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ttntJ

· Thoughts
Cordh•l

Gluo- Colll)lr
chier keeper or the
VaUcan Ubrary uDtll his dosth
In 1849, .waJ belleved to be the
moat accoJq:Jitahed llnguiat ever
known. He could translate 114
langtapa and 72 dialects, alkl
spoke 80 la-ges Ouenlly.
M~zotantt,

the

.

tile Rev.

..,.mg;,. ·

MEIGS THEATRE .
TONIGHT &amp; SATURDAY
MARCH 21 - 22
'
BORN WILD

Friendly. Circle
Meets Tuestlay

- TechnicolorTom Nardini
Patty McCormack

KONA COAST
- Technicolor, Richard Boone - Ven Miles

~•1 Ciarlfylng

SUN. - MON.• TUES.
MARCH 23 • 24 • 2l5
(Technicolor)
Joanne Woodward

Estelle Parsons
Colorcartoons:
Chimp &amp; Zee

L:========":!
•

MASON DRIVE-IN
FRI.-SAT .-SUN.
lo\,U, 21-22-23

OUr ldenUt;y -

chOir and the guest ch&lt;Jir lim·
Who Are We as a Church?" ~ erenlng following a prae.
was the .p'Oil'am topic presem.- tlce aeaaloo at the clllrth.
O&lt;l by Mrs. Albert Woodard 10
Both
11ill sing at !be
tile Fr!OIIdl.!' Circle Tuellday night 9Jnd-.r eveninl Lenten aentce
at Trbilt;y United Church or at 7 p.m. at the Trlni\Y Church.
A Illy will be ploced In the
Chrlot.
•rour relatlonahli&gt; to a living sanctuary by the clrele tor the
Gocl and our ldnshtp to .in erea~ Falter service tben. taken to a
tlon, •• as presented as a posi- shut-ln.
tive and joyou11 affirmation of
Carda were signed for F r e d
Rosenbaum, im.PJ"''VIng Crom reGod's movement in _man•a life.
As&amp;lotlnr Mrs. Woodar&lt;l with cent surgery in Florida; D 1 c k
the program were Mrs. Leon- Nease, hospitalized at Tulsa,
ard Jewell, Mios Mary VIrginia Okla., where he is a student
Reibel, MI., Elizabeth F I c k, at Tulsa Unlversl'Q'; Mrs. Glenand Mrs. Thomas YOlDlg. Mrs. roy Ewing, residing at a Pres-

•fholr'

RACHEL, RACHEL

SHOW STARTS 7 P.M. '

Woodard closed her mec:Htatlon

with a hYmn. "The Cross," written by a Christian mon1&lt; durIng the Middle Ages, Mrs. Karl
Kautz accompanied for group
singing and a dla~slion period
was held.

General Hospital, and Mrs. Carl
Sbields and Mra. C h e s t e r

Knight.
Note&amp; ot appreciation w e r e
read from Mrs. William Mat·
lack alld Mrs. Henry Ewing. A

........
--•nafilll

CIIUIR lor DI1.UIII

ALSO CARTOON

OPEN WEEK ENDS
ONLY

Literary Club Topic,
Poetry as Inspiration
De84lrlblng

~

as aii tn.

J.PiraUon to her 1fl1 of IHe, Mrs.

Edith Reed oC Athens IJ)ked on
rllythmlc -lt!cns and quat.
ed favorite poema wllenlhe opcllle
Wednesday afternoon at a 'meetfog or tile Middleport Literary

Club,

.Mrs. Reed, tormerly of Pome~
roy, was lntroGtced to the chb
members by Mrs. Thereon Joltl.

today!

· pg · ElOY_

NATIONAL ·BANK
POMEROY
· SerYine Meies County for
over 97 years
.Member Federal Reserwt System

RUTLAND

Iron Sheets Gn~ ~. il'l,ow (:a••~. In w~lte,,
pastels, and prints. FUll, twt.n, Cll~ln'
and King Sizo Shoots inc,ludod In this
~ole.

1154.

The Gallla Count,y Slerlll'o ~
Friday returned Hll,l'IIIOIICI Fpra former!¥ ol
Maher, W, Va., rrom tbe Ohio Penltentiaey,
where he had subsequentlJ been transferred,
to Golllpollo

Purchase and Sale! .
Womon•

Ex~a.n~

Vinyl _Svodo

Lined Jackets . )·
Sizes 8 to 18

95

...

;',.('

---oss...e

aecond term as sherlft'.
Farra to 'JW'Iered In !he ,.;,. Gollla
Coun\Y Jail but his poot.eonvtclloo bearlnr
WW be held in the courtroom where h.e was
sentenced. Judp Calboon will preside and
tho prosecuting attorney will be Hamlin c.
King.

The Farra atory began at 3:05p.m. March
30, 1954. Cui c. Myers• new cv was parked on Locuat st., in 1rmt ot Edler &amp; MJero
Real Estate. Myera' partner, Q)l, H. B.
Eeker, saw two men jump ln the ear and
dr!YeaWQ,
The state Jllghway I'Btrol, then on Eo&amp;tern Ave., was called. PU. Carl L. Bogs:a
(now Cpl. llo8go) gave chase mrth on Rt.
7. Near the Kaufman farm, Ptl. Bogs fir.

od two lhoto at tile apeodlnr car. He forced
tOO car Into the JUard rail and one insU
.iumt&gt;ed out.

That waa Ra7mOnd B. Burris, Jr., 18,
South WUIIamsoo, Ky. Burris later plead.
ed gutl~ to a chirp oC auto lllelt and was
placed on three years' prd)atlon. l1 was h11

first olfense.
But Farra had been enlanlled before
with the law. 1: was reported that, u a
juvenile, he had served time at the Chillicothe Reformatory for auto theft. Farra
wa011~ about 10 be caught.
Ptl. Boggs chated the speedlnJ car with
Farra at the wheeJ to Kanauga, aerosa the
bridge and throug!J Pl. Pleaaanl. Farra
abandoned the vehiele on Rt. 35, one and
lhree.tonths mlleo eall oll't. Ploooalll. The

Kelly Purchases Plant
"

.

.'

' '·

.•\
.

·~

.,

~:

•

)

'

By ROBERT WINGETT
MIDDLEPORT - The Kelly Maoulae.
turing Company, maker ol Jeep cabo and • ·
Varlet;)' or ether Jeep paris here, has Jllll'·
. ehated and Is occUw!ni the adjacent Iormor
Imperial Eleclrl&lt; Plant building.
Owner Donald Kelly said aequlsitlan or
' the opaclod 36,000 &amp;Qiare ft. atructure on
. Logan st., will parmi! tile Kelly M.u!ufacturfllg Co. 10 precoed with long • range _ . .
lloo pllnl.
Imperial Electric lut year moved from
..• the Lopn st. butldlng to a new, lariJOl' otrue.
ture between Park and Ash sts., also In Middleport, so Ito operation eould be·~
~r--.

\
,~-.

•

Mr: Kelly, who came to Middleport about
1% ,Wi "iD and has been fa3lng ll'OUilllwork to obtain space lor eventual Olq)llloton
lin.. !bat Ume, said blo ftnn aloo recently

ley's "Family rrtenda.''

~ring

lormer Kelly Mallllaclurlng Compaey.
Kelly llanulacturlng, since eomlng 10
Middleport 14 :ear• .,, had operated In a
18,0110 aquare tt. buildillg acron Logan a.
from the 1'1"mer _1!11~ Eleclrlc plant.
Most or Its manutaeturblg, atleast tor 1M
pretent, will be eant!IIIOd In this location.
Work now being dolle by Kelly em:
ployeeo In tile Imperial Eleclrlc building Is
aosembly and crating oC cabo lor freight de·
livery to lranehlted Jeep dealers In all SO
states, Clnada, Europe and Asia. The as..
tembly and crating, until recenlly, had been
done In the Cook Building on North Second
Avs.
Mr. Kelly, oo the subject oC tile com.
puy's Intentions, laid there Ia a uSOOd 1'101·
llbiJIQ"' the firm's Charleston, W, VL plant

in .England,"

., J

INVITED TO
Jehovah' a

Middleport •
Invited to

aeminar ol 17
Waverly, Aprtl

nahan,
churcll, wUI ·

\Ydeleptlon.
'

-

The Charleston plant, whlch. presentl,y
employees some 20 persons, makes an ex.
elusive rree wheeling hub product for tourwheel drive Jeep's.
Kelly said merrer of the two plants In
Middleport would help get production away
from Ito employment being oeallOIIal. Kelly
Manufacturing In Middleport, at the presen~
employees from to to 80 peraons, depend..
lng on tbe Ume of year.
The making oC cabs lor Jeep vehicles,
thr&lt;JU8(1 the primary pl'llWct of tile Middleport operation, Is only one or eight procllcta
that is maautaetured by tbe Kelly ftrm ror
franchised JBeJ) dealers.

llatlch, reethed a check lor t385,000. AI Ill\ 11 lbo .,.,1'.4
Weimer, 0!'1IOf of Gran-Dol Farmo, Loulmlle. .11\•.1!11 fll a. .
middle (llttlllg enougb) Is Jim Colliver, alo aqotlatllr,

Charolais Herd Goes for $365,000
GALWPOLIS- The largeatprlvatetreaty

The sale by Triple EEE of Ita Pure- In 1968 at the Kao111 Clt,y Amarl•ou
:•
Charolals transaction or the CharoWs indus- breds and 15-16's leaves tt with a herd
'
al. The Amerlean Royal, ~:=~~ ,.'
try In hlstory was closed March 10 in eo.. of 7-li'a through i-i blood Charolato with est
Charolal.l!l Show saw Gran.l)el
··~
iumbus, Ohio, when Gran ~ Del Farms, which. owner Emer1011 E. Evans and Man~ the Grand Champloa Charolalo
DONALD KELLY
· :;
Crestwood, K,y., owned by Ed Weimer, pur- ager Lambert Bush will continue in the Sir Sam 126, tor the reeord
tor ·a · · •
ehased lor $365,000 all the Purebred and Charolail business.
domestic Charolais Bull of ..S,~.,_.
15-16 Charolais cattle that comprised the
Gran-Del Farms entered the Charolais
LCR Sir Sam 1%6 was a~ kron
MOSCOW (UPI) - The military newi- natlona.ll)' ramou1 Triple EEE Ranch Charo- business in the ran of 1967, and me of
•
winner
In 1968: Grand Cha"\&gt;itm Bull,
P~~Per Red Star Saturday said Peking was at- lais herd, at G&amp;IUpolis, owned by J tJr&amp;on
their first purchaaee waa the top selling American Royali Grand ChamplonBull,Eaa&amp;.
tempting to'build a military-bureaucratic re- E.. Evans.
animal at the Fall Ohio Valley Charolaia ern Natlonal; Grand Champl.oa Bull, NlttGDrtme completely !ree of Communist parr,y
A total or 142 head wa1 included in the Association 9\ow &amp; Sale for $5,050. It waa al Western, and Grand Champlan Bull, Dlxcontrol.
•.
purchase compoaec:l of some of the most evident from the very beglnnlng that the ie Classic.
The newiPiq)er said the military now prominent bloodlines and individuall!l of the Gran-Del owner, Weimer, and rarm manThe bull battery at Gran-Del lndbeads 24 or the 29 ,provincial "revolutionary Charolats breed. Triple EEE has always ager, Vernon Roberts, tully intended to
LCR
Sir Sam 1%6, the Pure F,...clt Bull
cOftlmittees'' which run the giant nation. 11 0f been known for quality. Its sale 1n 1967 assemble one of the tq&gt; Charolais breed·
Bourdlwx B..25, and jotnlng them from Trip.
the 200 people COft'tlrislrw the ruling ~per
grossed $354,000 to average over $4,400 in lng establishments In dthe Industry. Their le EEE Ranch Is FWT Bor 223, a tq&gt;crust in Pekin&amp; more than l30are mUitary. '' Purebreds and 15-16'&amp;.
First Produed.on Sale Ia pl&amp;Med for the f1 Bar 8 and sire of the National aa.m,.
it claimed.
tall or 1970.
Ion Carcass Steer.
4
Many top and signllicant additions have
The addition of the Triple EEE Hn' ' ••
been made to the beauutul 1,000-acre Gran- makes Gran-Del the lorgoot Charolalo Reio1
I
Del :Farms since their start in 1967. Nadon- In the state or Kentucky and one of !be ~
.,
al attentloo was rocused on GrlliWJel Farms est in the country,

uSnow..

uoa

Christmas Eve," and E z r a
Pound'a "A BaBad ot the GoodIf Fare." To conclude the program, Mra. Reed read a poem
written by her lather to the busband ol a woman who had been a
•tpertect" guest in hl• home.
Meeting at the home oC Mr1,
Rodney Downinr, the members
reoponded to roll call tile
name ol an Amerlean poet, Mrs.
Downing Invited the club membere to be her 1110st1 again at
the Aprll 2 meet1nr when she will
preteM a paper oa Mark Twaln.
F.aoter caney wao Mrved by !be
hoJtess,
.
Guests at tile meettnr
Mra. Ted Reed, Jr., Mrs. ~· ,--d
Davis, Mro. John l&lt;lncald, UlaO"I•
Nellie Zerkle, Mro. J. E. !;I'. HI!'·
tlnpr, Mill Friedl Fulmle,
Mrs. Donald MDlo, Mra. ~lh
A, Bracllury, and Mr1. Hpll
Reed,

!ndl-,

When arralimd altar
r,..-·
pleaded not guUI.J and allied lor Ill 1111111"1'·
The caJe was eond.Naed. A week latlr, ,..,. ..
cballged his pies toguUf1ucheportedb ......
ed his r.tstrta to counsel. HewuUnwq ''r ·;.,.

bouaht another 18,000 square!!. oC landlrom will be moved here and consolidated wltb
Individuals aeroas Broadwar St., west of the the Middleport operatlon.

prealdent. 91e read r r o m
poelo laureate Including Emily
Diekeeoon, Robert Frost, J o h n
Greenleaf Whlttler,preiOJIIecloe.
ledlona trom her OWD eollection
&lt;t favorite poema, • sharedlettel'l wriUeoln poetlclormb¥her
lather.
With emphulo on Amerlean
writers, Mrs. Reed commellted
and quoted from Phyllis McGim·

"A

Ul

Oioole f~om muslin, , per~~lp: , ~nd, ~-.

Court and George fl&gt;man . . . aervlog hla

~.

were included in Mrs. Reed's

5H

Faii\IIJ and fleldi:test
PIUoil oa~es. . ·· : .,

The 8J1)ellate court's oplnloo was that
It did oot illld IU!llclaut evidence In the rec.
ords to warrBDt a c.orielusion that Farra had
lmowlngly and ~lganlly waived bls ,.,..
otltutlooal rights to .....,..!.
Judp Ronald R. Calhoun has oet 9 Lm,
Wednellday April 9 as date lor 1 helrlng
for Farra. The court IJlPIIInled WUilam P.
aJerrtneton u CCMiael for Fura.
The Old French Clt;y w8111't tho oame
Frldoy wllen Farra returned •• It wasonii&gt;.JI
2.. 1954 wh011 he left lor Mansfteld. Ilion'!
tile same Jell, Jud&amp;o, pnioe&lt;utfllg attorney
or llhorll!.
The late William H. J...o wao mun1.
clpal Judie. warreu F. lileeto was In his
llrll term as prosecuting attorney. Judp
lld&gt;ert M. Betz reigned over Common Pleas

·' .'

preoentatlooo and 11111011,11 her fa.
vorttea whlch abe read w e r e

Don't waste another day or dollar on "reviving" that has-been hack! Get one of our
quick-action, all-inclusive bank Auto Loans
tha~nt only will give you a new car to
enjo 'ght now, but also save you money
on e over-all cost ... right now!

BiiiJIIIInt 011 !are of

~­

bound,'' by Whittier, and several
aelection.a by Mlss Dlckml«&lt;.
S.e apake ol Frost's parlin the
.inauguratloo of a president.
Aa a eompari1011 to the worka
ol poets laureate or the pas~
tbe guest apeaker read a tMd·
eai modem poem• .!lie comment~
ed on Jo Webben'"'ark on edu·
cation, and her son, ROOinJOn,
who writes historical novels, one
ol which pertains 10 the coal min·
lng lnduolry ol Athens CouniY.
Several humorous aelectlooa

If your old oar
is too .. spru.ng••
for this spring-

P.m.

By DICK THOMAS
GALLIPOLIS - Nearly 1f yeara "i'&gt;, 1
l~est&lt;&gt;ld Mlni!O Count,y, W.Va., youth waa
...tenced from Gollla CouniY to 1 1..20 :ear
sentence In ManoOeld Reformatory lor auto
lllelt.
Last week the Foor!b District Court oC
AWeais remanded Ute youth•s caae to Gallia
CouniY Common Pleas Court with lnstruc.
tlooa tor the court to determine It tile youth
had knowingly and lnteiUgeotly waived hlo
rllhtl to counsel before sentencing In 11&gt;.J1

byterian home In Columbus; Mrs.
Ara Myers, a patient at Meigs

A hloiDry or the Eaoter teals
and a atory oC the leprlehaun .Uent auetion was planned ror
concluded prosram hour. Mrt. the Aprti meatlng.
Woodard gave each member an
Mrs. Pearl Mora, ~JNsident.
Eaoter bookmark Inscribed with closed the meeting with a poem,
MaUbew 28:20.
"My Easter Wish." Mr1. Elza
Durin&amp; the buaineU meeting GUmore and Mrs. Piul Werner
contributions were made to Mrs. served a dessert course, carey~
Kautz, guild president, lor the lng out the st. Patrick's Doy
auwer to be served the youtb theme in the decorations.

PLUS

Convicted Thief

of Ra-

cine,· pai!Or o1 the Racl"'' imd
Wanljr.,.
lllthiOy Cl\urche,s, ili&gt;ti!WU,.thls ' .· .ji!J';"Ibu~; . to
Ol'dlmtion Ills i&gt;eeo aetlor 7:l0 ,
~ ~rii 9 at the &amp;etne-Chufehl· ·, . ~ Wk .lunch witll pie~ ·
the Rev, Huber of Plea81111 Val· al!d' .teo pro'1!ied .1&gt;¥ the' hoot
ley, wbohas charge ort3churcb.. ' ~reh was held· in. the ~lal
es, and the Rev. Olarles Simon · r~ at noon. Tbe~~~Jolnt
ol the Middleport First llal)tist meetl~~g. waa c~ I'! ol'der 1&gt;¥
Church,
•"
Mr. George:, NOrthtV, m.ocl~rator,
Follooiog his intnxluclion, the•. o! the ·As&amp;OClation,. There. W&amp;S .
Rev. Mr. Simon extended all'.lo.'. rroq~ tlllilrw ol"!lyl')lthLooka
vitatl~n to tHe AssocliUMwcimen Up to Tfi~" and praye-: by the .:
to attem a lellowshlp tea tO be . Rev. David.,~l\'1 "'the Cheohheld at the Mlddl8(l01'1 church on i!'e Cburc~ The Rev. ~Hall,
Aprtl 7 at 7:30
The Relv. . host pa~r, welcomed the assGo
Charlet~ Roadannel/ tomt'ermts- . ~tion D:~embera. The ,.-piP&lt;MUie ·
siorary to indll, w:lll be the ,- was by the Rev•. Mr. G~, lnspeiker.
.
te~bp flllnlste~ at the ;Jackaon
The spring sessio{l was an all- church. \
'· .
day · event' begiming at 10 a.m.
~ was a report; trom the
wben the Women's Missionary board ol. truatees ortbeOhi,o~ ,
Soelet,y and the Men's Brother- tlat State C!&gt;ftventioo 1&gt;¥ t~ Re'l.· •
hood met together ror dev,:Kions Gerald R. Brown. He url8d re:.
by the Rev. Donald Hall before c~ttment•. to . Christ aD:I ingolrv into ln:livtdual sessions. volvement in personal eVingel· ,
Mrs, Gerald. Brown ot Gallla; ism.
pre&amp;ldent, opened the women's
~ill music was pr~aented
meetlng. She announced the W• by theWellstonHigtJSchoolchotr.
men's Conference to be held at Their · selections included "A
Granville, June 1S..2l. Several Migh.ty .rm;uess Is Our G~,".

32 PAGES

~:

1_-'vl ;•,

1\

..

Military Control Peking

Former lmperitJl Pfalll, now tkeupi«l by KeUy Mfg. Co.

4-H Club Advisors of
Gallia, Meigs

Dr. Christensen Given
Appreciation Dinner

Eltlht Maige COOID\Y and .ellht Gallla Collrtj' 4-11 elub advlooro,
a10111 with near11 1,400 Ohio ·4-11 cld&gt; un-o, ware I'OCOI!IIIHII
Thurlday tor their oervt.. u vo1unteor I-ra or Ohio YQith.
The 25th State 4-11 Advlooro Re&lt;OIIIlltlon Lunchal wa1 beld 11
Ute Ob1o Sate Univenlt;y. Award• were prellllted to eaeh ldvf10r,
~ """ years oC aervlee.
Altendlng from Malp Coun\Y were Mrs. William iloWD!e, 10
Year: Mrs. Mary Rose 1110! Mrl. Rose Carr, live year, Eocorttnc
•. !be trrOliP 10 Colwnbul wu Mils Jemtrer Blakealee, a former junior
: Ieeder and ten year f-11 club ma-r,
.
.
·
·!·
Attentllng from GoUla Cottnlr 10 reeelva lllo 10 year reeornldoa
· ware Mr1. Ha.Ye• D~. Mrs, John Payne and Fo- Lewto. Recelvfllg r""'tPtit!cn lor Rve yearo service ware Mre. Lawrenee Allor&amp;,
lira. George UOoclr, Mrs. KatiiiUrlaoon, Mro. ilalphNtedolllld Mrl.
Andnw Toler. Eaeb advloor ·reeelved a eertlfteala and a pin, The
'!drilor• ware acCQIIljllll!ed to Columbuo ~ Jock Friend, Count,y
Extension Arent, 4-IL
Other 4-H advlaoro In Gollla CclwJt,y w11o were lnvtled to !he
l111chean but were llllable to Included ~ lloLille wltb
!a yeoro tenure: Mro. Paul - · · John Pal'be llld flo.yeo Dee!
with 10 1t0r• tenure: and llro. ~ White, lfrl. WWard Cop.
. .., llld Emmet! , . _ ·aJt with &amp;yean tenure.
Unable to auend llun Mtlp Coullt,r but Iiiio ware ro~lfd
l ::~lfrl. Emma WI&gt;~ llld Mre. Frida Smilll, ten 7011' ~
I'
and Dorsey Jordu, !;~lor'""' Paddlun and•Eiale 911berllllll,.
II,. !r.t~-=~oor:•·
1
- A Tordl Hold Hfihu Wllllle 1f!eD1o ol tile' oil•.
llllllveroary or lhi•1WI¥ trlhutef'! w md&gt; ld'llaoro.
aomee oltlle volunteer leldOro prollllll _..,qd to 11,100
" reported AlbOI'I F, ·Gehrto, Stall, t'H '1.M4or .t1114·A~jllt4JII
· .
at 'lilt Ollla.l!llato IJ!)(v~lllr. .. •. .
. '
eiO¥er
- • proll!lllted to I&amp; ~..... ·With 30. JOtl'l'.
elovero fr? 'ldvliclro ~Ill 2&amp;·""•' ~'"1-1
wllll ~ 100!'1 ol
IIC!Id Jll!!e to·aM
and oil,er cloMr~IO .~l'~v;;:,.rldvi,O.o. :
a0rl ·ol11111 irulrllli. 'lllotoari'I!OiiAidtf~.

RIO GRANDE - More than 150 persons actellded an apple. .
tion dinner Saturda.Y night at Rio Grande College in honor
dent llfJd Mrs. Alphus R. Christensen.

The candlelight buffet was 8erwd. in the dining tall at the ~­
lege, under the direcd.on of RObert Hoff a.nd Mrs. Wilma Amald, llr
Maoter Chei.Mike Deffillppo of Chicago. Dr. John Alberti, net-·
ident for academic affalrs, was tcastmaster.
The dinner was given in 111preclatioo ror the "oot.taJd• jab"
President Christensen has done in making Rio Grande Cciltp U.
educatioral instlUJtion it is today.
·
Since President Christensen's inauguration as the 12th prea. f ·
dent of lllo Grande College In 1963, tile enrollmem hao dodlled. 1'11 '
e~lement this growth the college has CfJII.Itructed a llbrarJ, thrw •
dormitories, a dini11&lt; hall, an 11(111'1znent building, a piQ.'ol... cadon certer, and athletic neldL
··
President Christensen leavea this week ror Chi~ k
oMual meet1111 or the North eenlral Aoooelation of Colliioo loO.ii '"'
See-ry Schools. On Wednellday, Mtrtb 26, he will bo ~===~
whetber or mt Rio Grande College has been accepted lor D
and accredited by the Association.
Dr. Herman L. Koby, vice pre~ideat tor ltudent atraln,
ecned guests at the dinner. Music waaprovid.edby Mrs. 1Awi.: ···'"•

,

l'hO played "Ohio Lalli Is the Land lor Mil," whl&lt;h ~e=~~!·\~~
wh.Ue Roaa, associate dlrector of musle alld asabtant
mualc, sarw the lyrlca, were were ~ b3 the

•com-.

Ewl~~g.

!ilas Clara Pootm, IIIOC:IA!e i!tollo• of Eltlilah,
ttad .. POetic Remlnl.scenelln :whleb &amp;a1t wtth Pnlldett aw~io;~

aen's career whUe at Rio GJ'Iftlte :cOihi'- '
The dinner was atte-111 mrt-..o of !be llaord of
toeutly, admlnlstriotoro, and 811ft it lill! ~- Coil....

.m..:

lbo evonl!'l p r - Jack Slnlperi, . ioalato.,

mauca,

~;J~:~~
)NIIOIIIo!l "'" t.i! ~ ctovw •
"'
. ,Iii llio ·routb a( OhiO~ !be 4tl
'

at PreP.

ou-

ed Pmkient and Mra. Christensen a
'""'h bGw1
Ot111i0'teo ol'lllo Grande College. ·~ · ~ !'"R 11·~~
by Bntce A. Hatrt..._ vice president for lllwtl$'tiit.

......

I

,..reo..,

_..'Robert Rose, business~ ... trasurw.
'

"J.·.''

.

I ' '

'

.~

.

.

..r
.'

i'

'

."

. ·,,. ,1,

..., '

•'

. .

~

., ;.
·'

�/

I .

''

,

2-

•'

Tho .~

'

n.,,-...11111,
.....,,
!i
'•

3 - ')111 SUoiiar

~ ~~

~:t;ounty ·. Income

1

'

Tat

tion that the General Assembly
2. The allowance for Aid for
eract legislation utkler whlch Deperw:lent Childreri should be incounb' boards or education would creased to $200 per child.
initiate area education centers.
3. The legi.slature in apprq,ri'The three recommendations ate ways should increase state
endorsed by the Soll1hern Board revenues in order lo provide
include:
er&amp;..ter atate support for pub1ic
1. Payment of additional costa ·schools.
by t~ state for vocational a~
In other matters, the Southern
technical training.
Board voted to purchase a calcu•

I

Eight Defendants are
Fined in County Court
PDMEROY - Elgllt defendants
were fined and seven others lorfelted bonds In the courtofMelg&gt;
CounQ&lt; Coort Judge Frank W,
Porter Friday.
Fined were Victor c. Butera,
9:. Albans, W, Va., $5 and costs,
no protective headgearj .Carl E.

by Mort Reed
NEARING COMPLETION - Firat conorete was (IOUI'9d Frldly on the park!lv lot at the new
Shake ShqJpe, Seeoi'Mi Aw. and Olive St., Gallipolis. WheD coq)leted, the SIBke Shoppe wlll move
into this new buildt,. rrom Ita present location a blockaWQ'. Ted stoney, concrete cootractor,
extreme left standing. observes progress as the form is being nlled.

DAILY CROSSWORD
DOWN
20. Female

Students

o\al&lt;l88

1. Part or a
WUII!ng
triO

.......,

eloak

9.Romu

rooms

10. PerceJved

By Rotary

byear
12. Brittle

·

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis
Rotary Club sponsored two stll-

piece
lfl. Moslem

dents, Nancy Lease alii Vince

18. Vll'(l.nium
oymbol

U.Ex:CUR

115. Rooting

UUo

Hill, and John Mi)hcallt faculty

sponsor, to atten:l the World Af- ·
fairs Institute Conference this

19. Salt

past week in Cincirirlati.
The conference c e n t e r e d

22. Swindle:

1. Minute

poove or

• ~.Opera

Sponsored

.....

-

p1J"
21 . By way

of

2. Warble

22. Larp

3. French
rtver
f . Infanta'

bUket
or ba&amp;'
U. l..oea·
Uon
of King

lood
5. "Qftlt ot
work :
abbr.
8. Retort
7. lndUln
mulberry
8. Hinder
t. Statutea
Jl, Garden

· plant
13. Symbol of

2&lt;l. Tuma

boredom
17. Eartbaaa
goddeaa

Arthur's
ff'ltenla)"'• Alllwu
eourt
32. Suffered,
26. False·
hood
dull patn
26. Little
33. Obtahu
girl
36. Carthage27. Honored
queen
with a
38. Asian
banquet

...

river

Z8. Sell
30. Depart
31. Battle
horn

fO . Humor
42. Yttrium
symbol

23. Sm&amp;ll
2-t.. Kind ot
hammer
26. Chatr

around Canadian • United States
relations with several Canadiln
speakers dealing with CamclianUnlted states trade relations and
the problems of Quebec.

21. Unbiased
28. Try to
equal .

Milhoan and these students will
use the Cacts learned at thelnsti•
tute to enrich the curriculum and
teaching~; at Galli a Academy High
School.
Principal James N. M. Davis
expressed appreciations and
thanks from the students and rae-

29. Ernanatu
31. Sack
34. Tellurium

eymbol
36. Over there
36. Chief in
Italy

......

37. Lamb pen
39. Tbe first

ulcy of Gallla Academy High
School to the Gallipolis Rotary
Club fo{J!!(Ir ~~.sh!"~l· JlL
sponsot~ihe W'Orld. Afralr~ ..
stitute ~ the Pllll t-~.years.
...
-. ~.!~. ·-

This 1955 double-s t r u c k the dies were canceled and
Lincoln cent has an esti- the remainin g pieces remated retail value of $410 in jected. Those that slipped
uncirculated condition. At through were allowed to mix
one time it could have been with the regular coinage.
How many of the legiti·
purchased for 15 cents, but
now the collector and inves- mate pieces got out into cirtor see something in it worth culation. no one knows, but
all of a sudden these double·
many times its face value.
It is the second aceldental die Lincolns are showing up.
rarity and the third highest 1 have been ~formed by the
value coin in the I.Jncoln National umismatic Aucent series. While some of thentication rust that these
the numismatic prizes show newest contrlbutions to the
a double-struck date or mint "fake " list are actua11y diemark," this coin has (wo com· struck in Milan , Italy .
plete and distinct imp~s­
WARNING
sions of the obverse des1gn.
Noncollectors inve s t m
one sufficiently rotated from high value coins as do collecthe other to provide two of . tors. Some have been known
each letter and numeral. as to purchase several pieces of
weu as doubled features in a scarce date or type and
the proflle .
hold them for a higher marIn preparing the dies. !or ket This is what caused
coining, a cameo or pos1t1ve cou.nterfeit 1909-S VDB LinlU&lt;eneS:~:~ ~'of the coin- in this
1922 Line

ton Route 2, overload, $65 and
costs, $50 suspended.

; ·-~~\9!: .
U. Slant
fli. Came up to
tlle mark
AXYDLBAA.XR
Ia LONGFELLOW
One teller l!lbnpl:,· stands for another. In t.hlallaiOple A lf!l used
ror tbe three! L's, X tor the two O's, etc. Single letters, apol·
trophies, Ule length and formatiOn at the 'tl'ordt Are Rll hlnt11.
Each day t.he "ode letten1 IU'e different

GALLIPOLIS - Garnet Elliott,
Chillicothe Rd., fLied a petition

A
p

WRPHHG

BOJ ,

CrJp-

Qootolloa

VHPMT

OJBRNRW

BJDPT

MF

URPILMYIH.,

JTR
TR ·

EHRSLF LJ SOPWD . - RKEPW FPHLIF

y,MI.erday'.. &lt;~ryptoquo...,: A :MAN NEVER DlSCLOSES HIS
OWN CHARACTER SO CLEARLY A8 WHEN HE DF.·
SCRIBES ANOTHER'S.-RICHTER

DO-IT-YOURSELF
Spring House Inspection
Begins at the Top

BIG ONE BOOMED
YUCCA FLAT, Nev. (UP0 -

Scientists detonated a 100-kllotoo nuclear device at the bottom
B1 MR, FIX
d. a 1,525 root shalt Friday 1n
Spring is the time the wise
home as quickly as a tle~vy
the Atomic Energy Comn1ission's
homeowner
makes
a
very
winter. Heavy snows, high
sixth undergrOWld test of the careful inspectlon of h i s
year.
house. Nothing will age a
amount of damage· Now is
the time to assess just how
much has been done.
Some of the damage may
not be readily visible, hence
the careful inspection. If not
tended to, some of these
problems which are minor
now can become major ones
tater on.
Firat place to ebO&lt;t Is the
roof. Even the roof of a aew
bouse may not come through
a bad w t n t e r unatathecl.
ON YOUR
Vou may be able to opot

u:::~~=·~:-~~ !~e:~i~~~~:

STOP BURNING

OIL

mo1t or tbe lrouble (nm die
grouad, but 1 look from the
top or a la4der 11 evea htt·

ter.
Check for torn or curUng
shingles. Cement them down
with a heaVy dab of roof
coating. Pre,u in place.
Exam)nelhe ·nashing while
you are at it. .This you will
find around chun~y~ and In

reverse
and used in the coining
press to strike the image on
a coin.
When the working die is
being made, it requires sev.
eral "strikes" of the press
hammer to properly sink the
design. The first time it is
struck, the master die is inverted to a bolder and a
blank for the working die
centered under it .
Thf' hrst pre ssure or
"strike" for a one-cent piece
is between 60 and 70 tons.
This does little more than
dent the surface.
Each time it is struck, the
working die must be annea1ed or rendered soft. Otherwise it would soon shatter
under the extreme for ce of
six to eight strikes .
Now, if on the seco nd
strike a new impression was
started, and again on the
third strike that impression
was struck again, the double
die would be well on its way.
That is how this httle freak
came about.
When it was discovered
roor valleys wbere slopes
come together. If the dam age is severe get a professional roofer to mak~..Jhe repairs. Small cracks can be
taken care of with roof coating.
Next in line are tfle gutters
and downspouts . G utters
may be sagging due to the
weight of the ice and snow
that accumulated during the
wiJJ.ter. The gutter should
slope gently and evenly jn
one direction, toward the
downspout. Refasten loose
hangers.
Clean out any accumulated
. debris that is in the gutters.
There should be a screen or
strainer -over the openirig
, into the downspout.
,
Winter Is rough on masoft.
ry. Tiny cracks fill with
moisture, then with the al·
-teraate freezing and tbawinc
they expand. Mortar works
loose eventually.
Check carefully if you have

head cent .
Be advised that the chance
of acquiring one of th~se
"fakes" is 10 to I. Few legiti·
mate pieces are being of[ered and when they are, the
price is not what you would
expect in a ba rgain base·
ment. and rightly so. The demand is too great for cutrate selling. This makes a
perfect market for the phony
and I insist your chances are
10 to 1 in favor of getting one
in a fast deal .
At least for the present,
please think twice before
even so much as looking at
one of these dates. Unless
the seller can provide you
with a ~igree of, the c~in
and an authentication of 1ts
genuineness, don't give it a
second thought.
A legitimate dealer will
not offer any high value collector's item without first
having it verified. If it is not
genuine, the good guys wo~'t
sell it but the bad guys will
make' all kinds of wild statements about why it must be
hush-hush.
(Htwspo,.r fnrerprire Aun.J

a brick or stucco house. Ex·
amine the foundation of any
house . Clean out crumbling
m or t a r and replace with
fresh mortar mix.
Examine sidewalks and
drives for cracks that may
have opened up during bad
weather. Chip out the bad
spots and use a concrete
patch to repair.
With both mortar and con·

A Rutland area teenager has been cited

HOME. BOY IT •BY THE BOX, BUCKET
Ameriu'• L•rgelt Tu Servlefi w.ith Ov.r 3000 Offices

WeekdaJa- 9 LJ:I. to 9 p.m.,

~Soon.

fh\, Ph. 146.4303

-.-.JNMo.MA pointmlnl Necessa.r ·r.-.

the Letart falls Elementary
School. An acitlvity fund. policY
recommended · by RObert Ashley,
assistant principal of the high
school, was adopted.
Attending the meeting ~ere
Supt. Huglles, Mrs. Joan Wolfe,
clerk, and board .RJ'emt?er&amp; Mrs.
Dorotizy Bertz, 00s MeCllntock,
Harry Hill, Howard , Ervin ard
Robert Harden.

GALLIPOLIS - Cecil L. ·Matthews, 47, Rt I Galllpoll~ was
arrested Friday nlgllt by the Gallla Councy Sherlfl's Department on
a charge of intoxication. He was released oo $34.50 bond to appear
Mlnday In Gallipolis Municipal Court,

Hitskip i8

GALLIPOLIS- CiQ&lt; pollee ln.
vestigated a hitskip accldentFri~
day. It was the 80th accident in
tile city in the rirst 80 days or
the year.
Officers said Drucie E. Cleland, of 77 Cedar St., parked her
car in front of her house Thurs~
day nigllt, When she went 0111
alter her car about noon Friday, she discovered it had been
damage by a hltllidp motorist
The accident was reported at
11:40 a.m. Thursda.y, There waa
minor damage to the left froo.t
fender. Pollee theorize t h a t
someone was turning aroond and
backed into the parked car.

crete patches remember to
moisten the area thoroughly
to begin with and then to
ke.ep the patch nloist until it
is cured.
Check your windows for
cracked or missing putty.
Remove unsound putty and
replace. Check all calking
jomts around door and window frames , around the foun·
dation and in inside comers
where walls meet. Clean out
defective calking and recalk.
If pain! has been damaged,
scrape off the loose surface,
prime and then repaint when
the prime coat is thoroughly
dry.

.

OR BARREL AT

808jJAfl$.,:$J(AI HOUSE
.

101 EVANS DRIVE-IN

.

LONG IIOTTQM,. -

'~'~"""
n;'' Rt. •· ~ Lari8
.....
_ ~
died .........
~·
~·, ..
~. ~
' ~
'in Voterana MOIIIOJill JIDIIIIlal,
IU. ~~Wain wao, tho IClll al ~

late Jack llld Al!linda Pldlerinll
linin. He waa aloo lfi'OCeded In
- . 117 hla wUo, Trolu COleman Swain, Jul¥ 311, 1968.
..,
Mr. Swain waa·llOm Ia Wood
CooJnt1, W, VL He waa a farmer
In the Long Bottom .... the
ll'aater part al hla life, 111d wao
a m0111ber al the Long BoiiiiJD
United Method!~~ Church..
He lo aufvtved 117 ihret 110111,
Dllrwaod Nel11011 Swain, We-·
rille, Ohio; Jomoia Oliver SnJ.,
Reed"'llit, llld 1\'Wiam Daa1o1
Swain, Mar!etla; four ~~.
Mro. Dille Ffedertd&lt;, ZloavUlt,
Ind.; Mrs. Goorila ~......
,Newark; Mro, Jtarjorle Dnkl,
'Racine, llld Mra. Pauline Pri!Dllllr, ~; 19 lr.,...._.dr..,
llx •teHrllldcldl- llldsroat-crandeldldrlll,
Fuaeral oel"'leal, will 1!1 held
Mooday at 2 p.m. from the IAII
Bottom Clirtatlut Churehwlthtllf
Rev. Freelllld Norr11 allldal.
lag. llurial will be In Sodlll
Cemetery. Frlend1 II1Q call at
the White Fmienl Home In "nll&gt;pera PlaiDa Ia the aile,_ .u..

Canned

ss

PerkSauage

~ACHEL,
1

POMEROY - joJm A. Sllr(11111, 47, Pomaroy Route f, ....
,..,... __
In hll - ·
porked m 1 lllddleport all'eet

RACHEL

(Technicolor)

JoeMe Woodward

Ja" Frlda,y lliJibl.

Estelle Par"'ns
Colorcartoons:
Chimp &amp; Zee

Jab!

Rldpay,

doPl11 ..........

.... the lllddlttJO&lt;t iiJDerj)l!llcy

SHOW', STARTS 7 P. M,

-......llr. Sllrpntnoclead-

illo lqiWI'I ~Yalj' Dr, Rideway Aid thet - . wu eauaed

MASON DRIVE-IN

IJr .. _..... boori atlack.

llr.

Sllr&amp;llll lo ounl•ed 1Jr
1&gt;11 wife,' llolda; CliO 1011; QJ:r R,
SoitloDI. .Rt. f, l'iimorqy; a dau..... cat.le L. ,~oe, Berklay, Mo.; hll lather, QJ:r v.
Sllr(lllll, Rt.. t; 1'omero11 one
brother, noile/ Rt. f, Pomero;y,
lliid a srladehlld, Klldoerl¥

FRL-SAT.-SUH.

, 21-22.:23

William
GALLIPOLIS Raymond Thomas, Jr., 19,
JackB&lt;In, wa&amp; admitted to Hoi~
First

~tonJaee,

can

'

-..:.

Picnics
F.RE.SH (Po.. ~ Boefl

ABMOUB

Vl.enna S.uu1e

Z. OFF

ARMOUR

3oL

Potted Meat

· COD

11 or,
jp

·Coffee Mate
FIBpiDE--q19(:., VANA., LEMON

Sandwich Crem"

con

22c
12c

IHtlllf

(

lb.

59c

1%·i•:Z9c
pq,

PIUCES
EFFECTIVE

TDU SAT,.
MARCH !1, 1188

..

~ Iii~:~
. ~ ·~T ·~ ., .
~ OO:!ii ..W bf bold

, ll!S'CooldlUon
was reported poor Saturday.
Thomas, according to the
hospital's accident report, was
InJured wllen the drilling rig he
was operating catne in .contact
witll high voltage wire. The accident occurred on Rt. 346 in
Meigs Countv. Thomas is an

lloncli,y at l p.m,

from

Ewlatl

Qwpol. 1lleRev, ~Ullllr­
will , allldlle. Bilrlal will
btiDCar1olm CIJneter7, Frteado
-

(lail

uvtlmo.
BROUGHTON

Budget F:tgure
Is Approved

employe of the S!elleY ~ Sands
Construction Co., Zanesvllle.
~-:.*.::&gt;;~~::=~~~-!--;-;-;:**;-;f.X::::::x~m:::.i-:=~-:.·

$50 Million .Bond
Levy Considered
COLUMBUS (UP() - 1~e elcy
was considering a $50 million
bond Issue to be 1'oted 011 the
November 1969 or May 1970 bal~
lot for a ~5 million stadium
and $15 million convention cenWr and indoors sports arena.
Mayor M. E. Sensenbrermer
said Friday' he planned to discuss
the propooal with hi&amp; cabinet
5(J(IJ, The bond issue ·Would call
for a less than 2.5 mlll levy, acoor&lt;ilng to the clt;y.

•.

• Called to tho acene liere ,Dr.

lb.

FRESH FLAVORFUL

John A. Sargenl

TONIGHT, MONDAY
AND TUESDAY
March 2J..24-25i

·~45~

9

TENDERBi:IT

...,,

11AS0N ~ lfaiOII Town ....,_
cl1 'lliloooed a $21,6M IHIIlltt
at a apeelal ll1lllinll Tbureday
....... ..,...w 117 ~IIOJ­
IIlll llll'nea, a-rder Mro. Cbarlcltto ·Jimo, and CCOmdlmeot

GOorao

Carom, HoPr liJAII,
· llld ~

Donald -

Wrlaht:
a wu aGmeadtbatlll£1-

ALSO (4.RTOON

.. will be bald .. AprU
5 11 lluOo'l l'lrlliOCijed at the
lfaiiOII &lt;loeidD&amp; faellltleL ll
;.,. ot 'rain, the will be
bald ... the Jot Ill the dt1
· ;...dlni,.,,F~ ,at.tiJe pork
,luj be Cit*o'to tiiePJI&gt;II&lt;Dll April
·~ lthloboeri''uni!omCocl. , ,
e I C..cll to """ £molt

OPEN WEEK ENDS

Joli,.... ....._ Olll(lko'•
, . ... the - ·
~
1lept,, to a nleetiac ot the Woat

w:.,...

Vlrlinla Water llld - r l'!lllutlan Cotnnlll-m Ia Olarl111 April 1111d 2, .

'

'

.

; Sgt. Jacobe Wins
: Medal Otation

. ~

'•.

CARTOON

..

KANAUGA
DRIVE'" IN
'
OHIO WINS CITATWN
THIN BLUE LINE
WAsHINGTON (UPO ~f Olllp, '
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio (UPOOnly s.ev.en or this cttyts 74 .PO~ which attracted $10.bllllon In InUcemen were on duty early to.. dustry during the plattlveyean,
day Jn the second day or a walk~ bas been cited aa the state with
out by the s~ety forces over the best industrial . program In
wages.
the nation.

.
1\'lllllll!

,

MEIGS IHEATRE .

Police Charge Intoxication

Ketttuck4 fried Chickett

· 366 Seco••
Ave.·
!ill.

- t.J;!e

school, from grade!J nl~ t~
12, will teke part In the tesUliJ!
program in Athen~ next month. ·
The board voted to purchase a
new 66-passenger bus,and to .bu.Y
a new deep sink ror the kitchen of

to the

Meigs County Juvenile Court after confessing an act of vandalism,
1iJ!erifi Robert Hartenbach's department reported Saturday.
The department said that on Feb. 18, a tractor owned by Gene
Vance, Middleport Route 1, was rwt into several feet or water, in
Leading Creek. Only the real wheels were showing. Alter investig,tion the juvenile admitted the act.

~-.

n\s Et:O~iCAL TO SERVE AT

' 1

;

highest given ·- in t~ dlsirlct
musi c roJJnPetitlbnaUrOnton. The
bancl wUlattend the state cOntest
on April 19 at Cuyahoga Falls,
Ttle s~erinte&amp;lent also r&amp;.
ported that prellptiqa'i-y . state
scholarship testiniha.s been com•
pleted In the hlsfl s~hQol. ard .tha!
approximatf!ly i;iO students ofthe

Teenager Cited into Court
POMEROY -

'

our~

DAII.Y CRYI'TOQUOTE- Hert~'• how to work it:

FridDJ' in Galli&amp; County Common
Pleas Court for the partition of
50 acres of real estate, in two
plots, in Ohio Twp.
Named defendants in the case
were Frances Eugene Elliott aBi
Katherine Elliott, 558 Thi.rd Ave.
Roberta Ann EUiott, Richard
Wayne Elliott, Keith Allen Elliott and .Janet Elliott, all or Chillicothe Rd.
The plaintiff, the wid9W of carodus Elliott, is twMhirds own-er of the real estate.

A 'FAKE' LINCOLN

ing; Sammie R. Lewis, Pomeroy
Route 4, $15 and costs, speedingi Sidney M. Craig. Pomeroy,
$10 and costs, no operator's license; WllUam P. Burgett, Vin-

,~,·- · ~ly, ...,

Suit Filed to
Divide Land

'

Davis, stewart Route 1, $5 and
costs, unsafe vehicle; Jorepb
Kuntz, Canton, $10 and coats,
no operator's license; Leonard
z. Jewell, Pomeroy, $15 and
costs, speeding; Jake R. Stitt,
RS.clne, $10 and coits, speed-

WilHam Kerwood, address not
was assessed costs and
pla®d on 90-days probation after being charged with intoxication. Assault and battery charges
were dismissed and two defendants were ordered to pay costs
only. 1bey are Allen Lee King,
Middleport, and Joili S. Mohler,
near Pomeroy.
Forfeiting boods were carl
Jeffers, Syracuse, $25, lntoxi·
cation; Harold E. Heighton, Iron·
ton, $27.50; Harriet B. Pullins,
Thurston, $32,50; Charlie Mor~
too, Caldwell, $27,50, and Wil~
Uam T. Hamrick, Parkersburg,
W, Va, $32,50, all charged with
speeding; A. T, Christian, A1ban.Y Route 4, stop sign ViolaUoo, $27,50, and Dana H, BaileY,
Albany Route 3, failure to register a motor.vehlcle, $27.50.
gtv~

~

,.

lator for Lhe Office "lralnina: d~
partment or, the high scJ,ool,_.FUty
per cent oC the cosHnWlved will
be paid by the. staW. ,
William Hughes, l!lu.perintendent and principal, repory;ed _o,a
varioUs scllodl matJer~ Upontbe
completion of~is r'~or:t~ boaTd
highly eomme1jlded tl\6 SO&lt;rt~rn
Jligh School 134~ ai'Kiltsdire~r
Robert Shaver for having attained
a grade Of •• Superior"

MONEY CliPS

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Ia~.a. Rejecte~
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RACINE - Another Meig&gt; . e11.l Board took tdentieal actio"n.
Tile hoard had been asked to
Courit:Y school district board of
education has rratly turned down approVe five · recommetdations.
·, req~est that it endorse a count.Y land to notlry the governor, Sen.
income tax for local school pur• Oakle;y Collins ancl Rep. Ralph
c. Welker or the en:torsement.
. poses.
The Southern Board turned
Latesl to reru'se the endorsement request of the Ohio School down two oftherecommeJXJatlons
Boards Association is the South- and approved three.
· Turned down also by the Soutlt·
ern Local School District Board
ern
Board wa s the recommen:la, of Education. Earlier, Meigs ~'

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Tlmeo&amp;otlnol,. s.n~~,y, ~ch za, 1i6D

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: 'THURSDAY"
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MARC" 27th,
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Buttermilk

::1.' 39c
Down Foodland's Produce lane!
FLAVORFVL

NewC.bHie

lb.9~

CELLO-CRISP. CIWNCHY

BLUE RIBBON

Cinnimmon

39c
of
s1x 29c

-.us

Pk(.
Pk(,

BROUGHTON

Popsicle!l
FOODLAND

Pile.

of27·I

Hamburger or Hot Dol BunEieht

Carrots

SIJ JIM FROZEN

U.S. N0.1

French Fries

Potatoes

GOLDEN BREADED

lhrim11

GOLDEN YELLOW

Bananas

11
69c

4114 lb.

'

Pkl1.

"'
BOUND

8 Oz.

Pkr.

TINY'S

ARGO
ewHOLE
ecREAM

Corn
can

lib.

�the

in
II to

lng

hill!. 111

Moreo...-, -~-

for

the Serate, eveq to
pain alii lllry qalnot ABll 0\'b' a

DOW

acrooched
wblle .:CO.
,. ' . ,'
· lnpopthlolo boawsentlllyearlu ~
al ele-· · alii II lo lllr fi'lllil cieMaln •1 aiO ·
.' clllllllry ~ ohareo tho dtollke ·or. tho lil*i!lo
Pl'lltll'IDI 1hlt so chic -ocmeofhJhrli·aow
· lsolatinatsv. who ..-. "' fGi- fHieclloo. ·
1.
In port also tllo bocaUJOlt Is one lh1111! l"·a utot··.
·~

to

:r.,

""rlurnintla ~sl- on aotrlcll,ymlllta~pilloa

. and ~r lh!iV a~ to do I~ ~~~ .not, 1ft
rae~ liMa dona oo
,rit.J JiiDllarl' poiJc1iullilln

two decade~.

araue •• a

all!'

Ni•' '-. ~owed to
when he

IIIII'
.-r,'o
v..,.
Phf,~ca1 oareey ,, ot lllike. Fllr he 11, atier ail.
., . . ._,.l'ln-chloL
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'lbeo, IAJo, lllo much •oter to-.-raoo the Ado

Doris Jean Kiser to .Wed

Mrs. Robert M. Scarberry

RAY CROMLEY
.· ·:.{);pnna Kay Pickens Betrothed

•

Russo-Sino Rift May Spur
SQviet Talks With Nixon

Mil. AND i'MRS.

WIWAM N. PICKENS, Route 1, lia'cini,
Ohio, are aMollncing llie engagement of their daugltter, Dtalllll•
Kif, .to Wlillam Carl Baker, IOO,of Mr. alii Mrs. Louis Baker ,
of EUds, Ohio. DiaDIII Is a 1968 graduate of Southam H I 8 b '
School In Racine aild a 1969 lfld~to ol Raedel Colleso, Fort
Wayne, lad. She io presenUy employed at Sears Optical o.partmont ' ln Fort Wayne, Mr. Baker Is s 1967 81'1~11!-1!! of .
Ell!lo Hlgil S.hoolaDil a l9~,srad•to ofRaodol Cc!Uoge, ·He lo
omplo.Y&lt;Id will) C.T.$. '!' ..me, jnd. Wedding plans are Jn.
cOiq)!ot'o,
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PUBUSIIED BY 111E omo VALLEY PUBIJSHINC COMPANY

Olester Tannehill, Exec. Editor
Hobart Wilson, Jr., Man. Editor

Richards. Owen,. Publisher
Vernon Deweese. Adv. :Mgr,
James E, Danner, Adv. Dtr.

War Evaders--- Always with Us
Every war this country has fought has

seen its share of deserters, sitter-outers,

evaders and those wbo could not In good
conscience participate.
Vietnam
Is

not worth the pr~ af military service.

Another matler entirely is the thouands
men who have signified their

SEOUL, KOREA (NEA)
Increasing Russo-Red Cblnese tenoloo may puh the
KremUn to seek more seriously oome way of protecting her
U.S.-Western Europe back door.
.
U the Soviet-Communist Cblna quarrel worseno, Brezhnev, Russia's major leader, may knock quite firmly at
President Nixon's d"\1,
.,
Uapubllclzed lnformaUoa reaching lere tbroUJh a l1llrd
country close to both M-w and Peldng lndlcata the Soviet Union wllbla the pelt several moatho bao Hllllll addllloaal dlvlsloa of erack troops ti lbe MongoUan bonier be·
cause of inoreaoed tnableo with Commaelel Cblu.
These presumably were troops freed because the occupation of C.echos!ovaltia moved ahead without strong opposition from the West.
·
The same third-country source reports that some of the
highest military men In the Soviet Un1cn argueCI strongly
against the Russlnn Invasion of Czechoolovatia. They were
worried that a· tie-up of Soviet troops in the West for the
Czecb adventure could lead Mao Tie-tung's CblneH to action In the East.

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Glass
Will Purchase
'
E
f
Fl·. o."''!·,·Al!··. l e. , s,•-[
'f Q r as er

511' DOWN .
A RUSil
SEWINS JOB
-'MD TIGE NOI&amp;S

.r·

IN UkE

-"'T·.'i
- - · flowMIDDLE"'"
,... .,._
oro lor lila Mtddlepoit F I r 1 I
· IIQIIIII cStirch ~ on
Ea~ Will· \le~ded by the

FAIEND~V

FLYNN~

'fl,vlfN/1 MfrS 1111' 1"

I&gt;CR)!Hyfi\IITH

3725 N. 41'11 Ct
PMILADIIAI"'
PENNI&gt;-

Bull' BeO CJulli . . .. _
11-.r 1bolrlda1 nialll ot the

.t

),.
IHA)i\''"a'i .e0)1.11dll( ,

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troop~~~~~f1J~i~~r~:~~~

more
otflcially
out leave
more than 30 days).
Until last year, however, the desertion
rate per 1,000 servicemen was compar·
able to that during the Korean War and is
still well below the rate during World War
II.

More than 85 per cent of those carried
on the rolls as deserters eventually turn

themselves In voluntarily, says the Pentagon. Only 853 deserters ~'ave sought refuge

abroad, and 40 per cent of,these are altens
who have decided that U.S. citizenship Is

'l'his
any
a~e

the population, it cannot compare

With_
J:l,evolutionary War when wllole
fa(lljUes of dissenters left the United States
permanently f&lt;lr C an a d a or the British

West Indies .
Draft evasion and reslstance were also
notorious durin~ the Civil War. In July,
1863, draft riots m New York City killed an
estimated 1,000 persons.
What lj remarkable about the Vietnam
war is not that so many young men are
voting against it with their feet, but that,
in a war that is the most wtpopular in the
nation 's history, there bave been relatively
so few.

Home---Luxury Item?
The median f!8les price for existing
(used) •lngle-famlly homes rose 7.1 per
cent between January 1lltl8 and January
I~ reports the NaUOI)al Association of
Real' Estate Boards.
The report Is based on the monthly study
of sales reports from 120 selected hoards
o1 realtors across the nation.
The median price for JanuarY of this
year was 121,060, meaning that half of all
the homes sold went for more and haU
for less. The figure was up by $1,390 fri&gt;m
the median of $19,690 in January 1968.
, Tbe slJlllftcant t h i n g noted by the
NARF:B •s that the price increase for the
past several years h'as been at an ~c-

celerating rate.
The 1967 median figure lor an existing
single-family h o m e represented an increase of 3.1 per cent over 1968; in 1988 it
Jumped by 4.6 per cent over 1967. Now it
bas leaped 7.1 per cent.
Since prices of new homes are leaping
just as energetically, and since interelll
rates of mortgage loans, already at the
highest level In history, have just been
given another nudt:e upward, we may be
approaching a time when Cor a significant
nwnber of American families who once
would have been considered reasonably
well oft, home ownership will be an unattainable luxury,
.,

Union with
apart.
. This, tbeoe Soviet mlUtary men pointed out, could be a
quite serious matter, given 11\e Umited capacity of the Soviet rail system on loog slreldles of the East-West route.
Despfte considerable exJ1enditures, the Soviet rall and
highway systems are In no condition to permit Moscow to
transport neavy numbers of men aod great amounts of
eqlilpment from east to welt with sufficient rapidity to
make the Soviet generals relt eaaUy. Air tr1111sport would
be lnsofUcient to bandle more than a minor fraction of the
men and equipment required.
One way or another, a great many troopo and reservisls·
and huge tonnages of equipment were moblll%ed and moved
westward for the Invasion of Czechoslovakia. This dloplacement could have caused serious problems in a two-front
crisis .
..
1be ......,rn of'the Sovlel 10110rals aad lbe Soviet troop
mavemelllo to Moncona poUt Q lbe liCDIUcaoco ol puiiUclly pven to the recent border duheo between Sovlelaad
Cblaese troopo.
AU this does not Imply that war Is aho)l! to break out between the Soviet Uolon and Red China. In the early limo, ·
Rusolan and Japanese troops fougbt a series of ml.lor 1
battles along the Manchurian border without these leading
to war. In some cues, the battle$ were so serious tbat
whole Japanese divisions were virtually pJII out of adlon.
(Russian casualties are unknown.) These clashes were bpi
secret for years .
.
Both Russian and Red Cblnese mllltary-poUtlcal concepta
warn against fighting on two fronts against two major
enemies at the same Ume. When such danger artseo, their
doctrine requires they make a deal with one -my to protect their rear while they have a~- With the. other.
This necessity may color both Russo'U.S. and Red Chlnese-U.S. relatlons in the next few year1.

II you really want to kaow qow rot~
America l.i, don't read the underground
protest press. Tune into Radio M.,.,ow.
Here is what the Russians had to say
about tbe hospital ship HOPE, which recenUy concloded a to-month medical (lljs.
slon to Ceylon:
"The ship HOPE has actually brought
no hope for cure to Ceylon and the
vicinity, but only mortal danger. Tile floating carrier of death Is the name tl\e shi'p
Is given by the people of the , cOJilllrles ·
where she has already been. Wherever the
ship HOPE appears there are sudden outbreaks of epidemics.
.
" People suller aod·dle from sev~e diseases. For instance, in 1M3, 'When the
HOPE was close to the sbotes of• Indonesia, there were outbreaks ·of cholera lind
smallpox In the citieo of Sow'ibaya,
Malang and Solo. It wao estabUahe'd .that
the American medico' Wlu&gt;' had 'oofni there
had carried out seem experlmenta' Gil llie
local pOpuiaUon with some sort of new
. vaccines and drup,
;•
; "After the ahlp HOPE called ai Guinea
; there was a sharp growth in m-Uty
:. from pollomyeUtJs there. Arter similar
l visit tb Senegal there was an outbreak of
. r: yellow fever. In Nicaragua a severe form
· of meningitis spread, from which people
died or becam~ mental ca~e&amp; for life. foli lowing a visit of the HOPF!.
"The ship is actually a floaUng branch
of the world-notorious American center for
che(lljc.il and bacteriological warfare in · ·
Fort Detrick, Marliand,U.S.A."
,,. ! 1
.. DUriltg the HOPE's stay In CeynHI, llll •·
llaff treated more than 1,11p lia'""* "
allcllnf lhip and, with Ceylonese ilocti&gt;ii; · ·
QIIIIIJucled 1,2811. operauons. Mllfe than

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If this defendent WQ a
member ol a conopirlcy to
kOI the deceden~ no mOIDber of ouch conspiracy..csn ·
ever Uve In peace or seeuzlty
or lie down to "Pieulnt

dreams.

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-Judge W. Preot011 Battlt,
in po"i71f1 ,.ntmco .,. ,
· ;.,.., rorl Rcr.

Ia there any reallllffm:m. ·
If Generalllotoro or Ford or
ATilT or U.S. Steel inate a
few · million dollars leA ·a
year? II there any real denial of the neceultleo of life
if corpora !loa a hold ihe
price tine when they enJoy
fat proflta?
-1. W. Abel, president of
the UnUed Steelworker~
o{ America.

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Concerted Christian Voice ' ~&gt;~
·, Needed on·Mideast Cri$is :;,.
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ir DAVID

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just a year ago l wu preparing for lily 'ftrst villi toi'tha
Hoi¥ Lands. Our tour p~ lru concerned about the situa-

warld

tion In Israel. The &amp;qi:-Day Wat bad l.rl tile Atab,
IIIIOidering In
~anger. The Jewlsll.coDimoiilty ',,
wu fltultint and waty,. 1VIsltoto who traveled to both lllab •'
c"'!'!trleo aad Jarael ~'w that other eplsodeo, boaWI!Iea , 1
and conJilcU w.ould, em~ge. , Today, the Holy LandS an on ·,
the verp of llllholy war.
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bonia of Mr..f.Coia Pulfi!D, tho
claoa ·cJeddeil to jur~hise the ·
llcnnin for tile Anc&lt;ilar!' decor- ,
atlono and tbon deliver them to
lliUWnS. !WIODI lnto~!llf~ ~t~l olflfi
.......-lalllowerolor the chur&lt;h ·
, Mrs. Electo Souare aaked to conto&lt;t Mro. Lettie ders, sad Mr1. lss~e .:OVII!~Jtou~. . ·1.· .- ... ... . . ·
~·Mrs. Pullen, MJ:•MrJ, EilzAI..d. !iihln, lolra. R0111h, sad Miss Jm-ry Pullen
Roull\ '~"'~' •"!"'!- NOr -. JOrdan HfVed retreshmento.
wen ll)PCIIntod to a committee
1o select and orrange in.llallattoo of new Door COYerlngllll the
• polllofos lltucll- A potltick dlmtr Is
Eggs
woo plamed for the ~ meet1ntJ which wiD be hold at the · POMEROY - ' 'l1te Jlelp t-Il
dlurch. ,. ,
PIMIIIre Riders sre unln, col·
Mrs. F~anceo Bearbo proaent- ored Eaoter e1111 as a 111011111' '
ed devll!lioto ulintJ"A!Jprtctatlon railing pro.fe&lt;l- '11te pricelo 75
o1
Raceo" aa bor lbeme. . cento per doZen, andordarolllllll
Jlembello lfeoponded to roU call be 1akeo bofore Aprll1.
wttll Blhlo verse a. Tile birtbdlu's
'l1te oaa wtn be-delivered IDI&lt;1. Mr•- NeUe Werner, Vi' I!- Fr&amp;- tn tho 5tll, Steve Powell Is chair. ds .,............ and Mro, Allbell man
· or l•o project, He can be
...._...,
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Mlll,gili'ore ob...-ved- .
reached b• c:aJllng 992~622- Oth.
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contrlbutocl to a er mnnbeu to cstl, If intereot,_,._
''bakslt••" ~ aalo. Mro- !!eo- ed, sre 949-3727 or 949-.2638.

we c3."f!.!'"~s't tie~ ,
u we awroach ailolhet IJOit · '
all mual'feel a porple~ng ·fi-lii• ' -:
. the situatiOn that 'threationo the · ,
great reUifona, . The

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"'·-""ro

llefenie spendlng·ls out of
control . •. 1be raoul! Ia i ·
I)'Jiam .not unute '"' meilleval kDilbt who woo 10 encased In armor that be weo
unable to move. We ore now
so aurfeHed with •
thit we are illmost unable to
flgllt.
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-'Sop. William Prozmtre, D-' ·
Wil.•
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POliiEBOY - A spring !lower ohow to be held oo May 10 lll
the Pomero.Y Elemontory SchOol
wao plamed I'Jrlng a meeting o!
.tho Wlndlns Trall Garden Club

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several members to attoncl 1118
session.
A tetter !rom Mra. llett;y Ml-

1111--.,.., 1/'ee

Is atage 'lt'.iiil\1of.. !Wowlll
be ~~~
from tho c1ub. • 1',, ';,,., ' • :

vaaeatobeslventotheVetonno MemOrial . Hospital to be
used for cut' n-o broullllt to
tllepotlontswerecolleded,aloag
with mapzlaea wilich will be
taken 10 tho lleil!l eouney In-

firmar1,

'11te reglooal ~ to be
held at the Rlebland Jlethodlst
Ghuzch, Athens, m ~ll 10 waa
Plans were made for
CUEsrS IN RACINE
RACINI! _ Mrs. Mary Rsed

·and Mloo Amber McCain were
!lmdl¥. dimer aoeots ol Mr,"ilnd

Mrs. Charles lhle snddaui!Qrs,
at Racine.

wilich openedwitl), defotlonsby
Mrs. Letto li&gt;eneer. 9le .used
Paalm 63 ao tile
lor her
, dev-s wilich .were lollowed
by the &lt;tub prf¥or-

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Arr1Q1&amp;81bonts clloptayed by tile
membeR were Judpd by Mrs.
Mel)' Bentz ,and ~lue rlbllono
wore awarded to Mro. Jolll Terroll and Mra. Thomp~, Mro.
Thompaon's arnnpmont, ,..,
made ol .llanl Dwml wilicb she
.had railed and brouslrt to bloom
In her window.
Mrs. Ularleo Ra1e• """ tile ·
trsveling .Prl&gt;e denote&lt;l by Mro.
Robert IAwls. Soqot pol gillo
were cllotrlbuted. .
•
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Retr•wen
oerv.,. ¥
·
, ._.. M
the hOIIoso, Mrs• ......,. oore,

IIILEFID ,

~e)

An economl.it hao been defined u a man who would
marry EUzsbeth Taylor for ·
her Q~Qney.
.

D-Pa.

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U2 ..,., Sporl Coopo, outo. Ira no. P.S.,
P. B., ""''' on.t hoater, only .1«10 miles. s. .. on
fhl, OH 1at ._.. ;,~---·....:....·- ...,··--·,.··-----$2895.

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SAVE!

67 atRY.sL ..R H~Wf!ORT CUSTOM • DOOR, ••tJ_
, fnla•;' p,s •• •p,1i,, ,iadl~. _a'. d hetlter, air contl.~ w/W
~nos. SIJorp ------~....;,____ ..,.---·-----~------$2195
,oil·

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R4~1 0 ,oo.tW;"'/w tlros• .sho!l ~---~SI39J
~·~~.·

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ing their eY"es;

when they 11hbe.

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66 Co"!ll C"PRI :2110QR H. r; 6 ~;1., o1aod. hjl~~·

men
Prutience,
the beholder.

POMEROY - MR. AND MRS. ERVIN 'KISER of Racine,
Route 2, are anriounclng the engagement arkl approachlng marriage of their daughter, Doris Jean Kiser, or Napoleon, Ohio,
to Mr. James Deel. son ot the late Mr. .lnd Mrs. Marcus DeeL
MISJ Kiser to a I964puste of Southern Hlgit School aDil is
""" -toyed at Campbell's S01Ijl Compaoy oC N11110leon. Mr.

Deel is eiiiJ)loyed at the American Retailers Association or Napoleqn. WeddlnJ plans are incomplete.

Garden Club Plan. ning (
~rague,
.Flower Sho~ M~y· 1Oth ~~.~~~f::ir.:E ;:r;:::~m:

Otllor.

.

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zlcko, regional ChatriQBII ror Ko:daehrome slideiJ, was read bl
which she urged members to ef1..
hoi~ Wednesda7 nilhl at U., Ohio ter
Ish White had charge o1 tho .PrO- Power eo. omce, Pomel'OJ',
slides in state eompetltion.
~am uolng word qulzes with
"Sin• oC tile Zodiac" will be Mrs. Dora Heotoo P,..aentod
prizes belnc WOII by Mro, Dana - the theme lor the show, an an- • _.. ... landll&lt;3pbig, Played
Hamm, Mrl- Iva 'lllrner, Mra. 111111 evontol theciom. Plans were at 1he meeting Was a reeordl.ng
Roush, Mro. IJJUao McGhee, and discussed during the meeting to ~ Mrs. Alice Thompson.'&amp; radio
Mro. Ruth JobniOD. !lie also read mlot wltll tho atage decoratloni talk on u:;prtng Care of Roses. n
the legond or the dopood tree. for the MilS Soothern Ohio Pae- Members dlacuaHd and comTo COIICiude the meeting mem- ean1 to be staged bn &lt;\prtl 26 at mented 011 Mrs. 'I11onlpaon'aprebora formed a friandlhlp circle the Meil!l Junior Hlgit School su- sentation.
and hadpra,yer. ,Others attending dltorlum• .}b:o. J:hN:l.OJI J.,ewlo
In

4-H Pleasure Club
Selli'ng

POUNG ·;. ~ ~~

Virginia.

-/!el&gt;. William ,S. Moor~

a

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f;;H:;mwJ.ti
•:.&gt;&amp;t.-.r: .• I t.-·,«&gt;r. J,~fl

~b ·1"/t i!"'!-'~&gt;f~~!\

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Reds 'Report' on HOPE Missions

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POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Charles DIU of Puneroy are
a1111011ncing tiJo msrrtsge of their daughter, CIII1.Y Sue, to SP4
R.Wrt M. St¢1orrf, son of Mr. aDil Mrs. Boaa Scarberry, Ra- ·
cine. Thebrldelsa ienloratMelgs Hlglt SchooL SP4 Scarberry,
presently stationed at Fort Knox, Ky., will leave 10011 ror Ger. many where he will openS the remsllller of his enlistment
time. The wedding ,... an event of March !Sat Hot Springs,

i.

'rwosrVDENTSOMITTED

notnoledrecontty.TI&gt;eyaroClen-

MIDDLEPORT -

na

'Ihe Meiga

tq&gt;homore, aad Mary .

'HE SHOE
.

.

Whore

s;~~t~p~j;jt~~

PrieM

mx~~w:•:•k:·::~:~::~pe::rl~oo~w:ere~~a~~~~-:·::~~::~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~====~~

BAH.R CLOTHIERS
YOUR FASHION CENTER FOR
We Have the Complete Line for Men, For Stu.ents, For Youths, For lloJs

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·.~fik5r1w!·~~iu~ln,~

POMEROY - 'lt!e Ladles AltxHtary al Baellle POal 602, Am.
en.., Leailin, ~ ·• J1II"\Y
'""'rsday 11 .Ill!&gt; .Soo!tlieaotern
Ohio Meolal Heoith Center f'"'
veterans confined tlle,-e.
The EastQ'.theme "'' carried
oul In llle doCorellono for the
perty WIU, Eaoter 1lo aketa and
tolorOd egp bOll!ll used oo the

Fr~.Uoif~ •• the ,
~~~ In Ol1ioi ~I!Wo ~ ~ltlon Hill' SdiO(II i.........._
eolilM c~ow~~ ...lullliO:~lil 1
· •
r 'r"';)'&gt;'··
, the""" men and 1110111' pqiOI]Of . , Carr1bw out I "'11111 II Alliir- f

Cl\Esn:a -

OLD Pomeroy
'Roo" 1!3,
llartlng 7:30
':lhe Rev, DeWey
'
OYanpllol; apeclal
lie lnvtied; ·RtiV, Roy
pillor. ' .

atld allo thia ·year, •. · , ~ ·~ :.. 1 ·:: ~ AIDer~,'' ftl:~dlinceill!erao
Dlroete&lt;l by Mra. :Allee Neooe/ , lii'a :c..lk MCGqy, Lllila lliier,
ln,lxllll rol11. the, ohilw wiU be rtaged, at 8!10. Panl 'Grl!!!.; ~e -oat&gt;,
9(), lo o
·
• , + ·@· , , ..

..

:~~~=~~~ ~.

her ..
Until o montllaao, Mr. Lowlo waa
lion• doniJWn
one or two dayf o week !0 work In a
ogeney.WOI\Idyou
btliO\OO thet 1111111 • - alx mcmlllo aao .. workeoi.'raplorly at the
job?l
·
E,.ry year since laoW. JC!cJdleport - and thet was a lcq time
ogo -Mr. Lowlo, accompaaled by hlo- Dr. Tom Le,.to o!COOm&gt;bus, las returned ..re oo Memorial Day to rillt the cemetery.
I•
CONGRATULATIONS TO KeD llarrlol He's been elected preolUni-rot~..
d... ol "~· Tau~-, aoclal ~Mri\J.;, 1"I Olilo

:-16th BlrtHd(ly,~efebrcit.
ed .
·~ ~.

POMEI!OY _ ' A St. Potrlck'o
lUis, minto ond
Day col.,. theme Wll'~sedln&lt;!Oo- b~ cake · ~·~ ...~ by
erauails when ruchard Dealt woo the hi&gt;iteo,_ ,Mrs. Deon, asiloled
honored by his IIOl"'nlil on hlo. :by ~ ~, Dolo and llfs. ·td
l8th birthday sa!Ufday nightat ,U.Ua 1\'...,t, to Matllyo ~
llle'Deon IMine 00 Wol...n Rood. Shirley Alldte, Groce and llfliry
Gamel were p~edlilll prizes · !-co Klntl. Joyct Waggoner, carol
won' by Juanita Ten:e11, Carol lli!1. K""l!' Wood, Kithy llal!.
K
Sue Wood Co-'" llrl k1 05
Hell, ODnY WOOl!., G.~ce ·King
! . . ,,...n
c
'.
uo~
"
••
.,,
Slew ·Burl&lt;lll and· Steve .Smlth. Ste.,. BUr- Steve Smllh, Hor- ·
Ken, aon oiMr. aDd Mrs. Eupnellarrlo, Mlddlepor~ • • !Onioral
Allor lhe guest of hooOr liad old Whir,, Joyce Deller, S&amp;ndy .,
State In prHDed.
.,
IJilOnOd hlo inany ·81fto retnoJ&gt;. , Profitt, John Waller Deon, ROdmont&amp; ol . bailors, ,;...~~, ice: l!tY car~ Walter Arnold, LindaMARRIED ONLY EIGHT months and It lookollke Ll""'nce IJ~
.
. Bell and Wdlard Dean, Mr. and
on! his bride will be ooparated. caceHJ, a medic In lhe WAtli, Ia
- ·'Mro. ·Follx Alkire, Mr. aild l!fd,
scheduled to leavt tor Gennany OD :March 31. They're both DOW at .
• BGb ,
Clair Wiaontr. Mr. aNI· Mrs.
Waiter Reed Hoepllalln Waohlngtoo, D. C., and recegtl.y """'I a raw
~~~ ;Bulld)A
and
RoW&gt;d Dill and lhe holt lind
diY• here wllll hloiiOl"'nta, Mr. and Mrs. c-.rteo Llaie ill5n'acu ...
Mai"Un Osborne
dO ucurl·
boatesa, Mr. and Mrs. J o·h n
osiiY" ~ked by Bill Cole, Carol
Dean.
COME TOMORROW, ond genial Franclo Klein wW be another
Sallenl,
'Bonnie Walker, Dllno
5endlno gifts were Brenda
yoor older. Sho got home from Veteran! lolemorlal Hoapllal Juot In
Grueaei'
alii
Ray Karr.
Smith, Rheba Brlckloa, ·Kula ministers.
time to celebrate.
'
Alai Holter will present the CJ'O'UI,
· Mrs. Golda' Mourning has re: Beal, Kenneth Hartley, Edward llijng you ean
•
ftrat
part finale, ••Stq. To the bind '· to
A
spend
all
week
ond
Alvin
smith.
turned trom ColwDbus where she
TOMORROW MEANS oomelhlng el80 f... Lorry Circle, son ol apent a week visiting her 8011
. their faith and
go
Rear"~ and dlncera will be Jp.. Place." Making up • 1f01CJ will
otl Sundly and pretend
tho Rev. and Mr~ Douglas Circle ol RaciDe. He'll be laoW. !rom and daughter-to-law, Mr. and
nie DOon, Nancy Karr, Melanie ,be Tom Gumpf&gt; ~ Karr; Klrli
MOVE TO NEW HOlliE
ell
true.
'Dean,
Dabble Keebeugh, Joy Chevalier, Rick liUckle~andJean
Celllornia lor VIetnam. Lorry, In lhe U, S. Army military pollee, Mrs. James Mourning and chll·
TUPPERS PLAINS- Mr. and
-'-Rev.
George
W.
Webber,
Colhy DIU, Rlitfl Adams, Whitehead. llll11 Whlleheu )rill
has been home on furlqb.
dren, Dale, Julie and Michael•. Mrs. Roger Ewle anddaugbters,
mw president of New Kautz,
List SUnday his brother-i~law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Last weekend lhe family welll to l1aYe moved from Clio- to llleir . York
Karen
Humpbrey,
Debbie Woods · present alaoam~ernjazzdlnce.
Theological Sm~
Follrod. entertained with 1 turkey di,Mer in his honor. Guests were Ellettsville, Ind., to vloll Mr.
aild Brenda Spencer.
Tom ..~.umpf •I'd hlo .trumpet
M!'ll·
~
tbe Re'Y. aa:1 Ml"l. Circle, Florence Clrcle. Mrs. James Patterson. and Mro. Geor110 W. Price and """ home hare.
Terry ODd Brent, Mrs. E. E. Follrol, Clarence HW, Jim DldcDo and to lndlanapollo to vlall Mr. and
Kim Follrocl.
Bllly Price and lomlly. During
Mrs. MOUl'lllng'o vlsllln Colwn.
FRED AND ELEANOR CROW g&lt;Jt 1 ,_;;; at their Orst grand- buolbe llllrd birthday ol Michael
chlld todoy. Named alter his Iaiiier, Theodore Meier Beegle, Jr., was celebrated.
LIDdo and Ted have decided IIIII he'll be called "Toby",
The Rev. and Mrs. George Oiler of Mullins, W, Va., will come
HOW VERY NICE ol Horoco Karr to ~n Royal Oak Pilrk to Monday for a several days' villt
llelp COODIY Girl Scoula for their daY COII1I llle !alter part ol J111ol wllll their aon·ln~aw and daughNot oW)' hal he provldod a alte for between 200 and 300 girls ter, Mr. and Mra. l R. ~eal,
who wW perUcQiate In the 'clay comp pr&lt;lll'llll, but he has also of· andJa.oet Lee.
terud use of the facWtlea. In preYI.ous years, day Clll1&amp;l has been held
Asa Bradbury eame home Fri.
at C&amp;ql Kiletula near Chester, and It has been a ~mendous job day !rom Marietta College for a
piUDg the placei'OIIIIy.
weekend visit wUJi htJ parentJ,
lletiY Fulls, lolory Blhr, and Janet N..,. mel with Mr. Kerr Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bradbury.
1'l&gt;urldey to diSCUio the pooolbillcy of boldlng clay camp al the park,
and npn1: that uhe )1st calldn't have. been nicer''.

..,... v......

'·

p....

tui\eo 11111 ldghli&amp;bl the aiUIUII · lea~ ljheapO\ !!&gt;o ·~hO.. Will • Ea1tem Blab .sc'""" ~~ wllll 1110' ·~ ·~ &lt;'WIIat'a

.

Anywayo, IIIII ... ,

~~~· dlnct

.,

I pariY for Nancy'l hlnderprlea

o;la1181ateJ. She oenedcupcalteo
Jnd pve cantiY ravoro. Nancy
oolocled l4'dla JolmJOO u Iter
bolpor lillie party.
Liter a party wao held allhe

~

!!,1-

; .... .;:~_... -'-~,
.•

I,_.,

See Pictures of Holy Land

Party Given

...~ ... l .... ,_.•ij,Jt; ll .

,_ I\ I• ·~'_;

POMEROY - Mr. and Mro.
JIDIOI CorDell with
I "'-r. II lllelr Mechanic Sl.
home 711lrsday nlllrt llol»rrrll
Lorry Clrlce, u.s. Army, with a
prH&gt;Irthday obaervii!Ce.
Clrde wW lnave Monday on.
route to Vlefllam. Ills blrtiJdl,y
II !loy I.
Altendlntl the . . . In acldiUoo
to. 1lle and llle hooored
Pill - . Mr. and lira. IJoui.
lao Circle, IIIII Floreooo Cirde, Mro. Jack Follrod ind da""
""'. Kim and mc:I!Y s.rt.
Clrc:a will leave liolldo¥ for
Fort Lelda, Wuh. Frvm there··
bo will 1D to Fori Ord, Call!., ,
... to Loo: !leach before Pill

~

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~-~----------------------J
SHIPMATE

)

it
BUSTER

'

Hippie Set
Adds Hilarity
To CCL Party

'

'i

TOP

.'
', ' .

1·

(

"

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Sharpest plcturetol any Color TV. • Newesl,
· Sylvania Color Bright 85° picture tube. • ~Year Warranty'
· on picture tube piUs lull year on all ·other partS.
• Automatic Color Level Monitor. • Deluxe DC video
"
coupling. • Pre-Set Fine Tuning. • Superb malillall\lblllty. '
'
'
• Convenient no-guesswork color lUning contr!'l&amp;i
··
• The Industry's best combination otlhe best leaiUI'es. • ,
'

'

to Vlolnam.

This is a

summer cottage.

Your

.

..

'

luxe

go. Fashionable and lots of style.
They're perfect because they're ·
by Buster 'llrown.

Ch;ap
•

Vi~wablo
'

Rutland School, 11 • 2 p.m.
Real Home, 3-'1:30 p.

m.

'

ARE A BRAND NAME TREAT!'

Hamden, 3:45- 4:15p.m.

THURIDAY
Beacon Station, 8:45 ~ 9 a.m.
Catllolie Church, 10 - 10:30
a.m .
Long Bottom. U •· 1:15 p.m.
PorUand, 1:35 -2:15p.m.
Great Bend, 2:30 .., 3 p.m.
Apple Grove, 3:15 - 3:45p.m.
Antiquity, 4- 4:30p.m.

Racine Park, 4:45 -8:30p.m.

The Joyce pump sparkles and glows in a new fashion
this spring .. . with the return of the higher he.e l,
the scooped silhouette . . . the opalescent detail.

Dudley's Jlorlst

l

Very romantic and pretty and everything magic! AAA
to B, 4~ to 10. Bone lustre potent .

ELAN 20.00

~

Of ~ ,costumed IMmben at.\Onllng ~parb' held.inllle ooc!aJ
rOom ol the Columbus and Soufh..
oi-n Ohio Electric Co., Mrs. Char·
lea A. Bradbury took the prize
for the wlldRsl \I,Uifll

Carnes we"' ·Pla.vedwlthpr1zes
befrw won by Mrs. Bradbury,
¥re. Wallace Powers •.Mi's. Ray-

JPOIII Stewart and Mrs.'J a me ·s
WloeciQI.
·
.Rel'rt:ahm!nts were served
lnlm a tabledecoratedwith a ring
ot aowers ttnterecl with a mini·
sklrled doll carrying the" sign
11 1-leppy H!lpie Part,y."
The I'OIIJiwas-dec:oratedtofthe
pOfiY ~ Mrs. Roberi Sclimoll,
l{rs. Bradbury, Mri. ~owe'i'sanil '
· Mrs. Pot DulfJ!. ~hshmenta

i

bY, Mrs. .Wl,ec~,
Walter~rJa.,·~a. LoUis
serv~ -·

Oaborne and Mis. stewarL
' During a bualnes~meetiligheld
collluncllon with, ~ party, tho
.· eij!b modo a ' o..it.;ibUIIOII IQ•·II)e
. Ohio CliUd Coooerfttlnti League
1fholarshlp !•n fl1ildril"
.\
A St&amp;nloy pafijlwaoplannedfor .
10 at thte
t.olll,!Dbia Gai 'or'
offtct. P ·.' .realtocm,..
for the nmal dlmei'·Pir- ~
J110111b,o'a ·to be hol4.~\ 11~
In Gai.Uwijs pn thi re8UIIr
,)' ll\lt6Ulil !late'!' ~rlh ., ''.
·

· In

thing lor t~e young miss on the

lill-

HAPPY FEET

- aerva1;lon League.

lf!s.

111 , Monitor.
Color!! right
turt Tube.

MONDAY
Salisbury, 9-10:45 a.m.

for the annual guest night observance of.tho Mlclclleporl Clllld Con-

were

kid's education.
An

And with perfect b~lance. Some- '

27:

lightir!i, ·proteat slogans, and
enormous paper dowers ·~were
li11ed to create a "hippie" setting

• 1

'.,·' -

....

.tfc Fine

Edlzy'o

loiiDDLEPORT - P5,Ychedellc

BROWN.
DOES IT
DIFFERENT

ocean voyage.
Retirement.

Mr.

r---··-----.,

' '

!Save Up To V2 OFF l

POMEROY -

Scl!edule tor week of March 24·

New York
Clothing House

.

Pre-Birthday

..

At

.,

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r---7--------------------,
1
SPECIAL GROUP
·I

aames were .jll!lyed during the

Just In

. .. -1

GIRLS' DRESS STYLES
BY BUSTER BROWN

,,

vet,rana was given a banana.

New Shipments

AI•

-----·

Wellace homo. Gomes wore ployed 111111 prtzeo going to Ruth Ann
Blake and I,Vdla Johnaoo. Oilier

-

Janet St. Clair is Bride

.·!.·\ n.- ..

o'l

Pomeroy

Susan Ohlinger Betrothed

· anti

Dleorated cu.P._eakta·were serv-

ed wllb Kooi..Ud and each ol tho

Eddy's Schedule

United Methodllll Church, 7:30
.Mond&amp;Y nill!t at the churob. Mrs.
Roy Reuter, program Ieeder.
MEIGS BAND BOOSTERS,
·Monday, B p.m., Meigs HIgh
MIDDLEPORT - MR. AND MRS. DAVID OHUNGER, 487
School caloloqa; Plano to be
Sooth Fourth St., Middleport, announce the eqptgement and apo.
completed,.. band b~~ruJ~el.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry f'ickens
.Proachlng marrlage
or their daughter, susan Marie, to James
,,
TUE.!I&gt;AY
Edward Baer, son of Mr. and Mrs."Edwan:IBaer, 267 Mulberry
LADIES AUXILlAIIY, Dr e w
Ave., Pornero;y. Miss Ohlinger, a graduatl! of MJddleport High
Webster' Pool, 39, Amerlcoo Le·
School, Is employed at Ohio UnlversUy. Mr. Ba.er is a graduaioo; 7:30 Tueoday nisiTI al the
ate of Pomeroy High School arxlls a student at Ohio Universit.Y
hall,·
POMEROY - MJaa Janet St.
Following the cremon,y a re.maJoring in buslneBS administration. The wedding will be an
SOUTHEIIN BAND Boootero, . event of April 12 at 11:30 a. m. at the Sacred Heart Catholic
Clair, daughter or Mr. and Mrs. ception was held at the home of
Tuesday, Z:30" P·ll!: at the hlgjJ
Avery !II. Clair &lt;! Route 3, Pom- the bride's parents Mth Mrs.
ChUrch, Pomeroy.
ICbool; ryana ·to . De made to
eroY became the bride of Har~ Homer Bailey and Mrs. Windle
80nd bond otudenlo to llate coory Picktlll, Jr., son of Mr. and William• as the hostesses.
tell.
•
Mrs. Harry Pickens, Sr., RaMr, and Mrs. PiCkens reside
GR~ MASTER Robert A.
~ine, on March 8 at the Racine
at 210 Spring Ave., Pomeroy.
Henlliaw to apeoh Tuesday at
Baptist Church.
POMEROY-Episcopal Chur~;:h eral years ago.
Vows o1 the dolble ring cer~MlcJdlojlorl. Mesonic L&lt;ldge 363,
Her ·presentation was made mon,y were read before members
F. and A.M.; dinner al 6:30 W-omen were taken on an arm·
p.~.,
followed by entertain- t:hair tour or the Holy Land by Thursday following a luncheon ci the immediate families by the
ment,
Master Masons 'invlt· Miss Diana Davis who showed meeting of the Church Women Rev. Charles Norrla.
ed.
, ¥.
slides and commented on the Dr. held In the parish hOI.\Se at Grace
Given in marriage by tler fathJ.
J.
Davis
family
trip
tllere
sev-.
EpisCGPIJ
Church.
.
er,
the bride wore a white street
LADIES AlJXIU~Y, Feeney~
Mrs.
0.
B.
Sloul
presided
at
1
. 1
eng!h dress o1. br. ocade. !IIc
Bennett P_o_st 128, .American LeIN CITED OUTFIT
he
t meet ng attende~ by 16 mem- wore a veUed headpiece and a
gion; 7:30 Tueada,Y night al the
PT.
PLEASANT
Airman
bers.
The Lenten theme was car- cOrsage ol i'ed roses.
hall.
I
Attending the couple were Miss
First Class Gary W. Rea, son ol ried out in devotions gJven by.
LADIEs AU%1ARY, Racine Mr. and Mrs. James..£. Rea, Mrs, Fred Crow, Jr.
Naney
St. Clair, &amp;later or the
American Leg! Pool 602, 7:30
205 Park Dr., Point Pleasant, ta
During the meeting it was re- bride, anc1 John McClung n.
~m. Tuesday ~ post home.
a
member
of
a
unit tflathasea.rn-- ported that a st:ieab1e donation
The new Mrs, Pickens, a grad~
PAST MAT ONS, Pomeroy
ed the u.s. Air Fcrce Outstand~ had ~en made to the Book ofRe- uate of Meigs IUgh School, Is
Chapter, Order or Eastern Star,
ing Unit Award. He is a su_pp)J- -BRJffibrance sc~rehlp rund or employed at the Ohio Unlversl~
7:30 p. m. Tuesday al the Ma1aonic Temple; Marge Crow, inventory ~ci~ist "In~ 3511t the Diocese or Solithefn Ohio in Library. The bridegropm graOOstralegjc JC!;,..~I'!Jhf,AijWhlter"" m'lJ::j\1:~'1~'}',~ '•~toil"f~ Ra~' illafl'~hool and
li'oateis.
man AFB, :iii!., Wlt!IH hl! won be~,...
0.'9,~~~ fl'preo~ ej,pl~·at Blaelt~~
lbe dlsllncl!ve. senf!i ribbon.
~ ·•!.tho 'IIJ~ng ,., aiel· nar Auto eo
··The airman Is a 1965 gradlateof ter from the Chlldren's HOSJ)ital
WEDNESDAY
Point PleaBOnl High SCbool and In ~nclnnatl ill&amp;nklng the women
. POMEROY LIONS Club noon attended Maroheil Univeralb'.
lor gowns ma4e by the gro~Q~and
PLACE YOUR
luncheoo Wednesday at United
a cash donaUoft.
:r,Iethodist Church social room.
ORDERS EARLY
ASK TO WED
The ecum,B1nical oonterence to
Proeram planned. All asked to
GALLIPOLIS - Two couples be ..ld al Proctor Farm on Aj&gt;FOR EASTER
allend.
have applied for marriage 11- rU 12 was announced as was the
'
Plans Made Early censesln 'Gallta County Comp1on EpJscopal Church Women's anaAlway• Brlnt BeHer
Pleas Court. They were James nual meeting: to be held In ColumR•sult5.
A. French, Jr., 23, Addlion, U.S. bus, Aprll18 and 19.
Army, and ' S&amp;ndra S. Kall, 22,
Hostesses tor the luncheon
Cheshire, registered nurse; and . were Mre. P·atrtckl.ocha,ry, Miss
R. S&amp;muel Reylllnl, ID, Galli- Vida lhle, :Mrs. Frank Fugate,
Sorvlng Gallipolis,
polis, food productlon, and Ker- Mrs. Jolin Lletwiler, Mn. Carl
Mlddlopart, Po.,oroy, 0.
ry L. SWnp,- 20, Gallipolt's, res- WUI -and Mra. Everett He,yeL
and Muon· Co., ,W. Va.
taurant employe.

.,_

.,l;il~ftl'l~.

r

allbe D.A,V.llall.

CDICLE,

given

:rhllr

Rev. Page and Rov. llloc!re ore
10WII! evangelists !root Nalllvllle, Temessee, sent by the
United MelhOdtst BoOni ol EvBII;
gellom lo bring llle guepei message In folk mulle to youlll. They
lang to a gtOUp ot 300 at the
Clifton United Methodist Church
Wednesdey evening, a n d on

· '
' 95, Dauat&gt;ter1 o1 u.. ·
TENT
111n v-an1, ·7:~ · MilldOY night

Sixth Birthday is Observed
MIDDLEPORT- Pardee were guests were 81ellaandJanetHor~
hold In ab'"""""" ol the •!Jill IQ&lt;, Mary Ann lllllor, and COnnie
blrtllday aiiiiiiCJWall&gt;ce,dauSh- Belley, Coke and Ice crellllwere
tor a1 Mr. and Mrs. Dwillrt WaJ.. oerved and gUto - e preOODied.
"tlce::··--... ~~
·' " " '.'.'"fQ,\:ft'Uey.
_,., ·' · "· , -~Mrs. Wella"' - - w1111
·

.toa.

Sellers.

LYDIA

•

CLIFTON '- 'lt!e ReV. ond
Mro. Jim Moore and Rev, Tom
Page were, Wodllosday jplesta or
llr. and Mrs. Roy Fox In 'Cllf.

Nazarene, R:ev. A. E. t41iler;
United Preobjoterlan,.Rev. Lin""'
stebblno; Albury United Melhc&gt;.
dllt Clarge; ReV. W•deU Slut. ler; · SYricti!e • &amp;dton Ullited
Methcldlol Charge, Rev. Poul A:

were &amp;t-Yen'••tavora.

•

Singing Pastors are Guests

MONDA'(
UNION· EV ANGELISI'IC cru •
..de, Monday tltroli&amp;J, ' llluraclaJ,
al Asbury United . !ollllhodllll
Chureb, 7:30 p; ·m., Syraeult;
·messages by mlnilters ol par..
ticlpatlng ehurchea, ChUrch ft.

O..·v.

Uble. ·Mini "'"' Oiled with jelly part.y •••&lt;"r,..lM
beaAa were ·at · each pJace Sl;ld prize,
mUihm:allotr 1 '-cltlckens. chooo.. ~a•.
1a. robblts lnjl decorated Oil&amp;&amp; ,

·. I

The reoiiY "here•ond-now" l_ook With the "isn'tthere-ataoll" fHiing! Joyce-magic makes it the light·'.
est pump you've ever worn . Smoothest fitting, t90. Soft •idskin with romantic dressmaker touches. A*A
to B, S~ to 10. Platinum.

\

SUPERBA 19.00

,,,

·;, Jat"Action features galore! ..
F~tno~~~~
D61f1 Acti on ltgllo.tor. Clothes plunge - ; 4~--=~~~
~eep Into hlb ior th~~h. gentle'clital11ng;,l .,

•
~

'

• COld Waler
r;lolj'!e8

·

• ZJet-Aw.,- ,.,.
. ·~ ~!1,&lt;~ '!
automat~ally.
_J

'/:

-r'

.tb8

'

SEE

'

'''I

'

The c:ompl•te line
for men an~ young
m•n in oil the
new Levi's. STA·
PREST &lt;~ ...als.

. YORK .

., HOUSE , '
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-/ronton .Reports Given
·.K-yger:· ~reek Boosters
l

BiZ

.·'work in
Full Go
SYRACUSE - Wlletller In Syracuse or oo BroadWaY, there's oo
"biz"' like show 4 ttrlz" anti Syratuae women are out to provetbat
there"s a Uttle bam inmost otus.
Uooer the leadershljl of tile
SyracUJe Fire Department X..dles Auxiliary- one of the moat
ambitious lf&lt;Kpl in Meigs eoon..
ty - wcmen of the «mmUnicy

. .. .

We ,_rw ' th. ,r,W~t ti .Jmlt ..,I!Atlla

c,,rrifht,

The lacHes wUl present a hlll·

BET!'Y HAYFS, CENTER, PORTRAYS the bride In a mock weddiJw whloh wUl be
part o1 a wrlety show to be givea at 7:30 p. m. Saturda1at the 'Syr&amp;ouo,e Gnde Sohool.
othera, left to rlgbt, Mildred Plerce, the miaister; Janice Law1011., the bride's .mother:
Sylvia ZwU!btg, groom, &amp;00 Edith Hood, lather of the bride. 'lbe Ladieo Auxlllar)' of the
~ouoe Fire Department lo _..orbtg the &amp;bow.

U..JC""
·.,

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c.., •

a

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Gallipl)l~ ·

be taken.. The show will be staged
In the Syraouae Sohool audltur-

KROGER STORES

lum.

Charge Fallure to
Yield Right of Way

OPEN

GALLIPOLIS - Clcy pnlloe
dted Naomi M. Sallnden, 53,
Rt. 2 Crown Clcy to Galllpnllo
IIJmlolpal Court Ilardi 24 oo. a
oharP o1 !allure to yield the

riaht or

way

y

u result of an ac-

d- saturday.
Tbe at::cldent oc:curred at
10:49 a.m. saturday on Vine st.,

ta1 b)' Ruby

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L. Pierce, 45, Rt 2

Gallljloll&gt;. 'lberewumlnordamap to both velllclea. No ooe

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waaln,Jured.

One nation's deserter may

be another's hero; one nation's humanity must not be
turned off to suit another
naUon~ draft Jaw,
-GOf'dotl Fairweather,
...,.btr of Canadian Par·
!lament,
Americana
wllo
to Canada

to

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11 IIXT1IA 'lOP VAtUI ITAMI'I

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Meat Loaf • .. 69e
II% ..........

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1'111111 .GROUND MI!A11

Pork Loin . .. 69e

Elql, :t/211/6&amp;

A STOP AT THE PURITAN market resulted In a chat with

The Pat Glass Newsletter

~~::::::::~na~·;ve~two=-&lt;l;,;ooverlnge

- an

case ol llsfrtwelght fabric J)luo
an outer ticking or decorative
slipcover. r Utia is the cue,
remove the outer cover andwaah
It aeparateiJ' beoauae tllio labric Ia 10 closely woven that lt
keepa JUdi and water from clreu1at1no thr&lt;ullll tile filling. ·
If the )llllow hal DO llaing,

oeama on oppotlto older aoo laoten these openlnp with looM
basting or Q\lercalttng sUtdtea.
Then sud1 sad rinse water ean
Dow thr&lt;ulib these vento, allowlng dirt to eaCQe but not the
au«ertng.
Feather, down, Aorllall, DaC1'&lt;ll1 eOO Orion filled jliliOWI

few Inches on the

can be laundered aad dried 1&gt;¥
maehlne. To balanoe the WUIIer load, wash two plllowa at
a time and add clean towelo,
With feather IIIUn&amp; use extra
soap or detergent bewlae tea~
then cause tbe 1uds to die down
cpckl,y, Plllowo lend to lloal
on the surface of water 10 turn

a

looer

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Biscuits .... 12 ~99c
_._.io .....

11 IXTIIA 'lOP VALIII

no_,

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AU Fltwora Kro11er

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Ice

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-.s In a dryer or b&amp;nll them

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pmcb pillows several tl.me1 diJr..
Ina dmlli to plump up .oo nu11
thefllllna,

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Prkee.and Coupon•
Effeetlve Sun., Mon., Tue1.,
WtL Onlu ln ALL .

out on a breezy day, Slake aad

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rubber piUowo oan
be machine waahed, uaiD(r: a 5

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Lltflt ... D..tc .

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MlouloMoW

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the rest of my "(\m." afternoon ,obaen•tlc;Nlll for a later time
another colu~n.
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Grapefruit

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Rose- Bushes
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. .••., .$1,19,
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bk !Uteen mlnutoo, turn-

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,- ·Une dry or dryer dr7 at
. low cw medium •eltlalf - Wben dr)', brulb In ..,.._ :.
\'IillO dlrecllon to rm..IIIIP•·: ' , · '
' The extr• wear 1au Ill tr6m
~ eare Of Jailr ~lankll•
will . bonellt· fOUl'~ 1111···.,
Jl&gt;o,1001 run.
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porno ·-

-II!Jcl&gt;·

55th aMJ-

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GJest Speaker
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Is Dr. Wood
I)ALLJPOLIS.- Dr. C&amp;rl Sto. '
llir WoQdl ol, Galllpolio Wll the
pot _..or tor the Addavllle
PTA

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Mrl. Woods wa1 alao " auest
ol the Pl'A,
Gllberi ~ prellded ewer
.tho buJino11 · IIIOetlng. &lt;llrlnl
whld! limo .,!lie fii'OUJ&gt; voted to

.IIIU'dlUa,
a Lon!Joase
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. moatar for
Ute seboOl aDd two more •creens.
seven '· aereMs were purchased
at the last meetJnc.
Mrs. llartha Kelley-gave the
treuuror'o report and It stood
11 read, Mra. Mulford's first
grade won the room count.
Refre.ahment&amp; were •erved by
Mrs. Muliord'1 firstgradechatrIIUIII, Mro. Jnp McCoy and Mrs.
lloma S&amp;ndo.

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Miss Rober laJ3rickles

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Bop 11.5 f Ladl'e'5
Ar'd ·Meet Held

Oscar's. Any club interested In
helptq: with thla _project should
contact BUl Fulks,
The rest or the meeting was
turned over ·to the entertahunent
chairman, Th001pson Casey, Mr.
Casey Introduced two local boys,
Tom. Brardeberry and James
Mullens, The boyt~ , playedguitars
and sang folk 1ongs, some ot
which they composed themselves.
It was learned that the two plan
to make a record in the near fu..

ture.
Guests present at the meeting
were Mike andSteveKelley,Gary
Cox, Pam and AM McMahon and
Bill Fulks,

The door prize was won by Ter..
ry fellure.
The meeting wasad.iournedand'
retreshments were served to the
38 people present by Gl~· s
Grant.
The next meeting of the c l u b
will be April 2 at 7:30 p. m. at

the K or P Hall.

Wedding Plans
Completed by

At Church

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FreewUI llaJill•~ ~iii;u41ftov-:;)Ofl;tir1!1·~j , ,
Ald. !lonna 'llaasle, president,
waa In chu~. .
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GALLIPOLIS _ Fb)a.J plans
1b(OpenlftJ·prayer wa~ given have been announced fortflemar.
by . Mary Roberta. The secre- riage of Miss Sllndra &amp;!e .Ka.tt
tiry'a .and _,tr~lurer'a reports daughter o1 Mr. aixl &amp;fi.s.
were rsad and ~ecepted. Roll oall Oliver Kal!, Che,shlre; to Mr.
waa answered by thirteen mem- Jame"s A, French, Jr: Mr. Frenc:h
ben.
is the son of Mr. aiKI Mrs. J. A,
Ten sick Calla were made and French or AddiSOII.
llx get-well -cards were sent.
The wedding wiD be an event
Trllba PatterlOI)- the door at saturday Man:h 2S at 2-30
pitze. A reading was given by p.m. at th~ Cheshl 'Baptl. t
8
Hi.zel Jones. .
Church
re
Trllba Pa~1011 and Pauline
Wedding musle will begin at
Wat1011 sen'~ refreshments to 2 p.m. and tile gracious custom
the lfOU~. oM visitor, Mrs. Kay . o1 open church w1lJ be observed.
Hookman, wao; pre-.

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Barker Home

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Mro, Ted Barker
was the hootoao tor the Patiiot SOcial Clom
March m.oottna. Mrs. Barker optile meeting with the Lord'o
Prayer ropated Ill unl11011. Roll •
call .... .._ed ey Jiving •
~plo'o

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TO BE WED- Mr. and Mrs. Robe"rt Brickles, 109 Kineon

Drive, are announc:Jrc the engagement and approa.ching marriage ·Ot tljeir daughter, Roberta, to Ge"tald O'Neal, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert carroll oC Parkeuburg, W. Va. Mist Brickles
loa 196$ IP''!lluate of Gallla Academy High Schoolaoo a graduate of C'amden Clark School of Nursing in Parkersburg, She Is
empiOY.ed as a nurse at Holzer Hospital. Mr. O'Neal is a grlduate ofParkersbf#g High School and is presently serving In_the
Marines. The wedding is planned for Aprill2at the fi&amp;:5t Uoited
Presbyterian Church Jn Gallipolis at 6 p. m. An open church
will be observed.

ATTEND LEGISLATION MEET
GALLIPOLIS - Members ol
the Junior Woinan•s Club who
attended the COntra! Ohio River
District Lellllatlon Day last
week at Nelsonville, were Mro.
Gorden Roth, State Dlreclor of
Mro. Seoretaey;
Georp T e bMn.
I t,
Junloro;Junior
State

Attending were: Mra. Ted Wooten, Mrs. Jim Porter, Mrs. Robert Moore, Miss Judy Hall, MJs1
Noel Kohler, Miss Linda Root,
Miss Debbie Bradley, Miss Linda
Wessel, Miss Sharon Vaughters,
Miss O.eryl Snyder, Mils Jean
~ars, Mrs. Mike Cantrel, Miss
Marilyn Parker, Miss Sbaron
MUier, Miss Theresa Grosjean,
Miss Linda Thomas, Miss Dianna Stevens, Miss Wanda Wilson,
Miss Jane Dillon, Miss Carolyn

concerniWg the approaching wed.
dJ~. Thole winning prJzes were
Miss Wanda Wilson, Mrs. Ro~

Jul!y Moore and. Mrs. Bryce .
Smith, and U!e guest.of'-honor,
Miss Patti Bloss.

lovely presents.

iOJ0&lt;\1~~1nl ·~'\'!, ..,.,,, ~ : ~awho"''';. 1he

ert Moore, and Miss Linda 'Root.
Adorning the gift table was the
traditional bride f.tgUrine. Patti

tioit4""''.MJar. " '

REMEMBER
SPECIAL DAYS
WITH AGIFT
OF FLOWERS

then opened the personal gifts
from her classmates and gra~
ciously thanked them for the
COMPLETES COURSE
PT. PLEASANT - Private
·
LarryW.Carroll,22, sonorMr.
and Mrs. Ray Carfoll, Southside,

=~~b::ar;i~r:~~r::;

Du41ey's Florist
Servins: Gallipolis,

Transportation SeJ"Klo.l, Ft. F'Ais. V

Middleport, Pomeroy, 0.
~nd Mason Co., W. Va •

·. HAS THE COST OF HOUSING
-GONE BEYOND YOUR REACH?
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THEN WHAT ABOUT A

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lbiOJII.-

IJ!OIIIIIllled.

ol ·

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wUI, bOat the
with Pearl

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-~ OR DOUBL·EWIDE?
.~t :wlull4l•l•
.U,;.iUp and Upl ·

.::.:?.rs/ Lam, l11terest Just Keeps
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PAUL DAVII:C
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l!fi&lt;l
JEWELERS

«1&lt;1 S.co~d Avo,

~--~~~:;.!~:::,..-.i
s, 0 lo .
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Miss Patricio Bloss
Honored with Shower
GALUPOLIS- sfnior student
nurses from Holzer Medical Center ~hool of Nursing honored
Miss Patricia Ann Bloss, brideelect of Mr. ~erlin Roy Mullins
with a personal bridal shower at
the lovely home oC Mrs. Bruce
Smith, Gallipolis, Monday evenlng,
Beginning the evening. a dessert course of bon-bon cookies
and punch were served by the
hostesses, Mrs. Smith and Miss
Judy Moore. The ,guest then en-

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Jolm Carte, president ol tile Gal-

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Clufr:, Meets at

Tueaday eYening,

to eare for teefJI.

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GALLIPOLIS ·"' BUI Fulko, a
representative irom the YMCA
wail a guilt IIPU,ker tor the Gal·
Ua COunty Citlzeftf' Band RacUo
Club Inc. meettna: hillel Wedne&amp;o
1
day at the K or P HaiL Charlel
(FOlQ') Grant presided.
Opal stover led the Bl'004l In
devotiooa. secreta I')' SUe Francis
took roll can and read the
utea. The treuurer"s report was
ilven by .Rudl Ann McMahon.
A short diaculaion waa held on
the plaiaa tor the cld&gt;'a annual
CB .Jamboree. A trop11y will be
giWft to the memberaelliqthe
molt tickets to the Jamboree.
Tickets may be purohaaed from
any Club ·member.
A repteaentatlve rrom the CB
club wW atUn.:l 1 YMCA Ol'llnJ ..
zatical meeting on AprU 11 at

•tins

Dr. Woodl' topic Wa1 "'ChUdren's
~entlv., Dentistry." He •bow~
• od alldes and pvo a talk 011 ho!i

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OrangeJui~ ·······--~ . .. ::.:'
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Addaville PTA

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WUalao

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rat11111'
at the OhioDlstrlot
Music EdoJco· tton
·~isoetatiOI\
lioDd Delta
rorlty Koi&gt;Pa
at 6:30Gamma
p. m. Honor
April so28,
aoo Ch'1"us Contest held at ~
Charlene Dors~ Donna MJsb.'llt .Thie' Junior Hlih ~ ·+.., ir aD:I ftan~lit Tucker were.,..
11011111 or• seventh alii el~ pointed to serve Qll the """'""'
;riders rated a DL~ lf'Wtl Jtl!e
C'Ommlttee for election ~
fir-' Ume for this baD(fp ply &amp;-ocers which wUI be held ne"xt
In OOJ!tletition. The ~Dr· H~gt~ month.
band rated a n.
At the concluaioo of the meet-Mra. E&amp;hemur. llao P" a fe- i~ r'fre1hmenta were servedlq
port on chorus rattng which Mr. Mrs. Jame1 Tucker and MrL
Matheney c~trect1 aho. The Mixed Garland Buckley,

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WELl. THIS COLUMN IS . ~LREADY lo\l lq 10 I wUI aa)W

Oft..
Oii\J

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let loon all at once.

DietAiclBreacL .•. ~ •• : 4''=-$1
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Uon.

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to take a dime," lheansweredjustas

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....Cottage.,_ ,...Cheese ......... "!'...5k

- Alltale ooe miDrte If doolred.
- Rlnoe twice, mJid qlta-

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· ·il'hat Charlie Is one nne gardener. I've mentioned him boCpre.
. a; ll~a on the col'l'lhr of ~cond arll G~ Stre't,.Almo~f ev-

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Lowfat Milk •••••••••••

bleach).

- !t&gt;ln.

golng

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~LL AT ONCE TilE MANY SCHOOL· ohllciren just let out of
GAllS rounded the corner- wi~ aD avalanche....... of brlaht vU»ratJrw
collll'a, It reminded me of a h\llh bunch of tirlllllt boll00111 J&gt;,l111

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method:
- Place 0110 blaD&lt;et In the
walldng machine.
- UN lukewarm wattr.
- Uoo mUd detoriOIII (do not

time.

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OI'I'OIIe In town hao passed by hlo garden . mi,Or\ioi'ed his fine
,ch with powers aoo "ttetableo.

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Oncludlna 11001) ... be ........
tully waohed ey the lollowlna

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BENNJII
PENNINGTON,
patrolman, one of m,y favorite
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Wa11 checking
parkingolcy
meters.
j'Oh;,11emle, you're 801111 to apoll ........... after- lfyoo
lf.~e them' 11 ticket," I Blld. .,
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"I I ·.• •t do my ))b," he anawered, "the, will find aomeme
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W'IIU
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iVo tal~, and he said -1• are telkh• •-l!irdenilll,
~~~ue Hllber , has tomato plantl "" rour inChes hlgti," he·told

minute cycle with warm IUda. If

It Ia not covered, plaee the pillow In a mesh bag or a pillow
oaoe with Ito opeo end lutoned
by loose .Utchea. 'l1lU wiD pro..
te&lt;t the loam Croon lbrtddina or
brealdng, Foam plllowa may be
Ioftin tho washer, .-,rlnl the opto
cyole. Pillow• ftOed with ohredded foam rubber· can be dried
automatleally at low beat.
.u oprt111 ~· aoo with
It, warmer temperature1, 7 o u
will be using fewer blanket1. s ..
fore packlne: them a~. be 1urt
ther are clean. For belt reaultl
follow care lnotrudlcllo 011 the
label or package wbleb caN
with the blanhet. -I
bla!Ntl

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KROOEB STORES/

Latex roam

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:A WOMAN \VAS;, TRYING TO START a oot-too-new car, ltwao
IUCh a pre1t)' day, the kind that 11\lkes melovetheworld,aol
.,pke to htri~Ith a bJg smile, I said, 11 Pait a nickel in it."

lr,"'rdly

IUdling. Rinse well, reltitch the
open vento, then dey at a law

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~~TEELE AND BETTY FISHER of Ec~ Cleaners had their
. ~~door open so the good tr•eh _s.Prtrw· air could get in. Betty
~ant workJ!'I much. quess she had spring f~ver too.

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~ DiCk ~~utrOduced me 10 a nice aalesman with a nice name.

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11 1~ TOP YALUI IT,.....

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GWI~~ ~ .Jtopfed In ,there too. MarU7n .Barron w~ there

IUCIOIACGII .

ElQ&gt;,

tha~r. to oolve thlo one.

.mlat,mlndo
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~ ·:~A.TTERBOX'_'· WAGNER 11111 .YCII see everyOne at

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Ulem over during the wasblng
to lfve both sldea a thorough ! ·

Ina blaaket twloe ...,. t b I 1

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Mrs. Way!!!: Shaver. We. W.ro iolned by Mrs, Robert Olobl SaunADDISON - Eva Gardner led
dora. 'lbe odnm-oation turned to the unr01t ll!ftODg ~outh.
a Bible quiz ·Cor the Wednesday
•,Ji.t+ a JWil&gt;lfiWe &lt;!Ia- It around "'"htliW:I!.W*"w•IM' m""\'ns .l!f.Jb•H\&lt;11!!~~

.· G!lh~Jil,g!
~illow.sr
Bl0;~ke·
t
8·"
fly

1-AT GL~
,
Ext.. Agent, Home Eeon.
GIJ.Ua County
GALUPOLJS - 1be pillow•
you eleep on aoo tile J)lllowo
you UN as deeorad.ve accents
must be kejll clean to retain their
comtortable reslllency.
AimOit all J)lllOW8 aduall1

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0'111ER MEMBEI!S OF THE illLLmLLY ~ parcy- a part of a Sf'OcUse varltzy aU aldt - inclllle, left to right_ Peggy Staats, flower girl, Velma Parson&amp;, matron
ol hoaor; Mabel Pickens, father of the groom; Ada Slack, mother of the grOOJili Agnes
White, beat man aDd Daiay Patuerson, rfrwbearer.

~l';t

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lOa -7p

wben, according to pollee, Mrs.
Slunders pu!Jed out onto VIne
st. Into the path of a oar dr1Y-

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Fulks ,·s Speaker
neAhe~..;:~::~r pe~ ::~· ~ ~·edbrolin For CB ·Radio Meeting
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iuloo to anotller, lt .wu .o!lillle tiler p~~ ' . ·
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. . Game'.~nd quiet 'comradeoh1!J are IIIIi... the CIW J,ioaoureo
·~ ~.to;. "~~'" ouembled In the afternoon w&amp;J'I!Ith ala brlllbt Maroh
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: On 1~ch a day, 1 park ,bench' 11· Jnore ·il].~tllw''tban a dark home
w:hefe 00 wlte watts.
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· .. ~_ ~~ld rather gO h9Jne aiXI quarrel or get put to work U.n
go hol:n8 to an empty hoose."
.
'. n\e)'_1were u•ntmoUJ about wlahlng they COjlld atUI work, but
tlie wetaht 1!f 70 plua )'elro llowo- their ~tepa, If oot their mlnlo.
Two -ot~,ero joined the gr...,, One .wore, • Legloo CIIIJ and walked With a' cane. When the 'subject ot the w.eather came up, he said
h!.s legs :~ let hlin know whe_n lt 'waa.aotna to nln.The other
Wl.l a big, ~e.t, dark man wh~ didn't talk mu~h. .
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,Walter Jame1 .. kept a sharp lookout on ·the corner drugstore
nc~. 1 '":alter·~ waiting tor the 'P81J8~, he'• got to have
thet - r , one aald.
-,
, .. For yean, when the Trillune office was "downtown," the
. ~ would ea~r, rain or shiM to .wait on J "hot ott the preu"
GOlllj&gt;olil Dally Trlb!ine.
,1-"lnally the paper arrived anLt James brought it back to the
aeated . gatheriq. 1'\flsh the)' atiU tad ho11jJltal admtssians. I
1~, It w~n tbe?1 pve a patient' I COIIditlon, J()Od, fair or crltl·
ell, 8 01he0iie aakl
.
'"Heard ~, old Sam ln Bidwell was pretty bad otr. I'll check to
see It, 'ih...,•, all!1hl111 about him." He ru~ed the printed pqeo.
'lbe onllll111 Uttle handed beck tho
SOmeone said,
••rJow what on e&amp;rth can )'OU do with 1 penn,y?"
"A pe1111y will buy 15 minute• J,1arkl111 time on the meter In
fi'J)rt ol the poSt office," Knox WUJiamsanawered•
Those old fellows oookllli up the Galllpello pun oould teach
the young men ot today a few trlckJ, I'll bet.

PUU: ~mt

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·MI;:.:.~::··~~tlli~,
to. ~o·;~:i!.; ~:;ri~~, J:."tlkeoble · B1-ll
Joaeph Wl.llaatd.
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u All right nori¥ "teUow1 " s.•r• utd, ''collection ti.me."

·Bygrade';.-, ._

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GALLJPOLil;·- RepOrtoOI!tlle '-Chorua apd Women'o Enemble
barid's ,.urwa at lnDon were both rated I In Clfa1 .A ewnpet~.
given at the Kyger Creek Bo..r ti011 aoo are eligible tor lhe ltate
•,.llonstoro meeti111 Monday nl'ht oi&gt;ntest. The J,.Uor High Choruo
,. -'IJh !1)0 preoldorit, ~'" Wallda rated a m. Mr. Mathene~ wao
E1heraUr, preakllng.
highly complimented on a tint
"1n the abaenc:e ot Mr. J o h n job from both ~s..
"Matbent)', ~r.a. Elheqaur cave
A motion was .made and iq,.
A"a JtP.Ort OP the band and Chorui . proved to serve a ·diMer tor the

cit, ·
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o! the; bl'
buUdllli that
1
l8y Dink. •
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Now aoo' then a """ race JoJ.,.ci lho, IP'"'t!·
and tbon pigeon new awaY lhaltirw- ·a dalah'otwhltie.' ..
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. ''•• .In thole da¥1 far!birl cami fo ~toWn· 011 tile river p&amp;~•."
~ 11 Yeh, those bolt• Would pUll \1' , 10 liD)' ft,ld.:Jtirt: th"e apron
~n and a man ~ex¥ c~~ on,rlOfd IDd ·an.:\
.
··~ r ' .11 111ey !ad 9lie advantap," (f01J04fed Wltli.a Jl~ chuckle,)\
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~ "No state patrol to Caich'~ouU' •:-~~ ,.' '•
·. A 111110, amUirw tellow 'IPPl'Oiehed. He. wa• lntrcduced ••

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are p....,..-1111 for their part In a
varieQ" show to be held at 7:30
p, m. saturdoy,

billy weddl111aoo perform • mop
dance. other talent of the ccm-.
munll&gt; ..m be takllli part In additioo to the Slutlar Broalerhood
Quartet trom VleJtN1 W. Va.
1 There's no acbnisslon chl~e
althoogh a tree wUI olterlng wUI

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JG 1 'lbe SUidltY 'rin~o~.r,..., ,.,...;, Yatda a; tsil.

Jan Karen :fope.·w~et:Jsi~A:r
GALLiPoLIS - Al2':30 In 1111

atternoon ct. March 9, Mlaa lan
Karon '!'.,., be&lt;ame tbo bride of
Mr. llllchlel 'McCormld&lt; In llle
Fl•llt Bopi!111 Church, GalllJx&gt;llo.
1be bride to. tile dau$1&gt;10r 0(
Mr. and Mrl. Earl Tope, 525
Third Ave. and the bridegroom
ls the son ol Mr. and Mrs. Rex"'
McCormlck, Lower River Rd.

Vows oi the double ring cere~
mony were road by the Rev. Jo-. ·

seph c. Chapman. Seven branch
candelabra and baskets Of gladl~
U, mums and carnations .aloog
with candles and greenery on

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"'"''.,....JV·I.. r.il'll'l ""k

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2-1 Ud7-8p. ... .
Pedlalrl&lt;i Ward.
Aclmlullln~ • , ' '
Publlc:atllln of IICbD!oOiono 1II
prolllbited uaW. !llrtber •notice.

&lt;h=b fellQwohiJl room. T h e
bride'• llblo carried out her
blue uc1 )'OiloW lbeme. II wu
~With a four :uereditodding~~ trimmed with blueroaea and tq,ped tt'adltkrlally with
the bride and.groom- flgurlnes.
Reglatertns auesta waa Mrs.
Mjchael Bui'ka, the groom's atster. Hostesses were Mra. Thomas Tope, Rochester, N. Y.;
Mrs. Michael Neal, Mlaa Janeen

3:12 p.m. Frlda.Y; ~- Poul · dl\'0!1001 by Mro. T h - Elll'Omeroy, 11011; e 1H man, Si&gt;lrttual Llf~ Chi~
a.m. Saturday.
qalrw: the topic, 11 Tbe81lentPartDlschargea
ners. 11
Jeollio:a A, Akers, Lori Am
Dllrl,. ·thO bus!"'" moo~ II
Hencler1011, Mra. June• W
·, Bar- waa amounced that the anmal
nelte, Rachel Ami Colllea, Rlri- Mother-llaloglller banquet wnt 1io
dal B, CCI!kle, Mrs. Mary B. aorved on Ai&gt;r1117, '
COx, Mr1. Clarence C, Crace,
The Scioto Pre!JI)yteJ;"iaJ'meito
Mrs. 01a E. ci-al&amp; Patricia A. 1118 will be hold In ChiUieotlte on
DonnOJI, Robert w. Dlxan, Jr., Frlciaf, .Ai&gt;rU 18. AmOI!i I he
LawrMoo M. Donahoo, Maurloo . speakers wiD be Mr. and MrL
E. For&amp;OJ!, LAwrence M. Fow- Glenn R. Noble, Pre~n
ldr, John L. Hall, MrB. Lopn fraternal workers iu SUclan. Alao.
E. lam, SteUa A. Lanham, a.er. at this mee~rw- the new PreJby·
ry B, Lanham, Mrs. Clarence 0. terlal otricers w111 be Installed.
1011,

Mrs. Nolan Fry andKath)', Grove
Mr. and Mrs. Robert CavenCity; Mr. and Mrs. Karl Jua.. der and Mr. and Mra. V, R. Mctice, Ben and Jenniter, Laneu- Cormick, South Charleston, W.
ter; Mr, and Mrs. Harry Rich- Va.j Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Mc·
ardson, Rick and Ed, Troy; Mr. Cormick and Mr. Mike McCorJohn Murray aad Mr. and Mrs. mick, WaBhlngton, D. C. and Mr.
Bruce DennifJ, Pt. Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs. Bernie ~Cormick,
and Mrs. Lee Hodge a, Wlij'lle, W. South Charleston.
Va.; Mr. Gary Thomas, Athena.

Cheshire Garden Club
Program on 'Herbs'
- Mrs. Leona Gro- meats, fiab and chicken.
All Ule herbs are beatJtiful
ver gave the program lor the
plants
which have bl(K!ms of eithMarch meeting or the Cheshire
Garden Club and Mrs. Raymond er plpk ,91:,, l~ve~r. Qqe ,ho~~.•
ahe did not have was the mustard
Zerkle was hostess. ' 1'
· Mra. Grover s p o k e on seed mentioned tn the ' Bible,
Mrs. l'flyllls Hawley, presl"Herbs." Sle told how the addition ot herbs and cooking wines deol, did a demoostrallon of alrto common dillies make gormet la,yerlng. file used a sharp knife
foods. At least 20 herbs may be and cut a limb near the main
uoed lor oooldng. Among tile branch, pried open the cut with
most popular are black and white a wooden match and wrapped the
pepper and sage. Hems m&amp;7 be wbole thing with damp peat moll
used to perlurne vinegar, aweet covered with Saran Wrap. 'lbi1l1
kept moist aU thetl.meuntll root1
rorm, usually ln alx to elgbt
weeks.
Mrs. Phyllis Hawley gave meditations from the Secret Place.
Roll call was, "Herbs I uselDOit
CHE~mE

• GREEN • RED • ROYAL BLUE
ONLY$ lQQ

Da~nbrough's

Gallipolis

POINT PLEASANT - Thla r&amp;portet, in t~ compan,y cf "two
members ol the CIUzens COmmittee invesUgating conditions
ol Muon County Schciola, visited
HaOMn High school Frldoy morning at 10:55 to observe the sehool
while the students were on noon
hour,
A vecy loud, flat shakl~ threat

GALLlFOLls - Mn. . WQ,_.
Qldell jlreolded at u.i ~ or
the W~~~!H'• As100latloa of 1110
· fll'ot Prosb)'llrlu ~~ phldl

E. Ferrlr!,

' Mrs. Michael McCormick

BASEBALL CAPS.

BY DODEE FORAN

Blrtlto . , i);
Mr1. ~tlbert 'BiileJ, wme... wu ""' at: the Chur.ch Wedlii~'
ville, 11011, 2:i7p.m.F~MrJ, do~ lllafil.
,' ,
lleilllen W; Hamiid!, SorlUt POint,
1'1!11 !DIIOII!W was opened Wlth Mrl.

McCoy, EameatF,Morrow,Mra.
Marlin D. Rose, Mrs. Bert Roae,
Lawrence E. Sanders, Mr1. BM~
Jamln A. Schenellald, Mrs. Charles L. 5mlth, John A. Stacy,
Franklin B. Wilson, Mra. Kenneth Dempsey, Mrs. Larry Wtlion, Mro. Raymond Broyles and
Infant daughler, Mrs. Ed L. liar·
mon Jr.. and infant son, Mrs.
Howard D. Snyder and Infant
doughier.

USHER THE BASEBALL SEASON!

Committee TurnedOut

,

l'Ueni."Cil

doiirertwenwhlteroaebwla,
~ lollowln&amp;d.e..,...
IIICI1I' a ?&lt;IP!Ioo'will held In llle

De~rtment Store

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Holzer liocllcal •C..r, · rJ~il
Avo., Gollla&gt;Oila. Vllllllnc bauro

He1'

either side of the pews decor- Thomas, ~gomery, W. Va.,
ated the scene of 'the wedding. and Miss Martha Cornwell.
The pews were marked with white
For a weddiDg trip to Niagara
bows.
Falls, Clllllda and New Yorl&lt;, the
The bride who &amp;IJIIroached ~ bride changed to a white lfil.en
altar on a whUe aisl• cloth, dress over whieh she wore ayelwore a short &amp;mm of Sakifeatur- low coat. Navy acces10rles and
ing the wedclina ring neckline. the orchid from her weddingbouIt . has a modified bustle in the quet completed hertravelingcoa..
back and long victorian Sleeves tume,
of Korate lace.
'I1u~y will be at hometotrlends
~e was given in marriage by at 138 Secoo.d Ave.
her father and she wore a BNThe new Mrs. McCormick Is a
gium lace mantilla borrowed grad~te ot CAHS and Gallipolis
rrom Mft. Richard Caldwell.
Business College. g,eispresentHer tid.aquet was daisies and ly a secretary or Tope's Furnlwas centered with a yellow ~ ture.
throated white orchid.
The bridegroom is a graduate
On~half hour of music pre~ of Wul'lington Irving HighSchool,
ceded the ceremony, Organist Clarksburg, W, Va. and Gallipo..
was Mrs. Edward stewart and lis Business College and Is emsoloist was Miss Margaret Am ployed by the Pernvtare &amp;!perBrewer. ~cial selections were markets.
"Hawaiian Wedding SOng,"' -.The
Out- of- town guests included,
Lord's Prayer,"anduBecause... Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Tope and
Mrs. PatricMcBrldewasma. Lori, Rochester., N.Y.; Mr. and
tron oC honor. 9le wore 8. li&amp;ht Mrs. Michael Burks and_Timblue gown featuring an empire m.v, SOuth Point, Ohio; Mr. and
waist. Her flowers were blue Mrs. Forrest Thomas, Fayette~
and yellow daisies, Sleal110wore vOle, W. Va.; Miss Janeen Thoa tlowerheadpiece6fblueandyel- mas, Mootgomery, W.Va.; Mr.
low daisies.
Scotty McCormack, Mr. and Mrs.
Best man was Mr. Keith Cot- Keith Cottrell, and Miss. Darla
trell, Huntington andusherswere Hamilton, Huntington, W, Va.
Mr. David Tope, tho bride's
Dr. and Mro. Richard Caldbrother and Mr. Michael Neal, weU and Gwynn, Mrs. Edith Cook,
Lower River Rd.
Miss Virginia Cook, Miss Doona
The bride's mother wore a COOk, Mr. and Mrs. Dave Cook,
beige linen skimmer dress with Kathy, Danny, and David, aJl o1
matching linen and lace coat. Columbus.
Her corsage was ptnk rosebuds
Mr, and Mrs. Roderick Thornand her acces110ries were pink. as, Greenfleld;Mr.andMrs.HarT he bridegroom'• mother ley Cloud, Vinton; Mr. and Mrs.
cho8e to wear a charcoal wool &amp;an.iey Wood, Cora; Mr. and

t.I1~~~~~TA..• ~. NEW~~
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r.;t ,lii!'Jiur&lt;p)IM a~et~el.

became

New Shoes for Easter

After the buainess rneetirc,

NAMEP TO DEAN'S Lm
GALLIPOLIS - Harry Anisbary, lOR of Mr. and Mrs. Wa,yno
Amlbary, pre - med Ill
Ohio Stale Unlvorsltl' wao oa the
Dean's Lilli tills ~-- H&amp;r17
was carrying ~ hours and
received a f point baur ratio b,r
gettilli all A' a.

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THE,(U•r;
.,
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make you feel like a girl-elegant,
·romantic-looking shoes, like this ant:
from our new collection.

HEA-+CtiE$1
+ {",

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ER

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·· TilE ·~CARE · OF INDOOR- ·
OUTDOOR; KITCHEN! ·
BATHROOM AND
SHAG CARPETSI .. , ,

I
TAY:IlUl
Jewelers

LOUIIINNI

LJ.I:I'I'"I 111 .00

IIIIIN "III.IIO

422 s.. ~ •••·
Gallipollo, Ohio

on.n.•

Boy's Wear

an lnvllatioo to the Gallipolis
Garden Club open meeting and
the Spril!i Regional Meeting to
be helcl In Athens on '1\prU 10.
An outstanding nower arranger
ucl judge, Mrs. Paj'l W. Reed,
wiU prooent the prqp-am at tile
spring meeting.
Tbe hostess waa ast!sted by
Mr~t. Wllllam Scott in the senlog ol refreshments.

·Free Give-Away
DAN THO
.

&amp;

"SERVIN!i
•

Scond Awe •

No Pilr'tllase N8Ce5Sar!

Wilson, Mill Susie McDaniel,
aiV! Dodee Foran. Registering the

Education

Plan Just
N•1ce Dream
COWMBUS (UPO- Former

Mr. Siders also saldthatSmith
was the best superintendent that
he had ever taught !UXfer, that the
coal rurnaco at llannan fmd been
converted to gas aOO 300 gallons
of paint had been used on the
school since Smith had been in
office.
The comrniltee members, Elden Vanscoy aOO Leonard Shobe
alii this reporter than visited
Smith al the Board or Education
office. Smith refused permission
to visit the schools oC Mason
C&lt;&gt;unly. He said that he know lhe
condition that they were in and
Lhat a team from W. Va. Unlversil3 at Morgantown was making
a survey of schools alkl bus stops
in the county aOO would have a
booklet made 14J with conditions
am recommendations for lm..
provement.
"Everything that can be done Is

lace • lilting this
summer. Our cammoopurpoaels
to. improve our school• to the beat
of oor ability," he said.
Smith also said that money · ·
would be avaUab19 July 1, 1969,
and that contract bids would be
let in June for a vocattu..l
school ln Mason County.
Smith asked Shobe ancl Vanaw
coy to walt and give the board
time, that things would be taken
care of aa the mDNY becomea
available, He said that when he

Teen Dems

OrganiZe

WORKER INJURED
PT. PLEASANT - Frederick
Thomas, 49, Cottageville. was
admitted to Pleasant Valley Hospital Friday at 11:05"'11.. m. with
a fractured lumbar spine, the
result of beingstruckwithapiece
of falling steel while working at
lhe Marietta Manufacturing Co.,
where he is employed. Ills condition is listed as good.

3Z1 Second Ave.

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Gallipolis, Ohio .
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On Friday
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PT. PLEASANT - The Teenage Democrats of Mason County
Divorce Granted
held a charter meeUil!: Friday
night at the hoftte of Mr. and
By Judge Thompson Mrs, Lawrence Plants.
Eighteen members were presPT. PLEASANT - J u d g e ent to hear Paul Crabtree, assistJames Lee Thompson granted a ant of the governor's office in
divorce to Jeanette L. Cottrill Charleston, tell "Why I Became
from Danny Ray Cottrill, also A Democrat."
awarding to the plaintiff care arxl
He said "Because they cared
custody of an infant daughter. about the people instead ofmater"Ibe defendant will pay $50 per ial things. They do make some
month ror support ofthechik:land mistakes because they keep try$100 per month for support of ing and starting new things."
the plaintiff.
A committee of three people
JWge Thompson also Friday was selected aro included Paul
dropped charges or contributing Dick, Provisional President,
to delinquency againat Lucille Marjorie Crabtree, Provisional
Durst, without prejudice, a n d Secretary, and Julia Plants. AdeMichael Brown, Thomas G. Wll~ ci s jon was made to contact the
liam, Uerney Hichard Stevens county high schools and junior
and Brian Hollins were released highs for a membership drive.
from probation.
Other teenage members pres- ··
ent were Sheila Messick, Karen :
Schultz, Georgia Rardolph, Kitty
PLEASANT VALLEY IIOSPJTAL Stewart, Gale Plants, Kendall
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Clenndennin, David Lingerfelt,
Donohue, Pt. Pleasant, a son.
Patricia Kapp. Marilyn McCoy,
Admitted - Mrs. John C. Mill- John Crabtree, Debbie Russell,
er, Henderson; Lora Parsons, Neesha Voight, Patty Helb, Pat
Leon; Mrs. Thurman Smith, Gal- !Iuffman and Lii'Kla. Messick.
lipolis Ferry; Elmer Fife, GalliThe teen-age group is sp~
polis; Gertrude Sturgeon, Ashton; sored by the Mason County DemMike Messuer, Jr., Cottageville; ocralic Women's Organization.
Jack DeVore, Ona; Mrs. Jesse Adult members present were
Donohue, Pt. Pleasartt; Freder- Maxine Nibert, Allene Plants,
ick Thomas. Cottageville; War- Frances Lingerfelt, Evelyn Kaw
ren DeWeese, Leon; Mrs. Cladus and the speaker.
Buck, Leon.
The next meeting date will be ;;
Discharged - Addie Olinger, on a Thursda)' in April, date ard
Mrs. Dorothy McDade, Christine place to be announced.
Jetfers, Mrs. Cecil Dean, Emma
Morrow, Re11. Thomas McElihenm·, Ruth Arm Love, Dana
Durst, Mrs. Roger Stover a n d
son, Michael Rossen, Mary
Blake, Elmer Frye, Mabel Mash.

SOUmERN EXPOSURE In
Clearwater, Fla., where 20·
montb-eld. John Bunce
seemo to be bavlng dlftlcully dim biD I on playgroltnd ettulpmeat set up
near his borne.

BERNADINES

&lt;-'t!B

Beautiful fabrics,
elegant embroideries and flatterIng designs highlight a stunnif!g
collection of For•

mals for this year.

tCHARGE

Store Hours

Mon. Tuoo. Wed. Sot.
9ti15
Thur.-9-12
fri.-9-8 PM

.

O.LAY:A\I'AY

...

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play it cool
Don't fret about fashion! Play it cool with
this smooth little number. Auditions
fashioned it to keep you in step
wherever you go.

Councy.

Young 111en of oil ages ...
nilVI Is the lilitt IO be lh!nlt!ng In ltr!IIS of ,011r word·

D1 tile caMs of the teelullcal
lnatllule dllltrlcta, uniVersll;y of.
ttelala who have branches in
the area telitlfl.ed they did not
feel there was a necessil;y lor
the oew racOities, while lnstilule peraoonel llld thoro was a
demucl for the facUlties.

robe wllh Spring and ]!osler
jlisl orolllld 1/u comer. Now
. at .·Haskins·Tanner 10!1 will
find a . good seleclio11 of
clothing, sport , coals flllll
accessories In lht season's
~esrSiylu and sl1odiilgs. I'e
illllilt 7ou lo sl~p in sooll and

look over ow eoi.I"I!OII ..

If your old car
is too "sprung"
for this spring-

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AMERICAN
LEGION Auxll·
"llcy, regular meetil'l 7iSO D.
m. at the Legion Hall.

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Don't waste another day or dollar on "reviving" that has-been hack! Get one of our
quick-action, all-inclusive bank Auto Loans
that not only will give you .a new cat to
enjoy right now, but also save you money
on the over-all cost ..• tight.now!
5ef

Ul

I!Mii'Y\

·Y LLIY

I'NN JIJD¥lN BIBLE ClaJO of
the First Baptist Cl'llll'eh, 7:3G
p.m.
!

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.·· ;.Op• Frldi¥ Nil•

, &gt;I

111 ·8'PM .; .

...'· \:~·'. ',

.ii,
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$18.95

FREE PADDING

Agenda May Center

AND

On Chinese Polley

INSTALLATION

'

With The Purch... Of .•..

Suits priced ·(roll! 29.95.
Sport CHIS frillll 17.95:

, CENTENARY GRANGE7:30 p.
n,. Open meeting lor Mer.eervllle, SWan Creek aad CadII!UI to praolloo do- work.
Solan Creek ladles bring cookies.

...

callielabra were fUled with pink
aid white flowers. As•lstlrw-with
the reception were Mra. Russell
Jones, Mra. Loman Jones, Mrs.
Harold D. Davis, Miss Warlla

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- A pl'(lp()sal ror a technical
Institute district In Musldngum

TIIESJAY

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boot•

aln&lt;:e
odded.
Stc&gt;t. Smith at
Alll)llrtlos ~greed to a moetlqr cation otnee at a
ot the ftve man Citlzens• ·Com- future.

Maaoo CoUnt,y Schoolsl Brooks beirw done a.s fast as JX)sslble.
Smith. He said those ''were his SlJlllij'aide School is due for a
orllors."

twoy•rs mittee

Councy.

MONDAY
SPECIAL BUSINESS meeting
d the Galtla Cl\aplor 0( the
Ohio Civil Service Emp10100'1
AsiiO&lt;:IaUon K of P Lodp llall
7:30p.m.

.

Connie Kay Woomer

Tuesday, he said.
The area contains man,y farms
and homes, Ula.rHe Kinnaird, Luther Price, and Henry Woods
are three farm~rs who have had
their farms burned out in part.
Volunteer fire crew, under the
direction of A. A. Smith, forest
ranger lrom Buffalo, and Darst
have been fighting the new fires
breaking out. Fire fighting is best
at night, Darst said, using (ire
rakes and a strong back. He said
the trouble is ttat when "we lhink
we have lt out, the next morning,
when the sun comes up and the
wirv:l starts, it breaks out all over
again."
The willis have been clocked
at as and 40 miles an hour.
The rire on Crabtree R()8.d that
starled Thursday was quickly put
out, Darst Said. The light rain
around 7 p. m. Thursday helped.

ery

lOV A!:! LE

STOP IN AND REGISTER FOR OUR ...

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.

state Sen. Rosa Pepple o1 Uma
said Friday GoY. James A.
Rhodes' higher edueatlon programs w e r e ••magntficient
dream•. u
"We Deed leaders who dream
imponlble dreams," he told the
Ohio Board of Regents. ''Mak1ng these sb: branches universlties ·is a f1ne proposal. n
Pepple leolllled belore tho
Regents on leglslatlon which
would create s1x oew state colleges by 1971 under Rhodel'
propoaed plan for hlt!lrer eduoalion In Ohio.
'lbose brauchea Would Include
uma, Maolfleld, Zanellvllle,
Alhllbula, Canton, and Mlcldlefolm
town.
'
••This Wootd raJSe the culturt:re
' '1111! nowcywed&amp; will malketllalr al level o1 all those areas, n he
home
at 1601 E. Crest Drive, Apt. Illd.
,loog
s~
, necklloo
with embrOid- p6, Clarlotte.
'Too Large. ImperiOnal'
"at the
ancl the elllJ)lre
Pepple
llld big unlveroltlos
bodice. T~e bridesmaid's cor- · Auxiliaries of
were "too largo, too big, uc1
aages wete wblte carrw.tlons with
too imper.aonal.''
Otureh Will Meet
pink rosebud cascades.
"l am eonvlhced tbat ·a small
The bride carried wblte rosePT. PLEASANT - The a.uxll~ part of disorders are caused by
buds with a white oi'chld am larlea of Trinity Unllecl Metho- Crustratlons ot some brllllant
white carnation cascade.
dlat Church wW mee.t Tuesday. students at the· big schools," he
The bride's going awu dress
Dorcas Circle will meet at 2 all d.
pink crepe knit with black p, m. at the church with Mrs. D.
Regents took no oatclaJ stand
i:cess,orl•" and a pink not and L, Cottrill and Mra. John Car.. on the propoaed legislation Fri..
hat. She wore the white penter as co-hostesses,
da,y.
from her bride'8 bouquet.
Mary Circle w11l meet at 7:30
Taken under advisement were
WUUam Wohlford, Princeton, p. m. at lhe home of Mrs. Clara three proposals tor new schools.
as best man. Roy Woom- Cheuvront, 2915 Birch Ave. A
Included were:
Jr., of Point Pleasari, broth- white elephant sale will be held.
-A presentation on the desir: or ~ bride, was usher.
The Rebecca Circle wiD meet ability of a Kent Slate Unlver· A reception immediately fol- at a p. m. at the home of Mrs. sJtv branch campus Jn Wadsthe wedding was held at Vlrgll Siders, 136 English Rood. worth, Medina COunQ' 1 Where a
Home with a pink and The Priscilla Circle wlll n o t KSU academic center now opercolor scheme. The silver meet.
ates.
-A proposal for a technical
institute district in A.shtabula

I)PEN FRIDAy NICHTS

WEDDING ltiNCU

fj!AN"I Jl.71

raging in Mason eount.y is serious. The firei are located ln a
circle formed by Millstone Creek
Road ard Ohio 16 Mile Creek
Road, near Hogsett.
The circumCerence of the cir-

guests was Miss Debbie Dawson.
The bride's mother wore apoww
der blue wool dress with ilavy
accessories and matchiltl haL
Her corsage was white car...,
tiona tipped with blue.
The mother of the groom was ·'
attired In a pink acetate Crock
with white emboridery, Her corw
r.
sage was pink rosebuds.
Glven in marriage by her fathThe new Mrs. Pace is agrac:hr
. r, the bride wore an empire A· ate of Point Pleasant HighSchool
lne white satlngawn wlth tapered ·am Huntington Business COllege.
leeve1 -and sc«q~ed neckline with She was formoriyelllj)loyedattbe
hantllly lace trim arv:l a detach- Masoo County Ins. Agency in
lble)chapel train that gave a bus-- Point Pleasant and the Cole Ins.
tle effect. Her bouffant Ulusion Agency at Huntington. She is now
.-ell waa gathered into a wreath ell1jlloyed at the U. S. Flclellty
ot white satin leaves trimmed Guaranty Co. In Charlotte, N.C.
'ith seed pearls.
The grocm is a graduate of
: Susie Pac~
Princeton Hlgil School and Mar1•

,,U.DtTIONIIL

L4D'I'"I Uli .OO

the-condition ol the loreat fires

Mr. and Mn. O.arles W. Pare

PT. PLEASANT - The marriage of Comde Kay Woomer,
tdllughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Woomer of Pt. Pleasant, arxl
,
rles W. Pace, son of Mr.
Mrs. L. T. Pace, ot PrinceW. Va., was solemnized Sat. ay, Feb. 15, at 11 L m., at
·Sacred Heart catholic Church.
· The dou~.,, ring ceremony vows
' re read .by the Rev. Father H.
Ryan "'l'hl the allar oottl!!i of,
hite gladiOli i.nd.. carKlelabra on
ither slde ot the prayer head.
uptial music: and solos wen
resented by Mrs. R4lbertShertz-

K eepea.k e·
KINWOOD

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'Bride of C. W. Pace

HOSPITAL

TO OBSERVE BmTHDAY

.

PT. PLEASANT - Mlleo Parol cle h seven miles, alld the area
ol the StaiB Dopanmenl ofNalur· inside, and on the rim of the
al Reoouroeo aald Friday night circle, has been burning since

'

VETERANS MEMORIAL

GALLIPOLIS - Clyde Tq&gt;e
of 100 Chllllootilo Rd., wiU oboorve hlo 79til birthday Cll Mardi
28. 1lliliS6
-·~- to ·~.
.t:~
\ -~"!J.~
~him will! W'do , IID : i&amp;·. by
oendlng them tO the above addreu.

Rural Areas of Mason

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MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
ADMITTED - Emmott Manley, Middleport: Mary . Allee
Ward, Langayllle.
DISCHARGED - Dell File.

ADMITTED- Larry ~ncer,
Racine; Lowell ColUna, Sladei
Charles &amp;ewart, Pomeroyi Leslie Wells, Long Bottom; Doris
Wells, Long Bottom; William
Zerkle. Hartford, W. Va.; and
WUOOr Beaver, Racine.
DISCHARGED - JeiOio Price,
Sandra Johnson, Geneva Shumate,
Ada Clark.

Fire Losses Heavy in

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·~·'t \
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vacate the premises immediately, was the w-elcome eden:led by
Prlndpal Vl111ll Siders bafore
the Citizens' Committee mem..
bers could state the purpoae of
their business.
Mr, Siders stated that the committee would have to have a writ..
ten invitation or permission 1
signed by the SuperinterKient of

'

·. ··&lt;::~"A$ 'ADJUSTMENT$ TO ·

Nine members and two guests,
Miss Kathleen Noble and Mlsa
Hartle Marie Smith, were pre~
tent. COrres})(rldence included
Discover the joy of wen ring shoes that

.

to call the police if we did not

~uperlntencJer:!t

ago there ,_ere no malnterance Sbube,
rneil Cor the school&amp;. Thay have aiiil Bol; ·

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:::;::.=:::-::==~~=----:----.,-...l

OTTAWA (UPI) - Canecla'o
deelslon to seek diplomatic relaUons with C&lt;&gt;mmunllll Chino

Mao Toelun&amp;'o
rqlme In tile United Nation.s
, could weU ·beacentrallsauewhen
Prime Mlnlsler Pierro Elliott
and tho ,..tlng of

Trudeau meeta President Nixon
In Walhlnaton Moriday and Tuesday.

Whlle no qenda ba• been ool
the talks, the list ol.JJOIIlble
topicl Is loog. Trudeau has Pr&lt;&gt;-

tor

miMd to dlseu01 wheat prices
m the lnle~ market U.S.
lmp&gt;rt QIIOiaa on canadian oil II
a cboloe !tom.
., ' ,\ .1·

...''l
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f' '

CARPET
6 95

Atl.. ulorPrid·
AI. Low AI

I

e NYLON
e WOOL
e ACRJLAN e KERCULON

"'• yd.

OVIr 5oo Colon ond PeHerno To s.IIICI'from.
Como In Tadey •1111 Molt• Your Soleclion

• FREE ESTIMATES

e EASY TERMS

MiNIMUM 20 SQ. YDS.
.. INIJOOR-OUTOOOR CARPET NOT ·
INCLUDED IN THIS SPE:CIAL!

FLAME . . . THE ULTRA.FEMININE HEEL RETIJRNS to mal&lt;e
t:\'enings mure maJ.:ical than ever. Opalescent ornament on bow
arrents the rounJeJ, tapered tut. Slim heel hits new heights .
Fwm th~.: AutiitiiiiJS wllection.

aud1t1onstp

' OP~N
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MEETING ATTORNEY
NASND.{;£. T..,.

tus'r

,.

~y

•:'"HARG£
, IT"
AT
· . ~·ARL'S ,

(UPI) -

. Jamea Eirl 'IIQI. ·IMldnJI •'~
• trial 1!1 ........rrlaotlail 0( Dr.
IW1In l.l!lhti'' ~ h. ...•
. _.tee~ io ~ 111111 at' Ioui
.. '*"' -~ ~In hli •"}!
al

the

r.ba..O Stale

a-1..... •
P.'i .1

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(

�World of
Religion
By LOUIS CASSELS
UP! Reiii!CXI Writer
'l1lo traditional Prtlleslonl

SO FAR, SO GOOD- Severe
landslide oo Route 124. below
Long Bottom led to road relocation recently completed by
Engle Con.structioo Co. Elevation is only slightly higber,
howe\·er, and it remains to be
seen whether fiood waters from
the Ohio, at extreme rigflt,
will result in ruture slides.
Roadway before Ohio Highway
department improvement is
sh&lt;lwn in lower photo. Long
Bottom Grade School, no lnnger In use, is seen just above
'the motorcycle in larger photo.

Local Bowling
Team No. 2. Jim Kisk.ls had high
CHEV ROLET BOWUNG
for Team No. 5 with 511 total
LEAGUE
pins, and Doc White had high
Week of 3-HI-69
ror Team No. 2 with 459 total
StandiJltS:
Team
Points pins.
Team No. 6 took 6 points from
No.5 .• . . ..•.• .. ,,56
No.3 •... • • ·•.•...•• S2 Team No. 3. Edna Jdlnson had
No.6 .•..••.•. . .••• 62 high for Team No. 6 with 464
No.9 •... •• .. • ••••• 48 total pins, and Ken Haner (suh)
No. 10 •..•.•• , , , .•• 48 had high ror Team No. 3 with
No.8 .•. .••••••..•• 46 515 total pins.
Team No. 9 took 6 points
No.2 . . . . . • • . . . . . • • 44
from
Team No. 4. Bob Byers had
No.7 .•••••..•••••• 42
high
for Team No. 9 with 559
No.1 . .••••.. • ••••• 26
No. 4 .• •••• .•••••. • 26 total pins, and Mel Tabor had
On Tuesday, March 18, the high tor Team No. 4 with 451
Chevrolet BaWling League met total pins.
Team No. 7 took 8 points
at Skyline Lanes.
ream No. 5 took 6 points from from Team No. 1. tllarlie Lup-

too had high for Team No. 7 with
578 total pins, aJI:I Elaine Graham (sub) had high for Team
No. 1 with 492 total plns.
Total No. 8 split 8 pointa with
Team No. 10. Glenn Th~son
had high for Team No. 8 with 539
total pins, and Jack Mink and
John Finney had highs for Team
No. 10 with 541 total pins each.
High pins for single game for
the evening tor women was Madeline Johnson with 188 pins and
for the men was Jack Mink with
224 pins.
Hlgh thre~e total pins ror
the evening for women was Dottle McMahon with544pinsandior
the mim was Charlie Lupton with

aystem ol 11t11na pastors It
un4er heavy ottack In t11o
United Motl!OOiat Church.
!lqlpart Is bollding lor a II!PftJICh under which a mia1J..
ter'a income would be deterJ
mined b,y bls abllley, tralnlnr
lllld e&gt;p~rlencc ratller than b7
IJe' tlbanelaJ l'eiiOUI'Cel cl tbll
coqregatlon he aervea.
,_ents say thll ool oab'
woold be more equltoblo, bul
al10 would enabl$ the chureh to
Hlld Its besllllOil to tile pitcoo
tlley're needed moot.
Salary II Flxocl
At present, In tile United
Motllodltt Church and mOll
other Protestant denon:.lr.ationa,
a minister' a salary Is fixed and
paid by tile CCX~~resallm be
aerves. Jf 1he congregation Ia
large, wealthy or generous, he
may 101 upwardo ol $15,000 a
year. :rr it's sman, poor or
ltin&amp;Y, he JMY have to strugle
along on less than $4,000 a year.
The weaknesses of this
arstem were outlined by a
prominent United Methodlot
pastor, t11o Rev. C, I'NIMunden
ol Lincoln. Neb., in a recent
fasue of the denominadon's
magazine for ministers, Christian Advoeate.
Dr. Munden (who baa no
persmal ax to grirKt, since he's

the well.patd pastor o! a largo

reprd,Jeu al their current
ualpunent.
' I
··
' . S&amp;llrill~ '
Ttit 1ota1 coat ol all· tlleoe
oalarlo1 1nJUicl IIMII be - ·
~~moe~ amona ·tllo 1oc11 ~~~

Traditional pastoral salary
System under·heavy Attack .

I"''"
liudrlot - · are
elloealod. Tho lndlvl~ minis·
ter woold ~ hlo lit¥ cheek

Defeat ·of Thin ABM

1rom tile conlel'OIICO rather than

. WASillNGTON (UP0 -

aCcor\11111 to tile IQII¥11&gt;1o
foj'mula ·bJ whlcll oll)tr qoft/er.

He said mlntpera rt exoe~
are often unable to put oor beat
mon wlloro ~ are moot tional obilltl are dearl1 DMCied
111_ ...............
DMIM,"

Senate Doves Sensing

tbeloeel~

'l1lo Cbrlltlan Advoelle rt•
porU ltbU roeelved a dllup ol
mall !rom mlnlllerl lllld
lipnon who are enthllllalllc

obwl tile pl'OJ)Oaal, Vety little
-Ilion has been Olii&gt;Hueo!Stepo are eli'OIICI;y beiDa tabnto
pro11811t tho plan !ormti)J to the

chUrcll's next ICDIJ'II - ·
ence, In 1970.
II th11 Idea worko In tile
Mcond larpst prctoiW!I doncmlnatlcn, It II very likely to
apfeed to otflera.

hardware on top ol mllltary
fitite dlaclosures by the Penta- hardware, ot overkill m tap .of
gon or new Russian nuclear overklll." He said a eloae
delivery aystema, Senate op. examination of ADM was
i&gt;ooento to the Sologuard necessary 1! 11We are not
.aetense missile aystem re- proJiared to IUITandor to tho
mained COIIY!nced saturda,)' that Pentagon the dedslon on how
jhey were within Btrlklng tile nation's resources should be
!lJstsnco o! blocklna tho propo- spent In the years ahead."
oal.
Barry's Charge
Foes or the antlballlltic
On tile ntbor bond, Sen. Barry
inlsolle (ABM) plan figured M. Goldwater, R-Arh., charged
lhey could still muster between there was a deliberate "anti~
lO snd 45 votes aplnat tile
program i! it were _put to the
test Saturday, For some,
Do-

defense campaign" atoot Whidl
he said would ''reach an almost
hyoterleal plteh among eertaln
groups" In the near tuture.
In a speech to tbe American

Fi&amp;hter Pilots Aaaoclatlcn Friday, ·the former Republlcu
presidenUal candidate a1serted
that the 11rad1eal left was busy
trying to convince the American
public that the ABM system Ia
a device cooked up by tile
military men io the Penta100 to

'GALLIPOLIS MOTOR CO.
SALESMAN OF

ALICE SAUNJJEIIS

HOWARD SAVNDEIIS

GALLIPOLIS - -oment to belJv mode thot the ~­
lo,yette Hotel diolna room IIIII cocktail lllunge Is under tbe
mam1811'1ent of Howard and Alice Saunders.
The Saundel's' have plans to restore the hotel to ita former status as a Qlallb' eadlw establishment. They also welc:ome
banquets, receptlooa, and club meetings.
Each week a 1hopper1' opecial lo ol!ered In tbe dloina
rOCIR. Serv!lw begins at 6:30 L m. each day. The cocktail
)OUJW8 is open lrQm 9 p. m. to 12 p. m. six nlabta a week. ~
1a1 room nteo are beiJv pl!ared w permaiMint BUesta ol the
hotel.

H

THE MONTH

probably wlU be at leaat

and procurement · lellislatlon,
which Includes the lnlllel $900
million ABM authorlzstlcn, only
Ia at Wednesday.

Training can be obtained
only through a collegelevel program.
.

TO DRAFT TEXTS
WASIIINGTON (UP0 -The
Jnternadonal
Telecommunica~

GBC GRADUATES

GET THE

Gallipolis Motor Co., Your LocOI Chevrolet.Oidsmo-

BETTER JOBS:

(New Qiiartir 11e1ins
June 12)
Write or coil 446·067 for
cdolo11 ~and lnfonnation.

·'

WIND TUNNEL meehaoleo Clyde Roush, left, aad Jameo Aodertcn ebeek CGo6guratlon of a model of lbe RMC

VIgilante In North American Rockwell'• sub1onlc tunael at Columbus, Ohio. The effect on alrerar&amp; of z,-.mJie·BDhour winds 11 mea1ured by IBM computer C(tDDected to tustrumeuts on modell or componeat1.

mlsalleo which could llivo tllem
a "first strike" capabWfiv
asalnot tho United States.
Church Doubttul
But Sen. Frank Church, DJda., said he doubted Laird's
pre&amp;elltatlon Thur Idly and Friday would .,.tie a dent In tho
hard-core Senate oPPosition to
the ABM.

bile Dealer is proud to announce Warren Skidmore 01
their Salesman of the Month for February. Only thru
excellent service ond o strong desire tO pleale the
people of this area can this be accomplished. Mr.
Skidmore resides ot Evergreen with his lovely wife
Mary Alice, and .C ·children, Ronnie, Peggy, Penny and
Becky. Gallipolis Motor Ca. and it's employees and
management·toke pride to extending to Warren and his
family, Congratulations.

"Some ot those who mtcy" not
have made up their minds
mlg:ht detide to go along now,"
he said In an interview. "But
those who've studl~ this, those
who are close to tile problem,
are not swayed.
·~They couldn't have made
any harder sell ror the system.

Beautifying
Rocuhide Area
Near Kanauga

'I1111V've come up with the beat
argument they cooid. Bill the
~stem has cllanpd so often,
the reasons have chBnged so

radlcelly, that It looks to me
like they've tailored the system
to nt their argument, 1t make!l
the whole case suspect."

Son. PillliP A, liar~ D.Mich.,
In a Detroit speech, oald the
issue stlll boiled down to "the
- . . . piling ol military

cioled

CIVIC DOGWOOD PLAN'!1NG- Ropr Smith IIIII Alden Wldemeyer, ol GaUlt Academy Hi-Y, f to r, In tront, help Mrs. Eugene Gloss, president of the Gallipolis Garden
Club, left, all.:l Mrs. Warren Sheets, chaJnnan oC planting, in pia• 12 dogwood trees
at the new Rt. .7 roadside park above Kala up. These trees were donated tor the park
beautlllcatlcn by tho Gallipollo Garden Club, The club boo oolcl a total or 340 d"""oods
to various civic OJ'KBnizatlons In the area. Other locations receiving trees donated by the
club are cl~ park, walerworks and the airport. Jerry GookUn ard Rusty Jerters of the
FFA uslsted wttli plantl~ other Hl·Y members helplrw with the project were Mike

Oliver aJJI Greg Pauley.

(UPO

2 Dr. Hardtop, 302 V-8 entine, w/s/w tires,
·wheel covers, radio, backup liahts, seat belts.

D-Wls., dla-

filet

~ interest.

2.072

j(i)s with major defense eontractors and the reverse move..
ment o! top execullveo ol major

$2524
4 Dr. Sedan, 390 V-8 entine, Cruise-omatic trans. P. steeriq, Visibility II'OUp,

TO PAY

825 w/ s/w tires, wheel covers, radio, seat
belts, back up lights.

F-100
8 Foot Style Side. Explorer packap.
825 1 15 blk. tires. Heavy duly rear
bumper, deluxe wheel covers, seat
belts. Stlckos'{a'~·

Sticker Price

$3588.99

We're
65 Ford
Thunderbird

88 4 Dr, Sedan, p.

v.

'l Dr. Horcftop
Loc:• tl{. owned, whit• with
beovtl ul GqUG lnt•rior. Po_, lteerlnt p. brGk.. olr
coNI. Exc:e!(ent tlr ... fhl•
c:~ will holcf up under Gny..
body•• lnsp.etlon .

B

automatic, radio,
beautiful red &amp; white
finish,
red
interior.
Real fine transportation

$595
68 Ford LTD 4 Dr. Sedaa
Medii1um blue, block vinyl roof, deluxe
engine, P .S., P .B. radio, w-s,;w tireos•;·,,,~; •:; :
1 1
wheel covers, Comfort Stream ventilation, rt
heodlights. This automobile has 11,000 actual miles.
Was locally owned. Sold new by Martin Ford for

I

66 Ford F-100
Pick-Up Truck

·

YouP
69 Mercury
Mont11o M.X.
2 Dr, H•rcflop, p. sfeetlllf,
p. brolt•s, chrome trl111, ~:~lr
eond.( racflo, w/s/w tlre•l

M" co,.en, . bllt, vlny
roof, ' 1,400. oet, 1111111 , One

. ..

, ..,

own«,

solei

ne.

by thh

595

61 .Chevrolet
1/2 Ton Pickup
I Foot Fon4w Sift lied, low
mil.age, In excell•nt co~

dltiOfl.

Mortln

S2290

s2988 ~~:~ght

2-DR HARDTOP

~:.,. ~::"':.:id~ld=

UP TO 42 MONTHS

GALAXIE 500

ateering, p. brakes,

Salurda,y

ranking military olllcero Into ne8'lllellons, claims againal tho

Martin Ford Price

~IUSTANG

--.~~'futerest ol avotdinii' ;O:,Ilict

Tho regulations ICDIJ'aiiY
1!t,eUred, h.l&amp;f\-ra1tiing mUltary torbid retired offlcerstoj•repreolncera are on the payrolls of sent 11\YORe other than the
the nation's 100 leadlng defense United States in comectlon with
contractors.
a matter In which tile United
He called Jt a "moat States is a party or has an
danprous and shocking condl- lntereot and In which he
lion" that threatens tile public participated personally and
illterest by lncreaalng the .subltantlall.y for the governchances of abuse of the military ment. n
This and other prohlblt.lon.s
procurement system.
''The easy movement ol. high- are intended to cover contract

MUSTANG

.'\F.RVICE DEPT.

"

months belore tbe Senate
gets sroond to anY teat voting
on the Issue. The Armed
Services Committee began hearings on m1Utary construcUon

Laird aald tile Russlana have

I

and prosperous chureh) ar~ed
that as things DOW stand, "We lions Satellite (Tntelsat) Corporation agreed Friday to create a
Q-Which count'll .,.,.
preparatory committee to dra!t
fered the most COIUGltie.s in
texts
on operations. The 68
World War I and World War
member nations and 30 obserII?
ver C&lt;IUntries meet again in
A-In both World Wars,
Russia sutrered the most Washlnllton Nov. 18 wtry w set
casualties.
up a global communications
satellite network. Observen
578 pins.
Most interesting to note fortlle IBid a moat dll!lcult problem
evening's scores was that 459 wn1 be Juat who w111 manaae
series of Doc White. He Corgot the aystem when 1t becomes
~rat1Ye.
his Oleertos that day.

Marlin Ford Price

'

two

200 large and accurate 8&amp;11

We Give the Values!

"BEST

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.

'•·

wu;;-~-,

$2924.85

1969

DeCenae
Secretary Melvin R.
;
Laird's a.IJP8al tor support on
tho baelo ol poteotlal perU to
the U.S. 11 strlke ba~ power In
,the 1970o onJ.v hardened their
resolve.

~~N

Sticker Price

23.

siphon oil billions o! dollars
!rom anllpoverey proJectJ and
other social welfare pt'Oil'a&amp;na. ''

Proxmire Cites High Brass
·th lis
SYiidl Alonll .,.

SUNDAY, MARCH

VOL. IV NO.8

Price

'Piua

66 Fiat

66 Qevy II
Station Wagon

Vinyl Interior. Excel•
lent condition.

$795

$1595

w,..

64
Custom" 800"

64 PtntfiC

Flrechltf

"Dr.
&amp;.dGntV•I .. ntlnt,auto.
trans. P. broket, p, tf..-lng,
corwl.
to buiiiP•·

eKCell~tnt

tr- ._,...

Seems to

Be Slower

SAIGON (UPO- Four sharp
battles erupted north and west
'- \
KOVentment and·· sale o1 sup- Rock..:: il, 104; ~er~ Electric, or Saigon saturday, and u.s.
plies, the Pentagon spokesman 89; Ling Temco Vought, 69; an:l South Vietnamese troops
Westingbouse
FJeetric,
59; reported killing 75 Communists.
lrMilcated.
TRW, Inc., 56, and Hughes But the general pace of the
High Ranks
month-old Communist ol!ensive
Proxmlre oald 10 ol tho top Aircraft Co., 55.
slowed.
Among the major contractors
100 contractors employ more
U.S. Intelligence officers said
than half the retired om.cers, an producing key eomponerts of
they
believed North Vietnamese
o1 whom bold the rank or tile an~alliatic missile system
colonel or Navy captain or (ABM), Prox:mire reported, and Viet Cong units were
·ntne employ 465 retired otncers, regroopi.ng aOO resl,flplying ror
hlgfter.
new attacks within the next
He llld the 10 are Lockheed an average of. 51 each.
three
days that would put
The 100 firms hold more than
Aircraft, with 210 oflteers;
Boelna Compatl)', 169; MeDon· $26 billion In military cmtracts, greater emphasis on grourxl
nell Douglas Corp., 14.1; General or 67 per cent or the u. S. assaults.
These reports said an attack
Dynamics, 113; North American defense doJJar, he llllld.
on Saigon was a 50-SO possibility
t~is weekend.
In the first weeks or the
offensive, the Communists minimized their own losses by
depending largely on rocket and
mortar attacks. More than 1,000
Nixon told the surprised Leath. Juan Capistrano Missioo, where
bases and towns have been hit
the swaUows returned this week
e~ks.
by artillery sioce the spring
SCinding atop one of the bull- tor the 192nd Ume.
offensive began Feb. 23.
dozers, the President asked the
Meanwhile, U.S. Ambassador
Marines how they liked the corps
Ellsworth Bunker flew out ot
and what they were learning.
S a i g o n Saturday afternoon,
He pi'OUdly Introduced two Vlat·
heading for a top level review
na.m veterans tonewsmenaccomor the war ln talks In Southern
pan,ying him. They were Gunnery
Calitornia with President Nixon.
Sgt. Theodore Naciementootlla.)'Bunker declined to comment
ward, Calif., whospert32montha
when- asked aboot reports he
In Soutil Vietnam, and Capt. A. A.
hacl recommended a resUiqltion
Lopez ,.. r ··' veraide, Calif.
of the bombing or North
Nixon and his wife, Pat, paid
WASIIINGTON (UPO - U. S. Vietnam in retaliation for the
a sentimental visit tooneoCtheir Rep. Clarence E. Miller, R-La~
Communist offensive•
favorite places, the rarby San caster, announced Saturday he
In the largest Oght reporta!
Would Introduce legislation d~ In saturday afternoon's war
siped to 11 crack down on those ccmmuniques, a South Vietna~
who pront by warping the moral- mese paratrpop battalion killed
ity of our youth."
40 Communfsts in a four-hour
Miller, in a news letter, said battle in Tay Ninh province
he would press for legislation to near Cambodian territory 51
deny special secoOO, third aiJJ mlles northweat of Saigon.
fourth class mailing l'lteatoperFive South Vietnamese ln:q)s
sons mailing obscene matter or wore killed and 20 woonied.
to any publication advertlsiJW
troops or the lot Air
availabWcy ot obscene materiaL Cavalry Dl vision, sq~l"'rted by
be to conaldorlna April I
The congressman Raid he would artillery and hellcopter gu~
lor tile bidding.
also work ror en~ctment of a bill ships. killed 10 CCinmunlsts in 1
The population o1 - . . , mlklrc 1t a federal otrense to I• brief aldrmlsh near An Loc 47
Center, whleh claimed 21 tnxklce Into Interstate cOIIUilii'ce miles . oorthwesl o! Saigon.
resident&amp; late In the 1830'&amp;, any obleene material "which ts There were no Alnerlcalllosses.
dWindled to zero laat laU when dlrec:ted to -or lnter.ted tor 1 minLo&amp;Hs Not Reported
Weeko lllld his wile -ed to or or a home inwtrlehilmlnorreIn nghtlng within a lew
Winterltol al!er Woeko "'' sides."
hwdred yardo · ol tbe Camboburned In aa aecitlettt.
dian border 1Dd 33 mUes west

-

Miller Wants

Crackdown on
Obscene Mail

For Passing
At Junction

"-·'·

Ready to Sell Town
Pid

u.s.

Re~Coalis

·

"'

Driver Cited Podunk Center Owner

2 dr. Four speed trona.

Rodlo, 6 c:,-1., Slc•ndertl Shift,
Lutt•l• Rack, W/SIW Tires,
Onec Ownw, LocGIIy Owned,
1,,000 Ac:t. Miles. In Show•
rDCHn Condition.

policy adviser, traveled through

DQu1ment directive rellrict- the briUlant green trlUs.
.Ina tile post.retlrement actiYI·
"We're just drlvtrw arowxt,''
·U' es ol dopartmont omplOfeS In
I

Offensive

President Nixon Visits Marines

ol tile mllltary4ndUIIrial com·
plex In operatioo.,'' he said in a
SAN CLEMENTE, CaUL otatemont.
(Ui'O - President Nixllll, Lll&gt;WiJl Tell Names
parently enjoying the Southern
Proxmlro oald he would make calUornia
sunahine, toured
gubllc the names of the retired c(Bital mountains near here
allteers and thelr companies in Saturday aJJI startled • grcq&gt; o!
' Senate opeech -day.
Marines doing road work on the
'l1lo Defense Department. Camp Pendleton Marine Blse.
which oeld It lllrnlohed tile
Nlxoo's long, block llmoualn\
WormaU.on at Proxmlre's re-o pulled onto the sprawling base
quell, had no comment.
unamoonced aCter he, aide John
A Penta&amp;on opokesman aid he Erlichman and Henry Klsabw:er,
,.as unaware ci any pro1eeu.. the President's chief torelgn
Uons under a 1966 Defense

THE VALLEY, ANGUILLA
(UPO - A mob ol I ,50G angry An,guillaRB scumed with
British troops Saturday in a
wild scene outside the oUiee
ot the Britlsh-appoint.ed commisslvner, Anthony Lee.
Some lslfoders trledtoprevent Lee from entering t h e
building, but he made It to the
office after police and troops
opened a path through the milling crcmd. A task rorce or
more than 400 British paratroopers arxl policemen Invaded this Caribbean Island last
Wednesday to reestablish colonial rule.

$4&lt;100.'

8,210 mllion Tons

ol SOI&amp;on Sotutda1, a C&lt;lllbinod
Ioree .or SOUUi Vlellul&lt;i1e m1
American soldiero klllod 16
Communists. Allied loa:1ea were

not roporlod.

Nixon Asl{s Colleges·
Control Dissidents
CLEMENTE, Callt - be initiated by college adminis(UPO - President Nixon Satur- trators.
Nixon's statement was in the
day urged America's colleges
nature
or moral persuasion arv:l
and universities to protect their
integrity, IOOepend.ence and cre- he confined himself to the simativity from the disruptive ~c­ ple vow that the processonear~
tics of irresponsible· student dis- lng will be carried out in an atSAN

Enemy

To See

Ray Innocent

Author Column

phrey will bellin writing a weekly syndicated newepaper column

'

"
~

'
.... }¢.

government by milltary attaeb
at ·borne and by vituperalfaa
and diatribe In Parts.
Allies Hopollll
The allies were deaertbld u
being bopaiW tbe VIet Coal will.
eventually qree to . lalk It
;a!goo In Parts. Vice PreahloC
Nguy011 Coo 111, U. cbW
supervisor of the Salp dlllla
tlon, ha1 ....,...ced his .....

next month, it was amooneed
Saturdoy.

"I don't have all the answers.
but I know some very tough
questions," HUmphrey said at
his Washington office.
'Ibe former vice presl~nt,
who lost the presidential eleeIICBL to Riehard M. Nixon In No.
vember, said his column will express his own viewpoint and not
neeeasarlly that o! tile Demo.
cratle part;y.
u'I'here will be times when I

ness to meet hi1 """''"
Parll lalt the communllll

wlU be eritical ola Democratic

Republican. .. he said.

~

:.: •. .rr.

•

•• ""

Brave•' Bteam.

a.1 .

Ume have reJected hll bid.
Olflciall,y tbe lilllted
and Vi.q.am ...,.W,:'j
tllolr _..... ....... ...
ne~ table •• boillr . .
...... doleiluon-tlle Nail ..
Uberalloll• Fruit
Viol Ccu'a political - .

parey or Republican parey -.!,
or rt an indtticlaal Democrat or

~r· ~ _Atlanta

'

a..

Humphrey to

lltird ba• SOturtiay •• the - ~ Extol etitied a lift • aame
1oll!tc otreak llith • S..'l victory

~

Truth

Says Stoner

-·s -

I

the unrest.

w

(Ui'O - Anpl
out bunt ...... In tllo 11th ...
nln&amp; ocored Koury. WIUs ~

'

lems" that has caused sc:ae ot.

"To do so." he said, would
be "slothful and dishonest."
••Students today point to m1117
wrqs which must be made
right,"" the President said, ant
mosphere
free
or
violence,
sidents,
tilen
'-' listed a lew IDC!IIIIq:
The
President
made
it
clear
He urged stricter enforcement
-A depersonalization ol tile
or laws against student violence that he was not advocating repres-educattoml
experience. "Our insion
ol
responsible
dissent
or
and offered the moral suwort
stitutions
must
reilhlpe themor the Presidency against those
selves
lest
this
turna to toa1
trying to discredit "the voices
alienation,
n he said.
of reason and calm."
COLUMBUS (UP0 - Scioto
-"The lnterral contndicUCIII
But at the same lime he made
C01mty Prosecutor Everett
ot
our communities,"
it clear that coUege and uni.ver- Burton has withdrawn his bid
sicy administrators must police
be named u.s. Attorney lor
their oWn houses.
the soutbern district o( Ohio.
The federal goverrunent .. canHe was recommended by U,
not, should not - must not - en- S. Rep. William H. Harsha, Jr.,
force the principles or academic
R-Portsmouth. Robert E. Boyd
freedom and intellectua1 integJr., a Columbus attorney and
rity in schools,'' he sa.ld.
former law partnerotSsl. wn.
Nixon put forth his sentiments
llam B. Saxbe, R..Qrlo, Is exon campus unrest in a statement. ~ to reeeive the appointi ssue&lt;l from his weeken:l vacament.
tion home here at the same time ~~.m:~:::::q:;:::~::::::*~·
that ReaJth, Education and Welfare Secretary Robert Finch
made public in Washington t h e
PARIS (UPl).. Allied IIQIIIa.
text of a letter he sent to school
tors are c::onftdeat the Commuadministrators remhdtng them
nist• soon wlU roallze
ot the laws which provide for withcamot spilt the Uniled !rom South Vietnam at . .
drawal or federal funds from students convicted of criminal acts
NASHVILLE, Terut. (Upl) - Paris peace tal.ks, CCIIference
on the campus.
Attorney J, B. stoner visited sources oald Saturda,y.,
"It is important for all co~ James Earl Ray in his prison
American and VI-.
cerned to understard that Con- cell Saturday and later said Ray mese nexutlators are awaftlal
gress has spoken oo this issue was irmocent of the murder or tho moment wbal North VI-.
and that the law must be en- Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., b.rt mese and Viet Coni dele~Mea
forced," Finch sald in his let~ had been "pressured into plead- become aware the all1e1 meu
ler.
Ina gulley."
business when thQ.Y MY 11Q'
Nixon has on many occasions
Stoner, once an organizer for peace solution must be under·
' hls concern about the the Ku Klux Klan and the 1964 written by Saigon, the soureea
exPressed
violence and disorders which vice presidential candidate for Ill d.
have swept American campuses. the National !btes Rights party,
Revise Tactics
He has been in touch with several also claimed to have new lnlor- · asking
allied privately
"''JJl''l If......
top university admJnlstrators aOO mation in the Ray ease.
already
t11o
held conferences with Finch and
He said he couJ.dn•t divulge Communiats might not _ ,
Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell in the nature of the evidence be- revise their tacU.c1 aimed It
Washington earller this week on cause "I might need it later on driving a nclge betweeD . .
how his administration can help for his trlal."
two allloo and elimlnallllr
control the unrest.
Asked whe:ther It would stand Saigon ao Washlngton'o DQIIII.
Federal law on the subject, up in court, the diminutive, gray ating partner.
Diplomatic BClU'cea ll1d tbl
enacted .by the last session ot haired lawYer sa.Jd: 11 Aceording
Congress, requires that action to the tnrormation given me, it allies have realized IInce tbl
against student troublMJ~~kers will stand up very substantially.'• loor-way peace talks be11011 Ju.
IB that tile basic r&lt;&gt;IDI!!II!(ot
objective was to loolalo Slip
and impress UPJD Waabtqlaa
that only a new 11peaee ~
In Sail!l&gt;ll could opood •
seWement.
The 8011l'CCS oald tllo allitJ
remained determioed to ccaNEW YORK (UPO - Former
tinue warning Hanoi to eeu1
Vice President Hl.lbert H. Humtrylna to undermine the Slip

END LOSING SI'REAK
Wfm PALII BEACH, Fla.

'

ignoring the "very basic prcD-

_.ty
IU, OUf&amp;No~ll~:;;;
NOra. ·v.-.... "'

Pll1J~1.,

~;;_~
.....~~~ -~~· ... ~. \0 '• -, - . SelltiD .
;ENNIS, ANYONE! Acj

... _ • .,.,...,-rwae ·
llliolllra... II! P u or lo
IUeo ... . ,,.~ ... .... ...
loellloil' t• 1
movie.

•w

' NLFwtn ' baotolll
... IOik

. .,, _ ....
..-,•a.-.CII

�· -··· ·- - · ~--

'

-· -· ··

.. ... ..

. ... · ~- · - ·· "'""'''""'-•'1""•··· .. -~····~ ·~· · .- ...- -

,

'

rs. .,.,.._ .. ,•-····· .. ~ ·- -··-·· · - ~· ·~ ·· · ............~ -· .. ~ ,_ ... ........ - - ..

..
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{

I

&gt;I

t .J - ·~,te Stu'day 'llmes-Setttlnel~ &amp;aadQ, Marth 23, 1969

Backstairs at the White House

Presidenf·Nixon Learning
About Credibility Gaps
\\' \SitiNGTON (UP.0 -Backstairs at the White House:
There was a time not long
ago when President Lyndon B.
Johnson

was

regarded

ror

eci"Cntric

his

as

towering.

onen-angry -efforts to keep his
actions rrom the public until he

was ready to move.
He was particularly touchy
about publlc disclosure that he

iswe a.
statement or make a trip on a
would make a speech,

sperifk

date.

He

wanted

oothing definite said about his
plans until the last possible
minute.
For this widely derided habJt.
Johnson

became

known as a

wheeler-dealer, a man slightly
buggy on the subject or keeping

his nplions open. And eventually, as father of the credibilit;y
gap,

Now
we
have
son of
credibilit.\o' gap, at least in the

minds of some mildly irreverent
observers of the White House

scene.
Who startetl Flap?
Who's the man whc started

all

the flap

about President

Slides of Tour Shown
By

~Irs.

Capehart

Mrs. RusSell
Capehart, Mason; showed color
slides of her trip last swnmer as
an advisor with a youth group to
England and the Eur~ean nations
friday e\'ening here ror mem..
bers of the Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club at Heath Chw-ch.
Assisting her at the projector
as she described the scenes was
her husband. They were intr~
duced by Program Chairman Dr.
Jerry Matheney.
President Wilbur Theobald
presided at a brief business meeting following dinner served by
ladies or the church.
WliDDLEPORT-

BACK IS INJURED
PT. PLEASANT- WarrenDeWeese, 31, Leon, Rt. l, was admitted to Pleasant Valley Hospitat ~1 m. ,~IJ;l. back &lt;T
i y receiVed at tklaft,while~
1i ·ng wood.

'tiday

a.

a

BAIRD
Auto
Wrecking
446-4~0

367-7598

GUARANTEED
USED AND
REBUILT
PARTS
OWNERS:
H•nry, Don,
Paul Baird

UCLA to Thind .Crown

Eisenhower Comfortabl~ :
Fqllowing Allother ,A,(~at;k..
1 Hve from day to day, from
hour to hour"
-Mamie Eisenhower.
WASfiiNGTON (UP0 -For.
mer
President Dwight D.
Eisenhower, his heart bearing
the burden ot another conges.tl~e
heart failure, is in
favorable condition and resting
oomtortably, according to the
latest medical bulletin from
Walter Reed Army Medical
Center.
It was leame&lt;) Frld!IJI that the
78-;year-&lt;Jid general of the Army
suffered a congestive beart
taUure last Saturda,y, a condition described as ooe in wblch
the heart fails to pump enough

'

blood. Doctors said it "m&amp;y well
have" lessened his reserve
strength.
During the week Mamie
Eisenhower remarked to trl'tlndS
that her husband has · j'some
good days and some bad ones."
She said that last Sltturday was
particularly bad, and ••t didn't
take my clothes o« for 30
hours."
Eisenhower, one of the
nation's three living ex-presidents, suffered his fourth heart
attack April 29 In Soothern
C'.a.llfornia, lie was brougflt back
to Walter Reed, just a lew
miles north or the White House
where he lived rrOm 1952 to

I'

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Travel-Recreation

Vehicle Industry Sees
A Recreation Take-over

DO-IT-YOURSELF
SINK POSTS PROPERLY
FOR A FIRM FENCE

$1 Million,

Or No Race

Local Bowling

keep ahead
of your bills

Israeli Seeking

. Out Guerrillas

&lt;i.OAl'l
~

.J

Phi co

Solid State Ste·(eo

Need a neighbor ...
someone ... anyone .•• FAST!

The amazing hearing oid that filters out loud
painful, wdden notse . . .
'
Sudden blasts of noise con be vncomfort.
able. Especially if your hearing aid doesn "I
shut them out quickly.
The new Zenilh, Moderotor eliminates th is
painful discomfort. And il gives you this protection auromoticallv.
As• us for o free demOflslrotion. We thin... 71«1111
we con save )'QIJ discomfort. • , . ,
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VERE SMITH ~UDib-VISUALS, INC,

•t• !"·Unions,.

~

:

, ·&lt;

Atften&amp;, Ohio 4574! ·

I D.pt,

Place fence post holes with .~ore~
FTC MONITORS
BLAS1'S KILL TWO
WASHINGTON (UP0 - The
!.IELBOuRNE (UPo- A ...,
,Federal Tra~ Commission is . rles f!. tJX.P)oiJ.onl apd ~a fire
stepping up m!'iUtorinli of the aboard the ge&lt;iphysleal sicrvey
. television networks for dece_p.- ship ,,Westen;a, spruce. Sa.f.¥rday
Uve ~r misle~ a~Ei~~l.ng. "\ killed two crewmen aDd inJured
To, supplement ,an jnte~iiJfted ,, 2~ other&amp;. ·Savera! olf!!e b!JurOcr
.sch~e ,ol visual audllhi8, lbo , Wlll"8 ' llifloosly bUri'O\!' 11\ellhiP'
~t!:;
lt,has fUr•~· II~ , w•• taldng oo .IIIJI'I4· ~
·' ,, . ~t,alh ,!'P)Iies :1J1 ~II when iliere wu art ' expl..kil ,
,f!llh\11"~ comm,er~a!s · I1IIMI dur- followed by , fire. Ai ,J..,st 20
lpg a &amp;pecUiOO J?Crlod .eaCh' mOre 8Xptos'ionstoU.....l.: ......
month.
1
·
.... eu.

•.

t:• ,

,.

Lew Alolroor completed hla r§lgn
ao lbo kl!li ol college baokellioll
In dictatorial ' la~hlon Saturday
wltll 37 points .,..-cicDII ..~ of
1 the a.c~• to ,gow'er UCLA
paot Putclut 92-l'l!Jor on lll"l&gt;rtc:- haU, the BoUOrmakera werenevI
,, edonted lblrd cooao!;ullico.NCAA er In conten"tlon.
ci'JJiim. ~ ,
,
Alclndot, who at times In lbo
, ~ .JOI!Ir~ ~ol~ 11h , lcw;h last ·three yeara taa ~ trouble
, ce..,., P!IYioc hb ;nral c:ou... getll~ ' oiiiCitionllcy "' for
· ,~~at.f ~. turned,what !'&amp;• ex- pmeo, leemed pared to O'Peak
, PtCt6cl tO be a elose conq,st into in the. first 20 mJnutea as bt..,
' a nBiowaf earl,y. In tliO first ¥f scored 24 .POints anlpulled doWn
•· •• tbl BrUina·1~Uai.:xedthegre!,t.. 11 rebOunds to give" the Bruin1 a
oil *""'0-year hlatorjlln .collegi· conuoalliiJW 42-31 lead ollntermitliotL
ate lloal&lt;elbaiL
In the three--year Alclftl:lor era,
Purdue, countiQ~ heiVII,y Oil
lbo
lost onJ,y twice In so Ita outside shootirc to l!lta.Y in
pmes and ln none of their" three lbo pme, stayed elooe for the
NCAA ch...,lonshlj&gt; pmes was first five minute1, but the Brt.tthe tlDii •core close. It was UC- Ina outscored the Bollermaken

'

196J, anD slhcv·.ha~ sutteJ$d~s
fltth, · sixth a,nd seve:r,tfi 'he'art
Ntxan · 110)'1111! ooe thing and conf'erence March 4 that he
attacks.
· .• ··
doing another'l Simple answerwould have a statement on the
lie underwent sur~ F~b: 2·~
President Nb,.,
anUballlstlc miS8lle (ABM)
to. relieve '8Jl BC!Jie Intd8ulflil
Recently there ha~e been two system "the first ol nut
block and . catJ~f hypoat*ti~
laboratory eases showing how a week.'' The days, however,
pneumonia a few day.s later: '" ·
president, wUh the sincerest dragged wHll no announcement
Maj. .George · Il, Fost.ei
sort of motivation, can get He was' pictured as agonlz~
official .a~snian at WaJtef'
himself into trouble tor virtually over his decision when it was a
Reed; said El"\\h&lt;&gt;wer dlil-lng
no substantive reason.
relatively simple matter or his
his latest spell "manifested
The President, for example, wanting to talk to more
symptoms_ or pongestlve heart
aniiOlllced voluntarily to the advisers before announcing his
failure such as, he hils dori'e on
nation during a televised news plan,
occasions In the past."
"There has bten no evidance
or further . lntarc'i.Iohs or danse~
roul!l irregularltiel Of the heart's
action," Foster ·said. "The
general's response to treatment
for heart failure has been
~j;_.:W~~m!U:'®e@~~1l~~1®!$1~i§:l:~1J~*~t:MJ ravorabie
but slow.
11
This indicates that he ·tnay
PT, PLEASANT - The Oh Kan Coin Club will hold a
well ·have less reS~~Jfe strength
regular business meeting on Monday evening, March 24, at the
than previousi.Yo llatrever, hls
By JIM CROSSLEY
Tu-En;lie--We Manor, located to the rear or Heck's a;tore.
physicJans rePort · ' that his
Our big new baby, bawling out the transportation tuncA
social
hour
and
trading
session
which
precedes
the
condition is favorable. He is
and sprawling, is recreation. tion, this one seats five . In
meetlng,
starts
at
6:30
p.
m.
aOO
all
prospective
new
memresting
comfortably and is In
Might as well recognize it the rear are stove icebox
GIRLS GO FOR UNIFORMS lbe world over. Here, two
bers
are
welcome
to
attend
all
activities.
good
spirits,
n Foster said,
and be prepared for the sink and cabinets, all the es:
t:trls in Saatla&amp;o, ChUe, listen Ia rapt aUentioa to sol·
Club President Clair Cheuvront urges all members to
changes it is bringing with it. sentials for living.
President Nixon vls!ted El¥ndiers cuardlng elcctioa poUs.
Here's an unexpected new
Available as a second
attend for completion or final plarvdng of the organization's
hower 1 last Wednes\lat, · ~
development to substantiate family-errand car during thf
6th AIUlJal Spring Coin Show. which will be held at the Moose
Mrs. Elsenhowe~Y~ attendREESE PACES WIN
it.
week, then ready for getting
Club
auditorium on Main street on Aprll 26 and 27.
ed
a couple fashion s h o w B
TUOION,
Ariz.
(UPOThe
UI!ADENTON, Fla, (UPD
There were a million and away on weekends and vaca·
The
event
·will
be
the
only
show
scheduled
this
;year
in
during
the week. including one
University
of
Arizona,
after
a
a half light trucks sold last lions, this breed of vehicle is
Rich Heese's two • run double
the
Immediate
area.
Fallowing
the
business
session,
a
so
for
the
Walter Reed Women's
three-run first iiUling, routed
year. Of this number. 80 per a.n example of the penetrawith two out in the first iMin.g
lot
coin
auction
wm
be
called.
Club,
said
she had not planned
cent were destined for use. tJon of the recreational patOhio SlaLe 7-'2 in baseball acpaced the Minnesota Twins to a
at least p.nrtially, for per- tern into American familv
!II Easter outfit this yeaf.,
tion Friday,
5-l victory over the Pittslllrgh
sonal transportation.
life .
·
;:=::!::%;!::':!*:i~~~~:::$,:::::~~~w:"::::::;:::::~:::~~~:;:::;~~:;:::~::;:;:;:::;:;:
"I Ilve from day to day, from
Junior Wildca t righthander
.~....;.)."?. ~-=-::~:=:?.~®..~~ ..::?.!B~.. ~w.:x:::-::::::»:-.·:-:·:-:-:·:::·.~·:::::::.:-·
Pirates Saturday.
Drop in at a state or naThe recreational vehiclt"
ho~:~r
to hour," she said.
Jim l!ooten notched his fourth
tional park for a weekend industry in 1967 constructed
win en route to Arizona's lOth
and the reasons for this are 321 ,000 u n i t s of all kinds,
KATMANDU (UP0- A fire at .
victory.
parked everywhere.
worth $619 million. That was
the
v1Ilage ol Kunwar in
Arizona
added
another
four
• The pickup truck is an up 11 per cent over 1966. By
TIMBER SPLITIERS
western
Nepal Wednesday killed
ever more popular founda- 1980, it is aiming at a gross
runs in the fifth inning. Ohio
J. Bryan rolled a 23~628 ser~
tion for the recreational cam- market of $2 billion.
24
persons,
M oflielal announceState took . its scores in lhe
ies for Happy Corner's high, as
B. F. Scanlon, light truck
per, which sits in the picksaid Saturday. The
fifth and seventh.
they dropped G,. &amp; J. Auto out ment
up's bed.
sales manager of Ford, in a
announcement
gave no details.
of the runner-~ sp&lt;X by taking
• Even though cars can recent speech. tied in the
all 3 games. \\(. Denney had the
be beefed up with towing population growth 1in 1980 aJ.
best eCCort lor G. &amp; J. with a 193packages, many tow-behind most double the population of
trailer owners choose light 1960) and disposable income
560,
trucks as tow vehicles.
growth at the same rate.
Moving Into the ruMer..q&gt; spot
By MR. FIX
• The motor coach - that
"The average vacation will
was Falls City after a3gamewln
ultimate in touring, a land be almost three weeks in
No matter what kind of olope of tbe ground, Since II
over McKnight &amp; Davies Hdwr,
yacht - probably has the 1975,' ' Scanlon predicts, ''and
fence you plan- picket, rail, is nearly impostlble to gel
K. Bostic had a 198-565 to lead
chassis that should be placed fo.ur weeks in 1980. People
board or what have you-its
NEW YORK OJPO - Rep. Ad- ability to stand up over the all poato Juol the aame
the
Falls City team and K Morin the heavy truck or bus wi11 almost feel it's sinful not
am Clayton Powell , D-N.Y., said years is determined by how hefgbl, mate them IaUer
category. It has, however, a to travel."
gan
and P. Bauders both had
than ...ded, lben trim lbem
young offspring - a minlaWith two million recrea- Saturda,y he will run for mayor well you install the fence ouee the'' are up. Trim tile
473 series to lead M. &amp; D. scor·
ture motor coach - that is tiona! vehicles on the road
;ng.
of New York this year if he can
posts
corner JIO!II to lbe right
converted from a true light now. the Recreational Vehi- get $J million i.n campaign funds .
If you plan the fence as beigbt first, thea olnl&lt;b a
Tawney's Studio has a share
truck and it is getting more cle Institute forecasts a Oeel
Powell
said
hehasalreadsbeen
something
utilitarian,
to
Uae
to
tbe
otber
corner
and
or the second place spot as they
popular by the month.
of 7 1~ million by 1980.
haag a Hne level oo fl. Mart
keep
animals
or
people
out
pledged
$525,000
if
he
makes
the
split
their series with the Elks.
Just introduced is the most
It will mean more roads
race and is having discussions or in, well-installed posts will the posts Md trim aeeordTop
scorers
fortheirteamswere
r_ecent of these little recrea- more parks, more people emlogly,
tJonal .. g ems, the "Mini- ployed in service and manu- with another financial group about keep it strong. If the fence
J. Ryan's 205-562 tor Tawney's
is there for purely esthetic
If lhe ground slopes sharphome, made by Motor facturing industries, mor~ of
tlle balance he would need to
and l Folden's 222--555 for the
reasons you should still do ly do not attempt to level
~·J:~AAd ~onotructed..r~ever~lhing,until~t ~.~' trans. ; reach $1 milj.ion.
Elks,
• ·•' . :van, · ._,
, 4' ~fortne.d' N ',..d, 'tolinlrysld• ':.t "Even If 't don't run, l'wil l as g.ood a job as posaiPJa in·:. posts, lnsleacUoUIId the fence ;
The K · of P, wo~ ·s "~bl~!IJ
puUm~ up posts beeause
in sleps wfth tlie posts with; ''
They g~r more ~ttracltve and foresi into something
make public 11\Y own blueprint there is n o t h i n g esthetic in each step level with each
from
french City Home Cenand fun.ctJOnal as t1me pass- hard to imagine from our
for
New
York
by
April
J,••
he
about
a
sagging
fence.
ter
with
R ferguson's 212--582
other.
es. Des1gned _so ~at the f~re present point of view.
told
a
news
conference
at
the
series as hlgh, The bestfor F. C.
Posts should be absolutely
part of the mter10r carnes
(Newspaptr Enrerprite Aun.)
An improperly set p o s t
Abyssinian Baptist Church ln vertical, should be level and will heave with the change
was f. Burke with a 223--604.
should be in line. And even of seasons and temperatures.
HarJern.
The Cit.Y Loan was led In scor..
Five Democrats have already thou '·h they may start out Also the weight of lhe fence
ing by G. Marchi with a 195-announced their candidacy and that way they may not re· must be considered.
563 series as they won 6 points
main so if they are not proplastaU
eeraer or ead posts
two Republicans are challenging erly
from Ohio Bell. Tops for Bell
anchored.
flrot. Dig a bole drep enongb · was L. Tawney with a 209-.535,
lncurnbent Mayor John V. LindProviding good drainage and wide eaougb. The rule
say for the Uepublican nomina.
K. Haner had the top score
will keep the post from rot· of lbumb for depth io one·
tion.
for the night with a 234-634
ling. A good method is put- third the total length of the
series as his C.O.B.A. team
ting a bed of gravel at the pooL In wldlb make II about
split a 3 game series with Ash·
bottom of the hole. For ab· three timea the wldlb of the
solute steadiness next pour POit. Tbat wUI leave room
land Oil. J. Hellman had a 212·
concrete into the hole, level- for a good job of compacting
569 for Ashland Oil's high.
ing it off slightly higher than or for fUUag with concrete.
Starolngs:
the. surrounding g r o u n d
Use rot-resistant wood
Happy
Corner • • . • , . 68 20
level.
You'll like doing business
such as cedar, cypress or
Falls City • , ••• , ••• 54 34
where you're a valued cusTo
p rev e n t heaving in redwood. Treat the end to be
JERUSALEM (UI'D - Israeli
Tawney's Studio ••• , , 54 3·4
tomer-never a slx-ti,Rure
areas where freezing and buried with a chemical wood
intelligence agents arc now seek- thawmg are severe try makG, &amp; J, Auto •. , •.. , , 52 36
computer number. So see
preservative. Rest method
ing out and attacking Arab guer- ing the concrete (ill wider for application is soaking.
K. or r. . ...... , ... 48 40
us for the money you need
rill as in their own territory , it
to
clean up those old ,bllls.
Oh;o Bell , , , , , • , , , , 44 44
at the Uoltom than at the You may be able to buy posts
top.
was disclosed Saturday.
C.O,RA. , , , , ... ,,38 50
that are already treated.
In a broadcast over Jerusalem
SEE US FOR A DEBT
French City , •••• , .•• 36 52
Another method is to nail
Size 4 x 4 lumber Is preCONSOLIDATION
Radio, former Jsraeli intelli- a wooden crosspiece to the ferred for fence posts.
McKnight &amp; Davies , , . , 36 52
gence chief Gen. llairn Herzog base of the post. This Will
Elks • • • ...••...•• , 36 52
Check the post frequently
said the new tactic has already anchor it firmly in the con- with a level to make certain
Clly l.Qon , , , •• , . , • , 32 56
forced UJe Arabs to reorganize crete.
it is vertical as you set it
Ashlaro 011 , , , , , • , , 32 56
Once end or corner posts in place and tamp earth
in smaller groups, reducing their
are
in place :stretch a line around it. If it is dlfflcult to
FORMAL FAREWELL
effectiveness_
from the outside of one to get it vertical use temporary
JAKARTA (UPD- U,S, Am''The policy is to seek them the outside of the other. Then
CRkDffll ,
braCes.
Drive
stakes
in
the
bassador
Marshall Green Saturout and attack them while they drive slakes inside that nne
01" I 111- 'ltlt:f LHII.liT.
ground on two sides several
day pald his formal farewell
are training or organizing," Her- to line up the posts in be- feet away. Then nail a brace
call to Indonesian · President
zog said. "The onJy criterion tween.
from post to stake after you
:ilharto.
He became ambassator attacking them is that they
The fen&lt;e will look better have that side checked with
dor
In
Indonesia
In 1965. Green
belong to El Fatah (an Arab ter- if the top Is level regardless a level.
will
ABIAime
new
duUes as U.S.
rorist organization) bent on at- of minor changes In tht'
fHt:•JIIGpet ltdetpt;N AsJJt.)
assistant secretary or state for
tacking Israel."
East Asian and Pacific alfaira .
SIGN PACT
USES BRAD. LE
. ''
SEOUL (UPl).... South Korea
WASHINGTON (U 1'0 - The
Saturday signed an agreement
Social SecurHy Administration
for a $7 mUllan U.S. loan [rom
Is now accepting and answering
the Asian De~elopment Bank.
letters in Braille. Martha
The money 'frill be used in the
Seabrooks, a blind typist, types
re£rigeraUon and cold storage
BraUle replies on a Oraillc
industries.
High Fidelity Phonographs
electri~ typewriter.
Tfle timefess beauty of good styllns and e11pert craftsmanship
is evident in every PhllcQ,Mastercraft Cabinet. Eech c~ftur~s the
character
elegance of a fine furniture style In int;.re~iin&amp; 1
detail and rich wood be8uty."
41

LA"s ftlth NCAA l!Ue In olx
yean.
•
The Brulno led by,aa much''
20 points at one stageofthepme
with Pur:duet aDd, exeept tot a
'brief rilly late In the second

LPUISVILLE, Ky, (U~O -

I

Brl""'

,,

LEI\' ALCINDOR

1

·13-1 during the next three alll guardo.
a half mlnuteo alll took cootroL
&lt;:oaeh John· Wooden qf UCLA
The h•bllll1 ol Rlckllollllllnd took mercy oolbo Bqllermakers
Bill Keller tD hit from lbo out.- f..- a three-mi!lllle ind 24-oecond
aide prov8d the Boil~rs• stl'eteh of the, seccm halt when
umolng. Mount, thenatlori'olaad- he I'OJIIIlVed AlCIIIIIol' fran lbo
lng sco'rer, was eapectally lnef. pmt. Ht returned thebJscenter
[ecti"ve in the flrat lalf •• he hit ' to the u-.. when ~urdue bepn
on onJ,y three , of 18 ohoto a"!! ,to ra~~,y; lbon took him out f..mlued 14 1n 1 f'OIIf at ont•• • JOOd with just over two minutes
Mount no i UW.b0tf4r lnth'l rOniai.U,..
oecond hal!. hlttiiW 011 nine of 18 ' When big Low left,lbo pme he
and rinlahed the ,.me wit:b 28 , railed', bl~ loog antu1 rar owr
poirita. But most of his polnta his hild and stretched out one
eime with tht Bruhu lncC~n»lete ttr:pr rt hla ' band, signi(yiJW
commalll.
,
tlcal1he Bnilno apln were No.1.
Keller, , who had 20' polnt8 in
At ' the cmcluslonofthe ~pme,
Purdue' a 9z,$ routo!North~- AI~ looped 1.-. the air with
Una 1n the aemtQ..ts, scored Joy, rushed over, picked 'I) a
jusc 11 aplnot the Brulno and 'folding chait to Oland on and ,...
waa unable to pt off 1111 1hots moved the nets ·trmn tbe ba&amp;ket
against the · Bruins' bigger in a triumphant diB.PlaY of ulti-

mps Bridgeport
Arcanum
Easily for Class A Cage Crown
&lt;

'

• •,

mate Victory.
UCL.'. as usual, had a wenbalanced attack Iran AlciiiiiOI''o
o_.-t~ac coat. Jolin vailel,y a...
lohell witb 15 pointl, CurUsltowe
added 13 and Lynn Shockelford
hadlL
Shackellord, Ted Rella a nd
BID Sweek Joined · Alclnclor ••
groc~uou,. ~en~..... All 1oor
PlaYed 011 each ol the . llrulils'
three otraigbt 'UUe team&amp;.
In the cooaolatlon rame, tastcloolng Droke pined third place
by otornllng put North Carollnl
104.84' and establlohed llaelf u ·
the most Wld.er~ted team in the
naU011. WUU, McCortor pec:ed
the Bulldofl•' alllck With 28

64 Pontiac

.

v

.(aral(~•

4 Dr. Ha,dlop, white finish, t11qu1lse
aut. trans. P. steerln&amp;, P. Irillts,
miles. Excellent cend. Radio.

$1295

'.

WOOD MOTOR SALES
. 1216 Eastern Ave.

Put Your Best Foot Forward On
Any Green.
GOLFING
TRY A
g}Na/!~

'

COLVMBliS (IJPI) - Ar..,_ JUch School woo 118 oecond Claas
A'balllotloall cbalqlkll1lhlp Soturclq wilb an owr"'fhelmbl!84.19 vlc:-

lorJ .... BrldlePort Ill&amp;!&lt; School.

My Happiest Day--Graeff

~·· collollollw 10110 delanoo.
But hiJ Qosde 111 lhi boar&lt;lo 1011&amp;1 foul•

COLUMBUS (UPJ)- "Thlslsthe happlestdayol DIY life. It's the goal we've been "orkiiW for,"
sold Jubllaat C.Och Dick Graef!, In oaYOI'Ing his first state Class A baoketblll champlonshlp Satur-

plaJed an ~ part Ill ArCIIIIIIII'o ftrot IItle emder 001eh Dlc:t Grull. 11\e
TrOjlmo wont Ill lbe n.r In
1956 IIIII were nnanop to
Slrallbura two yeora qo,
Grar 1110111 lbo lioordo for a
hlall 17 r - 1 , loci~
1Di 12 Ill lbe first balf.
Flrll 18an1 oii.Qhl,.. Jim
Troulwlne, who flllod to ._.
Friday, roboundecl with 25
iioJola, 1'iamuwto Don Rlqle
aM Fl'lli&lt; Ch8lllle odded 12
IIIII 10 polol8 for lbo TrOjooo,
, '1111 aweiiODIO comblnalllll of
GrQ' aM Cbrl... a pair of 6~ 200;lalnloenloro, povred
lllo IIIIlCh for lbo lllll&amp;llar Bullclop. The pair combblod lor 27
~ before o crowd of
,860 al St. John Arena here.

day,

Dave Gl'l,l', wllo uplcdod for a record 45 polol8 In tbo Trojans'
78-61 win over PortiiiiCUth Cia: Friday, mamged II point, agalnot
each and Gray and
ChOIIIIe were called for two lnlractloas,
-""'· Arcanum'• .otartlni
l8anl remained out ol foul troub1e lbe rest of the Wll;f,
1111 TrQJano turned looaa
lbelr blistering fast break In
the lblrd period tD pile up an
UIIIUI'IIIIIIIIIe 64-42 cuoblon.
DaRe led Brldpport with 18
po1nt1 while Lou Burk added 15
ODd Jim Tomolonla II.
Both ciUba finished with 25.:1
recorda,
ARCANUM (84)

G F T

Troutwine , • , •• , .9 7-12 25
Gl'l,l' • , • , • • , , , • 5 1·2 11
Chrlsl • , • , , • , 9 3-1 21
G. Rllisle • , •••• , 5 2-a 12
Cheadle , , • • ••• 5 ~ 10
D. Riegle , , ••. 0 11-2 0
t ' !'Pi !li!!41A1'k '!'llllmp- • GuriJon ' • ' ••• ' 2 1-2 ~
. 1 , . , af;llilllllarltrl TOTAU., •• ,,,. 35 14-25 84
it. I-to/ow, manapd jail ~
BRIDGEPORT (59)
nboundl a 1 a! n at Arcamun.
G F T
~- bouro urllerthey Prlco.,, •• ,,, •. 0 2-2 2
uimlll 30 rebolmdl qaiosl Glltc• , , , . , , , , , • 1 1-1 3
Fori Rt&lt;OVtr7.
Tllon(oooo , ••• , , • 2 1-1 5
Brl~ manapd juot 1111 Burl&lt; • ' • ' •• " • ' • s 5-7 15
lleld p i bllbe ftrot period IIIII T1111olonlo • • • , , , • 5 t-3 11
!rllllll 19.1.
Daile •••• ' • " " 7 4.1 18
·'

The

IJUI!doP maclo t11o1r 01011

tl¢tu1V. nm In lbo II&lt;CIIIII
...... aM lnlled U-*1 it balf.
olf

tjmo ·•• ,1'1111 Dallo ,,..,_
lloe -

to loll Ill el&amp;lrt

~ ', .
·I ~rt _,.clio hlvo
tloe brolka ping Ill 111.1' ••

a.rtst, TrouiWble 111111 1liello
~Od with lbno Jllll'·

_.

Two year&amp; ago, Graeff all! Arcalllllt IUgh Schon! Invaded St. Jolin Arem at Ohio state Unlver·
all&gt; but lost tD Stralburg for the ocbonlboy title.
However, it wal!l a dltrereDt story Saturday, aa the Trojan~ blasted Bridgeport 8f..S9 In die
cbaqllooshlp showdown balore 13,860 laiiL Arcanum ellled Ito ...... with o 17'f!llllll win &amp;treak
alll a 25-2 overall record.
Graeff iald lbo turning point of the season came alter Arcarum lost 97-64 to Dixie.
"The kids seemed~ became dedicated alter that humiliation," Graerr said.
· The loss trlqorecllbo TroJanomthelrloogwln streak and their firat otate title under GneiL
Arcacaun aioo took the Cla11 A champlonshlj&gt; In 1956.
Graeff sold he laloW Brldpporl "'would probably make II twgh on Dave (Gray) alii I told the
boys they l.,t to do 10010 of lbo shoollog."
Gray wao held to 11 points, far from the record 45 he DOtted ~~&amp;~~lllllt Portsmouth Cia: in tho
simll-11.-.la.
Jbn Troutwine t&gt;Piodeil with 25 point&amp; alter beiQ! blanked Friday,
"Jbn"s a quiet boy, no CQml&gt;lalota. We 1aikedto him last night and Jim aald he felt like he li&amp;d
a pKid same cc:mtJv," GneU said.
He said he had Ill Intention ol benehiQ! Troutwine, Steve Christ all! Gary Riegle even though
they bad plclted 181 three peroo.-.1 fonlo In lbo first peril&gt;!.
"You have to go with your best In a game Uke thla," the 4D-year..old coacb Ald.

'

. ,l

L~tzY,..BDRES
... ~ . ....., -· .W'III.. """"'"~··

CJ~ffrl!%~

Ray Floyd Tourney Leader·
lhlrd round, shot • 4.under.par
Curl,y - haired Bay Flwd, often 68 Saturday for a 54-llole total
In the money bUt not a willner ol9-underiill" 207. ,
Rl&amp;ht 011 bls heels, at 208,
olnce 1965. birdied the f1oal hole

gallery packed with his relatives
with a 6-undor- 66 IIIII 41year:.old Gardner Dlddnl!lon, the
veteran who led last fall's Jill¥·
saturday with an lllolool putt to were Weaver, wbo entertained a er revol~ wilb a 70.
ed&amp;O
Into 0 ·0110-strol!e, lhlrd
Mrclkwsk , ••••• , • 1 ••
....., 2 round lead In 1bo llOO,OOO GrellWOllomo , , •• , • o 1·1 1 er JacklonYIUe Open golf tour- . , , , ........ 1 ~ 2 nament.
roTAU. , • , , , •• 22 15-20 59
Floyd, a oae - time uAniJ;r
SearJns by quortera:
bral" who ..3,000 wilboul
Arclllum •• ' ' 19 22 23 20-84 a y:lctory last ieor, had flllm
JlrldB&lt;9ort ••• 8 22 12 17-59 bac:t ,Jnlo a Ue witb oorb" 1-r
Foul 11 .Ar....., 17, Brldp- Dewitt weav.r wbon he ntloood
portlS.
a live IIIII Pill at No, 17 .Fouled out: Nllll
but DtOYed blck Ill front Ill ...
A·- 13,8~0
603-;rard. par-li lith when, after
bctunclng blloliProocb -post
the cup, oank the PI'OIIIIr&amp;ii&amp;Ck·
ed putt he needed.
.
The 26-year-&lt;lldFio,rd. a - .
olf the paeo at lbo start of the
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (UPI)-

At

328 Socond Avo.

Reds·WiD 4-0 Over LA

WDIII ·Ctawlord's double 'If!
'
'
YOUNG
MAN
KILLED
GniWOJ' In lbo t.urthlnnlow alll
CLEVELAND
(UPI)
- A,
Jcilll P~ch'o olagle oil !Iii..
car
coiiiBillll
here
earl,)'
Sllurprl In lbo eJaldb were lbo ool,y
day olalmed lbe IUe of Cor!
Doclpr baH bilL
Neml, 21, of Parma.

'

tASTER SPECIAL!
I

a-Soundon
Quality Solos'"""

--.rJI!III

•

14-1969
CA

•

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IN STOCI TO
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lion ha,iolkQ&gt; OiemlloiTnlckolo Gallla
, CCounll 11ten AJt¥ Olbor llatco? ANSWER:

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�-•:' I

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.'
' .

'\1101 ~· Tfmeo-&amp;ollnol. auday,
Mlr&lt;:h
23, 1969
r
•

•

•

•

-

--· ...... r,tzon~ng

:

J1rlacoU wu the hlgliest score• In \he tournament, pouring in
96 )lOintain fciur games.
'The wlnningcoaeb had special
,Pi'alse for Baum, calling his performance ua re~l great game.~
The Temple oftenalve &amp;tar hail
30 polnta and ID r-.rtds, l!fabbing most of tile rebound• In tile
second half.
' ~!$urn was disturbed over tile
voting· adding: "tho msln thing
was the team wimlng tile cham- '
plonsltlp.••

Utwack also cited tile play of

substitute Tom Weiczerak who
&lt;OIIIrll&gt;uted six polnta ln.the closlog mlllltes. He came In for Bill
:Jrunk, who Utwaek said was
by 1 five - member coaches' ugetUng too edgy."
eommiuee
wont 1e Terry Drfa.
Losing Coach B o b Couay, .
. '
coli of Boston Ccllege. A mix- r.1tose team had run up 19 eon·

ture of cheers and boos greeted secutlve victories, sa'ld. 41 1 was
the announcamenl Olring the post- proud or all of my boys.
game awards ceremony.
Drlscoll was sitting on the
noor at courtslde wben the an~
lllWicement was made and was
helped lA&gt; bls !eel by lea!nmaleo
who led him le tile center of tile

noor.

"We slmply got too tired •.•
the spirit was willing but it's a
helpless reeling when you can't

want to •.• cur fast
break iult collapsed ...
"They CTemple) dldn~ show
us _..,.
.............
"~....
16 we didn't expect, n

run when you

he said. uThey just did a better
job than we did."

Holzer School
Of Nursing in

.

,t',

.

NEW YORK (i:JPO - HartY
Utwaek, the ·hll&gt;!.&gt;l' he.;! "'!"•h.
of tile Temple' Olols, had only
.,. regret$t~ ,blbloteom•s
Olll'PI'IIO &lt;OilQIOit ol Boslal C&lt;&gt;J.
lege tn the finals ri. the Na~..
11 lnvltalico Tournament and that
wao Jolrl Baum'• !allure lo win
llte 01011 valuoble player award.
Otherwise, Utwack, who wU
freshman eoaeb IIi tile PhlladeJ.
phia school It .won tile Orlt
NIT played, waa ail smUea.
ULet'l just say r~diaappotnt..
ed that lbe oo181a1J4lng
, .. player
didn't come from the cham,pl.onllblp team," said lha gray • haired cigar • smoking coach.
The MVPaward, based on votes

' ;,:'•

Crawls 27 Hours

State Tourney

WOODBURY, N. Y, (IJP0- A
22-year-old lllghland, N.Y. man,

COLUMBUS - The Holzer
Hospital School of N11rolng basketball team clelealed lha Providence Nursing IJebool oquad
of Sanclloky by a ~ msrgln
In tile Orll round of tile student
Nurses Aosocfadon of Ohio haske11&gt;aii tourney bore Saturday.
Holzer, hoWeVer, was ellmJnaled later In tile day by Mercy
Sc:hoOI or Nursing In tile Semi".

suffering a double fracture ol
the skull, a broken Leg, a broken

arm and fracture ot the spine,
crawled through the woods for
27 hours lo reach help !allowIng

the crash

of

a light plane.

Workers for a sand and gravel
company found Eric Kraus Fri·
day and took liim to Cornwall
Hospital, where he was listed
Saturday In fair conclldon.

llnala rouncL
Scorers lor Holzer School of

Nursing against Provldeilcawere

GEN. WHITNEY DIE'S
WASHINGTON (UP0 - Redr:
ed Army Mej, Gen. Courtney
Whitney, tile late Gen. Douglas
MaeArtltur's closest c&lt;111fldant,
died at W!lter
~ ~ ~~'
~·~~~·v~·~~ aplece,
~·?ft.il ~ ..... ' ~J;t ~

paced by Debbie Bradley willt 16,
Other point - goiter&amp; for Holzer
"''" ~· Babr witll seven,
SoniiY Davldaon, s I X, Donna
Darst, two and B"-7 Qumnlng.

·

,..

I

u.e

is a one-man stampede.

'

·

i

' 1

,

'I

• I·

ffnal turn .... tl1en clollad

His cap is turned catcher-style, his :mas-

sive head droops and sways, sweat forms

rivulets as it courses along the\~nkS .or
his ruddy cheeks and Ro\vs into ll)e della
or his blond .stubble: his g a r g a n t,ua n
fr~me. supported by plllars of legs with
six-pound ankle weights lied on, heaves
with each lumbering, rumbling fall of a
foot.
: He Islet out altheleh-fleld !outline auf..
: pounds metllodlcaUy off. One wateboo Ia
anxious anlleipstloa: Will he raise his
: head before be ~els to where the felllie
. eurves In eeater field? II not he wiD crash
: right lbrougb. Tbea a few toammotes
must give ••ase lo round him up.
This is all part of the care and fee;llng
: of the American League's home,run cham·
pion. Howard came late to spring training
alter a long holdout which resulted in a
typically mammoth contract. He reported
in at 285 pounds, about 20 over his playing
weight. He hopes to be as svelte as a bron. tosaurus by Opening Day.

--

a 5-10, 17()-pound midget and Howard'a
roommate, to run al011g. Humphreys is
like a perky pace horse. Howard agOIIIJ:es
to keep up. Humphreys now turns and runa
backward, goading weary Howard, ponderous Howard, grumbling Howard on.
("It's the only way io get him In shape,"
said Humphreys. "He can lose 10 pounds
in a day, then put it right back on that
night. My God, how he eats! I remember a
couple years ago he weifhed in one Sunday
at263. The next day, Gi Hodl!es, the manager then. called a sneak weigh-ln. Frank
weighed 277.
_
("You know whot he had lor b"'akfast?
A quart of orange juice, a quart ol milk,
six eggs, two steaks with french fries, two
piecea of pie and a couple slices of honey·
dew melon.")
Susee RoaDy calls No. 21. Howanl does '
not argue, 1h . . g b he
tbal this
torture Is unneeessary, thai he Is belal ·
paid aU that cash to snoash baseballs an
not to !UIIbe outfield.
"Frank's human like everyone else."
· '·gl "A d
IaIor, unconv1ncm
y. n you
a~;:.; this conditioning pleasant, get
pi
to like It psychologically. It
And sometimes they don't enhow I know? Let me put it
way ... They never• name )Jieir babies
;;;~~m:;_;e.fc:...&gt;.ili:;:~&amp;;W·~il,·~~--io11.·lU·~w:'i:;'~'wnWJ

ing at 7:30 and runs, hits, throws, beilds,

' stretches, reaches, grunts, runs, runs, runs

~

until late in the afternoon. "This IS the joyless part of baseball," he said, underslat·
ing his plight.
·· George Susce, wlzened and gnarled

coach, oversees Howard's TOPS course.

As they sit on the bull pen bench durin~ a
game, Susce will say, "A little bendmg
now." Howard groans. "It's gotla be done
and that ali there is to it," says Susce.
They gel up.
Fifty times. Susce lobs a ball a few feet
to his left and Howard goes boom, boom,
boom, boom and bends to retrieve. Fifty
times, Susce lobs a ball to his right and
Howard plods alter.
Next, they ~· te left field and Howard

•••ps

begins bls, well, amble. Suaee says he

must run 2D times to center field, wallllng
bact alter each jaunl
.
. After awbUe, Howard says it Ia ZD. Suseo
· says It Is only JJ. Howard says lie Is senile

and ean't eount any moli:. Howard lum-

bers away, mumtilblg Hitler, Slmoa Legree, slave driver, Inhuman oar. ("M•,?:·
be," said Susee, with a bblt of a uln. '! ·
did mess the

..

Th~

Bevlairer with confidence and
the bay colt paicl oniJI $2.80,
$2.40 and $2.10 acrou the board
In wlmil1i lor tile seC!IIId Ume
lhi
In ~
He a1 10
1

rear - · ri'CBs.
"'"' the .SIIfft stakes, tlrst of
lite four r.C..s PJ'OII'IUIUI1ed at
~ct lor aspiring Kealuclly
Derby ~tea prior to tile
Nay 3 iunnlng.

20
hand•
IICb IW:I, . Ia seeking Ita ·third
Willi Libbey leading 62-Glwltll
sirallbl ,litale mnm olnca 1983 l:f5 to play~ In pooses1klo of
and fourth overall. In the last IJ"' bsll, East's
Larey

;.:t ,?

s
k Ou
unn·m g P.ea ·s · · t

I' '

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CONTRIICTS SIGNED
NEW YORK (UPI) - The New
York Glanta amounced today lite
ol~ of their No. 8, 11 and l2
choices from lha _last National
Footbaii' League draft. 'Retum-

lng contracta were 6-t, 220 •

*"""""'

pound Georle Irby of 'i'uakeli80;
5-11,
Jolr1 FiliPA of

- - 918tA&gt;; arid S-1, 225 •
j1DWid llarey Bladmey ol lrlar7·

BuslniS$, corisultarif ";. :
has an attr.lciiY' lni•$t~. ·
ment opportunity In the
Pomeroy • Gallipolis ·

area .
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for furthor lnfarmotlon
Writ.:

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;'Bii'ADENTON, Fla. (\JPOJim Bun nl n r.. lh-.''lkiiiiJ
ofcloarm apeelallsi tit1h thOt big
lrfrlblenfng r.ot!Ow til......,,
,....,... ~s being aakefl blo
~
e·.wlt If, molt !llher
~}layoi " · &lt;~, '· conllder an
eXtNmelyfciJilc ...tiUbJed.
BWitllng waa al...,-s one tp
epOak. ido miiMt ancl !eli ' 711i!
oddly what lie 'thought. He did
It Th tile balmy clays and
pniiiably ~U all his life so be
aees· no reascln to cilaniO now.
The Plttalxir!lb Piratea eave
up four players 1e Phlladall)hla
for blm 15 mootba aso and lelt
so lti10d lboul tile deal tll8t they
.... ·0111 ·lb ad in a Plllaburgh
piper . whfel!,. had Blll!nlnll'•
llk011t11 In !lie· conlor and aald:
•.You" eald ·· wa tiOeded more

i

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i 7. •

Celtics. Give
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Paul N: ~p.!tcj ~ Assot;

,.(!h!•

B'

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1. •Big Huskey Witcomin 8'.4 h.p. lllgine.

flpadip,~ss

ApJ)eatanee

pitching. Well, we went 00t and
llllllt.H
Traded 1n 1967
The c1es1 was msde In m1c1.
of 1967. Bunning hail
not yet alillel! wi.. tlie Pldlllei
and It,was belng.",;..sed llr&lt;lllld
'ho was JiDing to ask them for
1190,000, Whenever a bsllplayor
cornea over to a new club It
aoneral)y . trleo 1e make 111m
ha.PPY. 'Ibis ·comes under tile
haadlng of showing a new
Pti3&lt;er he Is really 'lllnled
shcnrlni 111m by the best means
posofble. With money,
The Pirate&amp; paid Bunning
somewhore between $85,000 and
$90,00D Ialit year because they
felt they was getting what they
ni:toded D!,OS~ a 2D-IPU'Ie winner,
Besel by one lnjuey aller
another, Bunning never even
came close. Ills record willt the
Pirataowas f..14last season.
The dallcate question Jim
Bunnlna doesn~ mind snawerlng
at all now Ia whether ho ever
felt a little gull\)' walldng 1111 to
tho J111Y windoW last summer,
mlklils ill thel D10IIOY and
wlilnh!J' so low pmea?

lleee.

2. Electric start.
3. 6 speeds forward, 2 rl'lerse.
4. Includes options others
charge extra.for.
fi. P - take Off drive.

8. Fat switch ltUIChiiWitl.
/

SUSPI!NOJ!'D ClJI:, PoiMio 2'•4' ................. . .......89&lt;
DISAPPEARING S1AIRWAY ................ $15.84

tht&lt;IIWh tho paek,

'

- ••vefl dhllfl."

owne&lt;.

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~ ~0 .: ream
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apd

tiie

Porsclle of telavlotonper-IIY
Dick Smolhero, raced by Smolh.
era alii·Fred Baker.
Both cars were In tile 1ep 10,
as was tbe rems.... FardGTto,
which, like tho Alfa.Romeoa, had

. '•''

.

;. ~land
·'

Willi

:$.~~ .;i

w_..,...ilellflili,ll
xciijljll;r :·-:r.,r~J':1.i:'!:T'·

PQinls,
S Orlt periOd Ieod.

.

CIUIIon

~ !lob '!Of~

the Buildup' zeino·~

obntrlbatlng' faet« Ia 1111

· ed win.

""'"'""

•'

Question

_:P~::S.J!~:~h= =~~-::r~=e':.:

a,"";u.:=:.;:~ =::::~;.=;

Bunning got off on lite Wl'l1lll lop of tho 26 111'0 ~I &lt;1\lb
foot In AprU by tearing a muoole owners.
In hia groin, then apralnlng bla
"It was a wortinYh!le week,"
rl&amp;lrtankletwo..,eekslater.
commlsol.,.,. J',teR~elle..W
ke lrled lavorlng lite ankle and
.
.,
.. :.
came up wltll an lnllamed hlp as N&lt;Yl' A DROP
' • ·. '
a result. Thai ,., 111 bla rlghl
ROME (\JPI).. ~- waon't a
'' aide. A pulled hamstring on his single drip from half lbe faucala
left aide topped off the andre, in Rome Saturday beeause tile
wonderful rear. ·•'What can you t!OYernmanl cut off the walor.
lillY ahoot a year Uke lbal'l" The water wiD be cut off 1111111
· Bumfng. asks. "Whot name do &amp;mday in half tile dey whUe an
700 prt m It? As far aa rm aquemct Ia repaired.
ooncerned now, rm discounting
lalt year completely. It's gone. TOLL RISES
Whelhor I wao 2-d or 42..2, lt'o ' CAmO (UPI).. The death toll
ali over and lhiala anew &amp;ea11011. rose lA&gt; 99 Saturday In the eraah
I've aotten a clean bill of healtll Thursday of a Rusllan-bul.lt
and I know if Pm healthy I .,.. United Arlh Airlines plane at
pitch for Pittsburgh or anybody Aswan Airport, ·Two - . .
else. On lite otber hand, II I were discovered under tho
can't pitch like I know I can, then wreckage of lite lour-«&lt;g)ne
I can•t pitch for PIUiburgb or turboprop craft ·and four other
anybod)l else. Pll iult go home. parsons died In hospitals ol
Nob&lt;K\Y'll have to tell me. Pil frliurles. A teun of SOVIet
know my sell.''
aviation experts joined ·Egy)).
Jim Bunning's been llr&lt;1llld tlan ~lais lnYe'\ll"tln!l the
awhUe. He knows IIIey don~ J111Y erasb. 11iero were ID4 perscma
a pitcher $75,000 ~st to look aboafd tho Jeddah, Saudla
good in tile hotallobbY.
Arabia-to-Aftan !llllhl.

OU Tenth in Golf T
1%57 8lld !lifo We~ hod
lcir 12th placa.

.,.,,~.. --

' WIN, f • S
PIIILLIFS
CLEARWATER, Fla. (UP!)
Rookie center fleldtlr ~ Jii;.&amp;li '~
lllale dlllbled bome What ,I1I'Oirod,.
le be the winning run aa the Nl· ·
adelpllla Pbllllu edged lhaBoo- "
ton Red Sox, t-3, Saturday. :' .~ ,
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:O~()
~· J':J illl!

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MUST GO 'AND SAVE HUNDREDS OF QOL·
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oclor Jim Garner's Amerlcanln-

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LARS. OR WILL LEASE OR SEL.:L "' t~ fl~- ·
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&amp;~&amp;'
SCORES'
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.'

ANCE EQUIPMENT AND STOCK.

·'!.'

BOB QUEEN AUTO SALES
.
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Awe.

•
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FEAWRES
Moltlba.lft. toraue. STD. V-8
SaloiY·Rim wheels

. Pln8BURGH PIRATES' Bob ~~ pri.etk:t'o sUd·
In( In sowd•st Pll ot Ph:ate ·eaJIIp ·Jit 'B~. Fla.
Robenson Is· mo"tinJ romeblet Iller tlclnOy oiierolfon.

7-ot.P dip-andsorav .body prep.
Biggest brakes
Biggest trunk
Most rear-seal room ·

'IP: ~
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~I

!Ill,...-·
k)flts

. /'·.

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' A.
'}
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Uni~.J!l::constructlon

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

Slandard electric clock

~

(UJ'Q, -,' .Leo

Check the above Chart. Then, think aboultl :

·, .

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Rada.

}.

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_If(

$' ': . ~f
•·. ' .•
•;:_
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,...

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of your lavorile options. Get the straight story
and.greatlsavingo. See us today .

..... '·-·~·-·

I ~t

t'lioalnilta

going for it? That's Plymouth Fury Ill, straight
down the line. And, now during our GREAT'
Plymouth Sale,lhere's even more to think about.
We're offering sp~ially-reduced prices on many

.

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ui~Frl­

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'tl 1'.
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'.(,.'1'
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·-.,t"~
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-u-.QcHRVSLER
·
,MO!URBCOIIPIIRA1IOII .

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"
. . . . .· Chfyll8r•RI
. . ' ' ..

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Shouldn't you be buying the car that has the mosl

f

h.,

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Ford Galaxia 500

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~brlabtl7

.

Plymoutfl Fury Ill

TorSion--bar suspension

"·

~·

,.,....._
,.
.,....

•

.,•

IC~

••r "!:i~~=:~~~~·

10! •lil'ted.
. iiii .......

1t~'

be Alii. ~!lfti,iidt Q
19-1.
" ..
,

that ran a veey nlca

CHANCE TO BUY AT COST AS·EVERYTHING·_

New York lloDPra.

terMtlonal ·Racing, Inc.

.

.

NEW YORK (UJ'l) - For the
IOCGIIII Ume·"ljllhrle rears, VIc
Hadfield hal ....... tile
moot popollor msmller of tho

Pt~ven

-- ~

club

Solution Still Stjught

'

Wll tla.'111!1W ,,.,. ·lhllllftllllli!!h
~HI tile llold In tho 2Uiolln 91'
~ ., ·

....• ALUMiNUM S,IDINo\...!........._ .....................$21.97 ·~·
• .AlUMIN~ STORMTf/INDfi~S; .......... .. ... $8.2.5

r

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plq

OUT BY THE FIRST OF APRIL. THIS JS A
MOSf POPULAR

by Mark~
au:l Kallio .........., !Ia &gt;
t.aja

'.;
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''.GARAGE
'" """Si
9 x7 ' ........................................$47 .U
,, A~UMI~YM STORI(.OOORS .•.............. $16.84

RoOFING SHINGL~S, $Mliad~ ............... . ......$6.27
·
S.:.l Down ........................ $7.20
HOUSE
PAINT-,
"
·'"
....................
$3.68 gol.
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1.!!1

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IRON.RAil;ING, 4' pes. $2.99 .... ---- .6' pco. $4.55

. ...

the.

•llk8 1GU
"Tbii.Y're a very smart bsll loiy Is ~ a

hl4.

.

ner~~Y·

whon, sevonl ·
prHaee IILvw!tai ~ ·
peel out.
The t7th ll,p efaimod tho I
Penab-lda with a
·Joti;t
rear Cbl.sala itat II1I!M

. ol

. 'lb!IJ're tile belt' &lt;IW&gt; l'v~ fter lti10d llOll ~b fo.o~iJI

qt.
lense - not like East whfcll
jqll &amp;Wir!ed It ·~ there and
I)OI1ad tile two big ,1PJ7, wwld
got It and stulf II In," he aald.
!lllce felt Ham should have
received two free lhrowo In the
c:1oalng leCODds.
"\VIiy dido'! ·t hey call tile
foul . . • . you ~ .....,. It all
over tile Jllace." .
Dayton
Chamlnade ~h
play.
Jim Turvene was hfil1l,y im"Now that we've """· I can pressed wltll ~ McXlnley.
tell you t11at conner was olek
''The way ''lhelre Jlaylng
In bed ail day." The Tigers' rlgbl ..W,,t~~e:Y wjll be a tough
6-l~ COlter had a strop team le beat In tile Dnala."
throat and was liven a shot of
"It's a shame ..we didn't p1aa
penlelllln.
like we dkl last weekend, but a
In
regard
to
tonight's
cla&amp;b,
ball leasue ownets did &amp;CCOIIIpllsb here wao 10 move the ~ Hart called C8ntAm McKinley
par Bowl from Miami to NewOr- "quick and lllnlng. They'll be
a toughie."
le:ma.
"
TRYON, . N. C, (UPI) - Waka
II marked t11,e last high school
"What we're dealing with Isn't
Forest successfUlly clelended Ita
game
lor
Toledo
Ubbec'
Oosch
a afmple lllfng." the commlsIa hqllng ·to ehomplousblp In tile Red Fox
olonor continued. "It amounted Burl Spice llwllallonal Gall Tournament
lo an e&amp;.cauon.l Week. All tho land a oollege job, In the last
bore
Friday, as lhn!e Ohio colfour
yean,
Spice
has
&amp;Uided
the
'plans are still alive."
loge
teamo
came In farther down
Cowboys
to
87
111ns.
They
ftnRozelle was ii!IIR ahoot tile
the list.
lsbed
at
23..2
tlllo
seasoo.
que- being a comPlex one.
urm_, hopi.Ii&amp;: to get a break.
Ohio State, ocorlng 1244 for
NFL ....,.s want lha leques
tile
three round&amp;, &lt;IIIJIUred eighth
You
don't
:want
1e
look
back
Ll
ID eontlme as separate entitles.
years
from
now
and
say
'that'
1 place. Wake Forest carded an
Thi1Y offered lnlei-Jeasue play, all rve .... u
1142.
but lite AFL oimera seek total
Ohio Unlveralt;y was lOth wltll
••rm awt'ull,y prood of them.
roaiJ8nment.

the race, It. . . D)' blek liD
lha field, but ·~ ....,.. ~

, INSUIJA TED PATIO DOORS ...............................$95.00
!RON RAIL: lNG, 4' p&lt;;s. $2.99 ........ 6' pes. $4.55
I

!l'li

'od """

to

INSUI:.ATION/2!i" 3,; sq. ft. '........................ $2.93 roll
f-7/8" U oq. ft ................... $2,46 roll
EXT.ERIOR poOR$ ................ - .. -- ... $9.98

,

'Olio ·~
I'D a ·~ve 'aM wao fouled · on

llwt!lbt Umir

1965 Bilek s,eca,rW.I .

iNTERIOR DOQRS .. , ................... ... $5. 18 ·

\. "'!

~ ~ "'id pa~

ql !'flO !r., ·- · with 11011"1'8Y ell took , sbolo WI
49 se&lt;onds remaiDial to c:ut lite !ailed In lholr attempts to alv•
m&amp;r1lln 10 ~' I.
Libbey lite w1n.
Steward, a. secQI1d.leam All:
the play,
And ofter RAllo!! milled a
Lamar's free lltrow With li!5 drh'e, ~ .l'i&gt;UI\fed tile r.. Ohio pick, oolaCOII'ed Radolf 2:;.
· remaining completed
tme. ba!mcJ and ~od limo out wltll 2t In their ~ battle.
"I feel like F-ro lllrQU&amp;I1
point play and gave EUI') If- HI .e'&lt;ancls ~ 1!2 lead.
"In tho Dnal HTen seconds lite miD," Hart eal4. . ''Whew,
. ' ToledO's Abe~~ Carl Ham; ~and Dexter man1
"You can talk alioul your
•
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.
.
Ratlel!o, CORnaro cNick), La..
mare and lllckmans (Roy) but
·...
.
Walker made one of tile blaest
plays of lbe rome ', • . tile
.
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.
0
smallest making the biggest

Walker &amp;tole

to

SALE I

gearirv down and brak!Di·oiluplytoft1110(iatetlleawastlftotums.
Racing lor lite third and lburlll
·IIOIIItjoas - aboullhreoleil' behind tho leaden - won two
more Poraehes driven by lha beenlr&lt;d&gt;ledthrougboutlbeweek
.
team• of Joe Buzzotta and Rail wltll ~nlcol problema, 8lld . .938 Second
Stommelen and by tile lep P..-.che was au -•led mscb!qe. ·
. '
entry ol JoSiffarWirian ll4&lt;'nlil.
Sllferl ~ tile load¥ the
outael Is lite drhero rushed 'to
lholi' porkad can and IJIIftllod
them off 0t1 tile grueltrw eeduranoe tes4 lollawed clOui)o by
ll1feo niore of lha !actor)' caro.
But tile I'Graches pitted
routlneiJ, tile Pesnke Lola shot
lrto tile load, and two of the
Porocheo, liter
lha
lOad, were !breed I~ !110 pita.
The tlber&amp;1ao 011 SW'ert11 cart
like tlal , of another Parse he
whfdl lolor .... taken !ram· tho
race, were ohreddllW !ram Im'
..
A!llor., P.S., On• owt\~t, l'litt.
properly odjualed air opollera.
1!6~~.rD0.· ·' . .
•
Wlion the Porache p lllek I•

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PAMELING ....___ ...............................-... 54.39-$4.97

.

chlnglng

5-l~

...,.,Dirw

JlalensR.,_,I50

~ned

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were 'stUl in the race, Competing. In a race remarklbb free of atterooon as an estimated 65,000
the prestigious Sebring 12 hour for , more than ~.ooo i~ prtze mo,ior lneldenta desplie tile c.,.. sumalhers lazed sboul the
money.
potion on tile track, than waa course. A carnival air p):evatled
endlU'ance championship.
Leading was tho Porsehe entry one accident ol alii' coosequenee throughout the da7, with 11or..
Midway of tile torturous•st,aa
amsilng 5S of the
cars driven by Gerhard Mltl!&gt;rand IJ!Io ,~~ early gobw. Warren baekad monandpretcyminl.,eidrt.
Schultz who were pllotiqJ tholr S!lDneo, drivlrv a Shelby, sur-. ed women addlrw le tile col• ol
precision whlla i:araroundtlled.. · ~a ~akan,.,.. when hlo ear tile event.
'
mandlng to~Jrst at _more 'U.n .P... 0111 and nmmed a proWelloorlrw down the stnllhls It
110.60 QJlleo per hOur ":":· rar ·.If,., mOUDd of unci near one of 170. I11Jh, tho Ferrari 1'!111. Ita
.above tile' previous re"'?f'' ,raea , ,uieky turns. He waa released clallengera tootturnlinlhaload,

'755
........

i.st

TIIO. BdJliop boalt .a mode~

·- nt'~:.::'s":':. ;,;_ Ooseb :..~odd

't·

HIQ' Good Lookln, 'Olio ~ell
a go0c1 try In tile llret,!:h but ialiil; 'Olio starr.,s laat ieoiOO'
110 N. Kith 'St.
,
wltll
tile
dlampion
Orll'ln,., found WBIIflng, llif&lt;H3.80
Gahi!npoa 1
~~
·and $2.80. 1· PoUnd Gold, 'Olio thera of ih8 COttUruintai l.oa&amp;UO."
.
ad In .....,. but 111t11 of
tum
a r-: -,.
e •
~~~. ~0• .......... 17
...,.,_
'(
jiDWida to Hey Good Looldn 8lld
19 lorate.
I FCJund Geld, turnod In a
•aat
lie was"'-~ ... 1:2 2
•
,,
~4..1, ...,.Uing lhaillakea record
se1 by Qllnta In 1986.
ON ACCOUNT OF SICKNESS I AM F.QI\C~p
Revlewtr next Is 81P0cted 1e
liarlln tbef/5,000a¥s4Gotbam
. w•••fl;at,·one
mile .Ci1 APril 25
~
and~ tile $100,000 Woqtllrlamorfal at II~ miles .., Aprlll9,
'
'
two weeks before tile Ketrtuclly

of twlstlng, bl.lntDY concrete Cor

pace of 102 mpb. . · .
;-. 1""1' a holplt,al alter treatment. ·
lnfac4 untli nwi-sday,U.sln- , ~lllteafte,_,llrst
gle-Jap reoord here waa only lite Poroche and 1 Roger Penako
111.03 mpb.
Lola Chevy driven by Mark DonThe Porooho wao 1 followed ·ohue and lloMie Buckmsn !ought
closely in tho stanrllrw• and on- It out•fortlleleod. Then,aquarler
the course. by tile Orst laetoey of tho war through tile rsca, lite
Ferrari entared here In three Fe...,-1 shot past tile leaders at!-years, o' nrHD11110 red model er Jl9innlng out ootlle treaeberdriven by Qhria Amoo and lol'JIIo ous Dlllllber four tum, tllenrlaht·e r Sebring winner Morl9 Arrdret- trw ltsell, and overtaldns tile
d. Joey time one i:ar pitted, tile 'Lola.
other moved &gt;into tile '1esd In 0110
The Ferrari and tile Millerof the n,.sf roa&lt;f'races lilY• Schultz ~orseho chased one anwhore In year&amp;. ·
other througllout tile hot Florida

th~,

~J'-P«y'$ :;IJ(Jrts Parade

l1vt

ervw&lt;1 of 50,056 backed

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;~a wlmlng streak.
·• a ,6~3 •. ~ - ~ 'fourllt.
'rho Ei!Jt.Libbttr- .wao a
: 1'1118!1· ToledO Ultor · In friday !hrlller ,r,om atart.G&gt;tlnilh wlllt

'fY..i.J.::

olhor efasofc canclldites to C.ICJt
him.
Thay pve It a big try oniJ 111!1 , ·
- e d lA&gt; gain sllgbtiJ In tilt .
upper strslch. But for the ialt .
alxteallh In tills SOYen furlonl
race Reviewer had 110 ~
hiildlnl blsloadwljhUIIOQ)XIoiollig him bard.
' It waa an
,. fnipreoolve triiDIIIJb
t*'der the hlsbest welllbt over
. W'riad to victory In tiMI race,
for Revi-r was driving ill 1111
way and a teaser horse m1a11t
.have tired undei- lbe b~.
Pin Pail Stable'I , HIQ' . Good .
Lookfn was oecond In the amall
field' of .... OIIIJI• 110&amp;8111 front
of cae~ P. K'lma!eJ•s I POUIIII
Gold. Dlitlbetlve, live lenallla
,__, Pinata! and Mr. Oolnd-.
·dence &lt;Oll1lliMad tho !IOid In that
order.

cZl~s Eilft ·

~~~~~~~; . fln\lfni.
11p0011 .~co!Od)8 '!1'1le 1111.de•A~ c~ ~

'

Frank Howard

I

l.nd / c;anl.n
ro.arl,
hao
McJd!liey look · ~ routes 48•stral&amp;lrt wins.,.
iAiw&amp;rtl ' ~t•l 11reani Jnato!l ' CatKan ·McKIDieY, m tile olh.
at ' St. ,..,.,., Ar""l'- :·
'.,- or
hU, 11&gt;e0n 'tbiag for
MclllnW blalliil·- DoJton the brass rfita: since l.92f but
c~ 78-f&amp; al . Wea~- hal rol to grab 11.

;

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~~·lha-·
of Bold .Ruler &lt;~aed to alllfeo"~:!! vie~ til the $27,6$0 1ll1
fb!
Slokis iuider .lite ataaerlng 1&gt;urden ~ 130 ~..
Willi Jockt1 Botili1 U..aer)' In
tile saddle lor lhl! llrst time, Ravi..,.r went to tile front on the

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.,.,a,

PbljiPs' .ROVI- .~ hi• .Kentudl¥, llelfq al!ld&lt; IOirllir' at

to

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·&amp;~~tS,. Stars Pitt~d· ii( 'OasS AA-Final~

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NEW -YORK .· .(UJ'l) -

Porche Entry Race Miq~ay Leader
SEBRING, F1a. (UPI) - A trio
ol golden • lhr&lt;Joled factory
Parsehes and a sleek Italian
Ferrari dueled at record speed&amp;
over a
5.2

.

,.

'pol\(pANO BEACH, Fla.-(!JEA:!:...The '
earth began tO rum~(e. cocon~ts '•plpll)-'
meted fro!ll trembling palm trees and fans
at a Washington Senators' exhlbltjon game
worst.
here started scattering, fearirlg
Momentarliy. hearts Rultered bact•
normal. This was no natural dlsaS!l!r. The
small cataclysm wai unleashed by Frank
Howard. as he began running tapa along
the outfield fence. When a 6-&gt;r, 2iljl-pound
two-legged creature quickens his pace, It

Howard arrives at the park each morn-

Fractured Up Man

R-eviewer

•

9ta~g~~ ·
·
Senatot~,~fl _ Hr~ui~ : To ··ur•'
n ~J:tl ·
•.

''.,

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r

~-

,-,;,.., ,_-r.

1•

w~·

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19~ The~ T!Jileh'le~'!1w&gt;II.Y,IIardl a,a, ~969.

· .Ne~ in ·farlitmg'·. , .,.
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IAJUIIDAY'

'• •

DwliJtl Lopil, Pomeroy, receml1 had In his po..
soll!lon a&lt;l..nisomento by the Ja~ Elberfeld Co.
· wore ~ In 1923, ~r rort;y-stx yoaro qo.
Here are aomo of the oalos l&gt;orlillnB thot ·wero
amiable to tile realdenta of Melli CGunty: ·
.
·A Queen Anne dining room a\(l:lil. nine pieces, 5
c~lra, ..,. gueat c~. bullol, cblna cabinet llld on
loot extension table, .seiiJill'i walitut, regular
pr:,~ $25(1, Sale Pr\co $).79.:~1i;irik, ~ ._leto
41·
room outfit.
· ·~ ·' .~~· ·
A three piece bedroom oulte, 're~WJ fl25, SOlo

'?

wt 50 years -

. •

LOnOI '

llleao prices with the price ol fUrniture and clotb!JW
today. 011, we ..,. rosiiJ ad..ncod In tile pa.ot 50 yean. We have
adwnced !rom horae drawn vehlclos to the au1limcll&gt;llo to planes, and
oow apat:e atd»li we have seen the Seeon:l World War. Korean eon..
l lllc4 oow vu.u,m; we ha'" passed throolll days of peaceful UviiJII,
~ where people could walk withOut fear, travel with the Jmowledp thol
we wwld arrive at our piannecl destiration; no riots. no demonlltratioll!; nolo~ h!i&gt;pios; but not todaY·
We have e~ 1!111118 on today but It h so distasteful. II
seems that 11*4110dlbbws an amotherlllll the good.
0110 lhilli ·for ,.,..., tho minorlv Ia ro.Uy bell\1 hoard, not tho
majorlt;y. And It ia the !Dlnorit;y causlrc unrest on college caJq&gt;Ua
today, Collop 1-ro should be firm, and so ohould parents.
When the domOilSirators find thot they ~ succeed with au
their oulburata then llld onl1 then will they cease.
advanced in the

,IIOCIQ

·l

~I,.KE~­

C&lt;oq&gt;oro

really

12 OZ. SIZE

~

'ay

DEAR KATBY-Yoo did not
whelller or not you
tlreu wao real leatlter oi' lhe vlllyl , le~tlter .fnlm ~ 10
muy elotltea are made. I 1fOI!II een.mty. tHe a J(lludae
lealher dress to the dry elellller !,14 )!!t,.fal!lper 'ltli.lt Ill
home. Not all eleanera wiD w«JR oa lea~, 'Be lilre lo
IIQalre whether or notlhey do that'aorl olw'cirk and; II not,
oak who In your loeiUty cites eleaa leatber.-POLL'i' ·
DEAR POLLY-Aller: reading Ramona's Pointer al&gt;out
pressure cans I tblnk mille Is a better way to depresaurlze
them and avoid any danger to anyone after they are dfs.
carded and perhaps ·thrown on a fire. I Jay a folded news·
paper on top of the can which Is laid on Its side, th~n I jab
an Ice pick through the paper into the con. The paper keeps
any fluid from getting into the eyes and the can is ready
for the trash can.-MRS. V. M. A.
DEAR POLLY-I think a wooden ltitchen spoon does a
far better job of scraping
·
food from the bottom of a
pan II the rounded end of
the spoon Is squared ol!.
Saw ol about one-tltlrd of
the spoon's bowl and then
bevel the edge with sand·
paper.
When shampooing the

car, one annoyanee always

was the persistent wrink·
Ung an~ rolling up of the
chamois. Avoid this little
,.

'

,,'

problem by wrapping your Chamoi,s ll!ound a cellulose
sponge. The chamois will remain ilat and smootll and still
retain enough flexibility to follow the contours of the car
body. Use the same sponge you have used lor washing the
car.-RALPH
PEAR POLLY- A soft plastic drinking glass can be used
aa a good cookie or biscuit cutter. When the glass Is
squeezed slightly the dough drops on to the cookie sheet
with no mess.-MRS. L. K.
'

OAK HILL HOSPITAL NEWS

SOIII!l:!f...-.;

••j·

GIVE US ACALL AND LElUS EXPLAIN THE
. 'MANY ADVANTAGES OF ARTIFICIAL BREED: '' lNG.
,
· LET US HELP YOU
IMPROVE YOUR
FUTURE
'
'
.
HERD FOR A BETTER TOMORROW!
.

- 100's

J.P~

HOLLEY
.PHONE-446~1031

. I

ONE,A~DAY

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MULTIPLE

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.,..•• !&amp; ~1111 (pOs~!JlOl'C- gen po~ 1000 squire' lett could
once);
•'
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be applied ear()' In June ind also
; In ' ~rn Ohio, apply pro- lale July ond early A111111t 11
' eme""n&lt;e·cnbgraaa k!Uer&amp;bo- there Is auaiclent moiiiiD'e.
fare i!4i!'ll 1. !'PI'Ilcallon of pi'.,.
The other deotrablepractlceto
emml~co idners alter thladato have a goicj lawn is to mow hl&amp;h.
loa Wloite of money.
· l· ·
''Cutting blah" doesi)OI mean to
· 'After tlie aeedlillls ap'peir, lot the gra 11 get loll belore yoo
post-emergence crabgrass k11l- cUI iL Yoo sb6uld ~ often
era IIJ8Y be .used. "'"'"'"'• IVa e!XJ!Igb thot not more ·lhan one
•IO!~·~·r
tousethep~~rs- inch of.blad. li removed at Olie
once chemical. Remember, pre- time. Thla means cuttlrc 'tile
emergenee cliem~c:ala are selec,. graas at leaat twice a·wetk dur·
tl,. for tile job, but they wW ing perlods .of rapid growth. NeY..
kUI gormlnatilll bluegrass seed- or allow, the.,... •• .to become 80
linga, too. So, don't. sod oeed ~nd long that two Inches ot growth ia
appb the chemical In· doe same removed. Whengraaa iacutafler
season. Walt 'until Au&amp;tiat 10 aood beirc auowed to grow too loll, the
bare , spots, etc•• U you are ap.. lower part will be bleached am
plying' crabgra11 pre-emergence unsightly, ·
chemical in the oprlng.
Mow aa early In the opringand
For ordinary lawna the !&gt;laic as late In the rail aa the grass
time to fortUizola lnSeptember. grows taH enough toneedcuttlng.
The .tase recommendation is apKe.JP.ucQ bluegrass lawlUI
p()'irlg leriiHzer diU'!ng Septem- should be cut 2 to 2'h Inches
bot at tlla 'rate of two pounds of hi&amp;h. Plant foods are produced
Nitrogen per 1000 IIQlAI'O feeL In tho leaves lhroogh tho,action ·
This can be ae&lt;ured by usilll or sunlight;. the more 1•~ tile'
20 pounda per IQOO aquarefeetof more food, the, more roots, ard
a 11).11).10 lertlliier.
the atro~r the pl8nL The deptll
· U the lawn Ia Merlnll Bluegrass and strei!Bih of grass roots are
thep additional Nitrogen Ia OJ&gt;- pl'qlortional to top growth. The
plied at the rate ot one to two Merion varlet;)' ot bluegrau can
pounds of Nitrogen per 1000 be cUI aborter (1 to l'h inches).
aq~ foot In the period March
Rotary oi reel we mowers
15 to Aprtl15. An additional OJ&gt;- can be used tocutbluegraaa; hnw·
_ pllcall~ of
pound of N - ever, If Merion bluegra11 Ia to
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1&gt;e cut Ol&gt;ortl a reel cypo ......., Tile hon!eoWner, hclooe~,.m'..t
-lhoUid 1M! used. No matter what ,make sure tHat tie.want.l·•ue
you

"fl•

The first decision to make isJ
"Do yoo want a good lawn, an

averap

lawn, or a coorae

lawrtr'' If you want a good lawn,

then Yarletie&amp; or blerds o! Ken.tucky bluegraao are U~e best anawer we have l¢a.Y. The polo.,.
tlal qualll,y, Is 800d to excolleDL
The amouat ol care
upkeep Is

average

,,

'$,_;9·9

GITI2

C. .ALILHDIC

am cost of

2~SLICE TOASTER ·

A mulch of '4 Inch

erase.
grisses. Seed may be &amp;\11Uable.
DO a limited boola In 1969.
U a lower quallt:; of lawn is
desired some rod fescue may
·be used. Red fescue does better
in shade than does bluegran. U

Iiilo ~I

a poor coarse lawn is desired the soil should be kept wet until
then iall fescue IDOl' be uaed. aeodlngs ere established. Sprink·
lire is desirable. Haln lo needed.
Further tntormaUon on lawns.

. I

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· COlJ!"TY LANDMARK FEED MLES IIlii aorvlce personnel honored at the statewide Landmark
feed meetlowln Columbus were, left to right: Eugene Buckley, Jim Elliott, Area Feed Represents( "!!'&lt; "
't

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·.'~
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9QUART

77c I
88c

POMEROY - Melia Count;)'
Landmark feed u.lea and serv.

...

......

Gallla Counties won Landmark'•
atatewlde Grllld Award ·lor feed
tonnaao Increase durbog 191111.
The lopawar~waoproaenloddur-

IITA&amp; VALIII

,

,.

13QUART

CAR MATS
r.

.•.Heavy
mat "'"'' 111110'....
.

FRONT

' • .

$288
•

• Ful """ ..' tina vart.lyefeal'on

• Slrttch Kn~
• Non-Slip Foam "8adc
• Solid.Colon

lee ])eraonnel serving Meigs and

111M

. ,CAMPT

sn

77

3 """' _,.,., '
101 collllllln, ol

......~lOW . . .

WOD&lt;I hondlo

mpuo.

'.1"

We'll
you a calf!

We're convinced our Master Milt rP8E'arch team has
oorik&gt; up with tiM&gt; fin••t new calf feeds available.anY·
where. We'll bet you a calf you'll agree!
· All .vou need to do is raise as (('W as five calve~ to
lour months of age on tl)e !lf'W 1969 Master Mix Calf
P&lt;~.!!rom ... we'll pay the full cost of breeding any
.. cow in your herd to your choice ·ol a top lineup of
. ~~· olter!'d b.v CCOBA) Control Ohio BrHdero Ann.
See us ni&gt;w, apd get your calves storied on fJ. Maoter
, Mix program. We think you'll agree our new feeds
produce ~ct,.r calve~ .• . more· economi~lly., , than
leedmg progra'll you've·ever trll!d. We'll ~you
8 calf! !Otler t•Ditta April 30, 1989)
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i!!t!:"
.•'t·
ll!'! ..!!,' ...:~
"
F

High Low Prec,

llmdlQ' " • • .. 57
MoncJay •••••. 66

Tuealjllj' .. • . • • •65
WednOsday • . •• 76
Thursday •••..78
Friday .•.•••• 69
Sllllrday . . . . . .42

14
17
24
26
26
U

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by Robert Schmid, Food Sales
Manager, GleM C. uTiger" EJ.

GALLIPOLIS- Tonipiorature, - 10.56 Inches.
Normal average precipltatl.on
tions for each ~4-l!our period aa amually - 40.70 Inches.
reeoi'ded by Pete McCormick at
file Fairfield Weather statim.
Dill'

.

Meiss County also won an Area President ot t:mpire &amp;Lies TrainManagers Feed Scoop Award for Ing, Inc., Miami, Fla. Faod pro.
placing first in total increase in motions for 1969 were outlined

}feather Roundup
precljlltatloo and weather condi-

. ~ ~"
J:..J..
~;~n.J

E. MAIN ST.

BEST
BUY•••

INTERNATIONAL"

cu

Uson, head FreShman Coach at
The Obio Sate Unlverslty, was
the featured speaker at the con-

cluding lun&amp;oon.

o;

992-2975

'
LD·IIY®
•

IIICIDI

New this year! Husky, 15 hp. water cooled engine,
stron1 channel steel frame, independent power takeoff combine to assure you yean and years of the most
dependable service you ever thoulht possible!

, . , EAS~t. ;. '"
PAYMENT
PLAN I

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EI~S EQUI

ENT CO.
1,_992·2176
---------------------------Rear Meigs General Hospital

POMEROY

DON'T BUY
.Until You Check Our Prices!
ServinG Meigs, Gallio and
Mason Counties

.20

21

Charles Bush

Averaao high temperature for
the week thia fear - ,69degrooa;
last ~oar:- 50.5 cltiP'oeB.
AV.rap low tomJ&gt;erature for
tile week lhiH'oar - 24.1 de.
greea; laat Jio!' - ~6.1 degreeo.
Total Pl'O&lt;~Iorlhewoek
thlo year - 0.20 or an llicil; lost
year - 0,92 ~ an Inch.
Total preclplletlcin to date thlo
:roar' - 4.46 ln_d!e~; last year

A·C

f

GRAVELY TRACTOR .SALES
AND SERVICE

t ·.., • ·.,,.· I
,,.,..~·~
Tonnage Increase Award Won 1
I
I
ing tile 1969 Landmerk Feed feed tomage within Area 6, com.
I
Scoop Award program and IB.lea prised olll counties.
conference, March 18 and 19, at
Aprincipal ootside speaker the I
the Nell House, Columbus,
second day was Ralph Everett, I

""
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tatewide Feed

• 110% Collarl-20% lloyon

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" j!S.~.~IIOY, ~~
I ~lij
~h.

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Rilltr llfKI!t1 .

Extension Olflce.

' .jiV.;

of,)

dtitcbtl, wilh
~n pin.

Including seeding of a new lawn,
can be secured from the County

..

•"

lsfactory. Whentheloblsfinlshod
you ohould see 'h straw and 'h
soU When look!~ dlrectiy down
on IL Roll the lawn as soon as
tile mulch Is applied II the soli
is not too wet. The surface of

"

WOOD
STEP.

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

of groond

Of the new varieties, Penn11tar sphagn.J.m peat is best. Straw
was..., ol ~high retlng IJIPiiodlnathlnlayerlaalsosat-

6FQQ.T

If• ...........ly automolie, and
glm ..... -

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. Tho.Grov01y C011merciil Cl!l1vortibles ~. ~q!!'pa&lt;ltr~
flllthe commercial ·operltOJ', or for tlllli~Jl \olio Willis
extra power ond skangth to cut the tough,q J ·
:li&gt;l!iWi&lt;iJ
jpb do!"' to size. ·
·~,
[Choitt oliO or 1Z full hor,.powor•in ... ·
ltodilionolly rugged engines'. .. all·geor
drive with no belts to slip or break.
~ Convert from rider to walker by pulling
an• pin. Instant furward or reverse.
Ask any Gravely owner, he'll 1011 you
that doll11 for dollar, Gravely is the
best tompact traetor you can buy.
Come in and test driva on• today.

to above av- deeply.

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la)¥11 before aeediJW: Iaiiie~
Tall fescue (KenluCIIJ4lllld AI· J·
ta) wiH IIU'vive bel~ lrlfllc.
· The )!Oat time to aoed a new
lawn In oouthern Ohio lo in tho
month of ,Sep\Bmber. Mar~ Is
the secondbfatllme.~~ioe6lngs ual!lUy'loave more problema
with 8ll!all allllUII weeds. lierbl·
cldes are not ·recommended lor
".Bed cootni on .a newq seeded
lawn until II haa been IJ!Oft'od ·2
or 3 time a.
Seoociq rote for bluegrass ls1
to 3 powxls per 1000 .square feet.
The lcnrer rate Ia adequate if the
aoed Is diotrlbuted evenly. Tho
higher rate will do no lann but
will not assure suCcess.
In seodi!J8, rake tho aeodllghtly Into the soU. U.you can still
see some seed after raki!J8 yw
have not covered the seed too

be oure you can
aet It to thO 1rec01111118nded cut.
lng be'81iL
Set the mower on a flat surface
wi)OD you are ildjuall~itlnorder
to-ln .fhoeorrocthelghLlolany
reel t;ype mOJOera cannot be adjuoted to cUI II a 2-inch heighL
When ·the .,...•• t:• cut too short;
tho heaucy and vlkor of the lawn
wUI be reduced.
If home owners are Interested
in aeodq a completely new lawn,
lime li abort.
t;ypo

VIT'lMANS
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"a~n.

992·2181 Jock W. Carny, Mtr.

OPEN DAILY UNTIL 6:00 PM
Says:
''WE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY"

• BULK FERTILIZER • BULK SPREADING SERVICE
• SO· LB. BAGS • EARLY STORAGE DISCOUNT
• PICKUP DISCOUNTS
TIEMEND,OUS SHCIALS 0~ IIDING'r.MoWUS AS WIU
~· P\ISH lOTAIY MOWIIS.

SABRE TILLER
i"·

3 H.P.
UIGGS a
STRATTON
INGINI

Turf Trim
ROTARY
MOWERS

$53.25
up .

Slawn Keeltl, Coaltoo; ~Jh·ed

LeMaster, Rt. 1 Beaver; stella

. Blrthl· - Mr. llld Mra. Ralph McCo)'~ R~ 2 Ook Hill; Effte McRagiald, Beaver, Rt. 1, a aon, Fam, llt. 1 Pedro; Nancy MD·
Crate Alan, llarch 12; Mr. and ·1er, Ook lllU; Rulh Edra Mar•
Mra. WendaU E!VOIIO Bloom- • pn, Davia Home lor Ailed, Ook
field, Rt. 4, Oak HW, 100, ftoDo HIQ; Jamtl Ray Nance; Rt. 2
aid Eupne, March 14; .Mr. and Wbooloroburs; Hazel M. Short,
Mra. Rollort l'aloa, 225 Athena Oak Hill; William Slack, Soulh
SL, JackaOn,da\lllllet,Dolb Am, Webster; Kerma Lee Stapp, Rl.
llardl1$.
2 'ChUIIcotho; Alberta Vltltoe,
Pn..it PatiO,., - Jobn R. jackoon, ard Emma W&amp;Uaco, Rl.
~
iiW; Shirley Rulh 3 Ook Hill.
Gill\11!11, lit. l Jackson; Hom~r ' PaUenla Haleaaod - Paulmo..
L Jlolp Jr.,lit. f Ook ·lfill; Na- Ia Hutchlnaon, Vornle L. Miller,
Gllll iiulr, OUo HiD; ~,. D. Eliza Blevlna, Kalhleeri Metzler,
PemiJIIIMaK;Brullol&lt;or,Jack- Dalllle
' So,.t~• Fox, Cler·
....,; DotOII!I F. Clan, Ill. 3 Ook ,,._..,
!4ero, l;lrotll
Hill; ~ .c, CGtiurn, RL 1
RlHOII ~
MaqaJ,e!Qinor,
DoJIII', sa..- :
OoJi Hw; illiil Balloll!&amp;Yio,Jack- , ·
Ray Sorrell,
!1&lt;11; .,. , . DeJri, RL 3 JockErneall,. s"-' ts
I;; lio.nr alii JC!hn
Jenldno, Polrl ,,
!liP!'• ~~ Boosle!Joi!!No,
EUHD
.m. 1 •
Wiilitlot;
Katlly Hawl(no.

·oo.

.

UlLtll

6.75 Oz.

ly POLLY CRAMER .

DEAR POLLY-What can I do to get stains ·out of
a leather dress and vest?-KATHY
·

OFFERS THE BEST SIRES AVAILABLE
'· TO VOlt, BOTH IN B.EEF AND DAIRY HERDS.
' YOU DON'T HAVE TO BE AMEMBER. ·
.·';'

MOTOR
. OIL

Ji

POLLY'S POINTERS

r----•Polly's Problem _ _ _ _,.

I

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\ CREST
Toothpaste

have we roalb'1
Are the boJis In VIetnam domonatratlnjl, Can they slop llld d.,.
DWII betior conditions?, Can tlley domOnd !rom their offloota thot
they not 11&amp;1ttloda11
No. AU they can do iallght -for their u..a.

DEAR POLLY-IJke all mothers with sons in VIetnam, I
worry ill do not get a Jetter regularlY. I tiJink my son has
a neat Idea and it certainly means a lot to me. When he Is
too busy to write a real letter, he sends me an O.K. note.
Yesterday I got one and, believe me, It serves a good pur·
pose. I tnow he Is all right and that makes my day. On a
slagle sheet of paper he puts the dote, a big O.K. and signs,
"Love, steve.' Only a few seconds of Ume but with great
meaning for me. I am sure other mothers, wives and
; sweethearts WQ!Ild appreclatl&gt; 0.tt. notes. MaYbe all they
need do Is to remind that soldier of thelrs ...:.i.ENA
DEAR liEADERS-Thll would be made easier lor lhe
boya II oome previous Pollltera would be loUowed by tltose
Ill home, ouch ao seDdiDg stamped, addreued envelopes or
name and addres1 llftkera lor lhe toys lo uae.-POLLY

•

J/

A
'
.
C'0B

IETAIL lt.ALUE ~1.98

but

Quickie· O.K. Note
Keeps G1 in Touch

1-

. Whaf Does c·o.a.A
:· .01 ,.•,1..

Price, $69..
•
Boys wooh aulta, replar ~50 to ~50, on oalo lor $1.50.
Boys cloDim cm&gt;nlla, regular price 7Sc, oalo price 50c.

._w

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KATIE

Oh, yes, we

'.;~t· ··~ "':

BY C. E. BitA)&lt;EsQ:E
week. left to use the moat elfecl;ldenalon Agent, A&amp;ric.
live controL
.
.
Melga &lt;;ount;y
ThO!'o are two 1&gt;1•1~ Will' I of
POMEROY - Now lathe Ume cnntrolll'¥1, Cf3bilraao1i!tllherbl·
·!"!' h~ners 10 decJcll&gt;,•hO:W 1 ddea. ,Qne Ia ,to treot the la,.U In
_iiOOd 1 lawn they want lhl• lUll&gt;' thO ~tlrlter or 'l&gt;ritW liitorecrab'[.lllOr.,
. ..
, . ·I!J•a ;' !cod~ ) •rml•te (preIf crabilraas is _a summer emerpnce). ·w .Oiber I~ '10 OJ&gt;· pfOblem there Ia only aboUt 01]0 Pb herblc~a ~fler thO crab,
.

lOA.M.JO'
,,

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·Decide ·Now.· · Hameo·w
: . n.:e~~s~ a·~bo· u·,·. t Lawns

MottDAY
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. IIIGGS a
· mAnON
MOTOIIf
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~,· :,;- SoU .€onserv8tion Sernce

· Mason County
, PT. P,,l-EASANT - Over 30
J&gt;OOlP!o (;om Mason Cc&gt;uilty went
\0C.i!l~ll, Ohio, tb see the yearround paature program at the
slate University Resource

)

b

ilhici

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ce..,r•. Charles Boyles, rilanarer..
Q( the

station, e"')lained the live-

&gt;:-l1~ :·. ·~i -~f,i,,)\.t.i~~~~~

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~r~ii'IUIJ~l'jt ~·~,!Ill·'.

stock ,!~IlK lirocra'lli,,IO til§ .
V'"" and conducted a •tourwhlch
showed how they are carrying on
their feeding program. ThI s
teedlrc progtlm eon.Sh;ta ol takiJW care ot ~atUe wldJ 1 mtnl..
m\1111 of labOr and e&gt;l)enseIt lnYOiveo cUttiiB hey one
time from meadow land .using
rcurxf bales which ne · on the

ICMlngl'lnter. A~t(edlng

progralli

'

trw at Columbus.

~h'a herd of '28.8 cowala 80 per cent COBA slred aDd produced an average

Gra:n
.
., an d Wh eat

of 12,399 pounda of mDk llllli 591 pounda of OOtlerlat during the past year.

--~--------- Signups

Carpenter
Boys 4-H
In Athens

Burley is
Received

ranged the dimer at the Buckeye Cafeteria (oJli)Wed by a show

FRANK GOEBEL

factortly completed the 4-H club
.PrOjects and programs in 1968

porter, Tommy Bishop; recreation leader, stanley Hutton, Rodney Jordan, and JOilY Nel~;
Bill
Jeffers; and safety chairman,
Pat Law10n and KeiU'IY COen. Ser-

ing as Junior Leaders tor the
year were Donnie Cheadle and
Walter Jordan.
Those attending the dimer and
ohoW SAturday evening In addi-

tion to the offieers and jmtor
leaders were DBMY Jordan and·
BUI Kennedy. Lester an~ Marco
Jerrera and Pat Lawson were un-

able to aUend.
The major project a of the boys
In 19681ncluded .eardening, elec-

PARKERSBURG -

WO&lt;ld
County Bank, Parkersburg,
has a~mounced the promotion
or Frank L. Goebel of near
Coolville to vicepresidentand
cashier. Goebel, 31, was rormerly associated with the Capital Firance Corporation, Columbus, and the Tri-Count,y

Bank, Oilhltl•: Hf ! ~ *'grad­
uate of. Don Bosco AgricuHur..
al School, Huttons ville, t h e
Ohio SchoolofBanking,·O hi o
Umverslty; the School f o r
Bank Public Relations &amp; Marketing, Northwestern Universicyi am is currently enrolled
at the Graduate School of Banking at the Unlverslt.}' of Wisconsin. Goebel lives with his
wife, the Conner Patricia Cooley, of Athens, ami their four
childr.en at Goebel-Ga~. their
home In Athens Councy near

Coolville.

PUBLIC
AUCTION
THURSDAY,
APRIL 3rd
10:30 A.M.

All farm machinery and
faedinl equip. 5,000 bushel of
1w''"• 75 tons of straw.
next Sunday's edi·
lor lull listinrs.

FRENCH CITY
CATTLE CO.

IJu•••

McNeill, auctione111t'l
will be the lar1·
machinery sale of

farms waa about 19.9 million ac-

trtetcy, entomology, WOOdworking, small motors, rope, and con.
servatton.
To complete the program and
participate in the completion dinner the boys must satisfactorily
complete their project and exhibit at the Meigs Coonty Fair.

The Almanac

By United Press International
Today ts &amp;ndal March 23,
the 82nd dal of 1969 with 283 to
follow.
The moon Js awroaching its
first quarter.
The moming stars are
Mercury and Man.
The ,evening stars are Venu11,

Saturn and Jupiter.
On this daJln history: .
In 1775 Patrick Henry told the
Vlrginla ConvenUon: "I know
not what course others may

total or 1.1 million acres en-

The farms enrolled have an at~
rolled for diversion Is a difficult lotment of 477,851 acres, just 79
goal The signup pace at month's per cert or 604,035 acres on
IJ35,936,840,04 to growers who em sh~Med enrollment laggire farms enrolled a year earlier.
"We wou1d lllwtourgeevery
had "pooled" tobacco at the 35 behind the conwarable 1968 enrollment.
The
1969
totals
showed
producer to study his own cperaburley marketing centers In the
the
nwnber
of enrolled farms Uon careMiy before he makes ~
rive states where the co-op handles the price support program, .iust 94 per cent or the 1968pace, final dedsion. Those who have
enrolled acreege a bit further be- questlons concerni.~ program
W, L, .!bton, executive secrehind at 91 per cent and Intended beneflta shoold visit the local
.tary, said in a report.
dl
version at 95 per cent.
AS~ office tor further informaThe c o.()p received slightly
feed
grains
a
37
million
For
the chairman etnDhasized.
tion,"
more than 11 per cent of the
acre diversion would bring about
427,849,000 ~ds sold at ware.
.,
hous~s ln its area, which includes
.
1
The: average was based on the
Burley Co'Op's take of 48 .191, 438 pounds at a total outlay or

at the Athena.
Each club member who aatis-

"ere presJdent, Rexie Cheadle;
vice president, Glen Lawson; secretary, Walter Goble; newa re-

Dwight Wise, chairman ot the

At $74.57

on, Mr. and Mrs. Dorae,y Jordan and Mr. Paul PBJ'nter, ar-

was eligible to attend.
Officers or the club in 1968

GALLIPQLIS - Producer sign- the slight reduction In stocks
liP !or the feed grain and wheat needed thia year, ChairmanWiae
prograrlls Is not q&gt; to e:weeta- said. Nationally, as ot Feb. 28,
tlons at this pol.nt, accordlJW to totallrtended dtV.rstoomolgned

Ohio Agricultural Stabllizatlon res.
and Conservation Committee.
The report shcMs wheat sign"'
"Additional slgnq&gt; In the feed across the country is somewhat
. grain aOO wheat programs is behind !&amp;at year, with Intended
needed In Ohio tf weare going to addlllOIIII diversion of 2.1 milobtain
the diversion necessary to lion acres on signed farms, comLEXINGTON, Ky. - Burley toreduce wheat aOO feed grain sup- pared with th~ goal of 5 million
bacco taken rrom the 1968 crop
acres.
under the price support program plies,'' he 'said l
As
of
Feb.
28',
producers
In
More Ohio wheat farms had
by the Burley Toba cco Growers
Ohio
had siiOied 10 dlvert640,235 been enrolled by Feb. 28 than a
Cooperati\'e AssodaUon was received at an average cost of acres, With just one week to go year ago, 33,155 oompared to 3~,..
before si,enu,p ends, last year's 349, but acreage enrolledisdown.
.74.57 C.W.T.

POMEROY - The carpenter
Boys 4-H Club held Ita compleUon meeUng and dinner Saturdal
night at the Buckeye Cafeteria
at Atbens. The 4-H club advl ..

'

are Lagging

·

~::~~~~;~
..~~· West Farm
Burley
taken - ln effect,
IS

Producers'llavi

·~:~t, Sandy Tylea~John

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DEALEa·: !i
OPEN:'.

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HOME'

poratlon w_ithin the

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Gtllpols .Wy

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CIIIU&gt;REN'S AII'I'Vt'lliiK g&amp; RALE8MAN DBMONIITIIA'roli
lillg )'Oil down? 'll'aldl Wipe 4 ONLY. 11118' dreamaker llg
out 1Qll cleaner 110 Jo 'ltiWD., hill IOWIDI maoblne. 'ftdi
Rent a wall cleaner fl. Cenmaelllne .... for •. 85. tral SU~ply Co., 17 Court .st.
111.111 .r •·011 per '""!!lb·
IN
can 1J'15.11111.
•11
CARPET COLORS Jooldn1 db!!? MAPLE 00NS0LE liTERI!O
Brllll •em bad&lt; - fllv• •em !llll :MODEL will! powerful AM
vim. Use Blue Luilre. llont
• FM Radio. Just lib uew.
flectrlc m,mpnoer fl, Farmllao w8mtity. Auume 12
pa)'!Mnll Iii lUG ,.- wJI1 dller'• ·~Co.
...
count for ~. Clll 6'15.l111.
FOODLES, Tiny Toys, AKC
e&amp;-11
reg.. moot ecilon .. Also stud

~··Ablilo,
Door ........
aldei-the
at HoiDr. 0.llld
Roake,
8rd
~ zer llo.l_pti.Jpii¥ 'illu1 frlelllll
'
. llld rtlaU~_eo lor Oardl, word1, ,
mvtce. Ph. 1137.ft. •1
a.,.~• olid ....t o1
lor .
, .Pt.,.r. Whlcb carried me :
apartment, . '"""
' throu&amp;ll th' ,.... o! 'dellh
· tal!lllltDa Amold.
eo.- 65 NEW MOON bouoelraDer
;. ~ -mi tioll&gt;ltallZIIIIin.
.... ..~.
- .. with air condlllonlng, wxler~YOUr, kladnou CIIIIOI be 111111
pbmt:d. Qlll ~...
8N
· ~oiocC ~ Gad rlcbl,y
---blooo •;o.: '·
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SLnPlMG - . 1lllldr :911 GMC 3-4 ton lnd, 15011
Geraldine llalle)'
l'llel. Part Cenlrll Rolli.
V-ol, brtmd new, oaty Ill mil·
'' . . ;~
fl.tf to. Power brakes, p o we r
' ~ ''I (" i:. , ·:
. -~
~
n.ooR turnllbed ..,.t- steertns, auto ·transmllslon.

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ruRmsnEI&gt;

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'WISEMAN

AGENcY ·

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......., •·31i , ..., """' .... "
•::, S•twlll&lt;ty.

illm*i1'"•,1'r\ce,,Dr.

ShHfl .

U....... ...l #!t.U--... ,.. .
...,. VR....
·, · HAVI
MANY USES

tiM• the .ad

ll iSH TO

Make WIPE OOT wan cleaner c1eat11
~ wllll
your wal)s 1M teept
dry.
Blue Lustre. Rent eleetrle
Rent one ~ 111111 clve
sbalilpcioor fl. Central SUpply II a by. Only fl. P'lfllim
Co. .
.... Har4wwe.
IN

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36"
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..-.· ··~··!l!&lt;ol•- ...... ,~ l!!o
: :...~n, Trl..wiw 1t,Oie oft~

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IIOlBI'l!liN - · jeep pltiup
t WD, rklln( lawn - ·
Jardeft !fadllr, portable elec-

lrlt! mllbn. :1'/toJIH.

..,..

IOONGE dlalr. naugllaltlde
wine color flllt, wliJ sell for
flO. B1iol Martel, +16-liMII.

..,..,

.

Ofl. 441.361a .· ·
. '446 4500
he. 446 am

A Charmine Bareain
3 Bedroom Brick

Prlcedt Reduced

YDY ND t aadl &amp;o..
WII'B BA.TB Ala) . Nft' ruJlo
LAIOa

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LOT

WITH OMI:mt o&amp; 'IIWLD
SPOT.
· - 01(
LOC.lftD
OJf .. .PIUCID
. 011 1'0WJf

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Low Down Payment
... _.. Good Bur At 12,900

STYLES FOR LADIES .
· Sizu7-24)2

3 Bedroom Home
24 Acres Ed1e of Town

11111111,

modem. at

..Faartl!

I'll.

441J.4111f.·

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For Easter &amp; Alter
Sizes 3 Petites to 24%

HATS • GLOVES • PURSES

loo

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to

1 and 2 Piece Knits

.

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PT. PLEASANT
.

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ARE THE SWINGINGESl FOR
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TRI-COUNTY

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MOBILE HOMES,
OFFERS

Biggs Department Store

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factory).!:

TO $5.

iERS $5.99 to $12.99 BOYS TROUSERS $2.99

"Open All Day Thursday"

il:55
12:00 'Ntll'l
12:15
12:00 COm't.r-Mkt. News
12:30 The
. 12:1.511ulletlA llolnl
12:35 Teen-Time 'e8.
12:30 Prooecutor Reports (Mon.) 4:00 Interchange ·
farm " Home (Tueo.,
5:00 News, W=~~~~=
Wed., Tburo.)
5:30 sunoet s
12:4i Country Go Round
Sign 010
•
SUNDAYS
8:00 Sign On and Tho
halfltate For Sale
Proacher
8:15 News
8:30 Herald of Truth
D• H• WOOD• .,D . ...__
....,.
9.00'Protestant Hour
Phone 446-1066
9:30 Aunt Bertha
JUST LI9I'ED - a beautiful 9:15 O!IIdren's c~
three bedroom brtek )lOme, 10:00 Music for Sunday
carpeted. YCMI will enJoll 10:30 Flr' t Jlai&gt;tlat OIID"ch ·
worklllg Jn lbe very nice tn- 11:30 GoBIIOI of ChHat
eben, full balealtllt, bath and 12:00 News
haU, llnilheil al1lached gar- 12:15 Trinity Hour · :.·
age, colltftle drtve1f8y, large 12:4i catboltc Information
fuU basemeal, walk out al 1:00 Church of God
......,t level. Lot alends 1:30 Gospel Call
lnm Route 7 to lbe river. · Z:OO Sunday Drive Time
Prlt:ed below today'o rept..,.. $:00 News Rounclq&gt;
menl cool.
WJE!i'-nl LOG
.•
. .lei! D. WOOd
(Dally except where lndiCI!adJ
,._, ......,
6:00 Sign on llld Early Bird
illlllld' Cenlldoy
til•
Show (except Sundays) ·'
8:00 News Roundq&gt;
"
8:05 Music Unlimited
0. D. PARSONS
10:30 Olatterbox (exeept Satar. , ..
IIIWII'OB
day and Sunday)
l'lrll, . . . . C11J Plipwtf 11:00 Music Unlimited
'
PfniAOIIftl
11:45 All the News {e&gt;eept SUo.)
12:00 News (Sunday only) ·
12:15 Music Unlimited
SPECIAL
5:00 News
GOOD hardware &amp; Ire~ · 5:15 Dlmer Serenade
business. can be sold with or 7:00 Evening Serenade
wllhoul stoct Main route 9:45 Armed Forces Sllowa
·
· 10:00 Flrat Nadonal Flnll
Middleport.
10:15 Music UmD Sign Ott

' :&amp; ...__ " ;

LADIES BLOUSES st... 30 to .o. '1 to, .

675-3428

.

.........

,,_ ,..._M..,. ..............,., '""

S2.99

'

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18-3 DUE to movloa out of fiJwll we
have many lblnp to seD, S
. Aw"l
'ot M
pe. living room lllllle, 1 twin
.
111611 HONDA I'll Scrambler,
' ' • . • • • " ,.
J ROOIIil 111111 111111 'llllb. ljpt.
11116 Oldsmobile Dynamle •• . bods with nile llland. Corner
llalld or $ shelves. Stand
,: REVivAL wif.lart at ~ AloO t*ilti ellldener,"tdllllll I'll. *-4371.
table, bot plate, paint brushOhio ~ (j"plled lie1hodlli 'pl.~ AlMII OI)IJ. ~ ' lt!lrd
.
eo, earpenter tool!!, porch
, C1nJrcb ~ aJa1!1 lbrdl . Avt. tiN'JIII or 1011103. fU AKC WHITE TOY POODLES.
tludrs, I puoh ,....,_.,.,
'IIi' and ~ im 1: '1111
Ph. ~.
eN
lllep ladder and ID8IIY other
' Be.. Jmliaf"fl; Morrllllll of }J0tl£111( HOUSE. 5 rmo. and
Items
o! lntoresl. IHI lacltton
; Fori 0.,, y::va., wJI1 be tbe balll; -1111.
llllfly painted. DUIWING LOlli near Chelldre
Pike.
+16-25111.
17-3
~ .....111. :ReV~ JIIIIM Mar- a.Midre. ~
1111-'I'IN.
K)'Pr school; 2 bedroom
i. ll.on, ,11io ....... cordleDy'ln- ' •
IN
m..e !taller 8 I 43, ....uent
Yllol ,oll: '
1'1-11
-:-.- - - concUUon;· boyo 211" English URLY AMERICAN Stereo ti&amp;'
., ~ APAR'I'MENT, uBike • .Stallley Shaver, 367- . dlo Combination. Beautiful soltd state unll wtlb 4 sPeed
~
-AVCftON
··IDlllcs Jlfld, 1tMt1 only, :Ill
71117.
D-3
changer.
Payments ol f&amp;.OII
nuDAY Mardi II, 7 p.m. al !tile St. Coli ..._., after
or
f88.1S.
Call +16-1011. 118-1
, llanlion'i New 1o Uted ·P'Ur- 4:10: .
18-11 111111 11000KA trail motorcyole
LISTINGS
; nltu!:e. $ M.m Sl Pl. -Plea- ·
..
&amp;0011 shape, ellra parll, car
WE
NEED Lll!TINGS ~ Wby?
HORSE
l
SAI&gt;DLE,
IK
Ply·~~. ·w:. ·VII. ~. It · E.
, For Sale
carrier rack $210. Pb. +16Check
the Sold Signs. They
mouth
Sports
Fury,
Phone
_... a,.~.
-~88-3
·, ..
·~..,-.
. IN OHIO •GRASSLAND Graded - before noon.
are what counts - not nwnA. A. NIBERT, Realtor
after S, or eaJl :11$69-S
bers. U you want it SOLD j, ~EWAIID fill: lDiil'matlon Heietord Bull ·Sale. 2S Bulla. RED BLAZER &amp; VEST, size !IHii.
6 ACRES
THIRD AYE. STATK
Note: Live Sports BI'Oidelalll
Call
lhe
Dillon
Agency.
' fOIIIllll'lllnl 1M dllapjdi- clf8!1 pedigrees. servtce •
· 10; wall eablnet 30 1 30, 2
RT. 141. Four mDes out. 3 BR,
wiD aupercede regular pro.
.
~- 'lllel- llnd,~Jng ehotee. From the INiher cbaln, vw tire. Clll Industrial Equip.
. . . . . ...
'
.
bath, baoeml, forced air beat.
Looking
For
A
Small
Fam:
of I 1lr&amp;e trOll ..,... 211'
tcp herds of Ohio and Midi~
+I6-0Z62
ee-3
SPRING BARGAINS
grams when scheduled.
JUST LISTED
outbldp., Chkken lanD. II
·::. nllbl. FNol Kem. 1'1-8 pn. S8turday,, 'Mareh 29,
·
John Deere 2010 with blode
LARGE 2 S'IURY HOME on WE HAVE a .37 Acre Farm
you want out. this may be it.
Garfield Ave. Completely rewith 3 BR dwelling and bath.
( ··
1961. at the Wellston P'alr- WALNUT OOIISOLE. ·With ~·
and wJne11 ....... . •.1!"·00
l'nder
fiii,IJIJO.
modeled, nice kltcheD wllb
All rooms paneled and lltiV
,U,._L.J.:.i To po .J~
~~~
&lt;:· ,~,~··
4 Jill!. j lnt'l. TDSIO •"'i' h)'d.
.
·MILl &amp;REEK· ·
'"!J!':f
· f., ' ~·
· ·~
, , .... ' 1U,if ~'luti1e :
1. wtth AM
blade, ....r. . ·•. . .. . 4,400.00 . \ u lbe bdnMns. 3 BR, ..,.! • ftl'e ron "lllrilsl!e. ·I;and ~~·-····
port, alumimnn aiding, storm derlaid witb coal.
-~ , for eltlerlf
I:GII P . For .9a!alop wr)10 &lt; II PM•radiO: Pay just lUll .1D350 .,.llwler ldr. .. USO.OO
NEAR GSI. 3 BR, bath, plenty
In my home. CaD tlf-~
to: Lloyd I!J(tftood, · Sale
moatllly .,. $118.31.Coll .._ lSOO Ford Jog ldr.
windows and door, large lot.
water. A good bUY at tli.OOO ..
WE ALSO have a 411 acre farm
1'1-t Manager, Rl. 3, fllmeroy.
IN
•ee model . . . . . 4,1SO.OII
Price $12.500.
Uted fumltuN, t•olo, MI ..
1011 ·
Wallt
to work.
collcmltOUI ltom• &amp; nouo.. ·
•·ilh no house on it. This Is
,
.•
•·
Ohio.
IW
•
Jcy 125 Air comp..... .l.'IIO;GO
hold good,, Wo af.. b.,
also underlaid with eoal. Bot1t
ONE STORY
}
WI'NTED
c.uiPER8" TRAVIL
Many other tracton on~
VACANT LAND
eompl•t• ••tot...
. A~
nuo:b~. I OOFA iMeil In bome of aar
'I'IWLIIiR8
ENSLOW MACJIIINERY 00. REAL NICE with paueJJns ln. of the above mentioned farm• 2ii ACRES, 38 acres, 1110 .......
LR and ittchea, 3 BR, 'llwn- are located ne'r VInton, Oltlo.
'muit'·ha~ own he.od 10011,
l!efl!l'al J1181118er, onlf f1ll DON'T mils oul 011 a- IJIO·
loth St., West oft Jacksi&gt;n Ave
''
17
Take cllol&lt;e. .
lngs, fencod yard, Prate. a
Apply ......, Coullly Cbryl- Isellss-'a
new 1115), allo riiJ)dl- .. clall ..'• ··-- easb
. dll
.. -Dt durHunllnglon. W. Ya.
·
4.ACRES
and chair of con-..
Phone ·~ •-11•
real buy Ill fii,SOO.
LOTS OF LOTS
USED FURNilUit
·...-, • ...,.~-· ...... ... . • ""' "'
lng March.. Cl1ect our pi'ke
: ...,.... ~
:&gt;!EARLY
new
.all electric brick
1
'
• 8
lo!mporaiy styling. Iaten In
and qllll"" ~
.
-·"'Cllarleston branch:
home located south of town 1'RAILER sites, building sties.
'
·
on mOl adjustment. only 1'111.
_ ......_.. ..
.
'1300 Mo&lt;lorkle Ave.. s. W.
•
LOOKING FOR'
We may have wbat yoo waul.
on 4 acres of land wtllcll runs
.·. Ftm· I h L._. '" ur1 " ...._. but needs eleanll!\l. Calh on- .,.....,....
_.,.
!outh Charleston w va
A GOOD BUSINEI!!I? We h..e
•• ...... "" ._
11 "'0 _,_ -"s pleue
Slar-. craft Solei. Rl. II. N.
• · ·
to the beal;)iful Ohio River.
CHATHAM AVE.
one with plenty clean stoek
0001t 1o Oowller •llelp, ~"'~·• ., ... ·
· ·
o1 .Niit Pleaslnt bebbid
Pllone: !M-722-2106
~
· "
Has
full
divided
basement
ond
good
equiJllllC!IIt.
Prlcod
' tenced. &amp;nniy In penon II See Monday at ,.,.h ·Col-. Pleaaanl l'lllnllltlort. ..,
5 ROOM frame, deep Jot. Make
with reo. room, kitclu... batlt
roaoonable.
Call
Howard
liB an offer.
,'tllllle l'~ after 5. 11-3
=.~~e
Real Estate For Sale
and worltsh~. You will have
Bran11011
for
more
Informa··
'
11118 NEW ·MOON H- Trall,
to see litis home to appreciCHESHIRE
tion.
f ~'"lP \VIntH
GOOD HAY, L. L. Holliday, er,01 ~ 4asU, • ·
111. C. MASSIE
ate it. Call today for appolntBEAUTIFUL oldet large brick,
·.,ent. Priced to the thlrtya.
FpEilJEii'CmiY ~ JD&amp;. Bullville Ret: ~" ... ea _........ • IIIPJ.IIte or REAL ESTATE BROKER REDUCED FROM
II rms. and two ballts, new
cl!anle, eantatt il'.r.tli Davts,
,
....,._. .
..,
TEL. 446-0791
$8,000 to $6,009
WE
NEED
LISTINGS
modern kltehen. redecorated.
GalllpoJ~ Molo~ Co. fle.al'l2. ll!M KIRKWOOD llou..trlller
7 ROOM TWO s'roRY - 3 lrt..,. fireplace, basement, over
; ':~•'•:i:
IU
12 x 41. esteDent eondllton
NEW OMC TRUCK ·
MON.EY MAKER
Br, spacious country ittclten, WE HAVE had 9 sales since
&amp;n acre on Rt. 7
Jan. I, so If you wllnt yours
,. ···· •
• ' Ji30it i&gt;hone 448-11110 alter. s.
HEADQUARTERS
'lT. RT. 133. liO A. aD tractor.
drlUod well, fi-ont ind baok
LISTINGS NEEDED FOR.
ilold list with us right oway.
good farming land. 10 A. botporeh, lot "'!' 1 1011', view of
11el !4o T. GMC ~
tom, 211 A. rolling, balance
tile Oblo River.
N!Cf' lufitllilod houit, 4 niOIIII
111&amp; !4o T. a.oV. Pl&lt;kup
OFP'ICE PRONE 441-1111
SPRING BUYERS
grazing &amp;
Has coal,
1. ba!J!,
dryer, pd f\ENMORI!l dlslnluher, TaJwft
11111!4. T. Ford
EVENING
Jay
elay &amp; limestone. 8 rm. boule 5 ACRES
1'oeatlan. Cin be II •
UllfO, b0olre11e l)au' door,
t . . Ford JDconollne Pktup
awiol M. Neal +16-1541
Earl Winters, 148 a
II
bath.
plenty
water.
Also,
lmH FARM POND, drDled
&gt;Millcreek or
tteiDI af- . reason lor sellln!, ~vlnllJft !II T. CJ!ev. l'lotap
••,.. Amabery, 141 •
4111-41411.
1 ..S
,,...
llltadled grocery &amp; Teneo
well, large bam, plfn!y oullei' I.
rr,, .,·.
'il ..
W'&lt;!
,
.,- "'
"' T• •G....
""' "'-L.·
ruc••P
lleo- K. lll&amp;ley, 4411..
gas station. doing a good bus- 'balldlnp, prage, S room one
11111 !4o T. ateo.
BAIRD REALTY CO.
bless. Let the Jlln. lend tbe
~, fll!lm .• .tlkND (lOOD CLEAN LUMP and
!WI If.. 'I'..CIIIc
story bome In esll)l good conotore &amp; lhe Mr. do the farm- dtllon, • nice ~lclltll. s Oscar Baird, Realtor
)rl~ fOr a IMJ. ; llf · tr1coal. .Carl ,.,..., .
11110 1Ji 'F. ~etloaal
Services Offered
•Seeaad A... Mlllll- IN
G~nde~ PhOn&lt; 21'-5115. 141
Ing. Alii the IJOOII)e who own
1... li T. fill. lllebp
rooms paneled, beth, plenty All Over Coal
' PINKING SHEARS sharpenerl
II. Price flt.OOO.
,,
1111 !6 T. J'GI!I pktllp
Sl.Z up, scissors 45f! up.
shade - · ~ retirement TtBS farm bas Ill acres and
s bedl-.s tanij111- .. IF YOU an buDd!nl a ... IM !4.·'1'.
J11cbp
••
Sheppard
Sewing Machine
4 BEDROOMS
It's all underldl with COil.
C l'clarlh
I!OIJII! or ~1)1!1, ~ ~·
IIIli hOI Ford trd
Sales &amp; Servi&lt;e, 862 1st Ave.
Full acre lcilaooo bue, ...,_
IDEAL for rearing thallamfly. SPACIOUS
tr-11 ·We Ire 1iul)den.
IIIII tit Dodp ·t11111t1
Ave.
118-6
on room, one otory hoale,
.f~m lfolpolni AppD~. ~ · ·1111 !4o T. ~
Qulel st.. wonderful view, no TWO S'roRY HOME - juol oat.
bem 50 x 48. lie boule. other
tralnc. run basement, with a · olde clty. loCIIed on tho Ohio
apl!li••lll, I 6
IIIII Elei!trle. .
1M If 11!111 T. (J¥C
oulbulfdlllfl.
Be IUI'e and aee
DEAD STOCK
bUt, Wiler; liW· ,~ .
' ~..
- 'i."·
IW'I I !. rGJIC
Hec. room " Garage or work
River; S BR, .1!4. bath, Jm.
IUO
llatVICI t:HAJlOS
lhll
bargain
under
$85011.
&amp;rea. This property has a P!WIIve llvltW room wl1h rtreI'lL .~ . , ALL 1ype11 of
m~Wi'- · 1111 li T. OliO ~
WILL &amp;I:IIOYI YOVR DIAD
JMI'b AND COWl
'• , · tr;j(
tell, bloc:i, ~ ~~ · ,..., 16 1'..
beautiful kltehen' and J!Ia!», .IIIII beliemelll, J ear Raccoon Bottom Land
CALL UCUOH • .._1
'' . .. ' '
. mioW., ltnlelt; ete. Cli1llll ~ OKC, .....,_
area. Yoo11 IJOI more bouse lillae; •
lot wtlll
THIS farm has 1101110 or the
·.,n'ttn,·. Rtll ,.........., .o." CR ,Me.- •.T.. - . , ., _.
ftir fl4010 If you buy II tlian
~~ kinds rl. trees " lhrup.
nleeot bottom land you eould · I.EE"S PLUMBING &amp; REMQI)
Hull.
{
"·"'.,..
illf
' ~ I nnn ---.,.... ~ plaeel'"-.
EIJNG, Crown Ctty, u. Pn.
' ~ . ,..
J, y.
;{ . •t:
·waul. Half ac:re lobo&lt;:&lt;o bue
FABULOus '
.
I T. llilenlatlonll
IJI·II
reall.v produeeo. Two bla · lli6-AIH.
STATE RT- 160
i\'ICI'OR' ·M'Irt V !idder
!4o . Dadte ~
sEii: , · 11flll 'OUTSTANDING
barns, tie houie, 11W1J other
NEED a nh:e eot!!!IIV hOme. 7 hpilii m
Hill l)rlve.
&amp;IINNETB STI!GBR'S
outbulldlllltl. Six room lwo
nns., bath, cal!l"llnt. panel- .•. tatie
for ....
WA'b:R
DELIVERY SERVICE
!
.
otory bouoe wtlb ..rtar ...,ld
.~
....... ftl:. 4*1W1.' - IS-If
.
p enly fllora!!O II)&gt;IIC;!',
lli1!llll
llvlnl.
•
large
'
1'
11. ttS-8347.
287 II
.
'
'
;~o
room and li Jdt. Ule biilhl, 2
oom- be lovely.
wlij. enjoy.
belt lhll for

nu:l!:: 'R!Niel8b AJmanae.
~ RMrlelila l)ealer, 1111 EQI': em AYO., Ga!fipOUI.
..I

a

.-LIT~U GIRLS,,,' ' ·~A~IES .BETTER
.·. " ·DRESSES•''~ ~~· -&amp;SS,St~a

· S:JI.'I'IIk ol tlie Tolrll
. ~. 9:15
llfl!rlllngll!;ltl chclltefbo.

Tho )lfornlQg Show
11:4&amp; WwW.IIfaiC!I' Co. News

2 Bedroom-BII Lot .
Low Down Parment
HAC&amp;.

. DDAY"S- THRU FRIDAYS
.: .7:46 EchOes rll J~
&amp;1111
' Ohio Vallo7 Newo
.

~1;00

Neal Realty

LOYEL Y EASTER

Girls Shoes ; .$1.99 to $4.99
Ladles Shoes .$2.99 to $5.99
Boys Shoes ... $2.99 to $7.99
Mens Shoes ~ ••• $6.99 to $20

~ .

,·,

•;

~·· _.,..,,f.-; .flw" or •••
......
,.,,.. f."OI'~only•• ,,~J
itn will
M •t.tH •·
'_,._..,
of

NQihing draslic, wild or far out - bul ;ust wha~ :. .
it l ta~es 10 g'iv.~ yo~ a ri-ht dre.ssed loo~ l~t'i,:·;;,,,'/, "' ·
a lillie diffmnl for ~.cister and a.fltr. Our wide ., ,;{(
collection is '"!"Pmd of rh' mosllalked a~ou1 "','', ·~·,'-.:,,
.colors alld CNI$ '- ltliO 'Gftd lhree bNIIOII With side &lt;~; ·• '"'
:Vents P.!Ns the' ~ippie$1 double breasted s~-prr '"'
·coals you'll fin,4. itt the..area. Hop to it, drop iit' · '',,• ''··'"' 110_1,,1, 1
tod!IY choose yollt ·Ea~ tu sui I frotJII DUI colleciio~ : · .,
- CRICKEIEE'~ &amp;IINIVERSIT¥ SE)\'~;.','··,'~'; 1•&lt; .•.. ·•.1ti&lt;d ·

I,

n ...,iM.. olii.0·41'rl'- • -Uc 11.,

' ·.
..

.will N ch.r,.tl tht ,.. ,
ilf25c for e.C:h cho', ..,.,

·· O!Uded hi a Resource eonserva•
' tlon and ~velc.,ment Project. '
' \
. Thla proJect ere&amp; · Includes the
ciluntlea li( ~son. J~e~~Qn, P•tnam, Kuawi\a and ,BOOne. AJ, organizatlon tslletnglotmedtolook .
.iter thta RC&amp;D prQJecL The organlzaiiO. ·wol be, managed by a
P"Qjlll called .a ste8Ling commit..
', .MD ,
tee. n; • .a!Mrtlig ..commlt\ee
would be made .., ol one mom9:30 to 7:30 T~~; Sat. "
lier of the Weste_rn Soli CQaserand 1
~.
vatlon D!stric~ from each ~ .9le
1:30 to 6:3o $ondoy . ,.·
three &lt;OUntles In the Dlflrict.&lt;as
, I l ' .o~ • r 'l ,;u)'
well as a District si(IOrvisor
with many Ia•• y mqul t .
frnm ,l(a,.w.!\1 Count,y-and Boone
on ditploy and
·~·i• .
COIJI1ty. A me~ber ot each c:ounovoilobl, to f/1' &gt;
cy court or an authorized repreoentallve Would a)aq be on this
steering ~omml\iee. A third
member rePreSaqthJ .Uch ~Oj.ID­
ty would be I ma.for tre~n a cor·

SHOE DEPlRTMiNT

~

/

ll•c•~t~Mufl¥1tlt~~- ~ ---15CIIM

~1••-nt

EASTER FOOTWEAR IS A
•
FAMILY AFFAIR AT BIGGS

I

.'

.

.mo:

('

,.

•

RiTES ' :
,0 • D.r..Oftt ,,.,. -. •c·. ·11c u,.

~ rty

J. Q. EASTER BUNNY SAYS:

·.&amp;SU·R.PL Yc-o~

'

. cl{rr •••lttH r., cltulfled M•

,:

'

AROLIN·

.l;

CLA$Si~IED

cu.

Wide Ranged Options

- Producers on the acreage clevoted to wheat
participating in ~rm programs IC) to 43 per cent of the allotmay choose !ron\ a wide range ment.
of options that will permit them
Producers participating in both
to realize maximum program the wheat and reed grain probenefits accordina to J, Melvin grams also have theoptionotsub-Gilbert, Chairman of the Agri.. stituting wheat tor teed grain or
cultural Stabilization and Conser- teed grain for wheat in any comvation County Committee.
bination wlthin the total permit}Jroducers with a Ceed grain ted acreage. Diversion payments
base may exercise an option to will be besed on the program
divert a minimum of 20 per cent crops underplanted.
of their base to qualify ror pr~
Producers who participate in
gram benefits. They also may the reedgrain,orwheatprograrns
divert additional acres for PIJ'· will be eligjble for price support
ment. The price s~port pay- l&lt;lln on their entire production
ment will be earned on acreages ot the respective crops.
take but as for me, give me or reed grain up to 50 per cent
llbert.Y or gjve me death."
of the base.
In 1933 llle German Retchsla!!
Gilbert e"Piained that those
gave Ado)( Hitler "blanket who take part in the wheat pr~
power" tor four years.
\ ~ram, after divert!~ toconservJn 1942 Japanese-Americans l ng use an acreage equal to 15
were moved Crom their homes per cent or the farm allotment,
along the Pacific Coast to may produce wheat on aU their
inland communities as a war- wheat allotment acres.
time precaution.
Farmers who wish to produce
In 1966 a total of 32 persons less than their ful)aUotmentmay
dled as a bUzzard swept through sign IC) to earn dlvers.lon paythe Great Plains.
ments on the additional diverted
DomesUc market(JW
acres.
A thousht !or the dal: Ralph certiricates will then ~ earned
Waldo Emerson said, "A friend
is a peraon with whom J ma.v be
North America has only
sincere. Before him, I may one species of native lark,
think aloud."
the horned lark.

~.

..

1

i MASON CoUI'fl:Y is being to-

Sizes I to 6X

GALLIPOLIS

1

O,vid ~Uh, Rloky Burrts, Char-

'frOm Ohio, Mlchil!an and W0 s t
Vlrgln18. These bulla muatgnde
average choice (13) or ~.tgh.er to
seD In the olllestartlng at !p.m.
Animal~ having only cl~pedlgrees wiD he sold. All ahlmals
have been checked by the Besearch Department ol the Amert•
can Hereford MsoclatiCOI for
clean pedl~"'- Theassurance
of cleanpedip-ees and high quallty breeding stock. should guarantee Her.Cord breeders and
commerctal cattlemen a source
of high quality breeding stock in
this sale.
This sale wUI provide an oxcellent source ot strorw: r~
bulls that are ready for "'nice.
catalols and addtilc,..ilnformalton can be "'cured from lloyd
Blackwood, Pomei'O.Y, sale mana·
ger; . Jlm Little, Area Extension
Agent, Jackson, or .trom ~ounty
extension agents.

bought - by the CO-Op when it
fall s to bring one bid · above
the price support amount It car.
ries tOr its respective grade.
This amounts to a guaranteed
price to the grower .
Th.e Co.Op' s takeincludedvary.
lng amoonts of burley ln 47of the
110 grades, but most or it was
in the upper-grade, arid higherprices, categories.
Mone.y lor handling the price
support program is borrowed by
the Burley co.Op from Commodity Credit Corporation, v.
S. Department of Agriculture,
and ls repaid, with interest, when
the "pooled" tobacco is even..
tually resold to the manuractur.
ing trade.

HOMES' ·YOUR :·

MeadoWs, 1John Bwngtrner, W, ·
W\ Brown.1Edw~,~ ·Jlu.mgar~, ·'

bamsare•)'llilable.

.·

veed
.c
~

..

area

K &amp;·

1

RACINE - EDSON ROUSH, RACINE, was preaented the COBA Gold Modal Award by Ohio' a
Dairy Prtnce11, Miss Dellbte Weaver, ol Berlin, Ohio, on March B, during the CODA Amual Meet-

FriGo in

an ol,ctrlc !en.ce being used ley, Henry' Jia1, Hoborl .J. New-' program_
·
which fest~ic~ the ration p! the berry, Plrl Dutris, -~ell A. , _ _.;,."l"'~~;;~-..j
cattle so that about one ton of Smlth, E. c. C!arson, Jf S. Baird,
hay along with atandl•llsras' In Deo"" Yobo, ltobert.Dewhurst, c
the meaciCM acreage carrtf' tile T~rry Bl""'!arner, Sam Scar,
,
cal,tle through,..! lbe winter, No .berry, .Cl)ar)eo Ohllhge'r; We'sley

2.d!!:! Bu lls consigned to 2nd Sale

The eattle wlll be graded at 9
JACKSON - . The second Ohio
Grasslaqd Graded Hereford Bull a. m. by a c:anm!Uee .ol Harold
Sale at tile Jackson COUnQ' Fair- Heinrich, · Hereford breeder,
grounds In WellstOn on Saturday, Woodville; Dr. Randall Reed,
March 29, to sponsored by the Ohio state Unherslty Be.CCetUe
Spoclaltot, and Charles Boyles,
Ohio Hereford ABBoclaUon In _.lion with the Ohio Ileplrt- llfaiBPr of EOARDCat CaldwelL
ment of Agriculture and the Ohio Twenty-ftve bulls lave been conCooperadve Extension Service. slgned ll"mn Hereford b~rs

Charles Powers,

ii then carried 9Ut with

. , I'

. t·!

;

./ ·'·

/ '

'

' .

oC the:Land . . ..-· ,_, -~·~\to · ·
. " .

. . •·

••

r .',,

til...
&lt;$=:~~
.

s

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),..

..ttllfal

�•

23 - Tho Sunday Tlm-nUnel, 911111!11, )Jol~

. \· ~ ;for Sale ·

·

POOD~E ,·PUPPIES,

AKC TO)'
mlnlalure, ~ and up. stud
tervlce and lll"OOIDlnf. Pbalt

;" -~
.;•. '

II I

~

TIIUil'I'E

••

~~~:~=~~~~~::~J&amp;
CJa••

PES'f CO'(fROI :

i

.

Ill
...... ._; Jr)l,.U,S ~"'
FREE ~tlon .. call 41&amp;-nlS
IU'IIQ
"""'
or
the
AA .t&lt;Jurnalnom lleJc! !n
Merrill O'·Dell, "~perator lor. OhlO'~I"~f ......
\ ·' ·
Extermltal Termite l!o!rvlcu
++++++
10 Belmont Dr,
11'1 II
MONDAY, membera or t11o Galllpol!o BlueD..no
boskedloll team wW be holllred 'tilth an ......,s
TERMITE a PEST COI'II'I\01.
bon&lt;ll!et by tbe Boosters Club, bejplmlnt. at '8:30
FAI'I Eldermlnatlnn Co. Wheelp. m., In the Washington Sc:hbQI Cafeteria. ·
++++++
mburg, Ohio. Ph. 574-&amp;112 .
23!-U
BEFORE our thoughla turn comploti]j&gt; 1o 111
\sport~, we woolclllke 1o reproduce an article clb&gt;!r&lt;lm the March 11 edition of the Athens Me..
DOLL House Nun!ery tran•por.
It was written by Rowland Congdon, Meatatlon available, reasonable
Sports Edllor. The oubjecl waa ou cap
rateo also for shopping or
.
Jlm
who
ad4resoed
the 19611-00 Soulheostel'll 0 h 1 0
wortlng molberll, hourly, dalLeogue
~on
Alhona
Bulldo&amp;s.
It
follows:
·
ly ,.. -kly rates. Ph. 441+
+
+
+
+
+
4511.
MU
"Those atteldl~ the Kiwanis Club's annual,diiiiMir hoiloriJog tile.
Athens
Hl&amp;l1 School boskethollteem!oloodoynlghtatthe.BuclmyiiCat.,;
WINDLE'S Ca.,.t &amp; Upholstery
terla
heard
• stlrrlne apeeeh 00 Amerlcara.
Cleaning, professional equip.
"The
delivery
was Biven by Ohio Unhorslzybasketbalicosch Jim
ment, aU work guaranteed.
S~er who said lhet because or all the hustle and bustle necessary 1o
Phone Wellalon, col~ get his team to Now York attheeld or the week lor the NIT, he came
Iori.
80-tl •ql'$iilred.,

DEWrn's PLUMBING
AND BEATING
ROUTE 160 al Ewrgreen. Ph
446-2735.
2'11 If
1ns11ance
FOR ALL your Insurance needs.
cheek with your GranRe a~­
ents at the Neal Tn~ . Agency.
114 Slate St. Agents lor auto.
fire. Homeowners. ho!nltat
and general llabOHy. 81-11
NAnONWIT'E Nf:URANM:
AUTO. flre. llf• '5 "'''• St
WaMo F . P."n"'" ·

W

R

81'0\Vll. 446-!160.

!4-tl

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

_j

Meigs

Property
" Transfers ·
Benny L. Stafford, Fern L.
Stafford to Franklin Real Estate
Co., 158.50 acres, Salem.
Frank Cleland, Delores Cleland~ WUiiam Harden, Dorothy E.
Harden to James R. Cu001ft,
Thelma Cundiff, Easement, Sut·
tOIL

William N. SWain, Tressa
Swain to Harry Osborne, Jr., lla
R Osborne, parcel, Olive.
Guy Swadley, Geraldine M.
Swadley to Franklin Real Estate
Co., 55 acres, Salem.
William Everett Collins, dec.,
to Maude Jones, Janice Daniels,

I

er we nnct these other items
ot River News in the Tribune

vision

iels, MtOOe Jones to Darren A.
Collins, parcels, Middleport.
Mallie Jooes, dec., to Janice
Daniels, Laura May Greene, cert.
for trans., Middleport.
Robert L. Bower to William
Lee Ethridge, Nancy L, Ethridge,

E~neer.

The. allotments made recentJy by the Ohio River Board of

1'111Ulii:---.~-:. --IIOUSE,

J10W hot water heallnc .,..
tem, buill In tltchen, wall-towall ca)1eUag. LarRe a111c1&gt;
ed garq. end uWity room.
OJrner iot Ia Rutland, Pllone
7tMfH· after 5 p.m. 3-23-«o
'
FOUR ROOM HOUsE wl t b
talll, cement garage a n d
workshoP In Rutland, Phona
7hl6,
3-~

cated at Melville, about orie and
hal! miles above Laughery
Island, three miles above RisIng Sun, Ind.
[n additiQD to thesedams,autf)..
orized urxler the new appr•ia·
tlon. contracts will be let, beginning March 29, for the CO&amp;
struction of Dam No. 30, near
Greenup, Ky.; Dam No. 32, near
Vanceburg, Ky.; and Dam No.
34, at the upper eld of Chilo.

ooe

parcels, Olive.

Elson Spencer, Dorothy Spencer to Edward lhle, Doris Ann
lhle, .25 acres, Sutton.
C. W. Hoback to Ohio Fbel Gas

CINE FOUR-room ~
furnlab&lt;d; tround floor; allo
tHllor loll llld pnlen IIIII
""11111 altos on !lie riVer. Jla.
rlon lleynoltls, MillOn. PhoDe
77Hif7
J-ll.tle

" 'It's oot Just the C&lt;l&amp;ching, oot the sound, basi~ !UDdame~a
not only of baske11&gt;11l, but of Ute. He loves each one of you is thoolgh
you were his own child.
"'My son played ror ~lm .... helearnodwl'oit it's about !rom

all

TiiAR.ER.

Co. , ~- ater Site Agreement,

~

.

Miller Offers

Zirkle, Sue Ellen Zirkle, lot,
Pomeroy,
Linley M. Hart, Pauline Hart
to Robert Roberts, Phebe ~
erts, lot, Racine.
I

Sherman F. Ballengee, Eva
Ballangee to Franklin Real Eatate Co., parcel&amp;, Salem.
C. W, Hoback to Quaker State
Oll and Refining Coil)., rlsht ot
way, Lebanon,

Resolution to

PT. PLEASANT - catalogs
lor the second annual West VIrglnia Performance Tested Bull
Sale are available at the COUnty
Extension OO'ice here.
This sale will be held March
28, at Wardensville, and will lnelude one Charolals, 18 Here-

ford, 8lld 24 Afigua bulls.
The bulls hal" juJt completed

a .140 day test at Reymann Mem-

orial Farms and have proven
their abDlty togainweight.11tese
bulla have an average daily gain
C. W. Prol!ltt, Myrtle Protntt "'! the lost of from 2.1 to 1.1
to Quaker Stale on and Rerlnlne ' pounds per da,y.
Corp., right of 'ffll)', Lebanon.
Guido J. Glrolami, Vidia Girol·
Harreld Pledged 1o
ami to Hester V, Blackwood, Jot.
Pomeroy.
Sigma Chi at Purdue

, INSPECT COAL MINE SAFETY LAMP - Three Senalors receive a lesson from U S,
Steel Corp. coal m•ne t._clor RLdy Boyle (seoold !rom le!t) oi!'llow a 11amo ealet;y 11
ulod to detect methaoo gas In coal mines. The Senalors inapected the lamp duri:W hearings 1n
Washingto~ oo pelding coal mine aa!ecy legislation. From left are Sena. Robert c. Byrd (l).W,
Va.), Jennings Randolph &lt;D-W. Va.), aid Harrison A. Williams, Jr. ((}.N.J.). Coallldustry witnesses obJected that pend!~ bWs belittle the sa!ecy lamp as a staldord toot or methone gas,
thooll!h thousalds ol nuners are trained Ia its use. Most other provisions of t11o pending IOKIIIation won coal1ndustry si.I'IPOrt.
for 1111 but the moat unusual lax-

Permit Prayer
WASHINGTON - Ohio 10th ·
District Congressman Clarence
E. Miller
Introduced In tho

e,

U.S. Houlti ol Representatives a

reooluttCJii propoolng a Conotltutlonal am~nt that ...,ldpermilth, olferlng of prayer In public bulldJnis.
· The' new amendritentwouldtlke
ell'ect as psrt 'I' the u.s. Constl!!d!on after belne psaaod by
tWo • llllrds' ot both llouae o1
Congrus end then raUflod by
throe • 'IUI1"Ie\'l of theflll1 ltale
lqlolaturts.
·
In remarks made when IJIIro.
cllcllig llle rtaoluUan, Miller stat.
ed, "It lo Amorlca'l'ahallle thai
the Sqweme coUrt hu OUIJa•ed .... li~e ud nil)denomlaattonal prayerio In ' our pilblle
schools. II Ia · 1111. .firM belief
that the deli~l cif' oolr citizens
1o P'1 boii!&amp;P to God tn ochoo!lo
and od:er pUwc ~ ohOul~
be ·~ ond 1101 -~ 1&gt;1
the ~H , .• ;.,

COMMENTS

fr4-

CONGRESSMAN
CLARENCE E. MILLER
ACCORDING TO THE U. S,
Chamber ot Commerce: The IV•

erage Amerlcanwlllworktwoand
ooe-11111f hours every elsllt hour
worlting day this yasr to pey
federll1, •tate, and Ioeallas billa.
Is it lillY wooder that the aver.
ago American is upset with the
BIII&lt;Oinl Ill lases he P'l•?
One or the responll1billtes ol "
tho
Congress Is in handling FedMsry L. caroeyiO Thor 0. caroral
money {your money) whleh ·
GALLIFOLIS
James
Bruce
sey, parcel, Scipio.
brousllt
the matter ol lncoine
Harreld,
134
Garfield
Ave.,
has
Edna M. Carman, dec., toDenlases
Into
the llmell~t In Febver Carh'lln, ce_rl tor tnns., been accepted by tbe Sigma Chi
""¥7· Hearings by the Ways and
frater~lty at PUrdue Universi1;)',
Salisbury,
according
to
Greg
A&gt;ole,
111\erIleana Committee QllOIIed oo lha
J lmmy Larry ,l:o11101ly 10 Guibroad
aubJect or 1as reform:
fraternlcy
C&lt;luncll
repre-..
do Girolan:l, Vldia Girolaml,
tive.
Tlteae hearings are e&gt;Pocted
lots, PomerOy. . .
More
than
l.ilOO
mi!JI.
bave
. lo be lengthy, ''nncd:::::~hoi~~
•
. . . . aome so
· to
. TO NYC
plodgod ~ · itaternltleo al
(r , ,
': IIIIDdi'Y which the &amp;VeJ'Ift
.Mrl. Maxine
~a, four-•· · '
·· ·
' '
eriean taxpayer !IIIIa
·
,of ' tho l'ome!l'llld. ·' .t total lA 1,012
Tile
metci,...••k
Is·
nllt'
.ll
Broad
1as
. . fU '
lark 1but: a ,~ljeU&gt;f r.IIJ8 , ';
reform lo
tiJ~hird f~li!JI*. ,.. ~ . , . ·~ ·W!dl~ on the
'l,lf31l'inite:J'Oil&amp; ,laiiJid ol ~ I al"!
'· ~\i;WIII Wlil diac~ ~ ' '!{.,C!Gce to ilmpll!y~W~·;
.· u;e_,~oi:luiUfi4l.~D l!lfl.•
!ill reeurno. One to
.
'~
' ·~\·'"·
d;::.·i:;J~ .•
~ ;,t\ I I I , '
'
_•·

.

'l'rallei'
Park, Mlner1Yllle, bblo. Pbont
9~2-m~ . . '
' J-!Nic

___..,.. .......

l'lll!at • •

TWENTY YEARS AGO, !rom the files of the Daily Trioone and

Are Available

Bmin'1

WE WILL peJal ,.,.. 1001.

I

OOOIL

.Jimm)' Nelson, aka Jimmy K.
Nelson, OtJnna Jean Nelson, aka
Donna Nelson to Elizabeth M.
Nelson, John M. Nelson, lots,
Rulland.
Clara B. Miller to Danny s.

'

Employ-nt WaiiW ·

ing'. n

Sale Catalogs

,fti

1966

payers. If you are now or have

cOmpleted yoor Income tax
return for 1968, or 11 you haven't
IJiito gotten around ~ clollll it,
rm lUre yoo know or t;lle aiiiQI
eomplicatloos involved Ia this
form.

)Ia!

.

'

Real Elfate For S.ltt
IUlDNEY DIIWNDio. ''

cr • • ·

Bell s.lall IIIIW •

W • Ta Re~ . ilrLease
F.~ tll'CIUnd Now Ha\'011. C.U
New Haven 1111-2;1!: a.iU!p

•

· Notice

I

;,.

llllMiepori; . . - .

' z•lite

· FIVE IIOO'M HOOSE, ,_ly
&lt;'ecoroted. three toll, city fa·
cllltles. eotab1191!ed asparagus
. and ¥mi&gt; beds, a1ao lruH
.trees, price $1500. Far appointment call tn-5110.
S.23-121c

1968 CAPRICE 4 DOOR SEDAN
327 V8 engine, powor oteering and brokos T......

DODGE. ______________________ $1595

4 Door Sedan, VB, auto. trono. p .S.

!!~~or~~~!~~~~7.f.~:-R;di;-------------SJ095

. 1968 Cadillac Calais Hardtop Coupe
Bedtl~ul orct!c blue finish with black interior, equippe With
rodto,
II . powerI antenna , rear seat s-k
,.. ... _ er,
h't

CHEVROLET CHEYELLE._.. _______$595

mo

Jones, Wallace Amb•a•. Hilton Wolle,

SULKY CART and hamen.
Phone 2oV/-2281.
3-21-SI&lt;

,automatic, power steering and brake1 . Radio.

way power seat, and climate control air conditioning

The price on this one for our

88 sale

is $418
1967 Cadillac Coupe Deville

·(5 of the. nicest guys YGU will ev• deal with.

1965

a.oo

"OHIO'S OLDEST DODGE DEALER"

R. H. Rawlings Sons Co.

1964 CORVAIR ........................ $895

&amp;. telescoping steering wheel, tinted glou, ;adio
~·th pow~r antenna and reor seat speaker, white wall

Sp1der, 2 dr. black finish, good tires,
and heater.

tires. !hts cor has hod nothing but the very best of
core sonce new,
$428 S.IJO

1967 Cadillac Coupe Deville
.
Th1s car h~s a ~old. metallic Finish with a block vinyl

top and bet~e mter~or and equipped with power win ..
dow, and Stx way power seat, radio with power ant~nno and rear. seat sp~oker, tinted glass, white wall
t1ru, automottc headltght control and climate control air conditioning.

Early
Bird

WILL SELL
One Of MY Two Places
Of Business
Both Dolna Excellent
Contact

1963 BUICK SPECIAL

. . 1966 Cadillac Coupe Deville

~h•te ftntsh with beige interior, equipped with radio,

glide, rod1o and heater, good tires, blue finish.

Only 27,000 miles. Sale priced at $3288.00
1963 O_LDS F-85 STA. WAGON ............ $895

Pomeroy, Ohio

YOUR PRESENT CAR MAY MAKE DOW!4 PAYMEtfl"
ALL NEW CARS ON SALE
PERMO
·

.
FEJRGUSON

Wh1te fm11h, auto. Irons . , radio &amp; heater. Reol nic;
cor.

larr &amp; Van Zandt
Motor Sales

( "/;r/;f(r;r ·

LUMP, EGG, S'roKER, COli!.
', ' H
' ,' I&gt; l {, ,I "
screened, no dust, oiled II
3S
tractor, 7-loot
WARRANTED
wanted. Jacobs Coal Co.• RutFont mawer. . .new; lhreeUSED
land
'l'IJliile.
ilnont:
7+Mf52
or
·
.
~
•
~~
t--'-·-'-·olr!~f"flll!~IT"A
'flfl'llnl •hlt&lt;h blader ltOll'. ' 1'lw
992--3489.
:J.-21-lttc Custom Sports Coupe, Decor Group. Auto. trans . . Ra.dio. Foam'
CADILLAC
992-53~2
14-lnch plows. 7-foot John
cushions. Powier ateering, WSW tires. Overhead com 6 cyl.
Deere disk, Jolm Deere side
deUvery ralre, Ferguson rna· !IEMOVE EXCESS body fiuld
nure spreader. See Jameo
llollon, one mlle east of Five
Skylark 2 dr. Sport Coupo. Sharp all v;nyl trim with bea~tilul Unscramble thetelwr Jumblea,
Polnta off.. Rt. 7. Phone 992carpeting. 350 cu. in . VB engine. Automatic trans Power ont letter to each ~quare. to
60111;·
J-S1-3tc SUPER · stuff, RUle nul, tllat'o steering.
Rodio.
·
form four ordinary wordt.
Blue r.u.tre lor cleaning ruga
and
upholltery.
Rent
olorlrlc
!1 .INCH RCA 'IV with IIWivel
- ..... ~ ~- ..
ahtrmpooer " · Baker FurniSCUHR 11'1 .......
Pland. phone 742-5641. 3-21-Mp
ture.
3-17-11&lt; Catalina 4 dr. Sedan. Decor Group, Turbo Hydramatic. Radio.
MOOEL ri lfi!ncbesler IS.guage,
Foam cushions. Power steering. Power brakes . Floor mats
lull chol&lt;e. Call New Haven CASE MANURE SPREADER. front a!'d rear. WSW tires.
F'ARMALL M '111ACTOR
882-2217.
J-SS.Stp
HEEPS
with &lt;U!tlvatora and fertillz.
er aHachment; Jobn Deere
IT'S lorrlfle the way we're oelJ.
kow com planter. · Roy E. LeS.bre 4 dr. Cuotom Soclon. Papular "400" trans. With 280
iag Blue 'Lustre to clean ruga
HP VB engine. Power steering, brakes, Radio, EZI gloss,
and upholllery, Rent oham- Miller, Rt. S, Pomeroy. Pbone Floor mots ond wheel covors.
LCODEED
Chesler 985-3817.
3-1~71
pooer t~: Tiny's Bargalnlantl,
J-17-tlc
SEVENTEEN DEAD of rogiaterSpringer Holateln hetlen~,
rr HONDA, !OJ Scrambler, with . ed
CUrtiss Breeding, extra nice.
helme6: Very IOIId condition.
HEABED
Now-theein:ledletten
Pbone 91P.21'iz, Douglat Clr·
!'bono tiii47GI.
S.2t).Jip
cle, Raclne, Ohlp, ii-2S lie

$68 19

:.~.::~"~1~

69 Bui(k

$85.25

69 Bui(k

$98.39

EARLY
USED CAR
SPECIALS

66 Plylftoulh

$1195

I
RIDING hones, one .... DALMATIAN ptlpfllea. S.m..U..
rei mare saddle horlle, one old, AKC, temporary shots
Belvedere 4 dr. Sedan. Slant 6 cyl. std. &amp;hilt. Extra nke.
galled black mare, my
and paper broke: SSO eacll.
genUo.'. l'bone 74Z-ml or """'
Pirone lfZ.'I0'/5.
S.U.IIc
S.~
Iori ArtHIId Glate.

66 Pontia(

I
L

Ventura 4 dr. Hard Top. Factory Air Conditioned. All vinyl
Ventura trim. Exceptionally sharp inside and out.

I

64 Chevrolet

Aclou
DOWN
1~ brillianCe I Dnodful
'GOIOr
· 2 Sholhoneen
4BkJC!Olar
lndtons
' ILithUWOWJII 3Veey)'OUI1I
121'ollowtr· ·
b1rdl
lJ!lmollrlvulats 4S.vap

14,PJane "*"'-"
1$ t.nipolnt '
18 JlotioiM .
•••--•~ 1st .

5 Hawk'•leuh.
• Harmony
7 - (l'r,)
I Smoll pulrioo 211 Alooolute

IU'ablt...,...,i liTrlbulal)'ol 31Bolliaacity

r

IJ

$595

63 Mereu,ry

MontO&lt;oy 4 dr. Sodan. Power steering. Auto. shift. Shows good

care.

47IIedact

I I I I tJ

PrideSURPIJSUISWEIIliln

-...nu.........

lo'""'"' -UL

BLA

MARS

ESTABLISHED 18$3
BUICK'
PH,

992·2143

PONTIAC

I

Auto Sales

liM ENGLIBH Ford, melleal
(lQncJ!tlon, IOIId tires. Clll
7f2.f211. See Wtmlall Grate
RuUand Jl'urD!Me.
~

Ill PONTIAC G'ro, autm.ut:·
u.:ellelll condJtion.

SetiiDi

t1ae to a tllvwce. Pbone ._
•.
UMic

POMEROY, OHIO

.,,

•

'

~--

.4jjjjiiiji'!

VISIT YOUR FAVORITE
SALESMAN AT

'Pomeroy

(l I)

rr)

0~

ILUCII

ICHO

:::.;;.:::.,::;:::,._ _

Co.

Yoll Chevrolet Dealer
Qpen _Evenings Til 8

.,

992-2126

~================

Bus-iness Services
UPEIIENCED
WI... S.VIct

lnwurance
AUTOMOBILE tnsurance boot
eancelletl? Lost JGUr Ollefllor'a llcenoe? c.n 19J-211111.

· YOUR

• u tro

mates. Phone ·m .-. Goeileln Ready - Mlz Co., Mldclle.
port, Qblo.
'

GIIC TRUCKS

A (

PANSY

READY - MIX eoncreta delivered rlgllt to your projorl.
Fast and easy. Freo Mil-

You Get .A Better Buy At

.••••••••••••

I :::::J::=~

Business Services

MANY MORE

Local owner, dean int., light blue finish new tires ro-

d.10, rear bumper, 6 C)'l. engine.

L
[ ] I t X)

..

the 01le
33 Protettlve
.41 Term or
· :. broWnJih- 23 Incunlono
covortnc
ollecliaa
ZITwo-'-'
lHBIIint
3tllCJDfo1Pyloo IOPoerGynrl·
....... · 2S WindOw 1lass 40 Damp
mother

FLEETSIDE PICKUP---- $1695

II I I

(]

Y......Ur'•

8'

1967 CHEV.

--

owner. Belonged to locol merchant.

--

M Ceiuil ot

$1,095

· Btl Air 4· dr. Sedan. Power steering. Auto. trans. One loc:crl

41 Got&amp; up
ll)ponllcoolo 271mmureo
10 C'- bJ
21 Fomale of t11o ::::-bediH '·
11 Wllh..l (l'r.)
nd dool"
"blonds (l'r.)
ltl'aloiboad , n Dll&lt;r\mlnallnt 211'roots ..
411 11eo bird .

110~

$1,995

1964 FORD GALAXIE.. ................. $995
500 H.T . Cpe. VB envine, automatic:. White finish.
Clean interior, good" w,w. tires . R&amp;H.

==

$75.45

69 Pontla(

Colon

2 DR .............. $695

1963 CHEVROLET ...................... $695
!~palo 4 .dr. Local 1 owner cor, V8 engine, power-

t1nte~ glass, new whitewall tires, power windows
and Six way seat, Climate control air conditioning

GUIDO GIROLAMI

·rwo

RadiO'

Auto. trans., radio &amp; heater, $JOOd tires, runs out Fine.

Traded to uHu_st in time fur our 88 sale $4288.00
.

4 spd,

1964 CHEV. S.S. IMPALA CPE.......... $1495
Black vinvl int. with_ bucket seats &amp; console, new
Premium tires, V-B eng., auto. trans. p 5 p B radio, low mileage by local ownen Re~l ,h 11~ c~r.''

.

For Sale

CHEVELLE ..................... $1395

Malibu Conv. VB •nSiine, powerglide, radio, heater,
new whitewall tires, green exterior finish with white
nylon top, vinyl interior trim .

Here'•. one . with o Gold metollic finish with like new
green . mterlor, has a full compliment of power An .
ment •ncludin•• Win
· dows a nd stx
· woy power seat-,ulprlt

s.~

PARLY American sleroo radio
rombinlllion. Beau!llul aolld
state ..nit with f.o!&gt;eed changer'' Payments of $! or
$8tl.ts. Call m.ms. s.a1-stc

1965 PONTIAC ....................... $1695'
Safari Station WaSion, local 1 owner car, whittt cw•
dark blue finis~. Clean interior, like new w-w tires, ·

1967 Cadillac Hardtop Sedan Deville
Tht.s o~e has on ivory finish with a black interior
rodto With po~er antenna and rear seat speaker, tint:
ed glass, whtte wall tires automatic heodl "o•ht
tra I Wt"th twl, l,lg ht sentinel,' power windows •and consix

·for farm ponds. Pbone fl&amp;.

WA!JofUT OONSOl.E wllll 4
opeaker aound · syotem. 4
speed oirai YOllme control
with AM a FM radio. Pay
just t6 monlllly or $16:32. Call
.9!n-3218.
S.21-3tc

onf;

.

Dick Rawllnas

.;

Co'""ony otr1C1al car. v.u engine, auto. trans., po._. ·
er steering, radio, bucket seats and console. Blade ·
vinyJ roof. New car title and guarantee.

Special price for our annual88 sale Is $4988.00

COME IN NOW AND SEE THE GOOD GUYS WITH
THE WHITE HATS AT RAWLINGS

$100!!.

.1968 CAMARO 2 DOOR • - • - • • • • • • • • • S2895

new w 1 • wa 1 " 1 ~· C imote control air conditionin
;• te c~ntrol outstde mirror. This fine car has
9, 000 mtle~ and shows the ver)' best of care.

1964
V8, auto. Irons. P.S. SPECIAL- as is- Moch,.ically OK.
Needs some body work.

Save ov•

1967 FIREBIRD "400" H.T. CPE ........ $2295
Local owner and low mileage. Li~e new wide ovGf
WW tires. Blue finish with matching vinyl interior."
Bucket seats, 4 ·speed. Radio and heater.

88 Sale Nowl

-----

BREEDR«l--DIIOKB--:.-.-Elroellent

1441. '

IItle ond warranty.

O.UR ANNUAL

·

6 cyl. 4 Door, SOdon. Auto. Irons.

Hydramatic trona. Blk. vin)'l roof over ireen' finith. ·
R~ractable headlight covers. Positraction rear aJCie. ·
T1nted glau, Comfortron air conditioning. A beauti•
lui kept cor with only 6300 mile&amp;. Oh yu now cor'

Count On Karr &amp; Van Zandt
For The Finest Selection!

DODGE CHARGER _____________ .$1895
1965 DODGE_________________
-$14
95

1966
V8, auto. trans. Power steering, white finish

Carroll Norris, Emerson

as a successful 8.thletic groo,p. Your cha.IIJI)lonship this year _prows
that f
"He then praised tile bench warmers. •You suba are strong.
You've learned how to sacrifice. Don't ever forget i1;1 anythtrw you do
the most important thirw you can give is your·s elt'
"~er told the baskelhall tealll how rortunato they were 1o have
Charles McAfee as their cooch. 'You'll IJ)prectate him mOre after
you've lett Ath~ns High School In all the ccaching praleaslon, whethoer It be !rom tlie foorth grade to the profesii101Jl ranks, 1don' I think
there's a coach anywhere who does the job he does.'
·

Rachel M. Dunn named Gallipolis Chamberol Commerce's
11111-tlme clerk ..• E. E. ColdweUcooflrmodasGalllpolis poatmaster.
.•. Charles L. Miller named head of Presbyterlaa Men ... Hobo Wilson sinks carl Willis 511-401 In Gallipolis Bowling Toornament ..•
37 GAllS baseball cllll!dateo report lor drill~

-''

8!Jr. YEAR-OliO bay gelding
qqarter hone. Call New Ha·
ve~ -~~7.
J-2Utp

at

janitor ...

Joe Wippel,
folnla, Phone 8ft.
'
.
J-1i-ltp

TWO ,STORY heUJe, &amp; 1'0011111,
ball!, oil Main st. In Rutland,
Pbo~ tMI'I!.
J-Nc

to BuY·

weekly Gallia Times ... Miss Helen Mills, 13, dies unexpectedly at
her home near here ... O&gt;arlea Johnson emplayecl as oour1 boose

,,

.

Engineers wtre returned trom
Wuhlft81on lrith the approval o1
the Olle! Engineer.
Coplaln R. R. Jones, engineer
In charge of the Cincinnati 01..
trlct, says work on two new
dams Nos. 36 aid 38 will be
started thla season. Drawings
and SIIOclficationa will ba ~re­
parod immed!atoil' and plaao are
now to let the work ror ~ .....
otruetion or No. 38 with the govermnent equipment now bel~
~sed in tho completion o!Diun No.
39, Dam No. 36 wiU be locatod a
short distance above Coney· la-land aid Qam No. 38 will be lo-

...., To Go 01.Used Cars

'

. near. Five
.. M10.1

rues:
Maryland with that at the Unlversicy of Toledo.
·
"At Msrylald, a group of football players through a llst of
MARCH 18, 1919 - THE TIME
'
grievances concerning the !act their head lootbsll coach was too
made
by
Pittsoorgh
-Cincinnati
MARCH
20,
1919
THREE
MARCH 22, 1919-'111E RAILrough on them, was able to get the coach ousted. Snyder commented
paoket
Buckeye
Stale
In
1857
be·
humred
pints
of
whisky
In
a
roads
have about finished Ute
that he would not send a son of his to a school where the administratween
Cincinnati
and
Parkersbig
Stw:lebaker
carried
to
Char·
packet
boots on the Ohio aid
tors allowed this to happen.
'
burg
is
said
to
have
never
been
leston
on
a
steamboat
last
MonMiasinJ»,pi
Rivera alii are DOW
"At Toledo, the admirlistration backed 1.11 Rocket cmch Bub Nichols when he susperded a player Cor not attendi~W: class. This is the beolen. She made the trip of day night were confiscated at the after the towboats accordlne to
Wanted
wl'oir! byprohlbltlooo!Dcers. The CaPtain J, T. llatlleld of t11o Hatzype of support Snyder means Is needed to~ litis oountry go!~ on 283 miles In 22 hour~
owners or the whisky and car field Coal Co. The raUroacls have PIG!!. EYerell lloleomb, Alhathe principles on which it was founded.
·
dl&amp;ajlpeared.
A cocked Colt auto- no desire whate.ver to c()(l)ente
nJ. Phone MY.J.HIS. USIIe
" 'No teaJn succeeds by havine ildividuals think only of themMARCH 19, 1919 - N E W
matic
pistol
was
found
in
the
with
the
barge
lines.
selves, but of the team.
locks and dams to be started:
a
dispatch from Cincinnati says car which was owned by a Char·
The now wayi and boat buildu 'You boys are the ones who will make this country great in
that
the
Cincinnati
District
No.
leston
taxi
company.
Ing
plant being constructed
the t\rture, if it is to be great. r predict this country and this uni1,
Coll)s
of
Engineers,
U.
S.
Pilot
Ed
Barrows
has
been
Marietta
at the mouth of tho !oiusverslt;y will be great despHe the five per centers.
" 'If we allow a lack of dlscipllne or a lack of team play in Army, gets the largest allot- on the Leroy for a trip or two. kingum River maymeanlheoperment of work under the recent captain Ed Is the last or the ation ol goverrunent owbod borge
sporta, ~then God save us.'
"Snyder added here that he did n« vote lor Spencer Haywood as Congressional appropriation -of Barrows CamUy len on the riv- lines on lheoOhlo River eventualan Ali·American despite that UniversityofDetroitbasketballplayer's $3 million lor the Improvement er, The late C.ptaln W, Au .. ly. There are now marw more
of the Ohio River, according to tin Barrows owned and oper- government steamboata between
athletic ublllcy.
" 'He is not an all-American unless he stcts thlnkire of himself !lgureo made public by C&lt;llooel ated the Clarlbol afterwards the Pittsburgh aid LWisville than
and learns to conb'ol himself, • Snyder explained. He was referring to Lansing H. Beach, Cincbmati Dl· Neva for many years In the Gal· there are packets or lndependent
llpolls-Bu!lalo trade._ EnKinoer boats.
FURNISHED bouiO In Pomethe fact that Haywocxl allegedly hU a referee during the course of a
• roy, llVt' _,. ·Md baill.
baske1ball game.
HSnyder also told the Athens athletes •yoo lave a tough existence
Clll ·evenlnl!l. . . .
because you live in the midst of co1lege students.'
·
u.tle
..
.:,.
~
.,_
'
;,,f,
i
" 'They think thef have rr~. but they dooV' be menllooed aa
he talked of certain elements of"coi]ige Students; ·.., .. ·\
!"liftNIIIIIEDhTWO' tl~ .
.. 'You can't have freedom without responsibl11ty.
apartment, Middleport. PIIOne
" 'You athletes don't have to grow long hair to get attention,'
91Zo3874.
U-llc
the Bobcat coach cenllnuod, 'fouget It by your unselfish perlormllncos

++++++

!, .

'J'IMO'l'HJ. 11.\Y,

Laura Mae Greene, cert. for Charles McAfee, let me assure you.
trans,, Middleport.
· · .. 'McMee is ooe of those guys who eoach for the Jove 11 coach--

Janice Daniels, James B. Dan-

SPECIALS .

lti6S ~ Falrlillo, liT, VI,
. l·•ed · trans·, erlro cleaa.
Pb, . . . .
S+lte

- The 61ver•
l')lows ·OIIheGalllpolisDally1)"1bw'oe on March 17, 1919 ted :the
' folloiJI~ story abool Captain BIJ.
ly Bryant, of showboat lame, aid
the Valley Belle:
The Valley Belle was sold Saturdayit Pittsburgh 10 Bill: Bry&amp;It d! Hemerson ror a reported price' of $8,000. The Belle
was built at Msrletta by Knox In
1881. She has been rebuilt sevoral tlines. She first ran "' the
Muskln8um River from Msrletta
to Beverly and had lite Horry D.
Knox as an q,posltion boo~ The
V8Uey BeJle ran for several
"Nothing could r.ve been farther fran the truth.
years in the Marietta, Ravens-Plumbing &amp; Heating
"S~r may not have made thellttlenotationsall good -'&lt;ers wood alxl Middleport trade. She
8n1111Dfr PlamiiiiJ a lleoUag use, at times, or even have thought too much ol what specltlCilly be also was in the Charleston · ..
was goizw to say.
Montgolnery trade in the Kanaw·
!01 Fori A~.
Phone HI-IG'I
"But, from the esemplary ll!e he's led, both on aid orr the Reid ha River aid as of Jato has
ot athletics, be was prepared - it just kept rolling out. AR:! what 1 been used as a towboat ll! theM~
SjiOech.
no~ela River. She never had
.. 'Spoi'ts have a great part to play in our world, • he exhorted. , an accident that we heard of.
STANDARD · PLUMBING a
"•It's our only salvation, today, in fact. If we lose what we
Contlnulng a da,y-by-&lt;lay covBEATING, !15 'l'lllrtl Av...... learn trom sports, we l01e everything,' he told the young athletea.. erage
of 50 years ago on the riv44UIU.
._
•• 'If there is one place we have dlscipllne,' he contllued. 'it's
in sports. It's where one gives oneself up fOI' the team.'
"Here he contrasted the recent ~heaval at the Urdversit)' of

tre

T·OTATOES, Phone · MJ-2154
Clarence. Pn&gt;IIIU, Porllud.
. , •
lloli-Ue

m.

I

·SPRING

• • tro

BUDGET . PRili lundlunt t11
our lhitd llooi' bucltlel itltop.
Baker Furnlllft. IOddlepart.
Olllo.
INre
•

~AI&lt;ll

For The Fastest

Se~ice DAY

NEEDS

From tho Larao• TruCk ·
Bulle•r R!tdlotor To 'l'lil
:malleat H - Con. · ·

BLAEnN&amp;IS'
PH, ii9W1 t3

l'olnta&gt;¥

Complete Front-End
and Brake S•vice

BLAETTNAR'S
IN

c.~

Cl!UCK'S Caah and CaiT)' 'IV
SerYlce, .... up Ill onMalf
on repairs, ~ !hom In llld
oave, Churk's 'IV, Ill Butternul Ave., Po11Mf111. J-SS.tro

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

~~

Crill lit . . .
_,_;____ I I, ~ ••

CUJn'JSI ~Tl'LB ~
Senlce. Pbooe Parker IIIII Pomeroy til' 1117.asl ClDtJI. AIR OOND!TIONJNiJ Rerrltf•
ville Clll llallaa. ,.,. . . llloe .. ..... Joclt.. ~- .
erai!On, Niw lfaftll. li.ie

......

4ttro

•'

RADIO IDd Tv ,....,, tiaaie '
ealll, .... .......... Jmhlled, .

Jtm.
'. .

~

Rarrlttill, \~Jl.l.4fc
\

r ,·.•'&gt;

''

'

or

NIGHT .•• CALL
RAWLINGS SERVICE
DAY 992·2151
NIGHT 992-7324
R.

II.

RAWLINGS

SOHS

MIDDLEPORT, 0111!)

~

�I;

They are Ylolelib' Clllliosed to
me and Gary 1!olrw togO!her be- QUICK QUIZ
cause they IIY older 1110'1 ool,y
. Q-Whol II lht origin of
haw ooe thing oo their mlndo. lije """"' Dennil?
·
The truth Is just the -•ite.
A-The name is a form of
It Is the yourwer boys that aet D!Dnyslus, name of the
trelh, and I know traD •&gt;POri· Greek loci of WIDe.
once!
How can I get my J&gt;Qrenia to
COIAJMBUS (UPO-ls it too
Q-l)Oca the oltJrfish hove
aee tile truth? - PLEASE HELP
early
to 11111 thlnldng about the
tooth?
Door P.H.:
1970 ellllpOiano?
A-No.
The clrl you pour out your
Ylq' ool,y hq&gt;e Is Gary himJolm J. Gftupn, the Cflldn.
problems to and she makes you self. If he'll come to YOUJ;' houa:e,
natl
lrllhman - open! a year
forget them by te!Urw yoo hers. talk to ywr folks, show tbeJn
IUIIUCcessluUy
running for the
The true blue gal yoo lind out }le Isn't Sj)routlng homund their
,.Bull bo,yn - a constart liar, Senate In 1968, thinks so.
later made everyone dance with lorwel Is sale with him, they may
"Biddy'' - a crabb.Y per~
IDs name hao been drq)ped
you.
change their mints.
&lt;Note from H: Tbat's so old It's arwnd tho llatebouse rather
The girl you tell when you
Sqme parents react to "alder -llllln.)
etten as a candidate tor aovergain a size in the right place men" the way other adults react
"Soul man" - a person in the nor next year.
- or even in the wrong.
to Beatie haircuts. They never groove.
"Whatever t h e speculation
The one who tells you off lool&lt; beyond the obviOUB to the
11
Delbertn or "DurCUs" - a be, l have absolutely no
when you need it.
real guy underneath. Pit,yf dlngo41~illg. - TOll
plano
of any kind to be a canShe's the girl whose boose H.
FOR YOUR COPY OF GOV- didate lor omce In Ohio on the
you sleep over in more than Dear Helen:
ERNMENTESE PROVERBS AND lorootoabie future," he told
vice-versa.
Here are some more slang THE ANSWERS, SEND ASTAMP- UPL
She's the kid who acts sweet words:
ED, SELF-ADDRESSED ENVEBut, Wednesdo,y lllOJ1l!n&amp; the
to your brothers when they're
uA"- a pretty girl
LOPE TO HELEN BOTTEL, llate Demoorauc Executive Dlreally brats.
"Ftmk,y"- good -music,
CARE OF THIS NEWSPAPER. reetor Eugene P. O'Grady Ia.
She's the one you scrimp and
save to buy a nice present, am
....•.... .·'·
.•.
yru don't care what it coats.
She's the one you feel lost
without when she goes on va-

Gilligan lwlds to rw planning

Ohio. • •
Politics·

YOUTH ,ISKED
ITt
This column Is for young people, their problems ar.l pleas-

ures, their troubles and fun. As
with the rest of Helen Help Us I,
it welcomes laughs but won't
dOOge a serious question with a

brustM&gt;Ct.
Send your teenage questions
to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care
of Helen Help US! this newspa..

per.
O~ E MORE FOR
THF. COLLECTION

Dear Helen:

'I

I would like to add something
to yoor "What is A" collection:
WHAT IS A BEST FRIEND
A best friend is:
The one you exchange rings

and clothes and books alii things
with.

The one and only person you

let know who you secretly_like
because you know she'd never
tell.
The one who fixes you Iii with
the cutest boy when you're prett)' sure he'd rather go with her.

On ~is part for 1970 campaign
IUed a newa release which had
a hint of a campalp trill biJ.

Unlverslq, · porllcipollng as a GUII!IID llid.

loll.,. ot tho KOIIIIOCIY lnatltirte

10011 In ll
of Government.
'On 1be llold Apin'
The rumor mill .r....d the
"John J • .GUII.Pn, the Demo- otatebouH baa linked GIUipn
era! devoted almost a solid with roUrod cOl. Jolm Glom aa
year compilgnlng across Ohio com[lOIJIII eolloaaues next year.
lor the U.S. Senate In 1968, Ia
Gloom baa expressed IliON
spending llmost as much lime
m the road again thi8 year," than a .P&amp;IIinl laterest Ill Ohio
poi!Uco In recent 1eora, lnd
the story said.
llid reeenll,f he was conaldor"11d• )'ear, Ida perscm.l ap. illg tiJierlng the 1970 Demoent..
pearaneel!l ad IP88Chea, man,y lc senatorlalJrlmery,
of them at eolleJIII and unJver.
Dealos Knowing
altte~, ve taldnl him to a num.
GIUifllll d laclal med 11111
ber of .....,...,.,.. outoldo knowlod&amp;e o1 Glom's rumlng
Ohio,.. it added.
or the poalll&gt;le ~
NOll! monJII, GIU!pn wiU
••1 baventt the haziest notion
of
Wbal bll ~ llliabt be,"
spend all&lt; - · at Harvard

Just tho other day, GIUIDn
said he loll be would 1101 cbal1 - Son. Slal6on II. y .....
baa said ba would "'" for
.r Mleelfonlnl970.

~rs
•
t Ill

.. , can't concelv• nB1iJna
SleYe Y011111 If he
dloooea to nm," GW!pn ald.
''1111 voting reoord bao boon

aplnsl

......•

ComlDg from the -

i,

Wbe

dWien!IOd Ohlo'o moot fql'!lar
vole SOller In many )'elra and

11·

long • lime - - Fraak .,J.
Lauodle In last fear's prllllllr)l
aal _ , GUIJpn•o reluctaaco
to onter the race apln I80IIted
real.

tasti'.~
''Ia tbe cruh - . ""·'-' '
I right arm lnd ~
' the face; D....,r Haven, w. VL,
~~·
oauldor; 91lrley . . . - .. ,
...
cut ... loll lei; wu..
. '
.,.... New lllvon, ,...
:1ma1 ln)Jrloo, lnd 111D
. !8, i'Omel'QJ, fac:llllllc• Burpso, Rua..U IIIII
were Ill aclmlu.d.
berllr'l . - a l l,
I end, top, loll lido IIIII
!e of BuoseU'a ear _ .

Sele't Your New Easter Outfit At Elberfelds In Pomeroy

cation.
She's the greatest girl in the

Weather

Now .You Know

···

world, and you'll remember her :; '
all your llfe as !oor best school
pal - J. C.

illll!l: .,

ill..._

SHOP WEEKDAYS 9:30 A.M. TO 5 P....fRIDAYS AND SATURDAYS 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M.

Dear Helen:

I'm writi~ to answer "Shut
Out.'' You could say I'm that
11
J)recious little teenage girl"
thing bad happens.
(be describes) whose mother
The one everybody campll- won't let her date an "older
ments on her looks andpersonal- man."
ity, but she's modest about it.
Everything "9lut Out" said il!l
E\'en when she goes out with true, My boy friend is an older
more boys and gets more baby· guy (almost 20) am he has a lot
sitting jobs than you, it doesn't more manners and respect for
matter - most of the time. me than the fellows of 16 and
The kid who gets mad at you 17. But try to tell that to my
when you get jealous of . her.• o~e~..protective Mama and Papa!
The one you cry to when you
and your guy break up or any ..

Coats For The
Little Tots Easter

Dresses
For The
Easter
;Parade

'•

.·.

VISIT OUR 1ST FLOOR ACCESSORY DEPARTMENT

Choose from OW' outstancJ..

for your Spring Handbags, Gloves, Scarfs, Jewelry
and Hosiery. We've just received a big shipment of

ing

Jaclyn Handbags in calf and potent, including white

patent.

:·.

Select the Glensder Scarf just right for your new
Spring outfit. Add a touch of distinction from our
new selection of rings with real stones by Coro.

Hemlines demand that your hosiery style and colors
be up to date. Choose from Berkshir•, Hanes, Kayser
and Flatlc:nit, for smooth neat appearing fit and de-pendable weor in Stockings ond Panty Hose.

In Our Town-

gro141

dresses -

or ·

Dress her up fllr
Easter In one or
our coat and
bonnet sets.
Many styles to
choose from In
soft pastels and
navys.

·Ev'ERY'eOCX{

Olir ro .

lHE MOVND!

. ..... . - .

Just right for
Beautitul

dresses and 2 pc, suits in

.

Dresses
Styled
Espe.dally
With
Her
In ind

washable knits- soft whip
cream - jerseys - votles

- Hne118. Hundreds or selected dresses inthlsgrffiC)
that are sure to please you

- Choose from junior pe--

GALLIPO!JS- The !kent stamp hmorirw the Apol]o8 mlssloo
wiJl be placed on sale May 5, 1969, at Houston, Texas.
The next day, May 6, 1969, lt will go on sale at the Gallipolis
Post Office, said Postmaster E. E. caldwen.

tites - regular jublbra misses sizes - halt sizes
and extra sizes.

Leooord Buckley ci the Bureau
of ErwraW&gt;.&lt;r and Printlrw based

·.:t.:

his design on a photograph Slflplled by the National Aerorautlcs

am

~ce

.

Admlm.tratlon In

which the moon, in the foregrowxl
of the stamp, is 1111&gt;roximately
780 ldlcxneters !ram the ..,.cecrall To the top ol the stamp Is
half the earth, the rest in dark..
• ness, With the sunset tennlnator

S

ra ci tbe lherill' I dol lloo lnv'llll.,... ...
,._.eblele mllbop 8lndQ'
a.m. 011 Route 1t3, ....,.
weot of the juactloiJ Ill
;84 and 143.
llid a car drivODbJ
roy Wolah·, 19, Rl. f,
', ran otf the loll aide
-.1 and turned antt l[IOrenll,f fell ••1•• 1965 model auto IOd. He llllrerecl a IM..er the rl&amp;bt OJ't. No
baYO been U 1111
. either ...- .

'

Unit Has

yWeekend
·~· -·•or.

ll)lll.ll'td.::,
·
rpncy ulllt ·
·
WO!!IIBni ~ .She .)MI\~

~

.. m. SUnla,y the oqiM
the Charles Burdolla
Grant St. He had lloo

.... wao 1101 hoollltalls• i ..... Monday the squad

lod w the Joe NaPlu
Route 325 fr&lt;lm """"'

lei, who bad becomo W,
IOV8d to a hoiiJIIlll bJ
ear before the IQIId'l
2 a.m. Monday the ualt
he WOmer HallblU reD-

bisecting Africa.

A p 0 LL0

-·

a..

women's

11\Y occasion -

-'

L !I)TaCIII8 _ , _ . .
111 were al10 aunmc z.d

will Want to dlOOH HV·

·'

The words "In the Begi~
God" were spokea. by a member
ol the crew ol ~· 8 spacecrall
when he read from the book ol
Genesis during the course of the

• Little Kypr

erai when you see them.

ored an _...nt backiJ&gt;.
• was taken to the Hal,cal Center by the IJIIIIIIL

Dreaay dresaes - 2 m:1 3
.Piece suits -

historic fill#&gt;t orbiUng the moon.
SIX CUITI• UNITID ST.A"TU
Thill reading, While not I part Of
!light plan, bas closely become
associated with the fii81rt In the
THE APOLLO STAMP
public mlr.d.
The slaiJII) will be Issued in paDes ol SO, with an initial printing
of 150,000,000 The moon ia gray, outer &amp;pace la a deep blue alii the
world is blue and white.
Collectors desiring first day cancellations· may send addressed
envel~s, together with remittance to cover the coat of the atamps
to be affixed, to the Postmaster, Houston, Teus, 77002. The enveJ.
ope to the Postmaster should be eo:loraed "First Day Covers Scent Apollo Stamp." Requests must be I'OIItmarked oo later than
May 5, 1969.

-

4-year-old Joe Hallhlll

dre8a lnd

RROWlY IUGHER
YORK (UPI) - T b t
_,... nar.-l,y 11111&gt;oderate trading 011 the
rk SIDck Exchaup to-

c•t enoembleo, Slyleo to

wear thJ'OUib Elster am
summer - All aizea tram

.

I.

tots to teeJis - ant cbub-

Beautiful Blouses

To Compliment

,

by slzeo Slh to 14'h •

Yoll' Easter Suit!
.,

.

~

... . .

'

BolutiM dreny ocyles and t&amp;Uored blw101 - Whites and
peatelo - lace trim - Regular and E - Size.o.

. .,. ,.•.

·' '

~.-

'

'

\

'

~

·

LOCAL TEMPS

•

."/:&lt;

~··

, '

'

, ' , • ' ' r·

' '' "

lll&gt;erature In !'DIIIorO.Y'a
, buolneoo dlllrlcl at
m. today was 541 c1e.
der onrcast aldeL

OPENING OF BASEBALL SEASON Is just arotJIIi the corner

mw that spring bas olftclally arrll'ed. I think I'D stick ll'lth the eo.
Jumbus Jets again this year. One reaSOilis ttat the trip home after
a game won't be as long aa cCilling back from Clnclnnatl
There'll be a lot of new faces in Jet ataditun this year inclLJd..

IT WON1 BE LONG. ...
until we' II be ha'llll our annual shiPIIent and

lng John Clapp, generalllliQiger, who l'el&gt;laced Harold COOper, am
Don Hook. manager, who took over for Johnny Pesky.
Alxther fellow who won't be around ta blg Dave Roberts (18-5),
the boy from GaUipolis, who's with the r:ew e~PBnalon club, the San
Diego Padres. Best wishes to Dave withhlaaew club. Hope he makes
the grade. It couldn't hupen to a nicer guy.
Several of last year's Jets are IC) with the m«lther club, Ute
Pittsliurgh Pirates. Sm!e ol them •'-!' aa1 others - be back.
With the Pirates now are outflelden Elvio Jim.ioez and Al Oliver,
infielders, Richie Hebner, third base, an;l catchers Chris Camiz..
zaro and Manny Sanqt.d.llen, Roberts' old t.Uery mate. Pitchers with
the Pirates include Jl.m Shelleriech, the come•ck kld, aDd my old
Crien::l, Pete Ramos, the boy from Cuba, who lUtes to eat better than

:·

:·

Shop Elberfelds Ready To Wear Department for your new
Easter Coat - Beautiful atylln&amp; in tweeds, blaketweaves,
llannels, herringbone and ·laml.-ted Jersey- Your eholce

CONGRATULATIONS TO 1100art Wnaon, Jr., on his line ediLorial Uda past week on the ewnta at Rio Grande College. It waa one
of those nne pieces of work that makes you say, "Gee, I wish I had
written U.t." And, I would have, too, excel)t that Hobart is the edt..
tor, and, weJI, editorial&amp; are lor edUors, ami vice versa.
··
I am 100 per oent behind Dr. Alphus R. Christensen, the Rio
Grande College president, in tus decisions. During Dr. Olriste• .::
aen's tenure ·as president, Rio GraJXIe COllege has made more
atrklea b'wud tban duriM
the
rlod I ~ oil ' hi
The -·-·nln-u- ol
••
theany
~~A~II
.....n.~.:.a ~~ .• olotoeydis-.
IIRUUJ ..._. ...
,.._II"
. _ - _, t~IU.
lelldaa: •tude*- Dr. ChrltteDIIft It ill e...... ~ M.s to aaswer to

:.;~~~=~~~::r:1~:

of junior petite sizes - regular Juniors - mlaaea ancl halt
sizes - Just the coat you wUI need tor the Eaater Parade.

I

~oo

ever way

Sw"''" •• ·

Appllan~~ ·~·· .,..._.,., toat~, irona, p~rol•••
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ELBERFELDS ARE HEADQUARTERS FOR
"WHITE SWAH" UNIFORMS
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quartoro for Hoover Applioncoo - Waohon/Drr••
lo ..,; furnllvre dopa"""'"' - lloavor
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Yau never iaw such a beauUful
aelectlm of lillie tot dre1001,
onsembloo am paJW.y dreiiOI Juot the pretlloot lltllo dreaoes

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1 umentand the Jeto' AprU 18 opener wlth Rochester Is already a seUout, Maybe I can wa_.e a press pass Cor that one.

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Watch fer ow ad In this PIPfr.

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