence in govern·
ment. Dreamers, perhaps; but if it
isn't now, America used to be the
land where dreams came true.
These families tried. They began
the 1960s with one breadwinner. Two
were needed in the 1970s, so the wife
returned to work. Inflation made
further inroads, forcing them to cut
into those rainy day savings.
It didn't stop there. As prices rose
faster than take-home pay, and as
savings eroded, they experimented
with credit to maintain their life
style. Then the credit markets, by
edict, were closed to them.
Victims of inflation, all of them,
and of taxes too, and of the futile,
half-hearted and often inept at·

Letters to the editor

tempts to stop iinflation.
The ordinary people who adhered •
to the solid old values were too busy •
with the finer things of life, such as
caring for the family, to spend time •
on financial matters. Nor, perhaps,
did they have the inclination. They
trusted; above all, they trusted Uncle Sam.
They remained the solid,
dedicated, hard-working, straight,
trusted, dependable people that
everyone - political, business, investment, religious and other
leaders know is very badly needed.
But if there is added to the list
another and heretofore misleading
descriptive, "cynical," it's for a
very good reason. They've been sinned against. They've been robbed.

•

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

What, if any, drummer do you hear?
Aprill6, 1980
Dear Sir,
I wish to thank you and The Daily
Sentinel for the courtesy of printing
my letters to the Editor. It proves
that where there are still editors and
newspapers who believe in freedom
of speech, regardless of one's personal political beliefs and for this
you have my upmost respect. I will
not apologize for any letter that I
have written. If any were offended
by them, so be it.
There are many opinions bandied

about as to the NOW endeavor. I
have received calls fr~n~ people
from all walks of life and all ages.
Veterans from WW II, Korean and
Vietnam, men, women and
teenagers from all types of jobs.
They believe as I do. In the past I
have pressed for the election of men
I felt would serve the public best.
from both political parties, and was
active in organizing a union, all of
which has made adversaries for me
from all sides. I would do the same
identical thing if I had the option to

.'

do it over.
Each person must march to the
beat of the drummer he hears, and I
hear my drununer and I march to
his beat. This is a mighty nation, but
many of you do not hear any drummer and that is your loss.
·
I have some friends in Meigs.
County wlio believe as I do and who
believe in me and who are supporting me. But these are true friends. but fair weather friends and each

one of them compensates for a
thousand adversaries, negative
thinkers and wishy-washy people.
I will go to Iran where the •
American hostages are being held "
and only my demise will prevent me •
from doing so.
•
So think about it, do you even hear . ~
a drummer to march to? Then you'd •
better find one.
'
Respectfully. - Bill Foster, NOW, • •
P. 0 . Box 263, Racine, Ohio 4!i77l.

or built new romes and are • ~.
paying taxes in Meigs County. :: :
Most of them must drive 4(&gt;.50 ·and even 75 or 80 miles a day to · • "•
get to their employment.
A return to gravel roads will
most surely slow down or bring ••
an end to any new construction •
and the loss of income that goes ; ;
With it.
Buying a lot of expensive equip:. • •
ment such as roadgraders and ·
trucks surely isn't the answer.
Let's go foi'Ward not backward.
Sincerley. - Mrs. Opal Morris,

-·

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Questions county engineer's approach ·. ~
Dear Editor:
I see our County Engineer war&gt;ts to return to gravel roads, With
backward thinking people like
him to rurining our cotinty, is it
any wonder we are sometimes
called dwnb Meigs Countians?
Before the road I live on. was
blacktopped many man hours
were spent runing expensive road
grad.ers and driving trucks to
haul gravel to try and keep the
road passable which was not
always the case.
Many, people have purchased

~.! AS COT

UNDER STONE

(I)

SIJPER
STEREO

U. S. Savings Bonds buyers : inflation victims '
NEW YORK (AP) - Have you
considered what has happened to the
people we call the salt of the earth,
the people who try to live within
their means and who used to save
anything extra in case of a rainy
day?
Those people whose savings the
country relied upon to finance
housing and business enterprises
that provide the joba and incomes
for what used to be the ever-rising
standard of American living?
They're the people who bought
U.S. Savings Bonds because Uncle
Sam's ad men and top business
executives said bonds would help
pay for the education of their
children and make their retirement
days easier too.
And what they didn't put into bon-

~ahzeyoi

0

ad1ethae

Business mirror

HOPE IN

.,

'

(Conlinued fro"m page A· l )

TMAT

825 Third Ave., Gallipoli:l, Ohio 45631 .
Publlilhed every weekday evening except Saturday. Second ClaM PosLBge P~:~id at Gillipolis
Ohio4S631.
.
•
111E DAILY SENTINEL
Ill Court St., Pomeroy, 0 . ~769. Published every week day evening except Satun:iay Entered
a.s second elMs mailing matter at Pomeroy. Oftio Post Office.
·
By carrier daily and Sunday 11 ,00 per •etk. Motor route M.tO per month

(

•

Students . ..

'

Today in history. ..

I

••

GAlLIPOLIS
f

~

A-3-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Apri120, 1980

$unllltJl 'limes· ientinel .

dressmg wues, not personalities.

..

MA DIVISION Of

TANO't' CO RPOHATION

Aadto Snack
Dealers
Look lor thtli

stgn tn your

·,ladle
/llaek

11tJt ghborhood

'I
PRICES MAY VARY AT INDIVIDUAL STOAES

�. .

A-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, April20, 1980

Publiahedevery ~Y by lbeOho Va!Tey PublWUns Co.· Multi.media, Inc.
Letters ol optnloo are welcomed. They should be leas than D words long (or subject to reductioo by t;he editor) and must be sijned with_the si8.11ee'a address: NI:UlleS m~:~y be withheld upon
publi ~atl~. However, on ~uest. names WIU be disclosed. Lett.ers should be in good U:t.ste ~:~d-

ou~
'FOt.k:S
OCOEE. HA

DAILY TRIBUNE

~EW ~OUSE

At-.10

L,lOU AIJD (,)OUR

WI~E' RE BUI,ll IJ'••.
DIO 1,100 SAl,\

MAIL

IT'LL TAKE
200 YEARS'?

SIJBSCRIPI10N RATES
TheCaWpoi.U Deily Tribune in Ohio and Wea:t Virginia one year $33Jil ; six months tt7.50; three
months SI0.50. Elsewhere $38.00 per year ; six month.s ~.00; three months $1 1.00; motor route
ts.90 monthly.
·I
The Daily Sentinel, one year $33.00; SU; months Sl7.50: three mooths 120.00. Elsewhere $38.00;
!II lll001tbs 120.00; three months lli.IIO.
The AssoCiated Preas is excltl!lvely enUUed to the 1.a1e for publication of aU news dispatche.:i
credited to the newspaper and abo the IOCBJ news publl!hed hereln.

TI-l AT'S
JUST TI-lE
HJTE~EST.

~~~-~·~m·-

Ohio bills enacted
Gov. James A. Rhodes has signed into law a bill UP"
dating the state program which helps homeowners in
blighted areas obtain property insurance.
The program, known as the Ohio FAIR (Fair Access to
Insurance Requirements) plan, utilizes a shared-risk pool
in which insurance companies in the state are required to
participate.
Under the newly signed law, the FAIR plan is divorced
from a similar federal program which bill sponsors said
imposes unnecessary red tape on the state.
It makes several other administrative changes, including the addition of public and insurance industry
representation on the FAIR plan board of directors.
The measure, which takes effect July 18, 1980, was one of
11 signed by the governor Friday.
Also signed by Rhodes was a measure providing college
tuition waivers for the children of park district officers
killed in the line of duty. Similar waivers already exist for
the children of police and firefighters who are killed while
on duty.
An emergency clause in the bill allowed it to take effect
immediately.
Other bills signed by Rhodes, which all take effect July
18, include measures that will:
-Authorize state grants to local governments, community improvement corporations and nonprofit groups
for redevelopment of land strip mined prior to 1972, when
the state's reclamation law took effect.
-Exempt dentists from a consumer law requiring written estimates in advance of patient treatments.
-Increase from three to five years the amount of time
townships and counties are allowed to pay off debt on
'newly acquired equipment.
_ -Authorize townships to rent or lease buildings and
recreational facilities.
-Prohibit use of township zoning powers to prevent a
landowner from making wine and selling it on his own
property, if the ingredients for the wine are grown there.
-Establish a separate workers compensation fund for
: marine industry employees.
· -Require county mental retardation boards to require
tuition payments from private children's homes for
. providing special education to youngsters.
-Allow educators and school employees to participate
. in state-approved tax shelter and deferred compensation
: plans.
-Prohibit the false representation by a person that he is
an independent insurance agent.

Auditor intervenes
State Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson told the Public
Utilities Conunission of Ohio on Friday he should be
allowed to intervene in a hearing on Ohio Bell's measured
rate service.
Ferguson filed a brief with the PUCO responding to a
petition submitted earlier in the week by Ohio Bell opposing the auditor's intervention.
Ohio Bell contended that Ferguson cannot intervene
because he is not represented by the attorney general's office as required by law.
The company further argued that the auditor is not the
legal agent to contract for telephone services and the
issues raised by him already have been resolved by the
:Ohio Supreme Court.
· Ferguson countered in his brief Friday that his office
has "a direct, material and substantial interest in the rate
:case, both as an Ohio Bell customer and as the state agency that audits and pays the state's bills."
· He said the Supreme Court has ruled it is the auditor's '
:responsibility "where reason exists to question the legality
:of a claim, to investigate or require further proof of a
claim presented to him before he may authorize
payment."
·
Ferguson and Ohio Bell have been at odds for several
.months over the fact that the company's measured rate
billings of nine cents per local call do not include !i detailed
list of specific numbers called.
· Ferguson claims that Without such documentation it is
impossible to properly detennine the validity and accuracy of the bills.

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"resistance centers" to fight the
pressure (rom the Moslems, most of
them members of the Islamic
Society of Students.
Between one and four persons
were killed and at least 40 injured in
fighting at the Tehran teachers'
college, it was reported by the
Tehran newspaper Jomhori Islami,
official organ or the clergy-led
Islamic Republican Party.
It identified only one victim, a
high school student who it said was
strangled.
Tehran Radio said Moslem
student occupations continued at
Tabriz University and clashes broke
TRUCK OVERTURNS - A semi rig hauling sand
said the rig was driven by Eric Brown, 33, Cambridge.
out at the university in Shiraz, 400
overturned Saturday morning after rounding a curve
He and a passenger, Jerry Shaffer, 29, Hopewell, sufmiles south of Tehran. Some reports
on SR 7, four tenth.\l of a mile south of CR 26 in Meigs
fered minor injuries. There was moderate damage to
reaching the capital said 500 persons
County. The Gallia-Meigs' P05t State Highway Patrol
the truck.
were injured in Shiraz.
The student resistance centers
tide be their daughter?
claimed
hWJdreds of persons had
not blame any of the policemen
On April 5, the I..ockharts were
been arrested and hundreds injured
involved.
back In Florida. Dr. Garvin
He hopes their investigation will across the country. The Tehran cen!Continued from page A-1)
discouraged them from looking at
ters issued leaflets condemning the
end in an execution.
"We would go back and forth,"
the body; BME 102ll-79 had begun to
"I'm a Christian minister," he Revolutionary Council's decision as
l..ockhart recalls. "It was real
mununlfy. They identified Karen
said, "but I do believe in capital a "plot to purge all anti·dergy, antiagony."
from an earlier morgue photo.
punishment as a deterrent to this · imperialist and independent groups
Spring came. Dr. Keene Garvin,
On April 6, Karen Lockhart was
from the universities,
kind of thing."
deputy Broward medical examiner,
cremated. It was Easter Sunday.
A banner headline in J omhori
Karen Lockhart did not return to
suggested It was time to bury BME
On April 7, about 30 mourners
lslami
proclaimed, "This is the
West Virginia. Before they left
103l-79. "It's a shame this girl's gathered at the First Church of God
Florida, her parents, two brothers beginning of the Cultural Revolution
parents will never know what
In Hollywood, Fla. Sitting quietly
and two sisters walked together onto in Iran." In the famous Chinese
happened to her," Garvin said.
among them was Detective Leslie.
a weathered fishing pier that juts Cultural Revolution of the late 1960s
Homicide Detective David Leslie Perhaps the killer would show up at
into the Atlantic from the seaside and early 1970s, communist purists
wanted just a little more thne. Leslie the funeral , he said.
sought to purge China of aU
community of Dania.
had worked the case from the first
On April 10, Karen's 26th birthday
They prayed and read scripture. " bourgeois" tendencies.
day. He spent many hours on It, passed.
"We'll see you again, " they said.
puzzled and frustrated
On April 11, Detective Leslie
Weather
Grant Lockhart took a small plastic
On March 25, The Fort Lauderdale suHered a heart attack. He remains
Partly cloudy Sunday. High in the
bag from a small cardboard box.
News published a story about the hospitalized In fair condition.
mid 70s. The chance of rain is near
Aveil of ashes drifted softly to the
growing problem of · "n~name"
"It's not the kind of work where sea.
10 percent Sunday.
corpses like the pretty, dark-haired you can put In eight hours and go
murder victim. The Associated home and forget about it," said his
Press distributed the story.
boss, Sgt. Adams. "What happened
At the First Church of God In Lake
Is mainly beca115e the guy gives a
Placid, Fla., a inember of the damn." David Leslie is 32. A
colleague has taken over the
congregation read the story In the
Lockhart investigation.
local newspaper. Back in January
the woman had met the Lockharts
Pastor Lockhart says he was
saddened by t~ long delay in
and heard of their search for Karen.
learning his daughter's fate but does
Could the mystery victim In the ar-

NOW

'69~

for your SILADIUM, class ring In addition to your name
and favorite act1vity. you get these elrtra features free to

Murder...

For lack of a lobby the poor were lost.
By Robert Walters
WASHINGTON (NEA) - Why
must chropically ill children,
malnourished elderly people and indigent members of our society be
forced to bear the burden of reducing government expenditures and
balancing the federal budget?
Because they are the people whose
wrath politicians fear least especially in an election year- since
they lack any semblance of the
"political clout" that allows others
to influence the decision-making
process in this capital.
No detennined lobbyists make
compelling presentations to leaders
of the executive and legislative
branches of government on behalf of
disease-prone babies.
No political action committees
make generous contributions to the
campaign treasuries of presidential
and congressional candidates in the
name of the aged and infinn.
No sophisticated lawyers circulate
among this city's power brokers to
subtly but convincingly plead the
cause of hard-working but impoverished Americans.
As a result, it's hardly surprising
that the poor and powerless are the
principal victims of the budget cuts
now being proposed by both the
White House and Congress.

Many domestic social programs
whose funding is to be slashed,
delayed or eliminated in the current
round of fiscal belt-tightening
deserv~ that fate because the

Public Health found equally striking
results."
The president originally called for
$970 million in federal spending on
the WIG program, then cut the

Political comment
evidence indicates they are ineffi·
cient, extravagant, unnecessary or
otherwise failed experiments.
But when President Carter
belatedly decided to offer a balanced
budget for the 1981 fiscal year, he
also proposed cuts in the funding of
many useful programs that sland as
a tribute to our society's generosity
toward its less fortWJBte members.
One nolable example involves the
little known but' high!~ successful
Agriculture Department Special
Supplemental Food Program for
Women, Infants and Children,
known as WIC.
"A recent study conducted by the
Yale Medical School found drama tiP
reductions in infant mortality as a
result of the WIC program," said
Carter's original 1981 budget pr()o
posal. "Another study conducted at
the Harvard University School of

figure to $900 million in his revised
budget. The Senate Budget Commit·
tee has slashed the figure again, to
$8SO million.
To save another $388 million in the
coming fiscal year, the president is
calling for a year-long delay in initiating the Child Health Assistance
Program, designed to provide
preventive medical care to those
who need it most ·but can afford it
least.
A series of cuts in the food stamp
program- some justified but others
unwarranted - would save another
$433 million Wlder Carter's revised
budget.
"Carter eviscerated those pr&amp;grains with the fiscal equivalent of a
butcher's knife," says Barbara Bode
of the Washington-based Children's
Foundation. " But Congress, anxious
to outdo him, is hacking away with a

meat cleaver.''

A Senate proposal, designed to cut
another $1.2 billion from the food
stamp budget, would eliminate
alleged "duplication" by slashing
aid to families whose children ,
benefit from federal school lunch
programs.
The average monthly bonus ill
purchasing power received by food;
stamp recipients amounts to $32.82
monthly. That's slightly more than a
dollar a day or 3li cents per meal but the Senate proposal would
eliminate 51.6 cents for every school
lunch served to children in a family .
receiving food stamps.
Where are the concomitant cuts in
ill-advised subsidies to the maritime .:
industry, inflationary price supports ·
paid to dairy farmers and overpric-";
ed weapons system contracts doled:·
out to the aerospace industry?
What about hospital cost containment, increased waterway . user
charges and repeal of the generous
depletion allowance enjoyed by oil
and gas producers?
Nobody either in the White House
or on Capitol Hill has had the temeri· -;
ty to suggest that the well-organized ·
special interests who benefit from :
those programs should make the •
same sacrifices now being demand- . ~
ed of the poor.
•

Crash injures two persons
GALUPOLIS - Two persons
were injqred, one seriously Friday
during a fiery crash along SR 7, at
the junction of. SR 248, in Meigs
County.
Called to t)le scene at 3;30 p.m.,
the Gallia-Meigs Post, Highway
Patrol, reports a south bound auto
operated by Edwin Thomas, j/,
Leon, W.Va., swerved to avoid a
bicyle ridden by Dana Nynon, 11,
Pomeroy, that had traveled onto the
roadway.
The Thomas vehicle went left of
center, struck a bridge and burst in-

to flames. Thomas and his wife were
pulled from the flaming wreckage
by a passing motorist.
With incapacitating injuries the
two subjects were transported by
the Pomeroy Emergency Squad to
Camden-Clark Hospital in Parkersburg for treatment.
Thomas is in serious condition
with fractures of both legs and a
fractured· arm. Mrs. Thomas is
listed in satisfactory condition with
a fractured ann and abrasions.
The accident remains under investigation.

ds at 6 percent they put into savings
accounts at S.5 percent because,
they had always been told, saving is
prudent. And it used to be, that's
true, before 18 percent inflation.
For their efforts, of course, the
savers not only lost much of their
~oney but they paid taxes on the interest "earned." Their profits were
an illusion; they really lost badly to
double digit inflation.
Moreover, they're taxes went up.
Despite tax cuts, and despite many
assurances that it wasn't so, a
greater share of the gross national
product now goes to taxes than in
any year since the 1940s.
The bondbuyers, the savers, the
insured - have they been robbed?
You know who they are. They're
the people who personify the

American ideals of family, hard
work, thrift, hope in the future, faith
in institutions, confidence in govern·
ment. Dreamers, perhaps; but if it
isn't now, America used to be the
land where dreams came true.
These families tried. They began
the 1960s with one breadwinner. Two
were needed in the 1970s, so the wife
returned to work. Inflation made
further inroads, forcing them to cut
into those rainy day savings.
It didn't stop there. As prices rose
faster than take-home pay, and as
savings eroded, they experimented
with credit to maintain their life
style. Then the credit markets, by
edict, were closed to them.
Victims of inflation, all of them,
and of taxes too, and of the futile,
half-hearted and often inept at·

Letters to the editor

tempts to stop iinflation.
The ordinary people who adhered •
to the solid old values were too busy •
with the finer things of life, such as
caring for the family, to spend time •
on financial matters. Nor, perhaps,
did they have the inclination. They
trusted; above all, they trusted Uncle Sam.
They remained the solid,
dedicated, hard-working, straight,
trusted, dependable people that
everyone - political, business, investment, religious and other
leaders know is very badly needed.
But if there is added to the list
another and heretofore misleading
descriptive, "cynical," it's for a
very good reason. They've been sinned against. They've been robbed.

•

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

What, if any, drummer do you hear?
Aprill6, 1980
Dear Sir,
I wish to thank you and The Daily
Sentinel for the courtesy of printing
my letters to the Editor. It proves
that where there are still editors and
newspapers who believe in freedom
of speech, regardless of one's personal political beliefs and for this
you have my upmost respect. I will
not apologize for any letter that I
have written. If any were offended
by them, so be it.
There are many opinions bandied

about as to the NOW endeavor. I
have received calls fr~n~ people
from all walks of life and all ages.
Veterans from WW II, Korean and
Vietnam, men, women and
teenagers from all types of jobs.
They believe as I do. In the past I
have pressed for the election of men
I felt would serve the public best.
from both political parties, and was
active in organizing a union, all of
which has made adversaries for me
from all sides. I would do the same
identical thing if I had the option to

.'

do it over.
Each person must march to the
beat of the drummer he hears, and I
hear my drununer and I march to
his beat. This is a mighty nation, but
many of you do not hear any drummer and that is your loss.
·
I have some friends in Meigs.
County wlio believe as I do and who
believe in me and who are supporting me. But these are true friends. but fair weather friends and each

one of them compensates for a
thousand adversaries, negative
thinkers and wishy-washy people.
I will go to Iran where the •
American hostages are being held "
and only my demise will prevent me •
from doing so.
•
So think about it, do you even hear . ~
a drummer to march to? Then you'd •
better find one.
'
Respectfully. - Bill Foster, NOW, • •
P. 0 . Box 263, Racine, Ohio 4!i77l.

or built new romes and are • ~.
paying taxes in Meigs County. :: :
Most of them must drive 4(&gt;.50 ·and even 75 or 80 miles a day to · • "•
get to their employment.
A return to gravel roads will
most surely slow down or bring ••
an end to any new construction •
and the loss of income that goes ; ;
With it.
Buying a lot of expensive equip:. • •
ment such as roadgraders and ·
trucks surely isn't the answer.
Let's go foi'Ward not backward.
Sincerley. - Mrs. Opal Morris,

-·

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Questions county engineer's approach ·. ~
Dear Editor:
I see our County Engineer war&gt;ts to return to gravel roads, With
backward thinking people like
him to rurining our cotinty, is it
any wonder we are sometimes
called dwnb Meigs Countians?
Before the road I live on. was
blacktopped many man hours
were spent runing expensive road
grad.ers and driving trucks to
haul gravel to try and keep the
road passable which was not
always the case.
Many, people have purchased

~.! AS COT

UNDER STONE

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SIJPER
STEREO

U. S. Savings Bonds buyers : inflation victims '
NEW YORK (AP) - Have you
considered what has happened to the
people we call the salt of the earth,
the people who try to live within
their means and who used to save
anything extra in case of a rainy
day?
Those people whose savings the
country relied upon to finance
housing and business enterprises
that provide the joba and incomes
for what used to be the ever-rising
standard of American living?
They're the people who bought
U.S. Savings Bonds because Uncle
Sam's ad men and top business
executives said bonds would help
pay for the education of their
children and make their retirement
days easier too.
And what they didn't put into bon-

~ahzeyoi

0

ad1ethae

Business mirror

HOPE IN

.,

'

(Conlinued fro"m page A· l )

TMAT

825 Third Ave., Gallipoli:l, Ohio 45631 .
Publlilhed every weekday evening except Saturday. Second ClaM PosLBge P~:~id at Gillipolis
Ohio4S631.
.
•
111E DAILY SENTINEL
Ill Court St., Pomeroy, 0 . ~769. Published every week day evening except Satun:iay Entered
a.s second elMs mailing matter at Pomeroy. Oftio Post Office.
·
By carrier daily and Sunday 11 ,00 per •etk. Motor route M.tO per month

(

•

Students . ..

'

Today in history. ..

I

••

GAlLIPOLIS
f

~

A-3-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Apri120, 1980

$unllltJl 'limes· ientinel .

dressmg wues, not personalities.

..

MA DIVISION Of

TANO't' CO RPOHATION

Aadto Snack
Dealers
Look lor thtli

stgn tn your

·,ladle
/llaek

11tJt ghborhood

'I
PRICES MAY VARY AT INDIVIDUAL STOAES

�. A-6--TheSundayTime&amp;Sentlnel,SWiday,Aprll20; 1980

•PIICES ;o(IO SUIDIY Al'lll 2t lHIU SAT. AI'IIL U, 1910
oWf llSUYE 1HE IIGIII TO LIMIT QIIAIITITI($
•Wf GLADU ~em US0A GOYT. RX10 STAlin
•Wf m IIOT llSPOIISIBL£ FOil TYPOGIAI'IIItAL fiiOIS

'

7-Up

Grade a Large

8

Eggs

Superior
Frankie
Wieners

99~

16 oz.
Btl s.

INCL. DIET

12

ARMOUR
CANNED LUNCH MEAT

Doz.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE
TENDERBEST BEEF

oundStea

oz.

reet
FOODLAND TENDERBEST

U.S.D.A. CHOICE
TENDERBEST BEEF
WALDORF

Toilet
Tissue

PLAI

B·B·O.
89~ Sauce
~~~~L

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF

Bottom Round

HICKORY SMOKE

79c

U.S.D.A. CHOICE TENDERBEST BEEF

ess

TOP ROUND OR SIRLOIN TIP

Boneless Steaks

Boneless Roast

Lb.

'2.69

BONEUSS ROAST .:. GENUINE

Eye of Round Roast

Lb.

TOP IOUND · SIRLOIN TIP-RUMP

Boneless Roasts

·

Lb.

FRESH Elm LEAN

'

Ground Round

Rinso
etergent
c

E-Z CARVE · NO WASTE

Round Steak

'2.89
'2.59

lb.

Lb.

..

LEAN SHOULDER

Pork Blade Steaks

'

CHICKEN OF THE SEA
LIGHT-IN OIL OR WATER

'2"
Lb.

HY-GRAOE V.I.P. l\\-31! Ll. HALl

BonelosaHama

Lll.

HILSHIRE

hun Tun

Smoked Sauaage

llb.
r~a.

8REAKFASI STRIPS

Swift's Sla:&amp;lean

12PI(.
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KAHN'S SLICED lHICII DR THIN

Bologna

GRADE A POULTRY

SAVORY BRAND

fliOZEII 5-6 LB. AVG.

Baking Hens

Lb.

59~

COUNTRY PRIDE • GRADE A

Chicken Dru111stlcks

Lb.

99~

Sliced Bacon

Chicken Thighs

Lb.
1 Lb.
Plg.

9

FRESH • SKINNED &amp; DEVEIIIED

. Sliced B11f Liver

Lb.

9

BONELESS
CUT FROM THE ROUND

89~

Culled Beef Steak

GRIUMASTER

Chicken Franks ·

SAVE MORE WHEN YOU BUY
FOODLAND'S JUMBO FAMILY PACKS

Chipped Beef Steak

•coeNTIY PRIDE · GRADE A

FRESH LEAN

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COUNTRY PRIDE GRADE A

89~

Split Chicken Breasts

'2 79
59
Lb. '2
69
Lb. '1
lb. '119
Lb.

SUNBEAM

Snack Cakes &amp; Pies
BARSOTTI UNSLICED

Miracle
Margarine

Italian Bread
~SORTED

BOIED

Fireside Cookies

2~1 ~
6

For

16 Oz.
Loaf

1
69c
5

lOt.

$109

ORE·IDA SHOESTRING

lOOt.
PI(.

$129

TOO~!!!o!TAII ~~~ij~

llfADOII GOLD 51/NIIAE 01

Swiss Yogurt

Potatoes
Cool Whip
Fish Portions

12 Ot.
Cln.

99c
89c

llDt

$179

~()Oz.

PI(.

BIRDS£lE·IO'Dff LABEL

FOODUND HALl MOON SLICfO

90L

$119

Corn~on-the-Cob

Rave Hair Sprar
Nl.ll

Box
Of 30

SPRING FEEIJNG

Liquid Sha111poo

Pk~

Niblet Ears

SAYE ON

Relr Ta111pon1

BOOTH IUITERIIILK BAITER

GREEN GIANT

Tube

12 Oz.
Btl.
Btl.

Of 24

99c

.

TENDER

Loaves
lube

89
.Potatoes.....................................~~-L-~:~~~...
e
Green Onions.........................~.~-~~~~~~- '1 00
3
Apples ................................................~~:.~~~-- 99e
3
. 99C
W•1nesa.p A pp Ies...................................
MAINE

20~119

Troplcana Juices
llfADOII GOLD

FOODLA D FlESHIEST PRODUCE IS BEST!
Bananas .............................................~.~~~: .. ~ 1 00

8 Oz.
2 Boxes

ORANGE OR GRAPURUIT

Colby Cheese
Dreamslcles

BANQUET

CHICKEN · TURKEY · SALISBURY STEAK
CHOPPED 8EEF · WESTERN
BEANS 'NFRIN!S • MEAT lOAf

read

INEN lEAD! OR BUTTUMILI

Ballard Biscuits

4

'119
'1"
'1"
'1'•

Head Lettuce

WASHINGTON GOLDEN DELICIOUS

LB.BAG

ea.

,

�. A-6--TheSundayTime&amp;Sentlnel,SWiday,Aprll20; 1980

•PIICES ;o(IO SUIDIY Al'lll 2t lHIU SAT. AI'IIL U, 1910
oWf llSUYE 1HE IIGIII TO LIMIT QIIAIITITI($
•Wf GLADU ~em US0A GOYT. RX10 STAlin
•Wf m IIOT llSPOIISIBL£ FOil TYPOGIAI'IIItAL fiiOIS

'

7-Up

Grade a Large

8

Eggs

Superior
Frankie
Wieners

99~

16 oz.
Btl s.

INCL. DIET

12

ARMOUR
CANNED LUNCH MEAT

Doz.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE
TENDERBEST BEEF

oundStea

oz.

reet
FOODLAND TENDERBEST

U.S.D.A. CHOICE
TENDERBEST BEEF
WALDORF

Toilet
Tissue

PLAI

B·B·O.
89~ Sauce
~~~~L

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF

Bottom Round

HICKORY SMOKE

79c

U.S.D.A. CHOICE TENDERBEST BEEF

ess

TOP ROUND OR SIRLOIN TIP

Boneless Steaks

Boneless Roast

Lb.

'2.69

BONEUSS ROAST .:. GENUINE

Eye of Round Roast

Lb.

TOP IOUND · SIRLOIN TIP-RUMP

Boneless Roasts

·

Lb.

FRESH Elm LEAN

'

Ground Round

Rinso
etergent
c

E-Z CARVE · NO WASTE

Round Steak

'2.89
'2.59

lb.

Lb.

..

LEAN SHOULDER

Pork Blade Steaks

'

CHICKEN OF THE SEA
LIGHT-IN OIL OR WATER

'2"
Lb.

HY-GRAOE V.I.P. l\\-31! Ll. HALl

BonelosaHama

Lll.

HILSHIRE

hun Tun

Smoked Sauaage

llb.
r~a.

8REAKFASI STRIPS

Swift's Sla:&amp;lean

12PI(.
Ot.

KAHN'S SLICED lHICII DR THIN

Bologna

GRADE A POULTRY

SAVORY BRAND

fliOZEII 5-6 LB. AVG.

Baking Hens

Lb.

59~

COUNTRY PRIDE • GRADE A

Chicken Dru111stlcks

Lb.

99~

Sliced Bacon

Chicken Thighs

Lb.
1 Lb.
Plg.

9

FRESH • SKINNED &amp; DEVEIIIED

. Sliced B11f Liver

Lb.

9

BONELESS
CUT FROM THE ROUND

89~

Culled Beef Steak

GRIUMASTER

Chicken Franks ·

SAVE MORE WHEN YOU BUY
FOODLAND'S JUMBO FAMILY PACKS

Chipped Beef Steak

•coeNTIY PRIDE · GRADE A

FRESH LEAN

~

Culled Pork Steak
COUNTRY PRIDE GRADE A

89~

Split Chicken Breasts

'2 79
59
Lb. '2
69
Lb. '1
lb. '119
Lb.

SUNBEAM

Snack Cakes &amp; Pies
BARSOTTI UNSLICED

Miracle
Margarine

Italian Bread
~SORTED

BOIED

Fireside Cookies

2~1 ~
6

For

16 Oz.
Loaf

1
69c
5

lOt.

$109

ORE·IDA SHOESTRING

lOOt.
PI(.

$129

TOO~!!!o!TAII ~~~ij~

llfADOII GOLD 51/NIIAE 01

Swiss Yogurt

Potatoes
Cool Whip
Fish Portions

12 Ot.
Cln.

99c
89c

llDt

$179

~()Oz.

PI(.

BIRDS£lE·IO'Dff LABEL

FOODUND HALl MOON SLICfO

90L

$119

Corn~on-the-Cob

Rave Hair Sprar
Nl.ll

Box
Of 30

SPRING FEEIJNG

Liquid Sha111poo

Pk~

Niblet Ears

SAYE ON

Relr Ta111pon1

BOOTH IUITERIIILK BAITER

GREEN GIANT

Tube

12 Oz.
Btl.
Btl.

Of 24

99c

.

TENDER

Loaves
lube

89
.Potatoes.....................................~~-L-~:~~~...
e
Green Onions.........................~.~-~~~~~~- '1 00
3
Apples ................................................~~:.~~~-- 99e
3
. 99C
W•1nesa.p A pp Ies...................................
MAINE

20~119

Troplcana Juices
llfADOII GOLD

FOODLA D FlESHIEST PRODUCE IS BEST!
Bananas .............................................~.~~~: .. ~ 1 00

8 Oz.
2 Boxes

ORANGE OR GRAPURUIT

Colby Cheese
Dreamslcles

BANQUET

CHICKEN · TURKEY · SALISBURY STEAK
CHOPPED 8EEF · WESTERN
BEANS 'NFRIN!S • MEAT lOAf

read

INEN lEAD! OR BUTTUMILI

Ballard Biscuits

4

'119
'1"
'1"
'1'•

Head Lettuce

WASHINGTON GOLDEN DELICIOUS

LB.BAG

ea.

,

�A-ti-The .sunaay 'l'unes-Sentinel, Sunday, April~. 1980

Brown chosen CHEAO president
ATHENS- Dr. Harold D. Brown,
Pomeroy , has been elected
president of the Consortiwn for
Health Education in Appalachia
Ohio (CHEAO). •
Other officers are Hugh Kirkel,
Gallipolis, vice president; Dr. Sue
Foster, Athens, treasurer and Dr.
Carl D. Chambers, executive director of CHE AO, was named
secretary.
New trustees elected were James
L. Burrier, a retired school administrator from Zanesville; Dr.
Paul Hayes, president of Rio Grande
College; James R. Myers, district
director of the Ohio Division of Mental Health, Athens ; Wayne L .
Foster, Ohio Hospital Insurance
Company; Kenneth Malochiodi, administrator of the Selby General
Hospital in Marietta; and Dr.
Samuel .Goldman was elected to
return to the board .
Trustees re-elected to the board
were Dr. Harold D. Brown,
Pomeroy; Rosemary Christie, Guernsey County Health Department;
Raymond Craig, Belpre; Dr. Sue
Foster, superintendent of the Athens
Mental Health Center; Einon Plummer, director of .the Ohio Valley

•

AWARD WINNERS- Pictured are some of the
numerous winners at the annual Southern High School
awards dinner held Wednesday by the Future Farmers
of America. They are, front, I tor, Albert Holman, Star

Health Services Foundation; Enos
Singer, director of the Washington
County Home Nursing Service; and
Katherine Whinnery, a nutritionist
with the ·Cadiz Cooperative Extension Office.
·
Dr. Chambers, executive director
of CHEAO, Preseoted a report,

" CHEAO ... Yesterday Through

Tomorrow."
In his report, Dr. Chambers
enumerated the many accomplishments achieved by CHEAO
under Appalachian Regional Cornmission funding during the past five
years.

·.

~SUP~ERMARKfi

WALLP

3rd Ave.,allth St.

525· 7090 ,
Hunllngton,
(Across from Civic Center)
Also No.1 Plaza East Shopping Center. Charleston, w. va.

.6 0%

~~~~ UpJo

. 30,000 Rolls In_ $Dck
Pr~Pasted, Fabric Backad VInyl, Murals t .• .hng Pa-

Reg.

sale Price

'28"
'14.
'59" S/1 •39"
'21• S/1

.ODDS&amp; ENOS

Chapter Fanner; Pat Johnson, cooperatives; back, I to
r, Stanley Holter, scholarship; Bob Lee, leadership and
scholarship and David Salmons, scholarship.

--•1•

.

._..

Awards highlight FF A fete
RACINE -

.

•'

Numerous awards
were presented at the amual
banquet of the Southern High School
Future Fanners of America held
last Wednesday night.
Approximately 165 members and
guests attended the event with Bill
Morris giving the invocation.
Officers, Bob Lee, president;
Albert Holman, vice president;
Stanley Holter, treasurer; Phillip
Kincaid, secretary; Bill Morris, sentinel; David Lawson, reporter and
Deanna White, student advisor,
presented the opening ceremonies.
Bob Lee introduced guests and
sponsors and Albert Holman introduced the guest speaker, Tim
Wheatly, Wellston, state sectional
vice president .
Receipients of awards and sponsors include: Star Greenhand,
Phillip Kincaid, Farmers Bank and
Savings Co.; Albert Holman, Star
, Chapter Farmer, Racine Home
National Bank; Pat Johnson,
cooperatives, Pomeroy National
Bank; leadership, BOb Lee, Swisher
Implement; scholarship, Bob Lee,

David Salmons, Stanley Holter,
Racine Planing Mill; Valley Lumber, Roy Profitt; dairy production,
Bob Lee, Dan Smith Auction Service; A. J. Wellbarger, beef production, Star Supply ; Phillip Kincaid,
poultry production, Modem Supply;
Bob Lee, soil and water
management, Village Cut Rate;
Deanna White, crop production,
John Hill, Don Hill, . David Hill,
Larry O'Brien ; Albert Holman,
s teer production , Vanover
Trucking; Steve Riffle, placement in
agricultural production, J . D.
Drilling; Keith Black, outdoor
recreation, Larry's Grocery; Keith
Black, fish and wildlife, Sam Cummins; Albert Holman, salesmanship, Wagner's Hardware ; Bill
Morris, electrification, Carpenter's
Pennzoil; Stanley Holter, swine
production, Effie Pickens; Randy
Collins, agricultural processing; G.
and J. Auto Parts; Robert Kincaid,
public speaking, Sugar Run Mill ;
Bob Lee, home improvement, Twin
City Machine Shop.
Judging teams recognized were:

Gallipolis Court

'.

, GALL! POUS - Thirteen cases
were terminated in Gallipolis
Municipal Court Friday.
: Sylvia Carman, address unknown,
was found guilty to a charge of
telephone harassment and was fined
'$000 plus a six month sentence (both
suspended ).
Keith A. Nibert, 18, Bidwell,
pleaded guilty to a fine of $50 pi us a
six month sentence, all but two days
suspended.
Forfeiting bond on charges of
operated overloaded vehicles were
Plarles Caldwell, 22, Northup,
~124. ~ ; and, Steven D. James, 22,
Gallipolis, $76.80.
' Merele J. Howard, 38, Bidwell,
'was found not guilty to a charge of
failure to obey a traffic control
device.
: Found not guilty to a charge of
;disorderly conduct was Vaughn

Taylor, 19, Bidwell.
Randy Pearson, no address listed,
forfeited $35 on a charge of disor·
derly cohduct.
Fined $65 on a charge of t'ictitious
registration was David B. Smith, 21,
Gallipolis.
Robert Bradbury, 33, Gallipolis,
forfeited $30 on a charge of failure to
obey a traffic control device.
Waiving $35 on a charge of failure
to transfer registration was Gary R.
Swain, 21, Gallipolis.
Robert Sommerville,
20 ,
Gallipolis, forfeited $30 on a charge
of failure to obey a traffic control
, device.
Forfeiting bond on charges of excessive speed were Marvin
Ferguson, 20, Crown City, $25; and,
Vickie L. Brannon, 25, Crown City,

$27.

OFFICERS WOUNDED

Pettey was a graduate of Kyger
Creek High School where he played
football under the late Jim White.
He was a member of the Reed·
sville United Methodist Church and
had been employed with the
Monongahela Power Co. for the past
ll years.
He is survived by his parents who
still reside at Shannon, Miss. ; his
wife, Sybil Bookman Pettey; two
sons, Clifford and Michael, both at
horne; a brother , Joseph of
Buchanan, W. Va.; a sister, Rachael
Pettey of Shannon and a grandmother, Eula Pettey of Shannon.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m . Monday at the White Furleral
Home in Coolville with the Rev, John
Douglas,officiating. Burial will be in
the Baptist Cemetery at Torch.
Friends may call at the funeral
home anytime after noon Sunday.

Famous Stratolounger•
Close-Up"' recliners
YOUR CHOICE

'ror the
'TJ;vO

OJ You

Clarence W. R utt

14KGold
Matched
Wedding Rings

IN EASY-CARE HERCULON
~" ,. ' l

&gt;'l''''"lfiC,_'I"

,

·;Jnt~~l-.,

"'' ._,.,_.,.,,J.
rr .. ,,

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,:..-··

ll't?t.-tt

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-,,.,0, ..01'1-'\lt'rr•·- l i'J/•-

.;J,.d'IIP'•:€

IN RICHEST VINYL

-"•'l:JSia•'·''-'C,I$1(11' I l' •• 3"·''-·', r&gt;\Jt ' (.
J•atoio.r-.1?'
· 1 '");- .,,
'&lt;:!&lt;'' .. ,

l''lt.'-· J ,,rr.T'T"'r'"t

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.·."; tc'.·.~--~-.··ot:"vvJ·+·1' t 1 • • .,, •,-,,ff'f&gt;1Ces·._.r. Ando t covse
• , - ' f , ~ · q·~\0 ·"9''S ''t:&gt;"' r l'r',".f ' •lf' mf'tK::ub/;lupi"QjSiel) oe1a•t
;r'l i"l: &gt;"'T ,•. .-;r • 1
•• ,,. · _,.., .•1· :;•.. il l•tvn a-:,.;- 50~ ,r ·yltt'i'l! rrvat;
., ,_ ·~:·&gt;t"~l '~_:o:::•J€:

$89.95 EACH

DERIFIELD
JEWELRY
Across from Theater

Get the

the

MARION, Ohio (AP) - Two
Marion County sheriff's deputies
were reported in fair condition
Saturday recovering from shotgun
wounds to their heads and ann8.
S'gt. Paul T. Bailey, 31, and Deputy
Steve Pennington, 25, were allegedly
shot by Murray D. Harriman of
Marion County while they were
using tear gas to force him out of his
house.

;. ONLY

®

MAKES SUNJUNS

intthat beat
herbeater.
OIYM

Save big on the house paint that outweathers Sears Weatherbeater! 94 out
of 100 homeowners said Olympic Over·
coat looked better longer when in·
dependent researchers asked them to
compare weathered samples• of both
brands. Overcoat not only lasts extra
long, but goes on extra smooth, hides
extra well and cleans up extra fast in
just soap and water.

OVElCO~T.

'Red and white sa mples were weather~ (or lwo years.

,.

The .

d'L~~Shoe

•

t

. 300 Second Ave.

Cafe
•

Lafayette Mall
Gallipolis, 0.

Mon.-Sat 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SEOOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE lHROUGH SATURDAY, .APRIL 26, 1980

312 Sixth Street

On Sale
$1095
REGULAR 14.95
1

Point Pleasant ·

675· 1 160
Store Hours: Monday-Friday 8 a.m. To 5 P·f!l·· Saturday 8 a.m . To 12 noon
(

. (

GALLIPOLIS- Clarence Wyman
Rutt, 76, a resident of Rt. 2, Patriot
(Cadmus community) died at 1:25
a.m . Saturday in Holzer Medical !
Center.
Mr. Rutt had been in failing health
the past 10 years.
He was a retired state employee
and former school bus driver and
custodian in the Cadmus school
system.
Mr. Rutt was born April23, 1903, in
Cadmus, son of the late William ,
Henry and Stella Uoyd Rutt.
He married Mildred Ross on Sepl
17, 1927, in Oak Hill. She survives,
along with one son: James D. Rutt,
Rt. 2, Patriot; one sister : Mrs.
(Bertina)
Smeltzer,
Melvin
Gallipolis; two grandchildren and
one great-grandchild. Two brothers
preceded him in death.
Funeral services will be held 2
p.m. Monday at the Willis Funeral
Home with Rev. James Rainey officiating. Burial will follow in Olive
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m . Sunday.
Nephews will serve as
pallbearers.

Legar heath group
POMEROY - Pomeroy Fire
Chlef Charles Legar was named new
president of the Area Volunteer Fire
and Emergency Association which
met recently at the Pomeroy Fire
. Department Station.
Chlef Legar is a past vice
prelsdent of the association. Carl
Lee, a trustee and active member of
the Bashan Volunbter Fire Department was named vice president, and
Helen 'Newland of the Orang~ Township Volunteer Fire Department and
the Tuppers Plains Emergency
Medical Service, was named '

CUBED

SUPERIOR FRANKIES

WI EN ERS........... ~2•0:

••

SUPERIOR
USDA CHOICE

ARM ROASt ........!!.~ 1

SLICED

39

BACON.~~.~.

$ l9

USDA CHOICE

CHUCK STEAK ......L!·•••1
USDA CHOICE
$169
CHUCK ROASI .....L!·•••

U. S. NO. 1 WHITE

POTATOES ......·.. : .~:·
0

••

$
159
MILK......... :~T~C····

VALLEY BELL · .

2%

$} 19

BORDEN'S

IVORY................!~~~ .. .

BUTTERMILK....~.~. 7

SHOWBOAT

BORDEN'S ELSIE

LIQUID DETERGENT

.

14.5

oz. CANS

4 $1

PORK &amp;BEANS.... /
CO~NTRY

TIME

CRIS(:O

LEMONADE
3lOZ. '
10 QUART SIZE

$179
·

Limit 1 Per customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer EK
' 26. 1980

•

CAN

,$19,9,

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
26, 1980

.

$1 09
ELBO

KRAfT

GRAPE JELLY
'

3 LB.

~ GIL

ICE CREAM..............

secretary~treasurer.

During the meeting presided over
by Bob E . By~r. MiddlepOrt,
outgoing president, the group
discussed plans for the future of the
organization and upcoming
programs. There were two training
films shown. One was presented by
the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources through the Shade River
Fire District and was in regard to
the use and understandillj{ of heavy
equipment and support pen10nnel on
forest fires while the secv.:d dealt
with fire scene search and rescue .

$
29
STEAK......~~.

BUCKET

P~ttey.

GOP endorses O'Brien
.

Store Hours:

COOLVILLE- Ronald C. Pettey,
32, Route 1, Coolville, was electrocuted In an accident near Barlow
Friday morning while at work as a
lineman for the Monongahela Power
Co.
He was born at Shannon, Miss., a
son of George C. and Janell Lawhon

17 Second Ave. Gallipolis

loeal Republican candidates presented their views for the June
Primary.

MIDDLEf!ORT - Daniel Emmett
Hughes, 75, 580 Market St., McAr·
thur, formerly of Middleport, died
Friday at the O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital in Athens.
He was born Sept. 6, 1904 at Oak
Hill, a son of the late Charles and
Cathryn Morgan Hughes.
Mr. Hughes was a retired heavy
equipment operator. He was a
member of the Middleport Church of
Christ.
Surviving are his second wife,
Evelyn Hughes, and a cousin, Dr.
Paul Washburn, J ackson. He was
preceded in death by his parents, his
first wife, Alma Young Hughes; a
daughter, Betty J ones; three
brothers, Emerson, Evan and
Morgan and a sister, Anna Jane
Hughes . .
Funeral services. will be held at 1
p.m . Tuesday at the RawlingsCoats-Blower Funeral Home with
Mr. Ronald Moyer officiating.
Burial will be in the Reedsville
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the J ames
Blower Funeral Home in McArthur
after 2 p.m. Sunday and at the
Rawlings-Coats-Blower
Funeral
Home in Middleport after 2 p,m, on
Monday.

Ronald C. Pettey

parliamentary procedure, third in
District 17, Todd Mugrage, David
Salmons, Bob Lee, Albert Holman,
Deanna White, Stanley Holter,
Phillip Kincaid, A. J . Willbarger,
Tom Cummins, sponsored by Landmark; soil judging, urban teams,
third in district 17; rural, first in
county and fourth in district, sponsored by Jackson Production Credit,
David Lawson, Robert Kincaid, Phil
Kincaid, Todd Mugrage, Bob Lee,
Albert Holman, A. J . Willbarger,
·Stanley Holter; dairy judging, Bob
Lee, Albert Holman and Stanley
Holter, Gene Yost, sponsor ; meat
judging, Bruce Swift, B. K. Armes,
Eber's Gulf Station, sponsor;
general livestock, John Imboden,
Pomeroy Cement Block, sponsor.
Ed Hupp and Ted Reed, Jr.; were
given honorary chapter farmer
plaques for their contributions to the
chapter and the community.

•

; POMEROY - Atty. Patrick H.
O'Brien has been unanimously endorsed to fill the county court
judgeship vacated by Charles
Knight who resigned. His ap•
pomtment was approved by the
Meigs County Republican Executive
Committee here last week .
; The endorsement has been forwarded to the office of Ohio Governor James A. RHodes.
: The committee also endorsed the
~andidacy of Bill Keslar of
Muskingum County for the loth
District Republican State ComJbitteeman.
; Following the business session, all

Daniel Emmett Hughes

38

oz.

99~

Limit 1 Per customer
Good Only at Powell's

MACARONI
3 LB.

BOX.

$1,1''

Limit I Per Customer
GOOd Only at Powell's
Offer
Aprll26,1910

''

�A-ti-The .sunaay 'l'unes-Sentinel, Sunday, April~. 1980

Brown chosen CHEAO president
ATHENS- Dr. Harold D. Brown,
Pomeroy , has been elected
president of the Consortiwn for
Health Education in Appalachia
Ohio (CHEAO). •
Other officers are Hugh Kirkel,
Gallipolis, vice president; Dr. Sue
Foster, Athens, treasurer and Dr.
Carl D. Chambers, executive director of CHE AO, was named
secretary.
New trustees elected were James
L. Burrier, a retired school administrator from Zanesville; Dr.
Paul Hayes, president of Rio Grande
College; James R. Myers, district
director of the Ohio Division of Mental Health, Athens ; Wayne L .
Foster, Ohio Hospital Insurance
Company; Kenneth Malochiodi, administrator of the Selby General
Hospital in Marietta; and Dr.
Samuel .Goldman was elected to
return to the board .
Trustees re-elected to the board
were Dr. Harold D. Brown,
Pomeroy; Rosemary Christie, Guernsey County Health Department;
Raymond Craig, Belpre; Dr. Sue
Foster, superintendent of the Athens
Mental Health Center; Einon Plummer, director of .the Ohio Valley

•

AWARD WINNERS- Pictured are some of the
numerous winners at the annual Southern High School
awards dinner held Wednesday by the Future Farmers
of America. They are, front, I tor, Albert Holman, Star

Health Services Foundation; Enos
Singer, director of the Washington
County Home Nursing Service; and
Katherine Whinnery, a nutritionist
with the ·Cadiz Cooperative Extension Office.
·
Dr. Chambers, executive director
of CHEAO, Preseoted a report,

" CHEAO ... Yesterday Through

Tomorrow."
In his report, Dr. Chambers
enumerated the many accomplishments achieved by CHEAO
under Appalachian Regional Cornmission funding during the past five
years.

·.

~SUP~ERMARKfi

WALLP

3rd Ave.,allth St.

525· 7090 ,
Hunllngton,
(Across from Civic Center)
Also No.1 Plaza East Shopping Center. Charleston, w. va.

.6 0%

~~~~ UpJo

. 30,000 Rolls In_ $Dck
Pr~Pasted, Fabric Backad VInyl, Murals t .• .hng Pa-

Reg.

sale Price

'28"
'14.
'59" S/1 •39"
'21• S/1

.ODDS&amp; ENOS

Chapter Fanner; Pat Johnson, cooperatives; back, I to
r, Stanley Holter, scholarship; Bob Lee, leadership and
scholarship and David Salmons, scholarship.

--•1•

.

._..

Awards highlight FF A fete
RACINE -

.

•'

Numerous awards
were presented at the amual
banquet of the Southern High School
Future Fanners of America held
last Wednesday night.
Approximately 165 members and
guests attended the event with Bill
Morris giving the invocation.
Officers, Bob Lee, president;
Albert Holman, vice president;
Stanley Holter, treasurer; Phillip
Kincaid, secretary; Bill Morris, sentinel; David Lawson, reporter and
Deanna White, student advisor,
presented the opening ceremonies.
Bob Lee introduced guests and
sponsors and Albert Holman introduced the guest speaker, Tim
Wheatly, Wellston, state sectional
vice president .
Receipients of awards and sponsors include: Star Greenhand,
Phillip Kincaid, Farmers Bank and
Savings Co.; Albert Holman, Star
, Chapter Farmer, Racine Home
National Bank; Pat Johnson,
cooperatives, Pomeroy National
Bank; leadership, BOb Lee, Swisher
Implement; scholarship, Bob Lee,

David Salmons, Stanley Holter,
Racine Planing Mill; Valley Lumber, Roy Profitt; dairy production,
Bob Lee, Dan Smith Auction Service; A. J. Wellbarger, beef production, Star Supply ; Phillip Kincaid,
poultry production, Modem Supply;
Bob Lee, soil and water
management, Village Cut Rate;
Deanna White, crop production,
John Hill, Don Hill, . David Hill,
Larry O'Brien ; Albert Holman,
s teer production , Vanover
Trucking; Steve Riffle, placement in
agricultural production, J . D.
Drilling; Keith Black, outdoor
recreation, Larry's Grocery; Keith
Black, fish and wildlife, Sam Cummins; Albert Holman, salesmanship, Wagner's Hardware ; Bill
Morris, electrification, Carpenter's
Pennzoil; Stanley Holter, swine
production, Effie Pickens; Randy
Collins, agricultural processing; G.
and J. Auto Parts; Robert Kincaid,
public speaking, Sugar Run Mill ;
Bob Lee, home improvement, Twin
City Machine Shop.
Judging teams recognized were:

Gallipolis Court

'.

, GALL! POUS - Thirteen cases
were terminated in Gallipolis
Municipal Court Friday.
: Sylvia Carman, address unknown,
was found guilty to a charge of
telephone harassment and was fined
'$000 plus a six month sentence (both
suspended ).
Keith A. Nibert, 18, Bidwell,
pleaded guilty to a fine of $50 pi us a
six month sentence, all but two days
suspended.
Forfeiting bond on charges of
operated overloaded vehicles were
Plarles Caldwell, 22, Northup,
~124. ~ ; and, Steven D. James, 22,
Gallipolis, $76.80.
' Merele J. Howard, 38, Bidwell,
'was found not guilty to a charge of
failure to obey a traffic control
device.
: Found not guilty to a charge of
;disorderly conduct was Vaughn

Taylor, 19, Bidwell.
Randy Pearson, no address listed,
forfeited $35 on a charge of disor·
derly cohduct.
Fined $65 on a charge of t'ictitious
registration was David B. Smith, 21,
Gallipolis.
Robert Bradbury, 33, Gallipolis,
forfeited $30 on a charge of failure to
obey a traffic control device.
Waiving $35 on a charge of failure
to transfer registration was Gary R.
Swain, 21, Gallipolis.
Robert Sommerville,
20 ,
Gallipolis, forfeited $30 on a charge
of failure to obey a traffic control
, device.
Forfeiting bond on charges of excessive speed were Marvin
Ferguson, 20, Crown City, $25; and,
Vickie L. Brannon, 25, Crown City,

$27.

OFFICERS WOUNDED

Pettey was a graduate of Kyger
Creek High School where he played
football under the late Jim White.
He was a member of the Reed·
sville United Methodist Church and
had been employed with the
Monongahela Power Co. for the past
ll years.
He is survived by his parents who
still reside at Shannon, Miss. ; his
wife, Sybil Bookman Pettey; two
sons, Clifford and Michael, both at
horne; a brother , Joseph of
Buchanan, W. Va.; a sister, Rachael
Pettey of Shannon and a grandmother, Eula Pettey of Shannon.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m . Monday at the White Furleral
Home in Coolville with the Rev, John
Douglas,officiating. Burial will be in
the Baptist Cemetery at Torch.
Friends may call at the funeral
home anytime after noon Sunday.

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IN RICHEST VINYL

-"•'l:JSia•'·''-'C,I$1(11' I l' •• 3"·''-·', r&gt;\Jt ' (.
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DERIFIELD
JEWELRY
Across from Theater

Get the

the

MARION, Ohio (AP) - Two
Marion County sheriff's deputies
were reported in fair condition
Saturday recovering from shotgun
wounds to their heads and ann8.
S'gt. Paul T. Bailey, 31, and Deputy
Steve Pennington, 25, were allegedly
shot by Murray D. Harriman of
Marion County while they were
using tear gas to force him out of his
house.

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dependent researchers asked them to
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long, but goes on extra smooth, hides
extra well and cleans up extra fast in
just soap and water.

OVElCO~T.

'Red and white sa mples were weather~ (or lwo years.

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The .

d'L~~Shoe

•

t

. 300 Second Ave.

Cafe
•

Lafayette Mall
Gallipolis, 0.

Mon.-Sat 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SEOOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE lHROUGH SATURDAY, .APRIL 26, 1980

312 Sixth Street

On Sale
$1095
REGULAR 14.95
1

Point Pleasant ·

675· 1 160
Store Hours: Monday-Friday 8 a.m. To 5 P·f!l·· Saturday 8 a.m . To 12 noon
(

. (

GALLIPOLIS- Clarence Wyman
Rutt, 76, a resident of Rt. 2, Patriot
(Cadmus community) died at 1:25
a.m . Saturday in Holzer Medical !
Center.
Mr. Rutt had been in failing health
the past 10 years.
He was a retired state employee
and former school bus driver and
custodian in the Cadmus school
system.
Mr. Rutt was born April23, 1903, in
Cadmus, son of the late William ,
Henry and Stella Uoyd Rutt.
He married Mildred Ross on Sepl
17, 1927, in Oak Hill. She survives,
along with one son: James D. Rutt,
Rt. 2, Patriot; one sister : Mrs.
(Bertina)
Smeltzer,
Melvin
Gallipolis; two grandchildren and
one great-grandchild. Two brothers
preceded him in death.
Funeral services will be held 2
p.m. Monday at the Willis Funeral
Home with Rev. James Rainey officiating. Burial will follow in Olive
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m . Sunday.
Nephews will serve as
pallbearers.

Legar heath group
POMEROY - Pomeroy Fire
Chlef Charles Legar was named new
president of the Area Volunteer Fire
and Emergency Association which
met recently at the Pomeroy Fire
. Department Station.
Chlef Legar is a past vice
prelsdent of the association. Carl
Lee, a trustee and active member of
the Bashan Volunbter Fire Department was named vice president, and
Helen 'Newland of the Orang~ Township Volunteer Fire Department and
the Tuppers Plains Emergency
Medical Service, was named '

CUBED

SUPERIOR FRANKIES

WI EN ERS........... ~2•0:

••

SUPERIOR
USDA CHOICE

ARM ROASt ........!!.~ 1

SLICED

39

BACON.~~.~.

$ l9

USDA CHOICE

CHUCK STEAK ......L!·•••1
USDA CHOICE
$169
CHUCK ROASI .....L!·•••

U. S. NO. 1 WHITE

POTATOES ......·.. : .~:·
0

••

$
159
MILK......... :~T~C····

VALLEY BELL · .

2%

$} 19

BORDEN'S

IVORY................!~~~ .. .

BUTTERMILK....~.~. 7

SHOWBOAT

BORDEN'S ELSIE

LIQUID DETERGENT

.

14.5

oz. CANS

4 $1

PORK &amp;BEANS.... /
CO~NTRY

TIME

CRIS(:O

LEMONADE
3lOZ. '
10 QUART SIZE

$179
·

Limit 1 Per customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer EK
' 26. 1980

•

CAN

,$19,9,

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
26, 1980

.

$1 09
ELBO

KRAfT

GRAPE JELLY
'

3 LB.

~ GIL

ICE CREAM..............

secretary~treasurer.

During the meeting presided over
by Bob E . By~r. MiddlepOrt,
outgoing president, the group
discussed plans for the future of the
organization and upcoming
programs. There were two training
films shown. One was presented by
the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources through the Shade River
Fire District and was in regard to
the use and understandillj{ of heavy
equipment and support pen10nnel on
forest fires while the secv.:d dealt
with fire scene search and rescue .

$
29
STEAK......~~.

BUCKET

P~ttey.

GOP endorses O'Brien
.

Store Hours:

COOLVILLE- Ronald C. Pettey,
32, Route 1, Coolville, was electrocuted In an accident near Barlow
Friday morning while at work as a
lineman for the Monongahela Power
Co.
He was born at Shannon, Miss., a
son of George C. and Janell Lawhon

17 Second Ave. Gallipolis

loeal Republican candidates presented their views for the June
Primary.

MIDDLEf!ORT - Daniel Emmett
Hughes, 75, 580 Market St., McAr·
thur, formerly of Middleport, died
Friday at the O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital in Athens.
He was born Sept. 6, 1904 at Oak
Hill, a son of the late Charles and
Cathryn Morgan Hughes.
Mr. Hughes was a retired heavy
equipment operator. He was a
member of the Middleport Church of
Christ.
Surviving are his second wife,
Evelyn Hughes, and a cousin, Dr.
Paul Washburn, J ackson. He was
preceded in death by his parents, his
first wife, Alma Young Hughes; a
daughter, Betty J ones; three
brothers, Emerson, Evan and
Morgan and a sister, Anna Jane
Hughes . .
Funeral services. will be held at 1
p.m . Tuesday at the RawlingsCoats-Blower Funeral Home with
Mr. Ronald Moyer officiating.
Burial will be in the Reedsville
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the J ames
Blower Funeral Home in McArthur
after 2 p.m. Sunday and at the
Rawlings-Coats-Blower
Funeral
Home in Middleport after 2 p,m, on
Monday.

Ronald C. Pettey

parliamentary procedure, third in
District 17, Todd Mugrage, David
Salmons, Bob Lee, Albert Holman,
Deanna White, Stanley Holter,
Phillip Kincaid, A. J . Willbarger,
Tom Cummins, sponsored by Landmark; soil judging, urban teams,
third in district 17; rural, first in
county and fourth in district, sponsored by Jackson Production Credit,
David Lawson, Robert Kincaid, Phil
Kincaid, Todd Mugrage, Bob Lee,
Albert Holman, A. J . Willbarger,
·Stanley Holter; dairy judging, Bob
Lee, Albert Holman and Stanley
Holter, Gene Yost, sponsor ; meat
judging, Bruce Swift, B. K. Armes,
Eber's Gulf Station, sponsor;
general livestock, John Imboden,
Pomeroy Cement Block, sponsor.
Ed Hupp and Ted Reed, Jr.; were
given honorary chapter farmer
plaques for their contributions to the
chapter and the community.

•

; POMEROY - Atty. Patrick H.
O'Brien has been unanimously endorsed to fill the county court
judgeship vacated by Charles
Knight who resigned. His ap•
pomtment was approved by the
Meigs County Republican Executive
Committee here last week .
; The endorsement has been forwarded to the office of Ohio Governor James A. RHodes.
: The committee also endorsed the
~andidacy of Bill Keslar of
Muskingum County for the loth
District Republican State ComJbitteeman.
; Following the business session, all

Daniel Emmett Hughes

38

oz.

99~

Limit 1 Per customer
Good Only at Powell's

MACARONI
3 LB.

BOX.

$1,1''

Limit I Per Customer
GOOd Only at Powell's
Offer
Aprll26,1910

''

�A~The sw.may Times-Sentinel, Sllnday, April W,

r-;:...
I

·I

I

II

.I

i

'

:I
•'
'I

·'

I Southern sponsors nutrition workshop

----------- ·-.._...._.-~

I

f

Of the Bend

I

By Bob Hoeflich

I

1980

Salisbury Elementary School
students. will be finding out that
"there's no business like show
business" over the next few weeks.
Principal Jolm Lisle is off and running again to produce the school's
an nual musical, "Minstrel
Showboat." Jolm has selected a lot
rl. songs - especially some great
"oldies" - that you're gonna like for
this year's show. There will be the
traditional clown end men, dance
lines, a backup choral group and a
fuU orchestra will be accompanying
this year's production.
Show dates have been set for May
21 and 22 at 8 p.m. You'll be hearing
more about the musical as lime
marches on.
Syracuse resident, Ida Burns,
whom I am sure many of you will
remember from her days of work at
the former Stark Pharmacy, later
Nelson's, fell recently. After a
hospitalization period she is now at
the Pomeroy Health Care Center.
She's only expecting to be there on a
temporary basis. Ida's daughter,
Nancy Burns VpnMeter is the supervisor of nurses at the center.
Area girls, freshmen through
seniors, are invited to attend an open
house type thing at Veterans
Memorial Hospital today if they are
interested in becoming a part of the
hospital's successful teen group, the
Candystripers.
The get acquainted session will be
from 2 to 4 and girls need not attend
for the entire two hours. It's just
kind of a drop in event. Parents and
guardians of interested girls are also
invited.
Garrett Christy, a teacher in Tuppers Plains for several years and a
former bus driver, would like to hear
tromMeigs friends.
Garrett and his wile for a nwnher
of years entertained vocally at
homecomings and revivals at a
nwnher of Meigs CoWlty churches.
He has been ill recently. Friends
may send cards to him at 2353 Nedra
St., Grove City, Ohio 43123.
Parents of Meigs High juniors and

I
II

seniors who are interested in prom
night activities - and they should be
- are asked ot meet with Mrs.
Dorothy Olivet, a junior class sponsor, at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the
school library.
Parents who cannot be there, but
who are concerQed should call 992·
2570 after school hours.
Lewis Sauer, Betty Jo Roush
Allensworth, Martha Robson Cunningham and Virginia Mayes Covert
- all members of the graduating
class of 1940 !!!_Middleport High
School are trying to get it all
together for a fantastic 4{) year
reWJion of the class . in Middleport
the weekend of May 24.
,
They've lost five class members.
They are George Taylor, Guy Suter,
Bill Richman, Annabelle Russell
and Easter Ewing Davis. If any of
you readers can help find the lost
members, please contact Sauer in
Middleport or Betty J o Allensworth
at 164 Hayes Road, Groveport, Ohio
43125.

The class will have a special '40
room at the school on the night of the
reunion, May 24 and class members
are being asked to provide photos
and memorabilia for the attraction.
These things are also to be sent to
Mrs. Allensworth. Class members
will wrap up the weekend gettogether with a breakfast on SWlday,
May 25, at the Holiday Inn near
Gallipolis.
With the work that Lewis, Betty
Jo, Martha and Virginia have put into the planning, the reunion should
be one of those moments to remember.
Greg Becker was named to the
Dean's list for the winter Quarter of
Muskingwn Area Technical College.
Greg's name was left out of the
original listing. A student must at·
tain a minimwn grade point average
of 3.fi for the quarter. Greg is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Don Becker, S. Fifth
Ave., Middleport.
The wondetful miracle of spring
has happened. If you don't believe it,
~ check qut those potholes. Keep
smiling.

Kindergarten
•
•
registration
RACINE
Kindergarten
registration in the Southern Local
School District will be held Monday
from 8 a.m. to 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. to 3
p.m. in the kindergarten room, ne.x;t
to the Southern Junior High School.
Parents are .to bring a record of
immunization, proof of a skin test
within the last six months and the
birth certificate. A child must be
five years old by Sept. 30 for entrance into kindergarten. The Ohio
Revised Code requires that a child
entering public schools must have
the DPT series, booster, the polio
series and booster, measles and
rubella vaccine and a recent skin
test. There will he no regular kindergarten classes tomorrow.

program for children in schools and
an outgrowth of Public Law 95-166,
National School Lunch Act and Child · child care Institutions.
Nutrition Amendments, which
Ms.
Marge Hagerm(ln,
established a nutrition education Nutritionist for Tri.COWJty Community Action Agency Head Start
and Day Care Programs conducted
a food experience/demonstration in
which participants of the workshop
made a salad and whole wheat rolls.
Nutritious snacks were furnished
each night by the NET Program,
Participating in the work:shop
from Southern Local School District

Handicap
workshop
planned

GAlLIPOLIS - A workshop entitled "Hiring the .Hidden Handicapped" will he held at the
Gallipolis Developmental Center's
Activity Center fr(JIJ 9 a.m. to 4:30
p.m. April24.
Topics and stafffor the session include: "A Psychiatrist Looks At The
Medical- Vocational Restrictions Of
·The Major Forms Of Mental
Illness," Bernard Kulm, M.D.,
Medical Director, Mental Health
Services, Riverside llf~thodlst
Hospital; "A Psychologist Looks At
The Medical - Vocational Restrictions of Mental Retardation and
Developmental
Disabilities,"
Christopher Sanders, Psychological
Consultant, Colwnbus Developmental Ce11ter, (Member of the
Departments's Human Rights For
The Hanclapped Team.
"Pre-Vocational Services In The
Mental Health Center Setting," F.
Patrick Cronin, Division Of Mental
Health Coordinator of Adult
Vocational Programs And Adult
Basic Education; "Section 504- Its
Implications - For Employment
and Hiring The Hidden Handlcal?ped
- Its ,Program and Services,"
George Meyers, Project Coordinator, Hiring The Hidden Handicapped; "Deinstitutionallzation
and Its Impact On The Mentally
Handicapped Individual and Upon
Community Resources," JBIDe:!
Williams, Administrative Assistant
To The Deputy Commissioner For
Mental Health Program Services
and " Where The Jobs Will Be In The
'80s,' ' Willism DeVenzio, Colwnbus
District Labor Market Analyst, Ohio
Bureau Of Employment Services..
There is no registration fee for this
workshop. All reservations should
be sent or telephoned to Gwen ,
Fisher, Coordinator, Gallipolis
Developmental Center, Gallipolis.

were: Connie Gilkey, Joyce Thoren,
Paula Cochran, Sandra Boothe, Constance Enslen, Patti Struble, Jean
Alkire, SuzaMe Wolfe, Donna
Norris, Mickey Hoback, Shirley
Sayre, William Downie, Edna Price,
Unda Fisher, Pam Holcomb, Joyce
Ritchie, Marianna McGuire, Janice
Deem and VIcki Hill.
Participants 'fi'OOl Meigs Local
School District were Lynn Lovdal
and Sharon Birch and Mary Price
from Eastern Local School District.

Buy a
dozen donuts,

getthe '

holes
hee!.
On Safurday &amp; Sunday, March 19th and
Donna Fisher, halfway done

20th at Mister Donut, you'll get a dozen
fresh donut holes free when you buy a
dozen donuts. A tasty deal. From ....,._,-,
Mister Donut.

Creating those cornrows

2322 Jackson Ave.
P.oiiifPieaslnf ..........~.~~
OPEN

24
HOURS!

Tips on becoming a '1 0 '.

mister~
-~

Doru..tt: • •

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®hio Valley Bank

Assumes
presidency
CHESTER -

RACINE - The Southern Local
School District, in conjWJction with
Ohio University, presented a
Nutrition Education Wofl&lt;shop Monday and Wednesday ev~nings (April
7-9) at Southern High School here.
The workshop was coordinated by
Joyce Thoren, Southern Local
School District School Nurse, and
Carol Giesecke, Coordinator of the
Nutrition Education and Training
(NET) Program at Ohio University,
Athens.
Following opening remarks by
Joyce Thoren, Carol Giesecke
presented basic nutrition information to the participants.
William R. Haviland of Ohio
University's College of Osteopathic
Medicine gave an interesting and informative talk on "Nutrition and
Physical Fitness."
Assisting Ms. Giesecke in the Activity Centers were Ms. Jackie
Crow, Educational Media Specialist
at the Ohio University College of
Education; Ms. Hallie Powell, NET
Program Assistant ; and Ms. Patti
Wallbrown, Secretary for the Ohio
University NET Program.
Learning center activities in·
eluded evaluation of food labeling,
nutrition games, films on nutrition
whieh are available for loa'n, and a
review of nutrition curriculum
materials. Each particpant was able
to purchase $25 worth of nutrition
education materials from those
reviewed at the workshop.
The cost of the materials was
covered by funding from the Ohio
University NET Program which is

WAIM UP TO THESE PRICES
IEFOIE THE PIICE IICIEASEI
The ALL N6W

Pat Clifford was

elected president of the Shade River

24' FLORIDIAN I

Jaycees and William Osborne was
elected executive vice president at a
recent meeting.
other officers elected were Danny
Grueser, administrative vice
president, Alan Holter, programming vice president, Tim Baum,
secretary, and Pat Morrissey,

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Carpeted Petlo, 1~ · Walk·Around,
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Pool.

Elected to serve as directors of th,e ·
programming and administrative
pr.ograms were Steve Nelson,
William Buckley, Ed Holter and
Blair Windon.
The new officers will be sworn in
at the awards banquet to be held at
. the Meigs Inn on May 3, at 6:30p.m.
Any young man .between the ages
r1 18 and 35 wishing to join the
Jaycees may contact any member
or attend any meeting. They met on
the fourth Tuesday of each month.

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The a·c1u(ll return 1o -; ,~vt::.rors on rreasurV BillS. is higher than the.

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'79 GRAND·PRIX'S

APRIL 23 '

ANNUAL RATE

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13.549% THRU WED.,

WE lAVE POOLS SYAIIIIC AI '939'' IIITAWI
CALL IIOWI Fill FIE£ SlOP AT- SEIVJCE

Christy Lash, Pomeroy, .sports her '10'

PLUS I

GALLIPOUS- Are you a 10?
Well, even if you consider yourseU
a good, solid B (Cheryl Ladd in her
recent Barbara Walters interview
only rated herseU an 8 - so think
before you commit yourseU! ),
perbapB the new~ In high fashionthe "10" Bo Derek hairstyle - can
send rou speeding toward a 10, and,
If the movie is to be beUeved, toward
instant goddess status.
However, the 10 hair fashion - officially called "~wing" ( (I'
reverse French braiding, I.e. tight
braiding done on the scalp as opposed to the common, looser version
that is usually connected with the
,word "braid") - Is more than just
beads and braids and spangles. It
amoWJts to a considerable length of
time- and quite a swn of money!
"The balrstyle isn't all that practical,'' says one local hairdresser.
"It's "high fashion" - which really
means it's more of a fad thing- and
when people find out how long it
takes and how much it costs, well,
they usually find it prohibitive."
How much does It cost? According
to local sources, the cost generally
rW!S between ,150 and
and the
"Greenville Piedmont" (a South
Carolina newspaper) ~ to $450, cr
$25 to $30 per hour.
If that's not enough to curl your
cornrows, the process takes (again,
according to local sources) from
three and a half to six hours.
And, over and a.bove the cost of the
service and the time involved, Is also
the little matter of what to use as .
decoration. Most 10 dos sport
brightly-colored !Jeads and feathers,
and some are adorned by gold and
sUver cord woven among the strands. Depending on the salon you
choose, the beads may or may not be
included in the $50-$200 (S450?) fee.
One girl reports she spent around $20
to purchase beads (which, by the
way, have to be lightweight) and
feathers.

noo.

..

.

•

·'

More Interest On Your
PASSBOOK SAVINGS

• HEAVY·om EXT~UDED Alllilllll COIST.

treasurer.

DRIVER NEGLECT
NEW YORK (AP) _ The
, automatic transmission is the most
' neglected car component, according

ALUMIIUM IITIUDit

B-1-The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, April W, 1980

Each Depositor Insured Up To
$100,000 By The FDIC; An
Agency of the Fed. Gov't

~

....

;. .· "
! I"

What are some of the advantages?
"The attention Is Wlbellevable! "
reports one cornrow-ee .
"Everywhere I go, people stop me
and ask questions - 'Does it hurt?'
'How long does lt last?' 'Do you think
you're a 10?'- lt's fantastic!"
If you are still determined to compete with Bo, here are some tips on
10 hair care offered by AP
Newsfeatures:
-Have a professional salon do the
styling for a properly plaited and
long-lasting effect (It lasts, on the
average, about three-six weeks,
depending on the tightness of the
cornrows and the length of the hair).
- Frequent shampooing can
loosen cornrows. To cleanse hair,
try diluting one part shampoo to four
parts water and pouring over hair,
then rinsing - or try shampooing
with a water pit.

- Avoid dyed feathers; the colors
may run when you shower, shampoo
or swim.
- Tight braids shouldn't harm
hair if worn only a week or so
because they relax. H hair is
damaged - dry, brittle, bleached try looser cornrows.
Do not keep braids in indefinitely - they can nann natr; as a
precaution, use hair oil to lubricate
hair and scalp.
- At night, pin up hair ends,
beads included. Cover with a hair

net.
- Slip beads and feathers out of
plaits to change colors or to alter the
total look.
- On the beach, be careful of the
SWI rays, for they may burn your
sensitive, exposed scalp. Wear a
hat.
- After letting the hair down,
give it a deep moisturizing conditioner treatment. Hair tends to

lose elastiCltY wnen t1ght1y cornrowed.
- If you have thin hair, avoid the
10 look. Braids need lots of hair to
look right.
Incidentslly, the term " bigh
fashion" mentioned frequently
thr~ut this article means, according to a booklet entitled
"Fashions ArOWld the World" by Sir
Robert Clegg, noted high fashion
hair stylist, ''new, exciting and everchanging. High fashion motivates
the person who is consistantly
looking for something new.....Many
styles originate because they are
worn by noied personalities...Jackie
Onallsis, Janis Joplin, Jane Fonda
(or, in this case, Bo Derek) ... High
fashion is not for everyone."
In an informal phone survey conducted in the area, most salons
reported they had, as yet, had few oc
no calls for the 10 style. Many,
however, observed they were
capable of doing it, if so requested.
Donna Fisher, Gallipolis, who
recently had her mediwn-length
hair cornrowed especially for the article, reports, "Well, it was different. My hair is lots of varied
lengths, so it didn't work too well.
After I slept on it just one night, It
was a disaster, so I just took it out
the next day, If my hair had been r ll
one uniform length, I think it would
have worked well. The girl who
styled it did a fantastic job."
How did Donna feel about the hairdo overall?
"Well, let's just say I went to
Parkersburg the same day and I
sure got some strange looks!" she
smiled.
Bo, here she comes! ·
(The photos and booklet by Sir
Robert Clegg were provided by Paul
~h of Across the Street, who, with
bis staff, recently returned from the
New York International Hair Show
where they obtained the material.) '

"

-·- ~----------~----------------------~
...

ALSO I

A NEW 21Jz YEAR CERTIFICATE
.APRIL
RATE -_,

•·•

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-~ -

$5799

*FACTORY AIR
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* 'BUCKET SEATS
RAilYE WHEELS
7,000 to 12,000 MILES

*
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11.75 ·= 12.65

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By Sallyanne Holtz

ANNUAL RATE
ANNUAL vi'Ei.o· ·
P~ying an intereit rate relat.;;· to tile averegi 2'h v••r ti~Hi· 0 ;

tre1sury ucurltlts. Minimum lkpolit $500.00. Interest must remit~
on deposit • full y..r to etrn annutl yield. Sullsllnlilllnteresl pent It• ·
, u.pon Hrly wlthdrtwol.
.

tMinlmum deposit S5.00. Interest ,;;·,1st
relaln on deposit • fUll Ytlr to earn an·
1111111 yltlel.

"

• •

Times-Sentinel staff writer

�A~The sw.may Times-Sentinel, Sllnday, April W,

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I Southern sponsors nutrition workshop

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f

Of the Bend

I

By Bob Hoeflich

I

1980

Salisbury Elementary School
students. will be finding out that
"there's no business like show
business" over the next few weeks.
Principal Jolm Lisle is off and running again to produce the school's
an nual musical, "Minstrel
Showboat." Jolm has selected a lot
rl. songs - especially some great
"oldies" - that you're gonna like for
this year's show. There will be the
traditional clown end men, dance
lines, a backup choral group and a
fuU orchestra will be accompanying
this year's production.
Show dates have been set for May
21 and 22 at 8 p.m. You'll be hearing
more about the musical as lime
marches on.
Syracuse resident, Ida Burns,
whom I am sure many of you will
remember from her days of work at
the former Stark Pharmacy, later
Nelson's, fell recently. After a
hospitalization period she is now at
the Pomeroy Health Care Center.
She's only expecting to be there on a
temporary basis. Ida's daughter,
Nancy Burns VpnMeter is the supervisor of nurses at the center.
Area girls, freshmen through
seniors, are invited to attend an open
house type thing at Veterans
Memorial Hospital today if they are
interested in becoming a part of the
hospital's successful teen group, the
Candystripers.
The get acquainted session will be
from 2 to 4 and girls need not attend
for the entire two hours. It's just
kind of a drop in event. Parents and
guardians of interested girls are also
invited.
Garrett Christy, a teacher in Tuppers Plains for several years and a
former bus driver, would like to hear
tromMeigs friends.
Garrett and his wile for a nwnher
of years entertained vocally at
homecomings and revivals at a
nwnher of Meigs CoWlty churches.
He has been ill recently. Friends
may send cards to him at 2353 Nedra
St., Grove City, Ohio 43123.
Parents of Meigs High juniors and

I
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seniors who are interested in prom
night activities - and they should be
- are asked ot meet with Mrs.
Dorothy Olivet, a junior class sponsor, at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the
school library.
Parents who cannot be there, but
who are concerQed should call 992·
2570 after school hours.
Lewis Sauer, Betty Jo Roush
Allensworth, Martha Robson Cunningham and Virginia Mayes Covert
- all members of the graduating
class of 1940 !!!_Middleport High
School are trying to get it all
together for a fantastic 4{) year
reWJion of the class . in Middleport
the weekend of May 24.
,
They've lost five class members.
They are George Taylor, Guy Suter,
Bill Richman, Annabelle Russell
and Easter Ewing Davis. If any of
you readers can help find the lost
members, please contact Sauer in
Middleport or Betty J o Allensworth
at 164 Hayes Road, Groveport, Ohio
43125.

The class will have a special '40
room at the school on the night of the
reunion, May 24 and class members
are being asked to provide photos
and memorabilia for the attraction.
These things are also to be sent to
Mrs. Allensworth. Class members
will wrap up the weekend gettogether with a breakfast on SWlday,
May 25, at the Holiday Inn near
Gallipolis.
With the work that Lewis, Betty
Jo, Martha and Virginia have put into the planning, the reunion should
be one of those moments to remember.
Greg Becker was named to the
Dean's list for the winter Quarter of
Muskingwn Area Technical College.
Greg's name was left out of the
original listing. A student must at·
tain a minimwn grade point average
of 3.fi for the quarter. Greg is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Don Becker, S. Fifth
Ave., Middleport.
The wondetful miracle of spring
has happened. If you don't believe it,
~ check qut those potholes. Keep
smiling.

Kindergarten
•
•
registration
RACINE
Kindergarten
registration in the Southern Local
School District will be held Monday
from 8 a.m. to 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. to 3
p.m. in the kindergarten room, ne.x;t
to the Southern Junior High School.
Parents are .to bring a record of
immunization, proof of a skin test
within the last six months and the
birth certificate. A child must be
five years old by Sept. 30 for entrance into kindergarten. The Ohio
Revised Code requires that a child
entering public schools must have
the DPT series, booster, the polio
series and booster, measles and
rubella vaccine and a recent skin
test. There will he no regular kindergarten classes tomorrow.

program for children in schools and
an outgrowth of Public Law 95-166,
National School Lunch Act and Child · child care Institutions.
Nutrition Amendments, which
Ms.
Marge Hagerm(ln,
established a nutrition education Nutritionist for Tri.COWJty Community Action Agency Head Start
and Day Care Programs conducted
a food experience/demonstration in
which participants of the workshop
made a salad and whole wheat rolls.
Nutritious snacks were furnished
each night by the NET Program,
Participating in the work:shop
from Southern Local School District

Handicap
workshop
planned

GAlLIPOLIS - A workshop entitled "Hiring the .Hidden Handicapped" will he held at the
Gallipolis Developmental Center's
Activity Center fr(JIJ 9 a.m. to 4:30
p.m. April24.
Topics and stafffor the session include: "A Psychiatrist Looks At The
Medical- Vocational Restrictions Of
·The Major Forms Of Mental
Illness," Bernard Kulm, M.D.,
Medical Director, Mental Health
Services, Riverside llf~thodlst
Hospital; "A Psychologist Looks At
The Medical - Vocational Restrictions of Mental Retardation and
Developmental
Disabilities,"
Christopher Sanders, Psychological
Consultant, Colwnbus Developmental Ce11ter, (Member of the
Departments's Human Rights For
The Hanclapped Team.
"Pre-Vocational Services In The
Mental Health Center Setting," F.
Patrick Cronin, Division Of Mental
Health Coordinator of Adult
Vocational Programs And Adult
Basic Education; "Section 504- Its
Implications - For Employment
and Hiring The Hidden Handlcal?ped
- Its ,Program and Services,"
George Meyers, Project Coordinator, Hiring The Hidden Handicapped; "Deinstitutionallzation
and Its Impact On The Mentally
Handicapped Individual and Upon
Community Resources," JBIDe:!
Williams, Administrative Assistant
To The Deputy Commissioner For
Mental Health Program Services
and " Where The Jobs Will Be In The
'80s,' ' Willism DeVenzio, Colwnbus
District Labor Market Analyst, Ohio
Bureau Of Employment Services..
There is no registration fee for this
workshop. All reservations should
be sent or telephoned to Gwen ,
Fisher, Coordinator, Gallipolis
Developmental Center, Gallipolis.

were: Connie Gilkey, Joyce Thoren,
Paula Cochran, Sandra Boothe, Constance Enslen, Patti Struble, Jean
Alkire, SuzaMe Wolfe, Donna
Norris, Mickey Hoback, Shirley
Sayre, William Downie, Edna Price,
Unda Fisher, Pam Holcomb, Joyce
Ritchie, Marianna McGuire, Janice
Deem and VIcki Hill.
Participants 'fi'OOl Meigs Local
School District were Lynn Lovdal
and Sharon Birch and Mary Price
from Eastern Local School District.

Buy a
dozen donuts,

getthe '

holes
hee!.
On Safurday &amp; Sunday, March 19th and
Donna Fisher, halfway done

20th at Mister Donut, you'll get a dozen
fresh donut holes free when you buy a
dozen donuts. A tasty deal. From ....,._,-,
Mister Donut.

Creating those cornrows

2322 Jackson Ave.
P.oiiifPieaslnf ..........~.~~
OPEN

24
HOURS!

Tips on becoming a '1 0 '.

mister~
-~

Doru..tt: • •

@)~!!~f99!!!·

®hio Valley Bank

Assumes
presidency
CHESTER -

RACINE - The Southern Local
School District, in conjWJction with
Ohio University, presented a
Nutrition Education Wofl&lt;shop Monday and Wednesday ev~nings (April
7-9) at Southern High School here.
The workshop was coordinated by
Joyce Thoren, Southern Local
School District School Nurse, and
Carol Giesecke, Coordinator of the
Nutrition Education and Training
(NET) Program at Ohio University,
Athens.
Following opening remarks by
Joyce Thoren, Carol Giesecke
presented basic nutrition information to the participants.
William R. Haviland of Ohio
University's College of Osteopathic
Medicine gave an interesting and informative talk on "Nutrition and
Physical Fitness."
Assisting Ms. Giesecke in the Activity Centers were Ms. Jackie
Crow, Educational Media Specialist
at the Ohio University College of
Education; Ms. Hallie Powell, NET
Program Assistant ; and Ms. Patti
Wallbrown, Secretary for the Ohio
University NET Program.
Learning center activities in·
eluded evaluation of food labeling,
nutrition games, films on nutrition
whieh are available for loa'n, and a
review of nutrition curriculum
materials. Each particpant was able
to purchase $25 worth of nutrition
education materials from those
reviewed at the workshop.
The cost of the materials was
covered by funding from the Ohio
University NET Program which is

WAIM UP TO THESE PRICES
IEFOIE THE PIICE IICIEASEI
The ALL N6W

Pat Clifford was

elected president of the Shade River

24' FLORIDIAN I

Jaycees and William Osborne was
elected executive vice president at a
recent meeting.
other officers elected were Danny
Grueser, administrative vice
president, Alan Holter, programming vice president, Tim Baum,
secretary, and Pat Morrissey,

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Elected to serve as directors of th,e ·
programming and administrative
pr.ograms were Steve Nelson,
William Buckley, Ed Holter and
Blair Windon.
The new officers will be sworn in
at the awards banquet to be held at
. the Meigs Inn on May 3, at 6:30p.m.
Any young man .between the ages
r1 18 and 35 wishing to join the
Jaycees may contact any member
or attend any meeting. They met on
the fourth Tuesday of each month.

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5.25=5.46~
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The a·c1u(ll return 1o -; ,~vt::.rors on rreasurV BillS. is higher than the.

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discount rate offered. Federal regulations require a substantial In·
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lerest penalty for ~remalure withdrawal of certificate funds.

5413118 TYLER ltD. CHAS., W.VA.

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Now you can buy a car that looks like new
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WE lAVE POOLS SYAIIIIC AI '939'' IIITAWI
CALL IIOWI Fill FIE£ SlOP AT- SEIVJCE

Christy Lash, Pomeroy, .sports her '10'

PLUS I

GALLIPOUS- Are you a 10?
Well, even if you consider yourseU
a good, solid B (Cheryl Ladd in her
recent Barbara Walters interview
only rated herseU an 8 - so think
before you commit yourseU! ),
perbapB the new~ In high fashionthe "10" Bo Derek hairstyle - can
send rou speeding toward a 10, and,
If the movie is to be beUeved, toward
instant goddess status.
However, the 10 hair fashion - officially called "~wing" ( (I'
reverse French braiding, I.e. tight
braiding done on the scalp as opposed to the common, looser version
that is usually connected with the
,word "braid") - Is more than just
beads and braids and spangles. It
amoWJts to a considerable length of
time- and quite a swn of money!
"The balrstyle isn't all that practical,'' says one local hairdresser.
"It's "high fashion" - which really
means it's more of a fad thing- and
when people find out how long it
takes and how much it costs, well,
they usually find it prohibitive."
How much does It cost? According
to local sources, the cost generally
rW!S between ,150 and
and the
"Greenville Piedmont" (a South
Carolina newspaper) ~ to $450, cr
$25 to $30 per hour.
If that's not enough to curl your
cornrows, the process takes (again,
according to local sources) from
three and a half to six hours.
And, over and a.bove the cost of the
service and the time involved, Is also
the little matter of what to use as .
decoration. Most 10 dos sport
brightly-colored !Jeads and feathers,
and some are adorned by gold and
sUver cord woven among the strands. Depending on the salon you
choose, the beads may or may not be
included in the $50-$200 (S450?) fee.
One girl reports she spent around $20
to purchase beads (which, by the
way, have to be lightweight) and
feathers.

noo.

..

.

•

·'

More Interest On Your
PASSBOOK SAVINGS

• HEAVY·om EXT~UDED Alllilllll COIST.

treasurer.

DRIVER NEGLECT
NEW YORK (AP) _ The
, automatic transmission is the most
' neglected car component, according

ALUMIIUM IITIUDit

B-1-The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, April W, 1980

Each Depositor Insured Up To
$100,000 By The FDIC; An
Agency of the Fed. Gov't

~

....

;. .· "
! I"

What are some of the advantages?
"The attention Is Wlbellevable! "
reports one cornrow-ee .
"Everywhere I go, people stop me
and ask questions - 'Does it hurt?'
'How long does lt last?' 'Do you think
you're a 10?'- lt's fantastic!"
If you are still determined to compete with Bo, here are some tips on
10 hair care offered by AP
Newsfeatures:
-Have a professional salon do the
styling for a properly plaited and
long-lasting effect (It lasts, on the
average, about three-six weeks,
depending on the tightness of the
cornrows and the length of the hair).
- Frequent shampooing can
loosen cornrows. To cleanse hair,
try diluting one part shampoo to four
parts water and pouring over hair,
then rinsing - or try shampooing
with a water pit.

- Avoid dyed feathers; the colors
may run when you shower, shampoo
or swim.
- Tight braids shouldn't harm
hair if worn only a week or so
because they relax. H hair is
damaged - dry, brittle, bleached try looser cornrows.
Do not keep braids in indefinitely - they can nann natr; as a
precaution, use hair oil to lubricate
hair and scalp.
- At night, pin up hair ends,
beads included. Cover with a hair

net.
- Slip beads and feathers out of
plaits to change colors or to alter the
total look.
- On the beach, be careful of the
SWI rays, for they may burn your
sensitive, exposed scalp. Wear a
hat.
- After letting the hair down,
give it a deep moisturizing conditioner treatment. Hair tends to

lose elastiCltY wnen t1ght1y cornrowed.
- If you have thin hair, avoid the
10 look. Braids need lots of hair to
look right.
Incidentslly, the term " bigh
fashion" mentioned frequently
thr~ut this article means, according to a booklet entitled
"Fashions ArOWld the World" by Sir
Robert Clegg, noted high fashion
hair stylist, ''new, exciting and everchanging. High fashion motivates
the person who is consistantly
looking for something new.....Many
styles originate because they are
worn by noied personalities...Jackie
Onallsis, Janis Joplin, Jane Fonda
(or, in this case, Bo Derek) ... High
fashion is not for everyone."
In an informal phone survey conducted in the area, most salons
reported they had, as yet, had few oc
no calls for the 10 style. Many,
however, observed they were
capable of doing it, if so requested.
Donna Fisher, Gallipolis, who
recently had her mediwn-length
hair cornrowed especially for the article, reports, "Well, it was different. My hair is lots of varied
lengths, so it didn't work too well.
After I slept on it just one night, It
was a disaster, so I just took it out
the next day, If my hair had been r ll
one uniform length, I think it would
have worked well. The girl who
styled it did a fantastic job."
How did Donna feel about the hairdo overall?
"Well, let's just say I went to
Parkersburg the same day and I
sure got some strange looks!" she
smiled.
Bo, here she comes! ·
(The photos and booklet by Sir
Robert Clegg were provided by Paul
~h of Across the Street, who, with
bis staff, recently returned from the
New York International Hair Show
where they obtained the material.) '

"

-·- ~----------~----------------------~
...

ALSO I

A NEW 21Jz YEAR CERTIFICATE
.APRIL
RATE -_,

•·•

'

-~ -

$5799

*FACTORY AIR
AM.fM RADIO
* 'BUCKET SEATS
RAilYE WHEELS
7,000 to 12,000 MILES

*
*
*

11.75 ·= 12.65

..

By Sallyanne Holtz

ANNUAL RATE
ANNUAL vi'Ei.o· ·
P~ying an intereit rate relat.;;· to tile averegi 2'h v••r ti~Hi· 0 ;

tre1sury ucurltlts. Minimum lkpolit $500.00. Interest must remit~
on deposit • full y..r to etrn annutl yield. Sullsllnlilllnteresl pent It• ·
, u.pon Hrly wlthdrtwol.
.

tMinlmum deposit S5.00. Interest ,;;·,1st
relaln on deposit • fUll Ytlr to earn an·
1111111 yltlel.

"

• •

Times-Sentinel staff writer

�I

B-2-~Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, &lt;\pril20, 1980

B-3-The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, April20, 1980

Jehovah's Witnesses plan

Birthdays are shared

to attend Huntington assembly
'
.

MIDDLEPOIRT
Many
delegates from Meigs County will be
attending the semi-annual·assembly
of Jehovah's Witnesses slated for
Huntington's Memorial Fieldhouse,
April19 and 20.
According to Elmer Tufts,
. presiding elder of the congregation,
60 persons have arranged to attend
from this area. They will be among
some 1,500 expected to attend the
assembly's sessions. The keynote
address Sunday at 2 p.m. will be
presented by Paul A. Allen of New

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Looking for a Particular

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York. His topic is, "To Whom Does
the Obedience of the People
Belong•"
,
Commenting on the purpose of the
gathering, Mr. Tufts said: "The
program is designed to improve our
educational service to the people of
this conununity. By strengthening
the faith and moral integrity of individuals the quality of life ls improved for all."
Meetings of the local Kingdom
Hall, 37319 R. 124, Middleport, are
suspended April17·2L

Charles Richards
POMEROY- Charles Joseph
Richards, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald ]lichards, Pomeroy,
celebrated his fifth birthday recently. A cake decorated with a van
replica was served with ice cream
and other refreshments. Attending
were his parents, Ronnie and Katy
Richards, Alberta and Willy
Richards, Rhonda Wilson and Tommy, Mr. and Mrs. Danny Robson,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Estep and
Roger, Jr., Sue Ellen and Kril;
Kirkpatrick and Misty, Jeremy and
Julie, and Mark Zielinski.

CROWN CITY - Winter Rose
McGuire, daughter of Patricia Al&gt;shire, celebrated her second birthday on March 'l:l at the home of her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ode
Beaver, Rt. 2, Crown City.
A Bugs Bunny cake that was
baked by Winter's aunt, Alice San·
ders, ice cream and punch were served to the following guests: Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Whitt and Rick and Ed·
die, Mr. and Mrs. Dale Sanders and
Natpan and Tina, Terry Sanders and
were paternal grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Lester McGuire, Northup.

2119 Jackson • 675-2318

EARLY ~·&gt;.\~
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ASK USI
WE ORDER ALBUMS,
CASSEITES,
AND 8-TRACKS
AT NO EXTRA CHARGE.

GROUP TOGO
SWIMMING
ALFRED - Young people of the
Alfred United Methodist Church will
go to the Boys Club at Parkersburg
for swimming. They are to meet at
the church at I p.m.

~7~
OPEN DAILY
9:30 till8 : 00
Moti.-Sat,

42 Court Gallipolis, Oh.

WHEN YOU BUY AN

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AIR CONDITIONER

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BABY'S BASSINET
WITH VINYL liNER

1897

MI!ITS AlL

U.S. GOV'T. SAFETY
STANDARDS

son, "The Miracle of Change" by
Faye Hamilton; "In Times of Trial"
by Mary Nease; "The Universality
of Prayer" by Leah Nease , "Six
Special Powers of Prayer" by Mrs.
Kathleen Scott, Mrs. Hollon, Mrs.
Erma Roush, Mrs. Mae Holter, Mrs.
Edith Sisson, and Mrs. Hamilton.
Mrs. Yeauger read three poems
by Helen Steiner Rice with Mrs.
Naomi Wyatt reading "A House ct
Prayer", and Mrs. Mary K. Roush
reading, "The Prayer Perfect."
There was a song, "My Evening
Prayer" to close the meeting. Mrs.
Sisson had the special reading.
A potluck dinner will be held at the
church for the May meeting. Fortyone shutin visits were reported. The
hQStesses served a dessert course.
GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY
TO MEET
POMEROY- Mrs. Clara Lochary
will present a history of the Henry
Family when the Meigs County
Genealogical Society meets at 2 p.m.
today at the Meigs Museum, But·
ternut Ave., Pomeroy. All interested
persons are invited.

n

SOLD
UNASSEMBLED

SAVE$9

27'/o" TOTAL
HEIGHT

:life was presented by Mrs. Hilda
,Yeauger at the Forest Run United
:Methodist Women's meeting held at
:the home of Mrs. Evelyn Hollon with
•Mrs. Mae Holter, co-hostess.
: Mrs. Mary Nease had the devo:tions using scripture from Isaiah
;and a reading, "Spring Concert."
· Readings for the program includ:ed "God ls Love" by Ml'S. Yeauger;
:"Seeing the Unseen" by Ann Wat-

If we don't have
It In stock;

KELLY SHOWER TUESDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - A layette
shower will be held Tuesday, April
29, at 7 p.m. at the Rock Springs
Grange hall for Sue Kelly, wife of
evangelist, Dave Kelly of the
Carriers.

REINOLIND
Reino Lind of Condor St.,
Pomeroy, is a surgical patient at the
Holzer Medical Center. His room
number is 205.

KITCHEN CENTER

; FOREST RUN - A program on
:the power of prayer and newness of

REBAT

Artist or Album?
Is It old or hard to get?

Winter McQuire

DALE'S

p-MW hears program
~on prayer and new life

Legs fold for storage or

PLEDGED TO HONOR
SOCIETY- Ms. Jody A. N~,
daughter of Mr. and Mnl. Charles
E. Newton (Sandra Pierce),
Waverly, bas been pledged to the
Robert Lucas National Honor
Society of Waverly High School.
Ms. N~ Is the granddaughter
of Mr. and Mn. Carol R. Pierce,
Langsville, and the niece of Mr.
and Mn. Carol F, Pierce, Salem
Center.

X

2897

~FimD

PLASTIC
TOILET
TRAINER

SAVE 1 14
SAVE '4

Double drop sidi:!s , cushioned

4

CR. SHED

247

97

Folds for travel , storage .

.___........;;:;..__-.¢ ..,.. .;:==.!:~;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;~

11 97

00

Ad just able sea t, p laslt c troy , swiv·el
wheels , steel frame , 24" ring .

SAVE

'13

2697

s~~E

.

Front swivel wheels.
Wind guard, canopy.
Partially assembled.

1897

Thick padding . King
size troy . Converts
tao youth cho i r.

REG.
'44.97

FASHIONS FOR INFANTS

29"

TERRY KNIT
CREEP Eft

RECLINER

Reg. 12.77

7 rec l ining pos i tions .

SAOP of1o&lt;jldef
lind crotch. Cot·

Soft podding . Meets
govt . standards

10n terry . Sizes 8

to 18 months.

!
.!'·

DISPIIlliiTPERS
PKG.OF

40

377

.........

Fil babies ove r 22 lbs .
Eco'n omy- size pockoge.

o--..r
conlll
SWMS

-

••,r.rr..
397
.

48

PACKAGE
OF

40

~IG . ...

EASY-CARE
SUNSUITS

187

REG.
'2.97

IAIY

~·
99c

2•
oz.

IAIJCORlil
SIARCH
0~

128

BAIJ
POW DEl

REG. 0 2.97

Shorts with tank

Snap s tro ps, b ib
f ro nt . Solid col .
ors or prin!s .
Sizes M and l .

top or polo shirt .
Cotton Sizes : 9
to 18 months .

00
Cka!d

(Does Not Apply To Modei21&amp;:3SPW)

ThuJSday

All
Day

197

Screen print tops . Pullon panties. Po ly/cotton.
Sizes 12-2 4 months.

14
Ol

1'8

BAIY
OIL

Jq56

IAIY
SHAMPOO
oz.
oz.

".,
.. ,....

MENNEIP
IAIY
BAll

0~.

AVAILABLE AT MURPHY'S DOWNTOWN STQRE, 348 2ND AVEI\:UE

·"

··.....

$.~
· Our
517

$

I
I

J 6~Reg.

I

I

1.67

1

Kitchen Towels

Cheery kitchen prints on
sheared
cotton/polyester
tervelour.
4.97

Men's Athletic Shirts
Polyester collon Jersey knit. Short or
% -length sleeves. Save at K mart

39~ Per Print
Prints From
Instant
Pictures or
Slides

Pa ckage

I
1
I

. (

I

117

Pre Molltened
WuhciO'h'

ft· 88e
•

GUESS AT THE DOLLAR AMOUNT
OF FOOD IN KEMPER;S NEW
MULTI-STORAGE
CABINET AND
WIN ALL
THE FOOD!

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

SPRING-BASE
CHAIRS
Famous Lloyd wicker-like Fibercraft spring-base
chairs add a new dimension of comfort to outdoor livIng! 'rhe lounger features arms that. move up to let you
slide in and out effortlessly. It's a handsome set that will
all stay out of doors ... shrug off weather changes. Select
your favorite in green,yellow, white, bittersweet and
brown.

TILT-ARM LOUNGER ............. -..................... '98.00
. HIGH-BACK ARM CHAIR .............................. SSS.OO
LOW~BACK' ARM CHAIR ................ •...... ·.......· '45.00.
GLIDER ..........................................'99.00
~NO TABLES
-~
~
'39.00

:usn"

u ..

Avt.

,,

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

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

I
I
I
I

Our Reg. 8 .97

All-purpose alkaline . Choose 2-pack
"C '' or " D" size or 1 -pack 9-volt.

Copy prints
from instant.
126mm or

I

I
I

~s1
fliJ Our Reg . 5.97

I1

Compact alarm style. Antique white

I
I
I

Timex · Electric Clocks 1

Our 6.97, Lighted Dial Alarm , 4.97
Our 7.97, Snoo~e, Lighted .. 5.97

0%!
OFF

Dry Roast
Peanuts

ASELECfED
GROUP

433~ ~
ot'

Family s1ze , 24-ozs ."
goodness . Vacuum jar
for freshness . Save.
' Net W\.

!2

GREAl G-ROCERY
GIVE-AWAY

CO.•'I'HE FRIEND

j

I

~1Eveready'
~~~achBattery

·1
5,000·8,000 PTU

REG. 02.77

~~BABY PRODUCTS

IEG. 0 1.19

a.c.

84C

Handy dispenser package.

OUR TOP·QU~LITY

sac 66c
'

d1sposoble bo Hie s.

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I
1
1
I

INFANTS' 2·PIICI
KNIT DIAPIR SITS '· '-'1 '"''' ·-

Holder, cop, nipple,
10 pre -s t eril rzed

i
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

:,

DISP!ISABLE BDinES

• Pinl&lt;ed or hemmed edge

,...

c

PLAYTII 1'111-S'IIaiUZU

DOZEN
IEG.'6.9a
• Sofl and lo·n g· weoring

BRAND I.AIY NIID$1
IAIY
IAIY
11 ••acE
SIWINO IAIYOIL
, oz.
16

2-PIECE
SHORT SUS

'197

• FRONT FACING
• REAR FACING
• FRONT FACING

I
I

I·

I
I
I

00

SAVE 15

Del••• folding
HighChair

1-6

·SUNDAY·MONDAY.

I

I
I

TOTS' FOLDIN5

SwlniWhHI
Bally Stroller

.

~

THE SAVING Pl-ACE

I

CIRCLE WALKER

IRAY·L-GUARD® CAR SEAl

C:::.

I
I

I
I

Gallipolis, Ohio

24,000-29,000 BTU

OPENDAtLYlo-9-SU

REG . '11.27

Re movcbl e sea t fits reg ular 101 et . With defle c tor.

.,.inyl floor pod , droff guard .

955. Second Ave.

Burton Smith and Georgia Watson
gave an article on agriCIJ]ture
stressing that each Individual
Chrisjtan has the responsibWty to
help create 1'1'08J'ams necessary to
share the abundant life wl_th aU
God's children.
Mrs. Bailey read "Ufe's Quilt, a
Real Comforter", and a poem, "I
Didn't Have Time." Mrs. Cook dOsed with prayer, and Mrs. Snouffer
and Mrs. Skinner sen:ed a decorated
cake in honor of Mr. and Mnl. Jl)e
Cook's 59th wedding anniversary
and ice crealll. Others attending
were Audrey Young, Ellen Couch,
Georgia Watson, and Betty Wiles.

I
I
r----------------------------·--·--··----~

1
I

C{)Rf&gt;IN ~ .SN\"[)fR_
fURNITURE CO.

DELUXE PLAY YARD

Children" using the theme "Ab~m­
dant Life." ·Purpose was to
recognize the elements necessary
for a person to have an abundant
life. She talked of the right ci all
God's children. and of the need to
take action 'to a!ISure that end. Tak·
ing part were Ml'll. Foster 1\lld Mrs.
Sterrett who read an article on
education stressing that In our world
a wider knowledge is essential. Betty Wiles and Jane Snouffer read
about medical care noting that
physical health is a major factor in
the abundant life and that an adequate balanced diet ls essential for
all children and adults.

:,...-

35" L X 12" D.

WITH SAF.ETY MESH

go to Baptist orphanages in Alaska ,
and the Murrow Orphanage for Indian children. A communication was
read from the Association White
Cross chairman asking for articles
for various Christian Centers.
Mrs. Phyllis Skinner presided at
the meeting which opened with
group singing of "Jesu.~ Loves Me",
and the Lord's Prayer. The love gift
was taken by Mrs. Bailey, chair·
man. Serving on the nominating
committee which reported the new
slate of officers were Mrs. Sterrett,
Mrs. Bailey, and Maria Foster.
Mrs. Bailey presented the program from the book, "All God's

1
6-Pr Pack
I Men's White Tube Socks
I Quality work socks in cotton nylon
1 Cush1oned One size fit s 10-13
I

BPWTOMEET
. The Middleport Business and Pro·fessional Women's Club will meet at
:7:30 Monday night at the Columbia
:Gas Co, of Ohio, Middleport. The
;membership committee of Mrs.
·Alwilda Werner will bave charge of
#le program with initiation to be
'held for Barbara ~oush, Jean Will,
1&gt;fary McAngls, Rhonda Dailey, and
Nancy Cooper. Refreshments will be
,Served.

qj

POMEROY-New officers were
elected and a gift of money was sent
to the state project at the Thursday
night meeting of the Women's Missionary Society of the Pomeroy First
Baptist Church.
The new officers are, Caryl Cook,
president; Phyllis Skinner,
secretary and treasurer; Hariett
Sterrett, chairman of Christian
social relations; Maria Foster, vice
president of leadership and development and spiritual growth;
Margaret Bailey, love ~ift chair·
man; Ellen Couch, literature; and
Audrey Young, scholarship.
TQe gift for the state project will

1
1

travel. Bassinet measures

l8"W

Women 's Missionary Society elects officers

TIMEX

2-Lb. • Oak ' Quality
Canned Danish Ham

WATCHES

Famous Oak ' qua111y packed
with nat ur al JUICes . Stock up.

~
\\
7

o!3.57

I Bark Nuggets
I Large, decorative bark
I nuggets. 3-cu.-ft. bag.

-I

'~:/

2

78~ACH
Ume

50 lb. bag of agricultural
lime.

.I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

4

!r2.77

Tang
10112"

heavy duty

Our 4.47 8': ••• ............. 52.00
Our 3.27 6'12:'.............. Sl.SO

Natural
orange
• flavor, 40.5 oz, Makes
9 quarts.

I
I
I
I

I
I
1
I
I

I
I
I

I
I

Sanij)ush

I
I
I
I

Bowl Qeaner
Cleans
disi!'lfects
deodorizes,
48 oz.

Peewee Glove
Closed web,
pocket.

catch-

I

�I

B-2-~Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, &lt;\pril20, 1980

B-3-The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, April20, 1980

Jehovah's Witnesses plan

Birthdays are shared

to attend Huntington assembly
'
.

MIDDLEPOIRT
Many
delegates from Meigs County will be
attending the semi-annual·assembly
of Jehovah's Witnesses slated for
Huntington's Memorial Fieldhouse,
April19 and 20.
According to Elmer Tufts,
. presiding elder of the congregation,
60 persons have arranged to attend
from this area. They will be among
some 1,500 expected to attend the
assembly's sessions. The keynote
address Sunday at 2 p.m. will be
presented by Paul A. Allen of New

I

'I

' i
·t
'

I

:r
,I

.I
I

i
I

"·I
'I

,I

·:!
'

j

s.

Looking for a Particular

'1~

l

York. His topic is, "To Whom Does
the Obedience of the People
Belong•"
,
Commenting on the purpose of the
gathering, Mr. Tufts said: "The
program is designed to improve our
educational service to the people of
this conununity. By strengthening
the faith and moral integrity of individuals the quality of life ls improved for all."
Meetings of the local Kingdom
Hall, 37319 R. 124, Middleport, are
suspended April17·2L

Charles Richards
POMEROY- Charles Joseph
Richards, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald ]lichards, Pomeroy,
celebrated his fifth birthday recently. A cake decorated with a van
replica was served with ice cream
and other refreshments. Attending
were his parents, Ronnie and Katy
Richards, Alberta and Willy
Richards, Rhonda Wilson and Tommy, Mr. and Mrs. Danny Robson,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Estep and
Roger, Jr., Sue Ellen and Kril;
Kirkpatrick and Misty, Jeremy and
Julie, and Mark Zielinski.

CROWN CITY - Winter Rose
McGuire, daughter of Patricia Al&gt;shire, celebrated her second birthday on March 'l:l at the home of her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ode
Beaver, Rt. 2, Crown City.
A Bugs Bunny cake that was
baked by Winter's aunt, Alice San·
ders, ice cream and punch were served to the following guests: Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Whitt and Rick and Ed·
die, Mr. and Mrs. Dale Sanders and
Natpan and Tina, Terry Sanders and
were paternal grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Lester McGuire, Northup.

2119 Jackson • 675-2318

EARLY ~·&gt;.\~
·BIRD

... .

ASK USI
WE ORDER ALBUMS,
CASSEITES,
AND 8-TRACKS
AT NO EXTRA CHARGE.

GROUP TOGO
SWIMMING
ALFRED - Young people of the
Alfred United Methodist Church will
go to the Boys Club at Parkersburg
for swimming. They are to meet at
the church at I p.m.

~7~
OPEN DAILY
9:30 till8 : 00
Moti.-Sat,

42 Court Gallipolis, Oh.

WHEN YOU BUY AN

' I

'
•'
:I
I

d

• •®

AIR CONDITIONER

I

:r

BABY'S BASSINET
WITH VINYL liNER

1897

MI!ITS AlL

U.S. GOV'T. SAFETY
STANDARDS

son, "The Miracle of Change" by
Faye Hamilton; "In Times of Trial"
by Mary Nease; "The Universality
of Prayer" by Leah Nease , "Six
Special Powers of Prayer" by Mrs.
Kathleen Scott, Mrs. Hollon, Mrs.
Erma Roush, Mrs. Mae Holter, Mrs.
Edith Sisson, and Mrs. Hamilton.
Mrs. Yeauger read three poems
by Helen Steiner Rice with Mrs.
Naomi Wyatt reading "A House ct
Prayer", and Mrs. Mary K. Roush
reading, "The Prayer Perfect."
There was a song, "My Evening
Prayer" to close the meeting. Mrs.
Sisson had the special reading.
A potluck dinner will be held at the
church for the May meeting. Fortyone shutin visits were reported. The
hQStesses served a dessert course.
GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY
TO MEET
POMEROY- Mrs. Clara Lochary
will present a history of the Henry
Family when the Meigs County
Genealogical Society meets at 2 p.m.
today at the Meigs Museum, But·
ternut Ave., Pomeroy. All interested
persons are invited.

n

SOLD
UNASSEMBLED

SAVE$9

27'/o" TOTAL
HEIGHT

:life was presented by Mrs. Hilda
,Yeauger at the Forest Run United
:Methodist Women's meeting held at
:the home of Mrs. Evelyn Hollon with
•Mrs. Mae Holter, co-hostess.
: Mrs. Mary Nease had the devo:tions using scripture from Isaiah
;and a reading, "Spring Concert."
· Readings for the program includ:ed "God ls Love" by Ml'S. Yeauger;
:"Seeing the Unseen" by Ann Wat-

If we don't have
It In stock;

KELLY SHOWER TUESDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - A layette
shower will be held Tuesday, April
29, at 7 p.m. at the Rock Springs
Grange hall for Sue Kelly, wife of
evangelist, Dave Kelly of the
Carriers.

REINOLIND
Reino Lind of Condor St.,
Pomeroy, is a surgical patient at the
Holzer Medical Center. His room
number is 205.

KITCHEN CENTER

; FOREST RUN - A program on
:the power of prayer and newness of

REBAT

Artist or Album?
Is It old or hard to get?

Winter McQuire

DALE'S

p-MW hears program
~on prayer and new life

Legs fold for storage or

PLEDGED TO HONOR
SOCIETY- Ms. Jody A. N~,
daughter of Mr. and Mnl. Charles
E. Newton (Sandra Pierce),
Waverly, bas been pledged to the
Robert Lucas National Honor
Society of Waverly High School.
Ms. N~ Is the granddaughter
of Mr. and Mn. Carol R. Pierce,
Langsville, and the niece of Mr.
and Mn. Carol F, Pierce, Salem
Center.

X

2897

~FimD

PLASTIC
TOILET
TRAINER

SAVE 1 14
SAVE '4

Double drop sidi:!s , cushioned

4

CR. SHED

247

97

Folds for travel , storage .

.___........;;:;..__-.¢ ..,.. .;:==.!:~;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;~

11 97

00

Ad just able sea t, p laslt c troy , swiv·el
wheels , steel frame , 24" ring .

SAVE

'13

2697

s~~E

.

Front swivel wheels.
Wind guard, canopy.
Partially assembled.

1897

Thick padding . King
size troy . Converts
tao youth cho i r.

REG.
'44.97

FASHIONS FOR INFANTS

29"

TERRY KNIT
CREEP Eft

RECLINER

Reg. 12.77

7 rec l ining pos i tions .

SAOP of1o&lt;jldef
lind crotch. Cot·

Soft podding . Meets
govt . standards

10n terry . Sizes 8

to 18 months.

!
.!'·

DISPIIlliiTPERS
PKG.OF

40

377

.........

Fil babies ove r 22 lbs .
Eco'n omy- size pockoge.

o--..r
conlll
SWMS

-

••,r.rr..
397
.

48

PACKAGE
OF

40

~IG . ...

EASY-CARE
SUNSUITS

187

REG.
'2.97

IAIY

~·
99c

2•
oz.

IAIJCORlil
SIARCH
0~

128

BAIJ
POW DEl

REG. 0 2.97

Shorts with tank

Snap s tro ps, b ib
f ro nt . Solid col .
ors or prin!s .
Sizes M and l .

top or polo shirt .
Cotton Sizes : 9
to 18 months .

00
Cka!d

(Does Not Apply To Modei21&amp;:3SPW)

ThuJSday

All
Day

197

Screen print tops . Pullon panties. Po ly/cotton.
Sizes 12-2 4 months.

14
Ol

1'8

BAIY
OIL

Jq56

IAIY
SHAMPOO
oz.
oz.

".,
.. ,....

MENNEIP
IAIY
BAll

0~.

AVAILABLE AT MURPHY'S DOWNTOWN STQRE, 348 2ND AVEI\:UE

·"

··.....

$.~
· Our
517

$

I
I

J 6~Reg.

I

I

1.67

1

Kitchen Towels

Cheery kitchen prints on
sheared
cotton/polyester
tervelour.
4.97

Men's Athletic Shirts
Polyester collon Jersey knit. Short or
% -length sleeves. Save at K mart

39~ Per Print
Prints From
Instant
Pictures or
Slides

Pa ckage

I
1
I

. (

I

117

Pre Molltened
WuhciO'h'

ft· 88e
•

GUESS AT THE DOLLAR AMOUNT
OF FOOD IN KEMPER;S NEW
MULTI-STORAGE
CABINET AND
WIN ALL
THE FOOD!

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

SPRING-BASE
CHAIRS
Famous Lloyd wicker-like Fibercraft spring-base
chairs add a new dimension of comfort to outdoor livIng! 'rhe lounger features arms that. move up to let you
slide in and out effortlessly. It's a handsome set that will
all stay out of doors ... shrug off weather changes. Select
your favorite in green,yellow, white, bittersweet and
brown.

TILT-ARM LOUNGER ............. -..................... '98.00
. HIGH-BACK ARM CHAIR .............................. SSS.OO
LOW~BACK' ARM CHAIR ................ •...... ·.......· '45.00.
GLIDER ..........................................'99.00
~NO TABLES
-~
~
'39.00

:usn"

u ..

Avt.

,,

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

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

I
I
I
I

Our Reg. 8 .97

All-purpose alkaline . Choose 2-pack
"C '' or " D" size or 1 -pack 9-volt.

Copy prints
from instant.
126mm or

I

I
I

~s1
fliJ Our Reg . 5.97

I1

Compact alarm style. Antique white

I
I
I

Timex · Electric Clocks 1

Our 6.97, Lighted Dial Alarm , 4.97
Our 7.97, Snoo~e, Lighted .. 5.97

0%!
OFF

Dry Roast
Peanuts

ASELECfED
GROUP

433~ ~
ot'

Family s1ze , 24-ozs ."
goodness . Vacuum jar
for freshness . Save.
' Net W\.

!2

GREAl G-ROCERY
GIVE-AWAY

CO.•'I'HE FRIEND

j

I

~1Eveready'
~~~achBattery

·1
5,000·8,000 PTU

REG. 02.77

~~BABY PRODUCTS

IEG. 0 1.19

a.c.

84C

Handy dispenser package.

OUR TOP·QU~LITY

sac 66c
'

d1sposoble bo Hie s.

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I
1
1
I

INFANTS' 2·PIICI
KNIT DIAPIR SITS '· '-'1 '"''' ·-

Holder, cop, nipple,
10 pre -s t eril rzed

i
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

:,

DISP!ISABLE BDinES

• Pinl&lt;ed or hemmed edge

,...

c

PLAYTII 1'111-S'IIaiUZU

DOZEN
IEG.'6.9a
• Sofl and lo·n g· weoring

BRAND I.AIY NIID$1
IAIY
IAIY
11 ••acE
SIWINO IAIYOIL
, oz.
16

2-PIECE
SHORT SUS

'197

• FRONT FACING
• REAR FACING
• FRONT FACING

I
I

I·

I
I
I

00

SAVE 15

Del••• folding
HighChair

1-6

·SUNDAY·MONDAY.

I

I
I

TOTS' FOLDIN5

SwlniWhHI
Bally Stroller

.

~

THE SAVING Pl-ACE

I

CIRCLE WALKER

IRAY·L-GUARD® CAR SEAl

C:::.

I
I

I
I

Gallipolis, Ohio

24,000-29,000 BTU

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Burton Smith and Georgia Watson
gave an article on agriCIJ]ture
stressing that each Individual
Chrisjtan has the responsibWty to
help create 1'1'08J'ams necessary to
share the abundant life wl_th aU
God's children.
Mrs. Bailey read "Ufe's Quilt, a
Real Comforter", and a poem, "I
Didn't Have Time." Mrs. Cook dOsed with prayer, and Mrs. Snouffer
and Mrs. Skinner sen:ed a decorated
cake in honor of Mr. and Mnl. Jl)e
Cook's 59th wedding anniversary
and ice crealll. Others attending
were Audrey Young, Ellen Couch,
Georgia Watson, and Betty Wiles.

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Children" using the theme "Ab~m­
dant Life." ·Purpose was to
recognize the elements necessary
for a person to have an abundant
life. She talked of the right ci all
God's children. and of the need to
take action 'to a!ISure that end. Tak·
ing part were Ml'll. Foster 1\lld Mrs.
Sterrett who read an article on
education stressing that In our world
a wider knowledge is essential. Betty Wiles and Jane Snouffer read
about medical care noting that
physical health is a major factor in
the abundant life and that an adequate balanced diet ls essential for
all children and adults.

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WITH SAF.ETY MESH

go to Baptist orphanages in Alaska ,
and the Murrow Orphanage for Indian children. A communication was
read from the Association White
Cross chairman asking for articles
for various Christian Centers.
Mrs. Phyllis Skinner presided at
the meeting which opened with
group singing of "Jesu.~ Loves Me",
and the Lord's Prayer. The love gift
was taken by Mrs. Bailey, chair·
man. Serving on the nominating
committee which reported the new
slate of officers were Mrs. Sterrett,
Mrs. Bailey, and Maria Foster.
Mrs. Bailey presented the program from the book, "All God's

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1 Cush1oned One size fit s 10-13
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BPWTOMEET
. The Middleport Business and Pro·fessional Women's Club will meet at
:7:30 Monday night at the Columbia
:Gas Co, of Ohio, Middleport. The
;membership committee of Mrs.
·Alwilda Werner will bave charge of
#le program with initiation to be
'held for Barbara ~oush, Jean Will,
1&gt;fary McAngls, Rhonda Dailey, and
Nancy Cooper. Refreshments will be
,Served.

qj

POMEROY-New officers were
elected and a gift of money was sent
to the state project at the Thursday
night meeting of the Women's Missionary Society of the Pomeroy First
Baptist Church.
The new officers are, Caryl Cook,
president; Phyllis Skinner,
secretary and treasurer; Hariett
Sterrett, chairman of Christian
social relations; Maria Foster, vice
president of leadership and development and spiritual growth;
Margaret Bailey, love ~ift chair·
man; Ellen Couch, literature; and
Audrey Young, scholarship.
TQe gift for the state project will

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l8"W

Women 's Missionary Society elects officers

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�11-4-The SwJday Times-sentinel, Sunday, April 20, 1980

Drawing classes for
youth planned locally
GALLIPOLIS - A sectes of six
weekly classes in Drawing lor
children, ages nine through 12, will
begin on Tuesday at 4:30p.m., with
Barbara Braden as the instructor at
Riverby. "The french Art Colony is
pleased to be able to offer this series
of classes as a part of their
education program, and in . par·
ticular to have Ms. Braden available
to teach it," commented Janet E.
Byers, who chairs the Education
Department at Riverby.
Ms. Braden is now in her second
year as an art teacher in grades one
through six at Washington Elementary School. A native of Cincinnati,
she attended the University of Cincinnati, St. Louis Christian College
in Florissant, Mo., where she
received a degree in Bible Study,
and completed her Bachelor of Arts

degree at Edlstem Kentucky University. in Richmond, Ky. She holds a
Bachelor of Arts Degree in Art
Education and is certified to teach in
all grades from Kindergarten
through the 12th grade.
In l!r/6 her woodcut pctnt, "Potted
Plant," was published in the
Eastern Kentucky University's art
and literature publication. In 1977,
her pen and ink drawing received a
first place and a Best of Show Award
at the Carthage Fair in Cincinnati.
She has shown her works in both
Ohio and Kentucky.
Registration lor the series of six
classes, which will be held from 4:30
p.m. tJntil6 p.m., on six consecutive
Tuesday evenings at Riverby, is $15,
and may be arranged by calling
Janet E. Byersat~l903soon .

jayne Lee Hoeflich
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Multimedia selects
jayne Hoeflich
.
as Peace Scholar
. POMEROY Jayne Lee
Poeflich, Pomeroy, has heen selected as a Peace Fund Scholar by the
Southern Carolina Foundation of Independent Colleges, Wilson C.
Wearn , president and chief
executive officer of Multinoedia,
Inc., allllounced.
: As a Peace Fund Scholar, she will
lie presented a $750 college scholarship, renewable 811llually. Miss
Hqeflich was a junior at Meigs High
School when she was accepted late
last fall into the Honors Tutorial
College at Ohio University. She
began full-tinoe studies as a freshman, majoring in physics, at the
university on Jan. 3.
Robert W. Wingett, Publisher of
the Ohio Valley Publishing Co.,
reports that Peace Fund Scholarships are for children of full tinoe
employes, retired employes and
tleeeased employes of Multinoedia,
Inc., Its divisions and subsidiaries.
Selection is based on test scores,
academic performance, extra·
curricular activities, character, versatility and other potentialities for
su~ in college and in post-college

life, Wingett pointed out.
The South Carolina Foundation of
Independent Colleges assists the
Multimedia, Inc., Peace Fund by
making selections of the winners
and decisions on renewals.
Newspapers of' The Ohio Valley
Publishing Co., The Daily Sentinel,
The Gallipolis Tribune, Point
Pleasant Register, and Tri-&lt;::ounty
News are a part of Multimedia, Inc.,
which is headquartered in Greenville, S. C.
Multimedia, Inc., owns 13 daily
newspap ers , 23 n on-da i ly
newspapers, 12 radio stations, five
UHF television stations, one UHF
television station and a cable
television system serving 19 communities in two states. Operations of
Multimedia, Inc., are located in 17
states and also include producing
and syndicating a number of successful television programs including the Phil Donahue Show.
Hoeflich is the daughter of
Charlene and Bob Hoeflich, Daily
Sentinel editoral staff members for
the past 13 years.

TO MEET SUNDAY
The Meigs County Genealogical
Society will meet at 2 p.m. Sunday at
the Meigs Museum, Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy. Mrs. Clara Lochary will
present a history of the Henry
Family. All interested persons are
invited.

CORRECTION
GALLIPOLIS - The Men's Day
Program at Paint Creek Baptist
Church will be April20 and not April
29 as previously announced. Tbe
times are 11 a.m., 12:30 p.m.
(covered dish dinner), and 3 p.m.
(afternoon participation ).

Mother-daughtet: fare planned
POMEROY - Plans were completed for the allllual motherdaughter banquet on May 13 at the
Pomeroy Church of Christ when the
Evang~line Missionary Society met
at the home of Mrs. Helen Miller.
Mrs. Betty Spencer had the opening prayer and lor roll call each
member named their favorite
flower. For the May meeting each
member is to have something
about Mother's Day. Devotions were
given by Mrs. Charldine Alltire and
Mrs. Janet Venoy read a news letter
from Walter and Mary Maxie of

Japan.
Mrs. Trudy Andrews conducted
the meeting in the absence of Mrs.
Eileen Bowers who is ill. Officers'
reports were given and cards were
sent to the sick and shutlns. Revival
was allllounced for Aprii:!0-25 at 7:30
p.m. each evening.
Miss Naomi Ohlinger, hostess,
served dessert and coffee to those
named and Mrs. LaDonna Clark,
Mrs. Pauline Kennedy, and guests,
Mrs. Kate Jarrell and Mrs. Judy
Groghan.

B-5-The Sunday Times-5entinel, Sunday , April20, 1980

New arrival announced locally
RAY - Mr. and Mrs. William L.
Myers of Route 1, Ray, are announcing the arrival of their second
daughter, bam April 10 at 10:55 a.m.
in Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
The Uttie miss weighed seven
pounds, four ounces and was 20 inches long. She has heen given the

name of Amy Lynn.
She has been awaited by a fiveyear old sister, Julia Allll. ·
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Raymqnd Wright of Route
I, Ray. Paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. John Myers of Rio
Grande.

HARRISONVILLE SCC TO MEET
The Harrisonville Senior Citizens
Club will meet at 7 p.m. on Tuesday
at the townhouse in Harrisonville.
Cookies and coffee will be served.

ESHELMAN TO
ENTER HOSPITAL
Russell Eshelman will enter
Veterans Memorial Hospital Monday lor tests and possible surgery.

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r"':""-----.._..._ . . .
_..~

HOLY GHOST MIRACLE REVIVAL
COMING TO MIDDLEPORT AT
MEIGS JR. HIGH SCHOOL

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.3 GREAT NIGHTS (APR. 25, 26, 27)
Prayer for the sick in every services. You can be helped.
God is moving by His Power! Come expecting YOUR
Miracle.

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WITH EVANGELIST B. T. WESTON

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SERVICES START AT 7:30P.M.
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_..__.._.._.._.._~

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Snodgrass are allllouncing
the engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, Sherri,
to Roger Lee Gilbert, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Gilbert, Sr.
The wedding will take place April
27 at 2 p.m. at Clark Chapel Church
with the Rev. James Patterson
presiding .
The gracious custom of open wedding will be observed.

FREE TRAVEL SHOW

Loretta Clark

Cheryl Hudson

CHESlllRE - Mr. and Mrs.
Delmar Clark of Cheshire are proud
to 811llounce the engagement and approaching marriage of their
daughter, Loretta Lynn, to Steven
Franklin Moore , son of Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Moore of Cheshire.
Clark is a l!r/8 graduate of Kyger
Creek High School and is still at
home.
Moore is part-time student and
employed at Swisher Implement Co.
· An open church wedding is planned in May at the Cheshire Baptist
Church.

POMEROY-Mr. and Mrs. George
B. Hudson, Route 4, Pomeroy, and
Mrs. Earlie Russell , Point P1Cl15811t,
W. Va. are announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of
their children Cheryl Lynn Hudson
and Do1!81d E. Russell.
Miss Hudson graduated from
Meigs High School and the Hocking
Technical College of Nursing ,' She Is
presently employed at Pleasant
Valley Hospital. Her 1 fiance
graduated from Point Pleasant High
School and the Buckeye Hills School
of Nursing, and he is also employed
at the Pleasant Valley Hospital.
The open church wedding will be
an event of May 24 at 10:30 a.m. at
the Christian Brethren Church,
Mason, W. Va.

THURSDAY, APRIL 24 - 7:30 PM AT
AAA, 33 COURT ST., GALLIPOUS

POMEROY-Plans for serving the
canteen at the bloodmobile on Monday were finalized when the Rock
Springs Better Health Club met
Thursday afternoon at the home of
Mrs. Beuna Grueser.
Mrs. Teresa Abbott led in the
pledge and the Lord's Prayer to
open the meeting with Mrs. Lottie
Leonard giving the devotions using
Psalm 9 and a meditation "Splinters
from the Cross."
A thank you note was read from
Walter Morris and a request for a
donation was read from the Meigs
Unit of the American Cancer
Society. Ten shut-in visits were
reported. AElementary
minstrel to be
held atMay
the
Salisbury
School,
21 and 22, was allllounced along with
the bike hike lor mentally retarded
on May 17.
Mrs. Frances Goeglein had the

I

program with the readings including
"Sheets of Skin" by Nancy Morris,
"Behind the Marvels of Microscopic
Surgery" by Phyllis Skinner and .
Louise Bearhs; "Cold Weather
Dangers" by Ethel Grueser; " Mixing Food and Drugs" by Lottie
Leonard; ''Walk for Your Life" by
Helen Blackston. The contest conducted by Louise Folmer was won
by Beuna Grueser and Louise
Bearhs. Next meeting will ·be at the
home of Ethel Grueser on May 15.
New officers will be elected then.
The program will be by Beuna
Grueser and the contest by Mrs.
Goeglein. ·

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NEW LIVING ROOM SUITE SALE

UP
TO

VETERANS HOSPITAL
AUXll.JARY TO MEET
The Auxiliary of Veterans
Memorial Hospital will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the hospital dining room.

\

0%

GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Jean H.
Martin, Rt. 3, Gallipolis, and Granville I.. Martin, Corpus Christi,
Texas are announcin g the
engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, Christia
Ann, to Lawrence E. Becker. Mr.
Becker is the son of Mrs. Dorothy M.
Becker, Louisville, Ky., and Mr.
Joseph T. Becker, Jr., St. Louis, Mo.
Miss Martin is a graduate or
Marietta College and a member or
Chi Omega. She is currently employed as a systems analyst in
Louisville. Her fiance is also employed in Louisville as a salesman.
The open church wedding will take
placL at 4:30 p.m., May 24, at the
First United Presbytectan Church,
Gallipolis.

We buy direct from the factory, which ·is a tremendous savings.

1111_ead of keeping that savings for ourself, we pass that savings
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variety
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Melanie Hackett

connie

MIDDLEPORT-Mr. and Mrs.
George W. Hackett, Jr., 93 Seventh
Ave., Middleport, announce the

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POMEROY-Mr. and Mrs. Harry
B. Martin, Gastonia, N. C. are announcing the engagement and for·
thcoming marriage of their
daughter, Cynthia Jean, to Cpl.
James C. Steele, son of Robert M.
Steele and the late Ruth E. Steele.
TIMi blrde-eleet is a senior at
Hunter Huss High School where sbe
· is a member of Vocational·
Industrial ' Clubs of America and Is
employed by Ti-Caro Threads, USA.
Her fiance attended Eastern High
School and is a corporal in the U. S.
Manne Corps stationed in Okinawa.
An October wedding is being planned.
engagement of their daughter,
Melanie Alllle, to Robert Franko,
Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mat·
thew Franko, Sr. and the late Mrs.
Franko, Pittsburgh, Pa.
The bride-elect received a degree
in French from St. Mary's College,
Notre Dame, Ind., and will receive
her master's degree in May from the
Amectcan Graduate School of International Management in Glendale,
Arizona.
Her fiance Is a graduate of the
University of Notre Dame, Notre
Dame, Ind., and received his
master's degree in December from
the American Graduate School of In·
temational Management in Glendale, Arizona.
The wedding will take place at
1:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 31, in
Christ the King Chapel, Ohio
Dominican College, Columbus.

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POMEROY-Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Ritchie of Pataskala are 811llouncing
the engagement of their daughter,
Diana Lynn, to George w-. Anderson,
n, son of George W. Anderson,
Honeybrook, Pa., and Mildred
Anderson, Zanesvtlle. The brideelect is the .granddaughter of Mrs.
Clyde Well, Minersville, and Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Ritchie, Columbus.
Miss Rirthie ts a graduate in accounting from the Ohio State University and is an auditor with Peat,
Marwlck, Mitchell and Co. in San
Francisco, California. Her fiance
graduated in accounting from Ohio
State University and is an internal
auditor with Memorex in Santa
Clara, Calif.
The wedding will take place on
June14.

VARIETY CLUB
DISCUSSES PROJECI'S
Projects for the year were discussed when the Bradbury Variety Club
met Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
Bernice WIM. A potluck dinner was
enjoyed by the group. Attending
were Mrs. Dixie Sayre, Mrs. Rose
Carson, ~ . Eileen Searles, Mrs.
Carolyn Searles and Amy.

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These machines with our
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BLOOD DONORS SOUGHT
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County '
blood donors were reminded today
the Red Cross Regional Bloodmobile
will visit Gallipolis on Thursday,
April 24, from 12 noon to 6 p.m. at
Grace United Methodist Church.

WALLS CLEANED

.

conn~e

who were in church last Sunday, •
need baptismal robes.
The next meeting will be the :
Mother-Daughter Salad Buffet on :
May 20. Everyone is asked to bring a :
towel for the kitchen.
Mary Knicely read Ecclesiastes
3:1-8. Marcella Baker read a poem
by Helen Steiner Rice entitled, "So •
Swift the Way : So Short the Day," ;
followed by prayer.
:
Refreshments were served by :
Mary Frances Rose, Vivian •
Trowbridge, Vivian Tope, Mary , .
Burner, Mary Knicely and Marcella .
Baker.

r-----------------------

VISION CLINIC HELD
GALLIPOLIS - A vision clinic
was held Wednesday, April16, at the
Gallla County Health Department.
Nine~n children were examined
with two referred for surgery, and
four referred for glasses.
Richard Sinunons, M.C., and
Robert Strohl, 0. D., were assisted
by the staff of the City and the County Health Departments. This free
clinic is part of the overall program
at the County WeHare Department.
Referrals are accepted from par- ·
ents, school and public health nur·
ses, and any other agency.

OTHER GREAT VALUES

WHITE

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GALLIPOLIS - The Ladies
Missionary Fellowship of the First
Baptist Church held the April
meeting in the fellowship room.
Members worked on quilt blocks,
cutting out aprons or covering
clothes hangers lor the
missionaries.
The meeting. opened by singing
"Showers of Blessing," followed by
prayer by Mary Frances Rose.
Hazel Halley had a letter from
Arlene Spurlock, a missionary in
Africa, telling of her work, her
health and prayer requests. A letter
was received from Ruth Compton, a
missionary in Canada, thanking the
Missionary Fellowship lor the supplies given to her on a recent visit
here. A thank-you note was received
from the Stonos, Camp Directors of
Camp Scioto, thanking the group for
supplies. A card was also received
from the Moffats, who have heen
traveling around the world on
speaking engagements. The Kennedys, missionactes from England

THE

Great

'f.,L

GALLIPOLIS - Mary Belle Martin, daughter of Georgia Martin,
Gallipolis, and LeGrande Martin,
Gallipolis, is announcing ber
engagement to Greg Maynard, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Maynard,
Bidwell.
Miss Martin is a l!r18 g'raduate of
GAHS, whl~ Maynard is a 19'16
graduate of the same school. Martin
works at Central Trust; Maynard
works at tbe Southern Ohio Coal
Company.
The wedding is planned for May
24,3:30 p.m. at the St. Louis Catholic
Church with open ch(U'ch to be observed.

Cynthia Martin

BRIGHT BLUE

PINK

Mary Belle Martin

Color Film, Refreshments, Door Prizes

Better Health Club meets

Missionary Fellowship
meets, hears letters

S.everal area couples announce engagements
.

s.t.

992-292\'
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10 lB.

�11-4-The SwJday Times-sentinel, Sunday, April 20, 1980

Drawing classes for
youth planned locally
GALLIPOLIS - A sectes of six
weekly classes in Drawing lor
children, ages nine through 12, will
begin on Tuesday at 4:30p.m., with
Barbara Braden as the instructor at
Riverby. "The french Art Colony is
pleased to be able to offer this series
of classes as a part of their
education program, and in . par·
ticular to have Ms. Braden available
to teach it," commented Janet E.
Byers, who chairs the Education
Department at Riverby.
Ms. Braden is now in her second
year as an art teacher in grades one
through six at Washington Elementary School. A native of Cincinnati,
she attended the University of Cincinnati, St. Louis Christian College
in Florissant, Mo., where she
received a degree in Bible Study,
and completed her Bachelor of Arts

degree at Edlstem Kentucky University. in Richmond, Ky. She holds a
Bachelor of Arts Degree in Art
Education and is certified to teach in
all grades from Kindergarten
through the 12th grade.
In l!r/6 her woodcut pctnt, "Potted
Plant," was published in the
Eastern Kentucky University's art
and literature publication. In 1977,
her pen and ink drawing received a
first place and a Best of Show Award
at the Carthage Fair in Cincinnati.
She has shown her works in both
Ohio and Kentucky.
Registration lor the series of six
classes, which will be held from 4:30
p.m. tJntil6 p.m., on six consecutive
Tuesday evenings at Riverby, is $15,
and may be arranged by calling
Janet E. Byersat~l903soon .

jayne Lee Hoeflich
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Multimedia selects
jayne Hoeflich
.
as Peace Scholar
. POMEROY Jayne Lee
Poeflich, Pomeroy, has heen selected as a Peace Fund Scholar by the
Southern Carolina Foundation of Independent Colleges, Wilson C.
Wearn , president and chief
executive officer of Multinoedia,
Inc., allllounced.
: As a Peace Fund Scholar, she will
lie presented a $750 college scholarship, renewable 811llually. Miss
Hqeflich was a junior at Meigs High
School when she was accepted late
last fall into the Honors Tutorial
College at Ohio University. She
began full-tinoe studies as a freshman, majoring in physics, at the
university on Jan. 3.
Robert W. Wingett, Publisher of
the Ohio Valley Publishing Co.,
reports that Peace Fund Scholarships are for children of full tinoe
employes, retired employes and
tleeeased employes of Multinoedia,
Inc., Its divisions and subsidiaries.
Selection is based on test scores,
academic performance, extra·
curricular activities, character, versatility and other potentialities for
su~ in college and in post-college

life, Wingett pointed out.
The South Carolina Foundation of
Independent Colleges assists the
Multimedia, Inc., Peace Fund by
making selections of the winners
and decisions on renewals.
Newspapers of' The Ohio Valley
Publishing Co., The Daily Sentinel,
The Gallipolis Tribune, Point
Pleasant Register, and Tri-&lt;::ounty
News are a part of Multimedia, Inc.,
which is headquartered in Greenville, S. C.
Multimedia, Inc., owns 13 daily
newspap ers , 23 n on-da i ly
newspapers, 12 radio stations, five
UHF television stations, one UHF
television station and a cable
television system serving 19 communities in two states. Operations of
Multimedia, Inc., are located in 17
states and also include producing
and syndicating a number of successful television programs including the Phil Donahue Show.
Hoeflich is the daughter of
Charlene and Bob Hoeflich, Daily
Sentinel editoral staff members for
the past 13 years.

TO MEET SUNDAY
The Meigs County Genealogical
Society will meet at 2 p.m. Sunday at
the Meigs Museum, Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy. Mrs. Clara Lochary will
present a history of the Henry
Family. All interested persons are
invited.

CORRECTION
GALLIPOLIS - The Men's Day
Program at Paint Creek Baptist
Church will be April20 and not April
29 as previously announced. Tbe
times are 11 a.m., 12:30 p.m.
(covered dish dinner), and 3 p.m.
(afternoon participation ).

Mother-daughtet: fare planned
POMEROY - Plans were completed for the allllual motherdaughter banquet on May 13 at the
Pomeroy Church of Christ when the
Evang~line Missionary Society met
at the home of Mrs. Helen Miller.
Mrs. Betty Spencer had the opening prayer and lor roll call each
member named their favorite
flower. For the May meeting each
member is to have something
about Mother's Day. Devotions were
given by Mrs. Charldine Alltire and
Mrs. Janet Venoy read a news letter
from Walter and Mary Maxie of

Japan.
Mrs. Trudy Andrews conducted
the meeting in the absence of Mrs.
Eileen Bowers who is ill. Officers'
reports were given and cards were
sent to the sick and shutlns. Revival
was allllounced for Aprii:!0-25 at 7:30
p.m. each evening.
Miss Naomi Ohlinger, hostess,
served dessert and coffee to those
named and Mrs. LaDonna Clark,
Mrs. Pauline Kennedy, and guests,
Mrs. Kate Jarrell and Mrs. Judy
Groghan.

B-5-The Sunday Times-5entinel, Sunday , April20, 1980

New arrival announced locally
RAY - Mr. and Mrs. William L.
Myers of Route 1, Ray, are announcing the arrival of their second
daughter, bam April 10 at 10:55 a.m.
in Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
The Uttie miss weighed seven
pounds, four ounces and was 20 inches long. She has heen given the

name of Amy Lynn.
She has been awaited by a fiveyear old sister, Julia Allll. ·
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Raymqnd Wright of Route
I, Ray. Paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. John Myers of Rio
Grande.

HARRISONVILLE SCC TO MEET
The Harrisonville Senior Citizens
Club will meet at 7 p.m. on Tuesday
at the townhouse in Harrisonville.
Cookies and coffee will be served.

ESHELMAN TO
ENTER HOSPITAL
Russell Eshelman will enter
Veterans Memorial Hospital Monday lor tests and possible surgery.

'I .

_,,,

r"':""-----.._..._ . . .
_..~

HOLY GHOST MIRACLE REVIVAL
COMING TO MIDDLEPORT AT
MEIGS JR. HIGH SCHOOL

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.3 GREAT NIGHTS (APR. 25, 26, 27)
Prayer for the sick in every services. You can be helped.
God is moving by His Power! Come expecting YOUR
Miracle.

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WITH EVANGELIST B. T. WESTON

1
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SERVICES START AT 7:30P.M.
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_..__.._.._.._.._~

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Snodgrass are allllouncing
the engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, Sherri,
to Roger Lee Gilbert, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Gilbert, Sr.
The wedding will take place April
27 at 2 p.m. at Clark Chapel Church
with the Rev. James Patterson
presiding .
The gracious custom of open wedding will be observed.

FREE TRAVEL SHOW

Loretta Clark

Cheryl Hudson

CHESlllRE - Mr. and Mrs.
Delmar Clark of Cheshire are proud
to 811llounce the engagement and approaching marriage of their
daughter, Loretta Lynn, to Steven
Franklin Moore , son of Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Moore of Cheshire.
Clark is a l!r/8 graduate of Kyger
Creek High School and is still at
home.
Moore is part-time student and
employed at Swisher Implement Co.
· An open church wedding is planned in May at the Cheshire Baptist
Church.

POMEROY-Mr. and Mrs. George
B. Hudson, Route 4, Pomeroy, and
Mrs. Earlie Russell , Point P1Cl15811t,
W. Va. are announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of
their children Cheryl Lynn Hudson
and Do1!81d E. Russell.
Miss Hudson graduated from
Meigs High School and the Hocking
Technical College of Nursing ,' She Is
presently employed at Pleasant
Valley Hospital. Her 1 fiance
graduated from Point Pleasant High
School and the Buckeye Hills School
of Nursing, and he is also employed
at the Pleasant Valley Hospital.
The open church wedding will be
an event of May 24 at 10:30 a.m. at
the Christian Brethren Church,
Mason, W. Va.

THURSDAY, APRIL 24 - 7:30 PM AT
AAA, 33 COURT ST., GALLIPOUS

POMEROY-Plans for serving the
canteen at the bloodmobile on Monday were finalized when the Rock
Springs Better Health Club met
Thursday afternoon at the home of
Mrs. Beuna Grueser.
Mrs. Teresa Abbott led in the
pledge and the Lord's Prayer to
open the meeting with Mrs. Lottie
Leonard giving the devotions using
Psalm 9 and a meditation "Splinters
from the Cross."
A thank you note was read from
Walter Morris and a request for a
donation was read from the Meigs
Unit of the American Cancer
Society. Ten shut-in visits were
reported. AElementary
minstrel to be
held atMay
the
Salisbury
School,
21 and 22, was allllounced along with
the bike hike lor mentally retarded
on May 17.
Mrs. Frances Goeglein had the

I

program with the readings including
"Sheets of Skin" by Nancy Morris,
"Behind the Marvels of Microscopic
Surgery" by Phyllis Skinner and .
Louise Bearhs; "Cold Weather
Dangers" by Ethel Grueser; " Mixing Food and Drugs" by Lottie
Leonard; ''Walk for Your Life" by
Helen Blackston. The contest conducted by Louise Folmer was won
by Beuna Grueser and Louise
Bearhs. Next meeting will ·be at the
home of Ethel Grueser on May 15.
New officers will be elected then.
The program will be by Beuna
Grueser and the contest by Mrs.
Goeglein. ·

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NEW LIVING ROOM SUITE SALE

UP
TO

VETERANS HOSPITAL
AUXll.JARY TO MEET
The Auxiliary of Veterans
Memorial Hospital will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the hospital dining room.

\

0%

GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Jean H.
Martin, Rt. 3, Gallipolis, and Granville I.. Martin, Corpus Christi,
Texas are announcin g the
engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, Christia
Ann, to Lawrence E. Becker. Mr.
Becker is the son of Mrs. Dorothy M.
Becker, Louisville, Ky., and Mr.
Joseph T. Becker, Jr., St. Louis, Mo.
Miss Martin is a graduate or
Marietta College and a member or
Chi Omega. She is currently employed as a systems analyst in
Louisville. Her fiance is also employed in Louisville as a salesman.
The open church wedding will take
placL at 4:30 p.m., May 24, at the
First United Presbytectan Church,
Gallipolis.

We buy direct from the factory, which ·is a tremendous savings.

1111_ead of keeping that savings for ourself, we pass that savings
along to you, and throw in a big savings to boot, giving you the

lowest prices on living room

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ALL SUITS MARKED WAY .BELOW
REGULAR SUGGESTED RETAIL PRICES!

variety
is the
spice
of

Melanie Hackett

connie

MIDDLEPORT-Mr. and Mrs.
George W. Hackett, Jr., 93 Seventh
Ave., Middleport, announce the

Season your wardrobe w ith
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Yo-Yes t:&gt;y Connie. lhey're
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spiked with sleeker. slimmer
heels. And Yo-Vas look
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ever-because we added
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POMEROY-Mr. and Mrs. Harry
B. Martin, Gastonia, N. C. are announcing the engagement and for·
thcoming marriage of their
daughter, Cynthia Jean, to Cpl.
James C. Steele, son of Robert M.
Steele and the late Ruth E. Steele.
TIMi blrde-eleet is a senior at
Hunter Huss High School where sbe
· is a member of Vocational·
Industrial ' Clubs of America and Is
employed by Ti-Caro Threads, USA.
Her fiance attended Eastern High
School and is a corporal in the U. S.
Manne Corps stationed in Okinawa.
An October wedding is being planned.
engagement of their daughter,
Melanie Alllle, to Robert Franko,
Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mat·
thew Franko, Sr. and the late Mrs.
Franko, Pittsburgh, Pa.
The bride-elect received a degree
in French from St. Mary's College,
Notre Dame, Ind., and will receive
her master's degree in May from the
Amectcan Graduate School of International Management in Glendale,
Arizona.
Her fiance Is a graduate of the
University of Notre Dame, Notre
Dame, Ind., and received his
master's degree in December from
the American Graduate School of In·
temational Management in Glendale, Arizona.
The wedding will take place at
1:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 31, in
Christ the King Chapel, Ohio
Dominican College, Columbus.

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POMEROY-Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Ritchie of Pataskala are 811llouncing
the engagement of their daughter,
Diana Lynn, to George w-. Anderson,
n, son of George W. Anderson,
Honeybrook, Pa., and Mildred
Anderson, Zanesvtlle. The brideelect is the .granddaughter of Mrs.
Clyde Well, Minersville, and Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Ritchie, Columbus.
Miss Rirthie ts a graduate in accounting from the Ohio State University and is an auditor with Peat,
Marwlck, Mitchell and Co. in San
Francisco, California. Her fiance
graduated in accounting from Ohio
State University and is an internal
auditor with Memorex in Santa
Clara, Calif.
The wedding will take place on
June14.

VARIETY CLUB
DISCUSSES PROJECI'S
Projects for the year were discussed when the Bradbury Variety Club
met Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
Bernice WIM. A potluck dinner was
enjoyed by the group. Attending
were Mrs. Dixie Sayre, Mrs. Rose
Carson, ~ . Eileen Searles, Mrs.
Carolyn Searles and Amy.

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These machines with our
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BLOOD DONORS SOUGHT
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County '
blood donors were reminded today
the Red Cross Regional Bloodmobile
will visit Gallipolis on Thursday,
April 24, from 12 noon to 6 p.m. at
Grace United Methodist Church.

WALLS CLEANED

.

conn~e

who were in church last Sunday, •
need baptismal robes.
The next meeting will be the :
Mother-Daughter Salad Buffet on :
May 20. Everyone is asked to bring a :
towel for the kitchen.
Mary Knicely read Ecclesiastes
3:1-8. Marcella Baker read a poem
by Helen Steiner Rice entitled, "So •
Swift the Way : So Short the Day," ;
followed by prayer.
:
Refreshments were served by :
Mary Frances Rose, Vivian •
Trowbridge, Vivian Tope, Mary , .
Burner, Mary Knicely and Marcella .
Baker.

r-----------------------

VISION CLINIC HELD
GALLIPOLIS - A vision clinic
was held Wednesday, April16, at the
Gallla County Health Department.
Nine~n children were examined
with two referred for surgery, and
four referred for glasses.
Richard Sinunons, M.C., and
Robert Strohl, 0. D., were assisted
by the staff of the City and the County Health Departments. This free
clinic is part of the overall program
at the County WeHare Department.
Referrals are accepted from par- ·
ents, school and public health nur·
ses, and any other agency.

OTHER GREAT VALUES

WHITE

t

GALLIPOLIS - The Ladies
Missionary Fellowship of the First
Baptist Church held the April
meeting in the fellowship room.
Members worked on quilt blocks,
cutting out aprons or covering
clothes hangers lor the
missionaries.
The meeting. opened by singing
"Showers of Blessing," followed by
prayer by Mary Frances Rose.
Hazel Halley had a letter from
Arlene Spurlock, a missionary in
Africa, telling of her work, her
health and prayer requests. A letter
was received from Ruth Compton, a
missionary in Canada, thanking the
Missionary Fellowship lor the supplies given to her on a recent visit
here. A thank-you note was received
from the Stonos, Camp Directors of
Camp Scioto, thanking the group for
supplies. A card was also received
from the Moffats, who have heen
traveling around the world on
speaking engagements. The Kennedys, missionactes from England

THE

Great

'f.,L

GALLIPOLIS - Mary Belle Martin, daughter of Georgia Martin,
Gallipolis, and LeGrande Martin,
Gallipolis, is announcing ber
engagement to Greg Maynard, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Maynard,
Bidwell.
Miss Martin is a l!r18 g'raduate of
GAHS, whl~ Maynard is a 19'16
graduate of the same school. Martin
works at Central Trust; Maynard
works at tbe Southern Ohio Coal
Company.
The wedding is planned for May
24,3:30 p.m. at the St. Louis Catholic
Church with open ch(U'ch to be observed.

Cynthia Martin

BRIGHT BLUE

PINK

Mary Belle Martin

Color Film, Refreshments, Door Prizes

Better Health Club meets

Missionary Fellowship
meets, hears letters

S.everal area couples announce engagements
.

s.t.

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. IIDIISIWAIE IIII'T.

�lOT IISPOISIILI FOI nPOCilPIICAL IIIOIS

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PRICES IN
EFFECT .

OPEN DAILY 10T09
SUNDAY1T07

..·•

.

OPEN DAILY 10T0 9
SUNDAY 1 T07

SUNDAY,
APRIL 20
THRU
SATURDAY,
APRIL 26,
WI~LI

OUAITITIIS LAST

MURRAY

31h HOISIPOWII

LADI.I' OR M•N'I
PAMOUIIRAND

.UIICH

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.L.CTAOIRAND

IN•DASH

Equipped wijh .manual holoht
idluotora. 22 Inch eut
•nd 3.6 hor~epower.

AM·FM RADIO UNIT
e WITH ~TilCI 01 ClSSEnl PLlYEI

v_.....,.,, ......,_...

=r~:=·~=:~::.

Volwme tunin111 c onlrl)ll. Blll f'ICI end tona contr~l AM·e;lder'Uie twnlng
cflal tn 11pe door. Program lndlcetor Ught1. Mtn~ll
dlenge b11t·
ton . A.M·FM . .lectDII' button (luiO· IMtchifl{l lor lat)e) . l o&lt;:I II DitiiiiCI

lomallu , .. ltwlnd calonda11,

Protr•m

tpor1a calefldar·dlven or la dlaa' 17 )ewe( ~ • • ctl·
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b~o~tton. S tereo indit:1tor l~t tor FM. Comp1et1 with mc.untlng hl rdwere
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1 oz.

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s119. H:~~:s
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CLING FREE
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e

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IIDUSIWAII

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CREDIT CARD CALCULATOR

Perfecl credil card size llx2l't"x3%" e
Sensor Touch®· entry panel wilh Audible Tone
Verification e 4-key independently accessi·
ble memory e Percent and square root tunc·
tiona . e Aulomatic power off (APO) . e In·

HICK'S RIG.
$111.88

4tOL
OIYIOL

TRASH CAN
$299

LAD liS'

HECK'S REG .
$1.59

JIG COMBO

••• 21" .. 22''

HICK'S RIG.
$1.88

HICK'S
RIG.
.....8.

e

Treats 21 Gallon•
of guollne.

WITH Z lAmiilS

$3''

Girls' short sleeve shorty pajamaa. Soft 100% po·
, lyeat~r with printed front . Slzea-4 · 1-4.

TREATMENT

SHAIP

AIITDA4DTIIIIIIII'f.

LAW.NRAKE

SHORT PAJAMA
SETS

Un l'l'arut Lo-Moltftt, .,,. ... 10" ( ll.tb21.4)

HICK'S RIG. S12.481A.

HICK'S RIG. a1e.ee

U Till DELUXE

GIRLS'

s.T.P.
GAS

sa~

HICK'S RIG. $4.110

CLDTIIIII' .II'T.

PICK-UP TRUCK
MIRROR

All MOdllil are c.wpi•IIIJ aiUIIIbiM
and CCRI .-ith inltllatlol\ lniiNCtlaR (AO
•

12

bracht·t,-po lllin'or head lka 11 .plekllpa,
VIlli, -.aona Md puailf\ldll. l.iftcbltnld•
od drh-11' l'iaion Oft rlcflt or left with off "c.-111' brad! .. to pomtlt high or kN ltiOM:IftO.
F11lly Mi•llllbtra rigid triPod rnotn and aatr•·
lff'lnf!h 111111 cu.tlloftod 1ft molahNo raalatlnt 'Myt IVIWablo In baked white"""*·

CLOTHES DRYER

$2'1

HICK'S RIG •
t24.0&amp;

IIWIIIF IIII'T•

ROUND POINT SHOVEL
OR BOW RAKE

Asaoned styles end colora.

$15"

HICK'S RIG.
ato.te

. AUTOA4 Driiiiiiii'T.

JIWfllf ""'·

Let s you make up In the light you'll
be s een in. Four·way light ..1ectlon:
day, home, evening , office. 'Mirror
swivelalrom regular to magnifying.

1300 w•HI. ~pro d ....... Dual tlotlag.l, 12t'll 2o&amp;(.l. ThrH
ha•H •Ir lilt~ . SmaH , I~fWIIOM -

HICK'S RI!G.
at4.tttt1A.

..

IIU.WAIIIII,.

Gillette

\ltstblllty in fog anow and r•ln . Choice
of clear or amber. Eaay to in at all.

CHOic•:

HICK'S RIG. at t5.77

EACH

BOYS' TOPS

-

FOG LIGHTS

LIGHTED MAKE-UP
MIRROR
...,

~l~re-free , axtra powerful. lmprovea

tOftM lt)'HI . N IMit 20 . .eh

CIOICE
HICK'S RIG.
S70.0IIIA.

...,,.'

WATCHES

CLAIRQL

QUARTZ HALOGEN

_

...."

.. ,.Q•

•

$!2611
..

$137
.

HICK'S RIG.
.2.17

IIDISIWAII HI'T•

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CIIMCI

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HICK'SIIIQ.
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. IIDIISIWAIE IIII'T.

�B-1-The Sunday Times&amp;ntlnel, Sunday, April20, 1980

White Shrine of Jerusalem installs several officers

VINTON ELEMENTARY Junior High Beta Club recently pur·
chased a door mat to be placed in the school's main entrance doorway.
The mat contains the school emblem- "a tiger's face'' - along with
the words "Vinton Tigers ... Junior Beta '79, '80. Members worked on
fund-raising projects to purchase a mat under the supervision of club
sponsor, Mrs. Cheryl DeWitt. Shown above are, left to right, Anthony
Blackburn, Scott Williamson, Paula Booth, Lucille Harris, Melissa
Holley, Jimmy Thacker, Mrs. Cheryl DeWitt, Tammy Hunt, Arvina
Donahue, Aaron Smith, Angie McComas, Shirley' Mays, Todd Ragan
and Larry Lee (I]Ot pictured).

GALIJPOUS - Mrs. Bess Canterbury was installed as Worthy
High Priestess and Talm11ge Evans
as Watchman of Shepherds of
. Lafayette Shrine No. 44, Order of
' White Shrine of Jerusalem, Tuesday
evening with several guests and
members present.
Mrs. Maria D. McQuaid, inviting
Worthy High Priestess and Talmage
Evans, Watclunan of Shepherds,
welcomed the honored guests, including Mrs. · Ann Blake, Worthy
High Priestess, Mrs. Marie
Hawkins, Special Obituary Com- ·
mittee, Mrs. Nellie Casto, Past Worthy High Priestess from Mary
Shrine, Pomeroy. Mrs. Beatrice
Kuhn, Supreme Instructor, Robert
W. Kuhh, Deputy Supreme Watchman of Shepherds, Miss Gail J.
Russell, District Chairman of Membership, Mrs. Esta Reese, Mrs. Vennie Casto, Mrs. Elizabeth Cloud,
Mrs. Peggy Burton, Mrs. Emily
Frazier, Mrs. Mary George, Mrs.
Kathryn Alexander, Past Worthy

High Priestesses and Edwin T.
Thomas, John Vf· Evans, D. A.
Byers and Lawrence W. McQilaid,
Watchman of Shepherds of Lafayette Shrine, Qallipolls.
Mrs. Emily Frazier, Inviting
Herald, escorted the installing officers to the East where they were
introduced as follows: Mrs. Esta
Reese, Installing Officer; Mrs.
Marie Hawkins, · Installing
Chaplain ; Mrs. Elizabeth Cloud, Installing Herald; Mrs. Kathryn
Alexander, Installing Scrib; Mrs.
Vennie Casto, Installing Organist;
Mrs. Lora Byers, Installing Guardian; Mrs. Mary George and &gt;Mrs.
Maria D. McQuaid, Installing
Soloists; L. W. McQuaid, Installing
American Flag Bearer. Special
Escorts for Wort,hy High Priestess,
David, Dianna and Denise Canterbury.
The following officers were installed by Mrs. Reese: Mrs. Bess
Canterbury, Worthy High Priestess,
who was escorted around the cross

B-9-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, April20, 1980

fonnation by her children, o.8vid
Dianna and Denise, while Mrs. Ma,.Y
George, acocmpanied by Mrs. Vennie Casto at the organ, rendered,
"He Washed My Eyes With Tears."
Mrs. George sang, "How Great Thou
Art" while Talmage Evans, Watchman of Shepherda, was escorted
around the cross formation by
Elizabeth Cloud.
Other officers installed were:
Mrs. Brenda Tucker, Noble
Prophetess; John W. Evans,
Associate Watchman of Shepherds;
Mrs. Esta Reese, . Worthy Scribe;
Mrs. Florence Willis, Worthy
Treasurer; Mrs. Beatrice Kuhn,

Worthy Chaplain; Miss Gail J .
Russell, Worthy Shepher¢i; Miss
Mary Clendenin, Worthy Guide;
Mrs. Emily Frazier, Worthy
Herald; Jack McNeely, First Wise
Man; Delbert A. Byers, Second Wise
Man; Robert Kuhn, Third Wise ·
Man; Frank Capehart, King; Mrs.
Elizabeth Cloud, Queen; Mrs. Verna
Gleason, First Hand Maid; Mrs.
Mary George, Second Hand Maid; ·
Mrs. Rose McQuaid, Third Hand
Maid; Mrs. Alma Caudill, Worthy
Otganist; Mrs. Marid D. McQuaid,
Worthy Guardian and Trustee for
three years.

SPRING REVIVAL SLATED
FLATWOODS - There will be a
spring revival at Flatwoods United
Methodist Church April 22 through
April 'ZI, at 7:30 p.m. nightly.
Evangelist will be Rev. John Lanier,
Junction City. There will be special
music each evening. The public is invited to attend.

GARDEN CLUB TO MEETS
LONG BOTTOM-The Riverview .
Garden Club will meet Thursday at 8
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Ronald
Cowdery. Co-hostesses will be Mrs. ·
· Thomas Speocer, Mrs. Okey Connolly, and Mrs. Ray Young. M;rs. Hartis .
Frank will present a program on the'
American Cancer Society, Meigs '
County Unit.

VISITS LOCAU.Y

Local man to appear in Athens recital
ATHENS - A musical event wiU
take pl;lce on Wednesday, April 23
at8: 15 p.m. in Athens.
'
The mezz()-soprano Debra Louise
Knause of Akron wiU join with the
baritone of Matthew Lewis Griffin •Of
Gallipolis in a recital of vocal repertoire. This presentation will take
place in the Recital Hall of the
School of Music of Ohio University in
Athens.
The program will encompass
mu5ic from the Renaissance period
to the 20th century. Opening the
reci.tal are two songs for voice and
lute sung by Ms. Knause and accompanied by Thomas Riffe of
Athens on guitar. The singers will
pair for their first duet of the
evening on a two part unaccompanied madrigal.
Griffin will offer four songs by
Gabriel Faure followed by Ms.
Knause's rendition of an aria from
Massenet's opera, "Werther." The
mezzo-soprano wiD continue with a

section of German lieder, including
compositions by Schuman and
WoUe. Keeping with German music
Griffin will sing a comic aria from
Mozart's "The Magic Flute."
For the contemporary section of
the program, Ms. Knause will offer
"Four Songs" by Jean Berger.
Finally, the singers ww ]OlD rur •wu
duets from Gilbert and Sullivan's
comic operetta "Iolanthe."
This is not the musical pair's first
time together having performed in
productions of "Anything Goes" for

POMEROY-Clarence Spurrier,
Jr. is visifing his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Spurrier, Sr., Route

Ohio Valley Sunurn:r Theater and
the opera " Don Giovanni" for Ohio
University . Knause and Griffin are
assisted on this recital by their
pianists, Carol Cordray, Syracuse,
and Harolyn Brien!, of Athens.
Ms. Knause is a junior, majoring
in music with emphasis on vocal performance and this recital is offered
in partial fulfillment of her degree
program. Griffin is a senior and is
designing his own program between
music and theater.
No admission is charged for the
recital.

143.

A graduate of Pomeroy High
School, class of 195(), he retired from
the U. S. Air Force in 1973 and
presently is manager of Air
Associates of Alaska. He and his
wife, the former Doris Dill, reside at
Eagle River, Alaska. Their son,
Dennis, is a police officer in Shayway, Alaska.

ARTIFACTS PRESENTED
MIDDLEPORT - Larry WoUe,
Racine, was the guest speaker at the
Friday night meeting of the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary held at
Heath United Methodist Church.
Wolfe displayed a collection of
arrow heads and other Indian artifacts.
Dean Weber and Kent Wolfe were
guests. Twenty-one Rotarians attended. Dinner was served by the
ladies of the church.

VETERANS~ORIAL

Admitted--Clifford Hall,
Syracuse; Louisa Johnson, ·
Pomeroy.
Discharged-John Young, Louise
Crislip, Cora Will, Harriett Warner,
Mary Childress, Charles Blake,
Robert Shamblin, Candace
Brothers, Robyn Rife, Paul Burton.

RECEIVES BS DEGREE
. RACINE - Paul Matson Cross,
Route 2, Racine, received his
bachelor of science degree in
agriculture at the winter quarter
commencement of Ohio State
University.

Remember
SUNDAY
MEN'S DAY program and
fellowship dinner at Paint Creek
Baptist Church. Rev. George CUnningham, guest speaker at 3 p.m.

Sr. Citizen
Calendar

RET AILS EFFECTIVETHRU SATURDAY APRIL 26, 1980.

POMEROY - Meigs Senior
Citizens Center activities located at
the Pomeroy Junior High School is
open 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m., Monday
through Friday.
Monday, April21- Square Dl'flce,
12:30-3 p.m.
Tuesday, April 22 - Maxine Griffith from · the Ponieroy National
Bank will be at the Center to explain
and answer any questions you may
have on money market funds and
money market certificates at 11
a.m.; Chorus,l2:45-2 p.m.
Wednesday, April 23 - Social
Security Representative, 9:30a.m.12:30p.m.; Games,l-2:30p.m.
Thursday, April 24 - Kitchen
Band,12:45-2p.m.
Friday, April 25 - Bowling, 1-3
p.m.
Senior Nutrition Program, 12 noon
to 12:45 p.m., Monday through
F:riday.
Menu for April 21 through April

BONELESS

"fLAT

~UT$"

.

.

SIRLOIN TIP ROAST ................~.
BONLESS ·

SIRLOIN TIP STEAK ............... ·"·
'

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$2!!

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Ito 12·11t.

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GLADISOUD .. YAI.

Alr Fresheners. • • • • •

2 c.... 89C
1.,.,

78 c
$1
68
Lysol Spray • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
2 69C
Deodorant • • • • • • • • • ~~:::
48C
Window Cleaner •••• u~.....,,.
Soap Pq!tls •••••••••• 11-c1. lo•

~~~9s~~,!~~......

US-oz. lot.

88

"

C

£.~~?~~~!!,~~!.~E.~.~~......·... u~'·'" 98c

'

!!,~~~~·.f~~-Z.E~

•••••••• •• 32-oz. Ctn.

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68C

CUT

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FREE

5~!!~~:~~~D_E~................... lloa.C.•

or
HALf

63C

CINTII~~I

12·ol. Aoro Can

lb.

89

l'"lo I"

HAM ROASTS '""' ..... "·

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" ANYWAy YOU PREFER!!"

ARMOUR * STAR VERIBEST PORK

FRESH

Pork. Butt
Roast •~as;~:a-

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•• • 29
. , 69
CitY CHICKEN . , , , , ., , •• , • , , ••• , , .111.
•

$1 J1

PORK STEAK •••.• • , ••••••••. • .••• Ill.

. . . .0 . .

DELUXETOIIITIOWL

AUlTIN

Mr. Clean •••••••••

~~~·- ..'"'

$1

18

$2 98

O'CIDAI

Sponge Mop • • • • • • • • • • • ...

-

ARM&amp; HAMMER

BAKING SODA . .............. 16-oz.lo•

DINNER BELL

~~~~~~!~.!~.~~- ................... i.l~·· ,k,. 48c
---

r

tlG. c.r UUUill

~u~c~!~.~ .......... ,.............,...... noa .Ca• 98 C

Angler Broom • • • • • • • • • • ...

$J2f

-

tiG. o&lt;li.UUill

1· 1b,

liEF WEINIIS .... . . . "o·

$16f

CAMPFIRE SLICED lACON, .... ,,, ........... 1-l~. l'k,. 11, If

DINNER BELL

SLICED LUNCH MEATS J.V~'"'"., ... ... ,.......... .. . ,. 1-l~. ltkt. 1 1,6t

-

l·lb. "'•·'1.2t
KIILIASA orSMOKIDSAUSAGE .. , .;. :.. ............... ,. lb. 11,7t

SLICED lACON

$1 !! liNG IOLOGNA ...... lb. $J89
liNG LIVER ........... 10 .
P\o\IN Ill OUI.IC

$298

O'CIDAI

1 · 11~ .

'WIENERS , , , , , , , , , , , P~o .

.

IIO.MIHta " " " .... " .............. "

ARMOUR ,:. STAR HOT DOGSo.,.M..,. ....... 11~•- "'•·'1,19
ARMOUR ;, STAR HOT DOGSo.,.M..,. ........ Hk."'e- 11,39
ARMOUR ;, STAR JUMBO BEEF fRANKS ...... l·lb.l'ka.11.49

-

53c

THOIOFAH CLEAR

Ammonia • , ••••••• Mo1. Iotti•
JOHN50fil'5 PUDGI

Furniture Polish

$J68

LEMON or REGULAR .. , , , , , , 14-or. Aero Can

-

!o~~~J~'GS

...........

50-Ct.Pkg~ I!@

~~~~~~~.~~:~......... .... .......... . ••~•.lor 68c

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT BUSINESS AND
Professional Women's Club, 7:30
Monday evening, Colwnbia Gas Co.,
Middleport. Initiation to be held for
five new members. Relreslunents.

~!E~'f'................

64-oz. Bottle

98

ARMOUR * STAR
SMOKED
12·oz.
HAM SLICES ••••••••••••• P~g.

C

~~~~mua .... . .. ... . ........ . .... "~• 1ou1o 78c

SLICED 7-Yar.

,

. 12-al.

LA PIZZERIA PIZZA

$199

:~!~e~~n~ ••• , •••

$149

LUNCH MEATS ••••••••••• P~g.
KULBASSY••••••••••••••• lb. $1!!
SLICED BAC0 N ••••••••••.u,,. $1!!
DINNER FRANKS •••••••• 2-lb. ,,,. $3.3!

n.JaDAY

AMERICAN LEGION Awdliary,
Racine Post 602, 7:30 Tuesday night
atthehall.
• VETERANS
MEMORIAL
HOI!lpital Auxiliary, Tuesday, 7:30
p.m. in the hOi!lpital dining room.

Combination
Pizza • , •••• , ••

~~~:s~

•·lb.l·••·

•~1. $2!!

1-lb . u .... ,~ 1 .

.........

$299

GORTON'S

Fish
Sticks

-

1-lb. •·••·•••·$1!!

1~k~~-$~ 89

CALIFORNIA

Strawberries

aDCKEN, am/BARBECUE

.

Full Pint
lARS ..... :....... 2-lb. Pkg.
TRASH BAGS 2 MIL •••••••••.••• IS&lt;t. "'•·*I • 78

1lf0101An

UAI PAK I' OFF Labt.l ...........

4.1·01.
lort

68 c

GOLDEN GRIDDLESYRUP ••••••• II·IL .:..
JIFFY BISCUIT MIX .....................

,..

TOASTER PASTRIES~~:~.~·· 53 c ..
CARNATION COFFEE-MATE •••••' 11-o.~o, fJ31
.nUTJD

..

EN ONIONS •••• ;

4

IDAHO SIJ:ED&gt;

. a:TIJ'IG CHANGED
.t meeting of the Eastem Local

BAKING POTATOES

of

$'W
..."'"" .&amp;

l.b.

~

I#'::JI

f
~

Edualtlon schedule&lt;! for April 22
bu been ebanged to ApriJ 211 at 7
p.m. at lbe high schooL ,

PURPLIIIAUTY

EGGPLANT •••• ••••

49c
RED RADISHES. • • • • • .., .
l·lb

CRISP

INE LETTUCE • ,

IAVI21'
PEl PKG.

Fish
Fillets

BY ALMA MARSHALL
Special Correspondent
BAPTISMAI3 REPORTED
MASON - Several infants, youths
and adults were baptized on Easter
Sunday by Dr. John E. Wildman,
pastor of Mason United Methodist
Church. Infants baptised were,
Leslie Nicole Crump, Julie Beth '
Harris, and Roger Allen Wood II.
Youths and adults receiving the holy
sacrament of baptism included
Charles, Norma and Cynthia
Stanley, Unda and Melissa Stewart,
and Crystal Garhart.
,.
Joining by profession of faith included Charles, Norma and Cynthia
Stnaley, Unda Stewart, ,crystal '
Carhart, John Bond and Thomas .,
Bumgardner.
Gerald Stewart, joined the church '
by letter of transfer.
The Junior Choir of Mason United
Methodist Church will present a cantata, "Down by the Creek Bank" in
the Sunday morning worship service ·
at 9:45 a.m. on April '!/, with 14
youths participating. The cantata
written by Dottie Rambo and David
Huntsinger, wiD be directed by
Cecilia Harris and Jackis Sisson.
The event features youths going on
a picnic and mixing spiritual
guidance with the grandeur of the
outdoors.
Participants include Lisa Starcher, Lori Redman, Sherr i
Hickman, Tammy Hoffman, Sherri
Johnson, Tina Johnson, Mary Alice
Sisson, Robin Bond, Lisa Hayes,
Emily Bumgardner, Tommy ~
Bumgardner, John Bond, Shawn •
Johnson and Jay Buskirk.

Boosters yard
sale set
The Meigs Girls Athletic Boosters
will hold a yard sale April 25 and 26
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Rupe, Wright St., Pomeroy begiMingat9a.m. each morning.
Contributions are needed for the
sale and contributors may leave
Items at the Rupe home any day
next week or call Mrs. Nola Swisher,
~.Mrs. Rope, 992-2732 or Mrs.
Judy Crooks, 992-3704 for pickup service. The sale is fund raising activity
with all proceeds to be used in projects benefiting the girls' athletics.at
Meigs High School.
·

CONVICT DISSIDENTS
TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) - A
military court Friday convicted
eight prominent dissidents of plotting to overthrow the Chinese
NationaliBt government and sen-

c

.

Mason area news.
-

~·

INTO STEAKS, ROAST S
OR GROUND

Hams

WHOLE

.B oaeJess Whole
Sirloia .T ip

.

Semi· Boneless

Sentinel
Social Calendar

Board

•

PESCHKE • FULLY COOKED SMOKED

Wednesday - Uver and onion,
baked potato, buttered spinach,
fruited gelatin, biscuit, butter, milk.
Thursday - Italian Polenta, broccoli, stewed tomatoes, ice cream,
bread, butter, milk.
Friday - Fried chicken, mashed
potatoes, buttere&lt;l peas, peach cobbler, bread, butter, milk.
Coffee, tea and a choice of whole
milk or buttermilk served daily.
Please register the day before you
plan to eat. Pomeroy, 992-7886.

Dlslrlct

TH'OiiOFARE "Deluxe" BEEF
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
.

$239

$2!!
tttlPIID SANDWICH STEAK .... 1~.

milk.

School

Wt rtMfvt tilt! rl1ht to IIIIII! ~tHntltl"on tlllttmt ln thll~~ · H- tc~l• ro •"ltn. N~r mpontl~'-hrtr,_.,.,hhtltuorJ,

ru~~f/EAK ......................... ~~. $2!! ·
~NELESS

25:
Monday - Jolmny Manetti, green
beans, cottage cheese salad,
peaches, bread, butter, milk.
Tuesday - New England boiled
dinner, ham, potatoes, cabbage,
carrots and onions, cornbread,
yellow cake - lemon sauce, butter,

.

FREMONT, Ohio (AP)- UFO activist J . Allen Hynek says he
probably wouldn't report a UFO
sighting wlless someone else. was
along with him to verify it.
"I probably wouldn't report it
unless I had witnesses. People would
probably think that I'd been involve&lt;! in this so long it finally got to
me," he told an audience in
Fremont.
Hynek, who will be 70 May I, says
he's never had a UFO experience except on the set of "Close Encounters
of the Third Kind," the spooky sci-fi
movie for which he served as
technical advisor.
But, while Hynek says he wouldn't
report a UFO without help, he says
"a lot of scientific evidence is going
down the drain because people are
afraid to report UFO's, fearing that
people will think they're crazy."
Hynek, a retired physicist from
Northwestern University and the
head of the Center lor UFO Studies
in Evanston, Ill., said he was a confirmed skeptic when he began in-

Penngfar!

MONDAY
BLUE Angels, at 7:30p.m. in room
lA at the GAHS.

SET
EAST MEIGS - The Orange
Township Volunteer Fire DepartIJiftlt will'sponsor Its annual chicken
and 'rib barbecue dinner, rain or
shine on Mothers
Day, Sunday,
.
. May
11 beginning at 11 a.m.
The menu consists of either onel!alf chicken or ribs, baked beans,
Cole slaw, bread and beverage.
. Price of the dimers are ~.50. Carry·
out dinners will also be available.

He won't do it alone

~

tenced them to prison tenna ranging
from 12 years to life, ending one of

the most celebra~ political trlal8
,in recent Taiwan history.
The defendants lncludeil wellknown Taiwanese dissenter Shih
Ming-teh, who received the lone life
Nlltence, nationallePJator Huang
Hsin-Chieh and tbe i.slabd'a leadln&amp;
femlnlat, Lu IDu-Uen.

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

'

•
'
.

•'

.1

�B-1-The Sunday Times&amp;ntlnel, Sunday, April20, 1980

White Shrine of Jerusalem installs several officers

VINTON ELEMENTARY Junior High Beta Club recently pur·
chased a door mat to be placed in the school's main entrance doorway.
The mat contains the school emblem- "a tiger's face'' - along with
the words "Vinton Tigers ... Junior Beta '79, '80. Members worked on
fund-raising projects to purchase a mat under the supervision of club
sponsor, Mrs. Cheryl DeWitt. Shown above are, left to right, Anthony
Blackburn, Scott Williamson, Paula Booth, Lucille Harris, Melissa
Holley, Jimmy Thacker, Mrs. Cheryl DeWitt, Tammy Hunt, Arvina
Donahue, Aaron Smith, Angie McComas, Shirley' Mays, Todd Ragan
and Larry Lee (I]Ot pictured).

GALIJPOUS - Mrs. Bess Canterbury was installed as Worthy
High Priestess and Talm11ge Evans
as Watchman of Shepherds of
. Lafayette Shrine No. 44, Order of
' White Shrine of Jerusalem, Tuesday
evening with several guests and
members present.
Mrs. Maria D. McQuaid, inviting
Worthy High Priestess and Talmage
Evans, Watclunan of Shepherds,
welcomed the honored guests, including Mrs. · Ann Blake, Worthy
High Priestess, Mrs. Marie
Hawkins, Special Obituary Com- ·
mittee, Mrs. Nellie Casto, Past Worthy High Priestess from Mary
Shrine, Pomeroy. Mrs. Beatrice
Kuhn, Supreme Instructor, Robert
W. Kuhh, Deputy Supreme Watchman of Shepherds, Miss Gail J.
Russell, District Chairman of Membership, Mrs. Esta Reese, Mrs. Vennie Casto, Mrs. Elizabeth Cloud,
Mrs. Peggy Burton, Mrs. Emily
Frazier, Mrs. Mary George, Mrs.
Kathryn Alexander, Past Worthy

High Priestesses and Edwin T.
Thomas, John Vf· Evans, D. A.
Byers and Lawrence W. McQilaid,
Watchman of Shepherds of Lafayette Shrine, Qallipolls.
Mrs. Emily Frazier, Inviting
Herald, escorted the installing officers to the East where they were
introduced as follows: Mrs. Esta
Reese, Installing Officer; Mrs.
Marie Hawkins, · Installing
Chaplain ; Mrs. Elizabeth Cloud, Installing Herald; Mrs. Kathryn
Alexander, Installing Scrib; Mrs.
Vennie Casto, Installing Organist;
Mrs. Lora Byers, Installing Guardian; Mrs. Mary George and &gt;Mrs.
Maria D. McQuaid, Installing
Soloists; L. W. McQuaid, Installing
American Flag Bearer. Special
Escorts for Wort,hy High Priestess,
David, Dianna and Denise Canterbury.
The following officers were installed by Mrs. Reese: Mrs. Bess
Canterbury, Worthy High Priestess,
who was escorted around the cross

B-9-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, April20, 1980

fonnation by her children, o.8vid
Dianna and Denise, while Mrs. Ma,.Y
George, acocmpanied by Mrs. Vennie Casto at the organ, rendered,
"He Washed My Eyes With Tears."
Mrs. George sang, "How Great Thou
Art" while Talmage Evans, Watchman of Shepherda, was escorted
around the cross formation by
Elizabeth Cloud.
Other officers installed were:
Mrs. Brenda Tucker, Noble
Prophetess; John W. Evans,
Associate Watchman of Shepherds;
Mrs. Esta Reese, . Worthy Scribe;
Mrs. Florence Willis, Worthy
Treasurer; Mrs. Beatrice Kuhn,

Worthy Chaplain; Miss Gail J .
Russell, Worthy Shepher¢i; Miss
Mary Clendenin, Worthy Guide;
Mrs. Emily Frazier, Worthy
Herald; Jack McNeely, First Wise
Man; Delbert A. Byers, Second Wise
Man; Robert Kuhn, Third Wise ·
Man; Frank Capehart, King; Mrs.
Elizabeth Cloud, Queen; Mrs. Verna
Gleason, First Hand Maid; Mrs.
Mary George, Second Hand Maid; ·
Mrs. Rose McQuaid, Third Hand
Maid; Mrs. Alma Caudill, Worthy
Otganist; Mrs. Marid D. McQuaid,
Worthy Guardian and Trustee for
three years.

SPRING REVIVAL SLATED
FLATWOODS - There will be a
spring revival at Flatwoods United
Methodist Church April 22 through
April 'ZI, at 7:30 p.m. nightly.
Evangelist will be Rev. John Lanier,
Junction City. There will be special
music each evening. The public is invited to attend.

GARDEN CLUB TO MEETS
LONG BOTTOM-The Riverview .
Garden Club will meet Thursday at 8
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Ronald
Cowdery. Co-hostesses will be Mrs. ·
· Thomas Speocer, Mrs. Okey Connolly, and Mrs. Ray Young. M;rs. Hartis .
Frank will present a program on the'
American Cancer Society, Meigs '
County Unit.

VISITS LOCAU.Y

Local man to appear in Athens recital
ATHENS - A musical event wiU
take pl;lce on Wednesday, April 23
at8: 15 p.m. in Athens.
'
The mezz()-soprano Debra Louise
Knause of Akron wiU join with the
baritone of Matthew Lewis Griffin •Of
Gallipolis in a recital of vocal repertoire. This presentation will take
place in the Recital Hall of the
School of Music of Ohio University in
Athens.
The program will encompass
mu5ic from the Renaissance period
to the 20th century. Opening the
reci.tal are two songs for voice and
lute sung by Ms. Knause and accompanied by Thomas Riffe of
Athens on guitar. The singers will
pair for their first duet of the
evening on a two part unaccompanied madrigal.
Griffin will offer four songs by
Gabriel Faure followed by Ms.
Knause's rendition of an aria from
Massenet's opera, "Werther." The
mezzo-soprano wiD continue with a

section of German lieder, including
compositions by Schuman and
WoUe. Keeping with German music
Griffin will sing a comic aria from
Mozart's "The Magic Flute."
For the contemporary section of
the program, Ms. Knause will offer
"Four Songs" by Jean Berger.
Finally, the singers ww ]OlD rur •wu
duets from Gilbert and Sullivan's
comic operetta "Iolanthe."
This is not the musical pair's first
time together having performed in
productions of "Anything Goes" for

POMEROY-Clarence Spurrier,
Jr. is visifing his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Spurrier, Sr., Route

Ohio Valley Sunurn:r Theater and
the opera " Don Giovanni" for Ohio
University . Knause and Griffin are
assisted on this recital by their
pianists, Carol Cordray, Syracuse,
and Harolyn Brien!, of Athens.
Ms. Knause is a junior, majoring
in music with emphasis on vocal performance and this recital is offered
in partial fulfillment of her degree
program. Griffin is a senior and is
designing his own program between
music and theater.
No admission is charged for the
recital.

143.

A graduate of Pomeroy High
School, class of 195(), he retired from
the U. S. Air Force in 1973 and
presently is manager of Air
Associates of Alaska. He and his
wife, the former Doris Dill, reside at
Eagle River, Alaska. Their son,
Dennis, is a police officer in Shayway, Alaska.

ARTIFACTS PRESENTED
MIDDLEPORT - Larry WoUe,
Racine, was the guest speaker at the
Friday night meeting of the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary held at
Heath United Methodist Church.
Wolfe displayed a collection of
arrow heads and other Indian artifacts.
Dean Weber and Kent Wolfe were
guests. Twenty-one Rotarians attended. Dinner was served by the
ladies of the church.

VETERANS~ORIAL

Admitted--Clifford Hall,
Syracuse; Louisa Johnson, ·
Pomeroy.
Discharged-John Young, Louise
Crislip, Cora Will, Harriett Warner,
Mary Childress, Charles Blake,
Robert Shamblin, Candace
Brothers, Robyn Rife, Paul Burton.

RECEIVES BS DEGREE
. RACINE - Paul Matson Cross,
Route 2, Racine, received his
bachelor of science degree in
agriculture at the winter quarter
commencement of Ohio State
University.

Remember
SUNDAY
MEN'S DAY program and
fellowship dinner at Paint Creek
Baptist Church. Rev. George CUnningham, guest speaker at 3 p.m.

Sr. Citizen
Calendar

RET AILS EFFECTIVETHRU SATURDAY APRIL 26, 1980.

POMEROY - Meigs Senior
Citizens Center activities located at
the Pomeroy Junior High School is
open 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m., Monday
through Friday.
Monday, April21- Square Dl'flce,
12:30-3 p.m.
Tuesday, April 22 - Maxine Griffith from · the Ponieroy National
Bank will be at the Center to explain
and answer any questions you may
have on money market funds and
money market certificates at 11
a.m.; Chorus,l2:45-2 p.m.
Wednesday, April 23 - Social
Security Representative, 9:30a.m.12:30p.m.; Games,l-2:30p.m.
Thursday, April 24 - Kitchen
Band,12:45-2p.m.
Friday, April 25 - Bowling, 1-3
p.m.
Senior Nutrition Program, 12 noon
to 12:45 p.m., Monday through
F:riday.
Menu for April 21 through April

BONELESS

"fLAT

~UT$"

.

.

SIRLOIN TIP ROAST ................~.
BONLESS ·

SIRLOIN TIP STEAK ............... ·"·
'

I

~

-

$2!!

_ ·

,

'

.

Ito 12·11t.

·

l -

.

~

GLADISOUD .. YAI.

Alr Fresheners. • • • • •

2 c.... 89C
1.,.,

78 c
$1
68
Lysol Spray • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
2 69C
Deodorant • • • • • • • • • ~~:::
48C
Window Cleaner •••• u~.....,,.
Soap Pq!tls •••••••••• 11-c1. lo•

~~~9s~~,!~~......

US-oz. lot.

88

"

C

£.~~?~~~!!,~~!.~E.~.~~......·... u~'·'" 98c

'

!!,~~~~·.f~~-Z.E~

•••••••• •• 32-oz. Ctn.

I

68C

CUT

'

FREE

5~!!~~:~~~D_E~................... lloa.C.•

or
HALf

63C

CINTII~~I

12·ol. Aoro Can

lb.

89

l'"lo I"

HAM ROASTS '""' ..... "·

s

" ANYWAy YOU PREFER!!"

ARMOUR * STAR VERIBEST PORK

FRESH

Pork. Butt
Roast •~as;~:a-

~

'"""

•• • 29
. , 69
CitY CHICKEN . , , , , ., , •• , • , , ••• , , .111.
•

$1 J1

PORK STEAK •••.• • , ••••••••. • .••• Ill.

. . . .0 . .

DELUXETOIIITIOWL

AUlTIN

Mr. Clean •••••••••

~~~·- ..'"'

$1

18

$2 98

O'CIDAI

Sponge Mop • • • • • • • • • • • ...

-

ARM&amp; HAMMER

BAKING SODA . .............. 16-oz.lo•

DINNER BELL

~~~~~~!~.!~.~~- ................... i.l~·· ,k,. 48c
---

r

tlG. c.r UUUill

~u~c~!~.~ .......... ,.............,...... noa .Ca• 98 C

Angler Broom • • • • • • • • • • ...

$J2f

-

tiG. o&lt;li.UUill

1· 1b,

liEF WEINIIS .... . . . "o·

$16f

CAMPFIRE SLICED lACON, .... ,,, ........... 1-l~. l'k,. 11, If

DINNER BELL

SLICED LUNCH MEATS J.V~'"'"., ... ... ,.......... .. . ,. 1-l~. ltkt. 1 1,6t

-

l·lb. "'•·'1.2t
KIILIASA orSMOKIDSAUSAGE .. , .;. :.. ............... ,. lb. 11,7t

SLICED lACON

$1 !! liNG IOLOGNA ...... lb. $J89
liNG LIVER ........... 10 .
P\o\IN Ill OUI.IC

$298

O'CIDAI

1 · 11~ .

'WIENERS , , , , , , , , , , , P~o .

.

IIO.MIHta " " " .... " .............. "

ARMOUR ,:. STAR HOT DOGSo.,.M..,. ....... 11~•- "'•·'1,19
ARMOUR ;, STAR HOT DOGSo.,.M..,. ........ Hk."'e- 11,39
ARMOUR ;, STAR JUMBO BEEF fRANKS ...... l·lb.l'ka.11.49

-

53c

THOIOFAH CLEAR

Ammonia • , ••••••• Mo1. Iotti•
JOHN50fil'5 PUDGI

Furniture Polish

$J68

LEMON or REGULAR .. , , , , , , 14-or. Aero Can

-

!o~~~J~'GS

...........

50-Ct.Pkg~ I!@

~~~~~~~.~~:~......... .... .......... . ••~•.lor 68c

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT BUSINESS AND
Professional Women's Club, 7:30
Monday evening, Colwnbia Gas Co.,
Middleport. Initiation to be held for
five new members. Relreslunents.

~!E~'f'................

64-oz. Bottle

98

ARMOUR * STAR
SMOKED
12·oz.
HAM SLICES ••••••••••••• P~g.

C

~~~~mua .... . .. ... . ........ . .... "~• 1ou1o 78c

SLICED 7-Yar.

,

. 12-al.

LA PIZZERIA PIZZA

$199

:~!~e~~n~ ••• , •••

$149

LUNCH MEATS ••••••••••• P~g.
KULBASSY••••••••••••••• lb. $1!!
SLICED BAC0 N ••••••••••.u,,. $1!!
DINNER FRANKS •••••••• 2-lb. ,,,. $3.3!

n.JaDAY

AMERICAN LEGION Awdliary,
Racine Post 602, 7:30 Tuesday night
atthehall.
• VETERANS
MEMORIAL
HOI!lpital Auxiliary, Tuesday, 7:30
p.m. in the hOi!lpital dining room.

Combination
Pizza • , •••• , ••

~~~:s~

•·lb.l·••·

•~1. $2!!

1-lb . u .... ,~ 1 .

.........

$299

GORTON'S

Fish
Sticks

-

1-lb. •·••·•••·$1!!

1~k~~-$~ 89

CALIFORNIA

Strawberries

aDCKEN, am/BARBECUE

.

Full Pint
lARS ..... :....... 2-lb. Pkg.
TRASH BAGS 2 MIL •••••••••.••• IS&lt;t. "'•·*I • 78

1lf0101An

UAI PAK I' OFF Labt.l ...........

4.1·01.
lort

68 c

GOLDEN GRIDDLESYRUP ••••••• II·IL .:..
JIFFY BISCUIT MIX .....................

,..

TOASTER PASTRIES~~:~.~·· 53 c ..
CARNATION COFFEE-MATE •••••' 11-o.~o, fJ31
.nUTJD

..

EN ONIONS •••• ;

4

IDAHO SIJ:ED&gt;

. a:TIJ'IG CHANGED
.t meeting of the Eastem Local

BAKING POTATOES

of

$'W
..."'"" .&amp;

l.b.

~

I#'::JI

f
~

Edualtlon schedule&lt;! for April 22
bu been ebanged to ApriJ 211 at 7
p.m. at lbe high schooL ,

PURPLIIIAUTY

EGGPLANT •••• ••••

49c
RED RADISHES. • • • • • .., .
l·lb

CRISP

INE LETTUCE • ,

IAVI21'
PEl PKG.

Fish
Fillets

BY ALMA MARSHALL
Special Correspondent
BAPTISMAI3 REPORTED
MASON - Several infants, youths
and adults were baptized on Easter
Sunday by Dr. John E. Wildman,
pastor of Mason United Methodist
Church. Infants baptised were,
Leslie Nicole Crump, Julie Beth '
Harris, and Roger Allen Wood II.
Youths and adults receiving the holy
sacrament of baptism included
Charles, Norma and Cynthia
Stanley, Unda and Melissa Stewart,
and Crystal Garhart.
,.
Joining by profession of faith included Charles, Norma and Cynthia
Stnaley, Unda Stewart, ,crystal '
Carhart, John Bond and Thomas .,
Bumgardner.
Gerald Stewart, joined the church '
by letter of transfer.
The Junior Choir of Mason United
Methodist Church will present a cantata, "Down by the Creek Bank" in
the Sunday morning worship service ·
at 9:45 a.m. on April '!/, with 14
youths participating. The cantata
written by Dottie Rambo and David
Huntsinger, wiD be directed by
Cecilia Harris and Jackis Sisson.
The event features youths going on
a picnic and mixing spiritual
guidance with the grandeur of the
outdoors.
Participants include Lisa Starcher, Lori Redman, Sherr i
Hickman, Tammy Hoffman, Sherri
Johnson, Tina Johnson, Mary Alice
Sisson, Robin Bond, Lisa Hayes,
Emily Bumgardner, Tommy ~
Bumgardner, John Bond, Shawn •
Johnson and Jay Buskirk.

Boosters yard
sale set
The Meigs Girls Athletic Boosters
will hold a yard sale April 25 and 26
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Rupe, Wright St., Pomeroy begiMingat9a.m. each morning.
Contributions are needed for the
sale and contributors may leave
Items at the Rupe home any day
next week or call Mrs. Nola Swisher,
~.Mrs. Rope, 992-2732 or Mrs.
Judy Crooks, 992-3704 for pickup service. The sale is fund raising activity
with all proceeds to be used in projects benefiting the girls' athletics.at
Meigs High School.
·

CONVICT DISSIDENTS
TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) - A
military court Friday convicted
eight prominent dissidents of plotting to overthrow the Chinese
NationaliBt government and sen-

c

.

Mason area news.
-

~·

INTO STEAKS, ROAST S
OR GROUND

Hams

WHOLE

.B oaeJess Whole
Sirloia .T ip

.

Semi· Boneless

Sentinel
Social Calendar

Board

•

PESCHKE • FULLY COOKED SMOKED

Wednesday - Uver and onion,
baked potato, buttered spinach,
fruited gelatin, biscuit, butter, milk.
Thursday - Italian Polenta, broccoli, stewed tomatoes, ice cream,
bread, butter, milk.
Friday - Fried chicken, mashed
potatoes, buttere&lt;l peas, peach cobbler, bread, butter, milk.
Coffee, tea and a choice of whole
milk or buttermilk served daily.
Please register the day before you
plan to eat. Pomeroy, 992-7886.

Dlslrlct

TH'OiiOFARE "Deluxe" BEEF
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
.

$239

$2!!
tttlPIID SANDWICH STEAK .... 1~.

milk.

School

Wt rtMfvt tilt! rl1ht to IIIIII! ~tHntltl"on tlllttmt ln thll~~ · H- tc~l• ro •"ltn. N~r mpontl~'-hrtr,_.,.,hhtltuorJ,

ru~~f/EAK ......................... ~~. $2!! ·
~NELESS

25:
Monday - Jolmny Manetti, green
beans, cottage cheese salad,
peaches, bread, butter, milk.
Tuesday - New England boiled
dinner, ham, potatoes, cabbage,
carrots and onions, cornbread,
yellow cake - lemon sauce, butter,

.

FREMONT, Ohio (AP)- UFO activist J . Allen Hynek says he
probably wouldn't report a UFO
sighting wlless someone else. was
along with him to verify it.
"I probably wouldn't report it
unless I had witnesses. People would
probably think that I'd been involve&lt;! in this so long it finally got to
me," he told an audience in
Fremont.
Hynek, who will be 70 May I, says
he's never had a UFO experience except on the set of "Close Encounters
of the Third Kind," the spooky sci-fi
movie for which he served as
technical advisor.
But, while Hynek says he wouldn't
report a UFO without help, he says
"a lot of scientific evidence is going
down the drain because people are
afraid to report UFO's, fearing that
people will think they're crazy."
Hynek, a retired physicist from
Northwestern University and the
head of the Center lor UFO Studies
in Evanston, Ill., said he was a confirmed skeptic when he began in-

Penngfar!

MONDAY
BLUE Angels, at 7:30p.m. in room
lA at the GAHS.

SET
EAST MEIGS - The Orange
Township Volunteer Fire DepartIJiftlt will'sponsor Its annual chicken
and 'rib barbecue dinner, rain or
shine on Mothers
Day, Sunday,
.
. May
11 beginning at 11 a.m.
The menu consists of either onel!alf chicken or ribs, baked beans,
Cole slaw, bread and beverage.
. Price of the dimers are ~.50. Carry·
out dinners will also be available.

He won't do it alone

~

tenced them to prison tenna ranging
from 12 years to life, ending one of

the most celebra~ political trlal8
,in recent Taiwan history.
The defendants lncludeil wellknown Taiwanese dissenter Shih
Ming-teh, who received the lone life
Nlltence, nationallePJator Huang
Hsin-Chieh and tbe i.slabd'a leadln&amp;
femlnlat, Lu IDu-Uen.

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

'

•
'
.

•'

.1

�8-11)--The Sunday Times-$entlnel, Sunday, Aprill!ll, 1980

B-11- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, April l!ll, 1980

'Tecumseh!' to open
for season June 13
CJULLICOTHE - The summer
tbeatre season is rolling again as
around the country companies begin
IAl complete their auditions and
casting for 1980. "Tecwnseh!," the
,historical outdoor drama in
Chillicothe has participated in local,
state, and national auditions for tbe
last six weeks and is in the process of
f!Palizing the cast for ibis year.
With a production company of
over 1l!ll to fill, Rusty Mundell, the
producer and director of the production, has seen over 2,500 auditionees
and applicants for acting and
technical positions. In addition to
''Tecumseh!," a production of the
~oadway musical "Shenandoah"
will be presented this summer, and
is to be directed by Christopher Par·
sons, the General Manager of
"Tecumseh!." The inclusion of
"Shenandoah" has added singers
and dancers to the roster of those
people to be seen. Auditions were
h!!ld locally in Chillicothe, with state
auditions being held in Columbus,
Athens, and New Philadelphia.

Gallia County History Book
deadline set for April 25

tended the Southeastern Theatre
Conference in Nashville, Tenn., the
Northeastern Theatre Conference in
Boston, Massachusetts, and the Institute of Outdoor Drama auditions
in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
These events draw student and
professional actors from around the .
country and are a major source of
casting for many summer theatres.
More particularly for students,
"Tecumseh!" also held casting calls
at the American Academy &lt;I
Dramatic Arts in New York City and
at Catholic University in
Washington, D. C.
"Tecwnseh!" is scheduled to open
June 13 and will play thiough August
30, Monday through Saturday.
"Shenandoah" will be presented
Sundays beginning June 22 to August
31, and will also run September 2 to
14 nightly, except Mondays. For information on either production, one
should write: Tecwnseh Productions, Inc., P. 0 . Box 73, Chillicothe,
Ohio45601.

A thank you letter was read from
Larry Lankas, coordinator of the
Athens Mental Health Center work,
thanking the class for the monthly
parties. Mrs. Nora Rice .wiD attend a
recognition ceremony at the State
House on April30 to accept on behalf
of the class, a certificate from Gov.
James A. Rhodes.
Ed Evans gave the blessing with
refreslunents being served by Mrs.
Van Meter to Mr. and Mrs. Evans,
Mr. and Mrs. Mack Stewart, Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Cole, Mrs. Nora
Rice, Mrs. Hazel Wilson, Mrs.
Clarice Erwin, and Mrs. Roach.
May meeting hosts will be Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Grueser, Mr. and Mrs. Bud
Wilson, Mr. and Mn.. Dale Hysell.

,------------------1

'Know Your Colors ' I
theme of workshop II
GALLIPOUS - An art demon·
stration and workshop is to be held
in the Multipurpose Room at the
Senior Citizens Center, Jackson
Pike, on Friday, April 2S, frcm 1-3
p.m. Tl)i.s is an on-going part of the
Humanities Program for 1980.
"Know Your Colors" is the theme
Jor the program. Participants will
Jearn to see color and to use it
'Jisely, say chairpersons. Materials
will be provided
: Co-chairpersons for the program
ere Mrs. Marie Utterer and Mrs.
l.l:argaret Brim. Mrs. Brim, teacher
and artist, will do the demon·
stration.

Sr. Citizen
Calendar
; GALLIPO!JS- Activities for this
Week at tbe Senior Citizens Center
are:
. Monday, April 21 - Chorus, 1-3

:J&gt;.m.

. Tuesday, April 22 - S.T.O.P.
Class, 10:30 a.m.; Physical Fitness,
11:15 a.m.; Stamp Collection
Program, I p.m.
• Wednesday, April 23 - Card
:Games, 1-3 p.m. ; Macrame Class, I·
'3; Bible Study at Vinton.
: Thursday, April24 - Bible Study,
'i-2 p.m. ; Blood Pressure Check at
'Vinton.
. : Friday, April 2S - Art Class,
-12:30-3 p.m.; "Know Your Colors,"
'J-3; Social Hour, 7.
: The Senior Nutrition Program will
"Serve the following menus:
: Monday - Soup beans and bam,
~buttered beets, celery and carrot
'sticks, cornbread, butter, peach up4lde down cake, milk.
...: Tuesday - Meat loaf, mashed
~tatoes, green peans, wheat bread,
;j)utter, Tapioca pudding, milk.
~ Wednesday- Baked chicken with
;sresslng, cranberry gelatin,
:a-earned peas, dinner rolls, butter,
.apple crisp, mllk.
.: ThursdaY - Beef/noodle cas·ierole, stewed tomatoes, tossed
:salad, bread, butter, chocolate pud: ding, milk.
• Friday ~ Baked fish, potato salad,
~puttered broccoli, bread, butter,
fruit gelatin, milk.
·; Choice of beverage served with
::'each meal. •
·
;• "Services rendered on a non·; discriminatory basis."
•
Doa't Blame City HaD
:;, NORWALK, Conn. (AP) -Mayor
Filliam Collins says he wants to put
;,Die blame where It's due.
~ SO he had signs posted Friday on
:Pothole-ridden roads in . his _town
·saying, "Don't blame City Hall ;this road is lnaintalned by the
:~tate. "

:!; Collins said he's been besieged
L91th coinplalnts about potholea, but
)lie said tlwt When they're In state
roads the state must pay to fix them.
f

@!:/'
l
?
l
j
.
~) ~~
,. . . ~ Cj

be at the Dr. Samuel L. Bossard
Memorial Library to receive
manuscripts between 10 a.m. and 3
p.m. Gallians are asked not to take
the material to individual homes If it
can be avoided.
The "Gallla County History
Book," is available for $30 per copy.
Checks should be made payable IAl
the Gallia County History Book.

SENIOll DANCE APRILZ5
GALUPOUS - A public dance
NAME OMITTED
· will be held at the Gallia County
GALLIPOUS - Teresa Nickels,
Senior Citizens' Center on April 25
whose engagement was announced
!tom 8-11 p.m. Music will be
in last Sunday's Times-Sentinel, is
provided by Mary Lucas and her orgranddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lee
chestra. Price will be $1 per person
Nickels of Oak Hill.
and everyone is invited.

I

Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gillespie

Potluck honors Yankee
A potluck dinner honoring Terry
Yankee, youth minister, and his
wife, who are leaving the ministry of
the Middleprot Middleport Church of
Christ, was announced for April 27
wben the Homebuilders Class met
T)lesday night at the church.
:The class voted to give a gift of
money to Mr. and Mrs. Yankee
whose last Sunday at the church wiD
beonMay4.
Mrs. Coleen Van Meter presided
at the meeting which opened with
prayer by Mack Stewart. Officers'
rf,'ports were given by Mrs. Clarice
Erwin and Mrs. Dorothy Roach.
Farie Cole thanked the class for the
Easter lily. Appreciation was ex·
tended to the class for sponsoring
the projector purchase.

GALUPOUS - The deadline for
stories for "Gallia County History
Book" is ~pr. 2S. Area pen;9~ who
are interested are asked to mail
their historical accounts to the
Gallia County History Book,
Gallipolis, Ohio, take them to the
Gallia County Probate office, first
floor of the court house, or to Our
House IAl Mary AlliSon.
Friday, April 2S, Jim Myers will

The "Tecwnseh! " staff also at·

~

I

:

Exhibit for the month of April: 21
Turkish Prayer Rugs from the per·
manent collection at the Huntington
Galleries, given by Herbert L. Fltz..
patrick in 1952.
Gallery Hours: Tuesdays and
Thursdays, 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; Satur·
daysaodSundays,1 p.m..S p.m.
April l!ll, 2:30 p.m.-4 p.m. Children's Workshop m Paper
Sculpture. Open to children from
Kindergarten age through the
Second grade. Instructor: Barbara
Braden. Call Janet Byers, 446-1903to
register. Fee$2. Riverby.
April~. 4:30p.m.~ p.m.- First
of series of 6 weekly classes in
Drawing for children, ages ~12. Cost
$15. Instructor: Barbara Braden.
Call Janet Byers, 446-1903, to
register.
April 29, 7:30 p.m. - F.A.C. Interdepartmental Meeting, Riverby.
9p.m. -F.A.C. Trustees Meeting.
May 9 and 10, 9:30 a.m.-3:30p.m.
-Watercolor Workshop for two full
days. Taught by Polly Trumbore of
Asbland, Kentucky. Call Janet
Byers, 446-1903 to register. Cost $35
for members, $40 for non-members.
May II, 2 p.m.-4 p.. - Annual
Membership Tea. Musical program
to be announced, Riverby. Bobbie
Holzer is chairing.

Silver anniversary
celebration planned
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mn;.
Carl (Jean) Gillespie observed their
2Sth wedQing anniversary on April
10.
In remembrance of the occasion,
they plan to receive all relatives and
friends at an open house reception
on Sunday, April27, from 2 p.m ..S: 30
p.m. in the Fellowship HaD of Rod·
ney United · Methodist Church

located on Route S88.
The open church wedding was held
at the First Church of the Nazarene,
Second Avenue, Gallipolis, at 2:30
p.m. with Rev. Vernon Shafer per·
fanning the ceremony on April 10,
1955 (also Easter .SWlday and Mr.
Gillespie's 21st birthday). The
reception was held at the old Molly
Smeltzer Farmers' Hotel.

UONSTOMEET
POMEROY - The Pomeroy·
Middleport Lions Club will hold a
regular meeting at noon Wednesday
at the Meigs Inn.

groups from the entire area are
urged to attend for a great afternoon
of squ~re dancing.

Buy Now &amp; Save SJ46

TAK€ NOT€ OF NATIONAL

S€CRETAPJES' WE€K
STARTS MONDAY. APRIL 21

SPECIAL '999
Stop in and see our other
specials or write tor
brochures
showing
memorials with size and
price stated.

LOGAN MONUMENT .
COMPANY, INC.
POMEROY, 0 .
Leo L. Vaughan, Mgr.
Ph. 992·2588
VINTO 0.
James A.
Mgr.

We've prepa red something spe&lt;1al fo r thor special lady l1nown as o ..
l se&lt;relrorv. Our arrangement is called ." You're Worth Your Weight In Gold
1nclurles o qolden bud vase lapel pin. We con deliver it anywhere in
th1s a rea o r ol m ost anywhere 1n the world This IS the l&lt;~ nd of g ift
thor' s bound to make o lasting impression.

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
Mrs. Millard Van Meter
Ph. 992·2039
106 Butternut Ave.
or992·5721
Pomeroy, Ohio
We accept all major credit cards and we wire flowers
everywhere.

MEIGS COUNTY·VOTERS
In Order to Vote in the
June 3rd Primary Elections
YOU MUST BE REGISTERED
.

BY MAY 5TH
IF YOU ARE NOT REGISTERED: Vlslt the Board's Office In
person -

OR -

Phone the Board of Elections -

OR -

ALSO, If you MOVE you must notify the county oHice. Or
If you are In doubt as to whether you are properly registered,
phone the Board.

MEIGS COUNTY BOARD
OF ELECTIONS.
THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.
A~ • !!82-ee81 -: Pomoroy • 992~
1---,,----'T',--'·-·

FORT SMITH, Ark. (AP) - The
old Woinan stood on a Fort Smith
sidewalk clutching a broken strap In
her hand, watching a purse snatcher
flee with " all her worldly
possessions.''
Her handbag was returned later minus $20, a f60 pair or eyeglasses
and her wallet The purse snatcher
was caught and convicted on a theft
charge. As part of his sentence, he
repaid the money and bought the
woman new eyeglasses.
Criminals in Sebastian County pay
for the.i r crimes, literally. They dole
out money for abortions, medical
care for beatlni: victimS, doors
smasbed in burglaries, even
wrongful deaths.
Roo Fields, prosecutor for the 12th
Judicial District in Arkansas,
initiated the program in the early
1970s. The catalyst was the theft of a
small black-and-white television set
from an elderly woman in a public
housing project.
The set cost less than $100, but the
woman was living on $82 a month.
"The detective said there was no
way the woman could get the money
IAl buy another set," Fields said.
The woman eventually got a new
teUivision and "from that point on
we kept track of it (restitution),"
Fielda said. · ·
The program keeps growing.
In 1973, the department collected
$6,311 in restitution of property and
stolen items. Last year, the county
collected $190,000 in restitution in 400
cases and another f60,000 -in -over·
draft checks.
The program was expanded to in·

elude Crawford County this year.
While most of the restitution is for
thefts, Martha Milam, restitution
administrator In Sebastian County,
says two men have paid for abor·
lions for raped women.
Field said the restitution program
deals with cases in which individuals
have received suspended or
probated sentences. Often, the
restitution is a condition of the
suspension.
If restitution isn't made, Fields
said, the case may be returned to
court and the suspension revoked.
Restitution isn't cut and dried.
Sometimes the staff agonizes over
cases, such as that of a mailman
who was struck and killed by a
drunken driver.
"In that case, we suspende&lt;l about
five years of the time he (the driver )
was sentenced conditioned on
paying restitution," Fields said.
The man began malting monthly
$100 payments to the widow in September. Fields said the owner of the
car, who was not driving, was
charged with manslaughter and ordered to pay identical com·
pensation. He bad completed his
payments.
"We don't try to put a price on
life," Fields said. But he added that
he knew the widow would need help
for her adolescent children and that
the men would not receive long
prison sentences.
In another case, a man was .sen·
tenced to 20 years in prison with two
years suspended for the battery of a
child. Fields said the child's head

, •

was beaten against a wall and " he'll
never be nonnal. "
The convicted nlan wiD pay $100 a
month for the child's medical bills as
long as the child lives or untll he has
paid $10,000, Fields said.
Despite the success of the Fort
Smith program, restitution is hit and ·
miss in oiher parts of the state:
There is a state program that pays
emergency medical bills for rape :
· victims, but restitution in other
cases is strictly voluntary.
"There is really no requirement
for prosecutors to handle
restitution," Fie.lds said.
Fields blamed the situation on the
lack of staff in prosecuting attorney
offices across the state. "To handle
restitution, you have to have a big
enough office and enough staff," he
said. In some cases, a prosecutor
may have only one secretary.
Mrs. Milam spends 00 percent of
her lime on restitution. Fields said
he expects to have a fuil·time staff
member working on restitution in
the future.
He also remarked that programs
like this in Sebastian and Crawford
counties should be eligible for
federal funds from the Law , En·
forcement Assistance Ad·
ministration, as are some in larger
cities.
State Prosecuting Coordinator
Dail Stiles said the Sebastian County
restitution program might become a
model for the rest of the state.
"Nobody is opposed to seeing victims get something other than in·
dignity" from their physical and
monetary losses, Stiles said.

MASONIC TEMPLE BUILDING
P. o. aox: 488, Pomeror, Ohio 45769
\ Phone 992-2697
'
Regular Hours - 8:~:30 MO!Idays Jhrough Fridays
ADDITIONAL HOURS FOR REGISTRATION:·
Friday El(enings- Aprll18, 25, May 2-6 p.m. to 9 p.m.
saturday~-April19, 26, May 3, 9 a.m. to 12 noon.
Monday-May 5, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.

CJUCAGO (AP) -What is white,
combines the facial features of five
well-known American actresses,
and is making the Coca-Cola Co.
blanch?
Answer: The " PiBB Gl~l." a
promotion designed by the Atlanta·
based company to publicize its "Mr.
PiBB" soft drink by identifying the
girl who most resembles a compile drawing of the actresses, all
of whom are white.
. The company apparently hoped to
broaden the campaign by
distributing the contest entry blanks
to high schools nationwide. But when
a copy popped up on the desk of the
Rev. Christian Reuter, principal or
Hales Franciscan, an all-black, allboy Roman Catholic school of 400 on
the city's South Side, he questioned
its logic.
"It is immediately apparent to
any sensitive person that non-Anglo
contestants need not apply," Reuter
sr'~ Thursday. "I would have
thought such misjudgments iJn.

'

MCCL
announces
convention

POMEROY-The South Central
District spring convention to be held
at Rodney on May 17 was announced
when the Middleport Child Conservation !.£ague met Thursday night
in the Riverboat Room, Athens
County Savings and U&gt;an Co., Meigs
Branch.
The Rio Grande Mothers League
will host the spring meeting. Also
announced in a letter from the state
president, Mary Kreain, was the
1980 60th annual convention of the
Ohio CCL.
The League voted to sponsor two
children in the bike hike, and named
to the nominating committee were
Janet Duffy, Ann Colburn and
Thelma Osborne. Peggy Houdashelt
presided at the meeting which opened with the Mother's Prayer and the
pledge to the flag. Members came
dressed as their favorite television
stars for the guest night program.
Games were conducted by Susie
Abbott with Helen Blackston,
Clarice Kennedy and Susie Soulsby
being the winners. Tonda Seidenable
won the traveling prize, and Mrs.
Colburn the hostess prize . Mrs.
Blackston and Mrs. Osborne served
refreshments to those named and
Peggy Harris, Eloise White and
Nancy Morris.
KENNEL CLlJB
SHOW SLATED
BElLEFONTAINE - The Bellefontaine All • Breed Kennel Club,
Inc. will hold an AKC Sanctioned B-OP Match Sunday, May
18, at the Logan County Fair·
grounds, south edge of Bellefon·
Iaine. All regular Conformation and
Obedience classes will be offered,
plus Sub-Novice, Graduate Novice
and Junior Showmanship .
Registration for all classes starts at
9 a. m. Judging begins at 11 a. m.
with classes scheduled to start at
regular intervals unlil1 :45 p.m. For
details of judging schedule and other·
information contact match
secretary Mary E. Cost, Rt. 1,
Rushsylvania, Ohio 43347. Phone
5!3-468-2845. Advance entries at a
reduced fee will be accepted until
Wednesday, May14.

women."
Within days, he dashed off copies
of the letter he sent to Coca-Cola IQ
the chief school officen; in 50 states,
the superintendents d 160 ar·
chdiocesan high schools, the U.S.
Department of Education, the
NAACP, the National Urban League
and others.
Less than one week later, CocaCola Co. notified Reuter that it
would attempt to retrieve the
materials and ''will review all future

To Mom, With Love

. SOUTIIERN SCHOOL BOARD
TO MEET

HYMN SING SET
MIDDLEPORT - A gospel hymn
RACINE - The Southern Local sing will be held at 1:30 p.m. today at
School District Board of Education the Middleport Freewill Baptist
will meet at 7: 30p.m. Tuesday in the Church. Several groups wlll be
1 presenting several numbers. The
high school cafeteria.
public is invited.

SUPER MARKET-OPEN DAILY &amp; SUN. 9 to 9:30 p.m.
VINE STI!EH, GAUIPOLIS, OHIO

PHONE 446·959a

Prices Effective Sunday 4120/80 throu~ 4126/80
t~e Right

"We Reserve

~

to timit~"

~~

SUPERIOR
BONELESS

T~~!~~ ~~M

USDA
CHOICE
T-BONE STEAK

'13~

• •!

'1 29

$309lB.

11-"toiiujjAliR~TiERi'iii:iCiroTuusDA CHOICE
PORK LOIN PORTERHOUSE STEAK
9 TO 11 CHOPS

LB.

FRESHEST PROiJUCE !fl TOWN

YELLOW COOKING

c'1z~"f, ON IONS

69~

3 LB.

BAG

u.

FRESH

CELERY
STALK

ROME BEAUTY

NO. 1 WHITE

APPLES

POTATOES
20 LB.
BAG

39c

'159

3 LB.
BAG

99~

2% MILK

Legion Auxiliary discusses
AL

organizing memorial team
POMEROY - The possibility of
organizing a memorial and installa·
tion team for the American Legion
Auxiliary and the Past Presidents
Parley of Drew Webster Post 39 was
discussed when the Past Presidents
met Wednesday night at the Riverboat Room.
Mrs. Pearl Knapp presided at the
meeting during which time membership in the Auxiliary and the Eight
and Forty was discussed. Mn. Veda
Davis reported that six new juniors
have joined the Junior Auxiliary this
year. The possibility of opening
membership in the Pomeroy Past
Presidents · Parley
to past
pte.:sidents of all Auxiliary units in
county was discussed.
Mrs. Davis gave devotions
reading 81\ article from the National
News. Mrs. Mary Martin read "Army Hospital." A thank you note was
read from Velma Hartman, thank·
ing the parley for $20 contributed to

8

nurses scholarship. Also read was a
thank you note from Eleanor Ullum

of the Dayton V. A. Hospital, Miller
Cottage, for $25 sent there at
Christmas time and noting that the
money had been used for magazine
subscriptions:
Mrs . Knapp and Mn;. Martin serv·
ed cookies and sherbet during the
social hour. The next meeting will be
on May 3 at 6:30p.m. at an Athens
restaurant. The meeting will honor
Iva Powell who will be going to
Florida for an extended visit. Those
wanting IAl go to the meeting are IAl
call 99Ul24 for transportation
arrangements.

The Family Birtlulont fru Plaq11
When your mom receives the Family Birthstone Tree• plaque with all her
children and grandchi ld·,.n'! names, blrthdates and birthstones atcrwd
m bronze she wi ll cry tears of Jov. You will have g.i fen .to her the moet
cherished gift she could desire. her !emily Immortalized 1n bronze. Made
for you at

---;~------··
''Order Now to Insure Mother's Day Delivery"

.

'129

POUND QUARTERS

~' 89

ROYAL CREST

CAMPBELL'S

COTTAGE CHEESE

PORK &amp; BEANS

24
..,. 1100110 · - • - -

oz.

16 oz.3 F
CAN

CTN.
BROUGHTON

GALLON
PlASTIC

9~

VALLEY BELL

FRUIT DRINKS

ICE CREAM

99~

HALf
GALlON

'139

LUCK'S

PINTO BEANS
29 oz.
CAN

donations
POMEROY-A donation to the
Teen Class for a trip was made by
the Young Adult Class of the Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church
meeting Thursday nightht at the
Meigs County Infirmary.
A committee for entertainment
was appointed and includes Darla
Hawley, Patty Barton, and Sharon
Wright. It was decided that during
the next month, the member bringing the most people to the class
will receive a prize. Bob Barton was
the winner of the Bible quiz. Mrs.
Jacobs and Mrs. Floyd' ~hook served
refreslunents to those named and
Etta Mae EUts, Leona Martin, Betty
Will, the Rev. Floyd Shook, Bob Barton, Randy Hawley, Mildred Jacobs
and Ida Martin.

16 oz.
BTLS.

:t\.11J

MARGARINE

or Din PEPSI

Teens make

•I

,I I

promotional activities to see that a
possible in our multi-racial,
situation
of this type does not happen
liberated society of the 1980s."
again,"
said
company spokesman
The look-alike, whose face would
Frank
Stansberry.
combine . the features of Pam
"His was the only letter we got
Dawber, Debby Boone, Susan Anton,
about this, but it was enough to con·
Kristy McNichol and Melissa Sue
vince us that this promotion-which
Anderson, wins a trip to New
of course we would not have
Orleans to collect $5,000.
designed to purposefuily offend
Reuter, who began a one-man
crusade April .10 to scuttle the . anybody - was open to that kind of
interpretation," Stansberry said in a
promotion, called the advertising
telephone interview from AUanta.
campaign " blatantly racist,
unenlightened and demeaning to all

Mall

the Board a Card.

(

Making criminals pay.

PiBB girl makes Coca Cola blanch

A CS benefit set by·dance group ·
GALLIPO!JS - The Gallia County Twirlers, a local Western Square
Dance group, will put on a benefit
square dance for file Gallia County
Unit of the American Cancer Society
(ACS) on Sunday, May 4, from 2 un·
lil5 p.m. in the Activity Center of the
Gallipolla Developmental Center.
Chairing the event is Roberta
VanGundy, assisted by Irene
Paulsen and Laura Wade, along with
Joe Dobbins, president of the Gallia
County Twirlers.
Four callers will be taking part in
this three hour benefit square dance.
They are Jim Briggs of Bar·
boursville, W. Va.; Bill Adkins from
South Ceredo, W. Va.; John Waugh
and Billy Gene Evans, both of
Gallipolis.
As a part or the festivities, there
will be a Cake Walk, and a number
of door prizes will be furnished by
local businesses. Already com·
milled is McDonald's Restaurant to
provide its orange drink, and
Milstead's Bakery will have donuts
there for all.
The admission fee for this benefit
square dance is $3 per couple.
Square dancers and square ;nee

Needed restitution

69~

LEMON, REGUlAR,
WOOD SCENT

14 oz.
CAN

JOY UQUIO

DEL MONTE

DETERGENT

CATSUP_
380Z.
BOrnE·

'189

99~
-.,J

20' OFF lABEL

:;r:
r---·

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II DETERGENT
BOLD 3 .
COFFEE
II
I FAMILY SIZt $539
All GRINDS $5991 1 171 OZ. · ·.
'
· 2 LB. CAN
·~ 1
BOX
I Johnson's Market '
Johnson's Market
MAXWELL HOUSE I

4/26/80

.,

,,

1 Coupon

.

�8-11)--The Sunday Times-$entlnel, Sunday, Aprill!ll, 1980

B-11- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, April l!ll, 1980

'Tecumseh!' to open
for season June 13
CJULLICOTHE - The summer
tbeatre season is rolling again as
around the country companies begin
IAl complete their auditions and
casting for 1980. "Tecwnseh!," the
,historical outdoor drama in
Chillicothe has participated in local,
state, and national auditions for tbe
last six weeks and is in the process of
f!Palizing the cast for ibis year.
With a production company of
over 1l!ll to fill, Rusty Mundell, the
producer and director of the production, has seen over 2,500 auditionees
and applicants for acting and
technical positions. In addition to
''Tecumseh!," a production of the
~oadway musical "Shenandoah"
will be presented this summer, and
is to be directed by Christopher Par·
sons, the General Manager of
"Tecumseh!." The inclusion of
"Shenandoah" has added singers
and dancers to the roster of those
people to be seen. Auditions were
h!!ld locally in Chillicothe, with state
auditions being held in Columbus,
Athens, and New Philadelphia.

Gallia County History Book
deadline set for April 25

tended the Southeastern Theatre
Conference in Nashville, Tenn., the
Northeastern Theatre Conference in
Boston, Massachusetts, and the Institute of Outdoor Drama auditions
in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
These events draw student and
professional actors from around the .
country and are a major source of
casting for many summer theatres.
More particularly for students,
"Tecumseh!" also held casting calls
at the American Academy &lt;I
Dramatic Arts in New York City and
at Catholic University in
Washington, D. C.
"Tecwnseh!" is scheduled to open
June 13 and will play thiough August
30, Monday through Saturday.
"Shenandoah" will be presented
Sundays beginning June 22 to August
31, and will also run September 2 to
14 nightly, except Mondays. For information on either production, one
should write: Tecwnseh Productions, Inc., P. 0 . Box 73, Chillicothe,
Ohio45601.

A thank you letter was read from
Larry Lankas, coordinator of the
Athens Mental Health Center work,
thanking the class for the monthly
parties. Mrs. Nora Rice .wiD attend a
recognition ceremony at the State
House on April30 to accept on behalf
of the class, a certificate from Gov.
James A. Rhodes.
Ed Evans gave the blessing with
refreslunents being served by Mrs.
Van Meter to Mr. and Mrs. Evans,
Mr. and Mrs. Mack Stewart, Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Cole, Mrs. Nora
Rice, Mrs. Hazel Wilson, Mrs.
Clarice Erwin, and Mrs. Roach.
May meeting hosts will be Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Grueser, Mr. and Mrs. Bud
Wilson, Mr. and Mn.. Dale Hysell.

,------------------1

'Know Your Colors ' I
theme of workshop II
GALLIPOUS - An art demon·
stration and workshop is to be held
in the Multipurpose Room at the
Senior Citizens Center, Jackson
Pike, on Friday, April 2S, frcm 1-3
p.m. Tl)i.s is an on-going part of the
Humanities Program for 1980.
"Know Your Colors" is the theme
Jor the program. Participants will
Jearn to see color and to use it
'Jisely, say chairpersons. Materials
will be provided
: Co-chairpersons for the program
ere Mrs. Marie Utterer and Mrs.
l.l:argaret Brim. Mrs. Brim, teacher
and artist, will do the demon·
stration.

Sr. Citizen
Calendar
; GALLIPO!JS- Activities for this
Week at tbe Senior Citizens Center
are:
. Monday, April 21 - Chorus, 1-3

:J&gt;.m.

. Tuesday, April 22 - S.T.O.P.
Class, 10:30 a.m.; Physical Fitness,
11:15 a.m.; Stamp Collection
Program, I p.m.
• Wednesday, April 23 - Card
:Games, 1-3 p.m. ; Macrame Class, I·
'3; Bible Study at Vinton.
: Thursday, April24 - Bible Study,
'i-2 p.m. ; Blood Pressure Check at
'Vinton.
. : Friday, April 2S - Art Class,
-12:30-3 p.m.; "Know Your Colors,"
'J-3; Social Hour, 7.
: The Senior Nutrition Program will
"Serve the following menus:
: Monday - Soup beans and bam,
~buttered beets, celery and carrot
'sticks, cornbread, butter, peach up4lde down cake, milk.
...: Tuesday - Meat loaf, mashed
~tatoes, green peans, wheat bread,
;j)utter, Tapioca pudding, milk.
~ Wednesday- Baked chicken with
;sresslng, cranberry gelatin,
:a-earned peas, dinner rolls, butter,
.apple crisp, mllk.
.: ThursdaY - Beef/noodle cas·ierole, stewed tomatoes, tossed
:salad, bread, butter, chocolate pud: ding, milk.
• Friday ~ Baked fish, potato salad,
~puttered broccoli, bread, butter,
fruit gelatin, milk.
·; Choice of beverage served with
::'each meal. •
·
;• "Services rendered on a non·; discriminatory basis."
•
Doa't Blame City HaD
:;, NORWALK, Conn. (AP) -Mayor
Filliam Collins says he wants to put
;,Die blame where It's due.
~ SO he had signs posted Friday on
:Pothole-ridden roads in . his _town
·saying, "Don't blame City Hall ;this road is lnaintalned by the
:~tate. "

:!; Collins said he's been besieged
L91th coinplalnts about potholea, but
)lie said tlwt When they're In state
roads the state must pay to fix them.
f

@!:/'
l
?
l
j
.
~) ~~
,. . . ~ Cj

be at the Dr. Samuel L. Bossard
Memorial Library to receive
manuscripts between 10 a.m. and 3
p.m. Gallians are asked not to take
the material to individual homes If it
can be avoided.
The "Gallla County History
Book," is available for $30 per copy.
Checks should be made payable IAl
the Gallia County History Book.

SENIOll DANCE APRILZ5
GALUPOUS - A public dance
NAME OMITTED
· will be held at the Gallia County
GALLIPOUS - Teresa Nickels,
Senior Citizens' Center on April 25
whose engagement was announced
!tom 8-11 p.m. Music will be
in last Sunday's Times-Sentinel, is
provided by Mary Lucas and her orgranddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lee
chestra. Price will be $1 per person
Nickels of Oak Hill.
and everyone is invited.

I

Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gillespie

Potluck honors Yankee
A potluck dinner honoring Terry
Yankee, youth minister, and his
wife, who are leaving the ministry of
the Middleprot Middleport Church of
Christ, was announced for April 27
wben the Homebuilders Class met
T)lesday night at the church.
:The class voted to give a gift of
money to Mr. and Mrs. Yankee
whose last Sunday at the church wiD
beonMay4.
Mrs. Coleen Van Meter presided
at the meeting which opened with
prayer by Mack Stewart. Officers'
rf,'ports were given by Mrs. Clarice
Erwin and Mrs. Dorothy Roach.
Farie Cole thanked the class for the
Easter lily. Appreciation was ex·
tended to the class for sponsoring
the projector purchase.

GALUPOUS - The deadline for
stories for "Gallia County History
Book" is ~pr. 2S. Area pen;9~ who
are interested are asked to mail
their historical accounts to the
Gallia County History Book,
Gallipolis, Ohio, take them to the
Gallia County Probate office, first
floor of the court house, or to Our
House IAl Mary AlliSon.
Friday, April 2S, Jim Myers will

The "Tecwnseh! " staff also at·

~

I

:

Exhibit for the month of April: 21
Turkish Prayer Rugs from the per·
manent collection at the Huntington
Galleries, given by Herbert L. Fltz..
patrick in 1952.
Gallery Hours: Tuesdays and
Thursdays, 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; Satur·
daysaodSundays,1 p.m..S p.m.
April l!ll, 2:30 p.m.-4 p.m. Children's Workshop m Paper
Sculpture. Open to children from
Kindergarten age through the
Second grade. Instructor: Barbara
Braden. Call Janet Byers, 446-1903to
register. Fee$2. Riverby.
April~. 4:30p.m.~ p.m.- First
of series of 6 weekly classes in
Drawing for children, ages ~12. Cost
$15. Instructor: Barbara Braden.
Call Janet Byers, 446-1903, to
register.
April 29, 7:30 p.m. - F.A.C. Interdepartmental Meeting, Riverby.
9p.m. -F.A.C. Trustees Meeting.
May 9 and 10, 9:30 a.m.-3:30p.m.
-Watercolor Workshop for two full
days. Taught by Polly Trumbore of
Asbland, Kentucky. Call Janet
Byers, 446-1903 to register. Cost $35
for members, $40 for non-members.
May II, 2 p.m.-4 p.. - Annual
Membership Tea. Musical program
to be announced, Riverby. Bobbie
Holzer is chairing.

Silver anniversary
celebration planned
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mn;.
Carl (Jean) Gillespie observed their
2Sth wedQing anniversary on April
10.
In remembrance of the occasion,
they plan to receive all relatives and
friends at an open house reception
on Sunday, April27, from 2 p.m ..S: 30
p.m. in the Fellowship HaD of Rod·
ney United · Methodist Church

located on Route S88.
The open church wedding was held
at the First Church of the Nazarene,
Second Avenue, Gallipolis, at 2:30
p.m. with Rev. Vernon Shafer per·
fanning the ceremony on April 10,
1955 (also Easter .SWlday and Mr.
Gillespie's 21st birthday). The
reception was held at the old Molly
Smeltzer Farmers' Hotel.

UONSTOMEET
POMEROY - The Pomeroy·
Middleport Lions Club will hold a
regular meeting at noon Wednesday
at the Meigs Inn.

groups from the entire area are
urged to attend for a great afternoon
of squ~re dancing.

Buy Now &amp; Save SJ46

TAK€ NOT€ OF NATIONAL

S€CRETAPJES' WE€K
STARTS MONDAY. APRIL 21

SPECIAL '999
Stop in and see our other
specials or write tor
brochures
showing
memorials with size and
price stated.

LOGAN MONUMENT .
COMPANY, INC.
POMEROY, 0 .
Leo L. Vaughan, Mgr.
Ph. 992·2588
VINTO 0.
James A.
Mgr.

We've prepa red something spe&lt;1al fo r thor special lady l1nown as o ..
l se&lt;relrorv. Our arrangement is called ." You're Worth Your Weight In Gold
1nclurles o qolden bud vase lapel pin. We con deliver it anywhere in
th1s a rea o r ol m ost anywhere 1n the world This IS the l&lt;~ nd of g ift
thor' s bound to make o lasting impression.

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
Mrs. Millard Van Meter
Ph. 992·2039
106 Butternut Ave.
or992·5721
Pomeroy, Ohio
We accept all major credit cards and we wire flowers
everywhere.

MEIGS COUNTY·VOTERS
In Order to Vote in the
June 3rd Primary Elections
YOU MUST BE REGISTERED
.

BY MAY 5TH
IF YOU ARE NOT REGISTERED: Vlslt the Board's Office In
person -

OR -

Phone the Board of Elections -

OR -

ALSO, If you MOVE you must notify the county oHice. Or
If you are In doubt as to whether you are properly registered,
phone the Board.

MEIGS COUNTY BOARD
OF ELECTIONS.
THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.
A~ • !!82-ee81 -: Pomoroy • 992~
1---,,----'T',--'·-·

FORT SMITH, Ark. (AP) - The
old Woinan stood on a Fort Smith
sidewalk clutching a broken strap In
her hand, watching a purse snatcher
flee with " all her worldly
possessions.''
Her handbag was returned later minus $20, a f60 pair or eyeglasses
and her wallet The purse snatcher
was caught and convicted on a theft
charge. As part of his sentence, he
repaid the money and bought the
woman new eyeglasses.
Criminals in Sebastian County pay
for the.i r crimes, literally. They dole
out money for abortions, medical
care for beatlni: victimS, doors
smasbed in burglaries, even
wrongful deaths.
Roo Fields, prosecutor for the 12th
Judicial District in Arkansas,
initiated the program in the early
1970s. The catalyst was the theft of a
small black-and-white television set
from an elderly woman in a public
housing project.
The set cost less than $100, but the
woman was living on $82 a month.
"The detective said there was no
way the woman could get the money
IAl buy another set," Fields said.
The woman eventually got a new
teUivision and "from that point on
we kept track of it (restitution),"
Fielda said. · ·
The program keeps growing.
In 1973, the department collected
$6,311 in restitution of property and
stolen items. Last year, the county
collected $190,000 in restitution in 400
cases and another f60,000 -in -over·
draft checks.
The program was expanded to in·

elude Crawford County this year.
While most of the restitution is for
thefts, Martha Milam, restitution
administrator In Sebastian County,
says two men have paid for abor·
lions for raped women.
Field said the restitution program
deals with cases in which individuals
have received suspended or
probated sentences. Often, the
restitution is a condition of the
suspension.
If restitution isn't made, Fields
said, the case may be returned to
court and the suspension revoked.
Restitution isn't cut and dried.
Sometimes the staff agonizes over
cases, such as that of a mailman
who was struck and killed by a
drunken driver.
"In that case, we suspende&lt;l about
five years of the time he (the driver )
was sentenced conditioned on
paying restitution," Fields said.
The man began malting monthly
$100 payments to the widow in September. Fields said the owner of the
car, who was not driving, was
charged with manslaughter and ordered to pay identical com·
pensation. He bad completed his
payments.
"We don't try to put a price on
life," Fields said. But he added that
he knew the widow would need help
for her adolescent children and that
the men would not receive long
prison sentences.
In another case, a man was .sen·
tenced to 20 years in prison with two
years suspended for the battery of a
child. Fields said the child's head

, •

was beaten against a wall and " he'll
never be nonnal. "
The convicted nlan wiD pay $100 a
month for the child's medical bills as
long as the child lives or untll he has
paid $10,000, Fields said.
Despite the success of the Fort
Smith program, restitution is hit and ·
miss in oiher parts of the state:
There is a state program that pays
emergency medical bills for rape :
· victims, but restitution in other
cases is strictly voluntary.
"There is really no requirement
for prosecutors to handle
restitution," Fie.lds said.
Fields blamed the situation on the
lack of staff in prosecuting attorney
offices across the state. "To handle
restitution, you have to have a big
enough office and enough staff," he
said. In some cases, a prosecutor
may have only one secretary.
Mrs. Milam spends 00 percent of
her lime on restitution. Fields said
he expects to have a fuil·time staff
member working on restitution in
the future.
He also remarked that programs
like this in Sebastian and Crawford
counties should be eligible for
federal funds from the Law , En·
forcement Assistance Ad·
ministration, as are some in larger
cities.
State Prosecuting Coordinator
Dail Stiles said the Sebastian County
restitution program might become a
model for the rest of the state.
"Nobody is opposed to seeing victims get something other than in·
dignity" from their physical and
monetary losses, Stiles said.

MASONIC TEMPLE BUILDING
P. o. aox: 488, Pomeror, Ohio 45769
\ Phone 992-2697
'
Regular Hours - 8:~:30 MO!Idays Jhrough Fridays
ADDITIONAL HOURS FOR REGISTRATION:·
Friday El(enings- Aprll18, 25, May 2-6 p.m. to 9 p.m.
saturday~-April19, 26, May 3, 9 a.m. to 12 noon.
Monday-May 5, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.

CJUCAGO (AP) -What is white,
combines the facial features of five
well-known American actresses,
and is making the Coca-Cola Co.
blanch?
Answer: The " PiBB Gl~l." a
promotion designed by the Atlanta·
based company to publicize its "Mr.
PiBB" soft drink by identifying the
girl who most resembles a compile drawing of the actresses, all
of whom are white.
. The company apparently hoped to
broaden the campaign by
distributing the contest entry blanks
to high schools nationwide. But when
a copy popped up on the desk of the
Rev. Christian Reuter, principal or
Hales Franciscan, an all-black, allboy Roman Catholic school of 400 on
the city's South Side, he questioned
its logic.
"It is immediately apparent to
any sensitive person that non-Anglo
contestants need not apply," Reuter
sr'~ Thursday. "I would have
thought such misjudgments iJn.

'

MCCL
announces
convention

POMEROY-The South Central
District spring convention to be held
at Rodney on May 17 was announced
when the Middleport Child Conservation !.£ague met Thursday night
in the Riverboat Room, Athens
County Savings and U&gt;an Co., Meigs
Branch.
The Rio Grande Mothers League
will host the spring meeting. Also
announced in a letter from the state
president, Mary Kreain, was the
1980 60th annual convention of the
Ohio CCL.
The League voted to sponsor two
children in the bike hike, and named
to the nominating committee were
Janet Duffy, Ann Colburn and
Thelma Osborne. Peggy Houdashelt
presided at the meeting which opened with the Mother's Prayer and the
pledge to the flag. Members came
dressed as their favorite television
stars for the guest night program.
Games were conducted by Susie
Abbott with Helen Blackston,
Clarice Kennedy and Susie Soulsby
being the winners. Tonda Seidenable
won the traveling prize, and Mrs.
Colburn the hostess prize . Mrs.
Blackston and Mrs. Osborne served
refreshments to those named and
Peggy Harris, Eloise White and
Nancy Morris.
KENNEL CLlJB
SHOW SLATED
BElLEFONTAINE - The Bellefontaine All • Breed Kennel Club,
Inc. will hold an AKC Sanctioned B-OP Match Sunday, May
18, at the Logan County Fair·
grounds, south edge of Bellefon·
Iaine. All regular Conformation and
Obedience classes will be offered,
plus Sub-Novice, Graduate Novice
and Junior Showmanship .
Registration for all classes starts at
9 a. m. Judging begins at 11 a. m.
with classes scheduled to start at
regular intervals unlil1 :45 p.m. For
details of judging schedule and other·
information contact match
secretary Mary E. Cost, Rt. 1,
Rushsylvania, Ohio 43347. Phone
5!3-468-2845. Advance entries at a
reduced fee will be accepted until
Wednesday, May14.

women."
Within days, he dashed off copies
of the letter he sent to Coca-Cola IQ
the chief school officen; in 50 states,
the superintendents d 160 ar·
chdiocesan high schools, the U.S.
Department of Education, the
NAACP, the National Urban League
and others.
Less than one week later, CocaCola Co. notified Reuter that it
would attempt to retrieve the
materials and ''will review all future

To Mom, With Love

. SOUTIIERN SCHOOL BOARD
TO MEET

HYMN SING SET
MIDDLEPORT - A gospel hymn
RACINE - The Southern Local sing will be held at 1:30 p.m. today at
School District Board of Education the Middleport Freewill Baptist
will meet at 7: 30p.m. Tuesday in the Church. Several groups wlll be
1 presenting several numbers. The
high school cafeteria.
public is invited.

SUPER MARKET-OPEN DAILY &amp; SUN. 9 to 9:30 p.m.
VINE STI!EH, GAUIPOLIS, OHIO

PHONE 446·959a

Prices Effective Sunday 4120/80 throu~ 4126/80
t~e Right

"We Reserve

~

to timit~"

~~

SUPERIOR
BONELESS

T~~!~~ ~~M

USDA
CHOICE
T-BONE STEAK

'13~

• •!

'1 29

$309lB.

11-"toiiujjAliR~TiERi'iii:iCiroTuusDA CHOICE
PORK LOIN PORTERHOUSE STEAK
9 TO 11 CHOPS

LB.

FRESHEST PROiJUCE !fl TOWN

YELLOW COOKING

c'1z~"f, ON IONS

69~

3 LB.

BAG

u.

FRESH

CELERY
STALK

ROME BEAUTY

NO. 1 WHITE

APPLES

POTATOES
20 LB.
BAG

39c

'159

3 LB.
BAG

99~

2% MILK

Legion Auxiliary discusses
AL

organizing memorial team
POMEROY - The possibility of
organizing a memorial and installa·
tion team for the American Legion
Auxiliary and the Past Presidents
Parley of Drew Webster Post 39 was
discussed when the Past Presidents
met Wednesday night at the Riverboat Room.
Mrs. Pearl Knapp presided at the
meeting during which time membership in the Auxiliary and the Eight
and Forty was discussed. Mn. Veda
Davis reported that six new juniors
have joined the Junior Auxiliary this
year. The possibility of opening
membership in the Pomeroy Past
Presidents · Parley
to past
pte.:sidents of all Auxiliary units in
county was discussed.
Mrs. Davis gave devotions
reading 81\ article from the National
News. Mrs. Mary Martin read "Army Hospital." A thank you note was
read from Velma Hartman, thank·
ing the parley for $20 contributed to

8

nurses scholarship. Also read was a
thank you note from Eleanor Ullum

of the Dayton V. A. Hospital, Miller
Cottage, for $25 sent there at
Christmas time and noting that the
money had been used for magazine
subscriptions:
Mrs . Knapp and Mn;. Martin serv·
ed cookies and sherbet during the
social hour. The next meeting will be
on May 3 at 6:30p.m. at an Athens
restaurant. The meeting will honor
Iva Powell who will be going to
Florida for an extended visit. Those
wanting IAl go to the meeting are IAl
call 99Ul24 for transportation
arrangements.

The Family Birtlulont fru Plaq11
When your mom receives the Family Birthstone Tree• plaque with all her
children and grandchi ld·,.n'! names, blrthdates and birthstones atcrwd
m bronze she wi ll cry tears of Jov. You will have g.i fen .to her the moet
cherished gift she could desire. her !emily Immortalized 1n bronze. Made
for you at

---;~------··
''Order Now to Insure Mother's Day Delivery"

.

'129

POUND QUARTERS

~' 89

ROYAL CREST

CAMPBELL'S

COTTAGE CHEESE

PORK &amp; BEANS

24
..,. 1100110 · - • - -

oz.

16 oz.3 F
CAN

CTN.
BROUGHTON

GALLON
PlASTIC

9~

VALLEY BELL

FRUIT DRINKS

ICE CREAM

99~

HALf
GALlON

'139

LUCK'S

PINTO BEANS
29 oz.
CAN

donations
POMEROY-A donation to the
Teen Class for a trip was made by
the Young Adult Class of the Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church
meeting Thursday nightht at the
Meigs County Infirmary.
A committee for entertainment
was appointed and includes Darla
Hawley, Patty Barton, and Sharon
Wright. It was decided that during
the next month, the member bringing the most people to the class
will receive a prize. Bob Barton was
the winner of the Bible quiz. Mrs.
Jacobs and Mrs. Floyd' ~hook served
refreslunents to those named and
Etta Mae EUts, Leona Martin, Betty
Will, the Rev. Floyd Shook, Bob Barton, Randy Hawley, Mildred Jacobs
and Ida Martin.

16 oz.
BTLS.

:t\.11J

MARGARINE

or Din PEPSI

Teens make

•I

,I I

promotional activities to see that a
possible in our multi-racial,
situation
of this type does not happen
liberated society of the 1980s."
again,"
said
company spokesman
The look-alike, whose face would
Frank
Stansberry.
combine . the features of Pam
"His was the only letter we got
Dawber, Debby Boone, Susan Anton,
about this, but it was enough to con·
Kristy McNichol and Melissa Sue
vince us that this promotion-which
Anderson, wins a trip to New
of course we would not have
Orleans to collect $5,000.
designed to purposefuily offend
Reuter, who began a one-man
crusade April .10 to scuttle the . anybody - was open to that kind of
interpretation," Stansberry said in a
promotion, called the advertising
telephone interview from AUanta.
campaign " blatantly racist,
unenlightened and demeaning to all

Mall

the Board a Card.

(

Making criminals pay.

PiBB girl makes Coca Cola blanch

A CS benefit set by·dance group ·
GALLIPO!JS - The Gallia County Twirlers, a local Western Square
Dance group, will put on a benefit
square dance for file Gallia County
Unit of the American Cancer Society
(ACS) on Sunday, May 4, from 2 un·
lil5 p.m. in the Activity Center of the
Gallipolla Developmental Center.
Chairing the event is Roberta
VanGundy, assisted by Irene
Paulsen and Laura Wade, along with
Joe Dobbins, president of the Gallia
County Twirlers.
Four callers will be taking part in
this three hour benefit square dance.
They are Jim Briggs of Bar·
boursville, W. Va.; Bill Adkins from
South Ceredo, W. Va.; John Waugh
and Billy Gene Evans, both of
Gallipolis.
As a part or the festivities, there
will be a Cake Walk, and a number
of door prizes will be furnished by
local businesses. Already com·
milled is McDonald's Restaurant to
provide its orange drink, and
Milstead's Bakery will have donuts
there for all.
The admission fee for this benefit
square dance is $3 per couple.
Square dancers and square ;nee

Needed restitution

69~

LEMON, REGUlAR,
WOOD SCENT

14 oz.
CAN

JOY UQUIO

DEL MONTE

DETERGENT

CATSUP_
380Z.
BOrnE·

'189

99~
-.,J

20' OFF lABEL

:;r:
r---·

89~

II DETERGENT
BOLD 3 .
COFFEE
II
I FAMILY SIZt $539
All GRINDS $5991 1 171 OZ. · ·.
'
· 2 LB. CAN
·~ 1
BOX
I Johnson's Market '
Johnson's Market
MAXWELL HOUSE I

4/26/80

.,

,,

1 Coupon

.

�&amp;12-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, April20, 1980

Community Corner

C-1 - The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday. April20.1911l

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S

c

1928 certificate of credit
found, asked to be claimed
By Charlene Hoefilcb
Tfmes-Seotlnel staff writer
Mfl&lt;. Betty Frazier of Middleport
has found a certificate of credit
issued to Louis Parrish on May 15,
1928 by the Virginia Iron, Coal and
Coke Co. and thought perhaps some
relatives here might be interested in
having it. She can be
at
992-7114. .
The certificate
was behind a picture in a frame
which she bought
at a yard sale. It
was given for
mine safety and
accident preventionatirunan, Va.
Hoefilcb
Hoefilcb
And Mfl&lt;. Frazier asked us to pass
along her appreciation for
assistance given her and other
members of the family in a recent
auto accident. She reports that a
nurse stopped by before the
emergency squad arrived and gave
some assistance and she especially
wants to thank her - didn't get the

name.
We understand that Mrs. James
Murray is back in her home on
Grant St. in Middleport. For the past
year or so, she has been with
relatives across the river due to
some health problems. Mrs. Murray
Is one of Middleport's oldest
residents.
Sharon and Lee Davidson and
their three children, Ann, John and
Charles who have spent the past
several years in London, England,
were here for a brief Easter visit.
The family flew to Florida for some
sunshine (and it rained every day).
took the children to Disneyworld,
MEADOWS HERITAGE
REUNION PLANNED

PIPESTEM, W. Va. - The
Meadows Heritage National
Reunion will be held October 17-111-19
at Pipestem State park, Pipestem,
W. Va. All families and descendants,
male and female, of the Meader Meador - Meadows (and other
variant spellings) lineages are
urged to attend the Meadows
Heritage National Reunion and
bring copies of any records (Bible et
al) they have on their family. Reservations should be made without
delay.
Meadows Heritage organization is
.dedlcaUkl to preserve, in the Ar-

visited here with her parents,
Beulah and Emerson · Jones, in
Dayton with relatives, and then
enroute home, stopped in New
Jersey to check their property there.
By now you probably know that
the new multi-purpose building
Mulberry Heights slated to open this
week will not be rea&lt;]y for occupan·
cy for at least another month.
Meanwhile, the various agencies
are moving right ahead with their
plans for that day when all is finished.
Donations are still being received
by the Senior Citizens for that
room in their section of the building
to be known as "Jeanne's Room" in
memory of the Jeanne Morgan who
was one of the early employes at the
Center.
So far $712 has been contributed
and will be used to purchase equiP.
ment such as a ceramic kiln and
woodworking tools so that the senior
citizens can make use of their many
talents. If you havn't contributed
and want to, just send your donation
to the Senior Citizens Center with the
designation that it's to go into fund
for' 'Jeanne's Room."
The Meigs Girls Athletic
Associaton Association is asking for
contributions to a yard sale which
they'll have this weekend at the
Wright St. home of Mr. and Mrs.
Richaru xupe. They'll take anything
which can De soJa ana Items can be
left at the Rupe home or for pickup
just call the Rupes. The money will
be used for athletic equipment and
supplies.

55 PLATED HEADBOARD
Choose from elegant sty les I ike th ese ... to
blend a ttr actively with any decor . A value!

Twin size o n up . From

129.95 and Up

139

BY RIVER SIDE
ONLY ONE AT
T H IS PRI CE

REG . $249 .96

'

From '10.00
I

I

I

Mast111 Charae, Visa 01 ~,~yaw., Welcome

s1zE 34-46

BED FRAMES

ROLL TOP
REG. 1449.95
NOW

5.&lt;!1

HUTCH, TABLE &amp;CHAIR
STAR TING
AT

•7999 5

coMPLETE

sns

' CHAIRS 1 TABLE
As low

As

$199

ROLL TOP DESK IN
TRADITIONAL STYLING

s-:-::~.~~----~:____:~~a:J

light pine , with or without viny l seats.

COMPLETE

&amp;

RIVERSIDE

END TABLES

TOLL TOP

SAVE '75 TO

REG . $599.95
SALE

I

All styles 8. sizes, 3 colors of maple, oak, dark or

COFFEE

This handsome desk is made of solid oak and
oak veneers. It has seven drawers , a roll top
and parti ioned shelving or ease In organizing
our material .

I
I
I
I
II

ALL WOOD TABLE &amp; CHAIR SETS
95

TV's
All ZENITH COLOR lV's
FROM 13" TO 25" ON SAL I=

SAVE '50 to •200
23" COLOR CONSOLE
Starting at

•59995

i

:~;:;~~,;7
SALE
Reg. $399.95

•29995

COMPLETE WITH FOAM MATTRESS
OVER 10 STYLES TO CHOOSE FROM
"Waverly "

With the Purchase of Any
BEDROOM SUITE OF $599

'9995
CARPET

INVENTORY
REDUCTION
On evervthing in stock. 100's of colors to choose from. Buv now and
beat the new price increases.

Receive
FREE
Also
A Night"
Stand

You'll Receive a St:!aly Box

springs and Mattress Queen or Full Size.
Selected by Our Salesman
ABSOLUTELY FREE

HOOVER
CONVERTIBLE UPRIGHT
LIVING ROOM
SUITE

SALE
2 Pc . TRADITIONAL LIVING ROOM SUITE
Rusi/ Brown , Reg. $699.95
SALE $599.?5
3 Pc. EARLY AM. LIVING ROOM SUITE
Old M ill Stream, Reg. $1200.00
SALE S999. 95
2 Pc . EARLY AM. VELVET LIVING ROOM SUITE
Velvet, tree pa ttern . Reg . $799.95 ·
SALE 5599.95
2 Pc. EARLY AM . VELVET LIVING ROOM SUITE
Reg. $799.95
SALE $599 .95
3 Pc. EARLY AM . LIVING ROOM SUITE
Gold . Reg. $799 .9,
SALE $499.95
2 Pc . EARLY AM. VELVET WITH WOOD TRIM
Reg . $999.95
.
SALE $799.95
3 Pc. LIVING ROOM SUITE, Reg. 399.95
NOW $249.95
3 Pc. EARLY AMERICAN LIVING ROOM SUITE
NOW$299 .95
3 PC. EARLY AMERICAN 'LIVING ROOM SUITE
Ant ron nylon velvet. Reg. $~99 . 95
NOW $488 .00

Mickey --Rivers and Bump Wills
had three hits apiece for the
Rangers, who rolled to their seventh
victory in nine games.

CHICAGO (AP) -Dave Kingman
lofted a long grand slam homer to
center field in the bottom of the
eighth inning to give the Chicago
CUbs a 12-9 com&amp;ofrom-behind victory, over the New York Mets on
Saturday.
· Kingman hit two home runs ln the
game. He bas five this season, and it
was his ninth career grand slRm.
Kingman's slam olf Mets reliever
Nell Allen, ~f• capped a seven-run
rally. CariCJS Lezcano started the
winning rally with his second home
run and Ivan DeJesus' base.s-loaded
~ingle drove In the other two runs In
the inning.
The Mets built a 7~ lead for s~

MONTREAL (AP) - Bake McBride drove In four runs with a pair
of !Ingles, and Mike Schmidt
cracked a two-run homer in
Philadelphia's six-run ninth inning
to power the Phillies to a 13-4 triumph over the Montreal Expos on
Saturday.
: After trailing ~. the i'IIIWes took

a 4-3lead after five Innings, McBride

driving In all the rwis.

McBride's first two-run single

OUR RETAIL
$129. 95

SAVE •40.00.

MODEL 4175

ter Pete Falcone with three runs in
the fourth, but the New York lefty
was forced to leave the game in the
bottom half of the inning when he
reinjured the hamstring muscle in
his left leg. Before he "left, though,
Falcone yielded a solo home run to
DeJesus which cut the lead to 7-1.
John Stearns' second sacrifice fly
of the game and Lee Mazzilli's runproducing double gave the Mets a Sol
lead in the sixth. But the CUbs
moved back into contention as
Kingman and Jerry Martin slugged
homers to key a four-run Chicago
rally in the sixth inning against
reliever Mark Bomback.

Montreal blasts Phillies

• Tip toe carpet
adjustment
• Headlight
e 3 position
handle
• Quick and
clean bag
change

H~'89's
y

Harrah.
The Indians' fifth-inning rally sent
Toronto starter Jim Clancy to the
showers, and he was relieved by
Tom Buskey. Buskey lasted only 12-3
innings, allowing Charboneau 's
horner and consecutive singles by
Duane Kuiper and Tom Veryzer,
before being replaced by Balor
Moore in the sixth.
Cleveland scored a run . in the
seventh when Mike Hargrove was
hit by a pitch and came around to
score on Charboneau's single.
Hargrove's three-run homer in the
eighth provided the Indians with
their final runs.

Cubs rally over Mets

OVER 35 SUITES TO CHOOSE FROM

FREE

campaigns.

Staub finished Boston starter Dennis Eckersley, 1-1, with his basesloaded homer in the seventh inning.
The towering drive just made the
right field seats near the foul line,
about325 feet from home plate.
Perry allowed only two runners to
reach third base, one on an error.
The Rangers jumped on Eckersley
for three runs in the first. Rivers and
Wills singled and scored on a double
by Buddy Bell. Staub follow~ with a
·single and Johnny Grubb with a
sacrifice fly. The Rangers added an
unearned run. in the fifth and then
secured the victory in the seventh.

ClEVELAND (AP) - Rooltle Joe
Charboneau homered, doubled and
!lngled and Rick Walta fired a sixhitter as Cleveland beat the Toronto
Blue Jays 1-1 in the Indians' home
opener Saturday.
·Toronto tOok a 1~ lead in the third
inning when Dan Alnge singled and
carne around to score later on a
., doublP. play ball hit by Alfredo Griffin. But Walts held the Blue Jays to
three harmless hits the rest of the
way.
In the fifth inning, Ron Hassey's
two-run double erased the Toronto
lead, scoring Jorge Orta and Charboneau. Hassey came around to
score on a sacrifice fly by Toby

As Low As

95
' 169

BOSTON (AP) - Gaylord Perry
pitched a five-hitter for his 280th
major league victory and Rusty
Staub hit the ninth grand slam home
run of his career Saturday in leading
the Texas Rangers to an ~ decision
over the Boston Red Sox.
The 41-year old Perry, 1-1 on his
return to the Rangers · after two
seasons with San Diego, struck out
three and walked two ln fashioning
his 51st shutout in 19 major league

Indians pound Toronto 8-1

OVER 15 IN
STOCK

ON SALE NOW
AS LOW
AS

'28995

WOOD
ROCKERS

BUNK BEDS

i:ame in the third, and he de!Jvered

FULL SIZE

MATTRESS

Starting At

'6995

the second of his RBI singles in the
fifth, driving . in · pitcher Larry
Christenson, who had walked, and
Pete Hale, who had doubled.
Montreal tied the game olf
Christeqaon. 1..0, in the bottom r1 the

fifth. Andre Dawson tripled and
came home wben center fielder
Garry Maddox's throw sailed into
the Phils dugout.
The Phillies took a lH lead in the
sixth against Steve Rogers, 1-2,
when Bob Boone singled home Greg
Luzinskl, and the Phils scored two
more in the eighth on an RBI single
by Boone and a squeeze bunt by Luis
Aguayo.
McBride got the Phils going in the
ninth with a triple. He scored on
Maddox's single, and Schmidt then
laced a two-run homer. his second.
Larry BOwa also drove in a run with I
a single, and two runs scored on a
single by relief pitcher Dickie Noles.

Tigers snap losing streak

MATTRESS

Relays. A total of 39 teams began at 9:30a.m. to fight it oui for the 13th
boys championship and the loth girls title.

Perry records 280th victory

E

AU DINING ROOM SUITES REDUCED

CORA WOLFE tries to catch up with the pack during one of the' morning
semifinal running events at Rio Grande College in the Gallipolis Rotary

Kingman, Charboneau carry ..big bats

DESK

REG. '29.95 • '39.95

METAL
BREAKFAST

II

SHORT SLEEVE AND SLEEVELESS STYLES IN
WHITE OR NEW SPRING SHADES

METAL

DINING SALE

I

"THE NEATEST SHEU JN TOWN"

9

RIVERSIDE

TRADITIONAL All WOOD DESK
Th is peca n fin ished, all ·wood desk has seven
drawers (2 file) to aid you in organizing per ·
sonal papers . Pefect for the studen t, t or the
executive tha t brings work home or for
househ ld accounts, th is desk is also a
beautiful piece of f urniture.

ON ANY BERKLINE
RECLINER IN
STOCK.
GOOD SELECTION

L

•MATERNITIES

DESIGNERS - SHELLS

'50 '100

AS LOW AS

r----------~-=:::------,

HAS

S.AVE

STARTING

'--m..-''\

chives and public libraries, all
records and available data on this
colonial pioneer family of America.
This family was one of the earliest
residents of Virginia, New England,
the Carolinas, and the western frontiers. For further information send a
large stamped self-addressed envelope to one of the officers of
Meadows Heritage. There are no
membership fees, all funding is by
voluntary contributions.
Officers' addresses are Roy E.
Meadows, P.R., 4709 Pensacola
Blvd., Dayton, 45439; Truman P.
Meadows , V. Pres., P. 0. Box 51,
Kellysville, W. Va. 24732; or Lee
Meadows Ford, Pres., P. 0. Box 933,
Roseville, CaW. 95678.

•FULL-FIGURE
FASHIONS

RECLINERS

HUTCHES

•

DETROIT (AP) -Steve Kemp hit
~ palr r1 homers and Tom Brookens
added another Saturday as the
Detroit Tigers anapped • a seven-·
pme los~J!i streak with an ~ vlc,tory over the Kanaaa City Royals.
Tbe '11aen trailed through the
early i11nJn8a and were behir1d w in
the aeventh when Kansas City
_

...

reliever Ranee Martin, ~1, gave up
a one-out walk to Lou Whitaker and
a bunt single to Kirk Gibson. Gary
Christenson then came on for the
Royals and Kemp greeted him by
slamming a shot into the lower left
field seats on a 1-1 count to give
Detroit Its ~rgl~ of victory.
(Continued 011 Page C-3)

Ironton defends title
BUlLETIN

RlO GRANDE -:...:: Fairland tied
Ironton for the boys championship
while South Point replaced Miami
Trace as girls champion of the 13th
annual Gallipolis Rotary Relays,
which concluded at 7 p.m. Saturday
evening.
Ironton, grabbing a piece of the
championship for the third year in
succession, and Fairland accumulated 66 points. Gallia
Academy placed 11th with 16 points,
Kyger Creek 12th with 10 points and
Meigs 14th with three points in the
boysmejlt.

South Point outdistanced Fairland
70-57 in the team standings while
Miami Trace scored 50 for third
place.
Todd Rees, with a second in the
two mile run and Dan Staggs, with
third in the discus, accounted for the
GARS points while Chris Judge of
Meigs was fifth in the high jump
while Bill Davis was fifth in the 880.
Kyger Creek's Bill Ross took runnerup honors in the discus while Tim
King placed fifth in the long jW:np.
The girls' resulta and complete
boys' results will appear in Monday's papers.

SARAH EVANS muscles into a shot put toss during the girls'
preliminaries of the field events of the 13th annual Gallipolis Rotary
Relays Saturday at Rio Grande College. Gallipolis and Meigs were competing against 17 other girls teams in the day-long event. The meet results
will appear in Monday's papers. (Times-Sentinel photos by Keith Wilson)

~~,~~to. 7-?....

ne's Gallia Academy Blue Devils
swept both ends of a doubleheader
from Wahama Saturday at
Memorial Field to keep their undefeated string intact at 7~.
In the opener GAHS scored six
runs in the fifth inning to snap a 1-1
deadlock en route to a 9-4 triwnph
and came back with four fifth inning
runs in the second contest to hang on

for a 4-3 win.
The double triumph represents

nine years. Th Blue Devils won
their first ei t tilts of the 19'11
season.
Coach Gordon Spencer's White
Falcons absorbed their third and
fourth successive losses to drop their
overall accounting to 9-5. GAHS
recorded a 4-2, come-from-behind
victory over the White Falcons
earlier this season.
Greg Eutsler hurled the first · six
(ContinuedonPageC-2)

Insurance runs lift GAHS over M""".·~.,..
POMEROY - Chuck Derifield
and Phil King slammed back-tohack, run-producing singles with
two out in the si-rth inning to lift Kenny Brown and the undefeated Gallia
Academy Blue Devils to a 6-3 victory
over the Meigs Marauders in
Southeastern Ohio Athletic league
play Friday.
Brown opened the game by
retirtng the first seven Meigs batters
and worked out of a sixth-inning jam
to notch his third victory and first
complete-game effort of the season.
Brown walked two and set five
Marauders down on third strikes as
the Blue Devils increased their
league mark toM and 5-0 overall.
The Blue Devils tallied three times
off relief pitcher Tom Owens in the
sixth to offset a third-inning rally
which pulled Meigs within one run·.
Owens recorded two strikeouts,
but walked Jay Sexton and Ted
Adams with one away. After Mike
Burger fanned for the second out,
Derifield delivered his single to
bring in pinchrunner Marty Glenn
and Adams. King then followed by
hitting Owens' second pitch into left
center to plate Detifield.
Meigs, ~in the SEOAL and 1-4 in
all games, rallied off Brown in the
third to narrow a 3-0 GAHS lead to
one run. Jerry Fields delivered the
big blow, a two-run single. Cliff Kennedy and Roger Kovalchik opened
the inning with a single and double.
The Blue Devils got two runs in the
second off starting and losing pitcher Bill Demosky. A leadoff double
by Bob Foster and an outfield error
on a Tony Weiher fiy ball set the .
stage for a two-RBI single by Greg
Eutsler.
GARS added another run in the
fourth after Weiher doubled and
scored on a Ted Adams safety with
two out.
Meigs' third run came in the bot'
tom of the seventh on . a fielder:s
choice.
The Marauders threaten¢ in the
sixth after Kennedy and Kovalchik
reached second and third with one ,
away, but Brown enticed Terry
Wayland to jJop up and forced Jeff
Wayland to ground out to Weiher at
shortstop.
Demosky allowed five hits and
whiffed three in his 4-inning stint
while Owens struck out five in 2 innings of work.
Derifield picked up two of the
seven Gallia Academy hits while
Kovalchik slammed two of the six
Meigs hits in three trips.
,[

PICKOFF MOVES - Gallla
Academy's Keony Brown (rlgbt)
fires to lint baseman Bob Foster
wblle Meigs' hurler Bill Demosky
(hottom) tosses to Marauder fil"
st-sacter Terry Fields In an attempt to nail GAHS' Ted Adanu.
Tbe Blue Devils brote opeo a
tight game Friday to post their
fourth SEOAL victory In a row,$3. Times-Sentinel photos by Doo
Naus) .

. . . ..

.

�&amp;12-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, April20, 1980

Community Corner

C-1 - The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday. April20.1911l

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S

c

1928 certificate of credit
found, asked to be claimed
By Charlene Hoefilcb
Tfmes-Seotlnel staff writer
Mfl&lt;. Betty Frazier of Middleport
has found a certificate of credit
issued to Louis Parrish on May 15,
1928 by the Virginia Iron, Coal and
Coke Co. and thought perhaps some
relatives here might be interested in
having it. She can be
at
992-7114. .
The certificate
was behind a picture in a frame
which she bought
at a yard sale. It
was given for
mine safety and
accident preventionatirunan, Va.
Hoefilcb
Hoefilcb
And Mfl&lt;. Frazier asked us to pass
along her appreciation for
assistance given her and other
members of the family in a recent
auto accident. She reports that a
nurse stopped by before the
emergency squad arrived and gave
some assistance and she especially
wants to thank her - didn't get the

name.
We understand that Mrs. James
Murray is back in her home on
Grant St. in Middleport. For the past
year or so, she has been with
relatives across the river due to
some health problems. Mrs. Murray
Is one of Middleport's oldest
residents.
Sharon and Lee Davidson and
their three children, Ann, John and
Charles who have spent the past
several years in London, England,
were here for a brief Easter visit.
The family flew to Florida for some
sunshine (and it rained every day).
took the children to Disneyworld,
MEADOWS HERITAGE
REUNION PLANNED

PIPESTEM, W. Va. - The
Meadows Heritage National
Reunion will be held October 17-111-19
at Pipestem State park, Pipestem,
W. Va. All families and descendants,
male and female, of the Meader Meador - Meadows (and other
variant spellings) lineages are
urged to attend the Meadows
Heritage National Reunion and
bring copies of any records (Bible et
al) they have on their family. Reservations should be made without
delay.
Meadows Heritage organization is
.dedlcaUkl to preserve, in the Ar-

visited here with her parents,
Beulah and Emerson · Jones, in
Dayton with relatives, and then
enroute home, stopped in New
Jersey to check their property there.
By now you probably know that
the new multi-purpose building
Mulberry Heights slated to open this
week will not be rea&lt;]y for occupan·
cy for at least another month.
Meanwhile, the various agencies
are moving right ahead with their
plans for that day when all is finished.
Donations are still being received
by the Senior Citizens for that
room in their section of the building
to be known as "Jeanne's Room" in
memory of the Jeanne Morgan who
was one of the early employes at the
Center.
So far $712 has been contributed
and will be used to purchase equiP.
ment such as a ceramic kiln and
woodworking tools so that the senior
citizens can make use of their many
talents. If you havn't contributed
and want to, just send your donation
to the Senior Citizens Center with the
designation that it's to go into fund
for' 'Jeanne's Room."
The Meigs Girls Athletic
Associaton Association is asking for
contributions to a yard sale which
they'll have this weekend at the
Wright St. home of Mr. and Mrs.
Richaru xupe. They'll take anything
which can De soJa ana Items can be
left at the Rupe home or for pickup
just call the Rupes. The money will
be used for athletic equipment and
supplies.

55 PLATED HEADBOARD
Choose from elegant sty les I ike th ese ... to
blend a ttr actively with any decor . A value!

Twin size o n up . From

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'9995
CARPET

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springs and Mattress Queen or Full Size.
Selected by Our Salesman
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HOOVER
CONVERTIBLE UPRIGHT
LIVING ROOM
SUITE

SALE
2 Pc . TRADITIONAL LIVING ROOM SUITE
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Mickey --Rivers and Bump Wills
had three hits apiece for the
Rangers, who rolled to their seventh
victory in nine games.

CHICAGO (AP) -Dave Kingman
lofted a long grand slam homer to
center field in the bottom of the
eighth inning to give the Chicago
CUbs a 12-9 com&amp;ofrom-behind victory, over the New York Mets on
Saturday.
· Kingman hit two home runs ln the
game. He bas five this season, and it
was his ninth career grand slRm.
Kingman's slam olf Mets reliever
Nell Allen, ~f• capped a seven-run
rally. CariCJS Lezcano started the
winning rally with his second home
run and Ivan DeJesus' base.s-loaded
~ingle drove In the other two runs In
the inning.
The Mets built a 7~ lead for s~

MONTREAL (AP) - Bake McBride drove In four runs with a pair
of !Ingles, and Mike Schmidt
cracked a two-run homer in
Philadelphia's six-run ninth inning
to power the Phillies to a 13-4 triumph over the Montreal Expos on
Saturday.
: After trailing ~. the i'IIIWes took

a 4-3lead after five Innings, McBride

driving In all the rwis.

McBride's first two-run single

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ter Pete Falcone with three runs in
the fourth, but the New York lefty
was forced to leave the game in the
bottom half of the inning when he
reinjured the hamstring muscle in
his left leg. Before he "left, though,
Falcone yielded a solo home run to
DeJesus which cut the lead to 7-1.
John Stearns' second sacrifice fly
of the game and Lee Mazzilli's runproducing double gave the Mets a Sol
lead in the sixth. But the CUbs
moved back into contention as
Kingman and Jerry Martin slugged
homers to key a four-run Chicago
rally in the sixth inning against
reliever Mark Bomback.

Montreal blasts Phillies

• Tip toe carpet
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H~'89's
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Harrah.
The Indians' fifth-inning rally sent
Toronto starter Jim Clancy to the
showers, and he was relieved by
Tom Buskey. Buskey lasted only 12-3
innings, allowing Charboneau 's
horner and consecutive singles by
Duane Kuiper and Tom Veryzer,
before being replaced by Balor
Moore in the sixth.
Cleveland scored a run . in the
seventh when Mike Hargrove was
hit by a pitch and came around to
score on Charboneau's single.
Hargrove's three-run homer in the
eighth provided the Indians with
their final runs.

Cubs rally over Mets

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Staub finished Boston starter Dennis Eckersley, 1-1, with his basesloaded homer in the seventh inning.
The towering drive just made the
right field seats near the foul line,
about325 feet from home plate.
Perry allowed only two runners to
reach third base, one on an error.
The Rangers jumped on Eckersley
for three runs in the first. Rivers and
Wills singled and scored on a double
by Buddy Bell. Staub follow~ with a
·single and Johnny Grubb with a
sacrifice fly. The Rangers added an
unearned run. in the fifth and then
secured the victory in the seventh.

ClEVELAND (AP) - Rooltle Joe
Charboneau homered, doubled and
!lngled and Rick Walta fired a sixhitter as Cleveland beat the Toronto
Blue Jays 1-1 in the Indians' home
opener Saturday.
·Toronto tOok a 1~ lead in the third
inning when Dan Alnge singled and
carne around to score later on a
., doublP. play ball hit by Alfredo Griffin. But Walts held the Blue Jays to
three harmless hits the rest of the
way.
In the fifth inning, Ron Hassey's
two-run double erased the Toronto
lead, scoring Jorge Orta and Charboneau. Hassey came around to
score on a sacrifice fly by Toby

As Low As

95
' 169

BOSTON (AP) - Gaylord Perry
pitched a five-hitter for his 280th
major league victory and Rusty
Staub hit the ninth grand slam home
run of his career Saturday in leading
the Texas Rangers to an ~ decision
over the Boston Red Sox.
The 41-year old Perry, 1-1 on his
return to the Rangers · after two
seasons with San Diego, struck out
three and walked two ln fashioning
his 51st shutout in 19 major league

Indians pound Toronto 8-1

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the second of his RBI singles in the
fifth, driving . in · pitcher Larry
Christenson, who had walked, and
Pete Hale, who had doubled.
Montreal tied the game olf
Christeqaon. 1..0, in the bottom r1 the

fifth. Andre Dawson tripled and
came home wben center fielder
Garry Maddox's throw sailed into
the Phils dugout.
The Phillies took a lH lead in the
sixth against Steve Rogers, 1-2,
when Bob Boone singled home Greg
Luzinskl, and the Phils scored two
more in the eighth on an RBI single
by Boone and a squeeze bunt by Luis
Aguayo.
McBride got the Phils going in the
ninth with a triple. He scored on
Maddox's single, and Schmidt then
laced a two-run homer. his second.
Larry BOwa also drove in a run with I
a single, and two runs scored on a
single by relief pitcher Dickie Noles.

Tigers snap losing streak

MATTRESS

Relays. A total of 39 teams began at 9:30a.m. to fight it oui for the 13th
boys championship and the loth girls title.

Perry records 280th victory

E

AU DINING ROOM SUITES REDUCED

CORA WOLFE tries to catch up with the pack during one of the' morning
semifinal running events at Rio Grande College in the Gallipolis Rotary

Kingman, Charboneau carry ..big bats

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chives and public libraries, all
records and available data on this
colonial pioneer family of America.
This family was one of the earliest
residents of Virginia, New England,
the Carolinas, and the western frontiers. For further information send a
large stamped self-addressed envelope to one of the officers of
Meadows Heritage. There are no
membership fees, all funding is by
voluntary contributions.
Officers' addresses are Roy E.
Meadows, P.R., 4709 Pensacola
Blvd., Dayton, 45439; Truman P.
Meadows , V. Pres., P. 0. Box 51,
Kellysville, W. Va. 24732; or Lee
Meadows Ford, Pres., P. 0. Box 933,
Roseville, CaW. 95678.

•FULL-FIGURE
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DETROIT (AP) -Steve Kemp hit
~ palr r1 homers and Tom Brookens
added another Saturday as the
Detroit Tigers anapped • a seven-·
pme los~J!i streak with an ~ vlc,tory over the Kanaaa City Royals.
Tbe '11aen trailed through the
early i11nJn8a and were behir1d w in
the aeventh when Kansas City
_

...

reliever Ranee Martin, ~1, gave up
a one-out walk to Lou Whitaker and
a bunt single to Kirk Gibson. Gary
Christenson then came on for the
Royals and Kemp greeted him by
slamming a shot into the lower left
field seats on a 1-1 count to give
Detroit Its ~rgl~ of victory.
(Continued 011 Page C-3)

Ironton defends title
BUlLETIN

RlO GRANDE -:...:: Fairland tied
Ironton for the boys championship
while South Point replaced Miami
Trace as girls champion of the 13th
annual Gallipolis Rotary Relays,
which concluded at 7 p.m. Saturday
evening.
Ironton, grabbing a piece of the
championship for the third year in
succession, and Fairland accumulated 66 points. Gallia
Academy placed 11th with 16 points,
Kyger Creek 12th with 10 points and
Meigs 14th with three points in the
boysmejlt.

South Point outdistanced Fairland
70-57 in the team standings while
Miami Trace scored 50 for third
place.
Todd Rees, with a second in the
two mile run and Dan Staggs, with
third in the discus, accounted for the
GARS points while Chris Judge of
Meigs was fifth in the high jump
while Bill Davis was fifth in the 880.
Kyger Creek's Bill Ross took runnerup honors in the discus while Tim
King placed fifth in the long jW:np.
The girls' resulta and complete
boys' results will appear in Monday's papers.

SARAH EVANS muscles into a shot put toss during the girls'
preliminaries of the field events of the 13th annual Gallipolis Rotary
Relays Saturday at Rio Grande College. Gallipolis and Meigs were competing against 17 other girls teams in the day-long event. The meet results
will appear in Monday's papers. (Times-Sentinel photos by Keith Wilson)

~~,~~to. 7-?....

ne's Gallia Academy Blue Devils
swept both ends of a doubleheader
from Wahama Saturday at
Memorial Field to keep their undefeated string intact at 7~.
In the opener GAHS scored six
runs in the fifth inning to snap a 1-1
deadlock en route to a 9-4 triwnph
and came back with four fifth inning
runs in the second contest to hang on

for a 4-3 win.
The double triumph represents

nine years. Th Blue Devils won
their first ei t tilts of the 19'11
season.
Coach Gordon Spencer's White
Falcons absorbed their third and
fourth successive losses to drop their
overall accounting to 9-5. GAHS
recorded a 4-2, come-from-behind
victory over the White Falcons
earlier this season.
Greg Eutsler hurled the first · six
(ContinuedonPageC-2)

Insurance runs lift GAHS over M""".·~.,..
POMEROY - Chuck Derifield
and Phil King slammed back-tohack, run-producing singles with
two out in the si-rth inning to lift Kenny Brown and the undefeated Gallia
Academy Blue Devils to a 6-3 victory
over the Meigs Marauders in
Southeastern Ohio Athletic league
play Friday.
Brown opened the game by
retirtng the first seven Meigs batters
and worked out of a sixth-inning jam
to notch his third victory and first
complete-game effort of the season.
Brown walked two and set five
Marauders down on third strikes as
the Blue Devils increased their
league mark toM and 5-0 overall.
The Blue Devils tallied three times
off relief pitcher Tom Owens in the
sixth to offset a third-inning rally
which pulled Meigs within one run·.
Owens recorded two strikeouts,
but walked Jay Sexton and Ted
Adams with one away. After Mike
Burger fanned for the second out,
Derifield delivered his single to
bring in pinchrunner Marty Glenn
and Adams. King then followed by
hitting Owens' second pitch into left
center to plate Detifield.
Meigs, ~in the SEOAL and 1-4 in
all games, rallied off Brown in the
third to narrow a 3-0 GAHS lead to
one run. Jerry Fields delivered the
big blow, a two-run single. Cliff Kennedy and Roger Kovalchik opened
the inning with a single and double.
The Blue Devils got two runs in the
second off starting and losing pitcher Bill Demosky. A leadoff double
by Bob Foster and an outfield error
on a Tony Weiher fiy ball set the .
stage for a two-RBI single by Greg
Eutsler.
GARS added another run in the
fourth after Weiher doubled and
scored on a Ted Adams safety with
two out.
Meigs' third run came in the bot'
tom of the seventh on . a fielder:s
choice.
The Marauders threaten¢ in the
sixth after Kennedy and Kovalchik
reached second and third with one ,
away, but Brown enticed Terry
Wayland to jJop up and forced Jeff
Wayland to ground out to Weiher at
shortstop.
Demosky allowed five hits and
whiffed three in his 4-inning stint
while Owens struck out five in 2 innings of work.
Derifield picked up two of the
seven Gallia Academy hits while
Kovalchik slammed two of the six
Meigs hits in three trips.
,[

PICKOFF MOVES - Gallla
Academy's Keony Brown (rlgbt)
fires to lint baseman Bob Foster
wblle Meigs' hurler Bill Demosky
(hottom) tosses to Marauder fil"
st-sacter Terry Fields In an attempt to nail GAHS' Ted Adanu.
Tbe Blue Devils brote opeo a
tight game Friday to post their
fourth SEOAL victory In a row,$3. Times-Sentinel photos by Doo
Naus) .

. . . ..

.

�C.Z- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Apri120, 19110

Miracle ·handcuffs Eagles

Howell becomes a Hilltop per
Tim Howell, North Gallia's versatile four-year, four-sport athlete
will be given a shot at cracking the
West Liberty College defensive starting lineup this fall.
WLSC Head Coach John
Westenhaver announced the signing
of Howell this week and indicated
Howell will be tried at the cornerback position, vacated last
season by graduation.
"His attitude will carry him
through the rough spots," North
Gallia Coach John Blake commented. "He's done just about
everything_ out here all through high

school, aM he's probably one of the
quickest, most dedicated and
coachallie kids I've had."
Howell, a first-team United Press
International Class A defensive back
and Associated Press honorable
mention perfonner, turned in 34 solo
tackles and assisted with 32 others
from his Pirate cornerback position
and sparked NGHS to a 7-Z-1 overall
mark last year by churning out 1,049
yards and 58 points as an offensive
back. His best offensive effort
came against Symmes Valley, when
he tallied all 20 North Gallia points

and accumulated 216 yards ~ng.
Tbe 5-foo,t-9, l~und senior also
contributed a 13-point scoring
average on the basketball court and
nine steals per game as well as
playing baseball and running track.
Howell, who is undecided upon a
major field of study, became the flf·
th ~ football recruit signed by
the Hilltoppers this spring. WlSC
enters the 1980 season as defending
c&lt;M:hampion of the West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference.
Tim is the son of Mrs. Mary
Howell, Bidwell.

allowed only a second-inning home
run to even his record at 2-2.
Perry helped Blauvelt's cause in
the opener by pushing across Rio's
first run with a first-inning double.
Larry Carter's sacrafice fly gave
the ftedmen a 2-0 lead before Cedarville came to bat.
Tbe Redmen added a final run in
the third on Mike Clwrton's double.
The insurance tally was cosily,
though, as Cluxton injured a knee

TAKING A BREAK from the action in Gallipolis
Rotary Relays at Rio Grande College Saturday is the

Burger stepping down as Jackson cage coach ..

while trying to score on a sacrifice
fly.
Run-producing hits from Brett
Wilson and Perry highlighted a
three-run fifth inning in the nightcap.
Terry Wall collected two hits in
the second contest while Perry and
Jino Derrow each slammed a pair in
support of Blauvelt as the Redmen
displayed eight-hit attacks in both
wins.

Gallia Academy track squad. The Blue Devils and
Angels competed with 38 other schools from all three
classes in the 13th annual relays.

Pirates claim first victory
CHESIDRE - Tbe North Gallla
Pirates erupted for three runs in the
bottom of the sixth inning to claim
their first baseball victory of the
season with a 5-4 decision over the
Kyger Creek Bobcats Friday.
Tim Howell slammed a two-run
triple to snap the Pirstes' threegame losing streak and hand the
Bobcats their second loss in
Southern Valley Athletic Conference
play. Kyger Cre'ek feU two games
behind undefeated Southern in the
standings with a 3-2 mark.

Kyger staked itself to a 3-&lt;llead atter three innings after posting a pair
of runs in the second stanza. Bruce
Gilmore led off the inning with a
double and stole third base. John
Amos followed with a walk and
swiped third to set up John Rees'
two-run single.
North Gallia got two runs back in
the fourth after Keith Payne sent
two ruiUiers home with a two-out
single.
,
Darrell Shaw, in his first NGHS
start, recovered from a shaky start

Top-seeded Martina, Mayer advance
By The Associated Press
Martina NavratUova beat Pam
Shriver 7-6, &amp;-1, while Virginia
Ruzici scored a 7-6, &amp;-3 victory over
Ivanna Madruga in a $100,000 tournament at Amelia Island, Fla.
Also advancing Friday were Hana
Mandlikova of Czechoslovakia, a &amp;-I,
&amp;-o, victor over Jeanne DuVall, and
South African YvoMe Vennaak,
who defeated Leslie Allen &amp;-3, &amp;-I.

GAHS
(Continued from Page C-1)
innings of the lidlifter to gain the
decision. Chuck Derifield made his
first mound appearance of the
season in a seventh-inning relief
role.
Wahama's Gary Richards went

to give up eight hits io pick up the
complete-game victory. Gilmore ·
allowed all of the Pirate runs in 61!.
innings to take the loss with relief
help from Jack Minor. Gilmore
allowed just six hits, but walked nine
while the Bobcats committed six
errors.
Payne and Howell combined for
four hits and three RBI while
Gilmore, Rees and Greg Smith each
smashed a pair of hits for the Bobcats.

Top-seeded Gene Mayer defeated
Stan Smith IH, &amp;-!, while Roscoe
Tanner beat Ivan Lend! of
Czechoslovakia 7-6, &amp;-2 in quarterfinal matches of the $175,000 Jack
Kramer Open at Fountain Valley
Calif.
'
In other action Friday, Bill
Scanlon upset Yannick Noah of
France, 7-5, &amp;-7, IH, and Brian
Teacher defeated Butch Walts IH, &amp;4.

HUNGRY GOLFERS
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) -Tbe
three co-leaders of the $100,000
Tallahassee Open were cautious but
hungry going into Saturday's third.
Hometown pro Rex Caldwell
credited a new set of clubs Friday
after he tied Mark Pfeil and Bill
Rogers at 135. Caldwell added a 68 to
his 67 in the first round.
"I hit shots I haven't hit for man·
ths," said Caldwell, the home pro at
the par-72, 7,027-yard Killearn Coun·
try Club course.

the distance in taking the loss.
Mark Allison had two safeties
while Ted Adams, Tony Weiher,
Kenny Brown and Eutsler rounded
out the Devils' six-hit attack.
Weiher threw a four-hitter in the
finale for his second straight complete game of the season.
Barry VanMeter, who collected
two Wahama bits in the first game,

took the loss.
Gallia's. 1()-hit attack dUring the
second contest was paced by two hits
from Derifield, Adams and Phil
King. Brown, Bob Foster Eutsler
&amp;nd Paul Duncan also collected
single hits.
Jay Hesson put the West
Virginians on top 2-{) with a two-run
homer in the top of the first.

.,
TIM HOWELL

Coach Burger suffered ~ hip fraC:.
ture in a fall two years ago, and'
faces further surgery and a period Qf
rehabilitation as a result of the accident.
Coach Burger announced that he
wiU remain on the faculty of the ·
school.

AI Burger, Jackson High School
basketball coach for the past nine
years, aMounced Wednesday that
he will not continue as coach of the
teamnextyear.
Coach Burger cited health
problems as the reason lor his
decision.

Fannin blanks.-----:-----------------'GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
Academy girls soft~ll team threw
their finest defensive effort of the
season against the Jackson Irongals
Friday.
However, Jackson pitcher Tilda
Farutin fashioned an 11-strikeout,
two-hit complete game perfonnance
to give the Irongirls a &amp;-a victory.
Roberta Hamilton, with a seventhinning single and Lisa Roush, with a
second-inning safety, collected the
lone Blue Angel hits as GAHS fell to
0-5 for the season. Jackson inoproves
to 4-{)_
Pitcher Nancy Evans allo)Ved just
four Jackson hits in goil)g the distance and cut down GAHS' bases-onballs allowed to nine. But the
Irongirls posted four runs during the
first inning and added single tallies
in the flfth and seventh. .
AIUie Greene's fifth..inning triple
and Cathy Marek's double in the fir·
st for Jackson were the only extrabase shots of the contest. Evans'
record dropped to 0-3 with the loss.
The Blue Angels host Wellston
Monday.

"

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PRONT·ENGINE
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ARE ALIKE
You c an buy a ri ding mower that c uts yo ur
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FORMER NAVY QB KILLED
FITCHBURG, Mass. (AP) - Lt.
Allen R. Glenny, 27, a fonner star
quarterback at the U.S. Naval
Academy; was among the crewmen
killed in an American Samoa "plane
crash, ·the victim's parents confirmed.
.
GleMy played football at the
Naval Academy from 197M3, and
was the starting quarterback as a
senior.

a

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Plus blooming hanging
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90c In Doze_11 Paks

11-6-setback
to Red DeVils
MASON, W.Va.- A pair of threerun homers by Gene Morris and
Steve Varner led Ravenswood to an
11~ triumph over the Waliarna
White Falcons Friday.
Ravenswood collected 11 hits and
sh errors off Wabama to send the
White Falcons into Saturday's
doubleheader with Gallipolis with a
,7-4 overall record.
Ravenswood !allied three runs in
. the second inning, two in the tlllrd ·
and llxtb and erupted for four
· markers in the flfth.
. w~ collected two hits from
Sbawn Fields, Vince Weaver and
Jerry Arnold while Fields knocked
In two of the White Falcons¢un"~

.

Reg.

'60

'47

~

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DIA{IIE WINS AT LEBANON
LEBANON, Ohio (AP) - Diane
Williams, 22, drove 16-1 longshot
Skipper's Fleet Man to a four-length
victory Friday night in the $1,100
featured pace mile in the ninth race
at Lebanon.
The former Lebanon High School
girl basketball star and daughter of
veteran driver George Williams
pushed the winner to the wire in
2:07.1-5. He paid $41.60, $11.80 and
$4.
Bunk's Buller placed, returning $8
and $3.80. Thunderbuck paid $3.20 to
show.
Mike T. Quick and Keep Trying
paid $47.20 in the double on the combination :1-3.
The mutuel pool totaled $193,B61.
Attendance was 2,130.

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SPORTS SOUVENffiS
HOUSTON (AP)
Tht
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a charity affair, one of Earl Campbell's game jerseys was auctioned
offfor $6,100.

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KANSAS RELAY MARK FALLS
LAWRENCE, Kan . (AP) - Tony
Darden, Herman Frazier, Fred
Taylor and Steve Riddick blazed
their way to an American record of
1:21.55 in the 886-yard relay at the
ii5th Kansas Relays.

on ''Good Hands" insurance

•
•

Keith Hemadez led off the inning
by drawing a walk from losing
reliever Dave Roberts, ()-1. Pincbrunner Bobby Bonds took second on
a single by Ted Simmons and
scored wheri Hendrick lined a single
off the left field wall.
Fulgham, 1-1, retired 14 straight
batters after allowing a secondinning double by Omar Moreno. He
struck outfour and walked two.
Pittsburgh took a I~ lead in the
second inning when Bill Madlock led
off with a double, advanced to third
on an infield out and scored on Phil
Gamer's sacrifice fly.
The Cardinals tied the score in the
top of the third. Keith Hernadez hit a
one-out home run, his first of the
season.
·
Pirates starter Burt Blyleven
allowed four hits and struck out 12
before be was lifted for a pinch hitter
in the seventh inning.

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TWO RIVERS SUPER
PRICE

.,.

I
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I

George Hendrick's eighth-inning
single snapped a tie that gave the St.

liLOUSTER - The Meigs Reserves girls' softball team scored an
impressive 22-2 win over the Trimble Tomcats Friday behind a one-hit
pitching perfonnance by Natalie
~bert. Lambert faMed eight and
walked only one in going the route
fo; the Marauders.
liter the first inning ended in a 1-1
ti( Meigs erupted to distribute a
ba1anced scoring attack over the
rCOJaining six innings.
t.ambert collected a double and
t,., singles while paula Horton added a triple and single. Cindy
Crooks, Kris Snowden, Beth
GIOekner, and Lori Pickett each contn'buted singles.
Sheila Love had the lone Trimble
hit. Losing pitCher Mary Beth Byco!.uJ&lt;i and Dottie Heathcoat teamed
up: to strike out three and walk 16.
Meigs committed three errors to
Trimble's eight.

Ph. 992-5716
Syracuse, OH .
Open Daoly 9 to S &amp; Sun . 1 to S

-

home run of the season leading -oft
the fourth inning, the Yankees didn't
get a fUIUier beyond first base unw
the seventh against Haas, H, who
walked three and struck out five in
seven innings.
Tom Underwood, who relieved
Figueroa with two fUIUiers on base
in the third, yielded a run-scoring
single to Ben Oglivle, the first batter
he faced, and then blanked the
Brewers through the eighth with the
help of three double plays.
Tbe Brewers scored a run off Rich
Gossage in the ninth on a two-out
double by Robin Yount and a twobase throwing error by the pitcher
on Cecil Cooper's grounder.

·F.ulgiUJm tosses four-hitter

SUPPLY

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Similar 1o. lllustrafun

NEW YORK (AP) - Gonnan
Thomas drove in three runs with a
pair of singles Saturday and the
Milwaukee Brewers continued their
recent domination of New York by
d~eating the Yankees 5-1 behind the
eight-hit pitching of Moose Haas and
Bob McClure.
The Brewers have defeated the
Yankees in both meetings this
~on, six straight overall, and 29 of
45 over the last four years.
Thomas singled a run across in the
first inning and delivered a two-run
single as the Brewers chased starter
Ed" Figueroa, 1-1, trying to come
baCk from elbow surgery, with three
mo~inthethird.
.
Except for Oscar Gamble's second

Louis Cardinals a 2-1 victory over
the Pittsburgh Pirates on Saturday.

...

I
I

Birthstone Rings

Milwaukee chases Figueroa

.-

RIDENOUR

Hubbard's Greenhouse

't

urookens homered to lead off the
third . off Royals starter Dennis
Leonard.
Kansas City's Willie Aikens and
Willie Wilson each homered off
Detroit starter Jack Morris, 2-1, who
turned in his second complete game
of the season.

Marauder
.
)V
. girls
,Pll to victory

II
I
I

suffers

(Continued from Page C.! )
Kemp's first homer was 8 solP
shot off the facing of the upper deck
m left field in the first inning.

PITI'SBURGH (AP) - John
F~Jam tossed a !out-hitter, and
•

GAHSgirls

~----------------------11

Wahama

Derry
_r
I

ning when Neptune walked and rode
home on an Ingram triple.
The other Warrior run was plated - ·
in the sixth when Proctor followed a
Bowers walk with a long double.
Miracle handcuffed the Eagles . •
most of the evening behind 12' • ·
strikeouts in going the distance.
.
Roger Gaul and Robbie Smith',
each had singles for Eastern while··
Gary Griggs smacked a double. ·
Besides the run scoring hits by Proo- ·· ·
tor and Ingram, Jarvis lined a ...
double and HaiUIBn a single. Warreri"' '
played a flawless defensive game ' .
while the Eagles committed one-; ·
miscue.
Eastern was scheduled to host
Fort Frye in a double header Satur-'· .
day.
" .

BY SCO'IT WOLFE
Sports Writer
REEDSVILLE - The Warren
Local Warriors slipped past the
Eastern Eagles 2~ in a Friday non- .
league contest.
Tbe Warriors scored single rWlS in
the third and sixth innings to support
an outstanding pitching per·
fonnance by pitcher Mike Miracle
Eastern's Charlie Ritchie, mainiy
a relief pitcher, drew the starting .
role for the Eagles and suffered the
loss. Bob Smith came in to pitch the
last three innings. Both combined
for eight strikeouts and gave up four
hits while walking three.
.
Two of the walks led to Warrior
runs. The first came in the third in-

Redmen win streak at six
CEDARVILLE - Jino Blauvelt
and Jino Perry stymied Cedarville
College · with back-to-back fourhitters to move the Rio Grande
College Redmen's winning streak to
five games Friday with ~ and &amp;-1
victories.
Blauvelt (2-1) struck out five batters in posting the Redmen 's fourth
straight shutout victory in the
opener while Perry faMed 10 and

C-3-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, April20, 1980

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•,

�C.Z- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Apri120, 19110

Miracle ·handcuffs Eagles

Howell becomes a Hilltop per
Tim Howell, North Gallia's versatile four-year, four-sport athlete
will be given a shot at cracking the
West Liberty College defensive starting lineup this fall.
WLSC Head Coach John
Westenhaver announced the signing
of Howell this week and indicated
Howell will be tried at the cornerback position, vacated last
season by graduation.
"His attitude will carry him
through the rough spots," North
Gallia Coach John Blake commented. "He's done just about
everything_ out here all through high

school, aM he's probably one of the
quickest, most dedicated and
coachallie kids I've had."
Howell, a first-team United Press
International Class A defensive back
and Associated Press honorable
mention perfonner, turned in 34 solo
tackles and assisted with 32 others
from his Pirate cornerback position
and sparked NGHS to a 7-Z-1 overall
mark last year by churning out 1,049
yards and 58 points as an offensive
back. His best offensive effort
came against Symmes Valley, when
he tallied all 20 North Gallia points

and accumulated 216 yards ~ng.
Tbe 5-foo,t-9, l~und senior also
contributed a 13-point scoring
average on the basketball court and
nine steals per game as well as
playing baseball and running track.
Howell, who is undecided upon a
major field of study, became the flf·
th ~ football recruit signed by
the Hilltoppers this spring. WlSC
enters the 1980 season as defending
c&lt;M:hampion of the West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference.
Tim is the son of Mrs. Mary
Howell, Bidwell.

allowed only a second-inning home
run to even his record at 2-2.
Perry helped Blauvelt's cause in
the opener by pushing across Rio's
first run with a first-inning double.
Larry Carter's sacrafice fly gave
the ftedmen a 2-0 lead before Cedarville came to bat.
Tbe Redmen added a final run in
the third on Mike Clwrton's double.
The insurance tally was cosily,
though, as Cluxton injured a knee

TAKING A BREAK from the action in Gallipolis
Rotary Relays at Rio Grande College Saturday is the

Burger stepping down as Jackson cage coach ..

while trying to score on a sacrifice
fly.
Run-producing hits from Brett
Wilson and Perry highlighted a
three-run fifth inning in the nightcap.
Terry Wall collected two hits in
the second contest while Perry and
Jino Derrow each slammed a pair in
support of Blauvelt as the Redmen
displayed eight-hit attacks in both
wins.

Gallia Academy track squad. The Blue Devils and
Angels competed with 38 other schools from all three
classes in the 13th annual relays.

Pirates claim first victory
CHESIDRE - Tbe North Gallla
Pirates erupted for three runs in the
bottom of the sixth inning to claim
their first baseball victory of the
season with a 5-4 decision over the
Kyger Creek Bobcats Friday.
Tim Howell slammed a two-run
triple to snap the Pirstes' threegame losing streak and hand the
Bobcats their second loss in
Southern Valley Athletic Conference
play. Kyger Cre'ek feU two games
behind undefeated Southern in the
standings with a 3-2 mark.

Kyger staked itself to a 3-&lt;llead atter three innings after posting a pair
of runs in the second stanza. Bruce
Gilmore led off the inning with a
double and stole third base. John
Amos followed with a walk and
swiped third to set up John Rees'
two-run single.
North Gallia got two runs back in
the fourth after Keith Payne sent
two ruiUiers home with a two-out
single.
,
Darrell Shaw, in his first NGHS
start, recovered from a shaky start

Top-seeded Martina, Mayer advance
By The Associated Press
Martina NavratUova beat Pam
Shriver 7-6, &amp;-1, while Virginia
Ruzici scored a 7-6, &amp;-3 victory over
Ivanna Madruga in a $100,000 tournament at Amelia Island, Fla.
Also advancing Friday were Hana
Mandlikova of Czechoslovakia, a &amp;-I,
&amp;-o, victor over Jeanne DuVall, and
South African YvoMe Vennaak,
who defeated Leslie Allen &amp;-3, &amp;-I.

GAHS
(Continued from Page C-1)
innings of the lidlifter to gain the
decision. Chuck Derifield made his
first mound appearance of the
season in a seventh-inning relief
role.
Wahama's Gary Richards went

to give up eight hits io pick up the
complete-game victory. Gilmore ·
allowed all of the Pirate runs in 61!.
innings to take the loss with relief
help from Jack Minor. Gilmore
allowed just six hits, but walked nine
while the Bobcats committed six
errors.
Payne and Howell combined for
four hits and three RBI while
Gilmore, Rees and Greg Smith each
smashed a pair of hits for the Bobcats.

Top-seeded Gene Mayer defeated
Stan Smith IH, &amp;-!, while Roscoe
Tanner beat Ivan Lend! of
Czechoslovakia 7-6, &amp;-2 in quarterfinal matches of the $175,000 Jack
Kramer Open at Fountain Valley
Calif.
'
In other action Friday, Bill
Scanlon upset Yannick Noah of
France, 7-5, &amp;-7, IH, and Brian
Teacher defeated Butch Walts IH, &amp;4.

HUNGRY GOLFERS
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) -Tbe
three co-leaders of the $100,000
Tallahassee Open were cautious but
hungry going into Saturday's third.
Hometown pro Rex Caldwell
credited a new set of clubs Friday
after he tied Mark Pfeil and Bill
Rogers at 135. Caldwell added a 68 to
his 67 in the first round.
"I hit shots I haven't hit for man·
ths," said Caldwell, the home pro at
the par-72, 7,027-yard Killearn Coun·
try Club course.

the distance in taking the loss.
Mark Allison had two safeties
while Ted Adams, Tony Weiher,
Kenny Brown and Eutsler rounded
out the Devils' six-hit attack.
Weiher threw a four-hitter in the
finale for his second straight complete game of the season.
Barry VanMeter, who collected
two Wahama bits in the first game,

took the loss.
Gallia's. 1()-hit attack dUring the
second contest was paced by two hits
from Derifield, Adams and Phil
King. Brown, Bob Foster Eutsler
&amp;nd Paul Duncan also collected
single hits.
Jay Hesson put the West
Virginians on top 2-{) with a two-run
homer in the top of the first.

.,
TIM HOWELL

Coach Burger suffered ~ hip fraC:.
ture in a fall two years ago, and'
faces further surgery and a period Qf
rehabilitation as a result of the accident.
Coach Burger announced that he
wiU remain on the faculty of the ·
school.

AI Burger, Jackson High School
basketball coach for the past nine
years, aMounced Wednesday that
he will not continue as coach of the
teamnextyear.
Coach Burger cited health
problems as the reason lor his
decision.

Fannin blanks.-----:-----------------'GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
Academy girls soft~ll team threw
their finest defensive effort of the
season against the Jackson Irongals
Friday.
However, Jackson pitcher Tilda
Farutin fashioned an 11-strikeout,
two-hit complete game perfonnance
to give the Irongirls a &amp;-a victory.
Roberta Hamilton, with a seventhinning single and Lisa Roush, with a
second-inning safety, collected the
lone Blue Angel hits as GAHS fell to
0-5 for the season. Jackson inoproves
to 4-{)_
Pitcher Nancy Evans allo)Ved just
four Jackson hits in goil)g the distance and cut down GAHS' bases-onballs allowed to nine. But the
Irongirls posted four runs during the
first inning and added single tallies
in the flfth and seventh. .
AIUie Greene's fifth..inning triple
and Cathy Marek's double in the fir·
st for Jackson were the only extrabase shots of the contest. Evans'
record dropped to 0-3 with the loss.
The Blue Angels host Wellston
Monday.

"

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FORMER NAVY QB KILLED
FITCHBURG, Mass. (AP) - Lt.
Allen R. Glenny, 27, a fonner star
quarterback at the U.S. Naval
Academy; was among the crewmen
killed in an American Samoa "plane
crash, ·the victim's parents confirmed.
.
GleMy played football at the
Naval Academy from 197M3, and
was the starting quarterback as a
senior.

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MASON, W.Va.- A pair of threerun homers by Gene Morris and
Steve Varner led Ravenswood to an
11~ triumph over the Waliarna
White Falcons Friday.
Ravenswood collected 11 hits and
sh errors off Wabama to send the
White Falcons into Saturday's
doubleheader with Gallipolis with a
,7-4 overall record.
Ravenswood !allied three runs in
. the second inning, two in the tlllrd ·
and llxtb and erupted for four
· markers in the flfth.
. w~ collected two hits from
Sbawn Fields, Vince Weaver and
Jerry Arnold while Fields knocked
In two of the White Falcons¢un"~

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DIA{IIE WINS AT LEBANON
LEBANON, Ohio (AP) - Diane
Williams, 22, drove 16-1 longshot
Skipper's Fleet Man to a four-length
victory Friday night in the $1,100
featured pace mile in the ninth race
at Lebanon.
The former Lebanon High School
girl basketball star and daughter of
veteran driver George Williams
pushed the winner to the wire in
2:07.1-5. He paid $41.60, $11.80 and
$4.
Bunk's Buller placed, returning $8
and $3.80. Thunderbuck paid $3.20 to
show.
Mike T. Quick and Keep Trying
paid $47.20 in the double on the combination :1-3.
The mutuel pool totaled $193,B61.
Attendance was 2,130.

_

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SPORTS SOUVENffiS
HOUSTON (AP)
Tht
highroilers in Houston are willing to
pay and pay for sports souvenirs. At
a charity affair, one of Earl Campbell's game jerseys was auctioned
offfor $6,100.

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KANSAS RELAY MARK FALLS
LAWRENCE, Kan . (AP) - Tony
Darden, Herman Frazier, Fred
Taylor and Steve Riddick blazed
their way to an American record of
1:21.55 in the 886-yard relay at the
ii5th Kansas Relays.

on ''Good Hands" insurance

•
•

Keith Hemadez led off the inning
by drawing a walk from losing
reliever Dave Roberts, ()-1. Pincbrunner Bobby Bonds took second on
a single by Ted Simmons and
scored wheri Hendrick lined a single
off the left field wall.
Fulgham, 1-1, retired 14 straight
batters after allowing a secondinning double by Omar Moreno. He
struck outfour and walked two.
Pittsburgh took a I~ lead in the
second inning when Bill Madlock led
off with a double, advanced to third
on an infield out and scored on Phil
Gamer's sacrifice fly.
The Cardinals tied the score in the
top of the third. Keith Hernadez hit a
one-out home run, his first of the
season.
·
Pirates starter Burt Blyleven
allowed four hits and struck out 12
before be was lifted for a pinch hitter
in the seventh inning.

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TWO RIVERS SUPER
PRICE

.,.

I
I
I

George Hendrick's eighth-inning
single snapped a tie that gave the St.

liLOUSTER - The Meigs Reserves girls' softball team scored an
impressive 22-2 win over the Trimble Tomcats Friday behind a one-hit
pitching perfonnance by Natalie
~bert. Lambert faMed eight and
walked only one in going the route
fo; the Marauders.
liter the first inning ended in a 1-1
ti( Meigs erupted to distribute a
ba1anced scoring attack over the
rCOJaining six innings.
t.ambert collected a double and
t,., singles while paula Horton added a triple and single. Cindy
Crooks, Kris Snowden, Beth
GIOekner, and Lori Pickett each contn'buted singles.
Sheila Love had the lone Trimble
hit. Losing pitCher Mary Beth Byco!.uJ&lt;i and Dottie Heathcoat teamed
up: to strike out three and walk 16.
Meigs committed three errors to
Trimble's eight.

Ph. 992-5716
Syracuse, OH .
Open Daoly 9 to S &amp; Sun . 1 to S

-

home run of the season leading -oft
the fourth inning, the Yankees didn't
get a fUIUier beyond first base unw
the seventh against Haas, H, who
walked three and struck out five in
seven innings.
Tom Underwood, who relieved
Figueroa with two fUIUiers on base
in the third, yielded a run-scoring
single to Ben Oglivle, the first batter
he faced, and then blanked the
Brewers through the eighth with the
help of three double plays.
Tbe Brewers scored a run off Rich
Gossage in the ninth on a two-out
double by Robin Yount and a twobase throwing error by the pitcher
on Cecil Cooper's grounder.

·F.ulgiUJm tosses four-hitter

SUPPLY

I

Similar 1o. lllustrafun

NEW YORK (AP) - Gonnan
Thomas drove in three runs with a
pair of singles Saturday and the
Milwaukee Brewers continued their
recent domination of New York by
d~eating the Yankees 5-1 behind the
eight-hit pitching of Moose Haas and
Bob McClure.
The Brewers have defeated the
Yankees in both meetings this
~on, six straight overall, and 29 of
45 over the last four years.
Thomas singled a run across in the
first inning and delivered a two-run
single as the Brewers chased starter
Ed" Figueroa, 1-1, trying to come
baCk from elbow surgery, with three
mo~inthethird.
.
Except for Oscar Gamble's second

Louis Cardinals a 2-1 victory over
the Pittsburgh Pirates on Saturday.

...

I
I

Birthstone Rings

Milwaukee chases Figueroa

.-

RIDENOUR

Hubbard's Greenhouse

't

urookens homered to lead off the
third . off Royals starter Dennis
Leonard.
Kansas City's Willie Aikens and
Willie Wilson each homered off
Detroit starter Jack Morris, 2-1, who
turned in his second complete game
of the season.

Marauder
.
)V
. girls
,Pll to victory

II
I
I

suffers

(Continued from Page C.! )
Kemp's first homer was 8 solP
shot off the facing of the upper deck
m left field in the first inning.

PITI'SBURGH (AP) - John
F~Jam tossed a !out-hitter, and
•

GAHSgirls

~----------------------11

Wahama

Derry
_r
I

ning when Neptune walked and rode
home on an Ingram triple.
The other Warrior run was plated - ·
in the sixth when Proctor followed a
Bowers walk with a long double.
Miracle handcuffed the Eagles . •
most of the evening behind 12' • ·
strikeouts in going the distance.
.
Roger Gaul and Robbie Smith',
each had singles for Eastern while··
Gary Griggs smacked a double. ·
Besides the run scoring hits by Proo- ·· ·
tor and Ingram, Jarvis lined a ...
double and HaiUIBn a single. Warreri"' '
played a flawless defensive game ' .
while the Eagles committed one-; ·
miscue.
Eastern was scheduled to host
Fort Frye in a double header Satur-'· .
day.
" .

BY SCO'IT WOLFE
Sports Writer
REEDSVILLE - The Warren
Local Warriors slipped past the
Eastern Eagles 2~ in a Friday non- .
league contest.
Tbe Warriors scored single rWlS in
the third and sixth innings to support
an outstanding pitching per·
fonnance by pitcher Mike Miracle
Eastern's Charlie Ritchie, mainiy
a relief pitcher, drew the starting .
role for the Eagles and suffered the
loss. Bob Smith came in to pitch the
last three innings. Both combined
for eight strikeouts and gave up four
hits while walking three.
.
Two of the walks led to Warrior
runs. The first came in the third in-

Redmen win streak at six
CEDARVILLE - Jino Blauvelt
and Jino Perry stymied Cedarville
College · with back-to-back fourhitters to move the Rio Grande
College Redmen's winning streak to
five games Friday with ~ and &amp;-1
victories.
Blauvelt (2-1) struck out five batters in posting the Redmen 's fourth
straight shutout victory in the
opener while Perry faMed 10 and

C-3-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, April20, 1980

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�..
C-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, April 20, 1980

Puerto Rico boycotts USA boycott

Sports-At-A-Glance

By The Associated Press
While it appears the United States'
drive to boycott the Summer Olym·
pies in Moscow is gaining support in
Western Europe, it is meeting stiff
opposition closer to home.
The president of the Puerto Rican
Olympic Committee said Friday tbe
island U.S. commonwealth will send
45 athletes and staff to the summer
games in July.
German Rieckehoff Sampayo,
who is also a member of the International Olympic Committee,
said his orga nization would not sui&gt;"
port President Ca rter's call for a
boycott "' beca use we do not believe

Sporls At A Glance Is a weekly calendar of area athletic events in
the GaUJa.Melgs Co. area during tbe coming week.
All sports-related coatrlbutions are welcome. 'lbe deadline for SUIIday publication Is NOON FRIDAY.
All contributions must Include tbe complele name of tbe event, the
date( s) and starting times, tbe submitter's name and telephone number. Insertion .in SAAG must also he requested.
Malling address: Sports Department, 825 Third Ave., Galllpolls, OH
45631 (Allow three days by maD) . Telephone number: 44~2342, ask lor
sporls department.

BASEBALL
Monday AprU 21
Ripley at Gallia Academy, 4:3()
p.m.
Meigs at Kyger Creek, 4:3()
p.m.
Southern at Federal Hocking,
~ :3() p.m.
Tuesday AprU 22
Jackson at Gallia Academy
iSEOAL) ,4p.m.
Meigs at Athens (SEOAL ), 4
p.m. Eastern at Southern (SVAC),
4:30p.m.
Hannan Trace at Kyger Creek
(DH, SVAC), 4:30p.m.
Southwestern vs North Gallia
at Rio Grande (SVAC) , 4:30p.m.
Wednesday AprU 23
Gallia Academy at Point
Pleasant, 4:30 p.m.
Wellston JVs at Gallia
Academy JVs, 4:30p.m.
Southern at AleKander, 4:30
p.m.
Wilmington College at Rio
Grande (DH), J p.m.
Thursday AprO 24
Wellston at Gallia Academy
(SEOAL), 4 p.m.
WahamaatMeigs, 4:30p.m.
Eastern at Southwestern
(SVAC) , 4:3() p.m.
Hannan Trace vs North Gallia
at Rio Grande (DH, SVAC), 4:30
p.m.
Kyger Creek at Southern
(!-:. VAC), 4:30p.m.
Friday AprO 25
Gallia Academy at' Ironton
(SEOAL), 4 p.m.
Logan at Meigs (SEOAL), 4
p.m.
Saturday AprO 26
Hannan Trace at Symmes
Valley (DH), I p.m.
Malone College at Rio Grande
(DH, MOC), 2 p.m.
Sunday
Rio Grande vs Xavier at Por·
tsmouth (DH), I p.m.
GIRLS SOF"l'BALL
Monday
Gallia Academy at Athens
(SEOAL), 4:30p.m.
Hannan Trace at Symmes
Valley, 4:30p.m.
Jackson at Meigs (SEOAL).
4:30p.m.
Tuesday
Wellston at Gallia Academy
(SEOAL), 4:30p.m.
Ironton St. Joe at Hannan
Trace, 4:30p.m.
Meigs JVs at Athens JVs, 4:30
p.m.
Wednesday
Ironton at Gallia Academy
(SEOAL), 4:30p.m.
Meigs at Athens (SEOAL ), 4:30
p.m.
Southwestern at Hannan Trace

(SVAC), 4:30p.m.
Thursday
North Gallia at Meigs JVs, 4:30
p.m.,
FRIDAY
Meigs at Waverly (SEOAL ),
4:30p.m.
Gallia Academy at Portsmouth, 5 p.m.

in it."

Meanwhile, Australian Prime
Minister Malcolm Fraser sa id Fran·
ce and West Germany will be the

Tour pressure
doesn't

TENNIS

Monday
Gallia Academy at Minford,
4:30p.m.
Tuesday
Athens at Gallia Academy
(SEOAL ), 4 p.m.
Minford at Kyger Creek, 4:30
p.m.
Wednesday
Portsmouth at Ga ll ia
Academy, 4:3() p.m.
Thursday
Gallia Academy at Wellston
(SEOAL), 4 p.m.
Friday
Kyger Creek at Waverly, 4 p.m.

bother Hill
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP)- Although
21-year-{)ld Carolyn Hill is a rookie
on the Ladies Professional Golf
Association tour, the second-round
leader of the $100,000 Lady Citrus
Open is accustomed to tournament
pressure.
Hill played in two of the nation's
top women's college golf programs,
at Tulsa University and the University of Miami. She played in two
NCAA championships for Miami.
"It's about the same here," she
said of pressure Friday, after her
second straight three-under-par 70
gave her a one-stroke lead.
Hill also noted she played as an
amateur against tour veterans Amy
Alcott and Laura Baugh in tournaments in her native California.
"She said the LPGA tour was more
exciting, though.
"The most exciting thing about the
tour is the quality of tbe play. The
best players in the world are here,"
she said.
Hill had only one bogey on the
6,20().yard Rio Pinar f'-Ountry Club
course. She also posted four birdies
for a 140 total.
"This was an easy day on my nerves. I was close to the pin all the
time, and had an easy, tw&lt;&gt;-putt par
round," Hill said.

TRACK
Monday
Gallipolis Jr. High girls at
Fairlaqd lnv., 6 p.m.
Tuesday
Gallia Academy · boys at
Chesapeake,4 :30 p.m.
Gallipolis Jr. High at Logan
(Co-ed), 4:45p.m.
North Gallia girls at Bern..:
Union, 4:3() p.m.
Wednesday
Gallia Academy boys at Iron·
ton, 4:30p.m.
Gallia Academy girls at Oak
Hill, 4:30p.m.
Kyger Creek at Wellston, 4
p.m.
North Gallia boys at Fairland
Inv., 4:30p.m.
Thursday
Central State Univ. women at
Rio Grande, 4 p.m.
Friday
Gallipolis Jr. High boys at
Fairland Inv., 6 p.m.
LYNECENTER
Monday
Closed
Tuesday
College recreation &amp; college
swimming, 7-9 p.m.
Wednesday
College recreation &amp; college
swimming, 7-9 p.m.
Thursday
College recreation &amp; coilege
swinuning, 7·9 p.m.
Friday
Open recreation and swimming, 7·10 p.m.
Saturday
Closed
Sunday
Closed

decided not to send a team. Another
next allies to join the boycott.
aligned nations to join the boycott in
suggestion would do away ~ith
Fraser, at a news conference in protest of the Soviet military action
national flags at the operung
Perth, said he had spoken to a num- in Afghanistan . Trudeau said he
ceremonies, thus removing some of
ber of European leaders during in· hoped an aMouncemcnt of Canada's
the nationalism from the spectacle.
dependence celebrations in Zim· decision to boycott would come next
In San Juan, Rieckehoff said Carbabwe and they believed France week.
ter invited only American athletes to
would be next to join the movement
Today, the Norwegian Sports
the White House to explain his
President Carter championed after Federation, that nation's highest
position " because he knows that we
the Soviet Union refused to with- sports authority, voted 73-57 to
(Puerto . Ricans) in sporls are a
draw troops from Afghanistan.
boycott the Games unless the
separate organization."
Fraser said the West Germans government makes another decision
Gov. Carolos Romero Barcelo has
"believe they should not play games by the May 24 entry deadline.
supported Carter's position and said
with the host country with 130,000 to
The decision overturned a 19-13
there will be no official funds for sen140,000 troops committed to the in· vote by the Norwegian Olympic
ding Puerto Rican athletes to
vasion of another country."
Conunittee last March 26, SUI&gt;"
Moscow .
Despi te hi s statement, the porting participation in the Moscow
Australian Olympic Federation
Games. The ruling Labor Party
today deferred any decision on the · government of Prime Minister Od·
issue. Delegates meetlng in var Nordli had left it to the sports
Melbourne voted to allow AOF
organizations themselves to decide
executives to make the decision
on a boycott.
As yet, there has been no proposal .
prior to the May 24 deadline for sutr
made to cancel or postpone the
mitting entries to the Games.
Games, according to Lord Killanin,
The same was true of Italy, where
president of the IOC, which stages
that nation's Olympic Committee
otters
the
competition. The IOC is to meet
withheld for a month any decision on
at Lausanne, Switzerland, next week
a boycott. Italian athletes have been
to examine ways of keeping the
asked to continue their training.
Games alive despite the boycott.
In Canada, Prime Minister Pierre
One proposal would have athletes
Trudeau issued his strongest
compete as individuals, even if their
statement of support for a boycott.
Rio Grande, Ohio
national Olympic committees
He called for Western and non·

RIO GRANDE
COUEGE
COMMUNITY COU!GE

Manufacturing
Technology

(}6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday,

w.

••

Milwaukee
Booton

3 . ~71
4 .500 1
3 4 .429 1\;
3 6 .333 II;

Toronl&lt;l

New York

Cleveland

WEST

Texas
Seattl•

1 2

7 3
53
13
4 3
4 I

ChicagO

Ool&lt;land

Cautomla
Kansas City
MJnnesola

.ne

.700
.62$1
.62$1
.111 1\;
..... 3

Prld.y'1 Gam.,_
KAnsasCity&amp;,lletrollO, 11 innJn&amp;s
Mil,waultee3, New York2
Tew&amp;,BMon5 .
BalUmore~.

Chicago2

OaklandB, Calilornla3
Only g/IJDO!S scheduled

Sa.Ddllf• Game.

ChJcago at Balllmore
Milwaukee at New York
Texas at Boston
Torooto at Cleveland
Caifomia at Oakland, 2
MlnneJOta at Sea We

w.

L. Pd. Gil
6 I .1iill
4 3 ~11 1\;

• • .429

3 .571 1\;
3
21;
3 s .375 3
3 6 .333 31;

Phllad•:r-

New Yo
St. Loots

WEST

8 1 .il8il

Cincinnati
Houston
San Diego
Loo Angeles
San Francisco
Atlanta

6
5
3
3
1

I
4
6
6
1

.1iill I I;
.556 3
.333 5
.333 5
.12$ 61;

Cincinnati at Atlanta

Houston at Los Angeles
San DiegDatSan Franci,co

Hockey
NBA. Playolf1
Wet ten CoDfereate

Semlll.aall

Bcai-1Jf&amp;vea
Tlladay, Aprtl u
l.al Anseles 11.5, Phoenii 101, Los Arlgeles wins

Unibilt Homes
Quality at
lAffordable Prices

SeatUe S, Milwaukee 15, ~tries lied 3-3
!bldaf'•Game
Milwaukee at SeatUe
Eu~n Confereare Ftna.l

C&amp;S' Bank
25 Cou rt Street

RACIAL BRAWL
WRIGHTSVILLE, Ga. (AP)
Chanting and singing, nea rly 200
persons, most of them blacks, marched in a drizzle through this
racially tense city Saturday to the
courthouse, where riot~uipped
state troopers stood between them
and a counter-demonstration by
white power advocates.
The helmeted troopers - some
carrying riot sticks, some opening
their rain-slickers to expose
holstered pistols - formed two lines
at the Johnson County Courthouse to
keep the groups 50 feet apart at Oi&gt;"
posite ends of ' the courthouse
parking lot.

$28

~cerLeague

Srlver Bridqe !Jlaza

Sprmg Valley

Skylillen League
April If, 111!41
Slaadlllp
Team

W. 1....
American Legion
80 40
Gavin Elec.
8(1 fO
Warehime's
80 40
Rtw' GJ.ass
78 t2
Baird and Fuller
16 t1
Ault's Gencing Co.
61 ~
Frito La .
54 66
Central ~upply
SO 70
Your Father's Mustache
48 72
Pleasant Valley Hospltal
47 75
Bob Evans Fann
40 80
Wamsley's
34 116
RWill' Gla!., won eight points from Your
Father's Mwotache. High bowler for Ru.u' Glass
was R. StQut w1th 599. Hlgh bowler fer Your
Father's Mustache was S. Stephens with 444:.
Baird and Fuller won eight polnta from Bob
Evans Fann. "Higb bowler for Baird and Fuller
was K. White with $$9. Hli:h bowler for Bob

SaadaJ'•Game

1~

Silvercast" Reel

• Stainless Steel Cover
• ou'rable texan body

• Spinning , Fly ,
Spincast

• High speed model
• RH or LH retrieve

23!~77
Silver Series®Reels
• Fresh water or salt·
water action.

American Legioo-PilSt 23
Jlm'sSohio

w..-...7, AprtJJt
t1&lt;o1oo at Pliuadeiphla, U """"'"'l'

Cochran's Teuco

119 137
us 138

y,AprtJn
Pblladelphla at Booton

Fe&lt;lleral Mogul .
Smith and Halley's

Philadelphia at Booton, Unecessary

Natioaal Hockey League
Ploy&lt;ilo

and Reel Combo

• Spincasting Reel
• Spincasting Rod

116 140
111 145

. . .. .

.

~

W-y,Aprilll
New York Wander.!2, Booton I, ol
Pblladelphla 1. N"" York Rangers 1
Buffalo5, Chicago 0
Minnesota 3, Montn!al 0
'l'handiJ'• Game.
New York lslanders5, Bolton 4, ot, N. Y. Islanders lead series U
Philadelphia 4, New York Rangers 1,
Philadelphia leads seriea 2-0
Buffaloti Chicago 4, Buffalo leads series 1-0
JQnnesoia t, Montreal 1, Minnesota leads
oeriesM
S.turdll)l'l Gamu
Boston at New York Islanders
Buffalo al Chicago
Philadelphia at New York Rangen~
Montreal at Minnesota
.
.
SWiday'• Game.
Pblladelphla al New York Rangers
Buffalo at Chicago
Montreal at Mfnn·esota

1\i=,l:;ba

New Vort Islander! at Boston
Ntw York Rangers at Philadelphia
Chicago at Buffalo
Minnesota at Montreal
1"hnday,Aprt!U
PhilodelphlaatNew York Rangers
Boston at New York Islanden
Buffalo at Chicago
Montreal at Minnesota

Ba-y,Aprt!M

Minnesota at Montreal
SUdly, AprtJ17
New York Rangers It Philadelphia
New York lalanden at Bo3ton

3

2.47

.

Wire Fish Basket

Collapsible, q uality
wire constru ction.

.

Our Reg 547

Magic Worm Farm'•
• 6" versatile tool
• 1O·Ot. bait bucket
• Many fishing uses • Worm beddlnglfood

•

~

,. '

4·, 6·, 8·1b .. . 2.97
10·, 12·, 14·, 17lb ... ..... ' .. 3.97
20·, 24·, 30·1b.4.97

F

.... .,..;;,... \.,.....

-_

88~a

183·491 .
Federal Mogul : Jewell Flfe high game 123,
Looise Green high series 340.

Qwu1erflmol ROWid
BHtofSevea

2 ~r~eg.

97Kit

122 134

Ashland Svc.
91 1115
Individual:
Enchanted Mirror : LaeneGogglnsand Venit·
to Smith 165 high game and Venltta 4S5 high
series.
American Legion-Post 23 : Kay Ga britsch high
game 1M, Millie Houck high series t3$.
Blue Tartan: Pat Hunter high game and series

Friday, Mly I

Our Reg 8.94

145 111

BB~a.

Rooster Tail

Jim'sSohi.o: Joyce Rw.s tn-411.
.
Smilhand Halley 's: Gertrude Ferrelllta--377.
Derifield: Ruth Miller 1§, Sandy Wright (sub)
454seriea.
Act High Mwic: Cindy Iglehart 185, Debby
Barcus 462 hiRh series.
Cochran's texaco: Polly Swisher 178-449,
J ack's Awning : Debbie RLWell, Darlln Thornton and Jan Howell all carne up with high game
of 166 with Jan havinghi&amp;h series of 457.
Jobuon•s Supermarket: Vickie Juniper ilnd
Bev Casto had high game ol lfil, with Vickie
h.av~ l'ligh series of 437 .
Tim s Body Shop: Flo RUfle Ngh game and

Joe's Flies

e Av ailab le 1/ 24,
1/ 16, 1/ 8 oz. s pinn ing
lures.

• Fishing lures
e ldea l for trout . • Clear blue fluores·
cent. 250-yards.

series l7~.

Spllt.s were picked up by :
Cingle Iglehart the :W..7-9; Joyce Russ the :).10.

Thursday Swingers League stalldlngs for April
10, 1980 are :
w.. 1....
Twn
156 7ti
M. E. JohnsonSupennarket
128 IIH
Hockenberry Phannacies
120 112
H artdC Plant Food
100 132
Prescriptioo Shoppe
100 132
C andNParts
Johnson 's Market
96 1:16
High game and series: M. E. JohnSOn's, Opal
Casto 188 Marilyn Browning 481. Hockenberry
Ph.arm.~:~cies, Ullian Wilson 176-476. H srxl C
Plant Food, Lucille Hickman 167, Betty Bernard
417. Prescription Shoppe, Karen C1J,atlin 1~ .
C and N Parts, Delcil! Butcher 160-399. Johnson s
Market Nancy Marcum 159-426.
·sputa' converted: Usa Marcum &gt;10, Joyce
· Mooney~ and4-l0, Ullian Wilson ~10, and Betty Bema.rd :Mi.

ChieagoatButfalo

If You're

.Bu1Udilng or RemodeUng
..

Regal'" Rod Selections Zebco 33 '" Reel
• Daiwa • Silver Series

• Garcia • 5000 Series
• Spinning/Spiricast

92
102

Bootonal~J.hla

Oerilield Jewelry

Fridly, April t5

per sq. fl

.IM

136 llll
132 124
126 130

Boston at PhiladelDhia

•

Enchanted Mirror

Jack 'a Awnin&amp; Sales
Blue Tartan

Jolwon's s..,......rket

W - 7. April Z3

I

lls!!ce

Our 19.97

Blue Rod-"' Selections

...... aA~

Team Standings as of Apnlll , 1980, the fln.al
nlaht of Fridav niiht bowtiruz.
Team
w. [..

Ace High Music
Tim's ilody Shop

Pblladelpllia at Booton

00

r~

Our 19.97

1300C Reel .. 19.97
2600C ReeL. 26.97

Warehime's won eight points from Wamsley's,
High bowler fGr Warehime' s was C. Meadows
with521. High bowler for Wamsley's was J. Hood
with473.
Ault's Fe~ Co. won eight points from Central Supply. Hlgb bowler !or Ault's Fencing Co.
Will! D. Morris with510. High bowler for Central
Suooly wasJ. Hood with517.
(;8vin Elec. won six poillts from Pleuant
Valley. High bowler for Gavin Elec. was J. Kennedy with 512. High bowler for Pleasant Valley
was D. Curnutte with 448.
American Legion tied with Frito Lay. They
won four points each. High bowler for American
~ion was C. De.witt with ~. High bowler for
Fnt.o Lay wasl. Bush with 561.

Bowling Bf'Det

Friday'1Game
.
Philadelpllia 116, Bootonll3, Philodelphla l.. &lt;b
series 1.0

!.lf'mb er FlJ I~

'21 ORL' Silvercast • Reel 14.88
'212 RL ' Sliver·
cast · Reel 19.88

Spincast Omega •
191 ·• Reel 28.88

lklwllnl I...ea~ue

Bft1-0f-8eveu

The Commercial &amp; Savings Bank

Beat the high .c ost of housing
with a Home by Unibilt

North Amerteu

Frldliy'• Game

This home can
be built for
less than

~

mrtn, wide r eceivers.
SOCCER

series t.-1

Monday'• GilD~
Boston at New York Wanders

r·

Warren Anderson, Dennis Law, Hnd Randy Slm·

Evan.&lt;~ Farm wasL. lbei.ss with t77.

NewYortatChicago

• 25 Court Street
• Silver Bridge Plaza
• Spring Valley.

FOOTBALL

NatieDal Football r.acue
NEW ORlEANS SAINTS - Acquired Steve
Riley, offelL'Iive tackJe, £rom the Mi~
Vikings for the Saints thJrd-rOWld a nd a filthround choi«s in the 1980.
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS - Signed

Local bowling

NATIONALLUGUE

Friday'_I_Games
Montreal 7, Phlladelphl.ll
Pittsburgh II, St. Louis 10
Allanta 3, CincinnaU 0
HOUlton 7, Los Angeles 4
sanFrancisco5, San Diego2
Only games scheduled
Sudly'• Gamet
Philadelphia at Monlre.al
St. t.ouis at PitUburgh

With offices at:

CIUCAGO CUBS - Placed Ken Henderson
outfielder, on the 15-day disabled llat, retroactive
to April 15. Recalled Jesu~ Figeroe, ouUielder,
from Wichita of the American Aasoci11lioo.

COLLEGE
IONA - Named Dave Brown, assistant
basketball roach.
NORl'HWESTERN LOUISIANA - Named .
Wayne Yates head basketball cooch.

kansas City_at Detroit

Pilllburgh

SALE

IWIEBALI.

PORTLAND TIMBERS--Signed Robbi• H....
senbrink, forward, to a tw~year C'Ontract.
Amuleaa Soccer Lague
CLEVELAND COBRAS - Signed Marin&lt;
Cano, goalie; Jeff Sendobry, fDrWa rd .
PENNSYLVANIA STONERS - Signed Dsve
Hummert, forward, and Mike Mancke, midfielder.

Seattle 3-.1, Mlnneaota 1·2

EAST

SUN. · SAT.

N•Uooal Lupe

3 7 .3004

Chicago
Mootreal

We're convenient.

"

2 I .286 !I;
2 1 .222 3\;

Detroit

OPEN DAILY 10-9
SUNDAY 1·6

Transactions

LaLe Satur:d-1 l:amn: Gtllathaded
AMERICAN LEA.GVE
EAST
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Gil
BaiU.....
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Our 5.4 7 Battery
Box, .. .. . . 4.47

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• 21x25" . 36" deep ,
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metal, non ·f loating,
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124~~9
Life Vests
Chrysler®Motor Wondertroll®Motor

• Adults or Children
• U.S.C.G. approved

4-HP

• Full pivot steering
• '!.·Gal. built-In tank

• 36" shalt, 3 sj:,eeds
• 23·Lbs. thrust, 12-V

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Bastmenl
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t::

31 ::, .. ; '"_,'

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•Anderson Windows
•4x12 Roof P~ch

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•Mason~e

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•lh" Dry Wall
•Deluxe Carpeting

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with an

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Moo.-sat
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RUSTIC ENTERPRISES INC.
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-~

April20, 1980

Scoreboard
&amp;seball

-

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Crown City, Ohio 45623
(614) 256· 1946

e Po lye th y lene
cool e r
eSwlng

2J97 2J97 5!!7.97 6o!!.a.aa
Coleman Stove

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Coleman lantem

Fillet Fish Knife

eMod e l 225

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• Heats fa st

• Uses Coleman Fuel

• Razor sharp blade
• Leather sheath

e6"

Handy Boat Seat

• Molded ~olrthylene
• With sw ve base

-.
.•

�..
C-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, April 20, 1980

Puerto Rico boycotts USA boycott

Sports-At-A-Glance

By The Associated Press
While it appears the United States'
drive to boycott the Summer Olym·
pies in Moscow is gaining support in
Western Europe, it is meeting stiff
opposition closer to home.
The president of the Puerto Rican
Olympic Committee said Friday tbe
island U.S. commonwealth will send
45 athletes and staff to the summer
games in July.
German Rieckehoff Sampayo,
who is also a member of the International Olympic Committee,
said his orga nization would not sui&gt;"
port President Ca rter's call for a
boycott "' beca use we do not believe

Sporls At A Glance Is a weekly calendar of area athletic events in
the GaUJa.Melgs Co. area during tbe coming week.
All sports-related coatrlbutions are welcome. 'lbe deadline for SUIIday publication Is NOON FRIDAY.
All contributions must Include tbe complele name of tbe event, the
date( s) and starting times, tbe submitter's name and telephone number. Insertion .in SAAG must also he requested.
Malling address: Sports Department, 825 Third Ave., Galllpolls, OH
45631 (Allow three days by maD) . Telephone number: 44~2342, ask lor
sporls department.

BASEBALL
Monday AprU 21
Ripley at Gallia Academy, 4:3()
p.m.
Meigs at Kyger Creek, 4:3()
p.m.
Southern at Federal Hocking,
~ :3() p.m.
Tuesday AprU 22
Jackson at Gallia Academy
iSEOAL) ,4p.m.
Meigs at Athens (SEOAL ), 4
p.m. Eastern at Southern (SVAC),
4:30p.m.
Hannan Trace at Kyger Creek
(DH, SVAC), 4:30p.m.
Southwestern vs North Gallia
at Rio Grande (SVAC) , 4:30p.m.
Wednesday AprU 23
Gallia Academy at Point
Pleasant, 4:30 p.m.
Wellston JVs at Gallia
Academy JVs, 4:30p.m.
Southern at AleKander, 4:30
p.m.
Wilmington College at Rio
Grande (DH), J p.m.
Thursday AprO 24
Wellston at Gallia Academy
(SEOAL), 4 p.m.
WahamaatMeigs, 4:30p.m.
Eastern at Southwestern
(SVAC) , 4:3() p.m.
Hannan Trace vs North Gallia
at Rio Grande (DH, SVAC), 4:30
p.m.
Kyger Creek at Southern
(!-:. VAC), 4:30p.m.
Friday AprO 25
Gallia Academy at' Ironton
(SEOAL), 4 p.m.
Logan at Meigs (SEOAL), 4
p.m.
Saturday AprO 26
Hannan Trace at Symmes
Valley (DH), I p.m.
Malone College at Rio Grande
(DH, MOC), 2 p.m.
Sunday
Rio Grande vs Xavier at Por·
tsmouth (DH), I p.m.
GIRLS SOF"l'BALL
Monday
Gallia Academy at Athens
(SEOAL), 4:30p.m.
Hannan Trace at Symmes
Valley, 4:30p.m.
Jackson at Meigs (SEOAL).
4:30p.m.
Tuesday
Wellston at Gallia Academy
(SEOAL), 4:30p.m.
Ironton St. Joe at Hannan
Trace, 4:30p.m.
Meigs JVs at Athens JVs, 4:30
p.m.
Wednesday
Ironton at Gallia Academy
(SEOAL), 4:30p.m.
Meigs at Athens (SEOAL ), 4:30
p.m.
Southwestern at Hannan Trace

(SVAC), 4:30p.m.
Thursday
North Gallia at Meigs JVs, 4:30
p.m.,
FRIDAY
Meigs at Waverly (SEOAL ),
4:30p.m.
Gallia Academy at Portsmouth, 5 p.m.

in it."

Meanwhile, Australian Prime
Minister Malcolm Fraser sa id Fran·
ce and West Germany will be the

Tour pressure
doesn't

TENNIS

Monday
Gallia Academy at Minford,
4:30p.m.
Tuesday
Athens at Gallia Academy
(SEOAL ), 4 p.m.
Minford at Kyger Creek, 4:30
p.m.
Wednesday
Portsmouth at Ga ll ia
Academy, 4:3() p.m.
Thursday
Gallia Academy at Wellston
(SEOAL), 4 p.m.
Friday
Kyger Creek at Waverly, 4 p.m.

bother Hill
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP)- Although
21-year-{)ld Carolyn Hill is a rookie
on the Ladies Professional Golf
Association tour, the second-round
leader of the $100,000 Lady Citrus
Open is accustomed to tournament
pressure.
Hill played in two of the nation's
top women's college golf programs,
at Tulsa University and the University of Miami. She played in two
NCAA championships for Miami.
"It's about the same here," she
said of pressure Friday, after her
second straight three-under-par 70
gave her a one-stroke lead.
Hill also noted she played as an
amateur against tour veterans Amy
Alcott and Laura Baugh in tournaments in her native California.
"She said the LPGA tour was more
exciting, though.
"The most exciting thing about the
tour is the quality of tbe play. The
best players in the world are here,"
she said.
Hill had only one bogey on the
6,20().yard Rio Pinar f'-Ountry Club
course. She also posted four birdies
for a 140 total.
"This was an easy day on my nerves. I was close to the pin all the
time, and had an easy, tw&lt;&gt;-putt par
round," Hill said.

TRACK
Monday
Gallipolis Jr. High girls at
Fairlaqd lnv., 6 p.m.
Tuesday
Gallia Academy · boys at
Chesapeake,4 :30 p.m.
Gallipolis Jr. High at Logan
(Co-ed), 4:45p.m.
North Gallia girls at Bern..:
Union, 4:3() p.m.
Wednesday
Gallia Academy boys at Iron·
ton, 4:30p.m.
Gallia Academy girls at Oak
Hill, 4:30p.m.
Kyger Creek at Wellston, 4
p.m.
North Gallia boys at Fairland
Inv., 4:30p.m.
Thursday
Central State Univ. women at
Rio Grande, 4 p.m.
Friday
Gallipolis Jr. High boys at
Fairland Inv., 6 p.m.
LYNECENTER
Monday
Closed
Tuesday
College recreation &amp; college
swimming, 7-9 p.m.
Wednesday
College recreation &amp; college
swimming, 7-9 p.m.
Thursday
College recreation &amp; coilege
swinuning, 7·9 p.m.
Friday
Open recreation and swimming, 7·10 p.m.
Saturday
Closed
Sunday
Closed

decided not to send a team. Another
next allies to join the boycott.
aligned nations to join the boycott in
suggestion would do away ~ith
Fraser, at a news conference in protest of the Soviet military action
national flags at the operung
Perth, said he had spoken to a num- in Afghanistan . Trudeau said he
ceremonies, thus removing some of
ber of European leaders during in· hoped an aMouncemcnt of Canada's
the nationalism from the spectacle.
dependence celebrations in Zim· decision to boycott would come next
In San Juan, Rieckehoff said Carbabwe and they believed France week.
ter invited only American athletes to
would be next to join the movement
Today, the Norwegian Sports
the White House to explain his
President Carter championed after Federation, that nation's highest
position " because he knows that we
the Soviet Union refused to with- sports authority, voted 73-57 to
(Puerto . Ricans) in sporls are a
draw troops from Afghanistan.
boycott the Games unless the
separate organization."
Fraser said the West Germans government makes another decision
Gov. Carolos Romero Barcelo has
"believe they should not play games by the May 24 entry deadline.
supported Carter's position and said
with the host country with 130,000 to
The decision overturned a 19-13
there will be no official funds for sen140,000 troops committed to the in· vote by the Norwegian Olympic
ding Puerto Rican athletes to
vasion of another country."
Conunittee last March 26, SUI&gt;"
Moscow .
Despi te hi s statement, the porting participation in the Moscow
Australian Olympic Federation
Games. The ruling Labor Party
today deferred any decision on the · government of Prime Minister Od·
issue. Delegates meetlng in var Nordli had left it to the sports
Melbourne voted to allow AOF
organizations themselves to decide
executives to make the decision
on a boycott.
As yet, there has been no proposal .
prior to the May 24 deadline for sutr
made to cancel or postpone the
mitting entries to the Games.
Games, according to Lord Killanin,
The same was true of Italy, where
president of the IOC, which stages
that nation's Olympic Committee
otters
the
competition. The IOC is to meet
withheld for a month any decision on
at Lausanne, Switzerland, next week
a boycott. Italian athletes have been
to examine ways of keeping the
asked to continue their training.
Games alive despite the boycott.
In Canada, Prime Minister Pierre
One proposal would have athletes
Trudeau issued his strongest
compete as individuals, even if their
statement of support for a boycott.
Rio Grande, Ohio
national Olympic committees
He called for Western and non·

RIO GRANDE
COUEGE
COMMUNITY COU!GE

Manufacturing
Technology

(}6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday,

w.

••

Milwaukee
Booton

3 . ~71
4 .500 1
3 4 .429 1\;
3 6 .333 II;

Toronl&lt;l

New York

Cleveland

WEST

Texas
Seattl•

1 2

7 3
53
13
4 3
4 I

ChicagO

Ool&lt;land

Cautomla
Kansas City
MJnnesola

.ne

.700
.62$1
.62$1
.111 1\;
..... 3

Prld.y'1 Gam.,_
KAnsasCity&amp;,lletrollO, 11 innJn&amp;s
Mil,waultee3, New York2
Tew&amp;,BMon5 .
BalUmore~.

Chicago2

OaklandB, Calilornla3
Only g/IJDO!S scheduled

Sa.Ddllf• Game.

ChJcago at Balllmore
Milwaukee at New York
Texas at Boston
Torooto at Cleveland
Caifomia at Oakland, 2
MlnneJOta at Sea We

w.

L. Pd. Gil
6 I .1iill
4 3 ~11 1\;

• • .429

3 .571 1\;
3
21;
3 s .375 3
3 6 .333 31;

Phllad•:r-

New Yo
St. Loots

WEST

8 1 .il8il

Cincinnati
Houston
San Diego
Loo Angeles
San Francisco
Atlanta

6
5
3
3
1

I
4
6
6
1

.1iill I I;
.556 3
.333 5
.333 5
.12$ 61;

Cincinnati at Atlanta

Houston at Los Angeles
San DiegDatSan Franci,co

Hockey
NBA. Playolf1
Wet ten CoDfereate

Semlll.aall

Bcai-1Jf&amp;vea
Tlladay, Aprtl u
l.al Anseles 11.5, Phoenii 101, Los Arlgeles wins

Unibilt Homes
Quality at
lAffordable Prices

SeatUe S, Milwaukee 15, ~tries lied 3-3
!bldaf'•Game
Milwaukee at SeatUe
Eu~n Confereare Ftna.l

C&amp;S' Bank
25 Cou rt Street

RACIAL BRAWL
WRIGHTSVILLE, Ga. (AP)
Chanting and singing, nea rly 200
persons, most of them blacks, marched in a drizzle through this
racially tense city Saturday to the
courthouse, where riot~uipped
state troopers stood between them
and a counter-demonstration by
white power advocates.
The helmeted troopers - some
carrying riot sticks, some opening
their rain-slickers to expose
holstered pistols - formed two lines
at the Johnson County Courthouse to
keep the groups 50 feet apart at Oi&gt;"
posite ends of ' the courthouse
parking lot.

$28

~cerLeague

Srlver Bridqe !Jlaza

Sprmg Valley

Skylillen League
April If, 111!41
Slaadlllp
Team

W. 1....
American Legion
80 40
Gavin Elec.
8(1 fO
Warehime's
80 40
Rtw' GJ.ass
78 t2
Baird and Fuller
16 t1
Ault's Gencing Co.
61 ~
Frito La .
54 66
Central ~upply
SO 70
Your Father's Mustache
48 72
Pleasant Valley Hospltal
47 75
Bob Evans Fann
40 80
Wamsley's
34 116
RWill' Gla!., won eight points from Your
Father's Mwotache. High bowler for Ru.u' Glass
was R. StQut w1th 599. Hlgh bowler fer Your
Father's Mustache was S. Stephens with 444:.
Baird and Fuller won eight polnta from Bob
Evans Fann. "Higb bowler for Baird and Fuller
was K. White with $$9. Hli:h bowler for Bob

SaadaJ'•Game

1~

Silvercast" Reel

• Stainless Steel Cover
• ou'rable texan body

• Spinning , Fly ,
Spincast

• High speed model
• RH or LH retrieve

23!~77
Silver Series®Reels
• Fresh water or salt·
water action.

American Legioo-PilSt 23
Jlm'sSohio

w..-...7, AprtJJt
t1&lt;o1oo at Pliuadeiphla, U """"'"'l'

Cochran's Teuco

119 137
us 138

y,AprtJn
Pblladelphla at Booton

Fe&lt;lleral Mogul .
Smith and Halley's

Philadelphia at Booton, Unecessary

Natioaal Hockey League
Ploy&lt;ilo

and Reel Combo

• Spincasting Reel
• Spincasting Rod

116 140
111 145

. . .. .

.

~

W-y,Aprilll
New York Wander.!2, Booton I, ol
Pblladelphla 1. N"" York Rangers 1
Buffalo5, Chicago 0
Minnesota 3, Montn!al 0
'l'handiJ'• Game.
New York lslanders5, Bolton 4, ot, N. Y. Islanders lead series U
Philadelphia 4, New York Rangers 1,
Philadelphia leads seriea 2-0
Buffaloti Chicago 4, Buffalo leads series 1-0
JQnnesoia t, Montreal 1, Minnesota leads
oeriesM
S.turdll)l'l Gamu
Boston at New York Islanders
Buffalo al Chicago
Philadelphia at New York Rangen~
Montreal at Minnesota
.
.
SWiday'• Game.
Pblladelphla al New York Rangers
Buffalo at Chicago
Montreal at Mfnn·esota

1\i=,l:;ba

New Vort Islander! at Boston
Ntw York Rangers at Philadelphia
Chicago at Buffalo
Minnesota at Montreal
1"hnday,Aprt!U
PhilodelphlaatNew York Rangers
Boston at New York Islanden
Buffalo at Chicago
Montreal at Minnesota

Ba-y,Aprt!M

Minnesota at Montreal
SUdly, AprtJ17
New York Rangers It Philadelphia
New York lalanden at Bo3ton

3

2.47

.

Wire Fish Basket

Collapsible, q uality
wire constru ction.

.

Our Reg 547

Magic Worm Farm'•
• 6" versatile tool
• 1O·Ot. bait bucket
• Many fishing uses • Worm beddlnglfood

•

~

,. '

4·, 6·, 8·1b .. . 2.97
10·, 12·, 14·, 17lb ... ..... ' .. 3.97
20·, 24·, 30·1b.4.97

F

.... .,..;;,... \.,.....

-_

88~a

183·491 .
Federal Mogul : Jewell Flfe high game 123,
Looise Green high series 340.

Qwu1erflmol ROWid
BHtofSevea

2 ~r~eg.

97Kit

122 134

Ashland Svc.
91 1115
Individual:
Enchanted Mirror : LaeneGogglnsand Venit·
to Smith 165 high game and Venltta 4S5 high
series.
American Legion-Post 23 : Kay Ga britsch high
game 1M, Millie Houck high series t3$.
Blue Tartan: Pat Hunter high game and series

Friday, Mly I

Our Reg 8.94

145 111

BB~a.

Rooster Tail

Jim'sSohi.o: Joyce Rw.s tn-411.
.
Smilhand Halley 's: Gertrude Ferrelllta--377.
Derifield: Ruth Miller 1§, Sandy Wright (sub)
454seriea.
Act High Mwic: Cindy Iglehart 185, Debby
Barcus 462 hiRh series.
Cochran's texaco: Polly Swisher 178-449,
J ack's Awning : Debbie RLWell, Darlln Thornton and Jan Howell all carne up with high game
of 166 with Jan havinghi&amp;h series of 457.
Jobuon•s Supermarket: Vickie Juniper ilnd
Bev Casto had high game ol lfil, with Vickie
h.av~ l'ligh series of 437 .
Tim s Body Shop: Flo RUfle Ngh game and

Joe's Flies

e Av ailab le 1/ 24,
1/ 16, 1/ 8 oz. s pinn ing
lures.

• Fishing lures
e ldea l for trout . • Clear blue fluores·
cent. 250-yards.

series l7~.

Spllt.s were picked up by :
Cingle Iglehart the :W..7-9; Joyce Russ the :).10.

Thursday Swingers League stalldlngs for April
10, 1980 are :
w.. 1....
Twn
156 7ti
M. E. JohnsonSupennarket
128 IIH
Hockenberry Phannacies
120 112
H artdC Plant Food
100 132
Prescriptioo Shoppe
100 132
C andNParts
Johnson 's Market
96 1:16
High game and series: M. E. JohnSOn's, Opal
Casto 188 Marilyn Browning 481. Hockenberry
Ph.arm.~:~cies, Ullian Wilson 176-476. H srxl C
Plant Food, Lucille Hickman 167, Betty Bernard
417. Prescription Shoppe, Karen C1J,atlin 1~ .
C and N Parts, Delcil! Butcher 160-399. Johnson s
Market Nancy Marcum 159-426.
·sputa' converted: Usa Marcum &gt;10, Joyce
· Mooney~ and4-l0, Ullian Wilson ~10, and Betty Bema.rd :Mi.

ChieagoatButfalo

If You're

.Bu1Udilng or RemodeUng
..

Regal'" Rod Selections Zebco 33 '" Reel
• Daiwa • Silver Series

• Garcia • 5000 Series
• Spinning/Spiricast

92
102

Bootonal~J.hla

Oerilield Jewelry

Fridly, April t5

per sq. fl

.IM

136 llll
132 124
126 130

Boston at PhiladelDhia

•

Enchanted Mirror

Jack 'a Awnin&amp; Sales
Blue Tartan

Jolwon's s..,......rket

W - 7. April Z3

I

lls!!ce

Our 19.97

Blue Rod-"' Selections

...... aA~

Team Standings as of Apnlll , 1980, the fln.al
nlaht of Fridav niiht bowtiruz.
Team
w. [..

Ace High Music
Tim's ilody Shop

Pblladelpllia at Booton

00

r~

Our 19.97

1300C Reel .. 19.97
2600C ReeL. 26.97

Warehime's won eight points from Wamsley's,
High bowler fGr Warehime' s was C. Meadows
with521. High bowler for Wamsley's was J. Hood
with473.
Ault's Fe~ Co. won eight points from Central Supply. Hlgb bowler !or Ault's Fencing Co.
Will! D. Morris with510. High bowler for Central
Suooly wasJ. Hood with517.
(;8vin Elec. won six poillts from Pleuant
Valley. High bowler for Gavin Elec. was J. Kennedy with 512. High bowler for Pleasant Valley
was D. Curnutte with 448.
American Legion tied with Frito Lay. They
won four points each. High bowler for American
~ion was C. De.witt with ~. High bowler for
Fnt.o Lay wasl. Bush with 561.

Bowling Bf'Det

Friday'1Game
.
Philadelpllia 116, Bootonll3, Philodelphla l.. &lt;b
series 1.0

!.lf'mb er FlJ I~

'21 ORL' Silvercast • Reel 14.88
'212 RL ' Sliver·
cast · Reel 19.88

Spincast Omega •
191 ·• Reel 28.88

lklwllnl I...ea~ue

Bft1-0f-8eveu

The Commercial &amp; Savings Bank

Beat the high .c ost of housing
with a Home by Unibilt

North Amerteu

Frldliy'• Game

This home can
be built for
less than

~

mrtn, wide r eceivers.
SOCCER

series t.-1

Monday'• GilD~
Boston at New York Wanders

r·

Warren Anderson, Dennis Law, Hnd Randy Slm·

Evan.&lt;~ Farm wasL. lbei.ss with t77.

NewYortatChicago

• 25 Court Street
• Silver Bridge Plaza
• Spring Valley.

FOOTBALL

NatieDal Football r.acue
NEW ORlEANS SAINTS - Acquired Steve
Riley, offelL'Iive tackJe, £rom the Mi~
Vikings for the Saints thJrd-rOWld a nd a filthround choi«s in the 1980.
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS - Signed

Local bowling

NATIONALLUGUE

Friday'_I_Games
Montreal 7, Phlladelphl.ll
Pittsburgh II, St. Louis 10
Allanta 3, CincinnaU 0
HOUlton 7, Los Angeles 4
sanFrancisco5, San Diego2
Only games scheduled
Sudly'• Gamet
Philadelphia at Monlre.al
St. t.ouis at PitUburgh

With offices at:

CIUCAGO CUBS - Placed Ken Henderson
outfielder, on the 15-day disabled llat, retroactive
to April 15. Recalled Jesu~ Figeroe, ouUielder,
from Wichita of the American Aasoci11lioo.

COLLEGE
IONA - Named Dave Brown, assistant
basketball roach.
NORl'HWESTERN LOUISIANA - Named .
Wayne Yates head basketball cooch.

kansas City_at Detroit

Pilllburgh

SALE

IWIEBALI.

PORTLAND TIMBERS--Signed Robbi• H....
senbrink, forward, to a tw~year C'Ontract.
Amuleaa Soccer Lague
CLEVELAND COBRAS - Signed Marin&lt;
Cano, goalie; Jeff Sendobry, fDrWa rd .
PENNSYLVANIA STONERS - Signed Dsve
Hummert, forward, and Mike Mancke, midfielder.

Seattle 3-.1, Mlnneaota 1·2

EAST

SUN. · SAT.

N•Uooal Lupe

3 7 .3004

Chicago
Mootreal

We're convenient.

"

2 I .286 !I;
2 1 .222 3\;

Detroit

OPEN DAILY 10-9
SUNDAY 1·6

Transactions

LaLe Satur:d-1 l:amn: Gtllathaded
AMERICAN LEA.GVE
EAST
[.. Pet
Gil
BaiU.....
I 3 .B2$

Our 5.4 7 Battery
Box, .. .. . . 4.47

J67
Telescopic Net
• 21x25" . 36" deep ,
heavy duty net.

i&amp;

3!~eg ~66
Minnow Bucket
e2 pc. galvanized
metal, non ·f loating,
8 qt .

4!~
597
'41~~;4
124~~9
Life Vests
Chrysler®Motor Wondertroll®Motor

• Adults or Children
• U.S.C.G. approved

4-HP

• Full pivot steering
• '!.·Gal. built-In tank

• 36" shalt, 3 sj:,eeds
• 23·Lbs. thrust, 12-V

-~
'.J.'·-' r

Bastmenl
-·

-~

•• '/

t::

31 ::, .. ; '"_,'

. ;.
,

eDeluxe Oak Cabinets
•Anderson Windows
•4x12 Roof P~ch

.

'.~.

I

~

J ;'

.-

Option

.. '

.:;

•Insulated Steel Doors

•r-38 Roof Insulation

_,___ _ __... 5 .YR.

•Mason~e

Siding
•lh" Dry Wall
•Deluxe Carpeting

BUYERS PROTECTION PLAN
This home also qualifieS for W. Va. low~nterest housing money

with an

EM
GASGRILL BY ARKLA

Gives You The Beauly of Natural
Slone at About Half The Cost.
.M.

Real "charcoal" flavor with no charcoal mess
Uses natural or bottled gas
Safer, more economical than charcoal or electricity
Choose from roll-a-round cart, permanent post or patio base models
Grill, bake, fry .. . any kind of food ... any kind of weather

87 OLIVE

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GAU.JPOUS

4464464

a••

Store tbJrs

Uttle Playmate

Moo.-sat
7-5
Friday
7-8

.

RUSTIC ENTERPRISES INC.
.Rt. 2, Box 207

-~

April20, 1980

Scoreboard
&amp;seball

-

;,the Log home People"
Crown City, Ohio 45623
(614) 256· 1946

e Po lye th y lene
cool e r
eSwlng

2J97 2J97 5!!7.97 6o!!.a.aa
Coleman Stove

'

Coleman lantem

Fillet Fish Knife

eMod e l 225

•Model220

• Heats fa st

• Uses Coleman Fuel

• Razor sharp blade
• Leather sheath

e6"

Handy Boat Seat

• Molded ~olrthylene
• With sw ve base

-.
.•

�•
''

C-6-The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, April W, 1980

G-7-TheSunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, April W, I980

Olympian Eruzione caught in whirlwind
Murray Olderman
Special Correspondent
SAN FRANCISCO (NEA) - Some
day soon, Mike Eruzione will return
home to Winthrop, Mass., to stay,
and life will regain some normalcy.
He'll decide then what he's going
to do - whether he'll go into
coaching or into teaching. He has his
bachelor's degree in pbysical education from Boston University. Or
some other opportunity might come
his way.
Meanwhile, Mike is basking in the
glow rl achievement that comes
once in a lifetime, of being a momentary celebrity, of finding that people
react gloriously to what he and 19
other young men did one momentous
week in February.
Mike, you see, was the captain of
the U.S. hockey team that did the
impossible by beating a squad from
the U.S.S.R. that was generally a ~
claimed the ~st in the world,
amateur or pro.
And the Americans did it with an
emotionalism that lingers even now
among the individual players who
won the hockey gold medal for the
Uriited States.
The night before the American
was to play the Russians ln the
decisive game,· Mike remembers
trying to sleep in his small room at
the Olympic Village in Ray Brook,
N.Y. " Every hour," he recalls, "I
saw the clock ... 12 ... I ... 2 ... 3... .
Maybe some time around 6 I missed
a couple. But you know, when I got
up at 9, I felt good, like I'd had a full
night's sleep. I was ready."

In the game tnat night, with the
score tied at three, with exactly 10
minutes remaining to play, Eruzione
fired the puck past Soviet goalie
Vladimir Myshkin to give the United
States its sensational4-3 victory.
Since then, a whole new world has
opened up for the short (5-foot-9) ,
stocky, black-haired, intense but
friendly Italiano from New England.
He was older than the others at~­
Most of them were right out of college, but Mike had played a couple of
years of minor league hockey with
the Toledo Golddiggers. In the
summers he did some house painting and substitute teaching.
Under the weird rules of
amateurism, he was still simon-pure
though he had attended two National
Hockey Leaguever wanted to train·
ing camps and had played six exhibi·
lion. games with the New York
Rangers and some others with the
Colorado Rockies.
But unlike 11 of the U.S. Olympic
hockey teams who chose to
capitalize on their instant fame by
signing professional contracts - for
example, Mark Johnson with Pittsburgh, Steve Christoff with . Min·
nesota, Dave Christian with Winnipeg, goa lie Jim Craig with Allan·
ta; all of them guaranteed at least
$22$,000 for three years - Eruzione
decided that playing hockey for a
living wouldn't be his bag.
"I felt I had accomplishd

everything I ever .wanted to a~
complish as an athlete," says Mike,
revealing he turned down five NHL
offers. " I'm not gifted. I have to
work my tail off to excel at anything.
I couldn't have brought the same
emotionalism and hard work to it
that I had in the Olympics. I lost 10
pounds there."
Nevertheless, the aftennath of the
Olympic Games has been incredible
to him. A computer finn signed him
for a month of spea king
engagements to talk about his Olympic experience, and he has visited
Florida, Chicago, Los Angeles, northern Michigan, San Francisco and
New York.
"I go to dinner,'' he says wondrously, " and I meet Walter
Cronkite. I talked to President
Carter on the phone. Those things
don't happen to the everyday person. And I am THE everyday per·
son."
In Los Angeles, he visited a
boyhood friend who worked as a
page at the NBC studios. Th~ friend
took him around several sets until
they came to one where " Hollywood

Squares" was filming. , "The producer," recalls Mike, "recognized
me. He said, 'Put on a shirt and tie.
You're going on the show.' The people in the audience applauded.
'Naw,' I said, 'I can't go on.'
Well, they pushed me on as a guest,
not a contestant, and Peter Marshall
and Arte Johnson came over and
talked to me. The show will be on
May2."
41

Mike also came away with $1,000
in parting gifts.
What really has impressed Eru·
zione, however, is the gut response
of the public. "The people,'' he says
earnestly, "keep telling . me how
patriotic they feel because of what
we did. They never felt it before.
They didn't know where the country
was going. They were crying
because we won: They've all been so
sincere.''
They respond instinctively to Mike
Eruzione's own sincerity as evinced
on the victory stand in the Olympic
Arena at Lake Placid, that Wlforget·
table moment when he stood there
as the representative oi the
American team and then signaled

Trotters
to
appeal
•
anti-trust
ruling
.
said that if the judge's decision was
not appealed or is upheld during the
appeal process, the "state of har·
ness racing would be set back 40
years" when there were three or
more organizations that tried to run
the sport.
In order to race a horse, it is
necessary to be a member of the
U.S. Trotting Association, Evans
confirmed. He also acknowledged
that every horse that races is
registered by the USTA.
Sportsman's Park in Chicago,
which filed the original suit, does not
belong to the USTA.
"At the time, we tried to get enforced sanctions against hon;emen
racing (at nonmember tracks), but
the judge said they can race there
even though the track doesn't belong
to the USTA.

COLUMBUS (AP) - The board of
directors of the U.S. Trotting
A.$ociation decided Saturday to appeal a ruling by a federal judge in
cliicago who charged the group was
guilty of anti-trust violations.
\].S. District Judge Marvin E.
· Aspen issued the ruling last month.
· •:•There were several important
things the judge found us guilty of,"
sa!d association spokesman Donald
P.· Evans. "He says we prevented
horseman members from racing
at , a track or tracks that neither
belong to our association nor pays it
a prescribed fee. ''
The judge also questioned horse
eligibility and registation certificates that he said belong to the
horses owners and not the
asSociation.
· ~ociation President P.J. Baugh

our

JUMPING FOR JOY, Mike
. El'112looe (in actlo11, center) Is
wondering about his future. But a
successful career In big·tlme pro
hockey Is doubtful.

.the rest to join him, mobbing the
podium.

"That's what I remember most
about the Olympics,'' says Mike,
"Winning. Then standing there with
the . other guys and getting the
acknowledgement of the crowd."
He knows, though, that the high he
is now experiencing will eventually
flatten out into reality. "That's why
he wants to go back to Winthrop "to
spread things out." He's one of six
children in a closely knit family, and
his father, Eugene, works in a

Dorsey,

, COLO'' I

lhfiJfl (

..

'Coal Miner's
Daughter' is an
achievement
in American
cinema."

• •
recipients
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
College basketball standouts Tom
Dorsey, Grant Greenwood, Vince
Phelps, Denise Radcliff, Karen
Powell and Kim Martin have been
named the recipients of the J .
Newton Oliver awards for the 197~
season.
The awards, named for the former
Redmen cage coach and Clark Co.
Commissioner, are presented each
year for excellence in field goal percentage, rebounding, assists and
free throw percentage.
Dorsey, a 6-foot-4 junior from
Jackson, was the Redmen's leading
field-goal shooter last season (54.8
percent) and carried the Redmen's
best scoring average (12.8) .
Radcliff, a senior from Athens, led
the state champion Redwomen at·
tack with a 61·percent mark from
the field and an 8.9 rebounding
norm.
Phelps, a junior from Springfield,
led the Redmen in assists for the
third straight year with 172 while
Powell directed the Redwomen of·
fense with 125 assists.
The leading Redmen rebounder
award went to 6-4 sophomore Grant
Greenwood (7.2) while Martin, justa
freslunan, hit 73 percent from the
charity stripe for the women.
The Oliver awards ceremonies for
athlete-of-the-year are planned for
Rio Grande's homecoming weekend .

- Rrrhan.l (i rl'rutr .

&lt;.:vs mopolitan

Ma~t azme

~~•

A UNIVERSA L l lC1"UHE

lit:;

C l9!lOUI'ji~[RSAi.Cri'YSIUQI0:5r!'tC

"'. I. I&lt;IGJ.&lt;I S AE SEFW£0

SISSY SPACEK TOMMY LEE JONf:"
"COAL· Ml NEI&lt;'S DAlXi HTF.R~

•

f---....:----- -- - -

Friday, Saturday
&amp; Sunday

HAROCORE
PLUS

BLACKOUT
(RJ

~--------.

&lt;

Mike Caldwell puts bite on Yanks
By The AsiiOCtated Press
Is the Stage Deli ready for a "Mike
Caldwell" sandwich1 Mike Caldwell
thinks so.
"I want you to know that I've
beaten the New York Yankees six
times in a row,' ' said the Milwaukee
Brewers left-hander after a 3-2 vi~
tory over the Yankees Friday.
"Maybe someday I'll get a sandwich
down at the Stage Deli with my
name on it."
The restaurant, a New York institution, labels many of its sandwiches after celebrities.
The Stage Deli indeed might think
aboutadding Caldwell to its list after
the Yankee killer put the bite on New
York again with late relief help
.

Friday.
That improved his record to 7·1
over the Yankees while lowering his
lifetime earned run average against
them to 1.76 in 1.02 innings. Caldwell
gave up but two hits in seven in·
nings, including Lou Piniella' s RBI
single in the fourth.
Buck Rodgers, the acting
Milwaukee manager, lifted CLldweli
after seven innings because the left·
hander hadn't pitched since an
exhibition game in late March and
his legs felt weak.
In other American League games,
the Texas Rangers beat the Boston
Red Sox 6-li; the Kansas City Royals
whipped the Detroit Tigers 9-&lt;i; the
Baltimore Orioles trimmed the

Matula says Braves
different team. now

.

''

...
'

By The Associated Press
two streaks came to an end after
Rick Matula's five-hitter helped the
Atlanta Braves beat the Cincinnati
Reds~ Friday night.
Atlanta had lost its first seven
gnmes of the National League
season while Cincinnati had won its
first eight.
"It's about time," Cox said: It's
been about a month.''
Actually It's only been 10 days sin" ce the Braves opened their season
with a 9-G pasting at the hands of the
same Cinciruuiti Reds. In fact, five
of Atlanta 's seven losses had been to
the Reds, by a lopsided combined
score of 29-5.
"I think you'llsee a different team
out there now,"· Matula, who was tl10 as a rookie last season, said about
his teainmates after his first victory
and complete game of 1980.
In other National Leagtle games,
the Pittsburgh Pirates o\ltscored the
St. Louis Cardinals 12-10, the Montreal Expos beat the Philadelphia
Phlllies Ni, tne San Francisco Giants defeated the San Diego Padres 5-2
and the Houston Astros topped the
Lor! Angeles Dodgers 7~.
. Pirates 12, CardslO
. Plttsblirgh scored six 1'WjS in the
\t

~

"

..:

first inning and St. Louis battled
back to lead tl-7, but Dave Parker's
two-run homer in ·the sixth inning
put the Pirates back in front to stay.
John Milner drove in three runs for
the Pirates while Dane Iorg hit two
home runs and Ken Reitz and Ted
Simmons belted one apiece for the
Cards.

Chicago White Sox 5-2; the Seattle
Mariners took a doubleheader from
the Minnesota Twins, 3-1 and 3-2,
and the Oakland A's whipped the
California Angels 6-3.
Rangers 6, Red Sox 5
Buddy Bell drove in three runs
with two homers and a double and AI
Oliver drilled a homer and a pair of
doubles as Texas snapped Boston's
four-game winning streak.
With the Red Sox in front :&gt;-2,
Oliver and Bell hit consecutive solo
homers in the sixth inning.
Royals 9, Tigers 6
Willie Wilson's leadoff triple in the
11th inning triggered a three-run
rally that carried Kansas City over
Detroit. After Wilson's liner to right,
Detroit relief ace Aurelio Lopez
issued an intentional walk to George
Brett, but Wilson trotted home to
break a 6-j) tie on Willie Aikens'
sacrifice fly.

had it so good

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of 29 points. Ten of them came in a
16-2 burst that transformed a 58-48
deficit into a 6-HO 76er lead with 5:24
left in the third period.
Dawkins had 23 points, six of them
late in the ga me to snap an 88-38 tie
and put Philadelphia in front 94-90.
And Bibby had 17 points and four
assists in 26 minutes. He canned a
critical jumper with 56 seconds left
to make the score 9&amp;-93 and forced
the Ccltics to try a three-point field
goal with 12 seconds remaining.
" I thought I had the good shot. I
was open and I had the confidence,"
Bibby said. "We're playing with confidence, more confidence than any
Philly team I've been on. This year,
we're not tired coming into the
playoffs. We're fresh and that's a
change from the past."
Dawkins said, "Julius Erving is
the difference in this ball game,"
and, ill the late stages Erving was a
major asset.
With 2:52 left, he stole a pass by
Na te Archibald. A minute later, he
chased Maxwell down and prevented a dunk that would have made the

score 94-00.
''I had a lead on him and he just
ran me down. He caugh! me at the
basket and he hit my arm," said
Maxwell.
Maxwell made one of two foul
shots and the score was 94-91. When
Dave Cowens threw in two foul shots
38 seconds later, the Celtics trailed
by one.
Larry Bird led Boston with 'l7 poin·
ts and Maxwell had 21, but Coach
Bill Fitch said, "Some individuals
played horrible games."
Boston had the NBA's best
regular-season record, 61·21 , and
Philadelphia was third. They split
their six meetings, with each team
winning three times at home.
But with the win Friday night, the
76el'!1 gained the home-court advantage in the clash of Atlantic
Division powers. The next game is
scheduled here Sunday.
"We had our opportunities at the
· end. I thought we should have won.
We have to win Sunday," Fitch said.
"Tbere's no almost about it. We
have to win Sunday."

I
I
I
033941

By FRED ROTHENBERG
AP Sports Writer
Baseball's schedulemakers don't
make doubleheaders like they used
to. The national pastime's ven;ion of
the two-for-the-price-of-&lt;Jne sale is in
jeopardy.
In Los Angeles, the Dodgers are
scheduled to play all81 of their home
games on single dates. If there are
rainouts, a doubleheader is possible.
B~t waiting for rain is like waiting
(or a subway in L.A.
Baseball fans caught a big break
last Saturday when NBC gave us a
near doubleheader as the HoustonLos Angeles game went 17 innings
and lasted 5 hours 35 minutes. NBC
showed every out, which is a sharp
contrast to last year when the network pulled away from a game in
the eighth inning to show the
National Sports Festival.
Baseball and base ball fans
squawked then, and now it's fans of
the immortal "B.J . and the Bear"
who are doing the griping. NBC's
New York switchboard received 210
calls from Irate fans of "B.J.'' which
is about a monkey and a trucker.
"Switching to the Sports Festival
was a little different," said Arthur
Watson, president of NBC Sports.
"The score was tl-1 and the Fe~tival
was the beginning of our Olympic
buildup."
Does that mean there are ex·

ceptions to the contractual provision
that NBC must show a baseball
game to its conclusion?

Maximum insurance

which way tQ turn, come in for
advice. One visit will convince
you there Is a better wav .
READINGS
Half Life SS.OG-Whole Life SlO.OO
Rt. 7

Proctorville, Ohio

Across from
Lawrence County Fairgrounds

NOTICE .
VILlAGE OF
RIO GRANDE, OHIO
All water bills are to be paid at
the Village Building on or before
the lOth of each month between
the hours of 9:30a.m. and 12 : 00

noon or mail to P.O. Box 176, Rio
Grande, Ohio 45674 . Payments
will NOT be accepted after the

lOth and a 10% penalty will be im·
posed on each delinquent water
bill.

New water rates effective May 1,

1980 are as follows :

First J,OO gallons ...... . .. $6 .00
Each addition 1,000 gallons n .oo

Board of Public Affairs
Village of
Rio Grande, Ohio

C. K. SNOWDEN

" No," said Watson. " We had con-

versations with the commissioner's
office (They were called on the carpet). We said in the future, we would
show baseball to its conclusion. It's a
contractual commitment and we
have since proceeded accordingly."
NBC had two shows in its latenight schedule taking priority over
B.J - a preview of Monday night's
Oscar presentations, and "Saturday
Night Live" with Burt Reynolds.
NBC would rather alienate the
monkey" than a big box-&lt;Jffice star
like Burt Reynolds. But it cast NBC
nearly $1 million in advertising,
sources said, to pre-empt B.J.
Baseball's sponsors pay $25,000 for
" 3()-second spot, much lower than
prime-time rates. When the game
went into prime time, the baseball
sponors came along for the ride- at
bargain rates.
NBC has planned to pay $90
million for Saturday afternoons
games, and seven prime-time
games during the next four yean;.
ABC has paid an estimated $95
million for four years of Monday
night games and late-season Sunday
afternoon contests. It starts June 2.
In all, baseball is making an
estimated $185 million - a 100 percent increase from the last

agreement- for its network TV contracts.
ABC's prime-time broadcasts are
exclusive. Prime-time, regular
season baseball ratings have never
been as high as football, the Olympics or entertaimnent programming, but they would be even lower
if fans could choose between the
national game or their local team. ·
On Saturdays they have that
choice. And to NBC's dismay, fans in
Chicago watch the Cubs, in New
York the Yankees and in Los
Angeles the Dodgers, even If a big
game is on the network. These three·
cities can make the difference bet·
ween a ratings winner or loser:
The bottom line on all this is that
ratings winners can charge more for
hawking beer, cars and jeans between innings.

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Astros 7, Dodgers 4
Bobby Castillo's wild pitch in the
seventh inning brought home Jose
Cruz with a run that broke a 3-3 tie
and the Astros·went on to score three
more runs in the eighth to pull away.

shank arch support

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Expos 7, PhiiB 5

Giants 5, Padres 2
Milt May drove in two runs with a
triple in the second inning and Larry
Herndon brought home two more
with a double in the sixth. Winning
pitcher Bob Knepper had a shutout
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up a two-run homer to Dave Winfield.

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Gary Carter drove in four runs
with a single and a three-run homer,
capping a five-run fifth inning rally
that gave the Expos a victory in
their home opener.
'

•

Orioles 5, White Sox2
Home runs by Eddie Murray, AI
Bumbry and Ken Singleton powered
Baltimore over Chicago. Dave Ford
allowed four Chicago hits, including
consecutive doubles by Bob
Molinaro and Lamar Johnson in the
fourth inning, and a seventh-inning
homer by Chet Lemon.
Mariners 3-3, Twlas 1-%
Left-bander Floyd Bannister scattered six hits as Seattle beat Min·
nesota in the first game of their
doubleheader. In notching his
second complete game, Bannister
struck out eight and walked one.
Bnice Boch\!!.'s RBI double in the
sixth gave the Mariners their
second-game victory.
A'• 6, Angelli 3
Mitchell Page sent Oakland ahead
with an RBI single in a four-run fifth
inning and the A's beat California
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BOSTON (AP) - The Boston
Celtics knew that Julius Erving
would get his usual bushel of points.
What they didn 't count on was
Darryl Dawkins and Henry Bibby
filling the basket as well.
With those three men playing key
roles at various points, then pulling
together in the stretch, the
Philadelphia 76ers drew first blood
in their National Basketball
Association playoff series with the
Celtics here Friday night.
The 76ers, who hadn 'twon here all
season, edged Boston 9&amp;-93 to grab a1.0 lead in the best-&lt;Jf·seven Eastern
· Conference final series.
"The k~y tonight was they came
down, and the things we didn't want
them to do they did," said Boston
forward Cedric Maxwell. "We didn't
contain the people we wanted to contain. We know Erving will score·his
points, -but when Dawkins scores a
lot and Bibby comes off the bench
and scores like he did, then we have
problems."
Erving finished with a game high

yo~r

Tells

Unexpected lifts give Philly
upper hand against Celtics

lp

Tonight thru April24

lead Oliver

--

ATLANTA (AP) - Manager John
McNamara was one of the least concerned after the Cincinnati Reds undefeated in their fin;t eight gam;s of
the 1980 baseball season, surrendered meekly to the Atlanta Braves
Friday night.
''What are my thoughts ?" McNamara said. "We lost a ball game
but we didn't play badly. We got beat
by a superior pitching perfonnance."
Tbe culprit was Atlanta's Rick
Matula, who tossed a five-hitter in a
~ tri~ph which snapped the
Braves winless string at seven.
"Tbe guy pitched a hell of a ball

sewage plant by day and tends bar
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30 games, where he thinks he can enjoy the game and still make some
money, around $25,000.
"I might pcissibty play there," he
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�•
''

C-6-The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, April W, 1980

G-7-TheSunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, April W, I980

Olympian Eruzione caught in whirlwind
Murray Olderman
Special Correspondent
SAN FRANCISCO (NEA) - Some
day soon, Mike Eruzione will return
home to Winthrop, Mass., to stay,
and life will regain some normalcy.
He'll decide then what he's going
to do - whether he'll go into
coaching or into teaching. He has his
bachelor's degree in pbysical education from Boston University. Or
some other opportunity might come
his way.
Meanwhile, Mike is basking in the
glow rl achievement that comes
once in a lifetime, of being a momentary celebrity, of finding that people
react gloriously to what he and 19
other young men did one momentous
week in February.
Mike, you see, was the captain of
the U.S. hockey team that did the
impossible by beating a squad from
the U.S.S.R. that was generally a ~
claimed the ~st in the world,
amateur or pro.
And the Americans did it with an
emotionalism that lingers even now
among the individual players who
won the hockey gold medal for the
Uriited States.
The night before the American
was to play the Russians ln the
decisive game,· Mike remembers
trying to sleep in his small room at
the Olympic Village in Ray Brook,
N.Y. " Every hour," he recalls, "I
saw the clock ... 12 ... I ... 2 ... 3... .
Maybe some time around 6 I missed
a couple. But you know, when I got
up at 9, I felt good, like I'd had a full
night's sleep. I was ready."

In the game tnat night, with the
score tied at three, with exactly 10
minutes remaining to play, Eruzione
fired the puck past Soviet goalie
Vladimir Myshkin to give the United
States its sensational4-3 victory.
Since then, a whole new world has
opened up for the short (5-foot-9) ,
stocky, black-haired, intense but
friendly Italiano from New England.
He was older than the others at~­
Most of them were right out of college, but Mike had played a couple of
years of minor league hockey with
the Toledo Golddiggers. In the
summers he did some house painting and substitute teaching.
Under the weird rules of
amateurism, he was still simon-pure
though he had attended two National
Hockey Leaguever wanted to train·
ing camps and had played six exhibi·
lion. games with the New York
Rangers and some others with the
Colorado Rockies.
But unlike 11 of the U.S. Olympic
hockey teams who chose to
capitalize on their instant fame by
signing professional contracts - for
example, Mark Johnson with Pittsburgh, Steve Christoff with . Min·
nesota, Dave Christian with Winnipeg, goa lie Jim Craig with Allan·
ta; all of them guaranteed at least
$22$,000 for three years - Eruzione
decided that playing hockey for a
living wouldn't be his bag.
"I felt I had accomplishd

everything I ever .wanted to a~
complish as an athlete," says Mike,
revealing he turned down five NHL
offers. " I'm not gifted. I have to
work my tail off to excel at anything.
I couldn't have brought the same
emotionalism and hard work to it
that I had in the Olympics. I lost 10
pounds there."
Nevertheless, the aftennath of the
Olympic Games has been incredible
to him. A computer finn signed him
for a month of spea king
engagements to talk about his Olympic experience, and he has visited
Florida, Chicago, Los Angeles, northern Michigan, San Francisco and
New York.
"I go to dinner,'' he says wondrously, " and I meet Walter
Cronkite. I talked to President
Carter on the phone. Those things
don't happen to the everyday person. And I am THE everyday per·
son."
In Los Angeles, he visited a
boyhood friend who worked as a
page at the NBC studios. Th~ friend
took him around several sets until
they came to one where " Hollywood

Squares" was filming. , "The producer," recalls Mike, "recognized
me. He said, 'Put on a shirt and tie.
You're going on the show.' The people in the audience applauded.
'Naw,' I said, 'I can't go on.'
Well, they pushed me on as a guest,
not a contestant, and Peter Marshall
and Arte Johnson came over and
talked to me. The show will be on
May2."
41

Mike also came away with $1,000
in parting gifts.
What really has impressed Eru·
zione, however, is the gut response
of the public. "The people,'' he says
earnestly, "keep telling . me how
patriotic they feel because of what
we did. They never felt it before.
They didn't know where the country
was going. They were crying
because we won: They've all been so
sincere.''
They respond instinctively to Mike
Eruzione's own sincerity as evinced
on the victory stand in the Olympic
Arena at Lake Placid, that Wlforget·
table moment when he stood there
as the representative oi the
American team and then signaled

Trotters
to
appeal
•
anti-trust
ruling
.
said that if the judge's decision was
not appealed or is upheld during the
appeal process, the "state of har·
ness racing would be set back 40
years" when there were three or
more organizations that tried to run
the sport.
In order to race a horse, it is
necessary to be a member of the
U.S. Trotting Association, Evans
confirmed. He also acknowledged
that every horse that races is
registered by the USTA.
Sportsman's Park in Chicago,
which filed the original suit, does not
belong to the USTA.
"At the time, we tried to get enforced sanctions against hon;emen
racing (at nonmember tracks), but
the judge said they can race there
even though the track doesn't belong
to the USTA.

COLUMBUS (AP) - The board of
directors of the U.S. Trotting
A.$ociation decided Saturday to appeal a ruling by a federal judge in
cliicago who charged the group was
guilty of anti-trust violations.
\].S. District Judge Marvin E.
· Aspen issued the ruling last month.
· •:•There were several important
things the judge found us guilty of,"
sa!d association spokesman Donald
P.· Evans. "He says we prevented
horseman members from racing
at , a track or tracks that neither
belong to our association nor pays it
a prescribed fee. ''
The judge also questioned horse
eligibility and registation certificates that he said belong to the
horses owners and not the
asSociation.
· ~ociation President P.J. Baugh

our

JUMPING FOR JOY, Mike
. El'112looe (in actlo11, center) Is
wondering about his future. But a
successful career In big·tlme pro
hockey Is doubtful.

.the rest to join him, mobbing the
podium.

"That's what I remember most
about the Olympics,'' says Mike,
"Winning. Then standing there with
the . other guys and getting the
acknowledgement of the crowd."
He knows, though, that the high he
is now experiencing will eventually
flatten out into reality. "That's why
he wants to go back to Winthrop "to
spread things out." He's one of six
children in a closely knit family, and
his father, Eugene, works in a

Dorsey,

, COLO'' I

lhfiJfl (

..

'Coal Miner's
Daughter' is an
achievement
in American
cinema."

• •
recipients
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
College basketball standouts Tom
Dorsey, Grant Greenwood, Vince
Phelps, Denise Radcliff, Karen
Powell and Kim Martin have been
named the recipients of the J .
Newton Oliver awards for the 197~
season.
The awards, named for the former
Redmen cage coach and Clark Co.
Commissioner, are presented each
year for excellence in field goal percentage, rebounding, assists and
free throw percentage.
Dorsey, a 6-foot-4 junior from
Jackson, was the Redmen's leading
field-goal shooter last season (54.8
percent) and carried the Redmen's
best scoring average (12.8) .
Radcliff, a senior from Athens, led
the state champion Redwomen at·
tack with a 61·percent mark from
the field and an 8.9 rebounding
norm.
Phelps, a junior from Springfield,
led the Redmen in assists for the
third straight year with 172 while
Powell directed the Redwomen of·
fense with 125 assists.
The leading Redmen rebounder
award went to 6-4 sophomore Grant
Greenwood (7.2) while Martin, justa
freslunan, hit 73 percent from the
charity stripe for the women.
The Oliver awards ceremonies for
athlete-of-the-year are planned for
Rio Grande's homecoming weekend .

- Rrrhan.l (i rl'rutr .

&lt;.:vs mopolitan

Ma~t azme

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&lt;

Mike Caldwell puts bite on Yanks
By The AsiiOCtated Press
Is the Stage Deli ready for a "Mike
Caldwell" sandwich1 Mike Caldwell
thinks so.
"I want you to know that I've
beaten the New York Yankees six
times in a row,' ' said the Milwaukee
Brewers left-hander after a 3-2 vi~
tory over the Yankees Friday.
"Maybe someday I'll get a sandwich
down at the Stage Deli with my
name on it."
The restaurant, a New York institution, labels many of its sandwiches after celebrities.
The Stage Deli indeed might think
aboutadding Caldwell to its list after
the Yankee killer put the bite on New
York again with late relief help
.

Friday.
That improved his record to 7·1
over the Yankees while lowering his
lifetime earned run average against
them to 1.76 in 1.02 innings. Caldwell
gave up but two hits in seven in·
nings, including Lou Piniella' s RBI
single in the fourth.
Buck Rodgers, the acting
Milwaukee manager, lifted CLldweli
after seven innings because the left·
hander hadn't pitched since an
exhibition game in late March and
his legs felt weak.
In other American League games,
the Texas Rangers beat the Boston
Red Sox 6-li; the Kansas City Royals
whipped the Detroit Tigers 9-&lt;i; the
Baltimore Orioles trimmed the

Matula says Braves
different team. now

.

''

...
'

By The Associated Press
two streaks came to an end after
Rick Matula's five-hitter helped the
Atlanta Braves beat the Cincinnati
Reds~ Friday night.
Atlanta had lost its first seven
gnmes of the National League
season while Cincinnati had won its
first eight.
"It's about time," Cox said: It's
been about a month.''
Actually It's only been 10 days sin" ce the Braves opened their season
with a 9-G pasting at the hands of the
same Cinciruuiti Reds. In fact, five
of Atlanta 's seven losses had been to
the Reds, by a lopsided combined
score of 29-5.
"I think you'llsee a different team
out there now,"· Matula, who was tl10 as a rookie last season, said about
his teainmates after his first victory
and complete game of 1980.
In other National Leagtle games,
the Pittsburgh Pirates o\ltscored the
St. Louis Cardinals 12-10, the Montreal Expos beat the Philadelphia
Phlllies Ni, tne San Francisco Giants defeated the San Diego Padres 5-2
and the Houston Astros topped the
Lor! Angeles Dodgers 7~.
. Pirates 12, CardslO
. Plttsblirgh scored six 1'WjS in the
\t

~

"

..:

first inning and St. Louis battled
back to lead tl-7, but Dave Parker's
two-run homer in ·the sixth inning
put the Pirates back in front to stay.
John Milner drove in three runs for
the Pirates while Dane Iorg hit two
home runs and Ken Reitz and Ted
Simmons belted one apiece for the
Cards.

Chicago White Sox 5-2; the Seattle
Mariners took a doubleheader from
the Minnesota Twins, 3-1 and 3-2,
and the Oakland A's whipped the
California Angels 6-3.
Rangers 6, Red Sox 5
Buddy Bell drove in three runs
with two homers and a double and AI
Oliver drilled a homer and a pair of
doubles as Texas snapped Boston's
four-game winning streak.
With the Red Sox in front :&gt;-2,
Oliver and Bell hit consecutive solo
homers in the sixth inning.
Royals 9, Tigers 6
Willie Wilson's leadoff triple in the
11th inning triggered a three-run
rally that carried Kansas City over
Detroit. After Wilson's liner to right,
Detroit relief ace Aurelio Lopez
issued an intentional walk to George
Brett, but Wilson trotted home to
break a 6-j) tie on Willie Aikens'
sacrifice fly.

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of 29 points. Ten of them came in a
16-2 burst that transformed a 58-48
deficit into a 6-HO 76er lead with 5:24
left in the third period.
Dawkins had 23 points, six of them
late in the ga me to snap an 88-38 tie
and put Philadelphia in front 94-90.
And Bibby had 17 points and four
assists in 26 minutes. He canned a
critical jumper with 56 seconds left
to make the score 9&amp;-93 and forced
the Ccltics to try a three-point field
goal with 12 seconds remaining.
" I thought I had the good shot. I
was open and I had the confidence,"
Bibby said. "We're playing with confidence, more confidence than any
Philly team I've been on. This year,
we're not tired coming into the
playoffs. We're fresh and that's a
change from the past."
Dawkins said, "Julius Erving is
the difference in this ball game,"
and, ill the late stages Erving was a
major asset.
With 2:52 left, he stole a pass by
Na te Archibald. A minute later, he
chased Maxwell down and prevented a dunk that would have made the

score 94-00.
''I had a lead on him and he just
ran me down. He caugh! me at the
basket and he hit my arm," said
Maxwell.
Maxwell made one of two foul
shots and the score was 94-91. When
Dave Cowens threw in two foul shots
38 seconds later, the Celtics trailed
by one.
Larry Bird led Boston with 'l7 poin·
ts and Maxwell had 21, but Coach
Bill Fitch said, "Some individuals
played horrible games."
Boston had the NBA's best
regular-season record, 61·21 , and
Philadelphia was third. They split
their six meetings, with each team
winning three times at home.
But with the win Friday night, the
76el'!1 gained the home-court advantage in the clash of Atlantic
Division powers. The next game is
scheduled here Sunday.
"We had our opportunities at the
· end. I thought we should have won.
We have to win Sunday," Fitch said.
"Tbere's no almost about it. We
have to win Sunday."

I
I
I
033941

By FRED ROTHENBERG
AP Sports Writer
Baseball's schedulemakers don't
make doubleheaders like they used
to. The national pastime's ven;ion of
the two-for-the-price-of-&lt;Jne sale is in
jeopardy.
In Los Angeles, the Dodgers are
scheduled to play all81 of their home
games on single dates. If there are
rainouts, a doubleheader is possible.
B~t waiting for rain is like waiting
(or a subway in L.A.
Baseball fans caught a big break
last Saturday when NBC gave us a
near doubleheader as the HoustonLos Angeles game went 17 innings
and lasted 5 hours 35 minutes. NBC
showed every out, which is a sharp
contrast to last year when the network pulled away from a game in
the eighth inning to show the
National Sports Festival.
Baseball and base ball fans
squawked then, and now it's fans of
the immortal "B.J . and the Bear"
who are doing the griping. NBC's
New York switchboard received 210
calls from Irate fans of "B.J.'' which
is about a monkey and a trucker.
"Switching to the Sports Festival
was a little different," said Arthur
Watson, president of NBC Sports.
"The score was tl-1 and the Fe~tival
was the beginning of our Olympic
buildup."
Does that mean there are ex·

ceptions to the contractual provision
that NBC must show a baseball
game to its conclusion?

Maximum insurance

which way tQ turn, come in for
advice. One visit will convince
you there Is a better wav .
READINGS
Half Life SS.OG-Whole Life SlO.OO
Rt. 7

Proctorville, Ohio

Across from
Lawrence County Fairgrounds

NOTICE .
VILlAGE OF
RIO GRANDE, OHIO
All water bills are to be paid at
the Village Building on or before
the lOth of each month between
the hours of 9:30a.m. and 12 : 00

noon or mail to P.O. Box 176, Rio
Grande, Ohio 45674 . Payments
will NOT be accepted after the

lOth and a 10% penalty will be im·
posed on each delinquent water
bill.

New water rates effective May 1,

1980 are as follows :

First J,OO gallons ...... . .. $6 .00
Each addition 1,000 gallons n .oo

Board of Public Affairs
Village of
Rio Grande, Ohio

C. K. SNOWDEN

" No," said Watson. " We had con-

versations with the commissioner's
office (They were called on the carpet). We said in the future, we would
show baseball to its conclusion. It's a
contractual commitment and we
have since proceeded accordingly."
NBC had two shows in its latenight schedule taking priority over
B.J - a preview of Monday night's
Oscar presentations, and "Saturday
Night Live" with Burt Reynolds.
NBC would rather alienate the
monkey" than a big box-&lt;Jffice star
like Burt Reynolds. But it cast NBC
nearly $1 million in advertising,
sources said, to pre-empt B.J.
Baseball's sponsors pay $25,000 for
" 3()-second spot, much lower than
prime-time rates. When the game
went into prime time, the baseball
sponors came along for the ride- at
bargain rates.
NBC has planned to pay $90
million for Saturday afternoons
games, and seven prime-time
games during the next four yean;.
ABC has paid an estimated $95
million for four years of Monday
night games and late-season Sunday
afternoon contests. It starts June 2.
In all, baseball is making an
estimated $185 million - a 100 percent increase from the last

agreement- for its network TV contracts.
ABC's prime-time broadcasts are
exclusive. Prime-time, regular
season baseball ratings have never
been as high as football, the Olympics or entertaimnent programming, but they would be even lower
if fans could choose between the
national game or their local team. ·
On Saturdays they have that
choice. And to NBC's dismay, fans in
Chicago watch the Cubs, in New
York the Yankees and in Los
Angeles the Dodgers, even If a big
game is on the network. These three·
cities can make the difference bet·
ween a ratings winner or loser:
The bottom line on all this is that
ratings winners can charge more for
hawking beer, cars and jeans between innings.

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Astros 7, Dodgers 4
Bobby Castillo's wild pitch in the
seventh inning brought home Jose
Cruz with a run that broke a 3-3 tie
and the Astros·went on to score three
more runs in the eighth to pull away.

shank arch support

IC:"'; Growing up never

Expos 7, PhiiB 5

Giants 5, Padres 2
Milt May drove in two runs with a
triple in the second inning and Larry
Herndon brought home two more
with a double in the sixth. Winning
pitcher Bob Knepper had a shutout
until the eighth inning, when he gave
up a two-run homer to Dave Winfield.

comlo~

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Eu y to operate

Gary Carter drove in four runs
with a single and a three-run homer,
capping a five-run fifth inning rally
that gave the Expos a victory in
their home opener.
'

•

Orioles 5, White Sox2
Home runs by Eddie Murray, AI
Bumbry and Ken Singleton powered
Baltimore over Chicago. Dave Ford
allowed four Chicago hits, including
consecutive doubles by Bob
Molinaro and Lamar Johnson in the
fourth inning, and a seventh-inning
homer by Chet Lemon.
Mariners 3-3, Twlas 1-%
Left-bander Floyd Bannister scattered six hits as Seattle beat Min·
nesota in the first game of their
doubleheader. In notching his
second complete game, Bannister
struck out eight and walked one.
Bnice Boch\!!.'s RBI double in the
sixth gave the Mariners their
second-game victory.
A'• 6, Angelli 3
Mitchell Page sent Oakland ahead
with an RBI single in a four-run fifth
inning and the A's beat California
for their fourth victory in five
games.

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BOSTON (AP) - The Boston
Celtics knew that Julius Erving
would get his usual bushel of points.
What they didn 't count on was
Darryl Dawkins and Henry Bibby
filling the basket as well.
With those three men playing key
roles at various points, then pulling
together in the stretch, the
Philadelphia 76ers drew first blood
in their National Basketball
Association playoff series with the
Celtics here Friday night.
The 76ers, who hadn 'twon here all
season, edged Boston 9&amp;-93 to grab a1.0 lead in the best-&lt;Jf·seven Eastern
· Conference final series.
"The k~y tonight was they came
down, and the things we didn't want
them to do they did," said Boston
forward Cedric Maxwell. "We didn't
contain the people we wanted to contain. We know Erving will score·his
points, -but when Dawkins scores a
lot and Bibby comes off the bench
and scores like he did, then we have
problems."
Erving finished with a game high

yo~r

Tells

Unexpected lifts give Philly
upper hand against Celtics

lp

Tonight thru April24

lead Oliver

--

ATLANTA (AP) - Manager John
McNamara was one of the least concerned after the Cincinnati Reds undefeated in their fin;t eight gam;s of
the 1980 baseball season, surrendered meekly to the Atlanta Braves
Friday night.
''What are my thoughts ?" McNamara said. "We lost a ball game
but we didn't play badly. We got beat
by a superior pitching perfonnance."
Tbe culprit was Atlanta's Rick
Matula, who tossed a five-hitter in a
~ tri~ph which snapped the
Braves winless string at seven.
"Tbe guy pitched a hell of a ball

sewage plant by day and tends bar
at Santarpio's in the evening. .
There's still a small chance Mike
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received an &lt;tfer to play in
Switzerland, where the pro game is
less violent, where the pace is more
l eis~,~rely since the season consists of
30 games, where he thinks he can enjoy the game and still make some
money, around $25,000.
"I might pcissibty play there," he
muses, "if I didn't lUte what I was
doing."

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·1

�. C3-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, S\'ll(lay, April~. 1980

Court rules NCAA can challenge.Title IX
By S.J. GUFFEY
Aasoctaled Press Writer
DENVER (AP) - The lOth U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals ruled
Friday that the National Collegiate
Athletic Association can take the
federal govenunent to court over
TIUe IX requirements for women's
sports.
The ruling overturned a January
1978decision by a Kansas City, Kan.,
federal judge who said the NCAA did

'

!I
i

not have the proper legal authority
to challenge the federal rules on
behalf of its 707 member colleges
and universities.
The appeals court sent the case
back to district court in Kansas City,
where the NCAA's original question
will be decided.
Tbe association claimed the
Department of Health, Education
and Welfare interfered illegally with
college athletic programs by imposing the Title IX restrictions on

'Lou The Toe' loyal
Paul Brown booster

''

MASON, Ohio (AP) - Former
Cleveland Browns kicker Lou "The
Toe" Groza said he was glad to see
so many people ready to roast Paul
Brown at a dinner Friday night for
charity.
Groza, who played tackle and
kicker 21 years in Cleveland, many
of them for Brown, joked, "!thought
I was the only friend Paul had."
Speaker after. speaker finished by
praising the general manager of the
Clncirmati Bengals, after first getting in some shots.
Abe Glbron, who played for Brown
in Cleveland and later became coach
of the Chicago Bears, recalled: "We
had our differences. Paul and I
didn't talk for 10 years, but one day
George Hjilas brought me in and .
made me head coach. I hadn't even
applied for the lob. I asked him why

''
, I
I

,I

behind:"

--

' 'I
...I

A great roar went up from the 18th
hole where Tom Watson was
finishing his round. The television
man made a quick check and started
the taping again.
"Well, Lou, you're 11 under par
lind you're two behind," he said.
"Man, I hope this isn't a very long
interview," said Graham. Watson
was on another tear.
. He fired a six-under-par 66 Friday
and stretched his lead to two shots at

Title IX rules seek to end sexual
discrimination at institutions that
receive federal funds. The rules
require equal opportunity for
women students and staff, with the
threat of having federal funds
denied the institution if that OJ&gt;"
portunity is not provided.
"Obviously, we're very pleased, "
Tom Hansen, assistant executive

another nine years for him," An-

derson said.

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control the dii111Jling and storage of
hazaFdous wastes.
Otherwise, a major bill creating a
new anti-litter program with a $13
million tax on manufacturers already approved by the House could come to a floor vote in the
Senate. There probably would have
to be a conference corrunitee in that
proposal also, due to extensive
Senate changes.
·
In a similar situation is a long
debated bill restricting lawsuits
which may be filed against makers
and sellers of products, alleging

NO. 12

SUNDAY, APRIL 20, 1980

that Rhodes' decision was his own,
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - Ronald
and that the state party's official
Reagan may have Ohio in tow in his
position in the primary remains one
bid for the GOP presidential
of neutrality.
nomination long before the state's
Illinois Congressman Phillip
June 3 primary.
Crane's withdrawal from the race .
But Ohio workers for former AmThursday leaves only Bush and dark
bassador George Bush are not
horse Rep. John Anderson, R-Ill, on
throwing in thf towel, and expect
the GOP ballot with Reagan.
him to do well if not win the Pen·
The former governor's efforts in
nsylvania primary on Tuesday.
Ohio
thus far have been smooth and
Reagan headed for Colwnbus
well organized, in contrast to 1976
today to pick up the endorsement of
when his Ohio staffers often
GOP Gov. James A. Rhodes, after
bickered among themselves and
several Ohio Republican le!jislative
with
Gerald Ford Republicans, inleaders had boarded his bandwagon
'
eluding
Rhodes.
late in the week.
Reagan
spent only two days in the
Rhodes insisted at week's end he
state,
after
Rhodes and former State
·still was making up his mind, but
GOP
Chairman
Kent B. McGough
sources close to him were convinced
got
the
state
party
organization's
he now sees the former California
pre-primary
endorsement
for for.governor as the almost certain
mer
President
Ford.
nominee.
" You can read between the lines," · Still, Ford defeated him by only 5li
said a staff member at Ohio GOP percent to 45 percent.
Reagan has given assurances to
Headquarters, which was making
his
mostly new Ohio staff this year
arrangements for a Rhodes-Reagan
that
ho will devote much time and
news conference Sunday afternoon
attention
to Ohio.
at the governor's mansion in suburState Rep. David Johnson, Rban Bexley.
However, the spokesman stressed Canton, executive directo~ of his

Carter-Kennedy
fight continues

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UPPER RT. 7

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio's
lawmakers hope to complete action
on several major bills this week
before taking a spring break to campaign for the June 3 primary.
However, differing Senate and
House versions of some proposals
means a need for prompt compromise if the members adjourn on
Friday as planned.
Two bills already pending in joint
conlerence committees would ear·
mark a portion of state liquor profits
for industrial development incentives, and beef up state efforts to

liability for death or injury. It has
been approved by the Senate and is
near approval by a House committee.
Senators begin hearings Monday
night on a newly introduced but
priority bill appropriating $45
million to local governments.
It was lifted from a sidetracked,
197~1981 capital improvements, on
which the two chambers remain
hopelessly deadlocked.
The Senate leadership acted after
a recent Ohio Supreme Court
decision upheld a 212 percent

property tax cut voted last year.
Sponsors hope to get ihat proposal
to Gov. James A. Rhodes before the
start of the six-week campaign
recess, so the state can reimburse
local taxing units which went ahead
and granted the reduction before the
court case was settled.
Meanwhile, House Speaker Vernal
G. Riffe Jr., (}.New Boston, said the
record high, $841 million capital ilnprovements bill would be put on a
back burner until at least June.
Riffe and Ocasek fell into serious
although friendly disagreement af-

ter the 11pper chamber axed about
$200 million in proposed construction
projects from the House version.
Republican leaders had said they
would use the Democratic squabble
as campaign anununltion in the upcoming legislative elections.
But that was before federal
economic actions sent interest rates
through the roof. Few legislators, if
any, now are anxious to embark on a
major building plan to be funded
with bonds that would cost the state
exorbitent interest ·under current

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
:

.,)

·

conditions.
Members usually take a break
about this time in election years, to
allow themselves time to stwnp for
re-election votes back in their home
districts.
All 99 House members are up for
re-election this year, along with 16 of
the 33 Senators who represent evennumbered Senate districts.
House members serve twe&gt;-year
terms and senators four-year,
staggered terms, with half of them
facing re-election every two years.

PAGE l ·D

Reagan may wrap up
Ohio before primary

~HP .

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D

Lawmakers tying loose ends before recess

VOL. 15

4

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131, a remarkable 13 strokes under
par on the usually-tough, 6,889 yard
La Costa Country Club course.
It was a 36-hole record for this
elite event that brings together only
the winners of pro golf tour titles
during the last 12 months. And it
was, by three shots, the best twe&gt;round total of the year.
Only Graham could keep him in
sight. No one else was within six
shots.
" Usually at the Tournament of
Champions, two or three players
seem to spread-eagle the field ," said
Watson, who led from wire to wire in
winning this tournament a year ago.
" It seems to be happening again."
Seve Ballesteros, the dashing
young Spaniard who last Sunday added the Masters title to the British
Open crown he already owned, could
do no better than a 71 and was a
whopping 10 shots off Watson's pace.
PGA champ David Graham ha j ''l142 and U.S. Open king Hale lrNin
was73-145.

standing to represent Its memho!rs
coUld have been detrimental in other
situations."

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

capricious."

USED

he chose me and he said, 'At the
league meetings, Paul Brown said if
you don't hire Abe Gibron, you're
making a big mistake."'
"He didn't give us anything, we
had to earn everything. It was a fair
deal and an even deal for everyone,"
said former Bengals center Bob
Johnson. The balding Johnson took
off a hair piece he was wearing and
gave it to Brown.
Bengals quarterback Ken Anderson recalled Brown accused him
of blowing three games in his rookie
season. "I threw my helmet in my
lock.er and said, 'I'll never play for
that bald-headed blankety blank
again.'
" With the grace of God, I'll play

CHICKEN
DINNER
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$ 99
May

nation's major schools belong to the
association, and Hansen said "The
ruling that the NCAA lacked legal

ON~

Graham's hot pace
gets cold shoulder
CARL'&gt;BAD, Calif. (AP) - Consider Lou Graham.
The steady veteran had just completed his second round in the
$300,000 Tournament of Champions.
He had shot a frl on a tough golf course. He hadn't made a bogey in the
tournament. His 133 total was the
best 36-hole score on the PGA. tour
this year.
He was taping an interview with a
television reporter.
1
' Well, Lou," said the reporter,
"you're 11 under par and you're one

those progr&lt;~ms, which do not , director for the NCAA, said.
"It's importsnt beyond the imreceive federal aid.
mediate case," Hansen said. The
The NCAA called some of the Title
IX regulations "arbitrary and

'' The fact is that Sen. Kennedy has
WASHINGTON (AP) - Camadvocated a 3 percent real increase
paigning by remote co ntrol,
in defense spending in each of the
President Carter is picturing Sen.
past two years and in fact is one of
Edward M. Kennedy as "the biggest
the leaders in the Senate for a
spender perhaps in the history of the
stronger national defense and
United States Senate."
especially strengthening of U.S.' con·
But Kennedy, with high hopes of
ventional forces," said Flug.
defeating Carter. in next Tuesday's
In his interview with the PenPennsylvania Democratic presidennsylvania
reporters, Carter1 alluded
tial primary, is countering again by
to
"reports"
that Kennedy forces
challenging Carter to leave the
might
try
to
get
Carter delegates to
White House if he wants to engage in
defect
to
Kennedy
at the Democratic
such political bante".
convention
this
summer.
"It's a slap at the people of Pen·
Flug declared that Kennedy "has
nsylvania that Mr. Carter is willing
not
thought about, has not instructed
to make these inaccurate charges
anyo11e to think about and has not
from the sanctuary of the Rose Gardiscussed with anyone" such a plan.
den on the eve of the primary inMoreover, Flug noted that any
stead of coming to Pennsylvania to
such defections would involve people
debate the issues and answer for his
who originally favored Carter but
failures," said Kennedy.
decided they no longer could support
Although he spoke Friday night
him. "This is not something Kenfrom his home near Washington, the
•nedy
people would do, this is
Massachusetts senator has mainsomething
the Carter people would
tained a heavy campaign schedule
do,"
he
said.
·
in Pennsylvania for several days
Flug
insisted
that
speculation
and plans to return there before
about
such
a
convention
scenario
Tuesday's balloting.
has
come
from
Democratic
National
On the Republican side, the fight
in Pennsylvania also has come down Chairman John White, a Ca rter a(&gt;"
pointee , and " hypoth etica l
to a on~H~n-one contest - between
questions"
asked by reporters.
Ronald Reagan and George Bush.
Carter devoted much of Friday af·
ternoon to a recorded television•radio interview with correspondents
from the Westinghouse broadcasting
group and a separate meeting with
Cffi!JlCOTHE, Ohio (AP) - The
representatives d. Pennsylvania
federal government has declared
1,450 acres of property near
newspapers.
After asserting to the broad- ·Chillicothe excess, a vital step in the
' casters that Ke011edy is "well
eventual construction of a new Ohio
''known" as a spender of heroic
prtson here f.,r I ,200 inmates.
proportions, Carter added, ''The
The U.S. Department of Justice
only reductions in expenditures that
took the action, according to the
I know he has advocated have been
Warren Tribune Chronicle. If, there
in the defense budget.''
is no federal taker for the property,
Citing events in Iran and
the land will be given to the state at
Afghanistan, the president asserted,
virtually no cost.
"This is exactly the wrong time to
U.S. Bureau of prisons offiCial
cut our nation's ability to defend itGary Molt said he is confident no
self."
1other federal agency wiU claim the
Jlm Flug, a . Kennedy campaign
'land, which now contains the state's
spokesman, said Carter was simply
Chillicothe Correctional Institute.
wrong about Kennedy's recent " Not many people operate prisons in
.IXlS!tion on defense spending.
the federal gove'\""'ent other than

Ohio campaign, expects to have the
candidate in the state several times
unless Bush should fold. The latter's
showing in Pennsylvania could go a
long way in determining his fate.
ThalmanKnunm Jr. of Colwnbus,
Bush's Ohio manager, was OJ&gt;"
timitics about Pennsylvania. "We're
only nine points down in the latest
polls. We have closed from being 15
down, and Mr. Bush is working hard
there this weekend," he said.
Krumm added that Reagan "is
broke. He isn't spending anything in
Pennsylvania."
The Bush campaign worker said
he was "a little bit irked" because of
the timing of the Rhodes endorsement "just two days before
Pennsylvania. It appears .they are
trying to influence the .results of a
primary in another state."
Rhodes, a four-tenn governor who
wanted John B. Connally initially
and later tried to get Ford into the
race, apparently has changed his
mind about the "electability"of the
conservative Reagan, which he
earlier questioned.
With President Carter getting
deeper into economic and foreign
policy crises, the Ohio chief
executive obviously feels he can
deliver Ohio to the party with the
Californian at the top of the ticket.
Stressing the need lor party unity,
Rhodes declined to run this year as a
candidate for delegate to the GOP
National Convention. However,
some of his political allies are running lor state corrunittee posts held
by Reagan supporters.
The three top GOP Legislative
leaders, Sen. Paul E: Gillmor, RPort Clinton, Assistant Senate
Majority Leader Thomas A. Van
Meter, R-Ashland, came out for
Reagan on Thursday. Gillmor and
Van Meter previously backed Connally.
Johnson, elated over the decision
by Rhodes and the legislative
leaders to join forces for Reagan,
said "I had been working on them
for weeks."
But he said the front-running
Reagan campaign "isn't trying to
put pressure on anyone. We just talk
to people quietly.''
Meanwhile, Anderson is toying
with the idea rl. seeking the
presidency as an independent candidate although he is listed as a
Republican on the Ohio ballot.
But the deadline for independent
candidates to file in Ohio (March 20)
for the November ballot has passed,
and he could not run in the state as
an independent unless he was able to
force his name on the ballot through
some sort of court action.

..
.

')

~

~;

d
i
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\.
.

...

;
.

~

;! ,)

'

;

:.

.;

. -

,·

RECEIVE CAPS - The Holzer Medical Center
School of Nursing Class of 1982 received caps during

Boswell, Nancy Espenchied, Susanne Davis, Sherri
Rishel and Anne Bowers, R.N., B.S.N., M.A. Third row
- Margi Ehman, R.N., B.S.N., Sharlene Fultz, Vicki
Scott, Lort Darst, Robin Rider, Lisa Osborne and Nancy Gooldin, R.N .. Fourth row - Joanna Hayes, Diane
Ogier and Lana Bonecutter.

the Annual Capping and Recognition Ceremony recently. Front row, left to right are: Diane Ward, Juanita
Arrington, Suzi Stroth, Nita Bishop, Debbie Danner.
Second row - Donna Reynolds, R.N., Norma Glenn,
R.N., B.S.N., Sandy Brown, Sherry Evans, Pat

Bond market
rates decline
NEW YORK (AP) - Interest
rates are coming down rapidly, and
one result is going to be a sizable
reduction in the amount of money
that banks and savings institutions
pay on popular six-month savings ,
certificates.
A few weeks ago, the rate stood at
15.7 percent. Now it has fallen to
13.549 percent and next week it could
drop below 12 percent.
The rate is based on the average
discount rate of six-month Treasury
bills auctioned each Monday and
goes into effect on the Thursday after the auction.
Those Treasury bills are also
traded in the bond market, and this
week interest rates fell rapidly amid
indications the economy has entered
a recession.
On Friday, the rate on such
Treasury bills fell to 12.05 percent.
That would be the rate next week if
rates remain stable through Mon·
day's auction.
The falling interest rates in bond
markets Friday came as most
major banks reduced their prime
lending rates to 19~percent, down
from the peak of 20 pereent.
One major banker, John F. '
McGillicuddy, the !X'e5ident of
Manufacturers Hanover Corp.,
predicted the prime rate will drop to
14 percent by year end.
·

THEATRE COIJAPSES

NEW DEUD, India (AP) - A
ffiM~t~vietheaterco~(JSOO

after a landslide in the northeastern
state of Sikkim, killing 17 Indian army personnel and injuring at least 30
others, the United News of India
reported Saturday.

Initial step taken for new prison
us, and we don't want it,",!te said.
Before the slate took over, the institute served as a medium-security
federal prison.
State Rep. Myrl Shoemaker is the
driving force behind the state prtson
idea. He has pushed through the
Ohio House a bill appropriating
money to buy land for at least two
new state prisons. And, he expects
one of those prisons to be built at the
Chillicothe site. His Idea Is for the
proposed Chillicothe prison to serve
as the receiving center for inmates
entering tbe state·•s prtson system.
The Ohio Chapter of lhe American
Civil Liberties Union objects to the
land transfer because the
organization opposes the con-

1

struction of more large prisons.
"The ACLU 0J11K1S1!S the construction of a prison near Chillicothe
as It is presently planned. It would
house 1,200 prisoners in a facility adjacent to an existing penitentiary,
.:.. " wrote Ohio ACLU chief Benson
Wollman to the U.S. justice department. '"\Ve believe that future construction of -penal facilities in Ohio
.should comply with federal draft
standards regai'Wng size and other
conditions."
But, Judith Bartnoff, associate
U.S. attorney general for civil
rights, said the federal standards
"are .not ·regulatiOns and they are
not enlorecable in court and I don't
think Mr. Wolman realizes that."

/

./

-

DIANE WARD, lelt, freshman student at the Holzer Medical
china lamp, with the
lighted candle from Donna Reynolds, R.N., Student Services Coordinator at the hospital's School of Nursing.

Sc~ool of Nursing, receives Florence Nightingale

Nineteen freshmen
nurses earn caps
ceremony completed , members
GAUJPOlJS - Nineteen young
repealed the Florence Nightingale
women, members of the freshman
Pledge and extinguished the candle
class of the Holzer Medical Center
flame.
School of Nursing, received tbeir
The audience was welcomed by
caps during impressive capping and
Anne Bowers, R.N ., B.S.N., M.A.,
recognition ceremonies at Faith
Associate Director. of Nursing
Baptist Church in Rodney recenlly.
Education.
The caps signify completion of the
Nancy Gooldin, R.N., freshman
first two quarters of study by memadvisor presented the class;
class
bers of the Class of 1982.
Margi
Ehman, R.N., B.S.N., f~h­
· Featured speaker was Norma
man
class
instructor, with the memGlenn, R.N., B.S.N., Coordinator of
bers of the junior class presented the
the Practical Nursing School . at
caps and Donna Reyhnolds, R.N.,
Buckeye Hills Career Center.
Her topic was, "The Significance student services coordinator,
of Capping." She commented on the · presided at the candle lighting portion d. the ceremony.
history of the nurse's cap, Indicating
During a reception, the school's
its religious significance and the
housemothers, Rachel SWMer and
diversity of design. In recent years,
Christine Black, along with Susy Etmany nurses hav.e stopped wearing
terling, R.N., Uncia Ballard, R.N.,
their caps when on duty. However,
B.S.N., and Betty Jo Barsotti, R.N.,
Mrs. Glenn emphasized the imB.S.N., served as hostesses.
portance of the cap as an easy and
obvious way for patients toidentify
nurses who are caring lor them in a
hospital setting.
As each freshman received her
cap .from a member of the junior
ITEMS 'RECOVEREI)
class of the IIChool of nursing, she
POMEROY - A CB radio, wrist·
also received long stem talisman
watch and rings taken in a breaking
rose, the freshman class flower.
and entering at the James Hupp
Each member waa presented ,with a
residence April 4 have been
Florence Nightingale china lamp
recovered according to the Mei811.
with a lighted candle. After all had
Coonty sheriff's office.
been cappe&lt;! 8ncl the candlellghtlng

a

'

�. C3-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, S\'ll(lay, April~. 1980

Court rules NCAA can challenge.Title IX
By S.J. GUFFEY
Aasoctaled Press Writer
DENVER (AP) - The lOth U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals ruled
Friday that the National Collegiate
Athletic Association can take the
federal govenunent to court over
TIUe IX requirements for women's
sports.
The ruling overturned a January
1978decision by a Kansas City, Kan.,
federal judge who said the NCAA did

'

!I
i

not have the proper legal authority
to challenge the federal rules on
behalf of its 707 member colleges
and universities.
The appeals court sent the case
back to district court in Kansas City,
where the NCAA's original question
will be decided.
Tbe association claimed the
Department of Health, Education
and Welfare interfered illegally with
college athletic programs by imposing the Title IX restrictions on

'Lou The Toe' loyal
Paul Brown booster

''

MASON, Ohio (AP) - Former
Cleveland Browns kicker Lou "The
Toe" Groza said he was glad to see
so many people ready to roast Paul
Brown at a dinner Friday night for
charity.
Groza, who played tackle and
kicker 21 years in Cleveland, many
of them for Brown, joked, "!thought
I was the only friend Paul had."
Speaker after. speaker finished by
praising the general manager of the
Clncirmati Bengals, after first getting in some shots.
Abe Glbron, who played for Brown
in Cleveland and later became coach
of the Chicago Bears, recalled: "We
had our differences. Paul and I
didn't talk for 10 years, but one day
George Hjilas brought me in and .
made me head coach. I hadn't even
applied for the lob. I asked him why

''
, I
I

,I

behind:"

--

' 'I
...I

A great roar went up from the 18th
hole where Tom Watson was
finishing his round. The television
man made a quick check and started
the taping again.
"Well, Lou, you're 11 under par
lind you're two behind," he said.
"Man, I hope this isn't a very long
interview," said Graham. Watson
was on another tear.
. He fired a six-under-par 66 Friday
and stretched his lead to two shots at

Title IX rules seek to end sexual
discrimination at institutions that
receive federal funds. The rules
require equal opportunity for
women students and staff, with the
threat of having federal funds
denied the institution if that OJ&gt;"
portunity is not provided.
"Obviously, we're very pleased, "
Tom Hansen, assistant executive

another nine years for him," An-

derson said.

Thru

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control the dii111Jling and storage of
hazaFdous wastes.
Otherwise, a major bill creating a
new anti-litter program with a $13
million tax on manufacturers already approved by the House could come to a floor vote in the
Senate. There probably would have
to be a conference corrunitee in that
proposal also, due to extensive
Senate changes.
·
In a similar situation is a long
debated bill restricting lawsuits
which may be filed against makers
and sellers of products, alleging

NO. 12

SUNDAY, APRIL 20, 1980

that Rhodes' decision was his own,
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - Ronald
and that the state party's official
Reagan may have Ohio in tow in his
position in the primary remains one
bid for the GOP presidential
of neutrality.
nomination long before the state's
Illinois Congressman Phillip
June 3 primary.
Crane's withdrawal from the race .
But Ohio workers for former AmThursday leaves only Bush and dark
bassador George Bush are not
horse Rep. John Anderson, R-Ill, on
throwing in thf towel, and expect
the GOP ballot with Reagan.
him to do well if not win the Pen·
The former governor's efforts in
nsylvania primary on Tuesday.
Ohio
thus far have been smooth and
Reagan headed for Colwnbus
well organized, in contrast to 1976
today to pick up the endorsement of
when his Ohio staffers often
GOP Gov. James A. Rhodes, after
bickered among themselves and
several Ohio Republican le!jislative
with
Gerald Ford Republicans, inleaders had boarded his bandwagon
'
eluding
Rhodes.
late in the week.
Reagan
spent only two days in the
Rhodes insisted at week's end he
state,
after
Rhodes and former State
·still was making up his mind, but
GOP
Chairman
Kent B. McGough
sources close to him were convinced
got
the
state
party
organization's
he now sees the former California
pre-primary
endorsement
for for.governor as the almost certain
mer
President
Ford.
nominee.
" You can read between the lines," · Still, Ford defeated him by only 5li
said a staff member at Ohio GOP percent to 45 percent.
Reagan has given assurances to
Headquarters, which was making
his
mostly new Ohio staff this year
arrangements for a Rhodes-Reagan
that
ho will devote much time and
news conference Sunday afternoon
attention
to Ohio.
at the governor's mansion in suburState Rep. David Johnson, Rban Bexley.
However, the spokesman stressed Canton, executive directo~ of his

Carter-Kennedy
fight continues

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UPPER RT. 7

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio's
lawmakers hope to complete action
on several major bills this week
before taking a spring break to campaign for the June 3 primary.
However, differing Senate and
House versions of some proposals
means a need for prompt compromise if the members adjourn on
Friday as planned.
Two bills already pending in joint
conlerence committees would ear·
mark a portion of state liquor profits
for industrial development incentives, and beef up state efforts to

liability for death or injury. It has
been approved by the Senate and is
near approval by a House committee.
Senators begin hearings Monday
night on a newly introduced but
priority bill appropriating $45
million to local governments.
It was lifted from a sidetracked,
197~1981 capital improvements, on
which the two chambers remain
hopelessly deadlocked.
The Senate leadership acted after
a recent Ohio Supreme Court
decision upheld a 212 percent

property tax cut voted last year.
Sponsors hope to get ihat proposal
to Gov. James A. Rhodes before the
start of the six-week campaign
recess, so the state can reimburse
local taxing units which went ahead
and granted the reduction before the
court case was settled.
Meanwhile, House Speaker Vernal
G. Riffe Jr., (}.New Boston, said the
record high, $841 million capital ilnprovements bill would be put on a
back burner until at least June.
Riffe and Ocasek fell into serious
although friendly disagreement af-

ter the 11pper chamber axed about
$200 million in proposed construction
projects from the House version.
Republican leaders had said they
would use the Democratic squabble
as campaign anununltion in the upcoming legislative elections.
But that was before federal
economic actions sent interest rates
through the roof. Few legislators, if
any, now are anxious to embark on a
major building plan to be funded
with bonds that would cost the state
exorbitent interest ·under current

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
:

.,)

·

conditions.
Members usually take a break
about this time in election years, to
allow themselves time to stwnp for
re-election votes back in their home
districts.
All 99 House members are up for
re-election this year, along with 16 of
the 33 Senators who represent evennumbered Senate districts.
House members serve twe&gt;-year
terms and senators four-year,
staggered terms, with half of them
facing re-election every two years.

PAGE l ·D

Reagan may wrap up
Ohio before primary

~HP .

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D

Lawmakers tying loose ends before recess

VOL. 15

4

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1977

131, a remarkable 13 strokes under
par on the usually-tough, 6,889 yard
La Costa Country Club course.
It was a 36-hole record for this
elite event that brings together only
the winners of pro golf tour titles
during the last 12 months. And it
was, by three shots, the best twe&gt;round total of the year.
Only Graham could keep him in
sight. No one else was within six
shots.
" Usually at the Tournament of
Champions, two or three players
seem to spread-eagle the field ," said
Watson, who led from wire to wire in
winning this tournament a year ago.
" It seems to be happening again."
Seve Ballesteros, the dashing
young Spaniard who last Sunday added the Masters title to the British
Open crown he already owned, could
do no better than a 71 and was a
whopping 10 shots off Watson's pace.
PGA champ David Graham ha j ''l142 and U.S. Open king Hale lrNin
was73-145.

standing to represent Its memho!rs
coUld have been detrimental in other
situations."

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

capricious."

USED

he chose me and he said, 'At the
league meetings, Paul Brown said if
you don't hire Abe Gibron, you're
making a big mistake."'
"He didn't give us anything, we
had to earn everything. It was a fair
deal and an even deal for everyone,"
said former Bengals center Bob
Johnson. The balding Johnson took
off a hair piece he was wearing and
gave it to Brown.
Bengals quarterback Ken Anderson recalled Brown accused him
of blowing three games in his rookie
season. "I threw my helmet in my
lock.er and said, 'I'll never play for
that bald-headed blankety blank
again.'
" With the grace of God, I'll play

CHICKEN
DINNER
SPECIAl
$ 99
May

nation's major schools belong to the
association, and Hansen said "The
ruling that the NCAA lacked legal

ON~

Graham's hot pace
gets cold shoulder
CARL'&gt;BAD, Calif. (AP) - Consider Lou Graham.
The steady veteran had just completed his second round in the
$300,000 Tournament of Champions.
He had shot a frl on a tough golf course. He hadn't made a bogey in the
tournament. His 133 total was the
best 36-hole score on the PGA. tour
this year.
He was taping an interview with a
television reporter.
1
' Well, Lou," said the reporter,
"you're 11 under par and you're one

those progr&lt;~ms, which do not , director for the NCAA, said.
"It's importsnt beyond the imreceive federal aid.
mediate case," Hansen said. The
The NCAA called some of the Title
IX regulations "arbitrary and

'' The fact is that Sen. Kennedy has
WASHINGTON (AP) - Camadvocated a 3 percent real increase
paigning by remote co ntrol,
in defense spending in each of the
President Carter is picturing Sen.
past two years and in fact is one of
Edward M. Kennedy as "the biggest
the leaders in the Senate for a
spender perhaps in the history of the
stronger national defense and
United States Senate."
especially strengthening of U.S.' con·
But Kennedy, with high hopes of
ventional forces," said Flug.
defeating Carter. in next Tuesday's
In his interview with the PenPennsylvania Democratic presidennsylvania
reporters, Carter1 alluded
tial primary, is countering again by
to
"reports"
that Kennedy forces
challenging Carter to leave the
might
try
to
get
Carter delegates to
White House if he wants to engage in
defect
to
Kennedy
at the Democratic
such political bante".
convention
this
summer.
"It's a slap at the people of Pen·
Flug declared that Kennedy "has
nsylvania that Mr. Carter is willing
not
thought about, has not instructed
to make these inaccurate charges
anyo11e to think about and has not
from the sanctuary of the Rose Gardiscussed with anyone" such a plan.
den on the eve of the primary inMoreover, Flug noted that any
stead of coming to Pennsylvania to
such defections would involve people
debate the issues and answer for his
who originally favored Carter but
failures," said Kennedy.
decided they no longer could support
Although he spoke Friday night
him. "This is not something Kenfrom his home near Washington, the
•nedy
people would do, this is
Massachusetts senator has mainsomething
the Carter people would
tained a heavy campaign schedule
do,"
he
said.
·
in Pennsylvania for several days
Flug
insisted
that
speculation
and plans to return there before
about
such
a
convention
scenario
Tuesday's balloting.
has
come
from
Democratic
National
On the Republican side, the fight
in Pennsylvania also has come down Chairman John White, a Ca rter a(&gt;"
pointee , and " hypoth etica l
to a on~H~n-one contest - between
questions"
asked by reporters.
Ronald Reagan and George Bush.
Carter devoted much of Friday af·
ternoon to a recorded television•radio interview with correspondents
from the Westinghouse broadcasting
group and a separate meeting with
Cffi!JlCOTHE, Ohio (AP) - The
representatives d. Pennsylvania
federal government has declared
1,450 acres of property near
newspapers.
After asserting to the broad- ·Chillicothe excess, a vital step in the
' casters that Ke011edy is "well
eventual construction of a new Ohio
''known" as a spender of heroic
prtson here f.,r I ,200 inmates.
proportions, Carter added, ''The
The U.S. Department of Justice
only reductions in expenditures that
took the action, according to the
I know he has advocated have been
Warren Tribune Chronicle. If, there
in the defense budget.''
is no federal taker for the property,
Citing events in Iran and
the land will be given to the state at
Afghanistan, the president asserted,
virtually no cost.
"This is exactly the wrong time to
U.S. Bureau of prisons offiCial
cut our nation's ability to defend itGary Molt said he is confident no
self."
1other federal agency wiU claim the
Jlm Flug, a . Kennedy campaign
'land, which now contains the state's
spokesman, said Carter was simply
Chillicothe Correctional Institute.
wrong about Kennedy's recent " Not many people operate prisons in
.IXlS!tion on defense spending.
the federal gove'\""'ent other than

Ohio campaign, expects to have the
candidate in the state several times
unless Bush should fold. The latter's
showing in Pennsylvania could go a
long way in determining his fate.
ThalmanKnunm Jr. of Colwnbus,
Bush's Ohio manager, was OJ&gt;"
timitics about Pennsylvania. "We're
only nine points down in the latest
polls. We have closed from being 15
down, and Mr. Bush is working hard
there this weekend," he said.
Krumm added that Reagan "is
broke. He isn't spending anything in
Pennsylvania."
The Bush campaign worker said
he was "a little bit irked" because of
the timing of the Rhodes endorsement "just two days before
Pennsylvania. It appears .they are
trying to influence the .results of a
primary in another state."
Rhodes, a four-tenn governor who
wanted John B. Connally initially
and later tried to get Ford into the
race, apparently has changed his
mind about the "electability"of the
conservative Reagan, which he
earlier questioned.
With President Carter getting
deeper into economic and foreign
policy crises, the Ohio chief
executive obviously feels he can
deliver Ohio to the party with the
Californian at the top of the ticket.
Stressing the need lor party unity,
Rhodes declined to run this year as a
candidate for delegate to the GOP
National Convention. However,
some of his political allies are running lor state corrunittee posts held
by Reagan supporters.
The three top GOP Legislative
leaders, Sen. Paul E: Gillmor, RPort Clinton, Assistant Senate
Majority Leader Thomas A. Van
Meter, R-Ashland, came out for
Reagan on Thursday. Gillmor and
Van Meter previously backed Connally.
Johnson, elated over the decision
by Rhodes and the legislative
leaders to join forces for Reagan,
said "I had been working on them
for weeks."
But he said the front-running
Reagan campaign "isn't trying to
put pressure on anyone. We just talk
to people quietly.''
Meanwhile, Anderson is toying
with the idea rl. seeking the
presidency as an independent candidate although he is listed as a
Republican on the Ohio ballot.
But the deadline for independent
candidates to file in Ohio (March 20)
for the November ballot has passed,
and he could not run in the state as
an independent unless he was able to
force his name on the ballot through
some sort of court action.

..
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.

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.

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,·

RECEIVE CAPS - The Holzer Medical Center
School of Nursing Class of 1982 received caps during

Boswell, Nancy Espenchied, Susanne Davis, Sherri
Rishel and Anne Bowers, R.N., B.S.N., M.A. Third row
- Margi Ehman, R.N., B.S.N., Sharlene Fultz, Vicki
Scott, Lort Darst, Robin Rider, Lisa Osborne and Nancy Gooldin, R.N .. Fourth row - Joanna Hayes, Diane
Ogier and Lana Bonecutter.

the Annual Capping and Recognition Ceremony recently. Front row, left to right are: Diane Ward, Juanita
Arrington, Suzi Stroth, Nita Bishop, Debbie Danner.
Second row - Donna Reynolds, R.N., Norma Glenn,
R.N., B.S.N., Sandy Brown, Sherry Evans, Pat

Bond market
rates decline
NEW YORK (AP) - Interest
rates are coming down rapidly, and
one result is going to be a sizable
reduction in the amount of money
that banks and savings institutions
pay on popular six-month savings ,
certificates.
A few weeks ago, the rate stood at
15.7 percent. Now it has fallen to
13.549 percent and next week it could
drop below 12 percent.
The rate is based on the average
discount rate of six-month Treasury
bills auctioned each Monday and
goes into effect on the Thursday after the auction.
Those Treasury bills are also
traded in the bond market, and this
week interest rates fell rapidly amid
indications the economy has entered
a recession.
On Friday, the rate on such
Treasury bills fell to 12.05 percent.
That would be the rate next week if
rates remain stable through Mon·
day's auction.
The falling interest rates in bond
markets Friday came as most
major banks reduced their prime
lending rates to 19~percent, down
from the peak of 20 pereent.
One major banker, John F. '
McGillicuddy, the !X'e5ident of
Manufacturers Hanover Corp.,
predicted the prime rate will drop to
14 percent by year end.
·

THEATRE COIJAPSES

NEW DEUD, India (AP) - A
ffiM~t~vietheaterco~(JSOO

after a landslide in the northeastern
state of Sikkim, killing 17 Indian army personnel and injuring at least 30
others, the United News of India
reported Saturday.

Initial step taken for new prison
us, and we don't want it,",!te said.
Before the slate took over, the institute served as a medium-security
federal prison.
State Rep. Myrl Shoemaker is the
driving force behind the state prtson
idea. He has pushed through the
Ohio House a bill appropriating
money to buy land for at least two
new state prisons. And, he expects
one of those prisons to be built at the
Chillicothe site. His Idea Is for the
proposed Chillicothe prison to serve
as the receiving center for inmates
entering tbe state·•s prtson system.
The Ohio Chapter of lhe American
Civil Liberties Union objects to the
land transfer because the
organization opposes the con-

1

struction of more large prisons.
"The ACLU 0J11K1S1!S the construction of a prison near Chillicothe
as It is presently planned. It would
house 1,200 prisoners in a facility adjacent to an existing penitentiary,
.:.. " wrote Ohio ACLU chief Benson
Wollman to the U.S. justice department. '"\Ve believe that future construction of -penal facilities in Ohio
.should comply with federal draft
standards regai'Wng size and other
conditions."
But, Judith Bartnoff, associate
U.S. attorney general for civil
rights, said the federal standards
"are .not ·regulatiOns and they are
not enlorecable in court and I don't
think Mr. Wolman realizes that."

/

./

-

DIANE WARD, lelt, freshman student at the Holzer Medical
china lamp, with the
lighted candle from Donna Reynolds, R.N., Student Services Coordinator at the hospital's School of Nursing.

Sc~ool of Nursing, receives Florence Nightingale

Nineteen freshmen
nurses earn caps
ceremony completed , members
GAUJPOlJS - Nineteen young
repealed the Florence Nightingale
women, members of the freshman
Pledge and extinguished the candle
class of the Holzer Medical Center
flame.
School of Nursing, received tbeir
The audience was welcomed by
caps during impressive capping and
Anne Bowers, R.N ., B.S.N., M.A.,
recognition ceremonies at Faith
Associate Director. of Nursing
Baptist Church in Rodney recenlly.
Education.
The caps signify completion of the
Nancy Gooldin, R.N., freshman
first two quarters of study by memadvisor presented the class;
class
bers of the Class of 1982.
Margi
Ehman, R.N., B.S.N., f~h­
· Featured speaker was Norma
man
class
instructor, with the memGlenn, R.N., B.S.N., Coordinator of
bers of the junior class presented the
the Practical Nursing School . at
caps and Donna Reyhnolds, R.N.,
Buckeye Hills Career Center.
Her topic was, "The Significance student services coordinator,
of Capping." She commented on the · presided at the candle lighting portion d. the ceremony.
history of the nurse's cap, Indicating
During a reception, the school's
its religious significance and the
housemothers, Rachel SWMer and
diversity of design. In recent years,
Christine Black, along with Susy Etmany nurses hav.e stopped wearing
terling, R.N., Uncia Ballard, R.N.,
their caps when on duty. However,
B.S.N., and Betty Jo Barsotti, R.N.,
Mrs. Glenn emphasized the imB.S.N., served as hostesses.
portance of the cap as an easy and
obvious way for patients toidentify
nurses who are caring lor them in a
hospital setting.
As each freshman received her
cap .from a member of the junior
ITEMS 'RECOVEREI)
class of the IIChool of nursing, she
POMEROY - A CB radio, wrist·
also received long stem talisman
watch and rings taken in a breaking
rose, the freshman class flower.
and entering at the James Hupp
Each member waa presented ,with a
residence April 4 have been
Florence Nightingale china lamp
recovered according to the Mei811.
with a lighted candle. After all had
Coonty sheriff's office.
been cappe&lt;! 8ncl the candlellghtlng

a

'

�Bane One earnings at :r;ecord· high
By Marlon C. Crawford
ln closing, I would like to remind
Meigs COUDty
ol you who own a pet that it has
each
Humane Society
just
got
to have shots, folks. We ran
POMEROY- Have you adopted a
into
another
distemper case this
Humane Society animal? If so,
week.
The
dog hadn't had its
past
please stop by our Thrift Shoppe any
shot
and
when
found
sick the owners
Wednesday through Saturday and
to
doctor
it
themselves
- it got
tried
pick up a flea collar courtesy of the
away
and
if
it
weren't
for
the
fact
society and the Sergeant Company.
the
neighbors
·
had
already
that
The shoppe is located at the comer
protected their animals - it could
of Walnut and 2nd in Middleport.
have wiped out the neighborhood pet
And now to make comment on the
population.
,article in last Sunday's paper about
If you see your pet is sick, do the
;\he law concerning dogs running at
same
with it that you would do with
large now going to be enforced ...
yourseU
or a child, take it to a doc·Ohio Law RC 955.22.
tor. If yoli can't afford the expense,
: First of all, sorry to disappoint
.some of you, that article did not call us, maybe WJ can help you out
some way. By tlie way, the Meigs
mean that it is open season on dogs!
County Health Dept. is holding a
The burden of proof will be on the Rabie.&gt; Clinic at the fairgrounds on
guy who does the shooting. I have
May I with that shot available to any
~n advising pet owners for years
animal
leash for $3. Do take
,io pay attention to that law, which is your petonina and
get that shot and
,a good one, to keep your animals in a
MANY
THANKS,
HEALTH
DEPT.
lenced yard, on a chain or walk it on
leash - these are the only ways
you can protect your pet and not
)lllow it to bother or harm others.
•.: I'm surprised the farmers haven't
DISCOVER ANCIENT
c;omplained loud and hard long
CEMETERY
llefore now - some are really losing
~ock and not only are they losing
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia '(APJ money by this act, but their animals
An ancient cemetery, or necropolis
are dying a cruel death or suffering
with 60 preserved urns dating fro~
lerrible injuries.
the Bronze Age (3500-1000 B.C.) was
· If you continue to allow your dogs
to run at large they may be discovered on a construction site in
Pancevo near here, the Tanjng news
legitimately killed by a farmer or inagency reported Saturday.
nocent animals will become targets
The urns, with ceramic and metal
to every nut who owns a gun and
ornaments,
are said to belong to tbe
doesn't like animals. How are the
Gawa
culture. The area is
ancient
law enforcement people going to difclooe
to
the
Danube
and Tamis
ferentiate between the two types?
rivers,
which
attracted
the steppe
• This Is what worries the county
people
of
Eastelil
Europe
and Asia
humanitarians and one of my phone
Minor.
palls on the subject told me of a man
!"ho Is a widower and has only his
sweet Collie for company which
never leaves his yard.
: Well, something happened and the
man's dog left the yard Sunday after
that article hit the paper and ended
up being shot for merely walking on
~meone's yard. Happily the cfog
was not critically wounded - it is at
!he vet's recuperating now, but I'll
oot I hear sdrne worse stories before
\his is over. For this reason, let me
quote the law concerning animals
running at large. Ohio Law, Revised
Code 955.28 DOG MAY BE KILLED
FOR CERTAIN ACTS: OWNER
IJABLE FOR DAMAGES (CG S
5838) (76 ). The word, "chase,
Worries, injures, or kills," as used in
this section means that, for the
ldlting of a dog to be pennitted, the
dog must be killed WHILE IN THE
ACT of chasing, worrying, injuring, .
or killing: Perkins vs. Hatter, 106
App 361, 700(2d) 100,155 NE(2d) 73.
Other interesting parts of the law
are: (80) A dog on its master's
premises is not a vagrant and cannot
be said to be running at large:
Perkins vs. Hattery, etc. And the
law goes on into lots of detail but
boils down to another interesting
part which could save the county lots
of money if checked carefully when
claims come in for payment and that
is under paragraph 955.01 "on date
of loss or injury occurred, the
claimant did not own or harbor an
unregistered dog 'because' no
claimant who owned or harbored an
unregistered dog on that date may
recover from the dog and kennel

. r
I

COLUMBUS - Bane One Cor·
poration reported the highest quarterly net operating earnings before
securities transactions and net income ln its history.
Net operating earnings of
$8,114,000 were 11.8 percent higher
than the $7,255,000 reported in the
first quarter of 1979. Net income
grew 9.2 percent over 1979 and was
$7,845,000.
On a per share basis, net operating
earnings were $1.17 compared to
$1.05 last year and net income was
$1.13 compared to $1.04. Alll979 per
share data has been restated to give
effect to the 10 percent stock
dividend paid March 13, 191!0.
John G. McCoy, President of Bane
One, noted that the first quarter earnings compared closely to the
budgeted target and represent the
eighteenth consecutive quarterly increase, a record unequalled by any
of the nation's 100 largest banking
organizations. He added that quarterly earnings have exceeded the
prior year for each of the last 32
quarters. On an annualized basis,
first quarter earnings represent a

a

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return on average assets of 1.30 per·
cent and a return on average equity
of 17.2 percent.
Bane One reported total assets of
$2.66 biUion, up 17.5 percent from
last year. Total deposits of $2.17
billion represent a 17.1 percent increase, while net loans grew 12.4
percent to $1.48 billion.
Including Bane One of Kenton NA
which became affiliated ' in
February, Bane One operates 19 af·
filiate banks with 116 offices in Ohio.
The other banks are chartered in
Ashland, Athens, Cambridge,
Columbus, Coshocton, Dover,

SECOND ACflON FILED

.

ST. CLAIRSVILLE, Ohio (AP) A second civil suit was filed Friday
against former Belffiont County
Common Pleas Judge David B.
Cooper in the amount of $22,507.
The suit was filed by Marvin E.
Klitsner, of Milwaukee, Wis., C()executor of the estate of the late
Florence E. Weizer.

Fremont, Mansfield, Marion, Middletown, Milford, Mount Sterling,
Portsmouth, Ravenna, Sidney, Wadsworth, Wapakoneta, and Wooster.
Two other banks, Pomeroy National
Bank and the First National Bank of
Fairborn will become affiliates pending regulatory and shareholder approval.
.
In addition to its 19 afflliate banks,
the Bane One Corporation also includes Bane One Trust Company,
NA, Bane One Financial Services,
Bane One Realty Corporation, and
Bane One Capital Corporation.

TWO SQUADS BUSY
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Emergency Unit was called at 3:39
p.m. Friday for Bruce Davis who
had received hand laceration when
he became caught in barbed wire.
He was taken to Holzer Medical Center.

The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
went to 369 Hooker St. at 6:31 p.m.
Friday for Pearl Reynolds, retired
teacher, who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

GAHS inducts 16 into honor society
GAWPOUS - Sixteen juniors
were inducted into the Vernon Chapter of the National Honor Society
during Friday's assembly at Gallia
Academy High School.
According to John M. Dunn, principal, those tapped for membership
were qualified by a 3.~ average or
higher. Faculty members voted for
the junior candidates considering
selection on the basis of scholarship,
character, leadership and service.
Accepted for membership were:
Susan Bennett, Michael Burger,

Sally Ann Corbin, Jennifer Easley,
Allen Evans, Margaret Evans,
Christi Fellure, Teresa Ford,
Catherine Groth, Barbara Hood,
Ann Johnson, Elizabeth Johnson ,
Todd Nibert, Mark Phillips, Andrew
Plymale and Kent Price.
Officers of the GAHS National
Honor Society are Nick Robinson,
president; Tim Saunders, vice
president; Andrea Cook, treasurer
and Jayne Simpkins, secretary.
Raymond Adams is faculty advisor.

KindergaHen
•
•
regzstratlon
dates slated
GAWPOUS - The Gallia CoW&gt;ty Local School District has announced that it will hold kindergarten registration according to :
the following schedule: 8:30 a.m.· .
3:30 p.m., Wednesday, April 23, :
Cheshire Kyger Elementary. ·
Friday, April 25, Cadmus Elemen~ :
tary; Monday, April 28, Centerville :
Elementary; Tuesday, Aprtl 29, :
Hannan Trace Elementary; Wednesday, April30, Addaville Elementary; Thursday, May 1, Vinton
Elementary; Monday, May 5, Bidwell Elementary.
Parents must bring the child's immunization record, birth certificate
and record of TB skin test. The Obi~
state law for school irnmuni2ations
requires four OPTs, three Polio, one
Measles and one Rubella.
This year all students registering
for kindergarten and first grade who
did not attend kindergarten this year
should plan to be at their school for
one hour for registration, hearing
screening, and vision screening.

Licensed Speech Pathologist, M.S. CCC/Sp
O_pens. Private Practice for children and adults. Servrces mclude tutoring, testing &amp; evaluation, therapy
and counseling.
. '
!"or read in~ &amp; written language, speech, voice &amp; stuttermg: Learnmg difficulties, stroke, non-verbal and/or
autrstrc.
Office Hours: Daily &amp; Evenings
For More Information Call:

. LIBBY CHERRINGTON
446-1241

THESE HOMES WILL BE VINYLIZED
IMMEDIATELY BY FACTORY TRAINED MEN.
FOR USE OF BEFORE AND AFTER PICTURES
OF YOUR HOME YOU WILL RECEIVE HUGE
SAVINGS. TO BE ONE OF THE TEN, MAIL
COUPON BELOW IMMEDIATELY!!

EXTRA WORK

THE
BEFORE

WILL BE AT COST

AND AFTER
LOOK

8" American Clapl~Nrd
4" &amp; 5" Colonial Clapl~Nrd
In Wllile and Sofl Pastels

n~ighbor'sdogs .

I

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·I

;This same law allows the investigative authority, which Is the
Dog Warden or commissioners, to
have a vet examine the dead dog
and the dead stock to be assured that
it-was that particular dog that killed
Ulat particular farm animal The
!4w is written in such a way that it
ptotects both the claimant and the
owner of the accused dog. There has
been a lot of fraud in other counties
at the taxpayer's expense - claims
that are not legitimate being paidand it could happen here in Meigs
COunty unless the investigations are
thorough and done by experts.
, So, folks, it is still illegal to kill
dogs merely for being · on your
i&gt;roperty. Just call the Dog Warden,
that's his department, or if the
animal appears to be a nice animal
~t does not have mange, Is not
~· or snippy call our answering
service and report the animal ... 992611i0. Maybe we can find the owner
or adopt it out to a new home. Also
call us if the stray appears to be sick
or injured, so that we can get it to a

Vft.
•1bis week we have several really

SAVES
ENERGY!

40 YEAR
GUARANTEE

CUT FUEL

WILL NOT
•DENT•C..
•CONDUCT ELECTIIICtTY
efADE ·•BUSTER

COST

UPT040%

IS 40 liliES 11DER
THAN PAINTED
S..ACES
AND IS VIITUALLY ·

,_

THERE IS NO
IEIIER
INSULATION

RIEL IILLS. GOING UP!
LET us HELP YOU CUT COSTS AND
. .TOOf
GET AN INCOME TAX CR~rr

$1 ,000 IN CASH!
TO SELECTED HOME
CAN BE APPUED TO COST

·--------'

I
I
I
I
I,

'

FREEl
We,Willl~stall FOAM INSULATION FREE
With Every Sale Of VINYL SIDING

VINYL DISTRIBUTORS
'

Cllt.
II

TO ANYONE.WHO IS NOT A
PROPERTY OWNER •.• .IF YOU KNOW
OF ANYONE INTERESTED
IN SIDING AND
IT RESULTS IN
A BONAFIDE
SALE!

-STRUC11BLEI

nlce animalll up for adoption which
include a Manchester-chihuahua
with two tiny puppies (we will place
the puppies when they are old
enough if we haven't weaned them
within the next few days), two nice
Beagle types about a year old, one
small, the other medium size, a coon
h~und female, who is ·an
adult dog, a border coUle, male,
about 6 or 7 montha old and we have
dong haJred, black and wlnte, male

$100
REWARD

SOIIIVItYL

1001f, FINANCifG
NO MONEY DOWN

EUMINATE DRAFTS
AID COLD R.OOAS

High pressure dominates Ohio weather

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CONCERNED ABOUT FINANCING?
WE HAVE A BANK PLAN FOR ANY
BUDGET WITH THIS SPECIAL OFFER NO MONEY DOWN. NO
PAYMENTS TILL FALL.

-----------~-···

FOR YOUR FREE-ESTIMATE TO
QUALIFY, REPLY-WITHIN 5 DAYS TO

VINYL DISTRIBUTORS
c/o Box 6500, Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Gallipolis, OH. 45631

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and 70s today.
.
The front will extend from the
lower Great Lakes region to just nor·
th of Lake Ontario. By Sunday night
the cold front will be east and south
of the state and high pressure will
cover the Great Lakes again.
Temperatures aren't very cold
behind the cold front, but north and
northwest winds across Lake Erie
will cause some chilly weather close
to the shore.

By The A11oclated Press
pressure will dominate
Ohio's weather picture for the next
few datys. A high pressure system
holding over the northeastern part of
the country will be replaced by a
weak cold front which will bring
cloudy skies to Ohio and the rest of
the state Sunday. However, no
showers are expected with this
front.
The mercury will rise into the 60s
High

GREAT WALL OF CIDNA was started nearly 2,500 years ago as a
barrier against invading military.

THIS WEEK SPECIAL

MAX TAWNEY of Gallipolis is pictured with four of his Chinese
hosts on the Great Wall of China.

TUNE UP

My Trip to China:

Includes: Check air filter,
PCP valve &amp; filter, fuel
filter, scope engine, adj.
liming &amp; carb, install new
plugs.

Great China .Wall impresses Tawney
This Is the first of a series of
four articles by GalllpoUs' Max
Tawney, wbo toured Red Chlua
last month.
I

BY MAX TAWNEY
GAWPOUS - I had been
debating on taking a trip to China for
a year, ever since my sister, Ruby
Jenkins, had taken the same trip last
year and came back bubbling ~th
enthusiasm about China. She told
me it was a must, to forget any trip I
had planned, and go to China.
Well, I placed my name·with the
1
Progressive Farmers out of Birmingham, Alabama, who conduct
these tours to China. Three weeks
later I called and canceled out, as I
thought it would be hard for me to be
· away from my business almost a
month.
The next four months it was on my
mind continually; on January 4 I
made up my mind I was going and
put my name in again and began
making preparations, and on March
10 I was on my way.
Cbattanoogan great gny
The first stop was San Francisco
at the St. Francis Hotel, where we
all met to get acquainted with the
other people on the tour. As l was
traveling alone, I was assigned as
my partner Mark Chapman, Chat·
tanooga, Tenn., one of the finest persons I have ever met; we never had
one cross word throughout the trip,
and when we were near the close of
the trip be said to me:
"I hope tllis is oniy the beginning
of our future travelll together. "
I shook bands and said the same.
So, after spending the night in one
of the most luxurious hotels in San
Francisco, the Saint Francis, we
boarded the Japanese Air Lines big
747 non-stop to Tokyo which took 10
to 12 hours. I enjoyed every minute
of it. I never sleep. I try to meet as
many people as I can. I find they are
just as anxious to taik to me as I am
to them.
I met six Japanese Travel Agents
and we started a Black Jack game
which lasted four or five hours. I
came out with $27 in winnings.

OldCblDa!
We crossed the International Date
Line which set us ahead 24 hours,
and spent the night at a first class
hotel, the Narita Prince, in Tokyo.
After being servei:t a big steak din·
ner, we retired. The next morning
we boarded the J.A.L. for Peking,
China, which was a five hour flight,
arriving around 2:30 p.m. I could
hardly wait to start stirring around
in old China. We were met at the airport by our two guides Wong Yen
Ming and Shih Chin Hsia, both young
women. Miss Wong was to stay with
us the full length of our trip - Miss
Shih only in Peking.
We were informed by Miss Wong
we were lucky to be assigned to the
Peking Hotel, as it is booked months
in advance. It was buill in three sections: the old section where we
stayed, the middle section built by
the Russians, and the last section,
which was only recently completed
by the Chinese. Our room reminded
me of old houses 100 years back in
the United States: high ceilings, old
dressers, and brass beds with duck
down mattresses. This hotel is over
one block long, I do not know bow
many rooms, but I think around
1,000. But many foreigners stay
here. I met Germans, Japanese,
British, Swedes, and Americans
here.
Tedious dealers
One German told me he had been
here five months trying to close a
deal with the Chinese.. They do not
close dealll as we do in the U.S.A.
From talking to many foreign
business men, I found they are
tedio.us and tough to close business
deals with.
The next morning we were out to
explore Peking. This city has a
pdpulation of over 8,000,000 people
and bas been the capital of China for
almost 700 years. It is now the
political; economic, and cultural
center of the Peoples Republic of
China.
The historical sites to see here are,
No. I, I think, the Great Wall, next
the Imperial Palace, Ming Tombs,
Great ·Hall of People, Tien Men
Square, and Mao Tse Tung
. Memorial Hall.
We left early in our 12 passenger

bus for the Great Wall taking almost
three hours .around hair pen curves
high up through the mountains with
our driver lying on the horn all the
way around the curves. There are no
guard rails and if you went over you
would roll 2,000 feet; in some places
it was real scary.
We arrived at the Great Wall
around 10:30. It was a sight to
behold! 11'bas to be one of the wonders of the world! How in the world
they moved the large stones and
everything lt took to constroct such
a huiDan endeavor is alilazlng. It is
not quite as wide as our streets here
In Gallipolis.
.It is the oniy man made object
VISible from Earth orbit. The
amount of material it took to construct the Great Wall could be used
to surround the Earth eight feet
high. It was over 3,000 miles long.
Construction began during the
warring years (400-422 B.C.) when
different sections were built in scattered areas.
After China 's unification under the
first China Emperor (221-207 B.C.),
it took 300,000 to 400,000 men, many
of t~em political prisoners and
slaves, who were put to work connecting the segments into one huge
rampart of stone and earth. From
the end of the 16th century A.D. until
the Ming dynasty the Great Wall
was frequently overrun and became

ol&gt;solete as a barrier against invaders 1for whom bribes became the
most effective weapons ).
Mings work on it
The Ming Emperors, successors to
the Mongols, again tried to make it 1
into a useful fortification adding
blocks of stone, bricks, and cement.
It was made wide enough for six horses running abreast. Signal towers
were built every 500 to 600 feet and
they looked to me to be from one to
two stories in height.
Mark and I together with our
guide and interpreter Shih Chen
walked about three hours on the wall
- we would stop and talk and take
pictures every so often as there were
hundreds of natives and tourists up
there (Shih Chin was an efficient
guide as she could speak four different languages ). You had to be in
good physical condition to go where
we went, and it was steep. Many
dropped out before they got .half
way. It was cold and windy with lots
of snow at the top. You couldn't help
but think and wonder how much
human sacrifice it took to construct
such a world wonder as this. No
question about it: this was to me the
highlight of my trip!
(To be continued) .
NEXT: The second installment
covers the Mlng Tombs, summer
pala~e, Peking zoo, communism,
religion, and population.

POMPANO BEACH - At the age
of 17, few people would be considered veterans in their
professions, but for Daniel Roberts
of West Jefferson, Obi~, 10 years experience in the six&gt;rt of harness
racing appears to I•Ut him in that
category.
Roberts still has a long way to go
to become a BiUy Haughton, Staniey
Dancer or Dell Miller, but he has
already left his mark on four different harness tracks in the United
Statea.
.
On March 12 at Pompano Park,
Roberts became the youngest driver
ever to win a pari-mutuel race on the
Broward Oval as he drove Travalon
Mickey to a 1:59-4 victory over Victorian Image and Jon Boy's Dream.
The sub-two minute clocking was the
first ever for the five year old
gelding by Swing Time and The
Brown Mouse, and also, the first for
the eldesl son of Kenny and Phyllis
Roberts.
With that win, Pompano Park
beCame the fourth track at which

Roberts has earned this distinction,
having accomplished the same feat
at The Meadows, Lebanon and
Scioto Downs at the age of 16, last
year.
"Danny learned the hard way,"
says veteran trainer-driver, Phil
Siebold, Roberts' grandfather,
whose three horse stables at Pompano this season includes pacers
Jack's Joy, Macando and "Mickey"
owned by Kay Betz, owner of
Chickamauga Stables of Gallipolis.
"Danny has worked with me since
he was seven years old, cleaning
stalls, grooming and basically starting at the bottom and working his
way up."
Preferring jog carts to textbooks,
Danny left school at the age of 16 and
began to put his matinee license to
work for him, which he earned at the
age of 15. Roberts' younger brother,
Trace, will drive at Ohio Fairs this
summer and Siebold relishes the
possibltity of having both boys involved in the sport of harness
racing.

Report mass arrest in Assam State
NEW DEIJll, India (AP) - Indian anny troops arrested hundred;!
of demonstrators in the northeastern
state ol Assam Saturday. They also
slapped a curfew on the state capital
of Dlspur and the neighboring city of
Gauhati, but lifted it after several
hours, the Uilited News of India
reported.
Soldiers cleared protesters
blockading an oil refinery at
Narangi, near Gauh;lti, and arrested
500 rl. them, UNI said.
0\l.lir arrrested included B.K.

Phukan, the general secretary of the
powerful All-Assam Students Union,
which is spearheading a drive to
deport millions of alleged alienS
back to ~ngladesh, it added.
Also reported detained was Nagen
Hazarika, the president of a regional
P,.rty backing the student demands.
However, P .K. Mahanta,
president of the students union, said,
"If those arrested are not released
within 24 hours, the situation will
worsen."

8 CYLo ............. 35o00

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FREE BODY REPAIR ESTIMATES
8-5 ,PM MON •.fRI.

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fresh oil chon...

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Got roody for Spring with th- coypon opoclolo . ·

Pomeroy, Ohio

Driver cops Pompano
victory at age 17

flUld."

In other words, you who live near
unmanageable dogs that Brl! allowed
tp run at will by their owners had
best make sure you have your own
dogs licensed by th~ county for the
eurrent year - or forget about
rllaking any claims against your

D-3--The Sunday Times Sentfuel, Sunday, April20, 1980

Ph. 992·6614

SHOP AROUND
THEN COME TO

PAT HILL
FORD

--------Gallipolis, Ohio

.
AUTOMOTIVE
TUNE-UP
Price Includes : For ·6-cyllnder

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Install 6 new. spark plugs bnd new
vapor canister filter el•ment , adjust
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Iobei . other ernlulon control t)ltfem
components serviced 01 r.qulred.
Standard tgnlllon Add $3 : I ·
Cyllndor·add $2 , 4·Cyllndor lou $2:
present coupon when orde' It

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I

1978 PINTO

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valid thru June 1. 1980 at
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1976 COBRA

�Bane One earnings at :r;ecord· high
By Marlon C. Crawford
ln closing, I would like to remind
Meigs COUDty
ol you who own a pet that it has
each
Humane Society
just
got
to have shots, folks. We ran
POMEROY- Have you adopted a
into
another
distemper case this
Humane Society animal? If so,
week.
The
dog hadn't had its
past
please stop by our Thrift Shoppe any
shot
and
when
found
sick the owners
Wednesday through Saturday and
to
doctor
it
themselves
- it got
tried
pick up a flea collar courtesy of the
away
and
if
it
weren't
for
the
fact
society and the Sergeant Company.
the
neighbors
·
had
already
that
The shoppe is located at the comer
protected their animals - it could
of Walnut and 2nd in Middleport.
have wiped out the neighborhood pet
And now to make comment on the
population.
,article in last Sunday's paper about
If you see your pet is sick, do the
;\he law concerning dogs running at
same
with it that you would do with
large now going to be enforced ...
yourseU
or a child, take it to a doc·Ohio Law RC 955.22.
tor. If yoli can't afford the expense,
: First of all, sorry to disappoint
.some of you, that article did not call us, maybe WJ can help you out
some way. By tlie way, the Meigs
mean that it is open season on dogs!
County Health Dept. is holding a
The burden of proof will be on the Rabie.&gt; Clinic at the fairgrounds on
guy who does the shooting. I have
May I with that shot available to any
~n advising pet owners for years
animal
leash for $3. Do take
,io pay attention to that law, which is your petonina and
get that shot and
,a good one, to keep your animals in a
MANY
THANKS,
HEALTH
DEPT.
lenced yard, on a chain or walk it on
leash - these are the only ways
you can protect your pet and not
)lllow it to bother or harm others.
•.: I'm surprised the farmers haven't
DISCOVER ANCIENT
c;omplained loud and hard long
CEMETERY
llefore now - some are really losing
~ock and not only are they losing
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia '(APJ money by this act, but their animals
An ancient cemetery, or necropolis
are dying a cruel death or suffering
with 60 preserved urns dating fro~
lerrible injuries.
the Bronze Age (3500-1000 B.C.) was
· If you continue to allow your dogs
to run at large they may be discovered on a construction site in
Pancevo near here, the Tanjng news
legitimately killed by a farmer or inagency reported Saturday.
nocent animals will become targets
The urns, with ceramic and metal
to every nut who owns a gun and
ornaments,
are said to belong to tbe
doesn't like animals. How are the
Gawa
culture. The area is
ancient
law enforcement people going to difclooe
to
the
Danube
and Tamis
ferentiate between the two types?
rivers,
which
attracted
the steppe
• This Is what worries the county
people
of
Eastelil
Europe
and Asia
humanitarians and one of my phone
Minor.
palls on the subject told me of a man
!"ho Is a widower and has only his
sweet Collie for company which
never leaves his yard.
: Well, something happened and the
man's dog left the yard Sunday after
that article hit the paper and ended
up being shot for merely walking on
~meone's yard. Happily the cfog
was not critically wounded - it is at
!he vet's recuperating now, but I'll
oot I hear sdrne worse stories before
\his is over. For this reason, let me
quote the law concerning animals
running at large. Ohio Law, Revised
Code 955.28 DOG MAY BE KILLED
FOR CERTAIN ACTS: OWNER
IJABLE FOR DAMAGES (CG S
5838) (76 ). The word, "chase,
Worries, injures, or kills," as used in
this section means that, for the
ldlting of a dog to be pennitted, the
dog must be killed WHILE IN THE
ACT of chasing, worrying, injuring, .
or killing: Perkins vs. Hatter, 106
App 361, 700(2d) 100,155 NE(2d) 73.
Other interesting parts of the law
are: (80) A dog on its master's
premises is not a vagrant and cannot
be said to be running at large:
Perkins vs. Hattery, etc. And the
law goes on into lots of detail but
boils down to another interesting
part which could save the county lots
of money if checked carefully when
claims come in for payment and that
is under paragraph 955.01 "on date
of loss or injury occurred, the
claimant did not own or harbor an
unregistered dog 'because' no
claimant who owned or harbored an
unregistered dog on that date may
recover from the dog and kennel

. r
I

COLUMBUS - Bane One Cor·
poration reported the highest quarterly net operating earnings before
securities transactions and net income ln its history.
Net operating earnings of
$8,114,000 were 11.8 percent higher
than the $7,255,000 reported in the
first quarter of 1979. Net income
grew 9.2 percent over 1979 and was
$7,845,000.
On a per share basis, net operating
earnings were $1.17 compared to
$1.05 last year and net income was
$1.13 compared to $1.04. Alll979 per
share data has been restated to give
effect to the 10 percent stock
dividend paid March 13, 191!0.
John G. McCoy, President of Bane
One, noted that the first quarter earnings compared closely to the
budgeted target and represent the
eighteenth consecutive quarterly increase, a record unequalled by any
of the nation's 100 largest banking
organizations. He added that quarterly earnings have exceeded the
prior year for each of the last 32
quarters. On an annualized basis,
first quarter earnings represent a

a

.'

. 'I

return on average assets of 1.30 per·
cent and a return on average equity
of 17.2 percent.
Bane One reported total assets of
$2.66 biUion, up 17.5 percent from
last year. Total deposits of $2.17
billion represent a 17.1 percent increase, while net loans grew 12.4
percent to $1.48 billion.
Including Bane One of Kenton NA
which became affiliated ' in
February, Bane One operates 19 af·
filiate banks with 116 offices in Ohio.
The other banks are chartered in
Ashland, Athens, Cambridge,
Columbus, Coshocton, Dover,

SECOND ACflON FILED

.

ST. CLAIRSVILLE, Ohio (AP) A second civil suit was filed Friday
against former Belffiont County
Common Pleas Judge David B.
Cooper in the amount of $22,507.
The suit was filed by Marvin E.
Klitsner, of Milwaukee, Wis., C()executor of the estate of the late
Florence E. Weizer.

Fremont, Mansfield, Marion, Middletown, Milford, Mount Sterling,
Portsmouth, Ravenna, Sidney, Wadsworth, Wapakoneta, and Wooster.
Two other banks, Pomeroy National
Bank and the First National Bank of
Fairborn will become affiliates pending regulatory and shareholder approval.
.
In addition to its 19 afflliate banks,
the Bane One Corporation also includes Bane One Trust Company,
NA, Bane One Financial Services,
Bane One Realty Corporation, and
Bane One Capital Corporation.

TWO SQUADS BUSY
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Emergency Unit was called at 3:39
p.m. Friday for Bruce Davis who
had received hand laceration when
he became caught in barbed wire.
He was taken to Holzer Medical Center.

The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
went to 369 Hooker St. at 6:31 p.m.
Friday for Pearl Reynolds, retired
teacher, who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

GAHS inducts 16 into honor society
GAWPOUS - Sixteen juniors
were inducted into the Vernon Chapter of the National Honor Society
during Friday's assembly at Gallia
Academy High School.
According to John M. Dunn, principal, those tapped for membership
were qualified by a 3.~ average or
higher. Faculty members voted for
the junior candidates considering
selection on the basis of scholarship,
character, leadership and service.
Accepted for membership were:
Susan Bennett, Michael Burger,

Sally Ann Corbin, Jennifer Easley,
Allen Evans, Margaret Evans,
Christi Fellure, Teresa Ford,
Catherine Groth, Barbara Hood,
Ann Johnson, Elizabeth Johnson ,
Todd Nibert, Mark Phillips, Andrew
Plymale and Kent Price.
Officers of the GAHS National
Honor Society are Nick Robinson,
president; Tim Saunders, vice
president; Andrea Cook, treasurer
and Jayne Simpkins, secretary.
Raymond Adams is faculty advisor.

KindergaHen
•
•
regzstratlon
dates slated
GAWPOUS - The Gallia CoW&gt;ty Local School District has announced that it will hold kindergarten registration according to :
the following schedule: 8:30 a.m.· .
3:30 p.m., Wednesday, April 23, :
Cheshire Kyger Elementary. ·
Friday, April 25, Cadmus Elemen~ :
tary; Monday, April 28, Centerville :
Elementary; Tuesday, Aprtl 29, :
Hannan Trace Elementary; Wednesday, April30, Addaville Elementary; Thursday, May 1, Vinton
Elementary; Monday, May 5, Bidwell Elementary.
Parents must bring the child's immunization record, birth certificate
and record of TB skin test. The Obi~
state law for school irnmuni2ations
requires four OPTs, three Polio, one
Measles and one Rubella.
This year all students registering
for kindergarten and first grade who
did not attend kindergarten this year
should plan to be at their school for
one hour for registration, hearing
screening, and vision screening.

Licensed Speech Pathologist, M.S. CCC/Sp
O_pens. Private Practice for children and adults. Servrces mclude tutoring, testing &amp; evaluation, therapy
and counseling.
. '
!"or read in~ &amp; written language, speech, voice &amp; stuttermg: Learnmg difficulties, stroke, non-verbal and/or
autrstrc.
Office Hours: Daily &amp; Evenings
For More Information Call:

. LIBBY CHERRINGTON
446-1241

THESE HOMES WILL BE VINYLIZED
IMMEDIATELY BY FACTORY TRAINED MEN.
FOR USE OF BEFORE AND AFTER PICTURES
OF YOUR HOME YOU WILL RECEIVE HUGE
SAVINGS. TO BE ONE OF THE TEN, MAIL
COUPON BELOW IMMEDIATELY!!

EXTRA WORK

THE
BEFORE

WILL BE AT COST

AND AFTER
LOOK

8" American Clapl~Nrd
4" &amp; 5" Colonial Clapl~Nrd
In Wllile and Sofl Pastels

n~ighbor'sdogs .

I

'I
I

·I

;This same law allows the investigative authority, which Is the
Dog Warden or commissioners, to
have a vet examine the dead dog
and the dead stock to be assured that
it-was that particular dog that killed
Ulat particular farm animal The
!4w is written in such a way that it
ptotects both the claimant and the
owner of the accused dog. There has
been a lot of fraud in other counties
at the taxpayer's expense - claims
that are not legitimate being paidand it could happen here in Meigs
COunty unless the investigations are
thorough and done by experts.
, So, folks, it is still illegal to kill
dogs merely for being · on your
i&gt;roperty. Just call the Dog Warden,
that's his department, or if the
animal appears to be a nice animal
~t does not have mange, Is not
~· or snippy call our answering
service and report the animal ... 992611i0. Maybe we can find the owner
or adopt it out to a new home. Also
call us if the stray appears to be sick
or injured, so that we can get it to a

Vft.
•1bis week we have several really

SAVES
ENERGY!

40 YEAR
GUARANTEE

CUT FUEL

WILL NOT
•DENT•C..
•CONDUCT ELECTIIICtTY
efADE ·•BUSTER

COST

UPT040%

IS 40 liliES 11DER
THAN PAINTED
S..ACES
AND IS VIITUALLY ·

,_

THERE IS NO
IEIIER
INSULATION

RIEL IILLS. GOING UP!
LET us HELP YOU CUT COSTS AND
. .TOOf
GET AN INCOME TAX CR~rr

$1 ,000 IN CASH!
TO SELECTED HOME
CAN BE APPUED TO COST

·--------'

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I
I,

'

FREEl
We,Willl~stall FOAM INSULATION FREE
With Every Sale Of VINYL SIDING

VINYL DISTRIBUTORS
'

Cllt.
II

TO ANYONE.WHO IS NOT A
PROPERTY OWNER •.• .IF YOU KNOW
OF ANYONE INTERESTED
IN SIDING AND
IT RESULTS IN
A BONAFIDE
SALE!

-STRUC11BLEI

nlce animalll up for adoption which
include a Manchester-chihuahua
with two tiny puppies (we will place
the puppies when they are old
enough if we haven't weaned them
within the next few days), two nice
Beagle types about a year old, one
small, the other medium size, a coon
h~und female, who is ·an
adult dog, a border coUle, male,
about 6 or 7 montha old and we have
dong haJred, black and wlnte, male

$100
REWARD

SOIIIVItYL

1001f, FINANCifG
NO MONEY DOWN

EUMINATE DRAFTS
AID COLD R.OOAS

High pressure dominates Ohio weather

.

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CONCERNED ABOUT FINANCING?
WE HAVE A BANK PLAN FOR ANY
BUDGET WITH THIS SPECIAL OFFER NO MONEY DOWN. NO
PAYMENTS TILL FALL.

-----------~-···

FOR YOUR FREE-ESTIMATE TO
QUALIFY, REPLY-WITHIN 5 DAYS TO

VINYL DISTRIBUTORS
c/o Box 6500, Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Gallipolis, OH. 45631

NAME

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BEST TIME TO CALL
)MORNING C )AFTERNOON C )EVENING

---------------C

and 70s today.
.
The front will extend from the
lower Great Lakes region to just nor·
th of Lake Ontario. By Sunday night
the cold front will be east and south
of the state and high pressure will
cover the Great Lakes again.
Temperatures aren't very cold
behind the cold front, but north and
northwest winds across Lake Erie
will cause some chilly weather close
to the shore.

By The A11oclated Press
pressure will dominate
Ohio's weather picture for the next
few datys. A high pressure system
holding over the northeastern part of
the country will be replaced by a
weak cold front which will bring
cloudy skies to Ohio and the rest of
the state Sunday. However, no
showers are expected with this
front.
The mercury will rise into the 60s
High

GREAT WALL OF CIDNA was started nearly 2,500 years ago as a
barrier against invading military.

THIS WEEK SPECIAL

MAX TAWNEY of Gallipolis is pictured with four of his Chinese
hosts on the Great Wall of China.

TUNE UP

My Trip to China:

Includes: Check air filter,
PCP valve &amp; filter, fuel
filter, scope engine, adj.
liming &amp; carb, install new
plugs.

Great China .Wall impresses Tawney
This Is the first of a series of
four articles by GalllpoUs' Max
Tawney, wbo toured Red Chlua
last month.
I

BY MAX TAWNEY
GAWPOUS - I had been
debating on taking a trip to China for
a year, ever since my sister, Ruby
Jenkins, had taken the same trip last
year and came back bubbling ~th
enthusiasm about China. She told
me it was a must, to forget any trip I
had planned, and go to China.
Well, I placed my name·with the
1
Progressive Farmers out of Birmingham, Alabama, who conduct
these tours to China. Three weeks
later I called and canceled out, as I
thought it would be hard for me to be
· away from my business almost a
month.
The next four months it was on my
mind continually; on January 4 I
made up my mind I was going and
put my name in again and began
making preparations, and on March
10 I was on my way.
Cbattanoogan great gny
The first stop was San Francisco
at the St. Francis Hotel, where we
all met to get acquainted with the
other people on the tour. As l was
traveling alone, I was assigned as
my partner Mark Chapman, Chat·
tanooga, Tenn., one of the finest persons I have ever met; we never had
one cross word throughout the trip,
and when we were near the close of
the trip be said to me:
"I hope tllis is oniy the beginning
of our future travelll together. "
I shook bands and said the same.
So, after spending the night in one
of the most luxurious hotels in San
Francisco, the Saint Francis, we
boarded the Japanese Air Lines big
747 non-stop to Tokyo which took 10
to 12 hours. I enjoyed every minute
of it. I never sleep. I try to meet as
many people as I can. I find they are
just as anxious to taik to me as I am
to them.
I met six Japanese Travel Agents
and we started a Black Jack game
which lasted four or five hours. I
came out with $27 in winnings.

OldCblDa!
We crossed the International Date
Line which set us ahead 24 hours,
and spent the night at a first class
hotel, the Narita Prince, in Tokyo.
After being servei:t a big steak din·
ner, we retired. The next morning
we boarded the J.A.L. for Peking,
China, which was a five hour flight,
arriving around 2:30 p.m. I could
hardly wait to start stirring around
in old China. We were met at the airport by our two guides Wong Yen
Ming and Shih Chin Hsia, both young
women. Miss Wong was to stay with
us the full length of our trip - Miss
Shih only in Peking.
We were informed by Miss Wong
we were lucky to be assigned to the
Peking Hotel, as it is booked months
in advance. It was buill in three sections: the old section where we
stayed, the middle section built by
the Russians, and the last section,
which was only recently completed
by the Chinese. Our room reminded
me of old houses 100 years back in
the United States: high ceilings, old
dressers, and brass beds with duck
down mattresses. This hotel is over
one block long, I do not know bow
many rooms, but I think around
1,000. But many foreigners stay
here. I met Germans, Japanese,
British, Swedes, and Americans
here.
Tedious dealers
One German told me he had been
here five months trying to close a
deal with the Chinese.. They do not
close dealll as we do in the U.S.A.
From talking to many foreign
business men, I found they are
tedio.us and tough to close business
deals with.
The next morning we were out to
explore Peking. This city has a
pdpulation of over 8,000,000 people
and bas been the capital of China for
almost 700 years. It is now the
political; economic, and cultural
center of the Peoples Republic of
China.
The historical sites to see here are,
No. I, I think, the Great Wall, next
the Imperial Palace, Ming Tombs,
Great ·Hall of People, Tien Men
Square, and Mao Tse Tung
. Memorial Hall.
We left early in our 12 passenger

bus for the Great Wall taking almost
three hours .around hair pen curves
high up through the mountains with
our driver lying on the horn all the
way around the curves. There are no
guard rails and if you went over you
would roll 2,000 feet; in some places
it was real scary.
We arrived at the Great Wall
around 10:30. It was a sight to
behold! 11'bas to be one of the wonders of the world! How in the world
they moved the large stones and
everything lt took to constroct such
a huiDan endeavor is alilazlng. It is
not quite as wide as our streets here
In Gallipolis.
.It is the oniy man made object
VISible from Earth orbit. The
amount of material it took to construct the Great Wall could be used
to surround the Earth eight feet
high. It was over 3,000 miles long.
Construction began during the
warring years (400-422 B.C.) when
different sections were built in scattered areas.
After China 's unification under the
first China Emperor (221-207 B.C.),
it took 300,000 to 400,000 men, many
of t~em political prisoners and
slaves, who were put to work connecting the segments into one huge
rampart of stone and earth. From
the end of the 16th century A.D. until
the Ming dynasty the Great Wall
was frequently overrun and became

ol&gt;solete as a barrier against invaders 1for whom bribes became the
most effective weapons ).
Mings work on it
The Ming Emperors, successors to
the Mongols, again tried to make it 1
into a useful fortification adding
blocks of stone, bricks, and cement.
It was made wide enough for six horses running abreast. Signal towers
were built every 500 to 600 feet and
they looked to me to be from one to
two stories in height.
Mark and I together with our
guide and interpreter Shih Chen
walked about three hours on the wall
- we would stop and talk and take
pictures every so often as there were
hundreds of natives and tourists up
there (Shih Chin was an efficient
guide as she could speak four different languages ). You had to be in
good physical condition to go where
we went, and it was steep. Many
dropped out before they got .half
way. It was cold and windy with lots
of snow at the top. You couldn't help
but think and wonder how much
human sacrifice it took to construct
such a world wonder as this. No
question about it: this was to me the
highlight of my trip!
(To be continued) .
NEXT: The second installment
covers the Mlng Tombs, summer
pala~e, Peking zoo, communism,
religion, and population.

POMPANO BEACH - At the age
of 17, few people would be considered veterans in their
professions, but for Daniel Roberts
of West Jefferson, Obi~, 10 years experience in the six&gt;rt of harness
racing appears to I•Ut him in that
category.
Roberts still has a long way to go
to become a BiUy Haughton, Staniey
Dancer or Dell Miller, but he has
already left his mark on four different harness tracks in the United
Statea.
.
On March 12 at Pompano Park,
Roberts became the youngest driver
ever to win a pari-mutuel race on the
Broward Oval as he drove Travalon
Mickey to a 1:59-4 victory over Victorian Image and Jon Boy's Dream.
The sub-two minute clocking was the
first ever for the five year old
gelding by Swing Time and The
Brown Mouse, and also, the first for
the eldesl son of Kenny and Phyllis
Roberts.
With that win, Pompano Park
beCame the fourth track at which

Roberts has earned this distinction,
having accomplished the same feat
at The Meadows, Lebanon and
Scioto Downs at the age of 16, last
year.
"Danny learned the hard way,"
says veteran trainer-driver, Phil
Siebold, Roberts' grandfather,
whose three horse stables at Pompano this season includes pacers
Jack's Joy, Macando and "Mickey"
owned by Kay Betz, owner of
Chickamauga Stables of Gallipolis.
"Danny has worked with me since
he was seven years old, cleaning
stalls, grooming and basically starting at the bottom and working his
way up."
Preferring jog carts to textbooks,
Danny left school at the age of 16 and
began to put his matinee license to
work for him, which he earned at the
age of 15. Roberts' younger brother,
Trace, will drive at Ohio Fairs this
summer and Siebold relishes the
possibltity of having both boys involved in the sport of harness
racing.

Report mass arrest in Assam State
NEW DEIJll, India (AP) - Indian anny troops arrested hundred;!
of demonstrators in the northeastern
state ol Assam Saturday. They also
slapped a curfew on the state capital
of Dlspur and the neighboring city of
Gauhati, but lifted it after several
hours, the Uilited News of India
reported.
Soldiers cleared protesters
blockading an oil refinery at
Narangi, near Gauh;lti, and arrested
500 rl. them, UNI said.
0\l.lir arrrested included B.K.

Phukan, the general secretary of the
powerful All-Assam Students Union,
which is spearheading a drive to
deport millions of alleged alienS
back to ~ngladesh, it added.
Also reported detained was Nagen
Hazarika, the president of a regional
P,.rty backing the student demands.
However, P .K. Mahanta,
president of the students union, said,
"If those arrested are not released
within 24 hours, the situation will
worsen."

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Got roody for Spring with th- coypon opoclolo . ·

Pomeroy, Ohio

Driver cops Pompano
victory at age 17

flUld."

In other words, you who live near
unmanageable dogs that Brl! allowed
tp run at will by their owners had
best make sure you have your own
dogs licensed by th~ county for the
eurrent year - or forget about
rllaking any claims against your

D-3--The Sunday Times Sentfuel, Sunday, April20, 1980

Ph. 992·6614

SHOP AROUND
THEN COME TO

PAT HILL
FORD

--------Gallipolis, Ohio

.
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TUNE-UP
Price Includes : For ·6-cyllnder

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'f

D-4-The Sunday Times-8entinel, Sunday, April20, 1980

1
'

I:'

AgricultlJ~e and

.
our community
.

!I

0+-The Sunday·Times-8entinel, Sunday, April20, 1980

-

Homemakers'
Circle

..

__

IY lETTlE CUlM

By Bryson R. fBudl Cartt'r
Gallia County Extension Agent
GALIJPOUS - The lOth Ohio
Perlonnance Tested All Breeds Bull
Sale will be held at the Eastern Ohio
Research and Development Center
(EOIUJC), Belle Valley, Ohio, on
Monday, Apiil 21. There will be an
i,nterestlng and informative
program begilUiing at 2 p.m. The
sale begins at 6 p.m.
The all breeds sale includes
Angus, Charolais, Simmental,
Polled Hereford, Shorthorn, Red
Poll, Red Angus, Hereford, Linousin
&amp;nd Ankina. About 140 bulls will be
sold. Sale requirements are that ·
each bull must meet certification
requirements or certify superior.
Minimum requirements are :
Weaning weight ratio- .95; 140 day
gain ratio - .90; Yearling weight
ratio - .90; Minimum frame score
- 4.0; and Confonnation must be
approved by the screening committee.
In addition, all bulls must pass
rigid health and perlormance
requirements. Also they must pass
structural soundness, semen
evaluation and reproductive soundness examinations.
If you are interested in buYing a
herd bull then come early and inspect aU the bulls. It's an OP"
portunity to support your Buckeye
Beef Improvement Federation and a
chance to visit the other breeders.

!'I

' I'

We are having our annual Gallia
County Beef Queen and Beef· Prin-

cess Contest Thurilday evening, May
1 at the Gal!' · County Junior
Fairgrounds. If . · . know of a young
lady who is eligible but missed
receiving an application, then be
sure and contact us for one. Any girl
meeting the following requirements
is eligible to enter the contest:
1. She must have a beef farm background or be enrolled in a 4-H or
FFA beef project. The parents or
guardian must derive part of their
income from beef farming. If she intends to exhibit beef at the 1980 fair,
she automatically receives 5 points
on the judges' score sheet.
2. She must be at least 13 years of
age and not over 19 years of age as of
January 1, 1980. Contestants under
age 16, compete for Beef Princess.
3. The girl must be a resident of
Gallia County, or be an active member of a Gallia County 4-H Club or
FFAChapter.
Entry deadline is April23.
We will also have a Fitting and
Showing Demonstration for Junior
Fair Beef Exhibitors as part of the
program. Dave Mangione, County
Extension Agent, 4-H, 'Jackson
County, will conduct the demonstration. Following the evening's activities, there will be a light meal.
The Fitting and Showing Demonstration will get underway at ~ : 30
p.m. and the Princess Contest at
7:15 p.m. Anyone interested in 4-H,
FFA, and beef cattle production is
invited to attend.

BY:
DIANA S. EBERTS
COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT
HOME ECONOMICS
MEIGS COUNTY .

COST OF EATING OUT
POMEROY - The popularity of
eating out continues even in our
changing economy. But what Is the
cost of eating out? Today we are
going to be discussing the factors
that contribute to our decision of
whether to eat out or eat at home.
Some recent government figures
show that the average cost of food at
home is 78 cents and the average
cost of food eaten away from home is
J2.04. At first glance, these figures
overwhelm us. It looks like we
should eat at home. But let's look
closer at these figures and how they
are derived. First, consider that the
cost of foode at home only includes
the cost of the food itself and the cost
of eating out includes all costs, such
as labor, equipment and other
materials. These are the other factors that you, the homemaker, must
consider and add on to this average
food-at-home cost of 78 cents.
In addition to the raw food cost,
you have to add other costs such as :
- The cost of shopping for the food
- gasoline that you use, the car ex·
penses, the time to shop and the
plalUiing you do for the shopping.
- The cost in storing the food, the
space you're using up in your
refrigerator or cupboard, the
utilities.
- The cost of wrapping materials
for storage a(\d the waste and
storage. loss and again your time in. valved in storing.
- The cost of preparing the food ,
the utilities, the food waste due to
shrinkage or the slicing or cooking
losses, and again your time in

'I
"I

'.

'I
' I

t

preparing the food.
- The cost of serving and clean
up, such as linens, paper supplies
and containers you might buy.
- The cost of purchasing china
glasses, the cost of using the dishwasher, ·utilities, soap and equiP'
ment and again the cost of your time
in serving and cleaning.
There are other miscellaneous
costs such as the cost of your
uniform if you want to consider that
what you wear when you are cooking
is your uniform or the cost of the
apron you buy to protect your
clothing, and the overhead, just the
house tliat you live in, the cost of the
building, the depreciation or it, the
decor, the heating bill, the phone
bill, the light biU.
That average cost of eating out, or
the $2.04, doesn't look so high after
you consider all those hidden costs of
eating at home. You really have to
add onto that 78 cent figure. But I
think the two most important
decisions relaiive to coot that the
consumer must make is: (1) how
valuable is my time - we aU place
our own values on what our time is
worth; (2) is there some pleasure or
social gratification of dining out
that, although it is not measurable
and it is intangible. is worth a few
cents more.
AU educational programs and activities conducted by the Meigs
County Cooperative Extension Service are available to aU potential
clientele on a non-discriminatory ·
basis without regard to race, sex,
color, or religious affiliation.

F..I....._.UNl,

County agent's .corner
By Jobo C. Rice

Extension Ageot
Agriculture

apart; sweet cherry - 25 to 30 feet ;
and pear, dwarl -10wIS feet.
Plant early cabbage and broccoli
plants into garden. Check ven·
tilation of greenhouse cold frames
and hot beds regularly on sunny
days. Make plantings of early
vegetables such as beets, carrots,
leaf lettuce and radishes (soon as
soil conditions pemiit).
Sow seed of tender annual flowers
like phlox, cosmos, hybrid petunias,
marigolds and zinnias in the cold
frame.
Prevent iron deficiency chlorisis

Meigs Couoty
POMEROY - Bull Sale ... The
lOth Ohio Perlonnance Tested all
Breeds Bull Sale will be held at the
Eastern Ohio Research and
Development Center (EOROC),
Belle Valley. on April 21. There will
be an interesting and informative
program beginning at 2 p.m. The
sale starts at 6 p.m.
The all breeds sale includes
Angus, Charolais, Simmental,
Polled Hereford, Shorthorn, Red r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - "-:PoU, Red Angus, Limousin and
Ankina. About 14ll bulls will he sold.
Sale requirements are that each bull
must meet certification requirements or certify superior.
.
Minimum requirements are :
Weaning weight ratio- .95 ; 140 day
gain ratio - .90; Yearing weight
ratio - .90 ; Minimum frame score
- 4.0; and Conformation must be
approved by the screening committee.
In addition, all bulls must pass
rigid health and ·performance
requirements. Also, they must pass
structural soundness, semen
evaluation and reproductive soundYou save
ness examinations.
(or me sam eOallars oil on purchase ol
FORAGE CLUB - Anyone in·
lawn and oarden tractor wrth 50'' mower )
terested in entering the Forage Contest or Club, please call the Ex·
tension Office. Requirements are as
follows: use and follow soil tests, use
an entire field with a minimum of
two acres, make three cuttings by
June 10, July 25, and September 15,
and make not more than four cuttings. You may also have cuttings
analyzed if you wish.
Records need to be kept on cutting
You save
ideas, bale counts, fertilizer, etc.
The Extension Service will provide
(or the same dolla1s oJI on purchase
ol 11 -HP LT-110 wrlh 42" mower.)
suggestions on fertilization, weed
control, insect control, see that
fields are measured and other
questions that might arise.
If you have any questions, please
. call the office.
April is the month that you ...
Train the growth of young fruit
trees. Lack of attention to training in
the ea rly stages of tree development
results in severe problems with limb
Yousave
breakage, spray coverage and harvestinfi in later years. Regular
pruning is necessary to maintain
tree sbape and vigor.
Be ready to go AND mow on a new Ford ... These
Fertilize trees and shrubs. These
are limited time offers, so come in soon to
plants profit from an application of ·
fertilizer. The fertilizer can be either
surlace or drill hole applied. Water
or cultivate the fertilizer into the soil
for best results.
251 W. Main
99 2·2668
M ., Tu., Th ., F. B filS
Plant fruit trees. If you are p!al)Pomeroy , 0.
Wed . 8 til 8
ting more than one, spacing should
Sat. 8 l il12
be as follows : Apple, semi-&lt;Iwarl 25 feet apart; dwarf - 10 feet or
more. Cherry, red tart; peach ; pear,
standard; plum, European or Damsam or Japanese; aU 20 to 25 fet

TAKING A TODDLER
CAMPING
GALLIPOLIS - Camping has
become a popular way for the entire
family to vacation. It is economical
and •gives everyone the opportunity
to explore nature as well as take in
local sights.
With foresight, camping can be a
pleasure even with a youngster in
tow. It is wise to begin to gather infonnation early , campground directories and maps for the area chosen.
It is important not to leave
scheduling to chance with small
children along. A tired tot adds to
the frustration of not being able to
find accommodations. So, make
campground reservations in advance. Know what facilities are
available and the location of a
market, laundromat, etc.
Pack lightly. But, don't overlook
special needs of a child. Include
some favorite toys - perhaps in a
drawstring bag - that are readily
available and that give a feeling of
security in strange surroundings. A
portable playpen or crib provides
safety, and when tent camping,
keeps a sleeping tot ahove damp
ground.
Pack clothing with an eye to
layering. A sweater or sweatshirt
can be worn over pajamas at night,
and a long or short sleeved polo in
the morning. A cap and mittens
chase chills. Having a coin-{)p laundry nearby is more practical than
toting extra clothing. Lightly soiled
items can be handwashed at the
campground and line-dried.
Prior to the trip, collect small
plastic bottles arid other containers.
Fill them with grooming and
cleaning aids to last the length ofthe
trip. Mark the contents clearly.
Prepare for dishwashing, clothes
care and bathing. Pack some
clothing or gear in various sized
plastic pails. It's a good idea to take
some extra cartons or boxes to hold
the various items. Then use the pails
for dishwashing, hand laundry,
grooming, even for bathing a tod·
dler!
Other hints for camping with a tot
include keeping juice, milk and
snack foods - plus cleansing wipes
- handy for use enroute. Diapers
and other clolhi(\g changes will also
be needed. Containers for liquids
with screw on caps help prevent
spillovers. Use an ice chest or ther·
mal bag suitably sized to fit on the
floor of the car.
Always keep safety in mind when
a child is along. Ideally, the camP'
site should be well away from a
road, lake, stream. Note potential ·
hazards for the toddler and take
precautions when possible. Of course, a tot should not be left alone.
case of an emergency.
Take special care around campfires.
One of the great pleasures of camBe sure to take a first aid kit with
supplies to clean and care for minor ping is seeing things anew,
especially through the eyes of a
cuts, wounds or insect bites. Bring
child. Enjoy the experience by
any medications a child may
providing necessities and comforts
require. Find out if a hospital or docfor a youngster ahead of time.
tor is nearby or can be reached in

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JUNEAU , Alaska (AP)
Alaskans savoring the state's cominitment to give them cash from its
9il wealth and all but wipe out state
. income !axes now have an encore to
Consider - shares in state-owned

assets.

· It's called PACE - Portfolio of
Alaska Citizens Enterprises. '
The proposal introduced as
legislation Thursday by Gov. Jay
Hammond and House Speaker Terry
Gardiner would sell stock in some
state-owned assets to Alaskans at
tnarket value. Fifteen percent of the
stock ir1 the assets would be
distributed free to all Alaskans.
: Chief among the assets are oi~
coal and natural gas. But the
legislation provides that anything
built with state money, be it offices,
. · airports or pipelines, could be tur·
' ned over to citiz~ns.
The state could even buy shares in
private companies, such as airlines,
manufacturers or businesses, to sell

.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - State
officials are asking Ohioans to consider their home state as prime
; . territory when planning their next
• ; vacation.
: · "Ohio's For You" is the slogan
: : and red balloons are the symbols the
• : state is using to promote Ohio in
! : much the same way New York has
~ used a red heart and the words "I
~: Love New York" to advertise that

See

~: state.

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BACKHOE

L'EG~l NOTICE

The "dividends" are to be an an·

TO BIDDERS

Notice is hereby given

nual payment tii.d ·to a kind of oil
revenues "state savings account"
which is building and will give
thousands annually to longtime
Alaskans in the 1990s.

!hat sealed bids will be
received by · the City
Manager, of the City of

Gallipolis, Ohio at his office
In the Municipal Building
for
miscellaneous

Central Soya

of Ohio, Inc.
Third &amp; Sycamore, Galfipolis

p"""•

• : The campaign is being supervised
~ • by the Ohio Department of
' : Economic and Community DeveloP'
' ment which hired Marschalk Co.
•:
~- inc., Cleveland, to work out the
; details.
· . An allocation of $250,000 from a
' : total $350,000 in Ohio funds will be
: : spent on media advertising,\ which is
~; to begin May .5. A toll free telephone
· , number 1-800-BUCKEYE, w1ll
: · provide 'information about vacation
: : areas said Robert G. Stockdale,
;: lnark~ting specialist for the Depart·
ment of Economic and Community

Development.
New York and other states have
taken their vacation campaigns
beyond their borders, but for now,
Ohio will concentrate on Ohioans.
"This state is a net exporter of
travelers. We want to change that
around,'' Stockdale said. He noted
that the energy situation is starting
to change travel habits.
"Many people are looking for
vacations closer to home and
economical to the family,'' he said.
According to Stockdale, 120,000
Ohioans are employed in vacationrelated businesses. "We'd like to in·
crease that," he added.
The state government isn't the
only body working on promoting the
area as a vacationland.
In · Portsmouth, a non-profit
organization called Southern Ohio
Tourism Promotion Services Inc.
has fanned to draw visitors to the
·state's southern portion.
Gary Shepherd of Portsmouth, the
group's chairman, predicted that

Jiffy-Crochet!

recreation equipment.
Bids will be received at
the above named office un-

lil12 :00 Noon;localltme on
Wednesday! April 30, 1980
and public y opened and

read at that hour and place .
Bid forms may be obtained

in the Office of the City

Manager,

518

Second

City of Gallipol is,

Ohio.
April201 271

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
Aprilll, 1980
Contract Sales Legal

.

Copy No. 81H14B
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
PMS ·OOOS(l73)

Sealed proposals will be

the organization will have between
300 and 400 members within a year.
The group is seeking members
from all 'businesses, attractions and
festivals, tourist-related industries
and individuals. It was formed at the
urging of state Sen. Cooper Snyder,
R·Blanchester.
So far, two projects nave been
pianned by the organi7.ation- a tour
April 23 and 24 from Cincinnati to
Marietta and preparation of a
brochure listing events and attractions in southern Ohio which is
expected to be ready by the end of
May.
, Shepherd said the group also
hopes to become a clearing agency.
to help avoid conflicts in scheduiing
events in southern Ohio.
The latest U.S. travel data figures,
which are considered the most
reliable by those in the tourism industry, show that Ohio's tourist
revenue in 1976 was $3:2 billion.
Both Shepherd and Stockdale are
hoping to boost that amount.

j: Recession fails to halt Columbus growth
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - By
· 1985, the state's capital city will need
: nearly 4li,OOO new housing units, ac: cording to an official of the Colum·
· 'bus Area Chamber of Commerce.
"There's a lot of pent-up demand
• tor housing in the community," said
James Thomas, the chamber's
director of research. "For 1985,
we're projecting between 35,000 and
38 OOOhOusing units to be added."
Despite the start of what economic
experts are describing as a
recession Thomas said Columbus
appears io be in sound financial
shape aild is continuing to grow.
"I can't see anything that would
get in the road of continued growth,"
he said. "And we are a significant
·financial center. Our banks . and
savings and loans have assets of $22
billion and the five state retirement
systems which· are part of central
Ohio acUvity, have $11 billion in
them."
Noting the city serves as
headquarters for 56 insurance com·

'

panies, Thomas indicates the city's
stable profile relies on its relatively
equal employment mix.
Government, ma11ufacturing, service and trade industries account for
at least 80 percent of the employment, or about 20 percent each.
The city hasi1't experienced the
massive labor problems of northeast
Ohio where large manufacturers are
the major sources of employment.
"No one industry dominates the
employment scene here,"· said
Thomas. "The large employers the state, Ohio State University, and
the city and county- are relatively
stable."
While other communities struggle
to stem rising unemployment, ~
Columbus jobless rate dropped from
4.7 percent to 4.6 .percent between
January and FebrUary.
Severjll projects should sustain
the stability and fuel the growth pattern. A convention center sOon will
be finished along with a major
luxury hotel at the north end of the

.... --·~·----

downtown area while a new office
structure and new parking garage is
beginning to lise at the opposite end
of the downtown.
"We have the ability to continue to
grow in all directions," said
Thomas. "There's open land In all
directions for industry and residential and commercial projects.
" The tax base should continue to
grow, which ought to maintain a
very strong financial baBe for the
Cl'ty"
.
Another economic shot-in-the-arm
for the city was the decision by
American Electric Power Co. w
move Its headquarters from New
York.to Columbus. The corporation
Is in the pnicess !#. hiring between
400 and 500 employees, and wW
uiUmaMly tic aN Ita IPByroi) W
1,5011 wheil 'it finally gel.'! ll!ttled.
Other brigbt spol8 Include plans
by Honda Motor Co. to cmstruct an
automotive assembly plant in nearby Marysville that will add another,
2,000 jobs.

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

The 21-memher board report~
that newspaper membership
reached a high point of 1,372 last
year. Radio and television mem·
bership reached 3,646, also a high.
Overseas, the board said, more than
one bil)ion persons a day in 115 countries are estimated to have access to
AP news reports.
The board also said that construction is nearly complete on the
first 50 earth stations in the United
States as part of the AP satellite
distribution system. Four hundred
stations will be installed before the
end of the year.

week has been eulogized as one of
the most influential Western
thinkers of the century. ·
Simone de Beauvoir, the French
writer, political activist and Sartre's
nearly life-long companion, rode in a
black-draped car with her sister and
Sartre's adopted daughter Arlette el
Kaim.
Actors Yves Montand and Simone
Signore! and Socialist Party No. 2
leader Michel Rocard were among
the familiar figures being pushed
along by the crowd, which was often
unruly, especially where
photographers fought for photos.
At the cemetery, where Sartre's
ashes will later be buried near the
grave of 19th century French poet
Charles Baudelaire, the scene was
chaos, with photographers perched
atop the larger funeral monuments

1 - - - - - - - - - 4 Avenue,

Under PACE, residents wouldn't
get cash. They would get stock.
"Right now, if you want to invest
in Alaska's oil, you have to buy
shares in Exxon,'' said Gardiner, 29,
a collegiH!ducated fishennan born
in Ketchikan. "This would give
people a chance to invest directly in
Alaska .''

The board said that the scope of
the AP coverage in 1979 ranged from
war in Afghanistan to political scandal in South Dakota. "War and
rebellion and coup - stories as old
as the world," the board said. " And
a story as new as the nuclear age Three Mile Island, the AP's chance
to report swiftly, coolly and accurately a story that no one had even
had to report before. ''
The board noted that the AP
created a campaign databank - an
electronic reference library - to
cover each candidate in the 198Q
presidential election. The databank
was made available to all members
as a joint project of AP and the New

received at the office of the

Garden.

41 '1111

Under that law, people who have
ftled a state income tax return for
any three years since statehood in
1959 · will be exempt from future
taxes and get refunds on 1979 !axes.
The state this year will pay residents
$50 in oil wealth "dividends" for
each year they have lived in Alaska
since 1959.

\:Ohioans promoting state vacations

On Your

'

and give a way .
The money for PA,CE would divert
funds from Alaska's burgeoning
state treasury - now swelling so
quickly from oil revenues that
analysts last week uppedtheir threemonth-old estimate of its value In
mid-1981 by $319 ll)illion - to $4.5
billion.
"Distributing a portion of Alaska's
energy wealth to the people of
Alaska in the fonn of incomeproducing assets would increase
their involvement and awareness of
the management of the state's
natural resources, the development
of Its local industries and in the
capitalist system overall," Hammond said. "Ali Alaskans, including
the little guy, would have a piece of
the action.,
This proposal follows a "sharethe-state-wealth" plan Hammond
signed into law Tuesday that will put
$400 million into the pockets of
400,000 Alaskans this year alqne.

York Times Infonnation Service.
In the area of photos, the board
said picture handling was speeded
up and the cost of network operation
reduced by cutting the number of
control points and eliminating
Laserphoto operators from all
bureaus except New Yark !IJ!d ad·
ding six photo editors . .

civilization."

PARIS (AP) - Thousands of
young people joined political and intellectual leaders in the streets of
Paris on Saturday to pay final
tribute to philosopher-writer JeanPaul Sartre.
Sartre, beacon of existentialist
philosOphy and the moral conscience
of post-war France, died Tuesday
nightattheage of74.
His body was taken by cortege
Saturday afternoon from Br!)ussais
Hospital, where he died of a
pullhonary edema, to Montparnasse
Cemetery, where he was laid in a
temporary grave until cremation
Wednesday.
By the time the cortege had made
the journey from the south of Paris
w Montparnasse, nearly 30,000
people had joined in the final demon·
stration .for Sartre, who this past

Next proposed boon for Alaskans:

$262

The AP Board of Directors, in a
report prepared for distribution to
the members on Monday, focused on
the challenges faced by the
cooperative at a time when
"religious, political, military and
economic tensiol15 tear once more at

Thousands march to honor Sartre

REGION 8 OF HISTORICAL Societies from 12 and Miss Mabel Phillips, all of Gallipolis. Re-elected
counties register for annual dinner-meeting Saturday president was Charles W. Blakeslee, in his absence; he
at Gallipolis' St. Peter's Episcopal Church, Alice is hospitalized for surgery and treatment of a fracture,
Margaret Mossman ·serving as registrar. Signing the but Maj.-Gen. George E. Bush (U.S. Army Ret.) and
book is Mrs. Garland Elliott. At her side is Mrs. Harry . Catherine Remley presided. Seventy attended.
King. Behind Mrs. Elliott are Mrs. Hortense E'pling

34" Ford Rotary Mower
FREE with Ford LT-80
Lawn Tractor Purchase!

far as increasing his costs during the
past year," he said.

ART AWARDS
NEW YORK (AP) -Six painters
and a sculptor have been declared
wiMers of the 1980 art awards given
by the American Academy and In- ·
stitute of Arts and Letters.
Awards of $4,000 each will go to
painters Richard' Anuszkiewicz, Edward Dugmore, Marion Lerner
Levine and Chamiion vol'l Wiegand,
and to Sculptor Howard Newman.
Painters Dolores Mllmoe and Sidney
Laufman will receive awards of
~.ooo and ,1,500 bespectively.
The artists will receive their
prizesMay21.
•

HONOLULU (AP)
The
Associated Press will hold Its annual
meetln!i here Monday, marking the
opening of the American Newspaper
Publishers Association's traditional
unewspaper week."
The ANPA convention sessions
April 21-23 will cover topics ranging
from the controversy over the Olympics to the· American hostages in
Iran, and will be highlighted by a
speech by U.N. Secretary-General
Kurt Waldhelm on Wednesday.
The AP meeting, which is ex·
pected to draw newspaper and
broadcast executives fr001 every
state, will include the election of six
directors of the news cooperative, a
luncheon speech by President Ferdinand E. Marca~ of the Philippines
and a report on "News by Satellite"
from AP President Keith Fuller and
Vice President David Bowen.
'
Jack W. Tarver, chiUnnan of the
AP and publisher of the Atlanta Con.stitution and Journal, will preside.

~~~·~--~

credit has been the liiggest factor as

He said Ohio farmers also are finding that seed, fuel, fertilizer and
other suppliers are more reluctant
kl allow charges.
Brunton said low livestock and
grain prices will force many Ohio
farmers from business. "Fanners
have been subsidizing consumers for
a long.time hecause they can't control what they get for their products,'' he said.

'

or

~lln ~\l.iBC!l:mdl

Farm aid funds running low
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
well will soon run dry for Ohio farmers !!JOking to the federal government for money to help plan\ the
spring crop, says the state director
of the Farmers Home Administration.
"We've got roughly ~ million to
get us through this period," said
Wallace Brunton. "We think we've .
got more than enough applications
wuse all the funds we've got."
Brunton ,said his agency would
have run out of money if Congress
hadn't approved a $2 billion extension of the Economic Emergency
.Losn Program. The· act was set to
expire in May, but was extended un.tll Sept. 30, 1981. He said Ohio farmers will receive about $14 million
of this extra money.
The Farmers Home Ad·
ministration, a divisioo !#. the U.S.
Department of Agriculture, ·lends
money w fanners who can~t get
money frml C!llllllll!relallenders.
"l.enders are becoming worried
over the ability of these people w
repay," said Brunton of the influx of
FHA llian applications.
"'l'be costs of all inputs !wve in· creuec~. One of a fanner's biggest ·
,inpljts II credit and the ~ of his

ANP A convention
starts in Honolulu

in pin onk by treating with soluble
iron containing materials available
from local garden centers.
Follow fruit tree spray schedule.
Contact local Cooperative Extension ,
Service offices for infonnation oil
proper sprays and when to apply. ·
Begin mowing lawn where grass iS
about three inches high. Set mowei
to cut two to two and one-half inchei
high.
.
Prune and' hegin spraYing
dusting roses as soon as growth al"
pears. Apply pest controls and fer,.
tilizer regularly.

...

Director of the Oh io Oepar ·
of Transportation ,

t~m~nt .

to get above the ·pushing, shoving
crowd.
The crowd was so thick that
dozens of wreaths and bouquets
could not be passed through to the
temporary grave site.
Sartre's body will he cremated
Wednesday in a private ceremony at
Pere Lachaise cemetery, the burial
ground for many d. France's
greatest figures. His ashes will then
be returned to Montparnasse
Cemetery.
A national outpouring of emotion
and demonstrations of respect for
Sartre led up to Saturday's march.
He bas been the subject of magazine
cover stories, television specials and
eulogies by French President Valery
Giscard d'Estaing and leading intellectual figures.

r..:olumbus, Ohio, until 10: 00

A.M ., Oh io Standard Time .
Tuesday, May 13. 1900, for
improvem ents :
Athens, Gallia, Hocking,
Me igs and WashinQ ton

counties, Ohio, on vanous

" The date set for co mp letion of this wor k. shall be
set forth in the b id ding
.,
proposal .''
Each bidde r shall be
required to file w ith hi s bi d
a certified check or
cashier's check ior an
amount equal to five percent of his bid, but in no
event more than fifty
thousand dollars, or a bond
for fen percent of his bid,
payable to the Director .
Bidders must apply, on
the proper forms,
for
qual iftca iion at least fen
days pr ior to the date set
for openin?. bids in ac·
cordance wtfh Chapter 5525
Ohio Rev ised Code .
Plans and specif ications
are on fil e in the Department of Transportation and
th e office of the Distr ic t
Deput y Di rector.
The Director reserves
the right to reject any and
all bids.

'oca1lons, by apply i ng
retroflec1orlzed poryes1er
compound for centertlines,
lane lines and channelizing
lines.
The Oh lo Department of
Transportation hereb,Y
notif ies all bidders that 1t
will affirmatively insure
that in any contract entered into pursuan t ,to t~ i s
advertisement, m1nortty
business enterpr ises wit I be
atforded tutt opportun ity to
submit b ids in responSe to
th is invitation and wi ll not
be discriminated against
on the grounds of race,
color , or national origin in
cons ider ati on
for
an
award .
" Min imum wage rates
DAVIDL. WEIR
for this pro ject have been
DIRECTOR
predeterm i ned as required
by law and are set for th in Rev . 8· 17·73
Apri \ 20, 27
the bid proposal. "

AIt CompNIOOI'S•Drlll PNIOII
Y1111·Bind Sawa-Cut l&gt;lf oowa
Grinders
WNnchei
Socketa
A.lrTooill
Farm Su ppllea

TOOL
AUCTION
TUESDAY, APRIL 22 at 7:00 PM

7084

NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY
NORTH ROUTE 62

\ .· J

&amp;,~'8~
She'll enjoy that nip.in the air
cuddled in tflis tacket.
ChOO!f • warm combination ol
three oolors in ac.ylk 3-ply
mediurn-wei&amp;ht sport yarn for
this jiHy jacket in easy shell
stitch crochet. Pattern 7084:
Sizes 4-6; 8-10 included.
$1.75 lor each pattern. Add 501
each pattern for first·dass airmail and handline.
Ill:

Mice ....

s.n•

;: f ·;·

IIHllaaH lletll
Tile Dally Senlllle1
... 163, Old C...U Sll. Now
Yaft, NY 111011. Priat R11111, .
Mt11111, lip, P1ltlm Number.
EXCITlNG! New 1980 NHOL£·
CRAFT CATALOG with over I 70
desicns in creat variety of mtt..
3free patterns in~de . Send $1 .00

132-QuiH ~ · .. ... $1.50
131-'ld I llotk (!lilts ... $1.50
l»Sw.llrt-SU. 31-56 .$1.50
12'-QikL'Ealf ll1flllt11 ' $1.50
12Ualdlwrl Qoilts.... $1.50
127~ ••• Orilias. ' .$1.50
1~ Fllwlrs ...... $1.50
125-PIIII Olilts ..... ... $1.50
12'-'ilts ·~ cn.-ts . .$1.50
123-hldl 'I' Plldl Olilts$1.50
122·SIIIf ·~ hff Quilts ' '$1.50
121_,.. SMIHIIII .... suo
117-&amp;lr .... 'Ill.. ' '$1.50
111-11-- ... Qlllll .. ' .$1.50
1~5-~~H~t c.lllt
......
11,..
. ....
...10
110.11 '"" ••.. ' .. . ' 1.50
lit-Sow I hit ........ $1.M
101-1111111 ...... '' $1.st
151111111 fllllilil ..... $1.50
1051c1•t CNdolt ..... $1.50
103-15 Q111ts fir TodiJ ... $1.M
101-QIIII Cd tlw .. . . .$1.50

H'M

PT. PLEASANT, WEST VIRGINIA
NOTE 0... Ill t•IW •Io,.. ~~~ al.,.1jle0v tnhl~ o t

10011 ,., ... co~ t~ t n.., to"'* l&lt;l dol ~ !'! nl l!·lfl"''llll ~ ll
"'UIIOO ll'lete • •II be lfi.Ou'UI'dl ol o;to ll .,.lw 011 ~ o l u&gt;dultrLal tool ftiiM l«lli I'III SC ot emt Tr&gt;e&lt;twol l ~m ln¥tl)tl
IO!IIold So i ii i)HI.Itl Wi'l&lt;&gt;leU~IIInii UI~IOI~U ~ ... Deiiii'IIOI!Ir&gt;d

Hug a
Industrial Tools

Alr Compreaaora
Air Tools
).

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•.•...........
.,.....-114 ...

,l,lrc__....ol'l

Hany Duly

..

Mechanic Tools
l1 -1lflt; W-Ietl
42- l tp:;W,_.,Mit

l1 ·', ~ o!WtiMjiiiiC1~

3-IH. P' . .,.....,..

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Tool• for
Everyone

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41 • «&lt; pc Seo:lll Mh

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tl·Cit,.,l., uwt
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11· 1l ·:lMN"'f
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ELECTRICAL TOOLS
..c..•onu••

Miscellaneous

.. TI .... lllfiiON

y,,.......,,,u

U -ChMMIWiitlll

a- • ~ '-*

•t +W" 'IMH
II'lklc

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500-l ........ e4-'-'ftc..

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Machlnlata ToOII

35- llo ~ tfld.t-

11- Dttll~

:t2·711G• ..,_,.._ ..u

Farm Tool•

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M-lllllone!NU
!I . , I &amp;SMI.. II!t
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.ANI OTHI" TOOU DA't'Cf' U.ll TOO
NUMitOIJI TO .lNTIOII

THIS IS A PARTIAL
LIST ALL SUIIJECTTO PRIOR SALE
UUGOMOUCTIDIY

JAMIE HAYS

\

AUCTIONHII'S

NOTf:rt~ltwflll!ol ............................................ ,__ ............ 0¥1Ch

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D-4-The Sunday Times-8entinel, Sunday, April20, 1980

1
'

I:'

AgricultlJ~e and

.
our community
.

!I

0+-The Sunday·Times-8entinel, Sunday, April20, 1980

-

Homemakers'
Circle

..

__

IY lETTlE CUlM

By Bryson R. fBudl Cartt'r
Gallia County Extension Agent
GALIJPOUS - The lOth Ohio
Perlonnance Tested All Breeds Bull
Sale will be held at the Eastern Ohio
Research and Development Center
(EOIUJC), Belle Valley, Ohio, on
Monday, Apiil 21. There will be an
i,nterestlng and informative
program begilUiing at 2 p.m. The
sale begins at 6 p.m.
The all breeds sale includes
Angus, Charolais, Simmental,
Polled Hereford, Shorthorn, Red
Poll, Red Angus, Hereford, Linousin
&amp;nd Ankina. About 140 bulls will be
sold. Sale requirements are that ·
each bull must meet certification
requirements or certify superior.
Minimum requirements are :
Weaning weight ratio- .95; 140 day
gain ratio - .90; Yearling weight
ratio - .90; Minimum frame score
- 4.0; and Confonnation must be
approved by the screening committee.
In addition, all bulls must pass
rigid health and perlormance
requirements. Also they must pass
structural soundness, semen
evaluation and reproductive soundness examinations.
If you are interested in buYing a
herd bull then come early and inspect aU the bulls. It's an OP"
portunity to support your Buckeye
Beef Improvement Federation and a
chance to visit the other breeders.

!'I

' I'

We are having our annual Gallia
County Beef Queen and Beef· Prin-

cess Contest Thurilday evening, May
1 at the Gal!' · County Junior
Fairgrounds. If . · . know of a young
lady who is eligible but missed
receiving an application, then be
sure and contact us for one. Any girl
meeting the following requirements
is eligible to enter the contest:
1. She must have a beef farm background or be enrolled in a 4-H or
FFA beef project. The parents or
guardian must derive part of their
income from beef farming. If she intends to exhibit beef at the 1980 fair,
she automatically receives 5 points
on the judges' score sheet.
2. She must be at least 13 years of
age and not over 19 years of age as of
January 1, 1980. Contestants under
age 16, compete for Beef Princess.
3. The girl must be a resident of
Gallia County, or be an active member of a Gallia County 4-H Club or
FFAChapter.
Entry deadline is April23.
We will also have a Fitting and
Showing Demonstration for Junior
Fair Beef Exhibitors as part of the
program. Dave Mangione, County
Extension Agent, 4-H, 'Jackson
County, will conduct the demonstration. Following the evening's activities, there will be a light meal.
The Fitting and Showing Demonstration will get underway at ~ : 30
p.m. and the Princess Contest at
7:15 p.m. Anyone interested in 4-H,
FFA, and beef cattle production is
invited to attend.

BY:
DIANA S. EBERTS
COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT
HOME ECONOMICS
MEIGS COUNTY .

COST OF EATING OUT
POMEROY - The popularity of
eating out continues even in our
changing economy. But what Is the
cost of eating out? Today we are
going to be discussing the factors
that contribute to our decision of
whether to eat out or eat at home.
Some recent government figures
show that the average cost of food at
home is 78 cents and the average
cost of food eaten away from home is
J2.04. At first glance, these figures
overwhelm us. It looks like we
should eat at home. But let's look
closer at these figures and how they
are derived. First, consider that the
cost of foode at home only includes
the cost of the food itself and the cost
of eating out includes all costs, such
as labor, equipment and other
materials. These are the other factors that you, the homemaker, must
consider and add on to this average
food-at-home cost of 78 cents.
In addition to the raw food cost,
you have to add other costs such as :
- The cost of shopping for the food
- gasoline that you use, the car ex·
penses, the time to shop and the
plalUiing you do for the shopping.
- The cost in storing the food, the
space you're using up in your
refrigerator or cupboard, the
utilities.
- The cost of wrapping materials
for storage a(\d the waste and
storage. loss and again your time in. valved in storing.
- The cost of preparing the food ,
the utilities, the food waste due to
shrinkage or the slicing or cooking
losses, and again your time in

'I
"I

'.

'I
' I

t

preparing the food.
- The cost of serving and clean
up, such as linens, paper supplies
and containers you might buy.
- The cost of purchasing china
glasses, the cost of using the dishwasher, ·utilities, soap and equiP'
ment and again the cost of your time
in serving and cleaning.
There are other miscellaneous
costs such as the cost of your
uniform if you want to consider that
what you wear when you are cooking
is your uniform or the cost of the
apron you buy to protect your
clothing, and the overhead, just the
house tliat you live in, the cost of the
building, the depreciation or it, the
decor, the heating bill, the phone
bill, the light biU.
That average cost of eating out, or
the $2.04, doesn't look so high after
you consider all those hidden costs of
eating at home. You really have to
add onto that 78 cent figure. But I
think the two most important
decisions relaiive to coot that the
consumer must make is: (1) how
valuable is my time - we aU place
our own values on what our time is
worth; (2) is there some pleasure or
social gratification of dining out
that, although it is not measurable
and it is intangible. is worth a few
cents more.
AU educational programs and activities conducted by the Meigs
County Cooperative Extension Service are available to aU potential
clientele on a non-discriminatory ·
basis without regard to race, sex,
color, or religious affiliation.

F..I....._.UNl,

County agent's .corner
By Jobo C. Rice

Extension Ageot
Agriculture

apart; sweet cherry - 25 to 30 feet ;
and pear, dwarl -10wIS feet.
Plant early cabbage and broccoli
plants into garden. Check ven·
tilation of greenhouse cold frames
and hot beds regularly on sunny
days. Make plantings of early
vegetables such as beets, carrots,
leaf lettuce and radishes (soon as
soil conditions pemiit).
Sow seed of tender annual flowers
like phlox, cosmos, hybrid petunias,
marigolds and zinnias in the cold
frame.
Prevent iron deficiency chlorisis

Meigs Couoty
POMEROY - Bull Sale ... The
lOth Ohio Perlonnance Tested all
Breeds Bull Sale will be held at the
Eastern Ohio Research and
Development Center (EOROC),
Belle Valley. on April 21. There will
be an interesting and informative
program beginning at 2 p.m. The
sale starts at 6 p.m.
The all breeds sale includes
Angus, Charolais, Simmental,
Polled Hereford, Shorthorn, Red r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - "-:PoU, Red Angus, Limousin and
Ankina. About 14ll bulls will he sold.
Sale requirements are that each bull
must meet certification requirements or certify superior.
.
Minimum requirements are :
Weaning weight ratio- .95 ; 140 day
gain ratio - .90; Yearing weight
ratio - .90 ; Minimum frame score
- 4.0; and Conformation must be
approved by the screening committee.
In addition, all bulls must pass
rigid health and ·performance
requirements. Also, they must pass
structural soundness, semen
evaluation and reproductive soundYou save
ness examinations.
(or me sam eOallars oil on purchase ol
FORAGE CLUB - Anyone in·
lawn and oarden tractor wrth 50'' mower )
terested in entering the Forage Contest or Club, please call the Ex·
tension Office. Requirements are as
follows: use and follow soil tests, use
an entire field with a minimum of
two acres, make three cuttings by
June 10, July 25, and September 15,
and make not more than four cuttings. You may also have cuttings
analyzed if you wish.
Records need to be kept on cutting
You save
ideas, bale counts, fertilizer, etc.
The Extension Service will provide
(or the same dolla1s oJI on purchase
ol 11 -HP LT-110 wrlh 42" mower.)
suggestions on fertilization, weed
control, insect control, see that
fields are measured and other
questions that might arise.
If you have any questions, please
. call the office.
April is the month that you ...
Train the growth of young fruit
trees. Lack of attention to training in
the ea rly stages of tree development
results in severe problems with limb
Yousave
breakage, spray coverage and harvestinfi in later years. Regular
pruning is necessary to maintain
tree sbape and vigor.
Be ready to go AND mow on a new Ford ... These
Fertilize trees and shrubs. These
are limited time offers, so come in soon to
plants profit from an application of ·
fertilizer. The fertilizer can be either
surlace or drill hole applied. Water
or cultivate the fertilizer into the soil
for best results.
251 W. Main
99 2·2668
M ., Tu., Th ., F. B filS
Plant fruit trees. If you are p!al)Pomeroy , 0.
Wed . 8 til 8
ting more than one, spacing should
Sat. 8 l il12
be as follows : Apple, semi-&lt;Iwarl 25 feet apart; dwarf - 10 feet or
more. Cherry, red tart; peach ; pear,
standard; plum, European or Damsam or Japanese; aU 20 to 25 fet

TAKING A TODDLER
CAMPING
GALLIPOLIS - Camping has
become a popular way for the entire
family to vacation. It is economical
and •gives everyone the opportunity
to explore nature as well as take in
local sights.
With foresight, camping can be a
pleasure even with a youngster in
tow. It is wise to begin to gather infonnation early , campground directories and maps for the area chosen.
It is important not to leave
scheduling to chance with small
children along. A tired tot adds to
the frustration of not being able to
find accommodations. So, make
campground reservations in advance. Know what facilities are
available and the location of a
market, laundromat, etc.
Pack lightly. But, don't overlook
special needs of a child. Include
some favorite toys - perhaps in a
drawstring bag - that are readily
available and that give a feeling of
security in strange surroundings. A
portable playpen or crib provides
safety, and when tent camping,
keeps a sleeping tot ahove damp
ground.
Pack clothing with an eye to
layering. A sweater or sweatshirt
can be worn over pajamas at night,
and a long or short sleeved polo in
the morning. A cap and mittens
chase chills. Having a coin-{)p laundry nearby is more practical than
toting extra clothing. Lightly soiled
items can be handwashed at the
campground and line-dried.
Prior to the trip, collect small
plastic bottles arid other containers.
Fill them with grooming and
cleaning aids to last the length ofthe
trip. Mark the contents clearly.
Prepare for dishwashing, clothes
care and bathing. Pack some
clothing or gear in various sized
plastic pails. It's a good idea to take
some extra cartons or boxes to hold
the various items. Then use the pails
for dishwashing, hand laundry,
grooming, even for bathing a tod·
dler!
Other hints for camping with a tot
include keeping juice, milk and
snack foods - plus cleansing wipes
- handy for use enroute. Diapers
and other clolhi(\g changes will also
be needed. Containers for liquids
with screw on caps help prevent
spillovers. Use an ice chest or ther·
mal bag suitably sized to fit on the
floor of the car.
Always keep safety in mind when
a child is along. Ideally, the camP'
site should be well away from a
road, lake, stream. Note potential ·
hazards for the toddler and take
precautions when possible. Of course, a tot should not be left alone.
case of an emergency.
Take special care around campfires.
One of the great pleasures of camBe sure to take a first aid kit with
supplies to clean and care for minor ping is seeing things anew,
especially through the eyes of a
cuts, wounds or insect bites. Bring
child. Enjoy the experience by
any medications a child may
providing necessities and comforts
require. Find out if a hospital or docfor a youngster ahead of time.
tor is nearby or can be reached in

'

42" Ford Rotary Mower FREE with
new Ford Lawn and Garden
Tractor Purchase!

$401

A share in income-earning assets

PLUS •••

Grass Catcher FREE with new
Ford Riding Mower Tractor!

$124

DALE HIU FORD TRACTOR, INC.

Get
Going

JUNEAU , Alaska (AP)
Alaskans savoring the state's cominitment to give them cash from its
9il wealth and all but wipe out state
. income !axes now have an encore to
Consider - shares in state-owned

assets.

· It's called PACE - Portfolio of
Alaska Citizens Enterprises. '
The proposal introduced as
legislation Thursday by Gov. Jay
Hammond and House Speaker Terry
Gardiner would sell stock in some
state-owned assets to Alaskans at
tnarket value. Fifteen percent of the
stock ir1 the assets would be
distributed free to all Alaskans.
: Chief among the assets are oi~
coal and natural gas. But the
legislation provides that anything
built with state money, be it offices,
. · airports or pipelines, could be tur·
' ned over to citiz~ns.
The state could even buy shares in
private companies, such as airlines,
manufacturers or businesses, to sell

.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - State
officials are asking Ohioans to consider their home state as prime
; . territory when planning their next
• ; vacation.
: · "Ohio's For You" is the slogan
: : and red balloons are the symbols the
• : state is using to promote Ohio in
! : much the same way New York has
~ used a red heart and the words "I
~: Love New York" to advertise that

See

~: state.

We've got everything you're
looking for. .
IGRO ·LAWN &amp; GARDEN PRODUCTS

p~

Weed
Killer
ACME PRODUCTS

Model 40 Kelly Back Hoe

I I

IN STOCK!

I

"Ideal For tarm or Ught Industrial Jobs."

I I
I

·

Super
Weed

NQ
More

~t4'
~~~
Ume

Sulfur

I

3 POINT HITCH MOUNTING

STOP IN!

~·

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Ames
GARDEN SEED -

LAWN SEED

Geigy

AND CHECK OUT lHIS QUALITY BUILT

BACKHOE

L'EG~l NOTICE

The "dividends" are to be an an·

TO BIDDERS

Notice is hereby given

nual payment tii.d ·to a kind of oil
revenues "state savings account"
which is building and will give
thousands annually to longtime
Alaskans in the 1990s.

!hat sealed bids will be
received by · the City
Manager, of the City of

Gallipolis, Ohio at his office
In the Municipal Building
for
miscellaneous

Central Soya

of Ohio, Inc.
Third &amp; Sycamore, Galfipolis

p"""•

• : The campaign is being supervised
~ • by the Ohio Department of
' : Economic and Community DeveloP'
' ment which hired Marschalk Co.
•:
~- inc., Cleveland, to work out the
; details.
· . An allocation of $250,000 from a
' : total $350,000 in Ohio funds will be
: : spent on media advertising,\ which is
~; to begin May .5. A toll free telephone
· , number 1-800-BUCKEYE, w1ll
: · provide 'information about vacation
: : areas said Robert G. Stockdale,
;: lnark~ting specialist for the Depart·
ment of Economic and Community

Development.
New York and other states have
taken their vacation campaigns
beyond their borders, but for now,
Ohio will concentrate on Ohioans.
"This state is a net exporter of
travelers. We want to change that
around,'' Stockdale said. He noted
that the energy situation is starting
to change travel habits.
"Many people are looking for
vacations closer to home and
economical to the family,'' he said.
According to Stockdale, 120,000
Ohioans are employed in vacationrelated businesses. "We'd like to in·
crease that," he added.
The state government isn't the
only body working on promoting the
area as a vacationland.
In · Portsmouth, a non-profit
organization called Southern Ohio
Tourism Promotion Services Inc.
has fanned to draw visitors to the
·state's southern portion.
Gary Shepherd of Portsmouth, the
group's chairman, predicted that

Jiffy-Crochet!

recreation equipment.
Bids will be received at
the above named office un-

lil12 :00 Noon;localltme on
Wednesday! April 30, 1980
and public y opened and

read at that hour and place .
Bid forms may be obtained

in the Office of the City

Manager,

518

Second

City of Gallipol is,

Ohio.
April201 271

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
Aprilll, 1980
Contract Sales Legal

.

Copy No. 81H14B
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
PMS ·OOOS(l73)

Sealed proposals will be

the organization will have between
300 and 400 members within a year.
The group is seeking members
from all 'businesses, attractions and
festivals, tourist-related industries
and individuals. It was formed at the
urging of state Sen. Cooper Snyder,
R·Blanchester.
So far, two projects nave been
pianned by the organi7.ation- a tour
April 23 and 24 from Cincinnati to
Marietta and preparation of a
brochure listing events and attractions in southern Ohio which is
expected to be ready by the end of
May.
, Shepherd said the group also
hopes to become a clearing agency.
to help avoid conflicts in scheduiing
events in southern Ohio.
The latest U.S. travel data figures,
which are considered the most
reliable by those in the tourism industry, show that Ohio's tourist
revenue in 1976 was $3:2 billion.
Both Shepherd and Stockdale are
hoping to boost that amount.

j: Recession fails to halt Columbus growth
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - By
· 1985, the state's capital city will need
: nearly 4li,OOO new housing units, ac: cording to an official of the Colum·
· 'bus Area Chamber of Commerce.
"There's a lot of pent-up demand
• tor housing in the community," said
James Thomas, the chamber's
director of research. "For 1985,
we're projecting between 35,000 and
38 OOOhOusing units to be added."
Despite the start of what economic
experts are describing as a
recession Thomas said Columbus
appears io be in sound financial
shape aild is continuing to grow.
"I can't see anything that would
get in the road of continued growth,"
he said. "And we are a significant
·financial center. Our banks . and
savings and loans have assets of $22
billion and the five state retirement
systems which· are part of central
Ohio acUvity, have $11 billion in
them."
Noting the city serves as
headquarters for 56 insurance com·

'

panies, Thomas indicates the city's
stable profile relies on its relatively
equal employment mix.
Government, ma11ufacturing, service and trade industries account for
at least 80 percent of the employment, or about 20 percent each.
The city hasi1't experienced the
massive labor problems of northeast
Ohio where large manufacturers are
the major sources of employment.
"No one industry dominates the
employment scene here,"· said
Thomas. "The large employers the state, Ohio State University, and
the city and county- are relatively
stable."
While other communities struggle
to stem rising unemployment, ~
Columbus jobless rate dropped from
4.7 percent to 4.6 .percent between
January and FebrUary.
Severjll projects should sustain
the stability and fuel the growth pattern. A convention center sOon will
be finished along with a major
luxury hotel at the north end of the

.... --·~·----

downtown area while a new office
structure and new parking garage is
beginning to lise at the opposite end
of the downtown.
"We have the ability to continue to
grow in all directions," said
Thomas. "There's open land In all
directions for industry and residential and commercial projects.
" The tax base should continue to
grow, which ought to maintain a
very strong financial baBe for the
Cl'ty"
.
Another economic shot-in-the-arm
for the city was the decision by
American Electric Power Co. w
move Its headquarters from New
York.to Columbus. The corporation
Is in the pnicess !#. hiring between
400 and 500 employees, and wW
uiUmaMly tic aN Ita IPByroi) W
1,5011 wheil 'it finally gel.'! ll!ttled.
Other brigbt spol8 Include plans
by Honda Motor Co. to cmstruct an
automotive assembly plant in nearby Marysville that will add another,
2,000 jobs.

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

The 21-memher board report~
that newspaper membership
reached a high point of 1,372 last
year. Radio and television mem·
bership reached 3,646, also a high.
Overseas, the board said, more than
one bil)ion persons a day in 115 countries are estimated to have access to
AP news reports.
The board also said that construction is nearly complete on the
first 50 earth stations in the United
States as part of the AP satellite
distribution system. Four hundred
stations will be installed before the
end of the year.

week has been eulogized as one of
the most influential Western
thinkers of the century. ·
Simone de Beauvoir, the French
writer, political activist and Sartre's
nearly life-long companion, rode in a
black-draped car with her sister and
Sartre's adopted daughter Arlette el
Kaim.
Actors Yves Montand and Simone
Signore! and Socialist Party No. 2
leader Michel Rocard were among
the familiar figures being pushed
along by the crowd, which was often
unruly, especially where
photographers fought for photos.
At the cemetery, where Sartre's
ashes will later be buried near the
grave of 19th century French poet
Charles Baudelaire, the scene was
chaos, with photographers perched
atop the larger funeral monuments

1 - - - - - - - - - 4 Avenue,

Under PACE, residents wouldn't
get cash. They would get stock.
"Right now, if you want to invest
in Alaska's oil, you have to buy
shares in Exxon,'' said Gardiner, 29,
a collegiH!ducated fishennan born
in Ketchikan. "This would give
people a chance to invest directly in
Alaska .''

The board said that the scope of
the AP coverage in 1979 ranged from
war in Afghanistan to political scandal in South Dakota. "War and
rebellion and coup - stories as old
as the world," the board said. " And
a story as new as the nuclear age Three Mile Island, the AP's chance
to report swiftly, coolly and accurately a story that no one had even
had to report before. ''
The board noted that the AP
created a campaign databank - an
electronic reference library - to
cover each candidate in the 198Q
presidential election. The databank
was made available to all members
as a joint project of AP and the New

received at the office of the

Garden.

41 '1111

Under that law, people who have
ftled a state income tax return for
any three years since statehood in
1959 · will be exempt from future
taxes and get refunds on 1979 !axes.
The state this year will pay residents
$50 in oil wealth "dividends" for
each year they have lived in Alaska
since 1959.

\:Ohioans promoting state vacations

On Your

'

and give a way .
The money for PA,CE would divert
funds from Alaska's burgeoning
state treasury - now swelling so
quickly from oil revenues that
analysts last week uppedtheir threemonth-old estimate of its value In
mid-1981 by $319 ll)illion - to $4.5
billion.
"Distributing a portion of Alaska's
energy wealth to the people of
Alaska in the fonn of incomeproducing assets would increase
their involvement and awareness of
the management of the state's
natural resources, the development
of Its local industries and in the
capitalist system overall," Hammond said. "Ali Alaskans, including
the little guy, would have a piece of
the action.,
This proposal follows a "sharethe-state-wealth" plan Hammond
signed into law Tuesday that will put
$400 million into the pockets of
400,000 Alaskans this year alqne.

York Times Infonnation Service.
In the area of photos, the board
said picture handling was speeded
up and the cost of network operation
reduced by cutting the number of
control points and eliminating
Laserphoto operators from all
bureaus except New Yark !IJ!d ad·
ding six photo editors . .

civilization."

PARIS (AP) - Thousands of
young people joined political and intellectual leaders in the streets of
Paris on Saturday to pay final
tribute to philosopher-writer JeanPaul Sartre.
Sartre, beacon of existentialist
philosOphy and the moral conscience
of post-war France, died Tuesday
nightattheage of74.
His body was taken by cortege
Saturday afternoon from Br!)ussais
Hospital, where he died of a
pullhonary edema, to Montparnasse
Cemetery, where he was laid in a
temporary grave until cremation
Wednesday.
By the time the cortege had made
the journey from the south of Paris
w Montparnasse, nearly 30,000
people had joined in the final demon·
stration .for Sartre, who this past

Next proposed boon for Alaskans:

$262

The AP Board of Directors, in a
report prepared for distribution to
the members on Monday, focused on
the challenges faced by the
cooperative at a time when
"religious, political, military and
economic tensiol15 tear once more at

Thousands march to honor Sartre

REGION 8 OF HISTORICAL Societies from 12 and Miss Mabel Phillips, all of Gallipolis. Re-elected
counties register for annual dinner-meeting Saturday president was Charles W. Blakeslee, in his absence; he
at Gallipolis' St. Peter's Episcopal Church, Alice is hospitalized for surgery and treatment of a fracture,
Margaret Mossman ·serving as registrar. Signing the but Maj.-Gen. George E. Bush (U.S. Army Ret.) and
book is Mrs. Garland Elliott. At her side is Mrs. Harry . Catherine Remley presided. Seventy attended.
King. Behind Mrs. Elliott are Mrs. Hortense E'pling

34" Ford Rotary Mower
FREE with Ford LT-80
Lawn Tractor Purchase!

far as increasing his costs during the
past year," he said.

ART AWARDS
NEW YORK (AP) -Six painters
and a sculptor have been declared
wiMers of the 1980 art awards given
by the American Academy and In- ·
stitute of Arts and Letters.
Awards of $4,000 each will go to
painters Richard' Anuszkiewicz, Edward Dugmore, Marion Lerner
Levine and Chamiion vol'l Wiegand,
and to Sculptor Howard Newman.
Painters Dolores Mllmoe and Sidney
Laufman will receive awards of
~.ooo and ,1,500 bespectively.
The artists will receive their
prizesMay21.
•

HONOLULU (AP)
The
Associated Press will hold Its annual
meetln!i here Monday, marking the
opening of the American Newspaper
Publishers Association's traditional
unewspaper week."
The ANPA convention sessions
April 21-23 will cover topics ranging
from the controversy over the Olympics to the· American hostages in
Iran, and will be highlighted by a
speech by U.N. Secretary-General
Kurt Waldhelm on Wednesday.
The AP meeting, which is ex·
pected to draw newspaper and
broadcast executives fr001 every
state, will include the election of six
directors of the news cooperative, a
luncheon speech by President Ferdinand E. Marca~ of the Philippines
and a report on "News by Satellite"
from AP President Keith Fuller and
Vice President David Bowen.
'
Jack W. Tarver, chiUnnan of the
AP and publisher of the Atlanta Con.stitution and Journal, will preside.

~~~·~--~

credit has been the liiggest factor as

He said Ohio farmers also are finding that seed, fuel, fertilizer and
other suppliers are more reluctant
kl allow charges.
Brunton said low livestock and
grain prices will force many Ohio
farmers from business. "Fanners
have been subsidizing consumers for
a long.time hecause they can't control what they get for their products,'' he said.

'

or

~lln ~\l.iBC!l:mdl

Farm aid funds running low
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
well will soon run dry for Ohio farmers !!JOking to the federal government for money to help plan\ the
spring crop, says the state director
of the Farmers Home Administration.
"We've got roughly ~ million to
get us through this period," said
Wallace Brunton. "We think we've .
got more than enough applications
wuse all the funds we've got."
Brunton ,said his agency would
have run out of money if Congress
hadn't approved a $2 billion extension of the Economic Emergency
.Losn Program. The· act was set to
expire in May, but was extended un.tll Sept. 30, 1981. He said Ohio farmers will receive about $14 million
of this extra money.
The Farmers Home Ad·
ministration, a divisioo !#. the U.S.
Department of Agriculture, ·lends
money w fanners who can~t get
money frml C!llllllll!relallenders.
"l.enders are becoming worried
over the ability of these people w
repay," said Brunton of the influx of
FHA llian applications.
"'l'be costs of all inputs !wve in· creuec~. One of a fanner's biggest ·
,inpljts II credit and the ~ of his

ANP A convention
starts in Honolulu

in pin onk by treating with soluble
iron containing materials available
from local garden centers.
Follow fruit tree spray schedule.
Contact local Cooperative Extension ,
Service offices for infonnation oil
proper sprays and when to apply. ·
Begin mowing lawn where grass iS
about three inches high. Set mowei
to cut two to two and one-half inchei
high.
.
Prune and' hegin spraYing
dusting roses as soon as growth al"
pears. Apply pest controls and fer,.
tilizer regularly.

...

Director of the Oh io Oepar ·
of Transportation ,

t~m~nt .

to get above the ·pushing, shoving
crowd.
The crowd was so thick that
dozens of wreaths and bouquets
could not be passed through to the
temporary grave site.
Sartre's body will he cremated
Wednesday in a private ceremony at
Pere Lachaise cemetery, the burial
ground for many d. France's
greatest figures. His ashes will then
be returned to Montparnasse
Cemetery.
A national outpouring of emotion
and demonstrations of respect for
Sartre led up to Saturday's march.
He bas been the subject of magazine
cover stories, television specials and
eulogies by French President Valery
Giscard d'Estaing and leading intellectual figures.

r..:olumbus, Ohio, until 10: 00

A.M ., Oh io Standard Time .
Tuesday, May 13. 1900, for
improvem ents :
Athens, Gallia, Hocking,
Me igs and WashinQ ton

counties, Ohio, on vanous

" The date set for co mp letion of this wor k. shall be
set forth in the b id ding
.,
proposal .''
Each bidde r shall be
required to file w ith hi s bi d
a certified check or
cashier's check ior an
amount equal to five percent of his bid, but in no
event more than fifty
thousand dollars, or a bond
for fen percent of his bid,
payable to the Director .
Bidders must apply, on
the proper forms,
for
qual iftca iion at least fen
days pr ior to the date set
for openin?. bids in ac·
cordance wtfh Chapter 5525
Ohio Rev ised Code .
Plans and specif ications
are on fil e in the Department of Transportation and
th e office of the Distr ic t
Deput y Di rector.
The Director reserves
the right to reject any and
all bids.

'oca1lons, by apply i ng
retroflec1orlzed poryes1er
compound for centertlines,
lane lines and channelizing
lines.
The Oh lo Department of
Transportation hereb,Y
notif ies all bidders that 1t
will affirmatively insure
that in any contract entered into pursuan t ,to t~ i s
advertisement, m1nortty
business enterpr ises wit I be
atforded tutt opportun ity to
submit b ids in responSe to
th is invitation and wi ll not
be discriminated against
on the grounds of race,
color , or national origin in
cons ider ati on
for
an
award .
" Min imum wage rates
DAVIDL. WEIR
for this pro ject have been
DIRECTOR
predeterm i ned as required
by law and are set for th in Rev . 8· 17·73
Apri \ 20, 27
the bid proposal. "

AIt CompNIOOI'S•Drlll PNIOII
Y1111·Bind Sawa-Cut l&gt;lf oowa
Grinders
WNnchei
Socketa
A.lrTooill
Farm Su ppllea

TOOL
AUCTION
TUESDAY, APRIL 22 at 7:00 PM

7084

NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY
NORTH ROUTE 62

\ .· J

&amp;,~'8~
She'll enjoy that nip.in the air
cuddled in tflis tacket.
ChOO!f • warm combination ol
three oolors in ac.ylk 3-ply
mediurn-wei&amp;ht sport yarn for
this jiHy jacket in easy shell
stitch crochet. Pattern 7084:
Sizes 4-6; 8-10 included.
$1.75 lor each pattern. Add 501
each pattern for first·dass airmail and handline.
Ill:

Mice ....

s.n•

;: f ·;·

IIHllaaH lletll
Tile Dally Senlllle1
... 163, Old C...U Sll. Now
Yaft, NY 111011. Priat R11111, .
Mt11111, lip, P1ltlm Number.
EXCITlNG! New 1980 NHOL£·
CRAFT CATALOG with over I 70
desicns in creat variety of mtt..
3free patterns in~de . Send $1 .00

132-QuiH ~ · .. ... $1.50
131-'ld I llotk (!lilts ... $1.50
l»Sw.llrt-SU. 31-56 .$1.50
12'-QikL'Ealf ll1flllt11 ' $1.50
12Ualdlwrl Qoilts.... $1.50
127~ ••• Orilias. ' .$1.50
1~ Fllwlrs ...... $1.50
125-PIIII Olilts ..... ... $1.50
12'-'ilts ·~ cn.-ts . .$1.50
123-hldl 'I' Plldl Olilts$1.50
122·SIIIf ·~ hff Quilts ' '$1.50
121_,.. SMIHIIII .... suo
117-&amp;lr .... 'Ill.. ' '$1.50
111-11-- ... Qlllll .. ' .$1.50
1~5-~~H~t c.lllt
......
11,..
. ....
...10
110.11 '"" ••.. ' .. . ' 1.50
lit-Sow I hit ........ $1.M
101-1111111 ...... '' $1.st
151111111 fllllilil ..... $1.50
1051c1•t CNdolt ..... $1.50
103-15 Q111ts fir TodiJ ... $1.M
101-QIIII Cd tlw .. . . .$1.50

H'M

PT. PLEASANT, WEST VIRGINIA
NOTE 0... Ill t•IW •Io,.. ~~~ al.,.1jle0v tnhl~ o t

10011 ,., ... co~ t~ t n.., to"'* l&lt;l dol ~ !'! nl l!·lfl"''llll ~ ll
"'UIIOO ll'lete • •II be lfi.Ou'UI'dl ol o;to ll .,.lw 011 ~ o l u&gt;dultrLal tool ftiiM l«lli I'III SC ot emt Tr&gt;e&lt;twol l ~m ln¥tl)tl
IO!IIold So i ii i)HI.Itl Wi'l&lt;&gt;leU~IIInii UI~IOI~U ~ ... Deiiii'IIOI!Ir&gt;d

Hug a
Industrial Tools

Alr Compreaaora
Air Tools
).

-------..-J

•.•...........
.,.....-114 ...

,l,lrc__....ol'l

Hany Duly

..

Mechanic Tools
l1 -1lflt; W-Ietl
42- l tp:;W,_.,Mit

l1 ·', ~ o!WtiMjiiiiC1~

3-IH. P' . .,.....,..

H " Air ltltfiKI

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ll-AitefiiMI•
II-II I " Ak Dtlllt
t1 - AI• .....

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22· ~·---·

Tool• for
Everyone

•• . I".... toe:lrfl5
U - 2tpc IAil l hed"t
41 • «&lt; pc Seo:lll Mh

107·- -... c:MMII

zJ.n.c;Dnllbllt
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INM

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, ...110 1•1. ......
10).~111 .....

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Drill,....

,........."
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at- 1'/ H.I". f..,...rt

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Ml1S2·Pt611tbNI""'
·,........,,.

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11- Maollill.-.11

.,.,.......

tl·Cit,.,l., uwt
U -EIKttlc *illt

U · l DO' T,.,.ltfl1

Sockets

......

I ·Oioc t ri..W.I

31 · '4" DM,w..lt

5-4-0 ~._.

43· 111"~1·

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11· 1l ·:lMN"'f
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ELECTRICAL TOOLS
..c..•onu••

Miscellaneous

.. TI .... lllfiiON

y,,.......,,,u

U -ChMMIWiitlll

a- • ~ '-*

•t +W" 'IMH
II'lklc

IU·•pc:

500-l ........ e4-'-'ftc..

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Machlnlata ToOII

35- llo ~ tfld.t-

11- Dttll~

:t2·711G• ..,_,.._ ..u

Farm Tool•

~

M-lllllone!NU
!I . , I &amp;SMI.. II!t
II · f Nil l«kltl

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.ANI OTHI" TOOU DA't'Cf' U.ll TOO
NUMitOIJI TO .lNTIOII

THIS IS A PARTIAL
LIST ALL SUIIJECTTO PRIOR SALE
UUGOMOUCTIDIY

JAMIE HAYS

\

AUCTIONHII'S

NOTf:rt~ltwflll!ol ............................................ ,__ ............ 0¥1Ch

.
_....,...,tto
.. - ....

,

fll

cii:M ... -..._ .. ~..._.., .. _..._ .,.,,...._.._. l-tca~tt•tc·

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••

•

·• I.

'f

ji~T~im~es-Se:n:tine:l·::"~C~la=ss~ified Ads Do More Things For More People Than Any Other

• 't
I
''

I

I

!

I

I - . ' •

.

Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service

::ij~~

~r »~f~,
~~ .-ft!JW ~

Business-Farms-Partnerships
and Corporations
Payrolls, profit and loss statements, all
Ieder a I and state forms.

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION
618

E. IIIIa in

Pome r oy, Oh.

992-3795
4 2-11c

PUBLIC AUCTION

GOLF
LESSONS

Business Services

2 DAY SALE
SATURDAY, APRIL 26 &amp; SUNDAY, APRil27
STARTING EACH DAY AT ll :OOO'C LOCK A.M.
PENNSVILLE, OHIO
(On St. Rl. 377 in Morgan Co. at the Bill Janes
Farms)
Take St. Rt. 60 south out of Zanesville to Me·
Connelsville- or take St Rt. 60 north out ot Mar1et·
ta ta McConnelsville, cross river through Malta on
St. Rt 78 west for 2 miles - stay tefdt at top of h1ll
onto St. Rt. 377 to Pennsvtlle at the Bill Janes
FArms. 30 111iles northeast of A?hens or 90 m11es
southeast of Columbus, 0 .
SELLING COLLECTIONS OF ANTIQUE FUR·
NITURE , CHINA &amp; GLASSWARE, GUNS,
CLOCKS, LAMPS, LII'E TIME COLLECTION OF
POCKET WATCHES AND MISC . PRIMITIVES.

Family Plan
Available

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
•New homes
extensive remodeling
*Electric Ia workS
*Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph . 992-7583
. ·80

John Teaford
Phone:
(614) 985-3961
4 14 1

mo .

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING
Gutter

work,

wortt,

walks

down

spouts, some concrete
and

driveways
(FREE ESTIMATES)

'
eHOWARD
ROTOVATOR
eV -CHISEL
PLOW

INSUlATION
Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

nsulation

L£0
MORRIS

• Storm Doors

• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate

V. C. YOUNG Ill
POMEROY,O.
9'/l-6215 or
997-7!14
1 28 1 mo

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

o.

Rutland,
Ph . 742-2455

James'f&lt;eesee
Ph. 992'-2772

All types of roof work,

4 14 1 mo

new or repa1r guHers

and downspouts, gutter
cleantng and pa tnting.
All work guaranteed .

PREGNANT?

-ROOFING
-PAINTING
-REMODEUNG
-CONCRETE
Free Estimates
Ph. ; (304) 773-5131
or (304) 882-2276
H

(pd . )

N. L CONSTRUCTION
Quality construcfton at

reasonable rates
Remodeling
Additions
S1dlng
BrickWork
Block Work
Concrete Fintshing

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohto
Aprol11, 1980
Contract Sales Legal
Copy No. 80-160
UNIT PRICE
CONTRA.Cl'-'
FA 1-000R (16),
FR-OOOR(17);
SR-QOOA(11)
Sealed proposals w111 be
recetved at the offtce of the
OTrecfOr of the Ohio t&gt;epar·
tment of Transportat ion,
Columbus, Ohto, untt llO 00
AM , Oh10 Standard T1me,
Tuesday, May 3, 1980, for

improvements 1n
Athens, Gallla, Hocktng,

Metgs, Monroe, Morgan,
Noble,
V1nton
and
Washington Counties, Oh10.
by apply1ng pa1nl to lan~

lines, center lines and edge

lines.
The Oh10 Department of

Transportatton
he reby
notif•es all btdders that 1t

-••.

affirmattvely

tnsure

that in any contract en
tered tnto pursuant to thts
advert•sement,

New

5th St.
Haven, W. Va.
317·1mo.

GEORGE'S
ROOFING

mtnor~ ty

business enteronses will be

~

t

•

ij

9
•

ALL STEEL

Farm Buildings
Sizes
" From 30x30 11

/

Utility Buildings

home

Free Estimates
388-9759

2 u tfc
afforded full opportumty to
submtt btds in response to
thts invttation and wtll not
be discnm lnaged against
on the grounds of race ,

color 1 or nattonal ongtn m
constderatton tor an
award
" Mtntmum wage rates
for thts project have been
predetermtned as requtred

by law and are set forth tn
the bid croposal ·
" The date ser tor com
pletton of thts work shall be
set forth ' " the btddtng
proposal "
Each btdder shall be

requtred to file w•th htS bid
a cert tfted check or

cashter's check for an
amount equal to ftve per
cent of his btd, but tn no
event more than f1 fty
thousand dollars, or a bond
tor ten percent of his btd,
payable to the Dorector
B idders musl apply , on
the proper forms, for
qua!1ftcafion at least ten
days pnor to the date set
tor open109 btds tn ac·
cordance woth Chapter 5525
Ohio Revtsed Code
Plans and specif1cat1ons
are on file in the Depart·
ment of Transportatton and

Free"Estlmates

Reasonable Prices

Call Howard
949·2862
949·2160
1-22-tfc

~Tiae

Sewing Center
For 1111 Your
Sewing Needs
awWGa•
IT-lOON
CAU. fOil -.a'IION

~~

buil1-up

ANTIQUE AUCTION

I

PARK FINANCIAL
VA &amp; VA AutomaTIC
Loans, No Down Payment. Federal Housing
Loans 3% down on
S25,000; S% down on
balance. FHA 265 Sub
sody Program , FHA 245
Gradual Payment Mort.
Op~n M ·W· F 9 00 to 1 00
Other T1mes by
Appomtment
Olhce 992-7544
Home992-6191
107 Sycamore St.
Pomeroy, OH.

SMALL

.'

'

R'eal Estate Loans
14% lnterest-30 Yrs

siding,

roof
and
repair.

Free Estimates

will

WATERMELON
PATCH

gut1er,

After 5 P.M 992 5547
3·26-1 mo.

..

See Us First for All
of- Your Maternity
Needs.
Tops-Pants
J umpers·Dresses

Roofing,

Guaranteed Work

II

3
Announcements
GUN SHOOT EVERY
FRIDAY NIGHT 7.30 p M .
FACTORY CHOKE ONLY
RACINE GUN CLUB

Form Of Advertising."
Join Us In Celebration Of International Classified Advertising Week

I
I
'·

'

1).7-The Sunday Times-Sentmel, Sunday, April20, 1980

Sozes From 4x6to 12x40

Vinyl and Aluminum

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rl. 1, Box S4
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843·2591
3·30·1 mo
the offi ce of the D1stnct
Deputy D~rector
Tne Dtrector reserves
t he nght to re 1ect any and
all b1ds.
DAV IOL WEIR
DIRECTOR
Rev. 8 17 73
Apnl20, 27

•111mo

Siding

BISSELl
SIDING CO.
Call for a Free Siding
Estimate, 949-2801 or
949-2860 . No Sunday
calls.
3·21-1 mo.

.A. u·c T I 0 N
753 Acres- 6 Tracts
Wednesday April23, 1980
Sale on the premise at 1 P.M .

Located 12 miles north of Ironton 30 miles
sou thwest of Gal!tpolls off Route l.tl at Symmes
Valley HlQh School, 1'12 mile on Summes Creek Rd ,
follow s1gns

Tract No.1
(Sells at 1:00 P.M)
200 acre farm w 80 acres of good bottom t1llble land,
balance pasture and wOOded, l'h story f ra me home
2 rooms up, 4 rooms down, full bath, large barn w
full basement, attached block molk house. buolt in
m1lk stall, 21arge metal solos, 2,000 lb tobacco base,
double drive corn crib, machtnery shed, other
bu1ld1ngs, dnll well, large pond, Symmes Creek
runs through Farm, also County Blacktop Road .

SAT., APRIL 26, 1980

Tract No.2
(Sells at 1:30 P.M.)

10:00 A.M.

200 acre farm w 35 acre tillable, balance good
pasture and wooded 2 story log &amp; frame home un
mOdern, 2 rooms up. 4 rooms down, 2 firelaces,
garage, cistern, large barn .

Sold home and movtng to mob•le home, so must sell
our 40 yr. collect•an of antiques Located in Me1gs
Co. on 4th Street 1n Syracuse, Ohio.
"ANTIQUES OR COLLECTORS ITEMS"
Starck player ptano, pump organ, pie sate, round
wood table &amp; 4 chaors. wash stands, square &amp; round
front chtna cabinets, fainting couches, sptnntng
wheel, yarn winder, wall, candle &amp; cradle
telephones, black walnul bed, marble onlav
dressers, 2 organ stools, large roll top desk, wooden
peg wardrobe, gasoline lamp, churns, 8 day wall
clock w / arson, Gone w/ Wind lamp, Rose back
chair. camel back &amp; Jenny Lind trunks, Bible stand,
wash bowl &amp; Pitchers. oalr dresser clocks, child's
rocker, candle stands, loll to~ table, old dolls, 3 pc.
h1ghback bed Shipped from Middleport to Long Bot
tom by boat, old high chair makes onto stroller,
glass eggs, rockers, Jeny L1nd baby cradle, cherry
drop·leaf table, glass slippers &amp; hen on nest,
dressers, school bell, hiOhback bed. brass od lamps,
picture frames, secretary, flower stand w t claw &amp;
ha11, spool bed, hanging Iron oil light, dust pan, buf·
let, water bench, tong Bottom Motel bell w/ hole,
drop leaf 2 drawer stand, stone jars. coffee grinder ,
love seat, lanterns, ra1lroad lantern, dtnner bell,
corn sheller, flat orons, wood butter molds &amp; bowl ,
kitchen cabinet w/ flour bin, Clone wood wash1ng
machine, cherry pltter &amp; apple peeler, Cooper tea
kettle, Seth Thomas mantel clock, ftgunnes au
brands &amp; kinds, pressed, cut and depression glass,
shavmg mug &amp; straight razor, m1niature couect1on
of kerosene lights, brass candle Shades, soap stone.
satin glass, p1ano s P. Petry. Pomeroy, Ohio,
school desk, wood Plane, plano rolls, teakwood card
receiver, coin silver wind pocket watch, chifferobe,
Aladdin glass lamps &amp; lots more
OWNER: IlEA tRICE LISLE
D. SMITH
J. CARNAHAN
949-2033
949·2708
Not re.sponsobfe for accidents or loss of property.
Auctioneer Note : This is a PlrQe sale. Come dressed
lOr weather and plan on a long day of lots of niCe
merchandise .

Tract No.3
(Sells at 2:00P.M.)
231 acres w 75 acres of good bottom tillable land,
balance pasture and wooded, no butldtnos.

Tracts No. 4-5-6
&lt;Sells at 2:30P.M.)
Each Tract has 42 acres all wood~d w· Township road
frontage, very secluded: Ideal for hunTing lodge or
clubs, each tract wdl sell separate
NOTE : All tracts join each olher, all will be sold at
tract No 1, all mmeral rights go to buyers Gas well
on farm, coal on all tracts test core drilled Located
1n Lawrence County, A1d &amp; Mason Town·
ship.
TE~MS: 10 Percent on day of sale cash or check on
each tract, balance within 30 days. Possession of
farm land on day of sale. 1nspect1on anytime or
Ross Auction Co &amp; owners will be at Tract No. 1 on
Sunday, April 13 and 20 from 12 :00 p.m. until 5 00
p m. woth maps and inspection.
Please keep This Ad.

Symmes Valley Farm, Inc.

1

ANTIQUE FURNITURE (To Be Sold Both Days):
Beaut1ful6 pc French style bedroom suite complete
ww 1n beds, dresser, h1gh boy chest, dresstng table
w/ stool (multi colored wood inlay tn all pes , tn new
cond.) ; two 1930 penod bedroom su1tes, complete;
1930 French style bedroom suite (paonted while)
complete w/ bed, dresser, dresstng table w /stool
w/c ane seat. mahogany dropleof table w /5 fancv
chairs; V1ctorian walnut bed, I g . cherry corner cup·
board w/gl ass doors at top) 6 legged round oak
table; 3 oak bookcase secretaries (1 w/curved
glass) w / m~rrors , sq. china cupboord ; mahogany
chi na cupboard w/ drawer ; 2 Empire chests w/ glass
pulls . severa l oak Sld~boards; Shaker cherry chest
w/ curly maple drawers, 2 round oak tables C1
w/ claw feet). emp~re love seat set (red velvet)
w/ side chair &amp; rocker , sm. oak Ice box ; oak war
drobe, oak dressers, some w / mtrrors &amp; some w /h at
boxes, 2 tron &amp; brass beds; oak kitchen cabinets (1
w/ roll front &amp; flour bon), oak church pew; oak
l1brary tables, oak k1fchen ta ble w / foldtng leaves ,
several buffets , 51 egged sq oak table. asst stands.
2 upright ptanos, severa l cedar chests, asst . old
tables, lg &amp; sm , some drop/eat, treadle sewing
mach1nes, ornate what· not she lf w / mirror, old
radiOS, some w / recor d players , Duncan Ph';ffe
drum table , stream er trunk s
CHA IRS 6 cane bottomchatrs , Vt ctonan walnut
rocker, lg asst rockers (hand pa1nted, shaker,
pressed back, plank bottom , etc. ) , asst. st chatrs,
some in pairs , a sst over-stuffed couches &amp; chairs
ANTIQUE GLASSWARE &amp; CHINA (To Be Sold
Both Days).
Complet~ set Copeland &amp; Sons ch1na, heaVIIV
decorated in a blue flower pattern. dales back to
thP 1800 s, this is the nicest set of antique china we
have ever had; German, Austnan, Bavanan, Royal
Bayrauth, lronstQne, N1ppon. Non take, Chelsia,
English, Hav1land, etc; ornate Vtctonan glass
candlebras w/ glass pnsms, holds 3 candles , hand
patnted cobalt covered d1sh w t gold tnm, has
English lover s pa1nted on front , a sst Japanese &amp;
C1nese glassware , pr ornate vases , lead crystal
wine &amp; brandy glasses , over 100 pes ruby glass, cut
&amp; pressed glass . covered compotes, stemmed
ware, He1sey, Cambridge, carn1va1, milk glass,
Fenton, hobnail Baltimore Pear, pinK mtlk glass,
etc , ca ke plates, toothpick holders, spoon holders,
mustache cups, cruets, vases, salters, candy con
tamers, candy holders, mustard cups, cracker 1ars,
glass flowers, glass pitchers, glass baskets, butter
d1shes, sugar/creamers, dresser sets, satin glass,
com pattern sugar/ creamer, berry sets, hand
pa1nted bowls, etc. Btsque statues ; Wedge, Weller.
pottery bowl w / portratt of lndtan , 4 pottery mugs
wllndian patnted on each; ch1na fiQUrtnes ; lot what
nets, etc
ANTIQUE &amp; OECORATOR LAMPS (To Be Sold
Sal.):
Beautiful all brass hangtng lamp, fancy ornate
fount w / 4 art glass shades , hanging brass otl lamp
w/ 3 burners, hand pamted Burmese shades,
several T1ffany type art glass hangtng shades, d1f ·
ferent stzes, red sat1n glass Gone w / Wtnd oil lamp,
ornate brass banquet lamp, no shade, curved panel
slag glass table lamp , flat panel slag glass table
lamp, lg ass t anl1que lamps (all styles, Aladdm,
finger lamps, silver over brass, etc ) , gOOd asst
elec table &amp; floor lamps.
ANTIQUE PRIMITIVES &amp; MISC. OLO ITEMS (To
be sold Both Days) :
Ed1son Ambrolta 4 mm. phonograph, oak cabmet
w/l ns1de horn w/ 50 cyl records. wicker doll buggy,
old V1011n; wood wall phone ; old churns, adverttsmg
ttems, Sig ns, etc ; lot old store 1tems, iron &amp; brass
kettles , copper botler , ant. fools ; cnerry seeders,
apple peelers, kttchen tools, applebutter stirrers,
butter molds, wooden spoons &amp; bowls, etc , R R
lanterns, bt cycle lan tern, old lanterns, sausage
grinder, crocks, horse hames; collection flat trans,
copper, brass, &amp; Stiver plate ; coffee grinders, brass
· sh1ps bell , picture frames, 2 iron monkey stoves,
old Rogers Silverware , Old razors, and many boxes
old items to be sold by the box due to space
GUNS TO BE SOLD SAT. AT 1:00 O'CLOCK P.M ..
Springfi~ld 187N 22 rifl e. Mossberg 22 nfle M ·S26B;
wonchester 12 ga. shotgun M 37A ; H&amp;R 12 ga .
M 1212. El1 Wh.itney muzzle loader shotgun, Savage
12 ga ., Ted W11l1ams 20 ga ; two new Af1s 12 ga . on
boxes, Mossberg 22/ 25() ca l , M -800 new In box ;
Savage 308 cal . M 110E new in box . A tis 12 ga aut
new in box , Savage over/ under 410 &amp;22, M 2.t;
Stevens 410 ga .• M 59 A, Revelaflon 12 ga M 300.
Mossberg 22 mag , M 740; Mauser 7.5 cal, M ·93;
Savage 12 ga M Browmng pat , Mossberg 410 ga .•
M 183T , Ted Wol liams 12 ga, M ·JOO; Winchester 10
ga M lever act1on ; Wads 22 cal. M 390A; Win
chester 12 ga M 12, Revelation 30 30 cal , Schmidt
Ruben bolt act1on ; Pla1nsman 22 cal, M 865;
Mossberg 22 cal , N ·351. Ri chards 10 ga Muzle
loader; Mauser 10 ga , Stevens 20 ga ., M 25A;
Ithaca 20 ga .• M ·66, Winchester 22 cal., M 190; Boits
12 ga .; Wonchester 12 ga ., M 370, N.B. Clement 12
ga. ; Revelal1on 22 ca l , M 514, Savage 20 ga,
M 694 ; Revelation 22 ca l. ; Savage 22 ca .• M 521;
Marlin 22 ca, M ·989M , Page &amp; LewiS 22 cal, MD ;
20 ga muzzle loader , Marlin 22 cal , MSIJ; Savage 22
cal • M -587 , and others
CLOCKS TO Bli SOLD AT 1: 00 O' CLOCK P.M.
SUNDAY.
Very ornate French mantel clock w / f1gure of man
sittmg on t op w / 2 apergnes , lg ornate china clock ,
over 20 kitchen clocks (walnut, oak, etc.) ; OG
clocks, English wall regulator , store regulators,
French picture frame clock ; lg. asst. camel back
clocks, sq. mantel clocks . iron tlock, brass clock ,
Cuckoo c locks, over 80 clocks in all, all runn1ng &amp; tn
excellent cond1tion
WATCHES &amp; JEWELERS REPAIR EQUIP. TO BE
SOLD SUNDAY FOLLOWING SALE OF CLOCkS.
An1tque watch makers bench, foot powered, com·
pi~Te
w / lathe ; crvstal ca binet . complete
w/crysta ts, watch makers tools ; jewelers lathe;
springs &amp; watch parts, etc.
POCkET WATCHES · This is a lifetime collection of
hogh grade watches, some In solid gold &amp; silver in atl
sites. There will be a lot of collector Items In this
line of watches as 23 jewel R.R. watches; 21 [ewel,
19 1ewel. 7 rewel, and many more, up &amp; down tn·
dtcators HIJnfer cased watches, all stzes, some
solid gold Howards, Saga moo specials, B.W Ray
mond, Hampden, Il linOIS, Waltham, Studebaker.
Ham il ton , Burlington , South Bend, Westclock,
Kendel Sm1th, Sentinel, Cheshire, Ingraham,
Lambert Bros , Kent Bros , Key W•nd, etc Over 150
tn all There 1sn't enougn 1 can say abOut thts pocket
watch colleCtion of many years, except tt Is one of
the most beautifU l cOl leCtions I have ever seen and
think you wtll agree Watches will be on display day
of sale .
ALSO TO BE 50~0 Kenm ore Microwave oven ,
G E auto washer dryer (afJocado); small Mon·
lgomery ward chest freezer. 2 pool tables. podded
bar, fireplace tools , elec artifical fireplace ready
to Install, and many other Items not listed .
Sale held ins1de our new heated building. Ample
parkong. S~ll contai ned camper space available.
Lunch on premises. Nothing shown before day of
sale. Plan now to ait end both days of this large a~ti
que sale. Terms - Cash or check w/positlve ID
each day of sale. Not responsible for accidents
Bill Janes In Charge of Sale.
Aucttoneers- Bt ll Janes &amp; Assoctales
Phone 614 ·557·3411 or 557·!133

Announcements

3

Announcements

Ptano Tuning
Lane
Dan1els 742 2951. Tuning
and Repatr Service since
1965 If no answer phone

ATTENTION : Baseball ,
Business, Organ1zat•ons,
Politicians. custom pnnt
T·shlrts, 6 to an order Call
even tngs or weekends 949

iiiiiii ·---~=:.----il 2Bea
-3SB~Wood
~~-~..' ........
35707 Loop Rd ,
RVIEW RIVER ESTA
Rutland, OH. 742 2790. New

WE WISH To thank alt our
frtends, netghbors, and
relatives who helped 1n any
way durtng the death of our
son and brother. Those whO
brought food, the pall
bearers. and those who
stood by in prayer and
sympathy 1n our t1me of
need The Millers Funeral
Home and to Rev. R D.
Brown for hts consol ing
words. May God bless each
and everyone The family
of Jack K. Spires
l

l

Announcements

FOR THE BEST buy in
diamonds, &amp; jewelry go to
Tawney Jewelers, Com·
pare prices and values.
You can ~ve a fortune
shopping at Tawney ' s, 422
Second Ave. Gallipolis. Oh,
many of our Items priced at
200 gold. and 9.00 silver.

GUN SHOO I
Racine
Volunteer F ire Dept .
Every Salurday 6·30 p.m .
At their bu1ldlng1n Bashan .
Factory choke guns only.
GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12:00 Factory choke only ,
Corn Hol low Gun Club,
Rutland. Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 249

"·

..

,. '

.

,1

SEL L YOUR SILVER
COINS,
STERLING
SI LVER , GOLD, ETC., TO
BROWN'S
IN
MID ·
DLEPORT FOR
TOP
DO LLAR PHONE 614 '192
5113

Shak lee Dlstnbutor 1n the
Bend area . All natural
vit~mins All natural per
sonal products and organte
cleaners

OPEN HOUSE
WHERE:
6 MILES SOUlli OF GAUIPOLIS ON STATE
ROUTE 7 RIGHT ON RACCOON RD.
WHEN:
SUNDAY, APRIL 20, 1:00.5:30 P.M.

CEDAR-SIDED MODEL HOME
. FORSAL£
MODEL IS A

SWEEPER and sewing
machine repa1r, parts, and
supplies
P1ck up and
delivery, oav1s Va cuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd
Call
446·0294

Gtveaway

4

To g1ve away, Wooden
storage building to tear
down and ~au I away. 359
P~arl Sf , Middleport

ANY PERSON who has
anythmg to give away and
does not offer or atlempt to
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad tn thiS
column . There will be no
charge to th e advertiser
6 MOS OLD Kitten Litter
tratned To good home. Call
446 3887

MAYHILL HOME
Approximately 1200 Square Feet, 2'12 car
garage, 29 'x 6' fr . porch, 8'x14' rear deck,
fully carpeted.

1 CAT and 1 kitten Call 446
3479 after 6 p.m
5

Happ1· Ads

6

Lost and Faund

Found One pair of men's
eyegla:;ses
Vicinity of
Powell's Parkinglot and
Mental Health Center Stop
by Mental Health center to
claim

9
7

Yard Sale

Garage Sale Hand tools ,
garden tools, ant1ques,
starting Apr . 21 all week .
George
G
Roberts,
Bashan .

GARAGE SALE April 18,
26 12 till 5 p m , at Lances
store, Eno Oh10 on 554
M en, women, chtldren's
clothi ng 10 cen ts each.
Other 1fems Call 388 9092
8

HAPPY BIRTHDAY
FREDDIE FWSH.
FROM
WALTER

3 bedroon:rs, 21fz baths, 2 car garage,
large famtly room, patio, fully carpted,
kitchen and separate dining area, lovely
v1ew of the Ohio River!

M1ke It A Hlllm1rll-Fiberglas Pool.

Also plans, pictures, and build out costs
of other homes available at open house.
Plan to drive out and see us after church
on Sunday. We're sure to make vour day!
Call Clearvtew
Estates
Wiseman
446-3643.

Commercial or Residential

446-0766

or

6

Lost ilnd Found

Lost : No collar·temale
beagle dog
Brownand
Black. Broadway St and
Gravel Hill area Answers
to Jody Call John Krawsc
lYn992 2717.

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN
We ull anything for
anybody at our Auction

Barn or in your home. For
Information and pickup
service cidl 256-19d7 .
Sale e..,ery Saturday
Night at7 p.m.

SWAIN

AUCTION SERVICE

DIAMONDS, Old co1ns,
weddtng bands, estate
1ewelry, class rtngs, etc
TAWNEY JEWELERS,
422 Second Ave
WI L L BUY old Iron
smtssio n s,
battertes ,
engmes, or scrap metals,
~tc Call245 9188

Wanted to Buy

Iron and brass beds, old
turntture, desks, gold
rings,
jewelry, stlver
dollars, sterling, etc., wood
1ce bO)(es, anttques, etc
Complete
households
Wnte M D Mt!ler, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy , OHl or call 992

Wanted Homemade items
on cons1gnment Log Cabm
Golts·Suppl 1es. 985 4133 ,
985 3951 or 985 4327

S Cash$ for tunk cars
Frye's 742 2081 Open 9 5
Closed Sunday and Man
dav

10 karat, 14 karat, 18 karat,
gold Denta l gold and gold
ear p1ns 675 3010

BENTLEY PIG SALE
April 26, 8 p m , Fayette
County
Fat rgrounds,
Washington C H Selling
250 head of Durocs, Ham
pshtres, Chester whites,
Spots, Berks, Crossbred
and r eg tstered Gilts Roger
Bentley 3112 Reed Ad ,
Sabona, OH 45169 . Call513·
584 2398.

12 f1 aluminum
boat 992 5555

Gold , silver or fore1gn
coins or any gold or Sliver
ttems Antique furniture,
glass or c h~n a, Will pay top
dollar, or complete esta tes
No 1fem too large or too
small Check pnces before
selling Also do apj)ra tsing
Osby (Oss1e) Mart1n . '192
6370

11

CATALYTIC
CON
VERTERS
( us ed ,
alum1num&gt;. (cans, etc ) ,
automat1c
transm 1sstons
(j unk) , copper , brass, lead,
battenes, radtators, tndtan
arrowheads, and locust
posts. Call Robert L. Har
per, 675 3616 or 675 5202
Gold 10k, 14k, 18k, dental
gold and gold vear pins,
675 3010

Grow1ng Tow Boat Com
pany
seeking
chie f
engineer,
asststant
engmeer Experience w 1th
645 ESEMD and ALCO
Otesel engines
Weges
commensurate w eXpert en·
ce up to S12B per day Con
tact Guy E
B1ng co
Amertcan
Commrc1al
Barge Lme P.O. Box 610,
Jefferson. Ind .• 47130

WILL BUY old fran
smisstons ,
batter1es,
engmes, or scrap metals.
etc Call 245 9188 .

The Truslees of Rutland
Townsh1p w111 acepf ap·
pl1 cattons for truck dnver

304-882-29.62

ESTATES

,~ _

t('J'¥.;'#'

ACROSS

~V ~~'

,._,o,

~~.,

~'0,

".::)"

F.HA • VA APPROVED
WISEMAN'S ERA REAL
ESTATE AGENCY

aiARVIEW RIVER ESTATES, INC.
CIO JAMES C. SAUNDERS
Lower River Road, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
PHONE 446·0766
Thtngs to cons1der if you plan to invest in a new
hOme or butld•ng lot :
1-ts it located in a good netghborhood with
beautifUl, natural surroundtngs?
2-ls tt a safe ilnd desirable place for children to
play? Are there plal\s for recreation?
3-ls 11m a good school system?
4-ls 1t sub1ect to erosion, setthng, or slips?
s-Is there a danger of flooding?
6-Will you be subrected to sewage problems?
7- ls there an abundant , safe water suoolv?
a-Will your developer be bonded to guarantee
your streets Will be countv acceptable.
9-1s it access1ble to a ma1n h1ghwav that 1S not
danerously congested?
lG-Is 1t close to town yet out of the busy traffic
flow?
11-What about fire protectoon?
12-h it near a stream that is suitable for
boi1t1ng, flshtng and also nav1gatable to the Oh1D
Rtver?
13-h the ilrea well restncted to guarantee the
value of your proerty Will be protected?
We know where to find all of thts and more! We
are convinced that you will agree that thts com·
munity 1S the best in the area. We offer open lots or
turn kev homes that are FHA approved!
Plan to come out and visit one of our homes sunday, Aprtl 20, 1· 5 P.M.
Th1s lovely home offers cedar S1d1ng, cathedra I
ceiling 1n great room, master bedroom suite, two
more bedrooms, two full baths, galley kitchen, rear
deck, wall·to-wall carpet, 21Jz car garage, and is
well insulated
Complete butld out prices available at open house
lor all mOdels. CLEAR VIEW ESTATES located 6
miles south of Gallipolis, State Route 7.

Call Clearview Estates, 446-076' or Wisemiln Agen cy 446·364!.
FOR THE MONTH of Feb
Drehel's Ceramics. Green·
ware 30% off Glazes 20%
off. soN . Second Ave1 , Mid·
dleport, Ohio 614 992·2751.

Real Estate

General

"THE BUTCHER'S SHOP·
PE" formerly owned by
Vernon Lucas, under new
management, freezer beef,
Swift sides, custom work
done.
Call 446 · 2851,
Bulavllle Porter Rd
1 PAY highest pri ces
pos•ible for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry , etc.
Contact Ed Burkel! Barber
Shop, Middleport

GOLD ,
SILVER
OR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTt:tER ANTIQUE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOfO
DOLLAR . CHECK WITH
OSBY (OSSIEI MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING.
PHONE 992··6370. ALSO
DO APPRAISING.

Pomeroy, 0 .
NEW LIST,NG - NR•U ,
hltw spill !elvet rw&gt;me, l 'h

baths , J bedroomt,
b•sebNrd electric hut,
IMermopane wlr'ldows, plus 1
2car gar&amp;IJII A~~r ox I''•
otere, Tuppe-rs Plains. Ohio
Only k5.000
TUPPERS PLAINS AREA
Rtmoct.led hOme
on 3 •cres featur ing fru it
lrtes, well bull! barn, DOni
ble trailer loh Home hes
comPlete kllc,en, cten w ith
flrepllliU l ~rooms . fore ·
IKI elr near Bv eppolntmer11
- NR · S~ .

Gnl";'

P.icklng up an Easv play
organ
l n your area .
'Lookfng for a responsible
partv ro take over pay men·
t. Call credil manager
collect. 614·- ~2 · 5122 .

l.fl,!IOO

Ci\.'r'J.s M HIYe•, ltNif,.
Ntatll I Ceruy, Br
Pti HN40lor

have

rs- nt

poteroti;ol•

~~~t~:~: ~~~ orer:~~~p~£

SUNDAY PUZZLER

CHOICE ,~V~~MAYHILL
BUILDING4'~,
MODEL
~
HOME
~~#/
011 DISPlAY
~, CHECK OUR QUALITY

a

Help Wanted

Full t1me and part time RN
or LPN. 11 7 Contact Mr
Zidtan at Pomeroy Health
Care Center Monday thru
Fnday 9 5.

WOOD HOMES

lfS SPRING AT
CLEARVIEW RIVER

fishtng

GET VALUABLE trainmg
as a young bUSiness person
and earn good money plus
some great Q1fts as a Sen
tinel ro ute earner Phone
us right away and get on
the el1g1 bil lfY l1st at 992
2156 or 992 2157

WANT TO BUY axles,
spnngs and wheels for 8ft.
w1de tra iler Ca ll256 1507

Kenneth Swa1n, Auct.
Corner Third &amp; Olive

~_,Buy

9

7760

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Also Showing A Beautiful Tri- Level :

Ready For Your Own PoOl?

---------wanted
__

Public Sale
&amp; Auction
BRADFORD, Auctioneer ,
Complete Serv1ce . Phone
949·2487 or 949 2000 ra cone,
Oh10, Crttt Bradford

8

..,.

.'
.·.
.,•
'

'

.'

t Iterate
7 Turkoc
trobesman
12 Run away to
be marroed
17 Paon
21 God of manly youth
22 Tranquolloty
23 Engine
24Aim
25 Scale note
26 Hawk
28 Chast1se
30 Procurator
of Judea
32 Sun god
33 Perform
35 Athletic
group
37 Attempts
39 Quote
40 Land parcel
41 Scale note
43 Haul
45 Country of
As1a
47 Preposohon
48 Masculone
49 Judges
52 R1ver In Afro ca
54 Flood
56 Poets
57 Grumble
59 Camera part
61 Memorandum
62 Flock
63 Sandarac
tree
64 ArtifiCial
language
66 Greek letter
67 Female deer
68 Burrow1ng
ano mal
69 Greek letter
71 Emerge voctoroous
72 Carpenter's
tools
74 Gorl's name
76 Become
tnsipod
77 Man's nick-

78 Compass
point
79 Feel ondognant at
81 Measure of
weoght
82 Great Lake
83 Rockfosh
84 Small
amount
85 Natove metal
87 Froghtened
89 Goods cast
overboard
90 Plagued
92 Paddles
94 Transgresses
95 Scold
96 S1m1lar
97 Come onlo
view
99 Dawn goddess
100 Smooth
101 Metal fasteners
102 War god
103 Label
105 Leased
107 Tantalum
symbol
109 Summer Fr
1 tO Skidded
111 Report
113 Scorch
114 Man 's mck-

name
t 15 Prefix
Down
116 Walk wearoly
117 Pronoun
118 Permit
120 Scale note
121 Surfeit
122 Wold plum
123 Greek letter
124 Arrow
126 Small
128 Saollng vessel
130 Chastose
132 Unusual
134 Measunng
devoce
135 Booty
136 Cenum
symbol
137 Carry

139 Sweet pota-

toes
141 Pronoun
142 Dme
143 German dlstnc t
145 Pogeons
147 Rodents
149 Cheer
152 Man 's ni ckname
153 Astonosh ment
155 Present
occas10n
157 Narrated
159 Scale note
160 Reject
162 Foreogn
164 Peroods of
tome
166.P•sorderly
demonstrator
t 68 P aradlse
169 Slow Musoc
170 Sipper
171 Merited "

DOWN
1 lncarnat1on
of Vishnu
2 Heroic saga
3 Rover 1n 1taly
4 Antlered
ammal
5 Landed
6 earned
7 Township·
Abbr
8 Roman
bronze
9 Drplomacy
10 Oak fruot
11 Depended
on
12 Prmter's
measure
13 Cut off
t 4 Aurocular
t 5 Courteous
16 Muse of
poetry
17 Mature
18 With· Prefox
19 Man's name
20 Gladdens

27 Ment
29 Reliance
3 1 Tellunum
symbol
34 Surgocal
saw
36 Post
38 Tavern
40 Swone tat
42 Araboan
commander
44 Merriment
46 Musocal
1nstrument
48 Female
horse
49 Extracts
from
50 Weord
51 Ton symbol
53 Grafted
Heraldry
55 Earth goddess
56 Gong
58 Expunged
60 Seasonong
62 Pot
65 Be obligat ed
68 Servant
69 Pertaonong
to punishment
70 Pomtless
72 Mediterranean
vessel
73 Looked
prymgly
75 Spanish
article PI
76 Irons
77 Start
79 Penis
80 Snares
82 Mistake
83 Ranted
84 A state
86 Before
Poet.
88 Exist
89 Prymg
devoce
90 Bound
91 Choice part
93 Thorough
soaking
95 Sell to con-

until Wed , Apnl23. 1980

sumer
97 Dry
98 Male sheep
102 Century
plant
104 Precious
metal
106 Openwork
fabnc
107 Name
108 Afghan
pronce.
1 tO Soft mud
111 Hold back
112 Hond part
114 Shred
116 Conspiracy
117 Mediconal
plan I
119 Server
121 Cook slowly
122 Ch1mney
carbon
123 EXISt
125 Bnt1sh
streetcar
127 Negatove
prefox
128 Jac•et part
129 Placed on
130 Mace-bearer
13 t Doplomatlc
agents
133 Send forth
136 Waterway
138 Covethke
· nfammal
140 Tally
143 Conjunction
144 Check
t 46 Cocatrox
148 Lamb's pen
nqme
150 Toward
shelter
151 DiffiCUlt
153 Emerged
VICionous
154 Soak
156 Time period
158 Click beetle
161 Tellurium
symbol
163 Negative
165 Compass
point
167 Thoron
symbol

Part f1me Off1ce work Of·
ftee traintng and ex·
penence needed . 8·30 am.
to 1 p m 5 days Send
resume to Dally Sent1nel ,
P 0 Box 729 ~ , Pomeroy,
OH 45769
WANTED
Police Chief,
Vtllage of Pomeroy, must
have previous police ex
penence and Ohio Peace
Off1cer
tra1n1ng
Ap·
plicat 1ons and resume
must be at the Pomeroy
VIllage Hall byMay 16.
1980·midnlght,
Pomeroy ,
OhiO 45769

NOilOlOS

11 lt~~ ]&amp;},-} ~THAT SCRAMBLEO WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ *
byHenotArnoldandllobLee
Unscramble these four Jumbles,

one letter to each square. to form
lour ordtnary words

I SEMYS

-

I... ....0
., ._.,c...
~

.., • -~•

TULIQ

b
_

S1tuations Wilntect

Wtl ! clean house. Call 667
3423 or 667·6373 •

THE
GALLIPOLIS
Recreatton Department 1S
taking appl1 cat1ons for a
ballfield
matntenance
worker for the summer
program
~ust
possess
val1d dr~ver's l1cense and
be avat l ab!e to start May
1st., part t 1me anq full
tt me for the summer mon
ths. dut1es Include mowmg,
preparing ftelds , and mmor
repatr work App ly tn per
son at t he City Manager's
Off 1ce, 518 Second Ave ,
Gallipolis OH before Aprd
25th 1980 An Equal Op
portunify Employer

Wtll care for the elderly in
my home Tramed and ex
penenced Have a vacan
cy 992 7314

PART T I ME
pOS I TIOn
available wtth prtvate
soetal servtce agency at
local developmental cen
ter Th1s pos1t10n could lead
to full ttme em ploymen t
Requtrement s are B A or
B S.
soc 1a1
work,
phsychology , or nurs1 ng
Send resume to P 0 box
346. R10 Grande. 45674

NEED someone to ltve m
my home and share e)(
penses, 2 children ac·
ceptable Call367 0410

SB58

Someone to mow lawn, 245

THE
GALLIPOLIS
Recreat1on Dept. IS stt!l
taking applteat1ons unt il
Apnl 25 for the follow1ng
summer jobs · Baseball
superv1sor , playground
superv1sors and leaders,
umpires, scorekeepers,
gymnastics tn str uctors,
softball supervisor and ten
n1s 1nstructors. If tn
terested, please apply 1n
person
at
th e C1ty
Manager 's Off1ce, C1ty
Butldtng,
518
Second
Avenue, bv Apn l 25 . An
Equal Opportuntty Em·
pi oyer

Wtll care for elderly person
in my private home Call
992 6022.
Genera! welding and cut·
ting Arc and Gas 992·2535
evenmgs
Will take care of elderly
men at n1ght tn your home .
Have referen ce Ca!l 992·
5740 or 992 ·6008

Insurance

13

SANOY AND BEAVER In
surance co has offered
services for f1re msurance
coverage tn Gall1a County
for almost a century
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
availab l e to meet In
d1V1dua1 needs. Contact.
Ray Wedemeyer , your
ne,ghbor and agent
AUTOMOBILE
IN
SURANCE
been can celled?
Lo s t
your
operator' s ltcense' Phone
~92 2143
18

Wanted to Do

G1ve p1ano lessons to begin ·
ners and advanced student
'" mv home Also teach
chordmg and transposing It
.nlerested cal l992 5403.

LOOKING FOR A good jOb
and the tra101ng to go with
1t? We have that wtfh 67 d 1f
ferent jobs to choose from,
ranging from clencal, to
mechan1cal, to electron1cs
tust wa111ng for the nght
man or woman . Gtve me a
call at 446·7829 or stop by
the off1ce at 750 1st Ave tn
Gall1poi1 S, OH Ask f or Joe
Hollern,
U.S
Navy
representativ e

FOR SALE or Trade for
Commercial property
Pleasant Vall ey Estates,
loca ted on Rf 35, 3 miles
f rom Gal l tPOI1s, 112 m11e
from HMC, 3 bdr bnck,
cenTral atr, nat gas, c1ty
water, low uti llt te s Large
corner lot Call Sanders at
446 8640 or «6 2049 .

21

21

Business
Opportunoty

WOULD L1ke to dO babysiT
ttng 1n my home, Ga llipoli s
area, call 446 4039
Business
Opportun1ty

'•• can earn
115,11011 To '20,000

Call ot wr~te Todoy

[J

AIPHALI IEAUNG SPIQALIITS
2229 Merle Rd ., Salem, Ohio 44460
(2t6) 337-8461

I tJ

Now arrange the CirCled letters to
form the surpnse answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon

A

rXI XXI X)

Jumbles EXPEL MOTI F CELERY DETAIN
"
Answer No hot dog s for the ltmld- "'COLO FEET

Jumble Book No . 13,contalnlng 110puzzlet, Ia avtl!abltforS1.75poatpald
from Jumble, clo thlt newspaper, 8011. :M, Norwood, N.J. 07648.1ncludt your
nemt, addrtll, zip eodttnd mtkt chKkt payabltlo Ntwtpaptrbookl.

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

r.-lc;-,:;;--r~..--r;.-

Blackwood
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
Back rn 1934 young Easley
Blackwood of Indoanapohs
invented a convention
Today that conventiOn 1s
the best known and poss1bly
the most valuable of all.
There may be some begonners
who don't know about 1t and
maybe two or three experts
who don't use 11. But apart
from that , 11 &gt;s flayed from
Pole to Pole by al players
The average player uses
Blackwood to brd slams The
expert uses 1t pnmanly as a
check for aces after hiS br1dge
sense and use of pornt count
have told him that he has
enough ammumtion for 12 or
13 tncks, but wants to make
sure that hls opponents can't
beat hom woth aces before he
gets to take his own tricks
Let's look at a simple hand
where the expert and dub use
Blackwood the same way
You hold S- x H- A K Q J 10 9
x and open
x D- A K Q J
two hearts Your partner brds
two spades and all you care
about t how many aces he
has You b1d fr11r not rump. II
he show!! no acP ~ you stop al
f!xe: one a(•e lt!tS VUlt nld SIX

c.

12

Earning potentials of $1000 a w"k and mOfe are
far from unrealistic '" the fast boom1ng a1phalt
mointenanc. market! Regardless af age or curren.
employment we will show you how to own and
o,...ate this much ne.ded businns A small tn'&lt;lelf·
ment (Financ•ng avo1labt.) gets you the patented

(Answers Monday)

I

WANTED Parttime help
must be able to work bet
ween the hours of 10 a.m .
and 9 p rn Apply tn person
to Mad 1son Shoe Store,
Stf\ler Brtdge Plaza

and field-tested equipment and our guidance to get
started Immediately. NG ManthiM Of Hidden fM1

Print answer here:
Yesterday s

BUCKEYE Commun1ty
Serv1ces has a 20 hour per
week ppsifton avatlable for
tt 's foster grandparent
program to a1d in serv1ng
individuals who are
developmentally dtsabled
To apply you must be 60
years or older. Salary tS
52 25 per hour. Contact
Amanda Chatf1ns 245·9273
or Helen Belvlll e446·7032

BE YOUR OWN BOll!

I

I I I

J I I

-

Wa_nted

SUMMER!

... ,.,.....

GAROUCr
tRANBEN

~elp

THIS

KX) I

1

-

11_ __

a first rule
and two aces g1ve you a crnch
grand slam
Change your hand a trifle so
that you have no spades and
two clubs The dub may sbll
use Blackwood. but unless hrs
partner shows hrm two aces
he gains nothmg from h1s
partner's response
The expert doesn't know
exactly what to do But he
won't use Blackwood He will
probably b1d three diamonds
Then hrs next brd wrll be frve
hearts (assummg partner has
not made some hogher b1d m
the meanwhole) This should
tell his ' partner JUSt about
what he has Eleven tncks
w1th hearts as trumps and two
quick losers m clubs
We w1ll continue Black·
wood for at least two more
Saturdays, but leave you with
the f1rst rule of when not to
use Blackwood It IS DO NOT
use Blackwood wben you have
two quick losers In an unbid

suil
(NEWSPAI'8R ENTERPRISE ASSN )

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN send $1 to ' Wm at
Bridge. '' care of thrs newspaper. P 0 Box 489 Ra&lt;110 C1ty
Stat1on , New York. N Y.

roo ta!

Real Estate- General

Real Estate- General

�•
••

•

·• I.

'f

ji~T~im~es-Se:n:tine:l·::"~C~la=ss~ified Ads Do More Things For More People Than Any Other

• 't
I
''

I

I

!

I

I - . ' •

.

Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service

::ij~~

~r »~f~,
~~ .-ft!JW ~

Business-Farms-Partnerships
and Corporations
Payrolls, profit and loss statements, all
Ieder a I and state forms.

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION
618

E. IIIIa in

Pome r oy, Oh.

992-3795
4 2-11c

PUBLIC AUCTION

GOLF
LESSONS

Business Services

2 DAY SALE
SATURDAY, APRIL 26 &amp; SUNDAY, APRil27
STARTING EACH DAY AT ll :OOO'C LOCK A.M.
PENNSVILLE, OHIO
(On St. Rl. 377 in Morgan Co. at the Bill Janes
Farms)
Take St. Rt. 60 south out of Zanesville to Me·
Connelsville- or take St Rt. 60 north out ot Mar1et·
ta ta McConnelsville, cross river through Malta on
St. Rt 78 west for 2 miles - stay tefdt at top of h1ll
onto St. Rt. 377 to Pennsvtlle at the Bill Janes
FArms. 30 111iles northeast of A?hens or 90 m11es
southeast of Columbus, 0 .
SELLING COLLECTIONS OF ANTIQUE FUR·
NITURE , CHINA &amp; GLASSWARE, GUNS,
CLOCKS, LAMPS, LII'E TIME COLLECTION OF
POCKET WATCHES AND MISC . PRIMITIVES.

Family Plan
Available

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
•New homes
extensive remodeling
*Electric Ia workS
*Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph . 992-7583
. ·80

John Teaford
Phone:
(614) 985-3961
4 14 1

mo .

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING
Gutter

work,

wortt,

walks

down

spouts, some concrete
and

driveways
(FREE ESTIMATES)

'
eHOWARD
ROTOVATOR
eV -CHISEL
PLOW

INSUlATION
Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

nsulation

L£0
MORRIS

• Storm Doors

• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate

V. C. YOUNG Ill
POMEROY,O.
9'/l-6215 or
997-7!14
1 28 1 mo

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

o.

Rutland,
Ph . 742-2455

James'f&lt;eesee
Ph. 992'-2772

All types of roof work,

4 14 1 mo

new or repa1r guHers

and downspouts, gutter
cleantng and pa tnting.
All work guaranteed .

PREGNANT?

-ROOFING
-PAINTING
-REMODEUNG
-CONCRETE
Free Estimates
Ph. ; (304) 773-5131
or (304) 882-2276
H

(pd . )

N. L CONSTRUCTION
Quality construcfton at

reasonable rates
Remodeling
Additions
S1dlng
BrickWork
Block Work
Concrete Fintshing

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohto
Aprol11, 1980
Contract Sales Legal
Copy No. 80-160
UNIT PRICE
CONTRA.Cl'-'
FA 1-000R (16),
FR-OOOR(17);
SR-QOOA(11)
Sealed proposals w111 be
recetved at the offtce of the
OTrecfOr of the Ohio t&gt;epar·
tment of Transportat ion,
Columbus, Ohto, untt llO 00
AM , Oh10 Standard T1me,
Tuesday, May 3, 1980, for

improvements 1n
Athens, Gallla, Hocktng,

Metgs, Monroe, Morgan,
Noble,
V1nton
and
Washington Counties, Oh10.
by apply1ng pa1nl to lan~

lines, center lines and edge

lines.
The Oh10 Department of

Transportatton
he reby
notif•es all btdders that 1t

-••.

affirmattvely

tnsure

that in any contract en
tered tnto pursuant to thts
advert•sement,

New

5th St.
Haven, W. Va.
317·1mo.

GEORGE'S
ROOFING

mtnor~ ty

business enteronses will be

~

t

•

ij

9
•

ALL STEEL

Farm Buildings
Sizes
" From 30x30 11

/

Utility Buildings

home

Free Estimates
388-9759

2 u tfc
afforded full opportumty to
submtt btds in response to
thts invttation and wtll not
be discnm lnaged against
on the grounds of race ,

color 1 or nattonal ongtn m
constderatton tor an
award
" Mtntmum wage rates
for thts project have been
predetermtned as requtred

by law and are set forth tn
the bid croposal ·
" The date ser tor com
pletton of thts work shall be
set forth ' " the btddtng
proposal "
Each btdder shall be

requtred to file w•th htS bid
a cert tfted check or

cashter's check for an
amount equal to ftve per
cent of his btd, but tn no
event more than f1 fty
thousand dollars, or a bond
tor ten percent of his btd,
payable to the Dorector
B idders musl apply , on
the proper forms, for
qua!1ftcafion at least ten
days pnor to the date set
tor open109 btds tn ac·
cordance woth Chapter 5525
Ohio Revtsed Code
Plans and specif1cat1ons
are on file in the Depart·
ment of Transportatton and

Free"Estlmates

Reasonable Prices

Call Howard
949·2862
949·2160
1-22-tfc

~Tiae

Sewing Center
For 1111 Your
Sewing Needs
awWGa•
IT-lOON
CAU. fOil -.a'IION

~~

buil1-up

ANTIQUE AUCTION

I

PARK FINANCIAL
VA &amp; VA AutomaTIC
Loans, No Down Payment. Federal Housing
Loans 3% down on
S25,000; S% down on
balance. FHA 265 Sub
sody Program , FHA 245
Gradual Payment Mort.
Op~n M ·W· F 9 00 to 1 00
Other T1mes by
Appomtment
Olhce 992-7544
Home992-6191
107 Sycamore St.
Pomeroy, OH.

SMALL

.'

'

R'eal Estate Loans
14% lnterest-30 Yrs

siding,

roof
and
repair.

Free Estimates

will

WATERMELON
PATCH

gut1er,

After 5 P.M 992 5547
3·26-1 mo.

..

See Us First for All
of- Your Maternity
Needs.
Tops-Pants
J umpers·Dresses

Roofing,

Guaranteed Work

II

3
Announcements
GUN SHOOT EVERY
FRIDAY NIGHT 7.30 p M .
FACTORY CHOKE ONLY
RACINE GUN CLUB

Form Of Advertising."
Join Us In Celebration Of International Classified Advertising Week

I
I
'·

'

1).7-The Sunday Times-Sentmel, Sunday, April20, 1980

Sozes From 4x6to 12x40

Vinyl and Aluminum

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rl. 1, Box S4
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843·2591
3·30·1 mo
the offi ce of the D1stnct
Deputy D~rector
Tne Dtrector reserves
t he nght to re 1ect any and
all b1ds.
DAV IOL WEIR
DIRECTOR
Rev. 8 17 73
Apnl20, 27

•111mo

Siding

BISSELl
SIDING CO.
Call for a Free Siding
Estimate, 949-2801 or
949-2860 . No Sunday
calls.
3·21-1 mo.

.A. u·c T I 0 N
753 Acres- 6 Tracts
Wednesday April23, 1980
Sale on the premise at 1 P.M .

Located 12 miles north of Ironton 30 miles
sou thwest of Gal!tpolls off Route l.tl at Symmes
Valley HlQh School, 1'12 mile on Summes Creek Rd ,
follow s1gns

Tract No.1
(Sells at 1:00 P.M)
200 acre farm w 80 acres of good bottom t1llble land,
balance pasture and wOOded, l'h story f ra me home
2 rooms up, 4 rooms down, full bath, large barn w
full basement, attached block molk house. buolt in
m1lk stall, 21arge metal solos, 2,000 lb tobacco base,
double drive corn crib, machtnery shed, other
bu1ld1ngs, dnll well, large pond, Symmes Creek
runs through Farm, also County Blacktop Road .

SAT., APRIL 26, 1980

Tract No.2
(Sells at 1:30 P.M.)

10:00 A.M.

200 acre farm w 35 acre tillable, balance good
pasture and wooded 2 story log &amp; frame home un
mOdern, 2 rooms up. 4 rooms down, 2 firelaces,
garage, cistern, large barn .

Sold home and movtng to mob•le home, so must sell
our 40 yr. collect•an of antiques Located in Me1gs
Co. on 4th Street 1n Syracuse, Ohio.
"ANTIQUES OR COLLECTORS ITEMS"
Starck player ptano, pump organ, pie sate, round
wood table &amp; 4 chaors. wash stands, square &amp; round
front chtna cabinets, fainting couches, sptnntng
wheel, yarn winder, wall, candle &amp; cradle
telephones, black walnul bed, marble onlav
dressers, 2 organ stools, large roll top desk, wooden
peg wardrobe, gasoline lamp, churns, 8 day wall
clock w / arson, Gone w/ Wind lamp, Rose back
chair. camel back &amp; Jenny Lind trunks, Bible stand,
wash bowl &amp; Pitchers. oalr dresser clocks, child's
rocker, candle stands, loll to~ table, old dolls, 3 pc.
h1ghback bed Shipped from Middleport to Long Bot
tom by boat, old high chair makes onto stroller,
glass eggs, rockers, Jeny L1nd baby cradle, cherry
drop·leaf table, glass slippers &amp; hen on nest,
dressers, school bell, hiOhback bed. brass od lamps,
picture frames, secretary, flower stand w t claw &amp;
ha11, spool bed, hanging Iron oil light, dust pan, buf·
let, water bench, tong Bottom Motel bell w/ hole,
drop leaf 2 drawer stand, stone jars. coffee grinder ,
love seat, lanterns, ra1lroad lantern, dtnner bell,
corn sheller, flat orons, wood butter molds &amp; bowl ,
kitchen cabinet w/ flour bin, Clone wood wash1ng
machine, cherry pltter &amp; apple peeler, Cooper tea
kettle, Seth Thomas mantel clock, ftgunnes au
brands &amp; kinds, pressed, cut and depression glass,
shavmg mug &amp; straight razor, m1niature couect1on
of kerosene lights, brass candle Shades, soap stone.
satin glass, p1ano s P. Petry. Pomeroy, Ohio,
school desk, wood Plane, plano rolls, teakwood card
receiver, coin silver wind pocket watch, chifferobe,
Aladdin glass lamps &amp; lots more
OWNER: IlEA tRICE LISLE
D. SMITH
J. CARNAHAN
949-2033
949·2708
Not re.sponsobfe for accidents or loss of property.
Auctioneer Note : This is a PlrQe sale. Come dressed
lOr weather and plan on a long day of lots of niCe
merchandise .

Tract No.3
(Sells at 2:00P.M.)
231 acres w 75 acres of good bottom tillable land,
balance pasture and wooded, no butldtnos.

Tracts No. 4-5-6
&lt;Sells at 2:30P.M.)
Each Tract has 42 acres all wood~d w· Township road
frontage, very secluded: Ideal for hunTing lodge or
clubs, each tract wdl sell separate
NOTE : All tracts join each olher, all will be sold at
tract No 1, all mmeral rights go to buyers Gas well
on farm, coal on all tracts test core drilled Located
1n Lawrence County, A1d &amp; Mason Town·
ship.
TE~MS: 10 Percent on day of sale cash or check on
each tract, balance within 30 days. Possession of
farm land on day of sale. 1nspect1on anytime or
Ross Auction Co &amp; owners will be at Tract No. 1 on
Sunday, April 13 and 20 from 12 :00 p.m. until 5 00
p m. woth maps and inspection.
Please keep This Ad.

Symmes Valley Farm, Inc.

1

ANTIQUE FURNITURE (To Be Sold Both Days):
Beaut1ful6 pc French style bedroom suite complete
ww 1n beds, dresser, h1gh boy chest, dresstng table
w/ stool (multi colored wood inlay tn all pes , tn new
cond.) ; two 1930 penod bedroom su1tes, complete;
1930 French style bedroom suite (paonted while)
complete w/ bed, dresser, dresstng table w /stool
w/c ane seat. mahogany dropleof table w /5 fancv
chairs; V1ctorian walnut bed, I g . cherry corner cup·
board w/gl ass doors at top) 6 legged round oak
table; 3 oak bookcase secretaries (1 w/curved
glass) w / m~rrors , sq. china cupboord ; mahogany
chi na cupboard w/ drawer ; 2 Empire chests w/ glass
pulls . severa l oak Sld~boards; Shaker cherry chest
w/ curly maple drawers, 2 round oak tables C1
w/ claw feet). emp~re love seat set (red velvet)
w/ side chair &amp; rocker , sm. oak Ice box ; oak war
drobe, oak dressers, some w / mtrrors &amp; some w /h at
boxes, 2 tron &amp; brass beds; oak kitchen cabinets (1
w/ roll front &amp; flour bon), oak church pew; oak
l1brary tables, oak k1fchen ta ble w / foldtng leaves ,
several buffets , 51 egged sq oak table. asst stands.
2 upright ptanos, severa l cedar chests, asst . old
tables, lg &amp; sm , some drop/eat, treadle sewing
mach1nes, ornate what· not she lf w / mirror, old
radiOS, some w / recor d players , Duncan Ph';ffe
drum table , stream er trunk s
CHA IRS 6 cane bottomchatrs , Vt ctonan walnut
rocker, lg asst rockers (hand pa1nted, shaker,
pressed back, plank bottom , etc. ) , asst. st chatrs,
some in pairs , a sst over-stuffed couches &amp; chairs
ANTIQUE GLASSWARE &amp; CHINA (To Be Sold
Both Days).
Complet~ set Copeland &amp; Sons ch1na, heaVIIV
decorated in a blue flower pattern. dales back to
thP 1800 s, this is the nicest set of antique china we
have ever had; German, Austnan, Bavanan, Royal
Bayrauth, lronstQne, N1ppon. Non take, Chelsia,
English, Hav1land, etc; ornate Vtctonan glass
candlebras w/ glass pnsms, holds 3 candles , hand
patnted cobalt covered d1sh w t gold tnm, has
English lover s pa1nted on front , a sst Japanese &amp;
C1nese glassware , pr ornate vases , lead crystal
wine &amp; brandy glasses , over 100 pes ruby glass, cut
&amp; pressed glass . covered compotes, stemmed
ware, He1sey, Cambridge, carn1va1, milk glass,
Fenton, hobnail Baltimore Pear, pinK mtlk glass,
etc , ca ke plates, toothpick holders, spoon holders,
mustache cups, cruets, vases, salters, candy con
tamers, candy holders, mustard cups, cracker 1ars,
glass flowers, glass pitchers, glass baskets, butter
d1shes, sugar/creamers, dresser sets, satin glass,
com pattern sugar/ creamer, berry sets, hand
pa1nted bowls, etc. Btsque statues ; Wedge, Weller.
pottery bowl w / portratt of lndtan , 4 pottery mugs
wllndian patnted on each; ch1na fiQUrtnes ; lot what
nets, etc
ANTIQUE &amp; OECORATOR LAMPS (To Be Sold
Sal.):
Beautiful all brass hangtng lamp, fancy ornate
fount w / 4 art glass shades , hanging brass otl lamp
w/ 3 burners, hand pamted Burmese shades,
several T1ffany type art glass hangtng shades, d1f ·
ferent stzes, red sat1n glass Gone w / Wtnd oil lamp,
ornate brass banquet lamp, no shade, curved panel
slag glass table lamp , flat panel slag glass table
lamp, lg ass t anl1que lamps (all styles, Aladdm,
finger lamps, silver over brass, etc ) , gOOd asst
elec table &amp; floor lamps.
ANTIQUE PRIMITIVES &amp; MISC. OLO ITEMS (To
be sold Both Days) :
Ed1son Ambrolta 4 mm. phonograph, oak cabmet
w/l ns1de horn w/ 50 cyl records. wicker doll buggy,
old V1011n; wood wall phone ; old churns, adverttsmg
ttems, Sig ns, etc ; lot old store 1tems, iron &amp; brass
kettles , copper botler , ant. fools ; cnerry seeders,
apple peelers, kttchen tools, applebutter stirrers,
butter molds, wooden spoons &amp; bowls, etc , R R
lanterns, bt cycle lan tern, old lanterns, sausage
grinder, crocks, horse hames; collection flat trans,
copper, brass, &amp; Stiver plate ; coffee grinders, brass
· sh1ps bell , picture frames, 2 iron monkey stoves,
old Rogers Silverware , Old razors, and many boxes
old items to be sold by the box due to space
GUNS TO BE SOLD SAT. AT 1:00 O'CLOCK P.M ..
Springfi~ld 187N 22 rifl e. Mossberg 22 nfle M ·S26B;
wonchester 12 ga. shotgun M 37A ; H&amp;R 12 ga .
M 1212. El1 Wh.itney muzzle loader shotgun, Savage
12 ga ., Ted W11l1ams 20 ga ; two new Af1s 12 ga . on
boxes, Mossberg 22/ 25() ca l , M -800 new In box ;
Savage 308 cal . M 110E new in box . A tis 12 ga aut
new in box , Savage over/ under 410 &amp;22, M 2.t;
Stevens 410 ga .• M 59 A, Revelaflon 12 ga M 300.
Mossberg 22 mag , M 740; Mauser 7.5 cal, M ·93;
Savage 12 ga M Browmng pat , Mossberg 410 ga .•
M 183T , Ted Wol liams 12 ga, M ·JOO; Winchester 10
ga M lever act1on ; Wads 22 cal. M 390A; Win
chester 12 ga M 12, Revelation 30 30 cal , Schmidt
Ruben bolt act1on ; Pla1nsman 22 cal, M 865;
Mossberg 22 cal , N ·351. Ri chards 10 ga Muzle
loader; Mauser 10 ga , Stevens 20 ga ., M 25A;
Ithaca 20 ga .• M ·66, Winchester 22 cal., M 190; Boits
12 ga .; Wonchester 12 ga ., M 370, N.B. Clement 12
ga. ; Revelal1on 22 ca l , M 514, Savage 20 ga,
M 694 ; Revelation 22 ca l. ; Savage 22 ca .• M 521;
Marlin 22 ca, M ·989M , Page &amp; LewiS 22 cal, MD ;
20 ga muzzle loader , Marlin 22 cal , MSIJ; Savage 22
cal • M -587 , and others
CLOCKS TO Bli SOLD AT 1: 00 O' CLOCK P.M.
SUNDAY.
Very ornate French mantel clock w / f1gure of man
sittmg on t op w / 2 apergnes , lg ornate china clock ,
over 20 kitchen clocks (walnut, oak, etc.) ; OG
clocks, English wall regulator , store regulators,
French picture frame clock ; lg. asst. camel back
clocks, sq. mantel clocks . iron tlock, brass clock ,
Cuckoo c locks, over 80 clocks in all, all runn1ng &amp; tn
excellent cond1tion
WATCHES &amp; JEWELERS REPAIR EQUIP. TO BE
SOLD SUNDAY FOLLOWING SALE OF CLOCkS.
An1tque watch makers bench, foot powered, com·
pi~Te
w / lathe ; crvstal ca binet . complete
w/crysta ts, watch makers tools ; jewelers lathe;
springs &amp; watch parts, etc.
POCkET WATCHES · This is a lifetime collection of
hogh grade watches, some In solid gold &amp; silver in atl
sites. There will be a lot of collector Items In this
line of watches as 23 jewel R.R. watches; 21 [ewel,
19 1ewel. 7 rewel, and many more, up &amp; down tn·
dtcators HIJnfer cased watches, all stzes, some
solid gold Howards, Saga moo specials, B.W Ray
mond, Hampden, Il linOIS, Waltham, Studebaker.
Ham il ton , Burlington , South Bend, Westclock,
Kendel Sm1th, Sentinel, Cheshire, Ingraham,
Lambert Bros , Kent Bros , Key W•nd, etc Over 150
tn all There 1sn't enougn 1 can say abOut thts pocket
watch colleCtion of many years, except tt Is one of
the most beautifU l cOl leCtions I have ever seen and
think you wtll agree Watches will be on display day
of sale .
ALSO TO BE 50~0 Kenm ore Microwave oven ,
G E auto washer dryer (afJocado); small Mon·
lgomery ward chest freezer. 2 pool tables. podded
bar, fireplace tools , elec artifical fireplace ready
to Install, and many other Items not listed .
Sale held ins1de our new heated building. Ample
parkong. S~ll contai ned camper space available.
Lunch on premises. Nothing shown before day of
sale. Plan now to ait end both days of this large a~ti
que sale. Terms - Cash or check w/positlve ID
each day of sale. Not responsible for accidents
Bill Janes In Charge of Sale.
Aucttoneers- Bt ll Janes &amp; Assoctales
Phone 614 ·557·3411 or 557·!133

Announcements

3

Announcements

Ptano Tuning
Lane
Dan1els 742 2951. Tuning
and Repatr Service since
1965 If no answer phone

ATTENTION : Baseball ,
Business, Organ1zat•ons,
Politicians. custom pnnt
T·shlrts, 6 to an order Call
even tngs or weekends 949

iiiiiii ·---~=:.----il 2Bea
-3SB~Wood
~~-~..' ........
35707 Loop Rd ,
RVIEW RIVER ESTA
Rutland, OH. 742 2790. New

WE WISH To thank alt our
frtends, netghbors, and
relatives who helped 1n any
way durtng the death of our
son and brother. Those whO
brought food, the pall
bearers. and those who
stood by in prayer and
sympathy 1n our t1me of
need The Millers Funeral
Home and to Rev. R D.
Brown for hts consol ing
words. May God bless each
and everyone The family
of Jack K. Spires
l

l

Announcements

FOR THE BEST buy in
diamonds, &amp; jewelry go to
Tawney Jewelers, Com·
pare prices and values.
You can ~ve a fortune
shopping at Tawney ' s, 422
Second Ave. Gallipolis. Oh,
many of our Items priced at
200 gold. and 9.00 silver.

GUN SHOO I
Racine
Volunteer F ire Dept .
Every Salurday 6·30 p.m .
At their bu1ldlng1n Bashan .
Factory choke guns only.
GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12:00 Factory choke only ,
Corn Hol low Gun Club,
Rutland. Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 249

"·

..

,. '

.

,1

SEL L YOUR SILVER
COINS,
STERLING
SI LVER , GOLD, ETC., TO
BROWN'S
IN
MID ·
DLEPORT FOR
TOP
DO LLAR PHONE 614 '192
5113

Shak lee Dlstnbutor 1n the
Bend area . All natural
vit~mins All natural per
sonal products and organte
cleaners

OPEN HOUSE
WHERE:
6 MILES SOUlli OF GAUIPOLIS ON STATE
ROUTE 7 RIGHT ON RACCOON RD.
WHEN:
SUNDAY, APRIL 20, 1:00.5:30 P.M.

CEDAR-SIDED MODEL HOME
. FORSAL£
MODEL IS A

SWEEPER and sewing
machine repa1r, parts, and
supplies
P1ck up and
delivery, oav1s Va cuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd
Call
446·0294

Gtveaway

4

To g1ve away, Wooden
storage building to tear
down and ~au I away. 359
P~arl Sf , Middleport

ANY PERSON who has
anythmg to give away and
does not offer or atlempt to
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad tn thiS
column . There will be no
charge to th e advertiser
6 MOS OLD Kitten Litter
tratned To good home. Call
446 3887

MAYHILL HOME
Approximately 1200 Square Feet, 2'12 car
garage, 29 'x 6' fr . porch, 8'x14' rear deck,
fully carpeted.

1 CAT and 1 kitten Call 446
3479 after 6 p.m
5

Happ1· Ads

6

Lost and Faund

Found One pair of men's
eyegla:;ses
Vicinity of
Powell's Parkinglot and
Mental Health Center Stop
by Mental Health center to
claim

9
7

Yard Sale

Garage Sale Hand tools ,
garden tools, ant1ques,
starting Apr . 21 all week .
George
G
Roberts,
Bashan .

GARAGE SALE April 18,
26 12 till 5 p m , at Lances
store, Eno Oh10 on 554
M en, women, chtldren's
clothi ng 10 cen ts each.
Other 1fems Call 388 9092
8

HAPPY BIRTHDAY
FREDDIE FWSH.
FROM
WALTER

3 bedroon:rs, 21fz baths, 2 car garage,
large famtly room, patio, fully carpted,
kitchen and separate dining area, lovely
v1ew of the Ohio River!

M1ke It A Hlllm1rll-Fiberglas Pool.

Also plans, pictures, and build out costs
of other homes available at open house.
Plan to drive out and see us after church
on Sunday. We're sure to make vour day!
Call Clearvtew
Estates
Wiseman
446-3643.

Commercial or Residential

446-0766

or

6

Lost ilnd Found

Lost : No collar·temale
beagle dog
Brownand
Black. Broadway St and
Gravel Hill area Answers
to Jody Call John Krawsc
lYn992 2717.

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN
We ull anything for
anybody at our Auction

Barn or in your home. For
Information and pickup
service cidl 256-19d7 .
Sale e..,ery Saturday
Night at7 p.m.

SWAIN

AUCTION SERVICE

DIAMONDS, Old co1ns,
weddtng bands, estate
1ewelry, class rtngs, etc
TAWNEY JEWELERS,
422 Second Ave
WI L L BUY old Iron
smtssio n s,
battertes ,
engmes, or scrap metals,
~tc Call245 9188

Wanted to Buy

Iron and brass beds, old
turntture, desks, gold
rings,
jewelry, stlver
dollars, sterling, etc., wood
1ce bO)(es, anttques, etc
Complete
households
Wnte M D Mt!ler, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy , OHl or call 992

Wanted Homemade items
on cons1gnment Log Cabm
Golts·Suppl 1es. 985 4133 ,
985 3951 or 985 4327

S Cash$ for tunk cars
Frye's 742 2081 Open 9 5
Closed Sunday and Man
dav

10 karat, 14 karat, 18 karat,
gold Denta l gold and gold
ear p1ns 675 3010

BENTLEY PIG SALE
April 26, 8 p m , Fayette
County
Fat rgrounds,
Washington C H Selling
250 head of Durocs, Ham
pshtres, Chester whites,
Spots, Berks, Crossbred
and r eg tstered Gilts Roger
Bentley 3112 Reed Ad ,
Sabona, OH 45169 . Call513·
584 2398.

12 f1 aluminum
boat 992 5555

Gold , silver or fore1gn
coins or any gold or Sliver
ttems Antique furniture,
glass or c h~n a, Will pay top
dollar, or complete esta tes
No 1fem too large or too
small Check pnces before
selling Also do apj)ra tsing
Osby (Oss1e) Mart1n . '192
6370

11

CATALYTIC
CON
VERTERS
( us ed ,
alum1num&gt;. (cans, etc ) ,
automat1c
transm 1sstons
(j unk) , copper , brass, lead,
battenes, radtators, tndtan
arrowheads, and locust
posts. Call Robert L. Har
per, 675 3616 or 675 5202
Gold 10k, 14k, 18k, dental
gold and gold vear pins,
675 3010

Grow1ng Tow Boat Com
pany
seeking
chie f
engineer,
asststant
engmeer Experience w 1th
645 ESEMD and ALCO
Otesel engines
Weges
commensurate w eXpert en·
ce up to S12B per day Con
tact Guy E
B1ng co
Amertcan
Commrc1al
Barge Lme P.O. Box 610,
Jefferson. Ind .• 47130

WILL BUY old fran
smisstons ,
batter1es,
engmes, or scrap metals.
etc Call 245 9188 .

The Truslees of Rutland
Townsh1p w111 acepf ap·
pl1 cattons for truck dnver

304-882-29.62

ESTATES

,~ _

t('J'¥.;'#'

ACROSS

~V ~~'

,._,o,

~~.,

~'0,

".::)"

F.HA • VA APPROVED
WISEMAN'S ERA REAL
ESTATE AGENCY

aiARVIEW RIVER ESTATES, INC.
CIO JAMES C. SAUNDERS
Lower River Road, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
PHONE 446·0766
Thtngs to cons1der if you plan to invest in a new
hOme or butld•ng lot :
1-ts it located in a good netghborhood with
beautifUl, natural surroundtngs?
2-ls tt a safe ilnd desirable place for children to
play? Are there plal\s for recreation?
3-ls 11m a good school system?
4-ls 1t sub1ect to erosion, setthng, or slips?
s-Is there a danger of flooding?
6-Will you be subrected to sewage problems?
7- ls there an abundant , safe water suoolv?
a-Will your developer be bonded to guarantee
your streets Will be countv acceptable.
9-1s it access1ble to a ma1n h1ghwav that 1S not
danerously congested?
lG-Is 1t close to town yet out of the busy traffic
flow?
11-What about fire protectoon?
12-h it near a stream that is suitable for
boi1t1ng, flshtng and also nav1gatable to the Oh1D
Rtver?
13-h the ilrea well restncted to guarantee the
value of your proerty Will be protected?
We know where to find all of thts and more! We
are convinced that you will agree that thts com·
munity 1S the best in the area. We offer open lots or
turn kev homes that are FHA approved!
Plan to come out and visit one of our homes sunday, Aprtl 20, 1· 5 P.M.
Th1s lovely home offers cedar S1d1ng, cathedra I
ceiling 1n great room, master bedroom suite, two
more bedrooms, two full baths, galley kitchen, rear
deck, wall·to-wall carpet, 21Jz car garage, and is
well insulated
Complete butld out prices available at open house
lor all mOdels. CLEAR VIEW ESTATES located 6
miles south of Gallipolis, State Route 7.

Call Clearview Estates, 446-076' or Wisemiln Agen cy 446·364!.
FOR THE MONTH of Feb
Drehel's Ceramics. Green·
ware 30% off Glazes 20%
off. soN . Second Ave1 , Mid·
dleport, Ohio 614 992·2751.

Real Estate

General

"THE BUTCHER'S SHOP·
PE" formerly owned by
Vernon Lucas, under new
management, freezer beef,
Swift sides, custom work
done.
Call 446 · 2851,
Bulavllle Porter Rd
1 PAY highest pri ces
pos•ible for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry , etc.
Contact Ed Burkel! Barber
Shop, Middleport

GOLD ,
SILVER
OR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTt:tER ANTIQUE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOfO
DOLLAR . CHECK WITH
OSBY (OSSIEI MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING.
PHONE 992··6370. ALSO
DO APPRAISING.

Pomeroy, 0 .
NEW LIST,NG - NR•U ,
hltw spill !elvet rw&gt;me, l 'h

baths , J bedroomt,
b•sebNrd electric hut,
IMermopane wlr'ldows, plus 1
2car gar&amp;IJII A~~r ox I''•
otere, Tuppe-rs Plains. Ohio
Only k5.000
TUPPERS PLAINS AREA
Rtmoct.led hOme
on 3 •cres featur ing fru it
lrtes, well bull! barn, DOni
ble trailer loh Home hes
comPlete kllc,en, cten w ith
flrepllliU l ~rooms . fore ·
IKI elr near Bv eppolntmer11
- NR · S~ .

Gnl";'

P.icklng up an Easv play
organ
l n your area .
'Lookfng for a responsible
partv ro take over pay men·
t. Call credil manager
collect. 614·- ~2 · 5122 .

l.fl,!IOO

Ci\.'r'J.s M HIYe•, ltNif,.
Ntatll I Ceruy, Br
Pti HN40lor

have

rs- nt

poteroti;ol•

~~~t~:~: ~~~ orer:~~~p~£

SUNDAY PUZZLER

CHOICE ,~V~~MAYHILL
BUILDING4'~,
MODEL
~
HOME
~~#/
011 DISPlAY
~, CHECK OUR QUALITY

a

Help Wanted

Full t1me and part time RN
or LPN. 11 7 Contact Mr
Zidtan at Pomeroy Health
Care Center Monday thru
Fnday 9 5.

WOOD HOMES

lfS SPRING AT
CLEARVIEW RIVER

fishtng

GET VALUABLE trainmg
as a young bUSiness person
and earn good money plus
some great Q1fts as a Sen
tinel ro ute earner Phone
us right away and get on
the el1g1 bil lfY l1st at 992
2156 or 992 2157

WANT TO BUY axles,
spnngs and wheels for 8ft.
w1de tra iler Ca ll256 1507

Kenneth Swa1n, Auct.
Corner Third &amp; Olive

~_,Buy

9

7760

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Also Showing A Beautiful Tri- Level :

Ready For Your Own PoOl?

---------wanted
__

Public Sale
&amp; Auction
BRADFORD, Auctioneer ,
Complete Serv1ce . Phone
949·2487 or 949 2000 ra cone,
Oh10, Crttt Bradford

8

..,.

.'
.·.
.,•
'

'

.'

t Iterate
7 Turkoc
trobesman
12 Run away to
be marroed
17 Paon
21 God of manly youth
22 Tranquolloty
23 Engine
24Aim
25 Scale note
26 Hawk
28 Chast1se
30 Procurator
of Judea
32 Sun god
33 Perform
35 Athletic
group
37 Attempts
39 Quote
40 Land parcel
41 Scale note
43 Haul
45 Country of
As1a
47 Preposohon
48 Masculone
49 Judges
52 R1ver In Afro ca
54 Flood
56 Poets
57 Grumble
59 Camera part
61 Memorandum
62 Flock
63 Sandarac
tree
64 ArtifiCial
language
66 Greek letter
67 Female deer
68 Burrow1ng
ano mal
69 Greek letter
71 Emerge voctoroous
72 Carpenter's
tools
74 Gorl's name
76 Become
tnsipod
77 Man's nick-

78 Compass
point
79 Feel ondognant at
81 Measure of
weoght
82 Great Lake
83 Rockfosh
84 Small
amount
85 Natove metal
87 Froghtened
89 Goods cast
overboard
90 Plagued
92 Paddles
94 Transgresses
95 Scold
96 S1m1lar
97 Come onlo
view
99 Dawn goddess
100 Smooth
101 Metal fasteners
102 War god
103 Label
105 Leased
107 Tantalum
symbol
109 Summer Fr
1 tO Skidded
111 Report
113 Scorch
114 Man 's mck-

name
t 15 Prefix
Down
116 Walk wearoly
117 Pronoun
118 Permit
120 Scale note
121 Surfeit
122 Wold plum
123 Greek letter
124 Arrow
126 Small
128 Saollng vessel
130 Chastose
132 Unusual
134 Measunng
devoce
135 Booty
136 Cenum
symbol
137 Carry

139 Sweet pota-

toes
141 Pronoun
142 Dme
143 German dlstnc t
145 Pogeons
147 Rodents
149 Cheer
152 Man 's ni ckname
153 Astonosh ment
155 Present
occas10n
157 Narrated
159 Scale note
160 Reject
162 Foreogn
164 Peroods of
tome
166.P•sorderly
demonstrator
t 68 P aradlse
169 Slow Musoc
170 Sipper
171 Merited "

DOWN
1 lncarnat1on
of Vishnu
2 Heroic saga
3 Rover 1n 1taly
4 Antlered
ammal
5 Landed
6 earned
7 Township·
Abbr
8 Roman
bronze
9 Drplomacy
10 Oak fruot
11 Depended
on
12 Prmter's
measure
13 Cut off
t 4 Aurocular
t 5 Courteous
16 Muse of
poetry
17 Mature
18 With· Prefox
19 Man's name
20 Gladdens

27 Ment
29 Reliance
3 1 Tellunum
symbol
34 Surgocal
saw
36 Post
38 Tavern
40 Swone tat
42 Araboan
commander
44 Merriment
46 Musocal
1nstrument
48 Female
horse
49 Extracts
from
50 Weord
51 Ton symbol
53 Grafted
Heraldry
55 Earth goddess
56 Gong
58 Expunged
60 Seasonong
62 Pot
65 Be obligat ed
68 Servant
69 Pertaonong
to punishment
70 Pomtless
72 Mediterranean
vessel
73 Looked
prymgly
75 Spanish
article PI
76 Irons
77 Start
79 Penis
80 Snares
82 Mistake
83 Ranted
84 A state
86 Before
Poet.
88 Exist
89 Prymg
devoce
90 Bound
91 Choice part
93 Thorough
soaking
95 Sell to con-

until Wed , Apnl23. 1980

sumer
97 Dry
98 Male sheep
102 Century
plant
104 Precious
metal
106 Openwork
fabnc
107 Name
108 Afghan
pronce.
1 tO Soft mud
111 Hold back
112 Hond part
114 Shred
116 Conspiracy
117 Mediconal
plan I
119 Server
121 Cook slowly
122 Ch1mney
carbon
123 EXISt
125 Bnt1sh
streetcar
127 Negatove
prefox
128 Jac•et part
129 Placed on
130 Mace-bearer
13 t Doplomatlc
agents
133 Send forth
136 Waterway
138 Covethke
· nfammal
140 Tally
143 Conjunction
144 Check
t 46 Cocatrox
148 Lamb's pen
nqme
150 Toward
shelter
151 DiffiCUlt
153 Emerged
VICionous
154 Soak
156 Time period
158 Click beetle
161 Tellurium
symbol
163 Negative
165 Compass
point
167 Thoron
symbol

Part f1me Off1ce work Of·
ftee traintng and ex·
penence needed . 8·30 am.
to 1 p m 5 days Send
resume to Dally Sent1nel ,
P 0 Box 729 ~ , Pomeroy,
OH 45769
WANTED
Police Chief,
Vtllage of Pomeroy, must
have previous police ex
penence and Ohio Peace
Off1cer
tra1n1ng
Ap·
plicat 1ons and resume
must be at the Pomeroy
VIllage Hall byMay 16.
1980·midnlght,
Pomeroy ,
OhiO 45769

NOilOlOS

11 lt~~ ]&amp;},-} ~THAT SCRAMBLEO WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ *
byHenotArnoldandllobLee
Unscramble these four Jumbles,

one letter to each square. to form
lour ordtnary words

I SEMYS

-

I... ....0
., ._.,c...
~

.., • -~•

TULIQ

b
_

S1tuations Wilntect

Wtl ! clean house. Call 667
3423 or 667·6373 •

THE
GALLIPOLIS
Recreatton Department 1S
taking appl1 cat1ons for a
ballfield
matntenance
worker for the summer
program
~ust
possess
val1d dr~ver's l1cense and
be avat l ab!e to start May
1st., part t 1me anq full
tt me for the summer mon
ths. dut1es Include mowmg,
preparing ftelds , and mmor
repatr work App ly tn per
son at t he City Manager's
Off 1ce, 518 Second Ave ,
Gallipolis OH before Aprd
25th 1980 An Equal Op
portunify Employer

Wtll care for the elderly in
my home Tramed and ex
penenced Have a vacan
cy 992 7314

PART T I ME
pOS I TIOn
available wtth prtvate
soetal servtce agency at
local developmental cen
ter Th1s pos1t10n could lead
to full ttme em ploymen t
Requtrement s are B A or
B S.
soc 1a1
work,
phsychology , or nurs1 ng
Send resume to P 0 box
346. R10 Grande. 45674

NEED someone to ltve m
my home and share e)(
penses, 2 children ac·
ceptable Call367 0410

SB58

Someone to mow lawn, 245

THE
GALLIPOLIS
Recreat1on Dept. IS stt!l
taking applteat1ons unt il
Apnl 25 for the follow1ng
summer jobs · Baseball
superv1sor , playground
superv1sors and leaders,
umpires, scorekeepers,
gymnastics tn str uctors,
softball supervisor and ten
n1s 1nstructors. If tn
terested, please apply 1n
person
at
th e C1ty
Manager 's Off1ce, C1ty
Butldtng,
518
Second
Avenue, bv Apn l 25 . An
Equal Opportuntty Em·
pi oyer

Wtll care for elderly person
in my private home Call
992 6022.
Genera! welding and cut·
ting Arc and Gas 992·2535
evenmgs
Will take care of elderly
men at n1ght tn your home .
Have referen ce Ca!l 992·
5740 or 992 ·6008

Insurance

13

SANOY AND BEAVER In
surance co has offered
services for f1re msurance
coverage tn Gall1a County
for almost a century
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
availab l e to meet In
d1V1dua1 needs. Contact.
Ray Wedemeyer , your
ne,ghbor and agent
AUTOMOBILE
IN
SURANCE
been can celled?
Lo s t
your
operator' s ltcense' Phone
~92 2143
18

Wanted to Do

G1ve p1ano lessons to begin ·
ners and advanced student
'" mv home Also teach
chordmg and transposing It
.nlerested cal l992 5403.

LOOKING FOR A good jOb
and the tra101ng to go with
1t? We have that wtfh 67 d 1f
ferent jobs to choose from,
ranging from clencal, to
mechan1cal, to electron1cs
tust wa111ng for the nght
man or woman . Gtve me a
call at 446·7829 or stop by
the off1ce at 750 1st Ave tn
Gall1poi1 S, OH Ask f or Joe
Hollern,
U.S
Navy
representativ e

FOR SALE or Trade for
Commercial property
Pleasant Vall ey Estates,
loca ted on Rf 35, 3 miles
f rom Gal l tPOI1s, 112 m11e
from HMC, 3 bdr bnck,
cenTral atr, nat gas, c1ty
water, low uti llt te s Large
corner lot Call Sanders at
446 8640 or «6 2049 .

21

21

Business
Opportunoty

WOULD L1ke to dO babysiT
ttng 1n my home, Ga llipoli s
area, call 446 4039
Business
Opportun1ty

'•• can earn
115,11011 To '20,000

Call ot wr~te Todoy

[J

AIPHALI IEAUNG SPIQALIITS
2229 Merle Rd ., Salem, Ohio 44460
(2t6) 337-8461

I tJ

Now arrange the CirCled letters to
form the surpnse answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon

A

rXI XXI X)

Jumbles EXPEL MOTI F CELERY DETAIN
"
Answer No hot dog s for the ltmld- "'COLO FEET

Jumble Book No . 13,contalnlng 110puzzlet, Ia avtl!abltforS1.75poatpald
from Jumble, clo thlt newspaper, 8011. :M, Norwood, N.J. 07648.1ncludt your
nemt, addrtll, zip eodttnd mtkt chKkt payabltlo Ntwtpaptrbookl.

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

r.-lc;-,:;;--r~..--r;.-

Blackwood
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
Back rn 1934 young Easley
Blackwood of Indoanapohs
invented a convention
Today that conventiOn 1s
the best known and poss1bly
the most valuable of all.
There may be some begonners
who don't know about 1t and
maybe two or three experts
who don't use 11. But apart
from that , 11 &gt;s flayed from
Pole to Pole by al players
The average player uses
Blackwood to brd slams The
expert uses 1t pnmanly as a
check for aces after hiS br1dge
sense and use of pornt count
have told him that he has
enough ammumtion for 12 or
13 tncks, but wants to make
sure that hls opponents can't
beat hom woth aces before he
gets to take his own tricks
Let's look at a simple hand
where the expert and dub use
Blackwood the same way
You hold S- x H- A K Q J 10 9
x and open
x D- A K Q J
two hearts Your partner brds
two spades and all you care
about t how many aces he
has You b1d fr11r not rump. II
he show!! no acP ~ you stop al
f!xe: one a(•e lt!tS VUlt nld SIX

c.

12

Earning potentials of $1000 a w"k and mOfe are
far from unrealistic '" the fast boom1ng a1phalt
mointenanc. market! Regardless af age or curren.
employment we will show you how to own and
o,...ate this much ne.ded businns A small tn'&lt;lelf·
ment (Financ•ng avo1labt.) gets you the patented

(Answers Monday)

I

WANTED Parttime help
must be able to work bet
ween the hours of 10 a.m .
and 9 p rn Apply tn person
to Mad 1son Shoe Store,
Stf\ler Brtdge Plaza

and field-tested equipment and our guidance to get
started Immediately. NG ManthiM Of Hidden fM1

Print answer here:
Yesterday s

BUCKEYE Commun1ty
Serv1ces has a 20 hour per
week ppsifton avatlable for
tt 's foster grandparent
program to a1d in serv1ng
individuals who are
developmentally dtsabled
To apply you must be 60
years or older. Salary tS
52 25 per hour. Contact
Amanda Chatf1ns 245·9273
or Helen Belvlll e446·7032

BE YOUR OWN BOll!

I

I I I

J I I

-

Wa_nted

SUMMER!

... ,.,.....

GAROUCr
tRANBEN

~elp

THIS

KX) I

1

-

11_ __

a first rule
and two aces g1ve you a crnch
grand slam
Change your hand a trifle so
that you have no spades and
two clubs The dub may sbll
use Blackwood. but unless hrs
partner shows hrm two aces
he gains nothmg from h1s
partner's response
The expert doesn't know
exactly what to do But he
won't use Blackwood He will
probably b1d three diamonds
Then hrs next brd wrll be frve
hearts (assummg partner has
not made some hogher b1d m
the meanwhole) This should
tell his ' partner JUSt about
what he has Eleven tncks
w1th hearts as trumps and two
quick losers m clubs
We w1ll continue Black·
wood for at least two more
Saturdays, but leave you with
the f1rst rule of when not to
use Blackwood It IS DO NOT
use Blackwood wben you have
two quick losers In an unbid

suil
(NEWSPAI'8R ENTERPRISE ASSN )

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN send $1 to ' Wm at
Bridge. '' care of thrs newspaper. P 0 Box 489 Ra&lt;110 C1ty
Stat1on , New York. N Y.

roo ta!

Real Estate- General

Real Estate- General

�'!
I

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D-3-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, April20, 1980
16

RodloTV
&amp;CB Repair

1S

22

Schoolslnstruct•on

DI 'S CRAFT SUPPLIE:.
Spring Valley Plaza, 44&lt;1

' RON'S TV SERVICE
: specializing In zen1th
;.House Calls Call 1 304 576
"2398 or 4&lt;16·2454

213,.

Free

macrame

worksnop tor the pat1o,
every Thursday at 9 30
a m and every Saturday at
1 p m.

•

~.. 21
~----~~------~
Busmeu

Money to Loon

FHA VA Conventlal Home
Loans, Columbus F1rst
Mortgage
co ,
loan
representative,
Violet
(Cookte) V1ers, 463 Second
Ave, Gallipolis, Oh , 44&lt;1
7172

PACESETTER FASHION
S otters a highl y profitable
, Jean, ToP and Sportswear
..shop for your very own
•Select from over 100 brands
· Levi , Wrangler, Male,

Money to Loan

Mortgage
Money
Available New homes. old
homes, and ref•nancmg
your present home CON
VENTIONAL 5 Pet down,
SECOND MORTGAGES
VA No down payment,
FHA Low down payment,
FHA 245 Graduated paym
ent program , FHA 265
SubsidY prog ram Call 592
3051, Ireland Mortgage Co,
77 E Slate 51 , Athens OH

Lee, V1ceroy, Landlubber,
many

more. $16,500 10
~ ludes
beginning
m·
ventory , fixtures and
tralntng Open W1lh1n 15
days Call any!, me lor Mr
Hartley, C214l 937 9876

CANCER (JIUle U.Ju.ly ZZ) Today

ASTRO•GRAPH
Berntce Bede

Osol

April It, lilt
Early UU., COOling year yoo wdl be
laying solul found.lllions Near
autumn the shape Dl' what you have
been buJiding will be evident
TAliJIUS CAprB ZI-May 101 Un
famshed t.l.sks w11l bother you men·

Reat Estate - General

REAL ESTATE AGENCY

Were~~~

you need to know n real

~~te

•

Amem:~ ~ on@mll ~nd Ia~ e~tromc

ll:illly ,;y)tem

•

H~

Buyers Protechon Pliiin

m

• Trained rt&gt;ill estate pro~ooal~
• The ,1.-\ov ng

We ofler

M~l;line

,. , . ,."""" ...

lo help ¥')u buy

or ~oell •nvwhere m the coumry
• 1100Y Sel~~ Proteclton Pl.an

0.~

PHONE 446-3643

~.,

.,. "'

you may look for faullJI m other'l
rather than for their Virtues and

create problems that need not exist
Thll:l

ll

especulil&gt; lruc of famUy

members

LEO (July U.Au.g. !1) Bad feelings
Will grow If yoo renund anottler ol
how much you ve done for him or

her m the past This person alteady
feels obligated
VIRGO (AU!·

!3-SeJ&gt;I:

1%1 S. very
careful today lf you re domg things
Wlth fr1ends wtlere each has to pay s
portion()( the tab Someone could get
11p5et 1f they feel the~r share is too
!urge
LIBRA !Sept. z:s.oct. %3)
a
~bl11ty that you rrught lltlderriie
yourself m companson to me 11r
po51Uon The odds are really in your

The"'''

biYor
SCORPIO IOct Z:S.Nov ftl As long
a1 you rtly on your IOi/,ic today in-

llead of your Hnnchet or intuition,
yoo'Utwve no problem, Don't attach
Importance to neHaUvt i.hou,g.hll

ISsue yqwu•eJy und fearle~ly
AQUARJtJS IJea. to-Feb lt l Others
caMot be counted upon t.od&amp;ty to help
you with a taak, Jl m11y be slower
and more dUficult, bu( do it alone If
ne«saary

SAGnTARrtJ S (Nov U.Dec %11

PISCES (Feb M-Marcb ZO ) Ptodt

operate on the lUlJIM! wavel~ Be
sure your objecti'lles an! in har-

from expenence and don't involve
yourself in QnYthl,ng that j!rtlvioiJSIY
caused you probiems Repetjllon
would be asking for trouble

Where joint ventu~ are coocemed
it's very lmportantlhat both of you

mmr

CAPRICORN IDee ZWu. lJ)
There has been a difrJcult dedaloo
you've been dodllnlllltely and its
not likely to correct itself Face the

ARIES l March II· April 19) Even
though you may feel your mate Is

WI"'OII today, bend a lltUe and com
promtse Diplomacy dissolves

dl.oconl

23

..Professional
Servtces
CALL US for your
photographiC needs Por
tratt, passports, com·
mercia! and wedd i ng
photography
Tawney
StWdtOS 1 424 Second Ave

LAWN mower repa1r
ensJines,frames and shar
penlng 446 0355 or 446 4233
after s 30

I

OWNER WILL HELP FINANCE NEW LISTING - A spacious brtck
ranch with over 2,000 sq ft 3 bedrooms
•nc ludong a large master surte w1th Hrs
&amp; Her walk rn closets &amp; pnvate bath,
famtly room, w b ftreplace, 3 sparkling
baths. mOdern equ1pped l&lt;itchen, tor
mal dlmng, F A nat gas, central air,
plus excellent decorating throughout
Situated on a large tree ltned 101 1n
town

((I®]

21 LOCUST
STREET

Spread
your
wings

446-4206

REALlY WORLD .

lH

Stutes Real Estate

31

BY OWNER 3 bdr house,
ktfchen, F R , wood bur
n1ng f1rep lace lg level lot
Call4&lt;16·3100

Real Estate - Gener

Homes lor Sale

6 room house, corner of
Ca rro ll and 3rd St ,
Syracuse, OH Ut11tty room
and garage 992 5205

~~~~~~R~e~a~J~E~s~t~at~e~~G~e~n~e~r:a~t

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US.

992-2342
IXMNINGOtiLDS AGENCY, INC.

~!fll 1 0 1o'

LO\IE A GRACIOUS SETTING!
HOME OF RIIRE VIILUE &amp; CHARM
Thts stately 2 story nome has all the features '" a
home vou would ever want• Four bedrooms, 2 full,
lfA &amp; 112 baths complete buil t m k ttchen off !rom
the fam11y room with w b fireplace Formal ltvtng
and d1n1ng room Full f1n1shed basement featunng a
large family room wtth w b ftreplace, game room
and ut1!1ty room Large 2 car garage wtth opener
covered pat10 and sun deck Free swimming and
club house area available

WOODLAND
6 49 Acres more or less of tall green p1ne and
woodland Located south of R1o Grande on State Rt
325
$14,500
TOTAL CASH PRICE'
On thts 2 story, 4 bedroom home L1vmg room, k1t
chen &amp; dining area Fully carepeted 1 car garage
Situated on a deep lot with a garden space
WE ARE LOOKING FOR A
WALTON SIZE FAMILY
To ftll all 5 bedrooms 1n thiS except .anally outs land
lng brick home This home has everything for your
comfort Formal living room, large spac1ous famtiY
room with w b fireplace, beaul•lul k 1lchen w•lh all
built 1ns and dining area Colorful ceram1c tile
baths Full l1nlshed basement, loads of closet space
Large 2 car fmoshed garage This home tS very well
constructed Protess1onally landscaped In an
outslandmg 1ocal10n - Porterbrooke Subd. C1ty
Schools. Shown by Appo•ntment Only'
NEW LISTING!

9VA% F 1nanc1ng Avatlable 1 3 bedroom ranch, 1112
baths, famtly room , large k1tchen area Fully
carpeTed 15x20 out 01 the ground pool S•tuated on a
large lot
ACREAGE - E xcellent bu• ld•ng s1 te 8 4 acres
more or less Totally fen ced Located 5 to 6 miles
from the c11y C1ty Schools Pnced $14,500 00
GO AHEAD AND FALL IN LOVE I
THIS TIME YOU CAN AFFORD IT!
The owners have loved th1s home but they are mov
lng You will know the care 1t has had as soon as you
open the door Just etght years old 3 bedroom
ranch, living room, k1tct1en w1th built tns, dtn1ng
area, modern bllth, 1 car f1n1shed garage, all th 1Son
a ntce s11e lot located only one and a half miles from
the City. Priced rn the mod .CO's

BEAT THE INTEREST-RATE RAP!
$500 00 PER·MONTH,
$10,000 DOWN PAYMENT
Thts home is 1ust waitmg to be yours You'll bubble
w1th excitement when YOtJ SIP the features thts lux
ury home offers Foyer, floonng , formal l1v1ng
room, w b fireplace, cedar mantel track, lighttng ,
new plush carpeting, formal dlnmg room, beaUtifUl
tamrly room woth large sl 1d1ng door tead1ng to
beautiful pool and patio area. terra ced ground w1th
lots of shrubbery, as gnll , ideal for entertainment, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, large kiChen with unusual
breakfast bar, cherry, walnut wood. full basement,
central atr, garage and openers This home Is
beautifully decorated All new custom draperoes
Looks like '' 1ust cam eroght out of an mter1or
decorator's maoaztne On e of th e f 1nest I'm sure it
will be love at II rst Sight
BEAT THIS
SJOO 00 PER MONTH
1nclud1ng pronclpal, 1n
terest, taxes and '"
surance Only 9% tnt
Owner transferred and
very anx1ous to sell C1
ty schools, acre of
ground more or less, tlv
1ng
r.oom,
2 w b
ftreplaces, k1tchen &amp;
d1mng area Full base
men! Proced m $40's
QUALITY
PLUS BEAUTY
Th1s Is a family home,
all
brlcl&lt;
w•th
4
bedrooms and a spark!
lng lull bath up Large
kitchen lined woth pretty
cabrnets. Large Ioyer
and formal living room
and dinmg Full base
ment · ftreplace 1n fam1
ly room, 2 car garage at
!ached, also a workshop
and a barn Situated on
aproximately 5 9 acres
Th1s home reflecfs
tender, lov1ng care and
true value
DAIRY FARM
135 acres mo re or Jess
1 3 miles Raccoon Creek
bOttom, 40 acres creek
bottom, 60 acres tot al
!liable Used as a Grade
A dairy operat ton, 4
milkers woth automatic
washers, 800 gal bulk
tanks, 2 Silos (800 tons
total)
with
silo
unloadmg auger STruc
tures
40x80 metal,
172x40 milk hOuse w1th
Ieee room, 40x170 con·
crete slab feed lot All
structures have con
crete
floors
1.000
walnut and popla r trees
on farm Clay Twp, C1·
IY_t"~IS.

RIOGRANOE AREA
Mobile home and hall
ocre
lot for
only
$14,500.00.

FI NANCE
Owner w111 help tmance
with a down payment
and ca rry the balance
n a LAND CON
RACT Stately 2 story
p1llary
posts ,
3
bedroom, formal entry
&amp; large open w.nd1ng
sta1rcase r=amdy room
w1th pl.nk lloorong &amp;
w b !•replace Formal
hvtng room, spactous
eat·•n kitchen W1!h loads
of knotty prne cab1nets.
Tnts and much more
setting on J acres Can
buy only one acre City
Schools G1ve us a call
for moredeta11s

REDUCEDJ,OOO OO'
DOLLARS
SCENIC OHIO
RIVER ACREAGE
25 Acres of gOOd farm .
You'll love this mOdern
4 bedroom brick home
with lull basement. 21h
baths
Farmly room
with
wo odburn1ng
tireplace. two kitchen$.
Good barn
fences,
tobacco base, produc·
live cropland Call for
an appo1ntment

RODNEY ·CORA RD
58 Acre, mobil ehome
runners for a : 2x60
trailer , sephc tank,
rural water available.
Very reasonable

Bonnll! L Stutes, ReaHor, 44&amp;4206
·JacM$ R. Stutes, Assoc. 4/,o-2885
.Josepn L. Leach, Assoc. HS-94&amp;4

---

Homes fer Sale

ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH, DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?
'

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Real Estate- General

We cover over
7 m1ll1on m1les
to f1nd you a· home.

oan Boggs, rtea Itor' AssQC\
Ph. Home• 446·3294

Gallia County's Fastest Growrng Heal Estate Agency

JUST LISTED THIS RIVERFRONT
ALL BRICK HOME
Your family w111 love the beauTy of the two
ttreplaces and the energy savmgs of the wood
burner 3 bedrooms, full basement and much more
This home shows excellent quality and workman
sh•P Call us tOday'

LOAN ASSUMPTION EX·
ECUTIVE HOME - 2,000 sq II of
quality ltvtng space plus 625' of lake
frontage will make lhts 4 bedroom
home a most en1oyable experience for
our family 2 sprawling acres of recrea
t1on &amp; fun, a most attractive home w11h
2 baths, lamrly room, fireplace , large
equtpped kitchen, formal dln1ng &amp; 2 car
garage Excepttonal loan assumpt1on
Under $100,000

31

31

Homes tor Sale

9·ROOMS-85ACRES
COULD BE FINANCED BY OWNER
Approx 30 acres bottom level land,
balance pasture. Less than '11 m11e oil
blacktop road 6 bedrooms, l'h baths,
front &amp; buoll•n back porch, large
l6,/2'x22lf2' living room, automatic
washer &amp; dryer goes Bu1lf 1n cabmets,
s s / dbl sink, electric range Hot water
e~rculatmg heat plus wOOd burnmg
stove in fireplace Has 1ts own water
system Call now
I 414
VERY NICELY
REMODELED HOME
Th1s extra well kept
home has 6 large
spactous rooms
Kit
chen
w1th
bU11t 1n
cab1nets, sta1nless steel
stnk,
range ,
refrigerator, washer &amp;
dryer
Large utlltly
room Thts home has ex·
Ira lots with garden
space and 2 outs1de
storagebutldlng
1402

BEAUT! FUL OH 10'''
OWN PART OF IT
Tastefully decorated home LtVInQ
room , eat'" k1tchen w1th built m
cabmets, bath &amp; pat 1o. Storm doors and
wtndows w 1th carefree alum Sldtng 1n
addition, a large 30'x30' c mder block
garage with flourescenT l1ghtrng, plenty
of electrical plugs &amp; water Perfect tor
hobby or workshop or 1ust a place for
the husband to htde and putter All thts
plus a garden Ask1ng only $34,500 In
c1ty school d1stnct
N387

2·A . I· ROOM HOME
4 B . R , bnck &amp; fram e
home
Ni ce covered
patio tn back of house
Lots Of bu1111n cabrnets,
rural water . 12'x 16'
storage bldg , large
garden spot, wtth1n
21h mlles from Holzer
Hosp , 2 Acres of land
scaped yard Lots of
N279
shade trees

9ROOM
COUNTRY HOME
5 BR , ntce front porch,
niCe k1lchen wtlh bu 111
1n cabtnets, double s s
smk Bath w1th shower,
lots of shade trees and
frulf trees Nt ce garden
spot This home has
blown in msulat1on
Located bes1de St
H•ghway 160 84 acre of
land More can be pur
chased w•lh th1s home. 2
mob•le homes that now
are brlngmg 1n a rental
of $175.00 per month
plus a total of 3 84 acres
of land
All located
bes1de Slate Highway
160 CALL FOR ALL
DE TAl LS
I 266
Lt FE IS
TOO SHORT!!
Stop dreammg about
own1ng
your
own
busmess. BriCk burld1ng
rn Vmton equipped for
carry out Perfect tor
P1zza Parlor, Beauty
Parlor or Barber Salon
liar detailS
1243
$39,900.00
N1ce comfortable 2 BR
located on 1.1 A. of mce
landscaped yard and
large garden area Par
t1al finished basement
F A furnace, garage,
storm doors and win
dows Th •s property has
lots of shrubbery, shade
trees, fruit trees (3 ap
pie, 2 peach), grape ar
bor, strawberry and
raspberry bushes I 369
CABIN 3 OR
4 ROOMS
F 1shmg, vacation, 1 or 2
bedroom
cabinet
located lacing Raccoon
Creek and Blue Lake
Nice large wooded lot
Make your life a year
round vacation. CALL
US NOW. No. 366
MEDUCEOI!t
FOR QUICK SALE
RIVER FRONTAGE
Beautiful 7 rooms unl·
quely designed 2 story
home with 4 B.R ., 2
baths, 20xl9 living room
wlht fireplace
Full
basement
garage,
storm doors &amp; w indows
Pallo doors apen up to
the back patio &amp; a
beautiful view of the
Ohio R lver 2 acres M
or L . You' II love the
home &amp; view. CALL
NOW FOR $59,900 I 374
- NtC-EHOM-E
PRICED RIGHT
3 bedrooms, 2 baths with
showers. family room,
dining area . Total 8
rooms, modern kitchen
w i th electric range,
relrlg .,
dishwasher,
garbage disposal and lot
of cabinets F A F , also
woodburner,
Gallla
rural water service.
b u II d I ng ,
siding,
landa&lt;:ap•ed lot. Ap
ap

See

Hnm&lt;•s of distinct ron don t always have to be expensive
Interna tiona l offers 42 home designs rang1ng
from lrad1t 1onal to contempor ary , and they can all be
packaged and delivered to your lot Warm , beautiful,
spa c1ous and stylt sh What more could you wan t m a
home'
Send $3 00 lor one comp lete cata log or ca l l for
free broch ures

WOOD HOMES

Real Estate - General

*

EXCELLENT
LEVEL LOT
23 acre M or L for
res1dent1al,
mob tl e
nome and garden. Fron
tage on Patriot Cadmus
Rd
Rural
water
available ASk1ng price
only S4500
#382

NICE BAR
FOR LEASE
W ill sell D·2 l 1cense and
all stock and equipment '
whic h Includes cooler
(holds appro• 9 to 10
cases
of
beer),
showcase, Victor cash
register and add.ng
machine, ref and gas
cook stove. All stock and
equipment and 0 ·2
licenses all lor only
$5,900.00. Be the first to
pick up this bargain.
COME IN NOW No. 344

3 BDR, BRICK ranch style
home lor sale 2 baths, tully
ca rpeted, attached garage,
on n1ce lot Just off Rt 2m
GallipOlis Ferry Call 675·
6329 alter 5

NEW LISTING
comm
7 office room s
1nh 1 bldg on the Mam
St of Rutland Use as
bus1ness or home &amp;
combmat1on bus
2 STORY FRAME - 3
Bedroom , lull base
very clean, Racine
"area Call for more info
3 ACRES of qu•et coun
try s1de Lots of Hoot
Owls Within 5 m1nute
drive of Pomeroy Pav
ed street, all ut •ltlles
I ACRE IN Ml 0·
DLEPORT - 4 room
cottage. trailer hookup
Reduced to $8,000 00
2 BDRM. HOME - 4
acres, walk1ng dtstance
to M iddleport
2 BEDROOM COT
TAGE Paneled &amp;
carpeted throughout
New furnace . M1d
dleport area $10,500
Hobart Dillon, Broker
Fay Manley,
Branch Mgr.
Phone 992·2598

COUNTRY
Mtdland mobtle
With 3 bedrooms
baths Peaceful
,
Wtth 7/ 8 ac re Going
$16,500
TRAILER SPACES hookups, 4 acr es, water,
electnc, and gOOd loca·
t ion on State Route
NEW LISTING
Renovated brick home,
new ca rpet1ng , new
bath, and new k1tchen
cupboards Basement, 2
porches , near stores
CHANCE
01 a
res1dence or a bustness
or both Has a bath,
natural gas, flu e tor
WOOdburner and Oh1o
Power Serv1ce
Ask
mgonly $12,000
RUTLAND - Real niCe
2 bedroom home w•lh 4
los Has c•ty wa ter, cen
tral healing, and Oh1o
Power Ntce econom1ca!
home lor IUStS25,000
RACINE - 3 bedroom
home w1th carpeting,
panel1ng, natural gas,
c1ty water, 2 large lots,
basement and garage.
2 ACRES - All City con
venlences,
4 room
home, bath, natural gas
furnace, ftreplace and
nice kolchen
Only
$20 000

Housing

Headquar~ers
Real Estate- General

Real Estate

Real Estate- General

5 BOR bnck ranch, ex
cellent location, ctty school
d1strtct, 3 baths , 2
fireplaces , screened porch,
a1r cond , pnced upper
70's Ca ll446 4539

RIVER VIEW HOME·
FOR SALE

General

FOR SALE BY OWNER-$51,900
Don' t build - This one is like new! A
large, new family rm . with a woOdburning fireplace is lust part of our all brick,
totally electric, centrally a1r conditioned,
3 bedroom ranch style home. Located on
a large professionally landscaped, flat lot
in the K.C. School District. This home has
much more to offer than we can list here.
Pleas!! Call446-3100
446-71 22 (Evenings)

BY OWNER
Oown St . Rt. 7, 5
minutes from Ctty Park
2 story frame· 4 B R.'s,
living room w1th W.B .
fireplace, eat·in ktl·
chen
Basement and
garage. Pr1ced 1n low
40's.
Call Daytome, 446· 1615
A Iter 5: 44&amp;·1244

Real Estate - General

TONEY REALTY &lt;.o
WM. D. lONEY - BROKF!t

446-3087
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
WE DO OUR HOMEWORK!

I

v."

PROFESStONALl Y LANOSCAPEO
ACRE LAWN - The perfect settrng lor
thiS spac1ous bnck rancher, featuring 3
bedrooms, fam1ly room, 1112 baths and
bUilt ink ttchen

NEW LISTING, ACREAGE 100
acres M . or L , 70 acres cleared , 30
acres wooded, gas well Wtth royalttes,
lob base, all fen ced and locted tn Ad
d1sonTwp

General

Real Estate - General '

OUTSTANDING
Lovely sweeping v1ew
the Oh1o R1ver , from
th1 s Immaculate 3 BR
ranch
Th 1s
home
features LR w•lh pretty
corner frpl , nice kit
chen, den, bath, C A , 2
car garage and lull
SUPERB CEDAR RANCH - First rate basement w1th shower
craftsmanship throughout 4 bedrooms, S1tuated on 1 acre Of
double closets, 2 lull baths, complete lovely lawn
bu11t1n k•lchen w1lh Cornmg top range, PLATTED
AND
formal dlnong. lg family rm with READY :[0 BUILD ON
wOOdburner Redwood deck and 2 car - BUild! nO lOIS 120'x100'
garage
acre lot Call tor appoint located tn subdtvlsion in
ment
KC school di strict Buy
IS ACRES PLUS - 12x65 Kirkwood on land contract
mobile home, barn, corn crib, pond,
WE BRING
land fenced and lots of shade trees
PEOPLE HOME
Land can be sold without mobile heme

'I•

24 STATE STREET

Real Estate

Real Estate- General

BARGAIN - W1lh IOday's 1nllai10n,
$14,000 sounds great, doesn' t 1!? This
home needs some f1xin' 1 Call for
delatls
ROOM TO ROAM - on almost 4 acres
of land Wtlh a pond and small barn
Plus• A new 3 bedroom home, w1th l 1J:2
baths, a sunbust orange k1tchen, cen
tral atr, electnc heat pump, extra '"
sulaflon
Pass loan assump

Real Estate - General

Real Estate- General

AFTER HOURS
PHONE
Wtlla Davis, Associate
446·0844
Becky Lane, Assoc•ate
446·0458

FINANCING IS AVAILABLE
on th1s new home located ott Georges
Creek Road Spilt entry, LR . dtntng
area , 3 BR, bath, kttchen w1th
dishwasher, ntce cab1nets. Single car
garage, full basement Ruret water
ava•lable 2 92 wooded acres House 1s
not f1n1shed Take a look at thts one to
day'
1447

INTRIGUING
$36,900
Walk •nlo this very
warm and Inviting
home
Lovely large
rooms Some with new
carpe t Four bedrooms,
bath, utility room, buill·
'" k itchen w ith ap
pllances Call now, th is
nice home won't last
long
Kyger Creek
Schools No. 406

00 IT QUICKLY
The good ones go fast - 1t' s for certa1n
th1s cozy home won ' t last long 3
bedrooms, llvmg room, bath, uttllty
area, garage Concrete dr~ve , patto,
chatn lmk fence surro!Jnds bac k yard
Well msulated, thermopane wtndows
W1lhin 1'12 moles Of HMC Unbeatable
pr.ced at $27,000
1 437

88ACRE FARM
II you ' re lookmg tor a home tor yourself
AND your antmals
then look no fur
!her' 33 good, level , ltllable acres
Some woods, some pasture, n1ce stze
barn Located 15 min from GallipoliS
on blacktop road, th1s gentleman' s
farm has that "down home feeling "
Home conststs of J BR, IIVIOQ rm, d1n
tng rm , k1fchen, bath and good stze
uttllty room Cal! for more spec1ftCS

On 4'12 ACRES
A ftne ranch m the country , seven m1les
from GallipOliS S1x room modern
house, 3 BR , bath, lul l basement, fuel
otl forced a.r furnace, blown 1n msula
tton county water plus large crstern for
extra uses Spr1ng Will soon be here
What a place for your famtly and
tr.ends Well sTocked pond, good fences
Beaul•ful acres Call today Th1s show
tng Will be conv,nctng
# 449

H19
ATTENTION I HOG FARMERS
If you ' re looktng for the 1deal set up for
the hog ra•smg busmess, we have tf 101
acres of pr0duct1ve land and tn Me1gs
County New furrowing house, block
fatten1ng house, barn, new 6,000 bushel
gram dryer 2 wtre corn cnbs, plenty of
water Hook up for 2 mob1le homes
Owner Will sell complete With or
w1thout equ1pment Wantmg to get '"
the hog bus tness or JUSt wantmg a top
notch farm Calltoday
t 438
LOTS PRICED TO SELL
Butld to sutl yourself on these I acre
lots Frontage on blacktop road County
water ava ilable If you're look tng for a
pretty country sett1ng, call today $5,000
per acre No restnct10ns
N417

TRYTHISFOR
A STARTER
Where else can you f tnd
a home tn Gallipolis
under $20,000 wtth a
posstble
assumable
mortgage? Th 1s mfl a
t1on ftghter cozy home
has paneled 11v1ng
room , 2 bedrooms,
cheerful ea t •n k1fchen,
bath large carport, plus
metal
storage
a
bU1Id1ng
H413
ASSUMABLE
MORTGAGE
PAYMENTS OF
S189 60 MO.
1 acre &amp; 5 room home
1ust out of c1ty l1m 1ts on
Rt
141
N1ce com
t or table easy to heat
home w11h wood burning
llreplac~. basement,
modern kitchen, nat
gas furna ce, c 1ty water,
large carport,lme 16X18
block storage bldg,
garden space Call now
I
411

ALMOST PERFECT
Noth1ng 1S perfect but th1s cozy home ts
as close as a person can ftnd 2
bedrooms, large ltv1ng room, 1m
presslve
built tn
kitchen , new
dishwasher, new gas furnace patio,
storage bulld 1ng, v.. acre LOOktng tor
the rtght home, make an appomtment
today Wtthtn 4112 miles of Holzer
HOSpital
#421

LOOK AT THIS ONE
A two story remOdeled older home
located on St Rt 160 Just ,,,nutes
from town and the hospital It' s Situated
on e1ghteen acres with a large barn and
outbuoldings CALL TODAY
N460

2ACRES
Only $19,900' J niCe
rooms built on to a
mob1le home Large eat
1n k •lchen 12' x33. lots of
built'" cab1nets 12 x20'
l• vtng
room ,
fron t
porch N1ce rolling land
scaped 2 acres Lots of
room
H 412

" DO IT YOURSELF "
Ftn1Sh up the remodeltng of fh1s 2 story
3 BR country home It has been
rew1red, new breaker box, some dry
wall work done New roof and mater~als
costtng over SlSOO on prem tses County
wa t er tap pa1d for 1 acre of level
ground What a change you can make
t 442
and proltls un1tm1ted tor $17,500
YOUR OWN PRIVATE WORLD
That presents pr.vacy and beauty Th is
11 acres, more or less, already has a
lane 1ead1ng to the bu1ldtng s1te, rural
water tap and lots of trees Take a look
TODAY'
,451

REI'.LTOP e

Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636
AUilreytanaday, Realmr ~U
25 Locust St., Gallipolis, Ohio

THE CHOICE IS YOURS I 2 new homes nearly com
pleted, 3 BR . 2 baths, lull basement. hea t pump,
cen air cond, fully carpeted Superb qual•ly and
design $56,00
UME 1o'w Interest mc.rtgage 3 BR . l'h baths.
frame, tttfacheo garage Super !ocat.on

NEARL V 2 ACRES - 3 BR . 1'!1 bat hs 2
story with full basement Trees galore,
approx 4 miles from R10 Grande
$35,000.
VACATION SETTING - Over 19 acres
along Raccoon Creek NICe 2 BR home
Barn, other outbldg Good develoment
potenl10l $49,000

.'

NINE ACRES - Nice 4 BR home, famo
ty room, country kitc-hen, 2poches
Garage Several outbldg Near R•o
Grnde $4A,900
'
·- Over 600' rd frontage.
rural water, meadow and
beautiful S20,900 00

20ACRES·MODERN BUILDINGS
Stx room house, 3 bedrooms, l'h baths.
basement, FA fuel 01 1 furnace Level,
fertile garden area Modern barn, pond,
tobacco base, garage, work shop One
of the best IS m1nute drtve from
Gallipolis New surfaced State Road
Convenftonal ftnanclng $53,500
N459
A BIT OF COUNTRY
Th1s farm house needs some work, but
when you buy 11 you 'll get 1 barn, cellar
and cellar house, county water, but also
otd faShiOn dug well where water never
tastes better wtnched up w1th a rope
and bucket F r utt trees and a n1ce yard
T hree bedrooms, bath TOday only
$23,000
, 440
43 ACRES
Vacant land, poss•b• I• IY of coal and
agnculturallime
# 322

A HIDEOUT - But only a few minutes
from city. 2 story home has 3 BR , enor
mous living rm w1th f.replace, eat In
kitchen
equrpped
with
range,
refrigerator, concrete block garage. Cl
ty schools $37,500

POSSUM TROT ROAD - 1 5 acre
building lot, 40x30' barn, concrete
outbldg. Rural water. $6,500

;.

....
~

.
~

BEEF FARM
We have several farms, but th1s one IS
spec1al L and m good condttton, tiled ,
limed, fert1!tzed Fences kept up 1800
lbs tobacco base, 2 barns, gOOd setup
for cow and calf operat1on Let's not
forget the modern house, 2 or 3
bedrooms , n1ce large bath Th ts one 1S
ready to use We 'd l1ke to show 1t to you
,448

EXCELLENCE · tn design,
and workmanship. Natural te&gt;&lt;ture•
cedar and brick tn a pine tree setting
Beautiful 4 BR , 2 baths, storage galore.
tamlly rm with fireplace apens onto
deck surrounded by trees 2 car garage,
heat pump, cen air Few miles from c1
ty $83,700
SUPER BARGAIN - l'h story fr ame
home 1n good cond, 3 BR, country ktt
chen, spacious level lawn, e)(cellent
garden space Can' t be beat at $26,000

·-...

.,

CLEAN AS SPRING
!s this 3 yr old ranch Livmg room,
large kitchen and dmmg area, 3
bedrooms, bath 13 90 acres Tobacco
base 20x60 tobacco barn Kyger Creek
School D1stroct Pr.ced 1n the $40's I 4S7

REALTY

ENTERTAIN HERE! From the slate
floor entry to the second floor balcony
you 11 love th1s home 4 BR , 2'12 baths,
master suite has Its own bath and s1t
i1na area Folding doors let you com
blne living rm and family rm for lg
parttes Formal danlng rm, 2 car
garage 2 rm . basement Colon1al styled
extenor, circular drive, approx 3
acres, pond, lots of trees R1o Grande
area $94,000

•

LOAN ASSUMPTION POSSIBLE
A real value for someone need1ng plen
ty Of space 4 bedrooms, 15x26 i1V1ng
room w1fh stone ftreplace, bu11t In kit
chen, bath, ut1hty room Over 1600 sq
II of living space 5 acres Pond
Loca ted at R1 160 A home one must see
to apprec1ate. Loan assumptton poss1
ble to qualtlted buyer
#453

CAI-tADAY.

·m
LJ::!

...
~

LUCKY YOU
ThiS home delivers the
ktnd of !1vtng demanded
b y today s tastes 1n a
very handsome destgn
Large lovely k1tchen
has all the modern con
ven 1ences a w1 f e would
want plus a large d1nmg
area, eat at ba r , family
room J large bedrooms
and 2 lull baths Very
tastefully decorated
N
3
1
6

GRAB IT FAST
IT WON' T LAST•'
A lot of House lor only
$31 ,900 Atr condtt1oned
four bedroom home, tor
mal d1n 1ng room , k1f
chen
w1th
budt '"
cabinets, plus a porch
Make an appo1ntment
today to see thts cha rm
1ng home !n Mercer
v111e
~ 336

...

Real Estilte- General :,.

Can't Y,qu.picture ~vourself
bvtng here?

1 ROOMS

SUMMER , SPRING
WINTER OR FALLA HOME FOR
ALL SEASONS!
A pond f1ll ed w1tn Bassi
- 10 acre fa rm A h11!
for tobogganmg 1 Roast
chestnuts from your
own trees 1n Autumn' A
handso me brtck , a1r
cond1t1oned house w1th
l 1v1ng
roo m,
thr ee
bedrooms, lu ll bath and
two hall baths plus
shower K1tchen w1fh
built 1n cabme ts. sunken
dtnmg room 1ead 1ng to
large
bac k p orc h
overlooking breathtak l
ng rollrng hills Fam 11y
room , bt lltard room
w1th table, summer ktt
chen Heated garage,
aUMIIIary
bu!ldtngs
Plus, plus, pf\Js' - Ca ll
for more Information
No . 400

DILLON
REAL'ESTATE

Homes for Sale

Box 83 A, Rt 1, West Columboa , WV 304-882 2962

ACREAGE
PLUS MODERN
t500SQ FT . RANCH
19 A
1n cou ntry ,
spactous bnck &amp; frame,
3 B R , 2 baths, step
saver U shaped k1tchen
w built •n oven/ M1cro
Wave ,
di Sh wa sher,
large d1n1ng family
room, huge concrete
pat•o. sheltered front
porch for relax mg . 2 car
garagewtth utd.ty area
Rura l water, cen tral
air Man y more extras
make th1s home a must
Iosee ' CALL TODAY
K372
COMMEPCIAL LANO
BUSINESS BUILDERS
we now have approx 14
A avarlable, iUS I off Rt
35 west, w1th a close ac
cess to ctty sewer &amp;
water, &amp; near thn v1 ng
business comm un 1ty
PRICED TO SELL Can
297
sell in 7 A Plot

31

S47,900 Will buy this NEW,
quality bu111 home 011
lower Rt 7 tess than 10 mtn
from town Carport, 3 b r,
1 1h baths Carpeted Heat
pump Fireplace 446 4753
weekend or evening Better
hurryt

SERVING SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE 1868

1
I
I
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D-9--The Sunday Tunes-Sentme1, Sunday, Apn120, 1980

DOWNINGOtiLDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE

Rea l Estate

----------..
WISEMAN
I
Real Ellate- General

datA!
GEMJNI (May !1-JIIIH!! ZG) Funds

earmarked for domestic needs
shou.Jd not be blown on pleasurable
purswts today

Opportuntty
22

taUy today and coold spot! your fun
Finish them ftrst, then forget them
Romance, travel, luck, re1401.U'Ca,
pos:;1ble pltf~tlls and ct~rcer for
~ttl lhe com•ng months ~trc
dlsdt.ssed In your A.stro-Graph Let·
ter, whictl beg1111 with your birth~y Matl 'l for each to AstroGraph, Box 489, Radio City Station,
N Y l00l9 Be sure to specify birth

90 ACRES - Nearly 2,000' rd. fronta~oo.
55 acres pasture, 20 acres limber, rest
tillable. $95,900. ,
'

1

••

�'!
I

I
I

I

I

I

,

t
r
.
I

D-3-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, April20, 1980
16

RodloTV
&amp;CB Repair

1S

22

Schoolslnstruct•on

DI 'S CRAFT SUPPLIE:.
Spring Valley Plaza, 44&lt;1

' RON'S TV SERVICE
: specializing In zen1th
;.House Calls Call 1 304 576
"2398 or 4&lt;16·2454

213,.

Free

macrame

worksnop tor the pat1o,
every Thursday at 9 30
a m and every Saturday at
1 p m.

•

~.. 21
~----~~------~
Busmeu

Money to Loon

FHA VA Conventlal Home
Loans, Columbus F1rst
Mortgage
co ,
loan
representative,
Violet
(Cookte) V1ers, 463 Second
Ave, Gallipolis, Oh , 44&lt;1
7172

PACESETTER FASHION
S otters a highl y profitable
, Jean, ToP and Sportswear
..shop for your very own
•Select from over 100 brands
· Levi , Wrangler, Male,

Money to Loan

Mortgage
Money
Available New homes. old
homes, and ref•nancmg
your present home CON
VENTIONAL 5 Pet down,
SECOND MORTGAGES
VA No down payment,
FHA Low down payment,
FHA 245 Graduated paym
ent program , FHA 265
SubsidY prog ram Call 592
3051, Ireland Mortgage Co,
77 E Slate 51 , Athens OH

Lee, V1ceroy, Landlubber,
many

more. $16,500 10
~ ludes
beginning
m·
ventory , fixtures and
tralntng Open W1lh1n 15
days Call any!, me lor Mr
Hartley, C214l 937 9876

CANCER (JIUle U.Ju.ly ZZ) Today

ASTRO•GRAPH
Berntce Bede

Osol

April It, lilt
Early UU., COOling year yoo wdl be
laying solul found.lllions Near
autumn the shape Dl' what you have
been buJiding will be evident
TAliJIUS CAprB ZI-May 101 Un
famshed t.l.sks w11l bother you men·

Reat Estate - General

REAL ESTATE AGENCY

Were~~~

you need to know n real

~~te

•

Amem:~ ~ on@mll ~nd Ia~ e~tromc

ll:illly ,;y)tem

•

H~

Buyers Protechon Pliiin

m

• Trained rt&gt;ill estate pro~ooal~
• The ,1.-\ov ng

We ofler

M~l;line

,. , . ,."""" ...

lo help ¥')u buy

or ~oell •nvwhere m the coumry
• 1100Y Sel~~ Proteclton Pl.an

0.~

PHONE 446-3643

~.,

.,. "'

you may look for faullJI m other'l
rather than for their Virtues and

create problems that need not exist
Thll:l

ll

especulil&gt; lruc of famUy

members

LEO (July U.Au.g. !1) Bad feelings
Will grow If yoo renund anottler ol
how much you ve done for him or

her m the past This person alteady
feels obligated
VIRGO (AU!·

!3-SeJ&gt;I:

1%1 S. very
careful today lf you re domg things
Wlth fr1ends wtlere each has to pay s
portion()( the tab Someone could get
11p5et 1f they feel the~r share is too
!urge
LIBRA !Sept. z:s.oct. %3)
a
~bl11ty that you rrught lltlderriie
yourself m companson to me 11r
po51Uon The odds are really in your

The"'''

biYor
SCORPIO IOct Z:S.Nov ftl As long
a1 you rtly on your IOi/,ic today in-

llead of your Hnnchet or intuition,
yoo'Utwve no problem, Don't attach
Importance to neHaUvt i.hou,g.hll

ISsue yqwu•eJy und fearle~ly
AQUARJtJS IJea. to-Feb lt l Others
caMot be counted upon t.od&amp;ty to help
you with a taak, Jl m11y be slower
and more dUficult, bu( do it alone If
ne«saary

SAGnTARrtJ S (Nov U.Dec %11

PISCES (Feb M-Marcb ZO ) Ptodt

operate on the lUlJIM! wavel~ Be
sure your objecti'lles an! in har-

from expenence and don't involve
yourself in QnYthl,ng that j!rtlvioiJSIY
caused you probiems Repetjllon
would be asking for trouble

Where joint ventu~ are coocemed
it's very lmportantlhat both of you

mmr

CAPRICORN IDee ZWu. lJ)
There has been a difrJcult dedaloo
you've been dodllnlllltely and its
not likely to correct itself Face the

ARIES l March II· April 19) Even
though you may feel your mate Is

WI"'OII today, bend a lltUe and com
promtse Diplomacy dissolves

dl.oconl

23

..Professional
Servtces
CALL US for your
photographiC needs Por
tratt, passports, com·
mercia! and wedd i ng
photography
Tawney
StWdtOS 1 424 Second Ave

LAWN mower repa1r
ensJines,frames and shar
penlng 446 0355 or 446 4233
after s 30

I

OWNER WILL HELP FINANCE NEW LISTING - A spacious brtck
ranch with over 2,000 sq ft 3 bedrooms
•nc ludong a large master surte w1th Hrs
&amp; Her walk rn closets &amp; pnvate bath,
famtly room, w b ftreplace, 3 sparkling
baths. mOdern equ1pped l&lt;itchen, tor
mal dlmng, F A nat gas, central air,
plus excellent decorating throughout
Situated on a large tree ltned 101 1n
town

((I®]

21 LOCUST
STREET

Spread
your
wings

446-4206

REALlY WORLD .

lH

Stutes Real Estate

31

BY OWNER 3 bdr house,
ktfchen, F R , wood bur
n1ng f1rep lace lg level lot
Call4&lt;16·3100

Real Estate - Gener

Homes lor Sale

6 room house, corner of
Ca rro ll and 3rd St ,
Syracuse, OH Ut11tty room
and garage 992 5205

~~~~~~R~e~a~J~E~s~t~at~e~~G~e~n~e~r:a~t

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US.

992-2342
IXMNINGOtiLDS AGENCY, INC.

~!fll 1 0 1o'

LO\IE A GRACIOUS SETTING!
HOME OF RIIRE VIILUE &amp; CHARM
Thts stately 2 story nome has all the features '" a
home vou would ever want• Four bedrooms, 2 full,
lfA &amp; 112 baths complete buil t m k ttchen off !rom
the fam11y room with w b fireplace Formal ltvtng
and d1n1ng room Full f1n1shed basement featunng a
large family room wtth w b ftreplace, game room
and ut1!1ty room Large 2 car garage wtth opener
covered pat10 and sun deck Free swimming and
club house area available

WOODLAND
6 49 Acres more or less of tall green p1ne and
woodland Located south of R1o Grande on State Rt
325
$14,500
TOTAL CASH PRICE'
On thts 2 story, 4 bedroom home L1vmg room, k1t
chen &amp; dining area Fully carepeted 1 car garage
Situated on a deep lot with a garden space
WE ARE LOOKING FOR A
WALTON SIZE FAMILY
To ftll all 5 bedrooms 1n thiS except .anally outs land
lng brick home This home has everything for your
comfort Formal living room, large spac1ous famtiY
room with w b fireplace, beaul•lul k 1lchen w•lh all
built 1ns and dining area Colorful ceram1c tile
baths Full l1nlshed basement, loads of closet space
Large 2 car fmoshed garage This home tS very well
constructed Protess1onally landscaped In an
outslandmg 1ocal10n - Porterbrooke Subd. C1ty
Schools. Shown by Appo•ntment Only'
NEW LISTING!

9VA% F 1nanc1ng Avatlable 1 3 bedroom ranch, 1112
baths, famtly room , large k1tchen area Fully
carpeTed 15x20 out 01 the ground pool S•tuated on a
large lot
ACREAGE - E xcellent bu• ld•ng s1 te 8 4 acres
more or less Totally fen ced Located 5 to 6 miles
from the c11y C1ty Schools Pnced $14,500 00
GO AHEAD AND FALL IN LOVE I
THIS TIME YOU CAN AFFORD IT!
The owners have loved th1s home but they are mov
lng You will know the care 1t has had as soon as you
open the door Just etght years old 3 bedroom
ranch, living room, k1tct1en w1th built tns, dtn1ng
area, modern bllth, 1 car f1n1shed garage, all th 1Son
a ntce s11e lot located only one and a half miles from
the City. Priced rn the mod .CO's

BEAT THE INTEREST-RATE RAP!
$500 00 PER·MONTH,
$10,000 DOWN PAYMENT
Thts home is 1ust waitmg to be yours You'll bubble
w1th excitement when YOtJ SIP the features thts lux
ury home offers Foyer, floonng , formal l1v1ng
room, w b fireplace, cedar mantel track, lighttng ,
new plush carpeting, formal dlnmg room, beaUtifUl
tamrly room woth large sl 1d1ng door tead1ng to
beautiful pool and patio area. terra ced ground w1th
lots of shrubbery, as gnll , ideal for entertainment, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, large kiChen with unusual
breakfast bar, cherry, walnut wood. full basement,
central atr, garage and openers This home Is
beautifully decorated All new custom draperoes
Looks like '' 1ust cam eroght out of an mter1or
decorator's maoaztne On e of th e f 1nest I'm sure it
will be love at II rst Sight
BEAT THIS
SJOO 00 PER MONTH
1nclud1ng pronclpal, 1n
terest, taxes and '"
surance Only 9% tnt
Owner transferred and
very anx1ous to sell C1
ty schools, acre of
ground more or less, tlv
1ng
r.oom,
2 w b
ftreplaces, k1tchen &amp;
d1mng area Full base
men! Proced m $40's
QUALITY
PLUS BEAUTY
Th1s Is a family home,
all
brlcl&lt;
w•th
4
bedrooms and a spark!
lng lull bath up Large
kitchen lined woth pretty
cabrnets. Large Ioyer
and formal living room
and dinmg Full base
ment · ftreplace 1n fam1
ly room, 2 car garage at
!ached, also a workshop
and a barn Situated on
aproximately 5 9 acres
Th1s home reflecfs
tender, lov1ng care and
true value
DAIRY FARM
135 acres mo re or Jess
1 3 miles Raccoon Creek
bOttom, 40 acres creek
bottom, 60 acres tot al
!liable Used as a Grade
A dairy operat ton, 4
milkers woth automatic
washers, 800 gal bulk
tanks, 2 Silos (800 tons
total)
with
silo
unloadmg auger STruc
tures
40x80 metal,
172x40 milk hOuse w1th
Ieee room, 40x170 con·
crete slab feed lot All
structures have con
crete
floors
1.000
walnut and popla r trees
on farm Clay Twp, C1·
IY_t"~IS.

RIOGRANOE AREA
Mobile home and hall
ocre
lot for
only
$14,500.00.

FI NANCE
Owner w111 help tmance
with a down payment
and ca rry the balance
n a LAND CON
RACT Stately 2 story
p1llary
posts ,
3
bedroom, formal entry
&amp; large open w.nd1ng
sta1rcase r=amdy room
w1th pl.nk lloorong &amp;
w b !•replace Formal
hvtng room, spactous
eat·•n kitchen W1!h loads
of knotty prne cab1nets.
Tnts and much more
setting on J acres Can
buy only one acre City
Schools G1ve us a call
for moredeta11s

REDUCEDJ,OOO OO'
DOLLARS
SCENIC OHIO
RIVER ACREAGE
25 Acres of gOOd farm .
You'll love this mOdern
4 bedroom brick home
with lull basement. 21h
baths
Farmly room
with
wo odburn1ng
tireplace. two kitchen$.
Good barn
fences,
tobacco base, produc·
live cropland Call for
an appo1ntment

RODNEY ·CORA RD
58 Acre, mobil ehome
runners for a : 2x60
trailer , sephc tank,
rural water available.
Very reasonable

Bonnll! L Stutes, ReaHor, 44&amp;4206
·JacM$ R. Stutes, Assoc. 4/,o-2885
.Josepn L. Leach, Assoc. HS-94&amp;4

---

Homes fer Sale

ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH, DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?
'

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Real Estate- General

We cover over
7 m1ll1on m1les
to f1nd you a· home.

oan Boggs, rtea Itor' AssQC\
Ph. Home• 446·3294

Gallia County's Fastest Growrng Heal Estate Agency

JUST LISTED THIS RIVERFRONT
ALL BRICK HOME
Your family w111 love the beauTy of the two
ttreplaces and the energy savmgs of the wood
burner 3 bedrooms, full basement and much more
This home shows excellent quality and workman
sh•P Call us tOday'

LOAN ASSUMPTION EX·
ECUTIVE HOME - 2,000 sq II of
quality ltvtng space plus 625' of lake
frontage will make lhts 4 bedroom
home a most en1oyable experience for
our family 2 sprawling acres of recrea
t1on &amp; fun, a most attractive home w11h
2 baths, lamrly room, fireplace , large
equtpped kitchen, formal dln1ng &amp; 2 car
garage Excepttonal loan assumpt1on
Under $100,000

31

31

Homes tor Sale

9·ROOMS-85ACRES
COULD BE FINANCED BY OWNER
Approx 30 acres bottom level land,
balance pasture. Less than '11 m11e oil
blacktop road 6 bedrooms, l'h baths,
front &amp; buoll•n back porch, large
l6,/2'x22lf2' living room, automatic
washer &amp; dryer goes Bu1lf 1n cabmets,
s s / dbl sink, electric range Hot water
e~rculatmg heat plus wOOd burnmg
stove in fireplace Has 1ts own water
system Call now
I 414
VERY NICELY
REMODELED HOME
Th1s extra well kept
home has 6 large
spactous rooms
Kit
chen
w1th
bU11t 1n
cab1nets, sta1nless steel
stnk,
range ,
refrigerator, washer &amp;
dryer
Large utlltly
room Thts home has ex·
Ira lots with garden
space and 2 outs1de
storagebutldlng
1402

BEAUT! FUL OH 10'''
OWN PART OF IT
Tastefully decorated home LtVInQ
room , eat'" k1tchen w1th built m
cabmets, bath &amp; pat 1o. Storm doors and
wtndows w 1th carefree alum Sldtng 1n
addition, a large 30'x30' c mder block
garage with flourescenT l1ghtrng, plenty
of electrical plugs &amp; water Perfect tor
hobby or workshop or 1ust a place for
the husband to htde and putter All thts
plus a garden Ask1ng only $34,500 In
c1ty school d1stnct
N387

2·A . I· ROOM HOME
4 B . R , bnck &amp; fram e
home
Ni ce covered
patio tn back of house
Lots Of bu1111n cabrnets,
rural water . 12'x 16'
storage bldg , large
garden spot, wtth1n
21h mlles from Holzer
Hosp , 2 Acres of land
scaped yard Lots of
N279
shade trees

9ROOM
COUNTRY HOME
5 BR , ntce front porch,
niCe k1lchen wtlh bu 111
1n cabtnets, double s s
smk Bath w1th shower,
lots of shade trees and
frulf trees Nt ce garden
spot This home has
blown in msulat1on
Located bes1de St
H•ghway 160 84 acre of
land More can be pur
chased w•lh th1s home. 2
mob•le homes that now
are brlngmg 1n a rental
of $175.00 per month
plus a total of 3 84 acres
of land
All located
bes1de Slate Highway
160 CALL FOR ALL
DE TAl LS
I 266
Lt FE IS
TOO SHORT!!
Stop dreammg about
own1ng
your
own
busmess. BriCk burld1ng
rn Vmton equipped for
carry out Perfect tor
P1zza Parlor, Beauty
Parlor or Barber Salon
liar detailS
1243
$39,900.00
N1ce comfortable 2 BR
located on 1.1 A. of mce
landscaped yard and
large garden area Par
t1al finished basement
F A furnace, garage,
storm doors and win
dows Th •s property has
lots of shrubbery, shade
trees, fruit trees (3 ap
pie, 2 peach), grape ar
bor, strawberry and
raspberry bushes I 369
CABIN 3 OR
4 ROOMS
F 1shmg, vacation, 1 or 2
bedroom
cabinet
located lacing Raccoon
Creek and Blue Lake
Nice large wooded lot
Make your life a year
round vacation. CALL
US NOW. No. 366
MEDUCEOI!t
FOR QUICK SALE
RIVER FRONTAGE
Beautiful 7 rooms unl·
quely designed 2 story
home with 4 B.R ., 2
baths, 20xl9 living room
wlht fireplace
Full
basement
garage,
storm doors &amp; w indows
Pallo doors apen up to
the back patio &amp; a
beautiful view of the
Ohio R lver 2 acres M
or L . You' II love the
home &amp; view. CALL
NOW FOR $59,900 I 374
- NtC-EHOM-E
PRICED RIGHT
3 bedrooms, 2 baths with
showers. family room,
dining area . Total 8
rooms, modern kitchen
w i th electric range,
relrlg .,
dishwasher,
garbage disposal and lot
of cabinets F A F , also
woodburner,
Gallla
rural water service.
b u II d I ng ,
siding,
landa&lt;:ap•ed lot. Ap
ap

See

Hnm&lt;•s of distinct ron don t always have to be expensive
Interna tiona l offers 42 home designs rang1ng
from lrad1t 1onal to contempor ary , and they can all be
packaged and delivered to your lot Warm , beautiful,
spa c1ous and stylt sh What more could you wan t m a
home'
Send $3 00 lor one comp lete cata log or ca l l for
free broch ures

WOOD HOMES

Real Estate - General

*

EXCELLENT
LEVEL LOT
23 acre M or L for
res1dent1al,
mob tl e
nome and garden. Fron
tage on Patriot Cadmus
Rd
Rural
water
available ASk1ng price
only S4500
#382

NICE BAR
FOR LEASE
W ill sell D·2 l 1cense and
all stock and equipment '
whic h Includes cooler
(holds appro• 9 to 10
cases
of
beer),
showcase, Victor cash
register and add.ng
machine, ref and gas
cook stove. All stock and
equipment and 0 ·2
licenses all lor only
$5,900.00. Be the first to
pick up this bargain.
COME IN NOW No. 344

3 BDR, BRICK ranch style
home lor sale 2 baths, tully
ca rpeted, attached garage,
on n1ce lot Just off Rt 2m
GallipOlis Ferry Call 675·
6329 alter 5

NEW LISTING
comm
7 office room s
1nh 1 bldg on the Mam
St of Rutland Use as
bus1ness or home &amp;
combmat1on bus
2 STORY FRAME - 3
Bedroom , lull base
very clean, Racine
"area Call for more info
3 ACRES of qu•et coun
try s1de Lots of Hoot
Owls Within 5 m1nute
drive of Pomeroy Pav
ed street, all ut •ltlles
I ACRE IN Ml 0·
DLEPORT - 4 room
cottage. trailer hookup
Reduced to $8,000 00
2 BDRM. HOME - 4
acres, walk1ng dtstance
to M iddleport
2 BEDROOM COT
TAGE Paneled &amp;
carpeted throughout
New furnace . M1d
dleport area $10,500
Hobart Dillon, Broker
Fay Manley,
Branch Mgr.
Phone 992·2598

COUNTRY
Mtdland mobtle
With 3 bedrooms
baths Peaceful
,
Wtth 7/ 8 ac re Going
$16,500
TRAILER SPACES hookups, 4 acr es, water,
electnc, and gOOd loca·
t ion on State Route
NEW LISTING
Renovated brick home,
new ca rpet1ng , new
bath, and new k1tchen
cupboards Basement, 2
porches , near stores
CHANCE
01 a
res1dence or a bustness
or both Has a bath,
natural gas, flu e tor
WOOdburner and Oh1o
Power Serv1ce
Ask
mgonly $12,000
RUTLAND - Real niCe
2 bedroom home w•lh 4
los Has c•ty wa ter, cen
tral healing, and Oh1o
Power Ntce econom1ca!
home lor IUStS25,000
RACINE - 3 bedroom
home w1th carpeting,
panel1ng, natural gas,
c1ty water, 2 large lots,
basement and garage.
2 ACRES - All City con
venlences,
4 room
home, bath, natural gas
furnace, ftreplace and
nice kolchen
Only
$20 000

Housing

Headquar~ers
Real Estate- General

Real Estate

Real Estate- General

5 BOR bnck ranch, ex
cellent location, ctty school
d1strtct, 3 baths , 2
fireplaces , screened porch,
a1r cond , pnced upper
70's Ca ll446 4539

RIVER VIEW HOME·
FOR SALE

General

FOR SALE BY OWNER-$51,900
Don' t build - This one is like new! A
large, new family rm . with a woOdburning fireplace is lust part of our all brick,
totally electric, centrally a1r conditioned,
3 bedroom ranch style home. Located on
a large professionally landscaped, flat lot
in the K.C. School District. This home has
much more to offer than we can list here.
Pleas!! Call446-3100
446-71 22 (Evenings)

BY OWNER
Oown St . Rt. 7, 5
minutes from Ctty Park
2 story frame· 4 B R.'s,
living room w1th W.B .
fireplace, eat·in ktl·
chen
Basement and
garage. Pr1ced 1n low
40's.
Call Daytome, 446· 1615
A Iter 5: 44&amp;·1244

Real Estate - General

TONEY REALTY &lt;.o
WM. D. lONEY - BROKF!t

446-3087
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
WE DO OUR HOMEWORK!

I

v."

PROFESStONALl Y LANOSCAPEO
ACRE LAWN - The perfect settrng lor
thiS spac1ous bnck rancher, featuring 3
bedrooms, fam1ly room, 1112 baths and
bUilt ink ttchen

NEW LISTING, ACREAGE 100
acres M . or L , 70 acres cleared , 30
acres wooded, gas well Wtth royalttes,
lob base, all fen ced and locted tn Ad
d1sonTwp

General

Real Estate - General '

OUTSTANDING
Lovely sweeping v1ew
the Oh1o R1ver , from
th1 s Immaculate 3 BR
ranch
Th 1s
home
features LR w•lh pretty
corner frpl , nice kit
chen, den, bath, C A , 2
car garage and lull
SUPERB CEDAR RANCH - First rate basement w1th shower
craftsmanship throughout 4 bedrooms, S1tuated on 1 acre Of
double closets, 2 lull baths, complete lovely lawn
bu11t1n k•lchen w1lh Cornmg top range, PLATTED
AND
formal dlnong. lg family rm with READY :[0 BUILD ON
wOOdburner Redwood deck and 2 car - BUild! nO lOIS 120'x100'
garage
acre lot Call tor appoint located tn subdtvlsion in
ment
KC school di strict Buy
IS ACRES PLUS - 12x65 Kirkwood on land contract
mobile home, barn, corn crib, pond,
WE BRING
land fenced and lots of shade trees
PEOPLE HOME
Land can be sold without mobile heme

'I•

24 STATE STREET

Real Estate

Real Estate- General

BARGAIN - W1lh IOday's 1nllai10n,
$14,000 sounds great, doesn' t 1!? This
home needs some f1xin' 1 Call for
delatls
ROOM TO ROAM - on almost 4 acres
of land Wtlh a pond and small barn
Plus• A new 3 bedroom home, w1th l 1J:2
baths, a sunbust orange k1tchen, cen
tral atr, electnc heat pump, extra '"
sulaflon
Pass loan assump

Real Estate - General

Real Estate- General

AFTER HOURS
PHONE
Wtlla Davis, Associate
446·0844
Becky Lane, Assoc•ate
446·0458

FINANCING IS AVAILABLE
on th1s new home located ott Georges
Creek Road Spilt entry, LR . dtntng
area , 3 BR, bath, kttchen w1th
dishwasher, ntce cab1nets. Single car
garage, full basement Ruret water
ava•lable 2 92 wooded acres House 1s
not f1n1shed Take a look at thts one to
day'
1447

INTRIGUING
$36,900
Walk •nlo this very
warm and Inviting
home
Lovely large
rooms Some with new
carpe t Four bedrooms,
bath, utility room, buill·
'" k itchen w ith ap
pllances Call now, th is
nice home won't last
long
Kyger Creek
Schools No. 406

00 IT QUICKLY
The good ones go fast - 1t' s for certa1n
th1s cozy home won ' t last long 3
bedrooms, llvmg room, bath, uttllty
area, garage Concrete dr~ve , patto,
chatn lmk fence surro!Jnds bac k yard
Well msulated, thermopane wtndows
W1lhin 1'12 moles Of HMC Unbeatable
pr.ced at $27,000
1 437

88ACRE FARM
II you ' re lookmg tor a home tor yourself
AND your antmals
then look no fur
!her' 33 good, level , ltllable acres
Some woods, some pasture, n1ce stze
barn Located 15 min from GallipoliS
on blacktop road, th1s gentleman' s
farm has that "down home feeling "
Home conststs of J BR, IIVIOQ rm, d1n
tng rm , k1fchen, bath and good stze
uttllty room Cal! for more spec1ftCS

On 4'12 ACRES
A ftne ranch m the country , seven m1les
from GallipOliS S1x room modern
house, 3 BR , bath, lul l basement, fuel
otl forced a.r furnace, blown 1n msula
tton county water plus large crstern for
extra uses Spr1ng Will soon be here
What a place for your famtly and
tr.ends Well sTocked pond, good fences
Beaul•ful acres Call today Th1s show
tng Will be conv,nctng
# 449

H19
ATTENTION I HOG FARMERS
If you ' re looktng for the 1deal set up for
the hog ra•smg busmess, we have tf 101
acres of pr0duct1ve land and tn Me1gs
County New furrowing house, block
fatten1ng house, barn, new 6,000 bushel
gram dryer 2 wtre corn cnbs, plenty of
water Hook up for 2 mob1le homes
Owner Will sell complete With or
w1thout equ1pment Wantmg to get '"
the hog bus tness or JUSt wantmg a top
notch farm Calltoday
t 438
LOTS PRICED TO SELL
Butld to sutl yourself on these I acre
lots Frontage on blacktop road County
water ava ilable If you're look tng for a
pretty country sett1ng, call today $5,000
per acre No restnct10ns
N417

TRYTHISFOR
A STARTER
Where else can you f tnd
a home tn Gallipolis
under $20,000 wtth a
posstble
assumable
mortgage? Th 1s mfl a
t1on ftghter cozy home
has paneled 11v1ng
room , 2 bedrooms,
cheerful ea t •n k1fchen,
bath large carport, plus
metal
storage
a
bU1Id1ng
H413
ASSUMABLE
MORTGAGE
PAYMENTS OF
S189 60 MO.
1 acre &amp; 5 room home
1ust out of c1ty l1m 1ts on
Rt
141
N1ce com
t or table easy to heat
home w11h wood burning
llreplac~. basement,
modern kitchen, nat
gas furna ce, c 1ty water,
large carport,lme 16X18
block storage bldg,
garden space Call now
I
411

ALMOST PERFECT
Noth1ng 1S perfect but th1s cozy home ts
as close as a person can ftnd 2
bedrooms, large ltv1ng room, 1m
presslve
built tn
kitchen , new
dishwasher, new gas furnace patio,
storage bulld 1ng, v.. acre LOOktng tor
the rtght home, make an appomtment
today Wtthtn 4112 miles of Holzer
HOSpital
#421

LOOK AT THIS ONE
A two story remOdeled older home
located on St Rt 160 Just ,,,nutes
from town and the hospital It' s Situated
on e1ghteen acres with a large barn and
outbuoldings CALL TODAY
N460

2ACRES
Only $19,900' J niCe
rooms built on to a
mob1le home Large eat
1n k •lchen 12' x33. lots of
built'" cab1nets 12 x20'
l• vtng
room ,
fron t
porch N1ce rolling land
scaped 2 acres Lots of
room
H 412

" DO IT YOURSELF "
Ftn1Sh up the remodeltng of fh1s 2 story
3 BR country home It has been
rew1red, new breaker box, some dry
wall work done New roof and mater~als
costtng over SlSOO on prem tses County
wa t er tap pa1d for 1 acre of level
ground What a change you can make
t 442
and proltls un1tm1ted tor $17,500
YOUR OWN PRIVATE WORLD
That presents pr.vacy and beauty Th is
11 acres, more or less, already has a
lane 1ead1ng to the bu1ldtng s1te, rural
water tap and lots of trees Take a look
TODAY'
,451

REI'.LTOP e

Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636
AUilreytanaday, Realmr ~U
25 Locust St., Gallipolis, Ohio

THE CHOICE IS YOURS I 2 new homes nearly com
pleted, 3 BR . 2 baths, lull basement. hea t pump,
cen air cond, fully carpeted Superb qual•ly and
design $56,00
UME 1o'w Interest mc.rtgage 3 BR . l'h baths.
frame, tttfacheo garage Super !ocat.on

NEARL V 2 ACRES - 3 BR . 1'!1 bat hs 2
story with full basement Trees galore,
approx 4 miles from R10 Grande
$35,000.
VACATION SETTING - Over 19 acres
along Raccoon Creek NICe 2 BR home
Barn, other outbldg Good develoment
potenl10l $49,000

.'

NINE ACRES - Nice 4 BR home, famo
ty room, country kitc-hen, 2poches
Garage Several outbldg Near R•o
Grnde $4A,900
'
·- Over 600' rd frontage.
rural water, meadow and
beautiful S20,900 00

20ACRES·MODERN BUILDINGS
Stx room house, 3 bedrooms, l'h baths.
basement, FA fuel 01 1 furnace Level,
fertile garden area Modern barn, pond,
tobacco base, garage, work shop One
of the best IS m1nute drtve from
Gallipolis New surfaced State Road
Convenftonal ftnanclng $53,500
N459
A BIT OF COUNTRY
Th1s farm house needs some work, but
when you buy 11 you 'll get 1 barn, cellar
and cellar house, county water, but also
otd faShiOn dug well where water never
tastes better wtnched up w1th a rope
and bucket F r utt trees and a n1ce yard
T hree bedrooms, bath TOday only
$23,000
, 440
43 ACRES
Vacant land, poss•b• I• IY of coal and
agnculturallime
# 322

A HIDEOUT - But only a few minutes
from city. 2 story home has 3 BR , enor
mous living rm w1th f.replace, eat In
kitchen
equrpped
with
range,
refrigerator, concrete block garage. Cl
ty schools $37,500

POSSUM TROT ROAD - 1 5 acre
building lot, 40x30' barn, concrete
outbldg. Rural water. $6,500

;.

....
~

.
~

BEEF FARM
We have several farms, but th1s one IS
spec1al L and m good condttton, tiled ,
limed, fert1!tzed Fences kept up 1800
lbs tobacco base, 2 barns, gOOd setup
for cow and calf operat1on Let's not
forget the modern house, 2 or 3
bedrooms , n1ce large bath Th ts one 1S
ready to use We 'd l1ke to show 1t to you
,448

EXCELLENCE · tn design,
and workmanship. Natural te&gt;&lt;ture•
cedar and brick tn a pine tree setting
Beautiful 4 BR , 2 baths, storage galore.
tamlly rm with fireplace apens onto
deck surrounded by trees 2 car garage,
heat pump, cen air Few miles from c1
ty $83,700
SUPER BARGAIN - l'h story fr ame
home 1n good cond, 3 BR, country ktt
chen, spacious level lawn, e)(cellent
garden space Can' t be beat at $26,000

·-...

.,

CLEAN AS SPRING
!s this 3 yr old ranch Livmg room,
large kitchen and dmmg area, 3
bedrooms, bath 13 90 acres Tobacco
base 20x60 tobacco barn Kyger Creek
School D1stroct Pr.ced 1n the $40's I 4S7

REALTY

ENTERTAIN HERE! From the slate
floor entry to the second floor balcony
you 11 love th1s home 4 BR , 2'12 baths,
master suite has Its own bath and s1t
i1na area Folding doors let you com
blne living rm and family rm for lg
parttes Formal danlng rm, 2 car
garage 2 rm . basement Colon1al styled
extenor, circular drive, approx 3
acres, pond, lots of trees R1o Grande
area $94,000

•

LOAN ASSUMPTION POSSIBLE
A real value for someone need1ng plen
ty Of space 4 bedrooms, 15x26 i1V1ng
room w1fh stone ftreplace, bu11t In kit
chen, bath, ut1hty room Over 1600 sq
II of living space 5 acres Pond
Loca ted at R1 160 A home one must see
to apprec1ate. Loan assumptton poss1
ble to qualtlted buyer
#453

CAI-tADAY.

·m
LJ::!

...
~

LUCKY YOU
ThiS home delivers the
ktnd of !1vtng demanded
b y today s tastes 1n a
very handsome destgn
Large lovely k1tchen
has all the modern con
ven 1ences a w1 f e would
want plus a large d1nmg
area, eat at ba r , family
room J large bedrooms
and 2 lull baths Very
tastefully decorated
N
3
1
6

GRAB IT FAST
IT WON' T LAST•'
A lot of House lor only
$31 ,900 Atr condtt1oned
four bedroom home, tor
mal d1n 1ng room , k1f
chen
w1th
budt '"
cabinets, plus a porch
Make an appo1ntment
today to see thts cha rm
1ng home !n Mercer
v111e
~ 336

...

Real Estilte- General :,.

Can't Y,qu.picture ~vourself
bvtng here?

1 ROOMS

SUMMER , SPRING
WINTER OR FALLA HOME FOR
ALL SEASONS!
A pond f1ll ed w1tn Bassi
- 10 acre fa rm A h11!
for tobogganmg 1 Roast
chestnuts from your
own trees 1n Autumn' A
handso me brtck , a1r
cond1t1oned house w1th
l 1v1ng
roo m,
thr ee
bedrooms, lu ll bath and
two hall baths plus
shower K1tchen w1fh
built 1n cabme ts. sunken
dtnmg room 1ead 1ng to
large
bac k p orc h
overlooking breathtak l
ng rollrng hills Fam 11y
room , bt lltard room
w1th table, summer ktt
chen Heated garage,
aUMIIIary
bu!ldtngs
Plus, plus, pf\Js' - Ca ll
for more Information
No . 400

DILLON
REAL'ESTATE

Homes for Sale

Box 83 A, Rt 1, West Columboa , WV 304-882 2962

ACREAGE
PLUS MODERN
t500SQ FT . RANCH
19 A
1n cou ntry ,
spactous bnck &amp; frame,
3 B R , 2 baths, step
saver U shaped k1tchen
w built •n oven/ M1cro
Wave ,
di Sh wa sher,
large d1n1ng family
room, huge concrete
pat•o. sheltered front
porch for relax mg . 2 car
garagewtth utd.ty area
Rura l water, cen tral
air Man y more extras
make th1s home a must
Iosee ' CALL TODAY
K372
COMMEPCIAL LANO
BUSINESS BUILDERS
we now have approx 14
A avarlable, iUS I off Rt
35 west, w1th a close ac
cess to ctty sewer &amp;
water, &amp; near thn v1 ng
business comm un 1ty
PRICED TO SELL Can
297
sell in 7 A Plot

31

S47,900 Will buy this NEW,
quality bu111 home 011
lower Rt 7 tess than 10 mtn
from town Carport, 3 b r,
1 1h baths Carpeted Heat
pump Fireplace 446 4753
weekend or evening Better
hurryt

SERVING SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE 1868

1
I
I
I

D-9--The Sunday Tunes-Sentme1, Sunday, Apn120, 1980

DOWNINGOtiLDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE

Rea l Estate

----------..
WISEMAN
I
Real Ellate- General

datA!
GEMJNI (May !1-JIIIH!! ZG) Funds

earmarked for domestic needs
shou.Jd not be blown on pleasurable
purswts today

Opportuntty
22

taUy today and coold spot! your fun
Finish them ftrst, then forget them
Romance, travel, luck, re1401.U'Ca,
pos:;1ble pltf~tlls and ct~rcer for
~ttl lhe com•ng months ~trc
dlsdt.ssed In your A.stro-Graph Let·
ter, whictl beg1111 with your birth~y Matl 'l for each to AstroGraph, Box 489, Radio City Station,
N Y l00l9 Be sure to specify birth

90 ACRES - Nearly 2,000' rd. fronta~oo.
55 acres pasture, 20 acres limber, rest
tillable. $95,900. ,
'

1

••

�-D-1~The Sunday TirnelhSentinel, Sunday, April20,

1980
3t

31

Homes for Sale

House for sale 8 rooms 2
baths Good garden Call
614985 3526 Chester OH

6

room house corner of

Carroll
and 3rd 51
Syracuse OH Util tv room
and garage 992 5205
Real Estate

General

3t

Homes lor Sale

Homes tor Sal'

House tor Sale Large lol
completely remOdeled 3
bedrooms k1lchen 2 baths
l1v1ng room full bel!sement
$25 000 tOO percent l1nan
clng at 11 percent 1nterest
If mterested ca11698 733t In
Pagetown
Real Estofite

General

Realtor Auction"'
NATIONAL HOME
RELOCATION
Serving 6,000
communities
421 Second Ave
Ca11446.0552 Anvtlme
NEW LISTING - Assumab le 8lf2% loan, lOVely
br ck ranch tour m1 les from HMC Th s f1nc home
features 1 h baths b1g fam1ly room w1th fireplace
plus much more S1tuated on a large well land
scaped lot Call for complete detailS
NEW LISTING - In Rac1ne you will fmd a very
lovely 2'12 story home This fme home IS presently
bemg renovated &lt;About 90% f•n•shed) Mostly

restored to 1ts ongmal des•gn You must see th s one
to rea ll y apprec1ate Call now
BMR 342 Large Flat Lot All electnc home New
carpet throughout 3 BR s 1'/ 2 baths tully equ1pped
k1tchen Attached garage S1tul!lted on 120 x200 lot

Brick
ranch stvle
3
bedroom
2'h
bath
fireplace, full basement w
fam,ly room a c
2 car
garage
Baum Addn
Me1gs Co Call after 6 p m
985 4169
7 rooms and bath 2 story
full basement F rreplace '"
fam tl y room On farge lot
w rtver
fro nt age
In
Pomeroy Ca II after 6 p m
992 7284
9 Room House 1h baths
basen1ent and garage
College Rd Syracuse OH
992 St33 or 992 398t
Real Estate

3t

Homes for Sale

House tor Sale on Brownell
Ave Middleport 992 S204
32

Mobile Homes
tor Sale

1973 Fa rpolnt
14x6S 2
bedroom
1971 Cameron 14x65 2
bedr
1971 Fl eetwoOd t4 x65 3
bdr bath ;,
1971 Sha~espear 14x65 2
bedroom
1965 Yanor 12xS2 2 bedr
1968 Fleetwood t2x63 2
Bdr
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES PT PLEASANT
WI/ 304 67S 4424

32--M-o-biie ~H;:o::m
=-e=s:-­

for Sale
t971 FleetwoOd 14•65 3
bdr 11/2 bath
t971 Liberty 14•6S 2 bdr
t968 New Moon 12x60 ex
pando 2 bdr
t970 New Moon t2 x60 3
bdr
t961 II ndale 10x55 2 bdr
t969 Broadmore 12x60 2
bdr
B&amp;S
Mobile Home Sales
PI Pleasant W VA
675 4424
SPRING SALE
Used
mobile homes and travel
Ira i ers
TRISTATE
MOB ILE HOMES CALL
446 7572
1971 Ztmmer tra ler 12x60
1972 Buddy Tra11er l2x60
992 5304

General

33

BAIRD &amp; FULLER
REALTY

.,

OFFICE 446-7013

BMR 343
Frame and Permastone
loca t ed n
Crown C!IV on 137Xl50 lot LR DR FR 3 BR s
Carpeted throughout Natural gas heat Partt al
basement
BMR C361
Bus.ness Rt 7 Mtddleport Grocery
store wtth c 2 beer and w ine 11cense Includes all
stock and equtpment needed for complete opera
tton

Farms for Sale
1

FARM
Appro•
45 h
acres 7 rm house loca ted
1n Gallipolis Ferry Call
675 4296
COUNTRY HOME w1th
stocked pond for sw mm 1ng
or f1sh ng 9 room s bath
carpeted 3 to 17 acres
available Loca ted approx
1 miles from Pomeroy off
Rt 7 or 33 446 2359 after 6
36 Acre Farm 1Y:! story
hous e
F ull basement
barn bUtldtngs mtherat
rights good land $77 000
992 7559

BMR 361 The Place for K1ds Two story home n
R1o Grande w tth 41 arge BR s Inc ludes 3 extra lots
Call for an appotntmentl

150 acres wtth lovely view
4 bedroom older home
modern k1tchen 1~replace
pat o storms rutt trees
all m1nera1s $70 000 742
2480 after 6 p m or week en
ds

1

BMR 333 Modular Home 3 BR s 2 baths LR DR
F R wtth wood burner Kttchen Includes stove and
refrig All t his plus separate ut11 ty room Situated
on 1 23 Acres
BMR 334 Wr ll Cons der L and Contract I 3 Acres
of bareland on Jackson Pike Call tor detailS' 8%
F rnancmg

34

BMR 336 At the Edge of Town S1tuated on
nearly six acres of land Executtve type home
featunng 2 WBFP s Call today owner ts anxtous'
lmmedtate occupancy

3S

Lots &amp; Acreage

acres
c1ty school
district restncted butldtng
lot 446 3043 after 6

2 13

BMR 94 For Large Famtly Deluxe older home 3
BR s LR DR and fam 1iy room Natural gas heat
Must see to apprectate Excellent locatton 1n
Cheshtre t
BMR 137A LOOK Into Thts Bnck ran ch mciudes
3 BR s complete k1tchen w1th d1n1ng area FR w 1th
fireplace full basement All th1s and more on flat
( 120x 180) lot tn super sub d1V1San
BMR 139 Leave the Car and walk to town Ol der
two story home on Second Ave Home has
alummum Siding mcludes 3 B R s LR DR and FR
Less than $30 OOO'
BMR 149 Development Land 30 Acres W1lh 500ft
of front footage on Clark Chapel Rd Mtneral nghts
are tncl uded'
BMR 157 Rtver V1ew 3 B R frame house w t h full
basement and 32 Acres of land K1tchen has 2011 of
cabmets 1ncludes range and refrigerator
BMR 339F Need a Farm 30 Acres n Rio Grande
wrth 2 story house n need of repatr Call fo r com
pl ete details
BMR 340 Garden space
Older 2 storv home n
Patnot situated on 112 Acre lot J BR s LR DR and
kttchen 1nclud1ng dtsposa l and r ange Southwestern
School DIS!
BMR 341 En1ov Your Own Pond L shaped bnck
ranch on a 3 56 Acre lot 3 BR s 2 baths L shaped
LR w1th DR FR w1lh stone FP mud room fully
equ1pped k 1fchen Parllal basement Natural gas
heat wrth central a1r

LANO CONTRACT - A 10%
rate-·:··. , ·- --· :
payment will buv you a lovely brick frame b1 level
wtth 3 bedrooms 2 baths central a rand H4 acres
Close to hospttal Ca ll for appomtment today 1J 146S
DREAM HOME IN THE COUNTRY - Lovely brick
ranch has 3 bedrooms 2'4 baths formal dm1ng lui
iy carpeted beautiful kitchen w1th self c1ean1ng
range d1sposal &amp; dishwasher fam ly room wtth
bnck !~replace full basement heat pump and 2 car
garage Located on 1 acre room for garden 2 mtles
off Rt 279 behmd Thurman
N 1147
BIDWELL RODNEY RD - Good ran ch home with
2 bedrooms bath storage t:lUtld 1ng and garden
N 1Sll
space Only $22 500
GOOD FAMILY LIVING - Th iS love ly r anch has3
bedrooms famtly room w th wood burner large 2
car garoe beaut1ful 18x36 pool wtth large pat o
close to town Reduced to $52 000
N tns
CLOSE TO ENCJ - N1ce 1970 Rebel mob1le home
12x60 tn excellent condttt on furn ished front porch
&amp; a carport storage bUilding and an 01 ver tra c tor
Located on 2 acres of n!ce land better hurry only
$16 500
N056t

Twen ty acres
Rutland
Townshrp Large mobtle
home ready to move 1n
$20 000 Mob1ie home lot
State Route 33 across from
fatrgrounds $2 000
One
acre Crow 01VIS10n off Rt 7
SS 000
Twelve acres
Sai1sburv Townsh p off Bv
pass 7$8 000 Can t rade and
ftnanc e easrly Call 0 Bnen
and Crow Realty 992 2720
or 992 3589

Evemngs Call
Darvm Bloomer, Assoc. 44ti 2599
Oscar Batrd, ReaHor 446-4632
John Fuller, ReaHor 446-4327

EVENINGS
TOM WHITE AS SOC
STEVE McGHEE ASSOC
OONA McGHEE ASSOC
BETH NULL, ASSOC
BUD McGHEE- Reailor Auctioneer

For Sale 13 acres ground
Hvsell Run Rd $12 000
Cal1992 6201

RESTRICTED
BUILD! NG LOTS Debby Dnve all
utilities available
STROUT
REALTY,
446 0008

41

Houses for Rent

5 RM house Depos I ref
lease $175 a month $200
deposi1446 0952

5

RM COTTAGE near
HMC $175 mp I ch1id ac
ceptable Call 446 4416 after
7p m

Real Estate - General

UN F 3 bdr house w1th
basement m the c1IV fu l ly
carpeted caii446 343 7

42

Mobile Homes
tor Rent

M obi le home on 1 acre on
Rl
160
3888436
no
chtldren

446-0008
OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE - $6 500 down
- 9% - As~mg $33 000 - Remodeled 2 story home
3 BR s LR den fam1ly rm dtmng kt tchen 2 WB
!~rep l aces 3Y:! acres Located on state Route 233
between Galli pol sand Oak HIll
ROOM TO ROAM - I thmk you would say that thiS
sprawl mg bnck tn level IS one of the nicest country
homes you ve ever seen Thts beauty Is situated on
4'12 acres of lana aboul 3'12 miles from Rodney Why
not let your family enjoy 5 BR s, 3 baths large 11v
lng and dining room complete k1lchen family room
with stone fireplace and 2 car garage Be the f irst to
see thiS one
RACCOON CREEK FARM 50 acres Jd A botfom
11 A pasture lovely modern brick home wtth 3 Brs
2 ba1hs cathedra l ce lings fireplace large sun deck
and lots of other extrasa new metal pole barn cn b
1oad1ng chute approx 1700 II creek frontage
located 4 m from Me1gs M1ne No 3
WHAT DREAMS ARE MAOE OF - Mature land
scapmg and n ch green lawn highl ight this enchan
tlng r i verview home Owner has been transferred
and must sell lh1s custom built 3 BR home LR dm
lng rm , equipped k1tchen lover with open sta~r
way famtly rm w1th FP basement and 2 car
garage are oniv a few of the spec1al features
Located on Route 7 south of town Wllh frontage on
the Ohio R1ver
GREEN TOWNSHIP- PASTURE FARM - t55 A
M L located on SR W approx 6 ml west of town
Land ,. approx 60% clearl!d &amp; 40% woods &amp; In
eludes 2 POnds &amp; a good barn pnced at $500 per
acre
GREEN ACRES - Thr ... ~ ranch nice bath
large LR modern ~cl"'d",('u ndry all carpeted
garage &amp; fiat lot t\~\IY.:0:.11tV tor mllst- types of
11nancmg Immediate posse55ion SJ9 500
ROONEY BIDWELL RD - Sect1onal home, 24x60
.j BR, 2 baths, large LR equipped ~lichen, cent a~r
concrete block garage 1 acr" S22,500
FINISH THIS ONE YOURSELF &amp; SAVE MONEY
- Unfmtshed one story h~me wrlh 3 4 acres on RA
COON CREEK LOCated on tne Green Saunders Rd
near Nortnup St8 500

LOW DOWN PAYMENT - SUPER BUY- FHA
VA CONVENTIONAL - ThiS 3 yr old b1 level IS
l 1ke new &amp; must be sold th1s month 3 or 4 BR s 2'1:1
baths fam il y rm heatalator fireplace low heat
b1ils Clay grade school Gaii1a Academy H1gh
School Call for Appointment
IN THE LAP OF LUXURY - That S where you w•li
be the day you move Into thts b rand new 3 BR 211,
bath tn level Th1S home Will fulf tll your every
dream w th the large L shaped fa m1i y rm equ1p
ped kttchen &amp; 2 car garage Located '" Clearview
Estates &amp; shown by appomtment
CAMPGROUND (FORMERLY CLARK CHAPEL
ACRES) Make somethlnR of lh1s property agam 71
A 2 acre lake s~veral t.uildings 1n need Of repatr
dumptng statton 2 water s1stems lots of pm~ trees
Fix this dandy place up &amp; st.rt mak1ng money Op
p6r!un1ty knocks
MINI FARM - OWners moved to Flortda and are
selltng th1s lovely 3 BR bnck home Th s 6 vr old
beauty offers lots of good lrvmg for some lucky
fam•IY w1th a large kitchen &amp; d1n10g rm LR tamt
ly rm w1th f r eplace gar13ge &amp; barn Located on
St a te Route t60 approx 6 m1 from HMC

2 BDR
FURN
mob1le
home adults only dep
req m Chesh~re Call 446
4229
FOR RENT
3 bdr fur
mshed house tra ler wrth
washer and dryer TV on
pnvate lot Suttable for 2 or
3 employed adults Cai1446
1822 after 5 p m
Furn1shed 3 bedroom
trail er Deposit requ1red
No pels 949 2253
2 bedroom tra ler Adults
on ly 992 3324
43

Farms tor Rent

FARM HOUSE $150 mo
Must have reference Call
388 9092 or 388 9033 Ready
for ren t now

CROUSE BECK ROAD - Rest ricted building iot
1 22 acre nice wooded selling c1IV schools S5 950 1

44

PERRYTOWNSHIP - 78acres tSA SlmmsCreek
bottom, balance rolling pasture &amp; woods nice
modular home, large barn several other buildings
lob base corner of SR W &amp; the Vernon WoOds Rd

SLEEPING rooms and
11ght housekeeping apart
men! Park Central Hotel

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE - 20% DOWN
- Older 2storv home wllh 6 rms &amp; bath cellar
house, sheds, large shade trees on approx 4 acres
Located 4 mt south of R10 Grande on the Tom
Woods Rd $1 9 900
RIO GRANDE AREA - ,:cl\ o• 45 acres vacant
l and county wa gtnl~"(.V.;ome ti mber nice
building s1tes city ~~ $18 000

3 AND 4 RM turn1shed ap
ts Phone 992 5434

Apartment
for Rent

1 ROOM EFF apt Private
entrance and bath Call446
1232
F URNISHED Apt, 3 rms
and bath Adults Releren
ce requ~red Call 446 3733
days 446 0171
5 to 10
evenings
UNFURN t bcr apart
ment
upsta1rs
second
Ave $235 per mo 1n
cludinQ ut11ifres one montl'l
deposn requ ired No pets
ca II 446 2129 or 446 2800

-t-------

SI
Household Goods
Gibson 20 cubic It chest
type freezer 4 vrs old St60
firm 9112 756lafter6p m

S4
Ml•c Merchandise
FORMAL wedding gown
hat with veil, size B phone
446 2009 after 5

TRYTHENEW
"PILLOW SOFT'

LAD I ES
DESIGNER
clothes size 12 14 16
farllous brands new or ex
cellent condition 992 3283

RENTER S assistance tor
Senior C1ttzens 1n Vtllaoe
Manor apts Caii992 7787

sem

Furnished apt 3 rooms
balh ut lil1eS pa1d
No
drunks no pets Sleeptng
Roomfor
REnt
John
Sheets Jlf2 mtles south
M iddleport Rt 7
Unfurn shed Apt for rent
$150 Call 992 7511 or 992
6130
GOING 10 MHiie Beach? 1
CondomtnJUm lrd
floor
apt for weekly rental at
Garden Ctty 6 m1tes below
Myrtle Beach Ocean fron t
2 bdrs 2 baths elektnc
kttchen washer and dryer
a c prtvate scr eened par
ch
sw tmm rn g pool
telephone color ca ble T II
accommodates 6 Family
r ental s or 2 couples
preferred
No pets
no
houseparttes Sat to Sat
rental only some weeks
st tll avatlable Phone 675
1890 or 675 2975 after 5 p m
NICELY furn ished 2 bdr
apt Adults only lnqu1re at
Sheppard s Sales and Ser
v ce Ftrst and Oltve St
FURN 4 rm cottage 729
Second Ave adults only
no pets Call446 0957
4 RM AND bath apart
adults only no pets ca ll
446 3437
UNF
APART
n
Galltpolis
upstatrs
ref
req utt l pa d call at 631
Fourth Ave

45

Furntshed Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS
rent Galli a Hotel

for

SLEEPING ROOM 1 per
son $75 mo Ulliit1es pa1d
call446 44t6 after 7 p m
46

Space tor Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park Route 33 North of
Pomeroy Ll!lrge lots Ca II
992 7479
t TRAILER SPACE
Adults only Concrete pat to
and walk 900 block m town
Large lawn area water
pa1 d 560 mo Call 446 44t6
afterSpm
MOBILE HOME Lot 900
block tn town
Pa t o
adults $60
mo Water
pa1d Cal l 446 44t6 after 7
pm
47

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY - Serv 1ce statiOn dO
1ng good bus ness excellent build ng large shop If
you re 1nterested rn ownmg your own "bus1ness and
mak ng money stop 1n and see us for deta1 ls N 1100

BMR 338 12 Unat Apart ments 3 bUtldangs 4 umts
each Inventory avatlable Located tn Middleport

Real Estate - General

Property For Sa le Over 3
acres of land In Pomeroy
Onlv S7 000 992 3686

INVESTMENT PROPERTY - 2 niCe lOIS With 4
rental mobile home pads all are rented each pad
has concrete runners and pat to located 1n Rodney
(2155

Apartment
tor Rent

Bus.ness Bulldmgs

L 1quor L tcense operatmg
bustness $22 000 Complete
grocery store fullv equ1p
ped
carry out ltcense
$9 500

BMR 33S Handyman Special ThiS bnck has 10
spactous rooms Located rn downtown Gall polls
Must be seen

44

WANT TO RENT 1 or 2
bdr apart prtvate furn
w1thm 5 mtle radtus of
GallipoliS Call446 2342 and
Ask for Mark
WANT TO LEASE or buy
on land contract
Farm
wr te to P 0
box 455
Hager H1ii KY 4t222
-l'OR LEASE
4800 Sq•are Feet next
door Bob Evans Steak
Ho•se BOO sq It othce
4 000
wareho1.1se
storage garage or any
ather commerc1ai1.1Se
Catlike W1seman
446 3643
The Wtseman Agency

Sl

Pertec:t Sleeper
The Ultimate In
Sleeping Comfort

CORBIN and SNYD£

FURNilURE

9SSSecond Avenu,
GIIIIPOIIS, Oliio
45dt
PHONE 6t4 «6 1171
S3

Antiques

ATTENTION
( IM
PORTANT TO YOUJ Will
pay cash or: cert1 f1ed check
tor ant1ques and collec
tibl es or ent~re estates
NOih1nQ too large Also
guns pocket watches and
co tn collecttons Call 614
767 3167 or 557 3411
ATTENTION
( IM
PORTANT TO YOU) W11i
pay cash or ce rttfied check
for anftques and collec
tlbles or entire estates
Nothmg too large Also
guns pocket watches and
co1n col lecttons Call 614
767 3167 or 557 3411

M1sc Merchan1se

S4

COAL
sand
gravel
chlortde
ferttltzer
food and all types of
Excelsior Salt Works
E Ma m St Pomeroy
389t

dog
salt
Inc
992

APPLES - ROME beaut y
apples at $4 per bu Beslfor
apple butter Cal l 609 3785
Fttzpatr ck Orchard SR
689
IN STOCK for lmmed1ate
delivery var1ous stzes of
pool kits Do II yourself or
let us 1nstall for vou D
Bumgardner Sales
Inc
992 5724
Harley Oavtdson Yamaha
Super Deals Super Serv1ce
Gtant Accessory Selectton
$250 000 Inventory Athens
Sport Cycles 20 w St1mson
Ave Athens OH 592 t692
Decorated Cakes charac
ter cakes or sheef cakes
992 6342 or 992 2583
Dnve for show putt tor
dough Improve your short
game w th a new putter
John Teaford 614 985 3961
MOdel975 Freeze K1ng soft
serve tee cream machtne
dual head Very goOd cond
992 5786

wanted to Rent

Young worktng couple
lookmg for place to rent tn
country 1n Meigs County
Call after 6 p m 742 3t46

......

Electnc typewriter used 1
vear Gd cond $100 Elec
tri c Singer sewing mach me
tn case model 775 Touch
and Sew 2 vrs old will
sac nftce $225 1965 Mon
terey Mercury Gd for par
Is $tOO 1970 Triumph Sp1t
fife MKIII Ask1ng $200
w rth parts Sylvta Carman
35675 Long Hollow Rd
Pomeroy
~
Sears 5 h p go cart L1ke
newcond Cail9926115
SPECIAL Plant life fer
t ltzer Agn cu ltural and
hydrated I me 992 3891
Excelstor Salt Works Inc
Pomeroy OH
BEAUTIFUL full color
photographs of thiS year s
c hamp10nshtp Southern
H1gh School basketball
team 8xl0 $7 50 Sx7 $4 1n
folders Send orders and
payment to The Photo
Place
t09 H1gh 51
Pomeroy OH A llow three
weeks for mat I deltvery

LA RGE comm Sign like
new $100
Metal hand
plow, $20 New wire gate
St5 Met•l lawn chair StO
B~rd house StO G E stereo
r ecord player S20 Call 245

5050

ss

KACH ALL PORTABLE
BLDG Al l SIZes 6xl0 to
t2x40 see at t23 112 Pine St
446 2783 or 3 houses below
Bowling Aliev on Rt 7 446
t279

POOOLE GROOM I NG
Cali Judy Tavlor at 367
7220
DRAGONWYND
CAT
TERY
KENNEL AKC
Chow Chow dogs CFA
H•malavan Persian and
Siamese cats
Available
now 2 each Chow Chow
puppieS and S1amese kif
tens Call 446 3844 alter 7
pm

G OOD
USED
AP
PLIANCES
washers
dryers
refr i gerators
ranges
Skaggs
Ap
pllances
t9t8 Eastern
Ave 446 7398
SHAWN S ANTIQUES
ussec Ave
CLOSEOUT
Sale On old butcher's
block ,
secretary
bookcase, fancy wicker
rocker, w11nut desk, sq
oak table, p1e safe,
glassware, etr

BURROUGHS Bookkeep1n
g machine $50 Call 446
2342
KU STOM P A W1 f h four
12
speakers
n each
column Powered bv a
Peavey XL 500 head Call
682 7364 Oak Hill OH
$900
FACET office tvpewnter
manual w lh elite lype $80
Call446 2926 after 3 00
61

SOl FORD 2 row corn plan
ter t yr old Call Jack
Neal446 Ot57
JOHN DEERE M 2 cyl
good
cond
plow
cult vators and d1sc E)(c
to cultivate tobacco $1200
Call 388 8.160
WORK HORSE and horse
mower rake plow disk
saddle and harness Call
388 9033 or 388 9092 after s
pm

ANTIQUES
FUR
Nl TURE
glass
ch ma
anythtng See or call Ruth
Gosney ant1ques 26 N
2nd Middleport OH 992
3161
OLD COl NS POCket wat
ches class rtngs wedding
bands d ia monds Gold or
SliVer Call J A Wamsley
742 233t
Treasure Chest
Co1n Shop Athens OH 592
6462

63

Livestock

Regt stered polled Hereford
bulls best bloodlmes Don
Cox Patriot Oh 379 2671
HORSES tor sale or w111
trade for cattle

s YEAR old Appaloosa
Mare S400 green broke
remmg stock
blOOdline
Ftre Darter
AQHA
1
yearling PhiiiY registered
Appaloosa
AQHA Kmg
blood, 1 vearllng coil
reg1stere d
A ppal oosa
Snow Cap breed $300
each Cali614 593 7390 after
4 30
HORSE S for sale or w II
trade for mob le home Ca ll
256 1507

DITCH WITCH tren cher
R 40, 37 H P New engme
new d1gglng chatn Call 1
457 3139

green broke retn lng stock
$400 BloOd line Fire Dar
ter AQHA t vearlin9 filly
reg
Appaloosa
AQHA
king blood SJOO 1 vearl ng
coil
reg
Appaloosa
Snowcap breed SJOO 614
593 7390 after 4 30
H &amp; N oav old or started
leg horn pullets both floor
or cage grown available
Poultry
Housing
and
Automatton
Modern
Poultry
399 W Mam
Pomeroy Phone 992 2164

DOG
OBEDIENCE
Classes
begmnlng now
call367 0550
BRIARPATCH
KEN
NELS
Board1ng and
groommg
AKC Gordon
Setters
English Cocker
Spaniels Cali 446 419_!_
COCKER SPANIEL AKC
reg 6 months old black
$125 Cali after 5, 446 7655

SPRING OPPORTUNITY

AU BREEDS

GRAVELY TRACTOR
8
spd
elec start, rotary
motor sulky rotary plow
CUII1Yator Cail446 4149

LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION
Call (614) 992 9932
Pomeroy, 0
JOHN DEERE M 2 cyi
good
cond
plow
cultivators, and dtsc Exc
to cult vale tobacco $1200
Call 388 8.160

POODLE
GROOMING
Judy Taylor 614 367 7220
HILLCREST KENNELS
Board1ng all breeds Clean
Indoor outdoor factllttes
Also
AKC
regtstered
Dobermans 614 446 7795
HUMANE
SOCIETY
Adopt a tM&gt;meless pet
Hea llhy shots wormed
Donat1ons requ tred 992
6260 noon 7 p m
HOOF HOLLOW Horses
and pon1es and riding
les sons
Everythtng
1magtnable '" horse equip
ment
Blankets, bells
boots etc E ngllsh and
Western
Ruth Reeves
(6t4 ) 698 3290
DOB OBEDIENCE classes
beg1nntng now 367 0550

57

MUSICal
Instruments

P1ck1ng up a p 1ano tn your
area Looktng for a respon
Sible party to take over
payments
Call cred1t
manager collect 6 U 592
5122
Kimball Prano hke new
16mm movte projector
color and sound 247 262_.

61

Farm Equ,pment

Farmali400 gas li ve P To
2 way hydraulic w 2 potnt
fast h itc h draw bar GoOd
15 5x38 hres, w bolt on
hubs end duals also t John
Deere No 8 mower w 7 It
cycle K~rk Cheval1er 985
35t0
BUILDINGS" Last Chan
ce at These Pnces
All
steel clear span buildings
!Ma10r Mig) 20 x2~ xlO
for $2 896 30 x48 •12 for
$3,886
40 x48 •14
for
$4 807
48 ~72 xu
for
$6 897 F 0 B Factory Cali
collect Today 614 294 2675
l1i8p m

FREEl II
30" mower when
you buy a
walking mower.

"Mannmg Roush· Owner"

GRAVELY TRAC10R SALIS
Ph 992 2795 Pomeroy,

Oh

GOLD
AND
SILliER
COINS OF THE WORLD
RINGS
JEWELRY
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC ITEMS PAYING
RECORD
HIGH
HIGHEST UP TO DATE
PRICES CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, Ml DOLE PORT
OHIO OR CALL 992 3476

Goats 2 yr old male $25 2
mtlktng goats and 1 bred
female S60 ea 8 mo old
female us 6 kids males
$20, females $30 Shade
OH 1614) 696 1234

1977 Toyota Celtca GT 5
speed a c
new rad1al
ttres Ask ng S4 100 Exc
cond 992 720t

71

PERFORMANCE TESTED AND

t970 Pontac GTO 455 4
speed 12 bolt positi ve trac
l1on $800 Good cond 992
5487

500
1978 MUSTANG II 4 cy i 4
spd fi1p top steel belted
rad1als
AM FM r ad o
w r e spoke wheels gas
saver exc cond $3895
Call 446 9480
19 77 O L DS Cutlass
Supreme
A 1 Cond1t1on
fully equ1pped cal l 446
3882
1974 VEGA stat1on wagon
Cali 446 1324 or 388 996t

i~n MARK

II low m1 ieage
new t tres call 367 0657

BULLS
Angus Red Angus L1mousrn S mmental Ch anta
Mame An1ou, Polled Hereford and Shorthorn From
1S mas to 24 mas old A very h1gh quality selective
group of bulls

COWS ANO HEIFERS
Llmousln S1mmental Red Angus Ch1an a Some
with calves at side Heifers OPEN Some f1rsl Calf
Springers

77 MERCURY COMET 6
cyl stand trans while wa ll
ttres good cond call 245
9372 anvt1 me
t975 OPEL MANTA 4 cyi
needs some repatr Call

245 5050

1980-6 OOPM

t974 Gremlin P s A c
$1 250 Glen BISse ll 949
2801

Producers L1vestock Yards
812 Delaware St.
Washmgton C H , Oh1o

72

1976 FORD 'h ton ptck up
Short bed low mtleage ex
ee l lent condtt 1on $2 895
Call 446 os1s

1978 FORD 4x4 Deluxe 1n
tenor ask tng $5 000 Ca ll
446 2007
t973 CHEVY 60 ser es
tru ck
new t1res
new
motor new patnt 10b exc
cond1 t1on 1975 Kawasakt
motorcycle Cali367 7533
1968 GMC 1 ton t ruck
30 000 mtles gratn or ca ttl e
bed 446 2596
1979 Jeep Wagoneer 4 dr
fully equ1pped exc cond
$7 500 742 3tl7 after 5 p m

1975 Ford P1ckup
302
engtne p s auto a s am
lm
rad10
CB
low
m les runs good $2 t50
992 7841

t976 Ford F250 P1 ckup
St 200 1965 lnternaiiOnal 2
ton t r uck w1th or w1th out
ali steel bed 8 ft PICkup
topper $100 Oliver super
88 tractor $1 tOO Cyclone
Grass Seeder 3 pomt h1tch
SBO 10 II self contained
p1ckup truck camper $650
Caii98S 3988 or 985 4115

1977 Prem1er Volare 4 door
atr am tm tape speed con
trol New ttres Exc cond
Mason
Don Foglesong
773 5274

Springtime wtfh Mtster Rogers
20 Bill Moyers Journal 33
6 30-NBC News 3 15 ABC News 13
C BS News 8 10 News 6
7 oo~ D1sney s Wonderful World
3 15 Galacttca 1980 6 13 60
Min~tes 8 to Best of Donny &amp;
Mane 17 French Chef 20 War &amp;
Peace 33
7 30-Wall Slreel Week 20 8 00Chips 3 t5 Movie The Stmg
6 13 Dukes of Hazzard 8 10
Odyssey 20 33 Movie B1rth of a
Legend 17
9 oo-Masterplece Theatre 20 33
10 oo-Movle
Beyond &amp; Back
3 15
Alice 8 10
Wmston
Church ill 17 American Short
Story 20 F1nng Line 33
10 30-Jeffersons 8 10 Ruff House
17
11 oo-News 3 6 810 t3 15 Open Up
17 Great DeciSions 80 33
11 ts-ABC News 6 CBS News 10
PMA Pulse 15
11 30-Movle Colorado Territory
3 Benny H1il 6 Movie The Btg
Wheel 8 Mov1e Black Noon
10 ABC News 13 Wresfi1ng IS
Another Vo1ce 33
11 4S-PTL Club 13 t2 OG-3 s A
Crowd 6 12 30-News 15 1 00M ovle The Treasure of Pancho
ll11ia 17
t 4s--News 13 3 OG-Mov1e The
Hosfage 17 4 5$---Mavenck 17

MONDAY APRIL2t, 1980
Report t3 5 50-PTL•
Club 13 5 ss-World at Large 17
6 OQ-700 Club 6 8 PTL Club t5
Health Field 10 Listen 17 6 IsAthletes 17
6 30-For Our Times tO News 17
6 &lt;IS-Morning Report 3, AM
Weather 33 6 so-Good Mor
nlng W~st Virginia 13 6 5s-News 13
7 oo-Today 3 tS Good Morning
America 6 13 Monday Morning
8 Salman 10 Three Stooges
Little Rascals 17
7 30-Famlly Affair 10, Sesame 51
33 7 ss--Chuck While Reports
to
8 oo-Capt Kangaroo 8 tO Lucy
Show 17 8 30-Romper Room
t7
9 oo-Bob Braun 3 Big Valley 6
Beverly H1ilblliles 8 Jeffersons
10, Phtl Donahue 13 t5 Family
Affair 17
9 30-Bob Newhart 8 One Day At A
Time 10 Green Acres t7
10 oo--&lt;:ard Sharks 3 1s Edge of
N 1ght 6 Jelfersons 8 Joker s
Wild 10 Morning Magazine 13
Movie Casanova Brown r 17
10 30-Hollywood Squares J ts
$20 000 Pyramid t3, Whew 8 10
Andy Griffith 6
10 ss-CBS
News 8 House Call to
11 oo-High Rollers 3 t5 Laverne &amp;
Shl rley 6 13 Price 1s R 1ghl 8 tO
Elec Co 20
11 30-Wheel of Fortune 3 15
Family Feud 6 13 Sesame St
20 33 11 Ss--News t7
12 oo-Newscenter
3
News
6 to t3 HeaVh Field 15 Love

s 4s-Farm

s

Amencan Style 17
12 3Q-Ryan s Hope 6 13 Search for
Tomorrow 8 10 Password Pius
15 Movie Heros island 17
Elec Co 33
1 oo-DaysofOur Lives 3 15 All My
Children 6 13
Young &amp; the
R Estiess 8 10
2 oo-Doctors 3 15 One L 1fe to Live
6 t 3 A s The World Turns 8 tO
2 2s-News 17
2 3Q-Anotlier World 3 15 I Love
Lucy 17
3 00- General
Hospita l
6 13
Gu1d1ng Ltghl 8 tO Banana
Spills 17 B1il Moyers Journal
20
3 3Q-Fiintslones 17 4 OO-M1ster
Cartoon 3 M erv Grilfln 6
Petticoat June! ion 8 Sesame St
20 33
Gomer Pyle 10
Real
McCovs 13 L1tlie Ra scals 15
Spectreman 17
4 3Q-Lone Ranger 3 Gomer Pyle 8
Brady Bunch tO Tom &amp; Jerry
13 Merv Griffi n 15 Gillig on sIs
t7
s oo-Carol Burnett 3 San ford &amp;
Son 8 Mary Tyler Moore 10 My
Three Sons 17 Mister Rogers
Neighborhood 20 33
5 30-Mash 3 News 6 Play lhe
Percentages 8 E lee Co 20
Mash 10 Happy Days Again 13 I
Dream of Jeannie 17 Doctor
Who 33
6 oo-News 3 8 10 13 15 ABC News
6 Carol Burnettt7 Zoom 20 3
2 1 Conlacl 33
6 30-NBC News3 tS ABC News 13
CBS News 8 10 Carol Burnell 6
Bob Newhart 17 V i lla Alegre 20
Wi ld Wild World of Animal s 33
7 OG-Cross W1 ts 3 Tic Tac Dough
8 Face the Music 6 13 MacNeil
Lehrer
Repor t
33
Love
American Style 15 News 10
Sanford &amp; Son t7 D lck Cavett 20
7 30- That Nashville Music 3
Muppet Show 6 Joker s Wild 8
D1ck Cavell 33 Family Feud
10 13 Nashville On The Road t5
All In The Family 17 MacNeil
Lehrer RePOrf 20
8 oo-Little House on the Pra~rle
3 15 WKRP 1n Cincinnati 8 10
That s Incredible' 6 13 James
Michener s World 20 33 Movie
The STory of Mank ind t7
8 3Q-STockard 8 10 9 oo-Mov1e
T he Great Cash Giveaway
Getaway
3 15
Mov1e
Waik l kl
6 13, Mash 8 10
American Short STory 20 33
9 30-F lo 8 10 1o oo-Lou Gr ani
8 tO Boston Marathon 33 Big
Battles 17 News 20
10 JO-Over Easy 20 t1 OG-News
J 6 8 10 13 tS Last of the W1ld 17
Dick Cavett 20 Dave Alien at
Large 33
11 3Q-Tonight 3 15 ABC News 6 13
Harry 0 8 ABC Captioned News
33 Movie 'Pay or D1e
tO
Movie Ltttle Caesar' 17
11 50-Barney M iller 6 13 12 2s-Pollce Woman 6 t3
12 40M cC ioud 8 1 oo-Tomorrow 3
News IS
10-News 17 1 15-Movle T he
Male Animal t7 1 35-- News 13
3 2$---Maverlck I 7 4 25--0pen Up
t7

ROOFING Guttenng and
remodeling Wilham Mtt
chell 388 8507

Auto Repa1r

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleantng
446 4208
GALLI A RESIDENTIAL
IM PROV EMENT
Insulated vmyl stdtnQ
alum1num gutters and
spouts storm doors and
wmdows Free est1mates
Call367 0209 day or n1ghl

Camptng
Equtpment

t978 VENTURA popup
camper sleeps 6 call 245
9183

M EADES roof1ng and
spouttng home remodeltng
and stdrng free esttmafes
10 years local experrence
Ca II 388 9642

19ft cam ping tra,ler Se lf
conta ned gas and elec
refngera tor Mag1 c Chef
cook stove and Shower
f orced atr furna ce full
pressure water system
682 2255

PAINTING
Res1den1101
and commerc1al lntenor
and extenor mobile home
roof s Free esttmates 17
yrs exp w th references
call 367 7784 or 367 7160

1978 33 It Sw ss Colony
Deluxe Camper Tra11er
Sleeps 6 full awnmg a c
TV tm antenna extra duty
furnace double •nsula t 10n
Dealer ma ntamed Less
than t 000 m1ies S7 200
complete Weekends 448
2555 or weekdays 992 60St

&amp; G Carpet Cleaning
Steam
cleaned
Free
est,mate
Reasonable
rates Scotchguard 992
6309 or 742 2211
WALL PAPERING
pamhng 742 2328
82

t976 DODGE VAN 6 cv i
auto trans
ps
pb
ra d 1o call446 2309
t979 Ford tSO 4x4 auto
p s p b topper Postftve
tractton front and rear 985
4339
power

~::,&lt;;~n~'" L~~~r:~~er;:,~.. ~3

to 000 m11es $5600 Cali 992
3t49 or 992 2705

CARTERS PLU MB ING
AND HEATING
cor Fourth and Pme
Phone 446 3888 or 446 4477
DEWITT S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160 at Evergreen
Phone 446 2735
GENE PLANTS
AND SONS
Plumbtng
Heatmg
Atr
condtt1onmg 300 Fourth
Ave Ph 446 t637

~AI NTI NG tnt en or and ex
ter1or free esttmates ca ll
446 3344

CA BINET S &amp; VANITIES
Most wood products Wood
Shop
10t Court St
Gall1poi s Oh10 45631 Call
446 2572

HOU SE AND TRAILER
roof repa r patnttng f ree
esl1mates Call446 1562

THEISS INSULATION In
sui master foam msulatton
New homes old homes
commerc•al structures
For free est1mates ca ll 446
t971

STU CCO
pla sterin g
plaster repa1r
texture
cet hngs free esttmates
call256 1182

LAIR CONST
Block
brtck
ftr eplaces
new
homes remodeling ca ll
379 2123

Motorcycles

Harley Davtdson Yamaha
Super Deals Super Serv1ce
G1anf Accessory Selectton
$250 000 1nventory Athens
Sport Athens
Cycles 20
Sl1mson
Ave
OHW 592
t692
BUY A NEW
MOTORCYCLE unt1i you
see the 1980 Suzuki of
Suzuki of Jackson Rt 35
North of Jackson Cali 286
4956

ADVANCED SEAMLESS
GUTTER&amp; DOOR, INC
Overhead Garage Doors
Electnc Door Operators
Contmuous no leak gut
termg
Day 698 8205 N 1ght

B S A 750 3 cyl rocket 3
has been overhauled by
Wolfes of Belpre $1 tOO
Call446 7708
7S

Boats and
Motors for Sale

1979 Starcraft 15 II In haul
70 H P Mereu rv motor 446
2445 after 6 446 4792
t972 22 It 7 m STAR
CRAFT
self contamed
new Frtdg 1dalre counter
cook top never been out of
box Cali 446 0475 from 8
a m to 5 p m after 5 call
367 7289

GEORGES ROOFING
Roofing stdtng gutter
butld up roof, home
repa1r
Free Esttmates
388 97S9

KUHN &amp; SAUNDERS
ROOFING
Commerc•al or
Res•denttal
Hot or Cold Process
446 24S0- 379 2458

DENNY
CHAIN UNK FENCE
FREE ESTIMATES

Ken Soles
Rto Grande

24S 9t13

C&amp;W CONTRACTORS
All types home Im
provements - Rooting
gutters - spoutt - con
crete work Ph 367 0427,
367-Qt94 367-QI41 Free
est• mates

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

VINTON CEMENT
FLOOR INC
Box 89 Btdwetl, Oh
388 91i77 Sidewalks
drtveways
base
ments steps etc In
sulat1on res1dent1a I
or
commerctal
some remodelln

t975
T hunder
Craft
Magnun 160 SS (16 11 ) 75
h p Johnson Sterling lilt
bed tra1ier St 550 992 St74
76
Auto Parts
_ _llicesso"-rr,_,e.:c
s ___

Holley Dom1nator Intake
Manifold ano 600 CFM
Holley Carburetor Com
puter designed tor per
formance and econ,.,my
Fils 351 CUbiC Inch Ford
Windsor enQtne
Never
used 2 new 4 3Sxl8 and t
3 OOOx2t Carlisle Knobby
motorcycle fires Battery
operated fence charger
Call after 4 30 992 729t
USED AUTO PARTS Nor
th of Adamsville 112 m1le
tr.om canoe li very Walch
for s1gns on Rt 35 beyond
Render ng Pllmt Hours 9
to s Monday thru Friday
Sa t unttl noon Call 245
9t02
CHAR IE S SALVAGE
We buy and sell rad1ators
battenes etc Call W. 7717

E xcavat.~ln,_,g._____

L mestone for ur ·veways
Pomeroy Ma5on area 367
7101
METAL CULVERTS
6
thru 48 m stock 12 $5 to·
II 18 $715ft 24 $985
tt also 4 and 6 plasttc
corrogated COil ptpe 4
a nd 6 schedule 40 PVC
p pes and srnks
Call
collect Jackson OH 286
5930 Ron Evans Backhoe
loca ted 3 m Is south on St ,
Rt 93 toward Oak H1 il

DAVIDSON
DEVELOPMENT
Excavat1on Serv1ces
Dump truck
doter,
backhoe
Caii446 4537

Electncal

B4

&amp; Refngeratlon

SEWING
MACHINE
Repa1 rs
serviCe
alt
makes
992 2284
Th O:
Fabrtc Shop
~omeroy •
Authortzec:l Smger Sales.:
and Servtce We sharpen
SCISSOrs
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers
toasters •rons all small ..
appliances Lawn mower
Next to St ate Htghway"
Garage on Route 7 985 :
3825
M1ller Electncal Servtce
Res1dent and Bustness
Reliable and Expen enced
742 3195
D DAY
REFRIDGERATION
Res1 dent1al
commercial
heat tng cooling electncal
serv1ce Call 388 8274 or
388 9963
ELECTRICIAN 6 vrs ex
penence
res1denttal &amp;t
commerc1al
free
est, mates Call675 20t9

General Hauling

85

HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

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

Storm
W1 ndows.
Storm
Doors.
Replacement
W1nd.ows.
PatiO
Cover5
Alum1num
S1d1n.Q
and
Accessories Call

BIU.'S

446-2&amp;42

(Gallla Co•nty
Cerl1f1ed)
Beds, water and
Lines, Electnc
Pole Buildings

•Lm••·
Reese Trenchmg
&amp; Backhoe Servtce

t2 FOOT Runabout Wllh 5
H P Elgin gas engme 10
speed electnc trolltng
motor Call367 7533
t978 C STAR 1979 115 H P
Mercury motor exc cond
less than 30 hrs running
time W1iitakepav off Call
446 2066

83

CARPENTER WORK complete remodelmg by AI
Tromm 742 2328 Referen
ces

35 court st
Gallipolis Oh10
Cali 446 3896
or 446 301i0

Frank Rose const co
Remodeling repa1r, new
construction all types
Free estimates all work
fully
guar•nteed
Residential
commer
c•al industrial &amp; ten
, elecl'rR:aT war~
MSHA Cerl
1
446 4627

STA NDARD
Plumbmg Heal1ng
215 Third Ave 446 3782

JI M MARCUM ROOfing
spouting and s1dmg 30
years expenence
Free
est1mates
Remodeling
Cali 388 9857

t978 Ford Bronco P S
P B A C AM FM stereo
992 6130 after 5 p m
74

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

ALL TY PE S of Carpentry
work new home bldg or
remode l ng ca II 446 2910

Home
Improvements

and

QUALITY
MAIN
TENANCE
Electrical
plumbtng heatmg and air
condltionln!J, Call 388 9698

Furniture Stripping
and Refinishing

llans&amp;4WD

--------------------i-------------------~-------------=~----~-------------------11979 JEEP CJ 7

Sunday and Monday 's

FOR BEST in Carpet
Cleaning Call Smeltzer s
Steamwav
Call 6t4 446
2096

FIBER GLASS truck top
per w ith slrd1ng wtndow for'
6'12 II F leels1de truck $400
Ca ll 446 3139 after 5 p m

8t

Home
Improvements

81

s

PENDLETON REBUILT
BATTERY S20 plus tax
and old battery We buy old
batterres Repa1r battenes
Call 388 8596
77

Home
1mprovements

1974 Ford FtOO p1ckup
Rooftng s d1ng room ad
truck
Standard tran s
all types of general
St 200 or best offer 742 1t-;:~====;=;===:::;-1 d1t1ons
repatrs
25 yea r s ex
2396
per ence 992 3406
73

t976 Monza 4 cyl nder 4
speed 27 m p g 59 000
m1ies 992 7060

Auct1oneer-Mer1.n Woodruff-Urbana, Oh
Contact Geroge Amole Marton, Ohto 614 382 44S6
J1m Gebson Washington C H Oh
614 335 1922 or 614 998 2047

Trucks for Sale

t979 OMN I 024 I ke new
36 mpg $S 300 8 00 to 5 30
Call675 2731
t977 FORO GRANADA 4
dr, 6 cyl
auto am tm
low miles ca ll 245 5617

81

_ __..&amp;,_,Acce~o!_les_ _

78
1974MUSTANG II GHIA 6
cvl 4 spd loaded witt&gt; ex
tras GOOd gas mtleage
$1895 Call 446 0515 after

--- --

Auto Parts

ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE 24 hr wrecker
serv ce All types of repa r
Upper Rt 7 Call 446 2445
days and 446 4792 n1ghts

1964 II W t967 F1at t968
Falcon 1973 1!2 ton p1ckup
Car Rea lty Inc 446 7118

t973 VEGA Camback $400
Cail446 7523

SELECTED

SUNDAY APRIL20 t980
s 30-AG USA 17 6 oo-Amerlcan
Problems &amp; Cha l lenges 10
Between the Lines 17
6 3Q-LDS World Conference 3
Better Way 8 Treehouse Club 10
7 00- Jerrv Falwell 6
Urban
League 10 Action Newsmaker
13 Banana Splits 17
7 3Q-Eddle Saunders 6 Bibl e
Answers 13 Jimmy Swaggarf
15 It Is Written t7
8 oo-Day of Discovery 6 Grace
Cathedral
6
Evangelistic
Outreach t3
Three Stooges
Little Rascals 17 Sesame Sl
20 33
8 JO--Oral Roberts 3 Rev Leonard
Repass 8 Contacl 61 James
Robison 10 Lower L1ghlhouse
13 Open B1bie 15
9 00-Gospel Singing Jubilee 3 Oral
Roberts 10 Rex Humbard 6
Christian Center 8 Rev Jim
1 Franklin 13 Ernest Angley 15
Scouting Is 17 MISter Rogers 20
Stud10 See 33
9 30-Robert Schuller 8 It Is
Written 10 Rev R A West 13
Sesame St 20 Big Blue Marble
33
10 oo-Rex Humbard 3 K1ds Are
People Too 6 Movie See Here
Pri vale Hargrove 10 Jimmy
Swaggarf 13
Gospel Singing
Jubilee tS Leave II To Beaver
t7 Sesame St 33
10 30-Ernest Angley 8 Zoom 20
Mov1e The Miracle of Our Lady
of Fatima 17
11 oo-Human Dimension 3 Rex
Humbard t5 Rev Henry Mahan
t3 E lee Co 20 Once Upon A
Classic 33
11 30- Bill Dance Outdoors 3
Animals Animals Animals 6 t3
Big Blue Marble 20 World of the
Sea 33
t2 OG-AI Issue 3 Issues &amp; Answers
6 13 Viewpoint 8, This Is the Life
15 OhloJournal20 Movie Pals
of the Saddle 33
12 30- Meet the
Press 3 15
Women s Tennis 6
Cham
plonshlp Fishing 6 Face the
Nation 10 Kids Are People Too
13 Nova 20
t2 4$-Movie Battle Shock' 17
t oo-Famliies 3 NBA Playoff 8 tO
RTL Club 15
Movie
En
chantment 33
1 3Q-HI Q t3 Austin City Limits 20
1 3s-This Wee)&lt; in Baseball 3
2 oo- Amerlcan Sportsman 6 t3
2 to-Baseball 3
2 30-ETC 20 2 4s-Movle 'Flying
Deuces 17
3 oo-Boxlng 13 America s Alhletes
6
1nsighf t5
Mystery 1 20
Shakespeare Plays 33
3 30-NBA Playoff 8 10
Lillie
Rascals t5
4 oo-Golf 15, Baxters 6 Movie
That s My Boy 17 Upstairs
Downstairs 20
4 JO-Wide World of Sports 6 13
4 40-Golf 31 5 oo- E lee Co 20
S 30-Best of Groucho 20 5 3s-C esl Mol Toulouse Lautrec 33
6 oo-News 3 8 10 ABC New• 6 Tri
Slaie Today &amp; Tomorrow 13
lounil'v Roads t5 Wi'eslling 17

76

Autos for Sale

1968
PONTIAC
BON
NEVILLE
1973 Old
smob1le Cutlass Both '"
good cond1tton Call after
5 00 Cail446 4t94

Wanted to Buy
RISING STAR Kennel
Board1ng Call 367 om

71
Autos for Sa le
"-'--.___c=.oo=.

78 CHRYSLER L ebaron
exc cond must sell due to
health phone 675 3008

PRODUCTION SALE

FRIDAY,MAY2nd -

~-

63

5 year old Appaloo$a mare

BOBCAT loader 214 hr
i1ke new $4800 Call t 457
3139 or 1 873 4996

HILLCRE ST KENNEL
Boardmg ali breeds clean
tndoor outdoor factlit tes
Also AKC Reg Dober
mans Call446 7795

buy a r1d1ng tractor.

oCondor St

BUI L DIN G
40•72~14
$5995 F 0 B
Large door Included Also
40x44xt4 $4395 FOB call
collect now 513 278 482t

by
Randy
Car
penter,
fac:tory
tra med
Iron tend
a hgnment
spe
ctalist.

50" mower when you

21

STEEL

FRONT END
MJGNMEHIS

Farm Equ1pment

FREEl II

ALL

ENGLISH COCKER PUP
PIES
lovable ch 1idrens
pet 446 419t

FI REWOOD
seasoned
oak ash and hickory Ph
446 9442
40 L B Box of West V rgtn a
Chunks low ash low sulfur
Foster Coal Co 446 2783

ECHO CHAIN
hydraulic wood splitt ers
saw chain bars and ail
wood cutti ng supplies
Charles McKean Fairf1eld
Centenary Road 446 9442

CHIP WOOD Poles m_.
d•ameter 10
on largest
end $12 per ton Bundled
slab StO per ton Delivered
to Oh10 Pallet Co Rt 2
Pomeroy 992 2689

- --------ltvestock

L•vestock

Pets tor Sole

Household Goods

LAYNE S FURNITURE
Sofa chatr
rocker at
loman 3 tables $500 Sola
chatr and loveseat $275
Sofas and ctlatrs pnced
from $275 to $550 Tabl es
$33 $60 $7 ©
and $85
Sofabed and chair St50
H1de a beds $300
qu een
SIZe
$325 ,
&amp;
UP
Recliners
$125
$150
$t60 $175 and $225 Lam
ps from $18 to $50 5 pc
d1nettes from $69 to $325
Wood table and 4 chatrs
$275 Table two leaves 6
c ha~rs (h1gh backed) 5400
Hutches $300 and $350
maple or ptne fln1sh
Bedroom suites
$275
$325
(pecan)
(wh tel
$350 (oak ) Bassett Oak,
$550 Bassett Cherry S675
Bunk bed complete w1th
$115
$250
mattresses
$275 Capta 1n s beds $275
complete Baby beds, $75
Matt resses or box spnngs
full or twm $55 t~rm $65
and $75 Queen sets $185 5
dr chests $49 Bed frames
$20 Entertatnment cen
ters S40 and SSO Oesks
$38
USED
Ranges
refrigerators,
dressers
TV s
head
boards and beds Bedroom
suite swivel rocker bar
stools Big gas heater,
wood wardrobe, lavatory
3 miles out Bulavllle Rd
open 9am to 8pm, Mon
thru Fri 9am to 5pm Sat
446 0322

Farm Equtpment

61

Butldrng Supplle•

ALL TY PES of building
matenals
block
brick
sewer p1pes Windows, lin
tels etc Claude Winters
R 10 Grande o Phone 245
5t21 after 5pm

S6

63

WILL HAUL i1mestone and
gravel Also hme hauling
and spread1 ng Leo Morns
T ruck ing Phone 742 245&lt;
LIMESTONE gravel and
sand Al l Sites At Rtchards
and son Upper R1ver Rd
Ga llipolis Oh a Call 446
7785
JIM S
DEPENDABLE
water dei1very Cali 256
9368 anyttme

II E FILLINGER Water
Dei1verv serv1ce Cali 379
2124

86

LANDSCAPE
IAATERIAL SALE
AZAl.EAS ............

0 0 0.

•

0

M H Repair

BILLS MOBILE HOMES
and Home Improvements
Free esl1mates Call 446
2642

MOBILE HOME
SERVICE

~.95

Pmk &amp; Red

Holly, 1umpers, yews, red cedar &amp;
cypress mulch, landsc:ape leftovers

$3.00 AND UP

Anchoring, SklrtiOII•
Awn1ngs.
Patio
Covers,
Carports,
Roof Pa•nl, Set-up
and Re-levehng Call

10 to S Saturday
1 to 5 on Sunday

BIU.'S

446-2642
87

Upholstery

A&amp;H Upholstering, across
from the Texaco Station In
Syracus" Ph 992 3752 or
992 3743

BROTHERS
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
Finest quality at lowtst
POSiilllo pri- Coli
now lor tr• ullnt•te
Commercial er r u tlol

:~----~2~~t~~=2~---"~

J

�-D-1~The Sunday TirnelhSentinel, Sunday, April20,

1980
3t

31

Homes for Sale

House for sale 8 rooms 2
baths Good garden Call
614985 3526 Chester OH

6

room house corner of

Carroll
and 3rd 51
Syracuse OH Util tv room
and garage 992 5205
Real Estate

General

3t

Homes lor Sale

Homes tor Sal'

House tor Sale Large lol
completely remOdeled 3
bedrooms k1lchen 2 baths
l1v1ng room full bel!sement
$25 000 tOO percent l1nan
clng at 11 percent 1nterest
If mterested ca11698 733t In
Pagetown
Real Estofite

General

Realtor Auction"'
NATIONAL HOME
RELOCATION
Serving 6,000
communities
421 Second Ave
Ca11446.0552 Anvtlme
NEW LISTING - Assumab le 8lf2% loan, lOVely
br ck ranch tour m1 les from HMC Th s f1nc home
features 1 h baths b1g fam1ly room w1th fireplace
plus much more S1tuated on a large well land
scaped lot Call for complete detailS
NEW LISTING - In Rac1ne you will fmd a very
lovely 2'12 story home This fme home IS presently
bemg renovated &lt;About 90% f•n•shed) Mostly

restored to 1ts ongmal des•gn You must see th s one
to rea ll y apprec1ate Call now
BMR 342 Large Flat Lot All electnc home New
carpet throughout 3 BR s 1'/ 2 baths tully equ1pped
k1tchen Attached garage S1tul!lted on 120 x200 lot

Brick
ranch stvle
3
bedroom
2'h
bath
fireplace, full basement w
fam,ly room a c
2 car
garage
Baum Addn
Me1gs Co Call after 6 p m
985 4169
7 rooms and bath 2 story
full basement F rreplace '"
fam tl y room On farge lot
w rtver
fro nt age
In
Pomeroy Ca II after 6 p m
992 7284
9 Room House 1h baths
basen1ent and garage
College Rd Syracuse OH
992 St33 or 992 398t
Real Estate

3t

Homes for Sale

House tor Sale on Brownell
Ave Middleport 992 S204
32

Mobile Homes
tor Sale

1973 Fa rpolnt
14x6S 2
bedroom
1971 Cameron 14x65 2
bedr
1971 Fl eetwoOd t4 x65 3
bdr bath ;,
1971 Sha~espear 14x65 2
bedroom
1965 Yanor 12xS2 2 bedr
1968 Fleetwood t2x63 2
Bdr
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES PT PLEASANT
WI/ 304 67S 4424

32--M-o-biie ~H;:o::m
=-e=s:-­

for Sale
t971 FleetwoOd 14•65 3
bdr 11/2 bath
t971 Liberty 14•6S 2 bdr
t968 New Moon 12x60 ex
pando 2 bdr
t970 New Moon t2 x60 3
bdr
t961 II ndale 10x55 2 bdr
t969 Broadmore 12x60 2
bdr
B&amp;S
Mobile Home Sales
PI Pleasant W VA
675 4424
SPRING SALE
Used
mobile homes and travel
Ira i ers
TRISTATE
MOB ILE HOMES CALL
446 7572
1971 Ztmmer tra ler 12x60
1972 Buddy Tra11er l2x60
992 5304

General

33

BAIRD &amp; FULLER
REALTY

.,

OFFICE 446-7013

BMR 343
Frame and Permastone
loca t ed n
Crown C!IV on 137Xl50 lot LR DR FR 3 BR s
Carpeted throughout Natural gas heat Partt al
basement
BMR C361
Bus.ness Rt 7 Mtddleport Grocery
store wtth c 2 beer and w ine 11cense Includes all
stock and equtpment needed for complete opera
tton

Farms for Sale
1

FARM
Appro•
45 h
acres 7 rm house loca ted
1n Gallipolis Ferry Call
675 4296
COUNTRY HOME w1th
stocked pond for sw mm 1ng
or f1sh ng 9 room s bath
carpeted 3 to 17 acres
available Loca ted approx
1 miles from Pomeroy off
Rt 7 or 33 446 2359 after 6
36 Acre Farm 1Y:! story
hous e
F ull basement
barn bUtldtngs mtherat
rights good land $77 000
992 7559

BMR 361 The Place for K1ds Two story home n
R1o Grande w tth 41 arge BR s Inc ludes 3 extra lots
Call for an appotntmentl

150 acres wtth lovely view
4 bedroom older home
modern k1tchen 1~replace
pat o storms rutt trees
all m1nera1s $70 000 742
2480 after 6 p m or week en
ds

1

BMR 333 Modular Home 3 BR s 2 baths LR DR
F R wtth wood burner Kttchen Includes stove and
refrig All t his plus separate ut11 ty room Situated
on 1 23 Acres
BMR 334 Wr ll Cons der L and Contract I 3 Acres
of bareland on Jackson Pike Call tor detailS' 8%
F rnancmg

34

BMR 336 At the Edge of Town S1tuated on
nearly six acres of land Executtve type home
featunng 2 WBFP s Call today owner ts anxtous'
lmmedtate occupancy

3S

Lots &amp; Acreage

acres
c1ty school
district restncted butldtng
lot 446 3043 after 6

2 13

BMR 94 For Large Famtly Deluxe older home 3
BR s LR DR and fam 1iy room Natural gas heat
Must see to apprectate Excellent locatton 1n
Cheshtre t
BMR 137A LOOK Into Thts Bnck ran ch mciudes
3 BR s complete k1tchen w1th d1n1ng area FR w 1th
fireplace full basement All th1s and more on flat
( 120x 180) lot tn super sub d1V1San
BMR 139 Leave the Car and walk to town Ol der
two story home on Second Ave Home has
alummum Siding mcludes 3 B R s LR DR and FR
Less than $30 OOO'
BMR 149 Development Land 30 Acres W1lh 500ft
of front footage on Clark Chapel Rd Mtneral nghts
are tncl uded'
BMR 157 Rtver V1ew 3 B R frame house w t h full
basement and 32 Acres of land K1tchen has 2011 of
cabmets 1ncludes range and refrigerator
BMR 339F Need a Farm 30 Acres n Rio Grande
wrth 2 story house n need of repatr Call fo r com
pl ete details
BMR 340 Garden space
Older 2 storv home n
Patnot situated on 112 Acre lot J BR s LR DR and
kttchen 1nclud1ng dtsposa l and r ange Southwestern
School DIS!
BMR 341 En1ov Your Own Pond L shaped bnck
ranch on a 3 56 Acre lot 3 BR s 2 baths L shaped
LR w1th DR FR w1lh stone FP mud room fully
equ1pped k 1fchen Parllal basement Natural gas
heat wrth central a1r

LANO CONTRACT - A 10%
rate-·:··. , ·- --· :
payment will buv you a lovely brick frame b1 level
wtth 3 bedrooms 2 baths central a rand H4 acres
Close to hospttal Ca ll for appomtment today 1J 146S
DREAM HOME IN THE COUNTRY - Lovely brick
ranch has 3 bedrooms 2'4 baths formal dm1ng lui
iy carpeted beautiful kitchen w1th self c1ean1ng
range d1sposal &amp; dishwasher fam ly room wtth
bnck !~replace full basement heat pump and 2 car
garage Located on 1 acre room for garden 2 mtles
off Rt 279 behmd Thurman
N 1147
BIDWELL RODNEY RD - Good ran ch home with
2 bedrooms bath storage t:lUtld 1ng and garden
N 1Sll
space Only $22 500
GOOD FAMILY LIVING - Th iS love ly r anch has3
bedrooms famtly room w th wood burner large 2
car garoe beaut1ful 18x36 pool wtth large pat o
close to town Reduced to $52 000
N tns
CLOSE TO ENCJ - N1ce 1970 Rebel mob1le home
12x60 tn excellent condttt on furn ished front porch
&amp; a carport storage bUilding and an 01 ver tra c tor
Located on 2 acres of n!ce land better hurry only
$16 500
N056t

Twen ty acres
Rutland
Townshrp Large mobtle
home ready to move 1n
$20 000 Mob1ie home lot
State Route 33 across from
fatrgrounds $2 000
One
acre Crow 01VIS10n off Rt 7
SS 000
Twelve acres
Sai1sburv Townsh p off Bv
pass 7$8 000 Can t rade and
ftnanc e easrly Call 0 Bnen
and Crow Realty 992 2720
or 992 3589

Evemngs Call
Darvm Bloomer, Assoc. 44ti 2599
Oscar Batrd, ReaHor 446-4632
John Fuller, ReaHor 446-4327

EVENINGS
TOM WHITE AS SOC
STEVE McGHEE ASSOC
OONA McGHEE ASSOC
BETH NULL, ASSOC
BUD McGHEE- Reailor Auctioneer

For Sale 13 acres ground
Hvsell Run Rd $12 000
Cal1992 6201

RESTRICTED
BUILD! NG LOTS Debby Dnve all
utilities available
STROUT
REALTY,
446 0008

41

Houses for Rent

5 RM house Depos I ref
lease $175 a month $200
deposi1446 0952

5

RM COTTAGE near
HMC $175 mp I ch1id ac
ceptable Call 446 4416 after
7p m

Real Estate - General

UN F 3 bdr house w1th
basement m the c1IV fu l ly
carpeted caii446 343 7

42

Mobile Homes
tor Rent

M obi le home on 1 acre on
Rl
160
3888436
no
chtldren

446-0008
OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE - $6 500 down
- 9% - As~mg $33 000 - Remodeled 2 story home
3 BR s LR den fam1ly rm dtmng kt tchen 2 WB
!~rep l aces 3Y:! acres Located on state Route 233
between Galli pol sand Oak HIll
ROOM TO ROAM - I thmk you would say that thiS
sprawl mg bnck tn level IS one of the nicest country
homes you ve ever seen Thts beauty Is situated on
4'12 acres of lana aboul 3'12 miles from Rodney Why
not let your family enjoy 5 BR s, 3 baths large 11v
lng and dining room complete k1lchen family room
with stone fireplace and 2 car garage Be the f irst to
see thiS one
RACCOON CREEK FARM 50 acres Jd A botfom
11 A pasture lovely modern brick home wtth 3 Brs
2 ba1hs cathedra l ce lings fireplace large sun deck
and lots of other extrasa new metal pole barn cn b
1oad1ng chute approx 1700 II creek frontage
located 4 m from Me1gs M1ne No 3
WHAT DREAMS ARE MAOE OF - Mature land
scapmg and n ch green lawn highl ight this enchan
tlng r i verview home Owner has been transferred
and must sell lh1s custom built 3 BR home LR dm
lng rm , equipped k1tchen lover with open sta~r
way famtly rm w1th FP basement and 2 car
garage are oniv a few of the spec1al features
Located on Route 7 south of town Wllh frontage on
the Ohio R1ver
GREEN TOWNSHIP- PASTURE FARM - t55 A
M L located on SR W approx 6 ml west of town
Land ,. approx 60% clearl!d &amp; 40% woods &amp; In
eludes 2 POnds &amp; a good barn pnced at $500 per
acre
GREEN ACRES - Thr ... ~ ranch nice bath
large LR modern ~cl"'d",('u ndry all carpeted
garage &amp; fiat lot t\~\IY.:0:.11tV tor mllst- types of
11nancmg Immediate posse55ion SJ9 500
ROONEY BIDWELL RD - Sect1onal home, 24x60
.j BR, 2 baths, large LR equipped ~lichen, cent a~r
concrete block garage 1 acr" S22,500
FINISH THIS ONE YOURSELF &amp; SAVE MONEY
- Unfmtshed one story h~me wrlh 3 4 acres on RA
COON CREEK LOCated on tne Green Saunders Rd
near Nortnup St8 500

LOW DOWN PAYMENT - SUPER BUY- FHA
VA CONVENTIONAL - ThiS 3 yr old b1 level IS
l 1ke new &amp; must be sold th1s month 3 or 4 BR s 2'1:1
baths fam il y rm heatalator fireplace low heat
b1ils Clay grade school Gaii1a Academy H1gh
School Call for Appointment
IN THE LAP OF LUXURY - That S where you w•li
be the day you move Into thts b rand new 3 BR 211,
bath tn level Th1S home Will fulf tll your every
dream w th the large L shaped fa m1i y rm equ1p
ped kttchen &amp; 2 car garage Located '" Clearview
Estates &amp; shown by appomtment
CAMPGROUND (FORMERLY CLARK CHAPEL
ACRES) Make somethlnR of lh1s property agam 71
A 2 acre lake s~veral t.uildings 1n need Of repatr
dumptng statton 2 water s1stems lots of pm~ trees
Fix this dandy place up &amp; st.rt mak1ng money Op
p6r!un1ty knocks
MINI FARM - OWners moved to Flortda and are
selltng th1s lovely 3 BR bnck home Th s 6 vr old
beauty offers lots of good lrvmg for some lucky
fam•IY w1th a large kitchen &amp; d1n10g rm LR tamt
ly rm w1th f r eplace gar13ge &amp; barn Located on
St a te Route t60 approx 6 m1 from HMC

2 BDR
FURN
mob1le
home adults only dep
req m Chesh~re Call 446
4229
FOR RENT
3 bdr fur
mshed house tra ler wrth
washer and dryer TV on
pnvate lot Suttable for 2 or
3 employed adults Cai1446
1822 after 5 p m
Furn1shed 3 bedroom
trail er Deposit requ1red
No pels 949 2253
2 bedroom tra ler Adults
on ly 992 3324
43

Farms tor Rent

FARM HOUSE $150 mo
Must have reference Call
388 9092 or 388 9033 Ready
for ren t now

CROUSE BECK ROAD - Rest ricted building iot
1 22 acre nice wooded selling c1IV schools S5 950 1

44

PERRYTOWNSHIP - 78acres tSA SlmmsCreek
bottom, balance rolling pasture &amp; woods nice
modular home, large barn several other buildings
lob base corner of SR W &amp; the Vernon WoOds Rd

SLEEPING rooms and
11ght housekeeping apart
men! Park Central Hotel

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE - 20% DOWN
- Older 2storv home wllh 6 rms &amp; bath cellar
house, sheds, large shade trees on approx 4 acres
Located 4 mt south of R10 Grande on the Tom
Woods Rd $1 9 900
RIO GRANDE AREA - ,:cl\ o• 45 acres vacant
l and county wa gtnl~"(.V.;ome ti mber nice
building s1tes city ~~ $18 000

3 AND 4 RM turn1shed ap
ts Phone 992 5434

Apartment
for Rent

1 ROOM EFF apt Private
entrance and bath Call446
1232
F URNISHED Apt, 3 rms
and bath Adults Releren
ce requ~red Call 446 3733
days 446 0171
5 to 10
evenings
UNFURN t bcr apart
ment
upsta1rs
second
Ave $235 per mo 1n
cludinQ ut11ifres one montl'l
deposn requ ired No pets
ca II 446 2129 or 446 2800

-t-------

SI
Household Goods
Gibson 20 cubic It chest
type freezer 4 vrs old St60
firm 9112 756lafter6p m

S4
Ml•c Merchandise
FORMAL wedding gown
hat with veil, size B phone
446 2009 after 5

TRYTHENEW
"PILLOW SOFT'

LAD I ES
DESIGNER
clothes size 12 14 16
farllous brands new or ex
cellent condition 992 3283

RENTER S assistance tor
Senior C1ttzens 1n Vtllaoe
Manor apts Caii992 7787

sem

Furnished apt 3 rooms
balh ut lil1eS pa1d
No
drunks no pets Sleeptng
Roomfor
REnt
John
Sheets Jlf2 mtles south
M iddleport Rt 7
Unfurn shed Apt for rent
$150 Call 992 7511 or 992
6130
GOING 10 MHiie Beach? 1
CondomtnJUm lrd
floor
apt for weekly rental at
Garden Ctty 6 m1tes below
Myrtle Beach Ocean fron t
2 bdrs 2 baths elektnc
kttchen washer and dryer
a c prtvate scr eened par
ch
sw tmm rn g pool
telephone color ca ble T II
accommodates 6 Family
r ental s or 2 couples
preferred
No pets
no
houseparttes Sat to Sat
rental only some weeks
st tll avatlable Phone 675
1890 or 675 2975 after 5 p m
NICELY furn ished 2 bdr
apt Adults only lnqu1re at
Sheppard s Sales and Ser
v ce Ftrst and Oltve St
FURN 4 rm cottage 729
Second Ave adults only
no pets Call446 0957
4 RM AND bath apart
adults only no pets ca ll
446 3437
UNF
APART
n
Galltpolis
upstatrs
ref
req utt l pa d call at 631
Fourth Ave

45

Furntshed Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS
rent Galli a Hotel

for

SLEEPING ROOM 1 per
son $75 mo Ulliit1es pa1d
call446 44t6 after 7 p m
46

Space tor Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park Route 33 North of
Pomeroy Ll!lrge lots Ca II
992 7479
t TRAILER SPACE
Adults only Concrete pat to
and walk 900 block m town
Large lawn area water
pa1 d 560 mo Call 446 44t6
afterSpm
MOBILE HOME Lot 900
block tn town
Pa t o
adults $60
mo Water
pa1d Cal l 446 44t6 after 7
pm
47

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY - Serv 1ce statiOn dO
1ng good bus ness excellent build ng large shop If
you re 1nterested rn ownmg your own "bus1ness and
mak ng money stop 1n and see us for deta1 ls N 1100

BMR 338 12 Unat Apart ments 3 bUtldangs 4 umts
each Inventory avatlable Located tn Middleport

Real Estate - General

Property For Sa le Over 3
acres of land In Pomeroy
Onlv S7 000 992 3686

INVESTMENT PROPERTY - 2 niCe lOIS With 4
rental mobile home pads all are rented each pad
has concrete runners and pat to located 1n Rodney
(2155

Apartment
tor Rent

Bus.ness Bulldmgs

L 1quor L tcense operatmg
bustness $22 000 Complete
grocery store fullv equ1p
ped
carry out ltcense
$9 500

BMR 33S Handyman Special ThiS bnck has 10
spactous rooms Located rn downtown Gall polls
Must be seen

44

WANT TO RENT 1 or 2
bdr apart prtvate furn
w1thm 5 mtle radtus of
GallipoliS Call446 2342 and
Ask for Mark
WANT TO LEASE or buy
on land contract
Farm
wr te to P 0
box 455
Hager H1ii KY 4t222
-l'OR LEASE
4800 Sq•are Feet next
door Bob Evans Steak
Ho•se BOO sq It othce
4 000
wareho1.1se
storage garage or any
ather commerc1ai1.1Se
Catlike W1seman
446 3643
The Wtseman Agency

Sl

Pertec:t Sleeper
The Ultimate In
Sleeping Comfort

CORBIN and SNYD£

FURNilURE

9SSSecond Avenu,
GIIIIPOIIS, Oliio
45dt
PHONE 6t4 «6 1171
S3

Antiques

ATTENTION
( IM
PORTANT TO YOUJ Will
pay cash or: cert1 f1ed check
tor ant1ques and collec
tibl es or ent~re estates
NOih1nQ too large Also
guns pocket watches and
co tn collecttons Call 614
767 3167 or 557 3411
ATTENTION
( IM
PORTANT TO YOU) W11i
pay cash or ce rttfied check
for anftques and collec
tlbles or entire estates
Nothmg too large Also
guns pocket watches and
co1n col lecttons Call 614
767 3167 or 557 3411

M1sc Merchan1se

S4

COAL
sand
gravel
chlortde
ferttltzer
food and all types of
Excelsior Salt Works
E Ma m St Pomeroy
389t

dog
salt
Inc
992

APPLES - ROME beaut y
apples at $4 per bu Beslfor
apple butter Cal l 609 3785
Fttzpatr ck Orchard SR
689
IN STOCK for lmmed1ate
delivery var1ous stzes of
pool kits Do II yourself or
let us 1nstall for vou D
Bumgardner Sales
Inc
992 5724
Harley Oavtdson Yamaha
Super Deals Super Serv1ce
Gtant Accessory Selectton
$250 000 Inventory Athens
Sport Cycles 20 w St1mson
Ave Athens OH 592 t692
Decorated Cakes charac
ter cakes or sheef cakes
992 6342 or 992 2583
Dnve for show putt tor
dough Improve your short
game w th a new putter
John Teaford 614 985 3961
MOdel975 Freeze K1ng soft
serve tee cream machtne
dual head Very goOd cond
992 5786

wanted to Rent

Young worktng couple
lookmg for place to rent tn
country 1n Meigs County
Call after 6 p m 742 3t46

......

Electnc typewriter used 1
vear Gd cond $100 Elec
tri c Singer sewing mach me
tn case model 775 Touch
and Sew 2 vrs old will
sac nftce $225 1965 Mon
terey Mercury Gd for par
Is $tOO 1970 Triumph Sp1t
fife MKIII Ask1ng $200
w rth parts Sylvta Carman
35675 Long Hollow Rd
Pomeroy
~
Sears 5 h p go cart L1ke
newcond Cail9926115
SPECIAL Plant life fer
t ltzer Agn cu ltural and
hydrated I me 992 3891
Excelstor Salt Works Inc
Pomeroy OH
BEAUTIFUL full color
photographs of thiS year s
c hamp10nshtp Southern
H1gh School basketball
team 8xl0 $7 50 Sx7 $4 1n
folders Send orders and
payment to The Photo
Place
t09 H1gh 51
Pomeroy OH A llow three
weeks for mat I deltvery

LA RGE comm Sign like
new $100
Metal hand
plow, $20 New wire gate
St5 Met•l lawn chair StO
B~rd house StO G E stereo
r ecord player S20 Call 245

5050

ss

KACH ALL PORTABLE
BLDG Al l SIZes 6xl0 to
t2x40 see at t23 112 Pine St
446 2783 or 3 houses below
Bowling Aliev on Rt 7 446
t279

POOOLE GROOM I NG
Cali Judy Tavlor at 367
7220
DRAGONWYND
CAT
TERY
KENNEL AKC
Chow Chow dogs CFA
H•malavan Persian and
Siamese cats
Available
now 2 each Chow Chow
puppieS and S1amese kif
tens Call 446 3844 alter 7
pm

G OOD
USED
AP
PLIANCES
washers
dryers
refr i gerators
ranges
Skaggs
Ap
pllances
t9t8 Eastern
Ave 446 7398
SHAWN S ANTIQUES
ussec Ave
CLOSEOUT
Sale On old butcher's
block ,
secretary
bookcase, fancy wicker
rocker, w11nut desk, sq
oak table, p1e safe,
glassware, etr

BURROUGHS Bookkeep1n
g machine $50 Call 446
2342
KU STOM P A W1 f h four
12
speakers
n each
column Powered bv a
Peavey XL 500 head Call
682 7364 Oak Hill OH
$900
FACET office tvpewnter
manual w lh elite lype $80
Call446 2926 after 3 00
61

SOl FORD 2 row corn plan
ter t yr old Call Jack
Neal446 Ot57
JOHN DEERE M 2 cyl
good
cond
plow
cult vators and d1sc E)(c
to cultivate tobacco $1200
Call 388 8.160
WORK HORSE and horse
mower rake plow disk
saddle and harness Call
388 9033 or 388 9092 after s
pm

ANTIQUES
FUR
Nl TURE
glass
ch ma
anythtng See or call Ruth
Gosney ant1ques 26 N
2nd Middleport OH 992
3161
OLD COl NS POCket wat
ches class rtngs wedding
bands d ia monds Gold or
SliVer Call J A Wamsley
742 233t
Treasure Chest
Co1n Shop Athens OH 592
6462

63

Livestock

Regt stered polled Hereford
bulls best bloodlmes Don
Cox Patriot Oh 379 2671
HORSES tor sale or w111
trade for cattle

s YEAR old Appaloosa
Mare S400 green broke
remmg stock
blOOdline
Ftre Darter
AQHA
1
yearling PhiiiY registered
Appaloosa
AQHA Kmg
blood, 1 vearllng coil
reg1stere d
A ppal oosa
Snow Cap breed $300
each Cali614 593 7390 after
4 30
HORSE S for sale or w II
trade for mob le home Ca ll
256 1507

DITCH WITCH tren cher
R 40, 37 H P New engme
new d1gglng chatn Call 1
457 3139

green broke retn lng stock
$400 BloOd line Fire Dar
ter AQHA t vearlin9 filly
reg
Appaloosa
AQHA
king blood SJOO 1 vearl ng
coil
reg
Appaloosa
Snowcap breed SJOO 614
593 7390 after 4 30
H &amp; N oav old or started
leg horn pullets both floor
or cage grown available
Poultry
Housing
and
Automatton
Modern
Poultry
399 W Mam
Pomeroy Phone 992 2164

DOG
OBEDIENCE
Classes
begmnlng now
call367 0550
BRIARPATCH
KEN
NELS
Board1ng and
groommg
AKC Gordon
Setters
English Cocker
Spaniels Cali 446 419_!_
COCKER SPANIEL AKC
reg 6 months old black
$125 Cali after 5, 446 7655

SPRING OPPORTUNITY

AU BREEDS

GRAVELY TRACTOR
8
spd
elec start, rotary
motor sulky rotary plow
CUII1Yator Cail446 4149

LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION
Call (614) 992 9932
Pomeroy, 0
JOHN DEERE M 2 cyi
good
cond
plow
cultivators, and dtsc Exc
to cult vale tobacco $1200
Call 388 8.160

POODLE
GROOMING
Judy Taylor 614 367 7220
HILLCREST KENNELS
Board1ng all breeds Clean
Indoor outdoor factllttes
Also
AKC
regtstered
Dobermans 614 446 7795
HUMANE
SOCIETY
Adopt a tM&gt;meless pet
Hea llhy shots wormed
Donat1ons requ tred 992
6260 noon 7 p m
HOOF HOLLOW Horses
and pon1es and riding
les sons
Everythtng
1magtnable '" horse equip
ment
Blankets, bells
boots etc E ngllsh and
Western
Ruth Reeves
(6t4 ) 698 3290
DOB OBEDIENCE classes
beg1nntng now 367 0550

57

MUSICal
Instruments

P1ck1ng up a p 1ano tn your
area Looktng for a respon
Sible party to take over
payments
Call cred1t
manager collect 6 U 592
5122
Kimball Prano hke new
16mm movte projector
color and sound 247 262_.

61

Farm Equ,pment

Farmali400 gas li ve P To
2 way hydraulic w 2 potnt
fast h itc h draw bar GoOd
15 5x38 hres, w bolt on
hubs end duals also t John
Deere No 8 mower w 7 It
cycle K~rk Cheval1er 985
35t0
BUILDINGS" Last Chan
ce at These Pnces
All
steel clear span buildings
!Ma10r Mig) 20 x2~ xlO
for $2 896 30 x48 •12 for
$3,886
40 x48 •14
for
$4 807
48 ~72 xu
for
$6 897 F 0 B Factory Cali
collect Today 614 294 2675
l1i8p m

FREEl II
30" mower when
you buy a
walking mower.

"Mannmg Roush· Owner"

GRAVELY TRAC10R SALIS
Ph 992 2795 Pomeroy,

Oh

GOLD
AND
SILliER
COINS OF THE WORLD
RINGS
JEWELRY
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC ITEMS PAYING
RECORD
HIGH
HIGHEST UP TO DATE
PRICES CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, Ml DOLE PORT
OHIO OR CALL 992 3476

Goats 2 yr old male $25 2
mtlktng goats and 1 bred
female S60 ea 8 mo old
female us 6 kids males
$20, females $30 Shade
OH 1614) 696 1234

1977 Toyota Celtca GT 5
speed a c
new rad1al
ttres Ask ng S4 100 Exc
cond 992 720t

71

PERFORMANCE TESTED AND

t970 Pontac GTO 455 4
speed 12 bolt positi ve trac
l1on $800 Good cond 992
5487

500
1978 MUSTANG II 4 cy i 4
spd fi1p top steel belted
rad1als
AM FM r ad o
w r e spoke wheels gas
saver exc cond $3895
Call 446 9480
19 77 O L DS Cutlass
Supreme
A 1 Cond1t1on
fully equ1pped cal l 446
3882
1974 VEGA stat1on wagon
Cali 446 1324 or 388 996t

i~n MARK

II low m1 ieage
new t tres call 367 0657

BULLS
Angus Red Angus L1mousrn S mmental Ch anta
Mame An1ou, Polled Hereford and Shorthorn From
1S mas to 24 mas old A very h1gh quality selective
group of bulls

COWS ANO HEIFERS
Llmousln S1mmental Red Angus Ch1an a Some
with calves at side Heifers OPEN Some f1rsl Calf
Springers

77 MERCURY COMET 6
cyl stand trans while wa ll
ttres good cond call 245
9372 anvt1 me
t975 OPEL MANTA 4 cyi
needs some repatr Call

245 5050

1980-6 OOPM

t974 Gremlin P s A c
$1 250 Glen BISse ll 949
2801

Producers L1vestock Yards
812 Delaware St.
Washmgton C H , Oh1o

72

1976 FORD 'h ton ptck up
Short bed low mtleage ex
ee l lent condtt 1on $2 895
Call 446 os1s

1978 FORD 4x4 Deluxe 1n
tenor ask tng $5 000 Ca ll
446 2007
t973 CHEVY 60 ser es
tru ck
new t1res
new
motor new patnt 10b exc
cond1 t1on 1975 Kawasakt
motorcycle Cali367 7533
1968 GMC 1 ton t ruck
30 000 mtles gratn or ca ttl e
bed 446 2596
1979 Jeep Wagoneer 4 dr
fully equ1pped exc cond
$7 500 742 3tl7 after 5 p m

1975 Ford P1ckup
302
engtne p s auto a s am
lm
rad10
CB
low
m les runs good $2 t50
992 7841

t976 Ford F250 P1 ckup
St 200 1965 lnternaiiOnal 2
ton t r uck w1th or w1th out
ali steel bed 8 ft PICkup
topper $100 Oliver super
88 tractor $1 tOO Cyclone
Grass Seeder 3 pomt h1tch
SBO 10 II self contained
p1ckup truck camper $650
Caii98S 3988 or 985 4115

1977 Prem1er Volare 4 door
atr am tm tape speed con
trol New ttres Exc cond
Mason
Don Foglesong
773 5274

Springtime wtfh Mtster Rogers
20 Bill Moyers Journal 33
6 30-NBC News 3 15 ABC News 13
C BS News 8 10 News 6
7 oo~ D1sney s Wonderful World
3 15 Galacttca 1980 6 13 60
Min~tes 8 to Best of Donny &amp;
Mane 17 French Chef 20 War &amp;
Peace 33
7 30-Wall Slreel Week 20 8 00Chips 3 t5 Movie The Stmg
6 13 Dukes of Hazzard 8 10
Odyssey 20 33 Movie B1rth of a
Legend 17
9 oo-Masterplece Theatre 20 33
10 oo-Movle
Beyond &amp; Back
3 15
Alice 8 10
Wmston
Church ill 17 American Short
Story 20 F1nng Line 33
10 30-Jeffersons 8 10 Ruff House
17
11 oo-News 3 6 810 t3 15 Open Up
17 Great DeciSions 80 33
11 ts-ABC News 6 CBS News 10
PMA Pulse 15
11 30-Movle Colorado Territory
3 Benny H1il 6 Movie The Btg
Wheel 8 Mov1e Black Noon
10 ABC News 13 Wresfi1ng IS
Another Vo1ce 33
11 4S-PTL Club 13 t2 OG-3 s A
Crowd 6 12 30-News 15 1 00M ovle The Treasure of Pancho
ll11ia 17
t 4s--News 13 3 OG-Mov1e The
Hosfage 17 4 5$---Mavenck 17

MONDAY APRIL2t, 1980
Report t3 5 50-PTL•
Club 13 5 ss-World at Large 17
6 OQ-700 Club 6 8 PTL Club t5
Health Field 10 Listen 17 6 IsAthletes 17
6 30-For Our Times tO News 17
6 &lt;IS-Morning Report 3, AM
Weather 33 6 so-Good Mor
nlng W~st Virginia 13 6 5s-News 13
7 oo-Today 3 tS Good Morning
America 6 13 Monday Morning
8 Salman 10 Three Stooges
Little Rascals 17
7 30-Famlly Affair 10, Sesame 51
33 7 ss--Chuck While Reports
to
8 oo-Capt Kangaroo 8 tO Lucy
Show 17 8 30-Romper Room
t7
9 oo-Bob Braun 3 Big Valley 6
Beverly H1ilblliles 8 Jeffersons
10, Phtl Donahue 13 t5 Family
Affair 17
9 30-Bob Newhart 8 One Day At A
Time 10 Green Acres t7
10 oo--&lt;:ard Sharks 3 1s Edge of
N 1ght 6 Jelfersons 8 Joker s
Wild 10 Morning Magazine 13
Movie Casanova Brown r 17
10 30-Hollywood Squares J ts
$20 000 Pyramid t3, Whew 8 10
Andy Griffith 6
10 ss-CBS
News 8 House Call to
11 oo-High Rollers 3 t5 Laverne &amp;
Shl rley 6 13 Price 1s R 1ghl 8 tO
Elec Co 20
11 30-Wheel of Fortune 3 15
Family Feud 6 13 Sesame St
20 33 11 Ss--News t7
12 oo-Newscenter
3
News
6 to t3 HeaVh Field 15 Love

s 4s-Farm

s

Amencan Style 17
12 3Q-Ryan s Hope 6 13 Search for
Tomorrow 8 10 Password Pius
15 Movie Heros island 17
Elec Co 33
1 oo-DaysofOur Lives 3 15 All My
Children 6 13
Young &amp; the
R Estiess 8 10
2 oo-Doctors 3 15 One L 1fe to Live
6 t 3 A s The World Turns 8 tO
2 2s-News 17
2 3Q-Anotlier World 3 15 I Love
Lucy 17
3 00- General
Hospita l
6 13
Gu1d1ng Ltghl 8 tO Banana
Spills 17 B1il Moyers Journal
20
3 3Q-Fiintslones 17 4 OO-M1ster
Cartoon 3 M erv Grilfln 6
Petticoat June! ion 8 Sesame St
20 33
Gomer Pyle 10
Real
McCovs 13 L1tlie Ra scals 15
Spectreman 17
4 3Q-Lone Ranger 3 Gomer Pyle 8
Brady Bunch tO Tom &amp; Jerry
13 Merv Griffi n 15 Gillig on sIs
t7
s oo-Carol Burnett 3 San ford &amp;
Son 8 Mary Tyler Moore 10 My
Three Sons 17 Mister Rogers
Neighborhood 20 33
5 30-Mash 3 News 6 Play lhe
Percentages 8 E lee Co 20
Mash 10 Happy Days Again 13 I
Dream of Jeannie 17 Doctor
Who 33
6 oo-News 3 8 10 13 15 ABC News
6 Carol Burnettt7 Zoom 20 3
2 1 Conlacl 33
6 30-NBC News3 tS ABC News 13
CBS News 8 10 Carol Burnell 6
Bob Newhart 17 V i lla Alegre 20
Wi ld Wild World of Animal s 33
7 OG-Cross W1 ts 3 Tic Tac Dough
8 Face the Music 6 13 MacNeil
Lehrer
Repor t
33
Love
American Style 15 News 10
Sanford &amp; Son t7 D lck Cavett 20
7 30- That Nashville Music 3
Muppet Show 6 Joker s Wild 8
D1ck Cavell 33 Family Feud
10 13 Nashville On The Road t5
All In The Family 17 MacNeil
Lehrer RePOrf 20
8 oo-Little House on the Pra~rle
3 15 WKRP 1n Cincinnati 8 10
That s Incredible' 6 13 James
Michener s World 20 33 Movie
The STory of Mank ind t7
8 3Q-STockard 8 10 9 oo-Mov1e
T he Great Cash Giveaway
Getaway
3 15
Mov1e
Waik l kl
6 13, Mash 8 10
American Short STory 20 33
9 30-F lo 8 10 1o oo-Lou Gr ani
8 tO Boston Marathon 33 Big
Battles 17 News 20
10 JO-Over Easy 20 t1 OG-News
J 6 8 10 13 tS Last of the W1ld 17
Dick Cavett 20 Dave Alien at
Large 33
11 3Q-Tonight 3 15 ABC News 6 13
Harry 0 8 ABC Captioned News
33 Movie 'Pay or D1e
tO
Movie Ltttle Caesar' 17
11 50-Barney M iller 6 13 12 2s-Pollce Woman 6 t3
12 40M cC ioud 8 1 oo-Tomorrow 3
News IS
10-News 17 1 15-Movle T he
Male Animal t7 1 35-- News 13
3 2$---Maverlck I 7 4 25--0pen Up
t7

ROOFING Guttenng and
remodeling Wilham Mtt
chell 388 8507

Auto Repa1r

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleantng
446 4208
GALLI A RESIDENTIAL
IM PROV EMENT
Insulated vmyl stdtnQ
alum1num gutters and
spouts storm doors and
wmdows Free est1mates
Call367 0209 day or n1ghl

Camptng
Equtpment

t978 VENTURA popup
camper sleeps 6 call 245
9183

M EADES roof1ng and
spouttng home remodeltng
and stdrng free esttmafes
10 years local experrence
Ca II 388 9642

19ft cam ping tra,ler Se lf
conta ned gas and elec
refngera tor Mag1 c Chef
cook stove and Shower
f orced atr furna ce full
pressure water system
682 2255

PAINTING
Res1den1101
and commerc1al lntenor
and extenor mobile home
roof s Free esttmates 17
yrs exp w th references
call 367 7784 or 367 7160

1978 33 It Sw ss Colony
Deluxe Camper Tra11er
Sleeps 6 full awnmg a c
TV tm antenna extra duty
furnace double •nsula t 10n
Dealer ma ntamed Less
than t 000 m1ies S7 200
complete Weekends 448
2555 or weekdays 992 60St

&amp; G Carpet Cleaning
Steam
cleaned
Free
est,mate
Reasonable
rates Scotchguard 992
6309 or 742 2211
WALL PAPERING
pamhng 742 2328
82

t976 DODGE VAN 6 cv i
auto trans
ps
pb
ra d 1o call446 2309
t979 Ford tSO 4x4 auto
p s p b topper Postftve
tractton front and rear 985
4339
power

~::,&lt;;~n~'" L~~~r:~~er;:,~.. ~3

to 000 m11es $5600 Cali 992
3t49 or 992 2705

CARTERS PLU MB ING
AND HEATING
cor Fourth and Pme
Phone 446 3888 or 446 4477
DEWITT S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160 at Evergreen
Phone 446 2735
GENE PLANTS
AND SONS
Plumbtng
Heatmg
Atr
condtt1onmg 300 Fourth
Ave Ph 446 t637

~AI NTI NG tnt en or and ex
ter1or free esttmates ca ll
446 3344

CA BINET S &amp; VANITIES
Most wood products Wood
Shop
10t Court St
Gall1poi s Oh10 45631 Call
446 2572

HOU SE AND TRAILER
roof repa r patnttng f ree
esl1mates Call446 1562

THEISS INSULATION In
sui master foam msulatton
New homes old homes
commerc•al structures
For free est1mates ca ll 446
t971

STU CCO
pla sterin g
plaster repa1r
texture
cet hngs free esttmates
call256 1182

LAIR CONST
Block
brtck
ftr eplaces
new
homes remodeling ca ll
379 2123

Motorcycles

Harley Davtdson Yamaha
Super Deals Super Serv1ce
G1anf Accessory Selectton
$250 000 1nventory Athens
Sport Athens
Cycles 20
Sl1mson
Ave
OHW 592
t692
BUY A NEW
MOTORCYCLE unt1i you
see the 1980 Suzuki of
Suzuki of Jackson Rt 35
North of Jackson Cali 286
4956

ADVANCED SEAMLESS
GUTTER&amp; DOOR, INC
Overhead Garage Doors
Electnc Door Operators
Contmuous no leak gut
termg
Day 698 8205 N 1ght

B S A 750 3 cyl rocket 3
has been overhauled by
Wolfes of Belpre $1 tOO
Call446 7708
7S

Boats and
Motors for Sale

1979 Starcraft 15 II In haul
70 H P Mereu rv motor 446
2445 after 6 446 4792
t972 22 It 7 m STAR
CRAFT
self contamed
new Frtdg 1dalre counter
cook top never been out of
box Cali 446 0475 from 8
a m to 5 p m after 5 call
367 7289

GEORGES ROOFING
Roofing stdtng gutter
butld up roof, home
repa1r
Free Esttmates
388 97S9

KUHN &amp; SAUNDERS
ROOFING
Commerc•al or
Res•denttal
Hot or Cold Process
446 24S0- 379 2458

DENNY
CHAIN UNK FENCE
FREE ESTIMATES

Ken Soles
Rto Grande

24S 9t13

C&amp;W CONTRACTORS
All types home Im
provements - Rooting
gutters - spoutt - con
crete work Ph 367 0427,
367-Qt94 367-QI41 Free
est• mates

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

VINTON CEMENT
FLOOR INC
Box 89 Btdwetl, Oh
388 91i77 Sidewalks
drtveways
base
ments steps etc In
sulat1on res1dent1a I
or
commerctal
some remodelln

t975
T hunder
Craft
Magnun 160 SS (16 11 ) 75
h p Johnson Sterling lilt
bed tra1ier St 550 992 St74
76
Auto Parts
_ _llicesso"-rr,_,e.:c
s ___

Holley Dom1nator Intake
Manifold ano 600 CFM
Holley Carburetor Com
puter designed tor per
formance and econ,.,my
Fils 351 CUbiC Inch Ford
Windsor enQtne
Never
used 2 new 4 3Sxl8 and t
3 OOOx2t Carlisle Knobby
motorcycle fires Battery
operated fence charger
Call after 4 30 992 729t
USED AUTO PARTS Nor
th of Adamsville 112 m1le
tr.om canoe li very Walch
for s1gns on Rt 35 beyond
Render ng Pllmt Hours 9
to s Monday thru Friday
Sa t unttl noon Call 245
9t02
CHAR IE S SALVAGE
We buy and sell rad1ators
battenes etc Call W. 7717

E xcavat.~ln,_,g._____

L mestone for ur ·veways
Pomeroy Ma5on area 367
7101
METAL CULVERTS
6
thru 48 m stock 12 $5 to·
II 18 $715ft 24 $985
tt also 4 and 6 plasttc
corrogated COil ptpe 4
a nd 6 schedule 40 PVC
p pes and srnks
Call
collect Jackson OH 286
5930 Ron Evans Backhoe
loca ted 3 m Is south on St ,
Rt 93 toward Oak H1 il

DAVIDSON
DEVELOPMENT
Excavat1on Serv1ces
Dump truck
doter,
backhoe
Caii446 4537

Electncal

B4

&amp; Refngeratlon

SEWING
MACHINE
Repa1 rs
serviCe
alt
makes
992 2284
Th O:
Fabrtc Shop
~omeroy •
Authortzec:l Smger Sales.:
and Servtce We sharpen
SCISSOrs
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers
toasters •rons all small ..
appliances Lawn mower
Next to St ate Htghway"
Garage on Route 7 985 :
3825
M1ller Electncal Servtce
Res1dent and Bustness
Reliable and Expen enced
742 3195
D DAY
REFRIDGERATION
Res1 dent1al
commercial
heat tng cooling electncal
serv1ce Call 388 8274 or
388 9963
ELECTRICIAN 6 vrs ex
penence
res1denttal &amp;t
commerc1al
free
est, mates Call675 20t9

General Hauling

85

HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

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

Storm
W1 ndows.
Storm
Doors.
Replacement
W1nd.ows.
PatiO
Cover5
Alum1num
S1d1n.Q
and
Accessories Call

BIU.'S

446-2&amp;42

(Gallla Co•nty
Cerl1f1ed)
Beds, water and
Lines, Electnc
Pole Buildings

•Lm••·
Reese Trenchmg
&amp; Backhoe Servtce

t2 FOOT Runabout Wllh 5
H P Elgin gas engme 10
speed electnc trolltng
motor Call367 7533
t978 C STAR 1979 115 H P
Mercury motor exc cond
less than 30 hrs running
time W1iitakepav off Call
446 2066

83

CARPENTER WORK complete remodelmg by AI
Tromm 742 2328 Referen
ces

35 court st
Gallipolis Oh10
Cali 446 3896
or 446 301i0

Frank Rose const co
Remodeling repa1r, new
construction all types
Free estimates all work
fully
guar•nteed
Residential
commer
c•al industrial &amp; ten
, elecl'rR:aT war~
MSHA Cerl
1
446 4627

STA NDARD
Plumbmg Heal1ng
215 Third Ave 446 3782

JI M MARCUM ROOfing
spouting and s1dmg 30
years expenence
Free
est1mates
Remodeling
Cali 388 9857

t978 Ford Bronco P S
P B A C AM FM stereo
992 6130 after 5 p m
74

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

ALL TY PE S of Carpentry
work new home bldg or
remode l ng ca II 446 2910

Home
Improvements

and

QUALITY
MAIN
TENANCE
Electrical
plumbtng heatmg and air
condltionln!J, Call 388 9698

Furniture Stripping
and Refinishing

llans&amp;4WD

--------------------i-------------------~-------------=~----~-------------------11979 JEEP CJ 7

Sunday and Monday 's

FOR BEST in Carpet
Cleaning Call Smeltzer s
Steamwav
Call 6t4 446
2096

FIBER GLASS truck top
per w ith slrd1ng wtndow for'
6'12 II F leels1de truck $400
Ca ll 446 3139 after 5 p m

8t

Home
Improvements

81

s

PENDLETON REBUILT
BATTERY S20 plus tax
and old battery We buy old
batterres Repa1r battenes
Call 388 8596
77

Home
1mprovements

1974 Ford FtOO p1ckup
Rooftng s d1ng room ad
truck
Standard tran s
all types of general
St 200 or best offer 742 1t-;:~====;=;===:::;-1 d1t1ons
repatrs
25 yea r s ex
2396
per ence 992 3406
73

t976 Monza 4 cyl nder 4
speed 27 m p g 59 000
m1ies 992 7060

Auct1oneer-Mer1.n Woodruff-Urbana, Oh
Contact Geroge Amole Marton, Ohto 614 382 44S6
J1m Gebson Washington C H Oh
614 335 1922 or 614 998 2047

Trucks for Sale

t979 OMN I 024 I ke new
36 mpg $S 300 8 00 to 5 30
Call675 2731
t977 FORO GRANADA 4
dr, 6 cyl
auto am tm
low miles ca ll 245 5617

81

_ __..&amp;,_,Acce~o!_les_ _

78
1974MUSTANG II GHIA 6
cvl 4 spd loaded witt&gt; ex
tras GOOd gas mtleage
$1895 Call 446 0515 after

--- --

Auto Parts

ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE 24 hr wrecker
serv ce All types of repa r
Upper Rt 7 Call 446 2445
days and 446 4792 n1ghts

1964 II W t967 F1at t968
Falcon 1973 1!2 ton p1ckup
Car Rea lty Inc 446 7118

t973 VEGA Camback $400
Cail446 7523

SELECTED

SUNDAY APRIL20 t980
s 30-AG USA 17 6 oo-Amerlcan
Problems &amp; Cha l lenges 10
Between the Lines 17
6 3Q-LDS World Conference 3
Better Way 8 Treehouse Club 10
7 00- Jerrv Falwell 6
Urban
League 10 Action Newsmaker
13 Banana Splits 17
7 3Q-Eddle Saunders 6 Bibl e
Answers 13 Jimmy Swaggarf
15 It Is Written t7
8 oo-Day of Discovery 6 Grace
Cathedral
6
Evangelistic
Outreach t3
Three Stooges
Little Rascals 17 Sesame Sl
20 33
8 JO--Oral Roberts 3 Rev Leonard
Repass 8 Contacl 61 James
Robison 10 Lower L1ghlhouse
13 Open B1bie 15
9 00-Gospel Singing Jubilee 3 Oral
Roberts 10 Rex Humbard 6
Christian Center 8 Rev Jim
1 Franklin 13 Ernest Angley 15
Scouting Is 17 MISter Rogers 20
Stud10 See 33
9 30-Robert Schuller 8 It Is
Written 10 Rev R A West 13
Sesame St 20 Big Blue Marble
33
10 oo-Rex Humbard 3 K1ds Are
People Too 6 Movie See Here
Pri vale Hargrove 10 Jimmy
Swaggarf 13
Gospel Singing
Jubilee tS Leave II To Beaver
t7 Sesame St 33
10 30-Ernest Angley 8 Zoom 20
Mov1e The Miracle of Our Lady
of Fatima 17
11 oo-Human Dimension 3 Rex
Humbard t5 Rev Henry Mahan
t3 E lee Co 20 Once Upon A
Classic 33
11 30- Bill Dance Outdoors 3
Animals Animals Animals 6 t3
Big Blue Marble 20 World of the
Sea 33
t2 OG-AI Issue 3 Issues &amp; Answers
6 13 Viewpoint 8, This Is the Life
15 OhloJournal20 Movie Pals
of the Saddle 33
12 30- Meet the
Press 3 15
Women s Tennis 6
Cham
plonshlp Fishing 6 Face the
Nation 10 Kids Are People Too
13 Nova 20
t2 4$-Movie Battle Shock' 17
t oo-Famliies 3 NBA Playoff 8 tO
RTL Club 15
Movie
En
chantment 33
1 3Q-HI Q t3 Austin City Limits 20
1 3s-This Wee)&lt; in Baseball 3
2 oo- Amerlcan Sportsman 6 t3
2 to-Baseball 3
2 30-ETC 20 2 4s-Movle 'Flying
Deuces 17
3 oo-Boxlng 13 America s Alhletes
6
1nsighf t5
Mystery 1 20
Shakespeare Plays 33
3 30-NBA Playoff 8 10
Lillie
Rascals t5
4 oo-Golf 15, Baxters 6 Movie
That s My Boy 17 Upstairs
Downstairs 20
4 JO-Wide World of Sports 6 13
4 40-Golf 31 5 oo- E lee Co 20
S 30-Best of Groucho 20 5 3s-C esl Mol Toulouse Lautrec 33
6 oo-News 3 8 10 ABC New• 6 Tri
Slaie Today &amp; Tomorrow 13
lounil'v Roads t5 Wi'eslling 17

76

Autos for Sale

1968
PONTIAC
BON
NEVILLE
1973 Old
smob1le Cutlass Both '"
good cond1tton Call after
5 00 Cail446 4t94

Wanted to Buy
RISING STAR Kennel
Board1ng Call 367 om

71
Autos for Sa le
"-'--.___c=.oo=.

78 CHRYSLER L ebaron
exc cond must sell due to
health phone 675 3008

PRODUCTION SALE

FRIDAY,MAY2nd -

~-

63

5 year old Appaloo$a mare

BOBCAT loader 214 hr
i1ke new $4800 Call t 457
3139 or 1 873 4996

HILLCRE ST KENNEL
Boardmg ali breeds clean
tndoor outdoor factlit tes
Also AKC Reg Dober
mans Call446 7795

buy a r1d1ng tractor.

oCondor St

BUI L DIN G
40•72~14
$5995 F 0 B
Large door Included Also
40x44xt4 $4395 FOB call
collect now 513 278 482t

by
Randy
Car
penter,
fac:tory
tra med
Iron tend
a hgnment
spe
ctalist.

50" mower when you

21

STEEL

FRONT END
MJGNMEHIS

Farm Equ1pment

FREEl II

ALL

ENGLISH COCKER PUP
PIES
lovable ch 1idrens
pet 446 419t

FI REWOOD
seasoned
oak ash and hickory Ph
446 9442
40 L B Box of West V rgtn a
Chunks low ash low sulfur
Foster Coal Co 446 2783

ECHO CHAIN
hydraulic wood splitt ers
saw chain bars and ail
wood cutti ng supplies
Charles McKean Fairf1eld
Centenary Road 446 9442

CHIP WOOD Poles m_.
d•ameter 10
on largest
end $12 per ton Bundled
slab StO per ton Delivered
to Oh10 Pallet Co Rt 2
Pomeroy 992 2689

- --------ltvestock

L•vestock

Pets tor Sole

Household Goods

LAYNE S FURNITURE
Sofa chatr
rocker at
loman 3 tables $500 Sola
chatr and loveseat $275
Sofas and ctlatrs pnced
from $275 to $550 Tabl es
$33 $60 $7 ©
and $85
Sofabed and chair St50
H1de a beds $300
qu een
SIZe
$325 ,
&amp;
UP
Recliners
$125
$150
$t60 $175 and $225 Lam
ps from $18 to $50 5 pc
d1nettes from $69 to $325
Wood table and 4 chatrs
$275 Table two leaves 6
c ha~rs (h1gh backed) 5400
Hutches $300 and $350
maple or ptne fln1sh
Bedroom suites
$275
$325
(pecan)
(wh tel
$350 (oak ) Bassett Oak,
$550 Bassett Cherry S675
Bunk bed complete w1th
$115
$250
mattresses
$275 Capta 1n s beds $275
complete Baby beds, $75
Matt resses or box spnngs
full or twm $55 t~rm $65
and $75 Queen sets $185 5
dr chests $49 Bed frames
$20 Entertatnment cen
ters S40 and SSO Oesks
$38
USED
Ranges
refrigerators,
dressers
TV s
head
boards and beds Bedroom
suite swivel rocker bar
stools Big gas heater,
wood wardrobe, lavatory
3 miles out Bulavllle Rd
open 9am to 8pm, Mon
thru Fri 9am to 5pm Sat
446 0322

Farm Equtpment

61

Butldrng Supplle•

ALL TY PES of building
matenals
block
brick
sewer p1pes Windows, lin
tels etc Claude Winters
R 10 Grande o Phone 245
5t21 after 5pm

S6

63

WILL HAUL i1mestone and
gravel Also hme hauling
and spread1 ng Leo Morns
T ruck ing Phone 742 245&lt;
LIMESTONE gravel and
sand Al l Sites At Rtchards
and son Upper R1ver Rd
Ga llipolis Oh a Call 446
7785
JIM S
DEPENDABLE
water dei1very Cali 256
9368 anyttme

II E FILLINGER Water
Dei1verv serv1ce Cali 379
2124

86

LANDSCAPE
IAATERIAL SALE
AZAl.EAS ............

0 0 0.

•

0

M H Repair

BILLS MOBILE HOMES
and Home Improvements
Free esl1mates Call 446
2642

MOBILE HOME
SERVICE

~.95

Pmk &amp; Red

Holly, 1umpers, yews, red cedar &amp;
cypress mulch, landsc:ape leftovers

$3.00 AND UP

Anchoring, SklrtiOII•
Awn1ngs.
Patio
Covers,
Carports,
Roof Pa•nl, Set-up
and Re-levehng Call

10 to S Saturday
1 to 5 on Sunday

BIU.'S

446-2642
87

Upholstery

A&amp;H Upholstering, across
from the Texaco Station In
Syracus" Ph 992 3752 or
992 3743

BROTHERS
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
Finest quality at lowtst
POSiilllo pri- Coli
now lor tr• ullnt•te
Commercial er r u tlol

:~----~2~~t~~=2~---"~

J

�0.12-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, April ~.1980

·Craddock's Country Gardens celebrating grand opening
ByJudyOwea
The past four years have seen a
just-for-fun hobby evolve Into a
fulltlme endeavor for John Craddock and wife Diane of Point
Pleasant. And that endeavor Is now
a promising new business.
Local residents are welcoming
Craddock's Country Gardens to the
area this weekend during the garden
center's grand opening. Country
Gardens, a complete landscajifug
and garden consulting firm, just
opened for business this Spring;
John, however, has been landscaping since 1977 when he turned
his hobby into a professional venture. Educated at Moorehead State
University, he was formerly sales
manager at West Virginia
Malleable.
Specializing in outdoor plants,

Country Gardens boasts a large selection the actual landscaping
selecllon of trees such as sugar work, quite a few simply make
maole, white birch, European purchases directly from the plants
Mountain ash, pinoak and magnolia. which grace Country Garden's atTiie Craddocks also advise tractive sales site.
customers on shrubs, flowering
"The favorites, of course, are
plants and ground covers for every
azaleas, rhododendrons," says
landscaping need and offer for sale a·· Diane, who manages the . garden
wide selection of garden accessories center while John operates the
such as fertilizer, pottery, tools,
landscaping business. Roses and
house plants and terrariums.
fruit trees, however, are also
"We're doing mostly residential popular.''
landscaping/' says John, who feels
For the daring and exotic, the
his several years of experience in
also carries a selection of
center
and study of the trade has made him
trees
very
rare to this area - the
as competent as any lawn designer.
English
Varigated
holly, the
"But we also do commercial work.'
Weeping Alaska cedar and the
Although a great many of the
Weeping Norway spruce.
Craddock's customers take adBoth John and Diane assure that
vantage of the entire package which
aU their plants, and shrubs, which
provides full consulting, plant
come mostly from Michigan, Ohio

and Kentuckv. ond their trees which
they get from Tennessee are
hearty. "We virtually guarentee our
plants, " says Diane, "but the
customer needs to know how and be
willing to take care of them." John
adds that " We do our job by
providing the healthy plants and
advising the customer on proper
care, but once the trees or shrubs
are in the ground they need a lot of

d~lt-yourselfer

can landscape a
lawn for a mere $150 but a welldesigned professional lawn job such
as the Craddock's will offer upon
request can cost anywhere from $500
to $5000.
"The average landscaping job
today would cost approximately
$3000," John says, "but here In
Mason County that average is much
lower.n

attention to survive.
The Craddocks say that landscaping can be done at anytime
during the year but caution that
lawns planted in the summer
months need more care.
John
also
advises new
homeowners that their landscaping
should be planned at the same time
the house is being built if not Included In the builder's package. A

ELBERFELDS JN POMEROY

Accepts position

Peeps.

• •

A Gallipolis Diary
GALLIPOUS-A 1958 graduate of
Gallia Academy High School and
1962 graduate of Rio Grande College
- John R. Bane - April! assumed
his new duties as coordinator of the
all-volWJteer Fayette County Life
Squad operation.
A front-page article with his picture in the Washington C. H.
newspaper 81Ulounced his employ·
ment by the Fayette County
Emergency Services, Inc., board of
directors. This ~year-old bachelor
lives at 319 Gibbs Ave ., Washington
C. H. 43160.
Though he was born In Chillicothe,
he was brought up in Gallia County.
His parents, Mr. and Mrs. John R.
Bane (Edith Clark ), live on Ingalls
Rd. , which comes off SR 218 and
runs to Lincoln Pike. His uncle, Dr.
Russell Bane, then resided in
Chillicothe; the doctor, 80 years old,
now makes his home In Florida.
While he was a student at Rio
Grande College, John R. Bane, Jr.,
atayed with his maternal grandmother, Lavada Myers, the
postmaster. (A cousin is Dick Bane,
postmaster of Gallipolis.) John got a
B. S. degree In secondary education
from Rio and the writeup says that
he completed graduate work at
Xavier University in CinciniJIIti.
Bane was a Blue Devil football
player his junior and senior years
Wlder coaches Quince Thompson
and Bob Sang. In his senior year he
was president of the FFA. For three
years he was a member of the GAHS
student council and Hi·Y, active in
4-H and the Gallia CoWJty Junior
Fair, and was a substitute bus driver
for the Gallipolis City Schools while
he was at Rio Grande. He did his
student-teaching at GAHS.
To take the coordinator post, Bane
leaves a position as Washington
Senior High School teacher of
mathematics for 18 years. For six
years he was Washington C.H.'s
athletic director, and for ten years
has been manager of the Washington
Park Association's swimming pool
complex. A 32nd degree Mason,
Bane also is a leader in Elks Lodge
No. 129, of which he was slated to
become exalted ruler this month.

workshop. "The other boys walked
under the wire, but Frank Pierre
reached up to hold it out of his way,
as it was hanging low .... He immediately received a heavy shock
and called to Fred Bovie to cut the
current off, at the same time catching hold of the line with the other
hand, In this way getting the full
force of the electricity through his
body. The current was cut off at once
and he fell to the ground_ln_an unconscious condition. Dr. Holzer and
Dr. Barton were at the Bovie
residence in a few mlntues ... but the
shock had been too great and he
passed away. "
Pallbearers were Fred Bovie,
Wendell Thomas, John Armstrong,
Lorah Robinson, Jack Com, and
Lloyd Bush.

RAINBOW DIVISION VETERANS
&amp;2ND ANNUAL REUNION
CEDAR RAPIDS, Ia. - The Annual Rainbow Reunion will be held
on July 9, · 10, 11 and 12, in Cedar
Rapids, Iowa. The Roosevelt Royale
hotel will be headquarters for the
1980 reunion . Reservations can be
· made by writing to: Roosevelt
Hotel, 200 First Avenue, NE, Cedar
Rapids, IA 52401, Attn: Reservations
(Rainbow Division Reunion). Reservations can also be made at the adjoining Stouffer's Five Seasons Cen- ,
ter, Cedar Rapids, IA 52401, Attn: '
Rainbow Division Reunion. Reservations should be made as soon as
poSsible. Additional information on
the reunion can be obtained from
Hank DeJarnette, 1207 31st St. NE,
Cedar Rapids, IA 52402. Registration
fees can be mailed to Hank DeJ arnette in the amount of $25 per person.

GALUPOLIS - Mrs. Carol Davis
has accepted the position of Dietary
Supervisor at Pinecrest Care Center, Galllpoiis. She was previously
employed as senior nutrition
program coordinator with the
Gallla-Meigs Community Action
where she managed the feeding
program for persons 60 years of age
or older in Gallia County. She also
managed the Home-DeliveredMeals PrograminGallia County.
At Pinecrest Care Center,' Mrs.
Davis will be In charge of the complete operation of the Dietary
Department with the assistance of a
Counseling Dietitian.

COLUMBUS - Daylight savings
time returns to Ohio and most of the
remainder of the nation at 2 a.m.
Sunday, April '!I, Clifford Reich,
director of the Department of Liquor
Control, reminded all permit
holders.
When the clock strikes 2 a.m. it
will, in fact, be 3 a.m., thirty
minutes past the legal closing time
for permit holders entitled to be
open until2:30 a.m.
Therefore, aU sales of liquor must
cease at 2 a.m., when clocks should
be advanced one hour, Director
Reich said.

&lt;:Art Carved

ALLEGRO

W'J5653

LOVE ST,._R
WV 5827

Guaranteed
for a
Ufetime

DIMITR I

TAWNEY
JEWELERS

.............•............•...... ,

:
!-

'•••
•

.

TWIN SIZE
Reg. $149.95 ea.

now only

Serta Spin~ ~aver
LIMITED WARRANTY
FOR 10YEAR
Fl)( 1111 lif t\ year 1rl1r I)IHChl . . Adllf'l W~ltl . 1~ ,
Mil, 11 rtt option rtptlr or ••P••e• 1111 maurtll ttr
wit hout ChlrQI , I XC: Iutivl o f tra ntp()l'l t!IOn
COl li Tl'lerllitltf r.p-'r or ~ IICin'IIM II our op l lon
Will bt m1d1 tt I Chlfgl \Of IICII lltptM Yllf ot 1
10 ol the p~o~reh tN pr ~ l . plut trantpotliiiOfl COlli
Thrt Wl ff lrtly do.. n01 apply II bl(ki&gt;IIO It 'ubtet:l
fo ~ncltl iotl

DST starts April 27

WV6835
DELA.YS DECISION
we Have Many
ATHENS, Greece (AP)
Premier Constantine Caramanlis
ART CARVED WEDDING
put off a decision Saturday on
whether to run for president but said
BANDS AT 1300
he would enter the race only if memGOLD INSTEAD OF
bers of Parliament were free to vote
according to their conscience and
TODAY '500 PRICES.
VANCE MILLER was the name of not along party lines.
He did not elaborate. The 300the holdup man whom WilliaJn R
member
single -chamber
AUtey slew in 1930. Irma D.' Bales,
Parliament
is
scheduled to vote
Rt. 1, Cheshil'l!, wrote that Miller
Wednesday
for
a new president to
"Fine Jewelry for
was from Steubenville or near there.
replace
Constantine
Tsatsos, 80,
Over 40 Years"
He was married, had two children, •
and his wife was eight months preg- whose five-year term expires June
424 second Ave.
nant at the time of the shooting. His 211.
Gallipolis
father came lind identified the body.
He had read about the killing while r-----------..!......-----------1
sitting on his hack porch one evening
and felt strongly that this man who
was slain was his son. He told Athey
that he held no grudge against him,
that he would have done the same
thlng lf he had been In the predicament that Irma's grandfather was
ln.
"This information was told to me
by my mother-she was . 22 years old
at the Ume of the killing; she is now
,71," Irma &amp;!essays.
e
Willi~ T.. leadingha m
•
Realtor
BONNIE SANNS' old clippings Included one dated April 7, 1918, which
tells that Frank Pierre Sanns, 18,
t - and by fa r the easiest - methOd of selecting a
son of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne SaiUIS of • homeTheis quickes
s(mply knowing all tne tnat's available on the market.
And
First Avenue, was fatally shocked at •
you won 't get that Information by charg ing around from one 11 house
7 on a Sunday night wjlen he "touch- • for sale" sign to another . Your best course is to seek help from a
REALTOR. Preferably,one who knows - and is active in - the
ed a wire jleavily charged with elec- e• neighborhood
you ' re Interested in.
··
tric current in the back yard of the
Before you sit down with your REAL TO R, determine your ram i·
Harley Bovie residence on Locust St, • ly's needs; number of bedrooms and baths, storage needs , roo m for
•
future expansion, recreation facilities,. etc . if vou' re willing fo com·
nut door to the Baptist Church.''
•
promise on anv requlremenfs, say so. Be flexibl e about architecture,
Sanns and Bovle had set up an • and conSider looking at a variety of home styles. And be particular
electric workshop In the back end of e •boutthe location of the house . It's the one thing yov'll never be able to
.
the Bovie lot, and the current con- •e remOdel
Final ,:.dvice : Be Candid about your f inances and what you can af·
nected with a wire clothesline, which
ford. This\ information will come out sooner or later i!nd you'll be
~ "had been touched without hannfnl -_ wasting your time by looking et houses that are bevond your means .
•
11 there Is anything we can do to help you in the field of real. estate
fffect dlll'lrlJ dry weather.''
· However, ' the weather was wet e please phone or drop in 1t LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE, 512 Second
: Ave., Gallipolis. Phone446-7699. We're here to help.
•
:when these two youths pillS two
~r boys headed tow11rd the eeew•••••••~··~••••••••~••••••••••

·~

VOL XVII No. lO APRIL 1980

~ail

'Estate. :
To~ay

YOU AND YOUR AGENT

10 I'IHIUII , ttiC iudlng I~ CIIIi Y I ! Oidifl0 01 bltllliiiO
Qv..,.. t lzl Deddtng warranty only tpp lltl .,.,.n IN
n'l llt rtll and loulld l h~ rt Ulld on 1 "'It'll bee!
irll'l'll Of b&lt;td 11 ~ 1 IIII I pr o Yidl I r lg\0 Cllll.,- luppol'1.

Thit Wl"lnly It Ot'illl by \hi mtiiUII C:I UIIf, lnd II
Yllld anywhere within \Ill Ullllecl 5 11111. l o ()blain
wtrrtnly t tnotC:I C:OII\tet tf'll Sertt dtll., trorn whOII'I
rour btlklrno wu purcl'ltted or·
Adam Willi!, !tiC
0 II EYIII I Street
Crn connt!i, ()tiro 16101
QtVII yo~ I ~C&gt;ht legi t riQtiU 1 nd yo11
lit O I'IIVI Oll'ler IJ91'111 wnttl'l Wi ry IIOfl'l IIIII IO

P~rt w1rr1~ly
roll~

till I&lt;

.

J

Great To
Sleep On

'14995

"SPINE
SAVER"

FULL SIZE
Reg. $179.95 ea.

For

HeaHhful
Support!

NOW!

SET!

now only

'17995

SET!

QUEEN SIZE
Reg. $449.95 set

nowonlv

'22495

SET!

PRICE
SE;TS ONLY

,.L

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

�0.12-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, April ~.1980

·Craddock's Country Gardens celebrating grand opening
ByJudyOwea
The past four years have seen a
just-for-fun hobby evolve Into a
fulltlme endeavor for John Craddock and wife Diane of Point
Pleasant. And that endeavor Is now
a promising new business.
Local residents are welcoming
Craddock's Country Gardens to the
area this weekend during the garden
center's grand opening. Country
Gardens, a complete landscajifug
and garden consulting firm, just
opened for business this Spring;
John, however, has been landscaping since 1977 when he turned
his hobby into a professional venture. Educated at Moorehead State
University, he was formerly sales
manager at West Virginia
Malleable.
Specializing in outdoor plants,

Country Gardens boasts a large selection the actual landscaping
selecllon of trees such as sugar work, quite a few simply make
maole, white birch, European purchases directly from the plants
Mountain ash, pinoak and magnolia. which grace Country Garden's atTiie Craddocks also advise tractive sales site.
customers on shrubs, flowering
"The favorites, of course, are
plants and ground covers for every
azaleas, rhododendrons," says
landscaping need and offer for sale a·· Diane, who manages the . garden
wide selection of garden accessories center while John operates the
such as fertilizer, pottery, tools,
landscaping business. Roses and
house plants and terrariums.
fruit trees, however, are also
"We're doing mostly residential popular.''
landscaping/' says John, who feels
For the daring and exotic, the
his several years of experience in
also carries a selection of
center
and study of the trade has made him
trees
very
rare to this area - the
as competent as any lawn designer.
English
Varigated
holly, the
"But we also do commercial work.'
Weeping Alaska cedar and the
Although a great many of the
Weeping Norway spruce.
Craddock's customers take adBoth John and Diane assure that
vantage of the entire package which
aU their plants, and shrubs, which
provides full consulting, plant
come mostly from Michigan, Ohio

and Kentuckv. ond their trees which
they get from Tennessee are
hearty. "We virtually guarentee our
plants, " says Diane, "but the
customer needs to know how and be
willing to take care of them." John
adds that " We do our job by
providing the healthy plants and
advising the customer on proper
care, but once the trees or shrubs
are in the ground they need a lot of

d~lt-yourselfer

can landscape a
lawn for a mere $150 but a welldesigned professional lawn job such
as the Craddock's will offer upon
request can cost anywhere from $500
to $5000.
"The average landscaping job
today would cost approximately
$3000," John says, "but here In
Mason County that average is much
lower.n

attention to survive.
The Craddocks say that landscaping can be done at anytime
during the year but caution that
lawns planted in the summer
months need more care.
John
also
advises new
homeowners that their landscaping
should be planned at the same time
the house is being built if not Included In the builder's package. A

ELBERFELDS JN POMEROY

Accepts position

Peeps.

• •

A Gallipolis Diary
GALLIPOUS-A 1958 graduate of
Gallia Academy High School and
1962 graduate of Rio Grande College
- John R. Bane - April! assumed
his new duties as coordinator of the
all-volWJteer Fayette County Life
Squad operation.
A front-page article with his picture in the Washington C. H.
newspaper 81Ulounced his employ·
ment by the Fayette County
Emergency Services, Inc., board of
directors. This ~year-old bachelor
lives at 319 Gibbs Ave ., Washington
C. H. 43160.
Though he was born In Chillicothe,
he was brought up in Gallia County.
His parents, Mr. and Mrs. John R.
Bane (Edith Clark ), live on Ingalls
Rd. , which comes off SR 218 and
runs to Lincoln Pike. His uncle, Dr.
Russell Bane, then resided in
Chillicothe; the doctor, 80 years old,
now makes his home In Florida.
While he was a student at Rio
Grande College, John R. Bane, Jr.,
atayed with his maternal grandmother, Lavada Myers, the
postmaster. (A cousin is Dick Bane,
postmaster of Gallipolis.) John got a
B. S. degree In secondary education
from Rio and the writeup says that
he completed graduate work at
Xavier University in CinciniJIIti.
Bane was a Blue Devil football
player his junior and senior years
Wlder coaches Quince Thompson
and Bob Sang. In his senior year he
was president of the FFA. For three
years he was a member of the GAHS
student council and Hi·Y, active in
4-H and the Gallia CoWJty Junior
Fair, and was a substitute bus driver
for the Gallipolis City Schools while
he was at Rio Grande. He did his
student-teaching at GAHS.
To take the coordinator post, Bane
leaves a position as Washington
Senior High School teacher of
mathematics for 18 years. For six
years he was Washington C.H.'s
athletic director, and for ten years
has been manager of the Washington
Park Association's swimming pool
complex. A 32nd degree Mason,
Bane also is a leader in Elks Lodge
No. 129, of which he was slated to
become exalted ruler this month.

workshop. "The other boys walked
under the wire, but Frank Pierre
reached up to hold it out of his way,
as it was hanging low .... He immediately received a heavy shock
and called to Fred Bovie to cut the
current off, at the same time catching hold of the line with the other
hand, In this way getting the full
force of the electricity through his
body. The current was cut off at once
and he fell to the ground_ln_an unconscious condition. Dr. Holzer and
Dr. Barton were at the Bovie
residence in a few mlntues ... but the
shock had been too great and he
passed away. "
Pallbearers were Fred Bovie,
Wendell Thomas, John Armstrong,
Lorah Robinson, Jack Com, and
Lloyd Bush.

RAINBOW DIVISION VETERANS
&amp;2ND ANNUAL REUNION
CEDAR RAPIDS, Ia. - The Annual Rainbow Reunion will be held
on July 9, · 10, 11 and 12, in Cedar
Rapids, Iowa. The Roosevelt Royale
hotel will be headquarters for the
1980 reunion . Reservations can be
· made by writing to: Roosevelt
Hotel, 200 First Avenue, NE, Cedar
Rapids, IA 52401, Attn: Reservations
(Rainbow Division Reunion). Reservations can also be made at the adjoining Stouffer's Five Seasons Cen- ,
ter, Cedar Rapids, IA 52401, Attn: '
Rainbow Division Reunion. Reservations should be made as soon as
poSsible. Additional information on
the reunion can be obtained from
Hank DeJarnette, 1207 31st St. NE,
Cedar Rapids, IA 52402. Registration
fees can be mailed to Hank DeJ arnette in the amount of $25 per person.

GALUPOLIS - Mrs. Carol Davis
has accepted the position of Dietary
Supervisor at Pinecrest Care Center, Galllpoiis. She was previously
employed as senior nutrition
program coordinator with the
Gallla-Meigs Community Action
where she managed the feeding
program for persons 60 years of age
or older in Gallia County. She also
managed the Home-DeliveredMeals PrograminGallia County.
At Pinecrest Care Center,' Mrs.
Davis will be In charge of the complete operation of the Dietary
Department with the assistance of a
Counseling Dietitian.

COLUMBUS - Daylight savings
time returns to Ohio and most of the
remainder of the nation at 2 a.m.
Sunday, April '!I, Clifford Reich,
director of the Department of Liquor
Control, reminded all permit
holders.
When the clock strikes 2 a.m. it
will, in fact, be 3 a.m., thirty
minutes past the legal closing time
for permit holders entitled to be
open until2:30 a.m.
Therefore, aU sales of liquor must
cease at 2 a.m., when clocks should
be advanced one hour, Director
Reich said.

&lt;:Art Carved

ALLEGRO

W'J5653

LOVE ST,._R
WV 5827

Guaranteed
for a
Ufetime

DIMITR I

TAWNEY
JEWELERS

.............•............•...... ,

:
!-

'•••
•

.

TWIN SIZE
Reg. $149.95 ea.

now only

Serta Spin~ ~aver
LIMITED WARRANTY
FOR 10YEAR
Fl)( 1111 lif t\ year 1rl1r I)IHChl . . Adllf'l W~ltl . 1~ ,
Mil, 11 rtt option rtptlr or ••P••e• 1111 maurtll ttr
wit hout ChlrQI , I XC: Iutivl o f tra ntp()l'l t!IOn
COl li Tl'lerllitltf r.p-'r or ~ IICin'IIM II our op l lon
Will bt m1d1 tt I Chlfgl \Of IICII lltptM Yllf ot 1
10 ol the p~o~reh tN pr ~ l . plut trantpotliiiOfl COlli
Thrt Wl ff lrtly do.. n01 apply II bl(ki&gt;IIO It 'ubtet:l
fo ~ncltl iotl

DST starts April 27

WV6835
DELA.YS DECISION
we Have Many
ATHENS, Greece (AP)
Premier Constantine Caramanlis
ART CARVED WEDDING
put off a decision Saturday on
whether to run for president but said
BANDS AT 1300
he would enter the race only if memGOLD INSTEAD OF
bers of Parliament were free to vote
according to their conscience and
TODAY '500 PRICES.
VANCE MILLER was the name of not along party lines.
He did not elaborate. The 300the holdup man whom WilliaJn R
member
single -chamber
AUtey slew in 1930. Irma D.' Bales,
Parliament
is
scheduled to vote
Rt. 1, Cheshil'l!, wrote that Miller
Wednesday
for
a new president to
"Fine Jewelry for
was from Steubenville or near there.
replace
Constantine
Tsatsos, 80,
Over 40 Years"
He was married, had two children, •
and his wife was eight months preg- whose five-year term expires June
424 second Ave.
nant at the time of the shooting. His 211.
Gallipolis
father came lind identified the body.
He had read about the killing while r-----------..!......-----------1
sitting on his hack porch one evening
and felt strongly that this man who
was slain was his son. He told Athey
that he held no grudge against him,
that he would have done the same
thlng lf he had been In the predicament that Irma's grandfather was
ln.
"This information was told to me
by my mother-she was . 22 years old
at the Ume of the killing; she is now
,71," Irma &amp;!essays.
e
Willi~ T.. leadingha m
•
Realtor
BONNIE SANNS' old clippings Included one dated April 7, 1918, which
tells that Frank Pierre Sanns, 18,
t - and by fa r the easiest - methOd of selecting a
son of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne SaiUIS of • homeTheis quickes
s(mply knowing all tne tnat's available on the market.
And
First Avenue, was fatally shocked at •
you won 't get that Information by charg ing around from one 11 house
7 on a Sunday night wjlen he "touch- • for sale" sign to another . Your best course is to seek help from a
REALTOR. Preferably,one who knows - and is active in - the
ed a wire jleavily charged with elec- e• neighborhood
you ' re Interested in.
··
tric current in the back yard of the
Before you sit down with your REAL TO R, determine your ram i·
Harley Bovie residence on Locust St, • ly's needs; number of bedrooms and baths, storage needs , roo m for
•
future expansion, recreation facilities,. etc . if vou' re willing fo com·
nut door to the Baptist Church.''
•
promise on anv requlremenfs, say so. Be flexibl e about architecture,
Sanns and Bovle had set up an • and conSider looking at a variety of home styles. And be particular
electric workshop In the back end of e •boutthe location of the house . It's the one thing yov'll never be able to
.
the Bovie lot, and the current con- •e remOdel
Final ,:.dvice : Be Candid about your f inances and what you can af·
nected with a wire clothesline, which
ford. This\ information will come out sooner or later i!nd you'll be
~ "had been touched without hannfnl -_ wasting your time by looking et houses that are bevond your means .
•
11 there Is anything we can do to help you in the field of real. estate
fffect dlll'lrlJ dry weather.''
· However, ' the weather was wet e please phone or drop in 1t LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE, 512 Second
: Ave., Gallipolis. Phone446-7699. We're here to help.
•
:when these two youths pillS two
~r boys headed tow11rd the eeew•••••••~··~••••••••~••••••••••

·~

VOL XVII No. lO APRIL 1980

~ail

'Estate. :
To~ay

YOU AND YOUR AGENT

10 I'IHIUII , ttiC iudlng I~ CIIIi Y I ! Oidifl0 01 bltllliiiO
Qv..,.. t lzl Deddtng warranty only tpp lltl .,.,.n IN
n'l llt rtll and loulld l h~ rt Ulld on 1 "'It'll bee!
irll'l'll Of b&lt;td 11 ~ 1 IIII I pr o Yidl I r lg\0 Cllll.,- luppol'1.

Thit Wl"lnly It Ot'illl by \hi mtiiUII C:I UIIf, lnd II
Yllld anywhere within \Ill Ullllecl 5 11111. l o ()blain
wtrrtnly t tnotC:I C:OII\tet tf'll Sertt dtll., trorn whOII'I
rour btlklrno wu purcl'ltted or·
Adam Willi!, !tiC
0 II EYIII I Street
Crn connt!i, ()tiro 16101
QtVII yo~ I ~C&gt;ht legi t riQtiU 1 nd yo11
lit O I'IIVI Oll'ler IJ91'111 wnttl'l Wi ry IIOfl'l IIIII IO

P~rt w1rr1~ly
roll~

till I&lt;

.

J

Great To
Sleep On

'14995

"SPINE
SAVER"

FULL SIZE
Reg. $179.95 ea.

For

HeaHhful
Support!

NOW!

SET!

now only

'17995

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QUEEN SIZE
Reg. $449.95 set

nowonlv

'22495

SET!

PRICE
SE;TS ONLY

,.L

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

�Pege 2. MUSIC CITY NEWS

*
*

MUSIC CITY IIIWI, hili

country
•
In your
•'

*

~ lJ\~J(:~isready

Established, 1963

A publication of:

MUSIC CITY NEWS
PubliShing Co.,-lnc . .
1302 Division St.
Nashville, Tenneuee37203
(615) .2.CH117
0 1910, MUSIC CITY NEWS

lfJNNIE'S
OFF AND RUNNING/

;.-=

~

''Till Slund II I City HNnl ArWIII lila WOrld"

for Freddy Fender!
FREDDY FENDER

Ei:lltor, LH Rector
General Manager, Betty Cox

Marketing Director,
Ed Thomasson
Advertising Manager,
811L Willett
Business Manager, Pat Taylor

TOGETHER WE DRIFTED APART
including:

Please Talk To My Heart
Together We Drifted Apart/All it Means Is Love
Give it All To Me/Gimme Another Tequila
including :

Art DireCtor, John Sheehan

One Good Ti me
After Another

ON THE COVER

I Never Felt
So Much Love
(In One Bed)

_, ' The 'Fether of 81uegrus Music,' 8111
Monrot. Plloloby: Nell Pond.

Peaches
Judy's Arms
Lovin' A
Livin · Dream

~~ft~

CONTENTS
News..... . ; .......... .. . . .. . ... Pege .c
Chenot~• Exchenges ....... ... Pege 5
Ster Gezlll9 ...... .. . .... . ...... Pege 6
Lftter Flett .. . .. . .... ........ . . Page a
Lonzo• Olcer ... .. .. .. . .... . .. Pege 10
'Selcloin Sc-/Buck White ... . . Pege 12
Nnhvllle Greu .. . .. , . ... . .. . . Pege 13
Wllme Lft Cooper . . ... . .. . .. . . Pege l.C
Jimmy Martin .... . ........ ... . Pege 1.C
8111 Monroe . .. ... .... . . .. .. . Pege 16-17

ALL IS WELLER

BOBBY BARE

~~'W~

Down&amp;Dirty
includinQ:

GO FOR THE NIGHT

Nu~bers/Tequlla Sheila/Oualudes Again
Bhnd Willie Harper/Rock Star's Lament

Feces ..... ....... . ...... ...... Pege 11

Country Club'n .. . .. ...... . ... . Pege 19
Gospel Truttt .. .. ... .. ... . .. . . . Pege 20
Mec Wlseman!Biueoress
Cardinals . .. .... .. . .... . . .... Page 21
Fntlvel Directory . . ..... . . .... Pege 22
Album Rwlews . . . . .. . . .. .... . Pege 2.c
'Premiere' ........ .. ..... ..... Pege 26
News VIews • Previews ...... . Page 27
Star Route . . ........... ... . .. . Pave 2t

including:
Go For The Night/lost In Austin
Atfanta/E•plosioni/Night Man

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

·DDI'Z'
JIIIJIINwith
Charly McClain!

U.S.A. 1·YHr $'1.00
Forelgn1·Yeer $17.00
CINIU 1·YHr $10.00
Alrmeii1·YHrNII.OO
Payable only In u.s. cu"ency .

N

THE
DALTON
GANG!

Charly McClain

Subscription orders
correspondence end news
releases shoulctbe1llrected to:
MUSIC CITY NEWS

Women Get Lonely

P .O. BOX 22975

Nashville. Tennessee 37202

including:

Men/1Hate The Way 1Love It
• Stuck Right In The Middle Of Your Love
Lets Put Our Love In Motion/ Women Get Lonely

Buy 1t once
EnJOY 1t a lifet1me.
Recorded mus1c
1s your best
entertainment
va lue.
&amp;* l)JIJ! Ji ),

,

* ~IP~

....

TtMLHf·ChronldeofCiwkavllte, Tenn.
OftiOVIUeyN~ptrt.

"'~().

I' l t

'd
..

10

ID l ! H

.

! l II 1 n

II ]I' &lt; d

OI •

..

,
.J

J~: t;'J) f ~J i ll / ~ 1 0 ~ l'i. t, l' ·l.r.IU P,){

·Columb&lt;a:· I!J ··Epoc."

r!Jd'

are trademarks of CBS Inc

) ,, j

I

I

. ,'

~

'

I

I

' n I i VI

•

1,

.

I' ...

M0 I

, . t! •

., ...... ~!l: .. !l"~· ..,. it"'

S!ilrthte &lt;o d&lt;slnbuted l&gt;yGBSRecord; • 1980 CBS Inc

•

1Golllpolla. Otolo

~

~~t·-

On Columbia, Epic and Starflite
Records and Tapes.

I 11 ]ft 11 &lt;.
· j

A Sut'PtMitnt to:
NllhYIHe Suburben N....,.,..

I

MUSIC CITY NEWS wlcomes t.tten
,. tM editor. Lettwl mutt be
...,... with MfMMd Mdrell.
MU$1CCITY NEWS will not IN

~

.,tor,...

bt ,.....,.....
nor rerum
of Mn ·~klted mMUKra,tl w

I

- - - ·oollcttod molot'lolto
1M rwtumed ....,.... Keem...,tecl by 1
llff·iiddlsllld atamprHI envelOPe .

~. ~--------~----

..
••

Letter Explained
My March Issue of MUSIC CITY NEWS
arrived yesterday and I was glad to read
your reply to Mrs. Charles T. Skelton's
"Didn't Get Tickets" letter. I am one of
those th.a t sent for four tickets In .early
January and like her, bad my mo~y order
returned with a "no tickets available"
note. I truly could not figure out bow many
seats could sen out that quickly. Your letter explained It wen. I did get tickets for
the Roy Acuff Theatre. Keep up the work
you do so_wen. ·
Alnca Reeves
Perry,IU.

. Doesn't See How

Reveals
New Facts
.
\
I have been subscribing to your
magazine for several years now and I realI)'.Jove lt. My favorite coUDtry artist Is
Johnny Rodriguez, and I wanted to thank
you very much for the arllcle In the March
Issue. It was really super. You brought out
facts that are overlooked In en artist and
you dldn:t repeat lhlngs that seem to 11e
found In ·every article. I hope to see more
on Johnny In the future. It Is true, he ·Is a
super person and a greet entertainer, but
most of all, be Is a friend. Keep up the
good work end thanks again.
Sacara Albritton
Avon Part, Fla.

Protests Siss.y.._

I do not understand bow you could have
gotten so many requests for tickets on the
second of January, since Jen. 1 was 1 boll·
I Just flnlsbed watching "Live From The
dey with no mail service. Tbat Is why I
Grend
Ole Opry" over PBS end thought lt
welted UDW Jan. 2 to send mlne.off, as I
was
(felt,
but don't you think (and I'm
knew It would not be sent out UDtil Jen. 2. I
sure
meny
watchers, listeners and fens
purchased my money order on Dec. 18, but
will
agree
with
mel that It wu klnda steep
welted per lnatructlonsln MUSIC CITY
when
Loretta
Lynn,
out of a blue sky,
NEWS that no ~ would be accepted
brougbt
Sissy
Spacek
out on stage .to do 1
with I postmark prior to JIB. 1. If you
·song
with
ber?
Even
George
Hamilton IV,
received thlt many requests on the sewho
was
IDIIOUDCing et the time, didn't
·
CODd, It appears the postmark does not
even
know
this
was
going
to
happen,
and
m11tter. You 11y maybe next year we can
reilly ~!«!tmed surprised. When .so meny
get tlekets, but with this system, there Is
good
and struggling country and western
DO way for me to ever get eny. .
artists
would give their Ills to. be a
. Ruth Bryant
member
of, or just to appear on, the
Statesboro, Ga.
Opry.·So they made a movie of
Grend.Oie
EDITOR'S NOTE: No ticket request&amp; mil ltd before
Loretta's life cailed "Coal Miner's
Jtn. t, 1-. were ec~ . MCN't ,._II Is drtiiWf'tilll to 1
IIOif offlu box et the m11n NnltviUe po~,t offlct. wMre
Daughter." So what? 1bere are still a lot
m•ll Ia continuously being proci'IMd, even _.. hoUdtlya.
of Butcher Hollows In this country.of ours,
and many still living In those Butcher
Hollows are being raised poor like Loretta
Lynn was. (I know, I'm one of them). I'm
not downing Loretta, I'm one of her
We too were disappointed at being
greatest
fens . I'm siUre she Is 1 fine per·
unable to get tickets for the MCN Cover
son,
and
bas done 11 lot for country music.
Awards Show. The day the money order
But
Instead
of spending millions on a
was returned, It was sent back Immediatemovie,
why
not let some of the money be
ly for tickets to tbe Roy Acuff Theater. We
IJ8ell
to
belp
these needy people still strughave already received those tickela. 1 read
glln&amp;ln
these
Butcher Hollows? And as far
your letter to us, your subscribers, with
as
Sissy
ts
concerned
she Is 1 movie acgreet Interest. Jlllt want you to know that
tress
end
a
good
one,
but certainly not a
even though some of us were dlaspcountry
/western
artist
and she should not
polnted, we do Indeed realize what we
be
lllowed
on
the
stage
(above another arhave going for us. First, the best yeartist)
of
our.Grand
Ole
Opry.
What ever
II'OWld coverage, by eny megazine, of the
happened
to
out
good
old
country
music:
countcy music business Ia oun through
makers
and
singers?
They
are
still
there,
MCN. Secondly, I considered It e pleasure
but
won't
long
be
If
they
keep
allowing
and privilege to write In 037-8emml Smith,
things like this to happen.
Ol2·Marty Robbins, etc .... , on my official
Mirllyn Carter
bellot. Then, In June, I look forward t.o
Indianapolis, Incl.
coming to Nashville end enjoying the
festivities. Yes, If we honestly renect for a
EDITOR'S NOTE : Grend 06e Opry alers frequently In·
moment as you have asked us to do, then I witt
tunt1 to perfOrm on ttw Opry: LONtte'LYM was ••·
tn:lllnt Mr riQtlt " ~ Opry Member.
thlftk we woul.d Ill be In complete harmony. We do, In fact, reellze the great ef·
forts of MCN for us, the fens. It Is apprec;lated so very much, believe me. So I
lhank you, MUSIC CITY NEWS, and
I would like to tell Danny Davis a good
everyone Involved In these efforts.
deed
he did for me In December of 1978.
Lucy Floyd
We
were
to Oy to Florida from In·
Decatur, Ga.
dianapolls. I was very nervous, since I had
never been on a plane. While waiting for
the plene I saw Danny Davis waiting for
the SllJIIe plane. Wen, I forgot Ill my fears
and just followed him on thjl plene. The
After receiving my March Issue of
MUSIC CI1'Y NEWS and reading the.letter trip was fine and thanks to Danny Davis, I
am not afraid to Oy. I just wanted to share
from the lady In Georgia who wasn't able
my story wlth your readers.
to get tlckela, I'd just like to say lhet I
Mrs. Frank Biggs
know bow she feels end I sympathize with
Remington, Incl.
her. But I seni for tlckela end received
them four weeks later. So I feel that
MUSIC CITY NEWS did alve their readers

Thanks For Efforts

lng nice. He's numero uno. He no longer
has a fan club and we certainly wish be

did. But we love him anyway. He's really a
super human being. I love reeding MCN
from cover to cover, over an!f over.
Ruth F . Smith.
Lackawllllll, N.Y.

Bravo For Whitman
Bravo! You've gqt a splendid publication
that's a pleasure to read from cover to
cover! I'm the United States representative and correspof!dent for the Slim
Wbltman Appreciation Society and I was
more than pleased to see an article about
SUm In your newspaper. Slim Is doll!g
some touring In the U.S. and will be appearing with the "Legend Makers" tour In
the near future . Please put anyone In·
terested In finding out more about Slim In
touch wllh me .
Loren R. Knapp
T1ICIOII, Ariz.

Jones Gains Fans

Dllla Crolby

RlchiiiQI!d, Ky.

Hot Youth Hits Hard

It flits me with disgust that Glen €ampbell and Krls Krlstofferson were among
lbe entertainers who volunteered their
lalenla to raise money for the CambodiBDS
on the Feb. 5 CBS telecast. I feel sad for
the.Cambodlens too. But responslbUity
comes with the territory. Let them take
care of their own problems the best they
can to survive. In Sir Thomas Brownes'
"Religlo Medici" (1642) be 11ld "Charity
begins at home, Is the cry of the world, yet
Is every men his greatest enemy, and, as
It were, bla own executioner." It llbould
begin at home and does, except for us k1dl
who go to bed hungry and DO one cares
that we don't hilve enough to eat. All over
I see poverty and misery In lbe midst of
atnuence and grown-ups who dllc:ull
poverty as though It were merely en
academic subject. I don't know bow to express the hurt us children feel who are on
the oulalde looking ln. For the children
who lost fathers In Viet Nam there Is no
way to heal the loss In a whole lifetime. I
myself don't have my father. I am eleven
years old. In my entire life I have nevP.r
beard of any other country wiUing to raise
mpney, give away free food, free education
and free health care to the American
"poor." I am working to stay on the honor
roll at school because I want to be 1 doctor
S(lmeday. 1 went to benefit humanity. But
by the looks of things I may never get this
opportunity because there Is barely enough
food to eat and my mother could never afford to pay for my education. Probably
some Cambodian kid will get a free
medical education while I have to work for
It just like my molh·~r bas to work for our
fll'ld whUe the Cambodians get It free. It
Is plenty ruthless of American entertainers
to tum tbelr backs on the cries of hunger
frum Amerlcen children and lnstead help
people wbo don't like our country, food,
clutbes, or customs. They don't like our
music. They bum our nag. I feel like bum·
"Bless your heart." Thenk you on behalf lng my Glen Campbell tapes ....
of Ill of us people who like Freddie Hart.
You cannot give him enough credit for be-

Bless Your 'Hart'

a fair chance. I love MCN end Ill the performers of country music. I will cast my
ballot, but It will not be en easy choice .

.

1bank you for lhe fine article on George
Jones In the March Issue. George has bad
a lot of problems In the last few years, but
Instead of loosing a fen, be's gained a new
one: mel In spite of everything thlt bas
hajlpened, I believe It will take George
Jones to bJ'lng good, .true country music:
back. Whet's more, I believe be'stolng to
do It! Keep the articles on George's progress coming.

Davis Did Deed

Got Fair Chance

••

~
~~~'§t

The nominees are all winners. Good luck
to them Ill.
JOID Richey
Bono, Ar.

,.

.'". '

,

..

""'

�Pege 2. MUSIC CITY NEWS

*
*

MUSIC CITY IIIWI, hili

country
•
In your
•'

*

~ lJ\~J(:~isready

Established, 1963

A publication of:

MUSIC CITY NEWS
PubliShing Co.,-lnc . .
1302 Division St.
Nashville, Tenneuee37203
(615) .2.CH117
0 1910, MUSIC CITY NEWS

lfJNNIE'S
OFF AND RUNNING/

;.-=

~

''Till Slund II I City HNnl ArWIII lila WOrld"

for Freddy Fender!
FREDDY FENDER

Ei:lltor, LH Rector
General Manager, Betty Cox

Marketing Director,
Ed Thomasson
Advertising Manager,
811L Willett
Business Manager, Pat Taylor

TOGETHER WE DRIFTED APART
including:

Please Talk To My Heart
Together We Drifted Apart/All it Means Is Love
Give it All To Me/Gimme Another Tequila
including :

Art DireCtor, John Sheehan

One Good Ti me
After Another

ON THE COVER

I Never Felt
So Much Love
(In One Bed)

_, ' The 'Fether of 81uegrus Music,' 8111
Monrot. Plloloby: Nell Pond.

Peaches
Judy's Arms
Lovin' A
Livin · Dream

~~ft~

CONTENTS
News..... . ; .......... .. . . .. . ... Pege .c
Chenot~• Exchenges ....... ... Pege 5
Ster Gezlll9 ...... .. . .... . ...... Pege 6
Lftter Flett .. . .. . .... ........ . . Page a
Lonzo• Olcer ... .. .. .. . .... . .. Pege 10
'Selcloin Sc-/Buck White ... . . Pege 12
Nnhvllle Greu .. . .. , . ... . .. . . Pege 13
Wllme Lft Cooper . . ... . .. . .. . . Pege l.C
Jimmy Martin .... . ........ ... . Pege 1.C
8111 Monroe . .. ... .... . . .. .. . Pege 16-17

ALL IS WELLER

BOBBY BARE

~~'W~

Down&amp;Dirty
includinQ:

GO FOR THE NIGHT

Nu~bers/Tequlla Sheila/Oualudes Again
Bhnd Willie Harper/Rock Star's Lament

Feces ..... ....... . ...... ...... Pege 11

Country Club'n .. . .. ...... . ... . Pege 19
Gospel Truttt .. .. ... .. ... . .. . . . Pege 20
Mec Wlseman!Biueoress
Cardinals . .. .... .. . .... . . .... Page 21
Fntlvel Directory . . ..... . . .... Pege 22
Album Rwlews . . . . .. . . .. .... . Pege 2.c
'Premiere' ........ .. ..... ..... Pege 26
News VIews • Previews ...... . Page 27
Star Route . . ........... ... . .. . Pave 2t

including:
Go For The Night/lost In Austin
Atfanta/E•plosioni/Night Man

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

·DDI'Z'
JIIIJIINwith
Charly McClain!

U.S.A. 1·YHr $'1.00
Forelgn1·Yeer $17.00
CINIU 1·YHr $10.00
Alrmeii1·YHrNII.OO
Payable only In u.s. cu"ency .

N

THE
DALTON
GANG!

Charly McClain

Subscription orders
correspondence end news
releases shoulctbe1llrected to:
MUSIC CITY NEWS

Women Get Lonely

P .O. BOX 22975

Nashville. Tennessee 37202

including:

Men/1Hate The Way 1Love It
• Stuck Right In The Middle Of Your Love
Lets Put Our Love In Motion/ Women Get Lonely

Buy 1t once
EnJOY 1t a lifet1me.
Recorded mus1c
1s your best
entertainment
va lue.
&amp;* l)JIJ! Ji ),

,

* ~IP~

....

TtMLHf·ChronldeofCiwkavllte, Tenn.
OftiOVIUeyN~ptrt.

"'~().

I' l t

'd
..

10

ID l ! H

.

! l II 1 n

II ]I' &lt; d

OI •

..

,
.J

J~: t;'J) f ~J i ll / ~ 1 0 ~ l'i. t, l' ·l.r.IU P,){

·Columb&lt;a:· I!J ··Epoc."

r!Jd'

are trademarks of CBS Inc

) ,, j

I

I

. ,'

~

'

I

I

' n I i VI

•

1,

.

I' ...

M0 I

, . t! •

., ...... ~!l: .. !l"~· ..,. it"'

S!ilrthte &lt;o d&lt;slnbuted l&gt;yGBSRecord; • 1980 CBS Inc

•

1Golllpolla. Otolo

~

~~t·-

On Columbia, Epic and Starflite
Records and Tapes.

I 11 ]ft 11 &lt;.
· j

A Sut'PtMitnt to:
NllhYIHe Suburben N....,.,..

I

MUSIC CITY NEWS wlcomes t.tten
,. tM editor. Lettwl mutt be
...,... with MfMMd Mdrell.
MU$1CCITY NEWS will not IN

~

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bt ,.....,.....
nor rerum
of Mn ·~klted mMUKra,tl w

I

- - - ·oollcttod molot'lolto
1M rwtumed ....,.... Keem...,tecl by 1
llff·iiddlsllld atamprHI envelOPe .

~. ~--------~----

..
••

Letter Explained
My March Issue of MUSIC CITY NEWS
arrived yesterday and I was glad to read
your reply to Mrs. Charles T. Skelton's
"Didn't Get Tickets" letter. I am one of
those th.a t sent for four tickets In .early
January and like her, bad my mo~y order
returned with a "no tickets available"
note. I truly could not figure out bow many
seats could sen out that quickly. Your letter explained It wen. I did get tickets for
the Roy Acuff Theatre. Keep up the work
you do so_wen. ·
Alnca Reeves
Perry,IU.

. Doesn't See How

Reveals
New Facts
.
\
I have been subscribing to your
magazine for several years now and I realI)'.Jove lt. My favorite coUDtry artist Is
Johnny Rodriguez, and I wanted to thank
you very much for the arllcle In the March
Issue. It was really super. You brought out
facts that are overlooked In en artist and
you dldn:t repeat lhlngs that seem to 11e
found In ·every article. I hope to see more
on Johnny In the future. It Is true, he ·Is a
super person and a greet entertainer, but
most of all, be Is a friend. Keep up the
good work end thanks again.
Sacara Albritton
Avon Part, Fla.

Protests Siss.y.._

I do not understand bow you could have
gotten so many requests for tickets on the
second of January, since Jen. 1 was 1 boll·
I Just flnlsbed watching "Live From The
dey with no mail service. Tbat Is why I
Grend
Ole Opry" over PBS end thought lt
welted UDW Jan. 2 to send mlne.off, as I
was
(felt,
but don't you think (and I'm
knew It would not be sent out UDtil Jen. 2. I
sure
meny
watchers, listeners and fens
purchased my money order on Dec. 18, but
will
agree
with
mel that It wu klnda steep
welted per lnatructlonsln MUSIC CITY
when
Loretta
Lynn,
out of a blue sky,
NEWS that no ~ would be accepted
brougbt
Sissy
Spacek
out on stage .to do 1
with I postmark prior to JIB. 1. If you
·song
with
ber?
Even
George
Hamilton IV,
received thlt many requests on the sewho
was
IDIIOUDCing et the time, didn't
·
CODd, It appears the postmark does not
even
know
this
was
going
to
happen,
and
m11tter. You 11y maybe next year we can
reilly ~!«!tmed surprised. When .so meny
get tlekets, but with this system, there Is
good
and struggling country and western
DO way for me to ever get eny. .
artists
would give their Ills to. be a
. Ruth Bryant
member
of, or just to appear on, the
Statesboro, Ga.
Opry.·So they made a movie of
Grend.Oie
EDITOR'S NOTE: No ticket request&amp; mil ltd before
Loretta's life cailed "Coal Miner's
Jtn. t, 1-. were ec~ . MCN't ,._II Is drtiiWf'tilll to 1
IIOif offlu box et the m11n NnltviUe po~,t offlct. wMre
Daughter." So what? 1bere are still a lot
m•ll Ia continuously being proci'IMd, even _.. hoUdtlya.
of Butcher Hollows In this country.of ours,
and many still living In those Butcher
Hollows are being raised poor like Loretta
Lynn was. (I know, I'm one of them). I'm
not downing Loretta, I'm one of her
We too were disappointed at being
greatest
fens . I'm siUre she Is 1 fine per·
unable to get tickets for the MCN Cover
son,
and
bas done 11 lot for country music.
Awards Show. The day the money order
But
Instead
of spending millions on a
was returned, It was sent back Immediatemovie,
why
not let some of the money be
ly for tickets to tbe Roy Acuff Theater. We
IJ8ell
to
belp
these needy people still strughave already received those tickela. 1 read
glln&amp;ln
these
Butcher Hollows? And as far
your letter to us, your subscribers, with
as
Sissy
ts
concerned
she Is 1 movie acgreet Interest. Jlllt want you to know that
tress
end
a
good
one,
but certainly not a
even though some of us were dlaspcountry
/western
artist
and she should not
polnted, we do Indeed realize what we
be
lllowed
on
the
stage
(above another arhave going for us. First, the best yeartist)
of
our.Grand
Ole
Opry.
What ever
II'OWld coverage, by eny megazine, of the
happened
to
out
good
old
country
music:
countcy music business Ia oun through
makers
and
singers?
They
are
still
there,
MCN. Secondly, I considered It e pleasure
but
won't
long
be
If
they
keep
allowing
and privilege to write In 037-8emml Smith,
things like this to happen.
Ol2·Marty Robbins, etc .... , on my official
Mirllyn Carter
bellot. Then, In June, I look forward t.o
Indianapolis, Incl.
coming to Nashville end enjoying the
festivities. Yes, If we honestly renect for a
EDITOR'S NOTE : Grend 06e Opry alers frequently In·
moment as you have asked us to do, then I witt
tunt1 to perfOrm on ttw Opry: LONtte'LYM was ••·
tn:lllnt Mr riQtlt " ~ Opry Member.
thlftk we woul.d Ill be In complete harmony. We do, In fact, reellze the great ef·
forts of MCN for us, the fens. It Is apprec;lated so very much, believe me. So I
lhank you, MUSIC CITY NEWS, and
I would like to tell Danny Davis a good
everyone Involved In these efforts.
deed
he did for me In December of 1978.
Lucy Floyd
We
were
to Oy to Florida from In·
Decatur, Ga.
dianapolls. I was very nervous, since I had
never been on a plane. While waiting for
the plene I saw Danny Davis waiting for
the SllJIIe plane. Wen, I forgot Ill my fears
and just followed him on thjl plene. The
After receiving my March Issue of
MUSIC CI1'Y NEWS and reading the.letter trip was fine and thanks to Danny Davis, I
am not afraid to Oy. I just wanted to share
from the lady In Georgia who wasn't able
my story wlth your readers.
to get tlckela, I'd just like to say lhet I
Mrs. Frank Biggs
know bow she feels end I sympathize with
Remington, Incl.
her. But I seni for tlckela end received
them four weeks later. So I feel that
MUSIC CITY NEWS did alve their readers

Thanks For Efforts

lng nice. He's numero uno. He no longer
has a fan club and we certainly wish be

did. But we love him anyway. He's really a
super human being. I love reeding MCN
from cover to cover, over an!f over.
Ruth F . Smith.
Lackawllllll, N.Y.

Bravo For Whitman
Bravo! You've gqt a splendid publication
that's a pleasure to read from cover to
cover! I'm the United States representative and correspof!dent for the Slim
Wbltman Appreciation Society and I was
more than pleased to see an article about
SUm In your newspaper. Slim Is doll!g
some touring In the U.S. and will be appearing with the "Legend Makers" tour In
the near future . Please put anyone In·
terested In finding out more about Slim In
touch wllh me .
Loren R. Knapp
T1ICIOII, Ariz.

Jones Gains Fans

Dllla Crolby

RlchiiiQI!d, Ky.

Hot Youth Hits Hard

It flits me with disgust that Glen €ampbell and Krls Krlstofferson were among
lbe entertainers who volunteered their
lalenla to raise money for the CambodiBDS
on the Feb. 5 CBS telecast. I feel sad for
the.Cambodlens too. But responslbUity
comes with the territory. Let them take
care of their own problems the best they
can to survive. In Sir Thomas Brownes'
"Religlo Medici" (1642) be 11ld "Charity
begins at home, Is the cry of the world, yet
Is every men his greatest enemy, and, as
It were, bla own executioner." It llbould
begin at home and does, except for us k1dl
who go to bed hungry and DO one cares
that we don't hilve enough to eat. All over
I see poverty and misery In lbe midst of
atnuence and grown-ups who dllc:ull
poverty as though It were merely en
academic subject. I don't know bow to express the hurt us children feel who are on
the oulalde looking ln. For the children
who lost fathers In Viet Nam there Is no
way to heal the loss In a whole lifetime. I
myself don't have my father. I am eleven
years old. In my entire life I have nevP.r
beard of any other country wiUing to raise
mpney, give away free food, free education
and free health care to the American
"poor." I am working to stay on the honor
roll at school because I want to be 1 doctor
S(lmeday. 1 went to benefit humanity. But
by the looks of things I may never get this
opportunity because there Is barely enough
food to eat and my mother could never afford to pay for my education. Probably
some Cambodian kid will get a free
medical education while I have to work for
It just like my molh·~r bas to work for our
fll'ld whUe the Cambodians get It free. It
Is plenty ruthless of American entertainers
to tum tbelr backs on the cries of hunger
frum Amerlcen children and lnstead help
people wbo don't like our country, food,
clutbes, or customs. They don't like our
music. They bum our nag. I feel like bum·
"Bless your heart." Thenk you on behalf lng my Glen Campbell tapes ....
of Ill of us people who like Freddie Hart.
You cannot give him enough credit for be-

Bless Your 'Hart'

a fair chance. I love MCN end Ill the performers of country music. I will cast my
ballot, but It will not be en easy choice .

.

1bank you for lhe fine article on George
Jones In the March Issue. George has bad
a lot of problems In the last few years, but
Instead of loosing a fen, be's gained a new
one: mel In spite of everything thlt bas
hajlpened, I believe It will take George
Jones to bJ'lng good, .true country music:
back. Whet's more, I believe be'stolng to
do It! Keep the articles on George's progress coming.

Davis Did Deed

Got Fair Chance

••

~
~~~'§t

The nominees are all winners. Good luck
to them Ill.
JOID Richey
Bono, Ar.

,.

.'". '

,

..

""'

�P11114 MUSIC CITY NEWS

Nllllvlllt, Tennestee, Aprii,IIIO

111111¥1111, Tenwm, April, ltiO
· MUSICCITYNEWS,P~~~t5

NSAI Holds
Showcase
&amp; Supper

©00&amp;00@!§®~
§~©IW£00@§®

More than 250 registrants met at the Second Annual Songwrltters Symposium held
by the Nashville Songwriters Association
International Feb. 29-Mar. I at NashvUie's
Hyjj~ Regency to participate In a hardnoSed look at what Its like to be a professional songwriter and how-to sessions
geared to Improve writing abllltlei
Opening the two-day event was a
showcase of several of Nashville's top
songwriters who demonstrated their
secrets of success by performing lipme m .
tllelr chart busters. Felice ~ Bou&lt;Ueaux ; ·
Bryant, Tom T. Hall, Sonny Tbrockmorton, Randy .Goodrum anct Gall Davies all
took to the stage at the Feb. 29 sho'ltcase ;
performing their respective greats such
as : "Rocky Top," "Old Dogs Children And
Watermelon Wine, " "Last Cheaters
Waltz," "You Needed Me," and "Bucket
To The South," and others. The showcase
was hosted by TV personality, Ralph
Emery.
Symposium sessions which were
featured throughout tile day of Mar. 1
where highlighted by the NSAI's 13th Annual Songwriters of the Year for 1980 was
SoMy Throckmorton, whose songs spent
. more.weeks on the charts during the past
year than any other NSAI member.
Writer Steve Glbb's "She Believes In
Me" received honors as NSAI's Song of the
Year.
Recipients of fifteen Songwriter Achievement Awards were : "All The Gold In
California," Larry Gatlin; "Amanda," Bob
McDill, "Coward Of The County," Roger
Bowling and Billyl':d-Wheeler; " The Devil
,Went Down To Georgia," Charlie Daniels,
Tom Crane, Fred Edwards, Jim Marshall,

Ralph Sloan,
Opry Dancer,
Dies Of Cancer

..

Multimedia
Completes
WZTV Buy
•
~

Taz Dlgregerio, and C))arlie Hayward;
"Every Which Way But Loose," Milton
Brown, Steve Dorff, and Snuff Garrett;
"Family Tradlton," Hank Williams, Jr.;
"I Know A Heartache When I See One,"
Rory Bourke, Charlk.JJiack, and Kerry
Chater; "If I Said You Had A Beautiful
Body," David Bellamy; "Just When I
Needed You Most," Randy Van Wormer ;
"Last Cheater's Waltz," Curly Putnam ;
"Lay Down Beside Me," Dol) Williams;
"Shadows In The Moonlight," Rory Bourke
and Charlie Black; "Texas When I Die,"
Patsy and Ed Bruce and Bobby Borchers;
"When I Dream," Sandy Mason; ;and
"You Decorated My Life," Bob Morrison
and Debbie Hupp.

Fan Fair
. Activities Slated
Music City is already gearing up for this

Ralph Sloan, familiar to Grand Ole
Opry audiences as the founder and
leader of the Tennessee-Travelers, died
March 12 after a long battle with lung
cancer. He was 55.
Fllr nearly 30 years, Sloan and the
Travelers, one of country music's most
famous clogging/square dance groups,
entertained Opry audiences. They were
also featured regularly on TV 's syndicated "That Nashville Music" for 11
years, and they also made occasional appearances on shows such as "Dinah! "
and "Hee Haw."

Sloan had ~n hospitalized since last
August. He died In the early morning
hours at the home of his sister in
Lebanon, Tenn.
Sloan and the original Tennessee
Travelers came to the Grand Ole Opry in
1952, after being spotted by a talent scout
in his hometown of Lebanon. Sloan and
his group fashioned their flashy ,
energetic form of dancing after traditional Appalachian folk steps, but he encouraged his cloggers to add their own
touches of showmanship. The Tennessee
Travelers continued to play the Opry
shows during Sloan's hospitalization, and
they are expected to remain as a regular
part of the program.
A farmer In addition to his duties as a
dancer, Sloan was the owner of several
Lebanon-area farms .
He Is survived by his mother, Mrs.
Leona Sloan; a son, Ralph Sloan Jr.,
three daughters, Lynn Sloan Tomlinson,
Kay Sloan and Ruth Mason; a brother,
Melvin Sloan; three sisters, Nelda Gar~
and Robbie Lea; ·
~

-~-·~·

summer's week-long festival of country
... Songwriters performing at the NSAI's
music activities, the hustling, bustling,
Showcase held In conjunction with the 2nd
1980 Country Music Fan F-air.
Annual Songwriters Symposium included
This year's Fan Fair activities will begin (left) Felice and Boudleaux Bryant,
on Monday, June 9, with the 14th Annual
(above) Sonny Throckmorton and (below)
MUSIC CITY NEWS COVER AWARDS,
Gail Davies.
nationally televised live from the Grand
Ole Opry House, and the celebrity softball
tournament at the Madison, Tenn., Cedar
Hills Park. There Is no a~mlssion to the
softball tournament and it is open to the
general public. The tournament wUI conUmre through Tuesday.
Following the softball meets, activities
will shift to downtown Nashville's
Municipal Auditorium. where the record
label shows will begin on Wednesday. Starting off the auditorium shows will be Plantation and Monument Records and a
bluegrass show.
Thursday 's activities will include the
RCA, MCA, Elektra labels, and a NSAI
songwriters' showcase that evening.
Friday will usher in shows by CBS
Records, a collection of Cajun artists. and
miscellaneous-label entertainers.
The International showcase and the
Grand Ole Opry Reunion will be held
Saturday, and the Grand Masters Fiddling
Competition will take place Sunday at ·
Opryland.
Registration fee for the seven-day Fan
)
Fair is $35, which Includes admission to all
showcases and exhibits, and lunches
Thursday-Saturday. The Fan Fair
l I
registration does not Include tickets to the
Opryland USA begins It&amp; ninth and
regular Grand OJe\Opry shows on Friday
and Saturday evenings, which may be pur- longest season, March 29 when the
weekend-only operation starts. The 1980
chased separatel)(.
season
will run through Nov_2.
To register for Fan Fair, write: Fan
In
addition
to Opryland favorites such
Fair, 2804 Opryland Dr., Nashville, Tenn.,
as
"
I
Hear
America
Singing" and "Coun37214. Information about lodgings, actry
Music
USA,"
the
park will this year
commodations, and other activities in the
feature
two
new
additions
to Its daily
Middle Tennessee area may be obtained
entertainment
roster.
"Sing
the Glory
by contacting the Nashville Chamber of
Down"
will
showcase
gospe,l
music
In the
Commerce, 161 4th Ave. North, Nashville,
• park's New Orleans area1 'lind a nineTenn., 37219.
piece marching band wlll parade daily
through various park areas.
"The Opry Showcase," a summer-long
grouping of concerts by Grand Ole Opry
members, will take place In the Opry
house and will feature performances by
The 15th annual Academy of Country
such entertainers as Roy· Acuff, Marty
Musjc Awards will air live from CaliforRobbins, and Barbara Mandrell. The
nia's Knotts Berry Farm over NBC-TV
Showcase programs will be presented
May I, starting at 9:00 (EST)
Monday through Thursda)l !during the
Produced by the Dick Clark Company,
full-time summer months.
the telecast will cover presentation of
Opryland Is open Saturdays and Sunawards In nine performing categories and
days March 29-May 25, allll•se'fen days a
one category for Motion Picture of the
week May 26-Sept. 1. FroniS6pt. 6-Nov. 2&gt;
Year. "Top Performance" awards In
the park resumes its oweelcj!nd-only.
seven areas and awards for Top Touring
timetable.
'
and Non-Touring Bands will be announced
The park gates open at 10 a.m., and
prior to the telecast. Also announced early closing time varies with the season. An
wUI be recipients of the Radio Statton of
ali-day adult ticket is $9.75 and children
W&amp;c..Jcaa)I.CIUAe
and
under.thr.ee. years' of age.. are admitted
free.ll'l!v~kets are SlfiSII 1
t

Opryland Opens

ACM Country
Awards Set

I

Multimedia, Inc. completed the purchase
last month of Nashville television station
WZTV. This station which operates as an
Independent on channell7 was purchased
for approximately seven million.
Multimedia broadcasting also operates
VHF television stations In Cincinnati, Ohio,
Greenvllle, South Carolina, Winston Salem,
North Carolina, Knoxville, Tennessee,
Macon, Georgia, GAM, and 6 FM radio stations mostly In the southeast. Other broadcasting Interests include Multimedia Program Productions, the production and syndication company for "Donohue," the
"Bob Braun Show," Young Peoples
Specials and several country music
specials produced In Nashville, Including
the MUSIC CITY NEWS Country Awards,
which Is co-produced with Jim Owens Productions of Nashville.
Nashvllle music veteran, lohDny "K"
has announced the formation of his own Independent record promotion firm, Johnny
"K" Promotions. The firm wUI be based In
Nashville.
Bapp7 8llalaa has signed as personal
manager of Dnkl and Bocer Otwell.
Dnkl and Be1er are twin brothers who
for the put_three years have performed on
the Lawrence Welt Syndicated Television
Show.
DnN 8teanaaa, a gospel artist from
Tulsa, Oklahoma has signed &lt;1 long term
recording contract with Tempo, Inc., In
Mllalon, Kansas. Bill Rayburn has been
promoted to director of Music Publications
for Tempo, Inc.
• Columbia recording artist, lowy Dan·
: eu baa signed an exclusive booking agree' ment wltb Tqp BlUing, Inc., of NashvUie.
The Welk Mualc Group here recently
purchased the entire Gold Dust Music
catalog, and containing 152 compositions
written by such writers as Dlekey Lee,
Allea Be711old1, Bob MeDW and Paul
Craft. The catalog Is now ~lng administered by Vogue Music. The Welt
Music Group has also entered a copublishing agreement with Gar,. S. Pa:don
Publications, Inc., on compositions written
by Mark wrtclll. wrtcllt has also signed an
exclusive writer agreement with Welt.
Also signing an exclusive writer agreement with the Welk Music Group, Is PhD
• Earllari.
·
BAS Enterprises of Houston, Texas have
been given full responsibility for coordinating all engagements In the state of
Texas for "LIWe" Da•ld Wllk1D1 and the
Gooclallllt Spedal baad.
Walter Bayae., loe Laeu, and Bobby
Fl1eller have all resigned from IBC
Record tn Nashville. The threesome an:
nounced they will continue working as a
team and 'Will teveal future plans soon.
Country stars Crtsty Laae and DoUay
bave signed endorsement agreements for
sound reinforcement equipment and
microphones with shure BfQthers, Inc.
Dawa Cllal&amp;aill has just signed a booking
contract lldtlf Stage II Attractions for personal appearences.
Country artist Freddy Fender bas signed
an exclusive booking and tour manage
agreement with Buddy Lee Attractions of
NashvUie.
Doll N. Nell• Jias resigned as.vlce: . president of Mld-Amerlca.RJdio,ldll S3"l1 I

general manager of WIRE/WXTZ in Indianapolis to open a full service brokerage
firm In LaJolla, Calif., In July. The new
company will be Don Nelson and
Associates, and will deal with the buying
and selling of radio, television and CATV
Properties. The move will take place on
July I.
CBS Records In Nashville has restructured and expanded its Nashvllle operation, naming Rick Blackburn as vicepresident and general manager as Billy
Sherrtll assumes the responsibilities of
vice-president and executive producer.
Sberrtll will launch his own production
company and sign and produce new artists
as well as continue to produce his large
roster for CBS. Blackburn will be responsible for marketing and A&amp;R activities and

oversee the entire Nashville operation,
working with Independent Nashville producers and building added production ties
throughout the nation. Sherrill has Inked a
long term exclusive production deal under
which he wilt' sign and produce new artists
for CBS under ))Is own production logo.
Capital Records and Its sister label
United Artlst/EMI American Records
have merged their promotion staffs In the
country and rhythm and blues music
areas Into a new common core unit. In
this move the Nashville Capital Records
office was closed.
Stan laatz llas been appointed director
of merchandising and reta\1 development
for Word Distribution. Reba Rambo has
signed a three year Light Records recording contract and a joint publishing agree-

ment with Lexicon Music. Her co-writer,
Dony MeGulre, has also signed a joint
publishing agreement and exclusive
writ~rs agreement with the company.
Tom Ramsey and Bob Wood have been
promoted at Word Distribution. Ramsey
has been named Eastern Division
Manager, and Wood assumes the· new title
of Southeastern Regional Manager:
Atlanta based Country pop
singerI songwriter I guitarist Diane Pfeifer
has signed a long term worldwide recording agreement with Capital Records, Inc.
VIolet Dooley of New York, has signed
with Owl Song Publishing Co. l
Columbia recording artist, Lacy 1.
Daltoa has retained Shelly Bowers Public
Relations for worldwide publicity. Also
Continued on Pave 2t

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P&lt;&gt;o!.ex/KaiY Kllno/&lt;;Amptown"Racei/Biaclt,ICounlaln
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Send To: Uncle Jim O'Neal, Box A MCB
Arcadia, Calirornia 91006
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=---

N~•--------~~---------------5-t
________________________
Qty,

1 State

Zip_

.
'I

Send me .... barlio 2-record set\ for only
SS.9S plus S1.00 for polt. A. han~.
Send me .... barlio 8TK tape setj ror only·
S7.00.plua SLOO far post. A. hand .
check or money order.
USA•

__ I

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

--

__j

"'

�P11114 MUSIC CITY NEWS

Nllllvlllt, Tennestee, Aprii,IIIO

111111¥1111, Tenwm, April, ltiO
· MUSICCITYNEWS,P~~~t5

NSAI Holds
Showcase
&amp; Supper

©00&amp;00@!§®~
§~©IW£00@§®

More than 250 registrants met at the Second Annual Songwrltters Symposium held
by the Nashville Songwriters Association
International Feb. 29-Mar. I at NashvUie's
Hyjj~ Regency to participate In a hardnoSed look at what Its like to be a professional songwriter and how-to sessions
geared to Improve writing abllltlei
Opening the two-day event was a
showcase of several of Nashville's top
songwriters who demonstrated their
secrets of success by performing lipme m .
tllelr chart busters. Felice ~ Bou&lt;Ueaux ; ·
Bryant, Tom T. Hall, Sonny Tbrockmorton, Randy .Goodrum anct Gall Davies all
took to the stage at the Feb. 29 sho'ltcase ;
performing their respective greats such
as : "Rocky Top," "Old Dogs Children And
Watermelon Wine, " "Last Cheaters
Waltz," "You Needed Me," and "Bucket
To The South," and others. The showcase
was hosted by TV personality, Ralph
Emery.
Symposium sessions which were
featured throughout tile day of Mar. 1
where highlighted by the NSAI's 13th Annual Songwriters of the Year for 1980 was
SoMy Throckmorton, whose songs spent
. more.weeks on the charts during the past
year than any other NSAI member.
Writer Steve Glbb's "She Believes In
Me" received honors as NSAI's Song of the
Year.
Recipients of fifteen Songwriter Achievement Awards were : "All The Gold In
California," Larry Gatlin; "Amanda," Bob
McDill, "Coward Of The County," Roger
Bowling and Billyl':d-Wheeler; " The Devil
,Went Down To Georgia," Charlie Daniels,
Tom Crane, Fred Edwards, Jim Marshall,

Ralph Sloan,
Opry Dancer,
Dies Of Cancer

..

Multimedia
Completes
WZTV Buy
•
~

Taz Dlgregerio, and C))arlie Hayward;
"Every Which Way But Loose," Milton
Brown, Steve Dorff, and Snuff Garrett;
"Family Tradlton," Hank Williams, Jr.;
"I Know A Heartache When I See One,"
Rory Bourke, Charlk.JJiack, and Kerry
Chater; "If I Said You Had A Beautiful
Body," David Bellamy; "Just When I
Needed You Most," Randy Van Wormer ;
"Last Cheater's Waltz," Curly Putnam ;
"Lay Down Beside Me," Dol) Williams;
"Shadows In The Moonlight," Rory Bourke
and Charlie Black; "Texas When I Die,"
Patsy and Ed Bruce and Bobby Borchers;
"When I Dream," Sandy Mason; ;and
"You Decorated My Life," Bob Morrison
and Debbie Hupp.

Fan Fair
. Activities Slated
Music City is already gearing up for this

Ralph Sloan, familiar to Grand Ole
Opry audiences as the founder and
leader of the Tennessee-Travelers, died
March 12 after a long battle with lung
cancer. He was 55.
Fllr nearly 30 years, Sloan and the
Travelers, one of country music's most
famous clogging/square dance groups,
entertained Opry audiences. They were
also featured regularly on TV 's syndicated "That Nashville Music" for 11
years, and they also made occasional appearances on shows such as "Dinah! "
and "Hee Haw."

Sloan had ~n hospitalized since last
August. He died In the early morning
hours at the home of his sister in
Lebanon, Tenn.
Sloan and the original Tennessee
Travelers came to the Grand Ole Opry in
1952, after being spotted by a talent scout
in his hometown of Lebanon. Sloan and
his group fashioned their flashy ,
energetic form of dancing after traditional Appalachian folk steps, but he encouraged his cloggers to add their own
touches of showmanship. The Tennessee
Travelers continued to play the Opry
shows during Sloan's hospitalization, and
they are expected to remain as a regular
part of the program.
A farmer In addition to his duties as a
dancer, Sloan was the owner of several
Lebanon-area farms .
He Is survived by his mother, Mrs.
Leona Sloan; a son, Ralph Sloan Jr.,
three daughters, Lynn Sloan Tomlinson,
Kay Sloan and Ruth Mason; a brother,
Melvin Sloan; three sisters, Nelda Gar~
and Robbie Lea; ·
~

-~-·~·

summer's week-long festival of country
... Songwriters performing at the NSAI's
music activities, the hustling, bustling,
Showcase held In conjunction with the 2nd
1980 Country Music Fan F-air.
Annual Songwriters Symposium included
This year's Fan Fair activities will begin (left) Felice and Boudleaux Bryant,
on Monday, June 9, with the 14th Annual
(above) Sonny Throckmorton and (below)
MUSIC CITY NEWS COVER AWARDS,
Gail Davies.
nationally televised live from the Grand
Ole Opry House, and the celebrity softball
tournament at the Madison, Tenn., Cedar
Hills Park. There Is no a~mlssion to the
softball tournament and it is open to the
general public. The tournament wUI conUmre through Tuesday.
Following the softball meets, activities
will shift to downtown Nashville's
Municipal Auditorium. where the record
label shows will begin on Wednesday. Starting off the auditorium shows will be Plantation and Monument Records and a
bluegrass show.
Thursday 's activities will include the
RCA, MCA, Elektra labels, and a NSAI
songwriters' showcase that evening.
Friday will usher in shows by CBS
Records, a collection of Cajun artists. and
miscellaneous-label entertainers.
The International showcase and the
Grand Ole Opry Reunion will be held
Saturday, and the Grand Masters Fiddling
Competition will take place Sunday at ·
Opryland.
Registration fee for the seven-day Fan
)
Fair is $35, which Includes admission to all
showcases and exhibits, and lunches
Thursday-Saturday. The Fan Fair
l I
registration does not Include tickets to the
Opryland USA begins It&amp; ninth and
regular Grand OJe\Opry shows on Friday
and Saturday evenings, which may be pur- longest season, March 29 when the
weekend-only operation starts. The 1980
chased separatel)(.
season
will run through Nov_2.
To register for Fan Fair, write: Fan
In
addition
to Opryland favorites such
Fair, 2804 Opryland Dr., Nashville, Tenn.,
as
"
I
Hear
America
Singing" and "Coun37214. Information about lodgings, actry
Music
USA,"
the
park will this year
commodations, and other activities in the
feature
two
new
additions
to Its daily
Middle Tennessee area may be obtained
entertainment
roster.
"Sing
the Glory
by contacting the Nashville Chamber of
Down"
will
showcase
gospe,l
music
In the
Commerce, 161 4th Ave. North, Nashville,
• park's New Orleans area1 'lind a nineTenn., 37219.
piece marching band wlll parade daily
through various park areas.
"The Opry Showcase," a summer-long
grouping of concerts by Grand Ole Opry
members, will take place In the Opry
house and will feature performances by
The 15th annual Academy of Country
such entertainers as Roy· Acuff, Marty
Musjc Awards will air live from CaliforRobbins, and Barbara Mandrell. The
nia's Knotts Berry Farm over NBC-TV
Showcase programs will be presented
May I, starting at 9:00 (EST)
Monday through Thursda)l !during the
Produced by the Dick Clark Company,
full-time summer months.
the telecast will cover presentation of
Opryland Is open Saturdays and Sunawards In nine performing categories and
days March 29-May 25, allll•se'fen days a
one category for Motion Picture of the
week May 26-Sept. 1. FroniS6pt. 6-Nov. 2&gt;
Year. "Top Performance" awards In
the park resumes its oweelcj!nd-only.
seven areas and awards for Top Touring
timetable.
'
and Non-Touring Bands will be announced
The park gates open at 10 a.m., and
prior to the telecast. Also announced early closing time varies with the season. An
wUI be recipients of the Radio Statton of
ali-day adult ticket is $9.75 and children
W&amp;c..Jcaa)I.CIUAe
and
under.thr.ee. years' of age.. are admitted
free.ll'l!v~kets are SlfiSII 1
t

Opryland Opens

ACM Country
Awards Set

I

Multimedia, Inc. completed the purchase
last month of Nashville television station
WZTV. This station which operates as an
Independent on channell7 was purchased
for approximately seven million.
Multimedia broadcasting also operates
VHF television stations In Cincinnati, Ohio,
Greenvllle, South Carolina, Winston Salem,
North Carolina, Knoxville, Tennessee,
Macon, Georgia, GAM, and 6 FM radio stations mostly In the southeast. Other broadcasting Interests include Multimedia Program Productions, the production and syndication company for "Donohue," the
"Bob Braun Show," Young Peoples
Specials and several country music
specials produced In Nashville, Including
the MUSIC CITY NEWS Country Awards,
which Is co-produced with Jim Owens Productions of Nashville.
Nashvllle music veteran, lohDny "K"
has announced the formation of his own Independent record promotion firm, Johnny
"K" Promotions. The firm wUI be based In
Nashville.
Bapp7 8llalaa has signed as personal
manager of Dnkl and Bocer Otwell.
Dnkl and Be1er are twin brothers who
for the put_three years have performed on
the Lawrence Welt Syndicated Television
Show.
DnN 8teanaaa, a gospel artist from
Tulsa, Oklahoma has signed &lt;1 long term
recording contract with Tempo, Inc., In
Mllalon, Kansas. Bill Rayburn has been
promoted to director of Music Publications
for Tempo, Inc.
• Columbia recording artist, lowy Dan·
: eu baa signed an exclusive booking agree' ment wltb Tqp BlUing, Inc., of NashvUie.
The Welk Mualc Group here recently
purchased the entire Gold Dust Music
catalog, and containing 152 compositions
written by such writers as Dlekey Lee,
Allea Be711old1, Bob MeDW and Paul
Craft. The catalog Is now ~lng administered by Vogue Music. The Welt
Music Group has also entered a copublishing agreement with Gar,. S. Pa:don
Publications, Inc., on compositions written
by Mark wrtclll. wrtcllt has also signed an
exclusive writer agreement with Welt.
Also signing an exclusive writer agreement with the Welk Music Group, Is PhD
• Earllari.
·
BAS Enterprises of Houston, Texas have
been given full responsibility for coordinating all engagements In the state of
Texas for "LIWe" Da•ld Wllk1D1 and the
Gooclallllt Spedal baad.
Walter Bayae., loe Laeu, and Bobby
Fl1eller have all resigned from IBC
Record tn Nashville. The threesome an:
nounced they will continue working as a
team and 'Will teveal future plans soon.
Country stars Crtsty Laae and DoUay
bave signed endorsement agreements for
sound reinforcement equipment and
microphones with shure BfQthers, Inc.
Dawa Cllal&amp;aill has just signed a booking
contract lldtlf Stage II Attractions for personal appearences.
Country artist Freddy Fender bas signed
an exclusive booking and tour manage
agreement with Buddy Lee Attractions of
NashvUie.
Doll N. Nell• Jias resigned as.vlce: . president of Mld-Amerlca.RJdio,ldll S3"l1 I

general manager of WIRE/WXTZ in Indianapolis to open a full service brokerage
firm In LaJolla, Calif., In July. The new
company will be Don Nelson and
Associates, and will deal with the buying
and selling of radio, television and CATV
Properties. The move will take place on
July I.
CBS Records In Nashville has restructured and expanded its Nashvllle operation, naming Rick Blackburn as vicepresident and general manager as Billy
Sherrtll assumes the responsibilities of
vice-president and executive producer.
Sberrtll will launch his own production
company and sign and produce new artists
as well as continue to produce his large
roster for CBS. Blackburn will be responsible for marketing and A&amp;R activities and

oversee the entire Nashville operation,
working with Independent Nashville producers and building added production ties
throughout the nation. Sherrill has Inked a
long term exclusive production deal under
which he wilt' sign and produce new artists
for CBS under ))Is own production logo.
Capital Records and Its sister label
United Artlst/EMI American Records
have merged their promotion staffs In the
country and rhythm and blues music
areas Into a new common core unit. In
this move the Nashville Capital Records
office was closed.
Stan laatz llas been appointed director
of merchandising and reta\1 development
for Word Distribution. Reba Rambo has
signed a three year Light Records recording contract and a joint publishing agree-

ment with Lexicon Music. Her co-writer,
Dony MeGulre, has also signed a joint
publishing agreement and exclusive
writ~rs agreement with the company.
Tom Ramsey and Bob Wood have been
promoted at Word Distribution. Ramsey
has been named Eastern Division
Manager, and Wood assumes the· new title
of Southeastern Regional Manager:
Atlanta based Country pop
singerI songwriter I guitarist Diane Pfeifer
has signed a long term worldwide recording agreement with Capital Records, Inc.
VIolet Dooley of New York, has signed
with Owl Song Publishing Co. l
Columbia recording artist, Lacy 1.
Daltoa has retained Shelly Bowers Public
Relations for worldwide publicity. Also
Continued on Pave 2t

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urkey In The Straw/Utile Duf!nl Pal/Meya White Hou10 Bluea/SI"' Grus BUlle/loneaomc Road Bluea/Fabe Heart0&lt;1 Love/Nine 'J&gt;ound
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"'

�Pllt6.MUSICCITY NEWS

NIII!YIIIt, Ttro1111el, April, 1910

Clower1Ledbetters Prepare
For East Fork Olympics
Mississippi's ambassador of goodwill
from Yazoo City, Jerry Clower, recently
came to NashviUe to record a live album
for MCA Records. Clower entertained an
all-age audience at Belmont College with a
batch of new material concerning the invitation of Marcel LedbeUer, one of his
most colorful monologue characters, for
the Olympic Committee to consider movIng the summer games to his hometown of
East Fork, Miss. In his detailed discourse
on the proposed event, Clower elaborated
on the entire Ledbetter clan's wholehearted patriotic participation In the
world-recognized competitive meets.
"Marcel can enter the foot race, Clovis
can throw that spear, Uncle Versle can
arm wrestle, and Aant Pet Is awful excited
about running them low hurdles," Clower
chorlled with joy.
Country music king Roy Acuff was the
official industry representative of the
Country Music Ass&lt;iclation In Nashville's
annual Easter parade, which rolled
ceremoniously through downtown Music
City March 22. Acuff rode with his appropriate good-natured dignity In an opentop antique car with a number of children
representating many countries of the
world. In keeping with the theme of the entry ("The whole world loves country
music, Roy Acuff, and little children") , a
recorded version of Ray Stevens' hit,
"Everything Is Beautiful," accompanied
the Acuff automobile. On-foot bannercarriers preceded Acuff with the saluta. lion: "Country Music---From Nashville to
the World, With Love." The parade was
telecast locally.
Jeaaale C. Rlley returned home March
18 from a month-101&amp; tour of America's
"down-under" neighbor, Australia.
Jeuale made almost thirty concert stops
on the trip, Including major appearances
In Melbourne, Sydney, and several other
population centers In the Victoria and New
South Wales· regions. In between live performances, Jeanale also found the time to
tape Interview and musical segments on
several Australian television programs.
"The people On Australia) couldn't have
given us a warmer welcome-country
music Is very enthusiastically received by
Australian audiences," she said. "Still,
there's nothing that can top American audiences!" One Interesting sideline to the
trtp : Jeanale'• 13·year-old daughter, Kim,
accompanied her mother on the tour, but
was Informed prior to departure that

Tickets Available
Approximately 500 tickets remain
available for the presentation of the
MUSIC CITY NEWS 1980 Cover Awards
live on large-screen television at the Roy
Acuff Theatre, adjacent to the Grand Ole
0 pry House, J une 9.
The ticket price of $8 also Includes the
MUSIC CITY NEWS New Faces
Showcase, a special production staged In
·
the Acuff Thea tre prIor to the actual
awa rds telecast to mee1 the country
music pj!rsonalities that remain on stage
to soclallz nd 1
to
h
e a • go au grap s.
Send ticket requests, along with a selfaddressed , s ta mped re turn enveIope, to
MUSIC CITY NEWS, Tickets,

P.o.

Australian Immigration requested that all
entourage members have an official title
description. No problem. Jea11nle promptly
dubbed Kim "executive tour director."
Jobaay Cub apparently emerged with
the upper hand In an emotional contest
with the Metro (Nashville) Planning com·
mission over his plans to build a home for
the elderly on a 14.6-acre tract of land in
Madison, Tenn. The commission voted to
re-zone the property for the higher popula·
lion density needed for Cash and wife June
Carter·Cash to begin their project. In a
public hearing before the planning board, ·
Cash expressed his Intentions to name the
faclllty after his late mother-In· law,
Mother Maybelle Carter, but his plans
were met with substantial protest by a
group of area residents who feared that
the project would cause an upswing In traf·
fie congestion and lower property values.
The proposed 106-unlt, L·shaped structure
will be on property which also Includes the
house In which Mother Maybelle lived the
last years of her life. Mother May~e's
house, Cash said, will be retained ?:"dfon·
verted Into a recreational unit for the
home's residents. Cub·emphasized that
the facilities would not be a nursing home.
The prestigious and widely-read New
York Dally News recently released a
listing of those entertainers whom It
predicted to be among the "Newsmakers
of 1980." Recognized for Imminent news
potential In the country music field were
Moe Budy and Emmylou Harris. The
News reported that Bandy was lnstrurnental in country music's " resurglng
throughout the nation," and Emmylou it
clted, "seems to have put her early Greenwlch VIUage folk singing, soft-rock days
behind her to concentrate on the country
and western (sic&gt; trend."
Taking a successful stab at column·
writing is Los Angeles' banjoman Larry
McNeeley. McNeeley is already working
on a techniques and methods column for
the Banjo Newsletter, and Is soon to start
a similar projeet for Frets magazine.
Donnie Malouy, who worked sound and
lights for the Foar Gays prior to his
hospitalization for kidney failure,' has
undergone a successful kidney transplant
and returned to his job. Maloney, who had
been In and out of the hospital with Intermitten! kidney problems for the last two
years, was also known to do an occasional
on-stage comedy routine with the Guys.
Tom T. Hall was the recipient last month
of a Kentucky House of Representatives
salute to one of their state's most loved
and recognized musicians. Ball, a Kenlucky native from Carter County, was
honored by the chamber In a special afternoon session and then transported to the
Frankfort Country Club, where he was formally toasted by Kentucky Gov. John Y .
Brown.
The University of Mississippi will be the
site of a special series of concerts and
open forums concerning the relationships
betWeen American music and the lives of
the people who produced it. Headed by Dr.
WUJiam Ferri&amp;, the director for the.unlverslty's Center for the Study of Southern
Culture
·
' the s&gt;;mposlum wlll be held April
17-19 In conjunction with the annual
meetbig of the Mississippi Folklore Soele1y. "Music Is more than entertainment,"

not having shoes. When sociologists talk
about poverty, they do it with numbers and
statistics. But someone who knows the
culture of poverty seizes on something
simple like shoes to express what it 's like
to be poor. " More than forty speakers af·
filiated with the music Industry will be on
hand for the sessions, which also will in·
elude discussions on such musical form s as
blues, Jewish popular music, and hookytonk. The event Is open to the public.
Freddy Weller Is now showcasing his
new band, Spunz, which Is billed as the
first theatrical country music band. Spunz
Incorporates choreography, lighting, and
flashy costumes (designed by the Los ·
Angeles seamster responsible for the garb
for rock group Kiss ) Into a musical set
that Weller describes as "power country."
The overall look of Weller's new group, according to his publicist Woody Bowles, " Is
that of galactic cowboys."
Debuting In Decatur, Ala ., last month
was Cottonland USA , a major road show
and sales compalgn aimed at promoting
the cotton industry in that state. The Cottonland show includes a five-screen
multimedia presentation on the history of
cotton In the South and special guest ap·
pearances by Wendy Holcombe, herself an
Alabama native, and neighboring
Mississippi 's Jerry Clower. The show is
produced by the Bozell and Jacobs Advertislng Agency In New York.
In a recent Interview with Tennis
magazine, Kenny Rogers confessed an in·
tense passion for the title sport and
speculated that If he had his life to live
over again, he would bypass a musical
career In favor of the lure of the courts. " I
don't know where I'd be In tennis If I had
started as a boy," Rogers said. "But when
I got Into music, I spent twelve hours a
day learning my trade, and I know I would
have done the same with tennis. I'm a ten-.
nls nut. It's the best therapy I know."
Ro11en Is, however, tearing himself away
from his tennis game to make time to appear with George Bum• and Dottle Welt at
the grand opening of the nation's newest
Indoor stadium, the 20,000-seat Rosemont .
Ho..
_.__
...,n 1n Rosemont, Ill. "We are bringing
these established stars together for a once1n-a·111etl me show to celebrate our openlng," the manager of the Rosemont said.
a1111 BaDeY nearly collapsed on stage
before 2,000 fans in Lafayette, Ala., recently. Ialley was carried from the stage after
ni fl
o Y ve songs and admitted to a nearby
hospital with pneumonia. His stay was a
abort one, however, and Ialley was releas-

Tonk Tour last month at Anthony, Texas'
Anthony Gap Saloon were cowboy
balladeer Michael Marpbey and western
swing pioneer Rank Thompsoll. Held in
conjunction with the Marpbey/Tbompsoa
musical package is the Great American
Honky·Tonk Queen contest, with local
beauties from all tour stops competing for
the coveted title. Contestants are judged
on a triple criteria rl!tlng concerning their
beauty, talent, and ll:nowledge of country
music. Anthony's winner was Jeannie
Beloale, a local mOdel and dancer, who
will go on to lock horns In the contest
finals to be held this month In Houston.
Twenty-year Grand Ole Opry veteran
BWy Walker recently returned from a 30stop tour of Korea, Japan, and other Far
Eastern locations, with his Tennessee
Traveller Band. Walker and band were on
a concert circuit of American mUitary
defense bases In the area. Walll:er reports .
his trip marks the first time In twenty-five
years that a major country act has been
booked for an extensive stay In the Far
East.
Country songstress Wll•a Bargeu is at
home and recuperating smoolbly from
minor hospital surgery In late February.
Wllma said that she was mailing use of ber
time at borne to take care of some
·
business Interests and "take It easy. "
llel TUlia and wife Julie have finally
"
moved Into Mel's speclalll(hai8J!ed
log
cabin In Aahevllle, Te~
•-,about 30
miles outalde of Naahvllle.
Is •upervis· .
ed the construction of the couple's new
home and chose a Jog format to keep It In

BoIixg~F~errta~jsalldl.l"~Thewc~art~P~e~rklll~~··~songmi'tBiluehJ~t~ed~afite~rija~f~e(w dt.ayi~s to resume his c.•o .'rt't~~~Jtune
)l ; bouse
with Asheville's
rustle environment.
baa been several
months In

2

''n.'c'Je

The

MUSIC CITY NEWS, P~ge 7.

�Pllt6.MUSICCITY NEWS

NIII!YIIIt, Ttro1111el, April, 1910

Clower1Ledbetters Prepare
For East Fork Olympics
Mississippi's ambassador of goodwill
from Yazoo City, Jerry Clower, recently
came to NashviUe to record a live album
for MCA Records. Clower entertained an
all-age audience at Belmont College with a
batch of new material concerning the invitation of Marcel LedbeUer, one of his
most colorful monologue characters, for
the Olympic Committee to consider movIng the summer games to his hometown of
East Fork, Miss. In his detailed discourse
on the proposed event, Clower elaborated
on the entire Ledbetter clan's wholehearted patriotic participation In the
world-recognized competitive meets.
"Marcel can enter the foot race, Clovis
can throw that spear, Uncle Versle can
arm wrestle, and Aant Pet Is awful excited
about running them low hurdles," Clower
chorlled with joy.
Country music king Roy Acuff was the
official industry representative of the
Country Music Ass&lt;iclation In Nashville's
annual Easter parade, which rolled
ceremoniously through downtown Music
City March 22. Acuff rode with his appropriate good-natured dignity In an opentop antique car with a number of children
representating many countries of the
world. In keeping with the theme of the entry ("The whole world loves country
music, Roy Acuff, and little children") , a
recorded version of Ray Stevens' hit,
"Everything Is Beautiful," accompanied
the Acuff automobile. On-foot bannercarriers preceded Acuff with the saluta. lion: "Country Music---From Nashville to
the World, With Love." The parade was
telecast locally.
Jeaaale C. Rlley returned home March
18 from a month-101&amp; tour of America's
"down-under" neighbor, Australia.
Jeuale made almost thirty concert stops
on the trip, Including major appearances
In Melbourne, Sydney, and several other
population centers In the Victoria and New
South Wales· regions. In between live performances, Jeanale also found the time to
tape Interview and musical segments on
several Australian television programs.
"The people On Australia) couldn't have
given us a warmer welcome-country
music Is very enthusiastically received by
Australian audiences," she said. "Still,
there's nothing that can top American audiences!" One Interesting sideline to the
trtp : Jeanale'• 13·year-old daughter, Kim,
accompanied her mother on the tour, but
was Informed prior to departure that

Tickets Available
Approximately 500 tickets remain
available for the presentation of the
MUSIC CITY NEWS 1980 Cover Awards
live on large-screen television at the Roy
Acuff Theatre, adjacent to the Grand Ole
0 pry House, J une 9.
The ticket price of $8 also Includes the
MUSIC CITY NEWS New Faces
Showcase, a special production staged In
·
the Acuff Thea tre prIor to the actual
awa rds telecast to mee1 the country
music pj!rsonalities that remain on stage
to soclallz nd 1
to
h
e a • go au grap s.
Send ticket requests, along with a selfaddressed , s ta mped re turn enveIope, to
MUSIC CITY NEWS, Tickets,

P.o.

Australian Immigration requested that all
entourage members have an official title
description. No problem. Jea11nle promptly
dubbed Kim "executive tour director."
Jobaay Cub apparently emerged with
the upper hand In an emotional contest
with the Metro (Nashville) Planning com·
mission over his plans to build a home for
the elderly on a 14.6-acre tract of land in
Madison, Tenn. The commission voted to
re-zone the property for the higher popula·
lion density needed for Cash and wife June
Carter·Cash to begin their project. In a
public hearing before the planning board, ·
Cash expressed his Intentions to name the
faclllty after his late mother-In· law,
Mother Maybelle Carter, but his plans
were met with substantial protest by a
group of area residents who feared that
the project would cause an upswing In traf·
fie congestion and lower property values.
The proposed 106-unlt, L·shaped structure
will be on property which also Includes the
house In which Mother Maybelle lived the
last years of her life. Mother May~e's
house, Cash said, will be retained ?:"dfon·
verted Into a recreational unit for the
home's residents. Cub·emphasized that
the facilities would not be a nursing home.
The prestigious and widely-read New
York Dally News recently released a
listing of those entertainers whom It
predicted to be among the "Newsmakers
of 1980." Recognized for Imminent news
potential In the country music field were
Moe Budy and Emmylou Harris. The
News reported that Bandy was lnstrurnental in country music's " resurglng
throughout the nation," and Emmylou it
clted, "seems to have put her early Greenwlch VIUage folk singing, soft-rock days
behind her to concentrate on the country
and western (sic&gt; trend."
Taking a successful stab at column·
writing is Los Angeles' banjoman Larry
McNeeley. McNeeley is already working
on a techniques and methods column for
the Banjo Newsletter, and Is soon to start
a similar projeet for Frets magazine.
Donnie Malouy, who worked sound and
lights for the Foar Gays prior to his
hospitalization for kidney failure,' has
undergone a successful kidney transplant
and returned to his job. Maloney, who had
been In and out of the hospital with Intermitten! kidney problems for the last two
years, was also known to do an occasional
on-stage comedy routine with the Guys.
Tom T. Hall was the recipient last month
of a Kentucky House of Representatives
salute to one of their state's most loved
and recognized musicians. Ball, a Kenlucky native from Carter County, was
honored by the chamber In a special afternoon session and then transported to the
Frankfort Country Club, where he was formally toasted by Kentucky Gov. John Y .
Brown.
The University of Mississippi will be the
site of a special series of concerts and
open forums concerning the relationships
betWeen American music and the lives of
the people who produced it. Headed by Dr.
WUJiam Ferri&amp;, the director for the.unlverslty's Center for the Study of Southern
Culture
·
' the s&gt;;mposlum wlll be held April
17-19 In conjunction with the annual
meetbig of the Mississippi Folklore Soele1y. "Music Is more than entertainment,"

not having shoes. When sociologists talk
about poverty, they do it with numbers and
statistics. But someone who knows the
culture of poverty seizes on something
simple like shoes to express what it 's like
to be poor. " More than forty speakers af·
filiated with the music Industry will be on
hand for the sessions, which also will in·
elude discussions on such musical form s as
blues, Jewish popular music, and hookytonk. The event Is open to the public.
Freddy Weller Is now showcasing his
new band, Spunz, which Is billed as the
first theatrical country music band. Spunz
Incorporates choreography, lighting, and
flashy costumes (designed by the Los ·
Angeles seamster responsible for the garb
for rock group Kiss ) Into a musical set
that Weller describes as "power country."
The overall look of Weller's new group, according to his publicist Woody Bowles, " Is
that of galactic cowboys."
Debuting In Decatur, Ala ., last month
was Cottonland USA , a major road show
and sales compalgn aimed at promoting
the cotton industry in that state. The Cottonland show includes a five-screen
multimedia presentation on the history of
cotton In the South and special guest ap·
pearances by Wendy Holcombe, herself an
Alabama native, and neighboring
Mississippi 's Jerry Clower. The show is
produced by the Bozell and Jacobs Advertislng Agency In New York.
In a recent Interview with Tennis
magazine, Kenny Rogers confessed an in·
tense passion for the title sport and
speculated that If he had his life to live
over again, he would bypass a musical
career In favor of the lure of the courts. " I
don't know where I'd be In tennis If I had
started as a boy," Rogers said. "But when
I got Into music, I spent twelve hours a
day learning my trade, and I know I would
have done the same with tennis. I'm a ten-.
nls nut. It's the best therapy I know."
Ro11en Is, however, tearing himself away
from his tennis game to make time to appear with George Bum• and Dottle Welt at
the grand opening of the nation's newest
Indoor stadium, the 20,000-seat Rosemont .
Ho..
_.__
...,n 1n Rosemont, Ill. "We are bringing
these established stars together for a once1n-a·111etl me show to celebrate our openlng," the manager of the Rosemont said.
a1111 BaDeY nearly collapsed on stage
before 2,000 fans in Lafayette, Ala., recently. Ialley was carried from the stage after
ni fl
o Y ve songs and admitted to a nearby
hospital with pneumonia. His stay was a
abort one, however, and Ialley was releas-

Tonk Tour last month at Anthony, Texas'
Anthony Gap Saloon were cowboy
balladeer Michael Marpbey and western
swing pioneer Rank Thompsoll. Held in
conjunction with the Marpbey/Tbompsoa
musical package is the Great American
Honky·Tonk Queen contest, with local
beauties from all tour stops competing for
the coveted title. Contestants are judged
on a triple criteria rl!tlng concerning their
beauty, talent, and ll:nowledge of country
music. Anthony's winner was Jeannie
Beloale, a local mOdel and dancer, who
will go on to lock horns In the contest
finals to be held this month In Houston.
Twenty-year Grand Ole Opry veteran
BWy Walker recently returned from a 30stop tour of Korea, Japan, and other Far
Eastern locations, with his Tennessee
Traveller Band. Walker and band were on
a concert circuit of American mUitary
defense bases In the area. Walll:er reports .
his trip marks the first time In twenty-five
years that a major country act has been
booked for an extensive stay In the Far
East.
Country songstress Wll•a Bargeu is at
home and recuperating smoolbly from
minor hospital surgery In late February.
Wllma said that she was mailing use of ber
time at borne to take care of some
·
business Interests and "take It easy. "
llel TUlia and wife Julie have finally
"
moved Into Mel's speclalll(hai8J!ed
log
cabin In Aahevllle, Te~
•-,about 30
miles outalde of Naahvllle.
Is •upervis· .
ed the construction of the couple's new
home and chose a Jog format to keep It In

BoIixg~F~errta~jsalldl.l"~Thewc~art~P~e~rklll~~··~songmi'tBiluehJ~t~ed~afite~rija~f~e(w dt.ayi~s to resume his c.•o .'rt't~~~Jtune
)l ; bouse
with Asheville's
rustle environment.
baa been several
months In

2

''n.'c'Je

The

MUSIC CITY NEWS, P~ge 7.

�PIOII, MUSIC CITY NEWS
Nllllvlllt, Tennessee, April, 1910

MUSIC CITY NEWS, P1019

Lester Flatt,
Reflections
On A Legend
By lENNY ANDREWS

The time is March , '79.
The place is Hendersonville, Tenn .
Speaking is a legendary performer of
bluegrass music.
He is only a few days away from his
death. but of course, he doesn 't know that.
This is the last interview· Lester Flatt
will ever grant. But he doesn 't know that
either
Thin , frail, weak . Flatt cli ngs to a com pamon as he mak es his way up the steps
and inside the home of his friend and
manager, Lance LeRoy. Dressed in a v1vid
green jacket, and equally vivid green plaid
trousers and vest , he 's an eye-catcher:
even no"
At his side is a woman Flatt and his
friends call simply "Puddin ."
Comments about the twosome run pretty
much in the same vein .
" He never goes anyplace without her ."
"You see one--you're gonna see the m
both."
"She sorta takes care of him ."
"She's about all he's got these days ."
" Puddin,' who started out as a "groupie'
of sorts, has become Lester Flatt's constant companion. She ushers him inside
LeRoy's den and settles him into a big,
com fortable chair. Then she settles herself
at his feet, curling up cozy as a kitten .
While Flatt is busily engaged in carrying
on the interview, she is just as busy seeing
to his needs. Fetching cake and coffee
from the kitchen . Patting his hand. And
(from time tQ time) prompting, just a littie.
"Puddin,' , here,'' Flatt says, loosening
up,'' is just like a kid. She'd rather fish
than anything. If she had her way about it,
we'd be on the lake right now ."
Is she a good fisherman?
"She thinks she is," he grins, eyes
twinkling. "She can just net 'em. That's
about all."
Puddln' dimples happily . Later (when
Flatt is out of the room) she suggests softly that it will be alright to put in the article
that the two of them are to be married .
Flatt won 't mind, she assures, smiling.
But an up-coming marriage is not among
the topics Lester Flatt has on his mind to·
day . His thoughts keep skipping back and
forth, from the good old days, to his future
musical plans, and back to the good old
days again .
"I grew up in a musical family ," he
says. "There was nine of us, altogether.
Five girls and four boys." He laughs. " We
made a pretty good choir."
His voice has taken on the tone of a
grandfather, telling about what It was like
"back then ."
"My daddy played old time fiddle, and
banjer- just for his own amusement. He
was a fanner. A sharecropper. I used to
help work the farm ."
Just call me old-timer. I've put in the
miles.
"We was pore as Job's turkey, but we
was happy. We didn't have nothln'. But we
had plenty to eat."
The eyes ltght up. Looking back, It's not
so bad.
"Shoot-we didn't find out 'Ill later just
how pore we really was. We didn't have
nothin', and we didn't expect nothln', so we
was satisfied."
He sighs and shakes hla head sadly.
"I'd hate to see ldda have to do the thing
I did b•cl:~to ~~tab a'IMI!'I. Hille loi •!U

I

1
11

081,

•

.., , , .. H .. , '•·I'- .. :.

MUSIC CITY NEWS

i

•

at the 1!17D rate~
(Offer far ane year anly].

t
Lester Flatt &amp; Pudin' Puddin '

see them go without like we used to do .
But actually, I think it would be the best
thing in the world for them , to have a little
taste of It. --When you have a little harder
time making It, maybe you have to have a
little more character to survive ."
. Flatt, who lived throug&gt;, some of the
most difficult times our country has experienced, takes an old-fashioned hard-line
approach on the subject of character.
" That's the way I was raised, " he explains. "My daddy used to always say that
a man was only as good as his word . Me-l
try to kind of shy away from a man who
don 't keep his word. I've always tried to
be honorable."
Other old-fashioned values keep creeping
Into the conversation . Like respect for
parents. And willingness to put in a full
day 's work for a full day's pay. Tirtles are
changing. Too much . Too fast.
"Parents call a lot of their trouble on
themselves,'' he points out staunchly.
"You tell a child to do something, and he
doesn't do it--so you do it for him . That
child has learned something from that experience. Don't think he hasn't."
He looks away . He's back forty years or
so.·
"Used to be, we did what we was told to
do. A child's gonna be whatever you raise
him up to be."
What Flatt himself was "raised up to
be" was a pretty simple matter.
"We are just a blg, happy family," he
reminisces. "We'd work In the day time
and sing at night. When we got our chores
done and it was too dark to work, we'd glt
out an old hymn book and slng, and
ever'body'd play whatever instrument they
could."
_ U'i hiiN'4n sly wbelfustM.Flllll. ~ I

ron-. ·"'

.. ~, ... • ·•

... '

Act naw ta subscribe,
extend ar renew
yaur subscriptian ta

rll11la:

... 1 . .... ~~ ~~~- r~r

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•IS ';•

t

professional. If the criteria for turning pro
He smiles suddenly, broadly.
is getting paid, he did it at the tender age
"Shoot," he exlcaims. " I still enjoy il asi
of seven.
much now as I ever did ."
i'
"They used to have all day singin' and
Does he Intend to work again?
-~
dinner on the ground .~' he recalls. " I was
You bet your boots he does.
'
real little and I sang what they called alto.
" I plari to go back out, maybe this
They stood me up on top of the piano so
week ." He pauses for a moment. His vole
everybody could see me and people would
is weak . and gives out on him at inopjust come by and hand me money . I don 't
portune times.
remember now how much I got, but il was
"I'm not gonna overdo it,' he continues.
enough to buy me my first real suit of
" But I'm alright. Just a little weak ."
clothes."
. The plans are for a couple of days work
Flatt's parents, who were " real tickled "
down In Georgia . Nothing big. Just a cou·
at his success at the "singin" ' weren't
pie of shows.
quite so tickled when the songleader
"The boys will do the shows, if I can't
wanted to take young Lester with him on a go. aut they have a rough time gittin'
tour of country churches.
bookln's without the lead, so I try to go
Succes~ had to wait.
along . Besides, it's _still a part of me."
It was later, when Flatt was in his late
Lester Flatt, whose music is loved for
twenties, that he got his first real break. In It's gaiety, Is tat least toda_y&gt; a very
1944, Bill Monroe asked him to sing lead
serious man. Contemplative. Thoughtful. •
with his " Blue Grass Boys." Flatt, who
"Success ls a hard road,'' he adI
had never entertained dreams of wealth
monishes. " It's a lot of hard work. Not
and fame , obliged happily . It was a job.
something that happens overnight. And If
And it was fun .
you want to succeed, first you got to gil
By that time, Lester was married &lt;and
your own sound. You glt out here copyin'
had been since the age of seventeen) . He
ever'body else, why, you're just building'
had worked a variety of jobs and had settl- them!"
.
C
ed Into an enviable position at a textile
Flatt
ls
tired.
Time
to
"glt on back
mill.
home." There's that road trip next week, i
"I was a weaver,'' he says, wlth pride.
after all. Golla rest up. WitH II lillie help ; I
"And a person was lucky to have that good from Puddln,' he makes his way to the
a job. Feedln' the shuttle was what most of door.
'em dld."
Soon be good flshin' weather, he notl~ ~
In those days, a good solid job was hard
as he steps outside. Come sunimertime, lje
to come by and not taken tor let go) lightfigures Puddin' will have hlm out on the
ly. But Flatt didn't exactly agonize over
1
lake every day, they're not working.
his decision.
"Just like a ldd," he says, as she helps
"I've never regretted anything," he
hlm Into the car.
mu~s. as he sifts back through the years.
"I've never wished I'd done anythinll else
Lester Flatt died of beart failure on May
wi!ltm)llife. I' ' 1 t \ v 1 , ' 1

I

I

r

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~~

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~at29QJS,v vi~ ~l.ld ~~ ,US~ t&lt;lln -~YII~ !IAJih ci~M~~!l§olb
I Nashville , Tn. 372~2

I . This aHer-ls

. ·-:'f\~ :-In the United Stales.
•

�PIOII, MUSIC CITY NEWS
Nllllvlllt, Tennessee, April, 1910

MUSIC CITY NEWS, P1019

Lester Flatt,
Reflections
On A Legend
By lENNY ANDREWS

The time is March , '79.
The place is Hendersonville, Tenn .
Speaking is a legendary performer of
bluegrass music.
He is only a few days away from his
death. but of course, he doesn 't know that.
This is the last interview· Lester Flatt
will ever grant. But he doesn 't know that
either
Thin , frail, weak . Flatt cli ngs to a com pamon as he mak es his way up the steps
and inside the home of his friend and
manager, Lance LeRoy. Dressed in a v1vid
green jacket, and equally vivid green plaid
trousers and vest , he 's an eye-catcher:
even no"
At his side is a woman Flatt and his
friends call simply "Puddin ."
Comments about the twosome run pretty
much in the same vein .
" He never goes anyplace without her ."
"You see one--you're gonna see the m
both."
"She sorta takes care of him ."
"She's about all he's got these days ."
" Puddin,' who started out as a "groupie'
of sorts, has become Lester Flatt's constant companion. She ushers him inside
LeRoy's den and settles him into a big,
com fortable chair. Then she settles herself
at his feet, curling up cozy as a kitten .
While Flatt is busily engaged in carrying
on the interview, she is just as busy seeing
to his needs. Fetching cake and coffee
from the kitchen . Patting his hand. And
(from time tQ time) prompting, just a littie.
"Puddin,' , here,'' Flatt says, loosening
up,'' is just like a kid. She'd rather fish
than anything. If she had her way about it,
we'd be on the lake right now ."
Is she a good fisherman?
"She thinks she is," he grins, eyes
twinkling. "She can just net 'em. That's
about all."
Puddln' dimples happily . Later (when
Flatt is out of the room) she suggests softly that it will be alright to put in the article
that the two of them are to be married .
Flatt won 't mind, she assures, smiling.
But an up-coming marriage is not among
the topics Lester Flatt has on his mind to·
day . His thoughts keep skipping back and
forth, from the good old days, to his future
musical plans, and back to the good old
days again .
"I grew up in a musical family ," he
says. "There was nine of us, altogether.
Five girls and four boys." He laughs. " We
made a pretty good choir."
His voice has taken on the tone of a
grandfather, telling about what It was like
"back then ."
"My daddy played old time fiddle, and
banjer- just for his own amusement. He
was a fanner. A sharecropper. I used to
help work the farm ."
Just call me old-timer. I've put in the
miles.
"We was pore as Job's turkey, but we
was happy. We didn't have nothln'. But we
had plenty to eat."
The eyes ltght up. Looking back, It's not
so bad.
"Shoot-we didn't find out 'Ill later just
how pore we really was. We didn't have
nothin', and we didn't expect nothln', so we
was satisfied."
He sighs and shakes hla head sadly.
"I'd hate to see ldda have to do the thing
I did b•cl:~to ~~tab a'IMI!'I. Hille loi •!U

I

1
11

081,

•

.., , , .. H .. , '•·I'- .. :.

MUSIC CITY NEWS

i

•

at the 1!17D rate~
(Offer far ane year anly].

t
Lester Flatt &amp; Pudin' Puddin '

see them go without like we used to do .
But actually, I think it would be the best
thing in the world for them , to have a little
taste of It. --When you have a little harder
time making It, maybe you have to have a
little more character to survive ."
. Flatt, who lived throug&gt;, some of the
most difficult times our country has experienced, takes an old-fashioned hard-line
approach on the subject of character.
" That's the way I was raised, " he explains. "My daddy used to always say that
a man was only as good as his word . Me-l
try to kind of shy away from a man who
don 't keep his word. I've always tried to
be honorable."
Other old-fashioned values keep creeping
Into the conversation . Like respect for
parents. And willingness to put in a full
day 's work for a full day's pay. Tirtles are
changing. Too much . Too fast.
"Parents call a lot of their trouble on
themselves,'' he points out staunchly.
"You tell a child to do something, and he
doesn't do it--so you do it for him . That
child has learned something from that experience. Don't think he hasn't."
He looks away . He's back forty years or
so.·
"Used to be, we did what we was told to
do. A child's gonna be whatever you raise
him up to be."
What Flatt himself was "raised up to
be" was a pretty simple matter.
"We are just a blg, happy family," he
reminisces. "We'd work In the day time
and sing at night. When we got our chores
done and it was too dark to work, we'd glt
out an old hymn book and slng, and
ever'body'd play whatever instrument they
could."
_ U'i hiiN'4n sly wbelfustM.Flllll. ~ I

ron-. ·"'

.. ~, ... • ·•

... '

Act naw ta subscribe,
extend ar renew
yaur subscriptian ta

rll11la:

... 1 . .... ~~ ~~~- r~r

I
I

•IS ';•

t

professional. If the criteria for turning pro
He smiles suddenly, broadly.
is getting paid, he did it at the tender age
"Shoot," he exlcaims. " I still enjoy il asi
of seven.
much now as I ever did ."
i'
"They used to have all day singin' and
Does he Intend to work again?
-~
dinner on the ground .~' he recalls. " I was
You bet your boots he does.
'
real little and I sang what they called alto.
" I plari to go back out, maybe this
They stood me up on top of the piano so
week ." He pauses for a moment. His vole
everybody could see me and people would
is weak . and gives out on him at inopjust come by and hand me money . I don 't
portune times.
remember now how much I got, but il was
"I'm not gonna overdo it,' he continues.
enough to buy me my first real suit of
" But I'm alright. Just a little weak ."
clothes."
. The plans are for a couple of days work
Flatt's parents, who were " real tickled "
down In Georgia . Nothing big. Just a cou·
at his success at the "singin" ' weren't
pie of shows.
quite so tickled when the songleader
"The boys will do the shows, if I can't
wanted to take young Lester with him on a go. aut they have a rough time gittin'
tour of country churches.
bookln's without the lead, so I try to go
Succes~ had to wait.
along . Besides, it's _still a part of me."
It was later, when Flatt was in his late
Lester Flatt, whose music is loved for
twenties, that he got his first real break. In It's gaiety, Is tat least toda_y&gt; a very
1944, Bill Monroe asked him to sing lead
serious man. Contemplative. Thoughtful. •
with his " Blue Grass Boys." Flatt, who
"Success ls a hard road,'' he adI
had never entertained dreams of wealth
monishes. " It's a lot of hard work. Not
and fame , obliged happily . It was a job.
something that happens overnight. And If
And it was fun .
you want to succeed, first you got to gil
By that time, Lester was married &lt;and
your own sound. You glt out here copyin'
had been since the age of seventeen) . He
ever'body else, why, you're just building'
had worked a variety of jobs and had settl- them!"
.
C
ed Into an enviable position at a textile
Flatt
ls
tired.
Time
to
"glt on back
mill.
home." There's that road trip next week, i
"I was a weaver,'' he says, wlth pride.
after all. Golla rest up. WitH II lillie help ; I
"And a person was lucky to have that good from Puddln,' he makes his way to the
a job. Feedln' the shuttle was what most of door.
'em dld."
Soon be good flshin' weather, he notl~ ~
In those days, a good solid job was hard
as he steps outside. Come sunimertime, lje
to come by and not taken tor let go) lightfigures Puddin' will have hlm out on the
ly. But Flatt didn't exactly agonize over
1
lake every day, they're not working.
his decision.
"Just like a ldd," he says, as she helps
"I've never regretted anything," he
hlm Into the car.
mu~s. as he sifts back through the years.
"I've never wished I'd done anythinll else
Lester Flatt died of beart failure on May
wi!ltm)llife. I' ' 1 t \ v 1 , ' 1

I

I

r

r.rn:.

~~

' '·

?~ "' 1

u,'\m.-=~ ·

. ' -

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•

�Paot 10, MUSIC CITY NEWS

MUSIC CITY NEWS,,. . 11

Lonzo &amp;
.o scar Press
On 35 Years
By NEIL POND

.

Lonzo and Oscar have seen the tide of
fortune roll in and roll back enough times
to know, at least, how to hang on and ride
with it.
And that 's exactly what the famous com edy/ country act has done, managing to
keep afloat through the ups and downs of a
show business career that is still going
strong after more than thirty-five years.
Oscar Sullivan (the remaining original
member of the duo ) and Dave Hooten ( the
third and current 'Lonzo' ) are today carrying on the tradition of toe-tapping
bluegrass music and country cornball
humor that made the act one of the most
widely-recognized purveyors of country
comedy in the business.
Sullivan was playing in Eddy Arnold' s
backup band in 1944 when Arnold decided ·.
that he needed someone other than himself
to take over the comedy duties in his show.
A duo was suggested, and Sullivan and
Lloyd George, another member of Arnold's
band, volunteered for the position.
George and Sullivan named their act
"Lonzo and Oscar, " and patterned their
act on straight-man/ stooge routines with
humorous country patter. Arnold gave
them a slot on his network radio broadcasts and at his concert appearances, and,
after three years as a road act, they hit
big with a spur-of-the-moment novelty
record called " I 'm My Own Grandpa." It
sold over three million copies and ushered
Lonzo and Oscar into a recording contract
with RCA Victor.
The record exploded Lonzo and Oscar into a sudden and unexpected whirlwind of
popularity and attention . They became too
hot an item to continue working under Ar·
nold, or even share the bill with him , and
Arnold had to let them go solo. Their appearances were drawing heretofore unprecedented country market dollars, and
they were quickly Initiated into the Grand
Ole Opry . And just as their act was really
rolling, at the height of their commercial
success and public popularity, George
decided that they should break for a while.
So they did.
It was a mistake, Sullivan-----and later
George-----realized, and after about six dry
months they opted to bring Lonzo and
Oscar out of premature retirement and
back to the open arms of a public that still
rallied around them . The Opry even
welcomed them back with a clean slate,
and for a while it seemed as If Lonzo and
Oscar had never lett. But then George,
who had been dabbling In solo projects
without Sullivan, had a successful single,
"Un-Huh Honey," and decided to split
from the act again, this time for good .
Although George was quickly replaced
with Sullivan's brother, Johnny Sullivan,
the act's popularity had been somewhat
blemished by its Indecisive stop-starts and
by George and Sullivan's failure to
foUowup their first hit with another record.
By the time the Sullivan brothers had reformed Lonzo an&lt;t Oscar, there had been
eleven other cuts of "I'm My Own Grandpa," and the public's association of Lonzo
and Oscar to the song wa s beginning to
fade. " Nobody knew who we was, and they
didn't care," Oscar Sullivan related . "We
had a hard way to go."
The Sullivans moved to the Decca label
In the early 1950s, where they recorded
" Movln' On No.2," a Homer and Jethro

I

'\

Lonzo &amp; Oscar
exposure with appearances on a television
program called " Grand Ole Opry ," a
thirty-minute hodgepodge of country music
and comedy . They taped over one hundred
of the programs between 1951 and 1953. " It
was something like 'Hee Haw' is today,"
Oscar Sullivan explained . " It was country
music and I mean it was a show. It wasn't
just s~mebody gettin ' up singing. It had
·
everything on IL"
Oscar and Johnny continued to keep
their act working through the CiCties, and
in 1963 they re-entered the record business
and began self-producing their own
materiaL But then in 1967 the act's progress was again interrupted with the dea th
of Johnny Sullivan .
Oscar Sullivan recov ered the act once
more by recruiting Dave Hooten, who remains today in the Lonzo role. Sullivan
and Hooten continued to tour and record as
Lonzo and Oscar, and in the early 1970s
were successful with "Traces Of Life," a
wholly-serious ballad with no comic overtones. It was then that they decided to
gear the act toward a more somber
musical vein, downplaylng but not
eliminating the comedy routines that had
become such integral parts of the show
through the years . "And since then we've
been recording some things, " Hooten said,
"but we haven't had any success ."
Although Lonzo and Oscar have not topped the record charts or had any great upsurges in popularity In the past several
years, they have far from given up. They
have strived to constantly upgrade the
quality of their act, but yet to maintain the
very Important combination of humor and
music upon which the act was builL They
continue to make frequent appearances on
the Opry, and their show is still a muchrequested Item on the booking circuit. .
Both Sullivan and Hooten are confident

been on with anybody . in a package show
He added that country music , In its moye
or whatever , that we couldn 't steal the
to become more and more commerciaL
show," Hooten sa id . "Get the audience in
had also neglected to market the m aterial
such an uproar, you know . that they' re just of acts such as Lonzo and Oscar.
having a baiL"
" Everything is so commercial now ," he
Sullivan pointed out that they insaid
. "You can't follow your needs and
corporate four facets of country-style
wants
in country music. There's not a
entertainment into their act: bluegrass,
country
television show that can stand on
gospel , comedy , and straight country . The
its
own
anymore;
they've got to stand on
diversity makes Lonzo and Oscar stand
somebody
's
popularity
. Shows have gone
out, especially, Sullivan said, at bluegra ss
to
standup
singers.
It's
not a show any
festival s. "Our act is just !Ike the difcan
look
at
any show you want
more
.
You
ference between daylight and dark from
to,
they
're
all
just
standup
stars. And when
what the audience is used to seeing at a
you
do
that,
you
rule
out
the
comedians
bluegrass show," he sa id . "Although
show
aspect
of
it."
and
the
everything they 're seeing and hearing is
Comedy acts, as good as they may be.
good bluegrass .... About six or eight groups
Sullivan
said, simply do not attract large
might go on before us. and every one of
anymore . " Red Skelton-----and
audiences
them will do 'Flint Hill Special' or 'Rolling
you
know
how
good he was on the air-----he
In My Sweet Baby 's Arm s' , and the autook
a
show
out
on the road for six weeks
dience Is tired of all that by the time we
and
went
broke
.
Comedy shows are good
come on . And when we do come on, it's
on
the
spot,
they
may be A-1, but they will
altogether different. We get standing ovadraw."
not
tions and things that the other guys simply
Both express the desire for a future
aren 't getting. Not because we're better,
break into television. " Some good smart
but because we're different. "
· producer could take the Lonzo and Oscar
A bluegrass audience may be especially
show and tape It and do all these crazy ht·
hard to please, Hooten said, because they
tie ol ' things with us, and have a little segtend to frown upon electric Instruments.
ment with us doing something nutty , and
" They 'll sit out there all day and listen to
then come along and do the straight stuff,
you if you don 't play a lot of electric
and he could make a lot of money,"
guitars and stuff, " he said .
Sullivan said .
So Sullivan and Hooten recently purchased an elaborate sound system that gives
" I'd like to have a classy-type show,"
Hooten said . " Something on tl)e order of
them the benefits of amplified sound with
all-acoustic instruments. " We run
the old Jackie Gleason/ Art Carney thing,
everything through the PA , and we don 't
with a few plots In It, but still have us dohave any electrical instruments, as far as
ing our country music, and It would really
they know," Sullivan said .
be a different type of television show ."
" We sing it country , play it bluegrass,
Sullivan and Hooten are optimistic and
and they eat it up, " Sullivan said .
determined to press -their careers. Both
The country music Industry has not been
feel certain that the market for their type
especially kind to the field of country comof show has never walvered, but is, in fact,
edy, Sullivan said. First of all he said
as strong as ever. And as long as people
,ha!DJ)ered by
'
'
tap their
slap their

~~~~

'

I

•

•,

�Paot 10, MUSIC CITY NEWS

MUSIC CITY NEWS,,. . 11

Lonzo &amp;
.o scar Press
On 35 Years
By NEIL POND

.

Lonzo and Oscar have seen the tide of
fortune roll in and roll back enough times
to know, at least, how to hang on and ride
with it.
And that 's exactly what the famous com edy/ country act has done, managing to
keep afloat through the ups and downs of a
show business career that is still going
strong after more than thirty-five years.
Oscar Sullivan (the remaining original
member of the duo ) and Dave Hooten ( the
third and current 'Lonzo' ) are today carrying on the tradition of toe-tapping
bluegrass music and country cornball
humor that made the act one of the most
widely-recognized purveyors of country
comedy in the business.
Sullivan was playing in Eddy Arnold' s
backup band in 1944 when Arnold decided ·.
that he needed someone other than himself
to take over the comedy duties in his show.
A duo was suggested, and Sullivan and
Lloyd George, another member of Arnold's
band, volunteered for the position.
George and Sullivan named their act
"Lonzo and Oscar, " and patterned their
act on straight-man/ stooge routines with
humorous country patter. Arnold gave
them a slot on his network radio broadcasts and at his concert appearances, and,
after three years as a road act, they hit
big with a spur-of-the-moment novelty
record called " I 'm My Own Grandpa." It
sold over three million copies and ushered
Lonzo and Oscar into a recording contract
with RCA Victor.
The record exploded Lonzo and Oscar into a sudden and unexpected whirlwind of
popularity and attention . They became too
hot an item to continue working under Ar·
nold, or even share the bill with him , and
Arnold had to let them go solo. Their appearances were drawing heretofore unprecedented country market dollars, and
they were quickly Initiated into the Grand
Ole Opry . And just as their act was really
rolling, at the height of their commercial
success and public popularity, George
decided that they should break for a while.
So they did.
It was a mistake, Sullivan-----and later
George-----realized, and after about six dry
months they opted to bring Lonzo and
Oscar out of premature retirement and
back to the open arms of a public that still
rallied around them . The Opry even
welcomed them back with a clean slate,
and for a while it seemed as If Lonzo and
Oscar had never lett. But then George,
who had been dabbling In solo projects
without Sullivan, had a successful single,
"Un-Huh Honey," and decided to split
from the act again, this time for good .
Although George was quickly replaced
with Sullivan's brother, Johnny Sullivan,
the act's popularity had been somewhat
blemished by its Indecisive stop-starts and
by George and Sullivan's failure to
foUowup their first hit with another record.
By the time the Sullivan brothers had reformed Lonzo an&lt;t Oscar, there had been
eleven other cuts of "I'm My Own Grandpa," and the public's association of Lonzo
and Oscar to the song wa s beginning to
fade. " Nobody knew who we was, and they
didn't care," Oscar Sullivan related . "We
had a hard way to go."
The Sullivans moved to the Decca label
In the early 1950s, where they recorded
" Movln' On No.2," a Homer and Jethro

I

'\

Lonzo &amp; Oscar
exposure with appearances on a television
program called " Grand Ole Opry ," a
thirty-minute hodgepodge of country music
and comedy . They taped over one hundred
of the programs between 1951 and 1953. " It
was something like 'Hee Haw' is today,"
Oscar Sullivan explained . " It was country
music and I mean it was a show. It wasn't
just s~mebody gettin ' up singing. It had
·
everything on IL"
Oscar and Johnny continued to keep
their act working through the CiCties, and
in 1963 they re-entered the record business
and began self-producing their own
materiaL But then in 1967 the act's progress was again interrupted with the dea th
of Johnny Sullivan .
Oscar Sullivan recov ered the act once
more by recruiting Dave Hooten, who remains today in the Lonzo role. Sullivan
and Hooten continued to tour and record as
Lonzo and Oscar, and in the early 1970s
were successful with "Traces Of Life," a
wholly-serious ballad with no comic overtones. It was then that they decided to
gear the act toward a more somber
musical vein, downplaylng but not
eliminating the comedy routines that had
become such integral parts of the show
through the years . "And since then we've
been recording some things, " Hooten said,
"but we haven't had any success ."
Although Lonzo and Oscar have not topped the record charts or had any great upsurges in popularity In the past several
years, they have far from given up. They
have strived to constantly upgrade the
quality of their act, but yet to maintain the
very Important combination of humor and
music upon which the act was builL They
continue to make frequent appearances on
the Opry, and their show is still a muchrequested Item on the booking circuit. .
Both Sullivan and Hooten are confident

been on with anybody . in a package show
He added that country music , In its moye
or whatever , that we couldn 't steal the
to become more and more commerciaL
show," Hooten sa id . "Get the audience in
had also neglected to market the m aterial
such an uproar, you know . that they' re just of acts such as Lonzo and Oscar.
having a baiL"
" Everything is so commercial now ," he
Sullivan pointed out that they insaid
. "You can't follow your needs and
corporate four facets of country-style
wants
in country music. There's not a
entertainment into their act: bluegrass,
country
television show that can stand on
gospel , comedy , and straight country . The
its
own
anymore;
they've got to stand on
diversity makes Lonzo and Oscar stand
somebody
's
popularity
. Shows have gone
out, especially, Sullivan said, at bluegra ss
to
standup
singers.
It's
not a show any
festival s. "Our act is just !Ike the difcan
look
at
any show you want
more
.
You
ference between daylight and dark from
to,
they
're
all
just
standup
stars. And when
what the audience is used to seeing at a
you
do
that,
you
rule
out
the
comedians
bluegrass show," he sa id . "Although
show
aspect
of
it."
and
the
everything they 're seeing and hearing is
Comedy acts, as good as they may be.
good bluegrass .... About six or eight groups
Sullivan
said, simply do not attract large
might go on before us. and every one of
anymore . " Red Skelton-----and
audiences
them will do 'Flint Hill Special' or 'Rolling
you
know
how
good he was on the air-----he
In My Sweet Baby 's Arm s' , and the autook
a
show
out
on the road for six weeks
dience Is tired of all that by the time we
and
went
broke
.
Comedy shows are good
come on . And when we do come on, it's
on
the
spot,
they
may be A-1, but they will
altogether different. We get standing ovadraw."
not
tions and things that the other guys simply
Both express the desire for a future
aren 't getting. Not because we're better,
break into television. " Some good smart
but because we're different. "
· producer could take the Lonzo and Oscar
A bluegrass audience may be especially
show and tape It and do all these crazy ht·
hard to please, Hooten said, because they
tie ol ' things with us, and have a little segtend to frown upon electric Instruments.
ment with us doing something nutty , and
" They 'll sit out there all day and listen to
then come along and do the straight stuff,
you if you don 't play a lot of electric
and he could make a lot of money,"
guitars and stuff, " he said .
Sullivan said .
So Sullivan and Hooten recently purchased an elaborate sound system that gives
" I'd like to have a classy-type show,"
Hooten said . " Something on tl)e order of
them the benefits of amplified sound with
all-acoustic instruments. " We run
the old Jackie Gleason/ Art Carney thing,
everything through the PA , and we don 't
with a few plots In It, but still have us dohave any electrical instruments, as far as
ing our country music, and It would really
they know," Sullivan said .
be a different type of television show ."
" We sing it country , play it bluegrass,
Sullivan and Hooten are optimistic and
and they eat it up, " Sullivan said .
determined to press -their careers. Both
The country music Industry has not been
feel certain that the market for their type
especially kind to the field of country comof show has never walvered, but is, in fact,
edy, Sullivan said. First of all he said
as strong as ever. And as long as people
,ha!DJ)ered by
'
'
tap their
slap their

~~~~

'

I

•

•,

�P10112. MUSIC CITY NEWS

Nashville, Tennessee.

Sparetime
Musicians
Are 'Scene'
•

'

By NEIL POND
In the audience at a bluegrass performance by the Seldom Scene, you're as
likely to find three-piece suits as bib
overalls.
"We're all city boys," said mandolin
player John Duffey. "Our following Is not
a COjUitry audience. It's not associated
with country music."
This Washington, D.C.-based group Is not
your "typical" bluegrass band. In fact
Duffey, who worked as an Instrument
repairman, Is the only member of the
group whose vocation was previously in
any way associated with music. Dobro
player Mike Auldridge did commercial art
for the Washington Star, and guitarist Phil
Rosenthal, the newest member of the
group, graduated from the University of
Chicago with a degree in English. (Rosenthal replaced John Starling, an Army
surgeon) . Banjo picker Ben Eldridge and
bassist Tom Gray still work full-time jobs
In addition to their duties with the group ;
Eldridge is a mathematician and Gray is a
cartographer.
But, Duffey said, the District of Columbia is not your "typical" bluegrass
market, either. "The market up there is
1975.
.
not a bunch of farmers, It's doctors and
The group also boasts a prolific track
lawyers and white collar folks. Much of the
record In the studio. They have averaged a
bluegrass audience In Washington Is peoconsistent one album each year since they
ple who have just developed a liking for
formed In 1971. "We figure If we can sell
bluegrass. They might have been rock
only 25,000 copies every time we come out
fans, or jazz fans, or classical music fans,
with a record, then we'll always have an
or anyone with no particular ties to counaudience," said Duffey. The Seldom Scene,
try music. But they neard bluegrass and
he said, Is as milch Interested In quality as
got attached to it."
quantity.
The Scene even shys away from being
"Before I was In the Seldom Scene,"
pegged as a "bluegrass group." "We have
Rosenthal said, "one of the things that imsuch a broad variety of material," said
pressed me about the group was the power
Gray. "Tunes like borrowed from a rock
of their vocals. The sensitivity of the
group to old con11entlonal songs to things
vocals In the group made it an unusual
that we write ourselves. It's a mixture of
group ..."
·stuff."
"We really tend to lean towards the
"It's still got the bluegrass 'feel' to it,
vocals," J)uffey said. "There may be a lot
but It's ·also a lot of contemporary stuff,
of guys out there who can outplck us, but I
original stuff, re-arrangements of old stuff,
don't think there are many who can outsand some stuff that's not traditional by no
log us."
means," added Rosenthal.
"You can overwhelm people with a lot of
"We don't just record "White Dove" and
super licks, so that after five minutes It
"Mother's Not Dead, She's On)y Sleeping,"
would just sound the same to somebody
things like tha't," said Duffey. "We do a lit- who Is not aware of the techniques of playtle bit of everything. I guess we could say
Ing that kind of music," said Rosenthal.
'progressive.• We will play anything that
"So we try to play with taste, and, In some
suits us, any type of material that we think
Instances, we would throw out all of our
we can do something with; It doesn't make
licks. In many songs, we just have to
any difference what kind of music It Is, If
tastefully J uck them away and don't play,
we think we can adapt It and do something
and let the vocals carry us. We still want
with it." •
to be able to Identify and communicate
Country Gentleman Charlie Waller Is
with our audience, and we don't want to go
credited with comllll! up with the name for
out there and blow everything over their
the group. Waller jokingly dubbed the
beads."
group with "The Seldom Scentl" when he
"We were told In one place that they
heard that Duffey, an old friend, was playthought we were just a little too slick for
Ing In a new band that not many folks had
them up there," Duffey said. "You've got
seen or heard at the time. The group, then
to stay down with your audience and do
at a loss for a name any better,-adopted
things they understand. That's not calling
Waller's.
,
your audience stupid or anything like
But the Seldom Scene Is getting a_round a that."
bit more these days. Besides playing
"I think we've managed to break the
regularly on the club circuit In the '
barrier Into younger·people," said Duffey.
D.C./Maryland area, they also make con"I got a fan letter from a kid yesterday,
cert and festival dates all ac!'!lfS, \!Je.coun- ' said he'd been an a$lf:l rock fan all his life,
try. They have appeared on: &amp;Uige with
that's all he evefblought existed. He said
President Jimmy Carter at the White
· two friends dragged him off to a bluegrass
House and on national televifilOII at a
festival, and he sa\d-the greatest "line In
Washington Redsklris halftime show. They
the letter-'1 watched a bluegrass band
have also played at the Smithsonian Inperform and they're doing It all. There's
stitution, on the Grand Ole Opry, and at
no gimmicks. They're actually playing and
famoua WolfoTrap. Linda Ronstadt picked
they know what they're doing."'
one of their tunes, "Keep Me From
Duffey paused for a moment. "I guess
Blowln' Away," to Include on her awardthis kind of music just klnda tends to breed
wlnlllng "Heart Like A ~" aJ~upl Jn
goocl)nuslclans."

MUSIC CITY NEWS, P10113

.1910

Seckler

Carrys on·
'Grass'
By NEIL POND
For years after the much-mourned
break-up o( Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs,
Flatt's own group, The Nashvllle Grass,
was for many fans the bluegrass group.
Their firm rooting In traditional bluegrass
melodies and fine-tuned country harmonies, plus the powerful bluegrass genius
of Flatt, made the Nashville Grass one of
Curly Seckler &amp; The Nashville Grass wllh Johnny Cash
the hottest groups of pickers on the
bluegrass circuit.
The Grass was dealt a powerful blow
last year with the death of Flatt. But now ,
under the capable leadership of Curly_
Seckler, for many years a member of
Flatt's band, The Nashvllle Grass has pull·
ed Its loose ends back together and got
back to the business of carrying on the .
musical form that Lester Flatt devoted h1s
life to.
"After Lester passed away, then, of
course there was a little let-up in some of
our sh~ws," Seckler said recently at MCN.
.. And some of them cancelled out, a few
maybe due to the fact that Lester passed
on. But we carried the thing right on, and
it just looks now like people are going to
accept The Nashvllle Grass without
Lester."
Seckler said that he would continue to
direct the Grass In the direction that Fl,att
had established. "I don't see that there s
going to be anything but very little ~!!at
I'm going to change about the band, he
said. "Because that's one thing that I pre&gt;mlsed Lester before he passed on---tha~ I
was going to try to leave It the same. I m
like Lester; there wasn't a wh~le lot of difference In our ages. To change Lester
Flatt, you would've had to use a ha~mer.
That's just about my Idea on It, too. ,
Their latest album evidences Seckler s
promise. It features the same, tight-knit,
solid-as-a-rock bluegrass that The
Nashvllle Grass was known for before
Lester Flatt left them on their own. Called
"Take A Little Time," It features special
guest Johnny Cash joining In with Grass
members crmtlie Nixon !dobro), Pete Corum (bass), Marty Stuart (guitar and mandolin), !{enny Ingram (banjo), Clarence
"Tater" Tate (fiddle), and Seckler
&lt;guitar) .
Seckler said that the responslblllty ne
shouldered when Flatt died was heavy.
"People don't realize how much work-- I
mean hard work-- there Is In handling a
group and being responsible for this and
that and the other, when It's all dumped In
our lap " he said. "It ain't like going out
~onder ~nd crawling on the bus and taking
off every other day and not having to
worry about anything but ydur guitar. All
we used to do was get our guitars and run
and get on the bus, and play a sho~ • ant
&amp;
that was lt. Then we'd go home an go o e
I
bed and forget about it. Now • I Jl)ight com
home and stay on the phone talking
TEN~SSEE
business ball the night, or I might be at
(just
south
of
Nashv11le)
.
the desk ,working on some~~lng, and .I have
to forgetl4bout my guitar.
per
But Seckler said, he and hls group are 111
(children
under
12 with .~~ents, ~REE)
"handling lt." And he can't see as that w
Overnight parking facllit~ avadabk:
change "~ter Flatt went to bed with
.
•J
uslc on his mind, and he got
~~u!fth~: his mind, and It sla~~ th':i
Send check or money order to:
.
continuously • day in and day out, e s .
Wild Turkey jamboree of Country Mus1c
"He lived It 'tlll the day he d!~· He went
x
15
000 Nashville, Tenn . 37215/ Ph.one: 800-523-991 6
'tlll he couldn't go no longer.
"
P· 0 · Bo
'
M · Cha 1 IIC~ to ~upport
"I klnda feelllke Lester always said,
Proceed~
to
Country
I u~ ..li
ch"'" f.' lqnd_ N A ,)I!J l1S9H" snlnnlw
"like In thedml •
' 11:e l~llU.fillf'l!~ u(!at• -J..- ro !,'T'JTIT~
I
Seckler said with a chuckle,
____
____
...
___
__
...
..
old '30s. w.estern mov IeS ·. -•we're 8PDIIIl I!
~·- on_.
with our """"'

WILD1 . URKEY

oF couNyr,R\y ~I JSIC
STARRING

The Lynn Anderson Show
The Marty Robbins Show
The Nashville Superpickers
The North Star Band
The Merle Haggard Show
The Jerry Reed Show
Asleep at the Wheel
The Carl Tipton Show
Merle Kilgore, M.C.

Buck While &amp; Down Home Folks

Buck White &amp; Down Home
Folks A 'Family Approa~h'
By NEIL POND
Buck White and the Down Home Folks
crank out a blend of bluegrass and jazzy
western swing and just plain ol' country
that has been perking up ears from
Jacksonville to Japan.
White once said that the name for his
group Itself suggested the type of music
they wanted to play--"homey and appealIng." But they are "down-home" In
another way : guitarist Sharon Hicks and
uprlghl bass player Cheryl Warren are
White's daughters. White himself plays
mandolin and Jerry Douglas joins In on
dobro. The group at one time Included
White's wife, who later bowed out to tend
to their two other school-age children at
home.

White and family made the decision to
try to make It In music In 1971 when they
moved from their Wichita Falls, Texas,
home to settle near Nashville In Hendersonville, Tenn. White's background In
music dates from his childhood. "I wanted
to be a drummer, but my grandmother
didn't have drums, she had a plano. So I
learned to play the plano. " H~•latl!l' l
developed a proficiency for the mandolin.
When his daughters, Cheryl and Sharon
came along, they too "just drlftl!d ·Into It,"
White said. "When they were RfdWii\g up 1
was playing music In bands. nte!fheard
the music even though they mil~ have been
busy doing something else. They soaked It
up without knowing what they were de&gt;contlnuec:t on Peot 2t

The wi.nilers of the nationwide search for the top
"Country Stars of the Future"
.
20 exciting new country music acts compeung
for national recognition and grand pnzes

SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY, JUNE 7
Gates open 7 A.M.
COLUMBIA,
TICKETS: $9

·--~

..

I

II

~

------

8, 1980

day/$16 botla days

�P10112. MUSIC CITY NEWS

Nashville, Tennessee.

Sparetime
Musicians
Are 'Scene'
•

'

By NEIL POND
In the audience at a bluegrass performance by the Seldom Scene, you're as
likely to find three-piece suits as bib
overalls.
"We're all city boys," said mandolin
player John Duffey. "Our following Is not
a COjUitry audience. It's not associated
with country music."
This Washington, D.C.-based group Is not
your "typical" bluegrass band. In fact
Duffey, who worked as an Instrument
repairman, Is the only member of the
group whose vocation was previously in
any way associated with music. Dobro
player Mike Auldridge did commercial art
for the Washington Star, and guitarist Phil
Rosenthal, the newest member of the
group, graduated from the University of
Chicago with a degree in English. (Rosenthal replaced John Starling, an Army
surgeon) . Banjo picker Ben Eldridge and
bassist Tom Gray still work full-time jobs
In addition to their duties with the group ;
Eldridge is a mathematician and Gray is a
cartographer.
But, Duffey said, the District of Columbia is not your "typical" bluegrass
market, either. "The market up there is
1975.
.
not a bunch of farmers, It's doctors and
The group also boasts a prolific track
lawyers and white collar folks. Much of the
record In the studio. They have averaged a
bluegrass audience In Washington Is peoconsistent one album each year since they
ple who have just developed a liking for
formed In 1971. "We figure If we can sell
bluegrass. They might have been rock
only 25,000 copies every time we come out
fans, or jazz fans, or classical music fans,
with a record, then we'll always have an
or anyone with no particular ties to counaudience," said Duffey. The Seldom Scene,
try music. But they neard bluegrass and
he said, Is as milch Interested In quality as
got attached to it."
quantity.
The Scene even shys away from being
"Before I was In the Seldom Scene,"
pegged as a "bluegrass group." "We have
Rosenthal said, "one of the things that imsuch a broad variety of material," said
pressed me about the group was the power
Gray. "Tunes like borrowed from a rock
of their vocals. The sensitivity of the
group to old con11entlonal songs to things
vocals In the group made it an unusual
that we write ourselves. It's a mixture of
group ..."
·stuff."
"We really tend to lean towards the
"It's still got the bluegrass 'feel' to it,
vocals," J)uffey said. "There may be a lot
but It's ·also a lot of contemporary stuff,
of guys out there who can outplck us, but I
original stuff, re-arrangements of old stuff,
don't think there are many who can outsand some stuff that's not traditional by no
log us."
means," added Rosenthal.
"You can overwhelm people with a lot of
"We don't just record "White Dove" and
super licks, so that after five minutes It
"Mother's Not Dead, She's On)y Sleeping,"
would just sound the same to somebody
things like tha't," said Duffey. "We do a lit- who Is not aware of the techniques of playtle bit of everything. I guess we could say
Ing that kind of music," said Rosenthal.
'progressive.• We will play anything that
"So we try to play with taste, and, In some
suits us, any type of material that we think
Instances, we would throw out all of our
we can do something with; It doesn't make
licks. In many songs, we just have to
any difference what kind of music It Is, If
tastefully J uck them away and don't play,
we think we can adapt It and do something
and let the vocals carry us. We still want
with it." •
to be able to Identify and communicate
Country Gentleman Charlie Waller Is
with our audience, and we don't want to go
credited with comllll! up with the name for
out there and blow everything over their
the group. Waller jokingly dubbed the
beads."
group with "The Seldom Scentl" when he
"We were told In one place that they
heard that Duffey, an old friend, was playthought we were just a little too slick for
Ing In a new band that not many folks had
them up there," Duffey said. "You've got
seen or heard at the time. The group, then
to stay down with your audience and do
at a loss for a name any better,-adopted
things they understand. That's not calling
Waller's.
,
your audience stupid or anything like
But the Seldom Scene Is getting a_round a that."
bit more these days. Besides playing
"I think we've managed to break the
regularly on the club circuit In the '
barrier Into younger·people," said Duffey.
D.C./Maryland area, they also make con"I got a fan letter from a kid yesterday,
cert and festival dates all ac!'!lfS, \!Je.coun- ' said he'd been an a$lf:l rock fan all his life,
try. They have appeared on: &amp;Uige with
that's all he evefblought existed. He said
President Jimmy Carter at the White
· two friends dragged him off to a bluegrass
House and on national televifilOII at a
festival, and he sa\d-the greatest "line In
Washington Redsklris halftime show. They
the letter-'1 watched a bluegrass band
have also played at the Smithsonian Inperform and they're doing It all. There's
stitution, on the Grand Ole Opry, and at
no gimmicks. They're actually playing and
famoua WolfoTrap. Linda Ronstadt picked
they know what they're doing."'
one of their tunes, "Keep Me From
Duffey paused for a moment. "I guess
Blowln' Away," to Include on her awardthis kind of music just klnda tends to breed
wlnlllng "Heart Like A ~" aJ~upl Jn
goocl)nuslclans."

MUSIC CITY NEWS, P10113

.1910

Seckler

Carrys on·
'Grass'
By NEIL POND
For years after the much-mourned
break-up o( Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs,
Flatt's own group, The Nashvllle Grass,
was for many fans the bluegrass group.
Their firm rooting In traditional bluegrass
melodies and fine-tuned country harmonies, plus the powerful bluegrass genius
of Flatt, made the Nashville Grass one of
Curly Seckler &amp; The Nashville Grass wllh Johnny Cash
the hottest groups of pickers on the
bluegrass circuit.
The Grass was dealt a powerful blow
last year with the death of Flatt. But now ,
under the capable leadership of Curly_
Seckler, for many years a member of
Flatt's band, The Nashvllle Grass has pull·
ed Its loose ends back together and got
back to the business of carrying on the .
musical form that Lester Flatt devoted h1s
life to.
"After Lester passed away, then, of
course there was a little let-up in some of
our sh~ws," Seckler said recently at MCN.
.. And some of them cancelled out, a few
maybe due to the fact that Lester passed
on. But we carried the thing right on, and
it just looks now like people are going to
accept The Nashvllle Grass without
Lester."
Seckler said that he would continue to
direct the Grass In the direction that Fl,att
had established. "I don't see that there s
going to be anything but very little ~!!at
I'm going to change about the band, he
said. "Because that's one thing that I pre&gt;mlsed Lester before he passed on---tha~ I
was going to try to leave It the same. I m
like Lester; there wasn't a wh~le lot of difference In our ages. To change Lester
Flatt, you would've had to use a ha~mer.
That's just about my Idea on It, too. ,
Their latest album evidences Seckler s
promise. It features the same, tight-knit,
solid-as-a-rock bluegrass that The
Nashvllle Grass was known for before
Lester Flatt left them on their own. Called
"Take A Little Time," It features special
guest Johnny Cash joining In with Grass
members crmtlie Nixon !dobro), Pete Corum (bass), Marty Stuart (guitar and mandolin), !{enny Ingram (banjo), Clarence
"Tater" Tate (fiddle), and Seckler
&lt;guitar) .
Seckler said that the responslblllty ne
shouldered when Flatt died was heavy.
"People don't realize how much work-- I
mean hard work-- there Is In handling a
group and being responsible for this and
that and the other, when It's all dumped In
our lap " he said. "It ain't like going out
~onder ~nd crawling on the bus and taking
off every other day and not having to
worry about anything but ydur guitar. All
we used to do was get our guitars and run
and get on the bus, and play a sho~ • ant
&amp;
that was lt. Then we'd go home an go o e
I
bed and forget about it. Now • I Jl)ight com
home and stay on the phone talking
TEN~SSEE
business ball the night, or I might be at
(just
south
of
Nashv11le)
.
the desk ,working on some~~lng, and .I have
to forgetl4bout my guitar.
per
But Seckler said, he and hls group are 111
(children
under
12 with .~~ents, ~REE)
"handling lt." And he can't see as that w
Overnight parking facllit~ avadabk:
change "~ter Flatt went to bed with
.
•J
uslc on his mind, and he got
~~u!fth~: his mind, and It sla~~ th':i
Send check or money order to:
.
continuously • day in and day out, e s .
Wild Turkey jamboree of Country Mus1c
"He lived It 'tlll the day he d!~· He went
x
15
000 Nashville, Tenn . 37215/ Ph.one: 800-523-991 6
'tlll he couldn't go no longer.
"
P· 0 · Bo
'
M · Cha 1 IIC~ to ~upport
"I klnda feelllke Lester always said,
Proceed~
to
Country
I u~ ..li
ch"'" f.' lqnd_ N A ,)I!J l1S9H" snlnnlw
"like In thedml •
' 11:e l~llU.fillf'l!~ u(!at• -J..- ro !,'T'JTIT~
I
Seckler said with a chuckle,
____
____
...
___
__
...
..
old '30s. w.estern mov IeS ·. -•we're 8PDIIIl I!
~·- on_.
with our """"'

WILD1 . URKEY

oF couNyr,R\y ~I JSIC
STARRING

The Lynn Anderson Show
The Marty Robbins Show
The Nashville Superpickers
The North Star Band
The Merle Haggard Show
The Jerry Reed Show
Asleep at the Wheel
The Carl Tipton Show
Merle Kilgore, M.C.

Buck While &amp; Down Home Folks

Buck White &amp; Down Home
Folks A 'Family Approa~h'
By NEIL POND
Buck White and the Down Home Folks
crank out a blend of bluegrass and jazzy
western swing and just plain ol' country
that has been perking up ears from
Jacksonville to Japan.
White once said that the name for his
group Itself suggested the type of music
they wanted to play--"homey and appealIng." But they are "down-home" In
another way : guitarist Sharon Hicks and
uprlghl bass player Cheryl Warren are
White's daughters. White himself plays
mandolin and Jerry Douglas joins In on
dobro. The group at one time Included
White's wife, who later bowed out to tend
to their two other school-age children at
home.

White and family made the decision to
try to make It In music In 1971 when they
moved from their Wichita Falls, Texas,
home to settle near Nashville In Hendersonville, Tenn. White's background In
music dates from his childhood. "I wanted
to be a drummer, but my grandmother
didn't have drums, she had a plano. So I
learned to play the plano. " H~•latl!l' l
developed a proficiency for the mandolin.
When his daughters, Cheryl and Sharon
came along, they too "just drlftl!d ·Into It,"
White said. "When they were RfdWii\g up 1
was playing music In bands. nte!fheard
the music even though they mil~ have been
busy doing something else. They soaked It
up without knowing what they were de&gt;contlnuec:t on Peot 2t

The wi.nilers of the nationwide search for the top
"Country Stars of the Future"
.
20 exciting new country music acts compeung
for national recognition and grand pnzes

SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY, JUNE 7
Gates open 7 A.M.
COLUMBIA,
TICKETS: $9

·--~

..

I

II

~

------

8, 1980

day/$16 botla days

�MUSIC CITY NEWS, P1011!

Nahvlllt, Tennesse, Aprll,1910

THANKS!

Axton Hopes His Music
Is·Heard Around World
By LOUDILLA JOHNSON
Hoyt Axton has written some 500 songs
and had one hundred or so recorded, according 'to his own estimate. The biggest,
selling five and a half million copies, was
"JoyTo The World." "My music has pretty much been like road signs along my
personal highway of life," says Axton. " It
represents the realities I've encountered,
the dreams and ambitions. I guess If I
have a philosophy, It's best summed-up In
the liner notes I wrote on the back of my
album, 'Southbound.' It's not Important
that everybody know my name or that I
am famous . But It is very Important to rile
that my music Is heard ." Hoyt Is making
plans to attend his first Fan Fair this
year; 'tho he has, In years passed, made a
few appearances In Nashville during that
annual event. His fan club Is helmed by
Mil)' Ann Ludolph, 1603 North St. Albans,
St. Paul, Minn. 55117.
A letter in from Steve and Peggy
Tbompeon provides the info of one of our
readers was requesting a couple of months
back. The addre~s lor Wendy Bagwell and
Tbe Sunllten is P.O. Drawer 260-D,
Hiram, Georgia 30141.
The Tbomp10111 also state they would
like to see more Gospel artists' clubs listed
In this column. We will be happy to
cooperate If we can just get the necessary
Information, so let us hear from you.
For the reader who asks whether Loretta
Lynn Is related to the famous Carter
Family; the answer Is 'no.' Loretta's performing relatives Include Peggy Sue, Jay
Lee Webb and Crystal Gayle. The Carter
sisters Include JUDe, Anita and Helen.
JUDe, of course, works regularly with her
husband In the Johnny Cub Sbow while
Anita and Helen have teamed up with
some of the Carter offspring In a brand
new act called Tile Ortplal Carter
Famlly-m a-raUoa.

·

·

The address for Jolm • JUDe Cub'a fan
club Is 1110 West Hartman Rd., Anderson,
In. 46011 and Is headed by Cbarlea and
V~S~v.TbeCarterFam~doos

have a fan club but we are unable to give
you the address at this time. If someone
will send the Info, we wUI be more than
happy to pass It along.
Also have a note In from MaryEllen
Tidball to say she Is In charge of the fan
club for Darrell Tbomu, R.R. 1, Runnells,
Iowa 50237.
Another regular in the Illinois Country
·Opry, Carlotta Gall, has a brand new fan
club. Elelllor Cbvry Is president, Box 56,
Rosamond, Ill. 62083.
Bue1 Joaea writes In response to an article In a recent Country Club'n column
from DoiiDa P,arla asking where to obtain a
K111111 Roten t-shtrt. The MaKe Co., P.O.
Box 4088, Beverly Hllls, Ca. 90213 should
be able to help. And Hue! asks us to do
more on 8ulan Ra,e, which we .hope to do
In the future . By the way, Allee Keyen Is
stU! In charge of Sulan'a Fan Club from
1255 Lincoln St., Apt. 6, Santa Clara, Calif:
95050.

For the reader who asks 'who are Miaty

ROn, GaiMIIa BldtGG and Lila Todd m·arrted to' -at this time the best we can determine Is that tbele "Hee Haw" lovelies are
all unmarried. (Tbat doesn't mean, of
coune, thele ladles are lonely.)
Another regular-reader of this column
has come tofM~~~iM ·YI

can thank Gary Spaetb for responding with
the address for Jean Sbepard'a fans . Since
he Is a Representative, he says all Interested parties can write to him at P.O.
Box 278, Mastic Beach, N.Y. 11951.
For those who've been wondering, and
especially for Mrs. JoeepiiJne Wireman, we
are sorry to say that Cryatal Gayle doos
not have a fan club. You may, however,
write to her at Columbia Records, 24
Music Square E'hst, NashvUle, Tenn. 37203.
We are sorry to relate that Mary Jane
Kay, co-president (with husband, Art) of
the Lynn andenon Fan Club, died
February 4th In GreenevUle, Ohio, after a
lengthy battle with cancer. Club operations
continue to be handled by Art from 122
Borchers St., Russia, Ohio 45363.
The Gil)' Sbope Fan Club has been reactivated with Peggy Turner In charge; 22845
Co. Rd. 26, Goshen, In. 46526.
Tile Stamps, who just returned from an
oversees tour with Jury Lee Lewla, have
a growing fan club which Pat J . Smith
leads from 58 Music Square West,
Nashville, Tenn. 37203.
Kent Gordon (Ill.) , Mary T. &lt;Okla.), AI
and. Kathy Baln &lt;N.Y.), Dennla Bruderer
&lt;Idaho), Davtcl Klncbner (Ill. J, Ruth
Qu1a1an &lt;Ohio) and Brenda McGarvey
(Conn.) will perform on the International
Fan Club OrpnlzaUon'a New Country
Showcase during Fan Fair, June 11, 1980.
Dldja' know Helen Cornellua wrote a
song which Is Included on the new Oak
JUdge Boys' album? By the way , VIrginia
Walker Is doing a great job with Helen's
fan club from 724 State St., Hannibal, Mo.

Hoyt Axton

63401.

The recently-formed Roy Clark Fan Club
Is headquartered at 3225 South Norwood,

Tulsa, Okla. 74135.
Fur Rlcbarcl Jobnlon, we are sorry to
say Wendy Holcombe doos not have a fan
club. She doos, however, have a new road
show which Includes a five-piece band and
a rehearsal studio which her Dad recently
built behind their Alabaster, Alabama,
home!
For our many Elvia Presley fan-readers,
you might mark your calendar for the
week of August 12·16th. The Cook Convention Center In Memphis has been booked
for one week for the next ten years for the
presentation of an annual Presley Festival.
This year wUllnclude performances by
T.G. Sbeppard, Carl Perklna, Jerry Lee
lAwla, Merle Hagard, J.D. Sumller and ._
Tile 8~ Tile Jordanalrea, Cbarlle McCoy, Narvel Felta, Dickey Lee and the Bill
Blaet Combo.
Dee Wa'- Is In charge of the brandnew fan club for 818 AI Dcnnllna, 302
North 8th, Comanche, Okl11. 73529. Another
Oklahoma-based (an club Is that for Linda
Fa,. Durbin, with lllldred Copeland In
charge. Box 111, Temple, Okla. 73368.
8a1'bara Dailtells president for Joe
Hoi'-'• club, P.O. Box 17, Holstein,
NebraSka 66950. Bob Homan'• number one
fan and club president Is Marty WhUe, Rt.
2, Box 350, Yakima, Wash. 98908.
And Buck ow-• president Is Dorte
Sto¥111, 2132 Four Mile Road, N.E ., Grand
Raplda, Mich. 49505, currently working
bard to flhallze plans for Buck'a breakfast
with club members during Fan Fair week
In NuhvUle.
Remember to keep those cards and lettM!Q4itlrtglbl ll 't t'Hr ~ l , ,
t
1

.e•••••••• A4\.• .,._........,¥.. _ . . .....

_. ..........._ _
cm
....

~u

P.R. Rop . Mao Boron Axton (615) 12•·••12
P.roonal Managomont: Country Sounds (106) 172·7223
Kolll Warron fan Club: lox 615
Lamooa , TX 79331

._.. ,..,.. ro_,.,. • • ~ ..-, ._,..~,.,. 'l .,,. ... .. .,.....,.r•• •·•

. ___...

.... .

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

�MUSIC CITY NEWS, P1011!

Nahvlllt, Tennesse, Aprll,1910

THANKS!

Axton Hopes His Music
Is·Heard Around World
By LOUDILLA JOHNSON
Hoyt Axton has written some 500 songs
and had one hundred or so recorded, according 'to his own estimate. The biggest,
selling five and a half million copies, was
"JoyTo The World." "My music has pretty much been like road signs along my
personal highway of life," says Axton. " It
represents the realities I've encountered,
the dreams and ambitions. I guess If I
have a philosophy, It's best summed-up In
the liner notes I wrote on the back of my
album, 'Southbound.' It's not Important
that everybody know my name or that I
am famous . But It is very Important to rile
that my music Is heard ." Hoyt Is making
plans to attend his first Fan Fair this
year; 'tho he has, In years passed, made a
few appearances In Nashville during that
annual event. His fan club Is helmed by
Mil)' Ann Ludolph, 1603 North St. Albans,
St. Paul, Minn. 55117.
A letter in from Steve and Peggy
Tbompeon provides the info of one of our
readers was requesting a couple of months
back. The addre~s lor Wendy Bagwell and
Tbe Sunllten is P.O. Drawer 260-D,
Hiram, Georgia 30141.
The Tbomp10111 also state they would
like to see more Gospel artists' clubs listed
In this column. We will be happy to
cooperate If we can just get the necessary
Information, so let us hear from you.
For the reader who asks whether Loretta
Lynn Is related to the famous Carter
Family; the answer Is 'no.' Loretta's performing relatives Include Peggy Sue, Jay
Lee Webb and Crystal Gayle. The Carter
sisters Include JUDe, Anita and Helen.
JUDe, of course, works regularly with her
husband In the Johnny Cub Sbow while
Anita and Helen have teamed up with
some of the Carter offspring In a brand
new act called Tile Ortplal Carter
Famlly-m a-raUoa.

·

·

The address for Jolm • JUDe Cub'a fan
club Is 1110 West Hartman Rd., Anderson,
In. 46011 and Is headed by Cbarlea and
V~S~v.TbeCarterFam~doos

have a fan club but we are unable to give
you the address at this time. If someone
will send the Info, we wUI be more than
happy to pass It along.
Also have a note In from MaryEllen
Tidball to say she Is In charge of the fan
club for Darrell Tbomu, R.R. 1, Runnells,
Iowa 50237.
Another regular in the Illinois Country
·Opry, Carlotta Gall, has a brand new fan
club. Elelllor Cbvry Is president, Box 56,
Rosamond, Ill. 62083.
Bue1 Joaea writes In response to an article In a recent Country Club'n column
from DoiiDa P,arla asking where to obtain a
K111111 Roten t-shtrt. The MaKe Co., P.O.
Box 4088, Beverly Hllls, Ca. 90213 should
be able to help. And Hue! asks us to do
more on 8ulan Ra,e, which we .hope to do
In the future . By the way, Allee Keyen Is
stU! In charge of Sulan'a Fan Club from
1255 Lincoln St., Apt. 6, Santa Clara, Calif:
95050.

For the reader who asks 'who are Miaty

ROn, GaiMIIa BldtGG and Lila Todd m·arrted to' -at this time the best we can determine Is that tbele "Hee Haw" lovelies are
all unmarried. (Tbat doesn't mean, of
coune, thele ladles are lonely.)
Another regular-reader of this column
has come tofM~~~iM ·YI

can thank Gary Spaetb for responding with
the address for Jean Sbepard'a fans . Since
he Is a Representative, he says all Interested parties can write to him at P.O.
Box 278, Mastic Beach, N.Y. 11951.
For those who've been wondering, and
especially for Mrs. JoeepiiJne Wireman, we
are sorry to say that Cryatal Gayle doos
not have a fan club. You may, however,
write to her at Columbia Records, 24
Music Square E'hst, NashvUle, Tenn. 37203.
We are sorry to relate that Mary Jane
Kay, co-president (with husband, Art) of
the Lynn andenon Fan Club, died
February 4th In GreenevUle, Ohio, after a
lengthy battle with cancer. Club operations
continue to be handled by Art from 122
Borchers St., Russia, Ohio 45363.
The Gil)' Sbope Fan Club has been reactivated with Peggy Turner In charge; 22845
Co. Rd. 26, Goshen, In. 46526.
Tile Stamps, who just returned from an
oversees tour with Jury Lee Lewla, have
a growing fan club which Pat J . Smith
leads from 58 Music Square West,
Nashville, Tenn. 37203.
Kent Gordon (Ill.) , Mary T. &lt;Okla.), AI
and. Kathy Baln &lt;N.Y.), Dennla Bruderer
&lt;Idaho), Davtcl Klncbner (Ill. J, Ruth
Qu1a1an &lt;Ohio) and Brenda McGarvey
(Conn.) will perform on the International
Fan Club OrpnlzaUon'a New Country
Showcase during Fan Fair, June 11, 1980.
Dldja' know Helen Cornellua wrote a
song which Is Included on the new Oak
JUdge Boys' album? By the way , VIrginia
Walker Is doing a great job with Helen's
fan club from 724 State St., Hannibal, Mo.

Hoyt Axton

63401.

The recently-formed Roy Clark Fan Club
Is headquartered at 3225 South Norwood,

Tulsa, Okla. 74135.
Fur Rlcbarcl Jobnlon, we are sorry to
say Wendy Holcombe doos not have a fan
club. She doos, however, have a new road
show which Includes a five-piece band and
a rehearsal studio which her Dad recently
built behind their Alabaster, Alabama,
home!
For our many Elvia Presley fan-readers,
you might mark your calendar for the
week of August 12·16th. The Cook Convention Center In Memphis has been booked
for one week for the next ten years for the
presentation of an annual Presley Festival.
This year wUllnclude performances by
T.G. Sbeppard, Carl Perklna, Jerry Lee
lAwla, Merle Hagard, J.D. Sumller and ._
Tile 8~ Tile Jordanalrea, Cbarlle McCoy, Narvel Felta, Dickey Lee and the Bill
Blaet Combo.
Dee Wa'- Is In charge of the brandnew fan club for 818 AI Dcnnllna, 302
North 8th, Comanche, Okl11. 73529. Another
Oklahoma-based (an club Is that for Linda
Fa,. Durbin, with lllldred Copeland In
charge. Box 111, Temple, Okla. 73368.
8a1'bara Dailtells president for Joe
Hoi'-'• club, P.O. Box 17, Holstein,
NebraSka 66950. Bob Homan'• number one
fan and club president Is Marty WhUe, Rt.
2, Box 350, Yakima, Wash. 98908.
And Buck ow-• president Is Dorte
Sto¥111, 2132 Four Mile Road, N.E ., Grand
Raplda, Mich. 49505, currently working
bard to flhallze plans for Buck'a breakfast
with club members during Fan Fair week
In NuhvUle.
Remember to keep those cards and lettM!Q4itlrtglbl ll 't t'Hr ~ l , ,
t
1

.e•••••••• A4\.• .,._........,¥.. _ . . .....

_. ..........._ _
cm
....

~u

P.R. Rop . Mao Boron Axton (615) 12•·••12
P.roonal Managomont: Country Sounds (106) 172·7223
Kolll Warron fan Club: lox 615
Lamooa , TX 79331

._.. ,..,.. ro_,.,. • • ~ ..-, ._,..~,.,. 'l .,,. ... .. .,.....,.r•• •·•

. ___...

.... .

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

�Nllhvllle,

Patriarch Of Music Form

to play to people, you love to get on the
road and go to some town where you think
that they're really wanting you there. It
makes you feel good ."
" Buzz," the telephone interrupts.
" Monroe talent," Bill answer s. " It's at.
ah, I bel ieve the Ashev ille Auditoriu m.
Where are you callin g from ? I pause I Well
1 don 't think you'll have any trouble findi ng it. l pause l I believe so I pause !
You're welcome'"
Monroe cradles the phone
' 'T hat wa s from Alberton , Ga They 're
comi ng up thi s Sat urday ni ght and they

Bill Monroe Goes
About The Business
Of Bluegrass Music ·
By LEE RECTOR
It is 10 a. m. A sharp buzz snaps through
the si lence of an empty office. A bu tton on
the telephone is bl inkin g. No one answe r s.
Getting in touch with Bill Monroe dur·
ing business hours may lake a whi le. l\o
Code-a-phone no answering serrice no
wa' to Jcare a message If you call when
the·r ·re out. you just have to call back
B·ul. if yOt; chance to call when someone
IS in. you are likely as not lo lwar the
" Father of Bluegrass Music'' himself
answer, " Monroe Talent."
First glance around Bill Monroe's office
belies the business environment of a mat•
of influence and prom inence . The talent
agency is operated from a por table two·
room offi ce buil ding out north of Nashvill&lt;
somewhere on Dickerson Road. If he's in
to wn, you will know it. A 40·foot Golden
Eagle bus will be parked out front. Al ong
the side is painted : " Bill Monroe and the
Blue Grass Boys. "
The bus has seen some miles; but then,
so has Bill Monroe.
Monroe is the most successful man in
the business of bluegrass music . In fact, if
it wasn't for Monroe there most lilely
would not even be a "bluegrass" music as
we know it toda y . He wears his " father "
title literally.
At 68, Bill Monroe has seen to fruitation
the growth of a new musical style--most of
which he directed. Bluegrass affects the
lives of virtually everyone who listens to
radio, goes to the movies or watches
television.
Reflect a moment. When Ford wants you
to buy a pick·up truck and ,is
demonstrating how rough they are, what's
playing in the background ? Bluegrass!
That fast·food hamburger joint showing
you how quick you can rush through lun·
ch ... they punctuate it with bluegrass.
When they have a comic chase scene in
the movies, what are they two-wheeling
around corners to? Bluegrass!
Bluegrass sells! It gets people on their
feet, hand clappin', toe tappin '.
It all came about because of thi s man .
For all the accomp,lishments Bill Monroe
has amassed since his first recording ses·
slon In 1936 with brother Charlie, he one·
track mindedly went headlong into life
thinking, eating and breathing bluegrass .
From a meager beginning as a farm boy
in Kentucky, this youth would work his
way to becoming a regular member of the
Grand Ole Opry . He would foster such
musicians as Earl Scruggs, Lester Flatt,
Vassar Clements and a hundred more.
With mild determination he would take his
Appalachian·llke front-porch barn dance
music, refine it, define lt ·and carry it to
soaring heights. For his accomplishments
he would be recognized In the Country
Music Hall of Fame. And he would perfect
the bluegrass festival to make hundreds of
thousands of dollars for himself and
others.
But fancy offices, receptionists and all
that o,t her stuff-phooey! That just ain' t
bluegrass! ·
It Is this man who, looking white-haired
and dignified In his pin·strlped suit who .
speaks. "Monroe Talent," he says Into the
pbone ... "James Monroe hasn't got down

here. can you leave your number so that
he can call you back7 I pause ) Thi s is Btll
Yes sir. I 'm fine. I j ust got your album and
it rea ll y sounds good ... "
It was a bluegrass group from UJl north
calling··the Piper Hoad Spring Band Tlwv
wanted to see if they ca n get a booktng on
Monroe's fam ous Bean Rlossom Fef. ti ral
Completin g then· conversatiOn ~tonore
informs us with pride: ··Bluegrass is turn mg out to be more like a school of music
for people than anything else. and it's real
1~ come along in that "ay Its learned a lot
of people how to play
''B luegrass has advanced way on from
.the way old·time music was played) ears
ago you know .. just G. C and D is about all
they played . In bluegrass. music is all up
and down the neck . And it's give people 1n
a lot of other kinds of music help too I can
see where it s been pl aced in other peopl e's
music, country songs and p'eopl e like
that .. "
" It 's a music that they get a lot of good
out of . If you listen to it, " Bill says, " you
will hear many tones and feelings that you
wouldn 't hear in a lot of other music . The
way they do the music, the way they put
the notes in it and the way they slur from
one note to another, it just digs into a Jot of
people.
" There are a good many different ideas
in bluegrass music and different places of .
the numbers that touch different people.
Like if you was a Scotchman, or if you
come from that country, you might like the
Scotch Bagpipe sound . Or if you lived in
this country you might hear a lot of old·
til'(le fiddle music in it too. And there's
gospel in bluegrass music . There's old col·
ored blues In It, you know, and some jazz.
It's got a hard drive to it. A lot of people
like to drive. The good banjoin' and fiddledrive mandolin, it makes you want to
dance lots of times. And there' s times
when it makes you want to waltz or fox·
trot real slow like they did years ago. So
that's dug Into people and they understand
It and they want to know more about it the
more they hear it. "
The influences that are what Monroe
describes as bluegrass music today rubbed
off from years and years of traveling
thousands of miles to play dance halls,
square dances school houses and the like.
"Back in the early forties, we w.as draw·
ing good crowds. Of course, the admission
wasn't too much . But that give the people
in this-little town a chance to hear the Blue
Grass Boys and that made 'em feel good.
A lot of the old·timers that loved music,
they'd come right out there and sit all the
way through it.
"I used to work five days a week on the
road and be here &lt;Nashville) on Saturday
Ho play the Grand Ole Opry). I think we
went 11 years the first time and never·
missed a Saturday night.
"If you've got a lot of will power and
you're young, it don't hurt you. Back in
them days, you know, we traveled in a
two-seated car and tied the bass fiddle on
top. Then a little later we got a station
wagon. But, we didn't have as many
clothes back in them days to keep clean
and carry with you as you do today. If you
really love show business, If you really Ilke

'

.

.

.

want to know where we're playing ..
It 's evident that. alt ho.ugh Monroe
sometimes might seem aloof from making
infrequent eye·contact in conversation. he
~cnui n cly cares for "the peop le" · hi s audtcnccs l'atienll\ he listens on the phone
to numerous left ftcld questions and pa
t1cnt!~ i:lllS\\'t'r~

all

~Ja'akmg

w1th ('H'ryone·

"ho calls
"Back wh&lt;•n I was !OUng," Bill CO•lfldS.
"I had an awful temper. Of COlll'S&lt;' hack in
them days pt•ople "as different from what
thev are toda' . The\ dtdn't ·- the language
thei' used wa; much better You know
what I mean .. clcaner They didn't cuss you
all the time . That 's somcthmg I n&lt;'\'er
believed in I was raised never to take that
stuff ..
But. Monroe admits. tlw years hare
mellowed hi s temper some" hdt
Buzz~

"Monroe Talent... Hello' James hasn't
got down ye t. Alri ght. Yes sir . Yeah. pret ty good . OK , fin e. He' ll be in tomorrow.
Yeah , fine. OK . do th at 1 "
Monroe humbly admits that he presentl y
is the only bluegra ss recording artist in the
country on a major record label. Even
though bluegrass music has proven " com mercial " time after time for sales jingles
and background music , bluegrass hits are
few and far between .
Monroe's stream of bluegrass hits came
years ago when such tunes as " Muleskin ner Blues," "B lue Moon of Kentucky, "
"Footprints In The Snow," "Uncle Pen,"
and others were big sellers. His current
MCA albums, mostl y Bean Blossom
Festival specials, are about the only
bluegrass product that is widely
distributed to record stores . Most other
bluegr,ass records are found in speciality
shops, sold through the mail or by the
musicians themselves at appearances.
It conserns Monroe that more bluegrass
music is not played on the- radio . He thinks
increased radio exposure of the music
would increase public demand and
therefore more bluegrass acts would be
recording for major companies .
"Here's the way that I look at music."
Monroe gazes straight ahead and frowns .
"I' m by all music the same way . Let's say
that you were going to church and they
wouldn't let a lot of people come in if they
belonged to another denomination. Well
that wouldn't be right. It should be free to
anybody that wants to come there, as long
as they 're the right kind of people ... as long
as they're decent and they act right. The
church should help anybody . I think the
Lord would want all the churches to do that.
"So I think if it's a radio station, because
they play top 40 all the time, they shouldn't
shun a good gospel quartet. There's a
percentage there that would like to hear
some good gospel singing. Well there's a
percentage that would like to hear some
bluegrass. So I think that if I owned a
radio station I would lean a little bit to
everybody-to all different kinds of music .
"I like the blues as well as any kind of
music. I like gospeL I like western swing-Bob Wills' stuff. You couldn't throw that
aside. I would play some bluegrass. 1
wouldn' t play it 24 hours a day, but I would
play some of it ... let people know that I

knew something about bluegrass and 1
respected it. The same about gospel music.
Caj un music ... ! think they should be
played ."
·
Buzz '
" Monroe Talent. James hasn't got
around , who 's speaking? Yeah . E rn ie
Ashworth . E rni e, I called you earl ier toda '
and I 've been wailing for James to get ·
down. I don' t kn ow, he's been tied up all
day. Yes sir. I 'm sure he's going to be ,11
the office tomorrow. You getting along
alr ight' I was askin g Howd y Forrester.
have you hea rd anything about Ralph
Sloan .. how he's getting along? He dtd gn
home7 I didn 'l kn ow that. Wel l. that' s
good . Ernie, we' ll call you tomorro"
around two o'c lock "
Monroe hangs up.
Bill \\as concerned about the conrllltlln '·'
Halph Sloan. the leader of the Grand ft,,
Opry square dance team the Tennessec•
Travelers. I Sloan would d.ie the next da1·
Bill expresses sad ness at the fa ct thai ,·,,
many greal countr; entertamers have dtt
over the past few years
" It seem like in the last tO years lht'll',
been a good many of them that ha'e lell.
Monroe offers "People likP Jimmie Skin
ncr and Lester Flatt . Red Smiley he pas'
ed away and Chu bby Anthony . he "as
ftddler. you know."
The reflection naturally took us to a t1nw
when Bil l Monroe will no longer be around
to carry the lead in bluegrass music.
"That 's go in g to come, you kn ow ." Bill
promises. " And I just hope there' ll be
some people ... take James Monroe, or a lot
of these young entertainers or some of the
old-timers still hanging around . I hope
they will stand up for what 's right and
play the music as pure as they can pl ay it
:or the people . There's one thing that I
hope : that the people when the time
comes, that there will be somebody that
will get in there and will hang on and do it
right...someone that's got a lot of will
power and can get things done." &lt;Monroe's
daughter, Melissa , has also recorded . I
Evening was coming around and Monroe
began to think about getting back to
his farm, a place whj!re he says he can
take off the "role " of Bill Monroe. the
legend, and put on the " clothes" of Bill
Monroe, the farmer.
"I love .to go there and loaf around , you
know," he informs. I don't care how hard
the work is, or how great it is.. if it's plow·
ing or anything like that. I do it myself. I
love mother nature and I love the iay oi
the land .
"I watch everyday for the sunset."
Monroe smiles as the sunset reflects in his
glasses . " I 've always done that. I love the
sunset. You know, it's different every day.
It always has a different set."
The image brought to mind one of
Monroe's favorite moments, when. at the
end of his great Bean Blossom Festival , he
calls all the entertainers onstage for a
grand finale. Sometimes 100 or more musi·
clans are standing there with their string·
ed Instruments ringing like a bluegrass or·
chestra through the woods.
"I really think the Lord would be proud
of that," Bill offers. "I know that the music
touches a Jot of people and they love it.
They know it's coming down to the closing
of the festival and It's always klnda touch·
ed me, because maybe you're going one
direction and maybe somebody else will go
to Texas or Oklahoma, just having to go
all directions to get back home. Really,
you don't know whether you're going to see
a lot of them or not agatn. It's always
touched me.!'
As the sun dropped behind tile Goodlett·
sville, Tenn. , hills, Blll Monroe was leavIng his modest office and stepping into his
pickup truck for home. Another day of
business has come to an end.

1910

Monroe•s
Mandolin Is
Also Legendary
, Bill Monroe's favorite mandolin has
sure "seen some miles," as he puts it, but
not all its nicks and scars and cosmetic
rough spots have come fr,om the natural
wear and tear of the road . One particular
blemtsh wa s put there. very deliberately,
Monroe himself
years ago, the mandolin , a 1923
l r;ihscm F·5. w as in bad need of r epair.
neck was was loosening, the finger·
'hn'"r'" wer e wearing, and the frets and
tuning key s were well ·past r etirement
status. The fine maple·brown finish of
the instrument was beginning to show the
Im1attracti·ve signs of constant use and In·
l comi,derate weather. Monroe decided to
with the mandolin long enough to
it off to the Gibson factory, where it
could be repaired .
After foregoing the use of his favorite
I instt"ument while it was in the hands of
Gibson repairmen, Monroe was more
slightly upset when the instrument
back to him only partially mended .
next had been tightened up, but the
finish, tuners, and fingerboard
exactly as Monroe had sent them .
they didn't care no more about my in·
lstrument or me that that.. .. well, it just
me up," Monroe said. "That was
a good mandolin . It really agm e." So much, in fact, that
IMcmrcw&gt; took a pocketknife and chlsled
the Gibson name from the instru·
's headstock.
And that's exactly the way the man·
remained : with a weather-beaten
worn-out parts,and a headstock
a rough-hewn carved-out hole where
Gibson logo once was . Monroe
ltinued to use the instrument, but his days
endorsing Gibson were, at least for the
over.
Recently, Monroe was approached b~
!Gibscm with a make·good offer to refur·
his mandolin and make the needed
oretoaurs that they had neglected the first
A little begrudging at first, Monroe
lflnallv agreed. His F-5 will soon be rethe Gibson factory for a .comfacelift.
"I'm glad that It's come down to this,"
he said, "that things can be right between me and Gibson. You don't IJAtnll
anything by being on the outs.
know I've sold . a lot of instruments
IGI'bson."
Monroe's F-5 mandolin has
been his favorite, even when It was
ing for repair. "I' don't think any
company could put out a mandolin
good," he said. "There's not a m:am:lolllnl
I've ever had that could touch It In
way. 1 never played a better mandolin
my life."

�Nllhvllle,

Patriarch Of Music Form

to play to people, you love to get on the
road and go to some town where you think
that they're really wanting you there. It
makes you feel good ."
" Buzz," the telephone interrupts.
" Monroe talent," Bill answer s. " It's at.
ah, I bel ieve the Ashev ille Auditoriu m.
Where are you callin g from ? I pause I Well
1 don 't think you'll have any trouble findi ng it. l pause l I believe so I pause !
You're welcome'"
Monroe cradles the phone
' 'T hat wa s from Alberton , Ga They 're
comi ng up thi s Sat urday ni ght and they

Bill Monroe Goes
About The Business
Of Bluegrass Music ·
By LEE RECTOR
It is 10 a. m. A sharp buzz snaps through
the si lence of an empty office. A bu tton on
the telephone is bl inkin g. No one answe r s.
Getting in touch with Bill Monroe dur·
ing business hours may lake a whi le. l\o
Code-a-phone no answering serrice no
wa' to Jcare a message If you call when
the·r ·re out. you just have to call back
B·ul. if yOt; chance to call when someone
IS in. you are likely as not lo lwar the
" Father of Bluegrass Music'' himself
answer, " Monroe Talent."
First glance around Bill Monroe's office
belies the business environment of a mat•
of influence and prom inence . The talent
agency is operated from a por table two·
room offi ce buil ding out north of Nashvill&lt;
somewhere on Dickerson Road. If he's in
to wn, you will know it. A 40·foot Golden
Eagle bus will be parked out front. Al ong
the side is painted : " Bill Monroe and the
Blue Grass Boys. "
The bus has seen some miles; but then,
so has Bill Monroe.
Monroe is the most successful man in
the business of bluegrass music . In fact, if
it wasn't for Monroe there most lilely
would not even be a "bluegrass" music as
we know it toda y . He wears his " father "
title literally.
At 68, Bill Monroe has seen to fruitation
the growth of a new musical style--most of
which he directed. Bluegrass affects the
lives of virtually everyone who listens to
radio, goes to the movies or watches
television.
Reflect a moment. When Ford wants you
to buy a pick·up truck and ,is
demonstrating how rough they are, what's
playing in the background ? Bluegrass!
That fast·food hamburger joint showing
you how quick you can rush through lun·
ch ... they punctuate it with bluegrass.
When they have a comic chase scene in
the movies, what are they two-wheeling
around corners to? Bluegrass!
Bluegrass sells! It gets people on their
feet, hand clappin', toe tappin '.
It all came about because of thi s man .
For all the accomp,lishments Bill Monroe
has amassed since his first recording ses·
slon In 1936 with brother Charlie, he one·
track mindedly went headlong into life
thinking, eating and breathing bluegrass .
From a meager beginning as a farm boy
in Kentucky, this youth would work his
way to becoming a regular member of the
Grand Ole Opry . He would foster such
musicians as Earl Scruggs, Lester Flatt,
Vassar Clements and a hundred more.
With mild determination he would take his
Appalachian·llke front-porch barn dance
music, refine it, define lt ·and carry it to
soaring heights. For his accomplishments
he would be recognized In the Country
Music Hall of Fame. And he would perfect
the bluegrass festival to make hundreds of
thousands of dollars for himself and
others.
But fancy offices, receptionists and all
that o,t her stuff-phooey! That just ain' t
bluegrass! ·
It Is this man who, looking white-haired
and dignified In his pin·strlped suit who .
speaks. "Monroe Talent," he says Into the
pbone ... "James Monroe hasn't got down

here. can you leave your number so that
he can call you back7 I pause ) Thi s is Btll
Yes sir. I 'm fine. I j ust got your album and
it rea ll y sounds good ... "
It was a bluegrass group from UJl north
calling··the Piper Hoad Spring Band Tlwv
wanted to see if they ca n get a booktng on
Monroe's fam ous Bean Rlossom Fef. ti ral
Completin g then· conversatiOn ~tonore
informs us with pride: ··Bluegrass is turn mg out to be more like a school of music
for people than anything else. and it's real
1~ come along in that "ay Its learned a lot
of people how to play
''B luegrass has advanced way on from
.the way old·time music was played) ears
ago you know .. just G. C and D is about all
they played . In bluegrass. music is all up
and down the neck . And it's give people 1n
a lot of other kinds of music help too I can
see where it s been pl aced in other peopl e's
music, country songs and p'eopl e like
that .. "
" It 's a music that they get a lot of good
out of . If you listen to it, " Bill says, " you
will hear many tones and feelings that you
wouldn 't hear in a lot of other music . The
way they do the music, the way they put
the notes in it and the way they slur from
one note to another, it just digs into a Jot of
people.
" There are a good many different ideas
in bluegrass music and different places of .
the numbers that touch different people.
Like if you was a Scotchman, or if you
come from that country, you might like the
Scotch Bagpipe sound . Or if you lived in
this country you might hear a lot of old·
til'(le fiddle music in it too. And there's
gospel in bluegrass music . There's old col·
ored blues In It, you know, and some jazz.
It's got a hard drive to it. A lot of people
like to drive. The good banjoin' and fiddledrive mandolin, it makes you want to
dance lots of times. And there' s times
when it makes you want to waltz or fox·
trot real slow like they did years ago. So
that's dug Into people and they understand
It and they want to know more about it the
more they hear it. "
The influences that are what Monroe
describes as bluegrass music today rubbed
off from years and years of traveling
thousands of miles to play dance halls,
square dances school houses and the like.
"Back in the early forties, we w.as draw·
ing good crowds. Of course, the admission
wasn't too much . But that give the people
in this-little town a chance to hear the Blue
Grass Boys and that made 'em feel good.
A lot of the old·timers that loved music,
they'd come right out there and sit all the
way through it.
"I used to work five days a week on the
road and be here &lt;Nashville) on Saturday
Ho play the Grand Ole Opry). I think we
went 11 years the first time and never·
missed a Saturday night.
"If you've got a lot of will power and
you're young, it don't hurt you. Back in
them days, you know, we traveled in a
two-seated car and tied the bass fiddle on
top. Then a little later we got a station
wagon. But, we didn't have as many
clothes back in them days to keep clean
and carry with you as you do today. If you
really love show business, If you really Ilke

'

.

.

.

want to know where we're playing ..
It 's evident that. alt ho.ugh Monroe
sometimes might seem aloof from making
infrequent eye·contact in conversation. he
~cnui n cly cares for "the peop le" · hi s audtcnccs l'atienll\ he listens on the phone
to numerous left ftcld questions and pa
t1cnt!~ i:lllS\\'t'r~

all

~Ja'akmg

w1th ('H'ryone·

"ho calls
"Back wh&lt;•n I was !OUng," Bill CO•lfldS.
"I had an awful temper. Of COlll'S&lt;' hack in
them days pt•ople "as different from what
thev are toda' . The\ dtdn't ·- the language
thei' used wa; much better You know
what I mean .. clcaner They didn't cuss you
all the time . That 's somcthmg I n&lt;'\'er
believed in I was raised never to take that
stuff ..
But. Monroe admits. tlw years hare
mellowed hi s temper some" hdt
Buzz~

"Monroe Talent... Hello' James hasn't
got down ye t. Alri ght. Yes sir . Yeah. pret ty good . OK , fin e. He' ll be in tomorrow.
Yeah , fine. OK . do th at 1 "
Monroe humbly admits that he presentl y
is the only bluegra ss recording artist in the
country on a major record label. Even
though bluegrass music has proven " com mercial " time after time for sales jingles
and background music , bluegrass hits are
few and far between .
Monroe's stream of bluegrass hits came
years ago when such tunes as " Muleskin ner Blues," "B lue Moon of Kentucky, "
"Footprints In The Snow," "Uncle Pen,"
and others were big sellers. His current
MCA albums, mostl y Bean Blossom
Festival specials, are about the only
bluegrass product that is widely
distributed to record stores . Most other
bluegr,ass records are found in speciality
shops, sold through the mail or by the
musicians themselves at appearances.
It conserns Monroe that more bluegrass
music is not played on the- radio . He thinks
increased radio exposure of the music
would increase public demand and
therefore more bluegrass acts would be
recording for major companies .
"Here's the way that I look at music."
Monroe gazes straight ahead and frowns .
"I' m by all music the same way . Let's say
that you were going to church and they
wouldn't let a lot of people come in if they
belonged to another denomination. Well
that wouldn't be right. It should be free to
anybody that wants to come there, as long
as they 're the right kind of people ... as long
as they're decent and they act right. The
church should help anybody . I think the
Lord would want all the churches to do that.
"So I think if it's a radio station, because
they play top 40 all the time, they shouldn't
shun a good gospel quartet. There's a
percentage there that would like to hear
some good gospel singing. Well there's a
percentage that would like to hear some
bluegrass. So I think that if I owned a
radio station I would lean a little bit to
everybody-to all different kinds of music .
"I like the blues as well as any kind of
music. I like gospeL I like western swing-Bob Wills' stuff. You couldn't throw that
aside. I would play some bluegrass. 1
wouldn' t play it 24 hours a day, but I would
play some of it ... let people know that I

knew something about bluegrass and 1
respected it. The same about gospel music.
Caj un music ... ! think they should be
played ."
·
Buzz '
" Monroe Talent. James hasn't got
around , who 's speaking? Yeah . E rn ie
Ashworth . E rni e, I called you earl ier toda '
and I 've been wailing for James to get ·
down. I don' t kn ow, he's been tied up all
day. Yes sir. I 'm sure he's going to be ,11
the office tomorrow. You getting along
alr ight' I was askin g Howd y Forrester.
have you hea rd anything about Ralph
Sloan .. how he's getting along? He dtd gn
home7 I didn 'l kn ow that. Wel l. that' s
good . Ernie, we' ll call you tomorro"
around two o'c lock "
Monroe hangs up.
Bill \\as concerned about the conrllltlln '·'
Halph Sloan. the leader of the Grand ft,,
Opry square dance team the Tennessec•
Travelers. I Sloan would d.ie the next da1·
Bill expresses sad ness at the fa ct thai ,·,,
many greal countr; entertamers have dtt
over the past few years
" It seem like in the last tO years lht'll',
been a good many of them that ha'e lell.
Monroe offers "People likP Jimmie Skin
ncr and Lester Flatt . Red Smiley he pas'
ed away and Chu bby Anthony . he "as
ftddler. you know."
The reflection naturally took us to a t1nw
when Bil l Monroe will no longer be around
to carry the lead in bluegrass music.
"That 's go in g to come, you kn ow ." Bill
promises. " And I just hope there' ll be
some people ... take James Monroe, or a lot
of these young entertainers or some of the
old-timers still hanging around . I hope
they will stand up for what 's right and
play the music as pure as they can pl ay it
:or the people . There's one thing that I
hope : that the people when the time
comes, that there will be somebody that
will get in there and will hang on and do it
right...someone that's got a lot of will
power and can get things done." &lt;Monroe's
daughter, Melissa , has also recorded . I
Evening was coming around and Monroe
began to think about getting back to
his farm, a place whj!re he says he can
take off the "role " of Bill Monroe. the
legend, and put on the " clothes" of Bill
Monroe, the farmer.
"I love .to go there and loaf around , you
know," he informs. I don't care how hard
the work is, or how great it is.. if it's plow·
ing or anything like that. I do it myself. I
love mother nature and I love the iay oi
the land .
"I watch everyday for the sunset."
Monroe smiles as the sunset reflects in his
glasses . " I 've always done that. I love the
sunset. You know, it's different every day.
It always has a different set."
The image brought to mind one of
Monroe's favorite moments, when. at the
end of his great Bean Blossom Festival , he
calls all the entertainers onstage for a
grand finale. Sometimes 100 or more musi·
clans are standing there with their string·
ed Instruments ringing like a bluegrass or·
chestra through the woods.
"I really think the Lord would be proud
of that," Bill offers. "I know that the music
touches a Jot of people and they love it.
They know it's coming down to the closing
of the festival and It's always klnda touch·
ed me, because maybe you're going one
direction and maybe somebody else will go
to Texas or Oklahoma, just having to go
all directions to get back home. Really,
you don't know whether you're going to see
a lot of them or not agatn. It's always
touched me.!'
As the sun dropped behind tile Goodlett·
sville, Tenn. , hills, Blll Monroe was leavIng his modest office and stepping into his
pickup truck for home. Another day of
business has come to an end.

1910

Monroe•s
Mandolin Is
Also Legendary
, Bill Monroe's favorite mandolin has
sure "seen some miles," as he puts it, but
not all its nicks and scars and cosmetic
rough spots have come fr,om the natural
wear and tear of the road . One particular
blemtsh wa s put there. very deliberately,
Monroe himself
years ago, the mandolin , a 1923
l r;ihscm F·5. w as in bad need of r epair.
neck was was loosening, the finger·
'hn'"r'" wer e wearing, and the frets and
tuning key s were well ·past r etirement
status. The fine maple·brown finish of
the instrument was beginning to show the
Im1attracti·ve signs of constant use and In·
l comi,derate weather. Monroe decided to
with the mandolin long enough to
it off to the Gibson factory, where it
could be repaired .
After foregoing the use of his favorite
I instt"ument while it was in the hands of
Gibson repairmen, Monroe was more
slightly upset when the instrument
back to him only partially mended .
next had been tightened up, but the
finish, tuners, and fingerboard
exactly as Monroe had sent them .
they didn't care no more about my in·
lstrument or me that that.. .. well, it just
me up," Monroe said. "That was
a good mandolin . It really agm e." So much, in fact, that
IMcmrcw&gt; took a pocketknife and chlsled
the Gibson name from the instru·
's headstock.
And that's exactly the way the man·
remained : with a weather-beaten
worn-out parts,and a headstock
a rough-hewn carved-out hole where
Gibson logo once was . Monroe
ltinued to use the instrument, but his days
endorsing Gibson were, at least for the
over.
Recently, Monroe was approached b~
!Gibscm with a make·good offer to refur·
his mandolin and make the needed
oretoaurs that they had neglected the first
A little begrudging at first, Monroe
lflnallv agreed. His F-5 will soon be rethe Gibson factory for a .comfacelift.
"I'm glad that It's come down to this,"
he said, "that things can be right between me and Gibson. You don't IJAtnll
anything by being on the outs.
know I've sold . a lot of instruments
IGI'bson."
Monroe's F-5 mandolin has
been his favorite, even when It was
ing for repair. "I' don't think any
company could put out a mandolin
good," he said. "There's not a m:am:lolllnl
I've ever had that could touch It In
way. 1 never played a better mandolin
my life."

�P10111. MUSIC CITY NEWS

Nllllvllltt TenrtiiiM. Aprll,1910

MUSIC CITY NEWS, P101 It

'Alabama' Is
·Hot New Group
When Texas real estate broker Larry
McBride heard the group Alabama, he
decided to go Into the record business.
After forming MDJ Records, he signed the
group to his label, and watched as their
first song, "My Home's In Alabama,"
became a hit right off the bat. Alabama, a
lour-man country act that hails from the
blue skies-and-surf climes of Myrtle
· Beach, S.C., is comprised of Teddy Gentry
(bass guitar), Randy Owen &lt;guitar), Jeff
Cook &lt;guitar, keyboards, and fiddle), and
Mark Herdon (drums). All four sing and
write. Herdon, from New Hampshire, is a
late addition to the native Alabama trio of
Gentry, Owen, and Cook, who for six years
have headlined at the Bowery Club in Myr·
tie Beach. The group is currently
crisscrossing the country with personal ap·
pearances on the success of their hit
release, which is rather unique among
country singles in its six-minute-plus
length. Alabama has appeared in concert
with Don Williams, the Oak Ridge Boys,
Bobby Bare, Jerry Lee Lewis, and the
Kendalls, as well as other country
notables.
As a working daughter in a west TenAlabama
nessee tobacco farming family, Annie
McGowan grew up without many of the
modern conveniences that were commonplace in more urban environments.
But, Annie says thankfully, at least there
was plenty of music. Annie got her musical
st~rt by playing piano at her hometown
church services, and later, at the age of 12,
she formed a trio with two of her cousins
. that sung their way to a slot as featured
regulars on WPTR-Parls (Tenn.) radio
program . In 1954, the trio attracted the attention of a talent scout for the Junior
Grand Ole Opry TV show, who promptly
gave them a spot on the program . Annie
left home for some dues·payin' bluessingin' on Memphis' Beale St. and other
locations throughout the South and West.
She now lives in Nashville with her husband and two children . Cited as the most
Ada Collins
original performer at last year's Jimmie
Rodgers Festival In Meridan, Miss. (She
sang one song with an acoustic guitar and
no sound equipment ), Annie also wears
the distinction of being the first woman to
headline at Nashville's Bluegrass Inn. She
frequently teams with dobro maestro Josh
Graves for country music festival appearances.
Ten years separate brothers Mike and
Mitch O'Roark, but when it comes to
music, they're together all the way. The
O'Rorks front a four-piece band that has
I :
been packing in appearances throughout
and beyond their home state of Missouri.
Mitch, who plays bass guitar,, and Mike,
who plays lead, are both self-taught musl·
The O'Rourk Brothers
Johnny Lee
clans with an up-front bias for good-time,
bluegrass and high-energy country rock .
The brothers take their show to the road
forms at Gospel sings, on telethons, and for
Currently Keith has out an album which
during the summer months, and are con·
church services. She also appears on a
was co-produced by Harold Bradley and
Sunday morning television program
sidering the addition of strings and back·
Scotty Turner. Whitman, who has done
up vocals to their performances. They
wither daughter, Flo Carter, and a group
several of his son's songs and calls him "a
have been audience favorites at clubs and
called the Sounds of Joy. She has never
good songwriter," reports that Keith sings
missed a performance or a recording ses·
sta te fait from the East Coast to the West.
a bit higher than he does and tends to lean
" I had wanted to be an entertainer since I
slon, and she cit.es jumping rope, practlcmore toward contemporary music.
was six years old;" said Mike, the eldest at ing yoga, jogging, working out at a health
A tornado which destroyed their home
'2 " I remember when I was in the second
spa, and the grace of God as prime factors
and most of their possessions prompted
grade, my teacher sent hom e a report card
in her long and healthy career. " You never .the Harding Family to leave Texas and
get older, just better, and there's nothing
that sai d: 'Mike 's a born entertainer. He
relocate north of Nashville In White House,
should be looking along those lines for a
you can't do," she said .
Tenn . Although their homesite changed,
career---but not in my classroom .' I still
23-year-old Byron Keith balances
the Hardings continued to play their craft
scholastic duties at Florida 's Jacksonville
have that report card ."
as a musical family ministry/ entertainAda Colltns says that she doesn't feel a
University ith a budding career as a
ment act, making numerous presentations
day over twenty, but she may. very well be · singer/ songwriter. The son of country
at revivals, youth camps, banquets, and
veteran Slim Whitman, Keith accompanied
among the oldest gospel guitarists In the
boys' clubs. Chuck Harding, his wife
business. Lovingly dubbed "Groovy Granhis father for the last two years on tours of
Oneda, daughter Teresa and son
ny" by some of her younger fans, ColliJUefl Llillllll&amp;nll~m-weg P.l\ \ll~-9'K~n 1md.c.r ( c l«;.lt.ariii!J.P~Iizt: a Vjl£1ety qf mus.i~al.ill·, .
is a great-grandmother that reg~woo~ , ,,"'~In ~y~ ltlllllfl41 ~Wili!n llllC~ ,, 1 s!li\11'\~~dlJII! .\1~ Pl!PPCts. \ll,I.\J~iJ ,sllqw.

fact:
"I never thought such a
rugged microphone
could sound this great"!
Record Plant
Studios, N.Y.C.
David Hewitt
Director of Remote Recording
"When we record a live concert, we have
just one chance to get every bit of music on
tape .. . perfectly. That's why it's essential that
every piece of equipment give outstanding
performance, even in unpredictable
situations that result in equipment being
called upon to serve above and beyond the
call of duty.
"Our mobile units follow a string of
one-nighters from New York to California,
with set-up and take-downs every step of the
way. There isn't a microphone in the world
that's too rugged for that kind of assignment.
The Shure SM81 has proven itself time
and time again as an incredibly reliable
condenser microphone. In fact, we once
accidentally dragged an SM81 over 400 feet
on a wire catwalk ... and it still performed
perfectly!
"But, what really blew me away was the
SM81's superb sound . Its ,exceptionally flat
frequency response makes it our first choice
for uncompromising acoustical guitar
applications: and, the wide dynamic range
and ultra-low distortion make it perfect for
brass and percussion instruments as well.
"We count on Shure to make certain our
remote facilities give dependably high
performance. With the kind of custom·
designed, state-of-the-art equipment we've
got in our vans, we wouldn't settle for
less-than-the-best microphone on stage!"

a

II"'

--:jf
...,,_

SM81 Cardioid
Condenser Microphone

Hardin«'• background In the music
business Includes songwrlting credits for
Johnny Cub, Hank Thompson, Rosa Lee
and the Carter Sisters. He was also a
member of Pete Pyle's Mississippi Valley
Boys .
31 -year-old Johnny l.ee will be opening
up a new ca reer door when he makes In
debut film appearance in the upcoming
"Urban Cowboy ." l.ee also donated two
original songs to the movie's soundtrack.
For the past several years Lee has been
featured as opening act and lead guitarist
for Mickey Gilley's road and club show.
and he has lately been working on several
recording projects at Gilley ' s Pasadena,
Texas, studios . He is managed by
Sherwood Cryer.

SM81 Cardioid Condenser Microphone

SHURE
The Sound of the Professionals

0

I

{I

I

®

t

• ,

~

_ , •• • .,

"&lt;•: .

Shure Brothers Inc., 222 Hartrey Aw.: Evanston, llj 6020~ 1fil'G8riildlil A!O. S""mbnds llo"&amp;ll11il.imited I l• • ' · ' 1 1 "' .,·,11·' ., no' to
Outside the u.s. or Cahada, write toShure•Broth&amp;iS lnl:., Attn: Dilllt?J6 fbt lmornliltlbllbh'your lbbir·Stlure di!ltlibllfor.,J 1 ·- F t• " r'••H•r·ml1~-J"~ cp/'
Manufacturers of high fidelity components, microphones, sound systems and related circuitry.

�P10111. MUSIC CITY NEWS

Nllllvllltt TenrtiiiM. Aprll,1910

MUSIC CITY NEWS, P101 It

'Alabama' Is
·Hot New Group
When Texas real estate broker Larry
McBride heard the group Alabama, he
decided to go Into the record business.
After forming MDJ Records, he signed the
group to his label, and watched as their
first song, "My Home's In Alabama,"
became a hit right off the bat. Alabama, a
lour-man country act that hails from the
blue skies-and-surf climes of Myrtle
· Beach, S.C., is comprised of Teddy Gentry
(bass guitar), Randy Owen &lt;guitar), Jeff
Cook &lt;guitar, keyboards, and fiddle), and
Mark Herdon (drums). All four sing and
write. Herdon, from New Hampshire, is a
late addition to the native Alabama trio of
Gentry, Owen, and Cook, who for six years
have headlined at the Bowery Club in Myr·
tie Beach. The group is currently
crisscrossing the country with personal ap·
pearances on the success of their hit
release, which is rather unique among
country singles in its six-minute-plus
length. Alabama has appeared in concert
with Don Williams, the Oak Ridge Boys,
Bobby Bare, Jerry Lee Lewis, and the
Kendalls, as well as other country
notables.
As a working daughter in a west TenAlabama
nessee tobacco farming family, Annie
McGowan grew up without many of the
modern conveniences that were commonplace in more urban environments.
But, Annie says thankfully, at least there
was plenty of music. Annie got her musical
st~rt by playing piano at her hometown
church services, and later, at the age of 12,
she formed a trio with two of her cousins
. that sung their way to a slot as featured
regulars on WPTR-Parls (Tenn.) radio
program . In 1954, the trio attracted the attention of a talent scout for the Junior
Grand Ole Opry TV show, who promptly
gave them a spot on the program . Annie
left home for some dues·payin' bluessingin' on Memphis' Beale St. and other
locations throughout the South and West.
She now lives in Nashville with her husband and two children . Cited as the most
Ada Collins
original performer at last year's Jimmie
Rodgers Festival In Meridan, Miss. (She
sang one song with an acoustic guitar and
no sound equipment ), Annie also wears
the distinction of being the first woman to
headline at Nashville's Bluegrass Inn. She
frequently teams with dobro maestro Josh
Graves for country music festival appearances.
Ten years separate brothers Mike and
Mitch O'Roark, but when it comes to
music, they're together all the way. The
O'Rorks front a four-piece band that has
I :
been packing in appearances throughout
and beyond their home state of Missouri.
Mitch, who plays bass guitar,, and Mike,
who plays lead, are both self-taught musl·
The O'Rourk Brothers
Johnny Lee
clans with an up-front bias for good-time,
bluegrass and high-energy country rock .
The brothers take their show to the road
forms at Gospel sings, on telethons, and for
Currently Keith has out an album which
during the summer months, and are con·
church services. She also appears on a
was co-produced by Harold Bradley and
Sunday morning television program
sidering the addition of strings and back·
Scotty Turner. Whitman, who has done
up vocals to their performances. They
wither daughter, Flo Carter, and a group
several of his son's songs and calls him "a
have been audience favorites at clubs and
called the Sounds of Joy. She has never
good songwriter," reports that Keith sings
missed a performance or a recording ses·
sta te fait from the East Coast to the West.
a bit higher than he does and tends to lean
" I had wanted to be an entertainer since I
slon, and she cit.es jumping rope, practlcmore toward contemporary music.
was six years old;" said Mike, the eldest at ing yoga, jogging, working out at a health
A tornado which destroyed their home
'2 " I remember when I was in the second
spa, and the grace of God as prime factors
and most of their possessions prompted
grade, my teacher sent hom e a report card
in her long and healthy career. " You never .the Harding Family to leave Texas and
get older, just better, and there's nothing
that sai d: 'Mike 's a born entertainer. He
relocate north of Nashville In White House,
should be looking along those lines for a
you can't do," she said .
Tenn . Although their homesite changed,
career---but not in my classroom .' I still
23-year-old Byron Keith balances
the Hardings continued to play their craft
scholastic duties at Florida 's Jacksonville
have that report card ."
as a musical family ministry/ entertainAda Colltns says that she doesn't feel a
University ith a budding career as a
ment act, making numerous presentations
day over twenty, but she may. very well be · singer/ songwriter. The son of country
at revivals, youth camps, banquets, and
veteran Slim Whitman, Keith accompanied
among the oldest gospel guitarists In the
boys' clubs. Chuck Harding, his wife
business. Lovingly dubbed "Groovy Granhis father for the last two years on tours of
Oneda, daughter Teresa and son
ny" by some of her younger fans, ColliJUefl Llillllll&amp;nll~m-weg P.l\ \ll~-9'K~n 1md.c.r ( c l«;.lt.ariii!J.P~Iizt: a Vjl£1ety qf mus.i~al.ill·, .
is a great-grandmother that reg~woo~ , ,,"'~In ~y~ ltlllllfl41 ~Wili!n llllC~ ,, 1 s!li\11'\~~dlJII! .\1~ Pl!PPCts. \ll,I.\J~iJ ,sllqw.

fact:
"I never thought such a
rugged microphone
could sound this great"!
Record Plant
Studios, N.Y.C.
David Hewitt
Director of Remote Recording
"When we record a live concert, we have
just one chance to get every bit of music on
tape .. . perfectly. That's why it's essential that
every piece of equipment give outstanding
performance, even in unpredictable
situations that result in equipment being
called upon to serve above and beyond the
call of duty.
"Our mobile units follow a string of
one-nighters from New York to California,
with set-up and take-downs every step of the
way. There isn't a microphone in the world
that's too rugged for that kind of assignment.
The Shure SM81 has proven itself time
and time again as an incredibly reliable
condenser microphone. In fact, we once
accidentally dragged an SM81 over 400 feet
on a wire catwalk ... and it still performed
perfectly!
"But, what really blew me away was the
SM81's superb sound . Its ,exceptionally flat
frequency response makes it our first choice
for uncompromising acoustical guitar
applications: and, the wide dynamic range
and ultra-low distortion make it perfect for
brass and percussion instruments as well.
"We count on Shure to make certain our
remote facilities give dependably high
performance. With the kind of custom·
designed, state-of-the-art equipment we've
got in our vans, we wouldn't settle for
less-than-the-best microphone on stage!"

a

II"'

--:jf
...,,_

SM81 Cardioid
Condenser Microphone

Hardin«'• background In the music
business Includes songwrlting credits for
Johnny Cub, Hank Thompson, Rosa Lee
and the Carter Sisters. He was also a
member of Pete Pyle's Mississippi Valley
Boys .
31 -year-old Johnny l.ee will be opening
up a new ca reer door when he makes In
debut film appearance in the upcoming
"Urban Cowboy ." l.ee also donated two
original songs to the movie's soundtrack.
For the past several years Lee has been
featured as opening act and lead guitarist
for Mickey Gilley's road and club show.
and he has lately been working on several
recording projects at Gilley ' s Pasadena,
Texas, studios . He is managed by
Sherwood Cryer.

SM81 Cardioid Condenser Microphone

SHURE
The Sound of the Professionals

0

I

{I

I

®

t

• ,

~

_ , •• • .,

"&lt;•: .

Shure Brothers Inc., 222 Hartrey Aw.: Evanston, llj 6020~ 1fil'G8riildlil A!O. S""mbnds llo"&amp;ll11il.imited I l• • ' · ' 1 1 "' .,·,11·' ., no' to
Outside the u.s. or Cahada, write toShure•Broth&amp;iS lnl:., Attn: Dilllt?J6 fbt lmornliltlbllbh'your lbbir·Stlure di!ltlibllfor.,J 1 ·- F t• " r'••H•r·ml1~-J"~ cp/'
Manufacturers of high fidelity components, microphones, sound systems and related circuitry.

�Nllll¥1111, T111.111111, April, 1911

MUSICCITYN~,P~t~~21 •

NIIIIYIIII, TlfiUIIM, April, 1911

P~g~a,MUSIC CITY NEWS

Wiseman Keeps On Road
With Bluegrass Music

Gospel Awards Are
Coming And Going
•
Nominated in the Gospel Television ProThe Gospel Music Association has
gram
category are "Gospel Singing
released the final nominations for the lith
Jubilee," " Hemphill Family Time," "PTL
annual Dove Awards, a gala program to
Club," "Rex Humbard Family Hour," and
climax Gospel Music Week's four-day ac·
tivities at Nashville;s Opryland Hotel. Win· "700 Club."
Backliner Notes nominees are Merlin
ners in the sixteen Dove categories will be
Llttlefield for "Breakout," CecUe Norcrou
annoimced following the awards banquet
for "Hallelujah Turnpike," and John Mays
March 26.
for "Promises To Keep".
Nominees in the Male Gospel Group
Graphic layout and design nominees are
category are the Cathedral Quartet, DaUas
Mlcbael
Barris for "You Make It -Rain For
Holm and Pralse,the Imperials, the
Me"
and
"It Was His Love," "Deanls Bill
Klngsmen, and the Mercy River Boys.
and
Patrick
Pollet for "Hallelujah Tum·
Nominated for Mixed Gospel Group are
Bob
McConnell
and DUI Beaty for
pike,"
Andrus Blackwood and Company, the Bill
"All
That
Matters,"
and
Bob McConnell
Galtber Trlo,the Hempbills,the Rex Nelon
for "Promises to Keep" and "Special
Singers, and the Speer FamUy.
Tunes receiving a nomination for Song of Delivery."
Cover Photo or Art nominees are Dill
the Year are "He's Alive" &lt;Don Fran·
Beaty for "Promises To Keep," Mlke
cisco), "The Highest Praise" (Cbrls
Borum for "You Make It Rain For Me,"
Waters/Jobn Randolpb Cox), " I Am Lov·
Michael Barril for "It Was His Love.''
ed" WUUam J. and Gloria Gaither), "I'm
Joba
Miller for "We Are Persuaded," and
In This Church" &lt;Joel Hempbill), "I'm
DIU
Beaty
for "From Out Of The Past."
Standing On The Solid Rock" (Harold
This
year's
inductees into the Gospel
Lane), "Praise The Lord" (Brown Ban·
Music
Hall
of
Fame will also he announced ·
nlater/Mark Hodson), "Rise Again"
at
tJ:!e
Dove
ceremony.
Nominees In the
&lt;Dallas Holm), "The Day He Wore My
living
category
are
Jolla
T. Benaoa, Jr.,
Crown" (PbU Jobnson), "What Sins Are
Ralpll
Carmichael,
Bill
Gaither,
Connor
You Talking About" &lt;Harold Lane),
Ball,
and
Joba
W.
Petenon.
Nominated
in
"Words And Music" (George
the deceased category are Clarice &lt;Ma)
Gagllardl),and "You Make It Rain For
Baxter, Da't'ld P. (Dad) Carter, Baldor
Me" (Larry Stallings).
LDleaaa, B. B. McKinne)',
Ira Sankey, and
Nominated for Gospel Record Album of
;
Tba Speacer.
the Year in the Black Gospel category are
On hand at the awards as presenters will
"Cookln" (TeddJ Bnffam), "For Tbe
be
lames Blackwood, Pat and SlllrleJ
Wrong I've Done" (WOlle Bub and tile
a-e,
the a-e Glrl1, Terry Bradshaw,
Messeagers), "It's A New Day" (James
Slllrle7
Cae11r, Cbrla Cilrlatlaa, Aadrew
Clenlud ud tile Sontllen Callfonla
CulYerweU,
DIDo and Debbie Kartaoaakll,
Coma11111t7 Cbolr), "Let Them Laugh"
HOYle
Llater,
DoWe Ralalle, Georae
(Geae Marlin), and "Love Alive II"
Beverly
Sllea,
Marljob WUkla, TODJ
&lt;Walter Bawklaa aad tile Lon Ceater
Browa,
GMA
executive
director DoD
Cllolr).
BaUer,
gospel
D.J.
Blallop
AI Bobba, BMI
Contemporary Album nominees are ''AU
vice
president
Frances
Preston,
and
That Matters" &lt;Dallas Bola aad Praise),
Maua
Music
president
Hal
Speacer.
"Cosmic Cowboy" &lt;Barr)' McGalre), "Got
Pat a-e, JleY. lamea Clneland, Dal·
To Tell Somebody" (Dell Frucllco),
las
Bola, Boae)'tree, Pllll Ke&amp;UT. Tile
"Heed The Call" &lt;'rile lmperlall), and
Klagamea, and Grad)' N.U will perform at
"My Father's Eyes" &lt;A•J Grot).
various times throughout the evening, and
Inspirational Album nominees are "It
CJDW&amp; Clawna, Rut)' Goodmaa, and
Was His Love" (CJIWa ClawiOD),
Tom Netllertea are scbeduled to each sing
"Promises To Keep" &lt;Tile Speer FamUy),
"Special DeUvery" &lt;Doag Oldllam), "The · a medley of several songs nominated 1!1
the Song of the Year category.
Very Best Of The Very Best" !Tile Bill
Gospel category awards winners in the
Galtller Trio), and "You Make It Rain For
22nd
Annual Grammy Awards, held Feb.
Me" &lt;Rut)' Goldmaa).
27
at
the Los Angeles Shrine Auditorium,
. Nominated for the Traditional album
'were
Andrae Croacll'a "I'll Be Tblnklng of
award are "Breakout" &lt;Tile Mercy Rlnr
You"
&lt;Best Soul Gospel Performance, Con·
Bo:ra&gt;, "feeUngs" (Tile Rex Jlfeitemporary),
The Imperials' "Heed The
Slagen), "Home Cookln'" (Tile B~m ·
Call"
&lt;Best
Gospel
Performance, Contem··
plltlll), "from Out of The Past" &lt;Tile
porary
or
Inspirational),
B.J. Thomas•
Klagamea), and "You Ain't Heard Nothing
"You
Gave
Me
Love
(When
Nobody Gave
Yet" (Tile Catlledral Q..rtet).
Me
A
Prayer)"
(Best
Inspirational
Per·
Gospel Album by a Secular Artist
formance),
The
Blackwood
Brotlaera'
"LUI .
nominees are "Slow Train Coming" (Bob
Up
Tbe
Name
of
Jesus"
&lt;Best
Gospel
Per·
D;rlu), "Wings To Fly" (Jeaaale C.
formance,
Tradlilonal),
and
Tile
Ml11llt7
RUeJ), and "You Gave Me Love" (B.J.
Cloada of Jo7'1 "Changing Times" &lt;Best
Tilomaa).
Soul
Gospel Performance, Traditional).
Male Gospel Vocallst nominees are.
Bob
D7laa
received a Grammy for Best
D&amp;UJ Galtller, 881tJ Goodmaa, Dallal
Rock
vocal
Performance by a Male for
Holm, Gar)' McStaddea and D011g
"Gotta
Serve
Somebody," from his current
Oldbam.
born-again
album
"Slow Train Coming."
Female Gospel Vocalist nominees are
Many
of
the
world's
leading Christian ar·
c,.wa C1aw101, Vestal Gooclau, Am)'
tisls
and
Christian
music
Industry leaders
Gnat, Erie Toantallt-Karll-. Juet
will
converge
In
Estes
Park,
Colo., July 27·
Paacllal, and DeWe aaalle.
Aug.
2,
f~r the Sixth Annual Christian Ar·
Songwriter of the Year nominees are
tlsls' Music Seminar. Over 400 artlsls and
Doa Fruclace, Bill Galtller, Dallaa Holm,
cllnlciana
are expected to attend, along
Banld Lue, and Lau)' W.Ue.
with
1500
registrants
from some 45 states
Gospel, Inalrumentallat nominees are

diOd IMI~IWltlll!l~~f!!,,~!lN ~fi.D·

Wl~-~~··-11·/llllta&amp;'fi:r l CIIJ1tl'Jf#JU~~ ..rJI8~~tl(ol:l_Srll
li.W: l'tll!llliit"iad Y-c,and Belli')'
Aadna/Rlactwood ud CoapuJ, ana

8laagllter.

~ooP... )l

I

By JUDY KALLENBACH
In the 35th year of performing, Mac
Wiseman is still playing two or three
bluegrass festivals every weekend. " I
seldom get a two-day stand. At my age,
you have to keep ~oving," he laughed.
Wiseman is on the road from May
through Sejlteniber without a weekend off,
and then appears at some- f~stivals in
Florida and the West Coast during the
winter months.
But, Wiseman has not carried a group
with hi!ll for more than 20' years, ~nabling
him to' Oy·to his engagements and cover
thousands of miles in a single weekend.
" We used to travel With self-contained
groups and·play schools, theaters
auditoriums and the like, " Wiseman said.
"But back in the 50's the big package
shows became a necessary evil. You
couldn't follow up five or six headliners
one week with a small group the next week
or next month and make a living at it."
For the past nine years Wiseman has
sponsored his own bluegrass festival in
Renfro Valley, Ky., an affair that has
become one of the largest in the country.
"The pattern for a new festival (to make
money) is about three years, although it
doesn't have to be that way," he said. "I
was fortunate enough to make a little
money the very first year. But the reason
some of them aren't winners the first cou·

Dallas Holm

MAC WISEMAN
1Oth ANNIVERSARY
BLUE GRASS FESTIVAL
Renfro Valley, Ky.
1 11 11 1980

fc;!r bookings contoct;

J ) Wil.lp

Mac Wlaemnn Enterprise•

P.O. Box 17028
Nashville, Tenn. 37217
615/361·0861
·'&lt;"·! • - •· •·• •0nly-efew 1980 Dutea
c .'{l lr gli&lt; ~., \~, ~ ltWclifdble

Mac Wiseman

Continued on Peoe 29

Bluegrass
Cardinals
Are A Hit

Cynthia Clawson

no
me
Grass category for the 1980 MCN
Cover Awards.
Mac

pie of years is that they don 't gamble on it.
You can't pussyfoot around."
Unlike some bluegrass entertainers
Wiseman feels that playing bluegrass'
music on the radio would diminish the
festivals. "I know everyone doesn't agree
with me," he said, " and at first I was
disturbed when they stopped programming
bluegrass on the radio. But if you had aU
the bluegrass you wanted on radio, why
would you want to go spend seven, eight,
nine bucks a day to see it? In other words
if chocolate cake is your favorite cake, '
how much chocolate cake can you eat?
Plus the fact that if bluegrass were pro·
grammed that consistently you'd hear an
awful lot of inferior product. There's not
enough traditional bluegrass to warrant
that much programming ...
Although bluegrass has retained more of
the traditional soun!Js than many other
forms of music, there have been some
changes. "There have been some im·
provisations, sonle new arrlmgements,"
Wiseman says. "But I'm encouraged by
the things some of these younger groups
are doing. They hear a little different
chord on some of these old tunes which I
think is healthy. We can leave It up to the
people if they like the newer versions or
not. I'm not disturbed by it at all. In fact ,
the future of our bluegrass music depends

'

II '

I '

·.

(

By JENNY ANDREWS
Hovering around a table at a fast food
r~staurant, Norman Wright just loosened
the top on a salt shaker, and handed It to
Tim Smith. It was to get back at him for
throwing cold water in the shower last
night. Don Parmelly was poking fun at
David Parmelly, who pulled a prank which
was - well - unmentionable, couple of
hours earlier. Ernie Sikes (affectionately
call "The Kid") Is figuring what he can do
to the other four tomorrow. It'll have to be
something good. Something to break the
bordedom of being out on the road.
S!I.Piething to make those little white lines
down the middle of an endless highway
pass a little faster.
Together, they make up the Bluegrass
Cardinals, and steadily they beginning to
make their mark In the bluegr81ls field.
Pf!MI.f of that Is the fact that they are
allllfll constantly on the road- which is
&amp;Oniewhat unusual for a bluegrass group.
As a group, they are unique. They have
their own sound which is neither tradi·
tiona!, nor progressive; it's full, and sweet,
and totally their own.
As Individuals, they are equally unique.
Five' distinct personalities, who just happen \0 blend awfully well when they all
come together.
"We work just about year round," says
Don Parmelly, who hails from Virginia,
"That kind of life is normal to us. I like
one night stands. They keep v.s from just
killing days, g11tting bored, waiting to do a

.. /

..

.......4.••\

l •

'

,..

"'

l

J

'

'

Bluegrass Cardinals

space in the group fur greater and lesser
stars; sort of all for one, and one for aU.
When the group travels, Don usually
winds up rooming with Tim and Norman,
whil!! David bunks In with Ernie. ("We try
to put all the good·lookin' ones in the same
room," someone quips. - But no one says
whi~h group Is which.)
The Cardinals are playing tonight at the
Down Home Pickin' Parlor, in Johnson Ci·
sho'&gt;~&gt; . "
ty, Tenn. They still have six Qr seven hours
Don is sort of the head hauncho, along
before the show, since this is not a onewith his son and partner, David. That fact
stand. They played here last night,
is played down with a good deal of .deter·
in tills morning, and are now happily
minatlon. The Cardinals are a team, in·
at one another, while they
terdependent •1pon each other. tbere Js no l. ti~l.J~Ifdllle hours to pass.
,
- - -- - -- - ---'----- .. ~~~tg~.re~y~in:!g!!!_tl~· and quiet ( t

I

41' ...... . . . . . . .

~- ~..

----~:.

- --

-

least off·stagl') Don plays banjo, and sings his own.
David Parmelly, who sings lead &lt;or
oaritone fC"t the group. He also provides
bass,
depending upon what the song calls
leadership, born of his more extensive ex·
for) and plays both rhythm and lead
perience in the field. Having been in the
guitar, finds life In the group just his cup
business twenty-five years-ever since he
of tea.
was fourteen ot fifteen - he put in a nine
"When I get home for a couple of days,"
year stint in California, working with
he
says, "I'm bored to death. I like' travel·
various bands. Part of his worl. during
log,
seeing how people live."
that period was on the television series
A
bachelor,
David uses the days at home
"The Beverly Hillbillies."
for
such
essentials
as laundJi, bill-paying,
After having worked with "The Golden
and
dating.
Asked
if
young, single
State Boys," "The Blue Ridge Mountain
bluegrass
artists
are
bothered by over·
Boys," and the "Hill Men," Don formed
enthusiastic
female
fans,
he says DOD·
the "Blue Gra:.s Cardinals, In 1973. There
commitally, "Well, not all that mud!"
have beell iarious personnel changes.
· VmrG'Illsdln~forft'IIIIIIJII!Iwef m'&gt;tNIIlllth '(iiiVJidJtll~~·4'1~~
the
lf. 1Wl~'1181Hfti~\tliftl ....
'(1n H bn6,8ADO'i La'it !fli&amp;Mt'l

.o~~11141/DDJ .b111 .boo...hliiJI\ an baA

"·- ~~ --

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

I

-·J

' lr't•• lt

'

�Nllll¥1111, T111.111111, April, 1911

MUSICCITYN~,P~t~~21 •

NIIIIYIIII, TlfiUIIM, April, 1911

P~g~a,MUSIC CITY NEWS

Wiseman Keeps On Road
With Bluegrass Music

Gospel Awards Are
Coming And Going
•
Nominated in the Gospel Television ProThe Gospel Music Association has
gram
category are "Gospel Singing
released the final nominations for the lith
Jubilee," " Hemphill Family Time," "PTL
annual Dove Awards, a gala program to
Club," "Rex Humbard Family Hour," and
climax Gospel Music Week's four-day ac·
tivities at Nashville;s Opryland Hotel. Win· "700 Club."
Backliner Notes nominees are Merlin
ners in the sixteen Dove categories will be
Llttlefield for "Breakout," CecUe Norcrou
annoimced following the awards banquet
for "Hallelujah Turnpike," and John Mays
March 26.
for "Promises To Keep".
Nominees in the Male Gospel Group
Graphic layout and design nominees are
category are the Cathedral Quartet, DaUas
Mlcbael
Barris for "You Make It -Rain For
Holm and Pralse,the Imperials, the
Me"
and
"It Was His Love," "Deanls Bill
Klngsmen, and the Mercy River Boys.
and
Patrick
Pollet for "Hallelujah Tum·
Nominated for Mixed Gospel Group are
Bob
McConnell
and DUI Beaty for
pike,"
Andrus Blackwood and Company, the Bill
"All
That
Matters,"
and
Bob McConnell
Galtber Trlo,the Hempbills,the Rex Nelon
for "Promises to Keep" and "Special
Singers, and the Speer FamUy.
Tunes receiving a nomination for Song of Delivery."
Cover Photo or Art nominees are Dill
the Year are "He's Alive" &lt;Don Fran·
Beaty for "Promises To Keep," Mlke
cisco), "The Highest Praise" (Cbrls
Borum for "You Make It Rain For Me,"
Waters/Jobn Randolpb Cox), " I Am Lov·
Michael Barril for "It Was His Love.''
ed" WUUam J. and Gloria Gaither), "I'm
Joba
Miller for "We Are Persuaded," and
In This Church" &lt;Joel Hempbill), "I'm
DIU
Beaty
for "From Out Of The Past."
Standing On The Solid Rock" (Harold
This
year's
inductees into the Gospel
Lane), "Praise The Lord" (Brown Ban·
Music
Hall
of
Fame will also he announced ·
nlater/Mark Hodson), "Rise Again"
at
tJ:!e
Dove
ceremony.
Nominees In the
&lt;Dallas Holm), "The Day He Wore My
living
category
are
Jolla
T. Benaoa, Jr.,
Crown" (PbU Jobnson), "What Sins Are
Ralpll
Carmichael,
Bill
Gaither,
Connor
You Talking About" &lt;Harold Lane),
Ball,
and
Joba
W.
Petenon.
Nominated
in
"Words And Music" (George
the deceased category are Clarice &lt;Ma)
Gagllardl),and "You Make It Rain For
Baxter, Da't'ld P. (Dad) Carter, Baldor
Me" (Larry Stallings).
LDleaaa, B. B. McKinne)',
Ira Sankey, and
Nominated for Gospel Record Album of
;
Tba Speacer.
the Year in the Black Gospel category are
On hand at the awards as presenters will
"Cookln" (TeddJ Bnffam), "For Tbe
be
lames Blackwood, Pat and SlllrleJ
Wrong I've Done" (WOlle Bub and tile
a-e,
the a-e Glrl1, Terry Bradshaw,
Messeagers), "It's A New Day" (James
Slllrle7
Cae11r, Cbrla Cilrlatlaa, Aadrew
Clenlud ud tile Sontllen Callfonla
CulYerweU,
DIDo and Debbie Kartaoaakll,
Coma11111t7 Cbolr), "Let Them Laugh"
HOYle
Llater,
DoWe Ralalle, Georae
(Geae Marlin), and "Love Alive II"
Beverly
Sllea,
Marljob WUkla, TODJ
&lt;Walter Bawklaa aad tile Lon Ceater
Browa,
GMA
executive
director DoD
Cllolr).
BaUer,
gospel
D.J.
Blallop
AI Bobba, BMI
Contemporary Album nominees are ''AU
vice
president
Frances
Preston,
and
That Matters" &lt;Dallas Bola aad Praise),
Maua
Music
president
Hal
Speacer.
"Cosmic Cowboy" &lt;Barr)' McGalre), "Got
Pat a-e, JleY. lamea Clneland, Dal·
To Tell Somebody" (Dell Frucllco),
las
Bola, Boae)'tree, Pllll Ke&amp;UT. Tile
"Heed The Call" &lt;'rile lmperlall), and
Klagamea, and Grad)' N.U will perform at
"My Father's Eyes" &lt;A•J Grot).
various times throughout the evening, and
Inspirational Album nominees are "It
CJDW&amp; Clawna, Rut)' Goodmaa, and
Was His Love" (CJIWa ClawiOD),
Tom Netllertea are scbeduled to each sing
"Promises To Keep" &lt;Tile Speer FamUy),
"Special DeUvery" &lt;Doag Oldllam), "The · a medley of several songs nominated 1!1
the Song of the Year category.
Very Best Of The Very Best" !Tile Bill
Gospel category awards winners in the
Galtller Trio), and "You Make It Rain For
22nd
Annual Grammy Awards, held Feb.
Me" &lt;Rut)' Goldmaa).
27
at
the Los Angeles Shrine Auditorium,
. Nominated for the Traditional album
'were
Andrae Croacll'a "I'll Be Tblnklng of
award are "Breakout" &lt;Tile Mercy Rlnr
You"
&lt;Best Soul Gospel Performance, Con·
Bo:ra&gt;, "feeUngs" (Tile Rex Jlfeitemporary),
The Imperials' "Heed The
Slagen), "Home Cookln'" (Tile B~m ·
Call"
&lt;Best
Gospel
Performance, Contem··
plltlll), "from Out of The Past" &lt;Tile
porary
or
Inspirational),
B.J. Thomas•
Klagamea), and "You Ain't Heard Nothing
"You
Gave
Me
Love
(When
Nobody Gave
Yet" (Tile Catlledral Q..rtet).
Me
A
Prayer)"
(Best
Inspirational
Per·
Gospel Album by a Secular Artist
formance),
The
Blackwood
Brotlaera'
"LUI .
nominees are "Slow Train Coming" (Bob
Up
Tbe
Name
of
Jesus"
&lt;Best
Gospel
Per·
D;rlu), "Wings To Fly" (Jeaaale C.
formance,
Tradlilonal),
and
Tile
Ml11llt7
RUeJ), and "You Gave Me Love" (B.J.
Cloada of Jo7'1 "Changing Times" &lt;Best
Tilomaa).
Soul
Gospel Performance, Traditional).
Male Gospel Vocallst nominees are.
Bob
D7laa
received a Grammy for Best
D&amp;UJ Galtller, 881tJ Goodmaa, Dallal
Rock
vocal
Performance by a Male for
Holm, Gar)' McStaddea and D011g
"Gotta
Serve
Somebody," from his current
Oldbam.
born-again
album
"Slow Train Coming."
Female Gospel Vocalist nominees are
Many
of
the
world's
leading Christian ar·
c,.wa C1aw101, Vestal Gooclau, Am)'
tisls
and
Christian
music
Industry leaders
Gnat, Erie Toantallt-Karll-. Juet
will
converge
In
Estes
Park,
Colo., July 27·
Paacllal, and DeWe aaalle.
Aug.
2,
f~r the Sixth Annual Christian Ar·
Songwriter of the Year nominees are
tlsls' Music Seminar. Over 400 artlsls and
Doa Fruclace, Bill Galtller, Dallaa Holm,
cllnlciana
are expected to attend, along
Banld Lue, and Lau)' W.Ue.
with
1500
registrants
from some 45 states
Gospel, Inalrumentallat nominees are

diOd IMI~IWltlll!l~~f!!,,~!lN ~fi.D·

Wl~-~~··-11·/llllta&amp;'fi:r l CIIJ1tl'Jf#JU~~ ..rJI8~~tl(ol:l_Srll
li.W: l'tll!llliit"iad Y-c,and Belli')'
Aadna/Rlactwood ud CoapuJ, ana

8laagllter.

~ooP... )l

I

By JUDY KALLENBACH
In the 35th year of performing, Mac
Wiseman is still playing two or three
bluegrass festivals every weekend. " I
seldom get a two-day stand. At my age,
you have to keep ~oving," he laughed.
Wiseman is on the road from May
through Sejlteniber without a weekend off,
and then appears at some- f~stivals in
Florida and the West Coast during the
winter months.
But, Wiseman has not carried a group
with hi!ll for more than 20' years, ~nabling
him to' Oy·to his engagements and cover
thousands of miles in a single weekend.
" We used to travel With self-contained
groups and·play schools, theaters
auditoriums and the like, " Wiseman said.
"But back in the 50's the big package
shows became a necessary evil. You
couldn't follow up five or six headliners
one week with a small group the next week
or next month and make a living at it."
For the past nine years Wiseman has
sponsored his own bluegrass festival in
Renfro Valley, Ky., an affair that has
become one of the largest in the country.
"The pattern for a new festival (to make
money) is about three years, although it
doesn't have to be that way," he said. "I
was fortunate enough to make a little
money the very first year. But the reason
some of them aren't winners the first cou·

Dallas Holm

MAC WISEMAN
1Oth ANNIVERSARY
BLUE GRASS FESTIVAL
Renfro Valley, Ky.
1 11 11 1980

fc;!r bookings contoct;

J ) Wil.lp

Mac Wlaemnn Enterprise•

P.O. Box 17028
Nashville, Tenn. 37217
615/361·0861
·'&lt;"·! • - •· •·• •0nly-efew 1980 Dutea
c .'{l lr gli&lt; ~., \~, ~ ltWclifdble

Mac Wiseman

Continued on Peoe 29

Bluegrass
Cardinals
Are A Hit

Cynthia Clawson

no
me
Grass category for the 1980 MCN
Cover Awards.
Mac

pie of years is that they don 't gamble on it.
You can't pussyfoot around."
Unlike some bluegrass entertainers
Wiseman feels that playing bluegrass'
music on the radio would diminish the
festivals. "I know everyone doesn't agree
with me," he said, " and at first I was
disturbed when they stopped programming
bluegrass on the radio. But if you had aU
the bluegrass you wanted on radio, why
would you want to go spend seven, eight,
nine bucks a day to see it? In other words
if chocolate cake is your favorite cake, '
how much chocolate cake can you eat?
Plus the fact that if bluegrass were pro·
grammed that consistently you'd hear an
awful lot of inferior product. There's not
enough traditional bluegrass to warrant
that much programming ...
Although bluegrass has retained more of
the traditional soun!Js than many other
forms of music, there have been some
changes. "There have been some im·
provisations, sonle new arrlmgements,"
Wiseman says. "But I'm encouraged by
the things some of these younger groups
are doing. They hear a little different
chord on some of these old tunes which I
think is healthy. We can leave It up to the
people if they like the newer versions or
not. I'm not disturbed by it at all. In fact ,
the future of our bluegrass music depends

'

II '

I '

·.

(

By JENNY ANDREWS
Hovering around a table at a fast food
r~staurant, Norman Wright just loosened
the top on a salt shaker, and handed It to
Tim Smith. It was to get back at him for
throwing cold water in the shower last
night. Don Parmelly was poking fun at
David Parmelly, who pulled a prank which
was - well - unmentionable, couple of
hours earlier. Ernie Sikes (affectionately
call "The Kid") Is figuring what he can do
to the other four tomorrow. It'll have to be
something good. Something to break the
bordedom of being out on the road.
S!I.Piething to make those little white lines
down the middle of an endless highway
pass a little faster.
Together, they make up the Bluegrass
Cardinals, and steadily they beginning to
make their mark In the bluegr81ls field.
Pf!MI.f of that Is the fact that they are
allllfll constantly on the road- which is
&amp;Oniewhat unusual for a bluegrass group.
As a group, they are unique. They have
their own sound which is neither tradi·
tiona!, nor progressive; it's full, and sweet,
and totally their own.
As Individuals, they are equally unique.
Five' distinct personalities, who just happen \0 blend awfully well when they all
come together.
"We work just about year round," says
Don Parmelly, who hails from Virginia,
"That kind of life is normal to us. I like
one night stands. They keep v.s from just
killing days, g11tting bored, waiting to do a

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Bluegrass Cardinals

space in the group fur greater and lesser
stars; sort of all for one, and one for aU.
When the group travels, Don usually
winds up rooming with Tim and Norman,
whil!! David bunks In with Ernie. ("We try
to put all the good·lookin' ones in the same
room," someone quips. - But no one says
whi~h group Is which.)
The Cardinals are playing tonight at the
Down Home Pickin' Parlor, in Johnson Ci·
sho'&gt;~&gt; . "
ty, Tenn. They still have six Qr seven hours
Don is sort of the head hauncho, along
before the show, since this is not a onewith his son and partner, David. That fact
stand. They played here last night,
is played down with a good deal of .deter·
in tills morning, and are now happily
minatlon. The Cardinals are a team, in·
at one another, while they
terdependent •1pon each other. tbere Js no l. ti~l.J~Ifdllle hours to pass.
,
- - -- - -- - ---'----- .. ~~~tg~.re~y~in:!g!!!_tl~· and quiet ( t

I

41' ...... . . . . . . .

~- ~..

----~:.

- --

-

least off·stagl') Don plays banjo, and sings his own.
David Parmelly, who sings lead &lt;or
oaritone fC"t the group. He also provides
bass,
depending upon what the song calls
leadership, born of his more extensive ex·
for) and plays both rhythm and lead
perience in the field. Having been in the
guitar, finds life In the group just his cup
business twenty-five years-ever since he
of tea.
was fourteen ot fifteen - he put in a nine
"When I get home for a couple of days,"
year stint in California, working with
he
says, "I'm bored to death. I like' travel·
various bands. Part of his worl. during
log,
seeing how people live."
that period was on the television series
A
bachelor,
David uses the days at home
"The Beverly Hillbillies."
for
such
essentials
as laundJi, bill-paying,
After having worked with "The Golden
and
dating.
Asked
if
young, single
State Boys," "The Blue Ridge Mountain
bluegrass
artists
are
bothered by over·
Boys," and the "Hill Men," Don formed
enthusiastic
female
fans,
he says DOD·
the "Blue Gra:.s Cardinals, In 1973. There
commitally, "Well, not all that mud!"
have beell iarious personnel changes.
· VmrG'Illsdln~forft'IIIIIIJII!Iwef m'&gt;tNIIlllth '(iiiVJidJtll~~·4'1~~
the
lf. 1Wl~'1181Hfti~\tliftl ....
'(1n H bn6,8ADO'i La'it !fli&amp;Mt'l

.o~~11141/DDJ .b111 .boo...hliiJI\ an baA

"·- ~~ --

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�P... 22. MUSIC CllVIIEWS

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H0£00WN

1980

MAY 1 ~ 11
FIDDI.ERS' CONVENTION
MI""""P'PII.MH
MAY 1~11
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL

Bluegrass
Fe•tlva.l
Directory

ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
ltlloii.IA
MAY 1~11
FIDDURS' COIIYENTION
E l l . _••• • MAY16-17
OUHIMECOUNTRY
RADIOIEUNION
-TN
MAY1~11
' BLUEGRASS FUTIVAL
F"""-.aoq
MAY 16-11
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAI.
1 -. AL
MAY 16-11
BLUEGRASSFEmVAL
lrlllolvlllt,OH
MAY 16-11
ILUEGRASSFESTlVAL
, , _ TX
'MAY 16-17
ILUEGRASS "CNIC
Alllnto. GA
MAY 17
FIDDI.ERS'CONVENTION
Wt'/Mf'tCow. VA MAY 17·19
GUITAR CONVENTION
!lounlolnVItw,AR MAY 1~17
BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL
HtrmH19t,MO
MAY 16-11
MOUNTAINGRASSFESTIVAL
Rljllty, WV
MAY 1•11
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
-WV
MAYI~11
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
Troy, AL
MAY 16-11
COUllTRY MUSIC/
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAI.
H-GA
MAY16-11
II.UEGa,WFEITIVAL
Tllllcol'lllni.TN
MAY16-11
II.UEGRASSFEmVAI.

LMW1&lt;1. VA

Mluldln,sc

The following II a listing of BluegrHS,
Old-Time. Folk. Craft and Music feltlvela
tor 1t1e 1910 IHIOII. Before traveling long
dlatanctl you IIIOuld confirm that 1t1e
event will bt taking place. MCN IdYlyou to flnt check with- local and county
radio ltattona. MWapapers, pollee and
lfltrlff'a deparimenta In 1t1e locality of 1t1e
event tor apaclflc ilttalla and to verify
locatlonl and ......

..
'•

BLUEGRASSFESTIVAI.
OUHIMEFIDOI.W.,
MAYH
CIIAIIPIOIIIHIPl .• ' llwtr,kY
FIDOI.EU'CONYENTION
C - . TN
MAA...II
II.UEIIASS FEST1\¥i.
P-WV
APR.H -ru'E~Fem:A"H
-.,PA
MAYH
-~WOIUI
II.UEGIASSFESTIVAI.
FIDDUUCIIAIIPICIISIIIP
MAYU
Unltn-M.C.
AFI.H Mck-, TX
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
II.UEGIAIS FESTIVAl.
---.AL
API ... -II.U.:I"ISFESTIV~HI
.AIIUAI.. . ' .•
.,.. -MAYI-J
tw~Fem• '.;· Or..,...KY
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAI.
-NC
AM.U
-FL
MAYH
III. . UIIF~
,lrttrfl*.AL .
API.H
FIDDI.EU'CGIYIIITIOII
L-IIJ
MAYI
Alnl CRAFTS
IMJOFESTIVAI.
G... _TX
AI'II.U
!';l'l.lltiii__.,MIIk NY
MAYS
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
lllUHRASSFESTIVAI.
API.U -.OIC
MAYS
IUIEGRASSFEmYAI.
II.UHRASSFEST\YAI.
lotii-CA
API.U
MAYH
III.UHIUSFESTIVAI.
IOCIETYFORTHE
-Dk
A~l. l
PERSERYATIONOI'
FIDDUIIS'CONVEITION
CllldlW...-MO API.6
II.UURASSMUSIC
ASSOCIATION FElT.
FIDDUIII'CIIIV£NTION
MAYH
Unltn-.NC
APR. It-11
FIDDLERS'CONVENTION
II.UHIASS FESTIVAl.
Scm... OA
API.1HI ~I~IIAT-•• Mrtl
alii TIME FIDDLERS'
on. CIAFTIFEITIVAL
CIDIM!NTIOII
-.NC
API. II·II ·~~-llft-U"FOI.MAYK•11
II.UHIWIFEmVAI.
rvv '"""" . .
MUSIC FESTIVAL
. IIC
•
APII.IHI
LIIArlltitlo~
MAH
II.UHRASS FESTIVAl.
FmiVAI.
~-NC
API. IHI
LIUCirloi.LA
MAYS-II
M••tlUIFEmYAL
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAI.
- -FESTIVAl.
API. II a..t, AL
MAnn
IUIHUII
II.UEGRASSFEmVAI.
~API. IHI
MAHII
II.UHRASSFESTIVAI.
ILUIGRASSFESTIVAI.
E - OA
API. 11-»
s.-. vA
MAYf-lt
II UIII~IIFUTIVAI.
CAINilOUIDFESTIVAI.
-TN
API.1·"
MAvt-11
AITSlCRAFTS
fOU(MUSlCFESTIVAI.
· WV
API.
11-11 E-.01
MAvt-11
II.UEIRASS FESTIVAl.
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAI.
Fl.-fL
API. ll-»
·MA vt
FOUITII LAYOIDcaAWIOII - -MO
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
IIEIIDIIW.II.UEGRASS
-Dk
MAYf-11
FESTIVAI.ANDFIDOI.E
IUIEGRASS FESTIVAl.
JAIIIOIIEEIMTSl
wtru.VA
MAvt-11
CIAFTSFAIR
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
-.AL
. API.ll-lt
I.Mnf.IN
MAvt-11
OZAil FOUMUSIC
· 11.UIGIASS/OI.DTIME
FmiVAL
FIDDLIU' CONVENTION
-tin Vltw, AA APR. lt-11
C~otrWM, NC
MAvt-11
OUHIMEMUSIC
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
CONVEITION
MAvt-11
L- I L
API. IHI W-GA
II.UHIASSFESTIVAL
ANIIUAI. CIIW CNIP
illY Clly, Ml
MAY 10
THIICJI!fllll CliiiTEST
II.UEGRASSFEITIVAL
...,.,, Dk
APR. It
""'YVfflt.MO •
MAvt-11
GREEN COUNTY
IIAJIJOFESTIVAL
II.UEGRASS SHOW
MAvt-lt
CoUIMVIUt, OIC
APR . lt -llnVItw, AR
FESTIVAL
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAl.
MA vt-10
PoUock. LA
A.. A. »27 Flcllol. $C
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
MAY t-11
L-. fL
APR. 25-27 J -, AL
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
ILUEGRASSFESTfVAL
MAvt-11
Ctmtnl, Ok
APR. 21-17 COIIfltld. TN
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
MAvt-11
Nt&lt;co. CA
API. 21-17 Qr-FL
BLUEGWSII'IDDLERS'
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAI.
CONVENTION
StilL. TX
APR. 25-17 110-lnO.CA
MAvt-11
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL

--TX

-Ott

•

-.lA

-.NC

-WV

..

H
-

JMPif', AL

ILUE~RASSFESTIVAL

APiil:. 25-21

MII-.AL
MAvt-11
FESTIVAl.
Amt41a, VA
Allft. 25-27
1..-.CA
MAvt-11
ILUEGRASS FESTIV~
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
WIMiilrO. S(
API. IS-M
F-.OH
MAYI·I1
FOU MUSICAIO
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
Fl DOI.EU' CIIIV£MTIOII
MAvt-11
llowllnflar-.kY
API.:II Slulrt. VA
llW. SlEENSl
ILUEtRASS FESTIVAl.
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAI.

Ot11W1. OH

GOINS IROS.

APR . 25-27

1

MAY1~17

ar~FES;::~u-"

-.VA
MAYIJ-27
FOU FUTIVAI.
kornlllo,TX
MAYII-17
II.UEGRASSFmiVAI.
...._NC .
MAYII-IA

II.~FUTIVAI.
caawk-.MD
MAY2)!S

CMTEISTANLEY
II.UIIIMSI'UTlVAI.
- V A MAYII-25
OAit~PMK

II.UHIASI.IAMIOIEE
Gllo-TX
MAYII-25
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAI.
MctdMt .... U

-.u.

--.IIC

CIY*. IN
MAY .JUNE I
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Wl9olns. Ml
MAY •JUNE 1
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
. _ y, OH
MAY•I
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
PIUidlni.OH
MAY•1
FIDDI.ERS'CONVENTIQN
...,..ltw, TX .
MAY•I
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
kMXVIIIt, TN
MAY•I
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAI.
I'II. JtMMhi.. AA
MAY.I
RALPH STANLEY'S
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
MtCiurt. VA
MAY •JUNE 1
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
Jl&lt;'•wlllt,IL MAY.JUNE1
FIDDI.ERS'CONYEITION
Normln.Dk
MAY.JUNE 1
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
~r. NC
MAY •11
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Por11NIIIt,CA MAYII·JUNE 1
FESTIVAL •
Sir_,.,, CT MAY .JUNE I
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
ln(llonS,..,MDMAY.JUNEI
BLUEGRASS/FIDDLUS'
CONVENTION
Mt.'Airy, NC
MAY
OUI TIME
FIDDI.EU'CONYENTION
011111. NO
MAY 11
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
~. 0H
JUNE I
FOUMUSK:CONVEITION
W-DC MAYJI·JUNEI
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
ClrlltltONTMCIOM JUNE I
II.UEGIWIFESTIVAI.

.31

''*:U~fJiMi_NEI

-o.NC
MAY:IIJUNEI
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
_,._PA MAY·J-1
II.UEGRASS FUTIVAI.
CriiY ..... IL MAY.JUNEI
II.UEGIW&amp;II'IDDLIU'
COIVIIITMII

-kl
MAY.JUNEI
II.UHRASSFUTIVAI.
-JUNEH
II.UHRASSFUTIVAI.
_...,VA
JUNEH
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
--.Dk
JUNEH

MAYD-15

OUITIMEFIDDUU'
CONVENTION
Lllllii.VA
MAYII-25
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
Oudl-. TN
MAYII-25
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
T-FL
MAYII-25
II.UEGIWSFESTIVAI.
ClwCIIy,kY
MAYI),25
SOCIETY FOI
PRESUVATIOII
Of'ILUEGRASSMUSIC
11-.v,MO
MAYII-25
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
-CIIy,GA MAYII-25
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
MAYII-25
MEMOIIAI. D.\Y
II.UEGRASSFUTIVAI.
Crlntr, Dk
MAYII-25
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAI.
OUITIIIEFIDDI.EU'
COWEMTIOI

MAYII-25
FESTIVAl.
N-11-kY MAYII-25 ·
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAI.
-lo,MS
MAYII-25
FIDDI.EU' CONVENTION
-CT
MAY2A
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAI.
0U1 TIME
FIDOI.IU'CIIIV£1TION
-OH
MAYII-25
FIDDI.ERS'CONVENTION
A - TX
MAY2A
FIRST ANNUAI.MIOWEST
COUNTRYMUSIC
OIMMO.IA
MAYSA-:11
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
Wllklr,WY
MAYII-25
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAIJ
FOLKMUSIC
-$tiii-.FL
MAYII-25
II.UEGRASSIFIDOLERS'
CONVENTION
DtcoiiW. AL
MAY,.,.
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAl.
Hlow-.GA
MAYII-25
FESTIVAL
Em'-t, MO
MAY 22·21
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
k-lllt, IL
MAYII-21
FESTIVAL
-.PA
MAYIA-21
OUITIMEGUITAR
FESTIVAL
Pt-.Al
MAY,.·25
FESTIVAl.
Pollod&lt;P-CA
MAYSA-25
FOUMUSICFESTIVAL
Wllc. Dtiii.WI
MAYD-17
BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL
N. Slro.,.,lllt, OH
MAY 12-20
FESTIVALOI'USA
LOU. kY
MAY JI·JUNE 1
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
Ao!W111t. NC
MAy lt-Jl
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAI.
· - Rendl. FL MAY •JUNE I
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAl.
Prtllln,CT
MAY.JUNE1 '

ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
AlTSl CIAFTSIFOUtMUIIC
Vltw, AI API. 15·27 SCIIIOF.,_t,OH MAYI~It
II.UIGRASSFESTIVAL
FIDDURS' CIIIV£1TIOII
MAY 1HI
Ltr _ , CA
AP1.17 Clrllllrt· FL
II.UEGIASSFESTIVAI.
FOUMUSIC
lrl~ TN
MAYI-I E~~; 11~ d •I ~Y16-I~'' " I

•

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I ;

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1 , • •

•

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NISIIvllle, Tenneuee, April, 1910

' ILUHIWFESTlVAL

-WV
JUNU7
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAI.
E-MO
JUNEH
FOUMUSICFUTIVAI.
-Orlllilo.NJ
JUNU7
PIDDUU' CCilV£ lT lON
Edtn.NC
JUNH7
OUITIME
MUSICCONYEIITION
GIIIX. VA
JUNU7
ILUEHASIFUTIVAL
Pllroyro.MO
JUNEH
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
F - MD
JUNE H
OUITIIIE
FIDDI.IIIt' CIIIV£ITION
-GA
JUNEH
FESTIVAl.
_F.,.,,WV
JUNIH
II.UHMISFESTIVAI.
Fl. W.,..,IN
JUNEH
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
lwl'

n.Ut

JUNE7·1S

II.UEGRASSFESTIVAI.
1-AL
JUNh7
IEOGATE
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
k-It. TN
JUNEH
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
LltlltHtdiJot,OH
JUNEH
SUPERGRASS ..
- . , PA
JUNE H
II.UEGRASSFmiVAI.
W-VA
JUNEH
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
McCiywlllt,GA
JUNEH
0U1 TIME
FIDOI.EU'CIIIV£NTIOII
. NO
JUNEI-7
FOUFESTIVAL
CIMroloa:•MD
JUNE7
.ILUEGRASS FESTIVAl.
Cllli.NC
JUNEH
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
Hy-MD
JUNEH
COUNTRYWESTERN
CONTEST
W - Nl
JUNEI-t
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAI.
Fl.- k N
JUNEH
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
Clltrow. sc
JUNEI-7
FIDDI.EU'CONYENTION
SOWI&lt;k.~A
JUNE7
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
,_vlllt, MI
JUNE7
FOLKMUSICFESTIVAL
Gr1y1011,kY
JUNHI
FIDDI.EIS'CONVENTION
-~vlllt, MD
JUNEI
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
F..,_, WV
JUNE H
IILL-ROE'SIEAN
ILOSSOM FESTIVAL
- 1 -. IN
JUNEI-15
FOLK MUSIC FESTIVAL
cr.t P•k. MO JUN H il
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
-FIIOIIyF. Ol JUNEI&gt;
15
FOU MUSIC FESTIVAL
Clni_..,TX
JUNEI2

r• f~Tjf~. , t. nu u l ~ ll.'"'~f~SJI~A~ '
.. ~ ~ ~ ~ •.• - ... ... .. - -

• ; t_ ..... ... . ·~·. ~

4

•

Dian. WV

JUNE 1,_15

FIDDLERS'COIIYENTION
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL ·
JULY1HI
-NC
JUNE:IIIO Jot-.wv
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
FIDDI.ERS' CONVENTION

Con fln ~ed

I

•

'"""""'OM

-Ok

'

AUG 23

OLD TIME
FIDDLERSCONVENTION
C1nvonvllle, OR

AUG 23

FIDDLERS CONVENTION
AUG 23

Brogue, PA

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Slatyt«k, WV

AUG 2l·U

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Soultlwest, VA

AUG 21·SEPT I

MUSICFESTIVAL
Union Grove. NC Aug. 21·SEPT 1

FESTI VAL
Carllon Hanev's F .• NC
AUG H SECT 1

OUTOOOR THEAT RE
FESTIVAL
Kerrvlllt, TX

.4.UG 28 31

OLD·TIMECOUNTRY EX PO
Courw:ll Bluffs, lA

AUG 29·30

BLU EGRASSFESTIVAL
Blrdstown, KY

.4.UG 29 31

MUSICFESTI VAL
Norman, OK

29·31

BLUEGRASS FEST IVAL
AUG 29 XI

h ldvillt, NC

BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL
Gamer, NC

AUG 29-SEPT 2

BLUEGRASS F6STIVAL
SEPTI-7

Bloun"lllt, AL

BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL

Clay Clly, KY

SEPT S7
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

Dlhlonega, GA

SEPT S 1

FAMILY FESTI VAL
KeiiOIIQ,i A

SEPT H

THE!!ON ROEHOMECOMING
Beanr Dam, ICY

SEPTS·7

BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL
Noblesville, IN

SEPTS 1

BLU EG RASS FESTIVAL
Paola, KS
SEPT 57

OLDTIMEFIDDLERS/

Remus,
SEPT 57
BLUMl
EGRASS FESTIVAL

FESTIVAL

'l

PA

WlscOrisln Dells, WI Aug19·Sept l.

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Grand Terrtct. CA AUG 2'9-SEPT
I

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Kerrvlltt, TX

AUG 11 J1

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Dhcon, MO

AUG 29·30

· MUSICFESTIVAL
N1ftJfll BrldQt, KY

AUG 29-31

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
White Springs, FLAUG 29·SEPT 1

TR I-STATE FAIR
Angola, IN

AUG 29·] 1

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
GlnQOW. DE

AUG 29·31

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Romt, GA

AUG 29·31

ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
C1vtCity , lY

AUG 29·31

SHINDIG
Ashttlllt, NC

.4.UG 30

ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
lr~nttordO N T ,

AUG »SEPT 1

FOUMUSIC FESTIVAL
PtnetSpgt., WV .4.UG »SEPT 1

ILUEGRASSIOLD TIME
•-fiDDLERS CONVENTION
PltbiM, OH

CM'icln. OK
FOL~

AUG30SEPT2

MUSIC FESTIVAL
SEPT H

Co&amp;W, Tn

• ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
OM;Dil, AI

SEPT H

ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
SEPT . H

R.W. SKEENS. GOINS
BROS. BLUEGRASS FESTI VAL
Sclolo Furnace, OH
Jonesville, Ml

FESTI VAL
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

I I

P ayWK~ ,

AZ

SE PT 21·28

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Clintwood, VA

SEPT 26·21

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Buff1lo Gap, TX

SEPT 26·21

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
SE PT 2HB

FOLKMUSIC FESTIVAL
SE PT 26-28

MOUNTAIN STATE
FOR ESTFESTIVAL

SEPT 26·28

OCT 3-&lt;t

Palmvra. MO

S"EPT 26·18

ORANGE BLOSSOM PAR kS'S
BEST IN BLUEGRASS
Or•noe Blossom, VA
Elilabelhlon, TN

Anlltrs, OK

FESTI VAL
Dearborn, Ml

OCT 3·5

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
El Paso, TX

OCT 3-S

OLD TIME
FI DDLERS CONVENTION

""""""· FL
HOY" 16
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

Ferrum, VA

SOCIE TY FORTH E

PRESERVATION OF
BLUEG RASS MUSIC

OCT 25

COUNTRYMUSI C/GOSPEL
FESTIVAL

Glto Roso, TX

FESTIVAL
LakeOurk, MO

OCT li·NOVI

BLU EGRASS FESTIVAL
OCT JI ·NOV 1
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

San0lf90,0. •

Ham ilton, OH

OCTH

Casllewood, VA

SEPT 1
SEP'T 1

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
SET P 111J

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

SEPT 12 1•

BLU EG RASSFE STI VAL
lndianSprlngs, MD

SE PT 12·1•

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Chlplty. FL

SEPT 13 h

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
BunBiossum, IN

SE PT 111 •

OLDTIME
FI DDLE RSCONVENTI ON
Draktsvllle,I A

SEPT 12·H

SEPT 12·13
SEPT 12·1J

HARVEST FESTIVAL
Conowlnoto, MD

SEPT ll

SEPT 12 I•

BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL
SEPT 1J·H

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Noei, MO

SEPT 121A

FLATPICKI NG
CHAMPIONSHIP
FESTIVAL
SEPT 12·1A

BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL
SEPT 11·20

FALL NATIONAL
CRAFTS FESTI VAL
Springfield, MO SEPT ll·OCT 12

FLAT-P ICk CHAMP IONSHIPS
Wlnlltld, KS

SEPT 11·21

BLUEGRASS FESTI VAL
Prestonsburg, KY

SEPT 19·10

BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL
OtiiWI, OH

SEPT 19 21

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

The Heoft ir~~m •

. .... ..• ..• . . .. • . H•ndenon'lflll
. ! -R..IUJ.W.-- .. ·· - . ~....
. TN :!7075 ~
•

IILL MONIIOI • MCA•U

~iLIUM

lUI

.......

SPBGMA BLUE GRASS
FESTIVAL
Canll f ulton, OH

•.•h......

!t.OJiliTTA LYNN · MCA•t ALlUM U .ll
Eworye.octr Wtlltt To Oo To Htavt11 1 w...,.
No 0111 Stlncll Alont ; Whell Tilt)' !!till, Y11oto
Ookltll .. Ill ; , ..., 111 TIM VtiiiJI If CouN
Hur Mr Motlter "•r Altln : Tftt Tfllnl Mtft l
How Qrut T"ou Artt5Md Clm• Mt1tl11' TIMO I
Wlltll I Htar Mr Clthartn Prar 1 In The lwHt I TlltACK TA•I • MCAT•II 14.11
Ire Ancl lrt ; Where 1 Learned To "ar 1 t'd
Rltfttr Hne .lltUI.
IILL MONIItOI • MCA .. I ALlUM il.tl
I TRACK TAPE • MCAT ·I J4 .tl
Uttlt ....... , llutiO Ctll lit .. ; Tor fW1rt1
I'm Gohtl . . , .. To Old Ktlltuckr\ Lmt Attd
Ut Ut'OI NIM PeuM Htmmtrr Cot Ott PIONII
JIMMY MAIIITIN • MCA-11 ALlUM U .l l John Haf'llllr~ IIIHr Grove ; Dtnnr IOJ I
" " " .. Ill Of HUvtn l Ooocllh't l Olfll Mt Jot.~rttq•• l:lldi Otd Joe Cllrtr.
RoMt Now ; What Woukl You Oln In ••· NO TAP I. AVAILAeLI
clttntt ; Voloe Of Mr Savior; Sllut In'• ,.aror1
Thlt Work! It Not Mr Home , " " TM etLL MONIIlOI: • MCA•Il ALlUM tJ.II
Cloudt Awar ; Lord I'm Co"'lnt Horne ; • .,. ,.11111 Me•ttttltt 81.,.11 cotum•u•
Qlwe Me Your Hand : Uttlt Wftltt Ch1uot. ; SteckHO lhiHI T..... Wll Notttlttt Wt
ooa Ouldt our LUdtn Hand. ~
Could Dt1 I WH Uft On Tho ltr•h Ill
I TRACK TAPE · MCAT·tl $4.tl
SliMY lltlwtr; CMO Left Afftlrt Wftt Will
I E•f.. fft Alteut YOUI Pottr fll.,.'l Carel"'
LOwt l t•rn It LOMMfftl I CIU141 CtYJ . .ker"t
JIMMY MAATtN • MCA ·I1 ALlUM 11.11 aroakdOWIIJ WIMft Tho .... Art '" Tftt Hln,
Thoro Al11' t Nalt041)' Qonna Mill Me Whlll I TlltACK TAPE • MCAT·I7 M.tl
I' m Gone: ,.tttndlnt I Oon•t Cart ; LUvln'
ToWil l Ooll' t Glvt Your Htart To A Rame.ltrl
Train II'Ort)'•PIWI ; Drink UP And Oo Homt ; ltLL MON,.OI • MCA· 104 ALlUM U .ll
I Clf!.o I Will, I Do IOIIh't J Thtrl Wit A Lowe 1 ltont)' L.OttOMfMI salltr"l Hortt.IMl Tttl
Hit poarldt Of Lovtf· Sttppln' Stontt ; Tftt Tlme.ar ; Get U• Jthllt lrew11 COWIIIY 1re1k•
Jokt'l On You ; Sk p L HOP And Wobblt. down, Ptttft1nt111t couftttY I ett Mill! 1111t1
ClaUtl SCotland ; IIIIW Hldt ; MOIIf'OI'I HorttI TN ACK TAPE · MCAT· It $4.11
.IM · Whttt HelL
NO tA'I: AVAILAILI:
JIMMY MAIIITIN • MCA·ll -ALlUM IJ.II
Sulln)' Shll Of Tilt Mounlllft ; It . Tlkll 0111
To K11ow 0110 1 Qultar Pic .. nt ltrttklent J I ILL MON"OII • MCA· t 10 ALlUM Sl .ll
Georwlt lllottt Letter l'rorn Mr
Shtnaftdutt Walta ;_ Poor Elltn Smith! I' d Mr Llttl•
lllttfttr HIVI A,noncl_i Thtrl'l . . tttr Timet Oarti11 1.J _Mtmorltt Of MottMr AIHI DMII Hit"•
A comln'; 20· 20 Vblon ; I'm tomlll' lack wor 01' SO"tw l Oft TIM 0141 Ktftttltii:Y
eut 1 Don•t Know Whtn ; SIIOW White Qrl'll l Sttorez Oft AM Ofll MY DJIIII aMI Mtmtrlet
or You ; Wftlt•h••• ltvttl luttr CNt ..
J Ohll Htllry ; In The Plntl.
LOWII I' m etve. I"Wt L,tMMfftl l WIMII Tlte
I TNACK TAPE · MCAT· ll 14.11
OOfdlft LNwtt ...... Te Pan.
JIMMY MAIIITIN • MCA· I1 ALlUM U .ll NO TAPI AVAILA.LI
You Don' t Know Mr MlrHI ; Homu•ctq 1qr
T rackl ; Nltht; Grand Olt O.ry Sont l Wfto' ll elLL MONIItOK • MCA•114 ALaUM IJ.II
Slnt ll'or Ma ; Hold Whatcha Got ; ldoro Tilt No Oftt lut MY Dertln' J.I'tn Oltl KtfttuettJ
Sun 0011 Downt· Cripple CrtOk ; lt' t Not . . vntl ; ,_IMII L . . . l WftJ Did Vt• IIW'
Llko Hom0 1 All he Ooocl Tlmtt Art Patt Oooei .. ,OJ LOUIPIIIt ....tllldewftl Afl Aftltf
And Gone ; I Llkt TO Hetr 'Em Preach lt. In 01 ... 1111 1'10 Woory Of Holrl-11 'tllo
Pint Wltl""rwllh W•• AM err; veu•n
I TRACK TAPil · MCAT· I1 $4.11
Drirtlttt AWI)'J Tftll'l Wftlt I Ullle A•o•llt Yeu.
I
TIIACK TAPI • MCAT·U• . ..11
JIMMY MAIIITIN • MCA ·101 ALlUM 11.11
Widow Mlklr; Sl• Dart 011 Tfll Rold : I'll
Ntwor Tlkt No F'or An AntwtrL''m Thlnklftl IILL MONIOI • MCA•UI ALlUM 1.1.11
Till
IIIIM
Oo Mol LO,..
TOP!Itltt Of Mr elut IJIII Tfltro•t Mort
oliO! MJ
IL Wilt A LlttiO t.o- , _
Qlrtl Tftal'l Oftll HI)' LOMIOffttt Mr
lUll A Ve
PreM Ofl Hllfll I'M Worll:l"'
Wtlk ftl Sltoot ; Truck Orlttlll&amp; M111 1 Ocean Of
OlamoN•; Truck Orlver' t
uHII i Tht ON Oft A •utNiftll DoR"t "-1 Off 'nil TtMerrewl
M111'1 Drunk Atalll ; Ill 'OHr Old LOIIdefl, HI WHI ... v.. r , ...., Afl,.l Get Dewft OR
VHr K11•1 AM,.,.,, ....
LMOJ ~alkl"'
I TRACK TAPI. · MCAT·101 $4.11
111 Jtruultm Just Lilli• JP111
Otlt".
JIMMY MAIItTIN • MCA · 111 ALlUM SJ .tl I TlltACK TAPE· MCAT•U1 . .. II
... CtUIIIr)'l ..... lltOOitOr l Crow 011 TM
. . n.IO I You Art M)' IUnthllll ' U•ttWft ai\. L MON .. OI: • MC.\•UI AL.IU~.II
ON
IIUtll Orantt .. Ottolft t•Hith WIN ti'HIIII'I I I Uyt IR Ttto Pltl1 Crtlf.. CrMIII
Oolnt UP Dry eranch 1 UtUt Matti• Sh .. l I)OIIIfj TIM Lolli .1. .11 Vtlh LOt Ctlt 1t t11 TIM
so lwttt l UnJtn count)' ; llttd lltl"r Vaner1 L.IMI Wtftt To Oe Wlttl Yt•1K111t.... r Mtn.
••1111 1 leHJ Oeodll'll Ntftr Attlftllt TIM atue
Tfttmo Tl"''·
MOtll IIIII Slll..tRtl JI'IN 011 TM Me•ttttlfl.
I TlltACK TAPE • MCAT· 111 $4.11

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

PoyOII, KS

IIL.L MON .. OI • MCA· JIO ALlUM 12.11
I Hawen•t $elft Mery In Vun; LO'f'l, Plene
Come Home , Wfltft The Oeklen Lenu
...... To P'11l 1 Till "'Mt i llftkt Of Tfll Ohio ;
MoU•er't Oftly SIMPiftt l POttY M0u11tal11
To• ; Willi Of Tl"'1 1 101111)' 1 SweethUrt You
DoM Mt WrOftt l Whit Should You Glwe 111

MllllfJ Wftln M)' 11ul Mooft Tunu T o GoJd .
I TRACK TAP I· MCAT· 1 11 S4.tl

UftCII LOU! Uttlo ..tool ....... Yttr IIY"I
You Un In A World All Your Ow11 1 ThM
Cflllltlt lwtrytftlntl llut Gr111 Ptrt Onlt
Ill llllwor+ Plo.,." Of Lo"1 lt't Mftfttr
Dtrll: To flvel; lot« Down TIM lltl"rl ,...
Mr Jtultlttr DoH AWtrl Un ... Mt liteM

SEPT 13

Wlllllmton, WV

AID I'OLEY • MCA·147 ALlUM IJ II
. . ro nct Tht SUIIttt; lhOUkl You Oo l'l;,t 1
,_let Ill The Vttltr 1 Slttl AWI)' t Jult A
CloMr Wtlk Wltft Thtt 1 Our L.H)' Of 1'1th1ta;
Tl'll Place Wfl.,.l 1 WO,....lp ; SOmtOIII To
Cl" l Tht lltOUtY I Wilt Tht Clrcll It Uft·
ttrokln ; Okl PIP.J' t Ntw . .11101 1 Htlr A
Cllolr; Whtn Qod DhU Hit Lowt Ill M)' Htlrt .
I TRACK TAPE · MCAT·IU 14.11
PIDDLE MUSIC : Slfowfllkl JllHh Utttl tilt
llttd ; lltun, JohiiiiJ, """' litter Crttk .,......
down 1 l'kldler•t DNIIItl Cllflntt . .11111 1•
01)'1 fll Otortll; Acorft Hill lrt1k4IOWIII
Ill Sind)'! Star A Ll"lt Lonttrl DoM
00M ; Jtlll Polkl.
NO TAPI AVAILAILI

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Wl ycrou,GA

IILL MON .. O E • M t: A ·111 ALlUM t2 .t l
Turtcey 11'1 11'11 St nw ; I Woftdlr Wftlrt Yo u
Arl T on .. ht l Thll ' t All Rltht ; A ll Ttll Good
TIMII Art , ... And 00ftt ; ,rett y , 1lr In T fllt
Olrdln ;
.. oil On ludiiiY Roll On ; IIUI
~ltht'r
· Mldnl,ht On Tht Storm y Deep ; we re
Vou
t11r1 1 t Mlktl No Dlfflrtf'lct ; Dusty

.

TOMMV JACKSON • MCA· IU ALlUM U.ll

SEPT 1214

BLUEGRASS FESTI VAL
Clltraw, SC

.IIMMII DAVII • MCA· Jit ALlUM SJ.tl
I Wouklll't Tako Nothlll' l' or Mr JiturMr
Now; How b r.,t Thou Art; Ont Mort Vlller;
SomtOIIt To C1n1 Wllttd Ytlrl l Supper
Tlmt ; Whtll Ood DIN Hit Loft Ill M)' HUrt!
Tllltr Thtll Tr. .l t Wflo Am IP : Nttr Tftt
Cr011 1 Hit MI"II O'UI Ortce,
I T RACK TAPE · MCAT•Jit $4 .11

I TJilACK TAPI • MCAT· 210 14.11

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
SclotoFurnau, OH

DEC 13

BLUEGRASS FESTI VAL

FOLK MUSIC FESTIVAL

Glenn HollOW. NC

OEet. 7

BARN DANCE

Live Oak. FL

OCT 17·19

OECS 7

BLUEG RASS FESTIVAL

FIDDLERS CONVENTION

BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL

NOV 20·22

FI DDLERSCONVENTION
Cod,, WY
NOv n

FOLKMUSI CFESTIVAL

COUNTRY MUSI C/BLUEGRASS
FESTIVAL

HOY" "

I LUEGRASSFESTIVAL

OCT 25

Gilmer, TX

OCT 10·11

OCT 17·19

Hlawuste, GA

FESTIVAL

'""· FL

OCT 24-26 Myrtlt BeKh, SC

Hlawu$et, GA

NOV19

OLDTI MEFOLK
MUSIC/BLUEGRASS

OCT 24·26

COUNTRY MUSIC/BLU EGRASS
FESTIVAL

OCT 1H9

Steele, AL

BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL

LaktCily,FL

OCT 23·26

GOLDENWEST
Norco, CA

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

OCTH

OCT 19

Berea. KV

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Columbia, MO

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
NO'o' 1 2

Fotsum, LA

CAMPUSOLDTIME
FI DOLERSCONVEN TION

OCT 10·11

Bul headCity,AZ

FIDDLERS CONVEN TION
Section; Al.
NOV 1

FI DDLERSCONV ENTION
Goiela, CA

BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL

O . TH

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

OCT I·S

OLD TIME
FIDDLERS
CONVENTION
A!Mns, AL

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL
I O.kll"d, MD
OCT 10·11
O"aw1,0H
OCT l·S
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Wlllllmsburg, VA
OCT 10·12
Glen Rose. TX
OCTH
BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
OCT 11
Ames. lA
Duncan, OK
OCTH
BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL
FIDDLERSCONVENTION
Fl. Peirce, FL
OCT 10·12
Granite Quarry, NC
OCT &lt;t
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
BLUEGRASS FESTIYAL
Amelia , VA
OCT 10·12
Shawnee, OK
OCT4
BLUEGRASS FESTI VAL
I,ANDOFMAR KTWAIN
Pauldltllf, OH
OCT 10·12
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Marietta, GA

OCT 11

JAMBOREE
AoSimond, CA
OCT 11·19
OLDTIME

Up Your Class With Blue Grass · Your Last Chance To Buy At These Low Prices.

"'"r.

t:

List

o-•

Of"''"Of

I TIIACK TAPI • MCAT•tll . .. ll

How, Why, Where, and Wh en Your quesltons In·

1

OLD TIME
FIDDLERS CONVENTION

Mountain View, AR

OCT10·11

SEPT67

swered,concerninl The Nashville Music Industry. for
complete inlormation-write to;,.. , .•. • ·-·
·~ "'

SEPT 21

Mountain, TN

McCI'(SVIlle, GA

~-~r=======================:============~Sh:•:wo:,.:·:O:K===~NO~V~I~:Jt:k•:':·":•""=·G:•::::O;E~C~26~18~

From the Heart of Nashville

'

SEPT 26·28

Harpers Ferry , WV

Sign~

SEPT 19·10 Elkins, WV

BLUEG RASS FESTIVAL
Elll iay, GA

SEPT26-71

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

Poweii,MO
SEPT 20·21

Kings Moonta in, NC

BLUEG RASS FESTIVAL
Dlsnev. OK

Arcadia, FL
SEPT20

Canal Fulton, OH

Aspiring songwriters have until June 4 to
enter the American Song Festival competi·
tion, the seventh annual musical talent
search that awards cash prizes and profes·
sional industry exposure to its winning en·
trants.
Over 1,350 cash prizes, including two
grand prizes of $10,000, will be awarded in
ten categories in professional and amateur
divisions.
'For additional information of the
American Song Festival, or for an offi cial
ef\l~Y- form, contact The American Song
Festival, 6253 Hollywood Blvd., Suite 319,
f~ql!&gt;(,wood, CA 90028.

\

SEPT 19·21

FESTIVAL

ASF Opens
'80 Competition

'

SEPT 19-21

SEPT26·27

BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL

OCTH

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

O'LUCKS FESTIVAL

Murphy, NC

BLU EGRASS FESTIVAL

Rhine, GA

Moonlaln VIew, AA

WlyntSboro, VA

OCTH

SEPT S·7

Folsum, L.A

SEPT 1
SEPT 1

OLD TIME
FIDDLERSCONVENTION

OLD TIME
FIDDLERS CONVENTION

FALL FESTIVAL
Lawtey FL

BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL

Wlnfltld, KS

PICNIC
WfttGfove, PA

SEPT 19·21

SEPT 2 H

FOLK MU SIC FESTIVAL
H1mmet1, PA

AUG 29·31

FESTIVAL
Tomcit1M Corners, NY

GraSSVI IIey,CA

SEPT S 1

Jasper, AL

AUG 19·SEP T 1

GRASSVALLE Y
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

FOLk ROOTS 'IIIFEST.

AUGJO·ll

FOLKMUSIC FEST IVAL

SEPT 19·21

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Arley , AL

SEPT 6 7

Canal Fulton, OH

WI'IUemore Lake, Ml SEPT 111 •

Bellville, Ml

Cr-

·se PT.S 6

AUG 29 Jl

BLUEGRASSFUT IVAL

-kY

Bun Blossom, IN

SUmpfon, WV

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

SEPT 19·21

BILLMONROE'S AUTUMN
BLUEGRASS FESTI VAL

Wtsl Grove, PA

SUdtwryONT

..f.

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

8fa~e~~~~~~S FEST!~~l29 31

ALMOST HE AVE N'Ill FESTIVAl

SE PT 19-21

Noei, MO

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

G~llsburg ,

SEPT 19·21

FI DDLERSCONVENTION
Hunlsvllle, AL

UniOn Grove, NC

A$1\vllle, NC

11-.

-Itt.

fr om Page 22

SHINDING

--:.=-..••
fiiii-AI;:.-a:.;-ltl7

••=

1

•• ,

BuShnell, IL

Festival
Directory

Lex-

-CT

~

MUSIC CITY NEWS, Page 23

TAI.ENTCIIAIIP-IP
W........ VA
AUG 2-I
FOU MUSIC FESTIVAL
KovJ 5cotta
A,UG I·J
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL

COUNTRY MUSIC FESTIVAl.
El-,., TN
JUNE 1~15
JULY 11·20
FOU MUSIC FESTIVAL
PortTownstnd, WA JUNE7U Ruby, VA
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
N-olllrldgo, KY JUNE II·I&lt;
Flltlof ROUifl, ICY JULY 1•1t Ktl&amp;lmmll. Fl
AUG H
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAl.
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Vllil Rk:t,GA
JUNE 13·14 MfWCIStlt, N. lrunsw. JUNE 29·2
G.......-. IN
JULYI.If Gtttysburt.PA
AUG H
ILIIEGRASS FESTIVAl.
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAl.
--OH
JUNEII-Il ILUEGRASIIROCK FESTIVAL
JULYII·If ~. OH
AUG 1-l
ARTSl CRAFTS FESTIVAl.
Eden, NC
JULY I Mtwtattt, VA
FIDDLEU'COIIVENTIOII
FOU FESTIVAL
-II.MD
JUNEII·Il
I'OIIDERHORN PARK
O.Win.VA
JULYit·11 p - -,WV
AUG1·1
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
II.UEGRAss FESTIVAL
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAl.
otlor-FL
JUNEIHl ~. Ok
JULY H
BLUEIIASS FESTIVAl.
Otflwo.OH
JULY 1. 10 - M I
AUGI
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
FIDOLEUCOIIYENTION
............
JUNEIHS ,.,.,, NC
JULY H IS
PnltDniiMH'I, KY
JULY 1•20 L.lvlngPM.MT
AUG 1-l
THI! FESTIVAl. Of'
FESTIVAL
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAI.
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
THE BLUEGRASS
G.tHnburg. TN
JULYt-5
EtktOn, VA
JUL.Ylf II'VftMkt.ME
AUGJ.3
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
lY
JUNE 12-15
SHINDIG
COUNTRY MUSIC
ORANGe ILOSSOM PARKS
lliWIYIIII.GA
JULYH
lEST IN BLUEGRASS
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
-~~~. NC
JULY 11
ILUEGRASS COliTEST
O r - 1 -, VA JUNEIHl era.nort, NC
FOUMUSICFESTIVAL
w..-.vA
AUG 2·1
JULYH
BLUEGIWS/Rli.K
L-.ONT
JULY11·10
FOUMUSICFESTIVAL
CONTEST
MUSIC FESTIVAl.
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
Lklcoln. NM
AUG 2-I
WtiiGrow.PA
JULY2
Coolly, TN
JUNE1~1l
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
• -. lA
JULY 11·20
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAl.
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Molt L.... WI JULY II·AUG I
Silty Dog, ME
JULY H
E - Poil. PA
JUNE 1!-15
Arlty,AL
JULY11·20
AUGUSTAMUSIC
OUITIME
.ILUEGRASS FESTIVAl.
FESTIVAL
FIDDI.ERS' COIIYENTION
IAIIJOFESTIVAL
Elklns. WV
AUGH
Slltm, lA
JUNE 12-14 o.rtii'IOUttt No. Cotlt
JULY l
DurlllmONT.
JU LY1•11
OUITIME
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAl.
OUITIME ,
CONTEST
FIDDI.ERSCONVENTION
Houstott.MS
JUNE 1,_14
FIDDI.IIS' CONVENTION
JULY1. 20 Alvwldi.TX
AUG1H'
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
,_lilt. VA
JULY H Semara, NC .
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
FAIR
Gr-VIIIoy,CA
JUNE1~1l COUNTRY GENTLEMEN FEST.
JULY1.20 GrlftdRapldt.MN
AUGI)-17
IILL-ROE'S
S,_,,VA
. JULYH ,.,..._,TX
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAl.
-1-.IN JUNE1&gt;12 EmlnMCo,MO '
JULYH ~-~~~~~If-It luri-NC
AUG1•16
IIOUIITAIN FOUS'
MUSIC FESTIVAL
-IL
JULY If-It
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
MUSIC FESTIVAL
17
-WV
JULYH
III.UHIAIIFESTIVAI.
~Fm~~:t
· ~MO
JUNE1•22
MTS lcaAfT$ FESTIVAl.
OUITIME
Sm-lltt, TN
JULY H - . 0 1
JULY II-. OH
AUG"I7
1M ....A.PIITIVAI.
aWHW&amp;FmiVAI.~
FIDDURS'CIIIV£1TION
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
AUGl$-17
-.OH
JUNE1.1l Wlrii.VA
JULY&gt;! teledii.PA JULYlf-. -I4VA
II.UHIAIIFUTIVAI.
.IUIEGRASS FUTIVAI.
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
11-IL
JUl.
y
tt-»
II.UIGRASS
FESTIVAl.
W-VA
JUNE1Hl P-LA
JULYU
II.UHIWIPISTIVAI.
IIWWRII' WV
AUG 11-17
IOIPILMUSIC FESTIVAL
'SHINDIG'
JULY1t-.
IUIHIIAIIFDTIVAI.
P-.OH
JUNE1Hl -Uio,NC
JULYS
III.UHRASS FESTIVAl.
II.UEGRASSFUTIVAI.
FIIT~II-17
FOI,I(MUIICFESTIVAL
GMT
JUNE 1)15 II'-~
JULY ..
DMr~EGRASSFU~~~~t-a
IUIEGRASSFUTIVAL
-EE
' ._...... VA
JUNI: lJ.-15 H - - . JULY•»
w
JULYS ~GA
II.UHRASSFESTIVAI.
II.UEGIASSFEmVAL
FOUIIUSICFmiVAI.
I~
~ ~
PIIII.U
JUNE1Hl ~.-IIC
JULYH WfYIIIIVIIIo,IIC.
JULYSA-20
FLDYDCO.II.UEGRASS
;-;;·
II.UEGRASSPUTIVAI.
II.UHIAISFmiVAI.
FUTIVAI.
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,
PW.MI
JUNE1•1l Dotriii,OH
JULYH
~,,,.,
_ _..,.
_ .. KY
JULYII-17 ......SIIDKEYUIIIIi'l
IILUHMIIPUTIYAI.
II.UEGRASS FErn VAl.
-·VA
JUNE 12-15 k-001JULYU
II.UEt••,.
II.UHIWI PUTIVAI.
--lln.NY
._
OUITIME
II.UEGRASS FmiVAL
JULy
»17
FAMIL
YREUIION
FIDDUIIS'CIIIV£ITION
Gf..,_kY
JULY&gt;!
II.UEIRASS FESTIVAL
Clnlln. NY
AUI ...
11.-uEGIASI FESTIVAL
~.JUNE1l
·
FOliUM AIIIIUAI.
-AA
JULYH Artlrlt.NYOUITIME JULYII-17
FIOOLERS' CONVENTION
TEMWESSEE MTI.
INIMA
~~~
JUNEIS
FIDOI.EU FESTIVAl.
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
· ' COUITRYMUIICD.\TS
-.CHy,IA
JULYH
· -WV
JULY 25-:11 CWtll HIH,TN
AUG 1-9
E - TN
JUNE 16-21
FIDDI.EII' COIIYEIITIOIII
II.UEIRASSFESTIVAL
ILUESAND
OUITIIIE
ILUEGIWSFESTIVAL
JULY 25-17
ILUEGRASS FROST,
FIOOLERS' CIIIV£NTION
W-CA
JULH WIIIIW, kY
IOSPEL MUSIC FESTIVAL
lljllty, WV
AUG.,.
. 10
JUNE 16-21
FIDOI.IU' CONVENTION
JULY 25-17
EIGMTANNUAI.N.Y.C.
-RFEST ..
-lt.MD
JULH ktrnlllt, TX
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
ILUEGRASSANDOL
Mllw...._ WI
JUNE lt-J
MACWIII!MAII'S
Hll- NY
JULY 25-17
TIME COUNTRY
FESTIVAL
II.UEGRASS FUTIVAI.
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAl.
MUSIC CONTEST
CllldlP-NC JUNE1..1 -VIIIt7, KY JULY.12
OIICIIy,MI
JULY21-17
AIOCRAFTSFAII
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
II.UEGRASS FmiVAL
II.UEtRASSFESTIVAL
- York.NY
AUG•II
Wile, CO
JUNE lt-21 Mlntrii,V~
JULYit.ll
OIICIIy,MI
JULY21-17
ICCLAINFAMILYIANO
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
FOUFmiVAL ..
FIDDUUCIIIV£MTION
FAMILY FESTIVAl.
-.MI
JUNEif-22 WlriiiiOtl. MAN
JULY 11-11
-MT
JULYII-17 -kY
AUGil-17
FUTIVAL WEEKEIO
II.UEGIASS FESTIVAL
PICIMD'SREOOAK
PICKARO'IIEDOAK
JULYII-11
WIIMtn •• .. VA
JUNE.22 T-.VA
PWII.UEGRASSFESTIVAI. PWII.UGIASIFESTIVAL
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl..
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAI.
~LA
JUNE 19-22 ~.Dk
.JULYII-17
AUG1H7
JULYII-11
SHIIIOie
OIAIIGIILOIIOM PARK'S
II.UEtRASS FESTIVAL
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
.\lllvlllt.NC
JULY:II
IIITINII.UI!GIAIS
Dlt111UIIr, OA
JUNE lf-!2
JULY 11-ll
FIDDI.ERS'CONYEITION
- - V A AUGIJ.I7
FOUMUSIC FEmVAL
FOU FESTIVAl. ..
NE
JUL Y:11
CUARWATIR FESTIVAl.
-NC
JUNE1t Wloo~~..
JULY 1HI
FIDDURSOOIIYENTION
--IIJ
AUGI~It
FOOT STOIIPIII'
~FESTIVAL
.TX
JULY:II
II.UEtRASSFmiVAI.
.. FEST
W-VA
JULYIHI ILUEGRASS FEmVAL
C1rt Clly, kY
AUG IH7
R.,, WV
JUNE •22
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
JULYIS-17
II.UEGRASSnmVAI.
II.UEtRASS FESTIVAL
Dltnoy,Dk
JULY IHI P -.MO
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
f-MO
AUGil-17
-OH
JUNEI7·1t
RYC'SOUHIME
C~lniiO, AL
JULY 21-:11
II.UEGRASS FEXTIVAL
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
FIDDLERSl
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
I"' Rlt.NC
AUGil-17
Sllolrl, VA
JUNE 17·11
II.UEtiRASS OOIIYENTION
JULY 25-17
FOUMUIIC FmlvAL
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
JIMtv!Ht, VA
JULY 1•12 •-ntt.IL
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAI.
OWto-ONT
.t.UG1~17
V -, AL
JUNEI7·11
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
JULY :11-17
II.EUGRAWaiUITRY
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
V. . . IL
JUL. Y 11-ll PIIYIOII, Al
FOU MUSIC FESTIVAl.
MUSIC FESTIVAl.
Mn-.ONT
JUNEI7·10
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
JUL. YJl-27 EfflniMM, IL
AUG 15-17
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
Mtco,MO
JULY ll·U onewa. ONT
FOU MUSIC FESTIVAL
ILUEIRASS FESTIVAL
T-Crii.. ONT
JUNE17·»
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
JULYtl-27 l rlllltviiii, OH
AUG 15-17
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
HIINil. PA
JULY 11·1l VIIMI, VA
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAl.
JAMIOlEE
Corlnlll. NY
JUNE 17·21
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
JULY:II-17 IIODitii.CA
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
Qlljllty, FL
JULY 11·11 FnCIIy, UT
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
SHINDIG
110 Ditto. CA
JUNE »II
FAIR
AUGI6
OUITIME
........ ME
JULYII·U 1111-TX JULYII·AUGI Alllvlllt,NC
FOLK MUSIC FESTIVAL
II.EUGRASS FESTIVAl.
FIDDI.ERS'CONYENTION
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
JULY »AUG 2 Wtyntlbltt. VA
AUG 15-17
-linN. IMw. JUNEI7·11 kno6-.MO
JULYIHI Allwlllt, NC
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
ILUEIRASS FESTIVAL
FESTIVAL
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
AUG1~17
lunon.OH
JUNEI7 J.,.,.,Al
JULYII-12 ~Ridgo, ARJULY.AUG 2 ..... Wtllr, NE
OLD TIME
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
FIDDI.ElSCONVENTION
-TN
AUG 16-17
~MD
JUNEI7·11 - - ,, Onllflt
JULY1HI
l riiiOI, VA
AUG 1·1
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAI.
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
GilD ANNUAL
OLDTIME
Glltlff, kY
AUG16-II
fonyttt.MO
JUNE21-2't
F0U FESTIVAL
FIDDLEUCONVENTION
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
GRASS VALLEY
Wnii-.DC
JU l YIHI
Slttlt, AL
AUG l·l HtndtriOn.CO
AUGIH &lt;t
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
ORANGE ILOSSOM PARK'S
OUITIME
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
Gr• Vllloy, CA
JUNE 20-22
lEST INILUEGRASS
FIDDLERSCONVENTION
e.-.y,OH
AUGII-IA
Tli·STATE ILUEGRASS
Or.,...I..._.., VA JULYI J.ll
F -. NY
AUGI·I
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
ASSOCIATION SPRING
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
FESTIVAL
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
P -.OH
AUG 22·24
CIIY City, KY
JULY 12-ll
Olltwl, OH
AUG 1·1
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL .
Montrolt, lA
JUNE 20-22
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
Wolktr,WY
AUG \U•+'.V•
FOURTit ANNUAL PARKER
Clinton. AR
JULY1HI
HIHons. VA
AUG1-2
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
MOUNTAIN PARK
SHINOIG
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
HllriiOn,AR
AUG221'
II.UEGRASSMUSIC FESTIVAL Altrllllt, NC
JU LY12
llur-Foiii. ONT
AUG 1·1
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
Spr-lt.AR
JUNE 25-11
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
C-11 CHy, IA
AUG 22·24
ILUEGRASSMUSIC FESTIVAL Htbnfl, CT
JULY 12·1l
._...,IUt, MO
JUNE 2H f
SECOND TOPANGA
W"'tn. OH
AUG 1·1
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
CHARITON VALLEY
FOI.K FESTIVAL
OAKD.\LE PARK'SCOUNTRY
NJ
AUG 22·24
BLUEGRASSJAMIOREE
GOSEPLJUIILEE
ADAMS COUNTY FO!JRTM
Wtstwood,CA
JU LY12
Cheriton, lA
JUNE 21-29
TWENTIETH TOPANGA
Gltn Root, TX
AUG1·1
ILUEGRASSJAMIOREE
PICKARD'UEDOAK PARK
IAIIJO FIOOLE CONTEST
OAKDALEPARK
. IL
AUG22·24
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
GOSPELJUIILEE
FESTIVAL
Wtstwood, CA
JULY ll
McCIOUd.Dk
JUNEI7·21
GMn ROM, TX
AUG H
Townstnd. TN
AUG 2:1
H0£00WII
FOI.K FESTIVAL
llUEGRASSFESTIVAI.
FOLK FESTIVAl.
SIINI. CA
JULYII-Il
Kvt111Wn. PA
JUNE 21-S
Strlfton Tounttln, VT
AUG 2 Sctlwenklwlllt, Upper SaHord,
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
IYARDRAY
OLDTIME
PA
AUG II-25
OftiWI.IL
JULY11·U
FOU FESTIVAL
ILUEGRASS FES11VAL
FIDDI.ERS CONVENTION
Conflnutd on Pete n
NC
JUNE 20 WfWtmlrtltkt, MI JULY11·U Gr.....,,MO
, ., :~u l

I ·)

..'

JIMMY MAIItTIN • MCA· U1 ALeUM U .l l
Slntlrtt All Dar AIICII Dlnlltr On Tht QrtuN ;
Uft Your 1.)'01 To Jttt.ll t MY LOrd Kotltt A
fteco,_. ; God It Alwnt Tltt Salltl l Whln Tile
Snlor IUaciMd Dow11 l'or Mt ; llttkt Hand1
With Mother Allin ; Htl" Tltr l,.thtr 1 A
. . . utlful Ute : Stormr W1t1"1 Httd To
Ood"t Uncflaftllllt H111d 1 .Uttlt .Anttts In
Htnon.
I TIIIACK TAPC • MCAT· Ul U .tl

IILL MON"OI • MCA·II7 ALaUM Sl .ll
I Saw Tho Ulftl1 I' M MOot Vou 111 TIM Mo,..
lftll Uft•t .. artwtJ' To HIO\"'ttl Ltf'llll._ \-0.. Mo
0111 WIJflrlrtt ltrt..-1 . .a.tthll UfOI , . .
e&amp;otiil MIMerttll HMIM Of 0 ... 1 I'WI P'HIItl
A HWIIII ..,_, ...... Mol&gt;l MJ MIMjl AIO A
PUtrlfft t Lord . ...... Ml A et•lfl 1ft Cl try.

I TIIACK TA~I · MCAT..IJ .....

eiLL MONROI • MCA· 140 ALlUM U .ll
Mull lkiiiiMr e1u"1 KlfttUC111)' Walta1 Get UP
..toftn1 Y.u"ll PIJMII Htr Namt Wrltttn Thoro ;
IIUI MOOII Of KtiiiUikY I "'' MJ Uttlt
Shott AWIYI Jtoclllr lltoM IIIWIII Till Girl
tft TIM IN• Vtlttt .,nd 1 s.ammtrtlm• 11
Pitt Alld OOMI l'ott.rtnU Ill Tltt $nOW l
Tilt
Ookl """'·
I TRACK
TAPI · MCAT•140 M .ll
IILL MONIItOI • MCA•JJI AL8UM IJ.II
I'll M.. t Ytu lft Chureft IWIIdl)' Mtrttlnt ;
Orlftl"t Tto l'ar l'rom Tho lflort; Muter
euUdlfl I I'OUJNII TM WtJI Wt'll UMerttalld
U . .tttr1 Let Mt lltllt At Tltt lnd Of Tftt
JOUrMJI Otlltl Homt : One Of 0041'1 Sfle-. ;
War Down D••• 111 MJ. Soul; On Tilt Jtrlcllo
.. 0 . . ; l'lrtlttr AIOftt l Tht Glory Lind WI)' ,
I TlltACK TAPI • MCAT· JJI t4.11
OIIOIItNI: eft:OTHIIItS • MCA· 101

ALlUM d ,tl

Take T~trt Ht..,rntrl P'lthwar Of TlarllroPI I
Cettolt P'ltld•1 Kentun:r ; Me A11d Mr Okl
. . n.lt 1 e1u11,.n •••~Ill
cuc koo Blnl 1
Don't &amp;won ~·till At Me ; C"trlle cotto11·
Ttt ~ rart 0 Mhta ; lytle On Tilt ea11Jo ;

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OlaOIItNK I"OTMI:IItl • MCA· 1 tt
AL8UMU.II
Will You . . Ltwlfll AIIOthlr Mall ; Moll)' AM
Ten .. rotkiJ I'll ......, IMtll AllotMr Tear; Mr
Llttlt Girt lA TIIIM .... I l"tl NHtr Lowe
Antthtrl 111 Cit st•••lnt Teo t llttciCJ To• ;
Gal, You.,. Qet A Jo• Te DO l MJ 1'11•orltt
Mt"'orr1 Orlwlll' Nallt IR MJ Coffin ; If I
Cot1N CMftt Oft Yow.
I TlltACK TAPC • MCAT•ttl t-4.11
OIIO .. NII I .. OTMEIIIII • MCA•UI

ALlUM 1.1.11

1 8twM On MY Kll. . AM Crl. . "'Holr"' j
How Clrut TfiH Art1 .. OCIII Of A .. l l StN
AwiJ AM "'''' I
MJ war Ovt: Of
Trou•lt\ Wilt Vtu M" Mo Ofllr Yeftdlf l
Lltht A ne lltlt'Ort W"at A l'rt.,.d Wt Htft
111 Jeeut1 MMIII l'er Mettltn ;
sure
Ctla ..... MIJ WMrt Wt' ll Nl¥1r Grow Old .
t TttACK TAPE · MCAY•UI Jo4 ,1t

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OlaGIItNa 1"0THRIIti • MCA•1JI

At.IUM 11.11

"Uit)', AN Yh MMI I UrtMittt TO Tfte .. 11n1
ftaftkl l'tr All TfM Vttttf'IIIIIJ ' II ....... ,. ,
ut Mo II TIM l'l"t To KIIOW i Thl l'ltlttlft"
1141t Of Me1 TOftMIMI Hovrwl 001.1 won.
Of l'o,..ttoR ,.orlt ; semnHr 't . .ctr 111
TewR; "'' If Of Ulltll Tomonow ; M141•

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

I T~ACK TAPI • MCAT•III . ..11

UN.IT TUIII • MCA•. . ALlUM U .ll

I'll 011 AIOOI . ._.OWl llt. .lot ArouM r
I'IH.. M . . . , 1 Wtleft Tlte WtrN H• Turntil
Ytu Oewft1 Htt'O You . . ., . . . ,. Loftltrl
T...,...t A UttiO ... Of . . . rytttln, IR TeaMI
WtlkiRt 1'M ,,.., ower YOU! Oft tweod On
T . . 111'101[ ,...,.~ Not.lot MOrl TO . . ..
llt:tlnMw At Mldftttfttl 111 AtwiJI . . OIM
To Ttlllt Yeu e11111 LAt'l IIJ Ot. . art
Ukl WI .... Hefle.
I TlltACK TAPC • MCAT.a• t-4.11
KtnY WCLLI • MCA•141 ALaUM N: .ll
Oult Oft Tt.t llltll1 I OrHmM I INNftM
Httwtft P'or YMJ LOMIOmt VIIM)' ' MJ
Oftft Are Wllthtl P'tr Mel I Htl ... Mr iawlor
Ctlll Tilt Ortat 1 ...1111141 ..... , Ht WIH SOt
Vevr ,... ... , Olt I'IPIJ we euriM Htr 80M1ttt
T.fll WllltWII ORe WI)' TICIIIIt 'r:o Tltt SkW' I
I ..... TIM " " ' "' Mttttttw TWOfttY•I'OUfl
Ltf'd l' tn COMI .. Htlftt.
I T,.ACK TAPE • MCAT•t41 14.11

�P... 22. MUSIC CllVIIEWS

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H0£00WN

1980

MAY 1 ~ 11
FIDDI.ERS' CONVENTION
MI""""P'PII.MH
MAY 1~11
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL

Bluegrass
Fe•tlva.l
Directory

ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
ltlloii.IA
MAY 1~11
FIDDURS' COIIYENTION
E l l . _••• • MAY16-17
OUHIMECOUNTRY
RADIOIEUNION
-TN
MAY1~11
' BLUEGRASS FUTIVAL
F"""-.aoq
MAY 16-11
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAI.
1 -. AL
MAY 16-11
BLUEGRASSFEmVAL
lrlllolvlllt,OH
MAY 16-11
ILUEGRASSFESTlVAL
, , _ TX
'MAY 16-17
ILUEGRASS "CNIC
Alllnto. GA
MAY 17
FIDDI.ERS'CONVENTION
Wt'/Mf'tCow. VA MAY 17·19
GUITAR CONVENTION
!lounlolnVItw,AR MAY 1~17
BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL
HtrmH19t,MO
MAY 16-11
MOUNTAINGRASSFESTIVAL
Rljllty, WV
MAY 1•11
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
-WV
MAYI~11
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
Troy, AL
MAY 16-11
COUllTRY MUSIC/
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAI.
H-GA
MAY16-11
II.UEGa,WFEITIVAL
Tllllcol'lllni.TN
MAY16-11
II.UEGRASSFEmVAI.

LMW1&lt;1. VA

Mluldln,sc

The following II a listing of BluegrHS,
Old-Time. Folk. Craft and Music feltlvela
tor 1t1e 1910 IHIOII. Before traveling long
dlatanctl you IIIOuld confirm that 1t1e
event will bt taking place. MCN IdYlyou to flnt check with- local and county
radio ltattona. MWapapers, pollee and
lfltrlff'a deparimenta In 1t1e locality of 1t1e
event tor apaclflc ilttalla and to verify
locatlonl and ......

..
'•

BLUEGRASSFESTIVAI.
OUHIMEFIDOI.W.,
MAYH
CIIAIIPIOIIIHIPl .• ' llwtr,kY
FIDOI.EU'CONYENTION
C - . TN
MAA...II
II.UEIIASS FEST1\¥i.
P-WV
APR.H -ru'E~Fem:A"H
-.,PA
MAYH
-~WOIUI
II.UEGIASSFESTIVAI.
FIDDUUCIIAIIPICIISIIIP
MAYU
Unltn-M.C.
AFI.H Mck-, TX
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
II.UEGIAIS FESTIVAl.
---.AL
API ... -II.U.:I"ISFESTIV~HI
.AIIUAI.. . ' .•
.,.. -MAYI-J
tw~Fem• '.;· Or..,...KY
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAI.
-NC
AM.U
-FL
MAYH
III. . UIIF~
,lrttrfl*.AL .
API.H
FIDDI.EU'CGIYIIITIOII
L-IIJ
MAYI
Alnl CRAFTS
IMJOFESTIVAI.
G... _TX
AI'II.U
!';l'l.lltiii__.,MIIk NY
MAYS
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
lllUHRASSFESTIVAI.
API.U -.OIC
MAYS
IUIEGRASSFEmYAI.
II.UHRASSFEST\YAI.
lotii-CA
API.U
MAYH
III.UHIUSFESTIVAI.
IOCIETYFORTHE
-Dk
A~l. l
PERSERYATIONOI'
FIDDUIIS'CONVEITION
CllldlW...-MO API.6
II.UURASSMUSIC
ASSOCIATION FElT.
FIDDUIII'CIIIV£NTION
MAYH
Unltn-.NC
APR. It-11
FIDDLERS'CONVENTION
II.UHIASS FESTIVAl.
Scm... OA
API.1HI ~I~IIAT-•• Mrtl
alii TIME FIDDLERS'
on. CIAFTIFEITIVAL
CIDIM!NTIOII
-.NC
API. II·II ·~~-llft-U"FOI.MAYK•11
II.UHIWIFEmVAI.
rvv '"""" . .
MUSIC FESTIVAL
. IIC
•
APII.IHI
LIIArlltitlo~
MAH
II.UHRASS FESTIVAl.
FmiVAI.
~-NC
API. IHI
LIUCirloi.LA
MAYS-II
M••tlUIFEmYAL
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAI.
- -FESTIVAl.
API. II a..t, AL
MAnn
IUIHUII
II.UEGRASSFEmVAI.
~API. IHI
MAHII
II.UHRASSFESTIVAI.
ILUIGRASSFESTIVAI.
E - OA
API. 11-»
s.-. vA
MAYf-lt
II UIII~IIFUTIVAI.
CAINilOUIDFESTIVAI.
-TN
API.1·"
MAvt-11
AITSlCRAFTS
fOU(MUSlCFESTIVAI.
· WV
API.
11-11 E-.01
MAvt-11
II.UEIRASS FESTIVAl.
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAI.
Fl.-fL
API. ll-»
·MA vt
FOUITII LAYOIDcaAWIOII - -MO
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
IIEIIDIIW.II.UEGRASS
-Dk
MAYf-11
FESTIVAI.ANDFIDOI.E
IUIEGRASS FESTIVAl.
JAIIIOIIEEIMTSl
wtru.VA
MAvt-11
CIAFTSFAIR
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
-.AL
. API.ll-lt
I.Mnf.IN
MAvt-11
OZAil FOUMUSIC
· 11.UIGIASS/OI.DTIME
FmiVAL
FIDDLIU' CONVENTION
-tin Vltw, AA APR. lt-11
C~otrWM, NC
MAvt-11
OUHIMEMUSIC
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
CONVEITION
MAvt-11
L- I L
API. IHI W-GA
II.UHIASSFESTIVAL
ANIIUAI. CIIW CNIP
illY Clly, Ml
MAY 10
THIICJI!fllll CliiiTEST
II.UEGRASSFEITIVAL
...,.,, Dk
APR. It
""'YVfflt.MO •
MAvt-11
GREEN COUNTY
IIAJIJOFESTIVAL
II.UEGRASS SHOW
MAvt-lt
CoUIMVIUt, OIC
APR . lt -llnVItw, AR
FESTIVAL
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAl.
MA vt-10
PoUock. LA
A.. A. »27 Flcllol. $C
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
MAY t-11
L-. fL
APR. 25-27 J -, AL
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
ILUEGRASSFESTfVAL
MAvt-11
Ctmtnl, Ok
APR. 21-17 COIIfltld. TN
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
MAvt-11
Nt&lt;co. CA
API. 21-17 Qr-FL
BLUEGWSII'IDDLERS'
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAI.
CONVENTION
StilL. TX
APR. 25-17 110-lnO.CA
MAvt-11
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL

--TX

-Ott

•

-.lA

-.NC

-WV

..

H
-

JMPif', AL

ILUE~RASSFESTIVAL

APiil:. 25-21

MII-.AL
MAvt-11
FESTIVAl.
Amt41a, VA
Allft. 25-27
1..-.CA
MAvt-11
ILUEGRASS FESTIV~
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
WIMiilrO. S(
API. IS-M
F-.OH
MAYI·I1
FOU MUSICAIO
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
Fl DOI.EU' CIIIV£MTIOII
MAvt-11
llowllnflar-.kY
API.:II Slulrt. VA
llW. SlEENSl
ILUEtRASS FESTIVAl.
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAI.

Ot11W1. OH

GOINS IROS.

APR . 25-27

1

MAY1~17

ar~FES;::~u-"

-.VA
MAYIJ-27
FOU FUTIVAI.
kornlllo,TX
MAYII-17
II.UEGRASSFmiVAI.
...._NC .
MAYII-IA

II.~FUTIVAI.
caawk-.MD
MAY2)!S

CMTEISTANLEY
II.UIIIMSI'UTlVAI.
- V A MAYII-25
OAit~PMK

II.UHIASI.IAMIOIEE
Gllo-TX
MAYII-25
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAI.
MctdMt .... U

-.u.

--.IIC

CIY*. IN
MAY .JUNE I
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Wl9olns. Ml
MAY •JUNE 1
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
. _ y, OH
MAY•I
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
PIUidlni.OH
MAY•1
FIDDI.ERS'CONVENTIQN
...,..ltw, TX .
MAY•I
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
kMXVIIIt, TN
MAY•I
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAI.
I'II. JtMMhi.. AA
MAY.I
RALPH STANLEY'S
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
MtCiurt. VA
MAY •JUNE 1
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
Jl&lt;'•wlllt,IL MAY.JUNE1
FIDDI.ERS'CONYEITION
Normln.Dk
MAY.JUNE 1
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
~r. NC
MAY •11
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Por11NIIIt,CA MAYII·JUNE 1
FESTIVAL •
Sir_,.,, CT MAY .JUNE I
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
ln(llonS,..,MDMAY.JUNEI
BLUEGRASS/FIDDLUS'
CONVENTION
Mt.'Airy, NC
MAY
OUI TIME
FIDDI.EU'CONYENTION
011111. NO
MAY 11
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
~. 0H
JUNE I
FOUMUSK:CONVEITION
W-DC MAYJI·JUNEI
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
ClrlltltONTMCIOM JUNE I
II.UEGIWIFESTIVAI.

.31

''*:U~fJiMi_NEI

-o.NC
MAY:IIJUNEI
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
_,._PA MAY·J-1
II.UEGRASS FUTIVAI.
CriiY ..... IL MAY.JUNEI
II.UEGIW&amp;II'IDDLIU'
COIVIIITMII

-kl
MAY.JUNEI
II.UHRASSFUTIVAI.
-JUNEH
II.UHRASSFUTIVAI.
_...,VA
JUNEH
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
--.Dk
JUNEH

MAYD-15

OUITIMEFIDDUU'
CONVENTION
Lllllii.VA
MAYII-25
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
Oudl-. TN
MAYII-25
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
T-FL
MAYII-25
II.UEGIWSFESTIVAI.
ClwCIIy,kY
MAYI),25
SOCIETY FOI
PRESUVATIOII
Of'ILUEGRASSMUSIC
11-.v,MO
MAYII-25
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
-CIIy,GA MAYII-25
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
MAYII-25
MEMOIIAI. D.\Y
II.UEGRASSFUTIVAI.
Crlntr, Dk
MAYII-25
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAI.
OUITIIIEFIDDI.EU'
COWEMTIOI

MAYII-25
FESTIVAl.
N-11-kY MAYII-25 ·
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAI.
-lo,MS
MAYII-25
FIDDI.EU' CONVENTION
-CT
MAY2A
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAI.
0U1 TIME
FIDOI.IU'CIIIV£1TION
-OH
MAYII-25
FIDDI.ERS'CONVENTION
A - TX
MAY2A
FIRST ANNUAI.MIOWEST
COUNTRYMUSIC
OIMMO.IA
MAYSA-:11
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
Wllklr,WY
MAYII-25
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAIJ
FOLKMUSIC
-$tiii-.FL
MAYII-25
II.UEGRASSIFIDOLERS'
CONVENTION
DtcoiiW. AL
MAY,.,.
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAl.
Hlow-.GA
MAYII-25
FESTIVAL
Em'-t, MO
MAY 22·21
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
k-lllt, IL
MAYII-21
FESTIVAL
-.PA
MAYIA-21
OUITIMEGUITAR
FESTIVAL
Pt-.Al
MAY,.·25
FESTIVAl.
Pollod&lt;P-CA
MAYSA-25
FOUMUSICFESTIVAL
Wllc. Dtiii.WI
MAYD-17
BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL
N. Slro.,.,lllt, OH
MAY 12-20
FESTIVALOI'USA
LOU. kY
MAY JI·JUNE 1
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
Ao!W111t. NC
MAy lt-Jl
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAI.
· - Rendl. FL MAY •JUNE I
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAl.
Prtllln,CT
MAY.JUNE1 '

ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
AlTSl CIAFTSIFOUtMUIIC
Vltw, AI API. 15·27 SCIIIOF.,_t,OH MAYI~It
II.UIGRASSFESTIVAL
FIDDURS' CIIIV£1TIOII
MAY 1HI
Ltr _ , CA
AP1.17 Clrllllrt· FL
II.UEGIASSFESTIVAI.
FOUMUSIC
lrl~ TN
MAYI-I E~~; 11~ d •I ~Y16-I~'' " I

•

1• ,

I ;

, \

1 , • •

•

~ J \ •

NISIIvllle, Tenneuee, April, 1910

' ILUHIWFESTlVAL

-WV
JUNU7
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAI.
E-MO
JUNEH
FOUMUSICFUTIVAI.
-Orlllilo.NJ
JUNU7
PIDDUU' CCilV£ lT lON
Edtn.NC
JUNH7
OUITIME
MUSICCONYEIITION
GIIIX. VA
JUNU7
ILUEHASIFUTIVAL
Pllroyro.MO
JUNEH
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
F - MD
JUNE H
OUITIIIE
FIDDI.IIIt' CIIIV£ITION
-GA
JUNEH
FESTIVAl.
_F.,.,,WV
JUNIH
II.UHMISFESTIVAI.
Fl. W.,..,IN
JUNEH
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
lwl'

n.Ut

JUNE7·1S

II.UEGRASSFESTIVAI.
1-AL
JUNh7
IEOGATE
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
k-It. TN
JUNEH
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
LltlltHtdiJot,OH
JUNEH
SUPERGRASS ..
- . , PA
JUNE H
II.UEGRASSFmiVAI.
W-VA
JUNEH
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
McCiywlllt,GA
JUNEH
0U1 TIME
FIDOI.EU'CIIIV£NTIOII
. NO
JUNEI-7
FOUFESTIVAL
CIMroloa:•MD
JUNE7
.ILUEGRASS FESTIVAl.
Cllli.NC
JUNEH
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
Hy-MD
JUNEH
COUNTRYWESTERN
CONTEST
W - Nl
JUNEI-t
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAI.
Fl.- k N
JUNEH
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
Clltrow. sc
JUNEI-7
FIDDI.EU'CONYENTION
SOWI&lt;k.~A
JUNE7
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
,_vlllt, MI
JUNE7
FOLKMUSICFESTIVAL
Gr1y1011,kY
JUNHI
FIDDI.EIS'CONVENTION
-~vlllt, MD
JUNEI
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
F..,_, WV
JUNE H
IILL-ROE'SIEAN
ILOSSOM FESTIVAL
- 1 -. IN
JUNEI-15
FOLK MUSIC FESTIVAL
cr.t P•k. MO JUN H il
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
-FIIOIIyF. Ol JUNEI&gt;
15
FOU MUSIC FESTIVAL
Clni_..,TX
JUNEI2

r• f~Tjf~. , t. nu u l ~ ll.'"'~f~SJI~A~ '
.. ~ ~ ~ ~ •.• - ... ... .. - -

• ; t_ ..... ... . ·~·. ~

4

•

Dian. WV

JUNE 1,_15

FIDDLERS'COIIYENTION
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL ·
JULY1HI
-NC
JUNE:IIIO Jot-.wv
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
FIDDI.ERS' CONVENTION

Con fln ~ed

I

•

'"""""'OM

-Ok

'

AUG 23

OLD TIME
FIDDLERSCONVENTION
C1nvonvllle, OR

AUG 23

FIDDLERS CONVENTION
AUG 23

Brogue, PA

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Slatyt«k, WV

AUG 2l·U

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Soultlwest, VA

AUG 21·SEPT I

MUSICFESTIVAL
Union Grove. NC Aug. 21·SEPT 1

FESTI VAL
Carllon Hanev's F .• NC
AUG H SECT 1

OUTOOOR THEAT RE
FESTIVAL
Kerrvlllt, TX

.4.UG 28 31

OLD·TIMECOUNTRY EX PO
Courw:ll Bluffs, lA

AUG 29·30

BLU EGRASSFESTIVAL
Blrdstown, KY

.4.UG 29 31

MUSICFESTI VAL
Norman, OK

29·31

BLUEGRASS FEST IVAL
AUG 29 XI

h ldvillt, NC

BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL
Gamer, NC

AUG 29-SEPT 2

BLUEGRASS F6STIVAL
SEPTI-7

Bloun"lllt, AL

BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL

Clay Clly, KY

SEPT S7
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

Dlhlonega, GA

SEPT S 1

FAMILY FESTI VAL
KeiiOIIQ,i A

SEPT H

THE!!ON ROEHOMECOMING
Beanr Dam, ICY

SEPTS·7

BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL
Noblesville, IN

SEPTS 1

BLU EG RASS FESTIVAL
Paola, KS
SEPT 57

OLDTIMEFIDDLERS/

Remus,
SEPT 57
BLUMl
EGRASS FESTIVAL

FESTIVAL

'l

PA

WlscOrisln Dells, WI Aug19·Sept l.

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Grand Terrtct. CA AUG 2'9-SEPT
I

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Kerrvlltt, TX

AUG 11 J1

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Dhcon, MO

AUG 29·30

· MUSICFESTIVAL
N1ftJfll BrldQt, KY

AUG 29-31

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
White Springs, FLAUG 29·SEPT 1

TR I-STATE FAIR
Angola, IN

AUG 29·] 1

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
GlnQOW. DE

AUG 29·31

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Romt, GA

AUG 29·31

ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
C1vtCity , lY

AUG 29·31

SHINDIG
Ashttlllt, NC

.4.UG 30

ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
lr~nttordO N T ,

AUG »SEPT 1

FOUMUSIC FESTIVAL
PtnetSpgt., WV .4.UG »SEPT 1

ILUEGRASSIOLD TIME
•-fiDDLERS CONVENTION
PltbiM, OH

CM'icln. OK
FOL~

AUG30SEPT2

MUSIC FESTIVAL
SEPT H

Co&amp;W, Tn

• ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
OM;Dil, AI

SEPT H

ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
SEPT . H

R.W. SKEENS. GOINS
BROS. BLUEGRASS FESTI VAL
Sclolo Furnace, OH
Jonesville, Ml

FESTI VAL
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

I I

P ayWK~ ,

AZ

SE PT 21·28

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Clintwood, VA

SEPT 26·21

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Buff1lo Gap, TX

SEPT 26·21

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
SE PT 2HB

FOLKMUSIC FESTIVAL
SE PT 26-28

MOUNTAIN STATE
FOR ESTFESTIVAL

SEPT 26·28

OCT 3-&lt;t

Palmvra. MO

S"EPT 26·18

ORANGE BLOSSOM PAR kS'S
BEST IN BLUEGRASS
Or•noe Blossom, VA
Elilabelhlon, TN

Anlltrs, OK

FESTI VAL
Dearborn, Ml

OCT 3·5

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
El Paso, TX

OCT 3-S

OLD TIME
FI DDLERS CONVENTION

""""""· FL
HOY" 16
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

Ferrum, VA

SOCIE TY FORTH E

PRESERVATION OF
BLUEG RASS MUSIC

OCT 25

COUNTRYMUSI C/GOSPEL
FESTIVAL

Glto Roso, TX

FESTIVAL
LakeOurk, MO

OCT li·NOVI

BLU EGRASS FESTIVAL
OCT JI ·NOV 1
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

San0lf90,0. •

Ham ilton, OH

OCTH

Casllewood, VA

SEPT 1
SEP'T 1

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
SET P 111J

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

SEPT 12 1•

BLU EG RASSFE STI VAL
lndianSprlngs, MD

SE PT 12·1•

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Chlplty. FL

SEPT 13 h

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
BunBiossum, IN

SE PT 111 •

OLDTIME
FI DDLE RSCONVENTI ON
Draktsvllle,I A

SEPT 12·H

SEPT 12·13
SEPT 12·1J

HARVEST FESTIVAL
Conowlnoto, MD

SEPT ll

SEPT 12 I•

BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL
SEPT 1J·H

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Noei, MO

SEPT 121A

FLATPICKI NG
CHAMPIONSHIP
FESTIVAL
SEPT 12·1A

BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL
SEPT 11·20

FALL NATIONAL
CRAFTS FESTI VAL
Springfield, MO SEPT ll·OCT 12

FLAT-P ICk CHAMP IONSHIPS
Wlnlltld, KS

SEPT 11·21

BLUEGRASS FESTI VAL
Prestonsburg, KY

SEPT 19·10

BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL
OtiiWI, OH

SEPT 19 21

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

The Heoft ir~~m •

. .... ..• ..• . . .. • . H•ndenon'lflll
. ! -R..IUJ.W.-- .. ·· - . ~....
. TN :!7075 ~
•

IILL MONIIOI • MCA•U

~iLIUM

lUI

.......

SPBGMA BLUE GRASS
FESTIVAL
Canll f ulton, OH

•.•h......

!t.OJiliTTA LYNN · MCA•t ALlUM U .ll
Eworye.octr Wtlltt To Oo To Htavt11 1 w...,.
No 0111 Stlncll Alont ; Whell Tilt)' !!till, Y11oto
Ookltll .. Ill ; , ..., 111 TIM VtiiiJI If CouN
Hur Mr Motlter "•r Altln : Tftt Tfllnl Mtft l
How Qrut T"ou Artt5Md Clm• Mt1tl11' TIMO I
Wlltll I Htar Mr Clthartn Prar 1 In The lwHt I TlltACK TA•I • MCAT•II 14.11
Ire Ancl lrt ; Where 1 Learned To "ar 1 t'd
Rltfttr Hne .lltUI.
IILL MONIItOI • MCA .. I ALlUM il.tl
I TRACK TAPE • MCAT ·I J4 .tl
Uttlt ....... , llutiO Ctll lit .. ; Tor fW1rt1
I'm Gohtl . . , .. To Old Ktlltuckr\ Lmt Attd
Ut Ut'OI NIM PeuM Htmmtrr Cot Ott PIONII
JIMMY MAIIITIN • MCA-11 ALlUM U .l l John Haf'llllr~ IIIHr Grove ; Dtnnr IOJ I
" " " .. Ill Of HUvtn l Ooocllh't l Olfll Mt Jot.~rttq•• l:lldi Otd Joe Cllrtr.
RoMt Now ; What Woukl You Oln In ••· NO TAP I. AVAILAeLI
clttntt ; Voloe Of Mr Savior; Sllut In'• ,.aror1
Thlt Work! It Not Mr Home , " " TM etLL MONIIlOI: • MCA•Il ALlUM tJ.II
Cloudt Awar ; Lord I'm Co"'lnt Horne ; • .,. ,.11111 Me•ttttltt 81.,.11 cotum•u•
Qlwe Me Your Hand : Uttlt Wftltt Ch1uot. ; SteckHO lhiHI T..... Wll Notttlttt Wt
ooa Ouldt our LUdtn Hand. ~
Could Dt1 I WH Uft On Tho ltr•h Ill
I TRACK TAPE · MCAT·tl $4.tl
SliMY lltlwtr; CMO Left Afftlrt Wftt Will
I E•f.. fft Alteut YOUI Pottr fll.,.'l Carel"'
LOwt l t•rn It LOMMfftl I CIU141 CtYJ . .ker"t
JIMMY MAATtN • MCA ·I1 ALlUM 11.11 aroakdOWIIJ WIMft Tho .... Art '" Tftt Hln,
Thoro Al11' t Nalt041)' Qonna Mill Me Whlll I TlltACK TAPE • MCAT·I7 M.tl
I' m Gone: ,.tttndlnt I Oon•t Cart ; LUvln'
ToWil l Ooll' t Glvt Your Htart To A Rame.ltrl
Train II'Ort)'•PIWI ; Drink UP And Oo Homt ; ltLL MON,.OI • MCA· 104 ALlUM U .ll
I Clf!.o I Will, I Do IOIIh't J Thtrl Wit A Lowe 1 ltont)' L.OttOMfMI salltr"l Hortt.IMl Tttl
Hit poarldt Of Lovtf· Sttppln' Stontt ; Tftt Tlme.ar ; Get U• Jthllt lrew11 COWIIIY 1re1k•
Jokt'l On You ; Sk p L HOP And Wobblt. down, Ptttft1nt111t couftttY I ett Mill! 1111t1
ClaUtl SCotland ; IIIIW Hldt ; MOIIf'OI'I HorttI TN ACK TAPE · MCAT· It $4.11
.IM · Whttt HelL
NO tA'I: AVAILAILI:
JIMMY MAIIITIN • MCA·ll -ALlUM IJ.II
Sulln)' Shll Of Tilt Mounlllft ; It . Tlkll 0111
To K11ow 0110 1 Qultar Pic .. nt ltrttklent J I ILL MON"OII • MCA· t 10 ALlUM Sl .ll
Georwlt lllottt Letter l'rorn Mr
Shtnaftdutt Walta ;_ Poor Elltn Smith! I' d Mr Llttl•
lllttfttr HIVI A,noncl_i Thtrl'l . . tttr Timet Oarti11 1.J _Mtmorltt Of MottMr AIHI DMII Hit"•
A comln'; 20· 20 Vblon ; I'm tomlll' lack wor 01' SO"tw l Oft TIM 0141 Ktftttltii:Y
eut 1 Don•t Know Whtn ; SIIOW White Qrl'll l Sttorez Oft AM Ofll MY DJIIII aMI Mtmtrlet
or You ; Wftlt•h••• ltvttl luttr CNt ..
J Ohll Htllry ; In The Plntl.
LOWII I' m etve. I"Wt L,tMMfftl l WIMII Tlte
I TNACK TAPE · MCAT· ll 14.11
OOfdlft LNwtt ...... Te Pan.
JIMMY MAIIITIN • MCA· I1 ALlUM U .ll NO TAPI AVAILA.LI
You Don' t Know Mr MlrHI ; Homu•ctq 1qr
T rackl ; Nltht; Grand Olt O.ry Sont l Wfto' ll elLL MONIItOK • MCA•114 ALaUM IJ.II
Slnt ll'or Ma ; Hold Whatcha Got ; ldoro Tilt No Oftt lut MY Dertln' J.I'tn Oltl KtfttuettJ
Sun 0011 Downt· Cripple CrtOk ; lt' t Not . . vntl ; ,_IMII L . . . l WftJ Did Vt• IIW'
Llko Hom0 1 All he Ooocl Tlmtt Art Patt Oooei .. ,OJ LOUIPIIIt ....tllldewftl Afl Aftltf
And Gone ; I Llkt TO Hetr 'Em Preach lt. In 01 ... 1111 1'10 Woory Of Holrl-11 'tllo
Pint Wltl""rwllh W•• AM err; veu•n
I TRACK TAPil · MCAT· I1 $4.11
Drirtlttt AWI)'J Tftll'l Wftlt I Ullle A•o•llt Yeu.
I
TIIACK TAPI • MCAT·U• . ..11
JIMMY MAIIITIN • MCA ·101 ALlUM 11.11
Widow Mlklr; Sl• Dart 011 Tfll Rold : I'll
Ntwor Tlkt No F'or An AntwtrL''m Thlnklftl IILL MONIOI • MCA•UI ALlUM 1.1.11
Till
IIIIM
Oo Mol LO,..
TOP!Itltt Of Mr elut IJIII Tfltro•t Mort
oliO! MJ
IL Wilt A LlttiO t.o- , _
Qlrtl Tftal'l Oftll HI)' LOMIOffttt Mr
lUll A Ve
PreM Ofl Hllfll I'M Worll:l"'
Wtlk ftl Sltoot ; Truck Orlttlll&amp; M111 1 Ocean Of
OlamoN•; Truck Orlver' t
uHII i Tht ON Oft A •utNiftll DoR"t "-1 Off 'nil TtMerrewl
M111'1 Drunk Atalll ; Ill 'OHr Old LOIIdefl, HI WHI ... v.. r , ...., Afl,.l Get Dewft OR
VHr K11•1 AM,.,.,, ....
LMOJ ~alkl"'
I TRACK TAPI. · MCAT·101 $4.11
111 Jtruultm Just Lilli• JP111
Otlt".
JIMMY MAIItTIN • MCA · 111 ALlUM SJ .tl I TlltACK TAPE· MCAT•U1 . .. II
... CtUIIIr)'l ..... lltOOitOr l Crow 011 TM
. . n.IO I You Art M)' IUnthllll ' U•ttWft ai\. L MON .. OI: • MC.\•UI AL.IU~.II
ON
IIUtll Orantt .. Ottolft t•Hith WIN ti'HIIII'I I I Uyt IR Ttto Pltl1 Crtlf.. CrMIII
Oolnt UP Dry eranch 1 UtUt Matti• Sh .. l I)OIIIfj TIM Lolli .1. .11 Vtlh LOt Ctlt 1t t11 TIM
so lwttt l UnJtn count)' ; llttd lltl"r Vaner1 L.IMI Wtftt To Oe Wlttl Yt•1K111t.... r Mtn.
••1111 1 leHJ Oeodll'll Ntftr Attlftllt TIM atue
Tfttmo Tl"''·
MOtll IIIII Slll..tRtl JI'IN 011 TM Me•ttttlfl.
I TlltACK TAPE • MCAT· 111 $4.11

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

PoyOII, KS

IIL.L MON .. OI • MCA· JIO ALlUM 12.11
I Hawen•t $elft Mery In Vun; LO'f'l, Plene
Come Home , Wfltft The Oeklen Lenu
...... To P'11l 1 Till "'Mt i llftkt Of Tfll Ohio ;
MoU•er't Oftly SIMPiftt l POttY M0u11tal11
To• ; Willi Of Tl"'1 1 101111)' 1 SweethUrt You
DoM Mt WrOftt l Whit Should You Glwe 111

MllllfJ Wftln M)' 11ul Mooft Tunu T o GoJd .
I TRACK TAP I· MCAT· 1 11 S4.tl

UftCII LOU! Uttlo ..tool ....... Yttr IIY"I
You Un In A World All Your Ow11 1 ThM
Cflllltlt lwtrytftlntl llut Gr111 Ptrt Onlt
Ill llllwor+ Plo.,." Of Lo"1 lt't Mftfttr
Dtrll: To flvel; lot« Down TIM lltl"rl ,...
Mr Jtultlttr DoH AWtrl Un ... Mt liteM

SEPT 13

Wlllllmton, WV

AID I'OLEY • MCA·147 ALlUM IJ II
. . ro nct Tht SUIIttt; lhOUkl You Oo l'l;,t 1
,_let Ill The Vttltr 1 Slttl AWI)' t Jult A
CloMr Wtlk Wltft Thtt 1 Our L.H)' Of 1'1th1ta;
Tl'll Place Wfl.,.l 1 WO,....lp ; SOmtOIII To
Cl" l Tht lltOUtY I Wilt Tht Clrcll It Uft·
ttrokln ; Okl PIP.J' t Ntw . .11101 1 Htlr A
Cllolr; Whtn Qod DhU Hit Lowt Ill M)' Htlrt .
I TRACK TAPE · MCAT·IU 14.11
PIDDLE MUSIC : Slfowfllkl JllHh Utttl tilt
llttd ; lltun, JohiiiiJ, """' litter Crttk .,......
down 1 l'kldler•t DNIIItl Cllflntt . .11111 1•
01)'1 fll Otortll; Acorft Hill lrt1k4IOWIII
Ill Sind)'! Star A Ll"lt Lonttrl DoM
00M ; Jtlll Polkl.
NO TAPI AVAILAILI

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Wl ycrou,GA

IILL MON .. O E • M t: A ·111 ALlUM t2 .t l
Turtcey 11'1 11'11 St nw ; I Woftdlr Wftlrt Yo u
Arl T on .. ht l Thll ' t All Rltht ; A ll Ttll Good
TIMII Art , ... And 00ftt ; ,rett y , 1lr In T fllt
Olrdln ;
.. oil On ludiiiY Roll On ; IIUI
~ltht'r
· Mldnl,ht On Tht Storm y Deep ; we re
Vou
t11r1 1 t Mlktl No Dlfflrtf'lct ; Dusty

.

TOMMV JACKSON • MCA· IU ALlUM U.ll

SEPT 1214

BLUEGRASS FESTI VAL
Clltraw, SC

.IIMMII DAVII • MCA· Jit ALlUM SJ.tl
I Wouklll't Tako Nothlll' l' or Mr JiturMr
Now; How b r.,t Thou Art; Ont Mort Vlller;
SomtOIIt To C1n1 Wllttd Ytlrl l Supper
Tlmt ; Whtll Ood DIN Hit Loft Ill M)' HUrt!
Tllltr Thtll Tr. .l t Wflo Am IP : Nttr Tftt
Cr011 1 Hit MI"II O'UI Ortce,
I T RACK TAPE · MCAT•Jit $4 .11

I TJilACK TAPI • MCAT· 210 14.11

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
SclotoFurnau, OH

DEC 13

BLUEGRASS FESTI VAL

FOLK MUSIC FESTIVAL

Glenn HollOW. NC

OEet. 7

BARN DANCE

Live Oak. FL

OCT 17·19

OECS 7

BLUEG RASS FESTIVAL

FIDDLERS CONVENTION

BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL

NOV 20·22

FI DDLERSCONVENTION
Cod,, WY
NOv n

FOLKMUSI CFESTIVAL

COUNTRY MUSI C/BLUEGRASS
FESTIVAL

HOY" "

I LUEGRASSFESTIVAL

OCT 25

Gilmer, TX

OCT 10·11

OCT 17·19

Hlawuste, GA

FESTIVAL

'""· FL

OCT 24-26 Myrtlt BeKh, SC

Hlawu$et, GA

NOV19

OLDTI MEFOLK
MUSIC/BLUEGRASS

OCT 24·26

COUNTRY MUSIC/BLU EGRASS
FESTIVAL

OCT 1H9

Steele, AL

BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL

LaktCily,FL

OCT 23·26

GOLDENWEST
Norco, CA

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

OCTH

OCT 19

Berea. KV

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Columbia, MO

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
NO'o' 1 2

Fotsum, LA

CAMPUSOLDTIME
FI DOLERSCONVEN TION

OCT 10·11

Bul headCity,AZ

FIDDLERS CONVEN TION
Section; Al.
NOV 1

FI DDLERSCONV ENTION
Goiela, CA

BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL

O . TH

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

OCT I·S

OLD TIME
FIDDLERS
CONVENTION
A!Mns, AL

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL
I O.kll"d, MD
OCT 10·11
O"aw1,0H
OCT l·S
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Wlllllmsburg, VA
OCT 10·12
Glen Rose. TX
OCTH
BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
OCT 11
Ames. lA
Duncan, OK
OCTH
BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL
FIDDLERSCONVENTION
Fl. Peirce, FL
OCT 10·12
Granite Quarry, NC
OCT &lt;t
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
BLUEGRASS FESTIYAL
Amelia , VA
OCT 10·12
Shawnee, OK
OCT4
BLUEGRASS FESTI VAL
I,ANDOFMAR KTWAIN
Pauldltllf, OH
OCT 10·12
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Marietta, GA

OCT 11

JAMBOREE
AoSimond, CA
OCT 11·19
OLDTIME

Up Your Class With Blue Grass · Your Last Chance To Buy At These Low Prices.

"'"r.

t:

List

o-•

Of"''"Of

I TIIACK TAPI • MCAT•tll . .. ll

How, Why, Where, and Wh en Your quesltons In·

1

OLD TIME
FIDDLERS CONVENTION

Mountain View, AR

OCT10·11

SEPT67

swered,concerninl The Nashville Music Industry. for
complete inlormation-write to;,.. , .•. • ·-·
·~ "'

SEPT 21

Mountain, TN

McCI'(SVIlle, GA

~-~r=======================:============~Sh:•:wo:,.:·:O:K===~NO~V~I~:Jt:k•:':·":•""=·G:•::::O;E~C~26~18~

From the Heart of Nashville

'

SEPT 26·28

Harpers Ferry , WV

Sign~

SEPT 19·10 Elkins, WV

BLUEG RASS FESTIVAL
Elll iay, GA

SEPT26-71

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

Poweii,MO
SEPT 20·21

Kings Moonta in, NC

BLUEG RASS FESTIVAL
Dlsnev. OK

Arcadia, FL
SEPT20

Canal Fulton, OH

Aspiring songwriters have until June 4 to
enter the American Song Festival competi·
tion, the seventh annual musical talent
search that awards cash prizes and profes·
sional industry exposure to its winning en·
trants.
Over 1,350 cash prizes, including two
grand prizes of $10,000, will be awarded in
ten categories in professional and amateur
divisions.
'For additional information of the
American Song Festival, or for an offi cial
ef\l~Y- form, contact The American Song
Festival, 6253 Hollywood Blvd., Suite 319,
f~ql!&gt;(,wood, CA 90028.

\

SEPT 19·21

FESTIVAL

ASF Opens
'80 Competition

'

SEPT 19-21

SEPT26·27

BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL

OCTH

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

O'LUCKS FESTIVAL

Murphy, NC

BLU EGRASS FESTIVAL

Rhine, GA

Moonlaln VIew, AA

WlyntSboro, VA

OCTH

SEPT S·7

Folsum, L.A

SEPT 1
SEPT 1

OLD TIME
FIDDLERSCONVENTION

OLD TIME
FIDDLERS CONVENTION

FALL FESTIVAL
Lawtey FL

BLUEGRASSFESTIVAL

Wlnfltld, KS

PICNIC
WfttGfove, PA

SEPT 19·21

SEPT 2 H

FOLK MU SIC FESTIVAL
H1mmet1, PA

AUG 29·31

FESTIVAL
Tomcit1M Corners, NY

GraSSVI IIey,CA

SEPT S 1

Jasper, AL

AUG 19·SEP T 1

GRASSVALLE Y
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

FOLk ROOTS 'IIIFEST.

AUGJO·ll

FOLKMUSIC FEST IVAL

SEPT 19·21

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Arley , AL

SEPT 6 7

Canal Fulton, OH

WI'IUemore Lake, Ml SEPT 111 •

Bellville, Ml

Cr-

·se PT.S 6

AUG 29 Jl

BLUEGRASSFUT IVAL

-kY

Bun Blossom, IN

SUmpfon, WV

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

SEPT 19·21

BILLMONROE'S AUTUMN
BLUEGRASS FESTI VAL

Wtsl Grove, PA

SUdtwryONT

..f.

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

8fa~e~~~~~~S FEST!~~l29 31

ALMOST HE AVE N'Ill FESTIVAl

SE PT 19-21

Noei, MO

BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

G~llsburg ,

SEPT 19·21

FI DDLERSCONVENTION
Hunlsvllle, AL

UniOn Grove, NC

A$1\vllle, NC

11-.

-Itt.

fr om Page 22

SHINDING

--:.=-..••
fiiii-AI;:.-a:.;-ltl7

••=

1

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BuShnell, IL

Festival
Directory

Lex-

-CT

~

MUSIC CITY NEWS, Page 23

TAI.ENTCIIAIIP-IP
W........ VA
AUG 2-I
FOU MUSIC FESTIVAL
KovJ 5cotta
A,UG I·J
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL

COUNTRY MUSIC FESTIVAl.
El-,., TN
JUNE 1~15
JULY 11·20
FOU MUSIC FESTIVAL
PortTownstnd, WA JUNE7U Ruby, VA
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
N-olllrldgo, KY JUNE II·I&lt;
Flltlof ROUifl, ICY JULY 1•1t Ktl&amp;lmmll. Fl
AUG H
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAl.
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Vllil Rk:t,GA
JUNE 13·14 MfWCIStlt, N. lrunsw. JUNE 29·2
G.......-. IN
JULYI.If Gtttysburt.PA
AUG H
ILIIEGRASS FESTIVAl.
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAl.
--OH
JUNEII-Il ILUEGRASIIROCK FESTIVAL
JULYII·If ~. OH
AUG 1-l
ARTSl CRAFTS FESTIVAl.
Eden, NC
JULY I Mtwtattt, VA
FIDDLEU'COIIVENTIOII
FOU FESTIVAL
-II.MD
JUNEII·Il
I'OIIDERHORN PARK
O.Win.VA
JULYit·11 p - -,WV
AUG1·1
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
II.UEGRAss FESTIVAL
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAl.
otlor-FL
JUNEIHl ~. Ok
JULY H
BLUEIIASS FESTIVAl.
Otflwo.OH
JULY 1. 10 - M I
AUGI
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
FIDOLEUCOIIYENTION
............
JUNEIHS ,.,.,, NC
JULY H IS
PnltDniiMH'I, KY
JULY 1•20 L.lvlngPM.MT
AUG 1-l
THI! FESTIVAl. Of'
FESTIVAL
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAI.
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
THE BLUEGRASS
G.tHnburg. TN
JULYt-5
EtktOn, VA
JUL.Ylf II'VftMkt.ME
AUGJ.3
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
lY
JUNE 12-15
SHINDIG
COUNTRY MUSIC
ORANGe ILOSSOM PARKS
lliWIYIIII.GA
JULYH
lEST IN BLUEGRASS
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
-~~~. NC
JULY 11
ILUEGRASS COliTEST
O r - 1 -, VA JUNEIHl era.nort, NC
FOUMUSICFESTIVAL
w..-.vA
AUG 2·1
JULYH
BLUEGIWS/Rli.K
L-.ONT
JULY11·10
FOUMUSICFESTIVAL
CONTEST
MUSIC FESTIVAl.
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
Lklcoln. NM
AUG 2-I
WtiiGrow.PA
JULY2
Coolly, TN
JUNE1~1l
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
• -. lA
JULY 11·20
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAl.
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Molt L.... WI JULY II·AUG I
Silty Dog, ME
JULY H
E - Poil. PA
JUNE 1!-15
Arlty,AL
JULY11·20
AUGUSTAMUSIC
OUITIME
.ILUEGRASS FESTIVAl.
FESTIVAL
FIDDI.ERS' COIIYENTION
IAIIJOFESTIVAL
Elklns. WV
AUGH
Slltm, lA
JUNE 12-14 o.rtii'IOUttt No. Cotlt
JULY l
DurlllmONT.
JU LY1•11
OUITIME
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAl.
OUITIME ,
CONTEST
FIDDI.ERSCONVENTION
Houstott.MS
JUNE 1,_14
FIDDI.IIS' CONVENTION
JULY1. 20 Alvwldi.TX
AUG1H'
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
,_lilt. VA
JULY H Semara, NC .
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
FAIR
Gr-VIIIoy,CA
JUNE1~1l COUNTRY GENTLEMEN FEST.
JULY1.20 GrlftdRapldt.MN
AUGI)-17
IILL-ROE'S
S,_,,VA
. JULYH ,.,..._,TX
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAl.
-1-.IN JUNE1&gt;12 EmlnMCo,MO '
JULYH ~-~~~~~If-It luri-NC
AUG1•16
IIOUIITAIN FOUS'
MUSIC FESTIVAL
-IL
JULY If-It
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
MUSIC FESTIVAL
17
-WV
JULYH
III.UHIAIIFESTIVAI.
~Fm~~:t
· ~MO
JUNE1•22
MTS lcaAfT$ FESTIVAl.
OUITIME
Sm-lltt, TN
JULY H - . 0 1
JULY II-. OH
AUG"I7
1M ....A.PIITIVAI.
aWHW&amp;FmiVAI.~
FIDDURS'CIIIV£1TION
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
AUGl$-17
-.OH
JUNE1.1l Wlrii.VA
JULY&gt;! teledii.PA JULYlf-. -I4VA
II.UHIAIIFUTIVAI.
.IUIEGRASS FUTIVAI.
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
11-IL
JUl.
y
tt-»
II.UIGRASS
FESTIVAl.
W-VA
JUNE1Hl P-LA
JULYU
II.UHIWIPISTIVAI.
IIWWRII' WV
AUG 11-17
IOIPILMUSIC FESTIVAL
'SHINDIG'
JULY1t-.
IUIHIIAIIFDTIVAI.
P-.OH
JUNE1Hl -Uio,NC
JULYS
III.UHRASS FESTIVAl.
II.UEGRASSFUTIVAI.
FIIT~II-17
FOI,I(MUIICFESTIVAL
GMT
JUNE 1)15 II'-~
JULY ..
DMr~EGRASSFU~~~~t-a
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JUNI: lJ.-15 H - - . JULY•»
w
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II.UEGIASSFEmVAL
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JUNE1Hl ~.-IIC
JULYH WfYIIIIVIIIo,IIC.
JULYSA-20
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II.UEGRASSPUTIVAI.
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FUTIVAI.
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PW.MI
JUNE1•1l Dotriii,OH
JULYH
~,,,.,
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JULYII-17 ......SIIDKEYUIIIIi'l
IILUHMIIPUTIYAI.
II.UEGRASS FErn VAl.
-·VA
JUNE 12-15 k-001JULYU
II.UEt••,.
II.UHIWI PUTIVAI.
--lln.NY
._
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II.UEGRASS FmiVAL
JULy
»17
FAMIL
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FIDDUIIS'CIIIV£ITION
Gf..,_kY
JULY&gt;!
II.UEIRASS FESTIVAL
Clnlln. NY
AUI ...
11.-uEGIASI FESTIVAL
~.JUNE1l
·
FOliUM AIIIIUAI.
-AA
JULYH Artlrlt.NYOUITIME JULYII-17
FIOOLERS' CONVENTION
TEMWESSEE MTI.
INIMA
~~~
JUNEIS
FIDOI.EU FESTIVAl.
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
· ' COUITRYMUIICD.\TS
-.CHy,IA
JULYH
· -WV
JULY 25-:11 CWtll HIH,TN
AUG 1-9
E - TN
JUNE 16-21
FIDDI.EII' COIIYEIITIOIII
II.UEIRASSFESTIVAL
ILUESAND
OUITIIIE
ILUEGIWSFESTIVAL
JULY 25-17
ILUEGRASS FROST,
FIOOLERS' CIIIV£NTION
W-CA
JULH WIIIIW, kY
IOSPEL MUSIC FESTIVAL
lljllty, WV
AUG.,.
. 10
JUNE 16-21
FIDOI.IU' CONVENTION
JULY 25-17
EIGMTANNUAI.N.Y.C.
-RFEST ..
-lt.MD
JULH ktrnlllt, TX
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
ILUEGRASSANDOL
Mllw...._ WI
JUNE lt-J
MACWIII!MAII'S
Hll- NY
JULY 25-17
TIME COUNTRY
FESTIVAL
II.UEGRASS FUTIVAI.
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAl.
MUSIC CONTEST
CllldlP-NC JUNE1..1 -VIIIt7, KY JULY.12
OIICIIy,MI
JULY21-17
AIOCRAFTSFAII
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
II.UEGRASS FmiVAL
II.UEtRASSFESTIVAL
- York.NY
AUG•II
Wile, CO
JUNE lt-21 Mlntrii,V~
JULYit.ll
OIICIIy,MI
JULY21-17
ICCLAINFAMILYIANO
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
FOUFmiVAL ..
FIDDUUCIIIV£MTION
FAMILY FESTIVAl.
-.MI
JUNEif-22 WlriiiiOtl. MAN
JULY 11-11
-MT
JULYII-17 -kY
AUGil-17
FUTIVAL WEEKEIO
II.UEGIASS FESTIVAL
PICIMD'SREOOAK
PICKARO'IIEDOAK
JULYII-11
WIIMtn •• .. VA
JUNE.22 T-.VA
PWII.UEGRASSFESTIVAI. PWII.UGIASIFESTIVAL
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl..
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAI.
~LA
JUNE 19-22 ~.Dk
.JULYII-17
AUG1H7
JULYII-11
SHIIIOie
OIAIIGIILOIIOM PARK'S
II.UEtRASS FESTIVAL
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
.\lllvlllt.NC
JULY:II
IIITINII.UI!GIAIS
Dlt111UIIr, OA
JUNE lf-!2
JULY 11-ll
FIDDI.ERS'CONYEITION
- - V A AUGIJ.I7
FOUMUSIC FEmVAL
FOU FESTIVAl. ..
NE
JUL Y:11
CUARWATIR FESTIVAl.
-NC
JUNE1t Wloo~~..
JULY 1HI
FIDDURSOOIIYENTION
--IIJ
AUGI~It
FOOT STOIIPIII'
~FESTIVAL
.TX
JULY:II
II.UEtRASSFmiVAI.
.. FEST
W-VA
JULYIHI ILUEGRASS FEmVAL
C1rt Clly, kY
AUG IH7
R.,, WV
JUNE •22
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
JULYIS-17
II.UEGRASSnmVAI.
II.UEtRASS FESTIVAL
Dltnoy,Dk
JULY IHI P -.MO
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
f-MO
AUGil-17
-OH
JUNEI7·1t
RYC'SOUHIME
C~lniiO, AL
JULY 21-:11
II.UEGRASS FEXTIVAL
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
FIDDLERSl
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
I"' Rlt.NC
AUGil-17
Sllolrl, VA
JUNE 17·11
II.UEtiRASS OOIIYENTION
JULY 25-17
FOUMUIIC FmlvAL
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
JIMtv!Ht, VA
JULY 1•12 •-ntt.IL
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAI.
OWto-ONT
.t.UG1~17
V -, AL
JUNEI7·11
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
JULY :11-17
II.EUGRAWaiUITRY
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
V. . . IL
JUL. Y 11-ll PIIYIOII, Al
FOU MUSIC FESTIVAl.
MUSIC FESTIVAl.
Mn-.ONT
JUNEI7·10
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
JUL. YJl-27 EfflniMM, IL
AUG 15-17
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
Mtco,MO
JULY ll·U onewa. ONT
FOU MUSIC FESTIVAL
ILUEIRASS FESTIVAL
T-Crii.. ONT
JUNE17·»
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
JULYtl-27 l rlllltviiii, OH
AUG 15-17
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
HIINil. PA
JULY 11·1l VIIMI, VA
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAl.
JAMIOlEE
Corlnlll. NY
JUNE 17·21
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
JULY:II-17 IIODitii.CA
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
Qlljllty, FL
JULY 11·11 FnCIIy, UT
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
SHINDIG
110 Ditto. CA
JUNE »II
FAIR
AUGI6
OUITIME
........ ME
JULYII·U 1111-TX JULYII·AUGI Alllvlllt,NC
FOLK MUSIC FESTIVAL
II.EUGRASS FESTIVAl.
FIDDI.ERS'CONYENTION
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
JULY »AUG 2 Wtyntlbltt. VA
AUG 15-17
-linN. IMw. JUNEI7·11 kno6-.MO
JULYIHI Allwlllt, NC
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
ILUEIRASS FESTIVAL
FESTIVAL
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
AUG1~17
lunon.OH
JUNEI7 J.,.,.,Al
JULYII-12 ~Ridgo, ARJULY.AUG 2 ..... Wtllr, NE
OLD TIME
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAl.
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
FIDDI.ElSCONVENTION
-TN
AUG 16-17
~MD
JUNEI7·11 - - ,, Onllflt
JULY1HI
l riiiOI, VA
AUG 1·1
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAI.
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
GilD ANNUAL
OLDTIME
Glltlff, kY
AUG16-II
fonyttt.MO
JUNE21-2't
F0U FESTIVAL
FIDDLEUCONVENTION
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
GRASS VALLEY
Wnii-.DC
JU l YIHI
Slttlt, AL
AUG l·l HtndtriOn.CO
AUGIH &lt;t
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
ORANGE ILOSSOM PARK'S
OUITIME
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
Gr• Vllloy, CA
JUNE 20-22
lEST INILUEGRASS
FIDDLERSCONVENTION
e.-.y,OH
AUGII-IA
Tli·STATE ILUEGRASS
Or.,...I..._.., VA JULYI J.ll
F -. NY
AUGI·I
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
ASSOCIATION SPRING
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
FESTIVAL
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
P -.OH
AUG 22·24
CIIY City, KY
JULY 12-ll
Olltwl, OH
AUG 1·1
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL .
Montrolt, lA
JUNE 20-22
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
Wolktr,WY
AUG \U•+'.V•
FOURTit ANNUAL PARKER
Clinton. AR
JULY1HI
HIHons. VA
AUG1-2
ILUEGRASS FESTIVAL
MOUNTAIN PARK
SHINOIG
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
HllriiOn,AR
AUG221'
II.UEGRASSMUSIC FESTIVAL Altrllllt, NC
JU LY12
llur-Foiii. ONT
AUG 1·1
ILUEGRASSFESTIVAL
Spr-lt.AR
JUNE 25-11
II.UEGRASSFESTIVAL
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
C-11 CHy, IA
AUG 22·24
ILUEGRASSMUSIC FESTIVAL Htbnfl, CT
JULY 12·1l
._...,IUt, MO
JUNE 2H f
SECOND TOPANGA
W"'tn. OH
AUG 1·1
BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
CHARITON VALLEY
FOI.K FESTIVAL
OAKD.\LE PARK'SCOUNTRY
NJ
AUG 22·24
BLUEGRASSJAMIOREE
GOSEPLJUIILEE
ADAMS COUNTY FO!JRTM
Wtstwood,CA
JU LY12
Cheriton, lA
JUNE 21-29
TWENTIETH TOPANGA
Gltn Root, TX
AUG1·1
ILUEGRASSJAMIOREE
PICKARD'UEDOAK PARK
IAIIJO FIOOLE CONTEST
OAKDALEPARK
. IL
AUG22·24
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
GOSPELJUIILEE
FESTIVAL
Wtstwood, CA
JULY ll
McCIOUd.Dk
JUNEI7·21
GMn ROM, TX
AUG H
Townstnd. TN
AUG 2:1
H0£00WII
FOI.K FESTIVAL
llUEGRASSFESTIVAI.
FOLK FESTIVAl.
SIINI. CA
JULYII-Il
Kvt111Wn. PA
JUNE 21-S
Strlfton Tounttln, VT
AUG 2 Sctlwenklwlllt, Upper SaHord,
II.UEGRASS FESTIVAL
IYARDRAY
OLDTIME
PA
AUG II-25
OftiWI.IL
JULY11·U
FOU FESTIVAL
ILUEGRASS FES11VAL
FIDDI.ERS CONVENTION
Conflnutd on Pete n
NC
JUNE 20 WfWtmlrtltkt, MI JULY11·U Gr.....,,MO
, ., :~u l

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Nashville, Tennessee. April, 1911
NIIIIVtllt, TtmiiiM, April, 1910

P... 24 MUSIC CITY NEWS

CHARLEY PRIDE: "There's A
LIHie Bit Of Hlink In Me."
RCA Records AHL1·35a
In Charley's notes for this album he ex·
plains it was after several years of thought
that he decided to do an album of Hank
Williams songs. Hank Williams, of course,
was Charley's boyhood idol. Pride explains
that he was a little nervous about going into the studio to make this album, but that
he and his co-producer Jerry Bradley
decided they would choose songs from
Hank Williams catalog that were not so
frequently recorded. That is exactly what
they have done. Pride, commendably, does
not try to Imitate Hank Williams on the
album. It is definitely Charley Pride
singing Hank Williams which adds to the
strength of the album. Production and arrangements tastefully blend the old style
with the new and the result is satisfying.
Pride says it amazes him that there are
people around who sttll don't know about
Hank Williams. If this is your first introduction to the country music legend
(which is highly unlikely if you are a
regular reader of MCN&gt; you will certainly
become a quick convert to one of country
music's greatest all time writers and
singers as seen through heart of Charley
Pride. Selections are : "My Son Calls
Another Man Daddy," "Moanin' The
Blues," "A Mansion On The Hill," "Mind.
Your Own Business," "I Can't Help It (If
I'm Sttll Love With You) ," "Hooky Tonk
Blues," "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry,"
"Low Down Blues," "I Could Never Be
Ashamed Of You," "Why Don't You Love
Me," "You Win Again," and a song written specially for the album by John
Schweers, "There's A Little Bit Of Hank In

lfllX .\ LL£.\.,..111.

Da wn Anita, " Bring Your self Home:; . Rus t 1c
Re co rds, 1007
Kay Au st in " The Rest Of Your Life". E I 0
Records, 11 22
Gary Bean. '' Tr y T'O MakP Things Better " .
Trave ler Records . 7E 102
Roger Bowling, "Friday N1ght Fool ", N S R

UK I. \lt&lt;i:&gt;U .HUl\t:

37
Johnny Cash. " W ings In The Morning",
Cache t Records . CSA .4506
Bill Caswell, "Oklanoma Backroads '', F 1 v·ng
H 1gn Record5. 801 74
Don &amp; Brian, "When I Look Into Your Eves"
Odie RPcords, 153
Stoney Edward s. "Lean On MP!' . Music
t..merica , 105
Zoo t Fenster . " W ho Wrote . That word ", Anl1
Que 23
wavne Flowers, "Someday" , Cob ra Cour"~try
Records, 1028
Li nda Fudge. " Rem ember H 1m Up Above ",
Od ie Records. 15A
The Happ y Good m an Family, " Better Hurry
Up" Canaan Records . CAS 274
Bill Green , " Rai n y Day Song ", NSD 39
Bonnie Gu itar, " Honey On The M oon ". 4 Star
Recor ds 1041
Rooer Hallmark , "A M es sage F r om
K homeini", Vulca n 10005
Sh irley Hollis, " I ' ll Do Anyth ing (T o Esc ape
Be i ng Lonely) " , Starg em Recor ds, 2039
Larry G. Hudson. "I Can ' t Cheat ", M ercury

S701S

•

..

Jack Hughes. "I' m St ill Si nging Love onos ,
c and le Records , 377
Jan &amp; Windy , " A i n 't That Love " PHMO 2699
Jano. " Clara Lou And T -Bi rd Wine" B &amp; M
Records, 100
Frank Jones, " Thank You Canada ", Sound
waves , 4595
Sherry Keller. " Know Nothin' Woman ".
Comstock Records, 1640
Crlsty Lane, " One Day At (4. Time ", United

&amp;[bOOM!Ml@
000

00§\YJO§W

JERRY LEE LEWIS: "When Two
Worlds COllide''
Male (country) Vocalist of the Year. But .
Elektre Records 6·E254
with the release of his latest album, It Is
"The Ktller" opens this album with a
toe-tapping, knee-slapping rocker "Rockin' not clear exactly what direction Rex Is try·
ing to take. "Oklahoma Rose" Is an album
Jerry Lee," which dtsplays Jerry Lee's
devoid
of the beautiful clear vocals and
true colors. In a paradoxical twist, Jerry
pretty
country
melodies we are used to
Lee Is now being produced by Eddie
hearing
from
this
artist. Instead, the
Kilroy. Kilroy, you may remember, took
Is
a
collection
of songs depleting the
album
Lee's cousin Mickey Gilley after "Room
conflict
between
the
multi-faceted
life of
Full of Roses" and directed his rise to
Hollywood and the simple life or the soil. If
stardom on Playboy Records. Moving from this Is meant to be a "theme" or
a rock-a·bllly opening, Jerry Lee Is soon
"concept" album, the story would go
tinkling the Ivories on a get-your-teeth·
something like this : Rose's lover Is one
into-country number "Who Will Buy The
night lamenting her leaving Oklahoma for
Wine," which displays the dlst.lnctive fidthe bright lights of California as he croons
dle licks KeMy Lovelace. "Love Game" Is to a "Prairie Moon." He concedes "It's
a waltz which leads us Into an InstrumenOver," and later decides to go out to a
tal rendition "Alabama Jubilee," then
hooky tonk to pick up "What Was Your
Jerry Lee's understanding treatment of
Name." Meanwhile, Rose' is rocking It to
"Goodtime Charlie's Got The Blues." Side
big promises In "Hollywood," where they
two of the album opens with the title
say "Holy Is Hollywood, Hallelula." Rose
number "When Two Worlds Collide,"
gets coMed Into the "You're Gonna Be A
followed by another rocker "Good New
Star" routine as she spins at the discos in
Travels Fast." Strains of Dixieland can be rhinestone shirts and jeans. Still her lonely
hea.rd in "I Only Want A Buddy," and In
steadfast lover continues to "Yippl Cry
other places on the album. The album
Yl," with a broken heart. As Rose falls incloses with "Honky Tonk Stuff," sounding
to the "Drink It Down, Lady" life or a
much like what the title Implies al)d showhooker, she finally comes to the realization
tune "Toot, Toot Tootsle Goodbye." In
that home Is where it's at and "Oklahoma
total, the album displays Jerry Lee In
Rose," decides to fiy back to the uncervarious postures, but all poses are definite- tainty of the waiting arms of her man at
ly Jerry Lee. The Killer's fans will want
tmme. Thus ends the sua or Rose.
this one for .sure.
LACY J. DALTON: "Lecy J.
REX ALLEN, JR.: "Oklehome
Delton"
ROle''
NJC 36322 COiumble Records

S

Artists Records . X1342

..

Jerry Lee Lewis &amp; Orion, " Be Bop A Lula •
Sun Records. 1151

Bobby Wayne Loftis, "My Lady" , Charta
Records, U3
..

Shelley Looney , " Thank You Canada , M er ·

cury 76050

..

Julie Mareno. " Love That I ' m Feeling •
Charta Records . 142
Jimmy M art i n, " Water Th,e Flowers", Gusto

Records GTH1129
..
Mary K. Miller, " Say A Long Goodbye • In·

getter. Now Dalton's first album is being
released. Dalton, who is being marketed
by CBS Records as a "tough cookie"
female band leader, Is, when you package
her up, something like a female Joe Ely
who sings like Donna Fargo. All of this
hovers on the fringes of tlfe makings of a
pretty strong artist, but when she cuts
loose with her rendition of Redd Stewart
and Pee Wee King's "Tennessee Waltz,"
she's bound to get your vote as being
lilrlghtl Lacy J . Dalton comes to us at a
time when a string of new and extremely
talented young female vocalists are invading country music. It seems evident
from this, her first album, she Is bound to
be one of the best new acts to emerge from
this treqd. As songwriter her lines are
tight and her melodies are right.
FARON YOUNG: "Free And

Euy"
MC~

Records MCA-3212
Putting a Faron Young album on the
turntable Is like welcoming an old friend
h1to your living room . Faron's vocals are
so much a part of country music that even
a short span of time without hearing from
Faron is truly a void. Now on his new •
record label, MCA, Faron Young gets the
chance to bring us another handful of his
fantast.lc entertainment. Faron brings us
10 sides of cOuntry, country music, and

ergi Records, 1·315
.
..
Ron M illet, "You ' re Showing All The S1gns •
Wagon Wheel. 109
,
Dean Mitchell , " Did You Hear My Call ? .
Stargem Records , 2035
Sam Morgante. " The Inflation Song ", Coun·
try Store Records, G 1463
Jimmy Nicke ls. " It' s You I Love ", PS I
Records, 101
,

Rotay North. " Dea r Son", Cherry P•e 2152

Ken nY Post, " Truckln ' Fever", Volunteer

Records. SV0·103

Johnnv Keith Prevento. " Tomorrow Nloht In
Amarillo", Fireball Records. 8001
Jeanne Pruett, "Temporarily Yours", 1BC

Records. 0008
Randy Randel
Records, 156

a.

d .. Odie
Chance, '_'MY La Y •
y
H rt"

Del Re-eves. '' Take Me To

our

ea

•

Koala , I RDA S84
I M .. Up
Jimmy Rice, "I Bleed A Little B t ore •
Date Records, 4002

,

.

Charlie Rich, " I'd Build A Bridge • Un•ted

Artists Records, X 1340· Y

Barry Rogers, " I Still Love You Just The

Same", Riverview Records, 102

.

Rubel, " Evil. Evil Woman", Colon••'
Records, SC·2010
..

· d

Runemuck, ~' Honky Tonk Hero , Devil Wtn

~an lee Russell, "Sunshine And Happy Days" •

BILL MONROE: "Been Blossom

'79"

Risi ng Star Records 101

MCA Records MCA-3290
Bill Monroe continues to hold the read as
the Father of Bluegrass Music with ibis
live album produced last year at his
famous Bean Blossom Bluegrass Fellf~val.
Included on this album are many of•Bill
Monroe's most requested numberS arM
some of the most popular bluegrass
numbers of all times. They are: "John
Henry," "Dog House Blues," "The Old
Mountaineer," "Little Cabin Home On The
Hlil," "Or.an&amp;t:.BIOJISOm Special," " Molly
&amp; Tenbrooks Mtijley : Little Magglerlfraln
.:15, Blue Moon Of Kehtucky'," "Rocky Road
.t •!.,.,._,,
••
·
'"""'lnuodonP-15
&lt;: • t t .,.,
;rr , ·
•1 r&amp;· r · r •lf"t ~&lt;"l ' 1-k_ 'F _• ~,

Dennis Smith, "Dvnamlte", Adonda Records

80023
• ~~~Sovine,
'
"The L'"le Faml IY Soldl er " •
Gusto Records GTH028
Janie Steele, " Dallas Cowboy", Brock ~.R 126
Karen Strange, "It Happened With You •
Ethlcs .Records, 1006
..
3ihlmy Stuart, "LoreHo's Playpen ' Stargem
Rt&lt;$rdil 2015
J~,sun "Shotgun Rider" , ovation Records
1141
Sonny Throckmorton. " Friday Nigh t 81 ues " '
Mercury Records, 57011

,

Jimmy Tucker. " The Reading Of The Will '
N~D
oiO w.rren. "I'm Almln • on Ll v 1n' Some" •
Kelll
Jeremiah, 100-f
.. 'nd"
Roy WI"' "Cheating on My &lt;r"
•
NaS/11(111• c~t• :&gt;roducii~IJ§P ~&gt;ico t•

i·
~

· , ,,

.(1 ~· • l '

Miner's Daughter", MCA Records, SI07
Gene Parsons, " Melodies", Sierra Records,

0798
Char ley Price, "There's A Little Bit Of Hank
In Me", RCA Records. AHLI ·3548

·Blues, " "The Little Girl And The Dreadful
Snake," "In Dispair" and "Ya'll Come."
Bill Monroe to our knowledge is the only
full-time bluegrass artist in the United
States that continues to record for a major
record label. His quality and professionalism is unquestioned . His music. as
represented on this album . is great ~ It's
easy to see why.

Me."

•

151

continued from Paoe :u ·

u

•

Jerry Wayenn, " Don ' t Worry" , Odie Record s

More Review
Pride ·Salutes
HankWiiHa.ms
On Album ·

..

MUSIC CITY NEWS, PlOt 25

Sam ", Canaan Rec ords , C,:AS 98.49
Th e Hot m ud Fami l y, "Live. As We Know It",·
Flying Fish Records , 087
Gordon Jensen. " Gordon Jensen" , Impact,

0798

Jerry Lee Lew.is. " When Two Worlds Collide ".
Elektra 6E 25.4
Loretta Lynn , "Loretta" , MCA Records, 3217
The Marshall Tu cker Band , " Tenth" , Warn er
Bros Records . HS 3.41 0
Billy Earl McClelland. " Zero Hindsight" ,
Elektra , 6E 258
Bill Monroe, " Bean Blossom ' 79", .MCA
Records, 3209
Alan Munde. " The Banio Kid Picks Again ",
Rid ge Runner. 0022
Oak Ridge Bovs. " Tooether ", MCA 3270
Original Motion Pict ure Sound tr ack, " Coal

Tommy Scott &amp; Curley Seckler, " Now &amp;
Then ", Folkway s Records , FT S 31078
2nd Chapter Of A ct s. " The Roar Of L ove".
Sparrow. 1033
Barry Solomon , ''Southbound· Sketches'',
Ri dge Runner . 0021
Jimm y Swaggart , "Ji mm y Swaggart's
Greatest H its". Jim 3632
Conwa y Twitty , "Heart &amp; Soul ", MC A
Reco r ds. 3210
Marcus Uzilevsky, '' A Pi lgrim,
Son/ Marcus" . Folkways Records. FTS 32551
Various Artists . "Jesus The Rock ", Green
tree 0798
Robin &amp; Li nda Williams wi t h Peter
Dstrou shko, " D ixie Highway Sig n", June Appal
Recordi ngs. 03 1
Stephan ie Wi nslow , " Cryi ng", Warner Br os .
Records, BSK 3406
Fa r on You ng, " Free And Easy", MCA
Reco r ds. 3212

Rex Allen, Jr., "Oklahoma Rose", Warner
Bros. Records BSK 3403
Bellamy Brothers "You Can Get Crazy",
Warner Bros. Records, BSK 3408
Debby Boone, "Love Has No Reason ".
Warher Bros. Records BSK -3419

Bobby Braddock, "Love Bomb" Elektra. 6E ·
255
Bridge, "Bridge Build i ng", " Impa ct"', 0698
E Iizabeth Cotten. " When I' m Gone",
Folkwa ys Rec ord s, F A 353 7

Th e Cruse Fam ily, " Harmony", Impac t 3592
Lacy J . Dalton, " La cy J . Dalton ", Columbia,

36322

Danny Davis &amp; Will ie Nel son. " Danny Davis
&amp; Will ie Nelson With Th e Nash vi ll e Bra ss",

RCA Record, , AHL1 ·3549

Freddy Fender, " Together We Drifted

Apart ", Starf li te Records, J2 36284
Stua rt Frank, "Song s Of Sea a nd Shore" ,
Fo lkways Records , FH 5256
Ale x Fraser. " Migh ty Big To Me",
Broad l and, BR 2047
Steve Gi llette, " Alone ... D ir ect ", Sierra
Records , 0998
Sam Goodm an, " Happiness Is ... Brother

�r.

.•
Nashville, Tennessee. April, 1911
NIIIIVtllt, TtmiiiM, April, 1910

P... 24 MUSIC CITY NEWS

CHARLEY PRIDE: "There's A
LIHie Bit Of Hlink In Me."
RCA Records AHL1·35a
In Charley's notes for this album he ex·
plains it was after several years of thought
that he decided to do an album of Hank
Williams songs. Hank Williams, of course,
was Charley's boyhood idol. Pride explains
that he was a little nervous about going into the studio to make this album, but that
he and his co-producer Jerry Bradley
decided they would choose songs from
Hank Williams catalog that were not so
frequently recorded. That is exactly what
they have done. Pride, commendably, does
not try to Imitate Hank Williams on the
album. It is definitely Charley Pride
singing Hank Williams which adds to the
strength of the album. Production and arrangements tastefully blend the old style
with the new and the result is satisfying.
Pride says it amazes him that there are
people around who sttll don't know about
Hank Williams. If this is your first introduction to the country music legend
(which is highly unlikely if you are a
regular reader of MCN&gt; you will certainly
become a quick convert to one of country
music's greatest all time writers and
singers as seen through heart of Charley
Pride. Selections are : "My Son Calls
Another Man Daddy," "Moanin' The
Blues," "A Mansion On The Hill," "Mind.
Your Own Business," "I Can't Help It (If
I'm Sttll Love With You) ," "Hooky Tonk
Blues," "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry,"
"Low Down Blues," "I Could Never Be
Ashamed Of You," "Why Don't You Love
Me," "You Win Again," and a song written specially for the album by John
Schweers, "There's A Little Bit Of Hank In

lfllX .\ LL£.\.,..111.

Da wn Anita, " Bring Your self Home:; . Rus t 1c
Re co rds, 1007
Kay Au st in " The Rest Of Your Life". E I 0
Records, 11 22
Gary Bean. '' Tr y T'O MakP Things Better " .
Trave ler Records . 7E 102
Roger Bowling, "Friday N1ght Fool ", N S R

UK I. \lt&lt;i:&gt;U .HUl\t:

37
Johnny Cash. " W ings In The Morning",
Cache t Records . CSA .4506
Bill Caswell, "Oklanoma Backroads '', F 1 v·ng
H 1gn Record5. 801 74
Don &amp; Brian, "When I Look Into Your Eves"
Odie RPcords, 153
Stoney Edward s. "Lean On MP!' . Music
t..merica , 105
Zoo t Fenster . " W ho Wrote . That word ", Anl1
Que 23
wavne Flowers, "Someday" , Cob ra Cour"~try
Records, 1028
Li nda Fudge. " Rem ember H 1m Up Above ",
Od ie Records. 15A
The Happ y Good m an Family, " Better Hurry
Up" Canaan Records . CAS 274
Bill Green , " Rai n y Day Song ", NSD 39
Bonnie Gu itar, " Honey On The M oon ". 4 Star
Recor ds 1041
Rooer Hallmark , "A M es sage F r om
K homeini", Vulca n 10005
Sh irley Hollis, " I ' ll Do Anyth ing (T o Esc ape
Be i ng Lonely) " , Starg em Recor ds, 2039
Larry G. Hudson. "I Can ' t Cheat ", M ercury

S701S

•

..

Jack Hughes. "I' m St ill Si nging Love onos ,
c and le Records , 377
Jan &amp; Windy , " A i n 't That Love " PHMO 2699
Jano. " Clara Lou And T -Bi rd Wine" B &amp; M
Records, 100
Frank Jones, " Thank You Canada ", Sound
waves , 4595
Sherry Keller. " Know Nothin' Woman ".
Comstock Records, 1640
Crlsty Lane, " One Day At (4. Time ", United

&amp;[bOOM!Ml@
000

00§\YJO§W

JERRY LEE LEWIS: "When Two
Worlds COllide''
Male (country) Vocalist of the Year. But .
Elektre Records 6·E254
with the release of his latest album, It Is
"The Ktller" opens this album with a
toe-tapping, knee-slapping rocker "Rockin' not clear exactly what direction Rex Is try·
ing to take. "Oklahoma Rose" Is an album
Jerry Lee," which dtsplays Jerry Lee's
devoid
of the beautiful clear vocals and
true colors. In a paradoxical twist, Jerry
pretty
country
melodies we are used to
Lee Is now being produced by Eddie
hearing
from
this
artist. Instead, the
Kilroy. Kilroy, you may remember, took
Is
a
collection
of songs depleting the
album
Lee's cousin Mickey Gilley after "Room
conflict
between
the
multi-faceted
life of
Full of Roses" and directed his rise to
Hollywood and the simple life or the soil. If
stardom on Playboy Records. Moving from this Is meant to be a "theme" or
a rock-a·bllly opening, Jerry Lee Is soon
"concept" album, the story would go
tinkling the Ivories on a get-your-teeth·
something like this : Rose's lover Is one
into-country number "Who Will Buy The
night lamenting her leaving Oklahoma for
Wine," which displays the dlst.lnctive fidthe bright lights of California as he croons
dle licks KeMy Lovelace. "Love Game" Is to a "Prairie Moon." He concedes "It's
a waltz which leads us Into an InstrumenOver," and later decides to go out to a
tal rendition "Alabama Jubilee," then
hooky tonk to pick up "What Was Your
Jerry Lee's understanding treatment of
Name." Meanwhile, Rose' is rocking It to
"Goodtime Charlie's Got The Blues." Side
big promises In "Hollywood," where they
two of the album opens with the title
say "Holy Is Hollywood, Hallelula." Rose
number "When Two Worlds Collide,"
gets coMed Into the "You're Gonna Be A
followed by another rocker "Good New
Star" routine as she spins at the discos in
Travels Fast." Strains of Dixieland can be rhinestone shirts and jeans. Still her lonely
hea.rd in "I Only Want A Buddy," and In
steadfast lover continues to "Yippl Cry
other places on the album. The album
Yl," with a broken heart. As Rose falls incloses with "Honky Tonk Stuff," sounding
to the "Drink It Down, Lady" life or a
much like what the title Implies al)d showhooker, she finally comes to the realization
tune "Toot, Toot Tootsle Goodbye." In
that home Is where it's at and "Oklahoma
total, the album displays Jerry Lee In
Rose," decides to fiy back to the uncervarious postures, but all poses are definite- tainty of the waiting arms of her man at
ly Jerry Lee. The Killer's fans will want
tmme. Thus ends the sua or Rose.
this one for .sure.
LACY J. DALTON: "Lecy J.
REX ALLEN, JR.: "Oklehome
Delton"
ROle''
NJC 36322 COiumble Records

S

Artists Records . X1342

..

Jerry Lee Lewis &amp; Orion, " Be Bop A Lula •
Sun Records. 1151

Bobby Wayne Loftis, "My Lady" , Charta
Records, U3
..

Shelley Looney , " Thank You Canada , M er ·

cury 76050

..

Julie Mareno. " Love That I ' m Feeling •
Charta Records . 142
Jimmy M art i n, " Water Th,e Flowers", Gusto

Records GTH1129
..
Mary K. Miller, " Say A Long Goodbye • In·

getter. Now Dalton's first album is being
released. Dalton, who is being marketed
by CBS Records as a "tough cookie"
female band leader, Is, when you package
her up, something like a female Joe Ely
who sings like Donna Fargo. All of this
hovers on the fringes of tlfe makings of a
pretty strong artist, but when she cuts
loose with her rendition of Redd Stewart
and Pee Wee King's "Tennessee Waltz,"
she's bound to get your vote as being
lilrlghtl Lacy J . Dalton comes to us at a
time when a string of new and extremely
talented young female vocalists are invading country music. It seems evident
from this, her first album, she Is bound to
be one of the best new acts to emerge from
this treqd. As songwriter her lines are
tight and her melodies are right.
FARON YOUNG: "Free And

Euy"
MC~

Records MCA-3212
Putting a Faron Young album on the
turntable Is like welcoming an old friend
h1to your living room . Faron's vocals are
so much a part of country music that even
a short span of time without hearing from
Faron is truly a void. Now on his new •
record label, MCA, Faron Young gets the
chance to bring us another handful of his
fantast.lc entertainment. Faron brings us
10 sides of cOuntry, country music, and

ergi Records, 1·315
.
..
Ron M illet, "You ' re Showing All The S1gns •
Wagon Wheel. 109
,
Dean Mitchell , " Did You Hear My Call ? .
Stargem Records , 2035
Sam Morgante. " The Inflation Song ", Coun·
try Store Records, G 1463
Jimmy Nicke ls. " It' s You I Love ", PS I
Records, 101
,

Rotay North. " Dea r Son", Cherry P•e 2152

Ken nY Post, " Truckln ' Fever", Volunteer

Records. SV0·103

Johnnv Keith Prevento. " Tomorrow Nloht In
Amarillo", Fireball Records. 8001
Jeanne Pruett, "Temporarily Yours", 1BC

Records. 0008
Randy Randel
Records, 156

a.

d .. Odie
Chance, '_'MY La Y •
y
H rt"

Del Re-eves. '' Take Me To

our

ea

•

Koala , I RDA S84
I M .. Up
Jimmy Rice, "I Bleed A Little B t ore •
Date Records, 4002

,

.

Charlie Rich, " I'd Build A Bridge • Un•ted

Artists Records, X 1340· Y

Barry Rogers, " I Still Love You Just The

Same", Riverview Records, 102

.

Rubel, " Evil. Evil Woman", Colon••'
Records, SC·2010
..

· d

Runemuck, ~' Honky Tonk Hero , Devil Wtn

~an lee Russell, "Sunshine And Happy Days" •

BILL MONROE: "Been Blossom

'79"

Risi ng Star Records 101

MCA Records MCA-3290
Bill Monroe continues to hold the read as
the Father of Bluegrass Music with ibis
live album produced last year at his
famous Bean Blossom Bluegrass Fellf~val.
Included on this album are many of•Bill
Monroe's most requested numberS arM
some of the most popular bluegrass
numbers of all times. They are: "John
Henry," "Dog House Blues," "The Old
Mountaineer," "Little Cabin Home On The
Hlil," "Or.an&amp;t:.BIOJISOm Special," " Molly
&amp; Tenbrooks Mtijley : Little Magglerlfraln
.:15, Blue Moon Of Kehtucky'," "Rocky Road
.t •!.,.,._,,
••
·
'"""'lnuodonP-15
&lt;: • t t .,.,
;rr , ·
•1 r&amp;· r · r •lf"t ~&lt;"l ' 1-k_ 'F _• ~,

Dennis Smith, "Dvnamlte", Adonda Records

80023
• ~~~Sovine,
'
"The L'"le Faml IY Soldl er " •
Gusto Records GTH028
Janie Steele, " Dallas Cowboy", Brock ~.R 126
Karen Strange, "It Happened With You •
Ethlcs .Records, 1006
..
3ihlmy Stuart, "LoreHo's Playpen ' Stargem
Rt&lt;$rdil 2015
J~,sun "Shotgun Rider" , ovation Records
1141
Sonny Throckmorton. " Friday Nigh t 81 ues " '
Mercury Records, 57011

,

Jimmy Tucker. " The Reading Of The Will '
N~D
oiO w.rren. "I'm Almln • on Ll v 1n' Some" •
Kelll
Jeremiah, 100-f
.. 'nd"
Roy WI"' "Cheating on My &lt;r"
•
NaS/11(111• c~t• :&gt;roducii~IJ§P ~&gt;ico t•

i·
~

· , ,,

.(1 ~· • l '

Miner's Daughter", MCA Records, SI07
Gene Parsons, " Melodies", Sierra Records,

0798
Char ley Price, "There's A Little Bit Of Hank
In Me", RCA Records. AHLI ·3548

·Blues, " "The Little Girl And The Dreadful
Snake," "In Dispair" and "Ya'll Come."
Bill Monroe to our knowledge is the only
full-time bluegrass artist in the United
States that continues to record for a major
record label. His quality and professionalism is unquestioned . His music. as
represented on this album . is great ~ It's
easy to see why.

Me."

•

151

continued from Paoe :u ·

u

•

Jerry Wayenn, " Don ' t Worry" , Odie Record s

More Review
Pride ·Salutes
HankWiiHa.ms
On Album ·

..

MUSIC CITY NEWS, PlOt 25

Sam ", Canaan Rec ords , C,:AS 98.49
Th e Hot m ud Fami l y, "Live. As We Know It",·
Flying Fish Records , 087
Gordon Jensen. " Gordon Jensen" , Impact,

0798

Jerry Lee Lew.is. " When Two Worlds Collide ".
Elektra 6E 25.4
Loretta Lynn , "Loretta" , MCA Records, 3217
The Marshall Tu cker Band , " Tenth" , Warn er
Bros Records . HS 3.41 0
Billy Earl McClelland. " Zero Hindsight" ,
Elektra , 6E 258
Bill Monroe, " Bean Blossom ' 79", .MCA
Records, 3209
Alan Munde. " The Banio Kid Picks Again ",
Rid ge Runner. 0022
Oak Ridge Bovs. " Tooether ", MCA 3270
Original Motion Pict ure Sound tr ack, " Coal

Tommy Scott &amp; Curley Seckler, " Now &amp;
Then ", Folkway s Records , FT S 31078
2nd Chapter Of A ct s. " The Roar Of L ove".
Sparrow. 1033
Barry Solomon , ''Southbound· Sketches'',
Ri dge Runner . 0021
Jimm y Swaggart , "Ji mm y Swaggart's
Greatest H its". Jim 3632
Conwa y Twitty , "Heart &amp; Soul ", MC A
Reco r ds. 3210
Marcus Uzilevsky, '' A Pi lgrim,
Son/ Marcus" . Folkways Records. FTS 32551
Various Artists . "Jesus The Rock ", Green
tree 0798
Robin &amp; Li nda Williams wi t h Peter
Dstrou shko, " D ixie Highway Sig n", June Appal
Recordi ngs. 03 1
Stephan ie Wi nslow , " Cryi ng", Warner Br os .
Records, BSK 3406
Fa r on You ng, " Free And Easy", MCA
Reco r ds. 3212

Rex Allen, Jr., "Oklahoma Rose", Warner
Bros. Records BSK 3403
Bellamy Brothers "You Can Get Crazy",
Warner Bros. Records, BSK 3408
Debby Boone, "Love Has No Reason ".
Warher Bros. Records BSK -3419

Bobby Braddock, "Love Bomb" Elektra. 6E ·
255
Bridge, "Bridge Build i ng", " Impa ct"', 0698
E Iizabeth Cotten. " When I' m Gone",
Folkwa ys Rec ord s, F A 353 7

Th e Cruse Fam ily, " Harmony", Impac t 3592
Lacy J . Dalton, " La cy J . Dalton ", Columbia,

36322

Danny Davis &amp; Will ie Nel son. " Danny Davis
&amp; Will ie Nelson With Th e Nash vi ll e Bra ss",

RCA Record, , AHL1 ·3549

Freddy Fender, " Together We Drifted

Apart ", Starf li te Records, J2 36284
Stua rt Frank, "Song s Of Sea a nd Shore" ,
Fo lkways Records , FH 5256
Ale x Fraser. " Migh ty Big To Me",
Broad l and, BR 2047
Steve Gi llette, " Alone ... D ir ect ", Sierra
Records , 0998
Sam Goodm an, " Happiness Is ... Brother

�p.

.&lt;

:16, MUSIC CITY NEWS

Nlllrlllle, Terilt•n, April, 1910

-IIIIIWIIIt, T., II II, April, n.

MUSIC CITY NEWS, Pllt'D

OO~W® 9

\YJO~W©~
~00~\YJO§W®

Hall Named
New Host Of

TV's 'Pop!'

'Coal Miner's
Daughter'
Premieres
In Nashville

'

.

(Left to right, from top) Sissy
Spacek, who portrays Loretta Lynn;
Tommy Lee Jones, who portrays
Loretta's husband, Mooney ; Phyllis
Boyens, who portrays Loretta ' s
mother, Clara Webb; Levon Helm.
who portrays Loretta's father, Ted
Webb; Mooney, Loretta, and Mrs.
Clara Butcher. Loretta's mother.
await the screening in their theatre
seats; Loretta and Sissy pose for
photographers at a post show recep·
tion ; Tommy Lee, Loretta, Mooney,
and Sissy gather on ·stage at the recep -·
tlon to accept a warm round of applause.

It was a dazzling array of Nashville and
Hollywood as aristocrats from both ente rtainment capitols coverged on the Mustc
City Mar. 4 for the regional premiere of
Loretta Lynn 's film autobiography, "Coal
Miner's Daughter."
Flashbulbs popped, fans applauded and
cheered, and a giant spotlight swept across
the sky as limousine after limousine
unloaded film and recording industry
luminaries in front of Nashville's Belle
Meade Theatre. Local television crews
recorded the star and celebrity-studded
promenade down a long red carpet
that led through a seething double flank or
excited onlookers between the sidewalk
and the lobby.
Although the film had premiered earlier
in Los Angeles and New York, the
Nashville unveiling was in many respects
the most celebrated. For many members
or the cast, like Levon Helm---who portrays Loretta' s fathe r, Ted Webb--- it was
the fi rst lime for seeing a complete screening or the fini shed product. It was also a
grand ol ' famil y reunion for Loretta's clan
from Butcher Hollow, Ky., as her mother,
Mrs. Clara Butcher, and a host or siblings
and other family offshoots traveled to
Nashville for the event . {Loretta 's famou s
sister, Crystal Gayle, was not in attendance. She was performing in Miami.)
An enthusiastic crowd filled the 840-seat
theatre, applauded the opening credit

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
lina, and~eeredw~nlliel~aofErne~
Tubb, Roy Acuff, Minnie Pearl, Merle

Kilgore, or Vernon Oxford appeared on the
screen. They responded to the movie '&gt; conclusion with a four-mi nute standing ovation .
Following the screening, the movie-goers
moved across tow n to a catered reception
where they had the opportunity to hobnob
with the film 's stars and country music
personalities such as Mickey Gilley, Gail
Davies, Skeeter Davis, Box Car Willie. and
Loretta herself.
Sissy Spacek, who portrays Loretta jn
the film, looked pleased and lovely . " Making the film fell good right from the beginning," she said. " Everything just fell into
place."
Loretta , who also looked pleased and
lovely, had a point or her own to make.
" I'm lire11,.," ~q~ef\JY · "Helping prm31ote a
movie_l§!!'i ll!.U!!..sl~i job in the W9[lg ."

Tom T. HaD will replace veteran
radio/TV personality Ralph Emery as llie
host of television's syndicated "Pop! Goes
the Country.'' The announcement came at
a special luncheon hosted by Nashville's
Show Blzz, Inc., llie production company in
charge of the popular country music program. HaD'a duties wlll begin when llie
show starts Its fall tapings lliis year. Show
Biz president Rec Dunlap explained that
Emery was leaving the show at his own request after six years as host, and it was
Emery himself, Dunlap said, who suggested and personally asked Hall to take
the job. "I always felt that Tom T. had the
best eye contact on camera or anyone I've
ever seen," Emery said. " He's very
believable and has a great deal or
credibility." Although Emery will be leaving "Pop!", he wUI continue to host a daily , hour-long radio show &lt;also produced by
Show Biz), which is nationally-syndicated
over 288 stations, and he will also host
"Pick or the Pops," a best-or presentation
of twenty-six of the over ISO "Pops!" programs he has emceed. Hall was in high
spirits about his new television challenge,
but he took the time to heap laudatory
remarks on his predecessor. "TV, like
songwrlting, Is a very precarious
business," Hall said. "'Pop! Goes The
Country' succeeded because someone had
llie time and talent to make It succeed."
HaD also said that Emery had a knack for
bringing out the best abilities· in llie entertainers he hosted . "I plan to do that," Hall
said. "I've turned down many television
offers," he said, "because I was determined not to make a move until I was sure the
show would be right for me. I'm convinced
that 'Pop! Goes the Country' wUI be that

Ralph Emery, MCN 's Betty Cox. Tom T. Hall and Reg Dunlap of Show Biz,. Inc.
show .''

mixture of old film clips or earlier Cash
"Live From the Grand Ole Opry" was
performances and tapings done in
the opening feature March 1 for public
February at the Grand Old Opry house
television's "Festival '80", a series cif
wllli Cash and guests such as
specially-produced PBS programs. I:ast
Krlaloffenon, Gatlin, Waylon Jeanlncs,
month's live televised Opry broadcast
and Dottle West. The program airs this
marked the third such time that public TV
month.
had carried llie Saturday night perA further development to that reported
formances . Both Opry shows were broadUn last month's MUSIC CITY NEWS, Dolly
cast in their entirety to PBS affiliates naParton and Burt Reynolds have now
tionwide, and featured rare highlight apagreed to star In the movie version or
pearances by RoliDie MUaip, Loretta
"The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas,"
Lyon, and a number or other Opry _
but at a price somewhat more realistic
luminaries. Because public television does than their original tag of six million
not carry advertising, the Opry sponsors'
dollars. The Universal Pictures project,
segments or the regular shows were
which begins production in Texas and Los
replaced on the air with live backstage inAngeles in June, features DoDy as the
. terviews with Opry personalities and premadame or a notorious bordello near
taped documenary rootage on the Opry's
Austin, and Reynolds as a local sheriff
operation and country music history.
with vested Interests in the establishment
WSM , Inc., produced the six-hour prowho fights to keep It from being shut down.
gram.
·
The film will be an adaptation or the
Jobooy Cub recently hosted a dinner for Broadway musical or the same name
200 or his closest friends at his Hen~er­
which has been playing In New York for
sonville, Tenn., home in celehration or the
two years.
completion or the taplngs for his 25th
Motion plcure and television rights to
music business anniversary spectacular,
"Nashville With A Bullet," the mystery
"Johnny Cash : The First 25 Years. "
novel by "Green Beret" songwriter Barry
Singing at an after-dinner "guitar pullin"'
Sadler and Nashville songwriter Billy Arr,
(when one performer Is finished with a
have been purchased by Glen'arm Produc- .
song, someone else "pulls" the guitar
·lions of Pasadena, Calif. Although proaway and starts singln ') were Cub, his
ducers cuine Slone and G. L. HaD are cerwife June Carter Cash, Sbeb Wooley, Krls
tain that ~y plan to film the picture In
Krlsloffersoo, Billy Swan, Guy Clark,
Nashville, they have yet to announce a
Charlie Louvln, Lonnie Huteblna, Billy Jo
starting date.
Shaver, Penal Lane, Earl BaD, and others.
"NashvUie on the Road" wUI begin Its
Larry Gatlin, who was unable to attend llie spring taplngs for the summer and fall
dinner, called from onstage at a California television season this month In Albuquerperformance and sung over the telephone.
que, N.M. Jim Ed Brown, Helen Cornellua,
"Jobooy Cash: The First 25 Years" Is a
Jerry Clower, and Wendy Holcombe, who
make up the regular cast or the show, wUI
begin work 1!1 Albuq11erque Aprll 22, and
wUI go from there to tape segments in
Ruidoso and Carlsbad. The show Is produced by Nashvllle's Show Biz, Inc.
Don WOllam• once again teamed with
Bart ReynoldJ when the two met In
Juniper, Fla., to film a protlon of .
Reynold's movie-in-progress, "Smokey and
the Bandit II." WOllam• portrayed himself
and sang an as-yet unrecorded new song
as a part or his movie duties. He also appeared with Reynolds In "W. W. and the
Dixie Dance Kings."
A matinee Grand Ole Opry performance
on Aprll 26 wUI be aired live over the
1,500,000 watt Radio Luxembourg
throughout Europe, marking the first time
the show has ever been carried live on the
continent. An estimated audience of more
than four million wUJ be able to tune Into
the program which Ia being presented by
NashvUle Radio Workshop, a local radio
syndicator. Appearing on~ show will be
regular Grand Ole Opry members plus a
special guest appearance. by Bo:1 Car
WDUe who Ia the reigning country Entertainer of Ute Year In Europe.
NaahviUe's WSM radio his announced
that
It wllJ relnatate Ita popular "Dee Jay
Ronnie Milsap Signs Autographs ...
USA"
festure thla month, choosing country
Ronnie Milsap was a special guest last month when the Grand Ole Opry was

televlr.ed live for PBS. After his segment on the show. Milsap sign~ autographs
tor numerous backstage 'admirers.
•
!
~/ . •

- ...,.,=-

1(

J ~ ( r,

!,

&amp;fSimt;!,ot~lollll~

Johnny Cash

Johnny Cash celebrates his 25th Anniver sary In show business this month as his
Sliver Anniversary Special airs on ABC.
Performing wlifi Jol)nny (above) on the
Joe Cates Special are Waylong Jennings
and Krls Krlstoflerson (below).

Krls Krlstoflerson

petition has been in cold storage at WSM
since It last ran in the late 19605. According to WSM program director and
Grand Old Opry announcer Halri-Beaaley,
winners or each monthly feature wm be
chosen on the basts of tapes and resumes
submitted to the radio station. The DJ of
the month wUI be Invited to vtslt Nashville,
where he wtll be intrpduced on the stage of
the Opry and be give(U guest host position
on the WSM b~ Special recorded
salutes to the wlnllla&amp;J&gt;J by stars of tbe
Opry wUI be shl~;.t.-tbe winning DJ's
home radio statloll. A.~ Jay of the
Year" wm be eli=~ Opry cast
.
from among the
. r winners, and will
be announced dlirN .... annual Grand Ole
Opry birthday celtJ,t4iW In the fall. :•1bts
lsWSM's way of sqq-M., the hundredi of ·
country music~ who work In
radio and play the ~ of the Grand
Ole Opry stars," HeellityJiald.
.
Smith-Hemion Produetloos have .,_ aet
to do "Chrlstmu at U. Grand Ole Opry"
on ABC televlaloa-for tile third cm•utlve

seaaon. Tbe 1t'l't
of

drew

I

I'

�p.

.&lt;

:16, MUSIC CITY NEWS

Nlllrlllle, Terilt•n, April, 1910

-IIIIIWIIIt, T., II II, April, n.

MUSIC CITY NEWS, Pllt'D

OO~W® 9

\YJO~W©~
~00~\YJO§W®

Hall Named
New Host Of

TV's 'Pop!'

'Coal Miner's
Daughter'
Premieres
In Nashville

'

.

(Left to right, from top) Sissy
Spacek, who portrays Loretta Lynn;
Tommy Lee Jones, who portrays
Loretta's husband, Mooney ; Phyllis
Boyens, who portrays Loretta ' s
mother, Clara Webb; Levon Helm.
who portrays Loretta's father, Ted
Webb; Mooney, Loretta, and Mrs.
Clara Butcher. Loretta's mother.
await the screening in their theatre
seats; Loretta and Sissy pose for
photographers at a post show recep·
tion ; Tommy Lee, Loretta, Mooney,
and Sissy gather on ·stage at the recep -·
tlon to accept a warm round of applause.

It was a dazzling array of Nashville and
Hollywood as aristocrats from both ente rtainment capitols coverged on the Mustc
City Mar. 4 for the regional premiere of
Loretta Lynn 's film autobiography, "Coal
Miner's Daughter."
Flashbulbs popped, fans applauded and
cheered, and a giant spotlight swept across
the sky as limousine after limousine
unloaded film and recording industry
luminaries in front of Nashville's Belle
Meade Theatre. Local television crews
recorded the star and celebrity-studded
promenade down a long red carpet
that led through a seething double flank or
excited onlookers between the sidewalk
and the lobby.
Although the film had premiered earlier
in Los Angeles and New York, the
Nashville unveiling was in many respects
the most celebrated. For many members
or the cast, like Levon Helm---who portrays Loretta' s fathe r, Ted Webb--- it was
the fi rst lime for seeing a complete screening or the fini shed product. It was also a
grand ol ' famil y reunion for Loretta's clan
from Butcher Hollow, Ky., as her mother,
Mrs. Clara Butcher, and a host or siblings
and other family offshoots traveled to
Nashville for the event . {Loretta 's famou s
sister, Crystal Gayle, was not in attendance. She was performing in Miami.)
An enthusiastic crowd filled the 840-seat
theatre, applauded the opening credit

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
lina, and~eeredw~nlliel~aofErne~
Tubb, Roy Acuff, Minnie Pearl, Merle

Kilgore, or Vernon Oxford appeared on the
screen. They responded to the movie '&gt; conclusion with a four-mi nute standing ovation .
Following the screening, the movie-goers
moved across tow n to a catered reception
where they had the opportunity to hobnob
with the film 's stars and country music
personalities such as Mickey Gilley, Gail
Davies, Skeeter Davis, Box Car Willie. and
Loretta herself.
Sissy Spacek, who portrays Loretta jn
the film, looked pleased and lovely . " Making the film fell good right from the beginning," she said. " Everything just fell into
place."
Loretta , who also looked pleased and
lovely, had a point or her own to make.
" I'm lire11,.," ~q~ef\JY · "Helping prm31ote a
movie_l§!!'i ll!.U!!..sl~i job in the W9[lg ."

Tom T. HaD will replace veteran
radio/TV personality Ralph Emery as llie
host of television's syndicated "Pop! Goes
the Country.'' The announcement came at
a special luncheon hosted by Nashville's
Show Blzz, Inc., llie production company in
charge of the popular country music program. HaD'a duties wlll begin when llie
show starts Its fall tapings lliis year. Show
Biz president Rec Dunlap explained that
Emery was leaving the show at his own request after six years as host, and it was
Emery himself, Dunlap said, who suggested and personally asked Hall to take
the job. "I always felt that Tom T. had the
best eye contact on camera or anyone I've
ever seen," Emery said. " He's very
believable and has a great deal or
credibility." Although Emery will be leaving "Pop!", he wUI continue to host a daily , hour-long radio show &lt;also produced by
Show Biz), which is nationally-syndicated
over 288 stations, and he will also host
"Pick or the Pops," a best-or presentation
of twenty-six of the over ISO "Pops!" programs he has emceed. Hall was in high
spirits about his new television challenge,
but he took the time to heap laudatory
remarks on his predecessor. "TV, like
songwrlting, Is a very precarious
business," Hall said. "'Pop! Goes The
Country' succeeded because someone had
llie time and talent to make It succeed."
HaD also said that Emery had a knack for
bringing out the best abilities· in llie entertainers he hosted . "I plan to do that," Hall
said. "I've turned down many television
offers," he said, "because I was determined not to make a move until I was sure the
show would be right for me. I'm convinced
that 'Pop! Goes the Country' wUI be that

Ralph Emery, MCN 's Betty Cox. Tom T. Hall and Reg Dunlap of Show Biz,. Inc.
show .''

mixture of old film clips or earlier Cash
"Live From the Grand Ole Opry" was
performances and tapings done in
the opening feature March 1 for public
February at the Grand Old Opry house
television's "Festival '80", a series cif
wllli Cash and guests such as
specially-produced PBS programs. I:ast
Krlaloffenon, Gatlin, Waylon Jeanlncs,
month's live televised Opry broadcast
and Dottle West. The program airs this
marked the third such time that public TV
month.
had carried llie Saturday night perA further development to that reported
formances . Both Opry shows were broadUn last month's MUSIC CITY NEWS, Dolly
cast in their entirety to PBS affiliates naParton and Burt Reynolds have now
tionwide, and featured rare highlight apagreed to star In the movie version or
pearances by RoliDie MUaip, Loretta
"The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas,"
Lyon, and a number or other Opry _
but at a price somewhat more realistic
luminaries. Because public television does than their original tag of six million
not carry advertising, the Opry sponsors'
dollars. The Universal Pictures project,
segments or the regular shows were
which begins production in Texas and Los
replaced on the air with live backstage inAngeles in June, features DoDy as the
. terviews with Opry personalities and premadame or a notorious bordello near
taped documenary rootage on the Opry's
Austin, and Reynolds as a local sheriff
operation and country music history.
with vested Interests in the establishment
WSM , Inc., produced the six-hour prowho fights to keep It from being shut down.
gram.
·
The film will be an adaptation or the
Jobooy Cub recently hosted a dinner for Broadway musical or the same name
200 or his closest friends at his Hen~er­
which has been playing In New York for
sonville, Tenn., home in celehration or the
two years.
completion or the taplngs for his 25th
Motion plcure and television rights to
music business anniversary spectacular,
"Nashville With A Bullet," the mystery
"Johnny Cash : The First 25 Years. "
novel by "Green Beret" songwriter Barry
Singing at an after-dinner "guitar pullin"'
Sadler and Nashville songwriter Billy Arr,
(when one performer Is finished with a
have been purchased by Glen'arm Produc- .
song, someone else "pulls" the guitar
·lions of Pasadena, Calif. Although proaway and starts singln ') were Cub, his
ducers cuine Slone and G. L. HaD are cerwife June Carter Cash, Sbeb Wooley, Krls
tain that ~y plan to film the picture In
Krlsloffersoo, Billy Swan, Guy Clark,
Nashville, they have yet to announce a
Charlie Louvln, Lonnie Huteblna, Billy Jo
starting date.
Shaver, Penal Lane, Earl BaD, and others.
"NashvUie on the Road" wUI begin Its
Larry Gatlin, who was unable to attend llie spring taplngs for the summer and fall
dinner, called from onstage at a California television season this month In Albuquerperformance and sung over the telephone.
que, N.M. Jim Ed Brown, Helen Cornellua,
"Jobooy Cash: The First 25 Years" Is a
Jerry Clower, and Wendy Holcombe, who
make up the regular cast or the show, wUI
begin work 1!1 Albuq11erque Aprll 22, and
wUI go from there to tape segments in
Ruidoso and Carlsbad. The show Is produced by Nashvllle's Show Biz, Inc.
Don WOllam• once again teamed with
Bart ReynoldJ when the two met In
Juniper, Fla., to film a protlon of .
Reynold's movie-in-progress, "Smokey and
the Bandit II." WOllam• portrayed himself
and sang an as-yet unrecorded new song
as a part or his movie duties. He also appeared with Reynolds In "W. W. and the
Dixie Dance Kings."
A matinee Grand Ole Opry performance
on Aprll 26 wUI be aired live over the
1,500,000 watt Radio Luxembourg
throughout Europe, marking the first time
the show has ever been carried live on the
continent. An estimated audience of more
than four million wUJ be able to tune Into
the program which Ia being presented by
NashvUle Radio Workshop, a local radio
syndicator. Appearing on~ show will be
regular Grand Ole Opry members plus a
special guest appearance. by Bo:1 Car
WDUe who Ia the reigning country Entertainer of Ute Year In Europe.
NaahviUe's WSM radio his announced
that
It wllJ relnatate Ita popular "Dee Jay
Ronnie Milsap Signs Autographs ...
USA"
festure thla month, choosing country
Ronnie Milsap was a special guest last month when the Grand Ole Opry was

televlr.ed live for PBS. After his segment on the show. Milsap sign~ autographs
tor numerous backstage 'admirers.
•
!
~/ . •

- ...,.,=-

1(

J ~ ( r,

!,

&amp;fSimt;!,ot~lollll~

Johnny Cash

Johnny Cash celebrates his 25th Anniver sary In show business this month as his
Sliver Anniversary Special airs on ABC.
Performing wlifi Jol)nny (above) on the
Joe Cates Special are Waylong Jennings
and Krls Krlstoflerson (below).

Krls Krlstoflerson

petition has been in cold storage at WSM
since It last ran in the late 19605. According to WSM program director and
Grand Old Opry announcer Halri-Beaaley,
winners or each monthly feature wm be
chosen on the basts of tapes and resumes
submitted to the radio station. The DJ of
the month wUI be Invited to vtslt Nashville,
where he wtll be intrpduced on the stage of
the Opry and be give(U guest host position
on the WSM b~ Special recorded
salutes to the wlnllla&amp;J&gt;J by stars of tbe
Opry wUI be shl~;.t.-tbe winning DJ's
home radio statloll. A.~ Jay of the
Year" wm be eli=~ Opry cast
.
from among the
. r winners, and will
be announced dlirN .... annual Grand Ole
Opry birthday celtJ,t4iW In the fall. :•1bts
lsWSM's way of sqq-M., the hundredi of ·
country music~ who work In
radio and play the ~ of the Grand
Ole Opry stars," HeellityJiald.
.
Smith-Hemion Produetloos have .,_ aet
to do "Chrlstmu at U. Grand Ole Opry"
on ABC televlaloa-for tile third cm•utlve

seaaon. Tbe 1t'l't
of

drew

I

I'

�Pllt .. MUSICCITY NEWS

MUSIC CITY NEWS, Pill 29
O.yton.OH

20

D1yten.OH

12

Frrilln,GA

Oouolfl.GA
21 WemblfY, Engiii'MI
JOHN FISCHER
Rott.rd1m. Holland
Posodtnl, CA
APR!
DICKEY LEE
Mtdtord, OR
Pttnlnton,CA

Joplin, MO
Ft. Collins. CO
Nashville, TN

.-e

Lon9most, CO
SNttft, WA
lltrttley, CA
Mtll, AZ

piiCftofiPPIIrii'ICtL

Rlvtr F11ft. WI
Hlbbllng, MN
Tulw,OK
Wlr'IOM, MN
Slvll'lftlh, GA
Ctrrollton, GA

APR

n

ROY CLARK
Wtmbley, Engltnd

APR S
1·11

U Oovon, PA
15 Grttn Bty, WI

Bloom!- . MN
15
JERRY CLOWER
U

AttltM. GA
CokndoSprlngs. CO
APR 5 Vi1111nl18tKh, VA
Mlrshlll, TX
JOHN ANDERSON
Apple Springs, TX
APR II Sel&gt;t'lno. FL

ANDRUS/BLACKWOODHO.
Atllntt, GA
ChlrfOHt, NC
Mt. Vernon, OH
Klnklktt, IL
Wilmore, KY
Murrey,ICY

APR •
1

2U6

21

Oumts, AR
Adrl1n. Ml

APR l
27

CHETATKINS
APR II

Troy, NY
P1lm Bttch, FL

2!

WENDY BAGWELL'
SUNLITERS
APR5
12

Mt. Vtrnon. IL

Eurtk1Sprkt9s,AR
D1yton, OH
lndllnipollt.IN
Ft. W1ltvn 8t1Ctl, FL

II

""

RAZZYIAILEY

APR3
H
IG-11

Clnclnn~tl ,

OH
Mtmphlt. TN
York, SC ~
Myrtle INch·, SC

"
,.
12

.

2!

"

MOE lANDY ·
APR3
1 -. TX
•

NewK....:o.:

s

Tubo.OK
Grwlvllll, SC

-.oe

._,,,.,,.

u-.PA

~wv

E-MI

Cllk-IL
-lllt,NC

-•c
,_NJ

FIOrtln, LA
Pint Bluff, AR
Htmmond, IN

U
2S
26

APR 1f

I ILLY "CRASH" CRADDOCK
lf
20

26
27

LlnciSter, PA
NIStiVIIIt, TN
S.VInaw, MI

APR

MAC DAVIS
Statetlnt. NV

APR Jf·MA Y 12

MYRA DEE$
VanWtrt, OH
WliTtn, OH

U
25

-WI

McCvttllnsvlllt, OH
LIMivtltr, FL

SIAHa.MO

StOJMw, Ml
DILLIARDS
Wr-1111 - · · NC
llrtll-. AL
L.n....... KY
cloc-.OH
MB'ti, MI

eotum~M.OH

~.LA

$1.-lllt,LA
Otlllli Pork. FL
...,..,.,, SC

CIIIK-IL

APR II

lwi.,.._,IA
~ IL

2J
-VA
11
l-VA
CATHEDRAl QUARTET
WIII-LA
APRI
K-llt,TN
S
- l t, IN
II
Dltrllt, MI
5. - I N

t2
11

"

II

II

If
15

Oshkosh, WI
FREDDIE HART

21

PM'Io.IL
-lltiiL
RUIYFALL.$

APR 2.t

Hlgllllnd Htlghts. KY

•Birml .....m, AL

2!

l.t

l
I
t

St. Mlrtinvllle, LA
Of- Port, FL
Btlufort, SC
Whiteville, NC
Ktndlllvllle, IN
Elkhlrt,IN
LekeStltlon, IN
Wlhetti.IL

WALTER HAWKINS&amp;
THEFAMILY
NorlOid, VA

10
II

APR J
l
II
12
11·1f

26
25
27

2!

lert&lt;lty,CA

17

Oekland, CA

I

'

II
II

"

11. 21

HINSON$
APR I Cllorlolle, NC
APR S
4
STAN HITCHCOCK
10

APRJ-.t

I

t

10
11
12
17
It

•
14
II
15
t7

a

Ft.Weyne, IN

APR21·MayJ

WEMDYHOLCOMIE
utla,OH

APR 14

Doyton. OH

Loulmllt, KY
H,....KY
RICk Mill., NC
Hemmond. IH

Cftlrioolon. WV

-lllt,NY

Kokomo. IN

CoiUml!vi.MS
·EI OorociO. AA
Llttto Rock. AR
Hol$fr..... AR
-llvlf,AA
.OK
eoou-o.MO
Ev.-villt, IN
T...,._ AR

•
APR 1
It
12
14
IS
16
17

•
22

17·21
APR 16
17
1f
20

24·11

CARL PERKINS

I

Columbu's. MS

t

EIDor1dO.AA

21

APR 11
12
14
U

Clncll'lnltl, OH

APR 5

APR 1

Spr5ngfietd; IL

C- Ropidi.IA
Wkhlte, KS

Tulia, OK

It

~. MO

20

Mt.Yemon, IL
EYIMYIUt, IN
TexaruN. AR

21
22

Sin Antonio, TX

Fort Worth, TX
Nowltl, OK
Wkhiii.KS
Wkhlt1 Flllt. TX

APR •

•

Olll .... t lA

-KS
KENNY STARR

·~,

APR5

IllS $ lldaiU, KS
St. l.Ot.llt.MO

11
II

-.IL
lrlllol, TN

IAullvlllo, KY
STATESMAN QUARTET
JKklonviUt, FL

"

APR 4

STATLERIROS.
,._lilt, SC
APR 17
StiBviUe, MS

11

J - TN
T-.oH
5oeinow, Ml
Nl_,o Foils, NY

20
U

C~umbus.

26

tt
2!

OH

APR 3
4

s

20
JOE SUN

~Eno-

APR..t

s

II
If

23

7
f

~.SC

II

COivmblo, GA
Toll......,, FL

17
II
If

MobUt, AL

SWEET COMFORT lAND
APR~

Colul'ftbii,SC
AHiftfl, GA
ChlttenootL TN
GrttniiMn. NC

S
6
I

R k -. VA

II

APR 12
2!

lowtlntGr-KY

,.

Toronto.Ontar~.Conodl

11

Dtcatur, IN
Waruw, IN

2S
16
t7

ColumtM.OH
Whtlton.IL

II

Flndloy,OH
IOIIYG. RICE'
-.OA
APR!

HANKTHOMPSON
- -. co.
APR
-.oK

MICdtnny, FL

1•11
1• If
•

CMnUfl, KS
.............,, TX
,......,, TX

H-11

Das-IA
_ ,.. WI

EvtMYIIIt, WY
Gr.,.,, UT

11 W. COivmllla.SC
17
lt
CHARLIERICH

ll

Plrit. Frence
L.-. Enellnd

•21

lEXMELON SIIIGERS
Ln-iCY
APR4

· - " "·IN
'"

II

SPEERS
GMMM. OH

APR II
It

APA4
Gr-.NC
S
LDitRIE MORGAN
-llo,GA
APRlt
Ml~lL.,RPHY ·
Grllllf Fer AD
APR II

St. CIWIIL 110

~-MD

Hlllllf'd, FL
Wfnltafl Salem, NC

RONNIE MILSAP

wm~PA

APR II
14
17

DEL REEVES

25

MERCY RIVER BOYS

~··
P-TK

2!

APR 12 Gotfwnbur1, SWtdtn
lf Wtmblty, Entlend
a Frrifurt, Gtrmeny

17
II

~Al

COIItt&lt;Pork.MO

It

Wobnh, IN

.OK
Fo-lllt, AR

Eurtkl Spring, AR

20
U

12-11l

APR 1

I

JACK RIPLEY

I

w.,....,OH

APR IJ

-..tll 'l.•-~o; ( OII.J ' I

Pll'tlburlfl, PA
lutfl60, NY

"

lrvnswkk,

Moncton, New lrunswkk,

• cu

It

St. Cllhit Slwn. Ml

FroM-. C-

,."

~·••v•l

Cardinals
Continued from Pege 21

with black-bearded Norman Wright (the
acknowledged cut-up of the team.)
Oddly enough, Norman describes himself
as "not a practical Joker." Still, when he's
onstage, with a mike In his band
•
something does seem to come over him.
Whatever It Is, the crowds love It
In the framework of the
·he bas
a little reSIIODSJ
and sln~:lng

II
12
11

APR 11
25
APR l
S

II

At performances, Buck White and Down
are constantly trying to add
musical

&amp;u .......,ti•

Younostown, OH
W. Columbll, S(.
Frttrnont, WI

APR 11-12
25·27

WILBURN .ROS.
.

NUMBER ONE BLUEGRASS
.

GROUP FOR THE PrlST NINE
· YEARS, A_ND HAVE NOl'1JNATED
YOU'VE BEEN VERY KIND TO US

APR 25

LITTLE DAVID WILKINS
OK
Fulton. MS
Reno, NV

APR 1·4
5-6
I

L~t~ghtotl,

Bristol, TN

·us THE

US A·GAIN THIS YEAR.

APR l.t-27

KAREN WHEELER

Pint lluff, AR

YOU HAVE VOTED

APR I

KENT WESTBERRY

DAVID WILLS
20 Corlnlti,MS
APRIO
27
TOMMY WILLS
1
f

White said that the group's favorite type
of audience to play to Is one that came
specifically to hear them. "We play strictly to listening audiences," White said. " No
dances. We do very few clubs, and then on·
ly like In the wlntf.ij..}W played enough of
those In Texas and O~oma . 1 wanted to
get away from them when the girls got In·
to singing."
·

OOTTIE WEST
Los An911es. CA

APR 2H6

TAMMYWYNETTE
KlngS4)0rt, TN
OCIII, FL
LlfeyeHe, LA
ChlriHion, WV
Columbus.OH
Olyton, OH
Cltvtllf'ld, OH

APR .t
5

BrNzt. IL
Dt Soto, IL
NUts, Ml
JICkson, MI
Holllnd. Ml
lnttftochen• .MI

APR 19

11·12
II

It

70
25
ll
"

20
2.t
Z5
H
27

r'---------.1....-------,.,J

APR II Sewn Points. TX
II
It
NATSTUCKEY
23 Wltchltt, KS
APR 11
24 Cuslllng, OK
12
2S Merlon, IN
1f

Plno Bluff, AR

O.llos. TX

Ft. Wlttan. IC
TlfnPI,FL
Nfw Yort. N'r'

12
13

GENE WATSON
ChlfloHt, NC
POWOtrVIIIt, SC
Ttnrctnl, TX

1f
2~

Slomtor&lt;, TX

APR 16
RUTHIEQUINLAN

Clor-.. OK

11
12

21

C-. IL
II
IS
LEON RI,USCU
II
THETEXAS PANTHERS

Ho!Spr..... AR

Troy, NY
'P1Im 8t1ch, FL

R-Gz:y iTEWART

JEANNE PRUETT

14

APR 5
10

liLLIE JOSPEARS
Woupin, WI
APR 11

Sporto, WI

Ttrrt Heutt, IN
NllftVIIIt,IN
RockYIUt.IN

APR 11-12

APR It
20

APRJ.l2

KITTY WELLS

19
20
ChlriHIOII,SC
" Mornplll' TN
Wilmore, KY
2~·26 LOSAt19fles, CA
STEVEWARINER
FARONYOUNG

21

REDSOVINE

M Longview, TX
Proctor, TX
•

Pllldtnl, TX

It

Montville, CT
Ascvtnty, VT

lndlonopollo.IN

Tulti,OK

St. Louis, MO
lndlltllpoilf.IN
FUnt, MI
LlflytHt. IN
ColumbUs,GA
V1IOost1, GA
Lyons. GA

20
24-26

29

25
26
27

WALL BROS. BAND
NewOrleons, LA
APR 5-1

MARGOSMITH

:

CHARLEY PRIDE

APR II
II

Monlrose,CO
SIQinow, Ml

CAL SMITH

~:~':;!;, FL

20 Folly, AL
II
21

2! l0l-. ~Y

KENDALL!
APR4
. EIIIIond
s
K-IN
APIII - II
IAAIARA FAIRCHILD
A - PA
2!
-··
APRil . PA
II
Mlrtlft.ll
., wernn.OH
W-IN
•
KLAUDTSFAMILY
QOIIIIA FARGO
J-lllt, FL
APR 4
._.,j, TX
APR t
DOUG LAWlEIICE
&amp;-.AI
II W........... OC
APR4
FliDOYFEIIDU
-CA
1~14
===-~IN
APR:
17·11

11
It

NlshYIIIt. TN
'lllnWtrt, OH

APR I
I
II
16
17

MllwMtkM, WI
Ft. W•yftl, IN
I.OuiiVIIIt; KY
lndilftiPOIIt.IN
E. Pelfttlne, OH
ShrtYeport, LA
Rene. NV

2!

CHARLIE WALKER
KOkomo, IN
APR I

TIM SHEPPARD

COiurd'ANni, ID

,.

APR,.,~

Flytttvlllt, NC .
Greenville, NC
Rlltlgh, NC

24

'AIIIonl. TX

ll
14
16
17

APR 5 Wllmoro, KY

APR 17 LlttteRock.AR

APR .t
II
19

Conk-"••TX

11

Cedlr Rtpkts, lA
Holllf'ld, Ml

,.

11

ts-216

12 Lltflt Rock, AR
17 Ho!Sprlnos.AR
II Plnolluii,AR
II
MCCLAIN FAMILY lAND
- -. OK
17
MII-11~, GA
APR! Fay'""*'lllt, AA
11
A-City, AL
I Tutu. OK
tf
Pllll-o.MS
S COhlrnbiJ, MO
•
TIII....,.,FL
7 MI. v'"""" 1L
21
OatltCity,Fl
I EYIMYIUt, IN
22
Do,_ lolch, FL
t TexerCiftl, AR
2S
Optllkl, AL
10 -.AR
II
HUI'ltsvlllt, AL
II Mtmptllt. TN
f1
Ctdlt1owft. GA
It Kont. OH
20
YIIDOCity, MS
ll
SNERRI POND
E-II.VA
II ltnlolwlllt,IL
APR •11
-VA
17 PonomoCity,FL
It
NlwWUmingtofl, PA
II
'
MIIINIE PEARL
Attontk,IA
20 Wktllf1,KS
APR5
-so
21 ·12
RAY PILLOW
~so
12 """'- sc
APR"
L...,.,_, NO
U N.-ry, SC
•
Norlllflold, MN
2!-¥
KENNY PR ICE

21 Aftlntl. GA

It

2f

APR • llethlnY, OK

lt Wotlllond.WI,
24 F - I L
RONNIE MCDOWELL
»

Ovr-IL
UMifti,MI
MURRY KELLAM

JEAN SHEPARD
Andulhtiii,AL
APR 5
RochtSttr, NY
If
Pkknoy,MI
. 26

Dttwor,CO

STOIIEWALlJACKSOII
II
MI. Gllood, OH
APR It Altoonl, PA
Dvtnn.AR
16
Foyoll¥11~, NC
2!
~~~~-··
JANA JAE
16
OtftWr, CO
APR I Gr-.NC
O.llol. TX
12 R""""Nc
"
PAT MCKINNEY
l'tyor,OK
It
APRil
s,orfl~NV
11-MAYII ~MS
12
EIDorldo.AR
SONNY JAMES
Menlmlnet, Ml

Clntlnnotl, OH

Ptleonlx, Al
APR 12 BlktrSfltld, CA A
6 S1n Btmlfdlno,ltA
Concord, CA
TOKYOMATSU
BollilllOfe, MD
APR 2!-26 Wlllllmsbuf'O, PA
ONE TRUTH
Montktllo, NY
)II
Entllnd, TX
ORISMAYSSINGERS

II Dttrolt, Ml
If WIII,._,, PA

TwoRI.,.,.WI

21

Ltrlmlt, WY

6

Oollo&amp;, TX

21

Port11nd. OR
CIStroVIIIty,CA

HOPPER BROS.' CONNIE
RodlyMIII.,NC
A'AIA
TEDDYHUFFAMUHEGEIIS
Clllrlolle, NC
APRI
Jock-lilt, FL
4
Clllrlottt. NC
l
J-City,TN
10 Cfttrok•, IA
CHARLYMCCLAIN
L.lnldl.., PA
12

26

D\lluiii;MN

30

Shdtlekt,l~

Tamp., FL
Gn~ RIPids, Ml
CONWAY TWITTY

RONNIE SESSIONS

•"

APR.t
10
12

Ft. Witton BtiCh. FL

25

Esc1nlbi. MI
Merrill, WI
Hammond.IN

21
• So~LiktCity, UT

DARRELL MCCALL

JUSTIN TU88

19

Ktnmlrt, NO

""

Wolertown, NY

APR 12
17

,."

WYATTWEBB

"

Houslon, TX
APR 25

APR 2·1 .Arlington, TX
11 EnHand, TX
OAKRIOGEIOYS
ltthlny, OIC
Omahl, NE
APR I Cider Rtplcts.IA
RapldCity,SO
' Hotland,MI
BIIUngs.MT
10 Wllmort, KY
Pocatel~ 10
11 Murray, KY

20
2.t

Huntsvlllt, TX
Ntw Braunfels. TX
COf'JiusChf'lstl, TX

RUSSELL BROS.

WarrtnlbiH't. Ml

Sill Lilli City, UT

•

Sturttnnt, WI
Interlochen. Ml
Dumu, AR

APR I
11·)0

12

APR 12
Pint llutf,AR
WOOdbridge, VA
II
Wilm ington, DE
10 Farml"9dftt, NJ
11 ·12
MARTY WENDELL
Bennington, YT
APR 5
2l·2.t Valley FillS. NY
12
2! Clifton Plrk, NY
13
C1mbrldge, NY
II
Valley Filii, NY
It
NIWflnt. VT
25-26
H1ncock, MS
27

EHrlck, WI

Merrillville, IN
LIS VtVIS. HV

LondOn, England
NewOriNM. LA

If

Blrtonvlllt, IL

25

KENNY ROGERs&amp;
DOTTIE WEST

II

25
16

APR.t
l

""

I

lorl9dllt, OK
Piltfevillt. WI
ZIHIU, WI

II·If

Pltmln. NJ
Burllngf«&lt;, NC
Meldvlllt, PA
Brlsto4. TN
Warren, OH

10 Mtnom\net, WI
11 lndllniPOilt.lfii

SonAnlonlo, TX

APR 12

Gulf Breett, FL

Ft. Woyno, IN

Wtlertown. NY
LIMing, Ml
Mintr1IWtlls. TX
Elk City, OK

26
27

011111. TX
Sed11i1, MO
lndllnlpolls, IN

S San Amon~. TX

ERNESTTUBB

25

:M

24

JIIIIMYC. NEWMAN

17

U
13
14
IS

Tottdo, OH
Lubbock, TX
Bryan, TX

2l

16 Arley, AL

Ty~.TX

Syr.cust, NY
W...I-.OC
ChftltOoiL
lprlntlflold, OH
Ft. w,yn~, IN

20
21
12

NEWGRASSREVIVAL
12 Wlnllekt, KS
APR 12

APR I Ll Pryor, TX
2 Cllfttan. TX
I Tutu,OK

s

If

Mlllblnk, SO
AGO, MN
Virginll, MN

APRJ

Wilburton, OK

"
11·11

New Ulm, MN

CHARLIE LOUVIN

II

MIIKI, MN
Albertville, AL
J1sper, IN
Mldllnci, MI

Ociii, FL
Louisville, KY
lndiiMpolls. IN
Mlnthtliftr, NH
Uniontown, PA

JOHNNY RUSSELL

Fremont, NE Cedar Rapids, lA
Water*, lA
M1rshllltown, lA
StJames. MN

"27

JocksonYIIIe, FL

APR .t
l
'
12
20

1f Hempstead, NY
M Triton. NJ

"LITTI,E" JIIIIMY DICKENS

APR.

~. CT

20
2.t
21

P1l1tta, FL
Norfork.VA

· APRil Chlcago, IL
20 ' Wllhlngton, DC

PENNY DEHAVEN
LOI-CA
APUS

ElkMrt,IN

tJ

lf

ltniOnHortoor,MI
JOHN HARTFORD

20

NtwH~Vtn.MO

17
11

CodorR~di.IA'

-lllt,NC
LtsYtg~t.NY
APtttt-• K-lvlllt.IN
E - . IN
JOHNNY CARVER
-llle, CT
APR It Uk&lt;St-IN
W-IL
CARTER FAMILY

Plno llvff.AR

1J

Cotumbw.OH

GLEN CAMI'IELL

J1Ckl0fi'VIIIt1,AR

Knoxville. TN
Colle9fComtr,OH
Louisville, KY
Hlrrlsburg, PA
FIIIRiver,MA ·
Wlt\lmiC, IN

Elmlrt, NY

Tubl. OK
S
DEWAYNE IIOWIIAII
7
L.Gultvlllt, KY
Al'lll1·11 Cli- IL
·-City, MO
II-II
GATEMOIITH IRDWII
II
Frrillft, GA
AliA M · - - . M I
It
~GA
t7 ~k. TX
WIIMort,KY
216·27
JIMEDIRDWU
IIG Al DOWNING
HELEM COIMELIUS
APR20
K-,TN
APRI 1111-IA
-.PA
2!
JOHNIYRON
COMMIE EATON
MI.- C A . MARII-APRI
APR l
Astoria. OR
APR tJ Willurtlft. OK
S
.OR
tJ Vlftlta.OK

Sootllo, WA

H
II

McCt*;. NE

ConcO«&lt;Io, KS

2!

DANNY GAITHER
Vinllo,OK
Detroit, Ml
APR • Crowley, LA
Iedford, OH

"

JACK GREENE
Monlktllo, NY
Gronct Roplcb, Ml
APR 2!
LORETTA LYNN
TOM T. HALL
Rtno, NV
MAR 21·APR t
Dttrolt, Ml
APR 5
JOHNNY MANN

Allllond.KY

N
....
II
12

H

9
II

HMion, TX
DANNY DAVIS&amp;
"ASHVILLE BRASS

·-~·

Ktftf, WA
Tlcorn.,WA
Chotllilo. WA

12

I

N. PloHo, NE

,."

Bufftlo, NY

Anoconcla, MT
Ltwlston, MT

S
1

10

ArkiMIIS City, KS

JtfflnOn, LA

11·12

APR 1·5

APR4

12

APR 12

APR 5

JOHNNY RODRIGUEZ

HlyWird, CA
Ati9Win, CA
Boztmln, MT

Hixton, CO

APR 5

Mlrlon.IN
Wabish, IN
Wtretown, NJ

IS

8ufftlo, WY

OesM.olnet.IA

IHI
1J
IELLAMY BROS.
DING' DEll IE
. MI
APRtt
A'RI
Will'"'"-'• PA
a Soii-CA
. IL
II
IIOlMANIWE
II
~SC
APRI·I RICktor•• IL
Llfoyolli, LA
17·11
DIXIE MELOOY BOYS
Recktord. IL
11-12
10
APR4
-.lA
II E. l'llni,GA
S
Cli-IL
It Mt. Vlf'Mft.IL
II
K.,..City,MO
II L.Gultvlltt, KY
It
Avllln.TX
21 Flillt, Ml
RICkyMIII. NC
lA
IILL YILANTON
JESSY DIXON
G&lt;-IN.TX
APR!
AtMnt. GA

GEORGELINDSEY
Wtyne, Ml

1

II

2!

27

Webotor, MS

Conwoy, AR

APR 5
12

,."

FLOYD CRAMER
Roclno, WI
Chlllkolht, IL
Louni,MS
APR II
JERRY UINGING GOOFS
Pori•IL
KENNY DALE
JICkJonvlllt. FL
APR .t Burlington. lA
8ry1n. TX
APR
Ltnellftr, PA
12 Lombtrd, IL

tt

....

PEGGY FORMAN

25
21

'

It

Kenwood, OK
Pitkin, LA
Tupelo, MS

APR l
11
12
17

Bllklly, GA

II •G&lt;anctRopldi.MI

,_.....

4

JOHN LONG
12 N""¥11~. IN

Ylllie Platte, LA
Ellyevllle, LA

Wk hltl, KS
P1Hm1n. NJ
MlrltHI, GA
OesMolnts,IA
WtsfBtnd, WI
Or1ytvn Pl1ins. Ml

l

APR 5

NEWCRISTY MINSTRELS

APR~

Fulton, MS
PontiiC,IL
W1upln. WI
Hlbbllng, MH

Ellendale, MN

Atllnfl, GA
Vlrglnll8t1Ch. VA
Huron, SO
COf1K'IChristl, TX

APR J.ll
IS·MAY 1

Adrlan, MI

MARTY ROlliNS

APR H
2.t
25
26

TOM NETHERTON

21

Baltimore, MD

II

It

SIJS.Iftvlllt, CA

APR I

N. Zukh, TX
Mllono, TX

IUKkShllr. GA

APRil

LEWISFAM.IL Y

16·20

Montgomery, Al

7

Jacksonvlllt, FL
Gll'fltf', NC
KIMipolls. NC

It

II

'

PoHJiow!l, PA

Mont Belvieu, TX
H111rd, KY
Jacksonville, FL
Gttdln. AL

CtntreviUt, Al

tt
11
12
1l
11

f7
H-MO
It
FI. Smltti.AR
a
-TX
IAIIM ISTER TWINS
,_,IN
APR!

TOIIIMY CASH

11·1r
2CI
24-27

LJtHtton, CO
Pittsburg. PA
Chfrlerol, PA
Pittsburg, PA

ZELLA LEHR

Loulsville,KY

AHonii, GA
II· It Sln'A -Io. TX

w . c~um~a. sc

TamtN. FL

Reno. NV
L1kt TthOt. NY

Andenon, SC

12 No...YIIIe, TN
MACKENZIE COLT
lf

ERNIE ASHWORTH

~·-

12
13
1l

11
!2

IS

If

IILLANOERSON

Wkftltl, KN
Bristol, TN

AIM. OK
COIIIMYIIIe, IL

FLORIDA BOYS

REXALLEN,JR.

lprlllllleld, IL

H
I
11

J6

lONNIE NELSON

BRENDA LE!
APRl
" ~s-

.t.rl.lhelm, CA

Set rour ftvorlttcountry musk stlrt when they IlPPI" In your
trN. Htrt
1tw Stir'S scl'lecMts II furnished to US at prtu
flmt by tMit rtprflttltatlvn.
Schedultllf'f Millet to chlnoe, so you will w1n1 to chtck wlttt
locll """P'PfrL rldlo or TV s1111ons for spte;lfk tlmn 1nd

Hlmmond, IN

Changes
COilllnuod !rom P - 5

signing with Bowers In Los Angeles Is .
country recording artist/TV actor Ma)'f
Natter.
Gall Dnlea bas signed with American
Management, Inc. for exclusive ·worldwide
representation. Davies records for Warner
Brothers Records.
Ed Stoae, director of marketing and
public relations at Opryland USA bas been
named second vice-president at WSM,
INC.
Pat Treat and Boal Stoaem111, have
formed Trentstone Productions In
Nashville. Pat Treat, who heads up the
company, will manage all aspects of the
career of Hee-Haw c~star Ron! Stoneman.
Baey P. Mea ax bas desolved his long
term management and production ar·
rangement with Fred7 Feader. Fender will
continue to record on the roster of Meaux's
CBS afflllated Starfllte Record label with a
new producer.
LIWe Riehle Jollaaoa advertising agency
In New Belen, New Mexico bas signed to
handle national promotion for country ar·
list FaroaYouc.
am Sorea~ea former president of IBC
Records In Nashville bas been elevated to
the chairman of the board of the Utah cor·
poratlon. Former general manager Staa
CoraeUa1 has been promoted to the office
of president.
Ml.li:e KeUy bas been named IBC's new
national promotion director, and V alerte
Rampoae Is the label's new director of
sales marketing. The label will be working
with several independent producers, In·
eluding Walter Ba)'llea, Jim Ed Nermaa,
and Loab Lofredo
) I J1
Peui Laae Public Relations bas signed
to represent Rldg! To;, Records, recording
artist T11111•1 Je.
rn; 1
Dnl4 Poader hasjolrsed LJe ,\;11111 9S
their new baritone sll)ger. He wBS'i r"
former member of the Tennesseans, back·
up group for amy "Crlfll" Craddoek.
llerle Bauaid has named busl~ con·
sultan! loll "Tn" Wllluoa to his stlff as.
vlcepreelden&amp;-of.Hag, Inc., and Shade
Tree M'llMtlc.\~ t us • I'
· ~. li •

hav·
a good-time with you, then It's work·
lng. I don't care how good you're singing,
or playing, or If you're In perfect tune. If
It's just strictly the music there,, there's
something missing . .

~~Jill!

two or three years of
adult life, he
worked In a factory, while working pretty
regularly with a group called "The Blue
River ·Boys." But he wanted more. And
that's exactly what the Cardinals offered.
"They're the best band around at pickln'
and slngln'," be proclaim proudly.
And there ate those around who would
agree with him.

Wise-m an
Continued from

~aoe 21

on the Input of the younger generation.
There will be enough of the old traditional
performers to carry things on. "
Wiseman finds that bluegrass fans are
loyal to their favorites. " If you're for·
lunate enough to be accepted for what you
do naturally and you continue to do that,
you have to do something bad wrong
befo.re they'll get off. If they have Sj!veral
'·' records, they want the whole
of Yllur
cataJog. And I find that to be true
worldwide. I've done a number of overseas
tours, and have many overseas collectors.
Many professional people are becoming
stand-up-and-be-recognized bluegrass fans,
and \liey too go for the wholl' catalog."
Wl5eman still does some composing,
something be wishes be had devoted more
time to. "I don't find It too easy. I've got
Ideas jotted down all over the place.
Maybe I'm too critical, I don't know. I find
It rewarding what little writing I can do."
But Mac Wiseman after 35 years of mak·
lng his living with his music, finds little
else he'd change. "There have been bills
and valleys In my life and some dlsap·
polntmenls," be says In his rich Virginia
drawl, "but that's life Itself."
II'

Buck White
Continued from PHe 12

Whatever the formula, the Down Home
Fo!U are doing something right. They
were .the opening act for Emmylou Harris
OQ lie~ '79 spring tour. Sharon and Cheryl
sang backup vocals for Harris on a PBS
"Soundstage" taping. The group com·
pleted their own very successful tour of
Japan last summer. A new album, center·
iniiii'QUJld White's mandolin BJllslry, Is
soon !Abe released on the Sugar Hill label.
Tbe group will also tour Asia In
September, as a part of a government·
sponsored blues/cajun/bluegrass package
that wUI spread six weelut of· musical goodwill .. .F.ollowlng ~@'"' 1WJI!Ml1 !jll!cl. lte
plans several European loiM&gt;fMI#IrJ IIN\IP·

" If you've driven all day and you're
tired and worn out, and you've got a show
to do, you owe It to the audience to get out
there and make them think you're having
the best time In the world.

"I don't think that's being. false or foolIng anyone. That's show business."
Today, the Down Home Folks are a
act of four professionals blending a pot·
pourrl of musical forms Into their own
distinctive style. It Is a style that even
they find resistant to categorization. "Our
music Is not all in one vein," White ex·
plalned In his baritone Texas drawl. "You
could say that It's not bluegrass, though
we do do some bluegrass numbers.
Bluegrass music Is a hard-driving-force·
type of music, with a higher pitch to It
than what we have, and there's a banjo
pushing it. In January of this year we •
dropped the banjo and· took on the dobro,
because our music songwlse was becoming
easier, leaning a little more towards con·
temporary country, between traditional
and modern country.
"We still do some traditional tunes, but
we mix the music up so that It's not all the
same kind of music at one time. We sing
country songs, we sing gospel songs, we
sing Western songs. We sing whatever we
can do In our style and make It sound
good. When someone asks for a good old·
fashioned fiddle tune, we're still able to
play 11. Our dobro player can play a fast
fiddle tune on the dobro, be's that good. "
White said that he doesn't worry about
being criticized for "crossing over" or
"selling out" country music. "Had I been
raised strictly on bluegrass music, I might
have different views," be said. "I hate the
Idea of sacrificing one sound for the sake
of another, or for the sake of dollars. I
know people who are real bluegrass·
oriented, the real diehards, don't like the
Idea of changing tile music. But when
you're out there, trying to make a living at
It, paying salaries, trying to raise a family
and send the kids to school, your attitudes '
change. You want to be a little more
commercial-oriented."
"If the music were kept at one point and
was not able to change," White continued,
"I'm afraid that on down the road It would
burt it. It might keep what audience It bad,
bullt might not gain any. That's why the
bands are taking on new sounds In
b~~:!~:0 ~a;n~d branching out. The
are
less old-

1

OVER -THE YEARS AND WE'D
LIKE·TO TAKE THIS
OPPORTUNITY TO SIMPLY SAY
THANKS
SONNY AND BOBBY
THE OSBORNE BROTHERS

•
•

�Pllt .. MUSICCITY NEWS

MUSIC CITY NEWS, Pill 29
O.yton.OH

20

D1yten.OH

12

Frrilln,GA

Oouolfl.GA
21 WemblfY, Engiii'MI
JOHN FISCHER
Rott.rd1m. Holland
Posodtnl, CA
APR!
DICKEY LEE
Mtdtord, OR
Pttnlnton,CA

Joplin, MO
Ft. Collins. CO
Nashville, TN

.-e

Lon9most, CO
SNttft, WA
lltrttley, CA
Mtll, AZ

piiCftofiPPIIrii'ICtL

Rlvtr F11ft. WI
Hlbbllng, MN
Tulw,OK
Wlr'IOM, MN
Slvll'lftlh, GA
Ctrrollton, GA

APR

n

ROY CLARK
Wtmbley, Engltnd

APR S
1·11

U Oovon, PA
15 Grttn Bty, WI

Bloom!- . MN
15
JERRY CLOWER
U

AttltM. GA
CokndoSprlngs. CO
APR 5 Vi1111nl18tKh, VA
Mlrshlll, TX
JOHN ANDERSON
Apple Springs, TX
APR II Sel&gt;t'lno. FL

ANDRUS/BLACKWOODHO.
Atllntt, GA
ChlrfOHt, NC
Mt. Vernon, OH
Klnklktt, IL
Wilmore, KY
Murrey,ICY

APR •
1

2U6

21

Oumts, AR
Adrl1n. Ml

APR l
27

CHETATKINS
APR II

Troy, NY
P1lm Bttch, FL

2!

WENDY BAGWELL'
SUNLITERS
APR5
12

Mt. Vtrnon. IL

Eurtk1Sprkt9s,AR
D1yton, OH
lndllnipollt.IN
Ft. W1ltvn 8t1Ctl, FL

II

""

RAZZYIAILEY

APR3
H
IG-11

Clnclnn~tl ,

OH
Mtmphlt. TN
York, SC ~
Myrtle INch·, SC

"
,.
12

.

2!

"

MOE lANDY ·
APR3
1 -. TX
•

NewK....:o.:

s

Tubo.OK
Grwlvllll, SC

-.oe

._,,,.,,.

u-.PA

~wv

E-MI

Cllk-IL
-lllt,NC

-•c
,_NJ

FIOrtln, LA
Pint Bluff, AR
Htmmond, IN

U
2S
26

APR 1f

I ILLY "CRASH" CRADDOCK
lf
20

26
27

LlnciSter, PA
NIStiVIIIt, TN
S.VInaw, MI

APR

MAC DAVIS
Statetlnt. NV

APR Jf·MA Y 12

MYRA DEE$
VanWtrt, OH
WliTtn, OH

U
25

-WI

McCvttllnsvlllt, OH
LIMivtltr, FL

SIAHa.MO

StOJMw, Ml
DILLIARDS
Wr-1111 - · · NC
llrtll-. AL
L.n....... KY
cloc-.OH
MB'ti, MI

eotum~M.OH

~.LA

$1.-lllt,LA
Otlllli Pork. FL
...,..,.,, SC

CIIIK-IL

APR II

lwi.,.._,IA
~ IL

2J
-VA
11
l-VA
CATHEDRAl QUARTET
WIII-LA
APRI
K-llt,TN
S
- l t, IN
II
Dltrllt, MI
5. - I N

t2
11

"

II

II

If
15

Oshkosh, WI
FREDDIE HART

21

PM'Io.IL
-lltiiL
RUIYFALL.$

APR 2.t

Hlgllllnd Htlghts. KY

•Birml .....m, AL

2!

l.t

l
I
t

St. Mlrtinvllle, LA
Of- Port, FL
Btlufort, SC
Whiteville, NC
Ktndlllvllle, IN
Elkhlrt,IN
LekeStltlon, IN
Wlhetti.IL

WALTER HAWKINS&amp;
THEFAMILY
NorlOid, VA

10
II

APR J
l
II
12
11·1f

26
25
27

2!

lert&lt;lty,CA

17

Oekland, CA

I

'

II
II

"

11. 21

HINSON$
APR I Cllorlolle, NC
APR S
4
STAN HITCHCOCK
10

APRJ-.t

I

t

10
11
12
17
It

•
14
II
15
t7

a

Ft.Weyne, IN

APR21·MayJ

WEMDYHOLCOMIE
utla,OH

APR 14

Doyton. OH

Loulmllt, KY
H,....KY
RICk Mill., NC
Hemmond. IH

Cftlrioolon. WV

-lllt,NY

Kokomo. IN

CoiUml!vi.MS
·EI OorociO. AA
Llttto Rock. AR
Hol$fr..... AR
-llvlf,AA
.OK
eoou-o.MO
Ev.-villt, IN
T...,._ AR

•
APR 1
It
12
14
IS
16
17

•
22

17·21
APR 16
17
1f
20

24·11

CARL PERKINS

I

Columbu's. MS

t

EIDor1dO.AA

21

APR 11
12
14
U

Clncll'lnltl, OH

APR 5

APR 1

Spr5ngfietd; IL

C- Ropidi.IA
Wkhlte, KS

Tulia, OK

It

~. MO

20

Mt.Yemon, IL
EYIMYIUt, IN
TexaruN. AR

21
22

Sin Antonio, TX

Fort Worth, TX
Nowltl, OK
Wkhiii.KS
Wkhlt1 Flllt. TX

APR •

•

Olll .... t lA

-KS
KENNY STARR

·~,

APR5

IllS $ lldaiU, KS
St. l.Ot.llt.MO

11
II

-.IL
lrlllol, TN

IAullvlllo, KY
STATESMAN QUARTET
JKklonviUt, FL

"

APR 4

STATLERIROS.
,._lilt, SC
APR 17
StiBviUe, MS

11

J - TN
T-.oH
5oeinow, Ml
Nl_,o Foils, NY

20
U

C~umbus.

26

tt
2!

OH

APR 3
4

s

20
JOE SUN

~Eno-

APR..t

s

II
If

23

7
f

~.SC

II

COivmblo, GA
Toll......,, FL

17
II
If

MobUt, AL

SWEET COMFORT lAND
APR~

Colul'ftbii,SC
AHiftfl, GA
ChlttenootL TN
GrttniiMn. NC

S
6
I

R k -. VA

II

APR 12
2!

lowtlntGr-KY

,.

Toronto.Ontar~.Conodl

11

Dtcatur, IN
Waruw, IN

2S
16
t7

ColumtM.OH
Whtlton.IL

II

Flndloy,OH
IOIIYG. RICE'
-.OA
APR!

HANKTHOMPSON
- -. co.
APR
-.oK

MICdtnny, FL

1•11
1• If
•

CMnUfl, KS
.............,, TX
,......,, TX

H-11

Das-IA
_ ,.. WI

EvtMYIIIt, WY
Gr.,.,, UT

11 W. COivmllla.SC
17
lt
CHARLIERICH

ll

Plrit. Frence
L.-. Enellnd

•21

lEXMELON SIIIGERS
Ln-iCY
APR4

· - " "·IN
'"

II

SPEERS
GMMM. OH

APR II
It

APA4
Gr-.NC
S
LDitRIE MORGAN
-llo,GA
APRlt
Ml~lL.,RPHY ·
Grllllf Fer AD
APR II

St. CIWIIL 110

~-MD

Hlllllf'd, FL
Wfnltafl Salem, NC

RONNIE MILSAP

wm~PA

APR II
14
17

DEL REEVES

25

MERCY RIVER BOYS

~··
P-TK

2!

APR 12 Gotfwnbur1, SWtdtn
lf Wtmblty, Entlend
a Frrifurt, Gtrmeny

17
II

~Al

COIItt&lt;Pork.MO

It

Wobnh, IN

.OK
Fo-lllt, AR

Eurtkl Spring, AR

20
U

12-11l

APR 1

I

JACK RIPLEY

I

w.,....,OH

APR IJ

-..tll 'l.•-~o; ( OII.J ' I

Pll'tlburlfl, PA
lutfl60, NY

"

lrvnswkk,

Moncton, New lrunswkk,

• cu

It

St. Cllhit Slwn. Ml

FroM-. C-

,."

~·••v•l

Cardinals
Continued from Pege 21

with black-bearded Norman Wright (the
acknowledged cut-up of the team.)
Oddly enough, Norman describes himself
as "not a practical Joker." Still, when he's
onstage, with a mike In his band
•
something does seem to come over him.
Whatever It Is, the crowds love It
In the framework of the
·he bas
a little reSIIODSJ
and sln~:lng

II
12
11

APR 11
25
APR l
S

II

At performances, Buck White and Down
are constantly trying to add
musical

&amp;u .......,ti•

Younostown, OH
W. Columbll, S(.
Frttrnont, WI

APR 11-12
25·27

WILBURN .ROS.
.

NUMBER ONE BLUEGRASS
.

GROUP FOR THE PrlST NINE
· YEARS, A_ND HAVE NOl'1JNATED
YOU'VE BEEN VERY KIND TO US

APR 25

LITTLE DAVID WILKINS
OK
Fulton. MS
Reno, NV

APR 1·4
5-6
I

L~t~ghtotl,

Bristol, TN

·us THE

US A·GAIN THIS YEAR.

APR l.t-27

KAREN WHEELER

Pint lluff, AR

YOU HAVE VOTED

APR I

KENT WESTBERRY

DAVID WILLS
20 Corlnlti,MS
APRIO
27
TOMMY WILLS
1
f

White said that the group's favorite type
of audience to play to Is one that came
specifically to hear them. "We play strictly to listening audiences," White said. " No
dances. We do very few clubs, and then on·
ly like In the wlntf.ij..}W played enough of
those In Texas and O~oma . 1 wanted to
get away from them when the girls got In·
to singing."
·

OOTTIE WEST
Los An911es. CA

APR 2H6

TAMMYWYNETTE
KlngS4)0rt, TN
OCIII, FL
LlfeyeHe, LA
ChlriHion, WV
Columbus.OH
Olyton, OH
Cltvtllf'ld, OH

APR .t
5

BrNzt. IL
Dt Soto, IL
NUts, Ml
JICkson, MI
Holllnd. Ml
lnttftochen• .MI

APR 19

11·12
II

It

70
25
ll
"

20
2.t
Z5
H
27

r'---------.1....-------,.,J

APR II Sewn Points. TX
II
It
NATSTUCKEY
23 Wltchltt, KS
APR 11
24 Cuslllng, OK
12
2S Merlon, IN
1f

Plno Bluff, AR

O.llos. TX

Ft. Wlttan. IC
TlfnPI,FL
Nfw Yort. N'r'

12
13

GENE WATSON
ChlfloHt, NC
POWOtrVIIIt, SC
Ttnrctnl, TX

1f
2~

Slomtor&lt;, TX

APR 16
RUTHIEQUINLAN

Clor-.. OK

11
12

21

C-. IL
II
IS
LEON RI,USCU
II
THETEXAS PANTHERS

Ho!Spr..... AR

Troy, NY
'P1Im 8t1ch, FL

R-Gz:y iTEWART

JEANNE PRUETT

14

APR 5
10

liLLIE JOSPEARS
Woupin, WI
APR 11

Sporto, WI

Ttrrt Heutt, IN
NllftVIIIt,IN
RockYIUt.IN

APR 11-12

APR It
20

APRJ.l2

KITTY WELLS

19
20
ChlriHIOII,SC
" Mornplll' TN
Wilmore, KY
2~·26 LOSAt19fles, CA
STEVEWARINER
FARONYOUNG

21

REDSOVINE

M Longview, TX
Proctor, TX
•

Pllldtnl, TX

It

Montville, CT
Ascvtnty, VT

lndlonopollo.IN

Tulti,OK

St. Louis, MO
lndlltllpoilf.IN
FUnt, MI
LlflytHt. IN
ColumbUs,GA
V1IOost1, GA
Lyons. GA

20
24-26

29

25
26
27

WALL BROS. BAND
NewOrleons, LA
APR 5-1

MARGOSMITH

:

CHARLEY PRIDE

APR II
II

Monlrose,CO
SIQinow, Ml

CAL SMITH

~:~':;!;, FL

20 Folly, AL
II
21

2! l0l-. ~Y

KENDALL!
APR4
. EIIIIond
s
K-IN
APIII - II
IAAIARA FAIRCHILD
A - PA
2!
-··
APRil . PA
II
Mlrtlft.ll
., wernn.OH
W-IN
•
KLAUDTSFAMILY
QOIIIIA FARGO
J-lllt, FL
APR 4
._.,j, TX
APR t
DOUG LAWlEIICE
&amp;-.AI
II W........... OC
APR4
FliDOYFEIIDU
-CA
1~14
===-~IN
APR:
17·11

11
It

NlshYIIIt. TN
'lllnWtrt, OH

APR I
I
II
16
17

MllwMtkM, WI
Ft. W•yftl, IN
I.OuiiVIIIt; KY
lndilftiPOIIt.IN
E. Pelfttlne, OH
ShrtYeport, LA
Rene. NV

2!

CHARLIE WALKER
KOkomo, IN
APR I

TIM SHEPPARD

COiurd'ANni, ID

,.

APR,.,~

Flytttvlllt, NC .
Greenville, NC
Rlltlgh, NC

24

'AIIIonl. TX

ll
14
16
17

APR 5 Wllmoro, KY

APR 17 LlttteRock.AR

APR .t
II
19

Conk-"••TX

11

Cedlr Rtpkts, lA
Holllf'ld, Ml

,.

11

ts-216

12 Lltflt Rock, AR
17 Ho!Sprlnos.AR
II Plnolluii,AR
II
MCCLAIN FAMILY lAND
- -. OK
17
MII-11~, GA
APR! Fay'""*'lllt, AA
11
A-City, AL
I Tutu. OK
tf
Pllll-o.MS
S COhlrnbiJ, MO
•
TIII....,.,FL
7 MI. v'"""" 1L
21
OatltCity,Fl
I EYIMYIUt, IN
22
Do,_ lolch, FL
t TexerCiftl, AR
2S
Optllkl, AL
10 -.AR
II
HUI'ltsvlllt, AL
II Mtmptllt. TN
f1
Ctdlt1owft. GA
It Kont. OH
20
YIIDOCity, MS
ll
SNERRI POND
E-II.VA
II ltnlolwlllt,IL
APR •11
-VA
17 PonomoCity,FL
It
NlwWUmingtofl, PA
II
'
MIIINIE PEARL
Attontk,IA
20 Wktllf1,KS
APR5
-so
21 ·12
RAY PILLOW
~so
12 """'- sc
APR"
L...,.,_, NO
U N.-ry, SC
•
Norlllflold, MN
2!-¥
KENNY PR ICE

21 Aftlntl. GA

It

2f

APR • llethlnY, OK

lt Wotlllond.WI,
24 F - I L
RONNIE MCDOWELL
»

Ovr-IL
UMifti,MI
MURRY KELLAM

JEAN SHEPARD
Andulhtiii,AL
APR 5
RochtSttr, NY
If
Pkknoy,MI
. 26

Dttwor,CO

STOIIEWALlJACKSOII
II
MI. Gllood, OH
APR It Altoonl, PA
Dvtnn.AR
16
Foyoll¥11~, NC
2!
~~~~-··
JANA JAE
16
OtftWr, CO
APR I Gr-.NC
O.llol. TX
12 R""""Nc
"
PAT MCKINNEY
l'tyor,OK
It
APRil
s,orfl~NV
11-MAYII ~MS
12
EIDorldo.AR
SONNY JAMES
Menlmlnet, Ml

Clntlnnotl, OH

Ptleonlx, Al
APR 12 BlktrSfltld, CA A
6 S1n Btmlfdlno,ltA
Concord, CA
TOKYOMATSU
BollilllOfe, MD
APR 2!-26 Wlllllmsbuf'O, PA
ONE TRUTH
Montktllo, NY
)II
Entllnd, TX
ORISMAYSSINGERS

II Dttrolt, Ml
If WIII,._,, PA

TwoRI.,.,.WI

21

Ltrlmlt, WY

6

Oollo&amp;, TX

21

Port11nd. OR
CIStroVIIIty,CA

HOPPER BROS.' CONNIE
RodlyMIII.,NC
A'AIA
TEDDYHUFFAMUHEGEIIS
Clllrlolle, NC
APRI
Jock-lilt, FL
4
Clllrlottt. NC
l
J-City,TN
10 Cfttrok•, IA
CHARLYMCCLAIN
L.lnldl.., PA
12

26

D\lluiii;MN

30

Shdtlekt,l~

Tamp., FL
Gn~ RIPids, Ml
CONWAY TWITTY

RONNIE SESSIONS

•"

APR.t
10
12

Ft. Witton BtiCh. FL

25

Esc1nlbi. MI
Merrill, WI
Hammond.IN

21
• So~LiktCity, UT

DARRELL MCCALL

JUSTIN TU88

19

Ktnmlrt, NO

""

Wolertown, NY

APR 12
17

,."

WYATTWEBB

"

Houslon, TX
APR 25

APR 2·1 .Arlington, TX
11 EnHand, TX
OAKRIOGEIOYS
ltthlny, OIC
Omahl, NE
APR I Cider Rtplcts.IA
RapldCity,SO
' Hotland,MI
BIIUngs.MT
10 Wllmort, KY
Pocatel~ 10
11 Murray, KY

20
2.t

Huntsvlllt, TX
Ntw Braunfels. TX
COf'JiusChf'lstl, TX

RUSSELL BROS.

WarrtnlbiH't. Ml

Sill Lilli City, UT

•

Sturttnnt, WI
Interlochen. Ml
Dumu, AR

APR I
11·)0

12

APR 12
Pint llutf,AR
WOOdbridge, VA
II
Wilm ington, DE
10 Farml"9dftt, NJ
11 ·12
MARTY WENDELL
Bennington, YT
APR 5
2l·2.t Valley FillS. NY
12
2! Clifton Plrk, NY
13
C1mbrldge, NY
II
Valley Filii, NY
It
NIWflnt. VT
25-26
H1ncock, MS
27

EHrlck, WI

Merrillville, IN
LIS VtVIS. HV

LondOn, England
NewOriNM. LA

If

Blrtonvlllt, IL

25

KENNY ROGERs&amp;
DOTTIE WEST

II

25
16

APR.t
l

""

I

lorl9dllt, OK
Piltfevillt. WI
ZIHIU, WI

II·If

Pltmln. NJ
Burllngf«&lt;, NC
Meldvlllt, PA
Brlsto4. TN
Warren, OH

10 Mtnom\net, WI
11 lndllniPOilt.lfii

SonAnlonlo, TX

APR 12

Gulf Breett, FL

Ft. Woyno, IN

Wtlertown. NY
LIMing, Ml
Mintr1IWtlls. TX
Elk City, OK

26
27

011111. TX
Sed11i1, MO
lndllnlpolls, IN

S San Amon~. TX

ERNESTTUBB

25

:M

24

JIIIIMYC. NEWMAN

17

U
13
14
IS

Tottdo, OH
Lubbock, TX
Bryan, TX

2l

16 Arley, AL

Ty~.TX

Syr.cust, NY
W...I-.OC
ChftltOoiL
lprlntlflold, OH
Ft. w,yn~, IN

20
21
12

NEWGRASSREVIVAL
12 Wlnllekt, KS
APR 12

APR I Ll Pryor, TX
2 Cllfttan. TX
I Tutu,OK

s

If

Mlllblnk, SO
AGO, MN
Virginll, MN

APRJ

Wilburton, OK

"
11·11

New Ulm, MN

CHARLIE LOUVIN

II

MIIKI, MN
Albertville, AL
J1sper, IN
Mldllnci, MI

Ociii, FL
Louisville, KY
lndiiMpolls. IN
Mlnthtliftr, NH
Uniontown, PA

JOHNNY RUSSELL

Fremont, NE Cedar Rapids, lA
Water*, lA
M1rshllltown, lA
StJames. MN

"27

JocksonYIIIe, FL

APR .t
l
'
12
20

1f Hempstead, NY
M Triton. NJ

"LITTI,E" JIIIIMY DICKENS

APR.

~. CT

20
2.t
21

P1l1tta, FL
Norfork.VA

· APRil Chlcago, IL
20 ' Wllhlngton, DC

PENNY DEHAVEN
LOI-CA
APUS

ElkMrt,IN

tJ

lf

ltniOnHortoor,MI
JOHN HARTFORD

20

NtwH~Vtn.MO

17
11

CodorR~di.IA'

-lllt,NC
LtsYtg~t.NY
APtttt-• K-lvlllt.IN
E - . IN
JOHNNY CARVER
-llle, CT
APR It Uk&lt;St-IN
W-IL
CARTER FAMILY

Plno llvff.AR

1J

Cotumbw.OH

GLEN CAMI'IELL

J1Ckl0fi'VIIIt1,AR

Knoxville. TN
Colle9fComtr,OH
Louisville, KY
Hlrrlsburg, PA
FIIIRiver,MA ·
Wlt\lmiC, IN

Elmlrt, NY

Tubl. OK
S
DEWAYNE IIOWIIAII
7
L.Gultvlllt, KY
Al'lll1·11 Cli- IL
·-City, MO
II-II
GATEMOIITH IRDWII
II
Frrillft, GA
AliA M · - - . M I
It
~GA
t7 ~k. TX
WIIMort,KY
216·27
JIMEDIRDWU
IIG Al DOWNING
HELEM COIMELIUS
APR20
K-,TN
APRI 1111-IA
-.PA
2!
JOHNIYRON
COMMIE EATON
MI.- C A . MARII-APRI
APR l
Astoria. OR
APR tJ Willurtlft. OK
S
.OR
tJ Vlftlta.OK

Sootllo, WA

H
II

McCt*;. NE

ConcO«&lt;Io, KS

2!

DANNY GAITHER
Vinllo,OK
Detroit, Ml
APR • Crowley, LA
Iedford, OH

"

JACK GREENE
Monlktllo, NY
Gronct Roplcb, Ml
APR 2!
LORETTA LYNN
TOM T. HALL
Rtno, NV
MAR 21·APR t
Dttrolt, Ml
APR 5
JOHNNY MANN

Allllond.KY

N
....
II
12

H

9
II

HMion, TX
DANNY DAVIS&amp;
"ASHVILLE BRASS

·-~·

Ktftf, WA
Tlcorn.,WA
Chotllilo. WA

12

I

N. PloHo, NE

,."

Bufftlo, NY

Anoconcla, MT
Ltwlston, MT

S
1

10

ArkiMIIS City, KS

JtfflnOn, LA

11·12

APR 1·5

APR4

12

APR 12

APR 5

JOHNNY RODRIGUEZ

HlyWird, CA
Ati9Win, CA
Boztmln, MT

Hixton, CO

APR 5

Mlrlon.IN
Wabish, IN
Wtretown, NJ

IS

8ufftlo, WY

OesM.olnet.IA

IHI
1J
IELLAMY BROS.
DING' DEll IE
. MI
APRtt
A'RI
Will'"'"-'• PA
a Soii-CA
. IL
II
IIOlMANIWE
II
~SC
APRI·I RICktor•• IL
Llfoyolli, LA
17·11
DIXIE MELOOY BOYS
Recktord. IL
11-12
10
APR4
-.lA
II E. l'llni,GA
S
Cli-IL
It Mt. Vlf'Mft.IL
II
K.,..City,MO
II L.Gultvlltt, KY
It
Avllln.TX
21 Flillt, Ml
RICkyMIII. NC
lA
IILL YILANTON
JESSY DIXON
G&lt;-IN.TX
APR!
AtMnt. GA

GEORGELINDSEY
Wtyne, Ml

1

II

2!

27

Webotor, MS

Conwoy, AR

APR 5
12

,."

FLOYD CRAMER
Roclno, WI
Chlllkolht, IL
Louni,MS
APR II
JERRY UINGING GOOFS
Pori•IL
KENNY DALE
JICkJonvlllt. FL
APR .t Burlington. lA
8ry1n. TX
APR
Ltnellftr, PA
12 Lombtrd, IL

tt

....

PEGGY FORMAN

25
21

'

It

Kenwood, OK
Pitkin, LA
Tupelo, MS

APR l
11
12
17

Bllklly, GA

II •G&lt;anctRopldi.MI

,_.....

4

JOHN LONG
12 N""¥11~. IN

Ylllie Platte, LA
Ellyevllle, LA

Wk hltl, KS
P1Hm1n. NJ
MlrltHI, GA
OesMolnts,IA
WtsfBtnd, WI
Or1ytvn Pl1ins. Ml

l

APR 5

NEWCRISTY MINSTRELS

APR~

Fulton, MS
PontiiC,IL
W1upln. WI
Hlbbllng, MH

Ellendale, MN

Atllnfl, GA
Vlrglnll8t1Ch. VA
Huron, SO
COf1K'IChristl, TX

APR J.ll
IS·MAY 1

Adrlan, MI

MARTY ROlliNS

APR H
2.t
25
26

TOM NETHERTON

21

Baltimore, MD

II

It

SIJS.Iftvlllt, CA

APR I

N. Zukh, TX
Mllono, TX

IUKkShllr. GA

APRil

LEWISFAM.IL Y

16·20

Montgomery, Al

7

Jacksonvlllt, FL
Gll'fltf', NC
KIMipolls. NC

It

II

'

PoHJiow!l, PA

Mont Belvieu, TX
H111rd, KY
Jacksonville, FL
Gttdln. AL

CtntreviUt, Al

tt
11
12
1l
11

f7
H-MO
It
FI. Smltti.AR
a
-TX
IAIIM ISTER TWINS
,_,IN
APR!

TOIIIMY CASH

11·1r
2CI
24-27

LJtHtton, CO
Pittsburg. PA
Chfrlerol, PA
Pittsburg, PA

ZELLA LEHR

Loulsville,KY

AHonii, GA
II· It Sln'A -Io. TX

w . c~um~a. sc

TamtN. FL

Reno. NV
L1kt TthOt. NY

Andenon, SC

12 No...YIIIe, TN
MACKENZIE COLT
lf

ERNIE ASHWORTH

~·-

12
13
1l

11
!2

IS

If

IILLANOERSON

Wkftltl, KN
Bristol, TN

AIM. OK
COIIIMYIIIe, IL

FLORIDA BOYS

REXALLEN,JR.

lprlllllleld, IL

H
I
11

J6

lONNIE NELSON

BRENDA LE!
APRl
" ~s-

.t.rl.lhelm, CA

Set rour ftvorlttcountry musk stlrt when they IlPPI" In your
trN. Htrt
1tw Stir'S scl'lecMts II furnished to US at prtu
flmt by tMit rtprflttltatlvn.
Schedultllf'f Millet to chlnoe, so you will w1n1 to chtck wlttt
locll """P'PfrL rldlo or TV s1111ons for spte;lfk tlmn 1nd

Hlmmond, IN

Changes
COilllnuod !rom P - 5

signing with Bowers In Los Angeles Is .
country recording artist/TV actor Ma)'f
Natter.
Gall Dnlea bas signed with American
Management, Inc. for exclusive ·worldwide
representation. Davies records for Warner
Brothers Records.
Ed Stoae, director of marketing and
public relations at Opryland USA bas been
named second vice-president at WSM,
INC.
Pat Treat and Boal Stoaem111, have
formed Trentstone Productions In
Nashville. Pat Treat, who heads up the
company, will manage all aspects of the
career of Hee-Haw c~star Ron! Stoneman.
Baey P. Mea ax bas desolved his long
term management and production ar·
rangement with Fred7 Feader. Fender will
continue to record on the roster of Meaux's
CBS afflllated Starfllte Record label with a
new producer.
LIWe Riehle Jollaaoa advertising agency
In New Belen, New Mexico bas signed to
handle national promotion for country ar·
list FaroaYouc.
am Sorea~ea former president of IBC
Records In Nashville bas been elevated to
the chairman of the board of the Utah cor·
poratlon. Former general manager Staa
CoraeUa1 has been promoted to the office
of president.
Ml.li:e KeUy bas been named IBC's new
national promotion director, and V alerte
Rampoae Is the label's new director of
sales marketing. The label will be working
with several independent producers, In·
eluding Walter Ba)'llea, Jim Ed Nermaa,
and Loab Lofredo
) I J1
Peui Laae Public Relations bas signed
to represent Rldg! To;, Records, recording
artist T11111•1 Je.
rn; 1
Dnl4 Poader hasjolrsed LJe ,\;11111 9S
their new baritone sll)ger. He wBS'i r"
former member of the Tennesseans, back·
up group for amy "Crlfll" Craddoek.
llerle Bauaid has named busl~ con·
sultan! loll "Tn" Wllluoa to his stlff as.
vlcepreelden&amp;-of.Hag, Inc., and Shade
Tree M'llMtlc.\~ t us • I'
· ~. li •

hav·
a good-time with you, then It's work·
lng. I don't care how good you're singing,
or playing, or If you're In perfect tune. If
It's just strictly the music there,, there's
something missing . .

~~Jill!

two or three years of
adult life, he
worked In a factory, while working pretty
regularly with a group called "The Blue
River ·Boys." But he wanted more. And
that's exactly what the Cardinals offered.
"They're the best band around at pickln'
and slngln'," be proclaim proudly.
And there ate those around who would
agree with him.

Wise-m an
Continued from

~aoe 21

on the Input of the younger generation.
There will be enough of the old traditional
performers to carry things on. "
Wiseman finds that bluegrass fans are
loyal to their favorites. " If you're for·
lunate enough to be accepted for what you
do naturally and you continue to do that,
you have to do something bad wrong
befo.re they'll get off. If they have Sj!veral
'·' records, they want the whole
of Yllur
cataJog. And I find that to be true
worldwide. I've done a number of overseas
tours, and have many overseas collectors.
Many professional people are becoming
stand-up-and-be-recognized bluegrass fans,
and \liey too go for the wholl' catalog."
Wl5eman still does some composing,
something be wishes be had devoted more
time to. "I don't find It too easy. I've got
Ideas jotted down all over the place.
Maybe I'm too critical, I don't know. I find
It rewarding what little writing I can do."
But Mac Wiseman after 35 years of mak·
lng his living with his music, finds little
else he'd change. "There have been bills
and valleys In my life and some dlsap·
polntmenls," be says In his rich Virginia
drawl, "but that's life Itself."
II'

Buck White
Continued from PHe 12

Whatever the formula, the Down Home
Fo!U are doing something right. They
were .the opening act for Emmylou Harris
OQ lie~ '79 spring tour. Sharon and Cheryl
sang backup vocals for Harris on a PBS
"Soundstage" taping. The group com·
pleted their own very successful tour of
Japan last summer. A new album, center·
iniiii'QUJld White's mandolin BJllslry, Is
soon !Abe released on the Sugar Hill label.
Tbe group will also tour Asia In
September, as a part of a government·
sponsored blues/cajun/bluegrass package
that wUI spread six weelut of· musical goodwill .. .F.ollowlng ~@'"' 1WJI!Ml1 !jll!cl. lte
plans several European loiM&gt;fMI#IrJ IIN\IP·

" If you've driven all day and you're
tired and worn out, and you've got a show
to do, you owe It to the audience to get out
there and make them think you're having
the best time In the world.

"I don't think that's being. false or foolIng anyone. That's show business."
Today, the Down Home Folks are a
act of four professionals blending a pot·
pourrl of musical forms Into their own
distinctive style. It Is a style that even
they find resistant to categorization. "Our
music Is not all in one vein," White ex·
plalned In his baritone Texas drawl. "You
could say that It's not bluegrass, though
we do do some bluegrass numbers.
Bluegrass music Is a hard-driving-force·
type of music, with a higher pitch to It
than what we have, and there's a banjo
pushing it. In January of this year we •
dropped the banjo and· took on the dobro,
because our music songwlse was becoming
easier, leaning a little more towards con·
temporary country, between traditional
and modern country.
"We still do some traditional tunes, but
we mix the music up so that It's not all the
same kind of music at one time. We sing
country songs, we sing gospel songs, we
sing Western songs. We sing whatever we
can do In our style and make It sound
good. When someone asks for a good old·
fashioned fiddle tune, we're still able to
play 11. Our dobro player can play a fast
fiddle tune on the dobro, be's that good. "
White said that he doesn't worry about
being criticized for "crossing over" or
"selling out" country music. "Had I been
raised strictly on bluegrass music, I might
have different views," be said. "I hate the
Idea of sacrificing one sound for the sake
of another, or for the sake of dollars. I
know people who are real bluegrass·
oriented, the real diehards, don't like the
Idea of changing tile music. But when
you're out there, trying to make a living at
It, paying salaries, trying to raise a family
and send the kids to school, your attitudes '
change. You want to be a little more
commercial-oriented."
"If the music were kept at one point and
was not able to change," White continued,
"I'm afraid that on down the road It would
burt it. It might keep what audience It bad,
bullt might not gain any. That's why the
bands are taking on new sounds In
b~~:!~:0 ~a;n~d branching out. The
are
less old-

1

OVER -THE YEARS AND WE'D
LIKE·TO TAKE THIS
OPPORTUNITY TO SIMPLY SAY
THANKS
SONNY AND BOBBY
THE OSBORNE BROTHERS

•
•

�Nlillvllle', TttHiue', APrtl, 1910
" l~lll

Black &amp;White

~w Accepting Material for

PRODUCTION-PROMOTION-DISTRIBUTION
Only
$12.95

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131716th A¥0. South, Noshvlllo, TN 37.212
(615)313-6242

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Faron Younglulldlng
Nashville; Tenn. 37203

Most Complete Bluegrass Song
look Ever Complied

'""'114

John Henry, Ronk Stranger,
Uncle Pen Sally Jo, Barbara
Allen, Rocky Top, etc.

BECOBD ON .CBEDIT

615/ 242/2017

JUIISIC

INDEPENDENT MUSIC
PRODUCERS ASSOCilliON

JtlO 11 • • is

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AN INDUSTRY SERVICE TO ASSURE
FAIR TREATMENT FOR THOSE
PLANNING TO RECORD.

IIMII . . . . . . . . . .
II .,W,.
ltltl flrfNI Ill 1141 lli•llllllllllt IMIIIIIII Jlllilll.
C&amp;W 1111- I ;,, . . . IN tMctlra tl.
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fL£A
MARRO

·Fairgrounds
450 EXHIBITORS
FROM 22 STATES

DO YOU PLAN
TO RECORD
·IN .NASHVILLE?

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AUDIO SQUTH I'IOOUCTION5
41 Morale._... hot
,._,.ville, T-. 37203
(611) 211-2175

Singers-Writers
. , . . _ .... I

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1H£

111)111 . . . . .

III,,_ . . . . . F '

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JOHNNY DOllAR N.:IW:.Y ..s JOHNNY

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lftltlc lncbtry.
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Jason Hawkint ftrodudlons

nED &amp;. am BICIS

c:--

Fairview, Tn. 37062
(611)~.,.,.,.,2

~itth~"'
\
lila Ultitn• ill Qulityl
'1111 Ulti111111 i1 Sniapl

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A PERSONAL MESSAGE TO LON·
ZO I OSCAR FANS

... a Chell liM • • . - •llli•&amp; tiMir 11111

1111 ll1il ,.., wt . . I1&amp;Ul&amp; I lfiCill tllort II U,
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4lllllllks.o-w.t.NI' • ,T-1710.

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A PIOFIS$IONALFAMII. Y
Of MUSIC IIB.ATID SBVICIS

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MOVING TO A.NEW ADDRESS?

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to'lr.fr.-'iicUJ.·Sat. 11·5

-~ ·- ·

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IMPORT ANTI Attach a mailing addrHs Iobel
from a recent Issue here. OLD ADDRESS:
-----------------------~-------·----------------------··--···

,,u~ i 11111

I

LOCAL U.S. POST OFFICE!!!!!!

I I I

r

Address
City/SIIte - - - - - - - - - -P
MAIL TO: MUSIC CITY NEWS , Iox 22975
j ' I
Tn,

···

Fans!

pleeM write Julia Parten
Tuas 7786...

'

HAPPY EASTER to our II
Irishman and countrv
singer Eddie Rabbitt .
Martha Wavcaster .
Kinglf)Ort, Tenn.
STEEUOO BRO and fiddle
pllyers wanted tor stan ·
dard countrv band. Road
trtvel and session work .
GOOd pay, living quarters
furnished . Presently tour ·
lng Illinois, Wisconsin .
For full Information, call
Ruzty collect . ( 414 )
694·4203.

verted,
alto,
PA ·I ml
SpMkers,
monitor system ,
(l()..&amp;J 517·4624.

......

.,..
•

GET( CASH COMMIS SION
WITH EACH OROER
from friends, ;neighbors,
tor Amerlct's fine st
sho.s . Ell';' and pro·
fltGie . No Investment. In·
stant Income. Free sales
kit. Mason Shoes, K·519
MCN , Chippewa Falls, WI.
s.t729.
BIG INCOME . Guer1nteed
mailing pl1n. C1n be done
In spar•tlma. FrH details
without Obligation . Fltttl,
Box 2:112·MCN , Spring·
field , llllnols62701.
Wt_U WEEKLY Guaren·
teed. work 2 hours dallv
Stiirt lmmedlltely. Home:
worJQ FrH. Murrty·J2:,
1042·16 Avt. North, St.
Peterlburp, FL S3704.
S20S .80 GUARANTEED for
5 hour work Wftk 1t home.
Ladles 1nswer to •1nanc111
security . P.J . Cl1vln, P.O.
Box UUACN; Br1nson,
Mlssourl65616.
l • ,

REAL IITATE
WATERFRONT LOT Old
Hickory Lake. 111 Ft. on
the water by 170 Ft. on the
road . Wilson County. 35
mlnutn from dOwntown
Nashville . Buumu·IIV
WOOded. 135,000.00. oov
147-7572 Nl ht 367·922.3.

OLOTIME RADIO BROAD·
CASTS, Including "G rand
Ole Oprv," " National
Barn Dance ," " Gene
Autry 's Melodv Ranch,"
on quality tapes . Free
C1talog, Carl Froel ich,
Route OM, Box 1S8·A.
New Freedom. PA . 17349.
COLOR PHOTOS ON , off
stage : Dolly , Farrah
3,000 others, Dollv watch :
S2S, Posters, records .
Barr, 1850 N. Whitley ,
HollywOOd, Ca . 90028 .
SINGING COWBOY FANS :
I hiVe an a lmost complete
collection of records, tran ·
scrlptions, radio shows.
Taping service available .
Write for list. J imm ie
Willhelm, Star RCHJte Box
16.SB, Burnet, Texas 78611 .
ASTROLOGY PERSON ·
ALYSIS supreme 112.00
for eactl , 120.00 for two
plus chart compar itons
send name, date, exac t
time, place of birth, plus
relationships for comparis on • ASTROANALY ·
SIS ·G, P.O. Box 854,
Pisgah Forest, NC 28768 .
OVER $80,000 IN PRIZES !
Songwriters, Lyricists ,
Vocalists, Guitar , and
Plano Players, enter the
Music City Song Festival.
For more Information,
Write : MUSIC CITY
SONG FESTIVAL, Dept.
MCN ·C, P .0 . Box 17999
Nashvi lle, TN 37217.
'
FURNITURE ·""" off re·
1111. 100 name brands. 1st
quality! Write for free
brochure·Sobol House of
Furnishings, Box 7S7 MU
Black Mounta in, NC 21111:
ELVIS / COUNTRY
CATALOG · 32 pages.
Hundreds of Items. Sl.OO
Refundable with order .
Thurston Moore countrv
LTO., 1129 MC2, Mont:
row, Colo. 81401.
COLOR CONCERT
PHOTO S! Olks, St1t1ers,
Getllns, Wavlon. Denver ,
R1bb1M, Pride, P1vcheck.
Rogers, West, Mandrell,
Fricke, Wynette, Boone,
Rodriquez, Eagles, Dr.
Hook , Daniels, B. J .
Thomas, Bandy 1 tlllls,
Haggard, McGuinn, Bee
Gees, Engelbert, Tom
Jones, others. Catalog/
Sample SJ.OO Spe cify
flvorlte(t ). " SMILE ",
P.O. ' Box 1S293·MCN ,
Cheupeake, VA 23320.
S WE ETHEART POR ·
TRAITS you will love.
Two f'leldl drawn together
from your photos. Write
me for frH details. Svkes
Kennon, The Old Beach
Artist of Biloxi, 221
Mlr1m1r Ave., Biloxi, MS

39530.

RHINESTONES, ENTER ·
TAINER FABRICS ,
NAILHEADS , SEW ·ON
JEWELS, FEATHERS ,
Send specific requests and
S.A.S.E. for lnform1tlon
to : H.H. Fabrics, P .0 .
Box 14793, Orlando, Fla .
32107.

Continued from p 1 g. 20

Name

I.

(Rabbitt

-----.. . .

Rambo, the Arcllert, Wendell Burton, Ad
One, Company Jeuy Dillon, Continental
Slagera and Orcbeatra, Due Boyer, Cya·
lbla Clawson, Andrew CluwenrW, Jamie
Oweqs·CoiiJas, Amy Grnal, Dlao and Deb·
ble, Jobn Flacber, Rusly Goodman, PbU
Johnson, LaraeUe Harrla, Tbe HawaUans,
. PhU Keagn, Kalble Lee Jobnson, David
Meece, Tbe lmperlala, Barry lllcGnlre,
Jeremlab People, KeUy WWar4,.'a~n
Lafroty, Nielson aat f:tiU.~ ..l.IIIUit,
Doug Oldbam, ilbll&gt;earce, Mlchae1 aad

£.

GOS PEL SINGERS AND
GROUPS be In talent
showcase magazine that
Is sent to Gospel Buvers
all over U.S.A. Ozark Jub·
llee, Box 10012. Spring ·
field , MO 65804, (417}
116.4·.. 220.
BLUEGRASS E NT ER ·
TAINERS · write Otark
Jubilee on how to be In
Talent Showcase Tvpe
Magazine sent to Blue·
grass promoters all over
U.S.A., Box 10012, Spring·
fie ld, MO 65804, (417)
16.4·4220.
REWARD POSTER with
vour name I Old West Rep·
Ilea . Mounted, antiques,
readv to hang. Great u/ft,
too. Send for free , details.
Signature Studios, Dept .
MCN , Box 422. Palatine
IL 60067.
'

1-llli!11lll11JIII!!r-I
f - -I:Uii.lllliiUDli'O'iL-

RECDRDit

DOBRO WORKSHOP, In ·
structlon a lbum with
tablat ure, teaches the
I
styes
B th1 o' oJosh1 Graves,
rfd 1 r
swa d, Mike
Au r dge, Tut Taylor,
Jerry Douglas. $15.00 plus
11 · 00 'hi PP Ino . F ree
catalogue of records,
tablature, and tapes of
course• for Oobro and
other Instruments. Dan
Hucka bft, 28 MC Cliffside, Ft . Wortfl, Texas

BLUEGRASS AND COUN ·
TRY RECORD AUC ·
rarltles·tons of
'TION,
em I Do lltr (refundable)
for lilt. Arlc Leavitt, 723
University, Los Altos, CA
9&lt;022
.
" VERNON OXFORD :
Amerlcl'l Unknown Su·
perstar" album on Rich ·
~ - Tone available from the
producer and Fan Club
rep ., Everett Corbin
(MCN), Ill Bailey Collins,
$myrna, Tenn . 37167 at
17·50·

THE NA SHV IL LE SOUNO
PLUS "Y OU ." Recorded ,
backgrounds featuring
"Y OU " slnglng/ plavlng
best loved country hlfs
like JAMBALAYA. ANY ·
T 1M e, cHEAT 1 N ,
HEART . None other li ke
it. use at home, auditions,
fun , etc . Six RECORDS
available. lyric sheets In·
1 d d WI
l::-!!76~1o!!3&lt;~====-c ue .
rte NSY Pro·
.
ducllons, P.O. Box 4036_., RITA LORRAINE 'S new
NIShvllle, TN . 37204.
sin gl e on Robchrln
WHILE YOU WERE LOOK ·
Records "SwHt, Sweet
lNG for out·of·prlnt re·
Lovin" b/W " Sneaking In,
cords, vou should have
Sn.aklng Out", forthcom ·
been looking for us! LP 's
lng. Duet $3.00 USA &amp;
45's, tapes. DISContinued,'
Canada, all other coun4U S. VIctory , Burbank,
tries, SS.DO. Contact Rite
" HUDDLESTON 'S RE ·
ca . 91502 .
lorra ine Fan Club, Box
CORD ING " for Ten years
. 37 , Tennessee Ridge ,
we have been helping un·
1
FREE WEEKLY Auction ,,!-Te!!!n~n":.3~7~1!!11~·=-=---=-known songwr iters to
SO WAYS TO MEET
Lists Including out of print '1oo DIFFER ENT COUN ·
place songs with our top
STARS! II Ex·Beatlem an ·
C&amp;W section . Elmwood
TRY
d 513 00 200
notch demos, etc . 11819
Records,
Bo•
1023F,
Elm
·
recor
s
·
'
Ll
Itt A
lac tells secrets! Send
ood Cl 06 "
$25.00. 3,000 weeki';' I 10
PP
ve ., Dallas,
SS.OO : Bouse, P.O. Box
w , . 110.
different albums $9.00 .
Texas 75218.
26643, Salt Lake City, Utah SONGWRITERS AND Re·
AI'S, 2249 CoMage Grove,
"TEXAS DEMOS" ·. Profes·
8.4126.
cording Artist wanted for
Cleveland Heights, OH
slonal Demo services for
44111.
songwriters . compete In
Howdy Records, P.O. Box
BLUEGRASS SP~All
Jostl Graves and fr iends.
3251 , Temple, Teus76S01 . COU NTRY · BLUEGRASS·
todays market . Box
Cllsslc recordings from FREE CAT A LOG . Top
GOSPEL RECORDS AND
401166, Garland ,· Texas
the early 60' s. Send S6.00
stars . Large selection,
TAPES 13 .98 each, Cata ·
75040.
plus Sl.OO postage. Free
country , e1sy listening ,
log 50e: refundable with
PROFESSIONAL DEMOS,
list of other ava il able re·
pop , Records. tapes, cas ·
order . More Music. P.O.
masters , lead sheets .
cords. Cowboy Carl Re·
Box 1-46, Rahway, NJ
50150 Co Writing. Free In·
settes. Super low prices.
cords, P.O. Box 116 ,_,c,
Send todav. Roval, P.O.
07065.
formation (Sam ples availPark Forest, 111. 60466.
Box 521, Ithaca, NY 1-4850.
able) TDS Productions,
C&amp; W 8 l U E G R A ·
HA NK WILLIAMS FANS!
1609, 6255 Sunset Blvd .,
'
sS•
" The Drifting Cowboys'
KENNY ROGERS P IC.
SACRED
, OLDTIMEY
HollvwoodCallf. 90028.
lURE T·Shirt exclusive
RECORDS for sale by
Tribute To Hank Wll· WANT TO CUT · A .
work of art from top con ·
fiUCtlon. Manv rare , out of
IIams"·. Twenty country
RECORD? Our Inform a ·
cert photographer. limit·
print records will be offer·
and Inspirational songs
tlve booklet will tell vou
ed quantity · Order while
ed In the coming months.
written by Hank ao.d per·
how . SJ.OO to : ROBB ·
suppl'f lasts. SO·SO sh irt .
Please note vour collec ·
form ed by his Origina l
BE LLE MUSI C, 4930
Guaranteed . $7.50 + S1 .50
ling Interests 78 ~"'
Drifting Cowboys. A true
PI
· s, ...... s, or
collectors' edition . S14.9S
easant Vall ey Rd .,
P&amp;H Send cash ·check ·
LPs . Write to : Gerald
Chantilly, VA 2202 1.
M.O. Speclfv size, S·M·L·
Mills, Box 196 2, Sa n
value for $10.95 by mall. l;:,c;;;:C7;'~~~~7=cc:=
XL . Allow 6-1 weeks tor
Pe-dro, CA 90733 .
As a special bonus you get PUBLISHING COMPANY
dellverv . creaTive De · 1;7.~0:';;";;''E:'::f:':':=:=-,an hour-long Interview
will review your songs for
signs, P.O. Box 9045 • MONTHLY CO UNTRY Re·
with the Cowboys about
potentl1l recording . Send
Jonesboro. AR 72401.
cord auctions . Many
Hank Of'! the road. Re·
tapes (not returned). Jer·
1950's collector's Items.
cords, cassen es, 8 TK .
lOY Music, 1115 N. CorLISA WARD IMCN Faces,
Send for free list. Dave
save now! "Cowboys",
onado or., Peoria, ILL
Feb . luuel Is one of our
Cook, 121 Oak St. , South·
. ::;--;:=-:::c==
3269 Elm Hill Pike, Nash· 1 ~6~1;';60&lt;7¢;
talente-d singers. Alwevs l;:;:l~n~l';on';',;C';;T:;;06&lt;89~';',:.
· ===-ville, Tenn. 37214. Add ICOUNTRY AND GOSPEL
needs songs, poems. etc . COLLECTORS RECORDS .
$1.00 for postage and
SINGERS Record In
Let me hear from vou .
60,000 LPs Sold at Auction .
handllno, C.O.D. ok .
Nashville, at Nashville
~ 2 · 00 brings photo ot pret · Inter nat ional Se rvi ce
BILL BLACK'S COMBO .
Recording Factory . 200 a
V L sa and complete de·
Since 1971 In : (1) Jan.
The Or igina l Honky Tonk . Track's, or cessettet,
tails •bout our song ap·
Swing Bands, Jan Vo·
Sound· Buy albums direct.
only $39.5 oo 1 1 dl

1

i'i~7~:!!~:t~:o~~~v9~~ rv~:/W~:C~t::.
T.~~.~~~;rt~~:
es ern ; _., Person ·

~~r. ~:~·l :h~S~I~~~: ·1nvt1me.
~t~~~o (~ ::cki~t~~n:d:

6,

DOBRO SHEET MUSIC
TABLATURE 200
Hawaii an songs and 100
old standards. Free list
S.A.S.E., Oldtlmer, Bob
Strayer. 433 Eastborough,
Lincoln, NE 68505 .
COUNTRY BUMPER
STICKER : Guitar pickers
do II witt! the ir fingers .
Sticker and list SI.OO Dub,
Box 753, Forest Grove, OR
97116.

WANTED
PAYING 122.00 for mens
S16.00womensclassr lngs,
also want any other rings,
lewelry, watches, coi ns,
gold or sliver . Ship, Elliott
Mining Co., P.O. Box 458,
Kelso, Wash . 98626.
SLIM WHITMAN ALBUMS
especially South African.
Slim Whitman Apprecla ·
lion Society , 1002 w.
Thurber, Tucson, Arl1ona
15705.
WANTED GOOd Publisher
for the Jimmy Carter
Waltz. Let's All Back Our
President. Henrv Miller
Member A.S.C.A.P. and
NSAI , 931 Albany .Street,
Indianapolis, IN 46203.

Vocals,
Comedy
; (S) R &amp;
alltles, Folk,
Instruments,
R, R &amp; R, Rock, Blues.
SJ)ttlfy List from : Rev
Macknlc, P.O. Box 7511 ,
Dept. F, Van Nuvs. Calif.
91«16 U.S.A.
OBRO ALBUM, "tribute
to Osw1ld", lS.OO. Dobro

Mef!!phls, Tenn. 38118.

COPYR IGHT YOVR SONG .
Instructions, form , 12.00.
Copyrlghtl, Route 2, Box
JOIN THE 900 PEDAL
2228,
Goodlettsville, TN
STEEL Gulterlstl eround
370!2.
tht world who ere mem ·
bert Of our AIIOclatlon .
We cover every 1spect of FESTIVALS
Pedal Steel Gulttrplavlng
In our Newsletter. For a BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Hmplecopyendlnforme ·
Family Fun. Newton ,
lion write
: AThe IPedal
low1, July 19·21. Spon ·
Steel
Gulf ar
SlOe atlon,
sored by Optimist Club,
Box :US, Fk)ral Park. N.Y.
Bob Anderson, R.R. 2.
11001, Dept. M.
Newton, Iowa 50201. 1.5151
792 "7
WANTED: BAND &amp; 1;;;~~~,.-,==c.:-=
·...-.. S.
STRING INSTRUMENTS
ERMAN C, SM ITH'S loth
Will pur chase and / or
1nnua1 Bluegran Mus ic
trade musical or general
Festival, Jul y 11 , 12, 13,
merchandise for large,
1910 at Smith 's Jimboree
med ium, or small lots Of
Park, Knob Noster. Mls·
Instruments. Music Ma rt,
sour!.
575 C~rokee Rd., S, E.
08 EVANS FARMS
Smyrna , GA 30080 .
«W'4l3·l1l 2 John Rath·
CO UN TRY MUSIC ·CON ·
bone.
VENTION Saturday/ Sun ·
day, June 21, 22, 1980. Bob
LEARN TO PLAY GUITAR
Evans Farms , State
AT HOME · New ap·
Route lS, Rio Grande,
proach teaches hundreds
Ohio A WEEKEND OF
of familiar tongs In lust
CO UNTR Y &amp; BLUE ·
ten lessons . Buy one
GRASS MUSIC . ContacT
lesson at a lime, stop If
Bernard Connolly , Box 64,
vou aren't pleased. But Mason. WV 25260.
vou will bel Anvone can vc·s 12TH ANNUAL Old
learn. Send Sl .OO for sam ·
Time Fiddlers and Bl ue·
pte lesson to Guitar, Box
grass convention, July 10 ,
592 Cary NC 27511
'
•
·
11 , 12, 1980. Cumberland
Bowl Park, Jonesv ille,
VA . Cash prizes, rosettes,
and trophies. Free camp·
LYR ICI STS AND COM · lng, swimming pool , rest·
POSERS to collaborate. aurant, and showers. No
For Information and sam · registration fee required .
Pie Issue send $1 .00 to : L BVC'S Min . Music inc .•
~md C, P.O. Box 194, Gil · P.O. ·Box 350, Marion, VA
lesple, ll. 62033 ·
2054, 1703) 781·4795.
TOP NOTCH DEMOS · neat t-;;U;';G:':U7S::'T~':',"":T:=:H'CRO':cU,-,1~0
lead sheets. Write for GRANT' s 12th ANNUAL
prices. Free minor revi·
BLUE GRASS A,ND OLD
lions and collaboration . TIME MU SIC FESTI ·
Mover • 2521 No. 101 h,
VAL , Salt Creek Park,
Sheboypan, WI.S3081.
Hugo, OK 747.0. Osborne
C 0 NT AcT 1 N G Mus 1.
Brothers, Lewis Family,
ClANS! We pay commis·
Mac Wiseman, Rose Mad ·
s!On on sa les! For In ·
dox, Ralph Stanle; . Buck
formation send Sl .OO, L White. J errv Douglas ,
1nd C, P.O. Bo• 19, ,
Ricky Skaggs, Marshall
"'
F
1
Gll i"P ie. Ill. 62033.
ami v. Byron Berllne,
BEG INNIN G SONGWRIT ·
Goins Brothers , Josh
ERS
Grtves, Hot Rise, McLain
: How to write vour
Family, Lonnie Glosson,
song, words, and music,
Bill Grant· De lla Bell ,
114 pages, S.5.50, Educa·
Steve and Gwen . Bill
live Publications, Box
Grant, Rt. 2 Box ll ·K,
12009MC , Cleveland ,
Hugo, Oklahoma 747.o.
Tenn . 37311.
Telephone (4CI5l 3U·S59B .
SONGWRITER 'S CONNEC·
10 Big Contests ... $3,000.00
TIONI Experienced mu·
In Cesh and Prizes Blue
sic Industry, professionals
Grass Band Contest, Sat. ,
will Pitch vourtongs to top
Aug. 9th . A: &amp; R. Record
Nuhvllle Publishers, Pro·
Mfg. Corp., D1llas, Texas
ducers and Artitts. FREE
and Grant' s Blue Gran "

IDNGWRtfERS

1
~nJ~:
NE~~~;N~~~.R~~ b~:~~~
..
~l :th:~n~
;'.~ t~a~~~
P.O. Box 23186, Nashville,
ums
elr live per or·

tr::::::::;:::::;;:::::~::::T:•:n:n:.3:7:2():2:.======m:a:n:c:e:rec::o:rd:e:d:on::••:a:g•=·~

MAY
MARKETPLACE

S-4.50. (Postage, 60CL Bv
Instruction
Beverly
• Ktng books
, Route 1·2,
1
Madill, OK 73446.
'
LUE GRASS MU IC by
Bill Grant &amp; Della Bell.
Eleven ureal albums .
1.5.50 each for album, a
trtck or cassette. Manv
original so ngs . Free
catalog on request . Bill
Grant ·Rt . 2· Bo x ll ·K·
Hugo, Okla . 74743, (405)
';;'3~26';:·5'::5:"98:0.-;:;:;;;:=:-:="'
111 UTCH CASSiDY 'S WILD
BUN CH have got a wild ,
wlld record for voul As
soon as they 'get' the

Kick off the summer season with o MARKETPLACE od in MUSIC CITY
NEWS .
MGy lssu~ will spotlight a country music summer. Advertise your tourist
attractions , summer vacation sports and summer merchandise to over
half a million readers through the MUSIC CITY NEWS MARKETPLACE.
Advertise in the May 1980 MARKETPLACE section and start building your
frequency discounts .*

'-;:"'":';';•r;;lt;.t'~s;';oc;ka~I:7.::-7'7'=­

1LENNY

BAUMAN 'S LAT ·
EST HIT My True Confes·
slon, now available a long
with personallv. auto ·
graphed picture, send
$3.50, 2 Greenlelgh Ct.,
Wllllamsbur , VA 23185.
RECORD AUCTIONS con·
tl nu e . Country, sound
tracks, popular vocal.
ANTIQUE JUKEBOXES Mention wants. Stamp for
INTERE ST YOU? let me list. Record undertaker,
f'lelp YOU! II $1 2.00 year. R.D. 1, Box IS2C, Catskill,
Simple Sl.OO, Jukebox
NY 124n.
Trtder, 2USMCN SE 60th!&lt;;;';;;:;:'~;;;--;-~=-=
Ct., Dfl Moines, Iowa FROM THE LAND OF
50317.
FRUITS AND NUTS
comts 1 country novelty
POTATO CHIP CANISTE R 45 " My Dog Lives In A Du·
FUN book, 120 activities : plex" BIW " What Do
Things to make, games.
Clones Do On Mother' s
stunts. $3.00, Colntucky,
D1y?" Sl.OO Clam Re·
Box 393·M, Franklin, KY
cords, 6360 E ureka Ave.,
42134.
El errito CA

Fill in the coupon below with your advertising message at 60c per word
minimum ad of $12.00. Count 3 words for the P.O. Box no . ond phon~
number , Including area code.
April lOth deadline for May 1980 MARKETPLA~E .

---~----------------------------,I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Gospel Awards Are Coming

GtJARANTEE POSTAGE WITH YOUR

,·+" ' .
,\~ ' ·

SHARP 1973 (HALLENG ·
EA: Co.ach· New Tlres·Cus·
tom Co1ch Inter ior ,
Sl~ps a. Seats I , .so,ooo
Milt E ngine, Automatic
Transmissio n , power
steering and menv fine ex ·
tras. (717) 76J.1111.
19n GMC MOTORHOME
lets th1n 7,000 miles, fully
equipped, like new, orlgl ·
nally SJI,OOO.OO, Will Take
$22 , 500 . (Firm) Call
38S·2071110A.M.·· P.M.) J

TO INSURE FORWARDING YOU MUST

-1-ltA

110111 · - " ' ·

looking for Australian pen

pals .

702 S. Elm, Madisonv ille'

COUNT RY · WESTERN
FANS and Armed Service
People will love the prose,
songs and poems written
1bout them and Country
Sttrl In "OF SERVICES
AND TILLERS". Send
s.us plus St.os for H . &amp;~
(HirdbiCk ) to Orb r.,
Wildt, 43603 Montrose
Ave., Fremont, CA 94532.
LENNY BAUMAN FAN
'CLUB ·' Information, send
S.A.S.E., ~e . A. Gardner,
BOx J05A, Clay ton ,

. . ----THli()HNNY
--,....Tho-

MUSIC CITY NEWS cannot be respontlble for
copiH that are not delivered to your new ad·
drHt UNLESS we are notified of a chanp of adJ
~~;::;;.-' clrHt f®r weekt In advance. If you are planning
to mov41, us• thla form to-notify MCN of your~
aclclrHs to Insure that you do not miss . any
copiH.

~

Otllo 4ll33.

·~
DOUAl N:DitC'f Is
........,.
o1- ......... rnd/or.....,. ......,..

1011 16th A... South
NnhvMio, TN37212

pl. u • .,

~

125N, Lewistown,

.. ......

................. ,..t.lllt'

_,.

Box

-~~J.·

l'hono(611)215-5660

___c--_
___

ltema .

FDR SALE

.......

loconl In NoohYIIIe llf our oxpon10. N ""'
....hllont and doelro to echoi¥O luc-aln
tho rnualc lnduefry 1111 In lauch with us now.
f ,..,.,,.accepted, all -ordlng costs will
loo paid lor our cOmpany.
Sond"-to:

P. ~. Box17033
NMI!VIIIe, Tenn. 37217
111-111·7111

___.............
....,.,..
..............
.,............. .............,1
. .........
.......
. ... ...........
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Original

F11test growing fan club
for tht fastest r{slng ster.

ST . PATRICK ' S DAY Greet ·
lngs to my NUMBER
ONE Rabb/M, Eddie! Also

Mise

- · poroon~~-. ........... ~ ... help
~--plnlhonuic'

Talent Search

lilY 24-25

'

ers,

FAN CLUBS list your artists
In our magazine In the
Fan Club section, SS.OO per
vear. Send check and In·
formation to: Ozark Jubl ·
lee , P .O. Box 10012,
Springfield, MO 6SI04.
(417) U..·4220.
SLI M WHITMAN APPRE ·
CIATION SOCIETY ·
Nearly 4,000 strong . Jo in
us, onlv sa.oo per year.
1002 W. Thurber, Tucson,
AZ 15705.

.. . . . . ..., -

I.M.P.A.

Discounts To
41% Off!

OFFICIAL .E DDI E RABBITT FAPl CLUB . Post-

JOHNNY DOLLAR

'

.... J"'I!!' _ _ ........................ .....

wen as many

Send your ' - or record today.
p t - anclooo a IIH·oddreaod,
atampod ..,..lope lor reply by mall,
and alao your telephone number.

Tennes.e.State

Call (615) 242·1113

1000. •.oo

,..,r
_...,_,

Wo are now IYaluatlng talent by wey
of tlpol and records, It no coot We
expr- our opinion on whether you
1hould pu,..,o a recording ca,..r.
For - loot have potential wo
lumllh nomoe · and lddr- of
companln to contact

NASIIUIU£

Nosh..tllo, Ta. 37203

OH HEAVY Gl.c. ITOCK

Do""'In........
-·-"'
futUre
""'!'fry
mualct · help""' with

rodlo 11etlont1 acr011 lhe Unllod
Stata are referring people to our
orgonlzatlon. Bottor bllalneu bureaus
give ue o good ropo~. Wo have
helped olhorl, - can help you.

IIIMAIIIIIC£
Cllllthclm
..... 57

.

. 5211th A••· S.

-----. . . -..

UTH08~

aaw ex1o 1100 •

2

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0

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. . ~..=.

IIASIIVIU£. Til 37zel

11m.

...,~=· 110 ....,

RAillKORDS?
•' · ~-

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

· or$9.00fora-lloroba,......vo.

TOP QUALITY 8x10 PRINTS

Postage Fr.. In USA
Ove...- Add $2.00
c:-daAdd$1.00

··

nopfl••

(615}255-6606 .

No COD's
MIDTOWN PUII.ISHEIS
1224 Control Avo.
Mldolotown, Ohio &lt;15042

.,.._c.
.......... ...,......,w. ......
a......-.....,._

10ocJ •••••••••••••••••• $a:25.00

STARGEM RECORDS

Order Now

W0.15Z2
..... Till., - Mllic
... 11,1111 14- Ill&amp;'· IMII 1Dr T11risl ltlllld E•

&amp;tilillc c..,

'500 ••••••••••••••••••• $ ~ 25.0Q:

PIRSDNftL

"FREE DETAILS"

Send Cosh, Check or Money Order

........

' 100 •••••••••••••••..•• ; ~1.50
To """"• com odd $6.00 lor lx10

Over
500
Songs ·

PPIN Q;QII

'b10 GLOSSY PHOTOS

SII·EDGE PRODUCTIONS

1st Time OHer

Ii i

MlI SIC CITY NEWS, Peoe31

Stormy O'Martln, lhe Sweel Comfort
Band, Leon PaiWo, Sharalee, Don Fran·
cisco, Pal Terry Group, Mille Warneke,
Steve and Marla, Wlags of Llgbl, Tbe
Sbarells, Dan Whittemore, and many other
well-known personalities and surprise
guests. Registrants for the event will be
able to choose from over one hundred
seminars to attend. Classes will be led by
publishers, artists, songwriters, recording
.1 1 s:•~11•ny executives, agency and manat1'
~~ 1'!~'1 001 1 a~g_!l_ll!~~ ~;~~tlf I
sionals. ·
•·
··

'

••I
. 1 Moll your od with payment to:
1 MCN Marketplace
Ratea: 60c per word
: (Classified)
$12.00 minimum ad

I

· I p .0 . Box 22975

"''"•'
' ·••••• ·· ~
•
Nashville
, Tenn . 37202
1"

I
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'llli'liiVVa... 'lio,.V-VV
'

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third od, 10,-. o n six·

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1; 'tfi:O \·,~~tl,SJ;lf~n
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Frequency dlscounta I
as earned within one I
calendar yeor , 5% on I

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Black &amp;White

~w Accepting Material for

PRODUCTION-PROMOTION-DISTRIBUTION
Only
$12.95

-·-·... -........ _....-.

131716th A¥0. South, Noshvlllo, TN 37.212
(615)313-6242

..........-' .. -.,;.,., ............ ,... J .,.......

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

-· I' C,...,..... ..... ,..-c.r,
·--~CIIodor-

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Dlfllewt, ............... ~ · GeW .... "-"-• ...
1-f ~ 0...W. ,....._. ... the 0""-wt A....M .

NEW PCIRSCHIS
1 530 Ta"' Sipabt11, 2 5211, 1 each 911
Tarp 1nd Ceupe, 3 924 Tarbos.
C.hnd S... $.
(713) 5U·l311

PAIIT. lWO I'IIODUCTIONS

Sullo 1112

Faron Younglulldlng
Nashville; Tenn. 37203

Most Complete Bluegrass Song
look Ever Complied

'""'114

John Henry, Ronk Stranger,
Uncle Pen Sally Jo, Barbara
Allen, Rocky Top, etc.

BECOBD ON .CBEDIT

615/ 242/2017

JUIISIC

INDEPENDENT MUSIC
PRODUCERS ASSOCilliON

JtlO 11 • • is

........ ~ . ~......,111111111-

......_lit ..

AN INDUSTRY SERVICE TO ASSURE
FAIR TREATMENT FOR THOSE
PLANNING TO RECORD.

IIMII . . . . . . . . . .
II .,W,.
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C&amp;W 1111- I ;,, . . . IN tMctlra tl.
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MARRO

·Fairgrounds
450 EXHIBITORS
FROM 22 STATES

DO YOU PLAN
TO RECORD
·IN .NASHVILLE?

-.................-.-......... _....
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AUDIO SQUTH I'IOOUCTION5
41 Morale._... hot
,._,.ville, T-. 37203
(611) 211-2175

Singers-Writers
. , . . _ .... I

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1H£

111)111 . . . . .

III,,_ . . . . . F '

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JOHNNY DOllAR N.:IW:.Y ..s JOHNNY

au:oms - ~ .......
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lftltlc lncbtry.
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nED &amp;. am BICIS

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Fairview, Tn. 37062
(611)~.,.,.,.,2

~itth~"'
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lila Ultitn• ill Qulityl
'1111 Ulti111111 i1 Sniapl

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A PERSONAL MESSAGE TO LON·
ZO I OSCAR FANS

... a Chell liM • • . - •llli•&amp; tiMir 11111

1111 ll1il ,.., wt . . I1&amp;Ul&amp; I lfiCill tllort II U,
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A PIOFIS$IONALFAMII. Y
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MOVING TO A.NEW ADDRESS?

.. ,.- .11
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-·~·-·

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to'lr.fr.-'iicUJ.·Sat. 11·5

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IMPORT ANTI Attach a mailing addrHs Iobel
from a recent Issue here. OLD ADDRESS:
-----------------------~-------·----------------------··--···

,,u~ i 11111

I

LOCAL U.S. POST OFFICE!!!!!!

I I I

r

Address
City/SIIte - - - - - - - - - -P
MAIL TO: MUSIC CITY NEWS , Iox 22975
j ' I
Tn,

···

Fans!

pleeM write Julia Parten
Tuas 7786...

'

HAPPY EASTER to our II
Irishman and countrv
singer Eddie Rabbitt .
Martha Wavcaster .
Kinglf)Ort, Tenn.
STEEUOO BRO and fiddle
pllyers wanted tor stan ·
dard countrv band. Road
trtvel and session work .
GOOd pay, living quarters
furnished . Presently tour ·
lng Illinois, Wisconsin .
For full Information, call
Ruzty collect . ( 414 )
694·4203.

verted,
alto,
PA ·I ml
SpMkers,
monitor system ,
(l()..&amp;J 517·4624.

......

.,..
•

GET( CASH COMMIS SION
WITH EACH OROER
from friends, ;neighbors,
tor Amerlct's fine st
sho.s . Ell';' and pro·
fltGie . No Investment. In·
stant Income. Free sales
kit. Mason Shoes, K·519
MCN , Chippewa Falls, WI.
s.t729.
BIG INCOME . Guer1nteed
mailing pl1n. C1n be done
In spar•tlma. FrH details
without Obligation . Fltttl,
Box 2:112·MCN , Spring·
field , llllnols62701.
Wt_U WEEKLY Guaren·
teed. work 2 hours dallv
Stiirt lmmedlltely. Home:
worJQ FrH. Murrty·J2:,
1042·16 Avt. North, St.
Peterlburp, FL S3704.
S20S .80 GUARANTEED for
5 hour work Wftk 1t home.
Ladles 1nswer to •1nanc111
security . P.J . Cl1vln, P.O.
Box UUACN; Br1nson,
Mlssourl65616.
l • ,

REAL IITATE
WATERFRONT LOT Old
Hickory Lake. 111 Ft. on
the water by 170 Ft. on the
road . Wilson County. 35
mlnutn from dOwntown
Nashville . Buumu·IIV
WOOded. 135,000.00. oov
147-7572 Nl ht 367·922.3.

OLOTIME RADIO BROAD·
CASTS, Including "G rand
Ole Oprv," " National
Barn Dance ," " Gene
Autry 's Melodv Ranch,"
on quality tapes . Free
C1talog, Carl Froel ich,
Route OM, Box 1S8·A.
New Freedom. PA . 17349.
COLOR PHOTOS ON , off
stage : Dolly , Farrah
3,000 others, Dollv watch :
S2S, Posters, records .
Barr, 1850 N. Whitley ,
HollywOOd, Ca . 90028 .
SINGING COWBOY FANS :
I hiVe an a lmost complete
collection of records, tran ·
scrlptions, radio shows.
Taping service available .
Write for list. J imm ie
Willhelm, Star RCHJte Box
16.SB, Burnet, Texas 78611 .
ASTROLOGY PERSON ·
ALYSIS supreme 112.00
for eactl , 120.00 for two
plus chart compar itons
send name, date, exac t
time, place of birth, plus
relationships for comparis on • ASTROANALY ·
SIS ·G, P.O. Box 854,
Pisgah Forest, NC 28768 .
OVER $80,000 IN PRIZES !
Songwriters, Lyricists ,
Vocalists, Guitar , and
Plano Players, enter the
Music City Song Festival.
For more Information,
Write : MUSIC CITY
SONG FESTIVAL, Dept.
MCN ·C, P .0 . Box 17999
Nashvi lle, TN 37217.
'
FURNITURE ·""" off re·
1111. 100 name brands. 1st
quality! Write for free
brochure·Sobol House of
Furnishings, Box 7S7 MU
Black Mounta in, NC 21111:
ELVIS / COUNTRY
CATALOG · 32 pages.
Hundreds of Items. Sl.OO
Refundable with order .
Thurston Moore countrv
LTO., 1129 MC2, Mont:
row, Colo. 81401.
COLOR CONCERT
PHOTO S! Olks, St1t1ers,
Getllns, Wavlon. Denver ,
R1bb1M, Pride, P1vcheck.
Rogers, West, Mandrell,
Fricke, Wynette, Boone,
Rodriquez, Eagles, Dr.
Hook , Daniels, B. J .
Thomas, Bandy 1 tlllls,
Haggard, McGuinn, Bee
Gees, Engelbert, Tom
Jones, others. Catalog/
Sample SJ.OO Spe cify
flvorlte(t ). " SMILE ",
P.O. ' Box 1S293·MCN ,
Cheupeake, VA 23320.
S WE ETHEART POR ·
TRAITS you will love.
Two f'leldl drawn together
from your photos. Write
me for frH details. Svkes
Kennon, The Old Beach
Artist of Biloxi, 221
Mlr1m1r Ave., Biloxi, MS

39530.

RHINESTONES, ENTER ·
TAINER FABRICS ,
NAILHEADS , SEW ·ON
JEWELS, FEATHERS ,
Send specific requests and
S.A.S.E. for lnform1tlon
to : H.H. Fabrics, P .0 .
Box 14793, Orlando, Fla .
32107.

Continued from p 1 g. 20

Name

I.

(Rabbitt

-----.. . .

Rambo, the Arcllert, Wendell Burton, Ad
One, Company Jeuy Dillon, Continental
Slagera and Orcbeatra, Due Boyer, Cya·
lbla Clawson, Andrew CluwenrW, Jamie
Oweqs·CoiiJas, Amy Grnal, Dlao and Deb·
ble, Jobn Flacber, Rusly Goodman, PbU
Johnson, LaraeUe Harrla, Tbe HawaUans,
. PhU Keagn, Kalble Lee Jobnson, David
Meece, Tbe lmperlala, Barry lllcGnlre,
Jeremlab People, KeUy WWar4,.'a~n
Lafroty, Nielson aat f:tiU.~ ..l.IIIUit,
Doug Oldbam, ilbll&gt;earce, Mlchae1 aad

£.

GOS PEL SINGERS AND
GROUPS be In talent
showcase magazine that
Is sent to Gospel Buvers
all over U.S.A. Ozark Jub·
llee, Box 10012. Spring ·
field , MO 65804, (417}
116.4·.. 220.
BLUEGRASS E NT ER ·
TAINERS · write Otark
Jubilee on how to be In
Talent Showcase Tvpe
Magazine sent to Blue·
grass promoters all over
U.S.A., Box 10012, Spring·
fie ld, MO 65804, (417)
16.4·4220.
REWARD POSTER with
vour name I Old West Rep·
Ilea . Mounted, antiques,
readv to hang. Great u/ft,
too. Send for free , details.
Signature Studios, Dept .
MCN , Box 422. Palatine
IL 60067.
'

1-llli!11lll11JIII!!r-I
f - -I:Uii.lllliiUDli'O'iL-

RECDRDit

DOBRO WORKSHOP, In ·
structlon a lbum with
tablat ure, teaches the
I
styes
B th1 o' oJosh1 Graves,
rfd 1 r
swa d, Mike
Au r dge, Tut Taylor,
Jerry Douglas. $15.00 plus
11 · 00 'hi PP Ino . F ree
catalogue of records,
tablature, and tapes of
course• for Oobro and
other Instruments. Dan
Hucka bft, 28 MC Cliffside, Ft . Wortfl, Texas

BLUEGRASS AND COUN ·
TRY RECORD AUC ·
rarltles·tons of
'TION,
em I Do lltr (refundable)
for lilt. Arlc Leavitt, 723
University, Los Altos, CA
9&lt;022
.
" VERNON OXFORD :
Amerlcl'l Unknown Su·
perstar" album on Rich ·
~ - Tone available from the
producer and Fan Club
rep ., Everett Corbin
(MCN), Ill Bailey Collins,
$myrna, Tenn . 37167 at
17·50·

THE NA SHV IL LE SOUNO
PLUS "Y OU ." Recorded ,
backgrounds featuring
"Y OU " slnglng/ plavlng
best loved country hlfs
like JAMBALAYA. ANY ·
T 1M e, cHEAT 1 N ,
HEART . None other li ke
it. use at home, auditions,
fun , etc . Six RECORDS
available. lyric sheets In·
1 d d WI
l::-!!76~1o!!3&lt;~====-c ue .
rte NSY Pro·
.
ducllons, P.O. Box 4036_., RITA LORRAINE 'S new
NIShvllle, TN . 37204.
sin gl e on Robchrln
WHILE YOU WERE LOOK ·
Records "SwHt, Sweet
lNG for out·of·prlnt re·
Lovin" b/W " Sneaking In,
cords, vou should have
Sn.aklng Out", forthcom ·
been looking for us! LP 's
lng. Duet $3.00 USA &amp;
45's, tapes. DISContinued,'
Canada, all other coun4U S. VIctory , Burbank,
tries, SS.DO. Contact Rite
" HUDDLESTON 'S RE ·
ca . 91502 .
lorra ine Fan Club, Box
CORD ING " for Ten years
. 37 , Tennessee Ridge ,
we have been helping un·
1
FREE WEEKLY Auction ,,!-Te!!!n~n":.3~7~1!!11~·=-=---=-known songwr iters to
SO WAYS TO MEET
Lists Including out of print '1oo DIFFER ENT COUN ·
place songs with our top
STARS! II Ex·Beatlem an ·
C&amp;W section . Elmwood
TRY
d 513 00 200
notch demos, etc . 11819
Records,
Bo•
1023F,
Elm
·
recor
s
·
'
Ll
Itt A
lac tells secrets! Send
ood Cl 06 "
$25.00. 3,000 weeki';' I 10
PP
ve ., Dallas,
SS.OO : Bouse, P.O. Box
w , . 110.
different albums $9.00 .
Texas 75218.
26643, Salt Lake City, Utah SONGWRITERS AND Re·
AI'S, 2249 CoMage Grove,
"TEXAS DEMOS" ·. Profes·
8.4126.
cording Artist wanted for
Cleveland Heights, OH
slonal Demo services for
44111.
songwriters . compete In
Howdy Records, P.O. Box
BLUEGRASS SP~All
Jostl Graves and fr iends.
3251 , Temple, Teus76S01 . COU NTRY · BLUEGRASS·
todays market . Box
Cllsslc recordings from FREE CAT A LOG . Top
GOSPEL RECORDS AND
401166, Garland ,· Texas
the early 60' s. Send S6.00
stars . Large selection,
TAPES 13 .98 each, Cata ·
75040.
plus Sl.OO postage. Free
country , e1sy listening ,
log 50e: refundable with
PROFESSIONAL DEMOS,
list of other ava il able re·
pop , Records. tapes, cas ·
order . More Music. P.O.
masters , lead sheets .
cords. Cowboy Carl Re·
Box 1-46, Rahway, NJ
50150 Co Writing. Free In·
settes. Super low prices.
cords, P.O. Box 116 ,_,c,
Send todav. Roval, P.O.
07065.
formation (Sam ples availPark Forest, 111. 60466.
Box 521, Ithaca, NY 1-4850.
able) TDS Productions,
C&amp; W 8 l U E G R A ·
HA NK WILLIAMS FANS!
1609, 6255 Sunset Blvd .,
'
sS•
" The Drifting Cowboys'
KENNY ROGERS P IC.
SACRED
, OLDTIMEY
HollvwoodCallf. 90028.
lURE T·Shirt exclusive
RECORDS for sale by
Tribute To Hank Wll· WANT TO CUT · A .
work of art from top con ·
fiUCtlon. Manv rare , out of
IIams"·. Twenty country
RECORD? Our Inform a ·
cert photographer. limit·
print records will be offer·
and Inspirational songs
tlve booklet will tell vou
ed quantity · Order while
ed In the coming months.
written by Hank ao.d per·
how . SJ.OO to : ROBB ·
suppl'f lasts. SO·SO sh irt .
Please note vour collec ·
form ed by his Origina l
BE LLE MUSI C, 4930
Guaranteed . $7.50 + S1 .50
ling Interests 78 ~"'
Drifting Cowboys. A true
PI
· s, ...... s, or
collectors' edition . S14.9S
easant Vall ey Rd .,
P&amp;H Send cash ·check ·
LPs . Write to : Gerald
Chantilly, VA 2202 1.
M.O. Speclfv size, S·M·L·
Mills, Box 196 2, Sa n
value for $10.95 by mall. l;:,c;;;:C7;'~~~~7=cc:=
XL . Allow 6-1 weeks tor
Pe-dro, CA 90733 .
As a special bonus you get PUBLISHING COMPANY
dellverv . creaTive De · 1;7.~0:';;";;''E:'::f:':':=:=-,an hour-long Interview
will review your songs for
signs, P.O. Box 9045 • MONTHLY CO UNTRY Re·
with the Cowboys about
potentl1l recording . Send
Jonesboro. AR 72401.
cord auctions . Many
Hank Of'! the road. Re·
tapes (not returned). Jer·
1950's collector's Items.
cords, cassen es, 8 TK .
lOY Music, 1115 N. CorLISA WARD IMCN Faces,
Send for free list. Dave
save now! "Cowboys",
onado or., Peoria, ILL
Feb . luuel Is one of our
Cook, 121 Oak St. , South·
. ::;--;:=-:::c==
3269 Elm Hill Pike, Nash· 1 ~6~1;';60&lt;7¢;
talente-d singers. Alwevs l;:;:l~n~l';on';',;C';;T:;;06&lt;89~';',:.
· ===-ville, Tenn. 37214. Add ICOUNTRY AND GOSPEL
needs songs, poems. etc . COLLECTORS RECORDS .
$1.00 for postage and
SINGERS Record In
Let me hear from vou .
60,000 LPs Sold at Auction .
handllno, C.O.D. ok .
Nashville, at Nashville
~ 2 · 00 brings photo ot pret · Inter nat ional Se rvi ce
BILL BLACK'S COMBO .
Recording Factory . 200 a
V L sa and complete de·
Since 1971 In : (1) Jan.
The Or igina l Honky Tonk . Track's, or cessettet,
tails •bout our song ap·
Swing Bands, Jan Vo·
Sound· Buy albums direct.
only $39.5 oo 1 1 dl

1

i'i~7~:!!~:t~:o~~~v9~~ rv~:/W~:C~t::.
T.~~.~~~;rt~~:
es ern ; _., Person ·

~~r. ~:~·l :h~S~I~~~: ·1nvt1me.
~t~~~o (~ ::cki~t~~n:d:

6,

DOBRO SHEET MUSIC
TABLATURE 200
Hawaii an songs and 100
old standards. Free list
S.A.S.E., Oldtlmer, Bob
Strayer. 433 Eastborough,
Lincoln, NE 68505 .
COUNTRY BUMPER
STICKER : Guitar pickers
do II witt! the ir fingers .
Sticker and list SI.OO Dub,
Box 753, Forest Grove, OR
97116.

WANTED
PAYING 122.00 for mens
S16.00womensclassr lngs,
also want any other rings,
lewelry, watches, coi ns,
gold or sliver . Ship, Elliott
Mining Co., P.O. Box 458,
Kelso, Wash . 98626.
SLIM WHITMAN ALBUMS
especially South African.
Slim Whitman Apprecla ·
lion Society , 1002 w.
Thurber, Tucson, Arl1ona
15705.
WANTED GOOd Publisher
for the Jimmy Carter
Waltz. Let's All Back Our
President. Henrv Miller
Member A.S.C.A.P. and
NSAI , 931 Albany .Street,
Indianapolis, IN 46203.

Vocals,
Comedy
; (S) R &amp;
alltles, Folk,
Instruments,
R, R &amp; R, Rock, Blues.
SJ)ttlfy List from : Rev
Macknlc, P.O. Box 7511 ,
Dept. F, Van Nuvs. Calif.
91«16 U.S.A.
OBRO ALBUM, "tribute
to Osw1ld", lS.OO. Dobro

Mef!!phls, Tenn. 38118.

COPYR IGHT YOVR SONG .
Instructions, form , 12.00.
Copyrlghtl, Route 2, Box
JOIN THE 900 PEDAL
2228,
Goodlettsville, TN
STEEL Gulterlstl eround
370!2.
tht world who ere mem ·
bert Of our AIIOclatlon .
We cover every 1spect of FESTIVALS
Pedal Steel Gulttrplavlng
In our Newsletter. For a BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL
Hmplecopyendlnforme ·
Family Fun. Newton ,
lion write
: AThe IPedal
low1, July 19·21. Spon ·
Steel
Gulf ar
SlOe atlon,
sored by Optimist Club,
Box :US, Fk)ral Park. N.Y.
Bob Anderson, R.R. 2.
11001, Dept. M.
Newton, Iowa 50201. 1.5151
792 "7
WANTED: BAND &amp; 1;;;~~~,.-,==c.:-=
·...-.. S.
STRING INSTRUMENTS
ERMAN C, SM ITH'S loth
Will pur chase and / or
1nnua1 Bluegran Mus ic
trade musical or general
Festival, Jul y 11 , 12, 13,
merchandise for large,
1910 at Smith 's Jimboree
med ium, or small lots Of
Park, Knob Noster. Mls·
Instruments. Music Ma rt,
sour!.
575 C~rokee Rd., S, E.
08 EVANS FARMS
Smyrna , GA 30080 .
«W'4l3·l1l 2 John Rath·
CO UN TRY MUSIC ·CON ·
bone.
VENTION Saturday/ Sun ·
day, June 21, 22, 1980. Bob
LEARN TO PLAY GUITAR
Evans Farms , State
AT HOME · New ap·
Route lS, Rio Grande,
proach teaches hundreds
Ohio A WEEKEND OF
of familiar tongs In lust
CO UNTR Y &amp; BLUE ·
ten lessons . Buy one
GRASS MUSIC . ContacT
lesson at a lime, stop If
Bernard Connolly , Box 64,
vou aren't pleased. But Mason. WV 25260.
vou will bel Anvone can vc·s 12TH ANNUAL Old
learn. Send Sl .OO for sam ·
Time Fiddlers and Bl ue·
pte lesson to Guitar, Box
grass convention, July 10 ,
592 Cary NC 27511
'
•
·
11 , 12, 1980. Cumberland
Bowl Park, Jonesv ille,
VA . Cash prizes, rosettes,
and trophies. Free camp·
LYR ICI STS AND COM · lng, swimming pool , rest·
POSERS to collaborate. aurant, and showers. No
For Information and sam · registration fee required .
Pie Issue send $1 .00 to : L BVC'S Min . Music inc .•
~md C, P.O. Box 194, Gil · P.O. ·Box 350, Marion, VA
lesple, ll. 62033 ·
2054, 1703) 781·4795.
TOP NOTCH DEMOS · neat t-;;U;';G:':U7S::'T~':',"":T:=:H'CRO':cU,-,1~0
lead sheets. Write for GRANT' s 12th ANNUAL
prices. Free minor revi·
BLUE GRASS A,ND OLD
lions and collaboration . TIME MU SIC FESTI ·
Mover • 2521 No. 101 h,
VAL , Salt Creek Park,
Sheboypan, WI.S3081.
Hugo, OK 747.0. Osborne
C 0 NT AcT 1 N G Mus 1.
Brothers, Lewis Family,
ClANS! We pay commis·
Mac Wiseman, Rose Mad ·
s!On on sa les! For In ·
dox, Ralph Stanle; . Buck
formation send Sl .OO, L White. J errv Douglas ,
1nd C, P.O. Bo• 19, ,
Ricky Skaggs, Marshall
"'
F
1
Gll i"P ie. Ill. 62033.
ami v. Byron Berllne,
BEG INNIN G SONGWRIT ·
Goins Brothers , Josh
ERS
Grtves, Hot Rise, McLain
: How to write vour
Family, Lonnie Glosson,
song, words, and music,
Bill Grant· De lla Bell ,
114 pages, S.5.50, Educa·
Steve and Gwen . Bill
live Publications, Box
Grant, Rt. 2 Box ll ·K,
12009MC , Cleveland ,
Hugo, Oklahoma 747.o.
Tenn . 37311.
Telephone (4CI5l 3U·S59B .
SONGWRITER 'S CONNEC·
10 Big Contests ... $3,000.00
TIONI Experienced mu·
In Cesh and Prizes Blue
sic Industry, professionals
Grass Band Contest, Sat. ,
will Pitch vourtongs to top
Aug. 9th . A: &amp; R. Record
Nuhvllle Publishers, Pro·
Mfg. Corp., D1llas, Texas
ducers and Artitts. FREE
and Grant' s Blue Gran "

IDNGWRtfERS

1
~nJ~:
NE~~~;N~~~.R~~ b~:~~~
..
~l :th:~n~
;'.~ t~a~~~
P.O. Box 23186, Nashville,
ums
elr live per or·

tr::::::::;:::::;;:::::~::::T:•:n:n:.3:7:2():2:.======m:a:n:c:e:rec::o:rd:e:d:on::••:a:g•=·~

MAY
MARKETPLACE

S-4.50. (Postage, 60CL Bv
Instruction
Beverly
• Ktng books
, Route 1·2,
1
Madill, OK 73446.
'
LUE GRASS MU IC by
Bill Grant &amp; Della Bell.
Eleven ureal albums .
1.5.50 each for album, a
trtck or cassette. Manv
original so ngs . Free
catalog on request . Bill
Grant ·Rt . 2· Bo x ll ·K·
Hugo, Okla . 74743, (405)
';;'3~26';:·5'::5:"98:0.-;:;:;;;:=:-:="'
111 UTCH CASSiDY 'S WILD
BUN CH have got a wild ,
wlld record for voul As
soon as they 'get' the

Kick off the summer season with o MARKETPLACE od in MUSIC CITY
NEWS .
MGy lssu~ will spotlight a country music summer. Advertise your tourist
attractions , summer vacation sports and summer merchandise to over
half a million readers through the MUSIC CITY NEWS MARKETPLACE.
Advertise in the May 1980 MARKETPLACE section and start building your
frequency discounts .*

'-;:"'":';';•r;;lt;.t'~s;';oc;ka~I:7.::-7'7'=­

1LENNY

BAUMAN 'S LAT ·
EST HIT My True Confes·
slon, now available a long
with personallv. auto ·
graphed picture, send
$3.50, 2 Greenlelgh Ct.,
Wllllamsbur , VA 23185.
RECORD AUCTIONS con·
tl nu e . Country, sound
tracks, popular vocal.
ANTIQUE JUKEBOXES Mention wants. Stamp for
INTERE ST YOU? let me list. Record undertaker,
f'lelp YOU! II $1 2.00 year. R.D. 1, Box IS2C, Catskill,
Simple Sl.OO, Jukebox
NY 124n.
Trtder, 2USMCN SE 60th!&lt;;;';;;:;:'~;;;--;-~=-=
Ct., Dfl Moines, Iowa FROM THE LAND OF
50317.
FRUITS AND NUTS
comts 1 country novelty
POTATO CHIP CANISTE R 45 " My Dog Lives In A Du·
FUN book, 120 activities : plex" BIW " What Do
Things to make, games.
Clones Do On Mother' s
stunts. $3.00, Colntucky,
D1y?" Sl.OO Clam Re·
Box 393·M, Franklin, KY
cords, 6360 E ureka Ave.,
42134.
El errito CA

Fill in the coupon below with your advertising message at 60c per word
minimum ad of $12.00. Count 3 words for the P.O. Box no . ond phon~
number , Including area code.
April lOth deadline for May 1980 MARKETPLA~E .

---~----------------------------,I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Gospel Awards Are Coming

GtJARANTEE POSTAGE WITH YOUR

,·+" ' .
,\~ ' ·

SHARP 1973 (HALLENG ·
EA: Co.ach· New Tlres·Cus·
tom Co1ch Inter ior ,
Sl~ps a. Seats I , .so,ooo
Milt E ngine, Automatic
Transmissio n , power
steering and menv fine ex ·
tras. (717) 76J.1111.
19n GMC MOTORHOME
lets th1n 7,000 miles, fully
equipped, like new, orlgl ·
nally SJI,OOO.OO, Will Take
$22 , 500 . (Firm) Call
38S·2071110A.M.·· P.M.) J

TO INSURE FORWARDING YOU MUST

-1-ltA

110111 · - " ' ·

looking for Australian pen

pals .

702 S. Elm, Madisonv ille'

COUNT RY · WESTERN
FANS and Armed Service
People will love the prose,
songs and poems written
1bout them and Country
Sttrl In "OF SERVICES
AND TILLERS". Send
s.us plus St.os for H . &amp;~
(HirdbiCk ) to Orb r.,
Wildt, 43603 Montrose
Ave., Fremont, CA 94532.
LENNY BAUMAN FAN
'CLUB ·' Information, send
S.A.S.E., ~e . A. Gardner,
BOx J05A, Clay ton ,

. . ----THli()HNNY
--,....Tho-

MUSIC CITY NEWS cannot be respontlble for
copiH that are not delivered to your new ad·
drHt UNLESS we are notified of a chanp of adJ
~~;::;;.-' clrHt f®r weekt In advance. If you are planning
to mov41, us• thla form to-notify MCN of your~
aclclrHs to Insure that you do not miss . any
copiH.

~

Otllo 4ll33.

·~
DOUAl N:DitC'f Is
........,.
o1- ......... rnd/or.....,. ......,..

1011 16th A... South
NnhvMio, TN37212

pl. u • .,

~

125N, Lewistown,

.. ......

................. ,..t.lllt'

_,.

Box

-~~J.·

l'hono(611)215-5660

___c--_
___

ltema .

FDR SALE

.......

loconl In NoohYIIIe llf our oxpon10. N ""'
....hllont and doelro to echoi¥O luc-aln
tho rnualc lnduefry 1111 In lauch with us now.
f ,..,.,,.accepted, all -ordlng costs will
loo paid lor our cOmpany.
Sond"-to:

P. ~. Box17033
NMI!VIIIe, Tenn. 37217
111-111·7111

___.............
....,.,..
..............
.,............. .............,1
. .........
.......
. ... ...........
...
o.o-.
,__,_,._
...............
--.......
...... - _ ..·'"- ....

Original

F11test growing fan club
for tht fastest r{slng ster.

ST . PATRICK ' S DAY Greet ·
lngs to my NUMBER
ONE Rabb/M, Eddie! Also

Mise

- · poroon~~-. ........... ~ ... help
~--plnlhonuic'

Talent Search

lilY 24-25

'

ers,

FAN CLUBS list your artists
In our magazine In the
Fan Club section, SS.OO per
vear. Send check and In·
formation to: Ozark Jubl ·
lee , P .O. Box 10012,
Springfield, MO 6SI04.
(417) U..·4220.
SLI M WHITMAN APPRE ·
CIATION SOCIETY ·
Nearly 4,000 strong . Jo in
us, onlv sa.oo per year.
1002 W. Thurber, Tucson,
AZ 15705.

.. . . . . ..., -

I.M.P.A.

Discounts To
41% Off!

OFFICIAL .E DDI E RABBITT FAPl CLUB . Post-

JOHNNY DOLLAR

'

.... J"'I!!' _ _ ........................ .....

wen as many

Send your ' - or record today.
p t - anclooo a IIH·oddreaod,
atampod ..,..lope lor reply by mall,
and alao your telephone number.

Tennes.e.State

Call (615) 242·1113

1000. •.oo

,..,r
_...,_,

Wo are now IYaluatlng talent by wey
of tlpol and records, It no coot We
expr- our opinion on whether you
1hould pu,..,o a recording ca,..r.
For - loot have potential wo
lumllh nomoe · and lddr- of
companln to contact

NASIIUIU£

Nosh..tllo, Ta. 37203

OH HEAVY Gl.c. ITOCK

Do""'In........
-·-"'
futUre
""'!'fry
mualct · help""' with

rodlo 11etlont1 acr011 lhe Unllod
Stata are referring people to our
orgonlzatlon. Bottor bllalneu bureaus
give ue o good ropo~. Wo have
helped olhorl, - can help you.

IIIMAIIIIIC£
Cllllthclm
..... 57

.

. 5211th A••· S.

-----. . . -..

UTH08~

aaw ex1o 1100 •

2

'

0

~.
~.:: =-..........
. . ~..=.

IIASIIVIU£. Til 37zel

11m.

...,~=· 110 ....,

RAillKORDS?
•' · ~-

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

· or$9.00fora-lloroba,......vo.

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W0.15Z2
..... Till., - Mllic
... 11,1111 14- Ill&amp;'· IMII 1Dr T11risl ltlllld E•

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Send Cosh, Check or Money Order

........

' 100 •••••••••••••••..•• ; ~1.50
To """"• com odd $6.00 lor lx10

Over
500
Songs ·

PPIN Q;QII

'b10 GLOSSY PHOTOS

SII·EDGE PRODUCTIONS

1st Time OHer

Ii i

MlI SIC CITY NEWS, Peoe31

Stormy O'Martln, lhe Sweel Comfort
Band, Leon PaiWo, Sharalee, Don Fran·
cisco, Pal Terry Group, Mille Warneke,
Steve and Marla, Wlags of Llgbl, Tbe
Sbarells, Dan Whittemore, and many other
well-known personalities and surprise
guests. Registrants for the event will be
able to choose from over one hundred
seminars to attend. Classes will be led by
publishers, artists, songwriters, recording
.1 1 s:•~11•ny executives, agency and manat1'
~~ 1'!~'1 001 1 a~g_!l_ll!~~ ~;~~tlf I
sionals. ·
•·
··

'

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. 1 Moll your od with payment to:
1 MCN Marketplace
Ratea: 60c per word
: (Classified)
$12.00 minimum ad

I

· I p .0 . Box 22975

"''"•'
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, Tenn . 37202
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Pill&amp; MUSIC CITY NEWS

l

SHOP MURPHY'S MART
FOR BABY WEEK BUYS
SEE PAGES 4 AND 5 FOR DISCOUNTPRICED SELECTIONS OF BABY
FURNITURE, TOILETRIES, CLOTHES!

•

WOMEN'S MODEL 1120

SOLD UNASSEIII"LED

~· F
Men's tightweight 21 " diamond frame or
women's 19" step--through . Wk:le ratio 10speed gear[ng. H~ed lever 'sldepull
caliper brakes. Oual easy-reach stern
shifters. Chromed disc chainguard .

Home lite® Gas Powered .

String Trimmer
REGULAR

128.88
MODELST100

.

.

'99

• Powerful 2 cycle e(lglne· • Solid state Ignition
• Adjustable hand grip • Cuts a 20" swath
• Squeeze the trigger for automatic string
advance • Weighs 7V. pounds

•

Replacement Line
Reg.

f!!! 94

$6.39 . . .

75' monofilament prewound
on replacement spool,

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NIIIIYIIII, Ttn1t,nu,Aprtl, 1911

Pill&amp; MUSIC CITY NEWS

l

SHOP MURPHY'S MART
FOR BABY WEEK BUYS
SEE PAGES 4 AND 5 FOR DISCOUNTPRICED SELECTIONS OF BABY
FURNITURE, TOILETRIES, CLOTHES!

•

WOMEN'S MODEL 1120

SOLD UNASSEIII"LED

~· F
Men's tightweight 21 " diamond frame or
women's 19" step--through . Wk:le ratio 10speed gear[ng. H~ed lever 'sldepull
caliper brakes. Oual easy-reach stern
shifters. Chromed disc chainguard .

Home lite® Gas Powered .

String Trimmer
REGULAR

128.88
MODELST100

.

.

'99

• Powerful 2 cycle e(lglne· • Solid state Ignition
• Adjustable hand grip • Cuts a 20" swath
• Squeeze the trigger for automatic string
advance • Weighs 7V. pounds

•

Replacement Line
Reg.

f!!! 94

$6.39 . . .

75' monofilament prewound
on replacement spool,

'•

II
I

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�urphy's Mart For Sup~r Discounts On Sun 'n Fun Fashions

&amp;~·

Cool Terry
Sundresses

Boys' Rugged
Straight-Leg
Boot Cut

Denim Jeans
Men's Long Sl~ved
Chambray Work Shirts

Save

$1.50

Men's Short-Sleeved
Knit Pullovers

2

497

Heavyweight 3.6 ounce
chambray. Two button-thru pockets .
Tnple-stitching. Sizes l4 l/1- 11 .

S3

Heavywelli"l cotton
deoim. Turned-up
cuff s. Slim , sizes 8- 16;
reg . sizes 8-18.

No-iron fabric blends . Solid
colors . Stzes S.M,L,XL.

~ul

•.

SAVE

447
'

Popular TV character print tron1.
Bo•er wafst. Short sleeves. legs.

Men's
Rolf-Up

Heavy
Work
Socks

'

J47

3 PAIR

PKG.

Western, flare leg style. 13 ~.- ol .

polyeater/collon denim. Five
pooketa. Weist aizea 29-40.

StlVE 25"'

\

am

Q24

$29.97 41' . .

REG.

$27.97

S2

QAII99
Ailfft REG. $39.97

Nylon uppers with suede·

IDOl&lt; trim. Padded eollllr.
Cushioned , arch·sup,.:wt insoMis. Tractio,....grip sotea.

Junior
Sleeping
Bag

----------

~ .......: QlmOrill

cen-

... wllll __., dpolop fi!IIIIY._
elh~ tlopr.11ci-liid _ ,
w l - wllll storm n.pa.

Pre-Washed,
Straight-Leg
Fashion Jeans

REG. $3.44
Sunny-day colors.
Spun poly terry.
Knit waistba~d .
Sizes 7 to 14.

$3.

Women's and Teens' Sporty
CanvasOxfords

Men's And Boys' Nylon ~ers

8' x It)' Cabin Tent

0..4·· ·

REG. $9.99

Lustrous terry In bright
colors. Knit trim, short
sleeves. Sizes S,M,L.

Pre· washed cotton denims.
Novelty pocket , tie waist
or belled style, all with
zip fron t. Sizes 8 to 18.

~uper Buy!
Control-Top
Panty Hose

•

Flame-retardant polyelhylene roof. 8'
center height. With 'pole, ropes, llakea.

~ flq. 1119.97

7. 77

Girls' Terry
·. Tank Tops

Lots of colorful
striped patterns.
Fashion necklines.
Short sleeved or
sleeveless. S,M ,L.

w/spaghelli

'
Lopg-wearing, quality-crafted
leather uppers. Welt construction.
Safety-approved steel toes. Neoprene nylon cord soles and hee!s
resist most forms of oil and
'grease. Black. Sizes to 12.

12 x 12 Foot
Dining Canopy

~99

5~!$7.

straps. Many pop·
uJar colors. Both:
sizes S,M,L

.

Shag terry with U-neckline.
round or straight bottom,
contrast trim . Sizes S,M ,L .

Jrs.' Srriped
Terry Tops

Misses' V-neck
tops with cap
sleeves . Jrs. ·
cam isole tops

6" WORK BOOTS

244

Misses' Stretch
Terry Short Set

Suve 8if! Now!

Save ••

8" WORK BOOTS
REG.

Misses' or
Juniors'
Terry Tops

.344

Men's Steel Toe Leather Work Boots

Misses' Shiny
Terry Tops

Tie-shoulder tops, pull-on
fogger-style shorts. Sun
colors with contrasting
trims. Sizes S.M and L

Cotton. Cushion-foot. Sizes 19-13.

'

Misses' Terry
Tank Tops

-.sa"e'2

Hats

..

897

Great look for day or
evehing . Soft cot- ·
ton-polyester terry
with narrow straps,
keyhole neckline
and tie belt. Vibrant.
solid colors or solids with contrasting
binding, belt. Sizes:
small . medium . large.

Shorty Pajamas

·M~n's

Heavyweight Jeans

Sav~

7

Save '1.50

RECULAR $4.47 Ea.

Sanforized 11

'uung Men's 'frim

For

5

Boys' Polyester Knit

'
33"xt&gt;4" finished size. Full zipper, 2

lb. potyeater end undetermined fiber
fill. Polyester lop and vinyl bonom outer sheH. Acetate/nylon kn~ lining.

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
II
I

9

Foam::rmed NyloD

Life Vests

4 REG. $5,67
4'7

Children 's, medium,
and adult sizes .

Backbeanl
and Goal ·

22'

7

81\\'E .7

36 • 48" pre-drifted compo-

sition board. 110" official goal.

80 .

REG. SJ.97

Res. 811.97

•

'

Super buy. super comfort for summer
fun. Long--ring canvas. uppers In
white or navy blue. Softly cushioned Insoles anct dech-design molded soles.

I
• WHITE
• ILACK

.

Reg.
$1.67

99(!

Smart sh&amp;des with sandal ·
foot , cotton· lined crotch .
Sm., A.ver ., Tall .• li~t . TaU.

--------------·----~~

• tAN

Women's and Teens'
Casual T -Strap Sandals
Cool, perforated vinyl '
vamp. Adjustable buckle.
Rope-wrapped wedge heel.

3

11
REG. $5.97

Women's and Teens'
Buckled-Vamp Slides
REGULAR
$4.97

a•

Carefree, perforated vinyl vamp with buckle.
Low, rope-wrapped wedge heel. Pretty colors.
/

Deluxe Carry-On
Heavy duty, stain/ scuff-resistant vinyl.
Holds 1 or more su its plus accessories.
Large poe~~~ on one side, 2 on the
other . Continental handle. Removable
garment frame wl loc k ing hanger .
P~dlock. 2 keys . Popular colors.

Fligh~

Bag

1497
SAVE•5

�urphy's Mart For Sup~r Discounts On Sun 'n Fun Fashions

&amp;~·

Cool Terry
Sundresses

Boys' Rugged
Straight-Leg
Boot Cut

Denim Jeans
Men's Long Sl~ved
Chambray Work Shirts

Save

$1.50

Men's Short-Sleeved
Knit Pullovers

2

497

Heavyweight 3.6 ounce
chambray. Two button-thru pockets .
Tnple-stitching. Sizes l4 l/1- 11 .

S3

Heavywelli"l cotton
deoim. Turned-up
cuff s. Slim , sizes 8- 16;
reg . sizes 8-18.

No-iron fabric blends . Solid
colors . Stzes S.M,L,XL.

~ul

•.

SAVE

447
'

Popular TV character print tron1.
Bo•er wafst. Short sleeves. legs.

Men's
Rolf-Up

Heavy
Work
Socks

'

J47

3 PAIR

PKG.

Western, flare leg style. 13 ~.- ol .

polyeater/collon denim. Five
pooketa. Weist aizea 29-40.

StlVE 25"'

\

am

Q24

$29.97 41' . .

REG.

$27.97

S2

QAII99
Ailfft REG. $39.97

Nylon uppers with suede·

IDOl&lt; trim. Padded eollllr.
Cushioned , arch·sup,.:wt insoMis. Tractio,....grip sotea.

Junior
Sleeping
Bag

----------

~ .......: QlmOrill

cen-

... wllll __., dpolop fi!IIIIY._
elh~ tlopr.11ci-liid _ ,
w l - wllll storm n.pa.

Pre-Washed,
Straight-Leg
Fashion Jeans

REG. $3.44
Sunny-day colors.
Spun poly terry.
Knit waistba~d .
Sizes 7 to 14.

$3.

Women's and Teens' Sporty
CanvasOxfords

Men's And Boys' Nylon ~ers

8' x It)' Cabin Tent

0..4·· ·

REG. $9.99

Lustrous terry In bright
colors. Knit trim, short
sleeves. Sizes S,M,L.

Pre· washed cotton denims.
Novelty pocket , tie waist
or belled style, all with
zip fron t. Sizes 8 to 18.

~uper Buy!
Control-Top
Panty Hose

•

Flame-retardant polyelhylene roof. 8'
center height. With 'pole, ropes, llakea.

~ flq. 1119.97

7. 77

Girls' Terry
·. Tank Tops

Lots of colorful
striped patterns.
Fashion necklines.
Short sleeved or
sleeveless. S,M ,L.

w/spaghelli

'
Lopg-wearing, quality-crafted
leather uppers. Welt construction.
Safety-approved steel toes. Neoprene nylon cord soles and hee!s
resist most forms of oil and
'grease. Black. Sizes to 12.

12 x 12 Foot
Dining Canopy

~99

5~!$7.

straps. Many pop·
uJar colors. Both:
sizes S,M,L

.

Shag terry with U-neckline.
round or straight bottom,
contrast trim . Sizes S,M ,L .

Jrs.' Srriped
Terry Tops

Misses' V-neck
tops with cap
sleeves . Jrs. ·
cam isole tops

6" WORK BOOTS

244

Misses' Stretch
Terry Short Set

Suve 8if! Now!

Save ••

8" WORK BOOTS
REG.

Misses' or
Juniors'
Terry Tops

.344

Men's Steel Toe Leather Work Boots

Misses' Shiny
Terry Tops

Tie-shoulder tops, pull-on
fogger-style shorts. Sun
colors with contrasting
trims. Sizes S.M and L

Cotton. Cushion-foot. Sizes 19-13.

'

Misses' Terry
Tank Tops

-.sa"e'2

Hats

..

897

Great look for day or
evehing . Soft cot- ·
ton-polyester terry
with narrow straps,
keyhole neckline
and tie belt. Vibrant.
solid colors or solids with contrasting
binding, belt. Sizes:
small . medium . large.

Shorty Pajamas

·M~n's

Heavyweight Jeans

Sav~

7

Save '1.50

RECULAR $4.47 Ea.

Sanforized 11

'uung Men's 'frim

For

5

Boys' Polyester Knit

'
33"xt&gt;4" finished size. Full zipper, 2

lb. potyeater end undetermined fiber
fill. Polyester lop and vinyl bonom outer sheH. Acetate/nylon kn~ lining.

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
II
I

9

Foam::rmed NyloD

Life Vests

4 REG. $5,67
4'7

Children 's, medium,
and adult sizes .

Backbeanl
and Goal ·

22'

7

81\\'E .7

36 • 48" pre-drifted compo-

sition board. 110" official goal.

80 .

REG. SJ.97

Res. 811.97

•

'

Super buy. super comfort for summer
fun. Long--ring canvas. uppers In
white or navy blue. Softly cushioned Insoles anct dech-design molded soles.

I
• WHITE
• ILACK

.

Reg.
$1.67

99(!

Smart sh&amp;des with sandal ·
foot , cotton· lined crotch .
Sm., A.ver ., Tall .• li~t . TaU.

--------------·----~~

• tAN

Women's and Teens'
Casual T -Strap Sandals
Cool, perforated vinyl '
vamp. Adjustable buckle.
Rope-wrapped wedge heel.

3

11
REG. $5.97

Women's and Teens'
Buckled-Vamp Slides
REGULAR
$4.97

a•

Carefree, perforated vinyl vamp with buckle.
Low, rope-wrapped wedge heel. Pretty colors.
/

Deluxe Carry-On
Heavy duty, stain/ scuff-resistant vinyl.
Holds 1 or more su its plus accessories.
Large poe~~~ on one side, 2 on the
other . Continental handle. Removable
garment frame wl loc k ing hanger .
P~dlock. 2 keys . Popular colors.

Fligh~

Bag

1497
SAVE•5

�EVERYTHING YOU NEED FOR BABY'S CARE AND COMFORT IS LOW PRICED NOW!
•
Deluxe Play Yard
With Safety Mesh

Infants'
'
Folds to carry like an umbrella. Great for shopping
trips, and on buses! Fabric
seat with safety strap. Steel
legs and handles.

SAVE 8 8

Drop Side Crib, lnnersprin_g
Mattress And Crib Bumper

26 ~
9

'

97

SAVE'l3

Complete Set!

Front swivel wheels for easy
maneuvering. Has detachable
wind guard, adjustable backrest, canopy, back wire basket. VInyl upholstering. Steel
frame. Partially assembled.

Reg. $102.~1
Walnut finish crib has drop-side with safety lock •
mechanism, 2" casters, plastic teething rails. 30 x
53'' size (sold unassembled). Meets government
safety standards. Mattress and loam-filled bumper
have vinyr covers. Both meet government flammability standards.

Our Brand No-Iron

Fitted Crib Sheet

2

47

-

Both

189~
EACH

Cotton or cottonpolyester terry
blanket. White
·
with a print hood.

Has 7 reclining positions . Faces front or rMr. Tubular steel frame . Soft padding •nd sale!J llarneaa.
Meets goVernment safety standards.

18"W, 35"L, 12"D
• 27W' Total

Save
1
8

Hooded .
Terry Bath Blanket

2 !!.97

• Complete WJth
VInyl Uner
• aa..lnat It

Plastic
Toilet
Trainer
• Large Tray
• Safely Ball
• Convarta To
Youth Chair

491
S~VEt-t

!Old for easy storage 'or travel.

K-BibJWirm
After l•thl

Trav-L-Guard®
Reclining Car Seat

97
Haight

GREAT DISl;OUNT BUYS FOR INFANTS!

REGULAR 13.77

Foldable
Circle Walker ·

Bassinet or High Chai·r

Sturdy A-frame with double drop
sides. Foam-cushionaa vinyl floor
pad. VInyl covered top rail . Draft
guard. Folds for travel, storage.

Swivel Wheel StroiJer

Baby Swing

Infants' Car Seat/Carrier

13!!..

SAVE
$4.50

15-minute. wind-up awing
mechanism. Slrong cotton
seat. 1-pc. tub&lt;llar lego.

2 37
·

Terry Short Sets .
' Cotton knit. Pullon shorts with a
tank top or polo
shirt . Sizes 9 to
18 months.

Reg. $2.77

P1astic seat with qu itted pad.

• DYN·O·MfTE"'

• erath THtad For Safely

push--button adJuStment .

REG.
$3.77

J9.7
Reg. $2.77

straps . Prints
or solid colors .
Carefree knits .
Stzes M, L.

J77
Reg. $2.97

Our Brond Terry
Sleep/Play Suit

Terry Knit
Creeper

Sleet frame. legs. • -position

Bib front , snap

J87

Save20%

1747

Terry Sunsuits

2

6·-

Flame resistant, 1-piece
suits. Snap tront. Sizes
newborn, meet.. large.

~~

Snap shoulder
and crotcll . Cotton teri'J. Sizes 6
to 18 months.

~

l':l"
--,

~

-

'

PLA YTEX® DISCOUNTS I
NURSER
DISPOSABLE
TRIAL KIT .
BOTTLES

•

BABYNEEDSATLOWPRICES!

BABY
POWDER

BABY
SHAMPOO

48(! M sa(! sa~
Holder, cap. nipple,
tO disp. bottles.

Box or 40

REGULAR%•

140UNCES
. '

GENTLE
BAB.Y OIL

REGULAR 99'

REGULAR 11.29

160UNCES

160UNCES'

~~

BABY
SHAMPOO

fiB

1?.~.
I'"
16
oz.

starch

~

~

tr~h

-

o iOfl!lr•~

r'-~-

... ,.,.,tll

DISCOUNT BVYS FOR BABY!

BABY
POWDER

140unces

~
corn

GENTLE
BABY
BABY OIL · CORNSTARCH

--~~

MENNEN®
BABY
BATH

158. J28

JI7 .

IOOunces

90unces

80unces

Vaseline

. 2-Pc. Diaper Set

INTENSivt CARE

BABY
POWDER

OUR BRAN~- PKG. Of 12

REGULAR
$6.47

240unces

REG.l97

Cotton Diapers

$2.97

397

Pinked or hemmed edge style.

Fit toddlers over 22 pounds .

Screen print top. Elasticwaist panty . Poly/cotton .
Sizes 12 to 24 months.

�EVERYTHING YOU NEED FOR BABY'S CARE AND COMFORT IS LOW PRICED NOW!
•
Deluxe Play Yard
With Safety Mesh

Infants'
'
Folds to carry like an umbrella. Great for shopping
trips, and on buses! Fabric
seat with safety strap. Steel
legs and handles.

SAVE 8 8

Drop Side Crib, lnnersprin_g
Mattress And Crib Bumper

26 ~
9

'

97

SAVE'l3

Complete Set!

Front swivel wheels for easy
maneuvering. Has detachable
wind guard, adjustable backrest, canopy, back wire basket. VInyl upholstering. Steel
frame. Partially assembled.

Reg. $102.~1
Walnut finish crib has drop-side with safety lock •
mechanism, 2" casters, plastic teething rails. 30 x
53'' size (sold unassembled). Meets government
safety standards. Mattress and loam-filled bumper
have vinyr covers. Both meet government flammability standards.

Our Brand No-Iron

Fitted Crib Sheet

2

47

-

Both

189~
EACH

Cotton or cottonpolyester terry
blanket. White
·
with a print hood.

Has 7 reclining positions . Faces front or rMr. Tubular steel frame . Soft padding •nd sale!J llarneaa.
Meets goVernment safety standards.

18"W, 35"L, 12"D
• 27W' Total

Save
1
8

Hooded .
Terry Bath Blanket

2 !!.97

• Complete WJth
VInyl Uner
• aa..lnat It

Plastic
Toilet
Trainer
• Large Tray
• Safely Ball
• Convarta To
Youth Chair

491
S~VEt-t

!Old for easy storage 'or travel.

K-BibJWirm
After l•thl

Trav-L-Guard®
Reclining Car Seat

97
Haight

GREAT DISl;OUNT BUYS FOR INFANTS!

REGULAR 13.77

Foldable
Circle Walker ·

Bassinet or High Chai·r

Sturdy A-frame with double drop
sides. Foam-cushionaa vinyl floor
pad. VInyl covered top rail . Draft
guard. Folds for travel, storage.

Swivel Wheel StroiJer

Baby Swing

Infants' Car Seat/Carrier

13!!..

SAVE
$4.50

15-minute. wind-up awing
mechanism. Slrong cotton
seat. 1-pc. tub&lt;llar lego.

2 37
·

Terry Short Sets .
' Cotton knit. Pullon shorts with a
tank top or polo
shirt . Sizes 9 to
18 months.

Reg. $2.77

P1astic seat with qu itted pad.

• DYN·O·MfTE"'

• erath THtad For Safely

push--button adJuStment .

REG.
$3.77

J9.7
Reg. $2.77

straps . Prints
or solid colors .
Carefree knits .
Stzes M, L.

J77
Reg. $2.97

Our Brond Terry
Sleep/Play Suit

Terry Knit
Creeper

Sleet frame. legs. • -position

Bib front , snap

J87

Save20%

1747

Terry Sunsuits

2

6·-

Flame resistant, 1-piece
suits. Snap tront. Sizes
newborn, meet.. large.

~~

Snap shoulder
and crotcll . Cotton teri'J. Sizes 6
to 18 months.

~

l':l"
--,

~

-

'

PLA YTEX® DISCOUNTS I
NURSER
DISPOSABLE
TRIAL KIT .
BOTTLES

•

BABYNEEDSATLOWPRICES!

BABY
POWDER

BABY
SHAMPOO

48(! M sa(! sa~
Holder, cap. nipple,
tO disp. bottles.

Box or 40

REGULAR%•

140UNCES
. '

GENTLE
BAB.Y OIL

REGULAR 99'

REGULAR 11.29

160UNCES

160UNCES'

~~

BABY
SHAMPOO

fiB

1?.~.
I'"
16
oz.

starch

~

~

tr~h

-

o iOfl!lr•~

r'-~-

... ,.,.,tll

DISCOUNT BVYS FOR BABY!

BABY
POWDER

140unces

~
corn

GENTLE
BABY
BABY OIL · CORNSTARCH

--~~

MENNEN®
BABY
BATH

158. J28

JI7 .

IOOunces

90unces

80unces

Vaseline

. 2-Pc. Diaper Set

INTENSivt CARE

BABY
POWDER

OUR BRAN~- PKG. Of 12

REGULAR
$6.47

240unces

REG.l97

Cotton Diapers

$2.97

397

Pinked or hemmed edge style.

Fit toddlers over 22 pounds .

Screen print top. Elasticwaist panty . Poly/cotton .
Sizes 12 to 24 months.

�~

Big Murphy's Mart Discounts On Decorator And Household Needs!

Murphy's Mart Discounts For T,he Sake Of Decorating ... Naturally! )

fiCEfu®tf
IRill mtumr®

&gt;

.

.

I

•

'

Tailored, No-Iron
Open Weave Panel

\

18 x 24-lnch
Hook-itTM Latch Hook Rug Kits
Easy 'n' fun -to -make rugs can
also be used as wall hangings
or pictures. Kits include prec ut Acrilan® acrylic rug yarn .
canvas with printed design
and instructions. (l.atch hflok
tool nor included .) Beautiful
designs.

7

2!G

s

$447

60" WIDE
63'' or 81 " LENGTH '

EACH

Light ·n· airy ." Popcorn" net in nofuss polyester. Ideal underdrapery . Decor colors and white.

REGULAR s7.97

Ac rilan - Monsan to Reg. TM

•

"Con tempo" 'Defuxe
Woven Vinyl Cafe Curtains
24" L X 48" W

.. .

.sA.~Ef77
--..

TAiti.E SOLO UNASSEMBLED

Simpli~ity

3
4
7
SA.VE.2

'N;Uural color wicl&lt;er furniture looks great in any room .
"Sturdy, lightweight and comfortable. · Ensemble includes
settee: 50 x 23 x 28" high, table: 22 x 22 x 22" high
and 2 chairs; each 23 x 23 x 28" high. All hand made.

36.'L X 60..W

VALANCE

SA \'E ••••••••••••••••••

)Sl

From Breezy To Graceful!
Channing Wicker ~ating

Delightfully carefree, just wipe clean. Use in any room , on
any Window. Heat anct glare-deflecting to save energy. Can
be easily. cut to shorter length. Home fashion colors, white.

EACH
Hangin8 Chair .••.... Save •as
Fan Chair ....•...•...• Save tal

All-Cotton, Zippered
Pillow Protectors

REG. $159.88

SIZES MA\' VARY

Chair or Settee Cushions

88

INEXPENSIVE Jf/A YS TO HELP PROLONG
THE LIFE OF YOl'R PJLLOJf/S AND BED

97

At Its Very Best!
4-Piece Wicker Seating Ensemble

ROUN D OR

OBLONG

REG_ $4.99

sr·
:r rn: n ' """
l!!! 77
II EC; , Sll. l 'l .. .. ........ ........ ............ d

BOTH HANDMADE

Hanging chair ;n breezy. open-...,._loOk of
Graceful fan chatr rev.ves memones ol
naiUral wriMow ewer lteet-felnfroroed frame. 30x·
bygone d~
)l; , lool(s great In any room.
24x42..H. Celflng hook , 35·· chain.
NaTural c
Yl' tllow 46..W . SO" H.
S1Z£S MAY VARY SORRY , NO RAIN
S
AI lent 1 1wl rtt~ per
At ..... 12 r.Mirt ' " sl*"o - No RalncMcb

Tu fted bark cloth wit~ urethane foam
liiiing . Choose green. rust or bone.

11" QIA.

•tot• -

Flocked Print
Curtain Fabric

1~!.

Re-cover your old, protec t
your new. Feather-resistant covers ara machine
washa bl~ cokK1ast. Floral
or stripe pattern.

lA

Upholstery Fashion Fabric

REG. $1.99

Del icate flocked florala and

more. Creas&amp;-resistant, preshrunk polyester/ rayon.

44 /45:· width s,

27" .. 45"
OVAL

on lull bolts.

Nylon prints, velvets and
velour type&amp; or ·Herculon•
stripes, solids and plaids.
541' wide, 5-15 yd. lengths,.

A

V V

Yard

REG. $2.94

• 8111-IN• 8-IN_
• 10'h-IN.
18'.4''
HIGH
OVERALL

Olll
lilt~ ~ ~~

Evolution,.,_ -~~-.,....,
Zippered Mattress Cover
Sanitary protection. EVolution Two fabric is
carefree polypropylene. Machine washable
and stitch-bonded. Ru stproof zipper.

SIZE

5~!.,
FULL SIZE

REG. $10.97

·

699

Three-Piece S~t
Cilst Iron Skillets

911

2 97

Non-Stick Bundt_, P!)n!W
,
For brNd, c akes ,
Heavy duty , even-h eatrng .
Pre-seasoned Interiors.

,...._..u,_ .._ _
No

"~nc:Mc::kl

of natural color
1 ChOice
wicker or basket-weave
HIGH
I frames. PPG distortionOVERALL
free float plate glass
I mirrors. 17" x 23" size.
I
I Handsome Natural
1 Cane Wall Mirror

31 ·~

.J

frozen desserts. Aluminum with non-stick
Interior. baked-on almond-ector exterior.
Atleht41,.,MM• No "•lndleckl

~~~

SAVE
'10
'

Swag lamp with matching fount . Cytlndficat
t,ablo lamp with wh~e hardbeclt empire shade. ,

I REG.
.1 $14.44
cane frame,
I Natural
PPG distortion-free
I ftoal plate glass mlrI ror. 20" x 28" .

Reversible Rice Straw Rugs
These attractive and durable rice
straw rugs are hand-cnifted and
reverse for longet wear. Oval rug
In all-natural color. Round ruljs in
2 or 3-tone color combinations.

5!!
SAVE •2

\

�~

Big Murphy's Mart Discounts On Decorator And Household Needs!

Murphy's Mart Discounts For T,he Sake Of Decorating ... Naturally! )

fiCEfu®tf
IRill mtumr®

&gt;

.

.

I

•

'

Tailored, No-Iron
Open Weave Panel

\

18 x 24-lnch
Hook-itTM Latch Hook Rug Kits
Easy 'n' fun -to -make rugs can
also be used as wall hangings
or pictures. Kits include prec ut Acrilan® acrylic rug yarn .
canvas with printed design
and instructions. (l.atch hflok
tool nor included .) Beautiful
designs.

7

2!G

s

$447

60" WIDE
63'' or 81 " LENGTH '

EACH

Light ·n· airy ." Popcorn" net in nofuss polyester. Ideal underdrapery . Decor colors and white.

REGULAR s7.97

Ac rilan - Monsan to Reg. TM

•

"Con tempo" 'Defuxe
Woven Vinyl Cafe Curtains
24" L X 48" W

.. .

.sA.~Ef77
--..

TAiti.E SOLO UNASSEMBLED

Simpli~ity

3
4
7
SA.VE.2

'N;Uural color wicl&lt;er furniture looks great in any room .
"Sturdy, lightweight and comfortable. · Ensemble includes
settee: 50 x 23 x 28" high, table: 22 x 22 x 22" high
and 2 chairs; each 23 x 23 x 28" high. All hand made.

36.'L X 60..W

VALANCE

SA \'E ••••••••••••••••••

)Sl

From Breezy To Graceful!
Channing Wicker ~ating

Delightfully carefree, just wipe clean. Use in any room , on
any Window. Heat anct glare-deflecting to save energy. Can
be easily. cut to shorter length. Home fashion colors, white.

EACH
Hangin8 Chair .••.... Save •as
Fan Chair ....•...•...• Save tal

All-Cotton, Zippered
Pillow Protectors

REG. $159.88

SIZES MA\' VARY

Chair or Settee Cushions

88

INEXPENSIVE Jf/A YS TO HELP PROLONG
THE LIFE OF YOl'R PJLLOJf/S AND BED

97

At Its Very Best!
4-Piece Wicker Seating Ensemble

ROUN D OR

OBLONG

REG_ $4.99

sr·
:r rn: n ' """
l!!! 77
II EC; , Sll. l 'l .. .. ........ ........ ............ d

BOTH HANDMADE

Hanging chair ;n breezy. open-...,._loOk of
Graceful fan chatr rev.ves memones ol
naiUral wriMow ewer lteet-felnfroroed frame. 30x·
bygone d~
)l; , lool(s great In any room.
24x42..H. Celflng hook , 35·· chain.
NaTural c
Yl' tllow 46..W . SO" H.
S1Z£S MAY VARY SORRY , NO RAIN
S
AI lent 1 1wl rtt~ per
At ..... 12 r.Mirt ' " sl*"o - No RalncMcb

Tu fted bark cloth wit~ urethane foam
liiiing . Choose green. rust or bone.

11" QIA.

•tot• -

Flocked Print
Curtain Fabric

1~!.

Re-cover your old, protec t
your new. Feather-resistant covers ara machine
washa bl~ cokK1ast. Floral
or stripe pattern.

lA

Upholstery Fashion Fabric

REG. $1.99

Del icate flocked florala and

more. Creas&amp;-resistant, preshrunk polyester/ rayon.

44 /45:· width s,

27" .. 45"
OVAL

on lull bolts.

Nylon prints, velvets and
velour type&amp; or ·Herculon•
stripes, solids and plaids.
541' wide, 5-15 yd. lengths,.

A

V V

Yard

REG. $2.94

• 8111-IN• 8-IN_
• 10'h-IN.
18'.4''
HIGH
OVERALL

Olll
lilt~ ~ ~~

Evolution,.,_ -~~-.,....,
Zippered Mattress Cover
Sanitary protection. EVolution Two fabric is
carefree polypropylene. Machine washable
and stitch-bonded. Ru stproof zipper.

SIZE

5~!.,
FULL SIZE

REG. $10.97

·

699

Three-Piece S~t
Cilst Iron Skillets

911

2 97

Non-Stick Bundt_, P!)n!W
,
For brNd, c akes ,
Heavy duty , even-h eatrng .
Pre-seasoned Interiors.

,...._..u,_ .._ _
No

"~nc:Mc::kl

of natural color
1 ChOice
wicker or basket-weave
HIGH
I frames. PPG distortionOVERALL
free float plate glass
I mirrors. 17" x 23" size.
I
I Handsome Natural
1 Cane Wall Mirror

31 ·~

.J

frozen desserts. Aluminum with non-stick
Interior. baked-on almond-ector exterior.
Atleht41,.,MM• No "•lndleckl

~~~

SAVE
'10
'

Swag lamp with matching fount . Cytlndficat
t,ablo lamp with wh~e hardbeclt empire shade. ,

I REG.
.1 $14.44
cane frame,
I Natural
PPG distortion-free
I ftoal plate glass mlrI ror. 20" x 28" .

Reversible Rice Straw Rugs
These attractive and durable rice
straw rugs are hand-cnifted and
reverse for longet wear. Oval rug
In all-natural color. Round ruljs in
2 or 3-tone color combinations.

5!!
SAVE •2

\

�KROGER

5UPPI fMEN T TO
Po int Pl•osa nt tfeg ttiP f
Point P' lecua "t WV
Sunday Tl me1 Sentinel

G a ltipclis . OH

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

ADVER TISE D ITEM POLI CY
Ea ch of these advert •scd ttcms 1S fequtred to be •.e.a dtly
av atla ble for sal e 111 each Kroger store. s•cept as spect ftcally
noted ,, thts ad If we do run out of an adverttsed 1t em,
we w1ll ott er vou your cho1ce of a comparable 1tem . wh_en
av .:11 table re llect1ng th e s"me sav1 ngs or a ra1ncheck wh 1c h
w11t ent1t1e vou to pur chase the ad vert1sed it em at tht:l
advertiSed pnce 1 1

TOTAl

Nc;i\,J ARANTEE

Everyth tng you buy arK roger IS guaran teed l o r you r to~al
sat tsfa ctton regardless of manufac tuter If you are not sat tsf tP.d Kr o ger wtll re~la c e you r •tem with the sa~e bre nd o(

THAN LAST YEAR

COPYRIGHT
1910- THE KROGER
CO.
ITEMS
AND
PRICES GOOD
SUNDAY
APRIL
THIU
SATURDAY
APIIL
26 . 1910 . WE
RESUVE THE NONE
RIGHT SOLD
TO LIMITTO
QUANTITIES.
DEALERS.
20

a comparable bntnd or refund your purchase pnce .

----·- · ---- ~

SAVE

soc

PER LB.
YS.
LAST YEAR'S
PRICE

or.(
. :ondi1:io11er

Ql

with Balsam and Protein

•

ON FRESH POULTRY (Including
Turkeya) FRESH PORK, Bacon,
sausage; Smoked Hams,
Luncheon Meats, Canned Hams
&amp; Wieners.

28-0UNCE

. FAMILY
SJZE

• Normal/Dry"' Oily Shampoo
• ~egutar or Extra-Sody
Conditioner

2 '

Anacin®
Relief
Tablets

Q·Tips®

Playtex®
Deodorant
Tampons

BOX OF 100
Umtt2

Neutral
Henna
Shampoo

Cosmetic
Puffs

2
·~ ·

~7~X

1

Alberto VO-S&lt;Il

Trip'e Size

BAGS-

28

eoxes

99

86~
1$-()UNCE

~o~thL:rn~~~~b.

771~b.Bag.

These traditiOnal party mints
era big favorlt&amp;s anytime!

Regency by Borden

Peanut Butter
Sa"e
2$%
LI~IT

2

88,. 83t.oz.
......

18-0Z.
Smooth

·Polski Wy.rob
Dill Pick.les

or Crunchy style .

Polish-style kosher dills.

LIMIT ZJARS
.
~

Non-Dairy
Coffee Creamer
Reg.~

137

~

22-0Z.

$1.77

Regency brand by Borden .

· LIMIT 2

MR.OTJFFEE"'
Glass Decanter
Reg.

15.77

·391

• ·Replacement decanter
• 1()..cup capacity

r

Poly-fit® PurePolyester Fiber

:~~87 99~

WE

_

2

.

-----"'1
SAVE

CAlP

12-0UNCE BAG
LI~IT

Valleydale
•·lb .
Sl•1ced Baeon Pkg
.
l
i
V
ER'
S
FRC&gt;ZEN
THIGHS
&amp; DRUMSTICKS
OR PARTY PIIK
Fried
28-oz . $229
Chicken . Pkg.

Center Cut
$179 C~o~;~r Slices $199
Rib Pork Q1ops lb .
SLICED INTO CHOPS
9 Smoked Ham lb.
1 FlESH CENTER CUT $ 3 9
$1·
::;:~~:!ps lb.
WEAVER'SFROlEN
$2 59 THORN APPLE VALLEY
Fried Chick?2~oz.
.
Breasts.. .Pkg.
Wh~i;vBoneless $159
Smoked Ham .. lb.

l'

Party-Style
Assorted Mints

ggc

c

VALLEYDALE
Pork
l-Ib .
Sausage .. .. .. Roll
s:~Ok::tRYOVAC $119
Ham Portions lb.

2

lOe

Kodaeolor IJ® II 0
Color Print Film

188 -

24 Exposure

High-Energy .
Blank Cassette
.Res.

$1.4-7

6· 7~

GO-minutes recording lime.

LIMIT2_

HARTZ Flea

Collar For Dogs
Reg.

$3.66

·2 34

2 In 1 pl us lM , Long-lasting .

UMIT2

.

.

Tenso Chain ,
Dog Runner
Reg.
$3.44

J99

Sturdy, lie-out for your dog .
Zinc plated. 15-ft .

Men's
ork Gloves

~eg. 9,.,.~

11.29

.

f

Pr.

Heavy cotton flannel . Choice
ol white beck or .all-brown .

Super Discount!
Rugged Tool Box

~~.NO

ClutMe f~UUtt ·fUHe6tey

fwk lVt f110-~ S~CJOd

IIAINCN!CU

FROZEN FRES·SHORE
$13 9
Perch or
•· lb .
Cod Fillets .... ...... .. ... Pkg .

All-purpose bo• comes wllh
set-in tray. 13x6~e5" size.

...

!*f-.. ...._..

~E~F~~~~K~~:z:~R~~~ICE.

AI .... I!

~=~·::.n "$1 ;;~~~; ;;o~\t~l~~ f.!:~.~g;ri..P
89

Supplemonllolho Sunday Tlmoo Senllnol, Tribune Chronicle, Sundoy, Aprl 20, Blurglt Deily Journal/Journal WHkly Rovlow, BI'Jin TlmH, Login
·Oaftr Nowo, Adverll..r/Bollelonlalne Examiner, All•nce Rovltw, No,.. Mo-r, Croocenl Nowo/Northwnl SIQNII, Monday, Aprll21, T1pp Cit)'
Herald/Well Milton Rocord/Trl Clly Advoc•lo/Vandolll Drummer Nowa, Contr1l Shoppor, Buqruo Tolegrlpll Forum, Advorl~r-Trlbune/Senocl
Sentinel, Tuoldl)', Aprll22, Dilly SenHnoi-Trlbuno, Record COurier, WednaldoJ, Aprll23, A1Mn1 Mo11engor and MHoenger Advottltor, Sun./Mon.,
~prll20/21, 1tl0, MI. Vernon Nowo/Kno1 WHkly Nowo.
Sporllng Goode on page 2 no111 GrHnvlllo or Clrc..vtlle · -

.

OICE

~!~:;;~~:on. $219

,.•• f2

U.S. GOV'
CHUCKT GRADED·' CHOICE.
Boneless
Pot Roast ·.. ...... ..... .

RoII R~as., .... lb.

IEEF

lb.

$1

79

ABLEND OF IEEF &amp; HYDRATED TEXTURED
I(;;;~~~R;TP~o $1.19
Beef Patty Mix lb ·

·

Roast ... ...... lb.

Country
.club
....ned Ham
US,DA

CHOICE

·S

99
,SLI~ED

FREE

·lb.
Can

S·LB. CAN ••• $7.99

.'

'' I

99 c

Fresh Dressed
.$14.9
Sea Trout ... .. ..... ....... lb.

~Cei~FGntc~~eirKr.BI.AaciDEDecHCol~ $149 ~:~~~YA:DcHolcE.$199 Fresh Pacific
Chuck Steak . lb.

•c:;

$199
\~S:na~p~p:er~n~ll;le~ts~.~.. ~.. ...~~..~-~~b·~----'

�KROGER

5UPPI fMEN T TO
Po int Pl•osa nt tfeg ttiP f
Point P' lecua "t WV
Sunday Tl me1 Sentinel

G a ltipclis . OH

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

ADVER TISE D ITEM POLI CY
Ea ch of these advert •scd ttcms 1S fequtred to be •.e.a dtly
av atla ble for sal e 111 each Kroger store. s•cept as spect ftcally
noted ,, thts ad If we do run out of an adverttsed 1t em,
we w1ll ott er vou your cho1ce of a comparable 1tem . wh_en
av .:11 table re llect1ng th e s"me sav1 ngs or a ra1ncheck wh 1c h
w11t ent1t1e vou to pur chase the ad vert1sed it em at tht:l
advertiSed pnce 1 1

TOTAl

Nc;i\,J ARANTEE

Everyth tng you buy arK roger IS guaran teed l o r you r to~al
sat tsfa ctton regardless of manufac tuter If you are not sat tsf tP.d Kr o ger wtll re~la c e you r •tem with the sa~e bre nd o(

THAN LAST YEAR

COPYRIGHT
1910- THE KROGER
CO.
ITEMS
AND
PRICES GOOD
SUNDAY
APRIL
THIU
SATURDAY
APIIL
26 . 1910 . WE
RESUVE THE NONE
RIGHT SOLD
TO LIMITTO
QUANTITIES.
DEALERS.
20

a comparable bntnd or refund your purchase pnce .

----·- · ---- ~

SAVE

soc

PER LB.
YS.
LAST YEAR'S
PRICE

or.(
. :ondi1:io11er

Ql

with Balsam and Protein

•

ON FRESH POULTRY (Including
Turkeya) FRESH PORK, Bacon,
sausage; Smoked Hams,
Luncheon Meats, Canned Hams
&amp; Wieners.

28-0UNCE

. FAMILY
SJZE

• Normal/Dry"' Oily Shampoo
• ~egutar or Extra-Sody
Conditioner

2 '

Anacin®
Relief
Tablets

Q·Tips®

Playtex®
Deodorant
Tampons

BOX OF 100
Umtt2

Neutral
Henna
Shampoo

Cosmetic
Puffs

2
·~ ·

~7~X

1

Alberto VO-S&lt;Il

Trip'e Size

BAGS-

28

eoxes

99

86~
1$-()UNCE

~o~thL:rn~~~~b.

771~b.Bag.

These traditiOnal party mints
era big favorlt&amp;s anytime!

Regency by Borden

Peanut Butter
Sa"e
2$%
LI~IT

2

88,. 83t.oz.
......

18-0Z.
Smooth

·Polski Wy.rob
Dill Pick.les

or Crunchy style .

Polish-style kosher dills.

LIMIT ZJARS
.
~

Non-Dairy
Coffee Creamer
Reg.~

137

~

22-0Z.

$1.77

Regency brand by Borden .

· LIMIT 2

MR.OTJFFEE"'
Glass Decanter
Reg.

15.77

·391

• ·Replacement decanter
• 1()..cup capacity

r

Poly-fit® PurePolyester Fiber

:~~87 99~

WE

_

2

.

-----"'1
SAVE

CAlP

12-0UNCE BAG
LI~IT

Valleydale
•·lb .
Sl•1ced Baeon Pkg
.
l
i
V
ER'
S
FRC&gt;ZEN
THIGHS
&amp; DRUMSTICKS
OR PARTY PIIK
Fried
28-oz . $229
Chicken . Pkg.

Center Cut
$179 C~o~;~r Slices $199
Rib Pork Q1ops lb .
SLICED INTO CHOPS
9 Smoked Ham lb.
1 FlESH CENTER CUT $ 3 9
$1·
::;:~~:!ps lb.
WEAVER'SFROlEN
$2 59 THORN APPLE VALLEY
Fried Chick?2~oz.
.
Breasts.. .Pkg.
Wh~i;vBoneless $159
Smoked Ham .. lb.

l'

Party-Style
Assorted Mints

ggc

c

VALLEYDALE
Pork
l-Ib .
Sausage .. .. .. Roll
s:~Ok::tRYOVAC $119
Ham Portions lb.

2

lOe

Kodaeolor IJ® II 0
Color Print Film

188 -

24 Exposure

High-Energy .
Blank Cassette
.Res.

$1.4-7

6· 7~

GO-minutes recording lime.

LIMIT2_

HARTZ Flea

Collar For Dogs
Reg.

$3.66

·2 34

2 In 1 pl us lM , Long-lasting .

UMIT2

.

.

Tenso Chain ,
Dog Runner
Reg.
$3.44

J99

Sturdy, lie-out for your dog .
Zinc plated. 15-ft .

Men's
ork Gloves

~eg. 9,.,.~

11.29

.

f

Pr.

Heavy cotton flannel . Choice
ol white beck or .all-brown .

Super Discount!
Rugged Tool Box

~~.NO

ClutMe f~UUtt ·fUHe6tey

fwk lVt f110-~ S~CJOd

IIAINCN!CU

FROZEN FRES·SHORE
$13 9
Perch or
•· lb .
Cod Fillets .... ...... .. ... Pkg .

All-purpose bo• comes wllh
set-in tray. 13x6~e5" size.

...

!*f-.. ...._..

~E~F~~~~K~~:z:~R~~~ICE.

AI .... I!

~=~·::.n "$1 ;;~~~; ;;o~\t~l~~ f.!:~.~g;ri..P
89

Supplemonllolho Sunday Tlmoo Senllnol, Tribune Chronicle, Sundoy, Aprl 20, Blurglt Deily Journal/Journal WHkly Rovlow, BI'Jin TlmH, Login
·Oaftr Nowo, Adverll..r/Bollelonlalne Examiner, All•nce Rovltw, No,.. Mo-r, Croocenl Nowo/Northwnl SIQNII, Monday, Aprll21, T1pp Cit)'
Herald/Well Milton Rocord/Trl Clly Advoc•lo/Vandolll Drummer Nowa, Contr1l Shoppor, Buqruo Tolegrlpll Forum, Advorl~r-Trlbune/Senocl
Sentinel, Tuoldl)', Aprll22, Dilly SenHnoi-Trlbuno, Record COurier, WednaldoJ, Aprll23, A1Mn1 Mo11engor and MHoenger Advottltor, Sun./Mon.,
~prll20/21, 1tl0, MI. Vernon Nowo/Kno1 WHkly Nowo.
Sporllng Goode on page 2 no111 GrHnvlllo or Clrc..vtlle · -

.

OICE

~!~:;;~~:on. $219

,.•• f2

U.S. GOV'
CHUCKT GRADED·' CHOICE.
Boneless
Pot Roast ·.. ...... ..... .

RoII R~as., .... lb.

IEEF

lb.

$1

79

ABLEND OF IEEF &amp; HYDRATED TEXTURED
I(;;;~~~R;TP~o $1.19
Beef Patty Mix lb ·

·

Roast ... ...... lb.

Country
.club
....ned Ham
US,DA

CHOICE

·S

99
,SLI~ED

FREE

·lb.
Can

S·LB. CAN ••• $7.99

.'

'' I

99 c

Fresh Dressed
.$14.9
Sea Trout ... .. ..... ....... lb.

~Cei~FGntc~~eirKr.BI.AaciDEDecHCol~ $149 ~:~~~YA:DcHolcE.$199 Fresh Pacific
Chuck Steak . lb.

•c:;

$199
\~S:na~p~p:er~n~ll;le~ts~.~.. ~.. ...~~..~-~~b·~----'

�roger ra sA·t
Generic P s

lr. . AA
Larp 'E••

3c
Grade ·A
6
••· - - Large Eggs

ac Pak

J

1

Kroger Coffee

S$

9
LIMIT1

WAS NOW
12·01. FROZEN TOTINO
SAUSAGE OR PEPPERONI

Party. Piua .. ... $159 spt

l •. s.oz. FROZEN TOTINO
EXTRA PEPPERONI OR
EXTRA

Combo

Pizza .... 5

1'

MA2P

-- -

BLUE LAKE

16·oz.
Cans

9

11.75-0Z . PILLSBURY
PLUS ASSORTED

KROGER

Coke Mix ....... 8Sc 7gc

17-o~ 19

Small
Peas ......

19
21-o~

Pork&amp;
Beans .. ..

$

Cans

KROGER

Frui-t
Cocktail ..... ~.

Cans

YELLOW CLING

FREEZER PI.EEZER

Kroger
Peaches ...... .

Ice Cream
Sandwiches.

16-oz.
Cans

$

Kroger elk
Butterm1 ..

17-oz .$
Cons

ctn. ·

Kroger

Eggo Waffles .... gsc
WAS

a::~:N·T' ......... $209
10' OFF LABEL. QUART BTL.
DETERGENT
$ &amp;

1

Wisk ........... ..

8-ol.
Pkgs.

9

12·CT. TAKE ALONGS

Gal.
Ctn.

Baby Fresh .. ..... SSe 2/&amp;gc
U -OZ . CLEANER

Formula 409 ....

77 SHEETS PER ROLL, ARTS &amp;
FLOWERS

c

~::!Is .... 2~~~'

Tomato Paste .. 6Sc 5gc
$ l

Coffee Mate ... 2 9
10' OFF LABEL . 12·01 .

Treet ... .... ....... 5l 25

5• OFF LABEL , DISH

9·01 . ARMOUR

Vienna Sausage .g5 c age
WAS NOW
20' OFF LABEL , 36·01 .
MRS. BUTTERWORTH

Palmolive
Det erg en t ...

AGREE CONDITIONER OR

10' OFF LABEL

59

Dynamo
$
Detergent ... ~t~

Agree ·
Sh·ampoo ....

$129

NESTLE

12-oz.
Btl.

'

$145
12·oz.

.

e

Hot Cocoa M11 .... ....

8-oz .

Btl.

SU!&gt;JTAN Oil &amp; lOTION

'Coppertone .... ... .

ctn.

Co•

4-oz .
Btl.

$199

11-n

380 SHEETS PER ROLL

Swansoft 4
Bath Tissue.~~~~
SWANSOFT

Facial
Tissue ......... .

• Kroger Ra1s1n
•• Bran .... .. .

.. ..... .... . ........ $109.

$399
$399
,., age
••• 73c
age
..... 39c
•·· 33e
~

Chatham Chunx Dog Food ..... 25
. . .... ......
Kroger Ins t ant CaHee ........

$

IOJ·a·:

00 .

Embassy Mayonnaise .. ,.. ....

200-Ct.
Boxes

oo.

Kroger Catsup ...... ..
SMOOTH 01 CIUNCHV

II·•• ·

Playground Peanut Butter ...

Jo•

..lb.

SJII

Avondale Frozen O~nge Juice

Listerine
Mouthwash

VACPACK

Whole Kernel
Kroger Corn

Kondu Bleach .

$

P"e ·

..

lol

16·o• .

Hillcrest Dry Roasted Peanuts ..... .

Btl.

ggc
,.,. ...23c
.... u

AVONOAU

Kroger Family Pride Aspirin ...

J\lj

...

Fleece Bathroom Tissue .....
Macaroni &amp; Cheese Dinners

59~
••.c•. $119

Gallon
. .

500 SHEE T ~ PU lOll

Qt.

.
219 $269

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

Can

Bright Fabric Softener Sheets

$ 77

:U-OZ . EDWARD'S CONDENSED
ASSORTED VARIETIES $

Jo•

.

Avondale Coffee Creamer ....... .

$119

,...co .

33c

22 ·o• .

$119
.

It! .

Ja r

GOTHAM . :IO·QUAIT Sill

J.ll. MIS . GOODCOOKIE
AUDITED FLAVORS

Styrofoam

Frozen Cookies . 5145

Chest
5 66

WAS NOW
II.'/, ·OZ . PLANTERS

$

149

SJ39

159

spe

Roasted Peanuts 5139

SJ29

Tavern Nuts ..
IZ ·Ol . PLANTERS

Peanuts ..........

$

12 ·01 . PLANTERS DlY

Z·CT . $(RUNGE

Scrubber Sponge 7Sc &amp;gc

_,.M._~~ HAtlfl£.4
~-

cmJ

le&lt;h

~orrrlpitt

~to

lfittl~

BAVARIA
GERMANY

•

SUPER II

1

Schick Blades .....
,..,n,\llnl All

WRAPPED

&lt;Cl1h1a

Kroger Chee
Food Slices

$ 29

Now . tor o limited time only . it con be youn at remarkable savings of over 460 • .
on a simple . convenient . loy ·away plan that will easily fit vour weekly budget .

Her••. how the plan worlu . With eocl'l $3.00 purchase . you ore entitled to buy
one chino saver stomp for t9 ': a $6.00 purchase entitle• you to buy two stamps .

00% WHOLE WHEAT

Multi-Grain
Kroger Bread

2$ 09

etc . Once yo~o~ hove filled your saver certlflut• with 30 stompt , you may
redeem it for a beautifully gift·boud 20·piece service for faur in your choice of
Blue Garl and or Forever Spr ing pattern . The total coat of your 1et on thlt plan l1

NOW

only $2t .70 ph.u tax .
'
You may expand your chino collection with matching tervic' and acuuory
pieces . Eoth week a different item will be featured at tpeciol coupon tovings .
Every item In the Johann Haviland china line i1 carried In open 1tock , so you ~an
replace or odctpieces to your 1et long· after the promotion has ended.
The Old World elegan~• of Jo~ann Ho11ilond ch ino .. . let It odd grace ond charm
to your nelff dining occae lon .

2°1

S211

li ·OZ . KRAFT DELUXE

Macaroni DinnerS3c age

Only

I ·Ol . KRAFT '

Party Mints .. .7Sc &amp;gc

9.~
·

... ,.,,.,_"-·'"
7 ·OZ. FUINITURI POLISH

•

Kleen Guard ... ...age

~·::'

RAINWAVE OSCILLATING

• 4 Q.nrier Plales
• 4 Cups

Sprinkler......... .. Each
1-0AL. ll:U

Si~zler Grill ....... Each
eu a=
r:::..~u;:!!
••!I·
•

i
i

• 4 Dessert 01shes
• 4 Br ead &amp; Buner Plates

Kleen Guard ..... sp• ggc
t•·OZ . JOHJjSON

$ ll

1 spt
I•·OZ . JOHNSON SCENT
Pledge ............ 5118 . Sf7t
•

\

!·=.
-5
:

rm
v

KROGER F~OZEN

Pre-Whip Topping ... ~~;::.

SB

3

WITH IRON

I
.

·~
o· ·:·T''"'
"u~
!_o&gt;-::
--cr:J '

:;::!:
·

I i·Ol. FURNITURE POLISH

Lemon Pledge ...

$

1088
S21''

MICO

• 4 Saucers

79c

$499

per china stamp
Thermos Jugs ... .. .Ea.
on our
special savings plan Buddy Brazier Grill~.!

20·Piece Set In Forever Spring Pat1ern
(Aiao available in Blue Garland Pot1ern)

WAS NOW

•

Can

$179

4
I ·OZ . FROZEN BANQUET
ASSORTED VARIETIES
s
Pot Pies ... ..... 4 c

•

19

$

-Ct $139
All. erest Tabl ets .... .. 24Pkg.·

Nu Maid Margarine 2 plb9. .

$ ll

Mayonnaise .... .

I••QI .

Clover Valley Oleo Margarine ...

WAS NOW

'

CllAM STVLIOIWHOlE KUNfl

QUAITlltS

Staley Syrup .... Sl 45

···OZ . KRAFT

con

Gallon
Ctn.

LIGHT SPREAD

U·OZ .

Miracle Whip ....

YELLOW CliNG . S\ICIDOI HAL VIES

$ 99

$ 89

. ~::

59c
Kroger Applesauce ..
·~:: 29c
63
c
Avondale Peaches ............
... ~::
· hern Beans ......... .... ... . "''····· 29c
Avo ndaIe Nort
c
29
VOn
a
I
e
C
Orn
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
A d
Avondale Cut Green Beans .......... ~~:: 29c•
...... 33c
Hillcrest Tomatoes ....
Kroger Tometo Paste ..... ...........
'.::~ 22c
Kroger Tomato Sauce . .... ... . ....... ~=~ 1ac
... 79c
Kroger Corn Flakes ... . ...... .

$

S~up .......... 199

$

~

.... .... ......... 5

Kroger Tomato Juice .. ... ....... ....

2 '1 99

12 -0Z . CONTAOINA

ii·OZ . KRAFT

Avondale Flour. ..... .

$ l9

WAS

WAS

PlAIN 01 SIU -IISING

. Country Club
Ice Cream

Homogenized
Milk

$

NOW

IS' OFF LABEL , 31·01 .

• ......
Frozen P 1es

- - Kroger Plain or Iodized Sah .. ... .. .. .. •:::

33e
2
2
e
79 c

Avondale Shortening . . .... ....... . ...... $129
Avondale Vegetable Oil ............. . ·~··
••• $149

KROGER

Pot Pies

ll ·OZ. FROZEN BLUUERRY

Cat Food .........

2

·~:·

Avondale Sweet Peas .............. .....

Con

Kosher Spears ..5135

I ·LB . LITTLE FRISKIES
OCEAN FISH

Spread 25 $
Margarin.e. 2~~~~~.

FROZEN

U ·OZ . VLASIC DILL

22·01. CARNATION

MRS. FILBERTS

MA3P

125 -CT . BOUTIQUE FACIAL

Kleenex Tissue . 67c 63c

Compare the Quality!
Compare the Prices!

'/,-Gal

39

12·Ct$
Pkg.

Why buy o con with no brond , uncertain quollty
no guarantee of
conslstency ... when you can buy brands you know and trust that .
ore all competltlvel'( priced and unconditionally guaranteed for
quality ... or your money back .

Kroger
5
Instant Pudding . §.

2 age

§.
:5
:-·
=
·
5·

5-oz.
Pkgs.
WI:TH COUPON

LIMIT 2 ,II c;ouPON

ctmi ... Artll2t·2t. INI

..CTitMfUCUlf

-

ITl'lt I liCil TillS
~
111111111111111111111111111111111~

..

' .

. I

L

7. 7c

�roger ra sA·t
Generic P s

lr. . AA
Larp 'E••

3c
Grade ·A
6
••· - - Large Eggs

ac Pak

J

1

Kroger Coffee

S$

9
LIMIT1

WAS NOW
12·01. FROZEN TOTINO
SAUSAGE OR PEPPERONI

Party. Piua .. ... $159 spt

l •. s.oz. FROZEN TOTINO
EXTRA PEPPERONI OR
EXTRA

Combo

Pizza .... 5

1'

MA2P

-- -

BLUE LAKE

16·oz.
Cans

9

11.75-0Z . PILLSBURY
PLUS ASSORTED

KROGER

Coke Mix ....... 8Sc 7gc

17-o~ 19

Small
Peas ......

19
21-o~

Pork&amp;
Beans .. ..

$

Cans

KROGER

Frui-t
Cocktail ..... ~.

Cans

YELLOW CLING

FREEZER PI.EEZER

Kroger
Peaches ...... .

Ice Cream
Sandwiches.

16-oz.
Cans

$

Kroger elk
Butterm1 ..

17-oz .$
Cons

ctn. ·

Kroger

Eggo Waffles .... gsc
WAS

a::~:N·T' ......... $209
10' OFF LABEL. QUART BTL.
DETERGENT
$ &amp;

1

Wisk ........... ..

8-ol.
Pkgs.

9

12·CT. TAKE ALONGS

Gal.
Ctn.

Baby Fresh .. ..... SSe 2/&amp;gc
U -OZ . CLEANER

Formula 409 ....

77 SHEETS PER ROLL, ARTS &amp;
FLOWERS

c

~::!Is .... 2~~~'

Tomato Paste .. 6Sc 5gc
$ l

Coffee Mate ... 2 9
10' OFF LABEL . 12·01 .

Treet ... .... ....... 5l 25

5• OFF LABEL , DISH

9·01 . ARMOUR

Vienna Sausage .g5 c age
WAS NOW
20' OFF LABEL , 36·01 .
MRS. BUTTERWORTH

Palmolive
Det erg en t ...

AGREE CONDITIONER OR

10' OFF LABEL

59

Dynamo
$
Detergent ... ~t~

Agree ·
Sh·ampoo ....

$129

NESTLE

12-oz.
Btl.

'

$145
12·oz.

.

e

Hot Cocoa M11 .... ....

8-oz .

Btl.

SU!&gt;JTAN Oil &amp; lOTION

'Coppertone .... ... .

ctn.

Co•

4-oz .
Btl.

$199

11-n

380 SHEETS PER ROLL

Swansoft 4
Bath Tissue.~~~~
SWANSOFT

Facial
Tissue ......... .

• Kroger Ra1s1n
•• Bran .... .. .

.. ..... .... . ........ $109.

$399
$399
,., age
••• 73c
age
..... 39c
•·· 33e
~

Chatham Chunx Dog Food ..... 25
. . .... ......
Kroger Ins t ant CaHee ........

$

IOJ·a·:

00 .

Embassy Mayonnaise .. ,.. ....

200-Ct.
Boxes

oo.

Kroger Catsup ...... ..
SMOOTH 01 CIUNCHV

II·•• ·

Playground Peanut Butter ...

Jo•

..lb.

SJII

Avondale Frozen O~nge Juice

Listerine
Mouthwash

VACPACK

Whole Kernel
Kroger Corn

Kondu Bleach .

$

P"e ·

..

lol

16·o• .

Hillcrest Dry Roasted Peanuts ..... .

Btl.

ggc
,.,. ...23c
.... u

AVONOAU

Kroger Family Pride Aspirin ...

J\lj

...

Fleece Bathroom Tissue .....
Macaroni &amp; Cheese Dinners

59~
••.c•. $119

Gallon
. .

500 SHEE T ~ PU lOll

Qt.

.
219 $269

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

Can

Bright Fabric Softener Sheets

$ 77

:U-OZ . EDWARD'S CONDENSED
ASSORTED VARIETIES $

Jo•

.

Avondale Coffee Creamer ....... .

$119

,...co .

33c

22 ·o• .

$119
.

It! .

Ja r

GOTHAM . :IO·QUAIT Sill

J.ll. MIS . GOODCOOKIE
AUDITED FLAVORS

Styrofoam

Frozen Cookies . 5145

Chest
5 66

WAS NOW
II.'/, ·OZ . PLANTERS

$

149

SJ39

159

spe

Roasted Peanuts 5139

SJ29

Tavern Nuts ..
IZ ·Ol . PLANTERS

Peanuts ..........

$

12 ·01 . PLANTERS DlY

Z·CT . $(RUNGE

Scrubber Sponge 7Sc &amp;gc

_,.M._~~ HAtlfl£.4
~-

cmJ

le&lt;h

~orrrlpitt

~to

lfittl~

BAVARIA
GERMANY

•

SUPER II

1

Schick Blades .....
,..,n,\llnl All

WRAPPED

&lt;Cl1h1a

Kroger Chee
Food Slices

$ 29

Now . tor o limited time only . it con be youn at remarkable savings of over 460 • .
on a simple . convenient . loy ·away plan that will easily fit vour weekly budget .

Her••. how the plan worlu . With eocl'l $3.00 purchase . you ore entitled to buy
one chino saver stomp for t9 ': a $6.00 purchase entitle• you to buy two stamps .

00% WHOLE WHEAT

Multi-Grain
Kroger Bread

2$ 09

etc . Once yo~o~ hove filled your saver certlflut• with 30 stompt , you may
redeem it for a beautifully gift·boud 20·piece service for faur in your choice of
Blue Garl and or Forever Spr ing pattern . The total coat of your 1et on thlt plan l1

NOW

only $2t .70 ph.u tax .
'
You may expand your chino collection with matching tervic' and acuuory
pieces . Eoth week a different item will be featured at tpeciol coupon tovings .
Every item In the Johann Haviland china line i1 carried In open 1tock , so you ~an
replace or odctpieces to your 1et long· after the promotion has ended.
The Old World elegan~• of Jo~ann Ho11ilond ch ino .. . let It odd grace ond charm
to your nelff dining occae lon .

2°1

S211

li ·OZ . KRAFT DELUXE

Macaroni DinnerS3c age

Only

I ·Ol . KRAFT '

Party Mints .. .7Sc &amp;gc

9.~
·

... ,.,,.,_"-·'"
7 ·OZ. FUINITURI POLISH

•

Kleen Guard ... ...age

~·::'

RAINWAVE OSCILLATING

• 4 Q.nrier Plales
• 4 Cups

Sprinkler......... .. Each
1-0AL. ll:U

Si~zler Grill ....... Each
eu a=
r:::..~u;:!!
••!I·
•

i
i

• 4 Dessert 01shes
• 4 Br ead &amp; Buner Plates

Kleen Guard ..... sp• ggc
t•·OZ . JOHJjSON

$ ll

1 spt
I•·OZ . JOHNSON SCENT
Pledge ............ 5118 . Sf7t
•

\

!·=.
-5
:

rm
v

KROGER F~OZEN

Pre-Whip Topping ... ~~;::.

SB

3

WITH IRON

I
.

·~
o· ·:·T''"'
"u~
!_o&gt;-::
--cr:J '

:;::!:
·

I i·Ol. FURNITURE POLISH

Lemon Pledge ...

$

1088
S21''

MICO

• 4 Saucers

79c

$499

per china stamp
Thermos Jugs ... .. .Ea.
on our
special savings plan Buddy Brazier Grill~.!

20·Piece Set In Forever Spring Pat1ern
(Aiao available in Blue Garland Pot1ern)

WAS NOW

•

Can

$179

4
I ·OZ . FROZEN BANQUET
ASSORTED VARIETIES
s
Pot Pies ... ..... 4 c

•

19

$

-Ct $139
All. erest Tabl ets .... .. 24Pkg.·

Nu Maid Margarine 2 plb9. .

$ ll

Mayonnaise .... .

I••QI .

Clover Valley Oleo Margarine ...

WAS NOW

'

CllAM STVLIOIWHOlE KUNfl

QUAITlltS

Staley Syrup .... Sl 45

···OZ . KRAFT

con

Gallon
Ctn.

LIGHT SPREAD

U·OZ .

Miracle Whip ....

YELLOW CliNG . S\ICIDOI HAL VIES

$ 99

$ 89

. ~::

59c
Kroger Applesauce ..
·~:: 29c
63
c
Avondale Peaches ............
... ~::
· hern Beans ......... .... ... . "''····· 29c
Avo ndaIe Nort
c
29
VOn
a
I
e
C
Orn
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
A d
Avondale Cut Green Beans .......... ~~:: 29c•
...... 33c
Hillcrest Tomatoes ....
Kroger Tometo Paste ..... ...........
'.::~ 22c
Kroger Tomato Sauce . .... ... . ....... ~=~ 1ac
... 79c
Kroger Corn Flakes ... . ...... .

$

S~up .......... 199

$

~

.... .... ......... 5

Kroger Tomato Juice .. ... ....... ....

2 '1 99

12 -0Z . CONTAOINA

ii·OZ . KRAFT

Avondale Flour. ..... .

$ l9

WAS

WAS

PlAIN 01 SIU -IISING

. Country Club
Ice Cream

Homogenized
Milk

$

NOW

IS' OFF LABEL , 31·01 .

• ......
Frozen P 1es

- - Kroger Plain or Iodized Sah .. ... .. .. .. •:::

33e
2
2
e
79 c

Avondale Shortening . . .... ....... . ...... $129
Avondale Vegetable Oil ............. . ·~··
••• $149

KROGER

Pot Pies

ll ·OZ. FROZEN BLUUERRY

Cat Food .........

2

·~:·

Avondale Sweet Peas .............. .....

Con

Kosher Spears ..5135

I ·LB . LITTLE FRISKIES
OCEAN FISH

Spread 25 $
Margarin.e. 2~~~~~.

FROZEN

U ·OZ . VLASIC DILL

22·01. CARNATION

MRS. FILBERTS

MA3P

125 -CT . BOUTIQUE FACIAL

Kleenex Tissue . 67c 63c

Compare the Quality!
Compare the Prices!

'/,-Gal

39

12·Ct$
Pkg.

Why buy o con with no brond , uncertain quollty
no guarantee of
conslstency ... when you can buy brands you know and trust that .
ore all competltlvel'( priced and unconditionally guaranteed for
quality ... or your money back .

Kroger
5
Instant Pudding . §.

2 age

§.
:5
:-·
=
·
5·

5-oz.
Pkgs.
WI:TH COUPON

LIMIT 2 ,II c;ouPON

ctmi ... Artll2t·2t. INI

..CTitMfUCUlf

-

ITl'lt I liCil TillS
~
111111111111111111111111111111111~

..

' .

. I

L

7. 7c

�Fresh

$ 79

Mushrooms't';~;:,:•1

$

ld~hN~SELECTPREMIUM

Potatoes.

4 • ··

Green
Cabbage ... .. lb .

1

19C

I'

I

Winesap
$149
Apples ... .. .... 5 ~~;~
SIZE
e
Fresh Pineapples .... ..Each

99
White Grapefruit .. 8 &amp;:9 $1 69
e
Navel Oranges ...... ... .. 17
NO . 8

WE'RE GOIN6 'TO BE
OVT ~ERe ALL PAl(...

NOT SO

SEAVTIFV~.

1

·M~S.NeUON

72 SiZE CALIFORNIA

Each

DOZ . $1.99

SPRING SALAD SALE
Salad Tomatoes

I

.

c

lb.

WAS~At?

3 .$1
3 $1

Bunch Red
Radishes .... ..
Green Top
Bunch Carrots

~e~!W~T

Bunches

Salad · ··
Spinach ...... Bunch

Bunches

Romaine
lettuce .. .... Bunch

..

1

·' l ·~

I

SOMEONE BEHIND lJS WANTS . W~O
.TO P~Al( i~ROU6H ... IS IT,

SIR?

49c
49c

l-iE'S 'TI-lE CRAS61E5T 6W IN TI-lE CLUB!
~E

TI11NK5 MR5. SARTLE'&lt; AND M~~JJEL,ON
PLAI{ .TOO SLOW .••

STAND SACK, MARCIE ..TI-lE LADie5
ARE '60NNA LET HIM PLA'I TH~OUGH

Fresh Baked
Italian Bread
Deli Style
Boiled Ham

Russer
All Meat Bologna
lb.

TOOIDER

$199

BROOKSIDE

Kielbasa links.. .. .... ..

lb .

I ·PIECES OF CHICKEN . READY TO EAT

Wishbone Fried Chicken. Each
DILl SLICID

T

lb.$1 ~~

S1~L!D

Breast .. .. ........... lb .

$3~9

$2 99

COLIYSI.ICEDOICHUNK

I JV5T
. WANT ro ~

16·0I.g·
g
c
2

See

1-lE 15~ ..

Lvs.

BREAD AVAILABLE ONLY AT YOUR
SILVER BRIDGE AND POMEROY KROGER STORES

$279

CREAM CHEESE ICED RED VELVET

l ayer ( ake..... .. ... 7·1nch
longhorn Cheese ........... lb .
Cako
Dill SLICID
$2 99
Hard Salami.. ........... .. lb .
Egg Potato Salad ....... lb.
Ham Sandwlch ....... .... Eack

99 e

e
Cinnamon Rolls ........... ~i.e~: 99
Fudge 8rown1es
• ........ •··· 99c
FUSHICfD

$399

6·9c

Pkg

• ...
l emon Krune h P1e

Z'ltt A t:.Of.IIPU'rE~ PftOtiltAMMIR
AHQ :t•vf fAL.L.fN IN LOV!

$149

l ·lnch
PI• ·

iNa't'H Plf'f ~ eoPt~

RO&amp;E·R BRANDS SAVE YOU MONEY

c0MP~!TE£.Y /,,S'f'

YGufl /

/

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

lu,. OF
ffSALI~JJ.E

GOu~S! .:C

:t

O.H, ,,.

~OI.D

N!V- ttiOfliC OU'f'. · •

\

C.P.N•*r

MA/4~Y He~.

\

W&amp;,J.., !t•M G&amp;.J'D ,.o·
SEe ~I., ...AViN"r

•

WHO

~-:~~

�Fresh

$ 79

Mushrooms't';~;:,:•1

$

ld~hN~SELECTPREMIUM

Potatoes.

4 • ··

Green
Cabbage ... .. lb .

1

19C

I'

I

Winesap
$149
Apples ... .. .... 5 ~~;~
SIZE
e
Fresh Pineapples .... ..Each

99
White Grapefruit .. 8 &amp;:9 $1 69
e
Navel Oranges ...... ... .. 17
NO . 8

WE'RE GOIN6 'TO BE
OVT ~ERe ALL PAl(...

NOT SO

SEAVTIFV~.

1

·M~S.NeUON

72 SiZE CALIFORNIA

Each

DOZ . $1.99

SPRING SALAD SALE
Salad Tomatoes

I

.

c

lb.

WAS~At?

3 .$1
3 $1

Bunch Red
Radishes .... ..
Green Top
Bunch Carrots

~e~!W~T

Bunches

Salad · ··
Spinach ...... Bunch

Bunches

Romaine
lettuce .. .... Bunch

..

1

·' l ·~

I

SOMEONE BEHIND lJS WANTS . W~O
.TO P~Al( i~ROU6H ... IS IT,

SIR?

49c
49c

l-iE'S 'TI-lE CRAS61E5T 6W IN TI-lE CLUB!
~E

TI11NK5 MR5. SARTLE'&lt; AND M~~JJEL,ON
PLAI{ .TOO SLOW .••

STAND SACK, MARCIE ..TI-lE LADie5
ARE '60NNA LET HIM PLA'I TH~OUGH

Fresh Baked
Italian Bread
Deli Style
Boiled Ham

Russer
All Meat Bologna
lb.

TOOIDER

$199

BROOKSIDE

Kielbasa links.. .. .... ..

lb .

I ·PIECES OF CHICKEN . READY TO EAT

Wishbone Fried Chicken. Each
DILl SLICID

T

lb.$1 ~~

S1~L!D

Breast .. .. ........... lb .

$3~9

$2 99

COLIYSI.ICEDOICHUNK

I JV5T
. WANT ro ~

16·0I.g·
g
c
2

See

1-lE 15~ ..

Lvs.

BREAD AVAILABLE ONLY AT YOUR
SILVER BRIDGE AND POMEROY KROGER STORES

$279

CREAM CHEESE ICED RED VELVET

l ayer ( ake..... .. ... 7·1nch
longhorn Cheese ........... lb .
Cako
Dill SLICID
$2 99
Hard Salami.. ........... .. lb .
Egg Potato Salad ....... lb.
Ham Sandwlch ....... .... Eack

99 e

e
Cinnamon Rolls ........... ~i.e~: 99
Fudge 8rown1es
• ........ •··· 99c
FUSHICfD

$399

6·9c

Pkg

• ...
l emon Krune h P1e

Z'ltt A t:.Of.IIPU'rE~ PftOtiltAMMIR
AHQ :t•vf fAL.L.fN IN LOV!

$149

l ·lnch
PI• ·

iNa't'H Plf'f ~ eoPt~

RO&amp;E·R BRANDS SAVE YOU MONEY

c0MP~!TE£.Y /,,S'f'

YGufl /

/

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

lu,. OF
ffSALI~JJ.E

GOu~S! .:C

:t

O.H, ,,.

~OI.D

N!V- ttiOfliC OU'f'. · •

\

C.P.N•*r

MA/4~Y He~.

\

W&amp;,J.., !t•M G&amp;.J'D ,.o·
SEe ~I., ...AViN"r

•

WHO

~-:~~

�.,

Dave Grciue

ALLEYOOP
'fOU'RE ~IGHT! WE CAN'T HOI.D
THIS BOY F~ ~ANSOM IF "THE
ONL'f THINS HE'S NEXT 10 IS
A DIN0e5AI.J~J
_n;
' - -l:

.

••• AN' NO
MOTHSR ,
EITHEI&lt;l

••• SAY,

... AN' NO AUNTS, UNCLES, OR
COUSINS! WHY, HE: ... HE'S GOT
ABSOLUTELY NOBODY. MAIS!

r

KNOW

WHAT WE
CA"-1 DO!

/

HA\/E10

YOUA5WI
K;ICK.

YES, OF
COUI&lt;SE!

_.--.(., ,o

Warner Bros.

BUGS BUNNY ®

ING

NOT QUITE,

THAT'S A

B~'EI&lt;

IDeA!

CoYOIE.

e~•

A ·L.IT1l.E HAllE

~
......,........,. @ ...._,~....__........,_

UH OH! 6U5TER
t&lt;ALLII&lt;AK •. WHO'S
MAKING! M5DICAL
H15f0RY A5 IH E
HLINIAN VE6Erlf9LE
--IS A60UT TO 6E
SNATCHED BY A
MAD 5CIEtJTI5i
NAMED DOCTOR
FIN KEN5TEIIV!

YOU THI~K THIS
SPECIMEN WILL
DO, DOcTOR~

WITH A ~RAIN-WAVE
THAi FLAT', WE'LL.. BE .
DOINe HiE- POOR CREATIJRS
A FAVO~ &amp;'f I:JIIIHOOKING
HI~ LIFE·SUPPORi
. 5i5TSM1

by Crooks.&amp; Lawrence
OF

DickRo

LATER,

cou~:;e,

rNENUMSER

I MAY

'T~e R.I~T

PUT IN

IMPLANT A FEW
~RAIN CI:W:UO GJVE'
MY MAN·MON5TE:R

NUM&amp;=P..C!»-

~ :EY',

!70MEO ~MALL.
OSGREE OF
MeAJrAL
FUNCTIIN!

.

Al.l ,SASA ~ !'!AI$
':~ WI41T!l ,,
ANO m1 : ~~~:ar 1 ANO M , J .. -/t;~N-O.
'
.___
· _... ... II '·

AlliO:i

0\2. . FINI&lt;.EN~TEIN'S. NO$Y l-ANDLADY JLJ5r
HAPPeN!? TO E!&gt;E AWAKe-- KEE-PING TA&amp; ON

7

6ETTER SeND A
PROWl. CAFC: QUICK,
SER6EANT!

HER: NE16HE30R'.5 AFTER-DARK ACTIVITIES.:

,,_11 ~

THAT BODY THEY

WM• CARl&lt; YIN' MAY
AWREDDY 61:- GOIIV'
INTO HI~ FRE:E-ZE:R.
FER·5PARE PART~!

""'J

CAl\/ YOW IMA61NE THE WORLD'G
Pt!i8ELIEF, A~PAD--IF I
5UCCEE0 IN RE5T0RitJo TH IS LUMP
OF CLAY TO HOR.MAL HLIMifN LIFE!

~1LINNE&amp;1

IN TI-lE. 17ti1

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

Carroll &amp; McCormick
WH"i ON

'

E,&amp;\RTH-? !'!
~O"hUMG
K~FF·

K/1\Fr:.'

IN Tt4E JET
~II&lt;EAM!

'-.--..._

Tl.ll\ loJ

'•

!

~IILL DON'T KNOW

W'r\AT Tr\E FRE.P..KED·OUI
.
G06iUME
I~ P..LL

ABOUT!

VE. JU61' TRIED

IO

DRE.5~ TO

·CONFORM 10 Wt-\Ai THE

-.loo.

TV~ WHETHER
M"'N I~

PRE.DIC.TI NG!

TUMBLEWEEDS ®,

Senti your1g11

JJ

C:=~

.

"

;

·

WI)UIIHIIII II:

Jollnny Wonder
lc/o this newspaper)
P.O. Box1335
Santa Cruz, Ca. 95061

WE'Ll- &amp;e'f 'IOU THIS TIME, SNAKE !Y'E! "------::--...:.---~-1

Jl

OM EART"'!

UP THERE

3~1N

,,o
nv..(XUT)OCISHN 'WEAR
SHOeS ~ I1-nw:~~~~~~~~tlf J1:
!eT~;-_;~·

I=AI~Y ,..6-L.E I

C 1010 Uni ted Feature Synd icate, Inc. Yzo

~N6WEI&lt; I~

OWARPfl .'' -~~~~r

W.I-IY 00 iHE

· CINOERE.L.L..,
WOAe SL.IPPeRS
MADe. OF FUR,

HMMMM ..... NOW,
LE.T ME ~EE-

1

TAWNYA SCHLICHER,
N. RIDGEVILLE, OH .

C!NiU~Y VE.RSION
Otr 'n-IE I'O~L..IId~

,., ANP WHETHER
f'REC!f'IT'A TION
OCCURS P&amp;!'E!VPS
/Jf't/N WH!'THEf?,,.

11

THIS WEEK'S TOP
PRIZE QUESTION:

FAIRY rALE

MY s;.T,AR~ ~
FII\JKEN5TEIN
AND THAT C.REEP
MlJ5oTA MUGeED
s;.OME- INNOCENT
VICTIM FOR ONE •
OF H15 NUTTY
EXPERIMENTS!

HOOPLE ·

I _......,._

.. II .

i~II!V!'b •11 • ~'1"5 0\..0.

iHE

I

11

�.,

Dave Grciue

ALLEYOOP
'fOU'RE ~IGHT! WE CAN'T HOI.D
THIS BOY F~ ~ANSOM IF "THE
ONL'f THINS HE'S NEXT 10 IS
A DIN0e5AI.J~J
_n;
' - -l:

.

••• AN' NO
MOTHSR ,
EITHEI&lt;l

••• SAY,

... AN' NO AUNTS, UNCLES, OR
COUSINS! WHY, HE: ... HE'S GOT
ABSOLUTELY NOBODY. MAIS!

r

KNOW

WHAT WE
CA"-1 DO!

/

HA\/E10

YOUA5WI
K;ICK.

YES, OF
COUI&lt;SE!

_.--.(., ,o

Warner Bros.

BUGS BUNNY ®

ING

NOT QUITE,

THAT'S A

B~'EI&lt;

IDeA!

CoYOIE.

e~•

A ·L.IT1l.E HAllE

~
......,........,. @ ...._,~....__........,_

UH OH! 6U5TER
t&lt;ALLII&lt;AK •. WHO'S
MAKING! M5DICAL
H15f0RY A5 IH E
HLINIAN VE6Erlf9LE
--IS A60UT TO 6E
SNATCHED BY A
MAD 5CIEtJTI5i
NAMED DOCTOR
FIN KEN5TEIIV!

YOU THI~K THIS
SPECIMEN WILL
DO, DOcTOR~

WITH A ~RAIN-WAVE
THAi FLAT', WE'LL.. BE .
DOINe HiE- POOR CREATIJRS
A FAVO~ &amp;'f I:JIIIHOOKING
HI~ LIFE·SUPPORi
. 5i5TSM1

by Crooks.&amp; Lawrence
OF

DickRo

LATER,

cou~:;e,

rNENUMSER

I MAY

'T~e R.I~T

PUT IN

IMPLANT A FEW
~RAIN CI:W:UO GJVE'
MY MAN·MON5TE:R

NUM&amp;=P..C!»-

~ :EY',

!70MEO ~MALL.
OSGREE OF
MeAJrAL
FUNCTIIN!

.

Al.l ,SASA ~ !'!AI$
':~ WI41T!l ,,
ANO m1 : ~~~:ar 1 ANO M , J .. -/t;~N-O.
'
.___
· _... ... II '·

AlliO:i

0\2. . FINI&lt;.EN~TEIN'S. NO$Y l-ANDLADY JLJ5r
HAPPeN!? TO E!&gt;E AWAKe-- KEE-PING TA&amp; ON

7

6ETTER SeND A
PROWl. CAFC: QUICK,
SER6EANT!

HER: NE16HE30R'.5 AFTER-DARK ACTIVITIES.:

,,_11 ~

THAT BODY THEY

WM• CARl&lt; YIN' MAY
AWREDDY 61:- GOIIV'
INTO HI~ FRE:E-ZE:R.
FER·5PARE PART~!

""'J

CAl\/ YOW IMA61NE THE WORLD'G
Pt!i8ELIEF, A~PAD--IF I
5UCCEE0 IN RE5T0RitJo TH IS LUMP
OF CLAY TO HOR.MAL HLIMifN LIFE!

~1LINNE&amp;1

IN TI-lE. 17ti1

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

Carroll &amp; McCormick
WH"i ON

'

E,&amp;\RTH-? !'!
~O"hUMG
K~FF·

K/1\Fr:.'

IN Tt4E JET
~II&lt;EAM!

'-.--..._

Tl.ll\ loJ

'•

!

~IILL DON'T KNOW

W'r\AT Tr\E FRE.P..KED·OUI
.
G06iUME
I~ P..LL

ABOUT!

VE. JU61' TRIED

IO

DRE.5~ TO

·CONFORM 10 Wt-\Ai THE

-.loo.

TV~ WHETHER
M"'N I~

PRE.DIC.TI NG!

TUMBLEWEEDS ®,

Senti your1g11

JJ

C:=~

.

"

;

·

WI)UIIHIIII II:

Jollnny Wonder
lc/o this newspaper)
P.O. Box1335
Santa Cruz, Ca. 95061

WE'Ll- &amp;e'f 'IOU THIS TIME, SNAKE !Y'E! "------::--...:.---~-1

Jl

OM EART"'!

UP THERE

3~1N

,,o
nv..(XUT)OCISHN 'WEAR
SHOeS ~ I1-nw:~~~~~~~~tlf J1:
!eT~;-_;~·

I=AI~Y ,..6-L.E I

C 1010 Uni ted Feature Synd icate, Inc. Yzo

~N6WEI&lt; I~

OWARPfl .'' -~~~~r

W.I-IY 00 iHE

· CINOERE.L.L..,
WOAe SL.IPPeRS
MADe. OF FUR,

HMMMM ..... NOW,
LE.T ME ~EE-

1

TAWNYA SCHLICHER,
N. RIDGEVILLE, OH .

C!NiU~Y VE.RSION
Otr 'n-IE I'O~L..IId~

,., ANP WHETHER
f'REC!f'IT'A TION
OCCURS P&amp;!'E!VPS
/Jf't/N WH!'THEf?,,.

11

THIS WEEK'S TOP
PRIZE QUESTION:

FAIRY rALE

MY s;.T,AR~ ~
FII\JKEN5TEIN
AND THAT C.REEP
MlJ5oTA MUGeED
s;.OME- INNOCENT
VICTIM FOR ONE •
OF H15 NUTTY
EXPERIMENTS!

HOOPLE ·

I _......,._

.. II .

i~II!V!'b •11 • ~'1"5 0\..0.

iHE

I

11

�J

MARMA.DUKE

by Brad .Anderson ·.
.

BORN LOSE·R

• 4

~~~AD

a= (.QJST~Y

~a;DLI~

Me A8QJr

FORt\
c.HNJCO~!

H6AD

.w;;A~T TO tJ~

YOU

ABOUT ~lt-.10
'I·

'

. ...~ ABOOT A "l..ITTI.E !'Mit;~

M'( S~LD

OH, ~.I'M fROOD
OF 't'OU ~ I ~V~ ---.

Art Sansom
.

,.At-lD H.A.VetJ'T I
ALWAY~ 5/o.ID I
I&lt;~~W '{otJ WOULD
(..QIN; OUT aJ lOP

@

~
0'

&lt;

.

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.,."'

BAL-D,,

.

'i

:;

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'

,.

'

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0

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ANDY CAPP
'

' I

,

·,- /C&gt;EA'
I I

I

I '

LE'f"S ~VE A BIT
0' L.IFE.J'ACKIE
-SWITCH

1\.iE i'ELL.YON!

\

.

· L-----~
ONE OF '\'OU~ '
FA\OUR.ITE
Sl NGERS., '?E"f'-

,,·l

·,

b ·Ernie Bushmiller

NANCY

NANCY--I WANT YOU TO GO
TO THE STORE - - AND DON'T
FORGET YOUR UMBRELLA

· I LIKE TO HEAR
THE PATTER OF
RAIN ON A
ROOF~-

'I

I

I

t.

'

'

...

.

\

.

WHAt5
THE
IDEA'?

I LOVE TO
HEAR THE
PATTER OF .

RAIN ON
A ROOF

�J

MARMA.DUKE

by Brad .Anderson ·.
.

BORN LOSE·R

• 4

~~~AD

a= (.QJST~Y

~a;DLI~

Me A8QJr

FORt\
c.HNJCO~!

H6AD

.w;;A~T TO tJ~

YOU

ABOUT ~lt-.10
'I·

'

. ...~ ABOOT A "l..ITTI.E !'Mit;~

M'( S~LD

OH, ~.I'M fROOD
OF 't'OU ~ I ~V~ ---.

Art Sansom
.

,.At-lD H.A.VetJ'T I
ALWAY~ 5/o.ID I
I&lt;~~W '{otJ WOULD
(..QIN; OUT aJ lOP

@

~
0'

&lt;

.

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.,."'

BAL-D,,

.

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:;

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'

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'

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ll

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"c:
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0

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ANDY CAPP
'

' I

,

·,- /C&gt;EA'
I I

I

I '

LE'f"S ~VE A BIT
0' L.IFE.J'ACKIE
-SWITCH

1\.iE i'ELL.YON!

\

.

· L-----~
ONE OF '\'OU~ '
FA\OUR.ITE
Sl NGERS., '?E"f'-

,,·l

·,

b ·Ernie Bushmiller

NANCY

NANCY--I WANT YOU TO GO
TO THE STORE - - AND DON'T
FORGET YOUR UMBRELLA

· I LIKE TO HEAR
THE PATTER OF
RAIN ON A
ROOF~-

'I

I

I

t.

'

'

...

.

\

.

WHAt5
THE
IDEA'?

I LOVE TO
HEAR THE
PATTER OF .

RAIN ON
A ROOF

�Drew Webster Post names Buckeye Boys' State delegates
WINTHROP

b Dlck ·Cavalli

W~T A IA6.V I'VE HAD/

WOUL-D 'YOU 'L-IKE
'W He;Ait WHAT KIND

OF A ~y I'Ve f.IAD~

WOULD I LUG iO 6e PAINTED
GOLD AND PUT UP
.

IF

team:! at Meigs and is a member of
the Varsity M Club.
He plans to attend Ohio University. Steve attends the Pomeroy First Baptist Church and his hObbles
are tennis, hunting, fiBbing and
swimming.
Ray Is a son of Philip and Karen
Werry. He Is a member of the
National Honor Society and bas lettered In varsity football for three
years. He lettered in track and bas
been a member of the Lettennen's
Club for three years. He is currently
taking part in varsity baseball. He
was president of his clllss as a freshman and was in Boy Scouting for
four years.
Jerry is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Fields, Sr. , and attends the
Pomeroy Church of Christ. He Is a
college preparatory student and·
likes hunllng and all sports.

e

t1 LIWW~A iHOUeAND,.

I U- NC\1,9R A?K

HIM ANOT'HEiR GWEel10N.

Ae. A We:A'114ER. VANt= ON "'11-IE
MeTHOC&gt;I5r a-lURO-l ';!

'

On behalf of Drew Webster POI!t
39, American Legion, Paul Casci bas
announced three delegates and an
alternate to attend Buckeye Boys
state June .21-29 at Bowling Green
University.
. Delegates are Brian King and
Steve Ohlinger, juniors at Meigs
High School and Ray Werry, a junioc
at Eastern High School. The alternate Is Jerry Fields, a junior at
Meigs High.
The son of Lloyd and Eva King,
Brian studies welding at Meigs High
School. He participates in wrestling,
football, baseball and basketball.
His bobbies are archery and hunting.
Oblinger is a son of Mr. and Mrs.
WIUlam Ohlinger. He is enrolled in
the academic program at Meigs
High School. He is a member of the
varsity basketball and baseball

©

'

1980 Oy Nl~ , In~ , T M Reo U S

b Ed Sullivan
PUT IT WITH .

WHAT
YOU
GOT THIS TIME,

THE REST OF THE
STUFF ...

STUART?

"'AND THEN
GET BACK
OUT THERE.'

R
•
A BIRD 5-\TH,
TEN EMPTY
PRUNE JUICE ·
60TTLES'"

Costa Rica willing to grant asylum
SAN JOSE, Costa Rica - Costa Rica told Cuba Sunday it was willing
to grant pennanent asylum to all 10,000 Cubans still trying to leave
their conununist-goveriled homeland, a Foreign Ministry spokesman
announced. ·
He said Costa Rica bad made Its offer known In a message to Cuban
President Fidel Castro.
Cuba allowed 32 refugees to leave Havana on a Spanish airliner
bound for Madrid Sunday afternoon, but did not lift Its ban on flights to
Costa Rica. About 700 of the Cubans packed into the Peruvlsn Embassy compound in Havana were evacuated last week before Castro
cut off the fllgbb Friday.

Tito's condition said 'grave'
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia- President Joslp Broz Tito's doctors said
today the 8'1-yeaNIId Yugoslav leader was In "exceptionally grave"
condition.
·
1be doctors said they bad been unable · to stop Tito's stomach
bleeding, which Sunday was reported to have spread to the intestines.
Thill plus liver damage accompanied by severe jaundice,
pne~. high temperature and cardiac weakness endangers Tito's
life, the medical bulletin said.

"'A PAl~ CF
GALOSHES, A

GROCERY CART,
A 130WLING ~T "

I HATE ·
LEFT FIELD.'

"'AND NOW
E
CRUMMY Ga..F BALLS.
I'M SICK OF IT.'

Gwmlsrnan parachutes to safety
MADISION, Ind. - An Ohio Air National Guard pilot from Columbus ejected safely from his plane yesterday before his plane crashed
into Jefferson Proving Grounds.
capt. Stephen Lefebure ejected from the cockpit of his A·7D Corsair
after the aircraft developed trouble about 10:10 a.m. No one was injured when the aircraft crashed into a grove of trees.
· The Ohio Air Guard said Lefebure was not injured, and he was ex·
pected to be released from a Madison hOI!pital today.

Japan oil shipments end Monday
TOKYO - Iranian authorities today ended oil shipments to Japan
because the six major Japanese oil traders refused to accept a $2.50
price lncreaBe, said a spokesman for one of the companies, the Mitsublsbl Corp.
The National Iranian Oil Co., the government oil mondpoly, informed all six that Its Kharg Island loading port would no longer supply them with oU because they bad refused the demand to raise the per
barrel price to $35, the Japanese Broadcasting Corporation reported.

Carter's action call major topic
LUXEMBOURG - Conunon Market foreign ministers meet here
today to diBcuBs President Carter's call for strong unified action by the
U.S. allies to help win the release of the American hostages In Iran.
Carter hopes the meeting will result in a European Economic Comownlty declslon to Impose economic sanctions on Iran and a break in
EEC diplomatic relatiooa with the Tehran government.
Britalil bas been urging Its Common Market partners to give strong
backing to carter's request for tough measures. There bas been
resistance from some govenunents, notably France.

Bad health forces resignation
ADEN, South Yemen - President Abdul Fattab Ismail of Mamst
South Yemen resigned today for bealth reasons and was replaced by
Prime Minister Ali N11S8er Mohanuned, the official Aden news agency

2)1008

$

reported.

"YOU'RE LA TEl KEEPINQ GAs-PUMPER'S
.HOURS, EH, BASCOM?"

"WE ARe 'NO OPINIONS' ANo PROUD OF ITI REMEMBER,
· IrS US.UNOEOIOED8 THAY CONTROL ELECTIONS!"

.

But IIOIII'Ce8 In Cslro, who follow Yerneni affairs closely, said
Ismail's resignation was the result of a power struggle with Mohammed, and that although IsmaU bad tubercuiOI!Is, It did not lnterfer with
his duties.
_

Celebrezze enlisting students
- roLUMBUS, Ohio - auo Secretary of State Anthony J. Celebrezze
Jr. 1a en11at1ng the help of high school students to promote voter
registration amOng the 18-to-24 year age group.
His office sent registration lnfonnation kits to 2,500 high school
seniors who participated In Buckeye Boys' State and Buckeye Girls'
state last year. calebrezze ~ed the studenta to use the kit to develop
articles for their student newspapers and for announcement:' over
publlcaddreasys~.

·

Weather

MOitly sunny today, with highs fr(IJl 70 to 75. Clear tonight, with

Iowa near 50. Sunny Tuesday, with highs near 80. 1be chance of rain Is
near zero today, tonight and Tuesday.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday: A cluUlce crt ebowers ud tbwtclenfGriU Wedaeldly. Fair 'I'IIanday ud Friday. Hips WedMiclay
111
JDid 'Ill to low Ml, CCJG11Dc to tbe Ml by Friday. Lowa ID tbe Sill
Weclneedlyand tbe mid • ~ mld Sill Friday.
Wedft"dlly

*

tbrcJach

STEVE OHLINGER

•

at

RAYWERRV

JERRY FIELDS

en tine

Militants allow son,
mother hour reunion

From the Allaoclated Prj!ls

Priscilla's Po

BRIAN KING

pennisslon for the reunion with Her·
By Tbe Associated Press
menlng.
A3ked whether Ayatollah
The youngest American bOI!tage
Ruhollab
Kbomelnl approved the
met alone for an hour with his
visit. be said. "Of course."
mother in the U.S. Embassy In
The spokesman for the embassy
Tehran today, militants holding the
militants
bad said they bad decided
embassy said by telephone. It was
not
to
allow
families of the IMlstages
the first visit by a relative allowed
to
visit
the
embassy but might
by the militants since the millsion
reconsider
that
decision if Kbomelnl
was seized 170 days ago.
asked.
Ghotbzadeh
told a Tehran
Meanwhile, witnesses reported at
least one dead and many injured at
Tehran University in fresh battles
between pro-government and leftist
students opposed to the regime's
decision to purge the schools of anti·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio's
Islamic ideology.
unemployment funds are down more
Contacted by telephone, a mililant
b.an 60 percent from mlnlmwn safe
spokesinan said no Iranian officials
levels and a recession could
were present· when Barbara Timm bankrupt the fund for the first tip!e
of Oak Creek, Wis., met privately In Its 41 years, a state official warns.
with her son, ~yeaNIId Marine Sgt.
William Papler, director of
Kevin Hennenlng. The spokesman
researth and statistics for the
said Mrs. Timm also talked with Bureau of Employment Services,
Iranian officials while inside the em- said Saturday that the fund was
bassy.
down to $285.2 million at the end of
The visit took place after she and March. The "minimwn safe level"
ber husband Kenneth toured a · bas been set at S1 billion.
Tehran cemetery where Iranians
In his monthly report, Papier said
killed in last y~r ·s revolution are employefll will be adding about $57
buried.
million to the fund as they make
"Today we have decided to penni! their quarterly payments In April
the stepfather and mother of the and May. But If unemployment is
hOI!tage to visit him," a spokesman forced up by a recession, the state
for the militants said in announcing
will have to spend more than it takes

news conference that Kbomelnl
favored visits by the bOI!tages' "immediate families" but did not say if
the revolutionary leader planned to
force the Issue.
Mrs. Timm arrived in Tehran
Saturday hoping to ·see her son. The
bootages on Sunday began their 24th
week as prisonefll in the embassy.
Three other Americans have been

'

held at the Foreign Ministry since
the militants captured the embassy
Nov. 4 demanding the return of
ousted Shah Mohammad Reza
Palliavi.

Ghotbzadeh denied a report by
President carter on Friday that Iran
planned to hold the hOI!tages through
U.S. presidential elections In
November.

Unemployment funds low in Ohio
in, be added.
So far this year, the state bas
spent $278 million, about twice what
it silent during the first quarter last
year. Through March, Ohio's unemployment rate stood at 6.6 percent
with 324,000 out of work, up 32,000
from a year ago.
Payments averaged .$123 a week,
about 12.5 percent higher than a
year ago because more _persons in
high paid jobs, such as automotive,
steel and construction Industries,
are jobless.
Declining sales in automotive and
related · industries could spark a
recession that could bankrupt the
fund, Papier said. He couldn't
predict when, however.
If that happens, the state would

have to borrow from the federal
government. In 1977, the state was
prepared to' borrow when unemployment soared and the fljlld feU to
J6«).6 million, but didn't have to.
In 1975 and 1976 the state collected
less than it took in. Fourteen other
state funds went broke during that
recession and still owe the government money, Papier said.
Pennsylvania beads the list with a
$1.32 billion debt, while Illinois owes
the government $947 million and
Michigan $235 million.
If a state cannot repay the loan,
the government bas a fonnula it
uses to recoup the funds from a
separate tax employefll pay for the
administration of joblessness
programs.

Three people hurt in minor accidents
Officers report a south bound semi
Three persons were injured and
two drivers cited as the result of operated by Eric C. Brown, 33, Cambridge, 0., went out of control in a
three Saturday accidents in·
curve and overturned.
vestigated by the Gallia-Meigs POI!t,
Brown and a passenger, Jerry
Highway Patrol.
29, Hopewell, 0., claimed
Shaffer,
Officers were called to the scene of
a one-vehicle mishap on SR 588 at injury, but were not immediately
treated.
the junction of U.S. :J:;at 9p.m.
Patrobnen were called called to
The patrol reports a west bound
auto operated by Kenneth Charlton, the scene of a two-vehicle accident
on Rodney-Bidwell Rd., just south of
29, Sheffield Lake, 0., after stopping
at the Intersection, pulled forward, · SR588, at 3:30p.m.
Officers report a northbound auto
ran off the right slde of the roadway
over a guardrail and came to rest in operated by Darrell May Jr.,18, Bidwell, went left of center when the
a ditch.
Sheffield, who was cited on a brakes were applied and struck a
charge of DWI, displayed visible south bound vehicle driven by
signs of Injury but was not im- Charles Drwrunond, 17, Bidwell.
May was cited on a charge of
mediately treated.
The patrol investigated a semi ac- operating an unsafe vehicle.
Meanwhile, three people were
cident on SR 7, just south of CR 28 in
taken
to Holzer Medical Center,
Meigs County, at 8 a.m.
\

treated and released, following an
accident Sunday at 9:15 a.m. on
county road 7 near Harrisonville the
Meigs County Sheriff's Department
reported.
Teressa WOOd, 29, Middleport, was
traveling west on county rood 7
when she lost control due to a rough
section in the highway. Her vehicle
ran off the right side of the roadway
and struck an embankment.
Taken to Holzer Medical Center by
private car were Mrs. Wood, her
eight-year old daughter, Hesther,
and five-year old son, Joohua Dale.
Four other accidents were investigated over the weekend.
Saturday at 3:45 p.m. on SR 124
near The Tackle Box In Syracuse,
Kevin Wolfe, 20,. Rt. 2, Racine was
traveling east on 124 when a deer ran
into the path of his pickup. There

was severe damage to the right front
fender of the pickup.
Saturday at 7:17p.m. on SR 338 a
doe deer was killed when it ran Into
the path of an auto driven by Donnie
Evans, Rt. 2, Racine.
At 10:05 p.m. Saturday James A.
Gheen, 17, Middleport, was making
a left turn into a private drive just as
a noribbound vehicle driven by
Richard A. Sayre, 38, ?t. Pleasant
attempted to pass causing the two
cars to collide. Gbeen was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hoopital by
private car for observation.
Sundsy at 2:20 p.m. on SR ~. two
miles from I..nng Bottom, Amy
Souder, Portland, was traveling east
on 248 when the brakes on her car
grabbed as she was going downhill.
1be vehicle ran oif the road striking
a ditch.

Governor Rhodes endorses Reagan
COLmQJUS, 'Ohio (AP) - ()lio's
Republicans will clOI!e ranks behind
Ronald Reagan well ahead of the
state's June 3 primary If Gov. James
A. Rhodes 1111! his·way.
Officially neutral in the GOP fray
until now, Rhodes appeared with
and endorsed presidential contender
Reagan on Sunday before a crowd of
about 450 Reagan backers on the
lawn at the governor's mansion.
"Ronald Reagan can lead a
crusade to save America from social
and economic rulil and restore this
nation to Its hi8torlc greatness,"
said Rhodes, who only weeks ago at·
tempted without success to get former President Geraid R. Ford to run
again.
Although insisting for the record
be was neutral, the four-term Ohio
governor also had given private en·
couragement earlier to the abortive
campaign of fonner Treasury
Secretary John fl. CoMaUy;
But to the cheers of the Reagan

faithful, mostly GOP state and counnsylvanla and bad 5et up the Ohio rostrum with Rhodes and Reagan.
ty officials and Reagan volunteers,
event to get free national media Also In attendance was Martha
Moore of Cambridge, Ohio's
Rhodes said Republicans in
coverage.
.
national corrunltteewoman.
primaries around the country have
Krumm said he was "Irked" by
Rhodes called in his prepared
shown that "Ronald Reagan can and
the timing, adding "It isn't right to
statement for Ohio's Republicans to
will win in November. They (tl)e
try to lnfiuence a primary In another
join him now in support of the
voters ) have spoken loud and
state."
clear.''
While Ohio's Republican Chair- Californian.
"We must begin now, not after the
Neither Rhodes nor Reagan
man, Earl . T. Barnes, Insisted
denied thilt the timing of the enearlier that the state.organization is convention, to reach out to the
dorsement wa ~ set to give Reagan a
still neutral, he shared the speaker's troubled Democrats and In·
dependents who know that we need
possible boost in the Pennsylvania
rnew direction and will join us,"
primary T~l!Sday . Reagan said he
expects lt to "definitely impact on · Minor smoke damage
Rhodes said.
During a short statement and later
voters In western Pennsylvania."
The Middleport Fire Department
during
a question and answer
Backers of George Bush, the foranswered a call to the Karen Gilkey
session
with
reporters, Reagan al8o
mer United Nations ambassador
mobUe home on High st., at 9:26 .
made
a
pitch
for support from
who stands virtually alone between
p.m. Sunday.
Democrats
and
lndependenta.
Reagan and the GOP nomination,
A blaze was confined to the kir
Rhodes earlier had met with
were critical of Reagan and Rhodes
chen area although there was smoke
Reag811
privately at a hotel. 1be
for the timing when it was leaked
damage throughout the home.
governor
said b.e mentioned·
late last week.
cawre Of the blaze, whlcb was In
Thalman Krunun Jr. of Colwnbus,
the walls around the kitchen stove, , problems faced by the coal and steel
dusb's Ohio campaign manager,
was undetennlned and a monetary lnduatries and told Reapn, IUIIOilll
said tl.e forrner California· governor ,. loss figure bad not been .~ olher thlnp, that they IDIIIt be
llolvecl.
. '
hild run out of money in Pen- · this morn~~~~~.
~.
~~

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