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12-Tht Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomero)', 0 ., Frida)', Aro;:. 19, 1977

l

Blue Cross will go after
grahby doctors, hospitals
·By PATRICIA McCORMAI;K

UPI Hralth FA!lwr
NEW YORK (UP! )- Blue
Cross, under pressure from
big buyers of health
insurance, will begin a
program Jan. 1 to hold down
hospital costs and insurance
premiumS.
Walter J. McNerney, president of the giant Blue Cross
Association of America that
insur.IIS 85 milli&lt;Yt persons.
. Sllid Thursday both labor and
manag·e ment groups have
been urging more costcutting by the nation's 69 Blue
Cross p~ .
'
He said a fraud squad will
aim at abuse in claims and
other areas.
No one knows how
extensiv~' the padding of
claims is, but McNerney said
he hopes Blue Cross
computers will be able to spot
patterns of abuse by specific
doctors and hospitals.
The auto industry , one
angry purchaser of Blue
Cross Insurance, pays from
$1,200 to $1,500 a year for
coverage under a family
plan ,
under
current
contracts.
McNerney said attempts to
let some air out of ballooning
hospital costs also may affect
hospital pr;~ctices. Blue Cross
screening teams will look for
unnecessary . surgery, overhospitalization and uncalled
for laboratory and X-ray
tests.
Hospital costs bave been
going up 15 per cent a year,
twice the rate of other items
on tlle Consumer Price Index.

Medical consumer critics,
congressional

investigators

Ferry service delayed
The free ferry sen1ce for the Gallipolis-Point
Pleasant area did not begin today as some people had
anticipated.

plush!

RENT Only S2.SO per day

'

According wa spokesman at the ferry landing site In
Hendei'S()n, W. Va., dredging began late this morning. It
may take several more days of dredging since there Is a
large area to clear before the site is ready, it was
admitted.
Meanwhile, Dorsel McCoy, president of Three Cities
Ferry Service, said his two ferries, one eight car and one
~ar, were being inspected today by the U. S. Coast
Guard.
·
McCoy stated lbat once the Inspection is complete be
wlli be ready to provide ferry service if the dredging is
finished.

.second to Willillm Greer,
New Haven, on Rated X and
third to Ricky Franklin, Point
Pleasant on Mr. Sandman.
Tony Kennedy, Tuppers
Plains, on Cheeko's Lucky
Buck was first in the flag race
with second going to Richard
Franklin of Point Pleasant on
Pat's Glamour Boy. Debbie
Lewis, Letart, W. Va., on
Jumholiya was first in the
egg and spOon race ; Kathy

BlUE WSTRE shampoo to gel
)&lt;&gt;ur carpers brig11t, clean and

- An analysis of each claun
to see if suhscribers are

Convale-scenl

Gallipolis.

Center

in

A refired coal miner and
farmer , Mr. Griffith was born
Nov. 9, 1909 at Matewan, W .
Va ., a son of the late Elmer

Funeral services will be at
the First 8aptlst Church in
Granville at .. p.m. on Sun.

d&lt;&gt;r.

He was pastor ol the

Ca vary Bapt ist Chu'r ch in

Rio Grande- and a professor
and Hesler Stone Griffith. He at Rio Grande College In the

married the former Margie
·Meede, who survives, on Dec.
I, 19.5.
Other surv ivors are two
sqn:s, Homer of Springfield,
and Jimmy of Route 1,

Middleport ; three daughters,
Mrs. Freda Swan. Route 1,

Mfddleport ; Mrs . Delbert
.&lt;Mary) Swisher, Gallipolis ;
a~

Mrs.· Oa\le (Margaret)
Barrett, LangsvnJe, a step.
son, Billy Queen , Tancliffe,
W. Va., 26 grandchildren, and
four great.grandchlldren.
Also surviving are two
brothers, Edgar of Ga lli poli s .
and Walter of Landville , W.
Va .; lfve sisters, Mrs . Clyde

{Ollie) Burnett. Squire, W.
Va .; Mrs . Anna Whited ,

Hanover, W. va·.; Mrs .
Pauline
Odey,
Orlando,
Fla.; Mrs . Mary Crabtree,
Yukon, W. Va. , and Mrs .
Jerry . ( Virg i l'! l a) NQvak,
Cleveland , and sever·a l
nieces, nephews and cousins.
Preceding him ' in death
besides his parents were a

l~JOs .

ARNOLD L. RANDOLPH
Arnold L Randolph, 78,
former resident of Gallipol is.
died suddenly Thursday 1n his
home at 323 N. Garlleld Ave.,
Columbus.
Mr. Randolph was born

Se'pl. 1, 111'18. one of three

children born to Frank and
Emma Randolph Borden .
Only survivor of that union Is
a sister, Iva Randolph

Jackson, Gallpolls.

LemueL
a
brother ,
preceded hin In death as did a
half.brother ; Charles A.
Borden, who was killed in
service In 1944.
Other survivors are : half.
brothers, Forrest and Nyle
Borden. of Gallipolis, and
Nelson Borden. Los Angeles,

Calif.

Tentative

services

bus .

Stanley, Athens, second, on

Squeaky, In the dash lor
cash, Karl Meeks, Athens
was first on Jiggs witlJ second
place going to Jerry Lewis
Letart, W. \'a. on · Lad/
William Greer on Rated X
was third. Richaid Franklin
on Pat's Glamour Boy was
fll'st in the stake race; David
Elias, Letart, W. Va., on
Snappy Hank.was second and
third was Karl Meeks, Athens
on Jiggs.

Jr. Fair
(CGnllnued from pace 1)
Vet .
Science
( Animal
Dis eaSes ), G.C.
Den ise

Sayer, tie.

Small An imals, G. C. Ralph
Jordan and Rhonda Riebel,
tie ; R.C. Crysta l ._Roush .
· State Fair Winners · from
the Fashion Revue were
Terri Short, clothing from top
to toe ; Paula Life, Clothes for
School ;
' Conn ie
Stout.
Loung ing Clothes ; Deborah

Cookery I; Mary Colwell,
Teens

Tammie

Enterta i n,

and
Starcher, Breads.

Demonstrations .

State

Fair :
Paula Hysell and Tamm ie

Starcher.. G.C., Billy and
Patty Dy~r. G.C. {team );
R.C .. Individual.

BOI

Swine Show Awards : ·
First, Market Hog, .Brian
.Windon ; first pair , BillY
Holcomb; . Grand Champion
Showmanship, Brian Windon .

Sleer Show Results

Grand Champion Steer ,
Paula Miller ; Reserve , Pam
Miller.
Grand
Champion
Showmansh ip, Teresa Carr ;
Reserve, Sonia Carr.
Grand Champion Female
Hereford ,
Rog ie Gau l;
Reserve, Br ian Windon ,
Grand Champion Market
Steer ,
Hereford,
Pa.ula
Miller ; Reserve, Hereford,
·
Pam Miller.
Grand Champion, Market
Steer, AnguS, Noah ; Hysell ; .
Reserve, Paula Hysell.
Grand Champion Market
Steer, Crossbreeds, Rodney
Tripp ; Reserve, Teresa Carr.

RABBITS

and

death .

Mrs . Murray was a
member of
Prov idence
Church · and atterided the
First Bapt ist Chur ch in

CORBETT MANLEY
Corbett Manley , 85, Middleport, died Thursday af.

Mrs. Melba Sheets, Thomas,
Mrs . Robert {Joanl Dayton.

all of Gall ipolis. Eight grand
and one greaf .grandchild
survive. Four brothers and
six sisters preceded her in
death.
She was a member of
Siloam Missionary Baptist
Church ,
Funeral services will be
held 3 p.m. Sunday at the

Waugh-Halley.Wood Funeral
Home with R '! V. Bruce ll·· ·oe

LILLIAN SMITH
Lill ian E. Smith, 71, of

POULTRY

Grand
Champion
Showman, Rocky Pi tzer ;
Best of Show, Kevin Napier.

MASON DRIVE IN
SAT. THRU TUES.

BREAKING POINT
&amp;

A STAR IS BORN

Nolans' gems
accepted for

ternoon at Holzer Medical
Center.
Mr. Manley Wd$ born Aug :
l , 1892 in Gallia County the
~n of the late I. t . and Sara .
Dodds J\o\anJey. He was also
preceded in death by his wife,
Gay Ric:e Manley, . arid
several brot~ers and sisters.
MARlETTA- Howard and
Mr . Nlanley is sUrvived by
Geneva
Nolan of Syracuse,
two · da\Jghters, Mrs . Carl
Meigs
County,
lapidary arTeresa lker, Point Pleasant,
and . Mrs. Pearlie Evelyn
tists specializing in hand
Jewell, Carpenter, Ohio; two
crafted gem stones, will be
sons, Wlllton of Reedsville
showing
their work at the
and Ch"'rles of Cleveland,
several grandchildren, great.
"Indian Summer Festival
grandch ildren and · great.
1977 ," the 18th amual crafts
great · grandchildren and
exhibition
on Sept. 30, Ocseveral n ieces and nephews.
tober 1-2, at the Washington
Funeral services wlll be
held Sunday at 2 p.m. al the ·County Fairgrounds here.
Rawlings Coats Funeral
The festival is sponsored by

. Festival '77

Home with !he Rev. George

Oller officiating . Burial will ·

be · In .J&lt;Irkland Memorial

Gardens. Point Pleasant;
Friends may call at the
funeral home Saturday from
2 to 4 and 7 to 9.

NORTHFIELD
NORTHFIELD,
Ohio
(UP!)- Haste picked up hls
fourth straight victory Thursday night, winning the
·featured $2,400 ninth race at
Northfield Park with a 2:06 15 clocking. ,
Haste, owned by Jerome T.
Osborne of Mentor, Ohio; and
driven by Tom Brinkerhoff,
posted a one-hingth victory
over Name Key and returned
$3.60, $2.60 and $2.2tl. Empire
Denny was third.
The big triple combination
of 7~ was worth $803.70.
A crowd
of
2,830
wagered $266,1163.

fair week. Watermelon seed spitting contest winners on

Pooler, Pomeroy.

,.... Discharged
' Robinson,

-

Hazel

Llilie
Congo,

Wiener, Henry Johnson.

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges Aug.18)
Glenda Bailey, Ester
Baker, Tress a Cremeens,

Mrs. Richard Downard and six years."
son, Bryan Hall, Marie
Henry, Wesley Jackson ,
WASHINGTON - AN IMPORTANT NEW government
James Keeler, Linda Riffle, forecast says a buildup in global grain surpluses will continue
John Rocky, Howard RouSh, during the 1977-crop marketing season which ends next
Wilford Roush , Am'ondal summer, but at a slower pace than predicted earlier. World
Sauvage; Laura Sayre, Helen carryover grain reser~es next August will reach 186.2 milli~n
Smith, Amanda Spencer, ·· metric tons, up !0.3 per cent from tllis summer to the second
Harry Speraw, Phillip Sprow, highest level on record, the report said. Last month the reserve
Zelphia Thomp'son, Floyd level expected in rnid-1978 had been forecast at record 195.8
Wallace, Arron Young .
million tons.
·
(Births Aug.18)
The report from the Agriculture Depai:tment Thursday
Mr . and Mrs . Patrick showed also tllat 'global grain production prospects declined 1'
Bailey, a daughter, Jackson ; per cent from July wAugust but remain at the second-bighest
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Phalen, level in history. The new estimates, based on mid-August
a son, New Haven, W, Va.
condiUoos, were significant because they are being used by •
administration farm officials to help make final decisions on
PLEASANT VALLEY
propo!jed acreage-cutback programs for 1978 American crops
DISCHARGES - Ronnie of wheat, corn and other grains .
Whitt,
Pliny;
George
Jr.,
Point
C.a landros,
Pleasant; Mrs. John Vance,
Bidwell.; Suzetta Burdette,
Mt. Alto ; James Spires,
Gallipolis Ferry ; Lorie
Pierce, Pomeroy ; Mrs. Cleo
The medical staff at
The previously reported
R. Smith, Glenwood; Mrs. Gallipolis State Institute, as a case is now well and has been
Charles Rogers, Point result of an exhaustive " discharged from the local
Pleasant ; Judith Bacon , follow-up of the typhoid case hospital. · The probable
Pomeroy ; Blaine Perry, reported earlier this month, carrier is now being treated
Milton; Mrs. Ira Potts, has located the possible for the condition, ·and all
Henderson ; Grace Rogers, carrier source of the disease. necessary precautions have
Henderson; Mrs . Charles
The typhoid organism has been carried out.
Long, Gallipolis Ferry ; been located in the stool
'
Mattie Dunn, Point Pleasant; culture of a resident of the
Grace
Buxton,
Point same living unit from which
Pleasant; Ramson Kelly, the previous case came. Tbls
Arbuckle;
Edward F. patient has never exhibited
GREENVILLE, S.C. (tiPI)
Cheesebrew, Point Pleasant ; . symptoms of typhoid fever
Veteran offensive guard
Donald Hall, Point Pleasant ; now or in the past, yet carries
Len
Goi$alk underwent knee
Ki!llie
Stewart,
West tlle organism in her body. ·
surgery
Thursday for
l;olumbia and Mrs. Marvin
Further tests of conligament
damage
suffered in
McGuire, Pomeroy.
finnation are awaited from
Atlanta's
loss
to
the New
the Ohio Department of
York
Jets
last
weekend
and
Health labs in Columbus and
the l;ommunicable Disease the Falcons · announced he
may be lost for !he season.
labs in Atlanta, Ga.

a

leather., textiles,

seconc;i race ~

.

and wood as well as painting·,
There were 26 winning
drawing, sculpture, and . tickets 0n tlle 4-2-3 grouping
jewelry making. Thi~ year, of Turn the Cube, Run Sugar
.the Indian Summer Festival Run and Perfect Partner in
will once again have tne nintll race trifec\8 , each
•
·
demonstrations and perform- worth $1,740.
ances by countey craftsmen
A crowd of 4,633 bet
and musicians.
$440,3011.

Swtday edition is scheduled
WARREN, Ohio .(UP!)
The
Warren '"Tribune
Chronicle
will
begin
publishing a Sunday editioo
Sept. 11, making the
new~paper . a seven-day
publication, Editor James F.
Brown has amounced.
The Tribune, now in its
!66th year and the second
oldest. newspaper in Ohio,
began publishing a Saturday
morning edition July 30. It

VO. 12

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

NO. 29

GALLIPOIJS - In a surprise move
Saturday l;ounty School Superintendent
Thomas Hairston reassigned his
elemen~ry principals for-.the upcoming
school term. His action was taken under
autllority of the Ohio Revised Code 3319.01.
Supt. Hairston said the changes were
made for a better arrangement in terms of
education. He said he Is now "placing
expertise in schools where U Is needed tlJe

continues as an afternoon
newspaper Monday . tllrough
Friday.
The Sunday edition will be
e;~lled tlle Sunday Tribune.
Tribune officials said the
Sunday edition will contain a
color comics section, a
Sunday magazine, television
magazine and a full range of
news and editorial coverage,
features and sports.

Notebooks - Pens • Pencils - Filler
Paper- Glue- Rulers- CalculatorsErasers- Legal Pads- Sketch Books
and many more items.
'

NEW FALL CLOTHING
ARRIVING DAII.Y

MEN'S &amp; BOYS
Dress Pants- Fashion Jeans • Shirts
· Sweaters- Knit Shirts - Underwear
Socks · Belts - Jackets and~ Coats.

WOM~N'S &amp; GIRL'S
Blouses - Slacks - Jeans • Sweaters •·
Coordinates - Lingerie - Coats •
Jack~ts - Knit Tops· Belts - Jewelry
- Hos•ery and Cosmetics.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

SUNDAY, AUGUST 21, 1977

''

most." ·

The · onlY negative response to the
changes by princlpats present was the late

date they occurred. Hairston, however, be the new principal at Haman TracG.
Alfred Scarberry, Rt. 1, Thurman,
commended his principalB for their hard
work but he warned tllat even more work principal the past two years at BidwellPorter and Vinton Schools, was reassigned
would be expected this year.
Reassignments on the elerilentary to Addaville Elementary School. Elton
level for tlJe 1977-78 school term were as Savage, Gallipolis, principal the past year
at Addaville and Cheshire-Kyger
follows:
Allee Flilks, Scottown, principal at Elementary SchoolB replaces Scarberry as
Hannan Trace Elementary _since 1971 was principal at Bidwell-Porter.
James Cheatnut, Gallipolis, recently
transferred to the princlpalshlp at Cenemployed
as a principal after teaching and
terville Elementary.
.
coaching
five years at Haman Tra.ce
Ronald Paxton, l;olumbus, employed
Elementary
School, was assigned as
last week as an elementary teacher, will
Pl'incipal at Vinton Elementary School.
Paige Sheets, Gallipolis, principal at

I \t-~ l I I I

. MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

PRICE 25 CENTS

Sowards, of Co!~u1bus. Sowards bad. gone

to a restroom when the accident occurred.
Fooce's body was found submerged in
tllree feet of water. ·
City police officers and the Gallipolis
volunteer fire department were called to
tlJe scene at 8:50 a.m.

WELOOME KATHY -A sign welcoming Katherine M. Crumbley, Ohio's first
elected lady sheriH and tlle third female sheriff in tbe ·United States, was hung
across a portion of tlle Meigsl;ounty Jail honoring her on her visit to Meigs l;ounty
Friday, a guest of Sheriff James J. Proffitt. Sheriff Crumbley visited tlJe Meigs
l;ounty Fair Friday evening,accompanied bY her husband, James, a coal miner.
They have one son, Joslla, 26 months old. Mrs. Crumbley has received world-wide
recognition since her election and has appeared twice on NBC's Tooight Show
hosted by Johnny Carson. Shown are, 1..., Jim Crumbley, Sheriff Crumbley, Sheriff
•James Proffitt and Mrs. James (Marjorie) Proffitt.
1

Hua to lead China .
HONG KONG (UP!) - The &lt;llineSe
Communist Party's 11th National
Congress coofirmed Hua Kuo.feng as
Chairman Mao Tse-tung's successor,
expelled Mao's widow and pledged Hus
will lead the world's largest nation "into
the 21st century," Peking radio said
Saturday.
ln a speech broadcast less tlJan 48 hours
before SeCretarY of State Cyrus Vance's
arrival for the Carter administration's
' first high~evel talks with Chinese leaders,
Hua declared, ''the Soviet Union and the
United States are the source of a new
world war.';
Hua called on &lt;llina's more than 8110
miJlion peqple to press ''unrelenting"
worldwide struggles against the two
superpowers;
The week-long party congress in
Peking's Great Hall of the People fonnally
approved tlJe expulsion from the party of
Mao's widow, Chiang &lt;lllng, and her tllree'
cUI arts in the "Gang of Four," Peking
· Radio said.
A Cllllliilunlque said the discredited
radicals "completely perverted" the
poUdes and theories that made Mao ''the
greatest Manis! of our time."
Thesessioo, which eaded 'lbunday, also
ralllled a political report that look Hua
four hours to read, adopllld a new party
coqllltutioo and elected a new m.mernber
central committee -201 full members and
13Z altunates.

Centerville and Cadmus Elementary the administrators. It was also reported that hour. They were Carl Mefford, North
past tnree years and prior to tllat Cadmus Myers will be given a supplemental Gallla; William Marks, Southwestern;
principal for six years, was named prin· contract at a later date for duties to be Margaret Hall, Haman Trace and James
cipal at Southwestern High School specified J,ater. Cadmus now has no L. French, Kyger Creek. Employed as
replacing Uoyd L. Myers. Sheets holds a principal. That leaves only two holdover substitute secretaries were Patricia
certificate in both elementary and high principals in the county system, Robert L, Elliott and Carolyn Holland. They will
Lanning, Kyger Creek High School and receive $2.75 per hour.
school administration.
In other matters, tlJe board accepted
Myers, principal at Southwestern High Paul Dillon, Hannan .Trace.
the
resignations of Mrs. Elizabeth MitWalter
Stowers
employed
earlier
this
School the last eight years, was assigned .
.
chell,
a cook, and Linda Deel and Joanne
month
is
tlle
new
high
school
principal
at
as principal at Cheshlre-Kyger Elemen·
North
Gallia
.
He
replaced
Clifford
WUson
R&lt;lberts,
Title I aides.
tary School. Myers served as a basketball
-Employed
Ervin Arrowood .at $5 per
who
resigned
to
become
transportation
coach and teacher at Southwestern prior to
day
to
transport
Scott Arrowood, a handirectur
and
maintenance
superviSOr
at
becoming principal there. ·
'
dicapped
child.
the
Central
Office.
The transfers of Sheets and Myers also
- Authorized clerk, Mrs. Naomi
The hoard employed Millie Thompson,
means a change in the salary staius of both
Point Pleasant, a graduate of Rio Grande Beman to advertise for bids for coal.
- Approved tlle clerk-treasurer's
!;allege and the University of Oklahoma as
an English, Speech and Journalisr(l in- bond for three years witll Buckeye Union
Insurance through the Wiseman. Agency.
structor at Hannan Trace High School.
-Met \n. executive session twice to
Title I aides employed on one-year
rontrscts were Shelia Arrowood, Marilyn discuss personnel and roofing contracts.
Jones, Carolyn Holland, Patricia Marcum . - Rejected bids on roof repair for
and Candy Fisher. Other educational aides SoutlJwestern, North Gallia, Kyger Creek
·
given one-year contracts were Shirley and Addaville Schools.
- Discussed special meeting .for 7:30
Hudson, Sharon Shaffer and Judy Cox.
Bus drivers employed for kin· p.m. Thursday, Aug. 25.
dergarten routes at the rate of $5 per hour
The body was removed to the Waugh • were Leonard Newberry, Jesse ·Chapman,
Halley • Wood Funeral Home.
Wllliam Marks and Ervin Arrowood,
Officers Saturday morning in· Southwestern area; Jean Smith, Mildred
PONIES llACED FRIDAY
vestigated the theft of two patens (com- Donahue, Phyills Mulholand and Billy
ROCK SPRINGS - Pony running
munioo bread plates) from St. Peter's Hale, North Gallla ·area; Inez McGuire, races were held Friday at the Meigs
Episcopal Church on Second Ave. Fatller Connie Johnson, Merrill S. Waugh and County Fair. Winning first place money in
Albert H. MacKenzie said one was gold, Mary E. Waugh, Harman Trace area, and the 48 to S2 inch class was Scott Ferris,
the other silver and gold plated. They-were Wayne Palmer and Clara Day, Kyger Route 2, Albany on Skip. Ferris riding
Chico won first place in the 52 to S6 inch
valued at $19S.
Creek area.
One arrest recorded Friday night was ·
class
and Jennings Beegle, Minersville
VIvian Grant was employed as a
Don E. Carter, Gallipolis, charged with regular bus driver and (our drivers were was first on Old Boy in the over S6 inch
possession of marijuana and DWI ..
hir~d for vocational school routes at $5 per class.

Rural Gallia man
dies b'y accid·e nt
GALUPOIJS:.. A 33-year old resident
of SR 233, (Rt. 2, Patriot), .Arthur Junior
Fooce, accidentally drowned _Saturday
morning whlle fiShing in the Ohio River
near the Public Use Area off First Ave.
Dr. ·Donald R. Warehime, Gallla
l;ounty l;oroner, said Fooce apparently
suffered an epileptic sel.zure which
resulted in his drowning. Fooce had bee.n
fishing with a brother-in-law, Charles

into 21st c_entury.
SCHOOL SUPPLIES

and trainer, Pomeroy and his children with Trn Rhos after a

Eleh_lentary school principals shi

·Possible ·carrier located

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

first place win in the second race at the Meigs Fair. See Page
C9 today for coverage of Friday races.

tnttS

(CGilllnued flullpllt 1)
vice president who almost beclime president, has terminal
cancer. But the Democratic Party's "Happy Warrior" hopes
to retur)l to the Senate this I aU, Dr. John Najarian, chief
University of Minnesota surgeon, said doctors operated on
Humphrey and discovere&lt;j an inoperable cancerous pelv' c
tumor Thursday.
But Najarian said that with the help of chemotherapy
Humphrey may r~turn to the Senate early in September.
"He,s so. wonderfully 'alive/' Naj8rian said . " But it's
terminal cancer :• He said he is not sure how long the 66-year- ·
old Minnesotan, who almost beat Richard M. Nixon in tlle 19687
presidential election, can live.
" It could be mdnths, it could be years," he said. But he
said Htunphrey probably can't take chemotherapy, which
slows down the cancer spread, more tban "four, five, maybe

VETERANS MEMORiAL
Admitted
Frank
.Westfall, Cheshire; Gladys
Ch ff
Reeds 'll
H tt'
a ee,
Vl e;
a te
Arms , Syracuse ; Elsie

DON SPENCER, FORMERLY of Pomeroy and the son
of the late Sidney Spencer, well known harness horse driver

•

News •• in Briefs

Hospital News

THISTLEDOWN
the Manetta Area Arts and
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
Crafts League, supported by ·(UP! ) -,- Highway Robbery ,
grants from the . Gannett witll Joel McCullar in the
Foundation and the Ohio Arts irons, won Thursday's
l;orrunission.
· featured eighth race at
Judging for the festival was Thistledown, covering the six
on July 23 when of 161 entries furlongs in 1:113-5 over a fast
104 were accepted and six · track to pay $4.60, $3.40 and
were placed on a waiting Jist. $2.20.
The festival is open to artists
· Auburn Comers placed and
and craftpersons throughout Mean Mama showed.
The 5-4 daily double of
the U.S.A. Original handcraft
work in all media is ac- TraCIIS of Vega and Gusty
ceptable.
Jiver returned $153.2tl. A
Visitors will bave an op- consolation double of $5.00
pol'( unity to see artists and was paid when Dr. Roth (1)
craftsmen at · work in was a late scratch in the
cera~cs,

Thursday were Bob Sylvester of Delray Beach, Fla., in the
adult division and Damon Gibbs, Mason, youth division and
Friday's winners were Bob Sylvester in the adult contestants
and Jayne HoeRich, Pomeroy, in tlle youth division. Dally
winners have received cash prizes of $5. Grand prize winner
of the week will receive $50.

GRAND CHAMPION OVERALL - This divisnm in the Junior Fair was won by Ed
Holter, grand champion, and Tony Carnahan, reserve champion.

two Gilbert Luckadoo, Marilyn

Dale ,

officiatirig . Burial wUI be in
Ridgelawn Cemetery .
Friends may cal at the
Everett ·
funeral home from 2· 4 and 7·9
Murray in Novembe·r , .1924, in
p.m. Saturday.
Huntington, Two brothers
and one sister preceded her in

·'

Grand
Champion
Showman, Renee Kaldor ;
Best of Show, Jimmy Parker.

Hear a rattle!
Don't p&lt;Jnic.
Get&lt;~ low-cost, f&lt;~sH~ct io n Auto Lo&lt;~ n .
We like doing things your way.

Pluma W. Murray, 75. a
resident of Rt . 2, Gallipolis
(Centenary community) died
at 7: 30p.m . Thursday in St.
M.ary 's Hospital. Huntington .
She had been in failing
health the past two years.
Mrs. Murray taught in Cabell
County schools In West
Virginia for nine years arid in
the Gallia County schools for
26 years before retiring.
'$he w'as born Aprll 15, 1902.
in Gallla County, daughter of
the late Columbus and Eva

sons

Minersville, died Thursday
night at Holzer Med ical
Center . Born Aug . 27 , 1906,
Gallipolis.
She was a member of the . she was the daughter of the
late James S. and Edith Bath
County
Retired
Woodyard, Sports Clothes ; Gall i oiJ
Hood. She was preceded in
Teachers
Assn.
Mar y
Co lwell. Dress · up
death by her parents , gne
will
be
Funeral
services
Outfit ; Barbara Douglas .
infant . daughter ,
thr~e
.Coats and Jackets ; Jeannie held 1 p .m . . Sunday at the
brothers and one sister.
Waugh
'
Halley
.
Wood
Boggs , Cloth i ng
She was a member of the
Complements. ~"
.
. Funeral Home . with Rev . · Syracuse United · Methodist
Lush!r
.
offiCiating
.
Charles
4-H Food Fair; Best of
Church : Ft,~neral services will
Burial will be in Providence
Show, State F~lr :
.
be
held at 3 p.m. Sunday at
Cemetery.
~ Sharon Karr, All American
the
EwinrChapelln Pomeroy
Friends
may
call
at
the
.
Foods ; Becky Eichinger, Do
with bunal In Beec:h GroVe
funeral
home
between
5
and
9
Your Thirig with F90d ; Paula
ce_m etery. Friends may call
Hysell ,
Self-De)ermined p.m . Saturday.
at
. the funeral home after 7
Preserve &amp; Serve Project ;
p.m . this even ing .
Lea Ann Gaul. Outdoor

Karr, G.C.; Fae
Reibel, R.C.; Beth Perr in,

ABU
OF

Two

. .R.C. Renee Riebel.
Waugh ..
Ohio Birds, no G.C., R.t . . Clarke
She
married
Tamm y . Pitzer and · Chad
Whit~

~fHHon

DRIVING

mar

dau_ghters survive :

Pomeroy National Bank where Bill Clark, left, Pomeroy, and
Blll Cannon, &lt;lleshire, entertained in the lobbY during the
morning hours as a part of the bank's observance of county

are

Monday, Aug . 22 in Colum-

Korean .con flict ; two grand-·
MARY THORNTON.
children, Delbert Swisher,
Mary Ann Thornton, 78, a
Jr ., and Patty Qu'een, and a
res ident of Eureka Star
brother , Emery.
Funeral services will be Route, died at 3:05 p.m.
held at 1 p.m. Saturday at the Thursday in Pleasant Valley
Center ,
Church of Jesus Chr isl, Route Convalescent
Piketon.
1, Rutland with the Rev . Ray
She had been in ta ili ng
Roust"l officiating . Burial wifl
health
lhe past nine months.
be in the Rife Cemetery at
was born July 25, 1899,
Addls.on . Friends
call at in She
Twp., davghter of
the Walker Fun~ra Home theGuyan
late R. W. and America
until 11 a.m . Saturday. The
family will , receive friends Sheets BurneHe.
She was preceded in death.
from 7 to 9 this evening.
by her husband . Stanley
Thornton , in 1958.

PLUMA MURRAY

TilE BANJO WAS BACK in town Saturday at the

.

son, Bobby , killed in the

(Continued from pal• 1l

groufld..il dirt and grime. And use

HOMER E.' GRIFFITH
W. T. PACKER
RUTLAND'- Homer Earl
Wilfred T. Packer, 731 East
Grltflth, 67: Route I, Mld- Mtlple St., Granville, Ottio
dleporl , died Wedn•sday died Thursday In the Lincoln
afternoon at •he Pinecre~t , County Hospital In Newark .

and public health authorities getting all of the services
have been particularly which have been billed to the
critical of the excessive plan.
testing and screening by
"We also are suggesting
. pathologists and radiologists. that aU the plans increase
Most hospitals make their use of certain optional
money on the laboratory and activities that keep costs
X-ray departments . The down ," ' McNerney . said.
more tests , the more money. · "These include home care,
Other requirements under second-opinion
surgery,
the mandatory Blue Cross ambulator y (care ), same- ·
l;ost containment program day &gt;.'. surgery
and
include :
preadmission testing:
-Educational programs
" The
Blue
Cross
directed at individual sub- organization
has
an
scribers,
gr oups
and obligation to influence the
providers. These will stress bealth care delivery system
prevention of unnecessary with which it closely
and inappropriate use of interacts. It is clearly a
health care services.
shared obligation
and
,- Active coo rdinati on o£ responsibility with institubenefits
to
eliminate tional health providers,
duplicate payments to physicians, government,
subscribers covered by more labor, business and our
than one health policy.
subscribers."

Horses

Rent o BlUE WSTRE shornpooer
ro ~ me SCAJbbing ocrioo yoo
nee&lt;Ho loosen oM lift our

!I

Area Deaths

Sheep
Murray Grey · judged
breed judged at fair
ROCK SPRINGS - The Arts Green
Acres Farms, Route 2, Coolville, exhibited
the grand champion bull and tlJe grand and
champion Ifemales in the Murray.
reserve
.
Grey breed during open class dairy cattle
judging at the Meigs County Fair. Aris
Green Acres also won three first places
and one second in the classes of the
judging.
· In Hereford judging, Earl Cox of
Coolville ~xhibitod the grand champion
bull and tlle grand champion female with
Brian Windon·, Route 3,

Pomeroy,

exhibiting the re..rve champion bull and
Gaul, Route 3, Pomeroy,
'The l,SlO delegates, representing 35 nhibiting the reserve champion female.
mi,llioo party ·members, elected Hua In classes of the judging, Cox won four
chairman of Its 223-member presidium at firsts, two 8ecorids and a third; Windon
the outset of the congress.
'
won a first and a third; Roush Hereford
"The minds of the delegates were at Farnf, New Haven, won two firsts, two
ease and they spoke freely," the radio seconds and a third ·and Roger Gaul, n,
said.
Route 3, Pomeroy, won a second.
Marshal Yeh Orlen-ylng, Teng Hsiaoping, Ll Hsienoflin anq Wang Tuilg-hsing
were elected vice chainnen of tlle
presidium. They were expected to be
elected party vice chairmen when the new
central committee holds its first plenary
·session.
·
Wang, Mao's former bodyguard, also
was- named secretary general of the
presidium.
GALLIPOLIS - Joe Alley, director of
Hua paid tribute in his political report to the l;omprehenslve Employment Training
Mao and other party leaders who died Act (CETA) for Gallla l;ounty announced
during the past two years.
Sa!urdaY the Ohio Bureau of Employment
He said the purge of the "Gang of Four" will screen candidates for 17 security
and the campaign to eliminate their guard positions under tlJe CETA program.
supporters laid the foundation for a
Guardli will be employed .under a
development plan ·to modernize &lt;llina and program allocated for nine monthtl under
make the nation·a superpower by the end
Title IV. Those employed will be placed at
of this century. '
. various IICbools throughout tlle city and
Yeh, the No, 2 man •in the power county. Once employed, the guards must
structure, delivl!{ed a report on the new take a law enforcemmt !reining course at
constitution and praised Htia 's leadership,
and on weekends.
saying he was a worthy succeaor to Mao nights
Alley allo said tllat applications are
. and had been "chosen bY Chairman Mao being processed through the Ohio Bureau
himself."
·
Tong, a t~ime purge victim who was of Employment fOr 10 poeltlona under the
CETA program designated to repair
reinstated to No. 3 rank in &lt;llina less tlJan
a month ago, delivered tbe closing report county . bulldlngs. Laborers are being
sought for tllat project . .
to the congress.
Lea Ann

ROCK
SPRINGS
Reserve and grand champion
sheep were selected in
judging at tlJe Meigs l;ounty
Fair. ·
,
Dan Dailey, Route I, Guysc
ville, exhibited the grand and
reserve champion ewes in tlJe
Dorsey breed and won firsts
in two c)asses.
In the Suffolk breed, James
H. Bearhs, Route 3, Pomeroy,

exhibited the grand champion ram and Herbert Ervin,
Route 1, Racine, the reserve
champion

ram.

Carr's,

Tuppers Plains, Registered
Suffolk exhibited tlle grand
champion ewe and Eleanor
Leonard, 'Route 3, Pomeroy,

GRAND OF THE GRAND - Sonia Carr, left, won the Grand Champion Single Market
Lamb award with the ewe she Jmeels beside here. Reserve Champion is Todd Tripp, at
right. With :t.jiss Carr and Tripp Is Meigs l;ounty Sheep Queen Teresa Carr, who presented
the trophies and ribbons.

the reserve champion ewe.
In the ram, one year and

under two class, first went to
Eleanor Leonard, second t~
Bearhs and third to Ervin. In

Carr, Tripp .win top prizes

Security guards class, Carr's Registered
, Suffolk
won first; Todd Tripp
of
Route
3;
ned
Scree
.
to be
second, 'and Rodney Tripp, "
the ewe, two years and over

Pomeroy, 'won

Route 3, Pomeroy, won third.
In the ewe, one year and
under two class, Carr's won
first and second place wltlJ
Rodney Tripp winning third.
In the ewe, lamb ~lass
Eleanor Leonard won first
and Carr's won second and
· third.

Weather
Cloudy today, showers
likely in the afternoon. Highs
in tlJe upper ·711s. Clearing
Monday, highs in the 70s.
Probabllity of precipitation
40 pet. this afternoon, 2lJ· pet.
tonight. Lows tonight in the
50s.

\

POMEROY - Thursday the second and third year
night's 'judging of the Meigs, class, won the Reserve
l;ounty Junior Sheep Show, · Championship.
sponsored by 4-H and VICA,
Other major award win·
saw Sonia Carr and , Todd ners; receiving trophies and
Tripp walk away from the prizes donated by P. J.
show ring with tlle top two Pauley of Nationwide In·
prizes. Judge Joe Brown, an surance; Lois Pauley of Stout
extension agent from Mount Realty, and Crafty Ladles
Vernon, Oh., deemed Miss Handicrafts were Johnny
Carr's Champion Single Rice, Grand Champion
Market Ewe the Grand HampolrH'e Ewe-; Nicky
Champion Market Lamb. Leotlard, Grand Champion
whlle Tripp took the Reserve · Suffolk Ra.n, Over-all
Champion award , with his Champion Ram, Grand
lamb.
Champion Flock, Reserve
The rate of gain trophy was &lt;llamploo Hampsire Ewe,
. awarded to Eric Mlller whose ·Reserve Champion Suffolk
animal averaged .91 lb. per Ewe; Dan Dailey, Grand and
day. Scott Bearhs, Old Pro
Reserve Champion Dorest
Showmanship winner, was
Ewe arid Reserve Champion
judged over-all · Grand
Showman; Sonia carr, Grand
Champion Showman and
Champion Suffolk1 Ewe,
Sonia carr, reserve champ in

Reserve Champion Showman
in the 2nd and 3rd year class,

and Champion Single Market
Lamb; Scot! Bearhs, Reserve
Champion Suffolk Ram,
Grand Champion Pair, and
Cbampion Single Market
Wetheri

Herbie

Ervin,

Reserve Champion Flock;
Todd Tripp, Grand Chlllllpion
Futurity Class, Reserve .
Single Market Ewe, · and
Reserve Single Market
Lamb; Tam Bowers, Reserve
Champion, Futurity Class,
and Champion · Showman
.Novice Class; Teresa Carr,
Grand Champloo Showman,
2nd and 3rd year class; Noah
Hysell, Reserve Showmap·
Novice Class; and Roger
Riebel, Reserve Champion
Pair.

'

�A-3-The Sundav Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Aug 21, 1977

A-2-TMSunday Times-Sen line!, Sunday, Aug. 21, 1m

·Point Pleasant Man
Dies In Rt. 62 Crash
A head.an collision on Rt. 62 claimed .the life of a Point
Pleasant man Friday evening at about 9:10p.m., according to
Sgt. Detner Roush III of the Mason County Sheriff's Office.
Pronounced dead at Pleasant Valley Hospital was Ray
Joseph.Bri!ffiley, 69, 2811 Jackson. Ave.
' The other driver. Todd D. Handley. 21, 2225 Jefferson Ave.,·
· sustained injuries and was also transported to Pleasant
: Valley Hospital. He was later transferred to Holzer Medical
; Center.
· A hospital spokesman there
Both vehicles were reportedly
;this morning said he was in demolished.
·stable condition suffering
Brumfield's body was later
from a broken collarbone and
taken
to the Crow-Hussell
:jaw.
Funeral
Home where funeral
: Brumley's death marks the
services will be held Monday.
;eighth traffic fatality in
This accident was one of
·Mason County recorded so far
three
investigated Friday by
:this year, according to a
the
Mason
County Sheriff's
' spokesman from the West
'
Virginia State Police. Units
·from the State Police, in.cluding Cpl. ·J . L. Fitzwater,
were at the scene assisting
· Sheriff's Department officers.
Sgt. Detner Roush III and J.
E. Perry.
They were joined by the
Point Pleasant Volunteer Fire
Department and the Point
Pleasant Rescue Squad.
members who freed the
Brumfield's body from the
wreckage and tranSported the
victims to the hospital.
According to Sgt. Roush, the
accident remains under investigation, although it is
believed Handley
was
traveling
north
while
Brumfield was traveling
south.
The two vehicles met on Rt.
62 near the Traffic Circle.

Department.
T-wo hours later. another
driver was injured and his car
demolished, when it went out
of control on R.t. 62 pear Leon,
according to Deputy J.E:
Perry.
Treated at Pleasant Valley
Hospital was Harry E. Nelson
Jr .. '1:1, Charleston.
· According to Deputy Perry,
Nelson was traveling north
when his 1972 Oldsmobile
dropped off the right side of
the road. He reportedly lost
control of the car as it traveled
along a ditchline and even·
tually turned over.
No injuries were reported in

" God ••Jd, And to every beast
of the earth, and to every fowl
of tbe air, and to every thing
that ereepeth upoo the earth,
wherelll there Is life, 1 have
given every green herb for
meat; and it was so," Genesis
1:30

a lw&lt;rear accident, also on Rt.
62 near Leon. at ahout 4:4&gt;
p.m., according to Deputy
W.P. Maynard. Gladys J .
Yt.tsl, i2, Rl. 3 Leoni and

Sylvester A. Hendricks, 29,
Hurricane, were identified as
the drivers.
The accident resulted when
Yost slowed her car down to
avoid colliding with another
car. According to Deputy
Maynard, Hendricks who was

traveling behind, was unable
to stop and struck Yost's car.
Estimates of $1 ,000 and $400
worth of damage resulted to
the Yost and Hendricks cars,
respectively.

Handley, 21, 2225 Jefferson Ave., Friday evening near the
traffic circle on Rt. 62. - Photo courtesy of State Police
Cpl. J. L. Fitzwater.

FATAL ACCIDENT- Ray Joseph Brumley, 69, 2811
Jackson Ave., Point Pleasant, was killed in this car as a
result of a head-on collision with a truck driven bv Todd D.

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Published e\'ery weekday evening
except Saturday. Second Cl.!tsa
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Paid at. Gallipolis. Oh.io

45631.
THEDAU.YSENTINEL

....'

111 Court St, Pomervy. 0 . 45769.
Publlstled every week day evening

'

eXl:ept Saturday. Entered as second
cLass mailin~ matter at Pomeroy,
Otlio Post Office.
•
By carrier daily and Suriday 7Sc

..•.

per week. Motor route $3.25 per month.

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. ;/. Hours Monday · friday 8-5 ·Saturday 8-12 noon
.

Coolville plead guilty on charges of grand
theft of the Marion Sloter logging
operation on Rainbow Ridge on Aug. 8
when they appeared on a bill of in·
formation before Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Judge John C. Bacon Saturday
morning.
•
Judge Bacon ordered pre-sentence investigations to be conducted by Ohio Adult
Parole Authority. Both were remanded to
the custody of James J. Proffitt, sheriff.

.

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Ph. 44&amp;0132

SAT. TltRU TUES.
BREAKING POINT
&amp;

A STAR IS BORN

-

(J)LO\'a ·
'1'/u•tJ tr t

•

ONE WEEK
Tonightthru

Sun·.Mon

him Sept. 9, and is
Wlconcerned about longevity.
"I don't give a doggone how
long I live," he says. "I've
been near dead 10 times. It
doesn't matter if I die in the
next five minutes or live 100
years. I just mind God. 1
know Him, and He knows me.
"Whenever I leave ·this
earth, I'm going to a new
home."

Tue·

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'' Aug:lf-22..23.

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Mon. I Fri. 9:30 til 8
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this
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••

· Tbree-dlglt number834.
Five-digit numbers53248.
..
Lucky Buck
Tbree-dlglt number510.
Sb·dlglt number312181.

is agreed on

CHARLESTON, W. Va .
(UPI) - A United Mine
Workers official representing
the union's most mlliiant
district predicted Saturday
strllr.ing coal miners would
return to work after the UMW
International executive
Board meets Monday.
Other UMW officials
welcomed the long-sought
meeting, but were not as
cer!aln It would halt the
strike tha~ has paralyzed coal
production ln West Virginia.

Annette 0 'Toole
G. 0 . Spradlin

407.

Budget finally
HARRISBURG, Pa. (UP!)
- For the first time in a
week, the miorble halls of the
Pennsylvania Capitol didn't
echo Saturday with the llllgrY
&amp;bouts of hungry welfare
recipients and p_ayless
government workers.
After 51 days of fiscal
crisis, voodoo dances by
welfare protesters, state

Robbya.lnscin

LUCKY WINNERS
This week's winning Ohio
Lottery numbers:
PolO' Gold
Ttlree-dlglt number-

employe strikes at prisons
and mental hospitals and a
climactic fist fight on the
floor of the State House,
Pennsayivanla has a budget.
The House voted early
Saturday to . approve a $5.1
billion 1977-78 fiscal year
budget. The crucial 102nd
vote was registered on the
electronic tally board at 12;13
a.m. Gov. Milton Shapp
signed the bill an hour later.

UMW leader
predicts min~
to open Monday

•La·Z·Boy Chair5
.

MASON DRIVE IN

examination which Is given on a first come
first served basis each Monday beginning
at 9 a.m.
The public is instructed not to call any
departments in Middleport clty hall about
driver examinations. Appoinbnents will
not be honored by phone In Meigs County. ,
In Gallia County •PPo\nbnents -still
are made by calling the . Gallia·M;eigs
Patrol Post headquarters.

·

· last \'ear you thouah't

about It but then ju5t never
1ot arOLJnd to it. This
summer m~ke tkede&lt;ision
that will chanae your whole
summer life style. A
/Polynes,;ae Pool in vour back
. Polynesian Pools come
In the Standard. Lo-Huns
and Delu ~ee Concrete models.
Thev come in an infinite
varietv of sizes and shipes.
Cal~ or write today, our friendly ,
sales people will sive you any
Information you like with

~

.

ab!olutely no obU,.tion .

~Mg~nioakltMilablo.

See how thP-Sire a. shape
pool you d1oose wol.l ld look
in ~ sketch o~ vour own back yard ..

855 Second Avenue

Gallipolis, 446-7900

You area little late in the season now but get your pool
in, E"joy it some this year, and have it readY for u_
se
next spring.

-

SUNDAY thru SATURDAY
AUGUST 21 THRU AUGUST 27

CHICKEN
.;.SNACK BOX

•

Regular testing
of river begun

·cAROLINA LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
312 6th STREET

cares.
"One man offered me
$3,000 the other day for
helping him," be says.
.catfish uses his famUy tree
as further proof of the herbs'
miracle-working abilities.
His grandmother lived to
be 103, delivered alll2 .of ber
children, bad three husbands
to the age 70, and · "she
married one at 98 and wore
him otit in half a year,'! be
sniles.
.
· ·
Barely literate, it took
catfish more than two years
.tocovertheHolyBible, "but I
remember everything I read,
and I can teach it, too."
Deeply religious, he
attends Christian services
Despite his popularity, cat. twice on Sunday and forbids
fish lnsl8ts he rarely sells his tobacco, lj!rohol, cr illegal
herbl at ·cost, losing mooey drugs oo the premises. He
most of .the time. Grateful appears much younger than
patients supply his flnanclal the 6001 blrth(jay · awaiting

about painting

Headquarte~ for Devoe®: the most experienced name In paint ·

:

MIDDLEPORT- Effective Mondsy,
Sept. 5 aU appolnbnenta for driver license
examinations given in Meigs County will
have to be made by contacting In person
examiner Jim Stanley on Mondays at the
Middleport town hall council chambers.
The Gallla-Meigs State Highway
Patrol post said the best time to make an
appolniment for a driver license driving
test Is right after passing one's written

SAVINGS UP TO

This temfic booklet from Devoe answers
all the questions that come up most
often-and it's free for the asking, while
our supplies hold out! Stop in today to pick
up a copy ·along with your Devoe paint,
and you'll be ready to paint like a
professional tomorrow!

15. Give A Little BitSupertramp
16. Theme From "Star
Wars" .- Londoo Symphony ·
Orchestra
17. How Much Love?-Leo
Sayer
18. Telephone Man-Meri
Wilson
19. Black Betty- Ram Jam
20. Cold As · IceForeigner
. .- - - - - - - - •

Procedure to get driver exam changed

•

'

MAIL

Ohio and West Virginia one ye1:1r
$2!UIO; six months $11.50; lhret monihs $7.00. Elsewhere $26.00 per
year; s'!x monthS $13.50; three monOIS $7.50; motor roote .SJ,25 m~
lhly.
•
The Daily Bentinel, onec year

On Sale

Double White ·
• High quality

NELSONS .PLEAD GUILTY
.
POMEROY - Bobby Nelson, Rt. 1,
Reedavllle and Billy Nelson, Rt. 2,

NOW IN PROGRESS

ASKED
QUESTIONS

~-

SWldaY by The

ONLY MALFUNCTION
GAIJ..IPOUS - Volunteer firemen
here Saturday morning were ceDed to the
Holzer Medical Center, Jackson Pike, for
what turned out to be a malfunction In the
alarm system. There ~as no fire.

CLEARANCE SALE
To the most

G~LJS

·

$Reg.$10.20
g~auon

High quality
Wood. concrete, masonry
Exterior and interlor
28 colors
Pa!IQS, porches, garages

NEW YORK (uP!) -The
top :!l singles in the pop music
field, based on Billboard's
survey of sales and broadcast
play.
1. Best Of My LoveEmotions
2. I Just Want To Be Your
Everything- Andy Gibb
3.Higher And Higher- Rita
Coolidge
4. Easy-Commodores
5. Handy Man-James ·
Taylor
. 6. Whatcha Gonna Do?Pablo Cruise
7. Just a Song Before I GoCrosby, Stills &amp; Nash
8. Float On-Floaters
9. Don't Stop-Fleetwood
Mac
10. Strawberry Letter 23Brothers Johnson
11. I'm In You- Peter
Frampton
12. Barracuda-Hesrt
13. Telephone LineElectric Light Orchestra
14. Smoke From A Distant
Fire--Sanford-Townsend

n

SEMI-ANNUAL

On Sale

'lCDl
.ANSWERS

Ohci Valley Publishing Co.

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

•

••

.Sunday Tlrues-Sentinel

'.

GRAND CHAMPION LAMB- The grand champion lamb was purchased by the Kroger
Campar.y at the 4-H - FFAJunior Fair Uvestock sale beid Friday night at tbe Meigs County
FaD:grountls. Slown are, front, Sonia Carr owner; back Teresa carr, sheep queen, Tammy
Ervin, &amp;beep princeos, ~- Hudson and Guy Eddie Guinther, representing the Kroger Co.,
Jeannie Boggs, Jmior Fair Queen and Brian Windon, Junior Fair king. The·animal was sold
for $5 a )ioWJd. Last year's grand champion went.ror $3.55 a pound. Turn to page A-9 for
:~ pictures of grand champion and reserve champion livestock and "for complete sales

I

Acrylic 1-Coat&lt;l:!l Flat

All Weather&lt;l:!l High Gloss
Alkyd House Paint

r:.'

ev.ery

"fi'~ASONY!'

VIS4'

. ' ARC is a state-federal part·
:; nership which promotes the
; economic and social develop:. ment of the Appalachian
region of the United States.

. Published

TRINITRON

-

:~ natural resources.

·,'

and spent the crueletlt of herb doctors, and what they
winters this year barefoot. didn't pus 00 to him, Catfish
Gray sold his whopping abaorbed in childhood buntl
catch to the DuPont Co., with Indian frimda of the
which promptly naaned him Olerokee and B!aelr. Hawk
11Catfish.''
tribes .
That nickname stuck.
"Herlll can jUit put you
Slxty·sii others didn't, beck In perfect llhape wh&lt;ll
including the "Sassafra s you're jult about ready for a
-- ·
King," applied f&lt;r his coast- boneyard," he says.
By Mannlx Porterfield
to-coast mercllandlslng of tbe
"You· e)'W eee deer ·run?
.bark.
·
·.
·
· . That's what herbe do for the .
GLENWOOD, W.Va. (UPI)
For most or his life, . deer. And rabbits hoP? Same
• - Way back in 1942, when no
one else was ha_ving any luck, "catfish" has been pedcDing thing. u people toolr. h&lt;r"bo, .
Clarence Gray hauled in herlll and bitters, aioog with you woulcm't be safe to hardly
enough catfish to fill 21 advice he says came directly go out here and wallr. on the
from God.
1\'a.shtubs.
road for people running over
A plesaant man with the you, nmn.lng on their legs, not
That same day, he took a
glibness or an auctioneer, be in cars."
lifelong bride.
It sounds uncamy, until rattles _off faraway places
Herbal medicine is nothing
you discover that Gray quit such as RuMia and Germany .. new in Appalachia, but
school as a child oo the advice where the cured have written catfl!lh clalma he refined the
of a despairing teacher, has letters of thanks.
art with ~od's l!eiP·
His great-greatdelivered three babies, eats
Besieged with. more
largely Twinkles and milk grandfather and mother were patients thm he could supply
with herbo, catllllh prayed
late ooe night In 1973.
"In 20 minutes, God gave
me all of this," be ..ys, In a
subdued
voice,
and
displaying a chart of food,
good and bad, that, if
followed religiously, would
Insure proper health.
catfllh blames the "bad"
foods m ailments running the
Here's the biggest Trinitron color TV yet-21u
gamut fnm arthritis to high
(measured diagonally). And it haso b ig piusblood pressure.
·
Trinitron Plus . Trinitron has Clwcys been known for c
His
bitters,
·a
.
strong
Qreot picture butT ri nltron Plus introduces you to 'an
coocoction not intended for
even greater·-picture . Sony engineers found a·way to
the fainthearted, cootain at
intensify the electron beams which 11 paint 11 the picture.
least 20 herbs. Five of those
Also, the surface of the lube is darker to heighten
herbs can cure cancer but the
contrast. Whiter whites. Darker darks. More subtle
medical profession ignores
in-betweens.
this because "a lot of doctors
are getting rich searching for
Come see the biggest, brightest, sharpest Trinitron
cancer cure~/' says CatflJtJ.
ever . You'l l believe it. Trinit ron Plus. "It's a Sony."
"rve cured e\'ery cancer
I've had in nine years," be
says. Slr.eptics are invited to
check with his forrner
patients.
Despite his unorthodoK me·
!hods, ooly tllle doctor has
personally coofronted him,
and caUI.sh sUspectS It was a
case of jealousy.
"I cured his nur!lf, after he
doctored ber seven years,"
he announces with a trace of
scorn. "He could have cut my
throat. I cured her with
baking lloda. That man was
mad, oh, man was he mad.
He stomped and pawed."
KV-210 1
rn three years, more than
21" ;creen measured diagonally
18,000persons have Written to
him. The Smlthstonlan
·~
lnstltutlan wants to book him
. f&lt;ir a lecture. Studenl8, the
I
alling, and . plain curious
deacend·. on his two-room
wood frame shack tucked
away in the llills of southwest
West Virginia, close 10 a
OIOWJtain1spring.
"You ilrlnk city water?" be
asks increduously. ''That's
enough.. to
ldll you, right
there. .
.

SONY'S
BIG

Outreach

COLUMBUS- Gov. James
: A.
Rhodes
announc~ ed
Saturday the ap. ; proval of a $5,417 grant from
~ the .Appalachian Regional
, Commission (ARC) for the
; continued funding of the
• Gallia • Jackson • Meigs
; Outreach Mental Health
: Services Program.
The grant will be sup: plemented with $8,025 from
: local sources.
Funds will be used to
: continue operation of an out: reaCh case finding and treat• ment service program of
: mental heslth serVices in •
· : Gallia, · Jackson and Meigs
• counties. This three-&lt;!ounty
: area has been identified as
the number one priority for
. mental health services by the
~ Department of Mental Health
• and Mental Retardation.
· The project was submitted
: for approval .by the pepartment of Economic and
Conuntmity Development's
·: Appalachian Development
· Office, which administers the
·: ARC program In Ohio.
:: Ohio's 1977 Appalachian
• Development Plan and
:: Project ·Investment Package
,Z contains approximately $7.5
-; million in funding proposals
,: for Ohio's 28 Appalachian
·; counties in areas of health,
·' c hild
development ,
·; education, energy and

Top_20 ·singles
shown by sales

Clarence ·Gray popular
for his nattJral ctJres

. CINCINNA'rl (UPl) - .
Regular testing of the Ohio
River for pollutants sucll as
organic chemicals began last
week, the Ohio Environ·
meiltal Protection Agency
hal announced.
Samples will be taken from
intakes of six Ohio municipal
water works. Analysis of the
samples will be done by
private contractor, StUson
Inc., of Columbus.
'J11e samples will be taken
each Monday through Thurs- .
day. U federal funds become
available for the testing,

a

TED•

roGo
.rio
.Substitutes
e2 PIECES CHICKEN · .· eRO'-L
__ MASHED PO,TATOES
•

more lntenllve tnonltorlrJ8 of
cancer-related poUutanll will
begin in the nat few

months,

IICCOrdlng to Dr. Konlleth· L.
Applqate, chief of the
OEPA'a wa~r quality sec--

~·

2nd .&amp; OLIVE ST•.

·-

GAWPOUS..

�•

•

A-&lt;1-TheSIUldayTimes&amp;nlinel,Sunday, Aug. 21. J9'n

M-TbeSuDIIay 'nmei!&amp;ntinl!l,Sunday, Aug. 21, l9'n

· Area notices, briefs
ROCK SPRINGS - The
Meigs Athletic Booslers will
meet Monday at 7· 30 p.m. at
the h.igh school .

RUTLAND - There will be
an old fashioned outdoor
hymn slng Saturdav, Aug. ·21
at 6: :)0 p.m. at Forest Acres

Park, Ft. Meigs on the New
Lima Road oil SR 12~ in
Rutland . Featured will be the
Joyfulalres , Gospel

Travelers, Joytones, Midway
Trio , Chapman family ,
Fairvle:w singers and others.
Persons are to bring lawn
chairs and women are to
wear long dresses and bon·
nets. In case of rain the event
will be cancelled.

EAST MEIGS - There will
be an organizational meeting

Middlenort: Beth Perrin, 14, daughter of Rev. and Mrs.
Wilbur Perrin, Pomeroy; and Fae Reibel, 11, daughter
of Mr . and Mrs. Donley Reibel. Paula and Tanunie woo in
team CQillpetition, the other three were single winners.

DEMONSTRATION AWARD WlNNERS- Winners
of the 4-H Demonstration Awards were 1-r, Paula Hysell,
16, daughter of Olan Hysell of Minersville; Tammie
Starcher ; Sharon
Karr, 16, daughter of Donald Karr of
.

.

to coot act Miss Thompson.
EAST MEIGS - All kin·

dergarten

pupi ls

ol

the

Easlern Local School District

P.OWELL'

ilnd their 'parents are urged t.o
att~nd a meellng at 2 p.m.
Tuesday at the Tuppers
Plains Elementary School.

Treasurer ,
announced
Saturdaly that books are now
open for persons to pay
delinquent real estate taxes
plus penalties.

GALLIPOLIS - Applr.lng

for marriage licenses Fr day

with the Gallla County
PrObate Court were Lloyd
Vinton Rankin, 22. Cheshire,

chemist,

and Mary

'

By ROBERT SANGEORGE

Store Hours
8 A.M.-10 P.M.

Mon.-Sat.
•10 A.M.-10 P.M.
Sund•y

GALLI POLIS - Frank
Mills, Jr ., Galli a County

•

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'

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO.

PRICES EFFECTIVE
THRU
AUGUST 27, 1977

r

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Ann

j

who cannot attend are asked

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24

FRENCH CITY

WIENERS.....~
OUTSTANDING ACHIEVERS- These young men and women won the Outstanding
Achievement Awards for their representative organizations at Wednesday night's award
presentation ceremonies of the Meigs County Junior Fair. Left to right are Tammy Pitzer,
17, daughter of Clinton and Louise Pitzer of Lon2 Bottom. FHA: Trudy Hall, 17, daughter of
. Truman and Eileen ·Hall of Middleport, VJCA girl; Paul Cross, 19, son of Andrew Cross of
Letart Falls, 4-H boy; Herb Ervin, 17, son of Howard Ervin of Racine, FF A. Not pictured
were the VI CA boy winner, Stan Starcher; and the 4-H girl, Virginia Jordan,

CASE DISMissED
WASffiNGTON (UP! )
Attorney General Griffin Bell
will not seek an indictment
against a New York FBI
official who supervised an
agent charged with illegal
wiretapping and opening of
mail, It was learned Satur·
day.

Heath · United 'Methodist
Church, Hilliker ·said in tlis
opinion Wendy's, Limited
Stores, and Worthington
Industries have demon·
strated solid growth poten·
tial.
Hilliker, employed by the
Bache Halsey Stuart Inc.,
began employment in tbe
stock field in 1968 while still a
student at Ohio State. He is
presently vice president of
tbe Upper Arlington Jaycees.
Points Hilliker made In a
free-wheeling and far
ranging talk about the
economy as it relates to the
stock market were:

- Inflation soon will he
under control. •
- Investors will see this
and pUsh the market up.
-The DOW will he held in
check between tbe.850 and 860
level, and .take off when
"institutions'' decide to go
heavy Into the glamour
stocks,
.
- Stock brokers like to
develop a total investment ·
picture today, not · a
speculation boom and bust
app11Jach.
President Carl Denison
presided . Ladies of the
church served a steak dinner.

for and decorated with flags ·
yearly at the time preceding
Memorial Day ... "
Audrey Wickline, George
Northup and Howell Evans
are the Incorporators . of the
corporation.

Notices, local briefs

Feels begin to
look at Vance's
perso~al

funds

i

(Chuck)
Combs,
F.
Wheelersburg.
Planning
Director for the. Ohio Valley
Reg lonal Development
Commission has accepted •
position as Deputy Director

meeting of all parents of
k i ndergarten students in
Southern Loca I District on
Aug. 23 at 7 :30 In the
cafeteria allhe high school. If
a child has not been
registered parents are to
bring a record of im·
munization, proof of a recent
TB test and birth certificate.

for an upstate New York
regional planning commission. Combs will become

Deputy Dl rector for I he

Tier Regional
Planning
Commission,
Corning, New York .
Southern

PORTSMOUTH - Charles
WAsHINGTON (UPI) Federal banking officials
have broadened tbeir inquiry
into tbe tangled personal
firulnces of Budg!'l Director
Bert Lance.
With President Cart~r
adopting a hands-&lt;&gt;ff stance,
(.ance· summoned reporters
late Friday to disclose that
Investigators for tbe Comptroller of the Currency,
regulator of the nation's
banks, had found an "in·
temal" memorandum in the
files of tbe Manufacturers
fh!nover Trust Co. in New
York.
That memo appeared to
link a $2.6 million personal
loan Lance received In 1975
from tlii) New York bank to
tbe establi8hment of an Interest-free account -called a
correspondent reiatlonship by the National Bank of
Georgia.
Lanc:e
was
pruident of tbe G«&lt;rgla bank
before be bec:ame c.rter's
badge! dlredclt.

DR. DONALD S. PRIIT
PODIATRIST
Wishes to Announce the Relocotlo

TO 4542 EMERSON AVENUE
RT. 2 NORTH

PARKERSBURG, WEST VIRGINIA
HOURS BY APPOINTMENT
.. .

,; Violence
l · lurks in
the sky
.

.

'

' '

U. S. NO. 1

ALL PURPOSE

i,

10 LB.

POTATOES ....
MAXWELL HOUSE

I

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I

COFFEE

J

·· .

2LB. $ -~50 OFF REGULAR
.
PRICE OF 17.99
CAN
Limit l Per Customer W/C
Good Only At Powell's
· ·
Offer
27, 1977

..

'

.

..

4~~RO~

-Insulates against cold
or heat.
-Will not cliip. crack or
peel.
-No need to tear off
your roof to . repair· any
slate, metal; shingle or
built-up roof.' Make' it
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-Choose yours in any
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-Add years of life to
your present home Qr
D'uiJding.

GUARANTEE
ON B01H
MATERIALs AND
LABOR.

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GERBER STRAI~ED .

i

BABY FOOD

l 0/$1

j

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Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
27, '1977
Offer Expires

"·
1 .'!

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5 LB.
4 oz.
'
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1
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MAIL THIS COUPON

Hacke» Granulated Roofing
Middlep.:.rl, •l.
I " Aeaie 'send me further lnformatl;, ·;;;;
I Granulated Roofing . It Is underslood I am
1 Lllder no obJigation whatsoever.

1 n

7th Ave.

1·Root 0

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D (Please Check)

I NAME-------~--:--1 ADDRESS---------------------j
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$189

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Limit l Per Customer
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Offer Expires
27, 1977

' '• '

,,
:'
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LOOK FOR OUK

·MYSTERY .
SPECIAL
SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY,

j •

'.

.'

'

hear from some who say they
can't give t~ every worthy
cause,so they doo'tmake any
decision," Rice said.
Those
who
have
contributed money or items
of value inclu~ing Crosby,
Mamie Ei$enliower, Lady

are

Margaret Olase Smith, hotel
mugnate Conraci Hilton, goU
pro Tom Weiskopf, and even
former South Vietnamese
President Nguyen Van Thieu.
"We would like to build the
fund into ooe which would
aJiow the granting of a four-

year twtion scholarship to at
least one incoming freslunan
at Xavier each year," Rice

said. "'That's going to take
sQbstantial amount of mooey,
and it's been very difficult
just raising what we've
already gotten. But maybe
one day .we'll reach that

goal.,
So the contriootions keep
trickling in at Xavier
University and Rice keeps
sending out letters. The first
receipient of the U . HDbert T.
Ri.ce
Jr.
Memorial
will
be
Scholarship
announced by Xavier this

september.
Asked what keeps him
going ih a tiresome task that
will take at least several
more years, Rice simply
responded, "Bobby liked to
do things for other people and
we want to carry on that

effort."

.

..OPEN DAILY
8 TIL 9

SUNDAY

SUPER MARKETS

10 TIL 6

RETAILS EFFEaiVE THRU SATURDAY, AUGUST 71, 1977
...........

~

• .. " - ' . . . . . . . . .

...... . .

...,,.. ;2! ·....,.,

.., ,., i'lll//ll 1
SLICED RIB SlOE

GBOUND

CHUCK

BEEF
WIENERS

sucm
BACON

,,b
Pkg

lib

Pkg

Ill.

79t

s-.a.

e.t

qq·"

~¥

Pork Lofn Roast •• , tJ. .&amp;- Spare Rfbs •••••• tJ. .
Stt..d ..lw. Suu
$-.09 fluwo (!«!
.
$-.49
Pork Lofn Chops •• tJ. . &amp; - Rf• Pork Chops. • • tJ. . &amp; Put.
fluw, (!«!
. $f5t
• • Kra~t ••• 2-tJ. 'BC¥
Loin porJt (:hops • tJ.
-

$4' H.

39"

...

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Sh.le~• &amp; ~e(fcet/

Slieed American
or Pimento
Cheese Food

SLICED ·

BEEFUVEB

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3

Southern,Q\1~

£ACRES

,.,.k/lh(
~HTON'S

ICE C.R.IAM
.lfi gal.

ctn.

~NASA.

99~

BJl.EAD PIZZA\:·

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VECETABI U
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MINI PADS ",, ... fJ,29
MAXI PADS'" ,, ..,•t.6q

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· '"'bere have been 101M
·prn~o.. IIJl8)l milllonl, bat
b-1111 tll'll time we have pal
filleiber • payload that wiD

6a.
.,-

At..
I••... . . . . . ,,.......! •69

;lllable 011' ~ Ill

•

"We think we 1111ow 'Whal'I
"ttlert, but elmgll llttrtalniJ
wtat wen.dowllpin&amp; to llr
'dlfltnal..lrl9 what we think
. 'ft 11;11 taiJII' to.find out."

•

you could say we've helped
keep the Postal Service
going," he joked.
The Springfield, Ohio
family has received about aoo·
responses to the thousandll of
lett~rs. Most of those who
take the time to reply also
•

Sen.

new

lfl IntO del"'' of whal. ..
'llappenlniiD tbe high energy

PHONE (304) 428-0000

work goes in spurts."
Rice said that as !he years
have passed, the scholarship
effort "has become mostly
mine," although his family
sUII helps him with odds and
ends, such as seallng the
many envelopes )le mails to

. WASHINGTON (UPI) Belying the tranquility or the
· visible sky, the Invisible uni·
verse as viewed by X-ray
detectors ·above Eartb's
atmospheric ctirtain Is a
theater of bizarre and violent
performances.
Its actol's Include white
dwlll'fll, neutrm stars and,
JX188Ibly, black holes - the
remains of heavyweight stars
shrunk to infinitesimally
srnaJJ volumes which hl!ve
such lll'avity that nothing can
escape their pull.
· .A satellite named Uhuru
launched five years ago
dlscoverechbout 200 sources
of Xrays in the sky; whetting
the appetites of an audience
of Earth-bound astronooters
anxious to get a clear look at
the universe from the X-ray
viewpoint.
They now have a powerful
aet of eyes In space. The
National Aeronautics and
Space Administration
launched a satellite Aug. 12
Clllled a l:iigh Energy
AstronomlcBI Obllervatory cr HEAO - Into an orbit 273
to 281 miles high.
The spacecraft, largest astronomical satellite' ever ortiled, carries a set of X-ray
telescopes .expected to
expand the known number of
objects emitting X-rays to
2,000.
'
"It will survey the X-ray
sky from the edge of the sun .
to the edge of the universe,"
said Dr. Herbert Fmdman,
principal ,investigator of a
large X-ray mapper prepared
by tbe ,Naval Research
Laboratory.
He said the inltrumenta
aboard HEAO are powerful
enough to observe X-ray
en\lttlng c:luslers of galulea
1111 far away that they date
back to nearly the beglnninC
of time.
.
HEAO Ia the first of three
utellltes designed to
:"aammne the high energy
: radiation streaming ID
~ toward
Earth.
from
lbrougbout the universe. The
aecond HEAO will be
launched neD year with the
,third In 1.8'11.
.
•"lbll II really a mlatllom ol
'dlacoveey ," .lllid Dr. Ric:hard
. Halpern, cUreciDI' of high

'·

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ancl then, for the fund. So the solicit contributioos. ''I guess send cootributions. "But we Bird Johnson, lormer

mw

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LOOK AND PROTECTION
'
TO YOUR OLD ROOF

I

of His OHice

•

GrVE ABEAUTIFUL "NEW'

FREE
ESTIMATES

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19

Stocks analyzed for Rotary

Patriotic organization incorporated
RIO GRANDE- Secretary . "bean dinners" that date
of State, Ted W. Brown an· back to 1871. It is the only
nounced Saturday be has patriotic organization in our
issued a charter to the Rio village.
To . regularly
Grande Memorial Assn. to remember our war veterans
operate as a non-profit by seeing that the graves in
corporation. The principal Raccoon Township are cared
office of the corporation is to
be located here.
The corporation was for·
med for "An outgrowth of the
reunions of Civil War
RACINE- There will be a
veterans and their annual

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TOPS IN ARRANGING - Grand Champion of the Junior Fair Flower Show was
Tammie Starcher, left, of Minersville. Angie Spencer, right, placed second for Reserve
Champion. Fourteen year old Tammie is the daughter of Roger and Jackie.Starcher. Angie,
10, is the daughter of Jean Spencer of Tuppers Plains. ·

MIDDLEPORT - Youth·
fu~ personable Thomas R.
Hilliker,
an · account
executive (stock broker) with
a Columbus firm, said there
are pl~ty of fine growth
stocks close to home and
predicted the stock market
will take off (probably this
fall) in an informal talk to
members of the Middleport •
Pomeroy Rotary Club Friday
evening.
Introduced by Rotarian Joe
Young following dinner at

FOOD AND NUTRITION WINNERS - Pictured left to right, are the Junior Fair's
State Food and Nutrition winners, Paula Hysell, Tammie Starcher, Sharon Karr, and Mary
Colwell. Not available for picture were Becky Eichinger and Lea Ann Gaul.

oz.

CINCINNATI (UPI) seven ye&amp;n aco today, the
Robert T. Rice famlly buried
a 11011 who had been ldlled in
actiGn In Vietnam.
But the Rice's, unlike many
American families who
suffered the wrenching loss of
a loved one In the Soutbeu'
Asian war, managed to pu.
their IOITOW behind them and
began an emodlnary effort
to preserve . ~ memory of "a
lll'eat IIIUe guy." ·
It was only one year after
.graduatin!! from Xavier
University In Cincinnati that
Lt. Robert T. Rice Jr., U.S.
Ar'(ny, was felled by shrapnel
during a mortar attack on his
platoon .
His parents, Robert Sr. and
Audrey, and their seven other
• children decided to put their
energies into establishing
some type of memorial for
Robert Jr. -not a statue or a
plaque, but a living tribute.
"Bobby never got to make
use of his educaUc:w~, so we
wanted to try to do something
fot the education of others,"
Robert Sr. said In an
Interview. What they settled
oo was a scholarship flllld; to
aid a small number of
studenls entering xavier.
An astounding 6,000 letters
later, they have raised a little
more than $10,000, far less
than their original goal. But
the drive cootinues, through
botb good times and bad.
"We'll work at It for two or
three mootha, and then start
feeling like giving up,"
admitted the elder Rice, a .
program analyst at Wright·
Patter11011 Air Force Base In
Dayton, Ohio. "Then we'll
start up again, especially
when a check comes In,

.I

I

for all girls In grades 9-12 Martin, 73, Gallipolis. lab
Interested In playing volley- tech~iclan. and Gregory Lee
ball at Eastern High School James, 19, Bidwell . student,
Tuesday at 6 p.m. In the and Janice Marie Harper, 18,
school gym. Those Interested Bidwell, secretary.

ed in Vietnam grows

1
Memorial
fund
tO
son
.

1

:

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1

•

..

•

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�,
M-The ~7 'l'ln-sentinel, Sunday, Aug. ~1,19'17

,--------------------·----1

11.-6--Tbe Sunday Titnes-Sentinel. SWlday, Aug. 21, 1977

- - - - - - : Dateline
HEALTH

I
l

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

1

~
(14

I
I

lTallia

By Hobart Wihon Jr.

•

them

interested
in aging and University d. Toledo.
.
DEAR DR. LAMB - My thoug ht that " auto·
+++
questions concern yogurt. intoxication" from the colon
HEAD Coacl_t of the Rockets this year is Charles (Chuck )
Since I love yogurt in gravies was an important factor in Stobart, 42, a native of Me~gsCounty . The press guide contains
such as stroganoff, canned staying young. This resulted a backg':"um sketch of StObart, hts family and his coaching
creamed soups and heated in in many people having their aCCOOlplishments on pages two .and UU'ee and thll next three
many other ways can you tell colons removed in the wave • pages are devoted to Stobart's coaching philosophy .
me !f the cultures (Lac· of interest in colons and
.
+++
tobacilli Acidophilus and disease · that· followed. He
IT'S hard to believe; but it's been. 17 years since Stobart
Bulgaricus) remain active specifiCally reconunended guided the1960Gallipolis Blue Devils to a perfect~ mark
and continue to help the lower Lactobacillus bulgaricus ~the Southeastern Ohio League championship. Slobart, who
intestines when yogurt is yogurt to remove aut&lt;&gt;- wi!J be 43 m Oct. 27, was born at Bradbury, Ohio, near
coo ked ? r note that intoxication from the colon, Middleport.
acidophilus capsules must be and the yogurt faddists
+++
kept cold. Since 1 would like multiplied.
~ was a member of Middleport's 1949 SEOAL coto include these organisms in
The la~tobacillus may · championship grid team. After a sUnt with the U. S. Coast
my diet and can use yogurt so chauge the acid·base balance Guarq, ~ enrolled at Ohio University where he was an
many·ways in cooking I want in the colon which can affect outstanding quarterback for Coach Bill Hess' Bobcats. His
to make sure I am gettinj;: the the types of bacteria living first coachiug job was at Berne Union in 1959 where his squad
same benefit from yogurt in , there but that is about aU it posteda perfect 9-0 mark. After a perfect year at GAHS in
cookif!g ·as from eating it does. It does not cllre acne, 1~! he .moved to Mt. Vernoo where hia first YelloW Jacket
directly from the refrigerator prevent aging or everi cure edition finished 0.10. After four years and a 2&amp;-14 record at MI.
in th~ container.
constipation.
Vernon, Stobart entered the college coaching ranks as an
DEAR READER- You are
The cultured yogurt with as&amp;stan.t at Marshalll!~versity. He was an assistant at the
probably getting the same Lactobacillus bulgaricus Uruv~SJ~Y. of Cincmnati m 196:i, then joined Bo Schembechler
. benefit from the organisms - usually has less lactose in it at Mianu m 1967.
L-ooked or upcooked - which and enables it to be digested
+++ ·.
'is exactly nothing. The whole by lactose intolerant people
Sl'OBART then fdlowed Bo to Michigan in 1969. As you
idea of eating yogurt for the BUT most of the regular com- know. by ~w, the.rest Is history. The Wolves, with §lobar! as
colon began with an outslan· mercia! yogurt in grocery Michigan s offeliSive coordinator, became one of the coon try's
. ding scientist for his time, stores is made differently and most successful grid machines.
·
· Elie Metchnikoff, a ~ossian is often a very high lactose
I
+++
who became head of the food. I am sending you The
STOBART will, in time, build Toledo Into another llfid·
Pasteur Institute and a Nobel Health Letter nwnber 7·2 Amencan Conference powerhouae. The Rockets are coming
prize winner.
Milk Products: Good
off two consecutive losing seasons after riding atop the MAC in
ms contributions to germ Bad, to give you more in- theearly1971lswith.aloog~amewinningstreak .
theory were the forei'WIIIers fonnation on lactose in+++
of modern knowledge of im- tolerance and milk products
SCHEMBECHLER, in parting with Stobart last December·
mWle mechanisms. He was including yogurt. Others who for the first time in 10 years, remarked: "I don't know how
want this issue can send 50 Toledo could have hlred a better man. Chuck has contributed
cents with a loug, stamped, tremendou.sly to our footbaU program and more tl,!an just the .
self-addressed envelope for it coaching on the field. ,
'
,
to P.O. box 1551, Radio City
+++
StatiQn, New York, NY 10019.
"HE is a temendous football' man. He knows football but
'l'he concern about the more than that, he is an idea man. He is an excellent r~iter
bacteria in the colon is really and a really tireless worker. The guy can go all day I'm really
misplaced. The digestive pro- tickled fer him, because he wants to be a head coach. But 1 am
cess of ab,sorbiug nutrients really sorry to see him go. Ten years is a long tim&lt;i and that is
takes pJ.ace in the small in- how loug we have been together."
.
testine ~most of it in tile first
+++
CARROL K.
one to two feet just outside
JIM Harmon! son of Shirley and Roy Harmon, 2015
the stomach. The idea then ' C!lestnut St., Gallipolis, celebrated hia 43rd birthday on Aug.
SNOWDEN
that lactobacillus will irrJ. 16. A special "birthday surprise" was arranged by his sister
24 State
prove digestion of milk is not Mrs. Judy McCormick, Rt: 3, Gallipolis.
·
'
Street
Gallipolis
on very finn ground. Milk is
+++
Ph. 44~ -4290
not digested in the colon at
JIM received a personal telej)hme call from famous
all. The whole game is over coWltry llfi\1 western singing star, Ernest Tubb, from Franklin,
by the time food residue gets Tenn. Harmon had a "very pleasant" chat with tbe
to the colon. The fWlction c:J. entertainer, and is looking forward to Tubb's next show in this
the colon is to regulate ~t area and meet him in person.
and water balance. It absorbs
+++
water when you need it and if
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily
it is irritated you may have Tribune ,and weekly Gallia Times ...Joe B. Fulks, 17, Scottown
diarrhea · because of its named winner.of Oh,lo Rural Electric Coop's state scholarship
disturbed function 1n absorb- ~test .. .H. W. Wetherbolt appointed member of board of
See rneforState Farm
ingwater.
directors of Gallipolis Savings and Loan Co...Ohio Farm
If
you
enjoy
yogurt,
use
it
Bureau buys controlling stock In Gallia Produce ...Grant Wray
single premium
because you like it -cooked or born~ In Bladen d!!stsroyed by fire ... Forty GAHS grid
· disability income insurance. cold - but don't e.....,..t any candidates report to Coach Bob Saug for initial workout on
medical miracles !;om . it ~emorial Field: .
Likear;ood S U !f . . . . .
either way.
neir;hbor,
(Because of the volwne of
State Farm
,'" '""""
mail Dr. Lamb cannot
OD
is there.
'--...:·;1' answer ypur letters personal·
COLUMBUS (UPI) - gathered at the Ohio State
s~att F•111 Mukiar ~1110rrob'" ~nwr•roce eomp.n1
ly but he will answer
Home 01!&gt;« Bloom.nglll". lw,nol$
~presentative letters
of Martin
Janis,
Ohio Fair endorsing legislative
Commlss!oner
on
Aging,
said passage of the Utility Lifeline
general
interest
in
his
col·
p 7595
.
Thursday signatures will be bill.
umn.)
"This is a great opportunity
.for all Ohioans to join
together and do something
for those whb are having
financial problems in paying
for the energy that provides
the JFimary source of heat
for their households " Ja.iis
said.
•
. "We expect to have 100,000
Signatures to present to the
Ohio Ser.ate when legislators
return on Sept. 19 " said
Janis.
' •

I

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

and

"When you're sick
or hurt and can't
work, your car
payments don't stop!'

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ANIMAL SHOW WINNERS - Winners of the Rabbit
Poultry, and Swine Show Awards at Junior F;&gt;ir Nighi

Wednesday were, !..-, Rick Flagg, 15, son of David and
Judy Flagg of Minersville, and Brian Windon, 18, son of
Mr . and Mrs. Virgil Windon , Rt.J, Pomeroy, both in swine

cunpetition; Renee Kaldor, 18, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
stanleyKaldor o!Darwin, rabbits ; Jinuny Park.er,10, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Leland Parker of Chester, rabbits ; and
Kevm Napier, 10, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lark Napier of
Bidwell, poultry.

Some livers holding t90 much honnone.
WASIDNGTON (UP!) illegal residues of a cancer·
causing hormone, stilbestrol,
were found in nearly 2 per
cent of the beef cattle livers
sampled by inspectors in the
first half of 1977, a sharp
increase over last year's
violations, the Agriculture
Department says.
'
Department officials also
noted in a report that illegal
residues of sulfa drugs in
pork rose. sharply in the

second quarter of the year hormone if it is withdrawn
despite government appeals before slaughter to allow
to farmers and warnings that natural elimination of the
controls on the drugs may be chemical before cattle are
slaughtered . Because
tightened.
Stilbestrol, a synthetic Agriculture Department
· female hormone, has been sampling has detected
used for many years to continuing residues in cattle
promote faster and cheaper livers, however, the Food and
growth in . grain-fed beef Drug Administration has
been considering a bsn on use
cattle.
of
th~ material.
Current
government
regulations permit use of the
Open

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the ·practice of
Ophthalmology at the.
Amsblry Eye Clinic, sq
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis,
Ohio In urly SeptemiMr.

for

wanting

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LIJ ~ :at:

IYrry L. Amsbary, M.D.
will be opening his office

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Women : Harvest Gold
Men :·Aimond

SHOES
Silver Bridge Plaz:a
Mon. thru Sat. 10 til ,._Sunday 1til5

OOLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Public Utilities Conunission
of Ohio erred in granting gas
and electric rate increases to
Dayton Power and Light and
should rehear the cases the
Office of Consumers' Co~el
said Fridlly.
•
The PUCO granted DP&amp;L
increases in two cases calling
for a $567,000 increase for
electric customers and a $6.2
million increase for gas cus·
tomers July 22.
·
The conswners' counsel's
office says it takes issue with
the PUOO's handling of the

case

and

says

cases.
Counsumers
Counsel
William Spratley said his
office contends that the
electric customers should Women's Sizes
have received a ·rate Fancy Knee- hi '''":Ks.
decrease, rather than an . Reg st.49 ... 961 pr.
increase.
"My office is prepared to
appeal the cases to the Ohio
Supreme Court if a rehearing
Get to know us; you'll
does not bring about
favorable rulings on the
303 Upper River Road
Acros"s from Silver Bridge Plata
issues," he said.

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like
us.
·
•
Open
Mon.-Sal.

9 a.m.till9 p.m.
Sun . ltil6

Prices Good lhiu Tuesday • MasterCt\aroe. VISl! or Ask Aboul Our Layaway Plan

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BIG WORK· TABLE TOP
POLANSKI SUED
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
Roman POIIIJlllki was sued by
a photographer Thursday ·
over a brawl that erupted as
the director prayed at the
graveside of his wife, actress
Sharon Tate, on the eighth
anniversary of her murder by
the
Charles
Manson
"family. tt
Photograpber Curt
Gunther charged Polanksi
ripped his camera strap, took
the camera and destroyed the
fihnln the Aug. 9inclclent. He
a1ked $40,000 In punitive
damages, 'IO,Ooo for :Vis of ·
the plcturea and f239 for the · ~
camera, which Polanski
,

...:0::

New Kiltie-moccasin on
Covered Genuine Crepe
Reg . $11 .99. SAVE ~3 . 33

ROSALYNN TURNS 511
THURMONT,Md. {UP!)There were congratulatory
telephone calls from her sons
tennis lessons from a profes:
. sional, a Chinese dinner and
lemoo cake to help First Lady
Rosalynn Carter celebrate
her 50th birthday.
"She said she's had a
marvelous day," the first
.Iaqy's press secretary, Mary
Hoyt, reported Thursday. ·
Helping · with
the
celebraUon,ln addition to the
President, were daughter
Amy, 9, son· Chip · and
daughter-in-law Caron and
their lknonth-old son, Jamea
Earl Carter IV.

JKlli~e.

c.....

the

commission was ''arbitrary''
in some of its rulings in the

petition asked

returned through

D::

·

'

Women'sslzes: $16.99
Men's sizes: St8.99

-...

OJficrals
. say PUCO erred

I

· Men/Women: Sand

c(,)

Sunday 1 to 6 p.m.

~ ~\\)
....~~~ ATA
'~ PRICE!
SUPER

The look is right, the quality
is right, the price is right!
Genuine suede with Inspiration bottom.

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~,~~E.DES
COMPARE!

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appointment moy now .,.II

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yogurt has no nur•acles .m theRECEIVED
a number of 1977 college football press books
mail last week. Amoug
was one from the

....

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•
•
•
•

JJYz" HIGH
19%" WIDE
22Yz" DEEP

•
•
•
•
•

Slim Designer Styling
Door Opens 90" within Cabinet Width
All Steel Cabinet ... Baked-On Finish ,
Rigid Foamed-In-Piace Polyurethane
Insulation AII·Around ...Cabinet And Door
Seamless ABS Thermoplastic Lining '
3 Shelves
Freez.er Compartment
Automatic Interior Light
Push Button Oefrost...Automatic Restart

CHARGE IT!
II &gt;Uu Ho .. Any Q/
The itt Credit C1rt1s ·

ADJUSTABLE lEifl LEGS

•

• BA.NIC AM[R lf'.A RC)
• AMEFHCAf4 UPR~~
• MAftTe:A CMA~Of
• OINEAS Cl.q 8 I

• CARtE ~LANC~c)·
You , . , Ow•Mf
1

Fo/'

710

INSJANTC.

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�1\-t--TbeSunday ~ntinel, SWiday, Aug. 21,1977

•

•

Livestock sales listed
ROCK
SPRINGS
Owners, price per pound. and

I

buyer In the anl mal ll"estock

I

sale a! !he Molgs County Fa ir
Friday were :
LAMBS
Sonia Carr (G.C.L $5,
Krogers.
Sco!! Boarhs (G.C. Pair),

::a
-&lt;

::a
'"

$1.75, Ohio Valley Livestock.
Todd Tripp (R .C.), Sl,

Gaul's Mk!.
Roger Riebel IR.C. Pair).
$.75, Pomeroy Nat'! Bank.
Scott aearhs , s.1s, Racine
Home Naf'l Bank .
· Tam Bowers, $.85, Tr i-Co .
Moat Packing .
Todd Tripp. $,65, Clark 011
Co .
Tim Dorst, $.80, Chesler
Agrlco.
· Er ic Miller , $.85, Tri·Co.
Meal Packing .
Scott Bearhs, $.85, Wesley
Buehl.
Roger
Riebel ,
$.85 ,

Cl)

Rodney Beegle, S1.25, Five

Points Grill.

Paula Miller (G.C.I. $2 ,
Pomerov Nat'l Bank.
oiPam Miller (R .C.) Sl , Ohio
Valley LivestO&lt;:k .

Agrico .
Angie SpenCer, $1.10, Sen .

bred ), $.55 . Nlar ion Riggs
Ford, Logan .
Teresa Carr ( R.C. Cross·
bred)'. $.50, Diamond Stone

$1.30, Citizens Nat'l Sank .

Billy Holcomb (G .C. Pair).
$.70, Pomero y Nat'l Bank ,
Tuocers Plains Branch .

Marcia Holcomb . !R .C.
Pair) , $.50; G &amp; J Auto Parts.
Rick Jordan, $.60, John

Gibson , Int. Truck.

Dean Colwell, $1.10, Qvallly

Pr int Shop.
Ralph Jordan , $,65,

Ohio

WMPO.

Brenda Smith, $.60, Fabric
Shop.
Tamm y M i ller , $.58, Jim
Pierce.
Bill( Oyer . 5.59, Production
Credi Assn.
Jimmy

Jackson ,

$.64 ,

Oakley Collins.
Patty Dyer , 5.60 , Ohio
Valley Livestock.

Linda Smith, $.60, French

Cify Meats and Landmark .

-

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Rodney Tripp ( C. Cross.

Oakley Collins.
Nickey Leonard . S.80. Roy
Holter .
Quarry .
MARGET HOGS
lea Ann Gaul , S.60,
Brian Windon G.C., $2.60, -· Diamond Stone Quarry .
Racine Home Nal'l Bank .
Noah Hysell IC. Angusl.
Marcia Holcomb R.C ., S.67 1h, Farmers Bank &amp;

Valley Live5tock .
Ed Lester , $.60, Marton
Nickey leonard , . $.95,
Riggs.
Riggs Used Cars.
Jack Parker , $.65, John
Tammy Ervin, 51.10, City
Gibson, Inter national Trucks.
Ice &amp; Fuel.
Bill Holcomb, $.75, Central
Angle Spencer, $.85, Kyle
Soya , Gallipolis, Ohio.
Meat .
David Thornton, $.65. Riggs
Nickey Leonard , $.95 ,
Used Cars, Chester .
Citzens Na!'l Bank.
Paul Lester, $.65, French
Tam Bowers, S.85, Tri ·
· City Meats &amp; Landmark
County Moat Packing.
Foods .
Rick Durst, $1 , Pickens
Jeff Smith , S.60, Trl-County
Farm .
Kelly Taylor , $.95, Beggs Meat.
Richard Basham , $ .57,
Sales &amp; Service.
Melvi n Cro55.
Kelly Taylor , $.85 , Wesley
Dennis Thornton , $.58,
Buehl.

Penny Mi ller, $.65, City Ice
&amp; .Fvel .

Scott Lester, Pair , $.52,
Ohio Valley Livestock .
Carl Parker , Pair , $.51,
French City Meats and
Landmark Foods.
Rick Flagg, Pair , $.55,

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-a

STEERS

Randy Wolfe, $.95, Racine
Home Nat' l Bank .
Henry Hart. Sl. Boggs
Sales &amp; Service.
Eric Miller , Sl.15, Chester

Diamond Stone Quarry .

:
RESERVE CHAMPION HoG owned by Marcia
: Holcomb, front, was purchased by Manning Kloes on·
behalf of the Citizens National Bank for $L30 a pound .
· Standing 1-1, are, Manning Kloes, Jeannie Boggs, Junior
. Fair Queen and Brian -Windon, Junior Fair King.

Bank .

•

Coolville Mil l.
David Thornton. Pair , S.S6,

J . R. Coal Co .

Ed Le~ter , Pair , $.5.4, Pratt
Processing .

Gary

Holliday ,

$.64,

Citi zens Nat' I Bank.
.
Bill Mill er, $.75, The Shop ,

Middleport .
Dennis Thorhton , Pa' ir ,
5.58, Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings .
Charles Calaway, Pa i r,

Savings.

David Gavl, $.67, Central
Soya, Gallipolis .
Becky Wtndon, S . 62 1f:~ , City
Ice &amp; F"el .
·
. . Scoll Upton , $.60, Trl ·
County Meat Packing .
Greg Taylor , $.59, Sugar·

Run Mill.

Herb Ervin, $.62, PCA
!Production Credit Assn .),

Gallipolis.
Teresa Benedum . $.51 ,
French City Moat, Gallipolis
and Landmark FQOd .
Pau la
Hysell {R . C.
Angus), 5.70, Farmers Bank
&amp; Savings Cc .
Rogie Gaul, $.87 112. Citizens
Nat '\ Bank .
Rodney Keller. $.61, Royal
Qak Farm.
Tim Brinager , $.67, Scott

lucas,

adm .,

Veterans

Memorial HospitaL

Blai r Windon , $.68, J . R.
Coal.
Tommy P ullin s , S.67 V2,
Boogs Sales &amp; Ser vice.
~lck Findley , $.65, IV.odern
Supply.

Oarl~ne Thornton, $.60,
Farmers Sank &amp; Savings.
James
Smith.
S.67 1h,
Landmark Foods .
Ed Roush, $.60, Racine

i

GRAND CHAMPION
HOG at left, owned by
Brian
Windon
wa&amp;
purchased bY Tom Wolle,
on behalf of the Racine
Home National Bank for
$2.00 a pound. Last year's
grand champion sold for
$3.45, L-r are, Wolfe,
Windon and Jeannie
BOggs, Junior Fair Queen,

Home Nat 'l Bank .
Kevi n Buckley , $.60. Meig s
tnn .
Mark
Goegleln, $.76,
Southeastern
Equip . ,
Gallipolis.
Mike
Goegleln , S.BJ ,
Swisher &amp; Loh se Drug,
Pomeroy .
Bob Avis , $.62. Central

Soya, Gallipol is.
Todd Roberts, $.68, Athens
Co. Savings a. Loan, Meigs"
Co . Branch .
·
. Becky McGraw, $.69, Ohio
University Inn , Athens .
Dave Findley. $.61,, Far mers Bar'!k .&amp; Savings,

Pomeroy .
Mike Roush , S.!$01J2, Ra cine
Home Nal'l Bank.
Brenda Calaway, $.68,
Elberfeld 's.
Perry Smith, $.64 / Log
Cabin EqUip. Co ., Graceland,
Ky .

S.5J , Rac ine Home Nat ' l

1

GRAND CHAMPION PAIR OF LAMBS owned by Scott Bearhs was purchased by Torn
Stewart of Ohio Valley Livestock for $1.75 a pound . Pictured are, front, 1..-, Tam Bowers,
Scott Bearhs; back, Teresa Carr, sheep queen, Tammy Ervin, sheep' princess, Stewart,
Jeannie Boggs, Junior Fair queen and Brian Windon, Junior Fair King.

l

GEl"flNG FILES
NEW YORK (UP1 ) - A
federal judge has directed the
U. S. government to give the
Social Workers Party the
Iiles of 18 alleged FBI informants planted within the
. party, District Court Judge
Thomas P. Griesa's order,
which was delivered May 31
and immediately sealed,
came to light Friday during.
arguments on the government's appeal, according to
attorneys,

GRAND CHAMPION STE~chased by Warren Pickens on behalf of the
Tuppers Plains Branch of the Pomeroy National Bank for $2 a pound. The animal was
owned by Paula Miller and weighed 942 pounds. Last year's grand champion steer sold for
$1.62&amp; pound. The animal was also second in ~ate of gain. Shown are, 1-r, Warren Pickens,
Jeannie Boggs, Junior Fair Queen, Brian Windon, Junior Fair King and Paula.

'··
MOST LOVED

·.;Woman struck by truck

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'(I)

BOSTON (UPI) · - Vice
President
Walter Mondale
-· POMEROY
Meigs Squad to Veterans Memorial says former Vice !&gt;resident
County Sheriff James J. Hospital where she was and fellow Minnesotan
Proffitt's department is in- admitted.
Deputies investigated a Hubert Humphrey is "the
vestigating an accident that
ablest and most loved public
Occurred at the Meigs County second accident that hap- official in IIiy state.''
Fairgrounds shortly after 8 pened on Bunker HUI at
Mondale said Friday he
approximately 9:30 p.m.
talked
with Humphrey
p.m. Frtday.
·
Sandra Marcinko, 22, Rt. I, Friday.
Thursday,
just before the
Ney J . Parker, Middleport, senator, .underwent
an
Reedsville was knocked down
when a trash pickup truck told deputies he was traveling exploratory operation in
'operated by Gary Priddy, Rt. down Bunker Hill when he . Minneapolis, and with
control in loose gravel in Humphrey's . wife 'Muriel
'4, Pomeroy, who was picking lost
a
curve
and his vehicle went after the surgery.
11p trash for the Fair Board·
off the roadway on theleft,
Doctors later described
•traveled up the midway.
There were no injuries but
: She was taken later in the there was heavy damage to Humphrey's ca ncer as
1
'terminal.''
evening by the Syracuse ER
the vehicle.
•
"We don't know what the
results wUI be yet," said
Mondale, in Boston to
address an
American
Federation of Teachers
conference. "Hopefully ,- he
can soon return to his duties
OIL AND GAS LEASES
in the Senate."
to fulfill our future drilling programs,

URGENTLY NEEDED

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please write or call and be sure to include
property location and acreage th
available for lease .

UNIVERSAL PETROLEUM CO.

.,

P.O. Box 74

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IT .IS.NOT AN ATIEMPT TO
KEEP UP WITH THE JONESES ·

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WON'T SUE
KNOXVIlLE, Tenn. (UP£)
- James Earl Ray has ·
withdrawn a libel suit agaiMt
Playboy magazine for
printing :an article saying
Ray acted alone in ldlling
civil rig)lts leader Dr. Martin ·
Luther King in Memphis in

•

It is an attempt to make the Joneses keep
., up with the financial realities 'of todaj. The
•
:• 350 members of Local 1790, C.W.A./AFL.CIO,
l' Gallipolis, Ohio, ask you, the public, to .ioin
•
them in their support of the striking _
employees of the.Jones Boys Store, Local
No. 347, Amalgamated Meat Cutters, AfL·
•'
• CIO, in their attempt to ·secure reasonable
'• _
and ·fair wages and benefits.

4

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SIGNED LOCAL 1790

' C- K. Snowden
24 stole st.
Phone 446-42?0

"LIFE insuruu, too!
Call me for details~

~ TOll

Like a gOQd neighbor,
State Farm is there.

1•100

Sllle farm ll!e lnsur..ce ~
Home Ofliel'' Blocomingbl, lllinorl

lHI

Now In At Betz Honda

The All New 1978 Hawk

RESERVE CHAMPION STEER owned by"Pam Miller was purchased by Tom Stewart
oftheOhio Valley Livestock for $1 a pound . Left to right are, Stewart, Brian Windon, Junior
Fair king, Jeannie Boggs, Junior Fair queen and Pam Miller.
/\·
'

'

· ·I

Lifesaving techniques are learned ·
During the past 10 weeks
members of the Gallla
County
Volunteer
Emergency Squad have been
receiving instruction in prehospitallifesa~ing techniques
for the citizens of Gallia
. County. According to Joe
Struble, of Pomeroy, a
certified Trade and Industrial Service instructor,
the class is "making ex·
ceilent progress."
Members are attending
classes on their own since the
service is a Volunteer
organization. The training Is
provided as part of public
service programs of the
Trade
and
Industrial
. Education jn cooperation
with Adult Education at ·
Buckeye Hills Career Center.
The tr~ining is provided in·
conformance with standards

established by the U. S.
Department of Transportation, the State Depart.
ment of Education, and The

State Emergency Medical
Technician · Ambulance
Training Advisory Committee.

CB HEADQUARTERS.

~AWK

the same.

HONDA.

SU75
Rt. 7

BEllPhoneHONDA
SALES
446-2240

List St09.9S

TRAM Dl2

MOBILE

'89.95

=
SALE

=40 CHANNEL SALE!!=
·
I

'
'CG&amp;E REPORTS
CINCINNATI (UP!)- Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric hasd
reported · the firm's net
earnings for the fiscal year
ending July 31 were $3.05 per common share of stcick, after
preferred dividends,
compared to $1.53 fer the
same period a year earlier.
Gaa I!Bles for the most
recent 12 months were up
me-tenth of 1 per cent, CG&amp;E
disclosed Friday. Retail
electric sales Increased 7.2
per cent, compared to the 12
months ending July 31, 1976.

1978

MOBILE

TRAM 062
List $349.95

SALE

$279,95

Dollar-for-dollar, feature.for-leature, Tram CB
mobile rigs can't be beat. If you're serious about
CB. move up to Tram. See the Tram line now.

. SALE 5129.95

List $149.95

.

BOB'S C.B. RADIO EQUIPMENT
Everything In Tuio JT!ay A{ltennas and Accessories

GEORGES CREEK ROAD
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
SAVE NOW ON ALL 40 CHANNEL RADIOS

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

�B-1-TheSimdayTim~ntinel, Sunday,

~-10-Tile Sunday Thne&amp;&amp;ntinel, Slmday, AU!!. 21. 1977

By J .R. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS (UPI )
Picture the Governor of Ohio
lounging backstage at a rock
concert, his elbows oo a huge
black trunk , carrying on the
business of the state.
There is lots of activity

..

Ohio politics
around .him. Electricians are
putting the final touches oo
the sound system soon to be
used by four Scottish
musicians. Thousands of
teen-aged
girls
are
screaming for their first look
at their idols.
Up comes Thomas Moyer,
the governor 's right-hand
JIM CARNAHAN WAS ONE of the auctioneers at the Meigs County 4-H-FFA Junior
man with a brown briefcase
Fair Livestock'sale held Friday night. When Jim was not at the helm Dan Smith was. On the
holding Aflairs of State,
right is John Rice, Meigs County Agricultural Extension Agent, who had a very busy and
including five bills passed by
active spot in the sale.
the Ohio General Assembly.
"Here comes Moyer with
some bills," says Rhodes.
. Moyer leans close to hili
employer while the wann-u_p
band performs and tells the
67-year-old governor what
these bills do.
Out comes a black felt-tip
pen and a biU becomes law.
Back go the bills into the
briefcase and off goes Moyer.
Rhodes turns his attention
CINCINNATI (UP!)- Col- served in an old-fashioned
"We trace the start of to the music and begins to tell
lege football teams are campus malt shop.
football all the way back to •
breaking out the gear again,
Outside, a regulation sim'i lar games in Sparta Seahawks trade
just as a new and elaborate football field is being built for : more than 2,000 years ago.
shrine to collegiate football demonstrations and We cover the start of Fred Steinfort
begins taking shape.
collegiate football- the first
seminars.
After many years of
"College football is very game was 0(1 Nov. 6, 1869,
SEATTLE (UP!) - The
wlshlng that they bad a much alive and we want to Princeton at Rutgers.
Seattle
Seahawks Friday
museiun to rival the keep it alive in our hall of
"In all, we trace the sport
traded
kicker
Fred Stelnfort,
prestigious Pro Football Hall fame," said Wyant.
from its .earliest beginnings
who
wils
acquired
earli~r In
of Fame in Canton, Ohio,
Still, there will be some to today. And we're trying to
week
on
waivers
from
officials of the . National static display cases just depict it the way it is Oakland, to the Detroit Lioris
Football Foundation have
use · of the nature of lively."
finally gotten their act - and me orabllia . And the
The hall of fame is being for future considerations.
Steinfort, a fifth-round
money -together.
mem abilia the College built adjacent to Kings Island
draft
choice out of Bostoo
And
as
a
result, Footb Hall of Fame has to amusement park, about 25
College
last season, deposed
cmstructlon has just started choose from is almost miles north of Cincinnati.
veteran
star George Blanda
oo a College Football Hall of limitless.
last
year
and kicked the
Fame, which designers hope
How about the Infamous
winning
field
goal in an
will ultimately outdo and halfback "belt'' (now illegal,
opening
game
upset
of the
outdraw the pro version.
of course) which once
NOW YOU KNOW ,
Pittsburgh
Steelers.
He
· Scheduled for completion enabled linemen to pick up , The first recorded medal
90llletime next year, college the ball carrier and toss him for valor was a. .golden bee suffered a severe groin pull
football officials want the across the goal line? Or the pinned to the tunics of heroic after seven games and
shrine to be more "eJiciting" oval shaped footballs from Egyptian warriors 3,500 missed the second half of the
seaSOf\. Steinfort was waived
than the pro milseum. They J'un Thorpe's ·time?
years ago.
by
Oakland last week.
figure attendance will bit
And-jersey numbers? Red
300,000 the first year and Grange's No. 77, Bronko
cootinile climbing.
Nagurski's No.3, and on and
"We want to capture the 00.
excitement of a college
Besides nwnerous.film-clip
homecoming game and the highlights · from exciting
romanticism of a campus games, even some full length
weekend," says John Wyant, game films will be a vailab1e
the energetic, 31-year-old for purists. · Games to be
general manager of the shown in full include Notre
Colleg'e Football Hall -of Dame's famo\IB 7~ win over
Falne.
·
Bud WilkinsOn's Oklahrota
Wyant spent a lot of his Sooners in !957and the Irish's
early days on the job visiting :IS-13 win over Army back in
most of the 30 other sports 19I3 when the advantages of.
halls of fame arotmd the the forward pass were first
country. He came back being realized.
feeling IIWIY were drab and
An eiectronic game room is
lifeless.
planned to let the visitor .
But he also came back match his strategy against
bursting with ideas to liven crucial decisions
and
up his museum.
.
controversial plays in past
The two-level, 38,000- games .
square foot GeorgianThe hall's cenierpiece will
Colonial building will be be called " The Time
jammed with as many audio- Tunnel.''
visual devices as possible.
''We.'re constructing an
Live •'Broadway-style " 8,000 square foot tunnel for
musical
stage : shows -visitors to walk through,"
featuring college fight songs explained Wyant. "There are
will be presented daily . a lot of turns and a. lot of
Drinks and food will be surprises around CQmers.

New collegi~te football
.shrine is taking_~hape

the two reporters who bad
followed him all day why
country music is as popular
as rock music.
It was not the first time
Rhodes had met or talked
with Moyer that da'y. There
had been several telephone
conversatio·ns concerning
matters of state which
presumably warranted the
governor's attention.
But aideS to the governor
know that wl:ten the Ohio
State Fair is in progress, the
governor will be at the
fairgrounds (he maintains a
house trailer on the gr!&gt;unds
for quick naps and a place to
periodicaly hide ) and he is
not to be bother~ by routine
business.
On this day, the first of 13
for the !24th annual state fair,
fthodes had : · ·
- Unsuccessfully tried to
book some of the of 7,500
pounds of fish stocked in a
pond by the Ohio Department
of Natural Resources.
- Walked about five
miles.
--$ook about 200 hands.
-Toured most of the
exhibits at the Ohio State
Fair.
-Consumed
a
full
breakfast, several soft
drinks, a mug of lemonade,
two sausage sandwiches, a

double-dip vanilla ice cream hand that they had just met
cme, a roasted ear of corn the mayor ,Qf Columbus.
and a bag of peanuts.
When tola of the romment
-Been hit in the face w1th a later Rhodes n«ed that he
had been mayor of the capital
banana cream pie.
It was this latter event city. " You can call me
which received the publicity, anything in Columbus," he
but it was his presence at the said.
fair that most Ohioans who
Rhodes made. a special
met him that day will effort to be unconcerned
remember .
about the pie incident. "The
Rhodes is a man possessed matter is In litigation;" he
by the Ohio State Fair. He ssid, refusing .lit comment.
loves it more than John
After the man who threw
Evans, the manager of the !lie pie and six of his fellow
annual extravangaza, and protestors were arrested and
more than anybody who ever carted off to jail, Rhodes
won a ribbon lor a prize began his opening-day
kumquat..
sc~edule
on
time ,
He loves it more than
campaigning. Last year, he
was introduced just before
the bidding for the livestock
Sale of Champions as "the
man who makes everything
SPONSORED BY
in life worth living" by fair
manager Evans.
That is music to a
politician's ears.
Rhodes loves to walk
around the fairgrounds and
mingle with the thousands of
people who dally enter the
AUGUST 22-27 - 5:00 TIL
gates.
·
As his entourage swept
through one building and
headed toward another, a
woman was overheard
explaining to her children
wbo bad just shook Rhodes'

YEAR

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SATURDAY, SEPT. 3,
7:30P.M.
AT THE EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL

IF NO HOLE IN ONE
NEAREST TO PIN FOR WEEK
WINS QNE SET GOLF CWBS
NEAREST TO PIN EACH DAY
WINS I DOZ. GOLF BALLS

Admission 13.00 at Door. Children 6 to 12 11.00
Good seats and air-conditioned •.See you there.

Come Jn Today
and Try One of Our

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tbiiJ gi~·OUI shal vvl. 2 glrde·.
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Enjoy an oven
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Freezer

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TRY OUR

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OFFERED ANYWHERE.

Overr cleaning is ress of a·chore 1
thanks to
1
side

F.rost*Ciear
lleftpatc:M" Reezer '

RC-30

[

•.•

Perr y is craft director.
Corolyn Taylor Is in charge of
the food department. The
cla~es to be taught are:
Ginny Noe, (Beginners) the
Nativity; Gertrude Marrah,
(Primary), The Twelv9;
Bryan Coburn (MiddlerS),
The Crucifixion; Barb King
{Juniors), the Resurrection.
Harold Taylor will have
devotions for the fourth grade
down. Charlene Kelley will
speak to the fifth and sixth
grades on drugs . Chuck
Jamison will give the
devotional
closing
on
Saturday.
Anyone interested in attending can call 44S,l863.
Public is invited.

f

.

This banner hangin g from the front of the Gallipolis ..
Christian Ch~rch was done by Bryan Coburn to promote
the Youth Retreat planned by the church.

Square dancers have picnic
Ginny and Wally Henry, Joan
and .Wanda Waugh, Tracey
and Christie, Nora and Don
Lucas, Brian and · Donnie,
Tom
and
Marybelle
Pasquale, T. J., Doug and
Phyllis Mason, Joyce and
Bob Bartimus, Joleen, Stacy
and Keith. club caller and his
wile, Bill and Midge Ev&amp;n•,
Francisco Del Rosita also
attended and helped with the
barbecue.
The next club activity will
be the Fifth Anniversary Club
Dance, Saturday; Aug. 27
with BUI . E.vans club caller
for the evening.

Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Weiher
TO CELEBRAm - The children of Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond C. Weiher, Rio Grande, will give an Open House
Sunday, Aug. 28, from 2-ii p.m. at their parents' home on
Ridge Ave. in Rio Grande in celebration of their golden
wedding aMiversary. Mr. and Mrs. Weiher were married
Sept. I, 1927 at the BeUview· Stratford Hotel in
Philadelphia, Pa. Mr. Weiher is a retired construction
worker and Mrs. Wether is presently employed at GSI.
They · have three daughters and four sons, 24
grandchildren and . one great-grandchild. Ttte Weihers
request no gifts.
.

in keeping with the tiUe, was
pressed in blue vinyl and
while Hughes could not
positively state that other
albums would be manufactured In the same faahlon he
did assure that the records
would be made and at a
steady flow.
Still the demand is great
and One Stop has announced
that they will be allocating
records to each store at their
own discretion. Hughes
speculated that it would be at
least a week and a half before
any new Elvis records would
reach the stores.
Hughes also guessed that
other recordings by Elvis
would be released by RCA or
the Presley organization. It
had been reported that Sun
lntemational, the first label
that Elvis recorded with, has
approached companies with
recordings and interviews of
Elvis from the early days.
One Stop, for ethical reasons
turned Sun International
down.
The trauma is .still rapid.
Hear-say has If that in
Memphis people are paying
anywhere from $50'to $300 for
recordings of early Elvis
songs. To wbat length people
will go to Is up to the very
limits of human nature.
Still in the midst of it all the
question remains: What of
Elvis? He was a man locked
·in a world of his own design.
Money was no object but fear
and loneliness were. While
most ·men his age saw their
children flhlshlng school, saw
their lives turning comfortable and secure, reachiilg
plateaus of establislunent,
Elvis was struggling with
fame and the darkest perils of
human existence.
Harry Chapin, a story-Mng
writer-singer, penned the
words, "It's got to he the
going not the getting .there
that's good." Elvis might
have left millions of fans but
as for 1\ls personal life one
just has to wonder if either
the going or the getting there
was worth it all. ·

GALLIPOLIS - Twenty- very involved In aU of their Division , Mrs . Stapleton's
five were included in the projects. She works mainly in daughter, Lori, was an award
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Juror's choice from the River watercolors and acrylics. She winner. She will enter. the
Mrs.
Wayne Niday, 12 VInton
Recreation 'Festival Exhibit became interested in art 11th grade at Hannan Trace.
St.,
announce
the marriage of
competition, planned and through the French Art She has had lessons at the
their daughter, Robin, to
conducted by the French Art Colony in 1964. She has also ;French Art Colony and has Gary
Lane, son of Mrs. Edna
Colony in the City Park at taken classes at Rio Grande been 'painting, mainly in oil,
and the late Kermit
Lane
Gallipolis on July 4 and their College and at Cedar Lakes In for the past three years.
'
GALLiPOLIS
The Mrs. Raymond Willis, Mr.
John Thaler, a Senior at Lane.
work makes up the August Itlpley . She has exhib(ted in
The marriage was an event lamilies of the late Mr. and and Mrs. Russ Willis, Ajny,
exhibit in the Galleries at shows at Rlo ·Grande College. Gallia Academy High School, .
Riverby.
·
·
Jennie L. Hudson of formerly lived in Covington, of Aug. 18 at t~e United Mrs. c. W. Baker held their Matt and Mark, Mr. and Mrs.
Last week, the story of the Gallipolis started out with the Tenn . He has studied art both · Methodist Church m Pearls· ' first reunion at the home of Tom Russell, David and
eight prolessional artists French Art Colony when It at the French Art Colony and burg, Va . withthe Rev. Fred Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Baker, Jeremy, Carla Willis, Carl
Lower River Road, Saturday Lewis Baker and Charlie, Mr.
from three states whose first organized, as a member in school under David Lyons. Austin off1c1atmg.
B~th
are
graduate_s
~f
evening,
August 6. A potluck and Mrs. Robert Marchi, Mr.
The only entry that ·w~s
outstanding pieces of art may of a drawing class Instructed
Gall1a
Academy.
Rob111
IS
dinner
was
enjoyed by aU. and Mrs. Don Call, Jell,
be seen in the exhibit, were by David Lyons. Her main Juror's clioice in the
a.
l
so
a
graduate
of
Morehe~d
The
evening
was spent by Jerry and Jason, _ Lloyd
identified with a brief resume work is in watercolors. She Elementary age Amateur
10
reminiscing and taking Baker, Dr. and Mrs. William
about each artist.
bas continued to participate Division was Keith Bartimus State w1th a d~gree
educatiOn:
She
pictures. A surprise ~irthday Thomas, Sara and Susan,
physical
This week the residents of in classes at the Art Colony of Gallipolis. Keith is a
teaches
with
Gallipolis
~lty
celebration was held for Carl Mrs. Homer Baker, Mr, ~nd
student at Green Elementary
the area may find it In- under several instructors.
School
System.
Mr.
Lane
IS a
Lewis Baker who came from Mrs. Boyd Ramsey, Mr. and
Margaret Leo. a resident at School, who will he entering
teresting to know who the
•
lineman
for
Ohio
Power
Co
.
.
Iowa
for the reunion .
Mrs. Ralph Roseculp, Mrs.
award winning artists were in the Gallipolis State Institute, the fifth grade when school
/~
'
After
a
honeymoon
m
Myrtle
Two
sons
and
one
daughter,
Walter Schoonover, Jr., Mrs.
th~ Amateur Division, which works mainlY with textileil in . reopens t)te last week in
B¢ach,
South
Carolina
the
Wayne
Baker
Vance
Baker
Pat Compton, l)eborah
was, of course, judged the GS! art classes. She has a August.
couple
will
reside
at
126
Rear
and
Mrs.
L;;.colh
Call
atCompton,
J. Robert Evans
separately
from
the diatinctive style, both in her
The total exhibit at the
and
First
Ave,
tended.
Ralph
Baker
of
Miss
Mildred
-Brown.
Professional group. ·
work in textiles as well as in Galleries In Riverby for the
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Foley
Mrs.
Raymond
Willis and
Florida
was
unable
to
be
Many of these fourteen her painting with oils.
month of August are- the
present. Others enjoy_ing the Mrs: Robert Marchi were
amateur artists, all from
Josephine ·Morando, who works of the Juror's selecREUNION
SET
evening were Mrs. Wayne named to plan the rewlion for
Ohio, are active French Art works at GSI, bas studied art tions from the River
The
family
of
Warren
G.
Baker, Mrs. Vance Baker, next year.
Colony members, and take a there and has a special in- Recreation Festival Exhibit.
Elliott
will
hold
their
reunion
Mrs. Carl Baker, Mr. an~
responsible role in Art Colony terest in geqrnetric designs. Riverby is open to the public
on
Sept.
9
at
Bob
Evans
functions.
She uses this skill with lex- on Saturday and Sunday Shelter ito use from 5 to 9 p.m.
the daughter of the late Mr.
RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Ed Molden,
Annette Ashcraft of Crown tues, oils and other art forms . afternoons from I p.m. until 5 with potluck at 6:30.
Charles (Dick) Foley of
City teaches art in the One of her special talents Is p.m. and on Tuesdays and
Rutland wiil celebrate their Rutland. Both Mr. and Mrs.
elementary schools and has macrame, which she teaches Thursdays from 10 a.m. until
golden wedding anniversary Foley are members of the
3 p.m. Everyone who visits
taui!ht several classes and throughout the area.
1~ ,Z..
with . an open bouse at their Rutland Church of Christ. He
Sue Potter lives in Oak Hill. the Galleries this month is
presented numerous workretired from the New York
UJ, f&lt;:
~ 1) .
Salem St. home on Aug. 28.
shops for the French Art . She' has bad a life-long In· .sure to enjoy the many
·
'J
Hosting the celebration wiil Central Railroad after 32 .
Colony. She also has an an- terest lh art. She taught outstanding works of these
RIO GRANDE - Mr. and John Butler, Mr. and Mrs. -he their two daughters, Mrs. years, and is a member of the
tique shop that keeps her herself through the use of art local and area artists now
Mrs. James Clark were Claud Swick, Mrs. RobertS. Bruce . (Marjorie) Davis, Rutland Volunteer Fire
spare hours busy.
books. She is a graduate of being exhibited.
honored with a reception to. Wilson; all of Wellston; Mr. Rutland, and Mrs, James Department.
oebbie Baker of Patriot Southwestern. She prefers to
Mrs. Foley is a member of
mark their golded wedding and Mrs. E . B. Webb, (Mar vel) Quillen, Route I,
graduated from South· work in oils and do landthe Ladies Aus iliary of the
anniversary on Sunday, Aug. Hamden; Mr. and Mrs. Middleport. '
.
western High Scltool. She has scapes. This was her f1rst
I&lt;
"
14. The reception saw over George Savoy, Pickerington;
Lifetime residents · of the Rutland Fire Department
been an art student at the entry in exhibit competition. ·
I
250 people coming to the Rio The Rev. and Mrs. Edward Rutland conunwtity, the cou- and the Rutland Garden Club.
;French Art Colony and
Sally Pride of South Point
Grande College Dining Hall Dicinson, Yellow Springs; pie in addition to their two She also belongs to the Meigs
prefers to work in charcoal or has been painting for about 10
to celebrate the day. The Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Jones, daughters have four grand- Co\llltY Retired Teachers
oil. She wlll attend the years. Painting flowers and
reception was moved from Mr. and Mrs. Donold Wilcox, sons, David and Danny Association being a retired
University of Kentucky to using oils as her media ~her
the
Clark borne to the dining Mrs. Maxine Jones, all of Davis, Rutland, and Jimmy teacher after having taught
RIO GRANDE -A shower
{lllljor in forestry.
preference. She has studied was held for Kim· Allen,
ball because of threatening Columbus; William F. Neal and Steven Quillen, Route I, in and around Rutland f6r 27
Donald R. Baun 'of Reeds- at the Huntington Galleries bridiH!lect of Richard Stout
weather.
and family, Medina; Mr. and Middleport. Mr. Foley a~ .years.
ville has a Bachelor of and also with Bill Tackett in at the Bob Evans Craft Bam
Friends .and relatives are
The reception was hosted Mrs. Harry Swaney, Ray; has three sisters, Mrs. CecU
Science degree from the Ashland. She has won·rlbbons on August 3. The shower was
by their daughter and son-in- Mr. and Mrs. George Ross, (Eva Bell) Katlff, Rutland; cordially invitedto call during
stephen F. Austin St~te for her work-at several shows given by Lena Stout, Denise
law, Mr. •~nd Mrs. John C. Mansfield, Mrs. Wilbur Mrs. Alva (Hazel) Rife, R. D. the open house (lours.
Univer!!ity in Texas. He Is a that she. has entered. .
Foltz and grapdchildren, Trace, Coalton; Mr. and Mrs. Middleport, and Mrs. Russell
Barry, Debbie Felker · and
ranger at the Shade River
Elizabeth Richards is from Darlene Halley. Games were
Miss Mary E. Foltz and John Ralph R. Foltz, David Foltz, (Elizabeth) Young, West ColState
Forest
with Addison. She has been played and prizes were won ·
Clark Foltz.
. R. M. Foltz, all of Bremen; umbia, W. Va. '
photography as his chief painting for~ two years, by Jesse Carroll and Barbar!l
Assisting with the reception · Mr. and Mrs. Bill Lyon,
Mr. Foley and the former
hobby.
·
starting out with an art set Allen.
were ·Mrs. D. Hollis Wood, . Lancaster; Mr. and Mrs. Muriel Molden were married
GARY SNOUFFER
Janet Byers of Gallipolis is that she bought lor her
Mrs. Garland Ellia\!. Mrs. Trent Grogg ·and family, on Aug. 28,1927 in Rutland by
CHESillRE - Plans have
Kim opened the many
the Chairman of the daughter which was not being beautiful gifts and graciously
Finley Richards, Mrs. David Shauck, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. the Rev. Bolton. He is the son ~n compl~ted f~ the rruu:Education Department of the used. She, has taken some thanked everyone for the
Altizer, Mrs. Ralph Foltz, Bob Merkle and family, and of the ' late Mr. and · Mrs. nage of Miss V1cltie Lynn
French Art · Colony. She lessons from Sarah Moshier gifts and invited everyone to .
Mrs. Philip Wolpert, Mrs. Mrs. Virginia Wolpert, ali of . William H. Foley, and she is . Moore, da~hter of Mr. and
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Robert Merkle, Mrs. Donald Plain City; Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Freddie I. Moore of
itudied art in high school at the French Art eolony.
the wedding on August 27.
_ under Sarah Moshier and bas
Carl Zimmerman of Cake, punch and mints were Gary E. Snouffer of Uncoln Wilcox.
j 0 hn Foltz and John and
Cheshire, to Robert Eugene
Drive, Pomeroy, hosted a
Registering guests were Mary Beth Foltz, all of
DANCE PLANNED
Major, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Bachelor's degree in fine Gallipolis studied art for two served..
party
Sunday
in
celebration
Miss
Mary
Elizabeth
Foltz
Worthington;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
GALLIPOLIS-Members
Martin
Major
of
arts from Ohil!i ' state years at the Gaii!-Polls State
Those attending were
ofthesecondbirthdayoftheir
·
and
MiSs
Jennifer
Merkle.
Ray
Talbot,
Galion,
of
the
French
CitY
Square
Rushsylvanla,
O.
University. Mrs. Byers stays Institute under N'ell Shaw. He Sandy Corvin, Marcella
Dlniter was served at the
The Rev. and 'Mrs. Russell Dance Club of Gallipolis will · Theweddlngwilltakeplace
extremely busy ~big up bas developed a diversified Dwtcan, Jesse 'Carroll, Lena son,GaryEdwinSnouffer,n.
Cake,
ice
cream
and
Clark
home
to
34
relatives
Woltz,
and Mr. and Mrs. be celebrating the an- on Saturday, Aug. 27 at the
schedules and arranging style in oil.
Stout, Angie Stout, Sue Arclasses for the French Art
Jan Stapleton of Gallipolis thur, Betty Stout, Sopha koolaid were served. Allen- who were attending from a Eisler Metheney, all of niveuary of their · club First Presbyterian Church at
Wellston; Mr. a~ Mrs. Bob Saturday, August 27 with an 51 State St., Gallipolis with
Colony at Rlverby,
has been Interested In crafts• Phillips, Opal Phillips, ding and presenting gifts to distance.
Out of town guests In- Evans, Elizabeth and Anniversary Dance. The theRev. FrankHayesandthe
James M. Dolls, who now for several yean. lfDwever, Denlae Barry, Lois Stout, him were Mr. and Mrs.
Uves In Gallipolla, Is from she haa been painting, mainly Jeannie Rice, Pam Stout, William E. Snouffer, grand- eluded : The Rev. and Mrs. Maryellen Evans, all of St. dance will be held at the Tri- Rev. Lura Hayes officiating.
John City, Tenn. and Is in oi!, for only about five Stephanie Stout, Darlene parenta, Meloo;ly Snouffer, an John D. Davis, Oak Hill; Mrs. Albans, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Grande Square Building on The 7 p.m. ceremony will be
employed at the Philip Sporn yean. She atudled for two Halley, Carolyn Stout, auitt, Mr. and Mrs. Donald M. D. FloydGahm, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Plant and family, . Pl. Eastern Avenue in Clallipolls. preceded with a half hour of
Plant. He enjoys nature years under the lnatructlon of Barbara Allen, Debbie Newell, grandparents, and Merril Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Pleasant, w. Va.; Jessie Lee Caller for the dance will he music by Mr .. and Mrs.
' photoll'llpby as a bobby. His Margaret Brim. She teaches Felker and Kim· Allen. Those Mr. and Mrs. John Pope, Warren Jay Yerlon, Pat, Whitehead, Mayfield, Ky.; the club caller, Sill Gene Merlyn Ross to begin at 6:30
wife, tbe for.mer Shl~ley arts and crafts at the Gazebo unable to attend but sending · Johnny Wayne and Chad, Mr. Jimmy, Cherry, and Lynn Jenifer DickiMon, Falls Evans. The hours will be p.m.
A reception wW follow in
Albright 11 from thllarea and in pt. Pleasant, llllll cake 'gifts were Brenda Morgan, and Mrs. Mike Smith, Shelly Yerion, ·Mr. and Mrs. Church, Va.; William and fr9m 8-11 p.m. Refreshments
and
Tina,
and
Mr.and
Mrs.
Playford
Wilcox,
all
of
Jim
McConnick,
Charleston,
of
homemade
lee
cream
and
tile
church IIOclU 1'011111. The
teac:bel at Hannan Trace. .
decorating at the Extension .Jane Ann Slagle, Mary
BellS Grace II a Trustee of Office.
Morgan, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bartels, JoShua and Jackson; The Rev. and Mrs. w. va.; Betty Lou Felts, cake Will he served. All area gracious cllllllm fl. oplll
·t1Je French Art Colony and Is In the High School Amateur l&gt;ale Saunders.
Megan.
Kirby Oiler, Dr. and Mrs. Minneapolis, Minn.
square dancers are invited. church !""1beobllerved.

· normal spatters to a presentably
clean appearance during baking or
roasting . And the panels remove tor
cleaning of heavy soil.at the sink.
The restoftheo~ien Is easily ••cte!IS·I
lblfl for nor.maJcleaning thanks to
.
an oven door that lifts right off and
out ol the way. This model also adds
an easy-to-read clo&lt;?k and a handy
, ninu!e timer foyour kitchen without
taking up an inch of walt or counter
.
space.

' 329

I

~· ~

Foleys will celebrate

Miss Kim
Allen hono...' "d'
"'

01

MOIWII PITI7il3
0\ll h! y lte th,trl!l lflfke !n r' a
Qftl l b\.ry - 6-pOSotoOfl J,JfV il•

Pomeroy-Middleport

BY CATHERINE BENET
GALLIPOLIS- Houseman
could well have written, "To
a hem dying young." The
King (to some) is dead at the
age of 42 and an era in music
has died as well. For many
the grief was personal, for
some it was just another
passing.
In Gallipolis the news of
Elvis Presley's death
shocked many and tore at
others. Tickets had been
purchased for the concert "in
Huntington and for some
perhaps it would be a dream
come true to see their hero
'perform .
Before the .shock of Elvis'
death set in many headed for
local record departments to
purchase tapes,
LPs,
'BnYA.. visible
posters;
remembrance I of their
favorite star.
Jim Cochran of the G. C.
Murphy Co. in Silver Bridge
Plaza, commented, " ... it's
been tremendous, referriJ\g
to the fifty people a day who
have flocked in to the store
requesting his music.
Cochran also remarked,
"You can tell they're hurt by
it." Pat Ball of Alcove muses
over the fact that only a week
ago that store reduced a $6.95
Elvis book to a dollar to clear
out the stock. Both CQChran
and Ms. Ball predict that the
demand for Elvis products
will carry well into the new
year.
Rumors surrounding the
·avaUability of Elvis' records
continues to flourish. David
Hughes, a buyer for One Stop
Record Wholesaler in Pittsburgh, · Pa. feels that no
shortage of tapes and records
•WiU be felt on the market.
When contacted Friday afternoon , Hughes, whose
company sells to the Murphy
chain throughout Pittsburgh,
Ohio and West Virginia, felt
confident that RCA would
keep a steady flow of
material coming for some
time. The only collector's
item, reported Hughes
reported, might be the latest
album Elvis cut. Moody Blue,

0 ver 25, 0 attend
p
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t
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r,
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SALE

17.0 Cu.Ft.

Gallipolis-Point Ple4sant

Elvis/ What now?

Baker reuniqn enjoyed

MITTAG.

Gibson

992-2156

The artist behind the work

ire 30" Electric
CONE FLAVORS

446-2342

Miss Niday 'weds

THIS WEEK'S

FOUR

Charlene Hoeflich

.Second
.............
··
··
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retreat planned ·

POMEROY GOLF CLUB

WCK
5 BALLS $1.00

The

Catherine Benet

POMEROY-MIDDI.fPORT UONS Q.UB .

COME
THIS

Woman 's World

for each child for either
performance.
Providing the piano that
Anhle Oakley and Buffalo
Bill, will be presented next will be used for thiR outdoor
Sunday, August 21, with both musical presentation will he
an afternoon and evening Ward's Keyboard whose
perfonnance on the Patio al showroom is on State Street
Rlverby, by the Fanfare in Gallipolis. The French Art
Theatre Ensemble of New Colony is most grateful to Bill
York City.
Ward for his participation in
This exciting live musical this special project.
Throughout the area,
theatre at 3 p.m. Sunday
afternoon and again at 7 p.m., . tickets for AMie Oakley and
spcnsored by the French Art Buffalo Bill are available. In
Colony, will have appeal.for Athens, those who are inthe entire family. Those who . terested should call Carolyn
attend will he assured of an Hippensteel at 592•2308: In
att~moon or evening of ex- Jackson, PJs and Jack and
citement, actlon,-discovery, a Jllls have tickets for sale.
1111rprlse a minute and just They may also be purchased
GALLIPOLIS ·
The .
in the College Relations office· Gallipolis ' Christian Church
plain fun for all ages.
Annie Oakley Is known as at Rio Grande College. In will have its second minithe greatest little wing shot Pomeroy, The Kiddie Shoppe retreat of the year August 19that ever lived, and Colonel on West 2nd has tickets. In Pl. 20 with registration starting
William F. {Buffalo Bill) Pleasant, residents will find at 7 on Friday,
Cody, the world-famed Indian tickets available at Carter's
The overnight retreat will
scout and showman supreme. Men's Wear and at the Silver be for pre-schoolers through
Also appearing in the cast Bridge Plaza, in the ABC the sixth Jlrade. The _theme
will·he Sitting Bull, Medicine Kiddie Shoppe.. Locally in will he "The Life of Jesus."
Man of the mighty S!ollll Gallipolis, tickets may be There will he four 15 minute
nation and Frank Butler, purchased from Mrs. Tope or film strips shown on the life of
champion marksman of the any member of her ·com· Jesus, Nativity, Story of the
Western States. This great mittee as well as at several Twelve, Crucifixion, and
American musical is the local Gallipolis merchants Resurrection. There will be
story of an orphaned back- Including The Bastille, Corl's crafts, devotions , games,
woods girl who through Shoe Store, Jack and Jills, classes, a pizza party, singing
courage, grit and talent PJs, Thomas Clothiers and and other planned activities.
becomes a famous star, Tope Furniture Galleries.
The director of the retreat
In case ol rain, the per· Is Barb King and her
appearing before presidents
and the crowned heads of formance will be held In the assistants are Jane Vinson,
Europe. It is historically Washington Grade School and Debbie Fraley. Kitty
accurate and packed with Auditorium.
action,
Co-chairing
the
~rrangements for the two
SUNDAY DEADLINE
· performances at Rlverby are
The dettdllne lor wedding
Janet Maler . aod David and engagement notices
GALLIPOLIS - Members
·Strang for the French Art and society news Items for and families of The French
Colony. Anita Tope is the · the SIIDday Times-sentinel · City Swingers Square Dance ·
Ticket Chairwoman, assisted Is 12 noon on the Thuroday Club met Thursday evening
by M'Lou Morrison, Leslie preceding publleatlon. for-their annual family picnic
Treleven and Peggy Evans. Information may he turned on Mound Hill. Chairman of
Admission to either the 3 or In or mailed to the office of this year's event was club
7 p.m. performance on the Gallipolis Daliy vice-president Bob Bartimus.
Sunday, August 28, is $2.50 for Tribune or Pomeroy Dally
Following the meal club
adults and $1.50 lor children, Sentinel. Engagement and members and families enages 2 through 14. Special · wedding
joyed several competitive
forms
are
group rates for children, available upon request.
games.
when 1P or more attend
Present for the event were
together, are av~ilable at $1 ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;,:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:::: Mary and Urban Baldwin,
GALLIPOLIS

let~endary wild west show,

HOLE IN -ONE CONTEST

lealTraastreis

August 21st
thru
August 27th

Annie to open soon

breakfasting witll me group
and setting a furiOWI pace for
the reporters •ho ·wer_e
following him to ·see if
anytlllng else would bappen.
Noting did. It was vintage
Rhodes in -a style he bas
perfected fr9m decades . ol
visiting countless state fairs.
The only difference was an
increase in the number of
bodyguards around blm.
As one reporter said, the
pie incident •ill probab!Y go
down in Ohio political history
roughly equivalent with the
til,ne Cleveland Mayor Ralph
Perk caught his hair on fire.
People will remember
RhOdes at the fair long after
tlley've forgotten about the
time a guy hit the governor
with a pie.

Rhodes busy as usual during fair

'

Aug. 2l,l!m

95

.WIT

Plans made

Energy-Saving•'

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By
Frigidaire •.

Uaft len energy thlin
any other 16.0 cu-ft or

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•

114--The Swlday TIJnes.&amp;ntinel, Sunday. Aug. 21, 1977"

Couple united in wedlock

1'~------

Coming
~~~n!~~~~ti~y":!: i Events
j

Blue Lake

Chapman and three chlldmt,
Randy, Scotty and Michliel of
Beeeh City were recent
guests of his brother, Mr. and
Mra. Jimmie Chapman and
daughter, T•mi·
Mrs. Nancy Mal'llten and
three children, Mioty, Chris
and Clint of Colorado were
recent gueasofMrs. Bertha
Craig and Mary belle Mooney.
Other guests from Columbus
were Mrs. Gloria Pickett and
son Jack.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Halley
and family of Dayton were
weekend guests of his father.
Mr. and Mrs. Emmit Halley.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Oliver of Marlon, 0 . were
overnight guests of Mrs .
· William Oliver.
Mr. and Mrs. Thurman
Boggs, Jackson Pike, entertained Sunday evening
with a family picnic and
cookout and get-together .
Those presenl were Lonnie
Boggs, Diane and Resa ,
Norman Kelly, Carolyn, Rex
and Nanette, Larry Betz,
Linda and Kim, Winston
Saunders, Miss Mellssa
Ham., Harold and Janice
Saunders and son Kim, Mrs.
Mary Jean Betz, Mr. and
Mrs. Thunnan Boggs, Eric
and Erica Saunders, aU local,
and William D. Cornell 'and
Mildred and Julia Cornell of
Orient, 0 ., Craig and
Deborah Belleville, Bidwell.
Several from this community have been attending
the special meetings at the
First Baptist Church in
Gallipolls where the wellknown minister, Rev. B. R.
Lakin is the speaker. Large
· crowds attend nightly.
Winston Saunders of
Nelsonville spent the
weekend with his parents,
Mr: and Mrs. Harold Saunders and family. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Halley
and family of Centerville
were recent guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Emm!fHaUey.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley
Johnson have been enjoying a
two week vacation from their
duties ·at GSI. They accompanied their two grandchildren, Ladonna and Ricky
Stocker home to Davenport,
Iowa where they spent a few
days before returning home.
Mr. and Mrs. Cline
Thompson of Grove City
spent from Friday till Sunday
with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Brady Sheets.
Hubert Sheets'is a patient

&amp;:«'

at Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Homer Porter ts 1
medical patient at Hol&lt;er
Medical Center. She fell 011
the street in Gallipolla
Saturday and broke hef
glasses and bruised her who\f
face bad and blacked boU!
eyes.
The Bible School which will
held at the Victory ~"_!~:~
Church last week
Sunday evening with a
nice program. They ••,... ,,.Jt
105 every day. On Sundaf:
they also had a picnic
for all the children.
_
Mr. and, Mrs. Glen""
Chapman and family 0t:
Athens were recent guests of;
hiil brother, Mr. and
David Chapman and
Mr. and Mrs.
Spencer and two childr·e~:;':
Joel and Jeremy
Gallipolis, Bud Spencer
family of Warren and Lei&gt;
Spencer of Kentucky ano'C
Mrs. Yavonda Todd
Washingto n State were
Saturday evening guests
Mr. and Mrs. James Colem,.,_
and family. It is the first time
"":.
Mrs.'Todd has been home f&lt;fr.''
several years.
;
Mrs. Gypsy Chapman Of
Miller entertained recently
with a family dinner. Those
present were Mr. and Mrs .
Carter Ross of Florida, Mr.
and Mrs. Andrew Chapmart
and three children, Randy.
Scotty and Michael of Beech
City, Mr. and Mrs. Jimmfe
Chapman and daughter Tami
and Mrs. Janet McKinney
and daughter and Mrs.
Maryanne Uloyd and family
and Richard Chapman.
Miss Melissa Harris of Bald
Knob, W. Va. spent Saturdaynight with Mr. and l\lr Kennison Saunders anll::
family.
:::;
Theresa, Kathy and Bris
Rose, Marlyn Mooney a

and

bishop st..,ves. The

1
•

..

GALUPOUS - Decorated
with vases of peach gladlolas
and whit~ mums with accents
of greenery, the symbolic
wedding candle, and IBrge
palm ferns placed on each
side of the altar railing, the
First Presbyterian Church of
Gallipolis was the setting for
lojte wedding of Susan Carter
Sprow and Brent D. McCreedy. The double ring
ceremony was performed by
the Reverend James Frazier
at 2:30p.m. Sunday, June 26.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. John H. Sprow, '
Portsmouth Road. The
/ bridegroom Is the son of Mr.
· and Mra. Ple&lt;ce D. McCreedy, S!IDse! Drive.
~ half hour of prenuptial
music was presented by Mrs.
Merlyn Ross, organist, whose
selections
were

az::
ot:

''Evergreen,' '
14

Vickie Moore
·WILL WED - Plans have oeen completed for the
marriage of Miss Vicltie Moore, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Freddie Moore,Cheshire, to Mr. Robert Major, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Martin Major, Rushsylvania, Ohio. The wedding
will take place on Saturday, August Tl, at 7 p.m. at the
First Fr&lt;:-byterian C.hurch, Gallipolis. Rev. Frank Hayes
will off!Ciate. FolloWing the ceremony a reception will be
held in the clrurch Social Room .

ENGAGED - Mr. and Mrs. James Young, Letart;
are announcing the wedding plans of their daughter.
JoAnne, to David Lee Siders, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Siders, Gallipolis Ferry. Miss Young will be a student at
Point Pleasant High SChool this fall and her fiance, a 1977
8J'aduate of Point Pleasant High School, Is employed at
Sider's Jewelers. An August 26 wedding ceremony lS
being piBmed. The gracious custom of open churcp will be
observed at 7: 30p.m. with a reception following.

OTC./PCP

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SATURDAY

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PlAIA

GIU.li'OliS, 11110

EK!! ITY

We accept VISA and Master Charge
PHYSICAl TIIEIIAI'Y SUVICfS IIDIIIVIIIIIE
11111 SUSM IAIUIR. IN, ASST. MMit:FI

.,

~it Depot; Parris Island.

SuNDAY
' . PARTY PLANNED
HOMECOMING Sunday at
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hughes
Syracuse Asbury United will c.elebrate their 2~th
Methodist Church. Sunday wedding anniversary on
School and worship service in Sunday, Aug. 28 with a party
lllllrnlng with basket lunch at given at the Shrine Club from
12:30 p.m. in social moms. 2-4. The party will be bo!¢ed
Special program in afternoon by their children.
beginning at 2 p.m. SpeCial
singing by various groups
from church and the Rev. and
MONOAY
Mrs. Wendell Stutler.
MEIGS JAYCEE meeting
CHICKEN BARBECUE at 8 p.m. Monday at Meigs
Saturday and Sunday at Inn.
Syracuse Park sponsored by
TIJESDAY
Syracuse Fire Department.
AMERICAN Legion AuxServing begins at 11 :30 a.m. iliary,RacinePoat1102,8p.m.
Also softbaU tourney.
·· at the hall. Covered diah dinner with members to take
MONDAY
their own table service. Dues
MEIGS Athletic Boosters are payable to either Mrs.
Monday 7:30p.m. at the high Mary Housh or Mrs Julia
school.
.
Noms
·.
·

SAlUllllAY - 8 AM • 3 PM

M':.:"!:~RS

'-:.

.I!QMEROY - Mr. and
Mt:S. Michael Hazelton,
. Salineville, are announcing
th&amp; birth of a seven pound, U
ounce son, Jeremy Michael,
boi'JI Aug. 18 al the East
Li~rpool City Hospital.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. James Hazelton,
· Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mr&amp;.
•

James Maddox, Harrodsburg, Ky. Mrs . . Clara
Paulsen, Hemlock Grove and
Mrs. Nancy Stopher, Harrodsburg,
Ky .
are
greatgrarK!nlothers.
Mr. Hazelton is a minister
of the Church of Christ in
SalineviUe.

...•
"

3lOCJnONS TO ·SERVE YOU!

·.

only $13

MAIN BANK-SECOND AVE.

..

.•.·

VINTON BRANCH-VINTON
•

"Yonr Fr,lll Service People To PeiJple Bank"

MEMBER FDIC

'

..::t
.'·
'

••
•

a credit

hour. That'S only $39 for an

dette of Loms1ana were

50% -75%

.

days wtth her grandmother,
Mrs. J . R. Murphy and
1 mil
a y.
. Kevin Knapp spent several
days with his grandmother,
Mrs. Lena Knapp of LangsVtlle.

ISears I

,,

Our best l(enmore®
dishwashers

50

8
CUT

~

SUMMER CLEARANCE

r

Debb~e Murphy spent a few

Sunday visitors of their aunt
and uncle, Mr. and Mrs.
Harley T. Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Russell
and grandson of Columbus
spent 8 few days with
his mother, Mrs . Bertha
Russell and .brother, Earl

with peach and ivory lace roses with white ribbon.
streamers. She carried an
A reception was held in the
· ivoi:y linen and lace hand· social room of the church
kerchief given to her by her immediately following the
late
maternal
great- · ceremony. The bride's table
grandmpther Carter. Her featured a four-tier wedding
o.niY jewelry was a gold cross cake topped with ivory satin
necklace, a gift from the wedding bells. The cake was
groom.
.flanked on eacli side with
Her sister, Mrs. Max peach candles in crystal
Knopp, who attended her as candelabra and crystal punch
matron of honor, and Mrs. bowl. The table was
Dean Barry, sister of the decorated with nosegays of
groom, as maid of honor, fresh flowers and ivy.
wore peach . floor length Presiding at the table were
quiana gowns with cap Mrs. Roger Nichols, Miss
sleeves and cowl necklines. Polly Easton, and Miss Jane
The sell-attached sashes Posey.
crossed at the back and.
Prior to the Wedding, the
formed a bow in front at the bride was honored with a FRANKIE 'N JOHNNY
BuRBANK, Calif. (UP!) waistline. Both attendants bridal shower given by Miss
wore peach braided hats Kim Mangh and Miss Polly Frank Sinatra, who appeared
matching their gowns. They Easton of Wilmington, Ohio. semi-retired, will try out two
carried identical Colonial Another was co-hosted by firsts this fall: He will fill in
bouquets of peach roses, Mrs. James Enyart and Mrs. for Johnny Carson as host of
small white pompons, baby's Roger Nichols of Gallipolis. the "Tonight Show" and star
breath and greenery tied with
Out of town guests were in a television movie:
Sinatra will ' host the
ivory streamers. They wore . registered from Columbus,
gold bracelets, a gift from the Jackson , . Athens,
and "Tonight Show " Nov. 14 and
will star in his firSt television
bride.
Ashland, Ky.
Master Aaron Knopp
The couple now reside at movie, uaJntract on Cherry
served as ringbearer carry- 989 .Wayne Rd., Apt. 21 in Street," for !;BC later this
year.
ing an ivory satin and lace Wilmington, Ohio.
pillow.
Gary Lyons served as best
man. Ushers were Mike
330 ·Second Avenue
Skidmore and Troy Bartley.
Guests . were registered by
Mrs.
Roger
Nichols,
l
Gallipolis.
has- ·
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs. Sprow chose a
tiered run length gown of
peach and green chiffon. Her
waist corsage was or peach
roses tied with green ribbon.
Mrs. McCreedy, mother of
the groom, selected a long
soft pink sundress with· a
touch of white lace trim and
matching long sleeved
jacket. Her flowers were pink

7615

Built-in
Was $339.95

28995

8

Portable Was
$359.95
Colors $5 extra

8

309

95

Eac:h of these advertised items •s readily available for

sale as advertised.

HeaYy-duty wash system has Pot a11d Pa11
cycle tltal includes 3 distinct wash periods
pitts 5 rin•e periods. Furcctl-air drying system h elps prcHnt spotling. Power Miser
co ntrol le t; you "coo l-&lt;lry" to sa\ e energy.
Plu; :\.Jenl washin g a c~ion , rinyl-coate&lt;l
r ectangul ar ra cks. Built·in mi&gt;del replace s
most other units without altering existing
space . . . 24Ya·· in. installation width ;
SALE EXPIRES SEPT. 8th

Shipping, inslallation extra
• "S~an has a credit plan lo suit mosl C\lcry riced
. • Pri.:es ure Curalog prices
• Now on 8ale

'

STILl SOME GOODIES AVAILABLE.
---etc.~

BEDROOM SUITES

SUPER LOVELY

II

I

54·.99 95FRENCH PROVINCIAL ·
INCLUDING

·

Registration ,for fall quarter is Tuoodey, Sop·

FRAME

ANTIQUED CHERRY FINISH ON . SELECTED HA!UlW.IOODS',
ENGRAVED COMPRESSED WOOD, AND POLYSTYRENE
CCMPONENTS.

CHARGE IT!

tember 8. For more information -or complete

class schedules : .. phone 245-5353 or write lo us
at Rio Grande, Ohio 45674 .
Rio Grande Colloge/Communlty Colloge admits

•
•
•

THIRD AVENUE BRANCH

-.ews

Choice of beverage served
with each meal.
Services rendered on a non·
discriminatory basi&lt;.

average 3 hC?ur course .

-.-•

)

'

Wolfpen

milk.

And bes .. of all, we're not expensive . Residents
·of Jackson, Vinton, Melg:&amp; or Galli a Coun l ies pay

;•

'·

GALLIPOLIS
The
schedule of activities for this
, week at the Senior Citizens
Center,. 220 Jackson Pike, is
as follows :
Monday, August 22,
Physical Fitness, 11 :30 a.m.
Chorus, 1-3.
Tuesday , August 23,
Qullting and Visiting, 9-3 ;
Artex Embroidery Painting,
1.,'!.
Wednesday, August' 24 ,
Physical Fitness, 11 :30 a.m.;
Card Games, 1-3.
·
Thursday, August . 25,
Birthday Party, I :30 p.m.
Friday, August 26, Art
Class, 1-3; Nutrition Games,
1-3; Social Hour, 7 p.m.
The Senior Nutrition
Program will serve the
following meals:
· Baked
Monday
spaghetti, tossed salad,
pineapple slices, buttered hot
Italian bread, butter, s11gar
cookies, milk.
Tuesday - Pot roast of
beef,
gravy,
mashed
potatoes, buttered peas and
carrots, bread, butter,· ice
cream, milk.
Wednesday - Uver and
onions, au gratin potatoes,
buttered green beans, roll,
butter, peach cobier, milk.
Thursday - Salisbury
steak, baked potato, peach
salad, buttered beets, bread,
butter, rice pudding with
raisins, mUk.
Friday - Turkey salad
sandwich, potato chips,
buttered peas, butter,
chocolate cake with icing,

You can be a
full-time or a
part-time student.

.
,,
...

Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a gown
of candlelight ivory quiana
with a SCQOp neckline, long
full sleeves, fitted wai$1, and
an attached train. The bodice
and sleeves of the gown were.
reembroidered with !Bee. She
wore a head band of baby's
breath. Her bridal bouquet of
Colonial design made of
peach talisman roses, peach
and white pompons, baby's
breath ~~pd greenery was tied

. Mr. and Mrs. Brent McCreedy

I'

MON. • WED. - 9 AM • 3 PM
FRI. &amp; SAT. - 9 AM • 3 P.M

c

" You Are So Beautiful."

Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Ruaatll
and grandson of Columbul,
1\T
1'\T
Bertha RW18ell were Wedj
j ~otes nesday visitors of Mr. and
. .1 d Mrs. Harley T. Johnson.
Mr · Lin coIn R. UMell• VIS
Ie
Mr. Nonnan Hellman of
Saturday evenmg With Mr. Bellefontaine, Ohio was
and Mrs. Harley T. Johnson. Tuesday visitor of Mr. and·
Mr. and Mrs.. Okey Bur- M s. Harley T. J 0hnson.

tDOICES ..... at Rio Grande

\\

THURSDAY CLOSED

Birth announced

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joAnne Young

"

BANKING ·HOURS

~

Soloists were

Sr. Citizens
·Cakndar

57

THIRD AVENUE BRANCH
HOURS
MONDAY-FRIDAY - 8 AM • 6 PM

Sometimes.'~

Mrs. Nancy Walker Colles
with selections of "With
You," " Starting Here,
Starting Now," and during
the ceremony the 41Lord's
Prayer."
Mr.
Merlyn
Ross sang "Love Never
Endi." Upon entering the
sanctuary, the bride sang

;sw

The First National Bank

CONVALESCENT AIDS

''Amazing

--·ez;;
··,··;~;:;:;.~~··~
·

---

IT IS EASY.TO BANK AT

POMEROY Senior
Citizens Center schedule for
the week of August 22-26 is as
follows:
Monday, August 22 Cards and games, Square
Dancing, 12:30-3 p.m.
Tuesday, August 23 - Craft
Class,l0-11:30a.m.; Chorus,
12:15-2 p.m.
Wednesday, August 24 Social Security Representative, 9:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.;
Games, 12 : ~0-2 p.m.
Thursday, August 25 Sing-a-long, Horseshoes,
12:30-2 p.m.
Friilay, August 26 - State
Fair Trip, Leave Center at 8
a .m.; Art Class, 10-11 :30
a.m.; Bowling, l..'l. p.m.
Center is open Monday
through Friday from 8:30 to
4:30. Quilting, Visiting, Cards
and Games, Information and
Referral Daily.
COAD Senior Nutrition
Program menu :
Monday
Baked
spaghetti, tossed salad,
pineapple slices, sugar
cookie, Italian bread, butter,
milk .
Tuesday Hamburg
gravy, mashed potatoes,
buttered peas and carrots, ice
cream, bread, milk, butter.
Wednesday - Uver and
onions, · au gratin potatoes,
buttered green beans, apple
crisp, roll, butter, milk.
Thursday - Ground chuck
steak, baked potato, buttered
beets, peach salad, bread,
butter, rnilk, rice pudding
with raisins.
Friday ·- Turkey salad
sandwich , potato chips,
broccoli ' with cheese sauce,
chocolate cake with icing,
milk.
.
Coffee, tea, buttermilk and
juice served daily.

Grace," ''Homecoming,"
" Illy
Tribute"
and

~

DO-ITYOURSELF
SAVE 75%

..

McCreedy-Sprow vows ·spoken ) "s~:· Citizens .
Calendar
.
.

BY RUBY SAUNDERS
Mr. and Mrs. Euell Harris
of Bald Knob, W. Va. spent a
few days with her niece, Mr.
appliques with seed pearls ~:
and Mrs. Melvin Craft and
trimming the full skirt that :~
family.
fell from an empire bodice SUNDAY •
Mr. and Mrs. Marabel
and ended in a cbapellength THE FILM "Gospel Road" at
train. Her three tiered elbow the French City Baptist Haffelt were Friday eve.nlng
length wedding veil of illusion Church during the evening dinner gu·ests of their
fell from a Juliet cap with service at 7:30p.m. Everyone granddaughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Monte Sheets. While there
!Bee appliques and seed welcome!
pearts. Her jewelry was a FRENCH CITY Baptist Mr. arid Mrs. Haffelt
pearl necklace and matching Church ground breaking celebrated their 44th wedding
pearl earrings. She carried ceremony
for
new annlvel'tlary. They were
cascade bouquet of white educational unit. Afellowship married by the IBte Rev.
sweetheart roses, white dinner will be held at 12:45 Jennings Cremeans, brotherdaisies, stephanotis, and p.m. and ground breaking in-law of MNI. Hoffelt. They
were married at the
baby's breath.
service at 2 p.m.
Providence
Baptist Church
Donna Carpenter, Wooster, RELATIVES and ·friends of
on
the
Teens
. Run Rd. Mr.
was maid of honor. She wore H.' R. · Johnaon· family are
HB.ffelt
is
now
a
retired school
a pale yellow dress of dotted Invited to their reunion in the
teacher.
They
were
the first
swiss over bridal satin featur- Activities Building of the
to
be
remembered
to be
ing an empire waist, square GoUla
County
Jr.
married
at
this
church.
neckline and long sheer Fairgrounds. Basket dinner
Mrs. Margaret Johnson
sleeves. Her headdress was a at noon.
was
Friday dinner guest of
yellow picture hat with a
satin ribbon tied in a bow at FELLOWSHIP dinner at her· daughter, Mrs. Beverly
the back. She carried a col- ·F~ch City Baptist after Chapman and daughter,
onial bouquet of mint green morning service to · be Tam!.
daisies and baby's breath followed by ground breaking.
Mr. and Mrs . Brent
with green streamers.
Bring cover dish.
Saunders and two daughters,
Bridesmaids were Mary FAMILY picnic for DeMolay Laura and Gretta, qf
Ann Scott, Parkersburg, W. F1eur Dells Chapter mem- Parkersburg, W. Va. spent
Va., and Jan Stevenson, twin bers and families and ad- Friday night and Saturday
Heart'', and uEvergreen." A sister of the bridegrooln. visory council members at with his brother, Mr. and
prayer entitled "The Lord They wore gowns and hats Shrine Club at 4 p.m. Bring Mrs. Kennison Saundera and
family.
Mr. and Mrs.]e/fery Stevenson •
Bless You and Keep You" identical to that of the maid of food and table service.
Mrs. Pauline Boster and
ABRAHAM
was sung during the h9norbutmlntgreenincolor. THE
Mr.
and Mrs. Gilbert Johnson
They
carried
colonial
bouELIZABETH
'fhomas
family
ceremony.
Doug
Poyet
arawards in journalism front
SCRIBE AWARDS
were
recent guests of Mrs.
quets
of
yellow
daisies
and
reunion
will
be
held
at
Tyn
ranged
the
selections.
the University of Southern
LOS ANGELES (UP!) Mary
Wolford and Mrs.
baby's
breath
with
yellow
Rhos
church.
Basket
dinner
Given
in
marriage
by
hef·
Gilbert Grosvenor, editor of California.
Edward
Johnson.
streamers.
at
noon.
parents
and
escorted
down
The awards will be
National Geographic
Mrs.
Ruby
Saunders was
The
flower
girl
was
Sarah
HENRY
and
Nancy
Saunders
the aisle by her father ,• the
Magazine, and Don Hewitt, presented Nov. 17.
Wednesday
dinner
guest of
Hale,
daughter
of
Mr.
and
reunion
at
Yoctangee
City
Grosvenor has been editor bride wore a floor length
executive producer of CBS
her
daughter,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Mrs.
H.
David
Hale.
She
wore
Park
in
Chillicothe.
Basket
11
News'·
60
Min utes" of National Ge~~~:raphic since gown of white sheerganza.
Cleeland
Willis
and
family.
yellow dotted swiss dress lunch at noon.
program, will receive 1970, when he succeeded his Chantilly !Bee and seed atrimmed
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
in lace and tied in a _ANNUAL Church family
pearls
enhanced
the
bodice
distingliished achievement father, Melville Gr~enor.
bow at the front. She wore a reunion will be held at . Halley and two children have
yellow picture hat and car- Proctorville Women's Club returned to their home at
ried a basket of white rose houae below the Fairgrounds. Myrtle Beach, S. C. after
spending some time at their
petals, green daisies and Basket dinner at noon.
baby's breath. All of the HARRISON reunion is house near Circleville and
bridal attendants wore small Delaware Fairgrounds at they also visited his father,
son, Kevin, James an
Mr. and Mrs. Emmit Halley
engraved pendants, gifts of Delaware, Ohio.
Jennifer Wolford were rect
of Gallipolis and her father,
the bride.
HOMECOMING at Guyan
guests of Mrs. Marybei~~ ­
Clyde Hubbard of Wellston.
Sheila Osburn, Washington, Gospel Tabernacle on Route
Mooney and Bertha Cra!fr. •
Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Willis
W. Va. , cousin of the bride, 218. Special singing and
Mr. and Mrs. Harold ·
registered guests. Th~ bride's several preachers. Basket and Mr. and Mrs. Waldo
Harrison
of Neighborhood.
Wlllts or near Ironton were
mother wore a long sleeved dinner at noon.
Rd.
were
recent
guests of hJi::!
empire waisted dress of sea THE NINTH reunion of the Wednesday dinner guests of .
aunt,
Mrs.
Mary
Porter a
foam green chiffon which was Wilton and Rosetta (Chick) Mr. and Mrs. Cleeland Willis
family
of
Marion,
0. Mr,.. .,.
room in your
'trimmed at the waist and Taylor family at the Gallia and tlvo children, Louann and
Porter·is
somewhat
improveir·
'f
sleeves with silver and green County Junior Fair Grounds. Matthew:
home. , .
from her recent illness. :;: '
braid.
Basket dinner at noon. All
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Mooney,
Persona 1iz.- ,Vf)Ur r com .fi ero f
Mr: and Mrs. David FraZeE •
Mr.
and
Mrs.,
Oakey
Johrison,
Everett
Confer,
Howard,
'relatives
and
friends
are
'
with moulrhn g~ for picture
and
daughter; Michele, bf
.....' -. "
Rev. Ernest Baker and Rev.
Pa., served as best man. invited to attend.
and photo lrA mes, Rroun d
Columbus
and Mr. and Mrs.
. ... ' : '·UsherswereRickOsburnand REVIVAL BULAVILLE · Larry Justice were recent
fireplA cE's.. mirr or:&lt;~ anrl
Richard
Danner
and lamilf
Greg Osburn, brothers of the Christian Church. Special guests of Mrs. Marybelle
medicinE" cabinet!', or A~
of
Gallipolis
were
recent
bride, and John Smith, North singing, preaching nightly at Mooney and Mrs. Bertha
guests of Mr;'-and Mrs .
~hair rail!' , re iling and door
Canton. Ringbearer was 7:30 by Rev. Noah Burgess. Craig.
Charley Johnson.
trim .
even on . kitrhen
Mr. and Mrs . Andrew
Steven Spencer, son of Mr. THE 18TH ANNUAL Milton
cabinel~~;.
and Mrs. Ronald Spencer.
Brown reunion at 12:30 at the
A re&lt;:eption, catered by the Gallia County Fairgrounds
Ohio Valley College SteJli&gt;ing atthe 4-H building . AI)
Stones, was held in the relatives and friends are
church fellowship room. The cordially
invited
by
. ''
bride's table was decorated ·president, Charles Hnher.
with a sheer white cloth over · HOMECOMING AT CroWn .
yellow and trimmed at ·the City ·Methodist. Basket
corners and in the center with dinner at noon. Special
yellow bows. An arrange- -singing and preaching.
WITH
ment
of
yellow,
green'
and
Pastor
Jack
Rankin
invites
Third &amp; Vine
white daisies and baby's nublic.
breath was set around a three
branch candelabra at each U'ITLE KYGER Ladies Aid
end of the table. The three and Sunday School will hold ·
tiered wedding cake was. set cook out supper at the church
on top of a fountain with flow- at 6 p,m.
ingmlntgreenwater. . ·
HOMECOMING at Salem
"
Serving at the reception Baptist Church; basket
~ere Mrs. Dale Lockhart, dinner at noon. Rev. Joseph
AVAILABLE EACH WEEK
coUSIII of the bnde, Mrs. Godwin to be speaker
..,
Leona Grear, friend of the .MQNDAY
•
·
PROFESSIONAL
At the First National we believe in serving our customers
couple, · Darlene Carpenter REGULAR business meeting
by
APPLIANCES
and Donna Hartleben, both of Gallia Chapter, OCSEA, ·
to the best of our. ability. The First National not only
collegefnendsofthebride.
Monday, August 22, at 7:30
provides customers with all .the services that a full
Out of town guests included p.m. Grande Squares Club
service bank has to offer but it offers hours that wil J fit
Debi Arnett, Weirton, W. Va. ; Room on Eastern Avenue.
Mr. and Mrs.'l!alph Stewart, TUESDAY
.
even the busiest of schedules .
Miami, Fla., Tim Foster, VOICE
OF
.
Terry Woldorf, Robin
. .
Vtctory
The next time you have some banking to do remember
~f2?
Mendenhall, Dave Williams, Mt~stonary ConveQtion at
Loraine
McCumber Fatth Temple Church from
our 57 banking hours a week. We are open when you need
· Delaware· Mike Lucas sh!i Aug. ~25.
us.
nston w' Va. Kim' Gill . WEPNESDAY
Wesu;~e; M~. Mike Smith . Vc;&gt;ICE
OF
Victory
and Stacie, Lewisburgh, .W. Mtss10nary Convention at
va .; Mr. and Mrs. Don Faith Temple Church from
Carpenter and David, Aug. ~25.
"' ...
Wooster· Sabrina Noel St THURSDAY
'
Marys, W. Va.; CarlaSu;.er: VOICE
OF
Victory
South Charleston w Va . Mtss10nary Convention at
I
· and Rosanne Nixo~, Mt. Faith Temple Church from
Sterling, Ky.
Aug. ~25 .
A wedding trip was taken to BAND Rehearsal Aug. 25,
Niagara Falls, Canada. Mr. 6:30 to 8 p.m., Kyger Creek
and Mrs. Stevenson will be High School.
moving to Henderson, Tenn.
in the fall where ·he will be a
, TRAINING ENDS
.
student at Freed-Hardeman
POMEROY ..:. Marine
i:;;;·~!l;ieiil.o:owo:owiiM\W:M~' ··.· Private Earl B. Chapman,
·~
• I I" U iS
' • son of Martin J. Chapman of
Route 4, Box 299, Pomeroy,
has completed recruit
training at the Marine Corps

BELPRE - Tonnie Leigh
Osburn. daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Delmar G. Osborn. 2405
Rockland Ave., Belpre, and
granddaughter ol Delmar J .
Osburn, Reedsville, became
the bride of Jeffery Scott
Stevenson, son ol Mr. and
Mrs. Milton W. Stevenson, in
a double ring ceremony on
May 21 at· U~e Belpre Church
of Christ. Evangelist Ronald
D. Laughery officiBted at the
open church wedding.
The church was decorated
with two arrangernents of
mint green and yellow
daisies, spider mwns and
baby's breath. Between the
two arrangements was a
single red rose representing
the bride's grandmother.
Two nine branch candelabra
and one three branch
candelabra held white
candles. l'alms completed
the setting. Family pews
were marked with white
bows.
Music presented by Doug
Poyet, Larry Sarver, Mrs.
Nancy Curry, and Ron Frost
included " Annie'.s Song",
'If". ''One Hand, One

~ -~!$:;·"··....

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If You Ha'IB Any Of
Tfless Crt(Jil Ca ras:

students of any race, color, national or ethnic
origin and Is an equal opportunity employer . Rio

Grande

College

Is

approved

for

·Ria·

Grande

College

and
·Community College

• !ANK AMERICA AD

Sult•s At

veterans

' benellts .

: Evet~thing l'o11 Never fJ:cpected i'rqm il College.

-

Other Bedroom

(.

• M.iEAIC AN EXPRESS
• ~4STE~ CI-IA.f\C.E
• DINERS CLUB
• ,CA~'~'E BLANCHE

rou M•r Outlll'f For

Great Savings

1 750
INSTANT Cl I!'iT

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'

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'•

�Inte_rnational panel held at Rio :=se.~·~

Miss Roach weds

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Mr. mtd Mrs. Mark Williams

•

Methodist women meet
KANAUGA - Kanauga
United Melhodist Women
held their Augu;1 meeting at
the hom e of Mrs, Audrey
Brownell. Opening song was
"Love Lifted Me.·• Prayer
was by Mai:y Shamblin. Roll
call was answered by
scripture verses beginning
with the letter A. Scripture

WHY

CARP
WEAR
When particles of sand,
mud and grimy dirt
become imbedded in
carpet fibers ... traffic
causes the dirt to grind
like sandpaper into the
pile. making the carpet
wear out more quickly.
Prolqng the life of your
carpets!

IEIITI~AC

was from Psalms 139:23 and
24, . Una Mae Raike and
Matthew 7:.13 and 14, Pina
Ward. Poem "In His Steps,"
was read by Enuna Spencer.
A reading was given "Cheap
at Twice the Price" by
Florence Allen. Bible
questions were asked by
Evelyn Rothgeb.
Bible study was I John,
chapter 3. Benediction was
given by Virginia Roush.
Regular business meeting
with 26 sick calls reported.
Birthdays of Mary Shamblin,
the hostess, Audrey Brownell
and Virginia Roush were
celebrated. Refreshments of
chicken salad sandwiches,
salad, potato chips, coid
drink and ice cream and cake
were served. Ethel Wright
returned thanks. Next
meeting will be with Mary
Shamblin.
1 Present were Mary Shamf&gt;.
lin, · Pina Ward, Emma
Spence.r , Evelyn Rothgeb,
Ethel Wright, Florence Allen,
Lena Mae Raike, Virginia
Roush and Audrey Brownell.

CARPET CLEANI NG SYSTEM

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THURS

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St.

Ga

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EVENTS SET

Peniel Community· ChUrch
will hold jtheir annual
Homecoming, August 28.
Sunday School wjU be at the
regular hour 10 a.m. Potluck
dinner in the Tea House at
noon. The program following
this year will be a Song
Festival. Following the ·
program,
t~e
Peniel
Cemetery Association · will
hold their annual business
meeting .

POMEROY - Miss Trudy daisLeg.
Maria Roach, daughter or
They carried white wicker
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Roach, baskets ol peach and yellow
Wright St., Pomeroy, and daisy petals with yellow ribMark Broderick Williams, bonsandstreamers.
son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Darin Roach, brother of the
Williams, Route 4, Pomeroy, bride, was ring hearer. He
'were united in marriage on wore a yellow ruxedo and a
June 26 at 3:30p.m. at the boutonniereofasillglecarna·
Middleport Church of Christ. lion tipped in peach. He car·
The double ring ceremony ried a white satin pillow with
was performed by Mr. lace trim.
George Glaze, Jr., minister of
Rock Williams, brother of
the church, beneath a walk the groom, Route 4,
through archway trimined Pomeroy, served as best
with boxwood and yellow man, and the ushers were
daisies. At the top was ·a Raymond Roach and Randy
peach and yellow bow· with Roach, brothers of the bride,
streamers held on either side Pomeroy. The best man wore
by two white doves. The ar- a ginger tuxedo and a boutonchway also held two silk · niere of a single carnation tiP:
peach roses which were given ped in peach and yellow. Tile'
to each mother by the bride groomsmen and bride's
and gr oom after the father were in identical attire
ceremony. A centerpiece of and had single carnation
peach and yellow daisies with boutonnieres tipped in either
baby's breath was on the peach or yellow. The groom
organ ~nd the family pews wore an all white tuxedo and
were marked with peach and a boutonniere of yellow
yellow bows.
daisies and peach roses wi.th
Mrs. George Glaze, Jr.' baby's breath.
.
presented a·half·hour of preFor her daughter's wednuptial muslc with her selec- ding, Mrs. Roach chose a
tions including "I Love floor length beige sleeveless
Thee". "Because", "A Time polyester gown with a long
for Us", and "The Wedding sleer organza jacket acPrayer."
cented with peach and yellow
Given in marriage by her flowers. Mrs. Williams wore
parents, the bride was a long yellow sleeveless
escorted to the altar by her polyester gown with a yellow
father. Her gown was fashin· and green sheer chiffon
ed of white sheer organze and pullover. Both mothers wore
chantilly lace ove~ peau de corsages of white daisies.
soie. It had an empire waist,
The bride's grandmothers,
Juliet sleeves, and an A-line . Mrs. ·Gertrude Miller and
skirt that flowed to chapel Marie Francis and the
length. Her veil was a chapel groom's grandmother, Mi8."
length mantilla edged with Lily Dyke, wore corsages of
wide border lace matching white carnations.
the lace · on her gown. The
Guests were regilltered by
bride's only jewelry was a 'Miss Mary Blaettnar,
pair of diamond heart shaped Pomeroy, and Miss Debbie
earrings, a gift ot the groom. Harten bach, 'Minersville. The
She carried a colonial style regis\er table was covered
11ouquet of yellow and white with a white lace cloth and
daisies, peach sweetheart held a white plwne pen and
roses and baby's b breath bud vasea of silk rooes in
with peacn anc yeiiow ·peach and yellow with matstreamers tied in lovers' ching ribbons. Miss Blaettnar
knots.
and Miss Hartenhach also
Miss Patty Warner, Route passed oui yellow rice bags
4, Pomeroy, served as maid tied with peach ribbons and
c( 11onor. She wore a floor miniature scrolls with the
length gown of pale yellow bride and groomgroom•s·
polyester knit which tied in name and wedding date.
back and featured a v
A reception was h~ld in the
neckline, empire waistline, church IIOCial rooms. The
and cap sleeves. She carried peach and yellow color
a colonial bouquet of white scheme was carried
daisy pompons with peach throughout the reception.
ribbon and streamers.
The wedding cake which
The bridesmaids were Mrs. was baked by Mrs. Sharon
Raymond Roach, sister-in- .~tewart featured three seclaw of the bride, Route . 2, lions with one, two and three
Pomeroy, and Miss Becky tiered cakes joined by
Thomas, Pomeroy. Eacl!. bridges. The tiered cakes
wore a peach gown styled were separated bl' white
identical to that of the maid of pillars and the entire cake
.honor. They both carried col· W;tS decorated in peach and
onial bouquets of yellow daisy white and covered with White
pompons with yellow ribbon daisies. The one tiered cake
and streamers. Miss Shannon was topped with ·a cupid inCoates, cousin of the groom, side a heart. The bridge from
and Miss Tara Gerlach, it to the two tiered cake held a
cousin of the bride, both of miniature ring bearer and
Middleport, were flower two flower girls in peach
girls. They were. in long gowns. The two tiered cake
dresses of peach dotted swiss was topped with a white
with tied strap sho!llders church and a miniature .best
trimmed around the top and man and maid of honor in a
bottom with ininiature white yellow gown · and .featured
white wedding bells on the
bottom layer: The bridge to
the three tiered cake held
miniature ushers and
bridesmaids in peach gowns.
The cake was topped with the
traditiooal bride and groom
and the bottom of it featured
a basket of d,aisies.
The cake was served with
orange sherbet punch and
yellow and white wedding
bell mints by Miss Connee
Williluns, sister of the groom,
and Mrs. Rock Williams,
sister-in-law of the groom.
Hostesses for the reception
were Mrs. Denver Rice, Mrs.
William Grueser, Mrs. Mack
Stewart and Mrs. Raymond
Cole &lt;i the Homebuilders
Class of the church.

Designers Knits
WOOL BLENDS

CAPES
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BY CATHERINF. BENET

RIO GRANDE - Language

can sometimes be conquered
with jUil a gentle lll11ile or a
look of acceptance. Yet try to
create a vision of yourself in a
foreign country with no
frienda or family and no one
to converse with in your
native tongue. Americans
just naturally assume that
the. rest of the world speaks
English and that no one would
ever have that problem. Yet
for many visitors and exchange students the experience Is very real an~ very
frightening .
'
In order to better grasp the
problem and cope with it
more
effectively, the
Grammatical EngUsh class
of Rio Grande College·
Community College spon·

sored a foreign pmte1 .of
3 different natlonaUUea to
talk about how they teamed
John
EngliJh.
Mrs.
(Christine) Epling and her
class set aside one afternoon
for the sole· purpose of exchanging ideas on Engllab u
a ~nd language and the
problems arising from lt.
Speaking nr.t was Mf!..
Adriana
Gauto
from
Argentina who came to thiJ
country with her husband
who practices medicine at
Holzer Medical ·Center. Mn.
Gau111 cited such educational
programs as Sesame Street
as a major help in her Ouency
of English.
Her husband did not have
much success with his first
try with Engllab. He had

,_._ -'th
rdl
•udled Ens-• ~· r~
and w_u Ulled to a much
slower pace and much lllOH
purity in the language. Upon
his arrival In the United
states his Engilllb wu not
eully underltood and he
finally left his llucllea and
tackled Engli.lh by speaking
and lltudying It for seven to
elghtl1ouruday. Mn. Gauto
recommend&amp; that a dally
practice of any language
m!l8t be had In order for
fluency. Her other toots In·
elude constant use of a· die- .
tlonary and not thinking In
her native tongue when
conversing 1n·· her aecond
language.
Cletus . Genyl Soo from
Nigeria was a headmaster at
a school in his country. Wblle

AN INTERNATIONAL FLAVOR- Representing Argeniina, Estonia and Nigeria at
the Rio Grande International Panel were Mrs. Adriana Gauto, Mrs. VIlma Plkkoja and
Cletus Genyi Soo.

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t~t.\11'\t

At The

Library
... before swruner becomes a fading memory . J keep
· thinking !here is still the whole sununer to get out and do
things and there is hardly any time left.
Before summer is over, call up an old friend or grab your
mate and lake a long walk and talk until the early hours of the
lll&lt;lnling. Pamper yourself by seeing an old friend or
rediscovering a special friendship .
In !lie bUtie'and buatle of thiJ world, • quiet .P.t
amq the tilrttullla often 1 welcome change.

At the Gallla County Diatrict Library we have 1
place for tired feet and ears. We doa 't charge
aclmlatlon, and the furniture Ia certainly from another
day, (although the library chairs of yesterday are .
~gly c&lt;IIIfortable.) Sit back and relu. Newspaper&amp; abootnd, u well u magazines, ra~ from
farming and hcmemaldng to coin collecting. The
capable staff of the library will try to make you feel
welcome when YDI.l clllle In, to get acquainted, reacqualnt«&lt;, Ol' as a regular patron. Faces, new, old,
young, or mature, are all welcune, and a common
sight at your friendly library at the corner of Third and
State In Downtown Galllpolla.
·
The library Ia open from 11-1 Monday through
Friday, 94 on Saturday, and 1-6 on Sundays.

lEARNING CAN BE FUN - The Fairgrounds were busy this week as children, under
the direction of the Home Extension office of the 4-H program, learned about proper eating
habits and good nutrition . Among the children, Liane Bosley, Marlin 'Griffin and Chris
Rathburn, seem to be totally engulfed in crafts which were fun as well as informative.

••

·r Cathedral will

!

.he shut down

MDI¢ exciting news in Gallla County involves ihe play
"Annie Oakley" which is cM&gt;Ing to Rlverby nen week. Get
your tickets now. Also think of signing up for some classes at
Rio Grande. Two of special interest might be the yoga class
and the literature for older adults. My old journalism prof
Larry Ewing is teaching a course dealing with science fictioo.
Drop by Rio and look over the class offerings, am sure you'll
find something of interest.
Book-of-the-week: Olanging by Liv Ullman. One thing the
feminist movement taught me is that above all women share a
feeling of sisterhood which cannot be matched. Liv Ullman is a
woman wl1o acts with ability of her craft which is amazing and
she writes ju!;L as well.

'

'

Special thanks this week to two special people wl1o have
taught me a lot. First of all to Torn of a local gas station wl1o
added brake fluid to my list of chemicals which make a car
run.

DELAWARE, Ohio (UPI)
Leroy Jenkins' multi·
I milliondollar Holy Hill
Also to a lady I've never met and have had troub1e getting
1 Cathedral will close until
in
touch
with. Her name is Girree and she is a very thoughtful
violations of the state
- Calendar
CHESHIRE - Mr. a."lli inchell long. Grandparents
building code are corrected, person who brightens up my dsy with notes on her press
Mrs. Randy Mulford ill are Mr. and Mrs. Michael
releases. Thanks to the two of you for making life a little bit
his attorneys said Friday.
Olelhire are announcing the Whalen, Point Pleasant, w.
In
a
pre-trial
hearing,
brighter.
E:l:hibit for the mooth of August - 34 prize winning
birth of their first cbll(!, a son, Va., and Mr. and Mrs. John paintings from the River Recreatioo Festival Exhibit.
attorney John Hopper said
Mulford, Cheshire. GreatJerei!IY Buck.
News Flash: Just as l predicted Woodle Fryman wants
Gallery bouts- Saturdays and Sundays, 1 p.m. until' 5 the church would close Aug.
The Infant was born on grandmothers· are Mrs. Ann p.m.; TueadaysandThursdays,IOa .m. until3p.m.
25 and would remain dosed back in baseb;ill.
Aug. 14 at the Holzer Medical Whalen ol Sunnyvale, Calif.,
August 28, 3 p.m. and 7 ·p,m. - Two performances of until the defects, discovered
Center. He weighed six and Mrs. , Mulne Wi!llams, "Annie Oakley and Buffalo Bill" by the Fanfare Children's during a · June · state
~ole-of-the-week: Don't you know I want my life to . be
pounds, 10 ounces and was 22 Point Pleaaant, W.Va.
inspection,
are
Jixed.
something
more than loog? - from the Broadway mustcal
Theatre out of New York City, on the patio at Riverby, a great
The
state
had
filed
suit
Pippin.
American musical f&lt;r the entire family.
Open Sunday 1 to 6 p.m.
September 8, 8 p.m. - Ballroom Dancing Classes begin, charging that the building
Gerald Powell of P&lt;meroy, Instructor ; Anita Tope, DIIJ!ce was unsafe, which Jenkins
denied. Following Friday's
Ccmmlttee Chairman.
agreement, the suit was
dismissed.
Eighteen building code
violatioos were discoverd,
nine of which were
Popular Suede Casual on
considered safety hazards,
a Thick Wedge Sole.
Pomeroy ; John Hinkle, Hart· including improper wiring
PLEASANT VALLEY
Reg. S10.99, SAVE 13,99
ford;
Elda Carsey, Pomeroy; and structural damage.
DISCHARGES - Dale
RlOGRANDE-Ac!ass in limited to 25 participants.
Jesse
Swan. Langsville;
Jenkins maintains his
McDaniel, Point Pleasant;
Bernard Murphy Jr.; Rio
Mrs. A. W. McKinney, Point August Garnes, Pomeroy; · national headquarters at the family financial planning is
Grande's
coordinator of
part
of
the
fall
continuing
Pleasant; Michael Hall, Scheryl Saxon, Gallipolis ; cathedral, although he
Men's Sizes
continuing
education, emeducation
schedule
for
Rio
Henderson; Dusty Wamsley, Samuel Robinson, Jamie recently moved to South
phasized
that
thiJ course, as ,
Big Boyg' 31&gt;- 6.
Grande
College
•
Community
Gallipolis Ferry; Mildred Chapman, Tuppers Plains; Carolina.
R09 . $9.99, S8.90
well
as
all
non-credit off
College.
The
course,
open
to
Sturgeon, Point Pleasant; Sandra Marcinko, Reeds·
campus
classes,
is open to all
the
public,
will
convene
in
the
Hattie
Jordan,
Point ville.
residents
of
the
four count)(
community
·
room
at
the
Pleasant; Mrs·. Archie
Discharged - Annie Moon, ·
Community
College
district.
Jackson Pike Branch of Ohio
Get to know us; you'llll.k e us.®
Pierce, Rutland, and Kelly John Casto, Ethel Hossler,
Mrs.
DeRita
received
her
Valley Bank.
'epen
Crump, Polot Pleasant.
Louise Burbridge, Jo Ellen
Instructor Suzanne P. B.$. degree in home
303 Upper Rivtr Road
Mon.-S.I.· ·
Lawrence, David Pickens,
from
the
DeRita
said the class will ee&lt;inomics
Acr~s From Sll•ot: Bridge Pl111
f a.m. 11119 p~m.
VETERANS MEMORIAl..
Donna Dixon.
offer methods for learning to University of lllinois and wll1
Sull. till~
Admitted - Edna Hart,
' LEBANON, Ohio (UPI) - . live within one's income and soon .receive · h~r master's
Innocent pleas have been planning a family budget, tlegree. She has ·studied
entered by Warren County economics affecting the retailing, clothing and tell$heriff )loy Wallace and his family budget, using con· tiles extensively and has
wife, Elda, in connectioo with · sumer credit wisely, and the wor-ked as a research
charges filed against them by influence of values and goals assistant and teacher.
a special grand jury earlier on money management.
family financial planning ill
this month.
The non-credit class will only one of nearly 20 con·
Wallace pleaded innocent be taught Thursdays form 7-9 tinuing education courses to
Friday in Warren County p.m., beginning September 8, be offered thiJ fall in off·
Common .Pleas Court to three for a $15 fee. Those interested campus locations. Classes
felony charges alleging may register at Lyne Center are scheduled to be held in
embezzlement and three on the college campus, Gallipolis at the French Art
misdemeanor
charges Tueday, September 6, 6-9 Colony, in Wellston, MCAralleging he was paid for p.m., or at the first session of thur, Jackson and 1\fid·
making appointments.
the class. Registration Is dleport . A complete con·
Both Wallace and his wife
tinulng education schedule Is ·
pleaded innocent to a charge
available from Rio Grande
of bribery.
.College and Community
After
their . court
College by phoning 245-5353.
appearance, both Wallace
and his wife were released on MANAGER NAMED
CINCINNATI (UPI)
their own recognizance. No
This city's new deputy city
trial date was set, pending an
appeal by defense attorneys manager is Martin P. Walsh,
•
who are seeking to have the 1r .; former director of the
Cincinnati Building and
'-VIAcharges thrown out.
Some . 30 uqiformed Inspections Department.
Walsh, 41, succeeds Henry
deputies joined Wallace in the
•
J.
Sandman, who left in June
courtroom in a show of
to
become director of public
~port. Wallace,.51, refused
'
comment
from
news safety, at the University of
·reporters after court and his Cincinnati;
City Manager William Dodaughter, Becky Briner, a
naldson
said Walsh was
deputy sheriff, said her
selected
by
a five-member
father had nothing to add to a
Sale More On ·Other Selected Tables
search
conunittee
because of
statement he issued last
.
"the
wealth
of
his past
• 89" SOFA
week.
experlences
...
his
high
energy
In that statement, Wallace
• 6S" LOVESEAT
ONE GROUP.
called the charges a level."
MEN'S
&amp; WOMEN 'S
"political inquisition and · "He has obviously earned a
Constitutional rape reputation in 1ite cmununity
laughingly called a secret as a person who gets things
grand jury investigation." done," added Donaldson.
Va.luesi0$23.H

I-

Son born to Mulfords

·i

HOSPITAL NEWS

families

~o

be taught

Sheriff, wife
say innocent

delectable
menu

for

CONVENTION SET
7:30. SPeakers will be ctali
Voice
of , Victory Stobert, freda Cutcllp, R. A.
Missionary .Convention at Nutley and Randall She~
Faith Temple Church on pheard. Special singing and
Route 141 on Aug. 23-25, three preaching. ·
services a day at 10:30, 2 and

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only.

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memories of your happiest day is with professional
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· We are experts al bridal photography. So you can
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Remember your wedding for years lo come-wllh •
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Callioday for an appointment. or stop by the studio
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STUDENT HOSTESSES - Shirley Sayre and Linda
Gerard acted as hostess at a reception following' the
presentation and introduced each speaker giving back·
ground informatioo for the audience.

DUBLIN, Ohio (UP!) ct&gt;lo's counties have be«!
urged
by
the Ohio
Prosecuting Attorneys
Auociallon eJecutive
committee to reject a
COOlpromise ofter made by
the PeM Central Railroad
concerning delinquent taxes
it owes each county.
The railroad offered to pay
44 per cent of the lues due
since 1969. Association
preoldent, Richard M~ade,
FUlton County preaecutor,
said the association belleves
the counties can, and should,
receive a better offer from
the railroad.
He said meetings to discuss
the countys' options resulting
from the offer will be held in
Dayton and Lancaster Thursday and Wooster and Findlay
Friday.

7.90

The new Mrs. Williams is a
l!f77 graduate ol Meigs Hlgb
School. Mr. Williams, a ·1972
graduate of Meigs; Is
employed at the Philip Sporn
Plant, New Haven.
Out of county guests
ding the wedding were Mr .
a,nd . Mrs ?ofrs. Louis Smith,
Mr. and Mn. Jack Miller,
Mn. J ohnnle Davis, · Mni.
Jackie Lenox, Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Francis and
Gary Point Pleasant, 1llld
Miss Kim Sebo, Lebannon,
Va.
·
· A rehearsal dinner was
given by the groom's parents
at the church following the
rehearsal: It was prepared by
the bride's father.
The bride Will honored with
three bridal llhowers. They
were hollted by the Primary
· Department teachen at the
Middleport OMarclh o( Cbrilt,
the Chatter Club, and Mila
Patty Wamer and Mlaa
. Becky Thomas at the home rJ
Miss Warner.

1 u.&lt;:t ().. t\IStt •••

En&amp;J••

detailing •.. in coppertone

atten-

.I

a different laaCliiPI llllll
nine major dlalectl. Tbe two
method~ of leanlille
in Nigeria Ia the "thll that" metbod In which a ebalr
uJd be called 111ch in the
~ language and tbell
related to In the MCOIId
tanguage The nezt method Ia
the "oit.;.UOPS l!llllhod" In
wblcb conditions
a ...
arranged by the !nltnK:tor In
d
M
soo b..
a vance.
r.
mastered
English
10
perfectly that he nev·
er expresaed ony_ fear ol
not being underlllood. H11
belle! ill completely correct .
u he expresaea · ~lf .In a
lyrical British llke accent. ·
Mrs. VIlma · Plkko)a from..,
Estonia, no stranger to tbe ' .
area, spoke on the need I~.
ellcellence In a language.
Mn. Ptkkoja, retired lhla
month as a llbrarlali, escaped ·
from Estonia wben her
country was invade.d by
Ruaslans and ber husband
sentenced to death. Her ,
proud Estonia upbringing :
instilled in her the belief that, •
"Any education starts in a
library." German, not
English, was her se~ond
language and · she ·baa
mastered them both with
ease. Her advice' to studenta
was to start 1mb In th'
language and never try to
translate.
Attending the panel
meeting were several college
officials, Including Dr. Paul
Hayea, president, Dr. Sam
Smith, Dean of the college
and Dr. Clyde Evan!, Prov. .
of the college. A quelltlon and
answer session followed each
speaker's presentation. ·
Many studen"' and faCility
members llng~red for personal questions and advice on
how to deal with the large
inftUll of foreign students
l!llpBC!ed on the campus tbll
fall. The advice from each
speaker was tbe same:
respect that penon's culture
and lifestyle, always be
patient, nev~r auperlor and
always keep in mind that the
teaming experience can and.
does work botb waY!.

chewy crepe soles with kiltie

Followmg a wedding trip to
Cincinnati, the couple are
residing in theii new trailer
at Route 4, Pomeroy.

·sutrs

Railroad offer
is criticized

•

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-16CP
OIIM,oiii.Oit..

BACK TO

SCHOOL
SHOE SALE
ONE GROUP
BOYS' &amp; G! RLS'

STRIDE RITE
SHOES
·
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ONE GROUP •
OF LADIES'

DRESS&amp;
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1h PRICE
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&amp;1-Tile SWlday TiiJles.Sentinel, Sunday, Aug. 21, 1977

Honors shared in
second flower Show
By Charlene Hoe!Ucb
POMEROY - Mrs. Suzy
Carpenter and Mrs. Janet
Bolin, both members of the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners,
· shared top honors in artistic
arrangements at the second
flower show of the Meigs
County Fair staged Friday.
Mrs. Carpenter received
best of show for her modern
arrangement depicting coal
mining, a SOUI'ce of problems
and prosperity in Meigs
County. Taking reserve best
of show for an arrangement
suitable for a chW'ch was
Mrs. Bolin.
The
horticulture

Gardeners; and Pat Holter,
Chester Garden Club.
"Small Town Churches and
Country Chapels": Janet
Bolin; Suzy Carpenter and
Bernice Carpenter, Bend 0 '
the River Garden Club.
" The Mighty Drifting
River", water showing as
part of a traditional design:
Betty Dean, Chester Garden
preJ]liwn.
Club, Suzy Carpenter, HerAttracting mueh attention niceCarpenter.
from the goers was the
"Justice Weighed at the
JUDGING - Numerous gardeners were on hand Fri·
blacklight display of ar- Court House", traditional
day for the oral judging of exhibits at the second Meigs
rangments staged in an design using two containers:
County Fair flower show. Mrs. Earl Bender of Marietta,
enclosUI'e with peep holes. Jennifer Machir, Chester
an accredited judge of the Ohio Association of Garden
Blacklighl was used this year Garden Club , Suzy
Clubs, commended and critized the exhibits.
for the first time in the fair Carpenter,
Bernice
flowershows.
Carpenter.
The silver trays presented
"The Meigs Inn", modern
to the winners at the shows design featuring special
were provided by Pomeroy lighting .effects: Betty Dean,
Flower Shop, Dudley Flower Bernice Carpenter, Suzy
Shop, Frances Florist, Hub- Carpenter.
bards Greenhouse, Land·
"The Meigs Museum, OW'
mark, Bob's Market, Mason, Roots Revived", traditional
and Bob's Midway Market, design using a real or
Pomeroy. Determination of simulated antique as the conthe sweepstake winner and tainer or as an accessory:
the junior gardener was bas- Pat Holter, Suzy Carpenter,
ed on points accumulated on Betty Dean.
ribbon winning exhibits while
"The Coal Mine, SoW'Ce of
the best of show and reserve Problems and Prosperity",
best of show arrangements modern design : Suzy
were selected by the. judge, Carpenter, Pal Holter and
Mrs. Earl Bender of Mariet- Janet Bolin.
ta, an accredited judge of the
JUNJO~ DIVISION
Ohio Association of Garden
"Pools , Parks and
Clubs.
Playgrounds : a favorite
Ribbons and premiums design : Jay Carpenter,
. were awarded in three places RA!edsville, R D., no second
and the winners with the or third.
"Meigs County Is ... " theme
Specimens :
Cheryl
were:
Folmer, Route 3, Pomeroy,
ArUotlc Arrangem.ents
· blue ribbons in zinnias, both
"Scenic Country Roads", dahlia and ·cactus, with Jay
tradition
design featuring Carpenter, a white ribbon in a
THE WINNERS- Betty Dean of the Chester Garden Club accumulated the most points
dried
and-or
fresh roadside cactus zinnia specimen;
in horticultUI'e specimens to be declared the horticultW'e sweepstake winner. Jay Carpenter
Patty
Donita Manuel, Route 2,
materials:
was the recipient of the junior gardener award, and the two were presented rosettes by · Route 3, Pomeroy; Parker,
Janet
Racine,
blue ribbons in
Janet Bolin, cCH:hairman of the Meigs County Fair flower shows.
Bolin, Rutland Friendly marigold and sunflower
·
specimens , with jay
Carpenter taking second and

COLUMBUS - The Ohio
Department of Highway
..• Safety has advised all
Ohioans who oWn or o perate
mot o r i z e d b icy cl e s
t"mopeds") that new state
licensing requirements for
these vehicles will take effect
April1 , 1978- NOT Nov. 1 of
this year as had·earlier been
reported.
, The Department explained
that, while ,new legislation
.normally takes effect 90 days

after being signed by the
Governor, there was a special
provision in the "moped " bill
delaying its implementation
until next April to allow time
for development of a license
test and other rules and
regulations.
When the new law does
become effective, it will limit
operation of " motorized
bicycles" to persons 14 years
of age or older who can pass a·
· special test and obtain a

Lookin Good
for• oil
1n _h-ff;~
•

trotters
'

Lan cer

Definitely the boot of fashion, this
sleek, elegant shape of fine leather.
Its mid-high heel is the perfect
fashion accent for your new skirts
and pants. The inside zipper with
stretch panel insures perfectly
comfortable fit. Bla ck
Lancer

"motorized bicycle operator
license" or who already hold
a valid Ohio driver, chauffeur
or motorcycle license.
Under provisions of the bill,
a "motorized bicycle" is
defined as any two or threewheeled vehicle which can be
propelled either by pedals or
by a helper motor providing that the motor has
a piston · displacement of no
more than 50 cubic centimeters, develops no more
than one brake horsepower
and propels the vehicle at a
maximum speed no greater
than 20 miles per hour on a

CAFE
Lafayette Mall Dow11town, Gallipolis

POMEROY-- Everything
from a cantankerous goat to
an unconcerned gerbil competed for plaques and rosettes in the pet show staged Friday morning at the Meigs
County Fair.
· The over 60 entries In the
categories of youth and adult
. were judged by Racllael
Downie and Lucille Leifheit
· Pat Thoma w8ll general
chairman with Sherrie Cogar
doing the emcee for the con-

BEST OF SHOW award winner in the Friday flower show was Suzy Carpenter, Rutland
Friendly Gardeners, for her arrangement in the class, "The Coal Mine, SoW'ce of Problems
and Prosperity." Janet Bolin, also of the Rutland Friendly G'ardeners won the Reserve Best
of Show award.

POMEROY Senior
Citizens were out in full force
for the Meigs County Fair
this past week. Over 550
seniors attended Senior
Citizens Day on Thursday.
Thanks go to the Meigs
County Fair Board for
pnwtdtftg the tent and part of
the entertainment, to the
County Highway Department
for moving the piano, and to
the many individuals who
donated cookies.
Many individuals and
groups
provided
entertainment each afternoon
at the tent and their talents
were enjoyed by all, our
thanks to them also. H you
visited the Senior Citizens
Tent you may have noticed
the piano which is falling
apart. ~enior Citizens have
many activities which
require the use of a piano and

=in~u:~~:~·

ATHENS- Annual reports provided a wealth of in- them.
Mrs. Doris· Eggleton and
The exercise of publishing
by
superintendents to public formation in concentrated
two children, Sherri and Tina
an
annual report was conform
at
a
low
cost.
o.f near Bidwell were recent school districts in 1976
sidered a valuable exThis
is
the
evaluation
of
47!1
guests of Mrs. Maryhelle
Ohio school superintendents periimce by the superinMooney and Mrs. Bertha Oliver of Marion, 0. and Mrs. who resPQnded to a survey on tendents who had to report on
Craig. · Other guests were · Ollie Oliver of Gallipolis were
success of the annual achievements, problems,
Mrs. Craig's sister, Mrs. Friday evening guests of Mr. the
reports which were man- plans, source's of revenue, per
Mary Wolford of Gallipolis, and Mrs. Harold Saunders dated by law as of last year. , pupil costs, staffing and
Miss Sheila McGuire, Miss and family.
The superintendents were enrollm~nts.
Charla Pinkerman, and
Mr. and Mrs. Richard surveyed
Costs ·Of the reports was
by two. Ohio
Randy Cummons.
Wilcox and family of Salt University professors, Drs. found to ~ relatively low.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lick, W. Va. were recent Donald M. Knox lind Max W. The average school district
Spencer and daughter were . guests of her mother, Mr. and Evans, In a study of the ef- spent only $193 to reproduce
at Columbus TueSday on Mrs. Emmit Halley.
the first report, the study
business and they also did
Mr. and Mrs . Haskell fectiveness of the law in showed. •llbe law required
making schools accountable
some shopping.
Saunders of near Bidwell to the citizens. who support general distribution of the
The songfest which was were Sunday afternoon
I'I!J)Orts: • ·
held at the Eureka United guests of Mr. and Mrs .
The researchers concluded
Christian Church was well Cleeland Willis and two
from this initial study that the
attended. Those that came to children, Louann and Mat- SINATRA SAFE
CARSON CITY, Nev. law has caused a contake part were the Charles thew.
.siderable change in practice
Love and family, the Dillon ' Mr. and Mrs. Carter Ross (UP!)- A Nevada gambling in reporting information to
family and the Beulah Trio. of Florida, Mr. and Mrs. official, Jeff Silver, told citizens. Most superinThis is a newly organized Andrew Chapman and three authorities ThW'sday Frank tendents formerly relied on
church and the public is children, Randy, Scotty and Sinatra now owns less than 4 media coverage of school
welcome. Rev. Warren Michael, Mr. and Mrs. per cent in the Del E. Webb board meetings, periodic
Woodward is the psstor.
Jimmie Chapman and Corp., which owns four reports to parent-teacher
Mr. and Mrs. Harold daughter, Tami of near Nevada casinos, and may not meetings and pamphlets at
Harrison were recent guests Gallipolis, Mrs. Janet need to undergo an expensive the time of levi~.
of hit aunt, Mr. and Mrs. McKinney and daughters and investigatiol!. for a gambling
Homer Porter.
•
Richard Chapman and Mrs. license after all. ·
Mr . and _ Mrs. Doyle GYI!!'Y Chapman were recent
Saunders and two chUdren, Sunday evening supper
D. J. and Bobby Jo spent a guests of Mr. and Mrs. David
week camping at a lake near Chapman.
Mrs. u
R th waU,Mnl.
gh ••Cincinnati. While there they
visited the Kipg's Island . Sarah Halley and Mrs.
Amusement Park and many Geneva Fisher ·were recent
places of interest near Cin- guests of Mrs. Marybelle
cinnati.
Moone)&lt; and Mrs. Bertha
"Happy Anniversary" ·
.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Crrug.
·
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COMMUNITY NURSERY SCHOOl
School Starts Sept. 6th

FIRST PRESBnERIAN CHURCH
51 State Street, Gallipolis, Ohio
MON.-F Rl.-,.. 9 A.M.-11 :30
· Age 4-$25.00 per month
MON.-WEO.-FRI. 12:45-2:45
Age 3-517.00 per month
Phone
Rose Miller
446-0625
Barbara Moore, Administrator
446-2795 ,
Roberta Roush
446-4274.
Nannette Moody
446-0122
Stall' Certified Pasts Years

,,

"Happy Birthday" /. ~.;,.

1 ;\
..~ '4~·-t;..:. ..J ,1

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B~~.OVEJtA!;L IN YOUTII DIVISION- Ralph Jordon wtth Printze ., a German police and shepherd dog
won three plaques lll the competition of the pet show Fri:
day morning at the Meigs County Fair.

SENIOR CITIZENS SCENES

and seHorticulture D1Vlslon
Garden Club.
Dahlia, cactus type: Mrs.
Roses: Pat Holter, first and
level surface.
. The Highway Safety second places in in hybrid Charles Kuhl, Rose Ginther,
Department is now in the tea ; Janet Bolin, first and se- and Bernice Carpenter.
Marigold : Altona Karr, and
process
of
designing cond in floribunda.
Gladioli :
Bernice Betty Dean.
a
license . test
for
Sunflower: Betty Dean and
moped operators and ·de- Carpenter, Rose Ginther,
Suzy
Carpenter.
Club,
and
Chester
Garden
veloping other rules and
Celosia
: E;lsie Folmer, all
Bernice
Carpenter.
developing other rules and
Dahlia flowered zinnia : three places.
.
regulati011s to govern the safe
Annuals: (two divisions)
operation of these vehicles. A Betty Dean, Elsie Folmer,
public hearing on the RQute 3, Pomeroy, and Mrs. Mrs. Charles Kuhl, blue; Betproposed rules will be held in Charles Kuhl, Chester ty Dean, red and white; Ada
Holter, Chester Gai-den Club
Columbus. Formal notice of Garden Club.
Cactus
·
flowered
zinnia
:
and
Wildwood Garden Club,
the time and place of the
Betty
Dean,
Elsie
Folmer,
seblue;
Bernice Carpenter, red,
hearing will be published in
and
Elsie
Folmer, white.
newspapers of record across cond and third.
Dahlia; decorative: Mrs.
Perennials: Rose Ginther,
·the state atleast 30 days prior
CharleS Kuhl, Rose Ginther, ·Mrs. Charles Kuhl, and Elsie·
to the hearing date.
and Altona Karr, Chester Folmer.

ENROLL NOW

in the youth division.
Taking the plaque for the
best overall pet in the adult

division was .roan Browning
of Portland with her afghan,
"Sabrina", who also won the
best dog category.

Other plaque winners were
Kevin Napier, 10, of Bidwell
with his Rhode Island Red in
the most unusual category;
Kim Jo Cogar, 7, Minersville;
for her gerbil in the rodent
class ; Anna Wiles, 15,
Pomeroy for "Sampson" her
Siamese cat for the best cat;
and Verna Walker, Route 2,
Pomeroy, for the best dressed pet, her great dane,

test.

Blue Lake Mandated reports praised

Russet ~95
Tan

THE
SHOE

More than 60 pets
compete for honors

sweepstakes award was won
by Mrs. Betty Dean, Chester
Garden Club member and
Jay Carpenter for the secOnd
time won the Junior
Gardeners Award. Silver
trays were presented to Mrs.
Carpenter, Mrs. Bolin and
/'dJ'S · Dean along with rosettes, while Jay received a
rosette and a special

·
ff.
·
.N
' ew mope d r ules put 0 one year

•
•

any donations towards the
purchase of a spinet or studio
plano for the Center would be
appreciated. If you know
where a used piaoo could be
purchased, please call the
Center at 992-7886 or 992-7884.
Senior Citizens will be
traveling to the State Fair
this coming Friday, the 26th.
Two Greyhound buses have
been chartered and depar·
ture time from the Center is 8
a.m. There ·is ~oom for six

-!.--f~~
~";~·~
~.
~
. ;§~ ' ...
'
'
~- .
~ --

..::::·

For a beautiful way to wish birthday greetings to
that &amp;peclal person or to celebrate your
anniversary with a bouquet or arrangement of
flower! See Us Flrst. We ha"'e a variety of
flowers to choOse from ....

FLOWERS by GEORGE
New Owners
George Adams &amp; June ( Unroe) Adams

•
•

pet category ; and Pat Thoma
showing for Anna Wiles with
"Sampson" in the best cat
category.
While the first place winners received plaques, thesecond and third place winners
were presented rosettes.
The winners were:
Youtb DIYislon

Best Dog: Paul Jordan ,
Angie Spencer, Kimberly K.
Calve.rt.
Best Rodent: Kim Cogar,
Kimberly K. Calvert, and ·
Suzan Thoma.
Most Unusual Pet : Kevin
Napier, Donita J. Manuel,
Billy Cogar.
Most Talented: Ralph Jordan, Trina Reeves, and Dixie
Eblin.
Best Dressed: Verna
Walker, Angie Spencer, and
Barbara Chappelear.
Best Cat: Anna Wiles,
Janice Carnahan, and Kim
Eblin.
Adult Division
Best Dog: Joan Browning,
Brenda Sheperd, Sally
Lambert.
Best Cat: Pat Thoma showing for Anna Wiles, Fran
Moxley, a and Rita Eblin.
Most Unilsual Pet: Hazilee
Reibel and Joan Browning.
Best Overall Pet in the
Adult Division: Joan Brown·

YOUTH DIVISION WINNERS - These were the winners in the youth division pet show of the fair. PictUI'ed left
to right they are Kevin Napier, Bidwell with his Rhode
Island H,ed in the most unusual category; Kim Jo Cogar,
Minersville, with her gerbil in the rodent class ; Anna
Wiles, Pomeroy with her Siamese cat "Sampson" in the
best cat category; and Verna Welker, Route 2, Pomeroy,
with "Feil", a great dane, in the best dressed pet.

r--

BEAUTIFUL
BRIDAL
CREATIONS

GOOD SPlRITS

from~~

8131 ....33clstw .S250.
BankAmericard.,_
Master Char1!e

TAWNEY JEWELERS

_.,..._
..

.424 Second· Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

ADULT DIVISION WINNERS were, left to right, Hazilee Riebel of Route I, Long Bot.tom with her goat, "Goby", the most unusual pet; Pat Thoma showing for Anna Wiles, with
"Sampson", in the best cat category; and Joan Browning, Portland. with "Sabrina"' an
afghan, winner of the best dog category and also the best overall pet plaque. ,

2995

Order of Arrow
conference set

SANTA MONICA, Calif.
(UPI) - Actor Walter
Pidgeon was in good
condition at St. John's
Hospital Saturday, where he
was recovering from surgery
to remove a blood clot from
hi!J..brain. ,
A hospital spokesman said
Pidgeoo. was "in good spirits,
feeling much better and im·
proving steadily." He was
hospitalized two weeks ago
and was moved Thursday'
from the intensive care·unit
to a private suite.
Pidgeon,
a
veteran
performer in more than 100
motion pictures, became well
known for his role opposite
Greer Garson in the ·
Academy Award winning

S'catJ:JJIIm·

Cooks

MEIGS. VINTON .
&amp;.GAU.IA CO.
614-446-4208

Canister

HUNTINGTON- A group
of 12 Scouts and leaders from
the Tri.State Area will join
some 4,500 other Order or the
Arrow members at the
national conference to be held
at the University of Ten' nessee, Knoxville, August 23'll.

,..,-/
The exciting " natural " look of CRYSTAL
and CORK is now a classic in contemporary
kitchens
everywhere.
PI LGR 1M'S
KITCHEN CHEMISTRY with its alean
simple designs. perm its the beauty of good
to " show-through" in air -tight sealed jars .

Second Atienue

Drop in and let us show you oor wide,
variety .

WHERE ELSE

PEDDLERS PANTRY

\

Third .&amp; Stat·l!-il---ilrGallipolis, O.

The Order of the Arrow is
made up of outstanding Scout
campers. The members from
. the Tri-state Area Council,
led by Jeff Sawyers, Chief of
the Lodge, will take part In
training, recognition, and
competition at the conference.
The Order of the Arrow,
founded in 1915 at the
. Treasure Island Scout Camp
near Philadelphia, Pa., is an
integral part of the camping
program of ·the Tri.State
Area Council, Boy Scouts or

From fabric , to style. to
·

OUR FAMOUS

DAILY DOUBLE
Two ~.ggs (any style). two slices
crisp bacon. two slices buffered
toast and Jelly, colt{".

SILV._. PL4Z.A

.ENJOY. 'BREAKFAST
Wlnt US DAILY
. (EXCEPT SUNDAYI

9AM·

AM

SUNRI$E .

.

TRAVELER'S

TUNE-UP
Freshly squeezed orange Juice, crisp
cereal, freshly brewed coffee.

SPECIAL .
Kellogg's corn fl&amp;kes topped with
bananas. one egg (any style). toast,

coffee.

t
t
1
I

t

I

I
I
I

DAILY~

-•

Dr~n;f:aternity

l
l

I

AIIAt

I

ll

The
Unifornt
Center
\
,
.
,,
. , .

Slacks, Tops, Jeans,
\

I

--"--·GALLIPOLIS, OHIO--'

Back to
School

•

..
·.•'
..
I
I

•

A New Shipment

'

•,

'·
.·

()f Playtex

Has Just

•.

Arrived•••
VERY NICE. SELECTION
I

\

OF STYLES
AND
SIZES
JUST IN
TIME FOR

GOLDEN BROWN

FRENCH TOAST

\ BACK TO SCHOOL

Two slices · served with maple
•
flavored syr 0 p. creamery
butter,
choice of bacon, sausage or ham.

'145
HOT

GRIDDLE CAKES

NEW FAll. STYLES
OF OUR LINGERIE
UNES HAVE
ARRIVED

With buller and maple fi&amp;vored

syrup, choice of bacon, uusage or
ham, coffee.

I

~

•1"

RESTAURANT

'

,&lt;

Freshly squeezed orange Juice or
cereal 'with milk, two eggs (any
style). grilled ham steak. toast,
jelly, coffee.

87~

•

ARE ARRIVING

GALLIPOLIS 446-1923

BREAKFAST

One egg (any style). one sl ice crisp
bacon , one piece buttered toast and
jelly., coffee .
'

detail, the quality Shows .

NEW FALL
MATERNlTY
FASHIONS

.

ONE.ONE.ONE

GOOD TASTE. ·
WE JUST NEVER
. fORGET IT.

For Fall

BRIDGE PLAZA

HE-MAN

OUR FAMOUS

Styles

IN THE SILVER

America. As a national
brotherhood of honor campers, it recognizes Scout
campers who best exemplify
the Scout Oath and Law In
their daily Uves, promote
SCout camping, and develop
and · maintain camping
tradltl&lt;inJ and spirit; ac·
cording to Molt.
The national Order of the
Arrow conference, held every
two years, includes training
In subjects related to Scout
camping, service projects,
and administration of the
lodge program. It also
features a band and chorus
made up of Order of the ·
Arrow members; outdoor
. activities, Including Indian
dance competition; and
demonstrations of Scouting
skUis.

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•

-----------------------,
High Stepping I

l- ·-366 SECOND AVE.----

film, "Mrs. Miniver/' in 1942.

'

5 lb.

'
II
II
l
II

I

ing.

'•

•

Other winners of plaques in
the adult division were
Hazilee Riebel, Route I, I.oog'
Bottom, for the most unusual

" Yesteryear" is veiy en·

couraging to all of us. The
Rutla nd E.M.S. squad will
provide a first-aid tent and
the
Blg
Bend
C.B .
organization will he helping
with
the
pa rking.
" Yesteryear" is a day
plann ed for your en tire
family and there ls no charge
lor admission.
If you have any questions
CtJncerning "Yesteryear" or
would llke.more information
call the Center at 992-7886 or
992-7884.

more persons on the buses so
let us know if you would like
to go by calling 992-7888 or
992-7884 . Cost is $6 for those
over 60 and $11 for those
under 60.
Only four more weeks and
the second annual public
celebration entitled
"Yesteryear ll" will be held
here at the Senior Citizens
Center
in
Pomeroy.
"Yesteryear ll" Is our at·
tempt to relive .and renew ·
Meigs County's heritage.
Remember the date September 17 beginning at 11
a.m.
A new attraction for
" Yesteryear" is Tintype
Photos by Bob and Charlene
Hoeflich . You and your
family will be able to have
ANY
your photograph taken in LIYINGAOOM &amp;HALL •
costumes of "Yesteryear."
This mode of photography is
becoming very popular in the
..,.,to.~ft.
nation today.
Many of the gljDles and
· contests will be for two age
categories. The tug-of-war
ruuintlr sTAIIlEY STEE!fEII
will be 14 and under and over
14, the horseshoe pitching
under lili and over lili, rolling
pin throw under lili and over
P~OTECTION
.55, sack race and three
legged race under 12 and over
12. There is no charge for
entering · the contests and
on
games
featured
"Yesteryear," numerous
prizes
given toand
thetrophies
wiru)ers. will be .___________.

through .

uFeil".

The cooperation given to
the Center from the entire
c ommunity t o wa rds

1

/-

Fifteen year old .Ralph Jordon, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Dorsey Jordan of the
Carpenter-Dyesvllle area
came away from the show ·
with three plaques-one for
having the best dog, another
for the most talented, and the
third for the best overall pet

•
"••
•
•

\

Formerly Ruths Floral

PHQNE446-9721
23 Cedar·Street. Gall.

-THI ,
\

)

•

�8-&amp;--TheSunday'J'irnes..Sentinei.Sunday, Aug. 21,19'n

c_Stultday 'J'imes.&amp;ntinel, Sunday, AUI(. 21, 19'n

Tuition grants offered lawmen
credit toward either a cer- are ayallable for 250-300 may earq. a two-year
associate In applied science
tificate or an associate, students.
The program iJJ restricted degree in law enforcement
baccalaureate or graduate
degree from Ohlo University. to Ia w enforcement officers technology, or a bachelor of
The grant program is employed on the local, Pte criminal justice degree.
funded by the Law En- or federal level. Tbey may There is also a, four-year
forcement· Assistance Ad- enroll for either part-time or degree In forensic chemistry
ministration of the U. S. lull-time study, and may based at the Athens campus.
Department of Justice. Ohio choose a degree although - Persons wishing more
University has been allocated !hey are not required to work infonnation on LEEP may
oontact George M. Brooks at
$79,160 to be disbursed in toward one.
Since It takes a .variety of the OU-Zanesville csmpus,
grants up to a maximum of
$250 per quarter for skills to operate a law en- Patricia A. AUord at OUqualifying students. Funds forcement agency, grant Lancaster, David 0. Harding
recipients may enroll not oniy at OU-Chlllicothe, Eric M.
for courses directly related to Cunningham at the Shawnee
law enforcement, but also for State College In . Portsmouth
courses In related subjecta or Michael L'Heureux,
such as business ad-. · financial aid administrator
ministration, accounting, for law enforcement, whose
psychology, sociology, office iJJ in Chubb Hall, Ohio
government, economics, University, Athens. ApuALLIPOLIS
Two
broken windshield type
GALLIPOLIS - Brian computer science and public plicants should apply by
September 23, 1m to be
traffic accidents were in- Lucas. 18, Cheshire, was administration.
Persons Interested in considered for fall quarter
vestigated Friday by the cited to Municipal Court for
Gallia-Meigs Post State failure to stop within the working toward a degree grants.
Highway Patrol. The first assured clear distance
occurred at 4:30p.m. on SR 7 following a traffic accident at
where an unknown vehicle 9:40 p.m: Friday on Second
flipped a stone breaking the Ave. here.
windshield on a car operated
Police said Lucas' car
by Carh&gt;s P. Wood, 33, struck the rear end of an auto
Gallipolis.
operated by Jeffrey Clary, 16,
Another mishap occurred Gallipolis, knocl\ing his car
at 4:50p.m. on SR 7, one and into !he rear of a vehicle
one tenth miles south of operated by Merrill D.
By Bob Hoeflich
Cheshire where the trailer on Caldwell, 22, Rt. I, Crown
a car operated by Don Mc- City. There was minor
Dade, 36, Gallipolis, came damage.
loose breaking the windshield
POMEROY- The annual Meigs Cow.ty Fair has wrapped
A second accident occurred
on McDade's car.
up
f&lt;r
another year and I think congratulations are in order for
at 11 :23 a.m. at 456 Second
Ave. where an auto driven by the fair board members and their helpers.
There seemed to be so much more of everything this year
Harland T. Martin, 67,
Gallipolis, backed into a car which meant m&lt;re exhibitors and more fair goers. This kept
owned by Larry C. Winston, board members hopping, not only to pull off the many events
19, Rt. 2, Vinton. There was smoothly, but to k~ peace wherever there seemed to be a
tight damage. No charges problem. The ''peace" part·can be a big problem in itself in
trying to keep everyone happy and at the same time iron out
were filed.
any d!Hiculties. Board members did a great job all the way.
I also fe~l that the many junior fair advisors who lend their
talents and time to give young people the excellent training,
which shows up in the exhibits at the fair, are abo to be
commended. They're probably in thankless Jobs but not as far
By JOHN MOODY
as I'm cmcerned.
NEW YORK (UP!) -Scott
Incidentally, Paula Sayre Swatzel was really in there
on
TV
I
wanted
to
families
Meredith, one of the counpitchlng
at the county fair. And It's always good to see her.
kill
them
too.
I
felt
bad
that
try's leading literary agents,
there
were
so
many
wounded.
Paula
was
a participant In !f!e Big Bend Mins.trel shows for a
says someone is trying to sell
I
wanted
them
all
dead.
I
number
of
years starting when she was still m grade school.
him 10 hOurs of an interview
She
absolutely
beamed with pleasantness and personality way
want
to
cripple
them
didn't
purportedly taped with "Son
I'm
not
the
type
of
because
back
then
and
·she still does.
of Sam" suspect David
At
the
fair
Paula was knee' d~ in race horses and was
person
to
cause
anyone
unBerkowitz.
.
necessary
pain.
My
job
was
i:Jving
her
father,
Brooks, driying this year for the firsl time,
Meredith said a person
to
klll."
Howard Sayre, as well as her husband,
her
uncles,
Paul
and
"close to" the case, whom he
Meredith said he thinks the Mike Swatzel; a helping hand in getting the anin)al$ ready to
would not name, gave him
tapes
are authentic but wants go on the track. All four of the men have horses and so Paula
what was said to be tranto
discuss
the matter further was really on the move.
scripts of a tape in which the
with
bis
lawyer before
Wasn't It obvious at the fair that Jo Jo, the singing clown
suspected .44-caliber killer
just
loves what he's doing. He's talented and likes performing
deciding
whether
to
make
an
says:
offer
to
publish
the
contents.
and
he has no backwardness about everyone knowing it. He
"When I saw the victims'
entertained at the fair board office in between shows and got a
great reception. He was a real addition to the lair.
.
Now with the 114th edition of the fair out of the way, fall'
board members can !lig into their yearol'ound job of planning
the 115th production.

ATHENS - Area law
enforcement officers who
want to continue their
educstlon may now apply for
tuWon grants of up to 11,000
for a full year to Ohio
University under the Law
Enforcement
Education
Program (I..EEP).
The program is intended to
increase the participants'
competence and value tQ
their employing agencies
while simultaneously
allowing them to earn college

Oteshire man

Glass broken . ; ' ·. ·· · ·
cited after
in two mishaps
auto mishap

Beat•••

Of the Bend

Tape offered
believed by
Son of Sam

·~

CLARK'S JEWELRY STORE
SCENIC REPRODUCTION
OF THE GALLIPOLIS
BAND STAND

-~-.,-

THE NEXT FREE cervical cancer clinic for Meigs .area
w&lt;men has beensetf&lt;r Aug. 31 from 12n!l0n to 3:30p.m. There
are a number of appointments open for the clinic 'to be held at
Tri!lity Church in P&lt;meroy. To make your appointment call
·992-5832oo the weekends or evenings after 5:30p.m.
A UST OF RECENT contriootors to the fund drive of the
Pomeroy Emergency Squad listed Mrs. R. R. Cuckler,
Pomeroy. The Ust should have read Mrs. R. R. Cutler. In case
you didn't realize Mrs. R. R'. CUtler is our one and only "Liz"
CUtler who makes life a little more amusing and interesting for'
many of us.

'·

.22 RIFLE

REDFIELD
WITH SCOPE

'52

8

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

WALTON

lUCK &amp;

WET &amp; DRY

DECKER

. SHOP 3/8" DRILL

·$2988
HARDWARE DEPT.
GIANT MITAL

PORTA.FILE

SUNDAY SPECIAL
WOMEN'S

I

WALKING SHOES

'1390

PAIR

SEVERAL STYLES TO CHOOSE FROM.

Not Exactly
As Pictured

BLUE, BROWN &amp; TAN
·.

-

VISA"

-

SHOES·
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

.

MON. THRU SAT. 10 TIL 9
SUNDAY 1 TIL 5

PHOTO

#1912.WA, WQ!nut

woodgrain.

·

'199

'

TOR~ADoS SCHEOULE
Sep1 . 9
a1 Fed . Hocking
SepJ.- 16
at Southwestern
Stjl1. 23
Wa1erford
Sept 30
Wahama
Oc1. 7
at Nor1h Galli a
Oc1. 1A
Kyger creek

Oc1. 21
Oct. 28 '

HOUSEWARE DEPT•

HARDWARE DEPT.

5 LB., 4 OZ.

CHEER .

Nov . .t
Nov. 12

32 OL

STEP SAVER

HOUSEWARES DEPT.

SWINGLINE

3PACK

SPIRAL
.
SET
.

CUB
PLIER

STAPLER
WITH 1000 STAPLES

·.··1

HOUSEWARE

10 oz.

SWEEt'N LOW
100 PACKETS PER BOX

-RALlY
CAR WAX

*100
AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

a1 Symmes Valley
Mi ller

Hannan Trace
Eastern

Tornados grid roster
PLAYER
Steve Hill-x
Scott Souder-x
Mike Warner
Mike Huddleston-•
Danny Dudding-x
Kelley Winebrenner-•
Herb Ervin
Martin Bush-x
Keliey Taylor
Todd Cununins
Billy Harris
Ed Smith
TodRoberts
John West
Tom Allen
Kent Varney
Brian Bowling
Larry Cundiff
JohnPape
John Davis
John Reese
James Meadows
pale Teaford
Terry McNickle
Danny Talbott
Terry Clark
Mark Simpson
Rick Allen
Tony Adkins
Robin Fortune
Bllly Morris
John Williams
Scott Nease
x-Lettermen
DA~

WT. YR
145 4
180 4
160 4
175 4
165 4
180 4
135 4
185 4
125 3
140 3
140 3
165 3
165 3
150 3
140 3
125' 2
c . 135 2
G 125 2
B 130 2
B 130 2
B 125 2
T . 170 2
c !55 I
B
120 I
130 I
B
c 175 1
I
E
130
150 I
T
135
I
E
130 I
B

POS.

B
T
B
E
B
B
G
T
G
E
B
T
T
B
G
G

'

ANNOUNCED
DAYTON, Ohio (UP! ) The sixth ann~al DayiDn Pro
TeMis Classic, a part of the
nationwide Grand Prix, wlll
be held March 27 through
April 2, 1978.
Tournament chairman
Pete Hankney announced the
dates Friday for the 32-player
event, which normally has
been held in early February.
Hankney said the prize
money would be increased by
$25,000,'making the total this
. ye!lf 175,000. The i977 tqtirnament was won by Jeff
· Borowiak, Tiburon; Calif.

c
B

EAIT MEIGS - Out in
E1.eim Eagle territory,
SOCQIMI-year head coach Joe
Mitchem and assistants Arch
RQ11e and Ed WilBon started
Saturday putting !heir boys
through tw...,.-day drills- in
preparation for their Sept. 9
opener at C&amp;ldwell.
Mitchen had 34 athletes out .
this se•son but only eight
returning lettermen. Seven of
the 1976 Eagle team
graduated,
but
mo~t
forecasters think the Eagles
have the manpower to flll the
gaps.
The first Eagle scrlminage
will be at Oak Hill on Aug. 27.
Last year's Eagles weJlt 5-5
on the S..son a!ld finished
third in the SVAC behind
Kyger Creek and North
Gallia. Mitchem and his crew
hope to improve on that
record and !he coach seems
to think his men have the
right attitude to have a
successful season.
· The Eagle offensive line
will definitely be strong and
barring injuries, could carry
the Eagles to a conference
championship.
The biggest weakness !hat
!he Eagles have is a lack of
dePth· Sq to be successful in
their csmpalgn, !he team will
have to stay healthy·
Mitchem picks Kyger
Creek and North GaiDa to be
the teams to beat again this
year, but he also thlnka
Squthwestem will be vastly
Improved. Otherwise, It's
anybody's guess what the
BtandingS .will be.
Eutem has ita first league
contelt when SymmeS Valley
enten Eagle territory 011
ber 18 but then !he
=AC f~ isn't untU Oct.
7when Eeatem 80011 to Kyger
errlto for an

=:..::

COSMmC DEPT.

~teltr:

Here's tile 1977 schedule:
EAd'LES SCHEDULE

Sept. t.Caldwell
Sept. 16-Symmn

Volley

Home
Homo
Sell\. »Fed. Hocking 'Homo
Sept. 23·Alexander

. ~·

Away
·

By Greg Bailey
ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs
Marauder Head Coach
Charles Chancey heads into
his lith season with MHS
with only six starters
back, but that doesn't seem
to dampen his or the boys'
spirits at all. ·
Attitude ·is one of the
biggest ingredients In a
successful football team, and
from all indications, Lhe
Meigs crew should go a long
way. As a matter of fact,
Chancey says that the attitude is tremendous and this
· year"s squad is perhaps the
hardest working bunch of
young men he has coaciles.
This year's crew also
seems to be awesomely
' aggressive and this "gungho" attitude should make up

for the weaknesses. The two
main weak spots in this
year's Marauders could be
their lack of experience and
their shallow depth.
With 38 young men vying"
for positions and only six
starters, the competition
should generate the best
The
efforts
possible.
Marauders will he trying to
improve on last year's 2~
record. They open up their
season on .Sept. 9 at home
against the powerful Big
Blacks of Point Pleasant a~d
the following Friday host
Ripley. On Sept. 30 they open
their SEOAL schedule by
hosting always powerful
Ironton.
Chancey belleves that the
Logan Chleftaills and Ironton
wnl be the two te&amp;DII to beat

this year, but Gallipolis can't
be coualed out. The reot of the
league right ·now could be a
lollS-up, but Injuries and other
unforeseea o.,ltaeles could

change _all the forecasts . .
&lt;:hancey is assisted this
year by fou.r other coachea
who help ' in tbe two-a.&lt;fay
drills. John Bentley is · In
charge or the defensive backs
while Fenton Taylor coaches
the defensive line. Don Dixon
handles the offensive line
while Mike Barr shows the
ends what to do. Chancey
handles most of the specialty
teams. Managers this year
are Greg Taylor, \Jill Roush,
Mick Chancey, and Rick
Chancey. The 1977 roster and
schedule appear elsewhere
on this page today.

135
130

&gt;

•

GOOD PUNT ...:. Meigs' Dan Thomas gets off a good
punt during pre-season grid drills Friday. - Judy Owen
photos.
·

Meigs grid roster
1977MElGS MARAUDERS

l

liT. wr. YR
&amp;.I 155 4
x-GeorgeGum, QB
190 4
6-1
x-Brent Arhold, T
6-1 . 155 4
x-KeMy Young, E
160 4
5-10
x-Mark Mitch, C
170 4
6-0
x-Brent Stanley, G ·
140 4
5-8
Mike Wayland, WB
190
3
6-1
x-DavidBlake.• Ji'B
145
4
5-8
Jimmer Soulsby, TB
205
4
6-2
Dave Williamson, C
160 3
5-9
Bruce Carman, E
135 4
5-11
JoeGarnes,E
150 3
5-6
Mark Magnotta, G
190 3
6-1
Randy Arnold, T
150
3
5-10
Randy Tackett, G
185
3
6-0
Danny Edwards, T
170
2
5-6
Bob Olapelear, G
200
3
6-0
Mike Drehel, T
145 4
5-9
Kevin McLaughlin, WB
160 . 2
5-11
Rick Blaettnar, TB
144
3
5:-11
Brent Bolin, E
150 2 .
&amp;-9
Dan Thomas, QB
5-5 115 2
Rick W!lliamson, WB
5-11
155 2
TiinFaulk, C
145 2
5-9
David Hysell, E
140 4
5-8
James Haning, E
170 2
6-1
Todd Snowden, T
160
2
5-8
Tiin Wyant, T
140 3
5-11
Greg Becker, WB
5-8 190 2
RichardBasham,G
5-8 140 2
Mike McGuire, G
140 3
5-9
JohnSrout,E
160
3
5-7
Billy Elkins, m
6-1
170
3
Bob Soletig, E
230
2
5-8
Dave Davis, T
155 2
6-0
Van Williord, FB
6-0 .. 175 . 2
Robert Parker, T
x-Lettermen
1977 MHS SCHEDULE
Home
Sept. .9-Pi. Pleasant
Home
Sept. 16-Ripley
Away
Sept. 23-Belpre
Home
Sept. 30--lronton
Away
Oct. .7-Jackson
Home
Oct.14-Waverly
.Away
Oct. 21-Athens
Away
Oct. :IJI.....Gallipolis
Home
Nov . .4-Logan
Away
Nov.JI-Wellston

PLAYER-POS.

1
I

.

m!STLEDOWN
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio '
( UPI) - Bennie Feliciano
guided Martha My Love to
victory Friday in the featured
eighth race at Thistledown,
covering the six furlongs in
I: 12 1-5 over a fast track to
pay $9.60, $4 .and $3.60.
Haskrahon~y placed and
Jill's Birthday showed.
The 7" daily double of
DEAN of Southeastern Ohio League grid coaches Charles Chancey, now In his lith year
Anyway Marty ariil Allum at Meigs High School, goes over the work schedule during a skull session with his
paid $172.60.
Marauders as twiHI-daY drills continued Friday.
In the ninth race trifecta, .
there were 47 winning tickets
on the 6-7-1 grouping of B.
Battery, Lady Beaver and
Admiral's Cup, each .worth
$1,193.10.

Reds rip Mets

NEW YORK (UP!) - Dan cinnati Reda to an 8-2 triumph Swan, IH, was routed in the
fifth when the Reds scored
Driessen drove in three runs over the New York Mets.
The Reda loaded the based two more times on four hits,
and Ken Griffey scored three
times to support the five-hit in the first inning and took a including RBI 'doubles by
pitching of Fred Norman 3-0 lead on a passed ball and Driessen and Bench. CinSaturday and pace the Cin- Driessen's two-run double. cinnati scored Its final tally in
Aided by two -Met errors In the eighth on a sacrifice fly
the third, Cincinnati upped by Ray Kni~ht .
the score to 5.() on George
Norman, boosting his
Foster's RBI double and record to 11-10, was touched
·JohnnY Bench's sacrifice fly. for home runs by Mike Vail in
starter and loser Craig the seventh inning 'and John
PLAYER--POs
HT• . WT. YR.
Milner in the eighth.
x-Randy Boston, T, T
6-1
215
12
MILWAUKEE (UPI) - A
Jim Davis,SE,S
6-3
158 12
pair
of infield errors and Jim
x-Joe Kuhn, HB, HB
5-9
155
12
Wohlford's
two-run single
Brian Matthews, HB, HB
5-10
155
12
enabled
the
Milwaukee
Dennis Rucker, HB, LB
5-9
145
12
Randy Browning, HB, HB
5-9
145
II Brewers to score three
Greg Ginther, SE, E
5-11
158
II unearned runs in the second ·
x-TimHawlhome,C,LB
5-10 173
II Inning Saturday and defeat
x-Mike Hayman, TE, E ·
5-10
150
II ·the Chicago White Sox, 4-2.
The Brewers, trailing 2.(),
Randy Keller, G, LB
5-11 , !55
11
.lARRISON, N.Y. (UPI)- first victory in five years on
managed
·only one hit in the
JackParker,HB,HB
5-8
148
11
the pro golf tour, shot a SLawrencePooler,C,LB .
li-10
163
II · second but benefitted from Andy North, looking lor his under-par 65 Saturday for a
Dan Splmcer, FB, LB
.~
182
H errors by shortstop Alan
three-stroke third round lead
Russell Starcher, T, T
5-10 , 185
11 Bannister and third baseman
in the $300,000 Westchester
Brian White, SE, E
6-3 . 165
II Eric Soderholm to push
Classic; and no one was more
x-RustyWigal,G,LB
6-0
178
11 across the go-ahead runs.
surprised about it than he
Losing pitcher Steve stone,
Brian Bissell, QB, S
~ 5-10
150
10
.
'
BLOOMINGTON, Minn. was.
Tim Dillon, FB, LB
5-9
168 10 . 1~. opened the inning by
"This is such a screwy
C!llCAGO (UPI) - George Jose Cardenal struck out but
x-Don Eynon, G, LB
6-0
195 10 hitting Jamie Quirk and Lenn (UPI) - Ken Singleton game," said North. u1 came
Greg Hayman, C, LB
5-9
160 10 Sakata's potential double collected four hits, including here tired and I really didn't · Mitterwald, w't!ose fifth in- Blll Buckner hammered hla·
JerryHolley,T,T
5-11
165 10 play grounder went through his 19th homer, Saturday and f.eel like playing, and I'm ning homer produced the first third homer In two daya
Chicago run, singled with two against his ex-teammates to
Mark Norton, HB, S
5-10
150 10 the legs of Bannister for an Ross Grimsley allowed only playing good.
outs in the eighth to score give the Cubs the lead for the
Gene Cole, SE, HB
5-8
105
9 error M Quirk took third. four hits In seven innjngs to
"The
last
three
weeks,
at
Scott Chevalier, HB, HB
5-5 123
9 Charlie Moore than bounced lead the Baltimore Orioles.to Hartford,. Philadelphia and Bobby M.u rcer with the first time at 4-3.
The Dodgers tied the game
Dennis Durst, HB, HB
'
5-8
143
9 .a grounder to Soderholm, but a nationally - televised 6-2 the PGA; I was really ex- winning run Saturday and led
Rodney Keller, T, T
5-8
190
9 the Brewers scored when victory over the Minnesota cited, and I felt g!lOd, and I hit the CUbs to a 5-4 triumph over · in the eighth when .Steve
Garvey . singled, reached
!he Los Angeles Dodgers.
Tony Kennedy, HB, HB
5-8
108
9 Soderholm's throW to the Twins.
the
ball
good
in
practice,
and
The
loss
shrunk
the
third
on Manny Trlllo's error
Singleton
drilled
a
415-foot
Kenny Larkins, TE, E
5-10
163
9 plate hit Quirk in the back . .
all
three
weeks
I
played
DQdgers'.leadover
Cincinnati
scored
when pinch-bitter
Von Joshua then laid down homer off loser Pete Redfern,
Gary Putman, G, LB
5-9
150
9
horribly
and
missed
the
cut."
In
the
National
League
West
MaMy
Moto
grounded into a
Randy Staats, HB, HB
5-8
120
9 a sacrifice bunt for catcher 5-8, into the left field seats 'in
North
had
a
54-hole
total
of
9\2
games.
lorceout.
to
Ray Werry, C, T
5-7
155
9 Brian Downing's throw to the sixth after Dave Skaggs · 201, 12 strokes under par for
Bob]?y Murcer walked to
.
5-7
128
9 third was too late to get had led off the inniilg with a the short and . friendly
Greg Wigal, QB, S
.GreyScsrbrough,G,LB
5-7
150
9 Sakata and the hases were single. Singleton alngled in Westchester Country Club open the eighth, reached LL player wins
S.cond on Steve Ontiveros'
Rocky Pitzer, G, E
. 5-9
J.P5
9 loaded. Wohlford ·followed each of his other three apcourse.
sacrifice and went to third on monthly award
pearances.
·
Head Coach, Joe Mitchem; Asst. Coach, Arch Rose; Asst. with a two-run single that put
Tom
Weiskopf,
the
only
big
an infield out before Mit- .
The
OriolM
scored
il
run
in
the Brewers in front 3-2.
Coach, Ed Wilaon.
name
among
14
players
terwald
delivered hla hit off
RUTLAND, Vt. (UP!)
Milwaukee added an in- the second when Terry
x-Lettermen.
bunched
within
two
hots
loser
Charlie
Hough,
&amp;-9.
Cathy
LaDuke, 12, of
surance run in the fourth of Crowley opened with a double
starting
the
sunny,
breezy
Fiancee killed in 'cycle wreck
Willie
Hernandez
pitched
Rutland,
has become the first
Joshua's leadoff triple and a and scored on ·Andres Mora's
day,
made
a
5-foot
putt
lor
only tw9-thirda of an inning to little leaguer to win the '
alngle and Singleton's homer
night, was granted leave iAl dOuble by Don Money.
NEW YORK (UPI) eagle 3 on the 509-yard 18th get his seventh victory Athlete ·of the Month award,
made
it
a-G.
Jerry
Augustine,
11-14,
Diane Ferguson, fiancee of attend the funeral of Miss
Baltimore added a run In liole and ·shot 69 to share against four . defeats while the Vermont Sportscasters
gave up a run.acoring single
New York Je.ts' safetyman Ferguson:
second place a~ 204 with Dave Giusti gOt his first save and
Sportswrit·ers
The former Ball State star, to LarQar Johnson In the first the seventh when Doug Howard Twitty.
Shafer Suggs, was killed In a
·
Association
announced
Cub.
aa
a
Declnces
doubled
and
~red
·
, motorcycle
accident a native of Elkhart, Ind., and a sacrifice fly to Downing on AI Bumbry's single and
Twitty,
with
Weiskopf
in
a
Doug
Rau,
trying
for
his
Friday.
a
shoulder in !he second but. held tl•e
Thursday night ·in Royal suffered
group of seven players tied
C&amp;thy beat seven other
separation oo July 12 when he White Sox to only two hits · tbe Orioles pushed across two for the 36-hole lead, birdied 14th )Vin, was protecting a 3-1
Center' Ind.
involved in an after !he third before being more 1'11115. in the ninth on the last three holes Saturday lead In the seventh when athletes to win the July
Suggs, who was to make his was
pinch-hitter Dave Rosello and award and Is now eligible for
relieved by Ed Rodriguez Skaggs' two-run alngle.
first 19'n appearance againllt automobile accident.
for
69
of
his
own.
Ivan Dejesus singled to bring Athlete of the Year, who 'Nill
Minnesota's
only
run
off
when Richie Zisk led off the
the Pittsburgh Steelers In an
Leonard
Thompson
was
..
In reliever Mike Garman. be chosen In April.
Grimsley
csme
on
a
solo
ninth with a alngle. Rodriguez
exhibition game Saturday
alone
in
fourth
place
with
7oDuring the month she had a
homer
~y
Craig
Kusick
ln'the
~me on to get the last three
MILWAUKEE (UPI)
205:
~
pitching record for the
The Milwaukee Bucka Friday outs and record hla first sav~ seventh inning . Dennis
CAPTURES TITLE
Rutland
Kiwanis Utile
The game attracted 28,045 Martinez relieved Gt'lmsley,
Away announced the signing of 6-8
TORONTO (UPI) - Un- citing &amp;-4, ~. 6-3 victory to.
oct. 7·Kyger Creek
. Oct. u.Soufhweslern Home . Ernie Grunfeld of Tennessee, to put ~ Brewers past the 12-11, in the eighth ~ was seeded Regina Marslkova of capture
the
Women's League, Including back to
Oct. 21 -Hannan Trace Away one of · t1m1e first round millkin mark In home at- touched for a run-scoring Czechoslovakia overcame Champlonahip In the $160,000 back no-hitters. In six gamet1
(ll:j. 21--()pen
tendance this season at single by Larry Hisle In the South African giant-killer Canadian Open Tennis and 23 at-bats she had 18 hltl
HOme choices the NBA club had in
Nov. •·North Gallla
ninth.
. ,e.,.~ 23 "JDS· \
1,006,597.
M~tlse . ~er for an 1 ex- Tourna~ent SatfroaY ·' · · 81.
Nov. 12·Soulhern
·,j
~·y the sprillg draft.

Eagles have eight
·•
veterans returnmg ·

DETERGENT

'
Rival unions tailing merger
Teachers Association and the
Cincinnati Ji'ederation of
Teachers - may merge.
CT A President Ruth
Clepliane reported Friday
that a survey Indicates 83 per
cent of CTA members want a
•'merged local organization .''
Clephane said it is her
impression
that . CFT
President Roger Stephens,
who. currently is out of town,
agrees. Officials of the two
group11 are to meet Monday to
talk about a poaslble merger: ~·
· "CTA
leaders - are
convinced that the future
needs of all Cincinnati
teachers calla · f&lt;r a stroqg
and
effective
local
&lt;rganization speaking as, one .
· voice," said Clephane.
&lt;The CTA has about 900
members and the CFT has
about 1,200 members. Last
winter the CFT woo an ·
election over the Cl'A f&lt;r the
rtght to bargain cootracts
with· the Cincinnati School
Baord and , ~ spring the
CFT waged a month-long
strike for higher wages.

HARDWARE DEPT.

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CINCINNATI (UP!) -The
city's rival school teacher
unions . .- the. .Cincinnati

4X SCOPE

'4911

MRS. L!LUAN GRESS, whose appearance defies it, is
observing her 82nd birthday today. A real lady, Mrs. Gress
makes her home with her son..in-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Leon McKnight, 401 Spring Ave., Pomeroy.

TRIVETS · TILES ·
PlATES

RACINE - Although the
Southern Tornado football
team got a late start ·in
conditioning, new head coach
John Dudding doesn 't believe
his squad has been hurt at all.
Whatever detriment that
late start might have had,
Dudding believes that his
team's attitude more than
makes up for it. That late
start came about because of
some staffing difficulties.
Dudding was an assistant
coach a few years ago, and
this year he will be assisted
by Mick Winebrenner, a
Syracuse product who was an
outstanding athlete at
Pomeroy. ·
The 1m Tornados will be
trylrig to improve a fairly
successful 5-4 record In 1976.
Although a lot of quality
material was lost via
graduation, Dudding has
eight seniors and seven
juniors to lead the way lor the
rest of the squad. But only sjx
of those are returning lettermen.
Dudding has 33 candidates
for the starting berths, and
the Tornados will open their
campaign on September 9 at
Federal Hocking. Their first ·
home contest isn't until Sept;
23 when Waterford comes to
Racine.
Inside the SVAC, Dudding
picks Kyger Creek and archrival Eastern as the two
teams to beat for the Crown.
With the right bounc:YOf the
pigskin and a healtliy club,
the Tornados could once
again become a. serious
threat in the SVAC.
Here's the 1977 schedule:

WINCHESTER

., ••

......

Southern has 33
grid candidates

PRICES IN EFFECT SUNDAY &amp;MONDAY

BY THE · WAY, the emergency squads of Pomeroy,
Middleport, Syracuse and RuUand served at the Meigs County .
Fair each day. Fortunately they weren't.too much in demand
. rut it was good to have, them on hand. Wbat with so many
people around and so many activities taking place they could
really have beeri hard pressed.
·

ROY RIFFLE, Route I, Reedsville, emphatically denies
stories appearing in the news about Elvis Presley and his
having been given lij)PE!rs and downers by a sergeant In the
army.
.
. ·. .
. RiH!e was a sergeant and a part of the csdre tr8llllllg a
unit in which Elvis waa in back in 19SII for basic training iii Fort
Hood, Tex . The outfit was A Co. of the 37th Bn., Second
Atmored Division. Riffie said that on behalf of the U. S. Army
he denies the report. He said Elvis was congenial and not
difficult in any way. Riffle .aid he served for six years with a
similar outfit in Germany and at no time did sergeants give
uppers and lowers to guards ID keep them awake.

.

SPORTS

NOW AVAilABLE AT

'

Marauders have 6 starters
•
back for 77 grid campazgn

Eagles grid roster

Brewers
win, 4-2

North has 3
stroke lead .

..

Orioles stop

Dodgers lead cut to

Twins, 6-2

9lf2 games after 5-4 defeat

,

�•

v2-TheSunday Thnes-&amp;ntinel, Sunday, AUR. 21, 1977

Staub predicts 11-0 mark for Cincinnati
By RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI (UPI)- Out
from the shadows of Woody
Hayes, 43-year old Ralph
Staub is making one of the
splashiest starts ever as a

rookie head coach.
The long-time assistant to
Hayes at Ohio State is just
getting acquainted with bis
staff and players at the
University of Cincinnati, but

already is predicting his
team will have a perfect 11~
record this season and also is
challenging Hayes
to
schedule Cincy in the future.
Tony Mason recently

Wellston has 49 grid candidates

~ HEAD BLUE DEVILS THIS FALL - Pictured above are the Gallia Acade~y High

School s~~ ~ptams who will lead Co!tch Willard (Buddy) Moore's (rear) Blue Devils
oo the. gn~ this fall ..Left to right they are Gary Dabney, Tim Chevalier, Mike Staggs

and Jtm SmtmS, a!l seruors. Forty-four boys in the upper three grades and 30 freshmen
began two-a-day drills Aug. 15. Season opener is less than three weeks off against Rock Hill
at home on Sept. 9.
'
'

BY STEVE JEFFERS
WELLSTON- Forty ·nine
boys, grades nine through 12,
have been participating in the
opening week of football
practice in full gear at
Wellston High School.
. Of the curre~l roster, only
!•v~ are semors, 10 are
Juruors, 17 are sophomores
and 17 are freshmen:
Eight are returnmg l~ttermen from last year s
"'!uad which finished with 3
wms and 7 losses.
Returntng lettermen are
Tom Baker (Sr.), Jerry
Patton (Soph.), Don Osborne
(Jr.), Brendt Osborne (Jr),
J;ff Mont~omery (Soph.),
Mike. Masste (Soph.), Greg
Marttndill (Soph.) and Curt
JayJohn (Jr.).
Head coa.ch Jody Michael
Wlll be asststed this fall by
Terry Brennan ..Poui[.Griffi h..
Mike Wood, and Rick Perdue.

now .. . get
WATER&amp;ICE
without opening
the door!

Michael has scheduled two
preseason scrimmages. The
first is at Belpre on Aug. 30 at
6 o'clock and the second at
Fairland High School at 10
a.m. on Sept. 3.
Thus far Michael has been
· pleased with the results of ihe
workouts. ·
Asked ~bout strengths and
weaknesses of this year's
team Michael replied, "Most
teams will be bigger than us
but we should be much
quicker, especially in our
veteran backfield. Our main
goal is to rebuild our line, but
our staff feels we have the
boystodothejobontheline."
At present, the Wellston
High School roster includes
the following candidates:
Seniors: Tom Baker, John
. Bishop, Randy Buffington,
Ray Gilliland, Bill Buckley.
Juniors - Jeff Barnell,
Kerry Cheatwood, Curt
Jayjohn, J. P. Kisor, Paul

May, David Newman, Brendt
Osborne, Don Osborne, Kevin
Patterson, Robert Murray.
Sophomores ..: Steve
BenSon, Chris Carpenter,
Gene Carpenter. Mike
DeStephen, David Essman,
· Dan Lockhart, Greg Martln.dill, 'Mike MaMie, John May,
Rick McManaway, Jeff
Mdntgomery, Jerry· Patton,
Brad Potter, Tim Roberts,
Lowell Settles, Randy Sims,
John Trace.
Freshmen - Shane Cox,
Jeff Dever, Brett Gilliland,
Chuck
Greer,
Robert
· Johnston, Robert Johnson,
Jeff King, Steve King, Joe
Michael, Jeff Midkiff, Dennis
Osborn.e, Walter Osborne,
Jim Saltsman, John Smith,
Leland Smith, Bob Waldron,
Kevin Waldron.
Trainers - Pat Edwards,
Gene Waldron.
Manager - Paul Sims. ,Wellston Sentry.

rebuilt the Cincy football
program, leading
the
Bearcats to a 9-2 record last
year bef&lt;l'e moving up to the
University of Arizona head
coaching job, so most people
ftgured Staub 1o merely say
he hoped to continue the
Winning traditioo.
He didn't. He went a lot
further.
"Yes, I did etick my neck
out by saying we will be 11-ll
thi.!l year," said the stocky
Staub, who then compounded
his declaration by adding,
"But I hOIIesUy believe we
will be 11~ ."
That kind of statement
means opponents_will have no.
lack of motivation to whip
Cincy and Staub was asked
what happens to his
credibility if and when the
first defeat comes.
Staub seemed chagr(ned by
the thought of a loss.
"H we falter and we're only
H~l," he said, figuring there
is no way Cincy can lose
twice, "then next year we'll
go 11-ll." .
Staub Insisted his flat
prediction of perfectioo was
more than just pre-season
motivational talk.
''I do believe in positive
Utinking," he said, ~~~ut I'm
basing my predictioo on what

we can put on the field tllll
year. I'm telling you as ills,
I'm nollr)'ing to sell Uct;ets."
To start with, the trash
Staub said nobody In the
nation can out-punt Clncy 's
Mike C&lt;Jnnell.
· "Mike Connell Is the best
punter in college football and
you may quote m&amp; on thai ,"
he said. "He kicks ~70 yards
with a hang time of 5.1 or 5.2
seconds. The ooly way we can
foul him up is by coaching
him. I told my punting coach,
'You'll be a great punting
coach if you'll just listen to
this kid ."
As f&lt;l' place kicking, Staub
said Steve Schultz was "erratic" as a freshman last
season, ''but I think we .
straightened him out In
spring practice. OUr field ·
goals and extra points are in
good hands- or I should say,
good feet."
·
Staub also predicted
Bearcat Mike Woods will be
the ftrst linebacker taken in
next year's pro draft.
"The main reasons we'U go
Il-l! are defense and our
kicking game," concluded
Staub. "All we've got lo W&lt;l'k
on is our offense. "
The Bearcat boss has
moved senior John Butz from
safety to the No. 1
quarterbacking job, ahead of
Kansas State transfer Art
Bailey.

'

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Today's hurlers

North GalliJJ grid roster

'

NG

CAPTAINS AND COACHES - Rex Juatice
senior. running back; Calvin Minnis, senior quarterback
and Bill Lookado, a lineman will serve as captains for the
i

1977 North Gallia Pirates. They are shown with Head
Coach John Blake and Assistant Coach Ted Lehew.

North Gallia in
rebuilding year
' VINTON :._ With just three good strength due to Its
returning lettermen, North wInter · we lgh tllft in g
Gallia's Pirates, one of the program.
stronger teams in the
North Gallla will be
Southern Valley At hletic operating from the Power I
Conference in recent years, formation with Justice exface a monumental task in peeled to provide the bulk of
their bid to dethrone · the the running attack. Mlnnla,
defending champion Kyger Sam Smith, a junior; Dale
Creek Bobcats.
Geiser, another junior and
Coach John Blake's Pirates freshman Don Shupe, are
ftnished second for the second fighting it out for the quar·
straight year in the SVAC last terback nod. Minnis' a hardyear with a 5-1 record . hitter on defense, hal an
Overall the Pirates were 8-1 outstanding arm.
with their only loS!Ies going to
Under the quarterbacking
Kyger Creek .and Ironton St. of Mark Theiss, the Pirates
Joe.
comb(ned il quick, hard-nose
Rex . Justice, a 6-0, 162 running · game with · an
running back, Curtis Nolan, aggre.Sive passing attack led
156 pound senior lineman who by :rheiss and receivers
transferred !tom South· Tackett and Logan.
western High School, and Bill
On defense, the Pirates are
Lookado, senior linebacker, expected to use eltller an
are the Pirate returnees.
Oklahoma (5-4 ) or a pro ~4-4) .
Justice was one of North
The 44-man squad is
Galli a's top ·r unning backs a composed of nine seniors, 13
year ago behind Fred Logan, juniors, ll sophomores and 11
Mark Theiss and·Mike Casey. freshmen. The freshmen
Co-captains ol this year's squad Is one of the largest ·ln
44-member sq uad are · the school's history. It 1s
Justice, Calvin Minnis, a believed the· juitlorJigh
~~enior who did not play program established 1
fall
football in 1976 and Lookado, is responsible for that turna 140 pound .senior. Minnis out
lettered· his fres hman and
TheveteranP!ratementor,
sophomore years.
a graduate of Marshall
·Gone via graduation and University and former
transfers are Mark Theiss, an assistant coach at Southern
all league quarterback ; High School, feels Kyger
Russell Potts; Ron Plants, Creek, Eastern and SoutllJesseDuncan, MartinH!Uh, westerncouldbetheteamato
Fred Logan, co-MVP of the reckon witll in the SV AC.
SV AC; Bill · Baker, . the
North Gailia opens ita 1977
leag ue's Most Valuable seaaon Sept. 10 at Waterford.
Line man; Bret Tackett, Other non-league opponents
Home r McMillan; Steve . are Z8r)e Trace,. and' Hannan,
Mundell, Casey who moved to W. Va.. ·
Kyger Cr11ek and David Scott
The Pirates have set a
who moved to ·l!outh Point. tentative scrimmage with
Coach Blake, entering his Valley Locljl for Saturday,
seventh year at North Gallia·, f&gt;ug . .27'. .
said ~ team needs more
Aaaiming Coach Blake this
experience. The varsity has fall will be Ted Lehew,
overall good quickness and Pomeroy, a graduate of

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C3-The Sund.av Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Aug 21, 1977

Capital University. Lehew
waa a formec All-8EOAL
lineman at Meigs High
School. He played college
football and wrestled at
Capital University. Ron
Twyman, the school's head
baaketball coach, will serve
aa junior high ·coach this
year.
PIRATES
SCHEDULE
Sept. 10
AIWalerford
Sepl16
Zane Trace
Sept. 23
Southwestern
Sept. 30 AI Symmes Valley
Oct. 7
. Southern
Oct. 14
At Hannan Trace
Oct. 21
Hannan, W. Va.
Oct. 28
Open
Nov. •
. AI Eastern
Nov . 11
Kyger Creek
Head Coach - John Blake
Ass'! Coach - Ted Lehew

Samuel named
vj_ce president
NEW YORK (UP! ) - The
New Yor~ Yankees Friday
appointed Marah Samuel to a
vice presidency in charge of
marketing and public
relations.
Samuel, a veter•n ~ublic
relations counsel, previously
worked with the Chicago
White Sox, Cleveland Indians
and Cleveland Browns in
sports, He has also worked lh ·
outside industry, with
Yankee owner George M.
Steinbrenner among his
business clients.

NORTH GAUJA ROSfER ·
Yr. Pos. HI. Wt.
Player
163
5'11"
L
10
Jim Barnes
157
12 L 5'9"
James Kemp
9
163
L
6'0"
Scott Howell
5'9"
L
168
Tim Davis
12
12
5'
10"
162
L
Keith Hole&lt;mb
193
L 5'9''
Scott Franklin
11
10
175
L 6'2"
Joe Peck
189
L ~1911
Chip Kirby
II
140
12 B 5'8"
Bill l.oo kado, CC ·X
Gary Spencer
10 L 5'8"
249
9
L 5'1"
Randy Nolan
l33
5'5"
146
Bill Hawks
10 L
150
L 5'8''
11
Roger Cremeens
11
248
L 6'0"
Doug Mount
.
5'8''
217
L
10
Bill Hash
5'10"
It
223
L
Jim Fairchild
152
L 5'8"
9
· Gary Mount
6'1"
L
160
Tim McComas
11
12 L
5'6"
141.
John Swisher
L 5'6''
158
Mike Martin
9
L 5' 10"
11
163
Chris Welch
12 B 6'1"
201
Calvin Minnis, cc- x
10 L 5'10"
141
Jim Cains
Tndd Comer
9 L 5'2"
122
12 L 5'811
!56
Curt Nolan - x
·Jeff Gardner
10 L 5'5"
152
It
135
B 5'6"
Dale Geiser
12 L
5'9''
Mike Sheehan
141
10 B 5'5"
125
Tim Howell
5'11"
L
Stacy Winston
11
157
5'8"
L
11
144
Early Hayman •
B 5'6"
It
150
Marty Glassburn
134
L 5'10"
10
ScollLewis
L 5'10"
9
170
TmnGrieser
B 5'6"
119
Sam Smith
11
12 B 6' 0"
162
Rex Justice, cc -x
B 5'6"
Perry Livingslon
10
J:i2
B 5'4"
9
122
Jeff Cisneros
10 L 5'6"
Joe Gibbs
125
122
B 5'7"
9
DOll Shupe
B 5'8"
James Plants
11
145
132
B 5'5"
9
·Charlie Lookado
5'7'.'
9. B
Mark Wilfoog
119
101
9 B 5'31'
Tim Lee
x - Lettermen.

Sunday'sProbable Pitchers
United Press lntematlonal
(All Times EDT)
American League
Baltimore (May 13-11) at
Minnesota (Zahn 11·10), 2:15
p.m.
Boston (Aase 3-1) at
Kansas City (Splittorff 1~),
2:30 p.m.
Chicago (Barrios 11-4 and
Kucek fl.l) at Milwaukee
(Augustine lfl.H and Haas 88), 2, 2:30 p.m.
Toronto (Byrd 2-6) at
California (Tanana 14-7), 4:00
. p.m.
'
Cleveland (Eckersley litO) at ·Oakland (Medich fMi),
· 4:30p.m.
Det roit (Morris t-1) at
Seattle (Mitchell 1-4), 4:35
p.m.
New York (Guidry !Hi) at
Texas (Alexander 13-7), 8:35
p.m.
National LeagUe
San Francisco (Montefusco
6-9) at Pittsburgh (Jones 3-4 ),
1:35 p.m.
.
.
Cincinnati (Seaver 13-5) a\
New Yo~k (Koosman 8-U),
2:05p.m.
Atlanta (Ruthven 4-9) at

Montreal (Bahnsen 7-6), 2:15
p.m.
Loo Angeles (Rhoden l!H)
at Chicago (R Reuschelt&amp;-6 ),
2:15p.m.
San Diego (Owchinko 5-8)
at St. Louis (Underwood 7~ ),
2:15p.m.
Houston (Lemongello 5-13)
at Philadelphia (Carlton 177), 7:00p.m.

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HOUSTON (UP!) - The
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A crowd of 4,310 wagered
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�•

"

C4-TheSWldayTime5-&amp;'ntinei,Sunday, A~. 21.1977

C4-The Sunday Times..sentinel, Sunday, Aug. 21, 1977

Logan has 13 veterans, . Jacobs will

Kyger. Creek eyes fifth .
straight SVAC grid title
.

'I

CHESHIRE - Optimism is
running high here these days
as the Kyger Creek Bobcats
began two-a-day drills in
earnest last week in search of
their fifth straight Southern
Valley Athletic Conference
championship.
Coach Jim Sprague, en·
tering his sirlh year as head
Bobcat mentor, will be
looking fo• his fifth league
title in six years. KC finished
second in Sprague's first
season as head coach.
Why are Bobcat fans ·•up in
the air" this early? Well, one
only has to scan the Bobcat
roster to see the answer.,
Kyger Creek is loaded again
this fall. One fan said, "The
only thing we need is a proven
quarterback." That seems to
be the only question mark as
the Bobcats prepare for
another season in the SVAC.
The quarterback slot, a
position so vitally important
to a successful team, may not
be decided until the first
game.
Senior Greg MuHord, a 5-ll,
162 pounder, may have the
inside track, but, Mullord's
experience is limited. He did

Curnutte, Randy Taylor, Mike casey and Doug Halley.
Second row, left to right, Scott Richards, Marcus Geiger, ·
Bnan Sutphm, Steve Russell, Von Taylor and Victor
VanSickle.

BACKFIELD CANDIDATES - Kyger Creek's
offensive backfield will feature speed, agility and some
veteran performers. Backs expected to see plenty of
action are first row, left to right, Greg Mullord, Mark

·see some action a year ago

fall include Huntington Local,
Wahama , Alexander and
eith~r Hamilton Twp. of
Franklin County or Portsmourth Northwest.
T(te now famous Kyger
Creek · North Gallia contest
has been moved to the final
game of the season. As ex·
peeled it resembled the Ohio
State-Michigan game a year
ago.
Graduation losses included
All-SV AC players Ralph
Baylor, Todd Taylor and
Steve Baird ; Bill Abshire,
Steve Darst, Paul Fife,
receiver Brian Lucas; Carl
Myets, Ted Misner, Doug
· . Sands, and SteVe Shoemaker.
Summarizing his squad,
Coach Sprague said, "We
can't let down. We must play
every game one at a time. If
our seniors provide the
leadership and attitudes, we
should be ready to defend our
championship."
Assistant coaches again
this fall are Deryl Well, en~
tering his seventh year and

when veteran signal caller
Steve Baird was injured or
replaced late in runaway
games.

MuHord is being pushed by
steve Russell, a 5·9,153 pound
junior who can throw the long
ball, and by Brian Sutphin, a
gutty but small, 5.0,140 pound
junior.
In addition to his quar·
terback problem, Coach
Sprague must also develop a
defensive. backfield. He has
several new fattls there, most
of whom lack experience.
Now to the big plusses
Bo beat fans are thrilled
about.
Ten returning lettermen
form the. nucleus of the
veteran Bobcat squad.
Three of those returnees ·
were named to the first team,
All.SV AC a year ago.
Returning are linemep,
Semaki Corfias, Claude
Cornelius, Mike Hendrickson,
Darrell Jones, Randy Lucas,
Rusty . Lucas and Roger
Spaulding,
Returning in the speedy,
Bobcat offensive backfield
are Marcus Geiger and a
transfer from · North Gallia
Mike Casey. Sophomore
Victor Vansickle and junior
speedster Randy Taylor
could also fit in the Bobcat
offensive plans.
Jones, a 22:i pound tackle,
was selected to the all SV AC
squad for the second straight
year. Hendrickson, a 200
ppund tackle,. received '
honorable mention. Corfias
weighs 200 POllllds, Cornelius
weighs in at 190; Spaulding,
180 and the Lucas twins, 162160.
Geiger was Kyger Creek's
top offensive back in 1976
with 1,354 yards, in 162
carries, an 8.5 ave. and 15
touchdowns. On defense, he .
was the Bobcats' third best
point producer with 148
defensive points in his
coach'sratings.
Casey, a 5-:i, 140 poun.d
senior, while playing for
Coach John Blake's Pirates
in 1976, rushed (or . 1,100
yards. He . was particularly
tough against the Bobcats
getting three touchdowns and
247 yards rushing in last

..
VETERAN UNEMEN -Kyger Creek's offensive and defensive lines will be flanked by
veteran performers this fall. Linemen include first row, left to right, Rusty Lucas, Darrell
Jones, Randy Lucas, and Tim Nibert. Second row, Mike Henderickson, Claude Cornelius
Semal&lt;i Corfias and end Roger Spaulding.
.
·
'
year's 37-36 loss at Cheshire.
Coach Sprague lists the
team's biggest assets as his
offensive backfield, quick·
ness and veteran line. The
Bobcats will use a varied
offensive attack ·which in·
eludes the ·Power I, pro set
and straight 2 or fuiJhouse
backfield. ·
On the offensive and
defensive lines, veterans
Jon·e s, Corfias and Hen·
drickson are being pressed by
junior Dennis Mollohan, a 6-3,
188 pounder ; Jon Thompson,
6-0, 212 pound junior playing
his first year on the gridiron;
Chris Elliott, a 220 pound
sophomore; Howard Halley,
a 165 pound junior, and Doug
Stover, a 147 pound
sophomore.
Vying•for starting. receiver
are . Roger
positions
Spaulding, 1&gt;-2 senior; Tim
Nibert, 5-8, 140 pound senior
and Scott Richards, 5-8, 140
pound senior.
others working hard for
starting nods are Mark
Curnuette, 5-0, 132 pound

=
~6
~;;.,. ,

~
·stock No.
59

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Why are so many drivers switchi ng
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Allstate offers lots of special
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BOX

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'

· GAU.IPWS, OHIO

•

a

BASEBALL
Major League Standings

By United Press International
Nationill League

Ealf

W. L

Ph il a
Pittsbgh

Ch icago
St, Louis.
Montreal
New York

Pet. GB

74 45 .622
71 51 .582

67 52 .563
67 54 .554
55 67 .451
~9

71

West

41Jl
7

. fl

201h:

.408 251t2

W. L Pet. GB
Los Ang
73 48 .603
Cinci
ii3 59 .516 lOV2
Houston
57 65 :467 W h
San Fran
55 68 .447 19
San Diego
54 71 .432 21
Atlanta
43 77 . 358 291fl
.
Frld~y's Results
Chica.g o 6, Los Angeles 2
Cincinnati 6. New York 2. 1st
Cincinnati 4, New York 3, 2nd
Atlanta 5, Montreal 3, 1st
Montreal 7, Atlanta 2. 2nd
Philadelphia 9, Houston 5
Pittsburgh 6, San Francisco 1
St. Lou is 12. San Diego 4 .
.. Sunday's Games
Los Angeles at Ch icago
Cincinnati al New York
Atlanta at Montreal
San Fr.!lncisco at Plttsbt,Jrgh
San Diego at St. Louis
Houston at Philedelphia, night

Boltlmre
New York
Detroit
Clevelnd
Milw
Toronto

C:hica'Qo

Texas

53

72 .42~ 22
41 17 .347 3Dlh
West •
W. l
Pet. GB
67 50 .573

68 51 .571

. Kan City
Minn
Callf

69 53 ,566
se 59 .496

67 51 .568

Seattle

SO 74 .403

Oakland
44 74 .373
.
.
Friday's Results
Chicago 3, Milwaukee 1
Kansas City 9, Boston 3
Baltimore 3, Minnesota 2

,
,h
1h
•9
201(2
23lf2

Detroit 6, Seattle 4
Sundly's Gimes
Chicago at Milwaukee", 2
Baltimore at Minnesota

DODGE 0100 PICKUP.

Cleveland at Oakland
Detroit at Sellttle
Toronto at California
Boston at Kansos City

·

tntern•ttonot League
United Press hiternotiona I
W"L Pd. G8
Pawtucket
69 52 .570
Tidewater
66 54 .550 2'12
Charleston
65 56 .537 4
Richmond
Rochester

Columbus

' '

II'S
DEAlS ARE EASY.

New York B, Texas I

Cleveland 2, O~kland 1
Toronto 3, California 1 ·

Syracuse

•

69 49 .585 2 1/~
70 50 .583 21/2
55 64 .462 17
SA 66 .450 18112

63 59 .516 61h

61 60 :504 8
59 63 .-484 10'12

Summer is here! And your Dodge Dealer's really
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This is the good-looking, hardworking pickup that's
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haul a passenger/payload weight up to 1975
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specially engineered features like:

'

Electronic Ignition
Rugged three-speed manual transmission
Independent front suspension
Front disc jrear drum braking system
Tough doUble-wall construction
Ea1y-ofl tailgate
Factory antirust protection.

• I"RODUCT

SS 68 .447 i5
. ~9 75 .J95 21'1,

Toledo .
. Frodoy's Results

Tidewater 3, Pawtucket 0,

1st, 7 innings
Pawtucket 13, Tidewater 3,
2nd, 7 Innings
Charleston 1, Richmond

ot

1st 7 Innings
Charleston 6, Rlchrhond 1.
2nd, 7 innings .
, •••••-----;.;;;.;,..;._,.._ _ _.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,. Columbus 7, Toledo 6..

Member FDIC

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W. L Pet . GB
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Boston

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Stock No. 57

Nelsonville-York - "We
always have a good game
with them, they're the ty'pe of
team that could beat you. We
have to play good football
against them because of the
rivalry we have."
Wellston - "We know that
they lost 10 of 11 starters on
offense and have just one
lettennlin on offense and two

g-~~

STEVENS

HAND GUNS
AND SCOPEs ··

area."

AT

SHOT GUN
' '
12 GAUGE
SINGLE SHOT

Sept. 23
Sept. 30

Hilliard - "According to
the reports we've received,
they should be one of the top
teams in the Columbus

Ironton - "I prefer to ta~e
games one at a time, but
that's the big game for us. We
always.
·
Emerson, Kemper and tied for the league chamTucker, all seniors, will be in pionship last season, and the
the backfield, which may be a coaching staff, myself and
bit of a Su'l'rise to Logan the kids feel we have
foes, because Tucker has something to prove."
Jackson - "Tbey lost
earned aU-league and all·
state laurels on the offensive David P. Davis, and should
line. He will be the fullback. be a young team, but they
At quarterback, of course, always have a good football
will be Southeastern Ohio team."
Waverly
"Their
League's Most Valuable
program
is
getting
better,
Player Gasser, with Mike
Powers and a newcomer, . and of aU the teams in the
junior Brad Lightfoot, in league, next to us and Athens,
reserve. Gasser and Tucker have . the most returning
are this season's co-captains. lettermen.''
Athens - "They have the
Here is how the new Logan
same
number of returnees as
coach sees the season's opLogan;
most of which are on
ponents:
Continued on C-0
New Lexington - "They

Mike Mulford; a former
Bobcat linebachr, now in his
fourth campaign. The first
Bobcat pre-season scrim·
.mage is Saturday, Aug. 27
against .l;llouster.
Kyger Creek opens its
campaign Sept. 9at Wahama.
BOBCAT SCHEDULE
Sept.9
at Wahama
Sept. 16
Hunt ington Ross

REMINGTON

GOOD SELECTION

Find out why people all

corner 1 and Don Richardson,

offensive backs and defensive
secondary.
Kemper and Nelson will
serve as defensive heads and
Nelson and Richardson will

team.''

•

GALLIPOLIS Tom College so that participants
Jaoobe, ancbor man for the may aU compete in one
Channel 3 NI!Wicellter on the location. The toumainent will
noon dally new1C881 and well· feature doubles competition
By CHRIS TIJRKEL
known lelevillon reporter In m three divisions· men's
UPI Sparta Writer
lbe Olarleston • Huntington women's and mixed
'
The successful return of the
and Tri-StatealU, will be the
This first ACS to~rnament
NFL's all-lime leading
umpire for the _Aug. 28 finals in GaUia County combined a
quarterback Friday night ·
in the upconung thr~y recognition of and salute to
was not enough to save the
Maggie HlmerCancer Tennis Margaret (Maggie) Hirner,
Minnesota Vikings from
Tournament.
who underwent cancer
falling to the youthful arm of
. Now .in hi~ fifth year as a surgery in early July at the
. Bert Jones and his Baltimore
Colts. '
·
·
member of the . News Holzer Medical Center and is
Department at WSAZ-TV in already back at work as the
Fra~
Tarkenton,
lf~lngton, W· Va., Jacobs Is Personnel Manager of the
statistically the best passer of
an accomplished tennis Gallipolis Ohio Dlvisio.n of
aU time, went the first three
quarters for Minneliota and ·
player and well qualified to the Fed~ral Mogul Coract as umpire for the closing poration.
completed l~f·22 passes for
Entry fee for this benefit
hours of the three-day
176yards. But Jones was lk&gt;f·
tournament, scheduled to tournament is $8 per team to
16 for 90 yards and a
open at 5 p.m. Fnday, Aug. particiiJllte in each event and
touch,down, while Lydell
Mitchell rushed for 70 yards
28.
should accompany the
and a TD to lead Baltimore to
Jacobe Ia frequently sent registration form, mailed to
a 2!).7 exhibition drubbing of
out on assignment to the the GaUia County Onit ACS
the Vikings.
GaUlpolia and G~Uia County Route 3, Box 398, GaWpolis:
Jones and Mitchell were
area. His ability to ac· Ohio 45631. The registration
lifted
after building a 1&amp;-7
curately and concisely cover deadline .win be 8 o'clock
· halftime lead, but running
news stories has earned him Tuesday evening, August 23,
back Ron Lee played all the
recognition and credibility with the draw to follow on
• PAT HARRIS will be among !bose taking part in the Saturday, Sept 3 boat show.and ski
way and accumulated 105
throughout this region. Wednesday evening, Aug. 24
raced
along the Ohio River opposite the Upstream Public Use Area in Gallipolis . The events
yards rushing and a TD to
Specializing in trl-stata at 6 o'clock. Players must
will be held between 2 and 4 p.m. Harris is pictured above with his kite. He will alSo take
overshadow the pre-eeason
government and poUtlcs, his provide their own tennis balls
part in trick and shoe ski events.
.
debut of Viking All·Pro back
regular beat Is Huntington until the semi-final matches.
TOM JACOBS
Chuck Foreman, who ran six
and Cabell County.
Prizes of $20 in cash and a
times for 25 yards before
A native of Columbus, and trophy for first place, and $10
leaving
early in the thil;d
a graduate of Denison and a trophy for the runner·
quarter
with
bruised ribs.
first play ·of the second completed !3-&lt;&gt;f-16 passes for Theismann was 8-of-16 for 127
University with majors in UR, will be awarded in each of
115 yards, while Joe yards in the second half.
Mitchell
scored
on
a
12quarte1:,
history and political science, the three divisions.
yard
burst
up
the
middle
late
Both
teams
are
now
2-1
in
he was the Community
For additional information,
in the first quarter to give the exhibition·play.
Relations Director at WTVN· those interested may call the
LYNE CENTER GYM&amp; POOL SCHEDULE
Colts.a J().O lead. Toni Linhart
Sunday, it .will be Los
AM·TV in Columbus prtor to Cloaks at 446-1337 or the
· · Week of August 22, 1977
had kicked
28-yard field Angeles .at San Francisco and
joining the . Channel 3 Cancer Society local unit 446DATE-GYMNASIUM
POOL
goal to open the scoring but Cincinnati at 'Detroit. New
televislon staff in Huntington. 7479 in Gallipolis.
'
Aug. 22~- 8 p.m. Open Gym
12-2 p.m. Open Swim
travels
to
He and his wife Penny and
The Monday Night Football two of his four conversion England
8-10 p.m. Camp Crescendo
2-5 p.m. Camp Cresc.
HUNTINGTON - The
attempts
were
blocked.
Philadelphia
for
Monday's
schedule:
,
daughter, Brandi Dawn,
6-8 p.m. Open Swim
Pittsburgh
Steelers-San
Sept. 19-Pittsburgh vs .
Jones found wide receiver lone game.
8-10 p.m. Canip Cresc.
rulde in Huntington.
Francisco 49ers will open a San Francisco.
Glenn Doughty for a &amp;-yard
The only other NFL games
Aug . 23~-8 p.m. Open Gym
12-2 p.m. Open Swim
Cochairing the Maggie
FINALS SUNDAY
14-game lineup of Monday
Sept. 26- New Englans \IS.
8-10
p.m.
Camp
Crest.
2-S
p.m . Camp Cresc.
scoring
pass
in
the
closing
played'
this
week
were
on
Himer Cancer Tennis
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI) night football telecasts to be Cleveland.
6-8
p.m. Open Swim
seconds
of
the
hall
to
put
Thursday
night.
Seattle
Oct. 3-Qakland vs. Kan~as
Tournament, a first for the -Louisville Star Dry- seen this fall on WOWK·TV,
8-10 p.m . Camp Cresc.
City.
'
Baltimore
ahead
1&amp;-7.
shocked
Oakland
12-10
and
Gallla County Unit of the wall won the winners' Channel 13.
Oct. lD--Los Angeles vs.
Aug. 24~- 6 p.m . Open Gym
12 -~m . Open Swim
Jones' substitute, Bill Washington edged Kansas
American. Cancer Society bracket of the National
The Pittsburgh-San Chicago .
8-10 p.m. Camp Cresc.
2-5 p.m . CampCresc .
(ACS), are Bridget and Amateur
bet . 17-Cincinnatl vs. Troup, tossed a 4-yard TD . City 13-7.
Baseball 'Francisco opener will .air
6·8 p.m . Open Swim
pass to Fredtlie Scott early in · The second-year Seahawks
Pittsburgh
.
Richard Cloak. Mrs. Cloak, a Federation tournament Monday night, Sept. 19, at 9
Aug . 2&gt;--e-8 p.m. Open Gym
12·2 p.m. Open Swim
Oct. 2-4- Minnesota vs. Los the fqurth quarter. Lee scored twice in 70 seconds
registered nurse, is also this Friday and will face the p.m., on Channel13.
8-10 p.m. Camp Crest.
2-5 p.m . Carnp Cresc .'
Angeles. .
scored the Colts' final after the Oakland starters
· 6-8' p.m . Opeh Swim·
year's Miss Hope for the winner of the losers' bracket
The NFL schedule of
Oct. 31- New Yor~ Giants touchdown ·on a 22-yard run retired to the bench in the
8-10 p.m. Camp Cresc.
Gallia County Cancer Sunday for the championship WOWK·TV will also include v5;. ·st. Louis .. ·
-~
Aug.
26--.1-8
p.m.
Open
Gym
12-2 p.m. Open Swim
on
the
last
play
of
the
game.
·
second
haU
to
stun
the
Super
Nov . ?- Washington vs .
organization. Her husband, of the &lt;louble·elimination the Cincinnati · Pittsburgh
Baltimore. ·
8-1 0 p.m. Camp Cresc.
2-5 p.rn. Cainp Cresc.
Sall)Iny
Johnson,
who
left
Bowl
champion
Raiders
for
Richard, plays in tournament · tourney.
game on Oct . 17 , the
Nov. u~ St. Louis vs . the game in the third quarter their third straight exhibition
6-8 p.m. Open s·wlm
tennis and also gives lessons.
Thii Louisville team Cleveland-New England Dallas.
.
NOTE
:
Lyne
Center
Gym
and
Pool
will
be closed until the
,0
Sponsoring this benefit downed Louisville Green battle Sept. 26, and an OCt. 3
Nov. 21-Green Vay vs . with an injured right knee, victory.
fall quarter begins In September. A new schedule wil l be
accounted for the only Viking
Redskin QB Bill Kilmer,
tournament is the Jaymar Acres, 8-7, in the third round meeting pitting the Super Wash ington .
published at the time:
Nov
.
28Bvffalo
vs
.
TD
on
a
4-yard
plunge
on
the
wbo
. played the first hall,
Coal Company of Cheshire, and Springfield, Ohio, &amp;-!, in Bowl champion Oakland Oakland.
· owned by Jay HaU.
the fourth round Friday.
Dec. 5-Baltimore vs .
Rai(\ers against the Kansas
Miami.
The four tennis courts, part
The four teams still in City Chiefs.
Dec. 12- Dallas vs. San
of the Stanley Evans Athletic contention in the loser~ '
WOWK-TV will also carry
isco.
Field At Rio Grande, have bracket are Detroit, Cin· the NFL Pro-Bowl Game on Franc
Dec . 17-Minnesota vs.
beell g•n~roQSJ, offered for cinnati Applied Appraisal, Jan. 31.
Detroit.
use by the Rio Grande Louisville .Green Acres, and
College and Community Springfield,

14 FT. BY 70 FT.

12 GAUGE

Model 1100

be coaches for the reserve
team.
"This coaching staff, from
seventh grade to the var!iiY,
I think is the best since I've
been here," stall'(! Boynton,
who noted that aU of the
coaches have been attending
coaches meetings since the
first of August.
'11le new Logan mentor
considers Ironton, Ga Ulpolis
and Athens as the toughest
foes in the Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League.
The defense will be the
same, with a few changes
that will make it even better
than last season's grfl\1 club.
On offense, Boynton feels
that the position that may
need help is the splitside
tackle, but Logan's offense
should be just as explosive as

CLOSE OUT

junior; Doug Halley; 165 Russell, 120; Allen Sheets,
pound jurrlor; Jim Misner, 114; Greg Smith, 145; John
155 pound junior; Gary Westfall, 135; Mike Vance,
Nibert, 150 pound junior; Don 1«, and Victor VanSickle, a
Russell, 124 pound junior; 180 pound fullback candidate,
Randy 'fay lor, 122 pound and Rick Martin (un·
junior; Von Taylor, 130 pound weighed).
There are 15 freshmen out
junior, and Kevin Wise, a 140
for lootbaU this fall.
pound junior.
Last year; Kyger Creek
Sophomore players include
finished
atop the SVAC with a
Woody Burnett, 125 lbs.; Joe
IHl
record.
In non-league
Freeman,
137;
Bruce
,
battles,
Kyger
Creek
Gilmore,
106;
Larry
Harrison , 160, sophomore defeated Huntington Local of
quarterback; Mike Kelly, · Ross County but lost 21·7 to
141, Paul Lasseter, 15ll; Jeff Oak Hill and 27-7 to
Painter, !58; Jason Proctor, Alexander.
Non-league opponents this
86 ; Tom Rees, 155; Rusty

·

LOGAN - Thirteen let·
termen will returning this
season to the Logan Chieftain
football squad, which fillished
last year in a tie with the
Ironton Tigers for the 1976
Southeastern Ohio League
championship.
Logan's returning let·
termen are Je(f Lee Smith,.
· Scott Gasser, Cha rlie
Brodbeck, Dave Emerson,
John Kemper, Tony Poling,
Mark Rolan, Brad Tucker,
Jack Klump, Steve Helber,
Mark Armstrong , Marty
Hallett and Mike Johnson.
Smith, Gasser, Emerson,
Tucker, Poling, Kemper and
Armstrong are all two-year
lettermen.
New head coach Bob
Boynton and his ieam will
launch its 1977 season on
Friday evening, Sept. 9, when
they travel to New Lexington
to face the Panthers. New
Lex took an 11-8 decision
from Logan last season in the
season opener.
The i977 coaching staff will
consist of Wallace (Spike)
Black and Curt Parry, eighth
grade coaches ; Les Cham·
plain and Joe Winnenberg,
ninth grade coaches; Greg
Smith, seventh grade coor·
dinator and split end coach;
Chuck Kemper, tight side of
the offensive line, defensive
tackles and ends; Doug
Nelson, split side of the of·
fenslve line and defensive

have a new coach, Todd
Fugate, and at this time we
don't know what to expect.
They had a good reserve

•

drubs foe

umpire finals ·

lne~tor .'

new head grid

'

•

Baltimore

t

Syracuse 12, Rochestet 0

•

0~

tMAY5lUI tOMPOA•ltON

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE·
.

• COU~T &amp;THIRD

'

'

GALUPOUS. OHIO

�'
'
C.7-1beSundaynme..&amp;nlineJ, Sunday, Alii(. 21, tm

Foster·hits two homers
·
t
m
as R e d S Sweep W hill

Today's

Sport Parade

•

e

.

•

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP I Sporta Editor

Leaders
M1jor Lugue L eldtrs
By United Pftn lntern1lion1 1
Bitting

cbase-d on 32S 111' bill ) .

Na tional League

' G. A&amp;. H. Pet.
121 496 170 .343
Ill 392 131 .334

Pa r ker Pit
Simmns St.L
Stennett P it

11" -«5 148 .333

Luz;nski Phi
Tmpltn St.L

109 &lt;10 132 .322

lll 461 1•8 .321
118 4.56 146 .320
115 4·13 130 .315
11 8 •60 144 .313

Griffey Cin
·Mora les Chi
Foster Cln

117 .t16 15,. 3:Z.tl

Rice 801

Rivers NY

102 ·.t18 1l.S .323

LeFlore oet

113 482 152 .315

Ba ilor Tor
Ztsk Ct\i
Yount Mil
Hargrove nc
Home

106 .t18 135
106 407127
117 -'67 I.U
112 391 l20
Runs

.31:5
.3l2
.308

.301

Nltional League : Foster, C!n

Y..a, a ten week claso
'Jied to belp its partlclp.nts achieve phyolcal
. . mental harmony and
2

.4l · Buri'OUQhS, All and LUlin ·
ski, Ph tl 31; schmidt, Phil 30 ;
Ben~h .

Cln 27 .
Am eriun League: Rlc:e, S.Os
and Bonds, cat 30; scott, Bos

'
Ulought Foster couldn't
have
While Wilson's record Vo!IMI! n Mi l
NEW YORK (UPI ) - and +3.
~ ; Nettles, NY 11; lisle. . Chi 26.
104 427 130 .308
R:uns B aH9d In
a
better
year
than
he
had
last
certainly
seems
'
'The
closer
you
get
to
a
ap- Robinson P it
George Foster of the Cin101 36.4 112 .30fl
Na tional Lugue ~ Foster. C1n
NEW YORK (UP[ )- This is a love story. Not U!e usual one cinnati Re&lt;ls became the first record like that, everything year. I guess he's changed his proachable, Foster would
American League
Luzinski, Phll 100 ; Cey, LA
G. A&amp;. H. Pet . 110, ; Burroughs,
about a boy and a girl, but about a middle age man in Texas major-leaguer in four yean c.hanges. Pitchers pitch mind."
Atl and Garvey,
prefer not to tbink about such . Ca rew Min
93
118 A66 178 .382
and more girls than he can count.
LA
88
.
.
Foster's
40th
homer
came
personal achievements .
11 7 A59 l52 .331
Bostock M in
to reach the 46-homer plateau different and you get thinking
American
League ;
H1s 1e ,
The man's name is Dr. Bert Lyle, Jr.
109
382
125
.327
Singleton
B!
" I don 't seek material
Minn 9S ; Bonds . Cal 90;
nighl,· but his shout it yourself. He reminds in the sixth inning of the
i\e's a 4~year old !!hysical education professor and happily . Friday
Tnompson , Oet 88 ; Hobson. Bos
me a lot of Hank Aaron with opener and provided rookie goals," said Foster. " My
tnanager,
Sparky
Anderson,
87
; l isk. Chi 84.
married. Along wiU! \hat, Lyle also is athletic director and
Hack
Wilson's those fast hands. George Doug Capilla with enough objective is to try and imSlolen B•sn
Jrack caach.at Texas Woman's University in.Ilenton, Tex. , the thinks
Na tion al League : . Cedenq,
N~tional League home Min doesn't · do it wjth-strength.:' cushion to go the dista.nqe on prove. Now I'm going ·out ·
largest woman's University in the country and one which
Hou 43 : Taven,s, Pitt 4? ;
Cincinnati's Pete Rose, a. six-hitter for his fifth vic- there knowing I can do the
· R ichar.ds. SO 38 ; Mor:gan . C•n
conceivably could send representatives to tbe 1980 Olympics in record of . 56 is safe for however, thinks Foster might tory in 10 starts.
· job. I'm not trying to kill the
and Moreno, Pitf 37 .
another year.
Moscow.
Am erican League : Patek. KC
In
the
nightcap,
Foster
got
have
a
chance
at
the
elusive
ball
...
just
bruise
lt
.
Only
"I don't think he (Foster)
38 ; Remy , Cal 32 : LeFlore, Oet
The girls on the track team are known as HIS girls, and what will
28 ; Bonds. Cal end Pagl:!, Oc!lk.
even get 50," said An· home run record which has the Reds started with a two- time will tell if I can break
Continued ·from C-4
Jl"Utkes Ulis·ratherunusual , is THEY are the ones who tell you
run blast in the first i.nni.ng the record . Last year I
17 .
.
stood since 1930.
derson,
who,
watched
his
the
line.
The
big
question.
Pitching
that, not him. He has worked with them so hard and helped fearsome slugger bash a
and
he
also
drove
In
another
dwelled
on
winning
the
Triple
"Nothing George would do
.
.
fl Jd Th
Most Victories
them so much that he has their complete trust; tbeir
National League : . Carltqn ,
would surprise me," said run in the eighth with u Crown (he won only the RBI mark 15 their back e · ey
homer
In
each
game
as
the
Jo have eight returning Phil 17-7; R.Reuscf1et, Chi16..S;
coofidence, and yes, even their love.
Reds swept a doubleheader Rose. "AI Campanis (Dodger sacrifice fly to raise his title) and it got me all fouled
lettermen on both offense and . s·
Forsch.
St.L ts.&lt;; John. LA ]•·
Most oChis girls say they'd run U!rough a brick wall for him. from the New York Mets, +1 . general manager) told me in major-league leading RSI up and off the track."
Rau LA 13-3; C andelar ~a ,
One of them, sprinter Janet Brown, talks about Lyle this way :
defense."
p'1 11 t3'- • : Seaver , Cin 13-S,;
spring · training that he total to 116.
Meigs - "Meigs generally Rhoden. LA 13-8; Rogers. Mil
·'There have been times when I was off tile track a month or
. .1y a sen i Qr 13·12.
more due to inj uries or illness and have come back to run for
I
pays
prtma.rt
Am ericln League : Ryc!ln , Ca l
him without training a day . I did this because I know how much
team, so, from year to year, 11 , , ; Goltz , Minn· 15 - 7 •
they have a ig turnover of RoU!!rJ\a , Det 14 "4 ; · Tanana , Cc!ll
it means to him tn see any of us do well. He is not a well man,
14 ·7; Torrez , NY 14-10.
normally, yet he stands with us in the rain or sunshine. He
personnel. _Their quarterback ·
· Earned Run Average
is returning and he gave us a· ( based on 11! inn ings pitc he~l
cries with us, he laughs with us, he holds us tight and he throws
'
•
Niltlonal League: Clndelar~a,
us back to U!e lions, but he never, never abandons us and be
lot of problems last year With Pill 1.63; Hoo to~ . LA 2 .•' '
always defends us and gives us his hest. The least we can do is
the option play.."
R. Reusc hel. Chl _Mid John, t..A
.
.
"Th
st
2
79; Carlton, Phol 2.U.
return the favor."
Ga ll lpo1IS ey 1o a
· Ame r ican Lea gur : ." Tanana ,
All this seems to be paying off for the Texas Woman's
lot, but always have good ca t 2.31 ; Blylev•n· rex 2 609
University track team, rated among the finest in U!e nation.
and
Hayes
plans
to
go
into
tbe
Ohio State is coming oH a ~
~ double tight ends ; Joe . athletes. They are reported to ~~~~ · 2_ 8 ~~o~:~J. . o!tJ2~~~-son .
By GENE CADDES
Since Lyle came to U!e school and inaugurated the track
Strikeouts
2-1 season which Included .a season with the same Logan- Robinson ( 6-5, 256 ) at the have a good reserve and
UPI Sports Wriler
program in 1966, his teams have won the National Intercoltackle,
Ken Fritz (6-3,
freslunan team and are a
National Le agu e : Niek ro , AU
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Ohio resounding 22-0 loss to Michi- Springs combin a tion , O"er
1.1\
•
•
191; Rogers. Mtl 158; Koos.man,
legiate Track and Field Championship three times, fmished
State Coach Woody Hayes gan U!e final game of the alternating them at both 232) at the other guard, and young team, but by the tune NY 155; Richard. Hou ue .
second once and third twice. Three years ago, the 440 relay doesn't want to hear about regular season.
fullback and tailback.
Jim Harrell and Herman we play them at the end of the Seaver. Cin 143.
th 'II be ba · 11
American League : Ryan , Cal
·
team set the national collegiate record of 46.5 seconds, tbe U!e 12 Big Ten titles his teams
"That gives us some pretty Jones alternating at flanker. season,
But,
the
Buckeyes
ey
a
stca Y 284; Tanana, Cal 182; Leonard,
USTFF record of 45.9 and won the AAU championship, TWU's have won or shared at Ohio rebounded wiU! a solid 27-10 good backs in there with good
''Our offensive line will be
experienced team."
KC 173; Bfyleven . Tex 157;
. relay teams have held all the collegiate relay records at one State or the current · record decillion over Colorado in tbe .quickness," Hayes said of his improved," predicts Hayes.
In conclusion, when asked ·eckerstey, Clev Ill .
polnt or ar'i:other during the past seven years and never have
Orange ·Bowl and Hayes new offensive twist , "and our
Defensively, the Buckeyes what Logan needs to do to
streak of five In a row.
heen defeated in a .dual mee1.
quarterback
(Rod
Gerald
)
is
hopes
that
momentum,
along
have
two of the to~ in tbe defend their 1976 title ,
"One thing a coac11 learns
"What r try tn do," says Lyle, "is belp each individual come In a hurry," says Woody with a ·n.W look offense, will probably the quickest in the country at their positions in Boynton commented that ''I
as close as she can to obtaining her potential in athletics, and Hayes, ''is you can't look into carry over into the 1977 league."
linebacker Tom Cousineau believe, personally, that you
then, hopefully, this can be transferred to other aspects in her the past if you expect to keep season.
Hayes also has done some (6-3, 228) and safety Ray win football games with a
life. I suppose tbe greatest personal satisfaction for me is winning. And we figure to
A long-time advocate of tinkering with his offensive Griffin (f&gt;-9, 180).
good defense. Our defense
seeing some of the athletes who have participated in our keep winning."
power football, Hayes raised line, moving last year's
Cousineau Jed the 1976 must be as good, or better,
program come hack after graduation and tell how much it
With that warning, Hayes many eyebrows wben be went center, Mark Lang, tn guard Buckeyes in tackles with 182, than last year, we'll have to
meant in their lives. "
·
kicks off his 27U! year as Ohio to a small, quick backfield oC and inserting 6-3, 232-pound · while Griffin has turned big develop some depth at key
Mary Evelyn Blagg Huey, 1WU's President, speaks of
State football coach SUnday fullback Jeff Logan and tail- junior Terry Vogler in Lang 's play after big play in his positions, and, as always,
Lyle's thorou_ghness, fairness and perseverance. Above. all, when he greets a squad which back Ron Springs in the old' spot.
three years as the regular avoid injuries."
she talks of his utter dedication, vividly reflected in the way he
Anchoring
that
unit
is
6-4,
Orange
Bowl,
benching
241).
safety.
Logan 1977 schedule
includes 38 lettermen and 15
For 28 years I have lilted
worked with Lucy Vaamonde, a present team member who regulars. Workouts begin pound fullback ~te Johnson. 272-pound Chris Ward, a
Hayes must replace four . follows:
hearing
ai ds a lwa y$.
represented her native Venezuela in tbe 100-meter hurdles in Monday with the first Of three
Johnson, Ohio State's all- second team all-American as · defensive regulars, including Sept. 9-At New Lexington
combining q ualify product
the Montreal Olympics.
~
days of cooditioning. Contact . time leading· scorer, . is now a junior. Other prQbable all-Big Hiers In wide side end Sept. 16-Hilliard
and professiona I se rvic:f
"Lucy was on her way home ·ca cas when she came to drills start Thursday.
with rea Sonable· cost. Wh i l ~
· with tbe Cincinnati llengals starters are Greg Stnrer (6-0, 13&lt;lb Brudzinski, linebacker Sept. 23-AI Nelsonville-York
Denton in. l973," relates one of her eammates. "She had live
· 21~) and Bill Jaco (fl.li, 248) at Ed Thompson and tackle Sept, ~Wellston
we will c o.Pt in ue to ·.serve
brolien metatarsal bones ·and a cast on her left foot. She went
those who ca nnot come to
Nick Buonami~..But, a solid Oct. 7- At fronton
out ro talk· with Dr . Lyle !l"d he was quite frank with ber,
our
office we wi ll now
nucleus returris. '
Oct. 14-,!ackson
reward
those who can bY
telling her she might never run again and that she had to face
Kelton Dansler is back at Qct. 21-Waverly
fixing
the
price at ~27S.Dq
that. But he also told her 1WU had the facilities to help her
one end, as are three-year Oct. 28-o-Athens
for
the
best
k nown custom
recuperate and she also could get an education while she was
regulars J:;dd.ie Beamon at Nov. 4-At Meigs
made
and
in
d ividu a l fitted
there.
·
tackle and Aaron Brown at _Nov. 11-{laiJlpQiis
hear ing
aid
s. P ri ot
"tntimately; she decided to attend 1WU and a rehabilitation
middle guard. Converted
- By Craig Dunn, Daily
medical and aud iol og ica~
process was s.tarted. She had tn walk miles and miles. Dr. Lyle
examination enco urage&lt;£
linebacker Paul Ross has News Sports Editor.
massaged her foot himself and applied ultra-sound treatment.
If you ha ve a q uestio n or
ta~en ·oyer for Brudzinski ,
This was in addition to training all the .r.est of us. By the
wish an appo intmen t caO
while Byron Cato will replace
me at 592- 6238.
summer o(J974, Lucy.was part of our national champion WI
Buonamici.
'
relay team. La•t year, she was hack oo the Venezuelan
By ROBERT PJ!:NiCK
No. 1 quS:rterback job last · t.o Religie l!ucker and Charlie
The. secondary, exeept for
Olympic team~ the only p;~tticipant from her country in_track
'300.00
020 000 ooo-. 2 6 1
·cLEVELAND (UPI} - To season. and was celifinned by , , Nasli.
Tom Roche, is back intact, Cleve
and field.: You ~sk her sometime what she th.inks of Dr. Lyle." Cleveland · Browns head the trade of Mlk~ Phipps; w,a s ·
Oak
lnd
100
000
ooo1
52
wasn't pretty but 1think but ·a bevy of talented
less ·~5,00
· Hood (9 ), · Kern
With everything else, LYle has an understanding wife. Sbe coach Forrest Gregg, · whil ·sharp wjth 13 completions in ·we . played well overaiJ, " freshmen is expected to (9)Fitzmorris,
and · Fos~e. Kendall ; &lt;:;ol ehas to be; with all the athletes who campout atthe house alltbe won his firSt preseason game 20 throws for · 163-yards 311d· Gregg .said. ''We needed to. challenge for a couple of man , Lacey { 8'l. and Sangu illen .
Cash Discount
W- Fitzmorris, 5-7. L- Coletime.
.
19·10 over St. Lol!is Friday two touchdownS. ··
.
ftnish a game -' we always spois. ·
man , 2-4.
"We would he lonely without them," she 'says. "Tbey are a night, was satisfying wiJ).
He played well int.o lhl:. started to die in the fourth
Hayes says his biggest
source of great pride toils. Out life style is different than most,
Det
300 000 102- 6 9 o
To Coach Don Coryell of the fourth quarter while St. LouTs quarter.
.' .
.. problem will ·be finding a Seattle
000 lOl 101- A 13 2
lHjt I can assure you one thing .:.. it is never dull."
Rozema , Sykes (9L Taylor
wlnlessc8rdinals, there were regular Jim Hart, troubled by. . "They were blitzing a lot replacement
or
(9 } and May ; _Pole, La1c:ton (5 },
"really no highpolnts." . . . his annual sore anrt;wentl3- and] left Sipe in as a learning replacements - for kicker Segui
(6)," Montague (9) and
But to the 31,308 Browns 22 .lor · 130 yards and one ·adjustment," Gregg said. ")'om Skladany, the premier Stinson . W- Rozema , 14-4. L1-10. HRs- Detroll, Kemp
fans who had ·s uffered · · touchdoWJ! for the first. half.· . First year man Terry Luck, punter in the nation the last Pole,
(16 ); Seattle, Jones (21} ,
through consecutive ·last . "I wasn't really happy . \!Xpj!cted to play the second four ·years, who also did the 2Meyer
(17 ).
minute
defeats
by about my pE!rformance and half, saw duty most of the placekicking in 1976.
Tronto
200 000 010- 3 7 2
Washington and Mlnnl!I'Ota. was ·noi real sharp with. my fourth .quarter.
.
"Skladany sort of spoiled Cali!
001 000 !)00,- 1 3 0
Garvin , Vuckovich ( 7) an~
*--'8 ·.
fto"
the ' win over the respected. passing. .I ·always feit this
Hart threw one yard to us," said Hayes. "The worst
; Ryan · and Humphrey,
.,, I
Cardinals meant their teain team was capable of winning ·. WaY!)e Morris and his 1-of-7 thing we could do is expect Cerone
Etc~ebarren . W- Garv in, 8-13.
may improve on 18st y~r·s 9- · consistently," said Sipe after . passing. it1 a 17·play drive set any ·one . man to do aU our L - Ryan. 17- 11 .
Bv Unltea Press Intern••••••• 5 record.
·
·throwing touchdown passes·· upJ!JhBak~eri's 35·y~rd field . kickirig. We plan tn divide tbe
Pro ~~:::,ball
.
Jjrian Sipe, who . won the
_goi!l, ·aU the C~rds scoring · chore."
Houston - Released two
,
.
.
-coming in the first half.
Junior walk on Dave McKee
draft p;cks. fourlh rQund chd;ce
1
The Browns ·held a 13•10 ·would appear to have the
Rocky Sm ;th, guald, Oregon
S
stale, and No s pick Ed ·
• c. lead . at the hail on· Larry inside track to replace
Thompson , guard, Idaho State,
·
.
.
· Poole's nine·yard. scortna run Skladany as the pWlter, while
Mltor Le•gue Resiills
Mitterwald-:-w-Krukow (8-10) . nd
• ..,
Do gM .Eid
on ftbe
and two free agents, forwards
L~ul.s Dunbar. Houston, and
By United Press lntern•tlonel · L- John (U -5) . HRs- Chicago. a
Sipe'~ 18--yat:d pa~ to
U
C
owney, eO
Wtl lte Hodae.. Duke.
,
National League
Buckner 2 (9 )' Los Angeles Rucker . . then clinched the tnp high school kickers in the.
M.ilwaukee -. Signed forward San Fran
000 000 OlD- 1 s 1 "--day (·12)·.
'
•
sta'"last year· at Centerville
Ernte Grunfeld of Tennessee, Ptsbgh
203 001 oox~ 6 7 0 . ··~·
·
contest early, in the fourth
"'
•
o~e of three first round draft
Knepper, W illiams ( 3 )1 Hea - Houitn
101 OOQ llD- s 11 o· quarter on Sipe's six-yarder
hasagoodshotattaking over
verlo !51, Curlls (7) and Phila
310004 Olx- 9 11 o to Nash
'
the •placekicking.
Picks.
Pro Foofball
Alexander ;
Candelaria
arid
Niekro, Pentz (7) and F,_
r - - · 11
•
•
The Buckeyes wt"th 50 con
Seattle - Traded kitker Fred Oyer . W-Candelaria , 13 -4. Lguson ; Christenson , Reed (1) .
Our young defense played
' ·
•
1
Ste infort to Detroit for future Knepper, 6-7. H R- Pftlsburgh , . and . BoOne. w - Christensen , -12 - well," said CoryeU. " That secutive Ohio Stadium
considerations.
Robinson (22).
.·· . ...
5, L,- Niekro, 8-$. - HRs- Phlla .
th f "
hd
sellouts of over 85 000 open
BOOT
. Detroit ~ Released kicker
-·
delphi,!~, Hebner (l 5 ), Boone was
e . ust . 1 ouc ~wn
'
'
Dav;d Posey. ·
(ISI .Game)
CIO) ; Johnstone (9), ChriSienson they'd given up this year. We the season Sept, .10, hosting
Pebble teKiured
Atlanta
001 022 ooo:- s 1fo ·C&gt; l '
played generally the veterans Miami· (Fla.)
. lea1her
St. Lovfs -Baseball
Placed outfielder Mnfral
001110 OQO-J 6 o
- be in the first
be ever
Tony
Scott
qn
the
disabled
ilst
;
.Niekro
.
and
Poco
rob
a
;
Son
Dgo
.oOO
010
201_:
4
J3
2
ih.the
first
and
the
rookieS
in
meetmg
tween
t
two
Well construclion ·
.recalled
·
l
f!f•eld~r
Dane
1org
·
Rogei's,
AtkinsOn
(8)
and
,St.L
·
.50025000l't12160
•
the
secoi'td
h3lf.
SChOOlS.
. • Cushion insole and s1eel
from the m1nors . ·
Car,ter. W-Niekro, 12-15. L.:......
F. r I Is I eben_, Sawyer· (1),
"W h
Ia .
Minnesota visits Colwnbus
shank arch suppo~
RQQers, 13-12.
Tomlin (2) , Wehrmeister (4), · . e ave no game p n lfl
•
-· Spillner· (8) and Tenoce ; Urrea, preseason play. We run every the following week In the first
Oil resjslant neoprene sole_
Und G•mtl
.
.
SchUltz (8) and Slmmons_ w- . play ~e have.,,
conference gam~ and then
and heel..
·
.
·Atlanta
· 000 200 ooo- 2 s 3 .Urrea, s.J . . L- Frelsleb·en. "S--7 .
. · comes the. long-·~a 1·ted clash
LOBSTERS WIN · "Mntral ·
000 OAO 21x- 7 1 o HRs-;-St , L:ouls , · Tvson· (7) ,
._
BOSTON (i.JPI) - , The ·Solomon. C a mp b e I 1 (5) , Simmons l17 t; so" Diego, tv i.e
. with Oldah001a on Sept. 24.
· B· t
'L b t · F ld
Horgan . (6) and Nolan, Hold· !8)'
· ·
· ·
os on _ o s ers
r ay swOrth, -Alcala "(6) and c&amp;rter .
-..:....:...... .
· defeated the Cleveland NetS w~Holdsworth .. · 3-3. c-Sol.-: !lit ~·m•l
.·
..·
28-21 . to .win
. .
·the.. •eciding man.,3·3.
.ancl
· 000 201 100,... 4 9 'l ·.
"
- .N.Y. .
100 000 00()...'.1 60
Regularly $114.95
.match of a World Team L.A. · : 010 000 100:.. 2 3 o
Copllla tin~ Bench 1 Matlock;
GalliP?I!s, Ohio
Tennis ·elimination· seri~s, Chlcgo .. 310 011 Oox~ 6 15 I . Lo&lt;kwood (Z ) and Stearns. w~ ' ·
. two ~a·tches.to· one.· .
· Jolin, So~a . (5) Hovgt) .(lji , ii!nd . Capi/la .. 5-5. · L-Matlack, ·6-.14.
•• ,
Yeager;- KrukQW,
Ciusti (8) and
.
. . H.R.- Cinclnna.tl, F"oster (40)·. ·

Logan

'Can't look back if you expect
to continue winning'--Woody

Yoga course. is planned at Rio
. llo GRANDE - Hatha reluation, is on

the con·

tlnuing education schedUle
this fall at Rio Grande
College • Community College.
The CQurse, which · em·

phasi1es the physical side of
yoga rather than meditation,
will be held weekly in Lyne
Center on the Rio Grande
campus beginning MondaY..

Glenn added to staff at Marshall
HUNTINGTON- John M.
ll8ll ac.,eed a fuU-tlme position
wttb the Maraltall University
CanmunityCollege, Glenn E.
lmlth, MU Community
Collece .-clate dean, has
llll!Oiinced, effective Aug. 22.
In addltlon · to teaching
dtwn and supervising other
lllltructlonal
peraonnel,
Glaut
wW
be
responsible
for
de

Gllan of Gallipolil

evaluation the program and
will work closely with the
program's advisory com·
mittee.
A chemistry teacher at
Gallipolis' Gallia Academy
High School since 1973, Glenn
also has· been employed as a ·
technical manager with the
fantasota Company, Point
Pleasant, an.d as chief
chemist at the B. F. Goodrich

Company plant at Avon Lake,
Ohio.
A native of Colorado, Glenn
earned his Bachelor of
Science degree in chemistry
from
Colorado
State
University and took graduate
work at Case Western
Reserve University. He .
earned his teaching cer·
tiflcate at Rio Grande
College.

Gregg pleased after
Browns 19~10 victory
·:·u

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Sports

nsac . ns

l"znesco
. ....ns ·

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Horltelite XI!
Automatic duli

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1 SHOE STORE . .

SawBuck~~

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--..----·

1·

c'~nd game) ·
Clncl ·
N:V.

1975 BUICK LeSABRE 4

NOWONI;Y

-ac-

Borbon (B) · and
Plummer : . Espinosa , Myrick
(8) and Hodges. W- Moskau, 3-·
3. t.. - Esplnosa , -' 6~lO .· HR$Clnclnnatl , Foster (41), Griffey
Moskau·,

1101.
·

.

American Lea"i ue

Ch icgo

020 010 ooo- 3 6 o

.

•
We sold it new. This handsome hardtf)p Is finished .in powder blue
with a full dark blue vinyl top. Air conditioning, cruise control, 60-40
cloth seats,· tilt wheel and an AM radio with stereo tape pla~er add to
its value. If you've been looking for a good late model full s1ze car.-

Zlsk (26), Gamble (25) . ·
·
Boll
000 10l ooo'-- 3 6 o
Mlnn
020 000 00()...'. 2 6 2 .
Flanagen and Skaggs ; Goltz
and Wynegar. W-Fianagan, 919. L-Goltz, 15 -7. HR - Baltimore, Mora (10).
' N.Y.

SEE THIS ONE TODAY

8 a:;e0' on
~~~~

EXCLUSIVE SAf'E.T,TIP•
PREVENTS KICKBACK!

manult~tlmer:. ~UQO@"ed

'"o:;t e ~~•ud•f'\1 h ll•llht

h Ut ~~~\e 11 1'1&lt;1 loo;l!ll \ll ~ e ~
W £htr!IJII Wl!hOlll IIOIICII

de;~J.et

QUESTIONS MOST ASKED I
Q!esti~n : Why should your child or grandchild attend a Christian

school?
Answer: We believe that our children are gifts of the Lord. We are
responsible as parents to train them according to His Word not only at
home, and 'in U!echurch, but in school as well. ,
·
Question: What type of education will they receive ?
AnSwer : Academic excellenCe in a Christ.a.ntered atmosphere .
Qtestion : Will I be sheltering my child if I ~nd them to a Christian
school?
Answer : The best education to prepare a child for the real world is an
education which Jesus Christ is central. Tbe Christian understands
tile real world and wants to prepare his child for it. (Proverbs 1:7)

in

Question : What kind of school facilities will you have at Ohio Valley
Quistian School?

Answer : The school will be housed in. the new education unit of U!e
First. Baptist Church. The rooms are carpeted, properly lighted, air
conditioned, and ·conducive to an atrnosppere of learning. The system
contains a central"fire alarm system, water fountains are near each

.

Question : Who may register ?
Answer: Ohio Valley Christian School welcomes ail applicants of good
character and academic reliability regardless of race, color, or
national origin. It is important that studenis and parents evidence a
fuU appreciation of the education and religious purposes of the school
and that pupils, if admitted, abide by and respect the ~stablished rules
and regulations.
Applicants with special physical, emotional, or behavioral problems
cannot be eonsidered due to need for special teacliers and equipment
which Ohio Valley Christian School does ~ot. have.
Question: What about cost'
Answer: The half-day Kindergarten will cost $350, tuition to b~ paid in
10 equal payments beginning in August.
The grades 1-6 tuition will be $650 for the first child in the family ,
$550for U!e second, and $450for the U!ird child: This too, wiU be paid in
10 equal payments beginning in August.
Question: What will t)le school calendar be at Ohio Valley Christian
School?
Answer: The schedule and calebdar will ·run concurrent with the
Gallipolis City Schools.

Smith Buick-Pontiac, Inc.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
I

446-2212

748 E. Main St ..
992-2184

(1'1.
\

Pvmeroy. 0.

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SEPT. 6TH
We believe the sole purpose of Ohio Valley Christia n
School is to provide qu!'llity education in a · Chri stia·n
atmosphere. We believe that all truth is God's truth and
has its source in Jesus. Christ (John 14:6). Every subject ,
whether scientific, historical, mathematical, literary, or
artistic, is taught with the consciousness that Jesus
· Christ is to be central in all living and learning . Our
program is geared to meet not only the intellectual needs
of the student, but also his physical, social, and spiritual
needs.

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l APPLICATION FOR ADMISSION
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OhloValleyChrlstlanSchool
Third A~enue ~~Locust Street
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(614 l 4411-0344

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COMPLE'l'E ALL BLANKS
ON APPLICATION ,

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student's Name ·

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Applying for grade-- 1
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Date

Last _

First

Middle

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Present Address

City.

State

Zip

Phone

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Age ____ Sex

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Has applicant ever failed a grade, been dismissed, or suspended ?

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Birth Date

Birth Place

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Grade
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Has· applicant been in . any special programs such ~. remedial reading,
remedial math, special education, etc. (please be specifiC):

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Willyouusebustransportation?Yes

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No

(OneWay .

Both Ways

RIDENOUR SUPPLY .

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a..ster.o,

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Question: Are U!ere any other costs?

Qtestion : Does U!e school have recreation facilities ?
Answer: The church has leased 14 acres of land within four blocks of

Answer : Yes. There will be a registration fee and boOk fee .

Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Phone'- - --

U!e school for recreation.

Question: Is the Christian school in competition with the public
school?
Answer ' No. The Christian school offers a choice. The Christian school
is not limited. We can provide academic excellence in a Christian
atmosphere, applying Bible principles. ·

Doctor's Name--'---~---------- Phone' -- - - - 1

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If so, please explain

Those interested are invited to inspect the facilities.

Question : Are the teachers certified in the State of Ohio?
AnSwer : Yes. Our teachers are carefully chosen on the basis of their
Christian character, academic preparation, and love for children.
They are dedicated to the Christian philosophy of life and education.
Qtestion : What type of curriculum will the Kindergarten have?
AnSwer: The curriculum includes Bible, music, physical coordination,
art, st&lt;ry telling, poetry, and rhymes, numerals, ·phonics, printing,
reading readiness, group and personal discipline.
Qtestion : ·What about the Grades i~?
Answer: Grades 1-6 curriculum·.includes Bible, phonics, spelling;
language, composition, penmanship, mathematics, science , ~odal
studies, physical education, healU!, art and music. All subjects and
activities are Integrated with the basic ce~tered view Of life to the

Question: Is it too late to register?
Answer: No, but early registration will help u.S in our planning for the
school year .
Question: Will tile school seek a state charter?
Answer: Yes. · The Ohio Valley Christian School will seek state
approval.
•
Question: What if the bridge is still closed?
Answer:· For those living on the West Virginia side of the bridge, a
school .van will meet the children on the Ohio side of the river. The
driver will walk with your children across the bridge. If interested we
will furnish more information.

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Business A d d r e s s - - - - - - - - - - - - - Phone._ _ _ _
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Business A d d r e s s - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Phone-- - I

Father's N a m e - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Job Title_ __

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Guardian's Name

Job Title

Business Address

Phone

School District in which you reside

' with family : .
· Please list all other children under 18 years of age livmg
Name

.

., Age

Grade

School Attendmg

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Does applicant live with Father and Mother?_ _ Father only•

Question: How dO students In Chr~tian schools rate academically with
tile public sc'llool?
·
Answer : In testing U!ey have showed to be a grade or more ahead of

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public school students.

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I brief testimony (to be answered by applicant only )
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Mother only?_ Guardian?-'-' Has ,either parent been divorced ?
Family attends what chu.rch?
Is Father of applicant a Christian?_Motber?_ _ Guardian?

If so, please give

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OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN SCHOOL

J,lteiJ

Pt"" 'ubr"J'(I

J&amp;R SPORT SHOP

•Ox-

OPENS

PERSONS OTHER THAN PARE!NTS WHO COULD BE CONTACfED iN
·cASE OF EMERGENCY:
Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Phone _ _ _ _

room and reiltroom lacillties are excellent.

Wnite (11). ·

Boston
100 000 020- 3 9 1
Kan City
100 004
9 11 2
Paxton, Willoughby (6), Lee(7) and Fisk ; Colborn and
Porter. W- ColbOrn, 13-12. LPaxton, 6·3. HRs----Kanses City,
Brett . (15). Otis llo4l, Mayberry

she "just can 't go on
running," authorities said.
Two of those indicted with
Johnston, Herschel Weintrub,
described as the leader of the
drug and -stolen property
ring, and his brother ,
Norbert, hoth ol' Cincinnati,
have pleaded guilty . to
reduced charges.
The
rema ining
34
defendants are scheduled to
go on tria1Sept.19before U.S.
District Judge Carl B. Rubin.

homes.
Current law requ.iresdards
the
hoard to establish
st ct stan th
for a11 new ru ures o er
than one, two and three
family dwellings. The
standards to be adopted will
concern homes completed
after July I, 1978.
Remodeling of an existing
home would not be covered
by the legislation, sponsored
through the Ohio General
Assembly by Rep. C. J.
McLin, D-Dayton.
·
A home constructon
company. foun d guilty of
ignoring the soon-to-be
established standards could
be fined up to $5.000. ·
Legislative sponsors of the
bill said it was designed to
ensure that new homes would
be properly insulated.

Our Philosophy

ra:;

001 500 1()0-- 811

Tell!: liS
000 000 Olo- 1 .4· 2
Torrez and Munson ; Moret,
Llndblact (4) and Sundberg . w
- Torrez, 1.4·10. L- Moret, 2-1.
HRs- New York, Jackson (22) ,

Johnston was the only one
Sept. 12, from 7: 30 lo 9 p.m.
One objective os the course is
of on persons indicted by a
to help students achieve
federal grand jury last mooth
concentration and relaution
for allegedly participating in
by learning how to control
the racketeerin g ring who
their minds and bodies .
had not been arrested.
Rebecca Stump, certilied as
He had been indicted for
an instructor by the Hun·
conspiracy and receiving
tington VWCA, will teach the
stolen property from the
class, assisted by Barbara
$40,001ltheftof a Huron, S.D.,
Stump and Mary Alice
jewelry store last October.
Skidmore.
Tenn......, authorities said
A graduate of Holzer School September 6, at Lyne Center. an array of drugs vajued at
of Nursing, Mrs. Stump is
The course fee is $!5 and $15,000 to $20,000 was
employed at Gallipolis State students will be asked to discovered with U!e bodies of
Institute. She is also working provide their own leotards or Johnston and his wile . Police
on her Bachelor of Science shorts and mats or !olded also found. two dozen
degree at Ohio University .. quilts. The class will · be · hypodermic needles, $1,800 in
·Anyone interested in • limited to 30 students and .is . cash, three pistols and a
registering for the course open to any resident of Meigs, shotgun. .
may do so at the first class Jackson, Gallia · or Vinton
In her apparent suicide
·
f
•g
p
m
Counties.
note,
Joyce Johnston wrote
sess1on, or rom .,. . .,

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students.

YOU'RE IN CONTROL
WITII THE XL• AUTOMATIC!
Lightweight; precisiol) balanced. Weighs
less than 8lh lbs. with liY' bar and exelu- .
sive SAFE-T-TIP that prevents laCkback ·
~.
starting. Automatic chain orunP:.
Softone muftler. And-during our · ·
SAW BUCK DAYS - it's only $84.95

Milw
000 010 ooo- 1 5 o
WOOd and Downing ; Slaton
and Moore. W-WOOd, 6-5. L~
Slaton, 8-13 , HRs-Chlcago,' ·

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2d1 000 ci1~ 4 a:o000 100 020-.3 8 1

COLUMBUS (UPI )- Gov.
James A. Rhodes signed into
law Friday legislation
d f
requ.irlng the Ohio Boar o
Building Standards to adopt,
no later than March I, 1978,
mm1mum energy con·
servation standards for new

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

AIDS AND
THEIR COST.

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~owhide
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13&lt;lth oC them had written

"de notes.
Sw·c1

b.

ABOUT HEARING

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CINCINNATI (UP!)_ The
FBI says lhe body or • m.n
wanted in connectioo with a
m~li-million Southwest Ohio
drug and stolen property ring
has b&lt;!en found in a rural
ca bin near Knoxville, Tenn.
The bQdies of Billy Ray
Johnston and his wif~. Joyce,
were found Satur&lt;lay , dead
from apparent suicide drug
overdoses, authorities said.

I

LEfS TALK

F,n"th·y

Home energy bill signed

Body found in rural cabin

Thlrcl Avenue at Locust Street

Phone 446 0344

Gallipolis, Ohio

�Cli-~SunllavTiml$&amp;ntinel,Sunday, Aug. 21,1977

Local-horses are winners

'
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YOU

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E'LL
FRIDAY WAS MEIGS MARAUDER DAY at the Meigs CoWlty Fair. Burdell Me Kinney,
own~ and dr1v~r of Meigs Marauder and his grandson, Steven Wood, 3, son of Mr. and Mrs.
. Earle Wood , Middl~rt , dressed in satins like his grandfather, are pictured just after the
fow1h race when Me1gs. Marauder raced to a first place vi~ory. The Meigs Marauder High
School Band was pla)'lllg for the races and led the cheeririg of the horse to victory ,
Incidentally, 1t was the last day of racing for Meigs Marauder Wider McKinney's ownership.
Theammal was sold at the close of the Friday racing program to a buyer from Bremen.

ROCK SPRINGS - LOcal
drivers and locally owned
horses got their share of trips
to the winner's circle, much
to the delight of racing .fans,
during the final harness horse .
racing program at the Meigs
County Fair Friday evening.
In the first and fifth races,
for pacers, Clipper Stone,
owned by Ed and Wald
Humphrey of Pomeroy ,
raced to first place · victory
with Sherry Indasted, one of
Ohio's if not the only woman
driver in Ohio, at the helm,
and came in second in the
fifth. Chief Kenney, owned by
J . Van Rhoden of Mt. Vernon
was second in the first and
first in the fifth and third in
both races was Deacon Joe
owned by Ruth E. Me·
Williams of Logan. Clipper
stone was the winner of the
trophy blanket for the fastest
horse in the two races. The
blanket was presented by
Swisher·Lohse Drugs.
Don Spencer, fonnerly of
Pomeroy who drives wearing
the colors of the former
Pomeroy High School, purple

Court fines ·15
.

POMEROY - Fifteen and costs, no muffler;
defendants were fined and Kenneth Keith White,
three others forfeited bonds Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
in Meigs · County Court unsafe vehicle; Randall
Friend, Rt. 1, Long Bottom,
Friday.
Fined by Judge Robert E. $10 and costs, unsafe vehicle ;
Buck were Mark Huff, Ronald P. Wilkins, Gallipolis,
Huntington, $9 and costs, $10 and costs, following too
speeding; John M. Haggerty, close; Eli Nelson Vance,
Middleport, $11 and costs, Crown City, $10 and costs,
speeding ; Howard Nutter, illegal passing ; Terry E.
Mason, $10 and costs, left of Brady, Rt. 1, Coolville, $150
center, Joseph R: Deluca, and costs, license suspended
RD , Rutland, $10 and costs, 30 days, attend school in
failure to stop within assured Athens, driving while in·
· clear distance ; Anthony E. toxicated; Yvonne G. But·
Cardillo, Rt. 1, Langsville, cher, Rt. 1, Reedsville, $10
$10 and costs, improper 1 and costs, improper passing.
Forfeiting bonds were
passing; Phyllis A. Stevens,
Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va., $10 Dana L. Keefer, Leon, W:
and costs, stop sign violation; Va., $28, failure to stop within
W!Uiam D. Baker, Rt. 1, Long assured clear distance; John
Bottom, $13 and costs, E. Partlow, Rt. 3, Pomeroy ,
speeding; Harold E. Myers, $103, reckless operation;
Marietta , $35 and costs, Rodney G. Miller, Jr.,
$30 .50 ,
illegal passing; Keith Proctorville,
Bradford, Rt. 3, Racine, $10 speeding.

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READ 'FOR PROFIT
USE FOR R·ESULTS
GALLIPOLIS PHONE 446-2342
PHONE ·992-2156
POMEROY
'

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Brown, Oark
all smiles
WILMINGTO N, Ohio game oCthe 1973 season at
(UP! ) - "A precedent for Denver . Clark , a rookie
pro football," says Cincinnati playing in his first NFL
Bengals' assistant general regular season game, was tbe
intended receiver in the end
manager Mike Brown.
"An important judgment zone ·oo a pass play, but the
for myself and foc football," pass was intercepted by a
agreed Bengals' fullba ck Broncos' linebacker.
Hackbart, covering Clark,
Boobie Clark.
then
tried to block Clark, who
Brown and Clark were all
in
turn
ilsed a forearm to the
smiles ·Friday after learning
back
of
Hackbart's head.
a feder.al judge in Denver had
No
penalty
was called on
ruled in favor of Clark and
the
play
and
both players
the Bengals in a· $1 million
went to the side.lines without
lawsuit.
The suit had been filed corilmenl. Hackbart went on
more than three years ago by to play in the Broncos' next
former Denver Broncos' two games before being
safety Dale Hackbart, who · waived and later claimed
claimed he suffered a neck that Clark's forearm had
injury in a 1973 game when caused his neck injury.
Clark w~nt on to gain 988
struck by Clark's forearm
yards
that season and was
after a pass interception.
selected
the NFL's American
Hackbart charged Clark
COnference
Rookie of tbe
with "outrageous cooduct"
Year
and·
the
Bengals' Most
and sought to collect a total of
Valuable
Player.
$1 million from Clark and the
Clark is to be in lilJl starting
Bengals.
lineup
when the Bengals play
But U.S. District COurt
the
Detroit
Lions In a
Judge Richard P. Maisch
nationally-televised
pre·
ruled against Hackbart and
season
game
at
1
p.m.
(EDT)
· said, "Civil courts cannot be
expected to control the Sunday at the Silver Dome in
violence in professional Pontiac, Mich.
football."
Said Brown, " This sets a
precedent foc pro football. It
(the decision) says that a
player assumes a risk· when
he chooses to play the game.
"When federal courts get
COLUMBUS
State
involved, they're getting in\0 Representative Ron James
something they 're not (D92nd House District physically equipped to Proctorville) Saturday an·
handle . It's difficult enough nounced the findings of his
for a referee or a football survey conducted at the
coa&lt;:h to determ~ if a rule .Gallia COunty Junior Fair.
has been infracted, and we're .
James expressed his
satisfaction for those who
; in the business.
"From a legal siandpoint, part.icipated in his survey.
this decision has more impact
'!'he results of the survey by
than ihe case that has gotten
Gallla County voters are as
all the publicity," added follows :
Brown, referring to Oakland
Question : Should State law
Raider George Atkinson's require the weartng of auto
recent failure to collect from seat and shoulder belts?
Plttsbutgh Steelers' coach
Response: Gallia County
Chuck Noll in a slander
suit.
Said Clark, "They were
suing me for ~.ooo and the
Bengals for ~.ooo. If I had
lost, I wu goona retire. I
wouldn't make that kind of Jim Montgomery, 21, of the
mooey the rest of my career. cummins Engine Swim Club
"It's
an
Important of Bloomington, Ill., clocked
judgmellt fQI' myaelf and for the fast~ time in the WQrld
football. It (the sult) does not this year in the 200-meter
make any beca~~~e freestyle Fridlly in quallfying
football II an tntenae pme." for the finals of the AAU
The Haekbart-Clark Senior NaUonal Long course
IIKI)dent cama tn the opening SWimming Champiofll!hips.

and white, took first place
honors in the second race for
trotters.
Spencer along with C. L.
Ecker own Tyn Rhos which
won the race but dropped
back to fourth in the sixth.
Taking second in the second
and third in the sixth was
Crescent Stone, owned by
Waid and Ed Humphrey and
driven by the latter. Third in
the second was The Hick,
owned by J. Van Rhoden, aud
the horse was second in the
sixth. First in the sixth was

Justly Chief, owned by Dave
Ewing of Cardington. Winner
~f the trophy blanket for the
fastest time in the two races
was Spencer driving Tyn
Rhos . .
Miss Brandee, owned by
Roger Spencer of Pomeroy
and driven by B. Davis was
first in the third race which

Seven Eagle spots
still unsettled

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SHERRY INDASTED, one of Ohio's few if not the only
woman horse harness driver, is pictured as she returned
to the winner's circle to receive an ovation after coming in
first in the first race at the Meigs Fair. Sherry was driving
Clipper Stone owned by Ed and Waid Humphrey of
Pomeroy.
·

fastest time during the three
days of racing at the Meigs
Fair. The Big W ts owned by
William Hartman and J. L.
Howell of Bremen and raced
Thursday.

was for pacers. Second was

PffiLADELPHIA (UPI) Philadelphia Coach Dick
Vermeil says three of the
Eagles' four defensive
backfield positions are still
unsettled.
Strong safety Randy
Logan, who will start in
Monday night's pre-season
home opener against tbe New
Horsemen's'
. England Patriots, is the only Harnes s
one who has nailed down a Association.
Following the excellent
position in the . Eagles'
racing program members of
suspeet secondary.
.
. Last season, the Eagles the fair board, Bill Smith and
mtercepted only nine passes Danny Zirkle, presented the
overall and the secondary trophy blanket in memory of
picked off only six. "I really · the late Sidney Spencer, lonll
don't think anybody in our
defensive secondary had a

good year last year,''
Vermeil said. "But a lot of
that was due to our lack of
pass rush. "

~

Seat belts disliked in Gallia

(U~~~siOgl~~~cJ~h,;:l:!;

a Meigs ·county driver and
trainer of harness horses.
The trophy donated by the
Meigs County Harness
Horsemen went to The Big W
which ran ' the mile mthe

Willie Barrett, owned by
Vicki DeDiard of Grove City,
and third was Our Miracle,
owned and driven by Ralph
Guthrie of Athens. In the
fourth race which was for
pacers, also an Ohillco race,
Meigs Marauder, owned and
driven by Burdell McKinney,
Middleport, raced to first
place cheered on by local
fans, especially the Meigs
~gh School Marauder band
which was on band to play for
"the ra.dng.
The seventh race, was for
the top horses in the two
Ohillco Pace races and taking
top honors was Our Miracle
again driven by Guthrie with
Miss Brandee coming in
second and Meigs Marauder
coming in third. Our Miracle
was awarded the trophy
blanket presented by the Ohio

DANNY ZIRKLE, LEFT, AND Bill Smith, Meigs Forir Board members, hold the trophy
blanket awarded annu,aUy at the Meigs County Fair in memory of the late Sidney Spencer,
i?Cal driver and trainer of harness horses. The award goes to the horse making the fastest
time durmg the three days of local racing. The trophy this year went to Tbe Big W owned by
William Hartmand and J . L..Howell of Bremen which raced on Thursday. •

required permit from a law
enforcement agency prior to
Question: Should Sunday pur.chasing guns. Gallia
Countians split 50 percent Question : Do you favor the bunting be legalized?
Response : Again, Gallia 50 percent on the question of
legalization of gambling?
turned down such a registration of. all handguns.
· Response: The vote. was a COuntians
proposal, with 74 percent of 85 percent of , the voters
total disapproval of 14 per- the people polled saying surveyed felt that · there
cent of the persons polled.
should be mandatory prison
"No. "
sentences for all crimes
Question: Do you favor the
Question: In regard t.o committed with handguns.
legalization of prostitution? ·handguns,
Representative James also
would you favor a
Response: . The people
.
asked
residents to deal with
polled felt, by a large margin law which would:
a. Prohibit ownership of ·the top problems of the state
of 82 percent to 18· percent,
. cheap handguns- "Saturday 1 by · ranking their choices in
that prostitution should not be
order of highest priority.
Night .Specials"?
legalized.
b: Require a permit from a Drug abuse ranked as, the
number one problem with
Question: Should the state law enforcement agency welfare reform and crime
park system be expanded? prior to the purchase of a second and third . Other
Response : 88 percent of the • handgun?
c. Require registration of concerns ranked in the
people polled felt that the
following order : Education,
all
handguns?
state park system should be
d. Require mandatory Consumer Protection ,
expanded.
prison sentences for all Pollution Control, Taxation,
Prison Reform , Ethics
Question: Would you fa.vor crimes committed with hand· Legislation, Housing, Parks,
complete (ederal financing of guns?
Response: 56 percent of the ERA, · Highways (need for
Aid to Dependent Children
).
public .assistance programs? people surveyed agreed that ·more
ltepresentative James
"Saturday
Night
,
Specials"
Response: 77 percent of the
conducted this survey the.
people polled said they did should be prohibiied. The paSt · week at the Meigs
survey
showed
60
percent
of
not want the federal governCounty Fair.
ment to assume a larger role those polled opted for a,
voters voted 72 percent to
tum down such a law.

Humprhey, Pomeroy, and Don Spencer, formerly of
Pomeroy, among the top contenders.

. THE TOUGH COMPETITION in the harness horse
racmg of tbe Meigs Fair is shown in this photo with Ed

My name isjeffSmith

When yo~ need money,
for
whatevergood reason,
I'm the one to see.

in funding .

.

'I f you want to arrange a home mortgage loan, borrow
for businfss purpose~t, finance an automobile, or take
care' of personal n~ds, come see me. You'll find me at
the Jackson Pike Office of the Ohio VaUey ·Bank on U.S. Route 35 at the
junction of State Route 160. Corne in and get acquainted, whether you
need a fast loan or if yo·u simJ?IY want lo say hellol ·

we:re a complet.e ·b&amp;nking center, nOt a branch. And, we do loan money.

'W~ OhioValley Bank
·'

Gaii•PQhl Oll•o

"Jackson Pike Officii" U.S. Route 35 • St•le Rout.e 1M

�I&gt;-1-The~unday ~...sentinel, Sunday, Aug. 21, 1977

C-10-lbe Sunday Ti!nes-Senlli,el , Sunday, Aug. 21', 1977

.

County agent's corner
POMEROY- One of the pleasures
of your own gardens is the tasty navor
of fresh vegetables. Some of that
COOdnesa ean be preserved by freeW!g
IIUdl vegetables as brussels sprouts,
IIUlp buns, peppers and squash.
Now that surpl~ vegetables are on
band, Robert Joseph, Ohio State
University E:rten&amp;on food specialist,
says freete them •uccessfully.
To freete brussels sprouts, Joseph
say$ select finn, compact, mediumsized &gt;prouts that are bright green.
Remove sprouts from the main stem
and h•ndle individually, Wash
thoro.ughly . .lf there is any evidence of
lnsec\ life or damage, let stand in salted
water for ,. hour. If sprouts are not
unlfonn in size, sort into 2 or 3 sizes.
Scald and cool.
Scalding time : Scald small sprouts
with steam for 3 minutes and large ones
for 5 minutes. Or scald small ones in
balling water 3 minutes and 4,. minutes
for large ones. Cool quickly in ice water
and drain.
Package in moisture-vapor proof
containers. Seal, Ia bel, and freeze
packages immediately. Ten pounds of
·sprouts will make about 10 12-ounce
packages.
When freeW!g green or wax beans,
select only tender, crisp, stringless
pods with small to medium-sized seeds

less than ,. men long ), says
Joseph. Discard bruised, discolored pr
insect and disease-damaged pods..
Process snap beans promptly; aa they
wilt within a few hours after harvest
and may spoil and lose their quality.
Wash thoroughly in cold water, snip
off ends, and sort into two or ·three
sizes. The smallest size may be packed
aa whole beans. The next size may be
sliced lengthwise (French style ), and .
the largest size snapped or cut into linch lengths.
'
Scald in water at 170 degrees F. -,.
111 minutes for young,. tender French
style; 212 minutes for young tender cut
or whole beans; and 31'. minutes for
more mature cut or whole beans. Cool
at once in ice water, then drain.
Package in moisture-vapor proof
containe.s; seal and Ia bel the packages
and freeze immediately. A bushel of
beans will make about 35 12-ounce
packages.
Green peppers frozen without
heating are best for use in uncooked
foods . Heated peppers are easier to
pack and good for use in cooking. Select
firm, crisp, thick-walled peppers,
Joseph says.
Wash, cut our stems, cut in half,
and remove seeds. If desired, cut into 11
inch strips or rings. Heat in boiljllg
water, if desired; 3 minutes for halves .
or 2 minutes for slices. Cool promptly in
(seeds

·The.Land Bank was estab- ·
lished 60 years ago with ·
one goal in mind- to pre&gt;
vide a specialized type of
loan tailored to the needs

is all hut completed
qn

Over the years, generations of farmers have come
to depe11d on·the Land
Bank. So, tod,ay, as yester·
day, we offer tonli-term
agricultural credit with .
flexible repayment plans.
When building for the
next generation, as well as
the present, see your local
Land Bank Asoociation.

lay of the land
along cropland field.·· The
banks of the . stream 'will be
smoothed and seeded to
Kentucky 31 fescue along
with fertilizer and mulch. The
district dozer is doing the
work and upon completion
will move to the Edward

all purpose, heavy duty formula
for interior or exterior · heat resistant
DANGER! HARMF UL OR
NET ONE GALLON
FATAL IF SWALLOWED
(3.785 LITERS)
Other Cauuons on Back f'laneJ
Se~

WARRANTY
If this product, when applied. aCcord ing to
directions, fails to perform as ,stated;
return the unused portion for ~ full refund

or product replacement. This warranty
does not include any cost of labor . Any

• Applies easily with brush, rOller or spray

o Leafs ' to bright finish evenly
• Dries to t_he touch in 4 hours

questloos regarding I his warranty should
be directed to your local Majestic aler;

• Heat resistant up to 600 deg. F.

or call or ·wrfte Yenk ln-Majestlc

• Extremely weather resi$tant

aint

Corp., 1920 Leooard Ave .. Columbus 0 .,
(61A) 253-8511 .

• Rust inhibiting

CENTRAL SOYA.
3RD &amp; SY(AMORE

procedures.
Renovation
through soil tillage is the
oldest method, a very reliable
one when the refinements
learned through years are
used: A second method Is no,
till, utilizing seeders that cut
out a shallow furrow of soil!
to 111 inches wide into which
seeds are placed, or seeders
that cut a narrow slit without
much sol! disturbance and
place the seed into the slit.
Both no-till systems have
been successful, although
some failures have occurred
when extended periods of drY
weather have followed the
seeding. The no-till system
relies on herbicides or
judicious grazing techniques
for controlling competitive·
·
vegetation.
The second part of this
column will be in next week's
paper, so watch for it.

Stream channel project
By Roger Powell
POINT PLEASANT
Work is nearly finished the
Clifford King stream channel
project, however the rain has
slowed operations by making
its creek bed soft. The
cleanup consists of clearing
and snagging of debris and
placing it in washout areas

of farmers.

of memory.

GALLIPOLIS

Bumgarner farm where a
pond will be rebuilt and
shaping and grading of
waterways will be done. ·
ART HARTLEY PLANS to
develop a spring for livestock
use on his farm near Countrjr
Club Road of Sandhill. The
spring had been tiled to the
creek by the oldtimers using
three-inch clay tile. The tile
has since then silted fuil and
water was coming to ground
surface. The spring was dug
out and found to be a single
vein coming out of a rock
crevice. A district catch
basin will be used to collect
the water.
WE WERE ON THE B. H.
MORGAN property this past
week. The Morgans are in·
terested in woodland, wildlife
and recreation. Since 1970
Mr. Morgan has· planted
about three and a half acres
into a home orchard. Several
acres of woodland have been
.improved by removing unmerchantable or unwanted
· trfes, sl)rubs and vines ..This
practice also encourages
natural sef'(ling of desirable
trees and cull trees are used
for firewood . Some areas
have been desigmited as
wildlife areas where food
plots were planted for
protection and cover.
A private recreation area
has also been developed by
the Morgans. A camping and
picnic area along with stone
fireplaces, basketball area;
badminton court, horseshoes,
hiking trails and restrooms
are some of the facilities.
Plenty of dry firewood is ·kept

·

"He knew be WIIS a legend," Erin Fleming said. "At
diDner he would say, 'Bring me the de5ert, the legeod is

pack in containers, leaving no head

space. Seal and freete . If heated, leave
11 inch head space.
To freeze hot peppers, wash and
stem. Then pack into small containers,
leaving no head space. Seal and freete.
Select young summer squash with
small seeds and tender rind. Wash, cut
in 11 inch slices and heat in boiling
water for 3 minutes. Cool squash
promptly in cold water and drain. Pack
into containers, leaving 11 inch head
space. Scal and freeze . .
. .
Select only fully-matured, richly,
colored and highly-navored winter
squash or pumpkins that have a smooth
consistency when ciloked. Wash and cut
into' 3 to 4-inch pieces. Remove seeds
and fiber.
Scald by cooking in steam or bake
in oven until tender. Scoop squash or
pumpkin from rind or put throu~h a
food press, ricer or puree strainer.
Cool by placing in pan and floating psn
in ice water.
Pack in moisture-proof containers,
seal and label. U desired, those spices
· that would be used when making pies
may be added to the puree before it is
packaged. Freeze immediately. Ten
pounds of pumpkin or squash will make
five 16-ounce packages.

farm, cutting down on stream or kinds. Wise pasture
and reservoir sedimentation, renovation utilizes plants
and
making
machine with a higher yield and better
operations on hillsides nutritive quality ~ replace
possible where gullies have existing pasture plants. Good
been eliminated.
renovation practices arSo
These attributes of pasture include improving the soil
renovation may appear fertility. A soil test will be
idealistic at ·first. But full necessary for the most
consideration of what hap- precise fertilization proliram.
pens to the land and to the
Since legumes, primarily
grazing animals as a result of alfalfa, red clover, and ladino
renovation practices that clover are the cornerstones of
eliminate brush , weeds, and a
pasture
ren ovation
low-production grasses and program, the soil PH should
replacing them with highly be 6.5 or higher. Lime is often
productive forage species needed. Phosphorus and
that are high in nutritive potassium levels should be
quality leads to the basic high for the particular type of
conclusion that pasture soil.
Phosphorus
and
in
many potassium fertilizer should be
renovation
southeastern Ohio pastures Is applied before the renovation
needed and would be a g90 d work starts.
practice.
,~ Pasture renovation in the
Pasture renovation means late summer generally
one
or
two
replacing existing plant follows
species with some other kind

Helping JOil SIICCtell.
is our only colltmL

'
LOS ANGELES tUPI ) - Groucho Marx's long-lime
compauluo oald the comedian's death was the ' 1eod of an
era" -but Groucbo was too imp11dent to ever really Jade out

cold water and drain.
If peppers have not been heated,

Legumes, 'cornerstone' of pasture renovation
By Boyd A. Ruth
Conservation Service
POMEROY - The best
season for renovating
pastures is here. Mid August
to .mid September is the
preferred time for Southern
Ohio.
Pasture renovation Is an
important and valuable farm
practice. Pasture yields are
usually increased. The
nutritive quality of the
pastures is likely to be im·
proved if a thlcl&lt; forage cover
is maintained after the
seeding is established.
·
Improving pastures
through ,renovation often·
permits a larger farm herd or
fewer acres in pastures .
Improviilg nutritive quality
reduces expenditures for offfann feed supplements.
Reduced erosion means
keeping valuable and
Irreplaceable top soil on the

Instruments fail
on Voyager craft

Groucho knew he was •Jegend'
By John C. Rite
Ext. Ageul, Agriculture

hungry.'"

Miss Fleming, commeotiDg oo the death Friday night of
tbe tlf.year-old comedian, said, "I guess you could calllt the
end uf an era."
"But I don't thlak Groucho will ever leave," she said.
"He's •tou Impudent. I think Groucho described himself
adequately wheo he satd, 'Man1 joiDs the Immortals.' "
From uoe cumedlal to another, Red Skelton called Man:
"one of the greatesl of all the elowns and mll81cal clown• in
the tra.dltlon of being f111111y ."
· ::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;: ;:;:::;:::::;:;::~::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;::::::: :::::::::::::::::::

'

Vance leaves
for Peking

,·

MATCHED TEAM COMPE:rED - Harley Grate of
Salem Township, pictured with his matched team of
Belgium horses, was the only Meigs CountiaJl.. taking part.
in Friday night's horse pulling contest at\fhe Meigs
COunty Fair. Grate's team placed third out of seven teams

in the lightweight class. First in the class )Vent to the team
of Glen Umlng of Wllmington and secdnd to Bob Hall,
Marietta. In the heavyweight class first place went to Bill
Barnhart, canal W'mchester; second to Bob Foster, Canal
Winchester and third to Ellis Derry of Zanesville.

ONE-WEEK CIJNIC for young cheerleaders ended Friday in the Galli.a Academy High
School gymnasium with between 70 and 75 elementary school and junior high school pupils
attending. Mrs. Ann Adams Is the adviser. Their "faculty" is seated on the front row, the
Blue and White cheerleaders, who are, left to right, Lori· Naskey, Bridget Hennessey; Lisa
Niday, Linda Skaggs, Annette Snowden ahd Jane Ellen Wood. - Jim Porter photo.

5908.
13!!agle, ~emale, 1 yr. old, nice dog, ~7. ·
Fox Terrier, male, 9 mos. old, black and white, 742,2101.
German Shepherd ll!ld puppies, 742-2101.
Terrier type, male, hisck and white, small, cute, 992-3950.
Collie, female, 4 mos. old, tan, white and black, 992-581JG,
Beagle -Min. Collie, female, 3 mos. old, 992-7085.
Border Collie -Boxer, male, 7 weeks old, puppies, 992,
2192
(Day), 949-2354 (Evenings ).
·
put money into our "bank chimney'"
r
Coon
Dog
puppie,
742-2134.
One little guy, an 11-year old boy named Billie from BainCollie Type, puppie, 8 weeks.old, real cute, 992-2639.
bridge in Pilre County came over and emptied his J?OCkets and
Border Collie puppies, 8 weeks old, 949-2705.
then came hack a few minutes later with another quarter. He
Kitten, 8 weeks old, yellow and gray, real cute, 992-7688.
said he liked animals and wanted to help them.
Kittens, 3 mos. old, 1 gray, 2 gray with black stripes, 992It seems as though everyone has compassion for our
helpless·animais in the world, and for that reason it was a real 2090.
cats (4) and 2J!.ittens, grayiSh and blacl&lt;, 742-2529.
joy to hold down the Humane Society booth.
:,
Kittens, 1 six weeks old, black, female, real cute, 1 J mos.
But the most revealing and interesting conversation was
old, male, yellow and white, cilte, 992-2639.
with one of our Meigs County Commissioners, Jim ROilSh. I
Siamese .cat, six months old, friendly, 992-7317_
had felt up until this time that we only had one commissioner in
That's it for this week, folks, but in closing, don 't forget
our corn~r, Rich Jones, but you will all be as happy as I am to
know that we have two of the three in our comer . They are two important things. If you haven't done so yet: Get out and
looking for the land for us to build on, we have enough to make register so that·you can vote when the time comes - you can
the down payment, so it won 't be long now, folks, Meigs County bet your life the trappers will be out in full force in their losing
battle to continue their inhumane killing of animals, so thc.!e of
is going to have the best doggone animal shelter in the country.
you
who love.animals must register so that you can cancel out
Which means: We will be able to start controlling the animal
population somewhat, pick up strays, and take unwanted their votes. Sccondly, if you have not yet do!Ulted to the "soon
animals off your hands and put them into loving and wanting to Qe boilt Animal Shelter," please do so today, we need every
hands. Soon you will have a place to bring animals that you dollar we can get ... your donations are tax deductible. Send to
find ro;moing around, and a place too, where you can come and Meigs County Humane Soci~ty . PO Box 682, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769;
.
.
shop for just the right pet.
Believe me, there will be plenty to.pick and choose from,
and
when you get them from us theywill be healthy, licensed,
•
and in the caseoffemales, spayed when old enough.
Again for those of you who did not see our blueprint, the
shelter we have in mind has the following features :'
Small offices and reception room with sales window,
Tandem-ax(e design for heavy-duty forage
equipment and storage room, puppy and kitchen nins,
. treatment room, food preparation area, with the kennel being
boxes requiring maximum flotation .
approximately 39 X 30 with 14 runs measuring 4 by 9. We have
• 12-ton A.S .A.E. load rating .
talked some of hoping to add a separate section from the
• Heavy-duty. long adjustable tong ue.
homeless animals with a nice, clean kennel area for housing
• 15" x 10 " wheels.
dogs and cats of local people wanting to go on vacation who
• Rear towing hitch .
want their pets properly cared for while they're gone.
· It's just an idea, but a money-making idea that could help
support the shelter. There is no place in Meigs County to board
animals, so, perhaps ... !
The following are animals up for adoption this week :
Terrier, female, spayed, 2 yrs. old, blonde·, !lice dog, 44&amp;4090.
Fox Terrie,.., black and white, male, house dog, adult, 11492661. .
.
SEE IT
Beagle, male, 1 yr. old, nice dog, good pet, 992-7594 or 992-

By Marlon C. Crawford
Humane Society
POMEROY - We met a lot of nice people at the Meigs
County Fair this past week. For those of you who did not
attend, the Humane Society had a mock-up and blue prints for
the type shelter for animals that we hope to see become a
reality within the year. So many people came over and
examined it closely and almost every adult and many children

SPERRY HEW HOLLAttD
~ODEJ. 238 FARM WAGOtt

NOW AT
ready for campers.
MR. AND MRS. JOHN
COLUNS of Pl. Pleasant
have several conservation
plans and are interested in
some tile drainage on their
farm near Oldtown Creek.
Mr. and Mrs. Collins have
installed a large amount of
tile on their farms including
nearly 23,000 feet on their
Kanawha River !ann. The
main line on this farm was
lZ,inch tile to the river and
erosion is causing them a
problem with the outlet pipe.
Mr. Collins says some 25 feet
of riverbank ero·sion has
taken place since he has
managed the farnr.The river
is eating into the bank
allowing the metal pipe to
drop; however , they are
planning to repair it.
NEW COOPERATORS OF
the di~rict are .John L.
Wynne, 250 acres, and llorace

a

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

Mushroom is
Scholarship
afflicted by
to Letart youth
elephantitis

and Kathy Stillman, 93 acres.
Mr.. Wynne bought the
Denver Rollins farm on
Potters Creek Road and the
Stillman place is located· up
Kanawha River Five Mile
Creek.

Fulton-ThOmpson Tractor Sales
....

'

BEER POWERED?
' VENICE,' Calif . (UP!) .·Billy Carter, the President's
brother, showed up this week
at Revell Inc., which bills
itself as ''the world's largest
manufacturer of plastic
model kits," to sign papers to
· license prOduction of a Billy
Carter toy.
Revell, in Its news release,
wasn't saying was the toy is,

· but announced it will be
''previewed in October" and
go on sale next January.
However; in the accompanying publicity photo, mounted
on an easel beside Carter, is a
drawing of a truck captioned
"Billy Carter's Redneck
Power Pickup."

FARMERS TO REPORT
POMEROY - Fannen
Ill Melgo County will be
lETART, W. Va. - Jack
asked to report their crop
HANERSVILLE - A Cullen of Letan, w. Va. has
and land use acreages on
muibroom already 8 by been awarded a scholarship
all croplaad, acconling to
811-lllcbes across the top Is by the West Virginia 4-H Club
Clarence Price, C..lnnaD,
growing Ill the field be- · Foundation to attend the · Meigs Conly ASC Comiween the A. Kimball Leadership Conference
mittee.
Suiter and Roy Briggs conducted by the American
New provuloDJ Ill peoproperties here.
Youth Foundation at its
dlBg farm legislation may
Mrs. Briggs saki that Miniwanca Camp Conference
necessitate determining
after the lot was mowed the facility at Shelby, Mich.
crop use on tbe farm, be
mushroo"ls came up, most • Jack was selected on the
nplal,ned. Farmen are
of tbem about4" K 4". She basis of leadership qualities,
encouraged to aabmlt tbe ·
l8id they normally grow tn dtizenship, and the capacity
report by September 1,
cool, dark places such as to b&lt;;nefit from, as welll as 1177.
«!ave~;.
. contribute to, the Mlniwanca ·
;:::::::;:;:::,:::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::~;::::::::::::::::·. Leadership Conference.

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~

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POMEROY lANDMARK
Serving Meigs, Gallio

&amp; Moson Counties
.
Jock W. C.r~y , Mgr .
PH. 992-2111
POMEROY, OHIO

FARMER

..

•

I

FARMER
OWIIED

I

FARMER
COM7RDUED

nations, Chinese· leader Hua
Kuo.feng said his country
should move closer to other
communist and Third World
nations to form a front
against the United States and
Soviet Union.
Hua, successor to Mao Tsetung , called the two
superpowers "the source of a
new world war" and added
that
''Soviet
social
imperialism in particular
presents
the
greater
danger."
Hua did not mention
improving relations with the
United States .
In remarks at Andfews Air
Force base in Maryll\nd prior
to his departure, Vance said
PI\GE 1-0 his
talks would cover "a wide
variety of foreign issues and
also matters of mutual
interest r'rom a bilateral
standpoint, including the
question of normalization of
relations between our two .
nations."
The major stumbling block
showed the grand champion
in
Sino-American relations is
1,115-pounder in the Open
U.S.
recognition of Taiwan,
Class Steer Show : Ch ris
and
a
mutual defense treaty
Stikeleather of Darke County .
11etween
the two co untries.
had the reserve champ.•
Vance also said he looked
- Mr. and Mrs. William P.
Shultt of Gahanna were foward to meeting with Japahonored as the 500,000th nese officials to .discuss
persons to ha ve G'olden matters of mutual interest on
Buckeye discount cards his one nigl)t stopover in
processed at the Ohio Tokyo en route to China.
The No. 2 man at Peking's
Commission on Aging.
Washington
liaison office,
- Walter L. Bluck of
Chan
Hou,
saw
Vance off at
Columbus, Darwin R. Bryan
the
airport
and
about
a dozen
of Columbus, Warren G.
demonstrators
waved
signs
Weiler of Worthington and
the late John M. Grierson of calling for recognization of
Hillsboro were inducted into the People's Republic of
China.
the Ohio Hall of Fame. · ·

By JIM ANDERSON
' WASHINGTON (UPI )
Secretary of State Cyrus
Vance flew to Peking
Saturday for four days of
talks with top Chinese
leaders, including discussion
of full Sino-American
diplomatic relations.
But less than 48 hours
before Vance 's arrival for the
first high-level meetings
between new leaders in both

j~ntin~l

HOOFS. • .and. • .PAWS

,VOL 12 NO. 29

SUNDAY,., AUGUST 21, _1977 .

Gay 90s ·Day observed
Sunday, the sights an~
sounds
of the American
State Fair officials, buoyed
by
high
temperature Revolution will be spotlighted
forecasts in the pleasant mid as part of the Ohio Historical
and upper 70s range, ~ood ·society 's "Militia Muster
ready Saturday tq greet a Day" at the fair . Ceremonies
weekend crowd that could to honor the 75th anniversary
of 4-H will be held on the lawn
reach the 400,000 mark.
Fair attendance through in front of the Rhodes Center.
Friday activities included :
Friday was 662,897.
·
John Penquite of
Ohio Village celebrated
"Gay 90's Day" Saturday. Blenchester exhibited the
Fairgoers were invited to grand - champion meat
relive the days whl!n pen in the Junior Fair
handlebar moustaches, Poultry Show. Besides
Rock
tandem bicycles and straw his sis White
hats were the rage.
Cornish Roasters, Penq~ite
Grandstand entertainment also had the grand and
. was supplied , by Dolly reserve grand charnpion pens
Parton.
in the· poultry breeding
cotUMBUS(UPI)- Ohio

classes.
Michael
Squires
of
Chesterville displayed the
reserve champion meat pen.·
- Marsha Meckler of
Columbus took a blue ribbon
!Or her " Silver Jubilee
Trine" in the Spectacular
Dessert Contest. Second was
Margaret R. Matko of
Columbus, third Diane
Cordial of Powell, fourth Ann
Barnett of Marengo and fifth
Mrs. Samuel Peppers of
Columbus.
- In harness racing,
Hedgerow Will outlasted a
field of 18 entries to win the
Govenor's Cup ·Trot.
- ·Randy Shane of Fostoria

Marx's last years marked

By QARNEY SEIBERT
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(UPI )
A Voyager
spacecraft blasted off from
Cape canaveral Saturday for
a flyby of the planets Jupiter
· and Saturn but almost
. immediately ran into serious
technical difficulties.
· The spacecraft's own
systems shut down one of' the
· three gyroscopes aboard,
leaving only the .two
necessary for operation and
nothing in reserve.
Additionally, radio signals
from the spacecraft indicated
the scientific instrument
boom carrying two television
cameras and several other
vital instruments had failed
to fully deploy.
John Casani , project
manager for the Jet
Propulsion Laboratory in

hy _ t~moil ·

Pasadena, Calif., said, "I
would say that as of now, the
spacecraft is in trouble."
Asked
whether
the
difficulties might delay the
scheduled Sept. 1 'launching
of another Voyager, he said,
"I think I would have to say
yes."

Cassni.indicaled there was
a p6sibility that the .boom
deployment problem might
be only a result of faulty radio
reporting and electronic
reporting
aboard the
spacecraft. He said if the
boom is partially deployed
and locked, the scientific
experiments it is scheduled to
perform might be salvaged.
But he said th.at if the boom
is loose and "flopping
around," it would be
impossible tO carry out its

fl!nctions .
Casanl said 11 was hoped
the nature of the two
probleim might be hetter
understood by Sunday.
The $500 rnllliDn Voyager
project Is the last deep space
project planned by lhe United
States in the next decade,
during· which NASA will concentrate · ori the manned
Space Shuttle flights.
Attached to the top of the
1,820
pound
Voyage
spacecraft is a 12-lnch copper
disc which carries sounds and
pictures of earth. It was built
to last more than a billion
yeas and if an inhabitant of a
world unknown to man shoulll
find it, perhaps 525,000 years
from now, it will provide a
good insight into life on Oljl'
planet.

Coal conversion project
_k illed by poor planning
By EDWARD K. DeLONG

WASHINGTON (UPI) Poor planning, "incredibly
poor" management and a 211
per cent cost overrun have
killed the government's first
effort.to turn coal into cleanburning synthetic oil ,
according to congressional
investigators.
A General Accounting
Office
report
Friday
suggested that contractors
\ried to cover up problems as
costs mounted, and that the
government
took
no
corrective action for about 10
months after learning of the
trouble.
It said the coal cooversion
program was $10 million over
the$4.7 million target cost for
its first phase and 1411
months behind schedule when
the Energy Research and
Development Administration
quietly.killed it June 15.
The report made the first
public announcement of the
·project's termination. ERDA
has said only that ii is
reevaluating the effort, and
agency officials had no comment on the GAO reoort

Friday.
eastern coal rather than low" ERDA's first attempt at sullur western coal.
demonstrating a synthetic
Officials rushed the
fossil energy technology by contract through, the GAO
converting· coal into a clean said, so it would not come
burning liquid fuel has been a under a new law requiring
failure," the GAO said.
congressional approval of
As a result, it said, ERDA energy research cOsting over
will be unable to meet its 1983 $50 million.
goal of showing that coal can
The contract covered
be turned into fuel oil on a everything from planning to
commercial scale to help building and operating a
replace foreign oil imports. conversion plant in New
GAO, the investigative ann Athens, Ill. But it never got
of Congress, prepsred its past a $4.7 million design
report for Rep. John Dingell, phase, which should have
0-Mich., chainnan of the been completed March . 31,
H. o u s e C o m m e r c e 1976.
.
ERDA depended ol)
subcommittee on energy,
It said the problems began Coalcon to report problems'
.when
the
Interior and
conducted
only
Department hastily gave a . " haphazard " federal
$237 million contract to Union monitoring, the report said.
Carbide Corp. and Chemical
"In our view, relying solely
Construction Corp.
on Coalcon to notify ERDA of
operating jointly under the major problems represented
name "Coalcon" -on Jan. an
incredibly
poor
' 17, 1975, just two days before management practice," the
Interior's Office of Coal Re- GAO sa1d, adding that lack of
search merged into ERDA. fed era I monitor i n·g
The GAO said the contract . "cootributed greatly to the
was awarded despite ' un- project's substantial cost
resolved technical problems, QVerruns."
such as how to use high..sulfur

'Son .of Sam' warned police
·he was programm~d to kill

WS· ANGELES (UP!) At cer~mJonies last January the comedian's son, Arthur shoved a napkin in his mouth
The final years of the great installing him and his Marx, 54, generating a when he drooled at diniler,
screaming "You're a pig."
comic Groucho Marx were brothers in the Hollywood sensational court hearing.
NEW YORK (UPI) _The was the text of a letter the police h~ killed on the
The
younger
Marx
asked
to
But Miss Fleming had
filled with honors earned in Hall of Fame, be showed up
be . appointed conservator defenders, who said o~tsiders mass killer known as "Son of "Son of ~1!1" left for police conunand of a S,IJOO.year~~ tapes did not come from
. his youth and humiliating with George Fenneman, the
Sam'' warned police in a at the Slte of. hlS fifth and man named Sam who spo
Peltz and one of Berkowitz'
sixth murders.
through a dog owned by
•
personal deterioration alld straight man who was the himself. Accusing .Miss may have tJeE,n deceoved by
Fleming
of
looting
"hundreds
.
appearan&lt;;es
m her. strange letter four montJ:~s ago he
The
Post
said
it
got
a
copy
BerkowitZ'
neighbor
Sam
current
lawyers said he did
turmoil. brougllt on by age . butt of his jokes on " You Bet
of
thousands
of
dollars"
from
·relationship
w1th
me
aged
would
str~~e
agam
be~~
use
of
a
letter
left
by
the
killer
carr.
not
know
who was involved.
In his last' y~ats, the razor- Your Life."
younger
Marx
comedian.
his
father,
the
ll'itted Marx suffered · Fenneman.recalled that i!l
wasit P~~~~~~rte~ April 17, the day Valentina
The Post S.i&lt;l the last part
"They make raunchy re- ~~ll
Suriani 18, and her 20-year- of the letter contamed an
1 •. .
increastne me~ttal lapses as a 1969 New York Tunes poll, . produced witnesses- mostly
nurses and others from marks at each other at the
his physical co~dition ooUege freshmen asked to Marx's
household staff _ dinner table and she hollers Sa::r~:~ther development old bdyfriend, Alexander explicit warning that read: .
deteriorated. Even during name who they mo~ admired
agent Scott Meredith Esau, were slain with the .44- "~UCE: Let me ~~t you
who testified she severely at him, yeah," said one literary
some of his last public chose Jesus Christ, Albert miStreated
·
Bulldog revolver used With these words, Ill be
Marx,
person who had tJeE,n a guest sa1d he wa~ o11er.ed 10 hO':lfS caliber
in all "Son of Sam" attacks. back! I'll be back! to he
appea~ances, which took Schweitzer and Groucho
After one session of -at the Marx mansion. "But I of taped mte_rvoews w1th
Pol' h
'd th gun interrpreted (sic) as - Bang.
place only on his "good" Marx, in that order.
David BerkoWitz, the man .
· ~ce a':". sal
e
b nk ( · ) ban
dramatic
testimony,
the
got
the
idea
it
·
w
as
some
kind
days, wi1nesses said he was
"I'm sorry Jesus Christ
charged
with
being
the
"Son
~d
m
the.
ki!li"gs
wa~
found
bang,
~·
a
s1c ,
g
obviousty ·qnaware of where couldn't be here," Marx judge moved to suspend . of gam~ they play, . and of Sam" killer who terrorized , lfl BerkoWitz car outsode h1s - Ugh..
.
Yonkers N.y apartment,
The letter was sogned,
he w,as · or what was cracked
at
award immediately Miss Fleming's Groucho seemed to think 1t
where h~ ..~··apprehended. "Yours in Murder, Mr .
happening.
ceremmies. "He had to be in powers, and later replaced was funny. It pepped him New Yo~k for a year.
her.
up."
His third wile divorced him Philadelphia.'' .
_
The Post said the letter to Monster( the Post ~aid.
Witnesses
.
said
she
Marx's physician for more "c~~~!? th:a~~sea_~~=
·
police read in part ·
Meredith sa1d Fr1day he
in1969-whenshewas38and
For the past seven years,
WASHINGTON (UPI) screamed
obscenities
at
than
20
years,
Dr.
Morley
he was 78, - taking a $1 · he was rarely seen without
~
w~r~s~r%~ea
b.;,a~~
"~
am
de~ply
hurt
by
y~ur
~liS
~ffered
the
Berkowitz
The
. Postal Service said
million settlement.
Miss Fleming at his side. As Marx, slapped him, gave him Kert, said much the same .at · hi h David Berkowitz the calling . me a wemon (s1c) ~terVlew tapes. after bemg .Saturday it will Issue two
unpresct:lbed drugs, danced the hearing, testifying ' MlSS
· He ended his days as the MarX, in his 80s, became frail nude
c ar:.Old postal w~rker ~ter. 1 am not.. But I am a g1ven tr~nscr1pts of the Christmas ~ this year
around him taunting his Fleming was the only one ~4• ye
Jibe , monster. I am the 'Son of conversations.
object of a bitter legal ani! sickly; Miss Fleming
~ one showing George
sexual inability and drove who could stimulate Marx's ac~ of t~e .4H:a r Sam.' I ain a little 'brat.'
Mm:edith said he thinks the Washington kneeling in
struggle between his family helped him manage his him
· to the brink o{ tears, will to live and shoilld be .
father Sam gets drunk tapes are authentic, but prayer at Valley Forge, and
ll!ld his woman companion, affairs and his life.
. threatening to put him in a allowed to remain with him. sl~r=· ~ys · th .ct' ,
·Erin Fleming, which ended
In 1974, a. judge appointed
The salty language was just f mille." on ~ I ~.;::ter;:, he gets mean. He beats his wants to discuss the matter the other a &amp;now-ciusted
With Marx being declared a her Marx's temporary home for old persons if he did
the co111J11on usage of show ~them too. I felt b;ld that famlly. Sometimeshetiesme further W:it~ his lawyer rural mall box jammed with
ward of his own grll!ldMn .
conservator, or guardian, no~a~opt h!"'.
Nurse Jean Funari said business, he said. "He would therewere'soman .wounded. up to ~e back of the hous~ . before dec1ding whe~er to . gifts.
The judge held court at sharing authority over his
I wanted them
dead. I Other tlmes he locks me m make an offer to publish the
The brightly · colored 1~
r.Jars;'s bedside and the feeble fortune, estimated at more Miss Fleming threatened "to be depressed if she left. He
·
•
·
1
t
·
1
the ·
the garage. Sam loves to contents.
.
slap
him
all
the
way
to
.
doesn't
eat
or
drink
if
she's
cent
stamps will go on sale
didn
t
wa?
o
cr1pp
e
m
drink
blood.
Berkowitz'
original
lawyer,
comedian seemed to take than $2 million, with the Bank
Pittsburgh"
to
make
him
not
around."
Oct.
21
along 'with remjnders
I
m
not
the
type
of
'"Go
out
and
kill
Philip
Peltz,
allegedly
tried
because
little notice of the decision. of America, named fin&amp;ncial
take
a
nap,
drugged
him
in
He
warned
that
if
Miss
to
''mail
early.''
·
i).
e
rson
to
ca ~se any~ne
.
ds
f
th
Sam
"
to
sell
to
the
press
tapes
of
a
The story of Marx's last ~onservator.
. Las Vegas so she.could go on Fleming were removed; unnecessary pam My JOb common a er
·
.
.
On
the
Washington
stamp;
to kill "
·
Berkowitz, who was six-hour interview he had
years is inextricably bound
It was ber request this year
a
date
and
ooce
.coofided
to
Marx
might
soon
die.
up with 'Miss Fleming, an to make permanent the
w~
N~w York Post arrested Aug. 10 and charged with Be~kowltz, with the the general is wearing boots
her,
"I
wish
he'd
die".
.
She
was,
and
he
did.
and sword and is shown
attractive
red haired temporary appoilltment that
Satur"ru.y printed ll'hat it said · as "Son of Sam," has told $f~~g1ce said to be up to bowing in pra:yer' with one
Others
said
Miss
Fleming
(Continued
on
pag
..
D-3)
Canadian of 37, · a former . 'lrought on a challenge from
· Peltz has since asked to be knee in the snow 11uring the
.sliowgirl and former aide in
withdrawn from Berkowitz' Continental Army's 1977-78
the New · York City Mayor's
winter.encampment at Valley
defense team.
ciffice.
Meredith said the new Forge. It was painted by J .C.
Much of the time he was in
Leyendeker for a Saturday
of the ca~on nuin, of dust · her hand and ticking off her
I was talkiiog next day to a crowded .. The Shriners must
·and out of hospllala . and By ROBERT CAREY'
Evening Post eover in 1935.
dboa d :knowledge on her fingers. "I guy in our building. I only be partymg someplace else.
needed ipcreasing care at his ' MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP!) 1
The rural ffiaU box, repreknow Coca-Cola, hamburger knew him casually light stuff , "l thought this was supposed
MORE MONEY
Beverly Hills mansion, where What was he all about? He on your shoes, o car beer
senting
an important link to
suitcases
and
empty
r
.
.
El
.
Pr
sl
,
to
get
my
mind
oif
Newark.
to
be
a
big
.
)
Veek,"
said
the
OXFORD, Ohio (UPI)
the live-in nurses who WIIS my age.
cans
on the bare bedroom sandwich, VIS
e ey ...
He collected records as a older woman behjnd the bar, Excelience
the
outside'
world for many
in
higher
became a permanent feature
he
said
·
a
She
paused.
"Will
he
come
d
..: It is the autumn of 1955 ill noor. El -~wiiS
designed by
Americans,
..,,
' "here?"
hobby. I told him my wife had ~ubing out J:oer cigarette an
education can only be
later gave devastating Oklahoma. Some of 118 are
Do!U
Tingle
of
Westport,
No, Elvis was soldiering in several · Elvis Presley lighting another.
.
maintained by increased
testimony against Miss sitting in a cheap saloon·that ~~ was killed in a
Conn.,
who
also
designed
a
Germany. He wouldn't recordings on those old Sun
The younger waitress financial support, Miami
Fleming,
catered ·to student . trade, Marine plane crash five south
needlepoint
Chrlltmas
tree
getup this far. And no, Petra, labels, old:fashloned 45 rpm rested near the cash register, University President Dr .
'lbere were also honors. In . drinking beer . and not
the Postal Service used in
December, . 1972, three thinking about anything ye~s ~:ieen-Fifly-Eight · none of us kioow him. Sorry to jobs. She bOught them in high eyeing the ~ew customers Phillip R. Shriver told the 1973. .
·
·
disappoint you.
school. Hmmm, he said.
over by the p1ano player. She school's faculty Friday in his
· IDO!lths after emerging from strenuous. A TV set glowed was a bad wonter
m
The George Waahington
_
It
was
in
New
York.
1
The
next
time
I
went
down
spoke to th e Ione gent1 eman · annual Slate of the University
a'hospital stay for a stroke,. above the bar and Jimmy
stamp
will be i.l8uetl ftr8l at
Marx's ooe man llhow "All · called back, "Hey, look at =dny~ !~t. ~nechV:~ was plying my trade that bad into the basement where seated ' at the bar, the one address.
Valley
Forge, l'a., and tbe
grey whose face
clty -bumlng year of 1968. The some of our stuff was stored I going
Evening with Groucho" was thla guy."
wiiS making threats and~. our
en
~-d · th m1rro behind
mail
'box
stamp ., Omlha,
.
at ru'g"t
befor.e I had come noticed one of our boxes had r ec~ m e
r
11
a bit.
Alld there be was, that first unit was on a1ert for wee....
botU
uld
best
be
across on the ferry and it bad been broken open, the one the.
. es co ·
DECISION DUE
Nell.
In April, 1974, the. Motion lime, singing about 11&gt;me
KENT,
Ohio
(UPI)
A
Both &amp;tampa will be regular
Picture Academy, which lady way aa'OIIS town who a ~~miln who work~ in looked like Newark w'a s where Judy kept her old described as lined and
federal appeals court is size instead of the ~
records. The only ones tired.
gave the Marx Brothers oo was good to him. "That's the mesa had a daughter · burning. There was ~n eerie,
ky. missing were those of Elvis. I
"Did you go to the funeral," expected to rule Wednesday larger siie for comS
to
the
cast
Yellowish
·Oscars in their heyday, sllly," said the woman named Petra. Petra was 11
asked . I had forgo tte n to on the latest legal move to · memorative stamps In
moved to make up for the pulling drafts, but ahe kept oo yeats old and very sh Y. Crazy. Could that be? Yes, I · never saw the guy again. I she
tak ff
ass
. halt conatruction of a t6 order to reduce tbe coat of
Finally one da:t stie worked found out in the bureau, guess he moved away. I . e o my press P ·
ovenight by pretenllng him a looking. So did we all.
indeed
burning.
never
asked.
Sort
of.
I
had
been
allowed
million gymnasium at the site having several biUlon of them
Newark Was
apec!a1 AcademY AIII'IU'CI for
to stand m
· a roped
off area
"You watch this guy, you up her courage and came What
were
we
·
doing
to
Memphis,
Tennessee
~
of the May t, 1970, Kent State printed, the Poltal ServiCe
I ourselves'.
"the brilliant creativity and just watch him," said
shootings.
·
said.
_ _
"I know a bou
now . The place is not that
(C.on,tinued on page D-8)
unequaled achievements of Jimmy. Jimmy had a sense over·
America/' she said, raising
tbe Marx Brothers.''

T.wo new
stamps ·
p~anned

When

Ill

·Fans 'liked Elvis because he sang 'their songs'

~

11

·I ••

�'

t»-ne

--•

'·

,

-

t.Sanday, ,.,. Zl . lv.

For Best Results Use Sunday Thaes-Sentinel Classifieds

l»-TheSWiday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Aug.

Zl, 19n

•

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

I&lt;OT I C£ TO I I OOE U
PROJ E CT

Dfi

80S5 AQ O

~j"o. .Y. U E L

1976 CHRYSLER CORDOBA

t..

M EMOI&gt;I A ~

Lt llii;,Ul V
~ U ! Id

PfOpoti• h-

ve-a

rec ~

\it'll t

YEAR
END
CLOSE
OUT
4-1977 DODGE WlSO POWER WAGON

be

• ·II

U 00 k OOf'l .

L oc• l T "' e , St'P' ~mQft' J•
tf71 •' Th~ G l l ha C.OutiiJ'

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Stt~~· · G• li •P&lt;l••s.
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for
c.cHu.truction of Or

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• "4

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&amp;os.tar&lt;l .Mem or a J l.rbr ar y

G • ll •pol •s . O" lo ,

'"t'

1n

Forllle"OIIIC.....

u

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1973 GRAN TORINO SQUIRE WGN. 4 DR.'1995
P.S., V-8. auto. traos., lvg . rack, squire back .

1974 FORD F-100 SHORT BED WIDESIDE 12875
6 CYL Auto. trans., fear 1tf!p bumper.

1976 FORD f-150 LW8.......... ............ '3985
V-8. P.S.. 3 speed tri1nl., tutone pal,-. I, 10.000·mites.

6 cyl ., 3 speed , 13.000 miles, One loci11 owner .

1975 FO.RD F-250 LWB .................... .'3595

tr"t:'' ··

NO.T ICE.OF
PUBLiC SALE
Bids w ill be rece ived at the
Aufo, tran1 .• P.S., 301 V 8, H. D. suspension. AM ri1dio.
Offices ot F'ultt an~ Knight.
~~ . m i l« .
•
an Ea&amp;t Second St reet ,
Pomeroy Nat lofiat Sank.
Bv !l ding , Pom ero.,. , Oh io.
until Mon&lt;Jay, the 2·91h ctev of
-Augusl. 1977 , 111 10 o'cl ock
See P•1 Hill, Rocky Huppor O,rrtl Dodi-ill
A.M., tor the reJ I estate of
FortGoodO.•IonaNeworUsedVehlcle
El t z4beth Byer Jackson,
"i
·1
siTuated on the earner or
v~n ev-en ngs ft 7:00except
Grant St rnl . and ·Broadway
Thun$v ond Soturday . Closed Sund1y
• st r eel , In the vHiage af .
992- 1
M iaaleporr. MelQs Counly ,
on lo . The real estate was
appr~ l sed at 12,500,00 , a na
canno1 be sold ror le:ss man
the appraised val ue .
l wlll also offer for sale, at ,
the time and p lace abo~e
AuloSoles
staled . t he fo llowing per5onal
property : 1 GOld Wedd ing
Band , 1 White Gold Wedding
Band , 2 While Gold Diamond
ra fre ~ i ngs, 1 Pearl Ring
76 "'tRANS AM . ~il¥er , block int ., 1973 VW SUPER BEE.TLE , .C new Soli
tires . good cond . ·$1595 . Ca ll in Gold Sett ing, and 1 Go ld
AT .. AC, tap., •xc. cood.
Di1mond
Solita i re R ing
675-6900
~7196 or 367-7150
(damaged :sett inol.
__,.The
Adm i n i strator
19Q' .. LTD WAGON . ShQrp, d ean . 67 '/r l . GMC trvc k w11h colfle reserVes
the r ight to re [ect·
rackt
.
Coll256-1159
·
niM pauenger , air cond ., PS,
any and all b ids, and bids are
PB, rodlo, power lock r~or 75 CHEVY $1l VERADO PICK UP. sub lect to approvlll ol co ur t.
doot . leu than 36 .000 orlgif\ol
PS,PB, Auto . rra nr•. , A!r c:ond •.
'
Bernerd v . Fultz, .
mil••· Coll4A6- ~123
cruiseconlrol , Coll 3t/7·0b42
Admlrli$tralor of '
70 CHEVEROlET Caprice , full 1968 CHEVEL LE SS , 396 ond more·.
Estate ot
. pow•r, o•klng S.c50... Coli
Elizabeth lher Jackson ,
Serious inqu tri•s onl~ . Ca ll
deceesed .
_ 4.o6-72:1A
_4.16-1069 af~r 5pm _____
66 VW VAN, In good COpd . , has 197A MERCURY MONTEGO MX (8 } 17 , 18 , 19, 21 , 23 , 2'5, 28, 7 tc
b.do . Call 2&lt;45·5603
BROUGHAM. bluo . PS ,PB . AC ,
Cru lsa . 351 ~ng ., good
1977 GMC dump nuck, ~27 eng. ,
mileoge. near new lle•l· b•lted
16 ft . dump body. Like n•w ,
rodlol tires , -47 .000 mile• .
250·6633
S21 ~5 . t;rm J:.oll 1 &lt;5· 9256
~-71 DODGE, • door ••dan , Call
1973 FORD MUSTANG . 36.000 PARTS FOR 1'971 Gola"' ie Ford for
~~sale . Phone 9'92-5858.
miles , new tires , AM FM B track
1954 MERCURY . $650 . Coli
ond power boost , $1875. Call 1968 FORD 'Country · Wagon ,
~-05&lt;1
4&lt;16·7A32
.....;.-·
.___,...
outomollc , oit conditioned, no
rull , in nice cond ition . Tak(t 681
to Snowvill~ Store , then Y, mile
On grove l rood :_See Ed 11olley .

.s s

•H8 4!2
t A8
•• o73

his hand with the ace or
hearts , eventually lost one
trump and one heart , but had

his contract sar·ely in hand.

WEST

EAST

.10

• H32

•Q IO ·H

• K
tJ IOH4
.A Ke

t&amp;Z

• QJ8H2

(IOIJ1H 101
A"KQ814

• AB
t K Q73

•e
Neither vu1ner1ble

l

d

Th e game was d !JP IICa e an
SOuth was surprised to lind

that he had almost scored a
t op. Jt seems that most
declarers had forgotten to
play one round oltrumps . This
gave West a chance to ruff the
·seven of diamonds with ~is
sl?ftleton .10 of trumps . . ·
h is. fa I rly simple hand
shows the rule for trump play
Declarer should play as many

Well

Nortla East

South

lA

round~

Pall
Pall

IN.T. Pau
3..
Pau

3t
4A

Pall

Pas•

ford . In this case he could af·
ford to play that one impor·
tant round .

Pan
Openllll lud - Q.A

ll)' Otwald lo Jamea Jacoby

.

.

. South's three-diamond bid is
worUty of note. Even though
North had reaponded one
notrump there might well be a
dlllmond 111m If North held
~bly IQOd diamonds. As.
It Wll, South arrived at the

very aonnal 1111de aame.
He l'llffed. the aecond club,
ltd a dlllmond to dummy 's ace
.... a diamond back lo his
..... 'ftMn he playtd his ace of

u-..!

After thai

tile re1t of the

or trumps as he Can ar~

"

. ..

...

n,.,,,.,.,,

4door. Custom. 6cyl. , auto .• P.S .• tact. air. vinyl roof , very

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You'll Uke Our Quality Way
Of Doing Business "
992-5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Open Ever&gt;ings Tii6 : 0G-Til Sp.m . Sat .

•

IF YOU ARE LOOKING -~
FOR THE RIGHT PRICE~....
YOU ARE LOOKING AT ~
THE RIGHT AD! ! !

BIG

- ·"

(_

. ..

1973 CHEVROLET 8' STYLESIDE........~~~..~:~:.~~~::.~~-~~~:. ~~~:.:~~~~~~-..~:~::~~-~·..... s2395.

1976 ~EVY VAN G20 ........ ...,.. SS695

.-

l'l~Hy

1975 FORD ....... ,. ~~~- ~~~~~-.0~. ~-?~ ..12695

l owner, clean interior, air. P. steering &amp; brake s.
automatic. like new W·W tires .
·

P.5:".- P. Brakes. air, good tires .

1972 FORD LTD ........~~~-~~~~~ ...... 1295
Country Squire, V-8 engine, automatic , PQwer ~teertng,

brakes, door locks, windows &amp; seats , 8 pass .• air, radio .
Like new tires. many more extras.
~·-·-

';1ft';}NtiD1t

~- THATSCRAIIBLEDWORDOAME ·
~ ~ ~~· · byHerwtNnoldandBobi.H

6 FAMil X PORCH SALE, Aug 19
thru 26. Bargains galore. · 1 1/,
A.ve., 10 to 5, good school
miles up Mill Creek. Wotch for
C!lothes, women clothes, sOme
_!igns.
I urn. m ise items ·

UoSCI'arnl&gt;le ~he-. fair ....-_
one letter to each oquare.ID lonn
lour ordlnWY WQfda.

b
10 b.
b
) I I

.

..

~Dr .• small

.

'

.

~

v.e, automatic,

.

v.a, Clean Interior~ automatic, P.s:, radio .

'

Hurry In For AGood DEAL

'••

I

-

"" As I am moving upstate so will sell all my
personal property. Located from state Rt. 7
:. just north of Pomeroy, Ohio, go north on Co.
.. Rd. 26, .07 mile to Co. Rd. 25, turn we.st app.
- 1 mile or from State Rt. 33 take Co. Rd. 25
- past the Meigs High School app. 1 mile:

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
;!Your Ctlevy Deller"
m-2126
Open Evenil!iS

:

"TRACTORS"

l•

•
•

Silver King and Wards 32 In 7 H.P. garden. Allis
Chalmers WO 45 &amp; Allis Chalmers WO. ·
"AUTO&amp; PICKUP" -1967 Dodge Dart &amp; 1953 Dodge
w-283 V-i Chev .
"TRAILER" - Bx35 completely furnished gis heat .
"GUNS" -1897 Marion rifle, 22 lever action, hexagon
barrel; 16 gauge Ivy Johnson, 12 gauge double barrel

.

••
•

•

Ponwerej
Until8p.m.

"HOUSEHOLD"

- 21 in. B&amp;W TV, Warm Morning gas ·heater.- electrit
::apartment stove. refrigerator, metal cabinets, desk,
: stands, rollaway bed, single bed, _dresser, misc. tables,
- misc. chairs,. lamps, dishes, carpet, sweeper, 4.qullts,
= 17 cu. ft. chest deep treezeand ml~c. iten'!S.
"TOOLS &amp; MISC."
Remington chain .saw. drill press, vic~, saws,
: woven &amp; barbed wire, roto tiller, lawn mower, ext .
- ladders. misc. hand tools, fish ing equipm·ent, app. 400
- ft . oak lumber, app. .400 ft. mixed l~mber, electric
: barbecue grill, 45 lb. bow &amp; arrow, 2 wood: burning
-. stoves, iron kettle. 125 yr .,old handmade bed.

•'

I
•'

'

1971 PONTIAC CATALINA . olr ,
P8 . PS, Aodio . Phone AA6 029A

:sATURDAY, AUGUST 27 - 1:00 P.M.

I

M615T»&gt;T.

·x. I XI I Ic-o
I X)"

- · PUBLIC-SALE

=
- no

Falrlone 500 . Cpe .• V-8, automatic. P. S ~

WHAT TliE PHOTO~~
KEPT e£TTIN6 ·FRO\o1
.
HIS FEMAI..E:

-- ~-·- ----

;::

P .S .• P . B. :

1970 FORD ..................:.........·.. $199

Moildtl)

'

•••
•,.

1972 FORD MAVERICK 2 DR., ...S1595:

1· KX ]
Ma~er,.,.:••t

•

·4

Clean body, good !Ires, air,

INVEG

-- ,=---...,---,

..••

1970 FORD·LTD CPE. ;..............11095.

I EWAL
I KJ · _

kHELSIG

,.
•
f

~------------~---i
/ ·

"'
:

:. bush.

•
"WATCH REPAIR EQUIPMENT"
: Peerless lathl, boley tool, cleaning tool, watch parts.
• CASH
POSITIVE 1,0.
•
~R l•ME$ L SMITH
,

• IUII!illt

-

: fiif.'i033

.

:

J, ~rgfhon
701

L.11a1Aftue

742·~48
"Not responsible for accidents or loss of property''

r49-

,

446·2282

ALL TYPES of building moteriols,
block , brick , sewer pipes , windows , lintels , etc. Claude
Winters , Rio Grande , 0 . Phone
_,£~5_:_5121 :o:l::.:
le::r:.S::,.: : - - - - LAYNE'S NEW&amp;. USED FURNITURE
NEW
Lomps $20 &amp; $25 . Metal glider
choir rocker $135 . Pine
bedroom suite . $300. Maple
bedroom suite, $300; MediterrQneon sola and love seat $325:
Ear Am sola &amp; choir, wood trlm
$250 and $300; modern solo,
c:hair, loveseat $275: sofa bed
with matching choir $150 ;·
Reclir,en $1(1()'; ond up: Tables ,
Coffee , oak He xagon . maple or
f)ine $60 each ; magazine rocks ,
ma,ple $2B: Boston Rocker $55 :
maple table , 4 chairs $200;
table ond six choirs , 1 pc .
Dinette, $109: dinette table and
lour chairs $55. Bunk beds com plete $150; mattress and box
springs $60 eo firm : chest of
drawer $40, Queen size mol·
tress &amp; box springs set $130.
GOOD USED
Oining room suite, chino, buffet ,
toble &amp; 6 choirs . 2 maple poster
beds , Floor lops , ·p oster bed ,
TV's , refrigerators, washers,
dryers , ranges , bedroom
suites, beds, chests, dressers,
tables , lamps, choirs, other
items , gas dryer , book case,
call 446·0322 d~y or evening . 3
mi -out Buloville Rd .
REFRIGERATOR ,
RANGES,
Woshers and dryers , GENE
SKAGGS, 1294 Eostern A... e .,
Ph . 446-7398.
FOR THE BEST IN FURNITURE
UPHOLSTERI NG , Free Estimates
Pick up and delivery service.
call Mowrey 's Upholstery , Pt.
Pleasant . W. Va. 675-4154 .
tiGHT WEIGHT CHIMNEY BlOCK ,
Bx:IJ, 8x:8, Gallipolis Block,
-~·-6-~83 ____~------FARM FENCE PQSTS, All SIZE$.
over 6,000 to choose from ,
$1.99 and up , shingles, $14 .95
? per sq. , Anderson windows,
stud!, other bvilding material,
Op_e n daily 9-7, Franks Bargain
Center. Rt . 160' Porter, Ohio .
1975 250 MX CANAM Mbtorcycle,
_ jSOO .. Ph. 36
=
7-~
05~86~·~--~
SIGNS , Hondpointed' professional
quality , business signs, s tore
windows. truck doors , bOnners,
posters, mail box names.
Phone 446-0161, Tim Tope 525
HIGlEY'S NEW &amp; USED BOOK
STORE. 10,000 paperbacks .
Buy-sell. 446·0002
'
HOSPITAl BED. Ph . 446-0756.
~

675-5170
Ferry and get the best deal you will ever find on a new or

EARLY BLUE PlUMS, Hermon
~j~~ker_c·2~S~6~-~~3~~---­
POTTBRY , URNS , PlANTERS ,
CONCRETf. ClAY . MEXICAN .
Higley'S Gift Shop, upper Rt 7,

FT . ~OTOR HOME ; 19J6 COAl , _limestone. _and c~lcium
chassis,looded, Call446-7034
chlonde and C&lt;;JiciUm. bnn~
--- .........----dust control ond spectal m1xmg
ASSORTED TREES &amp; SHURBRY for
salt for forrrlers , Excelsior Salt
fa ll plont!nQ . Coll245-5246
Works , Main Street, Pomeroy,
1974 STARCRAFT motor boat and
Ohio o r phone 992· 3891.
troi ler ..Call367-06:39
CAMPER. $600. ~Also, ~horse·
1965 17' .Thompson wood boat ,
trailer, $450 . Phone (614) 698·
100 HP Mercury outboard , .:3::.
290
=·---~----­
$1000. Coli 446-4726
,SP,RING GARDEN Suppl;e., Cob·
boge , couliflower. broccoli,
and head lettuce plants,
yellow , while , and red onion
sets. Onion plants , Kennebec,
cobbler. Kotohdin , Red Pontiac
ond Red Losada seed potatOes.
Bvik garden seeds, potting soil,
peOt moss, lruit trees and rose
Strickly wholesale to all.
bush e'!i - Midway Mar-ket , ~
Not less than V2 case.
Pom eroy . Ohio. 992·2582.
Bob ~ s Market , ,Y.oson, .W.Va.
(304l?73-57ll.
~0N0MY TRACTOR with all attachments . Like new, asking
$2150 ..Phone (614) 698-3290.
22

!or

cAsE LOT

CAN GOODS .

Miller Produce
&amp;

Garden tenter

1210 Washington Blvd.
Belpre, Ohio

JOHN DEERE Crowler Backhoe
endiooder and dump truck.
992.7:.:':.:7.&lt;.
Y ·'------'~

RISING STAR Kennel Boarding,
BOARDING &amp;AKC PUPPIES
IndoOr-OutdoOr runs , grooming ·
K &amp; P Kerinels. 388-8274 , Rt.
all breeds, dean soni'tory
554 , % mile east of Porter .
facilities oe 361·7112. Cheshire.
BRIARPATCH Kennels . Boarding ,
YARD SALE. Childrens clothes,
Phone (6U) 367-0292 .
Grooming, AKC Gordon set mise. items, everything must
ters, Erlglish Cocker Spaniels ,
go. 6 miles West on 588 from · HOOF H_OllOW . Buy . sell, trode
Ph. 4~~·AI91
4th Ave Mon andTues
or trotn horses.•RUTH REEVES.
·
·
·
trainer. Phone (614) 698-3290.
4 FAMILY YARD SALE, AUg: 22
and 23 . 9am to 5 pm . Second AKC SHETlAND sheep dogs.
road on right post hospital.
(Min.) Collies, 2 females , 7
First ·brick ori right . High choir,
weeks old , Shots ond wormed .
stroller, Avon bottles .- dishes ,
Phone (614) 367 -0292 or 12FT. heovyduty aluminum boat ,
with troiler and trolling motor .
clothing and other misc . items . - '3"6'c
7-:'.7':-11:'2":
. -=-:-:-:-------:-~
Coll245-5804
MEIGS COUNTY Humane Society
AnimOI Carel!ne, 992-7680: or One mole Huskie dog. Ha s hod all
IF YOU have o service to offer.
Ofter 6 p.m., 9'92·5427,
shOts . Coll446-9729
want to bu~ or sell somefJII!ing,.
All
BREED
dog
grooming
.
J.
and
SWEET CORN for conn·
YEllOW
oe looking for _ work . . . or
D. Kennels . Reasonable roles .
ing. 60C a dozen. Coii446·0B67
whotever ". .. you'll gel results
No drugs used. Call for 'a p ·
foster with o Senlinel Want Ad .
Lorge metal office desk with
pointinent , 742-3162 .
. Coll992-l\56 .
chair. Exc. cond. Must sell . Coli
TO GIVE ·awoy · 3 kittens, 3 me,
446 -~867
old,
1 longhoired . Call
~OUR FAMilY Yard Sal8. Mon .
1975 HONDA , 4 cyl. , uc. cond.,
m -20'10. ·
and Tues., 22nd ond ·23rd, 9 un low mileage. Also 1948 1 T.
til 5. lots · Qf nice . items . in·
Chevy truck , good cond .ond
256-~
~
~ ------~--~~
eluding canning jots , lamps and RISING- STAR KENNEL
Farmall tr'octar, runs good. Call
~
Boarding
,
ln·door·Outdoot
Runs.
jeans . First rOod to left after
156-1341
· CANNING TOMATOES , PEPPERS.
Grooming, All Breeds . Clean
cucumbers . Cleland · Forms,
passing W.M.P.O . Ra in cancels.
Sanitary facilities , Chesllhe , Ph 1977 HARLEY ELECTRA GLIDE.
Greenhouse ,
Gerald i ne
1090
miles
,
$200.
worth
r;~f
ex·
Clelan.ud.._
.
--~~--~
YAJD ·SALE . Many back to .$chool
367·0292~----c--::-:c:
lros . $·3,700. or best off.er. Call
.~
clothes , shoes and misc . • CENTENARY WOODS PET
675-5067 after Spm .
TREE RIPENED orchard peache s.
household .items. I V1 mi. past
GROOMING FACillliES. Pro· -White or yellow starting Mon.,
Boeocon on 33 Norlh. Will be
fe.sslanol Services offered , all 16 FT . weaver built jorl boot I yr .
Aug. J. Mason Peach Orchard ,
held Monday. In case of Jail\
breeds, all slyle&amp;. Ph. 4~6 · 0231.
old. $100. Coll446·7260
1974 TERRAMITE Bockhoe, $3000.
canc!lle2..:.......-~---- · AKC SHETLAND SHEEPDOGS. SHOTGUN , 12 guoge pump.,
Phone (614)446·7150 .
deluxe model , perfect concli(Min. collies), Shots and wormtion . Coll446·8675
CANNING PEACHES . Bring · con.
VARe&gt;'6AL'E. Spring Aye . beside
ed. Free H&amp;alth .Guor. Ph.
tainer &amp; winter potatoes.
old Blaettner Garage. Mon .
367·0292.
4CHEVEROlET TRUCK RIMS and
Phone 843·2693.
and Tues .. 9 to 6. Clothes, tent,
AKC SHETLAND SHEEP DOGS, one animal cage lor outdoors, REGISTERED TREEING walker
and misc . artlofes .
·
Minoture Collies , shots ond _ ca11-4-46·9iB7
coon hound pups and 1973 750
worm•d.
Full . health Used gas furnace , 100,000 BTU .,
cc Kowosaki. Ca11992-7548.
guoronteed
.
Ph
.
367·0292
or
YARD SALE. Mon., Tues .. and
$200. Coli 446 -434} ofler 5:30
367·7112.
Wed ., AUg. 22,2J, and 2~ at
FIREWOOD . $20 a pickup
....RID
28·A Railroad St,reet, Mid·
truckload. deliVered. Call
CATIERY· KEN· EllCTRIC RANGE, mako oflor.
dleport from 9 om lo 4 pm . Rain DRAGONWYND
m-6353. or 992· 6109~ or
NEl, AKC Chow Chow dogs .
or shine. lots of nice ilems.
9'12-7130. ·
CFA Siomestt and Himoloyan
C_pll ~.4~~
:=-.
·(Persions).
1
Flame
Point
YEARLING
REGISTEJitED
POlLED
YARD ~LE. Mon . thru Fri., 9 until
PICK YOUR own
conning
Himalayan Kitren , (white fer .
HC:REFORD BULLS, call Don Cox
1, Third hou•e up from
tomatoes and green beons . Brsian). Ph . 446-38-U.
.
~;~t 379·2671
Syracuse Fire House . Bicycle ,
Ing containers . Andrew Cross ,
........,.
-end tables, clothing , and other
letart Falls , Ohio . Call
Ope mole Hutkie dog . Has hod oil , FIREWO OD. $25. a pickup lood .
thiilgs .
247-2852.
shots. Caii4A6-9729
Coli 36 ; &lt;.1639
FAMILY YARD SALE on Georges
1/t mile
Cr~tek
Rd.,
I rom
Buloville . Mon . Tues . ond Wed.

--

- ---- ·

~. - ~ _~

..............-~..

...

__

•

'·•

iilo".

19.75 .400 Kawasaki , lqw mileage.
991-5510 .
NEST RUN eggs , by the dozen or
by the case. Michael Forms: , 1
1/ ,
miles south on Counly Rd . , · Let Pomeroy Landmark
25.
soften &amp; condition your
~- ·
water and Co-op water
JO " ELECT
· RIC Range . white, ex ·
soltener, Model UC·XVI.
cellent condition . AM -FM
Now Only
stereo record player . Coli
985·3892 offer 6 pm . lo• ;n.
formation .
Let u's test your water
----·
lOCUSTS POSTS and Firewood.
Free.
Phone 742-2359 , after 6 pm .

,_A46·0002
~-~-1977 HARLEY DAVIDSON Electro
Glide, FlX in perfect condition .
$3&lt;00. Coli ~46 -7093
NEW 5 PIECE MAPlE FINISH
WOOD Di,NETIE SETS . S149.95,
r~g . $169_. 95 . RICE~ S NEW AND
USED FURNITURE , 854 Second
Ave., 446-9523
HOUSE COAl , limestone
delivered . Coll245·5309
LIKE NEW Wl2ord Refrigerator ,
$150. Also , 1955 Ford Pickup ,
1974 lERRAMITE backhoe. Ph
$200 and Volkswogon Fastback
446·715~0----~---Sedan , $150 . Coll949· 2873.
1~0 TRIUMPH 650, good cond .
Low mileoge, new paint job.
245-5662
FOR SALE
2 PbNYS. $40 eo ; saddle &amp; bridle
New Co · O.P water and
$30, walker -coon dog, mole, 10
softeners, model VC -SVI.
months _ old , Beagle pups 10
Only S279.U
wks old~20ea, Ph .367 - 06~6
.Save SSO.DO on a new ·
Hotpoint Refrigerator .
1973 HARLEY DAVIDSON SPoRT·
1 New 20 cubic ft . Chest
STER XLH, Elec. start, extended
Freezer
front end. custom seat. new
525.00 Dis'count
tires 8. other eKtros. $2000. Ph '
1 Good McCullough Chain
.367·7517 or 446-4165
Saw
US
1 Good Used Poul•n Chain
13 Thii'd litter $OWs ,. Homps . ond
$_11
$50
Yorks ., / l . Ourock boar and
Electric Trim-~11 cuts with
weaned bob'f pigs . Ph .,
nylo.n
$29.95

----

.A,.,U YARD SAlE , 25 He;\kle

1972 MERCURY MONTEGO .~.~~.~1495 •
doo&lt;. air conditioned, P .S .• P . S .. · radlo, wMe finis~. '
. blk. vinyl top, good fires .' Was S1695

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

GRAIN FED FREEZER BEEF , Ph
446-0760

•

.

1

--

$

used c a r - Alsci excellent service department to service you after the sale."

·
··
1
4
197- FORD LTD
- CPE... ........~?."!.. 269s2 seat, V-8 automat ic,
Was 51695

CHARGER. out.
Iron-.. , PS , PB , foe . air , .C5,000
mi~es , good cond .. one owner
Ph 2&lt;5·5182 alter 5 PM

·
·
10,· w-m1rrors,
step

MOUNTAIN STATE CHRYSLER ·PLYMOUTH INC.
Between the Silver and Shad I.e Bridges. "Cross over on the

1973 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN .....s149

DOOOE

rad'

. . . . . ...............................s1395

Phone

Torino .tdr.. dark green finish, black vinyl tr im,&lt;351 v-8
automi1tlc, P. steering &amp; brakes , wheel cover!., radio,
local 1 o~ner car.
·
Was S2895

Smith Buick-Pontiac, Inc.

_JWrdA
~v~·~·------------­

NOW "

1973

p · S ·~

SEE J, S. "RED" DUNCAN. OR MEL MOONEY

SPECIAL BUYS
IN FORD CARS

tnroughour inventory, find oometnlng you want and we will be glad lo 'constder
your offer. Our auction stock Is avalltblt to ba Inspected, driven ond boUIIht
before sale date
August
Now is the time to get your money's
worth, come ·
Auclior

_.9~ tr~•· P~..tcc-!6
::.·.:;2'19
=5---

..,

'

Travel fop, 258 cu. ln. 6 cy! . engine, auto. tran s., Hke
new fires , radio, 2 wl'1eel drive .

and family cars.
.
We hOve 111 types of quality pre-owned cars. Call us or come over 1nd look

MAVERICK 6 cyl. 12.000· mllos.
S.·T. would con•lder oi&lt;Nr car

auto

1973 . DODGE CLUB CAB .............
~ ~:~:· ~~~:
- ~~..r.:.~~

1974 SCOUT 11 ......................... 2895

We must reduce our used car inventory, 25 c1rs will"be ·sokl at our Auction
Block. 111 these cars are wagons, luxury car.s, Konomy cars, medium slie Qrs · ·

n

V-8'

1

MASON COUNTY MOTOR CO. ·

-

Adventure.
b
_

.

197l DODGE DlOO .......... ~~~~.:~: ....................................................................· 2395

miles and clea n as new.

SATURDAy I AUGUST 27th

-

·

TRUCKS

Fiberglass raised roof, bunks . screen . 12 V, ele~tric ~
r~r l g., furnace; Por'ta Pottll , stoYe d inette, 350 V.a
eng., automatic, p.s .. P . B., a ir cond ., AM-FM stereo
' radio and_tape, W·w tires. red and white . Only 10.000

CAR
AUCTION

speed . Super nice.

1972 FORD.LTD 4 DOOR ................................ ~ ................·.....;.......................$1195

1976 Chevy G20 Van Conversion 17995 ·

}"· '..,.

tac . air, road .

1971 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE:
..........~-~~:.~:.:: ............. :........ :............................ s795.
"
1972 HORNET 2 DOOR ....................~ ...........................................................:.. s995

autom~tit power steering ""d
Whe*!IS, chrome equi pment, inter ior
paneled and insulated , carpeted , ready to add your
own camping equipment ,
·

'•"

a·uto . •. P.S •• P.

1972 CHEVROLET IMPAI.A,..·............·............................................ ~-....................sggs

Local owl"!er, 350 , V-8,

,; l A.• L!

T ••

4 Door .

·---

, .... 2174

_dr.

Tops .

~

brikfl:,

NEWGMC
Truck Headquarters
197:4 ~' T. GMCPicl.up
197&lt; ~ T. GMC Pickup
1973 'h Ch•v. Pickup
197.C 'It T. GMC PU
1972 lh T Chev . pickup
1- 1973 1/1 T. Che~ . PU
197~ ~ T. Chev. PU
'1973 EICom ino with lop
--------~
_::::
_...:::;- 1970 Oldo Della 88
r
1974 1/t T. FordPU
1973 lhree·fourth T. Ford PU
New 10 Bolt G.M.
197~ lhree-fourth Chev , PU
Po~l -trac unit for 1968 '· 197~ lhree·fourth T. CMC PU
1975 1/1 T. GMC PU
and up Chevelle .
1971 GMC 9500 TrCI(tor
$100.00
1976 '1. T. Ford 4 W.O.
Ph . 446 · 0231
. SOMMERS GMC
TRUCKS , INC .
133 Pine St.
197&lt;1 'It Ton white Chevy Pickup.
446·2532
Bvck•t S.ata , good condition.
&lt;-!6-7150
1965 THUNDERBIRD , p .s .. p .b, air'
l9"ibCHEVY&lt; whl , dr., sho&lt;-1 bod .
elec. s.at , 390 engine, many
__ pickup . $3750. Coli &lt;-!6·7093
_ more extras. Ph 367 -77!/J

We keep gettinr questions
about whe.t her or not we open
four-card major suits .
The answer is that we do,
but only when all other
opening' are really un ·
satisfactory. Thus, no one !974 MAVERICK . In good condl·
could get us to open anything ...) l~n . Call«~
but one spade with :
1975 \/EGA HAlCHB--A"'c"K,.. _ ,;low
AAKQJ&lt;r5 4 !2 tK 64A84 .
mil.a!•· prlc.cf ro ••II . Call
-33:.~ 10_ _ -- ---~
(For 1 copy of JACOBY
1972
PLYMOUTH SCAMP . 2 dr ,
MODERN, llll!d $1 to: "Win II
hardtop, 6 eyl , outa, rodkll tlrea
Bridge,- c/o thil
light blut~~ w1th black wlnyl top.
P.O. Box 48f, Rfd/O City Stotlon,
$1&lt;50.
«6·1639
New Yorio , /&lt;!. Y. tOO till

1974 DODGE DART SPORT 2 DR ........:..... ~.~~:~:.~.~~~~-..~~~~-~·~.:~~~:.-...................s2295
1974 VOLKSWAGE" BEEnE ......;.................~.~~~-~~: ..~:~~:.....................:........... s2295
1974 PLYMOUTH VALIANT ... ~~~-~:~.'-~~:.~.~~~~.~.~~.~: .................:...........................:s2595
1973 AMC.AMX 2 DR Ht ......... ~:~:-.~~-1-~·:.. ~::::.~.~~:~: ................... : ................. : .... s2295
2
H.
v.a..
B.,
1974 CHRYSLER NEWPORT. ...-:-.~:~!::.~·-~~!.~~~!~ ...............................................
s2495
•
2
V-8, 4
1972 CHEVROLET CQ RVETTE. ........................................................................
s4995

one of these courteous salesmen : Pete
Burris, Marvin Keebauqh or George Harris .

____. ;.;";,; .;,;,.;.______.;Po;;.:;,m:;,:;e:;r,:o:.ly~,.;O~..1

TEST DRIVE IT TODAY

Passenger.

USED CAR SPECIALS

See

1

play was easy. He ruffed his
seven or diamonds with dummy 's last trump , returned to

Passenger.

ALL FULLY EQUIPPED

--

4·1peed Irani ., ut ilitr body , 390 ·
engine . $1 ,200 . .Cal 992-5101 .
F~ton · Thomps~~r Soles.
ONE TON 1%5 Oodge truck . cob
ond $1oke . 7&lt;2-2914.
o,-d"'to-p~.-C~
oll
1969 -MAUBiJ i"'dr. h.c.
m -2124.
·
-- 1977 FORD Four-Whee'! Drive.
P.S.. P. B., ~- speed, threeqvorter . Still under warranty.
Coil 9&lt;9 ·2673 .
1972 CHEVROLET Pl~ku-p-~ruck.
New t l r~&amp;s , run• . good. Coli
9'12-6231 .
1972 FORD GRAN Tor ;n 0 . $850.
Good cpnd ll;on. C~ 7.£_71&lt;6 .
"1969 CHEVROlET CAPRICE . P.S..
P.-8 .. A .c. Low m1·1ea'g•. $500 .
Call985 -3923.

3400

NOW 1

1-ELDORADO COUPE

1971 FORD thr~•· quarter pickup ,

Play trump till it hurts
NOR Til

E . Ma
. in Stre."•,

•---~----.;;;";,;";i..,;,

Here is a local one owner driven only 15,665 miles . Arctic white paint
with a matching Landau vinyl top and chrome styled wheels
enhance its appearance. A touch of elegance is added with genuine
leather bucket seats, tilt wheel, air conditioning. c(ui~e control and
an AM radio with integr;~l stereo tape player .

Sedons
wagons. We're deal in' on these
popular mileage makers .

. •

The all new beauty from Chrysler .

3-1977 COUPE DEVILL~S

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

500

FORD

-- -

De"Viie ........ ~ .......... '5500

3-1f#77 SEDAN DEVILLE$

You owe it 1o yourself to check with us before you buy any car. New
or Used . We can save you money. We are the Friendly Dealer . Call
or see one of_these Friendly Salesmen, Ceward Calvert, J. 0. Story
or Bill Nelson .
.

three -quorler ton
pickup truck. Automotlc, P.S.,
P.B.. 28,000 mile1. Good condl·
lion . $3. •00. Coii985-.C278.

-

-

NOW IN STOCK

1973 BUICK ELECTRA 4 DR
1972 FORD FlOO ................. '2695
'3295
1971 PONTIAC CATAliNA 4 DR. *1295 1972 PONTIAC -cATALINA
2 DR '2395
1970.CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO
2 OR ....................... '1695 1972 FORD GRAN TORINO
1969 'BUICK LESABRE WILOCAL. '795
1969 PONTIAC LEMANS ........... '695
1969 CHEVROLET IMP~ SPORt .....MAKE AN OFFER A .

As Low As

Priced To Sell

F11U MWer. air, stereo.

1972 BUICK SKYLARK 2 DR ....'1995

....&amp;W.'..

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

'5200

NOW

Custom

----

BRIDGE

moo

73 Cadlac Coupe DeV'IIIe w.. moo

'1395

- - ·--- -

1975

Was

Vinyl roof, ltafhe.r seats. lull power , factory i1 1r . eruts.e
mntrol, T&amp; T wheel. full stereo, 1 owner .

1974 CHEVROLET LAGUNA 2 DR '
'3195
1974 BUICK LESA.BRE 2 DR HT
'3395
1974 BUICK APOU.O 2 DR HT
'2395
1974 BUICK ELECTRA 4 DR HT
'4395
1973 MAZDA RX2 2 DR

DAN THOMPSON FORD

-

74 Sedan DeVJe

Cabo'iolel Roof.

1976 FORD f·350 CARGO VAN ............ s4395

-----------~M~;d:d:l:e:po~r~I.~0~.-.1

m lies.

74 Cadilae Cpe.

Aug . ) A. 21. 2'8 , Sep.t . •

v.e, P.S., aufo.
aux. tahk. H . D~ shocks, aux.
lprtn·g s, tutone pa int . One local 'owner-.

-

Full power~ factory • ir. leatt)t!t seats~ T&amp; T wheel ,

•4095

M inn ie W Mackf!'nl ie ,
Clerk -Treasurer
Ga tlfa Coun'fy Distr ict
Li bra·rv Board of
Trustees

1976 !lOIJGE 0.100 LWB................. : '3875

Fully equipped.

Full power. b ig discount here .

stereo. ll.Q(IO

1975 OLDS ctlllASS 4 DR SEDAN

&lt;w ill b e ref unaeCI prov io in9
he ao c um en1 s ~re reryr-n f'd
sh 1po •ng ch jllrQ'e"5 prepa 1d , '"
oood cond"it lon w •l in ten f IOJ
dey s after th t re c e , p r of b id
r nese docum ents arll! on hie
tor t'.l:amu, a flo n al The Ga l!ia ·
CDunr.,. O is rr tct Lf brar y ;
Co rum b o ~ Dodge Reports
l OSO Freewa y Or i ve North ,
Su ite 709 ,· COIUm DUS. 0n1C!
43229 and Tl'le S uit der.s Ex ·
c ha!"lot of Coh,l m bus, 1175
Dubli,n R o ~d , Colu m bu l , Onio
4.31 ts
AU B1dder:r. mus t be in
conform 11ft c e w ith
Stare
EQ OI I Emg loymeot Oo
port.unft y Requ tremen h "nd
inclUd e EEO Form s ln the ir
b td proposa ls .
A cl!'rr ifled cnec k. -Pa-yab le"
to ·~ G ., III a Co unty Distr ict
. L •br.ar'f "
or a pro,:ter i Y
se_c ured A l A F orm of B1d
Bone , in an.y Brnount equa l to
s percent or 'the tot a l b la shall
bt subm iTted w ith tM b id .
The Owner reserves the r ight
to accep1 or re fe-ct any or all
parrl ot an',' bias .
The successful b idder w ill
bl!' requ fred to furn ish a
~ali~ l a(lory
performance
bond tor one -hunor eo percer~t
(100 percen t} of the Cont rac t
pt ic;e No b ids rn.llly b!l! w it,
c:Jrawn lor ait leut l rxty ( 60 l
diiY! after the ~chedu ! ed
c lo$ing lim e tor re&lt;:e 1pt ol
b ldS .

1973 OLDS CUTlASS 2 DR................. '2895

3-1977 CHRYSLER CORDOBAS
·' 5895
1~1977 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER ·4 DR HT
3-1977 CHRYSLER .NEWPORT-4 DOORS
2-1977 PLYMOUTH GRAN FURY BROUGHAM 4 DR SEDANS
8 1977 ·PLYMOUTH VOLAR£. 'DODGE ASPEN
I!&lt;
2-1977 DODGE DIPLOMATS 1-4 DR; 1-2 DR.
2-1977 DODGE SPORTSMAN STATION WAGONS 1- 5
1-8

Sed. DeVJe wos "900 Now· '&amp;500

15 Caft: Coupe DeV'allewos w•~ NOI'/ 16400

.e3220. 1614 ) .e57 ·.t 1Al . Oeoos U
!&gt;h a ll bt! UO 00 per u t , wh ich

\/-8, cru ise. control. fd ef. I Lf , v jnyl top, AM-FM. 2 in
&gt;lock.

V-8,

-·

1975 BUICK I ESlBRE 4 DR
'4095

the C l ~tk Tr~~ ~ r&amp;t
S•oantt&lt; oropaw ls will be
re&lt;; t w ed fo r Generi l C-on
1trucfi o n .
P l um b i ng,
Ne cn • n .f c a l
OiV' A C J,
E let trl c; a t a nd Mill work.
Ttl e ln,t r uci !On 10 S t CSd~tl .
DraWl n ; • . S Ot! Ci fiC if iOn S ,
P t oponl Farm t • nd' otf'l e-r
Con tra ct Oo c um e-nls m ay be
o bta 1neo a t t rle offJc e of
R: ooer t
L
Gran t
&amp;
A. \ .Jacio&amp; tes, Ar ch i 1~ 1!o , ISIS
eer ~ ~ Road , Cotumb u, , Oh io

C

Light blue, blue vinyl roof. de-elegance inl.trlor, f!JII
pollll'tf' and • lr, ~FM stereo with tApe. T&amp; T steer ing ·

'4295

• nd
publicly r•Md a l lh-e Oft !Ct" oi'

a ir. v 1ny l lop, Shar p.

1&amp; CaS

1975 CHEVY CAMARO 2 DR

•mm rcli a tef)l fn-tru.u u

V~ l .

4 wheel drive pickups . big sovings on these.

1

cc: rd a nc• w ·1n.
dr•w lno\,
\ pe-e t , &lt;- a fi On1 a nct otn el'
c.ont r•c' Gocum enll t:Jr:eDueo
b!" Rob ert L
C. r• nt a.
Ji.UOC I. tn, , A! Ch ite&lt;.fl
Pro pou ls w il j Dt oDeneel

1976 EUTE. .......... ~ ............. ... .. ... . '4995

DISCOUNT SALE

I&amp;DOQ,,_.._

m &amp;t H' J• l a n d pertor m ,ng o-t

w. :

(I)

.

.

Good Refrigerator .S200

PomeroY Landmark

9a -Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
lllill Phone 99'2 · 2181

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

•279.95

· Pomeroy Landmark
9.., ~Jack W. Carsey. Mgr.
Ail, Phone 992-2181

H &amp; N day old or started leghorn
pul lets . Both floor or cage
grow n ovoiloble . PoUltry HouS·
ing and Automation. Modern
Poultry , 399 W . Moin ,_Pomeroy.
~~ne 992-~2~
1 b4
c::_·~~--­
YAMAHA. HARlEY-DAVIDSON
Con -AM Motorcycles. Complete
soles and fontastic service!
Hours M-T, i 9 -6; W· F, 9·?: Sat .
9-5. "The Motorcycle People of
Southeastern Ohio" Athens
Sport Cycles, 'Inc. 20 W. Stimson
- Avenue·, Athens. Ohio. Phone
(614 ) 591 -1692 .
BIG HORN Western . Saddle, 14"
s"eof, exce'llenl ~ondition . P.r ked to sell. Call Koren Griffith,
992-S782 .

--"'·..::·~ ._:..._~--:--

Harrisoo's
Service Center

SEARS KENMORE Dryer ond
Speedqueen outo'matic washer .
Excellent
condition,
Reoson·(lbly
priced .
Call
992·5832 . after 5 pm·. _ __
275 GALLON Fuel Oil tonk.
985 ·3588 .
LIVESTOCK . FEEDER pigs . 40-50
pounds. $30 per head. Coli
985·3588
,"". ,-'-~- --~-­
RAM. Also , ear corn.
Coli (614)698-&lt;499 . · - - - - : NEW WAlL-TYPE lavorotory with
new faucets , $15. Old-type cost
iron kitchen wo!l sink, $3.
Cistern pump, very good condl·
lion, with pipe . $15 . Coil
992-2969 .

rARGHEE

~47 SECOND AVE.
PiiCine - "'-9233

SWIMMING ,

o~:II
o,'
. . :•- .,..:\·"~~ '-::/ocbJ~
~~·"a..~
r-:
l..o

c0

·•

•

'

~

""o

"

o ...

•

,.

-AOJMlNOM
-STEEL
. -SUPPLIES
Bud lfarrioon
Evenlnas 446-3750
John Fullar
Day 446·3434
Evenings 446--\327

,:·

1 .1

�•

D-I-~ Sunday1'unes-&amp;!nt111el. Swlday, Aug. 21,1!177

-

For ~est Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
~

up and delivery Oovif Voewm

Cl+oner , mil• up Gem-get
Cteek Rd Ph «6 ooq_.

PA.SQUAU:

Heard

Eleuncbl

t(~ar,

care
and

LOVING

of
born

MEMORY

Gordon Wyorl Owen~
februory 10 1956 who
away Avgv .. • 18 1971
A
hght
1'&gt;
lrom

po~ed

our

hou~ehold gonf"

A vo1ce we love~~ &amp;filled

A place

t&amp;

vacant in our

home

Wh,ch never con be ftlled
Some mar thmk you ore
lorgonen
Though on earth yOu ore no
more
Bul

tn

men'lory

(OU

ore

w1thus
As you olwoys we(e b~lore
Sadly m1ned by Mom Dod
ond Arlen Ray and Bonnte
Oov1d T J and John
IN lOVINb memory of our

grandson and 11ephew Gor
don Owens.
More

ond

more

we m1ss you
Fr1en.ds
may

eO&lt;h doy
H11nk

wound rs healed
But they ftllle know

the
the

'!iorrow

l1es wtlhm
concealed

our

hearts

Sodl~ mttsed by Grandma
Bennett and Aunt Debb1e

Tl't~rt!'f

An Force

GARAGE DOORS

256-6472 DAY OR NIGHT .
-·

The Almallae

A

G&lt;..al. way of Ute
For Sundoy, A... 21. ltT7

ASTIO•&amp;UPH

quarter.
The morning 3tars are
Venus , Mars, Jupiter and

Bernice Be de Osol Saturn.
The

evening

star

u

OIPOLMA AND Degree programs
tn business coli 446 4373
GoiHpaht 8us•ness College. St
__!~~~-02'::0.
~
72::.:8:.:__ _
SPECIAl
From Aug 17 to 28 ONLY
Aug. 21, 18T7
At Tawney Stud1os
Keep your eyes open th is comPnOts from Shdes
Ing year for ways you can
3 l or 99C
beaut tty ot change your place of
Reg &amp;X each
res10ence It can be done In a
way that wltl cost you no more
than you re presently spendmg
5AIL •THE
SEVEN SEAS
LEO (Jul' 23·Aug . Hi A\'O•d
Vls 1t Hong Kong. Spa 1n, the
applytng pres~ure In order to brCarrfbean We'll pay you to
Ing others to 1erms today Rather
do 1t m the U S Navy If
world ' s
first
atorruc
than speec;hng up th•ngs you'll
you Cllre l1 to 31, call or see
only cause greater delay r:ind submarine.
US Navy
121 Columbul Rd , Ath e ns,
out more abou t yourself by senIn 1968, the Sovtet Unioo
OH
dtng for your copy Of Astra~ and other Warsaw Pact
pH · su 35 66 Collect
Grapt1 Lener Ma11 50 cents for
Invaded
each and a long self-addressed , f o r c e s
Cuchoslovaltia
!D smash a
s tamped envelope to AstroG.aph P 0 Sqx 489 Radio CIJy drive to free the nation from
Stat1on NY 10019 Be sure 10 Moscow's cootrol
TO WHOM tf may conurn spectty your btrtt1 s1gn
In 1971, three officers and
Whoever Ptcked up the yellow
tom cot w1th lhe wh1te collar by VIRGO (A . .. 23-a.pt. 221 You four coov!cts were killed m
Veteren s Memoncl Hosp 1to l have a tende qcy today not to an escape attempt at San
plea se return to owner Lmdo trust your IOSiirJcts but to do Quentin JriSOn in California.
Patterson 131 Lo~.trel Street thmgs to please others ThiS will
only serve to rnh1bfl your own
Pomeroy Oh Coli 992 2986
~
A thought for the day :
natural abihtles
TO GIVE away o h1ve of
President
Woodrow Wilson
~oneybe_!S Call m 564 ..
LIBRA (Sopl. :za-oct. 23) Lend
saJd,
"S&lt;metlmes
people call
nothing to on e who alraady
me
an
idealist.
Well,
that IS
borrowed th ings you prize and
1a1led to ret urn ttlem You'll only the way I know I am an
add 10 th is person's bulging In· Amencan America Is the
ventory
ooly Idealistic country in the
SCORPIO (Ocl. 2•·NOY.22) wcrld "
Don t le t van ity or pride
ov ershadow your nob ler
quai 1t• es today There 1 no
shame tn se cond place It you
really have done your best

-

THURSDAY,
' AUGUST 25, 1977
5:30P.M.

The personal pro perly of the late Pearl Ko.bl entz Will
~sold at his hom e app 7 m1les north of Pomeroy, Otu o
on State Rt 7 or app 112' mile south of Chester:, Ohto
" HOUSEHOLD "
Electnc stove refngerator. 2 pc .. hvmg room su1te,
chatrS, couch stands, dtnette table w 4 chairs, wood
rocker, 5 pc bedroom sv1te, 4 wood chairs, 2 metal
cabmets, dressers, roll away bed, cot, lamps p1cture &amp;
frames. desk wood porch !"Ocker, wall m1rror. J gas
heaters, dtshes. Maytag wrmger washer, n nse t ubs
and stand
" ANTIQUE OR COLLE CTOR ITEMS"
Gate leg table, drop leaf table and 4 chatrs . lanterns.
m1sc ollllght.s, depression glass dishes, 21ron keHies ,
coffee grinder m1sc. flat 1rons, 2 tru nks, pocket
watches. pocket ~ntves, small &amp; large stone 1ars, 2
corn JObbers, steel traps and many misc. items
" MISC "
s H p w hee l hors~. garden tractor . mower . d tsk ,
plow Fran klm stove. Seth Thomas m antel clock and
cathedral gong ma ntel clock, round oa~ wood cooktng
stove, ]Jke nf'W pa rade saddle and breast strap
LUNCH
RICHARO KOBL E NTZ
CASH
D Sm1th
J Carnahan
949·2033
949 2708
" Not res pon.stble for acctden1s or loss of property.' '

SALE
THURSDAY, AUGUST 25-STARTING

AT 10:30 A.M.
Located from R1o Gran de take Rt . 325 south
-sale Will be across the road from South estern H1gh School.

I
I

Thts sale cons1sts of new furn1fure that was
purchased '" West Va from a warehouse
thai had been flooded IW:Jst of the furn iture
1ust needs a little clean mg Brand name
furn1 ture such as Basset, Brouh1ll. and
many others.
25 Beds. 1S Chest of Drawers. 20 Wardrobes,
Ni ght stilnds, M1rros m decorative design ,
D1n1n g roo m sets, Hutches, Cha1rs,
numerous other lfems With a little elbow
grease you can save a lot of money and have
new fu rndure.
ANTIQUES
Ice Box, Wash Bowl and Pitcher , Butter
IW:Jid w1th dtsh and bowl. Butter Paddles.
Ch urn, Camel Back Trunk Brass l1ght.
Stone Jugs. se tera l other small1lems. Some
ro ugh walnut lum ber. a l1ttle Fi!rm
Mach inery. ol d Ford side mount mower.
Belt dnven hammer mill, a lot of nuts ilnd
bolts, scra p iron and junk, too
Terms : Ca sh
Lunch Served

MRS. HELEN DAILY, OWNER
TOMMY JOE STEWART, AUCTIONEER

,

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. REAGAN'S CANAL
21) Stay away from companlona
LOS ANGELES ( UP! )
w11h domineering personaiitlee
Ronald Reagan, once a firm
1oday They may back you Into a
corner You re 1n no mood to opponent of any change in the
status of the Panama Canal,
tolerate that
SOld Thursday he will make
CAPRICORN (Dec. H..Jon. 111
up
h1s m1nd about the
If yOu try tp 1n1ecl a serious note
tnto a ttgOt galhering today you II currently proposed treaty
meet With dire res ults Vour after discussmg lt with the
compa n1ons wont to lerate It
U.S
negotiators,
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Feb. 181 Ambassadors Sol LinoWIIZ
Trv not to let mdecr~nve com - and Ellsworth Bunker.
pan.ons throw e monkey wrench
Other Republican leaders
1nto your plans today Proceed
lobbied
by the While House,
on your own 1f they cant g ive you
mcludmg former PreSident
a qu1ck ·Yes'' or 'No '
Gerald F.:ord, have been
PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20)
lining up m support of the
Normall y you re the flrat to
pratse tho$~aklng a dif- treaty
LinoWitz called his off1ce
fiCult task Tod y,
at you have
to say may be 1
discouraging and arranged a meeting, m

ve10

New York next Thursday.

AlliES (Morell 21· Aprll111 To. Reagan said. "! will have no
day you'd be unwise to gamble further comment until after
even on yo urself It would be that lime. "
sheer folly to stake anyt'fllng of
lmpor"'ance on the pertormance
of anyone else
TAURUS (Ap&lt;ll 20·MIJ 20) In
you• dealtngo today make 1u111
you accu•ately define lhe word
" conc ess ion
To ga i n
someth1ng of value, you should
give up somethmg comparable

..----:-.::=:::---:.- -,

GEMINI (Moy 21 -JuM 201 You'll
probably be fu rtt'ler ahead today
by buymg the ftnlshed product
rathot than attempt to do It
yourself The "slmpte" direction!
often aren't
CANCER (.Nne 21-Ju(J 22) This
1s a day when you tl realize the
greates t pleasure from the most
Inexpensive diversions HighpriCed past1mes JUSt aren't for
you

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN

we ull anyth1n9 tor
anybody at our Auction
Bern or In vuor l'lome For
1nformat1on and ptckup
$erv 1ce call 256 1967
Sate Every Saturday
Ntghtat7 p .m

SWAIN

AUCTION SERVICE
Kenneth Swa1n , Auct
Corner Th1rd r. Ohve

PUBLIC SALE
AUGUST 27, 1977

10:00 A.M.

Located on Charles Street in downtown
Crown City, Ohio.
The following will be offered to settle the
estate of the late Josephone Dillon:
Marble lop table, old bedroom suite, old
chest, oak straight chair, bureau, round
table w·4 cha1rs, utility tray, rocker chillr,
rectangular table, fuel oil stove, fuel oil
tank, floor lamp, 2 beds, linen chest, pilrt of
an old secretary, indoor dryer , lamps,
dresser, comb case, 3 dimensionill dressing
table, kitchen utencils, 2 refrigerators, old
ice box, wedgewood gas stove that burns
wood on one side, old cupboard, old trunk,
portable washer, kitchen storilge Cilbinet,
small
kitchen
tilble,
and
other
miscellaneous Items.
TERMS: CASH
HAROLD DILLON, ADMINISTRATOR

Gallipolis. Ohio- Phone 446-9760 .
Auctioneer: Lee Johnson
Crown City, Ohio-256-6740

Not responsible for accidents or loss of
property.
I

=

Ulllled PreuiDiei"'UUtloaa,
Today is Swday, Aug. 21,
the 233rd day of 1977 with 132
!D follow.
The moon is 1t Its ,first

Mercury
Th011e bam oo this dale are
under the sign of Leo..
Brtta1n 's Princess
Margaret was ba'n Aug. 21,
1930.
On this day in hlSiory :
In 1940, Leon Trotsky, a
lX'lllll! builder of Soviet com·
numism, was a!sessmated m
Mexico City where he had
lived m exile f&lt;l' three years .
In 1951, the Uruted States
&lt;rdered oonstrucUon of the

-

Giveaway

CAll WALT BORDERS DOOR SERVICE

ESTATE SALE

t

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sent• el Classifieds
TH£ FAMII. Y of the lato -

COMMERCIAL AND RESIDENTIAL

Get '"

Sgt. EI•IM FerriS
USAF RKruiting Offtce
221 N Columbut Rd
Ath•ns. OH4570 1
Ph 614.591.4591

- -HIIVEN CERAMICS OilY OR

B AND 0 TROPICAL FISH 823 .,h
Ave Galltpohs Hrs , 12 8 Sun
lhru Thurs llob Green
GET YOUR EARS Pterced'";l,ee
-w~,,-;-h
the purchase of $1 0 pc11r of
BOr-nJngto Towneys Jew•l•~

trt~nH•g

touch wnh 1he A11
Fofce slor-; today ,
Sfrve vour:w!lf w~ule
you ser'lle yout covnary

Center..tl! e Vtlfoge
Closed
Monday &amp; lues.day Evenmg~
by ap'poH,tr'nent 2..5 9..t79
NIGHT Clones greenware and
suppl1es custorn ftnng Ph
368 8811

mediC CII/d~nlll

jOb JeCUHty, ld

mOte 10 tell

THURMAN HOUS~ ont1ques Fur
ntt~tre
stnpp1ng rep01r and
refmtshed, Covnt~ Rd 8 oH 35

IN

them?

vancemf)nf opportun•tv

DEAD Stock removed No charge
'all '245 55cl..t

T ~fE

abo\.11

•ndude 30 dayt
oJ paid 1tiiCitiOI'1 ew,v

BfGlN )'our spllng cleomng by
~Ovtng your corpah d..aned by
bes.t method known litemove
ol 1 rhe dtn Make youc corp4tt
look n•w ogom
Fo( fr"
fl11tTIOI. COlt 379 2681

i

-

-·-

Beautify your home with beautiful Wayne
doors. Sales, service. and installation
guaranteed. Enjoy the convenience and
protection with an automatic door opener.
Free est1mates. Let an experienced door
man do the job for you .

T~v

-t.of6 7716-doy or r11gi'tf

)

BORDE~S

Benefits
in the
Air Force ...

SWE£PE1t' and i•w'ng moch1ne
r~tr potts Gl'ld ~ouppl•-. P1ck

I

..

ANV PERSON who kas onyth1ng to
gtve ftwoy ond does not offer Of'
ottempt to offer any other thmg
tor -sole moy p lace on ad tn th1s
corumn lfiere w11l b.- no
chorge ~·he~od~Mtl,=-...,.1 YR OLD DOG All t.hoh lov4tt
6 -- ch1fdren Colll6.,7-'n'-'-"6"

WANTED

PINE POSTS
Delivered to our mtll on
Booley
Run
Rd
off
Highway 124 between
Pomeroy &amp; Rutland. Cut 611
long, squ~r• ends which
measures no less th• n 8"

and no more thin 10'h:"
DYtslde 1M bark

POMEROY FOREST

PRODUCTS
992 -5965

WANTED
PINE POSTS
Wanted
to
buy
delivered to our mill
on Baily Run Rd . off
Rl . 124 between
Pomeroy &amp; Rutland.
Cut 6 ft . long w·
square ends which
measure no less than
Bin. and no more than
!Oih" outs1de
the•
bark.
Call Pomeroy Forrest
Products for prices
and
delivery
instructions.
992-5965

OPERATING ROOM
Immediate openi119s in surgery tor staff
RN's, LPN's and experienced scrub
technicians in a new JCAH Sub-Regional
Medical Center in South Central Ohio. 7
fully equipped modern operati119 rooms.
General, thoracic and vascul•r s~rgery.
Aggre55ive atmosphere, opportumty for
growth, specialized training pr09ram •nd
in-service education in surgery, excellent
salary and fringe benefits. For interview
appointment contact : Director of Nurses,
Medical Center Hospital, SOK 708,
Chillicothe, o., 45601, area code 614-774- 3311,
~ical Center Hos;pit;ll.

~~E~m~==~

HI(;H SCHOOL GRIIDUII TES,
employment a~ta tl obl e as 00 YOU HAVE PIIRTY PLAN EX·
PERIENCE? FRIENDlY TOY PIIR
stenographers, ty'PJSb, clerks
TIES HilS OPENINGS FOR
etc wtth Federal Bureau of In·
MANIIGERS
DEMON
vesttgatton
( FBI )
1n
STRATORS SELL GUARIINTEED
Woshmgton
0 C
stortmg
TOYS
GIFTS NO SERVICE
solorles 16572 to $8316, pt"oCHARGE
PHONE
CIIR
mottonol opportumh..,
In
NECESSIIRY u.J.L COlLECT TO
teres ted? Call35-4· 5645 or wrtte
CIIROL Pll Y (518) 41W 8395
P0
Box 1343 Portsmout",
Oh1o
WAITJIESS &amp; CARHOP app ly tn
person Crow"s Steak House
b~tenc.d Mlp neect.d an
Pomeroy, Oh1o
dOiry torm, Coukj u.. husband
ond wtfe team Good hou11ng EXPERIENCED MEAT cutter R•la tl
furn11hed plus other benefttl
grocery e)(poedence helpful
Immed iate open.ng
Send
Apply Racme Food Market
resume to Dairy, Bo11C .. 56
Roc1ne.
Chesapeake Ohto,.5619
Nutrition Atde to work lor Golha
County Ex tens1on ServiCe
beg1nnang September 1 19n
Must have access to o CQr ond
be able- to asa11t homemakers
in their ~., w1th nulnhon
educoiiOf'l tn Southern half of
GGIIIo CGunty Trotnmg w1ll be
prov1ded Contact the Galha
County b:tenston 0H1ce. 3rd
floor , Court House, Goll1pohs.
-446 4612 An Equal Opportunity
Employer
Lady to lr.,e m and help w11h
housework ond core of elderly
couple. Call245·5510

OIIIRY FARM HIIND Good pay
and ben•f1ts Ccll256·6816
HOUSE MANAGERS Live In pos1·
lion lor a group hom• for 8
developmenlal dlsoblvd odultt
Please send reply lo Penny
Dolby 379 W Brood St . Colum
bus Ohlo-43215
BABYSIITER fo• 2 school oge
ch1ldren In my home Coli
....6... 1CW otter 5 JO pm

I'IST/IU(110N
/Jnwrt •mf&gt;/mfd by Ja'1{t' lnd
mgCI/Hlfxmfrs hod ammal a1 'frOI{
ranm~ tJ/ oboffl

$18,300.
w/974 'asqowledbyth•US fXpt
of Lobor. Burl'au o/ Ulbor Jfatu ,
!1C'S bf,Jiftm No. 187.5

SUNDAY, AUGUST 21, 1977
6 00- ThtS Is the Life 10
6 3()-Jerry Falwell • · Talking Hands B. American
Problems and Challenges 10. Newsmaker ' 77 13
7 oo-chrostopher Closeup 3, Tennessee Tuxedo 6&lt;
Thlnktng in Black 8. T'eehouse Club 10; Glen
Molle1te 13 7 3()-This Is The Lofe 3; Your Heallh 4,
Show My People 6: Jerry Falwell B. Porky Pig 10,
Amaz ing Grace Bible Class 13
7 55-Black Cameo •
B 00-Mormon Choir 3, Day of Discovery 4. Grace
Calhedral 6, Church Service 10. Dr E.J Daniels
Presenls Happiness Is 13; Sesame Street 20
B 31)-'{)ral Roberls 3, Jtmmy Swaggart 4; Celebration
of Pratse 6. Day of Discovery 8. James Robison
Presen1s 10. Re• Humnbord 13; Open Bible 15
9 00-Gospel Singing Jubilee 3, Robert Schuller 4,
Oral Roberts 10, Rex Humbard 6, Rev Leonard
Repass a, Better Wa y
15, Misler Rogers 20
9 3D-Whao Does the Bible Plainly Say? B; II ts Written
10. Jim Frank li n 13. This Is The Life 15, Sesame
Streel 20
10 oo-Chrlst Is The Answer 3. Church Service 4,
Communique 6; Christian Center 8, Movie " The
Buccaneer" IO , J immy Swaggart 13, Gospel
Slngtng Jubilee 15
10 3D-B ig Blue Marble 3, Juntor Almost Anytlng Goes
6.1 3, Yours for lhe Asking 4&lt; Bob Jones University
B. Zoom 20
11 00-Volce of Huntington Christian Academy 3,
Doclorson Call4; Hot Fudge 6, Re• Humbard B, 15,
Rev Henry Mahan 13, Eleclrlc Company 20
11 3()-TV Chapel 3, Animals, Animals, Animals
6, Focus On Columbus 4, Bluerldge Quartet 13;
Once Upon a Classic 20.

12 oo-At Issue 3. News Conference,. 4; Issues and
Answers 6. Face lhe Nation 8, Evangelistic
Ou1reach 13, lnsighllS, Even ing afPops20
12:3D-Meel The Press 3,4,15, Dlrecllons 6, Testimony
, T ime B. 1976 College All American Football Team
10, Willard Wtlcox 13
I OO-FBI3, American Life Slyle 4, America's Black
Forum 6, NFL Football 8, 110; Issues and Answers
13, Music Hall America 15; Nova 20. Evenl119 at
Pops 33
I 30-To Be Announced ... Aware 6, Medlx 13
1 45-Little Rascals
2 00-Baseball Warm-Up • · Movie " If Tomorrow

Comes" 6, Tennis 20, Hogan's Heroes 13; To Be
Announced 15; Kanawha County School Board 33
2 l!f-Baseball 3.4
2. JD-Movie "'Anylh ing Can Happen" 13.
3 00-Pro Soccer Play-off 15
3 3G-Movle "A Taste of Evil" 6
4 : 00-Golf B,IO, Documenlary Showcase 33.
4 : JD-Movle "It's Only Money" 13.
4. 4D-Bewllched 3
4 ' 45-Scoreboard •
5 00-Star Trek 3; Jamboree 4; Magnificat Mary's
Song of Liberation 15, Mod Squad 6; In Per.
formance at Wolf Trap 33
6 DO-N§ws 3,4, Andy Griffith 6; Andy Williams I ;
Americana 33. Hogan' s Heroes 10, Young Ideas 13;
Wally's Workshop 15, Sesame Street 20.
6 3D-NBC News 3,4, 15, News 6. JO Minutes B; $25,000
Pyramid 10; Newsmaker '77 13; Wall Street Week
33
7 00-World Of Disney 3,4,15; Hardy Boys
13, Destination America 6; 60 Minutes B, 10,
Crockelt's VIctory Garden 20, Onedln Line 33.
7 3()-Anllques 20
B 00-McMIIIM 3,4, 15 ; Movie "Lawrence of Arabia"
6, 13, Rhoda B, 10, Evening at Pops 20,33
8 ·3()-Starland Vocal Band B,IO
9 00-Movle "The Suoer CODs" B, 10; Poldark 20.33.
9 30-Movle " Code Nam• Diamond Head" 3,•• 15.
IO·OO-PiccadlllyCircvs 33&lt; Thealer In Anierlca 20
11 00-News 3,4,B,I0,15; Movie "lawrence of Arabia"
6, 13
II 1D-Monly Python' s Flying Circus 33.
II !$-CBS News 8, 10; PMA Pulse 15.
11 30-Movle "Mo50Uito Sauadron" 3.15; Movlo "I'd
Rather Be Rich"' 4, Movie "And Then There Wero
None" B, Hawaii Flve.o 10
i I 4D-Janakl 33
12 ID-News 13
12 2S-ABC · News 6.
12 4Q-- FBI 6, PtJ Club 13

Rathbum with to fhonk oil
relotlvea,
friends ,
and
netvhbon for their ••pres4ton 1
of sympathy al
lnne of
ct.oth of our belovtH:I father
For tM lovely flow..-1, cords
and glhs ol food In the hoUH
to the l~erond Cecil Wise fOf'
lhe beauty of the urvice ond to
tM Walker Fun•ral Home fOf'
th~r kindness durin&amp; ovr kours
of sorrow, Richacd , Raymond
__R~~,·c•~nd
~R~on~o~ld~·---------

m.

LOST

~.male

REPION£ Coon Dog

with pups . Loti snn In

East Letart oreo . Call (6l.t)

-~~
47~·~
22~7~
9~~2~
~7~·3=-=7~9~
4 ·~~-­

Rt
33, len miln noHH of Pome~oy .
lOrgelots wllh concrete pat101
t.idewotks runnen and ofi
'""'parkin • Phone 992 7.. 79
FURNiSHED. APT Adui'cts-on
~ly-."'no
'-'
""''

Phone 992 3874

Mid

diOpo•~';::'·:.:::::-:--:-:-:--.

iWOIEOROOM lraller, odulls ~
ly Coli 992 3324
TO~~EN~T~~A~••~.~,~.Id~o~Ap
--ts-.--1
bedroom starting ot $100 .,.,mo 2 bedroorna starting at
$138 per mo Equal Hou•lng
0PP&lt;&gt;•tunity. Y,ll 992 6098
TRAILER SPACE ovolloble S.pt 1
ocrots from Pomeroy El•men
tary School Call 992 30U or

LOST. Whho Male col . Roword
Coli 446-1595

lWO BEDROOM all electnc apart·
ment; clo•• to Pomeroy. Call
992·2298 or 992 7666.

WANT AD WAY

Business Services

~UNTRY Mobii;H;,e Pork

'ij'AILER SPACE on143, throe
quarters ot a mile from Rt 7
Coli (614) 367 7743

EVERYBODY

ICes.! Estate for Sale

3 AND • RM furn ished and un
furn lshlld apt1 Phon• 9925434

LOST SECOND Armor.- 0 1vlskm
Trolnin' Monuol book of Ft
Hood, exat H01 a.ntlmental
valu• M4y have been lost at
Eootern High School. 949-20&lt;2

Shops the

Rn2

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

SWAIN
Auttmltic

Tr~-ilsioll

s.mc,

PARTS • lABOR
GUARANTEED
·==:-:-.,..---- REASONABLE
992-3090
RATES Ph
........ 0

THREE BEDROOM
furnished Calf

home,

NOF~11NASSRun ;

un·

' p,.....,,OHio 45769
Mellen Clbmets • RoofmJ • Concrete
Pat10s Stdewalks New ConstruCtiOn '
Remodeling
Ph 992 7119 or 6!16-1005
£stlnut1S lpphtd te fOb
6-271 mo pd.

Coosider a Professional Uir&lt;er

Orivmga "BIGRIG"WeareaPri ,

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, fo• II
vate Trammg School offenng a
county Plonn1ng ond Develop
PARTTnneor
FULL Ttme Tram
ment Dtstrict In southern Oh10
Respon11ble for dtrect10n of o tni; Program lf you are working. •
stotf of 15 to plan , coord1ncte, Don\ Quit Your job anend our
Weekend Trammg program or at
and odm1ni1ter EOA: ARC
tend
our 3 We&lt;k fULL Time Ros '
HUO, etc programs dealing
w1tk economic and community 1dent TraJmng
de¥e1opmMII Posttktn requirn Revco Tmctur-TnulhTrrmmw lrte
mono~t obillty 1n hondl
mg fed.,.al grants
Alt.O,
PARKERSBURG
kno¥¥1edge of local and state
1-304-422-4080
go'llernmenl opera ti ons
Prevtaus proleutonal ex~rience trw=ludtng progrusw.admtntstrohve responslbtltftas
requmed Mosler s d.gr" m
ptonntng or relotad field
preferred Salary $18 000 to CORRECTIONAL FACILITY hoo
$25 000 , dependtng on exs'verol o~lngs for r,l.tececl
perience Send rHume to Clark
nurns Current R N lscenM
Alexander, Chairman Ohio
requ.red Good fringe benefits ;
Vall•y R.glonol Development
Contoc1 personnel oH1c•. P.O ,
Commlss1on, Clty Building,
Box 45699 Lucasville , Ohio Ph :
Chllll&lt;oth&lt;t Ohto 45601 lip
6 U 259 SS.U lin equal op..
plication deodltne September
portuniJy employer
23. 1m "Equal Opportunity
IABYSITTER , ltveln Call.w6-7671 ,
Employer"

SLEEPING ltoom1, w..Piy ratn .
_ _f'ork Centred Hotel .
LOW w-.kly and monthly rol" at
L!!&gt;br Hotel, ..u. 1743.

rtGKT housekeeping

room, Park

SLEEPING rooms for rent. Galli a
_!:l,l!t.l
OVER~ ·OOO~~~Ib-:T~
o~
ba-c_c_
o ~bo
--,o~
lo-,
l.ase, arrent. Ph U6-QI66

lOW. AVAilA' F

FOR RENT OR LEASE, pvor 4,000
lbt tobacco , base Robert
_ Q....,, Ph 446-0168

crt'• lllat bave cra~ted many Df
Ultose linl! qualll)' ••nbll!;s ~od c~r­
vorts in l.hiii 1n:11 Most of lhese pruaucu quWy for low intetut Mme

PH. 446-1599

.,D~ment

3 BEOR MOBILE HOME, 1• x 70
$175 mo, pluo depooll Rl 1 12 x !i2 SHULTZ Mob1le Home 2
lldwell, oYOitoble lost of
miles from Merc•rville Call
Auguot 61•·772·2566
-~·.6----:--:----:----:::--:-­
082
MOBILE HOME &amp;pace, wot•r and TREAT rugs nghl, they' ll be o
dehght tf cleaned with Blue
sewer furn11hed . Pkone
Lustre. Rent electriC t.kampooer
446-0294
FOR RE:NcT::..- -4:-..,
- , - . -nd7':'bo
- .,.,h- -ot _I: 1 Central Supply
Mudsock Coll4&lt;16· 1211
TWO BEDROOM HOUSE , 133Sioto
St Coli U6-02.S.. e¥eningt
FURNISHED efflcloncy $90
utillti" poid
Smgl• Call
-~· .UI6 after 7pm

2 Bdr M9blle Home at Quail
~ reek Coii2.. S 50:21

SMAll EFFICIENCY APT for one
-.1!.,-son only. Coll .. 46-0338

~~.~~~----------

lolu at your local

baik or SIL CIU tft..70:U lor a frtt
"dmltt or 1top by 1180 E Mam St ,

PDmtrDy,O

FURNITURE ,

992·2206 01992-7630

Syr-Oh~

"Thtllri!illlflln
Nol Thtl mi1JIIIs

G0oo

10 DO-Sanford and Son 3,4, 15; Dinah! 6, Here'• Lucy
B; Mike Douglas 10, 13; Once Upon a Classlc33
10 3()-Hollywoocl Squares 3s,4,15, Price Is Right B
11.00-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15; Happy Days 4~.13:
Bandstand 10; French Chef 33.
II 3D-If'sAnybody'sGuess3,4.15, Family Feud 6,13;
Love of Life 8, 10, Making Things Grow 33
II 5$-CBS News 8, AI The Fair '77 10
12 00-News 3,4,6,10; Shoot for the Stars 15, Divorce
Court B. Midday 13; Abdlcaflon 33
12 : 3Q-...Chfco and the Man 3,15; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Bob
Braun 4. Soarch tor Tomorrow 8,10.
1 oo-Go119 Show 3; All My Children 6,13. News B;
You119 and the Restless 10; Not For Women Only
15; Theater In America 33.
I 30-Days of our lives 3,4, 15, As the World Turns 8 10
2·00-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13
' ·
2:3()-Doctors 3,4,15; One Life lo Live 6,13; Guldl"9
Light 8,10.
3 00-Another World 3,4,15; All In The Family B 10 ·
Lowell Thomas Remembers 20; Romagnoli's T~bl~
33.
3 · 1s-General Hospllal 6.13
3 3()-Mafch Game 8, 10; How to Buy A Home 33.
4 ·00-Mister Cartoon 3; State Fair Gong Show 4; Gong
Show 15; Now Mickey Mouse Club 6. Gilligan's
Island B: Sesame Street 20,33, Movie "The DNdly
Hunt" 10; Dinah! 13.
4 30-My Thr"" Sons 3; Star Trek 4; Emergency Dnol
6&lt; Andy Griffith B; E•pohlo '77 15
5:00-Big Valley 3; Brady Bunch 8; Mister. Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33, Emergency One! 13; Mission ·
•
I mposslble 15.
5: 3()-News 6, Family Affair B, Eloctrlc Company
20.33.
6 00-News 3,4,1, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20· ·
Austin City Limits 33.
'
6 JO....-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News B.IO; VagotableSoup 20.
7·00-Truth or Consequences 3; Expohio '77 4; Liars
• Club 6: Buck OWens B; To TeiiThe Truth 13; News
10; My Three Sons 15; Americana 20 · Montage 33
7 30-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; 1~ Surch Of 4 :
Muppof Show 6; Gong Show I; MacNeli· Lthr..:
Report20,33; Prlcols Rlghf!O; CondidCom&lt;~raJ3 ·
Naahvlilo on tho Road 15.
'
B:OO-Liffle HouHonfhe Pralrlo 3; Pilot 6,13; Sole of
Champions 4,15; Jeltersons B,IO; Tennis 20· Once
Upon a Classic 3J
'
8 30-~aHbell 6,13; Szysznyk B,IO; Jean Shoplierd's
America 33.
9:00-Movie "Shamusu 3,4, 15; Movie "Attack on
Terror" 8,10, Shades of Gr..,. 33
10 00-Austln City Limits 33.
·
II 00 News 3,4,,,8,10,13,15; Fowlty Towers 20; Inner
Tennis 33.
11 :3D-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Sfroets of
Francisco
;; 13; Kolek 8: Movto "Cry Torror" 10; ABC News

223-Jmo

GUTTER
SERVICE

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum Siding.

Storm Windows &amp; Insulation.

Continuous one ptete 1utters. We h1n1
i1, 01 do H JOIIIsell Spoc•l JII&lt;OS ID

buHdm

Phone 949-2814

Call Professionals
Alocal contract01

RACINE CARPET
SHOP

Two
BOR
l ratler
Netghborhood
Rd
675 4886

Pllone 949-2801
01949·2860
Free Estimates
No Sundly C.lls Please

6 lb-l mo

G- ! J.t

met

PlUMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.
3110 Mon Sl
Pom...,, Ohio
Pom"" 192-i2&amp;2
0199Z-i26J

17L if1With le.,.er
18 Three toed s lo!fl
19 Aetect
20 Apportto ns
27 EmQioy
29 Wtnvl1ke
31 Cui
36 Part olltreplace
37 Young aalmon

992 5292
0.111 mo

CASH po1d for oil makes ond
models of mob1le homes
Phone areo code 614-423 9531

89 Representalt'.'es

90South Ame ncan
lndtan
91 Ma caw
92 Headgear lpt J
93 Unasp,raled
95 Sulhx followe r
of I pit
96 R1ver ban K
97 Long lor
39KIII
9? Separate
40 Exptres
101 Tall structures
.t 1 Let tan
42 Tachle organ of 105 Declared
1OS Repa1r
an an tmat
107 Death rattle
43Warbled
11 1 Norse god
44 Retec.t
112 Peruse
46 For example
t13 Falsehoods
(abbr)
115 Penod ol 11me
48 Roman road
I 16 Me rga nser
49 Part ol eye
118 Metaltastener
50 Chapeaus
119 Food ftsn
5 1 Sharpen
12tFatty
62 AI UlSI p!ace
53 SptrJted Mrses 123 Symbol tor S1lver
126 RepiJ tses
55 Tilled
56 Protect1ng too th 126 Ctly m Swllle'
land
57 A'IOI(]
127 More '.'IPtd
58 Marttmque
129 More secure
volcano
130 P1ece of dmner
6 1 lledtC lore god
ware
63 CaiJdll appen
13 1 Possesses
dage
132 Ots lurbances
64 Sem1 prec1ous ) 34 Beverage
stone
136 Place n line
68Strollers
t37 Ceremon•es
10 CUte led
139 R1.,.er duck
71 Vttal organ lpt ' 140 W1ld plum
73 F1g1.1res ol
144 Number
speech
145 SK1II
148 School ol
711 Pedal dig Is
wl'llles
75 Speed contests 14 7 TOtrld
77 Sedate
148 Weaken
78 Ptol
149 Prepos1IIOO
80 Mental 1mage
1 51 Heorew mon th
81 Mans n1cKname 153 Babylontan
83 Man s nlcMame
de tty
e.t lmtta tor
t 65 A state labbr )
87 Recocnm1t
!57 Behold'

TIMBER , Pomeroy
ducts Top pnce
scw1 1mber Colt
Kent Ha11by 1 I 446

an
Co li

2 bdr mabtle home furn 10 x
55 adults only
ref Coif
367 ·1 1.:,
67'-c~--:"--::----:-2bd;-;,.vote lopt , 4 mtfes out no
_..E~ no children Cotl446 3918

CARTER

109 Htlh Sl
Pomeroy

3·14-1 mo

MOBILE HOMES LOTS
GREEN TERRACE MOBILE COM
MUNITY
located on Rt 141 ctty water c1ty t
schools 5 mtn from Golf1polis
and ~oizer Hospt to l
LIKE NEW M H . except1onally
good neighborhood at edge of
lawn overlooktng the nver
(ontad the W1semon Real
Estote Ageocy

Bissell Siding Co.

9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Bob lloefltth

::U
:.,Sc::ED
:::-c::
R:::
EG::A:::IG::E:::RA--;-T:::O:=R
AND FREEZER UPRIGHT OR
CHEST , Ph 4&lt;16 0322

I 32 Thmgs m taw
133 Htndu guitar
1 Boy 1ltend1n!s 7t Norse goddess 135 Artned canlhct
6 Lance
72 Wort nless l. . y. I 38 Ever~one
139 Bind
11 ~eavy stillS
1ng
16 Muscular con•
74 StnQIRg YOtce
I 40 T1tle of respect
141 Cronv lco!toQ t
Ira chon
76 Tear
21 Lessen
71 Antlered amm1! 1 42 Chtnese dll
22 Girls name
78 Frenc h pnest
lance manure
143 Nole ol scale
23 Corl ltsl•nd
79 Pubhcat1on
144 Bacter1o1og s1l
24 Worthless n,at - 82 Edtble seed
w1re
ter Is lang)
84 Wtnged
t 4!1 8y wa) of
25 Cratty
BS Poems
147Pfts
26 Swollen part
86 Genu sol ma28 Smallwalleys
pies
149 Sultable
150 Babylon.an hero
30 Sa11or s call
88 Transaction
32 GIJ tdo s low note 891 hree-oanded 152 Dour mouse
154GOIUD
33 Symbol lor
arm1d1i10 •
156 Bv oneself
lellurtiJm
90 Slee.,.eless
158 Insurgent
34 TI'IIJS
cloaks
159 Satiates
92 Worsted y1rm
35 Sp1rush plura l
160 Btshop s head
art1c1e
94 Acl1'.'etv
dress
36 Cook stowiy
98 Aeg ,on
161 Small openmgs
37 Prefix before
99 Strokes
38 Btller vetch
100 Encountered
40 Erued tprmt
102 Htnder
DOWN
tng)
103 81$ MOP rt&lt;:
112 Distant
104 Etruop1an l1lle
43 Pour tortn.
105 Weakens
1Adhes1Ye subs44 La rge truck&amp;
106 Landed estate
tance
45 Hawauan INrea tl'l 108 Latr
2 Mare competent
111We1rder
t09Aslate (abbr)
3 Merry
49 Burma natt 11 es 1t 0 Nega ttve prel1x
II Lalm COn jUAC
50 Pronoun
1 11 Paddles
l1on
51 Ptatlorml
112 Re'.' IVI I
5 DepOSit
54 LI'.'ISttfondness 11-4 P1gpe1'1
6 Ftgure ol speech
on
116 We-1gnl ol Ina a
7 Go
56 TemPOrary
1 t 7 Th1el
B WtlhOIJI end
shelter
1 19 OIS Calch
ipoet l
56Peltyruler
120 Lambspen
9 Art1c le
59 Old pronou n
name
10 Crtmson
60 Mua1c as wn t· 122 Sailors
11 Per!atntng to tl'le
ten
124 Succor
cheek
62 HtUtng
1 25 H1ghway
1 2 The sweelsop
611 Prepos•hon
126 Pfopagates
1 3 Race ot lettuce
65 Brother a! Od1n 128 Mature
1-4 Spantsh art tc!e
129 Twnl
66 Note of SCIIe
15 Wr11Jng lablets
67 Urge on
13t Re tamed
16 Pack away

Ph. 992·39!3

HO NEY CAMPER deluxe model,
sleeps sl)(, w1th bath L1ke new
Reasonable Coli 256 6-472

ll.M lo430PM

SUNDAY. AUGUST 21 1977
69 Ha rYASIS
10 Resort a

At

GllTTE~WNIIIGS

LARRY LAVENDER

Anniverunes
Special Occ~~ons

SUNDAy· CROSSWORD PUZZLER
ACROSS

~gust ':8 :c2=:1':::--::~-----;-7"

Phone Mike Yoona

Portraits

6 00-Summer Semester 10
6 3Q-...Columbus Today 4, News 6, Summer Semoster
8, Medix 10.
6 4S-Mornll19 Report 3
6 .1()-{&gt;oocl Morning, West Virgnla 13
6 55-Good Morning, Trl Slate 13
7 00-Today 3,4,15, Good Morning America 6,13, CBS
News B, Chuck While Reports 8, Chuck While
Reports 10
7 . OS-Porky Pig 10.
1 3D-Wildlife in Crisis 10
B· OO;--Howdy Doody 6, Captain Kangaroo B, 10, Sesame
&gt;!reef 33
B 3D-Big Volley 6
9 oo-cross.Wfls 3; Phil Donahue •· 15, 13. Andy
Griffith B; Schoolles 10; Once Upon a Classic 33
9 3()-A M 3, Edge of Night 6; Concentration B, Porky
Pig 10
9 55-At The Fair '77 10

CIIMP LUNLEY ST IIRCRAFT
SALES closed for Vocation

!t&gt;tlll•P-. 0.

Ca1ptl • UpllObtery

Passports

•46-0322

WON'T LAST LONG at th is tow pr1ce. • BR, unfinished
2 R basement on 2.4 acres, 5 mile~ out, c1ty schools.

FAIR MONTH SPECIAL on enll re
s tock See them at CODNER'S
CAMPER S on Rambow ndge
From Rl7 take Me1gs 28 or 32
to Basham Open evenings
roo Owne, , Robert Codner
Long Bottom, Ohio .

Young's
Carpeting

Weddmp

Ph

""'

STARCRAFT lOti'! ann1versory sale
on mm1 motors trotlers and
folddowns Tra'llelstar 25 ft
$.4400 00 20 ft mmt motor
$10 8S0100 We sell toervtce end
qual1ty Comp Conley Starcraft
Soles Rt 62 north of Pt .Plea

SuperHJr

AWMINUM
SIOING-SOffiTT

Faresl Pro
for stondmg
992 5965 or
8570

CURRENCY tokens old
pocket wctcMes and chou1s
sJ!'IIer and gold We need 1964
and older sdver coms Buy sell
or trade Coli Roger Wamsley
742 2331
()Li)F'lJRNJTURE Ice bo~Ces bra ss
bed s
etc
complete
households Wnle M 0 Mtller
Rl A Pomeroy 01-uo or cell
992·7760
CASH I t Junk cars Fry s Tru&lt;:k 8
Auto Rutland Phone 7A2 2081
or742 9575 Closed Mondays
COINS

NO ITEM TOO La rge or too small
W1ll buy I p1ecti or complele
household New , used or ont1
ques Morhn s Furnitur e 20 N.
2nd SJ
Mtddleport Phone
9926370

SALES AIID SERVICE
1·28-1 mo

BRADFORD Aucltoneer, Com
plete Serv1ce Phone 949 2.. 67
or 949 2000 ~acme Ohfo Crt It
B(cdford
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers toasters , 1rons all
smoll apphonces La wn mower
next to State H1ghway Garage
on Route 1 Phone (6 14) 985
3825
REMODELING Plumbmg heo11ng
and all types of general repotr
Work guaranteed 20 years ex
perte nce Phone 992 2409
SEWING MACHINE Repctrs ser
v1ce oil makes 992 2264 Tl'le
Fa bri c Shop
PQmeray
Autho rited S1nger Sales and
Serv1 ce We sharpen Sci~ - EXCAVATING dozer,.. lo&amp;"der ond
backhoe work dump trucks
and lo boys for htre Will haul
flll d1rt , to soil , limestone and
grovel Call Bob or Roger Jef.
fers
day phone 992·7089,
ntght phone 992 3525 or 9925232
'=~---::---:--:-:-.,-

EXCAVATING doze• bocktll&gt;e
LATE MOOEL Cheovy % ton 4
and d•tcher Charles R Hot
wheel dnve p1ckup
Co li
field '"'18oc.k. ~ Hoe ServiCe
9'12·5335
Rutland Oh1o Phone 7&lt;12 2008
WE WANT TO BUY lAND I 6 WILl do roofmg , construction
acres toned mulflfomdy wtfh
plumb1ng and heatmg No JOb
woter ond sewer John W1nkel
too Iorge or too small Phone
(614)8681988
_ 742·,c
234
:.CC.8' - . . . , - - - - - CARPENTER , floormg , cetUng,
poneltng Phone 992 2759
MOBILE Home Repotr 1 Elec
plumbmg and heotmg Phone
9'12 5858

LL /U / 8

~

·:--:::cc-::--:-:-:=::-:--:::- '

HOWER¥- l;t.NO • MARTIN Ex·
covC1tJng "~"'.o'&lt;l~ -.syslems
dozer 1 bocknoe dump truck
l1mes tone , grovel
blacktop
pav1ng Rt 143 Phone I (61-4)
698 7331

PUBLIC AUCTION
The City of Huntmgton,
West VIrginia will hold a
public iiUctlan Saturday,
A11gnt 27, 1977, 10.00 a.m
at the C•tv. Garage, 2nd
Avenue and 5th Street for
tke following Items
1972
P l ymouth - 4 door
Sedan
S N PK 41K2FI55021 ~
1973 Oodge- 4 door Sedan
S N OK 41K3F223344
1973 Dodge- ,. door Sedan
S N OK 41K3F223351
1973 Dodge - 4 door Sedan
S N OK 41K3F223350
1913 Oodge- 4 door Sedan
S N OK •1K3F223346
1973 Oadge- 4 door Sedan
S N DK 41K3F223349
1973 Dodge- .. Door Sedan
S N OK 41KJF223345
1972 Dodge- 4 door Sedan
S N Ol 41P2F202627
1972 Dodge-4 door Sedan
SN DL 41 P2F202604
1972 Dodge - .. door Sedan
S N OL 41P2F202616
1966 Dodge Van
S N 1962081275
1969 Fo rd - 2-door Hardtop
S N 9AJOL24 .. 309
1971 Cushman
S N 299722
1970 Ford Falrlan.e- .. door
S N OA 28L204720
1964 Har ley oav 1dson
&amp;\Qjorcycle
S· N \~F L6097
1964 ttarrlty-Davtdson
Motorcycle
S N ""FLII91
196'.5 Harley Davidson
Motorcycle
S· N 65FL7073
1969 GMC Truck
S N EM 50AC063800
1964 C 60 Chev. Dump
S·N .. C63iJNl~O..l '

1966 c 60 Chev Dump
S N HC 63368143240
1967 C 10 Chev . PU Truck
S N CS 1478126586
1958 Adams Grader ( New
Detro it 01esel 1Engine)
S N 55CT9887
Inspect/an of 1tems mav
be made at the City Garage
between the hours of 8 00
a m and -4 00 p m on the
following days August 23.
2.4. 25 and 26 Terms of
so.les~hall be cash In hand
or\ly ,
The City of Huntington,
West Vlrg1nla reserves the
right to refuse any and all
b idS
~ITY OF HUNTINGTON
~ By. Winnlfred Snow
Purchasing Agent

----"'~~,----,--

I' I•

HARRISON S T V Repo1r Servtce
Calls 276 S~comore St Mid·
dleporl Phone 992 2522
~

I"'

I'

TV SERVICE Eleclronlc TV Cltn1c
756 2nd Ave , Golhpolts
446 3960 Service coli $5 95 plus
portS ond labor Serv1ce coils
wtthm 24 Hrs
Tn State UphoiSiery Shop
1163 Second Avenue, Goll1polts
..46 7833 , Evemngs ,.,.6 183J
LOANS - busmess form
Mr
estole, consohdaflon
_j_
ko
_I~_
Y _21_6 __
845_ 6666
__::,_:._____

""''

YOUR OPPORTUNITY
We will train y"ou to become a Drancn
manager. Rapid advancement; outstand!ng
salary opportunities and employee benef1ts.
Must be at least high school graduate and
have a car. Relocation may be necessary
now or in the future. Phone Mr. Snodgrass
at telephone no. 992·2111.

s.n

CAPITAL FINANCIAL SERVICE

12:oc.-Janakl 33.
12·&lt;40-Toma ,,13; Movie "You'll. Never • - .....
_Again" 1.
...,.
1:oc.-T_row 3,4.
1:~y Hartman 10.
1:50-News 13.

300 West Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
I"'

•

An Equal Opportunity Employer

2511&gt; Locust St.
Gallipolis, Ohio

446-3636

son.~t=::::::-::::::~;-:::-'':":::;;:::

WINDOWS

D. Bumgardner

388·8776

s.

Making
Phone 9U-:Zff6
Pomeroy, 0
8 7- r mo

THE PHOTO PLACE

JUNK auto and scrap metal Ph
USED

p

Slum Extraction

7-20-1 mo

Pool Sales
GOOD

3 bdr . 2 both house, $250 a
monlk o.p leose ond ref re
qu•red 35 West orea. Call

MONDAY, AUGUST 22,1977
5 45-Farm Report 13
5·50-PTL Club 13.

M'MtlliENlS

u

liiSitlltiOn Samces

and eai'JI9I:\I! If y_uu WID I a

qwalitY. prochw:l wbkh wm Jnl"rtase
Qu~ value uf your bomt', or mobJ.It'
hctml o• Uaal wall eDiul.ttee IL!i bettuty fer yean 10 come, Uus will 1Wt
your Hed:l 1'b! Urbao hoe t8 111
i..tumltuum,, heavy gaqt', aoodized
rllilllil 1nd pesll, plain Dr
deror.Uve We biiin an experienced

Centro I Hat.!

-

Products

•Cuttom Hydraulic Hose

f111nc1111 AnilabM
llownlnlo W.olts &amp; Altics
STOIM
WIND0115 &amp; DOORS
AEPIACEMEIIT

b ywr lllllbortted del;ler for Urban
1~1

Pail~

to your doo r by way of

Blown

Kingsbury Home Sales

1 l Z BEDROOM

Rustoleum

Y REALTY

Phone 446-4403
for AppolnbnenL

•we un ship outs dtrectly

FREE ESTIMATES

~2 7·TFC

SPRIIIG VMlEY
GR£EI MtAIIIIOlS

Property of 92 Court SL
10 A.M. Aug. :l'ltb
Terms of Ale, cub. Seller
reaerveti the rtgbt to reje&lt;:t
aU biola. May be loJpecled
alter 5 p.m,

I

9923736.

40- 50 ACRES of cropland at
Rullond Calf (5131539·7439.
IN MASON . 2 bedr opt wilh
staVe
and
refng•rator
Carpeted and clean
No
childr.n or pefl. Coli (304)
nB9n

RE FOR SALE
PUBLIC AUCTION

"------------------------------------.1
MEIGS
DAVID BRICKLES
EQUIPMENT
GENERAL
COMPANY
CONTRACTING .

l1U2!10

TELEVISION VIEWING

I

r-----.--.J\)

Q+-The SUndar 'fllneo.&amp;ntlnel, Swldly, A111•n, um

•

!

.I

•
•

FORECLOSURE
SALE
Under
provisions
of
Security Agreem!1Jnts be
tween
C .A B
COAL
CORP ,
Debtor
and
MEYNART
COAL
COMPANY, Debtor and
NATIONAL
AC
CEPTANCE
COMPANY
OF AMERICA &lt;NACI.
Secured Party , NAC shall
on Wednesday, Auau$t 31 ,
1977 at 10 · 00 A M on the""
prem lses of Marris Gravel
&amp; Excavating Co at 2,.79
Crawtls Road , Lancaster ,
OhiO , Jtl.l, l.t PUblit Sale
all of Secured Party's and"
all of Debtors' right title
and Interest In and to
certain earth
mov ing
equipment and motor
trucks such as crawler
tractor , shovels, crushers,
scrapers, graders. con
veyors and dump, flatbed
and pickup trucks, of both
C A B COAL CORP and
MEYNART
COAL
COMPANY
All of the
equipment and trucks are
now located at the sale slte
with the exception of One
(1) 21f2 yard shovel located
In a mine near GaUJpolls ,
Oh iO
Ternu at Sale cash,
Ceshlars or Certified Check
11 time af SaJa. _
NATIONAL
ACCEPTANCE
COMPANY OF AMERICA
105 West AC11m1 Strtet
Chicago, IUinais 60603
312-236·5532, Kenneth
D1m1kl

SIS,OOO.

BRICK RANCH - ExceP,tionally nice fireplace in
family room, eat-in kitchen w1th range, OW, and dlsp.,
and 3 BR, ~ a c . lot with anractlve storage bUild: In Ad·
diS On Twp. $37,500.

no ACRES - Large wooded area, 50 acres1111abte, ex·
tra tg barn and two car garage with storage. Blacktop
road wrth long frontage an bath stdes, 10 mites from
Holzer Hospital . Large 2 story house wtth good Site LR,
DR, s BR and porch around one-half of house. This
home could be restored to the showcase tt once was.
Better see TODAY. 565,000.
POND AND 10 ACRES - Wtth 3 BR ranch, family
room, full basement and attached, 2 car garage. Home
not completely fin1shed, buy as ts and save. LOW FIF·
TIES.
COUNTRY PRIVACY - W1thtn walking distance of
schools anti downtown shopping. Large wooded 101 w1th
exceUent view. Eat in kitchen, 3 BR:. carport, and 1ow
neatlng costs. $38, 500
53 ACRE FARM- ls-20 1tllable, res1 fenced, pa!rtur·e
and timber. l BR modermzed home all electnc
fireplace '" LR Pond, tob. base, lg . barn, and 2 out·
bu1ldtngs Owner wrll helpw•th ltnancing. S37,000.
VA OR: FHA- Thts 3 year old ranch has spactous I1YM
tng room, P/2 baths, 3 BR , and famtiY SIZed kttchen
w1th lots of cabtnets. CarJ)O:rt for 2. cars and sutrnn1er
kttchen. $35,000.

•

N~IIR IT ALL- SchoolS, churches, shopping, 3 BR, 2

story frame, LR has fireplace and open st1irw11y. For~
mat drmng rm . Full basement, nearly new gas forced
atr furnace. Grandma's old fashioned front and back
porch far retaxmg. VA ava1labte. LOW THIRTIES .
KYGER CREEK AREA -All electrtc 3 BR ranch, eaf10 kitchen, well 1nsulated, storm doors and wmdows,
fully carpeted except kttchen and bath. Ahached
garage. $25,000 .

MINI FARM -

3% acres with modern 5 room ranch,
attached carport and metal storage bldg., 1'12 mites
from ctty. S2B,SOO.

44 ot.'VE STREET- Good older 3 BR frame dwetli,ng,
OR, modern kitchen and large fran1 porch. Fenced
wtth one car ~rage plus large storage room. THIR·
TIES.
UNDER CONSTRUCTION- Plans lor lhos new 3 BR
frame calf far a frreplace '" the LR, formal d1n1ng,
range, diShwasher, dtSp. 1n spacious kttchen. 2 baths,
car garage. over 1300 sq. f1. living area . Concrete
dr.ve, 1.2 acre lot. Just listed! $45,900.
BRAND NEW Colomat ranch neanng completion, BR,
2. full baths, CEN. AIR, lg. 11\/tng rm with firelace, lor·
mal drn1ng, fully carpeted, 2 car garage, patio. 1 acre
rOt You can still choose your favorite decor for th1S
one• Just Ltsted! $45,900.
RENT BEATER! 1'12 story, 3 Br frame tn city. 26'x32'
concrete block garage with cement floor. Ctty water
and sewage. Gas heat. Clean, welt ma1ntarned . JUST
LISTEO! $18,900.
REDUCED- Excellenl s1arler home, 3 BR, well plan·
ned k1tchen w1th snack bar. Yr. old farced atr ga5 fur·
nace. New ptumbtng, madermzed bath. 1112 m•les from
ctty. Ntce netghborhood. Ctty water, schools. S22,500
BRICK AND FRAME RANCH - Nearly new, 2 BR,
large LR, kttchen has Jots of cabinets, bu1lt·tn oven,
counter top range, dtnjng area. Uttl1ty rm . lOO'x150' lot.
Priced 1o sell at $20,000.
BOATERS DELIGHT - R1ver frontage wi1h small
older mobtle home wtth tlectrtc hookup on tot SOx220
near town.
JUST LISTED - Remodeled one slory, 3 SR dwelhng.
Aluminum stdiR9 wtth blown 1nsulat1on, 2 outbuildings
on acre tot wtth targe garden spot and several frutt
trees $24,500.
29 ACRES - Plenly ol road fronfage wo1h
meadow Some woods. JUST LISTED. $25,000.
NEW LISTING- Neal2 BR lrame dwelhng, large
w1th trees overlooktng Ohio River, 10 mites from
$25,000 .
190 ACRES, 60 tillable, 100 acre5 pasture
ponds, tobacco base, some ttmber, 3 barns,
oulbldg. 4 BR br~ck home, nearly completed. Fir'eplau
1n LR, full basement, g~rage. Perfect for best '"'""·
Call for apDOintment.

ID
RON CANADAY, REAI.lOR

. WE NEED LISTINGS~

1
REAlTOR

Audrey canaaay
Realtor Associate
446-3636

Hour

GENERAL Conlracton Do ell
masonary, carperter 8 plumb·
1ng lnJtall and repair all
• driveways Ph ..46 9587

.'-':-:-..,..,-

CONCRETE liND BLOCK WORK by
the hour or by tho contract
Free esttmotes Ph 367-0295 or
367-0676
WILL DO CHILD CARE IN MY
HOME Gr"n Acr•s (UI) Call
••6·0671

-----

·---

BABYSITTING ln my home Five
days o wHk Coli 145 5662

-Wtll--

--housekeeping

do
No ,
bobystfflng Call 2A5 521 ~

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEll liNG
Cor Fourth &amp; Pine
Phone ,..u, 3889 or -446 -44777
STANDIIRD
Plumbing · H.atlng
215 Third A"• , 446-3782
GENE PLANTS &amp; SON
,
PLUMBING - Heottng - Atr
Condlllontng. 300 Fourlh Ave
J~ 46-1637.

DEWITI S PlUMIIING
AND HEATING
Roule 160 at Evergr"n
Phone 4&lt;16·2735

�D-4---TheSunday~tinei,Sunday,Aug

21,1977

.

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Oassifieds
Real Estate fur Sale

Real Estate fo~ Sal~

Real •:.mte for Sale

ft....J

Estate for

Sale

ftpa) Estate

D-7-TMS!mdav Times-sentinel, Sunday, Aug 21,1977

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

fill' Sale

•

.

Real Estate
for Sale
'

Real &amp;tate for SaJp

Real Estate for Sale

THE WISEMAN
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

VS REALTY
Branch
COUNTRY HOMa:: WitH
EVERYTHING - Make an

appointment to see. this

A

yr old brl dt Jocated about
7 m • from HMC . This
beauty is sltuett'd on lO
acres Of land •n the c1tv

school Cllstr.ct
fr ontage
on

with~

m•
Raccoon

cr~ek
Other
Sfeclal
features are 4 BR s, 3''2

baths, family room W1fh w

b fireplace , formal dlnJng

room , formal entrance,
laundry
room ,
large

screen~ '" pat •o and 2 car
garcsge Over SH&gt;Q..OOD

HUNTER ' S DELIGHT SJ 5 acres M L mostly
wooded, •deal tor your
weekend camp Located

1n

Morgen Twp and pr 1ced at
$12 500
NEAR LECTA - 101 acre
farm w1th AS A t1Jiable 5
rm house , 3 barns , several
other outbuildtngs , ce llar
house spr 1ng water &amp; a

3500 lb lob

base

$50. 000

VACANT LAND NEAR
RODNEY

-

Approx 55
!eve! &amp; rolltng

acres of
farrn rand w tt h pond . lob
base , barn &amp; co water
ThiS property fronts on 2
rds tn a very des~rable
rocat ton Lots of on tent1al
for Sl!~5.J O_O.Q_
PRICED REDUCED HI,
~lli,OCIO CNmer says sell
6 room and bath home
new alum inum stdlng,
LR &amp; kotchen, 3 BR' s,
oil furnact

LOTS OF LOTS - Loc ated
on Graham School Rd .

Ptke &amp; Georges
Creek. Rd Mob i le homes

Ltncoln

welcQme

NEAR TYCOON LAKE :J8 5 acre farm tS level &amp;
ro111ng land w1th about IS
acres t1tlable &amp; the balanceIn woods P 2 story home
has been ntcely remodeled
&amp; offers 4 BR 's , nice k1t
chen wtth stove &amp; refqg
011 furnace &amp; w w carpet
LOCATION • VALUE
APPEAL - 24acrefarm t5
mostly tillable &amp; features a
very ntce 2 story home w1th
8 rms
&amp; bath
The
do wnsta1 rs 1s brand new
Also Included are a SOx60
barn
s rl o &amp; 3 small
bull d 1ngs Th ts property 1S
located '"' m 1 north of
HMC on Route 160
OWN YOUR: OWN CAMP ·
SITE m rhe wilderness of
the Wayne Nat1onal Forest
5 to 8 acre tracts of
woodland now ava ilable
actro 1nmg thousands of
acres of government rand
Public huntmg , f 1sh1ng and
camprng perm riled Pnces
start at $2500 W1fh ftnan
cmg available

HARDWARE STORE Here's you r chance to get
s tarted tn
your own
busmess ThiS proper ty ts
located tn Vtnton. Oh to &amp;
can be bought for $12 900
plus stock &amp; equ,pment

QEAl I&lt;) I!!
VIRGI~

BUD McGHEE

SWIMMING POOL ._ New
Bt level near town elfers
lo ts of good living for some
lucky fam,ly
Brick and

Manager

fra;me beauty features 3
BR s . 2 baths , complete

THIS ONE HAS IT ALL. 5 BR's, 2 beths. family rm .
woth fireplace, laundry , complete kitchen, &lt;llrpet, heat
pump &amp; double
Located at 450 Jorry Drive
$56,900

ktlchen w tth id ts hwasher 1

range

&amp; re rig • 2Dx24
fam tly rm , 1 car garage
and farge lof near town

GRAHAM SCHOOL RD Bargatn pnced lot for sate
96)( 150 with c-o water for
only 52500

Locotocl on Pleesanf Valley Estates at 482
Kathy Dr. It's a very nice three BR ranch,
all bnck with natural gas heat and central
air. $39,900

MORGAN TOWNSHIP 103 acres vac:ant la nd Lots
of bottom land and Jots of
WOOdS fOr $32 000

NEW LISTING - l m tles
out Modern J 8 R ranch Is
pr1ced to sell at S29,500
Spectal features are 1112
baths , cent atr k1tehe-n
w 1th stove &amp; r efrtg nicecarpet throughout,
&amp;
lam tly. r m L-oc a ted on a
large lol tn the Green
Schoo l D1sl Shown by
appotnlment

LISTINGS NEEDED WE
ADVERTISE
NATIONALLY - WE BUY
- SELL - TRADE

Nearly 1900 sq. ft. of living space plus a
twocarattachedgarage Youw•ll en1oyan
over sized family room w1th fireplace, a
lovely k1tchen Including all appliances
w•th an adjomtng dmlng area You w1ll
en1oy the convenience of two full bath
rooms There are three large BR's IT4x1•
14x11· UxiO) and huge LR (2Bx141 This
home IS all electric with central atr and Is
well Insulated The lot contains nearly 2

CAMP GROUND
Clark Chapel Acres (for
merly) 1s tor sale Appro&gt;e
:. 71 acres, rots of ptne trees,
small take, 3 good bu1ldmgs
(needs minor repatrsJ.
Loca.ted near Por~er . Ohto.
STROUT REALTY , 446

BO!&lt;DER S GARAGE DOOR SER·
VICE Commencal and restden
hal , spec1ohz.ng m operators
Loco I 256 6472
DOZER WORI( e~tcovaltng land
deortng Ph 446 0051
Decrease those fuel bills ond m
crease the 110/ue of your home
wtth o ftreploce from LOGUE
CONTRACTING
FREE
ESTIMATES PH~388 9939
ST ANLEY STEEMER CARPET
CLEANER Any h\ltng room and
hall $29 95 up to 300 Sq Ft
Southeastern Ohto No
I
Ca rpet
Cleaners
Ph
614 446 4208

CHAIN LINK fENCING . WOODEN
FENCING
AWNINGS
Potto
Ault s Home lm•
covers
provements Ph 446 3608 after
4
BACKHOE DOZER OITCHER and
dump truck Concrete work
Hotfteld Backhoe Ser Rutland
Oh Ph 7.42 2008 or 446 2766
STUCCO PLASTERING and P!oster
repo1r Tea:fured ce1hng swtrl
floa t on brush des1gn 32 yrs
up Work by the hour or by the
to b 256 1182 Trt·Co Plosfer
_ mg_Jnd Stucco
OACK TERMITING SPECIALIST
PEST CONTROL . Ltcensed IN
Jured
Free
lnspe ct ton
Member NPCA and OPCA C
M Hall W1lkesvtlte Ohto Ph
669&lt;t914
If
V P. FILLINGER Water Del1very
Se nnce
Ph
379 2124 or
379 2172

very
baths, 2 f•replaces, formal d.nmg, full d1v1ded base·
ment, large 2 car garage Located on 1 acre on St. Rt
160 Call today to see thts lovely home

No~s the t1me to check on our listing In
the village of Potrlot. This livable four
room home with bath and 1 2 acres of flat
land can be yours for only $15,900 The
house has a like new fuel 011 furnace and
county water There IS road frontage on
two sides of the property and several good
butld1ng sites.

IN TOWN - Excellent locat•on tn town , close to shops
and schools, n1ce large house w1th s bedrooms. 2V2
baths, fam11y room, fully carpeted, beauttfultn ground
sw 1mmtng pool, let us show you thiS house today .

Ltve in or use as a rental property This
two BR home can be yours for only $15,.500
Call now for an appointment

LOVELY CEDAR RANCH - ThtS home tS lUSt like
new, J bedrooms, 2 baths, n1ce k1tchen W1th range,
dishwasher and disposal, fully carpeted. large 2 car
garage. Located on 1.4 acres on St. Rt 160 You'll look
a long 11me before you f1nd a better buy.

WE HAVE SEVERAL
PROPERTt ES.

Better make up your mind on this one It
has f011r BR's, could be f ive Large kotchen
and dining area, 2112 tv-o~o•
utility room.
two car d lv1ded ~
~IS very nice
hoiTte has a Lenno •..:at pump for year
' round comfort There 1s ten inches of
1nsulatton overhead This f1ne home ts
locatedona lAacrecornerlot S-47,000 Call

now
Located in the Gallopolls School Dlstroct
An older home s1tuated on 12: 75 acres of
land It ts presently occupied by the owner
This home can be yours for only S21 ,500
Call now for an appomtment
The owner wants action! If you are
tnterested tn the home at 35A Third Ave ,
g1ve mea call right now This home has all
new carpet 1'12 baths, modern kitchen,
utility area, storage building and a partoal
basement It ts heated with a natural gas
forced arr furnace

POTENT I_~!,_ BUYERS FOR VARIOUS TYPES OF

428 2nd AVE.

are rented, only 2 years old, each Side has 2 bedrooms,
hvtng room, nrce kttchen wrth range, refng. and
dtshwasher Located close to town on Bellomy Lane.

GAlliPOLIS, OHIO

BEEF CATTLE COUN
TRY- 1'lt2 acres clean hill
pasture , good fences, 2
barns, old hOuse, tob base,
lots of rd trontage, Walnut
Twp , us,aaa. STROUT
REAL TV , 446-0008

6 ACRES- Lovely&lt;::! year old ranch W1th 4 bedrooms, Z

baths, large kttc:hen·dtnrng area wtth range and
refng., carpeted, basement, heat pump Wtth central
atr, ntce location on Clark-Church Road.

••

WE BUY, SELL OR TRADE
EVENIN05 CALL
John Fuller---44:6~4327
Osc:ar Batrd---446-4632
Lee Jotonson- 2S6-6740
Earl Wonters___..%·3828
Doug Wetherholl--&lt;44·4244

""6

--

1971 STAR Mob1le Homv 60 X 12

excellent condttton gas heot
many e.xlros
$-:i 500 Coli
985 3505 tf no answer coli
985 3886

---

TWO BEDROOM mob1le home
furntshed , central otr excellent
cond1t1on $3 ,500 Call (304 )
882 2466
1974 14 K 6·~sc-m
o:b:-:
1le
-:h·o·m-e-.-p-ar
t1ally furmshed , central olr
Call 4"46 4660
1976 DUKE MOBILE HOME e)l:c
cond, $900 and toke over
_ P~J'.m_~.!_S 446 267:..:2:_.__
1971 Hrllcrest 12 x 55 2 br
1968Vmdole 12x60 2br
1966 Cheroktte 12 x ~7 2 br
1963Koywood 10 x 42 1 br
1959 Sabre 10 x 50 2 br
TriState Mobile Home
Golt1poi1S Ohio

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

3 BEDROOM mobde home and lot
Coll3/,7.7307

2A x 50 DOUBLE WIDE Mobile
Home 3 bdr central 01r Coli
446 1258 or 2S6 1SBS

•

MODERN 3 BEDROOM HOME In Green Acres S 0 •
situated on 80'x125' corner: lot F A. nat gas furna ~e,
attached garage, nice garden area, Gallipoli s Ctty
School Dlst Price S32.SOO 00
PEACEFUL SERENE and comfortable home In
Porter 3 bedrooms, larr'"'
room. sewing room,
modern kitchen. basem' ~'! ,nty room, large flat
shaded lot One outbuilding with, garage Price now for
$25,000 00
NEAT, CLEAN. 3 bedroom home locate~ on ~odw;~;
near school, full basement, large lot, 150 xl40 Ru
water Buy now for SJO,OOO 00
•
•
COMFORTABLE 2 bedroom home In Ka~auga
situated on ::v.. acre lot, nat gas F .A. furnace. Kitchen ,
bedroom and living room furniture goes with home,
Includes refrigerator, stove, washer and dryer Also lg
2 car gage. Could be used as a shop PrlceS24.000
FOR SALE DR LEASE . Modern one-story brick
building, over 14.000 sq tt, part basement, nat gas,
central air condttlon•ng Large receptton room . over 60
rooms various sizes Ideal location, parking area
accom'modates e)(c;ess of 40 autos Located adjacent to
Gallipolis Golf Course Call or stop In for more
Information .
1975 Vondale moDole home, 14'x&amp;'l', all ele&lt;rrlc The
average electric bill for last year was $69 00 a month
This mobile home Is on a large corner lot In the village
of Vtnton and In excellent condition throughout It has a
covered patio JO'x8' and air conditioning . Includes new
house furn1ture, color T V and all the goodies. Has
farge garage. and work area . You need to see th1s to
appreciate It Priced at le:ss than replacement cost
NEW LISTING: New 3 bedroom carpeled home,
constructed on 06 acre lot Large 20'xU' living room,
w btoreplace, l'h baths, healed &amp; cooled by heal pump.
2 car garage w auto door opener, located with to 5 mls
Holzer Hospital Price S55,SOO.OO
NEWLISTING-30.cref•-;n \thhouseand severao
outbuildings. Located ' ~\.11 I ot Gallipolis Well
water, rural water avail _,.:=, 1200 pound tobacco base
$33.000
LOOKING FOR: 2 bedroom home, with furniture, In
Centenary area, Gallipolis City School Dlst. 1 ~ere of
land within sight ol Green School Also, 30 x30 2 car
garage, could be used for shop or storage Price
Incl uding furniture $27,500.00.
FOLLOW RT. 218 . and Lot11e Bull Skin Rd to
Macedonia Rd and see this 3 bedroom home Situated
on J;_. acre lot Call for an appotntment to see Pnce
only SI7,SOO 00
TWO STORY: 3 bedroom home Including 3 SO'x l50'
lots overlooking Ohio River Price $16,000
COMMERCIAL BUILDING: Located 1222 Second
Ave, Gallipolis Proce S17 ,SOO 00
10 ACRES : Fronts on Neoghborhood Rd .Bulldongs lots
. no mobile homes. Price S15,000 00

14 ACRES - Very n1ce 24'd4' double wrde home, l
bedrooms, 2 baths, fam1ly room, ,k1tchen wtfh range,
refrtg. and disposal, county water, n1ce wooded land on
Kerr Bethel Rd
WE HAVE OTHER LISTINGS &amp; PICTURES OF ALL
OUR LISTINGS IN THE OFFICE COME IN &amp; LET
US HELP WITH YOUR REAL ESTATE NEEDS

RUSSELL WOOD REAI.l08.·

,;n' n

PHONE 446.0552_;_ANYTIME

GOOD INVESTMENT _.. N1ce twm smgles, both Sides

446-0971

Immediate possession, the owner has
moved out of state and would llke to have
quick action on this home located on Rt.
588 one mile from the c1ty park Three
BR's, P/2 baths, ktfchen wtth built In range
and oven Thts home has a full walk In
basement Call now foe an appointment.

VS REAL TV WOULD LIKE TO THANK YOU FOR LISTING WITH US.
GOOD LOCATION- Very good home , has new kttchen
cabtnets, new 11J:z bath-s, new carpet, extertor has
aluminum Siding, 3 ntce bedrooms, located on 2 ntce
lots at Evergreen, tmmedtate possess ton

ROoFING
HOME
IM
P ROV EMENTS
PAIN Tl NC::i---"---'-'--:--'---,
Carpenter work
generol
reptor
PH
446 43i6 or WELL
ESTAIILISH£D
GROCERY
BUSINESS for
-~-~~
~~~~~~~~
OUTYS BUILDING AND REMODEL · sale, good eqvtpment ,
lNG . FREE ESTIMATES Ph. excellent locahon, living
quarters, pnced to sel.l.
2S6·1352
STROUT REALTY, 446·
WATER WELL DRILLING W1lltom OOOB.
T Grant Ph 742·2879after6, L--~-------....1
CHAIN LINK AND WOOD FENCE
Roy Houck Fence Center Free
eshmores Ph 1 n6 2237
TUNING lone Oan:tels 12
seWING MACHtNE REPAIR ~~~ PIANO
years of serv1ce
Phone
makes , -446·4235
992 :1082
ECONOMIZE WITH A FIREPLACE
fnte estimates LOGUE CON WATER WEll dnll1ng Phone
WJII1om P Grant at 742 2879
TRACT1NG. 38B 9939
_
after
,!p m=--:--AUEN s GENERAL CONTRA(
PENNZOIL
RUTLAND open dotly
TORS, remodelmg house w tr
till
10
Clo~ed Mondays ,
lng house plumbmg free
wrec:lcer se~1ce tire repotr
2910 - --:::-'
..fShmotes
Phone 7.C2 9575or 7-42 2081
$;,ndy · and Beaver Insurance Co
hos offered serv1ces for F~re In
suron(e In Go/Ito County for
almost a century Farms
homn and personal property
coverages ore available fo
mHt ind1v1duol needs Contod ONE BROTHER s.wtng Machtne
w1th cobtnet for on electnc porF1nley Oov1s your netghbor ond
table
organ Coli 992 2969
agent
.

'

Just g•ftong started? Perhaps our listing
at 71 M1ll Creek Is the place for you It has
lhree BR's, both, eat. rn kotchen and living
room, plus ut1llty area nus home can be
yours for only S16,000 Thls home can be
yours w1th a 10 per cent down payment If
you qual1fy

Ken Morgen
Eventngs

446-1066

S()\l'J

------

l

- ---tc--'- -

Owner ts very anxious to sell the home at
31 Evans Heights Thts very home has four
BR's and a full basement w1th F R Priced
well below replacement cost S25.900.

0008 .

PASQUALE lnsulottng 103 Cedor
St Golltpolls Ph 44b 2716 or
446 1092
CUSTOM REMODELING , '20 years
expenence , 388· 8308 New dry
wall ceiltng wtlh swtrl or fe~t
fure destgns Other dry wall
repotr vmyl wollpopertng new
boths ,. new k•tchens Anythmg
fn remodelmg or repotr
BOB 'S
CB
Rodw
Equ•p
everythtng tn Two Way Radto
Antennas· and occes. Georges
Cr~k Rd Goll1polts, 446 4517
SMITH EXCAVATING
dozer
backhoe. trencher 1 dump truck
work done ot reasonable rates
Ph 446 3981 , John Smtih Jr

Looking for on all brick ra~ch In lhe KC
school district' If you are, check our
listing on Kelly Dr just off Georges Creek
Rd This lovely home os well kept and has
three BR's, llh baths A very nice
combination kitchen and dtnlng area ,
Including a.ll appliances and lots of
cabinets with formica topped counter
space. This nome Is all electric with
central atr. Low taxes and reasonable
utilities. Call now the price Is $39,900

Brick Ranch with fJreplace, full basement,
modern kitchen with breakfast nook,
Includes all appliances Three BR's, two
baths . Th1s home Is five years old and It Is
in excellent condition Central air $57,900

APPROX. 3 ACRES : On corner lot along
Neoghborhood Rd. No mobile homes Price 518 ,000 oo

BA HOUSE on one acre lot tn
B1dwell Ph 388-8746
THREEBDR HOUSE bullo sol1d by
Homer Henshaw Full bose
ment garage , central atr 275
Jackson Ptke $45'(K)() Owner,
4467399

MOBILE HOME Clean 2 bedroom Fleetwood, located
along Kemper Hollow Rd , 1 acre lot Rural water, 2
outbuildings, A C , some furniture, all for on ly
$12.000.00

4

:;-;EORQOM
'--H-O_U_S_E_w_l-o,h~,-.-,-re~,

MAKE US AN OFFER- Owner os leovlng the stole
and must sell this fabulous country manor. Modem 4
BR brick ranch feahlres family room with fireplace,
formal dining, formal entranc:e, equipped .kitchen, lY2
baths and double garage. Sotuated on 104 acres and can
be bought woth all or part ~I the land. Strout Realty 446·0008.

of grou11d on Georgvs Creek
Ad Call•4~1687 after4pm
HOUSE for sole 1n Vinton Coli
3B8·871B:..__...,.......,--.,----:--: IRELAND MORTGAGE
CO
6 RM HOUSE both , basement ot
Speetohz'"g In FHA and VA
72 M1ll Creek $10,500 Coli
Home loons Also Reflnonc1ng
446 d27
463 2nd Ave located 2nd floor
GallipoliS Ph 446-7172
2 BOA HOME on Ne1ghborhood
RoOd Catl.-6 2462
GRADE A DAIRY. One ol Gollio
County's best, 1-40 A ferhle
land , mostly ttl/able , 8 cow
parlor 18 x 50 atlo w1th
unloader and feeder 60 free
stalls , other barns &lt;nbs ond
remodeled home $100 000
_ Strout Realty, 4.C6 0008
AUL T MOBILE HOMES SERVICE 2 SroRY 3 bedroom frame
house, FA furnpce storm win·
Sktrtmg. anchoring ond patios
dows.
f~repJace rn Mtddleporl
call 4-46·3608 after 4
Phone9923457
8 AND S MOBILE HOMES
TRAILER &amp; LOTforsol•. 75 Elm So ,
PT PLEASANT. W VA
Mtddleport. Phone 992 7307
1973 Allen 12x40 2 Br
1973 Vu::torta 14~t67 J Br , 2 both
TRAILER AND lOT for sale on
Fourth St , Mason, Phone (61 .. )
1972 Monarch 12x50 2 Br cent
Olr
992 730
= 7 '"---..,..,....,._.,...,._..,..
1972 Cameron 12.:60 2 Br
WILDWOOD
ESTATES, Flatwoods
1958 Marlett 10K47 2 8r
Rood hove sevwol chloce lots
f?r sole for residencial hom"
Zoned far your protection 6 rhi
12 x 68 Holly Park Tro1ler wtth
expondo washer ond dryer
fror.1 Pomeroy, OH Call or SH,
GeorgeS liobstetter Bo~t 101.
d1shwosher, underptnnmg 12 a:
Pomer~,. Phone 985 4186
12ouobldg Ph 606638•060

HOMESITES far sale, 1 acra and
up M1ddleport neor Rutland
Coli 992 748 I
NEW 3 bedrOQm house, 2 baths ,
oil e11!K 1 acre, Middleport,
close to Rutland Phone 992
7481

SMALL form for sate, 10% down ,
owner fmanced Monroe Coun ·
oy W Va Phone (304) n2
-2!.92or (304) 772 3227
COUNTRY fa rmland wtttl sedud
ed woods water and good ac
cen In Monroe County W Va
$1 000 down . coil (304) 772·
3102 or (304) n2 3227
VAFHA, 30 yr fmondng Ireland
Mortgage, 77 E Stote, Athena
phone (614) 592 3051

---

--

.
NORTHUP AREA -Solid
2 story form hom• offtn
lots of good couniry living
close to IDwn, 7 rm. loomtls

,.rflalty. remodeled and

tocolod an a 1.25 A. ffotlat.
STROUT REALTY, 446-

0001.

..-

.

.

WITHIN CITY: 2 story home located on 3rd Ave, neat
schools and recreation area. J,l•-:e neighborhood. can
1 or residence
be used as investment
Also
rental mobile home on r ~ ~ r-~roperty Pr ice for a II
537.500 00
lSI ACRE FARM· Near Vonlon Includes f1 llable and
timber land . Also, 4 bedroom home, equipment Shed
Bottom land borders Raccoon Creek. Call for rnore
Information
THE DREAM HOME: Overlooking lhe•Olllo Valley,
this 3 bedroom carpeted home e•hlblts many quality
anem1tles. 2 w b fireplaces, formal dining room, 2
magnificent family rooms, nestles within a wooded
area, 22 acres 1n all, however. owner wtll sell house
woth s acres: Also, owner will help finance Price
reduced Contact for more Information
_
· Looking for 8 acres on Shoestring Rldgo, we have 11.
Including rural water, electric hook·uP, ttnce end gate.
Priced now lor $10,000.00.

r"\D

JUST LISTED: 4 bedrllom. stately home sOTuateo on
w2 acre lot located W1th1n the city of Gallipolis 21h
baths, 2 fireplaces, full basement, natural ga s &amp; 311'
con d . 3 car garage, a magn1f1cent home which has had
excellent care. Call for more Information
JUST LISTED: 3 bedrogra o--1e with brld&lt; front,
home located on Bula~llh
olot, only IS minutes.
from Galllpoll• Price $2.,...,.

il\1)

WE NEED LISTINGS: IF YOU ARE THINKING OF
SELLING GIVE US A CALL •••• LET US HELP YOU I
IF YOU'RE PLA .. NIN&lt;
T. SELL, CALL US, WI
HAVE
A
I fiT
OF
PRDSPECTIV • BUYI!RS
"'
AND W•'RE ANXIDU!
TD SERVE YOU
Coli Wood

IF YOU DON'T SEE THR
I'ROPERTY YOU WANT
IN TH t S AD ' CAL L. w•
,.
MAY
BEYDU
AILE TD I'IND
IT I'OR
•

l~&amp;urancta
RooLEstot.
1

8. TEAFORD, SR

REALTOR
216 E . S.cond Stroot
Pomeroy, Ohio 45749
Phone792 3325
WALt&lt; TO STORES
Renovated 3 bedroom
home In Middleport woth 2
baths, natural gas . Ohla
Power, c:tty water, and
metal roof, $17,000
VIEW OF RIVER
Reasonable 3 bedroom
house, bath, 7 rooms.
natural gas forced air
furnace Large garage and
¥.- f'Cre. $19,500
RUTLAND - 2 bedroom
.home, nafural ge~s, c1 ty
water, and 2 lots for
$10,000
NEW LISTING - Extra
nice home surrounded by
shrubbery . swimm1ng pool,
large famtly room with
fire place
3
IQvely
be drooms ,
2
baths,
fireplace In living, full
basement and garage
NE-AR RUTLAND 4
r-oom house, bath, well
water, With 23J,. acres of
l~nd Only S9,SOO
POMEROY - J bedrooms,
bath, natural gas , c1ty
water, 2 porches and large
garden Just $7 .000
PpMEROY Large S
bedrooms. 11;, baths. full
basement, central heating,
and ntce lot Furnished or
unfu rn tshed, you dec1de
SJ ACRES 2 good
spnn gs, several acres of
tractor land, little barn and
all mmerals. $16,500
MIDDLEPORT
All
electric 3 bedroom home
JUSt 5 years old Full y
msu lated, and well kept up
Fenced back yard A good
buy at SIB .SOO
4 ACRES Bulldong or
tra iler lots on old Route 33
Nc.-th
NEW LISTING - SOxiOO
foot lot In Pomeroy has a 2
bedroom air con d 1tloned
trailer Only $6,000
WE
HAVE
GOOD
PROPERTY
FOR
SPECIAL PEOPLE
Helen L Teaford
C. Bruce Teafocd

BOB LANE
BRANCH MANAGER
8.55 SECOND AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Office
Home

WE

146-7900
446·1049
NEEDYO~R

PROPERTY

TO.

I

·.. SELLNOW! ',""

,. I
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IV .liil&lt;'
CO!.I~,T~ ~ ~ EJI!&lt;El\To;t
L tke ne~oY 3 bedroom . l'n
bath, · 24'x7'2 '
Vlnda le
Modulllr home w1th 8 .a cres
of land tn Kyger Creek
School District Kitch en
applumces go wtth sale
Th1s 1s a large comfortable
home Qffermg centr:al air
and the bes t of con
structron Prtced at only
$29 000 00
GOING BUSINESS
AND GOOD RENTAL
INVESTMENT
At a n Ideal toca tton '" the
City Of Gallipo lis ThiS
t;IUSineSS
tlbS
been
established for 3S yea rs 1n
the area and has a very
good following We llave
the real estate only ,
Pnced If you desire to
cont inue the same business
a t this locatton, you can
deal d trectly with the
owner on Inventory and
supplies
If you
are
thlnklng aboul your own
bus• ness , you should check
Into th1S l
COMMERCIAL SITE
1 Cor11 er " lot on Second
Av~nue
where the old
Queen Be e was located
Offtce buHd 1ng on rear ot
lot ~rlced at SSO.OOO Oil
v

REALTOR .

CALL 446-3643

Willis T.
Leadingham
Reattot

5:01 Cantrol Tim•.

9

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.Gallia County's. Fastest

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A Country Showpl"e with 4 Ac.
1 a
fine brtck rancn wlth 221) sq ft Ol li\o'lng
space Three large bedrooms , formll l
entranc e end d ining, 2 baths , be-auttful
kitchen and breakfast area Huge fam lly
room with w b ftreptace, attra&lt;: t! ve rn
terior br fc k walls. plush carpet
throughout Th is 1S a flnl! country home
tocated in Gallta Co School District an a
state highway The big bonu&amp; Is the small
livestock barn and beaut1fu l land If you
\eed more than 4 ac we can put 10 more
with It Priced w1th .c ac $69,901) with 14 ac
$78.000 You'll be happy you looked at th is
6ROOM&gt;-3BED~OOI~~-Ll~E

Total electric, air conditioners,
water system.
Modern kitchen with lots of cabinets, gar bilge dls~al,
&amp; S S double sink . Garage, no maintenance, while
steel si ding with black shutters, nice level landscaped
lot 10'x10' metal storage building THIS HOME CAN
BE PURCHASED REASONABLY
5 ROOM COTTAGE
MODERN BROOM
CHILLICOTHE RD .
RANCH HOME WITH
well kept 2 -bedroom home,
SWIMMING POOL
bath, ltvl ng room , formal
Swlmm1~g pool worries are
DR Nice s1ze k•tchen , full
over Look t Almo st new &amp;
basement, attachE-d
modern In e\o'ery way ,
garage Two por ches, one
s w1 mm mg pool Included 1
ts a large front porch, nice
Beautiful
foyer,
l
to enjoy There Is also a
bedrooms , n1ce, large 4
large garden erea and
double closets, 1 stngle,
yard Th1S property mutt
L R 11'x18', formal DR ,
be sold It ls priced r.ght.
utility R , nice family R 1
you cAn buy ft today Move
complete kttcnen, nice s1ze
1n tomorrow .
&amp; handy , large 2 car
garage attached These are
a tew of fhe lns1de futures
HERE IS ONE
Now tne rest - Lots of
YOU ARE
shru bbery , attracteve gate
OVER LOOKING
entranc e to beauttfutly 150 Acres This Is a good
ftn lshed walkway leadmg farm 85 Acres of pasture,
mto a modern new oval 40 acres of more tillable
poor, s1ze 17'x35' w1th land, 800 lbs tobacco base
d1v1ng board and night Good farm , wooded plot.
light
Pool co mpletely fair amount of marketable
fenced In There tS plenty •timber Line fences are all
more, 2 exira lots , plenty of good, half of fences or more
yard or garder.'l space . are woven wire Nice large
fen ced m on 3 S1des, apple country home In a beautiful
trees , grape vmes, central setti ng 3 well built barns.
air , gas forced atr furna ce, will hang Jots of tobacco
tots of msula t1 on , low heat and store tots of hav
bdls, basketball court t Drilled well and dug well
qutt - please call for the All m lneral rights goes
rest
This farm Is for sate now 11
Is renonably pnced CALL
OVER 3145SQ. FT
NOW
BLOCK BLDG
Business or Storage Space
Nice S large rooms on
COUNTRY HOME
approx 150 ft frontage on
&amp;40ACRES
a Stale Highway by ap 5 Bedrooms, bath . wh ite al
prox 180 tt deep All level , s1dlng, nice country kitfuel oJt F A furnace Rural chen with bu1lt·ln cabs
water system, also well Elec wall oven table top
with erectr.c pump High range Fuel 011 furnace and
overhead doors for large a wood·burn1ng space
trucks Offtce Is nicely heater, also a woad
carpeted and paneled burn ing fireplace Drilled
CALL
FOR
OTHER well w ith electnc pump
DETAILS
Barn , corn crib, chlckel}.
house.
good
pasture&lt;;
Olfn-CCOON
fencing , 15 to 20 acres of
CREEK , lACRES
timber, approx . 20 A
lid your own home
Beautiful build ing sites , tillable tancf~ ll mineral
with mapJe shade trees and rights goes , s¥ veral apple
cedar bushes already set trees Ca II now
out Fronts on Raccoon Rd
with back of lot on R.accoon
110 ACRES PLUS
creek 2 rural water taps
pd tor Clay Twp .• clly
vacant A woodland
school d lst . All real good
wonderland
some
fencing All mmeral rights
pastun and tillable land
goes A good buy at ONLY
Less than $164} per acre
$9,000 00

One block below city park, 2nd Ave This home can be
used either residential or commercial 3 BR, 2 baths,
nice eat.fn kitchen. new modern utility room, fire
place. All plumbing, wiring, sewers have been
replaced. New F .A. furn This prominent family are
leaving area Almost Immediate possession . WE'RE
WAITING FOR YOUR CALL.
"" VACANT LAND
COMFORTABLE HOM§'
3 ACRES M . OR L
RIVER FRONTAGE
Leval land tn Gallipoles
City School Dlst on Clay
6 rooms &amp; bath, parlnsl
b.nement, n1ce front porch ,
Chapel Rd 11/:z miles from
beautiful vieW of nver
State Hig hway 7 750 ft
This property Is ctee~n &amp;
frontage 011 Burnt Run Rd
a !tractive It has had many
&amp; 150 t1 frontage on Clay
man hrs spent on It It Is
ChopiJ Rd Onlv $3.SOO 00
made more beauteful WJth
garden area
IncludeS
SUPER 8UILOING
raspberrtes. strawbernes,
SITE-27 ACRE$
cherry trees and grapes
Thts Is the one you have
Less t han 4 miles of
been looking for Over 21
'7alllpohs, south on Rt 7
ac . land Old homestead ,
very little value except
w.&gt;nderful choice area for
tROOM
building Rural wat.er lfne
COUNTRY HOME
runs the length of approx
With 3 acres , more or less,
12 acres, ready to develop
of level land Less than 'h
Approx lS acres timber
mile off blacktop road S
lend all within 5 miles oJf
bedrooms, 1112 bath, front &amp;
Gallipolis Blacktop rd to
built m back porch , large
the area This will go fast
161h'x2211:z ltvlng room,
t68ACRES
automatiC washer &amp; dryer
WALNUTTWP
goes, built In cabinets. s s
Here ls a lot of fa rm that
dbl sink, elec cook stove
can be bought at a
Hoi Water CITculatmg heat
reasonable price . Lois of
plus
wood burntng
pasture, timber, 30 A
t~replace . Has 1ts own
tillable . mostly level land ,
water system This Is a
plenty of water stream
nice up to date country
running through farm ,
home
toba cco base . 2 larg e (
barns , several other out
buildings Most fences are
7ROOMS
good, some are new. lots of
4BEDROOMS
road frontage Bldg area .
Galllpolts School Dlstrlc l.
many posslbiHtles This
basement , 1'h
baths,
man really want! to sell
modern kitchen, complete
we are ready to help Call
with b1rch cabinets, F .A
Today
furnace, carport, 2 wood ·
burning fireplaces, fam tly
ATTRACTIVE
room. large lol w1th frutt
HOME BY
trees and a large storage
THE RIVER
bUilding Wltt;!ln 5 miles of
Here IS your \o'acahon spot
Gallipolis
Ntce home at a
or ntce hom\! by the river
good pr ic e
Lot 110ft. frontage on Rt 7
Approxtmatety 500ft del!p
Very nice and well kept,
like new 5 R. mobile home
NOT TOO OLD
with many extras built ln .
3 bedrooms, family room .
Some extras outside, 10' by
l2'x24 ', total electric ,
lO' utlltty building, like
thermopane
wmdows ,
new,on good concrete slab.
rural water system, n tce
Mobile home under pinned .
metal storage build ing
Looks great County water
located on a nice tevel
available Again. this Is
landscaped fenced •n lot,
very nice Selling very
concrete driveway N•ce
reasonable. BETTER
home at only S23,50G 00
CALL NOW

BY OWNER
3 BR RANQi

STROUT
MAIN
POMEROY, O.

OTHER COUNSELORS :
CROWN CITY
Joe Crans
256·1456
National Advertising Wtth
Sallerv at Homes.

--~·· 55412 (6121 SU9751. Mandoy.Frtcloy 1:10-

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G'ET AWAV
FROM IT ALL'
Very nice 3 bedl'oom brick
setting on 3 acres of 1a11d
near R lo Grande This
hom has a quiet, scenic
I
and ls b.arga In
1o~rlc&lt;od at sso.ooo oo

House is lac~ted by Ollc
Holl . From Hoghway n &amp;
279, take 27t two miles to
County Road 4. Turn left on
4 1 nd follow to Hlclcory
Grove
Church.
Toke
driveway •bout 30 IMI past
church to house. Do • llnle
and save I tot. Low down
payment and rent slu
monthly payments mokes
you on owner lnsteod of a
renter.
Excellent
opportunity. Nice three
bedrool!l h - . W• con
furnish
materials
ta
complete. tmmtdlote
possession. No closing
costs or s•lls commission.
Sat If. Contoct Rtsolt
Department, 4500 Lyndole
An. , No. Minneapolis,

•
•

$

lAND CONTRACT WITH
A GOOD DOWN P!IYMENT
Jn thts 2 bedroom hideaway
selttng on Slue Lake near
Raccoon Creek and Route
7 Call us today ft more
deta lis

Handyman's Specia I

&amp;411lA COUNTY'S lARGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

•'•
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NO

216 -

3 Bedroom, large kitchen, single car

at1~ched garage, all electric, carpeted throlighout,

large 100x400 lot . FHA apProved . Price $28,SOO lrf
Tuppers Plains area
Pomeroy
992·2291
104W. Main
After Houn C.ll992·7133
Contact: Louis Pouley, Brondt Manoger

3BEOROOM BRICK
Bo·lev•l. rlcfuced for quick
sale. Exlro lora- living
room with firtlllace. Bulnln ber ond va bath, brlllht

spadous ldtchetl, P'-ly of
cabln.ts IIIICI dl-lhor • 2
full beths and UIIHty room.
Largt 0111 cor gar..,..
Close to HMC an 1 aero lot.
2 addltiotlol 'lots tv•lloble.
$35,5DO. Ca 11446-1225

•

-illlVST
fit L ~ _
11111!
MEDIA'"TEL Y, modtrn, 4
BR brick ranch, :IIVJ llatns,
family rm. wlfh tlreplact,
formal entranct, formal
dlnlne, llfrtt LR, tQulpped
llltchtll, dtublt 1ar••••
Kreened In patio, fteat,
pump, 2 barns, 10 acres,
SIO,HO, located an tht Kerr
Htrrlsllturt Ro1d abDut f
mi. from HMC In tho city
scflool dlst
STROUT
IIEALTY, 44 . . .1

RUTLAND-1 floor plan, 4
lots about 240ft frontage, 2
bedrooms, bath, natural
gas GREAT AT JUST
$12,000 00
NICE CORNER LOT Close to shopping, 2
bedrooms, both, carpeting,
natural gas F A heat .
porches, CCJ'lcrete drive.
GOING AT SlJ,aoo.oo
2 STORY FRAME - Lots
of ground, 2 baths , 4
bedrooms, dining, porches,
Income. 513.850.00
ALMOST NEW - Double
wide with 6 acres, garage
and storage building Close
to recreation . This Is lovely
property at a very low.
price 517,1100 00
MOBILE HOME - With
about 'h acre of ground, In
good
condition,
2
bedrooms, bath, large
living, storage building
$8,1100 00.
SMALL HOUSE - LOW
GAS Bl LL - small yard,
thls4room frame with beth
Is Ideal In this day ot
Inflation S5,400 oo
DROP
IN
LET
US
EXPLAIN OUR NEW
PHOTO
LISTING
SERVICE
THEN
DECIDE
WHO
YOU
WANT TO SELL YOUR
PROPERTY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Honl&lt;. Kot~~y &amp; Ltona
Cleland
Asooclotes
992·2259 or 992·2561

Large kitchen, pl~~ty
of cabinets. utt hty
room. attached l-ear
garage, large lot,
good neighborhood.
Phone 446-7476 after
5:30 p.m. 675-3950
daily

&amp;ABY FARM ..._ 22 acres
near Addison, about 112
tillable, like new 3 B~
ranch style home , 1 u 1
basement, good bu tldrngs,
S-4S , OOO,
STROUT
REALTY, 444·0008

FIVE ROOM house nlc; yard
good locotlon. $5 500 Coil
949 21l60
33 AC S, new fences good well
fr" gos, good posture; 3 bedr
troller
2 rooms bu1lt on
located Rt 681 to Snowville,
turn at SnowvtHe Store Yt
mile See Ed Holley
FARM FOR Sole 2 'Ar acres level
land 3 m1les south of Albany,
corner of 681-692. See Ed
Holley off 681 of Snowv1f1e
Store IJi Mrla .
LARGE PERMA STONE house 1n
Tuppers Plains for sale by
owner 3 bedr 2 both Phone
(614}667 3065.;......_ _ _
~PACIOUS THREE bedroom ranch
formal dining room , fully ·
equlpp.cl k1tchen 2 1/J botlu
central air, two cor garage
fomfly room feature$ stone
f11 eploce and living rool1i has
bow window Beauttful loco
tton , -4 m1 north of Pomeroy
Upper 60s By appointment
992·2996

...

Solid Quahty,
Rl\o'er
Front11e This handsome 6
quality
bu1ft brick home tncludes a large bv1ng
room w1th 2 b f1replace , beaut1fu l view
from dining room , very ntce eat m kitchen
with all the- appliances butlt !n, l'h
sparkling bllths , Anderson Thermopane
windows , overSIZed 2 car garage with
plenty of room for workshop - Concrete
crawl space Atlractive settmg on a well
d•·v• t.opl!d gei""!IIV slopmg tot whi ch runs to
I
IF YOU ARE NOT LOO KING
construction and qualtly neigh .
don ' t bother w1th thiS one .

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Ener&lt;tY Conscious by Now.
Save $50 OD
a month on your
electric bill Beautiful new 3 bedroom
home Includes fireplace , 2 baths, very nice
kitchen and has maxtmum Insulation (6
Inches

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How About A Wonderful Surprise . You
would expect to pay much more for a -4
bedroom home that Includes a fa~lly
room. dining room and very attractive
kitchen (built In range, dishwasher , etc .)
plus 3 baths, neat pump and 2 car garage
This br ~ ck IS only J yrs old and Is located
tn the ctty school district, lust off Fit 35
Owner has kept1t In beautiful condllion but
has been transferred and must sell lm·
mediately Price U9,900 00

Ask any good builder about bultdlng cosh
Then let vs show you 2300 square feet of
very comfortable living space 4 unusually
n 1ce spactous bedrooms and formal d ining.
large family room with a he .dsome w b
f1rep111ce, wlfe.approved bullt-tn kitchen ,
2% baths , 2 sundecks and 7 patios Large 2
car garage Central air to keep you cool
see this attracttve home and mak,l your
own dec ls1on

You Are Mlsstng The Buy of a Lifetime 1f
you want a qu1et loclltlon , a very nice l'h
yr old J bedroom home with family room
and 2 baths, you must look a t this one One
acre lot surrounded bv woods , 8 m ltes out
S35,000 00 Extra land available .

(New L1s1ing) Brick and Frame Ranch,
with eye appeal This attractive 3 bedroom
home Includes large kitchen &amp; family
room combination, good s1zed bedrooms,
carpet throughout and excellent location
on LlncC fil Pk at Centerrary F' r obably
would V A or FHA

Unusually N•ce Home w1th Ex(:ellent
Location. You'll get a wonderful feellnt
when you think of vour family living In this
beautiful 2 story colonial The decor-ating
Splendrd Brick Ranch In Town. Here Is a
Is a pr ize winner and yo u'll enjoy 4 large
very comfortable modern 3 or 4 bedroom
bedrooms , ram 1IY room wtth w b fireplace,
home tha t can put an end to your house forma l dlnmg , 3'1l baths, perfect kJt , rec
hunting . tt Includes a nice large eat In
room , sundeck and covered patio $68 ,500
kitchen w~ baths, 2 car carport and Is- Th 1s Is a n1ce home that you should look at
located 'only S blocks from city park Price
before you buy
S-41,900 00
ldut Wooded Building Sites Overlooking
Today •s Prices Getting You Down? Hftre is the River There are only a very few really
a bargam -ll very nice 3 bedroorTT'home good bu ttdlrlg sites left where you can
w 1th d.ntng area ~nl J\ chen. plus a full en loy a great v1ew of the nver from a very
basement w111 ~L.V room
N1cel y prtvate location in a wooded area tust 1
decorated and 10 ... wvod neighborhood, Ct!Y mile from town Cal! Ike W1seman lor
school district, natural gas heat You. ll more deta lis
look a long time and won't find a bet ter one
The owner of this 3 belii'"'JOm ranch w 1il
for $34 ,900 00
help a qualified bl
lures llh baths,
Just Lltted 4 Bedroom home , S29 ,GOO oo
large fam1ly roorr
_J k1tchen Prtce
Yes , 4bedrooms,yeteasytoheat It's a 11/:z 527 ,500
story frame with large llvlno room. d lntng
or tam fly room , big kitchen and garage
Beautiful 8urld1ng Lots ......... ll:o ac at Cen
Located an a l!at shady lot
tenary we have la c wooded lots 4 miles
from town Som e with lake frontage, 3 or 4
Want Some Acreage Close to Town? acre sites at R1 0 Grande with lots of p 1ne
Here 's 65 ac Of beautiful wooded htlls and and hardwood trees
valleys Build 1 to 12 homes - Perfect
view and locatton
IN MIDDLE PORT - Two s tory home on
Attnctlve 3 Bedroom Ranch You'll en loy large lot Carpe ted all over , fo rmal d ining
this lov ely big family room Nrce kitchen. room , nice kttchen, bath With shower In
home Is carpeted throughout located on a tub , central a~r, rural water, basement ,
flat lot with garden Grade school Is lust one car garage $30,000.
across the street
8 Acres, with large frontage on State Route
A Gentleman's Farm - 111 Acres One of 124 wtth nlce frame buildtng suitable for
the very best beef farms In Southeastern commerc1a l purposes , now com pletely
Ohto 90 Ac of highly fmpr:oved hay and furn ishe d and could be used as an apart
ment for one or two people Has two mobile
pasture land and 30 ac: of wooded pasture
Drive over all of It in your car New fence home s1tes with septtc tank
over most, 2 ponds, 6 automatic cattle
fountalns , 3 new me-tal barns wlth concrete strlckly Designed to Suit the Most
loafing pads, built •n feeders, gram Discr im inating . Resting on a beaut ifully
storage load ing shute w1th head gate 3 elevated tree shaded , l 'h ac lot thaJ offers
bedroom home is like brand new and m an lmposmg view from every wtndow This
eludes large family roomwlth handsome most spectacular home •n the county ofwood burning fireplace , modern kitchen fers everyth ing you have ever dreamed Of
with all the built tns , 111"1 baths , 2 car trom a TV mont tor of the front door to 6,000
carport It's a perfect spot located on State sq fl of elegant A classtc kitchen , break
Highway about 9 miles from Holzer last room, forma t dtnlng, huge format
Med1ca1 Center
entrance . 3112 bath s, 2 w b ftreptac:es. 2 sun
Home &amp; 11 Acres. Only $20,000 00 Near decks. pan ic button den , expansion and
r;&gt;anvllte In Meigs County Two story distinctive entertamment area with bar
frame, four bedrooms, dining room, nice tm pectable tute d 1scrlbes the efforts of
kitchen, cellar, basement , heated with the professionals who d id the decorating
Ooxol gas Barn also used as garage, land You won't believe the amount of storage
Lighted circl e dr ive and mature land
lays good Work shop and chicken house
seeping puts lhe fln 1shmg touches on this
CAll Mr Wiseman 446 4500
Owner Transferred, Must see fm . most handsome restdence
mediately There fs no better home buy an
today's market This splendid 4 bedroom This Old Timer Ha.s Been Reltared. Here
home Includes a nice kttchen , 3 bathsl Is a beautiful old It me 2 story sltttng m the
family room , 2 c:ar garllge on a large middle of a 17 ac. tract In the city school
corner lot Enjoy a sun deck and central dlstnct on State Rou te 141 - 8 huge rooms
includes o4 bedrooms, dm1ng room and
atr Excellent house keeping
tam 11y room, 1 working llreptace, • more
Older Home In Town - Excellent con could be restored , ntce kttc hen , modern
dltlon w1th modern heat and atr con heating , large old tim e barn Is ln good
d ltlonlng This solid 4 bedroom Includes cond tion Beautiful setting with excellent
breakfast room, 2 baths, shady lot. large view $75 ,000 oo
garage

SOlD

E. M. WISEMAN, BROKER 446-3796
E.N. WISEMAN. BROKER 446-4500

WE NEED LISTINGS
500 2ND AVE.

CALL 446-3643

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! · Area Deaths !
I

JAMES W. ARCHER
RACINE - James Walle.Archer , 89, Carmel aree . Rt .
1. Racine, d ied Saturday
morn ing at the residence of
Mr . and Mrs. Clifford Morris,
Racine .
Mr . Archer was the son ot
the late Andrew Jackson and
Elizabeth Roush Arche.-. He
was also preceded In death 'by
brothers. John, Guy, Charles
and Homer . and sisters ,
Al lee, Margaret, Sadie. Lucy
and Harriett.
Nw . Neher Is survived by
one sister, Eva Archff", Rt. 1,
Racine. 11 nieces and two
nephews and several cousins.
He was a ret ired farmer
and member of the Carmel
United Methodist Church for
72 years .
. ·
Funeral serv ices will be
held Monday at :i p .m . at the
carmel Church with Revs.
Freeland Norris and Steve
Wilson officiating . Burial will
be In the Carmel Cemetery .
Friends may call Ill Ewing
Funeral Home after 1:30p.m .
today .

Rowe Fooce . and tour
children , James. Mark ,
Tammy. and Jenny . all at
home. and these brothers and
sisters, Betty Fooce, Logan :
Charles , [)avid , Raymond,
Larry and Mr·s. Charles
(Viola) Sowards, all In
Columbus .
He had resided In Gall la
County several years .
Funeral arrangements wilt
be announced by lhe WaughHalley-Wood Funeral Home .

Center.

. ed
Fans lik

himseH

Whatever your style preference
you'll find a good selection

of fine home furnishings at

the lowest possible prices.

NEW ROTARY PRESIDENT - Sam Longancre,
right, new president of the Bend Rotary Club, is shown
receiving the gavel from outgoing pr~sident, Dick Roush,
during Thursday night's meeting. Other officers for the
year are Steve Halstead, vice president and John Campbell, secretary-treasurer.
' Bring me the dessert, the
legend is hungry'," !!he recalled .
She was almost the last to
(Continued from page D-1)
see
him alive .
In April, writer Nat Perrin,
Warned
Friday afternoon
an old movie friend of
that he was dying, she went to
Marx's, was appointed an
his hospital room as he
interim conservator. He soon
drifted in and out of
begged the judge to be
relieved, saying tbe burden consciousness.
"He wasn't in pain, he
was . unbearable, partly
didn't
suffer, " she said.
because of the enmity
"He held my hand and just
between Miss Fleming and
Arthur Marx, both of whom feU asleep."
She left the room, leaving
COfttinued to visit tbe comic.
Marx with his son, daughterIn July, Arthur's son, songwriter Andrew Matx, 2:1, was in-law and grandson
• ·
named hill grandfather's con- , guardian.
She sal in a chair outside
serviltoc in a compromise the door, a hospital employe
between his father and Miss
Fleming. ·The younger Marx said, and 15 minutes later,
· Marx died .
conunented that he seemed to
That night, at her home,
be a logical choice as one of
she
said, "I was just lookiJtg
the few who could get along
at a poster he signed years
wilh everyone involved.
By that time, Marx was ago . II said:
"'Dear Erin, I cannot live
hospitalized for the lhird time
wilhout
you - oc with you for
this year and becoming
that
matter,
Forever yours,
increasingly . detached from
Groucho. '"
the wocld.
·
"! doo't think he would like
NlPPY NOTICE
for people to see him as he Is
Fall sent oul a nippy notice
now," Pefrin said.
Visitors said he usually of its impending arriva.l
responded to conversations in Saturday as record low
temperatures were broken or
grunts or nods, if at all.
His wit reappeared in tied along lhe northern tier of
flashes. VISitors said most of states from Michigan to New
his comments were too racy York. Furnaces were fued up
for early duty 'and a nwnber
to be printed.
Miss Fleming said he was of home gardens were
aware his reputation and severely damaged in portions
venerable age had made him of northern Lower Michigan
where temperatures plunged
a legend in his lifetime.
"At dinner he would · say into the mld-20s and low 30s.

IN POMEROY

.bur'?

senility if we should live so

1100 East Main Street
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

ROGER

DAVIS

Home Phone: 992-7671
Business Phone: 992-7034

-

Is there really any magic in the word Modular when applied to
·
.
· · _
housing?
Some people would have us believe there-~~· H~wever, when we
examine the prints, wiring diagrams, spec1f1cat1ons sheets, and .
bill of material on the modular house, we find it t6 be identical to
··
·
the other manufactured home.
The other home to which we refer, is the mobile home house type
double wide. The one structural difference between these two
products is the floor framing. On the modular, 2x8 floor joists are
used transversely across the width of the halves. These 2x8's are
necessary because there is no metal frame.
_
On the double wide, 2x6 floor joists are used ~nd can run e1ther
transversely or longitudinally because .there IS a metal frame
which remains with the home.
Whether the new home you purchase is a modular or a house
type double wide is of no consequence, ~he_n you co~sider the fact
that like all real estate each type home w1llmcrease m value.
. ·
For a look at what's new in·manufactured housing, I invite you
to come in and see our large lot display.

Kingsbury Home Sales, Inc.
"For The Finest In Manufactured Housing"

1100 E. MAIN ST.

992-7034

POMEROY, 0.

1971 .

.
Funeral ~rvices wll.i be
conducted Monday at 2 p.m .
at the East Eden Unlle~
Brethren .Church with the
Rev. Eldon Blake In charge
with burial to follow In the
church ce:metery.
The body will lie In state at
the church one hour prior to

services. Friend!. may call at

' the White Funeral Home In
Coolville affe.- noon Sunday .
ARTHUR FOOCE
GALLIPOLIS , - Arthur
Fooce Jr.,~. a resident of Rt.
2. Patriot, drowned In the
Ohio River Saturday around
8:30a.m.
Mr. Foose was a disabled
Vietnam War veteran.
He was born Sept. 19, 1943,
at Moundsville, W.Va .• and Is
survived by his wife,, .~nna

long, those of us who began ·
our journey through Ibis
passage In the depths of the
Great Depression.
We, for example, will
always remember where we
were, what we were doing,
what was said and who was
there on the day they bombed
Pearl
Harbor,
when
President ·Roosevelt died,
when World War U ended, .t he
day President Kemedy was
shot.
And to this we add on~

UNITED NATIONS (UPI)
Cuba Is forcing a
showdo\1!n at the United
Nation• on whether Puerto
Rico should beAmerlca's51st
state, an Independent nation
or remain a "colony" of the
United states.
D,iplomats
said · the
showdown ' may come next
month when the U. N.
Decolonllation ,Committee
decides whether tQ vote on
this year's version of a Cuban
resolution affinning Puerto
Rico's "Inalienable right to
self-determination and independence.'' At issue Ia
whether Puerto Rico Is
technically a U. S. "colony."

but about tO,OOO Alabama miners were to return today, ending
a four day strike in that state.
A disgruntled member of militant Charleston-based Dislcict
17, home district of Miller and the union 's largest with 35,000
acUve and retired members, predicted the J une t7 election
·would overshadow !be IEB meeting.
"They (board members ) have for got thatlhe election is over
wilh," said Darrell Thomas. " It will be just a political battle in
there. Sane people that have lost in the election are nol
satisfied with the winners of lhe election."
Thomas said be doubted the board meeting would prompt a
relurn-to-work movement.
.
"It seems to me we can have meetings, but II doesn 't involve
lhe people that's out there picketing the mines," he said. "The
men out on the picket lines are the ones ca lling the shots·for

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, August, 22, 1977

A pretty baby contest, a
·
motorcycle thrill show, and
tractor pulling events
wrapped up the 114th annual
Meigs County Fair Saturday.
The
Rock
Springs
Fairgrounds was packed
Saturday night, not only in
the grandstand area but on
the midway, as residents
turned oul to take in the final
evening of the fair. Fair
··-board members felt that the
crowd at the motorcycle thrill
/
'!how Saturday night equalled
•
. ( .f
or was greater than the large
turnout for the demolition
derby on Tuesday evening.
Nineteen non-professional
contestants took part in four
contest&amp; staged in connection
with the professional perfomners at the motorcycle
show and winners received
cash awards. First and
second place winners,
respeCtively, in the events
included Terry L. Cunningham and David Grindstaff, the broad jump; Terry
Cunningham and Tim Roush,
the slow race; Jeff Weaver
and Terry Cwmingha.m in the
GIRL WINNERS- These are the girl winners in the
slalom and Gary Dye and
Walter Arnold in the wheelie.
annual pretty baby contest of the Meigs County Fair
Pretty baby contest winSaturday. From the left, Amber_Danielle Colmer, to three .
ners Were selected by out of
mooths age; Jackie Alisha Bacon, three to six months;
county judges. ~nducUng
the contest were members of
.
.
•
.
I
the · Middleport Business and
U'I'TI.E MISTER, MISS - Tbese are the little Mister and Miss Meigs County contest
Professional
Women's Club ·
winners at the 114th annual Meigs Collnty Flli.r Saturday. They are Emily Johnson, 4,
with
Janet.Korn
as chairman.
daughter of M.r. and Mrs. Allen Duane Johnson, Pomeroy, and Damy Robinson, 4, son of
Each child participating
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Robinson, Route 2, Pomeroy.
received a blue ribbon. First
,.
·place winners in the various
'¥
categories received $5 gift
certificates from Elberfeld's
Department· Store. .
Girl winners were Amber
Danielle, daughter of Mrs.
•
Shari Colmer, Pomeroy, to , •
three months age group;
Jackie Alisha, d&amp;ughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bilcon,.
Middleport, three to six
months;
Kelley
Jean,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
· Danny Grueser, Route 3,
Pomeroy, six to 12 months; .,
Brandi Joy, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Lynn Mallory,
Racine, 12 to 18 months;
Jessica Loshia, daughter of
Mr _ and Mrs. Pat .Mitchell,
Route 1, Rutland, 18 months
to two years; Carla Jeffers,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
C&amp;rl Jeffers, Bradbury, two
year olds, and Pamela Jean
Haggy, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest . Haggy, Middleport, three year olds.
GIRL DRIVER- In the ladies division,1,000 lb. pull,
·Boy winners were Robert
young
Ruth Ann Fry, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, managed a 95 !1. .
Travis, son of Mr. and Mrs.
pull
in
the garden tractor pull held at the Meigs County
Robert Spaun, Route 2,
Racine, to three months age
group; Larry, sori of Mr. •nd
um•t
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
LEE McCOMAS
(Continued on ·page 10)
Wednesday through
Friday, fair Wednesday
and Friday. A chance of
showers Thursday. Higbs
will be In the 70s and lows
Ill the 50s.
The Middleport E-R Squad,
answering two calls Sunday, ·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::::::::::::::::::::::
awards.
Lee
McComas, long- years In the Meigs elemen- school class. ·
at 11:21 a.m. went to 730 High
CI•t·
Mr. McComas has made St.
Mr. McComas shows hill
time superintendent . of tary and served five years as
for Bertha Ebersbach who
Middleport schools, has been elementary school principal. love and concern for the ' life more meaningful for , a was treated on the scene and
named Melgt County's He was superintendent of the youth of the area by making it · number of persons through at 8:08 p.m. to 707 Olive St. OB twO COuntS
outstanding senior citizen Middleport school system for possible, at lrls own expense, his thoughtful and seffiess for Bill Buckley · who was
Pomeroy Police reported
and will be honored at 2 p.m. :U yearit. After retiring as for them to attend Ohio giving of himself to others. taken to Veterans Memorial heavy damage to a car driven
For these reasons, the
Friday at the Ohio !ltate Fair. superintendent, be served as Un\verslty football games,
.
by Jeffrey Hysell, Pomeroy, .
.
Meigs
.County Council on Hospital
the
Ice
Follies,
clerk
of
the
newly
organized
dramas
and
The nomlnlltlon of Mr.
At 9:33 ·p.m. SundBy, the . on Second St. about 8 p:m.
McComas for the honor Meigs Local SchOol District other recreational . .and Aging. feels · that Lee Me· fire department went to Saturday when his car failed
for ten years and retired cultural activities. He takes Comas Is well deserving of Route 7 below the King's •to get through a turn from
readJ:
the time to give his personal the Outstanding Senior Arms Club where a car Butternut Ave. onto Second
The Meigs County Council again in March of 1976.
Mr. McComas was not only recognition to the young men Citizen Award.
on Aglll!l nominates Lee
owned by Joe Paciona, St., lrlttlng the residence of
McComas ·for the Out- an outstanding educator 49 and women of the community
'Princeton, Va, was on fire. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Seyler at
standing Senior Citizen years, he alao worked as a UPon their graduation from ·
NOW YOU KNOW
Damage to the car was the corner of Butternut and
repairman
when
monies
or
lrlgh
school
and
college
by
Because
of winter hazards, estimated at $300.
·Award.
Second. There were minor
Mr. McComas was born in other help was not avaUable writing them personal letters the 14Moot-long bridge over
damages to the building.
190'1 and apent his chlldl)ood In the school system.
congratulating them on their the Kuhmatt Ravine In
Hysell was ' . arrested for
Mr. McComas Ia a member accomplishments · and Switzerland is dismantled
In tbe Columbia Township
driving while Intoxicated and
area. He graclnated from of Phi Alpha Theta National presents them with small every fall and rebuilt every
ppssesslon of marijuana,
AlblnJ High School, received . Honorary Fraternity, a past
spring.
police said.
SQUAD. CALLED
hla B. S. Degree lrom Ohio President of the MiddleportThe
Racine
ER
Squad
was
HIIAl TEMPS
Unlveralty, his )lasters Pomeroy Rotltry Club, past
cailedAug.18at
U:25p.m.
to
NEW
YORK (UP!) - The
UNIT
CALLED
Degree from Ohio State and President of the Soplheastern
Oon
Manuel
residence,
.
the
highest
temperature
reported
The Pomeroy Emergency
baa worked toward his Ohio Teachers Asloclatlon, il ·
Rt.
2,
Racine.
No
aid
was
Sunday to the NaUonal
Clear tonight, lows to iiie Squad was caUed to 1689
member of the Heath United
doetonte.
given.
Qn,
Aug.
20,
at
2:18
upper
508.
Cloudy
Tuesday,
Weather Service, excluding
Lincoln
Heights,
Pomeroy,
at
Mr. McComu bepn his Methodist Church for 32
p.m. Allee Scarberry, Alaska and Hawaii, was 107
highs
around
80.
,Probability
8:33
·a,m.
Monday
for
John
.
teachlnl career at Keepers years, Ia presently Cbalrrnan
a medical patient, degrees at Needles, Calif.
Scboolln ins. He then taUJht of the Admlnlatratlve Bollrd of precipitation 30 per cent Wyatt who was ill. He was Racine,
taken
to Veterans Toda)"slow was 42 degrees at
was
10
per
cent
tonight,
20
today,
taken
to
Holzer
Medical
two yMnln tbe elementary of the QIUI'Ch and Ia Sunday
Memorial
Hospital.
per
cent
Tuesday.
Houlton, Maine.
Center.
ochool In Middleport, three School ·teacher for the high

'

Our great looking separates stage
a perfect campus homecoming ... jumpers.....__
and blazers in eye-catching plaids
... hooded blouson tops and gauchos
make great ieom mates ... see morel

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

oo

---

II

.....

/\

Kelley Jean Grueser, six to 12 months; Brandi Joy
Mallory, 12 to 18 months; Jessica Loshia ¥ttcilell, 18 to 24
moolhs, and Pamela Jean Haggy, three year category.
Not pictured Is Carla Jeffers, winner of the two year old
competition.

'*·

w.

It All10gether!

Vol. 28, No.

. . ..

McComas honored

UfilOfS

Fifteen Cents

Last night of fair a .b ig one

E-R

•

District 17 has attempted to spread the walkout in past
weeks by dispatching pickeLs to four other states , including
Alabama .
The work stoppage began in June, when the union's Heallh
and Retirement Funds amounced cutbacks requiring
beneficiaries to absorb the first $250 of hospitalization bills
plus 40 per cent of doctor's bills, wilh a combined maximum
total of s:;oo.
District 17 Vice President Cecil RoberLs said Sunday he
would propose at the board meeting that miners be assessed
$30 a moothuntil the irconlractexpires Dec. 6.
The money would replenish the Funds, allowing restoration
of the lost benefits, until the current conlcact runs out Dec. 6.
Roberts says miners could then be reimbursed under the
terms of lhe new contract.

this union ."

.

more.

Cubans will go
·for a showdown .

destroyed, leaders warn

•

Marx

'ELBERFELDS

.from an old fruit jar, do

b~ing

Miners milling in and out of the muggy smoke-lilled room
CHARLESToN, W. Va. ( UPI) - . The United Mine
W~kers International E•ecutive Board urged dissident said each member of the hoard made a personal appeallo the
llllllersooce again today ID lay down their pickel signs and end strikers to end the walkout. According to several miters, UMW
President Arnold Miller said the dissidents bent on striking
a nine-week-old wildcat strike.
. Meeting in emergency session in a hotel ballroom jammed could eventually destroy the union.
While the board was meeting, many miners in northern
""th 300 to 400 minero who pushed their way inside, members
of lhe union 's Urnember governing board one-by-ooe told the West Virg!nia returned to ,wiH'k. Although an exact number
miners to end their strike,
'
was unavailable, the West Virginia Coal Association said a
The meeting was closed lo reporters, but Jack Perry, majority of the mines reported some activity, depending on
premdent of UMW District 17 wlrlch has spearheaded the strike buw many miners reported for work. MOll! mining operations
and blunted back.W-w&lt;rk efforta, said the progress has been in Southern West Virginia remained shut down.
slow.
.
The hoard agreed to hold an emergency sesilion here after
"I just think the ,people here want a number of answers dissident miners refused repeated appeals to end their wildcat
and .they don't have them yet," said Perry when he stepped strike, which erupted after cutbacks were announced in
~tside .l,he room momenlarily. "I don't think anything's been miners' health benefits.
pumod do)rn yel."
.
The strik~ at its peak has Idled 90,000 miners in five states

MARY GILMORE
BIDWELL
Mary
Gilmore, 87, a resident of
Bidwell, died Saturday at
1: 55 p.m . in fiolrer Medical

She was born May l. 1890,
In Tablerock , W. Va ..
daughter of the late Mr. and
Mn. Malankford Bragg . 1
She was preceded In deotn
by her first husband, Letcher
Her
second
Redden.
·"
marriage was to William H.
DREDGING BEGINS- Dredging to clear a ferry landing in Henderson site began late this morning and Is expected to
Gilmore. who also preceded
take longer than al first anticipated- possibly several days . M. T. Epling is conducting the dredging ope•ations on behalf of
her In death as did two sons.
RAY J . BRUMLEY
Two sisters and twb
the West Virginia Department of Highways.
PT. PLEASANT - Raf J. brothers survive : Myrtle
Brumley, 69 , a resldan of Byers,
Maude
Moten,
anything you wanted to do, 2811 Jackson Ave ., Pl. Theodore Bragg and John
with one exceptioo. Just stay Pleasant, died Friday at 9: 10 Bragg, all of West \llrolnla . .
p.m. following a two-car
One daughter and three
off of those blue suede shoes. ac!cident
on Rt. 62, north of ·sons survive, Evelyn. HutAnd you would have. You and Pl. Pleasant.
(Continued from page D-1)
chinson, Bidwell; James
He was associated with the Gilmore Lucian Redden and
with other members of the J;:lvis would have gotten
Gallipolis Boat Club and was Harry Redden , all In West
media at both the mansion along just fine.
a rettred employee of thef VIrginia ; 20 grand, and Jl
Her face was oval, straight Ohro River Co .
and late• in the cemetery.
great-grandchildren .
"I liked him," she said. nose set between large green
He was born April 27, 1908,
FU{leral services will be
Why, she was asked. "When I eyes, pretty, sensitive. There In Mason County, son of the held at Cunningham Funeral
Howard and Ro~ Dav fs . Home in Charleston . Burial
was a kid, aboul six, he used was a fresh, unused quality late
Brumley . He Is surv1ved by · will be Jn Tyler Mount
to date a girl across the street there, open, honest you'd his wife, Mildred Young Memorial
Gardens
In
from us. we lived out by the think. And finally, authentic. Brumley ; two daughters, Charleston .
cemetery .. He'd come by on
Like Elvis' music and style, Mrs. Leota Pope, and Mrs .
Smifh,
both
his motorcycle and take her authentic .
Memphis ,, Martha
Gallipolfs ; a son , Howard
CHARLES NEAL
riding . We'd sit out on the Tennessee down home, Brumley, Alexandria, La ..
MIDDLEPORT- Charles
Neal. 68. Lancaster, formerly
curb and watch. He'd .always cornbread, purple hull peas; and iO grandchildren .
Funeral services will be of Middleport. died Friday
wave and smile. I doo't know sweet potato pie authentic.
ed
And that was why, of held 2 p.m. Monday at the afternoon at Doctors Hospital
Crow-Hussell Funeral· Home
North, Columbus.
COW'lll!, he lived bere. These
why . I just Ilk him."
with Rev . A . H. Mac Kenz le
The
middle-aged
Mr . Neal was the son of the
gentleman at the bar wanted were his people. And they offlclotlng. Burial will be in late George and Clara Neal.
He was also preceded In
to know more about the young were all there at the end, as Suncrest Cemetery.·
Friends
may
call
at
the
death
by ~ a son, Robert, a
waitress. "I'm 23. I run off they should be, au· the old funeral home after 2 p.m . on
month ago .
when 1 was 17 and started high school and Army Sunday.
Mr . Neal was employed at
living with this dude. My buddies, all the cousins with
the Fairfield School for Boys
WINNIE HOLSINGER
as an electrician.
momma had died of cancer the double Olrlstian names,
REEDSVILLE - Winnie
He is survived by his wife.
and my dad got killed in a car all the old aunts and uncles in Holslr!Qer, 59, Rt : 1. Reeds- Florence
; one son, George
wreck the next year. All their freshly pressed best villeJ. was dead on arrival
Ray
of
Florida;
one
Fr iCiay afternoon at St .
seven of us kids got farmed who cried real tears.
daughter. Charlene Foster.
Someone oo ooe of the local Joseph's Hospital in Parkers- Lancaster; a brother, Ike
out. I w.a s living with niy aunt papers descn'bed the funeral burg . He was born here af Neal, Middleport ; 10 grand·
and uncle and I hated them. I
Reedsville, the son of Martha
children, one niece and
got pregnant. So we got as moce cotlntry boy than Barber Holsing~r. Rt . 1. several nephews.
married. Now I'm divorced. show business, more plain Reedsville, and the late Alva
Friends may call at the
Frank Smith Funeral Home
My little girl's five .."
_ folks than beautiful people. Holsinger.
A member of the East Eden
in Lancaster after 2 p.m .
Keep up with tomorrow ... This great looking Conte!miJOf,Br~
The piano player started And that may he the most Uolled Brethren church, he todc)y
. Funeral services will
singing "Your Cheating perceptive thought expressed • was a veteran of WW 2, be held Monday.
' chair will dazZle your eyes V~~:ithout diminis;hing your wal
Heart " and Hank Williams in all the mllllons of wocds {armyl and a refired elecBegin with its futuristic style, then add the comfort of
·
would have been that have poured out of here trtclart
bunon·tulted back and padded arms. Rock in style and
He belonged to the DAV
prond of lhe rendition. Tbe in the past fe:" days.
LILLIAN E. SMITH
Ch~pter 008 and of the In u\ed to the· relaxation of years to come .
MIN.ERSVILLE Sur ·
Jliano player bad a nice voice.
Maybe .that s part of what ternational Brotherhood of
Lillian
E.
Smith;
7.1,
vlvors·ot
"He's been singing a lot of . Elvis w~ all about. And Electrical Workers No. 972 of
.of Minersville, who died
Marietta.
Elvis' songs, too," said the lh~re 1s a particular
Survivors
beside
his Thursday, are a son. Maurice
young waitress.
~~~e to those of us mother are hi~ wife Mazie Smith , Minersvi lle; two
And I thought your life is sliding Into our WlCertaln Jot11150n Holsinger, afhome ; sisters, Thelma Hawley and
an Elvis song. It:st.ould be put forti~. We hearken in Elvis' three dauWt1ers, Janet Mrs. Harry (Eileen) Clark,
both of Minersville, and
to blue grass music. Mother pass!llg lhe echOes o! our own Holsinger . Reedsville ; several nieces and nephews.
Brenda Day, Coolvill~ : and
dead of cancer, father killed mortality • ~e last slippage of Pattie fiarr, Springfield.
in a car wreck, wed at 17, youth UTetnevable.
Ohio; two sons, Ronald, and
divocced at 20, and 1,0w, to
Those of us who start~ Douglas, both of Newark.
get by, Berving drinks in a bar ~ether, who~ h~y IS Ohio; six brothers, Clinton,
.and VIrgil, all of
to low Upping customers crlSSCI'Ossed Wl~ hill, whose R.ussell,
ReedsVIlle; Alva, Racine;
down
in
Memphis
milestones are littered along Clifford. Belton. Mo., and
Tennessee. That's why yo~ the same road, feel, I. suspect, Rodney, Greenfield, Ohio ;
like.d him. He was singing to an even sh@llll!l' twmge. We four s1sters, Fannie Bigley,
VIrginia Carter, both of
you. He was singing )Tour have lost one of our own.
Reedsville; Donna Webb,
song
Th~e are certain moments . Guysville, and Emma Ed9y,
Yo~ could burn his house, that mark our lives sharply, Belpre. and five grand ·
steal his car, drink his liquor that
!rightly even mto children.
His father , Alva, died In

COMFORT PLUS

UM

I

made

2 runs Sunday

Driver

Weather

v

"

ed

Fairgrounds Saturday. Wiriner of the event was Mrs. Dale
Kautz. ·See Page 4 today for olher tractor pull pictures by
!Catie ()row.
·

Notices, local briefs
The McElroy reunion will Harry Warner Pickens, Sr.,
be held Sunday, Aug. 28 at Racine, and Gustava May
Portland Park. Basket dinner John.on Pickens, Racine.
at noon.

John Mohler has been
transferred from Holzer
Medical Center to University
Hospital, Means Hall room
513, Coiwnbus. Cards would
be appreciated Sent to him in
care of the hospital. ·
Marriage licenses hav~
been issued to Larry Steven
Pickens, 18, Rt. 4, Pomeroy
and Dreama LaDonna
Jenkins, 18, Racine; Mark
Alan Morris, 20, Rutland, and
Melissa Kay Thomas, 19,
Pomeroy, and to George
Dehner Mullinex, 29, Hartford, W. Va., and Constance
· Lee Reitmire, 35, Rt. 1,
Letart, W. Va.

EAST MEIGS All
Eastern High School girls
interested in playing volleyball are .to meet at the blgh
school at 6 p.m. Tueday.
Those interested who cannot
attend are to contact Miss
Thompson.
EAST MEIGS ...,- A meeting
of aU Eastern Local School
District kindergarten
students and their parents
will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday
at the Tuppers Plains
Elementary School.

. COFCTODINE
The Middleport Chamber of
Commerce will hold a dinner
One suit for dlvocce and meeting for member~ and
another action for dissolution their spouse·s at 6:30 · p.m.
bave been filed in Meigs
Tuesday at the Meigs Inn.
County Common Pleas Court.
Emerson
Heighton,
Jane ' R]lllyan, Rt. 1, Midpresident, said the group will
dleport, filed for divorce from
make plans· for an autmoblle
. Gary .Dwayne Runyan and
exhibition to be held In ()c.
filing for dissolution were
Iober.

,.

"

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