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..
10 - The O.il)' Sentinel, Pomenzy.Mlddltport, 0., Fttdu, A&amp;&gt;rll 4. 196t

.

'· 'Ne~ Station Sets Grand Opening
(~ picture on -

4)

·

o1 Lo&lt;UBI and Beech Sta., In Va.
A new Ashland on co. servIll obsemmee Gl the srand·...
Ice statloo wUI observe Its grand Middleport.
awoer aocl operatDr ol the oiling from 7 a.m. to 1Q p.m.
opening ,lpril 10, 11 and 12.
aaeb da,y, children vialtlnil lilt
The new station, constructed senrice center ll Frank Her- station wUI be given boll..a
1n- a cmtemporary cedar shakes ald, Jr., Middleport. Employea and lolllpopa. Ladlea wiD bedesign is located at the coroer Include Frank Herald, Sr., Cl)'de sented miniature Sompler box.Triplett, Robert ¥anley, Mike
ol candy,
Roush aoc1 RiellY Triplett.
111 addition, 20 door prlzea will
The owner-operator was em.
be
awarded Including a (iDrtabl•
ploye&lt;l at lhe Kaleer Alumlnun
televlalon
set. Tliere Is no Pur•
Corp., at Ravenswood six year&amp;
chase
required
to register for
before taking over QDeratlon of
the new business. He." his wife these prizes.
The station will also be decor·
and three children reside at S84
ated
lor the oeeaalon, whim beEASTER
Lincoln st. In Middleport. HerThls wonderous Easter morning a1d is formerly of Logan, W, gins~ Thuraday.
lias dawne&lt;l My Child lor Thee,
The ever Blessed Savior
-.-..--m&gt;.-~».'%-'&lt;i&lt;From sin has set you free.
PT, PLEASANT - T, R.
Friar,
plant manager, stated
Die~
The love or God came down to
that representatives or stauf..
Clearmont P. Harris, 61, Rt.
to earth
fer Chemical Co., and Local
1
Ree&lt;lsville, died unexpectedIn the person of Hi&amp; Son;
859, United Rubber Workers,
Broken bread He gave to men ~ Thursday morning at the Kai- met Thursday afternoon at the
ser Aluminum plant at RavensThat all men might be one.
Pleasani Point Resort to con·
wood.
tinue contract negotiations. No
The son of the late John W.
uTake up your cross," He said
and Arma Cline llarri s, he was settlement was reached by
to them,
born in Parkersburg and attend- either party.
14 Then come and follow me;
The meetilll: was adjourned,
It was for yoo that I have died «! lhe Joppa Uniied Methodist subject to turther call by comChurch. He was a member of
On the Cross or Calvary.
Labor Local No. !085 of Park- missioner Howard Steele, federal mediator aOO concilation
••thi s is the pri ce, that I have ersburg. Mr. Harris worked in service representative.
the coostruction business for the

C. P. Harris

Thursday

I gave

M.Y

past 29 years in thi s area.

all in love;

So. day by da,y, come follow me
To that bright home above."

He is survived by his wife,
Opal Barr Harris; four daugh-

Anonymous

ters, Mrs. David (Betty) Hamiltm, Mansfield ; Mrs. LucUle

M£1GS THEATRE
TONIGHT THRU TUESDAY
April 4 - 8

THE BOSTON STRANGLER
(Tectmicolor)
tony c urtis - Henry Forlla

COLORC AR TOO~S,
"f'A'O Fared Wolr
Wha1 on Earth
SHOW STARTS i P . ~l

Fri., s.t. &amp; Sun.,
April 4·5·6
-IIAIUU

Poe!, North Highland, Calif.;
Mrs. Herman (Margaret) Gross..
nickle, ReedsvUle, and Mrs. Harland (i\Ylvla) Webb, Mansfield;
two sons, Claremont Harris, Jr.,
and Larry Harris, both of Reeda.-

ville; two brothers, Frank,
Greenville, Texas, and Howard,
of Parkersburg; 17 grandchilchildren; two great - grandchildren, and several nieces a n d
nephews. He was preceded in
dealh by a sister and two brolhers.
Funeral service will be held
saturday at 2 p.m. at the Joppa
United Methodist Church with the
Rev . Freeland Norris officiating, assisted by the Rev. carl
GllUan. Burial will be In lhe
Eden Cemetery, Friends may
call at the White Funeral Home
in Coolville all)'time, The body
will lie in state at the church
one hour prior to services.

Walter Warren

Killed in Car

~~if.:~~

VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Admissions - LucWe Lam ..
bert, Rutland.
Discharges - Ernest Stewart,
Flossie Hysell, Alma Alle,y.
CONFESSED TO MURDER
!JMA, Peru (UP0 - Lima
police said today a 21)..year-old
houseboy had confessed that he
raped, beat aOO strangled Ivette
Arderson, the 2~year~ld soclalite daughter of a United Nations
official as she stepped rude from
her sh€Mer

Thursda~'

night.

CRUDE PRICE UP
CLEVELAND (UPO - Sohio
Petroleum Co. announced an Increase in tlle prlce of crude oil
in Olinois, lndiam and Kertucky
of five cents per barrel, affect~
ing 43,000 barrels per day.

DIES IN TRUCK
LODI, Ohio (UPO - Dale BryLOCAL TEMPS
ant, 44, Brunswick, was kUled
The temperature in Pomeroy's Thursday when his pickup truek
downtown business district at struck a guard rail on Ohio 421
11:05 a.m. today was 66 degrees near here and overturned.
uOOer sunny skies.

_...,._

J.;a;;&amp;l «....,_ AwML , ,....
,...., 1 us+·' ,,J W"--- --

Christian pilgrims from the
United States and many other
nations commemorated with
solemnity this Good Friday,
marking the day on which
Christ died by crudfixion
roughly 2,000 years ago.
Scores of the faithful moved
slowly along the Via Dolorosa,
or Way of Sorrows, stopping at
each of the 14 stations or the
cross al'li finally arri 'ling at the
Church of the Holy Sepulchre.
The church marks the slt.e
where Jesus was believed
entombed, and from which
scripture proclaims he arose
three days later.
The church Is in the old city
of Jerusalem, as Is the Wallir~
Wall, in Arab haOO.s untillsrael
occupied Eastern Jerusalem in
the Middle East war two years

i1 GIFTS
OF
Remembrance
For
: EASTER

I

Best friend a taxpayer has !

I

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lntpirotionaiBoolc.s
Pursel, Jewelry

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It's one of our checks that you've made payable to the Internal Revenue Service for
your '68 taxes. Why? Because when we return it to you, cancelled, It automatically
becomes your undeniable easy-to-find
proof of payment ... for years to come.
Another advantage of having a checking
account at this Full Service bankl

I MIDDLEPORT

I'

"'FLOWER TOWN ~ located In the former -tWboleoale CO. liodldiJV II lilt of NCII'Ih
5ec:ond aad Rullard
In Middleport, wenod Ita doors to the pd&gt;Ue at noon Thuradly. The ,_
bualneaa leo!Una artlflelal and uve noweraaed glassware. Pl.etured are several customers eheokI~W out their purchases at lhe sales counter.

S:.,,

Servine Meies County for
over 97 years
.
• • Federal Resa-ve System
.'!''

~Member Federal Deposit Insurance CorporoHon
, All Aocounts Insured Up To $15,000.00

FRIDAY NIGHTS 5TO 7 PM

lnveltlgated a minor two ear eolllo!on at 12:25 p.til. Friday on state St.,
In front ol the Gallla County Dlstrlet u.
bl'tll7. Pollee aald Gall J. Russell, 51,
Rt. 1 Gallipolis, headed IIOUtheast, polled
up one ear length ahead Gl a parked ear
driven by Hszel L. Holley, 40, Rt. 1 North·
up, who wss preparing to leave the park.
In&amp; space.
When Mrs. Holley pulled out Into the
line ol trame, according to pollee, her car
struck the rear bumper at lhe RuseeU
Ctll'. There wai minor damaBI! to the Holl«Y ear. No ooe waa illjnoed and no eharae
Pollee eltsd Nancy L, Leaoe, 17, ol 24
EYIDB Hta., to Gallla C&lt;&gt;uncy Juvenile COort

on a eharae of faUure to yield the right
Gl ...., Iller an aecldant at 12:25 p.m. Fri.
da.y . at the American Wash &amp; FU~ Second
and Pine.
omcers sold Mia• Lease was preparIng to leave the ;.utomaUe ear wash room
and let her ear ron torward. The Lease
Ctll' struck a patalng ear driven by Ethel
J!!witt, 48, Rt. 2 Bidwell. There was minor damage to - vehlelea. No one wao In·

menu meant for everyone's taste.

•

• Open Every Evenint Except Sunday •
• Danclne to Ll;e lluslc Weekends._•
• Air Conditioned •

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for

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solid-state
dependability, and
fast. at· home service
the differ·

..caYr~ety iUntcl ~
,
, T~ Ynnr "--f•.-,.. Chlnrenllt

•.

·

All82 ch•nnel uHF; VHf

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tasy.
_
However; repairs on a .Ouasa~
· 5hOU ldbe f ew.
· · lt'saii•AI''"
ltlte• '
o1tV ru·
IKC81)1 for the rectifier aflil .pic:'

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on •arrival ot !Ill 'Pl. 1'111- Fire lit· ,.-~ Ten pr.man and lJ!II! ~ a..
' mall reDIIbled il.iht Ml IDr .. hour lit-

e

.······························································~.·

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'. ter·arrlvliemlllt IMIIill'.

MIDDLEPORT - The only thing left to
do lhll m0111ing before launch ol the 1969
MldciliJIOrt-Pomeroy 11otary Club Easter
Ea !bit lo to Jill Cllt the ego,
Rotarian• lllld YOiuntser
of Midclleport will meet at 12:80 p.m. loda.Y at
tile llltllloijlal ~· to P!'r!Otm Iiiii task
ailtl bncit !Minoelvaa tar an Ollpe~
IOQ 10 600 eldldren' Gl elomentary ·..hool
qa - moD:r escorted by pa.renta - who
will find tiS btlsf1tl1 &lt;olored "ega" 1n
willeh wiU ba DOtal tslllng the finders
- IhQ' mt,y obtain ea!lll or other prlz.
••• '!be liP will be 11!1111&lt; material.
Rtpt' time Ia 2 p.m. .fi'eeedlng It"-&gt;'
a fflr.
toddl•~• l!IU ~11111111: iif.
leNIIIP In
!lllfllluMo 7 .•
• Cf4rl Q:miQ-

nrem•

"'"' nn. ·~eorclllil fl) ~ .. 111!11 aut

•

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pap

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l'f!la- ~

e
, ~I e
-~-

Put OUt Fare

PLEASANt' - · l'lllolblo ~ ..._,
~ wat avoided ftlda.Y lllilbt o11out
8!1$ . p.m. by the qulek aetloii Gl Cirelik.
er . RaJ Carper who uled a llrden hoM to
p« aut a lin tilat brake aut at lilt Pl.

••

,--------~W· ERNE.R ·.RADIO,. &amp;1Y.--~----~---,
IN. ~o AVE. · ·----~~-~-----~~~1_~-----~- .. --~!!l~:~!l!!•_o.J
...

•

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SERVICES ANNOUNCED
PI'. PLEASANt' - Semeeo for Wal.
ter Chtll'les Wtll'ren, who waa killed In an
automobile ti11&lt;ldent Thur...., nigh~ wUI
be held at 2 p.m. !blda.Y at the Mobr.sts.
vena Funeral Home with the Rev. Norville
Wblts aGiolatlnil, Burial wUI be In &amp;m.
crest Cemetery.
"

,lfl'.

•

tr• . o .. r•n~Hriot••IIGuflttneutrantee

oflO. dt!Wi,Y of oif,;

"-'
·~.; ·

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.l'll' ~•!e'•· L•bOr•nd transportnttUnell·
ul'd nUilled to MOKIIOIIII within ten

~O
,

•
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your · ... ,...._,. T•lltt...., All Prrtt
rh•t '" Drlilf\111 Owtltf lut~ftnlH COvtlf1 frH til·
·
cttat~~t.or Qpjk of ,.;tn pt'Ovef't delec·
.
· t~ln notfT'IIII.u_,, Aftn"'fdtnrou,e. tetl·

•
• •

';;,

1

• Coblnot atylo by Qroql
• Eoay flM tl!nlng with alight.
WKin It iooa out. l!lcturt ia

e

!:

~~~~-·
vict~,imllketu~.arednigned:
•
to work whh9ut burning theme·
•
selves oui. Sp you get years of· ·•
dependable lelViC~.
:

'"'·""'"*
diago~tly; 285aq •.In.l

POMEROY - Speelallsta from the ohio
Department or Slats Peraomel will visit
two area high schools this spring to slve
clerical tssts to Interested sonlora.
Testa wUI be given tor elerk-atenographer
and elerk-l;yplst poaiUons. Students who pau
the elvU service teats will be plac:ed on eUJ!Ihlllty lists which ean be used by state or
county _,cles lor employment Jllrposes

GALLIPOLIS -

··i•.•

• 23-in. plctura

Teams to Schools

The apeclallsto will visit Meigs High
School In Middleport ... April 10 and Gallis AeadeJJIJ In Gallipolis on April 30,

The !lalllpolls Kiwanis
Egg mart will
alii -....r In lilt Public lQI&amp;re, begin.... at 1:30 thla afternoon.
':tone Brown, chairman, aald the hunt
Wlil be conclucled In two aae dlvialono
.:.!: olx and under, and alx and over. All
ojty and .....,cy cldltlren are ellllble to
~lpata. IPacla1 prlzea wUI be pr..
H!!ted 111 s2 wtmera.

, ;.,

'i.-;1..111•· belllhl~~~t nr~ w&amp;• ~ by ·ian; ,
• . . .uoj .. lmitlll!kiil ••. lllil*. '

to 60 aooth. Clear and &lt;001
tJW In 30a or low 40a Moada,y

(I •

Ui

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:..;

Gallipolis-Point Pleuant

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,;: ' .
1: (-..

.IliaD.

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Nearly 2,000 tons of materials are stored at the construction site to be used by
AUie&lt;l Structural steel Co., of Hammond,
Ind., which will erect the superstructure,
Dorsey said.
West Virginia and Ohio hlgbwa,y depart.
menta, showing unusual cooperation early
In 1968 !oUowlng collapse ol lhe Silver
Bridge, set late this year as Ule deadline
lor -"'ng of the new bridge that will cmnect Heoderson, W, Va. wilh Ohio about a
half-mile sooth of lhe old bridge site.
Completion date of the bridge has not been
estabUshed, specifically, however.
Last winter a coffer dam for pler work
coUapoed during a season ol hlsh water,
delll)'ing for a time work on It A 8lrll&lt;e
by trade unionists about the same Ume
eause&lt;l additional delay.
There have been sugpstl.ons at early

Is Speaker

Auto Skids into Ditch
Pr. PLEASANT - The Mason Coon\Y
Sherl!f'a Department reported lnvest!gatioo
of an aeelllent at 6:30 a.m. saturday seven
mUes sooth Gl the elt.Y 011 State Route 17,
near the John Oshel !arm.
Earlen Jeffers, 45, Columl:lls, lost control ol his car which skidded off the road
Into a ditch. Damage was eatlmaled at
$40(1 .

thia~er.

~· third 11111111 Eatiler

d cooler Sunda,y. High 40 to

.,J .; J C)

Lewis Davis

State Will Send

-~filed.

•

m1ni

0

POINT PLEASANT, W, Va. (IJP0 - Constractlon or a rour.J.ane bridge over the
Ohlo Rber at nearby Henderson, to replace
the Silver Bridge, is progressing l'&amp;pidly,
the state Road COmmission said saturday.
The Silver Bridge collapsed on Dec~ 15,
1967, killing 46 per5011&amp;,
John T, (Jack) Dorsey, area engineer
for the SRC, said recent ideal weather
conditions have aided in construction work
on the bridge.
Dorsey said he expects the pier on the
West VIrginia side o! the river to be oomple\ed by lhe middle of next month. The
pl.er on the Ohio side is expected to be
completed by JUne.
t::onatruetlon o! the land piers on· sides Is finlshe&lt;l while work oo lhe two
approaches to the $13 mlllloo spao Is
nearing completion.

tsr Sea11011 11m a day early at a Satur.
day aftsrtloon hunt at the Public use
Faclllty, OVer 650 eggs and 320 other
eancly treats were made available for
tile event that drew several hundred
youngtltsrs. Top prize was a $5 biU
while numerous other cash and gift
awards, Including larae baskets at candy, were presented. The pre-schoolers
above seem to be trying to determine
where to search next. wlrlle In the
picture at rlgh~ Mayor Da.vton Ra,ynes
cheekl the eggs found by Mary MulUna. Town Recorder L&lt;ttle Jenks, who
pla,ye&lt;l a big role In organizing I h e
even~ distributed the prizes.

~Uee

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PRICE TEN CENTS

od Weather Favoring
Rapid Bridge Progress

_ .....RQNl'!Nii BOOS· - ,.. ·~ til
Mi.aon illrollih age 12 OI\IOYed lbe Eas-

tox!Cited.

:

snap-in

~.

SlJNDA Y, APRIL 6. 1969

'

· Behind the two ~ eara, Henry lloaa,
,7, of 716 Third Ave., failed to stq&gt; aoc1 hill
eer struek the back o1 tho Sowards ear
forcing It Into' tile back Gl ~111tier1 Vfble,.
le. Thera was moderats damage to tlie Saun.
dlra ear and heavy to the Clther two veblclei.
Pllllee died Jless to Gallipolis !4mlclpal COorl 011 a eharga ol driving wlrlle ln-

Weather

t-')

• {.)
·-! ~: .

THREE SECTIONS

Pomeroy-Middleport

dina!.

by NIOI OROLA-®

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e

VOL. IV NO.' 10

o
Ul
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28 PAGES

Jured.

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tion.

tmts

Lord B,yron eald, ''Fome Ia

. Pllllee aald Mlas Davio hod stopped behind another ear driven by c. Donovan
~rs, 30, Rt. 1 (la!Upolls, both &lt;111'1
itopped, headed norlheeat, at the traffic

linery 1 skirt&amp; ... on the
Zrd floor. And lingerie,
harrJtass, scarfs, hosiery, tourw:latlon garments, gloves ••• on the
lit door.

I

We invire you to sample our ercelle~t cuisine
fealuring steaks, chops, seafoods, chicken, ~~~~~
dinners (or the entire family. Plus a sandWICh

-

treated.

sweaters, blouses, mtl-

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3~&gt;4-6682

ROY

i:n ad

followers were telli~W a deliberate lie when lhey 511Id He had
been raised from death by an
act of God. And &amp;1\Y such Ideo
contradicts all that we know
about human rBture..
As New Testament historian
Daniel P. Fuller has pointed
out, the Disciples "preached the
risen Jesus at the risk of their
lives" and umen do not risk
their Jives for what they knoW
to be a fraud. •'
Quite Clear
It is quite clear In the Gospels
that the Disciples them11 •

I ..-&lt;

GALLIPOLIS - One person wss lnJur.
In a three car rear end eolllslon at
• :26 p.m. Frlda,y on Second Ave., below
Locust St., aeeordlng fD elty pollee.
' PatriciA M. Sowards, 20, COlumbus, owner. and passenger In I ear driven by Rosalea Davis, 18, Crown Clt.Y, suffered a whip.
lAsh neck iriJury but was not lmmedlatell'

You'll find excellent selections lor everything
you need to be properly
attired this Esoter, .. ,
coats, suits, dresses,

•

WELLSTOM, OHIO

"!' .

never wapld }aw bi.Hd ~
vlnced by the 011\11)' TCIIItb
alone that Jeausl..t r - to
lite. '!'hey belle* lri ai.
ResurrecUon only becailae the7
saw Jesus and lalkod wilh Hila,
not once, but on 1nulneroua
oeeaslons following llta!lealh..
The oldest wrlttsn recwd f1l
Jesus appearance to His Dl..
clpleo II found In a letter willeh
the 1\postle Paul wrote to the
ehureh In Corinth about A.D. 56.
In it he eatalosued the pOa&amp;l!e
who had seen the risen Jeq:
Firs~ Peter; then all tilt
Apostles; then umme thaD 500
of His !ollowers at -•· moat
(COntinued oo Page 18)

What's wrong with the stolen..
body lheory? lis basic !allaey Is
thot lt would mean that Jeous'

+

iici

AT
ELBERFELDS

:

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Thoughts

':/ One Injured
In Collision
On 2nd Ave.

OUTFIT

•

WEST BROADWAY

I

Select Your New

i•.•

It was obvious!)' in the
Interests of the Jewish and
Roman authoriUes to spike this
story. And they could have done
so, quickly and condusively,
simply by showing that Jesus'
body was aUU In t.he tomb.
Their !allure fD employ this
pertect refutation strongly suggests that they were lDl8ble to
produce lhe botly.
or course, an empty tomb
does not by itself mean that Its
occupant has r,eturned to life.
The botly could have been
secretly removed by Jesus'
followers to give credence to
their preaching of a resurrec-

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

OPEN BOTH FRIDAY and SATURDAY NIGHTS TIL 9

•

God might Intervene in the
operation of nature to raise a
dead man fD life.
But however congenial it may
be to the mind-set . of our age,
the concept of a purely spiritual
resurrection is difficult to
square with the historical facts
as we know them, not only from
the New Testament but from
other sources.
Clearly Established
It is clearly established
history that within a short time
after Jesus' crucirixion, his
Disciples began to proclaim that
He had risen from the grave.
And they made the claim
publicly in Jerusalem.

the lhlral ot youth."

News•.. in Briefs

ELBERFELDS IN

nonsense.
In our time, some disti...,.
¥U~shed Christian theologians
have viewed the story or the
emp\Y tomb as a mythological
pro.Jectloo or lhe Disciples'
belle! that Jeoua hod triiDIIphed
over death. According to this
view, Jesus' body remained in
the tomb and evenluall,y rotted
awa,y like all other human
bodies. When the Disciples
proclaimed his' return from
death, they meant only that He
had come to lite again in their
minds aOO hearts.
'l'tds "demythologized" inter·
pretation has great appeal tor
all who find themselves unable
to accept the posslblll\Y that

the Sabbath was over.
Esrly Sunday morning, whlle
It was still dark. three women
who had been tollowers or Jesus
set out lor the tomb to embalm
his bod.)', They arrived just at
sunrise.
The stone had been rolled
awl,! from the entraoee. The
tomb was empty,
Ha~ to Believe
That Ia the story lite New
Testament G01111ela teU. II you
nm It hard to believe, so did
the people who !lrat heard it.
When the terrified women ran
back to the house in Jerusalem,
where many of Jesus' male
disciples were in hiding, their
report was at first dismissed as

I
!· •

ACCIDENT REPORTED
POINT PLEASANT - CIIY P&lt;&gt;Uce reported an accident at 11
a.m. Thursday at the intersec(ecnl• freon pap 1)
tloo of Poplar Street and North
Main In whleh Phyliss Smilh, 47,
meeti~W• held by the JJemocraUe Republic o! (North) Vletram
102 Marietta Street, local, mak· ~~ either lhe Unltiod Slats&amp; or Soulh Vletnam,o " the spokesman said.
ing a turn onto N. Main !rom
The Viet Cong statement came in response to U.S. Defense Sec·
Poplar, was struck by Ralph E. relar Melvin R. Laird's comments Thursday In Washington that
Thomas, 19, ot Point Pleasant. uout:lde talks are going rorward" regardlng Vietnam peace negotia·
There were no injuries and no tloos.
citations. Damage was estimatGOP anti-ABM system another "Edsel"
ed at $350.
DAYTON - REPUBI.JCAN OPPONENTS OF THE PROPOSED
AnU-BaiUaUe Missile system said Thurodi.Y the ABM would be obsoTO CLEAN UP HOUSE
lete before It waa bull~ Pointing to an exhibit of the scrapped XB-70
The Meigs county Fox Hunters bomber at the Wright ~ Patterson Air Force Base muaeum here,
A88n. wiU meet at 7,30 p.m. Sen&amp;. Chorles E. GootleU, J!.N. Y. , and Marlow W. COok, R-Ky., said
Saturday at their elub house on the ADM could be the next "Edsel of the air."
Easle Ridge to clean up lhe elub
"WUI It coat us bUUooa wllh out adding fD lhe 111Uon's seeurl•
house. All members are urged ' ty? We think It wlll," the senatora said. "It Ia going to be another
to attend. Refreshments wUI be dinasaur, obsolete before lt is built.''
served.

:

Southeastern Ohio's Newest &amp; Finest
RESTAURANT &amp; PARTY ROOM

World or Relll!lon
By LOUIS CASSELS
UP! Rellgloo Wrltsr
ot Nazareth was
Jesua
&lt;ruellled on a Friday. Hla body
was placed In a t.mb, which
waa sealed wllh a large stone.
The burial wu c(Jmpleled Jus!
before sUndown, llie hour at
,'!lhlch the Sabbath omclall)'
jlegan.
The Jewish law• of sabbath
obseriiOIICe alrletl)' forbode aey
kind o! malllal labor, Including
preparation of a corpse for
entombment. So the Job of
il.oolntlng Josua' botly with
embalming 11111...- euatomarll)'
performed by female relatives
and friends- hod to walt untU

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PO EROY
NATIONAL BANK

RUTLAND

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I !il!l!l

ago. The wall is revered as part vacancies for the first time ln
years.
or King Herod's Temple.
CrOwds Mined
The anermath of the 1967 war
"Betore
the war you would
could be felt In Jerusalem even
oot be able to see tho stone of
on this religious day .
Arab shopkeepers grumbled the sidewalk because of lhe
crowds or people," one swvenlr
at the absence of thousands of
Christlan pilgrims from Arab shopkeeper lamented.
The beginni~ or the elght.&lt;lay
countries who used to Oood the
Passover
holiday was marred
Old City each Easter before the
Thursday
evening
when a KI'OII'
war.
Other hundreds of would-be ot hlkers were shot at on the
tourists from around the world El-Hamman section of lhe
also stayed away, apparently Golan Heights.
laraell officials aald one ofthe
because or continuing Middle
East tensions aOO recent hikers wea wourded and three
earthquakes in the regiOIL can were damaged by the
Several leading hotels In Old gunfire, which they uid came
Jerunlem reported nwnerous freon Jordanian territory.
In Vatican CI\Y, Pope Paul VI
grieved
over dlaeord within the
CELEBRATES BmTHDAY
Raman
Calholle
Church as weD
HARTFORD, W, Va. - Mrs.
Okey B. Roush was honored •• fir the death or Jesua.
He caUed attsntlon to lhe
March 30 wilh a surprise birthturmoll,
which he descn'bed as
day dinner given by her nloee,
·"almost
schismatic
ferment" at
Mlaa Audre,y Blesalng of Hertford. She was pre8fl'lled with his 1ofauncly Thuradly Maaa.
two love!)' birthda.Y cakes, several gifts, and reeelved many
cards !rom frlenda. Attending
were Mr. and Mrs. ()key Rouah,
Mrs. May Fisher, end Mrs. Garnett Chapman, all of Letart; Mra.
Allee Wat8011 ol AkrjJn; M r 1.
Rhoda Yeager of MAson; Mra.
carrie Judson ol HarUord; BIU
Welpnd of ~lnt Pleuant. and
the hostess, Mlaa Bleaslng.

J
L------------

I BOOK STORE

The Story, as tbe Gospels Tell It

.

Resurrection in Fact Squares with Historical Realilj.

Pilgrims Commemorate Crucifixion
JERUSALEM (UP0- In this
city that both consider holy,
Christians trudged the traditional path over which Jesus bore
His cross and J ews offered
Passover prayers at the Wailing
Wall toda.v.

"::.""!.

Mrs. carl J, Duekworlll. 69,
ol1811 Wooilland Drive, COihoeICII, dleil Tllirodi.Y mom!~ In
Ulllverolty Hoajital at CoiWDllla
- e she bod been a patient
olnee Febr1!117.
Mrl.
atormer ......
1c1ent of Molp COUnty, wao bora
Jll;y 17, 1899 at Balllwt, t h o
dauabter ol tho Iats JoiOIIh and
Birbara Bartle Frederick. She
wu al110 preceded In death by a
James Jooeph.
She married Carl J. DucklOirth
111 Dee. '17, 1921, Shewaumem..
ber ol the Grace United l!felhodlst Church, COsboeton; a life
, BRUCE DAVIS
member ol the wscs of ptseao
NEW MARSHALL - Bruce
Methodlat Clllreh, Otseao, Ohio,
Davis wasiiJliiOinted this week
and a 45,yoar mernlier ·of the D
by Rutland couneU as n e w
ol A Gl !;yraeuse, Meigs Counl;y.
marshall of tile vlllage a n d
She Is SU1'Yived by her husotreet maintenance superinten- band; a daughter, Mrs. James
dent following the resignation
(Pauline) Qdnaler, Lancaster;
of John TUllo who had ·served
three sranclchll!lren, Stephen, MIIn that eapaeU~· lhe past eight
ami Unlverolty at Oxford; Baryearo. Tillis will eontlrue as
bara and Kltt;y, Lancaster; a
Meigs C&lt;&gt;uncy Deputy Sherur.
brother, Henry Frederick, West- Sentloel Photo.
ervUie, aocl several nieces and
nephews,
Funeral services wiU be held
&amp;mday at 3 p.m. from the EwIng FWIOl'al Home. F101eral wiU
be In Letarl Falls. Frlando may
call at the Dawson Funeral Home
PT. PLEASANT - Walter In COshocton this evening from
Charles Warren, 55, of 2505 Jef- 7 fD 9 and at Ewing Chapel Satferson. Ave., was killed Thursday urda,y from 7 to 9.
about 5:15p.m., in anautomoblle
accident near Ansted, W. Va.
ANNOUNCE SERVICE
Mr. Warren, a boilermaker
SWU'ise services wUI be held
with the Union Boiler Co., aOO
at
6 a.m. Stmday at lhe MiddleCarbide Metal Plant, Alloy, W.
port
Church of Christ. A brook·
Va., was returning horne Cram
last
wUI
be served !oUowlog lhe
work when he failed to get around
a curve. The auto went over .a service by men or the Home
mountain side between Alloy all:! Builders Class. There will be
no charge, but an offering will be
Ansted.
State Pollee notifie&lt;l lhe looal taken at breakfast.
officials, who in turn informed
Mrs. Warren or the tragedy late
last nigh~
ARREST REPORTED
Mr. Warren was born in AnPomeroy pollee reported the
sted, W. VL, on April 5, 1914, arrest o1 Richard Peyton, 22,
son of the late Blanthe Welch Pomeroy, on a speeding charge.
Warren, HuntingtOn, aOO the Jate Peyton is scheduled to appear
Luther Warren. He was a mem- before Mayor Charles Logar ~
ber of the Ansted United Metho- rU 5,
dist Church. He had resided in
Pt. Pleasant lor the past 25
years.
ton, and one sister, Mrs. MarSurviving in addition to hi s
mother are his wife, Betty Hud- garet Ross, New York. One
son Warren, Pt. Pleasantj two granddaughter survives, F\lner·
daughters, Jill Warren and Mrs. al arrangements are incomplete.
FrieOOs may call after 2 p,
Joyce Kaufman, both at home.
Two brothers, Luther J. War- m., Saturday at the Mohr • Ste.ren, Gwymas 1 Mexico aNi ~he v~ns Funeral Home In P~ Plea•·
Rev. Paul A. Warren, Hunting- art.

ou.-.

THE POET'S
CORNER

paid,

'

Mrs. Duckworth
•
•
Dies Thursday

GALLIPOLIS - Lewis Davis, a native
o1 Jackson, will be the banquet apenker
at the annual meeting ol lhe Federal Land
Bank Assodatlon of Gallipolis at 6:30 p.m.
In lhe Grace Melhudist Church Thureda,y.
Davis spent 1; years In Ohio radio broadcasting before becoming Manager of Pobllc RelaDooa lor lhe Agricultural Division
ol lhe Moosanto Company In St. Loula.
On December 1, 1968, he was appointed
A88lstant to lhe President ol The Feder.
al Land Bank of Louisville.
ll!:!eetlve April 1, 1969, he was elevated to work wllh all three Farm Credit
Bank ol LoulsvUie, The Federal Land
Bank, Fe&lt;leral Intermediate Credit Bank,
aocl the Louisville Bank lor Cooperatives.
He will work In developing an expanded
program at public and member relaUona
for all three bankB.
The Farm Credll Banks of Louisville now
have over $1 bDllon 300 million In loans

lEWIS DAVIS
oustanc:U.ng to farmers in Ohio, llldiana, Kentuc!cy and Tennessee.
Cl,yde B, Walker serves as manager or the
Gallipolis Federal Land Bank Association.
Bertlna Smeltzer is lhe office aaslstan~ The
Gallipolis Association mskea 101111 term farm
laona fD farmers In elsht Southeastern Ohio
oounties.

1970 made In connec:tloo wilh the - lng of the new bridge.
This past 110ek, er011'&amp; have been buQ'
on Ike Ohio side completing approaches to
and from the bridge lanes to Oh1o 7, !hot
winds along the river from GalllpoUs to
Middleport, and lhat passes under lhe OhiD
approach to the new bridge.
I

Bicycle Driven

In Car's Front
GALLIPOLIS - Patrlclf H. 11\jrller, 12,
Columbus, vlaltlng wllll relatives near Jla.
cine and In Middleport, was admlttstl to
Veterans Memorlalllospltal, Flmteroy, Friday afternoon with a fractured 101 Iller he
was struck by a car. His c:ondltim 1a report..
ed as satisfactory.
The state lllshwa,y Patrol eald the aecloccurred at 4:10 p.m: Friday m Rt.
124, nlne-teoths ol a mile eaat Gl Racine.
O!lleera reported that the boy rode hill
bicycle In front ol a ear driven by
Frank P, Holter, 75, Rt. 1 Racine. There
was minor damage to the ear. No charge
was filed against lhe driver. The Mellis
CountY l'iteriJ!'s Dept. ualoted In the lnveatlgaUon.
The patrol Investigated a ooe ear ac:clat 5:25p.m. Friday oo Rt. 5S4, nve and
one-tenth mlles west ol Rt. 7.
omcers said Fred Conkle, 60, Rt. 1 BidweD, headed west, attempted to overtake and
pasa another vehicle but lost eontrol aDd
his car went Into a dlteh. There wss II!Gderate damage to the ear. Galkle received a
eut oo the face but was nat Immediately
treated.
The patrol cited Conkle Ill Galllpolla Municipal eoort ... eharps ol reekleas operation and no operator's Ueense.
A doe deer was killed at 2:15 a.m. saturda.Y at the west and f1l the Rt. 3S bypass.
O!flcers said lhe animal was otruek by a
car driven by Herbert A. WeoUall, 25, Slsaonvllle, w. Va. There wsa llllar diiMp
to the car.
..

Walnut Log FarmBegunt~--*~*=R~---=-=--,~~·· .
PlPrP~~.-toR:: =-:.~,:
. . . . i Easter Customs Vary
wal111t logs, a true hard-lo-iet Item theee
da,ys.
JI Ia a new type tree project here, and to
our knowledge, Ia the first o! Its kind In Mason ComlY, perhaps oven In West VIrginia.
IUs !arm Ia on Oltltolm Creek seven
mllea from Pl Pleasant. It baa a narrow
but ferllle strip ol bottom land lhroush
Ita middle.
When John COOper o1 the USDA SoU coo.
servatlon Semce helped him make aeonser.
vatlon plan four years ago, this
land wao c:overed with sycamore, aim, 'box
alder and walnut.
Alter eonoultlng !IIIII Johnny J.clonq, sar.
Foreatsr Gl the llepartment Gl Natural
fteiiOUl'Ces, It 'Wao deeldeclto elear awa,y all
lntl except the walnut. Burdelle hal done
moat ol this, and has rePortecl that ke had
released about 200 straight • stem walnut
~
·
Moat Gl the trees are from lhree lnehea
fD alght lneheo In diameter. He baa pruned
all Gl lheoe to a 12-toot height and Ia plaa.
nine to ftrtUbe 101110 Gl ·theJ!I. He alto .
eut viMa ' wllicb 110re ollnalnl In 11111t17
tree&amp;. Dil,a. will )le kOllt 011 srowth o1 the

BY PAT HOUCK
GALLIPOLIS- MUUoos of American ehllclren awoke early fDday, ran to the door and
found a b~t Raster basket full ol colore&lt;!
1GB, Jelly beena aocl ehoeolats rabbits left
overnlsht by the Raster bunrly.
Later toda.Y, after ehureh, parents or bigIV alsters aocl brothers will hide e111, outaide If the weather Is nlee, Inside I! It rains.
)l the PhUippines, homeland ol Mr&amp;. Mal
lilmon, 155 First Avenue, Easter !lUldo,y ta
tile climax ol a eolemn lloly Week. People
plher In plana to bu.Y pleeeiJ)Odsandwateh
prett.y UWe children In sparkling whits pa;.
ratle thrCI1gh tho streets behlncl a rells!Cill
-.e.
"
Mrs. Alexander Blrkle, wife of the &amp;lperlntsndent of lhe Gallipolis state Institute, anatl\-e of Argentina, said Raster In her COOIItry
Ia a "da,y of !...Utes eetllnil toaetber." ~

-m

"'ee

tne111

.

~~and~are-and-~~

..

have calored and ehoeolate ega.
U11oally, 'Raster dlmer In Aralalllla
emalsts Gl roa&amp;t beef and 111111&gt;. I It a 1111',
lutiw time ol new elothea and fe.ti.)'IIIOI
following F.rlda.Y, the Holy da.y,
·
''DI.Y Gl Glory" Ia the wa.Y
Barllll, CW&gt;an.born wife Clf Dr.

.

~~Ali:·~~;!;;5:E~ 1tojlorta
\119~ QU,AUTY
WI\J.SUT
,:. 11Gb- 1411,
~
l&gt;ralestJOr· at
• - r lhat
log . ert llolriloitte•
l~ft; andJilhnlll'·
JFARM
- r . ae~VI&lt;!e
ac~l~f
~turdiJ
· "':
'"'e ....
~ : loret\tii'J ii! W~it v~ii
· !JtPt. o( N~tunr
'l• ~~- to
......, . ' R,IOilrcei, m~IUN!h'l~· . .• w'a!!iilt~ .: . ' wa~.. ..

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lng. Tb8ll on Sotardsy, they tlml

brlllrt ....

ors an&lt;! celebrate In the stroeta wllh tlaaelng,
Most sfllres aocl buolnoa- an cloMd
Thureda,y and Friday before tile ' bollilo.J.
Llbusa SlmPke. wife Gl Dr. Jan Slmloll," · &lt;. •
aliiO ... lhe llio Grande !acuity. tlllo born In Pr-. aid c11111lma Ill c..slovakla dHfer In tile ....ary to lilt cll,y,
and In the !l!'st and weat. But In &amp;IID01'a1.
Ealllsi' Ia I "ilreot fUn" time. A Ume ·,
YOIIIIi m• pa.y eourt to fiYoHd- - ·
en and people taka
of Ill llollda.Y "' aet aut cC dlunai dtlellniDh,·.....

ad¥....,.

tJful ecuatry. r· • ,.
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tal!e•
and~l.

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GALLIPOLIS - Larry Kelton dolm at Pem,y!aro told me tile
other day be heart!' Mike Dlckersml on Radio WKEE giving tile Viet..
nam casualty list and wondered II he was our Mike Dickerson. I
checked it wt. It was.
Made a trip down to the Garfielcl Bar-B-Cue to see Aroold DickHAPPY HE'S HOME - Mr. and Mn. Ralph Warner ol
erson,
Mike's father. There was this grooviest little four or live
Muon, from the sign across1their home, are obviously happy
piece combo having a Jazz session. Aroold was played a 88JIIlllbone.
their oon, First Lt. llovid Warner, returned home Tue&amp;day
It so happens that Mike Is MaJor Michael Dickerson and he is In
' ·aafebr trom 13 mouths in Korea, near the DMZ - sentinel
charge of Public A!lilirs in the office of Secretary or Defense Mel·
Photo.
v!n H. Laird. Mike's been In tho Army eight or nine years.
Evon Chet H1D1Uey and David Brinkley have to go tllrOUih Major
Dickerson for their Information. Arnold said Mike's been asked to
go to the War College at Fort Leavenworth, KaJL Aroold asid he
thoqrht Mike wOIIId go, but he hasn't made q~ hl&amp; mind. Unless he
joes, he can go no higher than!dajor. U he does, he can be a CoiOIIlL
Arnold Dlcker&amp;on and his wire, thelatellorotllyWebb Dickerson,
had two sons. The other one, Tom, is at the Richmond, Va. offtce as
}. Blaine Lawson
manager of the MimesotaManufacturingandMinlngCo. He's married
Mrs. Frances }acrorul
to
a Pennsylwnia girL Tom did a stint in the Army an:l is out.
PT. PLEASANT - Mrs. HowPOMEJtOY - r,Jrs. Frances
Mike is married to the former Nancy Whalen of Upper S&amp;ndusky.
Jaccaud, 81, of 363 North Frank.. ard L. Yeager, 2ll 7 Mount Ver- They have three children, Mike. Jennifer alii Sean. Both Major and
lin, Delaware, Ohio, died Friday non-Ave., has re ceived word that Mrs. Dickerson are graduates of Ohio University.
evening. Mrs. Jaccaud was born her brother, J. Blaine Lawson,
in Meigs County, the daughter of Oak Park , Illinoi s, pa ssed away
MARY RIDDLE AUSTIN OF 17 VINTON AVE., who ~tes
the late John a and Mary Eliza· Thursday night after a six-months Mary's Beauty Shop, flew the .sameflagathalf-mast for former presbeth Carr Halsey. She was a illness.
Mr. Law son owned an employ- ident Dwight DaVid Eisenhower thatwasonherlate husband's casket.
member of the Methodist Church
ment agency in Oak Park. He Garlarxl Riddle was a veteran of World WarD aod was under Generolllelaware.
al EiseMower's conun:J.I'KI in the invasion of Norman:ty. It was a fi.t·
She Is survived by two broth- was the son of the late Mr. a n d tlng tribute to a great soldier.
ers, Wellington Halsey, Dela- Mrs. H. T. Law son who owned
Mrs. Austin called me the other day aboot the record of Red
ware, alii Alphonso Halsey,~ Brookside Farm on Route 62, Skelton's Pledge of Allegiance to the flag. I told her I woold pick q~
pers Plains; two nieces, M r s. eighl miles from Pl Pleasant. one for her when I found where they're sold. Well, I fom'WJ them, all
Mr. Law son and hi s si x brothDonra Jean Watson, Tuppers
right. But, I Corgot to get her one,
ers
and two sisters were raised
Plains, alii Mrs. Juanita Rairden,
I did call her, however. and apologized for not getting the rec·
Athens, arrl one nephew, Robert on the Brookside F'arm and at·
ord.
The records are oa sale at the ~per G. C. Murphy store. BW
terlied Pt. Pleasanl schools.
Halsey. Dayton.
Surviving a r e hi s wife, Edna, Mills, manager, said he'd given a record to each of the schools. It's
Funeral services will be held
a Columbia 45MRPM. The background music ls Red's White alii Blue
Morday at 11 a. m. fr om the form erly of Princeton, W. Va.i
March, a selection Red Suiter's band played at a concert last year.
Bemett - Brown Funeral Home two sons , Max RaMell of St. Alin Delaware. Burial will be in bans, and Jame s Lawson, Oak
THAT RASH OF GRASS AND FOHEST 11RES we had last month
Oak Grove Cemetery, Delaware. Park, Ulinois ; s ix brothers, Edcame
as no great surprise, I noticed this year's accumulated rainfall
gar C. , Boca Raton, Fla.i J.
was
trailing
last year's, but 1 didn't know if rn.v figures were righL
Brooks, William son, W. \'a,;Per*
Then Pete McCormick, the veteran weather observer at Fair·
Howard Burns
ry Thomas Law son, Erling'er,
field, sent me the figures. Last month's rain fall was 1.22 inches
. HARTFORD, W. VA - How- .Ky,j Charles Law son of Milwau- compared to 7.82 for March of !968. The story Is told, however, in
ar~ Burns, 84, Hartford, whodled kee, Wi s.; George Lawson of
the accumulated rainfall for the first three months of the year. This
FridaJ' morning, was a resident Long Beach, calif., atxl Joe year' s three month total was only 5.34 inches aOO last year it was
of the Betxl area several years. Lawson of Bristol, Va.i two sis1,13 inches.
He was born March, 1885, at lers, Ann Catherine (Mrs. How...
Leon, w. va., the son of the late ard L. Yeager) of Pl Pleasant
THERE'S AN INTERESTING AND WORTHWHILE petition you
Jacob arxl Estaline Rice Burns. arxl Ethel (Mrs. Levis E. Glbmight be interested in s igning at Bob Saunders Quaker State Service
A retired river engineer, he son) of Jacksonville, Fla.
Center. In fact. there's two petitions. One is opposing Ohio HB 184
was a member of the Leon Meth·
Mr. and Mrs. ):'eager were to
requiring ID (ldentificationl cards and the licensing of handgun ownodist Church.
.•
leave today to attend the funeral e!J!i
.... ·- :- ... • .•
'l:'r
.
I Mr. lltll'hs is sUMMilY'\is •,!ketl'illoU!tr:Br !Stol, Va.~"OIIMon~- .. The other ·reads: ~·Vfe:, tile W'lliers~. protest~~ prohibiting
l'flCe, ~Y S. Burn11~ ~ s8ns, .. ·dlbl.- 2,.p• .m.,..,
,. ,
of prayer and Bible reading in our public schools and propost a re'Elmer F., MiddlePOrt, and IV ood·
versal of this ruH'*. We further protest an.v legislation. that would:
row and Demasee, East LiverWilliam Nibert
1. Remove the chaplains from our armed forces.
pooh a daughter, Mrs. Wi11iam
2. Remove In God We Trust from our currency.
McBride, also of East Liverpool;
PT. PLEASANT - William
3. Remove God's 1'811le from the Pledge of Allegiance to our
five grandchildren, six great- Franklin Nibert, 79, Gallipolis flag, and
grandchildren, and two brothers, Ferry, died in Pleasant Valley
4. Remove God 1 S name from any part or our Amerlcan way of
Orion. Pt. Pleasant, ard Julius, Hospital Friday after a brief ill- Ute.
Wayne, Ohio.
ness.
Funeral serviees will be held
Mr. Nibert was a retired em~
Sunday at 2 p. m. at the Fogle- ployee of the American Car and
song Funeral Home. Burial wiU Foundr_y of Huntington, W.Va. He
GALLIPOLIS - The county talns:
be in the Leon Cemetery.
wa s born in Gallipolis Ferry on chairman and captains for the
Green - Mrs. Russell rubJ uly 23, 1889,
bee,
Mrs. Victor Niday,
1969 Cancer Crusade were anSurviving are his wife, Pauline nounced Saturd8¥ by general
Ohio - Mrs. Marion Angell.
ATIIENS, Oblo - Old Man Nibert; two sons, Leslie of HenClay - r.Jrs. Robert Mead.
chairman
Dr.
James
M.
Orr.
River just keeps rolling along derson atxl Richard of Gallipoli s
Raccoon
- Mrs. Wendell EvMrs.
James
M.
Mllls
m
Is
in the same old way, or so the Ferry; one stepson, Earl Barton,
this year's COWJt;y chairman. ans, Mrs. Ted McCulty.
song goes, but the course of
at homei a daughter, Kathleen Mooday 1 at 7:30 p.m., a coffee
Greenfield - Mrs. Morgan
·the fiood.prone Hocking at Atb· Martin. Gallipolis Ferry; two
Hammood.
hour
for
all
county
cancer
cruon&amp; Is about to be abruptly al- halt-brothers, Herbert Leonard,
Sprlngtleld - Mr&amp;. Lonnie
sade captains and their worktered.
Columbus, and LelaOO Leonard, ers will be held In the First Burger, Mrs. Walter Neal.
The loog • awaited ground. Rio Grandei two half-sister s,
Morgan - Mrs. Robert llasb.
breaking for the $10 mlllloo Mrs. Marie Gardner of Colum· Presljylerlan Chore h. Details for
Perry
- Cora Campers 4-H
this
year's
drive
will
be
disAtllons fiood protection pro- bus, and Mrs. Ella Burrows,
Club, Mrs. Merrill Rose, Mrs.
ject II olated April 12 at 11:- HWitington, several nieces and cussed.
V
emartl Fallon, advisors.
Here's
the
1969
coonty
cap30 a.m. The Huntington Dis. nephews alii seven grarxlchildren
Wslnut - Mrs. Je!f Wells.
lrlct U. S. Army Corps of En- alii seven great-grandchildren.
Add!6011- Mrs. Robert Waugh,
g(neers plans to IOOYe about
Funeral services wiU be 2 p.
llw!tlngton - Mrs, John Payne.
5.5 miles &lt;( the Hocking to m. Monday at the Beale Chapel
VInton - Mrs. Carpenter.
the swthofitspresentchamel.
United Methodist Church with the $192,000 ROBBERY
Cheshire - Mrs. Rita Wrigltt,
. Engineers say tlle project will Rev. Marlin campbell officiating.
LONDON (UPO- Five men
Cheshire V!llage - Cbellblre
~ prevent an estimated amual
Burial will be in the Beale Chap- robbed an Oxford Street jewelry Cats 4-H Club.
Oood loss&lt;( $800,000.
el Cemetery. Friends may call store of $192,000 worth of
Harrison - Mrs. Donv!l Hoi.
.,Rechanneling the r i v e r at Mohr-Stevens Funeral Home. diamond and gold rings Satur·
ley.
" lllould eliminate about 86 per
day. PoJiee said the robbers
•( ceDI &lt;i the spring flood dam.
wore masks and were armed
aces by enlarging the drain.
with iron bars and shotguns.
J?
aae capacif;y of the chamel,"
They gained entry to the store
Sl" ll\l
· · ,. • · ac!cording to Doo Johnson, sec.
when
the owner admitted
Tl \I ES·SE'ITI _, t:l.
retary d the HockingConsenanother
man posing as a
Pllbl.-nttt •• e t) "'l'ld l ~ 1&gt;)- the &gt;IIIIo \'t il&lt;)
! aaey Dlstri ct.
P"bll ~hing 1 o.
mailman. .

Announce Crusade Leaders

(;A U . II' Ul.IS ll.'JL\ I" HI HI
82:i 'rl&gt;ord ,\ w ., (;aJ1ip ul oo , Ol uu,

ONE WEEK
TONIGHT·WEDNESDAY

.w

+~f,1 1,

I 'W.

h .Md "'"'Y &gt;'&lt;·c hdl ) C&gt;t AI!lll C '&lt; ~PI '&gt;l l ~nll).

S.t·OIId ( lou

l'o•t l~

l' t id 11 r;allipol l1 , 01\lo,

t.\!13 1.
1 111 Mt &lt;·htn i" ~' '""' ·
1'001~ r OJ', fl hlo ,
l'ubl l•t.ed &lt;'WC)' 10 0o kd1~ e•onl111: U &lt;'&lt;PI
!iltmtl l ). f:n oe r ,•d •• ,....,,., d o,. maiii iiJ.: 111111·
1 ~7!l9.

l'a.t u rrooo .
"IN Hli'TIO~ 0 ) l' l r"f ie r d&amp;il ) 1!11 "''.-.:11) , 4 ~· pe r wct•ll.

\ er ll l' ome roJ,
TEI IM ~

t~oi&lt;~

&gt;II

MAll. 'I R\1

111 1'-rlli~

I! A II ''

l'r ilnme In Oh io l nd 11'~ • 1
l' lfl: inlo, """ )l:lr $ 11; " ' mo mlt,, -'6: lhr@e
month• Sol; •h&lt;•wlle rc, one 1car ~I~. •I• mo.n~ ~ ,
'fh•

MASON
w,_\:.

--

6-9

DRIVE· IN
_.

,.~

-.

~·
-

TONIGHT
APRIL 6

'"ll lvolu

S7: three' mDrUI " ~~-~'''·
n..· Ilo ilo &gt;,enti nel, "'""' }'el r
1110111h• SG,l;,; oh n"" munih &gt; ~-~-

-~1 2:

COLORCARTOONS:
Two l·al'ed Wolr.
What on Earth
SHOW STA!lTS 7 P; M.

__,

__

- --·. ·

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.......... '._*'

'11cur 1cou.· fli-.'lir

CARTOON

ADMISSION
Adulb •.•.•••••• $1.00
Children ••••••.••• 50c

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

.-.
'

-·

..•

-

Flred·on
TEFLON II
5 qt. automatic "COUNTRY KETTLE"

~·

colorful Avocado or a:oldon Harvest exterior

Teflon-coated

• porcelaln-an·alumlnum
• scratch·resistant Teflon
• automatic beat control

$1.49

COOKIE SHEET

S4.95

----.-•
-.-.

TRI-PLY
STAINLESS
STEEL

You'd ezpect to pay $2.89 for lhil ISY," x 12"
cookie sheet! Smooih·baking alumiDum. doubl•
coated wiih TeOon ••• never needa oc:ourlng. Buy

a pair!

--•

-------••

-

Include$:.. , .
· 1 qt. $aucepan
• Zqt. Saucepan
• 3 qt. Sauc1apan,
•10" Skillet
• 6 qt. Dutch Oven

6 to 1.0 cup

FLAVII-SElECTOR
PERCOLATOR

$9.99

•

WEST BEND "CONTINENTAL" .

Caters to your Iaaie . . . jiUJ t
set the flavo·Selector to choose
mild, rich or regular strength
coffee. The rest is automatic!

..

• STAINLESS STEEL OUTSIDE lor looting brightnou
• CARBON STEEL CENTER lor faot, oven hoot
'STAINLESS STEEL INSIDE cloon• in •IIHy

Sparkling aluminum with black
accents.

-

OPEN STOCK PRICES
iO" Covered Skillet ••••••••••••••••• SlO.Z5
1 qt. Saucepan ••••..•••••••.••••••••• $5.45
Zqt. Saucepan •••••.••••••••••••••••• $7 .Z5
3 qt. Saucepan ••••....••••••.••.••••• $7 .95
6 qt. Dutch Oven •••••••••••••••••••• $1D.95

SPECIAL

OFFER!

-----.-.
---•
,.
•

Stainless Steel

••
'
••
•'
•

DINNER PARTY
PERCOLATOR

Versatile 2 qt.
SAUCE PAN

•·.•

$24.95

•

Brewa !rom 9 to 18 cups tuto·
m1Ucally, and keeps II hot auto·
matlctlly too. Sparldinq at ..l, in·
aide and out, tor euy c:leulnq
1nd lonq·l••t1n9 beauty. lrews

Cover

...

:

:
•

a c:up-a-minuW.

with Antique Coppertone Cover
Discover the joys of West Bend's "400
Line" cookware at a bargain price! Favorite 2 qt. size is nice for vegetables,
soups. sauces, hot ce~eals, puddings. It's
handsome, quick-heating aluminum with
scratch-resistanl hard-coat Teflon finish
-so super-tough you can use metal spat·
ulas. metal spoons! Try iU

~

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-:....i.
:..
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*

4 piece

CANISTER
SET

sg.95
• Fi.m
• IUIAI

s22.95

'

• COFfEl
• TEA

Canisters with lreah slyUng llairl Graceful and
elegant in rich antique brown and glooming alumi·
num- a perfect match for .Wnt l!end'a di.otlnctlve

ALSO AVAILABLE
• 3 QT. DOUBLE BOILER .............................. $11.25
• I" SQUARE GRIDDLE .....- -.•.,..............,•..,..•$3.85
' 8" COVERED SKILLET ................................ $5.75

Sounders.
Mrs. Saunders waa presentShe was presented with a dfa• ed with a &amp;1ft !rom her co-work·
ln&lt;llld servlceemblemandaplant.

....
Helen ·Help

USee • By Helen Bolte/
to a club In their area, - LINDA
YOUTH ASKED FOR rr1
Tblo column Ia tor young Dear Helen:
Yoo've never had tills In ywr
people, their problem• and
co11111111.
ao here's my
pleasures, their troublesandtun.
WIIA T IS A FffiSJ' LOVE?
As wltll the rest ot Helan Help
A first love Is tile pre-dawn
USI, tt.walcomeolaugbsbut-"1
dodge a serlws questlm with a quiet &lt;i early spring, II comes
hesltaDtly, enveloped ln a fine,
brush.(){(.
Send ywr teenage ~~testlms to translucent mlat. It needs pro.
YOUTH ASKED FOR rr, care &lt;i lectlon from bitterness and r.,.
Helen Help USI tills newspaper. .Jectlon,
A first love Is tile fllllllter of
THE EAS!Em' WAY
disguise and a quick-change lr·
Dear Helen:
I'm worldnl! In a factory 'Willi UBI any performer would wora guy named Pete, who )lsi ship. II comes stumbling a n d
happens to be a married man. colored briRbt pink tor sb,ynoos
I've loved him for a 1oar, and and embarraasment. It comes
If he doesn't Jove me, be's been aloof and In greed tor lndltrerence. II comes sbrruded In gre,y,
gMng a good lmllatitlll.
But he bean't spoken to me splashed 'Willi the blood red rl. a
alnce the middle &lt;i February broken heart. Yw can add a
when I sent blm a Valentino smile and a row wurds to gray.
ness and II wiU lurn to yellow
and hi&amp; wlfe..got It !frat.
lllould I !Ish! tor him or tor. - for happiness.
A first love 11 elusive. It's
get him?- P.K.L.
here toclq, here tomorrowi and
Dear P:
Forgot him. Yw played tho the nell day It fades, so the! you
wrong card - and bls wife holds can hardly tell II still exists.
But It does. Yw can bide a first
all the trumps! - H.
love with the mist, but tile sun
Dear Helen:
Yw got a lot ol letters tl'om has to come. wt ovon111ally and
unhllllli.Y and disturbed people. It will burn the mist away, I'd like to tell tllem about an D.A.J,
orpnlzatlm that can help. II'• Dear Helen:
I used to dale till&amp; boy thl&gt;.t
called NEUROTICSANONYMOUS
and tile nalional head!uartero my mother Uked very much, but
are: Room 426, Colorado Jldld- I dido't. So we broke up. But my
tng, 1341 "G" Street N. W., mother bas sorta hlred him to
keep watch over me. Not thet 1
Washington, D. c., 20005.
This program, based on the do anytlllng wrong, but tile trou.
Alcoholic AIIIJII¥lD'"'s pian rl. 12 ble Is, tills kid still Ukes me,
steps, has heJped me overcome 10 be makes up things to tell
!ear, gullt and many Inferiority my mother, fi8urlng If I got In
feelings. I !eel Uke a lnlnlll9 be- trouble ru get grounded and
Ing ror the, nrl!l''\lme In years. then she'll make me date ~a •'nJ.ee
AI Qe 2Z~' &lt;J · baVe INriled-to aaro boy like Max. ..
How can I cmv!nco my mother
,. J!Q. 'Willi the problomo I can't
that he Is a aneol&lt;7 blaclanaller,
aolve.
Ulltortunalel1, Nj!Urollcs An· almoll'l- SJ'YMJED
IJIIYIIlOIIS lan'l accepted by tile DearS.:
Bide your time and caleb Max
m~rlty, as people who really
need It don't want to be class(. In a lio. Blackmalloro a1moet al.
fied as ucrazy/• Perhaps men- 1111,)'1 hanS tllemselvesl! )fOUsfve
tion In your column would show them enough rq,e, - H.
them that molt all of ua are
a UU!o neurotic and could do
with a groqp therapy. It works! BROTHER APPOINTED
WASIUNGTON (UPI) - Pres·
Thoae Interested can write to
tile above address tor dlreetloo ident Nixon's brother, Edward
C., 38, bas been apj)O!nted to the
$30,000 a year chairmaMhip Of
the Fedenl Field Committee
for Development PlanniJW In
Alaska. Nixon, a resident of
Lynnwood. Wash., and fonner
telephone company executive,
will be In charge of coonlhating
federal and state oronomlc
development activities for the
Alaokan region. The FFCOPA
• was created tn the Commerce
PI'. PLEASANT - Mary F. Department b,y the 1965 Public
Tbomton, 65, Pt. Plealllll, was Works and Economic Develop.
admitted at Pleaaant Valle,y Hoa- ment Act.
pllal for oboervatlm Saturday
artei'IIOOII tollowlns a three • car LEAVES HOSPITAL
acd- at 2 p.m. at tile lnlarWASIDNGTON (IJPl) - Dr.
sedlon &lt;i &amp;nllh st. and State MOton S. Elsenhell'er, 69, hao
Route 17 In llenderllll.
been releosed tl'om Walter Reed
The Ma101t County Sherill's Army Medical Center to CCJIIo
~ aslcl tile Tbomton
Weace at his home In
vehicle came oil &amp;nllh st., lead- Baltimore, Md., under the care
Ing !rom the !OIT1, ..-! trarel- ol his own doctor. Eisenhower
ed oato State Route 17 IMo • autrered 1 "mild epJIOde of
moving 11no &lt;i-tramc. cormary lnlutllcieney'' Moftlay
A car clrlv• by Worti\Y Goorae juot before lhneral servlcoo for
' Sidera, Jr., 24, Henderaon, bls brother, former Preolclent
craBbed Into the riP! lido ol Dwlibt D. Eisenhower, and
the Thornloll vobiclo witll suc:h apenl five dayo at Wolter~
a torce that her car - knock·
ed back Cillo Smith st. lllid llruck
a car jlrlvon by Rallll&gt; Rllodel,
52, Grlmma I&lt;uxllnr, who wao
ltoJIIlt4 011 Smllll st. Wlltlns to
tum ..... Route 17.
'lbi ~ ' caved ilr tile left
ddt tl. t11o !l'lloma car IIIII
threw htr 011to lbe ~.
Tbomton wa1 cited 011 I cbarp
tl. lllllDI to )'leld lbe rlahl ol
IM1·

--..
-- Victim of
•

18-cup

$4.99
With

(Mario) Blurncloro, RL 2 Golltpo. by Mll-.1 Bakel')' ..... SOJ'Yed
lis, was bono~
·
l&lt;ll.f, AJ)rll to !oUow ......,.kero. Hollesseo
2, oo her 2
· ce annlver- were MJsa Helen E. 'lbomaiJ,
ury 'With tile
I Tete- Wlllda Giles, Maureen Jotmson,
, pbms CoJilPII!\Y at a luncbeon and Chriotlne Burnette•
and open boose In the Trame
Lounge. A-.g the bmcheon
Mrs. Lola Jones, mother &lt;(
were Ida Durkee, chief Gperator, the honored I!UOst and DJgene
Michael Ervin, tralllc mana&amp;BI', Saunders, her brother, were also
Columbus and tile honoree, Mrs. In attendance.

~

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:~ ::: ~::::: ~::~:n

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Includes:

_

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• 10" Skillet
• 5 qt, Dutch Oven &amp; Covor

TONIGHT, MON., &amp; TUES.
April 6 • 8
THE BOSTON STRANGLER
(Techni co1or)
Tony Curtis • Henry Fonda

.•

JEWELERS

, Grills pancakes, fries two or more foods at once,
keeps party snacks warm - all automatically ...
just set the heat control dial! Double coated with
scratch resistant Teflon, so you can use your favorite metal spatula!
'UFLOM il luPint'l TM

•h

MEIGS THEATRE

-•
•

TIFFIN CREDIT

'19·99

• smaalh·heating aluminum
• hard-coat Teflon surface

5 PC. COPPERTONE SET

I I&gt;O ""' lco·ol '" ' ~ ' l'"hl i• hcd l11• re on.

____

GRID!)LE 'N SERVER

-IIATUII

l'h I uil&lt;•d l •rt·'&gt; llll&lt;•rnll liOMI ;, ud u..
i10l,1 e noi ol&lt;d ID 1nt U&gt;&lt;• fo&lt;' pub l&gt; fllt lon ol all
rll'U do., pll tl.,, •·• &lt;'&lt;lill!d 10 t ~ lo "" ~ 'PI I"l!f l fld

...__

AT'

nomes

GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Glrland er. A cake baked and decorated

~

.

In Our Town

(See plclure on Page 18)

~

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SALE.

· By l)lek

A&amp;&gt;rn 6, !969

3 - The Sunday Times. Sentinel, Sunday,

--.. Mrs. ·Saunders is Honored
-

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I
_COOKWA.RE
.

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5

i

Accident in

Observation

R:

Jleplt;y lllerll! NJIIard 1111·
Na4 elllmated clamqeo tl.

*'00

to tile carl lnvolYed.

Alterldlng the open boose were
Mary
Armslroll&amp; Chrlotlne

·Six City
Cases Go
To Court

Burnette, Bessie Comer, Murl
Durkee, Nancy French, Wlllda
GUes, Maureen Johason, Hoole
.loDes, Ruth Jones, Janet Me.
Klmey, Bcxmle Patrick, Mary
GALLIPOLIS - Six city po.
Protrltt, Jcy-lpha Saunders, He!- lice cases and five State lllgh., 'l'bomu, ~ YCODI&amp; Latle wa.y Patrol cases were difiPI)sHarrison, Bill ~ckle, Bill Mlf. ed ol Saturday morning b,y Judge
cbell, E. M. GaOOWood, Plant Jobn W. RoweD In Gallla Cqm.
Chief, and A. E. Romaine, fore- ty Juvanlle Court. They were:
man.
POLICE - Nancy Lease, 17,
GalllpoUo, $15 and e&lt;~&amp;ls, fail.
ure to yield tile rlahl rl. we.r;
Alan J. Bradshaw, 17, GIIU.
polls, $1!0 and COliS, apeodlns;
Patricia K, Dray, 17, RL 2 GaJ.
Upollo, pleaded not gullt;y to fail.
ure to )'leld the rlglrt rl. way,
case continued; John R. Walker,
16, Rt. I VInton, $12.50 bond,
wrong direction on 0110 w a 1
&amp;treet; Fred R, Wood, 17, 0no,
W.
Va., $18, wrong direction on
PI'. PLEASANT - The Mason
County Democratic orpnlzatlm one way street; and Garland Buck.
held Ita regular monthly IJIOOf.. le,y, 17, Addloon, $18, stop sian.
PATROL - Cheryl lUll, 17,
Ins In tile jury room &lt;( the coortRt.
2 mdwe!J, $10 and eosts,
booae Friday night.
Maxine Nibert, !lr&amp;t vice • unaaro operation; Richard D. Mil·
prealdent, presided aver the seo. ler, 17, Rio Gr1111de, $15 and
lloo In wllicb a diocUBslort was e&lt;~sts, speeding; WU!Iam E, Von.
held oo the TAD'o(TeonaseJ&gt;em.. tors, 17, Rodney, $15 and costs,
fictltiwo registration; Marcella
ocrats).
Plans were also made for the Slay, 17, Scarbro, W, Vs.; $27 .•
upeomlng Jack11011.Jetrerson Day 50 bond, speeding; and David V.
potluck dlmer to be held at tho JohnSCI1, 17, Gallipolis, $18, stop
Junior high on May 10 at 7 sian.
p.m.
Mrs. Nibert Is In cbarse &lt;( arrangemente ror the dlrmer and
Gallillll8 to Dine
other chaJrmen are Allene
Plants, food; Juanita Ward, colAt Southwestern
fee and tea; Mirmte Burdette,
decorating; Bonnie Harrison,
GALLIPOLIS- The sixth an.
calling e&lt;~mmlttee; NeD Kemedy, nual Cldlllcotbe Area Feeder Calt
tickets. Tickets will sell for $1. Committee ban"'"! ror Gallla
llo&amp;teues for tile nell mset. Counti.ans will be held on Fri·
Ins, oo March 2 at the cwrt- day, April 18, at Soutllwoolem
bouse, will be Eulah Bellamy, High SChool, beginning at 7:30
Lois Newberry and Beverly For. p.m.
bus.
Activities will Include oloc.

TADs Group

Reviewed by

Sr. Democrats

Award is Made
Posthumously
GALLIPOLIS - The late Cap.
ta!n Andrew A. Hayman, bus.
band rl. Mro. Mary L. Hayman,
Gallipolis, was awarded postbumourtly the National Order &lt;(
VIetnam, Fltlh Claos. Cspta!n
~man wukilled In VIetnam on
AprU 2, 1968,
•· The morliorlws citatiOn read

,.As aervlc8man ol courage and
rare selt-aacriOce, he display.
ed at all times the most tactful cooperaUon while aldlns the
Armed Forces &lt;i tile Republic
&lt;i VIetnam to repel the Red wave
undermining South VIetnam and
Southeast Allia." the cltatlon went
on to read thet "be died In tile
performance or duty" and ''bebind him be loaves the abiding
srlel of bls !Om' comrades
in-arms, Vietnamese as well as
American.-·
The ciiAUon was presented to
Mrs. lla,yman b,y MaJor Stephen
C, Kavac1 &lt;( the US Army ROTC
ln&amp;tructor Group, Ohio Un!ver.
slty, Atll•s.
METHOD IN DELAY
PARIS (IJPl) - North VIetnam and tile Vlst Cons have retused to engage In meanlllgful
neiiiJI(atlm !or VIetnam peace
becmse they believe they can
Ioree lbe coUapse ol the SllsOD
government by slalllns, allied
coaference sources llid Satur-

3 PC: Ran.p,,Set ,.. ••..·.•••. ;••••••• -~ •_ .$4.7~

TIFFIN C m:DIT .JEWElERS
.

LES WILliAM$QN

.

'

8

. SAT. TIL 9 Pll'

.. Blt,t' WELLMAN

'

,

i

IT'S IC:OMOMICAL TO SERVE-AT
HO)IIE. BUY IT'IY THJ.BOX,·BU,C!ICI!T
. .. ·, , . \ ~ IAJIItlt.; AT ,, , ·

IOIEtAN$'SJEU ltOUM

•.' .

Pork Cho·ps

.,

....

For your car
your home
your life
and your health

Closed
Sunday

LOIN lb.

RIB lb.

Easter Sunday
OPEN REGULAR HOURS
MONDAY, .APRIL 7th
Hollv-1 Style

Spate Ribs

~~

• • • •••••oo • • oor• oo oo ••oooooo• • •

69c

Dtlldou'

Sauer Kraut ....... _________ .... _ .. _____

IT'S ELECTRIC NOW
LANCASJ'ER, Ohio (IJPI) lnmateo at tho Fairfield Coun·
ty Jail here will be shaving
with electric razors. U they shave
at all, because prisoner.• were
uslnt! razor blades to cuttlu'ooBh
cell bars.

39c

,

Pies .

Bread

'

I

·"

14-oz.

State Farm is all
you need to know
about insurance.
Lemen Cutt•rd C1b or

• •

Angel Food Cake _. . . . : .·· 39c

Caroll K. Snow~en
P .... Central Hotef'81Jg:
Second Ave. Ph • .f~290
"•'"• ph. o4.t6-4511
GGIIIpoll•

Pllltbury &amp; BtHtr&lt;l

Ice Cream

....

Biscuits __ .. . _.. _ 12 ..... 99e
Nowl Birdstyt F......,

... $1
Orange Plus .. _. . . . . 2 ,ant
•

Home0fflc:et:81oortllngton,.tlllnols

crtn .

Cottage Cheese .... _. .

Insurance Companies
•

1/ 2-gal.

Krottr BrMd

STATE FARM

2~b.

Crill.

59e

•

day.

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

Laundty llolo."IIOI

2·lb., ..... r.: c
Breeze
·
------ --· -·- .... a9

MELAMINE
DINNERWARE
PIECE OF THE WE.EK

C•UP
II EXTRA TOP YALU&amp; STAMPS
with thl1 and purdlase e1

CRISS-CROSS TUMBLE DRYING
SMOOTHES OUT WRINKLES

1 lb. ., mon Cllllor Sllctd

SMOKED HAM
Exp, 1/9160

Unique Philco drum design, with i I I I
placed triangular baffles, creates a
cr9ss tumble actk&gt;n; brings gentle air-flow
contact with every fiber over and over
for"best possible drying of everything, lncllud4
ing the ne~ durable press garments.

EASY
TERMS

No Coupon!
Limit! - .
No

3";Jt

World Treasw·y Of Children's Clauics
Now On Sa~e
Vol. No. 3- Vol. No. I ea. 49c; 2-lfi ea. $1.49
Vita.Hume

O.coretlvo MAI'IIIt

• l automatic drylnt cycles • Safety
loadina door • Automatic dt-wrinkliRJ
• Frot1l servlct door with Slfety switch
• Auiblt time oontrof • Portelain
enamel finished drum

A Flam•leii,Eiectrlc Dryer
.

Kroger Stores

prizes. Resen-atlons may be
made by contacting Harley Calhoon in Rio Grande, Charles
Richard, Rt. 2 Patriot, or Blll
Lakin, Patriot Star Route. Tlckete are oo sale tor $1.

with the purch111 of
' ~

Gallipolis and Pomeroy

tion oC new officers. a special
tllm, and proselllatloo of door

GET 15 SPECIAL
WIRING ALLOWANCE

40Q Line .qqok.}"•r,. E.ch oaui.ot"r holcbl "otandard
j&gt;ack.-qe" quantltiq lor .convenien! otoraqt. , ,,

We .....,., 1111 rltlll to limit 'IUintiiiH.
Copyrltht, Tho K,_ Ca., ""

Chips . . .. ':! $1.29 Tc·p Soil . ': $1.19
Sunrise-Fresh
Pink or Seedless

lt IIXTAA TOP VALUE STAMPS
with thlt aood punhau of

I plies. Sliced
LUNCIIION MEATS
Ex•,l. 4/9/(1.1

II EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS
with this . _ 'lllfl pu•cMM of

'11 'tal. K"'or
LO.CAL DRINKS
F:(ip. 4/:i/11.1

-

.

Grapefruit

5
"'·

bag..

I

•

�.•

· Comprehensive Look a.t the 1970s j..
Urged by Meigs Extension Service ..•

Dr. Roadarmel Will Speak a·t Bpptist·, Te:,o,·

•••

BY HOBART WILSON, JR.
IQ tile Galllpolla Lloaa Club last Tuollda7 concerniJW

IN hla tolk
-ld problema, Rev. A. ll MacKN&amp;Ie, rector of the St. Petar'a
Qlls-1 Church, polntad out ~ drue use Ia oil tho lactee.lo thlo erea.
·

FAMILY ~lNG
POMEROY - Mr. and !lin. over 6$, long term l'lll'si'W care .
At
the
requea(,ofhomemahera,
facUlties
are
ll'UIIy
.
.
Metal COiDII1 Sablnlay were lntaUoriJW
leooono were given to
Medical
lacilltlea
ahould
bo
exALTHOUGH Rav, MacKellllo wu rellorrlnll vl!&lt;w! IQ look apln at tho gealo
18
hconemakero
In P&lt;~~~eroy aDd
pao¥1ed
to
properly
care
lor
our
to IUithetlltere Ohio I I I - t , he aibd&gt;''Whilre theJI want their councy IQreaeh In
RtedsvUie. WhUe tho maJoricy
do we otaal'l Rove we seorehed IMD'owo""""'unlt.)l the 70o. .The occiolon was then- -.Jation,
- Watar aDd Sewerego Sys- were young homemakers, the age
concendQg thlo dtQi81'Qio matter'? If thlo lo"hlp. lease or the 1868 report of tho
tems - Water Is urgently need- apan ranged to the mature homepe•Wie here, are welooldll!lfor an easy way oufl" Molgo Councy Exteftsloo Service,
++++++
The coctiOratlve Extension ed by two-lhlrds of tho -.11· maker. The majority had not
RECENTLY, tho Portsmoutll Times ran a Senlce In qrlculture and - e tlon aDd 99 per cent of tho 11'01 been invoJved in Home Exte•
serloo ot artlcleo CCMICOrning tho abuse or dnop b7 economies al., ottered cltizena to permit improvementinhm~es, aioo programs prior to , this.
Three newsletters are maned
teell&gt;ll!~rolll thot IIOII'by communlcy. Said tho Times intereatW in resource devei•. tile developmeni of new home
out
to homemakers ln Meigs
oitea,
and
lor
11¥1uatrlal
use.
me• and in the extension pr~
In a
2? editorial:
"P-;,.,Io are !o tho htblt ot r-Qi about trapd!eo aDd doiQJI gram to review goela sot forth Sewerego aystemo must follow. County each molth. One, which is
-Transportation - Melp easy reading, goes to low income
little more than nodd!ug their heads In thankati&gt;lt such things don't March 31, 1968.
happen here.
u Are more gals needed? Are County baa been effectively Iso- homemakers ao¥1 gives help in
"Many had taken that altitude toward the many stories of drug they correct? Do they show vi· lated by lack of modern highways moooy management, foodprepar·
use by teen-agers. Too many assumed that such couldn't happen in the s!on, lmegh•tlon, courage? Or ao¥1 bridges over the Ohio River. , ation, and household organiza·
Portsmouth area.
shoold they be charwed?" asked 'l"'rency mUes or additional lm· lion. Another goes to 125 young
county
agenta C. E. Blakeslee, proved highway Is urgently need- hcmemakers an:l Is concerned
" 'rt has ilaPPened here, aDd It !o ~~bore. Pollee aDd oth·
ers reel we are just beginning IQ !eel the etrecta or the lint waves of agriculture, and Margaret Grlf- ed plus a byilasl!l around Athens with money management. A third
to COI'dlecl Meigs County with eo. which goes out to 530 homemal&lt;·
drug use.
rtths, home economist.
11
To he1p answer these ques- lumbuo. The collapse or the SU· ers, gives general home economHospitals are gettirw: a few victims of drugs. Juvenlle Court is
tions.
the public ls invited to a ver Bridge greally accentuated Ics informatiOn with eJ11)hasis on
beginning to get cases lnvolviJW drug use. The school systems are b&amp;c0111umer information, nutrition.
glnnlng to get worried with the rlaiJW tide or rumors (If they are )lot meotiJW Ill the dlnlJW room. of this need lor transportation.
- Flmnclng - One or Melga heme fllrnlshl nga ao¥1 child dethe county home when the goals
rumors) about drug use.
w11te specter of death from drtV use is seesaln the ·community by for 1970 wUI beput down on paj&gt;er County's greatest needs Is in votopmen~ In addition, 125young
Portsmouth Pollee Sgt. Jackson Wetnmam, and he is In a poslUon to by the Rasource Development this l!olct. There Ia no ftnencing parents receive "Chats With ParCommittee and representatives available lor lnduatrlal dovel&lt;t~­ ent..••
foresee the potential or the coming months.
ment or houalng nmnclng In
TWenty homemakers learned
"Reports wrltten rrom New York ao::l Washl~n don't hit with of planning groq~L
Suggestion&amp; are solicited, by Meigs Councy except oo a abort. basic sewing techniques whUe
eflOIVh lmpacl A glue-sniffing death In nearey Cincinnati hasn't demaldrw: a simple dreu ln t w o
terred local yoongsters in their use of glue. Parents haven't been te1ephone, or tn person, or by term basis.
classes
held ln Pomeroy during
VocaUooal
Training
ao¥1
Rewrltlrw: to Box 32, Pomeroy.
oufftclently alarmed.
Recommendationa arxl guid- training - Additional money Is January and February.· BeJ~~ides
"Seine parents who read last week's T1me11 series CNllocal drug
problems are begirmiJW to ahmr eoocern. Some teeftoflgera are belag ance lor the Meigs County Coop. needed to devel"' a comprehen- baste sewing techniques, includ..
qui:z:zed at home concernbw their knolf)edge. Some school otnclals eraUve Extension service pro- olvo vocational trainiJW program ed ln all sewhlg classes was inare making a clos~r usessment of the problem. This Js aa It shoold gram In Hl Clubal¥lotherYouth In Meigs Councy. Trabdngboyond formation on color, fit, and other
Work, Resource DevelOJIIIIent, the high school level In both lea· consumer Jntormation which can
be.
"The lime is long past when ha-riqJ!qJao¥1 head-shaking wu Family Livblg, ao¥1 Agri-Busi- demlc ar¥1 vocational work ls he used in buying resd,y-mades.
greatly needed.
Emphasis is also giventouseand
enough. Unleu something Is done soon, it appears that the worst ness are invited.
Recreation
The
three
major
of the sewing machine tn
care
Groupo which have developed a
can happen here, leadhl:' to tears and flowers, and funerals."
special program in 1968 or have recreation areas now developed the beginning classes.
++++++
A highlight or the Extension
plana
well laid for work In 1969 in tho COUli\Y Include Forked Rtm
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from tho nles of the Dally Tribune and
Lake
and
Park
{State),
Royal
Oak
homemakers'
program was a
and
1970
are
invited
to
submit
weekly Gallta Times ... locumbent clcy commlssiooers Dr. R. D.
Park
(private),
ao¥1
Hidden
Lakes
Homemaker's ForiDD held In ApAllison, A. F. Frye and WU!Iam McKnight to seek reelection ... written statemerts to be includDwil!ht C. Wetherholt named GARS golf CQich ... Richard Davia ed in the aMual report of theRe- (private). Several recreational rU with 200 homemakers attendelected president of GAHS student body ••• Hugo Pierotti reelected source Develq,ment Committee. developments InclUde the marira ing. sessions offered were on
Bel'"' were the 1968 g&lt;els: at llllddlepor~ Soon IQ be aban- the homemaker's role in the comGallipolis B&lt;lat Club president ... Rotarians name Dr. Paul Fosrer
- E~~t&gt;loyment - A labor sur· doned lock aDd dam sites otror munity, use of small accessories
president •• Dr. Leo ;Bean. Rotary's charter presldent, hooored by
In the homo, gardening lor the
vey
In February 1967, b7 the Ohio additional posslbllitieL
fell'"' Rotarians ... GARS beats P~ Plea ..nt 5-1 in 1949 baseball
homemaker,
history of the Ohio
State
Employment
Service,
under
Tho
Extension
Report
for
1968:
opener.
Valley
as
reOected
through its
the direction oC Frank Childers,
The service, workirw in Agrisigned up 1,436, men (868) a!¥1 business, Home Ecmomics, 4-H lumlshlngs, and a Cashion Show
women (568), In add!tlon to this Club and other youth, and in re- featuring .., tC date patterns and
number there is probably a great· source deveopment, gave assist- tips for sewing onnewmaterJals,
AGRI·BUS!NESS
er number who did not sign ~. ance to 4,688 Individuals during
Nineteen 4·H club members
The four county high schools the year.
wUI graduate 300 high school
Training was given by the sold 19 steers well!hlng 17,2W
studenta this June. Jobs are ur- agents In leadership ao¥1 subject pounds at the fourth Meigs Counfolks Dressed Up, m-ng black each morning for you to savor gently needed to help these p~ matter areas thrwgh 318 meet- ty Steer Sale for$6,439,50. Aver·
tie, for the casJno and most of with breaklaot ..... And nothing pie secure a Ntlsfactory livlng ings with a combined atten:lance age weight was 913 poonds lor
the parties of the hal!-&amp;glish, is 80 tasty as a Nusau sweet as well as a IUIDIIment In life. or 7,889. In llddition, 226 news $338.92 average. Ten vocational
hali.Oid U, S, Guard in-set.
·• pineapple at the ripe.
- Ad-te HouaiJW - Thio i'rticiiS' Were prep&amp;red;. . fOW-' f,.. agrleull\lr~ ~~- I'H 'c!dti iiilnli'
Both the u. S. and their Brit'
They were not. however tile continues to be Meigs County's d1o' programs were prepared, bera ocld , ltmbs averlgtJW . 70
pounds wttb an average price ot
ish counterparts bore the un- Good Old Days .••• These a r e great need. Twenty or more In- four tours conducted.
mlstal&lt;able patina of I Got Mine Nassau's Good Old DIJ'B ••••• dividuals have built houses, but
$35. 87 per head.
llldivld~el help has been given
Eight Meigs County farmers
•••. You see Jt in Palm Beach, Where once no traffic cop was there is a lack or modern apart- thriJUih 4,400 telephone calls,
aJong the rlcb.folks' New Jer- ever needed, there are one-way ments an::J. houses for renL
olflce calls, and farm and home dipped 402 sheep for external
sey nicknamed shore the Irish streets, atop and&amp;!&gt; lights, sharp-Nursing care 11¥1 Medical vlalts. 7,147 bulletins were dis- parasite control.
Riviera, oot quite Beautlllal Peo· ly limited parking, ira!!lc Jams Facii!Ues - With Meigs eoun. tributed.
Thirty-three cooalgnors sold
There wore 512 4-B club boys 423 Ieeder cal vea at the Athena
ple, more a Beautitully Pamper- all doJ oot _hlst at 5:10p.m. Sat. cy's hll!h porceJtage or people
ed People, not solnclalvoly limn- ur~ afternoons for a few minao¥1 girls enrolled In 912 pro- ao¥1 Gallipolis Feeder Calf Demed as in a Dawnier sculptured utes.
jects. These were carried out in onstration Sale, 12,9 head per
TORNADOES MENACING
editorial but that's c I o s e
Luxury hotels then? Three ..,
Tornadoes menaced the G u II 39 elmo, under the guidance of consignor. ·
enougll.
Six farmers are selllng feeder
Today - about 30 with at least Coast Saturda,y and rain leU from
79 volunteer advisors (who serve
The pace was slow, the mood 15 new ones being built .... The Texa•oo New England.
wlthoot pay), and 68 Junior Leed· pigs through tho ChUI!cothe and
sleepUy merry, the maid cost British Coloolal sWI is t h e
Lanca1ter Sale.
ers.
three pounds sterling per week, downtown hub, bustling like a monitlea Installed behind, all set
Over 100,000 turkeys were
Sixty-one campers arxlll eoun.
$8.W In those days and she like commercial hotel rather Ulan a in what now has to be callod a aoUora participated In the three brooded or fiDI•hed on Melgo
as not plucked a tew vase-loads vacation resort; the antebellum full clt,y bloek of carelully land- area 4-H campa at Canters cave. County farms.
of brilliant subtropical Dowers Royal VIctoria baa been sprue. scaped .imgle, with a faint wh!l! This 60 acre camp site, worth
Twelve dairy herds are onprl)o
along the way to your kitchen ed up considerably, its Saratoga. ol the Nas..u ol ita earliest $100,000 is owned Jointly by ductloo te&amp;tllll; 449 cows are on
and if the sweet-pineapple sea- front verandah st1ll impressive- graceful years some 60 or more Mei&amp;a, Gallla, Hiahlao¥1, Jackson DIIIA, 125 on Owner Sampler, ao¥1
28 on DHIR,
son was m, she simply Lifted one ly antique with many modern a- seaeons ago.
and LAwrence Counties.
Forty men participated In the
Over 800particlpatedwith over
:;;~;;;:;:;:;:;;;:::x:: ::;;~:;~:;:;:~::~::::::::::::::::~~(,:;;;;;;;;::~.~m!mo!~
800 oxldbita In the Meigs County Agronom,y Clinic; 28 attended tlie
Junior Fair. Awards totaled $2,· Estate Planning ao¥1 Real Estate
Tranaler SChool; 20 altel¥led the
732.66.

++++++

CHOSEN DREAM GIRL Miss catherine Clark. a student at Ohio State University

ao¥1 a member or Theta Chaptar or Delta Zeta Sorority has
been seiected as The De1ta
Zeta Dream Girl, 1969, The
award Is presented each year
to the senior girl who most
exei!t&gt;Uftes the Ideals or her
saroritJ.

Miss Clark, the

dalll!hter or Mrs. Joseph W,
Clark. is !!Ut.iorif€ in Cloth..

''

irW and Textiles an:l is a mem--

'

ber ot the Universlcy 4-H Club,
the Universi~ Chorus,

aJXI ia

Little Sis or the Alpha Tau
omega Fraternity• .

1

t
'

WILL RUN AGAIN
WASH!NGTON (UP0 -A
spokesman for Sen. Allen J.
Ellender, O.La., says EUeiKier,
78, has every intentinn of
nmning in 1972 for a seventh
term. "There is no doubt ln my

min:! t.he senator plans to run
agalnt''

the

spokesman

said.

"He is quite active,"

lNCHEASES BROADCASTS
LONDON (UPO - Pekiug Ra·
dio has increased its Czech and
ROmanian language broodcasts

to a daily basis, Western
monitors reported Saturday.
Peking began the broadcasts

Jut September, beaming three
to czechoslovak.ja and two to
Ramania each week.

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NASSAU, Bahamas - Twen11 years qo when we first vlaft.
lid thlo Blamoroos chunk ol coral
'!)II in the Atlantic (Dot the Ca.
rlbbean, u so many mistakenly
insist) It was a snoozy, lazy,
IOTel,y little island .... II still
11 lovely but the lazy and snoozy
111 longer ftts.
We had a tiny pink hoooe In
~een street, 20 yeora qo, hall
a block !rom the British Coloolal Hotel, . - bicycles every.
where which wasn't far in those

deJa.
Everything in the way of sun
aDd games was available just a
~rooa~away,thepm~

ling casino Ill walldng distance
of our charming digs, the Bay

street Boys piled their prosperous monopollea along the lew
dcnmtown blocks, cars were few
IIIII rarely heard after 11 p.m.,

Absentee, Disabled

Petty Officer Cale

· Voting Made Easier Sustains Wounds
POMEROY - Pomeroy res!denta IIIII¥ c..t
ob- ballots in theMayprlmaryelectlono
tlrom Monday unW 4 p.m. on May I, the Meigs
CounQ' Board or Elections said S.turda,y,
Tho board otrlce loeated in the MeiiOOic
Temple ot Pllmeroy will be open !rom
Uo tp.m. Monday through Frida¥ each week
fF tile purpose of a b - voting, Disabled
and aervlcemen•a ballots and those of their
fimilles will be proeeased.
Pomeroy will have both a Democradc and
Republican primary.
On the Democratic aide, Ph,yllis Hennessy
IIIII Clara !De Souloby are soeking the nomllltlm of their party as treasurer candidate.
llrs. Elma Russell, a Republican now holdlila the ol!lce, did not We.
However, Mrs. RusseJl ls me of seven
lepmllcan candidate• seeking nomtnatioos
Ill run oi representatives of their party
lot Ylllego eouncU, with rrur to be nomlllll;od. Other candidate• are Dm Collins,
Frllllilln Rizer and IJJcien Poolln, incumlllall, and James Mees, Cllntoll F·isher

1;-

lllil i'fiil Globokar.
. 11le fOurth lllcumbent councilman

MIDDLEPORT - Kenneth Cafe, busband
ol the former Nancy Roller d. Middleport,
is confined Ill a naval hospital Ill Japan
after being woondod near the cambodlan
border.
Petty Officer Cafe received ln_hlrles of
the neck, eyes and shoulder on March 29.
He underwent surgery tho following day.
He is expected to he conllned to the hospital lor about three more weeks before
returning to duty.
Mrs. Cafe and the couple's daulhlera,
Marcia, Melissa and Megan, are making
their home with her mother, Mrs. Max
Roller, In Middleport cmlng Petcy om.
cer Ca1e's overseas clJtv,

.....C.
Econoilde lliV.

aource of lunda, lean~ aDd
!rom Farmaro HC11118 Admllll·

Area Laukocyte meet!JW, 11¥1 20
ottended the Dairy Prollt School.
One Iarmer Is on bie! production teiu._. Over 100atte1¥1ed
the Hereford Aoooclation and the
coctiOraUve' Extenslcin Service.
RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT
The Extension Service, Technical Action Panel, and Raaoorce
Development Committees aDd the
Meigs CouniJ' Regional Planning
Commission have carried out
work which encouraged, recommellfed, or assisted county d•
velopment.
Councy Boolanol&gt;!le S.rvlee,
clrc:tllatioo 100,009.
There Is a 200 mUe Pi&gt;ellne
un:le..- construction costin&amp; P.·
409,000 for 1650 water uoers;

Develq,ment Pr~, are: :
Comprehensive C&lt;lu!tfl• Wi6

Plannirw.

.

-:

Jobs.

•
:

Adequate Hou1lng.
.
Nursing care ao¥1 Mtdl~ 1'1cllltlea.
...
Transportation.
•.:
FiMnClJW.
'""

Competition amone the eonteatanta in tho !IIIII IIIDial M Ia 1
Solthern Ohlo Pageant 11Pi£ently Ia going IQ be keen.
The conteotants registered to date b7 Mrs. Ralph Welker and
Mrs. Richard Rawllnga como lr&lt;lm a wide area ao.J_.-entl,y blve
had a lot or trainiJW which should como Ill baDdy pqeant nfalt~
Incidentally, tho pegeant IIIII be held at 8:10 p. m. oo ~
26 in the Meigs Junior Hl8fl School at Pomeroy.
So rar, the conleatanta hill !rem Drexel 11111, Pa.l Mel•a,
Vo.; Gs~ Cdumbus, Oevelaod, Fairborn, GranvUie, IIIII ot
coorse, Meigs Cou!IQ'.
Rules of tho pegeant pronde thst girla eompetlov can elthor
live or he atteo&gt;llug school In all)' of the
countloo of GoiUa,
Melga, Athena or WasldDston.
To point out the versatillly a1¥1lnteresta of the
Cor
example, oae glr~ a -~~~ at Ohio Univeraley boa atulllad daneUw
lor 14 years, has had three yeora of tralnlllllln dramatic• and foili'
years training on tile !lute. She Ia an honor atulent, - • · doel 11atoo
er ao¥1 oaow sldi.qJ, teaches dancing ao¥1 Ia alao a Sunday SehOcil
teaeher. She won the Lincoln canter Incentive Award Cot C&lt;llllrlllulo
ing Ill tile per!ormiJW arts In high school.
Another contestioJt heo had three yeare training on the Ylclb!,
two yeero oo the !lute, elgllt yeero oflliuro allatillll. four )'tid·of
tellllla In addition IQ training In modern dance, art IIIII 'iOlee. Sl!e II,
a member or the United States Figure Sloltlllg Aoaoclatioa, partld.
pataa Ill tellllo trurnamenta, ,lltbto, does oeullllure, 11 a horaellaok ·
rldlqr inatructGI' at Ohio IJlllvorolcy, swims, aida aDI Ptlllll.
Thio Ia only a SS~q~ling of the girla reglatered lor tho ....X.
The pageant Ia a major chore and leodi'.'I . ~ ,'J'OSt walcC11118llllPiJW. liaixl.18 Jack Cari!Of and hi~ ol!iel"a~-~· ~ ~lritl.•
at landmark.lll!aldeli'other h8Jp the lla!Ho cUrillot il/ltijl
maea of oommWIIcatioo "which lo maUed IQ 'Conleotantl· uil'~~
alq tile _.rn rarte.
. .
· Incidentally, dancers IIIII 'OOC8I ...olsta of the 1111 Bead M!J&gt;.
sirs! Aoaoelatloo hove been holdiQJIIlldivldual reheorlll oeallcm
lor several weeho. They wUl move topther Cor their llrat Jo111t ,...
heerlll Thursday evaniJW at the Pamero,y Element1r7 SchOoL ·
The mlDOtrol - ' " IIIII ba providing tile entel'lllllllent b&amp;tween oegmelta ot tho pqoant C&lt;lqlelltlon - awlmoult, eVIIIIQJI
gown IIIII talent.
lo the final development towarda tho _.,t, loire. Ralph W.U..
er reports thet ad¥uce llle tickata wUl be plaeed Ill several bualo
neaa house• 'llluradty, 'llle advance tickatl are IOid at a all8flll1
lo- price thaD tickelo at the door, The avl11111 clooa add ..,, llowo
ever, If you're bl¢ng tleketa lor tile entire tamlly.
""

Miss Debra Rae Grueser
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and MrL WWiam T. Grue-,
Grant St., a'""''IICed the
or their daUKhter, Debra
Roe, IQ Mr. James Mlcluiel Gerl&amp;ch, son of Mr. aDd Mro. We"'
dell Gerlach, Vine St., at a Jllll'Q' Saturday night at tile Grueaer
h..,., Guoato at the bul!ei ""'per and Jllll'Q' whleh tollowed
.,.... relative&amp; of Mlos Grueser and her !lance.
A 1987 rrad~ata of Mlddl..,ort High School, Miss Grueser
Ia 1 aophCIIIOI'o at Glenville State Co11110, Gleovlllo, W. Vo.
Her llanco, a!IO a 1967 rndiBte of Middleport High
Sehool, Ia a IM&gt;JlhCIIIOI'e at Rio Gnnde College.

._.m:

•-nta,

MIDDLEPORT - The stork
moar waa carried rut 111 the
IOCial room dtcoratlms of the
Middleport First United Presbyterian Church lor a layette
lbOIIir hmorlnr Mrs. J a c k
Satlortleld, Jr.
IIQitllases were Mra. Terry
Ohllqw, Mloa Sarah Bechtle,
Mrl. JanetFraok, and:MlsaChar1~ DavldiOD.
. were nlavod ~~._

,, · b.\l~i·· · · ·T In
..r'lolro.'ij;;.;;.;,.J~ "er, !.Ira. ~Biwnil. 'Mrs:E411&amp;

l'a
VI
•
'

timor

We worship 11nd
give th..nl" to God
at f.dsterlimefor .Jl

Zirkle, Mrs. Jean Ellen Kelly,
Mra. Janet Lewia, Mrs. Gall
IIDvllter, Mra. Iva 8111011, Jolro.
JUanita Conde, Mro. BeU;y Cline,
Mrs. Beverly Lon&amp; Mrs. Dee
Brow, Mrs. Katie Wella, and
Mro. Hazel Roue!!,

'

Wedding Plans Completed

stowed upon ul.

?
•
..

THE REV, C. E. HOYT, Who formerly pastored the Middleport
First Baptist Church, is now tho executive mlnlaterof the Bay Councy CouncU or Churcheo and has moved to Essexville, Mlcb. Hla laot
pastorate was in Bay Clcy.
The Rav, Mr. Hoyt's 81111, Jolto, is a Presbyterian minister ao¥1
has a very large church Ill Fort Wayne, Ind. 1o !act he !a tho head
minlotar there 11¥1 has • paid •tal! or thirty. ThiJUiht yoo'd like to

know.

POMEROY - Consolidation ot

tile Forest Rose Council ot Tup.
pero Plalno, Daughters of Amer·
lee with Chasrer Com ell 323
,..; completed wring a -

Helen Woll presented the audltlng report whleh was accept.

eel, Golda Wolre aetlt words ol

lllPreciatlon IQ the council lor
the gift and cards which she reing Tuesday night at the Ches- celved _ . her recent hospitallter ball with Ellthar Ridenour, zation. Read at the meeting was
COII!tUor, presiding.
a Iotter !rom Mrs. Eva BeUey
National and state ofllcers re- wbo reside a in Florida, thankcelved during the meellng were ing the councU lor remembrancEdith Wakely, past otale councU. osiQ her.
or and"'"'""etde-"" ~,... .,..,
Thella&amp;bearera escorted Mrs.
.,...~,
.,..,;.........,..,. ,, Clellu\C!' iO the'alfU wiiere' Ma .

=~.=~~

:-et
doruo Councll; Netilellayea,doput;r ot Forest Rose Council, and
Erma Cleland, deputy of Chester
Councll.
A communieetloo waa read
!rom Beatrice Floeek, state SOC·
rotary, in which she tlwlked
the Cheater Council !onm..u.
dating with Forest Rose. MrL
Wikley opoke brlelly on 1 h e
CODJolldatioa, and MrL Hayes
was eaeorted to the attar where
MrL Wakely thanked her for her
wurk with the •ruppera Pllino
CooneU, Also speaking brlelly
were Mrs. Hetzlng, Jolro. Leona
Hena!Qy, 11¥1 Mrs. Stldenobel.
Reported Ul were Mae !'fen.
eor, Golda Wolle, home from
the hospital; Tina Marko, a ps.
tlenl at Veterans Memorial Hoa.
j1ital, 11¥1 Bernice Ridenour, a
Jlltleat at an Athena hoopltal,
'llle !leg was draped at tho
.,.u.s by
0p01 llol!an Ill tribute IQ former Pres!dent llwlgbt D, Elo-er. The
members 1111g "Omrard ChrisUan &amp;lldierL"

&lt;,.2:

Slowaiter, on hehali'cit'ilie
ell, presented her with a birthday gift.
A oUent auction waaheideythe
home and orphans committee 811!1
refreshments were served eythe
kitchen committee.

$25 Given

OS

Cfoss Offering

POMEROY- The recent meeting of the WUiing Workers Class
of the Enterprise United Mothodill Church, at tho homo of
Mrs. Thelme AlrBCXI opened with
devotions b7 Mrs. Mebel Moore
and aerlplurotakenlrom Melthew
27:26-17 read b7 Jolro. Dolores
WIU. Readings ey oevoral member•, group liniiJig ol "He A·
...,..," and !ll'll)'81' by Mrs. AB·
nos Weokalollowed.
uaher.
MlsallarolliY Long, president,
The I!'Bclou• .Ustom ot presided over the bulinoaa sea.
ehurch will be ol&gt;aerved with an
Ilion when tile group voted IQ
roceptloo IQ loll.,. Ill tho
give $25 to the clurch treasury
ehurch vestibule.
as an Easter offering. The
wonder box donated b7 Mrs. AB·
... Dbwn waa won by MrL eor.
doUaBontz.
Relrelhmenta were served to
OFFICERS ELECTED
those all'fii1Y named and Mrs.
POMEROY - orncera were Frances Carleton, Mrs. Myrtle
eleeted When the Zion League ol Lon&amp; Mrs. Boulah llltorback,
the Reorpnized Ghurch of Je0111 IIIIas Freda Ueving, Mrs. Ellie
Cbrlst of Latter 1&gt;aJ Saints mot. Bat8a, Mrs. llfarJorle Bowen,
With Nothing In Either W .
'llle lll'OUI&gt; ineludes ~ Cleelc, Mra. Beatrice Bleil, Mra. Sora
prelldent; Brenda Bradford, tlco ' DW, and auests, .Mr1. &amp;laan
prelldent; Patcy Walker, ioci-e- I'Ullllla and Sc&lt;lti;y, Palll' Elll·
111')', 11¥1 SandY PrU!Itt, ....... warda, and Poggi, Dollie, Gena
urer.·
IIIII l'ltrlck Alr11011.

u.

the bridesmaid. Bolli, cousins ol
tho brldt.elect, are of Roehea.
ter, N. Y. Mlsa MalliA T~­
ao IIIII bo tho aowor girl, and
Maater Gory Ginther IIIII bo
ring bearer.llulle will bo-'&lt;1od b7 Mr. Bill Allen and Mr. and
Mrl. Garry PariiOIIL
Sit. Td&gt;an hu chosen Mr.
Oly llorper •• hll bolt man,
and Mr. Tom Jonea IIIII be an

NOWI YOU MAY
HEAR AGAIN

the blessings be-

ARE YOU READY
FOR SUMMER

or ilie door prize

· waa Milo JolarUyn SWan. Larp
atorkl Ill a pink and blue color
ae~ deeorated both the sift
table IIIII tho retrellunont table.
leo cream, cake, Pllbth 11¥1 mints
were aerved. ·

o.

SPEAKING OF
FIGURES •••

The &amp;Uelll list Included those
named above and Mra. RoselleJ.
ooids, Mrs, Lola MeElhlll17,
Mrs. Mary llindy, MrL Doro.
lh1 Anthony, Mra. Judy Crooka,
Mrs. Clnda Harris, loire. Roeetta Redovlan, Mrs. Olive Sat·
ter!lsld. Mrs. Helen Sauer, Mlu
Lois Ann Sauer, Mro. c. H.
Burt, Mrs. MarJorielllrt, Mro.
Mary Buck, Mrs. Charlene Tho11!11~ Mrl, Judy ~Ja~Iey, l4ra, 1~ilil COIII!Is, Mlsl Mar8ali! ·~

hedpur and .Kharegplr, I I ...

Jll1'llll8ldonl of • wwldng .......

boltal Ill KhlregpUr, ao prlodpal 1111! aeeratary ol the s...
lal Bo7o' High School Ill Bhlmpore, alld _.vtaod the work
of 60 or more Ylllage primary
sehoola.
.For I1WII' yeara this former
mlaalonary pve _.,vtalon ond
counseling servleeo lor the In·
dian ellureheo ·of the bwllstrial
center• of JamahecipJr, Kharag.
pur, and Mosubonl Mines. DurIng the war years he did ope.

six-·

Give Layette Shower Councils Consolidated

POMEROY - Plano have been
~eled lor )he weddlnK of
Jolla• Allee Evalyn Smith, dlullh·
tar of Mr. and Mra. Lawrenee
A. Slnlth, Cheater, to Sit. Dan·
1a1
Tobaa,
S. Air Forca,
1011 of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil 0,
Tuban, RQute 2, Pomeroy.
· Viiwa d. the dooble ring cert·
IIICI1)' IIIII be read b,y tho Rev.
Pearl casto at tho Chesrer Melhedllt Cllltrell limdl1. April 13,
112:30 p.m.
Mlao .Kati\Y WU11011 will aerve
.. tile brldo'l maid ol honor
and Milo Barbera WDICXI will bo

••

'*""•

Pa,.

r-

Wen -

lo!IDDLEPORT - Dr. Qlar..
le1· c. Roldarmel, a mlsllianary .tit India lor to )'0111'1, will
be pot opeaker at the 1111111
lellciwlldp tea of the 8. H, Sinborn lolls~ Soe!ocy ol Ill•
Middleport First llll)tlal Churcli,
7:30 p,m, ldmdiQ',
During the 40 70Arl he ~
in the mlaolon Reid
iill
retirement Ill 1988, Dr. Roadarmel'o -rieneeo embraced
many 1aeeta of ml11lon work.
He served as psator of En&amp;·
!Ish ~ ehurchta Ill Jama-·

AND SPEAKING OF CHEER, oseing 1 famiUar taco in a far•
away place brightens tho darkest day, Paul Chadwell, in Vleam
1llt paat
was oollrat day or hio R.&amp;R. Ill Natlonallot
Chilli, IIIII wbo 1hoold he nm into but Steve Badiley•
Paul IIIII Steve were clasllll1&amp;tea at Eastern Hl8fl SchooL Steve
"Jadned tho NaY)' IQ see the world" ao¥1 to aboard one or the ships
just otr tho DMZ. The two badn't seen IBCh other lor a lq ~ 10
It wao quito a reunion.
B,y the_,
IIIII bo 21 on Aprll14. He e!Qoya nothing IDOI'e
POIIIEROY - Ell!hcy • ftve
thea mall !rom homO. lllo address - SP4 Paul Chadwell, U, S. peoplo walked out onio the speak11881910, C. Battery, lit of 44th Artillery, APO San Fraoeisco,
ers platform, youngandoldallke,
Call£ ' 28962.
as the band played uLetA Wi~
ner Lead the Way." This wu the
AFTER FOUR MONTHS IN FLORDJA with son, Bill, al¥llamlly, ldc)&lt;.off lor the cancer Crueade
lira. Geren Stansbury Ia home. She returned Wedoesday with her In Columbus last weokeo¥1.
llrather..IJI.Iaw and sister, Dr. ao¥1 Mro. CecU Harden ol Columbus,
1bree yOJ.ng boys were amo~
wbo alao wi.Ured 111 florida.
the 85, cured or the dreaded disJuat ~· Chrlltmao, Mra. Stanallll'y !lew to Walll'Wford, Po., ease of cancer. I met many pee&gt;
lor the formal weddblg of her granldaugllter, Lynn Stansbury Hempie and learnedmanythiJWS,Thio
- · IQ Dtvld Stephen Smith or Claymont, DeL, who attends was well worth attending.
Bar1111"d. l,yaa, daughter of Jane aDd Richard llemmemvay, Ia a
lo the past, one
lftduata or Endicott Jlllllal' College.
of loor percoold be
IMAGINE TAKING ON THE CHORE or constructing a 35 loot
now it Is
houaebottl art thot'o Mamlng ao¥1 JW&gt;O Kloos' lateot proJect, IIIII
k!QrlqJ them, It wUl bo !l&lt;etl~ on tho Ohio, come summer.

cor

•

Reunited with Family
POMEROY - A Columbus news- lut
week published a report on the reunion ~
Jom S.pp, Columbus, with his brother and
lour sisters.
Saw laot saw his brother and sisters
almost 35 years ago, when he waa four
years old and was adopted !rom a thlldreo'o
home in New Lexington.
Adopted ey the late Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Saw, of Pomeroy, he waa roared Ill Pome·
n&gt;T and - - Pomeroy Khoola. Liter,
Mrs. Slpp, following the death or her husband, marriod the late Hiram Archer, a
widower, after John Saw had been reared
and had left Pomeroy.
Saw vlalted here numerruo tlmeo, tho
last time in the early sixties when Mrs.
Archer waa Ill.

Mra. Dwight Parker, Pomeroy, Ia baviQJI 110 esay time ro._..
ating from ~loa ohe ltltfered wben she toppled clown a !light of
ataira at her - · about two weeks ago.
In the !all both ot her ohouldero were dialocated. She'o still at
Pletaant Valley IIIII IIIII probably bo there lor another week .., llo.
Her erma are lllW in calla, crosaod, and tied togelller Ill curtall
movement or the ohoulder oockots.
She' a Unoomrortable, but !nwroviQJI, and cardl Juot lllW would
aurely cheer her.

stratlon ind
opment Aclminlstratlol\1, *'-11!111
C&lt;lmprehenalve lliter ind1'sellii'
plan Coi111leted ror Melii ~
$40,000 compreheilalve ~~~
requested lor the counb'l ~
govenunenl Is Providi'W t7,5ot
Gealo, ao liated In tho ...-.
report of the Overall EconomiC

Former Resident is

""""'elor

that i&gt;lve been cured. But this
certainly gives us hope tor those
who will be strickenarxlthosewho
have

been

cured,

as they

llgain could face the disease.
Mios Virginia Graham gave a
most interesting talk that was
full of wit and hwnor. She is an
Inspiration.

clal work ·with ~ IIIII
hla residence wao •
lor many ot the 4.Dijotleaa ·mil·
ltary periiOQIOI WI~' • radlua
of60 miles of Khar..,..r•
In December, 1947, ·Dr. R!IOd•
armel was eleeted rJ\Iallonlry
secretary and in addition to lilt
desk work and lravalln&amp; o • e r
india in 001111ectl111 with thla !IUfT,
he managed rrumerooo evlll8llla.
tic activities, ei!IOCiaJI,y In train·
ing conterencea lor Chrllflan
workers, youth and la.ymen, He
had special reaponalbllltteo. 11
counselor in tile llovelopmlllil"of
the Christian Servlca soelefol' as
It took a sreater share of the
work which had formerly boon
adminlsrerod ey the mloslon.
Dr. Roadarmel's field of service was In the Bengai.Qrrlaaa.
Bihar area and his church was
the Baptist Church at Mldnapore,
W_Bengal, India.
He graduated !rom Colgate
Rochester Dlvinlcy School in
Rochester, N. Y.andreceivedhis
doctor's degree from Denison
University at Granvllle, He was
ordained oo April 28, 1926, re-

._..llau_.,

'
cetved his mlsoloo appointment
Ill May' 192 6, and set aull In
September.
Now a missionary. • at -large
lor the American Baptist Convention, Dr. Roadarmel will be
in Middleport Monday and Tuea.
day. His Tuesday schedule will
include a talk over W:MPO, an
&amp;!Mreoa before the Melgo Cooncy
Mlnloterlal Assoclatioo, a n d
speaking at a Meigs High Sehool
assembly program Tuesday sl-

AIRMAN ASSIGNED
THERE WILL BE maltY Easter
MASON - Airman Charles
bonnets worn today at s111rise M. Fry, 8IHI of Mr. and Mro.
services al'kl regular worship WUliam F, Fry, has comploted
services.
basic tralnlllg at Lacklao¥1 AFB, ·terDoon.Children wUI be stuffed with Tex., and has been asaigned to
A church lamUy 111pper has
cani,y and eggs. No one will Sheppard AFB, Teii., for train- been planoed for 6 p.m. Tuesday
want any dlnner - just too much In« in the clvU engineering me- and at 7:30 p.m. a special serv.
eeni,y.
chanical and eleetrtcal field. lee will be held with the retirlllt this Is oot the moat lm· Airman Fry, a graduate ol Wa. ed missionary as the speaker.
portant thing about Easter. This hama High School, attended West The public Is Invited Ill the Tuesis the day that g.-ve us our free- VIrginia lnst!IUte of Technology, day evening eervlce.
dom. OUr Savior died for us and
arose and ascen:led lrto heaven
KATIE
There a r e so that we may l&gt;lve eternal life.
many more persons than the 85 He pvo us the right to ask for
forgiveness. ThriJUih Him we
can have peace orhearla1¥1ml1¥1.
Thls Is Easter.
Let us not !orgeL

OOnpeAn Hoi usehis

ri 13t ·
p

Just a reminder. don't forget
AprU 15: Income tax deadline.
POMEROY - Open boose will Good Lock!
he held from 2 Ill 5 p.m. am.
day, April 13, at the Trlnlcy
Navigators Urged
United Church ol Christ aoclal
room in observance of the golden wedding amiversery of Mr. To Use Great Care
and Mra. Ben Neutzling, of PornRACINE - Notices regulateroy.
lng
navigation passage at the
Mrs. Neutzling, t h e former
Carrie Marie Ellersbach, yrung- Racine Locka and Dam have been
oat of the 12 children of the late amllWlced by the U. S. Corps
Mr. and Mn. Peter Fl&gt;Msbaeh, of Engineers.
··.. "· 1
Codatructihn 'tlf the !lilal''slaie
aDcl 'Mr. Ben NeutzUl!gwere!riar.
cotrerdam
ror the constructioo or
rled AprU 10, 1919, at 10 a.
Racine
Darn
wlll commence-Apm. at the Ellerobach home in PomrU
7,
when
all
trallic will use
eroy. The Rev. M. J. Betz, who
now resides at Chelsea, Mich., the main lock, sl:ze 110' x 1200'.
In view or the seriousness or
Ill a Methodist Homo, offlclat.
delays
and possible coaSitlon
ed.
The couple has two chlldr111, of navigation that could reBUit
Mrs. Ray (Mary) Riggs and Mrs. from an accident to the main
Marvin (Lola) Burl or Pome- lock, It Is requested that naviro,y; ol8flt grandchildren, a n d gators use extraordinary cautim when passing thrwgh the
me great.gandchlld.
Bolli Mr. and Mrs. Neutzling lock.
are retired. Mr. Neutzling, Jq.
time employe of the Parkersburg
Scientists have yet to find
Rig and Reel Co., retired Ill a giant sequoia dying of nat1957, 11¥1 Mrs. Neutzli.qJ, who ural causes.
workod 20 years for the Aid for
tile Aged, retired Ill July, 1959.
Both have b- activo in voeal
and inotrumental music through
the years. They are active mombera of the TrlniQ'United Cllll'ch
of Christ.
No formal lnvllatlona IQ the
open house have been IB111ed. All
lrlondo, relatives and neighbors
OHIO VALLEY
of lllo couple are lllvlted,Jolr,and
SLICED
Mrs. Neutzllng have requested
that glttB be omitted.

Our own observance of Easter Sunday reminds us ot a
new awakenJnv. P,er,r;ma,l fqith i5 ren,wed. We ,are ,
.. made ' ~eacefuUy c,pNl r'e Of' a haloipi8r [ift tO 'Cdrne. · ·. t
·'"'
E oiQrT ';Ijl'\11
.r: ll' ,•,,r.j · •J
' " ''·' I
At this aster Season, it is Oppropria e ro commem· ·
orate departed loved ones by erecting a fitting mem·
orial. Choose from our line of endurable monuments
of distinctive design and dignity.

QUALITY CRAFTSMANSHIP &amp; MATERIALS

See The Above Monument On Display
Place Your Ordw Today For Memorial Day

LEGAR MONUMENT CO.
Hours: Mon •• Sat. 8 AM·S PM-Evona &amp; Sun.
261 W. MAIN
14

THESE SPECIALS FOR MON., TUES., WED. ONL l'

BOLOGNA

RACINE

31•.1.00

WIENERS

Your Birthday?
Send Flowers
To Your

FRENCH
CITY BRAND

lb.

59~
GROUND BEEF

"Mother"
DUDLEY'S FLORIST
S.r•ing: Gallipolia,

Poonoroy, Middleport,

Ful- J alu

From Good, Fresh
Lean Baal

0.

ancl Mason Co., W. Va.
~ 1n7 or 992·5560

pte.

lb.

59e

MARKET
5TH and PEARL STS., RACINE
"The Store With A Heart,
You, WE LIKE"

Right Nler¥ed to limit quantities

We accept Fa a. Food Stamps

Tlwll81l1Uh to DUplay

On Discrimination

Ea.ter PfJI"alk Fmery
NEW YORK (UI'O - Thou- of New
Yorkers will don their IIDery blday for the
amual Eastar Parade em Filth Av...., the

clly'a biggest falhlon · - ·
Tho weather forecast was lor IIDIIY sklea
and temperalurea In the 50&amp; ......, the stroll·
era step off IQ tho accompanlmeatofthepeel.
In&amp; bella of nearby ellll'cheL For the S1lth
yeu: there will bo sunrise aervlcea at Radio
CIQ' Music Hall, with 6,000 -'"&lt;! toot.
tencl.

Plan a

Big Ea.ter

CINCINNATI {VPl) - Someoole apparently plan• o very extensive Eulill' celebration, with the reBUit poHce are oo poaalKILUD IN ACCDJENT
COVINGTON, 111'. (VJ'O - Robert llol- bl,y tile blirleat Eastar egg huat Ill the area.
Thlevea broke Into tho Elder Pooltry
comb, 19, lndependen~, K)',, died at St.
Elizabeth Hol!lilal Saturday lesa than an llfarket in tile Over,the..llhlne area Saturday
hour alter being injured Ill an IIIIo ac:el- """"""' IIIII look 11Yo cases COIIIalnlni: 1,.
800 ogp, Tho ep were valued it fSO,
dent on MAdi11011 Pike here.

,{j

•
••
•
•

Charge§ Club

whose
POMEROY - Tho owners 11¥1 an em.
tairnt exjllrea thlo year but who did oot ployee of the Hl-7 Nlte Club, oo state Rool.o
die Cor IIOIII!JIItioo Is Roy Reuter.
7 near Hobsoo, heve posted $100 bonds
each on charges that they discriminated
Win Degree. at OU
against a Pomeroy woman for reaaons ol
- Two lolelp Countlans were her color,
Three separate a!lldavlta were Wed Frl·
tho 567 receiving deg~·ees
vi tho 1968-69 winter ~ at day In Meigs County Court ey Mary Allee
Samuela, West Main 9:., PomeJ'O;f.
The charges allege that Glom ind Ro10
of arts ck!creea were
Middleport. and Jack F, Lawson, owners of the club, and Zerke
...,...._ 'l'l..r IIIII be lnvit. Schoenbarger, an employse, laDed IQ aervo
Ill tile llllversl4"a 1111ual her Cor reason of her color.
aerc1- on June 8.

. ' ). I

•

'"•

I

\1SIT

GROVER'S
STUDIO

..

•

As lhe Easltr season blossoms {orlh in all liS
·wonder and glory, we lake pause lo reflecl wllh
revetence and gralllude upon lht promise of lltal
firs! miraculous Easler Mom. AI lhis holy, happy
lime, we greel oilr friends 11114 neighbors, ·arid
~hare 111 yout rejoldJIII. f .lda olir sreeljllgs go olir
wishes lo tllch ~f y~ f~r llte,de~p~sl blessings
of lhe se~on. In faster's. m~ssage, 11111y all of
us find comf.;rl for loddy, and iilsplrallon for lo- . ·

BOB'S

mUil8
.
.

HEALTH CENTER

morrow.

·

.

·.

_

.

\

CHOPS
'

Ce1ter Cuts

ono BxlO, thrH 5Jr1, alx wollot alzo

_,lnt y:our chil• '- Gro•or'a Studio whllo
lhtro'l,,li!lt '- C.pturo tllot apoclohpork·
loot our lfiiCiol'~rlco. ·

· .

. . :, PHO..~ 992-~47$ HOWl ASK f'IIR
' "SI!ItiAL OI'FIIi~' APPOINTMIM,T.
~
AV(!IQ l!AI:TING
I ' '
'

'

_., ....,. ._
- ---G-.11-IIs~.O-hl:.o---~j!.j
· ~~
~"

'

SlO

I :1

"Sinr,e
186J"
'"
.

CARRO·TS

spe.cl al offw!
10 portraits of 1011' thild

Jimt_fathi~l~t! ltJik ':
'

ltrge Golde•

.,

. • AGE Ulilh( to l~ ,YEA!IS

.

.

pq.lO~

�Family P)Jlnnmg· Co~ferenee Will ~=s~:;:'l'~!~.:i~!::
Be Held April .23 at Rio Grande.· · :~ 2~~0:~:~..nmu~
,

lumbuo, OhiO 43215, M~ pay.
and show hoW tiiOJ' con be Op. able to, ••Piamed Paienthood
pUed In proyldjhg ~~c:e~ to Aosoclatloo ol C91umbul, Jne. •

'111e first o1 IF CIQ&lt; Schools, wiD c:enter an
tllo faml\)r plom~ ...,....... . the portlclpaljon of educaUoo In
f81'11b' plamlng I I It relltes to meet. the needs In l'llral BOUIJJ·
eo stern Ohio at thls time. Dr,
Fimlly IJ!e Edu~tlm.
John Haman, Dlreetor t:1 the Brlnl!ebe!'l'l' li Medical Dlree:
tile ~ llall Auditorium
tor 01 the Faniny PIIIIIIIinlf Prod Rio Grllllle Coli- Rqlo- l.owrence Coolley Welfare De- Ject as PJWOsed.il!o the Ohio Val•
traUoo bellba at 8::W a.m. wltil portment, ..Ul proYide the conllle session opening at 9:15 a. fereti!'O witil lnformsUm •• to Ill)' Health smt!:t• FOIIIdattm
how welfare departments - the lor AUten II, Golllo, Hocking, Jackm.
11te eonterenCea are sponsor- need for. family plamlng IIICI how 1011, Lawrt!"l) Molls, and VIn·
ed by tiJe Ohio Department of til'~)' J1U10 be acUve In a famlly tm Coundeo.
Wallhln&amp;tm llldFalrfleld Cowl·
Health, tiJe Pl1111ed Puentbood plaMintl prosram
Dr. Keith Brandeberry, Ob- Uoo will 11110 be represented at
AJsoclatloo of Columbus, 1 n d
.
.
sl!ltrlc~ecologlst
of Holzer lhls conrerenee.
the atlo Vall01 Healtil Serriceo
There Ia a pre.nglotratloofeo
Meclleal Center In Galllpolla, will
F~U~datlon ol Allleno. Repre8011ol
$2 wldch lneludes the lunchtallves ol bealth, education, and sum ttl tiJe pertinent areaslllet
eon.
ReserYatlml wltiJ reglstrawelfare agencies, Jawyen, cler- were olre!sed throtlliiM&gt;ul tiJeclq
gymen, commomlQ&lt; _ . , and
Interested Individuals o1 I!Ou!IJ·
eastern Ohio are lnYlted.
Dr. Robert Burket, Ol&gt;stetrtclan-Qrnecolofl(ot ol ClnclnnaU
and Alsociate Proreasor of 11te
Unlversley ol ClnciMaU will be
the ke,ynote speaker. Dr. Alphuo
Cllrlstensen, President of R I o
Grande College, will welcome Ute
participants, and Mrs. A n n e
Sedelmaler, NUrsing Director ol
the D!vlalon ol Maternal &amp; Child
llealth ol the Ohio Department
ol Health will discuss the objectives of her agency In relation
to maldng lamll)r planning oerv.
Ices available thrOUIIIK1lt t h e
state of Ohlo.
Rev. H. R. Hunting, Qlaplaln
of the Southeastern Ohio Mental Health Center In Athens wiD
GALIJPOj.IS ·-

~~d·= ~":. ~

.,

HUNTING EASTER EGGSst.OOents, above, of the Guid-o
ing Hand School eagerly
search for eggs hidden earlier
in the day by members of the
Alpha Delta Epsilon Commut..
ers Fraternit.Y of Rio Grande
College. Presert trom the social and service fraternity and
hidlrw eggs Friday were Roger

Stover, James Houck, Marc
Ellcessor,

and

Roger

WU~

IIams. A Guiding Hand School
student, right, happily holds
several eggs she fourd.
"FLOWER ARRANGEMENTS NO, 2", a 72 page booklet
filled with 135 photographs of artistic floral designs, has been
published by the Ohio Association of Garden Clubs, Inc.
This delightful little book contains many of the refreshing ~w
concepts in tlower arranging as well as the lovely traditional
patterns. All designs are the work o( garden club members
throughout Ohio. Much of the plant material has c(II'J.e trom
the gardens of these talented flower &amp;ITa~ers. Those ln this
area win be irrterested in the photos of arrangements done by
Mrs. James Titus of RutlaOO, one of which is shown above.

'j

Cancer Nursing

Workshop Date

Is May 21st
ATIIENS - Plans are n ow
complete for a Cancer Nursing
Workshop sponsored by the Athens Councy Unit or tbe American
Cancer Socle1y, Ohio Division.

.

The tqlic will be cancer In the

: different age groups. The work.: shop will be May 21, 9 a.m.-3
p.m. at the Athens Mental Health
. Center. The program ls open to
: Registered Nurses, Licensed ,
· Practical Nurses, ~rse Aides,
: Professional Nursing Students,

: and Practical Nursing Students
: from all of the sootheasternOhio

Unit, Esther fives, Phyllis
Grant and Patricia Torres.
For further information contact the Athens Count;y Unit of
the American Cancer Societ;y,
35 Elliott &amp;reet, Athens, Ohio,
or phone 592-1045.

Conservation
Program Topic
POMEROY - A program on
conservation by Mrs. Jed Webster, Sr. hlghll.gllted a meeting
or the Pomeroy !ilakespeare Club
at the home of Mrs. Louis ReJbel Wednesday.

Mason Area
News, Notes

The conservation of soU, water, forest, minerals, natural
gas, and wildlife were discussed by Mrs. Webster wllo cred-

Kimbler Lee Johnson of Westerville, Ohio Is visiting h e r
grandparents, Mr. and M r s.
T. R. Davis In Ma8011.
Ited Tbeodore Roosevelt with beJerry and &amp;!san I.&lt;Jper o1 Coing the first conservationist and lumbus, Ohio are visiting their
tile beaver with being one or tile grandmother, Mrs. Dorothy Cartbest.
wright, for a week. Their parMrs. Ben Neuhling presided ents, Mr. and Mrs. John Loper
at the meeting whlch opened with will visit this weekend.
the club women's creed. DevoMr . and Mrs. Curtis Menan..
tions by Mrs. Dale Smith in- teJ, Mason, and their daughter,
cluded scripture from Matthew Mrs. James Loyd and son, KevMIDDLEPORT - An lnvi~· 26 and prayer. Members namtion to a reception honoring Hll~ ed a favorite flower and a favor- In or Marton, Indians visited In
Columbus with the McDaniels'
d8 Quickie or Cheshire, deJJJQ&lt;
ite bird for roll call.
other daughter, Mrs. ~ley
grand matron, on A)&gt;rll 24 at
Plans were made for a pot.
Cheshire was read when Evange- luck lunchem to be held at Ute Sounders and lamlly.
Michael Brewer, son ol Mrs.
line Chapter 172, Ortter of the
home of Mrs. Katrine Millikan iileridan Russell, enlisted In the
Eastern star, met Thursday night in May. A dessert course was
army and left on Thursday for
at the Masmlc Temple.
served by Mrs. Reibel.
Ashland, Kentuck,y where be will
Rose Mary Lyons, worthy rna-

Plan Reception

On April 24th

tron, and Harry Chesher, wor. area.
lhY patron, presided at the meet..
,~:~r~ of the workshop are · '. W·.:~ -whlch Ume ··&amp;everal
ll
Bartlett E!:ecuUve Dl- · umtillonl to inspecllons were
ol. the So~iety taurine read.
Kirclmer, Profession~ EducaPlans were made to serve a
Uoo Cllalrman or Athens Councy boWling league luncheon. Also
Wscussed was the Eastern star
and Masonic poUuck dinner to be
held In May. Mrs. Lyons reported that the chapter l1ad served
a luncheon lor the &amp;m Oil Co.
abwt two weeks ago. iile .-d
tbat the Chapter has for sale
rugs, pepper and vanUia. It was
reported that Mary Meiubari Is
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Powers home !rom tbe hospital .
IIIII family and Mrs. Grace Pratt
tpent last weekend at a Lake
DAR TO 1\!EET
Hope cabin. On Satur&lt;IIIJ' they
POMEROY
- Return Jonathan
riolted In Logan.
Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Reynolds Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the
ar~ ln Morgantown visiting their American Revolutloo, will meet
100 and daughter-in-law, Mr. and at 2 p.m. Firday at the Grace
Mrs. ValReyoolds, and children. &amp;liaoopal Perisb House. Guest
Mrs. W. K. Wilson of Rensse- speaker will be the Rev. Brian
. lear, N, Y. is here visiting Mr. ~e. Hostesses are Mrs. EvIIIII Mro. Glenn Lambert and erett Hayes, Mrs. J, E. Hartother relatives. Wednesday, Mrs. ley and Mrs, John Rose.
Yllllil Anthon)' , Mrs. Eldon Wal.
burn, Mrs. Fete Elberfeld and
Mrs. Lambert were visitors in
BOY-GmL TWINS BORN
Columbus,
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jill' and
Ronald
Reynolds, Cave St., are
Mr. and Mrs. Don Grueser of
announcing
the birth of twins, a
Columbus are the weekend guests
of Mr. and Mrs. William 1'. boy and a girl, Thursday at the
. Grueser. Debbie Grueser is also GaiUpolls Medical C en t e r.
·. borne !rom Glenville state Col- Gran~ents are Mr. and Mrs.
. ~e and wtll return there Mon- WOllam Landers andRonaldRey.
nolds, all of Pomeroy.
~Mr. and Mrs. Earl &amp;nlth and

receive his phy slcal,

Eddy's Schedule

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Randolph
and daughters, Paulett&amp; and
;:
POMEROY - Mr. EdciY Edu- stella, visited over the w~kllll&lt;l
cator' s schedule in Meigs COUnty witil Mr. and Mrs. Burton Webb
at Mansfield, Ohlo.
Cor week oC April 7-11:
Mr. and Mn. Thomas Wi1MONDAY
llams, Jell and Cindy, or Wash.
Pagetown, 3-3:30 p.m.
lngton, D. C. visited recenlly
Harrtsoovllle, 4-6 p.m.
with hls parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Wolf Pen, 6:30-7:30 p.m.
U&lt;~Yd Williams in CUlton.
Enterprise, 8-8:45 p.m.
TUESDAY
Southern, 9-3 p.m.
Racine (Wagner's), 3:15--3:45 30 EXECUTED
HONG KONG (UP0- A Hong
p.m.
Harden's (llyracuse), 4-I::W p. Ko118 newspaper reported Saturday that more than 30 Chinese
m.
Rizer's (ayracuse), 4:45..6 p. lntellectuals accused of being
''counter-revolutlonaries" were
m.
recently executed or sentenced
Forest Run, 6:15 ~7 p.m.
to llfe imprisonment in the
Minersville, 7:15-ll:30 p.m.
Canton area. The Hong Kong
THURSDAY
Times attributed the report to
Eastern, 9-11 a.m.
Tuppers Plains, 12 ooon-2 p. travelers from Canton.

m.
Alfred, 2:15.2:30 p.m.
Burllngluun, 3-3:30 p.m.
Arnold's, 3:45-4 p.m.
New street, 4:30-4:45 p.m.
Rutland (Main), 5-6:30 p.m.
Silver Run, 7-7:30 p.m.
Bredbury Radio statloo, 7:45-

g,:ro p.m.

FRIDAY
Atklitlonal to the regular schedule, this week only, a Friday's.
run will be made:
Bradliury, 9-10:30 a.m.
Salem Center, II :30-1:20 p.m.
Swan 2:20-3:30 p.m.
Slverly-Locust Grove, 3:45-4:15 p.m.

'· .

Need A Brlcht
Spot In YDI!I'
Hornet ·

"Mum's The Ward"

OUPLEY'S FLORIST
5ervlng: Gallipolis,

POOifloy, lollddleport1• 0.

and Mason Co., W. va.
446-1777 or 992·5560

F.astem High
Horse Event
One of the season's first horse shows will be
staged next &amp;lnda.Y at the COOlville Riding Club ring by tile
Junior Class of Eastern l!lill

POMEROY -

School.
The show will begin at noon,
Twency~wo

class-

es will be leatured, concllcted
under Southeastern Ohio Horse
9low Assoclatloo rules.
A trq&gt;hy will be given for
Ute hlgh point class ol tile cll,y •
Classes include - western

lead-in _

:Mre. Gail Miller.
Pat Gallagher is a medical
patient at Holzer Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Ron Halley and
daughter, Paige, of Columbua
art the Easter weekend guest;
r11. her pa,rente, Mr. and Mra.
Earl KJ1l0t,t. Mrs. Halley and
l'll&amp;e wiftl remain lor the week.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Mourning
·of Ebrla and Mr. and Mrs.
James Mourning, Dale, Julie and
Michael ol Columllls are week. tlld guests of Mrs. Golds MournIns. The James Mourning !amlly
aliO Yiolls In Point Pleasant
Mr. and Mro. Tom Walters.
here visiting Mrs. Mournare her 1011.Jn.iaw and dsughMr. IIIII Mrs. George W.
and children, David, Pen~
·Dobbie and Randy ol Bloom,.,..., Ind. They were called
by the deatiJ ol hi I mother,
Clarles Price ol Long Bot-

IIICI Mrs. Harold Moure,
•.W.. and Slepllen, Cln'!Jid Mrs, John
.Ridlei Tem. ·are
W!l'lkeiltl ....1!1 ol Ma.Y'11'1 :~.:"1·· C, IQ, Fisher.

BLAST
WING TIP ·

,. ~-" ~~
.

PORK LOIN

TEIDERBEST
CEITERCUT

lb.69e

Steak

ments.

tHURSDAY
JACK SLAVIN, Mlddloportartlsl, guest speaker Thur~,
7:30 p.m. wllen Bracbll')l PTA

meetti seeond grade mothers
will serve. Nomlnatloo t:1 otn-

eera.
WOMEN'S AUXILIARY, Veterans Memorial Hoopltal, ThoroclaY, 7:30 p.m. at bofiPital Instead of re~ meetbw date
In dining room (due to hoepltal
CODVenUOO In COiumbul); Rutlind and Harriloovllle members
on refroshment committee; West
Vlr&amp;lnla member• oo prosram

eonuntttee.

,.,...,. - b y Gonorll-.

KER FURNITURE

race, western children's horsemans!Up, under 16, western stake

race for horses, 4-H horaemanlllllp 13 to 15 years, egg a n d

QUALITY FURNITURE-REASONABLE
RATES
'

spoon race, barrel race, 4-H
horsemanship 16 to 19, IIIII trail
clus.
A food bootb will be operat..
eel by the Junior cla18,

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

"OTTO IIAPPY" hf/ KE/TII COBLE

lftl tUH and nervous rrom frequent.

and day. ~ndarll)', you maJ loet
IIHP ud have Headaeht Hacllar:ha

and lftl old,!!1 tlrtod. deP,rtllfod . I•

al.dl run. t..:ISTEX uaually bril\111

rtlaxlnt comkn1 by curbing lrrltat·
lllf pnns In Kid urine and Q.ulct!IJ
ftllftl!*ift . ~ CYST EX at drUIIIIU.

.ILE Fill

66 Mercedes Benz

66
Galaxle
500·---.$1595
4
va,
p .s.,

Model 230 S, 4 ·Door Sedan, auto. Iran&amp;., P .S.
air-conditioning, W/5/W tires, 1 owner.
'

Door,,
auto. tran •. ,
P.8., a1r cond., R&amp;H. w/ w tires

Sharp.

95

~~oor~!~~ ~!~~!~i1~----- $995
••

SAVE!

w/w tires. Sharp. ·

64
Olds 98 -----------s1495
2 Door, Hordtop.
power
All

&amp;H, w/ w tires. Sharp.

R

-

'

63
Ford 2Galaxie
---------- $895
500
Hordtop, .
Footbock,
Door
VB, auto. trans., P .$.,
w/w tires. She~rp.

R&amp;li.

SAVE! SAVE!

2 -1965 Ford L. tD.

4 Door, Hardtop, VB, Auto. Trans. P.S.,
P.B. R&amp;H, w/w tires. Sharp. ·

1495 each

Mr. IIIII Mrs. Jameo !lleets
of H!llllboro are Easter week-

and ..... of Mr. IIlii Mra.
Harold LohN IIIII Mr. IIICI Mro.
Charles-.
Mr. IIlii Mrs. Chorleo Lochary, Uta and Robert, ol WheatOil, Md. are 11ta boUdi.Y weekend guellll of their perenll,
Mr. IIIII Mro. LeO Storl' IIICI
Mr. IIICI llrL Patrick Lochary, .Ciarlo a will rablm to Wheatd. lode¥, but hla IUnll1 wiD remain fGr a lonpr vllllL
Dr. and llro. Darid T, CrawfOrd IIICI children, cada, Krleten, IIICI Gr- of BaltlmOn,
Md. hove the gualll for
the put week ol Mrs. Crawford'l ..,.....U. Mr. IIIII Mro.
ArthUr ~ Mro. Crawford Is
!be former 11111 Aan liQJt. JolD..
1111 the fllllliY for a weekead
v1a1t here - • Mr. IIICI Mrs.
Ansel Hoyt IIICI c~ Mark
IIIII aw,D of Clnclmlll. '111e
Crowford family . aloo 'noll• In
Galllpolll wi11t bll perento, Mr.
and Mrs. Darid crawford.
Mr. IIICI Mrs. Georll Dollal,
9tovle, BUly, Mlcllaol, and Meu... of··St. Parlo are hero ror
• weekend ylolt wi11t t1lelr parSill, Mr. IIICI Mrs. William Mat..
lock, Cll,.aor Rood, IIICI Mrs.
Juanita i!aehlal, Mlddloporl.
Mr. and Mro. John FIBber
and dirl&amp;hter. Julie ol l!lbron
woobnd li'OIII of their parSits, Mr. IIICI Mro. 11teodore
l!eeile, PomerQll, IIICI MaJor IIIII
Mr •· C. 0. Fllhar, Jlldclloport.

are

Sale Conducted

POMEROY - A Wlllll! elephant eala Wll • , _ of •
meet111a of Ute Laurel cwr Better Health Clli&gt; held ill 111e !lome
of Ml'o. Bertha Parker Tlllrocll,y.

Mr o. Paul Frick prealdiclot
the meeting wldch

_,..s wl1lt

tbt Lord's .....,., In omloon.
llrL CUI!Drd Jaellb&amp; rOad tho
11111 ~ rl. st:.Lul&lt;e. llta. ·
~' n.4 , '~ '.llo*'ISI
Mrlln* tO •' U..''· ~-- ·'l\..,,
IIICI •'OIIIIi&gt;lllf!1 w~ " ,.
Gllnol t!llftdudad
II r •·
Porker ~'fW;;j;' i ' airs. .....
Uord
antl
.Mrs.

.'

M&amp;l~l,; Priced

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

\

2o/o Milk

Hart Peas
••n
Newport C1t Green Beans ~!~·
Hart Wh. Kernel Corn
~~.":·
Kleen Kitty Cat LiHer
t!:·
Royal Puddings
o•. ~~lly si•e
Frozen Waffles
~;;;:
Sla Flo U.Wd Starch
3eQ?.'1

TWIN
PACK
GAL.

0111

£ACII

Lettuce
FRESH

Corn on the Cob
SEEDLESS

Grapefruit
Slaw

'

' ..,

CAMPBELLI

Vegetable .
lO'k Ol,
CAN

7 oz.
CAN

ICEBERG HEAD

6

c.

Johnson's ·
Glade

BROUGHTON'S

Save on these 1Oc

5-YEAII, NAnDNWIDE WARRANTY

burnlnl or ll.chlnr urination nl1ht

II

,

SLICED
QUARTERED

..

OM-,ur W1rrent;r for rtpilir of IR)' "dlfect. plus 1 four·)'llr Pfo.
lectlon P11n (parts only) for furnllhlnJ rtplattmtnt for 1ny
dlftetlvtpart In thtcomplttt tr~n~mluion, drive motor. 1nd Wltlf

..... st.... ,.,.

v

pkgl.

TUESDAY
MEIGS ATHLETIC ASSN.,
TUe~, 7::W p.m., at Mel g a
High School In Middleport. Meet
the team night, with ballehall
team to be Introduced. Refresb-

fv. ·

THE SHOE BOX

Pork Chops
FRESH STORE SLICED
Cho11Jed Ham
Bologn~--~r_~~-~---SMOKEJ)
Polish Sa1sage
SWIFT OR ARMOUR
212 ···891&gt;
··wieners
·OHIO VALLEY-::;::::=-_ _ __:::.::.;:_..:._;

auedm.

Coll'lmon Kidney or Bladder lrrllaUona makt many men and women

BLACK
BROWN

any store ean have lhe ''lowest" prices on its specials (incluclinq usl ). But.it's day-to-day low prices1brOJ&lt;lqhout the store that counL So eompue your presenrfoocl
bill with what you'd pay at Fooclland, then check the
lola! on your tape. That'• where Foodland shines!

Sure,

pie; loltlatory work for ooe candidate; brill&amp; artlcleo for .Uent

SKOIIDUY TO
nNSION IIDIIIY
IIIITATIOII

$16·99

•

RACINE CHAFfER 134, OES,

BACKACHE&amp;

with a richly antiqued leather. and gives you
the shoe made for movin' out with today's fast·
paced action crowd. See them today.

TEST
FOODLAND!

SDPPER, 6:30 p.m., at DAV
hall In Pomeroy Thurlda.Y. All
velerano lnYlted.

wuler:, western Pleasure
J&gt;OIIY, 48-inches and under, llag
race, senior horsemanllhlp 16
aoo over, men's western pleasure, English pleasure horse, AppUoosa pleasure horse, musi~
cal chairs, western pleasure poo.
1\Y, over-48 Blld under-06 Inches, lacb''s western pleasure,
we stern Plea'!"re, junior riders
under 16, ride and nm oven~
western stock horse, ol-H horse..
manlllllp 10 to 12 years, pickup

Britannica.

Pedwin adds a little luxury

-.m

and

Encyclopaedia

You're "IN" with Pedwin's
NEW and NOW look
.

MDlDLEFORT GARDEN Club,
8 p.m: Monday at the Columbul
IIIII
Ohio Electric Co,
office; Mr1. Max Roller, Mn.
Walter Hayeo, Mrs. David Farmer IIIII Milo I.Ucllle Smltlt,
hostel-.
Riverview PTA Monday, 7:30p.
m. at the school; Easter sonp by
First and Second Grades; Mrs.
Ado Holter to show sUdeo and
talk obeut ller .European trip,
txECUT1VE Baird ol11to W~
men's Auxiliary
Ute Voi.r·
ana Memorial HOSPital wlllii!Oet
at 7:30 p.m. Monday night at the .
heopltal.

Yol!&gt;da1. 8 p.m. al MaiiOIIlc Tem·

ebUdren, Joey, &amp;ls.ie and Tim-

m,y, have returned to Urbana alter visiting here with Mr. and

llo1 Blti!JIII,

GRPUP 1, Womenta AIIOClatton of the Middleport FlntUnlt..
eel ~obyterlan Cllurch, 7:30
p.m. Monda)' at tile IKime o!Mrs.
Larry And8roon, New Hawn, W.
VL Devotlooo by MilS C18rlotte
Davidson; Bible study by Mro.
Dale Walburn.

• "Rapldry-1000" Spin. Fastest
spin of any automatic! Gels out
more waler, makes wash easTer
lo handle, quicker to dry.
• Deep Action Agitator. Creates
currents lhat plun1e clothes
daep Into sudsy water for thor·
ough washing.
• Two Jat·Away Rinses. Get rid ol
linl and scum so thorOUihly
there's no need for a lint trap.
• Durable Press Care. Saves you
ironin1! Gentle washin1 action
plus a cold water cool-down help
Durable Press labrics keep their
no-Iron !lfomise!
• Cold Water Wash Selling. Saves
hot water. Saves clolhes from
shrlnklnaand ladina.

Oass Plans

MOND~Y

POMEROY GARDEN C I u b,
Mood~~, 1 p.m. at borne of Mro.

of

iileely, &amp;lperlntendentol Lancas-

The cockroach can carry
agents or typhoid, cholera
and possibly leprosy, according to the

r--------..

speak on ·-The ResponslbiltUes
ol Parenthood.• Dr. Richard

rain or shine.

ALL PRICES ARE EFFECTI~E ALL WIEI·lONl

Marlene Kehr, !'lamed Paront..

PINK OR

WHIT~· 9~

CELLO BAG

TINY'S

39c

�English Club.
President is
Mrs. Plymale

'Wildflowers'
Wqyside Club
Program Topic

eaux served as cohostess..
New oUicers are Mrs. Ma .....
jorie Plymale, president; Mrs.
Florence Wickline, vice presidert; Mro. Alma CaudU~ secretary and Mro. Rosebud Baker,

Mrs. Garland EUi&lt;tt read the
minutes and the roll call in the

Interesting and informative talk
aboot the hymns and spirituals o!
our country. She began with the
story ol "How the Birds Learned
to Sing" and proceeded into a discussion of Negro spirituals and
followed this with favorite hymns
of the members.
Among the hymns mentioned
were uo God, Our Help in Ages
Past." one of those used at Gen.era] Dwight Eisenhower's funer·
allast week, 11 Faith of Our Fath-

ers," "0 Worship the King" and
uA Mighty FortreashOurGo::L"

She concluded her prognm with
MA!?Y ANN f?YAL
the aorw, "God of Earth, the Sky,
the Sea," which was written by
Samuel Long!eUow, brother or the
noted poet, Henry W. Longlollow.
Refreshments in keeping&gt;With
the
Easter season were served
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Bette ployed during the summer as a
by
the
hostess.
K. Ryal of 1105 Teodora Drive, geologist by Bear Creek MinGalllpolis, 8MOWlees the engage- Ing Company, an alflllate or Kenment and forthcoming marriage necott Copper Corporation.
The wedding wiD take place
~ her daughter, Mary Ann, to
Robert A. Perkins, son or Mr. at 1:30 p.m., May 31, at !l.
and Mrs. G. Lewis Perkins, 3257 Peter's Episcopal Church in GalStahl Avenue NW, MassiUon, lipolis. The gracioos custom or
q,en church will be observed.
Cillo.
Miss Ryal, a 1965 graduate of
Gallla Academy High School, , ..
MONDAY

Ryal Wedding Date Se '

etlved her bachelor's degree in
buslness education from BowlIng Green 9ate University in
June, 1968, ,g.e is a member of
PI Omega PI, the national hon-

Announce Birth of

GRACE UNITED METHODIST
Church, Circle 3, at 7:30 p,
Mrs. Geneva Howell,

m. with

First Daughter

or sociecy Cor business teacher
education, and wa s named t h e
Most Outstarxling Senior Woman in Business Education. S!.e
will receive her master's degree
!rom Bowling Green 9ate Univer&amp;I!Jr on June 14, 1969.
jl!rr l'erklns, a 1964 graduate
~ JackSIII Memorial H i g h

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Crump, San Antonio, Tex.,
amoonce the birth or a dall/lhter, born Aprll 1. The baby
W..igtted 6 pounds, l()lh ounces
and has been mmed Angela Dl·
ane, The Crumps are the parSebool, received his bachelor's ents of a son, Brian, 3,
degree tn geology from BowlMaternal grandparents are Mr.
Ing Green 9ate University In and Mrs. John Waugh, Crown
Jllle, 1968. He is presently City, aOO paternal grarxlparents
teaching In the Woodmore Lo- are Mr. and Mrs. Arthur CrUlJl),
cal School &amp;fstem and is em- Meadsvllle, Pa.

842112 First Ave.
GALLJPOLIS BAND Bonsters
wUI meet in the band room at
GAHS. Election of offtcers.
lll-LO CANASTA CLUB7p,m.
at the home or Mrs. William

-,

DAR MEETING will be held
at the Lafayette 1/Dtel, Dinner
at I p.m. Meeting at 2 p.m.
COMBINED meeting or Pcrnona a n d Junior Granaes at
!tJrlngfleld Granae Hall Junior granae meets at 6:30 p.
m. !oll""ed by POIDOIII. Refreshments or pie and aandwlcheL Bring table service.
GALLlA COUNCIL 114 Daush·

ters of America regular meeting. 7:30 p.m.
TUESDAY
RIO GRANDE Layman's Organization wUI •meet attheV~
ton Methodist Church, 7:30 p,

m.
GRACE UNITED METHODIST
Church Circle 1, with Miss
Alma McCormick, 7:30p.m.;

Circle 2, Mrs. Paul Kerns,

IT IS NICE to be wanted as a customer at a store. Not mly nice

1M refreshing, too. That'll the way they make even a perfect

strang-

_. feel at the Sewing Center iD Mlddl~ The women wbo work
tbere give service with a capital S.
A VERY MODEST GENTLEMAN tn GaUipolla who doesn't like
or any kind does so man;y thoogbt!ul, good deeds I get !ruslnled to think I can't mention them. His receat tribute to Ike was
. 'lllautl!ul and moving,
p~Micily

THE ATTRACTIVE HANGING (old?) Ugbt at 628 Second Ave.
· ·llllke• me think or the ha,.P~ lamps in German VU!age,
'
"·

FOR SEVERAL DAYS, there has baen activity at Gatewood.

, ~ when the porch light was on aDd the shutters were open. I

·'liln Maybelle

had returned "home." Welcmne back, Mrs. OOM.

Jackson Pike, 7:30p.m.; Clr·
cle 3 with Mrs. Paul Souders,
426 Heclgewood, 7:30 p. DL;
and Circle 5 wUh Mrs. Earl
Durham, Lower River Rd.,
!p.m.
WEDNESDAY
PRESBYTERIAN Church Cir·
cles, Morning Circle, 9:30 L
m. at the church; Mary Circle
1:30 p. m. with Mrs. Clarence
Boster; Rebacca Circle, 1:30
p. m. with Mrs. Roger Bar·
ron and Ruth Esther Circle,

7:30 p. m. with Mrs. Richard
CUIQ&gt;bell.
FRENCH CITY
Mothen
Leque will meet at the home
~
Mra. Gloria Rayborn,
14~h Eaatern Ave., 8 p.m.

~
SOME FOLKS HAVE FAITHFUL little dogs who wait patiently SADDLE AND SIRLOIN Rid..; ... them to come home each evening; SOO'le have cats or horses or ing Club BolaviUe Town house,
..... but one man who ruus a little store out in Gallla county, has
7 p.m. Melmers, bring des&lt;1 't!flaeth1q even more unusual He has three white roosters who wait
sert.
day near the door until he appears am throws them same peaTHURSiiAY
"'liitl, '11&gt;ey won't leave until he does this.
NEWCOMERS CLUB, 12:30
~~ Then they go about their day's business.
p. m. at the Presbyterian
Chorch.. Mra. Mel Simon will
'
,WHAT WELL-KNOWN GIRL in towu broke her necklace Olle give the program on the PhU'
•'
Just as she was ready to go to clllrch? Every time she
Luncheoo •L25. Call
~ .., tD sing, a tale-tell clattering gave her caUlle to think or one
446-2290 !or resenationa.
J1fC1 Skelton's favorite lines, "Titere went another one!"

.

- · · but remledeol the fll'OIIP
tllat lOinS are pol11111111 and If
Uled Ill the """"1181, cauld be

treasurer.

Mrs. Irene Brannon gave an

Koi/.French Wedqing Vows Read

· CII&amp;'IIIIIE - lq'l. Emmet
~ ..... the_.... tor
the Wt11alde (llrd4a Club JIIMI..
1118 held reellllll it the home ol.
Mrs. lblllt111huv- ~··
1181 Mrs. Ray Mltcboll.
Mro. 'l'liompioo•o taplc 1111
"W0cl101181'• and 11101r Use• ••
Medlclaoa." iilte otated t11at set.
llor• and ledlano deptmdod Ill
wlld!101181'&amp; !or medlcillll Jill'·

GALLIPOLIS- A new alate or
omcers was presented at Tuesday's meeting of the English Club
held at the home of Mrs. J o h n
Plymale. Mro. Douglaa Mullin-

absence of the secretary.
Mrs. Mabel Tawney brought
suggested menus for May aM the
grolf) will choose fr&lt;m these for
the dinner to be held at the Rio
Grande College Dining Hall.

9- The Sunday Tlmeo. SenUnel, Sunday, Aprll o, 1069

fatal.

Millen, PIIIUina and cattails

ore thouil&gt;t or •• weed but were ·
used by theoorlylndlanaformoot
"orythlng. iilte aald tho wild
dllay plent Wll IPid to dallroy
DeaL Doawood bark """ uoed ••
IGalc and stimulant and ""' a
'IUbatltute !or 911nlne.
Dandelion Is one or the bitter
herba mentioned Ill the Bible IIIII
118S uoed as atllnlc. Mrl. '111oqllll gave the facta Cll lwllllr
101111 herbs and their uses IIIII
clooed her talk by reading the
JOeDl, "Riches," by Kathert.
Ford
G, ii1toli,y. Colored picture• were
TO BE WED - Amooucement II bolllll llllde or the ea'Oietred by the group.
ild _..cblall uarr~age orEdla Ford, .......,... or
The meeting """ opened by
Mrs.
Chester
B. Fllld, 231 JacboaPikelllllthe late Mr. Ford,
the president, Mra. Dale )ful.
to Ty.- Rlchudo, - or Mrs. Yarla Rlclvds, 851 Fourth
lord. AU member• aald the club
Ave., IIIII the late llarlalld Rleharda. Mill Ford and Mr. Rlcb&lt;Olleet alter which Mre. Percy
ardo are 1966 Jl,'llluataa or GaWa Academy Hf&amp;ll SchaaL !Ito
Braci&gt;ID'Y gave cievOttano. Helt 1 0111&gt;loYed by Jim Bill Reblnoon IIIII he 11 attendtrw llala
en
Stlener Rice's poem, "After
Patricia Anne Harrell
BuaiiMlll College In Colnmlm. 1bo clul.reb weddlllil wiU
tho Winter, Comes !Vfln&amp;" IIIII
be AprU 19 at Gnce United Mathodlat Church, 7 P. m. An
"An biter Prayer for Peace•.,
qoea reeoptloo will held trnmedlalel,y fd!~ the ceremllQJ.
Roll call was annrered by
menlbera bringing IIIII tolling •·
ANNOUNCE BIRTH
wild Dowers. Mre, Mullord
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
remillded members or tho ~ring
Express Your
Regloaal meeting 'll111rsday, ~ Jerry E. Nol1011 are a111101111CinB
SympalhJ"~" Time
rli 10, at the Rlch!Md Melhoo the birth ora baby girl born~
of Grief ...
dirt Chureb In Athena and the rU 2. The baby walglled 7 poundo
COIIII\Y meeting Aprll 24 at the alll10 ouncesandhaobaeniUied
GALLIPOLIS - Armouncement ter of Mrs. Jobn David Har- l(.ypr Creek !Ugh Sehool Kathryn Marie.
Paternal granclporenta are Mr.
has been made of the engage- rell or Lakeland, and the late Wayside Club •• horton.
S.rvlng: Gallipolis,
ment of Patricia Anne Harrell Mr. Harrell. The prospective
Mro. Mltcholl IIIII Mrs. llla- and Mrs. J1111ea S. Nelaon, ~­
Pomoroy, Middleport, 0.
ver aerved delicious poppy seed or River Rd. MaterDal gratqlar•
~ Lakeland, Fla. and Ensign bridegroom Ia the 1&lt;11 ~ Mr.
and Mason Co., W, Va.
Douglas Keith Harrington or Gal- and Mro. Fred A. Harrington cake IIIII mints, tea and cof!ee. onto are Mr. and Mrs. John HeD~·1777 or 993-Ssal
~ Rt. 2, GalllpoUa.
The May meeting wiU be with deraoo or Gallipolis.
llj&gt;olis.
Miss Harrell was gratllated Mro. Goldie Patera and Mlsa
The bride-elect is the dough.
!rom Santa Fe !Ugh School, Lake- Marilyn Reese as hootosa.
::::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:·:: land, Fla., and Polk Junior COllege, Winter Haven, FlL, where
she was a member and secreHARPER DECORATED
:·:::::::·:·:::·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:=:·:·;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::: tary or Phi Thsta Kappa, NaGALLJPOLIS FERRY - Tech·
tlonal Junior College Honor So- nical Sergeant il""7 L, HarpMr. and Mrs. Burnette Niday ciety; listed on the Dean' a Ust; or, 1&lt;11 or Mr. and Mra. L C,
aRI grandson, Colwnbus; Mr. gra&lt;hated with honora and ro- Harper, baa been decorated with
and Mrs, Dan Black&amp;III children, celved an associate of arts and the u. S. Air Force Common, ;-, •. o
Nitro, aM Mr. and Mrs. Jbn
associate of J!cl~e !108!'~; ~ ,. dallj!II ·~(Ofd!IJirl._••" '''
. ~~ ·•· .
Robinson are spen:U.ng Easter was 11 fted In Who' 1 Who AlllCIIi vice .Ill .VJ..... o\n. ·alrera!t; •
with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rob- SWclents In American Junior Col- mainteaance leellllclan, he 1111
inson.
leges. iilte """ attends the Unl- prel&lt;llted the IIIOda1 at Molmverslzy or West Florida, Ponaa- atrom AFB, llmt., where he Ia
Easter guests in the home of cola, Fla., where abe wa1 nam- now aallsned to a un1t ~ t b e
Dr. atd Mrs. Warehime are Mrs. ed to the Provost's Bonor Roll Strategic Air Command.
J. E. Morrison U, Gales Ferry, of Gamma COllege, and -k•
Corm., arxl her daughter, Court.. parWme u a atudont uslst..
ney, am. Mr. and Mrs. Charles ant In the O!llce or Student FiWRITERS TO MEET
R. ParSons, Morgantown, W. nancial Ald.
GALLIPOLIS
- GaWa c-ty
Va., am three sons, Dick, Jim
Mr. Harrington was gratllat.. Creative Writing Groov wiU meet
alii Andy.
ed from Gallil Acadamy High with the Tyro Serlbes Saturday
School, Galllpolla, and MarahaU evooi!W, April 12, at St. Petera
Univeraity, Huntington, w. va. Episcqal Church, $41 Second
PLEDGES LAMBDA R&amp;
LETART, W. Va.- ~e Anna He Ia a Iormor employs or Ra· Ave.
Bumgarner, daughter ~ Mr. and clio stations WJEH in GolllpoMra. Edward llungamer, Is lls, and WSAZ Ill Huntlngtob,
pledging Nu Lambda Psi Soror- W, Va. He is presently an oCfl.
izy at Glenville !lale College. A cer and student pUot In the Unit..
freshman. Mias Bumgarner's ed aates Navy, stationed in Cormajor is French and her minor puo Christl, Texas 'llhere he Is
Ia Library Science. iilte is a mom. """ begimlng the !lnai phase or
A
bar of the SWclent Education Aasn, his jet training.
and of the u1e CenacJe.''
A mllltary wedding tn the Naval Aviation Memorlll Otapol,
Naval Air StaUon, Pensacola,
Phllosepher's Stone
Flo., is belnc planned !or Alii.
The philosopher's stone 30. The receptlm wiU be hold
was a substance which medi- at Mllrttn Beach O!!lcera Club,
eval alchemists be 1i e v e d Naval Air Station, Penaacola.
could convert base metals
into ~old. S e arc h for the
mythical stone cost fortunes
and several lives, but advanced man's knowledge of
chemistry.

Edna

Pa-nt

Ensign Harrington to
Wed Patricia Harrell

"FLOWERS"

DUDLEY'S FLORIST

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

TUESDAY &amp;
WEDNESDAY,
APRIL 8 &amp;9

Seen and Heard

SAVE
BY THE lOth
EARN BIG

5%

i-AI.lmiS

FROM THE FIRST
a

'

.

SAVINGS &amp;LOAN'

iEnst.rr

iltssiugs

Training can bo obtalnod
only through a collogo·
level program.

Get a beautiful

BxtO

GBC GRADUATES
GET THE
BETTER JQBS:

or call ~4367 for
catalog .and lnfar•atlan.

picture of your baby

twl..,•-

Ju., as spring herald• the
rebirrh of nature, 10 dou ·
fa.,er herald the rebirth of
ma11lci11d in the Rfturrecflon
of Jesus Christ, the Lord.

loronly

98c
rout

chlldrtll

::.::: :.:r:.=,.-=".:::c-.:;
rour

l

fl; ~tNE

OF THE F1RST TREES to begin to show green Is the big
Ill back or Ga11ia Aeadem)l, 1C1 above the swimming pooL
LINII'IG the loondation of the home oo 37
are pretty rtchl,_,

YOU DRIVE DOWN TIIIRl&gt; A,.,,, ba aure to notice the
(Lioll?) In the yard at 435 'lldrd, alii by aU meall8, lhla
,i~jd,~eo..,. oa He'*ie •IIIII - the tree that overnilllt I l l - '

.

LADIES

J

Wllla.t IIU c.mertt

1

~:EtA:L= _________ S 00

NATURAL COLOR TOOl

Easter Sun$lay, asking God'• continued
blessings on every family in our com-

~~E~x~----- ______ s119

At unbltlll'llbiY low ,nett..

Brln11 Friend

Darnbrough's

'9:Galll;llls Dept._·Stort

FAMILY SHOE STORE
Qalllpolls, Ohio

'. .
itr

'.
1\

,,
'

~--.--'-- - -

______ . . . .,. _____

··~-

Mason April 13

t"~~~,n-~-;:r

m.

loi...,

DUDLEY'S FLORIST

..

6.95. ......

GALLIPOLIS MOTOR CO.
SALESIAN OF
THE MONTH

· -.

eHEICULOH

· OPIIi FRIDAY

munity.

Carl's.

To Speak at

Jane Ann Morgan
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and MrL John R.
Morgan, Route 2, GallipoUs, aiiiiOW1Ce the enpgement their
daughter, Jane Ann, to Edward N. Slagle, son of Mrs. D, K,

or

Sboemaher, Mabalene Drive, and M,yral Preston Slagle, eo.
lwnbus, Ohio. Miss Morgen graduated from Southweotera Hlgb
School and is currently a senior at RioGrarde CoUege, maJorIng in hlatory and political scieuce. Mr. Slagle is a gradl8te
of Gallla Academy High School and loellljl!oyedwlth Bob Evans
Farms, Inc. Wedding plans are incQJDPlete.

[HOSPITAL NEWS

J

rick Soyder, Columbua; Adria
Holzer Medical Center, First Sayre, Recine.
Dischorged - EllllllD Yonker,
Ave., Galllj&gt;olls. Vlsltlag boors
2-4 and 7-11 p.m. Parents only on George Nesselroad, Larry !t&gt;encer, Carrie &amp;dder.
Pediatrics Ward.
Admissions
Publication of admissioos is

___ ....._ ___

I
prohibited until further notice. I

JaJJles

W.

I
I

I

Births
Mrs. Lawrence Tawney, Rt.
2 Bidwell, daugbter, 10:14 a.m.
Friday; Mrs. Wesley L. Wise,
Middleport, '""'· 5:07 p.m. Fr~
da.Yi Mrs. Edwin L, Thomas, Pt.
Pleasant, daughter, 6:18 a.m.
Saturday; Mrs. John D. Hall,
Vinton, daushter, 7 a.m. Saturday.
Discharges
Dave mabop, Deldra S. Conley, Eli DeniSIII, Mrs. lb'lvla
Denney, Mrs. Edith ~!llck­
erson, Berbara E. Gay, Emil
Knight, Ernest Lavender, Mrs.
John L. McDeniel, Mancleville
Parsons, Mrs. Charlotte S. Rankin, Mrs. Natlja Salem, Mrs.
Mary C, 91erer, Mrs. Vesta 9-leets, Mrs. Earnest E.
Watts,
Berry L. W e a ~
Mrs.

------ .

I .
I
I
I

I

I
I•

I
I
I
I

I

I

i FOR LOVEBIRDS ONLV!
1 As your lovebird stage evolves
1 into deep devotion. the meal sage of love in your ArtCarved
rings wiJI perpetuate
I twedding
he memories of those first
I moments. Our new AriCarved
I collection is unexcelled in
I beauty ond variety of design .
1 Have you seen them?

iI

I

k!Carved"
WEDDING liNGS

White and

ln!aot son, Mrs. Ernest E:Bak.
er and infant &amp;c:l:l, Mr a. Paul W.
Jarrett and ln!aot daughter.
MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
Admitted - Roy Frecker, Min·
ersville.
Dischorgecl - Leopold l{yaell,
Kenneth RusaeU.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Admitted - Loretta Kiaer ,
Racine; Mary Bolen, Pomeroy;
Carrie Turnbull, Hart!ord; Pat..

FAWN SET

His $39 .50 H1r1 135.00

PAll DAVIES

JIWI.ERS
. . •• __.Aw.
GoW,.U.,~.

J••••• _
-.----.._ ______
A10thoo,,.11 ~Carv.d

Easter
Greetings
May the coming of
this holy day lift
your spirit and
bring joy to your
heart as you worship
'
in your church this
&amp;ste¥ Sund.ay.

·.·

.•.

.'.
., .

eF~EE ESTJI4ATE$ _.JASYt•

II'ICI GUr IPtdll '"'W!n.pak"
)'OU ctn bU)' portNb !n

"!"'"'

choice in worship and lhanksgiving this

•... •Ill be 1111'8 the E'Aater iloiJill did it

~.~u.

You'll ... nnltMd plcturu - NOT PROOFS
- In lutt • few dtn. ChciGte hiO'a. t'xl't or

Let us all a"end the church of our

COTTON PETTICOATS

Missionary

In,..,IIIII.., ow:-

Group onl) tl.OO ptr child.

·.CATHY DEXTER, DAUGHTER OF Mr. and Mrs. John Dexter,
,=:'~ and ~r or Mr. and Mrs. Harry Dallier may
Ill
cla7s oo telavlsion. Cathy modelo shoes at II p. m.
Qllllol 13. She abo Ia a IJiudeot at !olarslall UniveraiQ'.

Brown- HUber Wedd I.ngolflcer
Vows Read March 22

Weather Roundup

• NYlON
elCRUN

H'HNI ..,.. poen. YOU'll pt to ...
~ewe~, ffftltMtt plctwet In Ju8t • ftw claya.
- I kiO.
oniJ ..,_ eteh chlt4 ttktn tlftiiY or 1 1110

ar;';.ien

Birthday Party Honors
Cheryl Ann Robinson

.........

ALL _ _ , _ , 4llltiUN, 100.
........ ••• ,.. dol .lull: ......

CHESIDRE - Mias Sandra sue
Kall, deughter or ""· and Mrs.
J. Oliver KaD, Cheahtro, be..,.e
lhe brlda or James A. French, Jr.
..., or Mr. andMrs.J. A. French,
AddliiOrl, Saturday, March 29, at
2:30 p. m. Jt the Chtahlre BopGALLJPOLIS - Colcnol R.
tlst OnD'ch.
E, Knoltl was the fPIOs! speak.
VOWI of tho doUble ri!W ce.,..
er at the resular meeting or tho
mOllY were road by the Rev. David
Gallla County CWzens Band RaSedllol. seven brlllch candelabra
dio Club on Wednesday, April 2.
IIIII baoketa or white Easter Will
at the K or P Hall. Mr. Knotts,.
and palms deconted the church.
a "~ auctioneer In this
A l'el!-llour of p......aialmuolc
area, opoke ... the "Origin of
waa presented by Mrs. Merlya
the Auction Profesalon."
Roas, ..,.nist, and Jloiolat wao
combining humor with lac~
Miss Patiicta Berridge, Ga!UMr. Knoltl cleared up a lot or
polls.
misunderstanding concerning the
Given In marriage by her !'athauclloneerlng pro!e88lon. He
er, the brlda wore a Ooor length
pvo a deiiiClllllratlon 11 hla aucwedd!IW sow• or oraanza and .,...
tioneering aldll by auctioning orr
embroldeNd lace with 0111&gt;1re
a cake to the hlllhest bidder,
walotllne, an .Wine skirt ild deBob Cox.
tacl'el&gt;le train. Her veU ~ elbow
The meeting waa called to orlenath. IUuai!ll wao attached to a
der b)' president "Foxy" Grant.
aatiD IIIII pearl headpt- She
Mike Thompson led the groop tn
......ted a caacade of ...,.tioaa
devotions. Secretary Soe Franand lllephanollo, centered with
cis read the mlrutea or the last
wbite cymbidi181lo andwhlteaatin
meeting and took roll call, The
atreamers.
treasurer's report was given by
Min Maey Lou KaU, oiater or
Ruth Am McMahon.
tile bridge, sened •• maid of
Work is still continuing on
boaor. Brldelllllida were Mrs.
the plans !or the anooal CD Jam.
Demio llallcoek, Loolsvllle, Ky,,
boree which will be held on
IIIII Mloo SUe Buckley, Cheahlre.
Jtme IS at the Gallla Coonty
They wore Identical Ooor lo!Wth
Junior Fairgroonds.
·aile green sowna l'ashloned with
GObert Plants was chosen as
e~~q&gt;lre walaWnes and lace bothe representative for the CB
•lces and sleeves, featuriJw satin
Club to attend the meeting at
Mr. and Mrs. James A French Jr.
bows lXI a eap back deoign with
Oscar's on Apri1 11, concerning
. ,...-•·.·.·.· .· . . ·..·.·,· . ... ·,•,•,·,•,, , . ,•
, • ..· ,··, ,c..·.
chitron tnlns. Satin bows and Uthe organizing of a YMCA tn this
luaion headpieces completed
their costumes. They carried
S/Sgt. and Mrs. Huber
Bosworth received her
noaepys of yei.Jcw carM.tions
Second Ueutenant's bars as an
centered with a yoUow cymbidin the React program.
ium.
GuestepresentwereLtndaand
Gary French, Addison, served
Junior Carroll, Joyce Bosworth,
aa beat man. The uahers were
Jay Cremeans, Bruce Campbell,
GALLJPOLIS - ChOI')'I Ann Cheeyl opened and ackoollledged Clarence Tucker, Gallipolis, and
Pam and Ann McMahoo, JimRobtn.oo wu hoooredonher10th her gilts.
JOM!Jh Pettey, 'Covington, Va.,
my Rothgeb, and R, E. Knotts.
Becky Call won the door prize. Marshall French, brother or the
birthday Friday with a party at
The door prize was won by
Guoota were Pam Mclllahon, groom, arKIBarryBurnett,cousln
her hmne. Cheryl lo the daugh·
GALLIPOLIS _ Vows of the coat. The couple took a wedding Sosle Fisher.
ter ot Mr, and Mrs. Earl Robtl&gt;- Carla WUUa, Sandy Sowera, of the bride, served as taper- double ring ceremony were read trip to Washington, D. c.
The meeting was adjourned
Becky Call, .Charlene Roy, C~ llgbters. Miss UD11a Maaard, Saturday, March 22, lor Peggy
son, 207 Klneon Ave.
They will reside this sum.. and refreshments were served
Game• were played and prlzeo dy . Mink, Debbie Cnft, Robin Coal Grove, Ohio. registered tho Lou Brown and &amp;Sgt. Charlea mer at Ft. Campbell, K.f.
to the approximately 45 people
wont to Dabble Craft, R o b i n Shaver and the honoree's broth- guests.
E. Huber D at the First PresThe new brtde is. a graduate preaent by lllcllle ca ..y.
Sl'e"'r and Cindy Mink. Favors er, David, and her mother.
The bride's mother chose a b.Yterian Church, Galllj&gt;olls.
of Gallla Academy High School
The next meeting will be on
were distributed totheguestoand
twQi&gt;iece beip lace dress with
Miss Brown is the daughter and attended Rio Grande Col- Wednesday, April 16, at 7:30 p.
matchina
-~
m, at the K of P Hall.
·~ accesaorles for her
~ Mr , and Mrs. Harv ey E• lege. ~e is presently teaching
dal¢ter's wedding, Her coraage Brown, Jr. and Sgt. ~ber is the at Henderson, W. Va.
was a yollow orchid.
oon of Charles E. Huber, SIJ. The bridegroom is a gratllThe bridegroom's mather wore ver ~rings Met, and Bett;y Jo ate of Blair High School, Silver
a coral crepe dre&amp;s with lace bo- Hube r, Denver, COlo.
~rings, Mel., and also attend59
GALLJPOLIS - T~ntture, Saturday • .. • " 63
dice and oleevonlllmatchingacThe Rev. Glen Hueholt read ed Rio Grande College. He I&amp;
Awrage hlgb ~ture lor
preciPitation and w01ther condiceaiOI'iea. She wore a yelliM or- the ceremony at 6:30 p.m. be- an Instructor with the Rangers
tlom lor each 24 hour period ao the week tbls year - 60.1 d""
!ore an altar decorated with large tn the 82nd Combat Sec. Pol.
reCO&lt;ded by Pete McCormick at groeo, last y01r- 75.6degrees. chid coraags.
Immediately
!ollowing
the
baskets ~ white muma, gladlnll, Eg., at Ft. Campbell, K.Y.
Average low temparatureo !or
the Falr!Ield W01ther Station.
ceremony a receptloo was held and car~~~~tions, ac~ented w 1t h
out4-Wwn guests were Mr.
Day
, )1~\ Low Prec.
In
the"otltlrch
110\!iltl'
t«iiff:'
'!'hi!
•.
111'
0
1!11
!om.
Candeiabra
and
a
and
Mra. Carroll Brown and
SWitay • • • • • •. , .,_ . 24
brlde'K
'ilblil
carl'leol'ou!
t
h
II
green
velvet
kneeling
bench
comlarnlly,
Columbus; Mr. and Mra.
MASON - Rev. Keith Han, .Total pniclpltalionlor tho week
Monday • , • • '" (5
15
green alii yollow color theme and pleted the decorations.
Larry
~pple, Henderson, W.Va.; lon, a missionary, will speak
thla yoor - 0.18 or an inch, last
Tuoadoy • • .. • 62
I9
waa centered with a threo-Uered
The organist ""' JudY Joho- Mra. Fern Mltcholl, Mro. llow- at the Albriglrt United lllethoWedneaday . , • 62
54 .18 year - o.u of Ill inch.
Total preclpltatlM to dete this wedding cake, loitPed withamini- 1111 and soloist was Nell San- ard Miller, and Mr. and Mra. dlst Church in Mason, AprU 13,
Tlurllday ..... 67
36
lturo bride and.......,_ H01te11es den. !pocial seleetl!lls were Blll Barlley, Pl. Pleasant, W, at 7:30 p.m. Rev. Hanlon and
yoor - 5.57 Inches. laot year FrJ41y ••• ••••• 80
34
were Mrs. Clarence Tucker, ••o PromiH Me," '•Beeaute," Va.; Miss Heather Lodge, Miss !amlly twice have been mission11. 44 lncheit.
Mra. Jame• s. Porter
Min and U1be lJJrd'a Prayer."
Betty Hammer, Mr. Craig Wal- aries to HalU, 3 years the first
Narmal a"'rage P"*&lt;iPitation
Connie Swiabor, Mrs. Richard
Given In marriage by her !a- ker, Mr. Jooeph N, Floreaca, time and 3'h years the last. He
am.u.Y - 40-70 inches.
Beautiful
Bockhont, and Mrs. David La· thor, the bride wore a !loor. Mrs. Deidre Cosgrove, Mr. Char .. aupervlsed the building or sevCroix. Aaslatlng hoste11ea wore length gown or lacs with elbow les E. Huber, and Mrs. Diane eral churches and one seminary
Bloomina Plants
Mrs. Harold Mack and Mrs. Ray- length lloevss. Tho lace train Brewer, Sliver Springe, Mel.; Mr. whUe there. The family is resldFor "Instant"
Mascara on Eyelashes
mond Zerkle.
""" altaebed at the walatandwas WU!lam Bozell and daughter, lng·at Letart, w, Va. and is enTo be@. ,-- ftile eyeCheirfulness
The.new Mrs. Frencblugrad- poor! 11111 IMQiin trimmed. 11&gt;e lrmtoo.
gaged In evangellsUc work.
laoltes
pt'dly aad Ia
Lilla or l(.ypr Creek Hf&amp;ll School gown .... empire SQ'Ied over
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Moore
The WSCS and the pastor, Rev.
.... sbapel aPttiY inasclla
Holzer School or Nuralngalll aattn with scalloped neckline. and 11111, Mr. and Mro. David Charles Parrish, extend an tnfe lllem lle1 ore ·allaehlnc to alii
Is presently -Joyed 11 Holzer
Her elbow length von of sDk Miller, Mr. and Mra. Pbllllp vltation to church congregationa
Y"J' OWD lalhH. Y- luhS.rvlnt: Gallipolis,
llledlcal
Center.
illualon
was held with a lace Miller, and Mr. and Mrs. MI- or the area to hear Rev. Han01 will slay oleo wldle 111P-roy, lllddlaport[. 0.
The bridegroom ia a ll'ldiBte jtlllbm: headpiece. The veil was chael Kerns, all of Columl:us; lon and see his slides on Haiti.
llt!J te~lller perfeelly 'llllh
and IIOson Co., W. va.
yGIIr false ODel. AlsO, lhe
of Kypr Creek Hl&amp;h School and berr&lt;nfed !rom the bride's coos- 11-Sct. and Mra. Charlea DickRev. Hanlon's parents are Rev.
~ 1777 or 992-SSdO
received Ida Bachelor of Science ln.
llillleal'l adl II I Preterva·
son, Ft. Campboll; K.f.; Mr. and (retired) and Mrs. J. W. Hanlive fer you !alae Illite•.
Degree In Geology !rem Ohio
Tho bride carried white roaes Mrs, Lother Brown, Mr. and lon. They make their home with
State Univenity Mareb 15.
on a lace covered Bible.
Mrs. Roger Brown and dau&amp;h· their daughter, Rev. Mrs. BernFollowi!W a wedding trlil toNi·
Mrs, Jean Am Lemon, ma- ter, Cheaapeake.
Ice Winkler at Clillon.
apra Falla, theccktJleresldeaat trc:rl ct honor, wore a sleeveMro. R. Frederick, Canfield;
tho present time at HooU I, Gal· leao Door length, linen gown Mrs. Robert Breben. Balti1'081' TO MEET
llpolll, but wUI leave 10011 !or or mint green, st;yled with em- more; Miss Jinx Farley, WalSh..
MASON
- The newly organiz.
Fort Belvoir, Va., where Mr. plro 1111at, and turned down col- lngton, D. C.; Jim Willlamo,
Freneb wiU serve aaanolllcerln Jar, !Ito wore a matching green Wbeeleroburg, and Roger Ev- ed Veterans ~ Foreign Wars
.POst 9926 wiU meet April 9
the United States Arm,y Corpo ot veU •
ans, 08k Hill.
at 7:30 p.m. at the town hall in
Engineers.
Wencly Dlckaon, daughter or
Mason. The poll plana to hold
Out • or- town pata included: 111~ Charles E. Dich11&lt;11 was
another obootlng match oo AprU
Mr. and Mrs. Rebert Rice, Mt o""er girl. iilte wore a m1n1
DIVORCE ASKED
13 at Cedar llollow Qm Club at
Vona, Ohio; Mr. and Mra. How· gr- A-line drel8 with matchPOMEROY- - E . Pear- I p.m., " " - Clillon and Weal
eD Edwarda, St. Clalravllle, 1ng coat, and carried a· white aoo, Middleport Boule 1, baa
Ohio; lllr, and Mrs. Richard Bock- ba- ~ ..._ carnation• and !Ued &amp;Uit !or divorce from Rutll Columbia.
horot, Lawrene....., Ind.; Miss · white ._!~«alL
Am Pearaon, Point Pleaaant,
Karolyn Hackl IIIII Mloa Shirley
Rlngbearer,-Bradahaw, w. Va., In the Melia Cooi1V plalntlft charges groos nugleet
SteVODI, Logan; Mr. and Mr I. 10!1 or Dr. and !lira. T. Jay COmmoa Pleas Court. T h e or ~ and extreme cruelty'
Jameo Froo~ Mr.ildMrs. Mlch- Bradallaw, Galllpolia, carried the
aol Dickerson, and Mloa Char- rlngo 111 1 white aattn cushion.
lotte Froat, aU of WCII'Ihqton.
Ulhen ware ~ WU!lam D.
Mrs. v. 0. llall, Mr. and Mrs. CUnlllt, Golllpolia; s.set. Carl ·
Ral!lh llaU IIIII deuahllor, Diane, ll. Rute, Ft. Cam&amp;1bell, Ky., and
Athe111;
~ 1e B, v•--.·•· Mra. E'lllyn Lunalord .._..,.
....,_ vd
.,._.., J r.,
and ....._ illaDc:he Spoaro, Water· Ft. Caqbeli, K,y.
1oo, Oh,lo; Mra. Charloo VI'OIIIln
Sit. Gal')' Lee Brown, brolb11111 dellllhter, YlrJ, Belpre; Mlaa or of the bride, 1188 best man.
Carlene French and Mill J u d Y AU the mole attendanta wore In
Kohl, ~~~ Ml11 Ulllla _., ..._ ....u
At ....lar,.. '
~-•w"'orm•
11101, Athenl1 Ml11 Holly W11vFar her doulllter'a wedding,
er, llllroMed,· 11¥•1 Clpt. llrl. 11rv11a a .llllltel blue
IIIII llr1. lil'lld Laei'Uilr; U, S. aatiD brocadt dnll with mateb·
Air Forto, and Mr. R. 8. ADa,.. IIIII coat, voll hal or ""'- With
worth IIIII da-1, Rae Am bowo and D01181' ace&amp; H e r
OHr M (elan Mil~- Te IIIICIIPand Joanl..
·
.Dowen wti'e white I'OMI.
CtnM
lelwflln
Ill:· aitd lin. Vallldlll ~
A ncoption waa bold ImmeFroneh, Mr, Larey Jarvia, Mra. dlateb' toU!IIIInl 111 the ehureb
Carolya Hart, Mloo C1nthia Buail. lell.,.lllllp room.
MINIMUM 20 SQ. YDS.
Mlao DWw Arm~ Mia•
The bride' I table 1181 deeoratRuth
Clark,
Mioo
Brenda
Lunaed
With 1 white wodd1n&amp; cake ••·
.fNOOOR•OiiTDOOR CARPET NOT
lord, Mr. IIIII Mrl. RalphMcCol· cenWd with white Dowera. G,_
INCLUP~!J IN TJfiS SPECIAL!
1_,, Mr. alld Mra. Polar Burp, poiiCb llld auorted mlllto ware
Mr. IIIII Mrs; Rebert Burp, 1ft, aemd- F'-o dleoniiDi 11M
Gallipolis Motor Co., Your Local Chovroltt • Oldomo· aM Mn. ·IOb·R.tlo, ail of CO. table ware daldea.
bilo Dealer is proud to announce Evorott Sounders as
l"'lllafo '
liGitlll France · realflind
their Salesman For Tho Month of March. Only thru
tl!elll IIIII ~ ,_IIWM
sonilco 011d a 1tr01111 dosiro to ploaso tho
;a r- ...... lllille ..... llrOini, ; ' ' axcell..,t
piople ' of th'is aroa. can !hi_• bo occompli•h~. Mr.
aild Cado,J Nlllar, GalSounders resides at il02 Konoon Drive, Galhpolls,

ALLATION
Withh,....Of.. '.
.
CAiPET

· (BLACK l WHITE) .

(New Quarter Beains
June 12)

.

CB Radio
Speaker is
R. Knotts

with hlo lovoly wlN 'Lillian and 2 i:hlldren, Cry•tal
and Konard. Golli."'lf~ Motor Co. and ill •!RPiayHo
and '
tGita
In oxtondint Ia ~vorott·

___ _. -

'.
I

' ,4 ,

�10- The S!Jrda)· Times • Sertlool, S~, Aprll 6, 1969

No Time .to .be Idle for Mrs. Edna Wickline
RIO GRANDE - If keeplns
buQ Ia the key to illlccessflll
retlremen~ Mrs. J::dr,a Willlama
Wickline will have no idle time
COl her hands.
Mrs. WlckUne retired April I
after ooarly 30 years oi posts!

ed ln and asked where be mlsht
looate a Mfas Rlilg. I UDderotoOO
him to 18¥ 'this rllli.' I asked
him aver In a (JI!veringvclce. He
baaded me a )Ioper with her name
and addreaa.
HRJo Grande Collep Olllled
the farm Bd&gt; EYana noW ·owna
and roUsfoua -lfvedlhere
'lllth a mlnlater and bfa Wife as
IUperv!sers. Mlas Ring, the stu-

service here. Sle has served aa
Postmistress, Acting Postmistress and carrler~lerk.
Her husband, 1he late Dana

Wickline, also was Postmaster

.dent, roomed there.

or Rio Grande seven years, and

"One hot atternoon, while
ateCVIng wxler a large shade

-

her soo, Donovan Wickline, was
Postmaster here a few years

tree, two men a-ched her
and asked her for somesuollne.
She told them the sa• drllm
was locked. Tlte,y told ber they
were 011 their WQ to see a afck
mother and had no mme;r. lite
remembered she had too dolJars and save It to them to get
sas. lite gave them her name and

Mrs. Wickline will have plenty

to keep her busy. Along with
her many hobbies, she takes
care of her 24-room home, three

trailers and two apartments, a
large yard and Clowers. ~e has
67 varieties ol African violet.
has qullted 28 quUts and prefera
the appllCJJed kind ol qullt lite
alao braids rugs and keeps busy
wltb her music and cooking,
During her years of postal ser-

'

"When I run out of a job, ru
take my rocking chair out on the
front porch and write a book"

she &amp;ald.
Mrs. Wickline was trained for

her

job

by Margaret Bohn, for-

mer postmaster, who served
from 1914 to 1941. Then shetook
over as Acting Postmistress.
9!e, in turn, has trained a doz-

en persons for the postal service, including her late husband.
S:le has watched the Rio Grande
Post Office progress through

ttiree classes during the years.
Until 1945 it was a fourth class
Post Office. Then, due to an increase in the volume of business, it became third class and

is now second class.
Mai\V interesting changes have
taken place through the years.
She praised the new Zip COde
and remarked that the parcel
post deUvery service had taken
a lot of work out of Ule post of-

fice. ,
The new $10,000 Rio Grande
Post Office was dedicated on July
8, 1962. Mrs. Wickline was acting Postmaster at the tlme. EI-

11 Defendants

mer E, Caldwell, GalliPolis Post. c11rred a!ler an early dispatch oi
master, was master of ceremon- mall one morning, she recaJled.
Ies.
urwo boys came ln to mail a
Back 25 years ago, the R l o package. 11tey wanted It sent
Grande Post Office handled many ~ecial Delivery. It wasaddreiB·
C.O.D.'s, Mro. Wickline recall- ed to a girl at Davis Hall, which
ed. Baby chickenscameinC.O.D. was the dormitory where the
Some times many or the chick- Medical Center is now located.
ens were dead and had to be I weighed It, The boys paid and
counted. The odor was terrible, left.
she recalled.
"I thought I coold hear some••1 was happy when the postal thing moving In the box then I
manual revised the requirement noticed two holes near the top
and we did not have to count the on the back side ol the box, The
dead chickens . We also had dead boys were very solemn and nevCrogs and bees, sometimes," she er mentioned what mlshl be In
reminisced.
the box.
••one time the post offke re"I decided to deHver Jt beceived a cremated body in a fore I opened the post office,
package, about the slze oi a shoe I did and had the girl sign lor
box. I had a very depressed feel- lt. I thought there was maybe
ing about that," she said.
a mouse or a grasshopper in
Mrs. Wickline expressed her the box.
pleasure at l'IOrldng with Mrs.
'fWell, latetheS&amp;Jne afternoon,
Lavada Myers, a former R i o two girls came to the post of.
Grande Postmistress. Mrs. MJ-.. fice and asked who sent the box.
ers was in lbe position for 11 I told them I just knew they
years. She also expressed her were students.
11
appreciation for the patience and
The girl said 'Who would
klndooss of the post office pa. want to pay postage on a dumb
Irons through the years.
old snake?' 1 said, 'A snake, all
An Interesting experience oc- I know is they were students.'

OfTwo Taken
POMEROY - Eleven defend·
ants were fined and two others
forfeited bonds Frldoy In t h e
court oi Meigs Cooncy J u d g e
Frank W. Porter.
Fined were Herbert D, Wallace, l't. Plesaant, Robert A.
MUier, Long laland, N. Y., Low.
ell D. stanley, Albany Route 2,
Robert 0. Brade, Parkersburg,
and DavJd Michael, Pomeroy,
'10 and costs each m charges
of l'lll1llng a stop slgn. Stanley
was also fined $10 and costs on
an unsare vehicle charge and
Michael was fined $10 and costs
011 a !lctitloos registration
charge.
Others fined were Richard E.
Lewia, Pomeroy Route 3, $10
and costs, no operator's license;
Gerald El&gt;lln, Middleport, $74
and costs with $44 auspendecl,
overload charge; WilJU.m L. Patlarson, Pomeroy Route 2, $5 and
costs, failure to dispiD.Y flag;
Charles Russell, Pomeroy Roote
3, $15 and colts, no operator's
Hcense; John Landaker, Pome.
ro,y, $5 and costs, unsafe vehicle, and Guy D. Hayman, Long
Bottom, expired operator's li-

Body Arrived Saturday

»

GALLIFOLIS - The body oi
PFC Roger Howley, 18, Rt 1,
Bidwell, was scheduled to arrive in Columbus late Sa:turday
nlsht according to Miller's Home
for FuneraJs.
PFC Hawley was killedinVIet.
nam on Merch 28. He was the
seventh GaJlia COWlty service.
man to die in action ln Vietnam
since Jan. 1, 1961.
~ steve Hawley accompanied his brother's body from Viet-

Home Sale
••••,k!!"'

.

''•••"'

675-3000

4 ':*'' S~n, Radi• and Heater, Automatic trailS.,
Power Stterin1, W/S/W Tires, Buraundy Finish .
willl Matchhqlnterior. Excellent Condition.

-

$1795

·WOOD .MOTOR SALES .
.

Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio _.
••lliliiiii_iiii
_______________

CAROLINA LUMBER &amp;SUPPLY CO.
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.

- e r brother, Robert,
a member of the U. S. Morine
Corps, and a Vleblam War veteran, arrived in Gallipolis Friday !rom Norfolk. Va.
PFC Hawley's parents are
scheduled to arrive here sometime Tuesday from New Mexico.
Funeral services are expected to be cmulucted Thursday af.
ternoon. Completa details will
be amounced later by Miller• a
Home for Funerals.

BEFORE YOU BUY A USED CAR !
68 FORD LTD 4 DR. SEDAN

IIU$IWS

~--

.67 FORD GAL. 500

a a

INC. 14

WE M4KE 2nd MORTGAGE REAL EST4 TE L04NS
Corner S.. ..d &amp; Court Stroot
300 S.cand 4¥onut
Gollipali 1
Mike Vanderpool, Mgr.
Phone 4~4113

~lo, 6 cyL, llandard ahlfl, I-.e nck,~L
owner• .focally owllad, 14,000 actual
m es. ShowTCOlm Conlltlon.
.

:="'

..

63 fOlD

Country Sedan 9 paaaerwer alaUoo waaon. V8, lilt.
trana. Power steering, power brakea, air cond., n·
dlo, locally owiled. Clea11.

- ---- .

·-~~o.rW..9J_

Fair lane G. T.A. 2 dr, Hardtop, 390 V8 e11111ne, new
wide oval tires, power steeri~, power brakes radio. One ..,ner, Sold new by this garage. In ,;,tnt ·
condition. BIJance of new car warranty.

$1995

64 PONTIAC FIRECHIEF

vvv "'i!iCPJtAIJIIiii"¥11P

•

:s

$·795 .

·- ,~~ ·

..

radio, 9' bottle sa• dellvery type

be.!. 7,00(1oct:

==-~=:_.
,..1!1!!.
66 FORD MOO
PICK-UP TRUCI

V8 e1111lne, CUslclm Cab, 8 tt.' sl)'le aide bed, red
and white. Radio. Heavy ducy rear "'-r. Loeaf..

-~~~--. -

'':

RU

%14.GLS

auaaau

$1595

u a JITS1W1

LIE

. 62 FORD C-750

65 FORD THUNDERBIRD

UW'¢

¥

.

TUt cab model, chaasla IDol cab, V8ellilne, 5 speect .
trans. , 17, 000 lb. rear ule, 2 speed, 7, 000 lb. front.
axle, cuatom cab. Heavy dul)' brakes, heaYJ dull'
rnme.

2 dr, Hanltoil. Locally owned, white with ....,utiful
aqua interior. Power steering, power brakes, air
cond. Excellent Urea. This car will hold ICJ ner
an,ybod,y's tn•pecttCA

66 FIAT

1

68 G.M.C. 1/2 TON
BOTTLE GAS T.UCIC
.
5 speed trans., 2 IIJ)Oed rea. ixle cuolclm cab

4 dr. Sedan, Power steering, power brakes. Turqoo!ae and white. Radio, w....,. llreo, A real clean
car.

$1095
•

$1595

-".cu.....,~,. •._.....-,.~---

u ClllfWI

$2095

~'!!!!lluun.

66 C
·
HEYY II STATION WAGON

2 dr. Hardtop, 390 v.s engine, Cru!s.......,.tlc, P.
steering, radio, W·a-w tire~, 16,000 actual miles,
me owner. still has new car warranty.
.

.

'LOAl'l

·

!2995

r __
_
Lriii.V-W%UWW4NV-%C

.._.. A"SQJJY_..., "Va4%: ~~sa "

SEE US
FOR A DEBT
CONSOLIDATION

By United Preas 1ntermti0111l
Thoounds of peace demooatrators marched In some of the
nation's largest cltlea Saturday
In the Drat mass protest ap.lnot
the war In Vietnam since the
olart of the Nixon administration.
The march organizers, many
of them prominent In the
stormy protests o1 the Lyndon
Johnson era, boasted their
rams would number tens of
thooaanda In parades through
the streets o1 New York;
O!lcago, San Francisco and
elsewhere.
·However, the Chicago marchers were estimated at about
5,000 when they st.pped off
d01¥11 Slate Street, buffeted by a
2S mlles per hour wind and
escorted by 800 policemen
llll,q,lcked lor their "trlendllness and coq:,eratlveness."
•·
Guardsmen on Duty
More then 7,000 National
GUardsmen were on duty in the
Chicago area, called out Thllrsday to put down rlotiJV wbfch
broke out on the eve of the
anniversary of the aasasslmtion
of Dr. MarUn Luther Kllli Jr.
However, the Chicago march
bep.n peacefully, as did the
pr.ocession or 4,500 to 5,000
demonstraWrS d o w n New
York's Sixth Avenue.
The three major marches
advertised that their ranks were
led by active Gls opposed to the
war. Whatever soldiers sh..,ed
up for the marches were not in
un1torm but wore white "over'· ~~·' ·caps.
., .
. :
··· .I ll Corw- flago,'llil the black ·
' bapnera of anarchy flapped
a'bove the marches, which were
ocheduled to end in rallies
l.ddresaed by leaders of the
antiwar movement late Satur-da,y.
The marches were the spea..,.

medium blue, black vinyl roo~ deluxe Interior,
390 2V engine, P.S., P.B., radio,,.•..,. tires. IJe..
luxe wheel covers, Comfort streem ventilation,
retractable headlights. This automoblle has 11,000
actual mlleo.. Was locally owned. Sold new by

v-..n""51i0ift:i,!t

2 dr. four speed trans. Vln,yl Interior. Excellent
·
condltlon.

QUALITY SALESMEN

Pie.... lrllck with utili\)' body,

did shut off a contract."
Thomas Morgan, Ohio manag·
er Cor Sauer, said the canpany
h~ to be able to comply.
-'We sun hope to get into
c(llljlllanee to satisfy aU parllos
cone.wned, 11 he said. "We are
trytrw gracetully to comply."
When Gienow issued the

warning last month, Sauer was
told to hire Negroes for work
on an $8.8 million projecL
Morgan said two Negroeo had
been employed dllrlng the 31).
day warning period and Glenow
said he felt the effort was surficient compliance to aUow con-

tlnlllllon of the ·contract.
More than f45 mUll&lt;~~ Wllrlfl
ol oonatrucUCOI Ia UJJderwQ ~ ·
Ohio State, with six pre.leeta
belJV developed.
St.phen E. Lance, unlverlil)'
constructor, reported all ce&amp;
tractors moving alq uin iOOd
shape,'' except for Sauer.

head of demoruitrationa advertiled In 32 clUes over the
Easter weekend to serve notice
to the Nixon admlntstratlon the!
the forcea of protest against.the
Vletnun war are still ·~·
Revive Fervor
One ol the organizers of the
coast-to-coast proteat, author·
paychlatrlat Dr, Erich Fromm,
said, "we tave waited long
enough and If we walt any
longer lethargy will set ln."

More Study Coming
On Government

Nixon Orders Arms Review
Leading to Soviet Meeting
TO RECEIVE mA DEGREE AWARDS Chapman.

L to r, Joan Darat, Louise Franklin and Esther

Three Firsts for FHA Chapter
CHESiliRE - Esther Chapman, Lwise Franklin and Joan
Darst, FHA members or the Ky.
ger Creek chapter, have been interviewed and approved lor their
State Homemaker's Degree. This
Is the hlshest honor attainable
for ffiA members, and it is the
nrot year thet anyone from~­
ger Creek High Sehool has tried

ror the degree.
Interviews were conducted by
active home economics teachers
from areas from aoolhcr district, a retired home economics
teacher from Ohio University
ard the assistant state slt)ervisor of home economics.
The girls will receive their
awards at the State FliA ConveJ~oo

President Nlxoll, tree Ill a
eampaljpl pledp, appointed a~
lltudY commlaslon Safllrdoy to
help tailor the executive branch
to the modem needs oi government.
.. Roy L. Alb, fll'elldent of Llttqn ln~atrles Inc,, waa named
by Nblll to ehalr the group. Other members are George Baker,
deal&gt; of Harvard Untverall)''s
Gr.- Sohool oi Business Aclmlnlatratioo; tormar Taas Gov.
Jcibn B. Connally; Frederick B.
I(Qpel, rormer chelrman of Ill•
American Tel._ and Tele~i~Pt Co. ~T&amp;T); and Richard
lt. Paget, a New York managt.

meat coosultaal.

tion in Columbus on Friday eve-

ning, April 11.
The Kyger Creek girls wUI
also receive the Award or Merit
for their chapter at tile State
Convention. This chapter re-ceived the Award of Merit twice
berore, in 1963 and 1965, Mrs.
Avice Frecker is advisor.

Brass Certain 'Politics'
Keyed Cut in B-52 Raids
SAIGON (UPO-U.S. mllllary
officials recovered enough saturday rrom their 11 tremendoua
-•urprise" to. co~e tha~
I"resident Nbo'll'a 'deciBtlln to
cllrlall B52 bombiJV raids In
Vietnam must have been a
poltucal one.
Highly placed mUitary sources said they saw the annoWlcement as a political move
designed to coax reciprocal acts
of d.,..scalatlon from the
CCIIIIIIlunist leadership In North
Vletnun and elQ)edite the Paris
peace talks.
The announcement was made
last week by Defense Secretary
Melvin R. Laird who said the
strato!ortress raids would be
curbed as an economy measure
that would save $52 million.
The sources said the move
ahocked U.S. commander&amp; in
VIetnam because Laird earUer
had aaked the Houle Armed
Services Committee for an
additional $102 million to llOJ'

for Increased B52 missions.
LaJrd cited statements by
Gel\ Creighton N. Abrams, the
Americau ~mander ln. Vlet.·ihat the bombing lillaaion;
were highly effective and
essentfal to the war effort in
VIetnam.
"The administration's a~
nouncement came as a tremendous surprise to the military,"
said one highly placed source.
"they thought they would be the
last to go."
The sources said It had been
proposed to use additional B52
strikes to offset U.S. troop
withdrawal&amp;
from
Vietmm.
There have been various
riiJilOrs that 50,000 to 100,000
troqls might be pulled out as
another sign or American good
faith ln trying to erxf the war.
But there have been no definite
commitments to do so.
The B52s, !lylrv rrorn hases
on Guam, Okinawa aOO in
Thailand, have been used dally

·nam;

KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (UPI)

-

Trailer Rally is Planned
GAI.LIPOLIS- ScotiMcKeoll,
ColumbllS, chairman o1 the April
21&gt;26..27 rally of the Wally Byam
(Columbua unit) Airstream TrsUerltes, to be held at the Gallla
Coolney JUnior Fairgrounds, waa
In Galllpolls aver tbe weekend
to make preliminary plana for
the event.
MeKecn eald the unit -~~
to have somewhere between 35
and 50 trailers on lliDII tor the
rally.
The campers plan to tour OUr
House, llld places of btl·

three.-

torlc Interest In the Old French
Clcy. Several plan to bring their
motorcycles here for use dllrtng t•
. Jr according to Mc-

KOCOI.
On April 26, Bob Evans Souage 9Jop wiD cater the evening
meal for the vialtors. Varfoua
forma of entertainment will hlshl!ght Satunlay nlsht activities.
Local otncialsworkl~with the
lollrl1ta· are Mr. and Mrs. Marlin Kerns, Waldo Brown, and the
Galllpolts Chamber oi com.
merc:e.

hit Communist tr&lt;q) concentratlons, installations arxJ lnfil.
tration routes in Sooth Vietnam.
: Abrams puts auch high value
on the lmportarice of the B52
raids he personally greets aOO
congratulates bomber crewmen
who come to Vietmm on
orientation visits.
The military sources said
they believed the Nixon admi·
nistration made the decision to
curtail bombing raids in re-spOD8e to Communist claims at
the Paris talks the United
States was escalating the war
through increased B52 strikes.
During the past two months,
both Hanoi Radio and the
NaUoml Liberatloo Froot (Viet
Coog) Radio have contended the
pace or the war was being
stepped Ui&gt; through the BS2
missions.
un•s a political move- that's
the reeling here," one source
said of the Laird annowtcemenL
to

MURDEH CHARGE FILED
AKRON, Ohio (UP0 - First
degree murder charges were tiled Satunlay apinst a 22-yearold Akron man accused ol shootIng his estranged wife to death
and wounding three other persons at a bar Friday night. Kllled at the B&amp;W Bar was Carol
Mclnl)'re, 19. Charged with mllrder and two counta of shooting
to wound was Louis L. Mcintyre.
TAX TAKE IS UP
COLUMBUS (UPI) - state
Treasurer Jolul D. Herbert eald
Saturday ealeslax collecllllls for
Ohio ln March totaled $35.4 mil·
Uon, an Increase of $4.9 mUllon aver l\larch, 1968.

WASHINGTON (UPO -The
United states is engaged in a
thorough review of ita disarmament positions aOO looks
rorward to opening discussions
with the Soviet Unloo by June
or early summer, authoritative
sources said Saturday.
The sources said that the
Nixon administration has alrea·
dy designated Gerard C. Smith,
director or the Arms Control
and Disarmament Agency, as
the chief negotiator at the
projected talks on limiting
offensive and defensive misslle
systems.
The administration, which has
been in touch with Soviet
diplomats on the negotiations,
has not as yet agreed to a time
or a place -ror the discussions.
Sources iOOicated that the
Russians have been urging
Moscow as a site, claiming that
talks could proceed there
quietly aOO erriciently without
the glare or publicity and
without constant lobbying by
nations represented at the
current Geneva disarmament
talks.
Propaganda Value
The United States, on the
other hand, is inclined to resist
the suggestion or Moscow as a
site in part because or the
pr(4lagaiX.Ia advantages which
would accrue to the Kremlin
when an agreement was finally
reached.
The U.S. reView has been a
time consuming arrair because
or wt!amiliari cy with detail by

many members or the new
administration.
Also, the review has required
considerable coordination between many agencies. These
include the Arms Control arK!
Disarmament Agency, the State
arKI Defense Departments, the
National security Council, the
White House Office of Science
ard Technology, tile Central
Intelligence Agency and lhe
.
,
. .
Atom1c Energy ComRUsslon.
Despite the delay, the Nixon
administration is ulllerstood to
be both serioua and anxious to

VISIT NEWSPAPER- steve I.Dduear, 10; Dennla New10111e,
oi the Wlllson Children's Center,
Columbus, visited In Gallipolis Friday accompanied by Mrs,
Don Lane. Above they observe a justowrlter operated by Mra.
Erma J...Yons, in The Smday Times-Sentinel's new offset printing
plant. The youngsters also took in the city park, saw the site
of the new bridge and watched boats on the Ohio River. They
sdmitted to liking sollthem Ohio hUJ country.

brlniiDI:

f!1t bl~ ~11\de fl1e "10111- somewllere"· 10 dill-

.Cooley said the arti!letal
will be uoed untU a
suitable hllman donor can be
found, Since the operatlan Ia a
"fir~" the medico were not
how
h time th had
sure
~·
• ey
btfore the temporary heart
..Ud beeome lnOperable;
Mlracoloul2tllo!U'S
"Pm dt18f1110111ted and someI!Qi!lilal.
.
~ llai1ned .that we haven't
tbe
~~ ill , hacl~agaor.'~ CO!iJey eald. •.Q'lle
· ~ a . 'man-mad!~ .. ~i ... t~ . tb¥ l!e !)!Is Uved 24 ·hour•
&lt;~·~ tdok ovett~&gt;!&gt;~-·
~...., II mlrieeJOUI bui the
. 'fton~M ' Of. 1111!11PJ!&amp;; &lt;and, ' tal:! I~ , that ~ ~t to rellet~
aiOrlutf ~loocl'
.the bndJ. him. of,,,tllia *':1~ and 19 iin·tO
h..rt

Lul&lt;l'•·' ·:

:a "''

nr.at

lrilk!e

'

..

·,

'

·,

'

'

1

l

"It gave us the stimulus to
move aliead with lhla device.
"MQbe aomewhere there Is a We were 10 encouraged by the
gill of a heart for my ..,aband, vlllve's success in ..,mans we
PI ease- "
have not u··• lillY anti·.....-•""
-a.
a1
1••
"
~ mCOlth8 ago, COOley a d
w,.
A prob1 em with u.r....
aa openlion sueh as he
.,.s,
performed n1 three 10 five Cooley eald, wso some were too
years · - ·
80ft to absorb OIIOIIsh blood to
Tlte impmements In valve• provide a smooth now and
. and lintnsa ~ever, cut~ . otberl Were tOO rouslt and
ooe of· the ·major ~· ln· 'brolle blood. cells.
" transpllllltlni orllfll• -:- break.
Dr.- Domlril:&gt; Liotta, u, a
,dOwn. ' of . blotlll .e.tla 1and ,·nauv~ ,oi ca~a, Argentina,
'nsutt!nc blood clot~,
,
, 11f1o ,le1lined the artificial .
. ")l't Uie. l!hat
C01111der0!1 1 hHI1, , aald ' 51 dlfte~Jil ~let•
' a llettel\ y~ve, ~'·~ wlllch, ~ ~· ltf-.,,'1!1~-~.... )Jefote deo~,
beeill lllllls ,cllnlc,lll' tllree '011 ;~ '~lsm· lll\lni. , '
· ·

ate a heart.

,

we

'

1 ·,;

'1

··~ ~~··

I .

'i'"'

.... ,'

'~

·•
0

'

'

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UPI)
-An estimated 2,000 persons
SAIGON (UPI) - Amixed Com- converged on the rain.-soaked
munist Ioree of VIet Conga n d Alabama CUpitol Saturday in a
North VIetnamese movlngtoward symbolic recreation or the
Saigon !rom their Cambodian Sebna - to - Montgomery march
aanctuary attacked a small U. S. led by Dr. Martin Luther King
artillery bose early Satunlay but Jr. rour years ago.
ran Into a deadly comblnatlm of
It was one of man,y tributes
U. S. firepower that shattered being staged across the nation
their ranks in a two..b.wr ba:We. this weekend in memory oC the
u. S. mllitary apokesmen eald Negro civil rights leader, who
the Communlat battalloo of about was slain by an assassin's bullet
640 men tried to overnm a small- in MeiJ1)his, Tenn., April 4,
er force or 200 u. S. 25th Dlv!- 1968.
sloo Infantrymen holding I h e
A drenching spring rain
artillery site. The Communists delayed the march !or nearly
raced forward under cover t:l a two hours. Leaders firaUy
mortar attack but met artillery decided it wasn't goi~ to let
and air strikes that mowed them up, and ordered the march to
down.
proceed regardless.
Some carryiJ¥: umbrellas and
others bundled in rain gear,
COUPLE KILLED
SWANTON, Ohio (UPI) - Mi- they trooped out St. Jude's
chael J. Gillen, 22, Rt. 3 Del- C&amp;thoUc complex, where they
ta, and Diana Harper, 22, Rt spent the night, and walked
4, Swanton. were kllled Satur- about two miles onto Dexter
de,y In a single car accident near Avenue, where the capitol and
the Dexter Street Bapti~t
bore.

administrator, eald the artificial
heart with It new reilnements
was a very simple machine. He
was asked why, 1t it was so
allnple, dld not someCOie buUd
one before.
"B' man knew so much about
engines, why didn't they Invent
the automobUe before 1898'?''
France replied. "It took somebocly to do it...
The outside of the heart Is
made of a type or plallllc called
sllallllc and Is !Ousher than
homan hasrt tisooe. Cooley put
the left slde of the beari In
first, Ibm the right and sewed
them togetb•r. Because ot the
t&lt;il&amp;hneas of the sUallllc, It took
. Cooley tuoaer to sew It together
than
it' '~do. with a ~
V '
I

Houston.
Cooley eald the new lining
was slmllar to a cotton
nlshtshlrt.
"It's about this consistency,"
be eald fingering his operating
robe. ••We call ' it a woven net
fobrle."
"-'··· eald "· n- valvo"""'"""
-~ on
called the Wada-eutter ljlngaltSI H8art valvellld .deve!Qped
IIi ~ro, Jll,!lll- .ttows the
blood to ~ow ~ lie eaid
fll'e\&gt;l~ ·: Problems With artlfl·
,e.W · deYicea were thai, biOOCI
!of!tl' ·.,lllitres and jiter !loata
lOOM ,_. ~Fel&lt;i4. . .,; IAi&lt; ,
.l"eW81 ranee, .,..
e 1 heart.
· '\

~

Union should !eel c...,eUed to
put on a new show of. military
force in Czechoalo\'8kla, it
would set back the quiet but
determined effort&amp; ol the
administration to make pr~
gress on a variety al outstarxling diplomatic issues.
U, S. diplomats are generally
positive in their outlook on
disarmament issues.
There Is a !eelllli ol h""'
within the Arma Control and
Disarmament Agency thet the
17-nation disarmament committee in Geneva, which Includes
both the Soviet Union and the
United Slates, mlsht formulate
a draft treaty on prohlbltlne the
deployment of nuclear w~Dill
on the ocean floors by the time
the U.N. General Assembly
convenes in New York tllia
auhunl\
The diplomats el!presa deeper
concern over the cLUTent debate
In the United States about the
creation or an AndmJssile
(ABM) System and the Soviet
reaction to it.
The Soviet Unioo throogb
spokesmen has denounced the
administration's plan to erect a
11
Safeguard" ABM a y s t e m,
terming the move an aggreuive
action.
But veteran diplomats are
inclined to feel that tll.ls far the
Soviet denWlciatlons are prima·
rily propaganda and that going
ahead with the limited ABM
system will strengthen the U.S.
negotiating hand at the 10JVeJ(IIeded talks with the Ruasians.

Tributes Paid Rev. King

u1bts is mmber 29,'t Uotta
Dr. Mlehael Dabakey of Hous- • hasrt transplant thet wW montb s aao, " coot ey, -··'d•
'''
''We•re so enth usJ a ...
~ c that It said.
He Is an aallstant
ton's Methodist lloillital baa · pro!ang hi 1 we."
uand a machine whleb tool&lt; O¥er
Kup'a wife, Shirley, save gives (blood) now and so little j)J'O(esaor ol surgery at the
the pw11J1111g tuD~COII ' by doctors a note p!Nlllng for blood destrectiOII.
Baylor College of Medicine In
body for el,.... "

open talks with the Russians.
The administration l'eels that
progress l~ disarmament bears
a direct relation to the general
political situation and, consequently, it is vitally important
to move forward across a broad
diplomatic front.
Authorities reel that a breakthrough on disarmament might
he1p on other difficulties such
as Vietnam, the Middle East
and Czechoslovakia.
Set Back Possible
State Department officials
acknowledge that If the Soviet

11, and Roger Irwin, 10,

Mechanical Heart Working Miracuously
HOUsrON (UPI).. An ...,..
pacted breakthroush In rafiM..
menta oi tbt llnlnga and valve•
three to five years ahead of
'ochedule kept a 47 'fOil'.old
Dllnola man's artlfleial heart
pUnp!ng a rhYthmic Jll8ll.llllde
- ··.' 10 beat oi life Saturday.
...,
··:u-akell Karp of !ltdde, m..
·- r - - '
••
"awake and
vorL" ..,....
and- In "liable and
-"' eondltlob ..........
llllllfacto,,.itl'ari¥ 24 houri - ~the
ilrnthetle heart waa lmplal!led
ln.• three-llour""'ratlonby!lr.
Qwon A. cOney tn st.'

PAGE II

SUNDAY. APRIL 6, 1969

VOL. IV NO 10

:1n

•'

their CQDtractual commitments,
uEvery contractor presentlr
to pp&gt;vlde equal employment involved' in construction work at
opJMlrtunity or risk loss or con- Ohio State 1• in violation ol the
1964 Clvll Rights Act and the
tracts.
Office o! Federal Ccrtract comDavid McConnell, Legal 11&amp;- pliance," McCormell said. ''It Is
dress Committeemen of the lo- a last minute, weak. iradequate
cal NAACP chapter, said Fri- response ai'KI Is a token effort
day's action was a weak effort. so they can say they acted alii

Throngs
March in
Protests

---·---------------------~--

675-1160

then 1 wlll permit the company
apprentice plumbers or lose the to reaume work,'' Gleoort said.
"II they do not comply, then I
$477,730 plwnblJV cmtract.
Action was taken after Sauer will termllllte the contract"
Glenow besed his declslnn on
had been given 30 days notice
or suspension by otate Public a June 5, 1967 executive order
Worka Dlrector Allred Glenow, tram Gov. James A. RIHxles.
11
Rhodei' order required publtc
1t Sauer demonstrates that
it wUl . meet the requirements, works contractors, as. part ot
on the job as journeymen or

j •

PRICES FOR
4'x8' SHEET FROM

OPP. B&amp;O DEPOT

COLUMBUS (UPI) - State
offi&lt;iala atopped a Pemayl\'anla
plumbing cootrador from work
on a $3.5 mllllon Ohio Slate
University ·proJect Friday because Negroes were excluded
from the work rorce.
SailOr Inc. or Plttobursh was
given 30 de,ys to JMll Negroeo

66 PONT,AC CATALIN~

D8Dl.

protect
r
credit

HOME APPLIANCES
FOR SALE

Mobile

'.

SALE
5

~~~ _r~~~~ 4~~

off those nagging billsWith ane loan, one payment,
alzed to fit your Income. Ira
a pleasure to talk over mon~
ey problems where you're
always No. 1-never a sixfigure computer number.

· WITH SCHULT

"Unperturbed, the girl said,
'We know who It wae sU rlghl'
They had seen the two holes In
the box and wisely opened It m
the porch. Mr. Snake crawled
out, and aWl!JI Into the weeds he
went.''
Mrs. Wlckllne recalled another peculiar Incident wilile working in the post office.
"A girl student at Rio Grande
College came In and re&lt;J~esled to
return her diamond ring. ~e was
breaking her engagement Her
eyes were swollen (rom crying
and she asked €or a large arnwnt
of Indemnity on the package to
be delivered in person.
ur collected all the fees and
she waited around untll I had It
ready for the €irst class mall
pouch. She sniffled backthetears
and I fell a bit worried, wondering what would happen if the
package got lost.
11 Nearly a week later a large
man in a sherffrs uniform walk-

OSU Project Stopped Until Negroes

'.

·\:!

GRANTS STAY
cense, $10 and costs.
WASIIINGTON (UP0 - SuFor!eltlng bond&amp; were Dale
E. Estep, Pomeroy Route 4, OX· preme Collrt Justice Wllllam 0.
cessive speed, $38.35, and Al- Douglas Friday granted a slay
fred T, Smith n, Parkersburg, of execution to Robert Lee
Sims, scheduled to die Aprll 18
$27.50, speeding.
in Arizona's gas chamber.

Lit us s~ow )'llU how lo pay

Art Tho Only Way
To Llvo ... Comploto
'f¥r•ltwro &amp; 4pplianco
N• Rent-No Worriet

•

~

APARTMENTSDUPLEXES

DON1BOTHER
MOBILE
HOMES

·as

~;-'!o~::~:~::;:;o~:;::::;:.-::::::::::::::~:::::~=:~::::::::::~::::::::::

'I,!

Fined, &amp;nds

he never reaped the benellta. Mrs. Wickline ealcl, "so I am
Mra. Wickline has ,_ ~cwnll. baJ&gt;w to ahow my._,tofacILne
Jated mqre alck leave ~ring hir eumulated lick leave,.
lolllre than did her hi!Dband. Wandertw healthandthatlaaome"II Ia aorta like ·IMir111&lt;8," lhlni eAA't boq."

NO IDLE TIME - WhUe Mrs. Edm Wickline of Rlo Gmnle haa retired aliBr _,.ly 30 yearl
of postal service to the village shewUlhave no idle time on her bauds. Here she Is shown witb one
or the 28 quilts she hao made and lljlpilqued. She has many hobbles In addltiCOI 10 taking care or a
24-room house, three traDers and two apartments.

vice she has jotted down many
interesting and some fascinating experiences. lite even has

plans for them.

addreos. They said they would
send her the two dollars.
"The ahertlt handed me the
- r with the girl's name and
addreas '"' lt Tlten I diiJJIIlsand
the dllllllOIId ring from my mind
and gave them dlnctlons to got
to the girl, He asked me 'Do 100
know the girl 'I' I anawared, '011,
yes, Yery well, she la a good
chrlllllan girl. •
uHe said, 'I have her name
and addreaa 111 lhla - r . And
70U are sure you know her.'
"A few de,yo Jatar I uw t h e
girl and asked herabouttheaherlft. lite told me the whole otory.
He was from another cOIIId;y and
had picked Ul&gt; the two men '"'
charges of auto theft. Her lllllle
and addre10 was under the wfndahleld visor.
"People get In trouble sometimes trying to be bel¢11," Mro.
Wickline j)O!nted Clll.
At the time of hla death, Dana
Wicklineofhad
accumulatedalarge
amount
slck
leave from which

·~

Church- King's rirst church- is
located.
The group was preceded by a
truck with a gas flame, burning
in memory or King.
Few whites, other than
p o I i c e m e n, witnessed the
march, and those who did were
silent.
About one out of every 20
marchers was white.
The marchers set out from
Selma Friday and hiked across
the Edmund PettllS Bridgewhere the 1965 marchers were
first turned back by mounted
policemen ard a tear gas
barrage.
There was no trouble Friday,
however, and after making their
way over the bridge, the
marchers climbed aboard buses
and trucks lor the 45-mile ride
to Montgomery, where they
spent the night before marching
on the cap! tot.
Negro leaders regard the
Selma-to-Montgomery march as
a turning polrt In the civil
rights Dght that helped bring
about passage or a llberallzed

voting rights act.
Rain put a danwer oo another
tribute to King in his hcmetown
or Atlara Hundreds had been
•&gt;~&gt;ected to keep a 44-ilour vlgll
at the gol&lt;Hklmed Georgia
Capito!, but instead only about
SO rode out the ralnL Several
hundred persona sllged a
candlellsht mareh
to the
Georgia Capitol Friday nlsht
An estimated 1,500 to 2,000
persons marched In tribute to
KiJV In Milwaukee and later
heard an address by the Rev.
James Gropl, who led the ~en
housing drive in Milwaukee in
1967 and 1968.
ur believe King was the
greatest American who ever
lived," the prieat said. "America had better llaten to the
words or Martin IAitber Ki~
Jr. if it wants to survive."
In North Carollla, a groq&gt;
with an American flq I&amp; their
slandard and highway patrolmen as their escort• began a
251).mlle march to Raleigh to
tall state ofllcials their problems.

Those Smothers Boys
Shaking Up TV Land
NEW YORK (UPI) - Are NBC
and ABC wooing TCl11 and Dick
Smothers, dumPed by CliS after
weeks of fellilng?WIIl Carol Burnett replace the brothers in Sunda,y night prime time? Wlll the
boys take this lying down?
Of!lclals ol the NBC~ ABC
television networks said satur·
day they had no comment '"' the
p08slbillcy one cirtbemllliabtplck
Ul&gt; the Smothen llreth-.a Can·
edy Hour drowed lp&gt; CliS Frldey.
But a highly placed retwork
so11rce said no comment did not
necessarlb: · mean nel:tber ot the
two networks
conaldertngthe
prcigrlm, , whleh ~and a
~ . ol ..............
a-.-n•
.._,,.,.,ay. atCBS

no

...... 11leP4·

..

....,.lilP

iip-.....
'

gram material

"I lhlm beth NBC andABCare
watchllli to see What type of
breach of ccnnct ou!t ~·
between the Smolbera Brothers
and CBS," the network IOUl"Ce
Hid. "UntO that Ia reiCilved, It' a
unlikely any third P1J11 will want
to get involved."

�.

.

.... ,,

12 - 1n. ~nday Time•. Sentinel, !:undal', April 6, 1969

··"· • '·

....

'

::~~~~ 6-Under, 207 After 54 Holes
Cards Eke Out
1-0 Win Over KC =~~~~~:-:.::: Maxwell In Best Performance
Gsn:Ptt
Godman
said
oa
Tourney
Peabody
Winner
Pimlico
.•

Tiger&amp;

KANSAS CITY. Mo. (UPD Loo Broek tripled home the only
r~m alii Mike Torrez and Dave
Giusti oombined lor a lour-hit·

••

ter to lead the st. Loots Cord·
inals to a 1-0 victory owr Kansas City in exhibition baseball

.:

GREENSBORO, N. C. (UP!)Billy Maxwell fired a 7-&lt;lnder·

Saturday.

par 64, the lowest 18-hole score

Torrez, a hard..throwing right..
hander, picked LV his foorth ex..
hibition triwnph, scattering three
hits over the first five hmings.
Giusti retired the last seven bat-

so Iarin the 1969GreaterGreens-

boro Open, but hsd llttle chance

of emorgina from the third roand
Saturday with the lead.
The 39-yeer-old Indianapolis
ters.
goiter suflered a 75 Friday that
The cardinals scored in t h e
left him at 6-under 207 alter 54
third when Torrez solved Royals
AKRON, Ohio (UPD - J I m holes. Three olhor golfers were
starter Roger Nelson Cor an offGodman,
a sandy • hslred 23- six urlier after the second round.
field double down the right field
year-old
bowler
from Hayward.
line with two out. Brock talCalit,
who
was
rookie of the
lowed with a line triple to the
BALTIMORE (UPD - Lightly 382-Coot mark in right center. year In 1965, applied the pres·
regarded Peabody, a Preakness
Nelson, who worked the first sure with seven straight strikes
ellgible, led from start to finish five innings, yielded only two Saturday to win the filth Fir..
Saturday to win the $28,800 Plm· hits in losing his fourth exhibi- stone-Professional Bowlers As-

Winner

and ·n ave Marr was eight Wiler.

twrnamont.

Morr and the other three- Ron
Funseth, Gene LlttleraedGordon
Jooes - had nol teed
by the
time Maxwell completed his third
rwnd Saturday.
Maxwell's 64 was only one
stroke higher than the record low
or 63 on the Sedgellekl Country
Club cwrao. John Schlee ...t the
record in the 1967 GGO and Doug
sanders matched it in last year's

"I just got thlngagolngtoda)',"
!be 39-year-&lt;lld Maxwell who
had three blrcllesonthelrootnine
aed tour ·more Cllllling In lor, his
3~1-64. "R was tho best round
I've had this year,"
"Everythlng leU In place. It
wa• eaay today," he oaJd. "I real·
Jy had to work lor that 75 yeoterday."
Maxwell's bast oh&lt;Ming this
year ""' finishing In a ~ay
tie lor second place In the Phoonix tVen.
Morr, who teed oa ohordy balore a shoWer began SaturciiY,

Replacement Comes

'I'

Uco Stakes for 3-year-olds by a
length at Pimlico.
George D. Widener's Over
There was second al'l:l Teetotum,
a stablemate of Peabody, was an-

other length and one41alllarther
back in third. RaymorKI Guest's

Palauli, a highly regarded Triple
Crown eligible, could do no better than fourth in his first outing

or the year.
Eldon Nelson gotPeabodl'awa,y
In trort and although his lead
Dever was more than one leJWth
he held it to the finish line. The
winner was timed in 1:11 2-5 for
the six furlongs.
The Chorley Robbins ·trained
entry of Peabodl' and Teetotum
paid $17.40 to win, $6.00 toplace
alii $8.20 to show. Over There,

tion game In five decisions. Bill
Butler pitched hitless ball for
three innings and Dave Wickersham pitched the ninth, aUowing
two hits.

Top Sox, 4-1
MILWAUKEE (UPO - The Chi·

sociation Tournament of Clam·
pions at the Rlvleria laneL

Godman defeated Jim Steranich1 Jo1iet, DL, the 1968 bowler
of the year, 266-228. Godman

picked lf&gt; a rirst-place cheek for

$2.1,000 and took over the lead in
the earnings race

tor

the year

with $33,625.
The six-foot unemotional Godman powered his way to t h e

Through With Win
NEW YORK CUPD - Dike, linol turn and finally forged to1lle
Claiborne Fann's Kentucky Der- front in the closing yards of the
by
replacement for injured mile race.
With Jorgo Velasquez in the
Drone, came through with a
smashing triumph at Aqueduct saddle, Dike swung to the outside
Saturday when the chestnut colt coming into the stretch and then
won the $58,000 Gotham Stakes oet sail lor Reviewer and Jlool&gt;.
by a neck in a thrilling three- ey's Shield, who were battling Cor
tholead.
·
horse finish.
The
son
of
Herboger
finally
Reviewer, the 1..S favorite, and

cago Cubs did all their hitting in championship with the highest
the first three innings, picking
score ever recorded in the final
on right ha!Xler Bob Priddy as match or the nation's richest
their special target Saturday in
Rooney's Shield finished secot¥1
bowlil'@: tournament.
posting a 4-1 exhibition victory
in
a dead heat behind Dike, who
Stefanich, 27, winner of the
over crosstown rivals, the Chi·
moved
up Into contention on the
Firestone in 1967 when he set 13
cago White Sox.
world bowling records, had alThe Cubs, playing without manready beaten 1966 Firestone
ager Leo Durocher who was in champ Wayne Zatm, tempe, SEEKS ENDORSEMENT
BUFFALO, N_ Y. CUPO- AI
Chicago nursing a cold, unloa.ded Ariz., 237-234, and Dave Soutar,
Bemtller,
veteran center for the
five consecutive hits in the three Gilroy, caur., 227-201.
another Preakness nominee, was
Buffalo Bills of the American
run third inning to ice the win.
The pressure
mounted as
worth $4.40· lor both place and
Ron Santo's bases loaded single Godman kept striking in the Football League, reportedl,y is
thaw.
seeking the Democratic ensent two runners home and Ernie title match.
dorsement
for town s~ervisor
Banks, who had the games first
Stefanich coUected $12,500 for
GUn.D TO MEET
RBI in the first inning, singled second; Soutar $6,500 for third; in suburban Cheektowaga.
PT. PLEASANT - The Ser- in the third tally of the inning.
Zahn $3,500 for fourth, and Don
vice Guild ol' Chri&amp;l Church EpisDon Pavletich sent home the
ARTICLES FU.ED
Johnson, Kokomo, IRL, $2,500
copal will meet Wednesday at the only White Sox score in the Dfih
POMEROY
- Arilcles of in.
lor fifth.
Parish House for a 1 ·p.m. lunch- with a sacrifice f]y after Buddy
corporation
have
been filed in
Zahn had defeated Johnson 256eon. Hostesses will be Mrs. Rush Bradford arxfKen Berry had sinColumbus with Secretary o! !late
93 in the opening game.
Krodel, Mrs. s. W. Ingraham, gled off Rich Nye.
In the final match, Godman, Ted W. Brown by the R. and
and Mrs. D. N, Connors.
A crowd of 10,847 braved 47...
who looks like a middleweight M. Coal Co., Inc., with Berndegree weather to take in the fighter with his 16().pou00 frame, ard V, Fultz Usted as the agent.
first of 14 maior league games did oot miss until the eighth Fred R. Fox, Caldwell, llled the
BADMINTON FlNALS
NATCillTOCHES, La. (UPD scheduled here this year.
frame when he hit tor nine and papers.
- Rud,y Hartono and Muljadi
then sparec;l.
Will, both of Indonesia, were
He a]so spared the ninth and
opponents in the finals of the
completed the route with two
•
U.S. Open badminton championMARCO ISLAND. Fla.- strikes and a niJ'le-i)in count.
ships at Northwestern Louisiana
INEAI - Mickey Mantle's
Stefanich slayed In through the
State College today.
drive zoomed off the 13th eight, spared the ninth and
tee in the recent Tony Lema struck out, but it was not enough.
Indonesia domimted play by
placing players In the finals of Memorial Golf Tournament
here.
four . of the tournament's five
The ball · traveled 200 .~,.&lt;)cal
open events.
yards strai ght and then caPOMEROY LANES
reened to the rig-ht. A slice.

l

(
.

'I
i

I

made It with a tremendous ef-

fort. He was timed in 1:34 4-5
even though rain fell on the track
thr~hout the afternoon.
Earlier in the program, mad!),
another Triple Crown eandidate
owned by Clalrborne, won the
furlong Go Lightly Purse by three
lengths but that victory hardly
was as impressive 1\S Dike's despite the more comfortable margin of victory.
It was the third straight victory in as many starts [or Blade,
who was a 2-5 favorite and paid

was at 8-ullier 13hller Friday's
r....d, whUe Lilli~, Jonea and
Fullloth were two stroke• back at
136.
,
Earl)' l!nishers S&amp;turcllj' lnelUded Masters clalqllon B o b
Goalby who fired 1 67 lor a 4ulller 209 along with Terry DW
ol Auatlil, Tex., wh&lt;Jalaoftnlahed
the third rwnd with 1 67. Don
Ja,..ry, Kan Stili and Bobby
Mitchell were also at 209.
Dudley Wy-, who .Jolnod
MaxweU In baing the llrttplayero
to tee oa, alii Don Wl&gt;ltl o1 La·
coota, cant, alao shot third
round 67's but were a~r
· stroke back In the 5~e total&amp;

..

at 210. BID
1het 1 69
to ba al210.
A controversy was building at
Sedgalltld SaturiiiY oboUI •• t...
cidellt Friday In which tour
white '"'" were kicked off the
cwroo lorheckllnatlegroproleo•lonal Charles SIO:ord.
But Smith Barrier, encU!fw
sports editor or the Greenobora
DaUy News alii Record IJid the
honorary chalnnan of tho QG.O,
staled thaI Sllford dld ncit aly
anythina about It baills racial and
that Walsh was "the ono who
pushed the racial bullnoss."
"Silford Is a gentleman, he
wooldn't," Walsh ssld.

Motion Is ·Denied
A tloo 1rto the disquallllcatlon ol
motion by Dancer's Image train.. Dancer's Image 11 wi1110r of the
ers Loo cavalaris Jr. and Rob- Derby lao! May in Loulnllle. The
ert Barnard lor dismisssl or ci- pair cootellled the cltatlooabould
tations againotthem arloills from be dismissed bacause they had
the Kentucky Derby disquallflca- served out the term of their susUon oontroversy last year• was pension.
The commisaion. however,
denied Saturday by lhe Kentucky
ruled
the motion ohould he dollied
State Racina CommiS&amp;IOIL
because
It wanted to hear testiCavalaris and his assistant,
mony
by
the pair In connection
Barrard, were given 30 - day
suspensions by Churchill Downs with their post-Derby activities.
Dancer' a Image, ""ned by Boastewards following an lnve&amp;tl8a·
LEXINGTON, Ky. (UP!) -

ton mUlionalre Peter Fuller, was

Capture Third
Round Matches

JOHANNESBURG CUPD- Topseeded Rod Laver and sec~
seeded Tony Roche of Australia
won third roond matches Saturday
$2.40 alter finishing in 1:10 4-5.
in the South African tennis cham·
Velasquez also rode Blade.
pionships at the eJII)Onse of rivals
Dike was a 7·1 shot as the
from the host cwntry.
crowd of 48,277 backed Review·
Lo YOr defeated south AIHcan
er soUdly. Reviewer tad won the
Alan Schwartz 6-0, 6-3, 3-6, 6-1
Swift and the Bay Shore stakes
and Roche stopped Andrew Pater·
impressively this year and was
son ot SOuth Africa 5-7,~. 8-6,
alter his third straight triumph.
6-.2.

cation was lound preoent In a
poot.!Jerby urine test
Tho commioslon ruled Dancer'• lmall• ao the winner, but
awarded first place prize DIOIIe)
to second place ftniaher For·
ward Pus, OWliOCl by Calumet
Farms.

BROS
Auto
Wrecking
446-4060
367-7598

GUARANTEED
USED AND
REBUILT
PARTS
OWNERS:

d

Henry, Don,
Paul Baird
(

a million?" he was asked .
' ·Heck , if he can get anything out of me. he can have
it," said the former New

York Yankees centerfielder.
" l don't even have a job. "

'Another Edison'
WASHINGTON-IN E AiNew manager Ted Williams

of the Washington Senators
has a unique eva luation of
slugger Mike Epstein:
"He's like Thomas Alva
Edison. Always experiment-

ing."

TO BE NAMED
GREENSBORO, N.C. (UPOHorace
"Bones" McKinney,
former head coach at Wake
Forest, is eJCI)ected to be named
next week as the coach of the
Carolina Cougars, a new team
in the American Basketball
Association.
111e Cougars, who this year

ton and a 3-2 victoryagalnstVintonCouncy. The Marauders will
contirue their 18-game schedule this week at home against
Waharna on Monday, at Gallipolis on Tuesday, at Athens on
Thursds¥ and home agalnot Kyger on Friday. Team members
aN lrGitl rGW, lell to ricbl, Carl Demoakoy, IIGmio Clonch,

forecast near perfect weather for
the opeMr here with plenty o!
&amp;Wlshine and temperature&amp; near

70 degrees by the 2:30 p. m.
game time.

GALLIPOLIS - Three ccuplea
have appllecl !or marrla&amp;'e ll·
eenses In the olrlce of Gallla
Ccwlll' Prd&gt;ote ClurL
They were: Mack Artlm. Elkins, 22, Galllpolia, conlltrtlc·
lion worker, and Joan Ma1fa,
18, Galllp&gt;lh, medical sects·
tary; James D. Hogan, 37, Gal·
Upolls, OVEC employe and reotaurant owner, and En1a L.
Smith, 32, Gallipolis, secretar)'i
Douglas
1'111!1, 18, Bidwell, appllance serviceman, and
!llaron Faye Puckett, 18, Galli·
polls, bookk-r.

w.,..

•

Rawllngs-Dndge , .•..• , , 58
Chapmar.cansday ••••.. 46
Mark V •.. •.....•• • . 46

LHOSPITAL NEWS

.

Elbert Williams Wins
College Grant-in-Aid

Mrs. Agnes Swisher

_
Julia Boyles 490.
Team High Game - Rawlings
Dodge, 769; Ind. High Game- El·
Iamay Norton, 189.

mosl
lha mosl

LATE FRIDAY NITE MIXED
LEAGUE
March 28, 1969
PI&amp;.
Forrest Runners • • • , . • 57

TV ••• , .... 52
. • •••..•.• 51
, • , . . . ..... 43
, .....•..• , 31

F'antastics , • • • • • • •••. 30

POMEROY - Funeral services for Mrs. Agnes R u p e
SWisher were held Friday at the
Ewing Funeral Home with the
Rev. WUbur Perrin ol!lclatlna.
Rotative&amp; attending from out
o! the councy were Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Swisher and children, Val·
arle, Paul, Jr., and TimotJl)';
Mr. and Mrs. David Swisher
and Mr, and Mrs. WUiiamTrlpp,
all of Columbus; Dale SWisher,

~IZID DEAlH

High Team Series - Forrest
RuMOrs, 2084; lligh Team Game
- Fanteotics 714.
played as the Houston MaverHigh Ind. Series - Jim Ride~&gt;­
icks, oll'ered the coaching job to our 536, Julie Boyles, 475. High
LSU's Press Maravich but he Ind. Game - Gllbart Wood 216,
turned it down.
Julie Boyle&amp; 168.

0

Williams earned varolcy loot·
ball letters during ell four high

CHRYBLI!!R

MtiTDtl8 OIHII'tiiiil6ti

Fury Ill 2·Door FOffllll Hlrd1oP

Point Pleasant Store
'

1n and ask

membership award ror "excellent retail sales performanH!'

IDrll

GALLIPOliS .CHRYSLER-PL YMOUl·HCO. -

.1637

EASTERN AVE.

CINCINNATI - C. L. J e"'
ldn1011, Danny Thompson, " a n d
Cll.ltord Phillips, of Kallh Goble Ford, Ind., Midllleport, and
Melvin L. Lillie, ol Martin Ford
Sales, Inc., GaUlpolia, will bs
honored lor outatandina aaleo'
performance during 1968 at a
300..100 Club ban&lt;Pet &amp;pOIISOr·
ed by Ford Motor Company's
Ford Division al the Netherland
HUlon Hotel here Saturday, April !2.
They are among a selectlllllllber o! Ford dealership salesmen
who will he presented a club·

'

·GALLIPOLIS
.
, OHIO .
•

'

'

..

The averap Club member aold
nearly $500,0PO, 119\'lli ,&lt;Ill ll!l!omotlve merchirltllsa In 196g· Ill
Qllll~ lor the nalionll ~·

team wiU pass "a great sports
milestone.''
"When the Reds (~)en thelr
season Monday, it wUl mark
the start of their second century in baseball-an outstanding
record," Rhodes said.
He said the baseball club was
"a testimonial to the loyal support of the people of Clnchlrati." Ceremonies will be held
marking the fielding or the first

est major league team in existence, largely because they
have traditionally rec~hed the
eri:huslastic backing of the people of Cincinnatl
"The Reds have contributed
more than their share or great
thrills and performances since
they became the world's first
professional baseban team in

1869.

Rookie Behind
Plate In Opener

who spent last season in t h e
Western Carolinas League, will
be the Atlanta Braves' starting
catcher in Monday night's season
opener with San Francisco.
The 20-year-old Louisiana naDL~CHARGES - Mrs. J. I.
Roberts, Worthy Jeerers, Dwight tive hasbeenbartingata.3·lD'pace
James, Cecil Pi~kens, Mrs. }'or- in spring training in hopes of getrest Hargraves, Mrs. Robert ting the catching job left vacant
Reeves and son, Mrs. Teddy Mas- in the trade or .Joe Torre to St.
sie, Charles Lathey, Elmer fife, Louis.
Didier is ln his third season of
Dreami Hayes, Mrs. Dallas
pro
ball. He batted .243 last seasayre arwi son, William fioush,
son
u an all-lcaiUe catcher ror
Laura, ParFton&amp;, EJien ButchEtr,
Greenwood, S. 0., ·in the WestMrS:· Ashley Bia~Oil. : t
ern
carolinas League.
BIRTHS - Mr. and Mrs. Wil·
He
was a star quarterback for
Ham Burris, Apple Grove, a son;
Oaks
High of Baton Rouge,
Glen
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Freeman,
La., before signtrg a Braves
PL Pleasant, a daughteri Mr. and
bonus
contract. His father, Mel
Mrs. Robert Russell, Fairborn,
Didier. a former Braves scout,
a daughter.
is assistant general manager of
the Montreal E.JII)os.

Bears Take

All 3 Races
From Trojans
OAKLAND,

Coli~

(UPD - The

University of California swept all
three races from Southern california and St., Mary's Saturday in
the Golden Bears' first crew com~
petition of the season.
Stead.Y rain and a cold wind
swept across the Oaklarxl Estuary during the competition but
had little effect on the Bears

oarsmen.
The Cal varslty shell won in
6:43 with USC secord in 6:54
and Sl. Mary's third in 6:&gt;8. It
was the closest race of the day
but not the fastest.
That distinction went to the
Cal freshman shell which won

In 6:40. St Mary's trailed by
foor lengths in 6:55 and USC
was third in 7:02.

Many of the greatest

names in baseball have appeared in the CincirtfBti lineups, aiXI some of the finest individ\lll and team performances in baseball history have
been registered on the Cincinnati diamond," Rhodes said.
"1 congratulate tlle Reds, the
club management am the fans
of Cincinnati on this great anniversacy," the governor added

XAVIER SIGNS CRABLE
CINCINNATI (UPO - Xavier
University has s igned by half-

COLOR

back Jack Crable of Cincinnati

Moeller fllgh School aod end Ben
Ballard of Cincinnati Woo:lward
High School to football grants·
in-aid.

laier\Wn•n®
THI! Qfllll:o\TI!.T NAMI: IN SOCKS

CREW·SADER(r) Orion ond Stretch Nylon Crew Sock•

9,000 TICKETS LEFT
CINCINNATI (UPO - Ad·
vance ticket sales have already
topped the 1968 pre-season total,
the Cincinnati Bengals said in
announcing that only 9,000 were

come in many colors and we hove a wide variety. You
con match whatever else you wear. Machine wash·
able and dryable and incredibly soft. One liz;e fits

10 to 13. Only $1.50.

still left.
About 18,000 season tickets
have been sold so rar for games
at Nippert Stadium by the American Football League entry.

Middleport Unit in

school years with the first two

gotten at Rutland and the othero
lrmn Meigs High loli&lt;Ming the
consolidation

of

Middleport,

Pomeroy and Rutland II i g h
Schools.
He played bolh orlense alii defense ln all seasons except as a
freshman when he started onl,y as
a halfback lor the Red Devils.
WiJiiams served as vice president of his freshman, sophomore and junior classes, is cur-

Three Aid Missions
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport emergency squad answer-

ed a call at 10:39 p.m. Friday
to 2941h Race 51,1 where Tom
Justice hod become Ill. O&gt;;ygen
was admfnistered and he was
taken to Holzer Medical Center.
At 11:16 p.m. the squad was
called to the D. A. Milan residence at 894 Pearl St. In Middleport, He was taken to Veterans Memorial ho~pital where he
was admitted as a medical pa-

Howard ThiYener

Warren SkidMore

Rox McCormick

Quollty s,!••m•n

Quality Salesman

Gen. Solos MtJr.

DEIONSTRA TORS
'68 IMPALA "55" CONVERTIBLE

1969 Seleet Group

IN ltDER FOR OUR EMPLOYEES TO SPEND EASTER
SUNIAY WITH THEIR FAMILIES!

Braves To Use

Roger Freeman, Pt. Pleasant;
Mrs. William Durrls, A p p 1 e
Grove; Charles Lathey, Leon;
Ellen Butcher, Pt. Pleasant; Mrs.
Charles Kinaird, Pl Pleasant

Ford Salesmen in

CLOSED TODAY
·EASTER SUND.AY

J

hospitality," said Meigs Foxhunters Association President
Corbett Cleek. Cleek a lso said
many of the out-of~otmty guests
to the e\'ent voiced praise of the
nne facilities.

rently preoldent of the Varsicy
Cincinnati; Mrs. Ralph lsaces, 11 M" Club, Ia vice president at
GraysvUle, Florida; Mr. and the Malgo Student CouncU aed lo
Mrs. Josoph Brail&gt;ury, Reynold .. a member of the NaUon Honor
burgi Burdell Bra&lt;llury, Urbana; SOciecy, alii the Fellowship or tient.
Mrs. Robert Ball, Rodney; Perry Christian Athletes or Meigs High.
At 5:3f a.m. SaturiiiY, the aid- ·
Rupe, Mariette; Mr. and Mrs. In other activities, he is a mem- men went to the Leading Creek
Claude Rupe, Mrs. Paul AdkinB, ber of the Hysell Run F r e e area where a car had stalled in
Mrs. Byron Bradbury, Mr. and Methodist Church.
which a man was transporting
Mrs. Jameo Bradbury, Mr. Char·
Elbert won recognition oo the a woman to Holzer Medical Cenles Thomas, Vera 'Thomas, Mrs. 1968 All..sEO League loolbaU ter. 'fhe squad took over lhe mloTh9MBS Damell, Mr. and MrS, team and also eamed a letter oo alon. The couple was no1 ldentiArthur Rupe, Sr., and Leo Rupe, the Marauder track team as a !led. They were beUeved Ill be
all of Kyger.
junlor.
from Wast Vlrslnls.

•

u

similar award earlier.

COLUMBUS (UPO - Gov.
James A. Rhode&amp; plans to at.
tend the Cincinnati Reds .. Los
lng bseball game in the Queen
Clcy Monday when the Ohio

ATLANTA (UPO - Manager
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
Luman
Harris anoounced SaturADMISSIONS - Mrs. Robert
RusseU, Fairborn, Ohio; Mrs. da_y that Bob Didier, a rookie
ELBERT WILLIAMS

Reds Opener On Monday
Angeles Dodgers' season-qM!no-

t.y Foxhunters Association, host
for the Ohio State Foxhunters
spring bench show and field trial
held last weekend, today expressed public appreciation to
Horace Karr for permittlng usc
or the archery building at his
Royal Oak Park, near Pomeroy,
for the bench show.
"Mr. Karr permitted the foxhunters association use oft h e
building free of charge and we

Funeral Held for

Evelyn's Grocery • • . . . . , 38
King Builders ••..••••.. 34
Team High series - Rawlings
Dodge, 2033; Ind. Ind. Series -

Ingle&amp;, Danny Abbott, Jed Will, Hoger Abbott. Asst. Coach Ed
Bartels and Trainer Dale Swift.

POMEROY - The Meigs Coun· are indeed grateful for his fine

MARlETT A - Meigs H I g h ietta College where he is enrolled
School Senior Elbert Williams, to attend beglnnlna this fall.
Elbert, son of Mr. and Mrs.
standout offensive hallback and
defensive cornerback on Maraud- Floyd Wllllall\5 of HYSilU ,!lun,
er football teams lor the past near Rutland, IB the seeondrn"emtwo seasons, has received a ber of CClllch Charles Chancey's
grsnt-ll&gt;&lt;lid scholarship and oth. 1968 Meigo football team to win
er financial assistance from Mar- a Marietta College grant-in-aid
scholarship, Quarterback J e f l
Werry signed acceptance of a

Points
D. D. Pinettes • . • . . . • . . 66

Pat Archer. Secor.:~ raw, Tim Demoskey,HickVanMatre, Dave
Boyd, Van Johnson, Gene PoweU, RlckOiJer, Dennis AulL Back
row, Coach Moore, Jim Crow. Jeff Tyo, Bub Burdette. John

Foxhunters Thank Karr

disqualified alter an Illegal modiNOLAN VS. DRYSDALE
CINCINNATI (UPl) - Y01111g
Gary Nolan of the Clnchuatl
Reds and veteran Don Drysdele
of the Los Angeles DOdgara
were named the starting pitch.
en In the treditional National
League opening game at Croaley
Field Monday.
The U, S. Weather Bure&amp;u

Randy Becker, Stan Wilson, Chip Haggercy, Mike Wllliamo and

White finish, turbo hydramatic, 327 engine, power steering and brakes, AMF~

,.adio,

re~r speaker, W~leel covers,

WSW tires and other extras.

'68 CAPRICE 4 DOOR HARDTOP,
full power, air conditioned, gold with

d trim.
Reasonable

MORE DAYS
To S• " &amp; R BlOCK

WE NEED GOOD
CLEAN '63, '64, '65
&amp; '66 MODEL USED
CARS &amp; TRUCKS

,,_

from last ..,...., alii Cltcbar
AprU 7, Soulbom, lwlme. ·
April 8, Wlllame, llome.
Bob Ritchie, a jUnlm; M I k e
Borlna and Dave Smith, 00111
April II, FOderil • lfodda&amp;.
pitcher-first basemen, and lq)!l- horne.
omores, aJkl shortstop · Howle
April If, Kyger Creek, · - ·
AprU 17, Waterford, lloJne,
CaldWel~ also a )lnlor.
AprU 21, Soothem, awi.Y.
The only senior on the SIJUid
is Ray Karr, who is expoeled
April 23, Federal • lfodda&amp;.
to start at second base. Karr away.
April 28, North Gallla, awlj'.
did oot play baseball last year.
April 29, 11)1&amp;01' Crook, - .
other B&lt;J&gt;ad membar~ are .Mike
May 5, North GoUla, home.
Gorrell, and Terry stethem, jun.
lora; Dale Boston, outtlelder;
May 6, AIIIXIIIdor, home..
Gordon Holter, OUUleldar-eatcber, and Tim Root, ouctleldar.
INDIANS OBTAIN HINTON
all sophomores, and Fre.shmen
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPO - A
Bob CaldWell, OUUlelder-seeond trade with the California Angels
lat.
Returning letter wimers back base, and Rick Sander&amp;, OUUleld- resulted in the return Friday at
er-shortstop.
outfielder Chuck Hirton to ·the
The schedule, as presently set, Cleveland Indians.
follows:
Hinton, 32, was traded by the
·Angels
lor outfielder Loo Joh~&gt;­
SIGN CONTRACTS
BUFFALO, N, Y. CUPD- JJe.. soo, 35. Hinton played with Clevefenslve tadde Bob Tatarek, full- land from 1965 to 1967,
Johnson came to the IndJans
back Wayne Patrick and defenin
mid-season last year in a
sive back Jerome Lawson, all
team, lbe Cincinnati Red Stock- of wh"'" saw limited play last trade with the ChicaGO Cubs lor
Ings.
year as rookies, have signed new Willie Smith. He batted .257 in
"Many other cities have lost contracts with the Buffalo Bills. 65 games.
major league basehell teams
through the years because they
did not have the s~port of local fans," the governor said.
"Today, the Reds are the old-

TUPPEIIS PLAINS - ~:astern
lligh School'&amp; diamond sqnsd
which openod its baoeball schedule or 14 games at home last
Thlll'sds¥ against Mfd.Qhio Val·
ley Conlorence roo AJognder
will rebuild thlo year.
Coach Dan Wright, a &amp;land·
wt basel&gt;all hurler in hi&amp; high
scbool cJa.yo at Buchtel a lew
years ago, expoeto to ba rebuilding the Big Green team
this ..,..lnB. He has only 12 play.
ers worklllg out lor pooitiooo
on the Easle squad. There Is one
senior and three juniors in the

Gov. Rhodes To Attend

Marriage Lice~~~&amp;

WOMEN'S EARLY BIRD
LEAGUE
March 26, 1969

Ridenour's
HUilollllers
The C. B.'s
The 9's , ,

dur11 to Hrnnll"llllyi In f4Mflbull
••· 111117• •m the fil!ld in m11d.
I'll in, h•il, tW MDOW !''

3 Couples Apply for

Bowling

BAIRD

.. 'Wh•l • •·h•n•e In unirunn

MARAUDERS - Coach Run Moore's Marauders opened
their 1969 baseba11 season last week with a ~1 win over Iron-

'Poor' Mickey

Mantle grimaced and covered his head with his arms
as the pellet struck ilnother
golfer in the lhigh.
"What if he sues you for

Big Green 9 Re~uilding ·

exhibition .baseball

------MONDAl' ONL l7
APRIL 7, 1969

1964 RAMBLER 4 DR.
STATION WAGON
Whitet 6 cyl., •td. trans. You better
hurry on this one, No. 235· B.

$'

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MON. ONLY--- · - - - -

1964 PONTIAC
2 DOOR SEDAN
REG. $1395

AROS
•

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IN STOCK TO
CHOOSE FROI

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·1969

IN STOCK

$·1099

MOM. ONLY------ -

14-1969

CHEVY TRUCKS

Automatic transmission, Radio,

Turquoiae.

John Houck
Aut. Solos Mgr.

·

1-\ TON PICKUP, 1 SPORT V~l
1-CHEVY VAN, 15-% TOt PICKUPS
2 BIG TRUCKS, CAB &amp; CH~SSIS

�···--·········· .. .

.,

~

0 I

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I

' '

·sunday Tlmea • SenUoel, SWdly, April 6, 1969

ops Nightcap, .4"3 ~:

•o Takes Opener 9-3,
.

'

wm

ues ay

1

RIO GRAJIIDE - Coach Don Shiwro' Rio Grallle College RedJiletl apUt a doubleheader bore Friday acternoon with Fllnl Communlt;y Junior COllege, the Redmeu winn1Jw the first pmo 9-3 and

1

I

drq)JIIng the nightcap 4-1.
Coach Ernie Myers Fllntmon are now 2-1 lor the aeaa!MI while
Rio Grande is 2-3. The Redmon play Cedarville College bore In a
doubleheader starting at 1 p. m. TuesdaY alii next Seturday travel
to Pikeville, Ky., for a Kentucky l!tercolleglate Athletic Cooler·
once doubleheeder with the Pikeville COllege Beers.
Rio Grande had a big ftve run
first hwng tn the first pme, second on nve hits, including
added two more in the second three bunt singles. llllke Serlo
alii two tn the fifth. F1int scored and Chris Stiverson hit back to
two in the fourth and one in the back singles. Torry Foul ground•
sixth.
ed out, with the rumors moving
Freshman SteveSisughterwent &lt;lP to second alii third.
the rou~ Cor the Redmon and was
Lorry Miller laid down a bunt,
ne.er In real trouble. Lorry Boot alii Serio, halfway home by tile
caught the first six innings and time a fielder touched the ball,
Terry Foot finished the geme scored. Stiverson meantime bad
behilllthe plate.
streaked to third an:l was home
BUI McAlpine worked the first before the F11ntmen ,.covered.
{our Inning&amp; and was charged with . Bill Morrison alii Bob Brubaker
the Joss. He was relievedbyJohn were safe on bunts to lOBd the
Dtetlan in the fifth. Slaughter bases. Bill McDonagh lilted a
struck out six and McAlpine fan- long sacrifice fiy to center and
ned rour. Both pitchers walked lii!Uer scored Rio Grallle's third
tour men
run. Loughlin grounded out to
centerftelder Jim Schall paced elll the inning.
the flintmen with throe hits In
Flint came back with the tyilli
!our trips, tncludi!!i a double and and wlrming runs in the top of the
, alowle. Phil Gsrelik alii Brysn sixth. Schall an:! Bell singled and
, lieU had doobles.
both scored on Craycrsff' s siJ&gt;.
But McDonagh and Bob Br,.. gle. Bob Demock Qled out. Jim
baker led the Redmon, each with Eastman grounded out and Denn,y
two ror ·three. Dick Loughlin and Hicks Qiecl out to elll the irming.
Dave Rekers had doubles and
Jim SchaU paced the F11ntmen
Brubaker poled a triple.
as he went three [or three. Bry·
F11nt took a 2-&lt;1 lead in the an Bell was two for four alii bad
, first frame of the second geme Flint's only extra base hit, a
"when Phil Garelik walked, Russ double.
carlson ntecl out, Jim Schall
Chris Stiverson topped the Redlingled and Bryan Bell singled

men hitters with two singles tn

to lCIId the bases.
three trips. Rio Grande had eight
Steve Craycraft walked but in hils to six for Flint alii left 12
the process Flint scored two men on base while the visitors
runs. Garelik came in a wild had six straOOed.
011
' pitch by Lorry Mlller alii Schall
John Diedan started for F11nt
" scored
a passed ball. Bob and was relieved by Steve Lucas
011
Podleski hit Into a double play In the third. Lucas got the win.
to end the inning. ShortstqJ BtU
Lorry Miller stsrted for the
Morrison threw Craycraft oot at Redmon alii worked five lnnlowa.
secolll and Dick Loughlin nipped He was relieved by Steve SlaughPodleski at first to complete the tor in the sixth acter pitching to
double play.
three men, all o[ whom singled
The Redmen came back with and scored the winning runs.
three runs in the bottom or the MWer was charged with the loss.
••
1

~

Snlit
lJou bleheader
r
F1RST GAME
FLINT
AB R
P. G&amp;rellk, 2b •• ••.• 3 0
R. carlson, 11. ..... 4 0
J . Schall, c! .• . .. . • 4 0
B. McAiphine, p-rf . . 4 0
B. Bell, rl-&lt; .... .. . 4 0
Rettenmulll, lb . .. ... 3 0
.J. Eutman, ph ....... I 0
S. Clo!u,c .. .. ..... l I
J. Dlotlan, p .. .... .. I I
D. Landis, os ....... I I
D. Hicks, 3b .. .. .... 3 0
TOTALS . . . . .... .. 29 3

H
I
0
3

0
I
I

0
0
1
0

1
8

SECOND GAME
FLINT
AB R H
P. Garellk, os ••..•• 3 1 o
R. Cerlson, 11 • .. ... 4 0 0
J. Schall, c! .••• .• • 3 2 3
B.Bell,wf ....... 4 12
S. Craycraft, lb .. ... . 2 0 1
B. Podlesid, r! ...... 1 0 0
B. Demock, c ........ 2 o o
J. Eubllln, lb ........ 3 0 0
D. Hlcka, 3b ........ 3 0 0
J. Dletlan, p ........ 0 0 0
S. Lucas,p .. . ...... I 0 0
TOTALS . • ........ 26 4 6

..

AB R H
AB R H RIO GRANDE
B.
Morrison,
as
.
.
.
.
5
0 I
B. Morrison. ss ..• .• 2 1 0
L.I!Clol,c .. .. ..... 4 11 B. Brubaker, r! .. .. . 2 0 I
T. rout, c .. .. .. . .. o o o B. McDonagh, 3b ..... 2 0 0
B. Mcllonagll, 3b ..... 3 1 2 D. Loughlin, 2b ...... 3 0 0
D. Lollllhlln, 2b .. .. . • 3 2 1 D. Rekers, If ..... , . 3 0 I
D. Rekers, II .. .. ... . I 2 1 S. llllller, pr ........ 0 0 0
.M.Serlo,Jb .. .. .. .. . 2 2 0 C. Stiverson, ct •.•.•• 3 1 2
. C. Stiverson, cf. •. . , • 2 0 1 T, Fout, c, o , • • • • • • 3 0 0
B. Brubaker, rf .. .. .. . 3 o 2 L. i!Clol, ph ......... 1 0 I
S. Slaughter, p ........ 3 0 0 L. llllller, p •••••. 1 1 I
TOTALS .. ... .... .. 23 9 8 S. Slsughter, p ....... 2 0 0
E. Jacobs, ph ........ 0 0 0
F1lrt • • • • • •000 201 0- 3-8-1 TOTALS . ..... .. .. 28 3 8
Rio Grallle •• 520 020 x- 9-8-1
·l&gt;f
BATIERIES: F1int - MeAl- runt • • ••.• 200 002 0- 4-6-3
.pllle (LP), Dletlan (5) and Clo!u, Rio Grallle •• 030 000 0- 3-8-1
BATTERIES - F11nt - Diet.lkAiplne (5); Rio Grallle lao,
Lucas (3) (WP) and Bell, De, ~hter and i!Clol, Fout ('1).
mock
(3); Rlo Grsllle - Miller
; E- Clofu alii Brubaker. LOB
I ·- F1int 9, Rio Grallle 4. 28(LP), Slsughter (6) alii Foul.
E- Gerellk, Eastman, Hlcka
·' ·· .j Gorellk, Schall, Bell, Lougi!Un
alii
Loug~lln LOB - F11nt 6,
I and Rekera. 3B - Brubaker alii
Rio Grallle 12. 28- BelL SBl Schall SAC - Stiverson.
•
Loughlin 2, Brubaker, Serlo and
•'• Pitcher
lP H R BB SO StlverHOD. SAC - McDonagh.
RIO GRANDE

i llcAJpine .••• 4

7 7

4

4

• DI!'IJan .... . 2 1 2
f .SiaUihter .. .. 7 8 3

2
4

3
6

Y~RK

NEW
(VPI)- MaJor
league baseball, battllns to
remain tile "ttatlm.l pootlnlt,"
get&amp; a drastic raeellltlng ·with
tho _,tog o1 the 1969 season
Momlay- lour new teams .In·
eluding Ute first outside the
United States. new "dlvlalona,"
alii poat-aeaoon pla,yulfa.
The Montreal Expos, aportlng
I!BIIdY new hats llllll a ·French
accenl, join the National League
aloag with the San Dloso
Padres, and tho Kansas Clt,y
Royals alii SeaWe Pllota
formally enter tho American
League.
To meke room ror 24 team a,
both leagues have been split
Into six-team East and West
"dMalona." And at the end o1
the replar season, the division
champions in each league will
meet In a bell.tbree.of.ftve
pla,yulf lor the rlllltt to_..
In the World Sorlea.
II all adds up to tile ,biggest

Toda ' S

'!- - - -

!

•

•

•

•

•

0

A.wef••

of changes In baseball gamea

alnce tho American Lsque
-eel In 1901 as Ute "IIOCO!Id''
major teasuo.
Top baseball men make no
secret ot 111e tact they !eel the
game'o poaltlm as the No. 1
aport In 111e United States Ia
being challenged aa never
be!ore, chlelly by pro football.
And thay mean to move quickly
and boldly to kHp interell
charged up 1n baseball.
.Whether the,y wlil achieve
quality remains to be sean, lor
Ute rorecalll are that the lour
new teams-like other "expen.
,...,.. teams bo!ore them- will
Rnish at 111e bottom ct the
otandlnga.
, ~antlt;y If not ~alley
But the mojllla certalnl,y have
acllleved quantlt,y, With 24
teama each pi~ s 162-pme
schedule, the regular aeeson ·
wiD Include 1,944 pmes.
CoJDpore that to the 1,232

~justa few years ap&gt;

wtien there - • IS teams, each . East

pi~

154 pmoa. AocJ then
001110 the pt.,.if1 llllll the
Warl,d Series, so that baMballla
likely 111 1'1111 elooe to November
this Jear- Ute lonpst seai&lt;MI
ever:
'111e st. u..ta Cerdlnalo,
doColldlne N a 1 1 0 n a 1 Lea&amp;ue
chomplooa, are being widely
touted as favorites to 111n their
third llralshl JIOIIIWIL AlthOUJh
the American League boosts the
world champ!..,., the Detroit
Tlpra w11o upset the Cerda In
last year's World Series, the
pennant race Ia ..., as wide
Detroit, Baltimore,
alii Boston perhaps the top
choices.
Fans who have been !oUowJng
the game all Utelr Uvea will
have to learn a new linEUp.
Here's the we,y the major
leagues are spilt up 1n1e
divisionS:

Wool
Calllomla
Chicago
Kontaa Clt,y
Mlmel&lt;lla

Baltimore
Boston
Cleveland
Delrolt
New York
Washington
National
East
Chlcll'&gt;

OSkland
Statile
League

Weal
Atl&amp;IU

-esl

Cincinnati
New York
li&gt;uaton
Philadelphia
Loa An&amp;elea
Pltiaburl!b
San Diego
st. u..ts
San rran&lt;loco
11da · strange new season
opens on a note or tradition.
As usual, the season will open
In Waahln&amp;ton and Clnclmati a
day earlier than elsewbsre. In
tho nation' a capital, President
Richard Nixon will make bla
first appearance as an Opening
~ "pitcher" when be throws
out the first ball Monday lor the
Waahlngton Sonatora va. New

Is R _J _
arf.I.U.e

t

NEW YORK (UI'lJ- Dave
Bristol aoll Billy Martin have
this one big !ault.
They're too modes~
Each'll tell you his club has
"a good chance" to win, but
both draw the line at ai\Ythlng
more definite. Neither comes
right out and says hls club

division, it's the Mots with
pitchers like Sea.er, Kooaeman,
Gentry, McAJI!rew and Ryan. A
staff like that doesn't need too
much hitting but I think there'll
be enough with Jones, Oils,
Grote, Boswell, Charles alii
SWobOOa to make the Mots the
moat improved club in the

WILL win. They're a bit bashful

league and get them all the way

about making such a cJalm.
Okay then, 1~(.;
1 !""ke It [or
them.
_
Cincinnati --v; U win in the
Nstionel League and Mlnneaota
in the American
I haven't met aJIYbody who
doesn't like the St. Louis
Cardinals. I like 'em, too, in
their own division. But you
know what they say can happen
in a short series like 3-ookl!-5
and that's what I look for to
happen when and i! the Reds
ever take on the Cords In the
Natlond League's Orstdivlalonal j&gt;layoft '
Baltimore is my other dlvi·
sion choice In tile. American
League and I[ that work~ out
according to my lq range
view, the playoC! with Minnea&lt;&gt;ta ought to be a ama11 wer with
the Twins R111Uy happy to pt a
truce so q,ey can go oa alii
light Ute 111&amp; :war with the Redo
In peo.ce.
Here's how 1 llne 'em all up:
Natioral League
East
West
1. St. u..la
Cinclnrali
2. New York
Sen Fnnclsco
3. Chicago
Atlanta
4. l'ltteburgb
Loa Angeles
5. Philadelphia
Hoooton
6. Mentreal
!'In Diego
American League
East
West
1. Baltimore
Mlnneaota
2. Boatoo
oaldalll
3. Detroit
Chicago
4. Cleveland
Calt!ornto
5. New York
Seattle
6. Waahl~n
Kansas Clcy
Bad News
I wllh I had better news for
Ernie Banko, who leola the
Cube llnaUy wW get Into a
world ,.riel this year but IIIey
were 13 pmos back lall year
alii I don't - them that much
better - ·
!! aaybody' o better In that

up to secoOO place, which when
looked at ulller a bright light,
isn't really the same second
place you and 1 used to know.
Plttsburl!b'• pitching Isn' t
nearly deep enough and the two
kids at ftrot alii third,
Robertson alii Hebner, may not
be ready either. Wtwt l saw or
AI Oliver I liked, though.
The Phlllles should finish
ahead or Montreal- If they
hustle. Every time Richie
Allen's out there, it's a toosqp
whether he'll break a record or
hla!118118&amp;er's heart.
The lieda had tho beat hiUing
in the teegue last year alii
shwld have again although
Torre's added bat ought to
bring the Cerda close to
Bristol's crew. Cincy's pitching
looks stronger alii behllll the
plate, Bench looks like a soonto-be MVP.
Bonds alii Etherld&amp;e, both
with added elljK!rlonce, will
moke the Giants tougher but in
the elll the question will be
whether Sen Fnnciaco baa
enoocto pitching alii the probable answer to no. Some deal
with Adenta. Plenf;)' o! hlU.ra
but who hld the pltchara'l
The Dod&amp;ers could be tho
ai-r In their division with
ftne looking idda like Sedakla,
Slzemore and Russell. That last
one, Ruaaoll, is only 20 and
you'Ji hear more about hlm for
sure.
Houston was looking lor some
help IC&gt; in Montreal, which
gives you a rough Idee abuut

quicker, Baltimore or Boston II
TollY Conigliaro mokeslt all the
way back, the Reel Sox have the
best out!leld In the league but
the Orioles' pitching gives them
the overall edge, particularly
since Palmer looks okay apln
alii young Adamson shows
sips of developing into a
regular wlnner.
'I"he Tigers warted one thing
more than anything else. They
wanted to get into at leaet one
world serle&amp;i they got into one.
They say It was greal
No Power
Cleveland has a merager who
always gets the most out or hls
club, but Alvin Dark can't got
blood &lt;&gt;lit o! a turnip or many
long bailers out of the gang he's
halllllng. Azcue, Maye alii
Snyder were the best hitters he
had last yeer alii they """'lied
a total of 10 homers among
them.
Ralph J1ouk says don't 'coW.
out the Yankees. I'm not. I'm
counting 'em In alii merking
'em down lor Rltb place.
In a way, Ted WUlt.tms has
the rouglleat Jab of all.
Nobody's eXjlectlow much out or
a!IY of tile eXjllnsion clubs, bul
everybody's watching to oeo
what the big fiJJ can do with
Washington. I hope he does
well, but outalde of Paacualalll
Coleman alii Howard'• home
run bet, he doesn't bavo a
whole lot to work With.
Buty Martin hal dono wbat 110
other IIWiaiOI' baa. He baa oold

hls Twins SHOULD win, they're
that good. He's got 'em aU
churned up. They suf!orecl a
bad turn the other day when
Boswell out his hand with a
knl!e while flahlng, but he'll be
back alii I think Martin will be
a wimer In his first try.
No question but that the Twins
are in the league's 11 eaaier"
division. The A's pose the only
serious threat with their young
pitchers and hitters like Monday, Jackson, Bando alii cater.
One way or another, the
White Sox pitching stsa will do
a decpnt Job. AI Lopez sees to
that. But be haa the same old
tro.mle again No punch.
BUI Rigney's ~ls dlaappointed everybody last year alii
maybe this Ia their yeer to
bounce back but I'll lave to see
It !Int.
That leaves Seattle alii

~~ . Cl~ .......

)'&lt;111

.

·,

t·

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.~ O~ : a

coin 1 that Marvin Mllkes
alii Cedric Tallis, who run tile
show for the Pilots alii Royals,
have done the best they could to
put together representative
clubs alii so have the two
scouting ala Us. The Pilots bave
a good baseball man In Joe
Schultz and the Royals In Joe
Gordon. Both are line fellows
alii deserve only the beat, but
In case nobody told 'om, they
didn't gel the beat In last fall's
eapenalon draft.
11 they don't knoW thet by
"'"'• llley'll start !lnllng oot
TuesdaY.

Alfcllfa .Weevil: Farm Enemy
., the SOYen yean alnce 19112
Carmen have tried IJIIII8J'GIIIde.
rensea IPlnll .....n loasea,
such ao IIOing back to red clover, or all grass. ButthNelarmero have !ound - . , Ia 11&gt; IIOOd
1111lotltute !Dr al!al!a In tile torose Cl'O!J program on moll Oblo
Carma. Control cl tho al!al!a
weevil Ia cUmcult, tort, In !IIIII)'
altuaUDns, weevil COIIIrol Ia leu
cootly thin tile productloa ct at.
lernate Cl'O!JI.

BY C, E. BLAKES! V
Ext. Aptt, Asrlculture
Malia Couney
POMEROY - Alfal!a weevil
... be controlled.
!IJtce llllout 1t62 !armero In
Ute Melp.Gallla orea Ia IIUII1I'
cases han seen the ll!al!a
weevil devour almost all ct the
flrll cutllnc ot ollll!a. Jn some,
Ute recrowUt Iller tile ttrat cut.
llnr WI a ealea off 11 .!aat as It

York Yanklel _.. .
.
.brliUanj Jltcl&gt;lfta . .
., CIJiclmatl., which It accord- headed •Y JuaD !la!ichal.
ed tho ,_
llf - " " Ute
· , Trwbloln tho~
NaiiO!Ial Lellllo bOCMtH llwaa
'111• ' 1869 IJirilll
the llome of the flral pro!aaalon- aeaaclo! P off to ariald lllit
II baseball tum. tile Clnclmall duo Ill 1111 P~l' "ttrlM" uid
lied• play hoot ID Ill• Loa poor wea!lter.
'"·
Allplea Dodger a. The llral pro
~ad by atiOr!llil' , ~
bueball team wu orpalzed In Miller, tho
AooOcJ.,Ual
Clnclnnsd 100 Yllrlll'&gt;.
enlllad In draWD.- MIOtla''
Actually, tile Reds wlil be UDna lllth the el.m lnnitri ovir
first only by ·a lew bCura. A such matters 11 tile poniloin
third game or1 the MoncJoi fllnd alii reaullr pl~fl .
achoclde Ia a National Lsque ' rofuaed to report to tralnl!\l
nigbt pme In Allants In Which campo until agreement Wll .
the Braves boll Ute San reached, When H Wll, with tho
Francisco Glante.
owners Increasing their eordrJ..
All tho other teams awing Into bution to the · pension lund, tile
action TuesdaY on this ache- players Nported alii taund their
dulo:
J
tralnlnil hampered by UIIIIUiil,y
American LealPie
cool alii damp weaUter In
Day pmeo- Mlmeaota at Florida.
Kanaat Clt,y, Clevolpd · at
'1110 apring alao wal markatl
Detroit, Bolton at Baltimore; 117 a llaming dlij1Uie ovar a
Nll!bt pmea-Cblc.., II Oail· tracle between the Mootroal
land, Seattle at Call!ornla.
. Eirpoa and tile Houl!lllll Aatroa.
National ' - "
The . Elipol IIWI»PPd !lrat
~ pmeo- Mo!llrtal It New baHIIWt Dcm Clendtnon anil
York, PhlladelPIWi at Chlcqp; oidlleldor Jeaua A1ou to t b t
Nl8bl pmea-1'lltebarllt al, st. Aatrol fili'Jii'i{liiiiJman lliiil;t;
Louis, Houlton at San Dleio, staub. Then Clondanon retl......
San Francisco at Atlaata.
IIDUI!IIIIl hollered It IIHluld At Waahlngton, Prealdonl
ployer or tile
Nboon likely will have to lharo should be nulll!led. Buaball'l
the spotlight with 0110 o1 new commlalllonor, Bowiebaaeball's tmmortala-Ted wu. ruled thel 111e deal 11001(
IIams, returning to 111e pme lor Finally, clendeDali-•'UJI.retlred'.l
the !trot time alnce 1960 u new Cor 1 bluer IIIIIJ'll offer (JQii
manapr or the Washinlton Montreal and K!abD ru1e11
Senators.
Montreal would have to ma111
WUUtma, al!able and Jovial another lllltlemenl llltb llaulllllll
with the press ell spring unlike to complele Ute deal.
th&amp; aeerblc WUII.tma ot old, · ·The CerdiDala Cllllcldy oltatakes over a elub that b01ilt1 bUibed themHlVII 11 tbl
the game's home n111 chaml11oo NllUmal Leaaue favorltel ad
In huge Frank Howard but IIWe •WilliS the bluest of the
else and is llkeb' to try hit spring when they
patience. On opening day, hit Cepeda to the Bravel for
men will be racing an unuaual catchor Joe Torre. Torre, 1 b)f
Yankee teem-with tile retire- Ill_.. Who ballloil willa
meld .of Mickey Mantle this Bravea' manalll!menl during 1111
aprlng, lt'a Ute nrot Yankee players' strike, appears UkelJID
team In decades to start Ute see a lot ot action 11 llrat bale
aeeson lllthout a ..big name• tor St. u..ta. The Cerda earllll
star.
acquired outtlolder Vada Plnlll!
At Clnclmatl, the Redo unvall !rom Cincinnati to replaef·
a team that ie being touted u retired Roger Maria.
'"'
perhaps the clllo! threat to
'111e American IAqUe's aplf.
oontlnuecl Cerdlnal domination Into two dlvlli&lt;lll r91111ted I ·
., of the league. The Red,a were .. , JI(~clng ali ot1hotopftye . .
·:Jibe National Loajple s top 1ft last year's pemant race.
bitting team In '68 and the one dl&gt;lllon, the Ealll. Pnf,
return to form of several . pecto were that dlrialon woat
pltehero who were 1!1lured last ~oe 111e wildoit llllll elo..C
year could make them a battle lor a dlrialon title lilt;
wlnnet. The lledgars they race only WW!ama' Senators Hill&lt;
oo opening day are atrona In ruled out.
:
pitching and rookie lhortltop
011 Ute othor hand, 111e AU:
Ted Sizemore ~bolster llleir Weelem Dlvlolm waa Ute ,.{
weak hitting.
ora with two -lion tealill
At AU&amp;IU, tile Bravea Seottlo llllll - • Clcy, a 1~
proaent a 8lrorlg hitting llatup, lido .,... belnc ratid 11- Ill ·
Including new first ' baseman "weakest" iuVJslon.
•
Orlando Cepeda acquired Cram The ,...war 1001111 ....,. ;
the Cerda and outtlelder Rico throu&amp;lt Ttlllraclay, Oct. 2, wf
Cort,y, returning Iller a year's 111e playo!!s starting 111e follow
lllne11, against a Giants' team 1ng weekend.
·

~

~ro

NEW

JUST ARRIVED

Slow
•

OVIng

"""*'

EMBLEM ••. on

heavy Qalvanized steel

EMBLEM

Al!al!a wOOYII conttot.
Once the al!al!a weeYil be·
CO!!lOI utebllahed In an ares,
al!al!a J)I'Ocllc'era mualapplycontrol measures each year. Without OD!JI!'OI, lbere will be little
or .., !!rat cuttln&amp; llllll subsequenl r.....,.U. will be held back
Cor two to lour weoka.
The al!al!a wOOYII can be con·
trolled. '1110 lnaectlcldol recom.
....- have been thoroughly
telted by Ohio Agricultural R~
aearch and Development Center
IC!antlot•. Therefore, to achieve
control, decide what II tobeusecl
and then aJlP(y II according to
Noommendatlono and label In-

, ~o~nUp,iBr~.f~~IS·,!ot~.L Spades, and Bolts
,

.

&amp;;lA

1 ra ,.

·..

·

,

·Central Soya

loci !rom en to adult verlea
!rom 6 weeki to severaliiiO!Itha,
depondlng m weather condl·
lima.
'111e 011111 hatch In tho spring
alii the wbole cycle repeats IIael!.
.
Control cl tile al!al!a weevil
can be acbleved by a preventive

The FOODPOWE/Peop/e

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

program.
New reaearch bas that
damage !rom tile al!al!a weevil
can be prevented by applJlnl
lneectlcldal sprays to ldll llllltl
before they 117 their eggs. This
program reiJIINithattwo apre,yt
be used, 'l1le flrll spray II ap.
piled when tho acldta are just
beglmilng Ill lay - · alii 111e
aecortd 25 to 30 days lat..
or, reprdleoa Ill 'llll8tlter or
not weevils or wOOYII dalitap
lo - . . The aecortd spray 11
Olaenttal baCIUse lllilt flight actirity !ollowiJw Ute first 11'1'11·
cation leads to adult Npopula.
tim or tile treated Deldl. These
adults alii 1J1Y larYae that have
botched must be kiUed before
they can lay their eaa.
Following the aecortd appllcaUDn, the tendency toward repopulation diminishes with time
beeause fiight aetlvlt,y olowa, and
old adulta are cl1lng rapidly. 11
some r_.tation and Urnlted
ou toying occur, there Ia a o t
....,gtt time before normal barveal to allow a daJnailng-""
1lDn to develop. Generally, a atubble spray Ia not necessary is this
program Is care!lllly followed.
In timing ol the II'Pllcatlm tor
the nrst cutting In Southern Ohio
the Iarmer should Inspect allll·
fa plants at least once a week
atartlng the Oral week In Ap.
rtl. Apply first spray when the
two or more larvae per stem
can be _ , without touching
the plant and 50 to 75 per coni
cl the leaves show alCalla wee.
rll feeding damage. Thla prob.
lli&gt;lY will occur when the plants
are only 3 to 6 lncbea tall. Do
oot wait wi:ll 50 to 75 per cent
or the leaves ore eaten off. Uoo
IS or 20 gallona ct water per
acre. Inspect Ooids 7 to 10 days
a!ler !!ret treatment and II'Ply
second spray when two or more
larvae per stem can bo aeon
without touching the plant and
50 to 75 por cent ct the leaves
on the top 6 Inches or stem
show al!al!a weevil damage. Use

sects In Ohio."
Tho beat material lor Ute sdtJII
al!el!a weevil control Ia meUtyl
parathion. 11da materiel Dllll
be used by a IIOOd operator who
Ia willing to follow cllrectl..,.
closaly. Gosiltt, respirator,
rubber llovea, and protective
clotldnl are necessary.

..

'755
.......
.........
1. •ali Hu..V Wllconlin 1114 h.11. ~r~;ne.
2; Ellctric 1t1rt.
3. 8spllds forwerd,
. . 2 l'IVInt.

t " ' '

Front to rear: Kin11wood Eatate Wagon
Concoura Station Wqon, Sportvan and Suburbon.

...
-··
,.

4, fnclucllf opti.ons others
chert11 extr1 for.

.

....··-.

have such
a
.m.t

BMw you
W'! mean.
Say you're in a Chevrolet Kingswood or
Collcoun Walk-In Wagon, w~ suddenly the
road ._,...nothing but chuckhol&lt;!l and ruto.
Oitly you can't tell it's rough.
Youeoe, Chevy wagona ftoet along on
CXllllpu"r..,lected roil springa lhlit amoolh

evenlhemeaneetroad.

··......

Maybe you're a bit more •r1~ about the
creal outdoor~. 8o .a re we. That's why we orror
the Chevy Sportvan and Suburban. To an
outdoo111man, they're like clearekiea and
no mosquitoea.
So before you head out to seethe U.S.A.,
better atop by your Chevroll'l dealer'o.

••n

.....

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a...u

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Alford,

Jr., ~lldti~ ·Irllll~la

New Techniques Come

Plows
perfect seedbed in one operation!
Gravely's unique new high-torque lugging power
Convertible lets you ride for the easy jobs ... pull one
pin, and walk for the gardening jobs, the tough jobs.
Unique Rotary Plow turns a perfect oeedbed in one
operation . . . ready to plant. And it's easy! Proper
adjustment to your soil and a light guiding hand gives
you the smoothest , mellowest seedbed you ever planted.
Then switch to Gravely's rotary cultivator and
power cultivate as your garden grows!

tlblottcs, the day that you dared
oot to touch an open li'OUDd for
lear Ill deadly Jnlection has dis.
awearecl and with It so has the
rlclous tournlque~ Today we can

popular ftral aid treatments have
cbanged radically In the tight o1
11011 medical knowledge. Here are
the newest ll!oasvlng procecmea
that everyone should know:
' - OLD WAY: When bumecl,
oover the skin with ointment or a
IOiutlm cl baking lOde.
- NEWWAY:Avoldolntmenla,
groosea, alii baking soda, especially on a burn bid ......., to
r"""" mecllcal trea-. Althoullh these remedloa NUeve
pain by excluding air, ~ con
be harm!ul, as unelerlle grease
or lOde on bums can lead to Infection. For lesser blma uae
cold water. !llbmerp the bum·
ed area In cold water immedlatelJ. Add lee to keep tile water cold. Cmtlnue treatment un.
til you can keep the btimed part
out ct cold water without having
pain recur.
- OLD WAY: 'Ill atop aer·
lou• bleocJln&amp; never toueb the
wound with your hand or unelerlle matertal. Apply a Dll'·

""' - ..... ~, , ,_.. '

use the direct approachi simply
put a cloth (oterile lC possible;

there's no sense asking for infection) over the wound. It you
do not have a clean cloth, use
a wad ot clean Ussue or your
bare band. Preas hard. The pres.
sure will ""'eeze the blood ves.
sels aplnst tissue, muscles, or
bone, alii will usually stop the
now If you press hard enough.
'llleae da,ya a tourniQJOt Ia only
useclln rare llle.ancl.doath emer-

••••••••••••••••••••••••

Free ¥:::it

See for your&amp;elf how the new epirited.
Gravely Convertible 7.6 does your jobe.
Let WI ahow you why more people own
DEMONSTRA TJON
tractono than any other Compact

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES
AND SERVICE
E. MAIM ST.

1

.I '

.

'

doll

it 11/ tbl WIY in I

abaord and feel real
. . . -tbatinatanttJ pum into ·Ktion ...

Stop

-.

~.·'

'®

BIG WAY!~~

·, MEIGS

r•· ,ba'"" ~~~~~tllllplaJJI&amp; '
llrhlch srow 11aw *-aldol¥
IOOidJW. c..tl...... ~ottht ·

f

992-2975

TRY IT AND YOU'LL AGREE .•.

IW •

·-~·
c:arq, • '· ~:::..~::lljllc c. -~liJ'~VVit~-­
~ ·:·~·t;:== ...;·~'·~~t~· ~'~····~·;· ~!=~J' ..••U:arilaat:M
~ I!~VE ,c~:
~'~t0u:iiii~~W~; ~::~~=u:JI. ~
'~e

614-245-5509 .

.

land Uta' ilat
!l....lht1
lliMl 4hlt···
relult o! ~
wal
l
.
:
.,...
''1111. eCIIabillltb illihl
did IIGI1cnow iiM! rea~Hor 11G1 ~k _..... IIIIJIIU'I!I~ .~ ~

.......-. ·E·-ar• w,..,. .,.,. . . ... . ·u-..J......w·...

aMil01 w..t Galllpolla
..... 35, . . ..,. o.

GRAVELY

Pat Glass Newsletter

.fred · DJJoaoalfo Grace ~I'VBn,
~Ita A. McC:O,, J. WWialn . . . and 111e ~o!burDo . cenll .
to ........_ tile
callan,; .JII!III
. o.AIIta,WWIIIn ~~-· we!llliht. pol» 'outtwo• ' ~area'"': ··••7q.a~. ,....

,u.

hlney Supply Co.

to mow...
but

(D. •

r
.. .. ~
w. . . . . . . .~... pie 011 •
Inc-to .planl
- · 'Wil• bMD, II

.

.

I ·

... ···; ·.: .

•••. . . . . . . .

~::~

&lt;

. • ... loltltl

•.• .i . '

8

$ 450

li
you ride

GALLIPOLIS - Robert L. Evans, prelldent, Bob Evans
Forma Inc., recently returned !rom a tour or US Air De.
!ense Installation u a guest of Mej. Gen. S. T. De!Corso,
Adjutant General cl Ol!lo.
The tour, pert Ill the Ol!lo Army National Guard's "Op.
oration Underatendlng'' (OU), was designed to show buat.
ness and Industrial leaders the &gt;!tal role played by the
Glard'a Nike Hercules units In the deCense of Industrial
complexes agalnet 1J1Y enemy air auack. It Ceatured a ria!t
to the Air Defense School, Fort Bliss, Texas; Tho White
Sanda MlsaUe Range, New Mexico, and the Army Air Defense
Command at Colorado ~rings, Colorado.
At Ft. Bliss. Texas members of the OU tour observed actual firings cl the Army's Nlke Hercules and Nlkel\ialc
mlsalles, ·Another hlghllgbl was a tour o1 tho North Amer(..
can Air Do!enae Command (NOR!ID) combat operaUDns complex lnalde Cheyenne Mountain at Colorado ~rings.
The impNgnable Command Post located Inside the solid
granite mllWitaln cODtrola the entire Air De!enee o! the North
American Cmtlnent.

BY PAT GLASS

r .•

Hoo•y Duty

:.-~rle

school. While there, McDaniol completed two pbaseo or tralDlag. classroom lnstructiOD aiiJpractical workbench experience.
Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto o!!ors both Evlnrude Illes alii service.
- Selltlnol Photo.

~ ·:.:"~~re·
bad.....,·~~ n::=·=.·:==:~u
11tlillkbwwith -ot.111e- ..~ - - ~·-- IOod

aplnJal•bad
Tile
,
~
-lp 111w al·
......, 'lndl 11111 _I',_

For Auto, Car, lndu$1JJ
1/2" &amp; 3/8" Drive

a trainlng course at the Evtnrude Motors Factory service

Ext. Agent, Home Economics
GALUPOLIS - Many once •

people with eonae!'Yition farm
plamlng lately. Some or theae
are Madison Bowles, Dick Stevena 14&gt; l&lt;amwha River, Henry 0.
Upton, or Leon, R. M. McKinney
o! Route 87 llllll John W. Hirt ot
Galllpollo Ferry.
During theae planning discu&amp;atona we bave e&gt;Pialned the aoUs
map alii what It shows each soU
cepeblllt,y to be. At the same time
we dlacuaaed diUoNnt poaslbUI·
Ilea lor treetment alii manage.
ment of each aoll condition. Aft.
or woigbtng these poaBibllltteo,
the landownar made decisions as
to what use he waa going to make
o! the land.
Aaolstence wlthplannllW, uslow
soU consar'VBtim IUI'VOYIIIIPIIB
guides, baa been one cl the main
aerrtcea of the Soli Conaervadon
Ser&gt;lce lor !lliiiY )'001'1, alii we
otlll !eel that thia Ia ora of our
beat ser&gt;lcee.

IMPACT
WRENCHES

~GRAVELY

t':..

I. POWII' llki.Off drive, !
.
e. Flit awftlllh ltt.lChmllttl. ·

.

••

a.LE'IZII TIWNING - Wllllalll X&lt;hl"'ol Ill Pomeroy
Home and Auto, East Mail&gt;&amp;, poses with an E'VinrUde boat
motor alii bealde a repair tank located lo the store Collowing
his recent returD from Mllwaukee, WiL, where he CODU'Ileted

i''

c· -,

"' . l.

gencles where bleeding can't be
controlled an:v other way, a1when
a limb Ia so obviously l!lllngled
that It prd&gt;ably will be lost.

Soli Conlervatlon Service
Mason CGimtY
PT. PLEASANT - Several
people are apin plannlngtopilnt
grain seed to provlde !eed lor
wildlife next wiDer. Lui year
oeveral people did this alii reported great success In attractlow and feeding several apecloo
o! 'll'ildiiCo,
The Western Soli ConlorYJltion
District Is moklow seed peckela
a9111lable to cooperators lo • fourth acre peckqes. The Agrl·
cultural stablll•atlonllllll Conaer·
'VBtiOU SOr&gt;lce Ia making coal
•harlow a9111lable to those who
quall(y lor coat abariDg lhrou&amp;h
that agency. Technlcllns o! Soli
Conae!'YitiOII Ser&gt;lce will be
halplDg people plan the area to
be plaJtad.
The seed pockets !urnlohecl by
the Dlrtrlct will centaln 11&lt;1!'·
Dlqust.
beonl, buckwheat, millet, sraJn
NEW WAY: Thanke to an1«11111111, all!l!lowera alii WE HAVE BEEN 'flrltbW tblo
Clii'D. · We ..w 18Y8ral cl these ·Colunui lor alloul tour YIIJ'I and
petchOI'Iaal year,when they weN ban b!oon Cll'OIIi IIGI to criti·
'Iii blOCIID ani tile !1111\Y Dowers olzo aoyOrre. We atlllWinl to !ol·
,PNHIUCI byllleclllf8rentopeclal loW this Cormal, but.,.. !eel IIIII course, .... destr0¥ed or nm out
o! pJan!,· ~ ... YWY boautl!ul. weohouldpolntout....,.otthe :.,an~C=':.~'::=
, We also ... oeveraJ ·otlhtH ~ o!llurnltw.
.
' paltt.o! thi,l j!ilt. Willlerllllll AW AI"" ba.e ¥1oltid landowners 'l ~lyclama&amp;ed, alUtiJ!III! the
~ lht1' 111!!'!'e .iiOine tho Jab cl ......,.. tho 'couney 111e ~two or
~ IIGI be lfiiPII'II!I at
aftractl!ia aiid·· ·~ow ~e. three WHka, wo haw 10111 !lliiiY .. Some - I t are miJJed 1n1e
Dl1lllr..,t wlldllle ll'a&lt;lll! could be places wllleh bava been llurned tl\liiklnc IIIII , Ore 01....., planla
soon· •• weD aa adler eWI_ence over. n was _...nt tbal_. to 111'0" ...,._.,.111othlncllllt

,.,

·-· ..

Completed Circumnavigation
Thirty.two men lived to
complete the first circumnavigation o[ the worldSebastlnn del Cano and 31
other survivors In the Span·
ifh ship Vittorio on Sept. 6,
1522. Del Cano took command after Ma~ellan was
killed in the Philippines.

In How to Save Life

Seed Packets for
Wildlife Offered

" '~

POWER TOOLS

Plana should be made to c:ut
al!al!a 14 to 21 days a!ler the
second spray. It field Is tobele!t
Cor ioager than this period, a
third spray will probably be nee·
essary.
For detalla on ihe sp~a,

Lay ~f the Land

'"

ar

complete generation per year, farmers should secure Extenalll a partial aecortd. The per. olon leaflet L-130, "AI!al!a In·

BY JOHN COOPER

·'

·- · -····

'1'lmob' blrYeatiJii,

ATHENS ~ The A!bana .lite rbr tlloiJj. ...... wlab to....,..
tal Health Center will be Cljlllte Alhou MI!UIIIaallll·
to I OliO day ai!mi!U!f II! Wlid· ~ (JN-7781)• II!. niJII"' .to
nesdaY, ~ 30, mUte llii&gt;Jo&lt;t.
KAam Seminar.
'
..lnlegratim of. Life and Jleltg..
ton," led 117 Flllller AdriM von
Kaam alii two ot his associates
!rom the Rellllon and Personal·
lt,y Center ot tile Institute Ill
Men, Duqueane UDiverllcy.
Father von Kum Ia a -ld
renowned lecturer iuld author.
His lecture lor Ute seminar will
be "Peraonallty 'l'heor7." Oneol
his assoclatel, Wllllam F. Kraft,
Ph. D, wl1o baa clone oxtenalve
work in tho ..,. cl Amhropoii&amp;l·
col Exeatentlal Paycbololl)', will
present a paper on ' 4No-'l1llagneso." The third member ct the
IJ'OUP, Charles Mall, M. A.,
Air &amp; Electric
will opeak on "l'he I!MIIvi.Ul

emerges from the cocooo and 20 gallons of water per acre.

Flll::c,..llnt, ......lnt.

ancient language.

(

out:rlenta),

leeds lor two to lour weehs. '111e
aclllta usually leave the Reid.
S1artinJ! In late Sejltember and
late October, the adults return
to tile al!al!a !lelda, where mat.
!JQ!•.•aol)le eu l~ · lll)d overwlnterlni occur. There Ia one

2.98

ONLY

Celti.C8 wm·' Meet Knicks
.
For Eastem Di•vision Title

The words chicory, hyssop.
myrrh and saffron all were
borrowed from Sumerian, an

mu•

Farmers recognize the great..
est damage Cram al!al!a weevil
Ia CBIIsecl by tho larvae. The Jarvoe deVelop !rom egga hstcbecl
In late March or early Apr!lln
SOUthern Ol!lo. Hatcblng ot ens
deponda on tho temperature. Dur·
lng warm periods thia occurs In
Cl1e to two weeks.
The larvae go through three
molll to lull growth. The,y feed
ecdvely lor three or !our weeks
on tile first cutting when JIOPU·
lations may be extremely high.
II blgh populaUDns of larvae are
present when tile first Cl'O!J Ia
cut, tho surviving larYae can
&lt;BIIae conoldorable damagatollle
daveloplng a e c o n d growth.
Though a lew larvae can be!ound
on later cuttings, evidence of
their leedlni Ia cUmcult to find,
alii therefore of lillie concern.
Heating stage lasta !rom 10 to
12 day a. Full grown larvae spin
a white, lacy cocoon on the allalla plant or within the ground
llUer and transform to a pupal
atap. The edult al!al!a wOOYII

40.!

Diego club comes umer discussian everybody agresa Preston
Gomez Ia a great II'IY·
The American tague'a Eallern Dlrtalon race may be
setlled early, the .n-r belog
whlcheYer club get&amp; aw11

aeon anolber bullet.

Prolltable al!al!a J)I'Ocllctlm
I'OIIIlrea:
Good stands.
Proper 1011 pH (acid Ievell
and ado4111te !ertWzation (yields
1101 be limited by a low
llOII pH oU.or lack ot plant

atruetlons.

the AJtros and when the san

edged San Francisco 93-90 to
take a 3-2 edge In Its series.
Boston seemed to be loold!!i
ahead toward the Knick series
as the Colts played poorly
IIIIJIInst Philadelphia, maki!li
only 41.3 per cent of Ita ahot1.
Jolin Revllcek missecl all nine
of hls shots· from the Reid In the
!!rat hall althOUJh he nntohed
with 22.
The 76era seemed to be
looklJw ahead to next year.
They made only 35.1 per cent ot
their shots.
Loa ~los, wblob led by 20
points In tho Drat Ia!!, found
!tool! Jeadiow only 109-98 with 10
secollla loll when J~ Epn
"'' !ouled by BUJ 1Ufnor. Epa
aan1&lt; ora of two llllll then bit
two more Hven aeconda later.
Jeri')' Weal Nd 29 lot tile
Lollar• but !ouled out with t:at
remalnlow alii tile Loken didn't

cGnunuolt.r...
April 30th.is · llllll· lioaervatlona
·I\'• limitld ..
•'
'
.·.
fOG.~-~~.. - ·
.
Date
'
liiileb' • tilt CerUr cafliWfL
Sem'nar . , ,._
~ •• ~ ,.

NEW IN FARMING

,,.

~or

,.

U - The Sulwlay Times • Senlinol, Sulllsr, April 6, 1969

- ·a

Amerlcan i.eiiiiO

Richman p•.ck s c•.nc•'nnatl•'
· M1•nnes.ota
y S IJlOr

By United Press lntenallonal
The thlnklll lourthi&gt;lace
teams Ia the Eaatern Dlriolan
of the Natioral Beaketball
Aasociation are going to baWe
· ' NBA PLAYOFF STANDINGS
lor a spot in the league's
[ . By United ":.::: lnterradm.l
- - - -- - - -playol! finals.
Boaton, the Courtl&gt;!&gt;ilce fl.
f
Series A
nlaher duri!li the regular
FINAL ABA STANDINGS
,:
VI L Pet.
aoaaon, IGI1Ped Plllladelphle, the
By United Press lnter1'8tlona.l
1 ;.New York . .. .... 4 0 1.000
second;&gt;ilce
club, 93-90, Friday
Eaat
l' lllltlmore ........ 0 4 .000
W L Pel GB nigllt to ooll the 76ers. Boston
:~
SeriesB
won [our of five games ln the
India no • • . • • 44 34 . 564
•
W L Pet.
Miami •. •.. . 43 35 .551 I
series.
11&gt;8ooion , ....... 4 I , BOO Kentucky ..•.. 42 36 .538 2
The Colle will now Ieee the
. : ,,PtillodOlphl.t • .. . .. I 4 •200 Mlnne- .. .. . 36 42 •462 8
New York Knick a, the thirdplace club, l'n the Eaa1arn
New York .. ... 17 61 .218 27
West
Dlvlolon fiJBla with tho wl-r
series A
meeting 111e Weatern Division
West
w L Pet.
W L Pet. GB tltllat. The beoi-Of.seven Hrlel
ArJ!fle• ..... 3 2 .600
opena Easter SW1IIo,y a!terooon
Oeklalll ....... 60 18 •769
f)"aDCliCO • , • , 2 3 .400
In New York and tile so- wlll
New Orleans ... 46 32 .590 u
'Serlea B
taleviatd.
w L Pet. Denver ...... 44 34 .564 16 beInradorall1
tile
lwo
Woatera Dl¥1aion
Dallas ...... 41 37 .526 19
2 2 .500
playoff
.
games
Friday nlaht.
•• \ ••• 2 2 ,500 Los Arl!olea • • 33 45 • 423 27
Elvin
llayea'
211-!oot
jU!J1)1r at
Houston ..••• 23 55 .295 37
MtiU
tho buazor pvo San Dleao a
Results
llt-112 triumph alii I 2-2
fridaY's Results
90
d...Upek
In Its serlef with
O.ldalll 111 Los
109
sen Fran. 98
Atlanta
while
Los Angelos
Only games scheduled.
U4AIIIalall2
lPHRBBSO
Pitchers
Dietlan . • .•.• 2 5 3 2 0
Lucaa •••• • • 5 3 0 6 2
Miller o • • , • • 5 6 4 3 2
Slaugher. , • , 2 0 0 2 0

bunc~

~-

'

'

1

!MH..i ...., ....,

.

POMEROY, 0.

·'

�..
........ - .......
~~~·~--~--~.....
-. -~.;~___- ·~·....~. .~--=·=:::::;;~::;;~~~~~;:;~~;::;:;:::;:;~:::::::;::::::~~sE::::::::::;:~~~~:_~~~~:~~--~... ...
"

__ ,

,.

. II '- Tho~ Tlnlita • Sentinel, Sundor, AprU S, 1109

.EvERYBODY'S INYITEt TO POMEROY 1AND.AR_K'S "BIG HAPPENING"••••••••••••••••• •• IT'S "THE GREATEST'~••••••••••••••

11-

'

..

••

For Sale
x.ooo
Aluminum
Sheets

$11 Un1ocWtl.,. iiiiYI- • • • -Uc II,_

T..._ conoocuth•o Hyo • • ·16c liM
A4.,.,tlolftl •4tred for lrr.. ultr
lntortlo~tt will tab tM ont tl•

'·,•

,....

Anp clll"lll · • • In the .-'l1hwl

Used Offstt Pletes

•.,, •••u•d fer cloulflod ••·
vortiiiiMtlf will !.o chorgod tht roto
ef 25c ,., ..ch cho"f• ·

992-2181

,,.,,.111 ••'••

April 9-10-11-12 - Wed., Thurs., Fri., Sat.
;

Chorloo
Bush

FREE ...... FREE
We Planned Our Spring
Sale For You!

.6, 000 BABY CHICKS
Will arrive Friday morning, at 9:00 o.m.

-100 Chicks FrH with ooch 100 lb.

Brill£! The Family!
Everybody Can Register
For Prizes! Come! See Us!

of Feed. Bring your own containn•r. As many or as few aa you
wont.

FIVE 2nd PRIZES:
FIVE 3rd PRIZES:
15-4th PRIZES:
PLUS TOO

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY,
JUST COM£ IN OR WRIT£ IN Tl)
REGISTER 'DURING OPEN HOUSE

OR

Genuine Amoricon Black Bear Skin Ruro

money.

Genuine American ShiiiJI Skin Rues

and TOO

quollty Stuffed Toddy Bears-for tho
kids end rrondklds.

Neacil Says:

It will be nice
to see you when
you visit us!
Bring the Children!
We have Refreshments for all!
Fun, Prizes, Lots of Ba11ains!

Blackie Says:

Katie Says:

1 llgrve JOu •

Come in and let me
show you our
Waslter &amp; Dryer Special
See This Pacemaker
Special!
..
-- -

special Woodcutters
kit with each
Homelite Chain Saw
purcho1ed the•• .t day1 . Prices start at

$140.50. Lot uo domonstrato. Kit: 1 Fllo
3.95-1 Safety Cover, 2.981·16" Chain, 21.05-1 Gas Con, 2.35total voluo 30.33.
&amp; Holdor,

-

Woshor, Rlflulor 255.00, ON SPECIAL
AT 219.95.
Dryor, Rogular 175.00, ON SPECIAL
AT 139.95.

Lawrence Says:

Buck Says:

All of YoU are In·

Attend our Chain Saw
and Weldin&amp;
Demonstration ...

vited to see our
compl ate new mower
line.

Factory ••preee~ttafh•• ..-Ill IMo
Mr• all dey Th.,... day. Chain
Sow Chel~t1 eherpened FREE
all cfer Thureday, April tO. L.~; l.:np th• lecfory mon bu1y, 4nr brand, bring them In,

...
••

Hopo Moor. Is offering you a 28 coi; fl.
Ch11t Frwoaor or a 23 cu. ft. Upright
Froour ot only $269.95. Ta.o your
choice of •lfher one.

•

•'
•
•

•• •

:
I

. \'.\1,1'.\111.1: ffii'I'U\

I

••

!

Ray Says:

CLIP THIS COUPON, IT'S WORTH
$2.00 OFF ON ANY TIRES AT
LANDMARK SERVICE STATION,

i

WED .• THURS., FRI., SAT. AND SUNDAY,
APRIL 9, 10, 11, 12, 13.
ALSO TV STAMPS

Yes, We Have Glass
Tires, Too!

• •• ••• -:- ~·~:·:-:· .......:

TRASH
BURNER

New At Landmarkl
ENDICOn.JOHNSON SHOES

•

•

-'•

,1' •••

HOME
BARROW

Alumlnhed lt.el,

3 cu. ft. '
Regularly
$9 .15.

3&lt;-tectlon, remov•
oble hood, big bur•
ner 11ctlon end 111h

dl1pa1el
pan,
you

THIS COUPON
WORTH 200 TOP VALUE STAMPS

henclle• wh..-e
ntoed

them.

SPI;CIAL

Regul.,lr St6 .•5.

7.95

$14.50

DURA-TURF
with POLYESTER CORD
willsive you added miles of safer drivins
F&gt;olyester has replaced nylon in our best
tires today. It eliminates the condition
known as "nylon thump" (nylon flatten ing out as it sits overnight). Polyester

~n

-

cord gives you better handling, corner-

ing and from 3% to 8% more tread

wear. Unico Mark IV tire body i!llso has
greater rupture resistance. U5ers report

650 I ll4t&gt;IJ

S2565

b. Tu $1.79

lower noise leo~els. less squealing, softer
ride, less joint slap. no thump. Modern
Dual Stripe desi~~:n that will help dress
up your car.
735 Kl54-ply ...... .... -$29.50
Ex. Tax $2.08
950 X 14 4-ply . . . . . . . . .. . $31.95

SPECIAL

U9

1.99

Two mowers, one hand -puah
and·one self ;propelled. Both
have 31/J hp B&amp;S t~. jlines ,
suction-lift blades, reinforced
decks and non ·catch circular
housinss. Self-propelled has
positive trlctlon driYt.
Hand Push

Self Propelled

MUll sot up

Ex. Tax $3.03
775 X 14 4·ply • .... • . .... . $31 .75
Ex. Tax $2.20
845 x!5 4-ply ..... ..... . $34.25

.hO¥el, te~Uiarly

TURF TRIMMERS

SSI.2tlsotup
SSUS In carton
SM.Ninearton

WN PEP SALE!

GARDEN GLOVES
POLKAANN,coatedco«on . . . , . •• . ' . .• •apalrm
HAPPY CHORE, 100%cotton . ..... , , .. , .a pair_,
HANDY ANN, 100%cottonprlnt ..... ' . ... apa;r..,
SALLY ANN , coated cotton • • • .....••••.• a pair 11J1

ONE BAG AT REGULAR PRICE,
SECOND BAG AT HALF PIICEI

RED HOT

SPECIALS FOR
OPEN HOUSE
Gas Cans ......... .1.99
Poison Ivy Killer .... 1.98
Roof Coatlna ....... 3.49
· Electric Fence Posts •• 40
AluMinu11 ·

needs twll bags anyway, so why not save money and gel the second
. , Lawn Pep is your best way to build showplace lawns. Its turf·
elelnents are released slowly so they'll do the most good over the longest
of time-and lawn Pep has plenty to release, with a hefty 23-12·6 content
imPortant, plant food elements. For the greenest grass around, use lawn
noW a.nd save.

40~

&lt;&gt;.~.=~,307~t~~~.~ne ~~· .
'·'

Step La•s ...... (2.25
16 Ft. AluMinuM

Extension Ladders •• 12.45

Something Big! Something New Every Day! Come Often and Register At Landmark·
'
(

T. Ford
Ford l!lconollne Pkkup
~

T. Chev. Pt.bp .
T. GMC Pickup
T. Chev.
T. GMC
% T. lntemaiiOtlal
~ T. IDI, plekup

*

1!!1'9 ZIG ZAG Sewing Machine
complete with sewing table.
This mokes button holes.
many fancy designs. Take
over payments of $5.92 per
montto or pay $44.25. Try it
In your home. Call 6'15-3081.
76-tf
191!e CHEV. Impala, 4 speed.,
Call 446-3174.
78-6

**

USED FURNITURE: Wood dln-

•tte set with desk to malch,
tnble and 2 slack drawers;
wuod bed, full size; 3 full size
mattresses; good Frigidaire
window air tondltioner . Corbin Furniture, 955 SIO&gt;nd Ave.
fiG.UTI.
'18-6

~

T. Ford pldnap
T. a.Y. plekup
FIOO Ford truclo:
1955 314 Dodge UIIIIIJ
1151 T. Dodge
1883 ST. GVC
1117 I T. GMC
111115
T. GMC Plclo:up
198'1 ~ T. GMC Plelmp
111115 GMC Suburban
New 5 T Farm Wagon~

*
*
*

Real Estate For S.le

W~&amp;-, $149.115&gt;i!JOW

NEEDED Drive-In restaurant
61 CHEVROLET Impala Sport ~TEREO'S - 11169 MODEL.
manqer willldfl to relocate
UNCLAIMED FREIGHT ~
Coupe, excel tond!Uoo. Ph.
fGr poiltlon with gnnvlng f..t
new
walnut OOIIIJOies stereos
fl6.13'15.
11-1
food dlain. Employees stock
with faclnry guarantee. Na, purchase plan, profit bonus,
llonally advertised brands to
• ' 'end other tompany benefits. ELECI'ROLUX VaCU1llll Cleanbe sold ror storage and freight
er. Has !brow-a-way bap,
:
Send resume lo Box 113, c-o
•
and complete set of cleanlnl of $126.88 each. May be pald
Galllpolls Tribune.
81.&amp;
ottaclmenl!o and guanmteed for at $&amp;.till per mo. 'ft1eoe
••
stereo consoles have Al\1-FM
perfect eolldHion. Pay off
:• !miLL MAN wilUng to relocate
radio, 4 speed, aulll. cloanSer,
balance of $31.00. Termto.
:
needed lnunedlately for grow.
Pbone • • .
'11-4 AFC jeweled stylus, and
•
1111 fast !God dlaln. ~
beauUful hand rWbed cabibenefits, hospitalization. Send
net. Will go to tloe flrllt 5
retUille to Box 114, c-o Gal· IF YOU are buDding 1 new people wbo call. wm be dehome or remodeling, see 18. . Uverad to your home with'
81.&amp;
' llpoUs Tribune.
We are builders. Dl1trlbutor
out obligation for JIIU to try
for Rotpolnt Appliances, ADI·
~ WAITRESS, 111111 order eGOk,
and make 11111'0 yw are comoon l!leelrlc.
1M If pletely satisfied. CaD 6'1SI
1ep .....,, lldenlews I lo 4,
no plooae caD. Plelllll Polat
!G81.
71-tf
W CARPET BEAUTY doeon't
1\eiOrl.
IN
show, clean it r(lht and 1968 OORVETI'E, like new,
:·
.woleh It glow. Use Blue lAos; 'M'PERWARE hal openings.
11000 mi. $3'195. Inquire at 154
Ire: Rent eleclrlc shampooer
4
part-time
t35
lo
f/S,
I
lulJ
..
Ftrst Ave.
71-tf
'0
• 1. Farmer's Harclware Co.
Ume f/S to $1111. CaD Jill.
'
ll.e ARE YOUR WAIJIS an unolgbt..
Jaclclon, 0,
'11-4
'ty mess? Wipe Out helps you
dean them for 11!111. Rent a
wall eleanor fl. Central Supply OJ., 17 Court St.
.,..

o pound
BULK

r

1

tlllPER STIJW, sure null
,at's Blue Lustre lor cleln1111 rup olld upholstery. Rent
eloetrle lbampooll' $1. Central 8uppl7 OJ.
IN

Put Your Best Foot ·
Forward•••

HAY AND STRAW llGc bole In
1011 often. Cail D. W. Brlgp,
31'1·741'1. '
814

See Our New Line Of ?
Endicott·Johnson SIHM!s
.

m

FOR
BEST Bt1Y In dla.. 'monds ' Ollld wedding bends,
to TllWiii!f'l Jewolry Store,

Walks nH• repalrl11?
TRY OUR SAOETE •
,i

1.

. jieetinol A~.

.. '.

.

-

"

DISCOVER
GREAT
SAVINGS
ALL OVER

THE
STORE!

.... ,_ .

· $AlES;,i
'f .

~
I~

AQUARISTS - Baker's dozen
For Sale
- 13 food and tonic for nolic fish, save 20 per cent.
muo
The House of W'olson Exotic GOOD used refrigerator, rea111114 2 T. 1Diematlona1
Ronable. 446-4974.
80-3
Aquarlst Specialities. I'll.
1855
T. Dodge plekup
6'15-1060. First road IJelow
!956 2 T, Int. 'n'actor
Pleasant Polnl Resort. '19-10 SILVER toY poodles, small
1 Minneapolis Moline Pow8'
black mlnlatures. Call Rio
Unit
Grande 245-5668.
110-3
!"'IEE: Rawlelg!o Almanac,
New 80'' Rotary Cutlers Rawlelgh ~aler, 1924 Eastmt.50. New 8.25 I 20, 10 ply
1953
PONTIAC
2
dr.
htp.
sharp.
ern Ave., Gallipolis.
81-1
nylon tires $55. Inc. Federal
dean, bargain $150. Forest
lu.
Atkinson, 6 Allen Dr. 444m3. Obte von.,. Jmple•nt 18.
I WILL NOT BE responsible
'19-3
lllr any debts other lban my
ISS PIM st. I'll, 441-wt.
140 If
""" as of this date April 3,
PICNIC
tables
for
sale.
Ph.
1811f.
367-73611.
'19-3 LOW, LOW, PRICES on Mal·
Stsned
LeW w. Dalley 81·2
tresses. Corbin Furniture.
USED Phlloo refrigerator 150. I'll. fiG.IITI.
used Frigidaire et ..t. range
Lost
$40. can 446-2300.
79-3
"SPEQAL ln'EREO''
PAIR of dllld'a glass... black
1'
1
69
EARLY American stereo
!rames, $&amp; reward. Call Buck 1955 CHEVROLET In good conradio
combination. This is a
Wilson MS-f424,
'19-3
dillon. can 315-51165 evenings. beautiful solid slate unit with
'19-3 4 speed doanger. Take over
WANTfD
payments of f6 oc fJOY bal·
MJDDLE.AGED lady to care 22 PT. TORJAN cabin cruiser. ance of $89.98. For free home
I'll. 446-3308.
'19-3
for Invalid lady, live In. Call
demonstration, call fl6.11121.
for IDtervlelr ~to. 71-lf
81-3
NEW 11169 ZIG-ZAG SEWING
MACHINE In original factory
HeIP Wlnfed
carton. Automatic zlg..zag to USED FURNI'nJRE of aU
llRlVERS NEEDED
make buttonholes, sew on kinds. Credit on new. Rice's
SEMI DRIVERS, local a n d
buttoons, lllOIIOf!l'am, and make New &amp; Used Fum. 446-ll52S.
83-tf
·liVer-the-road. EX'pel'ience
laney deslp with just llle
helpful but not necessary· We
"·•le dl 1 Left ••
twist of a _.,.
a · been
••
"SPECIAL"
·will train you. You can earn
and
lay-a-way
never
'IJEAUTIFUL walnut steroo oonIIVi!r f4.1Z per bour • For apused Balance due only f47 .00
dem
pllcatlor1 and Interview write
or ,.:_ of ..,_00 per month.
sole. This was floor
onWide let Director
'"' um
••
strator and bas new warranty·
'IN ,
pay just
· ' Traftspoitauon Bldg., 'Ctneln- GOOD CLEAN LUIIIP and atolc- $89.95 or f6 per month. For
' cau. Ohio or phone fll3.241· er coal. Carl Winters, Rio free home demonstration can
81"1
81"
4"-10211·
lm.
Grande. Phone 245-5115. 8-tf

'

Compressors •••••• .79.95
Hedte Trlmm•s ... .19.95

Ex. Tax $2.58

LAWN
SEED

L•nt Helliid

Home Special!

SPECIAL

'11395

* T.T. GMC
Pldlup
Chev, Pl&lt;kup

•

bonem

WITH THE PURCHASE OF ANY ·
PAIR OF ENDICOTT·JOHNSON SHOES

MARK IV

1915
111115
11$8
111111
1184
1966
11116
1116'1
1950
• IIIN
1155
1911
191!e

.

tl-4

Real Estate For Sale

I!JGO DETROITER hollaetraller,
10 X 46. Ph. ~ 57·11

PRICE reduced on new 2 bed!'OOm home with carpet, city
water, gas and full basement.
Plants SUbdlv. $9400. Ph.
~390.
5f.l6
BY OWNER - Home, 3 bedroom, 1!I baths, plus shower
in basement, carpeting, large
garage, plus carport. 6 Belmont Dr. Ph. 44~ · 1891 . 7J.tf

DiRon Agency
cious paneled LR with woodburning fireplace, country kitchen with paneled eoting
t~ rea . full basement wittl forced air gas furnace , glorm
windows and doors. concrete
porches, near new 2 car garae-e. This is an extra good
home and is priced right in
today's market.

ONE STORY
~

BR HOME with Voun~stown
kitcllen . dinin~C: room. W-W
carpet in TR. front porch and
!!wnin-,;rs. storm winftows and
doors . 2 car Rara~r:. Jot RO' x
1PO'. fenced bad yard . One

REALTOR
'Farm, Ylllop, Clly l'npiiiJ
Flnt A OIIYe
~ Plooae 44UIItl

Off. 446..3'43

53

446-3796 . 44d 4500

Best Buy In To111n
3 Bedtoom $8,900.00
IF THlS HOME SUri'S Y-au·a
NF.!OS \"OU WONT DO BET·
TER . A MODERN 7 YR . OW
3 BEDROOM
HOMC
WITH
STORM WINDOWS AND D.:&gt;ORS,
IIAIIIl WOOD VLOORS , HATH
AND FURNACE H&amp;AT. YOU
CANT UO BETTER. (; ALL IKt:
WISEMAN
TODAY .
OWNER
VERY ANXIOU S AND HAS CUT

THt PiiiCE WAV BELOW CQST.

Nearly New Split Level
Edge of Town
·MUS HOME HA ll "f.' ""q
'"''\'
ADVKRTISED. 1'IHJS ONE YEAR
OLD S I&gt;I.JT L~ V t.L u~ ...:L uv&lt;!-S
3 BEDROOMS, LARGI UVJNG
JtOUM . !.:O¥PW:'fELY MODERN
KITCHEN WITH RANOS, OVEN,
DIFiHWASIU; R AND rt'C .• FIN ISHED FA·MILY ROOM Wl'I'H
LOU DUilNINC Fta !PLAC£ . 2
BATHS AND LABGJ: UTJLn'Y
ROOM . TREE
SHADEr·
1.0T
Wml BIG HACK YARD. ONE
OP' .4. KIND .

Just Listed
1 Year Old 3 Bedroom
LOVELY

3

BEDROOM

HOD

WITH ~' ULL BASEMENT, BEA~ '·
TWUL KITCHEN, DlNJNG AR·
t;A , AN D GARAGE . AI. L ROOMS
ARE NICE SlZE. PATIO DOOR8
AND TWO LAII GE WINDOW S

PLUS
LOT,

7 ROOM, 4 BR HOlliE - 2 mi.
from city on old Rl. 35, spa.

Real Estate For Sale
0. D. PARSQNS

REALTOJI

EXTRA

UA.SF.MENT . m

JUST LISTED

.H

~-------~;&lt;-'!;'

FifE-filE-flEE

125ThlrdAve.
Gallipolis

NEW GMC 'IIUCK
HEADQUARTERS

*

A four-doy Borcoln Huntln1
Trip to Now York City, 111
tronsportatlon, hotol, otc.plus $300.00 spondlnc

Authentic American Buffalo Robes

McGrocor rod Hunllnc Cops,
winter wolcht w~h ur flops.

Bfor$1.00

-

An AlnJuon Kodiak lleor Hunt;
all tranoporhtion, lodclnr.
tnlnod·culdes, etc.

FIRST PRIZE:

BUICK Special can 2568971. .
'19-3

BETl'Y'S Beauty Shop, Clipper
Wanted To Do
Mills IS closed temporary. HOVSE painting, reasonable.
and will re-open In lhe near
Call Ernest E. Walls. 446future.
81).3
4631.
78-3

PRIZES

Says:

20~

Gallipolis Dady
Trillune

The Pllnled Pap
PRINTING, copying, rubloer
stamps, 253 Third Ave. 4460474.
'19-26

;!

Jack Carsey

'

Notice

STORE OPEN DAILY 8:00 TO 6:00 - SERVICE STATION OPEN 24 .HOURS -REGISTER AT STORE OR STATION
!!

HAVE
MANY USES

•I•

•=JO ' '"''

'

:95.~

36" X 23"

.....,.....

Atl1 ••rod t., th-H or
tint. .
orwl
••,lnttlon will
IN chlrtM for o~tly ttull'lltor of
tl•• tN eel 4..• ••nell .
Deedlh•:
4ellr end 11
• ·•· Setlll'4er.

ForS•I•

ForS1Ie

CL4SI"If0 UTES .
0.. Doy-Ont tl~~~e • ••• • -17c II"'

All odt •• rottrletM to their

EROY, OHIO

''

Items ·Advertised .Here Go So Fast, You'll Think They Weni

Fun - .Prizes
Refreshments
And Big Bargains

,..,., clollillcotl.ne ond to t'Ntulor Dally Tri!Juna otyte rtf ,,,.

E. Main St.

...

'

·n.. ,... Time• -Sentinel, Slllllay, AP'ruo, 19119

0

®

'

I·:'&lt;I

KITCHEN

IN

BATHS, LARGE

EXCELLENT

LOCA·

TION I .\IILE f'ROM T .)WN

Owner Will Help
Finance
VERY NICE NEW 3 BEDROOM
UOM£ WITH LARGE KITCHEN
CLOTS OF CAB. AND RANGE
•li UILT
IN-I
DINI\fC
AREA .
WVELV
BATH,
A'M'ACHED
LOCA1'E'll
0:'11
A
G ARAfli ,
t.A:ROI FLAT LOT
ON
141
CLOSE TO
GRADE
SCHOOL
OWNER WilL ln:LP FINAN CE
If-' NECESSA RY

4 ACRES

210 ACRES
LOCATED on Lower River Rd.
60 acres bottom land, I acre
tobaL"Co base. Iarge corn base,
extra good barn, 6 room 2 story home.

WE NEED
Listings, U.tlngs, Llstln,a!
CHECK the sold s;~ns. We'd
love to put a SOLD SIGN on
your property.

BEAUTIFUL
TWO STORY HOlliE located at
101 High Si.. Pomeroy, Ohio.
Large all buill-in kilchen. for.
mal dlnlng room, TV room,
3 BR. II&gt; bath, wall - wall
carpet throughout. hoi water
heat, part basement. A renl
'good location.

GOOD LARGE LOT
LOCATED in restricted re!idenlial neighborltood. Pomeroy, Price $1,500.

ZY.z ACRES
6 ROOM - modem home. bath,
garage, barn, located in Ky.
ger Creek school district.

2 BR HOME
'IIALL-WALL. carpel Jn living
room, rec room and kitdlen.
utility room, gas fo,... air
heat, central air eondltionlng,
plenty nice trees &amp; shrubs.

WJEH ·Radio
!Unlet.- Sian

6:00 Early Bird
7:00 National ond Ohio N0111
7:05 Early Bird
7:30 Early Bird
7:17 Echoes ol Joy
8:00 Loc:al Newa
8:05 Natlmal News
8:10~

8:15 Weather

8:17 Mornlni 9&gt;ow
8:55 Local News
9:00 Talk Of The Town

NEW LISTING. Rtn. Tw!J. N1ee
8 nn. ~ horne, loqe
9:55 Mason Cooney - ·
tarn, garage, cellar-81110b 10:00 Mominl Devotions
house, large hen house, 3 corn 10:10 WconderM World Of (M1Io
cribs, pond,
A. Tob. D., 10:15 The Morning 9&gt;ow
6 A. woodlot, belanee level to 10:25 EWcatton Newt !Pe&lt;lal
10:30 Chatterbox
noDlng land,
•
11:00 Ohio &amp; World News
11:05 Morning 9&gt;ow
196 ACRES
GOOD 3 BR ho.,.. new weD, 11:45 990 Local- Notional Newa,
Mason Count;)', Local, LIYO34 toundrP"' 1)
B. second
stod&lt; ROJIOI'I, BulleUn
gro1 ') () I::.,., eoal 11e8!111,
llolrd ond NewllOBI'aml.
hard o&lt;&gt;Od. 11,500.
12:30 Farm &amp; Home Hour
12:45 COUntry Go Round
6 ACRES
HJmntlme
RT. 141 . Four mUes out. 3 BR, 22:00
:30 Country Go ROllld
loath. basemt., forced air
4:00 Interchange
heat, outbldgs..
Chicken
5:00 Loc:al News
!arm. If you want out, lhlll
5:05 Mason County News
may he II.

*

1 ACRE

CENTENARY. 6 room frame
!lome. Nice sloaded yard. Garden, Garsge.
1th &amp; hall.
tw.o -'~ () \. ...semen!, 2
deep .. ••· Biding, 2 porcll.
es.

IN TOWN. R ,.,.\).

oo (AprD no..,....

September)

5: I 0 National News
5:15 !iiJorta

5:25 Wullter
5:30 Interchange
6:00 &amp;onset Blvd.

Real Estate For Sele
D. H. WOOD, Realtor
Phone 446-1066

Saturday

8:06 Early Bird
8:00 Local News
8:05 National News
8:10~
8:15 W~er

8:17 The Saturday 9JOW
11:55 Cong. Miller Reports
12:00 Local &amp; Oltto News, Bull•
Un Board, and NewSOfll'ama
12:110
Matinee

Sotur.t.r

1:15 Knotts Auction
5:00 News, brts, Weallter
5:15 &amp;onset Serenade
&amp;onset- Sian 00

Qonday
8:06 Protestant !lour
8:30 Herald ol Truth
9;00 News, Sports, Weather

9:15 The Singing Preacher
9:30 Gospel o( Christ
10:00 Smday Morning Mullc
10:30 Mornlng Worship
11:30 !llnday Music
u,t5 ~lngfield Baptist ChUrch
12:00 News Report
12:15 cattf6llc lnformalloo
12:30 Oltlo Unlversicy Reports
12:45 &amp;onday Afternoon Molle
1:30 Gospel Call
2:00 Smday Afternoon Molle
5:00 News, Sports, Weather

5:15 !llnset Serenade

&amp;onset - Sign

orr

S•rvices Offered
I..EE'S PLUMBING &amp; REMOJ).
ELING, Crown City, 0, Pli.
256-6664.
11'1-tf

Neal Realty

JUST LISTED - a beautiful
three bedroom brick hOme,
KENNETH STEGER'S
2.25 ACRES
carpeted. You will enjoy WATER DELIVERY SERVICE
SIX ROOM frame home, part
working Jn the very nice kltPb. 446-0347.
m II
basement.
Bidwell-Rndftey
dlen. full basement, both and
Road.
half, llnlslled attached gar.
DEAD STOCK
age, concrete driveway, large
tt.GO . .VICB CIWlOC
BIDWELL
WILL RDIOW YOtm DtiD
full basement, walk out at
NICE seven room frame home,
HOBOS AND C:OWI
J!I'OUnd level. Lot extends
CALL lACDON 1114111
storm doors &amp; windows. Gafrom Route 7 w the river.
rMc. large Jot and garden.
Priced
below today's replace· PINKING SHEARS sharpened
Jay SheJIIIOrd, «t-f!lt
$1.25 up, scissors 45c up. Shepmenl cost.
Earl Winters, 44s.38!11
pard Sewing Machine Sal.. II
Rossen D. Wood
Wayne Amsbory, ut-1139
Service, 862 1st Ave.
81.&amp;
Phoae
ut-41U
!'lenver K. Higley, 44~
Ronald Caallday
44&amp;,1111
AUIERT EHMAN
Water ~livery Service
For lent
Patriot Star Rt., Galllpolls
~PAR'l'MENT !umished I bedW. C. MASSIE
Ph. 3'19-2133
room, second Aoor, central
REAL ESTATE BROKER
' location, $85 per 'IIIII':'; utllltle!
TEL 446;0191 .
included. Ph. 446-0208. 110-3
The oldest forms of actual
writing
were produced in
11 ~St.
the
Sumerian
~an1fuai:e_:
3 ROOMS, bath, fruit cellar,
large garden. Call 446-2384 af.
BUDGET HOUSING
ler 2 p.m.
'19-H
GOOD 3 BEDROOM with hard
wood floor . plenty storage
~ ROOM unfumlshed 81111'1~ pace. cellar &amp; work shop, loment with buHtln kltdoen.
Used Fumllure, tooiJ1 mls•
ealed on a 1&gt; A. lot just outcellon•ou1 lt.ma &amp; IKIUI..
Call
44643311.
'17-tf
side of town. OWner anxi·
hold goad.. We also bur
celll,lete •••••••·
ct!S to sell. Price $10.000.
FURNISHED apartments, I lr
2 bedrooms, heat, water, oewKNOns
MONEY MAKER
age furnished. Ph. «Mt63.
ST. RT. 233, 50A, all Tractor,
47-tf
USED FURNITURE
gC&lt;&gt;d fanning land. 6 room
1163 SKon4 Awe.
house, bath, fur . heat &amp; plen•
FURNISHED
apartment,
..,._
-4-46·2917
Golllpoll1
ty of good water. Lal11't barn.
tact Stella Arnold, Park Ceft.
poultry house. has coal. brick
lrat Hotel.
71-tf
clay, and limestone. Added to
this a country store &amp; Texaco
gas station doing a good bus- SLEEPING !'OOIDB, weekly
rat... Park Cenlral Hotel.
iness. Price, $11,000.
'lf..tf

A. A. NIBERT, Realtor

BUILDING LOTS

65 Acres Tillable
Near Oak Hill, Ohio
THIS 70 ACRE FARM
LAYS
BI: T'H: R
THAN
~fO ST
I'Vt~
SEEN . ~4 ACRE COR :&gt;~ BASE,
S MI\ LL TOli ACCO BA S I&gt;:. GOOD
1 ROOM HOME WrrH MODERN
~-U R N.U E A ND BATH, L ;l TS OF
OUT BUn.DINGS PLUS TRACTOR AN IJ SOM E -EQUIPM ENT
t MOBILE HOME WHICH R ENTS
FUH S4S.OO MO. STA YS o\~ Jl
REN'&lt;EU

PLENTY

W A-

We Need Listings

plenty

6 ROOM, 3 BR hol)le, aU, !JUII\·
in kitchen in color. large LR.
gas furnace, carport. deep
well, price rediK!ed from $1&gt;,·
000 to $13.500.

60 ACRES

RIVERVIEW

of fhe better llomE's in Colon·

lal SUbdiVision with
nice llhrubs .

ACRES

NEW Lt'S'I1NG. Harrison 't'wp.
Good 10 nn. lwCHOIOI'f home,
38 I 50 barn, outbklp., waJ..
nul timber, S veins coal, ~
A. Tob. Base.

Into ()~bit

WE AilE

SELLI NG MOHt: f&gt;RO
PSRTV FASTER THAN EVER
BEF ORt: A;&gt;.:D ARE II UN NING
YOU
LOW ON USTINGS- [F
H AV E PROP~TY TO ~F. LL WE
:WOULD Sl~ Ct:aELY APPR!CI·
:\TE TilE C HANI.."E T) SELL
YOURS.

150 Acre Cle011 Farm
With Fann Machinery
U

·H' 1E

CORN

fl ~ SF.! .

'-'1

A

TO!iACCO. TilE ENTIRE FARM
!.c; CLE :\N
A NU
W AT ER F. O.

AVERAGE 7 ROO\! KOME PLUS
l RAt:I I\'S A,''W SEVF.R.o\L O lfT
Rl/ILDINGS. OWNE'R IS VERY
.'\~X I OU S TO SELL A':\ D IS OF FERING IT AT A
BARGAIN
l'RICF. .

Home Vlith 8 Acres
Just Right For You
HERE'S A DANDY PLACE Wl'n-1
11 ; \ C R· ~ niAT LAYS GOOD,
I 1,i STORY !lOME WITH BATH
AS II F UR NAC E . BARN
ANti
CHICKEN HOUSE. rr•s JUST A
SHO kT DRIVE T..:&gt; TOWN AND
IS IN KYGER CK. SOIIOOL DIS.
T RICT. CAI.J.. TODAY ABOUT
THIS ONE .

WANTED I

RICHARDSON
&amp; SKYLINE

RT. 160, Spring Valley, St. HALF double, near Pl. Pleasani, W. va. on beautiful Oblo
Rt. 141, Plants Sub. Dlv ..
River. I rooms and loath,
"'elghborhood Rd., St. Rt. 218
basement, big yard, water
BARGAIN OF THE WEEK
&amp; City. Price $350 to $3500.
fumlslled, 150 mo. 146-02311•
l BR H&lt;J.\IE near town with 3
'11-tf
acres. Has new furnace, alum- IF ELLISG your property is
inum siding &amp; carport. If
giving yuu a headache, let
RI!NI'.US
you can qualify you can buy
me help you. Call any hour.
RM
campers
and travel
for $700. down and balanc•
trailers, weekly and weekend
$115. per month. Don't d&lt;layrates.
Frendo City Home
CaU today.
BAIRD REALTY CO.
Center. 1nc.. Pine St. GamOscar
Baird,
Realtor
polls, Ohio. Ph. 446-UI98. '13-21!
11 ACRE FARM
3 BR DWELLING. Bath, all
rooms paneled, new fuel oil WANT A NEWBRICK HOUSEl .R ACRE TOBACOO bose and
·
Ianning land. Call Rullalld
furnace. Land is underlaid 1ll!S LOVELY three bedroom
74-lf
74U3&amp;1.
with coal. Located near Vinbrick is brand new. Hardwood
ton, Ohio.
floors . buill-in ltitdlen, ceramic tile bath. half bath, pan· FURNISHED 2 I'OOITill and bath
upstai1'll efficiency apt. All
eled utilltv room, finished
nlllltl .. pd., adults only. I'll.
basement. · attached garage,
44f.l51t.
74-lf
city water. forced air gas
fumac• . Real deal. '
UPSTAIRS unfum. IJ18rlmenl.
4 nns. and bath. Pto. 446-1945.
A NICE RETREAT
81-1
F'&lt;'URTEEN ACRES on • blacktop road has a nice fllur room
HOUSE. 5 rms. and bath, gar.
~ouse with ~ood wdl. barn.
metal roof, some timber. qe, In city, $85 mo. Ph. 44611~
!'rlced as a doeaple. Let us 1281 after ~.
•how you this city dude's PASTURE close to Gallipolis.
larm.
See Wayne Amsbary, Ql
81"11
If. YOU WAN.T TO SELL
l'~h Ave.
NOW IIi ~E. TllfE to list with • ';-·" l~~tur.·
Bair~ Really Go. We offer th: ·POtt'A'I.L yOarlilitn..., .._
most comnlcle re~lly service eheek Wilf1 _. Ot ... .,.
Available. You can I SO wron~ enbo It ~· Neal lnli.:~.
listing with "'· We find the 14 State St. A«ioitt· rio, ...
buyero . ond arran~e !inane- nre. ·. I!Orioeownet'$, . ~'tal
in~ . Ll•t with us for belli reand gonenl JlaliiiiiJ. ·~,
suits,,.
.
Offleo Pflone 111-4'17~ 21 'RT!o.
'i'RIRD AVE. A STATE tf,

~.

Bvnlnp
DIQ W•lloeilooll, I'll. 441-4241
11o11oit1 L..BaH.• "'- 4IMnl

Priced as · ·
low as

·

$3995·

.'

'

�___,. _____.

. ..... -

-~

-

......

---·· ····-·

- -- . .. -

18 - The ~!' Timet • Sentinel, Sunday, Ai&gt;rU 6, 1969

BU$l•ss Services

c •. •

TnMITE PEST OON'I'ROI.
FREE Inspection. oaR 4411-n4S

111errtu
o'Deu, 'OiJerator r...
Elltermltal Tenntte llorvlce

•

t

. , tl

10 I!elmont Dr.

•

''.,•

19 - Tha SUnda)&gt; 'l'tmos -Sentinel, :Sunda.!;
· ;;;;·;.·Ap-rl;;,t;jl6'1,;1;96;;;9_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

Ohio Politics

ForS1Ie

.

ExpeCted B:g Changes in School Bill
11

equaitzaUon aDd mandati~ the
1ax IDIJ' find some prcblema.
The administration wanted to
cut parochial school students
Into new money from the counit can be substantially rewrtt.. derotoed.
ty Income tax, but the original
leJL
Mc.Elroy's omissions amount- bill provided ror oharing Ill
The day before it was lntrOoo ed -.o forgetting to equalize state and county mOIIOl' wtth
duced in the Ohio House of school district's share of state parochial schools.
Representatives, a m a j or aNI county money, and the proWheo the rewriting was done
breach of administration policy visiOn for practlcall.Y mandall~ late Monday, the administration
was discovered and Rhodes' the 1 to 2 per cent councy 1,.. policy was reincolJIDrlted into
chief aide John M. McElroy come tax.
the bilL However, the state
spent Monday night rewriting
Whtle changlns the btll to plaluo&gt;ci to give oon • public
that section.
meet administration ideas was school students part of the new
In doing so, he admitted to not objectionable to legislator&amp;, velklors' excise tax through anioadvortantly omitting two oig- getting the two change• In other bill to be Introduced.
COLUMBUS (UPO- Adminls·

niglcant sect!....

TERMITE &amp; PEST OON'I'ROL tration aides hope they can get
The broach .stemmed !run a
·FAIN Extermlnallon Co. Wbeel- Gov. James A. Rhodes' omni- policy diS&lt;usslon aarller In the
eraburg, Ohio. Ph. 574-1112. bus education blll sent quietly year, which the man who wrote
m-Il to a House subcommittee where that section or the biU mlsUJioo

•.
•

DOLL House Nursery li'OIIOJIOI'
lotion available, reasonable
rat.. also for shopplng or
working mothers. hourly, dally or weekly rates. Ph. 4fl.

.. tl

4522.

WINDLE'S Carpet &amp; Upllolstery
Cleaning, professlollal equipment, all W&lt;&gt;rk guaranteed.
Phone WeU.too, !8WOII5 t»l-

JJ-11

lect.

'llrlmmer l'hlmbiBg &amp; Boallq
300 Fourth Ave.

STANDARD

au

PLUMBING I

loll

DEWiti'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
ROUTE 160 at Evergreen. Ph.
4411-2'135.
11

m

Concellotlont &amp; Corrections

Whether the bill wilt become
law as it now stands or whether
it will be rewritten ia not a
question.
Everyone, from the represent·
aUves who Introduced It to the
governor's o f l i c e wants a
chance to rewrite lt.

All-Breed
Sale Set
JACKSON - The fir st annual
Southern Ohio "A11 Breed" BuD
Sale will be held at the P I k e
County Fairgrouocls at Piketon
Wednesday, April 16, at 7:30
p, m. Thirty - nine outstanding
bulls t'rom Ohio's best purebred
breeding firms have been consigned.
This bUll sale is spon sored b)'
the Chillicothe Area Feeder cattle Improvement Committee, the
Southeastern Ohio Feeder Cattle
lmprovement Committee, and the
. various area sales organizations
which lendle the feeder calf sales
in cooperation with members of
the .Ohio Coq)erative Extension
.;&gt;ervke.
111 All bulls in this sale will be
weighed and graded on Wednesday, April 16, at 2 p.m., and a
mimeographed report of the
weight and grade or each bull
will be distributed.
The sale will start prompU~.
at 7:30 p. m. and the auctioneer
is Colonel Ham Hamilton of
Lewisburg, W, Va. The lea&lt;llng
purebread beef cattle breeder s
bave consigned 8 Angus, 1 Charolais, 23 Polled Herefords, arxl 7
Polled Shorthorn bull s to this
Ale.

AUCTION
SALE I
HOLSTEIN DAIRY
HERO AND
FARM MACHINERY

Thursday, April17
· MILO HUTCHINSON
Rutland, Ohio

JOHN McNEILL,

Auctioneer
• Watch Next Sunday' s
Edition For Complete
Listings .

Sunbury Girl
HONORED BY CO.WORKERS - Mrs, Garland SolDiers was honored ror 25 years or &amp;ervico
with the Ohio Bell Telephone Company, Aprll2. Mrs. Saunders is at len li'ontabove wtth her girts,
and others, I to r, are Bonnie Patrick, Bessie Comer, Sara carman, Warda Giles, Mary Young,
Ida . M. Durkee, Mrs. Lola Jones,, Chriatine Burnette, Monroe Gatewood am Mike Ervin (rear).

Wins B&amp;POE
Youth Award

'

212

»de

PhGile . .I.

BLIND ADS

4-4-tlc

EIGHT-ROOM house, twO baths,
in gyracuae. GoOd for family.
Jat&lt;&gt;b Turner; phone tltiZ-3881.
U71p

WA~TED
WAITRESS AND
SHORT ORDER COOK

_.:___

FURNISHED and unfumllbed
1partmenll. Clooe to lll!llool.

Top Salary • .Interviews.
9 to 4. No Phone Calls. ·

!

5th Ave., Middleport.

Phone tm-5135.

'

RATES

s.

Pilotte IIU4M. .

10.18-lle

Thanb

~·

Tl3-lil47
5-1&amp;-lfe
ley would llke to thank tbe
For 5•1• or Trlde
people who llelpecl durirw the :16'1 aiP:VROU:T liqlllla.
TRAILER, BROWN'S TIL'JL. ,
Illness and deeth ol our pop, two dOOt' hardtup,
ICo
""J''!C!ally lhe mnlnl! slalf Of tual mlleo, boachl ear - · l!lR PARK, Minersville, .,._
911-aDi.
4-1...
Melga General HosPijaJ, the
lAieaDy 0\lllled. CaD tiJ.Im
Mullen, Rev. George
boN- 1 and &amp;:10 p.m. ltld
Pets For S1le
Oller, the ~lingers at the
88U'HI alter • p.m. ~
cbureh and emyone wh o
M1NIATURE l'llotlle clole out,
ft puptJ, 5 matrons, euh sales
aent lood and n....rs.
lfll CAMERO VI, 4 apeetl;
Wife and Ch1Jdren
only.
Alao wire terriers JtOW.
1187 Flnblrd VI, 4 IPIId.
Min. 9clntau~era In S -b.
4-4-llp
Call tliiUM'I l1f . . . . .
freland Roed. Kl's, O&gt;olviDe,
Oillo.
l'llolte ttlrT-WII. 4-S-7tc
Notice
AlJCI'ION every Frtdly ntsbl.
EASTER SPIXliAL. ttmall mlnGeorge's Auctiou lbme, RutAuto S.les
ialure poodles, puppy trim inland Conslgnmenll wekome. ltle6 '1'IUVMPH 9plUin! dueled. $65; also pugs, 8&lt;01·
Forest GeollJe, Mer. 4-4-11c
verUble, M,OOO mlles, eEel·
lie!,
wim. Ireland Road Kenlent eondltlon, OliO OWDer.
nels, County Rd. 59, Coolville,
THE SINGING Roar family w1ll
C8ll WM!3'I or eontact Eller
Pllone
687-35115.
Ulotc
be preadllng 111111 stnclng at
JolmJon, Rt. f l'llmeroy,
the Cllureh of God, CIJesler,
Bailey RIDI Road.
f.Uip
Ohlo, Tueoday, April a at
lnsur1nce
7:30 p.m. for tbe youth ser- 1963 F-85 OLDS; automatic, po.
AUTOMOBtt.E 1t11Ura1tee . _
vice. Everyune welcome.
steering,
concllltoa
ezeeieneelletl? Loll JOUr 0. . . .
44-llc
lenl. John lhle, Recine, l'llolte
or'lt lleenAT CaD ••••
, ,llftJ.II!J.
f.Ntp
- ---·
t

•.oaa

""'*"·Dr.

......

VAN WERT - A &amp;lnbury,
Ohio, girl has been named a
national winner Ia the 20th annual Youth Leaderahlp Contest
COII&lt;Dcted by the Benevolent and
Protective Order or Elks, Eotelle E, Hunter, 18, Sj)Oitsored by Delaware Elk• l:Aidge No. . i\~RJi'l'l._!:·
·~
' 76, will receive $1,250 In U. S.
_ U food and tonle for ezSavlngs Bonds as third place
wiMer In the girts• division tn
otic lith, save :Ill per eettl.
national compeUtlon.
The House of Wilson Exotic
Miss Hunter Is also first place
Aquarlsl SpecWIU... Ph.
state wiMer In the contest con- 8'15-IOtlti. First road below
ducted In Ohio by the Ohio Elks
Ple818nt l'lllnt Retort.
Association. First place ato!A&gt;
44-ltlk!
winner In the bo.Y•' division has
been won by Ronald AlbertDteek- WILL DO IOwlnl a&amp; i*M JllaM ol981 f.dgetree Lene, ctn.
ztppen, pocl:els, peggtnc,
ctnnati.
hemming. alterations, etc.
Each will receive $500 In oash ·Mrs. Freddie ,.bet, Muon,
and $350 In Slvtngo Bondofor win- . Phone '1'/UIII.
Wl-llr.
nlni the alate eonteot wlllch was
In charge of M. A. Mlliauck of VACANCY for two oldeiiJ JIIOMansfteld, Elk• atote youth ae- pie. l'rlfer private pUI patlvltlea chairman. This Is In ad- tlentl. Phone Muon, '1'/Ulll.
dillon to the $1,250""" by M111
JO.t.tfc
Hunter, wbu Is a senior at Big
Walrut lil(4l School. S!e ts the
.\lliiOIS
t. COnatol·
daughter of Mr. and Mra, RobI , Bldokldol
l&amp;ttoD
ert Hun!A&gt;r of Rt. 1, bbury.
S.Spokeo
3.11Rlted
Other youth leadership awards
9. Waterway
t. Meet a bet
from
5. How the
valued at nearly $8,500 will be
· Buffalo
ploneen:
presentod to outstaodlng )'OUDg
to
Troy
traveled.
people In the allte at a special
10. Loath10me
6. Puddinr
Youth Day lunehelll Saturday,
11. Abrade
inJndlent
12. Brutlanee
7. Boothe
May 3, at the S!era~
1-t. You and me 8. Rent
buo Motor IIDtel. The eveat Is
15. Lanolln
11. Sudden
under the ebalrmanahlp of Pel8r
or lard
bluta
Gou-u or Berea and will be
18. Thailand
ot wind
tt. A Bmlth
13. Oolonr
held In 001\iunctlon with the 71st
20.
Affirmative
11 one
am~ual convention of the Ohio
vote
111. Herd of
Elks Association.
21 . ~bit'•
whales

II.

BtikP.

.iOJIIt . ~-.....;.."":,·

50 Years llf!O on the River ~~
GALLIPOLIS - Six of the
largest towboats of the Pittsburgh Coal Co., formerly owned
by the Monongahela Consolidated
Coal and Coke Co. havlng been
ordered to be scrapped was the
top River New s of the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune of April 3, 1919.
They were considered at one
time to be the finest boats between Pittsburgh aOO. New Or·
leans but have been tied up for
aeveral years. They are the
Alice Brown, 701J.ton capacity,
the Valiant, 307-tons, the J.A.
Domldson, formerly the J, A.
Walton, capacity of 300-tons. AU
the brass, Iron and boilers of
these boats will be placed on the
scrap heap while the cabins and
wall s will be de stroyed.
Other big towboats to be scrapped are the Henry Lowry, W. W.
O'Neut, Duquesne, S.S. H. Clark
an::J. some others. No more of
these large size t&lt;Mboats wm
likely ever again bt: built. The
Plttbburgh towboats have been
the best ever used for towing
purposes on an,y river in the
world.
The smaller type of pool boats
are now being used at Pittsburgh.
Coal shipments from Pittsburgh

PUBLIC SALE
SATURDAY, APRIL 12th
STARTING AT 11:00 A.M.
LOCATION: From Gallipolis take Mill Crook Road
pa to Crou Rd. Then go thaiSiht on Bunce Rd. First
house to the left.
'

For Rent

IMttr.ct IMortlon.

ProvisJOD8 of the bDI idroFOf Woftl Ali S.rvlco
duced would only ~ the • .5 cent• ,.r Word •• ilt~ortlon
determination of the subsidy,
Mlnl•um Chor" 75c
12 c•nt• p•r w01d thtc• con.. cw·
then would make the county 11,.., 1rr1.n1ons .
provide that subsicb to ~ch 18 ccM1 psr Word siK con••ewti-we
district. Thu1, the dlapartty be-· ln..rtlont .
2.!1 per cent Dhcowltl on paid od1
tween rich ancl poor school dls- ....... pal4 "Within 10 do-, •.
trlcto within a count,y Would not CARD OF THANKS &amp; 081TUARY
be reduced. but would remain $1.50 for 50 wDI'd mhti~M""· Ee.
ctfdltloRcl word 2c.
the same.

NO-II'e

FURNITURE

•
;";'.Good Frigidaire, gas cook stove, wood ·and coal cook stove
'

.

· llYirc room suite, ice cream freezer, table, 4 chain, record
:,:. player, lots or dishes, pots and pans, bed clothes, radio 1
eleotrlc haater.

MACHINERY
500 feet of walnut lumber and 2x4's, 2 shovel plow, 2 stngle
· ploWI, good 2 wheel trailer, bee hives, 1947 Pl,ymouth.

ANTIQUES
'l)'pewriter, washstand, sewing machine, Sooora Victrola, 2
-r round tables, stand table, 6 beds, 2 rocking chairs, bookcases, 5 dressers, 12 strlght chairs, cl.l)board, 2 - 10 galcans.

Other lt~~ms Too Num•rous To Mention
Hot Rts.ponsiblt For Any Accidents
· Lunch Served On Grounds

VENA BUNCE, OWNER
~~!!·~,.~~:••:•:h::,,,!::.:!:::,:::,_______.J

to southern points along the river stopped five years ago. As a
result, many of the powerful big
towboats or former palmy days
have been left in the "boneyard"
to rot.
The Alice Brown was built in
1871, the Valiant, formerly the
Joe Nixon, in 1817; the Donald..
aon, formerly the Joseph Walton,
in 1873. The Raymood Horner,
Tom Doddsworth, Ban, Iron
Age alli sam Clarke are other
fine big towboats that have also
been In the boneyards up the
Monongahela River, near Pittsburgh, for several years.
Other River News trom the
old Tribunes included: March
31, 1919 - Jt is reported that
the Coney Islan::l. sidewheel ex·
cursion steamer Morning Star
will enter the Cincinnati- Plttsburgh trade in a few weeks as
an excursion packet.

APRIL 4,
Burt Higginbotham, former popular packet boat captain in the
Karaw-ha River trade, is now
traveling for a Gallipolis produce house and doing well. The
Gallipolis produce houses are the
biggest shippera b;¥ boat along
the Kanawha River, say the crew
of the Leroy,

APRIL 5, 1919 - THE wickets
at Darn No. 26 cannot be put q&gt;
before May l owing to the accumulation of mud In the lock gate
chambers during the winter, we
are informed by the peq~le of
the dam.
There was nine-foot on the
gauge at Dam No. 26 st 8 this
morning and the river was raniJW.
The three Inco self..propelled
freight bargeo that falledtomake
any money and lost several thousarxls in the st. Louis and New
APRIL 1, 1919 - THE side- Orleans trade are now out on the
wheel excursion steamer Ver- carondelet ways near St. Louis,
nle SWain wlll (Vente out or being prepared for an ocean trip,
Wheeling again this season, it the boats having been sold to the
ls reported. captain Harry Burn- French government. T h r e e
sides will clllllllllnd the SWaiJL thousand tons of steel will go InIt is rumored that another Swain to these boats in order to change
boat may be brought to the ..,per them into sea-going boats. The
Ohio Rhor from Peoria, DL East SL Louis was the laat pacA dlopatch from Huntington, ket to drop a bJg wad of money
W. VL, ot March 13, says that in the St. Louis - New Orleans
the Hlllllrwton Chamber of Com- trade and now the government is
merce will aak the goverranent trying out a smaU barge line in
ror an III'F"Priatloo ot $100,000 the same trade. Shippen seem
for bulldlfll! Ice breakers there. to prefer the rail routes.
It l• said the rums are available lf the govermnent can be
APRIL 5, 1919 - THE Homer
convinced of the necesslcy oC the Smith io due down foe HIDIUogice breakers, Rivermen state ton with an excursion at 10:15
the damage from Ice amualty to Smmy morning. Coptaln Homer
Smith io In commalll.
much aboVe $100,000.
A riverman was robbed here
APRIL 2, 1919 - A GERMAN of his valuable gold watch and
submarine Is coming ~.g:~ the some money. The pollee are inMississippi and Ohio Rivers as vestigating,
Thirty steamboats were lost
tar as Cincirnti and may come
farther IC the stage of the water In the ice breakLtJ ln the Ohio
permita duriiW the next war loan River a year ago this last winter. according to a list com,plled
drive.
The busineos ol the Chris by Captain VIc Eberhart, the vetGreene In the Huntington - Cin- eran diver of ClnclmatL
clnnoU trade Ia reported to be
The members of Harbor No.
25,
American Auoclation. Mas..
improving every trip. Captain
Preo EWoon Ia In charge of the tors, Mateo and Pilots or PittsGreene's olfice.
burgh will decide whether they
The excursion &amp;teamer Homer will enter the American FederaSmith will open the season next tion or Labor, A vote on the
Sunttay with 8 trjp from POme- proposal Ia being taken by matl
ro, to Huntington. There are now and the ballot&amp; will be countod
900 cases of Bevo on the wharf at the next session. The matter
put down by John Clendenin, hao been .., for dlscussloo before t h e Harbor for several
agent for the Homer Smith.
week&amp;.

116 RAMBLER Amaldor, 111
MuslaDg ilmdtq), •
Camaro. Pbone I9U8t'l. U4tp

ss

lui Estlte For Site

.....
•..
............

IUlllN£1' DOWNJNIJ
JIMl .... lirl...

198'1 CliBYliLER New Yothr.
Pbone tllUS4?.

4-Utc

O'IIIIIIIN

Employment Wlllted

W!LL DO ~ eleo•IIIJI.
Wub '11110s IIIII ceDing, Pb011e
lfUOII.
4-t.elp

1'0MEROY - I AP.AR'IH!Iftl
- t»nerele bloct bulldla8

bel"".

wllll 5 pntpl
Jive Ill
one and rent lhe olber. ee.oae.

DAILY CRO'SSWORD

foot, for

1T. Brttllh

bul:tance

beer

,....

Resurrection

u. nmlng
aa.Scandl.

(COR!nued frcm pogo 1)
or whom are still alive . , ."

29. Lobe

'Ihe last phrase Is tremendously olgnlftcanf- Paul was
prepared to rest his claim on
the testimony of several
hundred eyewitnesses who were
alive am available tor queotiCJDo
lqr at the time he wrota.
The ultimate evldenee ol the
Resw-r~Uon, of course, Is the
extoteace ol the OlrtoUaa

11. - man

Cturch.
The centrality of the llei!W'rectioo oiDry ID Chrlstlall faith
was most forcefully 8)q)reased.
by the Apostle Paul.
"If Christ has oot been nlaed
from .the dead, then wo t.ving
nothing to preach, and you have
nothing to bello..," he told
Corimhlan Chrlotlans. "lfChrlot
t.s not been raised, then your
faith to a delusion , • • moce
than that, wo are shown to be
IJIIII! against God, because we
said o1 Him that He raised
Christ !rom death.
"But !he truth to U11t Christ
has been raised from death."

1'001111, ~alii.

18. 1,760
flrdl

,..,..

.......

2&amp; Sland·
ard
or model
H. Spawn
offllh
21. Settln1

at

2111 ACRI!II, 1-room hotlle, I
bama, I !arm poadl, tree
p8; 40 ..... melt holtam,
loll . ol (IMIAJre. AI mlalrll
rfcbll, tbdler; 011 bladttop
,.,.._ I(&amp; mlle frllm llorriloavllle, m mites 'l'lJI1l ~.
• mites from

A••••

interval• relklrllr'•
28. Chemical
37. Incite

"o: On Mhalf
of
U. Topu
hummlnl·
blnl
•2. Know:
Scot.

.w.a. ...

IIGO. Write C11J MdDmley,
JluiiiDd, lit. I.

adomrm~nt.s

HOBSTETTEI
REALTY

out

3'. Grtek
letter
31. Pork, lamb

or beef

36. Flaunt
38. Cerium
li)'Dibol
38. Indian

.

OBO. IIOMIBI'iik, ..._
I bUllcllnS loll,
out Gl bltlb Wiler. .....00

balltl, I badmoml, &amp;lll'llp,
QI1IOrl, fJO,Itlt.GO

... Dervllh
U.AIW&amp;)'I

''· Hot ptac.

IIAIUil'8oNVIW!
W!JA. milk.
-·
llcnl, , . In C!UIIIvatlon,

45. FUm •taae•
48. ICchoed

tnc~f&lt;wlbad,l .......

•Do.

DOWN

110 ton
drDled well, •
linn pondl. I 1110111 ' - ·

1. Klndof

carpet

eao.eoo.oo

or cat

DAILY CRYI"l''QUOIE- Here'1 how to worll It:
&amp;X1'DLB.t.AX&amp;

.

.

H,DAJ!N·f/1 VIRGIL ~
AIIOOIA111 .
• n•

ClrrPioi- ..,.._

XRF,KVPV

KGG

XRPII,

VI

RZI'VHWK,

KWI'UV

KDQ

VI , PGK
I

'

\'OIIInldoq'o C'7,1ooJOOio&lt; YOU CAI('T e,U'·C_ _:__l TION .

ISN'T ADVANCING: IN I:VIIRY WAR mET
A NIIW WAT.- WILL IIOGIIR8

~~U IN
·\

used. Balatree due only '"
tenno of fl per montb.
Phone 992-28111.
4-1-ete

1969 RAMBLER, 440 Wagon
1969 RAMBLER, 440, Wagon

t!IJ8fltntee. Nationally adm·
tlsed ltraods to be IIOicl for
otorage and lrelgbl of ~-•
eaclt. May be paid II ....
per monltt. These ~~- conIOies have AM.JI'M radio, 4
epeed automatic e~ntnaer.
AFC, ,lenled ll!ylt11 IIIII

65 Mustang $1,395

radio, head rests, light pkg., medium blue and white two tone.

1969 RAMBLER, leltel SST,

V8 2 dr. Hard Top. 289 cu. in. angino. 4 sp. shift. Spotless
all white finish . A jeweL
·

$3764.00

1969 DODGE Coronet, deluxe

111111 ZIG ZAG Sewing Mlchlne
C!OIIIplele. wllh _... lillie.
Tbts makea butlotlholeo. rna·
ny laney dellpl, lib over
payml'!lls ~
per montb
or pay MUS. Try II In your
home. Clll lft.2tt38. 4-J.atc

1969 DODGE, AJOO

"·tz

$3687.65

WITH VACATION TIME JUST AROUND THE CORNER, LET'S TALK DEAL
ON ONE OF THESE ·wAGONS .•• BEST DEAL IN TOWN •.. SEE THE GOOD
GUYS AT RAWLINGS ...

. 11. HatTII, Portland, Pllone

s.rl-1111:

ONE AORE buildt!t1 Jots. l'llolte
...

SIX ROOM ttoase wltll two lots,
&lt;ellar, garqe, good loeatlon.
phone daytime 74Z.Uil. Eve·
nlnp 74UIIOI.
&amp;.Ute

...
!l:fLEiJ •HAY,

~

EXCElLENT. etllclenl IDd economical, lbal'l Blue LuiiN

....,"'
*'
J.M_..,

carpet .alii upbollt8rJ .....
er. Rent electric
ft. Baler Furniture.

ForSele

n.tm'Y ooll and brtCbt art

l!IG8 MODF.L Cobra E. B. set,

Blue

IAtltre. llelil elet!trle lltampooer tt. Tlny'l lllrtJUIIInd.
Nl.fle

---

INS II'ORD F1lrlltla, Rl', Yl,
4-epeed lrlntt·, estra clean.
Pb. . . . .
1-We

CURTIS boUoe trail•, Sl z I,
rully furnished, good eondJ.
tion, Contact Irvin MIUer. Rt.
611. Point Rod!. CaH IIIUW.
f.4ac
5 PONTES. tall; 4 mara, I
]lllldllig, 011'1. bridles; two
line saddlett, halten, Ftnt

... takes Ill. Bob Morris,
Leldlnl Creek Rd. .. Mill.

Ma:

12-at
Atlantic City,
New Jersey

13 Demolish
14 Alaslum

mountain

l5 Announce

publicly

17 Rabble
11 Uvy

books

mammals
37 Gratify

38 Adolescent

919-2881.

39 GrHt Lake

year

4-4-3tp

........
Indio

ehalr, dlnlnl!
room Illite. Pholle 915-311111
Chester. Cltarlett Chaflee, Sll·
ver Rldie Road.
4-4-3tp

ltAVENPORT,

42Beah:k
44European

1967 Cadillac Hardtop Sedan Deville •...•. $4300

46Cutoff

This one has an ivory finish with a black interior,
radio with power antenna and rear seat speaker, tinted glan, white wdll tires, automatic headlight con·
trol with twilight sentinel, power windows and si;~~
way power seat, and climate control air conditioning.

57 HOUSE traler, 3 bed·

rooms. ellended llvbt8 JGOm.
Call an-a for Information.
4-Nic

49VIllleys

ault

53 Smoll shield

MByd..,...
56 CorrelaUve of
oeither

31 Forest
creature
33 Treacherous
35Shirtpart
.
40WesterncatUe

""ninsula

Htro's ono with o Gold metollic finish with like new
grHn interior, has a full compliment of power equipment including windows and tJix way power seat, tilt
&amp; telescoping steering wheel, tinted glass, radio
with power antenna and rear seat speaker, white wall
tires. Haa had very but of care since new.

Modem l'llultey, 3111 W. M1Jn
Pomeroy, pllot11 IIMIM.

st.,

point

' '

Gold metollie finish with a block Yin~! top ond boige
interior and tquipped with power windows and six
way powtr seat, radio with pow·er antenna and rear
seat speaker, tinted glass, white 'Wall tires, automat~
ic headlight control and climate control air condi·
tioni.ng.
,

--·l

I

.

llrr &amp; Y• Za1b
S.lts

,.,..,... _ ""''"'-·r -

I
I I .· . I t]

t:.IBI.~

'

) II

C. C. D.\Dro!ID
. 4UCiidfla·
01'" illli, ......
1

........
....._,.
iae111. GMt

,I I •

' '
The ,. pa~lstait

~onslltulloil

recoJPIIzo• Moolein law · as '
embodied lri. the Koran.

,, •

' l(

I"

~ror*

''

,. ~·

Spider, .2 dr. block finish, good tires, 4 spd. Rodio
and heater.

II

1963 CHEVY II NOVA 4 DR. •• •••• ••••••• $995

Local low mileage car, spotless cleon interior. Red
fin iih, Powerglide trans. Radio and heater.

I

II

I';;

;Ill

-r.I"

I'"

I"'_

I

I

I

hod ••cellent core ond cab i s Hko now.

II

1958 GMC UON " .. . .. .. ........ ...... $395

Platform body,

v.a ongffie, 4 speed,

solid lor model.

I

I

I
I

~..

r"

1

1

I"
(-

I"
I"

VISIT YOUR FAVORITE
SALESMAN AT

I Pomeroy
I

I"' IDZ
I

I

I"'

Yo11 Chevrolet Dealer
Open Evenlrts Til 8

I
I

Co. 1
\1
. 992·2126,

ElPEIIENCED
. . . . Servin

IXPEIT

..... Allt••ll

ss.ss

1

-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992~2094

tD6 I. Moln P-101, 0.
WARttANTm

YOUR

USED

.

CADILLAC

'

BLAETTNAR'S

ILAEnMAIS

BU$Iness Services
CllUCK'S Cuh IIIII Carry 'I'V

PH. 99Wlt3 '

NE!JlS

Complete FronHnd
and Brake S.vlce

From the Llrpll Truclt
Bull&lt;b•r !lttdllllll' To Tt.
!inllilost H - ol.-..
·
~

r;iit~u:.,~: ·--~--.-... ~-----..

- · Otilek'a ')'V, !Jt Batter· Alii OONDmONINO Ref~tgef• . CHUCK'S Cub and Carry TV
llit·Aw., ~· 1-»Uc
aiJoa ....tee. J...'i RefJtc,
Servlee. Save up lA&gt; one hoH
· , · . i: '
eillilon, New BIYelt. '*m repoirl. Brl!ltl them In and
RUDY • MIX ~ dallv·
IIWm. · ' . 4 t lfe
saye. ~'s 'I'V, 152 But·

ftl

ri.ht

1o

;our 'project,.
'

temut, !'llmen.y.

'

For The Fastest
Service DAY or
NiGHT •.. CALL
RAWLINGS SERVICE
DAY 992·2151
NIGHT 992·7324
R. h.

1.::::;::~;:~

"-lfc

Flat ittd . .y. FrW . 1111- BllliGET P•t~ f1!nt11ure •
...... ...-..
~
~ third .,
floor IJadpt lltap. SllPTic lllib elouetl Mlllll"
Sanlltlloft. lllewari, Oltlo,
lehiiiiiCit" Ml• eo., Middle.' . Baker Puntlturi, . Middleport,
"'- • .naa.
s.!Uc!
!*"·' QldO..... ' . ' • • lfe Cillo,
..
- -'"", - .-...
' . . ... .• iOJw.

~,J:..:,

··-

1

L•••••••••••••••••1

Business Services

,,
I

I
II
I

,.•• .., •••• &amp; A.d.

OPIM EVES. TIL 8
992-5342 ·
POMEROY

Business Services

I'

I'"

1

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

I

GO-Alton,

Ultc

U~theoe,_Jumbloo,

r•

~·

I"

statue

50 Jump
51 Comfort
52 Aperture
55'counterpoint
(ab.)

'"

F' ~· .

~~~~~~

48 Cosmic order

I'

uc58El-,T..... Ill
stCompus

47

28 Palatable
30 Gaelic.

11 Flatfishe-s
16 PerUSff

(poet)

1967 Cldlllac Coupe Deville•••••••••••• $4300

H • N DAY.(ILl) or sllrted
Legllorn pulleto, both floor or
cap fP'OWil avaUable. Pool·
try !ioUilng and aulomltton.

ono ~ to oach ~~~~. io
form four ordlnafJ word1 •

· (J

8 Plant ovules
9 Flowt-n

away to wed
34 Desire eagerly 112

1967 Cadillac Coupe Deville ............$4300

[ KY.'~lll'

26Made--48

32 One who runs
36 Arbot'ftl

~5

25 leather
NauUeal term

being

r'' l ph'
29 Winter vehicle 22 e egra u:

r.Jt,g · super~mag antenna and
50 font ...,. cable. Phone

1

2(Str;p of

worker
7 Euential

23 Chemical sa1l 20 Canadian

"Welghtol

JO

Loc
ir
5 Craft;
6 Newspaper

24 Baseball club

Malibu Conv. VB engine, powerglide, radio, heater,
new wh itewall tires, green exterior finish with white
nylon top, vinyl interior trim.

I
1963 OLDS F-85 STA. WAGON .......... " $89~ I
White finish, auto. tra ~ J.. rad io &amp; heater. Real nice I
I cor.
·
I
I
I
1
~o~~G~~A.~!fn~: ·~~t~;,;o~~~- • wi.i;: ii~ 1
1 Mo~.
Clean interior, good w.w. tires. R&amp;H .
I
11961 CtiEV. 8' FLEETSIOE PICKUP- $1695 I
owner, clean int., light blue fini sh, new tires, ra- I
I Local
dio, rear bumper, 6 cyl. engine.
1
I
I
I 1966 GMC 2 TON HEAVY DUTY • -- - • $2895 I
·~ traWithgood10' 825.-20
Marion Dump. Vo6 eng. 2· speed rear axle, exI
tire s, heavy duty frame. This truck has I

Verdi
Son
of Jacob
3
kolha
4

27 Drone bees

I
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II

1965 CHEVELLE .... ...... .......... .$1395

I

19 Bookkeeper's lOSmell

21 Identical

I
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I

Illinois

1 Great _
61 Small
t.ke, Utah
barracuda
S City in Iowa
DOWN
9Cape - ,
lBox
Massachusetts 2 Opera by

TWO REGISTERED Shetland
•tatlions, black; around 311·
41 inclles In belgltth. Lorett10
Davis, Kl~ Road, ~
mlle ol new Rt. 13.
4-4-IOtc

· tt.4t at Nelsolt Dnqr. 5-14-&amp;llp
cerpell eleened with

Middleport, 0.

992-2151 or 992-2152

S. Second Ave.

I
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1I
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II

I

v..a

Sc:lfari Station Wagon, local 1 owner car, white OYer
dark blue finish. Clean interior, like new w-w tires,
.automatic, power steering and brakes. Radio.

Touring America
Amoss

vinyl interior and bucket seats, new tires, radio, a
nice clean one.

Co'~pany official car.
engine, auto.~ trans ., pow•
er steering, radio, bucket seats and console. Black
viny! roof. New cor title and guarantee.

II

l H. Rcaw.Unp. .Sons .:Co.

..

ALUMINUM Fishing Boall,
tl8fe, dec~. sturdy. Buy a safe
boot for your family's protee.
lion. See Lorenzo Davis. '4
milo weot ol n""' Rt. IS on
Kingsbury Road,
4+.Jitc

REMOVE EXCESS body lltdd
with Fluldez 'l'lblell, Cll!J

GMC TRUCKS
POMEROY, OHIO

PONTIAC

B.UICK
PH. 992~2143

''OHIO'$ OLDEST DODG! DEALER"

Duckwortb po.
tallies. Elmer S. Batley, Wll·
low Creek Road, Rt. 1 Porn·
eroy.
4-4-ltp

45-INCR, 7-year spotted geld·
lng. Qulet for ddldren. Phone
742-4111,
4-f«C

BLAETTNARS

·Carroll Norris, Emerson Jonas, Wallace Ambe'1er, Hilton Wolle, Dick Rawlings
(5 of the nicest pys you willev• deal wltlt.

&amp;-He

4 speed trons ., 140 H.P. Midnight blue finish, with

I
I

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1965 CORVAIR CORSA H.T. CPE ........ $1095

PONTIAC ....................... $1695

MANY MORE

cabbege,

tomatoes, popper IDd lll'eel
potatoes. Order . -. Cberles

Two Door, 6 cyl. eng., std. trans., radio, heater, like
new tires, cleon vinyl interior.

$1,195 I 1965

Wildcat 4 dr. Hard Top. Like new white finish on bottom
with dark blue top. Power steering. Power bralces. Automatic
trans.

Sportsman Van, automatic trans., 9 pauenger, 3 seat wagon, radio, West Coast mir~
rors, tinted glau, wheel covers, light pkg., metallic tan and white,

1966 PLYMOUTH VALIANT·- ·- • - ·- • -51095.

CAMARO 2 DOOR - - - - - - - - - - - - -$2895

64 Buick

4 door, 6 pauenttr, 318 cu. in. VB, t/ flite trans., p/ steering, tinted gloss luggage
'
rack, remote control mirror, medium blue.

Hydramatic trans. Blk. vinyl roof over green finish.
Retractable headlight covers . Positraction rear axle.
Tinted glass, Comfortron air conditioning. A beauti·
lui kept cor with only 6300 miles . Oh yes new eo•
title and warranty.
Save over $1000

$1,395 I 1968

Catalina Conv. Cpe. One of cleanest 65's anywhere. Fully
equipped.

$3645.40

I
I
I
I
I
I

I

65 Pontiac

4 door, 6 po11enger, auto. trans., p. steering, 343 cu. in. VB, roof rack, reclining
front seats, head rests, radio, light pkg., hunter green.

WE HAVE THEM!
327 V8 engine, power steering and brakes, Turbo

Ventura 4 dr. Hard Top. FactO!J Air Condifioned. Power
steering &amp; brakes. Hydramatic. This is one we will put up
against any 66 in fhe area. Beautiful all vinyl interior.

$3082.40

I

1968 CAPRICE 4 ODOR SEDAN

S1, 995 I

66 Pontiac

4 door, 6 pGIItniJer, 232 cu. in. 6 cyl. auto. trans., reclining seats, (front), roof rock,

11 I tfa

NITATO!S, Phone 143-1114
Cllronee Prortlll, Purlllntl.
10-!Mii

$3082.40

1969 RAMBLEl 440, Wagon

Jy aatlsfted. Call - . - .
&amp;-1.-.

......

Catalina 4· dr . . Hard Top. One very careful local owner.
Spotletss white finish wit~ burgandy top. Power steering &amp;
brakes. Hydramatic.

.( ·door, 6 passenger, 232 cu. ln. 6 cyl. outo. trans., reclining seats (front), roof rack
head rests, radio, light pkg., medium iJrey and white two tone.
'

heautllul band Mlled eebl·
net. Will 10 lo the fJJII S
~e w1to ean. Will be delivered to your home w!tltout
obligation for yoo to II')' end
make lttll'l! yoo are oomplete-

pl-.

$2964.60

4 door, 6 pouenger, 232 c:u. in. 6 cyl. auto. trans., rGdio, roof rock, w/ s/ w tires,
head rests, light pkg., medium green and whitt two tone.

STEREO'S 1111 Model Unclltimed Frelgltt. 5 new walnut
consoles s1ereo1 witll fiCiory

,'

Catalina Conv. Cpe. New Ponfiac tr~e f~o?' one. of our
most faithful customers. Spotless all wh1te ftntsh. L•ke new
top. Power steering, Power brakes and Hydromatic.

•

porty 01 Fo1 Lorgo Foolily.

liOIJTHEIIN

Goio•ie 500 2 Dr. Hord Top. 17,192 OOiy miles. Spore tire
has never been on ground . Power ateerlng, Power brakes
and Cruisematic.

WE HAVE COME A LONG WAY SINCE THE COVERED WAGON DAYS. THE
GOOD GUYS ARE GOING TO PROMOTE WAGON SPECIAL MONTH DURING
THE MONTH OF APRIL WITH ONE OF THE BEST SELECTIONS OF WAGONS
IN THE COUNTRY. HERE IS A PARTIAL LISTING OF APRIL WAGONS NOW
IN STOCK AT RAWLINGS ...

5 R...,. ond Both on Flnt
· Floor, 5 Roo101 ond both
on Socond Floo1, 2 Cor
Go•ogo ond 3 Room Utility Building. Call 9493311 or 949-2153, Roclno,
O. Could bo lncomo Pr..

Nlt'llll,E . PUPPIEII, AKC 'IW
mlnlalure, fl5 llld ap. bl
. ~Ice •tid llfQOIII!pc. ,.._

IIJ.544t

65 .Pontiac

!
$1,395

66 Ford

FOR SALE
TWO FAMILY HOME

. I. l

FerS.Ie

67 Pontiac

I
ot
$1,595 I Unbota
I o1
$2, 295 I CAR 'BUYS

or

~

lo LONOI'IlLLOW
One letter •bnply studllor another. In t.hiiJUDplt "" il Ulld
for the tbree L"l. X tor the two 0'1, ete. Stnate tetteN, .,...
trophleJ, the l«n&amp;th uut fonnatloD of the wordt art all htnti.
EaCh day tile code lOUin an dtff-L

A

THERE MAY BE BETIER PRICES"
BUT THERE ARE NO
BETIERBUYS
THAN AT BLAETINARS

POIIJitOY -

MIJII!LII'(llrr - 10 1'001111, I1!1

group

VI

belemenl. ....

lot. IN GOOD OOND1'l'ION.
fii,SOO.OO.
WE BVY SElL 111M'
IIENRY lUUND

:n.Da-

UPocxw. - kwcraurr

(AdlljJted !run the book, "The
Real Jt~UI, ~· bJ Louis CUsela,
publlob8d by DoublediJ &amp; Co.)

POMEROY - 7 1'001111, S bed-

navla.a

GPU

a CIUIW

IUW.TY OOIIIPANY
POIIIEIIOY - 8 rooma, S Dice
becbvocl., betb, hanlwoud
floon, IOIDe r:eatiOIIellna. I
n1ce place w liVe. ee,100.ao.

IKIUSEWORK wanted by the
day -or week. Eulah Fnncts.
Pltono 119'U8JM,
~

compoWI.d
30. ~pent of
31. lrako
Choice
32. Venturu
31. Military
otfenalve

4-llllc

,'

1/o/n Ill
IP1rltleJ

~'

'

ebtne lq orlt!lnal laetnry ear'·
ton. Automatic
ug to
malre buttonholes, sew on buttons. monogram, and make .
fancy designs with )u•t L~•
twist of a single dial Left In
lay away and never been

zrr

auod . ....

~ needed, "" THREE RO()M fumlsbed apart.
In ll dellred. Good ~
CODtillkl!ll. Llg!tl 1--n ment with bath. Couple only.

cl••••

. .

flat """' att4
Phone IMT-HII.

HA!uH· uete

Crow'• Steak

,.,.,w••

IIIJ'S,

:I

Mon4t)' DH411M ••••.

of

.............,.....!.'1!111~~!1!!1

.''WAGON
SPECIAL
'
'
MONTH"

NEW 111118 Z1C ?Alii Sewi!IJI M• •·

rtver. Muil have 10 aeno o1

""'*·

BEATING, 215 Third AVIIIDt.

'·

s , ....,. DOy Bof.,o P_.licoll••

Clfd

448.m%.

WA111ti!IIS fqr 4 . p.m. jj~
midnight. 11110 ear hop 1114
(11'111 cook. A1Jply .. ps'llllll.

The equalization clause would WUI •• occo,td llfttll t •·•· for
provi4e that school dlatrlcts es/ · Dor J Publlcot.l~
-·~
U 8ub'
REGULATIONS
tablt... 1 c......
·
.., J)el" N
lt. Put.ll•t.i
the rllht
slcly, then divide the mODel to •111f or roloct ony .~.
.t... ,
&amp;\'IUabJe to the districts to tHtlt:~MI. Tht !MA~IItht:r will Mt
bring them lrto line with the H rt~spaaslblo , _ _... tMn eM

oli&gt;a!dy,

. Wentecl Jo,.!luY
. FARM
Wmllli 10 ·in!!•
II

Help Wented

WANT AD
' tNFOitt,IATtON
DEAOLINU

The mandating section of the Adclitlonal ric Chort• ,., Advet- 1
'l'RAILER LOTS. Bob'• Mobile
bill will be the· hardest Iough~ ..........
·
Court, Syraeuu. Oblo Gil State
PLEASANT
POINT
McElroy said the aovernor
.OFFICE HOURS
Rt.
124, Pltone IIIMIIt.
1:30 '·"'· te 5:00 P·"'· Deily
Jought tD have school dis trlcts '1i!fe.m. to 12:00 Noon Soturdcy
RESORT
..u.tfe
par«olpate In state monoy only· · · '
tc they had the equlwlenl or 20
FURNISHED bouae In PomeOf
mllto prq&gt;erty tax for openting
roy, llvf rooms llid bath.
w.nlld
elljiOI!lleo, and either throogh WE Willi to thank all our
CID
evenlnp, f9l.5la.
nel&amp;bbon, friends who sent A CLEANING IIOI!Uin l&lt;w one
the Income tax or add!UOMI
day ovary otber week. Write
property tax In the ' money
Jetton and ftow81'1 dll•hlch woold become avaUabla.
rinl tbe Ulness and death of Bor 818-C In care ol 'ftle
Dally Sentinel giving quallll- F1111NmHED TWO BEDROOII
UJat section was lnaci.Tertantour busiJand 8lld Ialiier, Mr.
ljwtment, Mlddleparl. Phone
ty dTOJllled and now the aclml,..
4-f«C
NelS Ouioto(lbenon. Y our caUonl.
111#14.
M-tfe
l&amp;tration aides rac:e the pJ'Ob..
~ wtH alwl)'l be r.
lemo ol geti!IW it Into the bUL
liARRIED MAN lor !arm 'MII'k,
membered.
The overaU effect ot the reMrs. llettJ ams~ boule tumisbed. P. M. Cow· ONE FOtJR.room apartment
lumlshed, gi'OIDlCI floor; also
writing was to reduce the bUl
dery, LeJw Bottom, Ohio.
and Mr. and 'Mrs. Harry
trailer loll IIIII garden lltd
from what they wanted ID a ve4-f«C
Plcketls.
4-4-ltp
hicle ID obtain what they would
CllltJl sites on the river. Molike tn have, McElroy now i'IIE FAMILY of Emmett Men·
rtCIII Reynolds, MIIIOII, Phone

Plumbing &amp; Heating
Pb011t t4f.IG'!
Goae PlaDII, OWDer

'

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•

WEEK AT ELBERFElbS

BESlF
"

'

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' ' --~.

·-

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Shot our First Floor ·Feu1dttlons
Department this week for -extelltll't values In Bestform- .
.
Bras and Girdles. Alarge and ~omplete selection to give yo~ ••• bra.and girdle of your .
chelce In your correct size.
.

.,

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.

IIIII' .... '

baott IIIII
lor IIIli~ "'

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1

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iot lnlarnatlonal cantrCI

ioble tntemattonol 111&amp;agalnst the rosumptlm

,g.

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New lightweight long-leg control!

WOnt rideupwhenyou sit down!

Your figure Js pampered and fJattered with the al~er eontml of the
Ions leg panty. Reinforced front panel controls your tummy as the
side panels slim your hips and thlr!hs. And more, back panels shepe
and control the derriere. Evan the penel-attached prters help to
smootll and flatten. All this In ceo!, IJshtwelght nylon and Lycra8
spandex at. pocket pleasins
prk:e. In White- In sizes: S.M-L-XL

Here's a panty that stretches when you ·do because special mesh
Inserts at the back of the thighs adjust to your every movement. Even
when you walk or bend this panty stays in place. That's not all you'll
love about th'is panty. There's a special lacey all nylon reinforced front
panel for extra tummy control and the nylon and Lycr&amp;e spandex
elastic ls a breeze to care for and as
Hght as a caress. White. S-M·L-XL.
\.1

row BESTFORM•

BESTr"nRM•
r

All stretch- all padded bra Soft-padded bra...cool&amp;comfy
You've loved this bra so much you've asked for a padded version!
Here it Is! Cloud-soft fiberfill makes every figure a perfect size. lfs ·
completely stretch ••• sides, back and undercup for comfort and
I

'

better fit Non-curl stretch straps adjust In an Instant Fashion extra:
A low dip back. In easy-care all nylon lace with nylon and t,vcrse
sJ)andex elastic. In WhHe only.
In sizes: 32-36A, 32-388 and C.
·

to .

e·ESTFORM.

make

$2.99

th~L

Only BesUorm offers you sucb a great nttte figure.

you're one size fuller and
no one knows it but you!

torso
more so

$3.99

' ' l

661Mlmlf©ill ,,~::,. .,

New super-sol! foam padding thafs lighter, softer and whiter than

ordinary padding, gives you that extra shaping you want, in the most
natural way. This cool Dacron® polyester, nylon and cotton blend Is
so easy care; too. The low V-cut sides for the woman Who doesn't want
any trace of bra showing under her

lashions. In White, 32-36A. 32-388.

Im~ruw room~~

66

c~®! ]p)~frJ
•
gives
your
derriere

.:\

/ l \\ :,

•l

' ' I ' I' '
' ..I ,I

$2.99

;\

\

the blissful
comfort of

Kodel fiberfill gives you a.c01npletely "naturol" look!
Now youl dresses can flt the way you've always wanted
them to, when you wear this ftatteriog Beotform bra that
increases your IJiellll11mDOIIIB by a full cup olze. The
fabric is an airy ~-JI1Ion...,ltoll blend thafs a
snap to launder. Elutlc: ...C.te, rubber ud n..nm•
poboeoler. White. 32-36A, 32-36B.

IT'S BESTFORM'S GREAT
FEATURE ATTRACTION I

\l\

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for finer

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1

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pre-stit(hcd
cups with foamrubber p01dding

. ·.' ,:·'\.
.. · •_\

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.

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•.

Ever wondered what to wear Wider slacks? Here's
Beatform's answer, a marvelous panty that , ; - an
ultra feminine look, yet controls those extra curves at
tummy and thigh. In nylon and Lycrao apmda to rive
you the "natural" control you've always wanted. White.

:' ldenL

' .

I

lightly padded bra ... only

&lt;Ibach said peU;y larceny
have been filed aplnat
ior tho alleged lhe!twhUe
pole and Mllhoaa ore be~ged in Pomeroy wi1haidabeting a petcy larceny.
men have been releaaed

.

You'll novtrt-.evet find·a bra u comfottable as lhia aplill
. It~upeclilly dellped of all-way otretcb nylon aod Lycra•
apalltfex with power net at sides and back section ao weD as
under the cups. Top of cup io go,.amer nylon clipped lace.
· So pre«yl Fiberfill inserts at bottom of cups add the perfect
upUft and support to give you fashion's .look of today. An
Important part of the comfort picture - stretch straps with
Jewelook' ch!Sing. White, Skintone, Black. Sizes
32-36A, 32-388, 32-40C. (32-420, $3.99)
0

$2 99

S-M-L-XL,

11

pencil~

appearance in

Court.

YOIJW WOII, r&lt;IRSMif

~fendants

fOIZ ,(~!Ill~ IN
· AN Hovrtf

lered Fined

NOW GO·~ 'Will':
1VN6Il-S Alll &amp;II' M::l&lt;

de!endants were lined and

BE SURE TO REGISTER -IN T FOUNDATION DEPARTMENT
FOR THE RCA PORTABLE TELEVISION TO BE GIVE.NAWAY.
SATURDAY,
12· AT 9 P.M. NO PURCHASE NECE$SAIY.
NEED NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN.
.

.... forfeited bonds In the
If Pomeroy Mll'W Cbarsaturday ni81tL

:ar

I were JohD Powell, RallO utd costa, reeldeas
Dll; -

It, $5 and

r-.

Point
COllis, aasur-

1r dlatanee• RoQald Carr,
$to aru1 00111, ..._
1.'1\ on a one-way l'trleti

·. F•

t Martin, PUmaroy, $5

·flo, dloturblne the peact,
bmett Welch, l1IU' Pom$10 and

//···· . ·. &gt;}:::

Miss Personality

ory school, for IIDdiJv
Municipal Park. Llllla
bird-Ave., Mlddi.,rl.
..,. egg. Taldng part In
; and Middleport May-

l!llhoan, both of~ llcJt.
connection with the Ba-

·.·· . · ·•':V\

cun·es

i1J Rotary Oub E111ter
11'1, !2-year-old soo of

cidents

look!

ss.95

'

ftiNNIES!

.

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-\.. _____ ______ ___ .. ··

"

rounded

fffilbemllll ]pJ!\dldle&amp; lblf!l

adjustable
srraps

••

alifted,'

\

Instead•of f/4ttening yoUT derriere, this long kg panty
girdle gil!e$ you fashion's new lifted, rounded leokl With
fiat Seams so you can wear it Wider clinging knits this
becoming style has pretty laatex-lace-edged legs ior a
smooth look from your waistline down_ White. &amp;-M•L-XL.

Stretches and adjusts
to your every movement

Only BesUorm orrers you such a great llttle figure.

' ; \I

.'

BEST.ronRM•
rU

$6.95

$2.00

JP)@illllity

stop
stop
discover

I

COill,

immlu-

~

Y AND
. . -- -SHOP MONDAY, TUESDAY,··
. . 1HU
. _ISDAY
9:30
TO ' 5:00.
.
·OPEN
Y AND SAtURDAY - 9:30A.M. tO .9:00 PJl

ELBERFElDS. IN. PO . :ERO·Y
'

l itinC bontlo
VaUlt
jr, Beilevllle, 1!$0. por-

.
I~. anhiJ

.

t:t'"'

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clrtV

Yolllc)e; IIIII

....

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�</text>
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  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
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      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
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      <name>jaccaud</name>
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