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•

OVEC's achievement
clear in ·1st 25 years

. I.

CHESHIHE - "OVEC" is
the acronym for one of the
elec tr ic util it y indu stry's
towering achievements, and
the passage of 25 years since
its creation has · not
diminished' its true propor·
lions.
,
It was in October, 1952 that
representatives of Iii investor
· owned electric companies
created the Ohio Va ll ey
Electric Corporation and its
subsidiary, Indiana . Kentucky Electric Corporation,
and committed themselves
to:
1. Build not one, but two
giant power plants - each
bigjler than any built up to

that t1me..
.time. ('fhi1; meant that that
2. Meet the demand of a
the 15 sponsor companies
single customer greater than
would have to absorb all the
a111 ~in gl e block of power
capacity not taken by the
eve r €o ntra cted for ..
. customer.)
, 1,800,000 kilowatts.
The customer was the
3. · Build two 345,,()()().voli ' fornier U. S. Atomic Energy
lines totaling some 776 circuit
Commission, now the Energy
miles.
Research and Development
4. Provide all of this power
Administration.
within a specific and difficult
Early in 1952, the AEC had
tim e schedule and at a
asked a group of utilities
projected price of only four·
located generally in the Ohio
tenths of a cent per kw.
River Basin to prepare a
proposal to serve the
5. Raise the n e~ssary
funds - about $400-million in
demands of a huge gaseous
new capital - in the middle
diffusion plant it planned to
of the Korean War, and
build somewhere in the Ohio_
6. And do it a ll on a contract
Valley. The 15 utilities made
subject to cancellation at any
their proposal in May of that
vear: the AEC accepted it ;
and on October I, Ohio Valley
Electric
Corporation was in
CUTTING CAKE in observance of the 25th anniversary
business, with Philip Sporn,
of OVEC's arrival in the area is L. R. Ford, Jr., left, plant
then president of American
manager. Looking on are Joe H. Burger, veteran employee;
Electric ·Power, as its first
Christine· Williams, newest·-,!Jmployee and Lee 0 . Wood,
president. E ven before that
veteran employee. - Picture by Jack Mink .

•

tntint

lUttS
VO. 12

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

NO. 35

'SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1977

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY
.

'·

Girls to
compete on
Nov. 20th
POMEROY - An invitation was
extended Saturday to southeast Ohio high
school girls to compete in• the 1977-78
Southeast Ohio Junior Miss program.
Local Junior Miss activities will be held
Nov. 20, according 'to Ralph H. Werry who
is chairman of this ye11r's program for
non-profit Southeast Ohio Junior Miss,
Inc., the Junior Miss sponsor.
"Former Junior Misses (they call
themselves 'has-beens' ) agree the
program is well worth the effort in terms
of establishing new friendships , expending
knowledge, and experience in meeting
people and situations," Werry said.
In addition , Junior Miss offers real
opportuni\,Y for scholarships for college.
The total scholru;ships and awards offered
on the na tion~ ! . state and community
levels is more than $5 million each year,"
he said.
.
·
Southeast Ohio senior girls, of the
class of 1978 can register for the Junior
Miss Program by writing the · Southeast
Ohio JWJior ~ Scholarship Program, P .
0 . Box ' I04, Pomer oy, 45769.
.
Rehearsals for this year's Junior Miss
Program will begin the middle of October
and the actual prograln will be held
November 20 at the Meigs Junior High
School auditorium in Middlep&lt;)rt at 3:30
.
p.m.
. \•
Southeast Ohio's two winners will
represent the community in the. state
Junior Miss finals at Mount Vernon,
January 1~78. The 50 state winners will
compete for the America's Junior Miss
Crown and the $15,000 scholarships that
goes with it at the national finals in Mobile,
Ala . next spring.

school.
A decision to discontinue the
program was reached after Mrs. Crisp, the
program operator, received the following
letters from the Office of Manpower
Development, Ohio Department of Administrative Services. It said, in part:
"This letter encumbers $11 ,372.84
which may be expended during the period
from Oct. 1 to Nov. 30, 1977 for the
following budget line items only : staff
wages, fringes and travel and enrollee
wages, fringes and travel and rent and
utilities.
'
"Be aware that should your. grant application not be approved in' the form in
wh,ich it was originally presented, that
your agency ris program operator must
reimburse OMD for any and all costs
which are disallowed and which do not
appear in the approved version . of the
grant."
·
Mr. amt Mrs. Crisp maintain that the
letter indicates that the rules on how the
money is to be ~pend~ are apparentlY
going to be worked out after it is spent and
that they could end up having to pay it out
of!~eir personal funds I(. the expenditures
don't fit into the rule pattern to be set after
the funds are expended.
According to the Crisps, the budget for
the training program is being reduced to
about $68,237 for 1977-78, while in 1976-77,
the local program received $180,902.
Crisp said .be .has asked everyone,
including President Jimmy Carter, to
intervene into the situation and help save
the local program. Local county officials
have been most cooperative in trying to
help but nothing has developed to save
the program, Crisp said. He has filed an
appeal with the Regional Labor Department.
In the 10 years operation of the
program, which was at one time known as
Mainstream, some 1000 Meigs Countians
have been trained and placed in jobs, Crisp
reports.
Crisp said that the federal program
funded through the state states that a
program of demonstrated effectiveness
must be refunded.
"We have no choice but to discontinue
the program," Crisp concluded.

Computer network
aiding education
as~ured

by grant

PRICE 25 CENTS

•'

Criticism

CETA here
terlninated
RUTLAND - " Dirty politics" was
blamed Saturday for t he termlhation of the
trainins program for 41 employes of the
Com prehensive Eme rgency Trainin g
Agency sponsored by Leading Creek
· Watershed District, Inc. ·
. Also terminated were administrators
Glenna Crisp, d irector-counselor ; Charles•
Hu!!Sell, job developer-counselor , and
Florence Stewart, secretary-counselor ·
bookkeeper. All were effective 4:30p.m.
Friday.
.lack Crisp. head of the watershPd
·distr ict , said F1·iday the immediate
discontinuance of the program is a result
of what he tenned dirty politics. Crisp said
the perfonnance record of the local
program has been excellent and there was
no reason for a budget cutback plus an
· ........!nd~fin ite policy on expenditures which
m'ake it impOssible for the program to
continue.
Crisp said that in the past year 41
persons were trained and placed on jobs
through the program, commonly known of
CETA. Ninety-five persons underwent
training, bringing the average cost per
trainee to $1 ,851.60. With a total expenditure of $175,902 for the year the cost"
of training the 41 who were placed
averaged $4,290.
'
Crisp ' pointed out that training the
people and placing them on jobs is important to all residents since the trainees
are P,OtentiaJ welfare CJI' some other public
assistance program potentials. In addition
to the 41 placed, eight were transferred to
other programs and one returned to

date, however, the OVEC. ..
companies had begun con- •.
struction of 11.5. miles of
138,()()().volt line to provideconstr\lction power to the .
AEC. ·The speed with which
the rouf e was surveyed, •
acquired, and built - less
than 60 days - was an in·
dication of the tempo to
follow .
The OVEC prol&gt;osal called
for the construction of two
plants, Clifty. Creek, near
Ma dison , Ind ., with si x ·
215,()()().kw units, and Kyger
Creek, at Cheshl· ~ with five
.units of the SHme rating.
Ground was broken at both
sites early in December 1952,
with completion of the lith
and last unit achieved in
March 1956.
For all of the intensive
planning,"~rrors" crept in. • '
For .one t6i~g, the last ·unit
(Continued from page . A-~

leveled
at EPA

r) ,

LAND REBORN PROGRAM was discussed by ( 1 to
Jun Fulton and Charles Call 1Division of

Reclamation), and Rex Shenefield and Roy Miller (Meigs
SWCD Supervisors) .
'·

·:·::,;:·:·:·:·:·:···: ·:::·.·;-;.;.;. ·:·:·::: -~·:;;;:::::;.:::::::::::::;::::::;.·:·:·:·:&lt;~:·:·:·:·:·:

POMEROY- Monday, Oct. 10
Is Bloomoblle day in Meigs County.
'· It will be held as usual at the
Pomeroy Elementary Scho!&gt;l,
although the hours have been
changed from 1:30 to 5:30.
"We hope donors can adjust to
the time change and continue to give
as usual," Vernon Nease , · Blood
program chairman, said.
·:·: ·:·:::-:-::;: ;: ;. ;. ;:;:;: ; : ; :;:;:;:;:;: ;: ;:;:; : ;:; :;:; : ~; :; :; :; :;: ;: ;:;:; :;:; :; :;: ; :;:;:;:;:;:; :;: ;: ; :

$78,000 asked

.m court sUit.
.

: I'

I

l f,
-

POMEROY - A suit asking $18,000
has been filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by James W. 'Casey, Connie A.
Casey, and Ralph R. Snider, Jr. , by his
mother, Connie A. Casey, all of Racine
agaihst Stear! Coneway, Jr., Markleysburg, Pa. , the Pittsburgh and New
England Trucking Co., and Hiller Trading
Co., both of Dravosburg, Pa.
The plaintiff says that on Oct. 2, 1975 at
the intersection of SR 7 and CR 5 the
defendant, Stear! Coneway, Jr .,
negligently operated his vehicle into the
motor vehicle owned and operated by the
plaintiff, James W. Casey. The suit is for
personal injuries, medical and hospital
expenses and property damage to Casey's
·vehicle.
.
. Other cases filed were a suit in the
amount of $4,646.50 by the Racine Home
Natjional Bank; Racine, against Chester
MWldry, Jr., and Ethel Mundry, Reedsville and"'tl'ifofge""Collins ·as treasurer ;
foreclosure suits by Citizens National
Bank, Middleport, against James T. Ray
and Marilyn Ray, Rt. 3, Albany ; Rolla nil
E. Smith and Karen D, Smith, Rt. I,
Middleport, and George Collins as
treasurer . ·
A land appropriation action was filed
by David L . Weir, director transportation,
State of Ohio, against Sam F. Williams, Rt.
I, Shade, Clara Willia1111, Rt. 1, Shade and
the treasurer and auditor of Meigs CoWlty.
Filing f~r dissolution of their marraige
were Michael Timothy Gard, Rt. I, Reeds·
ville, and J oan Gard, Rt. I, Reedsville, and
Marian Ga le Varney, Rodney a nd
Franklin Delano Va rney, Bidwell .
Filing for divorce were Carol M.
Mullins, Rt. I, Portland, from Clarence
Mullins, Orient, Ohio and Zelia Taylor,
RAcine, from George Taylor, Joliet, Ill.

COLUMBUS - - Gov. James R.
Rhodes announced Friday approval of a
$187,696 'grant from the Appa\3chian ·
Regional Commission (ARC) for a joint
project by the Ohio Mid-Eastern Regional
Education Service Agency (OMERESA )
;md the Southeastern Ohio Regional
Education Service Agency · (SEORESA)
for the establishment of a. computer
network.
The grant will be supplemented with
$46,924 from the 82 school districts whkh
will particit&gt;~~te in the regional computer
netwol'k .
•
The object of the joint project is to
RUSHED TO HOLZE R
'
inake the most cost effective computer
services available to all of the school
POMEROY - Thirteen-month old
districts in the ~unty area served by Kelley Hensler , Racme, was rushed to
the two RESA •s. Sm:pe of the services to be Holzer Medical Center by the Pomeroy
offered are payroll and budget accountiru! . ' Emergency Squad at 12:54 p.m. Saturd~y .
scheduling, trarisportaiion scheduling , ' The family was e nroute w the hosp1tal
grades and attendance, computer-assiste&lt;l when the squad was called at East Second
iru.truction and tut.orial programs.
St. to take ov&lt;!r the rrusswn.
~·

Land ~ehorn Program
is _proposed for Meigs
By Boyd A. Ruth
Conservation Service
POMEROY - Reclaiming abandoned
strip mines in Meigs County - a "Land
Reborn Program" - was the topic of a
meeting held last week in Pomeroy f e·
tween loca l leaders and the Division of
. Reclamation, Ohio Department of Natural
Resources.
Sponsored by the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District, va rious programs
were explained which permit the Division
to cost-share with private landowners in
reclaiming areas mined prior lo 1972. A
reclamation project on state owned land in
Meigs County also was proposed.
The "Land Reborn " program is a result
of the Ohio Legislature's efforts to·use a
severance tax of fou r cents per ton of coal
on reclaiming coal mines and sealing old
oil and gas wells. The state severance tax
eollection will amount to about three
million dollars per year in Ohio.
Priorities for assistance on private
land will be based on the amount of erosion
and acid causingJ!ff.1!ite damage from the
property, such as polluting public waters
or causing drainage problems on neigh·
boring properties. The basic cost-share
program allows the state to pay up to' 75
percent of the total cost with the land·
owner paying the remainder.
A special program for very severe
area,s causing extreme offsite . damage
includes 100 percent of the cost being paid
by the state with one of the following
conditions : (I) a certain per cent of harvested crop, hay, timber from reclaimed

area would lle paid to the state; (2) a lien
on,the reclaimed area to provide payment
to the state if the land is ever sold amoWlt paid to the state is the difference
between appraised value befo.r e
reclamation and selling value; or (3) allow
public' hunting or similar use of the area .
A state owned 87::Scre tract north of
Pageville in Scipio Township is proposed
for reclamation beginning next spring if
funds are approved . This project will inelude resoiling (borrowing soil from ad•
jacent land) , rock rip-rap waterways,
sediment ponds and r'eseeding with
grasses. Cost . ~r acre on this project,
which is considered to be one of the worst ··
unreclaimed sites in the state, is $7,s00 per
acre .
Attending the meeting were Charles
Call, John Schalip, Jim Fulton, Roy Miller,
Rex Shenefield, Thereon Johnson, David
Gloeckner, Mary Ann Falkoner, Boyd.
Ruth, Reid Young, Henry Wells, Richard
Jones, Wesley Buehl, Jack Crisp, Charles
Blakeslee, Archie Stegall, and' Howard
Frank.
A big challenge lies ahead in trying to
reclainn over 6,000 acres of unreclaimed
mines in Meigs County at a cost of about
$25 million. But if we do not start now, the
job will be postponed further into the
future .
Act now ! If you have land that needs
-re~lainned and are willing to work to im·
prove it, call your local Soil Conservation
service office for further details. In Meigs
County call 992-$47 or write Box 432,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Lava rushing
KALAPANA, Hawaii (UP! ) - A 3().foot
wall of lava from Kilauea Volcano rushed
"at a tremendous rate of speed" Saturday
toward the aqandoned seaside village of
Kalapana, scientists said.
Geologist Dan Dzurisin of the Hawaii
Volcano Observatory said after an aerial
1 inspection that the lava was accumulating
into a wall a mile from the ' hamlet and
"avalanching" over itself toward the
tllT'eatened-1.20 homes and two churches.
"We can
the trees as ttJ'ey explode in
lllwers of flame when hit by the river of
lava, " r esident Susa n Hughes told
reporters by telephone before evacuating
her home directly in front of the flow.
Civ il defense officia ls, poli ce and
.scientists gave up attempts to divert the
now. and said only a miracle could swp the
orange and black lava , 600 feet wide at its
source in the erupting volcaho, from
wiping out Kalapana by Sunday .
The lava pooled above the picturesque
old village, held back from its downw~rd
sweep ooly by two gull ies that fi lled up
rapidly like steaming lakes. Then the
avahmching began .

sei

to~ard

Dzurisin said that at the threatening
point , where the flow accumulated, "large
blocks of solidified lava have fanned and
are being rafted down the channel at a
tremendous rate of speed."
At the. pool above the village, the lava
advanced at about 120 feet an .llout_
scientists said.
. '!;he Kilau~ volcano kept "fou.ntaining "
spectacularly, lighting up the sky with \
lava spurts 200 to 400 feet high, sending the
flqw into tile two gullies behind Kalapana .
Although the village's 243 residents were
ev~cuated, at least 100 civil defense
· workers and firefighters set . up water
trucks and tractors on the perinneter of the ·
, tllwn to battle expected blazes.
~
Harry Kim, civil defense director for the
iSland o( Hawaii, said there was serious
concer n that as the lava reaches gtass and
brushy ilreas it may start fires that could
destroy homes not in the path of the flow .
One of the last persons to be evacuated
from 'Kalapana, famous for the "barking
'dog" sound of waves on its black beach of
volcanic rock, was Maizie Yamaguchi,
whose family runs the general store.

''"'
l'

I .

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UP!) - A
coogressional report ~rply criticizes tbe
FMC Corp. and the Environmental
Protection ~gency for failing to protect the
health of 1.8 rnilllon persons whose
drinking water was contaminated by the
toxic chemical carbon tetrachloride last
winter, the Cha'rleston Daily Mail reported
Saturday.
. The newspaper said the report,
sche&lt;luled for release Monday, accused
FMC pf·deliberately misleading residents
along the Ohio River through a deceptive
advertising campai~ aimed at downplaying health.hazards posed by the spills.
"FMC to date has not retracted these
misleading statements," the. Mail quoted
the 80-page report as saying. "The public
remains misinformed. Measures should be
considered to force FMC to pay the cost of
accurate information on the health risks of
carbon tetrach_loride consumption through
additional advertising .'~--The congressional investigation, started
last March at tbe request of Rep. Thomas
Luken, D-Ohlo, also charged the EPA with
failing to set limits for carbon
tetrachloride discharges in a permit
issued to FMC, the newspaper further
reported.
The report was quoted as saying,
"Failure tp specify in the permit the total
allowable level of carbon tetrachloride led
to confusion and abuse ...
"EPA's failure to follow its own
emergency response procedures when it
was alerted that ~usually high levels of
~rbon te~rac~onde had ~n discovered
~ the Oh1o River resulted m·unprotected
trn;idents such as the February carbon let
sp1lls, which EPA discovered by .
accident."

Geri Walton sworn
by Mayor Andrews
POMEROY - Geri Walton, sworn in
Friday as village treasurer by Mayor.
Clarence Andrews, was appointed by the
mayor to fill the unexpired tenn of Phyllss
Hennessy who has resigned.
·
Earlier coWlcil voted to combine the .
clerk-treasurer post, but due to the failure
of a house bill to pass the legislature, the
pOSition had to be filled by appointment. 1ii/':
The treasurer post will appear on the 'l~i~
ballot in November and Geri has filed as a
write in candidate.

village.
" H she comes, she comes," she said ·of
the lava.
Kalapana, about 30 miles southeast of
Hilo, largest city. on the state's biggest
island , was declared an emergency area.
Among the threatened structures was the
historic ·Star of the Sea Painted Church.
Tile volcano. started erupting Sept. 13.
Two perlions, Leo Bracy, 57, and Casamlra
Ward, 29, were killed in the ·crash of a I
small plane on the sl(!pe o( Kilauea
Thursday.·
·
· ' ·

. ..

$265,000 investedin GaJJia County

•

GALLIPOLIS - AllState Insurance ·
Compa,nies have invested more · than
$265,000 in · bonds in Gallla County,
according to Robert C. Brazer, ABsociate
Vice President for Ohio. Gallla County
investments are part of more than
$68,000,000 in !x,.lds held by Allstate In 35
coWJties ,in Ohio.

. .·"

.

'

�•

..
A..J- The Sw1day Tm:es-Senltnel, Sunday, ~t. 2,1977

'

D~put~es ohser:ve auto_ntlsha.~~
Dotlt ask tl16 1vh2\s

PO ~IEH O Y

ll tSil t ,., on

night shenff'·s depuues on

soing on. r just live
here.

I

patrol get to se;&gt; a traffic
arr1dent in the makmg und
rum piJ'te the1r rPDOrt as ~·r

" llnesse$
.
That 's "hat happened
Frtda• ntght at Fl\·~ Pomls
on SR 7 "hen £van H.
40. Rt
3,
Humph r e)'

A·r ea ·oeath S

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

I
I
1

INFANT DAUGHTER

MIDD LEPORT
The
mf ant dauqhter of Rrc ky and
Na ncy JanE" Barge Cl ark of
Syracuse .
djed
Fr tda v
even tng rn Holzer Moed •ca l
Center
In add 1fron to 1he paren ts.

the st rll born chil d ~ ~ surv ived
b y her pater na l grand
parents , Harr y E and Joann
Cl ark . R t 2. Pomeroy , 2
great grandmothers .

Mr"i

Eto dl a Cassell . Mrdd lf'port ,
and M.rs Evelyn Spencer.
Mrdd leport a step grand

I
I
I
I

father CeCil St /'ll,c r 1e . a
grandmother , Mrs Tu'la Lee
St Mane .. of Cad 1z, Oh ro , and
a great great .9 rdndm o1her ,
~.Mr s Bessre Qur ll en , Mrd
dleport
Gravesrde "Servrc~s w~ll Qe
held 2 p m Sunday at Rock
Spr1ngs Cemetery wlf.h Rev .
Floy d Shook oll•e&gt;al •ng
Jhere wrll be no callmg
hours Ar ra nge ments are
under the d rrect ro n of
R:aw l rngs Coats
F uner al
Home. M rdd leport

COLL~ IBl:S
t;Pi t - The \: S
Em tronmenU~t Protectton ~enc~ and lhe
Appalachtan Rel(lonal Commlsstan are
spnnsormg a technologtcal assessment of
fut11re energ~ deH•Iopment tn the lJ..state
\ppala cr.lan Regton
'Ibt:- three., ear assessment \Hll focu s
~? deu•ltJPlflE managemen t optwns for
handlt pg the tmpac t ol energ)
de , elopment on the regwn s econOmtc,
t'nn ronmental pollttcal af\d msttrutwnal

ltfe thorugh the )ear 2000 ~1ost tmportant
10 Appalachta rna) be the effects of
mcrease&lt;l mmmg. transportation and use
of coal
Batte!IM:olumbus LaboraiOnes has

12,251 file
for jobless
•
Ohio
paym

POMEROY - Voters of !he
Southern
Loca l School
D•strtct who will go ro the
poll s c;m Oct ..l5 to vote on a 6 5
emergency s&lt;::hool operatmg
levy can vote absentee ba llots
be9 •nning IWJnday at the

been iJ ffi1Sunder~tandtn);'3t

lhe Gnll and 'lhe pulled away
wuhhts r ar " ftshtathng " !Its
car went oft the' road mto a
duch
Humphrey was arrested
and Jatled for OWl by officer s
\\tlo "~ere northbound on SR 7
as Hwnphrey !tq,Ulggled mto
the dttCh
In oH~r actions, Stlenff
James Proffttt reported a
Syracuse 1U\'entle wa s c1ted
k
to Ju..·emle Court for par mg
on the roadway at the South'

Grueser elected president
~

Notices, local briefs
• Appalachia
Study planned m

Pomeroy, drove away from
the t'tve Potnts GrtiJ in a bad
frfuna.of mmd '
lie told depuues there had

ern-Wahama Football game
frtday night He wtll have a
heanng later. He was parked
we.,oound In an eastbound
lane.
..
Also , Roger Carpenter, Rt.
1. Long Bottom, reported a
p•&lt;1ure window m a hous~ he
o" ns In the Bastian area had
been broken and some
butldtnK tnsulation .,olen •
- Ja ek &lt;:umrn1n.s , . Rt , 2,
Hncme , satd Friday lllg_ht hts
house had been entered while
the famtly was attending the
Southern·Wahama football
game Nothing was found
mtssmg Several objects wtll
be du&gt;ted for fingerprints .

of Meigs Co. Heart Otapter..

POMEROY - The Metgs
County Chapter of the Central
Heart Assn selel1ed officers
REVIVAL SET
APPLE GROVE •- A ,at a recent meetmg m the
reviv al wtll be held at Apple offtces of Dr R R. Botce
Grove United Method iSt
Elected were Walter
Church Oct 3 lhrovQh Oct 8
Grueser, president , Kermit
w tth
the
Rev
Duane
· SydenStr tcker , Sr , of Bel pre Walton, vtce prestdent , Dr
as guest speaker . There wtll Boice, med1cal consultant:
be specra l s•ing tn g each
e&gt;Jenmg The Re v T•m Sm ttt't James Soulsby, treasurer ,
and
Wtlma
Sargent ,
Is pastor
TRUSTEES TO MEET
secretarl' Dr Botce was
SYRACUSE - The Sutlon commended for hiS past work
Townshi P trustees w tll meet
at 8 p m Tuesday at the as prestdent

•

It was announced that the
association recentl y pur·
cl!ased five stethoscopes and
blood pressure sets wtth one
set betng gtven to each
emergency squad tn the
t'OWlty. Chairwomen were
named to conduct the heart
ca mpatgn m february They
are Grace Etch, Nancy Reed,
·Luctlle Smtth and Roberta
O'B nen Plaris for the
..~:am patgn we re dtscussed
and the next meetmg was set
for 12 noon at the Meigs Jnn

County Board of
Electron
s
Off tce The offrce
been a\\ arded the research contract and
wrll be open N'onda y through
~til make tts fmdings a\ atlable to federal
Saturay from 9 a m to 4 p m
agenctes. Appalachtan state and local
for
the absentee i!Ot rng
COLUMBUS - A total of
go\ernments, pn\'ate Uldustn and spectal
12,251 new!) unemployed
LODGE TO OINE
mterest groups
Ohtoans hied mtttal clatms • HARRISONVI LLE
M unc 1pal Burl dmg
for benefits under the regular Harnsonvr lle Lodge -11 1 a nd Syr ac~
Cl'INtC NOlfCE
Eastern Star Chapter 255 wrll
Ohto Law dunng the \\eek hold a pofhJck d1nn.er at 6 30
POMEROY - The Me•gs
endmg September 24, a 67 p m. on Oct a to honor the County Tuberculosis Cfm tc ~-----~---------------------1
Letters ol oplnlpn are welcomed. Tbey obould be 1
percent mcrease over the w1dow s and wrdowers of both wtll be closed from 8 30 am 1
I p m Tuesday due to
,
1
leso
than 300 words long (or be subject to reduction by
I
previous week(s total of the lo dg e and chapte.r to
The foundation-has dlStrtbuted almost
h\embers are vrged to attend , t-uberculin skm tests berng
GALUPOUS - Stead). conunutng
the
editor)
aod
must
be·
slgDed
wltb
the
algnee'o
ad·
I
11.480. according to an an· Meat w11! be proo,;r ded
g tv e r,~ tn the Southern Local
- 33 null ton dollars to tts 34 member colleges
supll"rt for :he Ohw f oundation of
dreas. Names may be withheld upon pubUcaUoa. · I
School Drs1rrc1
nouncement by Albert 9
over the past 26 years of tts extstence Gtles, admimstrator of the
Independent Colleges was recm ed However, on request, names will be dlsclooed. Lett•rs J
Contributions from corporauons have Ohto Bureau of Employment
among them RID Grande College - from
should
be ID good taste, addressing Issues, not per· 1
made tilts dlstnbuuon posstble
96 OhiO corpora ti ons and busmess
servtces
.
sonalllies.
•
1
Checks recel\ ed from June 1 through
orgamz.atlons dunng the swrune r Total
t
. Gtles satd that tntlta l
September 30. mclude one from Holzer
for June . .Jul) A~gust and September was
clatms under all other
I
MediCa I Center CltntC
m-u2ll
programs numbered 2 129 ,
I
I
mcluding l,!QS under ExI
tended Benefits, for an
I
overall tntttal claims total of
I
14,380 last 1\eek, a shght .6 of
-«
IContmuOii from page A·l ) one percent 1ncrease over the
previous week's total of
Half-truths, ir1sir1uations
.
14,297 .
...
~as completed three months
MIDDLE PORT ..J Mtiiie nme are taken on a nother
Contmued clauns of those
ahead of ttme For another,
Deat Str
f
COLU ~BUS
State rollback, while $1,606 ,057 .37 the pnce of power m 10 of the Wlemployed one or more Lane, representmg Fran· route IS orgartized Volun·
In an arttcle m the Dail, ~ 'nllllel. Sept 25, 1977, Dr. Robert E .
homestead
Audito r Thomas E ferguson represents
years !956-!969 was1ess than weeks "'ere estlmated at ctscan Communtty Meals" of leers gtve approJUmately one
Cape sta tes. "Don't ever te'l"' amma ltt doesn't feel pam when
reported Saturda) a total of exempl!ons for elderly the four·tenths of a cent per 86,247, mcludmg 611,000 under Zanesvtlle, told members of and O(le·hali hours per week
caught m the steel Ja~ s of~ ··~ ·hold 'trap. It won't believe you" '
$8,007 ,543 26 m second hall homeo,\llers and $32,121.14 ktlowatthou r that had been the regula r Ohw Law, the Mtddleport·Pomeroy
The prog ram ts under~_a)
By thts sunple statemeJ1t t' " Cape leaves the tmpresston of
197i property tax rollback represents reimbursement set as a bogey m 1952,
representmg a 3 4 percent Rotary Club Fnday evemng tn Athens and L.-Hen'ce ]a\\S, a nd Ja\\s ha\e teeth : tm:, he would have us Jmagme an
and homestead exemptiOn costs to the counues for the
dechne fr om the 119,313 total atj Heath Umted Methodtst , Counues and bemg orgamzed
.
.
antmal ~turgglmg m a toothed Jaw trap. Such IS not the case
and admtmst ratlon co st adm~nlstration of thetr
In the early 1970s, nstng for the week endmg Sep- .Church a meals program fo• in other southeastern Oht~ Tra~ wtlh teeth have be&lt;in outlawed m Ohto for 50 or more years
reimbur sem ents has been programs
needy persons m Metis count1es
Yet a lady asked -at our fatr booth at the Metgs County Fair,
Included "as Metgs cost s, parbcularl y coal. tember 17
sent to 12 counttes
Jobless Oh toa ns ftlmg Count) IS posstble prOvtded . The speaker satd a meeting
finally
pushed
the
purchases,
Where are the traps wtth the teeth tn thern that you use' " When I
Of the to tal secon d $81 ,167 04, for rollbacks, and
wtll be announced later fh!S assured h&lt;:r that none wtth teeth were used, she replied , " Well, I
clauns under all programs there ts sifhcten( mterest
cost of power up"ard
$37
,488
less
$750
adhalf l917 retmbursementS 1
The money ts at hand, month where representatives was JUst ·to id that ) OU dtd ",
However, OVEC takes last week were esttmated at
for
S6 ,369 ,3&amp;4 75 represents the 10 mtmstrauve c~sts
pnde m tls contmued effort to 100,627 - 14,380 under mtttal through a federal grant to the of church and servtce
It wasn 't too hard to ftgure where she _got her nusmformatfon
per cent pr opert) ta• homestead exemptions
hold the untt cost of power to clatms and 86 ,247 und er Appalachian regton on a 'one orgmzattons c~n learn more
We of the trappmg frate rmty hav~ never stated or implied
about the program.
a m tmmum , the record contmued cla uns, sho\\tng a shot arrangement "
that there was no patn w1th the leg-hold trap. To do so would be a
" The program ts based on
The speaker \la S presented he , and most of the trappers I know are not !tars However th&lt;
shows that m 1976 OVEC's 2:9 percent decrease from the
umt cost of energy was the prevtous week's total of tne dtetary n,eeds of by program chatrman Joe nesh rendtng, bone shat!Enng unbearable agony the Antt
prtmanly mdtgent persons," Young
lowest of the three uulittes 103,6 10
trappers would have us believe IS mfhcted JUSt does not exiSt It "
Upon the sugg§,5\wn of more hke sllckmg your finger tn a hght socket, kmd of a shocking
supplymg power to the three
Admtmstrator Gtles stated she explamed She further
HO;.iG KONG 1UPI 1 realtzed too," he sa td m gaseous dtffuston plants that 2,019 Jobless Ohioans explamed
_
'
Rotanan Gene Rtggs the clu b surpnse more than a really pamful expenence
Chtnese Communtst part y reference to economic operated by the U. S. exhausted thetr benefits
Meals are prepared at a approved a resolu!ion opAlso our learned doctor goes qutte mto detatl on the type ol
Chatrman Hua Kuo-feng sa)S programs "We have the Government. The urut cost IS under all programs for the . central already established • posmg the passmg of State death clubbed to death (so he states ), or the chest crushed
Chma ha s entered a new resolve and the conftdence to stgmftcant, considertng the week endtng Sept. 17 Sub- facthty such as a hospttal and Issue 2 which would ban the
Well . let me tell you, aftEr hav mg carefully watched a couplE
perwd of de\'el opment that turn Ch ma , mto a great, fact the amount of power totals were Ohto Law 1,227 ; dehvered to homes by leg-hold trap tn Ohto
of vetennanansdo thetr thing puttmg stck pefs to sleep, I ca n gm
\l. l\1 transform tt tnto a
powerful
and
modern delivered to the government Tttle 5 !govern ment em· vo)unteers A mtntmum of
Prestde nt Carl Demson them a 15 ·mtnute head start wtth thetr needle and stlll come U&gt;
great, po" erful and modern SQCtaiist country by the end of factltty was somettmes as ployes and ex·servtcemen 1 five rectptents IS needed to prestded. Ladtes of the wtlh a more hwnane executton wtth etther a club or a crushec
S&lt;Jctalm" nation by the end of thts cent ury ."
start a "route n When over church served dmner
much as 2,100,000.kw , or 89
chest, If the ones I observed Yo ere 1outme , and I was assured tha t
the centur}
300,()()(1-kw more than the
U1ey wer e
Hua 1 toastmg Chma 's 28th
amount st tpulated ir! the
Dr Cape speaks of a qmck ktlllrap mucli ltke a mouse trap
:O:atwnal Da). spoke at a
cont ract
would
assume he IS ~eferrmg to the contbear Ftr~t. this trap "
, OfFERSTANDS
receptton fnday mght tn
unlawful
to set on land tf 1ls stze 15 over four mches; second, tt"
DEFIANCE, Ohio !UP! I Pekmg's Great Hall of the
A multt·fathered ch'Tid,
completely
nonselecttve; third , a fox would not go wtthin 10 feet o
Pe&lt;Jple that ~a s attended b) The prestdent of Johns OVED (and IKEC ) IS
nne
Under
any
consrdei at ton , and fourth , a com bear large cnougl
m&lt;nl foretgn guest s, tn- Manvtlle Corp told stnkmg operated by its own
to take a large coon or fox could kill a large dog or even a three 01
~ludmg former Secretary of employees at three J.M
management responSible to
four year old chtld or break U1e arm or leg of an adult.
plants m Deftance that the
Slate Wilham Roge rs
an tndependent board of
Dr. Cape speaks of a snare type trap used tfi Scandinavia 1
He recall ed the purge of the company wtll not tmprove tts dtrectors "hose members are
Democrattc
votes
to
win
and
Dr
Cape wtll read Ohw's game laws he wtll learn snares hav&lt;
WASHINGTON (UP! ) college.
late~t wage offer and IS
' Gan~ of f our" a ~ear ago
pohtically,
he
satd,
the
Lance
drawn from the 15 sponsor Sen Charles H. Percy, R-Ill.,
been
tllegal m Ohio for many years
,
At 29, he became prestdent
1
and sa1d hts program to constden ng a cu tback m compames. W. S, Whtte, Jr,
hearmgs
'
hurt
me
and
Dr
Cape
sta
ted,
"The
trap
and
trappmg
do not have to t
1
restore " great order across operat10ns 1 It was reported cha1nnan and ctilef executave once the boy wonder of of a SlJlall camera ftrm. He severely '' Among some
banned,
and
that
ts
not
the
intent
of
the
Ohto
Commtttee fo1
the land ' ~as proceedmg F•i'day. The three plants offtcer of Amencan Electnc bustness and pohttcs, says he made Bell &amp; Howell an Democrats, "I may never be
Humane
Trappmg.
The
tntent
ts
stmply
to
ehmmate
the leg-hoi&lt;
even bett er than "e an· we re struck July 1 by Local 51 Power Company , ts the emerged from hiS clash wtth mdustnal gtant wtth 10,000 forgiven "
trap,
and
othe
r
traps
which
cau~e an ammal ~ suffer prolonge&lt;
Bert Lance a wounded vtctor employes and sales of $171
of the Glass Bottle Blowers
ll ct pated
Asked if he felt he has "an
agony."
current and fourth prestdent - damaged polillcally and mtlhon.
' The goal of achtevmg AsS&lt;J ctatiOn, which on ly last of QVEC and IKE~ Those
tmage
prob
lem,"
Percy
satd
People of Ohto, get a copy of thts amendment, read 1
In the SenatE, Percy, a
ma rked success within three wee k re Je Cte d the latest precedtng htm tn thts wtth ao tmage as a loser.
he
dtd.
carefully,
then take tt to a JUdge, lawyer or any mteliigent perso1
Percy, who was the budget progresstve Republican, was
Ha r s will cert amh be co mpany offer
''I don't thmk about tt or
and ask them what 1l means Any lime an ammal IS restramet
capactty, all execuuves of the lfirector's chtef antagontst at put on Rtchard NtXoQ'S "eneagamst tts wtlltt ts suffenng. What ts prolonged suffermg' Is 1
AE P orgamzatiOn 1 were. the Senate hearmgs, satd mtes hst " for opposmg worry about tt but I presunoe
unbearable agony, rntld pam or mental anguish' What interval o
Phtltp Sporn from 1952 to there was an attempt by N1xon's Supreme Court !.have 1!," he srud. " ! don't
hme are we_; peaking of' Is "prolonged" a couple of seconds, '
1967: Donald C Cook, 1967· Lance "to dtscredit me and nommees and hts Vtetnam know what you do about
couple of mmutes 1 hours, days ?
1976; and George V Pat· make me the defendant " and and arms pohc1es . But thmgs lil&lt;e that ."
"I
was depteted as a loser,''
Si!ndy 'Howland says, "Thts IS for the courts to dectde." A
---------------- terson, 1916·1977.
to some extent it succeeded
desptte hts national imag.,.,
he said. "! hope that's a
whose
expense? Yours, dear taxpayer 1 yoW's
On the other hand, "to the Percy has had little mfluence
,.
temporary situation."
Mtss Crawford, a week ago m her column, "Hoofs and Paws'
Officers of the operation extent there were certam m the Senate
Durmg the hearings, Percy
in the Daily Senttnel, stated that we are confusmg the tssue wttl
company are : Ralph D. aspects of the Lance affatr
In a reflective mood a few
apologtzed
to Lance for sug- fa cts and figures Wtll somebody please tell me how anythng cat
Dunlevy ,
semor
vice that I would have ltked to days after tlis 58til birthday,
•
be confused wtlh facts or figures '
prestdent , I 0 . Hawk, vtce have done over , I do not Percy
had
these gestmg he had backdated
checks for an tllegal
In closmg I wrsh to state thts ts not a letter agamst .al
prestdent tn charge of unpugn the mottves of those observations.
deductton
veterinanans
The ones I know are top drawer and doin~ a ,e:o04
operations, T N. Ward, vice who crttacize me one b1t,"
While
his
own ·
Percy
satd
hts
wtfe
was
-.
Job
m
a
tough
pro(esswn but Dr. Cape's attack on the trap an•
prestdent , sec retary and Percy satd
presidenhal hopes have been
"
hurt
"
by
the
attack~
trapper
ts
a
bunch
of half lrul\ts and mslnua,twns that have to I&gt;
treasurer, J R. Simms,
" It 's thetr nght to do tt and slot astde - "I have no
mounted
by
Lance
and
the
answered.
Rtchard
L Coleman, Rt I Box 24, Ohto Bottom, Ohi
asststant secretary; and J. R. l assunoe to a degree some of mterest m 1980 whatsoever,"
White
House
11
45743.
Otto, asststant treasurer
he said - he thinks, if
It IS well-warranted
She and thetr children
lri an mterview 1 Perc)' satd opportunity calls, hiS son-lrl· "called me every day,
he
has
shelved hts law, Gov. Ja,r Rockefeller oL somettmes twtce a day, when
Think it over, she asks
The OVEC sponsor com· prestdenttal ambttwns and is West Vll'gJnta, a Detnocrat,
' I .
they
would
see
these
attacks,
pames are Appalachtan concentratmg on survtval m one day out of Ute Rockefeller
see
the
attempt
to
dtscreclit
Dear Str:
Power Company, The Cm- the jungle of !llmms pollttcs fall)ily's "sense of duty and
me
and
make
me
the
Before we cast stones at our Local School Goverrunent,
wtll
feel
ctnnaU Gas &amp; Elleclnc - tough for any Republtcan . obltgation"
defendant and the committee etc , perha~ tl would be wtser to make an analysis of how we
''c
ompelled"
to
seek
the
Whe n he
ca me
to
Company, Colum~us and
Ute defendant," he srud
would have felt If when our own children were m school the
Southern Ohto Electrtc Washtngton 11 years a~o. the prestdency ·
But m the end, Percy feels · same problems were present and the retired, the childless
Above
all
men
in
pubhc,
Company, The Dayton Power . sttll boytsh·lookmg , Percy
his view that Lance had couoles. etc, would have voted down a school operatin~ levy?
and Light Company, Indiana w.as seen as pro.specttve hfe, Percy admtres Sen.
decetved
the. Senate .was
Keep in mind that our School Distrtcts do receive state
~ Michtgan Electric Corn·
pr~sidenltal material. To wtt : Hubert ·H Humphrey, Dupheld
,
fundings and tlo have stnct reqwrements as 10 how the schools
Mtnn. "! greatly respect his
pany , )&lt;entucky Utiltttes
"I had the last 4,000 must be governed.
•
He ts a descendant of abtliiY 10 be enthustasttc
Company, Loutsville Gas and
words,"
he
.
satd.
"
I
lrud
the
Also,
think
of
'the
trauma
that
the
puptls will bear if th,e
Electrtc Co mpany , BrttiSh coloniSts Hts father about every aspeat of life "
case
out
and
that
case
has
not
aoors
are
closed
in
our
district
- Although he carried all
Monongahela Power Com· lost hts JOb and fl!e 's,s.-1ngs
Juvemle problems wtll be on the rtse, so how can we
•
102 LUtnols counttes in been refuted by anyone yet "
pany, Ohto Edtson C'""ll'~ny, m the Great DepresSion
smugly
stt
tn
our
homes
enjoying
TV
or
whatever,
knowing
© "'' ·,u - ~f)~
- Ohto Power Com-j)liny,
As a boy. Percy was wtnmng reelection in 1972, he
NOWYOUKNOW
Uta! mclirectly we are responstble if we defeat our levy ?
Pennsylvama Power Com· honored for selling more IS womed about a potential
The
expresSion
These children will some day be our futUre leaders, so
of
"Coun try prtmary challenge from
pany, The Potomac Edtson rop1es
"everythtng
ts
hunky
dory"
please
gtve Utem a chance.
Schlafly,
a
Company, Southern lndtana Gentlemen " to ctty people Phyllts
'.
was
insptred
by
:!n
eltgant
Thts
letter ts m no WJIY mtended to be a personal insult oor
Gas and Electrtc Company, U1o:111 any other rnagazme conservative, and a major
l!lth
century
street
in
threat
I
JUst wrote tl because I am so very mterested' $lid
The Toledo Edtson Company, . sall''\111&lt;:111 He fllCHl&lt;Jged to Democrattc effort to oust
"/hate to admil th1s but maybe Rozelle was n_ght
Yokohama
,
Japan.
named
dedicated
to -our young folks . - . Mrs. James M Ftsher,
htm
and West Penn Powl!,r ill'&lt;u~nul•tc $10,000 whtle
aiJout 'unnecessary v1olence 'I"
Honcho
Don.
Mmersv!lle
, Ohto
Per
ty
r
have
musl
wor lo ng. _!tt s WilY lltfl'"~ Ut.! h
Company
Me tg s

Support continues for independents

Meals program

·OVEC's

Twelve counties receive
rollback, lxemption pa~ents

is explained

. :t:6~ ; , .: :;: ;
••• .8~..1
?Jtt. ~:
· .a.-

.

Chairman Hua sure of future

... .

Percy em~rged from Lance
clash as wounded ·victor

.Berry's World

_::-:.---

•

· ·~
~. .

·can_Senior~a~ .eigs__High
lly Charlt•ut• Hul'iheh

' I'OMF.ROV-K&lt;idulfn Ilia&gt;
Florc!i of Torn•on, Mt·xwo_, .a
Spa ILishj!pt·a~lnl;...it•t• ua~s

tfit·

Mlddlt•port·l'onu·rny
Rotary Club's st•t·uud foreil{ll
{'X(·hangr !tludt.•ut. llc is a
st•niur at Melgslligh S•·houl.
The son ol a rani'ht·r wllh
thrt•t• bro(ht•rs and t~u
• Sl!ilcfSr Rndullo hudn't b'~n

norlh uf Tt·xa~ until he "'as
at cepted

b)'

tht•

Turn·un

Rotary l'lub fur Jhe exchaugr
program lfl' arrh·~d here on
Aug. Z7 a d ts tht• housegurst
of Mr

and Mrs. B.-rnard

"'II

F'ultz. Otht•r Hutarlans
be
st·n•lug as hosl familil"S for
the youth dunng hi s ttme m
Meigs County
As -~"th most foreign ex•

TV •••in Review

..·- ~;·,·;,, k,.,,l, c,, ,s, , , ,,~,,"'.u'·;c,_l, y.,.,..,~Gall~a _ driver~
pccklcd, packed

slullt"nt s,
lhu
langua~c prcst·nts some prt~o­
blcms. Rndulfu, huwever,

understands and spca\&lt;s
English qutte w~l having
sludlcd it in the publit·
classroom for many years. or
course, there is room fur improvement so he has enrolled
in a fresh man Enghsh
l'Ourse.
· The •ix fool one, brown
haired Rodolfo Is athletic aud
as une Rotarian described
him, is almost a 1'Super star"
on the tennis court. Since
coming to Meigs County he's
also taken up goU and now
plays with the MilS gulf
team.
His class include consumer
math, typmg, introduction to
business and lile sports.
Before commg here he had
already completed three
years ol secondary and two
years of preparatory school
m preparation for entering a
university m Mexico where
he'll maJor In business ad·

lly JOAN HANAU ER
Kmen Ann Qumlan, the legal
UPI Telrvlsi4111 Wrltrr
sklrmis hmg
nf
Cary l
Nf;W VOHK t UP! l
Chessman and the hero 's
Televtswn has reached the death of Joseph Kennedy Jr
ultimate 1n "docu·dramasH
The documentary dramas
- Ute dm:wnentarv stvle have been criticized for bemg
dramatizatiOn of an hiswnCal at best onc·stded views of
event U1.1t llt!Vl'r happened event-; much more complex
In order to drama ttze what U1an the limitations of televl·
dtdn 't happen , tl l1&lt;1s been ston can a llow . Th e very
necessary to ehmmrtte what nature of the beast 1s
dal
lopstded, slanted .
And a n endmg had to be
In tile case of Oswald, the
fabn ca ted out of \\h ole trouble wttlt the show ts mQre
'
cloth
subtle
~mirustration.
I'
HODOLFO DIAZ FLARES
The
docu-dratna
lh
The first two·hour ~egme nt
quest ton IS ABC's "The Trial opened with the vtewer
Of !....,~ Jiarve) Oswa ld " seemg
a
televt ston
wht ch the network IS, "documentary 1 ' on Oswald's
prescntmg m a pa1r of h\O · hfe that was bemg shown
, how· presentations Sept 31l dunng hts trtal for the
andOcl. 2 9-11 p.m .. Eastern murder of John F Kennedy
There were hiS mother, the
tnnc each mght.
In order to present the first of th e conspiracy
·tnal," wht l' h ol l'o urse theun s ls . his Russian Wlfe ,
Also, Oavtd Blake, Mr. and
POMEROY - Parents
never too k plci&lt;..'C, 11 "·~· !) Marma, and a number of
Mrs
John Blake, Lanny
nel'cssary to p1 ~tend that otiH.'l real hfe characters night was observed at
Mr and Mrs
Longstreth,
Oswald passt•d uneventfully
References were made tb Marauder Stadtuno Friday
Kenneth
Longstreth,
Davtd
lhrnu g h that umlet gt oun d Lyndon Johnson, Robert evening prior to the start ~f
Wtlhamson,
Mr
and
Mrs
Btll
corndor on Su~day , Nov 24, K~nnedy, J Edgat Hoover, the Metgs·lronton football
Wtlhamson;
!\andy
Tackett,
1963, wtthou! the fatal John Connally and other real game.
Presented and takmg bows Mr and Mrs Randall
mterventton of Jack Rub)
people.
It · all to o 1 e•hsttca ll y
Just as Jack Ruby has been were the following parents, or Tackett; Ttm Faulk, Mr and
re&lt;·rcated the assas.smallon
1cmoved from history's cast relattves, or fnends fo.r Mrs Clinton Faulk ; Mark
M1tch, Mr and Mrs. Gene
There an~ those ''ho didn 't of charac ters, two new players as listed ·
Mttch; Mike Drehel, Mr and
George Gum, Mr. and Mrs
\\ ant to :;ee 11 agam - the player s have been introduced
MfS.
James Drehel; Rtchard
pre stden t 's head sn ap tn leadtng roles - Ben George Gum Sr : Ken Young,
Basham,
Mr and Mrs.
forward , then back mto the Gazzara as th e forceful Mrs. PhylliS Young, Greg
Sherman
Basham,
Brent
arms orh1.s '\ tfc 111 her bnght
spec1al prosecutar, Anson Becker, Mr and Mrs Don
Stanley,
Mr
and
Mrs
Fred
ptnk sutt , her scramble · Ktp '' Hoberts, and a Becker; Dan Thomas, Mr.
Stanley.
Bob
Chappelear,
acr oss the bal'l&lt; of the be spec t acled , very and Mrs Don Thomas; Rtck
limousi ne , the Set:Iet Servt C'e Establishment lookmg Lorne 'Wilhamson, Mr and Mrs. Mr and Mrs Bruce Hoff·
man dm~bmg a board ·\t Greene as Osw~Jld's defense fred Wtlhamson; Ri ck man; M1ke McGuire, Mr. and
least the dram&lt;~ dtd not at\01 ney. Matthew Arnold Blaettnar, Mr and Mrs John Mrs. Dallas McGmre; Mark
explot t the tear-drenched Wel~on Both turned tn sohd , BlaeJ_1nar; Mtke Wayland, Magnotta, Mr. Joe Magnotta;
four days of emolwn that belleavab le performances as Mr. and Mrs. Gary Wayland, Todd Snowden, Mr and Mrs
everyone remembers so well
lawyers whO want to wm Btll Elkms, Mr and Mrs. Robert Snowden; Dave
As fm tfie vet dtct tn the but not at any prtce
Bobby Elkms; Van Wtllford, Davts, Mr. and Mrs Bruce
tnal , ABC ts hlildmg out. In
J oh n
PIe s he t t e Mr. and Mrs Bill Williard, Davts; • Brent and Randy
showmg the pr o~ r am to chara cten zed Oswa ld as the Jtinmer Soulsby, Mr. and Arnold, Mr. and Mrs Stade
Arnold; Jeff Laudermtlt,
critics, the network cut 1t off
loner he was - a man the Mrs. ~ames Soulsby
Mrs Janet Brown
before U1e endmg of the
v1ewer watches for four hours
And Dan Edwards, Mr. and
second se~ ment and tnsJ sls Without eYer gettmg to know .
Mrs
Larry Edwards; Ttm
the oAI) ""Y to kno" the He wasn 't hkeable, he wasn't
Wyant,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
verdict ts to sec the seLond v1llamous - tf he stands for suspiCIOns
Wyant;
Robert Parker, Mr.
Astde
from
the
far
from
hal[ of the prog ram Oct 2
anythmg, tt ts whl\1 has been
Robert
Parker;
Jtm Haning,
co
mplete
presentallon
of
"Trtal" appears to be ab{Jut · · called the banaltty of e~tl
1
Mr
and
Mrs
James
Hanmg;
facts,
"Tr1al'
ts
unsattsfymg
as far as teleVlston ca n go tn . For a monster to have
the docu-&lt;lrama fteld, m a assassmated the prestdent on another leve l When John Stout, Mr. and Mrs
season thai tn tts ftrst eouple mtght have been more Oswald was ktlled, the Btl lie Stout; Brent Boltn, Mr
of weeks ah·ead: has seen acceptable than havtng the cou~try was dtvtded between and Mrs. Joe Bohn; Davtd
dramatt&lt;ed t~ e pll ght of gun wielde&lt;l by a bland those who were thankful to Hysell, Mr. and Mrs. Mtlford
have been spared the ordeal Hysell , Joe Garnes, Mr. and
nonentity
Pleshette 's performance IS of a trtal (mcluding those who Mrs Bill Garnes
so convmcmg that at first the ques\toned the possibtiity of a
Sunday Tin..es-5entlnel
vt'ewer mtght be jarred by the " fatr " trial), and those who
Pullltshed !:!VI:!ry Sunda y by Tl~
lack of facta! resemblance mourned that now the nallon
Ohu Valley PubhshUJK Co
and by the end of the four- would never the full
GALLIPOLIS
DAILY TRIBUNE
hour show Pleshette seems asspssmat10n stofy
825 T h1rd Ave , Gallipolis. OhiO
That was the mtssmg
almost a look-altke.
45631
Publrshrtl every weekday cventng
The fmal two·hour segment element
the entire
l:!ltl'ept Satuz d11y Second Class
of the shol\ ts devoted to the Amencan legal system and
Poowge P&lt;ikl al Galhpohs, Ohro
tnal. Increasingly as tl how tl mtght have handled or
45631
THE DAILY SENTINEL
progresses the story h~e mishandled
trial,
the
ll1 Court Sl Pumuoy 0 4576\l
leans toward the conspiracy complete wtth complex issues
Publish~ every week day evemng
mccepl Sittunlay Enl.ered as serund
theory of assassmation, wtth for defendants rights,
dass marl rnl,l rnatler at Pomeroy,
the CIA, the Mafia and others freedom of the press, the
Ohm Post O(flce
th carrtcr Wu\y und Sun!.Wy 7~c
mvolvcct Because 11 had to priorities of gover nment
to
per wl!t!k Motor- route $3 25 per murtptck and choose among the secrecy and subpoe naed
th
Make the
volumes of evtdence m the ev idence m the case of a
MAIL
SUBSCRlPriON RATES
Warren Cornmtssion report 1 ca pttal crime
The GaUrpohs Da1ly Tnbune lt1
World Go
Instead these ISSues were
and all the facts btzarre and
Ohio and West V1rgrnw one yl:!ar
S22 00 -s-tx rnontl1:;$ll 50, lhr~ mon·
mwtdane that llave ansen qutckly skipped past, as when
RouruJ
lhs. $7 00 Elsewhere $26 00 per
smce, the program was a judge disquahlted hunself
yetu . sb: montlls 113 50 three rnon
and granted a change of
ths $7 50, mulUL,J'Ql.lte SJ 2li motrforced to take a stand
thly
The dtfftculty wtth the con· ven}.le
. ..
The Dally &amp;mime!, o n ~ ye&lt;r.r
"The Trtal of Lee Harvey
sptracy theory as propounded
f.l'l 00 , Six months $11 50, lhrecmun·
ths $7 00 Elsewhert $26 00, Slll
here ts that the kingpm has Oswald" as ptctured on ABC
J
munlhs $1:1 50 three months 17 50
been el tmmated - Jack ts remarkably simtlar to the
The Umled Press rnterntrunal IS
exclusively entitled lu !he ll'*! for
' Ruby's murder of Oswald has general run of American
pubhcatwn uf aU news drspa.tdres
always been a basic butlding tnals and that ts not a
422 Second Aile
crcdalcd to the newspaper iilld also
block
for
consptracy reasonable assumption
the loci! I news published herelll
Galllpolrs, Oh1o

Parents get honor

prior to gl;id tilt

Rin}i[/

CHICAGO [UPIJ -

A

spukesman ror the nation's

top pickled pepper pac•kers
has an answer to th e
question : llow many perks
ol pickled pepp rrs do
pick led pepper packe rs
pack'!
Elghl million peeks per
year, strys William R.
Moore, executive vice
president
of
the
organbatlon appropriately
named Pickled Pepper
Packers International.
Moore was proclaiming
"pepper power" with the-sTart today ol National
Pickled Pepper Week.
"Pepper power," Moore
said, is the " potetit puwer
· of perfectly piquant pickled
peppers lu particularly and
pleasantly plxilate and
palpitate the pubhc's
palate."
..

'

vehtcle dnven by J utu1 P.
Hu&lt;lerus, 29, North Ver·
s.mlles, Pa. str ul'k an ' auto
dmen by Carl E Moore , 18,
Galhpo)is
Another minor mt shap {X: ·
damage
Kathryn A. Va nwinkle, 66 , curred on the parkmg }(Jt a t
Warehouse Pmnt, Conn . was the.Shake Shupp!' off ·S&lt;!I:ond
ctled tu Mumc•pal . Cuut ( fm Ave when~ an auto driven hy
fat lu t e to y~eld followmg an lluldd Brown , 51, (;all lpo lts,
acetdcnt at 6 10 p m ~ rtda y l ulled mtu a car drlvtn by
on Ftrst Ave a nd Sycamore Loretta Keeton, 24~ IH I, Ew ·
St Offtcet&gt; satll the Van- u1gton 'I hefe was ltlll!(ll'
\vmkle ear tmlled 111to th e damage
A backtng ac·c tdent u&lt;'path of a Vehtl'le upct died by
Mary E Dawson, 18, Ht 2, C'mTed 011 F'u st Ave wllCI c a
Gal l.ir~hs. ~Hlcs wtp cd a car &lt;.;ar operated by Gt•orge I&lt;:
operuted b) Htck Smout, 18, Bush, Galhpohs, strut·k a
pat ked car owned h) \ilt.a
Ht 2, Che;apeakc.
No charges resulted from Corliss. There \HiS mawr
ah acctdent a t 10 20 am fn- damage
A £mal acctdent ocl'urrcd kit
day on Vtne St. and Tl!t rd
Ave whCI e a car dr Iven by the K&amp;K pa1·kmg whe1 e • n
Donna J""" Bias, 24, Pmnt auto dnv~o bv Jdf A Swmn,
Pleasant, s tru~k a truck 21, Gallipolts, ·,1, m·k a P'" ked
ddven by Robc1 t E~ Hobe1 ts, ca t owned by Chcty l SwHllt of
56, Eure~a Sta r Ht Thet'C RtOCrende.
by Stanley 0

!Iouck, 19,
mto a
car O\\ net! by Dtmuld I.
P01&gt;1Cr, 33. Ht 3. l'uulCfO)'
There wa s mndl'rdte

Gallipuh ~. fuH.: tn~ It

Laid ~ ff crews l
are recalled
LOilDS'I'OWN , Ohio I UP!)
General Motors Corp has
1 eea ll cd
1,000 latd-off
workers w tts assemb ly plant
and hued 1,300 more durmg
th e past two weeks ,
Lmnmumcallons coordmator
Jack Roberts sa1d Frld•y
He satd wtlhm a week the
plant wtll be bmldmg 70 ca rs
an how· on two sht(ts. Tl~
second shift was abandoned
earher lh!S year .
In March , 1976, GM latd off
1,600 workers but about BOO of
those have etther found other
JObs or moved a11ay, Roberts
satd
~

.

Arts, crafts class
to start at

-

.. .

Meigs museum

,I

POMEROY - The Metgs
County Museum arts and
crafts class wll begm thts
month.
Adult classes for drawmg
and pamtmg and macrame
will be offered on Monday
evenings for stx weeks Trlcia
Adleta will be mstructor for
the drawmg and paintmg
classes to mclude · watercolors , penctl, charcoal and
mk . The macrame class w1U
offer a vanety of knots and
techniques and wtll be taught
by Sandy Henderson and Lots
Snyder who were students m
the Metgs Arts and Crafts
classes of Mrs Adleta last
year. Both classes wtll be
from 7 to 9·30 p rn.
An mtroduchon to the
classes will be provided at the
museum at 7 p.m Monday,
Oct 3 Regtstratmn and
payment of fees wtll take
place at thts meeting Any
questwns can be answered by
calltng Mrs Adleta at 9926040 or 99H651.

'I;

.

.

I

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'

PICTURE FRAME
MOULDING &amp;
DECORATIVE .
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G-;'.~. ~.~~.l ~: i!.~ .....
TAWNEY'S
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,\ .. k .1houl Srar ... ('l'l' flil ·pl an ...

SILVER BRIDGE

.

'\''

•
t' nu~ y betwee n the (;ullipulis was li ght damage
A mmor mtsnap Dccur red
Termm3!1uul Hur~t·r ('her.
at
10 !&gt;8 a.m. Ullllt~r p~ t ktng
Ctl) poht c sa u.l tlw l'urnal'
lot
at SuperAmcncu where a
car strul'k un a_ulu o1•cr(!ted

GALL! POl.&gt; - -LtndH 'E
Toi11at, 27, Galhpohs, was
dtargcd walh feiiiUI e to stop
withm the assured clear
d,.t.nec followmg H three
v~lnl'ic aLcident (It 2.05 p: m

l' han~e

charged

PLAZA

243 Thcrd Ave .• Galhpoli s
Serv1ce

•

�-·

•

'

A-4 Tht&gt; Sundd~ Ttml'~tnllmd, Sund.n , llt.'t 2. 19;;

,hail Jppr••.l t h

:J,

&lt;~ I ~~~ !~·
hlll l , !11 Ullt 11\t'f {ht•tr IW ~ t·cl ·

u

(•' am

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•

,,f

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thai I'•

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n,.,, " I_,., 11 11 u....

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rt.t'~

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I lt II• t '

.f ... ,r tlw
.md an

1.uml~

th·ar

tlh

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1 ~·r t.dr I~
- I t ~ (; \\

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dtdh n t ll' ....
th t- puhlh· t-. ll li lf't'

h,t\t

prl\ .tit' 1H ,·_ am/ dlll tfb .
i t o h'ti ..tl an• i.H ll ll;.! \ t\

;b

t• 111l .tl t hlid ~ibU..'I.' l/H· Jud!IU!

~ '\ tii d \ht'\ are lobb~ lrl'l.!. fnr

;n\ If ,•

\;t' lllotr t-:dllo \f .

li.' t.'S

\\ , ti t ~ .,(,I ll'._ .. Hill l Jllt'~ . .1 ~

pu blH

;I\\ .lr\'IH;':"t

.ld t"-''i.-

· ·· \ muiiL: tll t ' ·t 1 11!,.!, ~·1Hkl'l lll! ~ 11 .1 ; · ...,l nn~ , ·nt lt't:.l~l:tiiHl.
..
I
•
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'
1~1. t i l'~ ;:tliJ •'ll t. • rh..t• 1lubh e' :-. · l ~t:t kr {:llitlll ' t':O. f"r U't.'OitJIIl' llt ·
h h·Jd.
•ll "-'ll\hll l' ~"' ,,f lntt'::il
.-ml r'd l&amp;lblht•Hi oll ~&lt; f lilt' \l ·
\~H- tll r .~ fr'-;;· t.~ l Ulit'f• •U!""'t 111 . t"\\
.trt·
th t•
-, prt·uf
t•f ··Lilt'l.l. ami f11 r I!HWt' publl r
\ \ hi t h ct lllalt• b..1b~ ..;Jt h ' l ,u:d
th !..' h~· ~ · w rattn· r . \\lrt' pPrtlHLf&lt;tp ti : IJh-'l tidml! :;'w •·• i llli •LI I it!H I ; r utr:.l~l'
va lled " k H.Illl e p&lt;~rn " HI \dUl'il
0 Jh ' tlunl! an ;..1ng fr nn'l the
Ill \ nh t:'ir .
dnl
d
nn
are
pl
c
tu
r
r
d
Tl!t' tuddler ha s ~·~ lw rrlw.t

·-. r il Ytni K t l't
~ .. ., ~• .t.., '•til \ 1 •ur ~~ ~

rr;;.

,f ttw !llOJUth tnft~·tto;.i fr11 1¥
,,ral 'l' X t;, h~·f fatht•r
11lt' 18-t.rl,·nth . . •ld. still at
tht• sut·khnt; :otc.n:,l , dnt'!'&gt; no~t
r·eah7t' thttt he r fat ht•r \ JWIII~
~:- nl't ~ t) ,ttlt•
:\ pt lr lltlhraphiL' II H.H.! a7llll'
j?ILtUrt'"i thl' \\d) llflt' f~t)lt'r
'K'l't'P" hL-, small dau.: htl'r f1~ r

tu"i o \\ 11 -.t&gt;xun l us.e lit' h &lt;l :"
t•qwppt'd Lhe nuter \-u ha \\ 1th
&lt;1 loc k nnl' sJdt' n nnl! ltk t• a

muuatur\' nf h at m a tmll '!&gt;.
!}(t&gt;:;l '

nf Ull't.' ~t 1!':&gt;
also d l·h lld ,f d1wrl't' :., ,m
l!lar nt&gt;cl an d tht• !Jlndit•r 11 f 10\ (•htlcl

\ ' lt'llll1

\ ~ar~dd

b1• ! s . ~h t.'
i-enlt'!Tlber .. ; n s n s t~· ht.'r
fHth ,•r nn ,.. l"''' 1:,:nd..., Hn
m11ther •
~ _. ... H,1 ,, niL't'
tw m

tt IS that ., nu're ct•tli!H.! to
\ 'llllf f8lher. " She w1:1s.
--d t i:!~ e· 12
fnndlctl h... r .1!1d
..;ht' rer al._,. d laseS around Ius
ho tel ruulll With her l11s\flg the
k.nm~o

c ha~e

r\ lt't' O-t.i ~E' r IS

brut.alizt•d b!
h~r ftHhl'r and r urts a v. a y.
tu r ru n~:, tr1 prl,~-tltutt !HI d rld,

now Jwrdenrd io iJH! ~l' "'Uctl
ft&gt;l'ltnl!; S
l'X C ~ p t
IJ Jttl•r
tr h!lllOfi(' S
,1 f
l'ilrly
\"\( umtzattr•n tn ht·r \\a~. ~tw
1s t:\emnl:!. tht· s1_ore

,, fattrcrrapes h1s lb-} l-'i:lf ·
old. dcmghter unr ~lftt•rno~m
w heo,~ h e n •tu rnl'd lnl!ll luj.!h
sc hnnl ant..l the hnlL'iC wa :;
empt~ \int' moilth::i later~
she l!;l\·es b irth UJ her uwn
~ 1st ~.' r . ·
her
father' s
gra rrdl'hild , and t ur ll~ t11 har d
d r u ~ s as nne mea ~' 11f
blnttint5 out m e mories.
.
A fHthe r climbs inw· bed
with his sleeping da uglller
wht1 awakens w hea r that
Dadd v wants to stan ht:&gt; l' sex
ed uc ~tion early - ·· J-Ie ga,·e
th 1s
r a ti o n Hlc
a bout
prepi:lrin g me to be w1th bo ys.
lie kept sHymg I wa s safe as
long as I didn 't let them ta ke
my pants dm~n . ':vtcanwhi le,
he was d.r,m g the same thmg.
1 spil t~i' 'kn e w whtlt he was
trymg to dn and that it was

wrong ..
A beaull ful voung matron.
ma rr ied n o ~· . with th ree
growmg ·children , had in'cest
with her father , biter wa,'l a

\' ICtim of her · pn est
crmfc sso r·, st iiJ late r wa s
seduced bv he r for me r
psyc h 1 a tri st.~h e still is under
psx c.~h1 atr ic c.:are,. trymg fo
ll1lk Cl tlt ~ and stamp out ~
he r personal hor rors.
· A mother say s to her o ld~st
da ughter , .. Okay, tonight it 's
yo ur turn with Daddy ."
An e i g ht -ye ar &lt;~ ld chokes.
unable to cry out , as her 250fl'l ll!ld fa tlie r for ces or al sex
nn her .·
The se a r e not fi c ti onal
~a ses of mcest , our ultlmate
ta hofl. These ar e doc umented
by riLHncrrJUS aulhr1r ities in a
Um ted Press Irl tcrna tJOnal
ruport un Jneest 1977 , the last
fronti er of chi ld ahuse .
'"l11e dirty old .ma n is
Dadu1 " is the i ·ay Dr .
Judic;~ne Den sen -G erbe r ,
:\ ew York psychiatn st ·and
!awvu r . sum s up o pridJicm
th at exploded suddenly '" our
SfJCiety . Dr. ~nsen-·Ge r bc r is
f1nc of the frontlin(! fi ~ hte r s to
oradi l'atc the whole spectr um
of child abtl)C
" I believe that incest IS
epidemiC 1.n Ame~it:a, " said

Dr . Henry (;iarrclto. director
of the pi&lt;&gt;nec rin~ Child Sexua l
Ab u.,., ')'rea tment Ce nter in
S.. nw C1a r a County 1Sa n
J&lt;&gt;se I, t~ Ii.f.
For

re p() r t l tfl the " cp(de·
rr nc ". thi S repor te r i:Hid
Q

CJther~

of Un1t ed P r ess
fn ternl:l ti ,Jnal aro und the
na ti&lt;&gt;n ta lked· with v i ~tirns
f)nd
V1cti mizen;,
wi th
psyi;hJ a tnsts, ped J atr i c J&lt;:~~ s,
polli·f' , juvenile ami f&lt;~ l)l li y­
r:r;urt&lt;&gt; . r· Jc~r ~y. SHt:J (J! ond
v. c 1f a r e • .w o r k e r ."i •
~Jr JrJirJgi.\tS. an throp(Jlt~ gis~s
rmd an yr)n e d se whose JOb JS
tr' a s.~ss w h~t ' s g(Jing on and
d rJ .'i'J Jn ~ thin g ab(J Ul the
~ X.ual
HHJ lt:stati un
r,f

, ;. b•• lil. tht.• c flt-Hl'~ nf ,qfl•
t~· atliH!.

battt_'rl'\1 Lh tldr t!n ;
'' P'-'Il llt':"'=- \\ il h __,\ hlt·h

ht• ! lltl:-, t' X U ~IIll\
~t- ... hlan iSJ 11

-wcludlrt~

itr i..'t•pt.l'd : ·dp d
th~- I H'fllll s~ tn• rws~
n_o w
;J bro~HI m thl' kmd UJi::luding
mattl -~ '.l. applflC .
nohuld!. bo_irrt&gt;tl -!tll l'nuphng·:·fr t't'dn!n
uf ;JbortiHrlS. and nbst.'t.•IiJt ~ a ~
par t nf the ld\11111
St_.ve ral ~ l Ufl' l'~ wid Jl.§.
u Jt t· ~t b the r m ; ~:it wl-repprted
1:-i

'

y,,, ' "I in gr&lt;&gt;Up · th&lt;:r"PY
v~&lt;.,-.l rm s '.!tllh mcr.=:-.-t vwtm1s,
·With th1· whok· forn il}' under
trf:&lt;:~tment tn talk- tt .... Ju t se!-i, s1rms, puTs utd C\'ery CJn~ lc ·.
Frtr Wf• frl llr111 thf.J t flrli• dtJfJ r
''Jlf•r Ji·d • n nply /JfWI JI·d HH •rt
Thr f·f'

r l' !-tl'ln rt·

lurtr tlb'i

V.t·rc JllS \

.. lhl' &lt;;r ual h:~t
{· 1 ~ 11 ".._ ti Uil, f••r msta nt't',
p.a s~·d \ I :-.tru u..:t• llt Ia'" till
\ t:' l l ~· l'\•&lt;i l &lt;ll .. l'd ~l' bt'(' illl ~l:

Lhl'n.• had l.M!t•n 'l wu rt•pclrlt.'&lt;l
:n{ ~~~ rw rrht&gt;a nf thl\
throat m du ldrt•n u nd~ r 18
IJltlll tlls 11 f av,t· an d one easr Ill
a elulll run t• month s (tld .

l'a St~ ~

Om• p ro\ ISI1•n is tha t an~

,

•

11 1( ;d llealtlt •kparll ill'lll l lltt.~
, . , ~u u i H t' .md trt•ut a l lnh l

\\llhuu.t Uw , .~~~·nt .. f the
pa r ,·u l.
F;u·ts
an•
n •ofull'HIW J l''\l't'pt ror tht.•
r \'&lt;..j UII' t.'illt'l tl In l'l'p~+rt tht•
cast' l(t tht.• ~Uttc l'HII.Irtii S.'l !HJI

W-hat

Ult' c&lt;tu.~t.·S uf

ii t"t'

lll&lt;'l'st''

1'ht! ;m~ w,•r s \\I ll kQep the
~·~cnufu- ' 'htlllllU!Ilty busy
fil l' &lt;:t il t.' lt:'rllll) !\Ct:'kUi~ all (J (
lJH.• t"i!USI.'S. Snmt· student!'.
tf' at't' It til " tran sact lO ll

:o~ u rdv a l "r the
f~ttni) ~ , ..
·· Jri thc tntlbJle nuclear
ca st's.
fr.nn11\ of toda' tht' ne-eds for
Iull S·l'urrellt tssut&gt;. Pt.-'tlm- mtHnHt.· y and -d ose phySI('Hi
tn t· ~ m a~az ant&gt;. r c p&lt;,rtJJJ~ ·l'ofl tad a l£,ng with desertion ,
tiw t ··g~~norrhea 1s t::pidt'll llr d l v 11 r c e, r e j ect i n 11 •
111 ti le uniwd States' ' . takt.&gt;s a f r u s t r a t i u n . · 0 v e r ·
lnu k es.pl't.' Wil~· (It t'hildren I.TI •Wdt.•d.ness, alcohnlism .
mfec!rd.
p.we r1 y a nd social isolati 1m
"The U.S. Pubhc He• ltll all . contribut e to the
Senice ha s cautwned that weakening of th e taboo of
Wi lli · ~ on ll('uec al infL&gt;('twn 111 im:t!st with ir'l the fam ily." Dr.
('hi ldren , rhe possibility of Amanant has concluded .
child abu se ~u s-!
be
. Yet most autllorit ies agree
. enrlsidc·red , "' Scu d
the ml·est &lt;'rosses a U linc.s . It is
maga w w ..
m1-t typ1(·a l ()f any area t t he
It add ed. ·· A few lfl \ t:'.Sttga- poor, r ur ~l communit y), or
tor s h8 1•e s uggested tha t m&lt;&gt;st an) group , any particular
.chi ldh ood gonorr h ea' IS ethnic, so cial, religious or
acquired se xually .... si" ce an e&lt;-.lnomic ~trata . It IS the
--·- urate hi story 1s us ua·lly ·~ hardes t tab oo to assess
a n d because so muc h IS kept tn
u 11 n b t a i n a b 1e
~~f

St•r ..: t\'t:'

S:n-t' IH l

F ltr

tt n., &lt;trds

tnltlrt;u wuh'r 12. the 1&lt;.1\' ~ ~
les...; Sl.lt't'lfit' uu rt.•p,•r t mg th-.·

t

IILJI .I .\'WOOO

dft.•t"tl\'l'

fa uultcs. SIJ Jlletnnes the fa ult
1~ &lt;hn·dly pl::tl'Cd oo . th~rn mulhl·r knew, why d)(~ t she
rcprH't the . me~dc nt~ .. Or,
somt:t urli:S 1llness kee ~s t ~
mutht•f· ftl[' i:l lon g perux J. tn ,
husptlal or oth er nursmg
care. Tile fathe r ~ses the
a lso . , . .
childn•fl .
. .
. .
A."i each d~ught ef grow:-; uut
They're Ulerf'. the rfl m!lY
of tile next - sometim es tht.• 'rl' Jnat ns Ultar t,. the re s no
snns a lSt1 are sndmnized
eost ~nw•lved us m. ~ e cas~ of
th ,
•er
girls
:
~
imp!)'
are
~ekmg out a prostitute , and
11
an clrno: (~ suci.'e!i.."iiun to. tht· usu~ll / · nc~ one 's goin g tll
re:tthcr·s sex·wrl desires.
t.alth.: 1111 . hu 1 ~ . , . •
, ..
In a way, it's likt• gr uwlllg
Ps yL·hta t.rt s ts a nd , s~Clal
up wtth thr knowledge U1at workers scud that sorn~ttmes
"next it's m y turn.''
.
Ult:: mulhcr _ for a van ety of
A specia list in the child reasons dese rt s t he
protection fi eld for 35 y~;,t r:s trctd_ltluna l role ,ctnd turns
tells one startling case . He tS £anuly Hlmm ge ment {1 \le r t.Q
Dr VincenLDe F r&lt;UlCki•.J vr- ,. .the . ol dest
daughter .
m~ rl y .~ i re(' to r of th e Belations w1t h he r husband,
ch ildren's divisitln ami still no Iunger are compatible, ~e
consultant for the Amer ican rnay ha ve her own se x hfe
Huma n~
As s ocia t iu n , outside Ule l~ l ne, the father
headquarte red in Denver.
is an alcohohc, h e may have
One case involved a fat he r • turned to promt sc UJty .
,
and four da ugl\ler s. As ea ch
•Whatcv~r, the daughter s
grew up a bit , she was the reactw n u1 reversal of roles
sexual target of the fathe r. leads he r to play the mother
'' Sometim es ince'St ru&lt;t y rolu full y._
..
. ,
happen onlv once, und e r
Dadd y IS NOI a dirt) _old
stress •· sai(t De Francis. man. As hea d of the f.anuly .
"This ;nan was ha rd core ... an he is to be protected. cate red
habitual cr iminal , a moral to, pleaS&lt;'&lt;I .
.
psych op~th . ... ··
!Ne:ilt : lncesl thnves in
Mothers catch thei r share climate tha t tulerates .c hild
of bl a me in incestuo us fl'&gt;nlll l

a male
ll&lt;~b ySi i \tr but the fat iler
pla yed a role in 1t," she said .
" But I dr1n't think t he
nu rnhtr of cases is in cr ea!.. . .rg
SIJ rnul'h a~ that the public is
rnrJre iJW GifC and th~ r e is
· b ~ · tt1 • r
rc p,J'ftJng, "
s he .

ttw

v. r·r ~ · 11111\
;"l iJU!-tf'

" !11 1 ~7 1 ,

tfwn·

71 f'i.t!o.(:S of 1·h lld

I I'IJ'I ! tl• d ...

!&gt;.lf l( '(•

l~J 72

wc '\'e tn·~ t.t:d 8, 000 'cllildr t:H
• ~md I gu C~s ttb 1Ul r:• thi rd l•f
the qu est i(J n , SonH· say,. &lt;t ll nu r rcp,,rt!'i ore mn~t
" Yes ." Snmt• ~~Hr )&lt; " nnt
" I he il cvc rmilc ('hddtf·ll
ncee s.'·wril y, ·· th:-1t . it ' fi a ~rc l:x! l ng Jrtdud t:d 1t 1 1!11 '' '"'1
moth' r · of ln•ltJ·r· {' ase lnrtr·C th;J n we're ~~ wu r' · qf. "
n•puru ng . I!H i fl' ! '&lt; JJ II II HHIItu: s
SCA:'-1 1s ;t pn vah' ,:1 ~· ~ ·rw y
se ~ttng· up prngr~lil :-, to trcot
fu mJ ~ d b} '' 1·untr;wt ""1t h lht.·

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Mrs- Sea Dillon , R,ll . Mrs. Susan Taylor, R.N.
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·'The worst cnses I've seen .
invol ved {:hildrcn tmder f ive
\'~a r s . " s&lt;t id Mrs. Sha ron
Pa llr!ne. ffJ Wldcr and director
of the offi ce of, •Suspected
Child Abuse "n&lt;J Neglect, tJr
SCAN , in Uttl e Rock, Ark.
" There wa s one death ih
ih;, sta te la st year from recta l

.'

A ~nu ~dtnnthl·r ~hi 1 had
mn·:-,tu11us rt.•lai !HIIS Will \ her
father , lt~lcr 11 w 1 ne~ ami
b~C:~r s t·hll drt·n. Tilc st:
(.'hildr en cspcd.a lly til ~ uld e~l
;i' cic:tU~hte; , Hl'l' l'HII dtdatt'S for
n• h t ro ns with their own
ratt\C"I' (Jn en lhe 'gmndf.a ther

Scott's World

f 'l lfltlll Uf· d

Is lll&lt;..' CSt {Jn th~· lncrt: iJ sl!''
Authori t ies t:tr.e d iv ided !•n

A4-The liwlday ·a~linel. !illndav. Oct. 2.l'il'l

1 UPI '
Presid ent J1rnmy Carter 's n"•st
ambassadur does n't wear morni ng o~t a n ~ stnped
JXIOL'-' . Httl'nd P mb.t..i ss ~ fWi l'tlons. drmk cham pa g~ m wh1te
~lon• s or frt't about pr t~toco l.
.
He'-., brot hN B1lh . lhe president's ambaS::iador fr om DtXle ,
~m ·o \ t1 1 shnw bus irtrs~ and the best thmg tH ll(Jppen to·bee r
:-i i iiL' t; lil t: lab upener ·
_ .
S"fl'"
k
Billy
dr
uppe&lt;.
l
uno
tile
UPI
L
os
Angeles
bureau
tile
t r!ll lt:' Hl AI11L'fl l'il .
~
~ttwr
lll
uf'n
HH!,
and
QUi
l'
k
ly
atta
cked
a
kwg.
-s1ze
~an
of
Coors.
dncurnent.ar-y cvid~nee fur
thefar:'ilyand ne \'ersw:fa ces
Il t&gt;nr, C 1arrt.&gt; tto belit&gt;\'e:!h· \\ \JS at't·nrn pam f:'(l by a bleary -{'y~ , bewhiskered man
nonsexua l spr ead is lacking . . ll!l [l'lhce blotters and m the
ttwrt· c:;r~ hw1dh•ds 11 f t.hou... and:-. of lllt't.'S t lllC Jd e nt ~. nc.ll ll t't.l Oseqr Be!Jnclli. a new fr iend he'd met a t a dante gonorrhea . e\'en in yOWit! courts .
should
be
One so urce told UP!, " The
nHirt:' than tho:;,e VIL'tlms o( cnntt':il. Usnt r gra bbed a brew \-\'lth alac_rny crying , ··I really chi ldre n
nt.'t'd
t
hl
~
...
.
·
.
considered
to
be
se
xually
.fa
ct that a c rime~ usualfy
,,ttJer eh1ld ab use am! tlt.');!leet.
(
)S.
_
·(t.r.
75
.
&lt;J
native
1
1f
l..eeds
,
E
ng
land.
is
known
as·
U1e
F
lymg
tr
ans
mit
ted
unless
pruven
c
u
n::;id e r ~.d a . s tn , has
11,.e' truth is. t he n~ are no
Yn
·kshJre!nan
.
He
plaN.
'
tl
third
in
the
man1th
on
dance
at
1
otherwise_..
happened
m tile home Is what
ha r·d lind fa :-; t statlStl l'S . llnly
Knott's
Bern;.
F
arm
where
..
Billy
tm
d
made
a
persor\al
Incest
ha
s
come
out
of
the
shuck
s
m
os t people: The
t'Stlln.a t es .
And
so me
close t - particu larly wtth the soci al tab_oo of the cn~e IS
esti ma tes· are tha t ~ me of a pp('~l ran ee . Billy likes people rt nd Oscar is d~ fin it~ ly ~peopl e,
Br,1 tJwr Hill~ . unhkt• the brothers of Presidents Nu, ~ n and ple ihor a of boo ks ne wly "·hat keeps tll em qu~et ..
·t·ver \' four \\'~llll e n 111 Ame'ri l'ct
publi shed . in the g r owtl1 of
It ts not a popul~r topiC of
.Jnlm!:l"n, IS h1ghl y \'lSI ble and enjoying every moment of 1t .
has &amp;een In \'( ol\ed 111 meest or
H('
':)
become
a
star
1n
Ius
own
right.
He's
a
warm
e
~
tr_
m
·
e
rt
agen('ies
tn
deal
with
de~·i
~nt
co
n ver sa ll~ n w1th · mo~ t
'•thenn se se xual \~ rnnle.sted .
be
ha
vi
or
,
the
te
leV
ISIOn
people.
But tncest could be tn
\\
h~
·
trdn
.
&gt;
l.
!
:i
the
cuw1
tr
y
thr
ee
or
four
d~
y
s
a
week
appeanng
at
The nne or four stati.stK'
documen
tarie!;)
that
dare
to
yo
ur
o\\'
T
l home, or next doo r.
fcurs. hot'downs and on t e l ~\'i s i on .
c
.
•
·
.
rep·e aiedly was cned.
.
Bill
,n
pped
his
beer
gra
tefully
and
satd
,
··rrn
kmda
ltke
&lt;'
.
approach
the
sub
ject.
.
the
l.u&lt;ok
around.
.
.
..
.
Tht&gt; lowest esti mate t.:Pl
.tha
t
have
It
has
rema
ined_
perststent
se
veral
m
ovies
found l' H J11(' f fl l!ll Dt.
used incest as a theme .
thr oughout the course of
[ br ah un ,\manat. a eh ilu
But
-'
·
e
found
also
that
the
histor y - the nuclear fam1ly
ps:clna tn s t He put tht&gt; .
f~muh
bluck
shee
p
but
I'm
different
from
.
oth~r
President~'
door
can
slam
ti
ghtly
still,
11ardlj
discovered l t. And m
rt&gt;cnrded c;_J-;l' lil t l.ll at abc tUl
b
r
th~rs
.
1
dtln·
t
peddle
mflue
nre
.
l
peddle
Bil
ly
Ca
rter
.
I
dp
n
t
sea
(eti
very
rapidly
wit
h
some
families.
1t 1s not
11
-Ill 000 &lt;I H ·;;Jr uf the estnnated
rcpn':wm
a
ny
big
L!1
rp11t·a
tions
and
I
leave
naU?nal
pohtits
families'
.
wit
h
the
t·onSid
ered
aberrant.
It tS an
som
e
1 r~Hlh or; \'JC tlrHS. Or . Amanat
vi
ctims
who
feel
guilt,
shame
"en
fami\le"
practice
handed
al!•lll'
.
.
.
~
IS med1nli di rector of t~e
·· sh 11w business and po iJtics are the same thing ..You shake a and hostility , with the duwn from generatiOn to
01l•trnpnlitan St. Loui s Se ~mll
J11 t o.f hands and met&gt;t a lot of people and you sm1le a lot. But
vi ctimizers who fear. public ge neration. Jokes are ~a~e
Ab use lnmmntee .. .
di
sgrace , ·prosecution. and about it . Definition of a ," r gtn
_
.
Dr . Densen-Gerber puts the I' n• Hl wavs smiled.
..
,
like
[
ploy
politics
.
like
campaigni
ng
for
Jtmmy.
~~l
l
job,
loss . and with a clergS - the 12-year-&lt;&gt;ld g1rl who
0
fi gure rn uch higher ~ close r
don'tli
ke
to run fur offl l't.' . I ra n fin times and lost four .....I h;,~ t · ··wh6 dam n ince~t as a sin but
can outrun her brothers.
t1• t or 8 nu lhnn a year . She IS
is-·
not
\'er
y
a
ctl\'e
in
Or, there 's the story ~t th.e
told
m
l'
snmething."
.
the fnunde r a nd ~ wdin g force
Oscar
gdnn&amp;l
a
pprova
l
of
his
new-found
friend
.
.
prog
rams
to
help
those
in
m
untry boy who marrted a
111 Odyssey Instit ute. Inc ..
Blllv
has
had
llffers
((&gt;star
tn
hiS
own
telev
!S
ton
shol'
,
but
he
need
.
.
neighbor
's da ughter, only to
cen te r s· fm· treatment qf dru g
isn'
t
~~·
ill
i
n
g.
to
commit
hinl'selr
to
a
s
h,~
w
bus1_nes~
c
a
re~r
.
.
.
r
ece
nt
NB
C
s!lU&gt;~'
return
his
bride the next day ·
The
abuse . She is incr ea singly
"
l'\'t~
enj
oved
insta
nt
fame
so
far
,
·
he
saad.
.
I
don
t
'
_Vatch
"
dev.oted
an
entire
with
the
comment,
" If she
"
Weekend
wv nlved i n child abu se.
TV
a
nd
ifi,J{ad
a
show
uf
my
own
1
wouldn't
watch
that
etther.
pr
og
ra
m
to
,
th
e
s
ubj
eel
,
ai
n't
good
,enough
for
her
own
because she said so many
··One
th
ing
I
like
abo
ut
making
all
these
ap~ara
nces
.t~
t~;J
t
z~roin
g
in
on
the
Santa
Clara
folks
,
she
.s
not
good
enough
dr ug addicts - fema le and
for ours."
male - first were r ictims of 1 got nut of the cla ss of being 'The Pres ident s Br?ther. I 111 project.
Bil
l1·
Ca
rter
.
rm
in
sh
ow
bu!
iness
on
a
9(k(ay
ba
sts.
When
1t
In
one
segment
of
the
show,
.Almost ev ~r y one to whom
me est .
.
a fathe r name withheld, told UP! talked recorded .case
·· we have over 300.'000 c as~s isn·i fun rl\ quit a nd go hide in Geor g_ia .'
" I aarn more rnonev than the President but I sleep tn hole 1 of inces't with · his daughter histories where the practi ce
(if
ru na wa ys
r~p'o rted
nallonally e~ c h ye ar.." said rnoms and he s leeps -in the· White House. · And tha t makes a and of g oing ·to his" priest for is multigenerational.
D1 s tn ct Attorney Robert differeol'e . But 1 w ~&gt; uldn 't change places "'.\h my br ot her for help because , " I knew what I
.
. was dOin g waa wr ong..
Lennard .. r Fli nt , Mich. " My an vthmg. 1 'only get drunk in hotel rooms.
Bil
il
thinks
he's
the
same
good
old
southern
boy
he
was
·•The priest say s , .'Say 10
bet is th cll n-\ ~er half \.1.: ere
before
,Jimmy
made
it
to
the
Presidency
.
But
he
sees
some
Our
Fathers and 10 Hail
n ctu ns (lf s~x ua l abuSe . "
chan
ges
in
his
brothe
r
:
.
.
and everythin g will be
Marys
Leona rd is president ·of t_he
CLEVE LAND ( UP! )
·'Eefore·Jimm\·
became
President
we
sounded
so
muc
h
a
like
okay
.
And
don 't stay in the
~a ti onal Dis't r·itt' Attorneys·
f ord Motor
Co.
The
your furl oug hed
.\ ssn cia tinn, r NDA ;\ J, which when we ta lked that even,our wives couldn 't te II tile dtffer ence same · r oom ~ s
150
hourly
.
daughter' . "
· ha s formed a spe&lt;•ial nation- &lt;•n ihe teleph one.'· Jimmy sa1d .
worke rs at its castin g plant in
..
j
su
i
I
talk
southe
rn
a
nd
J1mmy
talks
ktnda
miXed
up
now.
Right · here , 'we s hou ld
suburban Brook Park Friday,
wide task force of district
Billy said the Presidi?nt has never asked htm to keep a low ddin'e . incest as mo st
reducing employment . there
at tr•rneys to "cnme to grips ' '
to 6,350.
. .
with po rn ~g rap h y in cluding prtJfile. T he only rt n'le hes ·tJisC'ussed pohttc~ wtth hts brother authorities define it - as
was 011 the nccasion of supportmg Alabama s George Wallace 1 'ov ert sex ual inter c;o urse
They
were
laid off because
kiddie po rn .
Dr . Giarretto, \\'hose center for re-efectinn . Jimmy neithe r e~co uraged nor d~scouraged oct urring amon g members of of a change in the operating
,
,. a gr oup who are not
schedul e , according to
wor Ks throug·h the juvenile Billy'·S endorse ment.
" I don' t · th ink 1'm an embarrassment to the Prestdent ,
permi tted by society. Ior by· Robert H . . Barbour, the
cuurt syst em ii!nd bel i~ve-s in
plant 's industrial relations
trea tin g th e whole family , Billy said . ' 'I never·sa y a nything about htm ;,But we talk on the law) to marry .''
Giarre tto defines it as •·any manager .
'
sa id that Sa nta Cla ra County, · ph, ne all the time . I like to call and k1d h1m ..
Candid to a fault , Billy wa s asked why he ts allowed to travel sexua l activity between a
Ford also employs 6,200 at
Ca lif. ' Cal iforni a's wealth iest
.
pa rent and a child or between its two engine plant.s in Brook
count \' 1 ntJW handles fl. bout ·with out protection of the Secret Se r vt~e .
..
Hell,"
he
said
,
" I don't need secun ty because people hke childr en in ·the family . The
Park for a total of 12,550. at
600 cases a year . When the
adult need not hecessaril y be the . complex. Sin·ce Ap'il
center wa s started in 1971, it rne ''
Bill y thinks of himse lf as a good ambassador [or the so uth . the bio logica l l)'lrent - it . 13,1101i persons have applied
treated 30 cases.
But
the term " redneck" puizles h\m. He.duesn 't object to the · could be ... any authoritati ve for jobs ·at th e three plants.
The Santa Clara prog ram ,
appellation
nor ddes he mind being called Stxpack B1_lly. He figw·e -in the home. " .
Seven emp10yes have been
inc identally, has become a
pride&gt;
himse
lf ,,n being easy to get along w1th.
.
.
Incest includes a vanety of discharged from the three
ptlot for mGin y other centers
Bill v is a man of integrity. When the new beer, Billy~ IS relationsh ips suc h a s father plants si nce August in
Hro und the nat~ o n . .
mark
~ tt!d in Novemb er it will be a bre.w o.f his own chotce.
and da u ght er f the most cvnnection with an alleged
One official who directs the
Seven
indepen&amp;ent
breweries
brought
stx.
different
bre.ws
for
researched ), moth er and son job,selling scheme .
.city prog ram in ~ ew _York
(less
freq uent because t he
his
a
pproval.
·
..
b
"
h
be li eves that what 1s reported
"
I
tasted
all
of
them
and
chose
a
memum
~heavy
.
eer,
~
mother
usua lly is the
is just a frag:r(Jt:! nt of what's
said.
"They
told
me
I
'd
wsted
so
many
it
might
be
dtff~eult to seducer ) , brothe r and sister
grdng on out ther e.
Carol Parry, director of distinguish one from the other. So I went back later and chose (believed the most frequent
.
· a lthough the fathe rdau&amp;hter
New York' s Speci al Ser vices Uw same brew .-·· ·
Billy will soon be seen as a guest with Dtnah Shore ~pd on relationship carries the most
f,;,. Q1ildren 1forme rl y the
Burea u of Ch ild · Welfare ). other national tele vi sion shows , Offers conttnue to pour tn for shock value &gt;tnd is considered
, . ,, · the m ost abhorre nt ), stepsa id that last year the agency . appeurances around tne co.untry ._
"
When
1
fir
st
swrted
ma
kmg
appeara
nces
!.
gave
speeches,
parent a nd child, unc le and
processed 600 inee st cases
said.
"
I
found
out
qui
ck
that
nobody
likes
speeches.
No
Billy
niece
or other re lattve s
r e ferr ed fr o!Tl doctors ,
ma
tter
what
you
say
it
's
boring.
So
I
just
talk
to
the
people
for
in
cl
ud
i
n g grandf a th erhospitals, th ~ ···police, and
two
minutes
and
we
'te
all
happy."
.
granddaughter,
father and
assorted welfare &lt;.~nd sot:Ja l
_
The
·
r
i
vin
g
Yorkshireman,
revived
by
the
beer,
nodded
wtse
sop.
.
s·ervi,·e ~ ge nt:ies .
agreement.
S{lrne children were only
t Wo m r1nths old . ~" We 'r e getting just a sma ll
pe rcenta ge nf the cases, " she
S&lt;~ l d . " I feet .\hat for every,
rJ!le case we ha'ndle , there are
10 m r1r c ...... we jUst touch.the Lip
fl f the iceberg." Even sn, she
sa id , the 600 refl ected a
1
dr~mati c in creage fn th e l.ast
few yeC:Jr.s .

11f

bt' ~!in nmg

~· , ua l ~tll tL't' .
uwlud1ng IIH'\'!'1 , 1 ~ t ht.' :-.tJn ·ad
Alf h 'flt' ft'&lt;i l JI~'J~, l'\:t•fl lu

dla n n P\ l ' l

Brother Billy
b est.
ambassador

i nt er('( tursc in vnlvi n ~

r·b1l drr:n

(\f o!i/'

..:._r~ ~pti-I I'O:l!l] lll -., t''\ U~tJ ~H,"b
\\ ltll &lt;lliU l t~ ~~r -• tht• r· rh ~!llrt&gt;n .

tlw

-·

unmentionable sm, being treated openly af la~t

.tr

•

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•

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/

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--

A-g.}The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Oct. 2. 1977

- .,

If you feel that the~ privilege of IMMEDIATE WITHDRAWAL
without loss of interest is
important to yQ.U. ~.
(as it is to most sav~rs),
you're already saving at
Ohio Valley Bank ...

M&gt;-!lle:iundayTiJnes.&amp;ntineJ, Sunday, ()ct.l,l'ffl

,

••· ,.. ·

"

DECORATED

~t( .· l f COFFEE
MUGS

.~}
..."t! · · ·
~-~~

JUNii:JR CLASS FLOAT WINS - Winner of first

AU NUDE

24"x45;'

plae&lt;J in th e Homecoming Parade Friday in Racine .
precedin~ the Southern-Wahama football g~me was this

NYLON SHEER

BRAIDED .
RAG .RUGS

PANTY
HOSE

DECORATIVE GLASS

GIFTWARE

,.
\

~l/

•

r--·· ···· ~

2

00

fl.oa t created by the Junior Class, ·a replica of a huge
lifesaver. The Senior class won second and the FrestJman
class third.

FOR

00

$

NUAL
RATEd

"

w

REG.

88' .

COATS &amp; ClARK
WINTUK

KNITTING YAR-N

88~

fEB.
~8~ $

2

6.4 oz.

SKEIN

--1ftJ«J

DOGHO~E

·-· GAME

.
"

By

'

BATTERIES

'.

-

.MilTON

..,.....
..
.00

,...

":·,

Drow~

I

;

'D' SIZE

BATTERIES
.
•

}qe

Pkg of

2

..••
.

11

k0DAK"

.-

...••

••~·
•
•'

•••
•

••

•

&lt;

•
•
•

11 Ol CAN

126·12 or

~

. MISS BRECK

COLOR -FILM

HAIR
SPRAY
REG.·SUPER-UNSCENTED

88~

POPULAR TALKING DOLL
99

'•

.
LOSSES SET - Although loss was set at $7,000, a joint effort between fire fighters from
the Gallipolis State Inst itute and Gallipolis volunteer fire department prevented further
damages in a fire early Saturday morning at Cottage 7 on the GSI grounds . Lightning was
believed the cause of the blaze in the third floor attic of the state owned structure. None of
the 46 residents housed in the cottage were injured . According to Gallipolis Fire Chief
James A. Northup, the blaze was brought under.control due to a steady stream of water
supplied by GSI firemen on t he building's west side and a stream of water applied by
Gallipolis firemen using the city's aerial ladder truck on the east side . Twenty-two firemen
and three trucks answered the alarm. · ·
·

•
•'

. contract offer _., KIN~S MILLS, Ohio (UP! )

I
r.asbro®
II

AlUMINUM

STENO
BOOK

BRUSH

HAIR
ROLLERS

'j9 (, .

MEN'S
BROWN JERSEY

WORK GLOVES

MARCHING .
MICK"EY
MOUSE

9never too

-~9~pair

Reg. ·

. II'S

earlY ·~.,

TDDO'IOVII CHII!~S SHOI'f'IMG

"MILTON BRADLEY"

MEN'S
·QUILTED

NYLON
JACKETS

lADIES-GIRlS-INFANTS

FLEECE
DORM
MATES
2PAIR
FOR

BOY'S 4 TO 16

REG. '2.99

.WINTER
.

·GAME

JACKETS

ASSORTMENT

WITH
HOODS

S 00.

- for $10,000, the lirother of
••
DELPHOS, Ohio (UP!) the president of the United
Members of th e Allied States is going to do things
· Industrial Workers Union like blindfold himse lf and toss
... approved a contract offer a 50-pound peanut bag .
:
from the Military Products ·
That was one of six "zany",
Divisi on of the Fruehauf events outlined today by
•
Corp. Friday by a 3-1 margin .
The contract went · into Kin gs Is land a musement
effect immediately to repla ce park officials who are paying
the one which ,expired Aug . Billy Carter t.o appear at the
15, the day before about 230 park Oct. 15-16.
The promotional event, deunion members went on
signed to lure the public to the
strike.
park on its closing weekend ,
The thr ee -yea r
pact
is being called the "U.S.
include~ a 30-cent an hour
wage lncrease eac h year, a Peanut Olympics,
~arter and another person
better insurance plan , dressed in a ~~vogi Bear"
prescription drug cover age,
cartoon character costwne
increase in holidays to 12, and
are to captain two teams in
better •job class ificia ti ons ;
according to Local President half-a-dozen events.
The evi!Ats: " A fi ve-minute
Alan Custer.
peanut s~elling contest, a ·50Maintenan~ per:lonnel will
pound peanut bag toss by lhe
return to work Monday and
_other workers will · return blindfolded cap tain s; a
peanut I'elav bV team
Tuesday.

~ODULAR HOMES

4 STYLES

ARE

'99

.TODAY'S BES:J'
BUYS IN HOMES

YOUR

Q-~ -~~

CHOICE

:MOBILE HOMES INC.
See Jim Staats or Joe Giles
Phone 446 -9340
Gallipolis, Ohio

•

''

•

•

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'

The highest interest rate permitted by law on regular bank
passbook savings· accounts,
COMPOUNDED DAILY

c. !(, . Snowden

Workers accept Six-Pack Billy at Kings Mills

80 PG.

..

..

•

Batteries .
•

LOADER

DOLL

I

'

110·12
STURDY STEEL

I,lfl ·.

I i'J ~ I

88c,

BRADlEY

!, .. ~.

I

AIM
TOOTHPASTE

SNOOPY'S

99

q

PKG. OF

24 Stale St.
Phone 446-4~90

members running backwards
·with oversized peanuts
between their legs, a peanut
butter sa ndwich building
cont est, a peanut -shaped
waterfilled balloon toss and' a
peanut-filled
wheelbarrow
tace ."

"LIFE in5urance, too!
~all me for details~
,,.., ru"

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Like a good neighbor
Stite Farm is there.
Stale rsrm lilt ll"'surancc Cornplltl~
Homr Ortrt t IJioom•rt~~lo n lllor\01$
__.,.

· - -·

... and with no gimmicks!

If you're not already a savings account customer with Ohio Vall ey
Bank, take a close look at what your present financial institution
is paying on your behalf. We think you'll not only enjoy the hi·gh
interest paid by us ... you'll also endorse the added convenience .
and service.

Check these features of an .
OVB Regular Passbook
Savings Account:
.
.
'

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• MAXIMUM INTEREST RATE, paid from day of deposit to day of withdrawal.

LORETTA
LYNN .

&amp; CONWAY
TWITTY

TH E' COA L MINERS
o nd

THE TWITTY BIRDS

ERNEST RAY

MEMORIAL FIELD HOUSE
· Friday • October 14 • 8:00 P.M.

• NO MINIMUM required to open your account.
•

DEP~SITS of. an~ amount ~ay

1

be made AT (ANY TIME.

.•

• WITHDR.AWALS of any amount may be made AT ANY TIME.
• Your Passbook is FULLY ASSIGN-ABLE . : . use I'! as collateral.
• Al l accounts INSURED up too$40,000 by tile Federal Depos it In sura nce Corp.
•

TICKETS : s450 • ssso. S6&gt;o • ON SALE NOW
Field House. Mack and Dave's Humphreys'

Southside Pharmacy, Sears (Record Shop
In Portsmouth, Ashland)

Bauer's Sound Shop in Point Pleasant

Mail Orders: COUNTRY SHI!\IDIG . ·
C/0 MEMORIAL FIELD HOUSE

P. 0 . BOX 5455 • HUNTINGOO~ . WEST VIRGIN IA 25703'
Enclo5o stamped self-addressed envelope

"

FOR INFORMATION , PHONE 529 ·4124

OhioValley Bank·
Ga111poJrs. Oh1o

•

M.emb e' FD IC

�•

'
A-10---, The SWlday Ttmes.Senllnel, sunda~·- O&lt;:t. 2, 1977

Vi~wers

3 Promoted At OVEC
A nwuber of rhanges in the Pe rs o nm~l
Department at Ohto Valley Elertnc
Corporation's K\ger Crrek Station ore
. be in~ announced b) Plant Manager
Louis R. Fofll. Jr.
Effective October l, t97i, Joseph E.
Fenderbosch is being n
Personnel
Supervisor to surcee \): . Donald
Gallowa y. G. Leo Valentlne will move
I •
to Safety Supervisor and Alice Marie
~' .
li' '
Icard will assun1e the duties of Personilel Assistant. ·
l'aleotln•
Galloway will leave October
1, 1977 after 32 years or sel'\· i ~e
with the power industry, the as SafE-ty Supervisor. a
last 23 years wtth the Ohio position he held Wltil his
Personnel
Valley Electr ic Corporation. selectiQn as
Supervisor
.
Joe
is widely
Galloway resides at 1103 Ohio
known
throughout
the
area for
Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio. He
the
many
hours
of
volunteer
has one son, John . of South
se rvice he has give'tL .. to
Point, Ohio.
training individua ls in the art
F en derbosch
became
of
first-aid. An avid golfer. he
associated with OVEC in 19~

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lh 1'1:-.1 !'tliU .E H
· i'OI.l l ~11lUS illl'I J
· If
offerm~s t•! Uw ne~ Jt'lt.'\'t:-.toll

get in Cable ' TV a· ct ~.

bal' k'' tn Ole TV
diiw i~t• l s th"t

1111

IWtt uf tht•

L' llliecl

il rt'

.. ,_,.trtil'ipat L• r~ . "
s..•asun St'l' lll la~·klu:stt&gt;r , a \ . Ont; of tht• h' !l i.s. t•ntitll"ll
larJ!t': 1.t tblt• tr-lt•nsiun fmn · Piuwhcd . lt ~~ tn rarry a
~ ends h l ~·on pnl\'tch.• Its &amp;·s~mt' Stret-t·t~ pc of ehtl ~
\ 'll' \H'I' S

km\1.

\L f

wtth a \'l' r~ diffen•nt

prog ram mm g

\kt!n 's stww

U1at

wtll run

from 7 a.m . to 5 p.m.

The other ts called
l'ulumbLts Alive . ll will
tw uwa\ tell'vtsiun .a s the ft"ature i;L morning show
Warm:•r CabJi.l·Torp . refers to similiar tu NBC's Today. a
it.
is ·when
vit.&gt;wl'rs gamt• show with viewers
\card
Feoderbosch
parttdpate in shows tn participating. and public ser·
vtce programs.
,.... ·-pt"11J..(f\' SS by pushing ,buttons
is ('urrenUy preSident of the , a t lwme which register thPir . The game show. called
Gallipolis Golf Club.
rot&lt;' or-- answer with the " How do You l.ike Your
Fenderbosch is a graduate 'program . Their response is Ei/,gs'~ " is host&lt;•cl by Bill
Cullen . It was prcst•ntt."(l m
of Olmsted Falls High s/:hool' ,then disclosed on the air .
and has completed numerous
The system will· be the spring to 204 homt&gt;s m an
courses in the safety field and a,-a,labl e to 30,000 cable initial test of the servtl't'
Contestartts on the shu\!!
1n 1~3 he met the requirement subscribers here br the end or
1or licensing as a Certified the year, accordtng to the tried to glit$S tHJ W \ IC\H'r.
Safety ProfessionaL He has hrm. Its chat':"~ · Gustave would respond to . "rh
served th ree years in the u.s. 1'&gt;1. Hauser, satd lt wtll "ULke questions as ill' th• ..h\&gt;1'
Air Force.
us mto a w.h?le new era. the name.
The five buttt'ILS ''" thr
F enderbosc h and his way televLSLo n superseded
C'ontrol box . in tl1C ne""er·.
· wife. Helen. reside at 4 ~actio . "
.
.
H'1ll
t D.
G . 1'
Each subsertberwtll hm•ea home stood, in th&lt;' eM~ ,,( thr
. cres
nve, a11 tpo tS, OOx of electronic eq uipment question in the title uf thto
Ohto. They are the pa rents of installed next to his TV. show, for scrambled,
fl .
two sons, Mtke and·Gary. and . Viewers will also have a boiled, sunny -side up. hllrd·
Losses a re a n estimated a daug hter,~ Kay.
control box: similia r t.D a boiled and poached .
$5,000 in a lire at a New Haven
Viewers voted by puslltng a
Valentirw joined OVEC in pocket calc~lator , tha t will
home owned by Bruce Gilman 1954 and spent 15 years "' the en"ble them to select among button on their control box
and rented by the Alfred Ash- Results Department prior to 30 -chann~ls and to "Ul lk and contestants tried to guess
transferring to the Personnel
. •.
worth family.
The Ne w Ha ve n .Eire. Department in 1969 as PerDepa rtment received t he call sonnel Assistant.
Valentine is a native of
at 6:45p.m. Friday, and upon
Ga
llipolis, Ohio and graduated
arriving, contained the blaze
from
Gallia Academy High
to the attic. Water and smoke
School
a nd .Ri o Grande
damage was done to the first
College. In addition , he has
floor.
The cause of the fire wa s a n taken other courses through
electrical short in the attic and I.C.S., Ohio · University and
•
there were no injuries. Four Arkansas State University. He
· COl .UMBUS - Eaeh ye~u· (Wer 100 Ohioans are ,-ir tims of
trucks and 16 men, as well as served with the U.S. Navy for
three re scue squad members two years. Leo is an active carOOn mm10xidc poisnning duet'' faul ty furn aces, stnves and
alhlefic booster a nd is spa;:c heaters.
responded to the call .
' Ca lled "the si lf.'nt killer. " this colorless. odt•rless, ta steless
currently a nie"mber "of' the
Gallipolis Recreation Com· poison is prnd uet'&lt;l when any solid. Uqui d or gaseo us fuel fails
to burn comp letely .
m ission.
Oh io Slate Medical Associa tion ( OSMA J President
Valent ine a nd his wi.fe,
Clarice, are the parents of two WH1iron M. Wells, :\t.D .. Newark. says symptnms of c&lt;.-~rb'''fl
daughters, Rita and Ann, and mor1oxi de p(1isoning \·ary from hea daches, dizziness, and
sleepiness in t h-e e~r1y stages of poiSonin~ to nause~ , vomi ting;
a son , Tom. \he Valentines and fl uttering of the he&lt;:trt in late, fa tal stages.
re side in t he Cenli nary
·'If someone sht•uld be overcome by carbon monoxide,
Community.
remove the victim to fresh Hir and be.g in mouth-to-mouth
A driver · was injured in a
Icard is also a ,veteran
resuscita tion," he advises. "A physician shoUld be consulted
single-car wreck ''on Rt. 33, OVE C empl oyee, ha~i ng immediately."
near Ma son, at 3:25 a.m. joined the company in 1954 as
Any heating unit is capable to producing dea dly ca rbon
today, according to Mason a plant clerk . She advanced mqnox ide if complete fuel burning does not ~place . It is
County Sheriff' s Deputy J.E. thr ough
the
clerica l extremely important tha t hea ting uni ts be cleaned and in good
Perry.
.
classifications and in 1966 was repa ir be fore being turn ed on for the first lime th is fal l. All
Treated at Pleasant Valley promoted to Secretarial· heating uniis, especia lly the popular spa ce heaters, shou ld be
Hospital was Timothy R. Stenographer, a position she venteq to the outside so ca rbon monoxide will nllt be
Roush, 22, Mason. He was also held until- he r recent disc ha rged back into the hnme .
•
cited for-DUI. ·
' assignment to ' tbis superSe rious t ragedy can be avoided by fo llowing a fe w basic
health and safety rul&lt;·s:
According to Deputy Perry, · visory capacity.
- Have an· expert check your fuel-burning. equipment
Roush was traveling west on · Icard is a native of Point
early
in t h~ heating season.
Rt. 33 when he failed to make Pleasant, West Virginia,
Keep fuel-burning equip ment , fuel pipes, vents, and
a cw:ve in' the road. His car having graduated from Point
chimneys
_clean and in good repair .
reportedly left the right side of Pleasant High School. She
Keep
oar mufflers in good repair .
the road, tr~veled through two further pursued her studies at
Do
nnt
run i:ln aut(l or fuel-bw·nitig engine in a cloSed
yards and struck a. gas meter Association -and secretary of
bu
ildmg.
and telephone pole. ·
Technology.
fl'etfful(•k television .
F t·edb,l&lt;.' k... iel C\'lsion, ,. r

2 Arrested ~sses set at
..
$5,000 in fire
On Drug
Co':· .-:,is
J

A large quanti ty of
marijuan:-- ~·as confiscated
and two men arrested by loca l
law enforcement author ities
on Friday.
Taken into custody were
Lester Orion Gib bs. · 43,
HarUord, who was c harged
with possession of a controlled
substance with inte nt to
deliver and Gregory Allen
McKinney, 20, Miner.sville, 0 .,
who was char ge d with
possession of a controlled
substance.
They were arraigned before
Magistrate Miles Epling, who
set bond on Gibbs at. $5,000 and
McKinney at $1,000. They are
currenlly in jail in lieu of
bond.
·
·· Details of a rrests ar e
sketchy at this time .
Magistrate • John " Andy "
Wilson
;;s ued
search
warrants.
The arrests were made by
West' Virginia State Police
Trooper J . L. Searls and
Mason County Sheriff's
Deputies Detner Roush lll,
E.F. Crump an.d 'E.P . Watterson.
In other activity, the Mason
County Sheriff's Department
. is currerltly investigatip.g the
theft of"' pick-up truck.
The truck belonging to John
E. Mathews, 58 , Glenwood,
was taken sometime Frida y,
according to investigatin g
officer J .E . Perry. It was
taken fr om the own er' s
residence.
Although .no arrests have
. been made , t he Sher iff
Department does have
knowledge . of a pos sible
suspect.
The truck was described as
a 1972 red Ford.

·Monoxide poison
•

IS

silent killer

• hurt
Dnver.

near Mason

Alice Marie is an active 1liiill•••liiiiiiiiill••~
golfer and bowler and is '!
treasurer of the Hidden Valley
Country Club, president of the
Hidden Valley Ladies Golf
ASK TOWED
POMEROY - A marriage Association and secretary of
Rt . 35 West
446-1611
license was issued to James the West Virginia Women 's
Gallipolis
Seniors Golf· Tour·
Oliver Clark , 19, Miqdleport, State
and Mary Beth McKnight , 18 , nament.
~
Pomeroy.
Icard resides at 2000 Jef·
.fer son Boulevard, Point
Pleasant, West Virginia and
'"' has two sons, P. &amp;ott Icard of
Charleston, W. Va ., and Chris
At times during th e Ica rd of Pont Pleasant.
surn"liier, two-to-four la nes of
Open 7 days, 10 a.m.lil 10 p.m .
th ~ six-lane span were clo~ed
for
repairs,
ca using

All of Your Favorite

Traffic -flow nonnal at last

CINC INNATI (UP! ) After a summer of traffic
tieupS:, overheated engines
and even hotter tempers,
tratric flow on the I-15 Brent- massive tr affic jams near ly
·
Spence Bridge is back to every day.
The
tieups,
whic h
normal for the first tim e in
sometimes were more than
several months .
Workers Friday sompleted two miles long on each side,
the summer-to ng deck ·also may have contributed
repairs on the BrQnt-Spence, signifi cantly to severe smog
the most hea vily traveled link conditions in the Cincinnatiover the Ohio Ri ver between area during July and August ,
environmental officials said .
Ci nci nnati and No rt hern
Ken tucky.

.

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$2195

L.;.;--------

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QUEEN AND HER COURT - Southern High School's 1977 Homecoming Queefl,'Joy
Neigler , at far right , is shown with her court and their escorts, during Friday night 's
Homecomin~ activities . PiCtured, from lett, are Scott Nease, Crista Beegle, freshman

t

I

~­

·ONLY

't

r
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BOOTS
S16!KI

1{1' PITT
SHOES

THINK. PLAN. SAVE

fOR fUTURE NEEDS

1

A FIRST NAtiONAL SAVINGS ACCOUNT'
CAN HELP YOU ·PLAN FOR THE FUTURE,
WHATEVER YOUR SAVINGS GOALS OR
EXPECTATIONS MAY .BE:
Coi'-Ot
tduett LO.., tor
vour ehlldr•n

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1re"M lor yo&gt;.H"
femlfr

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~w
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A

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ple••nl

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.oc.iel - c u rl lyl

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hnportenl

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To buy •

ur. •

110m• •PPII•ne• .
or ·tOfl'ltlhing
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THI$ IS THE HIGHEST INTEREST RATE ALLOWABLE

SOUTHERN HOMECOMING QUEEN - J oy Neigler, daughter of Mrs. Sarah Neigler
of Racine arxl the ·Iate Arthur Neigler, was crowned 1977 Southern High School Homecoming
Queen during halftime ceremonies of ,the Southern-Wahama (ootball game Friday night.
.loy is shown receiving her crown from Vickie Roush, the 1976 Homecoming queen, far right.
Migg Neigler's escort, M&amp;rk Forbes, 'is also pictured .
'
·
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burg,
~28.50,
speeding;
Henry · - - - - - - - - P. Price,
RD,
Long Bottom,

•

problems and help you in any
way we can.
Besides the .I&amp;R Outreach
Program there are many
other things going on at the
center. "These have been
mentioned many times in
many ways, so just as a
reminder:
We have buses that provide
transportation to ,tne center,
doctors 1 stores 1 etc.
A nutrition program which
prov.ides a noon fue31 five
days a week .
The RSVP Program that
provides an outlet for senior
citizens that want !o volun·

NATIONAL 4-H· WEEK WAS RECOGNIZED by Dhio when Gov . James A. Rhodes .
signed the proclamation declaring October 2-11 as Ohio 4-H Week. Rhodes urges a ll Ohio
citizens "to assist in according this observance the attention and importance to whi ch it is sn
rightly entitled -" Governor Rhodes (center ) is signing the docwnenl. Looking on are, 1-r,
Edward Beery·, Woodsfield, aod Julie Tome, Malta, junior fair board members of the 19i7
Ohio SUite Fair (front) ; Roy M. Ko\tman, directnr , Ohio Cooperative Extension Service :
and Charles W. Lifer, assistant director, 4-H (back).
,
'

teer their services.

Then there are the center
activities of games, bowling,
cards , choruS 1 classes,
clinics, crafts, horseshoes,
quilting, reading, speakers,
square dancing; a~d trips a~d
some that I have probably
overlooked.
Our newsletter goes out
review the .past year's work
By Fred J. Dee!
once
a
month
tell· ·
and plan for the coming ) "ar ..
Extn. Agent, 4-H ·
ing
of
these
~ctivlGALLIPOLIS - Many It also focuses public at·
ties
plus
other
in·
formation of interest to senior American young people will tention on the 4-H program
citizens. If you are not help celebrate the 75th an· and its educational merits for
receiving the newsletter or niversary of 4-H during young people.
All youths between the ages
have any. questions, call the National 4-H· Week. Mqre
of
nine and 19 are eligible to
than 5.8 million youths from
center at 992-7886.
participate
in 4-H activities.
coast to coast will observe the
do so through
They
may
event October 2-8.
£
organized
clubs,
special
The theme for the coming 4·
SC .
interest
·
groups
,
nutrition
H year is, "Freedom To Be."
-·
3:15-3 :30;
President Jirruny Carter education programs, short·
POMEROY - The Meigs · Harrisonville
County
Road
3-Forest
Acres,
County Bookmobile schedule
said in a message to 4,-H term activities, camping and
3:45-4;
CoWlty
Road
3-New
members and volunteer other 4-H activities.
for this week:
Lima
Road,
4:15-4:45;
Th.e year 1977 was a banner
leaders:
. Oct. 3 - Racine Junior
1
1
one
for the Ohio 4-H program
Rutland-Depot-Brick
Street,
High School, 9-11:30 a.m .;
"
4-H- Freedom to Be is a
with
more than 220,000 4-H
5-7;
Cook-Gap
Hill,
7:15-7;30;
most
appropriate
theme
for
'Southern High School, 12:30-2
p.m. ; Bashan Road, 2:30- Hysell Run, 7:45-11; Junction an e(fort that reaches out to members participatin~. This
2:45 ; Bashan, 3-3 ;15; Keno, 4· 124-7, 8:15~:30.
all young Americans - rural record 4-H mem)l'ership
4; 45;
Chester-Methodist
and-urban - from all r.ac.ial, surpassed all previous
Church, 5: 15-8 :45; Ba'\m
HELP RENDERED
cultural, economic and social records in Ohio and helped
Addttton, 7·7 :30.
. I
SYRACUSE ·
..
The backgrounds. For many, 4-H Ohio 4-H celebrate its 75th
Oct. 4
Rutland Syracuse ER Squad on is the door to a lifetime of Anniversary.
In Gallia County over 930
EleJll'entary!9·11 :30a.m; 12.1 Wednesday at 2:15 a .m. personal gr0 wth and self·
youths were members of 4-H
. p.m .; Leadmg Creek R~ad,, ·transported George Conde to fulfillment."
1:30-2:30; Metgs.(iallta Lme, Veterans Memorial Hospital
Four·H week was o(ficially clubs. In addition to these,
3-3 :'30; Story's Run, 3:45-4; where he was admitted. On recognized by this state when over 130 adults were involved
Silver Run, 4:15-4:3~; Hob- the same day at 11 :30 p.m. Governor James A. Rhodes as 4-H advisors and club
son, 4:45-5; Gravel Htll-Park Richard Winebrenner was signed a proclamation · leaders . .4-H members in
Ave. Housmg, 5;15-6:15; take~ to Veterans Memorial declaring October 2-11 as Ohio Gallia County _were involved
Bradbury Commumty, 6:30· Hospttal. On_ Thursday at4:15 4-H Week. Rhodes urges .all. ~ ma~_Y actlVtttes last year
7:00; Bail~y's R\lfl, 7;1-5·7 :4S; • p.m. Den Ltsle ·was taken to Ohio citizens "to assist in mcludmg the Gallta County
Laurel Cltff, 8-11 :30. ·
Holzer Medtcal Center.
according this observance Jumor Fatr, 4-H campmg
the attention and Importance program at Canter's Cave 4Oct. 6
Pomeroy
FORUMS PLANNED
Camp,
Recreation
Elementary, 9:30-lla.m.; 12COLUMBUS (UP!) _The to which it is so rightly en· H
. 2:30 p.m. ; County Road 3- 0 h i o
P a r e n t • titled."
National 4-H Week is set
-Teacher Association is
each
year by the Cooperative
sponsoring five public forums
Extension
Service, which
across the state to focus on
4-H program in
conducts
the
the ~cult problems con·
all
50
states,
the District of
fronting the state's public
Columbia,
Pue'ito
Rico, the
schools. The forums will be
Islands,
and
Guam.
Virgin
· held in Columbus, Oct. 6;
The
observance
gives
4-H
Dayton, Oct. 10; Cleveland,
Oct. 11; Toledo, Oct. 13; and members, their leaders, and
parents an opportunity to
Canton, Oct. 17, _

Meigs

hedu}. e tOr b00km0bile

'149

'·

Bank In .GalllpoiiL

•

UTF.U

Gallipolis, 0.

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•

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VINTON BRANCH-VIN-TON
MEMBER FDIC

DISCHARGES - Maxine
Werry, Leon; James Jones,
Point Pleasant; Louis Oliver,
Point Pleasant; Joseph Work·
man, Buffalo; Mrs. Hoyt
Sayre, Mason; Gertie Buck,
Robertsburg; Frank Hicks,
Huntington; Lucille Rorrer;
Point Pleasant; Myrtle Shobe,
Point
Pleasant;
Mary
Thomas Point Pleasant· John
oMiller,' Point Ple~sant;
Barbara Thacker, Glenwood;
Brad &amp;hultz, Point Pleasant;
d Beulah Wolf Point
~~
t
'
easan ·
•

mE .

FARMER

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PQP'Ut..U.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admissions - Patricia
Schaekel, Long Bottom';·
workshops.,.. Achievement Betty Coleman, Cheshire;
Night, Club meeting, judging Eli~abeth Bartoe, Long
Helen Gibbs,
days and many other Bottom;
educational
opportunities. Hartford.; Cheryl LauderWith the observance of the milt, · Minersville; Billy
75th Anniversary of 4-H in· Brewer, Portland; Creston
Ohio coming to a close, Ohio Newland, Reedsville; Eber
and -Gallia County 4-H Gillilan, Chester; Linda
members are looking for· Hudson, Minersville; Thelma .
ward to 1978 as- an op- Whtte,
Long
Bottom;
porttiiLlt)r\l)g'i'oiVand develOp·..· Cl~rence Powell, McDonald,
and to follow the theme of 4-H Oht~- .1. ,
(or 1977 "4-H - Freedom To
Dt~cbarges
Lula '
Be." '
Westfall, Woodorw Hortney,
Birtie Wyatt, Helen Frank.

WOLVERINE ' 9"
WILDERNESS ' BOOT

••
''
;' -.

MAIN-BANK-SECOND AVE.
' .
THIRD AVENUE BRANCH

He doesn't
ge\ mad.
He gets even.

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Plan for your future. Open a savings
account today at the Flnt National

3 LOCATiONS TO SERVE YOU!

Sunday

thissumiMr,

.Arrangements
:Made-To.Orderl "\ :- ~:),'f;--')1).

BY LAW.
)

TAKENTOHOSPITAL .
The
POMEROY
Pom.eroy .Emerglmcy Squad
was called to 104 Union Ave .
at 7: 2B p.m. Friday for
Wanda Adams who was tkaen
to Veterans Memorial
HospitaL

'

SENIOR. CITIZENS SCENES
POMEROY - There a re
many people coming to th e
center regularly involved In
its activities .
Some of these people were
once homebound, because
they felt they were too old, too
crippled or too handicapped
in some· way to ever come to
the center on a r.egular basis ..
A lot of times the thing that
made the difference was a
visit. from our · outreach
worker.
Any time that we are made
aware of someone who lives
alone, needs help, or in any
way could use our services,
Donna Williamson, the
outreach worker, calls on
them.
This has resulted in many
senior citizens getting a new
interest in living . They have
found that here at the center,(
we not only care about them,
but many times we are able
to help them with their
problems.
Contacting Senior Citizens
· I&amp;R by calling 992-7311 or
coining into the office and
talking to Leafy or Donna will
most times provide help with
questions about Social
Security, Medicare, food
stamps or aimost .any other
topic. We will help you fill out
required· forms, aid you in
finding someone to stay with
the sick, help find medical
such
as
equipment
wheel chairs, walkers, etc.,
or get the lowdown on con·
sumer problems. These are a
few of our services. We are
always ready to listen to your

PQME:ROY - Twenty-&lt;ine $39.55 illegal driving in a •
defenda nts were fined and 18 park t rail ; Harold Hammon,
ot her s fo rfeited bonds in Glouster, $52.35, speeding; •
Meigs County Court Friday. William · Wineb r en ner 1
Fined by J udge Robert E. Syracuse. $28, stop sign; )
Buck were John S. Theiss, Daniel E. Hensler, RaCine,
Athens, a nd Brady Huffman, and"Nobel E. Russell, Vinton,
jr., Racine, $12 and costs .$28 ea ch, speeding; Gregory
ea ch, s peeding ~~arl E . , Sorice, Dayton, $34.50,
Stewart , Rt. 1, '""'dleport , speed in g;
WHlia m
B.
$150 and costs, three days Nicholas, -Ma rietta, Rebecca
Confin e ment , l ice nse Tri plett , Pome r..y, J a mes
suspended 30 days, restri cted Spa rks, Olivf Hlll , Ky.,
driving, driving while in· J ohnny R. Ross , Patti e .
toxicated ; Anna Cremeans, Creek, Ky., Jeffrey Hawley,
Coolviile, and James B. Rife, Middleport, Deimar Farmer,
Cheshire, $10 and costs each, Fort Deposit, .Md., William
speeding ; Nancy Reed, Landon , Nashville, Tenn .,
Middleport, $17 and cost~. Ruth M. Toney , Belpre,
,speeding ; Ellis Abel, New David V. Malone, Wheelers·
Athens, Ohio, $6 and costs, burg, and R(\~rt M. Lewis,
speeding ;
Charles
F . Belpre,
$!10.55
ea ch,
Mooney, Marietta, and Edgar speeding; William R. Am·
Wooten, Madison, Ind., $6 and berger, Chester, $34.55
costs, speeding; William T. speeding.
&gt;Peary, Leon, W. Va., $13 and
costs, speeding; Benjamin
Dowell, Middleport, $22 and
costs, speeding ; Christopher
B. Forbes, Minersville, $35
and costs, reckless operation.
c
•
l'!.t•tl/1 (
Also ,
-Lucy
Swain,
Gallipolis, $35 and costs, left
of center; James E. Husk,
Tonight
Hemlock Grove, $14 and
thru
Friday
costs, speeding; Jan Pickett,
Oct.
7
Rt. 3, Albany, $50 and costs,
$20 suspended, illegal deer ;
George J . Ratcliff, Rt. 1,
I\eedsville, costs served in
jail, negligent assault ;
Debbie Blair, no · address
recorded, $100 and costs,
disorderly conduct; David
Icenhower, Negley, Robert
and
May
Icenhower
Icenhower, both o( Navarre,
Ohio and Janice Smith ,
Brewster, Ohio, $15 and costs
IPGoo
each, trespassing .
A
U
NIVER
SAL
PiCLUie lej;llOICOIO! ~
Forfeiting bonds werP
Edward A. Bacorn, Parkers
CARTOON

COLO\' ·

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SUNDAY

..

2nd &amp; Olive

· attendant ; Johnathan Rees arxl Amy Souder, sophomore attendant; Dave Finley and Lori
Chapman, junior attendant; Greg 'cundiff and 1976 Homecoming Queen Vickie Roush, who
crowned the new queen ; John ·Sayre and Cheryl Wilso, 'll!'nior attendant; Richard Teaford
and Ivanna Powell, senior attendant and Mark Forbes and'Mi-ss-Neigler.
• .

Near six .f'zillion youths
will celebrate 4-H Week

,.,

COMPOUNDED DAILY TO EARN A 5.12%
ANNUAL YIELD.

3 PIECES CHICKEN
-,
•MASHED POTATOES
.&amp;GRAVY
•SLAW NoNo Subt
Coupons - No Lim it

.

~

.A FIRST NATIONAL SAVINGS ACCOUNT
EARNS 5% INTEREST WHICH IS

DINNER BOX

Few n Model Lefl

Gallipolis , 0 .

-.

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-

··aoNDA.

Phone 446 -2240

••

Transfers

CllVISIOII

"'"'"' .-c~..t

grt'ps. a combLned fork 1Qn1!.1on lock mstrument
module. and qu1eter mufflers are all new relm emen ts.

Rt. 7

O£ftl.'io\ s

''"""ner hind

on I he CB·750 K I t' s got a 4-strokeO HC: transverse,
fo ur mated to a 5-speeo gear box . More.cqmfor1ablc

BETZ HONDA SALES

Property

or ·•pay pat'kag.e, n to ha\'e

To build en

Even yoUr dall-y -r ide t.o w-d"r k can be"an adventwre

GOING STRONG

service.
Plans [•all for tile premium ,

three movie sele cti ons ;
'
colleKe courses ; ni~h tclub
having politicmns nn a show . entertainment ;' eu1tural
;md then askin~ the \1if;\wers performances and specials;
what they think of the sports; and rock concerts.
..
Harlan Kleiman, QUBE
offk(•lwldl'r 's P&lt;'Sitions, or
Clyde David Frye; dec. to •
simpi)' askin~. tht.:' audtenL-e, vke presiden t for the Dorina Mae Odie, Charles
" Do you b\'lievt• !u1u .·• -;'~" ' pn•mium c han ne ls_. said Dayton Frye, Ccrt . of Trans.,
t.:umpuler ~:1l*ll let:, the programming the channels, Hulland.
whirh require pHymen t in
pohocu~r. krw~·
Donna M. Odie, Vanus Odie •
Vtewers of l 'ulumbu:, ,\hw addttion to the reg ular to Cha rl es · Dayi on Fr ye,
wtll be abk tn push buttm"' w monthly cable bill, will "each Pcm:els, Rutland.
:
tell J)('"t\~nun n(ht·lo.l. \11-hl!l month present a cha llenge to
Proffitt
,
Shrf.,
.
"
'
James
J
.
pruvade something you
~lJlll'S the) 10ould hke w ....Fred B. Coeglcin1 eta \ to .. .;.
h•.'tvcrft s~£1n before."
diM- ~ d , r\'
L'i'
pp_rt\\.31
Cit izens NaiL Bank, Lots 7., 8 •
The moi1thly bi ll will
t il' d t lpprl•\ alt-.f )tLW t , 4lr
•
a nU~Rnck Springs Su b.
.
)u 'l .:h t.h:t ir ••JJi nlnn ~ ~ rr.main the s8me ; but the Div., Salisbury .
L\lmpany notes, that much of
t r
~ liWi h ''f" utl
Susanna Fitzgerald. Pa ul
C»'IHf" , Ut HI ~\ bt• the cost ill be up to the D. Fitzgl!ra ld, Maxine A.
1·iewer. A subscriber who
m•·.-.·1111111
Arnold tn Norman Raridolph
il • • se1e('l.s few of the premium Humph r~ys, Jr., J udy Bell ·
m nl 11 prol()'ams will have a much
.31 acre : .
HumphreyS,
smaller bin then a hea vy
#l'll
th~n
f t. P
· Chester.
.
or!ltt•
' rliif'b)' '1ewer of the shows thaf"cosf
Robert W. Barton, Bonnie
• button ex"ira.
"lfllrt.
Warner is thinking of going S. Ba rton to Ca\1 Ode ll
•• l
t . ol n 1t Ill
· Manley, Betty Ja ne Manley, ·
a sh!p furt he~, possibly as
dt'lllll\
i -11, Middleport.
n,,. t'\lftll&gt;\ltl'l' "til ha• e the soon as sometime next year . Lots
Gertru
de M. Butle r to
\lt." "er 'a •ddtto 41KI {i\aq;e That idea involves adding a
Warner. Lots I , 2,
Richard
N.
'''"unt numbt't' Bas..'&lt;i nn . fire and burg la r ala r m J, l , Mutc hler's Add.,
SLK'h ordo:rs. the product and sys tem to its ca ble TV
Rutland .
.e
.tlw btll would then be sent to service.
•
Ute subscrtber.
•
Hauser says Columbus was
se l~ted as the test market
•
because, "We felt it· was an
hospitable environment for a
new business. Co1wnbus ha p- .
pens to be a great city
demographically. It 's a good
MEN'S
test market."
Warn er, a subsidiary · of
INSULATED
Warne r Communi cations
LEATHER
Inc., is banking heavily on the
project. More than $2 million
has been spent on its
programming division , called
QUBE and an other SIO
million will be spent for
prog ra ms, equ ipme nt and
modifying i\s present cab!~
system.
. The co mpa ny ha-s a
franchise . to serve 100,000
Ideal for
homes i'fl Columbu s ~ nd ·
Work or
expects its present list of
ng .
30,000 subscribers will
.
increase as. QUBE develops.
VISA '
or the remaining channels
in the system, 10 will be
traditional 1]1, 10 ~ be
'
Silver Bridge Plaza

GAlliPOLIS STORE ONLY

Honda CB-750K

1&gt;4.'1' &lt;'e nt

pretlliwl t or ''pay" televi1:iiOn,
and lhc rest for community

....•

I •

.

- AHM 1978

4~

Meigs

un- t;'blumbuS Ali\'t' , some

l'llb\C

OCT. 2 ·OCT. 8

CLOSED SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY

thm

f:n11n..-"d scrambled.

~ndwiches Are Here ...
Try Our Super riSh

TUESDAY THRU 'SATURDAY 8:30 A.M.-5 P,M.

Good Se lec tion
On Used
Hondas

t'\N)'OII e

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY

NEW FAlL &amp; WINTER HOURS

fo r 78

wl':i-1t the J,:esull wnuh.l be.
Within minutes , the C(lll1·
llilny ' s
computtl r
tt1ld

Court hears 39
cases ~n Friday,

•••
•.....

T

ell us wha~ you'd ljke, or let us
create a beautiful flower or plant
·'
arrangement. We're artists! ·

FLOWERS BY GEORGE
Phone 446-9721

28 Cedar St.
Ga IIi polis

·r

"trSASONY:

$47.99
Mon. &amp; Fri. iil8p .m.

Tues. Wed. Sal. til$
Thursday t1112 noon

ass Setond Avenue
Gallipolis, 446-7900
·
You 1rea little late in the -:epson now but get.your pool
in, Enjoy it some this ye ,r, anct have it ready for use
ned spring.
·

243 Third Ave .

•

Gallipolis; Ohio 45631

. ...
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'
B-1-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Oct . 2,1977

...

I

A·12- The Swlday Times-Senllnel. Sunda1•. Oct. 2. 1977

•

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.__,_

fr:~nkl~ . r~nuun

t~

l'INt:INNAn [ UP!) - A
fedt•ral judge is expected to

dts•:m't•r that IJiJ.!::i du not luok alas rntll'ut s \\ llh pntt•ntwl to
l'rt•atl\'l' · don . Su lx"h l'\·o.•blt• ~•n" hts hk.l' Pl1rky: that skunks do do grt•at liauli~~t·.
The Ohiu;on for Wlidilft•
\T~atUrt'S tha.t. f'Hiny tht• not .m ule likl' Bambi 's
gentus .
Hts
\lntntal!.•d
Cun:&gt;t'r\'~tl(lh
' 'nl!llullh.'C suul
r hara cters becamr tJu r \'ou1h w r &lt;:H.Iult, for lhii l frll'lhl. Fl u\\'t'r-:' a mi thut
-bet·aust•
dt)
tlw~ ll crs url'
muskra
ts
ttnd
f
ill't·uuns
are,
friend• in childhood and. ;n~th.'r 1 hn s bt'en stnrtlt,td .to
nwr't• fanuliar with I &gt;1Sncy
than n·&lt;.llity. they m'\' fair· .
Kanw fnr tho.sr who :w e using·
llll'i r fantasi es to oppose

W,tlt

so

this

Ohioana honors
writer
•

~

I

D.C. , \\'ill receive the music

Beat•• ,

Of the Bend

:~

By Bob Hoeflich

di.'l' tdt' in' several days
• wheU1 er to delay his order
U1at U1 state of Ohw tome up
with a plan to end
I!Vtlrt.Tn wdin~

Torturer of 3
sons sentenced

~ ~ ~;:~::~u::d~~o.~:Y th]:i~
~ 1 ljl terms.

needed in Oh io to m3nal!C ·'

wildlife.
There is on the November
bal1ot · a
constitutiomll
amendment to outlaw the

leghold trap, a device used
under stiff regulation in Ohio
to eapture primarily muskrat
and raccoon, but also beaver,

.+
t

•

limb.

means is starvation and ••

populat ion in one season. The
nea rly 600 .000 muskra ts
trapped this past yea r, if left
to their ow n devicl~s. would be
one million muskrnts today .
Without food, with out
spa ce. what wou rct happen?
Th e su pp orters of the
amendment, Issue 2, speak of
nature's balance . What that

FORMERLY SNOWVILLE GENERAL STORE
.
-

disease. lt p1eans a wildlife •
attack on &lt;'rops , on watt!r-

8.

AT

AGAIN John Mohler of Route 1, Middleport, wins the
honor of the first with his Christmas cards which were in the
mails over a week agd . John has heen seriously ill at
University Hospital in Colwnbus and is now wrdergoing kemo
therapy treatments at Holzer Medical Center. We know you
want to join us in wishing the best for John who was delighted
at hearing frorri over 100 friends during his hospitalizaUon.

·

:

+
+'
+
•

()'- .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .....

strike COLOR with new

·

·-

The · ·
Il.eal Treasure is

·

·

SALE
•

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

·-·.......·

9900

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and back panels I hat b egi n rf.tdu cing

FISH &amp;
FRENCH ,fRIES

.tf

\\

RC-30

clea n apPearance du ring baking or
roast ing. And the panels remove for ·
cleaniOg of heavy so11 at the ~.ink.
T ~e rest olthe oven is easily access-I
ible lor norm al cleaning thank s to ·
an oven door t hat !ills right oil and
out of the wav. Th is model also ad ds
an easy-to-read clock and 1a handy
, minute timer to your kitchen without
taking up an inch of wall or counter
space.

.&lt;.;d .·
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.

Mr. and Mrs. Normal Lucas
CELEBRATING - Mr. and Mrs. Normal Lucas of
Littfe Kyger ttoad will celebrate their golden wedding
anniversary with an open reception at the K,ger Creek
Club House on Sunday, October 9 at 2 p.m. They are the
parents of two sons, Robert and Scotty Lucas of Cheshire
and two daughters, Mrs. Chester (Patricia) Roush ol Rt. I
Gallipolis and Mrs. Joe (Ruth) Domer of Naples, Florida.
They also have !3 grandchildren ~All frienda and' relatives
are cordially invited to caU during the afternoon.

17.0 Cu.Ft.
Energy-Saving
Frigidaire
RefrigeratorFreezer •
Uses tess ene!QY than

dl uu

Frigidaire.
20. 3~cu -lt slde·lly-side has
a 7.04·CU ·Mfreezer com-

available (edra charge)

on
elegance.

SAVE
'

:r
·

$ $ $

Oh&lt;i~t· 'l,+ l stu!ll..,ea. 2 ghde·
Cl!sper s con verl rble ·
•uvflt~+b l o o;:tour ~ . remov•b!e
&lt;J ou r rac;.s oPI1ona l roUl'r~ .
1ce mash1t ca paD•I•I~

FrQst*Ciear

'"&lt;I Refl iplator Freezer.

,

freezer .
Reversa-doors.

WIT

~

Seventh antique seminar
Racin,e legio-n ~
names .committees to be; in m_id-October
....,,.

"""
distrophy 'fur 1978.

GALLIPOLIS
The
RACINE-Committees for
Seventh
Annual
Antique
the 197.7·78 year \j'ere , apThe traveling prize donated
pointed ~~ the Tuesday' night by Mrs. Thelma Walton was Seminar, sponsored by the
meeting of U1e American won by Mrs. Shirley Ables. French Art Colony, will be
Legion Auxiliar~ of 'Racine Refreshments were served conducted on Friday and
Saturday, October 14 and 15
Post602.
by Mrs. Willford.
by Mrs. Orva Walker
Mrs. Marie Boyd and Mrs.
'
Heissenbuttel of Washington,
Martha Lou Beegle were
. D. C., noted antique
named color guards, Mrs.
authority , lecturer and
Mary Roush, historian ; Mrs.
columnist lor several antique
Beulah Neigler, natinal
journals.
security; Mrs. Leora Young, .
"'A native of. Gallia County
community service; Mrs.
and
graduate of Rio Grande
Boyd, children and youth ; ,...
U
J
High
School, Mrs. Heissen·
Mrs. Frm1ces Roberts,
iS the daughter of Mrs.
butte!
foreign relations; Mrs .·
·
Zelma
Walker of Thutinan.
Beulah Autherson, legisla· ..
She
is
well
known in the Mid·
tion; Mrs. Louise Stewart;
Atlantic area and is the
Americanism; Mrs. Julia
founder of an amazing total ofNorris, veterans affairs;
32 antique, glass and rela ted
Mrs. Beegle, poppy. chair·
clubs and societies, three of
man; and Bea Jay Autherson, junior activities.
ATHENS :._ The Ohio them national.
During tlie meeting presid· University Artist Series will
She is an instructor in
ed over by Mrs. Elizabeth present the Soviet Georgian classes and seminars on
Wilford, th~ unit voted to Dancers
and
Tbilisi antiques at colleges in the
make a donation to the Polyphoni c
Choir
in Washington, D. C. area where
Racine Fire Department and Memorial AudHorium she has resided for the past 20
.the Emergency Squad. it was Monday, October 3,,at 8 p.m. years. She is Associate Editor
noted that two .boxes of riP.
Hailed · by Clive Varnes of of the Antiques Observer and
. bons had been sent to the the New York Times as " One Associate -Editor of the
Dayton Hospital for making of the great dance ensem bles Rainbow Glass Journal.
To open the two· day
into rugs by the veterans · in the world," the company of
there·.
80 dancers and singers are Seminar at Riverby on Oc·
The fall conference was an· the livi~g ex ponents of the Iober 14, Mrs. Heissenbuttel
nounced for Thursday at performi ng traditions of wili focus on the Victorian
The morning
Junction City. On Sunday, Soviet Georgia. The dances Kitchen.
Oct. 9, an Eighth District pic- are spectacular and the session, following 9 o'clock
nic will be held at Rutland . Georgian music is rich with registration, · will start
Also announced was a leader· the rituals of everyday work, promptly at 9:30 a.m. with
ship school to be hosted by the' as well as heroic war songs , ''Sontewar:e and Yellow-ware
Chillicothe unit. Reservations wedding, drinking and from the OhiO" River Valley."
· are to be made with Mrs. Nor· · humorous songs.
Following luncheon, the
The folk music of Georgia , · afternoon Session at 1 o'cJock
l ma Frazer, lll5 23rd St., Port'
smouth...Classes will begin at created over the centuries, will be a general discussion of
9 and last until noon. Cost is has been enriched by fine new the various aspects .of an;
$2 per person and this must song s ·· that express the tiques found in those spacious
he submitted by Oct.l5.
thoughts and yearnings of the HVictorian ~itch ens." Both
Cards were signed for Mrs. '. So.viet people, th~ ir love of the morning and afternoon
Margaret . Houdashelt and life and country.
sessions will include a tour of
Mrs. Shirley Wolfe who have
'Ticket reservations are the galleries at Riverby ,
both been hospitalized. A let- available at Memorial , Gallery I will display a
ter- was read from .the Auditorium, Athens, Ohio, by collection of Furniture, cast·
American Legion Auxiliary mail, phone or in person. Call iron cook stove ahd cast iron
national president calling for (614 ) 594.;)807 for further ~:ookware made at a
units to participate in the information, Monday-Friday , Oallipolis foundry in the 19th
roll ca ll for muscular H p.m.
century, and all of the many

D'/1n·c·er.''('

types of utensils used in the .
family · kitchen of the Victorian period. Gallery II will
display a collection of
stoneware and yellow-ware
from the Ohio River Valley.
" Kitchen" collectibles
have become quite popular in
recent years 1 and include
Such items in woodenware as
butter moulds · and paddles,
potato mashers and . rolling
pins; cast·iron griddles,
"gypsy" pot s, cherry pitters,.
·sa usag e grinders, lemon

squeezers and mortar-and·
pestles. Of special interest
will be examples of "river
glass.'' the early pillar·moulded'glass made in Pitts·
burgh and shipped down the
Ohio River . These examples
include molasses or syrup
"ca ns" (dispensers }, and
celery vases. Also popular
collectibles are ea rly tin
canisters, spice cans, moulds
and cookie cutters .
Saturday's
seminar,
starting at 9:30 a.m. ivill
center on antique .furniture.
The morning session will
include a discussion ·or
cabinet woods, construction
and restoration . The afternoon will be a workshop on
methods ·of restoration a nd
refinishing of antiques · and
" early married" furniture.
Registration for
the
complete two-day sem inar, •
including lunch served both
days, is $25. Or, registration
may be for one &lt;Jay, including
lunch, at $7.50. Anyone
wishing to attend only part of
either dayls session may
regisier for $4 tri cover a half·
day without lunc~'. or $5 with
lunch. Reservations sho uld
be made by Friday, October
7, by ~alling Mrs. Sue Beverly
at 446-190$ or PJ's at 446-1819.
Mrs. Beverly is handling the
arrangements for this out·
standing annual event
sponsored by the French Art
Colony.

Exhibit for the month of October - Antique 'Exhibit
featurin g a Victorian Kitchen in Gallery I and Stoneware and
Yellow Ware in Gallery II . The maj ority of the items on exhibit
are locally owned and loaned to the Fren ch Art Colony fur this
exhibit.
·
Gallery hours .:. Saturdays and Sundays, I p .m . until 5
p.m. ; Tuesdays and ThW'sdays, 10a.m. until3 p.m.
October 14-15 - 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday Seventh ~nual Antique Seminar, Rive~· by. Conducted by Mrs.
Orva Walker Hei ss~nbuttel of Washington, D. C. Reservations
to be made with Mrs. Sue Beverly, phone 446-1906 or 446·lal9.
$7.50 registration each day includes lunch at Riverby. Friday
sessions : Stoneware and Yellow ware and Victorian Kitchens.
Saturday sessions: Antique furniture, reslofation . and
refinishing. Reservations should be made by Friday, Octol;ler
7.
October 18, 8 p.m. - F.A.C.lnterdepartmental Meeting,
Riverby .
October 25, 8 p.m . - F.A.C. Trustees Meeting, Riverby .
October 30, 2 p.m . . 4 p.m. - Parent-Child Workshop,
Penny Moore, Chairman, Riverby.
·
November Exhibit - John Ruthven "The World of John
Ruthven ; Wildlife Artist," 35 prints.
·
November 14, 8 p.m. - Film and talk on Print Making by
John Ruthven . An opportunity to meet and talk with the Artist ,
Riverby.

Musewn, features booths of antiques and collectibles, books,
boutique items, wooden furnitur e, musicalitems. Contact: Mr.
Donald Wilkinson, 17522 Narragansett, Lakewood . Ohio 44JQ7.
1216) 521-4717.
·
October 8-9 :.._ INDOOR UGHT GARDENING SHOW,
Mansfield (Kingwood Center). Artificial light gardens are
exhigit&lt;td, with experts on' hand to answer the public's
questions, African violets are featured down the Hall. Contact:
Columbus. A toast to Chris includes concerts, a foot run , golf
tournament , ·parade and fireworks' Contact : Columbus Day Kingwood Center, 900 Park Avenue West, Mansfield, Ohio
44903. (419) 529-5418.
U.S.A. Association, P.O. Box 1527, Columbus, Ohio 43216. (614)
· Qctober 'B-9 - APPLE BUTI'ER FESTIVAL, Burton. A·
221-1321.
.
October 7·9 - PAUL BUNYAN SHOW, Nelsonville flea market and village ox roast in the settinu of Centurv
(Hocking Technical College) , The only, forestry equipment Vi ll&lt;~ ~e . (',.or tact : Th e Gea uga County Historical Snciety, P .0 .
demonstration show · in Ohio, plus : college lumberja.ck . Box .153, Bu•ton, Ohio 44021 1216) 834-1012.
October 8-9 - AMERICAN FOLK ARTS FESTIVAL,
competition, Friday i2-4; Ohio Lwnberjack Competiti o~ , .
'saturday )-4; National Lwnberjack Competition, .Sunday 1-4, North Oimsted. Craft demonstration, folk .music, country
Auction of.Chain:Saw sculptures . Contact: Ms. Kay Bourgin , store. Nominal admission fee . Contact : Mrs. James Carney ,
Hocking Technical College, Nelsonville, Ohio 45764 . (216 !753- 251 Cotnmodore Circle, Elyria, Ohib 44035. (216) 365-5054. ·
October 8-9 - OCfOBERFEST, Lowell. Flea market , ox
3591.
0
roast,
antique car and tractor display, hlrY rides, banjo pickin '
rh't11ber 8--MUM FESTIVAL, Tip11 t'lt) . FkH n1arket 1-l!id
all
provide
a ga l~ time ! Contact : Thomas L. Shank, Route 2,
arts, antique car display , mums the .word, and bands from all
l"wcll.
Oil.in
45744 , (614) 8!16-2176.
over the state compete I :30-5 on Sunday. Contact: Mrs. Flo
(l&lt;:toher
8-9
- OHIO SAUERKRAUT FESTIVAL, WaynesMullenix, P .O. Box I, Tipp City, Ohio 45371. 15131667-ol22.
ville.
The
k:
aut
with a lot of clout is served midst arts and
Oct.1ber 8-9 ~ COUNTRY STOHE, Lakewood 1City Halll .
&lt;-raft,,
antique
car
parade . folk music . Contact : Jack Estes,
The Countrv Store. its sa!es bcnefitin~ the Old StoJ•e House

9243 Old Stage Road, Waynesv ille, Ohio. 45068. 1~13) 862-4:!:17.
October 8-9 - OLD FASHf ONED DAYS, Mt . Gilea d.
Walking, Sulky and Gang Plows, Team Horsemanship and
Team ' Hitch Class, Li ~ ht andH eavy Weight Log Skidding.
ConUict: Da ve Sm ith , Central Ohio Draft ·Horse Association,
RFD 3, Box 298, Cardington, Ohio 43315. ( 419 ) 864-7620.
October 14-16 - BOB EVANS F'ARM msTIV AL, Rio
Grande. Tirere's neve r a slow down in this annua I hoe down!
&amp; sure to attend, for evans sake! Contact : Lee Dw·ieux , 66
South Sixth Street, Columbus , Ohio 43215. 1614 ) 221-7751.
October 15-16 - FALL FESTIVAL DAYS, Mass illon
I Spr~1g Hill Historic Horrtt) . Cont;r ct for detai ls: Mrs. Robert
Schneider , 212 Lincoln Way, East, Massillon, Ohio 44646. 1216)
833-4061.
.
Octoller 15-16 -· FA LL FESTIVAl~ ·oF LEAVES,
Bainbridge. When southwestern Ohio m:ikes iJ spectacle of
itself, don't leaf it go to 'waste ! App le butter making. crafts,
entertainment. Contact: Bob Kilpatrick, Ohio Festiva l and
Events Asspciaton , 208 W. 1st Street, Uhrichsville, Ohio 44683.
Or Box 105, Bainbridge, Ohio 45612.
· October 15-16 - APPLE BUTTER STIHRIN', t:oshocton
tHoscoe Village ). Spread the word , this yearly festival allows
no ma rgarine or error ! ContaCt: Ms . Pat Brown, Roscoe
Village Fi1undation , 381 Hill Street, Coshocton , Ohio 43812.
1614 1622-9315.

to appear

all

grr:at buy - 6·o,os•ho,; a·ciJu JI·
·able

By
12 . 3 cu . ft . Of
convenience.
including a 4.75 cu .

Clarence Boster, Melvin Sheeis , Fred Harrington,
Marj orie Plymale, Ada Johnson, William Casey,
Raymond Gooch.

Model AT17F3

'l UI

frigidaire.

THE CLASs OF 1932 _,:. Front row, Helen 'ray ler,
Evelyn Boggs, Dessie Mollendeck, Ruth Pitchford, ·
Winifred Acker, Opal Jll'male , Edith McCa ll. Back row,

Qualrt~ I P.~hiiC5 mike lhrs a

n. . top

' ~ l r ~trhl 1d tl71i ~W ~ / !flo ,
CO!fl~lll&lt;l • •1~ tMr,y C0~-

F&lt;U /t rl ~U " ' ' r~ I CIUI!
""· dt~Udrn ; o~ . ~c1111 e~
~ rronm t r&gt;!, lloo&lt; cp~r r ~gl . lfpt

By

Proof. Automatic Ice

comparlment.
~~.:g~·j:.,'l\l916 ~~•• ~~.~

Elegance.

panmem. too•f. Frasi-

a ny other 16.0 cu-lt or
larger refr igeratOr- ~
freezer. 4 lul l-width
shelves·and twin Veg ·
etable Hydrators.
4 44 cu-lt freezer

Ctolil •• d Jl •luQ41fiiC" 1~&lt;1

hs.3cu·
I
!

'

992-5248

"'\- ·.

_

Gibson

TO WED - Dr. and Mrs. Paul C. Hayes, Rio Grande,
formerly of Wadsworth, Ohio, arurounce the engagement
of their daughter , Dianne K. to Floyd Cratvford son of Mr.
and Mrs. Dan Crawford, of Warren, Ohio. The bride..,lect
received her degree from Akron University and is a high.
school physical education and health teacher in Alliance
Ohio. Her fiancee is a graduate of Kent Stale Universit;
and is associate with PackardElerlric Co. of Warren. The·
wedding will ta~e place December 17 in Salem, Ohio.

GALUPOUS - The sixth · supper, Mr. Higgms gave a
reunio.11 of the Gallia• short talk and pictures were
Academy High School class taken by Tawney's Studio.
of 1932 was held Saturday Mrs. Eleanor Martin Null of
Sept. 10 at Oscar's River Boat Sandusky, Ohio assisted in
VISiting with her fellow
Room .
Follrteen members of the classmates but due to other
class and seven visitors in· commitments was unable to
eluding E. E. Higgins, who stay for tne picture taking .
The ·ten known deceased
was principal of GAHS atthe
tim e of their graduation, class members lire Ruth
Smith, · Mary Frances Hill
attenaed.
.
• :,t'he secretary ·treasurer's Seott , WillialJJ . Janes,
report was read . and ap- Richard Fa!J)kfier, Nelson
proved. The group was Wheeler, _90qald Saunders,
saddened to learn that ten James Henry, John Evans,
known members of their Eugene Criner and Beulah
Gibson Mills.
class were deceased.
Those attending were Ada
The gro up derided to hold
Johnson,
Opal Plymale,
their next reunion at the
Dessie
Moellendick,
Helen
same time in 1980. General
·
Tyler,
Ruth
H.
Pitchford,
fund was set up to be used for
Evelyn Boggs, Marjorie
invitations, postage, etc.
Each class mate in· Plymale, Winifred Acker,
troduced themselves. Special · Edith McCall, William Casey,
recognition for coming the Clarence Boster, Raymond
farthest was given to · Gooch, Melvin Sheets, Fred
Harrington.
Winifred Huntington Acker
It was derided that a
from California and Ada
Johnson from Florida. After special elfort he made for all
a delicious baked steak members to attend the next
reunion in 1980.

:::3
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. 83-...,:;- .....
·~- I ""·~-.... ...

Dianne Hayes

..

Class of 1932 gathers

~ WARRANTY* ~

normal spa tte rs to a presenlabty"

,~

Sandra .Carleton

ENGAGED - Mrs. Frances Carleton of Route 3
Pomeroy, is announcing the engagement and approadling
marriage of her daukhter, Sandra Louise, to Jeffrey Scott
Needs, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack W. Needs, Roush Drive,
New Haven, W. Va. The bride-elect is the daughter of the
late William !larry Carleton. The open church wedding
will be an event of 2:30 p.m. on Nov. 5 at the Hemlock
Grove Christian Church. T.he Rev. Fred Workman will of·
ficiate. ll;liss Carletop is a graduaie of Meigs High School
and the ·Parkersburg, . Coinmunity College. She is
employed at the Holzer Medical Center Clinic. Her fiance
graduated from Wahama High School in 1974 and is
employed at the Southern Ohio Coal fo.

~&amp;&amp;.\fu1Gutc~1
::il 5 * 2 * 5 .

ltEG. '799.95

Oven cleaning is te ss ol a chore,
thanks to continuous ·cl,eaning sid e

tsle fu

;

· ·- ;--,+ - - ..

Oct. 2
thru Oct. 8

A

.

7'

Enjoy an oven
that can clean
while it cooks.
From Frigidaire.

-+-+

·",

MAYTAG
Dependability

sPECIAL

~
· ~

'

. r--· ,,.

idaire 30''·Eiectric
Model RC-30

84c

)

Mayt@)alifoiDia·g-oiA_,

'THIS WEEK'S

Locust Street

•

•

OPEN 7 to 7 MON. thru FRI.
g to 5 SATURDAY

t

••

RUTLAND FURNITURE

THE USEFUL FRIENDS Or~anization of South Bethel is
selling cleaning supplies. If you're interested in purchasing
from the group call Norma Hawthorne, 985-4133, or Ula
VanMeter , 985-3851.

___·....

•

..VI

f ·,

STRIKE IT RICH in SAVINGS! .

ROY POWELL OF LAUREL CLiFF underwent heart
surgery this past week at University Hospital in Colwnbus. He
needs to replace 18 pint.s of blood 'due to the surge~y. The next
bloodmobile will be on Ocl. 10 from 1:30 to 5:30p.m. at the
Pomeroy Elementary School. Persons wishing to give blood in
. Roy's name are asked to be sure to tell the clerical help at the
unit that they are so doing so he will get credit for it.

\f~~ury

Gosolln~.

'"-

fowl. on bird.., It ·might even • .
nu.'an
moveme nt
~nto • .
sU bu rba n gilrdens in the
scarc·h fo r food.
•
Ohioans niust op pose Issue
·
2 und \'Ole " no'' on Novem ber

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Pomeroy-Middleport

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See Us for Your Grocery,
Household lter..·s &amp;

992-2156
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ft C9BB'S GROCERY f

. THE MOST C'OMMON trapping devise used in Ohin is
~e sll\O&lt;Jth bar,leg hold trap. Desi ~~red primarily for the
nmskrat , thl' tn1p r es ~raiil$ the HninuJ I by rlosing a buut its

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.Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

MIDDLEPORT - The
Middleport Emergency
Squad went to Story's Run at
7:50 p.m. Friday for ISmonth-old Robert ,Shuler who
was ill. He was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.

SNOWVILLE, OHIO

Charlene Hoeflich

446-2342 ~

~-Kt:ALLED

BUY NOW AND $AVE ON BRAND NAME TV'S &amp; AP,PLIANCES

Color TV

Catherine Benet
.

BUDGET PRICED·!

MEMBERS OF OHIO ETA PHI Chapter or'ileta Sigma
Phi Sorority held their annual rush party Thursday nigh I. The
costwnes that the gals came up with to carry out a circus
theme was tremendous. There weren't enough prizes to go·
around, unfortunately.

Woman 's World

ruled Uta! the stnall cells at
the Lucasville prison were ....
WIL'O nstituUonal and gave the
state 90 days to come up with
a plan for giving the
prisoners more spaec. The 90
days elapsed this week .

BEAUTIFUL FURNITURE! - BEAUTIFUL APPLIANCES!

DO BE ADVISED that you do not have to register as a
voter in Meigs County unUI November, 1978. However, an
extensive program is now underway in the county registering
voters so that registrations can be processed now and set up
properly by the Meigs County Boardof Elections.lt is better to
register now; but do keep in mmd that the deadlme IS ·
November, 1978, better thim a year away. There will be
registrars at the voting precincts at the November election,
this year to register you so that you will have it out of the way.
Registration to vote in · this year's ' November election is
definitely not required.

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POMEROY - The toys and dolls are in at The Farmers
Bank and Savings Co., preparatory for the Cllristmas season.
Through the program, dolls are rostwned and toys are
created from kits . In previous years, the dolls and toys were
given to the under privileged. This year, a new approa~h is
. being taken and the dolls and toys are to be sold at a srlent
auction with proceeds going to the Pomeroy Emergency Squad
which is currenUy involved ill a drive for a new truck.
If you'd like to make a toy or costume a doll, contact the
hank. The nice part about it all is that several people recerve
nice prizes from the bank for cornlng up with the best
costwned dolls and the best toys.
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Announcing the Opening of
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skunk and fox . Persons in·

volved
with
wildlife
eon·
' manage ment and
servationists recognize the
trap a~ an effi cient .
economi ca l and hum ane
m e th od fo r ma·intaining
wildlife population - for
keeping these anima ls at
levels that assur~. as much as
caq be assured in nature,
these creatures do not over·
run their living space nor usc
up their food supply.
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In other words, people trap
animals and in doing so
eliminate a 'Surplus.
Ohio is a o industria I and
agricultural state. With the
exception of specific wildlife
preserves, the land is •taken
by people. It is not wild
country. There is no. room_for
a population explosion afnong
il1'uskrats or faccoons or
beavers. MuskratS, for
example, can breed from 50
percept to 80 percent of (heir

at the Lucas-

vtllc prison .
The judge may delay the
&lt;•rdcr until afl e r th e
November c leC' ti on when
voters will decide an
a!lll!mlment that includes $80
mil lion for new prison
faci lities.
State attorneys have asked
U.S. District t:o w'l· Jud~e
Timothy !logan lo delay his
order until after the eleetion.
Early this summer Hogan

meth,ods of trapping t)mt a re

years Qf Warren cartoons in
citation for his "untiring the CinclnnaU Enquirer .
- Terry Waldo, Colwnbus
devotion to furthering the
perf ormer'
co mposer'
music81 arts. 1 '
Others receiving book scholar and writer, for his
acrount of American music,
awards include :
- Retired Columb us "This is Ragtime.". ·
- J ohn · Baskin, Dayton,
Citizen-Journal Editor Don A.
who
will receive the Florence
Wea 1•er, for distinguished
Roberts
Head Award for his
service in both joumalis{ll
of
an
Ohio village which
tale
and civic affairs.
lies
under
a man-made dam,
- WiUiam E . Turner, Wor"New
BW'lingtoo
: The Life
thington, for excellence in
artistic work and historical and Dea th of an American
Villa~e .''
research.
- Dr. Robert Canzoneri,
.Co)limbus, for his r oo t•
searching autobiography, ' 'A
Highly Ramifi~d Tree."
- Bri nton Turkle, an
Alliance naUve now living in
CINCINNATI (UPi l Santa Fe, N.M., for his Disciplining three of her sons
children's books " Island - aged nine, 10 and II - by
Time" and "Deep in the burning them on the buttocks
Forest. ''
with.a pair of heated 5cissors
- Walter C. Langsam and has resulted in a ~"lJail
L.D. Warren , both of Cincin- sentence for Mrs. Gloria Jean
nati, for their book, "The Sanunons.
World
and ' Warren 's
Mrs. Sammons, 31, CincinCartoons," which reviews 30 nati, who pleaded guilty to
three counts of child endan. ge ring, was sentenced by
~:.o;:~~-s;:,;.."*~::&amp;:~~*::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::~:;:::::;~::::::::::::~;:::~-:=:!:!:;~:.:~:'~ Municipal . Court Judge

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Martha Kinne)' Cooper
Ohioana Library Association
will
honor
syndicated
columnist•Bob Greene and 10
other Ohio naUves later this
month
for
notab le
achievemeats.
Greene, a Bexley natl\'e
now living in Chicago, will be·
presented an
Ohioana
citation for distinguishing
Ohio in journalism at the
group 's 48th annual meeting
Oct. 22.
Dr. Charles A. Doan, d!an
emeritus of the Ohio State
Unive rsity
College
of
Medicine, will r eceive the
group's coveted Career
Medal for his lifelong
dedicated work in medicine,
civic betterment, hig her
education and service to
humanity.
Dr . Walter F . Anderson, a
Zanesville native presenUy
director of musit programs
for the National Endowment
for the Arts in Washington ,

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Judge to delay ptison orders

·Pigs really_don't look like Porky
COLU MBUS
Disnry truly wa s a

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FALL FOUAGE RIVER TOURS, Marietta. For a
delightful four ·hours, you can talk man to 'ol Man River!
Captain Jim Sands commands the Valley Gem, an authentic
.sternwheel ()lissenger packetboat, leaving the Front Street
Landing at 9, returning at I. $6 adults, $3 children. Contact:
Captain Sands, 123 Strecker Hill, Marietta , Ohio 45750. (S14 )
373-7862.
October 1-2 - TOP OF OHIO TOUR, Bellefontaine. A
- Drive-It-YOw-self toW' featuring much of the bounty in Logan
County. Contacl : Mrs 1 Wanda Srhlumblom, RD 2, DeGraff,
Ohio 43318. (513) 585-M29.
October 1·2 - OHIO GOURD SHOW, Mt. Gilead. Displays
of bot~ craft and fresh gourds . No carny atmosphere. Contact :
·Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Biederman, R.R. ), Cardington, Ohio
43315. ( 419) 864-7483:
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October 6-9- WONDERFUL WORLD OF OHIO MART ,
Akron (Sta n Hywet ). 60 craftsmen demonstrate and sell their
accomplishments in the atmosphere of a lawn fete, qn the
grounds of beautiful Stan Hywet Hall: Stan Hywet is
considered the finest example of Tudor Revival architecture in
the ~nited States. Admission and.Hall tour charge. Contact:
Ms. Louise Goodman , Stan Hywet Hall Fowrdation, Inc., 714
North Portage Path, Akron , Ohio 44303. (216) 836-5533.
OCtober 6-10 ·- COI.UMBUS DAY CELEBRATION,
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Miss Thomas· honored ·with showers

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I' 0 M Jo:l( 0 \ ' ·- S c "er ill
sllU\h'rs wt~rL• hl'ld for Usa .
'llwmas. the n·cT•nl brnlt• of
M:trk MPrt'ts .
Mrs . !'arl Dt•ntsun . Mrs.
'""'~'l E:dll&lt;lltb, Mrs. Fred
Wtlliatllsotn , Mrs . Bill
Wtllramsun. and Mro. Edith
WtllltllllS\111 t•nterlltined with
a shower al the Rolland
Umt,,l Methodtst Church.
G;uncs 11ere played with
pm&lt;•s gurng to Mrs. Ralph
Grans ;utd Mrs. Harold
S:tut•r.
1\ ttendin~ were those named and Mrs. Marjorie
Mtl hoan. Mrs . Harvey
Erie "' "'"· Mrs. Clara

M-The Sunday Times-SenUnel, Sunday, Oct. 2. 1977

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Cmdy

utiue,

Vau~han,

Mrs.

St~pluUJie

Don
Priee,

Mrs. Jt&gt;hll !lowell, Mrs. Dun na Weber, Mrs. Eugene Misty Dawn Powell.
Thomas. Mrs. Carl Morns, Thumpsun , Mrs .. CnH'C Col~
Sending gifts were Teri
Mrs. WtlburHtll, Mrs . W:tyn&lt;' well. Mrs . Davtd Gmle, and Russell, PHUIH Eichinger,
Tun11•r. Mrs. Gtlt•s Smillft . Mrs . William Buck.
'J~na Duffy . Games were
Mrs. Hunald Wt.lliams, Mrs.
Mrs. Kathy l'n&lt;'c, Mrs. · played with prizes going to
Mat'VIIt Morns, and Miss Kim Sieve Powell, Donna Thorn- Miss Coy, Mrs . Ross and Miss
Coy .
tun , and Bc&gt;cky Thomas, McKnight. .
Sendin~ gtfts were Mt·s. bt·idesmaids. mtertaine'd
Mrs. Don Grueser, Mrs .
Hubert Black, Mrs. Greg Er· · with a shuwe•· at the home of Kenneth McLaugltlin, and
win, Mrs. Phil Globokar, the bride. They served awn· Mrs . John Blaettnar hosted a
Mrs. Atut Webster , Mrs. C. 0. brella ca ke trinuned with shower at Trinity Church .
Chapman, Mrs. Bruce May , yellow and white . disies, Guests were ..Mrs . . George
Mrs. Reva Snowden, Mrs. Jue punch and mmts.
Kor(t, Jr .. Mrs . Ruth Thomas ,
Bolin. Mrs. Vernon Weber,
C'uesls were Julie and Mrs. Fred Williamson, Mrs.
·MrS: 'Nannie Hadcliffe, Mrs. Gwen Thomas, Lori Rupe, John Betnley, Mrs. Paul
Jack Murl'is, Mrs. Nate Wise, Kathy
Blaettnar, Angela Darneli ,Mrs. Ralph Graves,
Mrs. Iva HoweJI, Mrs . Sisson, Kim Jones, Dina Mrs. Everett Thomas, Mrs.
William Hobstettei·, Mrs . Pratt, Julie Hanm1, Judy . Eugene Murray, Miss Erma
Howard Birchfield, · Mrs. Radford, Mrs. Frank Ross, Smith: Mrs. Leon McKnight,

Charles Werry, Heather
Gums, Mrs. Rose Ginther,
Mrs. Paul Taylor, Mrs. Marvm Morris, Mrs. William
Matlack,1'Mrs. Charles Gorder, Mrs . Dan While, Mrs .
Gerald Powell , Mrs. Carl
MorriS, Mary Blaettnar.
Sending gifts were Mrs .
·Howard Well , Mrs. Russ Watson , Mrs . Louise Heines, Mrs.
William Slater, Mrs. Paul
Nease, Mrs. Leonard Van
Meter, J oni Murray, Mrs.
Joseph Si$Son, Mrs. Neva
Seyfried, Mrs . Charles
Lcgar, Mrs. Genevieve
Me inhart, Mrs . Dwight
Goins, Mrs. Paul Eichinger,
Brenda Taylor, Mrs. Walter
Grueser, Mrs. Don Dixon,

Allen-Stout vows solemnized
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at ~impson United Church

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RIO GRANDE On organ. Their , S&lt;;lections in·
Saturday evening, August '11, cl11ded "Sunrise; Sunset,"
at the Simpson United " Jesu , Joy of Man's
Methodist Church in Rio Desiring," "Whither 'Thou
Grande, Miss Kiln Allen, Goest ," ." Traumeret and
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Romanza," " Melody pf
Robert Allen, Lake Drive, L&lt;Jve,"
" Mornin g Has
Rio Grande, and Mr. Richard Broken ," "Let It Be Me," and
Stout.son of Mrs. Lena stout , the traditional " Wedding
Thunnan;-.Ohlo, and the late March" by l..ohengrln.
Buntace Stout, were united In
Escorted down the aisle by
tile holy bond of marriage. her father and given in
The Rev. · Robert Dam· marriage by her parents, the
sllroder performed the doubl e bride wore a fuU length gown
ring .ceremony before the in white cre pe finish
al(ar that was · beautifully polyester with . a sculptured
decorated with a wedding open horsesh'oe ne ckline
arctr entertwlned with t rimme.d with pearls and
greenery and topped with two iridescents. The bodice and
large white doves holding top portion of the shepherdess
eggsllell and pink ribbons sleeves were In chantilly type
whicl!_ cascaded to a point of lace. The front plain skirt
two lai'g'e pin)!, satin bows. On panel -had lace motifs with
ei the r side were white · pearl trim. The hem broder
colu mns on which were and chapel train were in
placid fireside baskets filled matching chantilly type lace.
with debonnet, pink and white This "total look" included a
roses, lilies, baby's breath full chapel mantilla bordered
and mums with pink ribbons in matching lace. A tiny heart
in ce.oter . Two -seven necklace centered with a
branch candelabras with tiny single pearl - a g.ift of the.
pink tapers were placed on groom - wa s her only
either side of the columns and jewelry. She carried a
two five branch candelabras colonial bouquet of miniature
with tiny pink tapers were carnations, sonja roses,
placed on the organ' ·a·r.-a· pompons, and baby's breath ,
piano ~-.A beautiful white tied with pink and eggshell
cahdle made with the imprint ribbons flowing with lovers'
of the couple's Invitation was knots . She ca rried out the
placed on the altar. The tradition of something old ,
borrowed,
ca ndle was a gift of the something
matron of honor to the bride . something blue, and in her
Centered In the arch· was a slloe wore a penny given her
white kneeling bench where by the minister. She carried a
th e couple knelt for the dime given her by Susan
wedding prayer . Two single Morgan .
branth hurricane lamp
·n.e groom wore a sand
ca ndelabras marked the tone tuxedo with an ivory
pews where the parents and _ _ruffled sllirl, burgundy bow
he bride and tie ." and bl@.ck shoes . His
grandparents
groom were seated. Prior to boutonniere was a debonnet
the entrance' of the bride a carnation with baby's breath
while Cai'Jl"\ was laid in the and a tinY. heart .
aisle. .
~
The m~tron of honor wsa
Preceding the ceremony a Mrs . Rhonda Collins: cousin
prog ram of nuptial music · of the bride, a nd the brideswas presented by Mrs. Jean maids were Miss Karen
Cooper at the piano and Mr. ~lien, sister of the bride, and
William · H. Uoyd at the Miss Susan Howard; friend of

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1~1;'":":~:s:·~M:rs~·~·~C=a~rl~N~ic:h:o:m·~
· ~M:a~r!ga:r~e~t~P:a~rs:m~m~,:M:i:ss~-Do~n~·~Klln=
·~~C~o~y~,~B:e:lli~·_:M:c~K~n;ig~h:t·~~M~r~s~
- ~~4~·n~ia=n~~Gre~ss~. • ~Mr~s·.. ..M.rs.·.•w.u.l.ia~n~1S~'w·"·l•ze~l. . . . . . .. - '

Fabrict'

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LENDING A HELPING HAND -Junio r Wilson, editor of tile Gallipolis Tribune and
member of Ute Lions Club, is pictured wtth Mrs . Ruth Snyder and Mrs. Dawn Clark of the
Uoness Club and bags of the Halloween candy Ulat the [joness will be selling to help the
visually handicapped . Tite candy is $1.50 a bag and can be purchased from any Lioness
member or at these stores. ~!edical Shoppe, Jack &amp; Jill's. Baslilje, Knit Mill Shop, Buckeye
Building and Loan, Central Supply. Carl's Shoe Store, Thomas' and Son Shoes, Tawney 's
Jewelers.

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Miss Cole is married
ADDISON - The Zion
Lutheran Church in Sandusky
was the setting for the Aug. 6
wedding of Deborah Sue Cole
to Thomas Scott Hy sell. 'the
bride is the daughter of Mr .
•
and Mrs. Ronald Cole of
Sandusky and the groom is. the son of Mr. and Mrs. H. T.
Hysell of Addison.
The Rev . Richard Bauerle
performed the double ring
ceremony whil &lt;; William
Scheid, who pla yed at the
wedding of t he bride' s
parents, provided wedding
music. Alice Dumphy ga l'e a
violin solo.
,
The church was decorated
with ivory· .ri bbo~s and
clusters of green and wmte
foliage . . The altar was ·
· decorated with white snap. dragons, white daisies arid
green baby 's breath. ,
Given in marriage · by her
father, the bride wore a
candlelight gown of soft
quiana with a scooped
neckline fallin g into a ·
reembroidered
Fren c h
A\encon lace capelet and A·
-·l ine skirt . The dress was
highli ghted by a chapel
length train and elbow length
veil which was held in place
· by a matching _profile headpiece. She .wor e ~arl ear·
rings given to her by her
Mrs. Tbomas Hysell .
parents, a ruby ring which
belonged - t o the groom's
grandmother and a hand'
----~--J~.~;rchief and cameo which
belonged to the maternal and blue dolled swiss dress with FLAWLESS ENCORE
paternal grandmothers. She white accessories and a white
NE W, YORK (U P! l
carried a cascade bouq uet of gla mellia co r sage. Mrs. Nearly 20 years ago, Cuban
stepha notis, white ja phet .Hysell selected a pa.le pihk ballerina Alicia Al onso
orchids and green and white polyester and satin dress with da nced the role of "Giselle"
starburst foliage.
white accessori es and .a white at th e New York Metr opolitan
Tracy Ann Cole served as glamellia corsage.
Opera.
maid of honor for her sister .
A reception " was held
Thursday night, the ageless
The brides111aids were Julie following the ceremony at the · diva did it again , to the
Worman of Dayton, Valerie Sand usky Yacht Club. The appla use of a celebrity- .
• Dziama of Lorain , Mr s. five tiered cake was endrcled studded a udien ce, whi c h
Thomas Joseph of Dayton , with a n ivy and daisy mixture includedU.acqueline Kennedy
.Jeanne Tuetsch of Bay which carried out the·,bride 's Onassis wl\Q.".met the star
Village ; all are sorority ·color theme. '- Aiice Dunphy backstage.
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sisters of the bride. They registered guests.
wore mint green dresses with
The bride changed into a
an empire waist flowing into powdered blue suit for a
a pleated skirt, spaghetti ·honeymoon t rip to Ca pe Cod. OLD SCHOOL TIE
WASHINGTON (UP!) straps with print capelcts. The couple is now residin g in
Vice President Walter
They
ca rried
cascade Sandusky.
bouquets of-peach, blue ,
The bride holds a B.S. Monda le Thursday swor e in
white and yeUow daisies with degree from Bowling Green Ha rry MacLaughlin, his
ivy. The bride presented each · Stale Un iver sity where she former law partner , ·as a
a gold bracelet and earrings was a membe r of Chi Omega federal judge in Minnesota
which they wore for the Soror ity. She is a teacher at during a bri ef ceremony at
wedding .
the .Sandusky schoo l system. the White House.
Mac Laughlin and Mondale
Mark Toomey of Huron The bridegroom holds a B.S.
served as best man. Grooms- degree from Ohio Uni\•ersity attended Jaw school together,
men were Jon Rothgeb and where he was a member of the n pra c tice d law as
Jack Henson of Gallipolis, Sigma Cht. He is ehlployed as pa rtner s. .
Doug Dvorak and Dav e a teacher and coach with the
Ferguson . Ushers were ·scott Sandusky Public School
L&lt;Jve, John Whit e, J im system . Out of town guests
Baxter, Ken Krueger and ca me from · California,
Doug Andrews.
Massachusetts, New . York,
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For her daugfiler's wed· In.diana,· Penn s ylvania,
ding Mrs. Cole wore · a lopg Michigan and Illinois.

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By orange Blossom
A song for both of you

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446-9255

In Downtown Gallipolis

WEDNESDAY
UNITED . METHODIST
WOMEN ol the, Letart Falls
United Methodist. Church,
Wednesay,7: 30 p.m . with
Mrs..'Don Be ll. Miscellaneous
sale will be planned . Mrs. ,
Bell to have tfie program .
MIDDLEPORT
FIRE
DEPARTMENT
AUXfUAR l wi ll .meet Wednesday at 7:30 at the fire hall .
Pia ns wi II i'C made for a

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Calendar-

REV. JOHN La nier will be
speaker at revival service at ,
Mt. Hermon United Brethren
'Church, · Texas Conlmun!ty,
Wednesday through· Oct. 16.
Pastor Rev . James Leach
welcomes public.

t116th Ave.

"

...-·..r

POMEROY CHAMBER of
Commerce Tuesday ·a t noon
at' Meigs Inn.

••

Huntington, W. Va .

•

XI GAMMA MU Chapter,
Beta Sigma Pht Sorority, 7:3p
Tuesday at the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electr ic Co.
Mrs. Susan Baer and Mrs :Donna Byer to have the
cultura l program ; and Mrs .
Dori s Ewing and Mrs. Mar·
tha McPhail to he hostesses.

... with the area's largest selectlc:)n

----....

...

I

Masons are invited. ·

•

EACH

chairman of the hostess committee composed of Merry
Simmons, Ferne Felton, and
Flurabelle Funk. Judith
Matheny-gaVe the invocation .
Attending from Meigs
County were Jeanne Bowen,
Betsy Horky, Martha Husted,
Lee Lee, Geneva N'olan, Olive
Page, Vilma Pikkoja, Fay
Sauer, Rosalie Story, Rebecca Tate, Wykle Wttitely,
Roberta Wilson, and Carol
Wolfe, Others attending were
from Jackson and Vinton
·
'
Counties,
Next meeting will1&gt;e Oct. 22
with Meigs County members
to meet at 9 a.m. at the Meigs
Inn. The program will be by
Vilma Pikkoja, chairman of
the research committee.
Members are as~ed to get
tbeir reservations to Mrs.
Philson by Oct. 13.

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Tyson Ro~e
turns dne

French .City F~bric Sho.ppe is open ·...
'

. POMERtl'{
Carol
Eberts, Bernice Mapes, and
Maxine Wells were initiated
into Alpha Omicron Chapter
of Delta Kappy Gamma International Society at a dinner meeting held Monday
night at the Lake Hope
· Lodge. ·
Anna Elizabeth Turner, a
teacher at Sa lem Center
School, is chairman of the initiation committee. Esther
Cassill providtld music for the
impressive ceremony con. dueled by Maxine Philson,
president; Margaret Benson ,
first vice president; Barbara
Litter, second vice president; ·
Nellie Parker, secretary;
Esther Maerker, treasurer.
Each initiate was presented a l
red rose and lace fern at the
conclusion of the ceremony.
Lorayne Jones served as

the bride . The~ wore fl oor·
leng~h gowns of burgundy
polyester knit . featuring a
square neckline which was
bordered with tiny · floral
••
braid and ruffles, fuU puffed
sleeves, and full length lies
which hung in a loop in the
·~
back . 'J'hj)y each carried a
nosegay of r-oses, carnations,
baby's breath, and pompons
tied with pink and eggshell
ribbons.
The fl ower girls were little
Miss Kristen Allen, sister o!
. TYSON ROSE
the bride, .and lit(le Miss
Angle stout , sister of the
groom. They wore dresses
identical to those worn by the'
bridesmaids. They carried
open lace baskets of roses,
carnations, baby 's breath
•
a nd pompons.
Larry Stephens served as
LONG BOTTOM - A birth·
best man. Ushers were
day pqrty w~s g iven on
Ronnie Hutchines and Chuck
Saturday, Sept. It}.,for Tyson
Beach, friends of the grom.
Eric Rose at the . e of his
They also wore sand tone
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Archie
tuxedoes, ivory ruffled shirts
Rose , Route I, L&lt;lng Bottom,
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Stout
and burgu ndy ties. Their
to celebrate his first birth·
day.
boutonnieres r·"lfre debonnet
car~·l3tions.
· ,
A Mickey Mouse cake,
The ringbearer was Master groom' toast ed each other.
Ev;,rette Seagraves, Chris cupcak es, and ice cream
Assistin g at the reception a nd David, Ashland, Ky.; Mr. were served as refreshments.
Lance Halley , nephew of the
Those attending were Mr.
groom. He wa s dressed were Mrs . Audrey Wickline, a nd Mrs. Albert Canen,
identical to the · ushers, and Mrs. Debbie Felker, sister of Sandy Corvin, Bobby Corvin, and Mrs. Raymond J. Smith,
carried a white satin pillow. the groom, and Mrs. Connie Rick Hackney, and Mr .' and Route 4, Pomeroy ; Mr. and .
For her daughter's wed· McNerlin , aunt of the bride. Mrs . John Duncan, Goshen, Mrs. John J . Rose, Julie and
ding, Mrs. Allen chose a floor
For her going-llway out!il' Indiana; Mr . and Mrs. Craig Mandie Rose, Route I, L&lt;Jng
length gown oflight turquoise the bride changed into a Kromer and Kelly, San- · Bottom; Archie D. Tuttle,
with silver trim and silver camel colored pantsuit and a dusky ; Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Roule I, Minersville ; Mr. and
accessories. Her corsage was beige knit blouse with brown, Ferguson, Stan and Stacey, Mrs. J ames Robert ' Grimm
carnations tied with aqua · red, yellow, green, rust and-'- Wheelersburg ; Leslie Kobie and son, Jeremy , Pomeroy;
ribbon flowing with lovers ' white print. Their wedding and Wayne, Northfield, and . Mr. and Mrs. Robert E.
knots and tiny hearts .
trip took them into Ten· Mr . and Mrs. Richard Chupp, Smith, Sr., Route 4, Pomeroy.
Gifts were presented by
The groom's mother chose nessee. They. a re now Goshen, Indiana .
those attending the party and
a floor-length gown of light residing at the Valley View
" ...
.
~ .
sending gifts were Mr. and
beige tied with a pink sash Apartments In Rio Grande. zoo,o:·'\
~r·.o
:x;
.. ;~---t
w:. .... w.:~.
Mrs . Phillip Werry, Janet,
looped in the front and she
The bride is a graduate of ~
Ed, Ray, Route I, Miners·wore black accessories. Her Gallia Academy High School, ~
vi lle ; Billie Johnson, son of
corsage was carnations tied Gallipolis, and is presently
_Mr."'and Mrs. Ray Johnson ,
with pink ribbons flojing employed by Concerted In· ~·
Boule - l , Minersvi11e ;
with lovers' knots and tiny vestm ent s ' in th e Spring
Christina Kessler, Shade .
hearts.
Valley Plaza .
, . 1·-,1
They were honored by the
The groom is a graduate of ·
attendance of seven grand· Southwestern Local High
parents : Mr . and Mrs. Dow School, Patriot, and is em·
SUNDAY
Crabtree, Mrs . Laura Searls, ployed at Chris-Craft Cor·
ANNUAL· Hemlock Grpve
COLLEGE DAY SET
C hri s I ian
Ch uf ch
Mrs . Garnet Allen , Mr~. poration , 'Gallipoli s.
ATHENS - Southeast:Dhio
· A rehearsal dinner ' was
homecoming Sunday .:w ith
Nellie Davis, a ll ',grand·
nigh school students .,lm have
parentso[ the bride; and Mr. · held in the social room of the
morning service, 9:30 a .m.;
the opporjunity to n;teet
and Mrs . George Carroll, church on Friday evening basket dinner in church
representl tives
of
60
grandparents of the groom. immediately following the basement a t 12:30 p.m .' Af.
Cl;)lleges., univers ities and
The grandfathers each wore pract ice. Mrs . Audrey ternoon ser vice 2 p.m. With
nursing schools at the second
a white carnation bouton· Wickline was the hostess. The Dary · Hayman and Hymn- annual College Day hosted by
niere and the griindiTiothers bride was also honored with timers singing.
Ohio University on Oct. 27.
MONDAY
each wore a carnation cor· three showers' 'One given- by
Persons wishing more · in·
sage tied with white ribbons. Mrs. Lena Stout, Mrs. Debbie · SALEM CENTER PTA, formati on should contact
Mrs. Janet Stephens F elker , Mrs. Darlene Halley , 7,30 Monday night at the their high school guidance
presided at the register and and Mrs. Denise Barry; one school. 4-H awards to be co unselors or write the Ohio
each guest was given a small given by Mrs. Garnet Allen presented.
University Admissions Of.
burgundy net parcel · cot\· and Mrs. Rhonda Collins ; and ' .MEIGS. County Fair Board fice,-Chubb, Hall, Athens,
taining burgundy with white one given by the Simpson meeting, Monday, 8 p.m. at 45701.
rice and lied with a pink United Methodist Ch urc h secretary 's
office
on
ribbon.
Women.
fairgrounds .
In addition to the many
REVIVAL Monday through
Following the wedding
ceremony, a reception was guests from Gallipolis , Rio Sunday at . Middleport .
Church of the Nazarene with
held in the church social Grande , Bidwell, Oak Hill,
Edna
West
as
room. The table was J ackson , Thurman, Patriot, Mrs.
decorated with a white linen and Point Pleasant, the, out· evangelist. Services at 7:30
tablec loth bordered with of-town guests incl uded : each evening and 10:30 a.m.
matching lace and oentered Roger Shriver, Mr . and Mrs.
on Sunday.
with a three-tiered wedding Jim DeWeese and Wendy, .
REVIVAL at Hope Baptist
cake with colonial columns Mr . and Mrs . Bill thompson, Churc h, Grant ·St ., Mid·
being placed between the Cathy, and Beth, Columbus ; dleport ; 7:30' _,each evening
various layers . The cake was Mr . and Mrs. Harold Howard, with Rev. Earl Dingus,
trimmed with burgundy and Susan, Phil, Betti, and
Chillicothe B~ptist Church
pastor, as evangelist.
white roses following the Caroline, Wilmington ; Mr.
theme of the wedding. The and Mrs. John L. Grif!ith,
top of the cake . held the Darlington, Pa. ; Mr. and
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN
traditional arch under which Mrs. Burl Crabtree, L&lt;Jri and 'CLUB, 7:30 p.m. Monday at
R d W'1ttkugle
the Columbus and Southern
. ,·ature brl' de and T
stood a mtn
eresa, an
gromp. The table was further Waverly;
Mr.Y and · Mrs '. Ohio Electric Co. Mrs. Walter
co mplimented with silver Russell Barton, Mrs. H. . E. Hayes, Mrs. _M. D. Wilson,
ca ndle holders, bur g und~ Dowling, Williamstown, W. Mrs. E . 0 . Tewksbary to be
candles, a silver punch bowl, Va.; Mi'. and Mrs. Donald hostesses.
the lace baskets which the Davis and Missy, Mrs. Nellie
TUESDAY
POMEROY CHAPTER 186,
.flower girls carri.ed ttr.l lie Davis, Mrs. Mar.~ Harris,
altar, home made pink and Weldon Davis, Sandusk-y; OES, 7:45 p.m. Tuesday at
p ·u· B
the Masonic Temple. Elec·
burgundy mints, and in• . Mr . and Mrs. ht tp esco lion of officers to be held .
dividual toa st .glasses, a gift and Phil Wilson, Pedro; Mr.
-MIDDLEPORT · LODG,E
of the bride's grandmother, and Mr s. Gerold Boster,
with which the bride a nd Beaver ; Mr. a nd Mrs. 363, F. and A. M., will meet at
·-'1~0 Tuesday night at the
Masonic Temple. All Master

'til 8 p"m. on Monday
and Friday
.
.
.

PLIER KITS

Silver. Bridge Shopping Plaza-Route 7, Gallipolis, Ohio
Putnam Village
Shoppirig &lt;;enter
Hurr ica ne, W. Va .

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Hours , 10tii9Mondaythru

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Monv style s o ~d co lo rs to choose from . .
.... 71e to S1.t0 M.

FOR

Attach decoro1 ive sMps
and eyelets last!
.... $3.9$ H.

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Economy package of"
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strlpes •.solld•~ 54" wide.
. Reg. $3.99 to U.99 yd.

STITCH WITCHERY® ·

• FlowmeteiS .
• Bedside Commodes
• HumidifieiS
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Members initiated

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LIVINGROOM &amp; HALL •

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ENTIRE STOCK

Pinking shears, Cont ura·liteiM
more . Qui ck -Cli p ® not incl uded.. •

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t.od lr"l !l'ff l)to,.n 0&lt; bit~~ (lOUd tlol t O on

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Reg. $3.29 &amp; S3.49 ycl.

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CONVALESQNT
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RENTAL &amp; SALES •

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B-&lt;1- The Sunday Times-Sentinel. Sw&gt;day. Od . 2. 1977

Mrs. Tracy named Atwood president MidkiffS~ith
RIO GRANDE
Mrs.
Arlene Tracy, Rio Grand,e.
was installed as president of
Ri o Gr.ande C' o lle~e and
CommlllJlt)' College's At wood
Club in coremonies held last
"'eek.
. Other offi cers ind ucted
were Mary Lewts. first nC'e
president : JrenP Rrannon.
.. secretary : and Jean Cooper,

carnation :::ts a symbol of

In other . business Mrs .
POMEROY--Miss Mary
Tracy appo111 ted Zelma _ Aim~ Midkiff and Ronald
Northcutt.
Georganna · B
Smith exchanged wedJenkms and Irene Brannon to diruce
.
,
d
- • ng vows m a 6: 30 p.m.
.
a pu bl1c11y an ca 11 1ng
at the Hemlock

olfl&lt;'&lt;'.
The ceremonr . held in the
hon&gt;t' of Mrs. Paul C. Hayes,
wile of Hio's president. also
marked tht&gt; first annive-rsary
of the Atwoo d Club's

ceremony . .
Mrs. Hayes led an infom1al Grove Christian Church on
bo t
I b Aug. 2Q.
• ·
.
d•scuss1o.n
a .u , c ~
The bride is the daughterof
members o"n history w1th M and Mrs. Ziba Midkiff
R1o Grande College.
r.
•
The Atwood Club will hold Route 3 ~ Pomeroy, and the
.
groom IS the son of Mrs.
its ne~ , mee!mg at noon Ralph { Leota ) Smith . .of
WedneSW.y, October 19. m H ml kG e
.
din' h 0
e oc rov .
th e,
campus
&gt;ng a ·
Roger Watson of Athens officiated at .the double ring
ceremony following a program of pre-nuptial music by
romm1ttee.

od~ anizatiotl. The club was

!om1ed to invol\'e staff and
fr ie nds of the rollege in ·
preservmg the in•titutibn's
history
and assist in caring
treasurer . Beath('f' Cla rk led
lor
the
campus Heritage
the ritual and presented each
Room
.
new offlC'er wtlh a white

#

'$,"'

t
~l

Coin in g

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•

B4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, S'unday, Oct. 2, 1977

vows
exchanged
•

Juhc Hutchison, p1anist and
Sharon Wilson, vocalist.
Selections by Miss Hutellison included "The Long
Winding Road" , "Because :,
while Miss Wilson sang " You
and I", "Sunrise, Sunset",
and "Our Wedding Prayer."
The altar was decorated
with a 15 candle arch
candelabra . adomed with
peach, yellow and bronze
pol)lpon mums. Pews were
marked with white bows. A
peach colored candle and
coordinated
wreath
decorated the guest regisler
table.
·
Given in marriag~ by her

DeLille-Barhorst vows made

Pomeroy, and Larry Harman, Rutland. The groom
wore a rust tuxedo with. a
peach ruffled shirt and his
boutonniere was a yellow
sweetheart rose and baby's
breath. His attendants were
in rust tuxedos w~
· telling
ruffled shirts
boutonnieres of white c
tions tipped in peach.
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs. Midkiff wore a
floor length gown of mini
green polyester topped with a
cape. She wore bone colored
accessories with a corsage or
yellow swet!theat roses.
The bridegroom's mother

RODNEY - Rollin Lynn
DeUUe, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs .

..

NEW ATWOOD CLUB OFF1CERS installed recently at Rio Grande College and
Community College. L. toR., Beatrice C\flrk. installing officer; Arlene Tracy, president ;
Mary Lewis, vice president ; Irene Brannon , secretary; Je.an ~ooper, treasurer.
·'

::~~'!:;· t~~i~~ ~~:~e~~~ ;:~.~y ~~~:ei::rJrr:.wo~~

,. Events

r't'ldWOO d Garuen
',] C't-U
1 .b
mee tS .'
.

T
VV

'

ing an interpretation was
Mrs . Smith. She 'used camphor plant and greenery with
a mirror . which represented
looking to the future, and a
pencil and a book which
represented learning.

POMEROY-A workshop gardeners day out held
on makmg plaques of dried Thursday at Marietta . New
flowers was conducted by program books were
Mrs. Marcia Arnold at the distributed by Mrs. Arnold
Wednesday night meeting of who talked about the pr&lt;r
U1e Wildwood ·Garden Club 'grams planned for the year.
held at the home of Mrs. Ada Mrs. Smith read a card from
Holter. Mrs. Urana Tll01nas Mrs. Don Blue asking for a
and Mrs. Pat THomas were contribution for a gilt lor the
assisling hostesses.
outgoing regional director.
A mediU!tion from the UPPlans were made for a
per Room, ' 'O Worship tne • plant sale at the October
Lord" a nd the 96th Psalm meeting which will also be a
were g1ven by Mrs. Dorothy masked party.
Sm1th, president. Mrs. Eva
Ribbons were awarded to
Hollon noted that she and· the members bringing
Mrs. Holter had t attended a speCimens. Mrs. Evelyn
meetmg of the Garden Clubs Hollon received a blue ribbon
of Ohio, Inc. held recently at for her arrangement of
the Holy Tnmty Church m· greenery and dwarf purple
Jackson. Mrs. Irene Jackson dahlias with driftwood in a
was the demonstrator.

green low container .

Mrs. Kathryn Miller spoke
of the nature tour of

Displaying the arrangement "The Scholar" and g4v-

Communications

were

received from the regional
director announcing lhe fall
meeting to be held at Rlo
Grande College Nov. 5. The
afternoon speaker · and
demonstrator will be Mrs.
Allen Grossman, and OAGC
judge from Region 9. Her program will . be on using
weathered wood. Luncheon
reservations are to be sent to
Mrs. Homer ,llrannon, Rio
Grande, by Oct. 29.
Mrs. Hilda Yeauger won
the door prize. The hostesses
served refreshments.

Rodney church marks homecoming
RODNEY - The Rodney
United Methodist Church
observed homecoming on

Sunday, Sept. 18. The day's
activities began with the
regular school and Sunday
morning se rvi ces. The
worship service was led by
the
Reverend
Damon
Stapleton; Minister.
During worship service,

special music was presented
by members and guests. The
church history was read by
Elva Holbrook with special
emphasis on the present
building program.
A po\luck lunch was served
at noon followed by special
music in the afternoon by lhe
Gospel Messengers.
The guest speaker for lhe
afternoon service was the
Reverend Charles Hill,
fonner pastor of the Rodney
Charge from 1958 to 1962, and
now pastor of the Hilli~rd
United Methodist Church in
Hilliard, Ohio ,
Approximately 100 present
and former members were in
attendance to enjoy the
fellowship and . reminiscence.
The church history presented
is ·as follows :
The village of Rodney was
laid outJ in lots by Henry
Coverstone on Sections 30 in
year 1830.
On Oct. 4. 1856 George B.
and Polly Smith sold a piece
of land to the trustees of lhe
Rodney Methodist Episcopal
Churc h. The land being
Nwnber Lot 13, wa s pur'
chased and SQught lo buil.d a
church.
It was in the following year
that a church was bu'ilt using
bricks made of native clay,
and baked on the hill north of
Rodney,now a part of the Joe
DeLille farm . The church
was constructed with two side
entrances. One· was used by
the women and the olher by
.
the men.
Two of the Early Ministers
were Rev. A. D. Ebright 1882,
he resided in Rodney and
·Rev . W. H. Gibbins 1887.
The liturgy we are now
using was given in memory of
Rev. Gibbins by his two
daughters.
It was in 1905 that the side

doors were removed and one
center entrance was built.
Another major cha nge in

,

the church structure came in Mrs. William Miller and the
the year of 1950, when the stonn doors entering the
Vestibule was built, and vestibule were given in
Stucco was applied to . the memory of Mrs. Edith Spear
entire church. The grounds by Mr. and Mrs. Joe D.
were la ndscaped , and a Miller.
WAYSIDE Garden Club 7:30
.
J
Conf
p.m. with Mrs . Bruce
Coneret e wa II from the ro ad
Dunng une
erence
was added. It was also at this Session in 1968, tlw! Methodist Yeauger. Speaker : George
Oct. 3 - Beginniilg Macrame at 7:30 p.m. Call Debbie
KotaHc.
time realrttrrg that the Churches merged with the
Tipple, 446-1851. .
·
automobile was here to stay, United Brethren Churches WEDNESDAY
Oct . 6- Crafts at Pam Terrizzi's. Call Debbie Tipple, 44&amp;that thejwrse hitching rails and' .we are now Rodney CENTENARY United
1851.
•
were removed.
.United Methodist &lt;;burch.
Methodist Church Women,
Oct. IIi -Macrame 7:30p.m.
.
During the last year·of Rev.
In 1974, during the ministry 7:30p.m. at the home of Jean
Oct. 13 - Get Acquainted Coffee 10 a.m. Call Cindy Potter,
C. E. Eyre's ministry·in 1954, of Daryl Fourman the inside Ann Leman. Bring a work
446-4400.
.
the
sanctuary
was of the sanctuary was item for the bazaar.
Oct. 17 - General meeting.
remodeled. The chancel was remodeled. ·The waDs and .
Membership chairman: Joy Atwood, ~99.
raised and extended the flooring were aU removed. A
width of the church. The new central heating system
Comm un io n t.able, pulpit · installed, concrete floor · - - - - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - chairs and piano were given poured and walls replastered.
in memory · of Martin A. new cl)ancel was built and James Blevins, Rev. Damon in seeing the plans of our
Vall bam by his sisters, Mrs . . also carpeting covering' the .Stapleton and Elva Holbrook. building, both early and
In the fall of 1976 three lots present will find pictures on
Carl Ewing and Mrs. Herbert sanctuary and v~le and
Waddell.
'
.
new drapes. James Blevens were bought and the display on the wood divider.
Dale Lear of Lear
The altar set was given by made the cross to hang above committee began plan·
Terry
Val- Photography made pictures
Emma Louise Echelmeyer in the· communion table in ning.
memory of mother, Nellie memory of his father, Virgil lance, a designea.:-, de· of ·our ground breaking and
E. Blevins Stonn windpws signed our plans and presented. the church the
Sales Echlemeyer.
ln' l958, under the ministry were installed in i976. May 29 Bradley Harder, our con- beautiful picture of all who
of Rev. Charles Hill, the this year the aMual reunion tractor, began our new were present at the ground
ceremony, · ·· 1
Sunday School rooms were of the Roberts' family was structure. Anyone interested breaking
.
I
started and completed in held. The children presented
1959. In 1960 folding doors to the. church a new com·
were added to divide lhe munlon set in honor of their
rooms into !K!parate classes parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
and a concrete walk was laid Earl Roberts.
along the east side of the - Earjy this year seeing the
church.
need for more class rooms, a
About 1965 the swinging building committee was
doors entering the sanctuary for!Jled . The committee
from the vestibule were In· consisted of Raymond
stalled in memory of Mr. and DeLille. Jean Gillespie,

.Welcome Wagon ·
club activities

Et Cetera BoutiqUe
. Gift .&amp; J~ Shop

Sundpy Special'

Negative

SOLE
OXFORDS

i.s closing its doors as of
'Oct. 31. Every item is
re~uced 'and all must' 'go . .
Do
vo• •
Christmas
shopping early and save on a II
clothing and gift items!!

Idea I
In Work or
· School

sg90

ro~.rrrr

ETCETERA
BOUTIQUE
205 N. 2nd Ave .
Middleport, Ohio

Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Smith

Romine, Tom and Keviii:
Pickerington; Mr. and Mrs.
Ed McPherson, Marietta;
Mrs . Jackie Davies,

DIRT EXTRACTION METHOD

I

RESIDENTI-AL- COMMERCIAL
Strea kless Machine Wa II Washing
Upholstery - Windows- Flo.ors
Complete Line of ••• .
Cleaning _l;guipment &amp; Supplies. ·

I

I·
I·
1
1·
L

ADVANCED a.EANING SERVICE
Call

I

675~5572

I
I
I

I
I

I

I

•I

After
... P.M.
.

l

L-----------•--"""'!'------------

(

""

bloom co r sage

or

wh1le

neckline and cape lel sleeves

with white trim .

A reception was held at the
c hur ch immediately
following the ceremony. The
bride's table was ·covered
with a white formal
tablecloth, a nd a centerpiece
of orange ca rnations, yellow
·roses, brown cushion pews •
and baby's breath. The lourtiered cake was decorated
with orange and yellow roses
and topped with th e
traditional bride and groom.
Hostesses were all aunts of
'.
the bride, Mrs: Hunter Boice,
Worthington, Mrs. Darrell
McClaskey, Gahanna , Mrs.
Martin DeLille, Columbus,
and the Rodney United
Methodist Women 's group.
Miss Cheryl Robinson ,
Gallipolis; "registered the
guests, and Missel; Cheryl
and Charlene Hammons ,
. Rodney , passed out the rice
ba gs.
The bride is employed at
the Holzer Medical Center
and the groom is owner and
operator of the Greene
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Barhost
County Sport Parachute
Center. Alter a wedding trip .·~···················.. ·.,·,·.--~;.:.· ..&lt;·&lt;m·'&gt;: ~&gt; "&lt;~

.,

l . Calendar

we&lt;lding and reception were
l.
Russell Young, Kansas; ~~;
~
Steve Egbert, Cambridge;
COAD 'Senior nutrition
Florence Katona, Cam- program menu for October 3
bridge; Mrs. Maxine Bradds, through October 7. Notice:
Jamestown; Jerry Nesbitt, Serving time has beef!.
Cincinnati; Charles DeLille, changed to noon to 12 :45 p.m.
Florida; . Mr. and Mrs.
Monday
Baked
Darrel I Mc CIa s key , spaghetti, . tossed salad,
Gahanna, a nd Mr. and Mrs. pineapple slices, sugar

and "Because."

groom's boutonniere was a

Hunter Boice, Worthington .

The lighting ofthe symbolic yellow carnation tipped in
wedding candle, alter which orange, with baby's breath.
. the couple knelt in reverence, The other · male attendants
was highlighted with the wore boutonnieres identical
soloist singing, "The Wed-. to the groom's with the n\ling Prayer," which con- ception of the baby 's breath.
duded the ceremony.
For her daughter's wedThe allllr of the church was ding, Mrs. DeLille chose a
decorated with baskets of ; floor-length green polyester
yellow gladiolis, orange gown with a square neckline
carnations, yellow roses, and sheer butterfly sleeves.
brj)wn cushion poms, baby's She wore a two bloom white
breatli. The family pews and . camation corsage tipped in
bench
were mint green with while trim.
kneeling
The groom's mother was in
decorated ·with orange and
yellow bows.
a floor length gown in mint
Miss Kathy Davis, Rio . green polyester, with a V-

Those from Columbus were
Sherry Barhorst, Ursula
Moore , Susan Kitchell,
Florence Moore, Mr. and
Mrs. Martin .DeLille and
daughter and John Del.ille.
Those from Daytqn wete
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Kerr and
daughter, Mr . and Mrs. R. P.
Barhorst, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Hopkins and family,
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Barhorst and family , Chris
Reynolds, George E. Brooks
and son, and Mr. and Mrs:
_]lor_bertBarhorst and family.

Shaws celebrate 25 married,years
Mrs. Ray Davis, Mr. and
Mrs. Hal Spencer and Bev,
Mr. and ' Mrs. Clifford
Hedges, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Del&lt;&gt;ng, Miss Lydia DeLOng,
Miss Neta Mae Leist, Mr. and
Mrs. Emmett Hinton of
Circleville; Mr .. and Mrs.
~ohnny Fanner of Atlanta,
Ohio; Rev. and Mrs. Roy
Rose and Becky of Stoutsville.
Mr . . and Mrs. Paul
Thivener and Lynn, Powell;
Mr. and Mrs. Frank
· Gillespie, Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Pritchard, Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Wilcox · and · Stevie of
. Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
George" AmoiCI, Rolxirt Ar" nold of Mechanicsburg; Mrs.
James Ward, Mr. and Mrs.
Francis Roush of Marion;
GALLIPOLIS - Episcopal
Mr. and Mrs .. Henry Luellen,
Churchwomen (ECW) will
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Ward of
1\old · a Rummage and
Prospect;
Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Miscellaneous Sale, Friday,
Nichol,
Mr.
and Mrs. Walter
October 7, from 9 a.m. to 3
Sco.
t
t,
Milford
Center.
p.m. at St. Peter's Parish
Mrs.
Ruth
Shaw,
Mr. and
Hall, 541 Second AVCI),Ue.
Mrs.
Orin
Shaw,
Mr.
and
Proceeds of the sale will go
Mrs:
Veri
Poling,
Mr.
arid
into the ECW building fund .
Mrs. Harry TaY,Ior, Mr. a.nd
pledge for the proposed
Mrs. Robert Taylor, Bob
HERE VISITING
addition to the church.
Ward,
Jill, Laurie, Wendie,
POMEROY-Mr.
and
Mrs.
The Special Committee
commissioned to hire an Pat Quinn and Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Dorthea Hamilton,
architect to formulate the Jack McDowell, Colwnbus Georgeann Hamilton, Estella
preliminary master building were weekend visitors of Mr. Hamilton, Mrs. Mary Belle
plan, is presently in- and Mrs. Karl Grueser. They · Huey, Marysville; Gregg
terviewing and making attended the homecoming at Huffman of Kenton ; Mr. and
selection of this person, and the Minersville United Mrs. George Davidson and
Don of Bellefontaine.
hopes to announce their Methodist Church.
choice ·somewhere near the
last of October.
MARYSVILLE - Mr. and
Mrs. James W. Shaw, 908
Sherwood Ave., Marysville,
OhiQ. we~;e honored at . a
reception celebrating their
25th wedding anniversary
Sunday, September 25, at the
bome of their parents, Mr.
'1,11d Mrs. Rex I,emley, 8207
Stoutsville Pike, Circleville.
The event was hosted by
their two children, J. Steven
Shaw and Stephanie J. Shaw,
and their parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Shaw were
married Sept. 20, 1952 in the

Wishes to Armoimce the Relocation
of His OHice

TO 4542 EMERSON AVENUE

RT. 2 NORTH
PARKERSBURG, WEST VIRGINIA
HOURS BY APPOINTMENT

Sale set

PHONE (304) 428..0000

Come and Get
Your Act
Together Now,
Our Selections
of Shirts
and Pants are
Dyn-0-Mite!
And If You're
Dressrng Up ...
Whatever the
·.Occli$ion, You 'II
Find the Perfect
Dress in Our ·
New Collection!

Kyger United · Methodist
Church by the Rev. Chester J .
Lemley.
·
· There were 100 friends and
relatives atttmding the open
house. Those attending were
Leo Shaver, Mr. and Mrs.
John Hood, Mrs. Kathleen
Allen, Mrs. Pearl U:lnley,
Mr . and Mrs. Marion
Harrison, Mark and Marlene
of · Gallipoli~ ; .l'lr. and Mrs.
Robert . Prtce, llecky and
Frankie, Mrs. Pauline R~
· ,
Mr. and Mrs. Lark Napier of
Cheshire; Mrs. Junior W d
and Flpnda of Rutland; Mr.
and Mrs. Junior Lemley of
Bidwell; Mrs. Carol Stonns
of Piketon; Mrs. Sally Brown,
Mr. and Mrs. Snap Ankrom,
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Evans,
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Mac
Fadden, Fred Davis.. Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Koonce, Mr. and

cookies, Italian bread, butter,

~~.

Sr. Citizens
Calendar

,
GALLIPOLIS- The Senior
Citizens Center activities for
this week are as follows:
Monday, Oct. 3 - Chorus,
1: t5-3 p.m.
Tuesday, Oct. 4-.., Quilting,
9 a .m.-3 p.m.; Garden Club,
·1-3 p.m.
Wedne sday, Oct. 5 Quilting, 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Card
Games, 1·3 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. &amp;-Quilting,
9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Bible Study,
1:15-2:15 p.m.
Friday, Oct. 7 - Advisory
Council,lp.m.; Art Class,l-3
p.m.; Nutrition Games, I.J;
Social Hour, 7. · - '
The Senior Nutrition
Program menu lor each day..

milk.
Tuesday - Baked chicken,
mashed potatoes - gravy,
buttered peas, ice cream,
bread, butter, milk.
Wednesday - Liver and
onions, au gratin potatoes,
buttered green beans, apple
crisp, roll, butter, milk.
Thursday - Salisbury
steak, baked potato, · peach
salad, buttered beets, rice
is:
pudding-raisins, bread,
Monday
Baked
butter, milk.
spaghe
tti
,
tossed
salad,
Friday - Turkey salad
'
a
pricots,
buttered
hot
Italian:
san dwi ch, hash brown
potatoes, broccoli - cheese bread, butter, oatmealcookies,
mille
sauce, chocolate cake ~icing, rmsm
Tuesday
Pot
roast
of
milk.
beef, · gravy,
mashed
Coffee, t~a and buttermilk potatoes, buttered peas and
serve&lt;! daily.
carrots, bread, butter, ice
Meigs - Center Citizens cream,
milk.
Center activities located at
Wednesday - Liver and
the Pomeroy Junior High
au gratin potatoes,
School is open 9 a.m.-4 p.m., onions,
buttered green beans; roll,
Monday through Friday.
tet. prune cobbler, milk.
Monday , Oct. 3 ~ Cards but.
Thursday - Salisbury
and Games, Square Dance, steak, oven baked potato,
12 :45-3 p.m.
peach salad, buttered beets,
Tuesday, dct. 4 - Christ- bread, butter, rice pudding
mas Crafts, 10:15-12 noon ; with raisins, mil~.
Chorus, 12:45-2:15 p.m.
Friday - Chicken salad
Wednesday, Oct. 5 - Social sandwich,
polato chips,
SecUrity Representative, 9:30 buttered peas, butter.
a.m.-12:30 p.m .: Games, chocolate cake with icing,
12:45-2:15 p.m. ·
milk.
Thursday, Oct. 6
Choice· of beverage served
Horseshoes, 12 :45-2 p.m.;
with each meal.
Sing-a-Long, 12:45-2 p.m.
~~ services rendered on a
Friday, Oct. ? - Art Class, non-discriminatory basis. ''
10-12 noon; Knitting .and
Crocheting Class, 10-12 noon ;
Bowling, I.J p.m.

Class E1. 1965
Pictured above is the 1965 graduates of North Gallia High Sc~1ool
reunion held Sept. 17 at the Catholic Youth Camp. Front·row : Red Hatten, Norma (Logan)
Marcwn, Louise (Dewitt) Crist, Darlene (Norman ) Burke, Jimmy Skidmore, Mike Polsley,
(Butc h) Walter Brown. Second row, Charolette (Gillman) Kiger, Brenda (Mullins )
Calli)lan, Vella (Plantz) Cronin, Jane (Erwin ) Coley, Audrey (Kemper) Hatten, Carol
(Smith ) Borden , Deb (Shaftings) Polcyn, Janet (Kemper) Miller, Carol (Hawks ) Huestis,
Tlm Bickers. Back row, Gary Callihan, Larry PeJoie, Roger Burke, Mr. Burleson, Mrs.
Burleson. Not pictured was Larry Russell .

•

.Class of 1965 holds reunzon
GALLIPOLIS
On
Saturday, Sept. 17 the 1965
graduating class of North
Gallia held its first reunion at

first to elect officers for the
15th year reunior. Jim .
Skidmore was elected
president, Tim Bickers vice
president, Carol Borden
secretary·treasurer. Those
that helped to get things
CLASSES OFFERED
GALLIPOLIS - The Vocal under way this year were Jim
Music class being offered at Skidmore, Tim Bickers,
Riverby has openings for Charolette Kizer, Carol Smith
more students. The class and Gary and Brenda
meets every other Saturday Callihan. A special thanks to
with Sandra Wilkins as the aU that helped . Then potluck
was
enjoyed
teacher. Cost is $36 for the six lunch
lessons. CaU Janet Byers at throughout the afternoon.
i46-1903 for more in- Volleyball and softball were '
played. And of course just
formation.
chatting about years gone by.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim BurleSQn
WENT VISITING
MIDDLEPORT-Mrs. Ber- were invited as chaperones
nice Grueser of Middleport, as they went with our class to
and Mrs. Eva Dessauer and Washington, D. C. 12 years
""Miss Erna Jesse were at ·the ago. DOnly 21 class members
Mark Rest Center, Mc- were present out of a
ConnelSville Thursday to visit graduating class of 67.
Mrs. Mabel W91fe.
tlie Catholic Youth Camp. A
relax!ul afternoon was enjoyed by all present.
A short meeting was held

"'

WILLIAM ADAMS
TURNS TWO - William
Ray Adams celebrated his
second birthday with a party held at the home of his
parents, Harold and Garcia

Adams. Cake, homemade
ice

cream,

coffe~

and . .

punch were served ·,to
Christi Dawn, his sis.ter;
Dale and Wilma McGraw,
maternal grandparents,
and GIoria Decker, an·
aunt. Sending gifts were ·
Melvin and Hope Drake,
paternal grandparents,
Sharon Reiber, Vincent
an~ JeSsica.SUNDAY DEADLINE
The deadline for wedding
and engagement notices
and society news Items for
lhe Sunday Times-Sentinel
Is 12 noon on the Thursday
preceding publication.
Information may be turned
in or malted to tbe office of
the
Gallipolis Dally
Tribune or Pomeroy Dally
Sentonel. Engagement and
wedding

forms • are

available upon request.

'.

Be an
Instant
Gourmet
Cook in
Your Home
with

• •

FABULOUS R(f))MERTOPF"
lite Original Unglazed Terra Cotta Pot
"'"

people are raving about., ',

This marvelious red·clay unerole with handsof'I)O em~ossed du ign, r.oa&amp;ts
food and braises it in Its own juices , preseNing tfle' l111tural fla110rs, nutrients.
and vitamins. No 'tits or oils are ·added . Grea• for dieters. and cholesterol watch ·
ers tool Meat, flat\, vegetables, 10ups, bread, cake, dtS~!1'· In tact. any food
prepared in the Original ROM[RTOPF tastes. more deiiCIOU'I, without addln.1
extra Calories.

No wonder, over 10 million Original ROMERTOPF were sold.
From $21.00
Where else

Peddlers Pantry

·:::;:;:::;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-:=:::-::::::::::

Sealnd Alenue

The double-faced poncho, brushed oatmeal
wool reversing to blanket plaid.

•

Minister
honored
MIDDLEPORT::_The .Rev .
JGrby .Piler, who has been
giles! mini~ter at the Middleport First Baptist· Church
for the past · month, was
honored last Sunday night
with a social hour following
his last service.
Hostesses were from the
Board of Chh~tian Education
·and the deaconesses, wi lh
Mrs. Helen BodiiT)er, Mrs.
Eva Hartley, Mrs. Martha
. Klein, Mrs ... Fran Parker,
Mrs. Katheryn Metzger, Mrs. ~
· Freda Hood, and Mrs. Freda
Edwards on the CIIJiliTliltee.
A decorated cake was served with punch , coffee, mints
and nuts. Mrs, Metzger was
at , the punch bowl. A fall
motif w~s carried out in the
table decorations by Mr".
Kle.in and Mrs. Metzger.

Stop In Todal'

GILLIAN'S
FASHION
CENTER ·
On TheT
In Middleport

Plaza

..

cora l

Ironton, and Kenneth Bright,
Winfield, 'ft . Va. served as
ushers and candlelighters.
Phillip Greenlee, cousin of
the bride, served as ringbearer.
. The groom, groomsmen,
and ringbearer were attired
in a brown tuxedo with an allwhite ruffled s'hirt. The

DR. DONALD S. PRITT
··;· PODIATRIST

•

John

or

'preceding the ceremony was
presented by organist, Judy
Burdell, pianist, Mrs. Carl
Gillespie, and the vocalist
was Mrs. James Blevins.
Some of their selections ·ineluded "We've Only Just
Begun," · "Misty, " "If,"
"Love. Song," "These Vows
We l'ake," ''Annie's Song,"

'

CARPETS STEAM CLEANED
I
I

Steven

attired in a .gown

qiana nylon. A dc'ep scoop carnations, tipped in cora l,

~~~gr:n~~~~!ow:f . :::~~ ~~Er~!~~!a~~~~~~ .~~~:fe:t~d::~:~!~~=~~ ::: r···:s;:--·-aii~~~:Fl

Gallipolis; Connie .. Martin,
Roger Watson, Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Hunter, Athens; Mr.
and Mrs. Gary Midkiff, Julie
Midkiff, Randy Uber, Sandusky; Joyce · DeLong;
Circleville; Marc Dailey,
Toledo; Maxine Arnold, Hartford, W. Va. ; Susan Sorenson,
Deerfield Beach, Fla.; Bllff
Thomas, . Pompano Beach,
Fla.; and Judy Kennedy, St.
Louis, Mo.

pyration.
Out of town guests at the
wedding were Mr. and Mrs.
Brooks Folk, Worthington;
Mark Folk, Pam Burson, Mr.
and Mrs. Dennis Gilkey, ,Mr
and Mrs. Howard Gilkey, Mr.
and Mrs. Karl Schmalz, Col·
umbus; Mr. and Mrs. Gene

. SHOES

Silver

of

bride

i[.

I

Raymond

Bamorst, Son of Mr. and Mrs. enhanced the fitted bodice
Norbert Joseph Barhost, of and long flared skirt . A sash
Dayton in a candlelight ci rcled the empire waist,
ceremony performed on fashioning a draped bow at
Saturday, Sept. 10 ·at the the back which completed her
Rodney United Methodist ensemble. Miss Kindra
Church.
DeLille, sister of the bride,
The 3 p.m. double-ring and Miss Betsy Barhorst,
ceremony was solemnized by DaYton , sister of the groom,
the Rev . Damon Stapleton. i· served as bridesmaids. They
Given in marriage by her wore dresses identical to the
parents and escorted to the maid of honor in yellow and
altar by her father, the bride - brown respectively. The
wore a floor-length gown of attendants also wore widepolester organza and venice brimf(led yellow hats, The
lace fashioned with a v- attendants carried colonial
neckline, empire bodice, nosegay bouquets or orange
sheer bishop sleeves a!\d full and yellow miniature carA-line skirt with attached nations, brown cushion poms,
chapel train. A deep rutne and baby's breath with
bordered the sk1rrand tram. streamers of brown, yellow
Her fingertip veil was · and orange to accent the
trinnmed in matching venice color of their 'dresses.
lace secured (o a juliet cap
As flower girl, Miss Laura
covered in same witp at- Sayre of Rodney wore a long
tachect blusher veil.
dress of peach Qiana nylon ,
The bride carried a colonial wtiicb matched the a
cascade bouquet of yellow tendants ' . She ca rried a
rosebuds, miniature orange brown wicker basket with
carnations and
brown petals of orange, yellow and
cushion pPms. It was ac- brown, with an orange and
cented with baby's breath yellow bow.

an

taffeta covered wllh white pink and had a pink corsage
French lace, and fashioned rL sweetheart roses with bone
will&gt; an empire waist. high accessories.
E:l
neckline, bishop sleeves, and
Mrs. Emmett Hawk,
't
a chapel length train. Her veil grandmother of the groom,
SUNDAY
of candlelight illusion was wore a corsage of sweetheart
HOMECOMING at Good elbow length and fell from a roses.
Hope Church near Crown juliet cap.of F~ch lace and
The reception was held in
City. Speakers will be Daryl pearls. Her only jewelry was the Hemlock Grove Grange
Fowler
and
Junior pearl earrings and matching Hall innmediately following
Hockenbel'ry . Services pearl necklace, borrowed the ceremony. The bride's
beginning at 10 a.m.
• . from her maid of honor. The !able featured a thr~ tiered
HOMECOMING at the Vinton bride carried a nosegay of cake decorated with peach icUnited Methodist Church . yellow sweetheart roses with ' ing and white roi!es, and
Services from 11 until noon baby's breath throughout. featuring Roman columns
followed by a potluck meal. Yellow bridal satin tied in between the tiers. It was to))John Davis, from Oak Hill, lover's knots flowed from the ped with the traditional
will speak at 1:30. Rev . John bouquet.
.
.
miniature bride and gr"?m
Grieser invites public.
Miss Conrue Lanrung of used on the golden wedding
VFW FAMILY picnic at the Route 3, Pomeroy was the anniversary cake of the
VFW !ann off 775 at 1 p.m., bride's maid of honor. She bride's grandparents.
covered dish. Members and · wore a peach floor length
The cake was elevated with
family invited.
.
gown of guiana with a mat- Roman colwnns and beneath
REVIVAL AT ' 'Ch'&lt;l'SMte' ching .jachet with cap,sleeves. it was an identical mini cake
Baptist Church Oct. 2through Sh~rried a long stemmed oopped with white roses. At
the 8 at 7:30 nightly. Special rose surrounded w1th e1ther end of the table were
'ftlusic · Rev . Ted Ball stephanotis to match her crystal candle holders with
speaku'.g.
. dress. Her . ensemble w_as peach candles. A white lace
ANNUAL homecoming at completedw1thabandofs11k overskirt over a peach
Calvary Baptist Church at flow~rs m her hair. • . .
tablodoth was used.
Rio Grande. Morning worship
MISs Courtney Midkiff,
Elisabeth Thomas of Pornat 10:40. Basket dinner at Pomeroy, mece of the bnde, pano Beach, Fla. registered
noon · aftemoon serv.ice at was the flower g1rl. She wore · the guests and Mrs. Ella
1:30.'
. ~. floor len~ dress of peach, Smith, Mrs. Helen Quivey,
yellow aDd green flowers sty!- and Joyce Hutchison served
MONDAY
ed similiar to the one worn by at the reception table.
LAFAYETTE Post 27 of Miss Lalining and carried a
For a trip (I) Fresno, Calif.
American Legio'l will meet at basket of yellow rose petals. the bride changed inw a
6:30 p.m. Meeting and She also wore a band of silk wheat colored jumpsuit of
refreshments.
flowers in her hair. Both polyesttr and cotton with lace
VINTON P.T.C. at 7:30 in · gowns were ·made by the inserts at the· neck andon the
school gym. Election of of- bnAnd
'de. V ha, f Ca t
pockeiS.
.
y aug . n o
n on,
' The couple resides at 5315
ficers, meeting of school
was best man, and the ushers Perry Hills, Canton. He ls
personnel.
BIDWELL PORTER PTO, w'e re D.a.v." Lambert, employed with Ben-Tom Cor7:30p.m. in school cafeteria.
.
Candidates for the Gallla
County School Board will
speak. ·
THE
GALLIA
County
Pomona Grange will· meet at
Huntington Grange at 8 p.m.
Judging of the sewing and
baking contest will be held
before the meeting at 7:30.
Potluck dinner.
GAHS Band · B.oosiers, 7:30
p.fii , in band room.
1928 ..
TUESDAY
FRENCH City Garden Club
at Mrs. Charles Lanier's
home, 12"· Edgemont Drive.
PEMBROKE Club at 8 p.m.
at Mrs. Neal.

Maurice

·DeUIIe, Rodney, became the

Grande, served as maid of shaped neckline and !ong
honor for tho bride. She was sleeves. She wore a 'two

ArrENTION
FLEA MARKET DEALERS
Merchants of the Silver Bridge
Plaza are sponsoring a .Fiea Market
at the Plaza October 1l1, 14 &amp; 15.
- Registration must be Gompleted by
October 11.
.----------------------~-FLEA:. MARKET REGISTRATION FORM

OlD FASHION BARGAIN DAYS
OCTOBER 13, 14, &amp; 15
(No Feel
NAME----------------~------- 1
ADDRESS------------~-------

Is Great
Uncle John
one of a kind?
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Our photo' re storation 'c tvice t an ; pruc~ him uj) and
make plenty oi' copies of the rcstorcq portrait for the
whole famil y to enjoy.
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Bring us your famil y picrurc' ... and we'll · ·
provide expert restoration s th at will he trea sured
for generations to come .·.
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If you desire restoration work for Christmas
giving, we must start on it by Oct . 22.

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LEAR .,PHOTOGRAPHY
446-7494

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Spring Valley Plaza:- Gallipoli.s
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MAIL TO: . Cox's
Silver Bridge Plaza
Gallipolis. OH . 45631

~losed

Mondays
Open Thursdays TillS

Gallipolis.. Oilio -~---•

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B~- The Sunday Tmles.S.nunel. Sw1day, Oct. 2. 1977

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TV Fun~ begins sixth year

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GAI.l.IPOIJS - On Oc·
Iober 1. 1972. th'e Holter
Medi cal Center Pediatric·
Tel ev1 ion Fund came into
through
the
e xi sten ce
dediCated effort of Earl Neff
wh o personally &lt;"ontacted
interested businesses. groups
and individuals to request
monthl)• contributions lor the
purpose of providing free
television for the children
who were patients on the
pediatril' unit of the hospital.
The fund has been a continuing one and the month o£ ·
October ma rks the fifth
consecutive year that th e
Gallipolis Elks Lodge No. 101
has been a participant in this
worthwhile projec t . Dan
Vance, Exalted Ru!er of the
Lodge, made the check
presentation to Neff.
.
The Gallipolis Emblom
Clu b, No. 199 and the local
Elks Lodge make annual
donations t o the Pediatric
Television Fund for the
months of September and •
October. All of the children
who are hospitalized during
October will have fr ee
televisionbecauseo[theElks
donation .
Just one year ago the

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Dan Vane. , Exa lted Ruler of the Gallipolis Elks
LoogeNo. 107. presents-the check for Pediatric Television
for October to Earl Neff .

.Mic(dleport PTA
' plan for new year
MfDOI&gt;E PORT-Aetivities
and projects '·1r the year
were "'l'
and eonunit·
tee!:S were appointed a t the
Mo nday n ight meet ing of the
Middlep -• PTA .
~I rs . "\. . jlerole Burdette ,
'- prrs idrn~a d cha rge of the
meet ing during which time
~. plans w ere made for a fall
ca nuval a nd the possibility of
~etttng semor eitize ns for
Safely patr ol members '"as
discussed .
The carni val was set for
Oct. 22 w1Uuostume judging
to be a feature. Donati ons will
.
be ta k en on a b1cvcle
to be
displayed a t the Sl;hool. Mrs.
Cathy Chadweii.Mrs . Joyce
Blake, a nd Mrs. Becky Orenner of the ways and means
committee will have cha rge
of planning for the carmval. ·
Conunittees ·named were
\1rs. Judy 'Coates and Mrs.
J.a ne Fr)'l11yer, mel)lbership.
\1rs. Fr!lnyer , ma gazine
cha irman: Mrs. Judy Crooks
a nd Mrs Donna Byer.
· t 11e theme
cu ltura I arts usmg
"R efle ctions.' '
Playgr ound impr ovements
were discusse&lt;j. Appointed to
the s&gt;tfety conunittee were
the Rev. George Glaze. Bob
Morris. and Mr. and Mrs. J .
J. Cremeans.
It was a nnounced that there
will be a meeting of the Meigs
County Council of Parenl.s

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Class offered

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Pedwtn c To) Fund was tlurmg the pabt year. visited
initiated to supply toys and . Holzer Medical Center's
games . both large ~nd small. Pl•diatric Unit to view the toy
for the pl ayroo m un the filth roon!_and see what particular •
floor in the pediatric Wlil to items need to be replaced.
provide entertainment for the Pa rt of their &lt;'Ontribution will
full a ge range of children who be used to buy new record
are patients in pediatrics. play ers f.or the playroom, one
This includes small babies suiUtble for the children who
and children up to age t8.. are teenage and one
Again , Net[ was instrumental esp!&gt;&lt;.'ially fo~ the smaller
in successlully organizing children .
and carrying out this projeet.
Not only are toys and
f'or the month of October, . games purt·hased for the
starting the second year of -playroom , but also special
th e fund . a new participant items are made available to
The Galli polis Club of the children who ar e unable
Telephone Pi oneers. with to ~o to th e playroo1n because
approximately 30 members, Jbey are confiJ1ed to their
has made the contribution for Beds. The t oy project has
toys. Members of this gr oup becon\e a' very important
have been in the telephone part of making the hospital
business for 17 yearS' or stay for children as. com·
longer and-such membershiP' fortable as possible.
is considered an honor . The
Both
the
Pediatri c
local TeleJ)'hone Pioneers Television and Pediatric Toy
organization in the past has Funds cont inue to be handled
contributed to the Helping by Earl Neff." who makes all
Hand School , the Galtipolis of the contacts throughout the
State Institute and needy community for the necessarY
fa milies in the area .
contributions that keep both
Ms . Dorothy Fourm a n, programs going on a conImmediate Past President of .tinuing basis. Neff may be
the Gallipolis Telephone contacted at 1113 Theo~ora •
Pioneers and Mrs: Marie Avenue in Gallipolis.
Saunders, a group leader

Jan Hill and Margaret P,.ar·
sons tsubstitute l thir&lt;!J:rade :
and Margaret Barr and Lucy
White, fourth grade. Pauline
Hortonand Sabra Morrison
a re the Title I teac hers. and
wis Hawley is the school
secretary.
· Mrs. Burdette ln her open·
in g remarks before the
GALLIPOLIS - Debbie
,.parenl.s and teachers explain·
Barr, daughter of Mr. and
ed the role of the ,PTA in the
Mrs. Bill Barr of Gallipolis,
school and called for sugges·
was united in marriage to
lions toward developing more · David Beam, son of Mr. and
.rapport. 'fhe problem of mak·
Mrs. Marvin Beam of Xenia,
lng up the days missed during· in a double ring ceremon y on .
the teachers' str ike was men·
Aug. 'll a.t the First Church of
tioned and parents were en· the Nazarene. The Rev. John
couraged to let school of· Utterback officiated with
ficials
kn ow
th ei r Rev . Michael Hancock,
preferences. Principal Mor· brothe,r-in-law of the groom.
ris suggested that parents
Wedding
music
was
contact him about diffe rences provided by Judy Burdell on
of opini on or proqlems per· the organ and pianist Beth
tmning to school.
Hancock, sister of the groom.
It was noted that breakfast Soloist was Chuck . McKinney
is being served in the e lemen·' who sang " Entreat Me Not To
· tary building . Campbell soup Leave Thee," " Eternal Life"
labels are still being saved. and\ " Oh Perfect Love ."
Mrs . Parsons·~
' 1 ird grade Kathy and Jim Radcliffe
.. ng " Day By Day" and
won the room aw rd , Oev~ sa
lions to open · e meeting Becky and Michael Hancock
were' given by the Rev . Bobby s\. rig "Savior Like a Shepherd
Elkins. Hope Baptist Chapel.
Lead Us."
The pledge 10 the fla g was led
The church was decorated
by the fourth and third with two wicker fireside
graders.
baskets of dried flowers on
the columns ' beside the
LAFF · A • DAY
archway .
Beside the kneeling bench
~
were· two 15 candle spiral

Barr-Beam vows spoken

:7- 1'he S:und.ay Tln'\es-Setntint!l, StiUlday, Oct. 2, 19'17

GALUPOLIS - You can
make } Nativity Scene with
pape{mache scul pture or a
Christmas ornament through
the art of French Quilling or
even print your own Christ·
mas card . ~~~ of this will be
included ill the Christmas
Arts class under the .ln·
struction of Corrine Lund al
the French Art Colony,
beginning Wednesday, October 12 at 9 a.m .
Mrs . Lund will a lso teach·
an eight week drawing class
for adults beginning MQnday,
, O&lt;.tober tO, at 9 a .m .
1be fees for both classes
are $19lor French Art Colony
Members · and $23 for Non·
' members .
To register ca ll Janet
Byers at 446-1003.

Ms. Fourman and Mrs. Saunders visit with 12 year
old Charlotte Eakins , and "Snoopy." provided by the
Pediatric Toy Fw1d . Charlotte, daughter o[ Mrs . Dimple
Eakins of Houle 2, Hacine , Ohio, is confined to her bed in
traction . Ms . Lewis is looking on .

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The Trotters
"Wide.:. Trocks"
ore here.

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r~~~=~,:~~~urging
of
Ohio a ns .
all voiers to

on .Issue 2 at the
iovr,mber general election.
Mr~ .
Jennie
Myers
nted the outgoing
~~~E~: Mrs. Car·o lyn
a gift in apof her work during
year. Mrs. Myers
r!~~;~~the new offi cers and
~r
each with a rose
color that represented the '
each was to hold. The
offlcers are. · Brenda
~or·•ari. pre sident, Faye
vice president
Graham , secretary:
Aarbatra Allen , treasurer .
Morgan read· a letter
to the Fall
Garden
Club
hosted by th e
Garden Club ·and
Grande Garden Club,
is to be held at Rio
Gr:• ndle Nov . 5.

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Ms. Dorothy Fourman and Mrs . Marie Saunders look
at the record player in the Ped iatric Toyroom that needs
oo be replaced,_with Debbie Lewis, R. N., Pedia trics.
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THE SHOE CAFE
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CHRISTINA COOPER
HAS PARTY- Chrisliua
Sue Couper Was honored
reeeatly at the home of her
grandpar.e nls, Mr ... and •
Mrs ; Reed Will of P omeroy
in observance of her s ixth
birthday anniversary. A
_turke}' dinner wa s SHVt'd
along witll cake, ice cn•am
and punch. Attendiug wer e
her parent&amp;, George and
and Tea~.:hers. on Thursday at.
candelabras. The pews were
Clarinda Cooper, ~m!ber,
i: 30 at the Bradbury E le men·
I
decorated with · ivy and
Georg.ie, Mr. and Mrs~
tary School. The delegates
lantern type candles. The
Reed Will and Sean of
are Mrs. Donna Carr, Mrs.
groom sang " Walk Hand in
Pomeroy, Mr. cand · Mrs.
. Patsy Ogdi n, Mrs. Marilyn
Hand with Me" to the bride as Shupe and Nadean Skidmore Wilson , Parkersburg; Mr .
Roger Deem, Kim and
Epple, Mrs . Phyllis Bake r,
he stQod bes ide a thr ee acted as hostesses at the and Ml"s . Tom Middleton,
Teresa, Middleport, Sen·
ding gills were Mr. and
and Eddie Kitchen. Alter·
brandt candelabra.
reception. Cindy· Sutton and Wilmington.
Mrs . Clem Cooper,
The bride, given in Reva Thoma s registered"
Attending rehearsal dinner
nates are Mrs. Betty Dren·
ner , Mrs. Rosemary Hysell,
marriage by her father , wore guests: Greeters were Scott and buffet were Mr . and Mrs . ' Syracuse; Mr. and Mr$.
Ernie Compsoo, Mark and
Mrs. Susan Baer. and Mrs.
-B&lt;~~
a floor length gown of quiana Allison, Maca Marinkovich, Bill Bar( and Debbie and
Timmy, Mason, Mr. and
L-""-"-'="-"==~--"·•::·•..J knit with an empire waist and Beth Kiper , Violet Day and Billy, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
Don.na Gheen.
Mrs. Dick Hood, Angie and
Teachers introdu ced were .. ,\ t) main problem is that 1 high necJ&lt; trimmed in be~ded· Linda Day .
Beam and Scott and David ,
Mr s.
M a r )'
Rose, kt•c p re peating myself . I say the Ia c.e and long stra tght
The bride changed into a Becky and Mike Hancock , . Carla Hood, Eddie Lee and
Tammy Russell, Mason,
kinderga rten: Debbie ' Ohl· s~a me l hing 0,.cr and over aga in .r sleeveS;. The ~own was two piece white dress Kathy and Jim Radcliffe ,
and ·Mrs. Irene Hoschar
inger and Judy Crow, first In other wo rd s. I 'm re petiti ous .' \ complem~nted With a. chapel trimmed in black for her Lynn and Josephine Rice,
and Tres of New Haven.
grade ; TwilaChildsandBar- lt" thcr than sav a lhing once lengthtratn . Her qnlYJewclry wedding trip to Greenbo Bonnie Storer , Rev a Thomas,
bara Logan . second grade: and let 11 go 1 k·er· p ..
was a heart-shaped necklace Lake, Ky. The new Mr. and Keith Jordan, Chuck and
·
with a diamond given to her Mrs. Beam are now residing Cindy McKinney , Judy
in ~darville.
· Burdell, Mr. and Mrs. Marv ln
by the groom.
Her flowers were a cascade
Out of town guests were Robie and Missie and Susie,
of silk pea ch roses, baby's Steve and Pam Mussier, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Plantz
breath , white 'Carnations and Becki Karrick and Gregg and Brian, Mr. and ·Mrs.
pompons.
Hebrank, Bill, Betty and Ronald Allison, Jill and Scott,
Lynn Rice served as maid Tamrriy Drake, John, Vicki, Ken Oaye, Kent Dyer, Julius
of honor . Kathy Radcliff, Shawn and Erfc Rickey, Akenem)'i ..
Bonnie Storer and Cindy Thelma Nichols, Cindy
and
Manuai
McJ:(inney served as brides- Sutton
maids. Junior bridesmaid Batus,
Harold,
Vida
was Missy Robie, cousin of and Beth Horton, Mrs.
the bride. Susie Robie and Jill
Allison, cousins of ·lhe bride, Harley Hilderbrandt, Marsha
served as flower girls. The and Stella Martin, .Glen ,
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bridesmaids wore shrimp Ellen, and Stephanie Allen ,
Colored dresses of Jersey knit David Davenport, Mr. and
with large bertha collars and Mrs. Fred Jack, Mr. and Mrs.
·c riss cross ties . TJi.ey wore James Ayres , VIncent a~d
WASHINGTON ( UP! ) white straw French style T~mmy, Daryl and SUSie
Career diplomat Paul H.
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'th
Mtller
,
Rex
Person.
Debbte
ha I s
rtmme
WI
a Gusilman, Rev. and Mrs.
Boeker of Toledo, Ohio , was
peace . rose. They car· Howard Ricky and Penny, sworn in Friday as new U.S.
~
rted bouquets of s1lk Don and Rita Anderson, ambassad or to Bolivia ,
roses, ca:nattons, pompons, Lester and Peggy Ferguson, where . he is s uc ceedin g
stephanolts. The flower gtrls R bert and Janet Ora••
William P . Stedman.
wore peach nora! dresses 0
""
Boeker joined the foreign
and rosebuds in their hair. Mrs .. Hazel Beam,. Elste
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• Jim Radcliff served as best Co~kltn, R~ger ' Kevm and service in 1961 and has served
.
Brtan Conklin , Mr. and Mrs.
in Bonn and Du-esseldorf,
man . Ushers were Btlly Barr, W'll'
T d
T
W'ld
br ther f th b 'de K
t tam u or, om . 1 a, Germany, and in Bogota,
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O~ye, ~ent eOy;~, 'sri!~ Pam , David and ~ill Murr~~· Colombia .
He
was
horn
May
2,
1938,
in
REG. 12.88 1
Plants served as ringbearer. Mr. and Mrs. · B. S ·
Junior groomsman was Scott wetbold, Joe and Ruby Van St. Loui s; . Mo . and is a
Beam, brother of the groom. Pelt, Gary and Evel; ' Seek- graduate of Dartmouth and
For her daughter's wed~ man , Terri ar
Paul Princeton unive rsities and
ding, Mrs. Barr wore a mint Roebuck, all of Xeqm; Don . th e~ve rslty of Michiga n.
green and white floor lengt' h and Dorothy Ward, Fatrborn,
Mr . and Mrs. Lee Onyan and
.
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d ress wtth matchmg ac- N . M
d· R
d
cessories. Her flowers were a
el1'
ary 1an • ev · an
. Mrs. J a mes MacKay, Terre
· b. 'd'
dOU ble rna I Ched Clm
I IUIDS
.
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of· wfiite with peach .
Haute.; Maca Mannkovtch,
Masstllon ; Mr. and Mrs .
Mrs . Beam wore a peach Billie E. Day , Robert and .
wuh . 1pcrson:~keJ S pe idel ldent. Ir's rhe periect
color \w~ ptece floorlength Linda Day, Virginia Beach;
wa y t1~ -,.n· som~ rh-in~ specirtl r( ) st~mc.xme special,
dress . wtth mat c hing, ac· Rita Hysell Newark· Barb
cessones . Her flowers were
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an y ti tllc uf the ye;H. There &lt;l rC&lt;wer forry sryles
Hk th t f M B •
l!o~~h . Oenms Shelton, Mary
e a 0 . rs. arr s.
Ann Gilliam, Chris Nestor,
from wh1ch to ch•&lt;1Se, for hi t_n and f(,r her.
A ·' r eceptto~ was held Rev. and Mrs. Harold Maish,
followmg the ceremony tn the all f Dayton·
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church fellowship hall . The
Mr . and M.rs. J erry Van·
bnde's table was decorated Horn
&amp;nd
Mike.
w1th a . four layer cake Jamestown;. Mr. and Mr.!J.
••. !11 .,.,.
separated by arches. Peach Kenneth Rutt, wgan; Mr.
Use Your Visa or Master Ctia~ge
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roses and s~~et p~a s and Mrs. Paul Barr. Sharon
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decorated the latttce behind Barr, Daniel Blevins, Rcva
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the cake table. A double crys· ·Thomas, Keith J ordan ,
KOl~LIC
ta l gla.ss candelabra flanked Marsha Kuper. Mr . and Mrs .
· both s1d~s of the cake.
Jim' Kiper and Beth all of
LANDSCAPING
J ose phine Rtce , Madge C 10111 b.
p
d' B dd
0
446 ·3100
Neal, Pearl E ll iott , Mary
us: am an
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Mr. and Mrs. David Beam

Is sworn m

WINTERIZE
· ·YOUR HOME
With Root Co.ating, Watgr
Heating Elements, Heat
Tape, And Insulation Wrap
At
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'1eg " $11 99 SAVE S4 .09

Guga A!hle!1C Socks Reg s 1

MOBILE HOMES SUCH AS:

Quote-of-the-week : You can travel on ten thoosand miles
and stlU stay where you are. Harry Chapin .
Book-of-tbe-week: The Short Stories of Ernest Hemingway. Of all the writers in America Papa Hemingway standS
out as the leader in American literature. Just grab any story
by Hemingway and be transformed. My all time favorite is a
"Clean Well Lighted Place " which is one of the most critical
looks at the agooy of heing alone. Treat yourself to something
rare and special.
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Jumper effect with windowpant contrasting

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Front

pockets

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WHITE SWAN
UNIFORMS

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THE lJN}.FORM-· CENTER
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from Your
White Swan Di..,tributor

c~uple

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and wing collar. 75% po~ester,
25% ny~n warp knil
Size 8-16

Son born to

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Win,dow-Pane Layering· I

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·- ..- ·- ,·- ·- "-· GaII'1poI'IS, Oh'10-.....1

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extra cash

for
shopping sprees

,Open ·
Mon.-Sat.
9a .m. 1119 p.m.
Sun. 1 lil6

THAT
WE. AR~ NOW
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Pnces Good ttuu Salurdav
Open Even ings • Ma&amp;torCharge, Visa or Ask AQoul Our levaway Plan

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~~se effect.

Across from Silver Bridge Plaia

IN THE SilVER

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BRiDGE PLAZA

OPEN SUNDAYS
1:00 UNTIL 6:00

COME ON DOWN AND CHECK OUT THESE

SUNDAY SPECIALS

$

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.98

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5talt Younq
to5cwc

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RND YOU'LL LRND ON
YOUR F~'T LRT'R
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·.·,

NEW FALL
DRESS ·LENGTHS

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Once you get into the savings habit, it's a
'tbugh habit to break! That' s why, the, earli·er.
you b·egin saving in one of our many highinterest Savings Accbt:tnts, the sooner you'll
have a secure
up for the'
. litile nest ~gg b~ilt
.

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future!

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COMMERCIAL &amp; SAVINGS BANK.
Silver Bridge Plaza

Spring Valley Plaza

Court Street

S-M-L

TOPS

Rosalynn Carter says her
goal is to "wipe out the revulsion" against mental illness,
and she's asked her husband
to spend some money to do it.
Says the First Lady: "Itold
Jinuny that I have pledged an
all-out, personal drive to help
create a new national
philosophy about mental
health care and to help bring
mental illness out of the

.99
Reg. 14.99, 15.50, '6.50, 17.50 Values

closet."
Honorary ·chaimerson of

the Presiden't's Conunission

ChooSe From Cowl Neck, Turtle Necks, Crews, Mock

on Mental Health, Mrs.
Carter believes there should
be a new federal' "interagen·
cy 1• to coordinate development of conununity mental
health programs. She wants a
'
28 per cent increase in federal
REMEMBER PRICES GOOD StiNDA Y ONLY
spending on mental illness.
She may run into difficulty .
trying to promote more com- ..,_ _ _..;,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~--~.----~

Turtles '
Man Tailored shirts In AGreat Assorbnent of Colois.
I'UA
. "ftlAI.I'S
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niunity mental health
facilities. Of the $17 billion
spent on mental health care,
only about $1.5 billion goes to
community centers. HEW ·
Secretary Jooeph Califano
has ,not included mental
health centers in his proposed .
· .
. budget.
With a srnile, Mrs. Carter
saYS Califano wiD soon be
aware of her feelings aboUt

that.

Member FDIC

SIZES ·

LADIES

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ONE. SELECT .G~P

Rosalynn
.
sets goals'

YD.

llegular 11.0 '

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The Uoness Club has started to ~e ll candy to aid the
visually handicapped. See the membr!ts or cheek for area
stores where the candy can be purchased .

upon

303 Upper River Road.

to 4.49

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... in wbat seems to be the middle of the week. My mix-up
was because of having Thursday off, so now who knows wbat
day it is? Read abo ut my " resUul" day at home in Wday's
section. ·

• GOVERNOR
• VICTORIAN

FALL
FABRIC

ONE WEEK ONLY

~·.'

,

Rosalyan Carter

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~e.,,"~ r:;~;..~~

requirements of everyday
family Jiving.
Questiolls
from
the ..
audience will be answered.
The
District
Health ·
Meeting in the Jackson
Extension Area will be held
at the Jackson Area Extension Center near Jackson
from 10 to 2:30 on Thursday,
October 13 .
Details on . the entire
program and infomiation on
making reservations are
available from the Meil!3-" --•
County Ext ension Office,
telephone 992-¥95.

PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2, ONLY

EVERY BOLT
IN OUR STORE -.. ._ --

LET .YOUR FEELINGS SHOW
.WHEREVER YOU GO...

c.

what we eat, and each of
them, according to our
present knowle&lt;)ge, is easier
to prevent than to cure. Why,
then, spend more and mote
money on medical treatment
than on prevention? Could
this relate to attitude?
Or. Lester Breslow and
Nedra
Belloc of the ..
University of California in
ws Angeles have ~nalyzed
the living habits of groups of
American adults .. They
eonclude seven simple, basic
health habits are associated
with increased life expectancy. Of these seven
health behaviors, four are
alated to nutrition :
I. Keep weight within
nonnal llmts.
2. Eat breakfast.
3. Eat three meals a day
without eating between-meal
snacks.
4. Keep consumption of
alcohol down, and und er
control.
Each of these topics will be
discussed in some detail, and
made relevant to the

RUTLAND - The sixth Clarissa Wood Cook was read
aMuai..Wood 'larli'iiy reunlotr , by !Wsemary Neece.
•·
,. Football season is
us. I live in promise n! the time
'
was held Sept. II at Forest •' Election of officers was when it will be all over . From what local talk has to offer it will
' - - - - - - - - - -··- - -......
,
-·- ·Acres Park near here. Prizes held with Dena Welsh named be all over - St&gt;on.
were won by Mary Davidson, president; Nonnan Will, vice
!{lila Rhodes, Murl Wood , president, and Jean . Wood,
Many people have remarked about the latest edition to the
Grace White, Kenneth Welsh , secretary-treasurer.
woman's section : our social events section. Just by reading
Edith and Peggy Wood .
Attending were Mr. and over some of the events, many appear t.o be within an hour or
Oldest member attending Mrs. Weber Wood, Mr. and so driving distance, I would bave say Ohio does have ~ lot oo
was Weber Wood : vo\lllllest Mrs. Nonnan Wood, Mrc and offer. Now is an excellent time to go explore and see what Ohio
member, Eric White, son of Mrs. Ernest Wood, Mr. and is really about. Hate to admit it but my limited toutist .
M•. and Mrs. Danny White, Mrs. Virgil King, Mr. and knowledge is just that, limited. The only places I've been are
and coming the farthest were Mrs.
Kenneth
Welsh , Bowling Green and driving through Cincy on my way home to
Ro semary
Neece
and Pomeroy; J,Yir . and Mrs. ·Chicago. Maybe we'll see each other on the road to exploring.
Dougla s of Adell, Wis.
Nonnan Will, Mr. and Mrs.
Culture is just around the corner as Ohio University, the
The afternoon prog ram Leo D. Davidson and family ,
consisted of skits given by a Adell and Eric White, Artist Lecture Series at Rio Grande and the french J\.(t Colony
group of young· people from Rutland; Rosemary and offer guest speakers, programs and other interesting events.
Mt. Union Church; a poem Douglas Neece,
Adell, Cootact them for more information.
"I'm Fine" by Anna ,Wisconsin ; John and ~.Dulse
\
The AAUW will begin a workshop on assertive behavior
Hall1day ; Marguerite Frank CotterlU, Marguerite Frank
&gt; .
•
read about the Wood reunion and Freda Kennedy , Athens ; this Monday. Any woman who holds a degree from a college or
universitY may join MUW and sign up for the course .
''
from her rrlllther's sera)&gt;' Grace White, Langsville; Mr,
book , and the obitual'l( of and Mrs. · Pearl Chase,
Chauncey. John and Helen ·
Kasler, Lancaster; BoMie
Bulloch, Columbus; Mr.
aild Mrs. Earle Wood and
Steven; Edith Wood, Mid- .
GALUPOLiS - Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bales of .
dleport; Anna and Alan Mrs . !Wy David Gibooq of Rt. Point Pleasant W. Va .
Halliday, Dexter, and the 2 Gautpolis are proud to
Paternal grandparents are
church group, Darlene , . announce the birth of their Mr. and Mrs. Ray Gibson of
Marlene and Teresa Bauett, second child, a son born Sept. Apple Grove, W. Va . ·
John Gilliam, Tammie 19 at 4:34 p.m. at Pleasant
Great 7grandparents are
DeBord, Sue Ket)lledy, Rilla Valley Hospital. The infant Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Gibson of
Rhodes and Helen King .
weighed 8 lbs., 121&gt; ozs. and Gallipolis and Mr. and Mrs.
was 21 Inches long . He was John Cook of Point Pleasant,
given the name Michael W. Va. Fred Willett of Point
Pleasant, W. Va ., and Lewis
Todd.
_ - - 366 Second·· Ave...----:--··Michael was welcomed Boles of Leon, W. Va .
Classified Ads
home by · his two year ·old
brother, Scott David.
Maternal grandparents are
s8c
,.•
bring you
•

Get to know us; you'lllike us. •

Point Pleasant

+="~oW\:

JACKSON - "Is Your Cup
Hall Full or Half Empty?
Attitudes Toward Nutrition
are Important !" is the title of
the presentation which will be
made pt the Fall District
Hea lth Conference by Mrs.
Margaret M. Hinkle, R.O. of
Columbus .
T)Je discussion ·will take as
its focus the realization that
much of what goes on in life iS'
rooted in how an individual
thinks and feels about a given
matter. Priorities are
designated this way. Thus,
attitudes toward nutrition are
importa'* because they influence food choices and
these choices, made over and
over again, bec6me food
·
habits.
The ·U. S. Senate Select
Committee on Nutrition and
Human Needs has been ex·
ploring ways to bring under
control six · of the leading
killers of Americans today :
heart disease, stroke, cancer,
diabetes, arter iosclerosis and
cirrhosis of the liver . Each of
these diseases . is related to

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Wood family meets

j "-~ ~ t\~e • , .

I
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C'\t~·coUntry Sole

K&amp;K

co nfused ·with the horse
chestnut tree, althouglr tjte.
horse chestnut has seven
leaflets. The buckeye nut is
bitter .a~d lf eaten in quanlty
ts potso]lous to man. .The ·
nickname " Buckeyes" given.
to l?"OPle born .or that Uve in
Ohro, accordmg to early
pioneer historians, came
from Col. Ebeneze Sproa.t,
who held the first court In
Martella In 1788. He greatly
impressed. the Indians and
they
ntcknamed
h1m
" Hetuch," the Indian name
for the eye of a buck deer.
The nickname finally became
" Big· Buckeye," as the buck
deers eye closely resembled
the bucker.e nut, th~s the
ntclmame Buckeyes.
.wvely refreslunents were
served to eleven members.

I

Footwork Counts

..

Mrs. Car olyn Thompson gave the program . She used
Ohio Buckeye Trees for her
topic . The Ohio buckeye tree
is usually found along
streams and on fertile bottom
lands. The tree leaves, which
open in early spring, have .
five leaflets four to six inches
In length attached at a
common point to a long stem.
Two species of the buckeye
tree are native to Ohio the
Ohio buckeye and the y~llow
buckeye. The Ohio buckeye is
the official state tree which
the legislature adopted in
1953. The two buckeye t~s
are hard to tell apart except
by the nut hull. The hull of the
Ohio buckeye tree is worty,
while the hull of the yellow
buckeye is smooth.
The buckeye tree is often

Fall health conference tp begin

1
I

.. .. CU!Ja.. ;when Your

F'ESTIVAL

'.~]11

GRANDE - The Open
Garden Club met at the
e of Mrs. Virginia
for its September
The meeting was
order by the vice
resident, Mrs. J ennie
The' roll call was
,. ~re rted by, how each
had spent their
vacation. Faye
passed out the new
ro•rat:n boo ks for th e
The program
a picture on the
of a gate opening into a
The cover was very
as
the
gate
bprt!sertt ed our garden cl ub.
discussing Issue 2,
leg hold trap amendment,
club voted to OPJ&gt;9Se this
~ne ndnoent and felt trapping
an aid to wildlife
agement providing
opportunity .for

tlt

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.n Gate Garden Club meets

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�B-&lt;l- Tb~ Sunday Tunes~~ntm~l . Sunda.' .lkt. 2, 19;7

AA UW workshop held
at Otter.bein College

Warner ·reunion held
P OME RO\'··Thr ~Hm ual
rl'Umon 1.1f the famll \ tlf tht•
latt' .J otm :md B1rd 1t•· Warrwr

\\ aS· ht•ld Sundon at thL' Bt&gt;d·-·hll'd \:out.h Centt~r.

•

(; a h~ Wurnt.•r. J t:rr) dlll.l t.'lm·
mt.• \\'arrwr. J~,_·rry . J r, and

D\\ tg ht. ~t a xmt&gt; ~dson , J un
l),,nnu ~ t.'lson . GaQ and

~md

Stt'\'t' .. Pt•!t• and Bl'tt&gt; l\1ar·
Oldt'st pres£'nt was Hr n nan runt'. Waym.~ a nd I.mda .
E. Wa rn t• r, whllt&gt;o t ht• Honwr and Palma Goodwm.
Ylmllgt!s t was WilltMnt--S·eti--;1 0!"t' ph and ·I.rtt.t Hall. ~Ot.'.
U'll'k Hall.
.
Tun ami \V1 l. Dulore::; P:1r·
Attendmg wt&gt;n• Hr n mm sons, :\1anmng und Becku:o
and Am bt.'r Watn~r, Howard Mohlt•r . .. H.ea Mat- l .oUlse,
and Ina Curl. Dale and Br r· Dunnv and Dodt Barnha rt.
tum Wa rner. Deka :\1ohlt•r, Cn·st~ll and: Lvut:;e· Well,
Z.. lda Dav1s. Her bert and Ja(·k Jill Judv Wavne and
Cle11t h J ohnson. Jark and Dom;a Cobb. K~mli1 ." l"Nmoe,
Gra&lt;'t" Warner, Jun and J uh und Lau ra
Gar v
~1;1rg 1e Prtlfflll . R1 r hard W;n·n t'r. Mary \va r nei:,
WArner a nd Erm. Gordon Kun bt•rl\' and J uani ta
\l'arm•r, Art anti Ada :'&gt; ease. Warner. E. Jack and Rachel
B1ll and Donna :-l ease. Jill Wa rner Gladvs Wa r ner
and Tra \"IS. Ji m and Beckie Blackwo'oo .
·
Anderson . .Jatme ..a ncl Brian ,
Gursts at the reunion were
flak and MaryBell Warner. ~' :1\ e Du nl an. Bru ee
' i..\mmt·. .Yllchael. and Mary Bllingardner, Khi1 Br o wn i n ~.
Ambert. Alan and J1ll Pugh. Jame J ohnson. Diane Epple.
Gene and t.ms Thumpsun. Kt'lh· Ridenou r
Bu nnv
Cmdy and Gina , Ted and
:&gt;lcGra w. Mark F~rbes, and
Suzanne Warner. Patty , Scott
Rand)' Arnold.
.
and Kun. I ren~ M. .Harple)·.

MIDDI.EPO!lT- Mrs . Bet·
sy Horky . Mrs. Fay ~uer,
~Irs. "Martha Hustro.anct
Mrs. Kathryn Knigllt, and
Mrs. S1bler Slac k attended
the Oh1u State D1v1sion fall
workshop of th~ ·American
Association of · Unil•ersily
Women held Sept. 24 a t Otter·IJcm College, Westerville.
Theme of the workshop was
·· v ou and Your AAUW Connection ." The welcome was
extended by Mrs. Marie
Pfeiffe r, PhD, presiden t of
the Ohi o State Division. After
intnxluc!ions a program was

presented by the C'olwnbus
Bra nch ent itled ··w omen of
AJI Ages ." This was a

readl-f""s theatre prodUction.
At one session ! he Hon.
CIHr c m·t&gt; J . Brown. Jr., Coh·
grrssma n of Ohio's Seventh
Distritt spoke on the politics
of food and the grain problem
thr oughout -the world. Reportmg

on

the

•

InternaH onHl

F ~ll ow sh i p

of Un iversi ty
Women 's C&lt;lnfercnce held at
Sterling. Scolland were Reta
Hu bler . J anet Welton, and
J;:~net Heinicke.

• A t otal o( 4:&gt;0 women were
present representing 81 bran·
ches. Tho'se from here atlen- ·
ding are members of the Mid·
dlep o r t-P nm e r oy · Ar e a
Branch of the AAUW .

· · conducts
· meetzng
· a fine American
ari
Legzon
·
their w~.e]l._ at Buckeye Girls
St ate at t he 'meeting of
lafayet t e Unit No . 27
American Legion Auxiliary
held Tuesday evening in the
ne w Legion Home . They were
introduced bv Mrs. Silas J .
Hami lt on . · Ame rica nism

report showed that collealion work force as a day o!!. The
of dues for 1978 was well '"" illness" was caused by my
underway and that drive for careless action as I drowned
ne w member s showed six m)' spastic colon with two
ne w names.
cups of black coffee in one
The unit will again have a da y. For that shameful act I
booti at Bob Evans Fam1 paid dearly , ,
Fest iva l October 14, 15 and 16
Calling in sick for work is a
chaim1an.
to displ ay and sell art ic les fine art perfected by
The biJsmess session was mad e
by veterans at Americans. The process is
conduct ed by vice president. Chillicothe V. . A. Hospital. one to be studied carefully
Linda Shaver . It wa s Mrs . Ro)' White is chairman and goes something like this :
report ed thai the treas urer 's and asks all members to
The dock says 6 a.m. and I
record book and check book assist at the booth .
realize the only reason for
had been dest royed by fire at · Mrs. Stella Mohr. Dora being awake at this hour is an
the mobile home of Dorot hy Huber and Elizabeth Lear emergency of some sort. It is
Hecker . t r ea surer of 'the unit, who a re m nursing homes at this time I realize I can 't
11le. secreta ry was instructed were awarded life mem· move and through th e
tQ order r eplacements.
berships in the unit . numbn ess of sleep I begin to
Bulletin s were r ead from Initiation for new members , explore the reasons why I
Dist rict president Ju n~ Blair wa s planned for next can't . I haven't pillowed
an no un cin g Distr ic t Fall meeting. October 25.
m)'self into ~orner ; am not
Conference at 'Junction City

The
best reason
. \Ve kno\v for stepping up to
sEparates.

;lSi).us '-J.I a demonstmt1on

.

ONE EXAMPLE
OF A LUX·" RECEIVER ""
'
T-88V AM / Steroo FM Tuner
:,
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Donahue made' me homesick

r

!.

/:···:

for Chicago; watching the
Gong Show made me sick,
period. Julie and Doug {we
all know who they are) were
on the Hollywood Squares so I
skipped the soaps in the afternoon and tried to read a
book.
Foo d became a problem
and the more hungry I
becarne the more mental
. notes I made t o be. mad at my
friends for not coming by to
·take care of me. The !act that
no one knew of my condition
was simply unrelated to the
matter. Chicken noodle soup
· is always a food oue eats
when home in bed. My
cabinets could only yield
onion and clam chowder.
Neither seemed appealing at
the time.
As ihe J!"Y drew on the
more boredom set it. I took a
stroll around my apartment,
sort of' getting to know the
place.
To
my
utt er
amazement thre e of my
plants are dying, one is in full
· bloom and I think the other
two are plastic. I discovered I
taller
than
m)'
wa s
refrigerator and my rocking
chair only squeaks 'at a high
speed.
The only solution was to go
to bed and sleep the ,whole
thing off.
,
Friday morning arrived. I
felt rested, refreshed and
ready to go back to work. My
health felt revived; I was

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NEW PHYSICAL EDUCATION INSTRUCTOR - Rio Grande College and CommUnity
College student£ meet with James Batesky, assistant professor of hea lth, physical
education and recreation. Left to right, Don Gibson, senior, 'Greenup, Ky .; Batesky; Terr(
Koster, junior, Ironton.

LADIIS'

FASHION
PANTS

'

Rio .has new phys.i cal
fitness instructor

LADIES' HANDBAGS'
$3' 9·9
EACH

ao,..•n

RIO GRA NDE - A man
who practices what he
prea ches about physical

W.VA.
UNI.VERSITY
TOBOGGANS

COLEMAN

DELUXE
DOU8LI
MANTLE

LANTERN

!166
Sports Dept.

·sPORTS. DEPT •.

• process of taking rny first day
of sic~ leave.
Fifty-two minutes . do 'not
pass quickly when one waits
in semi-anguish . Eight
o'clock came and passed and
my day off began. After all
the trauma I was wide awake
so sleep was impossible. Just
laying around made me feel
· · guilty So I began my journey
into the ' living room and
turned on the tube.
Watching TV requires little
effort - mental or physical,
so 1 ventured into the world of
the wasteland. Watching Phil

hdependem test labs have reponed that LUX seoarates
!ll 0 d ::.e:;er :nan anytr.ng else they hav~ ever heard We aqcee
A!lei /.81C nr IOU WII 'JO We II always be pleased 10 havB--y0\1

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estate know 1 am ·in the

prP&lt;='lrnpf•'fJer and power ampl1f1er

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wait, call whom'! Journalists

be

c:~pnra!~)·

I ·,

do not live at newspapers 24
hours a day and 7:08 is ,within
that' 24 hour time sparr. $()
now I have to wait untiiB a.m.
, to let the world of the fourth

T )(1,1yS receivers have more oower and mme features than
. ,_, 1~lure But they rea so b1gger hea·,·er and ·more
e•p,;os, . ~ Iliar ever before So ,f yoJ want en ore performance
I han. ;our :xesu nl m;:e1ver car dehver. you nay
ready for
setYan ldS A separate ·uner and Integra ted ampl11ler Or a

1-

' I

on the edge of the bed ready
to fall; I am ... it is at this
time that a sharp pain wakes
me into reality and I realize
· what the trouble is. My colon
is reminding me that coff ee is
a no-no and not to be taken lightly or otherwise.
• ' I then begin my process of
what day is this? If it is
Monday . through Friday,
m ake that Monday through
Saturday !have to go to work.
Sunda)' allows me two extra
hours of sleep, but didn't
Sunday just happen a few
days ago, so it ·must be ...
If reality bears any
resemblance t o real life then
this was a work day. By now
it's 6:30 and my two alarm
d ocks go off in not so sweet
unison : rather lill e rubbing
salt into the wound. From .
6:30 until6 :57 1 debate if I am
sick;. partially sick or , sick
enough to call in sick. After a
hopeless effort to remove m)'
body f"'orn bed, at· 7:08, I
declared that I was sick .
enough to call in sick ... Fine,
. I'll just make an effort to get
to the phone and ca ll ... He)'

SWEATERS

SLEEP
GOWN

Taking off sick,

GALLIPOI.IS
Lisa Oct ober 6. Reservat ions wer e
BY CATHERINE BENET
)fiday and Malinda 'Spencer · sent .
Due to illness on Thursday I
gave interE:sting acco unts of
Membership chaim1an 's had what is known in the

LADIES'

LADIES'

work th e sky looked a
brighter . blue or was it just
· tinted foe?
I swung open the door of the .
Tribune, greeted the girls at
!he .front_ desk . and .. . 'ud. denly m)' hea rt sank, I felt
weak, my face flushed. To my
dismay there before my eyes
was a · copy of the Tribune
dated Thursday, September
· 29. The paper had been
pub.lished and they did it all
·
without me.

I
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KEN GRIFFEY

Griffey Will
visit ·Gallia

Kent State ·in
44-23 ViCtory

GALLIPOLIS
Ken speed. He has legged out over
Griffey, the AIJ.Star right 80 infield hits his past three
fielder of the CinciMati Reds regular seasons not to
fitne ss is the new assistant
will visit Gallipolis Saturday, mention the infield hit he beat
.
professor of health, physical
Oct.
22.
out to score Dave Concepcion
to give Kent a 21.() lead and
ATHENS, Ohio (U P! ) OU, which falls to· 1-3
education and recreation at
Griffey,
who is heralded ad with the winning ·run in Game
Quarterback, Mille Wha len then ran 5 a nd 29 yards for overall and 0·2 in the
Rio- Grande Coll ege a.nd ~
ran for two touchdowns and second hall touchdowns as conference, was forced to ·go one of the up and coming 3 of the 1976 Championship
Community College (RGC·
passed for a nothe~;.Sat urda y the Golden · Flashes boosted w the air after falling behind saperstars of the major Series or the bunt single In
CC) .
leagues , will hold an .the final game of the 1975
to lead Kent State to a 44 to 23 their overall markto 3-1 and so quickly .
James Batesky thinks
autograph
session at . the Championship Series that
MidAmerican Conference their MAC r ecord Ill 2-{).
Quarterback Andy Vetter
"everyone should be in some
·Bastille
from·
I to 3 p.m. and started. the Reds winning
vlctofy over Ohio University .
Kent's other scores came hit &lt;iii 28 of 43 pass attempts
sort of regular physica l ac·
wiD
speak
to.the
youth of the rally with two outs in the
,Whalen , a senior from De- on five-)'ard runs by Mike for 394 yards and three touch·
tlvity that accelerates the
Gallipolis
Christian
Church ninth inning.
troit, hit split end Kim McQueen and Tom Roper in doWIIs, but it wasn't enough
heart rate." Batesky himself
at
6
p.m.
He
came
within
a
He also had the game
Featsant with a 21-yard TD the first qua rter and three to overcome the Kent
rW1S ·five mil es a day, seven
of
winning
the
National
hair
winning
hit in game two of the
pass late in •the first quarter field goals by Paul Marchese . margin ..
days a week. •
League
batting
championship
1975
World'Sei'ies,
and scored
The first Kent score caune
He is quick to poir)t out,
in.l976,
losing
on
the
Iinal
day
runs in
the
tying
and
winning
following an 81-yard return of
however, that that sort of
of
the
to
Bill
Madlock,
one
7
of
the
1975
World
game
an OU field goal attempt by ·
effort is not for everyone, but
Norm Wcirfen,
which, fastest players ln the major Series.
that everyone needs to
Ken owns a .3i4 lifetime
coupled with a face .mask leagues.
develop his own fitness
Griffey has utilized hls batting average for the twopenalty against the Bobcats,
program.
time World Champion Reds.
put the ball on the OU 9.
" Physical exercise is a part
OU managed to pull to
-within 24-17 at halftime on a
pair of Vetter TD passes and
a 42-yard field goal by Steve
SPRINGFIELD, Ohi o Dave Merritt rlijl for 190 Green. But Marchese kicked
'
'
Junior tailback yards and a pair of · the second of his ihree field
(UP!) touchd owns Saturday to gooals and Whalen guided the
Murray ,.. .8 rookie of the year contract with the club.
power unbeaten Wittenberg Flashes 88 yards for a
BOSTON (UPI ) "- The
Boston took a 4-llead in the
to a 35-7 victory over Ohio • tochdown to put the game out
Boston Red Sox, who year candidate, homered· in
BOSTON (UPI) - Earl agent draft last fall, Weaver
Wesleyan. '
homered their way into the first inning, staking bottom of the second off
of reach.
Weaver,
who has the third· fashioned a youthful lineyp
Baltimore
to
a
f~
lead,
hit
his
starter
Mike
Flanagan,
but
Merritt,
who
had
contention in the American
highest
lifetime won·lost into a team that challenged
27th
homer
in
the
eighth
to
the
Orioles
tied
the
gam~
in
runs
of
35
and
12
touchdown
League East this season,
CHICAGO (UP!) - Dan
percentage
among aU Major for the American uiague
put
the
Orioles
ahead
7-5
and
the
third
on
Skaggs'
and
yards,
paced
a
Tiger
ground
were eliminated from the
Meyer's two-run single
League-managers,
has signed Ea~t title until the last
443
attack
which
piled
up
race Saturday · when the singled across the final run May's homers.
highlighed a three-run
a contract to manage the weekend of the season.
Dauer's fifth-inning blast seventh inning and paced the yards.
Baltimore Orioles hit six with two out in the ninth.
LIITLESUCCESS
Peters said cbaches George '
Lee May added a two-run put the Orioles ahead to stay Seattle Mariaers to a 5-3
Quarterback Bill Hauser
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (UPI) Baltimore Orioles for. three
home runs, two by Eddie
Murray, in an 11-7 victory that homer, also his 27th, whlle at 5-I and Decinces' drive in victory over the Chicago scorecl twice ~or Wittenberg - Striking workers picketed m.ore years, the American Bamberger, Jill~ Frey and
assured , the New York Dave· Skaggs hit his first , the 6th made it 6-4. Boston White Sox Saturday in the on one and eight-yard runs, the Yale Bowl Saturday, but League club announced · Cal Ripken have also been
rehired for next season .
Yankees of their second Rich Dauer smacked his fifth pulled to within a run in the first game of a doubleheader. while the other Tiger TO apl)'ll'"IltlY had little success Saturday; ·
The
47-year-old
Weaver,
Brooks
Robinson ,
came
on
a
one-yard
run
by
and Doug Decinces hls 19th . bottom of the sixth on a
straight division title.
in
coi)vincing
spectators
not
Steve Braun opened the
The victory i:ojncided with , double by Car)ton Fisk and an seventh with a walk off loser Steve Fuller.
The Red Sox and Orioles ,
to ·attend the football garne · with a .596 winning per- Baltimore's other coach,
with identical 97-1&gt;4 records, the announcement that Earl · RBI single by George Scott, Francisco Barrios. After a · Wesleyan, now 1·2, got its · between Yale ahd Miami of centage, received the first already has said he intends to
multi-year pact offered an retire ,at the end of the
·Were to play Sunday for Weaver, the Oriole manager but Nelson Briles came in to sacrifice, Luis Delgado only touchdown in the third Ohio.
since 1968, had signed a three· shut out Bo.ston until pinch· walked and Dave Collins quarter on a 36-yard run by
Leaders of Loca I 35, Oriole manager since Hank season.
second place.
Weaver, who has led the
hitter Bernie Carbo belted a doubled, scoring Braun and Joe Sylvester.
Federation of University Bauer slgned a two-year pact
Orioles to five pennants·and a
Wittenberg is now~ on the . Employees. AFirCIO, which after the 1966 season.
~
two-run homer, his 15th, with putting Seattle ahead 3·2.
Bauer, however, never first-division finish in 10
represents the 1,100 blue
Hamilton replaced year.
~:t~ut in the bottom of the Dave
comp1eted
that contract. seasons with Baltimore,
collar
workers
who
are
Barrios and yielded Meyer's
- - The Red Sox tried to single.~
striking over wages, askect Weaver took over for the last complied 90 Wins or more In
spectators not to cross their 82 games of the 1.900 season. eight Qf · his · years at
CINCINNATI (UP!) -Rlly Lum with the thira run of the sustain their last-iMing rally
Seattle opened the scoring
.McLendon
has
picket lines and stay away . In explaining the Orioles' Baltimore.
Knight '~ two-out two-run
inning.
with two out as rookie in the second when Bill Stein
departure from their recent
from the game.
Th~ Reds added their final designated. hitter Ted Cox tripled and scored on an
single broke a seventh-inning
'
policy of limiting managers
tie and the Cincinnati Reds two runs in the eighth inning singled up the middle off infield out. A run-scoring 2 stroke lead
one-year contracts,
to
went on to a l&gt;-2 victory over on Dave Concepcion's single. Briles, who earned his second single by Don Kessinger tied
r
general
manager Hank ·
restricted the save for 3 1-3 innings of three- the game in the fourth for
the Atlanta Braves. Saturday
Hume
NAPA, Calif. (UP!) - Mac
Peters
said:
behind the combined three- Braves to one "run through the hit relief. Briles got AL home Chicago. Julio Cruz' RBI McLendon, who has won
"We thought Earl should be
hit pitching of Tommy Hume first seven innings to gain his run leader Jim Rice to fly out single in the fifth ·gave the more than $200,000 since
TOP ASSISTANT
justly
rewarded for the
COLUMBIA, S.C. (UPI) and Manny Sarmiento.
third victory against three to shallow center field to end
Mariners back their one·run changing his mind about
outstanding
season the
A single by
Cesar losses. Sanniento blanked the the game.
lead and Kessinger's second quitting the PGA Tour, Ben Jobe, who has been on
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.
Orioles
have
had.
He has
Geronimo and a walk ·to Braves the last two innings to
Flanagan finisr,ted the
Eric birdied two of the first three the University of South
single
scored
J
.
(UPI)- Pele said farewell
pinch-hitter Champ Swnmers gain his first save of the season with a 15-10 record,
Soderholm, who had doubled, holes he played in the third Carolina basketball staff done an exceptional job with to soccer Saturday the only
with one out in the seventh season. Willie Montaqez while Jim Willoughby, the
to tie the game in the sixth. round of the $200,000 Classic since 1973, was named our young players in helping way he knows how - by
· touched·off the Reds' winning doubled in the Braves' first second of four Boston pit·
John Montague gained the Saturday to take a two-•troke Saturday by Coach Frank them make the difficult
scoring a goal, the I ,281st of
· rally and led to the departure . run in ·the seventh and chers, absorbed his second
victory ln relief of starter . lead over Miller Barber in the McGuire to replace Donnie transition fro111 prospects to his career . .
bonafide major leaguers."
of starter Preston Hanna . · homered in the ninth.
loss after 'six victories.
Walsh as his top assistant.
chase for a $40,000 prize.
Toni House.
In · an emotion•chocked
Despite loslng Reggie
Dave Campbell ·walked
finale
of his 22 years in the
JackSI)n, Bobby Grich and
pinch-hitter Mike Lum and
Ji~
gall).e,
the Brazilian scored
Wayne Garland in the freeone out later Knight looped a
S ~pS
once lor the Cosmos and
tworun single to right to ·
came close several times lor
break a ·1·1 tie . A subsequent .
£
.
'
Santos of Brazll .before 75,646
·single by Ken Griffey scored
-u
rain-drenched .laiUI at the
By GREG AIELLO
St . Louis' explosive of!ensP. Ca rds' defensive unit .
York
Jets,
Green
·
Bay.
at
Meadowlands Stadium.
UPI SportS Writer
The Red s kins, of course, MinnesoJ.a, New Orleans at
was missing in a 7~ defeat to
United
Press
International
The CosmOll won a hard·
COLUMBUS ( OPI) - Full·
The St. Louis Cardinals can Denver and Washington lost specia li ze
in
such Chi cago, t he New York
Brooklyn
7 , Fairleigh· fought game 2-1 with Ramon
back Dave Cotner scored o)1 a trace their absence from last an embarrassing 20-17 reclamation project£. One .of
Dickenson 6
STILL UNBEATEN
1 Millin scoring the other
four-yard run In the second year's NFL playoffs to one decision to the New York them is veteran Mike Curtis, Gian!£ at Atlanta, Philadelphia
at
.
Detroit,
Tampij
Brown
10
Princeton
7
NORMAN, Okla. (.UP!) Cosmos goal and Reynaldo
quarter and Dan Maloney team -the Washington Red·
the former Baltimore Colt· Bay . at Dallas and San
Columbia 30 PeMsylvanla 16 scoring for Brazil.
Junior ·quarterback Thomas kicked the · extra point as skins. Tha( should serve as Giants.
Both teams then rebounded Seattle Seahawk, who started Francisco at Los Angeles. Dartmouth 38 Boston Univ. 0
Lot!, playing without injury Capital nipped Marietta 7to 6 proper incentive for the
The Cosmos and Santos are
last week, with St. Louis the fi rst two ga mes for Oakland visits Kansas City • Pittsburgh 45 Boston Coli. 7
for the first time this season, Saturday in an Ohio Cards Sunday when· the NFC downing Chicago 11).;13 and linebacker Chris Hanburger
the only two club teams for
Monday night.
· Rochester "28 Georgetown 14 which P~le has played. But
rushed for 102 yards and Conferenee ·intra-division East rivals
meet in Washington edging Atlanta out
with
appendiciti~:
· Surprising Cleveland hopes
Temple 6 Delaware 3
three, touchdowns Saturday to gamei
this was one of those days
Washington .
' 1Q.ll. Neither victory was , Hanburger worked out for the to inake the Steelers tbeir
Trinity
14 -Bates 7
'lead
second-ranked
when the game was not the
Cotner's score capped a 12- . Washington and St. Louis impressive, making Dallas first time 'l'uesday and is
Clemson 31 VIrginia Tech 13 thing.
01\lahoma to a 24-9 Big Eight pl"ay,
82-yard
drive. both finished with. "10·4 look more and more like sure li s ted as · probable for . third straight upset victims
foll owing victories ·over Duke 28 Navy 16 .
r
Conference vi ctory ove r Marietta 's only score came · . records last season but th~ di·vision champions.
Muhammad Ali, Ilenry
today's game.
.
C
incinnati
a
rid
New.England.
Georgia
Tech
30
Air
Force
3 . Klsilinger, President. Carter's
Kansas .
when
Sam
·Reynolds
blocked
·
Redskins
qualified
as
the
.'
. Jim Hart displayed some of · Running · back Teriy
a Crusader punt and Roo. NFC's wild card entry !tis old form bycompleting IS. Metcalf (hand) and· guard The Browns get no respite · Texas Tech 10 North CarOlina · son, Jelf, &amp;bert .}Iedford,
7
Pele's wife and father anp 761
Dw"st ran it in from the 22 becauSe of their two victories of-24 passes - including a sob Young ( hamstring) are next week when they face
Oak
lan
g~
whic
h
beat
William
&amp; Mary 28 VIllanova journalists from 25 countries
MICHIGAN ROMPS
over the C!!rdlnals. In the last club record 12 in a row _: for probable for St. Louis . Both
with 6: 1~ left ' in the game .
8
ANN ARBOR, Mich . (UJ&gt;I)
came to honor the king of
Marietta went for the two• · three seasons, the .Red.skins • 215 yardsa'nda flluchdnwn to are playin g with ca sts . Pitt£burgh 11&gt;-7 last week .
'J
oe
Namath
and
the
·Los
Kent
St. ~4 Ohio U. Zl
- Junior fullback Russell
SI)Ccer.
•
pOint conversion but quarter- have woo a share of an spark St . .Loui•. The one Redskins ' cornerback Pat
Davis scored two Michigan
A man of much emotion,
back Tom Havranek was Eastern Division champion- pleasant sUrprise so far this Fischer ( hamstring J Is Angeles offensive line get£ a Wittenberg 35 Ohio Wesleyan
7
big test ' against San
touchdowns and the third- stopped short of the goal.
Pele spoke briefly in broken
ship and a wild-card playoff season has been the questionable.
Francisco's
defensive
line
.
Mt
. Union 19 Grove City. (Pa.) , English before the game and
ranked Wolverines cashed in
Senior tailback Burce spot while the Cards won Cardinals' defepse .
In other games today, Na math threw two TD passes
14
·
'
on five Texas A&amp;M errors · Carter gained 104 yards for division titles in 1974 and J.975 ."
got the thousands ol fans to
Middle linebac ker Tim Pittsburgh is ·at deve land
Saturday to hand the _fifth·· Capital, who held Marietta to
Both. teams •. however, have Kearney . whn joined the club Cincin nati at San Diego . Buf: in leadi ng Ram s · .past Bowling Green 34 Western .roar in unison after him :
Ph ilade lphi a 20-0 . San
Mich 14
ranked Aggies a 41-3 licking
"Love, love, love."
just 47 yards rushing . •
shown they nught have fallen earl y last sc1:1snn after bein g fai n 1:1t Baltimore, Denver lit
Francisco
lookipg
for
its
first
Capital
7
Marietta
"
6
that snapped a 10-game
He then buried his head in
The Crusaders are now ~. Slime distilnce !rom years c:ut by Tampu J~y 1 has Seattle ; Houston at Mi;n 11i
Kalamazoo (Mich.) 7 Kenyon his hands and wept .
wfnving streak.
while Marietta dropped \'1 11-3. past. In openmg-&lt;lay losses, cmt!rged CiS 1:1 lccn!~r (,f tile New Englalld (Jt Lit.: Nc\,: victory .
3
;

Wit;tenberg in
easy 35~ 7 win

Weaver signs
·for
.
·three·· more years.

Yanks clinch East,title

Seattle tops

Ollsox, 5-3

farewell

ADJUSTABLE

and a irflow lor any

courses at RGC.CC including
Introduction to .Physical
Education, Physiology of
Exercise, and Organization
and Adminisiraiion of
. Physical Education. He will
also serve on the school's
Academic Affair cOmmittee
and pia"'! to continue writing
about physical . fitness and
education .
He received his master 's
degree in 1975 from the State
Universi'\y of New York at
Buffalo an4 his bachelor 's
degree in 1970 from Lock
Haven
State
College.
liatesky's past experience
includes several teaching and
coaching positions in New
York and· Pennsylva~ia. He
lives ·in TI10nnan with his
wi.fe, Diane. · _ _

--

Pele says

GILLEnE SUPER MAX 2

dl)'ing

of preventive medicine/' he
says. · " Exercise can help
weight loss, provide a lower
· resting - heart rate, help
prevent heart attacks and
chance· for
offer
a
relaxation." Rio Grande's new in·
structor 9flll'arent1y knows
what he's talking about. He
just complete(j his doctorate
in physi cal education at the
Universit.Y of Arkansas
where he · worked in the
liun1an
performance
laboratory with a project to
assess v arious kinds of
physical fitness testing .
Batesky also serves as a
consultant for the Executive
Fitness Corporation, Dallas.
He helps prescribe fitness
programs for buslnessmen.
. Batesky will teach several

..

0

-

Reds sink Braves, 6-2 .

Hardware
Dept.

AUTOMOT/1/l.,T.

Rllmse y carried it in himself one-yard scoring plunge by
By JOE JULIANO
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa . from ooe ya rd out three pla ys Chuck Servino.
J Fusina hit. passes of 16
( UPI) - Underdog Kentucky latl""· ,
guard
Ri
chard!"
ya rds to Bob Bassett and 15
Midd
le
rallied in the second half
Jaffe
led
a
Kentucky
defense
,
yards
to Scott Fitzkee to set
behind senitr quarterback
Derrick Rllmsey and a stingy ihat held the Nhtany Uons to up a . 29-yard touchdown pass
defense Saturday to score a just two first downs in the to Mille Gwnan that put Penn
stunning 24-2Q . victory over second half . Penn State's State ahead 17·14 at the time.
Matt Bahr kick~d ." 2a.yard
~ 'fourth-ranked and previously . final drive of the ba ll game
was stopped when fullba ck fie ld goal on the L1ons' next
unbeaten Penn State.
The
Wildcats,
two- Matt Suhey fumbled and po~sswn · With 16 seconds
touchdown underdogs coming Kentucky linebacker Kelly left '" the hall.
Bahr opened the scoring.on
into the, gaune, came back K,irchbaum recovered on the
initial
from a 2().14 halftime deficit · Wildcats' 48 with 3:116 to play. Penn . State's
The
winners
ran
out
the
IXJssesslOn
wtth
a
2()..yard
with a brilliant ball-control
field goal aft er
pass
attack in the third quarter clock.
Fusina, who completed 12 completioos of 37 "'.'d 29
when they held the ball for 10
of 2Q passes for 195 yards in a ya rds to {lanker J1mmy
minutes and 25 seconds.
Ramsey eng ineered an 11- driving rain in the first half, Cefalo P,MI the ball on . the
play drive on ihe Wildcats' completed just 6 of 12 in the Kentucky one. The Lions
were severely hurt in the
first possession of t11e haiC second half for 38 yards .
The Wildcats led 14-1·0 in drive by an illegal procedure
tha t resulted in a 31).yard fi eld
the second quarter taking penalty.
goal by Gerald Bryant:
of '
two
Kentucky , ran three plays
Later in the qu arter, advantage
Ramsey completed passes of interceptions of Chuck after the kickoff and Kevm
17 a nd 13 yards to reserve F usina passes . One was Kelly's punt was returned 75
split end Dave Trosper to put returned 23 yards for a yards by Cefalo who split two
the ball on the Uons ' three . touchdown by Dallas Owens defenders and sprmted down
The 6-f oot-5. 220-pounct and the other resulted in a the left Sidelme for a touchdown.

Hardware Dept.-

CaP

by .
p•I()neer-s, 7

.Cards ·seeking. revenge today

SC0res

'•·

�-

.
•

..

•

•

'

•

&lt;:-2- The Sw&gt;day Tmws-&amp;-ntmel. Sw1day. Q&lt;;t 2. 1977

Oct. 1977

Wahama stoPs Southern,l3-0
B) Grt&gt;g

Hailt·~

RACINE - Good defens~
&lt;!.nd a trrmt•ndous pa:;smg
~amP helped . tht.- Wahama
.\\'httt'

Falcons to a

C'o\'t'f

tht'

\'ll't oq ·

prt'\'h,_lUS I~·

un~

de fea ted Southt•rn Tornadoes
Fnday night as the B~rds won
!HI. The Falcons passed for
ll~ 1·ards as they upped the ~r
reeord to l-1. 11 h1 le handing·
tlw Tornadoes ftrst loss
n ~ain's t thrre wtn s. The
l' orhadoes could not ge l
much started e1·en though
"'1lfey threa tened on a couple ot

O('Casions .while tht" bi~ Birds
of W:thmn,a re~ll'hfl pcty (Jirl

The first score d m1e in the
last seconds of th(' quarter

!Wit't'

when the Falcon qJarterback

Tin• first quarter started KL•nny Hankin son kept the
out wtth &lt;1 lot of tumovers fur baU for an 11 yard run. David
both teams. OQ,j)J.e first play F. has t ned to boot the extra
fro m the huddle Southern point but was unsuccessful as
fumbled th e pigskin t o the ball went off to the right.
Wahama but was soon to gain
The only other score came
possession of it within the late in the second stanza with
nr xt minute ·.as Mic hael - only I : 20 showing on the
Warner intercepted - the score board. Jack Smith ,
football on the Tornadoes' Junior rurming back, came
own 9 yard line.
up with the points on a four
The Tornadoes could not yard run which made the
get out of the hole and had to score 12-&lt;l. Then Elias added
punt the ball away .
the extra point on' a perfect

.

.Outdoors .

..

luck.
· The

seco nd ha If was
s&lt;.·oreless as neither team
rea ched the other 's goa l line.
Both teams pla!·ed a strong
defensive' se&lt;:ond half with
Southern leading the way
with three sacks of the
quart erback within two
minutes. The defense of the
Falcons pro1•ed very strong
\he last half as the Tornadoes
gavt&gt; Wahama their best
shots. but Wahama stood the
pressure and won the game.
In the defense department,
Wahama's Kurt Sayre and
Brei Holbrook led their team--while colleding nine and
seven tackles respectively.
Mart in Bush led Southern
with H tackles while Mike
Huddleston had two sacks.
Wahama's pass defense was
in good form as they gave up
only one pass coinpletion out
of nine attempts by Southern,
while on the other side
Wahama compl eted six out of
12.
In a total summary of the
game Waharna had control
after their first scoring drive
and kept it throughout the
game. Southern tried to come
back but never really made it
under the heavy defense of
the Wl\ite Falcons.
Michael Warner led the
rushing attack for Southern
with 65 yardS in 11 carries
while also catching the only
completed pass for Southern
on a 4!i yard reception. Jack
Smith led the Wahama team
with 56 yards in 15 carries
while scoring one of the two

touchdowns . Frida y night
Southern plays its last ball .
game at North Gallia due to
the closing of the Southern
Local Schools .

UEPARTMENT

s. w.

First IJIJwns
5
6
, 69 63
Yards rushing
Yards passing
45 112
Total yards
114 195
Fwnbles
2
0
Passescompleted -9-1 13-6
lnterceptionsthrown 0
3
30 60
Penalties
Score by quarters :
Southern
•· 0 0 0 o:-- o
Wahama
6 7 0 il--13
Scor ing- Hankinso n. 11 yd.
run .-kiek failed . Smith. 4 yd .
rw1 , Elias kiek .

-~·

GOING OVER - Jack Smifh (35), junior tailback for the Wahama White Falcons is
shown crashing -over the goal line ,between Southern's Martin Bush (76) and K~lly
Winebrenner (18, for the final TD of t!Je Contest in Wahama's 13-&lt;l Friday night win over the
team from Wahama.
·
·

CLOSING IN - Se&lt;:onds after thiS photo was snapped;
Waharna's Kevin Honaker (69) and Bret Holbrook (72),
caught up with the Southern ball carrier here, Mike

Warner (46 ), and dropped him to the tui-f with a thud. The
other Southern player is Martin Bush (76).

Uolted PreiSs International
Npw tha t squirrel season is
fully tmderway, o;&lt;&gt;me hunters'
pre finding that a portion of
the animals th ey shoot are
infected with a con dition
kn own
as
" warbles ."
Actually, lhe"" da•k colored ,
hard-skinned grubs are the
larvae of a fly call ed the BotHy .
The life cycle of this insect
requires Uwt the adu It fly - a
lar~i sh , hairy -looking fly_
whi ch slightly resembles a
bee - deposit her eggs on the
l~• ir ur skin of the host
w&gt;irnal. Upoo hatchin g the
small larvae burrow lnto the
skin of the squi rre l where
Uley grow by feeding on the
squirrel itself.
Once U1cy reach the size of
about three quarrers of an
inch, they burrow back out of
U1e breathing hole they left
upon entry and fall to the
ground when~ t.ttey mature .
Warbl es have different
effects on various hunters .
Some inunt.'(Hately disc~rd
any animal Utat is found to be
infected while others view
them as sin1ply a skin
conditi on whi ch has little
effect on the edibilitv of the
w&gt; imal . It seems that-the best
approach would be tA:&gt; skin the
• squirrel out an\1 have a look .
If tl1e muscle tissue
surrounding the si te . of ' the
warble is discolored or is
different in any way : it should
be cut and discarde'd . If the
animal
has
multiple
infestations, it may be best to
simply leave it.
Sq'uirrels seem to be the

most common host animal for
this fly , and gray squirrels
seem to · have lhem more
often than fox squirrels, put
other anilnals do get them .
They also attack horses ,
cattle, deer, sheep and even

Bohcats
.
top
sw, 34 to·6.

P.ATRIOT
Visiting
Kyger Creek scored 14 points
in the first half then breezed
to a 3W win over host Southwestern here Frillay night.
humans.
Fortunately, only those . The victory gave the
species Whi ch attack animals defending champion Bobcats
are fow1d in this area . The a3-lslatewhileSouthwestern
·
wao·ble that attacks hwnans dropped to-0-4.
makes its home only in the
Co ach Jim Sprague's
very hoi areas of Mexico, Bobcats took ·the opening
Central and South America. kickoff 63 yards for the first
The species that attacks touchdown . · Senior quarsquirrels begins its life cycle terback G[eg Mulford capped
in the hair or skin and a nine play drive with a two•_
burrows into the an.imal. yard plunge. placekic ker
11wse species which attack Ra nd y Lucas, a senior,
livestock and deer begin by booted the extra point.
being ingestc&gt;d by the animal
Following some defensive
and burrowing nut £rom the football, Kyger Creek pushed
area of the intestines. ·
the score to 14~ at the half on
Warbles don't seem to be a a 40 yard pass interception
ser ious problem in Ohio . return by cornerback Brian
What llunters do with an Sutphin. Lucas again hit the
animal that is found In have
uprights on the EP.
the tell-tale lumps under the
The Bobcats marched 66
skin is most ly a matter of yards in 13 plays midway in
taste .
the third period scoring on a
four-yard run by senior
tailback Marcus Geiger.
GALVESTON, Tex . (UP! ) Geiger returned to the
- Derrill B. "Del" Pratt, sta rtin g lineup after two
who cmn piled a .312 batting weeks' absence due to a ieg
averuge for the New York injury.
Mike Casey, the senior
Yankees In the first part of
t11is l'entury, died Friday in a transfer from North Gallia.
scored another Bobcat TD on
nursing home. He was 89.
Pratt played major league a 16 yard blocked punt. The
ball was blocked by lineman
baseball from 1910 to )925.
He was SU1'Vived by on.e Semakl Corfias.
In the fin al stanza; Kyger
. daughter, Mrs. Julian Blum, ·
Creek
reached.
the
of Galveston, and two sons,
scoreboard
as
quarterback
Derrill B. Pratt Jr .. of Bella
'
Vista, Ark., and IJIJnald S.
Pratt of Pasadena.

Mulford connected on' a 39
yard scoring pass to end Tim
Nibert. The drive covered 71
yards in six plays.
Coach
Bob
Ashley's
Highlanders got '· their only
score in the final minutes· of
the game ·on a.63 yard pass
from junior _ quarterback
Gene Layton to end Larry
Carter.
Offensively, Geiger led the
Bobcats with 195 yards in 20
carries. Casey enjoyed ·his
!)lird straight 100-plus night
with 101 vards in 15 tries.
Defensively, Corfias, Geiger
and senior · tackle Darrell
Jones were credited with fine
efforts.
-~ Coach
Sprague
said
Saturday he was real pleased
wijh his team's execution.
Friday night. the Bobcats
host Eastern in an all bnportant homecoming game.
Southwestern will host
Green LocaL
STATISTICS
DEPARTMENT
KC SW
First IJIJwns
17 7
Yards Ru shing
264 90
Yards Passing
79 75
Total Yardage
343 !65
Passes Altpt.
10 11
Passes Com pt .
6 3
Interceptions
I
I
Fumbles
2 2
Fumbles Lost
1 1
Penalized
'4-45 9-50
By Quarters:
Kyger Creek
7 7 13 7-34
Southwestern
00 06-6

KYGER Creek's Marl.'US Geiger (31), second from
right beside Bobeats' Greg Mulford, 12, cuts back -with
some fine blocking up front in Friday's SVAC grid victory

LYNECENTERSCHEDULE
WEEK OF OCT. 3.1917
DATE-CYMNAStUM
Oct. 3- 5 p.m . Women 's Volleyball
Closed

.... ~

over Southwestern. No . 78 on left is Kyger's Cla ude
Cornelius. - Peggy Thorns photo.

POOL
Closed

••

Oct . 4- 8-10 p.m . Open Gym -~
Oct. 5-8· 10 p.m . College Rec .
Oct. 6- Ciosed
..Oct. 7x -7-9 p.m. Family-Night
Oct . 8- 2-4 p.m . Open Gym
Oct. 9- 2--4 p.m . Open Gym

8-10 p .m . Open Swim
8-10 p.m . CollegEt_~w:l_m
Closed
x-7·9 p .m . Fam . Night
2'-4 p . m . Open Sw im
2-4 p . m . Open Swi m
7-9p . m . Open Swim
7-9 p .m . Open Gym
x - Family Night is a community function created by the
maior-s in Health , Phys ical Education and Recreation. Th is
time block is open to. involve students, fa cu lty . and members of
the local community - free of cha rge . AI! part ic ipants under
the ~ge of la must be i!Ccompan iecfby a parent or a guardian.

"

,----~----.Seaver ·captures

21st victory

WHERE'S TiiE BALL - It appears Federal Hocking-Eas(e~n players in this Dean
Hawk photo are looking everywhere for the ball during Friday 's non-conference.,.contest ..
The Eagles won llleir tl;tird game in four starts. No. II at left is Eagles Brian Matthews. No.
22_ in fron t is Lancer's Rodney Gordon.

HomeliteXI;
Automatic during
Saw Buck 1&gt;-czys.

Eagles c.l~m
third victory
,-·

By Greg Bailey
wingback Brian Matthews tangle with the lllibCats. A
EAST MEIGS The had 22 yatds in three tri es. win Friday night could give
Ea~tern Eagles raised their Kuhn led the pass receivers the Mitchum boys a shot at
season record to a fme 3-1 · with three ca tch~s. good for the SV AC crown .
record Fnday . mght when 62 yards. Jim Davis got the
By Quarters:
they downed VlSJtmg Federal other pass for 12 yards.
Eastern
0 0 0 14- 14
Hocking ~.J-!1 in a hard-fought
The Eagle defense looked Fed. Hocking
0008- 8
N ntest. Neither team scored sharp as they limited the
E FH
.until the fuJ&lt;~I quarter with Lancers to just 22 yards in the First downs
ALL ALONE- Senior Wahama Tailback David Elias
16 18
the Lancer~ surpnsmg the air on three completions in Rushmg
143 187 .
(42) broke away for a big gain on this play in the· first
E•g les w1th a much- eight atternpls. Both teams Passing
quarter of Friday night 's game against the host Southern
74 22
1m proved ball club.
. had_ greasy fingers as Total
217 2119
Tornadoes. Wahama spoiled Southern's Homecoming
Federal Ho.c~111g outrushed Eastern fumbled fo ur times Passes, comp.,
with a 13-&lt;l win .
the hosts 187· fo 143, but the and lost three whi le the
inter.·
6-4-1 8-3-1 1
Eaglesof Coach Joe Mitchum visitors coughed it up three Fumbles
lost
4-3 3-7
won Jt In the passtng times and lost it wice. •
Scoring: E - Kuhn, 18 yd.
depa "ment as quarterbacks . · Eastern plays an all- run, Spencer run for two.
Ru sty W1gal and Bnan important SVAG contest Kuhn, 14 yd. pass, kick failed.
• Bissell connecJed on four of Friday night when they FH - 80 yd. kick off return.
six aerials for 74' yards and travel. to Kyger Cree k to
one to uclidown . Each team
th rew one interception.
By United Press lnternation\al
Milw 7, Minn 5, 4 V,~ i nh i ngs
With 6:15 remaining in the
Natiooat League
Kan Ci t y 8, Ca l if 5
co ntest, senior tallback Joe
East
Texas 4. Oakland 1
w. l Pet. GB
• Sunday's Games
Kuhn found an opening and
x -Phldl
100 60 .625 Baltimore at Boston
raced off ta ckle for an 18 yard
94 66 .588 . 6
Major League ResUlts
Piltsbrgh
Clevela nd al Toronto
By Un ited Press Internationa l
{ 14 innings)
St . Louis
82 17 .516 1711:1
scamper to pay dirt. Junior
De troit at New York
Nat ional League
100 003 001 000 00- 5 16 2 Chicago
81 79 .506 "19
Seattle at Chicago
fu llback Dan Spencer ran the ( First Game l
030 000 200 000 01 - 6 16 0 Montreal
74 86 .463 21
Minnesota at Mi l waukee
000 000 200- 2 a 1
Niekro , Forsch {8), Thomas New Yo~k
62. 97 .390 37 1h
extra ROints for an 8-l&gt; Eagle N .Y .
California at Kansas City
SI.L
010020 1Jx ~ 7 10 1 19), samb ito ( 11} , McLaughlin
West
lead. That drive started b~ck Todd , Myr ic k (5). Lockwood (14 1 and Pulols, Herrmann ;
w. l Pet. GB Oakland at Te)(as
97 63 .606
on the Eagles' own 20 yard (7), Siebert_ ( 6 ) and Hodges; -.SuJ.tao. Rautzhan ( 8 ), Webb (9 ). x ls Angts
and .'S i mmons . WGarman (1 21, Lewallyn (14) Cincinna t
97 73 .544 10
line and was ths only big Denny
Denny, 8 8. L - Todd , 3-6. HRand Yeager , Grote . W - Lew.!l · Houston
80 80 .500 17
sustained drive of the night · St Louis , Re1tZ {J7). · (Second _lyn , 3-0 . l - Mclaughlin , 4-7.
Sn Frncsc
74 86 .463 23
Gamel
San Diego
68 92 .425 29
fo r the hosts.
Atlanta
M 100 .375 37
N.Y
20000.4000- 663
COLUMBUS
The
With 1:'30 remaining in the SI
.L
200 000 '010- J 51
~ - cliilched di11 is ion t itle
Division
of
Wildlife
of
the
M~t-11'1tk;" Myr ick
(6) and
Friday's Result.s
game. -Eastern had another
.,
Ohio
Department
of
Natural
Steil rns ; Falcone, Metzger (61,
St . Lou is?, New York 2, 1st
opportunity, but it looked like Hrabosky ( 8 ) and Rader ,
NeW York 6, St. LOuis 3, 2nd
Am eric a:n Le ague
...
Resources, rem ind s ·Ohio
Phi ladelphia 9, Montreal 4
t he driye was go ing to sta Uon Simmons ( 5l. W-'--Mat la·ck , 7-15 , Oak,lnd
Q_QD 100 000- 1· 5 -0
deer
hunters . th at apPillsburgh
3,
Chicago
1
LFalcone,
4-8.
H
RSt
.
Loui
s,
Te&gt;~.a,s
~1 000 30x - &lt;t l2 2
the Lanc.e r 14 when Eastern Freed J 5l.
Cincinnati 7, Allarila 1
plications for the annual hunt
Torrealba. Bair (7). Dunning
had a fourth and five
L.A . 6, Houston 5', 14 inns
(B) and Newman ; E l lis and
at Ravenna Arsenal must be
·, 01 1 001 200- 5 8 J
San Fran 7, San Dgo 5
SUndberg . W ~ EII i s, 12-12 _ L situation. But Bissell found San Ogo
___ J'ubrnitted during October.
Sa n Fran
060 000 lOx - 7 8 3 ,Torrealba , 4-6.
Kuhn ill the open and laid an
Sunday's Game~ F r ei s I e be n, Griffin (3),
Any Ohio deer hunter, w)lo
Montr!al at Ph iladelphia
aerial in his . hands for a Tom lin ( 4 ). ' Spillner (6 ), Fin - Ba ll
002 401 003 - 10 14 3
Ch
icago
at
Piltsburgh
is
at least 21 years of age,
gers {81 and 'Tenac£&gt;: K.nepper ,
005 201 OJx- 11 13 j
fo urt een yard touthdown Heaverto (7) and A lexander . W Boston
Atlanfa at Cincinnati
D . Martinez , McGregor [4 ),
\
may
apply by sending a post.
New York at St. Louis
raSS: The kick for the extras - Knepper , 11 -9. L - Freisleben ,
T . Mart inez (8 ), .Drago ( 8 ) and
card
to Ravenn a Hunt ;
Houston
at
Los
Angeles
7-9.
HR
San
Francisco,
Evans
Dempsey : Cle'lleland , Willough ·died, Out Eastern was ln (16) .
San Diego at San Francisco
Division of Wildlife, Ohio
b-y (4), Campbell (6), Stiln )ey
'1 mmand 14-D,
• (9 ) and F~sk W- Campbetl , 13Department of Natural
But Federal Hocking Aflanta
OOQ 010 ooo- 1 a 2 9. L- McGregor . 3-5. HR • American League
. R_esources, Fountain Square,
. · • d ·d ,
. Cinci
102 030 10x- .7 11 0 Balt imore , Garcia ( 2 ).
Eas1
\h-1Sn t ea )et. On the en·
N iekro , Co l lins ("7L Theiss (7)
--r----W L
Pet . .GB C&lt;llumbus 43224.
"'U urg _
kickoff, Steve Curtis · and Mu rphy ; · Seaver and 141 1 irlning5. rain )
New York
99 61 .619 ~ .
Applications must contain
Minn
i :c the ball on his own 20 and· Bench ,. We~ner (6) w~ seave r ,
Boslon ·
97 63 .606 '
,
·
21 -6. L.,...- NreKro , 16--20. HR~......._
Milw .
the
hunt er 's na me, add ress
Ba
ltimre
96 6!1 .600
3
&gt;Jq!Rn on a race toward
Atlanta, ~oyster (6) : Ci"nci n .··
Thorsmodsgard . .HOlly _,(5)
Detro it '
73
az.
. ~56 · 26
and
1977
special qeer permit
-nJ,Ydirt. But the Eagle nati , ~ ri ffev ( 12): ·
and Wynegar ; Haas ,.. ca·ldwell Cle-ve lnd
10. a-r . ~ao 29 lh _
n
umber.
Improper or · in~
'(til ar'ld Haney . w- Caldwel l, 5·
67 93 . ~19 3~
I&lt; fep ':le made him co ugh up Chicgo
ooo ooo 010- 1 7 2 8. L -'- ThOrmodsgard , ll-15, HR s Milw
1
complete'
applications ··will
53 106 ,..333 45 2
ba ll on the 45. A Lan'cer Pitsbqh
ooo 200 rox - 3 a o - Minnesota. Bostoc k ( 14 ); Toron t o
Wes1
r, r~t·Usch el Robert s 18) and
not be accepted. Persons
Milwa1,.1~ee . Cooper ( 20 ).
W L · Pet. GB
ed up the pigs kir'l ' 1nrl ::.w ~rou (a nde!ar tt an( n 11 N
!
.
submitting
more -· than one
,.;.
Kn
ss
C
101
59
.631
•d Aij the Wil"y .!rj fhL ·end·
C andcla r i ~ . 20 5 L R ' Reus · c alif
20010 1 100......;'5 14-3
92 68 , 575 ' 9
Texas ·
will
application
·e r,J!" t h( score,. and an chel , 10 10 . HR ..,:.·.· Chica'go , Kan City
&lt;t20 011 oox- a 14 o Chicago
89 70 .560 11 1 2
L
Swisher (SL
Brett . Miller (3) iind Etch
disqualified.
82 77 .516 18 1 ~
int run made the final
ebarren : Spliflorll, Throop (4 ). Minn
Calif
73 87 .456 28
Only shotguns using a
Mntral
100 .011001
4 9 '}
Pattin
(5
1
and
Wathan
.
Woad 14-8.
63 96 --;--396 371 .J single ball or rifled slu g may
Ph il&lt;t
060 210 OOx - 9 9 1 Paltin , 10-3. L Brett , 13 \4 . Oak la nd
62 97 .390 38 ~
p ncer led the Eag le
Bahnsen , Dues (2)~ Landreth
HRs- Kansas City , McRae 21 . Sea ttl e
be USQd during t he hunt at
x clinched div ision titt'e
(5 ). Atk inson (7) and Carter , Ot is ( 171
'"' with 71 yards in 13 Bla
Fr iday's Res ults
ck
Well
,
L'onbor"g
,
Garber
,
(
71
Ravenna.
'Hunting will take
Boston 11 , Balt imore 10
es. Kuhn . wasn 1t far and Boone, Foote . W- Lonborg , Cle11e at Toronto, ppd rain
place
on
·six Saturdays:
Cleve al Tornt o. ppd .ra in
wd as he had 53 ma rkers I I 4. L Bahnsen . 8 9 H Rs Detroi
T
5,
NCW
York
2
Dl•cemb~r
H.o
and 17, 1977 .;mrl
Ph iladelph ia. t u1inSk l
(3 9J.
Sc atH e at Chicgo, pfd r ~i n
Sc&lt;tltlc &lt;1 l ChiC&lt;lo.ppd .rain
r, 14 ' attempts. • Senior Hebn
er ( 1B), flt\addox (JJ )
January 7, N. 21 ami 2H. 1978.

Frichy's linescores

'84

HC

HEAD-TO-HEAD

COMBAT-F~dera l

Hocking and Eastern. players square off during
Friday·.~n-conference game a t E~st Meigs. No. 8~ight is Eastern's Mik e Hayman ,

-~

be

1

...

41~13

Greenhumbles HT,
MERCE~VILLE
unanswered points to win
Trailing 13-12 early in the going away.
third period, visiting Green of
Coach La-rry Crem eens'
Scioto County rallied lor 29 Wildcats \Vere paced ofsecond half points to rout host fensively tiy senior Frank
Hannan Trace, 41 -13 in a non- Mooney's 66 yards. Mooney
conference game here Friday was also the big gun on
night . defense with eight tackles.
Harman Trace, behind by
Hannan Trace had 148
five at the half, took a short- · yards in the .air .and 115
lived lead in the opening rushing . Complet e deta ils of
minutes of the third stanza on the cOntest were not
a 50 yard pass from senior available.
quarterba ck Steve Beaver to
Saturday night, Hanna n
end David Swain. The kick Trace, 1-3, Will host the
sa iled wide to the left. Green, Fairland Reserves ......~
however, bounco·d for 29
With the viCtory , Green

Successful applicants will
Hunters muSt have a valid
be notified by mail after the 1977-78 hunting license while
public drawing to be held on hunting deer at Ravenna
November 9 at the Division of Arsenal.
Wildlife 's Columbus · office.
ACQUffiE FREE AGENT
.TOP RATINGS
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
NEW YORK (UP! )
New York Rangers have Thursday night's Muhamacquired free agent Don
mad Ali - Earnie Shavers
Awrey from Pittsburgh, ~ Heavyweight Championship
club spokesman announced bout swept the Neilsen
Saturday.
ratings with a share of, 37.3,
The • 34-year-old defense- making it the most-watched
man is starting hi s 14th boxing event in history, NBC
NHL season and is a veteran armo\lllced Saturday.
of 845 games with Pittsburgh,
Th e 37.3 percentage means
Montreal , St. Louis and ·that an estimated 70 million
Boston. He appeared in 79
viewer~ were tuned into .the
_games last season and scored fight, breaking the 35 .0'
one goal and 12 assists for 13 record set in May, 1976, when
points.
Ali fought Hichard Dunn.
-

increased its season mark to

j

POSTPONED
TORONTO (UP!) - The play a doubleheader Sunday
doubleheader between th e begirming at 1:30 p.m. EDT.
Toronto Blue Javs and the Toronto will pitch D_ave
Cleveland Indians Saturday Lemancyk, 12-16, and Jim
was postponed because of Clancy , 4-8, against Jim
rain.
Bibby,'12-13, and Don Hood lI
The teams are scheduled tb .1. '1,/}

..

\lbu're in conttof willa Homelit&amp;

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

3-ll-1.

By quarters :
Green
6 6 19 10-11
H. Trace
7 o 6 0-13

·'

Steel shot
needed in
3 counties

.Applications for annual hrmt ·needed

--

CINCINNATI (UP!) ' .Tom Seaver _wa s strictly
philosophical.
"And kl10wlng him, you
co uld have pre&lt;tic.t ed hiS
reaction.
" If it's there, it 's there,"
said the Cincinnati Reds' 32_,
year-old right-hander. "I'm
sorry it wasn't. I certainly
•
tried ,"
Seaver fell four short of his
200-strikeout goal in his final
start of the season Friday
night, but he picked up his
21st victory against six losses
as he pitched the Reds to a 7-1
vi ctory over the Atlanta
YOU'RE IN CONTROL
Braves in the opener · of ·a
three-gam e series which
WITH THE XV~ AUTOMATIC!
closes out the season.
·
Lightweight, precision balanced. Weighs
~ ''I m~t:!d three starts,' '
pointed out Seaver. "That's
less than 8¥.. lbs. with 10'' bar and exclu- one
of the reasons."
sive SAFE-T-TIP that prevents kickback.
The Reds' pitching ace had
Easy, fast starting. Automatic chain oilin~.
gone to the mound last night
Sofume'" muffier.
needing ninl'!I!Slrikeo uts to run
his string of 200 or more
95
FOR ONLY
strikeout seasons to · 10
straight . .
"It's my record now
EXCLUSIVE SAFE-T-TIP*
anyway,"
he said, offering an
PREVENTS KICKBACK!
explanation why he wasn't
'
really disappointed in failing'
to notch the necessary
strikeouts which would have
'
put him at the 200 level.
"Anyway," added Seaver,
"someone's gOing to 'coine
--IL---'3lc•n~ and break the record ...
985-3308
Chester, o.
Nolan Ryan of the

COLUMBUS - The Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources' Division of
Wildlife reminds all waterfowl hunters that U. S. Fish
Wildlife -Service
and
regulations require the use of
steel shot over all waters of
Eri e, Ottawa and Lucas
co unties.
·
The steel shot regulation
will be in effect within·' !50
yards of any lake, pond,
marsh, swamp,,river , stream
or seasonally flooded area.
Steel shot will not be required
along drainage ditches and
over temporary sheet ·Water"
. more t)lan !50 yards from
water areas.
Steel shot is currently
'
available in 12-gauge shotshells only. Hunters using
guns larger or- smalleF"thanc_____ _
12-gauge are exempt from the
steel shot requirement, except at the otlllwa National
Wildlife Refuge. All hunters
participating in the. goose ,
hunt at the ottawa National ·
· Wildlife Refuge will be
required to use steel shot. ·~

GIVE A'BEAUTIFUL "NEW''
LOOK AND PROTECTION
TO YOUR OLD ROOF
~ Insulates

against cold
or heat .
- Will not cHip. crack or
peel .
-No need to tear- off
your roof to repair any
slate. metal, shingle or
built-up roof. Make it
leakproof with beautiful
Granules.
-Choose yours in any
color of your choice.. ·
-Add years of life to
your present- home or
building .

FREE
ESTI.MATES
.. GUARANTEE .
ON BOTH
MATERIALS AND

·California Angels or someone
~lse."

Seav-er restricted th e
Braves to eight hits, none in
the last three irmings, as he
notched his 14th · victory
against 'three losses since
coming to the Reds from the
New York Mets in a June 15 ·
trade.
'
"I'm in a winning groove
now," sa id Seaver , ''and f
really hate to see the season
end. And, I'm really looking
forward to spring training."
Se~ver joined the Reds with
a 7-3 Won-li)st ~ecord and a
3.00 eam·ed run average. As a
· Red-his ERA is· 2.35 and 'his
overall mark for the season is '
2.59.
" It's been an emotional and
strength draining year, but
coming here to the Reds has
made it all worthwhile," said
Seaver, reflecting momentarily on his early season
hassles with the Met s'
management.
Major League Leaders
BY United Press International
Batting
(based on 425 at bats)
Na·tiol'la l .League
G . AB . H , Pet .
Parker Pit
157 63 3 2l&lt;t .338
Stennett P it
116 45 3 152 336
Tm plln St .L
150 612 198 .324
Foster Cin
156 607 196 .323
Gr iff ey .Cin
152 576 184 .3 19
. Sim mn s St .L
lAB 511 162 .3 17
Rose Cin
160 64 9 202 .3 11
Hendri ck SO
150 534 166 .31 1
Luzins·k i Ph !
148 551 17 1 .310
Oliver Pit
152 566 174 .307
American League
r
G. AB. H. Pet .
Carew Min
l5 3 607 233 .384
Bbstock ·M in
151 585 196 .335
Sing le ton. Bl
151 532 174 .327
Le F lore Det
153 64 7 211 .316
137 562 182 .324
Rivers NY
Rice Bos
159 639 206 .322
132 513 162 .3 16
Bumbry Bal
Bailor Tor
120 487 153 )14
159 60 2 188 .312
Cowen s KC
137 558 174 .3 12
Brett KC
Fisk Bos
151 532 166 .312
Home Runs
National League: Foster, Cin
52; Burroughs , All 41 ; Luzinsk i,
P hi! 39 ; Schmidt, Ph il 38;
Garvey, LA 33.
American League: Rice , Bos
39; Bonds , Cat and N et tl es, NY
37; Scott. Bos 33; Jackson, NY

.....

32 .

Runs Batted In
National League 1 Fost_~. ' c)~ ·
148 ; Luzinsk i. Phil130 ; Gar .... e-,;
LA 115 ; Burroughs , At! 114 ;

cev.

LA

no.·

•:fm8rican

League :

Hisle,

Mmn l l6; Bon ds, Cal 115 ; Rice,
. Bos ll&lt;t; Hob.son , aos 112 ;
Cowens, KC 111 .

r---------------.
----1
MAIL •THIS COUPON . I
I
I
I
I

Hackel! Granulated Roofing
·
Mlddleport,o).
Please send me fur ther information on
Granut.Jted Roofjng . It I~ understood I am
ooder no obligati~o- w~a i ~oever . _

.93 7th-Ave.

I Roof

:I
I
I

I

0 · Sidewall .D (Please -c~eck) 1

NAME

.. . .

·

ADDRESS
CITY ·

.

ZIP

I
I

I
1

I PHONE
.
.
.
- . j
~-------------------- ..

Stol en Bases •
National League ; . T averas,
Pitt 70 ;
Cedeno, Hou 6 1;
Moreno , Pit1 and Richards, SD
53; Morgan, Cin 48 .
American League : Patek. KC
53.· Bonds, Ca l 41; Remy , Ca l
and Pa ge, Oak 40 ; LeF lore. Del
38 .
Pitching
.
Mc;tst Victories
National
League : . Carlton,
Phil 23 -10; Seever, Cin 21 -6;
Candelaria , Pitt 20 -5; Fors ch.
St .L 20 -6;
John,
LA 20 -7 ;
R.Reuschei, ..Chi 20: 10 . .
American League : . Pa lmer ,
Bait 20 -11; Go lt z, Mlnn 19 -11 :
.Leonitrd , KC 19-12 ; Ryan , Cat
19 -16; R ,May, Bait and Colborn.
KC 18-1'4.
,
'.
· · · tarned Run· Aver age
lba~ed ' on 153 ifll:'lings p it ched ) ·
' National League : c:andela r l.a,
Pi11 2.3&lt;1 ; Seever . Cin and
Hooton , LA 2.58 ; Carlton , Phil
2.64 ; John , LA 2.78 .
~
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ca'l ~ . 54 ; B l yle11en'," Tex 2.7-2 :
Ryan . Ca l 2.77; Guidry. NY
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Strikeouts
National L ea gue l N iekro , Att
262 ; Riahard , Hou and Rogers .
Mil 200 : Ca rlt on , Phil 19!3;
Seaver, Cin 196
American L ea gue : Ryan , Cal
34 1; Leonard , KC 235 ; Tan ana .
Ca l ·205 . Palmer , Ball 193 ;
Eckersley , Clev 191

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�/'
C-5- The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, Oct. 2. lim

'J:: -4- The Sunda; Tu nes-&amp;ntmt'i, Sunda)', Oct.~. 1977

Pirates Cop 8-6 win

Tigers nip Meigs, 9-7

WILLOW WOoD - Junior
quarterback Sam Smith

IJut tht') 'rt: rwl {k•wn and
they 'n: nut out.
Just ask Un• lnmtun

bum for the all important
two .. point conversion
fol!owing a touchdown , here
Frtday night as the North
Galli a Ptratesed~ed Symmes
Valley, ~in an SVAC con~ test.
:;. Coa£h John Blake's Pirate$
;'' scored in the opening period
.. on a 10 yard run by junior
! Roger Cremeens .
:
The remainder or the
.. contest was a defensive
: struggle until Coach Joe
::" Bokovttz's Vikings rallied
: with 6:02 left in the game.
:. Symmes Valley came ~ back
: on a 44 yard pass play from
.~ Ron Broham to Allen Burcham. A run for the tying
: points was stopped. ·
,.
:
•
•
::

Maraudi.'r s 1n.ay be 0-4 llllW ,

'
Tig~t:::i

nnd ('nad1 Bnb Lutz. 'The
highly~f~IVl•rcd 'l'i~ers came

h• M;trauder Stadium hen•
Frid&lt;Jy night expecting i:tll
easy win.• tmt went home by
the .!!! kin'o( U1eir teeth as Uwy

.,,,,.,\_)arcly gtlt Dy the ·tads of.

Coach Charli~- Chaoeey, 9-7.
Tenth ranked in the sta te,
the Tigers sco red all nine
·points in U1e first quarter and
then U1e Marauder defense
got tuugh. l .ed by defensemen
• Mark Magnotta, Brent
Stanley, brothers Randy and
Brent
Arnold ,
Dave
Willicunsnn,
and
Van
Willford , the Marauders
didn't let the Tigers mount
!'
any serious threi::llthe rest uf
the .cuntest .
Meigs gave Ule Tigers and
fans alik.e some taste that
they might have a few .
sw-prises in store when Mike
play . On ground in t-enter of photo is Marauders' Brent
FUMBLE - Meigs forced an Ironton fumble Q/1 the
Wa yland took the · Tiger
· Bolin (82). On right is MHS tackle Brent Arnold ( 71 ).
MHS one to stop the Tigers' first scoring threat dn this
opening kickoff and raced 47
yards to the Ironton 39 before ·
_. '
the last Ironton defender
nailed him. But Meigs was
forced to punt and Ironton
be_gan showiJg why they wer e
ranked in tfie state.·
.
Starting on their own 15, the
By MYRAM BORDERS
Nevada at Las Vegas .
tory
judgment
and before COtlgre~s," Tarkanian
Ironton lads took 12 plays tn
LAS VEGAS, Nev . iUP! J- . The ruling may ca~se t-he permanent injunction against said . " I feel we had a great '
put ifl on the Meigs Three.. . Ba•ketba ll coach Jerry Tar- NCAA,
a
voluntary .the university .to preve.nt the case." ....... ,:"
But t;hen Williamson made kanian has scored perhaps regula tory body for the action.
The coach said his players
speedster Juan Thomas ., the most significant victory conduct of collegiate athletes,
as
well he had been damaged
Tarkanian was j ubilant
cough up the ball on !he one of his career ln a COW't too sha rply revise its- ab'out his legal victory and by NCAA allegations and he
and Williamson pounced on d~cision blasting the NCAA investigative pra ctices In the said, "The NCAA will have to said the athletic asi;ociation•s:
it. Meigs had the momentum, and permitting him to remain cases of suspected rules change jts investigative probe had hurt recruiting ofDEEDS ON THE GO - Ironton's &gt;-7. 141}-pound senior halfback, Bodie Deeds, picks up
but on the first play from on his job at the University, of vio lations.
new athletes by UNLV and;· procedures."
gain against host Meigs in SEOAL battle in Pomeroy Friday. Ironton won on a safety, 9-i.
scrimmage Greg Becker was
"challenged the credibility' o1 •
District
Judge
!ames
He
said
he
would
be
happy
Chasi ng Deeds is Meigs ' Tim Faulk 155 ). -G reg Bailey photo.
hit behind the goal line for a
'
Brennan Friday granted to testify at a Congressional our program."
sal ety and a 2-fj Ironton lead . J5
Judge Brennan , sai d·. ~
Tarkanian a perman•nt hearing on the NCAA
After the safety, Dave Fumbles, lost
2~ 2
"When one sifts through the;.
· 5·3
injunction agains( UNLV's investigative proced\l'te!~~ ·
Blake's kick gave Ironton Penalties
10
10 action in severing the coacil
The NCAA action against evidence presented to this14
13 from the basketball program,
good field position on the First downs
UNLV and
Tarkanian court the action demanded byZ
Ind . Ru shing
Marauder 43. Ten plays later,
a sanction demanded by the prompted Rep . James the NCAA against- the
Ironton
with six seconds left in the Rushing
NCAA.
Santini, D-Nev ., to call for plaintiff can be red uced to'
TCB Yds
first period; fullback Rod Deeds
7 55
In Septef1lber, .the NCCAA s uch
a
Congressional one word - iOcredible. ''
9 50 placed the -UNLV bllsketba li inves tiga tion. Rep . John
Boykin plowed over from the Williams
He sHid Tarl&lt;an ian's
15 46
one and Joe Fletcher booted Thomas
reputation
had suffere d
on
probation
for
two
Moss,
D-Calif.,
head
of
the
team
Boy kin
13 42
the extras for a 9-fj .Iron ton .J"otals
44 193 years for alleged recruiting Oversigh t and Investigations "irreparable · damage ,"arid
lead.
Meh;~s
vio la ti ons and favored Committee, has'said he would th~ coach had' been denied
TCB Yds . academit
A turning point in the game
treatmen t of" have a decision within a few liberties guara nteed unde~ ,
Becker
7 14
came in the waning minutes Willford
athletes.
,
days on whether• a probe the 14th a1nendmen t and had
13 41
of the second period. Meigs Way land
been denied due process. ,
Judge Brennan, in his would be conducted.
l
6
started a drive on its own 34 Young
7 23 ruling, singled out NCAA
" I would definitely testify
3 3 investigator David Berst and
and 11 plays later had a first Elkins
Soulsby
3 4
. down on the Ironton four ya rd Totals
said he " had an obsession to
38 . 91
line . But in four tries, the
Passing
the point of paranoia to harm
Marauders co uldn't p~sh the Ironton
C YG the plaintiff ...
FRANKLIN W. QUILLIN, JR., D:O.S.
,,'
2 19
ball across and had io. Fletcher
"David Berst threatened,
Deeds
I
21
relinquish the pigskin .
PEDODONTIST
Totals
3 40 ·coerced, promised immunity,
'
Another thrllling play of
Meigs
. promised rewards fo athletes
Wishes to announce the
that first half came after the
"'
C YG in his eff ort to · obtain
·
relocation
of
his
Qffice
for
the
6 73
Ironton tDuchdown on the Wayland
derogatory informa ti on
1
4
ensuing kickoff. Speedy Billy Becker
Totals
7 77 &lt;.~gainst Tarkanian."
Practice Of Dentistry For Children To
'
Elkins took the kick and ·
Scoring - lroriton : Safety,
Tarkanian,
who wa s
raced 50 yards before being tackle by Bo_ykin ; Boy'ldn, l notified by UNLV he would be
6171 Childers Road
stopped, but two plays later yd . run , Fletcher kick . severed from the athletic
Barboursville , W.Va .
the Marauders coughed up .Meigs · Sou lsby, 1 yd . run , program Sept. 9 a lthough he
(Behind Guyan National Bank
Blake kick.
the ball and the momentum
Rl. 60 E . or29st.E
Score by quarters :
remained on the pa}Tolf as a
was stopped.
·
(304) 736(8906
Iron .
9 0 0 Q-9 professor , had fil ed · a
Office Hours by Appointment
0 0 0 7-7 com pla int seeking a. tleclaraIn the third period, Meigs M
had the ball for all except
•
nine plays. With 5:55 to go in
the quarter, Jimmer So ulsby·
intercepted a Tiger aerial
and raced 25 yards for a fir st
down on the Ironton 46.
Thirteen plays later, with
11 :57togo in the ga me, Soulsby got the nod to plunge over
from the one yard line for the
Mara4ders' score. Bla ke
added the extra point, and
that',s the way the game
ended, 9-7.
But the excitement wasn't
over.
Ironton was threatening
TIGER SACKED - Meigs' Van Wilford (32) brings down an unidentified Ironton ·
with
fourth
and three on the
quarterback Bobby Williams on this play. No. 63 in rear is Meig5' ou tstanding guard and
Meigs
10
yard line. But
8th
lineba cker, Brent Stanley.
Tiger on right is Marty Sci or 184) .
,.
Wayland broke through the
N..,w •s II•~;~ best !lr:m:l IIJ pa1nt ~ ou r r1ouse e • le" O' ana J'/ 1111 t•1~~P ::.utH'•
House Paonl S r~te prrces you do n t ... ant to ,.,a ,r flnotii Pr oa 1·• h"'l' "'e •t:dl
line and nailed Boykin for a
hQnesl.,jo .gosh ~a~"'4S un-Oe&lt;! " &amp; 8 ;ury su~.ll:l' 111gn Qllal1!y 11 0use JlaiiiiS
four yard loss and Meigs
tne ell5y on oa•n t ~ mat tas t o~aulo l ui 'Y tor year~ A na ,11 yOrH o~,m ~ B1"'Y
~ ! O ro' VOU get d IQ!
lh&lt;c&lt;ll SUP&gt;?! j)"C!!S
\&gt;VPJ:H IJ,I Ir' l -)'liU !.j!ll &lt;JIIOI
started a final dnve. But time I'
• you r quest•ons an 5wm ca ilbcut_ltQ ,Y 10 oo tne J0tl rrgt1' Mot• on nDfi and
ran out with Meigs on the
5ave. w1th SnpPr dnuse Pant Sale proc~&lt;; on DP,ln /1, BH•• yiH)~~~· p, r m~i ·
IrontOn 4a and on the move .
S.lve SUO Ga ll on
In that last try, quarterback
Kenny Young completed four
VELV·EASE
sa le priced
passes of four, !8, II and 10
LATEX HOUSE PAINT
~
FLEXSTEEL FINE ~ITURE
ya rds to move his team down
Goes 011 srnoOth i,Y and eas~y ones to;;
BEGINS ON THE INSIDE TO ASSURE
the fi eld.
"et~e ll lal looosh Uoa l won t la&lt;le O• c l r a l ~ ·
QUAUTY, COMFORT, BEAUTY AND OURABIUTY
woll lost Jo r years Brt:!atnes ou t mti•sl ur e
..,Way land had a fanta stic
.to nrolecl agaon~t costly bhsl,.nng il!ld
night on offense and defense_
pe,ehn!t Cre;an -uo •S e&lt;JS~ wrlh soan ano
... arer lti re;u1y 'T1Uo&gt;d color~ a no '"I hole
The"!40
pound
senior
had
only
•
l()!llj m;t tC1!-ITI81&lt;:!d coto r~
six yards rushing, but caugbt ~- _
~~
nmrm·s ··uww~
six Youn~ aeri~ls for 73 yards
OlUlCilQI
fUIW:$
and some important first
downs . Coach Chancey also
,,
•
praised -Young for .doing ad
outstanding job- at signalca llin g, and on defense
Stanley led the Meigs crew in
holding the ..!!'&gt;tent Ironton
. .
- offense in check as he had 12
:--...
.
.
.'f ,.
' -M£-1 .
tackles. Willford had eleven
tackles while Williamson had
nine and Rr1ber t Parker.
Young, and Tim Faulk each
Sa~te S2.BS galtoo
had s'even .
Chancey praised his
HIGH GRADE
sale prtced
',
inter io r
linemen
for
HOUSE PAINT
,.
c.:ontrtJIIin~ Ironton'S ' fine
T'~·"l' '•'' 'H.H• ,w_r1 r, ..-1,flfoll 1 O.,u .. r :,,, , &lt;til l

North Gallia 's ground
was led by senior Bill

0

Interceptions
Fumbles

I

---.,

I
By Quarters:
2 North Gallia

attempts. Senior
Justice Penalized
· 7-65 7-65
had another good night
· getting 117 yards in 26 cracks.
.Jon Bokovitz paced Symmes
Valley's ground game with
114 yards in 24 carrie~ .
The victory gave North Sandayls Probable Pltcben
Gallia a 2-1-1 record while
United Press International
Synm1es Valley dropped to 0(All Times EDT)
4. The Pirates host Southern
• American League .
Friday night.
Cleveland (Camper .~) at
Symmes Valley goe• to Toronto (Lemanc-zyk 12·16),
Southwestern.
1:30 p.m .
STATISTICS ~ .Baltimore (Palmer 20-11)
DEPARTMENT
NG SV at Boston (Tiant 12-a or Aase
First Downs
14 11 6-2), 2:00 p.m.
·
Yards Rushing
2f2 !84
Detroit (Ruhle 3-5) at New
Yards Passing
0 58 York (Tidrow 11-4 ), 2:00p.m.
Total Yardage
272 242 .--~ seattle (Abbott 11-13). at
Passes Attpt.
2 7 Chicago (Stone 1~-12 ) , 2:1~
Passes C&lt;lmpt.
0
2 p.m.

8 0 0 0-8

.o 0 0 6-6

Sym. Valley

Minnesota (Goltz 19-11) at
Milwaukee (S laton 10-14),
2:30p.m.
Ca!itornia (Hartzell 8-ft) at
Kansas City (Leonard 19-12),
2:30p.m. , ·
Ollkland (Blue 14-19) at
TeiBs (Polonl Q.O), 3:05 p.t;n.
JUSTICE CRASHES UP MIDDLE - North Gallia's
Nattoaal Lea111e
Chicago (Burris 14-15 and • - Rex Justice (20) slams up the middle for yardage in
Bonham 11}-13) at Pittsburgh
(Jones ()-l) and Whitson 1.0), 2, 1' 35 p.m.
New York (Zachry 9-13) at
I:05-Jr.ID.
Atlanta (Ruthven 7-13) at St. J..,uis (Forsch 21}-6), 2:15
Montreal (Rogers 17-1~) at Cincinnati (Nonnan 14-12), p.m.
Philadelphia (Lerch !1}-6 ), 2:1~ p,m .
Houston (Richard 17-12) at

Friday's victory over Symmes Valley , In background
watching play is North Gallia's Marty Glassburn (85) , ~
Bruce Gabriel photo. ·
los Angeles (Castillo J.fj)·, San Francisco (Barr 12-15),
4:00p.m.
4:05p.m.
San Die~o (Shirley 11-18) at

-·

Cage coach ··s cores court·victo
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�..
C~-The Sunda~

•

-

~

--

'
, ..

Times-Sentinel, Swtda~ . Oct :!, 19i 7

·~
J~1ek Smatht•rs ran t•igm
'· nrds to flHl'dlrt followt.&gt;d b.v
;.m tneomJll ete ('Oil\'NSion

st ralg
'· ht wm
· over Jackson the
Bulid 0 ~as n ertcd I'" first
·
d
· st 81 ·
ds
O!,rys.· h~ d ~u
, y&lt;Jr
117
ru sh mg, but h 1t on e Jght 0

-

l'·7- The Sunday Times.Senunel, Sw1dav, 0&lt;1 . t . 1977

•

Athens edges Jackson ~12-7 after_ fine .goal li~e stand

·

.'

Powerful Logan rips (Weflston team, 49-0
.

The lronmen coughe-d up
the ball three times on
fumbles and . lost them all
while Athens lo•1lhree of four

Ju.sll Jenkins was ~"topped for
LOGAN - 'lltc powerful downs
whilt·
limitirl''
l&gt;Cnod a s tht•y pUt Zlt&gt;Oints on then Dave Emerson crashed
ATHF. :\'S. ~ ln a surprisinJ.! qutuh•rtxH:k Mttrk Jenkms quartt..•rbHck t\ 1 W~1lton round
C
~
no 0"am .
Logan hieftains opened· Wellston to a,net uf four rir~t Ow board.
in from the orie. and Smith's
dt spla: (I( tru e ._'lit the Athens ' ra~·t-!.1 7~ ~ otrdst o paydirt with end J ohn S~hunn~nbach wlth
In ,l, h,.t&gt; fourth quarter
defense of the:i1' 1976 SEOAI. , duwns and total .\'ardaue M
This demolition . '•c1•an kick made it 28~ at halftime.
Hulld tl~S t u u~hl'd out a 12·i
J ~1Sh Jt•nkms· ktck making it
a 25 yard tourhdown pass but
"
., "
' Jackson shoved to a first and
t1tle Friday' night with an 7l , all on tin• ground .
when quartt.•rback Scott
In the third period John
nctor" \Wrr nsiung J arkson i..{) "tth 8.30 left in the first thl' 1"011\'rrsion ktf'k failed . pas..,.
MJwno;.~" l....W..-ve-o~l-~111e-AH&amp;-2 yard lin e.--!"'~esJ&lt;&gt;r ~~.r!'.~~!h.!~-~~~~-Fflcllry-·PcttreJTs----l- _llllpre,sive· 49~~ohn Kemper taurtchcd..tbc.._G ~pped.aurighl_j'ard ..Kemper. recorded his second
Fnday m~ht USln~ ·lw O-~\)'ll- ·QU811&lt;r .
- - - -- --'-'ll!'..Hulldog&gt;Ur.alled 7~ at ·
.
the Wellst on Golden !lockets. -S&lt;'Qrtrr~ paraclt' wJtlt a one seorin~ pass to end Malt) TD of the conte&gt;t on a three
liJ;.r !'tands and two Ironmcn
Athrns got on th~ board in halftime but snarled out in two lieree Jacks&lt;Jfl threat.&lt; to but fo~r pla)'S later the Bull· mtercepted . . .
"kson
f1n, 1shed with ' )·oume•s
to Wa verly while
Ja
preserve
the
shak~·
12-7
lead
.
-&lt;lo~s
took
over
at
the
13
as
the
...
.
J
In recof d'mg tht&gt;ir tenth .· ~·ard scorm~ run in the first Hallett and Dave Emerson yard run and Smith toed the
mistakt•s to ga m the big. win . the S('{'Lifld quart er foUowin.R thl• tbini..period tu recover a
·
'"
I
•
I
s
r
lied
up
Jackson
will
ho~1
Meigs
.
0
mnsecutive gridir-on vil..'tory period With Jeff Lee Smith kicked the J)llint after.
Tht• 1ronmrri. who- alway s the return of a pass in· Ja ckson fumble- a t the JHS 24 .. Midway m the third quart~r de£ense spilled J ackson .;...ven mil {own '
upriglrts .
.
Ja
ckson
had
a
fourth
and
one
backs
for
II
yards
in
losses.
169
yards
on
the
ground
,
but
Score
by
quarters:
over
tw o seasons the kiCklll~.Jh~. e&gt;tra ·pni1iL
. Brad Tucker blew over
Gasser
opened
the
Soot!
gJ\'l' :'\rhens fits. seored first
tt.·reeptton to the lrorunen 30 yard stnpe,
7 0 0 0-- 7
ln registertng their fourth completed JUst one of three Jacksonn1icftains rolled up " lan- ' Logan '§.. offenst' emu latr·d from the one with Smith fourth period St'Oring with a
on tht•Jr first possession when. yard !mi.&gt;. On thr third play
On thr third play fullback . at the Athens II yard line , but
0 6 6 0--! 2
passes lor 15 yards.
Athens
ta &gt;tic 420 yards and 25 first Ohio State in the second kickln¢ the point alter, and one yard sneak with Smith

ag•in booting the polnt alter .
The final Lo~an tally c~me
on a t ~'0 yar!l nlfl by junior
t ailback · Ron ' Swain and
Smith bootedJli'Lsixth extra
point.
An outstanding effort by
the Logan offense was
complimented
by
the
defensive unit, which limited
the Rockets t o just four first

.,

MITCH ';EASE. son of

~

\tr . and Mrs . Willi:Hit
'\;c_•a~;c of Rariur. is onrt•
again a mrmbt•r of tht&gt;
~1urif•tt.:l CoHl'gr Pionrrr
Font ball tt·am. This yt·ar :.ts
a junilll-. l\fitctt_is the

8-9

st.:lrLing tight t• nd for tht•

Piunf'ers. Last srason ht•
saw adion an d lt•ttf'rrcl ns
o.t halfba('k aftu spending
· his fn•shina u st•ason as a
tai lba&lt;·k. A gr.:~d~tt&gt; · of
Southrrn Hi g~ School · in
19i5. Nrast· . y,as n thn·r- ·
sport ((&gt;ttt'rnta n , Y.ith
1:Jttlstandiug honors in
football. llr madt' thr .~II·
S\" ,.\ C
tt•am
as
a

.
rumst1

~nng

II

Tur

'

- Shorgood

Chieken·
Franks·

R* STAR

4 HAVILAND DINNER NAPKINS

Snaokees

Honorable Mention. As a
junior, he was nominated
Prep-All Am&lt;riran. ,Mitch

Breallfast Sausage.·

Is S·lO. 185 and is- majoring

•

e

in art and management.

12~

USDA

ARMOUR n STAR

30-0 romp ·

HOT

C JNCJ~NATI

( UP!)
Tailba c k T om Schroeder
sto red three touchdowns
Fr iday
night ,
leading
Cinci nna ti. Moeller High
School to a 3(H) tro uncing of
Monsig nor Farrell High
.. .i'/2hool of Staten Island, N.Y.
Moeller hved up to its
reputation as one of the
n a ti on~ top high schoo l

. ···lb.89"

BEEF
HOTDOGS
-

'I '!119
JJeJtom Jlound •••••·.... ... ·~

...............................•J.39
GOLDEN CRI$P HICKORY SMOKED
........
. . .......... ...•.'f 49 Slieed _ $
Cmp JIOGst •• • • • • • • • • • • • • •• $J.39 ~'•••
~···· Tip StMirs ... •· • • • •·• ...'I • 69
ilrfoln Tip JIOGst .......... ~...... 'J.t9 ~•rloln
Baeon~~~:
·
.......
.
'J
q
~"'"L
.
'I
·
79
IOP ....... JIOGst......... ••. •
........
.
.-....
. 'I aq
Top aound StMirs • • • • • • • • ... . .,..
t:P'ao7:n.r ................'J.89
$ .. AA
.urouna aouna
-~.
~
•.
•
•.•
•
~
•
~
·~
~,.,i~: :: Cli'if,•~ -..~.e aa..rw ... 'Z.%9
.
.

GRJLL

DOGS .. • • • · ~~::SJ_09

1-lb.99" BACON. •• l·lb.SJ S9

Pkg.

··-··. . .
............. ··-·· - ..
.

':A.""-'!.···

.

DOGS. • • ' · Pkg.

e

1-lb.
Pkg.

CHOICE

- ~·

Moeller in

SLICED

'

.

~"'"""""'Y'L.-_,.l

- -·

.....

.

.

kicking . In the 1977 edition
are suggestions from NFL
stars Marv Bateman, . Keh
Stabler and Toni ' Linhart . .
Complete PP&amp;K rules and
suggested cond iti oning
exercises for contestants are
also lncluded .
Trophies will be awarded
for first, second and third
place in the local competliion
in each of the six age group~.
Winners can continue · on up
through the Zorie, District,
Area and Division contests to
the National Finals. · Local.
comP"tition will be held at 10
a.m. on Saturday, Oct. 8 at
the ,Meigs J unior High
football field in Middleport.
This is the 17th anniversary
year for PP&amp;K . From its
inception, there have been
more than 14 million par·
ticipants. PP&amp;K has been
sponsored by the Ford
· Dealers of America in
cooperation w.ilh the National
Football League for the past
17 years.

COL UMB US !UP!) - Here
ar:.e how the top ten teams in •
the
United
Press
In ·
ternat.ional Ohio High School
Board of Coaches footbal l

ratings fared Fri day night:
' Class AAA

\.

Cincinnati

defeated tiMMignor
N.Y. 30·0 .

2.

B.a rberton

Moeller
Farrel

defeated

Grove Ci t y 32·6.
3.
Canton
Me Kinley
defeated A ll i.ance 32 ·6.
4. Massil l on defeated Niles
34-7 .
5. Zanesville defeat ed ·
Columbus Linden 41 -12.
6. Sa ndusky lost to Findlay

21 ·6.
7.

the

scor in g for Moel'l~r \)'ith a 4vard touchdown burst in the
fi rst quarter. Tailback Eric
Ellington scored J or the

otiMASSAG£
UQUIOOISM

Co

Po~

Cincinnati.team in the second
quarter on a 21-yard TD run,
putting Ml"'ller up IH at
. halftime.
The Moeller defense,
meanwhile, held Farrell to
only two first downs in the
first hall .·
[n the second
hall,
Schroeder scor'ed twice for

D£1£1GtM1

·

t

oetergen '
20c: Off lABtl

Gahanna

Lin col n

defeated Reynoldsburg 48· 16 .
· 8. Pfinceton lost to Lima
Senior 1·5·13 . 9. Lakewood St. Edwards
pla ys Kettering Al ter ton ight.
If 10. Walsh Jesuit defeated
Akron Hot?an 17-o:
Class AA

1. Elyr ia Cath olic plays
Elyria West tonight .

. 2. London defeated Clark
Northeastern 87-o·.
3. Wyoming ~efeat ed
Cincinnati Greenhill s 14-0.
4. St . Marys Mem orial
defeated Elida 14-12.
S. Columbus Watterso'l lost
to Upper Arl ington ::: 1 G.
6.
Urbana
defeated
Spring field Shawnee 13-0.

Moeller, on touchdown runs

7. Orrville de feated Wadsworth 9:7.
8. Sf . Clairsville defeated

of one and 36 yards. Farrell

went to the aerial route to in a
se co nd -half
comeba c k
attempt, but Moeller players
inte rce pted five passes on the
'iew York team.
Kicker Harry Oliver closed
out the scoring for Moell er
with a :,5.yard l1eld goa l in the
fourth quarter.
A crowd estimated at 25,000
was at the University ol
Cincinnati's Nippert Stadium
to watch the battle between
MncUer , Ohio's top-ranked
high schoo l footba ll team,
cmd Farrell. similarly ranked
j n. New York .
The win wcts, M Oeller ~ s 28th
i n-cHm~o , while the Cincinnati
te am s nap ped Farrell's
\vinmng streak at "20.
Moeller coach~rry Faust
S:.iid the gam~ was "super for
hi ~ h school footbalL
·
" We'll bring in teams fr om
Texas and California· in the
future, " Faust promised .

)

DF&amp;K

How top 10
teams fared

their offerisc sc·ored in every
quarter wh ile their: defense
stymied Farrell throughout
the long-awaited high school
gridiron battle .

opened

near Or

,,· .. '

'

~.........

Pkg.

•

foo tball powerhouses, a:-;

Sc h r~eder

,)

are

.

named thr
Leagur's M\"P Back as a
st·nior. Hr madt' the t\li\\35

Distrirt team in both his
.junior and srnjor seaso ns.
and both years also
recrivod All
State

~

on puntin g, passin g, and

sop h(lmore. juoior. and
senior and

Deadline

downs •nd 71 net yards. while
I
0
r~rv..y ering six or seven
Wellston fumbles .
Gasser was his usual
sensatlO!lal selLas he..com· ·
--I=pleted eight of 14 passes for
176 yards and one touchdown
POMEI!OY ~ There is just
while Dil'¥&lt;' Eme&lt;O&lt;JA paeed oet
002 010 100- s 11 1 one week r.emaining for
the Chieftaln rustl'er~ith 64. N . ~i-1\er and ~~r~~~~Gu2id~/ youngsters in Meigs County
yards of a total 2y.
Lyle (JJ and Munson . w- to reg1ster for the local P.unt,
-'Pass &amp; Kick competit1ons,
Next Friday Logan jour· Hiller , a 12 L - Gu idry, 16 7Any person between the agesof 8 through 13 can register at
either
Dan
Thompson
Ford
in
Middleport
or
Country
Cousins
Restaurant
in
Pom·
eroy. Registration wili
be held up to and including
the day of competition .
Reg istrBtion and com petition
are both free.
When contestahts register,
each entrant gets a · free
PP&amp;K Tips Book. lt contalns
sliJPER MARKETS
helpful pointers from the pros

.- '

AR,.,OUR *STAR GRADE A

OPffi DAILY

neys to Ironton for a · show
down with the only SEOAL
foe to defeat them last · ~
wfiile . Wellston travels to
Gallip(Jiis to take ·on the
winless Blue Devils.
.
Score by quarters :_
Wellston
0 0 0 0-- 0
Logan
7 21 7 14--49

• Buckeye South 36·16.

· 9. Akron St. Vincent plays

Lorain Southview tonight.
10. Ironton defea ted Meigs

.. i111111 i11 thi• M. "-"' 111d to ........ Melt

re1pt~11iWe

Fr·e neh
Fries

U.S. No. 1 ROUND WHITE

C

toes
10-(J, '8tt9
MILD Yn~OW COOKING~

~

~-lbs. ~

Ontons

"CHAZT BRAND"

Mcintosh Apples ••••. 3~
Wild Bird Food • • • • • • s~b.

THJST~
LE"'o""o"'WN

1.• . Hkn . lit .

NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
fUPl) - Scotty W. easily
took the featured eighth raee
at Thistledown
Friday
running the si~ furlongs in
1:124·5.
Th·e winner , ridde n by
David Placke, . pa id $0 .80,
$5.40 and · $3.40. Crim son ,
Valleywas
second
a nu
Silkydunit was third.
, . •
The 7-5-3 ninth race trifecw .
ol Swift Quiver, Port G'inger
and Ods Bodkins paid
$3,295.80. The 9-4 daily double
nf Classic Streak and Beulah
Mae was worth $69.20.

Bog

6

DOG FOOD Chl&lt;k ; n &amp; Lim •

• • • • n .JO , 1oo

· ·

~

1~

.

. .

.

.

~

ss.4 oq
•s1
f

FLOOR C~EANER ••••••• , ••.•u
mol

•

DISINFECTANT ••,..... ... ;. .

·

$

....

.

Granville tonight . .
.
3. Bluffton lost to Pauld ing

1-lb.,
8-o~. Pkg.

20'0,

4. St . Henry defeated RockPark~ay 10-7.
5. (tie) West Liberty Salem

ford

qe
PIE SHELLS •••••• ., .s!'~~:; 4
e
q
1
CORN ON THE COB.
ttiDHII

1.39
qqe

9. (tie) Shadyside de
. leafed

u ....... c.

LYSOLSPRAY.. ..............
GRAPE JELLY ••••••••••••••••
·

ltGIATCII ...1.teU•1. 1'111 .

Bellaire Sf . John 24-0

NEW! BUITONI FOODS

. , 10

4-et.
• • Pkg.

LASAGNA or
MAN1con1 W/SAUCI • • • •

t4....
; •• Pkg.

9. ·(fie) Woodsf ie ld lost fa
Caldwe l l 20-7.
, •

qqe

,;,.,,,qe

' ' MEAT,CHilSior
'
·
EGG PLANT PARMIGIANA. , • ,. , .. , •• , •• "'·

BOSTON ( UPl) - Seven
Boston Marathon winn~r s are ·
. among some 3,000 entrant.s in .
the first annual Labatts Freedom Trail Road Race
Sunday, starting at 11 a.m.
The eight-mile ra ce begins
and end.s at Waterfront Park
and will be rWl over parts of
the • Freedom Trail in
Boston's North End and
through the s treets 11f
·Charle.stnwn , Cambridge,
Back Bay, Beat'On Hill and
Government Center.
. Among the wp entrilnt.s ln
t he race is 1975 Bosto n
Marathon . winner,
Bill
R.odiefs, from Melr ose·~
Mass., who also won the 1976
New York Marath on in
record time , and 1972
Olymp ic Mar-athon go ld
medalist Frank Shorter .

$.1 ·~
•q

,.,,,_8qe
.SJ 69
··--· • • • · • .

COOKIE MIX""'·""'·'-·aoonot-Ao,on2
.
·
SJ I~
CHEESE PIZZA MIX •••••••• """''·"•· • ~

· ~'::t'i'&amp;"M:,;i'~I!:"Mini or ~ef Ravio~ ... SJ •OS .

,,.,,..,,

•

•

·

8. Rockford Parkway loc;t to
St. Henry 10-7.

·..:.. ~

e

CUT GREEN BEANS ••••••• ,.u... . ,.,
-·~

Jonathan Alder 62-2.
· 2·. Newark Catha I ic plays

Benton 20 -7.

77e
6:J e

HUNTS KETCHUP •••• , • • • • • • • •

Class A

I . West Jefferson defeated

defeated Riverside 33·6.
"
s. (tie) Clark Southeastern
defeated Cedarville 24 ·7.
7. Arlington lost to Liberty

PIT RITZ

•

""""
....

9-1.

HEINZ ::.. . CRINKLE CUT

ter ty,...apllt-' .,.., 1.

•

�. .......

..

•
C~TheSunda) Tm1es-S&lt;nt mel Sunda' •CWt !,19Tl

.FriiUJy's high ·
~

Football Results

Untted Press lnternatton.al
- - - AlCron-

B uc--n;t E-1

TO

Alo..ron

Garf iel d 7
Akron E 7 Akron F1resfone

~l"fliOr I~ ""Pttncelon IJ
Ltsbon 1... Spnngf1eld Jt!f
lt&gt;r,.on 1..1
Locl-.l and .J2 Landmark 2.J
LOl.HSvtlle .JO Marltnqton o
Mansf teld
Mad tson
17
Ashl~nd 0

Lt!p&lt;"

Oh10 H1gh Schoo l

7

(fie )
Akron N l7 Cv,ahoga Palls 0
Ama nda Clt-a rcreek 8 Logan
Elm 8 (li e )
Archbold 40 Liber ty Cen ter 0
Ashtabula St John 16 Con

~~ ~~~~c~~ ~(~~~~.:a;er 0
fv\ass dlon J Niles
3

L&gt;

Waverly conies fro'm behind to edge
GAHS, snaps iosing Spell in SEOL
.

school scores

..

·-

7

Millf ield 1 Brush o
Mentor l.t Maple HeJghts 0
neau1 0
Mtarn t Trace 34 La ncaster 6
Ash tabula
Harbor
18 Mlii! rrtls burg 7 Tr otwood
Mad rson 2
Ashtabu la 12
A yresv dl e 20 Wa yne "Frace 6 Mtddletown 7 Newark, O
Mrd dletown Penwrck .so
Bart5er ton 32 Grove C1ty 6
Ba y Vil ta9e 36 Fa 1rv1ew 8 ~
Frank li n 22
:
Bellvue ( Ky ) -l3 Cm Count r y Mrd v1 ew 21 Brookstde 8
Mt ller 15 Alexander 14
(
Da y 14
Mil ton UnrQn 11 Bellbrook a
Benv ue 21 Bucyr us 0
Monervo 18 Northwest 11
Ber ea 26 Lakewood 2
Be rne Un1on- b F a 1rf1Ci d Napoleon 38 Syt'lanta South
Un 1on 6 (ttel
N ;~w ~;XI ng ion 13 New
Be;.;ley 14 Buc keye Va lley l
Concord J G 6
•
Boardma n 19 Struthers 0
Bow lmg Green 15 Fostona 8 Ne-~ Phdade lphoa 6 CantonS
6 (lie)
Cad1z 24 Me adowbroolo- 6
New Rtc hmond d4 Western
Ca ldwell 20 Woodsf 1etd 7
Brown 8
Cambr rdge 21 Mar tms Ferry
Nordon10 33 Cle Lmcoln w 7
14
Canal W 1nc h est~r 9 M IIIE~ r~
Norm andy 16 Valley Forge 3
sp9rt 8
North College Hill 51
Canton St Thomas 28 Can
Harrtson
North
Ga ll01a 8 Symmes
!reid 16
Valley 6
Can ton McK rnley 32 All tance

WAV ERLY - Galhpohs
scored hrst hHe Fnda\
111 g-ht. but Waverl)!--bouneedbark to edge Coat:h W1llard
~ Budd~ )
Moores
Blue
De\IIS , 8 6 1n t he 1977
Sout heastern OhiO Lt:&gt;a gue
upener for both i::iquacts
It was Wa \erl; 's f1r s t
l'tmfeiencewUl slncea34to7
, lctory over Wellston on Nov
3. 1972, snaAping fhe T 1ae rs
~"'"
e28-game losmg st r~ak mstde
the league Jt was also the
Tigers' first victory ever over
a Gallipolis team smce
JOIIIIng the SEOAI In !970
Waverly, now 2·2 on the
year, held the upperhand
statlstiCS·I;ISe, rackmg up H
f1rst doW!ls to the Blue Devils
nme The Tigers rushed for
165 yds (41 attempts ) and
QB U&gt;rne Weeter connected
on f1ve of nme aenals for 51
yards tone mtercepted ) and a

,

'

€-9-TheSunday Tm~es,!;entmel, Sunday, Oct 2,1977

Browns set for Steelers ~tilt

I

•
1
h
trappC'd ftH' \ards Uehtnd thr M dll1) tdll)!ht )ttbrlt'\ Ul t e
l!ue of SC II Il\llhi'R'~ ~-~'Z ig - G 1\~ ...lM.t:kftl'idl &lt;~ml t\\0
z.agMt."&lt;l- aer.oss...Lha held and - 'llftllllpktt• pdSSt'S t"'lH.ted tha t
"as on h1s \lo a} for ,, scorr th1 cat
Y.hen sophomore- sdfrt\' r4rL\
!\trk HobmS(11l t!ltt.'r&lt;.:epted
Hobmson pull ed hun do\\11 •' h.olfba&lt;k P•"s b\ &lt;"hu&lt;k
from bchmd On the pl.tv
lbump~on ld tl' 111 the thud
Robinson " as hlt · lth ,, 15- pellttdtlnthe i:Uuo. Dt•\' ll el'g ht
1
~
th (•AHS
yard face llht s k penalty , HIH. returueu lt to e •
putting, the oval on Calha's 27 i' ollo \\lll g a 15-yard
three
pcna lh ~lgamst tlw l 1gci ~.
Wrr tcr th3n fired a quirk
&lt;he Blut• DevilS marched 35
d
h
1 • t
shut u\er the mtddlr to
\.Hr s In etg t Pay s o
r1ght t.'Dd Da\•e Cla}tor
Wave rlv s 23 r"O succe'ss1ve
With 8 21 left, 11 ""' &amp;-all.
losses b.ock to the T1~er 35
Wtrte&gt;r than rammrd it up
ended that threat Simms
the nuddle for "hal pro1cd
punted dead to the WHS 17
to be the gamt"s "Inning
GAllS held then rc~amed
po!Uis
posseSSIOQ \\Ilh 7 52 left
GAHS threatened on nvo
Waver!) st opped Gall!a
h
d 1
f
f st
other occasiOnS .Enda\ ' fh e l rce ) ar s s wrt o a If
Blue Devils took the openmg do"n
and
r ega[ned
ktckoff and marched 41 yards possessiOn on 1ts 22 followmg
In eight p1ays to Wa verl y's 27, a Suruns punt \\ Ith 5 45 left
Th a t was th • Ias I IJmc
but a four·va rd loss (Don

GAllS had the pigskin
With all four Waverly
backs taking turns, the
Tlg-.s marched SO yards In
12 plays, "lndlng up on the
GAHS 29 as the final gun
sounded .
DefenSively for GAHS ,
Mark Sheets returned one
Wa verly mtercept10n H
)a rds Just before m
t ernussto n Big Charles
Roberts. 208 pound tackl~.
was m on several tackles fdr
the Blue Devils along. with
Tm1 Chevaher M1ke and Dan
Staggs, Simms and Robmson
Robinson returned two
punts fo r 36 yards and a poss
Int erception 19 yards
Fnctar• the Tigers play
Athens at home Ga lbpohs
"'II host Wellston F'nday
Here
are
Frtday's
statistiCS

"

INDIVIDUAL NET
YAROS RUSHING
IGalhpdltS)
Player
T&lt;;B YG Avg
N!ornson
14 56 4 0
Wrtlts
1
4 4o
Oabney
25 67 1 6
Harrington
3 1 '1 3
TOTALS
43 134 3 1
(Waverly)
Player
TCB YG Avg
Thomp5on
12 77 6 4

s

~:rrrer

27

54

13 41 3 I
112010
4t 165 4 1

Weeter
TOTALS

PI\SStNG
(Gathpohs)

Pia yeT
C A I YG TO
HarrmgJQ_n
0 1 0&lt; 0 0
TOTALS
Ol 0 0 0
( Waver I¥)
Play.er
C A I YG TO
~
59 I 51
1
Weeter
Thompson
0 I 1 0
0
TOTALS
S 10. 2 Sl
1
TeAM STATISTICS
G~
Ftrst do.wns
9

OP.ua.~mRnt

W
14

Yards rushrng
Lost rushing
Net rushtng
Pass aftempts
Com plef rons
Inter cepted by
Yards passrng
Total yards

160

BF.HEA,Oh1o (UI'I l - The
t:lcvt' land Browns have
cmer ~cd from a short week of
prddilc 111 guod health and
hJ¥ h s pirits for Sunday's
~ame agamsl Ule Pittsburgh
Steelers
W&lt;d e
rece,..e i
Paul
Wao field, out of'actton in last
Monday mght 's VICtory over
• New England wtth a hng.ermg
hamstring pull, IS expocted to
see at least lumted act1on
However all.pro defensive
tack le Je1 ry Sherk "Ill rest
h1s st1 a med knee for the thud
stra 1~ht game
Quarterback Bnan S1pe
Isn't Impressed by the so·
called " Monday rught Jlllx, "
a theory that teams playmg
111 a Monday mght game are
at a disadvantage when they
play lhe next ·sunday
Asked tf the JIDX might be a
fa ctm , S1pe sa1d, ''I don 't
• know I 've never play~d on a
Monday mght before "
The statiSti cs seem to dis·
co unt th e theory In 92
Monday rught games played
s mce 1970, the Monday
wmners have gone on to wm

18S

26 10
134 165

2 10
0

5

2

0

0

51 .

134 216
A5
51
tReturn y~r ds
104 29
Fumbles
2
5
Losl fumbl es
2
1
Penal tie ~
4 .tO 1 15
Punls
• 151 3 63
Recovered enemy fumbles
GAHS - ' Greg Harrington
Waverl y - Dave Claytor and
Don Malby
Sconng GAHS - Greg
Harnnglon, 26 yard run , 9 07
thlrO (run fatl) Waverly Dave Claytor fh:ree ya rd
pas:. fro m Lorne Weeter
8 21 thtrd (Weeter run )
Score by ~ua rters
_
GallopOI IS
0 0 6 ()-6
Waver ly
0 0 8 o-o
NEXT GAHS GAME Oc::t 7 ~ Wel lston home
Pta~ s

6

~

:... ...

Ci!rdmgton 13 Mt, Grl ead 12 N~~thmon t 16 W Carrollton
Care y 30 Bud. eye Centra l 6
Carrol ltqn 21 East Palest me 6 Norwa yne 14 Smrthvd le 0
Norwood 17 Anderson 7
Celma 13 Deflance 7
~
Chag rm Fa lls 29 Chardon 14 Oakwood 27 CarliSle 8
Oberltn 26 Well rngton 0
Crn Bacon. 22 Cm Purcell 0
Crn Colera tn 30 Crn Turp.n 0 Olmsted Falls 20 fAedtna 7
C1n Elder 43 Lexmgton ( Ky ) Pardora Gtlboa 33 Arcad1a 6
Parkersburg IW Va I 12
Br yan 6
Martetta 7
Cm Moeller 30 Fa rrell CNY J 0
Cm Oak H1lls 7 Ctn Northwest Parma 21 M dpark lA
Parmet Padua 40 Cle West
0
Tech 6
C n Sycamore 49 Glen Este 0
C n Wester n Hd1s 28 C n Taft Palnck He"ry 10 Swonfon lJ
Pau ld1ng 10 Bl uf fton 0
0
C n Woodward 30 C1n At ken 12 Perry 26 Jackson 11
Perry 37 Fa~rpo7! ~
Clea rfor' k 0 Delta 0 (t re)
Col Academy 12 New Albany Phal o 38 Morgan 16
P ckerrngto n 40 Liberty
8
Col Br tggs J6 Col 1\o\ohawk 0
Um on 2
Col DeSa les 42 Frank.l1n Hts 0 Ptqua 13 Fa1rborn Park HJ!Is
12
Col E"ast 7 Col Brookha ven 0
Col Independence la Col Plymouth 21 Danville 14
Port Clrnton 21 Toledo Wa1te 0
Hart ley 6
Col Northl and 19 Co l North 0 Ra '/enn a 6 F1eld 0
Col South 14 Col Easlmoor 7 Rea9 ng 16 Day Ch am made
Jul 1enne 0
Col Waln ut Rrdge J2 Col
R,dgedale 11 Wynford o
Central 0
Col Weh rle 14 Col Centenn1a l R1ttman 21 Hrllsdale 7
u
R1ver Valley 27 Elg 1n 7
Col West 11;1 Co~ Manon
R1verdale 27 Manon Pleasant
6
Franklrn 6
Col Whetstone 18 Col Mtffl n 8 R1vervoew 14 Ma ysv1 1j e 14
(lie )
Columbra 12 F relands 8
Columbrana &lt;16 Mineral Rrdge Roolsfown 18 Water loo 0
Salrna 13 Defrance 7
8
Sandusky St Marys 24 Avon
Columbus Gro ve 10 Spen
20
G~r'Y lie 14
Cory Rawson 21 McCom b 0 Sebn ng 19 Sfa"ton 7
Crooksv rlle J..Shen dan 0
ShadySi de 2A Bella"0!Joh ns 0
Dal ton 6 Dol yestown 3
Day Carroll 36 Day Jefferson Shelby 18 Tiffin Columbian 6
Sprrngboro 70 Peebles 6
6
Day Fa rr vreW 25 Da y Krser 6 Spnngf1eld Twp 34 South
Day St1vers Pat 6 Day Col
Ra ng e 13
Wh 1te 0
St Clatrsvtlle 36 Buckeye S 16
Def ran ce Fa tr vtew 49 Ttnara St Henry 10 Pa rkwa y 7
St Marys " Elida 12
0
Delp hos
Jefferson
16 Teays Valley 12 Col Beech
croft 7
Crestv rew 23
Tecumseh 13 Fa rrborn Baker
Dover 13 Coshocton 0
7
E Lt ve rp ool 0 Hamtlfon
Ttfftn Calvert 31 Sandusky
Garf1eld 0 lhe l
Perkt ns 6
Edgerton 25 Edon 6
Trpp CJ ty 34"" North r1 dge 12
Elyrra 7 Mar,on Hard tng 6
Eucltd 14 Wil lo ughby South 6 ifol W1tmer 21 Oregon Clay 7
Fa1r lqnd 10 Ne lsonvrlle York Toronto 7 Wellsvil le 0
Tnmble 50 Vtnton County 6
0
Troy 22 S pr ~n gf 1eld S 6
F1ndlay 21 Sandusky 6
Tuslaw 35 East Caiiton 0
Fort Frye 10 Fran tter 6
Fremont Ross 21 Loratn Ktng Twtn Valley N 36 Hamtlfon
Ross o
8,
Gahanna 48 Rey f\o ldsburg 16 Unrted Local 40 Crestvtew 0
Upper Arl ington 31 Col
Galton 12 Wt Hard o
Watterson 0
Garfteld He1ghts 30 Shak~r
Upper Sandusky 21 Norwalk 7
He1ghfs 7
13
Spnngfte ld
Geneva
14
Pa rnes v rll e Urbana
Shawnee 0
Rtversrde 0
Greenvtew 30 Waynesv il le 6 Ut tca 16 Ltck tng Va lley 16
lf1e )
Groveport 21 Wh1tehall 3
Ham11t on Taft 14 Crn lrlughes Va lley Vtew 14 Orxte 0
Vandal ta Butler 30 S1dney 14
6
Versa rlles 36 lndran Lake 14
Hilliard 35 Chtlltcothe 14
Hillsboro 17 Wash1ngtqn CH 0 W Portsmouth 16 Portsmouth
ND 6,
Kens•ot"l 28 Orange 0
Walsh J esur t 17 Akron Hoban
Ken'
~ ~ evelt 26 Ta ll madge

yards an Sl plays fr om
scrurunage
GAHS rushed for 134
yards In 43 attempts. QB
G
1
reg Harrington "'as ~2 n
passlng, giving the \l:sttors
134 total yards In 45 pla}s
from scrimmage.
G II 1 •
a lpo IS Jtm
lmms
punted Jo ur ttmes for 151
yards (37 7) while Waverly s
T1m Fredencks punted three
f
ds
tunes or 63 ;ar (21 0)
The Blue Devils, now 0-4:
overall, were led by sentor
tailback Gary Dabney and
sophomore fullback Scott

John Lehew, a n&lt;~t 1ve of
Pomeroy and a graduate of
Me1gs U&gt;cal H1gh Sch"'\1. 1s
expected to pla) a ma jor role
1n Ca pital
UruverSJty s
football fortunes th1s fall
Lehew, a 5 10 foot , 195
pound semor, 1s expec ted to
see actwn as a gua rd tht s
year · Th1s ts hls fourth season
of varsity footba ll at Ca pital
where he IS hopeful of helpmg
coach Gene Slau ght r no&gt;\ m

1

Bacon to face old mates
'

CINCINNATI (UPI ) - Coy
Is not exactly coy about 1t
Coy Bacon, the Cincmnatt
Bengals' vete ran defensive
tackle, hopes to have one of
the fmest games of ttis career
Sunday m San D1ego aga1nst
his former teammates, the
Chargers
~,
Two years ago, Bacon and
the Chargers came mto
Cmcmnat1 and suffered · a
hunultatmg loss Ba&lt;on
dedared after the game he
didn 't hke the amrgers' style
and ~&gt;Can ted to be traded
Shortly thereafwr he wa s
traded ,
1romc ally,
to

•

Cmcmnoll

" You kno\\ I'll be ready,'
the 34·year old Bacon sa1d m
antiCipation of the 4 p m
IEDT 1Sunday kickoff '11Je
worst pa rt of my life was
there m S~ n D1ego
"I hate to talk about 1t about people hke th1s - but
they ta lked about me so bad I
want t o pro ve I'm---not
fmtshed "
Satd Cincy w1de receiver
John Mc Damel, c We know
Coy's ready, , and we're ready
to do ,well fm hun, tup We.know what this game means
to hun and what he means to

us He's hke blood - keepsus
gomg ''
De s p1te t he e nthuswsm ,
Bengals' boss Bill Johnson
doesn 't lib'l!re Bac9n w11l get
so htgh that It m1g ht hurl hiS
performance
'Coy Baco n IS ve ry
mature ," scud J ohnson "He
can .a ppr uach th 1s
Without that h~pperung
ttigh a ll th e lime a nd such a
competitor that I don't thmk
he 'd let 1t affect hi s
performance to the pomt
where he couldn 't functiOn as c
a team player ' '

10·1 ~

Bv

SP.orts Transac hon s

Bu ft a lo - S1gned fr ee &lt;tgE'nt
1nebacker Greg Cothns
New Orle cu~s
PldCerJ wrde
receiver l arrv Burton on
nlured reser...-e
seattle
Stgned tree agent
I neba c ker M ke Jo•1(' S

When You Buy

•

~ Superbu~ger ·

34~·7

&amp;8TH

h1s 17tH ) ear as Crusader
head coach, Improve upon
last season s 5·3·1 mark
A btolog) maJor, LeheY. 1s a
me m ber of Kappa Iota
I ambda fratern lt) a nd
Varslt) Ca t Cap ital and also
IS on the wrestl mg sq uad,
ha' mg three letters 1n that
sport HIS parents are Mr
and Mrs William Lehew,
Anne St , Pomeroy
c

REGISTER FOR
PlA,STIC SHUTTER

SALE
20 Y.
OFF

J

01eqo

Pro Basketball
Boston - Placed forwa rd
Sieve Kuberskt on 1n1 ured
reserve . placed rook ies Tulane
center Jeff Cu mm rngs Wake
For£&gt;st guard Sk•P Brow,[! and
Bowlrng Green guard Tommy
Harr son wa1ver s

Regu\ar Pr\ce.

Wa sh ng ton
51 Lou!.
Philadelphr a
NY Gra nts
Central

,I

FOOTBALL

Ch cago
M1nneso1a
Green Ba¥
Det ro,t
Tamp a Ba y

NFL Standrng s
Un•ted Press tnter natron aJ
Amencan Conference

Bait. more
MramJ
New England
NY Jets
Bu ffalo

Houston
Cleve land
Pt ttsburgh
C ncrnnal

Centra l

I '

Gtve any room 1n your
home a facel1ft
wrth
uchly grained woll pan·
eltng Marked below our
regular low price durmg
Ibis bog sale event

.:::::~t@it.m

~

·=
"
~

SAVE 35•

HAMBURGER
MEAL
Regular
Superburger
Regular Frte s
Regular Drmk
Sl 59 Value

$ 25

&amp;

Wtth Th 1s Coupon

SAVE

~

...... 1 1 0

West

0 7 0

W l

l
1
0
0

1
1
7
2

500

500
500
000

T Pet

0
0
0
0

T Pet

100 1000
'1. 0 01000
1 1 0 500
1 1 0 500
L

T

A onepure
fh1rd chopped
lb 100 $
pet
beef steak With fnes
or baked potato , hot
bread and all you can
: eaf sa lad ba-r
Va Iue"'1 4oW I th Th IS Ca upon
_

SAVE 20•

i

40

Btg f1sh sandwtch, $
regular fries &amp;
regular drmk
$ 1 59 value

SALAD BAR
2 Dee p frted hsh
ftll ~ t s
or baked
potato, hot bread a nd
cole slaw or all you
ca n eat sa lad bar '

t

§

~ - Com~1nandftx 1tth'~ $
way you way you hke
1t Ommg room Only

W1th Thts Coupon

Exp1res 10· 15-77

WHITE OAK

'6.39

500
500
000
000

EASTlAND PECAN

WESTERN CEDAR

Pel

'2

Buffalo &lt;:~I Ball tmore
Ct nct ar san Otego
Denver at Sea ttl e
Green Ba y a! M nn
Houston al Mtamt
New E ng a t NY Jets
New Or lns at Ch1cago
NY G1ants al Atlanta
Phtladelph la at o crrotl
Prtt sburgh a t Cleveland
"St Lou's al Washrngton
Sa n Fran al Los Angeles
Ta mpa Bay at Dallas
Monday 's Game
Oa kland at Kan Ct iY n gh t '

BRISIOI. BIRCH
1/1

~BLUE

=·

401H~l

20% OFF

COMBINAnON
SAil $199

SHEAntiNG
llx4x8

ELECTRIC WIRE

PANELING ,
ADHESIVE

SALE

77'

$}999

REC. IKlXES
SALE

4~1

DAP

5 GAL
TOPPING

BATH TUB

Regular '7.25

SQUEEZE
TUBE

\4

RED BRICK &amp; MESA

55"

SALE

$646

PAN AND

20% OFF

Co"'"
b!Mtioft 09or
&amp;rtw Amenc:en bewlw
f\l99ld 11\lminum
c:onl1rut~•an Sc ""

':II

.,;:~ IIIII l ...-u ln
&lt; ludld Stolild.-d 111M

~

~~

23PC.
SOCKET SET SALE

SALE

$599

~ '

.

~

'"•-

~-----------------~
~ 1~
ALL.;AME ROCK : ''-.,, - - Gal

~.

alssToN ___o

'8,05

VANiTiES
'

30% OFF

$199

AllnnitK~rn

HARDWARE
, ,20"• OfF

Regular
115,99

I
I

:

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

4•110 FT.JLASTIC
·DRAIN PIPE

Good Seledion

In Stock
POWER TAPES

~.~

4" BRUSH
REG '5.99

2.39

1

All

HAND
Regulltr

'9.95

12"Xl2"

TOOlS

14'
SQ. Fr.

of long wea r

,

yoU expect for your

work shoe dol l'a rs

Wtth Thts Coupon

20%

Regular '7 25 Bucket

SALE

Regular

Des1gned to keep yo u
comfottable al l day
and de l1ver the
~~~~d

· SPINDELS

5 GAL JOINT
COMeot.IND

SPECIAL

to stay on d ul y when
you're ' on du ty

: large container.

WOOD

SET

'9.95

fo r workmen Ou a l1fy built

golden brown

$646

ROWR

MADERIA WALNUT

work shoes

14'' STAPLES
69' box

BUCKET

$}35

39'

%

Go to work
•
in quality

'

SALE

LACE

c:

LARGE FRENCH
FRIES

TUBE

ETOilE &amp; VILlAGE £F"1I btiiWn

25
Outdoorsman

SALE $1144

CAULK

CEILING IIQXES
SALe

$269

FOOT

SALE '6.29

§ frenc~ fnes 1n a

FURRING
56' EACH
All Ttle In Stock

Exptres 10· 15-77
t uumiiuuuu tit ttltttt utttlltutrr ttt tr 111" '" '""'"'"""" ''""

I

I

I

I

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I

'(

GOT ..

~!

PRICID

RIGHT! ~

•

' '

B&amp;D

SHEET

WHITE
ALUMINUM
GUnER

NUTMEG
GOI:D

BlADE

7.99

COCOA PINE

l/8

$319

1

Regular '8.99

;

5

'5.49
'6.99 '6.29
'9.75 '8.75
'7.49 '6.49

C'IPRESS

SAVE 10•

W1th Th1s Coupon

Exptres 10· 15· 77
i ulttlltttllllltttt ltlttttlltttltt ttttl ttttrltt tttlrtututttttllttttttnttttt

'6J9

'SALE

All PAtNT
AND BRUSHES

ssgm

Exptres 10· 15·77

SAVE 35•

. FISH FILLET
PLATTER

BRANDY BIRCH

WOQO PRE RNISHED MOULDING

~

§

'4.49

AUTUMN

W1lh ThiS Coupon

Expires 10·15·77

MEDIUM TONE

MOSS GREEN

BIG FISH
MEAL

BIG BEEF
PLAITER

Exp1res 1015 77

=
~

1 0

500

34~

=ltllllllltlltlttttrtttlttllltttl lltttttllltr rlrtttrllllltlllttttrttttllllllltltlltr tttrttltlllllllllllttttttltltlttttrttttlllllllttttrtttttllltnttllltllllttttttlltllttttttlfiiUUttlllllltttttlltlrrtrttttrrntunnu

I

1 I 0
1 I 0
I

118

Pet

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SAVE 34•

standings
.

T

7'14" SAW

Regular '27.95

500

0
L

REG.

4'18' DESCRIPTION

500

Sunda¥ s Games

0 0 1 000
Denver
2 o o 1 000
Sa n Ot ego
1 1 0 500
Kansas CJiy
0 2 0 000
Sea ttle
0 2 0 000
National Conference
East
W L T Pet
Dal las
2 0 0 1 000

.=

1
1

rr
REGULAR
'5.60
12"116

SAVE
NOW

12 2 Wtth Ground
250 Foot Roll

500

500

0
0

1 1 0 500
020000
020000

W l

w..t

0

I
I

W

Los Angeles
East
Atlanta
W L T Pet
New Orleans
2001000 Sa n Fran c sco
2001000

W

Oa~ l and

t

SHEET

~

B¥

I

•3••

Mon tre al
Acautred tile
contrac t of right hander R ck
Sawyer on wa1vers fro m sa,-,

5 WARM
MORNING
WOOD BURNERS
IN STOCK

BLACK

STARTS

~tOur

Braves top
Cleveland

iii

---FRiiiEE

Ba se ball

Press Internation al
Pro Football

Un~t ed

Frtday

........ ·'
. ,. ..·. .':·

OCTOBER

Sports transactions

I

Grid

years

i

expected to play key
,:g/e in f;ap's grid fortun~

,,

Cincy ticket
pnces gorng
up in 1978 "--

"\

Le~ew

Mornson Dabney piCked up
67 yards m 25 t r1ps and
Mornson 56 yards m 14
caiTJes \

SOUTH BEND, Ind (U P! l
- J ohn Shumate and Btlly
Km ght scored 18 pomts
ap1ece Fnday mght to lead
the Buffalo Bnaves to a 1()6..93
vtctory
the
Clevelahd
Cavah ers m an NBA
exhib1t1on game
The Braves JUmped out to a
25·18 lead at the end of the
first quarter and stayed m
front the rest of the way,
mcludmg 5944 at halfttme, as
they evened their preseason
0
Wapakoneta 27 Lt ma Rath 0 mark at H
Kent . .
Van Wert 0
Campy Russell paced the
Hard rng
3
Ketter tn~
Farrmont E 20 Warren
Cavs, also 1·1, wtth 28 pomts
Steubenville 0
Wayne 13
Kettertng Farrmont W 20 Day Warrensvdle 12 CUyahog~ and Jim Chones added 15, •
He•ghfs 0
Stebb tns 0
Randy Smtih scored 14 pomts
Waverly 8 Ga ll tpolts 6
Keystone 13 Buckeye 6
for
the BraveS
West
Branch
15
Gtrard
6
Krrlland 15 Cle Lutheran E 12
l 1berty Ben ton LO Ar lrngton 7 West Geauga 22 Twmsburg 0
Lrcktng Vall ey 16 Uttca 16 West Jeffer son 62 Jonathan
(11e)
'Iii
Alder 2
L ma Centr a l Cath LO Allen E Wesl L1berty Sa lem 33
Rtversl de 6
0
West Muskingum 34 Trt
L m a~ Perry 31 Ada 14
Valley 0
Western Reserve 14 South
Cen tral 6
Westervr lle S 22 Delaware 0
Westland 6 Westerville N 3
•
•
Wll llamsfown IW Va ) 16 St
Marys 8
Wtlmtngto n 35 Greenfield
(All Games )
McCla m 14
Team
W L T POP
Worthmgton -43 Mt Vernon 0 Logan
4 0 0 154 12
Wypm rng 14 Creenhtlls 0
Pt Pleas
4 0 0 89 0
Xenta 21 Sprrngfreld N 15
lron1on
3 1 01 76 38
CINCINNATI I UP! l _:_ Zanesv rlle 41 Col Ltnden 2
'Athens
3 I 0 ~ 56
There
Is
a
'd is tinct
Rock Hill
2 1 0 49 33
Wellston
2 1 0 50 89
poSsJbJil t\' that Cincmnati
Waverly
2 2 1l 46 78
Red s t1 c ke t pnces wil l
Coal Grove
1 3 0 48 86
mcrease 50 cents nex t season
ONTARIO, Ca ltf (UP! ) Jackson
1 3 0 29 101
0 4 0 13 59
says Reds general rnana ge1 Qual1fymg will be held Oct 7 Me1gs
o 4 0 38. 11 3
D1 ck Waflller
and 8 at Onta rto Motor Gallipolis
Non .SEOAL result&lt;
Red s ta~ k ets at e no \\ Speedway fo r the Wmston South
Potnt 21 Coal Grove 0
pnced a t $4 50, $3 50 and World Drag Racmg finals,
Pf
Pl easa n t Geo.t;ge
$2 50 A few plush sea to s~ ll the concludmg event m the $4 Washmgton played Satu rda y
for $6 50
million Nattonal Hot Rod mghf
Rock Hill Ironton St Joe ,
Re ds
off tcJa ls
ha\e • Assoc1at10n ser1es that began played Sa turda y nr ght ~
,
boasted the past co uple of 111 February
1 season about not tnl 1 e d~m g
SEOALONLY
Smgle ehmma'twn fmals
Team
W L T POP
ticket pnces de spite mflatlon
begin at noon Oct. 9
Logan
I 0 0 49 0
.Two years ago, Don Garhts Athens
but Wagner smd ther e were
1 0 0 12 7
several r eason s wh' tlQkets of Seffner, ' Fla , set auto Ironton
1 o o 9 7
may cost m ore ncxl .. ca r
racmg s ftrst recorded 250 Wa verly
1 0 0 8 6
o 1 o 6 8
" Our payrl!ll • IS Up m1l es per hour speed m a Gall tpolt s
N\e1gs
0 1 0 7 9
Sizeably,' he s,ud
Th at's h) bfld, 2,000 horsepower Ja
cKson
0 1 0 7 12
one reason And, th o ~;ord ~~ agster He 1eached 250 69 Wellston
0 l 0 0 d9
4 4 0 98 98
Sizeably starts wtth a c aptUll m ph m a quarter mtle fr om TOTALS
Frtdav 's results
Sand ends w1lh a tap1tal Y
a dead stop
Logan 49 Well s ton 0
Wa gner
als n
1 ttrrl
""
"dram at 1c ill c rea s es m :,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:::,:,:;,::::;:;:;:::::;:;:;:::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::: Waverly 8 Gallipoli s 6
Iron ton 9 Me'tgs 7
transportation and hotel costs,
NO PICTURES
Athens 12 Jackson 7
and other scrvlcCs reqUired
GALIJIPOLIS - Duelo·a
Oct 7 games•
Athens at Waverly.
~hen the club'~ on the road
~a !function in the camera,
Logan at Iren to n
He alsO pmnted out the
p1clures of the GAllS·
N\e rgs at Jackson
team won ' t be rccet\tnl::t Waverly game were not
Wellston a t Galltpolls
play off and World :;cnes
•"allable for publi ca tion
Farrland a t Rock Htll
Coal Grove at Ironton St Joe
revenue as Jl did the pa ~t Hw
torla \
..
Nttro at Pt Pl e.3san t

48 VlclUIICS
The Plllsburgh game 1s a
sellout ami C(rach · Forrest
Gregg, ears shll rmgmg from
M onday . ru~ht' s apprectallve

•

crowd of 76,518, had .1 f.1v.,,..r-tob~
• -line blea cher end of ti1e field,
ask uf the fa1's
where the fans a r e so close
- A' k the fa ns- to .ot least
"We call a lot of audibles at
hCI Id 1t down t u a modeipt.e
UlC lrnC' dnd so meumes It 's
roa-F when 11ur nffcnse br(!u ks hard for our offcns1 ve pla}•e rs
the huddle cmd goes t.o the hne to hear We missed one
or SC flmm age , " he Said
,JUdtbleagamstNew England
"F;spe&lt;.:Ja lly wh en " e'rp rtt l.x::cause of 1t '

JOHN lEHE\1 AT CAP

s

Chuck Thompson, 190
pound semor wmgback, led
the Tiger offense w1th 77
yards m 12 carrtes Semor
tailback Rob Leffler added 41
yards Ill 13 trtps
After a scoreless first half,
GAHS struck paydtrt on a 26yard keeper around nghl end
by sophomore QB Gre g
Hamngton w1th 9 07 on t he
clock Dabney was stopped on
the run for extra pomts
Following the e ns uing
kic koff (John Brown returned
Dav1d Mmk's k1ck from t he
T1ger 18 to the WHS 43 )
Chuck Thompson appeared

47 l ! IJH!S the fn 1J ow111 g
week(•rHJ I he Mnnd.ny losers
have dm1e shr, htly better with

Roger Bo/ler

FUNNY BVSINESS

I '

STORE HOURS
Frl7lOamto,pm
5atwrday7 )Oa m to~p m

Mon

' ST.
,87 OliVE
GAlliPOliS. OHIO

Phone 446 4464

CASK &amp; CARRY

Pl«lNE 446 4464

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C.. I(}-The Sundav
·. Tunrs-Scntuwl. Sund.:n. . fkt. :!. 1~77

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C·II - TheSunday'J'inies-Sentlnel, Sunday,Oct. 2. 1977

By l't1ariun C. Crawfurd
Mt•igs Cuunly Humane SuciL•ty
PONEROY - Each week I ~IIC&lt;in to rLoconunend some
~ks to all of y~u w.ho lo,·e animals, and 1ket•p for~etting ; so
Ill start by tellmg )'OU · In .place gp oul and f1nd three books
wr1tten by Dr. Jatnes Hemot, a Yorkshire En~:land Vet Th
li brary has them .
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They are " All Things Bright And Beautiful " All Creature
Great aOO .,small, " and his lutrst. "All T trin~s Wise an~
Wonderful.
-·
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. Dr. Herrlot Wrlt~s a~ut real a nimc1ls and pLoople in such a
way that you feel you lffiow them all when you have finished .
Titere IS hwnur l1ke you 've nev~r rrud abo ut . My gosh! r didn't
dream that Vr~ .go! UJemsel\·es into suc h laughable
predi cament ~ . An~era can vets that read his books must fall on .
thr ftoor reading Ins desc.riptions of situations that he gets into.
Another good book, 111 fac t, a grea1 book is Animals You
Will Never For~ et - 72 1'rue Stores.from the Readers Digest.
111ese are. also true and beaut1ful storeis that make you laugh
and rry . 1 he
1can recommend you
this book is by

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MRS. GE~HEIM E R &lt;IT Ac \VISHING weH un the farm
lawn .

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~'R.S : .QF;NHEiMER with a scale replica of

the old

An im.a ted ·scenes.
at Genlieimers'
reflect ambition
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BY BOIH{OEFLJCH
CHated by Mr. and MM .
POMEROY - "Th e
world Genheimer and they are onlv
owes you a living·. But you ·a part of the extensive lawn
have to wotk hard to collet! decorati""', used about the
it."
well kept .fi!rmhouse. At one
These pruited words on a spot there is a grist miil with
small card placed on a wall in a pond providing the water
the kitcl)en of Mr. and Mrs. fortheturningwheel; there's
ViCtor Genheimer near a . wishing well; a little red
Pomeroy undoubtedlv reflect barn , a replica , built to scale
the philosoph-y of th~ couple. with pews and a pulpit. of the
Both · Of sttong German old Bunker Hill Church. no·
desc ent , Mr . and Mrs . long·er ysed . The lawn offers
Genhe imer
have
been in its variety a replica of a
working hard all of their lives riverboat built from a picture
to "collect '' that living no the Genheimers ,. borrowed
longer " youngsters," Mr. ahd fr.om a nelghbQr . The large
Mrs. Genhe-irner, who .have . . boat, un?er ___roo f also, _has
been married for over 5~ white hghts at the Sides
years, are ·still at it.
• a~d larger red and green
The ambition of the co uple bhnkmg l1ghts at the rear and
is reflected at ever v turn on the paddle wheel turns. The
their farm wh~re Mr. ya rd a l~ has -two large,
Genheimer has resided 'since" round birdhouses for mar·
be was 12 years old. Quite tins, ·used also on poles ..
representative of their in·
Mr . and Mrs . Genhe1mer
dustriousness are over a have "_'Orked together on .the
dozen 'Colorful attractive extensive lawn decorations
miniature sce ne~ which line · over .t he ~ea rs . and Mr.
tlie drive into the farm. The Genhe1mer IS qtl1ck to exscenes, roofed and attached cl~.un: ,
to poles, feature cha racters
She s better at it than I
who move P.,wered by small am. "·
Many of their creations
windmills attached to each.
were
built without patterns.
The scenes are _varied .
Mrs.
Genhe•mer has been
There is ·a piano player who
p~uticUlarly
active
in
poUnds the ivOries , a
drawing
the
fi
gures
used
in
re·volving
carrousel.
the
scenes
and
painting.
them
gallopin~ horses, characters
wGrking ,on mo~ing tools later .'
The outdoor decorations
from
yesteryear,
a
are
only tine facet of the
man being kicked by
ambitious
Genheimers. They
a mule as he shovels out the
turn
out
intricate sewing
barn, and others who move ~s
boxes
and
Mrs. Gehheimer
the wind strikes the small
carves
replicas
of hand tools
windmills.
plus
whipping
out
attractive
All of the scenes were

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VICfOR GENHEIMER WITH HIS riverboat yard decoration, a rea l highlight for
visitors kl the home.
with farm operations. The
couple has dairy farmed.
raised chickens and ,crops
and in their "golden years "
still have over 100 Corriedale
sheeP to care for. There is
eonstantly ' some remodeling
to be done to a farm building
or wood to be cut and stacked
for the approaching winter.
Mr. Genheimer is now .81
and his big ai)n is to "keep on
my feet and stay active." ·
He's doing well at that , to say
the least. His fat her was .a

Institute, is in charge of the
police department there and
serves as the chief instructor
in training the 900 plus employees in . the care, treatment and therapeutic ban·
dling of aggressive residents.
Eric Charn!Jers works for
the State as a vocational
rehabilitation counselor. He
is assigned to Sgt. Manley as
an instructor for police self·
gefense and care, treabnent
and therapeutic handling of
the aggressive resident.
Both men have training in
various forms of the martial
arts, Chambers for five years
and Sgt. Manley for 2Q years.
Manley and Chambers have
been an instructing team at
' · colleges and seminars. They
,will be conducting schools in
law enforcement in this area.
their supper and so many to They are planning for the
share the good times with public a program of personal
them ."
self defense instruction for
Address of the writer is Box
women and men.
3, Barlow, Ohio 45712.

Harry Hurn wrote: 'Flames of war spreading
England, and even of Gallia "Bringing Up Father," (Germans) and helped carry
Cow1t)' who had to fight the "Somewhere in the US, " and out wounded ones. You
war .
" Fatty" had patriotic cannot have the slightest idea
what it means to soldiers in
The war was difficult for themes.
One sad moment for the this war.~~
Gallia ns to accept: it was
Guy Lanthorn wrote the
fought in a far off land over whole town of Ga)llpolls came
princ iples that lew un· in the summer of 1918 when following letter from New
- - - - - - - - - - - derstood . What's more , few the city was blackllstlod by York in 1918:
•·we have been packing up
coul.d un.derstand how the the army. Mcordlng to the
today.
We're going to take a
war was being fought with its report, GalllpoUs was not a
visit.
It
reminds me of getting
" new '' strategy of !rene~ safe town for soldiers to
ready
to · go to the fair .
warfare . }hen, too , the war spend time In as they made
is singing and
Everybody
only touched .home when one their, way to Induction camps.
having
a
good
time. Not a
o.f your boys was called up to ·The ' recruiting effort in
single
one
of
us
is worrying
go "over there ."
Gallia was quite strong.
about
our
visit.
.;.•For the ·home folk , there Several free concerts were
"I was teUlng t~e GaUl a
were the Red (:ross dri,ves , given at the Opera House by
boys
MIKE SWIGER
I thought that Teen's
the campaigns for Liberty the Woodmen 's band. They
991-7155
Run
was better than any
loans , and the used-clothing played mostly patriotic
149 S. Third Sl.
plaC
e
I ever saw. Gee·, you
drives . Near the end of the music . The boys from. Camp
Middtepon, o .
ought
to
see us boys washing
war people were asked to Sherman presented at the
clothes:
30 wash at a time.
give up a few luxury items Opera
House a pla y
We
uSe
scrub brushes and
and the s~ores were required '' Remaking of the Nation."
to close on Mondays.
Each week as boys · were ·, scrub the tar out of them. I
Through the local papers mustered into the service, bought a French book and I
one kept up on the war by crowds of well wishers would am golng to learn to talk
readmg
Pat O'Brien's ga ther · at the Courthouse French.
Don't worry abo.ut me
column, " Outwitting the where the OHE band played
going
away , I will be all right ,
Hun ," or Opie Read 's . and one of the local pastors
wherever
I go. I have my
"Heroi sm of Mercy." Each of · preached a sermon .
Bible
and
song book. I was
the four GalHa newspapers
In the local papers letters
just
looking
through the song
(Journal , Bulletin, Tribune, from the so ldiers were
book
and
found
some of my
and Times ) tried to keep aU printed. Some of these letters
old
favorifes.
This
letter will
citlzens"informed as well as are very touching . Earl
be
the
last
one
I
will
get to
to keep their spirits high.
Bradley wrote from France
\\Tile
in
the
old
USA.
That
is
Harry Huro wrote some in 1918 :
hard
to
say,
Mother,
but
a
beautilul pieces o! patriotic • "The rain froze as it struck
hero
can
say
it
and
smile.
prose. In one piece he Wrote: the ground · and the roads
Likeacood " ""
" Say, how did the ball team
"The names of war are became a glare of ice. We
neichbor,
make
out with their ice
spreading; but the home froze all night and got up in
SrakFarm
cream
social
&amp;nd how much
fh;es, the fires of faith, love, the morning to find our shoes
is there.
did
they
make•
Would have
hope, and peace are burning were frozen stiff. We have
·.••.• f~•" .,. _,,.~ J ,. ~;. t ~· r;..•.J" ~ ." ~#~.
to
have
been
there. I
loved
hotter still."
lived in barns with the
""~t O" •·t 8rr."~'il•
·~ 1
went
to
the
canteen
that
night
Even cartoon strips like animals until we smell like
them and .as · for me I feel and bought myseif a box of
inore aki'n to the lower. . cr.eam an'd while I was eating
animals than to mankind. I all by my lonesome, I thought
have seen dead Boches o! the boys at home, with
BY JAMES SANDS
GALLIPOLIS - The fierce
mdustrial competition among
se veral European nati ons
caused World War I but it was
the farm boys of Prance,

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what-not shelves. In her
''spare" time she crochets
pillow tops and has com-·
pleted in crocheted c~­
tumes a com plete · wedding
party . The
old
farmhou se
has
been
extensively remodeled and
updated by Mr. Genheimer.
Many of the couple 's winter
evenings are 'spent in turning'
out a new decoration for the
yard or working on an indoor
project. Daytimes are busy

ment comrittee.

but faith,--love, h·o pe, peace bum at hf!me'

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House ;lul y 28 Pending before
Senale- Enenn and Pi.JD iic
Utili ties Comm ittee
,
SB 95, Ca labrese . e ,..tends
ban on gas and oil dr iiiJng
under Lake Er ie unlil 1980 and
reQuires Oepartm~nt of Na tural
Resour.cecs · to se' r ut es tor
dr illing thereafter
Passed
Senate Ju ne 2. Amended and
passed ~ouse July 29 Pend ing
before conference commif1ee
58 168, M illeson Allows ta~
abatement fo r i nsta ll a tion of
poll ution -co ntrol eQu ipmef'lf to
spur use of Ohio coal. Passed
Sena te July 21. Pend ing before
House E n,ergv and Environ

Well , how 1nany of )'OU have read the. ads in the paper
concerning the twu male dogs taken from the Darwin area in
July• 1 have met the ~oung, recent mllege graduate who owns
tlw_se dogs ; and sh~. 1~ r~.a.lly _a .nice girl , a nd very upset and
hurt beca~st; some . ~'1ck mdtvldual has her beloved animals.
Folks, I m ~frm~- we reall): have some weirdos running
loose around Me1gs Co~nty . You ve seen tlJe picture o( the cute
!itUe "Benj1" type dog tha t has ~lso been in the paper several
tin~es. Someone or :;everal i~divlduals are taking nice dogs
which are left ~unatte_nd~: mce dogs that nice peop!e love .
What these deprav.ed lfldlVlduals are doing with the dogs they
~1ke - I hate to think - perhaps taking them out of the sta te
and sel ling them to pet stores, or selling them tn experim€'ntal

'l'HESE SCENES WITH MOVABLE characters. set into action by small windmills line the entrance to the
.... . .Oenheimer farm houSe:
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Bunker Hill Church which is no longer used .

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Status of major
.Ohio legislation

HOOFS .•.attd ••.P AW~

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

THE WHEEL OF THIS GRIST null keeps revolving a\,a pond on the farm home of Mr .
and Mrs. Victor Genheimer.

carpenter and although Mr .
Genheimer
has
been
prinnarily engaged in far·
ming , his carpentry which he
says " is in my blood" has
'Se'rved as quite an asset over
·
the years.
A wooden plaque, carved
by Mrs. Genheimer, hanging
on the living room wall
reads:
"God Bless Our Cotlntry
Home"
And, y'ou knoW; I believe He
has .

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See me lor State Farm
single premium
disability income insurance

LOOKING FOR DAYLIGHT engagement!; is this group of musicians, the Shadle Band,
which will play at 2 p.m. Sunday at Symmes Valley ·High School for Old Timers Day
Festival. Seated is Mike Blair. Back of him, left to right, are Gary Litteral, Emory Me rtin ,
and Roger Walker . Walker's mother runs an antique shop in Kanauga.

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Two ·records cut
by Shadle Band

~~ sant~

Fe" (slow countrY) .
They recorded at Redwood
Cit Sound in Belfonte, Ky .
with Bill Burchett doing the
engineering. The songs were
GALLIPOLIS
The Blair, bass guitar; and Gary written by Roger Walker and
Shadle Band.
trio of Litterj!l. drums ·and per- Mike Blair. Mike and Roger
musicians who play nightly at cussion . Emory Martin is · have been together in music
the Escape Lounge in South their promoter a'nd the for ten years while Gary
Point, has cut a couple of produce• of the two 45 RMP joined the band a year ago
while playing at the Club
records, sale of which they records.
in South Point.
Sheridan
: ·One record is ''Rhymer
are promoting.
The
band
lives in Ironton ,
Named for the Shadle Forty·Niner" (fast rock ) and
bridge . across the Kanawha "Have Faith" (slow rock); as does Emory Martin. Roger
River, the musicians are and the other record is ' 1You Walker and Mike Blair are
Roger Walker, guitar; Mike and Me" (fast country) and singers as well as guitarists.

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GRACIOUS
LIVING
ccin
yours in a

·-NEW HOME

By John Cooper
Conservation Service
POINT PLEASANT
September has been a very
busy month for us, assisting
cooperators with practices,
mostly having to do with the
drought program. Other
activities of interest included
the celebration of Farm-City
Week'il month or two early at
which the Kiwanis Club and

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Elders, deacons clinic is planned
MIDDLEPQRT The
Middleport Church of .Christ
·is announcing an Elders and
.
.
'
Deacons Clinic at the church
CAROL DODSON AS THE FAT LADY, Peggy Stout: as a saiin costwned performer·. building at 5th and Main ,
and Cheryl cr~w, I to r, were th,e most outstanding costwned in their respective categories,
Monday and TueSday, Oct. 3
funniest, prettiest and ugliest at the annual rush party of Ohio Eta Phii Chapter of Beta
and 4, 7:30-9:30 p.m.
Sigma Phi Sorority Thursday night in Middleport. Pledges attending were Patsy Ogden.
The clinic or seminar, will ·
Sharry Roush, Janelle Haptonstall, Becky Romine, Carol Crow, Judy Ruth, Jill Williams
deal mainly with the
and Jane Wagner .
·
qualifications and work of the
elder and deacon as set forth
programs.
in the 'New Testament.
The bill also empowers the
Registration Is $5 and another
go vernor to act in behiJlf of
. .
t;OLUMBVS (!JP I)- Ohio effec tiv e immediately , the stqte by a pplying for $5 for the workbook .
The subjects· to be
VISITS CAPITOL · ~ Larry Spencer, right, Meigs
has a new law to guarantee authorizing him to c:·eate or federa l funding for such
will be: The Office
discussed
COunty Clerk "'f Courts, visited the nation 's capitol
&lt;:ontin ued partic ipation in designate by execu tive orde r programs.
of
the
Elder
and Deacon;
recently. Spencer is shown on the steps or'the Capitol
federally·fundcd programs. state agencies requifed by
Until now, the stale ilad no
Business
and
Administration
building with Congressman Clarence E . Miller who
Gov. James' A. Rhodes the federal government to conforming law as required
provided Spence r this pi cture.
s igned legis lation Frida y, carry out t he federal by the federal government. in the Local Church;.· the
Work of an Elder and
Deacon; a Planning Session
for your Church; Evangelism
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in the Local Church, and the
Nurture of Church Me!l)bers.
Leading the seminar will be
Glen Wheeler of Ironton.
· Two health educato rs ' members .. from . hea.l th also . attend' . the November be given , lo the ~pplications .profit . organ iza tion .which . ·Currently ·the president of
., workshops will be s ponsored educationJ~gencies ~~Cho ha•e workshop, which has been from hea lth educa tors from offers health ed ucation Restoration House , Mr.
by the Corporation for Health not had extensive ·experience · co nstrutted as a fo ll ow-~ p to th e
,\ppa lac hian
Oh.io prog,r.ams to health prac·. .Wheeler' has a degree from
·oo unti&lt;$ .
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Education in Appalachi a or training . The sessions are · the October sess ion. ·
titioners and to the public. It J ohnson Bible Colle&amp;,e in
Ohio ICHEAO) and held at designed to provide needed
Appli calion s should be
F'or more info rmation·: serves the .26 Ohio Ap- Tennessee , and 35 years
the Cambridge Holiday Inn informallon, techniques ~nd s ubm itted as soon as co ntact Greg Clapper, health pala chian counties under preaching expetit:'n'ce. His
on
October
5-6
and skills.
possible s in ce the ses -, education specia lii-:1. , CHEAO fundin g from the Ap- last ministry was for 15 years
People interested in at- sions
will
be
limit· Cilrnbridge office, at 4J9-6641'" palachian Regional Co m- at the Central Christian
November 9·10.
· mission . Offices are located ,Church in Ironton . Ohio.
The workshops are open to . t ending.
the
October cd to 10 part il'i p'Hnts 'cor or 4:!04948.
CHEAU
is
a
pri
v.at~,
non·
heal!h educator~ or staff wo rkshop '+fC encou raged to each wnrkshop. fribrity w11l
in Atheqs '
Cambridge.
Wheeler has authored four

Ohio will get share of pie

George Glaze, minister: of
books, has done extensive
traveling, and has received the Middleport Church of ·
numerous honors and awards Christ, invites an Christian
•for his community in- men who want to improve
volvement and · church · their cffettiveness in the
Lord's Church, to attend.
related works.
THERE'S

C::Wt:' IN

t:'VER'I
FRIENO~Y

CARP

MOST MAGICIANS ARE'
WHEN H~ G~TS
BAD CA~D PLAYERs -.. . iHROUGH, Tl&lt;E CAR[&lt;S
AN~ NO)' SO GOOD AT

MAGIC EITHER-l

ARlO. TORN, 170G •
fARED OR
SAWf~ IN .HAL.F ...'

GAME· ..

the MRP combined efforts.
This was done by selecting an
outstanding farm family who
had attained high honors with
manY activities including
conservation work as Well as
being recognized by Farmers
Home Administration tor
achievement . This farm
family was referred to as the
Sweepstakes winner.
,
The- main part of the
celebration was a dinner "
which MRP members,
Kiwanis Club members and
farmers attended. This is the
second year that the local
MRP has celebrated in this
. manner. I am president of the
local MRP and therefore
helped ma_nage the affair .

See Our Fabulous New .
Dimension In Housing
Enjoy th!! good , life in one of-our beautiful
homes .
Select fr-om our many f)oor plans ; in two,
three or lour bedroom models , with your
'
.
choice of functional front kitchen, spac100s
front dining room, pra~tical_ front l~mily
room or intimate front bedroom . Furmshed
in a decor to suit your life-style.
.

Health educators'·workshops planned soon zn Cambridge

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lay of the -land

LIVE MODERN IN A
HOME YOU CAN AFFORD

Priced as low as $18,500.
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KINGSBURY
;lb.x..,. &gt;;~~MOU~ NEWAA"/,
FU~NITIIRE

MAO\T,

CHICAGO. I'' .

HOME SALES, Inc.
"For the Finest in Manufactured Housing
100 E. Main ST. · 992 -7034

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Pomeroy · O .

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Anoiher activity of interest
is a meeting we· ·called ·to
establish a "meeting of the
minds" concernirig an animal
waste disposal system at
Lakin State Hospital. We
received a r"!uest the last of
July to help plan a disposa l
system at the hospital. A

Secretarial
General Office
Accounting &amp; Business
Management

tee .

HB

115,

Tranter . Mod if ies
th at motorcycle
operators wear a helmet at i:lll
times. PaSsed House June 29.
Recommended by Senate H igh .
Ways and Transportation Com .
mittee Jul,y 27. Pend ing before
Senate Rules Committee .
ELECTIONS. , .
SB 283. Valiquette . Congl'es.
siona l
red istricting .
Passed
Senate .July 7. Pend ing before
House Government Affairs
Committee.
SB 115. Hall. Requ ire gover .
nor and lieutenant governor to
run as a team In both pr imary
and genera l election . Passed
Senate MarcM JO. Amended bill
passed House May o"1 1. Pend ing
before con ference committee .
SCMOOLS .
.
HB 449,· .snnziano . Public
school teachers' tenure r ights .
Vetoed by governor July 21 .
H8 91 , Locller . Requ ires no
(11ore than one minute of s ilent
da ily meditation at beginn ing of
each school day. Passed House
July 1.4 . P.ending before Senate
Ed':Jca tion and Health Commit ·
re&lt;:~uirement

College.level training that
put you above other
appllca nts.

wm

by Ohio State
of School &amp; College
Registration .

Visit, write or call446·:2739
for our bulletin.

SOuthern Hills
School of
Business
414 Second Aile.
(Business &amp; Professional
Bldg .)
Gallipolis
RN05B5 B
Thomas C. Breech,
Director

tee

HB' 580. Wilkowski . Allow
school district income tax .
Pend ing before House Econom ·
ic Affa i rs and Federal Rela .
t ions Committee .

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Farm products prices
decline fourth month Build with improved
"ENERGY
.
HB' 415, Carney.
Creates
O~o ...._..
Department of Energy . Passed

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iwiN~RIB"+PWS Roofing

&amp; Siding •..the full-width, full-

strength "ligtmy~ht",with

heavyweight performance.

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pOMEROY LANQMARK

I

uourmonau

hBIPSUDU

s&amp;au euen

Wllih

5 Peop ·..·

See or Ca 11

THOMAS E. MILLS
Insurance Agency .
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owner: David McCoy

·1so Second Ave:, Ph. 446-4927

'&lt;;/~J!fffu~

TWJN·RIB'+PUJS

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nter Sl'k
n es 1 OU

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Drought program
big last month

b~

Oiplomi CQurses

Officials said bad weather
ByCHERYLARVIDSON
in r~ent weekS in some
WAStuNGTON (UPI) For the fourth straight major .producing areas in·
· ·month; prices of raw fann eluding Canada and' the
products declined during Soviet Union has raised
September, sending the prospective wheat exports to ·
fanner's average return on 1.060 billion bushels for the
his crops and livestock in I9n-76 season, up 50 million .
mid-September to a level 7 from earlier forecasts.
Corn exports ~ w~re forecast
per cent lower than the
at
1.550 billion bushels, up 100
previous year.
from
previous
The Agriculture Depart- million
ment said Friday that for the predirtions.
As a result of these
month ending Sept. 15, raw
farm prices feU 2 ~r ceni, changes, experts said the \J.
with declines in prices lor S. wheat s~i'plus would be
soybeans, hogs, potatoes, 1.218 billion bushels next .
crirn and CQtton leading the summer instead of the 1.268 · .
Long, lightweight
billion forecast earlier. The
way.
aluminum
sheets
with full 4·1oot
Prices have declined corn surplus next fall will
wide
coverage
and
an
improved
side-lap
reach
1.276
billion
bushels
steadily all summer as
design
provide
easier
application
and
tighter
s
ide-laps
instead
of
the
1.401
billion
forecasts of another year of
for
long-lerm
tabor-saving
economies.
bushels
forecast
previously.
bumper harvests were
Twln·Rib Plus really stands up to the weather ...
realized. The contnuing drop
never
heeds paint because' it's rust-proof ... saves labor
in farm prices appeared to
... reduces maintenance costs.
strengthen earlier ad·
Smalt wonder TiNin·Rib is .the
ministration predictions of PEKING SHINDIG
world's best-selling aluminum
relatively stable food prices
HONG KONG (UP!)
farm
sheet. Now even better!
CHECK OUR PRIC-E
through early !978.
Former U.S. Secretary of
PER 4'•8' SHEET
The USDA said lower State William P. Rogers was
prices for soybeans hogs bonored Thursday night at • potatoes, corn and ' cotto~ , banquet .in Peking host~ by
were partially offset by the pr~1dent. of tlie Chin~se
Serving Meigs, Galliil
higher prices on the farm for . Peoples Institute of fore~gn
&amp;. Mason Counties
Ja(k W1Carsey, Mgr.
milk, lettuce and orang~
alfalfs. . .
.
PH , 992·1181
. POMEROY, OHIO
Comparing tann . product
The offiCial New Chi~a
prices and farm costs, the News Agency NCNA sa1d
FARMER
FARMER
FARMER
farmer's returns in mid- Rogers and hiS wile amved
,:&amp;l,j,JAioll.ileFOUNOEO
OWNED
CONTROllED
September were 63 per cent in Pek_ing Wedne:'dar at the
of the "fair" parity standard, mv1tabon of the mst1tute.
down I per cent- from mid·
August and the lowest since
the depression area.
Corn prices plunged to their
greatly enlarged herd of
dairy catt[e was blamed by lowest level in four years,
the management ·and they bringing $1.59 a bushel in
compared
needed a system to take care · rnid..September
of this amount of cattle. It with $1.63 in mid·August and
appeared to us that some .$2.60 a year earlier.
Soybeans brotiglrt $4.81 in
work was being done without
proper planning so we R)id..September, down from '
arranged a meeting ·at which the $M2 record"li in midPaul Dunn, Ed Wright, · August and $6.65 on Sept. 15,
George Viar,Okey King and I 1976.
Wheat prices improved
attended from Our Service,
Art Sellers, Dr. Kelley and slightly .to $2.17 a bushel
Carl Cook of Cooperative compared with $2.13 in mid·
Extension · Service, Bill August and $2.88 a year ago.
Farmers' costs fell one-haU
Bradford and Charles Drake
from the State Department of of 1 per cent from mid·August
Health and George STrickler but were 4 per cent higher
and
Bill
McDermitt than in September, 1976.
In a related development, ,
representing the Farm
Planning Commission for USDA economists reported
an improvement in ihe
state farms.
•
This meeting was called to outlook for American grain
each
agency's exports and a corresponding
outline
responsibility and to get an drop in the expected surplus
orderly procedure to help buildup over the coming '
year.
with the project.
You can earn a big . beautiful6' J pet. inter'est .on
a 1-year Cert1ficaJe of Deposit with a mlnirllutn
of. 11 ,000 that are held to maturity . nat muns
............................................ ,
6• 1 pd . extr.i cash in your potket ... something to
Ca
t of
lei
th1nk about when bill paying time rolls around !
'

••

Classes S'ar1 Dec . 12

LTH AND SAFETY .
HB 650 , Sweene\1 . Lega li zes
intrasta te sate and man ufacture.
of Laetrile. Pa ssed House Ju ly
7. Pend ing befor e Senate
Ed uc at ion and Hea l th Comni it -

Gallipolis, Ohio

For One of the Finest

CANCER COVERAGE
Policies Available

Ninety day interest penalty if withdrawn before
maturity elate-. ~~ all the facts o;,oon!
Ninety day mterei l ~Rflly •I w•thd••"wn btiOft mlho~roty o•t•

I

•

�.'

•

.-

•

'

•

POMEROY ....... What do \ nu \uum ~1bt1u• m~ui.H1m 1 • I); 1 \ uu
llt"t"d UlSUlat.mn 1 0. 1 , tlU nt't'll LU ..Hid ,, 11 tt' tt1 " hat \ i 1u ha' t• l
Rn~E'r M11ler, Extl~nswn A~ zu u!tur,tl F:n~Uit't'l .tl Tht•
Ohio State Um\~t~ ,1 has ~u~gt•stwns that \\Ill ht·l~ ~~~u

dec1de the answE'rs h1 these

qu t·~tJLin:-

All buildmg matenab

tlaH' Sllllh.'
!!t"ner~tll) r~h.• rs

constrUt' tlHn but t't)uld

We at the La nd Bank know the needs
the farmer because each of our local La nd
Ba nk Ass octat to ns rs owned and o pere ted
by farmers
Tha t s • ;hy over the past 60 years we ve
come to be looked upon by generattons
Js a depenoable source of long -term ag ncultur al creci1 t

So tf you re th1 nktng about cred1t vtslt
your loca l Land Bank Assoctatton They
und erstand
218 Upper R111er Road

Galllpolls Ph 446 0203
Clyde 8 Walker Mgr
THE BANK OF GENERATIONS

1\l'll

ht•n·

-~

--

llh'IC

Cattle sale dates set
ATHENS - The Ohto
Approved Feeder Cattle Fall
Sales at the Athens Livestock
Sales here will soon be underway The Southeastern
OhiO Beef Cattle Assoctatlon
plans this schedule
Thursday, October 13 (aU
breeds of calves. yearlmgs,
datr) cross, mcluding bull
calves ), and Thursday,
November 10 (aU breeds of
ca lves, yearlings, datry
cross, mcludmg bull calves)
For both sales, cattle can
be brought to the market
from 3 p.m until 9 p m the

secon d PEAK 1 sPec ar
lormula os bu 11 a1ound
ad vancta add ot •n I hal
pr014!CI , our c iiT s coohn g
syst~m h om 15 gr,~rn t
enem n- rust ana
,o.,os•ol"l Enemres trr• t
SI ~SI'I Opetatong r !hC rency
"
;rtiHI w e~r out you• car Defore
rfs I me
l nlol r1!41ze os a ve~r
or mort 010 rel)tate t ,. tM

Sc:r rl you•

~P.E.I\t( QIO(I!~Toon

Now Detore I he t QlO

ANTI FREEZE NOW
CENTRAL SOYA
of Ohio, Inc.,
Gallipolis, Ohio

day before the sale , and until
noon the day of the sa le Upon
arnval, cattl e ~Ill be
wetghed, and then ' graded
Into spectfted lots The
auctwn tlme for both sates 1s
set at B p m
Due to the extremely htgh
numbers of calves on last
fall's sales. farme rs and
livestock producers desmng
to sell calves on etther of
these sales, are asked to
constgn c~lves prevtous to
each sale date
To constgn cattle or for
more rnformahon con tact
Rodney Howery at Alban)
698-7331 , or the · Athen s
Uvestock Sales Offtce at 5922,122, or by callmg your local
Count y Extenston Agent at
your County Cooperative
Extensron Offlce

Otester
News Notes
By Clarice Allen
Mr and Mrs. Spence
Tednck , Old Washtngton ,
vtslted Wednesday aftern oon
wtth Mr and Mrs J ohn
Wtckham
Rex Batley underwent
surgery on hts hip last week
at St Joseph H&lt;l\Pttal ,
Park ersburg
Mr and Mrs Dtts Casto of
Reedsvtlle have purchased
the Clarence Wolf home
Mr and Mrs. Roy Chnsty,
Mr. and Mrs Vlrgtl Roush
and Mr and Mrs Wilham
Matlack attended the wedding of Mtss Donna Kay
Matlack, daughter of Mr and
Mrs Donald Matlack and Lt
Andrew Semple of Fatrlax
Chapel, Fort Belvoir, Va • on
Sept. 10 They also dtd some

-

wt• offer

_,._ _ __

•

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t

Churlc s Stivers of Walu ut Twp. has m.stC1.11ed nearly 8,000
f eel of ut~ 111 a crop field M er nil Rose, also .Of Wal nut 1\\.p has
some ti le s t~kl&gt;d and ready to tn.staU

Hnbort Jenkms of Har rtson Twp hc.id a di\ erswn ditch
eonstructed on h1s farm to protect a crop fwld Tht~pral·ttce lS
d esigned to tnt eret•pt surfac.-'e-waterand divert tt away frnrn 1ts
IICitural dr.(,IJn,J gC pattern
(;urdtlll Hejduk ur Huntmgton Twp developed a sprmg to
d.r dill OJ.se~pal ea and g:1ve livestock a good water supply
The Sml ConservatiOn Servtce offers ser Vl ces without
tegard to race. creed , color, nat10nalt ty , sex 01 rehgmus
c.tff1halion
--.- - 1

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ANGUS
ASSOCIATION'S
FlRST PRODUCTION SALE
Monday, Oct. 10, 1977 5:30 P.M.

111\t1hccl m the futmr Thi s CCilllJXln) IS
rerl.l m.ttwn dncl has realized the dSSIStdnce

I

Aericulture and
'

'

3 Bulls -15 cows with 8 calves by
-,
11 Bred Heifers -13 open He~ers

Ill' Bt yson-R ." (-6ud l Cm ter
G.tlha Couull' Extenswn Agent
-

1
C8tf sales here m Gallipolis The sa le is
comtng up th1s Tue.sday, October 4 at 8 p rn m the Ohio Valley
Ltvestock Barn
Thts ~le 1s ~ o tre ~ to._W sponsored by the Southeastern
OhlO Beef Cattle Improvement AssociatiOn m cooperation With
the Ohio Valley l~\cst ock Yards m GaUta County this fall
Cattle wtll be recel\ed unttlll am on TUesday, the day of !he
sale, and tf farmers \Hsh the\ ma)' brmg the1r calves m on
Monday afternoon and eve mng pn or to the sale between 3 and
9 p m I w 1U be there along "tth Tommy Joe Stewart and
others to tag 10ur calves and to also wetgh them
Calves should be constgned ahead of ltme m order to se ll
on the sale, The) mav be of t'M beef breed and shoul.d wetgh at
least 275 pounds Bull cal\es \\Ill be accepted, but not graded
Datry-beet.cross bred ca lves that grade 5 or better wtll also be
accepted
Mark el charges wtll be $1 per head to the Beef Cattle
Improvement Association and $4 per head to the Stoc k Yard
Company C&lt;:~lves must eome dire( t fr om the farn1 where they
were produced Producers may be loeated In the countles of
Galha, Athens Lawrence, Me1gs, Vmton and surrounding
counttes
The other sale sponsored by the As:soc1at wn IS to be hel d here
at Gallipolis at 8 p m on October 27, 1977 l'lus sale. will also be
held at the Ohio Valley Lt vestock Company
Ferltll ze shrubs at
FERTILIZING SHR UBS
· once
a
year
to
keep
them
least
healthy and growmg For dectsuoud shrubs. use a 5·
10-5, 10-&lt;H, 8-8-8 or eQUIValent analySis fertilizer at the rate of
2-4 pounds per 100 square feet or bed area. Around narrow leaf
eve rgreen, "!ie 10-&lt;H 5-10-5 or eqwvalent at rate &lt;f2-1 pounds
per 100 square feet or If, to I pound per large shrub For
broadleaf evergreen s, use 5-10-5, 4-12-4 or other specially
formulated broadleaf evergreen fertilizer at 2-4 pounds per 00
square feet of bed area The amount may be sphl mto two
applicati ons Apply one 111 early sprmg and the second after
flowermg
FERTILIZER- Make fmal fertt ilzer applicatiOn on lawn
tf you haven't already done so This last applicatiOn of the year
feeds the root system dunng ~he wmter , but wattmg too late to
apply 1t can result m oth er problems Late applicatiOns can
cause the grass to gro" "gorously, making 11 succulent gomg
mto the wmter Succulent, tender grass can be damaged by the
first ha rd freeze Normally, an apphCi!tlon now wtll fe ed the
rott system, but anv new tender growth wtll have lime to
harden off before hard freezes

Steers and

He~ers

Built For 'tong, Trouble-Free Service ...
From the long, tapered floattng pom ts and snapptng
roll s all th e way back to ItS wtde wagon elevator,
Superp1cker does •al'i outstandtng JOb of bnng1ng tn
your crop
And wtth your Superp1cker, corn cnbs. and
Mother Nature dotng t~e work, you· don 't have to
worry about the nstng cost of fuel for drytng

4:tl and FFA Projects.
AUCTIONEER-MERLIN

For mformation or Catalog contact Charles
Withee. Box 39. Rto Grande, Ohto 45674,
Tel . 614 -245-5477 .

E.

llaylUJY .....
, . baler DOW wlfh

NO
FINANCE CBABGIS
gnHJ

l!lay 19"18*

LOW DONA NtiUNTS, LONG TEBJI
FDIAIICJIIG, UD Nill&amp;ll'l'l 'I'JULOBED
Hlul'l' 'IQUB .CUB now·
lt -' the perteelltme to m OYI!!" u p to
htld pro ve n Moul!y fe• ouao;;ori boler
pcrl orma nce Ttu.•y te rugged ol 11mple
duo gn l o r relrabtlt !y and ellrctency to

toke m o u~ ot rlie wotk o ut ot fla ymg W ol h
n o llnancto c harvuto MQr I U11 1Oller
ends Ckio b.r 31 19'77

In stocl( I only new323 One Row Roller, I used 323 One
Row Picker in excellent conditiO!\.

,PARTS • SERVIC E

e

ACCESS O~ lt:S

• CONVENIENT rEAMS

where the whole Idea means better performance

''

MEIGS EQUIPMENT .CO.
992-2176

•

POMEROY, OHIO

Letha

Wood ,

M1 s

Fr cda

M1 t!t-r Hm.l f.enm.1 Hli 7. IIl"i:( •

'

10,500
17,100

1

12,100

1

NOW

'8,500
'5,500
'9,500

REWARD

'2,000

ASK ABOUT INTEREST WAIVER UNTIL MARCH 1. 1978

FULTON-THOMPSON
TRACTOR SALES.
Pomeroy, Ohio

110 Spring Ave.

back up thelf claun the
government ts bemg too
.generous.
Recent Commerce Department ligures, for example,
showed that pay of cMIIan
federal employes has gone up
laster than private workers
in the past 10 years: Wtth the
new tncrease, the average
government employe will get
$11,350 yearly, not counting
fringe benefits.
The
Commerce
Department
also
satd
average pay for aU ctvthan
federal workers more than

I~NixQn,

quotas
/, ·in high court
WASHINGTON (UP!)- A make
lor
pasl
up
gay teacher's career , a new discrunmat10n
appeal from Rtchard NIXon
The state of Delaware and
and racial uquotas " for suburban school officials
Chtcago pohce promotions aU wanl the ]USttces lo hear their
come up when the Supreme objections to a court-&lt;&gt;rdered
Court begins t!s 1977-18 term merger of II school dtstrtcts
on Monday
destgned to desegregale
The JUStices wtU act oo up Wtlmington classrooms Civil
to !100 cases m a smgle blow rights groups wtll be
on operung day
concerned if the Burger court
That ts when they aQ!)OWl~ steps ..ito the case
which of the petitions that
James Gaylord, who lost
arrtved over tile swruner or his teachmg JOb m Tacoma,
were lefl over from last term Wash • after he ' admitted
wtll get lull Supreme Court bemg a homosexual, wtU
revtew and which ones wtll be make headlmes if the JUstices
derued a hearmg
chQOse his case for thetr4iJ'st
One lam!liar figure wtth an review of gay nghts.
appeal pendmg Is former.
A multi-btllton dollar case
Prestdent Ntxon , seektng that wtU make btg news m the
revtew of another case news busmess mvolves a
mvolvmg Whtle House tapes
circuit court ruling that could
The justtces dectded tn 1974 lead IQ the breakup of UJl. to
hts tapes had to be 150 crossownershtps ' of
surrendered for use m the newspapers and broadcast
cnmmal trtal of Watergate stations Also pendmg are
cover-up delendant.s, but this cbaJlenges to sportscasttng
time around NIXon wants liJmts aod other restricttoos
them 1o rule that prestdential placed on cable TV systems
prtvtlege bars use of the and to a "gag order" ISSUed
recordings m a clvtl damage by a judge m South Carolina.
SUit,
Other cases mclude chalThe court already has lenges lo: the Kiwanis Club's
agreed to hear argwnents pohcy of excluding women
Oct 12 on the much- from membership; death
publicized Allan Bakke case penalty laws m Ohto,
mvolvmg a white medical Arkansas, Arizona and
school applicant's j'reverse Nebraska; a ruling barrtng
discrtmmahon" claim
completion of a $116 million
Appeals from a judge's order dam m order lo save an
that blacks and Hisparucs endangered fish; a clean atr
must get 40 percent of future plan requmng reductions In
Chtcago pohce promo\tons IQ trafhc and parktng on
the rank of sergeant provide Manhattan; and permit
It wtth another chance to rule systems
that
restrict
on programs that give commuter
parktng
on
nreference to minortties to residential streets.

~1

OUR FALL REWARD PROGRAM

992·5101

AD

I

E U T 11/l.• The m01&lt;t careful!y engine&lt; red triiCtor in the world.

favor of the dcregulahon
forces was that Byrd hansctf,
who favors eontmued "fiL'C
controls, satd Saturday he
_ would support a deregulatiOn
bt l! tf tljllt ls the pme of
end tn g the flhbuster and
ge ttmg snme kmd of gas bill
passed
,
" If the questi on 1s put that
.way , ll1e answe1 1s 'yes,"' he
sa1 d
ltf
" I thmk the realistic
postllon her e, as far as I'm
concerned, ts that the
Important thing IS IQ get the
btll to conference" between
the House and the SenauSuch conference!': arP rf'-

qUire&lt;! Lo resolve differences
when the House and Senate
pass cnn(lictmg bt lls The
House has a lready rejected
deregulation and approved
Presrdent Carter's plan ttor
t eg ulated. but higher, gas
pnces
After two weeks of debatmg
the 1ssue - the last stx
devoted almost exclustvely to
hltbll!lli!t' by -amendment the Senaw was shll trymg lo
reach a vote on one of two
prmcLpai.Jlroposals
- The deregulation plan,
sponsored by Sens James
Pearson , R-Kan , and !Joyd
Bentsen, D-Tex would put

•

By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - If
there was any doubt that
Wtlham B Saxbe •s a dyed-in-

Trade fo r a fuel-sav tng Deutz atrcoo led dtesel tractor and reward
yourself wtth a big savt ng now plus •
savtngs on fuel every ope rattng hour

REGULAR

By Saturday, mdicatwns
" ere • th ose
favoring
deregulatiOn of natural gas
prtces were overhauling the
pnce control stde, and It
seemed likely U1ey would
eventually force - and wm a vote on the tr deregulatiOn
btl! 111 the Senate
That vt ct or y mtght be
academ1c, however, because
Byrd, House Speaker Thomas
O' Nctll
and
other
congressiOnal leH ders have
satd they expect the House to
reject any deregulatwn btl!
passed by the Senate.
One h1nt the Senate
fllibuster tide was turmng m

doubled from $7,642 m 1!!66 to
$15,738 m 1976 People m
prtvate JObs got an-average 88
percent pay mcrease over the
same penod - from $6,179 to
$11,627
Mtlitary salaries have gone
up even more , ft gures show
cumulative tncreases
approachtng 250 percent
stnce 1970.
The mtlitary pay htkes
were mmed at making a
career tn the armed forces
compellllve wtth other jobs,
but a recent Rand Corp
study, commenting on both
the ctvlllan and mthtary
government Pay system,
said, "It has evolved to the
pomt where far more than
necessary IS paid."
The study, comllliSStoned
by the Pentagon , compared
milt\!!ry offtcers· pay to that
of conege graduates Ill
ctvtllan life, and the salaries
of enlisted men and women lo

~~~~te~~

conservative, one

need only Usten lo him on the
public speakmg c1rcu1t Utese
days.
Saxbe
leaves
the
unpresston that 30 years tn
government has • convmced
hun we'd all be better off
wtthout it
'
Maybe 1t was hts audtence,
the Ohto Dental Association, ·
but last W"f'k Saxbe came41(f
soundmg hke a hard-bitten
nght-wmger
A revtew of the thoughts he
expressed to . the denttsts
mtght be useful m case
Ohtoans are laced wtth votmg
011 him, like next year for
governor.
Saxbe descnbed hfe as '
'speaker of the Ohto House of
Repre senta lives, • 'l!I.S
senalor, U S.· attorney
general and amba~dor IQ
Indta , all of whtch l!C has
been
He sa td life m India gave

•
cur~ently uncontrolled types

of gas. ~u t 1t would also allowprices for new gas lo rtse lo
S2 03 per thousand cubtc feet,
compared ~o the $1 75 m the
House-apProved bill Chances
for thts compromtse Sbluhon
appeared to be fa dtn g
Saturday
The Senate scene Saturday
was much the same as 1t has
been ever) day ·smce noon
Monday
AntHleregulation
senators started the day wtth
some
350
delaymg
amendmenlS sttll m reserve
and began calling them up
amtd challenges , angry
cross-tal~ and con fusiOn

PAGE l D

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1977

VOl 12 NO 35

•

•

Farm bill will help president
By BERNARD BRENNER

BERT LANCE may be out
ol the Washmglon scene but
out necessanly out of
pohlics. Associates back
home m Calhoun, Ga., say
that alter the former budget ·
dtrector straighteiiS out his
personal finances he may
make another. bid for the
Georgia governorship or
seek a U.S. Senate seat.

WASHINGTON (UP! ) Prestdent Carter says he
doesn't thtnk he has lost
political support among
fanners hit by low pnces m
recent months, but he
believes the farm btU he has
signed will help repatr any
damage he mtght have
suffered
" ! don't thtnk any of our
pollmgresults mdtcale I have
lost support m the farm belt ,"
Carter told mernbers of the (
Newspaper Farm Editors of
Amenca at a White House

bnehng Fnda.y
But, he conceded, farmers

had ytelds cut sharply by
drought
" ! know from expenence
that farmers tend 1o blame
the prestdent when they have
a short crop or when pnces
are lQw," sa1d Carter, a
former Georgia peanut
farmer.
" When I wasn 't m olftce, I
used 1o cuss the prestdent and
the secretary of agriculture
when my crop was poor And
when tt was good, of course, 1
l.iOri'fl!Jve'the president and
the.secreta ry any credit for 1t
- I figured tt was because of
me "

He satd the farm btiL. he
stgned a few days ago, and
his admtmstratwn's plans to
r est ram surplus gram
production- next year, will
show farmers he has an
"u nderstand in g of farm
needs"
The brll mcreases graw
supports for the 1977 crop and
proVldes sma ller , contmumg
m creases for grams and
other crops from 1978 tbrough
1981
Cnncs ear her charged that
Carter had reneged on campatgn commt tm ents by
seekmg to hold mcreases m
the btU below the levels he

~

fmally accepted. But he now
ts embracmg the legtslation
" I do thmk tliat the new
Jegtslat10n I have helped to
pro"de will be an mdicabon
that farm farm lie s can trust
me not only to understand
thetr problems but to ca rry
out
my
campmgn
comrmtments,'' he told the
Yistting farm editors
Carter also satd would
"J ust about gua rantee"
Amencan partiCipatiOn m
future maJor food exhtbtttons
abroad m an effort to boost
overseas sa les of farm
products.

are "dtsturbed" because btg
overall crops natiOnally have
depressed prtces wh\Je
fanners m some localities

Legiol)naires'
disease
H amilton county
called
pneumonia
type
hit by tomadoe~.-.

htgh
school
Overall, the study ~d.
"military offtcers earn about
Uruted Press lnternaflonal
70 percent more and enlisted
Thtrteen· persons suffered
personnel about 30 percent
more than comparably aged rrunor InJUrieS and 20 homes
and
educated
ctvtllan were damaged, 10 of them
workers "
"}-~ severely, Saturday morrung
The current pay htke m one of two tornado
benefits 2rrullton members of touchdowns 10• Hamtlton
CountY
the armed f orces and I 4
Offictals satd the mJured
CIVIlians, but the mthtary were all restdents of Green
gets a smaller portton of the Townshtp in the western part
total mcrease - about $1 5 of the •county
Some,
milhon yearly.
mcludmg a young boy • had
Chairman George Brown
and lhe lour other members been trapped m their homes,
of the Joint Chtefs of Staff as pohce satd, by a lornado that
ll
th
to
ki
npped through the area
we as 0 er
p-ran ng shortly before B a m
offtcers will get the ~ , A second tornado touched
rmses - $8,579 year,ly lo ~own 10 the Queei!Ttty's
lotal salary of $53,303.
M4d1sonvllle area about 7 30
A lieutenant colonel With 22 a.m Billldmg damage and
years m the mthtary Will get downed power lines were
ted b t there were no
a htke of $2 ,294 yearly to
$34 716.
An unmamed ~e~or • u
•
l
mJurY reports
pnvate who has competed - ,The NuTone plant lost a
bamc tramtng m the all- roof and 10 cars parked m the
volunteer military wtll go plant lot were mas hed by t he
from $4 21 to $4", 0 mon thl y • a high
wmds
yearly mcrease of $84.
The tornadoes capped off a
. The latest rmses come at a mornmg of vtolent weather 111
time when the mtlitary P:"Y southern and central Ohio
system m parttcular IS cr1t1- Sa lUI day that also mcluded
cized as a patchwork of severe thunderstorms some
outmoded
laws
and floodihg and heavy r~mfall
regulattons
A drenchmg storm m
Carter named a panel lo Columbus flooded streets and
recommend possible changes
derpasses on the north
m the m1Utary pay system by
81
next ,
March,.
but
r:'.;.rly four mches of ram
acknowledged the JOb would fell m Hamtlton m Butler
be "very complicated, and as County and m CmcmriaTI.'
you can well .!'"agine, very
Wilrnlnglon reported 2 67
controversial.
mches of ram. whtle

him a new respect for a
He satd Americans have
capitabstlc society "There is been soft on cr~mmals
no substitute for the free because of hberal tdealists,
market system," he satd. but are begmmng ' 1o come
"There Is no substitute for the around.
mcentives to get people up m • "We're startmg to reahze
the mormng 1o go to work " that there ts such a thing as a
In lnd1a, said the former 'bad' person," he sa1d, "one
ambassador, the government thatcan'tberehabtlltated but
IS so dommeermg and taxes
keeps committmg the same
are SO htgh that there IS no cnmes. The best thing you
mcenttve toward progress can do wtlh them ts
The 1954 Morns IS the No. I -' warehouse
them.
but
car produced there.
everybody wants 1o teach
Sax be warned that the themlo be a nuclear sctenllst
Uru!ed States ts headed ,in or at least put on a half-sole,"
that dtrectlon. He predtcted he observed wryly
that wtthin 10years, "we'll be
Sax be also applauded
m the same posttton as the efforts to counter quota
Uru!ed ~lngdom w~ere they systems
and
reverse
don t pohce and don t put out discnminallon agatnsl whttes
ftres. "
1n
educatton a nd the
On school leacher strikes· professiOns.
"We'll come. to the sttuallon
The former senator had
where there won'l be any harsh words for "populism ··
classes Schools will be for and satd congressmen pay
the beneltt of the teachers " ~., much attentton 1o thetr
Sax be agreed wtth Gov · crr~§tttuent s He satd the
James AlfU!odes that foretgn Umted States was concetved
imports and unnecessary as a r e publi c. not a
clean atr standards are democra cy
drtvmg the steel mdustry out
"Under thts system," he
of northeastern Ohto
satd,
"we
t old
out

fini~h

Hew(y.pr odu ce d gas
tcmp1Jranly under a ce1hng
of abuul $2 50 per thousand
c ub1 c feet , L'Ornparcd wtlh the
current level of $1 45 , tl
would l'hen ~move pnce
controls from gas prOIJuted
on shme In two years, ~nd
from new offshore gas m h.ve
years
Be nt sen Pearson
o r1 g 111a ll y
demanded
deregulatt on tmm edtately
but offer ed the two-yea r
delay as a compromtse
- The mam 11 Compromlse' '
plan offered by Byrd and Sen
Henry J ackson, D-Wash ..
would conllnue regulalt on
• and extend 1t to cove r

ttnts

"'!...

Fayeltevtlle, m Brown
County, recetved 2 5 mches
and Lockmgton, near Piqua ,
reported 3 32 mches
The severe weather came
as a hne of mtense
thunderstorms moved across
the southern and central
counties
The large early autumn
storm system was' expected
to be south of Ohio by
Saturday mght. The National
Weather Servtce called for
cloudy, wmdy and cooler
weather across the state
Sunday, wtth htghs near 60
and lows Sunday mght near
50.

By CHARLES S.-'fj\ YWR
ATLANTA (UP!) - The
sctenllst who discovered the
ca use of Leg}onna1res '
disease satd Saturday 1t ts a
type of pneumoma present m
the general population,
capable of breaking out In
eptdemtcs or ln tsolated

cases

"It ts a dtsease that 1s
endemtc m the general
populatwn," satd Dr Joseph
McDade, a mtcrobtologtsl
wtth the nallonal Center for
Disease Control 11 lt can
occur m tsolated cases or
there can be clusters of
cases."
McDade said U!gionna1res'
disease " has been around for
a long tune but has gone
undiagnosed
" It IS another type of
pneumt;&gt;Ola that occurs m a
certatn proportwn of the
populatiOn," he satd
It was McDade who found
the Leg1onnaues' disease
bactenum while re-checking
... some shdes under a
mtcroscope at the CQC
durmg
the Chnstmas and
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - II
cost nearly. $177 llllllion lo
elect a president, 33 senators
and 435 members of tbe
House of RepresentatiVes tn
1976, according to studies by
the
Federal
Electton
Comnusss10n.
The
FEC
Saturday
released a report showtng
that candtdates for Ute House
spent a total of $60 9 million
THURMONT,Md (UP!)on thetr general election One year ago, Junmy Carter
campatgns last year.
observed hts 52nd btrthday m
The report completed the a Ptttsburgh motel It came
FEC's study of campatgn durmg a low pomt m hiS
spendmg 111 the ' 1976 campatgn and his pohttcal
markmg the ftrst tune the future was uncertam
government has made a
The celebration arranged
comprehensive
hnanc1al
hts 53rd btrthday
for
representahves 'you w1U be
Saturday
wa s qutte a
analysts
of
both
prestdenttal
elected and you wtll be
contrast
congressiOnal
electiOns.
and
responsible for makmg
Thts year, Prestdenl Carter
Earher reports showed
dectstons for the people that
celebrated
among all the
Senate
general
electtons
cost
elected you "'
trappmgs
of
power He spent
$.'18.1
mtlhon
111
1976,
while
'
Saxbe sa td too many conprestdentlal
candtdates
spent
the
day
at
the sumptuous
gressmen and senators arc
Camp
Davtd
prestdenltal
$77
B
mtlllon
total
on
preoccupft!d- wtth re-elechon
mountam
prunanes
and
the
general
retreat
guarded by
and " have thetr fmger to the
electwn
an
exclusive
military
wmd at all times "
,
The report on House cam- con tm~ent
" Those are the ones that
Instead of lookmg ahead to
s~y forever·," hCsa Ld. "'Fhe paign spending revealed
yet
another week of campatgOf
the
almost
$61
million
senator or congressman who
rung,
he wrestled wtth tax
spent,
Democrat.s
put
up
$32
4
spends hts lime fetchmg and
reforms
that wtll affect
mtlhon
,
Republica
ns
$28
carrymg for hts constituents
mtlllon
and
mdependents
alrnosl
everyone
m the nation
survtves better than those
and
prepared
lor
hts ftrst
almost
$500,000
who try to go to the mat on
speech
to
the
Umled
Nattons
Wmrung
cost
more
than
wo rldwtd e or domes tt c
General
Assembly
·
losmg
Wmners
spent
$38
problems "
'
Carter celebrated hts btrlhThose are some of the mtlhon - or 62.4 percent of
day
qUietly wtthoul any of hts
the
total
Incumbents
out"ews of the man who las t ran
sons,
but wtfe Rosalynn and
spent
challengers
barely
for electtve offtce m 1968
daughter
Anly were on hand
accounltng
for
50
2
percent
of
agamst liberal Democ rat
1o
keep
him
company and the
the
lotal
John J Gtlhgan, and won.
Uu·ee
luncned
logether
cacdtda
tes
House
Oh, yes. About next year
The
hrst
lady
planned a
rece
tved
$65
7
mtllton
m
The answer 1s still "no" on
spe
ctal
dmner
of
pe pper
cont.nbutlons,
resultmg
m
a
'
Saxbe rwmmg fo r governor
steak
and
ptstachto
ca
ke net
surplus
altliough
some
" I spent
30
years
candtdates
flmshed
tn
the
Ca
rter's
favon
te
and
she
sw1mmmg w1t11 the sharks.''
gave
her
husoond
one
ot
hts
red
Of
the
total
he told \he dentists 'I'm JUSt
presents
early
It
was
a
contributions,
$23
6
mtllton
book
Juckv tc• get nut ahve and 1'11 1
nnt •(Jbo11l to J!&lt;'l mvolved JU St Over a third - was 10 on trees so he can better
amounts of $100 or less
understand the beauttes
agam

"':J

Sa$e .c alled hard-bitten rightist

THE INTELLIGENT CHOICE

30.06
62-06

I.

•

DEUTZ®

52.()6 -

,

WOOD~UFF

TO FARMERS WHO ACT NOW

MODEL

r

Suitable for

stghtseemg 111 Wash mgton.
DC
Mrs Opal Holton Casto
spent Tuesday mght w1th M1
and Mrs Ross Cleland and
attended the D of A Lodge

Mr and Mrs Paul Klnnen ,
Athens; call ed on Mrs Jcss1e
Weber and Mr and Mrs
Arthur DeTray, Sunday
Mr and Mrs Ross Cleland
spent a few day s wtth Mr and
Mrs Eugene Halt at their
summer camp, Lee svi ll e
Glen
Mr and Mrs Clarence
W1l1 . Phoemx, Arrz , v.ere
Fnday and Saturday mght
guests of Mr and Mrs
Clayton Alt en
Mtss Mary Beth Kaman ,
Columbus, spent the weekend
wtth Mrs Opal Etchtnger and
famtly
Allen Web er , Akron, spent
a couple of weeks wtth Mr
and Mrs Ralph Keller
Recent callers of Mt and
Mrs Clayton 1\llen were Mr
and Mr s. Karl Kloes.
Syracuse, and Allen Weber.
Akron
;
Mr and Mrs Arthur Orr
- vtstted over the weekend wtth
Dr and Mrs Roger Grueser
and famtly , Loga n. Mr and
Mrs Ed Neuman and fa mtly,
Gallon , and wtth Mrs Edtth
McElfr esh, Ashley
On
Sunday \hev attended the ~oth
weddmg anmversary of her
s1ster and b1 othet -m-l aw, Mt
and M1 ~ Ira H11l at Ne w
Watcrfo'rcl
DeRzer Cleland spent an
afternoon w1th Mr and Mrs
G no r~e Abbott , Mt Herman
, ' Betzrng, Pomer oy,
\.1:-;!l ed Sunday wtth Mr s

si~e

30 Plus AnguS Club Calves

lt':s t1me agmn for the loca l Ohio

then '

~raise

By ROBERT KAYLOR
WASHINGTON ( UP! )
Some 3 4 million military
employes and whtle collar
goverrunenl workers gol a
pay ratse Saturday that will
cost taxpayers $3.4 btllion a
year Some cntics say tl IS too
much
The 7 05 percent mcrease
was stgned last week by
President Carter under a
system destgned to keep
goverrunent salanes rn hne
with lh"''e 111 prtvale
1
mdustry
The crttlcs CJte studies to

•

At Gallia County Fairgrounds

•
our commun.Itv
•

atmosphere for tampermg
wtlh the precedents of the
Senal!'," Byrd said " If we're
not careful we may set some
precedents that may come
back 1o haunl us "
Tempers
flar ed
at
Saturday's sesswn - Byrd
himse lf pounded a desk a nd
shouted rn anger dUJmg one
dtspule
and
the
Democratic lea der suggested
well before the recess
deciSIOn that the stratn had
grown too great on everyone
1o expect any progress thts
day
" I thmk that tempers are
JUSt too high to continue
actlj&gt;n at this lime, " he smd

costs
$3.4 billion year
ay

meetmg

BIG CAPACITY, COST·SAVING
FAVORITE 1-ROW SUPERPICKER

WASHINGTON (UP!) Renewed
• wranglmg
The Senate endu"ed 1ts belween senalors ftghtmg w
natural gas pnce ftUbuster keep pnce cetlmgs 011 natural for stx: more hours Saturday, gas and tho &amp;e trymg to
then deferred further battle remove those cethngs broke
until Monday liiilld stgns tt - out before Ute Senate agreed
mtghl soon end m vtctory for 1o tnlerrupt the ltght until
the deregulation forces
Monday It headed loward a
Dernocraltc Leader Robert recess alter dispensmg wtth
Ayrd told reporters wlule the some other busmess.
Byrd said the leadership of
Senate began a sometunes
bitter and acnmonwus both parties would use the
w~kend ltlibusler sesston he mtervening hme to dtscuss
thought the chamber mtght posstble ways to end the
be ready to quash the, tangled parliamentary stalelthbuster by TUesday or so
male lhat had produced six
" I think they wtll have had stratght &lt;!"YS of fthbuster by
a bellyful of tt" by thai tttne, amendment.
Byrd satd
" I don'l lhmk thts
I
(Saturda y) ts a good

hut1al mHstJg.ttiUns fnr putenh.Jl lake s1tes have been
,,;nplt!tt-&gt;d for U1e- 0 0 - Mdnlyre Park Drstnd Watershed
o.u1d ~lib mfonnallun hil s been t:Onlpiled on U1ree sites and a
dt t tr lnph~lll !h'lll"
•
r cpttl t will be f.: I\ en tn U1c park board soon
llrldt'l pl.lllf11 ~~4' ol\ t ~ •Jiiplt~lh•d \\.II) dl'\t'IOpllll'll\ u£ ,I
l'hc t:unstru&lt;:tien scetle has shown Ha lph DcJVts and Clay
t c'nst•r '" tJc lll f,ulr t Jll.tll f, '' l'lu !~ 1p M allt'l \\ he' h \ l'S 1Ht .a 241 ~ kcr. botll &lt;,£Walnut 'l'wp , &lt;:Omplettng pond constJ uct10n for
c~t It' f.t 1111 111J l~nr'l~ 1/l 'l \\ p 11 ,. t. xpr t'.sM...·d .111 trtlt• J est 111 fHllll II vcstot: k waJC( sopplic~

•

F1151 PEA"K nerps U!tO yOur car lrom
lreeN'9 11 s oeen the cho•ce ot
people .,.M ~ no w and ser~ ce cars
lor O~er JOye ~rs Bvl thal s only
ll'lt&gt; tlegonnong

'325 GALLON

-

lh Sh·H· thhm~t·r
llb.l nt' t'inL"it•n",•twmsr
GALl II \ll lS '' '' t•J ! IJ,d.uu t•\1 p~tr ~r ,1·1n ,,f pldlllllllg 11ml
1 ' 1' 1SCI \ &lt;~ll 1 1 11 p1' '' t11 t' ~tpplh .rt l•tll 1 !1.t r .tt lt'll7t•dSlph.·n 1 1~ 1 s

which decorative pamt or wallpaper can be added Vmyl '"'ll more e~n9
co\•ermgs or two coats of enamel pam t t•a n sene as a \apM mt erestrd
barner. Also , the mstallatwn of vents 1ft the exterl('lr \Ht ll
surface will let the "all breathe Motsture that gets 1ns1de the
wall can exit through the venlS Tlus also helps reduce the
posstbtlity of pamt peeling The ret ling of an extstm ~ house 1\ tll
not need a vaporllarner tf the alttc IS well 'entilated

Fo r rwo-gooa reasons

PEAK

_!__

.
~
S.,111\l' t&lt;f thl' anore f'O IUJlU lllly ust~d ansu1a \Jlll\ 11ta tt•r 1.1 Is dtltl
lht•u· H \':tluc per uw.·h uf Unckncss ,rre as f n Jluy, ~ I on~t:' f11l
pl.utnlllJ..: bt•f1•n· ht. ll!ll\l'ciJ1r till" &lt;~ It'd fr11111 \\ c~lt'lll O lue1 Plut
t blm\.·n i!Hd poured l - Mmeral ftbt•r ( ru('k , sl.1 g 111 gl.1ssJ, ~ 0
1
r
to 3 3: Celluln!ie ( nulled paper nr wund pulp) , 3 7. w~~~~d frbl•1 , ... :-it.'l H U."~ .J!J..lut 111 Hpt·r r l hHW ~~ r1 h-mogernent &lt;1:-i Ill' .llsn l td t.l a
\\i")(lt,Jnd
nl.ul.tgt'llll'lll pldw d~' \'t·ln(.&gt;t'd tht uugh filL' Ohm
softY. tOO~. 3 3, Pt:"'rhte, npo:~nded, 2 7, Veruu cuhtt• t:'XIJillllll'{f
lhp.u tlllt!ll ••I N.ttur.JIIksrpu\t. S
23
tlpt onlu tg pt.ws \\ 1tl ht• '' r tltl'n fo1 tn1) ltuHion nt•t s \\hu
Bl.mket and Batt - Mmeral ftbel i ILI(;k, ~ Jag 11r g l.l ~!:i) 3 0 ~J
}.(
tll'l
l &lt;1'''1J\-'1.tll\t .tl! lt'ellllltt s \\ Itllthc (; .tll la S•fl l dnd W&lt;~t~ 1
37
l nn~e 1 \dtll•ll ()t stll l t
Ri~td (boards and slabs ) - Mmeral fiberboard. " el
( tl'lll' ()t_·~·lt ll'l t'llll\ \)I t light d 150-Hcr l' tr Ht't Ill (;,CCII t\\'P
f&lt;lted.at&gt;'Ustlcal tile. 2 1. Mmeral fiber \qt li resm btndcr .1 5.
lit'
\\ .I lib l•• spt'tl tth tl' 111 hd \ p 1ndut t1nn Cil'{l(!-!l' J urrt;10
l~la~"J ftiA•r. ''rganH.: bond~ ~ 0, Expt~ndt."\1 PL'Iy~tyrl'n~ 1p11h
bl•ught
•I !.IS~u rt.' tr ,J( I 111 I't•rJ ,. I\' p C e{lr~e h,J s 1t'( l'llll\
f111 m b1.a1 ds ,,r sl&lt;:~bs should not b'! left ~~p11S(&gt;d t11 illlllpll'd
IIUIH-'(1 J~lt' fwlll tilt' l ll'\ 1-'l,uul d l t'.t H(• rt~qutslcd snmC
,trt'.ts). molded beads, 3 6, Exp.mded P''l} st~r('n c . extrud{'fl
plam. l 0. Expanded polystyrene. extruded \ R- 121. 6 0. m.ut.t gt'tl lt:n t c~cl\1~ '-' BPUl ('f tltt'.st' n~ \\ lnoperdtnr s l'equcsted
pl.lll dt&gt;H• Inpmeut f111 "lt~ll ldn d
-Expa nded pol;urethane 1R-11 ). 6 3
1hl' Gt~l\lpollS St.ut e lrt.stl tut,• h.1d a sJtt.· mventllf'} .md
Foam (foamed-Ill place) . 4 5-5 0
InsulatiOn IS available wtth or wtthout a vapor barner In c\ .t l u~1 tum &lt;t il dl.tlmtge pi'Oblt' ll l~ 1n 1ls J('Cieatlotl ~ued I he
MWeonstructinn, msulahon w1th the \lapor barncr &lt;Hl.cwhetl ls problem can be eastly correet~d wtth the tile and smfaee
v
commonly used But, a separate v~1por barner uf pldstll f tlm ch .unc~g~
Hil
bert
!\
1
) t' t s lws dramdge p1 obl ems on his farm 111 Pl'r ry
can l&gt;e placed betwe-en the msulatmn ,1nd llll~ lll S!de v. .dl fl nm
1\\p
'I
he
"&gt;illldll
un \\.t S stuched rcu1nuuendatton.s made , dml
tlf t:e thng mater ra l
nt·xt
sp
n
n
~
siHmld
b1111~ tll!lSllll t.llllll to con e&lt;' t h1 s pi ublems
In ex1stmg houses whe re extenor "ails havt'. hc~d
('tP\\fl
llty
Mllllll
f;: {'o h d!' dSkl'd for teclnucal a~fstl.llll.' e
msulation added , a good \lapor barner ('an be p! o\ uied (In the
t•n
stnp-llllll{'
Il'tl.lllldtl
l•n ll .l ppi'dr s that ou1 help \\Ill be
Ultenor wall surface w1th two coats 1Jf alununwn pa1nt tl\H

l ake PE.-.~ cerore won te1 sets '" It II gtye
your car !tie k ndot orem oum orotectton
,, neeas

GET YOUR

fllf

111 \\lthlll rdlll!t

nt.mufH cturci

n(lt be used for 1nsuldt1ng ex1slmt! bulidmgs The \anuus furm.s
of msulallon are n~1d biJrlket, boilt fnanwd-m-plal e and lnoSt'
fill
.
'nte msulatmg valu~ of\ ,lf\llUS material~ can be t'Oillpanod
by their. thermal rests!&lt;lnce sa) s ~hiler Ttv.rma l reststance IS
commonly called the ·R value The R · \alue tndtca tes the
abiht) of the matenal l(l re s1st the transfer c1r passage (If t at
The htgher the R' 'alue. tile be tier the msulat10n
-----l&gt;ul&gt;iishe&lt;l-"R~alues rnav-be for a one mch thi ckness l•f
matenal or for the total thickness of a matertal. The ·R"
values are added t o~et1H;~r to get the totaltnsulation va lu e For
example, 6 m(·hes of vcrnucul 1tc &lt;It R 2 2 per mch equals 13 2
Stx mchcs of ee ll ulose at R 3 7 per mch eqwls 22 2 The to!&lt;II H
nf 22 2 provides d t:!re.llcr rt'!'&gt;lstanl•e to the passagt' of heat ttwn
the R of 13 2 !Addtng msulat10n Loa house \~.Ill mcrease the re.s1stance tn
heal flow and reduC€ the fu el used per season Mtller sa) s the
approxunate heat loss th rough 100 square feet of non-msulated
reilmg 1R I 5l ts equal to about 61 gallons of otl per a&gt;erage
heatmg season The heat loss U1rough 100 square feet of
lllSUlated ce.l mg t R l Ol ls equal to about 3 ga llons of ml per

1ttakesone
to know une.

l.~tt~h tHJt ~ uf lnsul.tll i•ll .lit.
fh~~ ' ;\dt t h \.IIUt't~lll \ ,11\ iiUt
t11 .1 dlfft'rt•llt'l' 111 the lt!OI IJ#,nut\", d tn slt) .tllc.llfmlt'l\,al
:-.ttutturc ,s, ~ut• tll\ttl'n,tl.:s l~&lt;t\t' ,, thff'-·,,n,,• 111 Jdtln ~,.: " ht'll

H \.tlu,

.tpJliii~IJIIt.ttl

"·'ll

I

lit&gt;\\

.. ,.,..•n

lL'i~·d 111 till'
.t:;; tUIIIP·lr~.:d to ltk' ll u.iit' lll l ll\' tt'lllllt.: H
'~tlu,•:; .trl' usuully triC.hu ttcd (Ill tht• !)l l..,iUl'l "' IMt kdgt' b\ ltw

ln:sulatltln 'alut·. btll tht•

term msulallon
1\l pnlduet,:; dt's l~m'&lt;i
pnmar1ly £or this purp..1se M1ller s.t):s lnsulatlt~~l ht.'lps kt't!P
heat m thr bwldmg durmg Ctllll "('dther c1nd hl.'lps kl&gt;t.•p l1eut
ou( m hot weather
There IS no 1deal (lr perf~,_•ct msulatum that Is bl•s t For ~IIJ
apphcations For exmnpl~. sonw nwtenc~ls mm b~ \\ f' l1 suHl'&lt;l
for msulating " all.s or L'rt!lngs m

h..•.nm ~ ~

Filibuster__on _gas price-ceilings nears

September conservation activities
well·h~anced program in Gallia Co_
.
-......

~

D-1- The Sunday TtmeS..Sentinel, Sunday, Oct. 2. 1977

C-12- The Sunday Tunes..Senltnel. Sunday, Ocf 2 )9.77

/-Gounty~ agent's

•

,

Vote in '76

US election
•
expensive

New Years holiday season
last year He found that the
rod-like orgamsm, while difftcult to g row 111 the
laboratory ,
also
was
extremely hard to kill.
The ~ tllness , accordUlg to
McDade, does not represent a
tnaJO[ public health threat
because of tts mfrequent
occurrence
The tsolatton of the
bactenum by McDade, and
1ts tdenllltcabon as the agent
that caused the Legwnnatres'
disease that took 29 lives man
outbreak m Phtladelphta last
year, Jed to the development
of lab tests that can 'now be
used to spot the tllness
wherever 1t occurs
Although this dtagnosbc
experttse belongs almost
excluSively to the CDC ,
medtcal s~tenllsl'; there are
workmg on what they
descrtbe as a "sens1tlve, yet
practical, serologic (blood)
U&gt;st whtch could be made
readt ly avatlable t o all
serology laboratones "
The CDC recently sent out a

r eport
des crtbmg
the
progress made m tts
tnv esttgatton
of
U!gtonnatres' disease . hslmg
tis chmca l symptoms,
descnbmg what was known
about the

I

bactertum and

soli citing specimens from
doctors treatmg persons wtth
severe cases of pneumoma
The response to that report
was a greatly mcreased flow
of specimens mto CDC
laboratones from persons
suspected of ha vmg the
disease
McDade, who does much of
Ute dtagosttc work hunself.
satd his own lab handles
about 100 tissue and blood
samples per week and that a•
diagnostsccan be completed
m about a day
Smce the Phtladelphta
epidemic, 55 conftrmed cases
of the tllness, and 14 deaths,
have been reported lo the
CDC from 19 states. Three
cluste rs of the atlment have
occurred m hospttas at
Columbus , Ohio, Burlington,
Vl ; and Kmgsport , Tenn

Trappings of Power, Guard
Feature Carter's Birthday
which surround the Catoctm
Mountam retreat
Aides sa td the prestdent
arose befor e 7 a m , as he
usually does, and did 'some
paperwork " Ram prevented
htm from playmg tenrus
Carter may have reflected
durmg the day on his life one
year ago At that ·time, hts
campatgn had been sllppmg
for SIX weeks, and he had
been especially hurl by hts
fir st debate wtth Gerald
Ford
There was no certamty that
he would ever reach the
White House
But as prestdent, Carter.
cannot dwell too much on the
past Thts week, for example ,
he mtllll be m New Yor~
Tuesday and Wednesday to
add ress
the
General
Assembly a nd to confer wtth
world leaders about efforts to
brtng
Mtddle
East
adver-sa rt es to a Geneva
t&gt;eace conference
Carter ' a lso IS . likely 10
discuss the strategtc arms
llrnttatlon agreement wtth
the Sovtel Umon It ex~tres
Mondsy , but there have been
mdtealtons recently that both
stdes are trying hard to reach
a new pact
Another toptc hkely to
come up this week •s tax
reform. Carter has satd he
wtll keep hts CalJipatgn
1

prQm!Bt! of comprehensive
tax reform m ea rly October,
but Treasury Secretary
Mtchael Blumenthal satd 1t
may be several weeks yet
before the fmal package IS
rea dy lo sent to Congress.
Ca rter IS sttll studym g
opltons m the com plex
packago One of the maJor
prov1swns 1s believed to be a
tax cut for m08l families with
annual mcorlles of less than
$100,1100, but some deductions
whtch many people now take
may be eluntnated

•

Weather
Rain endmg today, largely
clearmg, wtth htghs to 65
Probabthty of prectpttation
today 70 percent thi s mornmg , 20 percent tomg ht
Co nt mu ed cloudy tomght,
chance of showers Monday,..__
l&lt;Jws tontght m the low 40s

MISTRAILDENIED
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - U
S Dtstrtct Judge Carl B
Rubm has demed a defense
motion for a mtstrail m the
case of 10 persons accused of
parttctpattng
tn
a
multunilhon dollar drug and
stolen property nng.

.
....

�I

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...........

--

;

'

().2- The Sunday Times-Sent.J.nel. Sw1day. Oct 2. 1977 ····~

For
B\e-st
Results
Use·
Sunifay
Times-Sentinel
Classifif!ds
~Fo-r-·=-B-es-LResult~·U_se S_t•nday _Times~Sentinel Cla_ssifie_ds
------..........
t
/
L
I
FOIA
ODD
-- ~
.-.
t
1977
Yovr
Dealer
.- t
DOC
.,..SELL-DOWN
C!J0r30
&lt;S&amp;·m~
Above
SMITH
~ALLIPOLIS MOTOR COMPif4r'''''" t
t
ANNOUNCES
..
f
DISCOUNT PRICES
76 ME.RCURY·
77 GMC PICKUP
t
·
O
ct.
6-7·
·
8
76
'7900
MONARCH
.
.SMITH
NELSON
MOTORS
76 Ford Elite 2 Dr. - - t
NEW CAR SHOWING· "
t
~Oh~J~~:·'~'f,~o'n'~"o~l~~
GRAN GHIA
HAS'
THE
GREATEST
USED
..
Aulo Salt's

I

NOW'S YOUR

TIM~

Cadillac Cpe. DeVille .................. .

Red with wh ite v'i nvl .root, w h ite lea ther in t eri or , fu ll

A.

c..

power a nd factor y a ir , full st e r eo, c ruise con tr oL T&amp; T
wheel.

V -8, p.s .. v tnyl r oot e x clean .

Was S8900 NOW
302 V 8. a . c .. p .s ., red tntr; g b uckets . rad io. clean .

1

76 Ford Granada 4 Dr.,----'-· 3895
6· cyl.. p.S.. a .(: .. AM-FM ste reo. auJo. trans .

1

74
Ford Pinto 3 Dr. Runabout_ 1995
Auto. trans ., cyl. , on e owne r .
74 Ford· Maverick 4 Dr.-'--- ~2295
cy l. , steer ing,
75 Granada 4 Or, _ _ __ 13395
p.

Wa s moo NOW

'1995

73 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

4 cyl., a uto. trans .. Tu Tone pai nt, luggcige r ack

1

1995

was m oo

4900.

1

--

1977 BLAZER

74 Ford Pinto 2 Dr. _ _ _ 1995

Now 12900

Coli

8,000 miles .

73 Ford F-100-.,..----- 2295

,

__

__,__

1-1977 SEDAN DEVILLES

1

75 Ford F-100- - - - 3295

~LL

•

4 speed, P.S., P. B.. long bed. dua l
rear wheels. Only

Ford F-250

3495

4 dr . H.T., a ir , new Bu ick t ritde .

2895

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

·--~2595

" You'll Uke Our Qualify Way
· Of Doing ·Business"
992-5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Open Eve11ings li16 : OIP- TH 5 p.m. Sal . .

1

74 Ford F-100
·302 V -8. p. st eer ing, .a ut o. trans ... local truck .

74 Ford F·lOO,__

6 cyl. , auto tr l:l ns ., shor t bea . :. ryleside . ·

Black with blaCk viny l top . We Sold
and services. This ·· ane was $4495

&lt;A11y ·

'4195

.

PIANO TUNING end RE1p01 r Lon£&gt;
Oon iel s, qq2 -2002. 12 yeors ser vi~e t o Tr i-Counl y. Re ferenc e.
Elberfeld s.
TR ENCHING WORK done
992 -SS24 or 9:92 -39 17.

Coli

WILL DO babys itt ing in my home
9~9 -' 2322 .

Delbert Swisher's
Special Fall Oi sco u ~;~l
On checking out your
furnac e.
clean ing
it.
replacing . filters , getting
your svstem ready tor the
colt;! sQell that is coming .
Special pric e SIS .OO . Senior
Citi ·t ens S12 .00 . Any parts
used ar e eK t ra , This offer
good for ·Jo da vs onl y .
Swi sher 's Plumbing &amp;
Heating
~H0 - 3877

44b -S: 5b8

~

PA SQU 4,~ E

lnsulo t•ng. 103 Cedo1
St ., Gal l ipo l is_ Ph . 4J b-'2 7 1b or
44'6-1092.

CHAIN LINK AND WOOD FEN CE,
Roy Houck Fence Center, Free
es l imates . Ph . 1-776-2237 .

CUSTOM REMODHING 20 ·,.- ears
exper1ence 388-8308 . New dr y
wall ce 1l11'lg wdh ~ w i rl or te .:
lure- des•gn s Ol he--r dry wel l
·repo 1r vin yl wallpa per mg . ne,V
bol hs new k1tch ens A nythmg
m remodeling o r re oo 1r .

SEWING . MA CHINE REPAIR , a\1
mak es

1974 BUICK LESABRE CUST.

lend

DE W ITT S PLUMBING
. AND HEATING
Rou t e I bO at Ever green

4 40 - ~51

an d
Cal l

RE ES E T"RENCH ING . SE RVICE.
water . sewer . el ec tri c. gas li ne
or ditches. 12 inches w ide to 5
h . deep . Wate r line hook ups
Call after ~ pm 367 7560
SANDY AN D BEA VER Insurance
Co . has o ffere d serviCes for f ~re
insurance co ... eroge in Gal li c
Coun ty l or olmost a centu ry .
Form , home and per s_onal pr o per ty co.,.eroges Qre O'.'aila bl e
'to mee t md tvidu al needs. Con
ta ct Ray Wed ~ meyer
your
neigh_bor and o!!en t .

669.- 4914 .

SATURDAY, OCT. 8 AT 10:30 A.M.
LOCATION : From Gallipolis take Rt. 160 north lf2
'mile. Second house beyond Ashland Bulk Statio n .

SWAIN AUCTION SERVICE
KENNETH SWAIN
Gal.lipolis, Ohio
AUO ION E ERS

DAR XL ALBAN
Qak Hill , Ohio

•

a

..•

....-'

MOOERN 3 bd r: ranch for lease .
Rodne y area . Available Oct.
IS . $2~5 per mo nlh , p lus security depos it. Wr i te Box 808 , c·o
Gall1po lis Doily Tr ibune , 1:125
_ Third ~... e., G'?llipoli s, 0~-~

.b

•

I

I

1972 PINTO ROUNDASOUT. Good
cond i tion. $800. 949 -2.f'39, after
5.
•

1968 CHRYSLER "300" 4·door ,
1976 CONTINEN,T.Al MARK IV .
Phone992-741b. $795.
Loaded , excellent condi tion, _c:::=~::c..:.:.:c.-c=c:__._--­
low m ileage . 965 -3595.
1970 AMC HORNET, 6 cyl.
Autnmot ic. 992·2747 , after
1-974 MONTE tA Rl O . Burghandy , · 5:30 .
excellent condil ion . $2500. Co!1
1971 DATSU N PICKUP. Good
after 5 pm . 9B5 -4ll:c7.;__ _~
shape . 247·22 45.

AUCTION,
2 DAY

11:00 A.M.

The following Eslate merchandise is !he
conlenls of a Nine Rm. Second Hand Store,
located on Slale Rl. 33, Mason, West Va . (112
mile Easl of Pomeroy, 0.-Mason, W. Va.
Bridge.).
NUMEROUS: Gl.asse_s, Bollles. Jars.
lns·ulalors, Radian! Healers, Planlers, 200
Wooden Chairs, Hammer Handles.
Windows, Screens, Doors and Old Books.
SEVERAL ~ Oil Lamps. Marble Pieces.
Lan~erns, Melai·Wood Be~s, Tables (Wood
some Oak), Piclure Frames, Curtain Rods
and Hardware, Baby Beds, Kilchen
U!ensils .
, ONE ·OF A KIND: KITCHEN Cilbinel,
Iron Bed I Nice) Glass Shades, Sm . Camel
Trunk, Balgium
Oil Lamp, carnival
Goblels {8) Corn. Planler . ROCKERS Pollery, S&amp; P Shakers, Oak Sideboard Glass
Door, 410 S~olgun. While Sewing Machine ,-~
1969 Chev. 2 dr., runs good (Sells 2:00 P. M.
SafTA'day).
Aucl. Nole : The above is a partial lis!
from !he B. F. Board Business al !he same
location SO years. a lot of old and inleresting itenis. Bring Chair. Lunch · Served and
plenly of shade.
•
SIGNED: N. S. PAULEY
.
P. o. BOx 525
New Haven, W.Va.
BRADFORD AUCT. CO.
C. C. Bradford, Aucl.
Ph . 61-1-949-2000 or 949·2487
i

1970 Ford Maverick •••••••••••• s795

'L.

1969 Chevelle Wagon •••••••••• .SS99

6 cyl. , st d . trans·., good tires, radio , clean

~a l car . automatic, V -8.

••

..A.••

742-2211

Rutland, 0.

for

•

•'·
\
,t

~

••
•••

.•

-~

1174 Scout II· •••••••••• ••• •••• '2.895
l'!avel top. 258 cu. in 6 cyL ~~~l ne,.. auto. trans ., !Ike
new tires, radio, 2 wheel drive.

S72 Maverick 2 Dr•••••••••••• '1595
. inall V-8, automatic, P .S .• radio, good tires, c lean ,

•

1
•

I

•

BABYSITTER

Co li

WANTED .

446-4235
BABYSITTER . ful l time . Con live in
or out. Good w age . Col i
446-3632 oher 5pm
WAITRESSES

:':1 974 Gremlin 2 dr. " X" package, new ww tires, 6 cyl.,
l!utomati c, p. steering, Levi trim, blue _finish. Special

Me-!gs Inn
-·---·
EARN MONEY NOW . Toke orders
for Li sa JeWelry . Ca ll lor fr ee
co lo l ogs
on
toll
fr ee

••

.•,•

___,...

In For A Good DEAL.
.
POMEROY MOTOR CO.

•.

l

~

••

--

..
"992-2126

•

.

Chevrolet
"Your Chevy Dealer"
. ·
Pomeroy
Open Evenings Unti18 P·'l'·

,

;:!B~- 8776 . -~~
USED FURNITURE ; not
'Opholstered : ond appliances .

TIMBE« '
Top prices for
lOR Qvolity
POMEROY FOR~EST PRODUCT I

Col/992 ·5965

lH. 446-0322

-

person

AIJ!?RESSER S

WANTED

:..

..

_lm ·

mediately ! Work at home .. no
' experience necessary .. ex Cellent pay . Write Ame rican
Service , 8350 Pork Lone , Sui t e
269, Oollos , TX 75231 .
in person.

Mei~~-ln_n_.__ ~----- _

'

M

in

.,.

WAITRESSES. Apply

..
cJ300

apply

· 1256-------....,.;._S00-631
__,.........__,...

~HurfY
.

•'

Oct. 2. 9

A CAREER wit h o fu tu re fo r o 'man
or woma n who wonts lhe best
in life. A poy chec k every
week , fa ntasti&lt;a.r i r:~ge benefits ,
all local work , Give vs a call ol
992·2480 or w ri te, Western
Southern Life Insurance, 218 •;,
WE NEED medi cal laboratory
E. ~ain . Pomeroy ,. Ohio, for intechnicians or tcch nalogist.s.
formation .
·
r egiS ter ed or eligible to be
r egi stered . Confect Personnel
Dept. ot O'Bi eniss Memoria l
Hospital 6 14593 -555 1. An equa l '
~po r tu nity emPloyer .

I974 Gremlin 2 Dr••••••••••••• s1695 .

-

•'

Jonathan E . L oud en
D ep ut y Clerk -T rea su r er
• Ga!lia Cou nty
D is tr lct:ubrai'v
Board of Trustees

AUCTION EVERY Fri ., 7 pm . lots
· of new and used mercnondise
ot Ohio
Auction , Meig~
Plaza,
Ohio.. Home
· Phone

Rh erglass raised roof. bun~s, screen •. 12 V, electric
r Zl'rig . , furnace. Porta_ _ftottl, ~tove , d1nette . 350 V-a
eng., automatic, P.S., P.lL air cond ., AM-FM stereo
ridio and tape. w.w tires, red a nd wh!te . 0f1IY 10,000
m'iles and clean as new.

•

GOOD USED
REGRIGERATOR
AND FREEZER UPRIGHT OR
~ HE 5T , Ph. 4_4=.
6·.03
;.: :2::2c,.-~~­
ANTIQUE OAK FURNilURE , Ioney
irQn beds. stOne jars , elc. Co li
145-5050

1976 Chevy G20

~·•

Deposit shall be SSO.OQ, pe r
sel , which w i ll be refunded
providing the dOcuments a r e
retu r ned , Sh ipp ing charg es
pr e p~ i d , in good condition
with in len ( 10) days after th e
of
b id .
These
r e ce i pt
documents ore on f il e at the
Gallia
County
Distri c t
CASH paid lor oil moke$ ond Libra r y ; Co l umbus Dodg e
mode-ls ol mobile h o m~s . R.cports , 1050 Freeway Drive
Nortli , Suite 209 , Columbus ,
' Phoneoreocode614 -423 ·953 1.
Oh io 43229 and t he Builders
TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Pro - Exchange of Columbus , 1175
duch . l op price tor st"onding Dub lin Road . Columbus , Oh io
saw l imber . COli 992 -596S or &lt;l32 15.
All bidder s must be in
Kent H.onb~6·6570 .
con formance with
s t ate
Op COINS, CUR~ENCY , tokens. o ld Equal - Employment
pockel wOtches and chains , portUn ity ReqOirernents and
silver and gold . We need 1964 inclu de ·EEO Form-s in th ei r
ls .
ond ol,d er si lver coins . Bu y . se ll , bidA· proposa
ce rt i f ied , check payab l e
or trQde ' Coli Roger Wamsley , to "Gallia Coun t y D istrict
742 -2331 .
L ibrary "
or a pr ope rly
OlD FURNITURE . ice boxes . brass secured AlA Form of Bid
Bond, in a ny amount equa l to
beds ,
et c. ,
c.O'mplete S percent of the tota l bid shall
housenolds . Write M . D_Mille r , be sUbmit t ed with the bid .
Rl. 4, Pomeroy . Ohio or co li T he Owner reser~Jes the r ight
qcn . 776iJ .
to accept or r e j ect~ny or all
parts of anv bid . .,
CA SH I 1_ Junk cars , Fry 's Truck &amp;
The su'i:::cesstul bi dder wi l l
Auto , Rutland . Phone 742 -1081 be required to f urnish a
or 742·9575 . Closed MondOys .
sa tiSfacto r y perform a nee
l;lond for one h undred pe r cent
NO ITEM TOO large or lao smoll. ( 100 percent) of the Con tra ct
Wdl buy I piece or ~omp l e t e price . No bids may be with household . New , Used, or onli · drawn tor at least Si)( lh (60)
d ays after th e sc h edu l ed
que~ . Mar tin 's Fuq'lil ure . 20 N .
2nd St. , Middleport . Phone closing time to r the rece ipt of
bids .
992·6370.

Alletiu n_:

Jl1NK au to and scrap metal. Pn .

or Gene Smith

re~l · nice

-

•

NEW SIMMONS BEAUTY REST BOX SPRINGS
&amp; MATIRESS lWINFULLQUEEN KING
'58.00 AND UP

See Herb, Dave, Mike Grate

engine, std. trans., step bumper,

1 ~wner, 350, V-8, automatic power steering and
br"}fkes, rally wheels, chrome equi pment, inter ior
pafleled and insulated, carpeted , ready to add your
o-llfl camping equipment.

i

..
RUTLAND FURNITURE

V~8

1976 Chevy Van G20 •••••••••••• s5495

••
•
•f

. Several gas &amp; eleclric ranges $79.95 a"d up
Several Mel a I KitChen Cabinels $10.00 and up
2 Aulomalic Washers $125 each
Porlable Maylag Dryer· $88.00 ,
2 · 5 Piece Wooden Breakfasl Sels 599.95
each
·
Several full &amp; !win size beds, wood only,
510.00 and up
65,000 BTU Warm Morning Healer, Gas
. $199.95
Come in Now and 'save while !he Seleclion is

-

e69 Chev. lf2 Ton •••••• ~ .......l995
n'ioctei .

•••
•

Sels of Bunk Beds $125 and up ·
2 Sinks I green , 1 white. $49.95 and $99.95
2 Bar Slools $25.00
· _Breakfasl . Sels $19.95 an\f up
12 Bedroom Suiles in slack slarling a! $99.95

•

••
L

SAT., 9Cf. ·8, 10:30 A.M.
SUN., OCT. 9, 12:30 P.M.

0

·-....
·-

MUSTANG . 35 1.
Good condi tion .

1976 V. ton Chevrolet T.clck .
' 13,000 mi.., extra . tires , $3800 .
Coli ~42 · 2316 , evenings .

POLIS, OHIO

Week End Special

·:·
Maple Hex ·Tables $20.00 each
Used Hide-A-Bed 539 .95 .
3 Nice Love Sea.ts $88 and up
2 pc . Living Room Suiles S69.96 &amp; up
Small Desk $39.95
Several Chesls &amp; Dre~sers slarling a·l $29.95
and up
.
Porlable Black &amp; While TV $49.95 and up
2 Humidifiers $49.95 each
Wooden 4 Drawer filing cabinels $25.00 each
2 Small 2 Drawer filing cabinels $34.95 each
4 Drawer Melal filing cabinel $59,95
Odd Chairs $10.00 and Up
Olher Odd Tables $5.00 and up

_•. ]

RIGHT PRICE
RIGHT DEAL

..,.

PAR TS FOR 1971 GolaJO:ie Fprd for
sole . Phone 992 -5858 .
·

$7S&lt;j,1992-29'15 .

457 -41At .

.-

;.:

1966 FORD
Au!OrlJOtk

A

THIRD .&amp; COURT"

';'·.

. ·?~;~i~-2~3~5~
9 ·~--~---~~·~ng~in~e~
·

bow l, st erling base bowL eight foo t oak ,showcase,
need s w ork , refi nished oak ta b ! ~ reHni Shed p i ne .
Empire chest 1850, fancy Eastlake table, oak dresserbra ss pu l ls, r efinished ben t glass china cabine t-,needs
gla ss, walnut marble insert dresser.brass pu ~l s,
m a rble dresser top . white, carniva l g lass sp ittoon, four
oak c ha i r s, 1940s. iron dog foot scaper, curved oak stai·r
rai l &amp; spi nd les . c he ~ t n ut drop l eaf table, kitchen
cab inet , modern two pie ce oak bedroom suit-five
dra-we r chest and bookcase head board, tin box , iron
door kn ock e r , 1876 Atlas of Vinton Co ., Ohio, gol den oak
side boa rd , loaded with carving ·made by Gall ia Furn .
Co ., Gallipolis. Ohio, dish marked The Dea rorff &amp; •
· Poore Co. Dry Goods. Gallipoli s,, Ohio, four books by
Gene Stratton Port er , six books bv Zane Grey, copy of
Th e French 500 by Wm . Sibley , copy T t1e Hang_ing of
James Lane, G all ipoli s, Oh io, Qfoup of Ga llipolis, Ohio
po s t ca r d s, Ga.llipoli s Mus ter Day Plate, 1"965
Cen't en n!dl p late, other items too numerous to mentlon·.
All the above w i II be sol d to the highes t b idder .
To be offP.red at 12 : 00 : VerY rare and e)(tremely
or na t e bras s piano lamp . Ha s four ~abs of marble and
is dated 1887.
·
M i n imum bid accepted :- SJOO .OO .
Auc tion to be held at Junc tion of 5- t . Rt s, 16C &amp; 554,
Por te r . Oh io From Gvlltpolis take St. Rt. J5 We st to St .
Rl. 11'10 North .

.

•

•"

•

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7th
CARROLL NORRIS DODGE

1973 BUICK ELC. CUSTOM

Auto . p.s., p .b .. a ir . not too m an y
miles bu t body rou gh , l ots of rust .
Was S1095. No~

L-----------'

~~:~~~~~ ~~~~fe 0~ol~~~~~i~1er1~ni~r~~~:~ t~os~~~

. PUBLIC • AUCTION

OWNER .. HOWARD STEWAR T

'2895

.1973 CHEV. IMP. CUST 2 DR HT

popco rn
r o ute .
Pl eo sont
bu s_i ness. High prof it ite m . Pori
ti me or f ull ti me . Cosh invest Type LT, air, stereo.
men t ol $1950. and up . depen Crager mags . $5,300.
dign on number ol ac co unts yov
.
w ish to service . We establish
Racine , .949·2636 .
ini l ial accounts. For de tai ls
writ e and include your phone ~
number: D.M . Eagle , 393B
M ead o wbrook
Rd . ,
Min - 19691MPAlA. 4-door . Fine condi·
neopa lj_s . Min~ : 55_&lt;l_~6 . _ - · - . _.·
lion . New pqinl job. 350

H anging brass la mp, loaded with prisms, bow l and
pitcher . f inger ring lamp, China, German, Austrian,
Ba v ar ian, Set~ Thoma s cloc k , th ree bottle glass cruet
stand , wooden '"bowl. stone ware, stone jar marked
Gree nsboro. Pa ., one Jackson, 0 .. mirror t&gt;lateau,
group old bottles, china dre sser set, lap robe, type tra y,
gro up arrowheads. wood ba r re l pump, wood sp i got,
se v en -piece berry set, two smoke bells, tea lea f bowl,
carnival bowl, glass compotes , g loss .tr.,1Uf1S, plank
bottom chair , old frame w i th mirror , fan c y oVal frame.
miniature g lass showcase, glass walki ng cane, n in e
pieces of Heisey. g lass, glass cake stand, t wo brass
bell s , brass ket tl e - s ~and , croche'f ed ·bedspread,
re fini shed humpback trunk , green opa lescen t vase,

DACK TERMITING SPECI A LI ST
PEST CONTROl . l icense d. IN
sured .
Free
In sp ec ti o n
Member NPCA dnd O PC A . C
M. Ha ll Wilkes... ,lte Ohro Ph

listing in pa rt : Book c ase, coffee aOd end tab l es,
portable T .V .• t loOr fan , uti li t y cvbinet. f_l_oor tamp s.
Sears Cold Spot upr ig h t f ree zer. ( rea l _n tce l. Sears
washer and dryer , Sear s Ice Maker refngerator , g~ s
range, ro l l-awa y bed, c h i (d's roc ker . Troy Bill
rototilter, wheelbarrow, por ch , swing , hand tools , new
10 gallon orcha rd or garden spray wi th gasoline mot cir ,
3 gallon pump gar dt:n sp ray , seed sowe r . 55 gallon
drum s. !tep !add er , ga rden carl, ha ng1ng scales, s ~ed
sower on wheel s. mixer , 2 lawn chai r s. bedroo m su1te,
2wardrobes, fruit i ars, 2 dog box es, g,a rden pu sh plow,
si l ver dollar . · .
.
,
-4

•

'2295

Gallipolis, Ohio

STU CCO PLA ST ERING and Plaster
r ep o,r Te xl ured ce 1ling SWirl
f loa t on brush des4gn . 31 yr s
e)/ p Wor k by the hour o r by the
10b 25b -118' Tri -Co . Plo s!N
•ng and Stucco.

DODGES

~­

-lias

4,

BACK HOE , DOZ,ER . 0\l' ( HER and
dump lruck . Co ncre l'e Wo rk .
Hotl 1eld Ba ckh oe Ser . Rullond ,
Oh, Ph 74? 2008o r 44 6-2786

....

•

Th i s Oids ha s e ve r yth ing , T his is tn e
best Of"ds made. Wa s $3-195 Now

loc;k,
tots of m i les. Runs like
new car . Was $3195

ANTIQUE
AUCTION
•
Saturday, Oct. 8

SEE THE NEW '78

.• .
•·
••
••

4 dr h .t. , loaded , hasP w ,, p.s., door

ST ANI:EY
5TEEMER
CA RPET
CLEANER Any li vmg room and Phone 44b -273 S
hall 52q _95 up 1o 300 Sq H ..
Sou th eos l~r n
Ohio No _ I ·
Cor pe I
C!e o n e r s , . Ph , , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
&amp;14-446-4208,.

AllEN 'S GENERAL C O N T R ~C­ CHAI N LIN K FENCI NG , WOC&gt;OEN
FENC IN G
AWNIN GS . PoliO
TORS , remodeling , house w1r •
co11 er s. A ult ~
Home tm ,
ing. house plu m bing. f ree
pr ov emen ! s Ph . 4~ b · 3008 oil er
estimotes.446 -7910
PATTRY 5
CARPENTR Y
remodeling , Po inling :
367-7 672

'.

~·

1974 OLDS 98 LUX. 4 DR. SED.

· 1973 BUICK ELEC. 225 CUST.

1977 CAMARO

446 - 163 7 .

eho11al ing

•

·MEMORIAL

o

•

. c'&amp;oK GEl'IERALIST
Ability to follow recipes for
large daily
volume
cooking. Previous .in·
stitutional
experience
preferred. Rotation shifts.
Call or apply at Pe-rsonnel
. Dept.
Holzer Medica I Center
446-5105

Affirmative-Action
Equal opportunity
employer

IT WILL PAY YOU .
.. to look into this
Here is a secure job in
consumer
finance
with an excellenl
fulure. Your ability
and · iniliative. plus
our fine !raining
program, assure your
rapid progress lo a
Branch
Manager
posilion.
We have ~ opening
for a lrainee IIA\o is a
high school graduate
wilh
or
without
experience .
Car
required . Relocation
may be necessary
now or in !he future .
Phone Mr . Hays at
992 -2111.

Capital Financial
SeiVices Inc.

3~o. west2nd Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

AN EQUAL
OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER

The Cars Listed are Mostly One Owner,

New Car -Tra~es and Are

.'

A~rage!.._ ..

Expect the Best. We Cany a 100% Warranty.

.

••

Tann e hi ll ,

t
t

LIBRARY
Sealed prQposal s w il l be
reCE"ived until 2 ·00 P .M .,
Lo ca l T im e, October 18, 1977
al th e G all ia Coun t y D is tr ic t
Library , ,"!,b,U-d Avenue and
State Street , Gall i polis , Oli'fo
45631 fo r furn ishlng ·m a te rial s
and ta bor tor the e)Cecufion
and ' cons t ruction of Dr .
Sam uel L . S:ossarc;:~ Memorial
Libra r y , Gallipolis, OI"Jio , in
accordance
with
th e
drawings and specifications
and
other
contract
documents prepared
by '
JO!.obert
L.
Grant
&amp;
'Assoc iates , Ar c hitecl s.
Proposa ls wi l l be opened
immediately thereafter and
pub l ic l y read at t he office o f
the Clerk -Treasurer .
P~oposa l s w i ll be rece i ved
for the General Construc ti on
Contract only
The Instructions to th e
Drawing s ,
B i dders ,
Spt\'Cif i cat i ons .
Proposal
Forms a nd other contract
Ooc umenls may be obta i ned
at 1t'le ~ffice or Robert L .
G ra nt &amp; Asso c iates , Ar ·
Chit.e·c ts , 1515' Belhe l Road ,
co "lumbus . dhio ~3220 , (614) '

..,

•3795

j

Sport Coupe

BOSSARD

4 dr . ht, p.w ., p.s .. a1r vi ny l t op , Ttl i s
was my unc le' s car . Pr i ced t o sell.
Wi'J s S419S.

'2895

who~ sa l e

CAN TRUST"

2 dr . h.t., CIJr lse , door lock s. a ir
vin y l lop, e;.c tra sha r p, big sa v ing .
Was $5595 .

4 4 6 - ~ 235

CB

DO ZE R WORK
cl earing Ph

CUST.

1971 DODGE 11' T PICKU P. . ;3 18
V-8 au to ., good 'cond ition
$1195 Co11J88 -SB3S .

Ro d 10
Equ i p
everythi ng m Tw o Way Rod1o .
CARTERS PLUMBING
Anrei1nos and ecce:. George!&gt;
AND HEATING
Cr ee k Rd . Gall ipo lis &lt;i4 6 4)1 7.
--, .._
Cor.· f o l.lrl h 8. Pi ne
SMIT H EXCA VATI NG . dol:er . Ph one. 446 -3888 or 44 6 -44777
bod!. hoe trenc her, d um p tru ck.
Sf ANDAR'O
work don e ot r e o ~o noP i e rate'&gt; .
plumbi ng Hea li ng
Ph. 4463981 John Smi th Jr .
21S !fwd "A ve ., 446)782
. - ·--BORDER S G\:A RA GE DOOR SER GENE PLAN TS 8. SONS
VICE Commer ico l an d res 1denAir Cont10I speciol1z ing 1n opera to rs, PLU MBIN G - Heot1 ng
ddlon ing. 300 Fou rt h A '.' e . Ph .
Lo(ai 2S0-6472 .
BO B 5

...............1-wo.NAMES YOU

V. E. FI LLINGER Wat e r Deli\l ery 1976 FORD 4 wh l. dr ., ' • T.
P1 cl\ up Call 379 ·2582 oiler
f-' h .
379 -2\ 24 or
Ser •n ce
6 pm .
379-21 71 .
ROO F I N G
H O ME
I M · 1973 PINTO RUNABOUT , Au to ., ·
AM - ~M - Tap..:.:._ C o ~l ~46 - 4452.:_ __
PROVE M ENT S ,
PA INT I NG ,
Co rpen rer wor k , ge neral 1977 MONTE CARLO , f&gt;)( C. cond .
n~pior
PH . 44b - 4 3 lb or __£all ~46_:_~ 595 .,

' Siii'.
=- H ri!illtf..mFc:c. .,. . .--, -:-- --;;._ ' -~

LESABR~
•

Camaro

Malibu Wagon (Wagon Rear Open)

7951

Middleport, 0 .

RUTLAND open doily
till 10. ClOsed MOndays ,
wrecker · sen1lce. tir e r epoir .
Phone 742 -q-5 75' or 741-:1081 ,

..

1974 BUICK ELC. CUST.

1975 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX

\

See Pat th :!, K ocky Hupp or Darrel Oocl r!ll
For d Good Oeal on a New or U se d Vehicle
Opl!n E venihgs ti\17 :00 except
Th ursday a nd Saturday . Closed Sunday

MA~~~~~t\~:,1:ND

1. T it le of P ub l icat 1on ; T he
Sunday T imes-Sen fi nel.
2 D ate o f Filing : Oct 1,
1917.
J . Freq uen cy a t I ssue :
Sunday On l y .
JA , Ann ua l
Sub sc r ip tion
Pr i ce : By m ail in Oh io - W .
V&amp; . 11 3.00 P er Yea r .
4. Location o f K nown Off ice
o f Publiu t io n · 825 Thi r- d
Ave .. Ga llipol is, Oh io. •
5
Loc at ion
of
th e
H eadQu a r1er s o r G ene r a l
Bu si ness Oft icf&gt;s o t th e
• P ubl isher s : 82 5 Th i r. d Ave ..
G all ipol is . ·
6l.Nam.e s and Addr esses of
Pu b.l i sher ,
E ditor ,
tJnd
M a nag i ng Ed i tor : Publ isher :
Ri chard S. Owen , Midd lePort ,

T h o m as _ Bole s ,
O h io tr u ste e for St epha
Bo l es , Robert Boles , Jani c e
' Bo les ; George~ - Byers Il L
Col u m b us , Oh iG; Lynn S.
Ka u fman , Grand Rap i d s,
Ohio ; Seth Byers Sell s,
Col u mbus , Ohio ; D ia ne B .
Byer s, Colu'mbus , Oh i o ;
Robert Wing~tt , Syra cuse,
Rally
Oh lo ; George W . Byers , Jr .,
Col u mbus , Oh io .
8, Known Bondholders ,
Morlgagers ,
and
Other
Security Holders Owning or
Holding 1 Percent of Bonds ,
Mortg;,ges
or
Other
NOTI CE TO BIDDERS
Sec urllies : Ohio Valley Bank ,
G;,llipolis, Ohio.
PROJECT : OR . SAMUEL l .

'5295

DAN THOMPSON FORD
992:2196

1976 BUICK

'3895

Blue w ith white top , low m i leage l or
74. Was SJ19S, tv\arked only

See ~ne of lhese coui'leou!i sales~en-: Pele
Burns,
or Georg
. ..
. Marvin ·Keebauqh
.
.
e Harns.

V-8, HD su spe nS ion. HD t ires. 4 speed tr ans ., p .
steer i ng .

ST ATEMENTOF

.

to visit our "~how room.

.

OWNERSHIP

~·~--------~--~~--~~-...-.~--~-.~~~~~~----~----~~ ~~,;h, Cl•h~~~~.-~~-~~;:,i~s~·;;~~
.FOR CHEVROLET &amp; OLDSMOBILE

•

•3495

1975 BUICK LESABRE CUST.

V -8, au t o. trans ., Cus tom .

1

.

'4995

ONLY

2 DR.

FULLY EQUIPPED

. 4 dr . a uto.• p .s., p .b ., a ir con d ., si lver
·on red viny l tap , one own~ r .

---

I

PUBLIC NOTICE

r.-....--

This Is an Invitation

-----

A-USTIN MARINA , 4 dr .
$1500. Co ll 245 -54 51.

1974

'

10

extra cl ean . Was 54195. Only

Thr @e ·quorte r lon 73 FORO -F250
wilh hea vy pipe cotlle rock·
$2300 . 72 FORD -F 350, I len cob
&amp; cha SS IS 0 o )500 . Se'.'e-ral
pieces form equipment , rnok e
alfer . Ph 379 -2667

..~

~hevy-Oids

Monle Carlo landau Coupe

•

T SUPER CAB.
44b -7B'27 o r

' J T. PICKUP. $500.
Col l 367 ·0-::5~4~l---~---

1

302 V -8, 3 spee d co l umn 'f&gt;hift . Ranger Pack cab li ghts,
loca I owner .

,..

19b4 FORO

1-DEMO SEDAN DEVILLE

4 ~yl , auto. tra ns ., vinyl r oof .

wh l. dr

4J6 -b69b
1975 FORD 1 •
$3 77 5. Ca l l
245 -9441

NOW IN STOCK

1

-4

&lt;

Coli

GRAND PR1x~ l~lly .equip·
ped. blue w ith wh ite landau
lop, new ti res . Wi l l sell or tfo de
for olde-r modet. Very g ood
condit ion . Al so 1976 Conbello
250 b rand ne w Ridden 5 hrs.
Ex c. ~an d . $900. Call ~4b- 2672
or see at 425 G reen Terrace Or .
in Centenar)l . Rl. 2.

Fu ll po we r , a i r , stereo:

4 cy l,. p . st eer ing . a uto. t r ans ., Estate option . 40,000.
miles, e)( . clean.

MUSTANG .

1 97~

74 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille _ _ _ _ '5500

-=mu

74 Chev. Vega Sta. Wgn.

19M .FORD
67S-5022

--

~-

Vinyl roof. leat her seat s, f ul! pow er , fa d or y air , cru ise
contr o l, T &amp; T -w hee l. f ul l stereo, I ow 11er

302 V-8, a.c .. p. steer ing, rad to, vi n yl roof, recl ini ng

13 Ford Pinto Sta. Wgn.

75 Cadillac Coupe DeVillewa. s•8oo Now '5900
74 Sedan DeVille

r adio, 3s peed on column .

buckets .

1973 DO DGE CHARG ER . ou1.
trans., PS, PB . fo e oi r, 45 000
m i le~ good con d . ,one owner
fl h '2 45-5 182 alt ar 5 PM

Ful l po w er , f actory a ir , leath er se at s, T&amp; r" whee l,
st ereo, 32 ,000 m i les.

4

6

ligh t b l ue,- bl ue viny l roof. de-elega nc e inter?or , f u ll
po we r a~ a ir, AM -FM ste r eo w ith tape , T&amp; T steer i ng
wheel.

_..

••

NlW C M(
h ut lo. H Q odq v~r It~ • '
11/74 , I V MCPrdo.up
Ht74 ', T G MC f'"r cl..up
1\.173 '1 ( h(' v , P• clo.up '
I 'tt l .I , I GMC f'"U
I 1 ~ 73 1 , I Chev PU
t 97J , r ( nev PU
IY7J tiC ommo w rth l op
I ~ ].I , T ._o rd PU
J97J thtee l ourlh 1 .. ord PU
1974 three l ourth Chev 1-'U
1'174 th r ee l ourth T GMC 1-'U'"
197 \ GMC q500 Tr oc tor
197 4 I l r .. ofd Prck up
1972 CMC J1m my ~ wh . dr,
1968 I T Chcv Cab &amp; Choss•s
JIH:J lnternol10ri al 1600 Ser•es
cob &amp; c ho ~SIS 1andern dnve
IYJ!l ' 4 T. For d Prc k up
SO MMERSGMC
l RU CKS IN(
133 Pme St
4Jb-1532

TO BUY

........

-

-

..

'

-'

D-3- The slllldlt Times-Sentinel, SWiday. Oct. 2, 1rm

0

(

.

Average No . Copies Each
Issue Dur i ng Preceding 11
Months
10. E)(lent and Natu r e of
Circu l at ion
- A . T.otal No . ~ opies Prin t ed : Sunday , 12,500.
B . Pa id Cir c ulation : 1.
~ ales Thl'"ough Dealers and
Carriers, St r-eet' Vendors and
Coun ter Sales : Sund~y 9, 184 .
C. Total paid ·circula t ion :
Sunday , 11,836 .
2. Mai l
Subscriptions : .
Sunday , 2,652 .
0
Free Distribution by
Mail, Carrier or Other
Mea n s ,
Samp l es ,
c om .
p li mentary , and Other Free
Cop ies : Sunday 115 .
E . T ota l D i str i bution :
Su nday , 11 ,951.
'F . Copies Not Distributed :
1. Office Use , Left -O'Ier ,
Unaccounted , Spoiled After
Pr lnling ; Sunday 389 .
2. Ret urns From News
Agenlii.:.. Sun d ay , 160 .
G . T otal : Sunday , 12,500 .
' Act tia l Number of Copies of
Si ngle
Issue
Published
Nearest to F i ling Date
10. Extent and Nat ur e of
Circulation
A ~ Total No.- Copies Prin ted : Sunday , 13,000
B . Paid Circu lation : 1. Sa les
Throu gh
Dealers ·
~n d
Carriers . St re et Vendors and
Counter Sa le'S : Sunday, 9,793 .
2. Mail
Subscriptions :
Sunday , 2,689 .
c . Tota l Pa id Ci r cula t ion :
Sunday 12,482 .
D . Free Distribution by
Meit ; C:el'"rier or
Oth er
Means ,
Samp l es ,
Com .
plimentary , a nd Other Free
Copies : Sun day , 1'1 5.
E . Te ta I
Distribut i on :
SUnday ~ 12, 597 .
·
F Copies N ot Dis tr ibu t ed :
1. Office use ; Left -Over,
Unaccounted, Spoi led After
printing ; Sunday, 268.
•1 . Returns From N ews
Agents : Sun day, 135.
G . Total : Su nday 13,000 .
I
certify
that - the
s1a t~ments
made by me
above are correct and
complete .

RICHARD

dr.,

4

wheels, 8,867 miles,
Gran Prix 'Trade.

new

air

power

cond ..

ice.,..~ new

$7006 .00, 77
imited trade, showroom
condition.
·

76 DODGE ASPEN
CUSTOM 4 DR.

74 CHEVY · ·
MONTE CARLO

Air cond., 6 cyl.., power
steering, vinyl top, driven
only 12,854 miles, new car.
Trade this week.

Lt . green with match ing
interior, white vinyl top, air
conditioning. Only 36,256
miles . See this one now .

•

75 OLDS OMEGA

75 OLDS CUTLASS

2 DR. HATCHBACK

SALON 2 DR~ HDTP.

VB, automatic, p .
steering, only 6,854 miles, 77
Buidk , trade . Super sharp.

Air cond., bucket seats, light
blue with white vinyl top.
exceptionally nice .

75 CAMARO
Air cond., 350 eng. , auto.,
p.s .• driven only 26,988
miles, local businessman's
daughter's trade, one of the
nicest around.

74 BUICK REGAL
2 DR. HDTP.
.Air cond., burgundy with
black, padded vinyl top.
driven only 37,127 miles.
New regal trade this week.

OWEN

S.

PUBLISHER

BUNDY CLARINET . in cose-. $85. EOR.SALE or Trade : House and lot~

Coli 446-0822.

in Mason, W. Vo . 3 bedrooins .
both , li ving room , kitchen , utility . ex tra largo r oom lor recreo ·
l ion or TV room . (304 ) 773 -5227 .
alter 5 pm .
v
,_. ,.

HELP WA"NTED

LABORATORY •
We are currently accepted applications for the
following positions in our PathoiC?gY department :

M. L.T. !ASCPI
C. L.A . (ASCPI
Full-time and parf. fime positions. On evenings 3 to 11
shift.
We offer a good starting salary and
compr-ehensive benefits program . To apply please stop
by our Personnel department week days, 9 a.m . to l
p.m. or call Mrs. Logsdon, interviewer. For additional
information call area code 614 -225-5288.

...

'1"\&gt;'·-,~·;~------

--

FOR SALE or rent : Nice 2 bedroom FOUR MONTH OLD Border Collie.
Mobile H~me, . unlurril\lj'Eid. . Cdll A:46 1 50~
_
renl depos1t requrred . .Pos s-Ible 'cO LEMAN FUEL OIL FURNA CE.
for buyer to l eo ~e mob de h~me
Call 245 _5506
on lol rn o beouhful co untryj6e tHOMES FOR .3 KI TTENS and
ting. 742 -3122.
mo t h e r cot . Good wit h
FOR SALE · or trade or lond Con chi ldren . Coli 4~ 6 - 7525 .
tract . 2 bedroom · hou~e" In
Rutland . 992·585B. TWO LOTS in Pomeroy for good

bu lldozer or end looder . Write
Milton Ber tra m , For t Goy , W .
Vo. 251 1-4
MOBIL E HOME l o r sole or ren1.
N ice location . Albert Hill ,

949-226l c. - - - - ' FOR SALE or Rent. Hovse , ideal
for single parson Or couple,
walking d1ston ce to town .
992·3405 or 992 - ~ 3 14 .

Moun! Carmel Medical Center
'
125 S. Souder Ave.
Columbus, Ohio 43222
An equal opporlunily employer .

wh o has anything to
i
ond does nol olfer or
altempl to offer any oth er 1hing
l or sole moy pla ce on od in thi s
co lum n . Th ere will be no ·
.... .J~ kor.ge_ t o~t h e odverli ser

.GENERA L Conl ro ctor s: Do oi l
masonary , carpent er 8 plumb ing . Install c:.nd repair oil
d r ivewoys :..P~ 4~b- 95~ --

SEW ING AND AlTERATION S, al so
dOll clol hes ., In my home . Call
446 -3 115

.-

-----.-MATUR .~ __ house w ife wil l

baby sit

on innrn1 . Call ~4b · q7t;J7

DAIRY DISPERSAL

PUBLIC AU,C TIO"
SAT., OCT. 8, 1977
11:00 A.M.
Have discontinued farming and moving to fown so

will of-f er for sale at mv farm located from Rutland ,
Ohio app. 1!2 mile out the New Lima Rd . . Turn left on
gravel road, second t)ouse on left . Watch for signs.
•
"TRACTOR AND FARM MACHINERY"
Allis Chalmers D -14, - Si mptesty garden trac.tor reel
type mower and cultivator, I. H. 3 1 mower, 2 bottom 3
P.T. Dea r; born plows, ft. Bu sh hog. 5 Shovel cu ltivator
spike tooth, Strawberry plow, potato pl ow, drag
harrow •. J. D. horse mower, drag disk, vice, ahvll •
sprayer and water pumps. ladders, misc. block plai n s,
too ls, •12 in . d/rill horse harness sing le set, rope, hand
too ls.

s

''HOUSEHOLD"
Whlr.l pool (coppertonel re frige rat or , Mag ic Chef
{copperto ne) gas sfove, 2 pc. living room suite, 4 pc.
bedroom s uite. 3 pc. bookcase bedroom sui t e, B &amp; V:J
combinat ion T.V .. rad io' and record player, A.M. &amp;
F .M . stereo, Warm Morning 85,000 BTU gas stove w.
blower, oi:td c ha irs, studio couch, 6 pc; . breakfast. set,
metal wardro be, two 9X12 w09 l rug~ w -pad ,"12 X12 r ug
w -pad . lawn chairs , dresser, clocks, dra~s, and m lsc.
odds and· ends. ·
•

"COLLECrOR lTEMS"
5 gal. ston e jar , lard press,_,copper boiler trunk .
Lunch

. 0 . Smith
949 -2033

•

Charles, E. Eads , Owner
Positiv e I. D.
Cash o_r Check
L. Donohue
J-. Carnahan

742-3048

949-2708

Not re s11on si ble for accidents or loss of property .

Saturday, Oct. 8, 1977
11:00 A.M.
LOCATION : 4112 · miles Southwesl of
Ravenswood on W. Va. Slate Route 2. Due lo
olher interesl I will offer my enlire milking
herd al Public Auclion.
55 - DAIRYCOWS55
50 Hol stein , 4 Guernseys. 1 Red Holstein .
This is a good set of high quality milk cows
in various stages of laclation . There 'a re
several first and second ca lf h-etfers in the
sa le .. The majority of these cows are young
with a lot of potential. Al l cows are bred and
sired by A. I. A. I. has been used in this herd
for the pas! 25 years. SOme of fhe sires of
these cows include: Limewater, Comet,
Jelstream, Charm, lmperior , Transmitter,
and Elevation. If you need replacements for
your herd, don'! miss this sa le, most of the
cows were ca llhood vacci nated for Lepto.
These cows are in good conditio n ·and r~ady
to produce . Complete informal ion sheet at
sale .
' TERMS; CASH
WA.YNE HUGHES, OWNER
273-4744
, Lee Johnson - ·Auclioneer
Crown Cily, Ohio - Phone 255-6740
No! Responsible for Accidenls
John Me Nei II - Sales Manager

0

..
•

····-

�'

0-5-TheSundayTimes-Sentlnel Sunday

D-4-The Sundal Times-Sentmel Sunda) Oct 2 !977

For Best Results~Use Sunday Times Sttntinel _Classifieds

Oct

2

tm

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-s-entinel Classifieds

&lt;')

Cani ofThauks
Reo '1\!ombe l'd by hose
her

ho o -d

g one t o

t&gt;"Sl

V u t ne

lil'

olone

Fe

a po

of 4s

Choc h
eo,

\!

A TT EN li O N SO W'"tunte s

b~
~

fo rgo e by l hose ho c
yo u bes Oeo Cod plem .:- Q l.. t"
'!'f-1 W!'!",ogr ~lov-ed
t&gt;
up above T"'l he hov. t1uc h
we n H he
Q d g
t&gt; ho? 0
a u a .. ~
b coke ou hea to
lose hE&gt;
bu ~h e ~ d
qo
en

v rh h e he d o ov col ed he
ho e You g o e u s e g h o
fa ce
and c'ou age to
et&gt;
the b loV) Bu .... ha
n O:&gt;o n o
ose hli:"
o o e w II If? e

ca n p

e e

.. o o

ne a t Bo w H u n ng

supp es The Sow Hun e r. Shop
New Ha e
W Vo
Pho e
3()4 ) 882 2827 Ask t o Dove

ce e
ho ks a ny no ny I e ds who

W SH

o eM e nd

ny s

e en be ed me wh le I w a!&gt; 0

pot e n
a
l ho ks to
I o wP s v s
They we e g

tio t: er Hasp o
he n a ny co d s
ts and P a ye s
eo y app e o ted

G od Bless
Houck

each o e

Mo e

k nov..

R cho ds
SHOO TING MATCH at the Spo

s no

Club s o

t

ng at 1 prn

Su da y Foe o y choked g un s
o ly Sho t and slug m ot~
NO HUNTING dov o n ght on the
l(e ne h and Robe t Do s fo n
n S o eys Run Sheep Pos tu e
Keep dog s au
They
I ve

o nge

Blue Lake
,.,

R9c e Gun Clu b
ol e oor
Foe tor
guns on y Aho eel

Gll N SHOOl
e ~ ,- Sun

B olo. e \'Vo xi o d
o be w h Je u~ 0
1960
o b~ b
g:t

leo a

who we
robt'!r
o,
sod memo es o a lo ed o

Campmg ,l,;qmpmenl

Nub.,...,

BY RUBY SAUNDERS
Mr and Mrs lrra&lt;f) Shee ts
spent a "eekend with thetr
daughter Mr and Mrs Cltn e
Thompson of Grove Ctty
Mr and Mrs J ohn Paul
Sheets of Columbus were
recent Sunday guests of Mr
and Mrs Leslie Sheets They
came espectally tp get h s
mother Mrs Mable Henery
of Trenton Fla 10ho has been
vtsttmg fnends and relatl\ es
m this commurutv a fe" da) s
She will spend a fe" da) s
wtth her son and then ret urn
to he r home m F londa
Mtss Carla Spencer 10ho
attends Rto Grande College
spent the weekend wtth her
parents Mr and Mrs Robert
Spen cer a nd fanulv
Mrs Debbte Belleville " as
re&lt;;ent afternoon guest o f her
cousm Mrs James Vmson
a nd fanul)
Mrs Laura McGutre
a few davs wtth Mrs
Shu mashe r who

Inez Halle) and two chtldren
Jerem) and Enc and Mr and
Mrs Emmtt Hall~l
4
Mrs E\a Queen "ho was a
pattent a t Holzer Medtcal

NO HUNTING o T espcss ng on
n y lo m o pr voJe roa dwa y

--

Claude Ebl"
-~
MEIGS COUNTY F sh and Game

-

ho d o mee ng Wed Oct
5 7 pm o Shade R ver Club
house
w

•
3 AND
lu

4 RM tur n shed and u
shed op s Phone W?

S-4 341

;ts

$A400 00 20 h m
mo le
$ 0 850 00 We t.~ ll serv ce a d
qua l f)l Ca mp Con t~y St o c of
Soles R 01 nor n ol PI Plea

OMJd Fo I o 'l people n
Coo s Bu d ng over Co um b a

Go$ Aho I smo off ce roo m
to
e n Call a t op
6 o
phone 992 364 I

.

ST ARCRAfl
educed !lo ve
$ 700 o 2Sf978u s n
stock New a nd used We seserv ce o d qu ty Co' p Con
wy Sto re oft Soles R b2 N o h

All 1977

- - - "---

nod els

o f Pt P eos o n t

SPRING VAUEY
GREEN APARTMENTS
MUttit.."li11111e0 fu• Rent-

1 Bedroom

''Happy
Bl• rthday"

Center ts now at her hom e
recuperatmg
Mrs
Bertha
Cra1g

Business Services

STARCRA FT 0 t on ve ~o y so e
a m n
o tors 1 o le s old
to ddowns Tro vel5 1o 25 I

AVAILABL E AT R ve s; de
I
bed oom $ 105 per mo ntti $ 50
se-cu f)' depos 992 W98
FO UR ROOMS a nd bath Adul s
son!
only No pets 992 5908
1 T ave T o le se lf co to ned
S Peps s x
Furn a ce o d
Ad u h
TW O BEDROOM 1 o e
ef ge oio S av e f/9 2 7644
o nry 992 3J24
AR STO CRAT
TRA VEL
CO UN fRV MO B LE Home Po k IQ 72
T a ler
8 I u conto ed
Route 33 nor h of Pomeroy
Call
Ekc ellent cond I on
large lu 1 Co 992 7479
992 2427 doyt mv a 99 2 3580
ONE BEDROOM opt o cond
aile 4 pm

Apartments

MOBil E HOMES LOTS
GREEN fERRACE MOB LE COM
MUNITY
Locotedo R 14 c ywoe c y
schoo s 5 m n f om Gall pol s
_!! nd Ho ler Hos~I TWO BEDROOM f nob le home
Co 446 2317 or 446 6613

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING
Res1dent•11

commerdal

~an d

Cal

Anyday •nytime
Phone 985 3806

Jack's Septic
Tank Service
Bo• 34

Chester Ohio
B· 2'1 pd

SWAIN
Automatic
Transml$$1011 Stmce

PARTS • LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES

(Baer) McQune

The Big "30"

--

!.ale

---

---'-"==--"- - - -

Denny

I

HOVUC

- - -----

rr1

I

I REMEG
I I I
1J I

IMECENT

I 0

tJ I

Niw.( I

I

[)

I I I I ](1 IIJ

I

FREE ESTIMATES

.....

Radiator~
Service~
r udl - ... u.._ ....

lllown tnlo Wills &amp; Attie:s

, OM

-

LARRY LAVENDER
S~1&lt;11M.Oh•

rh 9U3Hl

to ,,..

c-.

'

SMITI;I NEI.SOIN

......

• " ' f t•t '"' alum n1un unOtrp nn'"" For you1 puu ot muwl 1nd to
Sltilfy rot!f 111$Ufii'ICI CDII1PinJ It! US
111 down reur mOtnll home TheM tit

downs a e rnt(tlantcally nstilled to
ISSIIII IIUift'lum safety Con tiel us fOt

1 111111i1J IWI n&amp;.
lw~n tn ""' I10f

Don t WI t tlll Cl
tet us tOll I now

"'d 1119 IIOltnliol

CAll
H1103• 011 STDr ll 1100 [ MAIN
Sl POMEROY OHIO FOR A flEE
ESTIItATl
lools.

-YARD SALE sto

Supen01

2 0 d
11:ens
I mps
1 rs s
Sou h
Oho

Ste~m Extractton

Young's
Carpetmg
fliOitl

,~,0

--

ng Sundo11 Oct
d shes dolls bedd ng
ron po s p c u es
jewelry doth ng i one
ands lo s of m sc a 0
2nd St
M dd lepo t
t

8ypou on old !Wu e 143 Sou h
of Jock s Club. Reosonob e
pr ces

992 2206 01 992 7630 •

TV SERV CE Eloc pn &lt; TV ( I , c
Go pol s
75b 2 d Av e
446 3980 Se v ce call $5 q5 plus
po ts o d ab o Se v ce co Is
w h 24 H s
CARPENTER fl oor ng
ce I ng
panel ng Phone ~92 275~--..-- T sole Uph olste y Shop
63 Seco d A11 t1 ue Go po s
HOWERY AND MART f';,l ,.t x 446 7833 Eve n ngs 446 1833
cava l ng
sep t c syste ns
dozf badlM'oe dump t utk
mes one g o vel block top BRADFORD Au ct oneer Com
pov ng R 1-iJ Pho e I (614 )
pie e Se v ce Phone 949 24B7
b9B 7331
o 949 2000 Roc ne Oh o C tt
8 od to d
HARRISON S T V Repo r Se v ce
Co s 276 Sycomo e S M d ELWOOD BOWERS REPA R
d epa I Phone 992 2522
Sweepe s taos ers
ons o I
smo opp onces lawn mower
BATHROOMS AND K tchens
next to Sta e H ghwov Go age
remodel ed ce om c e p um
on Route 7 Phone [614 ) 9B5
b ng co pen tr y and gene ol
3B25
m o n enonce
13 yeo s ex
pe ence CN2 3685
REMODELING P umb ng heat ng
and o ypes of gene o epa
illAVATI NC BACKHO E doze
Wo k guo onleed 20 yeo s ex
trenche
low boy
dUmp
ucks sep t c systems 8 11 ~nee Phone m 2-i09
Pull ns phone m 2478 day or SEWING MACHINE Repo s se r
n ght
v ce o makes 992 2284 The
Fob c Shop
Pome oy
BLOWN NSULA TION Get th ee
Autho zed S. nge Soles and
est motes Co 607 64 7q lor
Se v ce We sho pen Sc sso s
f ee est mole

---

--

--

For Sale

YARD SALE 0c

3 and 4

S X FAM lY Go age Sole Oc 3
-4
5
Men s
women s
ch ld e 1 s clo th ng
d shes
m sc Do o hv Co owov s nee
Allred Tu n on bB l fo ow
s gns

1 3D-Peyton P la ce •
Movie Chilnnel • 5 8. 9 PM - Nic kelodeOn (PG)
7 8. 11 PM -Chino (PGl
Cable Channel S 1 p M - PPHS George Wash ngtoo Football
4 PM - Wahama Southern Football

'•

.. FAM LY YARD SALE 25 Henkle
Ave
0 a 5 good sch oo
clo th es women c o hes some
I urn m sc ems
.. FAMILY YARD SALE a t lq[J2
Eastern Sept 2q to Oct 8 9 o
?
Moy og wa,.he
up gh
I eeze
g de
bobybeds
b eye es
wag on w hee s
5 e eo
b
w e
d shes
c a h ng
PORCH SALE oil\ week lOom o
5pm Sept 30 o Oct 7 641
F lth A'tle Washer and dryer
s amps toys c o hes kf'l cks
knocks
YARD SAlE Sun Oc 2 9 30 o?
An que glan clo th ng fu
n tu e Avon bo t es Uppe R
7 o Evelyn s Beauty So on
YARD SALE Sep 30 Oc I and
3 On St R 588 at Rodne y
Oom to 6pm boy s and 9 s
1eons toys ootuo urn vo e ly
of c o thes
YARD SALE Oct 4 a M Rober s
es dence on Ew ngt on Durgan
Rd 0 30 t ll4pm
POR CH SALE Oc 6 and 7 Thurs
and F
708 Second Avenue
Drape s
clothes
m scellaneous
RUMMAGE SALE F thru Wed
9AM to "9PM Go o Coun y
Volunt ee Eme rgency Squad
228 Ja ckson P ke

Optimism can be fatal
NORTH IDI
"K J5

.
EAST
.. Q 10 8 2

¥2

¥4

• Q 10 9
• A J 84
"" J9832
. ""A K 10 7 5
SOUTH
"A6 4

l

¥ AKQJ7t3
• v 53

...

North South vulnerable
West

North Eas t

South
4W

Pass

Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

I·

Opcnmg lead - K"

--

Phone
446-03Q7
256-6535

f&gt;'&gt;

J

vol

lly Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Pesstmtsttc Pete thought
Anyone else would thmk of a
slam I hope I ca n lnake
game
So he opened the btd
dtng w1th four heart s
Everyone passed
West opened the kmg of
c lubs Pete thought some
more Everythmg ts gomg to
be wrong Can I make game
agamst th e bludgeomngs of
fate•
Then Pete · dtsca rded a
spade

West shtfted to the mne of
that sutt Dummy s )ack was
cove red by East s queen and
Sou ths ace
P ete led a trump to dummy
ru ffed the SIK of clubs led a
spade to th e kmg r uffed dum
my s last spade
Then he e ntered dummy
wtth " s econd trump led the
quee~ of c lub~ and dts tarded
the three of dtamonds
West was tn and had no way
to collect more th a n OJ\e
further trtck A diamond lead
would make Pete s kmg good
Any othe r lead would allow
htm to ruff m dumm~ and dt s
card one diamond
Pesstmlsm had patd off
Any other lme of pla y would
have lost the hand

~~~~
A Kansas reader wants to
know wha t the Notrump for
cmg convent1on 1s
II ts ve ry popular wtth ex
pert~ who never open four
card m\I,!Prs It provtdes that
the one notrump response to a
maJOr opemng IS a one round
force It has lots of mertt but
a lso ts very complicated
(Fo r a copy of JA CO BY
MODERN send $1 to W n at
Br dge
a'/CJ th s news para
P 0 Bo• 489 Rad o C1ly Stat on
New Yo1k N Y 10019)
NEWSPAPER ENTERPR SE ASSN

IIHf WOOO
J6

ng ho

.,e.,

Ofld o&lt;J.,
3b7 7~:J3 o

e~

JB8 !iJOJ

RA Y HAWK NS AGI;NCY
I you o e o o ~mo k e
oil u.,
f a !.pee o otes on p ope ty
IN S 446 2300
HHI:WOOO lo sole Buy ow o d
s av e C oii :J6 ~ 7072
USED FURN lURE
40 TAPPAN GA S RAN GI:: wo
r eel e ~ all oway bed collce
table A 1 Co h
o d S yd9
Fur u e Q55 Seco d Ave

$1~

ku p lc:Jod

p

H(.)}PI I Al

B~D_~h

S1rtckly wholesale to a II
Not less than ' 2 case

1$x36
16x!J'l=======$2
S250
lS
S2H

Miller Produce
&amp;
Garden Center

20x40

HARRISON'S
SERVICE CENTER
UJ Second Ave
Phone 446 9133

1210 Washtngton Blvd
Belpre Oh o

1977

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bermce Bede Osol

AIYrDm

~ ITJ~wllitflm\7
Oct 2 1977

At pol cons de able d stan ce s
ke y h s co m ng ye a
t s
some h ng you ve been ho p ng
to d o The mea ns and t me
sh bu d be av a tab e

ARIES (March 21 April 19) In
par ne sh p ar angemen ts to
day be s ur e you pu as a earn
If one tends to slack off t w I n
duce th e other to do so as we

Bud H arr son
Even ngs 446 3750
John Fuller
Day U6 304

Eventng'S 446 4327

GUlAR used but ve y
good co co l o d hoby ~w ng
Co 446 1498

~l ~( HU C

0~8 b

44b 0756

~IN G U~

OUCH It SEW wol ut
co ~a e a ble ep osses~cd n
e)I C
and Pay ho o ce SilO
co sh a e m.s co11 446 2876

R~BU tl B AT H: RII: \J. ~~ S&amp; eX
cho ge
$11:1 Jllo"''o
Ph
)~M B596
97
Ho ey Dov so ~po s e
good cond on Ia s of e xf O!.
Ph 44b 9~82
Q75 HONDA 3b0 T c:w:c cond
$800 Co 245 502 4
UStD Wl;SI NGHOUSE wo!&gt; ke
o d d ycr
g ce n
Was he
ncvd !&gt; so n e wo k
Col
2 .4 ~ 5087
ONE PA RJ;IEW DRPA ES. 75 x 84
on que w h e $25 Mo ftle top
co ll eo. tobl e $40 Co 440 4360
US ED NK DRUMS Con be seen o
the Go pol s Do ly T bune Of
f'"

COll REVOL VER 22 co be LN
$7$ f o11379 24b9
ON t BABY l:IED a nd ne w mo
ress
n C)(C
cond Coli
440 0757
CORN FED BEEF Cu o d pockog
ed by qu o le I o o whole
Co 446 77 olte Oc abe 6
J NATURAL GAS STOVES

CASE LOT
CAN GOODS

another 1 me

Oswald and J1m Jacoby

WEST
.. 9 7 3

' A Grow1ng Bus mess
For th e R1ght Person

All TYPES of bu d ng no er ol!&gt;
b a&lt;lo. .b ck ~&gt;ewe p pe s..,-W~-14-do w!&gt;
I ntels
etc c oude LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 23) At
W n e s R o G ande o Phone I tude s all mpor1ant t o d ay and
7.t5 512 of e 5
I s mpe at v e hat you be
pos ve Pe mIt ng se doubts
LAYNE S NEW &amp; USED FURN lURE
to c eep n co u d tu n you from a
NEW
w nne{ o a Jo se F nd o u mo e
Ne w o up top de sk &amp; cho
about yourse I by se nd ng o
$ SO Mode
bed oom su e you copy o t As! o G aph Letter
S SO P 11e bed oorp su te $300
K ng ste se
$200 Mope Ma 1 50 cents for each and a
ong se I a dd ess ed slamped
bed ooll su e $300 Wo u
e ve ope to As a G ap h P 0
Bed oom su 9 S2SO Med e
Box 489 Rad o C ty S t ~t on N Y
o eon solo and love sea t $325
Eo A solq &amp; cho $300 love 100 9 Be sue o spec fy you r
brhsg n
~
seat $150 modern so kl cho
oveseo t $275 solo bed w ttl SCORPIO (Oct ~ov . 221 Be
no ch ng cho S 150 Reel e ~ gene ous today bu a so be d s
S 00 a nd up Table!&gt; Coflee
ng en ough to be abe to
oak Hexagon maple o p ne cern
recogn
ze hos e who pa y on
$60 each Rocke $55 mop 9 o
p ne ab e 4 cha s $225 Hu ch you sy mpathy lo s elf sh pu
poses
$275 7 pc D net e $109 5 pc
0 ne te $55 00 Bu nk beds com
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23 Dec
ple e $ 50 mo t ess t~nd box 21) n 10 nt ventures t s probab e
sp ngs $60 eo f rm chest o
oday ha you mate o pa ne
d owe $40 Ouee s ze mo
w 1 have he be e s an t on
es s &amp; box sp ngs se $ 30
h ng s Le h m be cap ta n
GOOD USED
Maple table w th 6 cho s o d CAPRICORN (Doc 22 Jan t91
hu ch Cu o clock o onge ee
Vall g ea es ewa cts tod ay w
3 F eeze s
washers
5 c ome I om $Ome t h ng t hat
bed oom su es 5 desks sew
appea ed 10 nod he sma lest
ng rr~oc t-1 nes d ne t e round prom se A I that g te s s not
ob e 4 cho s 2 mope pes e
gold
beds
pas e
bed
TV 5
AQUARIUS (Jon 2D Feb 19)
elr gero 0 s drye s onges
You have mo e tun today pa
bed oom su tes beds ches 5
d esse s
tab es
amps
I c pat ng n act v t es you re
cho rs oth e r te m s l:v&gt;ok case
tam a w th rather tha n do ng
call 440 0322 9 t 8 p m 3 m
something unt ed and
ou Bu ov ll.e Rd
quest onab e
R EFRiGE R AtO R~ RANG ES
PISCES (Fob 20 Morch 20) If
Woshe s and d ye s GENE you e ente ta n ng today ~ee p t
SKAGGS 19 8 Eas tern Ave
s mp e ah d do n 1 put on any ex
Ph 4•b 7::.
39::;8" - - ' - - - - - t a a s Save the good ch na for

BRIDGE

• 10 9 8 5
• 7 62
•Q64

wo k ho s.cs po
o f o il k tj 5 Co

I·

- · Galhpoh s Oh1o

BRIARPAlCH Kennel s Boo d ng
G oo
g AKC Go do n se
e s E gl ~ h Coc ke Span e1s
Ph 446 4 9
YARD SAL E Cone of Fo e5 Ru n
RIS
NG STAR KE NN El
4
Road and Route 7 Tues 0
I om 9 30 o 4 00 Eve y h ng Boo d ng ndoor Ou tdoo Runs
G oo
g A I 8 eeds Cleo
cheap Hulty 26 n G Is b ke
So tory la c I es (hash e Ph
(once led n case o t on o
3o7 0292
Wed o~'=s'--'--~
{
ENIEN
AR Y WOODS
PET
THREE FAMILY Go age So 1 ~ Wed
GROOM NG FAC l T ES P a
and Thvrs Oct 5 and 0 810 W
es s o a Su v ces aile ed ol
Mo n St
Pome oy
94
b ee ds all 5 yle s' Ph 446 0231
Ch ld en s and .-odu I c o h f\9
on que furn u e m sc tems
DRAGONWYND CA TTERV KEN
NEL AK C Chow Chow dog!&gt;
PORCH
SALE
A
Max ne
CF A So ese ond H malayan
M choel s lo u e C If Oc 3
[Pe s ons ) Place Ch s nos k
and 4 2 women s coots rocker
e n and sp ng puppy o de s
cha salt ond peppe shake
no
w son) Ph 446 3844
do th ng~k~ck knocks
AK
C
REG COCKER SPANIEL PUP
YARD SAlE sponso ed by Sew r 1e
P ES Cente o y Woods Ke ne
Club of l ncoln H s on emp y
446 023
o across i om 148 Butternut
Avelues Oct4hl0om to4 AKC REG AU-\TRAUAN e e
pm
pupp e s Col 440 43 4
GARAGE SAlE Gbo ge Se e s
es den ce Mt 01 ve Rd t ong
So tom
M o~
Tues
and
Wed 3d 4h and5h
RESPONSIBL E PE RSO N won s o
e !&gt; nol house out of tow
FIVE FAMil Y Vo d Sole Wed
between A hens and Pome O )l
Sep t 5 O ld Rou e .33 Dove s
G oce y Cop per one rang e ~ 4 ~ 446 30B7 Qf e ~
k !chen ta ble and cho s
lamps c ot hes m sc

'"

3 IJO-Another World 3 4 15 All In the Famllly 8 10
Lowell Thomas Remembers 20
3 t5-General Hospital 6 13 3 3D-Match Game 8 10
Lilias Yooa &amp; You 20
4 DO-Mister Cartoon 3 Little Rascals Our Gang 4
Gong Show 15 Merv Griffin 6
Gilligan s Is 8
Sesame St 20 33 Gomer Pyle USMC 10 Dinah 13
4 3D-My Three Sons 3 Partridge Family 4 Brady
Bunch 8 10 Lillie Rascals 15
5 IJO-Bonanza 3 My Three Sons 4 Gunsmoke 8
Mister Rogers 20 33
Hogan s Heroes 10
Emergency One 13 My Three Sons 15
5 3D-Odd Couple 4 News 6 E lee Co 20 3l Mary
Tyler Moore 10 Hogans Heroes IS
6 DO-News 3 4 8 10 13 15 ABC News 6 Zoom 20
6 3D-NBC News 3 4~ ABC News 13 Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6 CBS News 8 10 Pests Pesticides &amp;
Safety 20
7 110-'-Truth or Cons 3 Cros s Wits 4 Liars Club 6
News 10 To Te ll the Truth 13 Gilligan s Is 15
Ohio Writers 20 KnOVj our Schools 33
7 3D-That Nashville Music 3 New Truth or Cons 4
Muppet Show 6 Match Game PM 8 MacNeil
Lehrer Report 20 33 Wild Kingdom 10 Candid
• Camera 13 Nashville on the Road IS
8 DO-Lillie House on the Prairie 3 4 15 San Pedro
Beach Bums 13 Emergenc y One 6 Elvis In Con
cert 8 10 Age of Uncertainty 20 33
9 DO-Movie Murder In Peylon Place 3 4 15 NFL
Footboll613 BettyWhlteB lO Aul obl~
hyofa
Princess 20 Harry S Truman Plain Spe lng 33
9 30-Maude 8 10 10 DO-R•IIerfy 8 to Ne s 20
Austin City Limits 33
10 3o:--As We See It 20
11 IJO-News 3 4 8 10 15 Three 1\rll•ts
n the Nor
thwest 33
11 ~Johnny Carson 3 .4 15 Movlte
Letter s from
Three Lovers 8 Mo'.4l e The Prea den t s Analys1 ,.,.
10 ABC News 33
':;
12 00--News 613 Janak! 33 12 3
FBI 6 IronS!&amp;,
13 1 oo--Tomorrow 3 4 I 30-Mory Hortman ID
News 13
Movie Channel 4 58.7 PM - Ode to Billy Joe lPG l
98.11 PM - Man Who FellloEarfh !R)
Cable Channel 5 7 p M - Paul Gaudino Famlry Fllnon
7 30-PPHS George Washington FOOtball
~
iO IJ0-700 Club

Catalog Sales

~
'&gt;lr&gt;~"&gt;l od ol I
bo t c y 446 0 1'l1

H OR~t~ f- O R ~ A U; R d

Montgomery &amp; Ward

SALE 5 and 6 10 5 677 South 4 h
M dd eport W nte c a h ng
toys d shes

Tho Ori!iM!ot&gt;
NoHhl lmitJl!Ns

MONDAY OCTOBERJ 1971
5 45--Farm Report 13 5 50--PTL Club 13 5 55Sunrise Semester 10 6 25-Medlx 10
6 30----Columbus Today 4 News 6 Sunrise Semester 8
b 45-Mornlng Report 3
'6 so--Good Morning West Virgin ia 13&gt;.
7 oo-Today 3 4 15 Good Morning America 6 13 CBS
News 8 Bullwinkle 10 7 3D--Schoolles 10
7 45-Sesame St 33 B oo-Capt KangarOO B 10 9 ooMerv Griffin 3 Phil Donahue 4 13 J5 Family
Altair 8
9 3D-Edge of Night 6 Andy Griffith 8 10 DO-Sanford
&amp; Son 3 4 15 D nah 6 Here s Lucy 8 Jpker s Wild
10 Mike Douglas 13
10 3D-Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Price Is Right 8 10
11 IJO-Wheet of Fortune 3 15 Happy Days 6 13
Marc us Welby M D 4 Elec Co 20
11 3D-Knockout 315 Family Feud 6 13 Love of Life
8 10 Sesame Sf 20
11 55-CBS News B Lovi ng Free 10 12 oo--News
3 4 6 10 D vorce Cou r t B To Say The Le~st 15
Mtdday 13
12 3D-Chico 8. the Man 3 15 Ryans Hope 6 13 Bob
Braun 4 Search for Tomorrow 8 10
1 IJO-Gong Show 3 All My Children 6 13 News 8
Young 8. the Rest less tO Not tor Women Only 15
1 3D-Days of our Lives 3 4 1$&gt; As The World Turns
B 10
2 IJ0-$20 000 Pyramid 6 13 2 3D-Doctors 3 4 rs One
Life to Live 6 13 Guidi ng Light 8 10

4

REGISTERED Coclo.e Spa e _pu p ~&gt;
Goll po~o
3 ma es 2 femal es 8uft o d fO R THE BE ST N FURN TURE
UPHOL
S
I I:: HING F ee Es llO es CO AL AND LIMESTONE de l ve ed
$75 each
wh e n colo
P c.k up a d de l ve y se v ce
Call Dov d Vou g o a 24 .;, 5309
949 2439 at e 5
co Mow e y !&gt; Uph ols e y P
Jq1o
CHEV Y CHl: VEllE n exc
GI VE AWAY o good home 10
P!eo§a I W Vo t;,/ 5 41 54
co d Co 446 3548
week ,9 ock temo e hound pup
LIGHT WEIGHT CHIMNEY BLOC K
py Very oveoble 992 7370
8x 13 H:w: tf Go po1 $ B ock HAR VEST GOLD REFR GE RAT OR
Co 1388 9003
MALE WHITE pood e o g ve away
44 b 2783
9A9 2&lt;98
~
33
Fl CARVtR MONIER tV w th
FARM FENCt POSl S All S ZES
I y bf dge (tw S o ons wo
FREE PUPPIES M xed hou nds
ave b 000 to chOJJISC I on
255 h p co np e e elec on cs
992 7671
S 99 a nd up sh 9 es $ 4 95
co ll p e e vob 1 ty occessOres
pe
sq
Anders on ~ w dows
PART BEAGLE pupp es to g ve
o o e g ne h s o lyq() Soot
s ud s othe bu d ng no e o1
owoy 6
ales '] lema e 1
and e
e eok n ke new con
Ope
do
.
,
.
9
7
P
a
ks
Bo
go
n
Pho ne 949 2079
d on 30 x 50 arp .c ad e A
Ce nte R I bO Po rte Oh o
sJeol o $33 500 W le P 0 Bo x
REGISTERED FEMALE St Be nord
'l21 G ee n t oMe w 54q41
to 9 ve owoy to good home GRAIN FED FREEZER BEEF PI
446 0760
Phone 747 2123~---

GAR A GE S'ALE Oct 5 thru 8 from
9 to 5 do ly located off Route 7

Carpet &amp;UpiiOIStOIJ
Phone Mtke Yount
At

Ktn&amp;'bury Homo Sales

--

--

for Sale

torSaJe

FOR SAl.E

HOOF HOLlOW Horses Buy ~e1
I ode or Ira n New and used
saddle s Ho se Shoe ng Ruih
Reeves A bony (014) 698 3290
MEIGS COUNtY Hv none Soc et y
Core l ne o d odop an Se v ce
992 7680 742 3162 9'12 5417

THREE F-AMilY Vo d Sole Oct 3
and .4 9 om o -' " Pm 235
Mulbe y Avenue l o s ofn c e
terns to eve yone Kn ck
knacks
furn tu e
bed oom
su • po tocr b
very good
se eel o n of ch d e sand odu
clo h ng potte ns d esdo m
eco ds lamps ugs cu Ia ns
bach preods e c

MOTORS, INC.

SAVE ON lOUR fUEl BILl TIUS
WINTE! AND BEAIITIFl lOU! MOIIll
HOME W• bat ant&amp;lble n 1 q 11t}' of

AKC SH ETLAND sheep dogs
(M n 1 Co t! es 2 f e me.!e~
weeks o1d St ols o d worn ed
Phone (614 ) 3(:17 02Q2 o
3677112

TI-IREE FAMilY Mo an d Tij"115
Oct 3 or d 4 at Roc ne 15
house on eft on Vellow Bush
Rd 9om t04 pn

... ._, . . .,

h4t. o

RI SING S I AR Kenne Boo d ng
I door 0 \Jtdoor ru s groom g
all bre vds
clea n so to y
foc i es oe 367 7 11 2 Chesh e
Phone (01 .. ) 367 0292

FOUR FAM LY Co po-;-s;;i; 0 n
or s.h ne q JB South 3rd M d
dleport Oct 3 a nd 4 9 5
Avon books w nler c o h g
mise

El(PERIENCED

IMMIItion StfYitiS
r.nanu•• ~··bit

STORM
WINDOWS l 1100115
IEI'IACEMENT
WINDOWS
AUiliiNUll
SIDiNG-SOifllT
GUIT£Rs..IWNING$

IF 'I'OU ha\l e a se v ce to offer
wo ''to buy Of sell some h g
oe loo k ng lo w o k
0
whate ver
you II get results
foster w th o Sent nel Wo tAd
Coll992 2156

.

TELEVISION
VIEWING

•

for

est1mate 24 hou r service

celebrated her 86th birthday
recent!) at the home of her
Available Oct
dau g hter Mrs Marybelle
Mooney Mrs Cratg has t&gt;&lt;:.e.n~~..
- ...
Ph 440 1599
very tll for several m ontiif""
'
ru1U1so
Mr and Mrs
Gtlbert
~17 TFC
Johnson and Mrs Ceor gte
Johnson " ere recent guests
SLEEP NG Rooms week y ro es
AUL T MOBILE HOMES SERV CE
Pork Centro Ho el
of Mrs Mar) Wolford and
Sk ng oncha ng and pol os
Mrs Edward Johnson
col .44b 3608 of e .t
EXCAVATING dozer oode and
~Mr and Mrs Jesse Allen
BAND S MOB LE HOMES
backhoe wo k dum p I ucks
Taylor are aMouncmg the
ON YOU IT
PT PLEASANT W VA
and o boys fo h e w II haul
btrth of a baby daughter at
DOESN T SHOW
1973 AU en 12•4018
t II d t to so ! mestone and
197:) V ctor a 41167 3 8 2 bath
P leasant Valley Hos pital
g ova l Co Bob o Rage Jet
SLEEP NG oom s f o
1971 Mo na ch 2~e50 2 8
cent
fe s day phone 992 708Q n gh
Hotel
They named her Wanda
0
_!
P:::h::::o::""::;,9'1::2':3::5::2::::S::coc.:.99C:2'-;'5"23~27"_
Mane Mr and Mrs Russell
OVER 4 000 b Tobacco bose fa
1972 Comero1} ~12•60 2 Br
EXCAVATING do;re
~ckhoe
ease o enl Ph 446 0 b6
Taylor are paternal gra nd
l958Mo let Ox4728
an d d che Char es R Ho
parents and Mrs Marte
f eld
Bock Hoe Se v ut
Gothard maternal g rand
12 x 68 Ho y Pork T o le w h
Ruland Oh o Phone 7&lt;4,2 2008
SW EEP ~R ond sew ng mach ne
expondo woshe a nd d ye
repo r po Is and suppl es P ck
d shwosher unde p nn ng 2 )C
and Mrs
Edgar
up and del ve y Dov s Vacuum
12 outbldg Ph b06 038 4000
I
Cleo
ne
m
le
up
Gee
ggs
of Westerville were
underwen t
of
Creek Rd Ph 44b 0294
TRI STATE M08 LE HOMES
recent guests of hts mother
Umve r st t y
Hospttal
tn
GAIL POLIS OHIO
Mrs
Orpha
Wooten
and
Columbus Mrs Shumasher
197012 X bOMARIET A. 2 bd
was hu rt bad!) tn an Junwr Roberts They all "ent
9b8 12 x tiJ V NOAl E 2 bd
900 lh 47 CHEROKEE 2 bd
au t omob tl e acctdent some to Oak H1U ~ Va where BEGIN you sp ng c eon ng by
1972 BUDDY 12 x 60Mob le Hohte
ho v ng you corpe s cleaned by
1963 10 x 42 KAYWOOO 1 1M
tune ago and ts now getting they VISited Mrs Wooten s
w h Expondo- room All goi
be s method known Rem ove
960 10 x 50 RICHARDSON 2 bd
fu n shed woshe ond drye
m(Ce Mrs Glorta Smtih and
along sattsfactonly
al he d
Make 'lou carpet
W II le t go for pay off Phone
look new ogo n For t ee
famtly and they all VISited the
Mr and Mrs Ira Watson
974 CONCORD 4 x bS 2 bd
yas A203
es mo e co I 379 2682
large brtdge which Is under
Mrs R uth Wau gh M ~A
FURN SHED TWO BED
mob le
ke new cond I on cen o1 o
ALICE JOHNSTON 2 bedroom
home dean
n ce loco on
DEAD Stock emoved No charge
const ructiOn at Sanger W
Thelm a Bos t er an d so n
y f ee enl
unde pen ng
mob le home n Bradbury
Adulh
nope
s
Call
4.46
4
70
Coll
245
55
14
•
pr vo e o over oak ng he
Davtd Teresa Kathy and Va The bndge ts over the
Lorge f on own ng underp nn
ve
$6500
Co
I
4-46
4b60
APARTMENTS FOR RENT
THURMAN HOUSE ant ques Fu
Brtan Rose ~ e r e recent New Rtver
ng gas heal o r cond 1 on ng
JACkSON ESTATES R 35 one Q75 2 • tiJ COMMUNITY Un
n u e sfr pp ng
epa
and
Exce en cond I on May be
Mrs 'Kathleen Rose and
Sunday afternoon guests of
bed oom from $ 08 pe month
ef n shed County Rd 8 oft 35
fu n shed 2 bd Coll446 .u 99
seen by oppo ntmenl onyt me
Mrs Marybelle Mooney a nd mother Mrs Ruth Waugh
no pe s Rent a cco d ng to yov
Cen terv lie V age
Closed
a nd Teresa Kathy Rose and
Mrs Bertha Cratg
ncom e Col 446 27.:&lt;::_
5 _ __
Monday &amp; Tuesday Even ngs
by oppo ntment 245 947Q
Mrs Homer Porter was Brtan She1la McGwre and
FURN SHED APT Modern clea n
recent guest of Mrs Hillts Sarah Halley were recent GET YO UR EA RS P erced free w h
p vo e One o
wo adults
Reosono e depos 1 requ red
he pu chose of $10 po o f
Pmkerman who has been guests of Mrs Maryhelle
Donne 13 P ne 446 3627
earn ngs Tow neys Jewelers
amon g 1the ailtng a few day s
Mooney and Mrs Bertha
Well kep co pets show the
l RA.DERS DAY
Mrs Kennison Saunders Craig
esul s of egu o Blue lust e
and two chtldren Ntis and
Mtke Evan and Anthony Every Sunday n Po ter
spo clean ng Ren e ec tr c
B n9 o
buy
onyth ng o
Jamte spent a few days wtth Reese
asststed
Harold
shompooe S Central Supp y
everyth ng At lorry l ve y
Saunders 1n takmg 10
,.-h.er parents Mr and Mrs
es den ce f'l Po ter Follow
s gns
James Moore of Parkers
tobacco
burg W Va
Mrs Donna Gtbson and TREE HAl YEN CERAMICS green
wo e cus tom f ng f n shed
Junmy and Davtd Crmer of daughter and her mother m
p oduc t o rder s Call 388 88 1
SUNDAY OCTOBER2 1977
Columbus Tma Eggleton and l aw and
Mrs
Odessa
6
IJO-AG
USA
4 This is the Life 10 6 3D-Jerry
Mrs Edith Stapleton were Galloway and Mrs Mary R &amp; J COINS of M dd epo t w II bv
Falwell
4 Talking Hands8 Amer ican Problems &amp;
a
the
French
500
Flea
Morke
Sun&lt;lay a ft e rnoon g u~ s of Phtlllps were recen~ guests of
Challenges 10
o buy sell t ode U S cons
Mrs Marybelle Moon~ and Mrs Mary Wolford and Mrs
and cu ency o so we hove TIIATS WHAT
7 OD--Chrl!topher Closeup 3 Eddie Saunders 6.
Mrs Bertha Cratg
Edward Johnson
stomp suppl es and me o
HOLLYWOOD ( UP!) Thinking n Black 8
Treehouse Club 10
Mr and Mrs Hamer Porter
de ectors
Mrs Rl'Chard Patterson of
Newsmaker 77 13
What s happemng oo the set
Henderson
W Va
was attended the homecommg at HIGL EY S BARBER SHOP OPEN 8 of the televlston sertes
7 3D-This s the Life 3 Your Health 4 Show My
o 5 ClOSED SUNDAY &amp; MON
recent guest of her father
the Mt Zton Baptist Church
People 6 Jerry Falwell 8 Urban L ~ague 10
What s Happerung 1 ts a
DAY G FTS BOOKS &amp; POTTERY
Amazing
Grace Bible Class 13
Mr and Mrs Emmtt Halley
Sunday Dmner was held on
quarrel between producer
1 55-Black Cameo 4 B oo-Mormon Choir 3 Day of
Charles Pmkerman Is a the church g rounds and there
' Bud Yorktn and actors
Dtscover¥ 4 Grace Cathedral 6 Church Service
patten! at Holzer Med tca l was much good smgmg and
Ernest Thomas who plays
10 Dr E J Daniels Presents Happiness Is 13
preachmg
Center
Raj
and Fred Berry
Sesame St 20
Rev Arthur Stewart w1ll be
Mr
and Mrs
Emmit
Rerun
8 3D-Or al Roberts 3 Jimmy Swaggart ~ Celebrotlon
the guest mmtster (or a sertes Halley were recent guests of daughter Amy ~n d her
ot Praise 6 Day of Discovery 8 James Robison
Thomas and Berry walked
of meet mgs at Kmgs Chapel hts brother Mr and Mrs
Presents 10 Rex Humbard 13 Open Bible 15
off
the
set
Tuesday
son Don Herman and fanuly
Church Mr Stewart was Warner Halley
9 00--Gospel Singing Jubilee 3 Robert Schuller 4 Rex
com plauung Yorkin Ignored
helped her to celebrate Mrs
Humbard 6 Rev Leonard Repass 8 Ernest
reared m this commumty and
Word was recetved here Sprague ts a foster grand
continued complamts thetr
Angley l l Mister Rogers 20
that Mrs Edgar Wooten of parent at the GSI
now hv es a t Xema
dressmg rooms are dirty
9 3D-What Does the Bible Plainly Say? 8 It Is Written
Mrs Marg aret J ohnson Westervtlle was a surgtcal
cock roaeh Infested and
Mrs Anna Ruth Pack was
10 Zoom 20 Jim Franklin 13
spent Fnday mght wtth her patten! m the hospital there
funushed wt!h
unsheeted
recent guest of her mother
10 oo--world Conference 3 Church Service 4 Com
Mrs Nellie Th1vmer of Mrs Margaret Johnson
daughter Mr and Mrs
stained smelly mattresses
munlque 6 Christian Center 8 Sesame St 20
Chapman
and Columbus s~ent several days
J tmmte
The y satd when they
Movie Boom Town 10 Jimmy Swaggart 13
Mr and Mrs Dav1d Frazer
daughter Tamt
wtth Mrs Chauncy Th1vmer and daughter Michelle of
Gospel Singing Jubilee 15
returned Thursday, they
Mr and Mrs Robert Halle)
and fanuly
10 3D-Yours for the Asking 4 Rex Humbard 8 Hot
were told they could not
Columbus were recent guests
Mrs Margaret Johnson of her parents Mr and Mrs
took thetr young son Robbte
Fudge 6 Garner Te&lt;l Armstrong 13
resume work until they
11 00--Doctors on Call 4 Notre Dame H lghllghts 6
and Mr a nd Mrs Jurume Charley Johnson and fam1ly
loth&lt;" Children s Hospttal m
Signed prorrussory notes for
Rex Humbar&lt;l 15 Rev Henry Mahan 13 Infinity
Columbus to have h1s tonsils Chapman and daughter
$25 000 each - Yorkm s
Mrs Brent Saunders and
Factory 20
and adeno1ds removed He ts Tam! were recent overnight two daughters Laura and
estunate of what the walkout
• gettmg along satisfactortly guests of Mr and Mrs An
11 3D-Focus on Columbus 4 W V U Hlghllghls 8
cost the production - wh1ch
Gretta of Parkersburg W
Medl x 13 E lee Co 20
Mrs Beverly Chapman and drew Chapman and family
Yorkm could collect if they
Va spent Frtday mght w1th
12 IJO-Meef the Press 3 4 15 Issues &amp; Answers 6
Beech Ctty 0
and on her s1ster Mr and Mrs
Mrs Anna Ruth Pack we r e m
ever did 11 agam
Evangelistic Outreach 13 Rebop 20
Saturday they all went on to Kennison Saunders and
Columbus at the Umvers1ty
J2 25-Woody Hayes Football lD 12 3D-At Issue 3
They refused saymg m a
Hospttal where Mrs Chap- near Cleveland to see Sea farruly
Ntws Conference 4 NFL 71 15 NFL Today 8
joint statement that JUS! be
World wh1ch was very m
man had an appomtment
Willard
Wilco x 13 As We See It 20 12 55-NFL
ca u se they grew up m
James Moore of Parkers
Follies
10
Mrs Chauncy ThiVIner and terestmg
burg W V a was recent guest poverty that s no reason the
1 00--Big Blue Marble 3 Movie Things to Come 4
Alva
McGutre
a nd of his daughter Mrs Kay company should offer 1t to us
daughter Thelma v1s1ted
Directions 6 NFL Football 15 NFL Football B
daughter Lmda Mr and Saunders and family
recently with Mr and Mrs
now
NFL Footbatl 10 Issues &amp; Answers 13 Nova 20
Carrol Thtvmer and famtly of Mrs Earl Mooney Marlyn
EvenIng at Pops 33
Mooney and son Kevm were
HtllJard 0
and they also
3D-Movie Dragnet 3 America s Black Forum 6
recent guests of Mrs
vtstted Mrs Nelbe Thtvmer
Town Topics 13
\ri}jjN} fe}lf ~THAT SCRAMILED WDRD GAME
Marybelle Mooney and Mrs
of Columbus
2 oo--Aware 6 Public Potlcv Forums 13 Age of Un
~ ~ ~~·
by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee
certa inty 20 Mozart In Seattle 33
Roy and Connte Waugh an&lt;t Berth8C:r,11lg
2
3D-Movie
The Walking Dead
4
Animals
Mr and Mrs Homer Porter
famtly were recent guests of
Unscramble these f01,1r Jumbles
Animals Animals 6
one-latter to each square to lon'n
were Fr1day dinner guests of
ht~ mother
Mrs Goldie
four orcbnary words
3 00--San Pedro Beach Bums 6 Tennis 20 Tony the
Mr and Mrs George Sheets
Waugh
Pony 13 Festival 33
Monte
Sheets
was
also
a
Marshall Kmg " as among
3 3D-This Is the NFL 3 Cliffwood Ae Kids 13 4 00-guest
th e atlmg a few days wtth
N~L Football3 4 Movie The Little Nuns 6 NFL
Mrs Margaret Johnson
v1rus
Footbatl 8 1D Mole It Happened One Night 13
and Mrs Ros1e Brurnfteld
Brady
and Darlene
Music Hall America t5 Documentary Showcase 33
Cl ... .,. .... c . . _ _ .......... were recent guests of Mrs
Sheets and Jrlrs
Clme
5 ~n Death 8. Dying 15 In Pursuit of Liberty 33
Mary Wolford and Mrs
6 IJO-Fran Curci Footbatl13 This s the Life 15
Thompson were recent guests
Pa&lt;ent E fledlveness 33
Edward Johnson
of Mrs Sheets brothe r Mr
6 3D-NBC News 15 News 6 Newsmaker 77 13 Wall
The Rev Don Eaton ts the
and Mrs Btl! Wtlliams o f
Street Week 33
evangelist who wtll bnng the
Columbus Bot h Mr and Mrs
00--World
of Disney H 15 Hardy Boys Nanty Drew
7
messages m a 'senes of
Sheets are very poorly
6 13,_ 60 Minutes 8 10 Ohio Writers 20 Onedln Line
meetmgs at the Providence
Mr and Mrs Earl Mooney
33
Bapttst Church on the Teens
were recent guests of hts
7 3D-Antiques 20 B DO-Six Mtlllon Dollar Man 6 13
D
Run Rd The pubhc 1s invited
stster Mrs Goldte Fts her
Rhoda 810 Evening at Symphony 20 33
Mr
a11.d. . Mrs
Emmit to attend
8
3D-All
In The Famtly 8 10
j
Mrs Louella Sheets and
9 IJO-Movle Just a Little Inconvenience 3 ~ 15
Halley antN.e veral relaltves
Movie The Trial ot Lee Harvey Oswald 6 13
daughter Peggy of Bulavtlle
gathered at Jackson Lake
Dickens of London 20 33 9 3D-Alice 8 10
Rd were recent guests of her
near Oak H1ll for a ptcntc and
Now arrange the circltd teaers 10
lG
00Kojak 8 10 Visions 20 33 10 3Q-mother Mrs Goldie F1sher
form the IUrpriae anoMf 81 &amp;uq
family get togeth er Those
11 00--News 34 6 B 10 13 15 11 15-ABC News 6 CBS
gested
by
t
h
e
Ltttle Jam1e Saunders was
present were Mr and Mrs
News 8 iO PMA Pulse 15
tll for a few days wtth v1rus
Harold Halley a nd stx
11 3D-Movie Loving You 3 15 Movie Deadline
He was treated by a
children of Dayton Eddte
U S A 4 Secon&lt;l City TV 6 Face the Nation
phystctan at Holzer Medtcal
Cmdy Chuckle Mary Kathy
B 10 PTL Club 13 Monty Pythons Flying Circus
(-.Mondoy)
33
Center
and Robbte of Dayto n
12 00--FBI 6 700 Club 8 Movie Get Yourself a
Sprague
JumbleS BRAWL UNCLE FLAUNT MASCOT
Mrs
Ahce
Warner Halley Mr and Mrs
CoHege Girl ro Janak I 33
YetterdaY I celebrated her birthday
Mlghtoccur-.-nd- home
Melvm Clagg and ch tldren
12
3D-ABC
News 13 1 DO-Notre Dame Highlights 8
ASlOWBURN
Roy
and
recentlv Her son
Mr and Mrs Clayton Clagg

Diana Ruth

~ur Sale

P..tsfurSul"

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER ?
... ~t Pomeroy Lan dmark
sOft en &amp; condttton your
water and Coop water
softener Model UC XVI
Now Only

'279.95
Let Us
Fre e

test

your water

FOR SALE
Ne w Co Op water and
softeners modgl VC SVI
On tv $219 95
Save 5.5;0 00 on a new
Hotpotnf Refrtgerator
1 New 20 CUbiC ft Chest
Freezer
"

$25 00 D1scount
(I) Good Refrig e ra1or S200
1 Good Used McCul ough
cna.n Saw 575 oo

Go9d Used
Upr ght Freeter

I

Amana
52SO 00

Pomeroy Landmark

9 .. ~Jack W Carsey Mg i'
lllliil Phone 992 2181

30 000 B U towson
S NGER TOUCH a d Sew n
50 000 BTU Duo The m
wa n ul conso le! e table
80 00 Hu llph e y
Repossessed n e xcellen cond
A so wo nul d n ng ob e co ff e e
l a Pay balance of Sl 0 cosh
ob e ond end ob es I v ng
oo su e ho d ock maple
_o_, _e_,m,__99_2__
5 ~4~6"-'------s ng e bed camp ete Call
446 4757 o 756 1204 at e 3p n
GRAPEF RU T PILL w th D odox
pion rn a e conve n en than
g opel u ~
Eo so sly ng
mea s on d lose we gh Re vco
TROMBONE VERY good ond
D "9
on Used on y for symphon c
BROWNS. HARDWARE
bond Pho e 991 5267 of e 4
V NTON OH 0
pm
CLO SE OUT SALE OCT 3 4 and 5
40
OFF TH E REGULAR RETAIL FIVE YEAR old Appo oosa
Geld ng Block w th wh te
PR CE ON ANY MERCHAND SE
b onke
good
look ng
N STOCK CASH ONL ¥
992 7735

EIGHl All.l.I.\J.N I,JM sto m w n
dews 30 x b6
$5 each
949 127')

d

REG STEREO POl l ED He eta
Bu 4 yr o d 992 2867
WOOD BURNING Stoves the
I nes t ova abe Mo so a nd
Ele Hea vy cos on w h dou
b e ne ns A r t ght w th p eci
sian d ol con ol Notu a c
cu1ot on no fans needed Con
11 e a ble f e ploce type o r box
ype P e seoson d sco un
5%
otl un I Ocl 15 look a nd com
po e quo y lo any othe wood
stove you hove e ve see RNR
Heat ond Fue lok n W Vo
{304 ) 713 5955

1 Inte nse
6 Eng ne
1 Networks
16 Newl y w ed
2 1 lnQuts 1 ve
var ant
22 Marb e
23 Air ca n
antelope
2 4 Consumed
25 G reek le tter
2 6 Small valley
28 S gn I cant
pont
30 Ch nese m ie
3 1 Cont nent
abbr
32 Su table
34 Levant k e tch
36 Cav e rn
37 Flow er part
39 Too lbox
40Jump
42 Begone
44 J apan ese
co ns
46 R ghts abbr
4 7 Tempo
48 Hor zo nla l
trmb er
51 G reek por t• co
53 Soda s pper
55 Em!DIY t a k
s la n g
58 Jogg ng ga t
60 Pos tI ve
62 Greas te r
65 1 lega leaves
66 S umm on (up)
6B Cover d s h
meal
70 Babylo nta n
god
7 1 Appear
72 Dt sc lose
73 Head s lang
75 Bu lei s o u nd
76 Meddle
77 Bu s hy
78 Am P. r c ~n

lnd an
79 Tchatkov s ky s
SUbJ eC t
81 S lent
greet ng
82 Threesome
83 Leg s tal ed
85 Te eg ra m
86 Me al cui
88 Verdant
B9 M;dda y
9D Wa lk ng s t tk
91 Me ta ll c

element
9~ 8ovme

so unds
93Eng sh
p h osophe
95 Andes

cou ntry
96 Camp e ted
97 S lopp ng
100 Btbl cal
bro lher
1 0 I 0 c k ens
J cha r ac ter
102 Osc I a te
10 4Tw st
1 05 June b eet e
1 06 Spar01d l!sh
107 Skeleton
fea tur es
1 D9 Ga c
I end
I 1 0 Qua y
1 1 D scha rge
1 1 2 Ex; s ts
1 1 3 Mo th e r s and
lathers
t 15G oupotn ne
I I 7 Obtu se
1 18 Ba se m en 1
1 20 Air can lake
1 22 Alcohol c
beve age s
1 23 C lea n sed
1 24 Arl! s l s s tand
1 2 R Co a se f le
128 EmotiOnal
exc te m ent
1 30 Con tr ad c l
13 2 Bo n Frf! n ch
1 8 4 Unad ltere lr.d

1 36 Mor tgag e
13 7 Revolve
141 Museum
d;splay
1 4 2 Storehouse
1 44 New star
46 Always
148 Cuckoo
149 Aslaras
150 Rough ava.
51 Co mes
to gether 2
wd s
154 Jaco b s
br o th e r
156 Chopp ng tool
1 57 Del ghlful
spots
1 59 Drop sy
60 Anl tc
162 Peach seed
64 Deta n
165 Ca mpatgn
aga tn '
166 Barter
167Ev lspe s

DOWN

1 H star cal

record
2 Two doo ca r
3 P a noun
4 S pread hay
s Po ta to b uds
6 Sp tte
7 Btb calk ng
8 Br m less cap
9 Aud tor y
IOPasson
11 Feels nsulled
1 ')K n ead

13 Anname se
measu res
14 Eso te c
1 5 Ex perts
16 School a larm
7 S amese
measure
1 A N eu t er

CAMPER
S600
A so
ho se
ole $ 450 Phone (b 4} b98
3290
ECONOMY TRACTOR w th oil ot
achments l ke c w as k ng
S22SO Pho e (614) 698 3290
AlADDIN KEROSINE lamp and
eplocement po Is
hoo e s
Ch mney mant els w cks etc
S op n lo de mons at on and
Moun Q n
f ee ca tal ogu e
Leathe an d Ge neral Sto e
104 106 W Un on St Athens
Ohio 591 5478

pronoun
90 Un tt e I rmly
1 9 Heavy c otton
91 Sect on ng
20 G row•ng out
92 A g reat
27 Po werful! ght
number
beam
93 Fundamental
29 N g h ls be fore
94 D so red t
33 C h nese
95 Long lor
pagoda
96Th n co n
35 Arrest
97 Attend to
38 Stun
98 Sca ndmav an
39 Aptery,
99 Av dtly
41 Sac ed son g
r 0 1 Flood
4 3 Succ ncl
I 03 Burmese
45 0 nner course
nat tv e
4 7 Conver se
104 Golf c lub
1 07 Lamb c r es
49 Fa ry port
1 06 TV head\ ner
50 Dec ay
I 1 0 Puntt ve
52 In a I ne
111 Ma denha rs
5 4 Br dal
113Frolc
s h o we
11 4 S harp break
55 Wa s e
1 16 Sma I draft
maker
1 17 Mus ica l
56 Hav e a debt
twosome
2wd s
119 Fasl ng
57 Hoo te r 2
sepson
wds
1
2
1
Summe r
59 Term
souven r
61 Of races
123 Longs tor
63 W etrd
1 25 Conductor
6 4 Synthel c
127 Malay boat
labr c
1 29 Rtgorous
66 Domest c
130 0 d
wo k e
131 We a r away
67 T c k
1 33 Lyr c poem
135
Expel
69 Jungle
1 38 New Zea la n d
mona ch
Iori
72 Mac h ne gun
139
Sense le ss
74 Po ynesan
140 Wat e r spr les
tl y
142Stmp e
7 6Regnng
1
4 3 Alwa ys
supreme
14 5 Wmg e d
78 Short acke t
14 7 Reck ess
7 9 Less
15 0 L le ra ry notes
80 Ad he e
1 52 Exlm cl b rd
82 Jogg ng Q• t
153 Health r esor t
8 4 Ch llv
155 Wesle n
85 Arme d
lnd a n
c:o nfl c
158 Ove ead
87 1n d v dua
Ia n
16 1 Verb end
88 Pre c ous
me AI
163 Dr a ft amma

FOR SALE

BUSiness
Opportunity

I

p 0 Bo• 862
Jackson , Dhto 45640 "

NEW HOM E J bd
doub le
W ldwood
Es o es
go age
Pome oy Oh l ee Cons uc
t on
Co
6 4 992 3454 o
614 9'125455
W ll SEll NEARLY NEW HOME
loco ed opp ox 3 m es ' om
Po e Se s n t-.e m ddl e ot 30
acres of and H gh y sec uded
w h p vocy A rare ype f n
d ng n buy 9 a hone Th ee
bed ms fully co pe ed tu
basemen t onl po ch bock
pot o and own ng e ec c he o
w th wood bu ne n basemen
Iorge go age near y new oa n
one smo1 outbu ld ng Co I
367 710
THREE ACRES OF lAND IN OAK
H l l 4 oom c nde block
bu ld ng 240 ft we ll no pump
Rt S Bo~ 205 o4 he e nd of he
s t eel Ask ng $9000 Co11 Ken
tucky 606 0389075
THR EE ACRES of n ce and w th
mob le home garage shade
tee!&gt; and own wo e sys te n
New pu mp A real ce p ace to
ve P ced fo qu ck so le Coil
245 9487 befo e 9 30 om o
of e 4pm _
---TWO AND THREE ACRE lots neo
R o G ande Co 745 58 5

SWAIN
AUCTION 8ARN
We se ll anyttHng for
anybody at our Auct on
Barn or n vuor home For
ntormat on a nd p ckup
se rv ce ca ll 156 1967
Sa e Ev e ry Saturday
N ght a t 7 p m
SWAIN

AUCTION SERVICE

TAURUS (April 20 MIV 20)
Mater ally cond t ons are a m x

K c nn ct h Swa n Auct

Cor ne r Tl'l rd &amp; Oliv e

ed bag today P oft can be ea n

ed f om the sweal of yo ur brow
bu t not thro ug h blue sKy
specul a! ons

MACHINE
SHOP
SERVICES

GEMINI (Mov 21 Juno 20) Con
t o1 of matte rs personal y lmpor
tan! to you s hould no I be a lowed
1o st p through you capable
hands today Assoc ales cou d
steer you on to the oc ks
CANCER (Juno 21 Julv 22)
Don t d m n s h the lus te r of yo ur
cha tab e act:; tod a,y by b oad
cast ng your good deed s It
cou ld embarrass 1he one you
he p

WELDING

,

SERVICE
Pubhc walk m busen ess
mdu stna I or con struc11on
bustness welcomed

VIRGO (Aug 23 Sopt 22) St' ke
wh lethe ron s hot t an oppor
tun ty ar ses today to f urther your
amb 1 ons or car e~ r Pract ca
matters must t a~e pr ~ce den ce
AI t H ~ Nl t'

PIU S ~

'

PORTABLE

LEO !July 23 A... 22) You I be
n a rathe g ega ous moo d to
day You need to be where the
net on s Enjoy yo urse l but
don I dam age you r bud get

N ~ 1'.~1

Large lathes an d"'\bormg
m lis
Metahztng weldtng and
babbt!lng
Steel fabrtcafJon complete
stock of steel
round!.
pla1es and struc1uals

ASSN

•

Free Eshmates
No Job Too Large
or Too Small

M&amp;G MACHINE .
SHOP
Upper Route 7
Kanauga Ohto

UNITED FEAiUC!E SYNDICATE

I

200 " cr &lt; .\v&lt;&gt;nue New Yo r k N Y

•

APP ALACHIAN STOVE Company
Only au he zed Ashley S eve
deo e n Mo gs Co un y We APPLES FllZPATR CK Orchards
hove the best s ove tor he best
S ate Route 68 9
Phone
p ce
mpe ol C bO $375 n
W kesv lie 669 3765
d ud ng b ower Econom y 25 HF
976 KX 125 KAWASAKI Neve
$200 Wo als o cor y U S s ove
bee n raced Excelle nt col)d
cool and woods 011es nclud ng
1 on 992 3016
he Sen Fronk n (S 80)
Won derwood S300 w th blowe
Con e see us
we e
n
Corpen te jus! otl 43 6 1.4)
GOATS 6 weeks old 2 mole
b9B 7 9
{b 14)
$15 2 le ma e S15
BABY RABB TS and full grown
690 234
obb s 997 7330
TAK NG ORDERS for f rew ood and
SEARS FOR CElF'A: IR c culot n.g
s ovewood Cqll 843 2933
fue o I heo e 91 400 B T U n
pu w h '275 gallon tonk on 60 000 BTU GA~ hea ng stove
Ask ng $45 843 2933
&lt;;tond
lui of fue1 and
everyth ng needed o nstall to
BROWN f'iG GO LDEN Eog e Mo k
$225 Ex o good cond I on
Ill 23 cho nne AM bose stat on
Sea s 30 go lon ga s ho water
CB P~ one 9;.
49.:._:23::2:2:::_______
onk n good cond t on $40
l nley Hart
Ro c ne
OH
1975 HONDA XL 350 On y 1300
949 238-4
"""-t.. m les $750 992 7342
18
FT
MAHOGANY
and
SWEET POTATOES Robe t l ew s
f be g ass Sl ck Croft boo 80
84J 2432
h p Johnson Comp e e sk
HAY 90c and up Eo &lt;o n $ 1 50
equ pmen t New
es Ex
bu
Col Rona d Cowde y
ce en cond l on 992 720 o
985 358
q92 3309
YAMA HA HARLEY DAV IDSON 8.
Con AM Mota cvcles Camp e e
soles and fan ost c se rv &lt;e
Hou s M T T 9 6 W F 9 7 Sol
9 5 The Motorcycle People of
Sou heos le n Oh o
Athens
3 Year Old Food Service
Spo t Cycles n&lt; 20 W St m5 on
Bu stness
e&gt;ecellent
Ave
Athens Oh o Phone
locatron 20 percen1 plus
(614 ) 592 lb92
yearly growth est 1971
gross 595 000 Own your
bustness wtth less 1han
$40 000
Inv estmen t .
Con1act

ITDDAY'S CIDSSIDID PUIZLB \
ACROSS

COAL I nes one and co le um
chlo de a nd co c u n b r ne lor
dus t &lt;on ol and spec ol m x ng
soli to r fa me s h c.e s or Sol
Wo ks Mo Stree Pome oy
Oh o or phone qq') 3891

10017 12 2)557 2333

614

6

U",f,

�..

~

.

•
~-'-TheSund,ll

Tlmes.Sentmel.Swl&lt;ial Ott !.1917 •

'

•

For Best , Results Use Sunday Times-Sen~i~el Cla~sifieds

[).7-TheSwulayTmleS.senhnel.Swnlay Oct 2,1977

•

,•

For Best Results Use Sunday
Times-Sentinel Classifieds
....
ReatiafZ~-srue

--

r

"
BOB LA NE

BR:ANCH

m

GALLIPOLIS OHIO

Ofhce

446 7fOO

WE NEED

LJ::!

YOUR

PROPERTY TO

R'Allc

SELL NOW'

251

2

Locust Sf

Ga lhpohs, Oh•o

446-3636

r.. lichen

FA_R:M LtV IN• t-h•s ones 1u st ng ht tor you and your
famrly 53 acre~ enough f1llbl e to rome your own hay ,
corn etc Pasture, pond Good large barn Tob base,
farm home as 3 BR s fireplace m llvmg room Eat IQ
kttchen wtth range and r efnge.-afor Freezer NeW
srdtng Hannan Trac e Schools $35.000

r.ome offer no centra a r
ana tne best of con
struchtHT Pr ced M on v

FIRST AD• 2 story 3 BR older home m good cond Eat
tn kttche:n has nearl y new cab 1nets new hot wa ter
tank Storm doors and wandows New roof Garage On
1 acreJevel)!lt 118,000

COUNT RY RETR EAT

Like ney.,.
b(!tl')

2.1 1c. P

Mod ul dr
ot

J bt droor'r

l and

I

Vrndal£'

r.on e "' ' 'h 8 acres
n

K.yal:'l"

School 0 str ct

Crct~

i:\PP it an ces oo wIn sale
Th sIS a t ~rqe comtortctble

$29 000 00
GOING BUS I NESS
ANO GOOQ RENTAL
INVES..T..M.ENT
At an tdea l toc at on rn tne

c •v of Gaii1RQI s
buSt nPSS
ha!.

1'h t 5
been

esl a bl "n ed fOr 35 vears •ll
t~e Mea

ClAd nas a veno
qood fo llow ng We have
the rel'l l
e~t a le
only
Pr ced
If vou d~s re ro
COr1f 1 rW~

at

th

tne samE' bus ness

s locat,on

deal

dtrecfly

you ca n
wiTh

the"

c wner on tnventor) and
If
vot~
are
suop f1 es
lh1nk.tnq
you r own
busmess VOI.J noi.J id cnec k.
In fO II" IS

PLEASA N
I
on d halt lot has 3 bedrooms fully carpeted downsta 1rs
open sta 1rw ay large bat h lots of stora ge and IS close
to every th ng Pn ce reduced o~vner wan ts to sell
NOW no reasonable offer refused
NEW LISTING - V~,ry n tce 1977 12:-:.60 mobile ho~
bas 2 bedrooms bath w1t h shower f ully carpeted fu l fo/
fu m 1shetl wtndow atr cond 1t or\er loca ted on two nrce
lots on Raccoon Rd

atlo1.f

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - N1Fe home close to
town 3 bedrooms bath w1th sho . . . er fu ll y carpe t~d
din 1ng room family room full basement I car ga rag e
large lot pnced r educed to S32 500

NEW Ll~i'ING
Olde r home n r~ eed ot
remode l no
on
Ftrst
Avenue on GallipOliS Ttl ts
ho me sets on a oeaut t ul
r 1ver ot that IS 65 w de and
390 deep I f you a r e m
te rested
n boat.ng and
outdoor r ec rea tion th s
could bE" what t ~ou a r e
loo lo. •ng fo r

LOVELy HOME - Ntce 3 bedroom home bath w1th
shower f amily room beautiful carpet coun t y water
good buy pnce redu ced to S22 800
WE HAVE OTHER LISTINGS &amp; PICTURES OF ALL
OUR LISTINGS IN THE OFFICE COME IN &amp; LET
US HELP WITH YOUR REAL ESTATE NEEDS
WE BUY, SELL OR TRADE

CALL AT HOME

ECONOMY MINDEO? Cook• ng heat1ng &amp; hot water
are all rncluded for $26 per month 1n th s modern 3 BR
ran ch Th s home IS 1n excellent con d tron &amp; located on
a large fl at lot rn Coun fry A1 r Estates Pnced to se ll at
S29900 ST ROUT REALTY 446 OOOB
-~ -

WELL
EST A BLISHED
GROCERY BUSINESS for
sa l e
good eq u1 pment ,
f? )(Cellent 1oca t1on
l tv .ng
qu ar te(.i q pr 1ced to- sell
44 6
STROUT REALTY
00 08

IRELAND

MORTGAGE
CO
Soec o l z ng tn FHA and VA
"' Home loons Al so Re f nanc ~r)g
- &lt;l63 2nd Ave Loca te d 2nd floor
Gall polts Ph 446 7172
GR ADE A DAIRY One of Galbo
C:oun !y s best 140 A lertde
land mosllv ttl able 8 cow
parlor
LEI I( 50 s Ia w1lh
unlooder and feeder bO free
sto Is oth er bcm15 cr bs and
remMel ed home
$ 100 000
S rau l Realty 4&lt;1 6 (M)()8
4 BR

HO USE an one acre lot 1F1

B dwell Ph 388 87 46

THREE BEDROOM HOUSE
all
rebu It l1ke new Near CIIJ'
l m ts Approx 2 acres of land
S22 500
Coli
44 6 1984
4.t6 J615or4-! 6 124 3

ACRE S c ry wol er hardtop
ro ad beau tiful hor:ne t. 1le R1o
Grande Cenlerpomt Rd Ca ll
614 262 5916 Columb us
or
614 354 5036 Portsmou th

10

•

COMMERCIAl PROPERlY
JACKSON OHIO
Thrs propen y wtll hold 125 cars
or 175 p•eccs of heo..,y equ p or
125 p1eces of far m mochtnery
or 35 to 40 mobde homes II s
dose to landmark store on o
busy str cel F ne loco tt on for
fow rent hou~mq o a pot lmcnt
co nplex;
3 1 blot~~ to
down lawn Jat~~on 11 ha s o 30
)1. 100 masonry bu ldmg w1th
Ia ge 5 room ond both aport
mer I plus o 3 room and bo th
f rame~ ~ ~ Senou~ .nq u•r es
onl y ~ II
614 286 3212
Ja ckson Ohto lor oppo1nlment

NEW HOME 3 bedroom dOuble
garage w, tdwood h!~rh!'S" l1:!e
Co11slrucf on
992 3454 Qr
99'1 5455
THR EE BEDROOM home Rocme
alum1num s1d1ng sto1 rn wm
dow s gas forced o r furnace
Iorge yard S 1;1 500 949 2559
SPACIOUS THR EE bedr oorn homt;ryrr."bld Fea tur es all th e e)!
I r a~ Beour.fuf local to 1 on 1 4
acres 99'2 2996 lor rna e 1n
formal on
fHREE BEDROOM house l or sal e
near Eastern htgh schoo l Full
hosement Io rge lt'.'tng room
w th I re plo ce 2 cor garage
9fb JB67

TEAFORD

I]
lhAlTOP

V IRGIL B TEAFORD , SR
REALTOR
216 E Second Street
Pomeroy Ohro 45769
Phone 992 3325
NEAR SCHOOL - Sma ll
VIllage 3 bedroom home
w tth barn T P wa ter and
nea r stor es $14 000

n

ACRES
Good
remo deled 8 r oom home
wr t h 2 baths
modern
krtchen F A Furnace and
g.arage New fences On l y
S37 500
WA STE LAND 100
ac r es 60 acres of coal
some woods and mrnera ls
QUIET STREET
3
bedroom frame home
Frreplace
m
llvmg,
carpetmg and 2 car garage
Want only SJS,SOO
P~ ME

RO¥- 3 bedrooms
11
baths
carpet1ng
centr a l heatrng garage
and corner lot $25 000
145 ACRES Remote 4
bedroom home w1 th l arge
barn Sqme fencmg Ask.ng
$45 000

BIG FLAT LOT - 6 room
home bath F A furnace
on Rt JJ Lots of room for
th e K1dd1 es S23 000
WE DON'T PROMISE A
MIRACLE , BUT WE CAN
SURE LEND A ftAND '
HELEN L TEAFORD
C BRUCE TEAFORD
ASSOCIATES

RURAl HOME for so le by owner
K.tchen d1n1ng room double
,.., , g 1oom l ou• bedrooms
upslo rs bathroom on each
floor lull bosern enl cool fur
nocu fue l od furnace C• ty
woler Also well and c•s l&amp;rn
(~;;I lor h ou ~e tv1lh 1 room (jwell
1ng overhead large born On
appro)( 3 , acres of land Pr c
ed ol $35 ()(JO I rm Shown by
appomrme nl 01\ly 992 3469 0 1
&lt;192 3)J I

WE
STILL
ftAVE
BUYERS FOR YOUR
HOME LET OUR PHOTO
LISTING
SERVICE
WORK FOR YOU ,
ftENRY E CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp;
LEONA CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
992 2259 992 6191
992 2S68

CAMP GROUND
Clark Chapel Acre s I for
me1lyl 1S for sa le Approx
71 acres lots of pme tre es
small lake ,J good burldmgs
(needs m rnor reparrs I
Located near Porter Oh10
STROUT REALTY
446
0008

FOR SALE
Pi ck your own ca rpet color
tn
t ht5
com pletely
r em odeled 75 Pet
new
const 4 'Or 5 BR tam 11y R,
1• ~ baths l g L R 111:1 acre
lot nat gas plenty water
24x l2 bloc k garage w 1' 2
basemen t 6m 1 fro m town
3 m1 fr Om HMC 446 362 1

BUD

FIRST AD• Near Gavin and Kyger Creek Plants
Roomy 3 BR IS x17' LR , lg fam1ly rm 11 2 baths Well
planned krtchen wtth Tappan range Ntce level lot
Garage S29,SOO

REALTOR

WARM AND FRIENDLY Gather around
hrelac e rn the tamtly rm and en10Y thne w•nter even
rngs ThiS 3 BR bnck, all electnc ranch has a Warm
Mornmg wood buf'ner for added comfort and economy
Work saver kttchen w1th lots of cabmets range,
dtshwashe.-, and d1sp ~4 acre lot SJ7,SOO

6 ROOMS ,

3BEOROOMS
LIKE NEW
Total elect n c a 1r con
d tfl oners
ru ra l water
system Modern k•tchen
wtth lots of cab •nets
garbage d•sposal f &amp; 5 S
double s nk Garage no
ma.n tenan ce wh1te steel
std n9wrth bl ac k shutter s
n1ce lev el l ands caped lot
10 i )( 10
me t a l slorage
bu•ld 1ng TH S H OM~ CA N
BE
P URCHASED
REASONAB LY
8 ACRES
Wtt htn 10 m n dr1ve lo
dOWntown
Gall t po l •s
Gr ee n T ownsh1p
Cdy
School Svstem Has hookup
for mobile home GaJI 1a
Rural Water Elect r ic &amp;
Sep frc Tank n ght t ght on
pole 200 fl frontage on
G ra ha m
Sch oo l
Rd
T t m ber Build1ng sties
CAL L NOW

SUPER YARD• Nearly an acre surrounded by trees
Well ca.-ed for 2 BR frame home, eat m ktfchen fuel Otl
furnace Storage bldg Rural wafer ctty schools .EKcetent buy at S22,SOO

RENT BEATER• 1'12 story, J Br frame tn City , 26'x32'
concrete block garage wtth cement floor C1ty water
and sewage Gas heat Clean, well marntarned, 118,900

STATE H IG HWAY 160
REASONABLE
PRICED
150 tt fr on t ag e on Rt 160
La rge l 1v1ng room Clnd eal
tn k tchen
Two B R w th
clo set bath wtt h sh ow er
N ce stream ru ns through
propert y f !iOme tree s largf.!
comrele floor carport Th s
property on l y Sl B 900 00
JUS T LIS T ED CALL

190 ACRES, 00 hllable 100 acres pasture fenced ,
ponds tobacco base, some trmber, 3 barns, other
outbldg 4 BR bnck home, nearly completed Fireplace
m LR , FULL BASEMENT, GARAGE Perfect for best
cattle Call for appotntment
VINTON - Remodeled one story, l BR home has
alumrnum srdrng, blown msulatron Ntee one acre lot
wtth good garden spot Frutt tr~es 524,500
KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS. 3 BR ranch on ISO' .SO'
tree shaded lot Fmrshed 1 car garage All electnc,
well msulated (last winter's heat b1ll was low) Well
matntarned ns,ooo

ON RACCOO"N
CREEK , 3 ACRES
Bu il d your own home
aeaut 1t u t bulldrng sll es
w ttl'1 maple shade l rees and
ceda r bushes a lready set
aut Fronts an Raccoon Rd
w'fth back of lo t on Ra ccoon
Creek '2 r ural water t aps
pd tor Clay T wp
c1ty
school cf 1st All rea l good
ten c 1ng A ll mtnera l ngl')ts
goes A good buy at ON LY
S9 000 00

' 10
ORCHARD HILL- One ot the n1cest nerghborhoods
the cttY Wrthtn walktng dtstance of schools and
downtown Approx :~,4 acre wooded lot offers excellent
vrew, prrvacy 3 BR redwood horr:e eat tn kttchen
features dtnrng area wrth prcture wtndow, hardwood
floors , carport Gas f1,1rnace heat S3S,OOO
DRIVE BUY' Located 10 crty at 81 Locust St Newly
pa1nted 2 story 3 BR f"O"l]l}"ent Fully carpeted ,
well matntarned rns1d ~I
1ce heat Krtchen has
dtshwasher, range a~
-:~ Washer and dryer
PRICED RIGHT'

ONE ACRE PLUS
Vacanl land tn ctty of
M1dd 1e por t
Re a l n. ce
bulld•ng lot htgh &amp; dr y
w dh larg e sh ad e lree
a l ready lhere Appro)( JOO
ft frontage

WI NEED LISTINGS!
RON CANADAY, IJEALTOR

You will h k e thrs mamtenance tree brKk
ranch It has three BR's 11f2 baths LR ,
OR, and kitchen , nafural gas heat and cen
tral atr Thts home 1s only live yean old
and rs stluated on a large flat Jot Pnced
under $40,000 Grve us a call tOdav

Solid hardwood floors W1th cupet m the
hvtng room and hall and new floor cover
mg m the kttchen You wdl also entoy 1
roomy LR and k1tc:hen, both featuring
beamed cathedral ceil1ngs Thrs home also
has natural gas heat Last wrnt~r the
budget was anlv $28 00 Lots of storage
spac;e 1ncludmg a metal outbUIIdtng, This
home IS pnced m the Mtd 30's Call now for
an appomtment

SJ9 000 00

----s MALL DOWN PAYMENT
&amp; TAkE OVER
PAYMENTS
3 bedroom s f,il m ly room
12 x24
total eleclr• c
thermopane
w tnd ows
ru ra l water system n1ce
meta l storage but ld•ng
located on a n1ce leiJe l
land scaped f enced m lo t
concrefe dr tvew ay NICe
hOme
OVER 314S SQ FT
BLOCK BLDG
Su s ness or st ora ge space
N ce 4 large rooms on
appro~ 150 ft f r ontage on
a Slale Hi ghway by ap
prox l80 fl deep All lev el
t uel ot FA furnace RtJral
wal er svs te m also well
w1 th elect r •c pump H1gh
o&gt;.Jer head door s tor arge
lr uc ks Off tce 1s ntce tv
car p ete d and pa nel ed
CALL
FOR
OTHER
DET A IL S
168 ACRES
WALNUT T WP
Hore •S a lo t of farm that
can
be bough l at a
reason ab le pr,ce Lots of
pa sture ttmb er 30 A
til l able mostly leve l rand
p l en t y of water st ream
ru n'r.'l ng t h r ough farm
to tfacco base
2 l arge
ba rn s seve ra l other out
bUtldtngs M ost fe nces ar e
good some are new l ots o f
ro ad f ro nta ge Bl dg area
ma ny POSS i bilitieS Thi S
man r ea ll y wants to sel
We are ready to help Call
Today

One block. below ct ty park
~nd Ave Tnts nome can b!!
used edher re~•de nl tal or
commer c1 al J BR 2 bath s
nf CI" ea! •n k dc hen new
modern Ul llt t y
room
f repla ce All ptumbmg ,
w trtng se wer s have been
reptaced New F A turn
Thrs pr om.ncnt f ilm ly 1S
INh1ng
area
Almost
•mmed ta t c
possess ion
WERE WAITI NG FO R
YOUR CALL

To name a
assets of this fine
hOme we wtlltell you that 1t has a full base
ment (and 1t s dry) ftreplace m the LR ,
bUilt In kttchen w1th breakfast nook and
ad101ntng dtnrng room, three BR's , two
barhs, walls are part1ally paneled and the
floors are carpeted throughout (e~~:cept k1t
and baths ) Th1s ver.,. hne home 1S rn the
Gallipolis school system

ATT RACTIVE
HOME BY
THE RIVER
Here Is your vacat•on spo t
or n ce harp e by the r 1ver
Lot 110 II fr onlage on Rt 7
Approx ma te l y 500 ft deep
very !'\Ic e and wel l kept
l• k. e new 5 R mobde home
w1th many e:-:tras bu 11 tn
Some ext r as outs1 de 10 by
10 ul l1ty bu il dmg
lt ke
new on good concret e slab
Mobile home under p1 nned
Looks_g reat County water
availab le Aga .n l h1'S 1S
very n1ce
Sell ing very
r easona ble
BE TT ER
CA LL NOW

COMFORTABLE HOMe::
RIVER FRONTAGE
6 rooms &amp; bath pa rltal
basemen! n1 ce fr ont por ch
beautt lu l v ew of nver
Th i s property tS clean &amp;
attract ve I I has had many
man hrs spent on 1t I t 1S
made more beautiful W1lh
garden area
mc l udes
ra sp bcr r •es strawbernes
ch erry tr ees and grap es
Less tha n 4 miles of
Ga ll tpolts south on Rt 1

7 ROOMS
4 BEDROOMS
Galltpol s Sch ool D i strict
basement
ll 1
baths
moder n kitch en complete
wtlh bi r ch cab nets F A
fu rnace ca rpor t 2 wood
burn ng ftrepl~ces f.!lm ly
room la rge lol w1th fru it
trees and a large $forage
bu ld lng Within 5 m i les of
Gallt po lts Ntce home at a
good pr ce

""
.it!:...-

~

""'"~ '&gt;*

~

,t£

BUY YOUR
BUILDING LOTS
BEFORE SPRING BRINGS IN
FLATION
Nearly therty acres of land ·'pdaie&lt;i
home that has recently been u
a .new kttchen and bath, also
carpet
Thts cozy home has three BR's, plus an at
trc room, d1n1ng room and front room,
basement and nearly new fuel 011 forced
a1r furnace There 1s county water, also
10,000 gallon ctstern Located in eureka
wtth a• scen•c vrew of the Locks and Dam
Catl son thts one should sell qutck

I

..
.i!JI,
ONLY TWO mtles I rom downtown thtS
lovely home ha s nearly 1900 sq ft of'hvrng
space and tt sets on 1 84 acres of land 11
you are a quahhed buye.- gtve us a call to
day Th1s one 1s pnced nghl S63,000
Looktng for a nrce clean home pnc;ed 1n lhe
mtd JO s, Perhaps this 1s 1t New pa1nt out
s1de, new wall c;;ovenng tn k1fchen , carpet
throughout (ex cept k1t and bath) Th1S
lovely home has a convenrent heat pump
tor heating a"d cooltng and tt rs well 1n
sulated It' s located at 39S LeGrande Blvc:l
G1ve us a call now

•
Excellent burldrng site The lot rs 139xJI4
wtth rural water nearby Na mobtle homes
please

\

Double wrde s1tuated on 1 01 acres of land
Thts unrt Is very clean It has; three BR ' s, 2
baths, LR and dmmg area and kit, all
electnc with central a1r Also rncludes a
two car ga.-age Pnced m the Mid-20's
Located near the Shnne Club

Great locaflon- Excellent buy, tl you plan
to get your full dollar value Check th•s one
out Mtd $70' s
LOT on Rt )41 , 120x260 ( 71 acres)
OWNER ANXIOUS to sell I One and half
story home wrth 12 75 acres 6 mtles from
Gallipolis
IT LOOKS SMALL, but, lt has 3 BR's, LR,
bath, eat m kttchen and utility area It 1S a
sohd house and the prtce Is right Located
at 71 M1ll Creek 116,000
LOOKING FOR an acre buildtng lot, only •
m1tes out of town, w1th c1ty schools? Call
now, tomorrow could be too late

'

4 BR s, full basement, new paint and shut
ters 31 Evans Hetghts $25,900

WE NEED LISTINGS
WE THANK YOU FOR LISTING WITH US

PHONE 446-0552 ANYTIME

FIVE ROOM HOUS E 5 miles from
town on Rl 7 Coli 446 3522

INC.

World's largest, the leader since 1900
in serving .the nation's buyers and sellers.

SEVEN YEAR old house 3 acres 6
rooms and both '/, mde from
Chester 985 3950

AUCTrON -SALE

BY OWN R
3 BR HOUSE - K1tch en
ln:mg room and bath Wall
to
wall
carpef1ng
throughl)u1
Almo st
6
acres The lots are lev eled
off for bulldtng s1t es or
housetrallers One very
secluded bu1ldmg s1te at
the top of the hill 2 acres of
woods w1th se~,; erat la r ge
black walnut and Wl'llt e
Oak trees
In Galllpohs
School Or strict Only 21 1
m11es from --Gall!po l ts
Pncc reduced to S2J,S OO
446 8603

DATE: SAT., OCT. 8th-TIME: 11 A.M.
Place Home of J1m Adams on Long St, Rutland, Ohio
bes1de the grade school Watch Sale S1gns Due to til
health am selling a large assortment of tools and
household 1t~rhs mcludmg
Craftsman two wheel gr1nder, Craftsman saber saw
m steel case , J 11 ,, sk1ll electnc dnll1n case , Craftsman
wheelbarrow, leather tool 6elt , bench vtce, 14 foot log
charn ; p1pe wrenches, large colledton of hand tools.
tool boxes , two pa1r new t1n sntps ptpe f1H1ngs na1ls,
screw~s , bolts, stapler (Arrow). large level. Stanley
hatchet , a large collectiOn of ,4:\von bottles, some
empty, some full, old vmeg# drspenser , old Picket
knrves, one Wtnchester rn m1nt condition , Srnger
electrtc sewmg machme cabmet model (extra mce•,
radro ltke new, one set Old H1ckorv kntves, never
used , cast 1ron Dutch oven rugs, dtshes record player
w1th 'records (some Presly) electrrc deep fry, a very
large collechon of Barbie &amp; Amen can Character dolls.
hand blown glass, hundreds of whatnot s plus many
other 1tems
Autumeer Col Btll Brown New Marshfteld Ohro
Term s Cash
Not respons1ble for accedents
Srg ned J1rt1 Adams
{ Chp th1 s Ad )

•

.. • • • • • • . .

Ph. 446-0008

CO UNTRY farml and w th s9t:lud
ed woods wa ter ond good oc
cess 1n Monroe County W Vo
$1 000 down co li {304) 772
3102 or (304 ) 772 3227

---

---

VA FHA 30 yr f moncmg Ireland
Mortgag e 77 E S!otu Athens
phone (b1 4) 592 105 1
'J.

---bedroom

STORY 3
fra me
house F A fu rnace storm wtn
dows fireplace m M•ddlepor!
Phone 992 345:7

514 2nd Ave .
LOTS OF LOTS -

SELL
IM
modern 4
BR bnc k r.!nch 3 ;, baths
f.!lmlly rm wtlh f replace
format entrance forma l
d~ni ng large L.R eQU ipp ed
Kr t chen, double garage
sc reened - 1M pal 10 Meat
pump 2 barns 10 acres
SBO,.OOO loc ated on the Kerr
Harrisburg Ro ad about 7
ml f rom HMC n th e c1ty
sc hoo l dlst
HARDWARE STORE
Her es you r cha nce Ia get
start ed
•n
your own
bUSif'leSS Th lS proper ty IS
located 1n V• nton Oh• o &amp;
can be 'boug l'1 t for S12 900
plus stock &amp;. equt pmen t

LOCATION
VALUE
APPEAL ,....- 24 ac re farm IS
mostly tilla bl e &amp; features a
very nJce 2 story hom e with
B rm s
&amp;
bath
The
dow nstai rs 1s brand new
Also 1n cl uded are " 50x60
oarn
sll o &amp; J small
bUt ldiMCI S ThtS property IS
l ocaled""': J 4 m• north of
HM C on Rou te 160

MUST

M~OIATELY

~~·

""

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BEAUTY IN 'l'HE WOODS - Qua lit~ bu ilt ran c h st yle
home IS sr tuated on 17 acres of pines overlook ing U S
35 appro x 4 m 1 west of Rro Grande First tim ~ on the
markel SSO s STROYT REALTY 446 OOOB

SIX ROOM house ol 613 Mtl l St
M 1ddleport Good condt lton In
qu•re at 439 lrncoln St M1d
dl eporl

BEEF
CATTLE
cbUNTRY - t42
acres
clean htll pasture, gOOd
Umces, 2 barns old house,
lob base, lots of rd fron
tage, Walnut Twp , $4S,OOO

MUSr SeU. th ts 3 bedroom 2 '

:

both
foyer
th all thol!:l
e ex
tros l spirt
Pnced
far w1below
ual
real estate value for qu1ck
sole t Nrce drt'.'C Ia power
plants $4&lt;1 000 992 2492

1~0~8U

4

T

REAlTY •

'·~~~;;~;::-:-~-=~
!!:!:!:_~e:for Sule

c.-

HOMESITE S lor 5o le J ocr o and
oNE ACiEtot;-;QOt~JF;';n
up Mlddl(&gt;p&lt;trf 1 oa r kvtlo nd
toge Tuppers Plams Oh10
Coll992 7481
667 3349
---NEW 3 bedroom houv.r 7 hoths
APP 200 ACRES at ground no
¢II alec 1 ot:.10 M1rldlopor l
budd1ngs
T upper~
Plotn s
dose to Ru tland i'ht.n(l ~2
7481
49:.:..._~---OhiO 667 33:_
NEWTHREE b~droom house fu ll y SMALL fo rm lor solo 10~1. dO'w n
carpe ted
firep lace
dtnmq
owner fman cvd MtJ!Ht~g Coun
room carport 1 ocre lot
l y W Vo Ph om.~ f t(Jol ) n2
667 3349
3102 or (304 ) 777 Jill

Located

on Grah am School Rd

NEAR LECTA ~ 101 ac r e
farm w 1t h 45 A t ill able S
rm hou se 3 barn s se ver a l
other outbu lld mg s ce ll ar
house spr1ng water &amp; a
35 00 lh t ob ba se S50 000

L ncoln Pike &amp;. Georges
Cree k Rd Mob tle homes
welcom e
NEAR TY( OON lAKE 38 5 acr e f arm IS leve l &amp;
roll•ng land w•th about 15
acres tillabl-e &amp; the ba l ance
tn woods P"', slor y home
nas bee n n1cely remode led
&amp; offers 4 BR s n tce kit
chen w•th stove &amp; refrtg
oll ftJrnace &amp; w w carpet

VACANT LAND NEAR
ROONEY .- Approx 55
ac r es of l evel 8. rol li ng
farm land w r1h pond tob
base barn &amp; co wa ter
Thts propert y tr olltS on 2
rd s In a very des trable
locat 1on l ot s of po t en t 1a l
for S5S 000

BEAUTY IN THE WOODS
_ Quat 1ty built ranch style
nome Is s1 tuated on 17
acres of pines overlooking
us 35 approx 4 m1 west
of -':R to Grande This low
ma 1ntenance home
Is
co v ered w rth brick &amp;
alum 1num e. features 3
BR 5 la rge LR wlfh stone
fireplace n1ce kItchen &amp;
dlntng area 2 gar.!lges &amp; a
ce ll a r hOu~e Ftrst time on
the market $50's

PRICED REDUCED TO
$13,000 - ONner says sell
this 6 room and bath home
with new aluminum stdln,g
large LR &amp; kitchen, 3 BR s,
dlnlng room. orl furnace
and flat lot In Thurman

BE YOUR OWN BOSS w tth
this
well
established
grocer y bu ~ 1 n ess Perfec t
for .a f.!lmdy operafton
LIOtnQ quarters are &amp;I
ta ched Call for details

...

L - New
near town offers
good llvrng for some
family Brick and
frame beauty features 3
BR's, 2 baths complete
k tchen w 1th d iShwasher
rang e &amp; refrtg , 20x24
family rm
2 car garage
and larQe lot near t own
INEXPENSIVE HOUSING
NEAR ADDISON - $14 000
Isn't much tbr this 'good
sol 1d 2 BR home with large
bath , butane furnace
unfm tshed attrc , cellar .
hOuse fruit trees &amp; a large
lot tmmedrate posses&amp;ton
ThiS wquld make- a n1ce
rental
NEW LISTING - 2 yr old
ranch h.!IS lots to offer tor
only S32 900 Features are l
BR s. large LR &amp; family
rm
kitchen with stove ,
refr1g
dtshwasher 8.
breakfast bar laundry
rm
cent a•r &amp; SWIM
M I NG POOL Th is b!!auty
IS located In Bidwell &amp;
would probably QO FHA or

..

we have 3 acre wooded lots &lt;some
wtth take frontage) only 4 mt. from
town 3 or 4 acre s1tes rn R10 Grande.
l/4 acre-lot rn centenary

ontal frame home Is one of the best con
structed homes '" tis class 4 large
bedrooms, a family room wtth w b
fireplace, formal dtntng, l'h baths, perfect
kttchen and rec room EntOY a ntce
sundeck and covered patio along with the
e)Ccellent tocatton 568,500

....-

WO'Oded sttes overlooktng the nver
- 1 m• from town, a very pnvate
locatton atop a hrgh htll Excellent
v1ew of the nver

SPECTACULAR VIEW - ARCHITECT
DESIGNED RANCH- Absolutely one of
the best views of the Ohto Valley and only 3
mmutes from downtown 77 acres of woods
and be•uttfully destgned 3 Bedroom Y
shaped residence that wtll please the most
dtscnmmatlng Unusually ntce k1tchen
(all appliances Included) 2'h: baths and a
fam11y room that Is out of th1s world Large
stone fireplace A peaceful settmg w1th a
view that would be hard to match Ar
rangements to see lhts can be made at
your conventence

NEW LISTING- JAY DRIVE - Located
rn an excellent netghbOrhood, thts 2 story 4 ]
bedroom frame has a very anrac:ttve 11v·
1ng room and dining room Large fam11y
room, eat tn k1tchen and 1 baths Cttv
school d1Str1c;,l S47,SOO
COUNTRY SHOWPLACE WITH 4 ACRES
- An attracttve brtck ranch W1fh :Z200 sq
tt of llvtng space
Three spac1ous
bedroorhs, formal entrance and d1nmg,
be..Uhful kttchen and breakfast area
Large famrly room wrth w b fireplace. 2
baths Th1s fine home mcludes a small
livestock barn and rs located on a good
htghway '" Gallta co Sch Otst

EXCELLENT VIEW WITH
RIVER
FRONTAGE - This handsome solidly
but It brick reveals large llvtng room w1th
w b ftreplace, dmtng room \Ytth a cap
t•vattng v1ew of the river, very ntce eat-tn
kitchen with the appliances butlt m 1112
baths and oversized 2 car garage wtfh
room tor a workshop. En1oy the breathtak
lng v1ew from the extra large lot gently
sloping to the rtver for $69,900

VA

MORGAN TOWNSHIP 103 acres vacant rand Lots
01 bottocn land and lots of
woods for $32,000
NEW LISTING - 3 m tleS
oul Modern 3 BR ran ch 1S
pn ced to sell M S29 500
Spec1a l features are 11,
baths cent arr k itth en
w1th stove &amp; refrlg n1c e
car pet
t hroughout
&amp;
family r~ Located on a
la rge lot .n th e Green
Sc hOOl C:hst Shown by
appotntmenl
INGS NEEDED ADVERTISE
""" •- .. ALLY- WI IUY
-TRADE

2ND AVENUE PROPERTY- You must
see this older 2 story 4 bedroom brtck 10
the he•rt of town Has a family room wtth
fireplace, dining room( 2 baths, eal tn kif·
chen and 2 car carport A beautaful fenced
tn back yard
A HOME AND 6 ACRES A very
appealing 4 bedroom frame ranch
resttng on 6 beaut•ful acres Entov a
large hvmg room, d1ntng room and
attractive tamily room 2 baths, eat
kitchen and basement Wtth rec
1n
room 2 car garage and central arr
Located off SR 7 In K.C . Sch. D•SI
$49,900
YOU'LL FIND SOLITUDE
Wllh !hiS
attractive 3 bedroom split level
Features a mce k1tchen. l baths and
family room You must see th1s one
Rests or, a 1 acre: lot surrounded by
woods a m1. out. $35,000 (extra land
available)
sR S88
A pleasant 3 bedroom
frame home wtth a large eat m ktt·
chen. basement w1th rec room. Has
a central gas furnace and a wood
burntng fumace Resting on a 1 acre
plus lot $33,900

NEW LISTING IN VINTON Loca ted ad1acent lo Rt
160 10 Vihton 2 or 3 bedrtom v rllage water lot Stze
47 xl27 Buy now for S16 000 00

~~~~

8 ACRES - Frontage on SR 124. A
n1ce butldmg completely furntshed
Hll 2 mobile home s1tes w1th septrc
tank 520,000

'

ACRES NEAR RUTLAND +
W1lh a large 2 •tory S bedroom
home, eat·in kitchen. d1ntng, llh
baths 15 acres tillable w1th good
fence and barn . 54 MOO
~

HOME AND t1 ACRES- A 2 story
frame w1th 4 farge bedrooms, family
room. basement, garage, workshop
and ch1cken house. Calf Mr
W1seman If 446-4500.
-·
DUTCH STYLE - This beautiful frame
home has UOO sq ft of gracious livtng
s ace 4 large bedrooms and formal din
~~ sPaciOUS family room wath overslled
w
ttreptace, wtfe approved built In
cheft, 21!2 baths, 2 sunde:cks, 2 patios en
tnl a1r.

t

o

l't

mTf&amp;et&lt;....

Three bedroom carpe ted home
Plantz Subd• v
'two extra lots t otal drmens 1ons
180'x 140 F A nat gas furnace $23 00 mont hl y budget
NEW LISTINGS Three bedroom ca rpeted homes, all
electric srtua ted on 75'xl20 lots Available for one
.. year lease, or buy for S25 000 00 wrth con venhona I lo an
or land contract Call for more mformat1on
FO.PR SALE OR LEASE Modern one story bnck'
bu'Hdmg over 14,000 sq ft part basement na t gas
central arr con d rt ronmg Large recept1 on room over 60
rooms vanou s stzes Ideal locat ton parkrng area
accommodates excess of 40 au tos Located ad1acent to
Gallipolis Golf Cou r se Call or stop 1n for more
rnfor matron
FOUR BEDROOM S1tu ated on 40 xl 50 lo t w1th 1 '&lt;._~ ' ~Y
of GallipOl iS 2 ba t hs lg lr vr ng room 12 x22' ce~l
A
14'x24 garage nat gas $39 00 mont hly budget
Pnce $30 000 00

c,

NEAR TYCOON LAKE 3 acres plus new fireplace
(flrewood already cut)
16 x 17 lrvmg room
3
bedrooms carpeted
700 f ee t of road fron t age
Gall ipOliS City School D1stn ct Pn ce $35 000 00

I'''

NEW 3 BEDROOM BRICK ,
bath s ! .rep lace wllh
burlt .n fan s heat pump 24'x24 garage wr th elec tn c
door opener You must see th rs home to apprec1ate
rrtany burlt m s Pnce $55 000 00
NEW LISTING Located on Lower RIVer Rd
i!ll
beaut 1ful v 1ew with r iver frontage 3 bedrOom newl y
ren ova~Cr carpeted
you m ust see to apprec1ate
Wood burnmg fi repla ce new hot wa t er tank, F A fuel
oil furna ce 8&lt;1 acr e lot all for SJO ootoo

NEW LISTING 3 bedroom brr ck home centrally
located between Gallipolis and R1o Grande les s than
one year old Gall1pofls Crty School D1 st rtct rural
water 1112 baths n 1ce so acr e• lot Buy thrs brick for

only

$~9 ,900

oo

PORTSMOUTH RD ThiS da)ldy ~
bedroom ~ rame features formal dthrng, a
brand new k1tchen and famtiY room nestl
ed on a cool shaded tot S29,900

NEAT, CLEAN, 3 bedroom home locate~ In ~1dwell,
near school . full basement, large lot l SO x l40 Rural
water Pnce reduced $28 500

AN ATTRACTIVE 3 BEDROOM RANCH
wtth a lovely famrty room, n1ce kttchen,
an~ fully carpeted Located across from
Addavtlle Grade School on a flat tot wtth
garden space

COMFORTABLE 2 bedroom home m Kanauga ,
si tuated on J;_. acre lot iia t gas F A fu r na~ Kitchen.
bedroom and ll vmg room furniture goes w1th home
mcludes refrigerator, stove, washer and dryer Also lg
2 ca r gage Could be used as a shop Prrce $24,000

62 ACRE FARM - If you are lookrng for a
nrce farm let us show you thts dandy 18
acres trllable, balance tn fenced pasture
and woodland CompiiJTlented by a recon
dtttoned 2 story 4 bedroom home Attrac
fiVe k1tchen (wtth range, oven and refrtg )
central oil heat, 2 car garage and large
barn $45,000

NEW LISTING 40 acres w1 th three bedroom house
garage &amp; two outbu1ld1ngs rural water &amp; we l l Located
near Cora pn Tom Wood Rd Pr tce $28 000 00

NEW HOME This beauhtut new 3
bedroom home has a very ntce ap
pearance An attracftve kttchen, 2 baths
and frreplace An energy saver w1th tis 6"
msulahon tn the walls and floors and 12"
overhead Only 1 block from Clay Grade
School
A GENTLEMAN'S FARM - 117 acres
one of the best beef farms'" the valley 90
ac;res of htghly rmproved hay and pasture
30 acres ot wooded pasture New fence, 2
ponds. 6 automat1c cattle fountams, l
cmetal barns w1th concrete loafmg pads.
but It 1n feeders. gratn storage, loadmg
shute w1th head gate In addrt1on there ts a
wonderful 3 bedroom frame home contatn
rng a mce family room wtth an attract1ve
w b hreplace, mOdern bUIIt·tn kitchen , Ph
baths, 2 car carport .~ Excellent localton on
a state htghway, 9 mtles from H M C
STRICTLY DESIGNED TO SUIT THE
MOST DISCRIMINATING. Resllng on a
beauhtullv free shaded l'h acre lol that of
fers an 1mposmg view from every wtndow.
ThiS spectacular home offers everythmg
you've dreamed of from a TV monttor at
the front door to 6,000 sq ft ot elegant ltv·
tng space A classtc kitchen, breakfast
room, formal d1nrng, huge formal en·
trance, 3'12 baths, 2 w b. frreplaces. 2
sundecks, pan1c button den, expans1ve and
drsllnctrve entertatnment area w1th bar.
Impeccable taste descnbes the profes
s1onals who d1d the decoratrng Plenty of
stofage, hghted Ctrcle dnve and mature
landscapmg puts lhe ftnrshtng touches on
thrs most exethng home

MEIGS CO PROPERTY
IN MIDDLEPORT - A 2 story
frame restmg on a large lot Formal
dmtng. nice kitohen, basement, and
carpeted throughout 1 car garage
and cent. a.r 130.QOO

FRIENDLY
FAMILY
ROOM
WELCOMES YOU - In the #amrly room
alone there are · aoo sq ft of beauhful
rust 1c hvtng space Huge rough sawed
beams support the balcony
Master
bedroom and bath w 1th a most attractrve
w b
ftreplace. There are 3 other
bedrQoms, ntce kttchen, 24' livtng room
Another bath tus garage Entoy the In
ground swtmm 1ng pool and large tlat acre
lot on a good htghway 1n City Sch Drst

NEW LISTING Small collage, located on Rl 160 luST
outside c 1ty 11m1ts nrte gard ~n area fenced •n yard
garage Pnced to sell $23 500 oa
FIVE BEDROOMS Cen tra ll y located a long 400 block
of Second Ave Home 1s d rv1 ded to mak~ental
apartm ent 1f destred 2 krtchens 2 bathrooms car port
f ull basement steam heat Wrthrn easy walk ng
drstan ce of downtown Pnce $35 000 00
FOLLOW RT 218 and Lrttle BUll ~ m Rd to
Macedonia Rd and see th rs 3 bedroom he -o si tuat ed
on a;" acf'e lot Call f or an appomtmen f tt 1"e Pnce
on ly $17 500 00
TWO STORY j bedroom hom e ncludrng 3 50 x l 50L..._
lots overlookrng Ohio Rrver Pr •ce $16 000
COMMERCIAL BUILDING Located
Ave Ga ll rpolls Pnce $1 7 500 00

1122 Second

10 ACRES Fronts on Neighborhood Rd Butldrngs lots
no mobd e homes Pnce $15 000 00

APPROX
3 ACRES
On
ciJrner
lot
along
Neighborhood Rd No mob ile homes Prr ce S18 000 09
MOBILE HOME Clean 2 bedroom Fleetwood loca ted
a lon Kemper Holl ow Rd 1 acre lot Rural water 2
~utb~il d fngs A C some furnr ture al l for OI"IY
11200000
151 ACRE FARM Near Vtn ton tn.cludes tillab le ano
l imber land Al so 4 bedroom home equipme nt shed
Bottom land bor ders Raccoon Creek Ca ll for more
1nformatron
Looktng tor a acres on Shoes trmg Ridge, we na"'e It
mcludrng rura l wa ter, el ectnc hOOk up, fen ce and gate
Priced now tor SI O 000 00
NEW LISTING lN GALLlPOLlS Compacl home
loca ted 936 1st Ave , along th e Oh10 R ver One
bedroom Pr 1ce Only $8 000 00

~

E. M. WISEMAN, BROKER 446-3796
E.N. WISEMAN, BROKER 446-4500
CAL:. 446-:iw43

1975 Vandale mobtle home, 14 xd7 ' all electrrc The
average electrtc bill tor last year was $69 00 a month
Thi s mobile home Is on a la rge corner lot In the village
of Vinton and In excellent cond tron th rou ghout It has a
covered patio 30'x8 and air condrhonrng Includes ne'(l'
hou se furniture, color TV and al l the good res Ha s
large garage and work area You need to see th 1s to
apprecrate 1t Prrced at less t han replacement cost

WE NEUl LISTINGS lF YOU ARE THINKING OF
SELLING GIVE US A CALL
LET US HELP YOU I

,. ,.

SCO 2ND AVE.

•

Acreage close to town We have 65
acres of beaut1fuf hillS and valleys.
Excellent vtew, good locafton and
prtce

- Th1s 2 story Col

A

IN CHESHIRE ..,.. Recenlly remodeled t'/2
story 4 bedroom frame home Large hvmg
room, d1n1ng or fam1ly room and a ntce ktt·
chen Free shaded lot S26,SOO

STROUT REAL TV
MUST
SELL
IM
MEDIATELY
modern 4
BR brick ranch J 1t 2 bath s
tam11y rm W1fh f1rep1ace
formal entrance
formal
dtn1ng , large LR , equ1pped
k1tchen double Qarage
screened 1n paf1o , h,.ea t
pump, 2 barns , 10 acres
SBO,OOO located on the Kerr
Harnsburg Road about 1
m1 from HMC 10 the c1ty
school
d1st
STROUT
REAlTY 446 0008

VINTON - NEW LISTING • - A com
fortable 3 bedroom frame h.ome W1th a
large hvtng room. eat·rn kttchen (w1th
range and refng ) and a scen1c S acre
wooded lot For more mtormatton call Dan
Evansaf388 81\t

ranch 1ust 5 blocks from the Ctty Park
This fine home features 3 or 4 bedrooms
large eat tn kttchen, 1Vt baths, 2 car car
port, mce lol. 541.900.

~
-.,;;-;,;-;;.,;;;.-,;;;-;,;-;;.-;;;.;;-.;;;.;;;..:;.::..::..::..::...::...::&amp;~~~

TWO BEDROOM hou se 1n
Syracuse Storm wmdow s 2
porches olummum bu1ldmg
porttally fur ntshed 992 5395

.

An attracftve modern brtc:k

A EDUCED TO

S ROOM COTT AGE
CHILLICOTH E RO
Well kept 2 bedro om home
bo?l lh l 1v mg r oqrn fo rmal
OR N 1ce Stle k tl chrn full
baseme nl
altached
qarage Two porc hes one
s a largt- fr onl porcn 11 ce
to en1oy The r e s also a
arg e garden arra anp
yard Th s pr operty rnust
be so ld r r ts pr lc l"d r ght
you c ~n buy .t tod a{ Mo"e
n tomorr ow
~

A FINE HOME AND EXCELLENT
LOCATION - A beauttful brick and frame
ranch that reveals a
kitchen and
fam1ty room Com
3 spacious
bedrooms and
I
on
Lrncoln P1ke at

~

•'

Audrey Canaday
_ Reallqr Assoc1ale
446-3636
-Hour

As k~g S55 000 Col~992 E 492

446-1066

M~GHEE
A QUALITY HOME LESS THAN $30,000
FHA APPROVED This IS an extremely
well butlt very clean 3 bedroom home wrth
low, low fuel btlfs Cnat. gas forced a1n an&lt;/.~ 1\!'Jl
needs no redecoratmg Large kitchen, ~
and carpeted throughout Plenty
space and located tn a n1ce subdrvt·

8 ROOMS MODERN HOME - Located on
up to 1 A of level land appro x 6 m1 to
Gall 1pol1 s on a bla cktop road 3 8 R large
fa m tly room 16 x20 lrvmg roo m 12',., 16,
forma l drn room mod krtchen wtth lot s of
bur llm cab1nets table top elec rang e
Galha Rura l Wat er System Can take over
a 7' , pet loan w rth l ow down pa yment
P HONE NOW FOR INF O RMAT ION

MCIDE RN 6 ROOM RANCH HOME WITH
SWIMMING POOL
REDUCED
Sw rmf'n 1ng pool wornes r e over Look 1
Almo'sf new &amp; modern m every way
sw1mm.ng pool mc ludedl Beaut1ful foyer
3 bedroom s nrce l arge 4 dou ble closets 1
stng le L R II x lB forma t D R utdrty R
ntc e fam ily R complete k tchen nr ce s1ze
&amp; handy large 7 c.;~r garage atta ched
These are a fe'.v of th e rns1de features Now
th e rest - lots of shrubb ery , attrachvtgate entran ce to beaut fu l l y f nrshed
walj.;way leadmg tnt o a modern new oval
pool srze 17 )(J5 w rth dtvr ng board and
n1ght I ght Pool cotri pl etely fenced 1n
There rs plenty r;11 yar d or garden space
fenced •rn or 3 srdes apple l rees grape
vines cen tra l a rr gas forced a1 r furnace
loi s of rnsulatron low heat bills basketba ll
court I qulf - please call for th e res t

NEW HOMES UNDER CONSTRUCTION All have
spactous quahty built plans s1mrlar to one rllustrated
WoOd burnmg flreplar;e, 2 car garage 2 FULL. BATHS,
central a1r cond range, drshwasher and dtsp tn Ktf
Approx 1 acre lot S45 900 and under

ond still dnve lo power planh
ond mtn esl 3 bdr 2 1 bath All
oppltonces and much mare

RUSSEU WOOD REALTOR

CALL 446-3643

FIRST AD• Lookrng for a place rn the country, S'(l
acres, barn, chrcken house and granary Good fence 4
BR home, farrnly rm garag"" Fuel 011 furnace lots of
space for a lg fam1ly 532 SOO

IMY LOW MEIGS COUNTY TA)(€S

GALLIA COUNTY'S LARGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

Manager

44 OLIVE STREET Wrthtn walktng drstal)ce
downtown J BR frame Ntce eat tn krfchen Garage
Natural gas furnace Good cond S30 ooo

~~~~~~~-iflfJW

Ken Morgan
Evenmgs
446 0971

Branch

Need Your Home or Farm To Sell

BUY OF THE WEEK' N1ce 3 BR ranch only llll mrles
from c1ty Hardwood floors lg carport w1th storage
area, 3lf'J' acres all fenced Several excellent bulldtng
s1tes 528 SOO

JUST LISTED - NEWER
RANCH TYPE 3 4 bdrms
modern kr t and bath
approM 2 acres barn cold
shed
pa-t ro
stor age
carport , garden space
FREE
GAS
FREE
WATER LOOKS NICE for
S35 000 00
JUST LISTED N1ce
ol der home m Rutland
W BF P
fe nced lot 3
bdrms
carpe t 1ng and
remodeled Lots of newer
feat ures Only $14 000 00
JUST
LIS "J; ED
2
frrep laces 2 3 bdrms good
neigh borh oo d
1n
Mrddleport
Nrce
remddel rng 1 f loo r plan r
off street park lng Cheap at
$13 000 00
JUST LISTED E xtra
rnc ome w rth th 1s 10 room
roommg house 2V1 baths
lobby l tv rng room dmmg
room
Tile net rnc om e
should pa y the mortgage
11650000
MIDDLEPORT ThiS
rmposmg older home has
eve r yt h 1ng
from
a
W 8 F P to a large two ca r
garage 4 bdrms , modern
kll
2 baths"'- Ia rge rec
roo m et c A bar :p m at
$39 500 00
HOW ABOUT - 31h acres
tn the country wrth a nrcely
remodeled 2 bdrm home
barn and other b11lldrngs
Stea l thr s for S11 500 00
4 ACRES - 4 home srtes
Near Mmes good gravel
road 14 60(/ 00
RANCft TYPE
3
bdrms
large eat..,n krt
With bar Large master
bdrm full baement, many
features S23 500 00

0008.

VS REALTY,

Phone Evenmgs 446·9539
Gal/ill County's Fastest Grou)ing Rea{ Estate Agency

LOOK - COfo(tPARE and you' ll agree fhrs hom-e has a.
lotto offer for$20 000 Lower Rt ~ andOhro Rrverlron
fage 2 story frame w1th nearly new Stdrng 4 BR Log
spactous 1tv1ng rm W1thllfeplace Dtntng rm wrll seat
the largest fam11y rn comfort Rural water ctty
schools
.....

BOB LANE &lt;14' ~ 10&lt;19
WALT LA NE 4.J6 OH8
Nat•on,at Ad ~ t&gt;r:f151 ng W1th
.Galler y af H ome s

Excellent condtflon. e)C.
ctltenl locatron Basement.
garage
alumrnum
stdmg s1orm wtndows
Pnced 1n S20 1s 446 1443,

0

leadmgham
Realtor

BASEMENT WITH FIREPLACE Lovely bnck
home 3 bedrooms 2 baths 2 fireplaces ~ for mal Orn ng
full drv ded basement larg e 2 car garage Located on 1
acr e on St Rt 160 too k at thrs home before you buy

LAND CO NTRAC T WITH
A GOOD DOWN PAYME NT
I n tn ts 2 neo r oom h dea wa y
set ! ng on Slue Lake near
Raccoon Cre ek. an d RouTe
l
Ca ll us today for nore
deta I s

THE WiSEMAN
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

HEDGE
AGAINST
INFLATION - SI9S per
acre
180.
acres
ot
wilderness approx
20
mrles west of Gallipolis .
STROUT REALTY , 446-

446 9523

WilliS T.

COUNTRY LIVING AT ITS BEST - Th1s beautrful
ranch overlOOking Tycoon Lake has 3 bedrooms 2
bath s large I v1 ng room wrth a stone fr r epla ce very
nrce k 1tchen d 1nrng lovely Lee carpet throughout
You II be happy you looked at th tS

CQMMERC I AL SIT E
C'o r ne r 101 on St&gt;cond
1\venue wht&gt;re the olo
Queen Bee was loc ate-d
Off•ce bu ddmQ on rear &gt;I
lot Pr ce'1 at ~50 000 00

--HOUSE IN CITY

FOR SALE
clean level lo1 tn
Cheshire
Sutlable for
bu rldrng or mob1le home
,2 500 00
Call446 1294

t.e~

CANADAY
REALTY
•

MANAGE~

85SSECONO AVENUE

GALLIPOLIS

IF 'VOU RE PLANNIN(J
TO SELL CALL US W E'
HA J E
A
LIST
OF
PROSPECTI VE BUYERS
ANO W£'RE A NXIOU S
TO SERVE YOtJ

I F YOU DON 'T SEE THE
PROPERTY VOU WANT
I N THI S AD CA LL WE
MAY BE" ABLE TO FINO
IT F"OR YOU

�•
·-· ~·

.

.

.

~(!)
HEALT~
~~

LawrenceE.Lamb.M.D.

Dalid Sizemore injured in wreck
(; 1\l

l.ll'OI JS

I)&lt;J\'lli l ·

:!0. G,tHtptlh~. \ttd:s
h:-.tul Hl :-..rll~f,u:t un t undl·
11111; S.ttunl~l\ ,tfttTI1tM~n In tilt'
lutt•ri:;J\ t' c~m. · St'l'twu ut lht•
lh•llt•r:\k~tt~_•11 trt.•ntt.'l' \\hl'tt'
lh~ \\.l!&gt;i dtlnuttt'li follu"mg ,1

Sl / l'I!HIIt'.

tl'affll •, r tl' ldL•utFrrda~onlllt'

By Uwreoce E. Lamb. M D.
DE AR DR . LAJ'IB
ll
- An•
~
'd ru!{s
h
t e anti-uepessant
.•. or 1.io·
mere1y temporary at u.s
•..
1
ll1e:- 1K1VE' any ung tem1
do ~ s
bent.' f 1 t s.,
H o"
...
t
d
h
ps~&lt;· 1atry l'Uillllit
eprE's·
swn and do you :=tt."t' an~
usefulness tn bJofeedbiu.·k amt
other sumlar trl'hOlQUCS I
What is th~ dtfference bel·
ween a mantc-deprCSSI\'0 per·
son and .1 tjptl'al d~prl'SSIVe
person '
. DEARoREADEH- Dt'presston IS a svmptom. ll can be a'&gt;
tt18nifest.8hon of fl ni'urosls or
in tis milde~t !Qrtll a rhange
m mood A1 the otftt&gt;r end of
the spectnm1 rt c.tn be a
psychosiS of maJ Or tm·
p&lt;Jrtance There are no sharp
c~v1dmg lmes and the dect·
swn as to the stgmft cance of
depreSSIOn and what II
represents depends upon the
tndtvldual case and how
dtsabllll!1 or oven pamlul ilts
to the person
Depresstun IS part of the
three maj or psychoses which
mclude the manic depres.srve
}OU askert about, the UJ\oolu·
bona! melanehoba that affects olde r peoplde snd the
frank psychotic epresswn
The ps)chottc depression IS
seen m a persQn who IS
severely disabled He may,
not speak or if he does It may
be ;cry slowly and even all
physt cal movement may be
sl011
The mamc depresston ts a
psychosis that causes a per·
son to be ma mc - " high" mth delusiOnal thoughl.'l of
great things tmd excess ac111 II) Tlus phHse may be
preceded or follo11ed by a
rlepress ton The c)cles maY
bt&gt; Interspersed v. 1th pea ~
r1r nurmal mood swmgs and
rrorma l behaviOr
The anti-depressants are
temporary m the sense that
they don't cure an) thing but
ena ble the person to feel bet·
ter and functiOn better while
the C) cle IS bemg completed
Vanous med1cmes may fie
used m combmat10n with
anal}SJS or psychotherapy
Elect roconvulsive therap)
1 ECT l often gtves urunedtate
relief It ls very useful m the
severely d1sabled. person.
I don't think much can be
ea1r1eu from bwfeedbctck m

trt-atJng thr dt&gt;pressr,·e 1,., .. 1,,,._\ ·t'u! c~ Bd three and
groups p S\'Cholh erapy t ILa t r11 ', . 1,. 11 tJr.s 11 ult&gt;s "uuth uf SH
"
t•nab1est he pt'r.;on l•l.Wtders- e.oo
d
d
th
th
1
t
"""
tan a n cope wt
e re~t 1 ~
'l'ht• &lt;~~rllla-Mei''S Post
of 1us 11fe Sl tua 1tons. m od ern s,' ,, ,.
~
... D··trol
satd
1
1 111 ~,1111 ,'J-'-"
~
drugs an d . if needed . E \. 1 are- Silt'llll.lre lo.st control· of hts
usua il y t' ff ec t1\"e .
C..'.lr \dUd\ ran off tht' rmld·
It IS unportant to reahze \\,I\ :rnd U\'erturned st•veral
that a person \' ho has a t mws. Sizemore suffered a
depresSIOil net:d.§ profes- fr.ll'tUtcd arm and other til s10na! help. The frtendl) JUI'l&lt;'S The accident ts sttll
net~hbor approach just ti;n 't Wider lliVCSltgallon
a~nsable ThedoctorrespunGat lt• L Drwnmond,2:2,AdStble _for the caS€ must de&lt;~ 1 dlsun. \HIS charged wtth DWI
"tth complex proble ms .... fulli!\\1rtg
&lt;!CCldcULl!t Ji.25
1X'yond what a gOdd irren&lt;; pIll Fnday on SR 5!&gt;1, four
ca~ usually do. Just hstemng cmd t'!ght tenths nules east of
tsn1£nougtL
SR 160 The patrol- reported
Some of these peopl~ are Drummond who sufft&gt;red'
deflmtel: surcrdal and they nunor mjur·a~s lost control uf
may not be able to help Ius car whtch ran off the
themselves. The) neied so-, !ugh\\ ay stnkul' a ditch then
meone to protect them fro~n merturned.. g
'
themselves when they are n'"
Jeffery L "Dtlcher, IS, Rt 2.
this vulnerable ph~se . No . Alb.tnl was cited for driving
professiOnal meddling may left 0 ( the center followmg a
do more hann than good
collision at 7.;;o p m. on Til,;
Depressions tend lo recur 259. east of SR 1~3 F riday Ill
Some of them. such as mamc Metgs Collllty. Olftcers satd
depressions. have a tendency Dt!cher's car stdeswtped an
to occur tn fanuhes as an m- auto opera tied by William E
hertted cha racterJsttc ·. Kennedy, 45 , Rt 4, Ef&gt;metoy.
Depressive responses canoe~ There was m cfderate
cur wtth some medicmes and damage
so can maruc reactiOns.
No Cltahon was Jssued in an
Sterotd hormones may cause accident at 6: 15 p m. Fnday
some people to have marne on CR 17, north of SR 684 10
depress1veresponses.
Mei gs County State troopers
Asp1nn IS tn many said an auto drt\'en by Cathy
medicmes that you buy by s Mornson , 18, Rt.l, Rulland,
brand name. For mfonnation attempted to pass JUS! as a
about these medicmes send 00 vehtcl e driven b; Charles w
cents. wtth a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for Cochran. 24 · Athens. attemp-

an

The Health Letter nwnber
Asptrtn and Related
Medictnes Send your letter to
Dr Lamb m care uf thts
newspaper. P 0 Box 1551 ,
Radto Ctly Statton, New
Yor&gt; 'IY 10019

~.

WORTH II MILLION
NEW YORK (UP! )\ Stage and screen actor Zero
Mostel , who dted Sept . 8, left
an estate valued at $1 mtlhon
Mastel's
17-page wt\l,
disclosed Fnday, provtdes
his wtdo\\ an"d second wtfe ,

Cathryn H Mostel, wtt ,h
Jewelry, furmture and half
the estate oulrlght. m addtt10n to the mcome from a
trust fund to he compnsed of

the remammg half ·

···

L.~_:.

;:;
·

~;
~

Y

Alfred Social Notes
1

!-iuml.•~ !'i• h•'ol attt•r•O.•r~t t.: Mr dllll Mr~ I 'Hsh Bahr· of
un Sept. :!5 "·':; 5H. !ht· u • Muldkport ~pent a day wtth
ft.•t'lll~ S:H .,\0 \\'Uf~h lp S.t'l'· M1 s Swo~rf't
f~ulul't' to vtt.•h.l lllL' 1'11-!ht uf \ ll't'ti Wt'l't) held .tt ltl -15 \\ llh
Mr a11d Mr~ ll o bt~r t
w.ry [lllltlWHI~ an tw.'t'tdt.•nt ttl tht' Ht'\ . Htt har·d l'homas ~\\ {utz muJ f:ra• ·•· Sww1z
5 10 pnL on thl' Fuuficld- s pcakrn.~.t fnun. H.mtansl3 · ll · spl'llt Sund,ty wtth M1 ,and
V,rnt·u ~td Offu..•t•r:; scud the · 14 on · Slerp111~ On th e Mr s llnr old Sw&lt;.~rtz &lt;.~rrd
'l"ilb•
l ~ t1
II
Promasc !" Hcv Th!&gt;llHtS f·~Ill.
ll\ ·il tl"lli
a..:I ·' t.',(
ttl' k a \' ~ll{'l'
, rr am .''tt
., mn, \"' ·
dnven b) G~-11) E. Lamm, 26. pia yeti Hnd suu~ !.!J_Specml V,r
Ga Ill pol ls: The rl! w&lt;:t s nurn bPr Atll'nda nee \\as ·17
l'!,l n.1
t-' ullrud. · Nma
'I' Itl' u n'1 I"y 11e 1{1 tts Hobinson and K.1thy F'bBrod
Hh.Kierate clamagt.\
Hobert E . Bower:,. J9. regu 1ar meetrng at t he 1tomt• \!Sited 1o.w1r . a11d Mrs.-G-erald

the .Sermonette .

asking tiod f ~r somethi ng,
and commumon or con~
HI salton wtth God Your
llcfhuti!m may nut be the
same ~s any or the above
. h~1Phedu1thcwo~d.softhe
Snapturc. we hnd the
f!l
o o wm~ (l ) P rayer lk
m su s
p
t'o God We pray bclievang
rayer Jl1i1Y ha ~ nwny there is a God who hears our
defrmtJQns It depends on ""ho pravcrs. This giVes a sense of
1s dcfmin~ rt Prayer has a relationship
~
with the source
1
K
d
H
R"
h
r
becnrPferredto
&lt;Js
talkmg
to
Chtll1cotht.&gt;. was t'lted ftll o ct 1e an
ay oue aver Swartz and fam1ly
at
of all thmns
'!' d
God, talkmg wtth God. God
o
mak111g a lef.t turn wtthuut on ues ay cventng, Sept 20 , Marietta Sunday,
12) Prayer, we beheve,
du~ car fuIIowm).! an acudent wt th a good a ttemIancc dnd
G.enev1eve Guthne had her talkm,g to the one praying takes us beyond Qur own
at 3·40 p.m Frtrtay--~.:'11 Sli 7 Thelma liendcrson leadrng house roofed r~ently
human v;Jsdom and strength
nt.•ar the F'edt•ral Mogul the pledge servtce The next · (lien Robmson has been
to a Source 111 whom there the
Plant The patrol SHi d lllt'etmg Will be at Thelma 's pamtmg hlS roof, as 'have
ultimc~te rn WISdom' and
Il&lt;met·s' tt·uck struck a car at· wtth Emma Fm ch. program several other folks m the
,
&gt;trcngth
..
Jemptmg to pass drtven by leader.
COllllllUlllt)'
Ofl
i3) Prayec IS helpful for
Hassan F . Alnasser, 33, Hun- ~
The bpda\ ~howe1 fo1
Emerson Guthrie became
clennngoursoulsofguilt, we
lmgton.
Susan Henderson Saturday til 1n Pomeroy on Saturday
NEW YORK (UP!) - The blilll!ve God ts a forgtvmg
__ A sing!"-. car...'.!'"~ oc~_eventng a_t the church was a~t! .vas taken to V~terans_ lnternatto~l _
_.}:".!!-It fatlter_and .lYIII cleanse. us of
curreuat 12 '15 p m on SR 7, a1fended D) lilarge crowd Memorial Hosp1l&lt;~ there. HiS snoreman s
ASsoctatton stn.
south of CR 35 where Rit;key and an abundance of wtfe, Ethel, 1s 111 O'Bieness went on strlke today against
(4) Prayer can help us
G. Sm1th, 19, Ghes h~r~,'-fell-beautilul and practtcal gtfts - Hosp1ta! w1th gall &gt;tones
ccmtatner~ htpptn~ from
toward stratght thtnktnp\\lth
asleep at the wheel of Ius car were gJven Games were
Mr and Mrs. Omrlc~ D Mame to Tex as
regard to nght and wrong ,
The vehrcle ran off the pla}~ed and refreshments Woode
attended
th e ' The walkout was called at good and ev il.
highwa) stnkmg a road stgn
were served. Tite sho11er was homecoming a! Vanderhoof 12 ·01 am. EDT after a
(5) Prayer can help us to
Glorta J . Tnplett. 30. g1ven by Jamce Pullins and on Sunday afternoon and breakdown tn negotiations bett er understand God's will
Gallipohs. was InJured tn an Ruth Brooks and asststed by called on Mr. and Mrs. here
between
unton and purpose for our lives
acctdent at 11 !0 a.m. Fndav Sharon 1ind Lisa. SISters of Chester Fredenck of North representatives and the
Perhaps most people
on SR 141. two nules llCSl of the bnde to be and oth ers
Bethel.
Co uncil of North Atlantic engage some tune each day
Gallipolis. Thepatrolsaidshe
Mr and Mrs Charles D
George
Guthrie
and Sh1ppmg Assoeiatwns.
111 a rttual of prayer God
lost control of her car wlule Woode attended the Cluster Charles Woode attended the
"·The · roadblock has been bless you for that. but prayer
reachmg for a ,small cluld. hynw smg-at the South Bethel Barlow Fatr Satu rday af- our JOb security and must mean more than a mere ·
. T]le vehicle left the roadway Church Saturday evenmg
ternoon
guarantees to our pension ritual It must be you, in·
stHkmganembankment
Also attendmg from Alfred
Mrs Lowell Guthrte took and hospital funds," said volvmg your deepest, most
Melvin B Freeman, 16, Church were R~y and Kale thetr daughter, Trtcia, to the Thomas Gleason, president of st neere and htghest thoughts
Rt I. Cheshire. a passenger 111 Rodehaver, Anna ThQrnpson, dod or recently for a sore the umon. The uruon has been m real comrnu mon wtth God
a car operated b) James V Mr and Mrs Howald ann and had a splmter faced w1th dwmdling em- _ a conversation tha t perHockman, 19, Gheshire, was Flanders and Floren ce removed, whrch took strtches ployment caused by the tn- mtts God to speak to you as
InJUred m a s111gle car accr- Spencer
to close
creasmg use of container you desire that 9od hears
dent at 2·30 am Saturday un
Mr and Mrs. Murray
Juantta Swartz, Martha slnps, which can be unloaded you
Gravel - H,ill Rd. of[ I~ tUe HopktnsofDayton spent from Elltolt and Warren Van wtthfarfewermetj,!hantliose
liave you really prayed,
Kyger Rd . Officers sa1d Tuesday until Saturday of Meter , all recent surg1Ja1 carrying
loose catgo. lately ?
Hob ert 1'.
· Hockman swerved h1s car to last week with Grac{Swartz, patients, are reported domg Gleason sa1d 16,000 Jobs have Bumgame 1 ~ - Pastor, Heath
avoid strlkmg a deer . HIS also Maynard and Shtrl ey ver) well at home at the been lost tn the Port of New Untted Methodist Church,
vehicle ran off the road strik· Bahr of Long Bottom Rd anrl present tune
• York alone smce !008.
Middleport
mg a tree.
·-------------~
;;;.~.~_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,_.__ _ _,.

e en an

1 'l'hess,llonians 5 16 • 17 , 18
"Always be JO}htl Always
k.ct•p on praymg. No nwtter
wha'-- flappcns, i.tlways be
thankful, for this IS God's wr\1
for you who belong to Jesus
Christ .. 1L B p )

Lo

h

ngs oremen
go
strike

Gen
•
R
. er
. abon ap
.
B H 1

.......

ll'&lt;l to nwk~.• ..1 kfl tur 11
i.(tttr G lh.• mb), ~.J.
(~alhpt1hs, was ch.rrgttd \\I til

··:::::·::::::::.::::~::.:::::::=:·:=:=:·:=:·:-:·:.:;,~"*:-::::::::::::::::::::x:.-:::.~-=x::::::·:~·:~..o;:.~;:.:::o»:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·::!

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~

GENERAT!lm RAP- BY HELEN AND SUEBO'ITEL
. SHE'S IN LOVE WITII BOTH
RAP .
I"m 13, have a mce personality and am qmte pretty I fall m
love wtth boys eastly and I usually become close to every boy I
meet
I've been gmng wtth Shaun for SIX months, but he went away
for two weeks, &amp;nd durtng that lime I fell m love wtth Doug.
Now Shaun's back, and !love them both. What to do ?- M. 0
M.·
Stop tossmg around the word "love" and settle for ''like.''
You're not ready for a serious relationship otherwise, you'd be
able to choose between Shaun and Doug.
Stay fnends wtth both- if they 'll allow it. ·SUE--- ,
DEARM:
Thirteen IS too young for serious boy-gtrl relationships
penod 1 And if I sound just like your mother · great· she needs
encouragement ·HELEN

'ELBERFELDS ANNIVERSARY SALE
CONTINUES All THIS WEEK
ENDING SATURDAY, OCT. 8th at ·sP.M.
Special savings in every department to celebrate 113

yea~

of business in Pomeroy

)

you and your family. Furnishings for your home.

CELEBRATING 113 YEARS

ELBERFELD$ ••n POMEROY
113th ANNIVERSARY SALE!

SAVE

(GOT A PROBLEM• Or a subject for discusSion, tw&lt;&gt;generation style? Direct your questions to etther Sue Q!:_Helen_
Bottel . or both, tf you want a combtnatwn mother-daughter
n~swer. m care of this newspaper.)
CHILDREN HURT
MARIETTA OhiO (UP!)Fourteen chtldren and thetr

HOTDOG
PEOPLE
THINK OF US
THAT WAY!

school bus dnver were ln·

jured Fnday tn a head• on
collision wtth a water truck
The bu s drtver, Gloria
Wmters , 36, Vincent, was
cited for failure to yield half
of the road . The truck dnver,
David Clark, 26, Belle Valley,
was unhurt.

·

MURDER PROHED
CADIZ, Ohio (UP!)
Hamso n County Sheriff's
deputies are investigatmg the
ax-murd'er late Fnday of
Mary SaU, 44, of Hopedale,.
Deputies refused to gtve ·ouf
information about the case,
saying I\ was still under tn·
vestigation. The woman was
reported killed with SIX ax
blows to the head
NEEDS INCREASE
AKRON, Ohto (UP! )
Ohto Edison has announced
that tt wtll seek 'a rate in·
crease to offset " mcreased
custom er requirements,''
mflat10n and environmental
demands

WASHINGTON (UP!) - In a potential major victOrY for the
nation's steel mdustry, the Treasury Department today
tentatively determmed. Umt five Japanese steel compames are
selling carbon steel plate m the United States at a substantial
loss
_
As a result, the Treasury Department annoonced that the
f1vc companies would be requared to pvst bonds to co ver
''dumpmg duties '' amOWltmg to :J2per cent of the imports.
Japanese ftrms sold 1174 mtllton worth of carbon steel plate
in Ute Umted States last year.
·
The Japanese COillJlamcs mvolved in the tentative decisiOn

are ftve of U1e six ftrms involved m a U.S. Steel Corp.
complamt !tied Sept. 2Q .

Amencan steel producPrs have btcn !)cekmg curbs on
foretgn imports !Or years.
Pressure for such curbs has been increascil in recent months
because domestic production and profttab11ity have lagged and
imports have surged. •
Robert Mundheim, Ute Treasury Department's general
counsel. told a news conference that the department would
make a final determination on the case wtthtn 90day5
II Ute !mal decisiOn conftrms that the Japanese steel is bemg
sold here at "less than fair value," the case would be referred
to Ute InternatiOna l Trade Commission for a ruling on whether
the domestic st!!el mdustry had been " mJured " That Will also

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday , October :1. 1977·

e

OUR FINEST QUALITY :,

United States at prices below the cost of production."
The average margins of dumping, whtch determine the .
estimated dumpling duties, amounted Ill 32 percent, Treasury
The Treasury mvestrgatlon was imllated on a complaint said.
·
f1led !Jy U1e Oregon Steel Mtlls Dtvtsion of Gihnore Steel Corp.
The Gilritore complaint was a forerunner to Ute U.S. Steel
The ftve Japanese ftrms Involved at Ntppon Steel Corp, Corp. complatnl flied-last-month
-- -Ntppon Kokan K K., Sumttomo Metal Industnes, Lid.,
President Carter announced last Thursday !hat an agency_ _
laks force would explore aU of the domestiC steel industry's
Kawasaki Steel Corp, and Kobe Steel, Lid .
These ~o mparue~, Treasury satd, accounted for more than 70 problems, includmg alleged dunopmg by overseas producers.
Bethlehem Steel Corp., the nation's No.2 producer, said last
oercent of recent carbon steel plate tmporl.'l from Japan .
week tt would lay off 2,500 salaries employes In Oclllber.
A Treasury statement satd tl.'l investigation "found that
Since mid-year, the steel indusjry has laid off about 18,000
Japanese produce{s have been marketine steel plate m the
wockers
In the meantune, tlle f1ve Japanese f1rms will be required to
post the bonds

•

e:ntine

at
i

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 114

•

Would you believe?

rww a 'Mother&amp;-in-law Day'! . .

Meigs payrolls
•
•
mcrease m '76

WASHINGTON. (UP!) -On Oct. 23, if a ll· goes as
plann&lt;:d, !he Uruted States will celebrate National
Mothers-In-Law Day - wtthout the offtdal sanction
sponsors hope to acqutre before next year
Ever alert for new occaswns on which floral tributes
··· nught be appropnate, Flonsts' Transworld Delivery :,:·
from any source on em.. discovered a distressmg fact about mothers-in-law:··
Substantial increases were 40.8 pet. (See below.).
The report was tssued by ployment and payrolls In
:::. few people send them fiowers tn that capacity They :,:,.·, rMeportedC In to\~l pa yr olls in
.·. nught be smothered m postes as wtves and mothers,
etgs oun Y In 1976 com· the Galha County offtce Ohio industries-and counties.
but rarely as mothers-m-law
:;: pared to 1975 according to which served Meigs County In 1976 the law did not cover
So ·the organtzalton took some soltndrngs whtch ... tabulations JUst released by last year. Meigs County such groups as agricultural
indicated that - comedtans ' JOkes to the contrary
the Ohio Bureau .of . Em- recently had its own office labor; Interstate railroad
workers; domestic service In
notwithstanding - most marrted people feel kmdly
ployment Services.
returned.
toward their spouses' maternal parent.
The tabulations cover 326
The Division of Research private homes; employees of
FTD approached some members of Congress, and
employer reporting units in and Statistics in Columbus non-profit or parochial
says tt expects btlls soon Ill be mtroduced to make the
the county that averaged tabulated quarterly reports - schools, other than colleges"
honoring of mothers-in-law an annual event by an Act
4,760 workers last year of approximately 179,000 or , unlverstUes; student
of Congress
reporting a total 1976 payro11 employers, with 3,767,918 employees of colleges or
of $53,452,022, roughly a 15 workers subject to the Ohio universities; federal governpet. increase over 1975.
Unemployment
Com- ment service; and state and
local government workers
Biggest gam tn 1976 over pensation Law.
1975 employment was m coal
These tabulations present not In the classlfted service,
mimng whtch went from 27 the latest and most com- uniess a political subdivision
Clear tonight, low between
pet. of the total work force to prehensive figures available elected to cover unclassified
40 and 46. Sunny Tuesday,
workers.
high between 60 ancl 65.
Probability of prectpttatton .
20 per ~ent today , near zero
Covered
Covered
tonight and Tuesday.
Wanted,
a
red
vehicle
wtth
Payroll
Employment
R eva ]. Snowden, postmaster
maybe a btt of a 1976
Chevrolet truck haQgmg onto
+ 25.6
+ 10 -3
Total, Meigs County •..•.•.. .
it.
. .
.
Deputies of Sheriff James
+ 40 .8
+ ~-0
M~n~ng •.••••.•••••••••••••••••••••
J Proffitt's Dept. tn·
+ 3.6
- 3-2
Construction ..•.•.•.• •• ..••••••...
vestigated a hit-sktp mctdent
+ .8
+ 9-2
Manufacturing •...•.•• • • , , • .• ...• , •
.
.
Saturday mght that occurred
+ 11.3
+ 2.9
Transportation
and
utilities
••••••
on the parkmg lot of the Tall
.6
+ 8.3
Whole$ale
and
retail
trade
•••••••
,
Tunbers Nile Club. Keith
+ 5.?
+ 8.?
Finance, insurance, "and. real. e state
Aeiker, 1669 Lmcoln Hts.,
+
4.
1
+ 19.3
Senices .••• , •••••••..••••.••• • •••
Pomeroy, said hts 1976
+ 20.1
+ 2.6
State and local government ·•••••••
the Postal Department.
Chevrolet
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
truck
was
Her fmal day as postmaster was marked With the am val sideswiped while parked at
RUTLAND - Reva J. Snowden, Rutland postmaster since
of floral bouquets, gifts, and words of best wishes from the parkmg lot. The unknown
' 1951, rettred Frtday.
vehicle was red, Aeiker said.
Mrs. Snowden began her work as a clerk at the Rutland post numerous fnends and business assoc1ates.
George Kuhn, Mtddletown,
offtce m 1942 and then in Oct. 1950 was named acting · Paul Harris of Ute Athens Post Office, is now the officer m
p6stmaster. She received her permanent appointment on May charge of t]]e Rutland Post Office.
Ohio reported to . local
Durmg her time as postmaster, Mrs. Snowden has worked deputies Sunday mornmg
6, 1951
Thursday Rtchard J?eyton, manag~r of the Sectional wtth 14 different clerks and 15 rural route earners. Present that he had a 23 channel • NEW DELHI, India (UP!)
Mrs. Gandhi said In a
Mrs. Gandhi was likely Ill
Center at Zanesville, presented Mrs Snowden wtth a servtce clerk is Mrs. Margaret Edwards . Fred George is the regular · Browmng CB radio and twin - Former Prime Mmister be taken to a magistrate statement her arrest was a
award in recogni tion of her 35 years of dedicated service wtth rural route carrier, and his s~bstitute IS Mrs. Lee Wood Roy antennas (gutter mount) Indira Gandhi was arrested where she was expected to be ''political ooe" aud intended
Snowden, husband of the retirmg postmaster, retired from the stoled off his auto He was today under the Prevention of
released on bajl, a police to "discredit me in their (the
Rutland Post Office on Jurre 15, 1976 after havtng w6rked there visitmg his brother Robert Corruption act on charges of officer said..,...
pe~le's) eyes and the eyes of
32 years. Mr. and Mrs. Snowden's daughter, Ute late Jean- Kuhn, RD Cheshire,' and had abusmg her posttton durmg
The warrant under which the . world," witnesses uid.
Parker, also worked as a clerk at the post office.
gotten his auto into a dttch. her unsuccesfuul election she was arrested said she
Mrs. Gandhi was not taUn
Mrs. Snowden is a. member of the Rutland Garden Club Since it was off the roadway campaign.
used her position as prime away lpunediately.
havmg served as president for two tenns and treasurer for two and out of traffic he watted
A group of policemen led by minister to secure jeeps for
Witnesses among the large
terms. She is also a memb~r ~I the Rutland Church of Chrtst, until mornmg. when he went high police offtcials went to the campaign earlier !his crowd that had assembled In
By United Press International
has been secretary of the Sunday school fo~ the past etght down Monday morning he
GENEVA, SWITZERLAND - THE 5-YEAR.OLD grand- years. Through the years she has been acttve m numerous discovered the theft. The ca~:_ her house and presented a year for herself and her party fl'ont of Mrs. Gandhi's house
warrant for her arrest, m the last general elections, said she asked the pollee
niece of multirrulhonatre tm king Antenor Patino, was school, communtty and ctvtc actlV!Ites. •
#
was left unlocked
which she lost.
officials to take her away in
signed by a magistrate.
kidnaped by two men today from her parents ' home on Lake
handcuffs but a pollee officer
Geneva, Swtss pohce satd Pohce satd the kidnapers shot at a
explained
this was not cussecvant who wa s trymg to protect little Graziella Ortiz. The
tomary.
r
servant, believed to be Spamsh, was hospitalized with serious
There
were
shouts from the
injuries.
•
then transferred to St. Mary's crowd of "Indira Gandhi
POINT PLEASANT - A mtle south of here.
The ktdnapers, aged 26 to 30, escaped in a blue Alfa Romeo
Parsons was in the in- Hospital In Huntington.
Point Pleasant man was
Zindahad" (Long Uve Indira
car wtth ltahan hcense plates, police said. The car was
tensive
care unit of Pleasant
A spokesman for St. Mary's Gandhi).
ktUed
and
hts
brother
·
abandoned a few mtles from !he Ortiz restdence soon after the
senously inJured Sunday at I Valley Hospital with en· said he was admitted to the
Mrs. Gandhi said she was
kidnaping at 8·30 am Police said Ute car contained traces of
p.m. in a one-car accident tustons , lacerattons of the hospital's surgical intensive concerned not with credit or
chloroform , presumably used to quiet the infant.
head, a back mjury and a care u~ with a back injury discredit but ''with my duty
q.ear here.
mmor concussion, the and possTble internal injurles. toward my country, whatever
The
dnver
of
the
~ar
also
SAN FRANCISCO - A YOUNG COUPLE kissed and ,
sheriff's department said. He
suffered
pamful
mjurtes.
I am, that continues Ill be my
hand-m-hand, jumped to their deaths from the Golden Gate
CALL ANSWERED
l!NITED NATIONS (UPI) Simha Ehrlich said.
was cited for failure to
Authorities
satd
Bryant
,
endeavor.''
Bridge, the California Htghway Patrol reported. Th~ bodies of -The joint statement on the
The Pomeroy Emergency
What provoked Israeli ire
She lllld the crowd, "I can
the still umdenttfted couple landed on rocks at Lime Pomt Middle East issued over the most of all were two words Dirk Taylor, 20, Ohio River ma intatn control of his Squad answered a call to
and
shall be with you all. So
under the north end of the span Saturday. Anny milttar}j weekend by the United States !hat crop up whenever the Road, died when a car drtven vehicle.
Union Ave. at 7:41 Monday
Tunothy
Allen
'j'aylor,
19,
by
Jack
H.
Parsons
Jr.,
26,
of
keep
cabn and peaceful, but
policemen recovered Uie bodies and turned them over to the and the Soviet Union has Arabs talk about peace - a
for Mrs. Rodney Karr, an
brother
of
the
man
k1Ued
m
112
English
Road,
Potnt
let
no
per90n or deed subdue
Marin County Coroner's offtce
obstetrics patien~, wlto was
provoked bttter criticism reference m the three page Pleasant,
the
acctdent,
was
taken
to
hit
a
tr.t:~:Jil
.~
~urve
your
spirit and deter·
They were described by coroner's officials as Asian and from Israel and a chorus of statement
taken to O'Bieness Memorial
to
the
Pleasant
Valley
Hospital,
on
W.Va.
2
and
62
about
one
mlnation."
apparently in thetr 2Qs. The bridge has claimed 613 known praise from the Arabs
Hospttal, Athens.
Palestinians' " legiltmate
swcide vtctims, but the couple who jumped Saturday was
Arab diplomats said the righl.'l. "
believed to be the first double death in the span's 411-year statement brings the two
•
Until now, the Untied
history.
sides a step closer to peace States has spoken tn terms of
talks in Geneva, which both Palestinian " interests"
SOUTHGATE, KY . - THE SOUTHGATE VOLUNTEER Moscow and Washington rather than "legttimate
firefighter responsible for inspecting the Beverly Hills Supper hope can start in December. nghl.'l," a diplomatic code
Ftve persons were injured patrol sa id Kathryn R.
Charles b. Nichols, 91, llill E. Angell, 20, Gaillpolls,
Club told state investigators he was ignorant of mo'st ftre
"Some obstacles remain phrase generally understood
m
10 traffic accidents m· Halley, 22, Crown City, lost Tuppers Plains, was charged struck and killled a cow which
regulations before the May 28 fire that killed 164 persons, The but definite progress is bemg to refer to the Palestimans'
Courter.Journal reported today.
made. We are very close," nght to an mdependent state vestigated over the weekend control of her car_ which ran with failure to yield the rlght entered 'the highway. There
Capt John Braun told the investigators he lacked said one Arab diplomat, who on the lsraeltoccupted West by the GaUta-Metgs Post off the highway str)king an of way at a stop sign following was moderate damage. • ·
embankment Mrs. Halley an accident at 10 a. m.
State H1ghway Patrol.
knowledge of !tre laws, but was filling a moral obligation by met with Secretary of State Bank of Jordan .
A hlt·shlp accident ocsons,
Brian,
age
4
and
her
Two
persons
were
hurt
in
on
SR
681
In
Meigs
eurred
at 5 a. m. Sunday on
Saturday
conductmg mspections the best he knew how. "It boils dolvn to Cyrus Va~e at the Uruted
1
American offictals mumand
Jeremy,
age
one,
had
an
accident
at
12:10
p.
rft.
the stmple fact that I was probably the most incompetent fire Nations during the weekend. lamed that
County.
State
troopers
said
SR
588
where
an unknown car
Amenca n . t
mmor.
mjurtes.
There
was
Saturday
on
SR
7,
six
tenths
inspector out of Ignorance," sald Braun, who was mterviewed
Nichols'
car
pulled
from
a
•
knocked
out
128
feet of fence,
"We are more hopefulthan"-·endouement of the code
Sept. 23 by th e spectal team investigating the Beverly Htlls ever before that a Oeneva phrase m no way signaled a of a mtle south of the Meigs .'moderate damage.
side road into an auto eight posts and a metal gate
A single car acctdent oc· operated by Beverly J . on property owned by
' fire.
conference will take place change tn the U.S. position County line. Troopers said an
eurred
at 12·~4 a . m . Bailey, 37, Reedsville. There Lawrence Tawney.
auto
operated
by
Larry
M
thts year," said another.
towards the PLO or Israel' s
on
SR 7, one tenth of was moderate damage. 1
Saturday
Spears,
40,
Point
Pleasant,
RICHMOND HEIGHTS, OHIO - MEMBERS OF the
No one was injured or cited
On the face of tt, the joint refusal to negotiate wtth an
Richmond Heights Education Association voted Sunday night statement outlining . Sovjet- organtzatipn,. which tn the struck the rear end of a car a mtle south of milepost 2
A single car mishap oe- m a single car accident at
to accept a new rontri'£ t,J atsmg the base salary $675 with American hopes for Geneva past has called for tis operated by Betty A. Lohse, where an a.uto operated by curred at II :55 a . m. 9:50a.m. Sunday on Brlllhy
S2, Seamon, forcinjl it into the ' Rodney R. Roush, 25, Mid· Saturday on Bulaville . Rd. Point Rd . eight tenths of a
improved frmge benefits and grievance procedures. The only served to provoke a new destructiOn.
•
increase to the $9,850 base was retroactive to Sept. 1, according crisis in American-lsraelt
That
position,
they rear end of a c!ff driven by dleport, was struck by an five and one tenth miles north milo south of US 35. The
to Donald Banas of the Ohio Education Association .
of SR 160 where an unknown patrol said Ussa M. HUJ, 21,
, relations and underscore the retterated, was that the PLO Jesse A White, Jr., 20, Crown unknown vehicle.
Another single car mishap vehicle forced a car driven by Rt. 3, Gallipolis, going north,Tea chers tn Newbury Twp. , Geauga County, did not walk intransigence ?f the Arab and must accept U N. Resolution City White and a passenger
out today as they had planned but decided to awatt tonight's Israeli posttions on the mam 242 recognizing Israel's right tn the Spears car, Mark D. occurr.ing early Saturday Charles E. Ferrell, 28, Rt. I, lost control of her car after
school board meeting, at which an offer is expected to be issue blocking a resumphon to exist before tt can enter the Morrow, 20, Point Pleasant, m!jJ'Jnng but not reported Gallipolis, of! the roadway. meeting another vehicle. Her
had minor injuries. Spears until late Saturday involved Ferrell's car struck a fence car ran off the roadway' over
made. Banas, also working with the Newbury teachers, said of the talks: the Palestme peace-making process.
key issues include wa ges, hospitalization and binding Liberation Organization
an embankment.
The officials also stressed was charged wtth fatlure to an auto operated by Anette C. causmg minor damage.
Carter,
16,
Rt
.
2,
Patriot.
The
arbitration. Teachers now receive a base salary of $8,700 and
;top
within
the
assured
clear
Four
minor
traflic
mishaps
A final mishap involved a
"Our reaction? We reject tt Ute statement Left open the
mishap occur'r ed on the were mvestlgated Sunday. hii-skip motorist on SR 554.
are asking for a $9,600 base, which the board has offered to with both hands . The two thorny questton of how the distance .
A mother and her children Patriot-Cadmus Rd. where The first occurring at 2:20 a. An unknown vehicle knocked
meet Sept. I, 1979.
powers are exhibiltng real Pales ttntans ' should be
were
InJured in a smgle car Miss Carter, going east, lost m. on SR 160, two and seven down fence posts on property
signs of forcmg an tmposed represented at peace talks or
BRIDGEPORT, MICH. - SIX BOYS AND GIRLS, II to I 7, solulton on us and we won't tndeed, tf the PLO as such acetdent at 2:43 p. m. contrOl of her car when she tenths miles north of SR 554 owned by J . D. Smith, Rt. I,
drowned m a crowded rnmpac t car that ran off a muddy accept an tmposed solution," sh o~d represent them .
Saturday on Neighborhood met an unknown vehtcle.
where an auto operated by Bidwell.
I
Rd
north
of
SR
2t8.
The
Israeli Finance Minister
(Continued on Pile 10)
(Continued on Pile .0)

1

Weather

.

'

Israeli bitter·
over statement

· ~ DECORATORS
C..(][) J INDUSTRIES ~~

take up to 90 days

Red car
wanted.

Gandhi aJTested

ELBERFELDS ANNIVERSARY SALE

CUSTOM MADE DRAPERIES

Steel dulllping chal!ged Jap fi1111s

Snowden, postmaster 27 y·e ars,
retired on Friday at Rutland

and surrounding trading area. Stop in; look around and save on wearing· apparel for

Elberfelds are open every week day including Thursday from 9:30A. M. to s
P. M. and on Friday 9 : 30A.M. to 8 P.M.

WE ,ARE THE

,

•

•

Mason County man killed

Five hurt in weekend traffjc

Right now save 30 pet. on ,'
these fme quality custom
made draperies for your ,
home. office, church. A·
large seleclton of
and colors. Antique satin.
sheers.
foam
bac:J&lt;
textures. fiberglass and e
you'll like the way they're
made. -how easy the.y are ,
to hang and ·the elegant '
look, they'll give to any
room tn your home.
Bring
in
your
measurements let us
help you decide on pattern
and color.
Home Furnishmgs
lsi Floor

30% SAVfNGS SALE&lt;BEGINS MONDAY OCT. 3rd
AND ENDS MONDAY, OCT. 17th.
\

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

•

''

'

.,

•

.

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