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'

12-The Daily Se1.1lincl, MiddlepU11-Pumcruy. 0 .. fnda)' , Sept. 8. 19'i8

•

Sheriff not s"'re if ~ew
reg.ulations can be met

Food, wholesale prices decline during August
1

By JAMES HIWRE'm
WASHINGTON ( UPI l - Wholesale prices, led by a decline
In food C?Sts, fell 0.1 percent in August for the first decline In
two years, the government reported today.
The Labor Department said August's wholesa le price performance was the best since an 0.2 percent decline in August
1976. Increases had averaged 0.8 percent during the first seven
months of this year .
The figures were another encouraging signal of moderating
inflation .
Food prices dipped by 1.~ percent last month, the second
consecutive monthly decline and the largest since a 1.8 percent
retreat registered in August 1976, the department said.

There were large drops In the costs of processed poultry,
fresh and dried fruits and vegetables and eggs.
Wliat may be even more encouraging than the decline in food
prices was the moderate 0.4 percent Increase for nonfood
items, which equalled the smallest of the year.
The department 's overall Producer Price Index for Finished
Goods, which measures those products ready for sale to
consumer ouUets, stood at 195.3, a drop of 0.3 percent from
July. That means goods that cost SIOO In 1967 were priced at
$195.30 last month .
President carter and his economic aides have maintained
that inflation is the nation's No. I worry . And escalating
inflation - which rose at' a near double-digit pace during the
first seven months of 1978 - has undermined carter' "

president of the Farm Labor going to ask workers to stay
Organiz in g Committee , away from Ohio.
ca lled for · a nati onwide
" We have about 1,500
boyco tt
of
products workers who· will help us
manuf ac tured by Libby- campaign this fall in Florida
McNeil &amp; Ubby and the and Texas," he said.
Campbell Soup Co ., both
l(alasquez
sa id
the
for
t hei r
t wo-week-u ld
large users of Ohio 's $27 migrant.-; fight is not with the
walkout .
·million tomato crop.
tomato growers but with the
The workers we re to gather
. "We want a good day's pay tomato products firms . He
in front of Ohio State for a good day 's work ," said said the !inns have forced
University at 10 a.m. and Valasquez as he led the gr owers into accepting
march down High Street to marchers to Ohio's capital contracts that leave little for
th e Statehouse, where they city.
the migrant pickers.
were to hold a noon rally.
Valsq uez sa id FI ,()(' Lc:: . ~ l ~ ·
Severa l gpeakers will
address the crowd , all talking
on the them ''Justice for
Farm Workers ."
About 200 of the st rikers, Vrterans Memorial Hospital
Pcnlue : Linda Hud ge rs: Jay
who be gan wa.lkin g last
Adm i tt~d Cat he rine St iles: Ru.ssdl Sti\•crson ;
weekend from the fields of Brown. Middle port : Barbara BarlHII'C:I Swa n : Nul a
northeast Ohio to Col urn bus, Smith . Middleport : Nancy Swisher : Hti mld Thomas:
arrived Thu r sday night. Pullins. Middleport ; Gladys Georg&lt;' Vurch : Phylli s
Several hundred more were Nicholson. Rutland ; Mary · Wamt'r ; Lousela Whit e :
to .arrive today by bus.
Da vis. Rut la nd : Reese Pettrica Whit e.
A spokesman said the Williams. Pomeroy; Edward
Birth
workers hope W gain support LeMaster . Pomeroy.
Mr. Cl llti Mrs. John Wuyan.
from sever a I groups at Ohio
Di sc harge d - Jo Ann sun, ApfJicGruvc. W. Va .
State who are sympathetic to Mc La ug hlin , Ma rgaret
Di&gt;&lt;·harges, Sept 7
Lheir cause .
Barrett, Virginia Riffle .
!.is• Ba xter ; Huward Bir·
The workers engaging in
chfield : Patl'iea Rlevr ns:
the 100 mile march were
l..i:lw l'enc.:c Crtii g; Thomas
callil)g for a boycott of two of
(\H nmuns : MelissCI Oemp~
the nation's largest tomato
sl'y: Frank • Doss: Sha ron
Hullt'r Mt·dkal Ct·nlt"r
products firms and for a
Duff: Luci ll e Frey: Hichard
Diseharges, Sept. 6
boycott of Ohio's crops .
(
;I essne r : E r nes t
Mr .s.
The migrants struck the Flo rcii L'l' Barrett : Haze l EI'IJcst H&lt;i ylcy a11d tJ&lt;:tughtcr ;
tomato fields in northwestern Bt'lhel : !.aura Boutell: Chloia Mrs. r. il bcrt Hl.!nry anti sun:
Ohio two weeks ago at the Cam pbt'll : Clll'ryl Church: Elinore Hulluwily : William
peak of the growing season to W.snJa COO!Jt'r : Hycm Crisp:
.Jirln rson : Huth Karr ; Roy
back up demands for higher · llultw Goff : Mildred Har·t :
!.usher : Huward McCoure:
Alin·
l
.oc
klletr
t
;
Son
ja
wages and better working
.J
ulln Md)cmiel: Kllthlecn
Marks: J cr~ m r M&lt;:tthcm·y ,
conditions.
Me
Wil lia m o: Mi c hilel
Bald ema r Val as qu ez. ~.ssi t• Pat tcrs.ull . Winfield MdVilliet m8: Anna Nease ~

.

Ro~ rts;

Cory Rose;
Shamblin ; Evcrttc
Sha rp : Til bit ha S hee ts:
Ma bel Shci ld&lt;: Rcnil VanSrckle : M•ry WcbiJ.
Births
Mr. illld Mrs, i.•n·y
Wallace, su11 . Oak 1·1111
f:\'et. inc

FISCAL
PROGRAM

(JOLF RESULTS
Meigs 203
Scott McKin'ney 43; Rob
Davis 50 ; J . R. Wamsley 51 ;
Fred Young 59 ; Chu ck
Kennedy 60.
Warren Local195
Mark King 44 : Mark Aebi
4~ ; Scott Wynn 48 ; Stephen
Chevalier 58 ; Nate Proctor
60 .

Got droopy dollars'!
Tune up with th e po wer pair.
A Savings Accou nt Io ea rn high int eres t.
A Cht:cking A cc\l unt tn organ ize spending.
Give )'&lt;' ursc lf a li ft.

pomeroy
rutland
tuppers plains

pomeroy
nationa
bank
the bank of
the century
established 1872

Meigs record 0-1.
SEOAL record 0-0.
Next match ·- Monday,
Se pt. II, Wellst on and
Gallipolis at Riverside Golf
Co urse, Mason. W. Va .

HOMECOMING SET
There
wi 11
be
a
homecoming Sunday at the
Orange Christian Church,
located between Alfred and
Lottridge on county road 53.
Worship service will he
held at 9:30 a.m., Sunday
Schoo l at 10 :30 with a basket
lunch at noon . Afternoon
services will he at 1:30 p,.m.
Guests will be Mr . and Mrs.
Scott Bryant , students of
Kentucky Christian College .
Every one is welcome to
attend .

PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 9th
UNTIL 6 P.M.

UfAMILY PICNIC
OF

BOILERMARKERS LOCAL
NO. 667

CA.MDEN -PARK
U. S. 60.WEST

E'ITA YOUNG
Powell of Mason ; three sons,
Etta Young, 86, West William H. Young, New
Columbia." died at 1:40 p,m. ' Haven ; George H. Young,
Wednesday in the Holzer Gallipolis, and James F .
Medical Center following a Young, Letart; 20 grand.
children,
23
great·
long illness.
She was born June 16, 1892 grandchildren and one great1n West Columbia, to the late great-grandchild.
Jim and Cice ro Nichols
Funeral services will be
Hoffman.·
Saturday 2 p.m. in the CrowShe was preceded In death Hussell Funeral Home with
by her husband, William the Rev. George Hoschar
Young .
officiating. Burial will be in
Survivors in clude three Suncrest Cemetery.
daughter s, Mrs . Mildred
Friends may call at the
Brumley , Gallipolis, and funeral home after 2 p.m.
Mrs. Doris Eads of Pt. Friday.
Pleasant. and Mrs. Voneda

HUNTINGTON

confirmed ·by developer

STANFORD, Conn. IUPIJ
_ The Conoco Cool Developmen! Co. announced today it
had "1·eaffi1·med" its inten·
lions to build a $300 million
cool gasificativn plant in Noble Cuw•ty, Ohio, l&gt;ut a final
~ ecisi on on construction
depends un the federal
guvennnent.
Jilek Lord , a spokesman for
Cunoco, wltich is a subsidiary
uf Continental Oil Col., said
u1e decision to go with the Noble County site was made
after ' Conoco officials had
considered thelr sites
1
1 because of various teciUiical
1
Letters of opinion are welcomed . They should he less 1 reilsuns.
I than 300 words long (or subject to reduction by the editor I 1
I and must be signed with the signee's address . Names may 1.
I be withheld upon publication. However, on request, 1
I names will be disclosed. Letten; should be in good taste, I
I
I addressing Issues, not personalities .

meet the pil!nt's process re·
quiremenb already tTosses
the site, a gas pipeline on the
site and an adequate sourc-e
of water is about five miles
away. ·
In additon, Conoco said,
"environmental work to date
has disclosed no problems
wltich might prevent is·
suant-e of Envirorunental
ProtedionAgenc-ypennits".
Conoco officiaLs also noted
the "strong and highly
positive attituda and support
of the people of Ohio and
especially Noble . County"
wward the project. Lord said
· construt'lion operation of the
plant would he financed even·
ly by the Department Energy
and' ConOt-o. Lord !lllid · the
DOE has already spent $22
tnlllion in the design of the ·
plan!.
·
I
" The decision w gu or nut
go is in the hands of De]lllrt·
ment of Energy," st~id Lord .
Lord said another project
I TEHRAN, Iran (UPI) - the entire southern district of to gasify eastern coal Ls in II·
Military troops fired Into a Tehran and the sister city of linois and the DOE would procrowd of anti-Shah protesters Rey, &gt;¥ith bursts of gunfire ilHI&gt;Iy have to make a chok-e
today killing up to 250 people, audible every few minutes. .between Ohio and Illinois.
The residential area
Lord 1111id ConOt-o bad
eyewitnesses said, and
around
the Iranian Air Force l.elited t'Oal found in the Noble
helicopters roamed over
Tehran to enforce a martial base at Farahabad was County area at a pilot lant in
law imposed in. 12 Iranian blockaded by troops and Scotland.
At first the process didn't
residents were trapped Inside
cities.
their
homes.
work
but with a modification
Leaders of the opposition to
of
the
process it changed NoThe
tanks
rumbled
into
Shah Mohammed Reza
firing
Into
the
air,
ble
County
t'Oal into gas
Tehran,
Pahl avi were rounded up in
within
hours
of
a
declaration
without
any
problem
.
their homes in an early
" It rt!l!IIY •· Jrks. We hope
morning government crack· of martial law in the capital
down against dissents that and II other cities to counter the decisi. of the DOE is
government favorable btcause we want to
the
bega n Thursday with the what
imposition of martial law in described as a plot to over· build and operate tlwt plant,"
Sllid Lord.
throw the shah.
major urban areas.
Bursts of machine gun fire
Government troops fired
into crowds gathering for a
demonstration in . East
Tehran's Zhaled Square.
Eyewitness reports said up
to 250 people were killed and
scores more wounded.
The water supply In the
area was cut off later in the
day , witnesses said.
Riotin~t spread to nearly

r--------------------------1

I

l .8~
lI ••• ~.. ~:. _ _
Appreciation is extended
Dear Editor :
Please allow me to take this opportunity on behalf of the
Meigs County React Team to extend thanks and appreciation
to all who contributed w our Memorial Day "Coffee Break"
held May 27.
"REACT" stands for fuldio Emergency Association
Citizens Teams. We are a national association of citizens
teams who volunteer their assistance and provide a citizens
two-way radio cCITlmunications in local emergencies. Even
though we are an important part of the national organization,
we are equally important as a local organization; having our
own officers and volunteers who monitor ChaMel 9 to help
anyone who may be In distress within our transmitting area. If
you are an operator of a citizens band radio, keep in nnind that
F .C.C. ruling reserves CB Channel 9 for "emergencies and
motorists assistance" nationally. If you do not receive
assistance on Channel 9, any of the forty CB Olannels may be
used for emergency . However, they should be cleared by
anyone who is not Involved In the emergel!cy. One of our teain
members (Grandma ) monitors Channel!9.
If at anytime, anyone is In need of motorlsts aasistance
(IQ..I6) or emergencies (11).33 ), please ask for Meigs County
React on Channel9 lor prompt action as you may be received
via "skip" . Remember w give enct location (lll-20) and
include city and state. Motirists assistance Includes requests
for road service, motor trouble, request for information
necessary to reach destination, report accidents, stalled cars,
e"'. Emergencies covers anything that threaterts the safety of
life or property.
If you are in doubt concerning F.C.C. regulations for CB
rules, we have up-to-&lt;late copies available.
Meigs County React meets the first Friday of the month at
7 p.m. at the Senior Citizens Building. We Invite the public to
see what "React" is all about.
·
Sincerely,
Do!Ula Stewart, Reporter
Meigs County React Team

·Logan
!Continued from page I I

SEEKS DIVORCE
Filing lor divorce in Meigs
Count y Common Pleas C01.rt
were Gary F . Hyse' l,
.P1~ne roy , against Carol n
Lee Hysell, Middleport .

. l.,].'

Area Deaths Construction intentions
I
I
I

I
I
I

be raised for salary in·
creases.
Strikes continued in the
Tallmadge school district in
Swrunit County where most
of the system's 180 teachers
were off the job but schools
r emain ed open for the
district 's 3,500 students and in
the Lima Shawnee School
District where 1~0 teachers
were off the job, schools were
also open lor the system's
· 3,400 students.

"Howtiver, after weighing
the tedmical reasons against
factors, including costs,
siting and t!nvirorunental t'Oil·
sideratiuns, the company has
c-oncluded Uwt the Noble
County location - · a 1,444acre tract near Sarahsville is best suited for the project,"
U&gt;e company said in a state'
men!.
In ~ letter to . the U. S.
Departnient of Energy, Con·
ocu said the Noble County site
is " advantageously located"
because a long tenn sourc-e of
Ohio cool is adjacent to U1e
site, a power line wltich can

NEWLY ENACTED regulations, instituted by Common
Pleas Judge Ronald R. Calhoun, foc the governance of the
Gallia Oounty jail, will, according to Sheriff's Department

officials, reduce the cell -capacity of the facillty by ~arly
two-thirds , while raising the cost of operation by thousands of
dollars a year.
·
·

VOL 13

FRANK RICIIARDS ·and daughters with two of eleven Engllsh setter pups.
Sara, 2, the blonde, holds "Patches," who belongs to Laurie, 5. These two pup!! and
their nine brothers and sisters were born Aug. 1- on Laurie's fifth birth&lt;jay;
theref&lt;re, ohe was given "Patches" as her birthday gift. (See page A-2 story and
additional pictures).

'

MIDDLEPORT - The pastor of the
Middleport and Syracuse Presbyterian
Olurches {&lt;r the past seven years and
moderator of the Harrisonvllle
Presbyterian Church, Rev. Dwight L.
Zavll.!, plana to retire as of Sept. 30. After
serving a• a layman for a number of years,
Rev. Zavitzaccepteda call to the Christian
Ministry over 33 years ago, serving a
small church in Saginaw, Mich.
In 1&amp;48, Pastor and Mrs. Zavll.! moved
South, where Mf. Zavitz served churches
In George and Virginia for the next 10
years. The family, including two boys,
moved back North In 1958, and have served
churches fn Indiana and Ohio for the past
:!ll years.
Mr. Zavil.! tool\ his wtdergraduate work
at Marion College, Marlon, Ind., and
C&lt;lllpleted his graduate study for the
Christian Ministry at Union Theological

made by squads
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered two calls
Thursday night.
At 6: 12 p.m., the squad
went to 118 Union Ave. for
Reese Williams who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and admitted there. ·
At 8:30 p.m. the unit went to
168 Mulberry Ave. for Judith
Bacon , who was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital.

Income tax
estimate filings
due Sept. 30
GALUPOLIS- City Tax Commissioner
Edith C. Crosier issued a reminder yestcr·
dity that ~veryone who eetnJt!d income in
Gallipolis must file his de&lt;:i«ratiun of
estimated tax on or before Sept.
30 - everyunc, U\Ht is, whose employer
does not withhold city income taxes from
their wages .
Sept. 30 Is the deadline for half the
declared estimate, and O.C. 31 Is the
deadline for fllin~ the estimate un the
balance of U1e dty incume tax .
This filin~ Is required by Section 27.67 of
Ordinance No. 78-30.
Also, lh~ city lax commissioner said Uwt
paytnenls for June •nd July witl~1oldings
shuuld all be retumed by now. If not, inwrest will bt' "dded at the rate of one-half
&lt;1 one percent per month: the Aug Wit
withholding payme11t will be due on or
before Sept. 30.
The fon1111 for filin g are avail«ble at the
lox offlt-e In tl&gt;e Municipal Huildilt~ .
•

r-v,,:,....,..,..

svVAN

Seminary of Richmond . Va.
The Zavitzs plan to move back to
Virginia after they retire where they will
reside at The Chester Town Houses
Apartments, Chester, Va ., which is In the
proximity of Richmond . Their oldest son ,
Dwight, Jr., who serves on the editorial
staff of The Richmond News Leader, lives just .west of Richmond at
Midlothian . Their younger son, John, is an
Estate Lawyer with Sutin , Thayer and
Brown Professional Cooperation and
resides in Santa Fe, N. M.
After taking some time to reevaluate
their capabilities and get!lng adjusted to
retirement living, Pastor and Mrs. Zavltz
hope to set some new goals for the next
decade of life, do som~ traveling in the
United States, and seek limited
employment that 18 coouneqsurate with
their abilities at this junctw-e in their lives.
The Zavltzs appreciate the privilege they
have had of serving in Meigs County and
cherish the warmth and friendlinesa of the
people of this area.
The Middleport and Syracuse
Presbyterian Churches wlll be served by
an Interim minister, wttil arrangements
can be made for new leadenhlp.

account for the deposit of the inmates'
money , the establishment of· a com· missary or · j':,tore call" from which
prisoners may purch8se certain personal
items, and the issuance of jail uniforms for

all irunates.
Sheriff Montgomery stated Friday
that he had no objection to the rules , except on a practical basis. "To enact these
re gulations would cost thousands of
dollars, and I don't know where the money
is going to cume from ," the Sheriff said.
"The department is currently grossly
wtderstaffed," Montgomery coritinued,
"to meet the state average of 1.2 deputies
for every I ,000 population, we need to hire
an additional 16 deputies ."
The Sheriff's department at present
has 15 deputies, working three shifts.
" I obviously want to maintain a safe,
clea n and healthy jail," the Sheriff said,
"but I'm really more concerned with
adequate law enforCement and crime
prevention.''
Department officials indicated that
enactment of the regulations specifying
"prisoner , separation~· would cause a
major problem, m that the new rules
would drastically reduce the facility's
capacity to lodge inmates.
Unde r Section Il of the new
regulations, the foll owing prisoner
!Continued on A-2)

tntitttl
MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

PRICE 25 CENTS

•I

•

lbree

P"r80DB

Eastern Ave., at approximately 4:30
p.m;, Saturday.
•
An auto dr!vea by Priscilla E.
Dayton, 24, Galllpolls, travelillg east oa
Eastern Ave .. was struck to the rlgbt
side while attemplfog o left tum In the
Suporlor Car Wash, by a west bound
vehicle driven by Barbara Ann
Hueholt, Z2, Bloomoburg, Pa. Hueholt
was transported to Holzer Medical
Center by SEOEMS. Two llllfdealllied
pa•sengers In the Huebolt auto were
transported by the Gallla Volunteer
Squad to Holzer Medl&lt;al Center.

Work to start
:lion (l,if
..J -y on

FIRE gutted the Gallipolis Terminal Co., 1528 Eastem A~(C ., Saturday when a
blaze of undetermined &lt;rigln began in the garage section of the building. The
Gallipolis City Fire Department, aided by unit:; from the Middleport-Pomeroy F.
D., responded to the call at approximately 2:30p .m. Flames, and heavy smoke
spread throughout the building and into the adjoining Voto Manufacturing Sales

new traffic light

eo. •

1r~1

MARIETTA - A spokesman for the
Ohio Department of Highways, Division 10
Office, here, announced Saturday work
will begin on the installation of a new
traffic light Monday at the Silver Bridge
Shopping Plaza.
Plaza merchants and other Interested
individuals have been working on the
project lor the past three years. The light.
was funded through contrlb~tions of
existing businesses and area individualS.
Just last Tuesday night, Gallipolis City
Commissioners signed an ordinance approving work by the Ohio Department of
Highways.
Since the Plaza opened, tbe area h86
G;\1 .LI POLIS - Nation•lly renowned
Ci•rcncc McCabe will be the principal had a high accident rate.
speaker next Satu1·d•y in the Gallia County Junior Fairground for 115th allniver.sary edebraUon of llnculn's Ermmcipctli ul• Proclamation.
McCabe, l7 , a st&gt;niur at G• llia Academy
High School, is one uf two internatiotwl
vice-presidents of Koy Clubs ' Kiwanissponsored yuuth serviee clubs. He is the
lughest-•·a nking Key Club official from
Ohio since the or·gcmir.ation bt!gan.
This sununer he sang at the Ohio State
POMEROY - Sheriff James Proffitt's
Fair with the aii.Oitio slllte youth choir and department has charged Terence D. Lee,
is" membt'r of the GAHS symphonic choir 19, Pennsboro, W. Va. with carrying a
and
GAHS Madgrigals.
concealed weapon following a fight Friday
Amon~ num~rous lucal, ~\.Qtt!, ~:t.nd mt- night at the Sout"hern·Federal Hocking
tiunal activihes, McCabe is a mt:mOOr or foot ball game.
·
Key Club lntem•tional executive cununitAccordin'g to the report, Lei was in·
tce, d!Himum of the' Key Club Interna- volved In a small altercation. While
tional committee on awards, and was ruun- fighting, a loaded ,25 caliber automatic
t'tl to " Who's Who among Americl:m High pistol fell from his jacket pocket. Lee was
S&lt;'huol Students.''
lodged in the Meigs Collllfy Jail pending a
Subject uf his speed\ will be, "We 've hearing.
Cume a Long W•y."
Another person held In the county jail
pending a hearing Is 27-year old Theron P.
Stelnlger, Oxford, charged in Teus w!th
the unauthoriZed use of a motor vehicle.
Steiriiger was arrested lut week upon
a
routine
check by lherUI's deputies.
MEETING CANCELLED
According to the report, Steiniger was
POMEROY,- The Disabled American
Veterans September meeting has been hitchhiking on SR 7. When deputies
checked, it was learned Stelnlger was
cancelled.
. They wlll hold a picnic instead for wanted In Teus.
members and wives at Forest Acres Park,
New Lima Road, Tuesday, Sept. 12, at 6
EXTENDED FORECAST
p.m. Those attending are to bring a
Moaday ......... Wedlleaday, 1
covered dish.
cba... af allnerl .. -ten Oblo
Moodloy, ~MIIH IDly warm period.
FUNDS DISTRmUTED
POMEROY - State Auditor Thomas HJcllo wm 1oe .. 11oe 'ltl. ,.....,. wDI
E . Ferauson's office reports the
nee• ,,_ 11oe IIIIIJIIIa 111M lawer •
dlltrlbuUon of $177,781.&amp;17.66 in 1978 Jo. eariJ 111-r HI ~ 1110 low to mid
tangible tuea on financial institutions and Ill .TIINIIay ... Wetlmday.
.
securillea clealerr to Ohio'• 88 coWJtles.
Meip County received $124,206.12.

McCabe to be main
speaker Sept. 16

Man cited by

Meigs sheriff

FIre levels mobile· home
GALLIPOLIS - Fire completely home's $3,500 contents was saved.
destroyed a moblle home owned by Fred . Cox told firemen that when an automatic
Cox, 25, located on Georges Creek Rd., smoke alarm went off, he opened the door
during an early morn ing blaze Saturday. to the bathroom, where a washer and
The Gallipolis City Fire Department dryer were ruMing, and flames rushed out
was called to the scene. approximately one Into the passageway.
.
•
mile west of SR 7, on Georges Creek, at
Oox sustained minor bums to the right
1:21 a.m.
·
arm and the right side of the face, and was
The department reports that flames treated at the scene by firemen.
consumed the entire dwelling, valued at
Cause of the blaze; which originated in
$9,000. Appro~imately 1200 of the mobile the bathroom. is listed as .unknown .

Speaker named for conference
GALUPOUS - Dr. Charles V. Petty
will be In Gallipolis oo Sept. 15 and 16 to
lead the Family Life Enrichment
COOference, sponsored by the Gallia
County Ministerial Association .
Dr. Petty was born In England, Ark. He
received his Bachelor of Arts degree from
the Ouachita Baptist Universliy, his
Bachelor of Divinity from SouthwestPrn
Baptist Theological Seminary and his
Doctor of Theology from the same
seminary.
Dr. Petty has pastored congregations in
Arkansas aod Texas. He has done summer
mission work in Ghana, West Africa, the
Bahama Islands, and the state of

-

REV. DWIGHT ZAvn'Z

ELBERFELDS IN POMbOY

• GAI..LIPOL.IS -

were injured In a two-car crash oa

Burkett was report'ed home from the
hospital and William G. Beal was reported
confined to the Veterans Hospital in
Dayton.
Charles Swatzel reported on a recent
trustees and past commanders meeting
and also on the county fair pollee work of
the post. Some 51 members put in 5&gt;4\'z
hours working during the fair . A party lor
members who helped with the project has
been set for Sept. 24 at the hall.
Don Stjvers reported that membership
now stands at 199. The membership of
Robert E. Hartenbach was reinstated and
Chester Mundry, Jr~. and William Sorden
were accepted as ·new members. Joe
Zwilling announced that the department
chaplain has been Invited to Pomeroy for
the observance of Four Cha~s Day.
Refreshments were served by Charles
Hayes.

u..,

CAR CLUB
Gallla Car ClUb 11 belltg
formed. If interested, meet at
Bob Slunden Service Center,
llecond Ave. and Pine St.,
Sepl. II, 7:30 p.m. For more
information, call David
McCoj, ...... 18.

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the sheriff to maintain a separate trustee

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1978

POMEROY - The building program
of Drew Webster Post 39, American
Legion , to construct a new post home near
the Rock Springs Fairgrounds, has been
shelved for the time being.
This was the decision at a Friday's
post meeting, when Paul Casci of the
building committee reported on progress
being made. Lack of Interest in the project
was given as the reason for giving up the
plans for the new post home at the present
time . Only some 25 percent of the membership responded to an opinion poll
conducted by the post.
During the meeting presided over by
Rodney Karr, commander, Homer Smith
gave a report on the swnmer baseball
program and a check wa s received in the
amount of $25 for the building fund . The
check was given in memory of Sherry
Marshall by the unit's auxiliary . Eddie

Pastor to retire on September 30

a-·

Interviewed Friday, Sheriff Mont·
gomery stated that he had requested an
updating of the regulations which govern
the operation of the jail, but that he had not
expected a document as " imposing'' as the
one he received frorn the Common Pleas
Judge.
"There is sim.ply no way we can meet
many of these regulations," the Sheriff
said, "The department ju;1 doesn't have
the money."
The regulations enacted by Judge
Calhoun call for the iinsta llation of a video
monitoring system which wo uld allow for
24 hour a day surveillance of at least one
area of the jail, the Installation of a "key
monitoring system" that would record the
jailer's rounds, as well as the employment
of jail physician to be on call 24hours a day
to administer medical care to thf inmates.
The new regulations furth er call for

Legion building
project shelved

Emergency runs

IGI1 utuiiJ filed Airl

u;rrection'." .

tmts

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

NO. 32

In LAKKY t:WING
GA I.LIPOUS - Commbn Ploas Judge
Ronald R. Calhoun releaaed last week a12page document specilflng a new set of
rules, re"gulations and procedures for the
operation of the Gallia County Jall, and the
conduct of the inmates lodged therein.
The document , which was filed with
the Clerk of Common Pleas Court, directs
Sheriff James Montgomery , and all his
deputies, to comply with the new
regulations, " at the earliest possible
date ."
Judge Calhoun's ruling supe,cedes all
jail rules previously In effect. Operation of
the facility had previously been governed
by a set of regulations enacted in 1949 by
Oommon Pleas Judge . Robert M. Betz.
The document releaaed by Judge
Calhoun states that the new regulations
ar'e being enacted, "In accordanc~ with
the request of the Gallia County Sheriff,
the recomm endation of the Gallia County
Grand Jury , the latest Federal Court
decisions, the newly enacted provisions of
· the Ohio Reviaed Code, and the newly
adopted recommendation of the Ohio
Department of Rehabilitation and

•

unba

Military:troops
l kill protesters
l

for th e system's 37 ,000
students on !he fir s! day of
classes and were expected to
be open today .
The
Middleport
The school board sought a
Emergency Squad was called
court order Thursday ordering tea chers ba ck to work,
to Route I, Cheshire at !Q:27
but Judge Ca rl Kessler
p.m . Thursday for Vera
postponed a decision until 9
Stewart, who was taken to a.m. today. He said he would
Holzer Medical Center.
order dail y contrat1 talks
At 6:07p.m. the unit went to
with a federal mediator if the
the school playground where
teachers would retum to
an unidentified child had
work.
fallen from a slide. The child
Tuday's special is yester- was treated on the scene by
But, the Dayton Education
day
's b~d guess by the chef.
Association rejected that idea
the squad.
·
and said its members would
remain out.
Thur sday was also th•
beginning of th e third year of
busing for deseg regation
purposes in the Dayton school
system.
The Dayton teachers say
the board of education has
refused to give them any pay
raises for two years. The
board claims it has no money
for salary increases.
In Cleveland, pickets were
100'1. ~ ICI nylon
111.
up at the city 's 126 schools
Thursday which was a
preparation
day
for
teacher s.The · first day of
THE TOUCH OF LUXURY YOU DESERVE
school for the rlty's 100,000
students is today .
The prestige dren shlrtl' 'f!le toucl) of juxury 'll1d sen·
Negotia~ors
for
the
SUOUI
comfort. Incredibly 10ft and IUprtmtly flattering.
Cleveland'
Boa rd
of
In
surprisingly
practical 100%
nyton. Fabric by ·
Educa tion and the coalition of
Klopman.
Van
0-WIIen
you
Wll11
to
feel 11 great u
school employee unions claim
you look. $17.50 Alao available In elegant pattems.
they have been ''hamstrung"
by conditions set down by the
state in prohibiting the ex, Be sure to see all the otllt_! '" 'W dr... and
penditure of .20.7 million in
shirts In the Min's DlpWtmtnt - lit
emergency state school aid
loor.
· .~
on wage increases.
Both side demanded !hat
.
'
Ure state controlling buard 11ft
the funding restriction aa
1100n as possible su money can

.

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,

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COLUMBUS I UPI )
Several hundred st r ikmg
migrant fartn workers
arrived late Thursday night
in the Capital City,. prepared
. to march on the Statehouse
today to try and ga in support

Marion

moderated aomewhat Iince JDid.lummer, diWiy beca1111 of
decllnes In fOO(I priCH. Prlc:ea of !*~'food ltema have In·
creased at about !be -.me riPid rate throuihout lbe yNr.
AdminlstratiQII ecGnamlc plamen worry !hat !be riPid
advance of non-lood ltema ml&amp;ht llall eftCII'II to queD ~Uon.
Food prtcee have rt.en ilharply foe' Jdne llralght montha untO
July's 0.3 percent drop.
Beef and veil Jrlcea feU apln lut month. But picea for
pork and dairy _products lurned up uroewl..t lifter decllnlns In
July, !be department uld. ,
. Fish prices incre.ae a Uttle mere than in Ju)y, poulbly
indicallng that there Ia IDne conaumer relillence to high meat
coots.

----------- . . ·····" -------------1

workers' march today

HOSPITAL NEWS

popularity with the public and forced the administration to ·
toughen the fight against inflation.
The White House is expected to announce a second phase of .
an anti-inflation program later this month . The revamped
program reportedly may contain voluntary wage-price
guidelines.
·
The administration has predicted that inflation will be about
8 percent by year-end , considerably above previous
expectations.
The 0.1 percent drop in wholesale prices last month
compared with an 0.5 percent increase in July and 0.7 percent
rises in both June and May .
Inflation at both the consumer and wholesale levels has

DR. CIIRLES PE1TY

Washington . He was Associate Director of
the Olristlan life Commission of the
Texas Baptlst Commission. Currently, Dr.
Petty serves as Director of the Council on
Olristian Ule and Public Affairs for the
Baptist State Convention of North
Carolina.
He lives with his wife, Jannie Brewer,
dl•d his two sons, Anthony Charles, 10 and
J•remy Charles, 7, In Raleigh, N.C. Dr.
Petty speaks about lamlly relationship!!
oot just from books he has read nor
profesaors he bas heard, lilt !rCITl the
great teacher, experience, too.
Dr. Otarles Petty may be heard on Sept.
15and 16at 7:30p. m. at the Church &lt;f. the
Nazarene. Also during the day on Saturday
he will Jl'estlt a special lecture on
"Parenting" at 10 a. m. At 12 nooo he will
meet with senior high otudenta over a free
lunch to talk about "DaUhg and
SeJ:Ulllity." At 3 p. m. he will deal with the
topic "Communication Clearly."
The conference is open to all interested
citizens. There will be a free will offering
to help psy for expenses. Some of the
expenses are being paid through a grant
from the Gallia-Jackson-Melgs Cowtty
Mental Health and Retardation 848 Hoard.
There will be qualified ' nursery care
provided lor babies and toddlors. Younger
children through the third &amp;rade will be
entertained with movies lhown during the
lectw-es .
SQUAD RUN
POMEROY
The PomeroY·
emergency squad answered a call to Rose
Hlllat 10:~ p.m. Friday lor Unda Dickena
who was taken to Veter1111 Memorial
Hoapltal where she was treated and
released.

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A-3-The Sunday Times-&amp;ntinel, Sundav, Sept. 10, 1978
A-2- 'fl.., Sw1day Times-&amp;n\11..,1, Swiday,

. 10, 1976

Patrol checks
threeThe mishaps

..

•

·-

· GALLIPOLIS GaUia
_ Meigs P ost, Hig hway
Patrol, inv estigat ed three
accidents Friday.
Officers were called to' the
sce ne of a two-v ehicle
collision on SR 1. four-tenlh.•
of 8 mile 110 uth of the
Gallipolis City Limits at 7: 14
a. m.
According to the patrol, an
auto operated by Walter
Fluharty, 22, Cheshire, was
so uthbound on Rt. 7, followed
by a vehicl e driven by
William
Stevens ,
50,
Gallipolis.
The Fluharty auto stopped
in traffic to turn left. It was
struck in the rear by the
Stevens vehicle, which was
unable to stop.
Fluharty claimed injury,
but was not immediately
treated .
Stev ens was cit ed on
· charges of assured clear
distance. Both vehicles incurred moderate damage.
At 1:45 p. m.,: the patrol
investiga ted a two-auto
mishap on SR 7, at Swan

'

\

.,
·'

Creek Rd.
Officers report vehicles
operated by ~argaret Batley,
49 • Cro'!"' City, and James
Hay, 11, WllliaiJ1S(own, W.
Va., were northbound on 7. ·
The Hay auto attempted to
pass the Bailey vehicle, just
as Bailey started to tum. The
Hay auto sideswiped the
Bailey vehicle.
There was no report of
mjury, or of citation. Both
vehicles incurred · slight
damage:
The patrol investigated a
second two-auto .collision on
CR 23A , one mie west of
Center Point Rd. at ·7 :20 p. m.
re~ort
that
Officers
vehicles driven by Ooal
Fields, 55, Oak Hill, north-.
bound, and Salome McCarter,
22,
Wellston ,
traveling south, collided
when they met in a curve.
The Fields vehicle incurred
moderate damage. There
was slight damage to the
McCarter auto.
There were no i.1juries. No
citation was issued.

GUN ·CABINET

PERFECT
GIFr
FOR

ANY
DAD

Rouse, Coronel
named delegates
/

'"-·
'··

""~-

........

'"·

OPEN HOUSE, DEDICATION TODAY- Open . Dedication ceremonies will begin at 2 p.m. A tour of
house and dedication ceremonies for the new Plea- ·the $2 million facility; located on Sand Hill Rd-, pt,
sant Valley Nursing Care Unit will be held today. Pleasant, is scheduled for 3 p.m.

GALLIPOLIS - Elaine
Rouse and Stuart Coronel by Greg Bane.
were elected delegates to the
A fund raising dinner will
State
Convention
and be Monday , October 16, at 7
Richard c. Ro&lt;lerick, Jr. and p.m. at Rio Grande College
Gary Baf!e were elected Cafeteria.
alternates to the convention , Democrat Headquarters,
to be held September 23, . located in Park Central
during the recent meeting of ·Building, will be officlaUy
the
Gallia
County opened September 12 at 7
Democratic Executive p.m.
Anyone
wishing
cOmmittee.
literature or information on
Plans were made for a any candidate may stop by
" Meet the candidate Night" headquarters on or after
to be held Thursday , Sep- September 12, 1978.
There will be a meeting of
tember 28 ' 7 ' 30 p.m., at the the Democrat Central and
Gallia
County
Junio.r
Fairgrounds . Refreshments Executive Committees
will be served and en- September 12 following the
tertainment will be provided opening of headquarters .

BIG
SEifCTION

WOOD

ROCKERS

Girl's birthday: 11 pups born
GALUPOLIS - Laurie
Richards' birthday party
Aug . I was a " howling suet-ess" when 11 English setter
puppies were born at her
home just a whoop and a
holler ooff Shoestring Ridge .
It was Laurie 's firth birthday .
Her mother , Linda
Rkha1·ds , had all the
neighborhood kids in, and the
·party was in lull blast when
U1ree-year-uld Dutche,;s, big
wliite English setter, sU!rted
her obstetrical achievement.
And achievement it was!
Frank Richards, designer at
the Robbins and Myers plant,
says that the normal delivery
is only five or six pups, but
Dutchess prodU&lt;-'t.'ll 111

LUNCH-TIME finds Dutchess servin~ not Quite aU of
her II sons and daughters at the Frank Richards home

Because of the coincidence
of birthdays, Laurie, a little
brunette native of Springfield , was awarded one of the
puppies. She named him
''Patohes."
Sire of these eleven is
Egore, age 9, a ticked white,
black, and Uln English setter.
Egore races around the
Richards house a~ if he knows
tlwt he has fathered an extraordinarily large nwnber of
offspring.

Laurie's sister Sara 2 a
blonde beauty ~ho lik'es' to
play with these little animaLs,
obviously thinks it's great to
have so many pets in the
enclosure a few steps back of
U1e Richards back door.
It'• a well-traveled family,
thi• Richards family which
came here a year ago in May .
Laurie and Frank were born
in Springfield ; Linda in Connecticut; and Sara in Minneapolis.

Frank Richards says that

u.., English setter is a loyal,

one-man dog . He bought
Egore the day after he gut out
of the Navy nine years ago,
and Egore was only eight
week• old then - a little older
Uu111 his II progeny are now .
He had earlier GaUia CoWJty connections :
Frank
Richards ' great-greatgrandmother, Malinda
Gilbert Wooten, is buried
near Providelit-e.

m Shoestring Ridge. All of them are plump, playful,
healthy, and hungry ; nme gets left -out. Larry Ewing
newsphoto.

At a price like this
you should buy
Sp1ed Satin now,
even if you don't
plan to paint until
later. There's just
no way we could
make thi s offer
uniF,ss Glk1den
cuts its price to us.
AND THEY DID!

oioe-year-old
English setter father of
eleven puppies Ia one litter,
rues around the Frank
Richards
bouse
oo
Sbotatriag Ridge. Larry
Ewing aewspbolo at 1-500
of a second.
~unday

i(f

But this is a
limited-time offer.
So bener hurry.
Don 'I miss the

l'im&lt;'8-8enltnel

Pullliliht.'\1 every Sunday IJy
Otw V:tllcy P ub!is hnlK
Mull 1 4Ji t:lli&lt;~, lnt· .
GAt.UPOLIS

for

boat '

TI~e
Cu . ~

Slightly. Hillier

DAILY TRIBUN E:

20%oat~N.

t l5 Tllll'd Aw ., Clillhpulis, Ohiu

DUCHESS, three-yearo()ld English setter mother of eleven !JUpples, poses for a proflle by this newspaper's
Larry Ewing, news lensman ,

Sheriff. • •
(Continued from A-1I
separation and cell assignment rules are
listed :
.
- Material witnesses shall not be
housed with other prisoners.
- Juveniles shaU not be housed with
adult prisoners.
- There shall be a separation of male
and femal e prisoners.
- Persons awaiting trial shall not be
housed in the same cell as those serving
sentences.
- No more than two persons Shall be
placed in one cell.
- No more than one juvenile shall be
pla~d in one cell.
· ·

LAMPS

~ All prisoners, including trustees,

ORDER ISSUED
shall remain in or about the jail, and no
COLUMBUS (UP!) - An
pri110ners shall be aUowed to loiter on the International Brotherhood of
steps or lawn Of the Courthouse.
Railway and Alrllne Clerks
According to Special Investigator
k
·
·d
George Plants, full enactment of these sttt e captam sat a ternregulations would effectively reduce the porary restraining urder was
jail's housing capacity from its current · iasued Friday to prevent
space for 42 prisoners down to room for Norfolk I&amp; Western employees
only 18 iMiatea.
from picketing the Conrail
The Gallia County · JaU last year freight y~rd in Columbus.
housed 1,400 prisoners, with an average
SEEK DIVORCE
daUy lodging of between 15 and 20 iMiates.
POMEROY - Filing for
Judge Calhouo'a order stated that the/
regulations "shaD become effective at the divorce ·in Meigs County
earliest possible date." Sheriff Mont- Common Pleas Court were
gomery stated that he wasn't sure how Mary Lovell Erickaon, Rt. 3,
soon that would lle. or if it was " possible" Albany , against Kenneth Y.
Erickson, Rt. 3, Albany .
at all.

45631 .
l'illllisht-'11 every wcckdily tVtrlit1.::
t Xl't'PI ' &amp;lt urday.

St:t.•urlli

ClM ~

PIA't&lt;tio!l' P~tl tl 1:11 Gallipolis, Ohiu
00 1.
THE DAILY SENTINEl.

..~··;-·:··.·;···
·
.:;.·:·
..~.-·...........\\"~
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I ll Cuurt St. , Pumer uy. 0 . 45769.
,f'ublillhctl t'vcry wt-• dt~)' e\lt'll iug l
~XL't'pt &amp;itln.llly . E ntt-red a!' aotleund
do~s mullin!( rnMLL~ r 1:1l Pomeruy,

OhiOJ&gt;w,:l Ort!c:~ .

MAn .

"UilSCRIPTION RATP.!l
'f l~

(Juo

GHJJipoiU. llMII)' Trlbuhe in1
1111d

.~...........

Welt Vlr(linU. Llf~ )leMI' :

ftl .OO: Sl!lllloiiUII Jl I .10; lhrt.'t I~ · ,

Uu; $7.00. El:,:twherc 1211.00 per y"r: •
sur. nMrth,.; $1 J ,$0 ; three nwnthll
1 $i.W; llll,ltor· r ·out4,~ fl .~ munthly.
; Tlw Owily :Mmlirwl. nne year
fl2 .00,.; St.\ nltMlths $11.:wl; thn~t:mun·
l]l.'t $1.00. I·: L,t•whertl ~ . 00 ; six rnut•·
thli $1 ~1. 50 : three mouth.-; 11.5CI.
· Tht• Umh:tl r rt!S.'i lntt&gt;rnliut1.11l Ill
cJu·l u.'&gt;IYNy t ntit ~tl lo Uil' Wit.' (ur i
I ~ Ubl l t':Ji iuu of aU news di:;J)IU:h•:a'

t'/'l,.lltt•d tu thll 'm:ws~~ r ~ nd Mhlll
f11l' l•1t:-.l nt-w.w p11bli:dM•d IM• r·t•iu.
.

. ....,•.•.

.;:.·.·

::::;:~·

•

~ily atnd Swn. 7.X
pe r wtek. Moto r route $.U5 pt!r
mon01 .

, uy t.'a r ricr

.

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.·:·;.··

Will HOlD IN OUR
lAYAWAY FOR DECEMBER 23 DELIVERY

.·:.···~·

...

pring\Vall~y
,-:&lt;..

MON·SAT. 9 1m · 8 PM

.••.·:'

. 4 '
·.&lt;·--~() . ~~
·'·":-A·

HOURS

FREE

•'

?-.\~.'$(&gt;•.....

w"

~

•1&amp;4554
I

'

,

PARKING
AT tHE RfAR
OF OUR SlORE ~

• • • •
RIMIMIIR
A SMAU.
DOWN
PAYMINT
WILL HOLD
ANY ITIM

PLENn (f

••

'\W.
. IX'·,

529 JACKSON PIKE

SHOP EARLY AT

•;;,

.•::·:.·

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�~ .

GAI.IJI'OI .IS - The theft
of a money bag, containing an
unspecified amount of
money, taken from a taxicab
was reported by Linda Jones,
Gallipolis, to the Gallipolis

t:ity Police ·Friday .
Taxi driver Jones ~d she
had gone to a dqor to call for a
passenger at the corner ol
Secbnd Ave. and Olive St.

.

.

':

Upon returning to the cab,
she noticed a subject walking
away from the vehicle. Re_e ntering the taxi, Jones
discovered the theft.

MEET SEPT. 13
CHESTER - Past . Coun·
cilors Club of Chester Council
323 will meet at the lodge hall
Sept. 13 all p. m. Laura Mae ·
Nice and Leda Mae Kraeuter
will serve as hostesaes.

.

11o11 guarantee
.

.you a

.

averS
Between 1910 ond 1930,
nearly 2 million Mexicans
em ig re~ led

pe nniJnently

lo

the United State&gt;.

at the ·Meigs Senior Citizens Center, with REACT help
flags des.gned to get aid for motorists having difficulties.

OUT OF SCHOOL.

CAN'T GET A JOB?
Go To Southern Hills
and The Job Will
Come To You!

ENROLL NOW FOR
Fa II ClassesDay or Evening
Diploma courses at the
college level in a year or
les s.

·

For information , please
call 446-2239. or visit •our
office from 9 a .m . to l p.m .

SOUTHERN HILlS

most mo.torists, due to
attacks and mistreatment,
will not stop anymore when
they observe a motorist
having difficulty .
Friday, Guy Hysell of the
REACT
team
Meigs
presented emergency flags to
all staff members of the
Meigs County Senior Citizens
Center.
CB 'ers who see the help
flag in Meigs are to call
REACT on channel 9 and
report the location and
descriptlon of the vehicle in

SCHOOL OF
BUSINESS
~} 4 2nd A~~ ·

Gallipolis
Not aH1hated with any
a? her schoo I'"
.
Thomas C. Breech,
Director
RN 0~858

distress .
Others are asked to become
familiar with the distress
help flag . The flags are small·
enough to be placed in a glove .
compartment and can be
used to summon help
effectively .
" As you no doubt are
aware, it is dangerous in this

Residents may obtain the
day and age to stop your car
by
to help anyone on the high· REACT help flag
way. So - the flag is to a Jert contacting any REACT
other m oto ri sts to your member or by stopping by
problem .and they are to Evelyn's Grocery 011 Route
notify officials or REACT for 124 west of Pomeroy.
help so that the legitimate
problems can be taken care
of," Hysell warns.

Historical

Chop Suey
Chop suey W;:tS l'Oncocted in
New York City on August 29 ,
1896, by Chinese Ambassador
l.i Hung-Chang 's chef , who
devised this dish to appeal to
both American and Oriental
tas te. Chop s uey wa s
unkrwwn in China at the time .

Glacial Origin
Auy laq~e mass of snow and
ice.on the land which la&gt;ls

·rrumy Yti:U'8 is a glacier.
Glaciers are funned uver

0:1

num!Jer of years wht-re mon•
snow falls than melts. As thi&gt;
snuw

accumulate .s

and

becomes thkker, it is compress£'&lt;1 and changed into
dense, solid ire . Also , U1e
mass of snow and ice tends to
now du~ tu ilo; OWl\ Weight.

YfS WI CAll
... help you beat the
high cost of building
a new home.
Fur over three decedu. Jim- Walter hu
been buildin~ and linan ~ing homn that
fam ilies of all walks ut lite can alford .
NOTHING !fM CHANGEOIIf yiJu own prop·
erty, we can sl ill ·tUIIIJm bwild a home for
you W far !!nthan " aura~• " prh:es btin~
reported in newspapers, on television and
radio, YES WE CAN! !:!! !!} show ¥!!!_1
We'll also show you that , by doing some or
alt of your own insidm flnls~lng work . you
can uva more . Hera's how : JimWa lter will
cuuom bu'ild your new home to al most anw
atage ... from the " s~e ll" wp to 90% com ·
plete. We' ll fin i s~ the outsi de In avery de·
uil. On the inside , you tall us where io
atop . .. then take over and fini1h the rest .
Do u mut~ u you lih ... but lhe more
inside work you do for yourself t ~e more
money you 'll save.
Jiln Walter offers INSTAN T mortgage fi ·
nan~ing to Qualified proprrtw ownm , ..
and wou 'l l know euct!y what your month ly
mortgage payment will be before c onstru ~ ·
t ion beg ins .
lli 'In CAN! hen tho11gh new home prices
CIJntinue to sp iral upward, Jim Wa lter can
help you bell the high cost of bu ild ing. Let
us siKiw you how today!

•
SOCiety

will meet
POMEROY - The Meigs
County
Pioneer
and
Historical Society will hold an
open meeting, Wednesday; at
7:30, at the musewn, lor
trustees, members and the
general public, who are
interested in wocking on the
. planned Meigs County
History .
The society undertook the
project of publishing an up-to·
date history ol Meigs County ,
not only to benefit this
generation,
but
lor
generalions to come .
By
providing
an
opportunity foc all Meigs
County residents 'to be
included, this history will be
more complete than any prior
county publications . lt will be
up-to-date, and will also offer
topographical and early
settler information.
Within a lew weeks, you the
residents, will be receiving
infocmalion on this exciting
project. We will be providing
continuous information
through The Daily Sentinel,
so that you will be aware ol
what we are doing, whom you
can ·contact for more
information , of workshops to
help you in writing and
various other informative
items .
Representatives of the
historical society and Taylor
Publishing, will be on the
Kalidescope program over
WMPO
on
Thursday,
September 14, at 10: !5, to
answer questions from the
public .

the

: YOUf

desireM cert lficares with lace amount
of $~ .000.00 or more.
Annual yields are elfecllve wl'len pnn·

protection for your

a Aulo

!

a Lite

0

aAnd you can be s u re

0

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hal wllh Me lrop oli la n :
• Property and Liabi lity In- •

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PLANNING DRIVE- The Wahama White Falcon Band is undertaking a fundraising
drive to purchase new uniforms. Plctilred left to right are: Harry Miller, Band Director
Charles Yeago and R.G. Greene. Miller and Greene are co-chairmen of ihe drive. All three
are shown looking over a list of polential donors.

WEDNESDAY

CEN TENARY
United
Methodist Women will meet
at the church, 7:30 p.m.,
gues t
speaker
Ruth
Eshenaur, Pt . Pleasant, who
had just returned !rom doing
m'issionary work in Africa .
fublic is invited.
.
ADDAVILLE Athletic assn .
7 :30
p .m.
Bulaville
Townhouse. Coaches, officers
and parents urged to attend.
THE GOSPEL Inspirations
will be singing Saturday,
Sept. 9, at Clark Chapel
Church , startingat7:30p.m.
Also Sunday, Sept.IO. Special
singer s starting at 7:30 p.m.

Uniform
Drive Begins

The Wahama White Falcon parades In New Haven,
Marching Band has oHiclaUy . Hartford, Mason and Clifton
started Its unUorm drive to and a concert at West
pay for new bands uniforms. Columbia.
The goal is to raise $14,000 to Times are as follows : New
purchase uniforms for the Haven 10 a.m., Hartford II : 15
band. This Is the first lime the a.m.; Mason 12:30 p.m. and
band has gotten new uniforms West Columbia 1:45 p.m.
for many years. The old Donations are being asked
for from private individuals,
uniforms are 15 years old.
Fans can see the band businesses, ·Industries and
wearing the new uniforms at banks. All donations, both
next:" Saturday's football large
and
small,
are
game.
welcomed and greatly apTag Day will begin the preclated.
fundraising drive on Satur·
day, Sept. !6, by performing
FIREFIGHTERS MEET
CI.NCINNATI ( UP!)
More
than 6,000 persons
MERGER DISCUSSED
CINCINNATI (UP!)- U.S. began gathering in Cincinnati
Justice Department hearings this weekend loc the tooth
on the proposed business annual conference of tbe
merger of Cincinnati's two lnll!rnational Association ol
·
daily
newspapers,
the Fire Chiefs.
Fire
chiefs
and
other
public
Enquirer and Post, will begin
safety officials from across
Monday .
The hearings, which are the country and around the
expected to continue several wocld will be meeting Sunday
weeks at the downtown U.S . through Thursday to discuss
Post Office building, will lire protection.
The meeting at the
include testjmony !rom both
downtown
Convention Center
supporters arid opponents of
will
include
business
the·proposed merger and wi!l
professional
help U.S. Attorney General sessions,
Griffin Bell decide whether ID workshops, educational
technical
approve the merger request. exhibits and
Enquirer and Post officials demonstrations by nearly 180
have asked lor approval to exhibitors. .
corribine business operations
in order to save money.
Under terms ol the proposal,
the Enquirer would take over
business operations of the
The U.S . is the only major
Post. However, editorial
industrial nation without a
operations of the two papers
national health insurance
fi;ould remain separall!.
plan . Seventy countries
The most vocal opponents
throughout the world have
ol the business merger have
programs of public health in·
been Post printers and other
surance or medical care
Post non-editorial employees,
systems for the entire popullt·
who stand to looe johs under
\ion .
the arrangment.

THURSDAY
PRODUCTS
PARTY
policyholders have enjoyed • Hemlock Grange Hall Thurslor over a century.
day 7:30 p .m . Everyone
Call me for your perso nal 1 welcome.
Insurance needs .
GALLIPOLIS Garden Club,
Sept. meeting, Thursday,
14th, 8 p.m., at Rita Frazier ,
Portsmouth Rd. Program:
437 Second Ave .
Golllpo!is, Ohio
Dried
material
and
446-0147
arrangements.

SIX CONSIDERED
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Six
men - three from Cleveland,
two from Duluth, Minn ., and
one !rom Detroit- still are in
the running to become e&lt;ecu·
tive
director
of
the
Cleveland-Cuyahoga County
Port Authority.
Loran Hammett, chairman
ol the search committee, said
Friday the field had been
narrowed from 13 to six
candidates.
Anthony Russo, 60, father
Cleveland
Council
ol
Majocity Leader Basil Russo,
is one of the candidates lor
the directorship, vacant since
June, according to Hammett,
who said it may take another
couple weeks to !ill the
position , which will pay from
$29,000 to $36,000 annually .
BeSides the elder Russo ,
others under consideration
are : Jack Hively, the acting
port
director;
Tar as
Szmagala, publicity and
personnel coordinatnr ol the
Cleveland Regional Sewer
District ; Thomas Burke and
Paul Pella, both of Duluth ;
and Lawrence Tailford.
Detroit..

Kansas is a word in the
Sioux lan~ua ge mean ing
.. south wind people"'

-

.

Sears

18232

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VAI.UE
18.1-cu. ft. freezer

VALUE
23.1-cu.

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ONLY

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: JOHN SAUNDERS
0

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interest rate savings plan to fit your needs.
So when you think savings, think Ohio
Valley Bank savings and stop in to discuss
the benefits of all our savings plans. You'll
find out why we guarantee a saver's edge
with maximum rates and a plan to fit your
needs.

o
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: OMetropolitan:

:Metropo lilafl Life Ins. Co., N.Y., N.Y. :
1 Metropoli tan Pro per!~ and liat!ility •
•
. R. t.
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Ins. Co., Warwick,
1
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••••••••••••••••••••

SATURDAY
LAFAYETTE White Shrine
will practice for ceremonial
and inspection, 7 p.m. All
officers urged to be present.

If the minute you turn your head your little
mess maker is in your jewelry box or
cosmetics making a big mess . . . then you
need ltbwlo •I*UI, the child protection latch
for cabinets and drawers. It keeps tots out
~f the cabinets and drawers you want them
kept out of. Yet, adults can get in quickly.
And it locks automatically wben you close
the cabinet or drawer. Put an end to the big
messes, install i/&amp;l.t;puat

'200FJ&lt;' ek-'&lt;'lric dryer

SAU~ *224~~
:11420'l

I 9.6-cu. ft. freezer

SALE

•

'45}65

Large-capacity dryer feat.ures Automatic Fabric Master, Wrinkle Guard® I.
special Touch-up cycle, End-of-cycle siena! and drop-down Load-a-Door!

. lear Photography is now accepting

w~

OhioValley Bank
Gall ipol is. Oh io

Member FD IC

The Leading Savings Plana Are AI The Leading Savings Bank

appointments for Senior
Call

ear~

Po~aits.

for most convenient

SAVE 14500

appointment time. If you didn't
receive our mailer be sure to ask

SAVE SJO
Black and white TV

SAVE $70
Remote control TV

lthu/n'!lfllvl. LATCHES

SALE

SALE

•48()u

:

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(

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Our highest peak HP
vacuum! 12-in. wide
beater brush adjusts
to 4 h e ights .____

'1525 1

•.·.•

18-tn. d ... Qftal_....,.pk:tv"" .

I

•on l1me depellls. regulelions reQuire th•l 11\fl' ,.· De 11 1 ml•1et1 penelly it !he princiPII !1 withdr.wn WIOrt
maturity, H older w111 be JN!Id l ~terestet the aonu11 ..• :t! ol 5 ~ leu thr" mon"'• lor ft. tlrnelhe ptlnciptll wn onct.POIIt

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-----~P_H_._86_7_·_l_1s_J_ _ _ _..,.....:.'- - L.':.::-~:_ ~----~:."J

•

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::
fl:=l.
L :
".--:1--:-J:

I

Answer line

: sur ance Company you will
• receive the same e• ce ll ent •
: ser&gt;.Jice Metr opolilan Llle :

y -.

I

•
•

:doesn't it - one person to :
• handle you r personal ins ur- •
: ance needs .
:

cip~ afll intetest are left Oil Deposit
tor a full ~ear. •

j-.a;' . _... :}·

I

:

:
•
H
H lth
•
:
• ome • · ea
:
• Makes life a litUe si mpl er, •

Anel lo addllion to all this .. roonthly or
quartelly mcome ... pal~ on ooe. two.
three. fol.ll', Sil, 01 eight year ce11ili·
cates Interest payable monthly n you

BARBARA SHERIDAN
::ll/:&amp;~
will be speaker when the
MORTGAGE
FINANCING
Pomeroy Chapter of the
,i ··- · • ' l __;_ !
to qu•lltled proptortr _ , .
Women's
Aglow Fellowship
- · .•. 1 - 1
meets
Thursday
at the Meigs
We offer a complete line of mOND HOME COTTAGES
~Inn. Doors will open at 6:30
~
I
Cell or visit th1 J im Weltlf Hom11 disp/1~ p•rk nutut
for the (!Inner meeting with
-l-· ·-:- I
you ... tit sand thr coupon fo1 complete d1t1ils . Get
dinner served at 7.
ell lb1 l~ets ebout building ,, vout pttJp•tt1 . ..
PRECEPTOR Beta Be\jl
wilb p•ymrnts you ten •lfotd.
FREE FULL·COLOR CATALOG!
Chapter ol Beta Sigma Phi
Fill out and malt. No obligation.
Sorority will meet Thurs·
day noon at the home of
NITRO, W. VA. -25143
r-----------~ Mrs. Mary Morris, Uncoln
We are ll"'ll! rested rn more r n l orm al ro~ •tJout J rm W•lter
Hill, for a luncheon .
P• 0 • Bo X 637
Homts P!tue lt~G vo~r lull -color t•"log ot 1\ omes
Members are to take gifts
606 1st Avenue South
tooav 1 vnoersran a mtre ., no oblog•t •on
for U~eir !ieeret sisters.
U.S. Hwy 25 East
MEIGS COUNTY GIRL
PH: 727 ·22 96
ADOOISI
Scout Leaders, other
CHESAPEAKE, OHIO 45619
(IIY
, .... _
... _ _
volw1tetrs, 10 cun. to IIOOll
T•.. jtlh.-1.- n•ithl•rwJ
at the Mei!lll Inn. P1·ogram
P.O. Box 250
,
I n~rel ,..ute pl.... t l •e directior11
and ttdivities fur fall to be
Old Highway 52
discussed .

I
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life

•
: ... with insurance

4 BEDROOMS - 2 lATHS

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I

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ellective form of diagnosis.
Some experts feel that
critics of manunograplly, In
their " zeal" to protect the
public from a theorellcal
ra4iation hazard, may have
prevented some women from
having the benefit of mam·
Amtrlc:en Cancer $oclety
mography because some 30
.
'
m'!rC'Pnt nf breast Cancer
A
regutar · teature, stration projects. sponsored occurs among women in the
prepared by the American by the National Cancer In- · 40-49 age group.
Cancer Society, to help save slilute and the American
your life from cancer.
Cancer Society, mam·
A woman asks : "Can mography
( x-ray)
breast cancer be treated by examination ol the breast is
drugs alone? ''
done on a routine basis for
ANSWERline : Surgery is women 50 years or older. For
the major method of treating those younger than 50 it is
SQU~D CALLED
women who have breast recommended if there is a
MIDDLEPORT - The
cancer. For many women, close family history ol breast Middleport emergency squad
radiation
therapy
and cancer or if th'e woman has answered a call to Pearl St. at
chemotherapy are used in already had cancer in .one. 8:24 p.m . Friday lor Mark
addition to surgery. New breast. These guidelines Tyree, 16, who had received
drug co mbinations can refer to women without facial lacerations while
reduce the recurrenre rate of symptoms. A woman under playing football on the play·
breast cancer in some 50 who experiences any kind ground ." He was taken to
patients after surgery. Drug ol breast change should have Veterans Memorial Hospital
combinations ca n provide no qualms about mam- . for treatment.
prolonged control for a mography because it is an'
number of advanced breast
cancers.
At
present,
L
however, the use ol drugs is
not sufficient to treat breast
ca ncer.
A retired engineer explains: " I have a skin con·
dition which my docto~ says
is precancerous. What does
that mean?"
ANSWERiine :
Certain
abnormal skin conditions
have a tendency to become
malignant . A common
condition is a scaly skin·
thickening that develops in a
small area , usually the face,
neck or hands. This kind of
abnormality most often
develops in older persons
whose skin has been exposed
for many years to the
ultraviolet rays ol the sun.
The !act that you have a
precancerous condition
THE DOLLARSANDSENSEOF
means that treatment can
DIAMOND VALUE
prevent a potential cancer
from developing. Your local
. American Cancer So~iety
Because your diamond purchase is a
Unit has a new pamphlet of
facts about skin cancer that's
major investment , your source should be
yours lor the asking.
one of proven reputation and integrity .
A woman explains : " When
We 're proud of the trust and confidence
I developed breast cancer in
we've
earned for representing the utmost
my 40's, it was discovered by
in quality, value and dependability.
mammography. Now I am
disturbed to learn that
women . in my age group are
being told to avoid mam·
mography . I am afraid that
lives will be lost if this
technique is avoided ."
ANSWERline :
Under .
guidelines currently being
followed in special breast
cancer screening demon·

CANCE-R

I

CARLL. JOHNSON
ol the Pomeroy· Trinity
RACINE
Carl L. Churc h, a retired employee ol
Johnson, 62, Route J; North the New York Central
Sewickley Township, Beaver Railroad and . former co·eounty, Pa ., died Sept. 5 in own e r ol the Twin City
the Beaver Falls unit , Machine Shop.
He is survived by his wife,
Medical Center of Beaver
County, where he had been a Frances Grueser Reibel, two
daughter s,
Mrs .
Carl
patient for one month.
Born ' AprU 21, 1916 in (Marcella j Baker, Gallipolis,
Racine, he was the son of the and
Dorothy
Reibel ,
late Martin T. and Belle Pome roy ; two sisters, Miss
·Willis Johnson and was Louise Reibel, Columbus, and
employed for 36'h years by Mrs . Margaret Ramey ,
two
grand·
Babcock and Wilcox Co., Pomeroy;
Tubular Products Division, children;
two
greatBeaver Falls.
grandchildren; four nieces
Upon his retirement in and one nephew.
April, 1!!78, he was a security
~· uneral services will be
guard in the plant protection held Monday at 1 p. m . at
department.
Ewing Chapel with the Rev.
Mr. Johnson was a member Wilbur Perrin officiating .
ol the Chippewa Evangelical Burial will be in Beech Grove
Free Church. He was a World Cemetery. Friends may call
War II Army Air Corps ·· at the funeral home alter · I
veteran.
p.m. today. In lieu ol flowers
Surviving are his widow, the family requests con ·
Evelyn Mayer Johnson; two tributions be made to the
sons, Thomas, Ch ippewa local Boy Scouts.
Township, and James,
College Hlll; a brother ,
Eugene, Racine; a sister,
Mrs. Carl (Gladys) Barr,
Beaver Falls, and three
grandchildren .
Preceding him in death
were three brothers and two
Sisters.
Funeral services were held
Thursday at Campbell 's MONDAY .
Funeral Home in Beaver ON MONDAY, Sept. II, at
Falls. Burial was in Concord 7 p .m ., ·at St. Peter's
Cemetery in North Sewickley Episcopal Church, :;94 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, there will
Township .
be a planning meeting lor
Services for the Developmentally Disabled (mental
DR. LOZIER
retardation, cerebral palsy,
POMEROY - Dr. Gerald autism. ep islepsy) . The
Lozier, 48, Princeton , N. J . topics to be discussed include
died Saturday morning in a group homes, education of
Princeton Hospital. He was a the handicapped, vocational
son-in-law of Mr. and Mrs . traini~g . Jaci&lt; Pealer from
Aarun Kelton of Minersville, the Department ol Mental
and the husband ol Rhea Ann , Re tardation and Developa daughter of the Keltons .
mental Disabilities will
Funeral services will be conduct the meeting .
held in New Jersey:
THE REGULAR meeting ol
the Gallia County . District
Ubrary Board ol Trustees
will be held Tuesday, Sep·
LEWIS REIBEL
tember 12 at 5 p.m., in the
POMEROY
Lewis Librarian's office at the
Reibel, 88 , 116 Union Ave., library, corner ol Third Ave.
Pomeroy,
died Friday a nd State St.
evening
at
Veteran s
MARTHA Circle will meet at
Memorial Hospital.
Grace
U.M. Church Tuesday
Mr. Reibel was the son ol
9:30 . Coffee hour·
morning,
the late Peter and Cathryn
followed
by
business meeting
PCerriman Reibel. He was
and
prayer.
also preceded In death by liv.e
brothers and three sisters. RIVERSIDE Club will meet
Mr . Reibel was a member at Rio Grande faculty dining
hall, Tuesday, I p.m., Sept.
12 .

·.·can s ,·mplt'fy • •

THURSDAY
· PRECE PTOR BETA
BETA Chapter ol Bel&lt;l Sigma
Phi Sorority, luncheon,
Thursday, noon at the home
ol Mrs . Mary Morris .
Members are asked to take
gill&gt; lor their secret sisters.

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: Metropolit&amp;n :

l Social 1
1 Calendar 1

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MADISON

r--A~e-~~n;;a-iiis-1

0

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY CHAPTER 80
Royal Arch Masons Wednesday 7:30 p.m . Bosworth
Council Royal and Select
Masons 8: 15 p.m. All companions invited.

Homes built on your property to any a111ge of
completion from the shell to 90% finished .

A~ -The Sunday 'l)mes-Senlinel, Sunday, Sept . 10, 1978

~~~Band

Alert flags distributed
POMEROY - Motorists
needing help can signal to
passing
citizens
band
equipped vehicles with a
simple highly visible flag
available through the Meigs
County REACT, Inc. team.
The nags are designed to
attract attention to CB'ers
who will get help for a
motorist who has problemS.
They·
are
especially
recommended for use since

..

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Money ~ag taken from taxi cab

GUY HYSELL, right, of Meigs REACT : Inc.,
presents Troy Ohlinger and Lewis Williams, bus drivers

.

'

• Kenmore rang~s and dryers require connectors not included in prices shown
• Shippin1. in1tallation extra • Sears hall a credit plan to suit most every need
• Pricel are catalol( prices •Now on l!l&amp;le in our "P" cataloasupplem~nt '

Lear
Photography

Each ~fthese advertised items is readily available for sale as advertised.
lwlpo

Snti~fnrtion

u.,- OO&amp;t ••

FRUTH

IP'8tNG VALLIY PLAZA, GALLti'OI.tl
,-.HM
. '-LUIID~t~•'r

AU. LOCATIOIIS

~ 1171. 1&lt;1NOEAQARD

I

i'-.Ofl

~nON 0111..... ,..,_ ,.,..,

Most merchandise available
for pick-up within 2 do·.·' •
Phone
446· '2710

'

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(]UI!tanteed or )'our Monell Bndc

Sears
SIE:ARS. ROEBUCK AND 00.

.;,

Silver Bridge Plaza
For Service
Ph. 446-2902

�A-6- Tflt!' Sum.J(ty 'l'uncs"~'lllllt!l , Surul&lt;1 y. St•1H. lO, 1~Jitl

42 cases terminated
POMEROY Twent y and costs. purchasing illega l
oelendants were fined and 22 intoxicants; Dennis Tolley,
• othe r s forfeited bonds in Rt. 3. Albany. $100 and costs .
· Meigs C&lt;&gt;unty Court Friday. possession: Paul R. Barry,
Fined by Judge Robert E . Seottown. $20 and costs,
Buck were AlfrOd H. Lyons, ex pired registraticn.
Jr., Racine. $12 and rosts.
Forfriting bonds were
speed ; Mary Ericksen, Richard C. Cooper, RushPomeroy, $10 and cos1s. ville; James R. Bennett,
fail ure to yield; Mamie D. Winfield. Charles B•yer ,
Ham1on, Rutland , $10 and Parkersb urg, Robert Me·
costs, l!Jlsafc vehicle; David Daniel. Middleport , Barbara
A . Nolan, Patriot . $lil a nd Bumgardner, Leon, and Brad
costs, gross overload, $10 a nd H. Johnson, Port Chester. N.
cos ts,
un s a fE'
ve hi cle ; Y.. $30.50 each, speed ing:
Gregory Glaze, Pomeroy, $.10 Otha E. Milard , Rt. 2.
and costs. left of center; Albany. $360.50, DWI: George
David Carr, Pomeroy. $W J . Beaver, Middleport , $30.50.
alid costs, shooting ground- no muffler : Samuel P.
hog from roadway : Rodney McKinney, Rutland. $30.50.
Howery, Albany, $13 and improper passing: Johnny
costs. speed: Carl Jackson, Ray
Hosc har,
West
Proctorville, SIO and costs, . Columbia, $67.50, speeding;
making U tum; Marion · E . Elias Howard, Chesh ire,
Sn ider, Pomeroy, $10 and
costs, improper passing;
Patri cia C. Circle. Rt. I ,
Racine. $25 and costs, failure
to yield: Robert J . McClure,
Rt 3, Pomeroy. $10 and costs.
defective exha ust ; Roger
A two-story. frame house
Lathey, Baltimore, Ohio, $2:!
along
Route 33 at Letart was
and costs, speeding: Donna
destroyed
by fire early this
Davidson, Rt. 1.. Rutland, $25
morning
despite
the efforts of
and costs. improper st.&lt;:~rting
the
New
Haven
Communi ty
and ba cking : Car! R. Allie,
!H. 2. Racine , $100 and costs, and Volunteer Fire Departlea'"ving scene of accident , ment , according to Mike
costs only, driving under Fields, fire de partment
suspensio n ; Kimberl y A. president.
Hall. Rt. I. Albany , $22 a nd
The house, inha bited at the
costs, speed ing: Harry C. time by four or five persons.
Watson, Pomeroy, two counts Fields sa id, was rented by
of se lling alcohol to minorS. Elizabeth King from he r
liO days confinement and 1100 mother.
and costs on each count,
The lire is believed to have
confinement suspended .&lt;:~nd
originated
in an electrica l box
half of fines. fiv e yea r
Kelly
C. on the back porch of the home.
probatio n :
Firemen were swn moned to
Winebrenner, Syracuse, $25
and costs, purchasing illegal the hom e at 4:10 a. m. and
Intoxi ca nts: Timot hy W . reported the house was fully
Cha ffee, Rt. I. Reedsville, $25 ablaze at that time . They were

A•7-The Sun&lt;4ty Tirnts-&amp;ntintl, Sunday, Sepl. 10. 1978

$25.50, unsa fe ve hicle;
Michael Lambert. Rt. 1,
Rutland, $30.50, un~ble to
&amp;op within assured clear
distance:; Preston Evl:lnS, Rt.
3, Racine, $357 .50, DWI :
Hubert Nelson, Rt. I , Reeds·
ville, $25.50, unsafe vehicle;
Junr. Mayes, Rt. 2. Pomeroy,
$30.55. parking on roadway :
Keith Wisec up, Pomeroy, $28 ,
parking on roadway: Glen D.
Werr y, Mason , $30.50,
pa rkil)g on roa dway ; J&lt;~mes
l&gt;illon, Coolvi ll e, $28.55,
un sa fe vehi cle ; Ha rley
McDona ld. Rt. I, Middleport,
1103, rec kl ess opera tion :
Richard
B.
Med ley,
Hocki ngport , $103, con trib ut ing ; Tim Da vidson,
Pomeroy, $53, trespassi ng ;
Roy H. See, Bidwell, 140.35.
illegal parking.

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INC .
ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE

Phone 446-1761
452 2nd Avr

Kirghizia
Kll'ghilii:.l is .in the cl:ls tcrn
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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
f

story.

These are some lesson course.
·
plana Pelltor ll8Cfi in sports
Electives are offered as a
literature, a class he teaches fun cow-se to eitller help a

TilE OHIO Rl.VER ! A sow-ce of pride to all whose homeland borders
upon its shores. From the earliest days of Meigs County's settlement,
people have fl()!'ked to tile river to watch tile various boats plying tile
water. In tllis pictw-e, from tile Meigs C&lt;&gt;unty Pioneer and Historical
Society, we observe a gentleman watching one ollbese early boats. Can

development of t~· county.
He also spoke on · Hocking
Valley Railroad and indicated that future plans call
lor the railroad to provide a
train between Nelsonville and

Athens.
John Rice, president, was
in charge of the meeting and
Vernon Weber ' led group
singing. Women of the church
served dinner.

ON
AMILLION LIVES
TONIGHT.
HAROLD BROWN. wbo recently filled tile unexpired
term of Mayor Howard Neekamp, opened bids lor the sale
of the Vinton police cruiser Friday . The cruiser was sold
1D James Mulholand for $300. Willi tbe sale. of the vehicle
tile controversy surrounding the issue of law enforcement
in the viUage has apparently ended .

Vinton ·controversy

GAI.LIPOI.IS - With the
sale of the Vinton police
cruiser during the village
co un cil' s regular monthl y
meet ing Friday evening, the
controversy s urrounding the
issue of law enforcement in
Vinton has a pparently ended .
On Aug . 28, the village
council agreed, in an out of
cou rt se ttl ement, to pa y
Marsha l Edwin Widger $2800
in back wages, pl us pay $575
in co urt costs, effective upon
the res ignations of Widger
and Vinton Mayor Howard
Neekamp.
Pursuant to the agreement ,
on Se pt. I, Widge r and
Neekamp resigned . At that
time, Harold Brown, then
president pro tern of the
co un ci l. ascend ed to th e
position of mayor.
Mayor Brown then signed a
con tract with t he Ga!lia
County Sh eriff's Department
for !ega! services in the
village.
Haro ld Pauley officiall y
re sig ned Fri day even ing
from his post as council
member .
Pauley
ha s
ass um ed the posi tion of
.$pecial deputy fur the county
sheriff's department to serve
in Vinton.
Margaret Hoover and -Seth
Huntley were appointed to fill
the council seats left vacant
by the ascension of Brown to
Mayor, and the resignaUon of
Harold Pauley.
The village police cruiser
was sold Friday evening, by
close d bid, to Jam es
Mulholand , president of the
Vinton wat er board a nd
husband of the village clerk .
The 1972 Plymouth was sold
lor the high bid of $300. Two
other lower bids had been
recei ved.
In further al1ion, Alva
Adkins was elected to serve
as president pro tern of the
co un cil , re pla cing Harold
Brown who is now mayor.
1he resi ~Z:nations of water

board

membe rs

Victor

member .

The co uncil further moved
to raise the water ·rate from
$6 .25 per month to $8 per
month .
Co uncil mem ber Alva
Adkins stat ed Sat.urd•v
morning that the council is
proce eding with plans to
in st all
water
meters
throughout the village.
The co uncil moved to approve flood insurance for the
village before adjourning at
10:30.

speaker

25D

BOB'S CB RADIO

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players,'' he said. ·

SHOOTS HIMSELF

AUSTIN, Texas (UP! J - A
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his mother he didn't like
school, fo und a pistol kept in
the house and shot himself in
the head.
The unidentified youngster
suffered a scalp wound. She
told police and doctor s he was
attempting to kill himself
with the .38-taliber pistoL

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~he Bearc.at «o 250 with more than 30 separate and dis!•~ct. func!10ns_i~ designed with the professional scanner
·~ mo~d .. Sl!'~e ot s crystalless, programming 50 frequ e n·
c1es !" •nfm1te frequency combinations is as easy as

" When baseball pla yers
became free agents, r gave
tile students f4 million and
told tllem to buy bascoall

He also brings In sports
writers to speak to tile class.
He uses his nine years of
coaching football , base~ll
and basketball to tell the
history of sports, Coaches ~t
tile school leU about their
particular sport and the
athdeUc director talks about
the total atllleUc program.
PeUior's brought in videotapes of sporting events for
tile students to watch, tllen
assigns them to write a story .
He says a good student
needs a challenge and that is
where special projects come
in. One was buying ball
players.

Shop Johnsons ·And
Find Out Why .MORE
Sati.s fied Customers
Shop Here •••

PHONE 446-9593

VINE STREET, GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

89

pushong a lew buttons. With its incredjble "non-volatile"
memory , the. Beurcat 250 searc hes out frequencies,
s tores them m memory fp r later retrieval and even
counts transmissions by freque i'lcy. lt 'salso a 'nne quartz
crystal cloc k. The capabilities of the &amp;areal 250almost
MIDDLEPORT - George defy imaginafion. lf you want fhe ultimate scanner availArnott , Middleport , local able today , this is it.
railroad buff, was speaker
Friday evening when the
Middleport - Pomeroy Rotary
Club met at Heath United
Methodist Church.
Arnott spoke on the Norfolk
.and Western Railroad Society and commentect t-hat a
majorit y
ot
railroads
operating today are making a
small profit rather than
losing money. He stressed the
need for railroad service in GEORGES CREEK RD.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO ·
Meigs C&lt;lunty for the future .

Enrollment
is almost
tripled
GALLIPOLIS - The Ohio
Va lley Chri stia n Schoo!
opened its doors Aug. 29 for
its second yea r .
In this short time, the
enrollment has climbed from
39 to 115. This growth can be
attributed to a highly-geared
academic curriculum with a
Bible-centered emphasis.
Six new staff members
have been added (his year to
keep pa ce with the increased
enrollment.
The entire staff of certified
teachers, teacher aides and
offi ce help are enthusiastic
about the coming year. With
the additlon of an all school
music program under the
direction of Mrs. Barbara
Stewa rt, and a competitive
sports program under the •
direction of Mike Simmons, it
promtses to be another great
year at Ohio Valley Christian
School.

also a part-time sports writer
at a local paper (The
Columbus Dispatch) who has
an English degree .
" Wh en the class first
started , students were
reading box scores," he said.
The
class
doesn' t
necessarily draw tile student
who is looking lor an easy
class. "He says it also attracts
a high-&lt;:aliber student.
" ! had a Nationa·l Merit

SMOKED

huff main

George and James Broyles
were accepted, as well as the
resignation of Water Plant
Superintendent Max Barnes.
Larr y Burris will replace
Ba rnes as Water Superin·
tendent.
Jim Bush was appointed to
serve a s wa ter board

"It's a good course for
someone going into sports
journalisin," PeUior added,
noting a student can use
sports as a vehide to write.
The main text is a weekly
sports magazine (Sports
fiiustrated). Pelllor has the
students read it and write
swrunaries of tile articles.
This is the fifth year this
course has been taught and
Pellior, a former coach, is

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

LARGE SUNFLOWER - ·
In the yard of Mary Irene
Arnold, Rto 4, Pomeroy, is a
huge suollower. The Dower Is
II feet and ' 2 Inches tall and
is 19 Inches wide. In the
background are sunflowers
four feet In height. All the
Dowers were planted at the
same Ume.

Railroad

is apparently .over

student toward a career or to
broaden an educational
experience.
" We've got to offer more or
the students aren't going to
take it," he said. uTile course
is basic reading and writing,
but only a different vehicle."
Teachers are encow-aged
to teach classes in a reality
situation, and show how
students can relate to the
class vocationally.

you identify the locaUon , what type of boat, and or the gentieman? Last
week's photo showed the flood waters of tbe Ohio surrounding tile
Episcopal Churcb and Parish House. Some reports indicate this was the
location of one ol tbe first libraries in tile town of Pomeroy.

in min or wreck
GALI.IPOLIS - City police
here Friday investigated a
two-auto accident at 6:47
a.m., on Syc.&lt;:~ more St., 42 feet
west of Fi rst Ave.
Officers report an auto
driven by Richard A.
Phillips, 24, Chesapeake, was
stopped in traffic.
A vehicle ope rat ed by
Kathy
J . Roese , 20,
Ga llipolis, failed to stop, and
struck the Phillips auto in the
rear.
The Roese vehicle incurred
moderate d.&lt;:~mage .
There
was slight damage to the
Phillips auto .
Hoes~ was cited on charges
of assured clea r dista nce.
In furth er action, city
police issued two citations
Friday evening.
Gr egor y A. Reee, 21,
Ga llipolis, waS cit ed on
cha rges of driving under

within
the
English
Department at Westland
High School.
Sports lit is one of
the electives within the
departrneni students can take
after they complete their
required three En~lish
courses. Or it can be taken in
conjunl1ion witll tlleir lhird

COLUMBUS (UPI ) When athletes play out
op,tions ell tlleir contracts,
Dave Pelllor hands out
money alid asks his students
to buy the players.
He also has the class watch
a sporting event and write a

Driver~harged

Gallipolis, was cited on

NOW AVAILABLE THROUGH
THE

By SANDRA L. LATIMER

·assisted by a backup team
from the Cottageville Fire
Department.
An estimate of the damage
was not available; however,
Fields said he believed the
family was able to save very
little.

suspension .
Ga ile Drummond ,

to coast. Fas1. Conve nie nt.
We think yo11' ll find a
d ifference with All s l (t k .
So compare compan i~s. Fi nrf o ut
why the owners of c,&gt;ver nine
million cars are now in ,.good
ha nd~." Ca ll or come in .

Students asked to purchase players

Scholar in the class one
year." he said.
Girls enroll in. the class as
well as boys.
"The boys often have a
'know-it-all attitude.' but the
girls are in U\ere to learn ,"·be
said. " Maybe their boyfriend
plays a particular sport or
tlleir Dad enjoys a sport and
they want to learn about it."
He also notes !hat girls are
becoming statisticians lor the
athletic teams.
Pellior tries to put realism
into the class.
. He ·Uses his newspaper
background · to help students
write lei:lds on sports stories.

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�Il-l- The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 10. 1978

.

By JAMES SANDS
GALLIPOLIS - A farmer
and a city man were talking

one day in a boat about the
world of knowledge. The city
man asked the farmer what
he thought of frenologism.

-

.

UlCiodies, une Hner joke:;,

MAURICE LOTI and Paul Manuel, left to right, pose
by the Meigs County Museum sign on Butternut Ave . in
Pomeroy where they have been working as volunteers
with the Meigs Retired Senior Volunl&gt;!er Program for the
..st two swruners:

Wells, W~gett
named delegates
POMEROY
Mrs .
Dorothy Wells, Long Bottom,
and E. A. Wingett, Racine,
were named ~elegates to the
Ohio Democratic Convention
in Columbus at the Meigs
County
Dem oc ratic
Executive Committee
meeting Thurdsay ni!(hl at
the Meigs Inn.
Named as alternates to the
state convention were Mrs.
Barbara Hackett of Pomeroy
and Charles Mullen of
Middleport.
During the meeting, open to
all Democrats, plans were
made for a breakfast to be
held in honor of Rep. Ron
James at 8:30 a. m. on
Saturday , Sept . 2:!, at the
Meigs Inn . Democratic
committeemen have tickets
for the event.
·
Giles Smith, a Democratic
candidate for a seat on the
Meigs County Commission,
spoke and distributed
literature. Mullen was named

''

also

distributed

voting

re gistration material s t o

central committeemen who
may now' register any voter
in their precinct regardless of
political affiliation.
· In the absence of the
president, Chester Wells ,
Henry
Hunter ,
vice
president, was in charge of
the meeting.

$40,000
damages
recorded

visitors to Gallipolis in the
years 1880 to 1905 when
minstrelsy was at its peak .
the farmer.
"Why then," remarked the Daniel Emmett, the author of
city man, "one quarter of "Dixie" and " Old Dan
your life ts gone. What do you Tucker" in his later years
know, Mr. Farmer, about traveled with AI Field's
Minstrel show to Gallipolis.
granunar?"
The black songwrller
"Very little," he responJames
Bland traveled with
ded .
the
Black
Diamond Minstrel
"Then two quarters of your
show
that
even played such
life is gone," said the city
rna~ . ~&gt; What do you know small towns as Vinton in 1876.
about the dictionary then ?" Some of Bland's son~s were
"Very little," said the. "Carry Me Back to Old
Virginny ," "In the Morning
fanner again .
About that time as the city by the Bright l.ight" and "Oh
man was telling the farmer Dem Golden Slippers."
Probably the most famous
that three quarters of his life
was gone, the boat hit a' rock minst rei entertainer int he
1879' s and. 1880's, Billy
and started to sink.
1black.) came to
Kersands
The farmer asked the city
Gallipolis
with Callender's
man what he knew about
Georgia
Minstrels.
Kersands ,
swimming.
an
excellent
comedian,
was
Tlie man remarked,
a
!so
the
originator
of
the
"Nothing"'
"soft
shoe"
(dance
)
and
the
To which the farner said,
·
Buck
and
Wing.
..
.
"Well it done look like your
Other
famous
black
enlife is four quarters gone."
This story is over 120 years tertainers who frequented
old and was originated by Gallipolis before the turn of
Brudder Bones and the the century were W. C. Handy
minstrel show. One of the . (the father of the blues),
great attractions for people to Gussie Davis Ia composer),
the minstrel show was. that Ern est Hogan (ragtime
the show honored the com- singer and composer ) and
mon man and made fun of the Bert Williams who lat er
starred with the Ziegfield
sophisticated.
Very early minstrelsy saw Follies.
The minstrel show has left
· white comics dress up as
its
impact on American
black folks and exaggerate
culture
in other ways, too.
the characteristics of
Aunt
Jemima
originated with
blackness. While ihe blacking
the
minstrel
show until
up of the minstrels face
by
a
flour comborrowed
continued throughout minpany.
strelsy's later history, it was
In addition many sayings
not always to make fun of (he
black man . . At different like "Where there's a will ;
times, Germans, Irish and there's a way" originated
Japanese were ridiculed by with the minstrel show. Other
minstrel sl)ows . And , in latter minstrel sa,yi ngs indelibly
years, the minstrel show was marked on our mind are,
the showcase for biack talent "Slow and Steady wins the
in the fields of comedy , race'', " Never hit a man
singi ng,
dancing
and when he's down ," and "Pull
hard against the stream. "
songwriting.
Minstrel shows made fun of
Whereas in the early days,
life,
particularly of the urminstrelsy was mostly social
banization
and
incommentary in a comedic
dustrialil.lllion
of
the
late
19th
form, later minstrelsy
combined into one show century; but it offered no
something for the whole solutions to these problems.
family - "tear jerking" The wisdom of the minstrel
ballads, ' 'toe tapping" show was largely the wisdom
typified b)' Brudder Bones

GALLIPOLIS Fire
· damage estimated at $40,000
to a 1976 Caterpillar and end
loader was reported to the
Gallia County Sheriff's
Department Friday.
Lin Young, of the CKL Coal
to serve as committeeman
Company , told the departfrom the First Ward in ment at approximately 7 p.m.
RIO GRANDE - You can
Middleport to fill a vacancy . the end loader, which was learn the tricks and
The group made plans for being operated by Don techniques for good color
ope ning Democratic Harrison, caught fire at the photograph y
from
a
Headquarters on Sept. 21 with company's Bevin's Pit on professional photographer.
Leo·Hill, through the office of
the place to he announced Mercerville Rd.
.
later. By-laws were adopted.
A broken oi l line is continuing education at Rio
Mrs. Frances Thomas, suspected as the cause of the Grande College and Comdeputy director of the Meigs blaze.
munity College, will offer a
County Board of Elections,
In further action, Herbert ba sic course in color
demonstrated a votomatic Smith, of the Gallia County photography .
machine which will he used Highway Garage, reported to
The course, which meets on
for voting in Meigs County at the Sheriff's department Monday ni ghts, September 10
U,. November election . She Friday, the Thursday theft of thr ou~h November 13, will
a battery from the County's
Highway Roller.
According to the report, the
TROPICAL STORM
roller was parked along
MIAMI (UP!) - The
Bladen - Mercerville Rd. at
National Hurricane Center
•
•
the time of the theft.
downgraded Fl ossie to a_
tropical depression Friday
but said an area of disturbed
weather in the western Gulf
for the program is $1 ,455 .
Co urse content for th e was showing signs of inprogram includes ; Drafting, tensification ,
RIO GRANDE - Clarence Welding , · Machine Trades,
F'lossie was dropped from
Thompson, superintendent at Electrical Maintenance, Air tropical storm classification
Buckeye Hills Career Center, Conditioning - Refrigeration at 6 p.m. (EDT) when it was
. recently announced that I wo and Millwright · Mechanical. located 600 miles northeast of
vacancies exist for the new
Adult Edu cation Super- Pu erto Rico and moving out
adult education full lime ·visor, Scott Coddington, to sea. Highest sustained
Industria l Maintenance stated that the program is winds were 35 miles an hour,
program . The 1,440 hour veterans approved for those mainly in squalls east of the
program began Sept. 5, and individuals who qualify for center .
will conclude on Au g. 24, 1979. G. l. ben e fits. Interested
Flossie had become the
Students will attend classes individuals should call th e Atlantic hurrica ne season's
Monday through Friday from adult education office at 245- first tropical storm in the
· 3:30p.m. untillO p.m. Tuition 5334 .
mid-Atlanti c.

when nne dax_ ,he was asked

hi s opinion or religion.
'·Heli gion is a matter of
like entertainment like
trans ce ndentali s m and
midgets.
Many of the great names of trans cend ent a li s m is ·dat
minstrelsy were frequent 'spiritual co gi10sccnce ob

" Never heard of it," said

'

'

skits, and even some circus-

psychological irrcfragibility,
cnnnecle(f with t"Onscientent
ademption ob incolumbient

spirituality and etherialized
connection, " and on a nd on he
would go somewhat in the
vein of Professor· Irwin

Corey.
While the minstrel show did

not sol.ve society's problems,
it · did help people keep a
hum orous and optimistic
outlook on life and ·even
death. One of Brudder Bones
sketches had one of the actors
send Brudder Bones out for
the doctor because the man
felt .ill: Brudder came back
with a doctor, lawyer, WI~
dertaker and gravedigger.
When asked why he brought
these f0 ur, he tnld that he
wanted to save himself a few
trips .

r------------------------Leners of ·opinion are welcomed. They should he leu
than 300 words long I or subject to reduction by Ute editor l
and must be signed with the signee's address. Names may
be withheld ·upon publication. However, oo request,
names will be d.isciosed. Leners should be tn xood taste,
addressing issue's, not personalities.

Special thanks extended
Those of us involved with the operation of the first aniUial
Little League Tournament held in Syracuse this past swruner
would like to take this opportunity to express our deep
appreciation for the support and interest shown in this event.
Several local businesses must be applauded for their
financial contributions, as ·well as the fans in attendance who
gave so g~nerously in support of this event.
A special thanks goes to our umpires, who did an excellent
job of overseeing the play of the games. Also, we thank all
those wbo helped with field preparation or did any work vital to
making the tournament a success.
Last, but not least, we applaud those players, coaches and
fans of all the teams that participated and provided this
tournament with excellent baseball games and the excitement
that surrounds any event when talented young athletes meet to
compete for a championship.
Thanks to all of you again, and we'll be looking forward til
seeing all the area litUe league teams back next swnmer to
compete for the championship of the Syracuse Little League
Tournament.
The Management
John Arnott and Bill Hubbard

By TOM SAUNDERS
GAI.LIPOLIS- The Board
of Trade held a meeting Feb.
9, ISM, at which .Louis Baer,
P. A. Sams and Silas Brosius
were appointed a CQmmittee
to act, in conjunction with J.
M. Alexander, Mayor of .the
city, to raise funds for the
relief of 'the flood sufferers,
and-• to take such other
necessary steps as the
emergency requires. To this
committee W. A. Fuller and
William ~ing, members of
the city council, 'were added
by the Board of Trade.
A J . Green was elected
chainnan and , Louis Baer as
secretary and treasurer. The
committee's first act was to
charier the steamer New
Era, to carry supplies to
needy points.
The . following steamers
were chartered by the relief
committee at various times :
Nora Belle, Claribell, New
Era, B. T. Enos, Champion,
Chesapeake, and Lizzie
Johnston.
These steamers were under
the personal charge of the
folljowlng gentlemen : C. F.
Henking, S. H. Olmsted, W.
H. Harvey, J.F. Morgan, S.
A. Dunbar, D. H. Baldridge,
A. J. Green, E. S. Aleshire,
M. Mollohan, A. W: Kerns, J.
J. Maxon , W. H. Andrews, J.
T. Hampton, J . W. Gardner
and J. D. Olmsted.
The committees were in
daily receipt of many
telegrams and letters from
abroad, advising donations of
money , food and clothing .for
the use of the flood sufferers.
For three weeks supplies
were shipped over the
Columbus, Hocking Valley
and
Toledo
Railway,
sometimes as many as. seven .
carloads on a single day.
These supplies w~re

received into warehouses,
where they were assorted and
then shipped on steamers
chartered by the committee,
to towns up and down the
river, from Mar'ietta to
Portsmouth, a distance of one
hundred and eighty miles.
Relief supplies became so
large and poured in so rapidly
that four large warehouses
were rented to store them.
Depot No. I was used for all
classes of supplies, No. 2 for
meat, flour and other
provisions , Nos. 3 and 4 were

used for clothing and bedding.
Sixty-live car loads of
supplies were received here:
The committee distributed
over six thousand packages.
The orders filled averaged
a week 's supply for six
persons, and generally
consisted of a twenty-five
pound s;JCk of flour, eight
pounds meat, two pounds
coffee, -two pounds sugar, two
pounds rice, two pounds
hominy, dried and canned
fruits, tea, baking powder,
soap, candles, matches,
clothing and bedding.
The committee also gave
out 717 bushels of corn and
5,340. bushels of coal.
Any goods that were
brought in by rail arrived at
Mllls Station (Jet . Rt. 35 &amp;
160). Here they were loaded
onto the New Era and
brought into Gallipolis.
Can you ima gine a steamer

sitting under the traffic light
on Rt. 35. Just think of how
much ground was under

water and the 1937 flood was
even higher .
I have also been told a river
steamer came all the way to
Kerr to pick up the Columbus
mail. - T. S. Rt. l, Box 335,
Bidwell. Ohio, 388-8446.

f

UP TO

doves.

·-· Nuptial
music
was
.,preaented by Dr. Eugene
Wickstrom, organist, and Dr.
Ira Zook, vocalist. Organ
.. selections preceding the
ceremony included Bach's
11
Jesu, Joy of Man's

Deslring," "Tara Theme" ·
from "Gone With the Wind,"
theme from "Love Story" an&lt;
theme from "Love Story"
and theme from "Romeo" and Juliet." Dr.
... Zook aang "Evergreen·:
.and
"My Sweet La·
dy" belort! the ceremony
and "Wed010g Song" during
the ceremony . Purcell's
·~Trumpet Vo!WIIar)"' was
played lor the processional
~d Mendelssohn's "Wedding
March" for the recessional.
Given In marriage by her
parents, the bride was
escorted to the altar by her
father. She was attired in a
formal gown of white silk
organza and silk venise lace.
The empire bodice of uie
gown, accented with lace ,
motifs, was fa.thioned with a
lace cameo collar and sheer
· Yoke. The cap sleeves were of
lace and the A-line skirt fell to
the floor and swept into a
chapel lenltlt .train with a
!Ace border. ..Her headdress
was a cbapellength mantilla
qf silk illualon edged with lace
.and held in place by a

camelot cap. The bride
carried a cascade bouquet of
white sweetheart roses ,
miniature blue carnations

and

other

necessary

ingredients
for
good
photograph y. Cost of the
course is $35 .
Cfass 'will meet from 7-10
p.m. at Southern High School.
To register for the color
photography workshop, interested persons should attend the first class session
prepared to pay for the

empire

waist,

narrow

shoulder strap5 and A-line
skirt. Miss Whitehead's gown
was baby blue; Mrs. Frydman wore lavender, l'yliss
HQgus, Miss Marko and Miss
Hewitt wore peach, mint
green and yellow respectively. They carried colonial
bouquets of blue, peach,
lavender, green and yellow
carnations, baby's breal~
and
matching
ribbon
streamers tied in lovers '
knots. Each wore a matching
single carnation with baby's
breath in her hair and a white
gold cross necklace, ·a gift of
the bride.
Miss Amy · Berkhimer,
daughter of Mrs . Jenny
Berkhimer, Reedsville,
carried two long-stemmed
white roses which the bride
presented to her mother and
mother-in-law during the
ceremony. Miss Berkhimer
was attired in a pink
polyester gown with a flocked
floral overlay of nylon which
featured an empire waist,
cap sleeves and a ruffle at the
neck . She wore a halo head·
piece of pink carnations and
baby's breath.
Miss · Lisa
Hoffman ,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Terry Hoffman of Morehead,
Ky. was the flower girl and
wore a baby blue gown
identical to Miss Berkhimer's
in design. She wore a halo
headpiece of blue carnations
and baby's breath anct
carried a white straw basket ,
of pink rose petals. The at- ·
tendants' gowns were
designed and made ~y Mrs.
Herbert Matheny, Coolville.
The groom's brother, Wah
Hensch, was the best man

On your choice of quality Devoe
Oil Base or Latex House Paint

course.

-

CONSTITUTION WEEK
By Proclamation of th e
President of the United
States, and by Act of
Congress, this is Constitution
Week. The Daughters of the
American Revolution remind

all citizens that the freedoms·
of religion, press and speech
and the rights of petition and
assembly are guaranteed to
us by the Constitution. We
must be vigilant to protect
our rights and freedoms ; for
once lost to us, they can never
be regained . Read your
Constitution.
The SorLS of Uberty flag ,
first flown at Cambridge,
Mas.s ., in 1175, was a green
pine tree on a plain red field.

'

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Club P1n1lln1 IJ Chlmplon.
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carolina Lumber &amp; Supply Company
312 Sixth Street

. 675·1160

Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Hill

"

,sexton-Hill wed
.!n "june 3 ceremony
"

• Mila Rlsa LyM Sexton, Dr. Samuel Notter, D.V.M.

· 'Uallllhter of Mr. and Mrs.
· ·Devid G. · Ser;too, Route I,
Jlldwell, beclme the bride of
'Jlooald HUI, 1011 of Mr. and
' 'lira, Hamer HID, allo of
'Bidwell, In a double-ring

WHITE

"

'!Evergreen," "The Wedding

Mr.' .and Mrs. Edward Hensch II
and ushers were Chuck
Iammerino, Jim Sasak, Ron

Marko and Rick Belin, all of
Mayfield. Their formal attire
was light gray
coats and dark gray
trousers
with
shirts
and carnation boutonnieres
in
correspon·
ding colors of the bride's
attendants whom they
escorted. The groom wore a
light gray tuxedo with dark
gray lapels . The groom's
nephew; Benji DeJohn, attired in a gray t~xedo, was
the ring-bearer. They hoth
wore
white
carnation
boutonnieres.
The bride's mother wore a

blue polyester and organza
gown and wore a corsage Of

pink sweetheart roses. The
groom's mother was in a

beige gown of polyester and
organza with a peach floral
design . She carried peach
sweetheart roses on her

purse.
Wedding guests were
registered by Miss Debbie
Wilson of Athens and
Pomeroy. A blue linen cloth
and an arrangement of fern,
baby's breath and a single
white rose were used on the
registry table.
A reception followed the
ceremony at the Ohio
University Inn . The buffet
table was centered with a
five-branched silver candelabrum decorated with
blue and white ca rnations
and springerail. The bride's
table held the wedding cake
which consisted of heartshaped cakes at the base
centered by a blue water
fountain . Roman co lumns
held the second and third
cake tiers which were connected .bY white spiral
stairsteps holding miniature
replicas of members of the
wedding party. Blue and
while carnations, · baby's
breath and sprlngeraii
decorated the cake which was
made by Mrs. Paul Roush,
Tuppers Plains, who served
'as hostess, assisted by Mrs.
James Chadwell, Reedsville.
Mary Ruth and Joy Sauer,
cousins of the bride, Robin
Humphrey, Parkersburg,
and Rosemary Young,
MinersviUe, were the aides.
Following a honeymoon at
Myrtle Beach, S. C., the
couple are residing at Portage Towers, No. lll7, 2220

Song, 1' "You Make Me Feel
Bra nd New ." Before the
couple took the holy
sacrament ' of

High St., Cuyahoga Falls,
Ohio.
The new Mrs. Hensch is a
graduate of Eastern High
School and a June graduate of
Ohio University. with a
bachelor's
degree
in
Elementary Education .
Hensch is a 1977 graduate of
Ohio University with a major

in accounting . He is
associated
with
Con-

tington , served as matron of

honor . Bridesmaids included
Mrs . Lowell Bird, Huntington ; the groom's sister,

Mrs. Todd Hutton. Durham,
North Carolina, ·and the
bride's sister, Miss Terri
Adkins , Scottown, Ohio .
. Junior bridesmaid was the

bride's cousin, Miss Carol
Lynn Brown, Huntington. The
bridesmaids' floor-length
sleeveless gowns were pastel
blue. The satin gowns
featured a princess style
design and rounded necklines. They were accented

with sheer floral capes
finished with a rounded neckline. The capes were square
cut in the front and fell into a
flowing arm length level in
the back. The junior bridesmaid wore a gown identical to

the other attendants. Her
cape featured a square cut
design . The attendants
carried a single white car-

commufiion,

nation with greenery and

Miss Leftwitch sang "The

ribbons.
Flower girls were Miss
Adrienne Hutton, Durham,

LJrd's Prayer."

The church was decorated
with two; nine branch candelabras flanking the altar.
On the altar was placed two
gold vases of white mums
along with I wo candles and
the traditional cross. During
the ceremony, the couple lit
the symbolic wedding candle.
Given In · marriage by her

temporary Builders, Inc .,

parents, the

Massillon.
Out-of-county guests included Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Hensch, Lea and Leslie of
Mayfield Village ; Mr. and
Mrs. John Wood and Justin of
·Temple, Texas; Mr. and Mrs.
Tim DeJohn , Timmy, Tony,
Benji, and Michael of South
Euclld; Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Palmisano and Nicki of
Highland Heights, Cmdr.
(Ret. l and Mrs. Hi! Hayden,
Trish and Jan of Rockville,
Maryland; Mr. and Mrs. E . J .
Henderson of Wheeling, W.
Va.: Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Hoffman of Morehead, Ky .;
Dr. Isaac Frydman of
Buffalo Grove, Ill.; Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Meredith
of
Beverly; . Charles
Meredith of Circleville; Mr.
and Mrs. Randy Horst of
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Pete
Zuccarelli of Cleveland; Mrs.
Carol Volz and ·Scott of
Springfield; Mrs. Kathryn
Dietz and Mrs. Ronald
Laughery of Belpre; Mrs.
Ethel Rawlings, Mrs. JoAnn
Richards and Amy, Mrs.
Carolyn Gorrell of Parkersburg, W.Va .; Chip Hayes of
Toledo; John Belch of
Ashtabula ; Mark Mace, Mrs.
Lillian Henderson , Diedre
Henry, Jane Smiih and
Marlon Wood, Athens; Karla
Kahier and David Johnson of ·
Gahanna; Melanie Grinnell,
Allen Friszman, Barbara and
Mike Rossi of Mayfield; John
Oliverio of Cleveland; John
Kovel of Youngstown; Michel
Gigliotti ol Cincinnati; Bob
Gyevat, David Carpenter and
Stephen Haynasch of Solon;
Nancy Truitt and · Mark
F!ockinjier of Mansfield and
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert ·
Matheny of Coolville.
The groom 's parents hosted I
the rehearsal dinner at the
Ohio University Inn on
Saturday evening. Guests
were members of the wedding RllrtY and relatives of
the bride and groom.

escorted by her lather who
was attired in full dress blues
military uniform. The bride
wore a forma l gown of
candlelight ivory satin accented with an empire waist
line. It featured a rounded
neckline covered with old
English alencon lace and
sheer bishop sleeves. The
bride wore a fingertip veil
attached to a Juliet's cap. A
cat hedra l length train of
matching old English lace
was attached to the dress.
The bride wore pearl drop
earrings and a string of
pearls. She carried a colonial
houquet of light blue car-

brid e

was

North ~carolina, the groom's
niece and the bride 's cousin,

Miss Melinda Spears,
Proctorville, Ohio. They wore
floor-length party dresses of
dotted white organdy. The
dresses

featured

lace

trimmed cap sleeves and a
ruffled bottom and were
accented with pastel blue
sashes to match the attendants' gowns . . They each
carried a single carnation

with greenery and ribbons .
For her daughter's wedding Mrs. Adkins selected a
floor-length gown of light blue
quiana. The gown fe•tured
long sleeves, a rounded neckline with a bow tie a nd was
topped with a silver mesh

Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Braley
bride 's cousins, Mrs. James
Master Pine, Mrs. Dale Clark, Mrs.
Charles Allen Brown, Hun- Cha rles A. Brown , Mrs. John .

tington . Ringbearer was the
bride's

cou s in ,

tington. The groom and his Martin McChes ney, Mrs.

attendants. wore charcoal Robert Kachelreis and Mrs.
gray tuxedos accented with James Greeson . Miss Tin a

black satin trim, matching Pine and Miss Lisa Clark ,
vests and black satin how co usins of the bride, pa ssed
out rice bags.
ties.
Pre·wedding pa rti es for the
Following the ceremony, a

reception was held in the bride and groom inc! uded a
church soci al room . Guests shower given by Mrs. Charles
were r eg istered by Mrs. A. Brown and Mrs. Lowell
Larry Ewing, Gallipolis. The Bird , a cookout hosted by Mr.

bride's tables were decorated and Mrs. John Ma rtin Mcwith a blue tablecloth with a C.l lcs ney , a shower hosted by
white lace ove rlay. The main · Mrs. Joseph McClung and
table was decorated with two Mrs. John Martin McChesney
candelabras with blue can- and a bachelorette party
dles and white mums. It hosted by Dr. and Mrs. Jack
featured a sterling silver Hart . The rehearsal dinner
coffee and punch service and

silver trays of mints and nuts.
sleeveless vest. She wore a A smaller round table held
corsage or white carnations the wedding cake. Trimmed
accented with greenery and - with blue flowers, the three
blue bows. Mrs. Braley wore tier ca ke was graced with a
a gown of soft pink quiana blue carnation on top . Four
which fea tur ed a cowl rounded cakes trimmed in
neckline, sheer long sleeves blue were placed around the
and a belted waistline. Her center cake. Greenery ac·
nations, mums and baby's white carnation corsage was cented lh,e table.
Assisting at t he reception
breath. The bouquet was accented with pink ribbons.
were
the bride's aunts, Mrs.
accented by ivory satin
William Braley served as
0.
A.
Judd, Mrs. Harry
streamers tied in a lover's best man for his son. Ushers
Spears
and Mr s. Baxter
knot with gold rings.
were Gary Klavuhn, Scott
Spears;
the groom's aunt,
The bride's cousin, Mrs. Thompson, William Keck and
Charles C. Brown , Hun - Michael Moore, all of Hun- Mrs. John Lawhorn; the

was hosted by the groom's

parents
at
Young 's
Restaurant in Huntington.
Mr. and Mrs. Braley also
hosted a party for the wedding party at their home:•
For a wedding trip tu
Montreal. Quebec , Nova
Scotia and New Brunswick,
Canada the bride ~elected a
m elon colored and tan dress
with matchin g accessories.
The couple is now making

their home at Wind Haven ·
Farm, 'one Braley Road,
Barboursville, West Virginia .

Miller-MacNab vows spoken
The " Gallia Country" peach . They wore headpieces
setting was the site of Miss of statice and carried
Anne Miller's wedding to Mr. nosegays of stephanotis with
Tom MacNab, son of Mr. and accents of ivy and ming fern .
Mrs. Robert E. MacNab of
Miss Sarah Kapteina of
Chagrin Falls, Ohio on Niagara Falls, N. Y., serving
September 9, at 4:30 p.m. · as flower girl was dressed in
Nupual music preceding an ivory gown trimmed with
the ce1\.mony was presented lace at the shoulder straps,
by Miss Mary Beth MacNab, neckline and the full skirt's
cousin of the groom of ruffle . She carried a basket of
Hudson, Ohio. Among her rose petals. Master Tony
vocal and guitar presen- Canaday, attired as the
Tum,

groomsmen, was ringbearer .

Turn, There is Love, Try to
Remember, The Wedding
Song, Annie' s Song and The
Lord's Prayer.
The bride, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Loren F. Miller, 620

tations were Tum,

The groom chose his father as
best man and the other

Fourth Avenue, was escorted

groomsmen

were

his

brothers, Tracy and Jim
MacNab of Chestnut Hill,
Mass., and Mantua, Ohio
respectively ; David Miller,
Chagrin Falls, and the bride's
brother, Jim Miller .
The mother of the bride
wore a plum and green airbrushed print gown. She wore
a plum caUJeya orchid . The

by her father to the improvised altar in front of the
miniature bandstand, which
was decorated with swags of
boxwood, garlands and silk,
ivory roses. Their prayer
benches were nanked with bridgroom 's mother wore a
tall, pedestalled ferns . The flower garden print gown
Rev. Albert H. MacKenzie {ashioned of lawn and her
officiated at the ceremony wrsage was an off-white
when the co uple exchanged cattleya orchid.
vows of their own comFollowing th'e ceremony, a
Lucy Pearson of Bryan, at the home of Hoyd E. position. She wore an ivory reception was held at the
and Boyd Pearson of Bidwell, Blazer of Blaz~r Road.
gown of imported cotton home of the bride's parents.
are
announcing
the
Maid of honor will he embroidery which featured Hostess and guest registrar
engagement and forthcomilic Tan1my Pearson and flower deep embroidered ruffles in was Mrs. Tracy MacNab. The
marriage of their daughter, girl will be Beffie Jo Me- the scooped neckline, hem reception hall, living and
Pauline Pearson, to Walter Daniel. Best man is Almer and short train with a hand· dining rooms were decorated
E. Blazer, son of Mr. and Spaulding; ringbearer wiD be kerchief point overlay. Her with magnolia boughs and
Mrs. · Floyd Blazer. The C. J . Swick.
bouquet was a cascade of white candles in silver and
wedding will he an event of
An open church wedding Ivory roses and stephanotis, crystal holders and the stairSeptember 9 at 5 p.m. at the will be observed with Rev. centered with cymbidium way was draped with
Addlaon-Bulaville Town- Jack Holley officiating.
orchids and accented with garlands of boxwood and
house. Following the wedAfter the wedding, the Ivy. For her headdress, she white wicker wedding bells.
ding, · a lhower and old· couple plans to reside In wore a wreath "halo" of
A champagne buffet was
.falhloned belling will be held Crown City.
baby's breath, stephanotis served and the banquet table
and ivory sweetheart roses . was set with a white cut
cloth,
sliver
She wore diamond earrings, a madeira
gift of the groom.
caledlabra and a centerpiece
Mrs. Scott Turner served of flowers carrying through
of the two days, and enjoy variations of the 18th and 19th as "the ·n .atron of honor the theme of the bridal
lunch M Riverby Is $7.50. centuries, with Thursday and she carried a smaller Dowers in a silver and crystal
Those who can only attend a afternoon closing the two day style cascade bouquet of compote.
half day 11111y regllter for a workshop, with a program on ivory and talisman roses
A floor-length white
mornlna or an afternoon care and restoration of an· accented with ivy. Anne's organdy cloth over linen,
aeaslon, without lunch lor t4, Uques.
sisters, Mrs. Jeff Canaday covered the separate table
Mrs. Helssenbuttel who will and Miss Micaela Miller, her lor the five-tiered wedding
or with lunch, at ~.
The openJna lelalon on conduct this eighth Annual sister-In-law, Mrs. Jim cake, and a white cut
Wednesday morning, s,p. Seminar, as she has each Miller, and the groom's madeira over the serving
!ember rl, at t o'clock will be year, is a n~tive of Gallia sister-in-law, Mrs. Jim table for the crystal punch
on Co-1111, followed after County and has been an MacNab attended her. They service.
In wore aatin ltnlt blouson gowns
dealer
lunch by an afternoon . antique
For her going-away
program on Qullla. Thunday Walhlngton , D. C. for the past featuring scooped neckline of costume the new Mrs.
' morning
will
feature 17 years. She Ia nationally . deep, embroidered ' ruffled MacNab wore a two-piece
American Antique Furniture, recognized u a lecturer, collars spilt at the sleeves silk border print ensemble in
hlghlllhling the charac· authority on antiques, and 18 and with full pleated skirts. tan and white to whir~ ,nc
The bonor allendant 'a gown pinned the cymbidi""' orttriltlci of the wooc1a, the I colllllllllll for I number of
antique
jourr.-la.
was
coral and the othen were chids from her bridal
varied llyles and tlje regional

Pauline Pearson
w~ds on Sept. 9

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house paint
Offers good color retention
Use on wood siding and trim for year
round weather protection

Of
''QUAUTY"

HUNTINGTON, W. Va. The Pea Ridge United
Methodist Church was the
setting for the August II
wedding of Catherine · Cora
Benet and John Wilson
Braley . Catherine is the
daughter of Warrant Officer 2
1USMC) and Mrs. William D.
Adkins, 3507 Chosin Circle,
Jacksonville, North Carolina.
Wilson is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. William H. Braley, 5302
Pea Ridge Road, Huntington,
West Virginia .
.
The double ring; candlelit
ceremony was performed by
the Rev . 0. A. Judd, uncle of
the bride, ·and the Rev. John
Gra ndstaff. Wedding music
was provided by Judy Forbush, organist. SoloiSI was
Ellen Left witch whose
se l ections
included

and baby's breath. She wore
a pearl necklace, pearl earrings , and a cameo ring
which belonged to her late
maternal grandmother, Ruth
Henderson Pickens.
Honor attendants wert! the
sister,
Juli
bride's
Whitehead, Reedsville, and
Jean Frydman, Buffalo
G~ove, Ill. Bridesmaids were
Nancy Hugus, Findlay,
Donna Marko, Cleveland, and
Patti Hewitt of CinCinnati.
Th~ir Identically styles
gowns were of polyester satin
with a Dora! Docked overlay
of nylon fashioned with an

Photography workshop set

Vacancies
exrst zn
program

•FLEXSrEEL
•ADMIRAL

REEDSVILLE-Miss Jane
Danell Whitehead, daughter
'of Mr. . and Mrs. Ernest
Whitehead, Reedsville, and
Edward CuUen Hensch II, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Edward C.
~Hensch of Mayfield Village,
.u:ctumced wedding vows in
...the Helen Mauck qalbreath
Memorial Chapel on the Ohio
• ~nl~ei'lllty Campus, Athens
· lilllliUiy, July 30 at 2:30 in the ·
.
·
illternoon.
..:.The formal
wedding
ceremony was performed by
Ronald Laughery, minister of •
the Belpre Church of Christ,
befor.e the chapel altar
ctntered by a silver cross and
t,wo lighted silver candles. A
· Sliver vase on each side of the
: candles held an arrangement
cil white cushion mums and
blue carnations. Flanking the
altar were white standards
·-holding tall arrangements of
• white glads, ml11DS and blue
...carnations. Pew markers
.. w,ere of greenery, white .and
· blue carnations centered with
• .white satin bows ·and white

'4• ••

deal with lighting, balance

Catherine Cora Benet
weds in candle-light
double-ring ceremony

.Whitehead-Hensch
..exchange vows

Minstrel shows hit peak
•
zn area between 1880-1905

Point Pluunt.

Store Hours: 8 a.m. 5 p.m. ·~onday.friday, Saturday 8 1.m. 12 noon

Annual antique seminar to open

GALLIPOUS- The eighth
annual Antique Seminar
...~ ceremony held June ..,.,red by the French Art
-... I p.m., at the Vinton Colony wlll he on Wednelday
. Baptl• Cllurch.
.
Inc! Thursday, September 27
"''" ...
..t-~-~
to
.....
.
brick . . .
-·-• ...,.
Inc! 21 at IUverby. Reaer. ' VIckie Ba&amp;ter, Galllpolla. vlitlona for both daya or any
""Perfonnlnl the ceremony , ..rt of either day lhould be
:~.wa1 the Rev. Samuel made u 100n u poulble by
. TbomJIIOII.
callln&amp; PJ'a Ill 441-1119.
· ·~ After the wedding, the
To regllter for both daya of
' ';!'Uple hODO)'MIIjlned In the Seminar, that Ia being
1 oonduetld by om Walller
,JIIIllldl,y.
• The lrrtda II a IIJ'IlCiullle of Heinen bu ttel
from
..lortb GaiJJil lfllh Sehool. Wubin8ton, D. C., CG111 a
' 'lilt ~ lllo lttlnded total of tl~ Inc! that price
~ Odi RIP Sehool. Includes hindi at RlverbJ
~ !beY an 1111b employMI by . both days. To attend )lilt one

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Mrs. Thomas MacNab
bouquet.
Among the out-of-town
guests at the wedding were
the bride's aunt and uncre,

Mr. and Mrs. James Venz of
Lancaster ; Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph H. Puryear of Fairfield Glade, Tenn .; Ms.
Jacque Lodes of Stamford,
Conn. ; Mr. and Mrs. Allan H.
Kapteina of Niagara Falls, N.
Y.; Mrs. Joan Layne of
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs .
Marshall Hood of Huntington; Mr. and Mrs. Sam
Richard !II of Charleston;
Mr. and Mrs. David Jarrell of
Ashland; Mrs. E. J . MacNab,
grandmother of the groom of
Shaker Hts.; Mr. and Mrs.
Bruce MacNab, aunt and
uncle of the groom of Hudson; Mr. and Mrs. E. R.
lsmond, aunt and uncle of the
groom, David Miller, of
l.llagrln Falls: Mr. and Mrs.
Kermit Kennedy,- aunt and
uncle of the groom of Shaker
Heights; Mr. and Mrs.

Thomas Podwoski of Gates
Mills, Mr . and Mrs. Albert
DeVaul and Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Horn er of Westfield ;
Mr . and
Mr s.
J ohn
Oberholtzer of Medina ; Mr.
and Mrs. Mel Kosanch ick of
Hudson and Mr . and Mrs.
John Glasstcttcr of Fairview

Park.
The bride, a graduate of
Gallia Academy in 1975, also
attended Rio grande College
and is presently enrolled at
Kent Slate University.
The groom graduated from
Orange High School in
Chagrin Falls and received
his B.S. Degree from Rio
Grande College this past
May. He is employed by the
Midwest Property Invest·
ment Corporation in Kent.
Upon their return from
their wedding trip to the
Island of Cozumel, the couple
will he at home at Silver
Meadows Boulevard, Kent,
Ohio.

�B-2-The Sunday Timcs-&amp;ntmet, Sunday , &amp; pt. 10. 1978

.Vance reunion
held in Crown City .:
'"

Di 's .Candy Shop.
comes to Gallipolis ·

POMEftOY··The an nual
t'CUIIiun of the descendants uf
Eli and Ma~gie Perry Vance
wa s held recently at tile lwme
uf Winfield and Lula Rutherfut·d Vinson, Crown City.
Oldest member attending
wa s Mt·s. MeliSSll Waters
.
Vmtun
and the youngest was'
Brtan RuuRock, Huntington
Beach, Calif.
A !Juffet dinner was served
cmd gcunes and music were
enjoyed by the group.
Others attending were Eli
anti Esther Vante, Racine,
Judy Vance McGraw
daughters , Tt·acy and Bunni:
and Du~g Warden , Racine ;

. la rgt.• f:! rtmps ~111d urP,anil.aBy Sallyamte Holtz
.If yuu ett&lt;.led up eating that tiuns if L·unta('lt..&gt;tl in &lt;Jdvam·c.
I.&amp;Jter. sill' pli;:!IIS tv stt~· k
down-shaped l'Hke you bak e'! for your son 's IJirtltday fi IIi ngs for en•am -eent l'l't.'&lt; l
yo urself llecause sotnl'UJ.lc t.:&lt;t!Hiit.•s, which ar c tl iffit:u lt tu
r em ar ked
suggested
it · find .
Di 's CH!ldy .SilUIJ is pli:inning
l'l'!:ie·mUleJ a sa nilctry lcmd
fill, then I may have a ~ol u­ lu offer l'ias:;es in · t:ak tt
lil'l'OJ'itlirag Ucgi r1nin~ thi s
LI UII to your problems .
Di's Candy Shop, just upen- week. Fur more infurma tiun
L'l in the Spring Valley Show- llll these classes, you may eull
in g PiaU!, Gallipolis, could iJc D1 at 44ii·21 34, or Betty
Carpcnlt'l' , in structor , ~l
til~ an.!:i wer. The .shop , u.wm:d
ami upenttetl by Dhma Hnd 24&gt;·&gt;:163. Mrs. Buggs pt·efers
you 'l 'giste1·· in t:Hlva ncc . The
i .{)nhi~ Boggs. is Gl fl cxtt•nsiun
uf a shop whi eh Mrs. Ruggs da.sseS arc sd1cduled tcnstar1ed in her llumc twu vt·m·s lativel)· fur Muuday nights.
Sht• is alsu p!C:I nning to hold
ago. The bm;ines."&gt; was sU sm·-

cessful that she IJoughl out
Betty Carpenter, Rooney,
who al s o had a cC:I ke
dt:~l'uraling

shop in her hom e
fur sever(:!) years.
The shop has everything
you mi ght need to make c111y

ty pe of randy you desire or to
Uet'orole &lt;-J cake inneHrlv anv

design. She hamlles ail th~

Wilton &lt;.: &lt;Jke d~curatin~ supplic~. including novt·lty l'ake
pan s, &lt;.: ak c t o ps &lt;:t !HI
dccura~in g tips. She al so earries ~ wide varictv uf ca nU\'
tnulds to make 'ccmtly fo-r
.. t•Vl'ry occa~ ion .

Mrs. Buggs "lsu lumdles
Ulock &lt;:~ nd wafer chot'ulate
•.. and ean order large quan lit ic~ of

free candy classes, fikt&gt;ly un
Wednesday eveni ngs and
Thursdi:tys afternoons. Call
H6-2134lo register.

dri vc is underway in Meigs
County and Grace Pratt, Middleport chainnan, is in nt&gt;ed

uf volunteers tu be on the
streets Sept. 16. She'd appr·edate " helping hand su
just cuhtad her at 992·2301.
The Middleport Business and
Professiona l Women 's Club
and other volunteers will he
Joing a housept&lt;.rhouse can-

Mrs. Buggs will be sponsoring till' annua l Rio Grand~
ca kt- show this yei:tl' whit:h
wil l iJc hdd the first Saturda v
ir1 Novcinbcr. More details oi1
this willbc availalJlt• later.
Di 's CAndy Shop wtll IJe
open 10 to 6. Monday tltrouglt
Satun la y. During thl' busy

va~

Christmas aml
Easter - she pl a ns to be ope11
lett er .
A grand opening is plalllred
fur this w~ ek with drClwing:.-,
held fur free cake pans.
SC i:i S Uil

Shown are some of the many cake deC&lt;Jratin~ and candy making supplies that can be found at Di's Candy
Shop, Spring Valley Shopping Plaza.
·

...----· - · - .. - ..-

I 00 pounds or over for

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NOW THRU SEPT. 16th

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Be &lt;J,ure to 1.1Ke o
dnl age of
Hanes ' Look Al ive sal e o f sheer
support p an t y hose and s tock1ngs
Avail&lt;'lb le in reinf orced heel iind

toe -or sandal l oo t
Color s · Barel y T tl e r(&gt; ,
r own
T au pe , Sou th Pac d 1(, Gent le
Br own or Blac K.

support pantyhose $1 . 00
suggested retail

$5.95 Now $4.95

70C off

support stockings
suggested retail

300 Second Avenue

off

$3.95 Now $3.25

Lafayette Mall

Gallipolis, Ohio

GOOD SUN., SEPT. 10 THRU SAT., SEPT. 16

SAUERKRAUT AND
WIENERS
PLATE LUNCH

p

-...,

·

and Mrs. Leo Smith.'
Betty, Ba rbat'a "nd Sam uf
Berrin Spn ngs, Mich., and
Kenney Smith, Steullcn vi lle,
have been here visiting Mr.
C:lntl Mrs . Aarun Zahl aud
other relatives .
Mi:tr garet Warner ur

II
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REG. '1.59

$

29

Phone 446-1611
Open 7 Days a Week 11 A.M. til 9 P.M.

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Corner II

By Charlene Heeflich

HAVEANICE WEEK!

Oktober-Fest reservation
Something
arrangements a.nnounced
Members of the French 'Art
Colony who are planning to
attend
the
delightful
OKTOBER·FEST
on
Saturday evening, October 7,
at Rlverby, should call Elsie
Neal to make . their reser·
vatlons. Mrs. Neal's phone
number is 446-1707. Plans
Indicate a dellghtful evening
with music provided by Mary
Lucas and Friends and lots of
, good food from 8:30 p.m ,' until
midnight.
Included in the four
m~ber musical group are
Raymond Willls on drums,

Charlie Brown on trwnpet,
Paul Eddie France on
saxophone and of course,
Mary Lucas and her
inimitable style at the organ.
Assisting Bess Grace and
Marianne Campbell who are
coor4inating the evening, are
Ron and Micki Calhoun,
David and Eleanor Strang,
Don and Carolyn Hippensteel, Dave and Martha
Evans, H0 yt and Reva
Mullins, Alix Harder, Ruth
Tap, Mary Margaret Willis,
Harold Black and Bill
Campbell, along with Mro.

-

POMERY-A family picni" on Oct. I was planned
when the Sew-Rite-Sewing
Club met Wednesday night
at tbe home uf Mrs. Evelyn

Gilmore .
Mrs. Joni Huffman
presided at the business
meeting with Mrs. Ann
Browning giving th e

HAVE APROBLEM?
NEED TO TALK IT OUT?
CALL CRISIS liNE.
GALLIA 446-5554

CARPn CLEANING
-INSIDE YOUR HOME-

MEIGS 992-5554
JACKSON 286-5554

•Deeper Cleaning
•faster Drvlnt

446-1412

.

DUKE CLEANERS
GAlliPOLIS OHIO
248 SEOOND AVE.

•

011

Goo's gt·een shag rug that lwu
normal-sized people can fit
into one five foul by fi ve foot
ruum without suffering some
sut'l uf injury . If one uf us is
all tile way in, then tile other
,
~ 0' one ls chitming herself on the
shower t·oo; if one uf us goes
in to wash her hands before
Lrei:lsurer'.s . report, and
othet· le11ves, then the one
'Ute
Mrs. Evelyn Gilmore, tile
who
was there first is likely
;;ect·eU.ry 's report. The pictrying
tu extract her elilow
nic willile held at tile southfrom
the
faucet bead.
hound roadside park un
And
the d utl et· is
Ruu(e 3;1 at 2 p.m. Also
ridiculous!
There must he
planned was a Halloween
enough
make-up
sitting in
dinner tu he held Oct. ·25 at
our
bathroom
tu
prepare
the
Seddens on the Mall, Vienuf
·:Eight
is
entire
cast
na , W. Va ., 7:30p.m .
Enough"
for
shooting
from
· Games were played with
now until they've all readwd
pri zes guin~ to Mrs. Ann
puberty! I'm convinced that
Browning, Mrs. Lenora
if
we put all Ute mascara
McKnight, Mrs . Bat·b
brushes end to end, they 'd
Mullen, Mrs . Pandora Col·
proilably reach at least lu
!in s, Mrs . Ca r o lyn
McDaniel, Mrs. Juni Huff.

THE UNIFORM I
I
I
CENTER
I

TU

·-

tLINIC

._....,.. , ., ......··- ·-.

,,
''THE-WRAP

~· ·

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HAS

New Kimono fashion "OBI" belt inset
all around, with button fashion loops
anchored inside for perfect fit. 100%
Polyester Gaberdeme

'30.00

WHITE SWAN
UNIFORMS

w
I~
Man. &amp; Fri. tit I p.m,
Tues., Wed .• Sal.lll5 p.m.
Thursd.ly 111112 noon

I

- BY SALLYANNE HOLTZ
I finally went to see
''G rease" after hearing abo~t
it for months on end and
hearing nothing but on the
radio for what seems like
years. I have been more
impr~ssed. The movie was
entertainment for the sake of
being entertained - and
nothing more . Some of the
dance sce nes were well
choreographed , but the plot
was of beach-bla nk et origin.
To imagine ·John Travolta
getting bent out of shape - 'or
step. as it were - over Olivia
Newton-John, who looked
good hut, in reality, must be
old enough to be his - well,
step-mother - wa s a trif)e
farfetched. The movie was
"cute" - period.
Catherine Co ra Benet
Braley came in thi s week to
bring us her wedding story.
She's looking as every bride
should .
J. Sherman Porter has
retired from the Tribune;
now he's only working partlime. He looks as if he's
enjoying his time off. I doubt,
from what I've seen of Mr.
Porter, If he's doine· m\l,ch

1

_ .366 Second Ave·----·------Galipolis, Ohio-

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PLAYTEXo

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p

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S3.00 OlfonFIM SplrH•

aody llrletllrl for ell avt1 smoott~W~.

1112711• (-In lolgoJ _,_Soli a.,
tfl7 ... (-In lolgol s.cm. -"a.,

c

"""·

~i
19.9S
19,96

Now

Only
16.96
16.96

S1.ooorron

-

Support Can .. leautlfut• lraa
_,. -c:i.o
,.,._
.

--"~

tOUt•

~-~~PiurGe-

.....

t.ac.O..

tftllllll (MUI~I bllilol _,....l'ltoot Qp

8.9!1

7.96

16.9~t

I).H t

\NIO .... -lllool~

lace

~

I .95ft

7.fltt

9.SO

1.10
9.eott UOtt

1.951"1

atyte#36 CI'Ou VolA' Heart•
Cotton lral
"" C&lt;&gt;tfon- ~- Coltons.­
S1.50 Olf"when you buy two
Crou Yow Heart Soft Sider• Ira•
,(of the one 11'/WJ

...

SoiiSiaorlllool~

9clt---~

DIPAtn'MINT

Suede·

ByTbeYard
Su~es,

$398

$650

$649

,-·
· - · - · -·- · - ·- · -·,
I Sr. Citizens I

Singer Sewing Machines
Sale-A-Thon In Progress

I eatenc~ar I

.

French City Fabric Shoppe

7.fltt

8.96tt

7:96f1

9.Q5tt

l .tatt

$1.00 Oft'' when you buy two

9.9!11!1 7.96111 .....
9.9!11!1 7.96!11

Ohio Valley Gem
I
I
I Calendar I and Mineral Society
to meet se'Jlt
12
'j-' '

Something
. SmaHer

-------·-------~--------1

PLUS: TRUCK MOUNTED MEANS
eMore Powerful Equipment

stance. There's no way

trwn , and Mrs. Lucy White .

"CLEAN, QUIET AND EFFICIENT~'
OUTSIDE IN OUR TRU(K
ALL THE NOISE AND DIRT

Fur the past sevt!ral m~n­
Uts, I lwve shared a trailer
with another girl , a friend
from Rio Grande. I have
derived from this experietK.'e
Uta! living wit!l another person can be divided into two
categories - the times when
it's overcrowded - and tile
limes when it's overcr~wded.
Take the bathroom, for in·

f-&amp;"~i~·-·1

SUNDAY
JAMES
C.
AND
ETHALINOA MOORE
reunion Sunday , at Sutton
Church. Basket dinner at
POMEROY - The regular Drive, Marietta .
12 :30 p.m . Friends and
Mr . and Mrs. Jerry Heye
relatives invited. Games and monthly meeting of the Ohio
contests for. a ll. Baking Valley Gem and Mineral will give a report of their
Elizallcth Arden's back duur. . contest, pies and cakes, for Society, Inc ., will be recent trip to North Carolina,
Another problem we've run women.
Tuesday, Sept. 12, 7:30 p.m. the place for "Gem Stones."
into with the bathroom is \ hat
BIRDIE WARNER reunion at the Washington County Emphasis will be on the
U1cre i.s only one bathroom. Sunday at Ft. Meigs on New Electric Building on Colgate Wildacres Workshop which
Maybe it's just me, but it Lima Road at pavilion
they attended lor one week.
se;,ms that every time I number two on left. Basket
.. Memories" using the last of Here th e best trained
dedde to make a nel'eSSl:U'Y dinner at noon . Family and ~s ummer flowc.rs. Mrs. Lapidary teach judging, ·
trip, so does everyone else friends invited.
silversmithing,
casting,
Marilyn Wis~cup, judge.
within a fi ve-mile radius of
faeiti
ng,
and
gem
stone
MONDAY
EASTERN LOCAL Band
our trailer. Realistically. I
making.
UNITED METHODIST
Boosters, 7:30 Tuesday in
know it's only my romrumJte ,
Membership of the club
Women,
Heath
Church,
the
iland room . Election uf
but there are times when I'd
reaches
from Point Pleasant
of£iL:ers, fw1d ri:lising proswear the !.us Atigeles Rams Middleport, 7:30 Monday
in
West
Virginia inclusive to
ni~ht with Mrs. Nan Muure
jects, and band needs to be
are li v in~ under the bed.
Vienna
and Bridgeport. In
discussed . Band parents
The kitchen has often been to have the program, Mrs.
Ohio
from
Syracuse inclusiVe
tn·~ ed tu attend .
a trial, too. Mal'ie is mol'e of a Emily Sprague the dev&lt;&gt;to
Marietta
and Stockport.
WEDNESDAY
gounnet; I'm one who leans tiuns, and Mrs. Kathryn
Refreshments
will be
POMEROY - Middlelu fro zen milk duds. If I Kn igh t , Mn:L li' ri:ince.s
served.
Door
·
prizes
will be
port Lions Club, Wednesthought it would tnake it any Wilson, Mt·s. Lillian Smith,
drawn
.
Any
one
interested
in
and Mrs. Ruth Bwngarner
day noon, at the Meigs Inn.
ea~ier lu use Hamburger
becoming
a
member
of
the
Helpet' 111 my pea nut bullet· to he the hostesses.
club is welcome.
TUESDAY
and jelly sa ndwiches, then I'd
COME AS YOU ARE at
probably do it. Even toast is
PTO meeting
Harrisonville
difficult fur me.
Tuesday,
Sept.
12, 7 p.m. at
Marie is another maltt!l',
Eleme ntary
Harrisonville
however . Slle cO:Jn whip up
School.
a~nosl anything with no truu·
SYRACUSE PTO Tuesday
ble, and often does so. We've
the school. Introduction of
at
often had .sw.:h enticing comff members. Babysitting
sta
billa lions as fl&lt;:~lning: eherrie.s
will be provided . All
service
jubilee with pup-up apple
patrons
of the school are
l&lt;lrts. Life is, to put it mildly,
invited.
(()lteuing.
.
SYRACUSE PTO, 7:30 p.m.
Please excuse me. I think I
Tuesday a t the school with
smell somdhi ng thawing .
staff
in trod uctions
to
Suede is the fashion accent this fall.
highlight the program;
Come in and choose from a variety
babysitting service will be
provided.
of suedes - yes, a variety - of weights
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter of
and of fall color s.
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, first
meeting of the fall at 7:30
60" Dress &amp; Skirting
p.m. Tuesday at the River
Acetate and Nylon ..... . ..............
yd .
Boat Room of Meigs Branch,
Athens County Savings and
Loan in Pomeroy.
60" Fashion Suede
HARRISONVILLE
East"sitting around " - mental, ern Star 255 Tu esday 8
Ught weight polyester with qiana
physical, or otherwise . He's p.m.
yd.
and challis coordinates............ . .. .
twice as active as I am!
SOUTHERN LOCAL
Rio Grande College started School Board Tuesday 7:.30
45" Jacket Suedes
.
classes la st week. I'm taking p.m. at high school.
Double
faced.
easy
to
sew
and
d
Classes mysell and I'm no
POMEROY CHAMBER OF
ULTRASUEDE .. .. ..... ........... . . ..
Y·
more ready to see summer Commerce Tuesday at noon
end and get back to work than at Meigs Inn.
is anyone else. Everyone
RA CIN E LODGE 461
ALSO
looks as if he is in shock .
F&amp;AM Tuesday. Work in MM
degree . All master masons
QUILTS, VELOURS, CHALLIS
invited.
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN
L1uiJ, 6:30 Tuesday at the
firehu'use,
Middle port
covered dish dinner with
beverage ami table :it!rviL'e
provided . . Members are lu
GALLIPOLIS - Activities lake mea t vegetable sa lad
'
at the Senior Citizens Center, or desse rt . Suzy Carpenter
tu
220 Jackson Pike, are as conduct workshop fullowing
follows :
dinner .
Monday, Sept. U II WI NDING TRAIL Garden
Singer A.pproved Dealer
Sewing Class, 1-3 p.m.; Club, 8 p.m. Tuesday at the
••.on .· Fri. 9:10 - 8 : 00p .m .
Chorus, I : 15-3.
home of Mrs. Alice ThompTue~ .. Wed.· Thurs .-Sal. 9:l0 · S: 1)0 p. m .
Tuesday, Sept. 12 son. Progr~m on corn husk
S.T.O.P. Class, 10:30 a.m.; flowers by Dollie Hayes; roll
Physical Fitness, 11 : 15 a. m. ; call respurtse tu he a bulb arBible Study, 12:45-1 :45 p.m. ran ge m en t
th e ;ne ,
Wednesday, Sept. 13 Card Games, 1·3 p.m.
Thursday, Sept. 14 - Make
Crafts for Bob Evans Fann
Festival. 1·3 p.m.; Potluck
Supper, 6:30p.m.
Friday, Sept. 15 - Art
Class, 1-3 p.m.; JAM iood to
be deliver ed; Social Hour, 7
p.m.
Senior Nut rition Pro·
gram menus are :
Monday - Sausage links,
creamed corn, cottage cheese
salad, biscuits, butter,
orange and grapefruit sections, milk.
Tuesday - Chicken, gravy,
mashed potatoes, sliced
tomatoes, roll, butter, canned
apricots, milk.
Wednesday - Meatballs in
gravy, baked potato. jelled
fruit C&lt;Jcktail salad, bread,
butter , yellow sheet cake,
milk.
Thursday - Soup beans
with ham bits, canned peach
and pear salad, kale, corn·
bread, butter, chocolate
pudding with vanilla wager
oo top, milk.
Friday - Tuna loaf,
escalloped potatoes, buttered
peas, bread, butter. berry
cobbler, milk.
Choice of beverage served
with each meal.
"Services rendered on a
Coppertone
non-discriminatory basis."

ally

Others attending were Mrs.
Flu Strickland, Mrs. Betty
Wehrung, and Mrs. Martha
Huffman. Mrs. McKnight
will host tile next meeting.

FOOTLONG
-.

BEST JET STEAM

Neal who is taking the
reservations.
Riverby will be decorated
with colorful outside lighting
so that if the evening's early
October weather pennits, the
OKTOBER-FEST will be held
on the spacious lawn at
Riverby with music and
dancing on the outdoor patio.
The cost is $5 per couple or
$2.50 for a single member,
and all are urged to make
tbeir reservations early so
that specific plans for food
may be made as accurately
as possible.

Sew-Rite Sewing Club plans
•n
family picnic at recent meett
.
6

I
l

Illness in a strange d ty
Not withdut error.. ....
isn 't easy as the Ronald
Re verting tu mc.iden
Young fam ily uf Middleport names , putting down the
Oberli n w &lt;:~s the recent
found when · a membcl'' of wr·on g name by a~socii:tlion
visitiors of Mrs. Rubert their tnveling party fell ill in with :;om eon ~ else ..... yes , we
Warner. While here she a t- l.exingtun, S. C.
do make rnistakct:i &lt;:~ nd one of
tended the Ruu!&gt;h r eunion .
Hazel Board , 80, with the the week was when we
Auuther recent visit or of Mrs. Youngs as they rnHde their reported gue~L.s of Mr. and
Warner was Mrs. Martha
wa y
towa rd
Florida , Mrs. P'red Gueglein to iJc
Genheimer, Columbus.
dev eloped chest pains in those of Mr. and Mrs. F'red
Paul
Baxt e r
of South Ca rolina a nd !tad to iJc Leifheit. Mr. l.eifheit has'
Parkersbm·g W. Va . visited 111shetl lu the I .exington Coun- been c..leL:eascd fur several
her~ with tlis gramlparents, ty Hospil&lt;l l tlterc . Four davs yci:trs .... our apologies. The
Mr. and Mrs .Nurman Baxter and they we re on the roiuJ Goegleins and Leifheits have
recently.
again as Mr~. Boem.l's condi· been neighbors and £riends
Mr . and Mrs. Eli Agre and tion wasr1 't seriuw;.
for yean; .
daughter , l.ynn, Mor·rislown ,
But it took only those fout·
N. J . wen~ Wt.'t!kem.l visitors days for Mr . ""d Mrs. Young
Our IJelated cungratula·
uf Iter sister, Mrs. Hilton and their daughter, Bat·biu·a tions tu Nellie Tracy who
Wolfe uf Raci ne, and other Atm Haley, tu lea rn uf Ute celebrated her 88th birthday
relatives. They hat.l dinner compassion a nd understan- ·nwrsday .
with Mrs. Rubert W&lt;:~rner.
ding of lite Lcxiugtun people.
While she resides at the
Two pt:ople, one a N(:tzarene Kimes Convalescent Center
miui.ster , invi ted them into in Athens, she is as al~rt as
their homes, alll.l there were ever and in goU&lt;l spirits, her
uthcr.s whose t:UIIsiderali ollS friends report. Mrs, Hartwell
will he t'ememilcred IJy the C\11'(1and her fl randsun, Steve
Youngs .
Elkins uf Culmnbus, visited
TO SPEAK HERE
Once
on
the
l'oad
agc
lin,
the
with Nellie un her birthday
POMEROY - Barbara
group
continued
to
F
lorida
a
nd wh ile they were there ,
Sheridan will be speaker
with
Mrs.
Board
"IJie
lo
join
Nellie
rccilcd a lengthly
when the Pomeroy Chapter of
in
ail
the
si
ghlse~
in
g
.
They
pocll'.
"
The Master Comthe Women 's Aglow Fellowloured
St.
Augustine,
spent
eth
.''
ship meets Thursday at the
two days at Disney World ,
Nellie is known for her
Meigs Inn.
visited
t
he
Kennedy
Space
recita
ti on ~
Ltruund Meigs
Doors will open at 6:30 for
Ce
nter.
&amp;a
World,
·
Silver
County
where
she taught for
the dinn er meeting with
Springs
and
Cyprus
Gardens,
over
hal£
a
century
before
dinner served at 7.
Mrs . Sheri dan is song and then enruute home stop- retiring in her mideventies.
leader of the Pomeroy ped "t Gatlinbw·g, spent a . mid·seve~1ti e ~. She love~ to
Chapter . She ha's a back- day in the Rockies, and hi:lve visitors i:lrtd get mail , so
be sure to rememlx!r this
ground of teaching chemistry visited Rock City.
gra d uus lady .
and i s now acting ad·
Kathy Sue Haley didn't
ministrator of the G~llipolis
make
the vacation with the
The cystic fibrosis fund
Christian School. She is vice
family
siru:e he1· swnmcr was
president of the fellowship
retreats for Southern Ohio. spent at Camp Crescendo in
She is the .mother of six and l.ebunan Junction, Ky .
Kalhy was a counselor at
of a
phy sician
wife
the
camp fur 10 weeks this
specializing in opthabnology .
swruner
returning home j u.st
Reservations are to be
ilt
time
tu go back tu Rio
made with Joan Edwards ,
Grande
College
where she is
992-3929 ; Joyce Hoback , 949a
sophomore
studying
to
2325; June Baker, 949-2723;
bee
om~
a
classroom
teacher.
Marie Show, Mason-Point
Pleasant, 675-3273, and Linda There wet·e about 600 kids a
Butcher, Gallipolis, 446-3041. week at the camp and Kathy
feels she gai~ed inval uable
experience in dealing with
teenage problems.
But the sutruner· wasn't all
The Marquis de I -'lfayette work fut· Kathy. She toured
was curnrni~ioned a major Kentucky, visited " My Old
gener"l in the CuntincnU.l Ar- Kentucky Home" , and saw
. "The Stephen Foster Stot'y."
my un July 31 . 1777.

Includes Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy,
Hot Roll and Butter

Carol McLaughlin is home
after three weeks in Idaho
F'alls, Idaho where she' went
especia ll y tu ~eta peek at her
new grandson, Jason l...ee,·sun
uf Du.a.rae a11d Debbie
McLaughlin. She traveled by
bus lo include some sightseein~. a highli ght or which was
a visit tu the Munnan Taher,.,a de in salt u.ke City.

--------------.
r:
II
c0 mmUDity
• I·I .
I1

omeroy
Personal Notes I I

I Mr.

fur C~mtributivns.

linda Vanc'e Wise, suns, Bud, ,
and Chris, Huntington, W. • •
Va. ; Eli and .Jean Va~~&lt;:e and ~ ·•
son, Derek, I.anU.na, Fla .; .
Ennund and Oretba Vattt'e:.,
and daughter, Diane, Crown ,,
City; Lawrenc't! and Ute
VatK'e, Gallipolis; Fred and" :
Dora Harshbarger, son ,' ~ · ·
David, Millon, W. Va .
• .•
1-'lrry and Pat Tuwn~nd,
Greg, Tim, Todd and AmY,' ""
Milton; Marty Rutberfurd,:" ·:
Cullooen, W. Va .; Frank .and';,".:
Delores Rutherford, Kenny ·.
and Susan, Craig Ripley ,'' '
Huntington, W. Va .; Rev."'
Carl and Rebecca Waters;:'"
Tarruny and Thruny, Buwlin(f -·
Green , Ky.; Fred and Jwmita;. ;;
Bledsoe, Tim and Fred, J r.
and Susie, ' Huntington, W.
Va.; Jirn and Rmnaine J ones, .
Gwen a nd Shellie, ApolluBeach' Fla.; Betty Kunikuf~~
and sun, Jeff, Hollywood,
Calif.; Ernest and Freda·,
Trent, Gary, Rkk, Karen and, ·.
Kathy, Jackson ; Sue
RuuRock , Kevin and Brian,
Huntington Beach, Calif.;
Denver and Pauline Tren~ " '
a tid Reginia,
North,".
Ridgeville; Debbie and Doug
Sprig gs and Trlsha ; ··
Cleveland; Dun and Millie-:
Tn,nt, Don Jr. and Michelle' :
Ravenna; Bill and Betty ••
· Mc-Ginni s, Culwnbus ; Sue :
Davis, Tonuny ami Jennifer, :
.Colwnbus ; Billie Junes , Hutt- :
tington, W.Va.
The 1979 reunion will he :
held in August at the home of :
Ms. Judy Mc-Graw, Racine. •
•

IW-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 10,1978

4.Q5tt 2forl.f0tt

5 95 2 ro. to..a
5.50tt 2 fOr 9.501-t

IlLVII
lltiDOI

CRYSTAL DELAYED
Crystal Gayle's guest appeara~~&lt;:e un the Johnny Carson show Monday has been
cant'eled with likelihood uf a
new date tu he set. Ac·
L'OI!Ipanied a t the piano by the
c'Offipuser, Bobby WoU&lt;l, she
will 4rter sing "Talking in
Your Sleep." Bobby Wood !sa
re~ular visitor tu Cheshire.

Charlernagne founded the
Ca t·olinKian Dynasty in 814
·A.n. whkh ruled much u1
western and c~ntral Europe
.
tuttil9HI:

__ r · --.:._.__
Redwood

SILVER IIIDGE PLAZA

�•

B-1- The Sw1day Times..seutmel. Swulav. Sept. 10, t!!78

Conduct
.
PIa nnina
6
··

forum

Dedication
is slated

i"K,-·-t~-~------~----1

a .ze s
IKorner
~•1
I
1
1

A dedication program and
an open house · will be held
Sunday, September 17 at the
new Jackaon Care Center,
State Route 93 South in
Jackson.
First patients will be admitted to the $1.5 million
skilled nursing center about
October I. Scheduled to
participate in the I :30 p.m .
dedication are the Honorable
Oakley Collins, state senator

By Katie Crow

Pealer , district
r
of the Division of I
Developmental Disabilities
. There are good honest people in the world and Greg
and Mental Retardation will Bailey, sports writer for the Daily Sentinel can verify this .
conduct a planning forwn in
Greg recently lost the registration to his truck without
Gallia County on Monday, knowing it
Sept. 11 . The purpose of the
The other day he received a letter in the mail sent from
forum is to inv.olve civlc Middleport containing the registration . The letter was sent by
leaders, professionals and the Brenda Fry.
community in the long range
Finding the registration and having it returned certainly
planning process for develop- saved Greg a lot of headaches. Bailey extends his sincere
mentally
disabled and thanks.
·
mentally
r eta rded
individuals. Topics that will be
There is nothjng like old friends. On an assignment
discussed include education, recently my husband and I had the pleasure of visiting a very
voc ational training and de!IJ' friend. Eileen Roush.
r esi dential,
and · com·
. Eileen is the type of person who always has something
prchensive services for the good to say about everyone.
mentally retarded in Gallia
I know if I needed her, I would just call and she would
Co unty . Mr . Pealer hopes to come running .
Jack

mana~er

The mutlu of the state uf
Texas is " friendship ,.. ta ken

from the Indian word -- L~­
jas.

machine in the Center for the

When you're a
stone's throw from
the altar. choose
a beautiful stone.

Columbia

Columbia d1amonds from ~I '5 0

Tawney's
Jewelry
424 Second Ave.
--~!.!,!!·~~~
· ::_:O~h~1 ~
0_

L

_j

public to become acquainted
haven 't
with . If you
registered to vote you may do
so while you are at the
Center. If you are unable to
come to the Center one of the
Outreach Workers will come
to your home for registration.·
ENERGY DISCOUNT
The deadline for applying
for the Energy Discount
Program for persons who
were a t least 64 years old in
1977 and whose family income was $7,420 or less and
fur persons who are permanently and totally disabled
has bee n ex tended until

October I, 1976.
Eligible individuals whose
homes are heated by gas or
electricity will receive a 25
perce nt credit on their
heating
bill s
between
December 1978 and April
1979. People who heat with
other fuels.such as wood, fuel
oil or bottled propane will
receive a cash payment of
$87.50 for the same period .
Applications for the Energy
Discount are available at the
Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy. If you would like to
apply lor this program or
have questions, stop by the
l&amp;R office at the Center or
call 992-7311 for more information .
CENTER ACTIVITIES
This coming Tuesday at II
a. m. Mrs . Ellen Bell, Meigs
County Libra rian, will be at
the Ce nter to s peak on
Library Services in the
county .
Physical fitness classes
will be held each Tuesdoy ,
Wednesday, and Thursday
mornings at 11 :30 A. M. The
uercises are simple but very
effective in promoting good
health . Staff members will be
partici pating with you in this
class. These short exercise
penods will make all of us
. .
feel and look better :
.The blood P_~e~~ chniC
w1ll be held on Friday from
10 :00 until noon .

maintairi

Miss Mary johnson

wed Nov. 25
Mrs. Frances JotuiSon
Mason, i8 armuunl'i11g th~
engagement and forthcomin g marriage of he r
daug hter, Mary, tu Mark
Riclunond, sou of Mr . and

I

LANCASTER TRIP
The trip to the Olivedale
Senior Citizens Center in
Lancaster wa s filled so
quickly that we are planning
this same excursion for
' October 18, t978. If you are
interested in going in Detober, you should make
reservations as soon as
possible. Again. the first 25
persons paying the $2 .00
charge will be going .
This policy of paying when
you register for trips was
adopted by the Center this
· past year.
Many scheduled trips in the
past were ca ncelled becouse
persons who registered for
them did not go. The buses
cost the same empty as they
do filled and it was felt that
persons paying in advance
would go on the e&lt;cursion .
This payin g in advance
makes the t ransportation
arrangements much easier
as we know e&lt;actly how
many to plan for.
If you pay in advance for a
trip and ca nnot go because of
illness, etc. your money will
be refunded if there are
persons on the waiting list to
take your place.
Also in October we will be
going to the Bob Evans
Festival and on a shopping
excursion to the Parkersburg
Mail. Please register for
. thtse trips as soon as possible
so transportation can be
arranged .
Have a nice week .

an

activities

fLiN'DA;IADYF'AIR

Mrs. Rol&gt;ert Ridunond
Rutland.
M1•. Ridunond is a 1977
graduate of Meigs High
School and is employed at
Uw Southern Oltio Coal Cu.
The wedding will be held on
Nov . 25 at 2 p.m. at the
United Christian Brethem
Church in Mason .

1 BEAUTY SALON
I Now

I
I
I
I

t~BUSINESS

t~JR.

ADMINISTRATION

ACCOUNTING

.-EXECUTIVE SECRETARIAL
4GENERAL OFFICE
liSECROARIAL
ST. NO. 75.02.0472B

CALL TODAY FOR
FREE INFORMATION
446-4367

VOLUMElOF
FUNK &amp; WAGNAI I S
NEW ENCYCLOPEDIA
STILL ONLY 9¢ .,,, "1,...1 .. ~•·-

National

Br'ing your
\ ·
favorite eontainer 1'·.
to Dudley's. we will '·, ·

F1owerWeek

SUPER MARKETS .

Sept.l7·23

custom design v.our

arrangement.

L ----· --·

Pork Chops

BeefPatt~

y Perm-S3.000FF
949·28311

ARMOUR VERIBEST PORK
VARIETY

ECONOMICAL ALTERNATIVE
TO GROUND BEEF

. PERM SPECIAL

Gallipolis 446-1777

Package Includes: 2 Blade Chops.
2 Sirloin Chops, 6 Rib &amp; Loin Chops

~

Middleport 992-5560

or More

l·lol p••lnt

lb.

.... 85'

HANOWASH® SYSTEM

U.S.D.A. Ctt6itE BEEF
SHOULDER ROAST ..... ..., ••••• lb . '1.69
ROUNDBONESHOULDERSTEAK••·'1.73
EYE OF ROUND STEAK • • • • • • • 111 ·?·19
RIB STEAKS t.,. w ••••••••••.• lb. 2.79
CUBE STEAKS •• ·••••••••••• , 1b.'1.19
BOTTOM ROUND THICK CUT •• lb.'2.29
TOP ROUND STEAK'"""'"· • • • ~ • lb '2.3 9

,.,b.
pkg.

ARMOURirSTAR HOT DOG.S .' •• •·•·"-•· 5 1.19 WHOLE CHICKEN LEGS , , . , • • . FomHr M 5lb . 79'
ARMOURil'STAR BEEF HOT DOGS ,.•. ,..,.5 1.28 COUNTRY SPARERiBS •.....•.... ''· 1.49
FAMILY .PAK CHICKEN PARTS .••••.. lb. 49'
ARMOURirSTAR LUNCH MEAn.~ ~~~~· 5 1.19
51 59 FAMILY PAK CHICKEN BREASTS , •.. lb 5 1.18
ARMOURirSTARSLICED BACON. •·•· ~'~•· •
ROASTING CHICKENS .•....... ...• lb.79'
SUPERIOR FRANKIES •••••••••• , ....,.., 99' LEG or BREAST QUARTERS ...••..... lb 69'
$
SUPERIOR iEEF FRANKIES •••••• ~~~~· 5 1.09 lltrl L•• G!-o""~ "•' lorMuly
GROUND ROUND . .. .•.. .• . . .. lb 1.35
U.S.D.I . CHOICI BHf

BONUS BUYS
U.S.D.A. CHOICIBEIF

5teaJr

THIS TOTAL WASHER
FEATURES TWO AGITATORS
TO DO DIFFERENT KINDS OF WASH!
0 Handwash '" Agitalor desi
wash small, lightiy soiledgnedto
delicate load s
'
0

~sestup
to 24 •io less water per fill
1

an s own low level selling
0 Saves hot water and saves ti;.,e b
offenng a shorter wash period
Y
o Fegdular agitator for heavy-soil
oa s With grouhd-in dirt.
0
0 ~ ~=~~ /SRpin speed combinations .
.
1nse temperatures
o Venable water levels saves ~ater
o Bleach/fabric soften~r dispenser.·

1

Roast

lb.

BLADE CUT

SLICED BEEF LIVER .. : ..........• lb. 69'
BEEF SHANK""' 1• • • • • • • • • • • • • • lb.5 1.09

SJ!!

BONUS BUYS
SUGARDALE
REDSKIN

BONUS BUYS

79

Any Sitt
Piece lb.
&amp;l.JCED ••• •· 99'

Boloana. •

Wieners sqe
Roll
Sausage I··· 70t
SUGARDALE
CHUCK WAGON

1.89

BEEF SHORT RIBS .... ....•.... lb.5 1.19
BONELESS STEW BEEF .•...... •.. "· 5 1..59

IN
lb.

I CJaueJr

5

BONELESS CHUCK ROAST .. .•.... lb

CJauelraoNE$Jif

*

39

$

l·lbs.

$

SUGIIDIU ft1lt or P'1rtiM

SEMI-BONELESS HAMS ••..

l·lb.
Plcg.

lb .

I. 19

CENTER CUT HAM SliCES ...•. . .... . .. lb. '1.19
UIN GIOUND lllf FOIMIIlT

GROUND CHUCK ••• ,,., .....n~~~ SJ.29

MORRELL

IU,IIOI

loH

POLISH SAUSAGE •••••.•• ,.

$

1. 29

lit
~

•

SUGARDALE

Braunsela· ~·· 59~
weleer ••• •~::. lb.
CAMPFIRE

J.lb.S JJ!

$11eed
Baeon •••••• Pkg.

Retails eHectlve thrv Sat.i Sept. 16, 1978
U.S. No.1
ROUND WHITE

ftftC

~

F•ncr•lesler-n

.MeJntosla Apples ••••••••• ~ . ... ..,..,
ft C
Prune Plums •••••••••••••• ~ lbo.-.,'1
OftSH TINDIII
I!! ftC
Broeeoll •••••••••••••••.••• ~.,
ftC
4
Cueumbers •••••••••••• • • • 3 '" .,

Potatoes

~

MICHIGAN • StANLIY

&amp;

lllftc:ll

0 Permanent press dryer
w ith po ly kn it cycle 0

• A balanced, 1000 calorie diet that iridudl's a ll fouJ

LONOOIIIN

zo. .

Aut omatic Sensi- Ory"'" or
limed .cycle up to 60 minUie s 0 End o f cy· e signal
0 Up - front li nt filter 0
Porcelain enamel fini sh
drum .
Model DLB2550P

a nd excee dS the es tablish e d n utr i t ion&lt;.~ ] rc-

qu In: menu for adult s .
• Wee kly educational semlnan that d ea l w it h the
ph y~ i~.:al. nutrition a l and ~: motional r.' &lt;.~ U M.: ~ uf uv~..-r ­
wCi ght .
• The Fore~er Slim plan fur permanen tl y ma intain in g sli mn css .

.

NEW MEMBERS-SAVE $5.00
Brlns this coupon wllh you to any meeting
listed and you will &amp;ave $!.00 orr the lnhlal
Registration foe of $6.00 and Weekly Seminar
fee or $3.00. Pay only $4.00 lnllead of $9.00.
Offen .. plru friday , September 22, 1978 .

Weekly Insight-Motivation Seminars
0

Jilckson- Mond•vs. 9:30•.m. &amp; 7: 30p.m .
YMCA Building, 187 Pe8rl St .
Pomeroy- Mondays, 7:30p.m .
Meigs Inn, 126 M•in St. .
. All'lens- Wednesdays, 7: JO p.m .
Athens University , JJ1 Richlind (At . 33)
Giillipolis- Tuesdays, 7: 30p.m .
St. Peters Episcopal Church. 541 2nd Ave.
WEST VIRGINIA
Maso11, w. va .- Tuesdays, 7:30p.m,
St. Joseph Church Hall
OR CALL 992 ·3382

Ntw M~mbtrs Alw,ays Welcome

Registralion $6.00 plus Weekly Seminars SJ.OO

CONWAY DIT INSffiUH-It fiG .,uired

ON THE PAIR

I I uof
A Lot

I 1• •• i

n I

Appliance for Your Money ·

SIRVICI AmR THI!

S~U

.

POMEROY LANDM
E. MAIN

• 992-2181

rams •••••.•••••.•....•••..••.zq

lag

I

•

NIWC-oSOUTHIIN

PFIIPFIR SALAD DRESSING 1¥•.... , .... .... ... ... •••· ht. l '" 79'
PAYO SPAGt!ml SAUCilY•. .... ; . . .............. - - 71'
SUNSHINE DOO' FOODa ooo oo oo o o oo ~ o o oo ooo o o o o o 21-11. . . •J,M
HI Ml TOWILl • •• • , •••••••••••••; ••• ••••• •••••••• ....._ W 45~
AUNT JIMIMA PANCAKI MIX.. . .. • ......... , . ... . . z... loo 65'

~oooo-oooooo

\

free dictionary.

Storling Sept. 12th ·
Call for Appointment

dudi o n program &lt;:o n sis ts of three main e lcmt'nt s :
g ruup ~

Margarine

.Open Under New

Tlaanlr• lo Healthy Conway Dlel

REGISTER NOW
New Quarter Begins
Sept. 18, 1978
Choose a Career in ..•

Buy Volumes 2 &amp; 3 of
Funk &amp; Wagnalls New
Encyclopedia
for just $2.69
each and get a

Golden Quarters

Management.
Connie Aldridga, Owner
Cothy Wood1, Operator

Loses 128 Pounds
Wh en thi s ph o t o wa s
taken , Mrs. Del o r ~s Wa rren h a d alread y lost 11.3
pounds i n ju ~ t II
month s S h e ha ~ si nce
lo!'! t a nothe r IS pounds .
The now s lim Mrs . Warrcn . who luv cs tu dam:c
and is a tt ending beauty
school says. " I had never
been able to s ti ~ k to a
dicr a nd co uld rH.· ver
hav4.: dune i t without thl·
Conwa y prog ra m ."
Thl' Conwa y Wl' ight re -

DICTIONARY!

The la~t witchcraft execih
tion in England occurred in
·
1716, in Scotland in 1722.

designer. . Choose
from our greatest
selection ever of
dried materials.

program, dietetics departmen! and pharmacy services.
The open house will be held
from I to 4 p.m . Refreshments will be served and the
public is invited to attend.

Mary johnson to

Connie Aldridge who has been employed ai the Fashion
Beauty Shop in Pomeroy for eight years is leaving to take over
Linda's Ladyfair Beauty Salon in Racine.
We wish you the best of luck.

REGISTER TO VOTE
POMEROY - If you have
any question about the new
voting procedure for the
upcoming November election. stop in at the Center and
one of the staff will be glad to
e&lt;plain .the voting machine to
you. Mr . Bud Wingett of
Racine has placed a mock
voting boothe and vot ing

FREE

for AUTUMN

Members of the Syracuse Presbyterian Church recently
honored the Rev . and Mrs. Dwight Zavitz on their birthdays
and his retirement with a dinner following church services
held in the annex of the church .
The Rev . and Mrs. Zavitz were presented a money tree
from members of the congregation along with a cake in the
form of a Bible.
We hate to see the Zavitzes leave, but wiBh them the best of
everything .

Senior Citizens scenes

CELEBRATION PLANNED•
The family of Dale Dye,
Carpenter, iovlt• •D hi&amp;
friends to join In the
celebration of his 80th birthday, September 24, at the big
shelter house, Lake Snowden,
Albany . A covered dish
dinner will be ~ed - at 1
p.m. with a reception from 2
til 5 p.m. No gifts please.

from
Ironton
, RobertCare
D. 1 ~-------------------.
Mu'r tha,
president,
Centers, Inc. of Dayton, and
other local dignitaries.
According to Jackscm Care
Center Administrator Mrs.
Kathleen Fee, the 1110-bed
facillty .will offer skilled an4'
intermediate nursing care for
convalescing patients of ail
ages. Special services include
physical, occupational,
speech and hearing therapy .
Be
your
own
The new care center wlll also

sensitive the comm unity to

th e needs of mentally
r etarded individuals in Gallia
County.
Pealer also stated that
individuals interested in the
future of services for the
mentally retarded would be
identiFied and included in the
long range planning process
at the district level. The
meeting will be held at the
Episcopal Ch urch, 541 Second
Ave ., Gallipolis, at 7 p.m.

HOMECOMING SE:I'
MT. HERMON - Annual
homecoming of the Mt.
Hermon United Brethren
Church will be held Sunday,
Sept. 17.
Following morning services a potluck dinner will be
served at noon. Afternoon
services will be held at I :30
p .m. with the Rev. James
Morrison of Point Pleasant as
the speaker. There will be
special singing . Everya,ne is
welcome to attend.

PENNYFARf
OFFERS

0

CHILLY POPS ·. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . • •• •.• ,.,. ol r...-, ... 1.... ,.._ ft•
GLAD WRAP..... • • . . • • • • • • • • • . • • • • ••• • •..• 1r• ••• ... 2w 1 1
OINTLI TOUCH IAI SOAP ••••••••••••.•••••• ••• •• c.n .... .. 21'
KlAn VILYinA CHilli SPRIAD. ,', ........ .. ..... l ... lo• 'l.ft
KIIILIR CINNAMON CRISP or HON$T OIAHAMS. IU!ttho ..... II'
SUNIHINI Ct!IIZ.ITS , ••• , ............ • .. • .. • • • .JkL looltw 'I

ICON MOUTHWASH ••••.•••• WOflllA• . ... . ............. 11.U
THOIOPA. . MAPLI SYIUP .... .. . ... .. ; .......... . .......... tl•
CIIIMOitA NON DAllY CIIAMII ........... . .. , ..... HI.,_ 1I.H
MUIIILMAN APPLIIAUCI •••••••••••••••.•• ••••• 1... c. J ._ 1I

11tOIOPAB . .AN JILL Y ••••••• J • •••••• •• ••••••••• M. Jw • •
MIIIIIIMAN NATUIIAL APPLI JUI~

•••••••••••••••• lt. IM. II'

A..wtCIC CAIN'IPMIH ••••••• • · '·

..................L .... 11. , •

GENERICS

(NO NAME BRAND)
PRODUCTS

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�•

Guiding Hand School
adds pre-school program
'

Hy Saltyaonll' HuUz
Tht.• f.uidinJ,! H&lt;HHI sehoul,
CIJCshire, wvuld like to all·
nuunL'e that the 1978-79 school
yea r h~s begun .
Thi~ yccu·, the schuul i.s lif-= 1
fe r mg a JJ!'c·sdwol pi"O/..!I'iHn ,
upen tu a ny child betweeu
tln'L't' uml six who is han·
ukap)lt!d or delayed in any
way . The pi'(JgJ'Hm WMS man·

rlalL'&lt;l by til e state, and the
SL"Iumllii.Jd tu di'( JJl its ~ t·hOJnc
trai ning prog ram in fctvor of
the pr~-st: houl. The is meant
t~J

Students of the Guiding Hand School are shown working in the classrooms and in the
workshop.
.

Also this year, lmpcfully
, stctrtiug in ctnot her two
weeks. the Guidi ng Hctnd
te,ll'hers plan t tu take the
c hildren to Rio Grande College to partidpatc in l'ct.•r·eational &lt;::~l'ti\'itics there. This
project is rmH ie p os~i ble U.v ::t

gr~:tfl t fronl the :&gt;l.itte uf Olnu
wilil'h is applied through Hio
Grande. The l't't.: rcational
pru~-: ram :s &lt;.II'C plauncd rur
Tuesday und Thursday after·
noons cHid vo l lmlt~rs a rc
!lcederl . Those wishi'ng to ltelp
out t:cu n .'all the Guiding Hand
sdtiJul a t 367-0102.
A c~onling to Jo Huntingtun, Su)&gt;et·iniendent , . Ute
dusses arc groupe d murc fur
ability tlmu for age . Thl' rc
ttrL' H total of five classes.
ra ngi n ~ from primcu·y, luw
al&gt;ility to the workshop for I

c.:lus."ics, such &lt;:ts the prevoL:ational class for 17-21
ye~ r-o lds, is IJ"WinlY job
oncnted . The class ins tr·uctur
cuiH·eHtrates on teac.: hing
skills rele:t led to cummon livi11g , such a s filling out a ppli ca tions. _working with
·~h ers, developing gooLI work
habits and completing tas ks.
Skills Such skills are taught
as janit~rial training, car
washing and waxing ami
Jawn l'ar·c,
In the workshop, wl1irh
prepa res the students for the
\.·ca rold,~;.
wor ld of work on their own, · The primary classes (If dOcti contract work for local
' which there arc two, ar~ Ill· imlust1·ies. 'The students do
vu.lvt..'&lt;l in . te&lt;:tc hing the . sorting , (meka giug and are
d nidren l&gt;ostc s ktils needed ))llid wages for their efforts.
fur .eve ry day hvrn!\, suc h as The school is happy to report
dressrng lhcrnsclves and that these students are ofien
baste rcadi n~. The advan cec.J pla ce~ in outside work silua-

lions a nti arc ailll' to live independently.
A grant has lx.'Cn approved
to l&gt;uild a new workshop,
which i.s now housed in the
J.{ymnasium of the sc h ool~;~nd
nul nearly large enough, out
Ute school has to come up
with 10 per cent of the money.
itself . In ord er· to do this, the
atlrninistration ~~the Guiding
Hand feels the Guiding Hand
-Gallco levy has to be passed.
Jo Huntington sighed, ·'The
trouble is - people don 't Sl'C
the same kind of progress
IK!rc J hey do in pul&gt;lie sc:lruols.
If a child comes here unable
tu dress himsell etm.l leave.s
being able to live on ltis own,
llta t's progress! If these peopl e could not Jive in·
dependently, lire chances 'are
they'd end up on welfare. "

Mr·. and Mrs . Emmett Roy
Thompson , Rou(e 1,
Cloeshire, are armouncing the
l&gt;irth of a daughter oo
September 2. Tloe lillie miss
weighed eight pounds , one
OUI&gt;l'e and was named Emily
Ruth .
The maternal grandparents are Finley Cotton,
Gallipolis, a nd Clara Culton,
St. Petersl&gt;urg, Fla . The
paternal · grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Emmett E .
Tl&gt;ompson, Chesltir·e .
Emily was greeted at horne
by a sister, Kelly Joan, 19
months.

U

birthday

11aS

CENTENARY - Allen
Elliott celebrated hi~ sixth
birthday Monday, August 21,
with a party at the home of
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. ·
Wayne Elliott of Centenary.
Those· attending were
Nathan Berkley, Chuck
Fisher, Russ Neal, Tom
Lana, Carrie DeWald and Lee
Ann Lemon. Games were
played with prizes going to
simple story aOout a sunple, overnight but is convenient . Nathan Berkley and Russ
natural . .function.
Em- and
enjoyable,
once Neal.
phasizing the joys of breast- established."
Chocolate cake and lee
feeding, it is designed to
The continuing series ol cream were served to his
encourage and inform infonnal meetings is open to guests .
mothers who desire· to nurse all women interested in
Those sending gifts and
their babies. In the words of breastfeedin g. Babies are ca rds were maternal grandMarian Thompson, President always wel come. Anyone parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
of La Leche League In- desiring further infonnalion Burnett, paternal grandternational, "Breastfeeding may call Bev Splete 44&amp;-4010 pa~erils , Mr. and Mrs . Ralph
is an art that is not learned or Betsy Crank 675-2776 .
Elliott, Diana, Don and Doug
Elliott, Becky Swain, Ron
and Edie Wilkins and Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Fellure· and
Christi and Keith.
CARAVAN SCHEDULE
BOOK CARAVAN
Faii-Wloler No, 1
Monday
GALLIPOLIS
The
Sept. II, 2!i; Oct . 23; Nov. 6,
Gallipolis Church of Christ in
20 ; Dee. 4, 18; Jan . 29 ; Feb.
Christian Union, 2173 Eastern
.12, 26; March 12, 26; April 9,
Ave ., will be having their
23 ; May 7, 21.
annual homecoming services
School - Hannan Trace
beginning with a week's
Elementary
revival Sept . 11-17, with the
Community
Re v. Bud Combs from
Pine c rest, · 2 :30-2 : 45;
Parkersburg, W. Va. as the
Winters Station, 2:50-3:05;
evangelist. There will be
Rio Grande (Valley View
'special singing each evening.
THE
Apts.), 3:30-3:55 ; Rodney II ,
The services will start at 7:30
4:1!H:30; Rodney II , 4 :35- p.m .
4 :55; Quail Creek, 5 :05-5:20;
On Sunday, Sept. 17, the
Rodney I, 5:2!i-5 :40 .
homecoming day will start at
Fairview, 6 : 2~:35; Sprin~
9:30 a .m. with Sunday
Valley, 6:40-7; 35 W, Apls.,
School; 10:3Q a.\n . morning
7:05-7 :30; Pleasant Valley ,
worship with a former pastor,
7:35-8.
Rev . James Erwin from
Tuesday
Florida doing the speaking.
Sept. 12, 26 ; Oct. 10, 24;
Nov. 7, 21; Dee. 5, 19; Jan . 2, At I 2 noon there will be a
basket dinner in the church
16, 30; Feb. 13, 27; March 13,
yard; at 2 p.m . an afternoon
27; April 10, 24; May 8, 22 .
service with the Rev. Bud
School
Vinton
Combs preaching and special
Elementary, 9 : 45 - 3 ;
singing.,At 7 p.m . the evening
Christian School, 9-9:45;
service will be held with the '
Community
Rev . James Erwin .
Crousebeck Road, 4-4 :30;
The congregation gives a
P orter Brook , 4:45-5 : 15 ;
special invitation to the
Fairfield Acres, 5:20-5:40; public.
Centenary, 5 : ~ : 15 ; Green
Ac res , 6: 25-7 ; McGuire
The Best
Subdv., 7:05-7 :2!; ; II, 7 :30Cleaning Your
7:45 .
Carpel Ever Had
Wednesday
Sept. 13, 27; Oct . II, 2!i;
CHURCH ACTIVITIES
Nov . 8, 22 ; Dee. 6, 20; Jan. 3,
The Master's Encouragers
17, 31; Feb. 14, 28 ; March 14, will give a one hour concert
&amp;
28 ; April 11, 25 ; May 9, 23.
during the Sunday · School
Ol,.r lnc!udts llvlnt -m
School - Clay Elementary , hour (9:30a.m .) at Gallipolis
ond holl only up Ia :100 Ill9-2; Adelaide Drive , 4-4:25 ; Christian Church today. They
H.
Neighborhood
Road will also · have part of the
( Cremeans) , 4 :4&amp;-5 : 15; Sunday morning . service
Eureka, 5 :25-5 :45; Crown (10:35 a.m .); and tbe entire
City , 6-8 :30; Shaffer's, 7:10- Sunday evening service at 7·
7:25 ; Smith's, 7:40-8.
p.m .
Furnllura Sl1111iey IIHIMII
Thursday
On Sept. 12, Uplift, 7 p.m .;
Sept . 14, 28; Oct. 12, 26; 25th , The Ladd Family
Nov, 9; Dec . 7, 21; Jan. 4, 18; Singers concert, 7 p.m. ; 26th,
PROII::CIIU"
Feb: 1, 15; March I, 15, 29; Uplift, 7 p.m. ; 29th, Men's
April 12, 26 ; May 10, 24 .
Fellowship, 6 p.m.
Gallia, Meigs
School
Cadmus
Elementary, 9-2 .
&amp; Vinton Co.
Commuaity
614-446-4208
Northup (Niday's), 2: 152:25 ; Northup (new homes),
2:30-2 :55 ; Patrtol P.O., 3:203:40 ; Cadmus, 3:50-4: 10;
Waterloo, 4:30-4 :50 ;
.
Gallia , 6-8 :20; Centerpoint, ·
'
6:40-6 :55;, Centerville, Town
Hall , 7:10-7 :40 ; Banks, 7:45-8.
: '{ :

Le Leehe League to hold meeting
GALLIPOLIS - II you
ha ve consi dered brea stfeeding your baby but have
questions about this womanly
art , you a re invited to a ttend
the second meeting of the
series of La Leche League of
Gallipolis m eetin gs . The
meeting will be held Monday,
September II , 7:30 p.m . at

the home of Chris Mitchell,
636 Kristi Drive, Gallipolis.
The topic will be " The Af.t of
Brea slfeedin g a nd Overcoming Difficulties. '! The
discussion will include en·
co urag em ent
and
in·
formation on how to establish
a happy nursing relationship.
La Leche ~ague tells a

Homecoming set

SEE WHY
RIO GRANDE
COLLEGE
COMMUNITY
COLlEGE
IS
BEST

Miller-Minnis-]ackson
families hold reunion
Gifts were presented to the
officers and to the oldest
member s and the charter
member present being Mrs.
Carrie Jackson and Mrs.
Mabel Minnis a nd Joseph
Jackson, and the youngest
member, C. Miller .
Games for the children
were led by Mrs. Glen Miller.
Prizes were awarded the
winners in various contests.
The children also enjoyed a
special treat at the end of the
day.
Th ere
were
four
generations of some famil y
members present.
· The day closed with group
singing accompanied by Mrs .
Sylvia Miller at the piano:
Mrs. William Jackson and
Mrs. Turner Jackson were in
charge of the talent program.
Me mber s and friends
present were : Mrs. Wyman
I Mabel Miller) Minnis, Mr.
Buford Minnis, Mr . and Mrs.
Turn er (Augusta Minnis )
Mc.bel M innis, treasurer.
The afte rn oo n prog ram Jackson, Mr. and Mrs. Calvin
bega n with the group singing, I Maudine Morrison ) Minnis
" Yteld Not To Temptation," and son, Mrs. June (Jackson )
devotiona l sc ript ure 27 th Foreman and son, Mark,
Psalm and prayer by Brother Mrs . Kerr (Sadie Miller )
Calvin Minnis ; song, "Down Cordell , Mr. and Mrs. Alfred
At Tlte Cross " ·led by Mrs . (Mary Bunch ) Cordell and
Augusta Jackson. Welcome family .
Mrs. Lushe r ( Mildred
wa o by Ktm bcrly Jac kson
with response by Mrs . A. 'Clark ) Evans, Mrs . William
Brown . H1stor y (:lfld high !Clara Evans ) Jackson and
JX&gt;Ints of the New Testament children, Kimberly, Karen ,
and writers were expounded Kirk, Kelley , Mr. and Mrs.
b) f!ufo rd Minnis . A duet was Ea rl IVada Evans) Mayo and
sung by Kimberly and Karen c hildren , He rman , Earl ,
.Jackson. " I'll Let · Nothing Carman , Lusher, Joseph
Sc·paratc Me From The Love Ja ck son , Mr . a nd Mrs .
!Kathryn Jackson ) Allen of
uf Cod :" song, '' God Cares, "
Dayton, Ohi o.
Keli)' and Ka ren Jackson;
Mrs. Rudolph (Sylvia )
poem. " Some body Loves
You, Vada Ma yo; song, Mr. Miller, Mr . and Mrs. Glenn
(Corliss Borden ) Miller, Mr .
and Mr s. Ca lv in Minni s;
song, Mr . and Mrs. Angelo and Mr s. Herb ert ( Eva
Miller ) Lear and daughter,
Hickman .
Columbus
; Hollis Miller ,
The speaker fo r the day
Mrs
.
Ralston
!Gladys
was Deacon Allen of Mt.
Hielman
)
Miller,
Mr.
and
Uni o n Ba pti st Churc h,
Da yt on, Ohio, who was Mrs. Angelo IBeulah Miller )
loving ly presented by his Hielrnan, Mrs. Nina Peek ,
wife.. Mrs. Kathryn Allen . He Mrs. Charles (Minnie Peek )
spoke on the meaning of Miller , Mrs. A. Brown.
The group promised to
reuni on and gave a brief
history.
meet again at the same
The Aliens also showed location next year , Sepmovies of the past year 's tember 2, 1979 .
reunion.
The 43rd annual reunion of
the Mtller - Minnis - Jackson
f_amilies was held Sunday ,
Sept. 3 at the Bethel Church
near Vinton. The famil y roots
go ba ck to 1843 when 30
families from Virginia were
settled on a tract of land
purchased by slave holders.
The fa milies are proud of
their true herita ge and the
hist o ri ca l signifi cance it
gi ves. Although the ancestors
were bro ught to this country
as captives , through much
prayer and fa ith in God they
survived a nd became free.
The day of festivity began
with a morning gathering and
soci a l hour followed by a
basket dinner at the noon
huur .
Mrs . Mildred Evans,
president , presided over the
afternoo n session. Othe r
offi cers prese nt were Hollis
Mill er , vice president ; Sadie
Co rdell , reeording secretary ;

A /bert Durose to
host meeting today
One of the last official activities of Albert R. Durose,
lie ute na nt-governor, will be
Ius hosting the Ninth Division
Kiwanis Councrl Sunday
afternoon at Rio Gr·arrde College Community College .
It is a training meeting
wl11dr will start at 1:30 p.m.
in t he dirUn~ room . Tl1c

meeti ng is scheduled to r·un
until5 p.m ., and then, at 5:30
p.m ., the officer·s from !3
clubs over southeasterrt Ohio
willll.Cjve dinner ,

Durose's

year

as

lieute nant·guvernur will t!11c1
Oct I , and Harold Kelley,
Wheelers l.Jur~ . will takfo 11ver.

SUNDAY
HOME CO MING , Eureka .
United Christian Church .
Sunday school with special
service at 10 a .m. Dinner on
the grounds at 12 :30. Aftern oo n servi ce. Singers:
Charles Love Singers and
Heirs of Christ.
SUNDAY
SEMINAR on evangelism ,
Rev . Eldon King, Dallon, 0 .,
Fellowship Chapel, Sept. 10,
11 , 12. Tea ching sessions 10
a .m. and 7 p.m.
SPECIAL spea ker at Jubilee
Christian Center, George 's
Creek Rd ., Dr . S. Bill Pritchett. Sunday church school,
9:30: Worship service , 10 :30.
Pastor C. J . Lemley invites
everyone.
KIWANIS Ninth Division
CcWlcii I :30 p.m . Rio Grande .
College dining room .
HOMECOMING at Addison
Freewill Baptist Church .
Speakers : Homer Mahew and
J ohn Mahew , Delbarton , W.
Va. and Irving Reedy,
Columbus. Special singing.
Covered dish at noon.
HOMECOMING at Mt. Zion
Baptist Church Sunday, Sept.
10 starting at II : 15 a .m.
Morning speaker , Ted Ba U
and aftern oon speaker,
Clifford Gore . Special
lin~in~. dinner seryed .
HOMECOMING
at
Springfield Baptist Church.
Prea ching and s pecial
•ingin g. Basket dinne r .
Pastor, Roger Glassburn .
SPECIAL singing Sunday at
7:30p.m. at Grove Freewill
Baptist Church, Roseville
Rd., Vinton with the Gospel
Tones. Clyde F errell , pastor.
ANNUAL Harvest Festival
at St. J ohn Lutheran Church
Sunday . Church service at 11
a .m., basket dinner at noon
and Gospel Tones at I :30.
BIRDIE WAHNER reunion
Sunday at Ft. Meigs on New
Lima Road. Pavilion number
two on left. Basket dinn er at
noon . All family and fri ends
invited.

Stown are children from a last year's class at the
Community Nursery School.

Community Nursery
school begins new year
School opened on Sept. 5 a t
Community Nursery Schoo l
located. at
the
~' ir st
Presbyterian Church 51
State Street. The mo~ing
class is filled with a waiting
lost , but there are still some
vacancies in the afternoon
cla ss for three-yea r -o lds.
This class m eets on Mondays,
Wednesdays, and Frid ays
12:45-2 :45 p.m . Ccst of class
is $17 per month . The morning class for the next school
year will be selected from

this class belore being opened :
to the public.
If you have a three-year-old
whom you think would enjoy
our class and being with
children his or her own age
group, why not enroll him
no w'! For more information
or an a pplication, please call
Sha ron Johnson 446-1488 ;
Na nnett Moodey 446·0122 ;
Mrs. John Moore 446-271f.i; or
Mrs. Jam es Rousli 446-4274 ;
or come in to see the teachers
at schoo l.

Honored on
4th birthday

Wendi Rertae Turley

HARRY Drummond fami ly, Sunday School hour (9 :30
Ga lli a Jr . F ai rg rounds . a .m .) at Gallipolis Christian
Dinner at 12 noon. Everyune Church today. They will also
welcome.
have part of the S unday
THE DESCENDANTS ol morning service 1t0 :35 ) and
Henry " Doc" and Angeline the entire Sunday evening
Tope Crem'olens will meet for servioe at 7 p p.rn .
their annual reunion Sunday ,
September 17, at the Kyger MONDAY
Creek recreation area . A FRENCH COLONY Chapter
picnic dinner will begin at I DAH luncheon meeting , I
p.m. in the Shelter house. Ail p.m . at Holiday Inn .
members and friends of this Reservations must be in to
family are cordiall y invited May Haskin s by Sept. 9.
SF.PTEM 1BEH
II ,
to come.
Washington School P.T.A.,
THE
MASTE R'S
En - Monday 7 p.m . in the oehool
couragers will give a one cafeteria,
" Mee t
the
hour.f L'r, n t'l'rt durin ~ t he Teachers."
IJ

Wendi Renae Turley,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Turley of Crown City,
was honored with a party
cc.l ebrating her fourth birth·
da y recently at her Aunt
Lynn's home in Marietta,
Ohio.
The cake and table
decorations were done in pink
and white.
Cake, ice cream, and Kool·
Aid .\"ere served to the guests.
1110'¥' present were Roger ,
Lynn, Todd, Stevie Osborne ,
Mr . and Mrs. Harold Osborne
and Pary, Gall and Debbie
Osboine, Bonnie, ·Kevin and
Timmy Baird and Wendi 's
mother , Sue.
Th&lt;\rt on AugUJt 23, Wendt 's
birth&lt;jay, she had cake and
ice cr.eam with her parents,
brother Chett and sister
Christl.

MONDAY
MONDAY, Sept. 11, La
Leche League meeting, 7:30
p.m., home of Chris Mitchell.
More lnforinatloo, ca ll Bev
Splete, 446-4010 or Betsy
Crank, 675-2776:
MERCERVILLE Granlle
regular meeting Monday, 8
p.m .

Gallia-Lawrence Farm -Bureau held annual
meeting Thursday night in Rio·Grande

Announce
birth

ANY
UVING ROOM

-~

~
----------

POINTERS

torFal

'

Tile ( iallbt· l.awl'cntc ~'ann
Burt!aU held lhcir annuul
meeting Thursday, Sept. 7, at
7:00 p.m . in the Rio Gra nde
College cafeteria . There we re
· fr7 in aUenJe:. ncc.
T h~ met!ting began with a
lovely dinner served l&gt;y the
cafeteria stctff , e:tftcr which
Ore meeting was ufflcially
ca lied to order. The inti'Oductions were given by President
Ro y Sprague, who welcomed

wH s

c untluded,

g~vc

i:l
Jclightful speed\
abuul her expt!riences lhcn:.
Another A young experiences
U1c re. Then. Cindy Graham
rt!iat.cd her cx-pcrcim:es at a
Yuung Couples' Confen !ncc
which she and her husba nd ,
l)d vid , attended earlier this
year.
The highlig ht of the eve ning

wt:ts t h(: prese11tatwn of till'
$500 reword which tu Willia1n
Jamerson, f~alli f Kili.s , fur·· hi.s
brave &lt;:tl't of reporting a
crime tu the polino wlu ch led
tu lht• cuTest of the aillliJicd .

Mr .

J;u ncr~on

:-.a w

lltall

1:t

U!.ke a dtizl'!l':-. biJJ lli rm lifl

frulll a .ve hicle.· owr1eU IJ\' Corrull Nurris, uf f'arrul No rris
Dotl~e .
(;&lt;:~lli poll s.
Mr .
Jam cr !-lull g&lt;:~ vc (I bri ef thank
speeeh tl iatlki ng the bu re&lt;.111.
Afte r ruusJ n).( c nlt~ rtaJn ­
provc ded by Ce11rgt·
TI!Olllj)SO/l &amp; l'll ., thl· lllt' Cti !Jg

was ad juumed.

Homemakers~

.

Sbown are, right to left, Martha Gearhart, member of the State Farm Bureau Boatd
who pr•nted the Star Awards at the arunaal Gallia-Lawrence Fann Bureau meeting;
Barban Milia, Emelyn &amp;;arberry and Doo Thomas, winners of the awards.

Circle
featuring

GALLJPO!JS- Eahtbit for the month of September , 1978
- Coverlets and ~- A unique display prepared by the
Smithsonian, on loan 111 the Ohio Foundation on the Arts, to
provide, in a unique J!lllllller, a description of the process used
BY BETTIE CLARK
in making coverlets. Uical coverlets and quilts wtli exemphfy
Es&amp;euioo Aaeal,
the inf&lt;rmation in the Smithsonian display .
Home ~oDomtrs
Gallery Hours - Saturdays and Sundays, I p.m . until 5
p.m.; Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10a .m. until3 p.m.
By Bellle Clark
weekly, bi- weekly, monthly,
september 26, 7::10 p.m. - F .A.C. Interdepartmental
Co. Ext. Agt.
etc. I.
Meetinll ; 9 p.m. - F .A.C. Trustees Meeting, Riverby .
Home Ecoo. Gallta
- Approximate foo d exseptember 27-28- Eighth Annual Antique seminar with
"All Around the House" is pense , including food eaten Orva Walker Heissenbiltlellrom Washington, D.C., Riverby.
the theme lot the Home away from · home .
Cali PJ 's, 446-1819 for details and reservations.
Economics program at the
or
mortgag e
- Rent
September 30,5 p.lll.-9 p.m. and October I, 1 p.m .-5 p .m. 1978 Fann Science Review. payments, including tues "Bright and Breezy at River by." Flower Show by the
The fifteenth annual Farm and insurance.
GallipoUs Garden Club, Nancy Smith , President ; Karen
Scient'C Review will be held
- Utility costs, including Berkich, Chairw&lt;man. Open to the public .
September 19, 20 and 21 at the tel ephone, water , sewer,
October 7, 8:30 p.m.-12 Midmght - "Oktober Fest,"
Don Scott Field, Co lumbus, natural gas, electricity , fuel Riverby. Dance Music provided by Maty Lucas a nd Friends .
Ohio. Exhibits in the School of oi l, cable television.
Gennan ·food and lots of fun , $5 a couple, $2.50 single . Bess
Home Economics tent will
- Automobile costs, in· Grace and i'\arianne Campbell co-ehairing the plannin g. Dress
contain informati on for all eluding car payments, auto casual.
family members on topics insurance and gasoline.
ranging from insulating the
- Installment debts.
sheet cake, bread, butter,
attic t o buying toys for
-Savings .
milk.
- children .
The fifth exhibit in the
Thursda y - Macaroni Hnd
Five exhibits are planned : Home Economics tent
cheese, canned peach and
shown are Bob Powell, Glenn Graham, Ernelyn Scarberry and Roy Sprague. Powell The Weatherized House , a fo cuses on children's play .
pear
sala d.
spinach ,
model ho use illustra tin g The importance of play to the
and Sprague were elected to the Fann Bureau board . Mrs. S!:arberry and Mr. Graham were
c
hocol
ate
puddi
ng
with
home
insulation;
Pa
inl
ess
child
will
be
emphasized;
elected as delegates to the annualfarm bureau conference.
vanill a wa fer, corn bre ad ,
Se win g, a ss ista nce with participants will learn about
organizing home sewing; Go creative play through nature,
Me i&amp;s Senior Citizens butter , milk .
.•. FOR THOSE
Friday - Sa lmon loaf,
With Good Sense and Good a rt , and drama . Information Center act ivities located at
escalloped
potatoes, buttered
Food, infonnation on dietin g; on selection of toys with . the Pomeroy Junior High
cobbl er . bread ,
peas,
apple
DEEPLY PERSONAL
A Child's World of Play, an safety and creativtly in mind School is open 9 a. m . to 4 p.
butler
,
milk
.
emphasis on the impQrtance will also be included' in the m. Monday through Friday.
Co ff ee, te a , bulter mtlk ,
of play; and $ Watch, a exhibit.
Monday, Sept. II - Square
MOMENTS
skim
milk , and juice served
com put erized
budgetin g
The Review offers many Dance, 12:30 to 3 p. rn .
daily
.
Plea se register the day
program. Faculty from the other educational exhibits
Tuesda y, Sept. 12 School of Home Economics , from every department of the Physical Fitness II : :10 a .m .; before you pian to eat.
PORTLAND - Telephone
The Ohio State University, College of Agriculture and Ellen Bell , Librarian, II a .
will be at each exhibit to Home Economics and many m. ; Chorus 12: 30 .!0:~ p. m . 84 3-3364. COAD Se nior
Wedll'!sday , Sept .. 13 _:_- Nutrition Weekly Menu fur
answer questions or do short commercial exhibits of indemonstrations.
terest. Advance tickets at Soc ial Sec urity Represen- the sa t ellit e site at t he
The Weatherized Ho use $1 .50 are available from the tative, 9:30 a.m. to 12 :30 Reorga nized Chu rch uf the
mod el shows correct in· Gallia Co unty Extension p.m. ; Physical Fitnets 11 :30 Latter Day Sa ints, Old Town
stallation of insulation in the office or the Farm Science a. m .; Games 12::10 to 2 p.m . Flats, is similar to the above
menu . Please ca ll .in your
attic, walls and basement. In Review office at The Ohio
Thursday , Sept. 14 addition, atti c venting is State University . Admission Physical Fitness II :30 a . m . reservat ion.
illu strated in the mod el at the gate will be $2.00.
Friday, Sept. 15 - Blood
house.
Pressure Testing , I~ a . m . to
Persons attending the 1978
12 noon ; Art Class JO ., . m. to
Fann ScienCe Review can
12 noon ; Bowling I tO 3 a. m.
also learn " painless sewing " .
Senior Nutrition Program,
Included in this ex hibit will
12
noon to 12:45 .P· m .,
MEETING SET
We des ign special funeral sprays
be lips on organizing the
Monilay
through Frt.y.
On Monday, September 11,
sewing
center
and
on
sav
ing
Menu for ,~
and floral pieces for those occasat 7 p.m., at St. Peter's
time by using short cuts. Episcopal Church, 594 Second
Sept. llthrougjl ~1. 15
Monday - · !reef patty ,
Demonstrations will be given Avenue, Gallipolis, there will
sions when only flow ers ca n
continuously between II a . m. be a planning meeting lor whole kernel corn, ~ottage
express your innerm ost feelings .
and 2 p. m. each day .
Services for the Develop- cheese salad, oranp and
will
focus
The
third
exhibit
Roy
Sprague,
President
"When words are not enough Send"
mentally Disabled (mental grapefruit sections, bllcuits,
of the Gallla-Lawrence on dieting, a preoccupation retardation, cerebral palsy, butter, milk .
,
Tuesday - Baked Chicken,
Farm Bureau, addre ssing for many persons. In- autism, epilepsy).
formation on balanced diets,
the meeting.
The topics to be discussed cole slaw, mashed potatoes
and low-calorie snacks, include
g r oup
homes, with gravy , fruit cocktail,
Ph. 446-9721
Galli olis
28 Cedar St.
salads, be verages , and education o f the han- roll, butter, milk.
desserts will be presented . dicapp e d,
Wednesday - MeatbaUs in
voca tional
gravy, baked potato, buttered
Review-goers will be able to training.
get answers to all their
Ja c k Pealer from the green beans, iced vellow
qu es tions about die tin g Departme nt of Mental
between 10 a . m . and II a. m . Retardati on a nd Developand 2 p. m . a nd 3 p. m. each mental Di sabilities will
day .
conduct the meeting.
Another activity for reviewgoers is $ Watch, a com·
CREMEENS REUNION
puterized budgeting program
The descendants all Henry
that allows the individual to
"Doc': ; and Ange~
- Tope
compare his or her family 's
Crem'Mbs will m~ '· their
TO END MARRIAGE
ex penditures with national
annual reunion . nday ,
GALLIPOLIS - Filing for September I 7, at the Kyger
a ve ra ge family spending
patterns. Persons wishing to dissolution of marriage in Creek recreation area. A
partiCipate in the · computer Gallia County Common Pleas picnic dinner will be&amp;in at I
program should bring the Court Thursday were Ruth p.m. in the shelter boll8e. All
followin g figures to the Ward, Vinton, and Lawthie members and friendl of this
Ward, ~ hland, Ky. The family are cordiaily Invited.
Review:
couple was married Nov . 10,
- Take home pay.
- Pay schedule (received 1955, and have four children.
Annie Anybody

From $300
tor the set

r ·- ----:. -:·-·l

1 Sr. Citizens 1

I

Cakndar'

I

FOR TODAY AND
TOMORROW IN

Magn tftcent b ridal sets
made for each other and
you . Th ese are the mo s t
beautt tul engagemen t
and w eddtng nng se ls
you 've ever seen .
By

DERIFIELD JEWELRY
417 Second A11 e ..
Gallipoli s, Ohio
" Across fro m the TheMer"

l tlustrahons e nlargP.d

-

-.,r·,

HOMEMADE OXYGEN

~

_ RESPIRATORY SUMIRT SYSTEM
Here's a sleek bit of loo twea r th ars pract ical
and comfortable . Wear it to work - wear it
at play- you 'll e nj oy its versatility . ClasSIC lines with stylish pleated front ,
SECURITY will find a solid place
in your footwea r wardro be .

Just Arrived

COMPlETE

BROWN
&amp;
BLACK

Itaa

!ilnmrtfDe PHILOSOPHY

lfMJITflr OF
R£SPfiA TDIY

·THERAir
EIUIPIBT

•suPPUES

Security

..

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We believe IINII you. our customers, are deserv.lng of caring.
II'OfessloNI Mrvice. With tliat concept In mind. we strive to meet
your hlghelf.apectations. Our trained staff takes the time to insure
,ou have till proper service. privacy, confidentiality and the care
tnc1 respect fOu deserve. We firmly believe you are the strongest
link In our business. As we look to .the future with faith and
confidence-In this, our S.conlfyear of business, we thank you for
your past ,.tronage and pledge to serve you in an honj!sl. sincere
way In teh future.
Herman and Dee Dillon

Mon. &amp; Frl: lill
T-., W.., Sal. IllS

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Set 1n 14 K.l Yel low 01 Wl11t e GokJ .

FLOWERS by GEORGE

"EKperience the omerence ··

THE

'"s tar

e:t wurds" were presented lu
thusl' ml'mbers who he:ttl done
outstanding work fur the
urgani z&lt;::~tiun in the past year.
Till' awards were given to
fla riJa ra Mills, for her work
with the wumen '!:I L:ommittee ;
Dun Tlwme:ts., for· orga1iizing
two new [(ii'IO lJureau ad-

visur-y counet ls ; and tineiyn
ScarberTy, who reeeiWd two
awar·us, fur her work?.los in-·
furmaliun · ·coordinate and
for her successful &lt;live as
1\JcmbetJShip chair-w~l .
Later, Amy Scarl&gt;erTy, who
along with Michael Stowe r·s
and Michael Sterri ti was sent
to the Fa11n Bureau Youllt
Cuufereiii 'P · in Olt t•t~in ,

!llCJit

Turns one
CENTENARY - Cindy
Elliott, daughter of .Mr. and
Mrs. , R. Wayne Elliott of
Centen"' y, celebrated her
first btrthday with a party at
the home of her parents.
Those attending were
maternal grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Bumett,
paternal grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Elliott, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Fellure and
Chr!Bii and Keith, Diana, Don
and Doug Elliott, Beclty
Swain, Edle Williams, Judy
Baker and brother, Allen .
Cake and ice cream, tea,
pop and coffee were se.rved to
aU . ·
Sending gifts were Chuck
and Joella Fisher and !': ..,..
Neal.

tlic m cmbcn; CJm.l ~ uests tu
the m~eti n g .
After the usual business

SPRING VALI.EY PLAZA

Tllul'lday Ill t 2 -

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The Su1iday Times-&amp;mlinel , Sunday , St•pl. 10. lli7H

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.......,
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Sunday School building of
Grace United Methodist
t'hurch, at Second and Cedar.
' We are proud of our program
and facilities, and look for·
ward to sharing them with
interested parents. For more
child finds that lea rning is information, call Gl oria
fun , his conI'd
f
1 ence in himsel
Danner, 4-16·9550, Mary Kay
grows.
Carter, 4-16-4193; Charlotte
Come to the Open House, Seamon, 446-3498, or Katie
and get to know us. The Harris, 256-1357,
Cent er is located in the

j
A k from the
B c Childhood Center·\

Children arc shown a t snack time in the Community Nursery School, located at tlle
Grace United Metllodist Church.

EVENT TODAY
POMECOY - The annual
Harvest Festival of St. John
Lutheran Church will be held
al Pine Grove loday with a
service al 11 a.m. followed by
a basket dinner al noon. At
1:30 p.m ., the Gospel Tunes

THE SHOE CAFE
H'I'V JJ //,\ 'CS /.V
L/1-F !3FC0Mf
TRUE (.L -IS

will present a program of

GALLIPOLIS
The
teachers at the Community
Childhood Center would like
to invite ·you to help us
celebrate the new school year
at an Open House. Come&gt; join
us Thursda y, September 14
from 7 p.m. til 8:30 p.m. Let
us answer any questions you
might have ; meet the staff,
and see our facilities. Parents
who have children already
enrolled will have a chance to
see what they've been doing,
and parents of perspective
student s ca n come get
at·quaint ed with the teach"''' ·
We do ha ve openings for
children ages three to five.
Registration materials will
be availa ble.
The fu·st week of school has been a happy one . Th e
·children ha ve had a good
time gettin g to know each
other , and had a lot of fun
ge ttin g used to nur sery
schooL The Center's nonstru ctur ed, caring
atmosphere is formulated to
make your child's first SChool
experience a happy one . As a

~-.

~,

•'\

Plans completed
Plans have been completed
fon the wedding of G0 yle
Louise Price to Vernon Ray
Roush on Saturday, Sept. 18
in the Rockland United
Methodist
Church,
Washington, Blvd., Belpre, 0.
Miss Price is the daughter

Yanks pull within
one tilt of Bosox

of Mr. and Mra. Chllrtea P.
Price, Jr., Belpre and ROush
;_. the 11011 of Mr. and Mrs.
Vernon R. Roush, Sr., Maaon.
The open church ceremonY
will be8in at I :30 p.m. A
reception will follow the
ceremony.

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GALUPOUS defenders spent most of the game
chasing Rock Hill's Don Roe (34 , on right with ball ) in
Friday's 1978 grid opener. GAHS players left to right are

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( .'/n••ll tllll nr;d!l lwa l
ll'il t lrl\

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lr; r&lt;~'" 11/ llt : o lf,t"
11 , 1r.m M 11'''' ami
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flll'l t•l" ' ''' ~ ' l milil&gt;" lll rf, ~mrh
II , 1'•11 . /,.. /),,"

THE
.SHOE CAFE
Lafayette Mall
Gallipolis , Ohio

II

®

Welcome Wagon
club activities

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Sept. 13 ..: Get-acquainted coffee, 10 a.m. Karen Moffitt's.
24&gt;-S3S9. RSVP . Car pools will be forming at Jackson Pike
office of Ohio Valley Bank at 9:45a.m. for rides.
Sept . 14 - CanaSta , 7: 30p.m. at Gail Martinko's, 446-7571 .
RSVP.

Sept . 18 - General meeting and installation of new
officer s, 7:30p.m. at Ohio Valley Bank , Jackson Pike office.
Guest speaker from Community Concert and tentatively from
French Art Colony .
Sept. 21 - Bridge at Nora Troike's, 7:30p .m., 441&gt;-2153.
RSVP .

Sept. 22 - Couples bowhng, 9 p.m., meet at Skyline Lanes.
Welcome Wagon is open to any interested party in tbe
area. For more information call Chris Mitchell, 446-7739 or Ann
Rauh 388-9804.

We're convenient.
cars offers·fast

SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPI)
- Sophomore Jeff Brockhaus
kicked a 33-yard field goal
with 12 :50 to play Saturday to
give two-tou chdown un·
derdog Missouri a 3.0 vk1ory
over No . 4-ranked Notre
Dame and hand the Irish
their first shutout loss at
home since 1960.
Notre Dame was al!11ost as
tough on itself as Mis5ouri
was, losing the ball twice on
fumbles · when it was
threatening to score and
failing on three occasions to
make the distance on a
fourth-and-&lt;&gt;ne attempt.
Missouri, led by the passing
of sophomore quarterback
Phil Bradley, never was outclassed and had the ball in
Irish territory as often as
Notre Dame could reach the
Tigers' turf. Bradley com·

drive In service
at all three offices.

C&amp;S_ Bank
The Commercial _&amp; Savings Bank
25 Court Street

Silver Bndge Plaza

'I N-VITES YOU .T O
'H OLD YOUR

Spring Valley

pleted II of 18 passes for 107
yards and carried the ball 14
times himself. However, he
was sacked four times for
losses totaling 25 yards .
Bradley's performance
outclassed the passing of
Notre Dam e's star J oe
Montana, who completed 13
of 28 attempts for !52 yards
but had two of his throws
intercepted and returned 39
yards . The first interception,
by Eric Wright, came when
the Irish were on the Missourl
33. The second, by linebacker
Chris Garlich , came when
Notre Dame had advanced to
the Missouri 45.
Missouri, with running
back Earl Gant piling up 103
yards ·in 17 carries, failed
once on a fourth-and · three •
inch attempt at the Notre
Dame 38 in the seco nd

quarter

but,

• • •

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ART CRAFT
•

IN OUR PARKING LOT

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.
(UP! )- Chuck Fusina threw
for one touchdown to break a
Penn State record and Matt
Bahr kicked four field goals
to tie another Saturday to
help carry the third-ranked
Nlttany Lions to a 26·10
victory over Rutgers.
Fusina , playing before a
record crowd of 77,154 at
newly expanded Beaver
Stadium, hit wide receiver
Scott Fitzkee on a 53-yard
score midway through the
first quarter for his 27th
career t ouchdown pass,
breaking the mark set by
John Hufna gel from 1970.
1972.
Meanwhile, Bahr, a senior
who played in the North
American So ccer League
during the summer, booted
field goals of 32, 37, 28 and 27
yards to tie the Penn State
mark set in 1974 by his
brother , Chris, now with the
Cincinnati Bengals.
The scrappy Scarlet
Knights , playing in their
season opener, kept the game
close in the first hall and only
trailed 13-3 .at intermission . .
But the Nlttany Lions took

control of the game in the
third quarter. holding the bail
for 12 :4.2 in the period and
allowing Rutgers no first
downs and no net yards .
Bahr kicked two field goals
in the quarter, while Penn
State's ball control tactics
and a 37-yard pass from

Today's
hurlers
•

Nalional League
St. Louis ( Martinez~ ) at
Philadelphia iLonborg 6-10 or
Carlt on 13-1 2), I :35 p.m.
Pittsburgh 1Bibby 6-7 or
Reuss 2-2) at New York
(Koosman 3·15 ), 2:05 p.m.
Chicagp (Reuschelll-12) at
Montreal (Fryman 7·9), 2:15
p.m.
Los Angeles !Sutton 13·10)
at Atlanta (McWilliams 7·1),
2:15 p.m.
.
San Francisco (Halicki 67)at Cincinnati 1Seaver 12·
14), 2:15p.m.
San Diego 1Jones 1!-13) at
Houston (Richard 15-11 ), 3:15
p.m.

thereafter,

Missourl seemed t o dominate

the game.
Not_re Dame failed on a
fourth-and-one try from the
Missouri 10, aga in on a
fourth-and-&lt;&gt;ne try from the
Missouri 4 and yet again on
fourth -and -one
at
the
Missouri 28.
Notre Dame's best chance
to score otherwise came on a

field goal attempt of 32 yards
by Joe Unis. But Unis
couldn't get the kick away a s
holder Jo e Restic fumbled the
snap from center and, in·
stead , threw a futile pass.
It was the second victory
for Missouri in three games

with Notre Dame and the first
shutout for the Irish at hom e
since Oct. 15, 1960. Notre
Dame lost by shutout at
Michigan State, 21-0, in 1965 .

Fusina to Bob Bassett set up
the Lions' final touchdown in
the fourth quarter, a !·yard
slant by Matt Suhey, which .
c_apped an 82-yard drive .
The Nittany Lions, 2-0,
scored 10 points within a 25·
second span midway through
the first quarter, beginning
with Bahr's first field goal
Safety Pete Harri s in·
tercepted a Bob Hering pass
at the Penn State 47 and on
the next play Fusina hit
Fitzkee, who broke a tackle
at the Rutgers 30 to score
easily.
An
inter ce ption
by
lineba cker Lance Mehl on an
option pa ss by Rutgers '
halfback Dave Dorn set up
Bahr's second fi eld goat' of
the first hall, but the Sca rlet
Knights came right back, set
up_by Dorn's 46-yard run, and
got on the board on a 36-yard
fiel goal by Kennan Startzeil.
But the Penn State defense
kept Rutgers stymied until
late in the game , whe n
quarterback Ed McMichael
hit tight end Andy Carino
with a 5·yard touchdown pass
with less than two minutes to
play.

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12TH, 10 A.M. TIL 8 P.M.
NO COMMERCIAL OR PROFESSIONAL ORGANIZATIONS PERMinED.
HECK'S FLEA MARKET SALE IS FOR NON-COMMERCIAL USE ONLY.
LOCATIONS AVAILABLE AT HECK'S PT. PLEASANT STORE ON A

''

FIRST-COME BASIS TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12TH FROM 10 A.M. TIL
8 P.M.

QB DROPPED - Point Pleaant'a Sophomore Quarterback Glenn McCieuU (14) Ia

f'

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!lbown beln&amp; hit hard by Milas' Jerry Jl'ltlds. Comlnl on to olfer lw1ber defensive
llllllanc:t, at ri8Jrt,ll Bob Seella (87). The players In tile far backgrwnd are, Metes' Van
WIDford fS2), Point Ple811811t's BIUy Roach (n) and Meigs' Dave Blake (35).
.~

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Neggles, scored on Lou
Piniella's wind-blown double
to short ri ght. Following
another intentional walk to
Roy White, Bucky Dent and
Mickey Rivers smack ed
singles with each hit driving
in two · run s . Thurm~n
Munson drove in the sixth run
with a single and the final run

scored on a passed ball by
Carlton 'Fi•k'Ibe Red Sox, who made
two errors, have now made 2S
errors in their last 10 games,
which has accounted for 20
unearned runs. In the threegame series, the Yankees
have scored 35 runs on 49 hits.

'

Niuany Lions
dlifeat Rutgers

Member FDIC

earned run average to l.n .
The shutout was his ·seventh
of the year and he became the
first pitcher in the league to
beat every club at least once
this season.
The only Boston hits came
in the first, a single to center
by Rick Burleson and an
infield hit by Jln1 Rice.
Guidry retired the final 17
)!alters in recording his 13th
complete.
The Yank ees chased
starter Dennis Eckersley, 11&gt;7, when they banged out six of
their 11 hits in teh fourth
innin g. Chri s Chal)lbliss
doubled and, following an
intentional walk to Graig

Junbav ~imts • ·jentintl

Irish lose, 3-0

music.

·r -------,·- ·- ·- ·-·- · - ·-- ·- --·1

Marcus Sheets (50), Baron Haner (21) and Jack Yeagler
(35). Rock Hill won, 43--0. Preparing to throw a downfield
block for the Redmen is Wayne Addis ( 60) outstanding
guard and linebacker.
··

I!OSTON iUPII - Ron
Guidry fired a two-hitter for
hi s 21st victory end the New
York Yankees pulverized the
hapless Boston Red Sox, 7-0,
for the third straight game
behind a two-out, seven-run
rally · in the fourth ~ing
Saturday to move to within
one game of first place in the
American League East.
Guidry, who has lost twice,
became the first left·hander
to shut out Boston in Fenway
Park since Ken Holtunan did
it with Oakland in August of
1974. The Yankee ace, fanned
five to up his league-leading
strikeout total of 220 and
lowered his lea~ue-best

SPORTS
Jimmy, ·Chrissie show
NEW YORK !UPI) - The
Jimmy and Chrissie show
was on again at the U.S. Open
Tennis Champion ships
Saturday.
Jimmy Connors, a finalist

now for the fifth straight
year, made 19-year-&lt;&gt;ld NCAA
Champion John McEnroe run
around · the court like a dog
chasing a bone before ta king
a 6-2, 6·2, 7·5 semifinal vic·
tory.
Chris Evert, seeking to
become the first woman in 43
years to win four stratght
titles, crushed last year's
runnerup, Australian Wendy
Turnbull, 1&gt;-3, 6-0, in the
conclusion of Friday's rain-

suspended match.
In Sunday's nationaiiy
televised finals, Connors

takes on the. winner of the
Bjorn Borg-Vilas Gerulaitis
semifinals and Evert meets
16-year-&lt;&gt;ld wonder girl Pam
Shriver.

Shriver, who conquered more game to win a set.
top-seeded
Wimbledon Connors then roared back to
C h am pi o n
M a r t i n a win the next six games in a
Navratilova in the semis, row and clinch the victory.
watched a few games of
McEnro e, one of the
Evert 's demolition of Turn· - youngest semifinalists in
bull, said " this stinks," and history, had to be content
left to try on some new with $9,550, not bad for a
clothes.
recently
turned
pro.
McEnroe may be the " new McEnroe won the NCAA Title
Jimmy Connors" , a left· last spring for Stanford, then
bander with a temper and quit school to join the men' s
flair, but the old one was too pro circuit.
much for him Saturday .
Evert said she was looking
Connor, 26, embarrassed forward to playing Shriver in
McEnroe in the first two sets the women 's finals .
\hen rubbed it in even more
''She plays the kind of
when he pulled a trick out of game I like," Evert said.
Bill Tilden 's old bag. Back in "She's aggressive and I'll be
the 1920' s when 'J'llden was going for passing shots.
king of the courts, he used to
let an opponent win five
games on him then come
back to win the set.
Connors coasted through
DETROIT (UP! ) _ Hard •
the third set while McEnroe luck Dave Rozema won his
swept five of the first six
games and needed only one first game in nearly a month
by pitching a five-hitter
Saturday to break a personal
four-game losing streak and
pitclt the Detroit Tigers to-a :;.
2 victory over the Cleveland
Indians.
Rozema raised his record
to 7·10 with his ninth complete
game and only his third .
alter Kansas fullback Sam victory in his last eight starts.
Smith had fumbled at his own His ERA is now 3.15, second
22 to make ti 24-10.
best among the Detroit
The Aggies scored a pair of starters. The only two runs
insurance touchdoWfl.' in the scored by Cleveland, which is
fourth quarter on an M-yard winless in six tries at Tiger
run by r eserve quarterback Stadiwr. this year,- carne as a
David Beal and a 10-yard run result of two of the Tigers'
by backup fullback Roger four errors.
Wiley in the season opener for
Bernie Carbo was hit by a
both teams.
pitch with one out in the third
It marked the ninth con· and came all the way around
secutive season in which on Gary Alexander's two-&lt;&gt;ut
Texas A&amp;M won its opener. double when centerfield Ron
Curtis Dickey rushed for LeFlore had trouble picking
128 yards and added Texas up the ball for an error and
A&amp;M's first touchdown with cutoff man Jason Thompson
threw wildly trying to get
1:32 IJfi in the first hall.
at
third .
The Aggies rushed the ball Alexander
II straight times in their Alexander also scored on the
second possess ion of the play.
Starter Mike Paxton, 10-9,
game, moving 46 yards to the
Kansas 17 before settling on a did not allow a hit until he
34-yard field goal by Tony gave up four hits and four
runs in the fourth inning. Milt
Franklin for a ~ lead.
But Kansas came to life May's sacrifice fly scored the
midway through the second first run, Phil Mankowski
quarter following a 17-yard doubled down the left field
punt return by Jimmy Little line to score two runs and
Lou
Whitaker
that gave the Jayhawks the rookie
squeezed a single between
ball at the Texas A&amp;M 48.
third and short to score the
fourth run.

T"
:agers topple

Indians, 5-2

TexasA&amp;M
routs Kansas
LAW!l.ENCE , Kan. (UP! )
- Mike Moseley threw two
touchdown passes to split end
Doug Teague within a span of
1:41 during the third quarter
to propel !5th-ranked Texas
A&amp;M to a 37·10 victory
Saturday over Kansas .
A fumble by Mosley after
he was sacked by linebacker
John Calovich gave the ball to
Kansas at the Texas A&amp;M 24·
yard line to set up a 26-yard
field goal by Mike Hubach to
tie the sco re at 10.10 at 8:14 of
the third quarter.
Then Mosely hit Teague
.with a 7-yard scoring pass to
cap a 5-play drive and con·
nected on a 17-yarder with his
junior wideout three plays

Caldwell

hurls·four
hit shutout
BLOOMINGTON (UP! ) Mike Caldwell tossed a four·
hitter and rookie Paul Molitor
tripled in two runs Saturday
to pace the Milwaukee
Brew~rs to a ~ victory over
the Minnesota Twins that
moved them to within 41&gt;
games of first place in the
American League's Eastern
Division.
Caldwell, 18·9, walked
three and struck out four to
post his 20th complete game.
Rookie !Wger Erickson, 1311, yielded only five hits for
the losers.
Sixto Lezcano led off the
fifth with the flrllt hit off
Erickson. Erickson retired
the next two batters, but
- Charlie Moore singled to set
the stage for Molitor's triple,
which sailed over the head of
centerflelder D•n Ford an&lt;t
rolled to the wan, allowing
LeJ:cano and· Moore to score.
LeJ:cano, who had three
singles, drove In Ben Ogilvie
with a base hit in tbe sixth.
Ogilvie got on bue on a
fielder's dwlce and reached
second on an error by second
baseman Bob Randall.

"

HELPED OFF FIELD - Henry (Bo) Elliott, one of
the casualties of the hard-fought, but thrilling clash
between Meigs and PPHS Friday night, is shown here
being helped off the field by Dr, John Grubb. Elliott, a 190lbs. junior, suffered an ankle injury.

0. ]., Payton
matchup set
' By JOE CARNICELLI
" I'm approa chin g this
UP! Exec. Sports Editor
game like any other," he
Fans in San Francisco may said. ''There is no difference,
feel they're watching a track really . People say it 's going
meet instead of a football to be a head-to-head battle
game today .
but it's really not . It 's really
That's because \he two top our defense against their
running backs in the NFL - defense and their offense
some feel they may be the against our offense. " .
best ever - meet on the same
Chicago's new coach, Neill
field for the first time when Armstrong , lost all four preO.J . Simpson and the .. San seasongames but came away
Francisco .f9ers take on a wiMer in hls season operter.
Walter Pa yton and the Pete McCulley, who took over
Chicago Bears.
at San Francisco this year,
Simpson, who joined the saw his revamped 49ers
49ers this year after nine make a ton of turnovers in
record-shattering years -in their opening loss. The 49ers
'Buffalo, holds six NFL are going with 1$ new starrushing records, including ters, including quarterback
most yards in a single season Steve Deberg, who hit 16--of-32
- 2,003. He also is second passes for 174 yards. Rookie
behind Jim Brown on the all· wide receiver Terry Lecount,
time rushing list with 10,183 a quarterback at Florida last
yards .
year, caught five for 83 yards.
Payton, who broke SimpChicago quarterback Bob
so n's single· game rushing Avellini managed only 6-of-19
record of 273 yards with a 275- for 72 yards but will get some,
yard effort against Minnesota · help this week with the ad·
· last year, also made a solid clition of Golden Richards.
run at the 2,003 mark but fell Richards was obtained from
Dallas this wee~ after losing
short with I ,852.
Both were injured during his starting job to Tony Hill.
pre-season
Simpson
In other games today,
recovering
from knee Miami is at Baltimore, New
surgery and Payton idled Orleans faces Green Bay at
with a slight shoulder Milwaukee, Dallas is at the
separation - and did little New York Giants, New
but both looked 1!11pressive in England at St. Louis, the Ne'l\'
opening games last week.
York Jets at Buffalo, Seattle
Simpson had 22 carries for at Pittsburgh, Philadelphia
78 yards in teh 49ers' 24-7 loss at Washington , Houston at
to Cleveland while Payton Kansas City, Atlanta at Los
ran 26 tln1es for 101 yards and ' Angeles , Oakla nd at San
caught three passes for 22 Diego and Cincinnati at
yards in the Bears' 17·10 Cleveland . Denver is at
victory over S.t Louis.
Minnesota Monday night.
Payton is downplavin~ the
Det;-oit played at Tampa
Bay on Saturday Night.
meeting.

Saturday's
grid scores
United-Preas 1Diei'D81iaaal
(Eall)

Florida St. 28, Syracuse 0
Holy Cross 19, New Harnplhlre 14
Dayton 31, Maine 14
Delaware 37, Rhode Ialand 0
Lehigh 23, West Cheater 20
Lafayette 31, Gettysburg 0
Penn State 26, Rutgers 10
Rochester 21, Brockport St.
13
(Seulb)

AP!ialacblan St. 35, Wofford
14
Duke 28, Geofllia Tecb 10
SouthWeetll'll 19, Mllllaps 8
West Virginia 14, Richmond
12
Will &amp;. Mary 10, VMI 3
(Mldwelt)

Ohio Univ. 23, E . Michigan 22
Youngstown St. Sl, Northern
Iowa 14
·

lDNG NIGHT - •11•Je Devil fans and players had Uttle to ch- about at Rock Hw
for both teama.
~~
1\
'

~ldaynightastbe ''edmen wallopedGallipoUa~ln theopeninggame

�•

C-2- The Sunday Times.,&lt;;enunel, Suud"l'· Sept. 10. 1978

Redmen humble Blue Devils, 43-0

Big Blacks edge Marauders 14-8 in overtime
pass that made it 14-41. The conversion run failed.
But the Marauders were not through. Jerry Fields
hammered the ball in two tries to the local five. Came a twoyard loss . On 4th down Oan Thomas • t a pass Into the end
zone for the apparent equaltzer - and the ball was dropped !
So many things happened in that dramatic contest tha t if
they were all d_ellneated, we would be at th is typewriter until Saturday morning.
·
·
Let's pick out some features : When PPHS scored ln the
third stanza, it was a bdrilliant 51-yd catch and run by soph
Troy Krebs that set up the TO. The march covered 70 yards.
McClellan completed 8-of-11 aerials, hitting Krebs twice
for62, Greg Thomas twice for 25, Brian Stepp twice for 25 Tfd
Ohlinger fo r the 28-yd TO, and Jay Minton for 11 .
'
For Meigs, Dan Thomas went to the air 24 times. He
uncorked 16 passes in the 4th period, completing 8 of them ,
mcludmg the TO toss to Stewart. Two pass interference
penalties against PPHS kept the Maravder drive alive.
Larry Stewart caught fi ve aerials for 57-yds. Bob Seeling
grabbed three for 30-yds and recovered a local fumble . Dave
Hysell had a 15-yd catch.
Robbie Beller and Ron Newell each interceptted a
Thomas pass. Danny Jone s fell on a Marauder fumble to get
the locals off the hook.
It ma y sound unbelievable, but the Meigs defenders held
that PPHS ground game to a mere 8-yds net over the entire .
route. That's after losses via fumbles, wild pitchouts, sacks
and fierce tackling are subtracted.

BY J ACK ROGERS
POINT PLEASANT - Their running game stopped cold
by a savage hard.ttitling Meigs defense, the Point Pleasant Big
Blacks .went to the air to squeeze out an overtime 14-.'l victory
over the under-rated Marauders of Coach Charley Olancey
Friday night.
· ·
The thrilling contest was waged in warm muggy weather
at Sanders Memorial Stadium before a crowd tha t was limp
with excitement to the very last pla y.
The win was the second this year for Coach Steve Safford's Red-and-Black youngsters, and the lOth straight home
victory over a spa of two seasons.
For Coach Chancey's inspired but hard-luck· youngsters
the defeat was in thei r season opener.
Local QB Glen McClellan, only a sophomore, hit Ted
Ohlinger with a 28-yd scoring pass in the third period to break
a scoreless tie. Jay Minton ran the conversion to make it U.
But Marauder QB Dan Thomas unlimbered his pitching
ann in the fourth period to drive his mates 68-yds in the
fading moments, nailing end Larry Stewart from 8-yds out for
a TO with only 14 seconds on the clock. Then Thomas circled
right end for the conversion that knotted it at 8~ and sent the
battle into overtime.
.
The Big Blacks had the first crack at trying to put it in
from the l().yd stripe. In two downs, Meigs drove them back to
the 25 . But McClellan speared Troy Krebs for 11 yards. Then,
on 4th down, he fired to Greg Thomas on the six and Greg
twisted and broke tackles to go in with a 14-yd touchdown

PEDRO :._ Rock Hill rolled Rock Hill 's Mark Scutt - and permjtt ed the Blue
. up 227 yards rushing and blocked a Greg Harrington Devils but one - that came in
passing and gained an ad- punt on the GAHS 22, the first period .
The Redmei! limited GAHS
ditional 241 yards on punt, resultingln a two-point safety
'to
60 ya rds rush ing. GAHS
kickofl and pass interception for the home team. That
was
().4 in the passing ga me .
returns here Friday night to made it 9~.
humble visiting Gallipolis, 43·
Ted Barner's one-yard The Redmen were four of 11
0.
plunge with 5:45 left in the - in the air for 28 ya rds and one
It was the season opener for third period gave Rock Hill a touchdown .
Rock Hill ran 56 plays from
both teams.
'
1:&gt;-o advantage. Bambart's
scrimmage
. Gallia had the
After a scoreless fi rst kick from placement wa s
41
plays.
ball
period, Coach Ken Vessely's true.
Ga llia's Greg Harrington
Redmen put nine points on
With 50 second&amp; left in the
punted
10 times (two were
the bqard in the second canto , · third period, . Don Roe
lor 229 yards .
blocked)
then won going away in the returned a Greg Harrington
Wagner
punted
three Urnes
second half, tally ing 14 punt 53 yards to give the
for
99
yards
for
the
winners.
markers in the third stanza Redmen a 2~ lead. Again
LUke
Anderson
paced
th e
and 20 more in. the fin al' Barnhart's kicK was true.
Redmeo with 6' yards In II
In the final period, Roe
period.
carries. Roe added 44 in
GAHS Coach Bill Trent scored again from to-yards
se ven trips and Ted Barner
began substituting freely in out with 8:54 · remainin g.
57 In 15 attempts.
the third quarter after his ·Bamhart's kick made it 30-0.
Baron Haner led GAHS ball
· young gridders fell behind,
Bob Justke picked off a
ca
rriers with 26 yards in eight
I!Hl. All 46 Blue Devils who
Bob Foster pass and
all in the first half.
trips,
returued It 35 yards with
made the trip saw action .
sco rin g thre e
Besides
Rock Hill QB Steve
7:361elt lD the game to give
touchdowns,
Roe returned
Wagner hit end Dale
the Redmen a :li-0 lead .
Blue
Devil
punts for 159
seven
Depriest with a three-yard
Baruharl made II 31~.
.
yards.
•trike to give Rock Hlll a 6Final Rock Hill score came
For GAHS, Nick Robinson
0 lead with 10:53 feflln the
on a 14-yard run by Roe with
returned
one pass insecond period. Bob Bam·
5: « left in the game. Barn·
ha,rt spilt the uprights to
hart's kirk was wide to the terception nine yards, two
punts 24 yards and four
make It 7~.
left.
With 3:55 left in the half,
Rock Hill had 15 first downs kickoffs for 37 yards. He also

We don't know the names of all the Meigs defende111, but
SCORING:
recall the brilliance of such fellows as Bob Seelig, Dave Davis,
PPHS - Ted Ohlinger 28 pass from McCJeUan (Jay
Robert Parker, Tim Faulk , Jerry Fields, Van WiiHord, Dave _ Minton r un).
Blake John Stout. And there were others.
Greg Becker was the workhorse for the Marauders on the
Meigs - Larry Stewart 8 pa ss from Dan Thomas (Dan
ground, ca rrying 16 times for 43 yards. Jerry Fields added 24, Thomas run ).
J ohn Stout 21, Van Willford 14, and so on. The Marauders
· PPHS - Greg Thomas 14 pass from McClellan (run
ripped for 126-yds overall.
failed).
But how about Poinr s defenders? Our statistician shows
these boys with solo hits and assists: Robbie Beller 8~. Henry
" Bo" E lliott 7-3, Billy Roach 6-1, Chris Mahan 5-3 Ted
Ohlinger 4-2, Jeff Summers 2-2, Tim Jackson 3~. ' Tony
Stallstlcs
Thompson 3~. Gary Newsome, 2-2, Ron Newell1-3. And there
were others.
.
PPHS
MEIGS
Depariment
. As we said, the PPHS running attack was shackled. Jay
6
1st Downs 14
M1nton netted 27-yds' ln 10 slashes and his 15-yd burst was the Net Yds Rush 8
126
longest for the Big Blacks. Brian Stepp netted 13 in 10 cracks·
II
24
Passes Tried Ron Newell had 8 in 4. And that was ·about.
'
8
Passes Completed 9
Knowing there were the underdogs, the Marauders took it Intercepted By2
0
to the Big Blac~s from the opening gun, and they did not let Yards Passing 132
103
up. And the more credit to them as they face SEOAL compeUUon. ·
140
Yards from·Scrimmage - ·
229
:Next Friday the Big Blacks are at Gallipolis. The Blue Return Yardage 83
31
De.vils lost their opener at Rock Hill last night by a surprising Fumbles 3
4
4~ spread.
I
I
Fumbles Lost Score by quarters:
83
Po!'nalties, Yards50
MEIGS ..
Punts
4-37
4-31
0 0 0 8 0
8
BIG BLACKS
52
74
0 0 8 0 6
14 "ltfonsive Plays-

Wahama blanks Kyger Creek, 33-0
By Scoll BarDIIz

:.

,.~:j;jh.

•

TIE-BRE AKER - Greg Thomas, 6-1 junior end for the Point Pleasant Big Blacks, is
shown about to go over the goal line with the winning tally in the 14-8 overtime win agaiilst
visiting Meigs Friday night. Thomas scored on a fourth · down pass from Sophomore
Quarterback Glen McClellan.
-

Hannan Trace drops
.
30-13 tilt to Hannan
ME RCERVI LLE - The fa iled but ·Hannan Trace led,
Hannan Wildcats, lor three !HI.
&gt;tra ight quarters, saw their
Han nan st ruck bac k
offense run over Hannan qu ickly on a four ya rd run by
Trace while keeping them at quarterba ck Reece Dalton.
bay defensively to win , 3!H3. His team's kick fail ed. which
It was the first win of the left the score tied , momensea s.on for Coa ch Ra nd y ta rily.
Clark's highl y charged team
On Hannan Trace' s next
which drQpped it s sea son possession, Sibley turned on
opener a week previous to the speed and raced dOI\11Buffalo of Putnam County, field 85 yards on the game's
22~ 1 2. H annan 's r ecor d is now
most dramatic run to score.
l-1 .
This tim e the kick was good
On the surface it appeared and Trace led, 13-6.
a brot hers act which gave
In the second period, Reece
Hannan the win, as Wayne Dalton passed 12 yards to
and Reece Dalton teamed up so phomore sensation Steve
for three touchdowns and 345 Rocklev itch for the six-point
yards rushing_ out o( a total of score. Hannan added Iwo
390.
more points to take the lead
Harm an Trace scored first when Dalton ca ught Keith
when halfback Todd Sibley, Dye on a pass in the end zone
who proved to be just about for the successful conversion.
th e ent ire s co ring a nd
After a halftime of needed
rushing punch for his team rest, Hannan hegan where it
ran in from 70 ya rds out Th e left off as Reece Dalton
extr a point kick attempt scored his second touchdown

of the evening, rushing from
two ya rds out. He took the
ball in aga in moments later
fo r the extra two points.
The fin a l score came in the
fourth period, when Reece's
brother Wayne ran in from
two ya rd s out. Again ,
moments later, Reece pa ssed
to Wayne for the extra two
points and an insunnountable
30·13 lead.
Reece Dalton led both
teams in rushing with 251
yards on 24 carries. His
brother Wayne had 94 ya rds
fo r 17 ca rries. Dwight Arthur
had 10 ya rds on five carries ·
Steve Rocklevitch eight fo r 2iJ
ya rds ; Keith Dye two for two
ya rds ; and Joe Cobb two for
five yards.
Sibley led his team in
rushing wi th 161 yards. This
came rno&gt;tly on his two
touchdown runs, whi ch
amounted to 155 va rds.
In pass receiving, Steve

CHESHIRE - Wahama
aft er being walloped a week
prev iously by Wayne, 35-7 came back with vengeance
and blasted Kyger Creek, 33~
here Friday night.
It was a sweet victory for
the White Fa Icons new head
coach Bill Jewell, who won his
first as head mentor of the
Bend Area schOol. The victory
saw Wahama 's record even
out at 1-1 . Next Saturday, they
play their first home game
against out-of-sta te rival
Meigs, who lost an o~ertime
hear tbreaker
to
Point
Pleasant Friday evening, 14.,,
Wahama got onto the
scoreboard midway through
the first period when senior
wingback Bob Elias caught a
25-ya r d pass fr om junior
quarterba ck Vince Weaver for
the score. Elias, who has heen
handling Wahama's kicking
chores for the past couple of
years, successfully converted
to give his team a 7.0 lead.
In the second period., senior
tailback Kevin Roush, who
gained 124 yards on the
evening, rushed in from one
yard out which was followed
by another successful kick by
Elias.
Minu tes later, an elert
Falcon tackle, Mike King,
scooped up a Kyger Creek
fumble and scampered 45
yards for the score. Wahama,
this time was unable to con·
vert on the extra points, but as
the halftim e ended it walked
into its lockeroom with a 2().()
lead.

Rocklevitch caught 2 passes
for 20 yards, Reece Dalton
one . pass for nine yards ;
Keith Dye one pass for three
yards and Wayne Dalton one
pass for three yards.
In the quarterba ck spot.
Reece Dalton completed
three out of three passes for
18 yards ; Steve Rocklevitch
completed one pass out of six
for nine yards; and Wayne
Dalton completed one pass
out of one attempt for eight
yards .
The Dalton brothers also
led their team on defense as
Reece was in on 13 tackl es
while his brother had 11.
Clifford Akers had eight nd
Keith Dye seven.

The Falcons added six more
in the third period when
runni~g back Jack Smith took
the ball in from six yards out.
The conversion again failed.
In the fourth period, Kevin
Roush scored his se cond
touchdown. this tim e taking
the ball in from seven yards
out. Elias kicked his third
extra point of the evening to
give the Falcons an extremely
comfortable 33~ 1 d
So comfortable
·the lead
that Coach Jewell substituted
his fir st team , midway
through that final period.
Kyger Creek's frst scoring
opportunity came near the
end of the first hall when it
reached the .Falcon 's threeyard line but failed to score.
Also .helping Wahama 's
cause in stopping the Bobcats
were two intereceptions and
three fumble recove'rie s ,
including the one fumble
recovery which was converted
into a score.
One scoring opportunity the
Falcons did muff, occurred at
the beginning of the game,
when they took the initial
kickof and drove 71 yards only
to fumble the ball away on the
Kyger Creek one-yard line.
Wahama's ground attack
was led by Kevin Roush who
picked up 124 yards on 13
carries. Jack Smith had 70
yards on seven carries, while
Vince Weaver had 65 yards on
nine carries; Ri ck Barnitz,
Peanut Harris and Bob Elias,
each had five yards on a
carry: and Kreig Sayre four
yards on a ca rry .
In the passing department
Vince Weave r. threw. four

::s

Score by quarters:
6 8 6 8- 30
Hannan '
Hannan Trace 13 0 0 0-13
Department
H. HlRushing Yards
390 215
Passing Yards

JS

0

Tota l Yar ds

425

215

F irst Dow ns

18

7

0
2

0

n

.t

Passing

Inter ception
Fumbl'es

Fumbl e s

L n~~; t

5·10 0-5
S

WILL NOT REPORT
NE W YORK (UP!)
Wilbu r Wood, the Chicago
White
Sox'
ve teran
knu ckleball pitcher , has
decided not to report to the
Pittsburgh Pirates, it was
ann ounced Satu rda y by
Pirate general manager
Hjlrding Peterson.

passes and completed three
for 41 yards. Backup quarterback Rick Barnitz passed
the ball once but was un·
successful.
In re ceivin g, Bob Elias
nabbed that one big touch·
down pass ":hich was good for
25 yards. T1m You~g cau~ht
one lor 14 yards wh1le Kevm
Roush caught one for three
yards.
In tackles, Tim Rickard,
Fred S~ith and Jack Smith
each picked up five while
Todd Rawlings and Mark
Gtlkey each had four. Four
other Falcons had three
tackles each.
Score by quarters :
WAHAMA: 7 13 6 7-33
KYGER CREEK: 000~

WHS K.Creek
Rushing Yds.
278
72
Pass Attempts
3-5 3-9
Passing Yds.
41
47
Total Yds
319 119
First Downs
15
8
Penalties
·8-70 7~
Interceptions
0
2
Fumbles
I
3
Fumbles lost
3
I

WATCHING FROM SII;&gt;ELINE - KYII• Creek
football coach Jhn Sprague and two of his playeni,
INihert (84 ) and Bruce Gilmore (33) watch the action
Friday's ~ non-league loss to Wahama. The defeat left
KC with a 1·1 season mark.

C~~~~~~~~.,._.,._,._,._,._~~~~~~~~~~IWI~~~~~

EXTERIOR
PAINT SALE

.,••
GAL

LIMITED TO THESE COLORS ONLY

LATEX SPRED
HOUSE PAINT
LATEX SPRED
GLOSS HOUSE

&amp;TRIM PAINT
$AVE$

3613 ONYX
3639 OLD SALEM
3654 REVEillE

3907 BAYBERRY GREEN
3908 BARK
3913 ONYX
3953 REVERE GREEN

QUANTITIES Ll MITED

SALE STARTS SEPT. 10

about~~~~~:~FfboBOUJ!DSh -

PPHSndHalfback Jay Minton (40) , a 175-lbs. Junlor, Is
unwo ere on an e sweep ln the second quarter of Frida 1 ht'
hard-fought clash against the Meigs Marauders. The Meigs players on defense a~." ~av!
H&gt;'11"11 (83 ) and r Van W11lford (32).
•
"
')

STOPPING RECEIVER - ·Danny Jo1111 (a), I'PHS
Big Black junior, dives to grab hold of Metsa Receiver
Bob Seelig (87 ), an 187-lbs senior, after Seella had pulled
down a pass in the second hall of Friday night's clash that
went into overtime.
·'

I

~ta tisti cs :

Ironton rolls
over Ashland

Grid standings

Goto·work
in quality

...

Haner

Marc hi
/lk rr ison

8 26 3.2
3 9 3.0
4 10 2.5
3 7 2.3

Yea~ l ey

•

Evans

5

5 - 11
1
-3
36 60

-2
.J
1.6

S

Harr ing ton
Fos ter

TOTALS
Player

7

1.7
1.0

Will iS

I Rock Hi Ill

TCB YG Avg.
11 69 6.2

Ander son

Roe

7 44
15 57

6.2

3.8
3.0
7 14 2.0

Barner
Justi ce
Wagner

5

TOTALS

IS

45 l'l'l

56

1
0

2
1

third (Barnhart, ki ck ) ; Don
Noe, 53-yitrd pun t r eturn , : 50,
third ( Barnha r t, k ick) ; Roe,

10·yard run . 8: 54 , fourth

1. 15 3.1s
10-229 ].99

Penalties
Punts

( Barnhart,
ki ck );
Bob
Just ice , 35-yard ·pa ss in ter ception r eturn. 7: 36, fourth

RE'COVER EO ENEMY (Barnhart, kick) : Roe, 14FUMBLES ~ Robinson , L yard r un, S: 44 fourth (kick ,
Individual scoring - {Rock fa il) . GAH S - None .
Score by quarters:

Gallipolis
Rock Hill

o
(}

o o o- o
9

14 2D-43

Next GAHS gam e - Sept .
15, Pt . Pleasant, home .

END OF MODEL
CLEARANCE

1979

HONDA

MODELS
COMING
SOON

750 F

4.4

PASSING

Play er

I Galli polis 1

Harrington
Foster

C-A I YG TO
0
0
0

0-4 1

0-1 1
0-5 2

TOTALS
,
I Rock Hill)
Player
C·A 1 YG
Wagner
Justice

4-10 1
0- 1 0

4-11 1

Fir st downs _
Yards rushing
Lost rush ing
Net-rushing
Passes attempts
Completi ons
Intercepted by
Yards pass ing
To tal yards

28
0
28

0
0
0

to1

WAS

0

NOW

'2400

1

$2095

1
15
84 210
24 11
60 199 ·
5 11
0
A
1
2
0
2B
_60 227

Rt. 7

Ph. 446-2240

THALER'S $100 CASH REBATE
ON 1978 COURIER· FAIRMONT AND FIESTA

"fORD'S .fALL ECONOMY LEADERS"
OFFER ENDS SEPTEMBER 16TH

1978 FORD COURIER ·
2300 cc engine, 5 speed manuel
011erdrlve trans., rea r ~ tep bumper,
7 tool bed .
·

Stk. No. Ill

was

'5240
1978 FORD COURIER

$5!40

NOW

.1978 FORD COURIER

1978 FORD COURIER
2300 cc engine, 5 speed overdr ive
trans ., AM push button radio. t inted
glass, air conditioning, w estern
sw ing b8 c k mirror s, r ear step
bumper , sl iding rear wi ndow .

2300 c' eng ine. S speed overdr ive
trans .• AM radio, push button, t inted
gla ss, low m ount, br ight we stern
mir ror s. r ear step bumper , w-s-w
tir es.
Slk. No. 834

Was

Stk. No. 836
Was
$S662.75

'4840

NOW

trans .. AM push button radio .

western :;wing lock m irrors, w-s-w

tires .

Stk. No. 838
Was

No. 8l7

Stk.

NOW

SS370

'4670

$5250

duty handli ng pkg. BSW radial ti res.

4 cyl. engine, 4 speed trans., sports
group, fl ip-up open air roof, heavy

insert bodv side m ldg .. com plete
stripe pkg .
·

vent windows, body sl de

~507

NOW,

'4250

Stk. No. 107
Was
$5211

Stk. No. 66a
Was

'4980

NOW

'4650

4 cyl. eng ine, 4 speed trans., i.nt erior

duty pkg .. AM rad io. ti nted glass,
move~ble

NOW

decor group. hea vy duty pkg. Vinyl

mldgs. Load rtoor carp et.
Stk. No. 839
Was

5 220

1978 FORD FIESTA

1978 FORD FIESTA

1978 FORD FIESTA
4 cyl. eng ine. 4 speed tr ans., hea11y

t

2300 cc engine, 5 speed over drive
trans., soft ri de option , AM push
button r adio . wester n swing lock
m irror s, real step bumper .

2300 cc engine, 5 speed manual

Was

NOW

1978 FORD COURIER

$4644

NOW

'4320

1978 FORD FIESTA

1978 FORD FIESTA

3 dr. Hatchback Gh la group. 4 cyi.
engi ne. 4 speed tran s.. AM radio,
White-side-wall t ir es, mov eable 11ent
windows .

4 cvl. eng ine."' speed trans., hea vy

duly handl ing pkg., AM radio. tin ted
glass, tr im str ipe pkg.

-·

Stk. No. 738
Was

NOW

Stk. No. 325
Wos

'4220

$5166

1

1978 FORD FIESTA

NOW

'4700

STATION WAGON

6 cyl. eng ine, power steering and
brake s, automat ic trans .• a i r
condition ing, luxury exter ior decor
group. inter ior decor group. fron t &amp;
r ear bumper guards, spt . group.
tinted gl ass , vent windows .

.4 cyl.

eng ine, 4 speed trans., Inter ior
decor, heavy duly pi&lt; g., tinted glass
moveable front vent windows, vinyl

Insert body side mldgs.

Stk. No. 710

Was
Stk. N•. 718 '5560
4650
-----------+------------~--~
1978 FORD FAIRMONT
1978 FORD FAIRMONT 1978 FORD FAIRMONT

Was
$4192

NOW

,

2 dr . sedan , 6 cyl. engine . automatic

2 dr. seda n, 4 cy l. engine, 4 speed
trans., white si de wall t ir es, body
side m ould ing.

trans .• power steering , Interior
decor group, flrtted gla ss , air

4 cvl. engine, 4 speed trans .. power

steering, ln.ter lor accent group , trim

conditioning, dual bright mirrors,

rings. hub cops, vinyl Insert body
side mouldings.
'
Stk. No. SCN
·Was
~116
NOW

pivot ing front vent windows, deluxe
wheel covers .

Sik. No. 215
Was

Stk. No. 761
Was

'5030
•::11• .. FORD FAIRMONT ·

'3190
1978 FORD FAIRMONT

STATION WAGON

6

• power steering. power brakes.
exterior acc:ent group , white

exterior and Interior decor group,
front vent windows, 11inyl Insert,

'

3 750

6 ' Y'- engine, power steering and
brakes , automati c tran s., air
conditoning, exterior and Interior

group. tinted gloss. dual bright

body side moulding .
Stk. No. 497

a.:=::::o---=~':4:1::30:!.Lwas

NOW

1978 FORD FAIRMONT
STATION WAGON

c~~~~ ~~~wing.

automatic trans .• o1r cmdltlonlng.

sldewail !Ires.
Stk. No. 755

um

NOW

6 cyl. englf1e, automatic trans .,

'.5 3 10

mirror s. pivoting vent windows.
$tk. No. 661

'5440

Wu

RD SALES
362 lACKSOft PIKE-RT. 1&amp;0 &amp; 35
'
ACROSS FROM HOLZER MmiCAL CENTER '
For a good deal see Tom Sprague, Melvin uttle, Gany
Rudolph, Pete Somerville, NancY Fowler. Slndv Gatewood.
24 tn. wrecur seMCe
Phone 44&amp;35611
'

__ _____

I'

Lost fumb les

41

90 241

TEAM STATISTICS
Department
G RH

Fairland no match
for ·Wellston team

WELLSTON - Halfback score with Mont gomery's
Curtis Jayjohn scored two kick making it 28-14.
touchdowns Friday night in
In the final three minutes of
leading the Wellston Golden play Kim Roberts stole a
Rockets to a 35-14 victory Fairland pass and raced back
over' the visiting Fairland 22 yards for a touchdown and
Dragons.
Montgomery added the
Coa ch Judy Michael 's placement for the final point.
Rockets, with the entire of·
Friday the Golden Rockets
fensi ve unit returning from travel to Nelsonville-York to
1977, got on the board in the . seek their second win of the
first pe~iod when Brent young season.
Osborne went off tackle on a
Score by quarters : ·
10 yard touchdown run . Jeff Fairland
0 6 0 8-14
7 6 8 14- 35
Mont gomery kicked the Wellston
extra point.
In the second period the
Rockets halted a. Dragon
drive on the Wellston 26 with.
THISTLEDOWN
a fumble recovery and then
NORTH RANDA~ Ohlo
marched 74 yardS in seven (UP! J - Jockey Clyde Maplays with QB Lowell Settles honey guided Baybatim to
passing 34 yards to Mike victory in Friday'S featured
Massie for the score and a 13- eighth race at Thistledown.
0 lead.
The 5-year-old winner cov·
.The Dragons struck back in ered the mile in I:39 to pay
the second quarter following $12.80, fl and $3.80. Arrival
the interception of a Settle Time placed, with Special
pass by Scott Hutchinson on Heritage showing .
the Wellston 33.
Now's My Turn and Lovers
Joe Stuart. hit Marty Dance combined to return $66
Matthews with a 23 yard m the 3-3 daily double, and
strike with 32 seconds left in th ere were nine winning
the half, which ended with tickets on
the
5·2·6
Wellston holding a 13-6 lead. combinaiion of J .V. Tony,
Jayjohn raced 38 yards to Commander Del Bee and
FOSTER THROWN FOR LOSS - · Gallipolis
paydirt in the third period Long Gone Lisa in the ninth
110phomore quarterback Bob Foster (18) was sacked for a
and then caught a two point race trifecta - each worth
three-yard lolls 111 this play in the third period Friday
conversion
pass from $5,842.70.
night. Giving chase is Nate Dickerson (53).
Montgomery out of a fake
Attendance was 3,753 and
kick formation to make it 21 - the handle totaled $462,779.
6.
Scott Hutchinson brought
the Dragons to life in the
BLOOMINGTON, Minn.
fourth quarter when he (UPI) - The Minnesota Vik·
scored on a one yard run and ings announced Friday that
then took a pass from stuart second year linebacker Paul
ror a two point conversion Harris from Alabama has
that narrowed the gap to 21 -14 been cut from the squad.
with 10 minutes left in the
Harris was acquired 111
, IRONTON - Coach Bob a rebuilding Trojan team.
contest.
waivers from Tampo Bay
Score by quarters :
Lutz unveiled an awesome
Jayjohn dashed the hopes last week.
offense Friday night as the Ashland, Ky . 0 0 ' O 0- 2 of the Dragons when he
With the cut , ,the VIkings•
7 0 7 20-34 streaked 52 vards off tackle to
Ironton Tigers rushed fo~ 343 Ironton
roster now stands at 45.
yards In smashing the rugged
Ashland Tomcats 34·2 at
Tank Stadium.
Rodney Boyktn, a 195·
pound senior fullback, bulled
for four touchdowns and swift
ALL GAMES
POP
Gabriel Lewis raced for 183 ~::"Grove I:J ~ To 96 35
2 o o 22 8
Yards as the Tigers opened PI . PI eas.
1 o o 43 0
th e 1978 grid sea son in Rock Hill
Ironton
1 0 0 3• 2
dramatic fashion.
·
If
,
Waverly
1 0 0 28 0
Commg
o an .,. 2 season ..Wellston
1 o o 35 14
last year the Tigers wasted "'logan
o o 1 6 6
little time Friday night Meigs
o 1 o 8 14
showing their wares as Lewis Jackson
o 1 0 0 12
f
h
Athens
0
1 0 14 38
raced 73 ya rds or a touc · GaiiiJ'!'IIs
o 1 o 0 43
down in the first quart er and
Froday's rosuns :
Joe Fletcher kicked the extra Rock Hill •3 Gallipolis 0
point.
·
Pl . Pleasant u Meigs 8 (oil
Ironton 3• Ashland 2
The Tomcats from Ken· Coal Grove •7 Ports. West 22
tucky blocked a punt through Wellston 35 Fairland 14
the end zone in the second Waver Iy 28 Vinton County o
Ouldooreman .. . work 1h0411
Sept. 1S games:
quarter for a safety and then
Pt.
Pleasant
at
Gallipolis
Rodney
Boykl'n
for workmen. Quality built
Watched
Rock Hill at Minford
·
pound them into the ground Athens at Teays Valley
to atay "on duty" when
behind a powerful line.
Ironton at Portsmouth
you're "on duty."
Boykin tallied from the one Jackson at Wheelersburg
.
.
Logan at Hilliard
Oetigned to keep you
yard bne in the third quarter, Meigs at Wahama
and then smashed over from Ports. West at Waverly
c.omtortable all day .
the three, the three again, Wellston at Nets:vork
and dellvor the·
and finally the one yard Coal Grove at Boyd County
kind of long wear
l!rlpe In the final period.
Fletcher, the very talented
yov expoct lor
196 pound junior, booted three
*"«&lt;a dollare
NEW YORK (UPI) - Unextra points in the lleCond !Jail
before his final effort was defeated lightweight
contender Johnny Lira
blocked.
The Tigers only attempted Friday llil!lled a three-year
three pauea wllh two piHered con.tract with promoter Don
by Ashland , but saw Lewis King .
The 25-yiar-old Ura, who ·
carry the ball II tlmei for 113
yards with Boyltln adding recenUy knocked out the ·
anothlr 121 yards on 21 tries. WBC and WBA No. 1 ,
Fll'lt do'WIII l.vored the cmtendw, Andy a.nnlpn, '
SEOAL team 18-4, total has an 11-0-1 record with II
yarda11e
143-143,
and knoellouta . He started hll
,anythlna elM that lloel with career In tm under the
,
11\11~ ol Mike Sarge, a
victory. ,
.
.
• Friday tbe Tlllera journey prominent boxlnfl figure In
to Po!Umouth to tanale with Las Vegas.

Plays t rom scr 1m .
Return 'Jiardage
Fumbles

Hi ll ) : Dale Depr iest. 3-var d
INDtVIDUA.L NET
pa ss from Stelle Wagner .
YARDS RUSHING
10: 53 second ( Bob Bar nhar t.
I Ga ll ipoUs I
kick
; Sfety , J : 55 second ;
Player
TCB YG Avg . Ted )Barner
, 1-yar d run , 5: 45 .
Sheets
3 10 3.3

TOTALS

ROE ON THE GO - Rock Hill's IM-pound senior
fullback Don Roe ( 34) scored three times and picked up
159 return yards Friday to pace his teammates to a ~
VIctory over GAHS. Above, Gallla's Baron Haner (21)
chaaes the elusive Roe down the sidelines.

'

recovered a Ruck Hill
fumble.
Ga ll ipoli s will host Pt.
Pleasa nt Fr iday. The Redmen wiil trav el to Mi nford on
Sept. 15.
Here a r e Ff iday's

\.

'

.,

�C-l- l'loe Sund•y Times--Sentinel, SundHy, S..pt. 10, 1978

STANDINGS

Frichy's high school _scores
Ohlo Hlgb School
Football Results
Unl"'d Press International
Adena Buckeye W 16 Cadiz 3
Akr St Vin-St Mary 7 Akr
Garfield 7 (tie)
Akron Buchtel 21 Sww Walsh
Jesuit 7
Akron East 20 Alliance 0.
Akron Firestone 21 Copley 14
Akron Hoban 25 Akron
Central Hower 21
Alexander 6 Oak Hill 0
Allen East 20 Col umbu s
Grove 6

Alliance Marli ng ton 13
Lorain Southview l2
Anthony Wayne 13 Northview
12
Arlirigton 14 Pandora.{;ilboo
l3
Ash land 14 Mansfield Sr 7
Ashtabula StJohn 21 Kirtland
0

YES, WE DO

R.OWERSWe do flowers for
sympathy
We do flowers for
gel well
Flowers for
Birthdays
Flowers for
Anniversaries
Flowers for any
occasion
We do flowers.

AM BLESI DE

Barberton 62 Cle John Hay 6 ·Coldwater 6 Delphos St Johns
Beallsville 59 Waterford 0
0
,
Beaver Local 14 Leetnni• 9 · Colerain 21 Sycamore 6 ,
Bedford (Michl 28 Sylvania
Columbiana 12 Lisbo.i 0
Southview 12
Cory-Rawson 28 Hardin
Northern 0 .
Bellevue 13 Port Clinton 0
Berea Midpark 29 Bay-- Covington 49 Tipp City 0
Village 0
Oestwood 19 Aurora 1;
Berkshire 20 Champion 0
Crooksville 56 Nelsonville
Bexley 14 Canal Winchester 6 York 0
Bloom Carroll 20 Logan Elm Cuyahoga Falls 32 Tol
6
DeVilbiss 14
Bloomdale Elmwood ~ N Danbury 14 Lucas 12
Baltimore 0
Day Cham.Jul 21 Oakwood 14
Brecksville 13 Orange 0
Day Jefferson 21 Day Stivers·
Brunswick 16 Fairview Park Pal 0
Day
Meadowdale
0
Buckeye S 6 Toronto 0
Trotwood-Madison 8
Bucyrus 7 Ontario 0.
Day Stebbins 6 Fairborn
Ca ldwell 14 Meigs Eastern 8 Baker 3
Ca nton Aquinas 20 Canton S Doylestown 47 Canal Fulton
12
Northwest 6
Cardington 26 Cog Wehrle 0 East Central 32 Harrison 21
Carroll 17 Beaver Q-eek 6
East Clinton 14 Williamsburg
Cedan"le 12 Northwestern 0 7
Chagrin Falls Kenston 23 Elyria '1:1 Toledo Scott 0
Conneaut 8
East Central 32 Harrison 21
Chesapeake 6 Portsmouth East Clinton 14 Williamsburg
Notre Dame 0
1
Cin Elder 35 Lancaster 0
East Knox 38 Centerburg 0
Cin LHSa lle 34 Portsmouth 0 Eastlake N 3 Lorain Admiral
Cin Madiera 21 Greenfield King o
,
McClam 0
Eastwood 18 Perrysburg 12
Cln McNicholas 28 Anderson Eaton 9 Brookville 6
12
Elida 26 Upper Sandusky 0
Cin Moeller 28 Findla~ 15
Elmwood 20 North Baltimore
Cin Princeton 40 Centerville 0
20
Elyria 27 Toledo Scott 0
Cin Purcell 13 Norwood 0
Elyria Cath 21 Lorain
Cln ReHding 26 Deer Park 0 Clearview 0
Cin St Xavier 21 Cln Aiken 12 Fairfield 14 Talawanda 6
Cln . Withrow 20 Hamilton Federal Hock~ 0 Meies
Garfield 8
Southern 0 (tie l
Cin Woodward 22 Cln Roger Field 32 Uniontown Lake 16
Bacon 0
Fort Frye 21 Belpre 14
Circleville 13 Chillicothe 8
Fostoria St Wendelin 28
Clark Southeastern 20 Triad 0 Gibsonburg 14
Cla)'monl 28 Coshocton 6
Franklin 20 Miamisburg 13
Cle Benedictine 12 Ashtabula Fredericktown 21 Danville o
Harbor 6
Fremont Ross 13 Euclid 10
Cle Central Cath 21 Chagrin Garrettsville Gar 14 Portage
Falls 7
Southeast 6
·
Cle Holy Name 30 Colwnbia 7 Genoa 40 Rossford 0
Cle St Ignatius 7 Parma 7 Goshen 19 Blanchester 2
I tie )
Green 18 Paint VaUey 6
Clermont Northeastern 27 Greenhills 20 Indian Hill 0
Klngs 9
Greenon 25 Park Hills 0
Coal Grove 47 Portsmouth W Greenview 20 Bellbrook 12
22
Co l
DeSales
6
New
Philadelphia 0
Col Eastmoor 27 Col Central 0
Col Linden 0 Col Whetstone 0
(tie)
Col Mifflin 12 Col North 0
Malor League Results
Co l Northland !9 Col
By United Preu International
National League
Centennial 0
( fir~t game)
Col South 17 Cambridge 0
51 L
000 000 000 0 3 2
Ph i la
ooo 001 oox- 1 3 a
Col West 14 Col Ready 9

Friday's
lines cores

R.ORAl
FASHIONS
Phone 446 -6681
4 mi. west of Gallipolis
on U .S. 35

Bruno, L i!lel l (81 and Sim mons ; Ruth1.1en and Boone . W Rut h.,en (ll 10). L - Bruno (4 .
21

'I

;ISears I

8

I

80 OFF

J3. 7 -cu. in. gas chain
•
:saw with 18-in. bar
'

( 5econd game )
St L
000001000- 1 60
Ph il a
010 ooo 001 - 2 B o
O'Brien , Schu lt z (9) and
Sw isher ; Ka at , Reed {9) ~nd
Boone . W- Reed
{2 2J
LO'Br ien (0 l l . · HR - St. Louis ,
Mora les (4)
S.F
200 300 107- B 12 0
Al l
010 200 200- 5 7 1
Montefusco, Barr (8) and
Tamarg o , Hi ll ~9) ; Solomon ,
Sk ok (81. Cam pbell (9), Easter
ly
(9 J
ana
N olan .
wMontetusco til 6 l . L -.Solomon
HRs- San
Franc isco ,
( 4-5)
Madlock 2 ( 14 ), Evans ( 18 );
Atlanta . Nolan ( 4) .

L. A.

000 000 000- 0 l 2

Hous
020 102 oox - .5 11 a
We lc h. Rautzhan 16 1. Hough
I Bl and Fer guson , Grote ( 8);
Forsch and Bochy W- Forsch
(9 Sl. L - Wel ch ( 5 31 .

( 10 innings)
Ch i
0020000002 - 4 70
Mont
ooo 000 001 o- 1 8 o
Burr is, Sutter ( 9) Md Rader ;
S anderson , Twitche l l (6) ,
Bahn sen ( 7) , Garman (10 ) and
Carter, Fry (0 ) . W- Sutter (8
n . L - Garman (4 7l .

First time reduced!

•

Ba r , t:h ai n umtttac hed

Harrac ud a · c h ain is our fastest-cutting
with o ur most aggressive cutt ing angle
Powe r-Sharp built-in c hain s harpening

••'

1-iY!-ltt• m lt•ts yo u sharpen c hain as saw
runs IJ~· moving a knob back and forth

•i.,

.,

i'

Sure·fin.~ so lid state ignitinn
d ~pc ndahl e starting

helps assure

• Automatit· and manual oilers let you
handle various ty pes of cutting jobs

5 0
100 100 100- l 8 0
Ci ncl
010 001 000- 2 9 2
Perry , Sh irley ( 7) , F ingers
(8) and Te n;~ce ; LaCoss, Hume
{7) , Ba ir (81 and Ben ch . WPerr y { 17 -61. L - LaCos s (3· 11 .
HR San Diego , Turn er ( 7)
P i tt
011 000 000- '1 8 0
NY .
10 1 OOOOh.- 3 90
Bl yleven and 011 ; Hau!im an ,
Murray (8 ) and Stear ns . wMurray (8 51. L - Bi y l e~.~en 117
9 1.
American League
Bait
002 010110- s 10 o
To r
010 101 001- 4 12 1
Flanagan , Br i les {4). Stan .
hOuse
( 9)
and
Dempsey :
Underwood . Bu sk('y !8 1 and
Cerone. W- Br i les (4-4). L Underwood ( 6-1] ) . HR - Toron
to , McKay (6) .

"

Milw
000 JOO OOQ- 3 9 1
M lnn
000 000 000- o J 2
R e p I o g I e and Mart i n~z:
Serum and
Wyne91Jr . wReplogll (8 -'1) . L - 5erum (8-71 .
HR - M ilwaukee, H isle (30 ).

I
I
I

N.Y.
8os

J'

I_!

'
·l

'

"j

Jluildi n ~ot

Cleve
01 1 001 000- 3 10 1
Det
040 010 Olx - 6 1] 0
Clyde, HoOd (7 1, Kern (5 ~ and
Alexander ; Sll!l ton , Hiller (9)
and Parr ish . W- Siaton (15 101 .
L -- Clyde (6-10) .

.. Ufnl'!'!

+na." s••rnhll'd
j
I

j'

'

.,'

I
'
I

'&lt;

;~

260 021 02 o-13 171
000 000 002 ~ 1 6 7

B eattie . Da~r i s (9 ) and
Munson , He5lh (8). Wr ight ,
Burg m~ l er
(2L Lee (31 and
Fisk
W- Bealt ie ( A 7)
LWr ighl (8.JJ. HR s- New York ,
Jackson (21 ). Plniel la (.5 ).

"

'20 CWF 10x5-ft. *deluxe
gam brei-roof storage building
9 1J,x4% ft. inside; larger
buildings a lso on sale

'20995

~ f .".xlf•ri,,- lmNf' di mt•ux;fJf!H fflltndt&gt;d lfl nenre14f foot

Gruund anchor kit . . 114 .49

Cement anchor kit llS.49

• Shipping. installatinn t'dru • Prices are cata log prices·
• Spars ha Na credit Pion to ~mit most eve ry n el' d
• Nuw on sale in our ·· y·• calHioK s upplement

'
I
ISears

Sliver Bridge Plaza
For Service

SEAR~. ROt~ H UC K

Ph. 446-2902

AND CO.

c;.,5-Till! Sun!lay Timcs.OOnlinel, SmulHy

Sea
020 000 000 - 7 8 0
Chi
102 000 OOx - 3 6 1
Colborn and Pasley ; wo,- .
tham and Colbern . W- Wor tham U -2) . L- Co!bor n (4- ll l .
HRs- Chit::ago, Pryor 2 (2) .
Tex
030 000 010- 4 10 4
Oak
101 026 Ohc - 11 12 1
Matlack, Barker (6J. Dl!lrwin
(7] and Sundberg, J . Ell is;
JOhnson, Wirth (2 ), Sosa ( 8)
&amp;nd Rob inson , Essian . WWirth (].4). L - Matlack (12 -13) .
HRs- Texas, Zisk (18) ; Oak ·
land , Page ( 14) .

K .C.
000 003 05 1- 9 12 0
Calif
001 002 llD- 7 11 1
Gura , Bird 17), HrebOsky (8)
and Porter ; Knapp , D. M i ller
( 0), LaRoche (8), Fit zmorr is
( 8) and Dpwnlng . W- Bird (.5 .
6) . L - LaRoche (9-71. HRsKansas
City,
McRa e ( 15),
Porter ( 161 ; Cll li forn l&amp; , Bostock
{51 .

M1jor LUtUt Standln's
By United Prtn lnttrnaftonal
National Ltatut

East

Ph il a
Pinsbrgh
Chicago

w. L

Pd.

77 63 .550
74 66 .529

..,,

G.

Boston
New York
Milwauke
3
Beltlmor
71.'2 Detroit
11
Cle~relnd
11
Toronto

Montr~al

70 71 .496
67 7S .472

St . Louis
New York

61 81 .430
57 85 .401 21
We!.t

Los Ano

w.

Sen Fran
Cincinnaf
Sa n Oiego
HOUStOn

L

Pet.

GB

84 57 .596

81
76
73
65

Atlanta

60 .514 J
64 .54.3 71/J
69 .514 11 'h
15 .464 18 1h

61 80 ..433 23
Friday 's Rtsulta
~hila 1, St.L o, 1s1
Phila 2, St .L I, 2nd
Chi 4, Mont 2. 10 Inn
S.F . 8, Alia 5
N.Y . ] , Pitt '2
S. D. l, Cine I 2
Hous .5, L.A . 0 ·
. :sund1V'i G11mes
Chicago a't Montreal
Piflsburgh at New York
Sl . Louis at Philadelphia
Los Angeles at At18nta
Se n Frenclsco at Cincinnati
San Oi~o at Houston

North Gallia drops opener·

Amtrlun Ltltut

Kan City
Calif
Texas
Oakland
Mlnnesot
Chicago
Seattle

W. L Pet.
16 Sl .6U

GB

10

VINTON - In one of the big
upsets of the year, Huntington of Ross County
collected li second quarter ·

GB

Blue Angels open volleyball

.. 56 .600

2

11 60 .57.

79 62 .51&lt;!

76 61 .543

5'h

7 1!~ .

60 19 ' ...32 25 112
56 87 .392 Jlltz

West

'if. L
77
75
68
65
62
60
52

61
66
70
76
79
81
86

Pet.
.551
.532
.493

3'/z
9
.461 131fz
·"'"' hWz

.377 25
Frldey'a Rtaults
N.Y . 13, Boston 2
Ball 5, Tor"

Oet 6, Cleve 3
Chi 3, sea 2
Milw 3, Mlnn 0
K.C . 9, Colli 7
Oak 11, Te&gt;cas 4
Sunday's Q•mll
Cleveland at Detrojt
New York at Boston
Milwaukee at Minnesota
Seattle al Chicago
Te)l;as at Oakland, 2
Kansas City at California

THIS Brent Palleroon photo shows unidentified Southern ball carrier being stopped by
host of Federal Hocking tacklers in Friday's CHl tie contest. Number 46 in black jersey is
Federal Hocking's Mike JOhnson.

COLO\'
·
,
..
I J,t.,,,,
t

Sun

ONE WEEK
galn momentum io score the With 8:48 showing on the
Fridaythru
winning points alter in - clock, quarterback Bruce
termission .
Barnes ran a keeper lor a
The entire first quarter eight-yard Score. Jeff Tangle
found the Eagles turning up ran the extras to complete the
chunks of turf lor live, six, night's scoring. The rest of
and seven yards on nearly the contest was played beevery carry in the left hall tween the 30 yard lines.
side of the Caldwell defense .
The stat sheets showed the
With 7:.50 left tn the second teams nearly evenly matched
quarter, sophomore quar - with Caldwell rushing_lor 166
terback Greg Wigal found yards and Eastern 142 yards.
end Greg Guinther in the end Both learns had 13 first
zone lor a seven-yard scoring downs, but the Redskins got
toss on a fourth down. Wigal 54 yards in the air to
ran the extras to make it~ . Eastern's 39. Eagle Bruce
Nearly eight minutes later Bissell completed 5 of 15 - - - - - - - - - came that clutch touchdown passes, Wigal was !lor 3, and
toss to .·make the halftime ·Caldwell's Barnes was 5 lor
score read u .
10.
The bigger Redskins came
Neither team lost their one
out in the third quarter fired fumble , but Eastern threw
up and looking lor pay dirt. two interceptions to Caldwell's none .
WELLINGTON
Eastern's Randy Browning
I
Jed the ground gainers with 93
SAFETY TOE
yards in 17 carries. Teammate Danny Spencer had 48
in 11 tries .
For the~ Redskins , Jell
Tangle gained 54 yards while
Jim Polen had 48 . The
deciding yardage .was on the
ending out.
fingertips of Gray who caught
Mon.&amp; Fri.
With Bob Sbirley and Rollie 4 passes lor 48 yards and a
till p .m .
Fingers teaming to blank the touchdown.
Tues
..
Wtcl., 511. 1115
Reds the last three innings,
Eastern is open Friday
Tllurs. HI
Gaylord Perry, the Padres' night. The Eagles cesume
t2 noon
39-year-old right-hander, play on Sept. 25 at Alexander.
picked up his 17th victory
Eastern is now 1-1.
against six losses. The save
Here 's Friday's statistics.
lor Fingers was his 32nd of
WOLVERINE 10"
Department
E C
the season.
F.D
13
13
WESTERN BRAZOS '
"That Perry iS: amazing," Yds . Rush .
142 166'
J9
54
said an admiring Bench . Yds . Pass
181 220
"You look lor one pitch from Tolal yds.
Ton, touah oil-tonned
Passes -comp .
18-6 10-S
him and he throws you Pens ., yds .
cowhide ,
8-70 7-65
something else . Then, when Fumbles
Well construction
1
l
0
0
you guess right, he changes Fumbles lost
Oil prool solo ond heel
2
0
Full cushion insole
speed on the pitch and throws Had Inter c.
Punts -av .
4-33 4·30
SIMI lhlnk I rdt !lUftoorf
you all balance."
Score by quarte-rs :
Perry, who now has 263 Caldwell
0 6 8 1)--14
0 8 0 G-:- 8
lifetime victories , restricted Eastern
Scoring: Guinther , 7 yd .
the Reds to six hits and two
from Wigal . extras ·
runs, walked only one and pass
Wigal. Gray, 30 yd . pass from
struck out six before bowing Barnes , run tailed . Barnes , 8
out lor a pinch hitter in the yd . run, extras · Tangle.
lop of the seventh.
Cincinnati rookie righthander Mike LaCoss, who
departed with ooe oot in the
seventh, took the loss, his
seventh in 10 decisions.
A walk to Barry Evans,
sandwiched between singles
LOGGERS ARE NOW RECEIVING THE HIGHUT PRICIS
by Ozzie Smith and Winfield,
loaded the bales and was
EVER FOR ALL SPEOU Of SAW LOGS 10" IN DIAMETER
followed by Jerry Turner's
AND LARGER
sacrifice fly as the Padres
scored one run in the first
inning.
Turner's seventh h001er of
the season, coming ln tbe
fourth inning, accounted for a
second Padre run.

By Greg Bailey
RACINE - Two hardnosed clubs met Friday night
at Racine when the visiting
Federal Hocking Lancers and
Southern Tornadoes battled
to a CHl deadlock. Although no
exact stats were available,
the game was played evenly
with the only scoring threat
coming wi1h 2:00 to play in
the contest .

ROOT

As it had all ni ght, the
Tornado defense stiffened
and stymied a last:chance
drive by the Lancers. With a
first down on the Southern
five ya rd line, the defense got
tough and the visitors ran out
of downs. That tough defense
had several standouts,
among them Ed Smith, Todd
Roberts, John West , Kent
Varney, and Tom Allen. The

McARTHUR - Coach John
Burchinal's Waverly Tigers
opened the 1978 grid season
Friday night with a 28-0 win
over Vlnlon County, maklng
the first opening ga me viclory lor Waverly si.nce l969.
The Tigers, a power in
basketball for years but "
pussy-cat in football, showed
they are now vastly improved
over pa st seasons und er
Burchinal's fourth yea r at th e

.~t&gt; up to 14%

on llometJH'IIft'S
•
IIJ.fJilliJIK'e

if your home is less than
7 years old, you may sa ve
money . Find out how
much. call:

helm.
Friday night Jerry Althou se score"d on a one yard
run in the fir st quarter with
Mark Rhoads running the
conversion.
Althouse, a 170-pound
senior, talli~d aga in in the
second period on a three yard
run to make it 14-{) at halflime .
Big John Knight, a 270.
pound fullback , rammed in
from the four yard line in the
third quarter but " conversion pass failed.
Quarterback Loren Weeler
· Frid;~y 's Sports Transactions
By United Preu International
Pro Bask etba ll
Den1.1 er Signed fo r ward
Tom Boswell.
Indiana 5igned forward
and f irst -ro und draft p ick Rick
Robey .
New Jersey - Traded guard
Kevin Porter to Detroit tor
guard Eric Money .
Pro Hockey
Detroit -- AnnounCe d retire
· m en I of winger Dennis Hull.
College
San Fran ci sco - Named Dan
Bel luomini athletic dir ec tor .
Baseball
Atlanta - Recalled pitcher
Jim Bouton fr om Savannah

tSU .

Mike w1ger
992-7155
149 S. Third St .
Middleport. o.

lr.::::-:::::"1

WE WA.NT YOUR SAW LOGS!

State Farm i
and Casualty Co&lt;,np•myl

Home Office:

Bloomington, Illi nois
p 78806

Kansas City
R ec atl ed
catc hers Art K usnyer and Jim
Gaudet , pit chers George Throop
Md Bill Pas chalL outfielder
Luis 5ih.terio and th ird ba seman
Dave Cripe fr om omaha (A A ).
San Francisco - P urchased
pitcher Phil Na st u fr om Pho
enix (PCL I .
Pro Football
New
England
Signed
punter Jerrel W ilson and placed
defen sive end Julius Adams on
the in !ured reserve list; also
waived backup guard
Fred
Sturt , and rea c tivated safe ty
Dicki e conn .
Houston Signed Quarter ·
back Tommy Duniven and
pla ced wide r eceiver Eddie
Fost er on the injur ed reserve
I iSI .
Denver - Wa iYed offensive
ta c k le Bill Ba in .

OPEN MONDAY-FRIDAY 7:00-4:00

SUPER E-Z AUGHlWEIGHT

p P.

PERFORMMCE WDER.
Features simple triple option with
compression release for easy
starting .. 16" power tip guide bar to .
put the power to the wood. . With
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C. It SNOWDEN
417 Sewnd Avo.

,_T. -.---

I~\)

.

Lancer.punter did well fnr th•
visitors as he kept the Tornado offense bottled up in
their own territory ,,all night.
Southern never penetrated
the Lancer 3()-yard line.
Southern hosts Southwestern in an. SV AC contest
Friday when they play the
second of their three season
hom e games.

Waverly blanks VC Vikings, 28-0

loss on Redlegs
one sentence .
"We had dumb bats in t.he
ninth inning," cracked the
Reds' catcher .
Bench didn 't have to
elaborate.
Three o utstanding
defensive plays by right
fielder Dave Winfield snuffed
out a Reds ' threat in the ninth
Friday night as they dropped
a 3-2 verdict to the San Diego
Padres ln the finale of a twogame series.
Reds Manager Sparky
Anderson found the Joss
particularly hard w swallow
since it cost the Reds an
opportunity to pick up a game
on the Los Angeles Dodgers,
who lost to the Houston
Astros.
A leaping one-handed catch
by the 6-6 Winfield with his
back pressed against the
right field fence robbed
Bench, the leadoff batter in
the ninth, of an extra base hit.
"Bench shouldn 't feel too
bad, though ," said the
smiling Winfield. "Down in
Atlanta I reached lour feel
over the fence to take a home
run away
from Jell
Burroughs.''
Champ Sununers, starting
his first game since recalled
from Indianapolis this week,
followed Bench to the plate
and singled to center lor his
second hit of the night.
Alter Dave Collins replaced
Summers as a pinch runner ,
Dave Coocepcion flied to
center lor the ·second out of .
the inning.
But Ken Griffey, pinch
hitting lor Cesar Geronimo,
kept the Reds' hopes lor
victory alive with a double to
right.
"I knew I had to head oil
Griffey's ball or Collins goes
all the way home," said
Winfield .
The Padre right fielder did
just that , again using his long
reach w stab Griffey's drive
down the line with one hand
on the first bounce, then
wheeling and firing a throw
cui' off by Padre first
baseman
Broderick
Oawford.
" I don't have as many
assists as a lot of outfielder,"
said Winfield , "bul IILat's
because my throwing ann ls
respected."
Reds' thlrd bale coach Alex
Grammas respected
Winfield's ann enough to hold
up Collins at third. And there
he remained as Winfield
raced into right center to haul
down pinch hitter Mike
I .urn's drive fer the game-

Friday's high
school results

Southern tilt ends in 0-0 tie

Padres slap 3-2
CINCINNATI (UPI) Johnny Bench swruned up
the Cincinnati Reds' loss with

GALLIPOLIS - The Blue
Angels opened their volleyball season by winning two
matches at Coal Grove
Thursday night.
The Angels laced Oak HiU
in the evening opener,
defeating them 1&amp;-4, I:Hl in
two games. The Angels took
the Door with six seniors.
Janel Groves and Tami
Fraser at the hitting
_positions; Kathy Daniels and
Val Finley as setters and
Patti Niehm and Karen
Steinbrenner as hitters and
'

·Caldwell rallies to
edge Eastern, .14-8
· By Greg Bailey
EAST MEIGS - On a logcovered field , the visiting
Caldwell Redsklns rallied in
the second hall Friday night
to down a lighting Eastern
Eagle club !4-3. Host Eastern
controlled the first half,
Caldwell ran the third
quarter, and both clubs
battled evenly in the last
stanza.
The turning point of the
contest came as time ran out
lor the first hall. With lour
seconds showing on the clock,
Caldwell quarterback Bruce
Barnes found Jody Gray all
alone in the end zone for a 3()yard scoring toss. The run lor
the extras failed and Eastern
went into the locker room
leading U. But that timely
score enabled the Redskins to

campaign on successful note

.426 11'12

EASTERN PLAYER DOWNED - Caldwell's Matt Snyder (64) ~tops an unidentified
Eastern ball carrier on !his play in Friday's non-league outing. Eagle player on left is
Russell Starcher (77). Looking on is CaldweU'sMark Barner. (59) .

. ~­

PhoM 446-4290
Gil llipott,, Olllo

CONVINIINTLY LOCAtiO POll ALL IOU'IHIAIIIIN OHIO
AND NORIHIIN KINTUCX1' AND WilT VIIOitiiA

Iuper E-Z'

Ill ONI TODAY

LOOGaL .

ran 36 yards lor a fourth
quarter touchdown with Jell
Kritzwiser running the
conversion to close out the
scoring .
Althouse finished as the
game's top rusher with 98
yards in 16 carries.
Friday. the Tigers host
Portsmouth West in what
should be a crowd pleaser .
Score by quarters :
Waverly
.6 8 6 8-28
Vinton Co.
0 0 0 0-- 0
Massillon Jackson. 21 Akron
EHel 18
Maumee 34 To! Rogers 0
Maysville 12 Philo 0
McComb 22 Van Buren 14
Meadowlrook 30 River 6
Mec hanicsburg · 6 Spring
Northeastern 0
Mentor 21 Cleveland Hts 6
Middletown '1:1 Springfield S 6
Middletown Fenwick 31 Twin
Valley S 6
Middletown Madison 7 Mason
0
Midview 16 Avon Lake 7
Miller IB Berne Unon 6
·Milton-Union 6 Miami East 0
Mlneral Ridge 33 Columbiana
Crestview 8 Mjnster 8
Riverside 8 (tie)
Mogadore '1:1 Coventry 18
Mohawk 7 Marion Pleasant 6
Monroeville 35 Seneca E 0
Montpelier 30 Delta 7
Morgan 35 Warren Local 20
Mt Healthy 20 North College
Hill 6
Napolean 46 Defiance 6
New ,Concord JG 37
Barnesville 14
Newark 24 Col East 0
Newbw-y 33 Fairport 6
Newcomerstown 14 Warsaw
River View 0

Greenville 6 Celina o
Groveport Madison 7 Marion
Harding 0
Hamilton Twp I~ Teays
Valley 0
Hilliard I~ London 6
Hillsboro 26 New Richmond
13
Huntingwn Ross 9 N Gallia 6
Huron 28. Norwalk 14
Indian Lake 21 Benjamin
Logan 12
Indian Valley N I~ Smithville
14
Ironton 34 Ashland ( Ky) 2
Jackson Milton 28 Lakeview 0
Jefferson Union 35 Ams
Springfield 6
Johnstown 19 Heath 13
Kent Roosevelt 7 Medina o
Ket Fairmont E 7 Day Alter 6
Lake 6 Woodmore o
.
Lakota 14 Hamilton Taft o
Leipsic 13 Vanlue 7
Lemon-Monroe 20 Cin Walnut
Hills8
Uberty 24 Newton Falls 6
Uberty-Benton 19 Arcadia 0
Ucking Valley 13 Walkins
Mem 0
Lima Sr 32 Wapakoneta 14
Lockland 13 Bethel 12
Lorain 26 Lakewood 3
Loudonville 19 Hillsdale 7
Loveland 0 Forest Park 0

.......
........
a 'J' ?lr,

ti.IU IUM

A

o•

Tolal Yardage

Passes Attpt .
Passes Compt .
Interceptions

Fumbles

Fumbles Lost
Penalties
Bv Quarters :
Huntington Ross

Norlh Gall ia

6

6

1

0

0

0

I
0

1
•1
10-90 10-79
0 7 2 0-9
6 0 0 ()--6

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SERVICE

A Great
Combination
For Soutneastem Onio

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Spring Valley Plaza

iDIIe
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Gallipolis, Ohio

Sales &amp; Service

Phone 446-2206

(614)992-5652

NOTICE

Mon . lhru Fri. -9 A.M. to .5 P.M.
Evenings and Saturday

Through the fall seuon

By Appointment Only

and winter months we
will be closed on Sunday .

Physician ' s Referral Required

Herman L. Dillon, L. P. T.

BOB W. Main St .
Pomeroy. OH 4S769

(WVa) S 0

1Marion Elgin 0 Wynlord 0
•(tie)
Martins Ferry 20 Linsly
(WVa) 8

Massillon 20 Massillon Perry
6

PASSBOOK SAVINGS
Eam 5%% from
date of deposit to
date of withdrawal.

SIIDBr SaiB
On all 78 Models in
Stock .... We also have
a large selection of
used Travel Trailers.

Napoleon 46 Defiance 6
New Concord JG 37
Barnesville 14
Newark 24 Col East 0
Newbw-y 33 Fairport Harbor
6

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. Meigs Branch

The Athens f;:ounty
Savings &amp; Loan

·

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9~2-4&gt;655
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for long-term labor-saving economies.
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•'

HHS N~
10
8
51 1"7
10
0
6\ W

Department .
First Downs
Yards Rushing
Yards Passi ng

Mansfield Madison 26 Tiffin
Columbian 7
Margaretta 2 Vermilion 0
Marietta 47 Parkersburg

POMEROY lANDMMK

OAK HILL. OHIO 41616
'"· (614'"2.. , ... .
(614,..2·7617
LOCAIID ON IT. ta NIT I MI.D NOIIIH OP OAK HILL. OHIO

ville's Rosecrans Friday
night.
STATISTICS

EARN THE HIGHEST
INTEREST ALLOWED BY
LAW! I

PER 4'xl' SHEET

INDUSTRIAL10un2-10xa
TIMBER AND
LAND
CO.
·
I

defensive specialists . The
Angels were Jed in serving by
Karen Steinbrenner and
Kathy Daniels with nin e .
points each. Janet Groves
and Patti Niehm led the
hitt ers with two points cHch.
GAHS t hen laced C&lt;,a l
Grove winning 1~-9. 15-12. The
Angels fell behind in the
second game 5-12 before the
Angel s ra cked up ten
unanswered poin1s behind the
serving of Kathy Daniels and
hilling of Patti Niehm.
Errors had ca used the Angels
problems in the ea rly part of
the game but the experienced
team gained control and
reversed the moinentum .to
win the second game.
Janet Groves and Val
Finley Jed the team in spiklng
with three points each. Patti
Niehm handled ten spikes
converting t wu points. The
team handled the · bHII with
underhand pass or bump with
95 percent efficiency with
only nine mistakes in the
match.
Only the varsity team saw
competition at Coal Grove
beca use of the triangu lar
matcl\.
The Angel s, now 2-11, meet
Ironton Mond.y evening at
Ironton . In varsity and JV
play beginning at !i:JO.

first blood in the opening
stanza when senior back
Roger Cremeens zoomed in
from 13 yards out. A kick for
the Frontiersm en edged the extra point was blocked.
Huntlngton bounced back
FrHnkfort Adena, 6-0.
Coac h John
Blake 's with 3:31 remaining in the
Pirates, pre-season favorites second quarter when Rex
along with Eastern and Blain re covered a teamKyger Creek tu take the mate's fumble in the end
SV AC championship , drew zone . Mike Sh oop's boot
pushed the score to 7-&lt;i ut the
half.
Newcomerstown 14 Warsaw
The
Ross
Counlians
River View 0 Nordonia 26 blocked a Pirate punt with
Bedford 8
8:09 left in the third 'tanza.
North Olmsted 20 Berea 6
The ball rolled out of the end
North Ridge\11le 18 Westlake zone for a safety.
0
The Frontiersmen 's Shoop
North Royalton 20 Highland attempted two lon g field
l4
goals but both were wide. He
Northwest 40 Finneytown 7 had two in last week's win .
Northwestern 40 Mapleton 0
Tracy DePugh Jed HunNorton 19 Cloverleaf 13
. linglon's offense with 30
Oak Hills 36 Belmont 6
ya rds in 10 carries . Cremeens
Oreg on Stritch 33 To! topped NGHS with 115 yards in
Macomber 0
17 tries.
OttawH-Giandorf 19 Fostocia
Nort h Gallia held a n
13
overall 147-&lt;il offensive edge.
The Pirates will play ZanesHuntington, which is not
known for winning football
games, has now pulled off two
upsets in a row. t.ast week.

(tie)

'

Ulrea ....

tuuchdown and extra puint
and a third period safety to
stun the North Gallia Pirates,
!Hi here Friday.

. 216 W. MAIN ST.

t~

Know You"
POMEROY

Richalii [: Jones, Manager
\

0.

�('-6 -

The Sunday Timcs.Scntincl , Sunday, St•l&gt;l. 10. 1978
C,.7-The Sunday Times-sentinel. Sunday. Sept. 10. 1978

A Leader Any Way
You l.oolc At lt. •

Agriculture and

~~

WAS '4825.00

our

NOW

$4425

00

2300cc eng .. 4 speed
overdrive trans .• AM
radio.
western
mirrors , sliding rear
window , and more .

By Bryson R. cBud) Carter
Gallia County Extension Agent

1976 Cadillac

1977 FORD
MUSTANG II

Sedan DeVile

Extra sMrp, air, Real nice.

tAlly

1973 Cadillac
See one of the courteous Salesmen: Pete Burris;
Marvin Keebaugh or George Hartis.

IMPAI.A.~ ............. ~3195

2 dr ., brown &amp; wh ite , white int. , P.S., P, B., air , AM -

Red with large roof , V -8, auto .. cruise , air, P .S.. P. B.

00

,OPEN Ttll7 P.M.
Except Thursday &amp;

Salurdar tils ,oo

.

DAN THOMPSON FORD

Closed Svnday

See Rocky Hupp, Carrell Dodrill ot Pat Hill, General Manager, for a
Good Dea I on a New or Used Vehicle.
992,2196

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

7':! ' ~

Presley

CLIFTON
AUTO SALES

By PIETER VAN BENNEK Nicaragua Friday, National
MANAGUA , Nicaragua Guard troops reinforced with
rUP II - A Vietnamese and four truckloads of soldiers. a
t wo American soldiers u£ tank
and
helicopters
fort une hired by President dispersed a demonstration of
Anastasio Somoza, as well as

hundreds of Indian women in

the operations chief of the Masaya.
Nicaraguan
army
died
The women
were
Friday in a plane crash near praying and chanting for the
the Co&gt;ta Rican border.
release of a Costa Rican
The Nicaraguan National priest arrested after troops
guard identified the dead as said they found arms .
Brig . Gen . Jose Ivan
The priest. Jose Maria
Local owner , clean interior. AM-FM CB rad io, good
Allegrell,
the
l
wo
Americans
Pacheco,
was expelled
tires .
as Michael Ec hanis and Friday . Almost 200 o'f the
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP!) Carlos Wilfred Sanders. the Indian women were given
A life-size bronze statue of Vietnamese as Ng uyen Van first-a1d for tear-gas effects.
Elvis Presley was unveiled· Nguyen.
4 cyL . automatic. good tire s, b l ve fin ish, radio, good
In Managua, the congress
Friday in the lobby of the Las
eco nomy &amp; real sporty .
•
The U. S. Embassy said it co ntroll ed by Somoza's
Vegas Hilton Hotel.
was withholding details about Liberal Party passed a law
The unveiling drew a crowd the Americans until relatives csta blishing a nation a l
of 1,700 persons including were notified in the United '' economic emergency" in
Vernon Presley, the late States.
Landdu V-8, automatic , P .S.• P . B . air . AM. a track
response to the 16-day nation·
st~re o radio . power door locks and wi ndows. High
singer's father , and the
But friend s said Echanis, wide business strike.
mileage but a real bargain
singer 's ex-wife, Priscilla. who was well kn ow n in
The Ia w suspends the
The statue by sculptor carl Managua as :'Mike Mer- constitutional guarantee of
Romanelli depicts Presley cena ry ,'' was 27 and was fr eedom of commerce and
With a guitar draped aroWJd from Memphis, Tenn.
g ives the government the
his
neck,
a
microphone
in
his
The
National
Guard
power to impose price conLocal 1 owner car. V-8 engine. automatic trans ., P.S..
left hand and his right ann communiqu e
P.B .. radio . Clean interi or .
said
the trols on basic services.
extended
towards
an Aerocommander plane was
audience.
owned and piloted by
The statue will later be Allegrettand crashed about! Soldiers stand
moved w the hotel pavillion, p.m. over Lake Nicaragua
Sport ~i c kiJp , 350 V-8. au tomatic tran s., P.S., P.B .,
scene of the "always Elvis due to bad weather.
r ad 10. l1 ke new t ires , bed ra i l s, orange wl th wl'1ite trim .
festival," featuring Presley
But a fisherman living on guard Saturday
memorabilia .
the shores of the lake told the
TEHRAN, Iran tUPI)
Presley 's father , said the newspaper La Prensa Friday
Soldiers
in battle gear. many
unveiling brought "mixed that he had seen the plane
of
them
clearly tense after
feeling s. It is an honor, but explode in the air and then
1 owner. good tires .V B. automat 1c , P S., P.B., radio.
day-long
skirmishes across
it 's still a sad time for me. It nose-dive into the water.
the
Capital
Friday, stood
captures a lot of his features , Residents near the crash site
guard
today
a long th e
particularly with his fa ce and said the weather was good aU
sidewalks
or
cruised
the
hands ." The elder Presley, day and winds were normal.
&gt;treets
in
armored
personnel
who has suffered two heart
A reliable source sa id carriers or light tanks.
attacks,
arrived
in
Las
Vegas
Echanis
was a muscular six·
PASS. CARS, 1/z &amp; 3A T. PICKUPS
The thousands of armorin a wheelchair.
footer with a Fumanchu backed
troops
were
" I am doing what the mustache who almost always
and
II
patrolling
Tehran
USING REG. GAS.
doctor ordered," he said. "He wore dark glasses and had an
other cities under a dusk-totold
me
I
co
uld
attend
the
eagle tattooed on his left ann.
VAN CONVERSIONS, MOTOR HOMES,
dedication and unveiling of A Vietnam war veteran , dawn curfew following a day
the statue but I had w take it Echanis was .single and lived of bloody anti-government
El CAMINO &amp; SUBURBAN
riots in defiance of martial
easy.
in a house trailer full of guns law .
"The fan s have been a on a hllllop on the outskirts of
Though the government
great help with their Managua.
57 people were killed and
said
thoughts, but it's been a very
.Sanders had a wife and a 205 wounded in the clashes,
tOugh year f&lt;&gt;' me."
chiid who had recently witnesses and hospital
arrived in Nicaragua to join sources put the death toll at
him , the source said. A red· 250 or higher, with hundreds
haired , blue-eyed Army more wounded by troops
ooldier, he was aloo a Viet·
nam war veteran and also firing su!lained machine gun
had a tattoo on his left ann. bursts into crowds of
Sanders carried call in g thousands ' of chanting
"Your Chevy Dealer"
cards in hi s pocket staling his Moslem zea lots.
. confession as " mercenary ~'
992 -2126
Pomeroy
under a symbol of crossed
Open Evenings Til8:00 p .m .
BELLY D'ANCER
rines.
ATLANTIC CITY (UPI l The night before his death,
the source said, Echanis told Amid the pianists, ballerinas
Gary Wolfe, Peggy Wolfe to friends he was goi ng on a and singers, Miss Ohio hal
Roger C. Hili, Jane Ann Hill, mission near the Costa Rican broken with tradition and
Easement, Sutton .
border, which is known to be staged a belly dance as her
Col. &amp; Southern Ohio Elec. a favorite infiltration point of talent performance.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Cobb , Gle nwood ; Charl es
Nineteen-year·old Cher
Discharged : Mrs. Harry Adkins, Crown City ; Faru1ie Co. to State Of Ohio, 7.366 the Marxist Sandinista
Lynette
Patrick performed
acres, Lebanun .
guerrillas.
Neville, Point Plea sant ; Gaskins, Leon.
the
dance
during Friday's
Col. &amp; Southern Ohio E!ec.
Somosa
recently
Woodrow Kuhn, Vinton; Mrs.
final
.
preliminary
round of
Co
.
to
State
of
Ohio,
7.366
acknowledged
he
had
Donald Bandy, Huntington;
Veterans Memorial Hospital , acres Lebanon .
com
petition.
privately hired the services
C'harles Zerkle, New Ha ven;
Admitted - Ca rl Staats,
Col. &amp; Southern Ohio Elec. of two experts in anti· . Miss Patrick told UP! she
Mrs. ' Jack Stewart, Cowen, Minersville.
Co. to State of Ohio, 9.296 guerrilla warfare and it was took up belly dancing when
W. Va.; Don Berkely , Johns·
Discharged - Clarence acres, Lebanon .
widely known that he was she 'was 16, partly 'as an out·
town, 0 .; Deborah Mowrey , Haning, Rhonda Jones , Stella
Col.
&amp;
Southern
Ohio
Elec
.
referring to Eohanis and gro&gt;yth of her . mother's InPoint Pleasant; Ann Roney , DurSt. Freda Martin, Lora
terest in ethnic cultures and'
Co.
to
State
of
Ohio,
Ease
..
Sanders.
New Haven ; Richard Cline, Cleland .
1radllions.
Lebanon.
'
In
other
activity
in
Point Pleasant ; Ca rolus

977 Pinto 2 Dr.•.••••• s2995

statue

unveiled

976 Mustang ••~::::·•• }2795

1973 ·Monte Carlo. ..••. s1895

1973

Chevelle.~:~:·::~::..S1995

1976 Chevrolet. ......... s3495
1976 GMC % Ton •.••.• ~3695

78 MODEL CLOSE OUT

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

Meigs
Property
Transfers

HOSPITAL NEWS

Air. Local car.

'2695
1974 FORD
MAVERICK

Red and wh i te v inyl top.

2 dr . White with Beige vinyl

Real nice.

top .

'2395

19?3 FORD

1973 BUICK
CENTURY

.. GAL 500
2dr . Green Vinyl top . Local

car .

Cust. 2 dr HT.. Green and

'fthite . Air .

'1695

'2395

1973 CHEV.
IMP.
Sed ., air. vinyl

1973 FORD
CUST. 500

1973 PLYMOUTH
GRAN FURY

4 dr HT. Makes a nice
family car. Air .

2 dr HT. Air cond ., vinyl

fop .

'2195
1972 FORD
GAL 500
4dr HT Run real good . Nice

Plan crash
claims three

4dr . Sed ., Real nice Dodge,

'1895

4 dr
Nice and clean.

· Located on W. V~ . Side of Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge (3041 773 -5777

1975 DODGE
MONACO

*3695

4 dr. Sed. Real Nice., Air,
low mileage .

1976 FORD GRANADA.............. s3649

2300cc eng .. 4 s peed.
XL T option. western
mirrors • . AM radio.
step bumper and
more .

std .

1974 AMC
MATADOR

tape .

'4695

1974 FORD
T·BIRD

trans., Nice.

SEPTEMBER
USED CAR BUYS

1975 CHEVY

.

1 '1

car.

GALUI'OUS ~ Newest lines of farm equipment arid
supplies will be on display at the Farm Science Review to be
held Septembe~ 19-21 just northwest of Columbus, say~ Bud
Carter, Gallia Co. Extn. Agent, Agric. Commercial exhibitors
will have more than 4~ displays in the Central Exhibit Area
and ~er exlub1tors will have display in the Varied Industry
Bu1ldmg.
.
In addition to being on display, much of this new -equipment
will be de.monstrated lfl the field so visitors can compare the
performances of ~ifferenl machines.
Corn harvesting demonstrations will be given daily from
9:30to 11:30 a.m. and from 2 to 4 p.m., with silage harvesting
from 9 to . II :30 and from 2 to 4. Soybean harvesting
demon~trations ~Ill be given In the afternoon from 2 to 4.
Plowmg and tillage demonstrations will be from 10 to 11:30
and_2:30 to 4:30 daily. Shelled corn, from the 150 acres at the
Review used for corn harvesting demonstrations will be dried
in the dyer area from 10 to 4each day .
'
· There are other field displays at the Review besides the
equipment demonstrations. Seed companies will have their
newest products on display -:- 364 corn hybrids, l!O soybean
varietie:' and 25 aHal(a varieties are growing in test plots.
One field demonstration is of corn that had sludge applied
before planting. Sludge, which IS treated municipal waste was
applied at different levels to plowed ground· then the g~ound
was disced and planted in corn .
'
Check Information t-enters at the Review for detailed
Information about the demonstrations since field or crop
conditions might alter the schedule.
Tickets may be purchased for $1.50 in advance from the
Gallla Co. Extension office and commercial exhibitors, or for
$2.00 at the gate.

Red with While top, tocal
one owner, Extra clean .

'3895.

•3195

more .

$4765

Cust . 2 dr .• local one owner,
Last of the Big Oneso

'2995

992-5342-0pen Evenings Until6:00

Til5 P .M. Sat ,- Pomeror

1975 BUICK
LESABRE

Clean Inside and out .

1975 CHEV.
C10
Ton Pickup, 6 cyl.,

1976 BUICK
REGAL

'5995

• dr .. Sed. Red and white.

"You'll Like Our Quality Way of
Doing Business" GMC Financing

NOW

Sun. Roof .. air, P.W., P.B .,
Vinyl top, Low mileage .

1975' CHEV.
. IMP.

Karr &amp; VanZandt

WAS '5205.00

.

1977 CHEV.
MONTE CARLO

'4495

Drive Home A Winner

2300cc eng. XL T. free
wheeling package; 4 .
speed trans . and

POMEROY - A new
E.conomie Emergency loan
service for fanners who have
financial problems caused by
credit shortage or cost-price
squeeze is liow in effect

through the U. S. Fanners
Ho me

Coupe DeVille

I

•
community

'1995

'1795
1972 FORD
MAVERICK
2 dr Local car . O"le owner .

1970 BUICK
LESABRE
Cust. 4 dr .HT, Vinyl top,

If you're not sure of t he

Air .

'995

'1495 .

'995

We Are The Friendly Dealership
Don't Forget you owe it to yourself to check with us
before you buy any car, new or used. We can save you
money. See or call one of these Friendly Salesmen. J . D.
Story, Ray Douglas or Bill Nelson.

500 E. MAIN

Gallipolis FFA
had 21 memben
tJJke part in fair

992-2174

POMEROY, 0.

'78 CLOSE-OUT
SAVE NOW ON

GALLIPOLIS
The
'
Gallipolis FFA Chapter had
21 members exhibiting
projects at the 1978 GaUia
County Junior Fair.
The following members
exhibited their projects:
Kevin Angel. Dave Beattie,
Randy Ca ldwell, Jeff Chigg,
Jan Collins. Lisa Fellure, Bob
Foster, Bobby C. Griffith,
Richard Griffith, Bryan
Hamilton, Randy Hamilton,
Tony Haner , Sandy Layne,
Tandc Pope, Harry Pugh.
W~lter Pugh, Teresa Skeen,
M1ke Stowers,
Teresa
Stowers.
Rob Ma ss ie . was the
exhibitor of the champion
Hampshire Ram, Champion
Hampshire Breeding Flock,
Reserve Champion Market
Lamb, and was the Past
Showmanship Winner.
Tandi Woodward was the
exhibitor of the Reserve
COURT &amp; THIRD
Champion Steer, Champion
llharolais Cow, and received
first place in the Senior
Showmanship class.
The chapter received an
"A" rating on the educational
booth which it constructed in
conjunction with the HaMan
Trace, North Gallia and
Southwestern FF A Chapters.
The officers and the
chapter ' s advisor, Tim
GALLIPOLIS - Fourteen
Massie, would like to com- cases were terminated in
mend the FF A members for Gallipolis Municipal Court
doing an excellent job this Friday.
past year and are looking
William Collins, Vinton,
forward to another successful entered a plea of guilty to
year. Tim Massie is advisor chatges of physical harm,
and Teresa Stowers is and was fined $100.
· Entering a plea of guilty to
reporter.
charges of passing a bad
check, James Henson,
Gallipolis, was fined f50, plus
a 30 day suspended sentence.
TEACHER STRIKES
United Preos!Diel'lllltiolllll
Gary A. Warren, 19.
The nation 's teacher Gallipolis, and Nicky c.
strikes have dillrupted the Smith, 20, Rio Grande, were
education of more than each fined $25 on charges of
lllO,OOO students in 13 states reckless operation.
Entering a plea of guilty to
and more walkouts are
threatened for next week.
Schools in Philadelphia will
open Monday to the city's
250,000 lludents, who got the
'
first day of classes off Friday Pennsylvania, Vermont,
to help officials get ready Rhode Island, Connecticut,
alter a teachers' strike that •Hc higan, Louisiana,
Washington, . California,
ended the day before.
But other strikes wt :r still Idaho, New York and New
~oing on in Ohio I!Hnois, Jersey .

eCOLTS
eOMNI

•

meaning of these different

sununer means · new shoe

seeds;

time for children, says

breeder,

GAlliPOLIS, OHIO

14 cas.e s tenninated
• Gallipolis court
m
charges of diso&lt;derly conduct , Sameuel
Clark,
Chillicothe, was fined $20.
Fined $3'1 on chorges of
fishing without a license was
Harold S. Roese, 26,
Gallipolis.
Karen B. Marr, 35,
Gallipolis, wos fined $27 · on
chorges of operating a motor
vehicle without a valid
license.
Forfeiting $27 on. charges of
operating an unsafe motor
vehicle was Debra J.
Bradshaw, Ga!Upolis.
Arthur C. Lund, 3~.
Gallipolis, was fined 122 on
charges of aasured clear
distance.
Fined or forfeiting bond on
charges of nceulve speed
were J-ph 0. McKinnlal,
It, Qllk Hlll, PI; Jamea E.
Kemp, II, VInton, $24; :Alice
J. H1111ell, Pt. Pleaaant, "';
Hobert A. Slagle, 51, Crown
City, QZ; and William P.
Callahan, 5!1, Xenia, 0., $22.
•

"

established farm operator -

will be repayable annua ll y.

individ ual.
partne r s hip,
corporation or cooperative expe riencing scarce credit or
an o verload of debt coming

due, may apply for up to
$400,000 of credit lhrougl)
FmHA i"n order to survive in
famling and continue their
normal level of oper&lt;Jtion .
Economic Emergency loans
will not be made to expand a
fa rm operation,

Loans made directly by
FmHA will be at an interest
rate equivalent to the cost uf
money sec ured by th e
government through sale of
its securities to the public,
plus an administrative add·
on of up to one percent. The

leather or fabric construction

rate initially will be 8' '
percent. Guaranteed

loans

will · be made at

rates

negOtiated between borro wer

and lender, with FmHA
providing the lender up to a 90
percent. guarantee against

Archie St egall sa id init ial
inq uir ies t.tbout F.con om ic
Em ergency loans can be
mad e r ithcr thro ug h a
commerc ial ag ri c ul t unil
lender or t he county FmHA
offi ce serv ing the county
where t hl' farm is located.

'l'hc Act ca lls for decision by
FmHA on in dividua l ap ·
plkat iuns within 30 da ys.
While introduci ng the new
Economic Emergency fann

loa n, Fm HA will continue all
pre~cxistin g

services. They
incl ude va rious programs of
non·cme rgency rea l estate
and production loan s .t o
farn il y~size farms, terms of
which will soon be broadened

under the recent Credit Act ;
emergem·y loans to fann s

damaged by natural disaster ,
and l oans or grants for
housmg, community faciliti es
and business and industry in
rura l a reas.

By John C. Rice
Meigs Co. Ext. Agent
Agriculture
PUMEKOY
New
equipment a nd supplies
a ren' t the on ly new things at

ON 12 HP GEAR
DRIVEN CUB CADETS

MEIGS
EQUIPMENT CO.

-ell•,

1978 Farm

the

Science

poses will be made for terms

of up to 7 years, with loan

child to wear the correct
shoes for a ll

occ~ s i o n s,"

western f ra nk lin County

land .

t o extract sugar from
sorghum . Then the s ugar is

Seed companies will have
thei r newest products on

molasses.

ex hibit in the grove con·
ca lf
r ais in g
management.
Gene ra l

The College of Agriculture
and Home Economics Alumni

managem e nt

display as 364 corn hybrids,
110 soybean varieties and 25
a lfa lfa varieties will be
shown at the Review .
A rural crim e prevention

display st resses the need for
rural r esi dent s t o take
preventive meas ures against
crime. Rural crime is in·
cr ea sing at a higher rate than
is urban crime . Visit this

display to find out how to

in wet weather to protect his

shoes and feet. A leather shoe
that ha s been ·thoro ughly wet
will have a shortened life and
may be stiff to wear . If shoes
do gel wet, stuff the toes wit h
paper and allow them lu dry
away from di rect heat.
" Remember, a damp shoe
worn for even a short period
of time is an ideal breedin g

place for fungi that cause
athlete's foot ," warns Dey11.

Ideally, shoes should ha ve
a rest between wearings. lf
possible, the S&lt;Jme pa ir of
shoes should not be worn two
days in succession to a \l ow
t ime for any perspiration

inside the shoe to evaporate.
However, your child may
need to wear the same pair of
shoes day after day. If so, be

sure to · place them in a dry
place with good air cir·
culation overnight or between
wearings.

Have the soles uf shoes
repaired before they are
worn through . When complete soles need replacing,
comfort and fit should be
questloned. Resoling may

change the shape and size of
the shoe and, in most in·
stances, will cut the shoe one
size in width.

perce nt

nitrogen

a nd

down

to

make ce rnin g

prin ciples

of

calf

includin g

Association will ha ve a housi ng , costs, feedi ng
hospitality tent next to Farm systems and hea lth care will
Science Review headquar~ be presented.
" Infec ti ous Disea ses of
ters. A slide series, " Plan
Your Future Now," will be llvestock,'' pr epared by the
shown at 10, ll, 12, I , and 2 Veterinary Science Departo'c lock da ily . Information m ent, will pro vi de in·
will be available for formati on o n disea ses of
prospective students and for current econom ic concern to
Ohio's livest ock produ.ccr s.
a lumni at the tent.

Although not new in itself,

Tractor Sales 1 and F ulto n ·

the hams at th e l ivestock
center complex.

'l'hompson for $1.50 or at the
ga te for $2.00. The Rev1ew
site

is

in

northw es t ern

Franklin County.

Roger Powell accepts
•
new post at Winfield
By John Cooper
Soil Cons. Service
PT. PLEASANT - We are

1'he Jake Somerville and
Will ~: dw a rds' ponds are
nearing completion. Both of

both sorry and glad to an- these have been wet connounce that Roge r Powell is
going to start to work as a
conservation technician for
Soi l ConserVation Service at

struction sites and have been

Winfi eld. We arc sorry to see
hi m leave our Pt. Pleasant
field office, but of course , we
arc gla d for him that he is

helping in the construction
work . Jake is also building a

~e tting

rat~er

difficult to cope with .

However , the recent lack of
r::J in has been an a dvantage to

di ve rsion ditch

above

his

house and bam to protect
a permanent position . them from hillside runoff

Hi s status working with t he
soil conservation district in
Mason Count y was a t ern ~
p o rary
assi gn ment.
However . the training he
received here put hi m in line
fot a permanent position at

water .

We visited the Ag Exposition at the Civic Center in

Charleston and found it to be
ve ry

interesting .

li vestock

ex hibit s

The

a nd

Winfield . The tehcni cian machi nery e xhibit s were
a ss ig nm ent there became
vacant on t h e
recent

very good a s well as other
co mmercial exh ib its. The

Look, and you'll see big savings
on the new MF farm tractor
you need!

retirement of Elmer Herold Ca pit ol Soil Co nse rvatio n
who had been there 30 years. District had an excellent
Koger did a lot of good work exhibit showing some of the
in Maso n County and made a
lot of friends. We are sure

less common grasses that can
be use d for con se rvation

that he will be missed by work .

The

Agricu ltural

and Con·
everyone. At the present time Stabilization
the distrk1 has not made a se rvat ion Service .had a very
decisiOn about refilling his ni ce exhibit and vario us
agencies in the Department
position here.
We ha ve been

informed

of Natural Reso urces and the
W . Va . Chri stmas Tree

that the ditcher is sched uled Gro wers Association had
for an appearance in Mason exhibits of interest to the
County sometime in October. public.
We sa w t he world's
This will be the fir st time for
it t o be here in October in champion wood chopper from
several yea rs. We are ~=: l ad Webster Count y in action and
that it will be coming in early marvelled at his speed in
fall ratheNhan in late fa ll or chopping a tifteen-ineh log in
two.

We were

more

im-

pressed, however, with the
in· method he used as he wielded
do a five pound razor sharp ax
exhibit and their knowledge drainage in October already. and chopped into the log
Others who are interested perhaps fo ur lnehes at each
of their project area .
Cong ratulations to the five should notify our office so lick not more than two inches
girl s for representing Ga llia th~t nl~ns &lt;~nci dPsi l!ns r:m he from his feet. That made us
County so well at the 1976 made to carry out a ll needed cringe as we watched him .
projects.
Ohio State Fair'

I'

boiled

Faculty at the beef barn
will discuss Management of
the Cow-Calf Herd. Sheep

wint er as has been the routine
during the past few years.

.·,

The
Dairy
Science
Department will have an

propelled by a mule, is used

In additi on to these
departmental
ex hibtts~ere
the antique farm collection is
will
be
more
than
420 comA sludge demonstratio n still growing and new
mercial
ex
hibitors
in t he
also is new this year. Sludge equipment has been added
fi
elds
and
in
the
Central
since
last
year.
was applied at different
Those interested in seeing Display Area .
levels to plowed ground; then
Tickets are available from
livestock
and horses at the
the ground was di sked and
the
Extensio n office a nd
Fa
nn
sCience
Review,
to
be
planted in corn. The sludge
La
ndmark,
Sugar Run Mill ,
held
September
19-21,
will
acts a s a low·analysis fer:Meigs
Eq
uipm
ent , Br own
ha
ve
an
opportunity
to
visit
tilize r since it contains 1 lei 5

protect you r hom.c, equipment etnd livestock.

Lay oj'the land

says

Deyo.
· Insist that your chi ld wear
rubber boots when going out

program at t he horse ba m .

one year's absence. A press,

loss.

Loans for operating pur-

phosphorous. The same type hea lth management exhi.bits
of procedure is being tested will be the topic at the sheep
on 100 farm s in Columbus, llllm. At the swine fa cilities,
Zanesville, Defiance and an open house will be held
each day of the Heview, and
Medina co unties.
Sorgo is returning to the management of the earlyFann Science Review after weaned foal will be the

Revi ew, to be held September
19-21 un 150 acres of north·

Gallia well represented
Several people have
at 1978 Ohio State Fair dicated
a desire to

Speda/s

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE

cu n su lid at i o n s
and
reScheduling for another 7
yectrs permitted. ctnd 20:y ea r
payment uuthorized under
s peci a l l'o nd it iuns . Hea l
estate loans ma y be made fvr
up to 40 ycCirs . Loans fur
annually . recurring expenses

previously hPen confined to

Clean Up

VANS &amp; TRUCKS
2 &amp; 4 WHEEL DRIVE

Under the new Economic:
Emerg ency prog ra m, any

that allows the feet to
" breathe" and pass off
foundation, or registered,
then you're probably in the Norma Deyo, Extension perspiration. Shoes that have
majority. Perhaps these clothing specialist at The rubber heel lifts will. absorb
brief definitions will help . Ohio State University .
shock.
Foundotion
Seed :
School shoes a re worn
Do not buy dress-up shoes
Requirements are the every day and it is important for every day wear . Dress-up
highest of any class of seed. to gel the best fit, con·
These are the has.lc seed· struction and style for your shoes are usually not the type
stocks of new ond old child's foot . Shoes can affect that a child should wear
varietieo and other strains the way the child performs in continuously . ·Dressy shoes
developed by Experiment the classroom and par- tend to be stiff and generally
provide less toe ruom than
Stations and the U S D A
plan_t breeders. Breeder ticipates on the play'ground. oxfords or other casual shoes.
Seed: A unique variety
"Even 'if last year's school They are often low cut and
developed by a plant breeder shoes st ill look good, be sure difficult to keep on the feet.
and Olllinta1ned by him. He to thoroughly check their fit
Patent leather is frequently
writes the description of his on your child's feet ,'' Deyo
crop. Registered Seed: Seed advises . " Young feel grow used in dress shoes. Thi s type
produced from foundation rapidly over the summer of leather is hard and causes
the feet to perspire and
seed handled under months ."
procedures acceptable to the
When selecting shoes for become tender.
Once-shoes are purchased,
certifying agency.• Certified your child. look for footwear
Seed: Produced from
they should be maintained for
registered seed and con· that has a soft, pliable even· co mfort and appearan ce .
sidered among the best seed grained leather. Make sure Polish protects leather shoes
for producers. Check the the shoes are made of finn from dirt and dampness. It
label to make sure what yet fl ex ible materials. Choose a lso helps keep natural oils in ·
you're ~ttin_g. All seed in shoes that have close, even
the certl~Ication program IlL stitching with strong thread the leather, retaining their
commerciAl chonnels ~ust and evenly trimmed, well ooftness and fl exibility.
" An important part of
be . tagged •• certlfl~d. finished edges. The linings in
proper
care is teaching the
~=~stered or foundatiOn the shoes should be soft and
·
'IUI\U
absorbent.
Test the shoes to assure
that the contours are finn
and bend under pressure, but
spring
back into sha pe.
Spring Ave.
Beware
of
shoes with rough
P\1mtroY OlliO
spots. thick seams. or open
BY FRED J. DEEL
.1111111111111111111111111111111111111111 seams inside the shoes. Do
Ext. Agent, I·H
Gallla County
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County
was
recently
represented at The Ohio State
Fair by several 4·H mem·
bers. Five of these members
received "Outstanding of the
Day" awards. Each of these
gi rls were selected on the
county level by their
achievements at the 1978
Galli&amp; County Junior Fair.
Gallia County 4·H members
honored at the State Fair
were Shari Howard, daughter
The·C ub Cadet· IS the
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Howard,
of
ul!imale tractor tor lawn
Bidwell;
Amy
Roush.
and garden care .
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Known tor its
Roush, Cheshire; Missy de
rugged perform Lamerens, daughter of Dr.
ance a nd quiet
and Mrs. Art de Lamerens,
ride. 11's a h1gh ly
Gallipolis ; Leslie Gordon,
versatile lawn
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Gordon,
Cheshire; Billie Jo
and garden
Grosvonor,
daughter of Mr.
tractor with over
Mrs.
Willia'm
Grosvonor,
and
50 att achmen ts
Gallipolis.
available 1ncluding
Missy, Leslie and Billie Jo
38, 44 o r 50
exhibited their 4·H dog
incn mower.
projects at the State Fair. In
their classes they were
required to demonstrate the
ability of the animal to heel
on lead, figure 8, stand for
CUB CADET' TRACTOR
examination, heel free ,
recall, long sit and long down .
WE ARE TRYING TO CLEAN UP OUR
Amy participated in the
EXISTING CUB CADET INVENTORY .
Natural R~sources DaY. at
DRASTICALLY REDUCED PRICES.
which time she exhibited her
STOP BY OR CALL FOR A REAL CUB
project and was Interviewed
by the judge for the 4·H
CADET DEAL
Conservation projects.
Shari Howard represented
GaUia County In the 4-H Food
and Nutrition lhow with her
Tasty Mea II project. She was
required to bring a plan .of
food for one day written In
menu fonn and Includlng
If tillY; thj!ir food
992-2176
eJthiblt, one plilce aettlng for
tlei'VIce for thllt meal; and an
appropriate
tablecloth or
. POMEROY, 0.
mat. · The participants were
interviewed to evaluate thelr
certified,

TRM.1UK Sl'' ES

•MONACO

tFmHA l.
Archie R. Stegall, the
agency's County Supervisor
for the Athens, Meigs and
Vinton County area , reports
that FmHA is prepared to
take applications at th e
FmHA County Office at 221
West
Second
Street.
45769.
Pomeroy, · Ohio
Ecor1omic Emergency loans
are authorized under the
Agricultural Credit Act of
i978, signed by President
Carter August 4, 1978. They
offer special help to farmers
who are hard-pressed by
recent shortage of credit
from their regular lenders, or
by debts accumulated during
the recent period of low !ann
prices.
Archie Stegall said th e
Economic Emergency loan
program was enacted by
Congress,
with
A:d·
ministration supp9rt, in
recognition of the fact that
"econom.ic conditions, as well
as weather , are often beyond
farmers' control. '' FmHA
emergency
credit
has

affected by economic con·
ditions .

not buy those with stitches,
By Diana S. Eberts
seams, staples or tacks that
Ext. Agt. Home Econ.
make bumps inside the shoes.
Meigs County
Purchase shoes with
POMEROY - The end of

fUllON•uJUIII pSQN·

eASPEN

Administration

loan s lo r reru vcr y fr om
natural disaster , or the
guarantee uf private lenders'
loans t o livestock producers

End of summer means
new shoe time for kids

.top.-

County agent's corner

Farm loans available

.,....
,..._ -

-·-

~. -

BEHLEN CORN CRIBS
5 Sizes available from 679 bu. to 2184 bu.
High quality 2 gauge
Buy now and have
.1A" rod galv. steel
them ready for your
consbuction
com crop this fall
CEITUL SOYA
af OliD, lac.,
G-3-.
61 CJhi,

save!
on a new MF tractor

Model

Was

Now

MF 230 GIS

'7325.•

'6495."

MF 230 Diesel

'7750."

'6795."

MF 245 Diesel

'8880."

'7595."

MF 255 Diesel

'11,000."

'9295."

MF 275 Diesel

1

14,300."

'12,000.01

MF 285 Diesel '16 1000."

'13,500."

Parts and service, too
Take a look at our parts and service
departments too, then you 'll know why we
can take care of you so quickly when (or if)
you need us.

SHINN'S
TRACTOR SALES

INC.
458-1630
Leon, W. Va.

�C-1-The_Sunday Time~·Senlinel, Sunday, S..pt.

10:1978

Peeps . ..

'

•

Solar energy for agriculture
By Boyd Ruth

ener~y

Soli Coo1ervallon Servlee

POMEROY - In 1973, one
year before the Arab oil
embargo, the United States
imported 36.1 percent of its
"' J . ."i ' ' " 1·:1. 1•J-:r1•.~
total oil supply. AI that time,
GALLJPOLIS - S. B. Whealdon, the Vint on photogr·apher, oil cost $4.91 per barrel. In
was a little man physically, in ulllt respt!CI like Napoleon . Mrs. 1974, oil jumped to $13.69 per
Maude Fadely Whealdon of Cent erville in the Far West or barrel and U. S. production ·
Gallia Cowrty says that she is five feet four. but the one time declined for the first time.
she mel Uncle Burton Wlrealdon she actually looked down on Last year, we imported 47
him from above. Maude emphasized that she looked down on percent of our total oil supply,
him ,,,~·physically , for he was a nne old gentlcm~m .
and that oil cost us between
Maude's husband, W. E.
$14 and $1S per barrel. Our
Whealdon, died this·past May
supplies of natural gas are
at 83 years of age. His father
becoming increasingly exwas William He nry
pen sive ami. in fnr' , this
Whealdon, brother of S. B.
Whealdon. it was while
Maude was visiting William
Henry in 1939 ihat she met S.

A Gallipolis Diary

B.

suurt'l! is not availabl e

in 'some coinmunilies.
Clearly, America need s
additional energy options.
And. if America needs
more options, no Americans
need them more than those
who raise our food. For the

cost of energy is interwoven
into the cost of agricultural
products.
Fortunately for us all, a
post petroleum era has
started to arrive; but like the
sun in beginning a new dawn ,
the new solar age is slow in
beginning here. f'or exam-

plc : about 30,000 Am erican American agricultural
.homes heat their water with scientists are working on an
sunlight. But in Israel, that impressive array of solar
figure is 200,000, and in tools : solar powered gram
Jap an, over I wo million dryers , solar heated poultry,
hom es ha ve so lar wat er hog and dairy houses, solar
heaters. In nothern Australia, heated greenhouses, solar
where the morning sun ri ses processes to cure burley
13 hours before it reaches our t oba cco, and even a
ea stern s hore, the law photov oltaic cell powered
requires solar heaters on all inse.ct trap. Solar heated and
new buildings.
cooled homes designed for
But if the sun of the solar rural families have been
dawn has risen earlier in developed . ~' resnel lenses
other countries, its ·ap· hold th e promise of
pearance on our horizon ha s augmenting the efficiency of
not caught us .napping . many other solar projects.
American farmers are

~:!lt i~~~~:.•i::y nee:.r;;,~v: ·
clean, dependable energy
source, the assurance that

the energy they need will be
there, in the quantities they
need it, and at a stable and

predictable cost.
The dawn of the post
petroleum era has found
American agriculture wide
awake. And that Is not surprising. The ingenuity behind
the new t~hnology has been
.a part of : American
agriculture for a long, long
time.

~~Governor
ll7 LEE LEONARD
V1'l StateiiHH Reporter

wocking married couples.
Van Meter car;ied ' the fight on Rhodes' contention thai
"(X)LUMBUS (UPI) - Some jottings from alons the cam- Celeste, if elected, will be unable to replace any Republican
public utUities commiiJSiooers until 1981. Celeste retorted tha\
Piltn trail:
.
Oov. James A. Rhodoslikos to run his own races as if he's he can replace them at once If he can show they've beer
th8·0nly me competing. He rarely mentions his opponent and neglectin~ their dulles .
lljMdally avoids personal criticism unless he's in deep
George C. Smith, the Repubican nominee for state attorney
trOOble.
But willie Rhodes campaiiO'Is above \he fray, he already has general, may be me of the most unpopullir political figures at
the moment. It seems nobody loves him.
Democ;rats snarl at the very mention of Smith's name
because
he Is trying to nail both his opponent, Attorney
me Republlcan leglalators fighting down .in the trenches
General
William
J. Brown, and another Democrat, state Audiagainst 1m opponent, Democratic Lt. Gov. Richard f' . Celeste.
tor
Thomas
E.
Ferguson,
with Investigations.
~!\ale Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter, R-A.shland, and Rep . Alan
The
Democrats
have
gooe
to court claiming Smith is using
E. · Norris, R-Wemervllle, have been deployed as a sort of
Franklin
County
taxpayers'
money
.to (urther his own political
"truth squad" to catch Celeste on any rilisstatements.
career.
Norris caught him oo ooe - that the goventOr had never
Now Sj)me Republicans are mad because Smith has backed
followed through on a promise to help reduce Income taxes for

GRfA TEST SILfCTION
I.OWfST PRICES

··

FE.~TURING

C&amp;O ••••••••••• :•••• ~ '350
Wood-Coal ModeI.. ..'360

Co. on Second' Ave. at the Public Square, and was a director of
U1e .Cand S hank .
In Middleport between Jrd &amp; 4th Aves.,
bt!camt: a locomotive engineer. He managec..l hotels at Mid·
• Henry W. Cherring~ou-was born March 12, 1886, son of
down the alley from OQn's Carry Out or
dlepor1 and Hillsboro, but returned to Gallipolis in 1902. W11en Samuel Maxon Cherrington and Rowena Putnam Cooke Cherrturn right at State Farm Ins.
U1e Park Central Hotel was organized i11 1907, Custumm was ington, and grandson of Major Isaac N. Cooke, who was on
president and manager.
Gen. Grant's staff during the Civil War. Cherrington's mother
~~~ .,...._
• Claude M. Wall was born May 5, 1870. His sons were Jutm was a direct descendant of Gen. Israel Putnam of Revolua uu r~n
S.. Pinckney T. - P. T. WaD became Gallipolis's outstanding tionar·y War fam e. His law office then and throughout his life
ltistorian, PeterS.. William G., Claude M. Jr., and Carl M. in was in the Pyllrian building , corner of Second Ave. and Locust
,.• V W
ra
.
.
1891 he opened a watch, clock, and jeweli'y repair shop approx- St.
imately where Tawney is n'ow .
Coming up next week or later will bC • J . H. f'ranz . • H. F.
CALL TODAY FOR APPOINTMENT
• James L. Haskins was bom Jan . 28, 1864, in CI'Own City. Brothers, • W. N. Hayward, ~ Sherwood A. Moot·e, • E. P.
Other Store in car~ent~r Ott Rt. 143
He was elected clerk of courts of Gailia County in 1904, suc- Mullineaux, • Charles f'. Stockhofr. • J. Ed Harrison, •
HRS.: Sat.lO :OO A.M.-4:00P .M.
ceeding Jolur H. Ewing. He helped opne the Haskins-Thomas Waid Harvey Miles, • Judge J . C. Ingels, • E. Wayne Sanns, I------•Tiloiidilailv,;r.;,2,;;Aiii.Miiio.·o1JiiPoi.iiMii.' ! " " - - - - - •
and • Earl Leander McCormick .

AWWUI lL.JiiwDJAN·
8_,.''E GOMnJ'I
_ NY

All this relates - in case you haven't read the p eeps colwnn
before - to a photograph of four young men tak'en probably in
1900 that Marshall R. Craig found ainong his late father's
belongings. Marshall has moved to Car-rollton .
Request was made for identification uf the pt!Uple in the pic·

LAST WEEK we told you about Cltief of Pollee Francis Ed-

alted Ruler . He was an int'Orporator of the Cmrunercial anc..l

DRIVE A LITTLE &amp; SAVE A LOT

LATEST FASHIONS! LOWEST PRICES!
3 PIECE

SOFA, CHAIR, LOVESEAT
REG. 1799.95

'59995

With the purchase of this livint room suite
you'll receive • Hoover Sweeper, Model 4127·
FREEl

WOOD TABLE
WITH

4 CHAIRS

BEDROOM
SUITES
UP TO 1200.00 OFF
Also with the purchase of a
Bedroom Suite, you buy the
Box Springs and we'll Rive rou
the Mattress.

McCALL

MAPLE OR PINE

Ualted Preoa lnterD.atlonal
Contract agreements in
Philadelphia and Marion,
Ind., will send more than a
quarter of a million· chUdren
back to school next week but
other laboc disputes left the
educalloos of more than a
half million other students in
doubt.
Talks aimed at ending
strikes In Chicago and
Cleveland took on the
appearance of the Madhatter's tea party in Wonderland
and a growing dispute In
Boston threatend to bolster
the ranks of Idled pupils.
A walkout by instructors
has halted clasaes for more
than 110,000 students at the
city colleges of Chicago for
two weeks and the myriad of
diaagreements between the
teachers and the board were
· becoming curlouser and
curlouser as the strike
l~;~~llthened. _

WITH

6 CHAIRS

$249 A~DUP
9

~k'l
~pg

ECONOMY
LATEX

RECLINERS
20%
TO

30% oH

\Jif. ON WOOO. jAASON"' •

WHITI114

3 PIECE

7 PIECE

BREAKFAST
SETS
WITH SMALL
DAMAGED
PLACES

$880!D
UP

EARLY AMERICAN

LIVING ROOM
SUITES
VELVET
NYLON
MATERIAL

95
$899

•
T estJmony
b.acking

'

• Warran ted One Coal ,
Non Yeilow tng • M tldew

Delra n! ' • 30 Popular
Colors
• Ae!"»sl ~nl 10 him (hJStruct•O&lt;l c;~u ~eo b~

$599

GALLON
WAS$6.99

f""11l(1ew

BEST OIL!

LIVING ROOM
SUITE

$3

Gel a 579.9.5 set of Lamps FREE
plus a SlOD trade lor your old
suite.

OFF
GLOSS OIL
HOUSE MINT

sg!!ON MO!!oN
-.- I

WAS $13.99

WAS $12.99

• Atch. Full Gloss
• Otl &amp; Alkyd Durab tllty
• M1ldew Deltant•

• Economy Pnced • All

Surfaces- WOOd, Masonry,
Metal • Wht te Only

• R e ~ustal'lt to l1 lm destrUCTIOrl Cl'll.l'.ied

ov m•IOe~'~

CARTER &amp; EVANS
S&amp;T STORE

OLIVE STREET

•

•
.

WITH THE PURCHASE
OF ANY 2 PIECE

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

BIG
CARPET SALE

GIBSON

'

ALMOND,
GREEN,
GOLD
&amp; WHITE

NOW IN
PROGRESS

BUY NOW &amp; SAVE

reporters .

However,

substantial differences still
remain on other important
issues.
"... Both the areas· of
progress and the areas where
differences reiiUiin relate .1o
important areas or Issues,"
and not mere procedural
iteins, he said.
Under repeated
questioning, Powell stressed
he was referring to major
items of dispute between the
Egyptians and Isr:aeUs. He
summed up by saying, "In
some of these areas where
there were substantial
differences, progress seems
to have been made, and in
others, differences seems to

.
.
inhabited West Bank and
Gaza regions--:-lly a set
deadline - a dispute where
Israel holds aU the cards,IUld
ooe that seemed unlikely w
be settled alter ooly a few
days of talks.
Summit sources stressed
that the "outcome is still very
much in doubt," and said
optimistic forecasts of a

come of this meeting," he

said.
He said no deadline has
been set foc conclusion of the
summit that began last Tuesday.
However, U.S. planning has
assumed it will either reach a
successful co.nclusion by
Tuesday or Wednesday, or
will , break up without
agreement ~ on

successful conclusion are

premature.
They said there has been
greater flexibility in some
areas, but greater rigidity in
others. refused to say,
however, whether Murdoch
had an option to buy the
paper or to discuss details the
gobetween trying to find
areas of compromise. M. for
his leverage, one official
said : "They both need us ."
Powell · declined
to
speculate on whether the
summit might produ~e even
the negotiating "framework"
that '
would
generate
remain.';
cootinuing Egyptian-Israel
The overriding dispute is peace talk!;.
· ''There is simply no basis
ISrael's unwillingness to give
up military and supervisor)' at this point for any infonned
control of the Palest!nlan- speculation on the final out-

the main

issues.

With Begin observing the
Jewish Sabbath througb sundown Saturday, PoweU said
all three delegations had
withdrawn for rest and
"thorough review of the
discussions up to this point."
He said the three leaders
had no plans to meet
Saturday and had not yet
scheduled their next session,
although it was possible some
meetings might occur Sonday
afternoon.
It also was expected they
would take their first joint
excursion

outside

Camp

David Sunday and tour the
Civil War battlefield at
Gettysburg, Pa., about 20
miles away.

Two cities have settlements
WOOD TABLE

ROCKERS

negotiators are dealing with
the '.'core issues" of Israeli
occupatioo of the West Bank
and Gaza areas, and the
future of the Palestinians.
"Progress does seem to
have been made in some
areas,"
Powell
told

UP! Wblie House Reporter
CAMP DAVID, Md. ·(UPil
- The Middl~ · East peaCt'
suimnlt has made progress
toward agreement on some
key issues but "substantial
differences" remain,
spokesmen
announced
Saturday.
The first o!Rcial progress
report from the secretive,
mountaintop concl.ave came
as-.President Carter, Egypt's
President Anwar Sadat and
Israel's Prime Minister
Mimachem Begin took a day
off for rest, religious
observances and private
review of work done to date.
'White
House
press
secretary Jody Powell,
ca~eful to say he was
speaking f&lt;r the Egyptian
aod Israeli delegations as
well, bent the swmnit's rigid
secrecy rules far enough to ·
give a fairly optimistic
IIIIIM!SSillentofthe first week's
achievemenl.l - but not so
far as tO identify the areas
where progress has been
made and tho.., where it has
not.
Other sources have said the

ward Martin in the old series , '" Men of Affc.irs in Gallipolis,"

Savings Bank.
• J . V. Lee was burn Nov . 30, 1878, and was a hotel man in
Louisville and Maysville, Ky .. and Cincinnati, and in 1907
became manager of the successful Bankrupt Store.
• J. W. Miles was born Oct. 24, 1844, near Rutland, and he
married the granddaughter of John R. McConnick .
• Capt. John C. Oliver was born July 7, 1847, and worked oh
the river 1861 to 1893 on75 or 80 boats . In 1893 he became chief
engineer for the Ohio Hospital for EP.ileptics (now the GSI ),
but in 18 months became superintendent of the Gallipolis
Water Works, then in course of construction.
• Merrill Kerr was bom at Kerr Nov . 16, 1881, and served in
the Ohio National Guard for five years . At the time this dippIng appeared in the newspaper - what newspaper it was we
don't know- he was ·worshipful ma~'\er of Morning Dawn
Lodge A and AM, having beenrnstalled in January, 1909.
• W. H. Cushman was born Aug . 24, !859, in Maine, and he

PAGE 1-D

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1978

Talks making progress

698-7191

LIVING ROOM
SUITE

Ohio politics

VOL 13 · NO. 32

lure, but about half the responses were to identify · the
photographer.
Jean McConnick said that one of the four was her
greatgrandfather, Ed Blake. Now , Neva Denney of Vinton
thinks that there are three Blakes 111 the piclm·e one
Kent - William f' . Kent, her father. If she 's right, the othe~
would be D-•yton Blake, with the dark overl'oat, and f'orrest
Blake, probably an instrwnental music quartet.

from a scrapbook of Mrs. E. Ross Wallace clippings, undated,
lent to us by her daughter, Marjorie Gates .
Here are some others :
• Capt. John M. Alexander, born May 11, 1841, had been
mayor of Gallipolis four times, once during the great flood of
1884 which Tom Saunders wrote about a eouple of weeks ago .
He was secretary of the Board or Health during the yellow
fever epidemic of 1878, had been a justice of the peace, and for
four years was president of the Board of Trade and of City
Council.
• John R. Mc-&lt;:onnick was born Oct. 30, 185.1. He was a bass
singer. He married Martha Howe (and there is Howe McCormick on upper f'ourth Ave. lo&lt;lay in 1978). He was the fi-st to be
initiated into the Elks after it was organized and was .an Ex-

Rhodes likes to run his own races

Option Blower . . .. . . . . . .. .... .... $50.00

came to Gallipolis from Illinois March 20, 1880. He helped build
tire Hocking Valley railroad from Luganlu Pomeroy and then

Uncle Burton had no
children of his own, but he
had a stepdaughter. and this
photograph, wltich was made
in Branford, Corm., F'eb. 3,
l!MO, shows him standing with
· his
IS-year-old stepgranddaughter , Bethy .
Janice Bradley .

turning to the sun for answers
to the energy problems that
confront them : diminishing

•

•

Nor m a n S w en so n ,
president of the Cook County
College Teachers Union, said
the union had offered to
extend iiB ·eontract with the
board - which included a nostrike clause - and continue
negotiations.
"But the board terminated
our contract &amp;:&gt; it would be
free to impose demands such
as new work rules," Swenson
said.
Cmtract talks have broken
down and recenl discussions
between the two sides have
been centered on a fuWe
effort to decide where
negollatnrs should meet to
resume bargaining.
Teachers' strikes in five
school districts in Illinois
kept about 48,000 elementary
and
secondary
school
children out of school.
Financially strapped
Cleveland schools were
trapped by a legal paradox.
Teachers want more money.
The school system says It
- hasn't got it- and is legally
hamstnmg."
"I am firmly of the opinloo
that any. wage increase can
ooly be granted as a result of
personnel reductions,"
Deputy
Ohio
School
Superintendent Dr .G. Robert
Bowers told a judge in
::teveland.
aut Bowers satd the nearly

OOffimiSSIOD

•

REFRIGERATORS $399

95
I

WASHINGTON (UPI) The testimony presented
during the flnl week of the
Houae, Aaaauination comJillltee a public hearings on
the llaying of Prealdent John
~y backs up the often·
II!Jputed Warren Commission
cvnclualons.
·lbe commlaalon ' reported
lliat Kennedy was lhot from
bthlnd In Dalla a oo Nov. 22,
IJ63, by two buUeU, one of
1'hlch allo badly wounded
teua Gov. John CannaDy
Who wu Mated In front of
Jennedy In the White House

Umollllne. •

"lthoush the committee
bat not . Ytl broached any
conaplracy theories, . the
*'lmoDy fi'OIII Pllltll Of
dlatfnlulahed medical,
·,.tbolo•y and balllatlca
•pilrts aiiD 11J1P811.-.d •rlntl
tblllnt week of a lchlduled
lllOIItb · public aeuiona
l!lnCorcll tbt tlllllllllilll011'1

lliltlln&amp;l.

·

bankrupt local sehool board
is limited in it.. ability to lay
off certified teachers· and
noted the number of
classroom instructors in the
city already has been
redueed "to the minimum
required by the state."
He said it would take two to
three weeks to come up with a
budget-trimming plan to fund
teacher raises . City school
officials are seeking a court
order to focce ' the teachers
, hacl\ to work.
The city's 101,000 students
were sent home from the first
day of school Friday when
many principals found themselves locked out of their
buildings, apparently by
striking .custodial workers.
Strikes have idled or
otherwise affected more than
800,000 students in Illinois,
Indiana, Oennsylvania,
Vermont, Rhode Island,
Connecticut , Michigan,
Louisiana, Washington,
California, Idaho, New York
and New Jersey.
Jersey.
Philadelphia's 250,000
public school pupils got an
extra day of summer
vacation Friday but will
begin school Mmday . Their
teachers accepted a new
'contract Thursday but the
settlement was to late to
salvage Friday's scheduled

first day of school .
And
the
settlement
appeared somewhat tenuous.

A bank consortium friday
delayed approval to fund the
contract after Philadelphia
school officials acknowledged
the school district 's planned
budget deficit is twice as high
as ori.ginally projected .
Marion schools also were to
open Monday. Teachers approved a new contract Friday
and ended a 1tklay strike.
Strike leaders jailed for
refusing to order strikers
back to work were set free
and a judge was aSked to
reScind fmes and jail terms
imposed on the city's JJ;
striking teachers foc contempt of court.
The
Boston
school
committee and the teachers'
union held weekend talks in
hope of heading off a strike
set for next Thursday lfi the
70,000-student school system.
Negotiations also continued
In New Orleans, where an 11day strike has crippled the
110,000-student school system.
, Walkouts by teachers in
Washington state - inclUding
Seattle and Tacoma - 1dled
some · 90,000 students and
strikes at a dozen school
districts in Michigan curtailed the education or 7S,OOO
pupils.

Syrian -Christians battle

BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPH
_ Syrian troops and laraeiihacked Christian mWtiamen
battled Saturday on the
southeast fringes of Beirut
with rockets, shells and
machine guns and a rlghtwing leader accused the
Syrians or trying to paralyze
the Camp David summit.
But a newly formed
Christian group saying it
rep~ted a silent majority
announced Its support for the
Syrta111 and denounced the
JaraeUa as the "people who
cruclfled Jesus Chrlat."
The right-wing Phalallillst
Radio said at leaat five
Lebanese were kUled and 98
olbera wounded including
many civUiana, bt the lateat
flare-up Ia the capital Friday
night and Saturday. Tltere
were no Immediate reports of
Syrian cuualtles.
By mid-morning the

clalhes reportedly tapered
off to spOradic light weapons
· fire apd sniping. ·Both sides
accused the other of starting
the flg!ltlng.
Rightist leader Camille
Chamolll\, 78, denounced the
Syrian-domlnated Arab
peace-keeping force, saying,
"There Is no jlllltlfication for .
the escalation yesterday and
today. It is aimed at
paralyW!g the Camp David
talks and distract \he parties
concerned from the main

iu:ues.u

'

A previously unknown·
group calling Itself the
·"Democratic
Christians
Orpnlaatlon" denounc!ld \he
main right-wing Christian
J)lrtles and applaudod \he
Arab deterrent force at .a
news conference In the
predominantly Moslem
western lector of Beirut.
Spokesman Michel Ghoralb

said the group had been
fonned to " represent the
Christian silent majority to
liberate Christians from the
oppression of the Phalallilist
and National Uberal parties".
Ghoralb condemned the
close ties of the main
Christian groupo with the
Israelis - whom he caUed
"the people who crucified
Jes•s Christ. expelled
Christians from their homes
and villages ·in occupied
Palestine and carried out \he
desecration of the Holy
Sepulcher and other holy
places In Jerusalem."
He at.o branded the Camp
David talks
grouping
Egyptian President . Anwar
Sadat, Israeli Prime Minister
Menachem
Begin· and
President Carter as "a
station on the road ·to
IUrt'ender," .

\

Justice Thomas J . Herbert of the Ohio Supreme Court is no
away from the investigation of a firing Brown made with
political overtones in 197S. They also complain that Smith political novice - the Herbert family is well-known in Ohio
failed to go foc the jugular when he had Celeste on the ropes in Republican circles.
So it's no surprise that as he campaigns for chief justice this
197S for usinR state emnlovees that were not on his oavroll .
fall, he will cling to the spirit of the late Chief Justice C.
Republican SecTetary of State Ted W. Brown, facing his William O'Neill , the popular Republican jurist whose chair he
most serious challenge f&lt;r re-election since he took office 28 seeks to fill .
Herbert, twke elected to the high court on his own, has a
years ago, is putting out press releases in double time urging
formidable task. His Democratic opponent for chief justic-e is
everyOne to register to vote. ·
Brown is trying to counter the claim of his opponent, state fellow Justice Frank D. Celebrezze, who defeated an incumSen. Anthony J. Celebrezze Jr., 0-Cleveland, that he has done bent Republican justice in 1972 - the Nixon landslide year. and
nothing over the years to encourage ina:eased participation in then crushed Republican Shehjon Taft - another . powerful
Republican name - by 310,000 votes in !974.
the political process.
Herbert plans w emphasize the fact that he 's been a part of
Democrats enacted a massive voter registration expansion
last year, and although he never went out of his way to recruit the O'Neill court since 1970, and that court has made sweeping
voters before, Brown is promoting full use of all the new judicial refocms in Ohio , bringing it national attention.
" I sat at Justice O'Neill's right hand," observed Herbert
method&lt;.
after he was nominated f'riday .
SIXTH VICTIM
NEW YORK CITY - An
ae&lt;ountanl employed In
Manhattan :s garment
district has become the
slxlh confirmed vlcllin of
the outbreak of Legionnaires' disease that has ·
claimed two -lives so far,
city health officials said
Saturday.
uwe may never find the
source of the dJSease,,
Health Commissioner
Relnaldo f'errer said as a
team of about 70 elty
workers began draining
and disinfecting water
towers atop buildings In the
district.
Ferrer told a oews
conference that the .ac-

countant contracted the
disease Aug. 22, was admitted lo a hospital Aug.
23, and has recovered. He
was due to be discharged
late Saturday.
Ferrer said the 111an, who
was not ldenllfled, was
among 73 people originally
suspected ol ha vlng the
mysterious disease, which
is contracted from a virus

similar to pneumonia. He
was confirmed as ha\·ing

the Illness Friday. Of the
six confirmed cases, there
have been two deaths.

Firemen
striking
CHA'ITANOOGA, Tenn.
(UPI) - The first strike in
109-year
history
of
Chattanooga
f'ire
Department caught officials
by surprise and left a token
force or about . so men
Saturday to protect the city of
142,000 residents.
Mayor Pat Rose said he
bad been in contact with
officials of the Tennessee
National Guard but there
were no immediate plans to
call out the . guard, as
authorities did in Memphis
when firemen there. walked
off their jobs last July,
triggering a wave of arson
and vandalism that resulted
in · $S million in property
damage .
In the ooly other firemen 's
strike around the country, 200
firemen remained off the job
in
Manchester ,
N.H.,
Saturday with little hope of a
settlement in sight.
About 35o of Chattanooga's
more than 400 firemen struck
f'riday
night
after
International Firefighters
Association Local 820 met
and rejected the city's latest
contract offer.
Officials weren't expecting
the move, and the city was
left briefly without fire
protection until supervisory
personnel and non-strikers
could be summooed.
Under a city budget
already approved, firemen
would receive a 6 percent
salary increase - the same
as granted to other city
employees and pol,cemen.
Negotiations over a new
contract have been going oo
for two months.
Within two hours afrer the
walkout, city officials
obtained a
temporary
restraining order from
Chancellor
Wilkes
T.
Thrasher directing the
firemen to return to work, but
strikers ignored the directive
and set up picket lines at all
21 fire statioos. A further
hearing was 11!'1 for laier
Saturday.
·
f'ire and Police Commissioner Gene Roberts
caUed the strike Illegal and
pre&lt;\icted strikers woqld get
little support from the public
because of adverse reaction
to the Memphis walkout.
11
1 ' thiiii~ 'we've
the
biggest decline In years in the
pubUc view of firefighters
after the union's action ·
there," he said.
&lt;ltatla110011a o!flclals said a
vacanl warehouae near the
downtown
area
was
destroyed by a fire early
Saturday and that a "routine
Investigation" Into the
possibility of ar!lll'l was being
made. Slllteen firefighters
and four pieces of equipment
were sent to the blaze;

seen

TRUMPETER PERF'ORMS - Eric Scites is shown presenting a trumpet solo for the
Meigs High School band during an impressive halftime show at f'riday night's opening football game against the host Point Pleasant Big Blacks .

Judge de.n ies request
WASHINGTON (UPI) Supreme Court Justice U,wis
F. Powell Saturday denied a
new request by a California
group for a delay in
widespread busing when
schools open in Los Angeles ·
next week.
The group appealed to
Powell f'riday evening after
Justice William R. Rehnqilist
turned down a similar
request earlier in the day .
"M. I am in accord with the
reasons advanced by Mr.
Justice Rehnquist in his opinion , I alsO deny the application," Powell said.
Rehnquist refused to
accept legal arguments that
the integration plan, upheld
by the California Supreme
Court and set to go into effect
Tuesday, violates federal
law .

Meanwhile, opponents or

Rehnqui st sa rd llu stop

busing in Wilmington , Del. ,

made a '· novel" argument

have
yet
to app eal that pa rents and sc hool
Rehnquist's refusal f'riday to childdrren have a "federal
block the busing of 23,000 right " to be "fr ee from exs tudents

bet w e c n

tensi ve pupil t rans portation

predominantly bla ck city that destroys funda mental
schools and largely white ri ghts of liberty and
suburban districts.

oriva cv."

The Wilmington bu sing
" While T hav e gravest
opponents were also turned dou bts tha t the Supreme
dOwn by Justice William Co urt of California was
Brennan Sept. 1. School s are required by the United Slates
scheduled to open Moo day. Constitution to lake the action
In the Los Angeles case, . that it has taken in this case, "
both Rehnquist and Powell Rehnquist said, "1 ha ve very
reje cted an nth-hour appeal little doubt that it wa s
by an organization called permitted by the Con st itution
Bustop, whose lawyers to lake such action ' '
ar~ued
the inte gration Anti-busing fort-es in Los
plan would violat e con- Angeles called for a boycott
stitutwnal rights by requiring by whit e students whil e
the busing of more than 60,000 schoo l and city offi cial s
school children to schools far plead ed
for
peacef ul
from their homes.
compliance with the law.

Unions should honor pact
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Postmaster General William
Elolger says he expects three

the law."
He said he wa s ' ·still
confident" the Postal Service

straight day or joint talks, but

unlons representing 500,000

could move the mails with

workers to honor an
agreement under which their
contract dispute would be
submitted
to
binding
arbitration, if necessary, to
avert a mail strike.

military troops during a
strike .
Negotiatnrs for the two
sides met for more than five
hours Friday in a th ird

The impasse ts centermg on
only t wo issues: wages and a

The Postal Service and
unions are entering the showdown stage of a special IS-day
mediation process that could
end in binding arbitration, an
alternative strongly opposed
by some union members.
No talks were scheduled for
today - a week before the
deadline - but negotiations
were scheduled to resume ·at
about · 12:30 p.m . EDT
Sunday.
An
agreement
that
prevented an illegal strike on
Aug. 28 calls foc Harvard
University labor relations
expert James Healy, who is
mediating the dispute, to
decide any unresolved issues
himself if a negotiated
settlement is not achieved
within the 15-&lt;lay period.
"I expect that they (the
unioos) will live up to that
commi:ment," Bolger told
reporters Friday.
Noting the law forbids a
strike by postal woc kers imd
requires binding arbltratioo
in the event of a contract
impasse, Bolger said :
uvou can be sure of one
thing. We're going to follow

Weather
Partly cloudy with a
chance of thundershowers
today. Highs in the mid or
upper 80s. Probability ·•I
precipitation 30 P' ··cent
today.

•

th e r e

we r e no sig ns of

progress.
"no layoff" clause that the
Wlion wants m aintained and

the Postal Service would
prefer w eliminate.

Bomb hurts 3
NEW YORK (UPI) - AntiCastro terrorists slipped past
a 24-hour police guard at the
Cuban mission to the United
Nations Saturday and planted
a powerful time bomb that
injured three men, including
a policeman and mis.cdfln
guard.
The bomb planted in the
mission blew out scores of
windows in posh townhouses,
Side block, including those of
the Japanese mission next
door. It also wrecked a
number of parked cars and
carved a two-foot crater in
the sidewalk.
At 8: SO a.m ., an hour. after
the explosion, ~ caner to
United Press International
said the bombing was carried
out by the right-wing terrorist
group Omega 7.
Omega 7, made up of Cuban
exiles,
has
claimed
respoosibiUty b a number of
bombings, mostly in the New
Yock area.
Authorities said Police
Ofiicer Leo Knox was taken
to U,nox llill Hospital and
treated roc ringing in his

·ears.

Assistant Pollee Chief
Harold Schryer said the c()fi
was spared from possibly
fatal Injuries because he was
walking aroW\d a parked car
when the h&lt;mb went off.
"The car In front blocked
the explosim from killing the

·t-

police offi cer," Schryer said .
Santia go,

1\-tar.iillaJo

a

mission guard, received head
injuries

but

refus~d

treatment. f'rank Latto, a
maintenance

man

at

a

building across the street,
was mjured b~ flying glass.
Police IT'aintain a 24-ho:&gt;r
guard at the mission.
Schryver
offered
no
explanation on no w the
terrorists were abk to sneak

by. But he said it could have
been done in the time it lakes
"to drop a pi ece of paper."
He said the b&lt;Onb was "a
high-order explosive s&lt;!t off
by a watch."
Police were hampered in
the investigation by Cuban
diplomats, who barred them
from entering the mission.
The Spanish-accented man
who called UPI said, "This
bombing was in reply to
(Cuban President f'idel)
Castro's
intention
to
reestablish relatioos with the
U.S. and the recent dialogue
with some trait&lt;rs from the
Cuban community in the
U.S."
Vowing that "these actims
will continue," the man
added, "Let this also be a
warning to the American and
Cubun exiles that are dealing
with a tyrant', Castro,
ignoring completely
thousands of Cuban patriota
killed by the Cllll'munl!ta."

•

�D-2- The Sw day T rn ~s&amp;ntmel Suntla' &gt;&lt;pi 10 1978

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
t:ard of l'hanko
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om mon Pleas Court

O\

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I c bvard s request for a
back to work order
Testtfytng at a heartng on
t h~

mot1on for an InJUnction

""' De~uty State School
Supermtendent Dr G Robert
Bo wers who told Judge
Harry A Hanna the local
sc hool boa1 d " ould be unable
to n ake any wage hike offer
to teachers for 2 3 "eek s He
sa d t w II tak e Cleveland
sc hool admtmstrator s that
long to come up " th a
mas s 'e pl an for budget
c It backs to fund pa) r a ses
I am firm ) of tl e upmwn

Bowers satd He noted
however that the board ts
lumted m Its ability to lay off
cert1f1ed teachers and that
the number of classroom
mstructors m ctty schools has
been redu ce d
to the
m1mmum requtred by the
state
Nonetheless he concluded
Reductions can be made
w thout affectmg the quality
of education or the level of
servt ces provided
Representatives on both
Sides agreed they have been
hamstrung by conditions set
down b; state offtclals
proh1b1tmg the expenditure of
$20 7 miiion m emergency
•tate school loan funds on

" age ncreases
Cleveland schools which
ha vc teetered on the brmk of
bankruptcy m recent years
received the spec1al state
loan
JUSt
l ast
week
Iron ca ll y the borrowed
fu nds "er e mtend ed t o
guarantee sch ol s could open

NO
H UN lN G
I et- a I p o p e
0 0

PHI LADE! PHIA !UP! I The federal E nvtronmental
Prote c tion A genq Fnday
said the draft envtronmental
unpact statement E1S) on
U S Steel Corp s proposed
I ake Er e
plant
was
madequate m several cnt1cal
areas
The proposed huge $3 5
b1ll 10n steel mi ll w ould
st r addle
the
Ohw
Pennsylvama border be
tween Conneaut Ohto and
West Sprmgfield Pa
The EPA sa1d the EIS wa s
one of the larger and more
extenstv e ones reviewed by
the agency However the
agency
sa id
matena l
submitted by U S Steel m
sup port of 1ts perm it
applicaton was not adequate
to
fully
assess
the
enVIronmental unpact of the

The Almanac

United Press lnternataonal
Today IS Sunda) Sept 10
the 253rd day of 1978 w th 112
w follow

The moon IS between 1ts
f rst quarter and full phase
fhe mornmg stars are
Mercury
Juptter
and
Saturn
The evenmg stars are Mars
and Venus
Those born on thiS date are
Wider the stgn of Vtrgo
Amer can phySicist Arthur
Compwn was born Sept 10
1892
On th s day m hiStory
In 1813 U S naval umts
Wider the command of Capt
Oliver Perry defeated a
Bnttsh squadron m the Battle
of Lake Ene
I n 1846
Ehas Howe
rece1ved a patent for the
sewmg machme
In 1889 Empress Eltzabeth
of Austna Hun ga ry was
assasstnated by an anarchist
In 1962 42 persons d1ed m
the crash of a U S Au Force
Jet plane near MoWit Spokane
m Washmgton state
A thought for the day
Amencan essayiSt poet and
philosopher Ralph Waldo
Emerson offer ed thts adVIce
Make yourself necessary oo
somebody

•
F~rst Woman Candidate
fhe fl st w&lt; man preSiden
t a I cond!da t e p1 upooetl at a
flaJUI pohtiCal pal ty cunven
l un wa o Sm M 11 ga1el Chase
Sm th of Ma 1 e wl o was
nommated by Sen Gco ge
Aike of Vermont at tl e 1964
Republ can NatiOnal Cunvc
t!Oil at Sa Fl a oiSlO &lt;a !if

proposed plant
EPA
sa1d
necessary
perrmts wtll not be approved
unl!l sallsfacoory resolution
of the problems
The U S Army Corps of
Eng neers Buffa lo N Y
distnct would ISSue the first
cru c a! permits but EPA
comments will be a maJor
part of the !mal EIS which
determmes whether the plant
can be bmlt The Corps of
Engmeers has said tt expects
to make 1ts deciSIOn next
M ay
The EPA comments were
sent m a JOint letter from
Regwn 3 admmtstraoor Jack
J Schramm m Pbiladelphta
a nd
RegiOn
5 actmg
adm lnt strator Valdas
Adankus m Clucago to Col
Da m e! I udw g of the
Engmeer s Buffalo off1ce
Both
reg t o n al
admin iStrators c1ted thet r
year long partlC!paUon m a
re\ ew of the proposed plant
mclutl mg U S Steel s draft

enVlronmental

assessment

and
seve r al
stud1es
conducted by consultants
The add l!onal mformat1oo
EPA sought mcludes
- A r em sston s whtch
could 1&gt;e ex pected fr om
Pennsyl va ma Electrtc Co s
proposed COHO generatmg
statiOn m the nearby Gtrard
E ne Cou nty
area
to
determme If construction of
both faciliti es would still
meet required a1r quahty
standards
- Analysts of populat on
projections oo evaluate what
preparation must be made oo
prov td e
the
necessary

servtces such as waste
disposal water supplies and
schools with the anl!c!pated
growth m local comrnWitttes
that
Will result
from
constructiOn and oper ation of
the plant
- Comp lete analys s of
alternati ves to preve nt or
m1t1gate the loss of portions
of
the
Turkey
Creek
watershed a valuable fish
and wildltfe r esource
- Further evaluation of
necessary alternative waste
water treatment processes oo
IJISure that water quahty
standards for phenols am
mon •a and other pollutants In
Lake Ene are oot VIOlated
- Evaluahon of alternative
structures for the proposed
soh d ftll pter extenston which
would allow for adeqUBte
water ctrculauon
- Evaluation of alternative
measures for operation of
water mtakes to tn sure
mmunal unpacts on ftshenes
resources m Lake Er1e
U S Steel the Cor ps of
Engmeers Penelec and the

EPA met ea rher Friday to
discuss what m ust be done to
satisfy EPA obJections before
the !mal EIS ts ISSUed The
EPA said t would be up oo
U S
Steel
and
th eir
consultants oo respond oo the
objections
A U
Steel spokesman m
Pittsburgh
sa 1d
the
steelmaker would contmue oo
try to come up wtth the
information reqwred
When the EPA comments
are recetved we II have oo
see what areas they r e
referrmg to and take a look at
them he sa1d

s

Ravenna
without
water
RAVENNA OhiO (UP! ) Ravenna s 12 000 Citi zens
Saturda) were for ced oo p1ck
up water from tank trucks
after the c ty s water supply
was rut off by a break m a 12mch mam near the pumpmg
station Fnday mght
Ohto NatiOnal G uard
offi cers and men were called
mto dut) to help supply tbe
city wtth water Officials
esttmated that 1t would be
late Saturday before service
was rest ored
Tank trucks supplted by the
guard the fire department
and
l oca l
busmesses
transported water from
ne1ghbormg commuruhes oo
downt own piCkup locations
where people stood m lme
w1th bottles and jugs
Water suppli es to the
Robmson MelilOrlal Hospital
were prov tded by two
Natwnal Guard tankers A
m1lk company also provtded
tank trucks as well as
netg hb or ng ftre d epart

ments
Mayor Paul Jones satd the
break m the mam Ime was
located
at
8 38
a m
.aturelay and that repa~rs
were estunated at between
two and three hours Jones
satd it would be another five
hours before pressure was
restored to the system
Jones asked reSidents of
the c1ty oo conserve water
throughout Saturday alter
parttal service was reswred
T he
ltre
department
reported no fires smce the
break Ftre ftghters m nearby
communities were put on
standby Ill the event of a fire
Ill Ravenna

v

Thursday when they had been
scheduled oo report for a non
teachmg work day The
str1kers are demandmg their
first pay rruse m two years
In an effort oo show they
were makmg good faith
elf oris to slash spendmg the
school board has voted giVe
Carlm a carte blanche
ehmm ate some ex1sltng
programs and drasttcally cut
spendmg The board also has
voted to place a proposed
permanent prope rty tax hike
on the Nov 7 ballot that
would raiSe an addiltonal $11
m1lhon annually
But 0 Mea ra has said
r epeatedly the school umons
would not accept a wage hike
proposallmked
passage of
a school levy m November
Two Identical levies were
reJected overwhelmmgly by
Cleveland voters m Apnl and
June
The WI!ons are demanding
a 20 percent wa ge mcrease w
make up for the absence of a
rruse durm g t he last two
years

w

w

&lt;

ce boxes bass

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN

':Y."

'' n

FREE CANDY
MAK lNG CLASSES

Learn

mold ng

••r

we seiJ •nvthin9
.,..ody at eur Auctleft
or 111 ru•r ,.."'• Iter
" orm•tlen and plclrtllt
nn•c• call 256 1"7

Spr ng Valley Plaza
Block and wafer chocolate

Sale a-Yery Saturd•'lt
Nlw,.te t 7pm

d pp ng

and much more
Call 446 2134 to reg ster
After 6 p m call 446 7903

SWAIN

AUC110fl SERVICE
Kenneth Sw8ln A vet
Corner Tllil'd &amp; Olt¥1

DON T
GIVE
ITAWAY''

YOUR HOME MAY
BE WORTH MORE
THAN YOU THINK
Don t try to se ll ,,
yourself L et a profes
s anal do t for you tt

may save you t
money

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bern1ce Bede Osol

September 11 1978
Do not de en phas ze act v es
ha afl o d you p ca su e h s
co m ng yea

P o

abe con

ac ts can be ma de w th pe
you ge

soc a

o kn o w o

ba~

on s

a pu e y

s

VI RGO (Aug 23 Sept 221 A
ho ugh 1 s on y It e beg nn ng
o

he weelo.

us ua

b eak up yo u

pa e n

p e asu ab e

w th

so me

pu su

Th e

chang e w I c v a
ook

L ke to

ze

you o ut

d o ut mo e o f

wha
es ahead fo yo u ? Se nd
a you cop y o f Ast o G a ph

Lc tl e by na ng 50 ce n s lo
each and a
onQ
se
add essed s amped e n~J e ope
o Ast o G aph P 0 Bo• 489

Rad o C y Sa on NY

00t9

Be su e o spec fy b th s gn

LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 231 Wher e
pe sana
nte es s are c on
ccrned you may be som ewha
etu ctan o pu o th he e o I
Th s w I no be ue whe re yo u
have to p ov de fo ove d o e s

SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 221 You
ew you hopes ea st ca y
oday even houg h som e asso
c ates may lac k you " so
Fol ow you sta not th e s

SAGITTAR US (Nov

ZJ Oec

21) You e ex tr eme l y ad o t
! nanc a v oday bu th e e s a
dange you may wea ken yo
pos I on w hen you sh o uldn t

g ve away he s ore
CAPRICORN (Oec ZZ Jan 19)

Do n
No

eve yo e you as so c ate
today w
hav e deals
compa able o yo ur s
Avo d
pe r sons wh o ack yo u n eg

w h

ty
AQUARIUS (Jan ZO Feb 19)
P de s adm rabte f
s not
m sused Don t be too p o ud
today to acc ep t favors I om

me and

Th•nk Real Estate
Thmk Strout Realty
446 0008
The only Brok er you II e ver need

people who have you
at h ea 1

PISCES (Feb

nlerests

20 March

20)

Even th oug h you may b ~
tempted o do othe w se keep
tr ends ou t o f you persona l
I nanc al a Ia r s Th ey could do
you rpa re harm than good

today

ARIES (March Z1 Apnl HI Be a
ee sp I today You don t
need coope at on to accom
pi Sh you a m s You e qu te
es ourcefu and fare be tt er
solo

TAURUS !April 20-Moy 201 Try
o see th e b g p c ture today and

you I be able to handle sllua
o n s co ming you r way 0 sto

on w I o cc u r f you beg n to

TELEVISION
VIEWING
SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 10 1978
6 oo-AG USA ~ For You Black ..Woman 8 This Is
The Life 10
6 Jt&gt;--Chrlsfopher Closeup J
Jerry Falwe I 4
Thinking In B ack 8 Amer ca n Problems &amp;
Challenges tO
7 oo-This Is The Life 3 Eddie Saunders 6 Dr Thea
Jones 8 Treehouse Club 10 Newsmaker 78 13
7 30-TV Chapell Your Heallh 4 Show My People 6
Jerry Falwell&amp; Urban League 10 Amazing Grace
Btble Class 13 Jimmy Swaggarf IS
8 00-Mormon Choir J Day 'Of Discover-y A Grace
Calhedral 6 Church Service 10 Chrlsl For The
Word 13 Some Of Gods 'thlldren 15 Sesame Sl
20
8 Jo-&lt;&gt;ral Roberts 3 J lmmy Swaggarl4 Cetebrallon
of P alse 6 Day of Discovery 8 James Robison
Presenls 10 Willard W lcox 13 Open Bible IS
9 3D-Gospel Singing Jubilee 3 Robert Schuller 4 Rex
Humbard 6 Rev Leonard Repess 8 Oral Rober!O
tO Trulh Thai Marches On t3 Ernest Angley 15
Mister Rogers 20
9 30-Whal Does The Bible Pian y Say? 8 If Is
Wr lien o Let The Bible Speak 13 Zoom 20
10 oo-Chrlsl Is The Answer 3 Church Service 4
Glgglesnorl Hofel6 Chrlsllan Center 8 Sesame 51
20
Movie
Fireball Forward
10
J mmy
Swaggaart 13 Gospel S ngtng Jub lee IS
10 30-Re• Humbard 3 Yours for fhe Asking 4
Vegelatbte Soup 6 Ernest Angley 8 World
Tomorrow 13

11 &lt;»-Doctors on Call 4 Noire Dame Foolbatl 6 Rex
Humbard 15 Rev Henry Mahan 13 Infinity
Faclory 20
11 30-AI Issue 3 Focus on Columbus 4 Face The
Nal on 8 Wesf VIrgin ians 13 Elec Co 20
12 DO--Meel The Press 3 4 15 t ssues &amp; Answers 6
WVU Football Hlghllghls 8 Rebop 20 The Issue
10 Rev R A West 13
t 2 3D-Marshall Football Highlights J News Con
terence 4 College Football 78 6 NFL Today 8
Face The Nallon 10 Evangelistic Outreach 13
Turnabout 20

t oo-NFL Football J 4 Communique 6 NFL Football
8 15 Washington Week In Review 33 NFL Foot
ball tO Issues &amp; Answers 13 Wall Slreef Week 20
30--Amerlca s Black Forum 6 Movie Knock on
Wood 13 Consumer Survi val Kif 20 Black Per
specllve On The News J3
2 &lt;»-Aware 6 Dlrctlon 78 Morattly of Television JJ
Kellh Jarrell Vermonl Solo 20
2 30--Anlmals Animals Animals 6 3 oo-Do 11
Yourself With Homer Formby 6 Great Per
formances l3

3 30--(n Search Of 6 Movie The Swinger 13
Saturday Game 20
4 oo-N FL Foolball 3 4 15 Movie Pursued 6 U S
open Tennis 8 10 4 3D-French Chef 20
5 !»-Ironside t3 Who s The Fairest of Them All? 20
Jerusalem

5 30--Elec Co 20
6 !»-Andy Griffith 6

33

occu

I you re uny e lding

LEO (July 23 Aug 221 Shelve
old ro~l nes today Apply your
1ngenu

ty

New methods will

get lhe 10b done m?re elhclent
ly Old procedures wit! only bog
you down

STANDARD
Plumb ng Heat ng
1 5 Jh d Ave 44b 378'1

CENTENARY

-.. G~NE PLANTS &amp; SONS
PlUMB NG
Heot ng
A Con
d on ng JOO Fou th A ve Ph
44b lb3 7

Wl: P CK up unk au o b od e s buy
ng u k o s sc ap on bo
~ es
and me o s
H de s
~o age
SH
24
Po e oy

DR ... GONWVND

' DEWITT 5 PLUMB NG
AND HEATING

DRA IN &amp; SEWER CLEAN NG SER
v Cl:: Open 24 H
7 dovs a
week
S a che
&amp; Son PH
1~6 1 39 1
.-

----

AKC REG female coc~e spa n e

Cot 379 237S

HOOF HOLLOW Ho ~es Buy sel
trade o t o n New and used
sadd les Ru h Reeves A bony

a

(bl4 b98 3290
RISING STAR Kennels Boo d ng
a nd g oom ng
ol
b eeds
(hash e 367 0292 o 367 0 106

•

LOVABLE WH TE snow d ft g eo
PYRENEE S Pupp es
Phon e
I bt4 6b7 3838
AKC RE GISTERED
chaco ate

10 1

6 30-News 6 In Search Of 13 Otto Zoo Gorilla 20
7 00-World of Disney 3 4 15 20 20 6 13 U S Open
Tennis 810 Chmielewski Family 33
7 Jt&gt;--Crockett s VIctory Garden 20 Life Around Us 33
8 !»-Sword of Justice 3 4 15 Roofs 6 13 Evening Af
Pops 20 33 9 Minutes 8 10
Mayor of
Casterbrldge 20 33
tO !»-Weekend 3 4 t5 Kaz 8 10 James Michener s
World 20 Firing Line 33
11 oo-News3 4 810 13 IS College Foo1ball33 11 1.5ABC News 6 CBS News8 tO PMA Pulse15
11 30-Movle Humoresque 3 Movie t n Search of
Gregory 4 Em@l';-ncy IS My Partner The Ghost
6 700Ciub8 Movie Brolnsform tO PTL Club 13
12 30--Thls (S The NFL 6 1 30--NdrCUI Welby M 0
4 ABC News 13 Janakl33 Movie Chonnel4 5&amp; 7 PM - PleceoffheAcllon (PGI
9 &amp; 11 P M - Cousin Couslne ( R)

f'WO IRISH Sette pupp es lo
sole 304 773 5538

GO CAMPING AMER CA
W th Coa ch men RV s Qual y
bu
p ced gh
Doze ns of
models w th o w de onge of
fam y p eas ng floo plans See
hem today Apple C y Mec eo
t ana l Veh des Rt 35 I m
wes
of
Ja ck son
Oh
bi4 280 5700

c

Game 10 Inner Tennis 33
9 3D-Brady Bunch 8 Family Allolr 10 Bit With Knll
3
10 00--Card Sharks 3 15 My Three Sons 4 Edge of
Nlghf 6 All In the Family 8 10 Dallng Game 13
B I Wllh Knit 33
tO 30--Hollywood Squares 3 ~ 15 High Hopes 6 Price
Is Right 8 10 S20 oOO Pyramid 13
It &lt;»-High Rollers J 415 Happy Days 6 13
11 30-Wheel of Fortune J 4 15 Family Feud 6 13
Love of Life 8 to Sesame Street 33
11 55-CBS News 8 12 oo-Newscenter 3 News 4 6 tO
America Alive! 15 Young and lhe Reslless 8
Midday Magazine 13
12 3D-Ryan s Hope 6 13 Bob Braun 4 Search lor
Tomorrow 8 10 Electric Company 33
I &lt;»-For Richer lor Poorer 3 All My Children 6 t3
Newst Young and the Reslless tO Notlor Women
Only 15
I 30-Days of our Lives 3 ~ IS As the World Turns
8 tO One life to Live 6 13 2 30-Gu ding Light a 10
Doctors 3 • 15
3 00-Another World 3 4 15 General Hospital 6 13
Lilias Yoga and You 20
3 30-MASH 8
Joker s Wild tO
Economically
Speaking 20
4 oo-Mr Cartoon 3 Superman 4 For Richer For
Poorer 15 Merv Griffin 6 Porky Pig and Friends
8 Sesame 51 20 33 Batman tO D inah 13
4 30-My Three Sons 3 Gilligan s Island 4 Gilligan s
Island 8 Brady Bunch 10 Lillie Rascals 15
5 &lt;»-Bonanza 3 Slar Trek 4 Beverly Hillbillies 8
Mr Rogers 20 33
Gomer Pyle USMC tO
Emergency One• 13 Petticoat Junction 15
5 30-News 6 Sanford and Son 8 Electric Company
20 33 Mary Tyler Moore 10 Hogen s Heroes 15
6 00-News 3 4 8 10 13 15 ABC News 6 Zoom 20 6 30
NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 13 Andy Griffith 6
CBS News 810 Over Easy 20
7 00--Cron Wits 3 PM Magaz M 4 Newlywed Game
6 13 Marly Robbins Spotlight 8 News 10
Gilligan s Island 15 Almanac 20 Know Your
Schools 33
7 30-That Nashville Music 3 O.llng Game 4 S100 ooo
Name Thai Tune 6 Malch Game PM 8 Wild
K ingdom 10 S1 98 Beauty Conlest 13 Naahvllle on
lhe Road 15 MacN.ell Lehrer Report 20 33
8 !»-Little House on lhe Prairie 3 4 15 Welcome
Back Kofler 13 Un~nown War 6 Jeflersons 8 10
Consumer Survival Kit 20 Person to Person
Selected Interviews 33
8 30--Good Times 8 tO Turnabout 20 33
9 !»-Movie The Cr Ileal List 3 • 15 NFL Football
6 13 MASH 8 10 Movie Antonia A Portrait of
fhe Woman 20 Opera Theater 33
9 »--ne Day AI a Time 8 10 10 t»-Lou Grant a 10
News 20 In Performance al Wolf Trap 33
10 »--ver Easy 20 11 !»-News 3 4 810 15 Dick
Cavell 20 Over Easv 33
11 30-Johnny Car- ~ 4 15 Gunsmoke 8 ABC News
33 Movie lnferrupled Melody 10
12 OO-News6 13 Janakl33 12 30-FBI6 Ironside 13
l 00-Tomorrow 3 4 1 30--News 13
Movie CN!nnel 4
5 and 7 pm - One On One lPG)
9 and 11 p m - Exorcist! I The Herettc (r)
Cable t;N!nnel 5
7 p m - Paul Gaudino
7 30 p m -.f' PHS Meigs Foolball
tO p m - 700 Club

CA MPER self con o ned
cond 20 f
sleeps 6
2-iS 5b64 or 245 5287

MONDAY SEPTEMBER 11 1971
5 45--Farm RlpDI'I13 5 .50-PTL Club 13 6 oo-PTL
Club 15 Summer Semester 10 6 3~olumbus
Today 4 News 6 Summer Semester 8 Public
Affairs 10
6 45-Mornlng Report 3 6 »-Good Morning Wul
VIrginia 13 6 55-NeW1 13
7 oo--Today 3 4 15 Good Morning America 6 13 CBS
News 8 Jefsons 10
7 25-Chuck While Reports 10 7 30--Schoolles 10
Sesame Street 33
I oo-&lt;:optaln Ka"9aroo 110 8 45-- This WHk In
Kanawho COUIIIy 33
9 oo-Merv Griffin 3 Phil Donahue 4 15 13
Emergency One! 6 Hogan s Heroes 8 Natch

'

MRS ROIIRT I lOBI IIDIRS OWNER
-AUCTIOIIIIIR~

TIONA!

DEVELOPMENT w I
epo t o prote ct d ec lo fo
men tal e o dot on p og an
Devf'!lo p. , se v ce ns ut anal
pion spec I c con nu ng educo
on
prog om s
on
MR
be hvo o a
op s
den l y
p n audo vsuo
mote as
e
fo MR foe I ty bror es for
con1 nv ng educot on for heolth
p ofeu on stall
Bochelo s
de ee
equ red In spec ol
etlvco on o hea h relo ed
f ed
en ollees
n relo ed
Mas e s o doc: o ol p og om s
p efe ed M ust be w II ng Ia
e ce o e n e the Combr dge o
Gall pol s N ne m en h pos
on w so o y of S9 000 fa 80
e f ng e bene! s Send
esume by September 10 to
P 0 0 owe 825 A hens O h o
45701 An ~uo l oppo tu n ty
emp aye
MATURE
IND V DUAL
peopl e
a wa k at ocal
o en ed
heal h co e cente ep f'!sen l ng
not ana l com pony os o soles
and pu b c relol ons ep esen
o ve Sa o edposton Yeo
ound ob Hou s 2prn to Bpm
Sot o nd Sun Co I h ' n umb e
only co l ect 30-4 341 S 74 An
equo oppo un r- employe
CHRK OR VE R po
me of e
oon and even ngs Mus Ik e
books people and eod W
ng od ve
T
uck ou o
PS deal to col ege s ude n
w h ght sc hedu e &lt;;ol fa op
po nlm en
G all o Coun y
0 s c l bra y 4416 06oi2
MIDDLE AG ED LADY to l 11e n
w h e de lv couple Cook ng
and I gh housekeep ng on y
Col 440 4286 or 307 7 60

el!
Co

GARAGE SALE Thu s &amp; F
m e fr om Ho ze
Rt 160
PORCH SA LE M an Sept I
o
F
Sept
15 Good w e
c othes mu ch more 10 to 5pm
39 Texa s Rd
F YOU hove a se v ce o oll e
w on o buy o se ll some )1 ng
ae look ng fo wo k
o
who eve
you II ge esu s
loste w th o Sen nel Won Ad

Co ll992 2 5b
YARD SA LE Rose
m le
f om last ghl n Pome oy on
A 33 Sept 0 &amp; l Sunday &amp;
Monday
9 t I do 1..
Men
w om en I t e g rl s clo h ng
coo s socket se for heo.,..y
equ pment
CB
antenna
g onwore oys loi s of odd~ &amp;
ends
YARD SALE Mon th u F
Sept
th u 15 Sy vo Zwel ng
Sy acuse Oh o
THREE FAMILY Yo d Sole o t he
home of Rode ck G mm o n
B oodway n Roc ne Com e to
opaf h II f om f e stat o n turn
gh T me of ~o e s Wed ond
Thus Sep
13 and 141 9 00
unll 4 00
es d ence on Tucke Rood n
Alfr&amp;d Now un sold ou l ow
p ces good quo! y cosme t cs
Also turn tu e doth ng d she s
and ant que s
THREE FAMILY Yo d So le Monday
Sept 11 9 to 5 180 S 5th A ve
M ddleport Ceram cs d shes
ty pew e
too s
p ctu es
Ch stmos deco at om adult
c ath ng gi Is b eye e 1975
Vega stat on wagon Ira le
m sc l ems

•

fARO SALE Clothes d shes elec
tr c appl ances L nens Hours 9
to5 lltal6ofSep lme
f om longsv e CR 10 Phone

742 26b8

LOST one par men 5 b focal
n the 5 lve 8 dge
glosses
P ozo Sept 5 Rewa d Coli

675 2060
LOST Brittany Span e
5 mo s
old wh te w th orange ck ng
n v c n ty of the h gh school

Rov.tardt Col .-6 3939
LOST Small b own le e
n
v 6n ty o f Sp ng Valley Co I
440 7360

A FUTURE TO COUNT ON

Columbus Rd Alhens Ph
593 3566 (Collect)

o

f ee
an e for Hunt ng o
e ev s o n s ot on P efe pe
son w th 10 mm co m e a Send
esume l o News 0 ec o P 0
Box 3 Hunt ng on WV 25700

G All A
COU NTY
un
of
Ame con ( o nce
Soc ety s
seek ng opp co ons lo
on of execu ve d ecto Send
esu me
o P0
Box 023
Ja c kson
OH
o
co I
014 286 3600 fo ap~en
Th e V I age of R o G on de s cu
ent y occep ng oppl ol ons.
o he p es t o n of V llage M o
sho I Resumes should be sub
m tted os soon as p os.s b e o
8ox 343 V lloge ol R o G ande
Appl canis mus hove sat sloe
o ly camp e ted a pol ce ba s c
ran ng p og om as po vded
by Oh o Rev sed Cod• 09 77

--

JANITOR WORI&lt; II pm to Sam 6
n gh s pe week Good pay
good wo k ng cond ons Ref
eq P efer someone w h
W e o 20 2
p ckup o vo
JS th St Po ke sbu g WV

MEDICAL LABORATORY TECHNI
ClAN OR TECHNOLOG!S
Reg s e ed o el g b e o be
eg sfe ed Fu t me Con o ct
Pe sonnet Dept
0 B en ness
Memo a
Hasp tal
A hen s
Oh I 5q3 5551 A n equo o p
po ~n tv emp oye
BABYSITTER fo
I scho ol age
ch ld R o G o nde area Co
245 55~ e~30p~
The 0 0 Me nly e Po k 0 s ct s
a ccept ng op pl co on ~ fo
he
pas on of Rec e o o n Supe
v so w th he Park 0 s let The
a .... e o I pu po1e o f theo pas on
s A Plann ng a w de vof e y
of ec e at ona programs and
oct v I es fo o ag e g oups and
ob I es on a cou n y w d e
lev•
B Organ z ng and m
p ement ng r ec eo anal pro
g om~ and oct v es C Supe
11 s ng
ec eo onol p ogrom
personnel
A Bache or of
Sc ence deg ee n Rec eo o n
ond one yeo s ex per ence n
ec eotlon
s
des ab e
Equ vole nt ex per ence n I eu of
edu cot o n w II be co ns dered
Appl co on s may be secured
I om
0 0
Mcintyre Po k
0 str ct Probo • Cou Off ce
Go I o County Court House

Gall poll s Oh o 45031 Ctos ng
date for rece v ng oppl Cot ons
w th esume s Oc:tobed 1978

•

•

Z

•
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•
•
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Leadingham Aqency
\

Writes All Types of lnsur1nce For
Your Auto Home or Business
Representing
* Ughtmno Rod Mutual Ins Co
*Western Reserve Mutual Casu11ty Cr.
Da1ryl1nd lnsur1nce Co

*

Low Cost Auto Insurance-compare our retes
Low Coat Homeowner Polley
Low Coal Homeowners Polley lor Renlers
F•rm Owners Pollcy- Completo Protection In One
Polley
A Modern Mobile Homeowner Polley
Low Cost Fire Polley
A Special Multi Peril Package Polley tor Your
llualnesa -

:

•
•

:

•

W. AIM Write Flood IMuronct
Why

lklp'Wan"'d

Auto~!""

l'rore.. mnal Seni&lt;'e&amp;

torRent

A1ltNTIUN Olen M Is ho
n
ned ate
open ng s
fo
elephone odve s ng depo I
nen manage s No expe e e
e&lt;esso y bu helpful Mu s
hove co e and be f ee o t av e
Oh o and West V g n a a eo
Guo on teed iols y pus an
m ss o n pad cvoca on and n
su o nce Fo n e vew cal co
ec 5l:J 324 0030 pe ~on a
pe so~':~ fo Dee Sm th

NtWGMl
Tu ck Heodquo e s
197bGMC
l
19 71 Chevy
r
19 5 Chc
o
o d
197J fo d Vo
19 4
T Che PU
19 3 f 00 Fo d Dum p uck
19 6 P n o
19 5
T GMl
1974 Che
T PU
19 2 fa d Vo
95CMC T lu c~
96fod
f Tuck
l.ied ne '!i heovy du y eo
bumpe

LOMM i:RCIAl ANO PORHtAIT
PHOI OGRAPHY Reu n a s oc
den a nd oe o photog ophy
Co I day o
gh
440 16 !l o
440 1244 Tawne y s Studio

COUNTRY MOBil!:: Home Po k
Route 33 no h o Po ne oy
La ge o !&gt; Co ll 992 4 9

HELP WANTED
Couple
!tght
for a
L1ve tn

not compare our rat• with

yo!W prts&lt;nf policy?

We know we can save you money

wanted To Do
Pr

ce reasonable
work guaranteed

PAUL ORR

l'ur H{')lt
~ L HP

Long Bottom or BasN!m
949 2193 or 985 lSU
8ABY SITTI:::R n town 2 hi ld en
co 4.C6 J2H6 an y
e o Sun
o of e 41pm on M onday
MAN I:XP!:=RIFNCI::O
on e e e
o d cone ete bl o(: k wo k o
Loll
ep a
f o undo o n
&lt;146 04 J of e 4pm
SOLD WASTE PlANNER Sl 000
S 5000 Ponne Ia sod
was e sys ems to wok n en
co unl es of sou hen O h o To
ass st loca l mp e men at on o f
eg onol so d was e pio n n
ud ng eossess ng u o con
to ne
sys em o pp o un t es
updot ng es mo es at so l d
was e o umes and develop ng
tmplemen at on and Ma nage
ment P on College deg ee n
p onn g
o
eloed fed
des o b e
So a y commen
su ote w h educal o and ex
pe ence Send esume o b:
e u ve 0 ec o
Oh o Vo ey
Reg onol De ve lopmen Com
m ss o n
40 Second 5
Po
smou h
Oh o 45602 befo e
Sepl embe 22 1978
An
Equo
Oppo t u
y
l::mp aye
POSIT ONS OPE N fo ch ld co e
wo ke 5 women o e 1 yeo s
a s no g cup home fo een
age g Is n Po n P eo so
Wo k sc hedu e s 96 hou '!&gt; on
duty 48 hou s off du y P ease
con ac M s A n ne C om a e Cf
Mason lou n y G oup Hone
675 6874

LICENSED
PRACTICAL NURSES

lmmed ate Opentngs
RECEIVE FULL PAY
WHILE RECEIVING AP
PROVED
PHAR
MACOLDGY TRAINING
Full ftme posttrons for
LPNs Excellent start ng
salary - S4 86 per our plus
frtnge beneftts (21 8%) In
serv1ce or entat on follow
tng employment

CONTACT
Personnel Department
Galhpol s State lnst tute
Gall polls Oh•o 4.5631
Tel ephone 446 1642
An
equal
opportun ty
employer
L,-.DIE S TO WORK
d y dean
au d ycene Appy npe s.o n
a Sea ch C eon (en e
BABYS TTER to pu 2 ch ld e n on
he bu s Co 440 4234 b e wee n
Spm a nd 7pm
EXI::CU TIVE SECRETARY o wok
o Med ea Dec o an d se e
os Afte co e Sec e o y Mu s
ha e ew ce enl de col sk s n
dud ng !lho thond
typ ng
Eng sh
g ammo
and
he
ob y o compose rna er o s
needed
n bo h sens I ve
I n co
and
odm n s. ol .... e
o eo W o k w h psy h a s s
schedul ng oppo n men s a nd
keep ng med cot on eco d s
Mu st be w I ng o wo k f ex b e
hou s nclud ng some even ngs
as schedu ed l o med cot on
I n cs Also must b e w I ng o
ave and wo k n o the oun
es two days pe week If n
e es ed p ea se coli he Got o
Jo ck son Me g s Co m mun y
Men ol
Heal h
Ce nt e
44b 55441 A n equa opporlun v

CAMERA/STRIPPER
Immediate open ng for

e•
per1enced str1pper and or
camera person
Ex
penence
to
enclude
halftone ltne work spot
and 4 cotor stripping Join
one of Oh10 s largest
printers Salary commen
surate wtth experience
Excellent fr1nge benefits
Send resume of preveous
experience and salary
htstory to aoxholder Box

295

Hinckley OH 44233

All repl1es conftdent1al

4416 0 .cs
ou o
Co

19 5 GRAN PRIX PS PB o
Sho p
$4000
u se
440 'il052

Co l

19 6 MPG f.' NTO 4 spd good
cond
SI (:100 Co l
:l)b bJ46
befo e /!pm and of e p

9b7 FORD STAT ON WAGON
'lb6 THUN Dl:ffHI RO powe sea
w ndows and d oo lock s M
ond o S 495 Co I 388 8'1 88
o J&amp;8 8583 of e 5 JOpm
o o
1909 OLOS CUTLASS
owne A
ond
n 5 de and
a u Sl o p Co I b S J.485
19 2 DU SH R 340 au o mo y ex
OS
$ 5 5
A so
Com
Oynom cs com Ia sm all b oc k
Mapa
whe e
odop e s
~ h o k es
The n l Quod s p
k
p n on snubbe
ons
coo e Wo k e
ock and 391
open eo end Col 446 J29q
even ng s
974 CHEVY NO V A HATCHB ACK
350 CIO eng Co I 0 5 4'192
9 5 COHVHH PS PB AC
auto 5 lve
new s
be cd
ad al s
whee l
Co
446 ::J 46 o f e 5pm 446 ] 4

BRADBUR Y RfNTAL S
Apo
men
Ad s on ly N o pe s
Co l44b 0957
l WO BDR MOB l E HOM~
446 @SOB

A H POSSESS ION n e 2
b d home n Gall p o s Neo
se c on
o pe s
b us ne'!&gt;
e n e n u keep hom e eo 8.
n eo Mus su pply etc c cc s
e n s fa 5275-pe mon th W e
bo x OB
T b une
SHfD APAIHMI:NT J n s
o d bo h $ BS Ut I e~ pod
Co 446 44 bof e Opm

~URN

HOUSl: 0 oorns un u
$200
Adu s La
44b 44 b o f e
bpm

19 4 PLYMOUTH SATHl H '1 d
h o d op
J B eng
9 3
a
P ymou h S of on Wag on

42

1975 FORD lRUCK PS PB 28 000
m es S2 945 hce len shape
Co
6 A 886 6374 F 00 o
vas op wh le spoke whee s
302 eng
T
1972 GOLD OUSTER $900
q '1
MG M dget $ 095
962. M e
u y Come 5300 Co Po e
'liOn and Sons 388 8695
19 5 PLYMOUTH FURY 4 d
l 8
e ng
25 000 m es
ex eo
c e on La 440 4076
948 Wll Y 5 JH P New ebu I
e ng ne 0 he pa s A sk ng
$800 Co ll446
'19
973 MG M DGH
ow m e~
needs some body wo k Co

JO&lt; 89S J5 9
FOR SALE OR TRADE
9 1:1 Fa d Van
comp e e y
us on ed e x o sh op bas
ofle
0
w
o so cons de
I ode
to
Co ve l e
Co lt
446 43b0
975 S VERA DO CHt VV P CKUP
Ca ll 440 0044 of e Spm
and

19 b FORO VAN co 1388 8772
1909 CHEVROLET P CK UP b cyl

Co 1250 6b49
1972 DATSUN 4 doo sto on
wagon 'lb OOCI m les 4 cy
good gos m e oge 150 N 3 d
Phone 992 7329
M ddlepo
of e 4 p m
Phone

1974 JEEP CJ5 AM FM ad o fog
I ghh Ju mbo 12 M udde
es
Good
s ha pe
P hone
614 753 2Bbq
The on

------

1970 DODGE DART 340 3 speed
ol slock Ask ng $ 650 n m nt
cond on
7.C2 2143
Dallas
W eber

!972 CUTLASS SUPREME 2 doo
Wh e w h b ock v nr-1 top 250

2bb 9492417
1971 CHALLENGER RT 340 auto

sooo 843 3 84
1975 CAMARO Auto I onl tIt
wheel Low m leage Excel ent
co nd t on
P ce d
a sell

992 529b
DREAMING OF o w h teC h stmas
w th no b li s? Wo nde fu 10
th nk about but 1 cou ld come
1 ue Be a Tov lades hos en
In you home or by o de s f om
our fr ends Earn oys and g Its
ee
Nome b ond
oys
eosonob y
p ced
w th
guarante e Gifts far he whole
fam ly
For nlormal on call
742 2377 0 992 7050

r

·---

WORK
OVERSEAS
Aust a l o
Afr co Sou h Amer co Europe
etc
Construct on
Sales
fng neers Cler cal etc SOOOO
to SSO 000 plu s Expenses pod
Fa r employment nformot on
wr te Oven110s Emp oyment
Box 1011 Boston Mo 021 02

-----

--age

ATTENTION MUSTANG
971 Mach I Excellen shape

a

302 Sl700 985 3301 doys

--

98S 4 40 of e 5 pm
-~

969 CHE VY NOVA V 8 s onda d
l ons
Ru ns
good
5650

98i •271
971 FAT

35 mles pe

S595 742 2400
971 FORD TORINO G T A

gal on

PS

$650 Fu se t of W lson golf
c ubs bog and golf co I S 00

-~'-~--

977 OLDSMOBILE V sto Cru se 3
seat wagon Well equ pped
742 '1007 of e 5 pm

-------

BABYSITTER tor k ndergarden
ch fd Grovel H II area AFter 5

992 3477
NEEDED CJIIII!IER lo
»4 675 l:j,13 ,.._

___

Mason

MAINTENANCE
Must hove In
duatriol Plant Ma ntencmce ••
per ence P mar ly o 101 d elec
trlcol background Apply rn
perton the week of Sept II
Imperial
Electric
345
Sycomo •
Mlddlepo t
OH

EEOM F
EXPERIENCED MECHANIC
tools r~ult'ed.,. Apply

~~~~:!~:"do 'lW

Own
n pe

AMC Joop

~

shP.d and un
Ph one
o le

Adu s

M dd epo

n

H V EH S D~
APAR Ml:NH
bed com opt S J mo p us
e e t
Ma n h r eo e l::quo
Oppo u y Hous n g
Co
992 721 fo oppo n ne
O N~

B~ORO O M

0 I.J. 11"J 0 S

OOZ~ R

WORI&lt; ex o a ng
eo ng Ph 440 005

I::H li::NCY ~P AR MENl a R o
G o de$ 00
pe
o
1: e y h g l u n hed
Co
44b 0 5
:JAAlL HFI C l:NCY
en a a
a d heo O ne gen e na n o n y
o 44b 033H

MAR C UM
ROO f: NG
SPOUT N G &amp; !&gt; DING 20 y s
eMpe e nce J88 9!:15
OfNNEY AND G LAS~ Chon nk
fe e
~ ee e
a es
Co
4'45 9 13 Ke Soe Gal pol s

WEll d
742 2879

W N R I V l:H~ MARNE 30 Uppe
R e Roo d Ch ys e So e s &amp;
)e ce Ca mp e e Hu Repc
L u om bu
Ph o e
446 865~

&gt;k

SJ 50

IH~

SS IUU MAX FOAM NSULA
T ON f ee e mo es
New
ho ne o d h ome~ ond mob P.
home Co 446 9

RH ) I:
I RI:N CH NG SE RV C ~
Dt:AN S ROOF NG HOME REPA R
o e sew e ele
go I e
eno
ze
D o
o
o d he s 11 n he s w de o 5
Co
446 950
7om o 4pm
dee p Wa e ne hoo kups
M an h u F
a at e 4 p m J6 7560
HUL lJOZ I:: R
BACKH O l:
RU~ ~ &amp; MAX HL OT
mes one ep
onk s o o
£&gt;
Oll&lt; Heo
go da o d a
o
ge e o
ons u on
g Rap o foam nsu o o n
M Neo Con o ngCo
440 as 5 o 440 0445 co 1 of e
J 9 2258
4 JO
~
AN ~y
~ ~AMl:H
Co pe
L ea ne See n g
be e
g
w hen S o ey S eon ng Co
44 b 4208

BOGGS
l:XHM NA NG
CO
o me ly Fa nes li 0 de O ak
H
Oh Co o e 68'1 6249
V l:

1:

en oTeme&amp;P e
of Gal po s Oh o
homos 446 100

PlASTER po se epa
ex u ed
e ng s
F ee
es ma es Co I 25b
82

H L ~ M08 ~ HOMES and Home
mp o emen s F ee es mo es
Co 440 2b4 2

a d
Do d

PAN T NC
Re den o n e o an d ex te o
bo n ond mob e home oo s
F ee es n es 5 v s e.~C p Co
Jb
(:14

Co n o
W om

l USTOM BU SH HOG C. NG BY
ho
o ob M n m 11 hg Ph
24 5 584

Fll NGER wo e del e y
e
e Co 3 9 '1 '1 4

LOA
ump
s oke
del e ed
ne one
Va ughn 245 5309

~ TU CCO

L ONC RETl: AND B OCK WORK
Done eo so ab ly by hou p ob
F ee es mo es Co 367 0195
0 36 7 023

eon g
Bl:) Jl: 5 I:: AM a pe
Ouk e L eo e
Co 446 4 2
~A ND Y

CONl NUOUS GUTTER ING o o b
oo o ge o smal G o y G
e ng Co b82 66 6 Ook H
Oh o

AND BEAVER n u o e
e
l o ho off e ed se ces o
su on ce o e age n G all o
Cou y l o o mos o en u y
Fo m hom e and p e sono p o
pe v co e ages a e o o ob e
o nee
d duo needs Con
a
TF
Bu e~ on
yo u
ne ghbo a d age

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER
ACROSS
1 P fer
6 Ev IS
10 In cli ne
14 D ug plant
19 Eag es
nests

11 Food p o
gr am
12 Lat n pro
nourt
23 Forie
24 Locks of ha r
26 Vegetable
28 Renova l e
19 Lampre y
30 Bar acuda
31 Bra s
33 Deed
34 Negat ve
vote

35 Ha lt
37 Mounla n
ake
39 Melal las
ener

40 F og
4 t Su ts
41 Gera nt s
wl e
44 Sower
46 Wak e d o n
47 Seep f tfu y
48 Outf t
50 F ghtened
51 Foo d ISh
53 Colleg e
deg ree
Abbr
55 Sw I
57 Roman gods
58 Sma t
59 Booted
60 Beho d
62 C oth mea
su r e

64 Female
sheep P
66 Broth e r of
Odm

68 Lalm co n
JUncl o n
69 H eaven ty
body
70 Cut
71 Bound
73 Ambushe
75 S enderer
77 Ass slant
78 Ess ence
80 Baby lon an
hero
81 Oent st s
deg ee
Abb
82 Resp o nded
84 Pam ph e ts
86 F ne ga uz e
87 C aw le
89 n et
91 Be net t
95 Th on g
98 Vent Ia es
99 Rant ng
101 Mans name
03 Co unt ng
word
04 Possess ve
p onoun
05 Roman ph1
osop her
06 Symbo for
calc 1u m

07 Symbol fo r
le u r urn
t08 Short 1acke t
ItO Cl c k beetle
I tt A cont ne nt
Abbr
112 Partner
113 Stu po r
tt5Sun g od
t 17 12 mont hs
119 Symbol to

neo n
110
121
124
126
127

Po so n
Bu I es
Exp res
Shut up
Tree trunk

128
130
t32
133
134

lncan
A ght
Rabb t
Grant us e o
Wo rt h ess
tea v ng
35 S end e
137 Bur m a na
t \les
139 M ans name
40 R ver sands
41 Shellf sh
143 Green and
sett emen
145 In avor ol
146 Sp ns
148 Tub user s
150 Ra oad car
52 Foo ba t
t ea m

153
154
56
157
t 58
159

Re no wn
Re g o n
Ne wes t
Au omob e
So tar d sk
Forme r Rus
san ruer
160 Sepa ates

DOWN
I Su rl e Is
1 Cy l!ndr ca
3 Soon
4 Three toed
slot hs
5 Sma ller
amount

6 Ego
7 Brtm
8 Jump
9 Fou r-

g W I em T

INK FENCING WOODl:N W ll DO baby s ng n my home
NG
AWNING S
Po o
on wee kly ba ss Ag es 2 and
up 997 63'1'1
o e
Aul s Home
lm
p o em en s Ph 44b Jb()B
W ll BAB YS
n my ho me ofte
I!A CK ti O ~ DOZER 0 C H~R and
oo
o s Be y Vo Me e
~ V o use 991 7288
du n p
uc k (on e e wok
Ha I e d Ba ckh oe Se Ru a d
I:X PI:: ff l:N CW SECRETARY seek
Oh Ph 47 200f:l o 446 1 Hb
ng po
me e en ng o
weekend
wo k
yp n g
L M~ ~ ON I: g a e and sand A
pay o bookkeep ng O• o 11
es A W cho ds a d Son Up
p u o on
e
Can
g e
pe R e Rd Golpo s Oh o
( O 446
(:15
e f e en ces
985 3988
o
0 4 bb M4 B at e S pm
A A A CON TRA CTORS Boc k oe
Co
do e dump u k Wo k do e Nl:fO SOM~T H NC se wn
992 801:1 Z ppe $ 50 Hem
by h e hou o by he o b ~o
$1 f'an s S 50 D e s $4 SO
ee P. na to'&gt; Co 256 92

~

~'""" Of{cred

~R

G on

~l:N C

992 2598
WO BDR MOB ll: HOM~ lu n sh
ed odu s on y No pe s de p
eq On Ne ghbo hood Hd Co
440 4 5

a d WA

CHAN

mob le hone

lHRH BfDROOM HOUSI: edg e of
own
a u ol ga5 heo
no RO N S TV S ~R V U Spe o 2 ng
p e s depos
equ cd plu s
len h House o s Lo
304 5 6 2J98 0 446 :1454
c fe en es
So m e
fu n u e
o a ob e Co I 446 0822
Till:: NSULA ION Ce a m
s o eQuo y I S yea s expe e e
MOB U HOM I:: 2 bd
e• con d
Phone 99:1 J685
Re $ 50
P o e o Dep os
pe mo Co M J 2644
J.IOBER T S BHO HEJ.IS GAffAGI:
~UHN
I::Ff $135 u
OS Pd
A ll ype o f epa Uppe R 7
l o I 4.46 2445
Su ob c fa
1 pe son Co
4&lt;16 441 6 of e 6p m
SEPTI C SYSTEM NSTAllElJ &lt;.:om
Yo u sa ed o d s ov ed fa wo o
p e e by qua f ed
ens ed
wo I a pe Keep
ew w
sa e
II d
ho ed s o ne
B ue u s e Ren e e
sham
g a e
e AAA Co
a o
a 256 92
pooe S2 Cen a Supply

!9 2 fORD l OR NO $700 Co I
b 5 :1050

1974 OLOS DELT A 88
Johnson 247 2 5'1

Co

I MM~O

19 5 DODGI:: PICKUP 4 wh d
$3300 W II oke o d co o u k
f od e Co I 368 8130

1q74 DATSUN P CKUP
997 6 92 at e 5_em

o

Go

N CH Y FURN SHED 'J bed oo n
op Adu l s on ly
Lease eq
lnqu e at Sheppo d So e~ a d
Se v e f s and 01 ve

$250 Coli 446 1848

qo9 THUNDERBIRD good
$550 Ca ll 37q 2 4

e

SLHf! N G ROOMS AND I gh
h ouse kee p g
oo n
PA foiK
UNTRA L HOTEL

1975 JEEP fii:::NI::GAOE CJ 5 VB
AM f=M ope m ag whee 1&gt; new
es new op ex c ond Ca l
446 J J2

250

ooms fo

Hoe

WO 19 ] VOLKSWAGE NS la
9 4 MAl.UA o o y eng
good
o nd
ons
446 q 29

NG

op

WO BI::DROOM
on y 992 JJ24
OUPll: XE APT
992 J40b

TRU lKS INC
IJJP n eS
44b 2532
Hou s l:lom o 6 JOpn

I

u

992 5434

and all

Call 4&lt;6 3682

SOMMER SGMC

or lady to do
housekeepmg
ret1red man .
Contact

ON !: BEDROOM ap
l on a t
V I age
M ono
Ap
M d
dl epo t 992
1:1
:J AND 4 HM
I
s h ~d

ELeCTRICAL WIRING
AND HOOK UP

914 LHAHVEff St loll 367 220

C NEMA10GRAPHER REPORT ER

EXPERIENCED MACHANIC Own
oals req Apply in pt~rson ot
R v erslde
VW AMC Jeep
Gal pols Oh o

JIIIIMplwtlfl ;
Olk Hill, 01110
PI ectliwllle, 01.- •
NUMaERSYITIM WILL a1 Ul D
•
NOT RISIOONSiaLI FOR ACCI DINTS
:
O.ryiA.....

2 COORDINA TORS FOR EDUCA

for 17 to 31 year olds Tratn
ng wtth tufl P•Y and
benehts PLUS travel and
adventure
tn
the
U5
NiYV Cill or stop 10 221

PUBLIC AUCTION
Locoteclapproxlmollly l miles Weal of Oek Hill Ohio
Just off Stole Route 279 beyond uke Jockson Wotch
lor Signs
SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 16 1971
Slortlng at 10 30 A M
Consisting In pert 1974 Ford F 100 Pl~kup Truck with
V 8 standard fransmlnlcn 47 719 miles Oliver Super
55 Farm Tractor New Holland Hay Baler Hay Rake 3
pi hitch Tandem Coverad Pon~ Trailer Front End
Loader lor Tractor Post Holt Digger (3 pi hitch)
Rubber Tired Farm Wagon Pull type Tandem Dlac
All Metal Tandem Trailer Cultlpocker Clay Hey
Condltlcntr Scraper 3 pi hitch 2 Dearborn Sickle
Mower 3 pt hitch Horst Drawn Plows Manure
Spreadera Disc Spring Taolh Culllvator Corn
Planter Horse Harness Collars Brass Knob Ham•
Pony Sulkies Charlot Pony Saddle~ Buggy Shafll &amp;
Tcng""s I Inch Table Saw Acetyl- OUtfit I h p
Riding Mower 20 laot I BHma. Roto. Tillers urge
Hand Wln~h Cement Mixer Rabbit Perla Electrl~
Fans Shelves New Tl~es tor Riding uwn MolVW1,
Motorcycle Ttres &amp; wt..la New Mufflers tar Lawn
Mowen SneppiAg Turtle R•l Type flt4wer Wood
Burning Stave Metal &amp; 2 Whetted Trailers Used :tx4 &amp;
2x8 &amp; b12 Lumller Plywood, Bl~lf.: P8rta. Metal
Posit Round 5 If Wooden Wire
I Old Wheel
Cradle Can.! Hook Pllchlorka McC., loch 11 In Ou!l!l
Sew New Bicycle nrft Aluminum Scr...,1 Bench
Grinders Old Maytog Kick Type Motor LDia of
Mlace!la...ous !lema loa Numeroua Ill mention
Something for everyone young or old
TERMS CASH
LundWIIIIeltrftd

pood es
op
o

I 304 882 3242

CORPO RA l ON
9

eg Oobe

RISING STAR KENNEL Boo d ng
and g oom ng
All b eds
lhesh e
Co li 307 0292 o
3b7 0 Ob

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE
TO WHOM IT MAY CON
CERN

LOST ON Rt 33 nea Athens Co
I ne 2 adult female G eat
Danes back and "'!h te spot
ed Rewa d fa nfo mot on o
e u n No ques ons a sked
bl4 592 1 sa

CATHRY

HILLCREST KENNElS boo d ng
foe I t es fo Ia ge o sma I
b e&amp;ds a so AKC
man Ph .C46 7795

Co

PET

KENNEl AKC Chow Ch ow
dogs
CFA S am eseo and
H malayan
c oh
Now
ova ob e
Flame
Po nt
H malayan
male
k en
4146 3844

Hou l e 160a he gee
Pho ne 446 2735

No ce s hereby g ven that
9.97 54 bH
on Septem be r 20
1978 at
0 00 A M a pub! c sale wttl
be he d at Pomeroy Motors
JOB J
E
Ma n
Street
Pomeroy OH to se I for cash
JUNK ou o a nd roc op me o Ph the fo low ng collateral to
w t
1976 Chevro e
Vega
388 8770
V71 86U 179309
sa d
be ng h e d to
GOOD USED FURNITURE no co atera
upho ls e ed o nd app onces sec ure an obi gat on a r s no
und er a retBil
n s talm ent
Ph 440 0 327
secu r t y agreement
con
GOOD USED REGR GERArOR d ton a sa e con tra ct) held
AND FRHZER UPRIGHr OR by Ge n e ral Motors Ac
cep tance Cor poral on as
CHl::ST Ph 44b 0322
secu ed party Said public
liMB t::R 1 o p p ce fo lop qual y sa e s to be conducted ac
Pome oy f- o e!. P odu s Co I cord ng to th e laws of the
Sta te of Oh o Gene ral Motors
997 5965
Acceptance
Corpora on
LA RGI:: quo n es o F ewood reser11es the r oht to b d at
this sat e
fJho e 6 5 A42b
The co lateral s presently
S~ I Of OXYGEN and se
ng stor ed and may b e seen at
on k s Co 367 7844
Pom er oy Motors
308 318
Man Stre e t Pomeroy OH
tAR Gt::
QUAN I T ES
OF
r HU:: WOOD La 5'21 8 J2 of e
GENE RAL MOTORS
5pm
ACCEPTANCE
PIAN O

WOODS

GROOMING FA.Cilll ES Pro
fe u. ana l Se v es oHe ed a 1
_E eeds all styles Ph 44b 0231

Newsmaker 78 13 Zoom 20

GEMINI (Moy 21 June 20) Stay

by be ng uptlghl
CANCER (June 21 July 22) With
a I tile eflort today you can
readily see on OJIP6S ng party 9
po nf-of view and w n a reluc
lant a ty The oppos te witt

BRIARPATCH Ke nne s Boo d ng
Croom ng AKC Go don set
ters Engl s h Cocke Span e s
Ph 446 419

Jerusalem Peace 33

p ck h ngs apart
loose and a te n as so m e th ng
benef1c at may s urface today
You m ght m ss an opportumt y

~

ANDHt::ATING
Co Fou h &amp; P ne
Phone ~&lt;tO 3888 o 4410 441777

WAN T TO buy o ld plo)'e p ano
t&gt;o pol s bl4 441b J B 4 o
61.4 446 3945

GOOD
US~O
Jb 0293

Mus c n

CARHR SPLUMB NG

WAN l:D l 0 b y o r' o ld no o
y eso po s Does o hoE
o
un
ffeoso noble p es
992 OJ45

w

NEWSPAPER ENTEAPA SE A SS N

•

.1146 8570

CONS
pocke
wo hes
doss
ng s w edd ng bo nds
d omon ds God o s lve lo I
Hoge Woms ey 74'1 '133

G eo ge
~Y o u se

Q

Fo Monday Sept 11

Proposal inadequate

Co I qq'J 5965 o

0 0

No early end foreseen
redu cllo ns

t

Ho by

on beds desks e c
o nplc e househo d ~
W e
M D M lie fH 4 Po me o r o
q 992 7 00

Dl S CANDY
&amp; CAKE SUPPLY

pers on nel

nbe

!&gt;OW

l&lt;. e

beds

eo y

thiS week and con ttnue
operatmg for the rest of the
year
The school board and UDlon
leaders have demanded that
the State Controllmg Board
hft the lundmg restncuons as
soon as posst ble
We must bave eVIdence
that budgetary cuts are bemg
made before a wage mcrease
can be authortzed by the
state Bowers told the cow1
At the hearmg s conclUSion
Hanna ordered lawyers for
both Sides to submll to hun by
Tuesday written legal argu
ments on the matter No
back to work
rultn g
IS
possible before then the
JUdge mdicated
Commentmg
on
the
poss1bthty of such an
m)uncl!on James 0 Meara
le ader
of
th e
Umt)
Committee a coalition of
school employee umons says
the wuon s wtiiignore a back
tow or k order
The Cleveland distnct was
to open the school year
Friday
Teachers and non-teac hing
employees struck the district

f:o es P o
l op p ce to s ta d g
POM~ROY

OLD fUHN lUlU

y

d

that any wage mcrease can
onl v be granted as a result of

o
Bu ndled s ob $6 pe
Oc t 11e ed o Oh o Pal e
Ht 1. Pome o~ 991 2b89

due. s

rl

BvROBERTSANGEORGE
CLEVELAND (UP!) - A
h gh rankmg state school
adm !ntstrator has offered
little hope for an early end to
the L1eveland Pubhc School
employee stnke as teachers
and non t ea chmg support
personnel \ owed to keep the
101 000 stud ent
system
lased
lttorneys for the Board of
f ducat10n and school em
p ovee umons spent Fr da y
argumg Ill Cuyahoga County

WOOD
Po es
no)lj
e e 0 On Ia gest end $8

11M8H~

e0

""
Yo u y

lo

k ow

0

M

e C.u

GUN ) H0 0
Roc
~ c y ~u day

A ve

'

e

o

Oa y HUI:: UO HINC.

p

o

p('

NO HUN lN G o
a pa ss g o
y p ope v w I au p e n s
so
Ju dy M C. ow

o

UAY~

lo

o Uub )ep J a d
eve y !:.u day he e a e foe
o y I o kt:: gu so y

ON~

e

0
o

Rl:MOVA

Y lAB
b o 'J

!:.po

J~

lWI:UR!&gt;

q

CHIP
da

.. o ked ~u

\ HOO ) N ti MAI CH

ort

YO UR I:Af.b P !: RU:U HofH
'V
Ht PUR L HA::,b O f- $0 'J)
~AHR N G)
AWNI: Y)

245 9-4 9

~ OR

C

llo ed
1:: e

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

Want..d lo IJuv

"-•~tr&lt; •

oeKpC'M,ou

1}3- TheSuntlay lnnes&amp;ntmel Sunday Sept 10 1978

Ad

m~ral

tO Nap ery
11 A nc •e nt
Greek c ly
12 H gh moun
tatn

13 New Pref x
14 Joke
15 Stamese cur

re ncy

16 Ce ebrate
t 7 Infla te
18 V ct ms
20 Ca n
13 Hydrome
15 Oceans
17 Enthus asm
18 Peruse
31 Wasle al o w

anee
33 Nut r ment
36 Cobblers
38 Wa n t
40 Pa y ng card
41 Pleal
43 Valley
45 Impelled
46 Shaded
47 Entrance
49 Qua rels
51 Foo!ball 52 Portions
53 Greek letl e r
54 Landed
56 P erce
59 Barrenn ess
60 M ne vem
61 Was In debt
63M ssves
65 Perche s
67 Per od of
tme
69 Sym bol lor
tn
70 Ang ed to
gether
72 Challenges
74 Parent Co l

90 Sa ary
91 T umpete

bird
92 Pe form
93 Sh fted
94- hoc
96 Soon
97 Fune ral p e
t 00 Proceed
102 Female s tu
dent
t 05 Jargon
109 Meta fas
tene
11 2 Horse tea
lure
t13Frgd
114 F reb and
l t6 War god
116 Ac tua
120 Chas t sed
t 2t Span sh t tie
PI
122 Beg
t 23 T ansact •on
125 Kmd off sh
t26Wo d o f
honor

127 Wag e rs
129 ln secl eggs
131 Most ter ble
132 Leases
133 Cam
t 34 Mad e o f ce
rea
136 Shaded walk
t38 C ass•l es
t40 Soa rd sk
141 T ti e
loq
142 Tran sgr esses
76 COnJunct on 144 P1le
77 Sharp
t 47 Th e wallaba
79 Knock
146 F y ng mam
83 Salaamsma
85 Wa x
t 49 Body of wa
86 Weary
ler
87 Son of Adam t 5t Greek letter
88 G rl s name !53 Note of sea e
89 A state
t 55 La nd mea
Abbr
s ure

�0

•

D-4- The Sunday Times-&amp;ntmel, Sunday . Sept. 10. 1978

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found in the Sunday Times-Sentinel
t'or~c

I RA VEL TtMIUR for sal e- 1q77
Ma rio. Twom 19 ft . 74775to6

ANY Pt:H SON wh o has onythmg !o
gtve awoy o nd does no t olleror
I ,. attem pt to offer any o ther thmg
Gl: 1 Rt:ADY ne x t season wt l h
tm sa le rn at place an ad m th ts
Care free owntngs, O lf con dr
col umn , Thil•e wrl l be riO
Ironer§
R V . on l i - lr een~ ol
charge to rhe odverl tser
CODNER 'S CAMPER S, Rornbow
VI:LL OW AN GO RA Kll TENS Co li
Ridge , CR 26 to Boshon

756· 1396
For

S~nday .

Sept. 10

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

IWO YEAH O LD COLl lf to good
home Coli 756 -9353
H Vl: P U fiP il: ~ . b week s old. m uc ed
brPed lhey wrl l make mce peh
or wolch dogs C o 11 2 ~ 5 - 9 1 94
1-'UPfl ltS. Por t Engli sh Se tt e-1 and
Harder Collie Co ii 2Sb, 144 3
f-O UR IRI SH Se tt er . por t &lt;ollre
pups 997-328 7 or qq2-149b
lWO KITTEN S 8 weeks old mole
742·2328.
~ RH

WOOD. Free • manure
9 ~ 9 - 252 1 evenmgs

Sep1ember 10, 1978

ll' s probable yo u ' ll not•ce ma ny
Ch.:J nges th1 s c om rng yea r On e
1n parl!c ular wi l l be a more
ell.pans •ve social ci rcle Many
val uable tnend s hips will be COUPLE w ith one child w o n ! ~ to
es tab l•shed
r ent unlurn • house or trotl er
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept . 22) You
Call 44 b 3987
need so me form ol soc ta l ou tle t
loday Pu t as tde early th e responsi b1l r11 e s of th e da y and
plan to ge t togeth e r w ith F~ '
.
frie nd s F1 nd out w ho yo u ' re
rom an tically SUited to by se nd- ( HIMN H
HL O( K~
buddtn g
ing fo r yo ur co py o f As tramotena ls Goll rpolrs Bl ock Co
Gra ph lett er Mall 50 c e nts fo r
44b·27HJ
ea c h and a long , se ll ad dres sed . s tamped e nve lope AIR BEDS. f or on ex tra bed folds
llot for stor age
tdeol lor
to As tro-G raph , P 0 Box 489.
•ecreo ltonol use
All s!le5Radoo City Statoon . N Y 100 19.
ovai loble Corb tn and Snyder
Be sure to specify bi rth sign
Furn 955 Second Ave
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) The
co nlrol IS in yo ur hands for 1977 HONDA CB 550 K e)( cellen t
fe rr eting o u t needed tn fo rmacond itron $ !300 FIRM Call
l lo n today You II be s u rpnsed
446 -973 1
hO w candi d an o ther is v.rh en
APPA LA CHIAN S TO V ~ CO
.yo u gam h1 s or he r c on fid enc e
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov . 22) L owe~ I p rr ce~ gr e o t e~ t ~ e lect ton
quoltty wood or cool s to ve ~
Good co mm un rcat• o n IS ea sy
to r you to e stabl rs h tod a y.
N e w ou tle t m M1 ddlepor f off
making you co mfortabl e wh en
Mill Sr behtnd Tony 's Corr y
mmg ling w ith lar ge or sm all
Ou t Ever y Sun 17 noon lc
group s
Jprn Coli 698· 7 191

- --

SAGITIARIUS (Nov . 23-Dec.
l1) Ac tmg o n yo ur own 1n rt1 alive , yo u may reali z e a s mal l
re turn fro m so me lhmg yo u d o
Ho wever , pri de of accom pl ishme nt w ill exceed th e pr o fit.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19)
An im portant ach teve men t w il l
be ga tned th rough yo ur perso nal elfor t today . The adm~ra ­
t• on o f othe rs wil l be show n b y
th e atten tio n they g •ve to w hat
yo u say.

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19)
You ga tn th e c o nfide nce today
of one whose h el p co uld be a
b1g pl us Once es tab l•s hed .
don ' t hes1ta te 'to ask fa r th• s
perso n 's commtlment

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) A
hre nd can of fe r yo u some wi se
advtce tod ay 1f yo u ' l l op en up
and d rsc us s yo ur problem s
Many l imes lh1 ng s c an be seen
more c learl y by an un •nvolved
tndiV!d ual.

ARIES (March 21-April19) II you
think you ha ve a b etter way of
domg som ething tod ay , b y all
means Try it. A ll indrc ato r s
point t oward yo ur goals bein g
reac ha bl e because o f soun d
thm kt ng.

TAURUS (April 20-May 2D) In·
side mfq rm at ion may c o m e
you r way today 10 put yo u o n
the lrack of ho w you can
ach• eve a soc 1al a• m
Yo u
should be able to ca rry it ou t to
the le tt e r

GEMINI (May 21-June 201 An
idea you ' re devetoprn g tod ay IS
the so lution 10 a p ro bl em yo u
th o ugh t w ould tak.e a g reat d eal
of time to so lve . Latch o n to •t.

CANCER (June 21 -July 22) If
vou' re a bit res tl ess today ,
don ' t drag your feet and wait
l or others to imttate t hlngs .
Take charge . Get eve r ybod y
ro ll mg .

LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) Your
acl tvr tre s fo r today w rit be w e ll plan ned You 'll mix p rodu c t•v•t.y an d le 1sure l o r a suc cess ful

day.

!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN

1

.-

SOUTH
.. A Q 6
.. Q J 7

• 8 43

+

A K 63

Vuln e ra ble : North-S outh
Dea le r : So uth
Wes t
Pa ss

North
3 NT

Eas t
Pa ss

So,uth
1 NT
P ass

Pa sss
Op eni ng le ad : •5

Nl:W IDl:A CO RN PICKl: R SJOO
Call 44 6-448 4
SI:R TA Pl:RH Cl SLEEPER M Al
f RESS fS AND FOU NDATION S
CORBIN A ND SN YOI:R FUR ·
NIT URI: 955 Sl:COND A VI: .
GA LLI PLI S OH
Reg Ap p ol oo~ o Hor ses. oi l ages
Ph 74 5 9369
New Ideo Corn Picker $300 Ph
446-•UB4

SERVICE .

Phone "2-2111

8 &amp; ~ MO BIL E HOMES, Pt . Plea
!liont, W Vo . besid e Heck 's.
19/' J 8ro odmo re 14 111 64 2
bedr oom
1973 Do r ron I 4 x bU 1 bedroom
1971 Vic to r ian 14 .- b7 3 bedroom ,
2 bo1 h
Fn7 Cove ntr y 12 x b5 3 be d room
JQ69 Sto !esmo n 11 x 60 '}
bedroo m

Ancllorlfll· Slltrtlrlg.

Awnlnt••

Patio
Covers. Carports..·
Roof Paint, S.t•IIP
and R•levellng Ctll.

...
IIU.'S

• J 87

The bidding by your opponents has gone one notrwnpthree notrump. A Loulaiana
reader wants to know what
we lead.
We make the standard
lead of your fourth-best
spade.

s129S

BRING IN
COUPON '
AND RECEIVE

s~

OFF

Sept . 11, IJ71

Call now for appointment.

IMPROVEMEim

Pomeroy Landmark

._llldtws.
Ste rt~~ .
Oo•rs,
RepiKenu nt • wtndows;
Co\ars,

'l"e'!!ck W. Carsey, Mgr.

!I!!

Pllont m-2111

SWH T POT A TOt:S. Re d , w hile ,
and ye llow . Phone 843 2 ~ 32
Robert W lew • ~ . Rl 'J Racine,
SR 174
UP HOl SHRV MATl:RIAl p teces
• Wrl l sel l cheap
Syl v ia s
Upho lstery , a n a ~ ~ h om l e11.a co
!:~Tott o n
S\11 ocu se ,
OH
9q2 5 1b2
GHIMH GOLOt:N Heel Oelio ous,
" G-o lden OehCtous app les F111
pof(l ck
Or char d
SR 6tl9
61 4-669 -3785
1972 HONDA 350
bo: cellenl
&lt;&gt; hope
Wrn dshte ld
S65 0
9BS-:J30 1 day .. 985-4140 alt er S
H VI: NfW Jee p AT lrock er
sn s 9fJ7 -S14"/

Jto

1 11e~

FRI G IDAIR~ electr 1c range
w h1 te SI SO. 3 piece lomr ly
1oom suite , Spon• sh ~o tyl e , $150
f-' alio se t, g loss top d in tng ta ble
ond 2 mat chmg c ho ~rs . SSO.
992 · 5869 or 9135-3595

.

H &amp; N Ooy old or sta r ted leghorn
pulle ts, bo th Hoar or cage
g ro wn a vail abl e Pou lh y Ho us.·
r.ig und A utomation . Modern
f-'oul!ry , J'W W M oln , Pom er oy.
f-' hone 992 2 164.

Discount

991- 54 20.

"N " SC A LE tra ins w tth l lype
fayou 1. Complete w rth al l Swi t ches . ho use church fo ctortes
B ~ ou lr f ul.
See Har vey Leo·
mond PO So11. 631 , Roc•ne,
Otu o by Wa gner Har dwa re
Stor e .

DUR I NG OUR
SEI\SONAL
CLOSEOUT
oiNSIDE PAINT
OUTSIDE WHI.TE

197b TAN GM C Von, ins ulated ,
paneled , ca rpet. 33 .000 m iles.
st andar d s. hif t. Good fires
Good
co r...-i ilio n .
5:.1 70 0
985-J857

eROOF PAINT

•

$92:11
~P

Prlcelnclucln
Foci. Tax
(does not

DAIOTEED
Olherllzes
ecim,.rably .
prlctcl.

POMEROY
lANDMARK
JACK W. CARSEY, Mer.
PHONE m -2111

3·15·11C .

4- 30-11~

OHIO VAllEY ROOFING
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE

Blown lns.,lation

SERVICE

Cellulosic !wood' fiber)
Thermal insulation

&amp; downspouts, 20
experience.
All

yeers
work

guarontood. Call
Hoskins , ·949-2160.
Es1lmates.

Tom
Free

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

J&amp;L

ReSidential and commer-

JIM KEESEE

clol. Coli lor ntlmote . 24
Hour Service. Any day ,
anytime.

Pftone 91s-:JI06
Jock Glnthtr 915-3106

Save 30 pct.lo SO pet.
on heatlngCGst
Ex"rlence 1nd
fully lnsurtd
Frto Est.
Call992-2772
8· 10. Jmo. {Pd. )

Jack's Septic
Tank Service
Chester, Ohio

10·30·c

1Q77 Ritz-Craft , l -4x70, 2 bdr .
1973 Roya l Embass y, l~ x70 . J bdr
1971 Covent rv. 12xb0 2 1xtr.
197 1 Huddy 17-.tJI.J 1 bdr .
19i'0 Am hen r, 12x50, 2bdr .
ElWOOD BOWER S REPAIR Sweepe r s, toaster s. lfOns. all B &amp; S MOBILE HOMES
smolt appliances. lown mower PI". PLEA SANT . W .VA .
ne11 t to Slate Highway Garage
---·- -·- ~ -~~
on Ro ute 7, Phone (614 ) 985 1915 OAKMONT mobt le home, lot
3825.
)( 70 . unfu rn . J bdr , I ' '1 bath s.
tn clude s kitchen appli ances
SEWING MACHIN!; Repair s, ser ne w drape rte!&gt; new 3 ' , T. cenvice , oil makes. 992-:1284 . The
tral air cond ., 10 )( 10 Ot !llfy
Fabr i c
Sh o p
Po mero v
bldg.
Owner re loc atin g m u~t
Auth orited Smger Sole s. and
sel l Call 675- 1958 ot ter Spm lor
_Se!"'!c~ . We_ s ho_r p~n Scis~ o~s
oppo•ntmen t
EXC A VA TING . doter. lo ader an d
19b9 12 x 52, 2 bdr. tota l eltM: t.
bo c~hoe work: dump !ruck s
l vrn..
underpenning. ex tra
and lo-boy s for hire . w dl haul
good con d .. ready to move
fill dirt , lo so il, li mes tone and
53975. C o l l 3 0~ · 88 1 - 2 466 .
g rovel . Co li Bob or Roger Jef fer s. doy phone 997 7089. night, 1954 LIBERTY . 8 x 50. 2 bdr ., good
phone 992-3525 or 991- 5132
cond . S1800 See ot 1900
~ r
·+ - - - _C he~~.ut St.:, G~ll~r:_~~-EXCA VATING. dozer , backhoe
ond d1tcher Charles R Hat. · 1976 NA SHUA 14 x bS 3 bedroom
ft e ld . Hock Hoe
Ser,v ice ,
1' 7 bath . underpinn ing , 51500
~Hutlond O hto , Phone 742-7008 .
and ossurne loon. 949 2b8J or
BA3·33 'l_: __ _
WILL do r ooltng. construct ron,
plumbin g an d heottng. No 10b 1970 HILLCRfST 12 x bO: Loco ted tn
too Iorge or too !.moll Phone
Solem Sent er o n ( R I .
742-73-'I B
614-bb9·5742.
.... - ~
HOWf RY
~ NO
MARTIN E•
1974 TOTAL HEG: TRIC 1211. 60. Ar ·
sys te ms
co vet i ng , S eprt c
bou gh addtllon Tupper! Pla im
dozer, back hoe dump !rue~
Con be moved o r left on lot.
limesto ne. grovel_ blacktop
_he~mJfs..:. 8~3_:2~1~ -po vong Rt 1 ~ 3 Phone 1 {01 4)
b98-733 1.

SMALl TRAILER and lo t In
Syro&lt;use across fr om pool.
P~o~e~ ~q - ~37:.1 _ ____
_

-

-- --------

-- --- -·
RE IN ES TRADING Post , F'oge v1ll e
-

-

~

Orocen es, dry goods hardw ore . feed , fock sho p . Speci al
2S lb. of dog lood , $3 .88 . ,

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

wood .

&amp;

School

7 ~81 .

¥•ddleport. Call992·3&lt;57.
-~-

IN SYRACUSE . 2 bed,oom house.
New storm windows . New
aluminum b uilding 2 porthe!l .

Call

.

992·3219

~~--

BABY SITTING in my hom e Clo y
School Di st. Caii-Ub·7706.

ACRE LOT on Rt . 7. Ntce building
s1te 992 -7574

..

-

.

.

•

Here's a "home loan" bank
you may be overlooking.
You don't have to be a farmer to
qualify for a rural home loan from the Land Bank.
We also make loans to non-farmers who live-or
want to live -In rural areas. A land Bank loan car(
be use~ to bu)l build. remodel or refinance a home:
It features long terms. prepayment privilege without
penalty. and reasonable interest:

l

BEDROOMS -

room ,

ll A. wilh 1 Y.'·

SETTING

this

country kitchen ~our wif e will_ love. . brs., overhe ad
ce ntral a i r , P/1 ba_ths, phone ta cks tn all the r~m s,
garage. setting on a sp ra wling lot. And t o beat 11 all.
owner will he lp or totall y f inance!

NEW LISTING- COLONIAL LIVING AT ITS BEST

i .5 "-CRES . ollln gros s. Shelter on

8.5 ACR ES Bulo.,ill e·Add isan Rd.
Wate r. electric. sepl 1c tonk .
creek bonk , 2 larg e storage
Ca ll36 7 - 7 5 2~ alt er Opm
build ings , llooting dock f ive
9
•
•
mdes from Gollipoli ~o SootCi ub.
1.27 A CRES on Btdweii ·Rodney in
1978, 14 JL: 70 mob ile home, 2
Rodn ey , Ohio . Price 55500
bdr s, 2 full bath s, cOncrete.
Rob er t
E.
H ol l e y .
patio and walk s. rear deck ·
l - 304 - S7 b · 2328
or
oyer looking camping oreo end 11
1·30&lt;·S1b·&lt;b00.
Raccoon C1eek . 3 T. centra l oir,
f'DURRO'oM HOUSE In the d ty .
furnish ed or unfurni shed . Coli
C o~ I ~ 46 - 3b~8 ~
~ __
-446·..S79.

- Located in a h ighly desi r ed ne1ghborh_
o od on Ro~te
35 Th l s large brick home has 5 brs , fam il y room w1th
tir'e place, love ly k itchen and dinin g , 2 full baths and a 2 ·
car garo!!ge. ·

PLENTY OF PRIVACY - In th\s 'n ice doublewide wilh
a huge pol e barn, b r and new swtmm 1ng poo l . Surro.u nd
ed by 36.25 acres of la nd w ith easy ac cess to aiiJ m1nes.

NEW LISTING -

TASTEFULLY DECORATED -

describes every room in thiS le ss than a yr . old home.
Lov e ly frpt. in the living room , but cher block counter
tops &amp; pecan c abinets In the wife -approved kitchen , 3
brs. , 2 car garage . On a lovely. 11h ac . tor.

CHOICE OF FINANCING - on lh is 3 br . fra~e ranc h.

If ' s neat as a pin wtth a log burning_ ~rank lin'" the living room, eat -in k i t chen, bath, utt~lfY , room and c ar·.
port . On a lf2 ac . lot in K .C. Sc hool D•stnct

'

r.

'

446·1049

44.-o.ISI
446·4042
367·7529
446-o.lll

•

fireplace,

•
•

•

Older

$23,500

Co~
·
in c;t •· \.~~

a'"

Lou L.utton

kol

ci
.t r 91\~\V' nea l ,
c a. ~ • T,
~e f enc ed
oa ck tawt '~rage bldg

Realtor Associat e
Ev e ning s 446-3005

·

new carpet, central a .c ..
attached garage . Here' ~
one you won' t have to do

anything before mov ing lr
.. . Call lor an appointment

several

- Tl1tn move
over 1700 sq. It·
fully equipped kit·
r - wlltl stone
1nd lull btt·
appoln1ment &lt;

ROOM TO STRETCH OUT
on tftls 15 A. baby farm.
Fe•turei 4 BR hOme, 30Kl0
barn,
te,r eral
ather

buildings,

lenctcl,

with

moat of l•nd in gran and

only nueo. STROUT
REALTY. 441·0001 .

STAAT RAISING &amp;.GRAZ·
lNG- 110 A.larm on county rd.,lncludts • IIR !lome,
~everal ~tarns and bldgs.,

mlnerll • rights, 2 ponds .
Walnut Twp. us.ooo .
STROUT
RE!fiLT'I' .
44t·OOOI.

"

Price

2 STORY HOME 1~·
SYR'ACUSE : 4 bedrooms.

.

nat .

MUlS'ERRY - H; Igh;s. - l ots of
privacy Ranch . 3 bedroom,
oVer 2 ou es. fruit tr ees F.A
oflurnoce . Central o ir . Unottoch·
ctd 2 cor ga rage . H :W floors .
Ory ba sement . Patio ond deck .

912·5792 .

- --

1"WO EXTRA nice lots in Raci ne 12
JC 60. Hollypark trailer , partially
furn fshed . Also 18 x 40 ce ment
bl oc ~
buiklrng with shed .

- -- - - -~

~

lots .

lor s.40. 000.

located on

Price

reduced

k

3'12 ACRES SITUATED on
the beautltul Ohio River
below Eureka . Scenic view,
. lot and home. with
additional
acreage
ova liable, some appliances
go with house. tor only
119,500.

COMMERCIAL
BUILDING, 1n Jackson, 0 .•

Al so.

COMMERCIAL
BUILDING on Eas te . n
Ave ., 80' frontage x 150'
deep. 2 rentals { 1 house. 1
apt . plus
commercia !

building) . Price $75 .000.

OVERLOOKING
EUREKA : 90 acres. no
buildings .
lald · U1
basement, river view . Bu)
for $3S,OOO .
NEW LISTING : Located In
Gallipolis on II• liCre tot , 3

bedrooms, kllchen, dini ng
and living rooms . City
wa,er &amp; $erVItes . Needs
some repairs ..• Buy for on·

ly 124,500.00 .

J " , o cr~s with wal er and sew age 'rHREE Bl:UROOM corpeted home.'

l ully ins ulated with 1''t Nnhs,
m Pom eroy Reasonobl 'r priced

Phone 992.tis72.

l OO ' xJOO'

14'xl6'

lot

sto ra g e

bullrling . Buy lor $35,000 .
INVESTMENT
PROPERTY : 4t~
Gall i polis.

T hree

~ve .

re ntal s

e xceed sJOO monthl y. buy
for no m ore than $23 .000 .

PROFESSIONAL·
BUILDING : 15,000 sq. It
located adjacent to gol !
course, one level , no steps.,

Ideal ' lor offices , schools .
professional activities . For
more Information call 446

1066.
PRICE REDUCED on this
2 bedroom home on Lower

BEAUTIFUL
NEW 2
BEDROOM home sllualed
a long R ijccoo n Creek .
Appro K. 4 acres of land .
priva te dr rve ; tdea l tor
coup l e
or
r et i r ed
newlyw eds . P n ce red uced

to $3',900.

River Rd .• 'h acre lot. cltr
water . Owner anx ious t t

THREE BEDROOM house , 3 acr es
land, Close to ! Chool , priced
_reo s~mobl!: 992·5126 . .... _
ou Peaco&lt;. k A ve , Pomeroy.
Ohio . $1000 do wn Bo lon&lt;e of
k6 .70 per m ont ~ to quali fied
person 9 ~2 - ~786 ,

NEW LISTING : Situated
on Rt . 21 8; J bed roorr
carpeted hom e, tnsuiated
all electr ic with firepl ac e

$1 1 .000 .

99&lt;·5505

iS

now under lease . Buy botto

$&gt;1.5.000.

TWo- BfoRoOM fu rnis"h;dh-o~a

M e mor ia l Bridge . 4 bedr oom , c ar pet ed home, ~ 2
baths, ce ntrat a .c. . nat. gas, 2 .w .b .. firep laces. ta mlly
room , beautiful ya rd with sw1m m rng p oo l an.d ba th
house Th is is one of the fin est hom es tn Gall tpo l rs T ~p
and
srt u at ed on 2.7 acres ot land Shown b y a pp1 n t
m ent on l y

furnace

excellent residential or
commercial location . Price

ROOM

- --·-

t .a .

THREE
BEDROOM.
commanding view of the
Ohio River . City water, I.a .
fuel oil furnace , locatod on
corner of Rt. 7 and Rl . 219.
Also 20' 1&lt;30' block building.

SIX
h~u se- and bot h. Cen tr al h E!of. On 11 cer es . Located
in country on Hy sell Run . AU
rni nerol rt ght s. 15 minu tes to
town , For Sole si gn in yard Vocont. $13, 000. Shown only to interes ted pa rties. 7 ~ 2 - 307 4 ,
M i dd lep o rt .

gas

QUALITY HOME over look ing th e Oh iO R_iver Valley A
pa noramic vt ew e&gt;C.tend ing fr om Ga ll lpO\r s t o the S rl v~ r

village water {$3 .00 mo. )
storm doors &amp; w indows
price Includes 2 additional
$32,900.

Meigs M ine J Drilled we ll ond
septic system . 304 8 ~2:_2~~: __

In

446·097
446·J40

NEW·
LISTING :
lr
Gallipolis .
brtck .
:·
bedroom. full basemen!

Jl . ACRE S located l mil e from

• ... 7.28 .

•

\

ken Morgan
Mose Canterburv

CALL US FOR .(ILL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS.
104 W. Mlin
l'llmeroy
992·2291
Alter Hours
Call"2 -71ll
CONTACT:
Lois Pauley
Bro"ch Monager

with a

ATHOME

i

Audrey Canad a y
R e altor, 446-3636
Any Hour

446·4618

BOB LANE
BECKY LANE
~ VICKIE HAULDREN
KENNY RAniFF
WALT LANE

I

446-3636

Russell D . Wood , .8roker

out buildings. ONner being

•

UWI'OUS. Clfl)
PH. .....

REALTOR

(46:1066

Price 512,500.
11 ACRES - More or less. 4
bedrooms. modern bath ,
large kllchen &amp; din ing

Stop In ••• let'e talk over
JfOIII' houee plane and CMU' loan plene.

221 UPP£1 IIVD 11CMD

RON CANADAY

REALTOR

home, some remodel ing ,
beautiful view of the r iver ,
must see to appreciate.

ALL -ROUND FAMILY PLEASER -

t. 1

"NEW AD DAILY "

RUSSEll .WOOD

BJIIOIII":

Shown by appointment only . 517.500. STROUT REAL·
TY , 446-oooa.

old ranch fini1hed bJrsement . 4 BR , l lf1 baths, l kitchens, LR', D
family room with Franklin fireplace &amp;
more.
near Codmlls. $~ . 000 . STROUT REAL·

•••tment,

~

better stock farms . This one has been in the sa~e fam F
tv for 3S yrs. 114 acres total. Approx . 90 A . of per~a ­
nent grilssland has been hmed , fertilized &amp; is in a ~tgh
state of product i on . All bottom land has been ttte~ .
owners are retiring &amp; have agreed to g1ve up thetr
comfortable z story, 1 rm . &amp; bath home . Oth er !eatures
are 2 good barns, 4 sheds. cellar house, corn cnb , tar~e
tob. bue, 3 ponds plus good well, some commerctal
timber reported , lots of rd . frontage tn Perrv Twp.

transferred .

llfetllllt caropptlrtUIIIty wfftl.,. ln..rllllllollllt-11 of compenles.
Call for u
·
•lcllerd lla¥1n,6U ••• 0111
. MonRunciT...... y9A.M ... 6 :. P.M.
E• • Opperttllllty lmpltyer .
,

.

on this genlly rolling S. A. $39,500. STROUT REALTY.
446-000t.

$3S,OOO.OO.

Must t. 21 w over, toel orient... embktw, lfiOrh·
minded, llwl••blt, hive cer......m. Offertd lncfucle
....,, ... ""'kikl • • eullt~Milll !lnflt llllrlnt.
For 1lle rt.M IJINIIIe IIIII will

$16,500

--"---"

CANNING peaches, good q uolllt ,
Frees. to ne conning peadws
$7.98 , bring own contai ner .
Retail and wllolesole Bob's
Mark e t ,
Mason .
M i dwov
._Market , Pom!roy. Oh.
'

DO YOU HAVE A OESIRETOWINf
OUr training will prepore you lor 1 WINNING
MANAGEMENT position In your i«allty wllllln six
mon1hs.
You can txpect to Mrn S10,000 to 111.1ot willie
1r•lnlng.
•
Gu.oronttocl minimum up to Sl2ot month lnamela
sl.ort.
T-Mtks treln.... In sellool, • • " - s ,.ld.
Trelnlnt In 1lle lltld . selling •1111 servicing
ntabll...d 1ccounts.
.

home on otd Route 160, approx. 6 mi. north of HMC.
G1r1ge, barn , shop, and small apple or(hard included

$28,000
Don' l m iss th is opportum
l y! Two fa m i l y r e nt a l 4
r m . and oa t h on 11r s t fl oor .
3 r m and ba th on secon d .
With i n w a lk ing d is t a nce
d o wnt o w r"'
s hopp i n g
Per fec t tor owner
oc cu
pan t or as tnvestm ent .

Lot s of space at a bud g et
pri ce! ov er 6 ac r es m os tl y
pas tur e L ar ge b ar n , o th er
outb ldg 7 BR m obtl e hor;'e
w i th 10'xl8' add 1t to n . . crty
sch oo ls. sm i tes t.r om c 1ty .

BOB L.ANE
BRANCH MAN~GER
SPRING VALLEY PL.AZA
GALL.IPOL.IS, OHIO

$35 ,900
E xce ll ent c on di t• on . 2tlx 57
dou bl e wide ,..~
...
r m anenl
to unda t 1 ~n
t ami ly
rm , l ui ~ .... . pped k it
·che n , d 11 .rng r m . and 2
bath s. Chai n link fen ce
w i th 2 c a r ga r age on two
lev e l lots in Cen t ena r y

VA Ff&lt; A
FIN A NCIN G
AVA ILA BLE

75 acres s u i t a bl e l or
d evelopm e n t.
E~ ce tl e nt
buildi ng s.tes Ga llr a Coun
t v Rur al w ~ t e r·ava tl aO i e .

~~

CHIMNEY FIRES·ore no fun ! Hove
vour s cleaned the du stless way
The
Ch imne y
Sweep ,
b 14.373 -6057 .

ft\_\iV

3 be a ut ifu l acres. la te
model m obil e t1om c . fur
nished Bx 10 st or age b l dy
Counlry se1Ttng ,ust 7 mdc s
fr om ci ly
K yger Creek
Sc hoo ls. W 1lh 6 acre s

$2 1.000 .

Beat t he hi g h cost o f liv1ng
tn thi s J B R fram e .
spac i ous k itc he n , a tt rac ·
ti ve living rm w ith p ic ture
wi ndow . Utilrt y r m .• h a rd ·
wood fl oors . Gas fo rced a1 r
fu r na ce , ca rport . F e n ced
lawn has beautiful shrub·
ber v , •n c i t y on q uiet s tr ee t .

furna c e . Rural w a t e r
Bea u1itut lg . rollin g la wn

OFFICE 446 7900

45 a c r es . Ap p ro x . 35
timber , rest t tll ab le . 12A2
lb . t oba cc o ba se, ba r n,
oth er o u1 blclg
H an na n
Trac e Sc hool s

$39,000

oc.}\\1• _, even
ings . Na ,·lr' :;~ as f orced a 1r

perlec t ·

$17,000

$26,900

BEEF CATTLE COUNTRY - One ol Galtoa Coun1y' s

THREE BEDROOM frome home in
-

FIN A NCIN G AVA I LABLE .

$21,500

Nice well-shoded 2 BR

Few rntn utes fr o m cr ty . Beautt f ul country surround
lngs B n ck and fr a m e r anch has 3 BR , ext r n ly KtT~h~n
tn· r ang e tr ash comp an d dishwa sller
u Y
~~ rpeted (~nt a i r , SpdC tOUS la Wn haS fam d y SIZiend
pa t io and ch a 1n li nk fence i n ba c k . I ca r alla c ~e ~ H A
sul a t ed gar age . Sepa rat e s! orng e bldCJ
V

Brr ck and cedar ran ch h as c eram 1c f1l e foye r , mir ·
r or ed wall s. mass ive stone fl re l ace cov er s on e l!vrng
rm . w a ll , p lu sh c arpet 1ng , form a t d in ing , eat ·1n kl_f
c hen, 3 \g . BR , 2 tul bath s . 20 ' dec k p~u s c o nc r et e p a t1 0
w ith brick grill l or o utd oor enterta1nrng 2 ca r ga r age .
ov er 1!2 a cr e ve lvet y l awn I rr es tst•bl e 1nsid e and out l

'

Country homiP 'lear Kyger
creek ...,W : hoo L l 'h
stor y t
..Jme w ith
atum•nu , . si dirot...r- BR ,
1rc h
f am il y rm 1

SO MUCH FOR SO LITTLE -

$45,900

$53,500

$60.000

NEW J bedroom house . 2 bot h'
all elec
I acre. M iddleport
close to .Rutl and Phone qq2.

AU TOMOBILE JNSURANCE been
can ce lle d? Lost your operat ors
l icens.e ? Phone 991-21•3.

SI'RVI CE STATION FOR LE'ASE
High traff ic . Good potential. For
interview or i nformation .
phone
M.r .
Adom s
ot
Jll0•2·81b l .

In addition to our 700 offices All Across America, we are attlllated with 800 other mdepen:sg
offices. Whether your move is to the CITY or the country let.us ·Serve you In
states, Canada and Mexico.

TONEY REALTY to

- - - -·--DO BABYSITTING m my
E.x peri en ced .

$44,500
T he l aw n is b ei ng la ndsc a ped and see ~e d , i ust a few
m o re days a nd th1 S bea utiful colon• a t w ill be r ea d y t or
you • 3 BR. 11vi ng r m has p tctu r e Wtnd~w and
· f i r ep lace K 1t cnen c qu 1pp ed w ith r ange , hood . d tsp a n~
dis hwasher F orm a l d i nmg ar ea , 2 c dr •n su late
gar age. H eat pump , cent a1 r . Plu sh c ar pet t hroug hout.

Sponsorod By
Bidwell -Porter PTO

BABY SITTING in mv home Spr tng
Voll ey Areo Ph ~46 - 4 3 97

·~· 215 7 .

$57,750.00

rea) estate

HOMESITES for ' ole , 1 acr e and
up . Middleport, ne ar Rutland,
Coll992·7481

$47,900
Brand new br ick a nd fr a m e, ove r 1500 sq . ft . l1vmg
ar ea 3 BR , fam •IY r m . w ith ft r epl ace, lg ea1 10 k• t chen
equ tpp ed with r ang e and r efr tg A t ta ched ga r age Si t II
tim e to ch oose our favor i te ca r pet co lor s.

Ltk e 10 se e yo ur hom e be ing b u rIt ? M ak e a n appornt
m en t Ia see tht s t.rt ck and cedar L sha ped r anch . For
m a l entry ha ll , 3 B R. fa mil y rm w1th fir epl ac e, f orm a l
di n 1ng , k i t che n w i ll ha ve sn ac k
bar , r ange,
cti !:ihwash er , an d di sptJsa l 'l full bath s, 2 c a r ga ra ge ,
hea t pu m p , c ent . Ji r . J • ac r e leve l lot Cen t. loca t to n

desk•.

S92·3051.

WILL
hom e .

• talk with your destination broker
• advance information about your new area
·• advance knowledge of housing, financing, schools, etc.
• motel reservations tor your family (if needed)
• tlmesavlog advance appolntm.ents
• pre-selected properties to your specifications
• Immediate home inspections upon arrival .

church pews, antique tools,
text books • copyright to
1903. Piano, mlscellan..,us
items.

VA -FHA, 30 yr. fi nancing. ol$o
refi nan ci ng . Ireland Mortgage,
77 E. State, Ath ens. phone (bl-4)

-

on a drr ve thr ough th e c ountr ys1de ot F r anc e y ou
m ig ht see a hom e like lh• s. Ga mbre l roof. Fren c h
d oor s, br idal st a tr case , marbl e mantel s Th •s &lt;;m e ha5
been m odern i ze d wtt hout losi ng an y of •t s on g •n at .old
wo r ld ch arm . Plu sh ca r pet , ha rm on rous wa ll c ov er!n g ,
e leganT light ing F ive s pac 10u s bedr oom s, pa rt y S1Zed
li v rng roo m . f amil y r oom R ecr eal!on room a nd h ~bb y
ro om tn basem ent. Covered wa l k w ay le ad s to prr va t e
sp a wi lh indoor heat ed pooL t.r epla ce, sn ac k bar a nd
dre ssrn g r oo m 15 ac r es sutta b le f or hor ses . Con ve n• ent
loc atio n E lega nce speak s tor rt self , com e see .

At B•dweii· Porter Elemen- •
tary School . One l1rge elec.
motor, filing cabinet, metal

--

PULLIN S EXCA VATING . Com pl e-le
Ser vice . Phone 992 -2478

$134,000

Take advantage of the FREE SERVICE
of our NATIONAL REFERRALCENTER

for fast efficient service whether you are BUYING ::or SELLING any kind of
property. (If there is no STROUT office In your immediate vicinity; send particulars
tq: National Referral Center, .P.O. Box 4528-G, Springfi~ld, MO 65.804.

PUBLIC AUCTION
SEPT. 16
9A .M.

---------

BA THROO M S AN D Kit chens
rem odeled , ce rom •c til e , plum bing. ~:orpentry , and gener al
mainten ance . 13 year s e ..:perionce . 99:1 Jb85

f

SEE OR CALL YOUR LOCAL STROUT SALES OfFICE

------ -·- --

Prices

lARGE FUEL oil stove. Aft er I.JO
pm col l 992-76 9b .

Custom Poly
A78x13

Battery.
Installation Service
Ph. "2-2141
l'llmerey, o.

com e fa ll m lov e wi th th •S 1m macu tate 3 B R b r ~c k
r a nc h . F u ll y equ1pped kit chen n'?- s Aman a s1de by s•de
r etn g era t or wit h ice m ak er , d1 sh w asher . r ange and
disposal ut rllty rm . nas H otpoi nt washer and dryer
snac k ba r F orm a l d1n ing ar ea 2 ca r gar age Pa t to.
Beaut •fu t 100' x 200' l ~ wn . F r 1endl v neio hbor hood

c ur ving drive t o c l a% !C ni gh pill a r ed en t ry ~iv,~s th• s
nea rl y new ho m e a " South ern . ~l a nl a t1 on
a• r :
G r actous toyer w it h open s ta1rway , lr v m g rm . has shut
te r s beam ed cei li ng Co untr y k1tch en w i th w ood b u ~n ­
ing 1r epl a ce, da r !&lt; wood ca b inet s. full y eq u1pped w •th
GE applta nc es Beam ed ce ilt ng, lots of lr gh T 1n stud y
Form a l di ning r oom w ith c ust o m ch• na c abrn e l , p lank
fl oOr s 3 lg bedrooms R ec r ea ti on rm 1n b ase me.n t
w ith f i re p lace . 2 ca r f.nt shcd garag e Cov e r ed ~ a t1o
35 x 45 gar age and w ork shop has c on cr ete fl oor , p il la r s
m a t ch 1ng hom e . Nea rl y 2 beauttfull y la ndsc a~e d
ac r es Ci ty sc hools , G r een Elem ent ar y Only 4 m rles
fro m c ity in a gr ea t com mu n tty

.'

Br1kes
Tires

WE DO pointing , gutte r , ceil ing
tile. paneling, roo t repo1 r.
plumbing and concre te work.
Free estimates. Coli 99 7-7785
ask for Wallace Morris

PORTABL E ELECTRIC d is h wa ~ her .
E leel r~ c dryer
Both for SSO .

White-Wall

Muffler
Shocks

BRADFORD , Auction eer
Complete Service Phon e 94q 2~ 87
or 949-:i'&lt;XJO . Roe~ ne , O hro. Cntt
Bradf or d .

Expires

Stotm

•

Aut• &amp; Truck
Repalf
Also Transmission
Repair
Pholle 992-5682

9-7-1 mo.

SPECIAL
PRICE '

11M

Bill'S
446-2642

MOORE'S

0.

8·2 1 mo.

AI !types of roofing, guners

mo tor Hay l or sol e S 85 a .
bol e 94 9-241 J or 949-2849

Siding and
AcatSMI''"· Ctll

GARMiE
'!'4 mile oH Rt. 7 by-pass on
St . Rt. 1'14 toward Rutland,

Pomeroy

Anv U.S. made car - parts
extra if needed. Excludes
front-whHI drive car$.

19b l Cl:H V Y FOR parts 1973 Vega

INEWBPAPI!R ENTERPRJSI! A81H ) , - - -

this

SPECIAL

PO l A TOE S FOH wm tcr . Cobbler
Ken neb e&lt; ond ~up e n o r Phone·
843 249)
1o m Sayre Great
Bend SR 338

.......
Aluminum

ROGER HYSW.

U$ Today

Strout National
Referral Center

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

ALIGNMENT

8 by 16 x 7 whe els . fJr
$25 00. 2 700 .- lb Wm l et tir es
pr 550 00 Cal l q92 ·7b9'1

•

I'Ut2-ZI74

8·20-1 mo. (Pd . )

Hoellich)
109 High St .

r-wHEEL

Sl:NSI-MATI(
0( ·
cou nllng m ochm e
Ph one
99 7-7156 , The Dotly Sen tinel
\ 1\ (o ut! Streel , Pomeroy
Oh to

1

or 949-2 "0 ·

The Photo Place

UUR~ O U G H S

G UNS AND am mo • Large dtscoun f
on sho t s h ell ~ 22 LR 7'1 Mag
etc. All k tn d~ of r1ew and used
shot gu ns, r tf les han d guns
~o m etr m es yo u don'l e11en neE&gt;d
money . We trade f or o lmos r
f OR D 'JN and Ferguson 30 l or m
ony th tng . Fde !&gt; , S J1d . M1d
tractor s See at 6:18 f rrs l Ave
d!epo rt. 9&lt;12 7494
01 call &lt;:1 46 1775 ol tet ~ pt n
A DM I RA L
srd e
b~
st d e M USICAL INHRUMENTS horns,
g u tter ~ . fl u t e~ d a nne ts tram
ref ngeror o r -f ree zer
wh rte
banes, etc l o se ll or trade
good co nd . Call 4 ~ 6 - 4 H B 5
Fr fe s !&gt; . Jrd Middlepo rt
TWO 14 SNOW TIRl: S $20 .. ~·ze
TVfJ~
W RIH:R S PORT A UL l:S. elec
2'1 ' 1 w1n 1er coal 51 5 Man!&gt;
tric . gorn g to ~ e ll or trad e them .
suit $10 Co ll4 46 0730
lao !=ti e 1&gt; . S Jrd , M td dlep on .
FOUR SUPtRI OR SPO Kl: MAG
991 7494.
WHH LS 1qb7 te11! ca mper
w tt hout canv as New rnen s 1978 FORO ', ton pic kup 300 6
cyl. , 3- speed w11 h o Verdr1Ve
weddtng ri ng whrt e gol d Coli
Tok e ov er po~m en t s . Se llmg
44 6·304 &lt;:1
because o f moving
A ndy
19!1 HONDA CL 100 l o11 cond
Vau g han
Ca ll 5 30 pm ,
Must sell $150 Coli 44b ) 477
747-7075
COM PlH f BROWN it UN IFORM • 1 97 ~ DA TSUN PICKUP
Phon e
_SIS Coll446-77 4b ofter 4pm
997 -~ 1 91 alt er Sp"?
l-O UR UNIROY AL Land Tree PLAID l OVE seat and mof&lt;hing
10 00 15 l it e!&gt; , lilo. e new, Free
cho1r a nd o ttom an Bed room
~ tanding
flf eploce, co mten·
wite All hk e new in ex&lt;e llen t
poror v sty le . Co11379 :242b
condition . 9~9 :176 1.

You hold :

C~ll

FREE

Phone 949- 286~

CBob

COAL . UM l:STO Nt , sa nd , gro vel.
cal cium chlo n de , fe rtt lt.r:e r. dog
food 0 11d aU types of soil [II. .
cel s10 1 Sal t Wo rlo. s, In&lt; . I: Motn
~ ~ Pom er oy 9q2.JB 91 .

Gallipolis , Oh10
446· 1044

~ ffu~ ~:HJJ1:S

QUIIOifOrll

We 1re currently making
1ppointments for senior
portraits. We use tradi tional settings and also
feature
outdoor
por traiture .
·

. . . Jock~· Carsey, Mer.

!IJi!!.

Free Estimates

High School
SENIORS

Pomeroy Landmark

...

row.
AI trick two he led a spade
to dummy 's jack. AI trick
three he led a low diamond
from dummy.
What would you do if you
we re East ? Would you duck
without long study? Would
you study and then duck?
Would you rise with the
king ?
This East rose with the
king and South wound up
making five notrump.
Sup!"'"'; East had ducked?
South s plan was to finesse
the diamonds on the next go
around and he would have
made just eight tricks.

ing

In Middleport betwoon
Third &amp; Fourth Street-ilff
Mill Stree1 just bthlnd
Tony's Corrv Out.
Open S.turdly 10-4 p.m.
Sunday 12 noon to 3 p.m.
8-31-1 mo.

446-3636

Being Transferred?

--· . -

Gutters and
Downspouts

Real E• lale for ::iale

tkal t:i!latc for ~e

H&lt;=al t:otatc for~"

CANADAY REALTY

Service

New or Repair

CHEAP!

•289.95

The actual declarer was
not clairvoyant, but when
brains were given out he had
been standing in the front

/Do you have • que!llon for
the experts? Write "Ask the
.Experts, " c•re of this newspeper. lniJividusl question• will
be answered If .ccom,.nled
by stamped, self-MJdreased
envelopes. The

QUALITY
WOOD HEAT

itka1 &amp;tate for~"

Heal &amp;tat.. tor Si!Je

_... _

H. L WRITESa
ROOFING

on.~

· MUVB ·GOIIINNY

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
e.

+KJ 7 54
• QJ 2
t A5

By Oowald Jacoby
aad Alan Sontag
North has 14 hig!K:ard
points and a five-card suit.
South has 16, yet moat declarers would fail to '!&lt;'ore
nine tricks. They would try a
diamond finesse at trick
two. East •s king would
pickle dwruny's queen, a
second heart would clear the
suit and declarer would loose
three hearts and two diamonds.
A clairvoyant declarer
mlcbt play Eut for klngunaU in diamonda, refu.te to
f'-, play ace and anothe'c diamond aQd make the
band that way.

Pho ne

St . Rt . 7

1975 KAW ASAKI 500. e .-&lt; co nd
Coli 44b·bb89

A tempting finesse fails
752
• 95 2
WEST
EA ST
.. \ 0 9 2
.. 8 7 43
9 K' toB 5 3 .. 9 4 2
.. J \0 6
t K 9
• Q 10
• J 874

Cla ude

YOU R O l D SUIT!: W Ht N YOU
Baby beds. $6$., Solo bed and
BUV AN Y NfW LI VIN G ROOM
cho tr, $1 50
so fa
chotr
SUI TE EXAMPLE· $199. SU1 H
roc ker , o tt oman J table§.
WITH f RAOE YOU f-lAY Sl99
$500 .
tl ed r oom
sur t es .
Rln ) fURNIT URE , 854 51:: Slb5·S250·S300·SSOO t: or Am .
COND ~4 6 · 9 523
~o fo ond chon $ 300 . modern
solo cho ir loveseol $275
1975 HONDA MR 115. ju ~ l r ebu ,ll .
r ed mcrs $1 00 and up Table s
Hooke r pi pes , Kon • shoclo. s Coli
SbO ea&lt;h Sw• vel ro&lt; kers SBO
44b · 11 17
Maple or pme tabl e 4 c h o rr~ .
WAHM MO RNIN G HI: A TER , 100 lb
S72~ . Hu tch . $300 , 7 pc.
cool or wood cop tci l y Deluxe
dmette SI oq
5 p&lt; drne!fe
cu&lt;u lo tro n . Used l ~r $250
$59 5 pc d tn etl e wt th sw1...-el
Gas power ed h eo v~ du ty weed
choH S, SJOO Bun k be d~ com
ttt mmer , like new !i lOO Coli
pl ete
$150 52:25-527 5
mo t
Jb7 7'1 17
Ir ene~ or bo11. ~ p rrn g~ ... lrrrn
$50 Sb0-$70 each, cop totn ~
NtW G E 40 c han11C I CS $75 Ca II
bed $12 5. queen ~ e t ~ , $175 , S
388 904 9
drawer c h e~t $49
GO O O U ~ H)
17 HP BO U:N S tractor w tth ac
C e S~O fi CS (oll256 1312
( he sr
nt g hh to nd
Dryer~
r anges l ree : er s. . co ff ee and
end ! a b l e ~ 1 V 1&gt; , bed s lo bles
WAGON SALE!
lamp ~ sew 1ng mo .. htne othe'r$249
ST . runn1ng gear
tl ems Coli 44p 0322 Mo nday
$269
6 T . runn i ng gear
th ru Fr tdo y 9 to 8pm Sa turday
$309
8
T
,
runnin9
gear
9 to Spm 3 m1 out Bulov tl le Rd
Gravity bO)C eS
S32S
FOR SAll: OR TRAO~ . Busme ss
Several gooct used corn
pr opert y 1n Golhpolrs for l orm
pickers .
mowers , disc,
equ1 pment Co li 156 b038 aft er
plows and trac1ors . Used
6pm
New Holland 717 Choppe,-,
Buy nQw and save at :
USl: D FURN IT URE
GA LL.I POLlS
3 pc lr vong 1oom sur te , color
TRACTOR,
INC .
l e ...-e v• ~•o n rec lrner Co rb in and
Your Massey -Ferguson
Snyder Furnth.n c 955 Second
Dealer
A ve Gall1pol•s .

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

9 A 6
t AQ

e re

$ 100 . I RADl: IN AllO WANCl: f!OR

N ~W

BRIDGE
0.9·A

197b HARtf.Y O AV I D ~ON HI::Cl RA
G UOt: , fu!l dre H . less than PICK 't'OUR OWN. Red ~ ktn
peaches $ 10 o lb. wh1le they
6 ,000 mtles Coll4 4b 1362.
245 !t l 21 af te r 5
lo ~ t M tn . Tues . t hurs t- n 9-b
1971 HARl i:Y DA VIDSON SA JA
Wed . Sot Sun. 1·b B1ing con
~ON THE;
B~ Sl
IN f-U RNil UIU
100 n d irt bt~ e . Also 40 gal :
ta mer s Wagner !&gt; f-ru rt f.or 111.
UI-'HOl SH:R ING . f 1ee h t 11 not e~
ele&lt;!nc wat er heater. Coli
l oyrnon , Ohio, 1' r m1 le ~ all ~H
P1 ck up e nd d e l ,..,.e r y se Poce
2Sb b72 9.
~SO o n C Rb 6 14-74&lt;1-JJ I:J .
col i M o wrey s Uphol !&gt;fer y . PI
Plea san t W Vo 6 / ~ - 41 S.a
f WO MSONt AN D CA Sl:
good FINI-WOOO . Win ches te r shol gun
cond . Call 446-0974.
Reming ton ri lle Ulo. e new cool ,
SWIMMING POOLS an d s u p pl• es .
s•r e 38 Call 992 -533 5
1n gr o u n d a nd obO\I f!' g round
GA S COOK STOVE. g oo d r ef rig .
HO LIOA V POOl S, Hunt•ng ton
(green) • bedroom su ite wt th MA VTA G WAIN G~ R woshet . $SO
W Vo Cal l 30 4-479 -47Hfl
ver y good box springs and mot·
good cond ition Bell dr otn tile,
l ress , ' ' bed (tro n). yellow ktt·
S 50 each. 2 stee l wagon
SWIMMIN G POOl S In an d abo ve
chen fable ond ~ cho tr!li end
w hee ls. Phone 9fl 5 3914
g ro und full se 1vice . Supph e .;.
tabl e Coli 446-0871
a nd pool s in s tock _D l:l ur n go r d
WI NfEJ.I POTATOES gr ad e I r;l lld
ner So le s 3 17 11 N obe l Surnm 11 Sl l:Gl t:~ ~ U EL OI L ~ I OV I:: . Call
2. C W. Proff itt , Portla nd . Ohto
Roo d . M iddl ep ot r O h . Ca ll
2.5b-14 7/
AUTOMAIIC MAYT AG wo1o her
992 -572 41
1972 HO NDA Ctl 450 chopped
f xc ellen t condil ion 949 2C92
USED TRA CTORS.
c xc . co nd Wtfl sell or lrade for
1q71
FORO , ' ton com per speoo l
MFI JS O•esel
M f-= 230 Ole sel
good used cor . Call •'46-7920
!J owe r. a n , au to., dua l lon ks.
M FI 50 Diesel M f- 235 o ,ese l ·
h cellent ru nn1ng r;ondilion.
M f l65 D 1e se l · M F 285 0 1ese l ·
$1 475 . 992 2392
M FII JS Di e se l. Cob air an d
Heo ter
1974 KAW A SAKI KX 250 . Goo d
NtW 8 USl:O I MP L t M E N T~
conditio!) 985. 41:.1:1 .
M ~ 9 Sol er
M~ I O Baler
M~ 1 10
Let Pomerov Landmark
REG ISTUU D COlUM!JIA r arn , 70
Bol ~ r
M atthews ~ o lory Sc yl he
sof1en
condition your
mon ths old . Reg1s1er ed Suflolk
MFBBO Semt ·M oun!ed 6 bo!tom
water wtth Co-op water
rom , 2 veers old Coll 99:i' 7165
pl ow · M F5'}{) 17 drH Mf7 '}
softener, Model UC · SVI .
t ow cho pper
M ~ J 9 7 tow
l9'lJ Fei~O ~- 1 00 p•~k u p tr uck , 20
Now Only
p lante r s
mec h o nt c o l
~hee l s poneltng. 742 -1b4 8.
transpl an ter . SHINN S TRA C
let
us test your water
1'968 CHEV RO LeT CA RRYAL L 1 •
T O ~ SAL ES
Free
l or, 6 cy l , std Has 19n engtne,
Phone 458 IOJO
full y insulcited and &lt;orpeted.
l tO N W.VA
G ood t1r es . $750 . (o ll991 bJ98
lin te ls,

W 111fe • s Hio Grande 0

~fi~"fJ~e

Business Services

o f b u,ld lllQ mohmoi J&gt; ,
b lock , b• Kk sewer p •p e~ . wtn ·

d e ws

-

t'or :;at.,

T YP~ ~

l A 'I'NE 5 N~ W AND USfO FUR
Nil UR E

Saturday, Sept. 9

"'ORTH
• K J 5

All

t'or~

!sell . Prlcod for $13,000.

BUILDING ON UPPH
lND AVE .. needs so me

250'x150' BUILDING LOl

repa ir. Price r edu ced.

highway. rural
price $5.900.

IF .YOU ' RE THINKI" -'
ABOUT SELLING. GIVE
US A CALL AND WE'LL
BE HAPPY TO DISCUSS
OUR
LISTING
CONTRACT WITH ·YOU .
WE HAVE BUYERS BUT
WE NEED LISTINGS11
L~T US SELL YOUR
HOME WHEN YOU'RE
READY .

near

Evergreen,

alanr

waler ,

"BUILDING LOTS : 7S' z120'
all underground utllllln.
rural

water,

c:entre 1

sewage collection , blac~~·
streets. No mobile homes
Price ~.000 .
r

.FIVE ROOM HOUSE

w;th balh. lui·

ly carpete d, wosher ·dryer .
r efrig .. stove . On Iorge le11el

tot . 75 • 320. $29 ,000. Call

-

256-6704 or ?56-bt.t• ·

-

THREE lOIS IN SUNK ISI VILLAGE .

· olf old Rt. 35 Good location .
concrete streets . lot sh e. 96 111
177. Cal l 416-2573 or 446 - ~ 7 1 .

�Sundll~ 'l'unes&amp;nunel, Sw~tlay, Sept. 10, 1!178
~-The Suuday Tunes-&amp;nlmel, Swlj!ay, Sept.

10, 1978

~~:...... for liak

Heal ~!:elate for S..W

&amp;at utah' for Sale

&amp;al.l!dtate for S..W

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found in the Sunday Times-Sentinel
Real Eetate for !:Nlle

-

·-cowc

k'

...

~

'

"We Sell Better Living"

428 Second Ave.

OFFICE 446 7013

446-0552

.

nearly 2 acres. s..8,500

NEW LISTING - 50 a c r e s
' " lebanon Township on

tt1r, large lot. Ma r f1n O r .,

c lose to HMC .

hOmes m c ludes a h1 ll fop view ~nd ,, is sur ..,
rounded b y nea r l y 35 ac r t•s L o ts of Iron Dl
!age on st a re h 1gh w a y New owne r co uld C:
S(' l/ se ver ~ l b uli cl1nq to ts $ 100,000 p lu s
~

OPEN DAILY , EXCEPT SUN 9-S
MON &amp;FRI TILLBP.M .
ER HRS. BY APPOINTMENT

NEW LISTING - Nice 4
bedroom older:: home wifh
modern kitchen and bath
Electric basebQard heat,
city water , second bctth 10
full base&gt;ment, garage and

garage, gas heat, cent ral

See th1s on e soon . One of the a r ea ' s t 1nes t ::2"

gOOd gravel road. Old 4 rm
house with e1ectr1c S20,000.
FAMILY
HOME
- 4

bedrooms, bath , natural
gas heat, fireplac e, city

Call 1q s )SlJ a ft er ) : :tu

Shultz Tratler. 1 vr.
Old on I acre of land, dnlled
l4x~o

POCKET THE RENTAL PROFITS - Three story
bUtld.ng, downtown corner tot tn Pomeroy. Has first
floor shop and otftce plus two large apartments, all occupoed . S40,000. STROUT REALTY , 446·0008.

we ll, s wttch system . School
bus &amp; mall to the door on

dead end road .

C1tv Schools, elementary
,
ty attend Gr een Thi s fra m e ra nch tn
eludes 3 BR 's, bu tlf tn k tl , D R Natur al
hea t S39,900, tak e a took we w ill li sten

Ph . 367·0523

NEW LISTING - At tr acltve r anch rn th e woods , has 3
be dr oom s. 11" ba ths, tull basement w tth brt ck
flfepla ce, l arge car port , located on 11 • acres on ni ce
wooded land

THE WI.SEM&lt;
AN R·EAL
ESTATE AGENCY
.

.

IV

~
CLOSE TO TOWN -

Th1s home needs a new owner . Two BR, at
!ached garage , sc reen ed back porc h,
IV natural gas heat Pr iCed at $2'7,900 Take a
Gl took and make us a reasonable otf er C.ty

Lovel y r anch with 3 bedrooms,

I

fi r eplace, bea ut 1fu1 car per. r ad ta tnter com sy stem ,
large 2 car ga r age Br and new home, immedrate
possess1on and Ctl y school d•stn c t

At the edge of town and less tha n SJO, OOO ..,
Take a look a t fh1 s 1' ~ sto ry home and you -·
Will f rnd a w ell kept fr am e hom e w1th 2 ~
BR's, F R. L R , k i t , bath and Ulll tty room , -·
all on th e m atn fl oor plus two untrnt shed :1
r oom s o n t he sec ond tt oor Out s•de you will CQ
lind a ce ll ar Wtth over head storage and a ~
lar ge g a rden spac e Eve c all Tom Whtte :.;
440 9557
:::r

GALLIA COUNTY'S LARG,E$T
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

•

"'

c:

NTRY LIVING - Tht S ntee brr ck home has 3
wtl e approved kttchen, large f amtl y room
f trepl ace, pat10 1 car ga rage, good barn ,
4 acr es o f n tce r oll 1ng land (l Q add ac r es
close to Thurman Le t us show you th1s f tne
today Good buy l or $69 ,000

•

fin.anc:e our lt sftng on
miles south of Rt 7 Th i s pr oper ty
Olli n&lt;: lu,~es two houses , a two car ga ra ge,
c storage butld.ng, rural w ater and a ce ll ar
;;:. Pr tced to sell at S27 .SOO

Ml L L CRE E K - Goc· ~N 1\ th 3 bedrooms ; ba th,
.ng r oom , 1 ~ ba se mer ~\» ... f , only $10 •.500
DING BUY - 1972 Globe mste r l4x64, has 2
. bath wt th showe r par1 ral fur n1 tur e, block
!OL&lt;nc&lt;ar,or 17 acre nt ce level land $13,500

..•

J8 AC RE S - Lots of pof e11 t1a t here, 38 acres n1ce land
al ong Racc oon Cr eek , most l y t 11Jabl c, t obacc o base,
Ia r oe pond good lOx sa mobil e home, 540,000
105 ACRE S - Good fa r m w1 th a m oder n 2 bed r&lt;&gt;orn
~ 1ome. has a large ba rn , 40x250, wtlh equ tpm ent
1
r:ti Sr ng .J?.ou lt ry , ntc e pond F erg uson 35 w tth a ll equ ip'll€'11 t ~ ~ us show you th1 s f•ne farm , loc ated 1n
! 'v'orga n Town sht p, good buy l or $55 ,000

ll

air ,
full
basem ent,
carpeting,
a ncJ
out
buildings N1 ce f1sh pond
ready for you to stock
SJ5,000
NEWSPAPERS SELL
ADS, SALESMEN SELL
HOUSES. CALL "NJ25
FOR RESULTS .
Helen L. Teaford

G. Bruce Teaford
Sue P. Murphy
ASSHI,ates

Ho:..~sing

Headquarters

.c

.tl

..;:r-·~..

C)

v

Brick Ranch wtth a full basem ent located
tn Mercer v 1lle Srtu a l ed on a l ar ge fl at tot ,
'C th is lovely home has lots of rne features 1n
:;:, clu d mg one of the nt ce st k 1tc hens 1n the
area Make an appo.ntment to see fh 1s one
• soon $44 ,000

·-...
.c
J
c

.

,

~

-~

~ &amp;1~

..._ 'l stor y w1th two baths . LJ n
BR , DR or FR . Lg L R and l ull basem ent (i)
Nat ura l ga ~ hea t VA approved
:r
fl)
fl)

Oscar Baird. ReaHor 446 4632
lotm Fuller, Realtor 446-4327

....

0

:a 1 Story with Carpet throughout. See th is
C one soon $21,900

••
-f

:::r

-

=:

~

...:::r-·
"'c:

M . L. (Bud) McGhee, Broker,
446·0552 Anytime

..

Q.

•

Tom White, Salesman, 446· 9557 Eve.
Gene Oesch, Salesman, 446-7440, Eve

•

.c

·-J

;:
1"1

Cil
:::r

Growing Wtth Southeastern Ohio

fl)
fl)

''Thank you for listinq with 'Bud' McGhee Realty" "Thank vou
R I NG I N TH E PROFITS - Sm a ll grocery and garage
good Mom &amp; Pop operat•on, equ1pment and tnventor.f
1n c lud ed, e .~e ce ll ent gross . SSS,OOO. STROUT REALTY

44H008

VACANT LAND
55 A
m -1, approx . 10 A ttltable ,
·balance wooded , beautiful
hom e site s, fronts on
Jack son Co . Rd No 48
(blacktop) ilpprox . 1 mtle
off State Roue 279, 4 m1tes
east of Oak H1ll. S14,000
STROUT
REALTY
446-0008

.

GRACIOUS LIVING
IN TOWN
L,u ge \l icforian Hom• with 2l!led belhs ond t;, both, 4
bedr oom s, library, dining roam , liVing room with
~erry woodwork , 5 fireplaces, Jully insulated and
:Stor m W1ndows . 2-car garage on a large lot overlook ina
th e Ohio on l sl1ndside. A fine place to raise 1 family m
graci ous comfort . C.ll Manning Wetherholt 446-4lll
Days or 446·0139 Even1ngs for apPQifltment

LAGlE

I

.1,.,. . I..c.,._I._ . .. . . 0
..._
I OUMEEb
I I

FHA &amp; VA HO ME lOAN S M el EN

OON MO HTC ACE COMPANY
l oon M e pr c~ en tot lve
Vtolel
Cool-ue ' Y1en
463 Second
A ve Second floor , GollrpolfS.
O h•o 4SbJ I Co li &lt;14b 7171
f OH SAlt BY OWNtH

WHAi A C:.OOD
CL.OiHING SAL.Es.\1\AN

b
J I I

tAINNIZ

Prlntanawtrhere:
vasltrday's
IN QUEST OF THE BEST? - You ' ll find 'tall in this J
BR brtck rancn Extras tnclude kitchen with atl built·in
appliances, central ~acuum svstem, central air,
~illilator flr•place m fam1ty room , al)d the list goes
bn . US,OOO. Sl'ROUT REALTY . 446· 000~

E TO BOAT? You can have your own
boat dock here . Th is beauttful2 story home
near the edge of rown overlooking the boat
club has 132 ' frontage on Rt. 7 &amp; ..0' along
the waters edge. Eat In kitchen w ·
breakfast nook , attrac tive l tvlng room
wtth firepl ace, J large bedrooms, full-base
ment with family room, fireplace, r~ .
wc&gt;rksh•oc. dinmg room , 1'!2 baths,

iiO

C men! , se,er a l ou t but ld 1n gs and nearl y one Country hom e w1th l ,5q acres of land . with AI
ra acr e of ground Thts onl y pa rf tdll y se ver al choice bu tld 1ng Stfes E ve c all~
s:. descr 1bes our l1s t1ng on M il l Cr eek Rd For Tom Wh i te 446 9557
~
t- your 1nfor m at10n g1ve u5 a call Y ou w il l be
Two
lots
m
Char
olat
s
Hill
s,
2
98
acr
es
and~
.. glad you dtd
•
J 34 ac r es Bot h lots r estn cl ed f or your c:
•
.. 14JC 70 Mob1le Home Sttu ated on a thr ee protec t ion
~ acr e lot Tht s lo t oiler s se vera l ver y gOOd
0
iQ butldtng Sti es Loc ated on Woods Mill Rd 1.40 acre bu1ldtng s•te 1ust oil 0 J Wht te .,
QJ 1u st 2 miles fr om Btdwell Pnced at Rd Th rs lo t ts su rr ounded by som e of the -·
&amp;:l:: $16,500 Owner Wtll const de r sett.n g land area 's ftn es t hom es Cou nty wa ter Pnce d c.n
separ ate
10 sell at \. 7,500
Cll
::I
Cll
IQ
.C AS A SEAl/ICE TO THE PEOPLE OF THIS AREA IT IS OUR PLEASURE TO
C) COME TO YOUR HOME AND GIVE YOU OUR PROFESSIONAL OPINION AS TO ~
V THE VALUE OF YOUR PROPERTY FEEL FREE 1'0 CALL ANYTIME .

Assoc. 245-5083

LIVING
decorated tns1de and out , fhts Spring
Valley spl1 t gtves you the lrvrng vou
deserve Grac 1ous living room , 3 ni ce St zed
bedroom s, format d1n 1ng wtfh entrance onto d eck , butl1 tn k rtchen , 21/:;o baths, family
&amp; r ec room, cent air &amp; large 2 car garage

·~a.

..·-·-"'"'

I

DOE!&gt; WtiH ·A
NEW CU!&gt;IOM~.
Now arrange the arctecl •nl!trl to
ronn the surprise anawer, as suggested by lhe al;&gt;ove ~aJtoor&gt;

(I XllJ

HIM

rn

' t 02b H rsl A ve n ue H1 ve rv1e w p ro·
pelly w1 t h f ron tage on F11 s1 and
· ~oco nd A ve nues 8 rooms 'l ' 1
bol hs , 2 co r gar age Colt ~ee k
days, 44b 4388, eveningS' and
Suhdoy 4&lt;1b·OIJQ Shown by ap
po~ n l men l only,
BY OWN ER

r? bdr home m co untr y Beovllful
se 111n g . All moder"
- O(ru

lot

&lt;14 1J

:,19~1 0 1

O n o ne

or adldl ttonol la nd
o vo dob le , Blockrop road Call
245 Q'/. J:J

CAnawereMondayl
Jumbles: JADED RANCH ADMIRE ST'JPID '
An1wer How to constrUct wa "lnduelry" out of
nudHy- AOO SAND R

HEW- JUSTOFF PRESS! JUMBLE BOOK l11 .. th 1f0puul• t. •v•tt·
ltble for 11.35 pq_et•d from Jumble, clb tt1l1 .,....,.,..., PO, Bo.~e 34,
Norwood, N J. M141. lnoludl your "'lme, addrHt. 11p cOdl and mtke
onecu payable to N•••P 11111rbooka.

ROONEY AREA 1~
a(res, 100 acres pasture &amp;
'cropland, coat &amp; limestone
,repo •-.d , neilr proposed US
IJS, ' 1 tnvestment pro. pert1 . •IOG,OOO. STROUT
REALT\Y 446-0008.

POMEROY, 0.
SYRACUSE CRuslic Hills)

::I

'
.;

M~IN

- 3 bedroom ranch, equip-

J, ~

:Twos~ '"V bnck home w 1th a d tv lded bnse

Evenings Call
Bloom~r.

!" j '

... "

Cll
Cll

co

JS A CRES -- Good ro ll •ng land for hunttng or campmg
w 1tll old house on Thompson Rd ott Rt 160 $14,500

DON'T JUST D~IVE BY - Make an ap
pomtm ent to see this lovely bi level 3
bedroom s (2 are huge &amp; have private baths
&amp; dressmg areas), elegant tiving room ,
dmtng r oo m Wtth pa tio doors opentng onto
th e dec k overlooktng th e lake, large famifv
room , equtpped kitchen, 3 full baths &amp; an
oversm~d '1 car garage. Also use of com
mun1ty swt m ming pool &amp; clubhouse- S60s.

I -. ... .p~

..

11 ACRES - Ntce ro l ling la nd sull ab •e for devel op
ment c tos.e fo Plan ts Subd ivr ston , ctty school d1 str ict
call t oda y

Damn

see this one soon . S25,000 J B R 's, har d ...
wood fl oor s. na Tur al ga s heat, sm all ne al 0
lot loca ted at t he edge ol town Cal l sQon
..,

&gt;

TOWN - New Moon , 12x57, 2 bed r ooms , has had ex ·
llenl car e, a1r cond1 ft on , good bloc k stor age bUtld1ng ,
bu y l orS JI 200
BU SINESS ~ Good hauli ng bustness w rth 2 packe
tr ucks, has con tr ac ts w 1th VIl lage and bu stness laces
call for m or e tnl or ma tton

OVERLOOKING THE BEAUTIFUL
OHIO - A lovely 2 story brtck home in a
m u ch desired locatton, approx .4 mil es
from town This well dec or ated home tn
eludes livrng r oom wtth w b f p , 3 spacious
bedroom s, 21/ 7 baths, equipped k i tchen,
dming room , full basemen t w1fh f amrty
room &amp; f1repla ce, 2 c ar gar age and over 'h
ac r e yard gent ly stop1ng to nv er . City
sc hools Pn ced to selltn low S60s

we

Neat 1n$1de and our .
are ta lking about
our ilsltng tn Northup Tht s lovel y fr ame
has J BR ' s, double entr y bat h, Lg eat 1n
kit chen . L R and a ttache d garge $36,900

..

Doug Enoc·hlliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii !!l:!!!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil
Loveday
Realtor Associate
ReaHor Associate
Ph. Home 446-2745
Ph. Home .c&lt;+a·:~u~l' •

Gallia County's
Fastest Gmwing

~~~,~.~~~~~TO 162,500 -

•

This is one of
quality butlt brick homes in
are a 3 n1ce s•zed bedrooms . beau ftful ltv·
1ng r,oom , built -in kitc hen w bar . 1pl ent y of
~ua ltfy c abtnets }, format di n•ng, inter com
1n every r oa m , 2 bath s, full basemen t &amp; 2
car gar age, Cent. atr &amp; over an acr e In Ky .
Ck . Schqols Seller w an ts offer
37.789 ACRES - Neoar P tne Ac r es Lake 1n
Porter Lovely wood ed land W1 fh cr eek ,
pon d &amp; many good butldtng lots ~n eed at
on I y S2 4,500
VERY CLEAN RANCH Th " ,m .
ma culate 3 bedroom hom e ts tust ltke new
Ver y pretty eat·tn kt tc hen, uti lity room ,
large bath , cozy living room &amp; garage
Chai n link fence 1n bac kv ard plus sundeck
enc losed by a pn vate louver fence. FH A.
VA or Convent•onal. $36,900 ,
2 BEDROOM IN CENTENARY - Loc ale d
on a .61 acre lot thts home includes living
room with fir etace , remOdeled k ttchen,
bath &amp; f ull baement. Could make an excell ent starter hom e. $25,000

50 ACRES &amp; MOBILE HOME -

Exc ellent
vi ew of the r1ver wtth plenty of rtver fron ·
tage 1972 14 )( 70 Buddv mobile hdtne has
nice cover te d deck on the back , full base
ment &amp; central a1r Lot of woods for hun·
ttno or tu5t roaming around $42.000
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - Move right
1n t o th ts attr active 2 story home on Lak e
Drive in Rio Grande Includes a large
famtly r oom Wtlh a most beautiful stone
ftre tace, 2 bahs, 3·4 or
bedrooms. full
base m ent w rec. room, plus over an acre
w• t h mobile home ( could help pav mtg ),
dog kennel &amp; small barn Owner needs
qu1c k sale
520,000
New listing in Cheshi re.
Remodeled 2 bedroom nome wi th a 12)( 24
l tvtng room, kit Chen, dtn1ng room &amp; bath.
Plus par tial ba sement. 60XISO yard Good
buy tor t he frr~ t t ime buyer

s

LOVELY LAKESIDE RESIDENCE ...:.
Near l y 625' of beautiful lak e frontage in
one of the area' s most prestlgeous loca t ion s. This 4 bedroom home has approx
1ma tely 2400 sq . ft . of luxurious li v rng to eluding a large family room w i th
ltreplace, Complete kitchen &amp; breakfas t
nook . forma l d1ning, ') full baths, 2 car
gar.,.ge, 2 hea t pumps and central a •r . Just
ima g rn e i' home this lovety on 2 acres
overlookinQ the lake.

LIVE A LITTLE - In this spacious L
shaped Oak Drive home Th ts f.ne hom~
has 3 large bedrooms , 21h baths, built-in
kitch en. very large liv ing room, full base·
men! w1th family &amp; rec room, central a ir ,
sundeck, 2 car garage &amp; a huge land!Sc~ped
yard,

ped ktt c hen , hardwood
floors , air cond , carport
and storage. $28 ,500.00 .
SYRACUSE - Close to
school, 3 bedrooms, full
basement, 2· level lots
$27,300.00.
LETART - Brick rancn
type, llh bath~ , ftreptace,
central air, modern kit ·
ellen, porclles. SJUOO .OO.
NEAR
FORKED RUN
-over I acre, 4 bedrooms ,
bath , nat. gas FA heat ,
large garge &amp; workshop ,
other building S29,SOO.OO
CLOSE
- 5 acr e s , J
bedrooms , bath , ntce k1t
chen, ch•cken house , barn ,
all fenced, part basement
DUPLEX - in Por'nerov ,
good c,o ndtfton , I has 2
bedrooms ,
1 has
3
bedrooms , readv to move
into. $15,000 .00
MANY OTHER PROPER ·
TIES CALL TODAY
FOR YOUR NEEDS. THE
HOME OF REAL ESTATE
IN MEIGS COUNTY .
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Hiink, Kathy &amp; Leona
Clelond
Realtor Associates
992-2259- 992·2568

OWNER ANXIOUS - The owner of lh&lt;s
brt ck &amp; frame ran ch ts verv an• •ous to sell
h•s fin e hom e 3 bedrooms including a
large master bedroom with Jlh bath,
another bath , dining room, k i tchen , cozy
hv lng room, garage &amp; ni ce yard on Rt . 35.
SJ7 ,900
4 ACRES - Chofce ltv • •·,n in Rio Grande .
Lovely wooded t
tcellent for 1-2 or
3 homes. No mo.
.- s please $13,900
or rea sonable offer _

SQlD

BRICK BEAUTY - Beaufiful all brick
ranch on a .7 acre wooded yard in a quiet
cut de sac You can see the quality in at·
tractive living room w ith firelace, 3
bedrooms, buitJ.In kitchen, l lf2 baths, new
carpet &amp; linoleum, full basem~nt w -rec.
room &amp;. . large gara9e~ Less than 1 mile
from H M .C. Mid $50~.
BARGAIN TIME - A well kept 2 story J
bedroom home tn town Includes a huge
fam1ly room, formal diniog, built 10 kit chen, 2 full baths, plenty of closet space .
carpet throughout, garage &amp; a pr ivate
back yard · A verv clean well cared for
hOme S35,000
\

.

HOUSE &amp; OVER I ACRE - Attractive L·
shaped ranch with a huge country kitchen,
family room combination , J bedrooms, at·
tractive living room..w w .b .f .p , 2 baths, 2
car garage &amp; storage building One of the
best buys tor the money on the martt~t.
549,500.
LOVELY HOME ON 9 ACRES - A solid 2
story 3 bedroom home with family room ,
fireplace, equipped kitchen, bath, utility
room, lovely llvino room plus a 2200 lb .
tobacco base &amp; smOke- house C1ty schools.

WE NEED LIST·INGS
E. M. Wistmtn, Broker, 446·3796, Eve.
Jim Cochren, Associete, 446·7Ul, Eve.
E. N. Wiseman, BroNer, 446·4500, Eve.
Nancy Smith, Associete, 446-4910, Eve.
Betty Hairston, Associate, 446·4240, Eva.

Real Estate
Age11cy

nace , utility room, dining

BU Y

HOME WITH RENTAL - Buy lhtS 3 bedroom home
w1th ba th , d• n•ng roo m , enclos«;&gt;d back por ch and let the
r enr f r om a 2 bedroo m garage apar tment help m ake
you r payrnent Good loc at1on tn t own, SJ4,000

~

Willis T. Leadi~gham, Realtor
Ph. HQme 446-9539

OFFICE 446-7699

HOBSTETTER

REALTY
GeorgeS. Hobsleller Jr.,
Broker
~-'.
Ohio
I'IIIM992-6333
Olflce Hrs.
ta.m .-Sp.m.
CioHcl Thundoys a
Saturdoyo ot noon
Your FYII Time
Rql Edelw lroker
RUTLAND · - J bedroom
frame home with natural
gas hHI. Sllueted on nice
size lol on Mlin Street.
Aoking St3.SOO.
Midtlllpart - Nice 5 room
homst with bath and
dtleched gerogt. Situated
on on• third of an acre. Will
1111 et 130.000.
RACINE- This beautiful 3
bedroom homt hi• dining
room. lomlly roam and •un
porch. Plenty of lloriSJe
IPIICI. Ger... and polio
with e conapy. Sltuoled on
elmost 1 ecre on Sl.te
Route 3311. Selt• tcr 130.000.
RIOOI CRIST MANOR. .utllul 12 raom spilt
level colonlel, he• 5
badroome. 3 lull blllll end
much. much mcrtl Coli
lacNy lor mort Into end

•n

.......
·

I!Mkt
otter.
W. Mft -"'tr Nstilltl te
cMIItf.-....... ..-. .....

..

C::::IC:la~·
HIIIMWIIfl,-.c.

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.....

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-~

SOUTHERN

We Need
Your Home
or Farm
to Sell

Arthur A. Nibert
seninr MemhPr
Amirtcan socie1
Of Appr t1 1sers

'

Thts home tS a ve ry we ll
decorated and quahty bu il t hom e sett1n g
on a lovely well landtcaped lot tn an •deal
locati on . Shown bY a.-,t onl y ! Cal l now 1
N 147

JUST A LITTLE
Bl'r COUNTRY!
5 r m s &amp; bat h, 3 bed room s,
F A fw! l ott neat, sc r8n ed
.n porch , n1ce level lot ,
gd r den, tot s of lru1t trees
Vil l a ;~e of Addt son. $30,900

Bonnie Stutes
Ev~nings

;4•-a•u

. SITTING PRETTY
Close to Hol zer Hospttal Beauti-f ul 4 BR
brr c k. home wtth posstbl e 17 A m or e or
less Lar ge llvt ng ooom , dintng room &amp; ktt
chen w tth lots of bu il t -in cabtnets, wall
oven &amp; cou nter top r ang e Family ro om &amp;
ktfchenett e for casual llvtng or posstb le
ent e rt a tntn g
L a r ge
util rty
r oo m ,
work shop &amp; posstble den or study E :.ctra
nt ce pat to &amp; tandscaptng SE E THI S ON E
TOD AY ' MU S T SE LL NOW'

A LOT OF HOME
A very tmpr ess tve home from th e fir st
li me you step 1nt o ,.the door You can see
th e l rne m ater. als used tn th•S home Ther e
are B r oo ms - 3 B R , fo r m al dmmg r oom
w tlh built tn buff et Nt ce storm door s &amp;
lilt tn th ermopane w tndow s La rge l rv •ng
room 16' x 20' wtlh wood burntng stove, r ea l
ntce stepsaver kt t cnen w tth eve r yt hmg
buil t 1n ( tt y wa ter , l ar ge fr ont por ch &amp;
bac k cove red pat1o Lar ge 11 6' lC. 126.' la nd··
scaped lot 2 car qar age All of t ht s &amp; m or e,
loo YOU CA N'T B E L IVE THI S HOME
LARGE AND
F OR T H E LO\V . LOW P R ICE
BEAUTIFUL
Love ly 3 B R brt ck coun tr y
HOME &amp; COTTAGE
home S1 l ua ted on 'l A of ex
LEVEL LAND &amp; HOME
ON1A
tra ntce land . La rge llv1ng
6 r oom home w 1t h 3 BR &amp;
f ht s room y 7 room coun t r y
room w i th f trepta ce, coun
balh FA f urnace !&amp; r ~ r al
home has ea t 1n k tl c hen, 3
tr y k ttchen w1lh love ly
w ater A ppr o ~ 4 1 4 A of ClC.
B R , l rvtng r oom &amp; famly
built in cabinets , d isposal,
Ir a n1ce level land Coul d
room The 2 B R cott age ts
all oven countert op range &amp;
be buddtng lots or used tor
nte cl y panel ed &amp; has some
grill pantry , d1n1ng room &amp;
farmtng Call fo r m ore
carpettng , Just ol! Rt 160
2" :;o baths Large famtl y &amp;
near Vtnl on
defa tIS
rec reati o n r oom
wtlh
EXQUISITE HOME
NICE
WOODED
ftrep lace &amp; bar , utilit y
CHAROLAIS HILLS
4.2 A. LOT
room plu ~ pl enty of storag e
Beautiful 3 16 A rcllmg
Th1 s 1s a. gr ea t loca tton to
area . Nt ce co ver ed palt o,
clean land ts t he sett1r g for
bu tld A pp rox . 1•2 mile f rom
stora ge buildtng &amp; pon y sh
tht s unusu all y g racious
Centenar y &amp; only 3 mtl es
ed. R ural w ater plus well
bn
ck home 3 spaCious
fr
o
m
Gall
tpolt
s
R
ural
wtth pump T HI S HOME
B R ·s , 21 2 bat hs and large
wat er tS av a tl abl e Lot s of
WAS BUILT WITH YOUR
utt1tfy r oom Large foy er
tr ees &amp; country Std e
FAMILY IN MIND LOW
tead rng to for mal l•v•ng
PRICE !
1 LOT
room , formal dtn tn g r oom
Nice Lot 58 in Patriot. All
&amp; lar ge famil y room Wtth
A LO\IEL Y SETTING
level
R
ural
wat
er
open trrepla ce Cha rming
2 A , of elC.tra nt ce !and plu s
kttchen w1th snac k bar .
ava tl able. Nice lot , only
a ver y well kept m ob tle
Corn mg countert op r ange,
S3,750 00.
hom e Lo1s of cab1nets &amp; a ll
wa ll
ov en .
d1 sposa t,
appltances stav •n clu d•ng
d tshw asher and lovely
B ACRES- LOTS
washer &amp; Cry er . E ~t ra rte e
, Shenandoan cabtnets Tht s
OF PINE TREES
storage bU1Id1ng w1th con·
spac 1ous hom e has a 2 car
Deep
well
E
lec
tn
c
pu
mp
crete floor . , Mu st see to
garag e w1th automat 1c
W e lt hOU Se, Septt C tank , 4 1 7
believe 1his clean l and &amp;
opener and centr al a•r
m rles to M me No I A pprox
home
These ar e tu sl a few of th e
5 acr es of timber A ll -8
ex tr as P tc fures or word s
acr es levell and .
12.6 ACRES OF
cannot descr rbe thi S home
SPRING \/ALLEY
PRIME LAND
YO U MU ST SEE IT
SUBDII/iSON
vacant all
fenced
tn.
Va ca nt lof s, 111ce stze
NEW BRICK RANCH
Gallipolis &amp; Green School
bu tld.ng tot s w t th all
GALLIPOLIS CITY
District ,
rural
water
ut t1t t1 es th ere
Lot stze
SCHOOL SYSTEM
available , many , many
101 8' by 171 '1 ' Bett er get
Bca ut dul gr een landscaped
uses (Sub dtvls ton. some
yar d, J B R , d1n1ng ar ea,
um now
farming, · hunt•ng, pa sture
l tvt ng r oom . ntee stcpsaver
or i ust place your own
4 BEDROOM HOME
kilchen. ut1lll y roo m &amp; 112
hOme m a ch 01ce spot &amp;
N
tce,
clean
name
wt
th,
IJalhs
Central a.r Forced
keep everyone else a d iSwood or coal bu r n1ng
a•r tur an ce f hcrmopane
tant away ). Has tr ees,
firepla ce-bri c k m an te l
w •ndows Ju st off Rf. 35
small stream. level bot
Modern kitc hen wtth r ange
west of Ga lhpo lr s NICE
tom , flat on top of a small
&amp; r efrtg
Rural w ater
HO M E
hill SEEITNOW
system F .A furnace, 2 ca r
9ROOM
garage &amp; sto rage ar ea, f
1.23 ACRES &amp;
COUNTRY HOME
large
shade
trees
Good
1 ROOM HOUSE
5 B R N1ce fr ont porc h,
large level garden spa ce.
3 B R . all r ooms ar e
n1ce k•tchen w1th buil t tn
Nt ce mod es! home at
ca rpeted , t ormat dtn tn g
cabtnets, double s s Stck
modest price
PHONE
room This home has had
B~ th w tth shower , lots at
FOR INFORMA T ION .
bl own tn msulat ton Ctty
shilde tr es &amp; fru tf tr ees
wat er , lar ge bu ll tn back
N1ce gar den spot Th1S
COMMERCIAL LAND
porc h Los of shade fr ees
nome
has b lown in insula ·
A long Rt
35 west of
Lar ge g ar den ar ea Has
t1on Locat ed bestde St.
GalliPOliS All level. Rur al
ce llar plus 2 out s tde
H tghway 160 84 acr e of
w ater ava il ab le On tw o
storag e bldgs Appr ox Stz e
land M or e ca n be purc hass1des approx . 8 to 10 A
14 'x 2.4' and 12 ' x 12' L ots of
ed wtth t h•s home 2 mobile
PHONE
FOR
DE
TA
IL
S
lru1 f t rees SEE TH I S ONE
hOm es !h at now are br
NOW
1ngtng tn a re ntal of Sl7 5 00
42 ACRES
per month plu s a total of
\lAC ANT LAND
11 ACRES
3 84 acres of la nd All
Lots of r oad front age on
HOME NESTLED IN
l oc at ed
bestdc
Staf e
Morgan Lane Some good
THE TALL PINES
High way 160 CAL L FOR
11ne fen c1ng. Some Wh1te
Beaut i fUl 7 room mod ern
ALL DET AI LS
oak t1mbe r . Appro ;.o. 15 A.
brtck &amp; frame , 3 BR home
tillab
le
.
All
could
be
overlooking Htghway 35
pastured ALL FOR ONLY
west Nestl ed in and sur
HANDYMAN ' S DREAM
S1 3,900.00
rounded by lots of tat!
, 45 acres of good land plus
ptnes Fam11y room , wood
unf in1shed tri-l evel home
\/ ,A. APPROVED
burnin g ft r elace, g arge &amp;
that you can fm ish, all
5 ROOM COTTAGE
bre ezeway , several fruit
ma
ter ta l s are a tr ead v
CHILLICOTHE RD.
tree s, pea ch, apple , pe ar ,
a v a tl abl e
Ow ner will
Well kept 2 bedroom home,
plumb Large garden area.
negot1 ate pn ce
bath, living room, formal
Truck garage, pony shed
DR Nice s1ze kitchen, full
Line fenc es. Beautiful set
RIVERFRONT HOME
baement , attached garage
tlnQ tor thts lovely home
3BEDROOMS
Two porches, one is a large
Beaut
tful
v1ew of tt.e Oh1o
front porch, nice to enjoy
COZY AND
River right from your llv
There is also a large
COMFORTABLE
tng room Ltke t o bOat, ftsh,
garden area and yard. This.
Ntce I~Jrge shade trees sets
and
rela )( each eventn g on.
property must be so ld II is
off this lovely 2 B .R . home
our own riv er front? 6 room
pnced right , you can buy it
with large livmg room , k tt
remodeled home , ntee
t¢ay. Move in tomorrow
cnen &amp; bath. All furniture &amp;
modern k'it chen, F and B.
drapes stay Just mov e tn ,
porches, nat. gas for ced air
83.35 A. MORE
Kyger
Cre e k Sc h oo l
furnace, all room s are niceOR LESS
District.
ly carpeted
Your own
vacant land Appro x 65 A
water sv stem Wh tt e alum.
4LOTS
of t1mber Dug w ell Creek
outstde covering, 2 large
Lots No. J1, 32, 33 &amp; 34 on ,
&amp;
spr i ngs .
PR I CEO
nicety shaded tots with
RIGHT .
Patriot .
Rural
water
cherry tr ees and one
available. Will sell In P.airs
peach. A very econorr.ical
4
ACRES
HOME
or~LCALL TODAY
place to I iv ~
MORE OR LESS
Wood lot Some pme tr ees
ElCTRA INCOME
LUXUR IOU$ UNIQUEL ~
Appr o)(
I mtl e f r om
. &amp;HOME
DESIGN EO HOME
Centenar y on Herm an Nor
2 mobile homes. tor the
Th1S beautil ul Bren twood
fhup Rd . P ic k yo ur own
pr ice of one. Situated on
. home 1S s1tuated on a ter
bldg s ite .
level land Live tn one &amp;
ra ced on e acr e lot , m or e
rent the other Nice scenic
la nd IS availabl e. Spaci ous
JUST A FINE HOME
ll v1ng room , formal dining
location . PRICED LOW
3 B .R ., famil y r oom in
FOR QUICK SALE .
room , kttchen , '1 ba thS &amp; 3
basement . Nice wh •te steel
B.R. on upper level The
Sldtng (no upkeep) Full
lower levet has 2 B. R .•
ALL CITY
basement . Lots of e)(tra
batn , kitchen &amp; family
CONVENIENCES
nice bu tl f.in cabtnel s in kit·
room w ith fireplace Quali Within 2 mile• of Gallipolis
chen, wa 11 oven &amp; counter
ty construc tion &amp;. st ze
.400 tt. frontage on paved
top range N ice large land
throughout This new home
5treet. 3 or 4 B R .• 1 room
scaped lawn . Garage with
is destgned so that the
home, basement, nice kit · concrete drive . W1thm
lower level can !Je indepen·
cl\en with lob of built-in
walking distance to Gr~en
ctent of the upper level &amp; •s
cabinets. Natural gas heat,
Elem . sen on St. H ighway
e•cellent tor use bY guests
city water &amp; city sewer,
141 approx. 3 miles from
&amp; family or duplex ar
Front porch. Garage . Land Gallipolis . City School
r a ng ement . Both level
is nicely landscaped with
System .
Very
n f ce
nav e ground entrance.
lots
of
shrubbery . neighborhood
SEE IT
QUALITY IS ST ILL AF·
REASONABLY PRICED .
NOW .
FORDABLE - - $112 ,000
~

' 181
BEAUTIFUL SETTTNG
Lot s of shrubbery , flower s
and shade tr ees surround
lht s very w ell kept tlome
F eat ure s L R , famil y
r oom Wtth w b f tref)la ce,
dtn1 ng
a r ea,
m o·de r n
kit chen , all btr ch cabinets
Has a large front porch , 2
car garage , good garden
area All th1 s st Htng on Jl;:,~
acres tn a serene and
peaceful ar ea. CttY School
Ots t
N 195

Merrill C.rter
Evening•
370.211M

Jim Stutes
Even1ngs
446 2885
NEW LISTING
RIO GRANOE AREA
Ltke new home with 6
rooms , bath , shOwer , full
ftnt shed base ment , one car
trn rshed garage Well land
sca ped , shru bbery , r ose
garden, pat to, de stgned
barbecue gr il l, oak whtle
board fence, attracftve ar ched bridge tn back yard to
add to some ot the many
pleasing extras Owners
mu sl sell now Loca ted
close to Vocatton ai .School
You ' ve wa nt ed 1f, we ' ve got
rt Prt ced to sell $49,900
.
# 216
COZY BEAUTY
D rs l inc t i ve hom e stlt tn g on
-;_ plus acr es o f beaut•ful
land Con tatntn g lots at the
ex tra s you ca n t ht nk about
ever own •ng 2 bedroom s,
full brlf hs. tamtly r oom ,
wood burn . ng fi r ep lace.
kit chen, all appl tances like
new Bu1tt rn acquar tum ,
not much mor e than 15
m t n u t e d r ive
tr am
Ga ll i I
Twp 11196

SMALL ACREAGE
GOOD STARTER HOME
Appro)( 7 acre farm , 4
acres le vel Tops for truck
tarm1ng , or an y use Sm all
barn , pa stur e for horses or
cattl e. H ouse ts bemg
r emodeled , 6 r ooms &amp; bath ,
shaded, level, att r acttve
area . 18 mtl es fr om
Gallipo l•s. 10 miles fro m
Oak H tll , b lac ktop roa d
SJ6,000
~ 200

INVESTOR ' S DREAM
Put your defl ating dollar tn
a nearly new commerct al
tease bu stness. 3 excellen t
long term leases Grea t
return on your monev ~ 215

CLNTURY

.'1

MOBILE HOMES
-

oP

T

•

'

MOBILE HOME AND LOT
1tt'x67' mobile home featur·
ing 2 B. R .. L. R .. D . R. ,
bath ,
kitchen
with
breakfaSt bar Front pa~o.
anchored &amp; undei"skirted. 1
car garage with work area .
,
140
MOBILE HOME COURT
4 Homett e m oQile homes,
12x52. 2 B .R , totaleiectr ic.
all turn1 shed , all r ented,
located on Old 160 at
Evergreen
Good c:ondl ·
f1on , ,v ery attracttiJe setti ng, profitable investment
SJ2,000.
, t7t
LOT AND MOilLE HOM£
2 bedroom mobil~
home, bath , kitchen, elec .
Ileal .
#IH
197A

QUIET RETREA I
New 14'•70' fully equipped
mobile home on creek front .
101, deep water frontage .
Excellent swimming and
fishing .
1201

MOST
ATTRACTIVE HOME
Beautiful , one of itt best,
Matn Sf , V tnton, 3 B R.,
bath, large formal 0 R ,
del uxe but It tn kitchen , k1f
chenett e,
L R
wtth
ftreplace , ba se ment, F A
fu el oil furn ace , large well
landscape d lot 97''X.A97' ,
garage , fr ont porch One of
Much more.
th e best
Shown by appo mtment
N207
LARGE HOME IN CITY
Large 2 storv house, 9
rooms House is modern
and 1n goOd condt t ron Pnc·
ed r"easonable . Own er
needs to move th1s p,-oper·
ty 1mmed1ate!y Plealecalt
tor more 1nformat1ori. 11135

BEAUTIFUL
RIVER
\/lEW
Buy two for t he price of
one! Th1s home nas l far ge
bedroom s ,
ful l
bath ,
shower in ba sement :.~¢s of
trees and shrubberv ~ :lnd a
ntce fireplac e in the 11vmg '
room. PLUS A RENTAL
Call
.l3i

GOOD BUY
100 acres, Harrison-... 'fwp .
Pastur• l and , totYcco
base, coal nghts, t.,.,ber
and nice wooded ar.. , for
lots 1972 12' M60' lflollile
home alread y in pi&amp;Ct~ Can
be purchased wlta or
wtthout mob tl e home. Sell.ng prlte ontv SJO.OOO!o; l 175

,.

FARM
EXCEPTIONALLY
CLEAN
.t1 acres, good fences, pro
due five pasture Approx 10
ttllable acres. Buut1fUI
wooded areas ApprOll. 1200
lb t-cco base, lillfitock
and tobacco barn H_.,se 1s
very enrac t ive , ! k e n
c are tf, 3 bed r
, '12
base,..nt. almost
oil.
F .A. r\Wnac e This I
welt
batanee&lt;t farm .
·• ,.. , 204
EXTRA CLEAN FARM
4 room house, barn and
equip,..ent shed KnM deep
grass all over Plenty of
sprtng- water for stock .
Good fencong
1167
219 ACRE FARM
One of Perry Twp.'&amp; best

all around farms. Medern
houH-. 6 rm ., bath,.:l Br .,
full -ment, he~mp
owner
fully 1
ted
2 bartls, 50 acres
ble ,
157 ac:res pasture. Nibacco
ba~e. lots of road frOhtage ,
rural water available ,
blacktop road . Extr1epace
all set up for mob1le home
ThtS II a good OM, let US
help you make a wi-. In ·
vestment.
I 199

"'Y'

· LOOKING FOR ·
A BAAGAINr
Then look no further than
this 30 acre farm . I acres
tillable, some st•ndino
timblf, the rest l~ture
land. Good spring
lop·
menf ,.,._ water
ly . 5
roorn 1 ttouse. 2 I
se
rectmly remodel
Fair
size ll'lrn, 700 lbs. tot&gt;ac co
ba!se. Should sell yester·
day s:zs,ooo
1 191
,.LANTA TIOII. _
69 aCAI on St. Rt. '115 and
Cora Mill rd ., 8 rooms.
Farm well lenced . Good
outbuildings , 35 acrHievel
tillable land . Much more.

• , 134

daily.

76 .89 ACRE FARM
Modern 4 bedroom nome only 4 Year s ol d 2
ba ths, mode r n ktt chen, l arge pa t to m ast er
bedroom tS 12' x24 ' wtfh hu ge wa lk 1n
closet 2 c ar g ar ge, stocked farm po nd, 50
ac r es of good til l able gr ou nd, 10 15 acres of
! tmber , exce llen t area to hunt , fish or
farm Some farm eq u•pmen t 1ncl uderJ
farm tractor wtt h f r on t end loader , bru st•
hOg, plows, dt sc, corn plan ter . c: r op
spr ayer , corn pt cker , 2 whee l trad er , and
various oth er •Jems Has some f r utt trees
Tht s IS a good genera l farr-n Wt t h lo ts of
posstb ll tl •es ShOwn by app Ointmen t N 21 7

HOUSE HUNTING ?
6 r oom s, bath, ex tens1ve l y
remodeled , moder n buil t 1n
ktt chen, for m al D R , 2
B R . l ull base ment Can be
pur chased Wtl h 3 acres or
2'l ac r es Toba cc o base,
so m e timb er Famtly mov
1ng , wil l l aKe ntce mobtl c
hom e on trad e rn Good
netg hborhood $35,000 Tot a l
Pr •ce
N 211
MOOERNHOUSE- POOL
J.JOO sq fl over all .:1 BR , 2
bat hs, shower , m odern kt t
c h en ,
la r ge
a n t 1Qu e
decora ted l am 1ly r oom ,
1100 SQ I t , concrete sw1m
mmg pool 18'x35', very
mu ch .n use pr cntc ar ea,
lots of llv mg St ate Route
141
Ga lltp oll s Sc hoo l
Dt slrrc t Prt ced bel ow to
da y' s ma rk et
11 212
EXECUTIVE 'S REST
Custom bud t J B R on l:lb
acr es ' " Debby Dr tv e MCrl
B •g hom e at Reasonab le
Pr 1ce
P 192
BHEVEL IN
WOODED AREA
Th1S lovely brt ck an d
fra m e b• revel rs se ft tng '"
1112 ac re s of beau t tf ul
woodl and Onl y 41, yr 5 old
f ea tunn g t oye r , L R ,
modern k. ttchen, d1n1ng
ar ea , J bed room s, full base
m ent ar ea Al l th ts and
mor e tn KY GE R CRE EK
S C HO O L
DI S TRIC T
Shown by appotntmenl ' 11

194
GOOD INVESTMENT
OR RENTAL PROPERTY
L.R ., 2 bedrooms , modern
eat tn k ttchen, hardwood
floors, full basement and
utility room Loc ated right
out of town Pr •ced very
r easonabl y - 52.4,500 00
N 191

changing

OFFICE.
JNDEPENDENRY OWNED

SPACIOUS It -LEVEL

cent ral a•r

will be

~

Be the first to see this immacul a te l y k ept
home featur ing a lovel';' formal L R w tth a
w B tirel ac e, dm•nQ erea , moder n built
'" kttc hen , .4 B R .. 2'12 baths, a ve r y r ust tc
F R with a w .b fireltct , uhllty r m , dou
bl e car garge, gas forced a •r fu rn ace &amp;

and level lot. S29 ,500 .
4 ACRES J bedrooms,
enclosed bath. new natural
gas furnace wtth ' central

"'

Atf r act tve home 1n B td wetl 3
;'t'd room s, n1c e ba th w tth shower . love l y ki tchen, ~te e
: arpe t. la r ge to t Pn ce $22,800. wt ll constder off ers

G OOD

124. Want su,ooo
NEW
LISTING
- 3
bedroom frame tfome Just
oil Rl. 33 near Roc k Spr·
1ngs. NJce kitchen with lots
of cabinets, new gas tur·

THE PROOF IS IN PRO·
DUCTION and lh05 146 A.
operilt1on can produce 600
hogs per ~ear . Includes
several buildings, lots of
teed storage, 54 A. botlomland with 1200 fl . &lt;reek
frontage , ilnd tobacco base.
N1ce 8 room house with 4
8R &amp; cellar completes the
package. S91,000 STROUT
REALTY . 446·0008 .

CALL 446-3643

REALTO~·

Q.

NO AVE - For conve ntent tn tow n l •v tn g, look
s older bnck home, has .4 bedr oom , P . baths,
1 1 room , f am tly room . r oom for beau ty shop, l ar ge
age Oullrt•ng Al l or $34,900

-. ·

water and extra lot on Rt.

Real Estate for Sale

13 .. baths, ce ntra l a1 r cond i t1on, famtl y r oom wtth bn ck

.

216 E . -ond Slreet

I' 2 ba ths , bas e m e nt, 2 car

~

...-·

.

9f2·im

FOR SAL£
BY OWNER
3 BD BRICK

This ad

[B. 446-6610

•VIRGILI . SR .. , , ~~~

0

M~GKEE

1218 EASTERN AVE. • GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

23 LOCUST STREET

Heal I::etate fur Sale

."Thank you for listing with 'Bud' McGhee Realty" ,.Thank you

Keall!:.tate for :;ale

&amp;all!:etale fur Sale

•

WITHIN WALKING
DISTANCE OF SCHOOLS
Crt y properl y, 2 stor y, 4
bedroom s, ga s hea t Very
r easonab ly prtce d 1
N 149
BARGAIN OF THE YEAR
Modern home , 7 roo m s,
ba th , I story house only 1·
yr old , al so has full t m1sh
ed basem ent , moder n k tt
chen, D R., forma l L R
w1th f trept ace. F R.• ut tlt t y
rm , work shop, &amp; study
Pat1 o,
r ose
garde n ,
beaul 1f ul shrubber y , good
garden
ng over all
to
an ac r e ot

89ACRES
CLAY TOWNSHIP
House, 2 bar ns, tobacco
base , ver y scen1 c ar ea, 2
be autiful lakes, st ocked
wtth f 1S h Excellent l or
fr shin g, boa ttng or hunf tng
Justg oodlt v tn g
ft 161
BEEF FARM
118 acr es. ov er 40 acres
l e ~o e l t il la ble land, the r est
IS pa!. ture and wo odlil nd
Tobacco base . 6 r oom
house, good ba r n, oth er
outl!lut ldmg s. Sell tn g bel ow
today 's mar kel
N 106

52 ACRESU9,500
Located off Sf Rl 325,
Pe rr y Tw p , 52 acr es
Tillable land, pas tur e and
som e wooded area M odern
6 room house and barn
over 800 lbs tobacc o base
Gallipo/t s (t ty Sch ool D •s t
PR IC EO TOSE L L '
N144
95 ACRE FARM

ANOHOME
Just l tsted lht s nice farm
located in Morgan Twp .
w tth 4 yr . old m ilk ing
parlor ,
18 'x 42'
ba r n ,
138'x60' corn cn b, ch tck en
house, cellar house &amp; toft ,
plu s other bldg s . 3 ponds .
All mr neral n ghts go.'
Modern 8 roo m far m house .
Hom e ha s new si dtng M or
tgage can be assum ed t or
r 1ght party
~ 205

ONE OF
MIDDLEPOR T'S
FINE HOME S
3400 so It ol exquts 1te liv
tnQ. t ul l y ca r pe ted, hugr
stone 11re pl ce, 5 bedrooms,
21 7 ba ths Al so a t ul l y
carpeted l st il oor ap art
mc nt r ents a t 150 00
# 174
SOUTHE R N HILLS
SPE C IAL PR ICE O LOW
6 r ooms, fu ll t)i'ISem ent lg
ga r den area , good storag('
bldg R l 1d1, IU St oul of Ct ly
lr m• ts - shou ld sell fa st
Wor th every penny
$25.000
1 128
LOVEL Y R A NCH
SHOWN BY
APPOINTMENT
Be the hr sf 'to see lh ts very
well cons tru cted I10ml'
Fea t u re5 3 beorooms, L R ,
drn tng ar ea, very morJe rn
bUtll 1n k rtc tl en, ba th , lull
bas ement f m tshed , super
nJCe work shop Th rs hom e
IS well kep t and very n• cely
decor ated and pa perpct
Loca ted 1n Syr ac use # 186
RANCH 4 BE DROOM S
Sp,.lce abound &lt;;, rn t h rs
1
r oomy horr.C'
7
w b
f rf c pl ac5
l u ll !1 nr shr-U
b,,se m ent . ooul:- l e Ci"l r
g,uaq e
wlfh
elec l r~c
opr ncr S1110n(l on a good
Stle lot 1oc.1tC&lt;' oil t r am St
1-&lt;: t 160 ( 1ty '::.C: IIOOI Or st
Sl1own by ti1JPOin1m ~J I ' 1
C c1 11 for mor e &lt;!C' I all 51 11 132
CON VENIENT P LAC E
Ow ner IS leav•ng sta te and
needs to move t h1 s all br•clo;
home loca ted oH St Rt 35
1n Pleasa nt Valley Eslates
3 B R , 11 1 ba t11s, modern
but lt 1n k•t c hen
lr v1ng
room . gas heat, centr al &lt;Ji r ,
doubl e car garage Can l&gt;e
seen anyh ttm e Check th rs
one out 1
112 14
RIVER FROi'JTAG E
Stor y and halt house , 5 r m ,
bath , 2 ex tr a stofage r oom s
upsta1r s, full basemen ! ,
gas fur nace House need s
some reparr Shrubbery,
tr ees , ver y scentc a r ea,
close to town 2 acr es plus
or m tnus, ex tr c1 lot Pr tcc d
1o se ll $22. 500
n1o

STOR Y AND 1 2
WOOOEO LOT
Super location , St Rt , 35
Th ts c har m1ng older ..horn e
1S st tt 1ng on 7 acre among
several large snaoe rr ees
Ho me featu res L R , F . R ,
fo r m a l
d tn tng
r oom ,
modern bull! •n ktf chc n.
ut rll ty r oom , 3 bedroom s,
gas forced a•r heat Be the
ftr sl to see th ts ch arm ing
hO me Won ' t l ast long 1
Shown by appt an i\' I N180
1

TWO BEDROOM HOM E
Pr tced low tor rmmed1c1fe
sa te Nrce garden space,
good loc ahon , ci t y water ,
sew er , basement Owne-r
wil t help f1na nce qua ltf ied
buyer •
N 109

CENTURY 21

ACANT lANL
8JACRESOF
1/ACANT LAND
L oc ated •n Oh1 0 Twp Has
been farm ed a few yea rs
ago. Marketa ble t1 mber
and good water supply
If
2

I

8

CALL NOW
42 acr es, untouc hed ar
$10,900
N 213
LOT IN THURMAN
B arn , sept i c t ank, rur al
w ater ava tt ab le
•1 89

33 ACRE FARM
4 rm house, 12'xSO' mobile

hom e, 2 drilled wells,
stocked farm pond Most of
the land lays well , could be
used many way s E xtra
mobile hom e hookup and
sept ic tank on anoth er good
location . Racc QOn Twp .
N170

\1 ACA NT LAN 0
22 ac r es, 10 till abl e, 11
pastur e, older bar n, 1300 lb .
, toba cco base ., pl en ty
wate r S11.500.
N101

"OACRE BEEF
CATTLE FARM
Cattle pr tces are lOOk ing
up . Lots ot pasture, plenty
water , some good timber .
Owner says sell now.· # 141

INVESTMENT
PROPERTY
27 acres , rural water ,
blacktop r oad , cl ose 1o
Gallipolis One of 1ts kind
left . Priced r ight
/1 103

'

ACREAGE
acres on black top r oad.
H alf of area or more IS
wood lot Hannan Tra ce
School Dtst Ca ll now N Ill
Si~

''We're The NeiJhborhOOd Professionals"
~·.

�•

[}.1- The Sunday Times-&amp;ntincl.Sw1dav . Scut. IO. I978

BUsinessman just pawn

Beat••.

Of the Bend

By (;ALE WILEY
FRANKFURT, West
Germany ( UPII - American
bu sinessman
F.
Jay
Crawford, in West Genpany
briefly today with his fiancee ,
insists he was only a pawn the
Russ ians played to win
release of two suspected
Soviet spies from a New
Jersey jail. .
Crawford and his American
fian cee, Miss Virginia
"Ginny" Olbrish, were to fly
to Chicago today aboard
Lufthansa flight 430. He will
report to company directors,
th entakeafewdays leave; he
·d
sal '
Crawford said he and Miss
Olbrish , unable to marry in
Moscow Aug. 19 as they had
planned, will be married by a

By Bob Hoeflich
IF YOU have any questions you'd like to direct to U. S.
SeDBtor Howard M. Metzenbaum you'll ha••e a chance to voice
them &lt;I! Wednesday.
The mobile office of Sen. Melrenbaum will be on the upper
parking lot between Lvnn ap~ Svcamore.Sis., Pomeroy , from
1:30 to 4:30pm. Wednesday. Staffer John Ma~mard will he
happy to answer any questions. The purpose of the mobile
office is to provide district office servi ces to areas of the state
that are long distance from offices of th e senator.

I UNDERSTAND attendance allhe Meigs Athletic Booster
meetings runs about six or eight persons for each sesion - Not
a very good turnout considering the big crowd of athletic
boosters turning out faithfully for the Friday night football
games and the nwnber of youngsters involved in the sports
program. I understand the Boosters meetings are not being
announced as effectively as they should be so that many
parents and patrons of the school don 't know when meetings
are held.
·
. I'm hoping that you will be well advised prior to each
meeting. A good boosters club can really accomplish a lot not
to mention the morale' building influence on the teams.

,justice o( lt]e. peare In tliO
United .States.
Crawford . was eonvicted
Thur sday
of
' black
marketeering dollars for
rubles and received a fiveyear suspended priso~ .
sentence and three years
· probation.
•
The Tass news agency
reported Crawford had been
expelled for his conviction,
but
the
International
Harvester salesman . denied
it.
"I was not expelled from
the Soviet Unidn," Crawford
said. "I asked for my e!dt
visa and I got it."
"I would l'k
I e to come
b3ck " he said. "I would not
like I~ think that I am barred
fr om the soviet Union .
There's no indication on my

NEW GALILEE, Pa. (UP! ) treatment for a finger InJUry.
- A state police command
Hudson ts wante~ on esc~pe
po st in north e rn Beaver charges in.both •1ales and·an
County Saturday directed anned robbery charge tn
a bout 15 state troopers using Ohio.
bloodhounds in a search for
The search was centered in
murder suspect Bert Lee nort hern Beaver Cowtty after
Hud so n, 23 , wanted on Hudson was reportedly seen
criminal charges in Penn- purchasing some food and
sy lvania and Ohio.
ca ndy at the Millgate Hotel in
A spokesman for the Beaver Falls Thursday night.
cummand post near New
A native of West Mayfield,
Ga lilee, wher e Hudson is near Beaver Falls, Hudson
wanted for questioning in the was sought for questioning in
.shooting death of a local man the shooting death of William
and the wounding of his son,
said th e last con firm ed
s1ghtin g of Huds on was
Th ur~day night at a tavern in
Beaver Fa. lls.
..
CLEVELAN D (UP! ) The spokesman sa1d state After months of often-bitter
troopers from va riou s wrangling , Cleveland Mayor
st ations we re co nducti ng Dennis Kucinich and City
consta nt s urve illan ce of Coun cil President George
roa_ds in the area , while in- Forbes have achieved a
vestigators checked reports compromise that will keep
of unconfirmed sig htings . Republic Steel's proposed $10
Ohio authorities have also million iron ore unloading
been alert ed since the area. is- dock in Cleveland.
only a few miles from the
Republic . executives had
border .
warned they were preparing
Hudson es ca ped from to build the facility elsewhere
Rockview Slate Correctional unless the healed dispute
lnsi itution at Be ll efonte , with the city came to an end.
Centre Count y, in early Alternative sites mentioned
Au gust. He went on a for the dock included Lorain
weekend furlough and fa1led and Ashtabula.
to return . He was serving 5-10
The dock proposal had
years [or the armed robbery become a major issue this
of a Chippewa Township summer during the un·
resident in November 1974 . success ful drive to oust
He la t e r surfaced in Kucinich from office, witjt.4he
Springfield, Ohio, where he young. mayor terming the
was arrested and jailed, but plan a ''rip-off of the tax·
then escaped Aug. 25 [rom a payers."
hpspital while unde rgoi ng
Republic is one of the

OON'T know if you are aware of it or not , but Doris and
Benny Ewing visited in Europe for several weeks this
summer. While there, they bought authentic German
costwnes for themselves and their children, Beth , Kim and
Ben.
Hope you have a chance to see all of the family together in
the outfits sometime. Thai's ~ great family too, by the way.
THERE is a strong movement underway for the
establishment of a Christian school in Meigs County.
However, facililles for tlle school are. needed . These could
be a church with classrooms, a public building of some
description , a Masonic building - whatever.
If you have a facility which you feel could be satisfactory
for Ule operation of such a schoo l - whi ch you would he willing
to rent - do ca11992-7760 or 742-2442 pronto .

past months. The doc.tors repor t satisfactory progress .

BEAUTIF UL Pin e Grove will he the scene of the annual
Harvest Fesllva l of St. John Lutheran Chur ch people
beginning with a church servi ce at llthis morning . A basket
dinner will be held at noon and at 1:30 p.m. the Gospel Tones of
the Chester area will entertain .
IT IS estimated there are still a couple of th ousand Meigs

County voters who have not registered. Registrat ion is
required by law and you must do so to vote at the Nov. 7
elections . Contact the board ·of elections office in Pomeroy it
you haven't regist ered . They'll be glad to tell you how to go
about it.
A NEW histor y of Meigs County planned by the Meigs
County Pioneer and Historica l Society is apparently going to
be all about people.
·
Every family in Meigs County - some 7,000 - will be
given an invitation to write a 500 word article about their
family for the book and they will be permitted the use of one
picture.
The society hopes to sell everyone submitting articles a
book but purchase is not necessary for getting your family into
the book. Incidentally. only the number of books ordered will
be published so there'll - at this point - be no chance in
holding out to buy one later since none will be available later .
You should be receiving word about the project in the mails
about the end of September . It all sounds like quite an

Crawford denied any guilt
and said he was convicted so
the Russians could trade him
for the release of two Soviet
citizens awaiting trial oo
espionage
ch11rges
in
Woodbridge, N.J .
Soviet police snatched
Crawford from his 1977 Volvo
statioo wagon on a Moscow
street the evening of June 12
and held him for 15 days
before releasing him into the
custody of IJ .s ..Ambassador
Malcolm Toon.
In
a
reciprocal
arrangement , the
two
Russians
arrested
in
Woodbridge the previous
month and held in lieu a $2
miUion bond, were released
into the custody of Soviet

Phillips, 48, New Galilee,
Beaver County .
Phillips was shot and
killed , and his son, William
Phillips Jr., 21, was wounded
se riously by a ma sked
gunman who entered the
Phillips' home early Wed·
nesday.
The
gunman
was
struggling with the younger
Phillips when the fath er

problem right now. It 's sinus. they say, and I don 't know who
" they " is exactly . Keep smiling anyway.

RECORD SET
CLEVELAND (UP! ) - A
record hig h t.emperature of 94
degrees for a Sept. 8 was set
at 3: 15 p.m. Friday in
Cleve land , breakin g the
pre\Oous record of 93degrees,
set in 1 ~59 , according to the
National W.ea th er Service .

Bus!!l L'!-&gt;S 111 the r_ iep&lt;Htment
s l ur'l·s IS booming this yea r .
Sal es CIIT ru nn ing a bout 12
pcrt'erlt ahe.ad of 1977, will1
must uf the rist:: dut: tu hiJ..(Iwr
volume rather thc111 infl a tinn
Til~ cxceptit'lleil pc rfon na nce
th is yea r ca n pro ba bly bc attribull!d lo th~ hcttvy snows
la)'i t wi nter . accunli ng to a
The Ne:t tional Shrine uf the
Conference Bo1:1nl ana lysis .
In lltid wt::a lher , conMuncn:i l m mt~ l'U latl· Cu nc ~ pt i un in
are indi ne{] tu make as me-m y Wa~lll n g tvn . D.C.. i.s the
purchase:-; a s pos.,;,; i iJ I ~ under l;Jrgt•s l Ct:1lholic churd1in tile
Unitell Sl&lt;tlcs.
oue rui ,r.

.. . . . . · e.. a.•••······· . . \

~al:

'£state:•

Today :
By

I

•

INTERIOR SEWNG TIPS

•
•
•

1
•

••
•

Rem embe r - when you
ar e showi ng th e Insi de of
your ho me. to a prospective
e buyer , firs t lm presslons
e are last ing and ha&gt;Je an
• i m por t ant ef f ect on a
potentia l sale .
I
A clean , well -kept hor'n e
• show s a home t hat has ha d
• good care and ha s bee n
• pr o perl y m a i nta i;1 ed .
e Repa int t he interi or if it
needs it, but use neutral
• color s, if possi ble. An at • tra c t i&gt;Je , c o mf o rtab le
• li ving room is a maj or
• attract ion , bu t a spark ling
k itchen wi ll appeal to t he
• lady of the ho use. It's th e
4 hea r t of any home , so keep

Bed r oom s are impor tant
_ arran ge th ei r f u r
nishi ngs neat l y . Sh i ny ,
clea n windows not on l y are
a grea t a sset, b ut l et
sunlig ht in and br ighte n the
ent ire atmospher e. Clean
out t he clut t e r in the
close ts , basemen t , and
garage. Ap d, i f you ha\le
pet s, cle ar them ou t too
when show ing .

Women are al so sensitive
• •bout ba thr oo m s ; k eep
II them clean and order! Y·

ESTATE , sn Second Ave., e
Gallipolis. Phone 446-7499 . e
We're here to help.
•

\!

e I! spotless . No dirty dishes .

•
•
•
•
•

e

•

•
•
•
•
•
•
•

If there is anything we •
1
.. an do to help you in. th e •
field lo f r ea l estate please e
phone or drop in at e

LEADI NGHAM

REAL e

•
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
v

HAMMOND, Ind. (UP! ) Four people, including three
children, were killed and five
others were hospitalized
Fnday in a house fire
investigators said would not
have been so devasta ting had
it occured a ni ght later.
Had tlle fire broken out one
night later, the vicr.ms would
have had newly insta lled
smoke detectors and mig ht
have been spared, an aide to
the chief inspector for the city
fire department said.
Killed were Cindy Bowen,
27, and her children, Michael,
8, Christine , 9, and Heidi. 6.
Four other occupants of the
house were burned severely.
Fi refig hter Fred Rodriguez
was hospi talized in fair
condit io n with
smoke
inhalation .
Listed in cTitical condition
was Jean Ann Smyth, 20, who
was sent to the Cook County
Hospital burns unit in
Chicago, authorities said .
Helen Smith , 48, and her
son. Da• id, 18, were treated
for in juries and released .
Maynard D. Smyth, 57, was
listed in fair condition after
mrgery .

Maynard and Helen are the
parents of lhe younger
Smyths and Mrs. Bowen.
Hanunond fire prevention
Capt . ' Leo Sartiris said all
eight persons in the large ·
home on tlle city's south side
were sleepin~ when the fire
broke out. The blaze apparently burned for some
time before being discovered,
he said.
Ironically, the house was
being rewired and the job
would ha ve tncluded in·
stallation of smoke detectors,
said Chief Inspector W.ebb
Lohse of the Hammond Fire
Department.
'"llley were just one day
late,'' he said.
The cause of the fire was
not determined. Lohse said it
might have been electrical,
because · there were three
extension cords plugged into
one socket.

The stale's newest and
most sophisticated nursing
facility-the Pleuant Valley
Nursing Care Unit was
dedicated Sunday and was
slated to be opened for
business today .
Dr. George E. Pickett,
director of the W.Va.
Department of Health, gave
the dedication address and
afterwards cut the ribbon to
the new facility .
While this took place on
Sunday, Gov. Jay Rockefeller
showed up Saturday for
what was billed as a sneak
preview of th~ facility and
took a tour.
Sev.eral hundred people
turned out for Sunday's ~vent
in 90 dsegree plu s lem·
peratures. The 1(J().bed xshaped facility is the only one
of its ktnd tn the stale that
meets all necessary federal
requirements.
Board of Trustee member

•
RICHARD L ROUSH

Temple, Charleston ;
and financial · chairman,
GaWpolle Christian Churcb.
Roush Ia inarrled and has
one daughter. They will be
moving .to Huntington in the
near future.

Shrine

,.,

and fired, killing the father.
Less than 24 hours later, a

the National Abortion Kights
Action League, the Akron
Pro-clloice Coalition and Zero
PoPulation Growth.
The Akron ordinance
requires parental conaent
aimed at teenagers under 15
seeking an abortion and
parental notification for
women under 18.

OTTAWA LAKE, Mich.
· (UPI) - Police said a 48year-old rrian was killed and
four other persons injured
late Friday in a two-car crash
in
Monroe
County's
Whiteford Township.
Authorities identified the
victim as Lyle Kohler of
Ottawa Lake, the driver of
one of th~ two vehicles.
The driver of the second
car. David Goodhead, 21 , of
Euclid, Ohio, and his three
passengers were taken lo a
BIG WORRY
Toledo,
Ohio, hospital. for
WASHINGTON (UPI)
treatment
of undetennlned
Deeply worried about in·
injuries.
flation , Americans feel they
are worse off today than they
were five years ago and they
A 35().pnund sturgeon yields
believe things are likely to go 55 pounds of ca vi• r, and a
downhill in the next five ·2,68().pound ·fish once provid·
years, according to an l'll more than 350 pounds. But
opini on
poll
released it takes 18to 20 years before a
Saturday by the Labor Beluga sturgeon matures and
Department ,
~p.:t wns .
~

i

78 BUICKS &amp; PONTIACS

Be~ in

Nicaragua clUes.
(UP!) ~ Nicaragua today
"The National Guard
wu 1D a alate ol full«llle maintains cunlrol ani order
dvll ,..., wj_lll the city of •
• o1 the republic," Col.
y ' 1• l!l--......
Annda, the Guard'•
·,• ....,. fiiiiiiJir1JI"''l'tl'f111'' ·
ft!IIIIIIIW clitef llidd in·'
8lld troope backed by tanka his latest corn~unlque
flahllnl IUerrlllas for &amp;mday. He pralaed all ol the
p · dlll of every blodl in members of the Central
Leon.
American 'natloo's 8,10Q.rnan
The 'mounlinl death toll U.S.-tralned army ''ftr their
reporledly w11 In the high morllle and efficiency tn
the mlsalooa accompllahed."
Delplte 1ovemment claims
However, heavy arms fire
to the contrary, the 2-day-old' Oared again in Managua
offenaive
by
Mardst &amp;mday night, ani gun battles
SandiDllla perrl1lu trying were reported in progreas
to gift the 1otta1na recJme:of early today In at lout three
Prelldent Anlltalllo Somciu locaUona in the capital.
a final puah continued
One pollee aource said two
unabated on aeverlll franta in Guardsmen and three
the capital and In provincial

-•¢

ELBERFELD$

r

PLAYTEx--

,I

~)

\

(

)

I

y -.:.
: J~·

t

&amp;;:~
~

Tlte World Today

..

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worked to lreep Norfollt and Western 1181Iway operalinl
allll:e railroad clerks went on strike July 10 have received
bonwt c:becb tQ\IIIIng more than $U m!Woa.
The rallroid Ia paylnc interim boou.a of $2,000 to

Rillciil
19.95
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Sole ~s OctoQer 7.1978

•on aole lor Ill• nrat tim• ever
two

ELBERFELD$ IN POM

y

r

program "Meet the Press," quoted a "pretty good source" as
saytng the negotia!Alr~ have made little or no substantial
progress.
In the first official glimpse of the meeting, White House
press aide Jody Powell, who has been designated official
spokesman for the conference, said "progress ·seems to have
been made, but problems remain in important areas."
The Gettysburg lour was the first time aU three leaders have
emerged from the heavily guarded presidential retreat since
Uleir arrivals last Monday and Tuesday.
The Egyptian and Israeli leaders and their delegations made
an elaborate show of multial friendliness. But although they
waved to the reporters, the officials gave no hint of the state of

tlle negotiations.
However, conference sources said the talks have homed in
on tbe two issues that have proved to be insurmountaWe
obstacles in past negotiations :
-The extent and timing of the Israeli withdrawal from the
occupied West Bank and Gaza strip.
-How to deal with the Palestinian problem in a manner that •
will satisfy the Israeli need for security and the Palestinian
demand I or a sovereign bumeland.
Officials said the conference has no deadline, but participants are expected to reach a conclusion, one way ~r the other ,
by late Tuesday or Wednesday.

17 die .i n
Ohio traffic
At least

17 people were

killed in tralllc accidents

J;-lane checked for damage

To'f::'~~Hac:,en::e~

Wants spacecraft developed
OOLUMBUS, Oblo (UPI) - Alahl Shlrnlut, a Tokyo
lllltllll'l Columbua t.borlt.orlel. to develop and carryout
all aan' a apacmtl, an experiment ltllle.led by one ol the

POR'I'LAND, Ore. (UPIJ - A Ncwlb;oflll Orient A1rUnea . =~on Ohio 2in
00.11 I'M Into a flock of auplll Ill tlbol amday, and the
Belief~· Gtl'bard H
piWIIIw tad Ill lbealrpcrt to c:bldtl«~. ·
"LeuiWI Jr
G1we City.
0111-auD - t thnlulb ID IIIIIM,IIIlllnolller atruck I ,..... bll ~ cnaheci
1.w • Jfllll'llrot.Nomajctrtlalnaa-WUdllcotaiddlerthe 00
13 in IApD Qlunty
Jtdl relunlld to Priln4 Jatnatltinll Airport, and It ~, William Ray ~
mila lrtp to Ha-polll, lllml.
a,Urna,...-bltbyacaru
be waiUd 011 • city lllnet.

u.s

III'ICII•••
r.ter dedicates project

SalueJ

=

, Akron:

Mlcbul

~- ClOUJMBIJI(UPl)-FlnUIIICirllrlltobelpclidkalll ~· 1:. U.U=
.al I iiiiJ4 led, t1J mW!m rttltl;:' tpr•nt pn)ed ....... , . aft 1
.ne":-1a Akron
1illtllll tf .. CUital OlJ - ' IIA. IIIJ.
IIIII Ill\ 1 1Ne
.
·
~dille fa N•.,.... rw 1 fwtt4 r II llllldiJ IIIII

11111UDumuttlltiiLV_,._CIIIIIIctilJ'IMar ' Jllllnue:lleftnC.Treat,
1CGI!tinu_ed!111PIIt10J

•lldlllrllllrtllbciii&lt;UI!inl'* • : 1111w 11

i

..

streamed out of the city &lt;I!
fool , carrying pathetic
bundles of clothes, or in cars
adorned with makeshift white
Digs made of bedsheets,
uncle rlh'lr Is · and
bandkerchiefa.
A Red Cross ambulance
driver whose vehicle was shot
up by a NaUonal Guard tank
said gunfire was !KI heavy it
was impoasible to evacuate
tlle wounded. Asked bow
many deaths there had been,
he replied, "Too many."
The Sandlnlstas claimed to
have scored galna against
govenunent ferces in at last
eight cities since guerrilla
bands throughout the natioo
opened
lighting
swnultaneously at 6 p.m.
Saturday., '

check two
accidents
Meigs

••w••al'ilclera.
,
·
The aperlment wW be lncladecl Ia a BltteiJe.deveiGped
Qlll' ~ payload to be nown oo tile u. s. Nallooal
.Mranaullca and Space AdrnlnlltratiCII'I lljiiiCe shuttle,

employ111 who have been worJdnc lOIII hours, principally
tnriY from home; $1,000 to lboee who have worlred hours
•.W.nllally in aceu of thole IICtl'lllllly requlrtd and • tAl
aD athera, NI:W apokeaman Lou Pbelpe said Saturday.

e

~:

Deputies

in Leon. "Eight masked
guerrillas, &lt;l!e of them a girl
who couldn't have been mtre
than 13 years old, came by

a

5.95
2 tor tOM
MOlt 2 tor 9.10tt

here asking everyone to give
them their pistols."
A National Guard tank was
reported destroyect in Leoo,
but another tank was
atfackintl' a unl~er•lty
science building there alter
dark.
Masaya, Nicaragua 's
fourthlargest city located
about 15 miles east of
Managua, was engulfed by
fires thai burned out of
control
today
amid
cootinuing heavy anns fire.
Residents frantically

$ ;;~;

around Ohio during the
weekend, the Ohio Hichway
Palrol reported today.
Among the vlctlma, who
died in 1bccldenta, were five
rnot.orcycllstl and two pedeatria111.
Also Included in the fatality
count were three Mlamlaburg
residents who Ioet their lives
In two-car crash on a
Mmt&amp;omery County Friday
evening .
The Patrol counts traffic
fataliUfll filch noo.iJoUday
weekend,!rom 8 p.m. Friday
until mltight &amp;mday.
Killed were:
Stulllay

ww 5 P"' with a cirallaUCII of II miiUon, 11M contacted with

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Crou Your Heart Soft Slder•lras .
(or the same stv1e)

Rush In now for great savings during our Playtex
"Combined suggested price d
tXJ..-XXL S1.55 more
ltD Cup 51.00 more
tt t J&lt;L s1.00 more

•ve

ROANOKE, Va. (UPI) - Supervbory employees who

$1.000ffon
Support Con Be Beautiful ®Bras

for a smoofh. nafl.xalloak \Slder pails.
12714/ 15

Supervisors now striking
~

Sandinlstas had died in a
fresh battle, and Sardlnlata
guerrillas were shooting at
troope from treetops. The
_,..,., uld thin wu an
order to ldl1 the Sanl!niatas
"until the last man."
The Guard claimed government troops retook Leon,
Nicaragua's second-largest
city, at 2 p.m. Sunday, but
witnesses said there had been
&lt;l!ly a truce between 3 pm.
and 4 pm. to allow people to
get fresh food supplies into
tlle blacked-&lt;Jut city 50 miles
west of Managua.
Foreign visitors said Uley
counted at least eight bodies
from gun batUes in the
afternoon at the only hoapital
still operating. At 7 pm.,

~:~~ricano0~ewspa~~

Thla Portage County
t'm!mnntty of 1t,OOO, dry for about :14 hours during the
weekend, has Ita water back today. Residents SIDiay were
told to boll nllr before drinking it after aervlce wu restored
late Saturday ,qht.
A •)'W'-dd water main brolte Friday night, leaving the
t'm!II!!!Dity with llWe water. Repair vren werked fer nearly
M houri lnltallbW a new Jerwth ct pipe belore getting preaure
reetored late Saturday night.

Money Back GuaranteerromPiaytex•

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 29, No. 103

the Guard Ia on the other

Water restored at Ravenna

~;J ~~

Upto$Soo0ff

than with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, indicating the
major decisioos still to be made on a compromise will have to .
come from the Israeli, rather than the Egyptian, side.
As the leaders and their aides loured the Civil War battle·
fields in nearby Pennsylvania Sunday, Israeli Defense Minister Ezer Weizman !Did reporters, ''we need another two or
three mere daya for things to crystalize."
Begin, also on the tour, told a reporter, "as you can see, it is
going well," but it was not clear from the brief eKchange
whether he was talking about the negotiations or his personal
relationship with Sadal, which appeared to be cordial and
friendly.
Sen. Henry Jackson, D. Wash. , interviewed on the NBCTV

block," said Alonao Abaunza,

•

RAVENNA, Ohio (UP!) -

'

en tine

Nicaragua
has
full-scale
civil
war
..
MANAGUA,

READY. TO GO

Hyer, James J. Hall, R.G. beds ."
Greene, Carroll Casto, Dr.
Since 19'11, iliggs pointed
Jack Buxton, Charles Lanah· out, the hospital e~panded
m, Harry Miller, Vitus again , which included a new
Hartley Jr., Dorsel Keefer, 40-bed tower and 10 doctors
T.R. _Friar, Jack Fruth and · offices.
James Farley, who is also
" This summer five doctors
executive director of PVH. have been added to our
In reviewing the history of staff," he said.
the hospital, Biggs said: " It
Also speaking was Farley,
really opened on a shoestring who praised his staff in·
and I have been told many eluding assistant executive
times that the department directors Mike Sellards and
heads were asked not to cash Gary P•rk, for the success
their checks for a while. PVH has had. Sellards will be
Anyhow, the doors stayed in charge of lhe new facility .
open."
Qthers to speak included :
He said the hospital began Mason County Commissioner
with 40 beds and later ex· William Rardin, James
panded its facilities to include Facemire, director of Far·
40 more beds in 1966.
mers Home Administration;
"The project was com- Charles Lanham, who
pleted .in 1966 and opened in represented local banking
1967 wben the Silver Bridge institutions that ·helped to
fell and we were ready to finance lhe project; Dr .
care for our people in West l!i chard Slack, w[10 is chief of
Virginia. Tbe 40-bed long sta ff at PVH ; and reverends
term care unit was QUickly Tally Hannan and Raymond
conve rted to acute care Jablinske.

I

praldentlal retreat.
Carter now has met more frequently ani longer witll

·'lN STCiCK

at y

JaCk Burdett served as the
master of · ceremonies and
during his speech he cited
Gladys DeVault of Point
Pleasant for her efforis in
trying to establish a senior
citizens center here.
Among. the other speakers
was Bruce Carter of tbe
W.Va. Hospital Association,
who told the audience that in
the last year five general
short ·term hospitals in West
Virginia closed because of
lack
of
effective
management .
· In contrast, he and several
of the other speakers cited
PVH's effective leadership
which ha s witnessed several
major expansion projects
since its establishment in
1959.
Given major credit for this
wa$ the Board of Trustee by
its president G.A. Biggs.
They include : Jack Burdett,
William Knight, Cha rles

I Negotiations nearing 'make-or-break point
CAMP DAVID, Mel. (UPI) - The Camp David swnmll
appeared today to be J110Vin8 toward a make-or-break point in
the negoliallooa, with lndlcatlooa that major problema remain
lri the WIY ci any Egyplian-llraell agreement.
Afw a -ltend lull fer real alii refleclloo - and a lour of
lbt I*J'by QeUyaburg baltlelleld - the substantive negolia·
llctna l'1IIWJlld Sunday atlemoon .with a one-llour, flve-mimlte
JDeetlnll between President Carter and Prime MiniJter
MINcbem JleCln and their top advlaen.
~ 1111111, there was no Indication from any side.about tbe
nbject tr result d. the meeting in · the tightly secluded

in accident

l•rgest
employers
111
Qeveland, and leaders of the
drive lo recall Kucinich h•d
charged the mayor was
endangering steel industry
jobs in Qeveland by opposing
the dock. Kucinich and his
supporter~ had argued the
steel company was using lhe
threat of jobs leaving the city
lo force a taxpayer · subsidized deal.

•

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, September 11. 1918

lundrtdl:

Four die
in fire

I KNO W your head hurts. Everyone seems to have that

Dedicate nursing unit

I

Advocates to gather Sunday

ca me in . The assailant turned

ambitiollS pro ject.

Willis ·r . Leadtngnam
Realtor

Richard L. Roush of Point
Amb·assadol'. Analoly Pleuant, has been named
Dobrynin.
adqllnlatratlve a~~nt to the
'' As Mr. (Soviet Fereign Huntington dlvlalon lllllllllller
Mtnister) Gromyko said, our
Po"er
&lt;Soviet) aim and objective of Appalachian
Compmty,
effective
Sept.
I.
was to get the Woodbridge
He rlaea to the J101ltlon from
Two free," Crawford told
reporters. "That was the first that of pubUc affaln coorobjective and they met that - dlnator at the company's
Mountaineer Plalit.
objectlve."
A native of Point Pleaaant,
The State Deparbnent has
insisted since Crawford's Roush holds an associate
arrest it saw no Connection arts degree from Ohio Valley
between the cases. The two College and a B.A. degree in
Russians are still awaiting social psychology from Morris
trial.
HarveY College. He Ia working
International Harvester's toward a M. A. degree at
lawyer, Robert W: Booth, Marshall University. Roush
who flew from Moscow, witll began his career with
Crawford, said he will appeal Appalachian in i974.
the conviction, though . He is a past president of the
"whether ah appeal is of any New Haven Rotary Club; vice
avail is another question." president, Middle Ohio Valley
Industrial Emergency
Planning Council; treaaurer,
Minturn Lodge no. 19 ;
mem!ler, Point Pleasant
Chapter 17, Mlsons ; Franklin
Commandery in
Point
Pleasant;
the
Beni
Kedem
neighbor of the PhiUips',
Jack Fowler, surprised an
intruder in his basement.
Police said the intruder fled
thro ugh a basement window
and Fowler fired shots
through lhe kitchen window.
AKRON, Ohio .fUPI) lbe intruder returned the fire Protestin g Akron's conbefore fleeing, but apparently troversial abortion • control
no one was injured.
ordinance, abortion rights
State police believe there advocates will gather in
may be a link between the Akron Sunday for a statewide
Phillips murder and the in· march and 'rally.
cident at the Fowler home.
The event is being spon·
····- sored
by several groups,
including Free Choice. Ohio.

visa that J carmot return."

Compromise achieved Man killed

Maxine and Reino Lind and Miss Helen Sqllth were at
Universi ty Hospita l in Colwnbus Thursday wh ere Reino
Wlderwent another of a series of eye examina tions over the

~~~

Roush Promoted

•
Bloodhounds pressed into service

SPEAKING of athletics. probably not many people are
aware of the work done b}' Meigs High teachers in preparing
the Pomeroy field for games. In the heal of Thursday evening,
Coach Charles Chancey,. Fenton Taylor and Sam Crow were
hard at it , raking and carting away grass. I'll bet their
cootracts don 't include that little chore.

Ont·S top Shops

j

a.rrp.m.

•

County

Sheriff

James J . Proffitt reports
F.
Full'z,
deputies
investigation two
Pomeroy, reslgaed as ,
accidents over the weekend.
cbalrman of the Meigs
LESLIE

The first accident occurred
Saturday morning when Gene
P. Hood, 20, Middleport, was
traveling east on CR 19
(Peach Fork Rd.) and due to
heavy fog, he did not see a
stop sign. Hood drove his
vehicle across CR 20 (old US
33) striking and knocking
down a section of guardrail.
The vehicle came to rest over
the embankment on property
of Jack King , RD Pomeroy.
The second accident occurred on private property in
Rutland Township where
P.o~ ; ;-t W. Moodlspaugh, 24,
l\1. I Middleport, was
operating a motorcycle on a
dirt track, lost control and
Lows tonight between 65. went over an embankment
and 70. Highs Tuesday in Into a creek. He was transupper 70s or lower 80s. ported to Veterans Memorial
Probability of precipitation lloapltal by prival~ vehicle
50 percent today, 80 percent for treatment. Moodiljlaugh
tonight, 'IQ percent Tuesday. received injurl1!8 to nose,
Ieeth and ankle. There wu
slight damage to .his cycle.
SQUAD RUNS
The
Middleport
Emergency Squad wu called EXTENDED FORECAST
Wedauday· tbroa1b
to the Croaaroada at &amp;:U p.
Friday,
mild tllroaP IH
m. Sunday for Mrs. George
period,
wlta. aeatlered
Hudlon. Mr. and Mra.
lllowen
or
lllaadenloowen
Hudlon were putting up dry
Weda1day ud Tlllll'lday.
waD at their ·horne when a
llecllan fell on Mrs. Hudson. HJPa will. .....e fnlll 'II
She wu taken to Holzer -att to 1$ aealll WecJ.
llllday .... Tllanday, ....
Medical Center.
At 1:11 p.m. Saturday the Ia tile 111 aena tile alate
.. ll'rldlliy, LoWI wiD be Ia
t~~~uad went to the office of Dr.
tile middle Ha t. lbe
JUIIfll Conde for Timothy
Sltlorenllo wbo was taken to mldllle ...
Hollft Medical Center.
Coualy
Republican
ExecuUve Committee at a
meeting beld Friday nllbt
at the Meigs Inn. Foltz
pve advancing a1e and -a
bealtb problem ao tbe
reaaoulor bla reslpatlon.
He has beld the pool for the
put 1t yean. He received
a vote of IUnb and au
ovation for bla aervlce to
the group at lbe Friday
meetlllg. Named to replace
Fultz Ia the potllloo waa
Metca CODDty Commluloo
Richard E. J~oes.

Weather

v

CPL. J . L. FITZWATER of the West Virginia Stale Police views the wreckage of the
third train derailment in Mason County within the past five days . The accident, involving 17
cars of a Chessle System train OC&lt;'UITed early Sunday morning.
I

.Chessie train derails
NEW HAVEN - For the plant at Apple Grove, W. Va.
third Iinne in five days, a
Cause of the derailment is
Cliessie System freight lratn under investigation, he ad·
derailed in Mason. County ded.
over the weekend. Aga in, no
In July , another Chessie
toxic chemicals were spilled train derailed farther up the

track , spilling ca ustic soda.
Residents were evacuated
during the cleanup when cars
carrying vinyl chlorida gas
were moved.
(Continued on page IO )

and no one was injured.

Seventeen cars of the 102·
car train, traveling from
Huntington to Parkersburg,
jumped the tracks about
12:25 a .m . Sunday in heavy
fog near the Mountaineer
Power Plant now under
construction by Appalachian
Power Co.
Only five of the 17 cars
were loaded, but West
Virginia State Pollee closed
U.S. 33 near the tracks when
an empty car that had been
carrying vinyl chloride was
moved in preparation for
placing it on the tracks agatn.
One 'car with Stauffer
Chemical markings leaked
lubrl!=l\lng oll Into a nearby
dralnaae ditch, which was
dOifled. The oil wu to have
been pumped out and bauled
away by tanker truck last
night.
C. N. Jaco, a trainmaster
from the Cheasle Office in
Gralloo, W. Va., said he did
t10t know how much oil the
small · Stauffer car was
hauling.
Three can spilled plallllc
pelleu, which llad ~ cen
loaded onto the train "' the
Goodyear Tire and Rubber

WJLIJAM J . HOBBl'EiiER OO.ved 1111 Urd
annlftraary u lllllllll"r tl. the Rutland Branch ol the
l'om«oy National Bank Friday. Hobltetter lbared 1
cteccnted cake with employes. He Ia alao a vice prealdent
ol Pomeroy NaUooal Bank.

~

'*

\j

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