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10 - . :Ji,O I)!!IIJ ~tool. P001eroy·Middleport, 0., l'rlday, April 11, 1969

Strident Fee Freeze
Written into Bill
COLUMBIIS (l'PI) - GOY,
Additlooally, the bill would
James A. llhcdes' promise to limit the 1971 enrollment oo the
Cteuze student tees and empha·~ central campuS ol the state's
site teclmlal education in Ohio five larger universities.
waa Included Thursdo,y in the
A $182.78 million copltal lmst~~Piemental approprlations bill provements program for techni-lntrodueed tn the Ilouse.
cal education facilities, covered

COLOO
c.utlon: 11li4 mol/on pklunl
· - , . kfpt out ol tho

roocholchlldrrml

1011 ... II¥BI
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DiC!&gt;! Wednesday
United Press lnternsHonal

t"Jron.mny jine....for lhe other guys .

WASIIINGTON- FU'TEEN SENATOIISand U lloussmembors
have
alped a tel0111'111l to President Nixon In protest to tho adml.,.
by reveille bonds protected with
latraUon'a
reported jlla111 to cloao doWn more tlu half of all Job
the p!"OIM)8ed 1'~ per cent ve.,.
Corps
centel-s.
dora' .excise tax, allo wu t.
Canw• at Ota.wa and Vesuvluo, Ohio, are Included In tho Ust or
cludsd.
Rep. Ralph E. Haher, R- ._led shuldOIJ!II. The tele~RD~ told Nlmn "we are deeply disWooster, Introduced the bill and turbed" to read of the planned eloslqrs and aaked hint to put orr nsaid It would be changed In sev- nal decision until oller congressional hearlnp oo poverty.

~

K~MALDEN

COLOR

em

"BILUON
DOLLAR BRAIN"

Charles Kelly, 64, Madison,
!nL, died r,WOdnesdo,y In Ki~a
DaUilfiters llo~rpllal, Midison, of
an -en! hll!lrt auaek. .
Boril J!IIY 9, lt!Oi In HArlan
Cormty, Ky,, he •waa formerly
'
eJq&gt;!o,yed
In Lopn County and
West Coiumbla. He was a foster
grandparent •t Loldn state HospitaL
'"
He Is survived bjo his wile,
Gratus Lee Smith Kelly; three
dsUgilters, Mrs. Maxine AI·
drldge, Mason; Opal Bootie and
Gloria Jean Johnson, Madison,
lnd.; three sons, Gerald, North
Hollywocd, ~~ John, l.a!IQ"etlo,
Ind., and CMrles Edward, Florida, alii one brother, William, of
Hartford, W. Va.
Frmeral service• wlil be held
Saturday at Gan's Funeral H0111e
In Madlaon.

a\11Uable federal higher eduea- Nixon aide lands $36,0IJO.a..year job
WASiiiNGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON has 111111ed Murray M.
tlon funds lncludsd.
Hearing Set
Chotlner, a dose politico! aide since Nixon's Orst vonturesln!D
uu ts a good vehicle to con- public o!Rco, to a 1136,000 - a - year Job as a trade lawyer.
ChoU~W6r wiU become general counsel lor the OMee of ~eclal
sider," Fisher said. Be iachalr·
man of the House Finlnce Can· Representative for Ti"ade 1\'ogotlatlons, TheJI ke.Y office which Ch&lt;&gt;mltlee and he Immediately ttner wUI represent as lawyer is the one which negotiates reclp~
scheduled a TUesday night cal trade agreements with other countries.
hearing on the bill
Combined with the omnibus Commie gunners hil amnw dump
SAIGON - COMMIJNIST GUNNEllS DESTROYED part of the
education bill, the state's con.
city
of Tay Nlnh early IDday with a barrage or rocket and mortar
trlbutlon to education In Ohio
that
eJQ&gt;Ioded 200 IDnB of am1111niUon with heavy casualties. It
lire
during the next two yean would
WORltER KILUD
be oearly $1.6 biUion, .., $361 W8s one of 45 shelllq:s duriq: the night- heaviest In three ,..ks.
PIQUA, Ohio (UP!) - WOOfficials In Tay Nlnh, 60 miles northwest of Sataon and only a
million over preaent levels.
Sbr bills were passed by the few miles &amp;om the cambodlan border, said nil&gt;! civilians were kill· llam Lee Smith, 25, Upper Sanlegislators Thursdo,y before they ed and more than 90 soldiers wourlled, five oC them Amerlc&amp;nl. AD- dusio', was electrocuted Thursday when a crane ooar which
other 50 South Vietnamese soldiers were reported miosiq:.
recessed for the weekend.
he was standing came In cooThirty bills were introduced
tad with a power line.
in the House, and six in the
Se111.te. N e x t Tuesday, the
House formally cuts ort free InJUDGE SATISFACTORY
troduction of bills and wUl
COLUMBUS (UP!) - 0 h I o
screen any legislation proposed
&amp;lpreme Court Chief Justice
before it is lntroduced, so they
Kingsley Taft, 65, was In satismay begin the downhill work of
fsctol")' condltloo at University
getting pending bills out of the
Hospital today following surgery
way.
Thursday for
. ,.a detached retina.
Limit Enrollments
Fisher's s..,plemental approFT. JACKSON, S.C. (UPO- political spies ond provocateurs
priatiOns blll would limit en-If the reports are correctrollments at the loliCMing state The young prhoate from Dllnols
SERVICES HELD
was one or the most articulate and think the government has
universities: Bowling Green
oo
right
to
Introduce
spies
and
BELLEFONT
AJNE, Ohio (UP0
(15,000); Kent (20,000); Miami and ootspoken eriUc s of U.S.
provocateurs Jnto groups engag- - Funeral senlcea were held
(15,000); Ohio (20,000) and Ohio policy In Vietnam.
When the uGis Against the lng In acto protected 1&gt;1 the IDday ror Fred Foermrr, 79, a
State (30,000).
World War I vetkan and former
War In Vietnam" held one of Its First Amendment." he said.
N111e of the schools currently
The
Army's
spokesman,
actLogan
COII!It;y !JIOrif! lor t e n
meetings, Pvt. John Huf!man
surpass the pnrposed limit.
generally was in the forefront or lng Public Information O!ficer years.
Rhode&amp; would freeze underRobert Ingram, was cryptic and ·
graduate Instruction fees at $150 the dlscu881ons.
Thus It was not surprising evasive about just when and
par quarter and would eilrnlnate
thet when nine members of the how arllman came to be on the
out-of-state student subsidies
group were arrested In nearby Army's side.
and lncrease certain in - state
He answered with a nat 'tno"
Columbia last month the soldier
student subsidies at Ohio lnotiwUh the most charges against when asked If the Army had
tutlons.
By United Preaa lnternatiOIIII
him was I!Ulfman, 19, of oak planted Hultman In the group,
The bill would mandate techCampuses a.crou the ration
and
seemed
to
leave
open
only
Park, Dl.
nical eGI.cation programs at
raced
student strikes and
What was surprising was thet a posslblllcy that llul!man had
state colleges, which woold be
the Army revealed Tlarrsda.Y turned on his eompanlons alter boycotts tAflal In the W8ke of
crested under a bill previously
violent c~tions with poo
Huffman was an informer the arrest.
Introduced in the Senate.
Uce
- the Easter vacation was
However,
a
prepared
stateagainst the "Gia." It said the
Completes Educstlon Package
over.
ehargeo against Huf!man had ment said defense lawyers had
With Introduction of the sup.
Protesters at'-Harvan:l Univerbeen dlamlssed and he had been been told o!!lclally thet Hull'plemental financing bill, the ad01 acting on behalf of
sity
Thursdo,y called lor a
man
was
transferred to 111111ther unit (lt
ministration's educational packthree-&lt;111,)1
strike as their rari&lt;a
the
command,
..
which
in
one
refused to say which).
liP . was. ~OJilllleted.
swoJled
frOIII
a few hundred to
Attomeye tot the other "Gis" lllterl!retation would Indicate
Included In the package were
promptly cried foul. Attorney that Huffman was a "plant" or around 2,000 aller pollee broke
bills to:
Thomas D. Broadwater said the an agent for the Army's up an occupation at the
- Create state colleges, state
Army had compromiaed Its ease Criminal lnvestigatton Division. AdmlnlatraUon Bulldlq:.
campuses, university branches,
'
Naarly 200 ·wore
arrested and
Hull'man was arrested March
by planting an ••agem:•• among
etc,
the defendents In violation of 23 while talking to other at least 30 inJUred In the dawn
- E~ish a slate board of
tho cllent.attorney relatioashlp. members of the anti-war group pollee sweep into the bulldlng.
school and' college registration
Melvin Wul!, legal director of at the 14UFO, u a Columbia Most were later released on
and re~P~~ate conduct of schools
the American Civil Liberties coll'eehouae which serves as persoml recognizance.
lor protlt.
Led By SDS
Union, 8tronii.Y protested llulf. heacQ,aarters for "Gis Against
- Eliminate differences be.
The
demoostrators,
led by
the
War.n
man's activity.
tween various l)pes of public
uwe condemn the use ot
school districts and make them
conform to a single title of

Accused Of
Spy Plant

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36 PAGES

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ot the Millers•

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Martin.

MRS. EARL S. PARKER, 315 Slate St., Newburglr, Ind., writes
asking help &amp;om Meigs Countlans on tha C.ade family hiatory.
Mrs. Parker knows that Joel CasU., born mi Dec. 30, 1751, at
Waterbury, Connecticut, moved to Meiga County and died In Bedford Townshlj! on Jan. 10, 1837.
Mrs. Parker asko all)'ooe having all)' Information on thellmily
to write her.
BEAUTICIANS FROM TWO POMEROY shq)a will be on lwlnd tho
evening of AprU 26 to asslat tha 15 contestanta In the Miss SO!Itharn
Ohio Pageant prepare for the three aegments of the pageant. They
are Judy Coster of the Faahloo Beauty Shop and Karen Ljlons &lt;if•
lola' a Beauty Salon.
The two wUl be joined by Mrs. Martha Struble, veteran Big
Bend Minstrel backstage chairman, and Mrs. Clarice Krautter and
Mrs. Theresa Swatzel from Xi Gamma Mu Chapter of Boto Sigma
Phi who will be slvlng the conteatants a moot welcome helping hand
also.

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"April showers bring May flowers," but a
visit to our bank- a Full Service bankbrings action now! It's because this is a Full
Service bank that all of the modern personal, family and business banking services
you need are here in one place ... at your
command ... now!

Use one, use all ol our services NOW!

11

PO EROY

NATIONAL BANK
POMEROY

RUTLAND

Serving Meigs County for

Member Federal Resave System
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
All Accounts Insured Up To $15,000.00

I

OPEN FRIDAy NIGHTS 5 TO 7PM

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-Rewrite administration and
slate financing of public schools
In OhiO.
- Provide lnstractlonal grants
to eolle~ students.
- Earmark certain 111011e1 lor
higher ..,cation and embark
on development of a master
plan lor hl(her educatiOD In
Ohio.

VETERANS MEMOWAL
HOSPITAL
ADMISSIONS- VIrginia Salin,
Rutland; Bess cassel!, MkldlePcirt; Beatrice Smith, RutlaDI.
DISCHARGES - Vernle Davis, Lu&lt;ille Lambert, Mltzarm
Wolle, Ethel Phelps, Kay Dod-

derer.

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

Pedwin adds a little luxury
with a richly antiqued leather, and gives you

-

the shoe made for movin' out wijh today"s fast·
paced action crowd. See them today.

s18·99
BLAST
liNG TIP

BLACK
BROWN

.........." ...

THE SHOE BOX

~-"' f!J!lltPta· s-. l!f
thoae In the biilldlni called for il

~

WOULDN'T THAT "JAR" YA?- P0111er01 antlque :colleetor Albert Mertln is
pictured with a •
jar carved 6'0111 a sandstone. Tho Jir was recently uneovered
when a prden plot was being prepared at tile Marlin IMine on Cocdor St.

lab.

S...sl~lr Prict4

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

M~lgs

fast, but gills of food wore
accepted, apJBrertb gratefUlly,
as Thursday wore Dn.
CHARGID WlfH Lrl'TERING
Ronald Re,)'lloida, ~,
was
Thursdo,y by Pomeroy poUee on a charge fll U~
terlns streell. He will appear In
~or Charlea Logar's court.

arre-

count_y men were

inducted Into the armed forces
an:i 14 others went Cor pre-Induction physicals in the April
call, the local !\elective service
board reported today.
Reporting ror lndu~!!on were
Gerald S. Eblin, Edward D. Reece
and Clinton M. Dlq:uss. Going
for physicals were Robert w.
Crow, Willis H. Durst, Thomas
D. Wickline, Rick W. LltUe,John
W. Adams, DaVId 0. Michael,
Richard K. Douglas, carl E.
Sbenefteld, Michael T. Marelnko,
Joseph R l'reeman, Roger R.
Black, Mark A. TUlia, Larry
R stobart and Gerald E. Broob.

OPEN BOTH FRIDAY AND
SATURDAY NIGHTS TIL 9:00
It's housecleaning lime ggain and Elberfelds are
headqtu~rlers for all your housecleaning needs - Glidden
interior and exterior paints - Clean and Omar Wal1J141per
Cleaner - Murphy Oil Soap - Blue Lustre
Carpet and Upholstery Cleaner - Polish
and Dust Mops - Wet Mops - Sponge
Mops - Brooms - Pails - Ollen Cleaners
- Window Cleaners - Room
Deodorizers - Moth Crystals
- Plastic Garment Bags Shoe Bags - Glory Rug
Cleaner-Penny Brite Copper
Cleaner - Cellulose Sponges
- Solvtnlol - Rubbennaid
Sin~ and Stove !lals - Dish
Drainers - Cutlery Trays Shelf Liner - and Bathroom
Accessories.
In dte "Drapery DeJ141rlmenl
on the ·2nd noor · - ' New
Curtains and Dr~penes Throw Rugs ~ Hoover Sweepers
and Shalllpooer,s- BedsptUds
.. p,ijlows ~ Co.uch and Chair

River Gauges
GAUGES - GaUipo]is, 12.3
and 23.0 r111ning 40 feet of rollera; Pt. Pleasant, 25.50; PomerfJ1 - Maooo, 23.97; Hlntlln, 1.81
ataL; Kanawha Fallo, 4,88 atat.;
Charleston, 111.25 ataL London,
Mannet, and Wlnfield, are on
tho sUL
GRANT APPROVID
WASIIING'fON (UP!) - T h e
Federal Water Polluu.i.i Control
Aclmlnlstrailon ThuradiQ" _....
ed a $750,000 grant to" Albtabula, Ohio, to help build waate
treatment !acllltles.

Covers - Lamp )_fta,~es - Curtain Rods - Prapery Rqds Window Shadd

MEIGS 'lilfATIE
TONIGHT THRU THURSDAY
April 11 • 17 ·
CANDY
(Technlcolor)
Charles AJ.ravour
Marian Brando
COi..ORCARTOOllS:
Think or Sink

•n~·· 11"""1k "' ·~t~:~:rlt

SPEAKER'S TABLE - Amoru those seated at the speaker's table at Oscar's
Friday night where 45 COIIImunlty leaders met to discuss posslbilltles of a YMCA
pfolect for the GoUla Ccrullt;y area are, loll to rlglrt, Richerd Danner, Dale SellsliUry, !ild,p Meodows, or the GaUipolls Areo Jll,lleeea, Bl'II10 V. Ottavi, YMCA execu.
live, Colmnbus, and Chlrlea Fulko, chairman of the J11eeea - sponsored proJect.

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Chairman Appoints Actwn Committee
It's Housecleaning Time •••

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jar -

- hal
fll tile
Albert

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Entering·School

:,&lt;.'''

Into Armed Forces
Three

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Four Boys Seen

The demonstrators occ"'ted
the building late Wedneado,y,
calling for an end to war
research by the Stanford

Three Men Inducted

8chool dlstrtct."

MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
ADMI&amp;SIONS - None.
DISCHARGI'l&gt; - None1

over 97 years

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Slate
lfl8llila.Y Safety Director "Warren c. Nel100 said today traffic aeel-oln Ohlodurln&amp;the
past three yeara have ldlied
7,688 psriOIII.
''That dealll toll Just about
matebeo thepopulaUon flli.eba11011, my borne lmm, N Nelson
said.

¢!Iango~.

~-~~----~------~~~
, ~-· 't Pleal&amp;llt
PRICE TEN ctN1S

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DIIICOVored (pllte by accldont While a pr. don plot was being prepared, the jar a mUI, or mortar, If It does date back to
the .. do,ya of the moundbuilder - wslgba
IJOIIIOWhero between !50 and 200 pounda.
standing about 20 lqehes tall, tho jar
baa a diameter of between 18 and 19 Inch•• varying In cllfferont spots and has a
five and ~ Inch ~m. Thickneu
of the jar's walla varies from two and
lhree.fourtha to three Inches.
The aged mill has Indentations oo the
outalde leading Martin - an antl~e collector - to believe that they are Identification marks of the Individual or tribe
which owned the mill.
Tho home at which the mill was fourKl
was built In 1894 and it has been known
as the WUdermuth property for years. Mrs.
Sarah Koehler, also a resident of CooOOr
a.. lived In tho home from the time she
was 10 years old for a mmber of year&amp;.
She has no knowledge of the Jar, the IDP
of which was discovered about a fool rmder the ground's surface.
Martin has been checking through mmeroua books in an attempt to learn more
about his find.. However, information ts
difficult to obtain.
Already Martin has received an offer
to sell the jar but turned down the offer.
He wants to do more research and atudy
and would prefer to present the piece if 1t is rare and authentic - to a museum
where It would be &lt;if cultural value.
Meantime, Martin Is planning an excursion ln!D the rock terrain at tho rear o1
his home with the thnugjrt that, perhapo,
more such roUes might be discovered.

new daughter on

on the Paclnc Coaat, Stanford
Univerelty otllelala and 801118
200 student and faculty member
demonatratora emtlllled to
O&lt;C\GIY a campus electrlllllca

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BY BOB HOEFLICH
POMEROY - A buge IIBDIIposslblt created by .........Udera
been IIIICOVered In the back yard
C&lt;lndor St. home of Mr. rmd Mrs.

March 21. She's been 111111ed Michele Renee. Mr. and Mra. MUier
hove another daughter, Mollasa Roe, three.
Other gra.q,arenta are Mr. and Mrs. !'red MUier or Defiance.

Students for a Demoeratlc
Society (SIJS), demanded I
binding ra!orendum oo whothar
to retain the Reserve Ollicors
Tralnlq: Corps at the achool,
lCMer rents at school housing
acd an end to destrucUon of
homes In the campus area.

-:mer ....... .. ..

· i_U ncovered·in Garden Plot

NAOMI CHASE HOWELL, formerly of Rutland, writes that she
and Judge HOifoU, Galllj!olla, hove returned lane &amp;om visiting Mra.
Howell's daughter, Judy, and husband, Jerry Miller, In Waxahachie,
Texas.
The occasion wu the arrha!

o.,

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~erne nortloolat It flit·
70s IICI!IIhwest .IIQIII&amp; l!ioelllr
. lair ....
Lows!!1the40a.-•..._•-.
lneP with l!Uie l.tqlei I

!\ECriGNS

•'?

~tone Age Tool, Perhaps,

Campuses Facing Boycotts ·

WE'RE MUCH FASTER
THAN APRIL SHOWERS!

/

~·~Y:-0-L-.I_V_N_0___1_1_ _ _ _ __ :____:Po~me~ro.::..~-MI~ddl:::..epo_rt_ _-:-_--:-----:S-:UN:-=DA-:-Y:-:-.--:A-:!P-::R/:-L-:-:13:-..:-::19;:-;6:;-9--------"-''"·•.
Youngaters of the school
of the POIIIei'O)' Elementary".
School will be on P&lt;111eroy streets Sa~ cbaervlng ttg day.
Purpose of the ac\lvicy li .to raloe Ill!' lind"$200 neOtied by th~·
youngstera to make their annual trill to Waahingtoll D. C.
~ctuolly, much ·credit Ia due to tho patrol young people. I thl~
It's aato tir siiJI that they've saved children
being killed or .
ma..ed in accidents during the school year. Their contributions to
tho eommun!Q&lt; have added liP so !)frhaps, Saturday, you wUI aee to
It that the cootrlbutlona from the eommunlcy to them add .., also.
The· otudents taking part In Saturday's drive will do a houhouso canvass tn addlilon lo being In the business ioctlon. Buslnass
houses are a "no, no" but contributions would be welcome. U all)l
business wlshea to cODtrlbute the -lion should be sent to Robert
Morris, principal, at the Pomeroy Elem-ey School.
The Y00118f!ters have worked dla'lng the past wl~ to help
raise the amount needed for the trill but are short now that It' a time
to Pill up,

. di,y. lllift~ frD!I&gt;· ~low

lJevoled To Tlae Gi'etJUr Middle Ohio Valley

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iully IIIII I U W . - ....

·lttt·

tmts

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eral areas Wl1h adJustments tor

TONIGHT, SAT. &amp;SUN., APRIL 11·12-13

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Charles Kdly

Sllu Weir Mitchell s a 1 d,
upeathts· but one more tomorrow."

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Thoughl~

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Jefferson--Jackson
~y

Dinner ~ed

·Charles Fulka, a Jaycee Interested In
the project, prealded. Fulks and hla committee bepn ef(orta to eslobllah a ''Y''
here over three months agu. Frldo,y'a aesslon was held to determine If work should
be eootlnued on the proJsct.
Namea to the committee were Dr. Gone
Abels, James A. Beverly, D. Kenneth Morgan, c. Ropr Barron, and Mrs. WUma
Brown. Fulkl will asslrt the conunlttee.
Bruno V. Ottllvi, asalstanl area executive fll the Oldo-Well VIrginia Area CouneU (YMCA), COiumws, waa oae Ill the
principal speakers Frldo,y.
Ottavl traced the hisli017 ~ the "Y,"
Ita requfromenta, and the eoats Which must
be met in order to asiiUre Its sueceat.
Dr. Francia W. Shane,GalllaCcrull\YHealth
commtsalonor, spoke on what a YMCA would
mean to resldentl nf tbla community.
!ldjr Meacklws, and. Fulks reviewed recent sui'Veya -&lt;ted by the .Ja,yeeea oo
e~llshiq: a YMCA •.
The ·newtt.tormed eommiU.O will hold
ita fir at aeulon In the Gallipolis C I t 1
Building Thurado,y,

21-Ye$r-Old Woman
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GALLIPOLIS- Clcy police have a mysteey on their ·hands. Who was In Gallia Aeadeiii.Y High School at 12:26 a.m. Saturda,y? Tho
answer- nobody.
Because that was the time pollee were
called by Principal ·.unes N. M. Davis. The
principal hod been called by a woman on
Fourth Ave., who saw theentirecperatlonbut
walled until alter the lour boys hod gone belore she reported I~
The unldentlned caller asld two cars
pulled.., In lront o!the high aehool, lour boys
got out and went In the tront door 011 the
Fourth Ave. side or the schooL
Police said they _.-ently had tohavea
key to Lhe building and the selence roon1 on
the second noor. One or them had a black box
and smnething under his coat, according to~
llee.
Chlel ol Pollee John T~Jior said an II&gt;
vestlption reveoled that apparently nothing
was miaolq:. They even turned llgbtl on In
the building, Chief Taylor said.
The Incident wasrecordedatpolleeheecl&lt;luarlerl u a breaklrv and enterill!l' The t...
vestlgation continues. ()t could have been science students who were )iarticlpating In the
Slate Science Fair Sa~ at Columbus.
They might .hove been leaving lor Columbus
early and "gone Into the science room lor
amnethlng.)

FEDER,U,MOGUL PLANT NEARING COIIPLETIO!I Work on GaUia Ccrullt;y'a new leduotrialplant, Foderai-MCIIIUI,
lo -~ completion. Work on the structure began on Nov. 11,
1968. The plant, when COO!Pieted, will produce aulD parts 1&gt;1

Museum In
Sumnier o.f
'69 Possible
POMEROY - The Meigs Councy Pioneer
and IUsiDrlcal Society Musenm can be a
reality thla summer.
A group or Meigs COUI!t;y men and women, beilevlng this, bepn last week workIng with tho
Society President, Edison
Hobstetter, and Finance Committee Chairman, Thereon Jotmsm, to raise a sizable
portion of $70,000 needed by the time of
the ~arterly meeting of the Society. This
meeting will be held Thursday, April 17,
at 1:30 p.m. In the dining room of the
Meigs Coull\)' Infirmary on Mulberey Heights.
Plans for the 40' x 80' museum building,
32' x 611' rental oft'iee space to provide
operational costs, and 24' x 46' enb'ance
hall, toilet and mechanical fac:Uides area
were completed last summer by Everett
Ray Johnson, a Meigs COUDt;y son, now an
architect In Columbus.
The society already has a SO..year renewable loaoe from llle Meigs County COmmiaslmers on a triangular piece or ground,
198 feet bjo 355 feet, .91 acres, at the
mrlheast eomor of the Meigs County Home
~-~ ,.

-y;

.•..::·

·t..... v

new proeeaa - l'lbrleatloo fr1lm pcJIIdored - . , ApproJI.
mately ISO indtvld..t• will be OJIW]01ed illllle 62,000 aquaro

a

loot structure. OMclals hq&gt;o to be In operation IOIIIe time next
moRh.

or

AUied Structural Steel Co., lfam.
10~ taU Oootiq: derrick oo
barges oil tile Ohio shore Thursdo,y 01 w o r k on the ne• Ohio River bridge between H-.-son, W.
Va., and Kanauga. The Orm erected a similar tower
., the Weot Virginia shore seven! w - qo. 'The
towers wlil be used In erecting tile Dlalft part of the
a..,.ratructure steel on the new bridge. Workera oo
right are awaiting a shipment of c:oncrete !rom
Jenldn.o Concrete Co. Work on the piers is.,.••
to be completed bjo mid-.lune. The ...,.rstrucis elQ&gt;Octed tobeftnlshedbj&gt;O&lt;L 1. The 1,950-foot
providl~ there are no delays, Ia eJpOctod to be
to tramc 1&gt;1 Dee. 31 thla yoar. Coat r:l the ,......,
llnleturewtll
.
-- ,
WORKERS

mong, IDd., erected a

...

II &amp;110 has an agreement with a )1ullder
that constractlon could be completed lor
$125,000, or less.
CommiUoomlll IIIIo have already agreed
to uslst In soliciting funds include Leo
stoey, Mr. and Mrs. Pal Lo&lt;hary, Earl
(Continued on Page 2)

Annual Kickoff Event
For Cancer Drive Set
GALLIPOLIS - The 8llllllal klekoll meetIng for etty team eaptalna and workers ofthe

Galila COUI!t;y Cancer Crusade will be held
Momlq, beginning at 7:30 p.m., In the Grace
United Methodist Church.
Dr. James Orr, general chairman of the
1969 cancer drive, will show a training
Rim, and distribute literature to Individuals taking part In tho campalgo.
~ Mulllos is chairman of the city
drive. Members of the GaUipolls Junior
Women'a Club ue serving as captain&amp; again this year.

A progress report 111 the 1969 cllJIIPIIIn
will be released leter thla week aceordlng
to Dr. Orr. This year's goo] Is $5,800.
Tho eOUI!t;y kicked off Its llmd-ralalng drive
last Mmdo,y.

Racine Firemen Reach For $7,000 Mark in Drive
RACINE - The Racine Volunteer Fire nations are still being aceepled. and that tile
Department'• drive to raise $7,000 lor the truck will not be bought untO all ibe 111011e1
p&amp;rcbase of a new truck has reached the is on hand. Money.roaldng projects, includIng weekly gun shoots, are being held by tile
$1,800 mark.
The department, meanwhile, eald that do- department to attain the gool.

�'

.! .-::- Th8 Su.~ T!~e:-Sent!ne!, .&amp;\~, '.DriJ 13, 1969

..

'.' I

~:

\ ' ·· ~ P·

-

)

I

...,1,

MEIGS

COUNTY
EVERETT

Meigs Museum
,/

(Cootlnued from Jllll!e

I)

Clark, Wallace Bratlord, Roy Miller, Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Sauer, Vernon Weber,
Fred Goegleln, and c. E. Blakeslee. Others

are Invited to assist.
Meanwhile, the trustees oC the Society
this past week received notice al the (J.Iar-

RAY

HISTORICAL

MUSEUM

JOHNSON

ARCHITECT

I

terly meeting and are being encouraged to Horace Karr, Clarence Price, Gordon CaJd.
contact friends and relatives, both In the well, H. E. Shields, John Duerr, Wallace
count,y and those living ootside the eooncy. Bradford, Purley Karr, Earl Clari&lt;, Dr. R,
Trustees include Harold Lohse, Fred Crow, E. Boice, Fred Blaet1nar, Rcmey Downing,
Ian Howell, Gene Grate, Mrs. Thomas Yoong, Theodore T. Reed, Jr., Thereon John11011,
.Mrs. Lester Hart, Manning Webster, Vernon Helen Cli!Jlll, Pauline Atldns, Betty Milhoan,

Nease, carl Bi!lkan, EdisonHobstetter, C,E, DoUy Hayes, and Virginia Thoren.
Blakeslee, Seth Nicholson, George Genhei-

mer, Leo Story, Fred Goeglein, w. P, Loch~ The honorary trustee is Mrs. J. W. Hersch.
ary, Howard Frank, Gladys Morgan, Vilma er, widow oC the late J. W. Herscher, mu.

Plkkoja,

Robert Elberfeld, Ben Ewing, seum fUnd beneractor.

Fund is Launched For Pfc. Epling

PENTAGON CRrriCIZED
Ci..EVELAND (UPI)- U.S. &amp;lpreme COurt
Jusilce WilHam 0. Douglas said here the
Epling works as a nurses aide at Pleasant ''Pentagon has gone to greatJengthstomake
Valley Hospital.
peace a subversive word." Douglas, who
The address o! Pic. Epling, who sill! spoke at the Case Western Reserve University

POINT PLEASANT - Nurse (Smitt,y) Mrs.
Harriet Smith, H. N., o! Pleasant Valley Hospital Staff, has started a ftmd for a portable
TV set for Pic. Miles S. Epling, a Point will have months ot rehabilitation Is, Pfc. Law School, said the Pentagoo has "about
Plessant youth injured last month In Viet- Miles S. Q&gt;llng, 246 1385, Ward M, U. S. one lobbyist for every two or three congressnam, who underwent more surgery Friday Naval Hospital, PhUadelpbta, Pennsylvania, men•' in its campaign to sen the anti-ballistic
to prepare bolh legs for artificial limbs. 19145,
missile system.
Teresa Ball coUected funds at the Point
Pleasant High Friday lor Pic. Q&gt;llng. Friends

LAKE TO BE QRAINED
COLUMllUS (UPI) - The Department or

DIES IN 2-CAR COLLISION
lnd neighbors o! Mrs. Freda Q&gt;llng, No. 3
URBANA,
Ohio (UPI) - A two - car Natural Resources announced today that
Burdette AMltion. are also collecting moncollision
on
U.
S. 68 about two miles south ~ring Valley Lake near Xenia would be
ey for Mrs. Epllng to visit her son. Mrs.

o! here late Friday claimed the life or drained cllring Aprll for major dike repairs.
Norman Smith, 33, ii}&gt;rlng!leld.
ffiONTON WOMAN KILLED
KILLED IN COLLISION
NEW SOC!r.TY PRESIDENT
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (UP0 - Slleila WilVAN WERT, Ohio (UPI) - Larry E,
COLUMBUS (UPI) - J. A, Meckstroth, Grubb, 24, Van Wert, was killed saturday
""'· 21, Ironton, was killed late Friday In a
single car accident on old U.S. 52, about sev-

Columbus, Is the new president of the 5,000

en miles east ot here.

member Ohio Historical Society.

when his car collided with a tractor~ailer
truck oo U, s. 30 near here.

~,tion:,.,_ -,.ldill~ ::&amp;iitrliSP

at
succeeds Burt MiUa,
edllor lnd pubilsher d. the Well·

ston Somlnel.
Other SEONA olllcers elected
lor the 1969-70 term ,..re Charlea Reamer, Athena, first vice

president; Robert Dlx, Martino
Ferry, second vice preslderi,
and Allltln Tumbell, Athena, sec-

rellry.
AJIProxlmately 15 SEQ new spa.
permen were OD hand for the afternoon business session.
Alter an hour ~ 41 ahop talktt
1he newsmen dlseussedJIO&amp;I!Itbiii-

dlcatlng that whoever broke the
mirror apparenUy cut himself,

The aherilf's department Is Investigating. No other unusual incidents or breaking and enter-

night

Besides being Meigs Junior
Miss of 1968, Miss Holter was

polis, lorfeited
speeding.

Twice Saturday

Forfeiting bonds on clcy pollee
17, Gallipolis, $17.50,

Gallipolis, and Sandy L, Roberts,
17, Rt. I Gallipolis, bolh $22,50
bonds lor speeding; and Pldlllp
Roberts, 17, Gallipolis, $28, failure to .Yield the right of wa,y.
BATTLE FffiE
GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis volunteer firemen battled a 15-acre

Woman Admitted

Dr. Hortin, who served as must remain objective because

SEQNA'o secretaq lor 16years, 10meone must be the spdies..
man of sanity in this schizo-.
phrenic era.
'"The prime need ot society
Is a clear, cold light to illuiJli ..

nate the problems or the day and
challenge man to solve them. u
Ohio President Vernon R, AJ.
den ,Presented the award to Gallqller lollowlng lntnNiuctory ...,

Fire Spreads

Out from Brush
GALLIPOLIS - Eight volunteer nremen and two trucks made
a run at 1:20 p.m.Frldaytopropercy on Bob McCormick Rd., owned by CecU Cook, Rt. I GaUipo.
lis, three.fourtba or a mile north
fll Rt, 588.
Firemen said the fire started
In a pile ot brush and spreed to
alljolnlng grass. The blaze Involved only one-half acre. On the
way back to the station, nr ...

For Broken Hip

GALLIPOLIS - !lira, Hazel
G. Rusaeu, n, Rt. 1 Middleport, was admitted to Holzer
Medical Center, First Ave., at
13:50 p.m. Friday with a fractured left hip, !Ito was JnjJred
when sile !ell In Elberfeld's De-

brush lire m a blllslde back ot
Cottage I at the Gallipolis State
lnsiltute. 'Ibe cause Is Wldetermlned. Two trucks made t h e
run. II was tho 54th !Ire nm of
the year lor local firemen.
Store at Pomeroy.
Dmald E. Williamson, 15, RL
2 Wei!ston, was admitted to the
hospital at 9 a.m. with a head
Injury. He was Injured whell be
apparently tainted and loll at
WeUston !Ugh School.

~ent

ONE WEEK
SUNDAY- SATURDAY
APR. 13-19

MEIGS THEATRE .

COM!l'l'iJtK, _,., Publillher ol the Weal vlr.JIIIa
pooes with Tlmes-SenUnal statler Dick Thomas, left,
.€hester 'i)nnetaiU during Frlcjoy night's anillal
Ohl!&gt; Newspiper Association and Sil!ll1&amp; Del·
dinner meetilw held at the Ohio Unlverslcy Inn. Com-

r~~~;J~::;:.•t Oldo Unlverslcy Sa~y: 0~1~'

TONIGHT TllRU THURSDAY
April II· 17
CANDY
(Technlcolor)
Charles Azmvour
Marian Brando

POMEROY-- The Pomeroy
Vohmtoer Fire Department responded to alarms twice Saturday afternoon to betUe brush
fires along Route 7, In the vlclnlf3' fll the Sllenanp ~·
Nile Club, oo propercy report.
edcy owned by the Goeg!aln Coal
Co.
Fire Department olllclals said
aboot l'h acres of brush area
was burned olf. The first call
was received at 1:27 p.m. and
then the firemen returned tD the
scene at 4:30 p.m.
•

·
.

"

''

SJf.Vf: MCa.Jf:EN

AS ~oo• 1111.,

I!J_,;,._...,.IIB_.,_.....-IOIIIIIISO.

•

______c_a_n_oo_N______ ~

Goes on like it
wants to be seen!

-

IIAIUII -AM

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

c.utlon:""'-""""'"
lhouldbo /roptout DIIIM

- • have been Important;
and could be deatructl•e to his
AdmlnlllrAil orer Washlngtoo, allover
Congreos and alllllrooqJII the comllllllill o!electedRopubllcanpollUcianl there Ia undenlablecoolu·
sloo •• to where the AdmlnlatraUoo reo1l,y stands.
Do the esiODIIall,y bland a n d
IOothinll aboervatlans ol Socr&amp;tary d. State WDIIam Rogers
apeak the Pre~• mind lnd
alma on foreign and military
policies? Or 11 the gerulne article coming Instead from such aa
llo&lt;retaq fll Defense Melvin
Laird lnd the Republican lesders
fll Congrese? This Is primary,
and urgent.
And seeonclarlly lnd Ieos ur-

does the rather liberal
Robert Finck, the Secrelal')' ot
Health, Education and Wollare,

gont!J,

or the c:cmservatJ.ve Art.htD' Burna
Bl the White !louse, rellect t h e
President'i true purpoees Cll do-

melllic matters?
In truth, It would be eai,Y to
present the poBitlon within the
Admlnlatratloo as one fll actuol

disarray. But while this would
make clramaUc reading, of the

WORLD ALMANAC
PACTS

BRUCE BIDSSAT

Denture Gagging
Not a Real Probelm

Nixon Seeks Missing Ace
In Pack of Co-ordinators

By WILLIAM LAWRENCE, D.D.S.
DEAR DR. LAWRENCE :
I've had false teeth since
1957 but can't wear them.
As soon as I put them In my
mouth, I gag. What shall I
do? -Mrs. Norma S.
ANSWER: Dentists a r e
guided by specific rules In
denture making in order to
eliminate gagging, but a
true gagger is a problem.
Some peeople are so marked·
ly affected that even the
sight of a denture triggers
uncontrolled gagging.
So you can see It's dillicult to tell you what to do.
But I can tell you how ONE
cas~ .was ~uccesslullY tr'at- ·
ed.
Frank K, a professor, 60,
needed a full upper denture.
"Immediate denture technique" was used: the few
remaining upper teeth were
extracted and the denture
was placed in his mouth
Immediately alter.
Everything went well. Extractions and bone-trimming
w e r e quickly, neaUy and
painlessly done. The denture
went into place perfectly and
looked great.
But, you know what they
say, " . .. the operation was
a succ~ss but the paUent
. . . Professor K sue·
cumbed. He gagged till he
was blue in the face. He just

By BRUCE IIOSSAT
NEA Washington Correopondent
WASHINGTON (NEAl
The Wblte House under President Nixon has plenty of
co-ordinators but very little real cCHll'dlnaUon.
. The plain fact is that nowhere on the large Wblte House
$If today js there a man wbo at once helps to set major
domellilc policy, is widely recognized throughout the
Nixon establishment as speaking for the President In this
lleld, and possesses the administraUve drive and skill tD
make effective the decisions that Dow !rom the power
center.
The lack is begiDnlng to be realized more acutely with
the passing weeks. Yet, since the staJ! is already so large
and so 1aaen with prestigious t~s, there is no move
afoot right now to &amp;o . outsi(W. m . s~~ of a suitable
·~·tor • . .
«·li:~, aa' prlnted, that the P~!ldenl wao more
Uwt''4JJille uptel .at the fallue of eommonlelllon amHJ
1111 deparlment beado and alatr people •• th'll afleeted Ida
reeei&amp; public: statement oa campuo rebellion and atudenl
freedom.
It Ia also true that John Ehrliehman, deputy eoUllllelln
the Wblte House, was thereupon given new responsibility
to try to provide better co-ordinaUon.
But he has not thereby automatically emerged as the
long-needed master co-ordinator.
For one thing, Ehrlichman Is not deeply versed in the
raw substance of domestic issues, as an elective policy·
maker-administrator needs to be. Nor Is he said to be
elaborately endowed with the kind of diplomatic skill required ol the man who must set or convey policy and make
It workable-If not wholly palatable-at department or
othef agency levels.
'l'bla eould cbaap, U he lulll oat Ia be a quiet llady.
Bat be II a lone way from beiDJ Mf. Big today.
The mere fact thai the President found It necessary to
lri!t over co-ordination Is the proof that other persons and
mechanisms have not worked.
Dr. Arthur Bums; billed as the &lt;hie! domestic programer, has the knowledge, the President's high regard,
and some critical status. But this bespectacled, pipesmoking economlat Is not the man to ride herd on agency
beads or otherwise conduct himself as the top pusher.
As this column hes Indicated, Daniel Patrick Moynihan's jazzy generalizations and hJs steady boll·up of creative ideas have a certain unifying elfe&lt;t in Ids gearing up
of the Urban Atralrs Council. But Moynihan Ia not the
Cl'and co-ordinator, either.
• Flu1hermon, at leatt OH ley White
lltalthe whole eo1111&lt;U eaterprile Ia !aUlae
ljl&amp; devl&lt;e. The touneU'a weeklY -llltp
eGII\'enleal macldllery lor aa atrfrte of vtewa
lite tabiHI leaden and oilton. Bat lley
In lite way of nal pollc:y-MIIIItc

While presiding over the
opening of New York's
World Fail' on April 30,
1939, Franklin D. Roosevelt
became the first president
to appear on television,
The World Almana&lt; says.
From a platform overlook·
lng the Court of Peace,
Roo seve It dedicated the
Fair to international amity
and said America's wagon
was hltc:hed to the. Star of.
Peace..
" ' I •

MONDAY

J111tice u tu""'d b~U:k, and
. llteouaneJS st&lt;Jnd&amp; afar
o ; for truth has fallen in
public squares, and uprightneJS cannot enter. lNiah 59:14.

~

• • •

Justice Is as strictly due
between neighbor nations u
between neighbor citizens.
-Benjamin Franklin, Amer-

ican s atesman.

In forestry, deciduous
m e a n s leaf-dropping and

couldn 'I tolerate his denture,
· He kept Insisting that It
was too long. With each com·
plaint some ol the denture
material covering the palate
was cut back, but It didn't
help.
Do you know what finally
helpe&lt;I? Cutting away the
ent1re palate section, making
the d e n t u r e horseshoe
shaped.
Usually when this Ia done
dentures won't stay In plact
because "suction" is lost. In
this case It stayed perfectly.

hoW~ blmra,ltwOuldhaVe

tho nat lnconsldtrablo sborteom·
lop fll being bodi,y orerdraWn.
To be aure, too, the lorelp
policy soiWiners are buiQ', ••

alwaya, in ]IIIJIIplng lijl mortal di·
vlolons 'llllhln the cabinet that

are

ac:tually

rar

le••

HYete,

jilt a1 the,y are Uroleaal,)' premotlng opeculatlons d. some com-

nat ..,. be Nlxan _ . . . but
lor their am:lef3' II&gt; ketlllhla nation In a poeture ol ltrenath In
this world.
The dioairoctloo ~ lhllae telIowa Is neither tDta1 110r perma.
nent; but In thla mood there lies
an even greater danger tD the

Highest quality latex wall
paint. Higher hiding power.
Dries fast. Low odor. Resists staining. Easily wash·
able.

withdrawal fll Aliaertcan
troops In Vietnam, and so on.
All the oame, lnd making (Ue
allowance tor theae tested tech·
nlques d. themoreextremedovea
In lnd out of pollUcs, the rsal·
1ty stiU Is that the Admlnlstra.
t1ott Is Indeed not spoaldng with
a clear, a single and a compellIng voice. The trumpet blows an
uncertain nota, While this may
or ll1fl' nat ba true as to the general public, It Ia certalnl,y lnd
serloual,)' true as to the real
movers and shaken In nat1ma1
polllics.
. 111 these lellmrl the PresldaDt is seen as sill! so concerned tD placate the Left and to draw
the teeth fll the - Isolationists
- lnd quite naturall,y so, tD a
point - as to risk the alleoatlm
d. two vllall,y Irreplaceable
sources fll strength,
'Ibe llrst ol theae IJ'&lt;IUIII Ia,
starkly, !armed of the vary people who elected him In thellrst
place - who are, baalcai)J, the
Ing

Volerl

\

fll suburbon IJld DOIIII'ban

areas, 11 the RepubUcan Natlanal Commltteelteellhasjuatpolni.
ad out.

'Ibe aecond

l!fOIQ&gt;

Is made up

o! thosehard.&amp;ero amongDIIIIHIcra\8 In Congress, and notablr
lnd most uaeiW!y In the Senate,
who ,... not In thepaatandwould

Livestock Loans

·OHIO VALLEY BAN
~lllpolls
'Fr .. Customer Park·ing

r• [~;,;,,.;n Window S.rvico

Netherlands
are the
make up

•Complete Bonki11[J Service

SPRING

SALE

DEAR DR. LAWRENCE:
I need dentures but I gag so

easily I'm llfnld I won't be
a b I e- to sllind the lmpressions.-T. Bender.
ANSWER: I'm surprised
this old bu~aboo about impressions still lives. Except

I

for rare, rare cases, dentists

and

overcame this problem ages
ago. Gag areas are tempor·
arlly desensitized by "paint·
ing" them with topical novocain. When needed, tranquilizers are prescribed to help
"relax" patient.
Also of great help are less
bulky impression trays, new
techniques and new, quick
setting, pleasant-tasting impressfon materlala.

24140
STRIPES
PAITERNS
ASSORTED

SCATTER RUG
ASSORTMENT
VALUE

Lookfnl for
someoae
spedalt

In g.

Her time is
•
preCIOUS.

Her timepiece
must be

DECORATOR COLORS

! The net ollt, then, Is that the President has a lair cove,y

for

s

.

lr PHIL PASTOIET

'~How

did the

Get~e!Hl

gOwn, widetv 111ed bv Prot·

$5.99

nqme?
:A-The name
1a
ta~en from Its use in S~
er · nd In the time of John
Cavia.

"Gene...-·

-

...

The local oalaml foundry
advertises what we call
"been" soup. We're willing
to acree II was soup at one
lime, but just what It Is now
Ia whal we'd like to know.

Her ·choice?
A C•revelle.
ofcou.....

TUBING &amp; CASES

PLASTIC
TRASH

CANS.,

lt'l futeraa4

REG. $1.99

wllea 11•

• • •

LIIIT
2

-

ONe 1,1.8 , !]...u.ilrl

69e VALUE

•

"EVERYTHING TO BUILD

PILLOW

MON.
TUES.
ONLY

~

3801·01 .

STAMPED

20 GAL.

~ON·fEUOOWINO YJitiTf

.......

3.57 EA.

REG.
$1.77

he needs.
The hope at the moment seems to be that someone
already within the fold may develop to the command
llalure required. If this does not happen, Nlmn may be
forced In spite of all to 10 on the prowl-outside the Wblle
House-for a qualified domestic co-ordinator.

BAI!tBS

FOR$

SPRAY
STARCH

trustworthy.

01 co-ordinalot's, II theiJ' publlc or privately authorized
mandates are to be accepted. Bat be does not bave the

QUICit QUIZ

a- ..

4.98

coniferous means cone-bear·

,,

orthodox lloplbllcana wllo ,..,. 'li ·
been his nsiUral all~
For whea1t11 pi rfllll . . . tt
It, the 1•- Ia l'onllll 1811111111.

r--------------------,

• • •

r.t:.le

eslcnt clergJIIIII'II receive ill

one gallon ... only

.

tal')' pollclu at - - .-. ·
and hawk are llmjll,y nat . . ·
tlable; and .Pirll..nt l'rufdllo.
Ual atlenlpta to Dllko
Pres~ than In the percept!. 11111 be lldl,y llllf..Weatlac Ia. .
~
ble disenchanlmlllll IIDGIIII I h e end.

one

Catollna LumHr &amp;SUpply
DOLLAR BRAIN"

It too rar lnd iln'ouSII too 1111111' kind jJIII'Vfl'ed by the IOoCBI!edfn..

ot thesollrlll100 days. 'l1lo con- tilde Journalllllic_.,acho!GIII-

VDUI=I DI!NTAL HIIALTH'

WONDER·TO"'.ES VINYL INTERIOR

men stopped at Eagle Gordan's

residence, aloo on Bob McCormick Rd., and extlllil!lshed a
trash lire.
It waa the fourth run or the
month and the 53rd or the
year tor Gallipolis Volunteer
Firemen.

speed!~;

Gregory G, Smith, 17, Rt. 2

••

class at Eastern High Sehool.

Flres Strike

an $18 bond,

!-(.

schooJ muslc. 9ie was also a
member or the speech and drama

Fraley, 16, Galltpolis, forfeited a $15 bond, speeding; and Linda M. Workman, 16, Rt. 1 Galli-

charges were Carl W. Francies,

Ues d. having quarterly meetIngs. Preoident Stowell Is to aPpoint a committee to study this
prqaosai,
The SEONA session helped
DR. HOR11N HONORED - Dr. l. J, lloriiD, Iormor cllrector o! the Olllo UnlveroitJ Sc11oo1
kick d.l Journalism Week activor Joornalism, was presented an honor award during Friday night's alllllal.iolnt SEONA and Sigltleo at Ohio Unlverslt,y.
ma Delta Chi dinner meett~. On left Is Vernon R. Alden, Ohio Unlversit,y President. Mrs. Hortin
outal&gt;la&amp; President Mills preloolas on.
sided. John Wilhelm, Dean, Collep d. Communication, and Dr.
L. J. llortin, secon&lt;l director d.
the Ohio Unlverslcy Scllool or gan at noon Friday with an ad- marks by Provost Thomas s.
Jwrnallsm (19li1-1967lwere spe- dress by Wes Gallagher, generSmith and John H. Wllhelm, dean
cial [JUests during !hoi, SEONA al manager of Associated Presa. d. the COllege o!ConununicaUon.
meeting.
Gallagher s a i d journalism

Friday night's amual Joint
Sigma Delta Chi and SEONA dinner meeting at the : UnlvorBicy
Im, Dr. HorUn Is now chairman
fll the Journalism department Bl
Murray State Unlverslcy In Kllltuclly.
The weokloag aboervance be-

bent the antenna on Warehime's
car and tore ott a s.\de mlrror.
The mirror was found on t h e
groond broken and there wa s
blood on the side of the car, ln..

.

Miss Holter
Is Candidate

Ordered Fined

Times, was elected president
d. the Southsastern Ohio News·

during

GALLIPOLIS - Donald Warehime, Jr., Rt. 1 Gallipolis, reported to the Gallla Councy !lterilf's Department that his car
had been hit by vandals while It
was pari&lt;ed at the Sl&lt;yllne Lanes
Bowling Alley, someUmebetween
9 p.m. Friday and 2:45 a.m. Saturday.
Sharifl's depuUes reported that
some unknown person or persons

Crown City Man

ATHENS - George W. Stowei!, editor or the Portsmooth

waa presented an hmor award

Vandals Hit
Parked Auto

BY WILLIAM S. WHITE
WASIIINGTON - Richard Nixon, who iombled on a stratesY of
c:onclllaUon and ICift.tooleclnesa
lor hll first 100 da.Y• In olllce,
Is clearl,y In dangero!loslngboth
his bet lnd the Initiative thet Is
the rockol&gt;ottem bldlspensable d.
PreBldenllall-rlhlp.
llldeed, tD tell it like It II now
in Walhlnglon, Ills necea.U,. to
1111' that In ·his lllrorts ID llive
eomelhlntl tD both Bide• ... t h e
transc-.. 11111101 d.VIetnam
lnd antlbollllllic mlsBiles, the
Prealdent Ia In fact lmperlllnc
his llhcU CClft!rol fll events.
Mr. Nixfll's manifest destretD
olllco •• a IQ'IIIbo1 ot nstlonal reconc!llatlan ,.. ~
underatandable and evenlmjaora.
Uvel,y nocesllll')'. For he bad to
reckon with ~st lmpresalana of
hlmsell as a modal d. harshl,y
-•rota! attitudes lnd palleles. lla ,.. thus riglrtl,y conearned not to let '1be oJdNixon''
- even thougb thla ,.old Nixm"
,.a tar more a hollille partlasn
sterec&gt;Qpe than a true Image become an entrenched cliche ot
the prelenl and fllture.
IUs approach, In a word, was
right - lor a lime. The trouble
with II Is thst he hal ]IIIJ'Iued

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Nixon Leadership Under 'Question

scheme with large honeycomb Schaefer, Columbus, relgnl~
heartS aril sprays o! white roseo Miss SOuthern Ohio and the new
lowing her vocsls the contestants used as accents on a red and Miss cantral Ohio, and Min
pink satin backdrop.
Glorla Buck, Pomeroy, Miss
will be Introduced to the
Karen Griffith, featured wlth Southern Ohio of 1961, wUI Oilaudience lor ths ftrst Ume. Each
coolnstant will carry a large red her lrUmj)e4 will play' "Peg of pear as a part of the pageant e~
heart on which will be her name. My HeartnandHflaveYouLooked tertalnment.
Miss Schaefer will present
The stage setUngbei~ created Into Yoor Heart?" wDI be tJMi
by Mrs. Charles Lewis and the vocal solo or Mrs. Jwae Van uThe ImposslbleDream"1 a nwn•
Winding Trail Garden Club wlU Vranken.
ber which she will use at the
be dme In a red IIIII plllk color
The Big Bend dancers will be Miss Ohio Pageant this slDtlmer
gn hand and will be introduced by and Miss Buck will pertorm In a
.s~ Powell's "ley Beart b A modenl Jazz lilmber.
'·
Hobo'', 'Ibe......,, wesrlrwtramp
Big Bend ' dsncers have been
c:D&amp;tumes
with
."heart" .Patches,. trained lor the pageant numbers
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wW lneluile PoWall, Mary Braclo by Mrs. Coleen Ohllnpr lnd Miss
. bury, l,.olo S.uer, Kati!J. lllor· Declo' Neaoe. Mrs. Olive Weber
pa, Nancy llarrli,· Rill Alkire, Ia mlnatrelaceompanlstaild Mrs.
Ben . Pem 11111 RaiJih Werry. Char leo Yeago Is official contestAlkire wDI dci the vociol on ant'acctBDpa.nist.
"All You Need Ia Heart" with
Emceei~ thoi 1969pogeantwW
• dance Uno· composed oloCillne be Joe Struble, another veteran
M~n, S.llbo Zerkle, ,Nsncy of Big BeiXI Minstrel Association
'i'llan1&gt;oon, Susan Lelllll~. Mary ahows.
Bradbury, ShtDa Child&amp;, Debbie
c.... uid Betie Jean iiQbatetter
bocldJ!c the mmber. 'l)ro other
dance linea wDI ~ IMtured and
l'lm Neutzllrw will Join other
dancers tor those two rwtlnea.
Jean Hayman wWintnlducothe
lq!il)llilcated evenllli 101111 CIID'
TONIGHT, MONDAY
pelltlon with bar aorw, ''U I Give
AND TUESDAY
11,1' Heart tD You'!. Mrs. Nesse
NANCY HOLTER
wiD return to the stage lor a
aeeond rumber, •'Young At
Heart", aa will Mlaa Grlftlth.
J11110 Leo HoeQich,-ntnower girl, wUlroundoutthe''beorta
••
and dowers" themewtthhermedle,y, "Gang Till! SoJw Heart ol
My Hearts" and ••r~~o~e WedAND
POMEROY - Mlaa NIIIIC1 Am
dilW
DeUs
Are
llreakbw
lP
'Ibat
Holter, a student at Ohio Stale
Paul Newman
Unlverslf3' and dauibtef d. Mr. Old Ga~ 1)1 Mine".
In
In alldltton to the entertainand Mrs. Roy Holter 11illbeeomment to be provided by the 15
HOMBRE
petlng lor the title o! llfln-·
conteotants
each
fll
whom
will
ern Oldo In Pomeroy fll Apr, 26,
Color
A former Meigs C0011113' ~r IJIPI8r in a three minute act to
CARTOON
Miss, the Ohio State freshman dlsple,y her talent, Miss Laurie
has had six years d. dancing
training and loor years or hI g h
•

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Washington Whi~··P:;;j

To the Rescue!

aaw.l "HeUo. Dolb" wrlttftn to
.lit ilto the - n t theme. Fol·

the Meigs Cooney Junior F a I r
queen two years ago. Sle was
active in 4-H club wori&lt; lor nine
years and Is a member of the
Ohio State Unlverslcy campus
4-H club. !lte Is a member ol
the
Big Bend Minstrel As....taGALLIPOLIS - Judge John
tlon
ana llf~'cDiilmumt1''elii&gt;lltn
·w. Howell lined Glll'l' L, Barey, . add!Uoo
to having taken part In
14, C'idwri 'CitY. $25 and ctist&amp;; ·
Saturday In Gailla. Cooney Juv&amp;- · high schools plays.
In the talent COIJIP'I(ltlan ot
nile Court on a state Highway Pathe
Miss Southem Oldo Psseant
trol charge of no operator's lito be staged In ~Meigs .llnlor
cense.
In other patrol cases, Michael lllgh School at Pomeroy, Mlaa
E. llenry, 17, Bidwell, was lined Holter will perform a JMdern
acrabaUc dance.
~0 and costs, speeding; Paul

Association during the or.

I

POMEROY - llluslcal numbers
by the Big Bend Minstrel Associ, &amp;IICXI . WlU c-lement the
.,Hearts and Flowers" tJt®le ot
the Miss Southern Ohio Papant
to be held at 8:10 p, m. Saturda)',
April 26, at the Metp Jtmlor
High School in Pomeroy,
Flft8en contestants - all IIlii. veroit,y otlllents - will be tak1~ part In the 1969 COIIIIIeUtion
which wiD see the 1S appeirt~
In event~ gown, talent and owllllsult segments. The contestanta
must ba atlendlng school In the
aress or Meigs, Gallla, Washlawton lnd Athens Counties. Their
residence may be In all,)' part ol
the United Slates, however. Two
or the 15 contestants this 1esr
are from VIrginia and Penns1J..
vania, the remaining are rrom
varlws parts of Ohio.
Mrs. Allee Neeae, Big Bend
Minstrel vocalis4 wiD open tha
pageant with parndles to "II
ley Friends Could See Me Now"

lngs were reported Friday
or Saturday morni~.

Portsmouth Editor Heads Newsmen
,.

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Minstrel
Numbers Will Comple·n tent
.
Hearts and Flowers ·Pageant Theme

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Ohio Bel.

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·Two .Autos

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•

Collide.in .
-laqauga
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t.-..

eo.; Ralph Gibbs, Jr•• ~ !Pn GenaraU!W Plant; Russ Blllllee, Pleasalt Valier Horpltll; Jim Sax·
ton, Holaer Medical esnter; WOllam GDmour, Appalaehi&amp;D
Power eo., 11111 Jos Fenlerboach, Ohio Valier Electric' Cor-

:1'111' Tire

poraUon,

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Hilbwll\' Patrpl,

Cllleers stated t1111 c a r s

drive.i north b7 Eliza J. ~o~ocw:.
t;y, 39, Gai,Upolls, and Sin A,
S11aro, 48, RL 1 Gloultor, cal.-,
~ with minor clama&amp;e to tiotb.

No ctiarge wasllled.
The accident occurred whtll
a truck abead ol the r.lcColt;y •
started to make a left turD oll
ant Valley Hospital; Don Mills, RL 7 ooto RL 35, Mrs. McC!d- ..
vlee chairman, Foote Mineral; t.Y polled 1n1o 111e rlilt at
WOllam (lUmaur, secretary, Ap- same Ume Mra. swarc PIDed
palachian !'lnnlr Com-; J o o Into that lane.
'llle patrol reportad an ac.cl~
Fendorboseh, ~oaouror, C. b lo
doni
at 8:50 p.m. Frlciv m Rt.
Valley Electric Co.
124,
nine-s of a mUe eoiot
CIIEIOKD :i:yAJIGELIST - !leT. A. E. MOler,.,._"011 the 8,Jraeuae Olurch al the NazaVarioUs eommltteo cbalrmen
at
Langsyllle
a
ear
driven
b7
rene,
loft, cheekt die J\eo4 ilr,.a or the lltll-bloodod Chei-obo lnllan ..anaeua~ Rev. M. V, Duo,
are: PrqJram Cbalrman - Don
Robert
E.
MUaaer,
32,
Rt.
4
or !llelb)', Ohio. Rev. Blaa Ia the e~,... revhahorvleealdahll7 ~the 8,Jracuao Church ,
Mills; seeuri13' and Trame Coo·
Pumeroy, airuck and kiUed a
of the Naaarono ihru l,priJ 20. SUnday morn1ns aervi&lt;ea boclnlt 10:30 a.m. Rev. Bus, who ._s :
~ol - Jsek Parsoos and P. D,
oow.
boon an e~at :15 )'lll'tlltld .aerved u llllalor 12 1~•· was ill 8,Jracuao the !sot Ume when . •
McCreedy; Communicallmts 'lllo owner of the animal waa
Pearl Hsr1Jor waa 1&lt;..- illlMi. He waa barn 011 an lndlln reaervadon In
The puldle
BUJ Gilmour; Material Assistnot
ldontllled.
'llloro
was
modance - .Joe Fendorbosch; Risk
Is welc01110 at the aervkea. - SentiDe1 Photo.
•
Evaluation - Don Diener; Pub- erato damage to the car. No
De RolaUons - Fred Edelmam; one was lQjured.
Anolllor accident occurred It
Special Sorvl&lt;e - Gary FIBber;
Medical Care - Jim Saxton; 8:50 p.m. Frlcla,y on Rt. 124 lnGALLIPOLIS - Folios lnve"' !lfeamore St., colllclecl It Sec- Bush. There was heavy damage
Membership and JIY-Laws- Lu- volvinl a car driven by RCilald
to the front of both cars. No
ligated
the clt;y'a 99th accident ood and Sycamore.
E.
Bisek,
22,
Rt.
I
Lanpvllle.
ther Tucker.
~
the
year
at
2:45
p.m.
Frlcla,y
Follce said Roberts, headed me was inJured.
Meetiogs are held oo 1lle sec- Tbe patrol bad not eomplotecl
Roberta was cited to Gallla
when
cars
driven
by
Harold
R.
the
lnvestlgaUm
of
the
aeclnortheast
on Second Ave., made
ood Wednesday of each mllllh,
Count;y
Juvenile Court on aeharae
lt
3
p.m.
Salurcla,y.
No
detana
Buah,
32,
~
19
Evaos
!Ita.
and
a
left
turn
In
front
of
a
car
at the varloul!l members' places
Phlll!p
M.
Roberta,
17,
ct
4{)
at
failure
to yield the rl&amp;llt of
driven
tiClUibwest
on
Secood
by
were
available.
of business.

Council Seeks ·Effective Mutual Aid Plan
GALLIPOLIS - Althoulll It's
\seldom ..,. reads or boars ol
acUvitlea of tho Mid-Ohio Valley industrial Emergency Planning CclmcU, It Is aeospted as

one

r1

the irea's most

volved.

This organization has been
statred with key porsomel who
share the responalbDIUes of organizing to .,_ with pltenUal
·import- emergencies In their respective

ant organlzaUon.

Primary purpose of tho MlciOhlo Valley tncua~lal Emor&amp;Oncy Planning Council Ia to organ.
lze a mutual aid program for its

plants and ostobUolunenta a n d
this group has the bseklng of the
management of these plants and
elllabllahments.
The objoctlvo ol the council
lo to establish a well coordinated and pracUcal, long range plan
for cooperation In hanclllng ln-

members lntimeot.emergencles.
· It was recognized .that the acUviUos In the area Justl!led the
dovolopment an&lt;l the maintenance &amp;lstria1 emergencies. Th:ia CCII•
cA. an emergency plan. The oom- olsta of a secwit.Y and trsllle
plexltlos ol lnGimy rOIJiire a . - 1 plan, a -....alealklat
cooperative ell'ort of those who
are re_,alblo for saleb' ~
life and propart;y and the r&amp;-

plan, a material aalilllanos plan,
a risk waluaUm plan, a Plblle
rolaUona plan and a spaclalservlee plan.
MOVJEI'C wao formed oo AI&gt;·
rU 28, 1960, b7 representaUves
from I!Wotrlea, bospltlls, and
pollee agencies of our area. This
meetiog took place at the AI&gt;Pa·
lachlan BuDding ill Pt, Pleasant,
W, Va. Tho boundarlea of momborshlp wereelllabUshedandther
wore the counties ~ Moils and
Gallla In Oblo, and Mssoo and
JaekiCIIIn West VirgiDia,
'llle olllosra for 1988 a r e:
Rusa Blbllea, cbalrman, Ploao-

-'slbUitlea for this would bl
the msnagement of the lnwotrtal plants, the utDIUes, the
bospltals and pollee agencies In-

the

an-aota.

Police Report 99th Accident

ornar

Friday

way.

. ,: .-.: toa~;~~w,;:::::::;::::;::..--;:~~·WW:II'.'ll~:,oso;;'II'S:'WW~'IIS$l'llt'liiiiii'M'II'M'IM1118811118811111111mlllmllllll!ll111881illllllllllli!a:!111881~

:···: ·.v.;.:··· ... .,.:. ..: :·:·. :&lt;·:· .· :·.·: :

Teenager is
Oted into
Meigs Court
POMEROY - A New Haven
was cited te M e l g a
' CooDit;y Juvenile Court on an ox• coUive speed charge followlns
: a one-car accident at 12:01 a.m.
: Samrda,y on Route 124 In Ra: elne.
'llle Meigs !lterll!' s Department aald John Harvey Rldgwa,y, 16, was apparently travellni&lt;&lt;ll·a hiP rata ~ ,BpMCI when
be:j.loal conlrol ~ his 1965 JDOd.
el ear and Jlddded acroao t h a
hil)llwar sldowala, rolling over
sn emHI*IIIent, ending up back
on ill -Is. Tbe vehicle was
clamolllhed.
A psaaenger In the car, Eeldie Ullh, Masoo, reportedly suf.
fered lacoraUona and bruises,
but was not treated.
'llle !Jierll!'a department also
»robed a minor two-ear acciFrlcla,y at 9:30 a.m. oo
Caunb' Rosd 26 It the F - s
Cboreb.
: . A ear drlveo by Louhe Mit~ choll, 17, R~ 1,' MlneravUJe,
' fravelln&amp; eut, made a left hand
,~ turn Into the path of an eaatbotmd !WI model auto operated , by KAren 91e Werry, 26,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, No lnJurlea or
arresta were reported.

teenaaer

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'NOSEY' HOUSE PAINTER
liORAGNA,
Italy
OJPI)EIIdlo Ca&gt;ailorl, 56, has a nose
2\2 lnchot lq and one Inch
wide. That's worthy of note,
Judge In thla vDiage asreed
Saturday, and proelalmod the

The Royal Family Set
.•.·.

POMEROY - A Meigs Count;y yooq man Is emflnecJ te a
boapltll In FhoonlxYIIIe, Pa.,
where he Is recovering !rom Injuries received In VIetnam.
He Ia ~ Donald E, Whaley,
11011 o1 Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Whaley.
3peclallat Whaley was lnlur·
ed In Vle1nam oo Feb. 28. He

gOQrmnent' s pleas to cut

sur~

··r rrac . ••

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130 REDS RELEASED
JAKARTA O!Pl) -

The

govermnert released 130 communilt prisoners after they
signed oaths pledging loya)Q' to
Indonesia's consUtutlon,_ it was

a trlj) to 1lle bospltal
the Easter weekend to villi
the aonteoman wbo lost a leg
In the VIetnam lneldont, wore
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Whaley,
Mr, and Mrs. Gene Whaley, Carla and Brian, and Jo Am and
LOCII&amp;rd BcarbrooSit along with
the aomosman•a wile. Mrs. Whaley remained for a l&lt;mger stay
with her husblnd.
1be aerviceman•s address is
~ Donald E. Whaley, us
u882Ut, Valier Forae GCileral Hospltll, Ward 4 CD, 1'11oenhvllle, Pa, 19460.

.pec1a
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UNIVERSAL CREATES
WONDERS IN YOUR KITCHEN
The best coffee is always served from Univtrsal coffeemakers
Perfectly balanced for easy pcuring, never risk burns because of
the knuckle guard h;ondle. Automatic selector for mold, mod.
or strong coffee. Now 12.80. Reg. 16.80
Blenders oro neces•itin for the homemaker who is always thinkIng up new ways to delight her family. You can mox, puree,
crumb, chop. grat~ blend or liquefy all at the touch of a button.
Stainless steel blades. Now 26.80. Reg. 39.80

LIMITED TIME OFFER MARCH 31 • MAY ll, 1969

men's requests for an increate
In price o,.oporta lor manulae•
turlq grade mUk mDk. But at
the SSJilo dmo, Hardin had
promised .to keep a cl- eyo
on produeUon and ..,bt ~end
- ao JmplleaUOII lliat he mllli&gt;t
m.,. to ralte ' - " ' laUor It
Olllput ~omlooed to allde.
ProducUoo Docllllil
tho Iateat rOport lhOifed

or room April 1 were rtport.ed
at $'10 c.,q,ated with $63.50 a ·
year earlier. Dally rate&amp; were
'!UO eot~~P~red with •uo laat ·•
year.
A "&lt;i. . .lte" averaae of aB
tlnn ·,.._ raiea - 1111! llfcltldJqt p~&lt;e' .work w- ..- '' a •
.1.21 an .hour April J ...........
with $0'.198 toourly a 1eAr ear-

ller..

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torte moment.
Policemen kept the line In pisco and moving steadll,y ,.o the
white marble steps.
Lee's eyes wldenecl and her lace brlghtenecl as she described
her awe of the scene they came a,von.
11 1t was Uke a palated pleture, '~ she said.
11 Those taU, digrdfied servicemen ln the different uniforms of
their country; tho ~ casket, bright ooplnst the black felt
covered stand; people !lllng slowly 11111, reverent, In a semk:lrcle,
101110 pausing brleny borore the remains of the depactod leodor.
Monday at the Capilli, Lee saw more dignltarleo In u hour
than most o1 us see In all!ntlme. AmOIWtbem were Prealdent Nixon,
Vice Preoldent .4inew, former President Jmason, Humphrey, Julie
aod Davicl, Ky, De Gaulle, Gen. Westmoreland and Gen. Brsolley.
Moat impressive tlras the mWtary'a,preciaton and perfection in
moving and handllns 111e casket In total sUonce.
u was ail e&gt;POrlenc• Lee probably .. w have to relatettmes to her grandchildren.

•

REGULAR PRICE S24.95

A savings of ss.07
CoMplete., with I, Ph, I:IA quart
cov.ered saucepans, I handle,
I cradle, 10'' covered skillet and cradle

Rev. Perr,·n

Count 'sm!

I
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tie-

·,t's .ele""r·
oni'c' "•,
11.1
• •• thafs
' -

AI
f
••ews

·

it's by ·Bulova
• , • thafs
.·

t·

Great!

it's sag·85
'''

th f

a S

V: ' f
BtUe

CA I'(
ol. AVE LLE•
.
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TRANSISTORIZED
WATCH

Cor a number of years wltb Walt

Judy Jane Durose
AUGUST WEDDING PLANNED - Mr. and Mrs. Albert
RaymoOO Durose of 425 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio, announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Judy Jane
Durose, to Mr. Donald Ray Warehime, Jr., son of Dr. arll
Mrs. Dona1d Ray Warehime o( Upper River Road, Gallipolis,

Disney. It had boon brooght lo
Gallipolis by Mr. Bryce Brow.,.
ing and shown at the Holzer Hos-

pitaL lllr. Browning, who Is the
"rather" of the Mw;ldngum Conservancy Dlatrict, wart a close
lrlenl of the late Dr. Charlo• E,

The I i r s t horseless car·

riage with a fare meter was
put to work on the streets of
Stultgart, Germany, in 1887.

The Future Homemakers or

America, Gallla Acadom,y lUSh
Selx&gt;ol, held thoir April meetIng In the Heritage Room at
Rio Grande College.
Hostess for the evening was
Mrs. Mary Lewis, CUrator of
the Heritage Room. The girls
were taken on a tour of R l o
Grande College and Mrs. Lewis
explained many ~ the coUoge
events that had occurred from

1900 to 1906.
Members of the FHA Were

'lbompsoo; ~ly 27, Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Foodorbosch; Aug. 31, Mr.
and Mrs. Aven Lusk; and Sept.
28, Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Wiseman.
Tbe amual Golf Dance will he
held later ln the year, with Mrs.

accompanied to Rio Grande by

Mrs. Betzy Clark, laculQ' adviser; and Mrs. Hlbert J. Dett;y, Jr., and Mrs. James Hanson, cbaplor mothers of FHA.
O!llcers of the Galllpolla FHA
chapter will attend the State FHA
Robert Richards, chairman of CmtVentlon Frlcla,y In Columbus.
this event.
AU ladies who are members organization as president or the
&lt;Jt the Gslllpolls Gol! Club are Photography Club. He attended
eligible te join the Ladles aaso- Washi!Wion Grade School, gradelatlon and m47 do so by paying uated !rom P~ Pleasant High
their dues to the treasurer. Mrs • School and ls a senior psychology
major at Lipscomb.
-Warren Sheets.

II
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GALLIPOLIS - Eight mombora ol tho FrOI!Ch Clt;y GOrdon
Club attolldod the JIDCion 11
5\Jri!W meoU!W In Athens. 'l1oe7
were Mrs. John H. Reesa, lieclonal Director, ·Mrs. E a r I
Brown, Mrs. Geortift Coonas,
Mrs. Jack Haekwortlo, Mrs. Char·
, ,Jes Linter, Mlao Marie Meal,
' Mrs. Jake Moore, and Mrs. WJ-

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Gollipollo, Ohio

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MIHon Miller, Pl. · ·Pleaililt.
lilotloer and aunt oi Mia. JWMr.
Follooilrw 'tha p , _ , )Ira.
Walker presl40&lt;! iat the
whleh was celtered with P V" ·
rangemont of tUlip ~..,

Gallia FHA
Tours Heritage
Room at Rio

lla"'

tor a trea -

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ALL AT ONCE SPRING IS really hero. Beautiful trees are GALLIPOLIS - The Rev. WILOhio. Miss Durose graduated !rom Gallla Academy High
bl01111lng everywhere, Too ms~ for me to polot out In parUcular. bur Perrin ot Pomeroy Was the
School in 1965. She is presently a senior at Lake J::rle College
The forsythia on H!ftfard llnnnon'a hill Is putting on aa ln- guest spsaker for the April meettor Women and will graduate in June. During her junlor year
she studied at the University of Amsterdam, Netherlan:ls. Mr.
eomparable sh!ftf,
Ing of the Progreoslve Mothers
Warehime graduated from Kyger Crook High School and Is
League held recently at the home
BE SURE TO NOTICE the &amp;PriiW bloomi!W fimfer&amp; around the of Mrs, Fred Wood.
presently attendirt:: Rio GraOOe College. The wedding will be
nag pole at · GAllS. Sara Jane Morpn had a hand In tha~ It Is rean event of August 10.
Rev, Perrin spoke ol tho teenported.
age problems or tod87, He called
attention to what was hapnfng
ANOTHER "PRETTY YOUNG THING" hss come to town. In the big clUes a few years
I'm speaking of Hob Fannlq'a wife. Linda. Hob Is tho new aoslst• ago Is now happsnlq In our own
ant administrator or Holzer 1\!edleal Center.
small towns of Gallipolis, Pomeroy, Mldclleport and others. He
BEEN NOTICING PEOPLE OUT pleklq greens In tho river alao spoke about tho things that
botiOm areas. 'Ibese greens are good, but tt Is dlmcult to get them are happeningonourcoUeaecamwashod.
Jll&amp;eS, A dlscuaaloo period was
held following the Informative
GALLIPOLIS - The golfing her clenr centerpiece of d&amp;ffoINSTEAD OF CALLING IT a rummage sele, the Fa~t;y Women meosage.
season began for the ladies on dUa arranged In a gol!lng hal
ot Rio Grarde College are calllng their t;)comlng sale a Treasure
A business meeting was callMrs. George Grace, announced
Wednesdll)', Aprtl 9, when the
Hunt Sale." Clever gals, those.
ed to order by Mrs. Gerald Ladles' Golr Association held its that for Ladles der, held each
Roach. Reporta were read and opening luncheon on the paUo at Wodnesda,y, teo-off time cmrlns
HAVE BEEN HEARING RUMORS In the wind that 10111e o! our approved.
the GalllpoUl Golf Club. Twen- th~ IJlOIIth_of April, will bel2:30.
"'-'WOmen Who Get Thlrti!'"r&gt;otle"' are planning a concentrated effort
'!be next meeting :aate will he ty-aenn a.~ · the luncheon, Myone arriving , more than lS
to
the bJPw87 enmncea te Gallipolis beauUfled. It won't sur- April 29 at the horfle of Mrs.
ml~slate, \vlli!Je lnellglblete
prise me II they send a measage to the Chomblr of COmmeree about Gerald Roach. 'llle program for and tlroocy-four · participated In
the Bingle, Bangle, Bimgle tour- compete in that day's tournament •
helJ&gt;IDi gettl~ thla project underwll.\'.
the evenlns will be elecUon ct nament held afterwards.
A Ringer's Tournament will be
officers.
In
progress though April, Ma.Y
Ruth Richards, with 11 points,
Refreshments
were
served
by
REVIVAL TONIGHT
Norlherlf Capital
won firet prize, and runners.. and June. Members may partiGALLIPOLIS - A revival
Reykjavik, Iceland's cap- Mrs. Gsrald Rosch and Mnl. up, with 10 points each, wore cipate In this by paying the entry
meetiq wiU be held at the K7· ilal city, Is the most norther· Larry North alter the meeting Harriet Thomas, Helen Fender- fee or one dollar. A spacial scorwas acijourned. Tenmembersand boaeh, and Deanle Smith. Msry Ing sheet has been posted In the
ger United Methodist Church, be· Jy capital in the world.
Thanks
to
the
Gulf
Stream,
two
gueats, Mrs. Larry Betz and Thomas had honOrs of her own, locker room for this, and one
giMing at 7:30 this evening. Rev.
it
is
warmer
than
New
York
Mrs.
Hobby Clark attended.
Frank A, Cheesobrew will be the
when she chipped In for a birdie m47 .compete In elthor the nine
Cily
in
winter.
evangellal 'llle Plbllc La Invited.
on the 4th hole. Tournament or eighteen hole contest.
The. club tournaments, both
were Mrs. George
Named to President's chairmen
Grace and Mrs. Gorden Gibert. nine and eighteen hole competiPreslcllng aver the business tions, will begin June 23 and the
Council at Lipscomb meeUng, held prior to the lun- Tribune Handicap tournament Ia
cheon. Mrs. James Orr, presl- acheduled to begin July 7.
Plans for the season also lnDavid Daryl Shoemaker, son den~ called for a reading of the
elude
a Ladles' lnvlitUmal to
minutea,
by
the
secretary,
Mrs.
of Mra. James E. Blsln ol Galbo
held
June 18. Mixed events
lipolis Forry, W, VL, and Daryl Joe Fenderboseh and for areport
K. Shoemaker of Gallipolis, Is a by the trea1111rer, Mrs. Warren call for nve Scotch Foursomes.
General chairmen for these are
member of the President's Stu- Sl.eets.
Aclonowlodiments for the ar- Mr. and Mrs, Frank Porter.
dent Counc0 at David Lipscomb
rangements of the hmcheon were Dates for these and their reCollege, NuhvUJe, Tenn.
This Is a group of toP students made to the committee, Mrs. specUve chairmen are: May 18,
on calq)US in scholarship, lead- Warren Slleats and Mrs. Paul Mr. and Mrs. Paul Davies; June
enhlp, and actlviUes o!all kinds, Davies, and to Mn. !lieots for 29, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
who are chosen to meet regular·
ly with President Athens Clll\'
Pulllaa.
BEAUTIFUL NEW
!llosmaker won his plsceln the

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Samsonite Spring Sale

GALLIPOLIS - AI the 'lllurocla,y wenlng meeting of the Rio
Grande Garden Club held at the
home of Mrl. llarold WIMman,
slides wore II-" b7 Mrs. Dana
WlekliDe llt1d a plant sale waa
held.
Mra. Zalma-.ntandMra.
Jomet Richardt wore bolleuea.
'!be Gpenlns thouabt waa stven
b)' lira. Elmer McCarlq.
Mrt. Jemea Clark reported 011
the Dietrlct mtiotiDg which 'liao
held at Alhent and -IIIIOUIICOII
the eount;y meotlni: wUI bo hsld
l,priJ 24 at K7ttor Creek H I S h
Scbool. Mrs. Sara Moabler wiD
&amp;IYethe_.....
,
Plans wore made lor a llU'doo
-am te be stven aver WJEH
Radio Ma; 10 at 12:90 p.m. For
the -am Mrs. Wickline abowed slides ct member'• gardena.
Especlal),y outstanding w o r e
tboN of Mill Grace 'lllomas.
At the 'dose or tbo meetln&amp;
Mro. WWard acted •• auctlonenr lor a plant sale.

Speaker F0 r
M-others Meet

.

Seven Stretch Stitches!
the
Super

II

$

lion bushels, down 8 per cent January-March milk prcxlucdon
from Last year.
totaled 28,185 billion poondo,
Agriculture DePartment ofn- down 2,5 psr eeot fran the
clall had hoped tor a deeper same perlcxl a Y•r earlier.
cut to otrset the price-depressAnolller department report,
i~ effects oC last year• a record meanwhUe, said farm wage

911' cent cutback in acreage.
pounda, down 2 per cent trom carded ln wqea paid under
montlol1, weekly aod dally ar.Planted acreage ot winter a year oarller.
wlieat for 1969 waa down 13 per
Agrleulture Secretal')' Clifford rsngementl.
. - !rom Jut year. But good M. lltrdln earllor refused dairy.
Weekly wagea without board

-,··.l '&lt;

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!lsldng

&lt;Nflt

babies at a children's hospltll
here, medlesl officials reported
Saturday. The deaths have
occurred since Jan. 1.

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Dhvlllt Cll April ••

production and a decllna In ex- rates 00 April I Jwqled 11 per
port sales for the current mar- cent over levels for one year
morthl,y crop report, conviled keting season.
earlier.
The crop report also posed
Averaae cosh rates per hour,
ori lhe basis or April I condl·
tlons, indicated good weather another potential problem for without board or room turn..
anti rlelng per1lcre yields of Nixon admlnistraUoo farm offi· lohed, were $L59 oo April I
wintar whott are eancoDJns out elals when it showed March · c-ed with $1.t1 a year ear,...1y haU 111e effect ol a 13 milk producUon at 9, 989 billion llor. ~le gains were te-

· Jlill'!'ll

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• .1.1,.

pertJ urged, It tppears.
The Agriculture Department' .11

powlng condltl&lt;llls !'&amp;vo prod11C811 a crop osUmale of 1.140
buohela - down only 7
!If' &lt;Olll from 1988.
:··+· · Oulput Would Drop
If t,pr1111 - t produetlon
!llii!IIIJ be It the 2M mWioo
iLillliloil le..t npartacleullor aa
II Jlltlbillt.Y ca U,. blsls ol
~ tolal wheat output ...
'ilef' Wo.ild bl about L438 biJ.

.,,,, ••.•..

was i-eturoed to tho states this
monlh and Ilk• to the Valley
Forge General Hospital at n-

~;h~· Farm Front
Good Weather, Increased Yields
Cancelling Out Acreage Cutback
plua whott production this
yotr But apparently they hsve
nat cut -· deeply as federal ex·

,.,

Donald Whaley Recovering
From Injuries in Vietnam

aiiiiOUIICed
Satw'cla,y. About
24,000 c.mmuntst. sUD sre In
prl1011 for their part In the
abortive coup ol1965.
15 BABIES DIE
MANCHESTER, E n g I a n d
houaepajrter "King Big Nose of (UPJl- A uvery deadly" strain
1169.''
of gastr~nteritls hss kllled 10

WASHINGTON OJPD-Amerlcan larmera have heeded the

CORNING71{;WARE.
~ ·.
J J·•,•··

Elizabeth Caldwell, claugllter ol Elmar ud Jewel Caldwell,
helped make national history recently.
Elizabeth (Lee), wbo had boon plami!W a trip to WaoldDCtoa.
D, C., to visit her brother, Jllajor Jim C814well, went oorly tD atlend Gen. Elsenhmfer'• funeraL
When she arrived In WaohiQgton at 6 p. m. SUDcla,y, the streaml
g! people waltlq to view the remains of the·general otretched back
alx blocks.
Lee and her slater-In-law decided to wal~ 10 they returnecl at
midnight 'llle Una was two blocks loq, oven then. Ma~ children
were In the Una and bad boon standing a ion&amp; Ume; their banda
held by parenta, aware or the Jmportaoeo of their aharlns this ills-

.

llolzer ~nd the two eonaervat.iiJI&gt;o
IJ1t• had worked closelY l&lt;lr~
yeara on both staUo llt1d natiOIIll
conservatlon P:rogram&amp; ,
Tho Musklngum Coolorvarley
Dlstrlcl now covers .8,00P sQ.Uilre
miles of conservation wonderland. The entire proJect coot$48,program.
000,000 but hasbr.iught!JIIlre than
Mrs. James Wilker, &lt;etlrlq three tlmos that amount ~ new
president, announced the new of· wealth Into the state. The Whole
neers lor next year: Mrs. R. wu- project Is "'!" sel'-s~lli llam Jenkins, president~ Mrs. reojulrlns not a Jl!'nil)' of tax mo...
John Brown, vice president, and ey - and now ~s taxes. It,has
Mrs. John L. Cornett, secretary- stlmulsted slmDsr protect• In
treasurer.
other parts of the United States
The dU&gt; will celebrate 1lle and sevsral foreign countries.
eightieth annlveraary of ltsfound'llle area embraced by the dislq In tho fall and Mrs. Jenkins trict Is a wonderful vaeation)and
QPolntAid a eommlttee toplsn the aOO Mrs. Holzer stressed the
eelebraUon. Serving on It will be fact that 111e llliareot lake Is onb
Mrs. Harold W. Wethorholt, a tw.......r drive from Gallipolis
ebalnnan, Mra. JmnE. HalliclaY, and Lake Atwood, with Ita beauMrs. J. Howard Neal, Mrs. tilul lodge, Is only a throe-hour
Jamo• Walker and Mrs. Fisher
Davis.
Br'"'n had as guests,
The -ram committee lor Mrs. S. C. WUhelm and Mrs.
the 196&amp;-70 year, appointed by
Mrs. Jenkins, Includes !drs. Slglsmund Harder and Mra. J, Gordon Gibert.
For her program Mrs. Holzer
showed a beautlrul film "Musklngum: Land of Lakes." The
film had been msdo by the dlaUngulahed photographers, Karl
alii Peter Maslowski, who worked

GALUPOLIS - The 'lllurscla7
CIW&gt; ftnlshed Its 196Boe9 year's
work this week. The meeting was
held at the bome of MoL Gary
BI'OWII, nee Dobby Darnbrough,
in Pt. Pleaaant. Mrs. Brown l11
the club's newest member. Mra.
Charles E. .Holzer Jr. pvo the

Luncheon Launches
Ladies Golf Season

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V'111ited by Wife, Porent.~ ,

of
Club Meet

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Thursday Club Elects Officers ·,

Scene

••

GALLJ;POLIS - No ..,. was •
IIIJIIred-,ln a two 1'&amp;1' coUIIIoo.
at 1:t5 p.m. ·F~ on Rt. 7
a~ tiMi iuncUCII ~ 'IlL ~5 In Ka~· '•eeon!in« to . 1lle S!ala

IIJD.OHIO VALLEY INDUSTRIAL EMERGENCY PLANNING COUNCIL - Six memblra of the Mid-Ohio Valley lndu..
trial Emergency Plsmlng Council met recentl,y at the Hol10r
Medical Collier oo First Ave. In GelliiH&gt;Ilotoreview the oqan.
lzaUoo's prosram. Lofttorlghttherare:P. E. Edolmano, Good-

Wiseman Home

...

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. · , 862 Firat Ava;..; .2852 - CallLP'Il~, Ohio

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�GALLIPOLIS - . Mra. Ioiii Sl·
mnn, 1 IBIIYO ofthePidllppJnelolllnda, was aueot ~ lor tbt
meethw Ill tho Newcunor'a Clw
ol Galltpoilo held at the First
Presbyterian Olurch oo Thurodll¥ alter,_ with forty-two
members attendi~Wo
After a llmeheoll waa aerwd,
Mrs. Jamea BeverlYpreold!'dovor the buolneoa meeting durllll
which It was annnunced the )fay
meeting would be a bus trill to
the campus lolortlua Muoemn in
lolarletta, 1 dutch treat l101ch In
the Gun Room of the Lafl1etle
Hole~ lollowed iJy a trl!l ID the
Fenton Gloss Company, The Rio
Grande Qlllep bus w!Uiea.ethe
Clcy Park at·s a. DL and will return In the late afternoon. II was
requested that reserw.t10111 be
made we11 in adl'Uce because
ol the limited Cllll&amp;clcy o!thebua.
After the business meeting,
Mrs. Beverly lntrodilced newcmners Mrs. James Chang and
Mra. Robert Flnnlng. whnse hua·
bends, Dr. Chang ll1d Dr. Flnnlng have recentlY joined the
· staffs of GSI ard Hoi..r loledlcal
center, respectivelY. Mrs. Charv
is doubly a newcomer, having
been in the United States but 15
days. Guests Introduced w e r e
Miss Imogene Boeden, daughter
of Mrs. Nyle Borden, and Miss
Debby Boyd, guest of Mrs. Olarles Steger.
Mrs. Joseph Ferderbosch then
introduced Mrs. lolol Simon who

Dianna Fairchild
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr, and Mrs. G. V. Fairchild of 149 Jackson Blvd., Plain Clt,y, announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Dianna, to
Dana Ray Mitchell, son of Mr. and Mrs. David Mitchell, Rt. 1,
BldweU. Miss Fairchild Is a 1968 graduate ol Jonathan Alder
Hlsll School and Is employed at Chemical Abstract, Columbuo.
Mr. Mitchell Is a 1967 graduate of North Gailla High School.
He is SJI1)1oyed at Kroger, Inc, in Cobunb.ls and Ia attending
Franklin Unlverslcy, Clllmnbus. The wedding wiil be June 21
in the Baptist Church at Mechanicsburg.

gave a moat lrteresting talk ac·

8 &amp; 40 Sends Dresses

To National Hospital
GALLIPOLIS - The regular
meeting ~ Gellla Councy Seloo
No. 612, Eight and Forcy waa
held at the home of Jennie Weil
In Pomeroy Thurada,y evening. Le
Petit Chapeau Jemie Weil preaided.
The Child Welfare Chairman
Emma Wayland reported that she
bid aent 8 reports 1o Dopartement &lt;llllrman. Sixty-lour birth-

~N1rs.

Elliott
I t
Hostess For
Northup Meet
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Walter
; Elliott was hostess for t h e
Northup Mlulonary Socle\Y afterunon meeting held recentl,y.
Tbe IIOClal hours were spent
with members working oniJillts.
AI 2:30 the meeting was called ID order by the preoldent,
loin. Walter Eiliotl. Opening song

dll¥ cards to cldldcen patients
In NaUooal Jewilh Hospital In
Denver and that sixteen dre11es
had been made to send to girls

companied by slides on her native
Ph!Upplne Islond•, Tbe 1!1'0111 consists ot 7,100 islands, the largest being Luzon. Although over
78 dlalecta are spoken English
is the major lllnguage with Taplog the main native language.
In spite of the early Spanloh
occlt}ltion, there are Cew ot.~[)o.
Ish descent, and little Spanish Is

Mrs. Elliott
Hostess for

there.
lnvitationa were read to anmal dinner meeting of Ill e I g a
Coun1;y Seloo ID be hold IIIII¥ 12,

ll1d 1D Fairfield Councy Salon
111ay 14. Al10 invitation given ID
50th AnniVersary reception fm"
Carrie Neulzllng, a memher ~
the Seloo, lolemhers plan tu .attend theae.
~ ..
Mrs. WWiam Stewart !Did about attondlng the Natlo.ai LegIslative meeting of the Alnerican Legioo and Ameriean Legion Auxiliary In Waohlngtoo, D.
C. !Ito is llepartmeut Laglela,.
Uve Chairman fM the Auxiliary
In Ohio. !Ito aaw Preal- Nixon pill the owltch that c:ontroUed tho lighting ~ the IDmb ~
the UnknoWn SOldier In Arllng!4n Cemetery. This was mode
poaolblo by contrlbudona from
American Legion and Auxiliary
members all over the United
Slates and will be maintained

Riverside
GALLIPOLIS - Mra. Harry
King was we1comed a1 a new
member at the Rlveralde Sboly
Club Al)ril meeting held at the
Blue Fountain ldolel Ca!fer,..ce
Room 9.
lolra. Garland Elliott waa hooteu ll1d aerved desoert.
Nominating committee ehalrman, Mro. H. L, Wickline preaented the !ollowlng elate of officera, Mra. Albert Durose, president; Mrs. Herman Condee,
aeeretary: Mrs. lolilos ~Jng,
secretary ll1d Mra. !Inward Lei-

«

doora.••

Mrs. Harder told ~ the nwt
mllhops ahe had wlthplantaahe Pit them out until she mo4.
a thorough lludy .r the PfOII'IIIt
tuple. One ~ tho many tlllqa
lhO did wrong wal ID aet II*
planta on ~ of the ground, Tblt'
were blown over by the wind IIIII
plants broken off, or doga -.ll
run by ll1d knock lhem clow8.
The first thing to de planning ID set planto OUidoorl
Is dig a hole for each pot dNt
enwgh 10 you can 1&gt;ury II *&gt; tilt
rim. Firat Pit some all1d In tilt
bottom of the hole 10 pol will
drain wail. Never let wthlnl
atop lhe dcalnage.
It is a good idee to llrat the plantstu the garap for at•
dlljls, then out Into the ground aa
a qulat cloudY dll¥ solhe plllllll
got used ID the outsldegr~.
AIWII¥1 cllst or Sprll¥ planta Mfore bringing them back Into tilt
home so 70U woo•t bring buill
lnto tho house. Looll under tlli
pot rims: this Ia a favorite hl4ing place lor slugs and snalli.
Turn the plant upalde down, •
you can examine the underaldtl
of the leaves: horeyou may llllit
white fly, mealy bug or scale.
Mra. Harder augpstedlean,.
the plants In their polo or thalr
roots become so large that A•

• lollao Bomle Nibert, Mrs. Gro- ween.

... April 29.

FLOWERS

Speak Comfort
No Words
Can EXIH'ess

Du41er's Florist
S..vlng Gallipolis
Pootoroy, Mlddl"'"'!1 0.
&amp; Moson Co., W. Ye.
•-16-1777 or 992·5560

; meeoa, Mrs. Julia Hammond ll1d

Mrs. Bruce Unroe. Minutes were
: read ll1d approved.
Get well cards were sent to
Mrs. lolaude Sounders, Mrs. Ves. Ia !lteeta, ll1d lolro. Connie Soll1~

SWEEP UP THESl SAYINGS AT

CARL'S

dors.
The group was dism!Bied with
the Lord'• Prayer. The May
IIIIOIIag will be with lolro. ~lvia
Fowler.

SPRING TRADE-IN
SALE

YOUI Olt SIIOIS AlE

Hoffelt Named

WOinlliiJI WEitiiT .. 101.11

3oooFF·· ~·..ww
S2000FF ··::..·.

President of
Teocher Group

BRA and GIRDLE

caUed the -ling 1D order and
wolcomed all proaent.llevGtlona
ware read rrom lolatihew, ~
ter 8, tho NCOnd chapter GtSoloIIICIII, veraea 11 to 1$ ll1d Bevela·
U1111a c~r I, •eraea liD 18,
by lollao loleal. Mrs. Florenet

TratDer, IICI'etar7,readllhernt.
' utea of lho !all meeting and Mrs.
Lora Raekworlh read tha treaaurer'a report. Roll caU waa ID·
awered b,y the members ID
exchanp or cuttings IIIII!' bid

2For f4¥P Reg.·~ Each
Theae fa!IIOUII •en.-Your-HMrt" Braa rive

Mra. Lora Hackworth reported
that ahe and Mro. Earl Nelf are
maidng plus lor a n1J11111a111 aale.
Date ll1d place lo be IIIIIOW!ced
later.
The Civic Beautl!lcatkm Chairman, lolrs. Wymond Bradbucy,
&amp;DIXaDICOd a meeting ~ her commlttee wiU be April 16, to atart
work m tM1r projects. A new
one thla year wiU be the Junior
High School building In oddlllnn
to the courthouee. Mr•. loloore
had _ . _ ber homo with
many prelf¥ ar-OIIIa but
most beauii!UI waa one she caDeel, "!ltedes .r ~· made onUrol,y ~ malerlala from houae
planta.
Mrs. Slgllllilund Harder ....,.r~.­
eel abo ll1d Mro. Georp Conuoa
will preaont a prngrom fM the
Nature• a Garden Club at the Galllpolla Slate lnotltule 1111 the 2ttb
of AprU.
Jnatead ~ amaetlngnatmonlh
the French Cley Garden Club
membero wiD tour WabkeenaNalure Reoerve oo lllay 18.
lollos Marie loloal was co-

Miss Deborah Jane Robey

_,.lion,

better
!It and comfort plus Double
UndtrOUp PGMu for better 1UJIIIOI1. And
:vou alao •~ $1.01 wbeJ.!,... !NY hoG of the
IIOPUiar l'la7tu Fllhlcm MaJIC" "Cotton and
Lai:e" Bras. (2 for ".99, Re,. $3.00 ea.)

Sandra Elizabeth Sellers

White. 32A-40C.

POMEROY - Mr. aid Mrs. Paul E. S.Uero at Portlanll
are l1111011Dcllll.the o-oment ol their daughter, Sandra EUz.abeth, to JIGbert Jameo Cadnor, oon of Mr. ard Mro. Robert
W, Codner of Long BaUIIIIl. !olin Sollera II a junior at Soutllern High School, Bacino, Her llance laal967 graduate at Eaalern I!J&amp;h School and 11 otaUonOd with the U. S. Navy at Hltode
ltJtjf[ Ha reeantly rtturned from nino month• In VleiiiUII.

SAVE

PLAYTEX "5 LBS. THINNER" UJ.ru/LI
You save $2.00 and diacover how ynu can

loot 6 pounds thinner without loaing a
pound! Playtex 5 lt.. Thinner Girdle
feelo like nothing you've ever felt before
-you've 10t ID aee It . •. touch It . • .
to know the wonderful thinp it
will do for your ftpre.

Officers of Philathea
Society are Installed

Girdle Onlyt9.95 reg. $11.96
Panty Onlyfl0.95 ret- $12.95
Lo111 Let Panty Only fll.95 reg. $13.95
Zipper Styleot
Girdle Only fll.9S reg. $13.95
Long Leg Panty Only fl2.95 reg. $14.96

As Seen
on TV

Sizes XS, S, M, L (Bxtra Larteaizes$Ul0m101e,

Loo4 for IM lirdk in IM taU tube.

Galllpells Dept. Store

418 •414 81l:DDND AVI:NUI: • IIALLIPDL18, DHID
ANN.X . . . .TATIE .TR&amp;kT

ON ANY PAIR OF SHOES
s7. 95 OR OYER IN STOCK

IIHDNIE 41o41o.a07eA Zlft ....... 1

"ONE OF OHIO'S fu.. STORES"

One place to find virllllllly any~ deplll'llllent store need ... DAVIS·
SHULER. And one card will do it all ..• your Davis·Situler Charge
Card. Yes friends you can shop both locations with one convenient
card . .. The Davis·Situler Main store or the Dauis·Situler Annex.
Two convenient plans in one easy to use account a Davis·Shuler
Flexible C~r.se accollllt with option tef'llls. Use it eiihiir as"a siraight
30 day acco1111t whereby you pay tltt balance in full each thirty days;
Or use your acco11111 as a B11dget Charge whereby you 111ake 111onthly
payllltnts based on your balance plus a senrlce chllrge of 1M% of the
previous 111onth's balance ... tltt plan preferred by yo1111g falllilies,
especially at peak buying periods.

STORE HOURS
Mo1day
9:30-5

Tues4ty

IEIIS.WOIEfiS.CIIILHEJtS

ueadon AsaocJatlon. was the realured ~r. !Us tuple
"Problema of Ecllcatlon in Otilo
Todll,)'."

'l-"'

IIIII PAll lUll II GIIACII
PAll

One~ the even!n&amp;'a hiihli8bto
n• the election of new ameera.

..... lla!lelt of Haman Trace
wao elected preoldent. lolro. Noel
Jlollter, aloo of Hennan Trace,
Jl the new treasurer and Mn.
........... Payne ~ North Gellla
,. ..........y.

YES
IN

~:30-5

w......, 9:30.5

Thursdey 9:30-12
Frldq
9:30.8
S.turday 9:30.5

If you would like to Join the many hiPPj DawiS'Shul• Ch.-p-A.Piate custom•s mall coupon to

DAVI5-SHULER Credit DeJJaltmeld, Box7i, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

l'bolie

BulneN AoJcJn.

=

.

£1: 8
.

.

::;:oJ·,~o~~'=
..~.::.."!.:::.t--==
• oltoN 1 - .. ~' _ , . ,

.r '(OI!f '"':':::~ oro'dk·..

~ ... .. ~,,..., .., . . . . . . ..., ...... ~ -

·'"" ..............1.............

.....
'

le!tdhw. Mrs. McElhinny- and

Mrs. BerllltalolcCiungwaawelcomecl lato the aocleQ- memberckrlns the meeting. Plano
made lor aervtng the Elgbt
Filrlridlnttel' .. - 12 with
)Ira. E; L. LaDanee and Mro.
Oaear RouJh ID oerve aa co chairman .r theldtchen commit-

Mro. George Melnharthadcharp
~ the table which waa cOjllered
with an arrangement or .lonfll!la
ll1d fm"aythla. Grace waa given
by lolrs. Chllda ·and 4be Lot;d'a
Prayer In unloon opened t h e
buslrleso maetlng.

Mrs. Riebel is
WSCS Hostess
REmSVILLE - AD Eaater
theme marked lhe progrom when
the ReedaviUo W.S.C.S. metlolrs. llorGtha Riebel. The IAlplc
01. deYQUona waa, "'Die Rellll'rectlon". A re8pllllllve reaciiDe
b.Y tbt - · ll1d -era . a.
followed b7 "'"" Hlolor7 at .• .
Croll," b7 four .,...... and ..
i!Whero the CUIIDma ~
Ilia Eaater orllln•ted,".lllo 'wu,

The )II'OII'am closed with tilt
Lord' a Prayer In un1100. ·
During the bua!neas aesolan,
-ctod by Mrs. lolamie - ll,y, prelldont, rug ialtl .....
lljiiOUIIetC). ArUcloa for the mlalllllllr)' boX ware brootlftl, The

11'2 .

l'voldon

relaJ7,

read.

PM. ·

Employed by

me eueat, Kevin Yeauaer, at-

Cootrlbutlono ~ $5 each ware
made ID the lololgs CGunll unit
.r the American cancer SocleQIIId the Eaater eeal iale of the
l(olga CouDI1 Soclel;r for Crlj&gt;.
pled Chlltlren.
lolro. Rlctt read a ~ ...,_
oera1ng the Wnmen•a R - t to
to be hald at Howallo lollll In
June. Reoervationa formo can.be
ltCUI'ed from ber. Mra. t1dlc1a
read a thank younotetrom wCiark lor a doostkln. He will 11&gt;
to !Iawall thla lllllllller . to do
mlaalon work there.
Ttio flower report waa given
b,y lolrs. Wendell Gerlach and
Nr•. catherine Erwin report on
the vanilla eole. Reported II I
wore Mra. Bertie Walta, Mike

YOUR DAVIS-SHULER CHARGE CARD IS THE
KEY TO ONE STOP SHOPPING CONVENIENCE

l'levlouo Add....

Y - . aeeretary, ll1d Mra.
Robert McEibtQI\V, aaalltant sec-

Gerlach, Mrs. Besole Ashley,
lolrs. Helen Bradford, Homer
Jm.es, Mrs. BlancheGUkfO', Mrs.
Nova Pratt, Mrs. Minerva Childers, Mr. llldMra. Herbert Fink,
ll1d the Rev. Raull!nMoyer. Mlaa
lolobel H,yeoll thanked tho society .for the cards, remembrances
ll1d prlljlers dUring her recent
Ulnesa. Carda will be len! to
811 those who are m.
A potluck dinner precoded the
meeting with 20 members and

•·

ONE CARD TO
DO IT ALLI

Town

IIIDDLEPORT - Acandlelight
lnatallatlon ~ Cll!lcera·fnr t h e
111811-70 year itlghJ!ghted Thurodll¥ nllllll'a meeting of the Pldiatltea SocleQ- of the Middleport
Clitreb of Cllrlll.
Mrs. Harold Wolfe eoncllctod
the lnatallation ceremony. Jnatalled ....,.. Mrs. Denver Rice,
pr..-; Mra. Grace P r a I t,
vice proal-: !lira. Ill a r t h a

Childs, tretlllreri Mra. Norman

.Addreu

Teachers' Association ~ring
IIIIQiet Friday night at Haman
Trace High Sehoul.
Dr. :iayner Brlp!4n, l.Xecultte Secretary of the Ohio Ed-

t.Dta Coun1J Teachers were rec~. '1td. ~ was pro.
· · ildod b7 tbt Haman Trace Fn~IM lllder the direction o1
f:uWD C41ar.

PLAYTEX "CROSS-YOUR-HEART''• BRAS

broulllll-

GALLIPOLIS - OVer 100 per1000 1tlonded the Gallta COUDQ'

·. Durin&amp; the aeulon, retired

SAYEilflJ

. ...... ,D'....

.

&lt;

WtiCGIII!ntl COIIIIl)I\IM' ~ made.
two caUl and !hi jii. . ID mlallona card ~of 1Hi' were. .

~~'~~&lt;~,~~
: Gamoa were pll;e!l-~
ta a~ lollrO.Nali .WDilaa,
loire. lolery 'Nlell!ll• ud . Mrs.
LWIID Plckeni. f.aater lifla for
lilt children at the count;y hnme
!Wert uaembled, Retreoluntma
In hepl111 wllll Easter ......
"'"tel to tbt ~· llld lin. ·

POMEROY - Mr. old Mrs. WUllam G. JIGbey of 3805
lolollane A•e., Northaaa~ MasaWnn, alllOIIIIee the engagement
of their claughtor, Mlao Ilebcqh Jane Robejo,tuJa,y C. Russell,
aoo ol Mr. alii Mrs. Truman Ruuell, Unloo Avo., Pomeray,
lollaa Robejo was gradoated from Perry High School and Is a
aophcmore at Ohio State UIIIYOralcy maJori111 In occ..,..Uonal
therapy, Mr. Ruoaeil was a 1966 gradoate of Pomeray His~~
School and is a aqthcmore In the College of Pillrmacy at
Ohio Slate Ulllveralcy. He is a member ~ Rho PI Phi Fraterliley, He Ia aer~ !do lnternahl!lat the Holzer Medical center, Gallipolis.

Children Give Songs
REEDSVILLE - Easter songs
and a flnpr Pill¥ BIDry featured
a meellngoftheRivervlewP,T.A,
at tha school Monday evening. Tbe
meeting """"ed with an Fnster
reading by tho program chairman, Mrs. lolaldne Wltltoheadand
the P.T.A. prayer was giyen by
lhe preal-, Mrs. lo!argaret
Brown. Mrs. Alice Nease, vocal
music !nstructur, directed the
first ll1d aecond grade - t s
in aeveral Easter songs and a
olory with finpr play.
Mrs. Ada Holter of Pomeroy
RD., presented lntoreatlng alldes
ll1d told of her experiences in
traveitng ID the Holy Land ll1d
other parts of Alia, Mrs. Wbltohead presented Mrs. Holter with
an attractive planter in appreciation for her help wllh the pro-

Spring Conference wldch will be

Aprll26 at the MlddleportSchnul
were to be made by the foUowlng committee, Mrs. Marlene
Pittman, Mrs. Marilyn Harumm,

Mrs. Delores Frank, Mrs. Grace
Weber and Mrs. Margaret Brown.
Report !rom the nominating

LONG BO'ITOM - Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth D. Davis of
Route 1, Long: Bott&lt;m, Ohio, are announcing the engagement
and approaching marriage· or their daughter, Rama Marlo, ID
Albert Lee Weaver, 8011 of Mrs. Dalay Weaver of New HaW, Va. , and the late Ervin Weaver. Tbe brldHiecl is a 1962
gradoate of Eastern High School and atlonded lolauntaln State
College. She is presentlY e~q~lnyed at the Bureau of Public

Debt, Parkersburg.
Mr. Wea.er is a 19r.l graduate of Wall8111&amp; High School
and Is preaently emploYed at tbe New Ha.en Porcelain Ccm·
JIIIIY, New HaYen. The wedding will be an eYOnt ol May Slat
the Chester United Methodist Church at 2:30 J).DL The gracious custom of q,en church wU1 be observed

. - fm" - t lei41rt hllftllallled the Br&amp;oiJur7 .Pl'A mM1111
Thuradtl niallt It the IICbool.
A dlapla,y" Ill aevenl art o1&gt;Jeets, clq, b..-e, 1IQOd ll1d
flberglaoa, ware dl..,.oled b7
Slavin, who - atteada 0 h I o
Ohio Unlverlley and II properlng fm" a career In art eclucatkln. He also dfaeualed tbt I.Jn..
portance of art In the IICbool
curriculum.
llall IIOUidtl to enlllt the a~pport ~ parentaln lllarUIII• .-1
troop 1n the 11ra&lt;111uey vea. Ha
reviewed the belp aitd training
given perents who are willing
to work with the bo.ya.
New olllcera electod at t h e
mooting 11ere Mrl. J - TboJn..
aa, president; Mra. Eva 11114

·rD 2a II tho ~ 11 . .

D;ia, ~. ·til lin.

Lola--, tu•-.,,.' , ' ·

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

irll !llrlaltllo,Cil!if4tt W • ._

~ '~11--r:!l~'"'

llldol"""

II. ...,.. ...
. ·-held It .tiM
!1 II Ilar7 Sehoul. -n.. PTA" •Citot!l ~
make a •10
It ..,
cllllfer.,.. .......
,'.
The IID!II All...,hool pllale
wao let "" Jill,)' 2a at a. Jl'Grtland Pirie. A nport 1111 IIJIIl
1111 tho pmea .)IUl'dlued b7
the Pl'A tor each ~ the cluarooma. Read at the mW1111 'IIU
a letter from tho 1!'1111
thBddng the unit tor tbt room
award ll1d alao the pmee. Each
-~~~ had llllled the - ·
Tbe room award lor lf.IMML
ance was woo by the Ofth grade.
Rel'reahmenlo were aerved 111
the grade room -...e.

r--------..,
SPRING
BOUQUETS
Are The "In"
Thlq Today

The Spirit of the Lord
God is upon me, b""a"-'t the
Lord ""' anoillted ....

to

bring good tidillg1 to the afflided; he hal 10t1t me to
bind up the brokenhearted,
to proclaim Uberty to the
captive•, cmd the opening of
the pr;,.,. to thole who are

bound.-lsoiah 61:1 .

!

"'*'""olb

Thoughts

Show Theme is Announced

POMEROY - "Signs of the Kennedy, Sr., and lolrs. Ill a r y
&amp;le Hs3man with the same office Times" will be the theme ot. the Shuler; rfbbms, Mrs. Olarles
serving for another year. Mem- amual spring fiow~r show of the Hayes; and judges clerks, Mrs.
bers voted to sponsor a money - Winding TraU Garden Club ID Ruth Moore and Mrl. lAlla l&gt;en·
making proJect for black-topping be held oo IIIII¥ 10 at the Pome- cer.
Nine claasea have been Includroy Elementary School auditoran outdoor game court.
ed In the artistic arrangoments
The Eig!lth Grade class held ium.
categories. This Includes two InMrs.
Charles
Lewis
is
gena bake sale. Rerreshments were
vitational
classes and a class for
eral
chairman
for
the
show.
Comserved.
junlor
gardeners.
mittees include scrapbook and
The horticulture category will
photograpil]l, Mrs. Robert Lewis; staging, Mrs. John Terrell include five color classes to r
ENTERING HOSPITAL
and Mrs. Robert Thompson; reg.. iris specimen Dowers and. four
MiDDLEPORT - S)-bU Dice, istraUon and hospitallcy, M r s. classes for rose specimens.
Middleport, will er¢er Charleston Dora Heaton, Mrs. Faye Prot~ Seedlings started by the juniors
gram.
David ChadweU's room was Memorial Hospital, Charles!4n, Mra. Walter Bentz, Mrs. L e o will a110 be exhibited In the horll&lt;ull&gt;Fe division.
awarded the reading~rclebqp)&lt; ·- ~· Mrs. Dice ls,.a boart;
anc1 .attendance bannel lor tM ~ember o! the Meiga Councy~ ·' Egypt's As•an High •Dam'"" . ;.. ~l!lll'lal dlrplay for the meetIng will be ground coven from
moil parents In attendance.
Chapter or the American Red contains enough material to
the
members' yards or gardena.
Favors for the CAit!JII.y Council Cross.
build 17 Great Pyramids.
committee was given by Mrs.

'

aa

!roo, vice pre..-: Mrs. !ltar-

Romo Marie Davis to Wed

-

IIIDDLEPORT ~ Tllkf br ,
Jack Slavin OIIU.fla:t'.r•Jt~~~N

llldbyChaddaKall,~
1o1a100 I«&lt;UUIIII GtlleW, ill t11o

r~ngbecomesalmol ;•;ate::••~·. . . . . . . . . . . . . .. : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : ; : ; : ;

lmpoaelble.
wmn
lolay 14 was chosen fm" our Galilpollo area ao the IBI'IIeat dolt
to start bringing plants ouldooro.
The Cbrlstmas cacluo ma,y be
braugbt out the end of lolay lilt
be takeu lito the houoe by S.
torilor. II II wlao ID transplant
Begonias ll1d Geranluma to bif.
aor pots before placing them
out.
Min lolorle loleol, proaldenl,

cepted unanlmouoJ.y.

I

Avmnx
P T~~..tn
·.·

Program About Plants
Given by Mrs. Harder

The alate of officers was ac-

was ''What a Friend." Scripture by them.
I was read by Mrs. Eiliotl and Refreahments were served by
I prlljler was by Mrs. ~lvla Fow- tile hoateaa, Mrs. Well, and BO: J.er.
clal hour !oUowed. The next maet: Readings ware by Mrs. ~!via ing ~ the Seloo wiU he lllay I
Fowler, Mrs. Albert Thtvener, at tha home of Mrs. Vernon De-

'

a.

man, treasurer.
Mro. Condeepresontedtheprogram about the Amish BOlUsmont in the United States. Her
material was taken from a book
written by Prof. Hostetter who
waa reared by the Amlah ll1d later was Bhunnod by lhem.
The next meeting will be at
the bome of Mra. L. H. Nel10n

·• ver .!ltoemaker, Mrs. Earl ere-

s.J)Oken. · Mrs. Sbnoo spohe or~
high ecluea\lonalalll-• at bOth
private ard public ochoolo, giW.
crtdlt to lhe United S41itea ~
..... dltrl111 the !Nirlod ilhoil
loludo were a "0. S. weolth.
COiq!lele Independence ..U
achieved JulY 4, lHS.' - a , .
IIUcal ayatem '!IIIIOl'lllci 011 U.t
at tbt Ulllted Stat...
~ aliO deacrllled the OlitD
llouae •llallcy to be-boll!
at Beata Umea lllll II? the vioitlar_

GALLIPOLIS - For t h t
French CIQ- Gorden Club 111811lng hald TueaciaJ at the home
Mrs. Joke lolooro, Mrs. 11811mund Harder pve an Jn!orma.
Uvo and lnterellln&amp; proeram 011
''When to move hnuaeplanta oul.

~

Slavin, Hall Speakers
At BradbCJry Meeting
.. .

Wier's Flwlst
S...int Galll,.ll•

p..... ~. Mt441_.,

o.

&amp; Moo.., C.., W. Va.
~tm

.. 99Ns.o

PAm JOHNSON'S

GREAT BUY IN PATENTS

&amp;
BONE
YELLOW
LAGHORN

SIZE
5 to 10

BUCK

WHITE

WE PASS THE SAVINGS ON TO YOU

THE SHOE

. W!.ore .SM.s..Aro S...al~ly Prlc..

MIOOLEPORT O.

.'

.

�.'

Pageant DetaifAssignments Made
, . I

Nota wry proiiJ picture, but ciae 10orlh taldDg notice or, 1• preIIOIIIailn a repoi1 ot a recent ....,.,rebellalw BIUdy m Ulllll8l needs
of chlldrell by the u. S. lleparlment o! Health, Educatkla lllil Welfare and the Natioo.IInlllttuto of Mental Heolth.
11le facta- Four millioo cbUclren In need ol """" sort ol peydllattlc lnterventioo with less than one percent recet.lng trealmenL
- Parental abuse, undisputed cause ol much emotloo.l.lllneso
In children.
- SUicide one ot the leoding causes ol death lliiiOIW cMidren.
111e report aceaaea perenla ot "OliPioitiiiJI, Deldecllag and
apoilJne their children's periiOIIIlities Ia the lllliiiO Will' we ha,ve louied the air we breathe, the water we drink and the lallll we lnhabiL"
It .\!era 11&gt; a "major IDtornal crisis as aeriws as any war crtala this nation has e'ler faced" ualess sc:methlq 'Ia done to relleve
the assression, fear and eullt complexes of today's ge1101'8$1on of
children.
11 begi111 In the home, the report Indicates, and the homo Ia
where the emctioaol and mental iiiness muot be recognlzllll before
treatment ean be started. Parents ..,ed an awareness of the sigel o!
problems. 111ese Include ci!Uclren who seem incopablo of low, Ue
lot no apparent reason, score high on inteiJlgenco testa but barely eseape failing grades, or wet the bed uhtil they are 10 or over.
Among the many problema laced by J!UeDte of emotlor.lly disturbed chUdren are the lack or adeq~ate !acUities and the high colll
of treatment. These are the problems now under consideration by
the Commission oo MOIUI Health of Children with a report scheduled to be released early this sununer.

a.,.

Beverly Kay Bainbndge to Wed
LONG BOTIOM - Mr. and Mrs. John William Baimrldge
of Smiths Ferry, Pa., are announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Miss Beverly Kay Batn-.
bridge, to Army Spec, 4 John L. Davio, aon o! Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth D. Davis or Route 1, Long Bottom, Ohi~ Miss Bainbridge Is a 1967 gra&lt;hate of Western Beaver High School and
is a student at the A.&amp;H. School of Beauey Culture. Her fiance,
a 1967 graduate of Eastern High School, is serving a 13-month
tour of duty in Korea. The wedding will be an event of June 7
in PeMsylvania.

•

..

,

Learning to Read is
PTA Program Topic
SALEM CENTER - Learning

in the same manner, that is by

to read was the program topic

beginning with vowel soundB, adding consonant sounds, and final~
ly adding special endings or beglnnlngs, as needed to make new
forms.

when the Salem Center PTA met
Mooday evening, 1\'lth opening
devotlooo led by Mrs. Faye Walker. These included a poem,
' 4 Take Time," and the Pledge to
the Flag was led by a slxtb-grade
Scoot, Rebert Council.
Charles Stock. program chairman. lnlroduced Mrs. Glady• Mn·
jor, who gave the presentation on
!lr Ill-trade Economy Reading matertalo, which include the book,
•ttag and ActivltieB, Pot and
Jln, and All Around With Dot
and Jim." g.e told how the puplls start learning with vowels,
then consonants.
~·Many rules are learned,''

He continued:

"Failure to decipher a word
can be attrlbal&lt;&gt;d to not koowing
or using a specUic role. T h e
misoing koowledgc can be pin·
pointed specifically and taught
The seq.~entlal nature of the procedure enables the teacher to ask
llJestlona, step by step ·w:ll!,
point In tho chUd's learning
where understanding has broken
down and teach (rom that point
on.
Mrs. Roberta Wilson's sixthgrade won the attendance harmer
and award.
The benediction was by M r s.
Alma Smith, and refreshments
were served by Mrs. Joanna
Council, Mrs. Velma Jchn&amp;OO,
Mrs. Audrey Hayes, Mrs. Fa.re
Walker and Mrs. Elller Kemedy.

Mrs. Major said. "Probably a-

mons the moat important first
rules were, in a word with one
vowel, the vowel is short, and
1n a word having two vowels,
the !lrst one Is long, and the
aecond Is silent," she said.
"The Economy Program has
provided a basis lor reading
three ABC Pre.prLmers and the
same in Scott Foresman, also
Primers trom three other readIna cconpanies. In short, the JIU·
pUs aro able II&gt; read more books
in ' the !irst grade, alter the ex.
tra work in the Economy program, than they have ever dooo
before In any claos 1 h a v e
taught," Mro. Major coocluded.
Mra. Olfve Page, the secoodgrade teacher, showed Ecooomy .
materials consisting of two road-

Annual Service
Held on Friday
TUPPERS PLAINS - The In·
nual Good Friday setvlceo for
the Tuppers Plains United Moth.
odist chargewasheldatst. Paul's
Chu!'cb in Tuppers Piaino with
the W.S.C.S.In charge,

era and a box of words, endin.gs
and IIOilRds.

AND NOW TO mE BRIGliTER side of life.
The arrival of sprillg has slgnolod the begirming or vacailoo
time.
The sights of Washington D. C. wore on the agenda or Richard
and Marlo Plcke1111 wben they took their grandoon, Brent Bauck of
Columbuo, east oo vacation. Enough to delight any 50Yen.y......-.dd
waa a visit to Fort McHeiD'y, a tour of the "Constellation," hours
at the Natloaai Zoo and the SmithBOnian Institute. Then there were
trills to Mount Vernon, Arlington and Washington's Monwnent, and
visits with relatlveo - Mr. and Mrs. Ben Pickens, Mr. and Mrs.
BUI Pickens in Baltimore, and Mr. and Mrs. James Satllerson at
Tacoma Park.
Mr. and Mrs. Edoon Roooh have just returned from Springfield,
Mo. where they viail&lt;&gt;d his brother and ststor-1~&gt;-iaw, Mr. and Mrs.
Stanley Roush. Whi1e there Edson showed pictures of Europe which
he and hjs wife had taken on their trip there a coqJ]e of years ago
to church Crlends ot the Stanley iloushos.
Just back from a vacation in california are Mr. and Mrs. R L.
Miller. They went especially to visit their son. 1l L. Miller, Jr.,
his wife and daughter, Robyn, and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lee Leroe
and deughter. The two jetted Crom Coiwnbuo. One of the highlight•
of their visit was a day at Disneyland.

Elected Circle President
MIDDLEPORT - Mrs. Nor.
man Wayland was elected president of the Afternoon Circle of
the Women's Society of Christian
service during a meeting Thursday al the Heath United MethoJIIat Chur&lt;;h. · ·:.:·,
.!
-- Other oCflcB"ta· ·elected went'
Mr!!. Emerson Jones, vice preVISIT PARENTS
CHESTER - Spendlrw lh&lt;
Easter weekeNI with theJr par.
ents, Mr• .and Mrs, Arthur Orr
of (]Jester were Dr. and Mrs.
Roger Grueser ai"Kl four daugh.
ters ol Logan, and Mr. and Mrs.
E. D. Newman aOO four children
of Gallon. Joining them for Easter
diMer were Mr &amp;. Robert E. Lee
arx:l two children of Raclne. It
was also an observance of thei.r
father's birthday, which was Sun-

sident; Mrs. M. L, French, secretary; and Mrs. Everett Davis,
treasurer, Plans were made for
a spring luncheon to be held 1n
Ma,y.
Mrs. French presented '•Encounter tnJnstltuUonallsm" from
the study book, "Venturesln MJs.
&amp;ions." Devotions by Mrs. Nan

Moore included the legends of
the redbud tree and the doswood
tree 1n poetry form. Sle read
!rom the 13th chapter of Corinthians.
Mrs. Oma Wood, Miss Bess
Sanborn and Mrs. 0. P. Klein
were hostesses,

A chart was displayed, and a followed by prayer by Mrs. Jane
vowels and vowel rules Young. Mrs. BoMie Hackney prewas played while Mrs. Page coo- sented a vocal solo, "Blessed
tklcted a sampleclas!iprocedure. Redeemer.'• Mrs. Mae Vineyard
Mrs. Page said the Economy led the congregation In uT h e
Reading SYstem is a phonics pro- Gloria in Excelsls," a litany.
gram Mrlch stresses vowels and
Meditations wereglvenby Mrs.
rules, enabling )llpils to workout Mnry Bahr, Mrs. Evelyn Spenwords they do oot know.
cer, and Mrs. Ada Van Meter.
Mr. &amp;ock summarized the pro- Poems were read by Mrs. WUgram as (allows:
rna Bahr and Mr.s. Ne.aael Weal. The Economy ProGram is thermill}.
used in the first three grades
Rev. Jack Young presented a
in our school system.
sermon using as his text part d.
2, The program teaches a set John 19:30, 111t ts Finished,"
t1 specific skills in a sequence.
3· Any new word is attacked first
is Son

eanor Blaellnlr and Mrs. ciarlce Krautter wlllaaolat the contestanla llackatage and Mrs. Nollie Brcwn and Mrs. ~elWt Rue
wUI'Iandle the ticket Ulobclolh
dlll'lnl the evening. Tlckete will
be m sale during the afteri10CII
from I to 3 p. m. by Mrs, J ..n
M-11, Door workers durtrw
the evening performance wUl be
Mrs. Marpret Folirod and Mrs.
MUdred Karr.
Mrs. NormaAmsboryindMn.
Blaettnar reported on placing
posters on the pagoant In Pconeroy and MidclieporL Members
were asked to house some or the
glrl5 who wlll be comirw in lor

the pageanL Mrs. A. R. K!Jl&amp;ht
Is handllrw thii phase qi the
pageant.
It waa announced dut11111 the
meetirw that the lllllil)state CClllvellllon wUl , be held In Toledo
May 23-25. Raservatim forma
are 11&gt; be given 11&gt; Mrs. Betzlna,
president, by May 10. Mrs. Betz.
lng, the retlrlne president, and
the newly al~cled preal4e111 wlll
serve as deltgatos to the CClllvontlon.
Tho annual FOIIIdllr's JJo.y obse'rvance was cHacuased. The dJ.n..
nor will be served at 6•30 p. m.
on April 24 al the Jill. Pleasant
ReaorL Reaervatlona are to be

Pastor Discusses Atheism
POMEROY - The atheistic
movement and Us threat to the
froe&lt;tcm of America was ella.
cussed by the R... Brian V.
EDge!, guest speaker at Friday
afternoon's meeting ol. Return
Jonathan Melga Chapter ol the
Daughters It the American Revoiuiloo.
The Rev. Mr. Jl))goi Ia paall&gt;r
of the 9:.. Paul Lutheran Chur::ch,

Pomeroy, and a u. S. Army re-

Daughter is Born
To Danny Arnolds
MIIJDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs.
Danny Arnold of Gahanna are a""
nouncing the birth of a daughter,
Melanie sue, born March 29 at
Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold have a
son, John Kevin, one year old.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Everett Michael, Middiaport;
Mrs. Irene Arnold, Colmn.b~s,
aoo Raymond Arnold, Harrisonville. Mrs. Jessie SlssonofPQIIloo
eroy is a sreal1!nondmother.
IIEVIV AL ANNOUNCED
HARTFORD - A revival will
be hold at the Christian Union
Church with Rev. O'Dell Manley
from Hobson Church, Middlepor~
April 17 thru 27, starting at 7:30
each evening. Rev. John Cq&gt;pock,
pastor, said everyooe is welcome.
First J&gt;aseballleag~e. ty .be
formed -w a s the Na1Ional
League, on Feb. 2, 1876. The
league consisted of e1ght

tea·ms.

80l'Ye chaplain. Ue dlscuaaed
current moves to have references
to Gocl removed from the currency and ID have all tl!lnsa relating II&gt; God -rated from the
armod!oreea.
uGod has always been a part
ol the major dedslooa ol o u r
countey," the minllter said, in
IJialdna reroreilce 11&gt; the Catstitullon ol the Unll&lt;&gt;d Slates,
whose signers had ••common
goals, commonattltudesandcommon faith in God." He said,
.,These were men wtth a cause
and willing to die !or Jt."
'lbe Rev. lllr. Engel discusslid pra,yer ln the srhoois and noted that It is perfectly legal to
set aol4e a time lor prayer. He
said that we should work in our
own area to tnnuence better
thinking.
Duties ol chaplains in the armed forces were described as
bringing God to man and !"""
to Gocl, to minister to mon'•
needs, the wounded, those ln
hospitals, the clylng, and the distressed. lie said that chaplatna
bear no arms, but serve with
courage and valor.
The speaker said thai a 8tOUP
ol 10 cier8YIIIon In the Revolutionary War were tho flial . ~hap.
Iaino, that there were 24,000
in World War I and thet there
were more than a million in
World War D. lie was ~sent1111 a gift by Mrs. James BrewIngton, the regent.
Held at the Grace ~~~~
Parish House, Pomeroy, the
meeting was opened In rituallatic.form by Mrs. BrewingtA&gt;n, uolsted ~Y Miss llees llaMonl,
chaplain. Mrs. c. M. Henneay
was at the piano !or the anthem

and the 8tOUP gave the pledge ot
allegiance.
A note or -oclation was
read !rom Mrs. J..owoii Bumaile, guelll speaker at a recent
meeting It the chapter. Members received an inril&amp;tioo from
the CGI. Charles Lewis Chapter
ol l'oint Pleasant to a IWldleon
held Saturda,y.
Mrs. Edward Foster, !lira. Emerscm"Jones and Mrs. Nan.Moore
were namod to a nominating com.
mlttee which will report at tho
May meeting.
Mrs. Jones, dofense chairman,
dlocuaaed obatenlty in plays,
movies and literature. She read
an article m the ROTC and the
rioting studento. A roater ol
1929 It tho Revolutionary So idlers burled in Meiss County
!rom the library ol the late
Crary Davis was presenl&lt;&gt;d by
Mrs. Davia II&gt; tho chapter.
Mrs. Harold Ulhse will be
hostess for the May meeting.
Members responded II&gt; roil can
with a poem or spring. Forsytllla
and daffodils were used 011 the
refreshment table by the hostesses, Mrs. Everett Hayes, Mrs.
J. E. Harley, and Mrs. John
RoBe. Mrs. Brewington and Mrs.
Rose presided at the Coffee service.

Marriage Plans Ann.ounced
•.

ih tOday to Mn. Jane Walton,
chairman ot the social Clllllmit-

lee.

nea

A work ••••ion to; the
ll!&amp;l'kit wai ·sett'or 8 p. m. Monda¥ night at the homo or Mrs.
Weiker. It· .,1)1 ~In to refinishing antlqlles.
llwaa r~ that tho $45
toea lor dolq,tes to Buckeye
Boy aid Girl 'States have been
pa1c1. Joines sw.ke1 wlll attend
ll!&gt;Ys State, and Marlene Goodwl~~o Girls Slate, Under IPOOIIOJ'o
shill or tbe sorority.
uareat Bellef't" WI&amp; the cultural prQBJ'Im theme by Mrs.
R- She p ve the history of
Mohiuluned and lila teachings uolrw the "Craan• as her relet,..,. and also dlscolased the dif·
lerences and sbnllarlllea '!I the
Jewish, Christian and lluildiat
rel.iglons.
F.Uowi!IB the moe~ the
gnq&gt; woni to Crow'aSieakHwse
lot relreolunonts. Mr5o Vautlhan,
Mrs. Mary Carolyn WUey and
Mrs. Jane Walton wore tho bootesses.

Built
Right
•
Sized
Right
Priced
Right
COMING SOON
AT

KEITH GOBLE FORD
MIDDLEPORT
OHIO

ciate,

Mrs: Paul J.'rkk of Pomeroy,

Mro. eati1)' Weaver o! Middle~h·. llall Is tho son o! Mr. and port will serve 01 the matron oC
Mra. Carlllall, Sr. of l'umcroy. hooor, and James Bragg of Potnt
The open church Wt'dding wtll Pleasant wili be tbe belli man.
be an event of Saturday, Aprll26, !'uests wUI be rOI:ilteredby MiiB
at 3 p.m. at the Enterprise Unit- Call\y liall, slater ol the pro.
ed Methodist Church, :\ hilf .. specttve bridegroom.
t\n open recepUon will be held
In the church social room Immediately following the ceremony.
Miss Jo,rlek ls a graduate 0(
Racine
Pomeroy Hi.gb School and is em.
ployed at the General Telephone
Co. In Athena.
RACir-iE - The new officers to
Mr. liall recently completed
1erve through March, 1970, were three years service in the U. S.
inataiied when the il;Jclnc Chapter Army.
of the Future farmers of Amer·
lea met Tuesday.
They are Art Hill, presldent:
Eddie liupp, vice president; Don
Smith, secretarYi Tcm Ham.m,
treuurer; ,Chuck Mugr.age, reporter; and Craig CottrUl, stu·
dent advisor. ·
Larry Hollon, the retiring
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
president, had charge of the lnatallation ceremony, He told the Kenneth Spragg o! Boggs Roacl,
new officers that being elected Route 8, Zanesville, areannounc·
to an office is not all honor but ing the engagemenlandapproachthat it would im•olve thought, hard ing marriage of their daughter,
work, cooperation, aOOpersever· Nancy Diane, to Sgt. Dwight Oliver, son or Dwight Oliver of Porn·
ance for a successrul chapter.
eroy and Mrs. Marjorie Oliver
of Sonora.
The open church IVedding wUl
Prize Winners in
take place on 2:30 p, m. on Sunday, May 18, atthe5onoraUnlted
Announced Methlllllst Church. The Rev. Forest WU!is will officiate.
REEDSVILLE - Jimmy Rulh,
The bride-elect is a graduate of
Rosemary Bartimus, aM Daniel John GieM High School and io
Petty took the top prizes in an employed at the Flrsl National
Ealller egg hunt staged Friday at Bank in Zanesville.
the Reedsville ball diamond by
Sgt. Oliver was graduated from
ladies Auxiliary of the Olive Middleport Hi gil School. lie is
Fire Dept
stationed wllh the 3415tStratogic
. Games were cOOOucted with MissUe Wing, Security Pollee
large chocolate eggs used as Squadron, at Maskstrorn A i r
Prizes. One hundred children par.. Force Base in Montana.
ticipated in this event. Refresh·
Jnents of cupcakes, l&lt;ool-Aid a1Kt
The U.S. government es·
Candy eggs were served to the tablished Sequoia National
~hildren.
Park In 1890.

Officers Ins tolled

By

Chapter

Nancy Spragg

Will be Wed

Egg Hunt

Comroen Kldrwy or Bladder Irritations an'ect twtct 11 many women at

men. often caUIInJ ten~enett and

nervoumeu from frequent. burnlna.
ltchl'ng urination. Se'condurlly, you
M&amp;):' lole. aletP.
Bllt~dt;.H

tM _.tlavtJ:~I!&amp;dBche,f,i

,

aOO "lttl .oldff." tlrid, ~'~ '

prtmc . hl .tuch·c.IIP'I. CYSTEX llsuall f 'bi"lngt telaklni comfort by curbIng germs In aeld urine, and euln1
pain. Get CYST EX at dtuRJtilllloday.

The amazing hearing aid that filters out loud
painful, sudden noise . . .
'

.Sudden blasts of noise con be uncomfort.
able. Especially if your hearing aid do~Jn·l
shut them out quickly .
The new Zenith Moderator eliminates this
painful discomfort. And it gives you this pro·

PLAYERS WANTED
MASON - Ladies lnteresl&lt;&gt;d
in playing so!tbeli are asked to
atten::l a meeting SwJday. at 7 p.
m. at the gym at Lakin state
Hoopltal, or they may contact
Cynthia Pierce by phonf1111 Masoo
67:h'l230.

16 W. Union 5t.

Aftten1, Ohio 0701

Coli Collect 59].7708

Willie• 5. Drle1, Mgr,, Hurlng Aiel Dept.

"Novel Touch"

Dudley's Florist
S.rvlogGollipolio,
Po.,.roy, Mlddl•r.'!• 0.
&amp; Muon Co., , Yo.
o4.c6- ln7 or 992-5560

PHIL CO

'/

VERE SMITH AUDIO-VISUALS, INC.

A

diiJ.

~

tection oulomolically.
Ask us for o free demonstration. We thinP '7i«IIW
we can so"lle you discomfort.
,._..

MONDAY,

gifts extraordinaire at DUTTONS

TUES., WED.

BEAUTY CENTER

SUNDAY
OPEN IJOUSE at the Trlnit¥
Unll&lt;&gt;d Church of Christ honor'
lng Mr. alii) Mro. Ben Neutzilng
on their golden wedding anniversary, 2 to 5 p, m., In the social
rO&lt;IIL

llEVIV AL beginning AprU 13
at the EnteJllriae United Meth&lt;&gt;dlst , Church, 7:30 p. m. Special
mu!Sic each evening. Sponlored
by District Y.F. and member
churches.
MONPAY
SPECIAL . SESSION, Soothern
Athletic Boosters, Monday, 8 p.
m. at high Bchool, RtciiM!.
MEIGS COUNTY Jaycee Wives'
Club, Monday, 8 p,m. at home of
Mrs. BUI McDaniel, Pconeroy.
SOUTHERN ATHLETIC Boostera will moot at 8 p.m. Monday
at the high school.
FRIENDLY ClltCLE, Trlnlb'
United Cblrch o! Chrlat, 8 p.m.
Mooday at the church. Mrs. Carl
Kautz, program leader. Members
are to take articiea lor a silent
auction.
BETHEL 62, International Order ol Jobs Daughtero, 7:30 p.m.
Monday night at the Masonic Tem.
pie.
TUOOAY
POMEROY CHAPTER 80, Royal Arch Masons, Tuesday, 7:30
p,m. at Mnsonfc Temple in Pomeroy with Royal Arch Mnaons
degree to be conferred.
WEDNOOAY
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46,
Royal and select Masters, stat.
ed meeting,· Wednelida,y, 7:30 p.
m. at temple with Royal and Select Masters degree to be conferred.
'l'HffiD WEDNESIJA Y Homemakers Club, headquarters at
Municipal Park, 10 a.m. Wednesday, Potluck dinner with Jean
Hall, Mila Hudson and Ada Slack,
hostessesi subject, usarety,"
Mrs. Howard Nolan the leader.
MIDDLEPORT
LITERARY
Club WedneO&lt;Iay at 2 p.m., Episcopal Parish Hoose, with Mrs.
Everett Hayes, hostess; Mrs.
Bernard Fultz will review "Central Park," and Mrs. Theron
Johnson wtll review "National
Park."
WINDING TRAIL Garden Club,
Wodnelida,y, April 16, at 7:30
p.-m. at the home of Mrs. John
Terrell i program will be on Aza~
lea and Spring Flowerlns Bulbs,
INVITED INTO CLUB
GALLIPOLIS- Ray st. Clair,
Mt. Zion Rood, Calllpolls manager lor (;oiumbla Gao of Ohio,
Inc., has been invited II&gt; attend
tbe (;olumbla Gas !t!atem Southeastern Quarter Century C I u b
~el Wednesday, May 7, at the
American Legion Hall, Lancaster, one or every seven g a s
company employees has been
with Columbia 25 years or longer.

Ree. 59c Armour

TREET
~noz. 53~

'Tis the season for Straw Hal, the fragrant essence of spring and sumllltr.
Captured by Faberge' in perfume, cologne and ballt accessories. Time to
wish yourself a Merry Springtime and a Happy New You. Time to put
your new Straw Hat.

Kraft Macaroni and
Cheese Dinner
7~oz.
.It

2 39·

Refrigerator-Freezers

..
L~.~tr.J

pkgs. ·

: •-;;"~

"

Smoked Callies
5 to 7 lb.
Average

lb.

39e

PREMIUM GRADE ROUND

'l'herc will be a Chesler
Alumni

Meeting Held

STRAW HAT

Born on March 31st

RACINE Mr. and M r s.
Thomas E. Diddle, Racine, entertained their son, James, with
a going-away dhmer Saturday,
April 5.
Guests attending the dinner
were Miss Pamela Cleek, Mr.
and Mro. Jol! DavidliOn, Mal')'
and Corily Cleek and Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Adams.
James enlhl&lt;&gt;d In the U, S.
Arllll (Airborne) r..-threeyears.
He 81'aduai&lt;&gt;d from Southern Local High lthool In 1966 and
com,leted two years of pre-law
at Ohio University. He loft Moodla)'. A.Prll 7, tor FortJacksm,S.
C, le begin hi 1 eight weeks balle trafnlng. llewasaceompanied
tt.. "·•·tlt'bua alrpotl by h I s
~r - ' Mlss Pamela Cleek.

IIKUtced by he1· parents, Mr. und

Min Paula Jane Frick to Mr.

WITH BLADDER IRRITATION

Going Away Dinner
POMEROY - Mt. and Mrs,
Hobert R£"eves, Pomeroy, are announcing the birth of their flnt
child, a san, Bryan Lee.
Weighing elgllt pounds and 14
ounces, the baby was born on
March 31 at the Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Maternal grarq,arents are
Mrs, Bette Cowan or Columbus
and Mr. Guy L. Cowan of Mid- .
dleport. Mr. and Mrs. Jame• C.
Reeves ol Route 4, Pomeroy, are
the paternal granclJa.rents. Mr.
and Mrs. Fred c. Tuckerman of
Pomeroy, Root.e 4.., MrL I v a
Reeves ot Rtrnesviile, llonald C.
Terril or Pomero~, and Mr. 1nd
Mrs. J, B. Cowan or Eleanor, w.
VL, are great ~ gra!'q1erenta.
Mrs. AMI Elkins o! Mason, W,
~a., Is a sreat-sreal1!nlndmo1J&gt;.
or.

Carl nobcrt llall hi being an-

hour o( nuptial music preceding
tho ceremony 11'111 be presented
by Mrs. William lladlord, The
n... William Airson 1\'111 offi-

·woMEN SuFFEk

Child

Given James Diddle

I'OMEIIOY - 'J'hc cng&lt;~~:cment
and approcwhbt~; murl'lagc of

•he

DISH GARDENS
For
That Gift With

Scri))ture, John 19:17-30, was
read by Mrs. Lila Van Meter,

record~

POMEROY - Work detail lor
tho Miss Southern Ohio P_..t
io be •taaei! em April 26 In the
Meigs , Junior High School audl·
tmium was assigned by Mrs.
Pearl Welker, general chaitmall,
when thio Xi Glinma"Mu GhaJIII&gt;r
ol Beta Sljpna .P hi Sorority mel
Tillrodly ilight at the Columbus
and Swlhern Ohio Electric Co.
office.
Mrs. Arm R"'e will serve as
chairman ot the concession stand
and aaaistiug her with that phase
wUI be Mrs. Sabra Morrison,
Mro, &amp;rban Betzlrw, Mrs.lleve
Vaughan and Mrs. Role Sisson.
Mrs. Teresa Swalzel, Mrs. El·

'

Guiding Star

pEARL STS., RACINE

Stvro With ;. Hoart,

You, WE LIKE"
Right ro••rv•d to limit quantities

. We accept Fill. Food Stamps

In Syracuse

AU proceeds go toward a scholarship for a senior at Eastern.

SYRACUSE- The Guiding Star
CooncU 124, Daughters of America, mee~ Thorlida,y night was
coomcted In ritualisUc form with
Associate Councilor Pauline
Morarit,y in the chair. Auditing
committee and various reports

Big 131 lb. No Frost freezer with auto· Plallco RD11J7 ID FROIT Hat 3
matic Ice M1~er. ~lorage door and sepa· Feat-Freeze ice cube treys and portable
rate adjustable cold control. No fro&amp;l ice cube keeper instead of let hlaker.
refrigerator sechon has deep-shelf stor· otherwise same 81 R01&amp;17M.

DUrtONS
l' . . .IN '

age door, meat ~eeper, 2 crispers, 1
tlldlng and J ststiona,Y shelves. Power Dlm~ntlohno
•
Saver. Roll -about wheel.s optional, 11tra. . " hlg • 30' Wide, W,A", dHp
15.8 cu. II. total capacity.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

.

Mr. Eddy's Schedule

POMEIIOY - A PTOGl'llm in
obscrwnce or UtHd Welfare
Month was presented by Mrs.
Ernest Bowles when the Ladies
AIIXiliary Of the Lewio Manley
Post 363, American I.Algion, met
Tuesday nigllt at the home or
Mrs. Lala· Jlampton.
DeLene DeLegalwaswelcomed

/,ions lnternatumul

as a junior mumber of lhe unit

and was appolnl&lt;&gt;d by Mrs. WUIiam Smith, pre,..ident, as membership chairman. The oUJIUIIer
convention Wa8 announced £or
.June 5 ·at Crooksville, ·aJd · a
thank-you C4nl Crom Mrs. El•ie
Bryant or nutland was acknow·
lodged.

Mrs. Oscar Hardaway sened
AM

For
FLOWERS

Dudley's Florist

J

INO

MONDAY
CUB SCOUT Leaders training
senion, 6:30 p.m., · K y g e r
Creek High School.
CENTENARY Grange will meet
at 7:30 p,m. Ladies bring pie
and sandwiches.
CHESHIRE GARDEN CLUB,
7:30p. m. will meet with Mrs.
Paul ~iartin.
WASIDNGTON PTA wiD meet
in the auditorium at 7:30p.m.
Children's musical program
will be conducted by Mrs. L. C.
Burleson. Instrumental music
under the direction o! Kimball
SUiter. Art exhlbiL
CHESHIRE-KYGER PTA 7:30
p.m. Dr. Shane wlU speak on
Head Start, fifth and sixth grade
band will perform under the
leadership of Mr. Matheney.
Cookies will be served by ki""
dergarten mothers.
GALUPOLJS BAND Boosters
will meet in the band room 7
p.m. &lt;Note time change,)
TUESDAY
CLAY SCHOOL PTA 7:30 p.
m. The Rev . Charles Lusher
wlii show mma or the Holy
Laml. Refreshments will be
amed. Public Invited.
LAF AYE'ITE Shrine Open Installation ol omcers, 7:30 p.
m. Ali members, master masons and t;:astern star Invited.
· PEMBROKE CLUB will meet
with Mrs. Keooeth Remita 8
p.m. Mrs. A. R. Christensen
will be in charge or the program.
SEW AND SO Clab wut meet
with Mrs. liouck Beaver

will meet at the home ot Mrs.
Reeder, 7:30 p, m.
G!I05t speaker wUII?e the Rev.
WUbur Perrin. Initiation of
new members.
WEDNESDAY
GALLIA COUNTY Citizens
!land nad!o 7:30 p.m.
01110 VALLEY GR~NGE 7 p,
. m. i.adles, bring potluck lunch.
·LITTLE .. KYGFJ! Ladles Aid
· lrlli meefal the homo ol Mrs.
Ntanle,y it.~vor. Bring covered
dlih."
'

MEIGS GENERAL IJOSPITAL
Admitted - Cora Rupe, MiddleporL
Discharges - Ernest David-son.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Admitted - Elsie Barnhart,
Middleport; Martha McElroy,
Minersville: Georgia Johnson,
Rutland.
Discharged- DessieErsktns,
Nellie Barsotti, Carrie Turnbull,
and Earl Kauf!.

Whatever Your Cooling Needs- You Can Match It With A
Frigidaire Air Conditioner

BAKER FURNITURE

IIlLI Fill
SKRV~S.'S

ION

65 Ford ____________$1395

63 FALCON.. _____ $6t5

.Golaxie XL. Auto. Trons., P.S., P.B., R&amp;H,
WIW tires. Shorp. 2 Door Hardtop. 8 tyl.

4 Door, 6 cyl., Stan. Trans., R&amp;H
'
WtI Wtires.

65 Comet Cydone ___$1295

SAVE! SAVE! SAVE! SAVE! SAVE!

2 Door Hordtop, 8 cyl., 4 'sp. Irons. R&amp;H WIW

.
Sh orp.
tHes.

·465 ford
8
Door,

1962 Chev. II Nova
STATION WAGON

•

Custom~-------- $995

4 'Door, 6 cyl., Auto. Trans. R&amp;H, Wi'W tires.
Sharp.

crl., Ston: Trans. R&amp;H, '1/l Wtires. Sharp.

$795

68 Plymouth Fury II ·--S2295
4 Door, 8 cyl., Auto. Trons., P .S., R&amp;H, W/ Wtires .

7000 actual milts, like now.

~LESMEN

- ~ODIE FIFE - CEWARD CALVERT-

doldli6h-"iiave been known:
~aptivlty

lor

~

)•ears, o.c;curdlng to i~.e En·
oy~lopa~la Brilannk:-!1- ''.,

'

""'•,..'C.. &gt;

.J.,.

&lt;·

"W ·

':il""

•

\

MIDDLEPORT
OHIO

"OrrO 1/APPY" hf/ Kl!TII COBLE

,,

iu· live In

Wi)l
·
. '·,

ENDS Tit h!NIN&lt;.: , •
IIARTFORD - Army Prlllullng L. Greene, 19, son It Mr,
and Mrs. RaiJ)h B. G...,one, IJu:l..
lord, w. Va., eorn9!eted a~­

color bearer for the ritualis- ed vehicJe mechanic ca:tr•
Mr. Eddy'• Schedule lor April
tic opening. The pnyer lor peec-e March 7 at Aberdeen l'roYiDg
which concluded the meeting was Grouml, Md.
14th -17th:
Charter.~ 23,000th
MONDAY
by Mrs. Arnold Rictal'ds, the
were read and accepted.
Hatrisonviile, 9 • 10:45 s.m.
CIJICAGO - Maintaining ita acting chaplain.
The tropical l,OIJO.legged
The council was saddened by
€arpenter, 11:15 • 12:30 p.m. position as the world's largest
Mrs. Hampton, Mrs. Virginia worm manufactures prussic
death or sister Berthe Ducl&lt;School Lot, 12:45 • I p.m. sef\'lte club organization, Lions DeLepl and Mrs. tampbeli acid in its body.
- ...son;..A~~prl 3, who was a 45Vale• Mills • Arbaugh, 1:30 • Jntornatiooal hao announced the Harper served refre5hments dur·
year m
Lodge serVices 2 p.m.
chartering ol its 23,000th club, ing a concluding social hour.
were held at th·e graveside.
Anytime Is
WUkeoviile, 2:30 • 3:30 p.m. This will place the Lions dose to The next meeting will be held on
Sl.ster Laura Watson is home
Langovtlle, 4:30 - 5 p.m.
10,000 clubs aheed o! the next the second Tuesday ln May at
The Right Time
from the hospital and recuperRutland Park, 5:30 • 6 p.m. largelll 5ei'Vice group, accord· the home of Mrs. Smith:.
ating nicely; sister Councilor
Hyoell Run, 6:3(1 • 7:30 p.m. 1ng to Lions International PreoiEileen Clark, reported 111 at her
TUFSDAY
dent David A. Evano of Texas
ASK TO WED
borne: sister Elizabeth DuckP&lt;XRerOy School, 8:30 • 2:15 City, Texas.
GALLIPOLIS
·- One cwple
worth is out ol the hospital and p.m.
Evans will officially welcome applied for a murlage license
at the home ol her daughter in
Pomero.Y Library. 2:30 - 3 P. the Brook, Indiana, Uons Club Saturday In the ollice of Galiia
Akron; sister Jessie .!lowe sun rn.
Serving Gallipolil,
at their Charter Night coiebra- County Probate CourL T h e y
very poorly, and brother Pearl
Pomeroy, Middleport, 0.
~pers Plains, 3:30 • 4:30 p, tion on April 16. Brook will be were: Harlan Tyrone Richards,
McBride was reported home
&amp; Mason Co., W. Va.
m.
the 412th Lions Club In Indiana, 20, Galiipolio, student, and Edna
from hospital andimprovlng~&gt;lce­
446· I777 or 992-5560
Old Chester Rcl, 5:30 • 6:30 with some 19,000 members in M. Ford, 20, Gallipolis, oecreiy.
p.m.
that state.
laty.
Walter Harris, husband d. sisRock Springs, 7 • 8 p.m.
ter Helen Harris ls in Veterans
TIIURSDAY
Memorial Hospital; Glen Hudson,
Syracuse, 9 .. 10:30 a.m.
son of sister Myla Hudson, will
Racine, 10:45 • 1 p.m.
undergo surgery at a Detroit,
Letart, 1:45 ·2:30p.m.
Mich., hospital April 17, Mrs.
East Letart, 2:45 - 4:15 p.m.
A, l, Flanagan, mother o( brothDorcas, 4:30 - 6:30 p.m.
er Rebert Flanagan, io In Hot.
Syracuse P.O., 7 • 8:30 p.m.
zer Hospital.
Deputy and District oCftcers
from the Cooncil and their es- [HOSPITAL NEWS
corts will attend a rally practice session at Che-ster &amp;mday,
Holzer Medica~ Center, First
April 13, at I p. m.
Theodorns COuncil No. 17 of Ave., Gallipolis. Visiting hoots
Pomeroy will Join Guiding Star 2-4 and 7-8 p.m. Parents only oo
Council in the local hall Mon- Pediatrics Ward,
IAYE
Births
day night, April 14, at 6:39p.m.
NO
ONANY
Mro. Rodney D, Rlppett, Wellsfor practice to recein State
DOWII
ONIOF
and National officers at the rally ton, son, 6:42p.m. Friday.
!I
Admissions
to be held in Marietta May 8,
llllDII .
MODIIS
Publication o! admissioos ls
The "good of the order" committee is planning a rummage prohibited until further notice.
Discharges
sale, the date and place t.o be
Mrs.
Pear I Barnhouse, Anarmounced later.
Attending were Deputy Flor- drew BeMett, Clyde w. Blanton,
ence Potts, Leola Enoch, Myla Donald M. Bumgardner, Mrs.
Hudson, Janice Lawson, J e a n John D. Byers, Oakley W, Fish.
!.000
Hall, Ada Slack, Margaret Eich- er, stephanie J, GiHespie, Mrs.
Harold
E.
llamiley,
JameoJ.
Kis10
ir:tger, Pauline Morarity, Markis,
Mrs.
Celia
Martin,
Jerald
M.
garet Cottrill, Esther Harden
24,000
Mullins, Mrs. Opha W. Offutt,
and Sadie Thuener.
u.u.
Mrs. Dennis L. Palmer, Evelyn
D. Sears, Mrs. Minnie ~er,
Mrs. Bernard 0. stumbo, Mrs.
William A. SUtton, Mrs, Nada H.
Wolfe, Mrs. Everett N, Thacker,
ROnald E. Wello, Mrs. Paul M.
LOW
Cratitree and infant daugllter,
1.111
Mrs. Charles L. Jay john and InQUIH
fant doughier.

R-'&lt;1

EASY TERMS

Child Welfare Month Noted

dance at lhc

project Cor this school year.

7 p.m.
•
1110 GRANDE Mothct&amp; Leasue

Pllllca 15.1 co.1t. 110 FROST
RD11J7M wllll
ICE MAKER Clll""'•"'l

squar~

Chesler Grade SChool SO.lurda.Y
April 19; from 1!-12 p.m. This
will be the Jast famd raising

C(JMI'I.f:n;~ t' l~~l~~~~~

Wf:ST tOUiMiliA· ·i'rivate J'lrst '"••• ,~ K.
)lorrls, .... &lt;i l\lr-. and ·llfa.
Worll\y T. llurrl6, has ....,.. .
ed llJo Haole Ele&lt;tronltt ..iura
at the Marine (;orpa Recruit ne.
pot, san Diego.

· ~

&gt;,

�'

-

·
o
Oo
8
Homeless" Top . "'' ' . =:=rd~""..~=
.·.·.····•······ ·.· ...·.

. ·:·.

CIUCAGO (VPI)-

By IJIIited Preoall!iemotloiOII

Mlnolt N.D., were atlelq)tlrv to

RaniJQiow rlwro gnawed
away al waterloaed· levees in
1118 l(lper Midwest S.turday,
drhlrv mon resldentl from
hcnea tn the area's worst tlond
dlosster alnce Ute record 1956
tnundetlon.
The tolal homeless topped
8,000. The hardest hll arees
were North Dakota, Minnesota,
Sooth Dakota and Iowa bul
fiooding began In Wjsconsin and
Dlinois river port&amp; were bracing

ret111"J'l to hunea as the Mouse

River receded, bol auth&lt;lrlties
were urging all but rescue
crews to stay away ~ the

nood areas.

Two JKmes explod-

ed and burned Friday night
when gas accumulations were

touched

of!.

Gasoline

was

leaking from submerged autos,

adding to the nre hazard.
Minnesota had 2,000 homeless,
South Dakota 1,650, ,.... 730
aOO Wiscoosin t.iO
'

Damage estimates al Mloot,
N.D.,
tq&gt;ped $3.25 million and
North Dakota, SOuth Dakcta

Cor their turns.

have

asked

a\llllable for federal assistance.

I

''.

,

school

sustained

At Jamestown, N.D., about severe damage.
Dikes Hold
100 more residents were driven
The
Red
River of Ute oorth
trtltl homes, swelllng thP
climbed
to
a record crest at
refugee total above 2,200.
A few of the 2,000 homeless at Crookston, Minn., 11:1 feet above

contain water that keeps boWng

Point Hoek

Under-aged Drinkers Social Notes
In Alarming Increase
COLUMBUS - Ohio Department of Uquor Control enforc&amp;menl activlcy wring the first
qusrter of 1969 was up slightly
over Ute first three months rl
last year, wbUe minors drlnklng
otrenseo jumped alarmlngly, Director Donald D. Cook said today.
Ill the first three months or
1969, enforcement agents !Ued
936 charges against permit holdera, compared to 875 charges
'the previous year, an increaseol

almost seven per cent.
However, 375 ol these charges
a.galnsl permit holders were lodged for minors drinking offenses,
an Increase ol more lllan 20 per

cent over the 310 charges levied
In the first quarter of last year,
u'Ibese statistics are most
diSturbing, n Director Cook Bald
"II Is appaUing to think that so
matv young people are willing to
su'b,ject themselves to arrest, or

osddle themselves with pollee

We would much prefer convlnclnr them not to drink, and we

Miss Tina Marie Radekln, who
was recently hospitalized In Holzer Hospital Cor -ndeclom,y,
Is able to return to her school
work in Albany Elementary.
Mr. Jess Proll"ltt has 'been a
patient Cor the past ten de,yo
In St. Jooeph Hospital In Pul&lt;-

expend great amounts of time

ersblrg.

and money on our educational
program to convince them.
"But catch them we will if
they choose to disregard our
admonltl.ons."

Recent visitors at the home
rl Mrs. Maude Holcomb were
her daughter and son..ln-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Fisher and daugh-

"OUr agents certa1ni.Y

don~

OllioY arrestingllleseyoungsten.

ter,

Mrs.

Helen Essex and

dsugllter !Usan rl Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. John Vale rl Columbus spent Saturday night and
&amp;mda,y with hla mother, Nellie

Violent Trouble is

Vale.

Triggered in West

SUnday

dinner guests were

Mr. and Mrs. James Nicholson.

SAN FERNANDO, Caltt (UP0

-The arrest of one youth early
S!ilurda)' triggered a violent dis-

turbance in which some 200 others attacked seven police officers aOO tried tostormthepoUce
station.

One pollee officer suffered

.

.

Radio,

.,
.,..

On

ter.
Mr, and Mrs. Corwin Smltll
and CamUy or Columbus openl
Easter Da,y wllh her parenla,
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin wuoon.
Mrs. Dele Harvey accompanIed her hulbancl to Cleveland
where she spent the week. Their
cbUdren spent the week with Mr.
and Mrs. Luther Harvey. The Cormer Mr. Harvey has been sent
to Cleveland on an asal8nmenl
by his COIIIJ)BIIY.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Bolen
and son, Johmle, ot. Londonderry vialled her mother, Mrs. Ethel Radekln.
Savent,y.aven people aUended
breakfast and Easter morning
services at Columbia Chapet
Those attending from a distance
were Mr. and Mrs. Roger Bolen and son, Johnnie or Londonderry; Mr. and Mrs. John Vale
or Columbus; Mr, and Mrs. Carl
Ranm!C of Toledo; Mrs. George
Ragan and son of Da,yton; Mrs.
Ida Deruli11011 and Mrs. Anna Ogdln or WUkesvllle; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert llolUda,y and family of
Wooster; Mrs. Barbera Radeldn
and Camll,y or McArthUr; Mr, and
Mrs. Richard Je!Iers and daughter of Albany.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Ranmtr or
Toledo spent the weekend with

HOLLYWOOD- (NEA)Dan Rowan and Dick Martin
were very careful about the
first picture they were going
to make. After all, as the
stars of Laugh-In, their first
film couldn't be anything
s iII y, meaningless, ridiculous.

So there they were on the
set of "The Maltese Bippy."
The set was a kitchen in an
ordinary house. Dan and
Dick were standing in front
of a kitchen table.
Behind them, lying on the
table, was a corpse. Only his
bare stomach was showing.
In front of them. on the
floor, were a couple of 30().
year-old Hungartan werewolves (Julie Newman and

Fritz Weaver}. They were
dead.
In front of them, on the
floor, was a girl in a gold
dress (Jennifer Bishop) with
a knife In her back. She was
dead.

A-Martha Washington,
whose likeness appeared on
the 1886 silver certificate.

\'

..

. • ': WMfUNGTON (UP!) - Pres- Truman was In the White
·ldent Nixon ~nnounced Saturday flouse.
thai his revised spendlqJ budget
_Nixon said Ule surplus uwill
Cor nacal 1970 wW cut $4 bUUon apeak louder than any words''
from ·domesUc and defense to demonatrate that the 101Uon
Pfograms and produce a $1!.8 "Is determined to bring a talt
blllltm surplus.
to the tnfl811onsry spiral which

'

By DICK KLEINER

currencv?

'

Nixon
Promises
$5.8
Billion
Budget
Surplus,
-

.

The President Mid the cuta

will l011er federal spendlrw Cor
Ute fiscal year slarU~ July 1
as proposed by the last Johnatm
¥set to $192.2 billloo and
P"nxluce Ute largest surplus
alnce 1951 when Harry S

-

has aerlouaty atrected o u r
economy these last tour years."
White House spokesmen said

detalled figures on the new
budget would be armounced In
the CIBillqJ week. Revised

budeot

Israel'
.l··- ordan
Battle
..
..-·-

'

.

•-•II

11'0 also~

~imts • ientintl

for the

the

chair, was a man in a uni-

form (Leon Askin). He was
alive, but barely. ·
In front of them, advancing with a knife, was a burly
woman In a uniform (Eddra
Gale}. She was very much
alive-for the moment.
"All right, breath control,
Jerry," said director Nor·
man Panama to the corpse,
an actor named Jerry Mann.
He took a deep breath and
held it.
uAction."

Mlgs Gale advanted,
brushed Rowan and Martin
aside and was about to
plunge the knife Into the
corpse's stomach (ob, I forgot to tell you, the eoprae
had &amp;wallowed the world's
.Ia r g e 1 t diamond) whencraek!-a rille llhot rang
out.
Miss Gale gasped, stag.
gered, fell.
Into the room marched
rifle-bearing Gary Walberg.
Behind him, ready to spring

into action were Mildred
Natwlck and Robert Reed.
Eventually. they were all
supposed to be lying on the
kitchen floor. One after another, tliey were killed off.
It was a tough scene, be·
cause of the logistics of fall·
ing down and remembering
whose leg was over whose

cedure of waiting for the
first answer print to score
from. This saves time.
Enders is very enthusias-

In

.,
...... -..

'

•••

1970FORD
it's
a

......

of car.

COME TO KEITH GOBLE FORD APRIL 17 TO SEE THE NEW ·1970 MAVERICK
DISPLAYED IN THEIR NEWLY REMODELED SHOW ROOM:
Staadar• power team features • 3-.,.t, fuiiJ syncllronlzed 11anual trans11lsslon, with a
170-cu. ln. Six that dHsn't sound like a power 11ower. You get ample zip far any size trip,
extra mar1ln for Hft p111111 when n...ed.
BUILT RIGHT! .. SIZED RIGHTI . , PRICED RIGHTI

REMEMBER: APRIL 17
Maverick averages 22-1/2 miles per gallon from Its peppy six-cylinder engllle.

GOODBYE, OLD PAINT
E¥Orythin1'1 boldet, bri9htor today. Mav.,ic• hu colors to"' with tho tim .. - ond nomos

. -.
· o

:-.,

'

'

• H1lla Blue

AT

' "l Utl9!&lt; the trip was extreme&lt; '
U-•
1J ~.~"oi'UIWhlle
and !Allful"
f
nm..
netb' toitl' ..... amen whO Ulllt his ·
at DUlleslnterratloralAir·

....

!

.

CandJapple Red • Black Jade • Champape Gold • ~lfsll:ti!lll Aqua •ueadol'lllk
Yetllew • Brltt.y
Bl1e • Lile Gold • Dresden Blue
• Raven BliP
'
.
. • llllldldiin

461 S.
'

3r~

lve•

l

'

.

.992-2196

'

.

'

hamlets

In

Headquarters In Saigon said
the shelling also destroyed 50
bunkers, 10 gun positions ard
two twmel storage complexes.
Offensive Still Rages

CAPE KENNEDY (l!Pl) America's most complex scien ..

VIet Cong and North VIetna-

ltrlc oatelllte, a $75 million Star-

mese soldiers pushed their
offensive toward its eighth

gazer, responded to emergency
commands from earth Saturday

YOUNG GUNNER stauds
guard at entrance to a
camp In Jordan where boys
aged 8 to 16 are trained as
members of AI Fatah, RD
Arab terrorist orgaalzatloa.
The guns reportedly have

after comlngwlthinthreehoorsof

River Project Begins

veralfi)t research programs,
Other speakers at the cere ..
mnny and following lunch In·

eluded

Att.r.

Goa.

Paul W,

Brown, Ohio Natural Resources
Director Fred E. Morr, lOth
District C&lt;ng, Clarence E. Miller, Brig. Gen. WUlard C. Roper
rl jha River &amp;lilneera, and
Ohio V. Prealdent Vel'lllll R,
Alden.

l:.a&amp;l Di88ident is

death from a mysterious eJeclronl&lt; allmenl
Engineers at the satelllte con.
trol center at Greenbel~ Md.,
quickly ordered the spacecrafl
to keep its solar panels aimed

Uve ammuDitloa a ad a o

toward the sun to recharge its

oafety catchea.

near - depleted baUerles, They
totd tt to temporarily forget tts

Last Plea

star watching experiments.

The 4,400-poundorbltingaslro-

oomlcal observatory, (OAO) ran
Into trouble at 8:30 a.m. E!IT
when It refused to f~.~w rootlne
stablllzation commitndii"Tadioell"l
from a grow•!' itetloo In Chile. ·
11 started tumbling oot of controt and that drained atectrtctcy
from Its batteries .
It was the s:&amp;rgazer's first
serious trouble after tour months
of highly successful operation.
But •t 5 p.m. ESI', a tracking

statioo In Australia reported It
had received a response from the

Made rI 0 r
.

...

s sIr• han
.,

•

rooncls of five Frldsy had killad
21 persons and wounded 100,
This time, 34 shells killed one
arx:l wourded five.

Terrorists in another Mekong
Delta village, Phu Huu, detonat-ed a mine in the marke1place,
wounding four children serious.
ly.

ery was not good. "There must

Far to the north, Cooununist
ground gunners knocked down a
U.S. Marine CH46 Sea Knight
helicopter near C&lt;Jastal An Hoa,

According to the defense. ''the

botlles under wa,y.
Informed U.S. sources In
Saigon said Ute low level of
r~ghtlqJ In the past week would
be reflectod In casualty fiJlUI"eS
released next Thursday. Nev·
ertheless, they said the munber
of American dead will rise past
the 34,000 mark lor the war.

29Kidnapped
Dels,ynd reports !rom SOuth

counsel Emlle Zola Berman and

Ru11ell Parsons did oot believe

Sirhan ~'should be given a medWASIUNGTON (l!PI) - Co,. al ror what he did," or even
a:ress returns frcm alongEuter that "he sbould ever be turned
vacation Monday for its nrst hard loose Oil society."

look at President Nixon's new
buclgel Democrats were prlm'l'l
Cor batlle.
"We should refer to lhls as
the IOIIII&amp;WIIted, !OIIjlantlclpated
budget," SanateDemocraticlead·
or Mike Manofleld said Saturda,y.
ldananeld and other promInent Se101te Democrats IncludIng Edward M. Kanned;y and Edmund S. Muslde have warned repeatedly they were anxious to
pare mUitar1 spendlow and pump
the osvirva lnlo domestic p&lt;Oo
gruno.

Cooper said testiJnolly by eight
psychiatrists and psychologists
and Sirhan's own erratic behavior in court, which Included
oeveral Ylolenl temper tantrums,
was clear evidence or the defendant's "diminished capacity" his lnebUtey to meanlng!uJly and
maturely consider the

conse~

quences of his acL
Former colle&amp;e football pla,yer
Lym Complun. deplcy district
attorney, followed Cooper's Clna1
a r - t by telling tile .mors
(Continued on -

WILL A NORm VIETNAMESE ver1loa of a Maypole
fool blgb-llylllg U.S. plaaes? That Is sappeRd. to be tile
fuaellen of tbe leafy sheath on Ibis pa barftl, .-rt~­
IDg to Tau, olflclal Sovle\ new1 ageaey whlcll releaRd
lbe photo of a Nortb Vletilamese antlalrenft emplace·

meat.

Nixon Wanting to

Vietnamese headquarters said

be some kind or electrical prob- proper fate'' or lbe man who ad- the guerrilla offensive carried
lem because Otis shouiW\'t have mits killing Kotmec11 In I h e
happened," Ute spokesman said. kitchen of the Ambassador llotel
here last June 5, WOuld be a ver~
CLEVELAND (l!PO - Slate
diet of second degree murder
Development
Director F, P, Neuconviction andllCelmprlsonment
Congress &amp;petting
Cooper stressed that be aud co- enschwander said 11wrsdB,Y Ohio-

Peek into Budget

·:-,·;

assassin winds up, with the jury American officials said. T.Jiere
were no reports of maJor

l)J'ognosls Cor a complete recov-

"It was within three hours of
dying."
orrtcials, however, said t h e

barrmges that milltary spoke&amp;·
men said caused light damage
and casualties.
Amoll:' the population centers
hit was Vlnh Long, 58 miles
southwest of Selgon, where 100

LOS ANGELES (l!Pl) - The aboard, U.S. spokesmen said.
final words on behalf of lirhan
The stepped - up level of
B, Sirhan have been spoken as shelling attacks did not carry
the trial of Robert F. Kemedy's over into ground fighting,

expecled to begin Its deliberations early In the week,
Chief defense counsel Grant
B. COOI!,OI' concluded his lengthy
summation Frlda,y by telling Ute
jurors, "Pm the Ia stone to speak
on behalf of lhls defendant When
I sit down, no voice will bo raised again In hla defense .... We
pass from our shoulders to yours
the responslblllcy and Ute proper
rate of Sirhan Sirhan.~

crippled satellite, OAO lllen steblllzed Itself and began soaking
up enel'SY from Ute sun to recharge Its batteries.
•• At least now we ean keep
tile obsel'Yatocy alive, and Icy
to figure out what went wrong,"
said a control center sp:Jkesman.

week, hlttlrw 30 towns and
camps Saturday with overnight

kUling five of lhe American Glo

ana who supply accommodadms
to travelers and vacatimersmust

keep pace or lbe stele will lose
Its high raling as a tourist area.
N..,...chwander told Ute Gav-

ernor's Conference on Tourism
that the lncmatry has doubled In
volume over the last stx years.
Re said that more than 14 per
cent of all tbe taxes collected
In Ute stete in 1968 were jiU!d
by tourists. Flf1;)'~ miUlon
tourlste vlslled the Buckeye Slate
last year.
"Ohio Ia qulcklychanglngfrnm
a role as gateway or corridor
stele, to a deallnatlon area where
vacationers plan to make longer
stzQ'a at parks and resorts," he
said.

12)

DE KALB, m. (UP!) Herbert Klein, President Nix·
0111 s

communications dlrec.
tor, said Saturday there is not
a "new Richard Nixon, "aOO it
is not true that Mr. Nixon does
not read newspapers.
Klein, addressing a meeting ol. Sigma Delta Chi, 101tlonal professional journalistic
society, said Nixon is not a
new man, but 14 he is a man who
has grown toward the job.''

Patch Up Troubles
WASHINGTON (l!PI) -

Th

Nixon administration announeec
S.turda,y lhal it was mo.U. II

patch "' relalioos with Combo
dia am was ready to open dl1
cussions on reswningdiplCID&amp;tic
ties.
Cambodian Chief of State Nor
odom Sihanouk severeddlplomal
ic relations with the UrdtedState

in May, 1965, over an lncidel'l

which Involved a U, S. mUltar
i ntruslon from Sooth 'fletnam b
to Cambodian territory,
BOND TO SPEAK
ELLSWORTH APPOINTED
MARIETTA, Ohio (UPD- Ju.
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Pre1
llan Bond, Negro Georgia state
!dent
Nlxm Saturda,y N&gt;mlnatt
legislator who was Involved in
the Democratic political conven- ooe or his White House 11Bia
tion at Cldcago last summer, will ants, Robert F. Ellsworlll, a kt
discuss the moral revolutioo and adviser on European affairs, 1
black politics In America at a be U.s. ambaaoador to 1118Nor1
public meeting on the Martella Atlantic Treal1 Organization !
College CaiDJIIIS !Unday nliltl Brussels.

Dickensian Musical, Henry II in Close Race
Fresh fates behind the scenes
offer a revitalized st- Cnr
viewer~ who tune In alllllally by
1118 millions to watch 1118

PIP
~
. --:

Cl••••••

• 0rt1lnal .
• thanks Yer11lllln

'WASHINGTON (UPI) - sen.
KeMedy, tired from
, .;i(au-ntght Olght, returned to
~· lnaton Saturday from a sen• lubcommlttee tour ol. Alaska
· ..:.retllsed to dlocua• chargal
li~tcails that his triP waa

FJ'liard M.

a'»Jj&gt;U~Icy etunl.

to go with the colors:

• Altl· Esta.llsh Mint

-·
- Safari
:Q&amp;skan

two

bivouacs s14Jplying the guerril-

Calamity

hi•

~;..edy Tired by

tile prides of the fleet.
The warship aaoaults lollowed
southermnost prov1nce of An
Xuyen Friday, kidnaping both 141 501 sorties by U.S. Air
hamlet chiefs and 27 other Force, Marine am Nav,y pData
Friday against the Conummlot
persons.
bulldiQ&gt;
throughout sooth VletThe 7th F1eet warships off
shore were bolstered in their nsm. Conununlqueo credited the
attacks Saturday wllh the pUots ..tth knocldrw oot at leut
arrival of the guided missile 52 Communist fortlCicatloos and
cruiser Goldsborough, one of the 33 bunkers.
Into

las' ratlonwide offensive.

Denounced Egypt
:J'be chief or Israel's lnlelll&amp;ence service, MoJ. GeJL llalm
Herzog, denounced Egypt Saturdq- . for fostering tile false
Impression lllat the Middle East
Ia on !he brink of wsr again,
Herzog attacked what he
called Ute "gulllbUicy of International political leaders" who
beliet'e forecasts of more war.
EMERGENCY GATE HOISTS Cor locka 011 tbe Racine Dam
Ill Tel Aviv, Premier Golds ·
project, now under construction on the Ohio River near
11elr said her government fears
Letart, West VIrginia, are resdled for shipment from ~~··­
oi--Pld can come of ~ Corporation's
NeviUe Island plant near Pittsburgh, dilt'ilf'l&gt;r
&amp;ilOWer talks on Mldiilt
two sets ordered by the joint venture prime conlractots. ·
peace 1108Sibllltiea since two of
Johnson-Kiewlt-Masaman, !bose hoists raise and lower emerthe powers are hostile to ·the
gancy gates to permit maintenance of !he locks' miter galas.
Jewish stele.
The miter gates ssal tile lock chambers during locking op,Mrs. ·Melr was referring to
erations. Dravo Is also IIUIJllfacturlng 16 talnter gate hoists
tlie Savlet Union and France.
for Ute Racine l)J'OJect. The talnter g~~tes control water flow
She said the other two powers,
over the dam.
the United lilates and Britain,
"also have the interests of the
Arabs at heart." Then she
adi!ed:
"!'The nalvet,y of -rlenced
pQlltlclans In the world
the· proposals of the Arabs
nders was alll]!l'isln&amp; since !he
present aim · of the Arabs was
nOt· a permanent peace but the ATHENS, Ohio (1!1'1}-Feder- Jengea to be overcome otto help
l~ldatlon of the state of al, state, clcy and Ohlo Univer- this region ol Ohio prosper!'
••we must get the (Baltimore
sity leaders Saturds.Y broke
w
::::..• I ••
MCBI.
&amp;
Ohio) railroad track moved
eround
Cor
a
$10
million
Hock...
Hussein Backed
Ing
River
flood
control
l)J'Olect
off
the campus" as a begin.
_kace proposal a JJUI forward
designed to and flooding of nlng, he said,
wf!C(IIesdsy by Jordan' a King here
the
school's
dormitory and athOther goals he called for InHti&amp;seln had the baclclng of
cluded:
leUc
field
areas.
Lebanon's Prealdenl Charles
The ceremooy was held at
- Obtaining all land occupied
Helou as well as President
by
the sootheast Ohlo Mental
the
south
end
of
the
campus
Gantal Abdel Naaser of Egypt,
near
Peden
Sladlum,
where
the
Health
Center here for univer·
Wormed sources In Beirut said.
slcy
expansion.
new
channel
will
be
cut,
A
Neither Iraq oor iiYrla has
- A maJor orea development
publlc(J commentod oo Hus. pledge was given by the leadera
to
achieve
new
and
vital
plamlng
session bolween bualoeln's plan, however, lllld EIYPl
regional
Improvements.
neu,
civic
and government
haJ been cagey In Its reaction.
The
rechallleling
project
callleaders.
B~se of this, well-Informed
- C&lt;lmpletion of a fnur~ane
Mitne East observers speculat- ed for rerouting of 5,5 miles rl
highwa,y
Crnm here to COlumthe
mer
during
the
next
two
ed~1hat 1118 monarch's plan ma;y
oos,
years.
been a trial balloon to ltlst
Fred H. Johnson of Colwn- Beautltlcation of area high..
lwull and Arab reactioo.
bos,
chairman
of
Ohio
u.•s
wa,ys.
."Mibough Huasoln's proposal
.allecl Cor Arab recognition of trusteos, praised the "dedicatod - C0J11111etion of other fioocl
YPel'• sovereignty, and her errorts" or tlleoe who worked contrnl projects,
- !Ustalned errorts by admln•
to uae the lllez canal, seven years to get the rtver relatrators,
Caculcy and students
chameled
and
cltod
chatUfiel prnmllllY denounced It as
to
inii&gt;Nwe
1118 IIIIIYeralcy &lt;Ill"·
aC'amoke aereen" containing
rlculum.
l1flllng now.
- Con!Uwed expansion rl unl-

i

·- ... •

ofl South Vletrmn's
coost In lhe Sooth ·Chi"' Sea,
military spokesmen said.
Hundreds of shells frmn the
destroyers al'll cruisers of the
U.S. 7th F1eet slammed Into
enemy hideouts up arx:l down
the C[IISt in the drive to destroy

Suffers

$10 Million Hocking

AT EIGS COUNTY'S NO. 1 DEALER

A dozen

stations

an JsraeJt

toward

(UP0 -

106 Conununlsl hideouts Saturday with salvoes from their

Stargazer

Mported untU later. uwe refer
:10 ouch small Incidents ouly in
.au weekly summary,u he said.

'

SAIGON

American warships knocked out

lntlatlomry environmenL"

· spokesman derided the Jordanian communique and called the
ftii!itlllg a "routine skirmish"
:.that oormally would not be

as

'

Jerusalem,

billion In exceso

1948, the budget chief added.
llll,yo said lhe - budget Is
"responsive to the needs of an

Silurda,y, Jordan amounced.
lsrael dismissed It as a
s)drmlsh art&lt;! accused !he Arabs
of exaggerellng to make It
appear war was Imminent.
Jordan said lsraell forces
trlgpred Ute Clghting, eight
miles south or the Sea of GaiUee
near AI-Mansh!yah. The Arabs
reported oo casualUes of their
own, but said Ute lsraells
~Jgged otr eight men.

lic about Rowan and Martin
as movie actors. He thinks
their future Is brlllianUy optimistic.
"They are good actors,"
he says. "This script could
arm and when.
have been played by LemAnother tough logistical mon and Matthau; we didn't
problem on "The Maltese get a scrip! for a couple of
Bippy" is the editing. Pro- nonacting comics.
d u c e r s Everett Freeman
"I think Dan and Dick
and Bob Enders want this have an advantage over
picture out and doing bust· other comedy team&amp;ness this s u m m e r-when they're bulb capable of be·
Laugh-In is off the air and lag leading men. The other
the public will be Rowan· teams all had one lunnyand-Martin-hungry - and looldlg
guy, and that made
that means getting it ready It tougb to write for tUm.
very quickly.
Dan and Dick can bulb play
So two teams of editors anything, and they both can
are cutting
they go, get the girl.''
working around !be clock to
There was a thud on stage.
have It out S®n after the Another actor had fallen
actual filming Is done. And
composer Nel591l Riddle is down on the growing pile of
scoring from the script, , corpses.
rather .jhan the usual pro-

year is the largest since

$7.1

••

Commie Hideouts
Obliterated by Navy

revenues reached by the
govennnent In 1951. The largeol
ever recorded waa $8.9 billion in

:By United Press International
:: lsraell and ·Jor&lt;lanlan troops
Mtlled with tanka, mortars and
In front of them, tied to "

l

postal rate lncreaaea.
llll,yo told newsmen the $4
lltlllles Innalltm
Mayo pointed oot thai al- totaL
The Nixon budpt al10 , wiJI
billion In planMd cuta In the
••tt also reOeds a fact that though domestic programs were
Allbough he declined to point
budget wm whltlle defense tile people or America have nol cut more for Racal 1970 than to specific programs which are seek repeal or tile rw.,~
The new admlrdslration budg- prosrams by $1.1 bWion and quite believed- thai lhe Nixon were defense outla)'a, the scheduled for reduetioi1s, Mayo employment limitation of '! drill
et Is actually ou1,y $Z.4 bWion re&lt;llce domestic prognuns the administration would come four requesta for future defense did say speclnc legislation only three workart ~ ..., ' ·
leas ttan the $195.3 bUllon In remain!~ $Z.9 btntori.
square Into the batlle on · authorizatloos were pored bock would be sent to Congress on lour government job 'J~1
outlays planned by his predecesBoth Nixon and l\ll,yo ooted inflation," he told newsmen.
to $3.1 bllllnn or the $5.5 billion farm s~t~port payments and on he added.
•or, L)'lldon B. Johnson, In h0110ver that or 1118 $8 button
Jan111ry. Whits House spokes- increase in spending· over the
men said however. _that ecme of 1969 budget total, domestic
the Johnaon esUmotes were otr prognuns wUI pin $6.5 bUUon
and 1118 total Should have been or .that increase.
$196.9 biUion.
"This admlnlstratltm will nevlludpt Dlre&lt;tor - r t P. er turn Its back on 1118 growing
needs ot the Amerlean people,"
Nixon said tn a prepared
VOL. IVNO 11
SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 1969
PAGE II
otatement.
· ~~~~~~~------------~----~~--~------------------------------------------in additloo to the cuts In
apendlng for 1970, 1118 revised
budge! also· cut $1!.5 bllllon In
requested authorizations for
flllure spending to a total or
$204.6 billion, Mayo said.
The $1!. 8 billion surplus goal
eel to be sent to Coqp'en at Ute
same time, they added.
Johnson FIJlUI"e&amp; Off

Diachlne guns for three hours

Mr. and Mrs, Robert llolllda,y
and Camtly or Wooster spent the
Easter vacation at the home of
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. A. her sister and brother..ln-law,
Radeldn and Mr, and Mrs. John Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence ChapHollida,y.
man.
Mr. and Mrs. Arlin Radekln
of Athens joined the HolUda,ys at
Q-Who is the first and
the Radekln home on Qlndsy for
only woman pictured on U.S.
a turkey dlmer.

and court records simply because IIley wOI not wall untO
tht~Y are of legal age to take a wllll a pollee officer and rauure spending two weeks with her
daughters in Medina and Woosto disperse.
drink.,

"

Rifle-toting
' '
Gary Wa/berg
seems intent
on having Rowan
and Martin
join the "bodies"
cluttering
•
floor in this
rather untidy
kitchen scene
from "The
Maltese Bippy."

------*ol

minor head iniuriesaOO 12youths
Mrs. Effie Hoosier returned
were booked on charges or disturbing the peace, interferr~ to her home here Friday after

.

"

:!

'

·.Are .Bettina:
,
Bippy ·

I

A-·

aulhorities said they were being

elementary

·.· . ·.·

with calla Frlda,y rdiht 11 1oo
the record set In 1985, but . . cal lale-nlibt television llmi
Crool!lton'1 dikes were holdl"l . aqught ieoosurance.tllet Call fand . the 8,500 ,realdenll reornla was oWl alive aud welL
mained In u.eJr homes, shelhour lacal"tUk
tered behind the levees.
s'-·" on•WJ.S.TV set otr ~
'1111 Des Molnas River was
tromora or [llnlc as l)lrllclfalling at Windom and Jacklon,
panta apoke ol "~fonda'•
Minn., but 470 J,leraono remained
demise In 1969."
h1111eless at Windom. Three of
Romle lltlrrett. hnat of U.
the four bridges Into Jackson
midnight ahow, Wasdlseusall'8
were closed and the fourth waa
CW1 GeJXry's new book, "The
closed to all but emergeni:y
Last Da,ys of tile Late Great
tram c.
State or California," wlth .lhe
uwe~re holding our breath," a
author and apaychlalrlstfrom
Jackson p o I I c e m a n 111id.
Northwestern Unl"VersiQr.
"There's a continual battle with

s . _ and we have had to
conservative
because
a
junior
build
srnne secondary dikes
President Nixon for disaster
high
school
ard
a
new
behind
the original ones to
area designation, makl~ them
Minnesota

,, .
'.;,

'10- '1111 ~ Tlm..,&amp;patlnel, SWVIaJI, Alirlll3, 1969

arxl

.,

.

world's highest prizes given the
Olm Industry.

Bergman, Natalie Wood all:
Jana Fonda.
Chaat&gt;lon has promised a
fllstel'jNice&lt;!, livelier st- than
the olcl [llrad~ or winners
throligh the crowd to the sfaae.
Nominated Cor best actress, ·In
addition to Mlsa Hepburn, are
Barbre Slrelosnd (f'IIIIIY Girl),
Woodward (Rach,t;
Joome
RacheO, Patricia Neal ('l'lie
Sub.klct Wu ·Roteaf and Vanes•• Jledarave a~
lltllt actor IQillnoes are

GOller Champion, producer of
&amp;IMiral spectacular Broadwa,y
hila, Is staglrw the show for 1118
Rrri lime.
And (or the nrat time In
many y•ra Bob Hope will 1101
play master o! ceremonies. In
hla .Place Will bo hosta ' and
hostesses lncludi!W Frank · SI•~
In' w~n~or&gt;
tra, Burt ....- . Sldoa,y Roo' .Moot~, (OUm), dt~
Ptlltiar, Stev. iloQullen, ,I!Wl'ld Rcillertaon . (Ciiorlll, ,\lin Arkin

•

''

..

'I

,..., o·:ro. ·(Lioa

&gt; •

I~ ;i;..

'

(The Hearl Ia A Lonely lluaiAi

and Alan Bates (Tho Flar).
The nominees IIIII bo - t
nar 1118 slap, ellml•IIIW ti
tlme conaum!rv treka rr.. I
~·h~· or the lhoater.

CwrtliiXI hi/iltll U . - W
1'1111 90 ~laM~ &lt;
lltll \1 .....

~-·
·· [1111, ....-_

'-'s.

p............~=~
~Iter

or

e.

~, - 011

~;.;:

Wliiw to~~~~~- ' I
'

�s·
han
·
· CZechs Say .More Russians

~~The Suncla)' Tlme.....ntlneJ, Sunday, .lprlll3 1969
•
•
•

, , 12 :... , . Sonllt.v Tlmo..&amp;&gt;ntinel, sunday, A!lrU 13, 1969

. U". '

Coming, then Say 'Wrong'
..
'

'

PRAGUE (tJPI)- C..Choolowlda aid Saturday U.t more
•-•ot ~s would augment
~" 10,00o.m.n
w"'"' occ..,.uon army
the
here and then denied its
,.......,
•
"....,
own aMOWlcement as unfounded.
n.e national news agency
CTK issued 1 govermnent
eunmunique in midarternoon
that said more Soviet troops
would be sent to Czechoslovakia
urder terms of the occ\llation
. •-ty 8 1.-...11 in October, 1968.
w&lt;•
, . ,been
_
· "It has
announced. from

olncial Circles that the content
or the Czechoslovak govermnent
cmununique on slWiementlng
the otrengih ot Soviet treaps on
C' -~-slovakia's territory is

~·~ In view of changed
unCounded
facts," CTK said.
lllli1o~ Talks Slated

The ,...;.;..,omen! had lol·

the Sol'iet defense minister,
returned to czechoslovakia for
talks on "mUitory and poliUcal
~-• Gen. lllarUn
train!-''
'" with ~·
.
Dzur, lhe Czechoslovak dotenae
~mini I-..·
There was oo reason gi,.n lor
the withdrawal ol the communique or the clrc\Dilstancea of
its i ssuanee• Thor. ha,. been
reports, never O[ftcia""
~ confirmed,
that more .Soviet
soldiers would be sent to join an
·
lor ce '""''
-·-beri~
ocCIC)B.bon
•oe
between 10,ooo a nd 75,1100 men.

The orig! naI gove rnmont communique had sa id "·t
u• "more .
Soviet troq&gt;s and technique wiU
be transferred to Czechoslova•
Ida t hi s month to Complement
the Soviet rorces • strength • • •"
It did not S8Y how many
troq&gt;a would be sent or where
they would be ststloned. It said

lowed a Prague radio report

they would be transferred "bY

that Marshal Alllrei Grechko,

rail to tho places of Soviet

troops'

stotloning,

llxeJI In

advance." ·

'

WI aalliVI '""'
TO UMtt !IIIAH1111D

'

MONDAY

1111'11 .

IATUIIDAY

9 P.M~
.

when he will hear arguments on
Ray's motions for a new trlal
Hill said he wasn't sure
whether Faquin would take new
evidence at that time, but If ao,
u1 do have new evidence in the
case." The nature ol the
evidence was not disclosed..
Brother Has Proof
The attorney said Ray's
brother, Jerry, would be avaUable to teat!~ it the judge so
desires, and that Jerry ~'had a
good porUOn ot proof and wiU
coq~erate."

Hiil filed a petition in U.S.
District Court in Nashville
Frida.)' charging that Ray was
~"pressured" into pleadq guilty
to ""' King slaying to protect
the story and movie rights to
his life- rights that Hill said
might be worth "millions of
dollars."

The 29-year~ld lawyer, a
Karate e)!l)ert who walks with a
slight llmp as a result of a
chUdhood bout with polio, asked
the
,,, district court to void tbe

STORE

I

lUNDAY

1 '7
1

BRAND
ACRYLIC
LATIX .
WHm·

NO. 56S

Reds Rout Braves, 12-3

lOSE
IOZILE
l!atnl ....., 4oly

polo

'tlrR .....••••n~t.•

llllf•••n whl . .
..wttoow.

for,

Mayo&lt; Arthur Hanes

The petition contended Foreman "never irtended for him
(Ray) to hove a lair trial and
jjA·
hi
·~·•t as this
tes .., 1n s own - would then make the facts and

""'"nth

testimony public property aiXl

Phillies Score First Win, 8-1

no one would or could have
exclusive (story) rigtrt:s In the
matter."

Claims Pressure
Acting on Foreman's advice.
Ray entered the guUcy plea
March 10 an:l, by prearrangement was sentenced tQ 99 yeara
in prison. He now claims he did
so after Foreman convinced
him that it was his only chan~
o! esCI!jling the electric choir.
E:xplaining his role, Hill said:
"The reason I became involwd
in the case basically came t'rom
my reading oC the contracts
under which Foreman, Huie and
Hanes had become involved."
He said he took the case out
o! s)1llllathy lor Ray and
.. because I think Mr. Ray was
done a great injustice."
Asked whether he thinks Ray

ALUMINUM

TENT

DOOR CRILL

Yanks Drop Mcl,ain,

c.. ... "'" ... _,.,.,..
lng aocl•llclow-prooflnt auch
lfiMt II ..rpaufinl, C9nYII

s

$ 00

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GAL-

personal viewpoint is immaterial, but since you have asked,
•yes', I do beli~ve he Is

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1111 .been I&amp;CrltJced to third by

Orioles
'·.

Topple

l4tl.IB
IllIll. '1111 SI.U

Senators

Advertising ... makes wheels go 'round!
Every day, in great cities and small vi.lJagea, bousewives make out their daily shopping lists from ads in
their home-t.own newspapers.
No hoopla, no ballyhoo. The kids bave gone .to
~ehool, tbe father to work. The mother of the family
- the one responsible for spending most of the family's
money - slts down at her kitchen table and carefuiJy
decides wbere she can get the best buys. The infor·
mation is oU there , in the newspaper. The bargain
prlces, the descriptions, atay there while she makes
up her mind. at leisure. Perhaps she will even Cold
the ad and put it in her purse, if tbere is any question
in ber mind about the price or ttl.e product.

Advertitlnt iJ a aorvi.. wblch people want. After
the New York llew&amp;paper atrike of 1957, women interviewed In one study aid they mlaaed ada mMI of all ·
features ill tbe newspaper.
Advertiatne makes the wbeeb 10 'round in our
econQIDy Following tbe Minneapolis newspaper strik«
Jn 1962, · economists of the Federal Reserve Bank's
Ninth District e~timated that the area had lost
$58,000,000 ia ules.
Ad,.rtiJIDJ maba newspaper wbeela JO 'round,
too. Before the advent of mass advertili.Dg, new•

REG. $6.99

BALTIMORE (tJPI) - SooU..
paw Deve McNall¥ pitched a !oorhlttar and his teammates ••ked
him with a 12-hltattackSaturda,y,
lncladbw ..... """' by Don Bu!ord,llld Frank Roblnoon, topace
the ·Baltimore Orioles to a 0.0
vlclory over the Waahlnaton Sen-

....
....
.
••a

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Jh4111fa'" ....
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...........
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$499

Ida• ...,

Paa~

HICK'S

. COATING

$2.54

STATE

depend on political parties for support. H hu been
advertlslna, honat advertillng lurnilhing 1 needed
sorl'ico to miHiona of conoumers, that bu atrengtbelled
the economic: base of Ute Amertean prep.

MOTOR OIL

MODii. 11GI

•

._.
":-r;v:.ot$11.·as' H. D.

IIOUW

·
• Clntllry
1Aotu4oo-.llloctro
Dial' '
DI'OI Aelloo, Dual Anti-

Revtnt

• COIOii Willi I 'Mioi&gt;
pi., 110 fl. ol 10 lb
Telt Une

~.·

Bob HWIIjlllreya rellowd Paocuat Iii the lltlnl and Jim Mllea

ROOF

papers - always very expeoaive to produee - bad to

INDEPEitDEIII MEDIUM

Ml:Nally retired the firot &amp;eY..
en senators and had another
atrlllB ol 11 baUera onrouts to
hla ;firot l'iclor)', strlkq out
ftve:PJ walking - .
SoOrlng three runs In both the
thtrd 1111 tlttlt lmh..,, tho Oriolto plmed tha loaa on CUnllo

iiNI•

.

•

'

· ·

MIDGiT TOYS
lEG 71c - '21$1.00
HG lie - 21$1.00
IIG 64c 21~ .
REG 41c-

2l59c

.1110

214911:

40c -

--d
lliol

.

.'frock . -

Batlel'f . 1\o•J

us

Giants Defeat San Diego, 5-l

Lose

~ ~l&lt;l9ry F~ •Iii•· TUt .,.. ,.
~taeaaoo, ~~ , .u.., ~-'&lt; ¥ '~"'·If ~

::::'=-~ark
....:,

S1.44

monied "' tor the looora.
~· by'l'aul Blair, Fraok
~ and Boor P-u pve
the 'Orlolea a 1-8 lead In the
tiro~ Blair's single ard three '
walka chaoed P11cull In the
thlnlo ' HuJ111hreyo came on to
walk In a run and ltlve ,. the
tltst of two sacrifice lllea by
Mark l!tia..V:
Buford h&lt;llltred to rlihtflold
In tl)t fourth with me on, bla
nrot crt the ylu. FraN&lt; Robl,..
off tbe ' llldh with h!o

·~,.~~·-' ' ·~
.. ....t
lloullle ellmUid a
In

99e

after lll'*Jlol

-~ 1;; !W!I&gt;Wstd "'*ll~.G-0),

· "· · ·

Of Year 7 3

!':~".!:~tit
w.~=~'!';
•~ to ~--kG-- out t the

N~ •uo
box and bring in Somben.
S-OS

O

Ron Santo IP'OUIIded Into a
double play betOre Ernie Banks
aiiWied to drive in Backer! with
the third rom of the IM!ng.ll8ndy
Hllldley then forced llanka toond
the gama.
The E'POI gave Gram 12-htt
alt&gt;J)Ori with Don Booch collectlng lour and Maury WWa three.
Ruscy Staub
In two runs
.._~,7 nd
ith
w a """!"" a 1 triple 1nd
lllack Jooes two with a sacrlnco
117 and an illilold lrOWidor.
The ElQIOo pounded Fergusm
Jenkins, the on~¥ a,.Jor league
pitcher to win 2 0 - In each
of tho laattwo SOUGill, and aent
hllh to the abowers betore a man
WIS OUUII the third.

Bootoo ............ 3
Ne" York , ••••• _ •• . 3
W ··3
as.~...oo ' ' • ' • · • •
Detrnit ' • ' • • • • • • • •2
Baltimore • • • • • ' ' ' • • 2
Cleveland • · • • ' '· • • ' ' 0
&lt;Weatsrn DIYislon)
Kansas Clcy • • • • • • • a
x-Beattle • • ' • • • • • • 2
Oakland •
2
x-Calltornla • ' ' ' • ' • 2
x-Chlcago • • • • • • • • · 1
x-MJnneaota • • .... , • , 0
»Maht gamea,
CSaturdayls Reaults)
Now York 4 Detroit o
Baltimore 9 Wa~ 0
Booton 5 Cleveland 3
Kanoao City 9 Oakland 3
at Callfllnda,
Chi..,. Seattle, nilht
7

._ttad

aa--

'

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

land~nt~

=~ ~~:ctory

a

whUa waildnl: ~~~... ~~~~~

aar..

Ketttuck~

fried Chickett

IT'S ECONOMICAL TO SERVE AT
HOME. BUY IT BY THE BOX, BUCKEt
OR BARREL AT

NEW YORR (IJPI) - D&amp;Ye
GIII.U doubled and ICOred t h o
game's oni.J nm 111 CUrt Flood' a
two.lloso hit In the third 1nn1na
5atunla.Y whUe pitching the st.
Loola Cardinals to a 1~ victory
over the Now York Mote.
Giusti, who was aCCJiiredtwlce
by the Cardinals during the oilseason doullled to lett off Met
starter Don Cardwell to ....., the
third. One out later, FlOOd followed with hla double to lett

Auto
WrecklnJ

seoriJw GluoU.

446-4110
367-7598

Giusti, who was acquired from
Hooatoo and tllen • • loll In the
_ . ..... droft to San Dlqo ....
fore the CardlnaiJ traded tor
blm again, allowed alx hits whUo
walltlng three and llrlklng out

GUAUNTEED
USED AND
REBUILT
PARTS

nve.

He ran Into ditrlcolty on1J&lt; In
tho first, twrth, and sixth InnIngs. In the !!rat, he walked
W&amp;YDO Garret! and Clem Jones
with two outbutreUredEdKranepool m a P8PIP to Julian Javier.
Garret! and Jones alngled to
the !onrth Inning bet GlusU
got Kranepool to bounce Into I
double play and Jerey Grote was
retired oo a tine running catch
by Javier In short contsr field.

OWNERS:
tt...t')', Doo,
Paul Baird

ond;'T~;;;:;:::iiiii..,

..........

. i'

t

,,,

DON'T

GGI(OWL
•

about your

INCOME TAX
You'll roar about the courte- lOTH
prompt and ine•p.n 1 ive fEDEIAl

CUI,

1ervice )'ou'll reui11e ot H &amp; R
ILOCK. No use puuy-foot;n

AND

around with your lalltn Come

STATE

s

to the folks who know what ~
they're doing.

L!113

366 Second Ave.

Weekdaya - 9 LJn,

&amp;

PRICES START AS LOW AS $2.99 ,~EL4x8

101 EVANS DIIVE-IN

WE SPECIALIZE IN THE NEW
24 w '(SECTIONAL HOMES) .
I

..........
Oot oopjolloro trill ho ..
oxporto In .., otoro to
holp JOI with poor panel.
lnt pro~l... o. Many

....... ····-

'

· · •CEILING
. ilLE
..·..,•FURRING
rrc ·
' ,.

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•PRE-FINISHED MOULDINGS
•DURAGRAIN
•VINYL PANELING
•REGENT, 11any styles
SPECIAL
STYLE BOARD-$5.95 ...

FRENCH CIT.Y~.
Honae Cliater,·. ,Inc::

· PIN.E ST.

,Pll,: ~-

MAIN ST. PH.: 11:~~2

J

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This Is our Sprint Panelin1 Sale that means Tremendous Sawin1s on
Panelln1 on many kintls of woods, Hardboard, and Vinyls, in finishes
to compliment any decor.

101 EVANS SRAI HOUSE

"'f

~

E I G SALEJ

1
I

2
I
2
3

7

(r

Foor of tho Cardll!all' • ·• 7
were daublu, laclr' c L·l!l- ,
B.roclt'o two .._,ltll./'
tho llflh . . . butCinl!liPJ!o\11.
ed blm off llld .... Ia liD • •
..... lnAID.Ie !be ,..
., - ·
'

Mets

who hod three hits,

v1111,..

BIG SPRING

~\~'f.··

•

Cards
Trip

.... obth but ~ ,......., •
Charltl •
tlito
....... the thnob
Carftall all the 'IRQI·ftlr
New York, lllow!Jwloll!l lla ...

~ONDAY, APl 14 THRU SATURDAY, APR. 19

1
0.0) at Cloveover tho
2
2 --;;;:;7.;~:---:::=:-:;;::::;--;;:;=::;::-:--:---=:-:OKAYAMA, JlljJln (tJPI)- Univeraicy &lt;aq~ua. Otrlclals
2
Uni,.rsicy alodento throw rocks slid one policeman waa ldlled
2 at poitce Saturday when tho and 40 others hWred, IClllle
4 oMcero tried to break thrCJUgil serious!¥, In the •we with tha
barricades on the Okt,vama YOUths.

,,, I. .

·'
,,

.
·•
Ki....,W hll .................

Tigers By 4-0 Tally

11111, lloot covtrlngs oncl
dodt .......... Ono tolloo
- .,....u_ly 100 ·~... .
lt. a- •• Cloor.

is innocent, HilJ replied: "Wen,
I beUeve in defending him- my

hlnoci:!i1t" ··•

AUGUSTA, Ga. (UPI) - Stoody BIIIJ' Casper, C1J111bu1a, to plo,y
It "aate and eaq", !orgad Into a two-itrolte lead ~ midway
..,.,... tho third l'1IIDI of the lllaoiAira ll'QI! tour111111ent.
Casper, who started tha do¥ at 7-er andln a tie wltll Aualrallan Bruce Devlla, had bla &amp;econdbepyllllnladl birdie of the tourmmn~ In an evel&gt;jlll' 36 II'Clllt nine whUe De&gt;llr!, w11o had two
and .., binlloo, made hla turn at 5-tuler- 1 fronHIIDe 38.
Tho 37-year-old Ca11p0r, named
"Goiter of the Year" for Ute sec- Friday's beat score, Tom Weloond time in 1968 when he waltho kcvt..., Lionel Hebert ware 3loadiJW money winner on the pro under after 45 holes of t h e
tour, said from the otart that he Mastsra.
felt his "tendency to gamble"
Fonner PGA c~loo Don
was what had •IYmied him here J11111ry Wll the 54-llole leader
at the Augusto NadOIIIIIn a doz.
ID'ITERS FAC": COMEBACK-Thete lonr faeeo will haual major lea,.. pllcben u bJUen otlempl 1 eomeblek
OIIIOilB tho ..,.Y -1¥ ftnillhera
en Previous Qpeuancea.
Iller
lad aeaooa I bllllllf drouth!. From loft are Amorleaa Leapo home 1'1111 kine Frat Howll'd of wa....,..a
Saturdi.Y 11 he shot a 2-&lt;mdorblltinc
eh1mJ11oa Carl fallnemtld of Boelea, NaiiHII Leape biiUag ebamp Peie B.. of ClaebmaiiiiiKI hom~
He boa been play!JW it sale par 70 tor a throo-l'IIIDI totoi of
1
rua eacler Willie MeCovey of San Fr1nclaeo.
this time from tho stsrt - and l-over-par 217,
lt'o been paying oil, He hod only
Four.ume Maotera champloo
0111 bopy throurh hlo firot 42 Arnolci Poilmer, turning In hto
holes.
best round o1 a diacourqlng
Den Sikes, who started Satur- toumoment, alao ohot a 70 Satday'• round three strokes off urday,
tho Caspar - Devlin pace alcqr
ATLANTA (tJPI) - Johiii\Y season 11 the Reds bombed Pat
That loft Palmer at~
1!80111.
with Georp Archer, shot a 1• 218 where he was Ued with Gard- Bench and Lee lllay each hit a Jarvia 1nd two relievers tor tits previous &amp;ames this seascm.
Y011111 Gary Nntan otarted far
undor-PBr 35 on tho !'root aide ner Dickinson who hod a 71. PaJ.. homer and drove In three nma hlsheat bit totoi in the maJors
Aaron's homer also gave him
the Reds and got credit for the 5,001 career total bose• - oniJ&lt;
ot tho aiD-kissed coorse Satur- mer almoat got PODIIlized 1wo &amp;Piaee Slturday ao tile ClneiJ&gt;o this season.
vlclm'y, althCJUgil be was taken the
day to go 5-under. But he bopyed • trckea Cor IP'OIIndlng a club In a naU Reds aweka from a m i I d
player in history to
Tho Reds, "ho led the maJor
Crcn
tits game In the olxth 1.,. attain that fi&amp;ure.
No. 10 to tall ..ck into a Ue trlljl bock on the secood hole, but battlJw alump with 19 hits and leagues In tsam batting last seaDing when he •trained 1 muscle
with Archer and MUier Barber. o!Dclala nded in hia tavor,
Felipe A1ou also hit a solo
routed AUanta 12-3 to the am, had oot collected more than in his rliflt roresrm, W&amp;YDO
Archer was holdq his own
homer,
hia flrat r1 the year, for
Braves
their
first
loss
of
t1ta
seven
hits
in
any
ot
their
three
Deve Hill was In with a 12-220
GraJWOr came on to finish the the Braves.
thi'OO&amp;h the first six holea and young Mac McLendon with a season.
Saturday whUe Barber, No. 2 76-223.
Hank Aaron ol tho Braves
money winner on this year's
slammed
his 511th career homer
The leaders hod bareJ.y reached
tour, shot a Cront.-aide 34 to saln the haltway mark of t1ta third to tie Mel Ott tor seventh on
two atrokea and was holdirw a round at miiHftornoon Saturday the aU~ lia4 but It was not
4-ulldor througit 12.
as they were rtven lolA! -ng enouetJ. to prevent the Braves
PITTSBURGH (tJPI) - Rookie buflh Pirates Saturday.
Charles Coody, whoao 68 wao times lor tslevlaloo coverap. from dropping their first game
Calll!JOII and Jolmaoo walked In
Doo Money balled In tlvo runs,
The
Phlllies,
who
kayosd
Jim
the fifth and Calll8011 scored on
after tour successive victories.
including three in the firot tn. Running in tho third Inning, &amp;llllji- Money'S Bingle.
Toouny Helma Coniribeted
four bits Including his firot ntng with a ••ea-.looded triple, Ped a Cour.gamo losq streak
The Pirates scored their run
to •ck the Rve-hit pitching ot whUe ending a Pirate win atreah In tho sixth oo ROOerto Cl&amp;homer of tho seaSOII, to the Reds'
mente'a doubJe.i&gt;lay ball with
attack and Alex Johnson chljlpod Grant Jackaon and tth• the PhU- at tour.
Money, who had three hits, the ••• laaded. Jose Pagan in with his first home run o1 the adelphla PhUiies their fire! win
or tho season, 8-1, over the Pitta- trlplod behind Riehle Allen's sin- and Mat1;y Alw oingled and Rich
gle, Johnny Calllam'a double and Hebner walked to 1111 tho ......
Deroo Johnson'a walk oo a 3-2 But tho dtNbl&amp;opla;y grounder and
pitch with two out in the inning. WWie StorpU's strikeout got
DETROIT (UPI) - Mel Slot- IIDUiemyre, and scored blmael!
J~ Brigs st.W.8ci 1n tha · Jackson out ot the iMing with
UelllJTe Ptrmitled but me hit 111 Murcer'a two out cioul&gt;.lo.
third, stole second ancl acored on little damage,
- JlmNorthruP'stwo.ootdouble
Clarke cioul&gt;.led to IOidollthe
Allen' a double to right which
The PhiUtea added a run _in
In the fifth lnnlag Saturday- and !l!lb end evenluall,y came home
knocked out Bunning. Allen took the eliflth on J1ckaon' a single
Cllll.r two other Tigers reached 01111Qy White's oaerl!lcetq, MeNATIONAL LEAGUE
TODAY'S PROBABLE PITCHERS third on CaiUson's tl,yandacored with tho •ses loaded and the
baae as the New York Yonkeea Claln yielded New York's final
(Eaa!Airn Diviolon)
By United Preas Internetional on Johnaon'a sacrllice fly off final lall¥ in the ninth on MonChuck Hartenstein.
nm In the ninth whenStGtt!OIIlJTe TEAM
Woo Loot
~tiona! League)
defeated Detroit f-0.
ey' s llflh RBL
StDtuOI!\YI'8 rOUred tho first singled, wOIIllo third on Clarke's Chicago • , .......... t 1 Montreal Gstoneman D-llat Chi·
14 batters he faced before North- third hll, and acamporedhomooo Pittshor&amp;h ••.•• , • • .• 4
1 cago Olanda 1-8).
.,., who also SJIOiled two no.ftlt- Komq'o single.
New York. , ••••• , ••. 2
3
PhUadolphia (Wise 0.1) at
terolaot aeaaoo llfth theon~J&lt;Dest. Loola .......... , 2 3 Plttshor&amp;fl (Blass 0.0).
troit baae bit ol tho game, hltthe
0 8
M011troa1 , , , , , , , , , , 2
3
St. Lools (Gibson 11-0) at New
SAN DIEGO, Call!. (UPI) clout ~st inside the right field
ftrot pitch to him solidly to lett
PhUadelphlo, .... . ... 1
4 York (Seaver 0.0).
WUUe McCOvoy slammed out his
for an OIIPOIIlte field double.
Cincllhtl (Cloninger 0.0 a n d aecond homo nm ot the young tool pole, came with a nmner
aboard in tho eighth to pad a
P!cldag "' his
(WesiAirn Division)
Queen 0.0) at AUento CNiekro 1- · season along with a pslr oC- atim 2-1 lead hold by the Gianta
at
.
:L\I!:Al!
. bleslodri,.lnthrooruna..pow- at the time.
to 3..2 eounta oo both Norm
Atlanll , •• , , ."1!1. ••• , · 4 1 Lea Angoles (tJryadale I~) at eri"' tho San Francisco Glanto
It came off AI McBean, SanDi·
llld WUIIe llo11aJ be!oreroUrlng
San Diogo • , •• , •.•• 3
2 Hoostoo (WUIJOII o-1).
to a 5-1 win over tho San Diego
ego starter, who was maid!¥ his
them.., a &amp;I'OIIIId out tolhortand
x-Loo AJWOies •••••• 2
San Francisco O'erry o-1) at Padres Saturday,
1
flrat outing of tl» aeaoonandwho
a lllrlke out rei))Octlvoly,
•
Clnctm.tl • • • , , • , •. 2
2 San Diego (Selma 1-e).
Me Covey's hefty •t enabled
waa taken out after the homer.
Tho on~¥ other lletr&lt;&gt;ltnmnors
San Francisco , , , •• , • 2
3
(Americani4gue)
Juan Marlchal, the National
over for
Jack Baldochun to reach baae - e Cash andt)CHIG~;o (otlriVPI) -theJimftr(lfod..lB x-Houston , ••••• , , • , o 4 Kansas Clcy (Butler 0.0 and League's top winner in 1968, to McBean
and
gave
1QJ a tour~
Mlcl!e.J SlaDiey. Cash was aate ca
--. r
ng
d
x~l&amp;flt game,
Bllllker 0.0) at Oakland (Odom 1· go the distonce and pick ,. his
with two out In the IO\Ienth when boUers In a row, loatatwe-hittar
(Saturday's Results}
0 and Fingers 11-0),
lniUai l'ictory as 20,356 looked gor to Jim Davervort alter two
wore wt in the same lOlling to
Horace Clarke bobbled hI • and a shutout in the ninth lmtng Cincinnati 12 AUenta 3
Mlmeaota &lt;Woodson 11-0) at on.
account
for San Francisco's
II'OWid ball and BoiJby IIUrcor Slfllrday when tl» Chicago Coma PhUadelphla s PIUaburgill
Calitornia (Murphy 11-0).
McCOvey's homer, a 34~
fifth
and
final run. It wao Davwas charaed with an error with bunched foor slnglea before re- St. Loola 1 New York 0
Chlcqo O'etera 0.1) at Seatei1KJrt'•
tlrst.
two out In the ninth '~~!len he mia- liovor Carroll Sember&amp; IIAJPPed Montreal 7 Chi- 3
Uo CPatuo 1-8).
KANSAs CITY WINS
In downing the Padres, Marhsndlecl SlaDiq's lrOWidor to the relly and preaerved a 7-3wln San Francisco 5 San Diego I
New York (Banaon o-1) liD&amp;OAKLAND, CaiiL (t]pl)- Jim
lchal spaced ao,.nhitaand struck
third.
·
for the Montreal EJpOB.
Loa Anaoloa at Houatoo, night troit (Lo)!ch 1-e),
~nis, Pat KeiiJ and Jackie
Tho Yankees evened 31- game
Grant allowed no rumors paat
_ _ _
Washington atllaltlmore(Boa.. Hernandez each drooo in a pair out the. He was In trouble only
wlmer Dem,y McLain• a record first •s• In the nrat eigilt I~
AMERICAN LEAGUE
man 0.0 lnd COleman 1-e) at ot nms and Joe Keou&amp;h chlj)ped in tho seventh and elibth Innings.
1
at 1-1 by collectlna 12 hits. New llinga. But Pinch hlttar J m
&lt;Eaotern Dlvlrlon)
Baltimore (Phoebes 0.0 and Pal· In "ith two doubles and a sqJo
York ICOred twice In the third Qnalla, Don KOislnger, Glom TEAM
Won Loot mer 11-0),
Saturday to lead the Kansas Cicy

boat••

AY

another lawyer, rormer Blr-

the slayi~ or Dr. Martin wednesday..
CHATTANOOGA,
T e n n. Luther Ki•• Jr. and that he is
AUOrney Robert HUi noted
(UPI)-Jemes Earl Ray's new
·~
ourt Jodge
prepared to present "new that Criminal C
attorney said SaWrday he evidence" at a hearing next Arthur Faquin haa A..id he will
believes hls client is innocent of
deckle in Memphis Wednesday

.

10A.M.'·P

The sUr over the troops came
a8-r
~o
weeks ol political
•w
'"
crisis that began with a wUd,
a n t 1• Ruilslan demoootraUon
March 28. The SO&gt;iets were
aJWOred and lljljl!ied pressure
that resulted in aewre reatrlcUons on the press and other
measures aimed at preventing ed. tlrat.degree murder."
further demonstrations.
When Comptoo complotea h I •
The ministry ot. defense said aummaUoo, be will be rollowed
earlier this week that Czochoalo-k
ioinod In the by assJatont prosecutor J o b n
.... --,..ers
t~WW
Howard before !llperlor Court
de--·traUons,
which damaged Jlldga Herbert V, Walker In.. _. ...
some Sol'iet ol!lces and lnatalla· structs the jury and thO)' begin
tl011s.
. dollberaUooa.
Proiidont Ludl'ik ~
began a tour o! Czechosloru
mil'~-y
... last week.
u.u 1-~-u.u
......
He ••pealed
to mUltary units
oot to take part In aSI..!lovlet eontrael!l which Ray previously
demonstraUoos and atreaoed made with tamed trW lawyer
that the Soviet Union was Percy Foreman ard author
Czechoslo,.kia'a ally.
William Bradford Hule, and

La
er
Oaims
Ray
Not
Guilty:ngham
New wy

Billy Casper On
Top By 2 .Strokes

j

CONTINU€JHrem U
· the case had been: '-'htgh)y OVet•
complicated'' llf psychiatric teaUmony by 11 80-Calle~f exPerts!'
Mlllt!Cllll Tronce
"lr you beHove Dr. BornOrd
IJolmond wlq, hi• mirror act
and believe Sirhan wao In iome
kind of tranee, so that he clldll't
know U he wu on foot or horaeback, then It would be lnhwnaD
to JIWI)sh him for anylldnJ! at
all " COJIIIIIon aald.
;-i!ut U you cloll't buy It, like I
don't buy It, th"" there's nothIng loft but plain old cold-l&gt;lood-

~"~!~t·~

7

�'

Saunders Hurls 2-Hitter, Whiffs 12 In Second Win

Hornyak Pdt~ All-Am~~ican
Team
.
'

NEW YORII CVPO - Tile 1969
Ali-AIIIerlca lli&amp;h achool bullet.
baD ...... tho lalltll ... lht 14ytir hlal&lt;)ry o! lht eeltcll..,.,
wu l!IIOUIICod by ScholasUc Mapzlne.
ForQ&gt; prep atare 1r&lt;im22 otatoa
anlthe Dlslrlcll1 COIIUIIbta won
spots 011 the team. Tile p!Qo.·s
l'lll88 &amp;om 6-1 to 7-1-an avorap helsbt ol 6-6\l •
Tcm Payne o! Sha""'e LoulevDio, Ky., Ia the lallealat
7-L Jamea Brown 11 t.cq 1,.
lanl Cll)', N. Y., anl Jell Dow·

1011 o!· Downer• Grove NGrlb,
DL, are the 6-l AIIOII .H~ at:SI. Jollll't ol
Bellaire, Oblo, with a pllonoali.
enol tU 'iwrap, IOIIda 1111!

.

.

.

Jim - . r ohWelooo«DD- .. . - · lndlarepoll.. elate
p~, Eaal ol ~ Ill., o~IGII In lndlarw, II rep...,.
a....aaed 1L$ Ill ,.O'W 11 It eeated by 6-7 'Gecirie IIA:Glnnla
-•• hiial to the 11118 ~- ·aod 6-t Sttw llciiiJUic.
IIA:Gimll beCame onl,y I h I
~hlP. '
· ·
eieGnd
athlete ·to have m a 4 e
oido, New York and N"'
Jer- hewi ·toUr. playera eecb aol!OOibol' All-America In both
on the ft111i,l\,lj ,...... &lt;;alltor- belirioll- !eolball.
. .
. . thi'ee, .Uil P....,l...U, JD.
'!'be 1969 lllae!lont join an
dW., lllllloll, ~~ anl Weot hGIOr ...U · lhel lnclllloe such
proleellonal etara as Oecar
Vlrlbtla ~ lwo. '
For the fint Ume, a em,te Bobertloll, Jerry Luoao, B Ill
IAiam hea two playera 011 the BrldiOJ anlWellll07 Vnaeld, anl
AU-America COP lllfiOII, Waoii- lbe -b&lt;-llsnod Low Alclndor.

Blue Devils (
Top ~ Express .

GAWPOLIS - The Gallla Academy mue DovDa the
Olk lUll Olkl 8-0 Friday afternoon on Memorial Field behind the
two hit pitching ol Dole Saunders.
.
In 1even lMiJWI, Seunden gave '~' only two hits, walked two
Oca or three jualon .., I b •
anl atruck out 12 In -nlrw: hla second vlctDry of the aeaeon.
teem, 6-U TOIII llcMUIJen. of
IUo _,ent on tile hiD waa
Menllleld,
Pa., with tO ~;,
Larry McCorkle, Whom the Blue more nms ln the bottom ~ the
per
game,
Is
tho oalyotboi' _..
DovUa nicked lor nine hlta. Mc- sixth. Mark JohniOII - " " ,..
member
to
hive
hli the to point
Corkle walked one and felled ID to the third baaeman. DOYo lklrmario. AdoZen other player. a&gt;cot one man via tho strike oot nett graunded out !or tho oocond
erapd ooer 10 poilU a pme
out. l'rGOO singled, hlo oocond
route.
durl•lhe Saundera pve up. ol.ngles to hit or the game. Moooly dooblod
The lowest man on the teem,
.Jody Evouole and Mike ~oen. for hla oocond hit o! tho pme.
o1 Whom were the on[Jo base Saunders was safe on Chrla Slatnmnero for lhe Oakl. Saunders en' a second error at ahortstop
walked Everaole and ~eon and PrOH and Mosely acorod.
In tho lq) o1 the seventh. In sU Bush alllglod and Saunders acoroak !WI bad only four base run- ed, bul Bush waa later oul try.
ners, none or whom reached sec- lllg ID aloal home.
ond bue aa the Blue Devils play·
Oak !WI left throe men on 1.:
base and tho Blue Devilo had two
od errorlon ball.
Flrlll baooman Tom PrOse and men stranded on the sacks. Each
catcher Rick Moaely paced the team PIDod one doUble play.
AB R H
Blue DevU hitters, each two for OAK HILL
played In the big leagues 11imself If be bas any talent
By MARTY RALBOVSKY
C.
Slaton,
ss.
•
..
.
•
.3
0 0
three II lhe plate, and each with
at all to work with." ·
and has been described as
NEA Sports Writer
a double. Sllortstop Lcinnle Bush M. Miller, lb .......3 0 0
something of a baseball
McCarlby Ufl lie hun't
rarity because, up In Co&lt;&gt;
aeea 1 bll league game In
had a brace of singles in foor J, Eversole, 2b...•.. 2 0 I
AMHERST, N.Y.-(NEA)
perstown, N.Y., there's a
M. Jlo8il, 3b.. .. ... 3 0 0
perton olnce 1118 when ha
tripe.
-Every afternoon kids
plaque
on
the
wall
with
hill
last
appeared al Oldtlmer's
M.
~een,
c
....
,
.•.
2
0
I
Second baseman Bruce Wlleon
gather on the banks of Elli·
stern
Irish
lace
etched
upon
Day
at Yanllee Stadium. Hll
'
and third baseman Tom ~ncer D, Briaker, If.. . , .•. 3 0 0
colt Creek and fiU the
Fl!lllAY'S FIGHT RESULTS
lt.
He
made
the
Hall
of
wife
haa
beeD
bedridden
tbe
muddy water with fishing
BLUNDERS COSTLY
were each one for three. WU- L, Howard, cf.. .. ...2 0 0
NEW YORII (VPI) - L e o n
Fame as a manager, and to
tall live yean, the result ol
Jines
in
a
scene
that
smacks
J.
Childers,
r!
.......
1
0
0
LONDON
(UP0 8 Arsenal
101111 hit was a double. The only
Walblngton, 157'h , New York,
this day there are people
a broken hlp thai aever
of
Huckleberry
Finn.
s.
Howard,
r!
........
I
0
0
took
l(lvantaga
of two de!enllve
other - a base hit for the Blue
who say Joe McCarthy was
knocked out Tom Bethea, 159'h,
healed properly. He emllloys
nobody
catches
!Ish.
But
the best manager baseball
Dmlo wae a homoron by Dale L. McCorkle, p••••••• 2 0 0
live people around tile &amp;ouoe
New York ()!); Jel11oforritt, 210, blunlera by Leoda United Satur"They're after bullfrogs,"
·
ever bad.
22 0 2
Slllldera.
. TOTALS
-three nuneo w.. prov!df
New York, atoppod Charlle"Em- day ID beet tho E11!11ah Soccer
says Joe McCarthy, an exSaUildero lllruck out Eversole
care for ble wife; a cleaalng
"Baeeball bas ebanged
peror" Harris, 215\1, Jeraey League'J First Dlviolon Crpert
on
the
subject.
"Hear
woman
who
Uvea
Ia
aa
adto ond the first Inning and then GAHS
draatkaDy
once
my
day,"
AB R H
rlllllt1'12-1.
Clcy, N. J. (3),
that. croaking? Sounds like
la!&gt;llnt ban(alow, aad a
be 11)'1. usut a ntaDIJer'•
retired tho oilde on strikeouts L. Buah, as •. , ..... .4 I 2
crickets, doesn't it? But It's
handyman.
job remains lbe aame. He'a
In the third and fourth Innings M. Milliron, ss........ 0 o o
the bullfrogs. In the summer
11
to
wiD
baD
cames.
Man·
got
1 don't hear from very
to nck up aevon strikeouts In a D. Johneon, d .. ...... 2 I 0
they really croak up a
agora
today
bave
a
lot
more
many
people anymore," he
row. '11len the Blue Devil ace J. Thomaa, d .. .. . ..• 0 o 0
storm. My hearing isn't
complications Ia lbelr work
says.
"I
get a caD lrom
fanned Larry Howard to end lho B. WlliOII, 2b•.•....• 3 0 I
what it used to be, but every
than we bad Ia the old dayo.
Frank CroseW whenever he
llfth Inning anl reUred the side H. Taylor, 2b. ....... 0 0 0
day when I get up the first
I never bad jet planea, a.,bl
atops In Bulfalo or Cleve·
thing I hear are those
em atrlkeouta In the alxth for a T. Silencer, 3b ....... 3 0 I
c•mea or cout-to .. oaal
land and sometimes ,I hear
Cylinder, Radio,
standild transmission,
frogs ."
str1a1 of four more consecutive J. Davie, 8b •••.....• 0 0 0
travel to WOrrY a..ut.
from Tommy Henrich, who
lives In Ohio. They don't
Joe McCarthy Is 8% now,
"I remember playing
strikeouts.
G. BaUard, H......... 2 0 0
even know me at the corner
and a virtual recluse. He
games in the afternoon and
The Blue Devils jumped off ID M. Johnson, rf. . . . . . .1 o o
turquolseftnlsh wltll black top, WSW tires.
grocery store anymore.
spends hlo mornings reading
!raveling on the old Pullman
a ~ llld In the bottom ol tho D. lllmotl, rf~f........ 3 0 0
Tbey used to. Everytlme I
on lbe back porch o! the
trains. Tbe trips were 1ong
third Inning. Prole opened with W. Jamleon, H........ 1 0 0
Joo McCarthy
came In they'd make a fuss,
while brick larmbouoo he
and tiresome, but everybody
a - · and Mooe[Jo alnglod. T, Pr010, lb. , . , ... , .3 2 2
but not anymore. 'lbe place
have their got to know each other a lot
OWDI OD Soqlh Ellicott "' . . hitters
Saunllerl Olad out. llllh dnglod R, Mitchell, lb........o 0 0
day
again"
changed
hands a few years
Creek Road In lhlo tiny bam·
better. Poker was the hlg
ICOring ProM. Dave JohniOII R. Mooely, c.......... 3 2 2
ago 8nd these new folb are
let near Niagara FaDs, and
thing then. My guys would
filed out. WUeon wea safe 011 an R. Saundero, p......... 3 2 I
stricUy business.
In the afternoon he ewllehes the best game in the country sit around poker tables for
to
the
front
porch
10
he
can
error and both -LJo anl Bulb TOTALS
as far as I'm concerned.
hOurs and talk baseball. I
"But I'm not complaining,
27 8 9
watch the lddo caleb frogo.
ICOI'ed. Spencer hit Into a Oeld- OAK HILL
On summer nights I sit out
"I've been away for a don't think 1ou see much of
000 000 0- o.:l~
Tho oDiy time he leave• the long time and a lot of things that today.'
on the Iron! porch In my
er'a choice, with WUeon out II GABS
·
003 023 X- 8-9..4
house
ill
to
make
weekly
rocker, think about the old
hive changed. Bul I get a
McCarthy managed In the
tldrd baae,
lll!lorlea: Oak lUll- McCortripe
to
tbe
grocery
atoro
days,
and llalen to the frogs.
kick out of people who say major leagues for 24 years,
...,..., .....- out to open kle (LP) and ~n; GAllS and the baak.
Whal
more can a man. !If 82 .
baseball Is dead. They say had nine pennant winners
tho llllh. Saundera emackod the
ask
qirt
of..Jife?"
plleilere·11re
domlllallllg
1he...'
.
:
and
s~ven
world
champions.
(WI') and Moooly. ~--~" il(el, "t~' the sollt~de,
firlltipltch peat Larry Howard in Sauoders
'
M. BoiiP 3, c. Slaton 2, .anl L; ... "· ·~ f.i'carttiy says he still hitters too much, and things He haH the Yankees ln the
centalileld lor a homerun. Bush Howard. LOB - Oak IIIII 3,
gets worked up now and like that. Heck, I can re. heyday of Babe Ruth, Lou
_.,t up 1&lt;1 tho third baeemsn GAHS 2. DP- Oak HW I, GAHS
then ... about baseball.
member the year one of my Gehrig , and later, Joe Dl·
lor the aec:ond out. D. Johnaon I. 2B - WUton, Prole and lofooeown
players with the New Maggio. He retired In 1950
"The only association I
wa1llad and scored on Bruce Wll- [Jo. HR - D. Saundero. SB - D.
York
Yankees, the late after managing the Boston
have with the game Is what
George
led the Rod Sox for two seasons,
eon'a -le. l\lencer graunded Johneon.
I read in the papers and see AmericanSternwelss,
League
in
hitting and the star of thoee Boston
out to IIIII the 1m1n11 and lbe Blue Pitcher
IP H R BB SO
on TV," he says. "I've been with an average of .305.
The teams, Ted Williams, ill
DevUo led 5-0.
McCorkle
6 9 8 I 0
reading an awful lot lately game survived that, didn't
maklng his debut as a manThe Blue DeYilo """red throe Sounder•
1 2 0 2 12
about baseball being on the it? The hitters will have ager himself this eeason.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
1616 EASTERN -AYE.
way out. I disagree with
their
day
again."
"I
don't
worry
about
that. The game may have
McCarthy, himself, never Ted," McCarthy says. "He
some problems, but it's still
know• what he's doing. He
wo. a great student of the
. WHY DOES JIM MINK SELL 650 CARS AYEAR?
game
when
I
had
him.
AI·
lleDinltal, the father ol nine
NO. 1 PRICE - NO. ZQUALITY - NO. 3 LOW OVERHEAD - NO. 4
erlllg .00 droulllg following two
ways observing, always
cbUdrsD,
has
coacbed
baakolboll
hours of playing paddle ball.
thinking. He didn't have to
VOLUME BUYING, NEW CAR TRADE-INS FROM VOLUME
Beniii&amp;IDII did DOl hOYO a hie- l8aml to. f7-33 record ...... he come back to baseball, but
. DEALERS!
he did and that telill you
tory ol heerl trouble anl h1l came to MSU In 1965 from St.
Loula IJnhorsltl. He wao CliO rt something about the man. I
EA!II' LANSING, Mich. (VP0 diUon In the lntonuve care soc- paddle beU - ' - Robert lhe lop ......... In the IIIB8Wrl don't know what kind of
-II!Cblpn state Unlversltl bae- Uon of tho hosplllll, althousb he NOrdmam, r r o • h balkstbiu VeUey Collloreoce and prevklua- team he has in Washinaton,
l&lt;etbell coach John E. Bmln&amp;lon. has suffered •-occaslonal discom- coacb, oeld BsolngiDo had n ol 11 coachad sl Drake UniYOrney. but he will do all righ[ for
eompl•lned 11 Wness.
47, remained In criUcal oondl- fort."
Dr. James FOIII'il, bead of tho
tloo Sllllrdll!' alter a heerl atOUR
tack he IUII'erod Friday follow- unb'erlll)' health center and MSU
team plO'IICian, ssld Bemn&amp;IDn
PRICE
Ina a pme or padclle baD,
would
reiNIIn
under
lnlonllve
~ HOopltll olllclllle ssld
68 PL
BMIDIIDII reiNIInsln stable con- care at Leaat three days and
"mull be ...,lldored In criUcal
auto., wlnyl top. - - - - - - - - - '
coodliicin lor at Leall72 hours."
68 FALCON Futura 4 Dr. 6 cyl., auto.
$2495
Dr. Feurli ssld Bemn&amp;tDn wes
A
real
beauty~.
-.,...-----stricken about 2 p.m. alter show-

i

-roll. ,

.

01' Joe McCarthy Still
Coes To Bat For Baseball

'65 MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE
6

heater,

will

$1295

--------------------------.1

WOOD MOTOR SALES

Ji Mink Auto Sales

••••••

MSU Cage Coach Said
Critical After Attack

50· CARS NOW INSTOCK-50
HERE'S A FEWI

It Isn't What you payIt's what you get ·

Jo SifTert

.

Earns Pole
Position
BRANDS HATCH, En CI and
(IJl'O - Jo Slllert, In a Worlls
l'ln'tcbe 908, lbllterodtheaports
car LIP reeonl hero Saturday ID
make the pole pooiUon In ibldll'l BOAC 100, tho third I1lUDd
of lbe World Sports Champlmlldp.
Tile lilllss driver roared round
the 2.11i mDe circuit In ooe mJn.,

2Ls

.-.11 ID reoord a
thlllei'IDI avorap speed of 107.IS 11111H an hour, a run 1.8
........ taller than New Zeallador Cbrls AIIIOII Ill a 312P

lllo,

r...-ut.

~the nut row o!the
Swede Jo HOmier,

ll'ld will be

.obo took hla Lola MK3 arc&gt;md
be trick In 1:31.6.
llill'bard em Sll!ert•s tanplpos
llll' two more Worke POracb-

..e

ol VIc Elford (1:32.0) anl
• • Gerhard Mitior (1:32.3),
IOCOOd row ol the l!rld.
.....Jan Jack
took
.,. GpOn-IDIJpod Ford 3 L
, r .. A!lll :Mam nciJW team
"""" Ill 1:33.2 to 1101 tho ln·
,li!IIIIGD 011 the third row.
J•M Brlbham will be the
&lt;Worlul Porsche of RoiC
wllo Lumod In ......
111:33.2. ~
· Ztallllld, In the
..,.. ,...,. Mom Ford 3 L, wW
•1

Br-

•IIIIi,

*

the

row.

~~

.

for what you pay!

.Plane Is
Grounded

ala vel\

Track coach Devo Rankin oaid
a rule KOVOrni~ aU apor1o at
Purdue Ia thai athletta muol be
aha.e llefore a meet.
Purdue was acbedultd to meet
lowa'a track team Saturday aft..

Brakes, Custom Cob. 200 Miloa, Sold
new for $3850.00.

$2695
1968 Chn. Pickup
'

1966 Buick Electr•

.

4 'Dr. Hardtop, Air Concl.,' Local Doc•
tor' 1 trade in. Lime Green, Black Vi-

6,500 :miles, Auto. Trans., VB eng me.
Sold new for $3250.00. Nice to Haul

Camper.

nyl top. Extra nico. Waa $2695.00 .

$2495

$2495
~-

WE

OrDOIJII.

Wltcaaoeo nld ·Erlf Mccaskill, whO quit Purdue'• track
team two weeks ago ovtr a racIal losile, pointed to a black
baa he ""' earryl~ near the
plane and 11ld, "I've got a
bcmb In Lilli bag. ..
When the pUot ol lbe Purdueowned DC 6 was notified, he
grourdod the plane anl ordered
a llurough eoerch.
Rank! n •ld he told Mol Harris anl Jbn Jackeon; botli run-.
nera, they could 1111 erur the
plane becauH lheyhadnotahlvW
off their moualaehea. ·

Auto. Trans. Pow• Stnring, Power .

4'Dr., 22,000 miloa, Air Cond. Interior
Llh Now. 100!1 Warranty.

By Threat
LAFAYETTE, Ind. (UP0 - A
b&lt;mb searo grounded a Purdue
Univerllty plane tod8l' ohortly
after two Negro pla,yen were
denied permission ID join their
leammafAoa for a lliJht to Iowa
City because they wore Jilt clean

1969 GMC Pickup

1967 Buick wn•cll

$2295
$1795

$1695
.$1695
1 owner, 22,000 miles-~-----:~-- $1595
65 CHEVROLET l11pala Z Of., lt.T. VI,
$1495
auto. P.S. Blue---~--~-65 PLYMOUTH Belw. II 2 Dr. H.T. 383
$1495
4 bbl., auto. Local one owner. Mint candillon----------65· FORD .Galaxle 5!10 Z Dr, H.T. VB, 3
$1395
speed, turquoise, nice car. ·
.: .
65 CHEV. SS 2 Dr. H.T.. 327 4 !Jill. 4
$1595
speed - - - - - - · - - - - ··-·-·--··
65VOLKSIAGEN - - - - - . . . - - - - - ~ ~195
6511USTANG 2 Dr; H.T. VB, auto. .
$1395
65 PLYMOUTH Fury Ill Sta. 11!1. 9,Pas$.
, $1595
GIIIU, p., s
,....,.
Va1 ......
~-------·-"' ''

1967 Int. ScOtt
4 Wheel Drive, 16,000 mil10 . Top con- .
dition.

67 FORD Country Sedan iO Pass. Wap.
VB lito. P.S;, P.B.::::-::-:---:=---:--67 FORD Custom 500 4 Dr. VB, auto •
P.S. All wlllte .=·~-::::-=:---:::--66 CHEVROLET 9 Pass. Station Wqon.
va. auto. P.S. --::-::-:::-~-=---66 FORD Falrl;ne 500 Conv. VB, auto. - - 66 RAMBLER Classic 770 Wapn. Local

"

64 VOI,.KSWAGEff
.
.
_,..
64 T. BIRD.' All !IOYier, ·-'r canil. Silver
paint. A·1 sluipe · · ..
·
3-63 FORDS Gal. 500 4 Dr. Slid. VB,
aido. bani. P.S: Take JD.II: plck----1
~[ORD. Onuwner, 29,000 miles. Like

5t0,5
$1595
··
$895·

60 CHEVROLE.T Pickup. Mechanical
pertecl New paint lob · . ·
· ·

1

$995
$1295.
$99$
'$1195
' $1295

. 895. '
$ 295:·
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-. .......

..

$1995
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·. ·

$495

TI{HiiiCE.OR THE ;DIFF~RENCE ISWHAT COUNTS
-=-"S"':!O SEE JIM Ml.NK OR DWIGHT S""!!Til..;,V-.Eoioo~S~~......-!-.""~

.

- .. ...

.

' · ·~··

............

-~.

·,

..

'

I

,,I

i

29-Year-Old Japanese
Golfer Rerords History

.. ,,__.,._

,..

-- . ... ...
_,

'

.~

• J

................ a ... _
IUI:d. aa'l ._. .,.. to 4u&amp;
offtbe ...tel"

Marauder
Golfers In
Third Win
POMEROY - Tile lfelp Marauder aolf IAiam ....,... Its overaD 1969 record to a-1-1 by deloeU,. R a - 225 to 2t9
Frlclay afteriiOOII at the Po&amp;
Ol'Qj'

Gcif CourH.

BID Henaler canlod a •l:ar!! 38 to best hll · ant, BID s.noburr. wbo bod a
47, anl to win medollel honora.
Randy Burl •e«od a 43 for
l\!elp tD deleet Phl11111boan, 52;
Marllllor Ru: llllllh carded a
Sf to boat Joe WUUamo' 52,
anl Bob Werry, also oll\!elp,
aot a ta to bell 'l'err1 Nutter'•
5L Kevin W- ol Ravonowood
scored the JaclleGI c.untlana
only will with • f7 to DOll Ander.... 1 51 I« l\!elp.
:Molal trawl• to Falqreene
COUJ1tr)' Club Wodneaclly afllr. 110011 for a match against Jackam anl Wellston.
Sq&gt;homcn

NBA PLAYOFF
Belt.&lt;J(-en dlvlalotl flnala

· A!a.tllltr lia'Wiitnet• IDI beRACINJ1; ;., The hard -lbrclw- DOOD to 111'11 the ~ Tor- ~ ,.... the 'fletlm.
~.
I
MlitenvtiJep:llllaci,
JQitl oeCc!.i bal!li, . . . .
lllg qhomore rflltthlndor, Ron- llldoea t1111r lint win of the
fanned lt ~Prtan• and .......
Coecb Ru.. .lltr)ler'l &lt;rODeDie lllchtel, pitched a DC&gt;Idt no- . 1919 betllball ......,,
run, 7-G 'Victory Fridq afterVlalll!ti Alounder of Athenl only ibree bllea 011 baDe. NO ·4oeo, who tailed dofelt Ia jiMilr
firlll three ...... lblt ........
'
.
jumped lnUi a 2-0, leod 1111 thiOIId 1m11tr. oddad r-monmarkerl ... ilia fourth IDd ICGl'ed
lheiJ' 11na1 run ID the IIXib.
- . . . lirlll two ..... reaullod from ~ ·~
leadl• off the lmlnr- a lingle, Geoqe lAwrence beiDa sale
.., a J\elder't cboloe, Pat AmBELPRE - The llelp Ml· Ray Vauahan aod Grimm aJao first; ·Belpre, aecond - 1:43.11. old waJiclng and Brllco Hart being
rauder lhlnolads woo nino oilS won lbe 880 relay In 1:43.5.
POLE VAULT- Whltletch safellllanorror.
evonta and acorod 61polnlawblls
Here'e ovonll reaulltl o1 the (M), Clnirch (B), L. Alloway (B),
111 the fourth lrame, Lawrence
taklrw eecond pisco Ill a lrii- meet, with the order ol Onlsh T. Alloway (B) - 10'.
lluted the four.run epllll'iO wl1b
Jar meet here Friday afternoCIII. anlthe Ume or the winner.
HIGH ·JT.JloiP - llleelure (B), 1 duals, Barry Harl tripled, Pat
Be!J&gt;re woo tho meet wltl! IJ3Ih
HIGH HURDLES - Sarboek Mitchell CBl, Nichola (W), Boy- Arnold ,..1 safe 011 an error and
pointa..)l'allrford plsced tldrd (B), WeD 00, Korns (B), Butcb- den (B) - 5'7".
lllole eecood, Bruoe Harl and
with 1¥12 points.
er (B)- :16.6.
BROAD JVliiP - MeCiuro(B), Croll CotlriU were safe 011 orCoach John BentlOJ'• Mareud,100 YARD DASH - Grimm Worry 00, Church (B), Lewle rora and Bachtel hit a IICrlllce
er trackltera were jllOod by the 00, Moore (B), Hawley (M), (B)- 21'.
117 to the outllold wl1b one eway.
riiiiiiiJw ol JWIIor John Rltchhart Gllllher (W) - 11:07.
SHOT PVT - Barr (M), SlavThe Jail Tornado run reaultanl. Alan CUnnlniLham. wbo WOII
MILE RELAY - Be!J&gt;ro,llrst; ene 00, Weber (M), Smith (W) oc1 lr&lt;im Amold walldna and Dave
twoevonlleach.
:Melp, ooeond - 3:52.
and Foutt;y (B), Ue - f0'7'', Rouoh movlrJc him to third with
Rltchhart woo the «O event
880 YARD DASH - CunningIn 51,2 eec:ondo anl llrot hem (l\1), White (M), J!oydon (B), ''"' lapullp • Foutt;y
Southern wW boll - e s 131'7''.
place In tho 220 yard dssh" with Nlchala (W)- 2:16.6.
a 25.S fo'Orformanco,
LOW HUROLES- Sarbeek (B),
Cunningham, also a junior, won llloCullougb (B), ButcberCBl,Mcthe 880 yardrunln2:16.6,anlfln- Ciure (B)- 2L6.
lshod llrot In the mile run with
220 YABD DASH - Rltchharl
(M), GW!anl (W), Ginther (W),
a 1:511.2 performance.
Other MeiJI PlfU•otpanta .,. Moore anl Lewis (B), lie.! lu!1ng firsts were ·Bob Grimm :25.3.
With a time of IL07 eecondaln
MILE RUN - CWI1Irwhem (M),
lbe 100 yard dllh; Jbn Warner, Kovaea (B), Nichols (W); Boy10.67 Ill the two mDe nm; !like don (W) - 4:5U.
Barr witll a dlslanee ol to Ceo!,
TWO MILE RUN - Wunor
7 Inches In the lhot put anl Mlx 00, Plarsol· (B), Vauchan (M),
Whlllateh, who bad a 10 loot per- Fortney (B) - 10:57,
formance Ill tho pole vaul~
880 YARD RELAY - :MeJia,
Marauders Rlcb Hawley, Rice,

Meigs 2nd In Triangular
M~et Despite Nine Firsts

Vtn 41lilltr
.hit .... hi

~H
&amp;.

aiJWIW""
.\~llti410-~...
pll1!'~~tli

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I&amp;K

MOBIL!: HOME SALES·
Pt. Plaaoant

SPECIAL SALE THIS SUNDAY·••• IIo Coupons, Ill Umltl

Falcons, Vikings In Tie

w. L. Ptl.

naturaUat.

' ';

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J,:lU

DRIVE IN TODAY...
.
1100 EASTERN AVENUE

•

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..I·,,
,.
Poro,round: c..m;,ro

''

Bs Convertlbio. ~~
. . Lei~ liDpala,Cuall&gt;li. Coupe. Rt,ht: Chiooello SS 896 Sport Coupe.

~

to have men· to be filS.
.

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a pltcihed boU .· '.

1'1 dlt ,lll'Jt .lndlll!

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J-•

lllil J!lch!O. ll&lt;:hlallbiiOII wal1tld.

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•Ill••

FOIM! Wll hit by

.

EST ,

down.

CLEVELAND (UPO - Bill
Leodla, whow011onl,y three..,..•
Jait Jllr, jllcked .., his third Yl&lt;&gt;
tor)' of the _,.., and X,.. llarrehGII belted a two-run holmer
to lead the Booton Rod SOX to a
5-I tr1111111h over the Cleveland
ldoM Saturda,y.
Laidls, who rellavod Ken
Brett 111 lbe ailh tmbw, blankod
the Indians .., CliO bit over the
filal f 2.:1 inlllrwL
•
Tho Rod sox took a 1~ ltld In
lbe Hoanl 011 Harreleon'. dooble, IWi&gt; hit betamen an4 Hull
Gllioan'a aacriQe•lb'· Tho1 added two more IiiI,lbe rthird- 011
Harrelton'l bon!e till and fol1k
a ,1-G llld In lbe' IGotrlh
p~·· doWie, qlbaCitl'~ lna.ld hit; inl I IIC1'14CO fb' JiO'
MJke M:h'IIWI!o '
\. '
'Ralt.wr L a r r J Burchlrl
IQI)loed llaltan .
with j b • '
bUtt loailed In lhl ae.-Ii 'far
llc!tton'l llnall'Ull.
'
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Breit, makiiW hll A.rttllllor
I. . . 1~1 oh~IIIII ti)t Indiana
wllhM a.- blt UD111 li.o lulh. lll)l

'IF YOU
CARE .
ENOUGH
'
TO BUY
THE.
..,
VERYBEST
IIOBILE
HOllE
IrS SURE
BE.
QUALITY
YOll.CAN SEE
Quality structure
Can't See ....
Makes The lflllC..
It COsts You No

m~:::~-:~~~:M::(S):·:~~·-·~~::·:·~~::~::::~~==~~~==::::J~

McARTHUR - The Wahama ton Vlldrw:al&lt;l a 6-6 tla.
BoiiDII , , , • , , •.•. , 2 1 .667 Witte Falc0111 ouflerod a groat
The dlu,ppolntmentcunelnthe
AVGIJSI'A, Ga. (Vl'O _ Ta- l'OUIId he promleedtoiiYeltallbe New York ......... 12 .333 diiiPpolnlmont here
Friday form of the diamond coateal bekaakl Klltlo kept hit word and bod IDd Pill' ''freer'' 1r&lt;1m that ·
Well
afternoon u they bottled the VLJ&gt;o tween the two lli&amp;h ochool l8aml
"let •er rip" $aturday 'to ..,_ pollll 011 and ha kept biJ word
w. L. Ptl.
being called off because of darkccinuufh 1; i';ll!,jj~~~ s.uardQ. ...,~1&gt;1.!~~--.. j LoaAnple• •• · .~·:t .·:· . l, r)LOCJ9 .. ~ ._ ::.;~ ,::_~·~~~
a4tdlvement at ..e·J.!Uioire. .. . "J .wqmu.. ?,~"·"''"""" tq,.,. , AtJanta ••••.•.• ; • ·; ·o ·, · ~ooo ·
Au&lt;&gt;u.-rA. Ga. · ((JitjJtooo, the29.,y-oOidbeJtam day," be exptal'nld lllrouKil - ~
Friday'eResutte
Thlrd.....,.d lllndlllge Ill the - lllthelq)haiCoftheelihlhiJ&gt;.
pro.!rom Yokohama, shota-r- friend anllnlorprelor, Dr. lllr." Loo Anplee 95 AUanta 93
~llera golf champlonlblp: Ding.
lall•alour.wder'illl' 68 fora21f olhl Tqyohara, an Intern at a
(Onl7 pme sebodulod)
(par a&amp;,ae-72)
·
Rl&amp;flthender HalltySmlthotarl·
1o1a1 that madohlmthofiriiiJIIPI- local heoplllll.
Billy COsper •• , • 6e-71 _71.:z08
ad oo the bUI for the Ylalloroanl
neae go)for over to lladtheeerly
"I played J1I'OIIil' aood and did
Georp Arcber •• 67-7U9.:109 · worked unLII ..,. was out Ill the
finllhereln the third l'!JIQidolthe mt have the ~~ p.rLdng that
ATHENS, Ohio (Vl'O- Ohio
II!Uer Barber •. 71.:1,a,:z10 flllll frame when he wee relieved
lofallera.
I had yeeterday. Ml onJ,y bad hole
Vnlversltl plekod up a pair of
Cllarles Cooc1f • • 7f-66-69.:111 by Sqohomore Tim Howard.
Altbousl&gt; hlo lead wes a tom- wae the lfth. II wao the onl1 beHball willa over Toledo SatTom Wolalmpt .• 7l-7l-69.:lll
Guy Clark anl Howard Joel the
porary one, Klltlo, who had llld pisco I prttod poorly. I tookurday to i&gt;ooat Ita llld-AmerlLklDel Hebert .• 69 _73-70.:ZI2
FaiCGI hill!~ with three sa!•
earlier In tile tournament he 1JU1t1 there.
can CGnlerenco mark to a.L
Georae KraldiOII 70_7s,e 9.:z 12 Uea eech and Brent Clark, a
reellzod be had no chance of
The 5 loot 3, 18f.t)olmder, who
The Bobcats woo the Bruce Devllll •. 67-70-76.:113 ll'elhman, Who collsclod-hito.
willnlllg 11, bedgod aomeoibat at- has been pl8l'ln8 pr11enlonally
er 5-I IDd came back to lake
Dan !lkes ••.• 69_71 _7a.:z 13 Brent Clark also recorded four
tor 54 holes and ssld thet 11011 he 10 years J&gt;ut lslll8lclnl h1l firat
the seYen.ftmlllg nlahteaP 10Don Bioa ..•• 74-70-70-:llt
RBI'o.
wam'lto auro.
_.,ance. Ill the Vnltod statoe,
o. ·
Takaald Klltlo , • 71-711-ee.:llf
Coeeh Gnnt llernello'a Fal''l'll try my bell," ba rep11oc1, had live blrdlea, the moat apocPllcber Ed Rllbblna llruek
Gene Littler , .• SB-7S-70-.21f
cons, W.l, heat Glouster
IQIWerlng a direct quetUOII 11 tacular ol wbloh wea a 30-toot- out If ballorollllheflrllpme.
...· .··.·.··.·...··...·....·.. ·.. ·. .· ·..-. . -:· ·...·. ' ... at 4 P. m. Monday,
to 'llllether he loll he had a chance er.., the 12th hole.
Three Ohio pltcbera bel4 the
COPS SINGLES TITLE
at the $20,000 firat prize.
He had, bla other blrdlea 011 · vllltlllg Jloeketa to five hila
JOHANNESIIIJRG,
South Alrl·
•
Kono han had on17 ..,. IIMwe- !be fill, Sib, 13111 lnl15tll holee.
Ill the ~
,_,..~~~~~,.,..~~n~.
ca
(Ul'O
Wimbledon
cbam·
pu round at Auauela National'• KoDo'a blallll puree UDIII now
Ohio v. Is 5-t overall. Topion BUlle Jeen KI'W ol t.cq .
par 72 oouroe. He had a 71 '11111'1- baa $f.OOO. He 1\'er&amp;pl lado II 5-11 and 0-3.
· Beech, ColiC.., deCoelod Nancy
dq and a 75 Friday whleh earn- less 1b1n 200 )'ll'de on hledrlvea .•.·.· .....·.· : :-: :-· ..·.:-· :-· ·..·. .·. ... :.:· .· :·:··
Richey of San ~ Tex., In ;
ed him a place 111110118the fa qual- but hal ~ OOIIIJih lor SIJDES INTO BIVER
atral&amp;fll eots 6-3, 6-f S.turday
Ulert for the 72 boloo.
bla aloe. He got&amp; the moll out
KARIBTAD, Sweden CUPD- to capture tho Jadlea alnLiiea ·
He wao "' pleuod 111 111v111g 11 Ida - i , be 181'0, bl' condJ:. Iof.... thin 1,000 teet o1 a
ourvlvod 'ibat after Frlday't UCIIIIng bblleelf II baiera do, hlgllway - n N«ebron and Utle of tile Sodb African Tennlo
Clamplonshlpa.
akliiPing ...... and doing rood
KU slid IDID the N,.....l_
work dally.
A man who dares to waste
He p1anJ to rllllrtl to Japan Rl- outalde hire S.furdl1, one hour of life baa DOt dlaThe llllde ~~~alhod an etllll;y
lmmodlaleb' after !be - e . ~~~~ ..,... 011 Ita way covered the value ol llfe.Charlel Darwin, Eng II s h

Boston
Outlasts
Cleveland

...... .

Bachtel TosSes No-Hit, .
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No-Run Wrn For Southenn

In Sixth By Demoskey
MIDDLEPORT - A lour•nm fourth Inning ... riolng carried
the l\!elas -Marauder beseboll team to a ........., 5-4 Yletory over
etroov Lefl)' John Rothgeb anl tho Kypr Creek llobeatt hero
Friday alternooJI.
Rothgeb, who fanned elsht battera, dld not give .., a hit to
Coech Ruas ~··• Meralllore UDtll the fourth Inning when ~lat
bettors boat out three c01111ecuUvo bomt aiJwloo. O.eraU, Rothaob
allowed six hlta.
Dennis Ault led off lbe bli o! the route to pick . .. the vi&lt;&gt;
Melia fourth by drawlrw: a wllk. lor)', He pve .., onJ,y three hill
catcher Jbn Crow, who heo been duriJW his 5 1-3 lnlllrw• 011 the
hlttl~ al neer .500, colloetod a mOund,
single to open ,.. the Marelller
The Bobcallllrot lnlllrwmarker reeulted 1r&lt;1m toed-off hotter
attack.
Then, with Coech Moore hev- Clllf Quillen and Perry lleebee
1~ tho bunt algnal on, Van JoJu&gt;. dnwlng COIIIeeutl&gt;e be101 011
son, Roger Abbott anl Steve OU- baDI. Rothgeb Wll hit by I wiJd
er aU sot soft..toueh olnglos thet pllcb, and Tcm Cooper ncrt.
resulted In the hosts overcom- field.
lnllelder Earl Thomas got a
Ing a ~ edvantap. The KC learn
alrwJe
leading olf the aeeond anl
simple could not field the Mllat
later ocored oo a two-run double
bunts.
What enled ,.. bel~ the event- by lleebee afllr Quillen waa safe
ual wiMLng meratn rUhforMelie on an error,.
waa scored In tho botlan of the
KJpr Croekalt!lll1llodac:cmesixth when Carl (Birdie) Demoe- beck Ill the lq) ol the sevoDtll
key walked. Shortolq) Dennis Ault wbeo Sbortstql Wigal alrwlod.
followed with a trlplo.
Beobee got hla aeeond dolllle to
lolet.p' only otbor hit off Ralh- eond Wigal heme before van
gob was a llllh lnnlrw: single by Mltre fanned Hyaell to enl the
Sq.-ore Abbott that !laded eDDies~ Tile Bobcats only otbor
the beHB with 000 out. Rolh8ob. hll o! the wao • third ....
howe.,..., fanned ODor andlorcod nlrw olrwle by~.
VIIi Matra, In hie time 011 the
Gene Powell to"' ,.. to pt out
hiD, struck out six and loaued .no
of the jam.
basel 011 beUo. Demoskey struck
HAD LEAD
out
ooe, bit ooe and walked two.
Kypr Creek hod srabbod an
Rolhgob, Ill addiUOII to Ia vlng
eerly ~lead with..,. l'llllntho
lli'lt frame anl two more Ill the elsbt strlkeoull, loeued five
secOIId off starter Timmy llomoe- beHs oil beUa and hlt'ilne beitor.
key, a lsll)' tophcmore, who had
By lnnl•••
Kypr Creek,. .120 000 1- U 1
·-trouble.
Demo.slley gave way to another Mello ....... 000 to! x- 56 1
Rothgeb anl QuUian. llomoesCillbomon, rlahtha- Rick Van
Mltro, with two outa In lbe eec- key, Van Mllro C2:l (WP) anl
onl anl Van Matre went the rell ~. .PowaD'· I(f),

,.

.••....1.---- - - ·

Win~ing Bun Scored ....,..

.•

JIIJNTINGToN - · Coeeb John MUhOln'a Glllla Academy Hli!t
School aoJC lollli pulled a Jllljor li!HI here Friday alto.- by
knocldrw off previoua[Jo l!llbooton ($.0) HIUII!naton Hlsh 155-1~9.
,The Pony EJIIIrm. Ia ·dtCendlrw: llltt eha1111lon ('frlllle /t):o!
Weal Vtrglnla.
nlo BluelleYilt, 110118-IOIIthi uplll will aver Dmtlnatoo:
.
rear, wore paced by Jack (Beep) Gllllpollo 155, HUntinatonllltll
MlUbewa, who .IJred on a ..,.. 158.
'
over'ilU' 38 cin the ·lllrlnS Vallay
GIIUpoUa - Jack ~""~
COurH, MlUbiWI COlleclo\l two 38, Tem Uoyd 38, Mike Orr
birdies 111 the llnal two holea ol to, Grei Slillth fl, SteVe ~
the nJne.llolo matth. Terey LIOJ4 nor U, Mike Noe t7.
ltllltlnaton lllglt - Scott Nul&gt;
alto had a birdie Cortllewlmero.
........,, the Gelllw will play 38, BID Wellman 38, Mille Coiat Jaek- .Wodoeoday, the GAllS raU u, Grea Booth f2, Doui
aul!era lou,_ to Atheno and SpJrloek f3, Bill Frantz ts.
Friday, lbe Blue DeVol wW boll
VlniDII Count:Y.
Here'• lhe resulte o! Frlday'o
SETS NEW RECORD ;
PITTSBURGH (Ul'O - B Ill
l\!azeroakl o! the Plttabur&amp;fl PI·
GALLIPOLIS - An Ol'IIJ&gt;o rates set a new NaUcql ~
LuUonal meollqr wW be held uust record Saturday.
l\!azeroakl threw out Philadelby the Gallla Count:Y Church
phia
PbUIIea' catcher lllku RySoiGioll Leeauo at the Firat
an
In
tho Courth Inning for his
s.PUat Clwroh Tllesdl,y, beIIMIIW at 7:30 p. m. Thoee 6,027th aaolst In 13 seuona.
Tbe old record Wll Bel bJ
lnlorested In lDidJv part In
Frankie
Frisch lo 19 s1110111
lbe Joogue this 111111UDer are
with
the
New York Giants anl
Invited ID attellll.
: ·.·..·.·.· •,•,-, ..•. ·.·.·. ,.,...,.,.,....... ·.· ·..·.··.· .·.·.· St Lmla Clrdlcalo.

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: .............

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1'he---·t·- tiFMiil.liiil~~v,

:WM Student Center,
.Firebombed Saturday
0

'-

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feodinllllli&gt; Fork·
eel Run Like Ill Mefp Coun1;y,
In the ~ abooe, at left,
In a -

Demla PorkerofKennoth Ami·
bary , Chillier, la&amp;&amp;e Waltan
Leagu~

Over 500 Trout Caught in
Forked Run Lake Stream
LONG BOTTOM - Over 250 ton, W, Va.
Kenneth Amsbary Olapter of the
persons went after the more than
Ten-year--old Sonya Adams of laaac Walton League and the
500 trout that were caught in the Reedsville was the youngest girl Meigs Coont,y Fish &amp; Game Assn.
secoOO annual Trout Derby Satur- to catch a fish and Glem Werry, The Ftoh &amp; Game Aun. provl~

day at a stream . loedi11: Forked a 9-yea.r..old Mason resident. was ed $50 to covercosteoftheovenL
Run Lake near here.
the youngest boy.
Stt&gt;plylng the much • SIIU,&lt;lhl
Dorald Williams, Ohio Division
T. B. Simmons or Rt. 1, Mid- prizes wore the lol!Oiring, who

.,

le&amp;ted, me&amp;llD'es 0111
of several trout caught by WU.
bur llobinlcll of Allred Who II
Dallkecl by Game i'rGIA!etora

Donald WUUams of Melp,
right, and E, A. DOM, A111·
"""· Above, at r1s1rt. J o b D
Hughes of CoolviUe and Freel
Aleshire, background, of RD
Pomeroy, cast a Tom Sawyer
IJ)pearonce willie Gregg Kuhl
of Vlllllllll, W, Va. pula a trort
on a 111rlnger In the other pic.

.•.·. ·.. ..

ma,iorit,y ot the
event

tqJ prizes

or the

Mr. Bryarit, who was celebrat.his S'lth birthday, was the oldest man to catch a trout. His wile,
Helen, who Is 56, was the oldest
iq!

woman to catch a tlsh, and also

caught a 14'h Inch long trout to
wln the biggest fish prize. Mr.
an:l Mrs. Bryant are or Washirw;-

Lou's

Ashlalll,

110 out and periMlllally Inspect
eaeh junk yard In the county and
I do not know which yarda need
licenses and whieh yards need
fencea. I will spell out the abo¥e
law and, If you feel that your
yard doe• not - " to )le Ucenaed or need a fence, please noll·
!)&lt; me Immediately and I will
come out to yoor yard to take a
look, II I agree that you do not
need a license or a fence, 1 will
11113' 10 In writing and that will be
the end ol the matter, so far as
yoo are concerned. Otherwise, I
will expect yoo to have obtained a license by April 29, 1969,
This lleense will cost you $:5
and be obtained from the
Count,y Auditor's Office In the
G&amp;Uia Count,y
Courthouse. I
will expect you also to have your
lanse erected by July 15, 1969,

...·=-.·:·· .·.·.·. .:-. :: .·: : .."·.···· .·.·=· .

Col!greas-

~~~~~~~~~~
can Lo ohtalnod
only
1 1

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WUiiams said there are ap-

GALLIPOLIS - lndlvlduala dealers. In part, the letter reads:
"Oft January I, 1964, 111e Ohio
- own and Ojlerllle juoeyarda
In Gallla Count,y, but do not have General Assembly passed a law
llcenBel!l, must obtain licenses to the el!ect that all • yards
from the county auditor's otfice In Ohio had to be licensed by
by A.PriJ29, 1969.
the Coont,y Auditor In the COUDToo, 11 a resuJt of ammberof t,y In which the yards were Jo..
eomplalnts that have been regis- cated and that a fence JDJit be
tered with tho prosecuting altor- butlt to hide such yards from
ney'o o!lice In Gallla Count,y, ot- Bfllte, county and townahip roadl.
Oelala are expected to start en. Gallla Counl;y has been negliforcing a law which requires gent In eotorclng lhi&amp; law, but
fonceo be built to hide jmj,yarda &lt;lie to the large number ~ eom!rom state, county and township plalnts arriving In this office, I
roads.
feel that the time has come to
Saturday, Prosecutor Hamlin begin enforcing It
C, King mailed lettoro to area
' 41 have not had a chance to

.- .~-

for
a drlcldDrt
In ChlckaElqinoera
willproject
10011 oollclt blda
nllllll
Creek
near
GollljJolla,
'!be work to ba done coutots
50
dreclglng •
•hamel
NVen teet deep plua ooe foot
OYerdopth, ~atthecreek
mouth on the Ohio River an4 ex1anc1b11 upatream for approxt.

m~

LADID STAYS OUT
WASIDNGTON (VPI) - Defense Secrelar1 MeiYin R, Lllrd
~ clecllnecl an Invitation
to addreu the Republican NaUonal Committee Mcnlla,y "" lbe '
erounds that hio ._......,
mlllht be Interpreted as ''POliti.

a caiiOIJa•

.G••IC''"1"t"'a:DU "TES
"

11

GET ·THE

BETTER JQBS:

!;.0::\ bid will be

(New Quarter Be1lns
June 12)
Wrlto ar call 446-4367 lor

1
•llllecl aboot April 2l, and 1 be
bldo will be opened aboot ~

""••lag
••
and lnlor01atlan.

22. '!be COII,qf the ID'OJeet 11 ea.
U1111ted cO b!ib,n.een$25,000and
fiOO,OOO.

SPECS lor lbe lature? II
may be If 111 Autlnllaa
deaiJIIer Ia correet I• pre·
dleUa1 "bot tb e weUdretHd outdoor lirl wiD be
allag lor IWIIIauea aroud
tile year lltll. Tbe vllor
mldeled by Rulli Ellla of
Melboune aol only -en
lle lull lace bat baa aucll
buUt-la aeeeuorlel 11 BD•
leuu alld two-way radio

granted or place where automobiles,
for some good cause shown.
wrecked or otherwise, are held
11
YOU do not need a license or or imjJOIIIIded for a period of
a fence, so far aa Gallla COUD- n1net,y days or leas lor storace,
ty Is cooeerned (there m., be a repair or resale without alters..
municipal ordinance), If your tlon.
yard lalla Into any of thelolloweommalleaUoa
10ta.
"' ,. "
lng ealei!Ories:
"YOU NEED /1, LICENSE If
"(I) lila located wholly witltln )'0111' yard lalla IIIII&gt; III1Y ol111e
city or village COI'JlOI'ation lim- lollowlng categories:
Its.
"(1) It Is used to atore, kee~~o
b~zy
or aell old or scrap cop.
"(2) It Is an establlalunant tor
AN)
proceulng iron, steel, or non~ per, brass. rope, r&amp;iS, batter·
ferroua serap and yoor prlnct. lea, paper, nabber, Junked, ellspol product Ia oerap Iron or mantled or wrecked automobile•
steel or non.ferrous serap for or parts, iron, steel, and other
sale for remelting ]llll']lOaeo. old or scrap ferroue or Dill With The PurchiN Of ••.•
(This means stleast 51 ]&gt;or cent ferrwa materlals.
"(2) It Ia used tor the operof the lneome from your bull•
ness 1n any given year must be ation or malntenanee ot an autnfrom the sale of scrap for re. moblle graveyard.
:Atl.. ulllrPrlce·
melting.)
•'You Deed a lleense, but DOt a
.. Lew AI
e
IMI· Jd.
'~3) It Is an establishment fence, If your yard Is d&gt;scured
from View from the roadbyaome
nawral d&gt;jeet or It Is loceted
more than 1,000 feet fl'om a stole
or COiliiQ' road and more111sn300
0.,.. jCJO Colan ancl PllterM To WecfiFNnl..
feet from • townlhlp road.
Come In TOller Mel Mike Yeur Wecflan
utr you do need a febee, tbe
fence must be at least six teet
By MR. FIX
hlllh. &lt;mlllnleted of - MINIMUM 20 SQ. YDS.
Nothing catches the atten- for picking up the dirt you
parent material and lllalnlalaod
tion of customers in a hard· dig. A square spade is O.K.
INDOOR-OUTDOOR CARPET NOT
IN STOCK
ao as to d&gt;scure the )lllk Ill the
ware or department store as for turning the IIIDil, can dou·
encloiUI'e from 'theordlnal')!VIow
INCLUDED IN THIS SPECIAL!
does the display of garden ble as a lawn edger.
of
per1011o
pouJna-111e·lllltlt,
seeds and garden tools. MayOPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS
A lleel rake Ia abaolutely
COUIIty llld towuoNp 1'01111. YOII
be it's as much a matter of aeee1ury lor leveUu tilt
desire for wanner weatber earth once lt'a apadOd. A
"""" not ,put III1Y advml.lement
&lt;II the ,..,.. o1llor lhllltlle llllllO
as it ls a need for garden bow,... ralber lbaa a
supplies that make crowds straight rate Is preferred by
~ the per- under wbose...,.
8 Miloa Wool
mBDy.
gather. ,-~
the ;yard hal been ~~- llld
It's unde
ndable t h a t
Goll!pollo
Hoes come in a variety of
111e rature of lhe 'bualneaa, I
you would n
fresh sup- weights, sizes and &amp;bapes.
the ,..... ldell••tely oldel41 the
Route 35,
plies of seed and fertilizer Get one big enough It\ do the
yard
from vlow from tbe 1&lt;114,
every spring. Garden tools, job but not so big that usln~
Roclnoy; 0.
hoWoYer, It Deed not so all lhe
if picked well, should last 11 Is a major chore. A broad
614-245-5509
"'I' U'OIIId the yard."
lor many years and not be blade hoe should be kept
something that you have to sharp, so get one of goodbuy new every year or two. quality ateel.
1'lle lint rule lo t. buy
A long-handled cultivator
qulllty toolo. SmaU haad has pronga lnatelid of a blade
troweb lllld eultlvaton, lor but otherwise resembles a
eJBmJile, lbal are pruHd hoe. This tool Is not aba..
out of a IIDile pleee of belli· lutely necesoary. See how
able obeet - 1 are to be you g~t along with a hoe
avoided.
first. Available ls a combln·
MeW parts should be of ation hoe - 111ralghl bla.de
on one side, twin p o I n t y
good.quallty steel.
blades on tilt other.
Handles should be of good,
II you get down on your
otraighl·graln hardwood . knees and work among tilt
Avoid paInted handles, Dower&amp;. get hlllld troweb
there's no way of telling and
cultivators - the kllld
about the quality of the wood with good steel blades and
underneath.
comfortable wooden handlea.
Don't juot point and pay.
You'll need a pair of prunHandle the tools ln the atore Ing shears lor shrubs, rose
Home owners In the Mel1s ·Galli aarea will be 11¥111 Ill opportll!lty of haYirll the
VYdal, the rllld,
before you buy. Heft them. buslles. II you bave hedges
All VlnJI Homesldlnt material
low eost. It will beof special interest
See II the weight and bal111ce you will need hedge abean.
ault you. A tool comforta- If vou bave a great many
home oWJiers who are •• " with
pllril!q lth¥ lilllntenance
The
MIRACLE
ble for someone else to use hedgeo, conalder an electric
SIDING developed by MenS. CIIMI~I ~ration .~ '; 'F. Goodrldl; two of the1110st
may not ·be comfortsble for hedge s.hear.
you.
n•s In !he chllllcll.lillustry. After 211 r•• of ~!ii ild nswch It li ispeclallr riCOIIHnended
Don't go wild on sprayer&amp;.
A v o l d the &amp;ad&amp;els and A two-quart hand sprayer Is
for useln :west Vlt~lnla and Ohio cllllte and w•f~r llilnitUII the ~lie. It calli a llf•
stick to baolc tools.
line to olart with.
tlmeiJiar•ln.wtltllll and PfOYid.S ,1~· _.Itkin, both .-uer .ad wlnter1
lt~1ll.riJ11
Get a apadtng f o r .k lor
With a good aet of garden• turntns over the soU and It\ Ing tools, plua a hue, you'll
the
o.f air condiUonl114 and '~a~ Ill· Tht.11111 prNict ~.~used I!YeriYIIJ
of holne, as- ·
1111 perelllllals lor transpllllt• be In buomeoa for the seaa011.
bestos,
brh:ll;
dlffereM • • Cl!lors ..ltvallible. Ho111 owners who act now
tng. Get - with a metal II you do much gardentne
phlllk that eneompanes tilt and tranoplanttac cet yourwill receive SPecial t~Pr-lve work
iddltloul
Ailappolnilllent will be m..W 1o
wood handle ratlltr than the oell - w .b e a your budeet
home without IIIJ 1!111Pt19n
All t,;es flnlllciq •• available.
kind that hal a Iinde piece permits - a wheelbarrOW.
of m•tal driven Into tht end Pick one you ~~~~ maneuver
I
and uve your baek and
of !be handle.
Plek a ~~~&amp;de !be ume anna.
!H...,., f-llo Auo.)
way. A rowiil apade 11 sreat
unless on

exta!sl011 Ia

SMART GARDENERS
DIG QUALITY TOOLS

e NYLON

e WOOL

ldlendyou
the money you need ..•

1

YOU CAN QUALI'I' lor a ,..._
-•1 loan If ,_ can maU
..-gulcw 80nlhly paymonto.
TIU. . . HOW I&gt;'UQ4 you noed
Uil I will toll you IMmedlotoly
~low low your payme:"!h cun be.
PHONE Mli' oa cor:J: !N. Most
Joan, ar• C:.mplotod the 101...
• ·7 .... apply,

e FRH ESTIMATES e EASY TERMS

to

costs.

to

. ,.,., ~?!!llomtr
"

.

IMC. 14
· WE MAKE 2nd MORTGAGE REAL ESTATE LOAM$
C..nor S..011d &amp; Court Stroot
.S.Coed A•onuo
Gollipollo
V~,..l, Mfr.
Phono446-4113

cost
stucco,

etc. !l•r

u.r.br

wliltsolvtr.

l'!f

cost.

)

.t 25c

for •och chollft.
Mt •4trH for thi'M or tl• thMI
_, tt.,pad blf«l ••plrotlon will
.. •hiitrt•d for onlr rwlnber •f
··-· the acl clat• .... ,..•.
o.-411,. : 4:30 p .M. deilr eNI 11

HAVJ

1

MANY USES

·!

2oe

1

8for~1.00

•.•. s.. ..... ,..

I
'.1

I WISII to thank each and every one who donated blood

~~~~ ~ ~-,.,Go·Uioiitipel""ll--· ··. ,.

Jl'OR beller elelnlng, ID
colon gleamlllll, UIO
1AIIIre earpet cleaner.
electrle ahlmpooer tl.
lral &amp;lpply Co.

..

.. Forhnt

2 BlllDROOM llaoaeiNDor, 111811
&lt;lleltnut Sl. Adulll only. ..,..

Blue
Rent

lal bed

!184 \fl T. GMC plcl!up
11115 " T.T.Olav.
GMC plciup
111'11
lifl Int. uoo
• • Iii T. GYC l'lc1rql
1. . \fl T. lllev. Pickup
llel Ford lllcoaoUne Pkbp
11M \fl f.. 'CIIilv, · Pickup
lllf 1i. T. GMC Pickup
lllf \fl T. Clli9.
lllf lfi·T: Jnt plel:llp
illl " T: J'Grd pld.up
1111 \fl ~. q.v..PlebP
lelt l/4 Docile 'lltlliiJ
Ita IT. GVC
1117 1 T. 'OIIC · ·

UNJt'
UIIN_ apalllnbatb 1lllllrtl~
4 1'1111.
and
' • _....,
Aft. Ph. lfl-1111.

lf-1
0t11o Bur

1

11· ACRI'8 pilture. ·
•
4flte, LGww River Rd. rl-1
,

11M J.T.
IIIII \fl T. ·
1!118 • T,· Int.

1n11

a

1 a11on til ino . .
""
•
• ~~,~~

•· •

·

·

,

,

balll fru ·

cien

·

'

liilJI:D·

· '.

YIJI

• ..

., ,., ''·

' ;.·' ' . . ._

"-'•tr

I

FLOORS,

11-A.TH

TVRNIMZ

HEA.T,

YOU

CAN'T 00 BI:'M'ER. CALL lk£
WISEIIAN
TOOAY.
OWNER
VDY ANXIOUS AND I-IA:S CUT

60 ACRES

THE Pft-ICE WAY BZLOW COlT.

NEW IJISTING. lfln. Tlrp.
Nice 6 r!n. two-story hOme,
large bam, 1arage, ceDar·
IIIIIOke bouae. large hen bouae,
3 com erlbo. pond, Iii A. Toll.
B., s A. woodlot, balance lf'lel to rolliDII land.

Neatly New Split Level
Edge of Town

·nus

HOME H,._.. ·'I F-'' "'Il
,......,
ADYUTISIID. TIHIS ONE RAB
OLD Sl'LIT (.1;\j.t.t, u"l.:l....- ... .:.S
3 BIDKOOMS, LA·R G£ LIVING
ltOOM,

L.'OM'Pl.ETELY

.MODERN

KITCHZN WITH RANGE, OVEN,
OISHW A.81U:R AND ETC., FINISHID FAMILY ROOM Wl"nl
L()G BURNING f"l! &lt;lEPLAC!, 2
BATHs AND LABGii l1TILl'l'Y
LOT
(11M!:

53 ACRES

:-lEW US'l'ING. Harrlaon Tlrp.
Good 10 rm. tw...tory home.

38 z SO barn, outllldp., walnut timber. S velna, Iii A.
Tob. lllle.

Just Listed
1 Year Old 3 Bedroom

21 ACRES

5 RM. FRAME home, Toll. B.
F1ve mlles from VInton. On-

I~~:.~~~~~
. ·~L~ BATHS,
IN EXca.LENT

ly $2,'150.

LAR GE

LOCA.-1 MlLE FR.O'M T OWN ,

'

Owner Will Help
Finance
VERY NIOI:

~

S1X ROI'!Q\.~m BATfi, ontbldgs. ·~-~ l!d- $4,0110

lAi ACRE

I

GOOD 7 RM. home, balll. garage, part 1\•-~ . Z porches, "'"'-":,()~... driJ1ed won.
Just of! 11.1. 35. $3,500.

•BUILT
LOYJ:LY

A

'"

SCHOOL .
FINANCE

65 Acfes Ti liable
Near Oak Hill, Ohio
70

A C"U::

F ARM

TIIAN

LOTS OF BOTTOM
Ti' YOU wnnl a lann with rots
of (!0011 Wloble bot1iom land,
this ls it. On Raccoon Road,
one mile off Route 218, are
several barns, bllldingB and
a sb:-room house. A lull mile
frOntage ''oh ·llll«&lt;DDI ·Crt&gt;el&lt;.
Can get to II With a boat.

1 ACRE

CEN'I'I!lNARY 8 room frame
home, Nice abaded yaM.
Garden. Gange.

LAYS

MOST

I" V E

TRAILER

~'OR REN'l' .• 2

Pt.ENTY or WA·
CO'O VF.N JENT
LOCLOSE TO
SMALL

We Need Listings
WE ARE SELLI NG MORE PRO·

all

F~R

THAN EVER
nVNtf1NG.
LOW ON USTlNGS. tr- V MI
HA.V! PROPERTY TO SU-L WE
WOULD St'lCilR.ELY APPI\ECJ.·
ATE T HE CHA NCE T )
SELL

BEFORI-.:

AN D

ARE

,.

gla•l 100 liP Evlnrude, Ga- .
lor trailer .(tilt) .... CaD

""1..

1

150 Acre Clean Fann
With Farm Machine1y
12

.'\&lt;..' O
U.:

CORN

FI A SF. ,

"'-'

lleDver K. JJI&amp;Iey, IIC •

W. C. MASSIE
A.

TOBACCO. THE J:NTIRE FARJit
IS CLEAN
AN'O
WATERED .

REAL ESTATE BROKER
TEL. 446-1998

AVERAGE 'I ROOM HOME Pl..iU8
JUff NS AND SEVERAL O UT
BUILDINGS. ()WNJ:R lS VERY
AN XIOU S TO SEU. · A•:&gt;; n IS Of ·
BARGAIN
Fl'IUNO IT AT A
PRI CE .
~

Home Wilh 8 Acres
Just Right For You
HERE'S A DANDY PLACE wml
c\CR F.S THAT LAYS GOOD.
1\Ao STORY HOME WITH BATH
!I

A NlJ

FURNAC E .

BARN

AND

CHICKEN HO USE. tT'S JUST A
SHORT DRIVE T.O TOW N AND
IS lN KYGER CK. SOHOOL DIS·
TKICT . CAU. TODAY AB01.!I'
THIS ONII:.

Dllon Agency
OAKWOOD DRIVE
ESTATE
TODAY'S beat buy tn Ibis ...,.
tlon. A brick lllld frame, ~
story home, 412' • Ill', ra"""
.tyle .., a perfect wooded lot,
4 extra large BR. 3 IUe batt.;
Mullflelor cabinets. Chamb-ref
en double oven. range, ·
~ dlshwasller In this apaclou8 klleben with banquetvlded
size eating aree. fuR di
basement with 1e&lt; room, S
flreplacea 2 r.rnac.. S ear
warege, ~ patio, .....

:me~· vacant. (!0011 tin-

w ""' 0011-

diU..,... peneled kltdlen wltll
fl(enty 'nice cal&gt;lnell. 8maD
down ,pa)'!IIOIII IIIII ·~ ldvllltaie of low Int. rate; •
.,,

.

• ·(
tiUvst~~~a41oomUllll. . .
ment. llrJelot. Honie •
Uti~ repair&amp;. Ideal lor re.

BUDGET HOUSING

('.000 3 Br., .halltwllnd lloon,
plenty storage space, ceDar
&amp; work sbop, loceted 011 Iii A.
·lot, just oolslde of town. PrJ.

ced to sell.

BUILDING LOTS

youn.
CAlL ANY IIOIJII

D. H. WOOD, Realtor
Phone 446-1066
4 A. NEW three bedroom home,
fuel oil heat, new electric
stove, refrigerator, all panel·
ed, black top road, septic tonk.

9 A. 4 ROOM home, bath, septic
tank, 25 fruit trees. AU level
land, $4750.
IN VINTON, 2 bedroom .-ge,
ba1h, cabiDets in ldtchea., nice
.lot, minor repolr, $4000.
LARGE home in clty, nw rooms
&amp; bath clown, modern kitchen,
3 rooms and bath "'· Good re"'
la].

ON ROUTE 35, buo route, I room
heme, 2 bedrooms, bath, large
,Jot, fuel oU stove, $4500.
ONE .FLOO]\ plan on Garl!eld

- A"-! clltlt.Oti, nice bath,, full
-~, carpOrt. Price re-

duc8d.:'. '\.

•· ..,..-. Cli ..... • """'
l' ., ~

..

,...

10.:

m1 4,.'Jt,
•.•• -., ...,.•~· ' ·

,. 0

f4l fitS'

·

,

~·

,llll: ._..... 'all*;

.\IU

.ill'

mce on

· ~

p.m. "'' ' ' "

~am~.

-

Rulaeil D; \l'ood - 446-4618
Ronald ·C~JU~y - 44&amp;.3636
John L Richard - U6-ij280

full

~.~..

st..

'

Ita~ Jfl~ and ., mt WA... ll'ont. ~~ · Conley Bobarl Dliloil.
.

...,

~' lli;jr-., ,.

,.
\

'

.

.. ~ ~ '·

' . ..

.· . _ ,.

1'.

~

, _t

l

w........1m..

tAidlie

.

.. '

~~·~~~-~-~"'""''·-.c;r.,_...,""".,..~~""·

•,

.

ill 'ftN

C.ft

Jl ~ &gt; ..._ •.....::
~, '
· . , . .....,. .•. ero~,
·" ' ·
. . '
~reral! ~leo ~!! yo u . ROBAJ11 Dltf .oN1 110......
~ """"Tiaf,
Adrian tv ~ In lllf ~
, .
·
· liuy, · Trade-~ ·~· to,
· ~ ·
furnlilled .,.t'i-, ~.. ,the o~arik ~~~·~ ~. · · t(ted IMiM!Id 'Plelallll, Poi~
or lidarot Bf¥.,.., 4 llld ·~~ • """!~- .
uat J\t , •. ~1 1;!111 ~. 114 .. "Reeort. ~ Mirth ·1'1 .\lirl ~~. , ~ ttf:ltlt

""tllbiW ·

. .

r=.:~~~~~~~~·

ROME loeated at II Gallla

Business Opportunity.

tfi.IIIL
'OEWiii'S

ROUTE. 110 II

fll.ml. .

·a
,

Alii.'~
-

Pi:.tJM:IINo

. A'Nii RIIAtii'!J

"O

'ASSibT£ wlNmi

NO SEILING - keep yoor reg.
ular job - work part time
refllllng al'lracllve 11ew eandy
and snack madlines_ Can expect VERY IIJGH EARNINGS 011 modeat I n of Jess th8fl mJO_ Write for
Interview appointment, glv.
hlg phone number and addreaa to: SPEED VENilOR.
'1'2IIZ Natural Bridge Road_ St.
Louis. Mlsaourl am. 1'1-s

Services Offtrtd
MAD STOCK

a.ao aaviCi' C'IIABOII

ST. RT. 160, Sprtilg Valley, St.
Rt. 141, Plants Sub. Dlv.,
Nelgllburhood lid., st. Rt. 218
.t City. Prl&lt;e $350 to $3500.
LOOKING for a cheap muse.
llave two I can show you_
I NEED Uatlnlls. Woold Uke ID
have the opportunity to oell

•tlrement or 8 good JnvW.
ment. P"l·

TWO BEDROOM

NA'l'IONWIDE INSURANCE
AU'!'O. nre. life. 45 state St.
Waldo Jl'. Brown, W. lt.
Brown. tfs.t!l60.
1141

10 I

~.~~1lirj;~D'"

~ Jp:ir1~11 ~1/,i,l'•*:'\!ii?l;jM,~Jt~ ·. ~~'~ . if'1'1•1'5 ~ili; .-"t•.itttl1i~~,ltll{~.l!\' ~'4' ' \ . ~ . ·.,:.', ; : : ' ,' •· '•( .
lli';tfltNC
"l~i.;,
· ' · ,."\, .ti . ' ~~ '* II'OIID,· ~;;~·r._
.~~~lt.r;.~ancl
" •l l·v"~c·"•T.ID~N· •'a•
··
t7tn ....., ~
""'--•·u~•
- ' ~ \~ .~ , and QOIIdlljoa
jxifilltf
,t!t , ) ~
"' I

see your

.

YOUR~ .

blme. Large LR

River. Land """' from
Rl. 7 to the rtv~. ~a• lull
basement with rec. room, kitchen. bath &amp;lid worbbop. Call
today lor appointment.
OI'FICE PRONE
• Bv1NJNo

bedroom.

Eyer~.

I'll•

1ft

u

Services Offered

FOR ALL your lnlllll'ance needs. TEIIMI'I'E t. PEST CONTROt
cbeck with your Grange ag. FAIN E:atermloatlon Co. 'IJieel.
ents at 111e Neal Till. Agency, ersburg, Oldo. Pit 574.fll2.
114 State St. Agadl lor auto.
tiW
lire. Homeownera, ~1
and general llabfllly. 81-tf DOLL Houae Nunery ~

lllolrll. Wanled -lll&gt;piMemnt
Parll 1tr Volbwopa 50, in 1&lt;\wn. l'r!Vete. AdultB
Pnmpt 11111pmeat
preferred.
WWEST prices. can « write:
'LIIIwig, n.e King.' IJldwlg
TRA ILER LOT
Motor Corp., (Ask lor Fritz
FOR RENT. 8 mlles out. W. Hlrschberger) 4ZI E. fl Sl,
ter included.
New York, New York 10028.
Jay Sb&lt;JIPlrd, f41.411S
Tel: (212) 1'11-'1010.
1'1·1

AN U BATH, L :.JTli OF

D SOME EQ UIPME NT .
ROME WHICH RENTS
D~OB~A!-!NC!
MO. STAYS AS O

PIIB.TY

Insurance

4ACRES

3 BEDROOM

HOME
11.0'1'8

~·U n N A CE

·•oblo -•~of ;"~ulllut

Mat- ' ....... Ph. 448-ut'l.
Ill-If
Jlllrnlture.
'· .
' . .· I
1• 18. 11'1'. Criltllner fllier.
of ·an

WOOD

AND

OUT BUILDI NGS PLUS TRAC ·

;:m..;-, ~~4-.~;, .~· Creillt ,~ beJrh~i t ~!: or~~ ·&lt;~~ · ~ . :.: dlar!N 1!i.l~lill}1Cff41 ·.,

"

HARD

116 ACRES

RACCOON boitom wllh I room
frame, bam, outbldllt. .11)81
he oold u 12. 10, or Ill ..,...,
New JllllnS.

HEN. 24 ACRE COR."f BASE,
S,\t,\LL 1"011ACCO 111\.St: . GOOD
1 ltOOM KOMI!: WITH MODERN

BAIRD REALTY CO.
'Oscer Baird, Reahor

r,:

•

Gil

,u

WITH

STORM WINDOWS AND OOORS.

BElTE R

Balll.

YR. OW

HOME

aerea of landscaped around
'I
to mill teeing
. •. ..
wonbrl"" waanllt el-'"'-' hom• . :,
$3,1100

:~--~-• .. • ~
........... '"'
""""'

.&gt; ·

BEi&gt;ROOM

THIS

IFlieaullful'
YOU ARE looking lor a
home located on 4

u·:~·, Vl:.~~...v~..J!!·. •

ifilRNl'I'URI,·

liY OWNER - WVELY 3 BR
home. 10 mblutes from lawn,
Rt. 111. Copper plumbi1111,
Ule bath &amp; shower, storm
doors and wind..,.., bullt·ln
kltcllen witll oven and range,
wall to wall carpel, drape!,
good outbldgs .. 5 or more acres of land. plenty water, city
water soon, forced air furnace heat, carport, ulillty
room and front pordl. Pit
319-21'13.
85-3

4 ACRES

. WlndOi!fl; ·llitllil1 etC: ,llalaft

~

II' THIB IIOJD HUlTS YOU'B
NEUIS YOU WON'T 00 BET·
3

UALTOB
Vllllt. C1tJ Pu,.IJ
Plnl a·Olin
,.... N4111

VACANT lJAND, 1101111 ~.
bolll Iii'&lt;' Co. l!d. ~
wllh coal. New~.

room 1 poneled, new fuel oil
'
furnace. Land ts 1D1derlaid
YOU TOO
with' eoat. LOCated near Vln- CAN enjay the llliOJ'Y, low lml
ton, Ohio.
llvklg In thlo onewi~:.~ BR

. · ALL typea of building 11111er-

' .

PJtrc!s

!rePel. Col4!1n
Ph. fll.l171.
• ·•

.

BY OWNER - Home, 3 bed·
room. IIi. batha, plua showl!r
In basement, carpeting, larp
garage, plus carport. 8 Belmont Dr. Ph. (46.JIIfl. 7'1·11

f!0 ~.

'"'"· b~_lll'ldi:, aewer ~.
nyJap itreS •· rne: l'edsrl1 ' .. Wlnterw...:~ ·~,' ~. !Jff

·~
•.. ;---...... ;,...,,.. · 'bun•
~~~',.:',;":,;,.;,a:"D.;;,; ..; · LOW, LOW,

new
trusted .

·

•:a 'lmr 1.•1 '11; 10-ptJ !

-~. ·ii~-

fl

'

We n · ~ Dliiilbulur
for llolpolnt AppJt...,, AJII.
11011 B:Jielrle.
IH If

!Jew ·lr. Roiarr ', ~- .._

Real Estate For Sale

Neal Realty.

as-tt

8'11-Ql,

.. - "

1 innneapoJII .Kollbe Poww

BestBuy In Town .
3 Bedroom $8,900.00

ROOM . TREE
SHADE[·
Wmt BIC BACK YARD.
OF A KI ND.

I

A. A. NIBERT, Reallo1

pletup

446-3796 ' 446 4100

TER. A MOIJI:JU'f. '

Missing-WonJs

300 ACRES

. '

REAL

. Y. •IF~'f'or'~~'~nl:C:;·I..a:

.

85-3

!tel ZIG ZAG sewing machine.
1111 demonstrator. AU fancy T11111D AVE. • IrATE tf.
wort done by turning a dial.
New IUII'antee. WIU Ml on BARGAIN OF THE WEEK
9 paymenlll of 18-00 or tiS.OO 3 BR HO:IIE near town with 3
eaall. Try II bl your home. · acres. Has new furnace, alumcan I'I5-3Gil.
as.tt
lnum siding &amp; carport. 11
you c8fl qualify yoo can buy
GOOD CLEAN LUJIP and llokfor $'1110. down and balance
er 1:011. Carl Wlnten, Rio
$65. per month. Don't delay·Gtatitlt. P111!i1e 14Ull&amp;. ' a.tl
can today.

~

~ aparlu*ll .. "'' 1 : _;_ .!...,

~· ~ .

can

~·.II ;

Ullll

2118.

,.!'!

!11811 S T. GMC with lD ft.

' =·

REI!lF CATI'LE -Polled Jlen.
lord. One of Ohio.. oldest
largest, finest reglsl«ed
herd.e. Accredited: cerlllled:
clean ped!Rreed. Ohio Sta~
University production tested:
cbolce and fancy' Selection
of breedhlg bulls and hellm
·aYallable: our 0110 llod&lt;,
wide r111ge of prices. Write
W. H. Nolan, Opentor, '!be
Huall M. Lynch Fanns, ani·
Ucothe, Ohio MI. Pit 773-

Farm;

REALTOR

WAU. TO 'IVAU. CARPEl'
1 ROOMS and han for as little
as fl'11.85 lnalalled. Plua a
free oweeper, sample lbowlng In your home, no obllga.
tlon to buy, Ph. 446-11&amp;'11.

...

Real Estale For sale
,
I
0. D. PARSONS

WISEMAN

'*·

Loob and MACEDONIA ROAD
Attachments A
bergaln, 93 acres for
B payments
les9 th8fl tiS on acre. Tldrty
Guannteed. acres Wlable, (!0011 water.
au taxes $40 per hall, nice twu
story. 7 room muse. Good
fuel oil heat. Priced to sell.
~ ~~-.= Ollleo
l'llolle ftf.t775 !I Bn.
IIIIIOmatic lntermb: cll.,.er.
Bnldap
1111 modem console. Tills set 11oq Welberflolt, Pb. t4W!I4
sold for muell blgher, now RMerl .. !Wnl, Pb. ......
1111111 sell Ill reliable party,
12 50
" · Try
eaallII ...
S5.50home
per.
month.
In your

NEW GMC TRUCK
HEADQUARTERS

·li~rZrL.

Real ·Es~le For 5ale

REPOSSESSED Singer Cabinet
Sewing Maclllne, equlppOd ALL OVER COAL
with dial control for zlg.zag, TWO FAR.MS adjoining 'each
bidlonhole, and fancy deaign other are all over strippable
wwt as well as beautiM coal. Some timber, 45 acrea
straight oewlng_ Full guaran- tillable, 100 acres pasture, IIi.
tee Ill party assuming bal- acre tobacro base. l&lt;&gt;ts of
ance of 1&amp;1.110 at 16.00 mooth·
bulldlngs, low tax rate. Let
Iy. Pbone f46.2012.
au liB show it to yml.

keep

1111' ll \'. tniC J'!iibp.

You'll Think .They Went Into Orbit

California car, llurst 3 speed,
Bolld botjy, no MI. Beat of.
fer over
Ph_ J45..51'11.
ll.tl

lor their co-operation.
'""
Joe 1111eaton.
· 11-1
For bnt
RALP ~ouble, near Pl. Pleo• 1955 CIIEVIIOLET In (!0011 con1 WiliH to eatend my ltblceft ant, W. Va. on beautiful Oblo
dltlo!l. can 111&gt;541115.
8'1-3
dumb to an those """ .. River. I 1'001111 and batb,
olated me In any way at lbe basement, big yard, water TAKE soU away the Blue IAI•
time of the death ot my be- furnlobed, .SO mo. f4&amp;.a.
Ire way from carpeta and
loved wile, Bernice 'M. Ben·
'/lolf
l'Pholstery. Rent electric
nett - eepecially extend gratsbampooer fl. Lcrnr G. C:
Itude to the Mlddleport ElM'REN'I'ALS
Murphy Slore.
l'l.f
geney Squad - aU tbose wbo RENT campers and travel
aent fllmn and food lrilleft. weekly and weekend WATCH ugly wan marb diEugene Zopp - 1lle alagen- rates. Jl'relll'4l &lt;lb' Home
minish. Use Wipe Out wall
eutet bearen, MD!en Home Center. tnc .. Pine St. Gamcleaner lor a lreohly painted
lor P'unerall, I a!.':_.!~1Y polls, Ohio. Ph. ~. '13-28
llnlsh. Rent a wall cleaner
ll'lfelul lor yooJ' IWIUf.... ,
tl. F'lrmer's Hardware. l'l.f
WUUam Bennell. 1'1·1 FURIIISIIED 2 rooms end bath
t!pllslra elflcleney apt. All !1'52 OOERNATIOIIAL dump
lrudl: l225. Cllnlon JlOW"T
Notice
11tll.ltles pd., adults only_ 1'!1.
strW. Spring formal sl!o 7
F'REE: llaWielgll Aknlaae, 446-ISII.
'Holt
$1&amp;. can Slrl-'1'120 alter 4 p.m.
RawleiP Dealer. 1911 Eut1'1-3
em Ave., GaiUpo}ls.
1'1·1 PAmJ'RE close to GaDipolls.
See Wayne Amabary, 1131
The l'llnlell Pap
Fourth Ave.
11·11 I CAB1N leDt lO'IIB', 01eel.
&lt;ODd. f'/5, Can be ..... at 414
~.
copying, NbiJer
Hedgewood Dr., GalllpoUs, or
llampa, 25S 'l1llrd Ave. tl6o
ForS.Ie
call 446-141t.
1'1-3
OfH.
'lt-28 1111!41 HARLEY Daridlon motorcycle 74. WUI 10U "'IIIOIIIble.
AQUARISTS - Baker's dw.n 38'1·'1111.
11-3 ~115 MUS'I'ANG, hard top, 2111
VI, P.S. 1 111111er, very clean.
- 13 food and tonlc lor ll·
o11e .flo~\.· ...e 20 per cent. RUGS a stgbt? Olmpany oomPit f46.1811t.
1'1-S
The Houle of Wilson Elotlc blg? Clean . them rl&amp;bt wllh
Muarlal Speclalltlea. Ph. Blue Lus1n. Rent lllodi1e !lOUSE. 8 r1111.. bath, city wa.
fer, I A. JII'Ound. Inqulre at
1'11-11115. Firat road ~ obampooer tl.
Fanner'•
:115 Kelton lid. near 'Alpine
~I · Pobll Rslrl. 'JI.IO
llarthrale Co.
..,..
'.
·
Motel.
SS.If
f
WANTED
AXC 'Minlltllre ~ wllb
EJJ!lCI'ROLUX Vacuum CleanJI(Mll lor puppies, I'll. . . 6 p!l. J)ed. Fl(lt diet, . ~
er Ulre .-. Some aUach·
Rnd -.ned. K a. P Kemele,
...
11·1
nte11ll
never used. Will guarDarreU Day, SIJI.C'14. 1'14
antee
to
responsible party for
IIIDDLE-AGED lady lo care
.
Jnra!ld lady, live Jn, CaD llllll CIIJMI(U:T . 1mp1111 . 4 balance of a payments of
,....._,M ...~ apeidf,h...-.l:m.u,eaadl- u 16.00 mon!llly 'll:.MI,!fll..~.,,t..
~.
, . . lion. Call ......
l'l.f l7i"i Pbone tl6-2092.
au
. '

W1ntti:l

So . Fa~t,
$7 ·OIII!lV'ROLI'l'l', convertible,

ella--

125 Third Ave.

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ForSele

'MAPLE 8TERl!lO IWliO
CONSOLE .COMBINATlON
11169 MODERN limo AM a.
FM radio eomblnatloll 4
apeed automafle
Mo.
dern moole COIIIIOle. Balance
due f91 .20 or payments. of ·$II
per month. Call 448-11118, 1'1-S

Gallipols Dally
TriiN111

Card Of Thlnkt

.

I~\ I 'j

,-

weftllt...nl

WOOL, pay!n1 top
priCe, aiJo Wlllfed. ·~
lllelrbi!I to do. CaD S'IR!te.

C~LL;

'(

,..

Xff1

SOUD STATE STEIIIlO
1!1(19 WALNUT ate""' &lt;oneo1e
with 4 apeakera, 4 apeeol automatic changer. Tab OYer
paymi,nta of S5.25 per month
or pay balance due IIUO.
CaU 448-11118.
1'1-S

,, Lised Offset PllteS

1~111ltt•d

•IUtl'rlil
· P.P

'
'

Anr cha,.• ...... In tht orlgii'IGII
u,.
lor clesJifl•d ed•
"will N ckor1•d the rate

W•"tfld To luy

btl•

at no

11"-.rtl...

ELl!ICTROLUX ~ two men
for local ..... and aenlce
- - Ph. IJ'II.43M.
11-IJ

new.

Qlled to lhltr homes at nwr
constant
llld

All edt .,. retttlctecl to thtlr
,.,., cle .. lflcetl.,.t aM •• tftt
,...,,., O•ilr TtilluM 1trl• af tr,.

lllllllt. ldell working boun.
Bald n11110 IIIII p~ lllllllbor to 1ios Ill, Co&lt;) Trlblme
lor pei'IOIIal llltl!rvlew. 8(.tf

Ten Homes

PAIN

I

KITOIIEN llllllke IJulldiQI up
on your walls?. U10 Wipe Out
rleaner to end II aD. Rent waD
waaller " . Central Supply
Co., 17 Coort st.
..,..

36" X"'23" X.009

NN.

SALESLADY for 1o&lt;al employ-

Su...,

IN TRAINING lor a try at lbe E•gllob CllalUlel, De1
Retlford, fl, lakea time out lor aom• nourlument durla1
a bid to IIWim 41 lapo of AutraUa'a Bolldl Beach. Tbe
Syday mao, a trand!atlltr, bope1 to be lbe ftnt Auotr.UU mil to IWlm IICI'OII tilt &lt;baDDel.

-.'

Cenlure lady wtlll olllce experl..,..
tnlened. WDI be tram.
ed . for airline travel 8tenCJ
nwponai&gt;Ditlea and autoJno. SELLII«l OUT - Mlnlalure
Poodlel, lnediDg atoet and
bOo club membeiablp oervlees. Pldl: up llJI)IIcetlon at tile Pl!'Ples, ..., IIOIIIe 'JI&gt;yl. Call
....
11-3
Aalo Clab, 8 Slate Slnet,
KmBY Sweeper.
Ollllpolts, Oblo.
..,..
cleans Ulre new.
RUGS a meu? Clean lor leu
plus
polisher for
with mue LUatre. Rent eleeE~ wallreas wantof ts.85 a monlb.
trte lllampooer ... Slteppard,
ed. Apply Ill ponon at all'lltl
Phone
441-2092.
• IJI Ave.
l'l.f
Ann lleolaunnt
N

...."c..·

)

'

·'

ForS.It

'

For Sale
Aluminum
ShHtS

11ELP WANTE!): For LoCal
lltanch ~ The Automobile
Club of Soulllem Oltlo. Ma·

e ACRJLAN e HERCllON

GAS

'

A4Y..-tlti"l .-.. red let lrr.. ular
lnMHI•.. will teU t~ • .._ t i -

~o~.t ..

INSTALLATION
. CARPET
6 95 .

FROM
WIX
OIL
and

~-··

'

l,llllitlirir

fiEf

AND
INDUSTRIAL

.
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•

c.

11

eal.u

]unkyard Law Will be Enforced in Gallia

CLAIIIFJED RATES
OM Oor:--OM tiM •' •••••J'tc line
II• CINecvtlvt'4tyl ••• • •ISe u,.
Tfwtt ctAitc 11h¥. ll.y~ •• ·1•c li,.

bomb

trlet of the U, S. .Vmy Corpa of

Elberfelds,

McGOVERN READY
WASIIINGTON (UP!) - Sen.
George McGovern, D.S.D., said
Saturday he baa llnlshed work
on a $1.8 bUiloo pn&gt;eram to
flllht IMmpr In America and will
Introduce legislation to carry U
The derby was sponsored joint- Pomeroy National Bank, Tiny's oot when C&lt;lngress returns to
ly by the Division ol Wildlife, Bargalnland, Osborne Slt&gt;ply in work MOIIdaJ.

scare . which
sroundecl a untveralt,y Corned
DC6 llrllnor at 34,000 student
Purdue Unlveralt,y ....,.reel
ahortly alter lwo Negro athletes
were dented JOrmisslon. to Join
their lrllek teammates 011 a ·
Oi!lht to Iowa Cley, ·Iowa,
becauae they were not clean
alaven.
Purdue traek enech Dave
Rankin sold he told runners Mal
Harrla and ' Jim Jackoon ihey
could not &amp;CCOII1PII\Y 111e team
to a dual · meet with Ioliri
becauoe they had not ahaved off
their DIOIIIIechea.
Witnesses said lbat another
athlete who quit the Irick team
two weeka eorller ID a racial
dl...,te pol- to a bag he was
careyllig liOir the plane llld
announeed, "l'w sot a bomb In
thia bog." When lhe ptlot waa
told of 111e lacldent, he erounded
the plane and ordered 1
~ oeorch. No bomb was
found.

Saturday

WASHINGTON -

lUre.

Moore's Store. Ebersbach'a
HardWare, Gloeckner's, Oownleproximately 600 to 700 troot len Grosa Store, Landmark, BaLDD
in the steam, along lake road 9 Lumber, Lake COncessionaire
ol! Route 248 at the Lady ol Bob Louks, Simoo's Market., Flve
Loretta Catholic Church. ''They Pointe Market, BRW Hardware,
should mske good fishing In this G&amp;J, The Farmers Bank &amp; Savparticular area for the next three Ings eo., Eagle Feed &amp; Slt&gt;ply,
or four weeks.'' he said.
Gaul's Market, Ridenour's TV,

'!'he

man Claren.. E. Miller lllllllllllC·
eel tocla,y that lhe illlntlnrton Dis-

ot Wlldlife Game Protector in dleport, had a trout measuring 6 were extendeda»preclationbythe Reedsville, Earl Lowery (Jf11
Dog Food), and NeweU's Sunocn.
Meigs Count)', sald a West Vlr- inches long that won him the prize sponsoring gr004&gt;o:

ginia couple, Mr. aOO Mrs. WU- for the smaUest one caught in the
liam It Bryant, carried away the event that concluded at 5 p, m.

s~sequelt

with
ualveral~ olltclala to -k
..-ttaace tor ooated.
Fire bomb• were hurled Into
the atuileat eonter at Western
lftebl&amp;lll balore &lt;1awn Saturda1.
students In a aearby dormitory
sold they heard glaas breaking
alii 41acoverecl tha Ore. 11lo
blue cauaed extenahe &lt;1amsge
to dropea and f'llnllture In the
building. Flremeo found lwo
broken bollleo with wlekalnolde
the bullclllV·
,
Wolllem Mlchlpn, a 17,000
1-.t Institution 11 Kalama·
zoo, Mich., baa been 1lle scene
of two recent prote&amp;ls almeclat
elii)IJIIJI,. atudenl ]JOifer In ...,.
acadomtC areas.
protem

tJntverilt.Y plane In the latest
llll:identa ot the •tlon'a renewed eampus uurest
AboUt 2,0110 llarvol'II'Ulllveral•
t,y atudenls backi~V pi'Gialtera·
who - e ouat,ct 11'1111 Unlveral. '
IJI,. HaD ·earlier In 111e week
eallod Sa~ lor .,...eUatton
of claosea by lacult,y members.
A canmlttee ot parents of
atudeiU eJIIOIIotf or suoponded
!rem the Unlversley of Chlct&amp;O
f~r a takeover of the admlnla-

250 JOUOIIB OOIIIplliedforJll"b·
OS In • Trout DtriQI ~

· mel

Ill!

t

liems Atlvertised · Here· Go

'

lrlltlo!' boUilb•

"

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By United
PreJBlnlernaticxal
1be Wellern Mlehl1a1
Unlveralty atudent center wu
nrebol'n!.ed SalurdoJ and · a
bunb threat ...,..Jed a Purdue

TROOT DERBY- Mon-

17 - l'he ljundol· Tlme.,S.ntll)el, Sundll, APril 13, lt&amp;i

WILL

TotJa DUD
COWl
CALL lo\CDON - ~

ao...

ANI)

LEE'S PLUMBING &amp; RE'MOJ).
ELING, Crown Illy, 0. Ph.
~.
tw4

IENNE1'II STEGER'S
WATER DELIVERY SERVICE
Ph. (46.0317.
. , tf
WE IUIPAJR aD Mat&lt;1 I MOdell oD major appl'"-, re.
frlleratlon. Alao seD llld IJt.
olaJI ceatnJ llfr CODdftloDiwl,
Free eatbaole. Galllpo1ts Pwuce ea. IN lie.
BY
AI.IIBRT JIIIIIAN
Water Delivery Service
Pllrlat Star Rt., Galllpolll
I'll. 3'/f.WS
Ill-If

TllllMrt'E PB8T CONTROl.
FREE lnlpecUon. &lt;all 4t6-3M
NerrUl O'lleD, Operator lor
lblennltaJ Termite !lervlro
10 Belmont Dr.
., tf

latlon available, ream..,.
rates alao lor lhappbla er
worldng motllen, bourly, dally or weekly ralel. I'll. fll.

lltf

est
WINDLE'S

CaJ1)01.

U!D&gt;IIIerJ

Cleaning, prolwlonal ....
ment. an -k parlllleod_
Phone Welloloa, Dl ooJ..
lee!.
N

Ground Broken for

Huge Nuclear Plant
-·· !"' ,. • : .. , ., ''

· Jr"l.'.ct;rno::.

SIUPPINGI'ORT, Pa. (VPI) Ground was brolien Friday lor

a new nuelear • fueled eleetrlc
-er station adJacent to t h e
9Upplngport Atomic Fowar Sta..
lion, the worlcl'o first nuclear.
tualecl olectrl&lt; power 11tat1on,
ballt 15 years ago.
The $215 mlllloo will have a capacity more 1llln ·
12 times that of the lldpplngport
station and will provide electric
power lor the eastern Ohio llld
western Pennsylvania area. It
will he OWIIed jolntl,y by l)u.
quesne Light Co., Ohio ~
Co., and l'emllflVanla - . , .
Co. and will be ealled the BeaVer Valley Power Station,
STRIPPERS INVITID
WELLSTON - '!be Ohio Vol-

ley Chapter of Proleollloaal Ellglneers and &amp;lrveyora will bold
their April meeting at the CGodl
Hoose on lll'oallwa1 street Ill
Welllltal at 7:30 p.m. April It
The featured spealcer will be
G. orville Bates from the Dl·
vlalm ~ Foreotry and Reclamation. AU lnterellled ltrlpmlne
OllOl'alorl are lnvlted.

WANTED\1
U•..t Purnlture, teels, •i-.;
eel--.,, lte• &amp; ....,..
MW 1Nd-. We elM • .,
c..., ............

1110m
·USED

1

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"

.•

· •''

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�. ·---:.

-L

Sund!ly, April 13
12:30 to 6 P.M.
Adults $1.251 ChtldrOft 75c
POMEROY - It was Good Friday Dorio J - Kloer, 22,
BeUetoolalne, left there with her ~i. Harold 1113 Kloer, lor the
Eaoter weekend with their J)ll'elllo, 11.\:. ud llrL l!nln Kloer of X...
tart FliiiL
.
The7 hill barely gotten a Jood .a!art when their car.waa hit
brwlslde by a tractor treUer.
..
.
Doria was taken to ' Rlwnlda HoopUal In eo.
lumbus. She suolalnOcl 'a fractured neck, liPIDe IJ&gt;o
jury and a broken arm; !ille nea IJat on hlor back at
Rlwralde, coq~letaly liii'll1led.
She was to be married May Jot. H you would
like to remember her, .Y"" may by maUtrw card•
to Rlwralde Methodist llolpllll, Cclumbus, Ohio,
GALLD'OLIS - One day of the year that causes llll'eot deal of
Interest and excitement at Gallia Acad01111 High School Is the day of
Roam 502. Her tamlly Ia very lfltaful to all who
have remembered them with cards udpnyerL
·
the arrha! of the Gallian, the GAHS yearbook.
This year the very attractive year book. which is dedicated to
Mn, Ne"' Eachus, former school secretary, Is a symphony In black
DR. AND MRS, CIIAliLES JORDAN, fonnerly
and ,u..r. The cover is black with a silver crest alii the cllvlalon
Patsy Price, dauihter or Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
pageo are solid black.
' Price, Porliand, are ,_ llvlqr In Petersburg, VL CborHe will be
Page 23 Is dedicated to Neva Eachus. The cor:ion tmder the lUll- alatloned there untU he to dlochargecl !rGm the Air Flll'ce.
page picture reads:
s...ral weeks aso Charlie was playbw In the yard with their
''During tbe autumn of !968, GaUia Academy lost a friend. An doe and tell ud broke his leg. WhUe he was still weariqr tbe cas~
lnlelll'al pert of GARS, Neva Eachus was aware of the needs of the they hill to take a burr led trljJ to the hoapltol to awolt the arrl'Val of
&amp;tudenls, the faculty and the administration; and she met these needs their llrat chUd.
with patience and elticlency. She shared the warmth of her peroOJ&gt;o
The morning they left tor the hoiiJiltol, at 3 a. m., It was raU..
allty wltb all .those who kneW her. Without Mrs. Eachuo, the plctld'e lng, Pat helped her hus- to the car, held the umbrella and car•
Is 001 complete."
'
rled her own oultcase. And guess who had to drl..? Pal, of course.
Tiley have a beby girl, and are delighted.
I can add Uttle to those sentiments, certainly nothing to detract

hi Our Town

!rtm the greatness of this magnificent person whose tlloughtfulness
and lnlentanding, in my opinion, weretwoofher greatest attributes.
She will be long remembered by those who knew her whenever they
visJt the school office.
One very beautiful feature of the yearbook is an 8 x 10 color
shot of a baseball game on Memorial Field. The mue DevOs are
playing the Meigs Mareuders and T001 ~ncer Is gettl11g reody to
pick off a Marauder streaking toward secooi base. Bruce WUson aid
Lonnie Bush are headi~ tor the bag. Danny Cook is on flrst base
and Jlmmy Gilmore is at third.
Smlebody tried

to tell me I was in the picture, but I couldn~

f'lncl me. The man sitting in the chalr behind the backstq&gt; is Lester
Thompson. an avid baseball tan and former umpire, alii a good one,
too.

On page 146, there's a picture
ot the Skidmore • Foster cos! truck that took a ptu11ge Into the swim·
ming pool. The picture shows tho truck at the bottom of the steps and
I'm standing by the overturnod truck taking a light readlq with my
exposure meter. I took pictures of the incident.
But I did get in the 1969 Gallian.

The caption lor the plclld'e reads: The Galllan phol&lt;&gt;grapher
acoops the Tribune's Dlck Thmaas. Remember the time the coal
cmqtany gave us a heated pool? It really wasn't a scoop, though, my
pictures hit the front page next day.
Year books become a treasury of memories. The day the book
arrives, everybody becomes an autograph hound storing memories
lor the ruture. &amp;De just autograph their picture in somebody else's
yearboOk, others write a few sentimental phrases.
&amp;me day ln the now far distant future, you'D haul down the old
GaDians arxl reminisce. Memories are made of this.

PUBLIC SALE

,,

Friday, April18, 11:00 A.M.
Dispersal of Livestock, Machinery, Feed and

Miscellaneous.
15 head top qua]lty Hereford cows, 7 have calves by

side, some weighing ll&gt; to 400 lbs. Others are cJose-tc&gt;
springers.. This is an outstanding set of cows -they have
1ize, quality, aM condltlon. Bangs' tested.

3 head large ponies, 3 small ponies.
3 eood quaHt.Y western saddles aOO bridges.
'53 Ferguson tractor with end loader and 6 ft. mower,
J-D 7 ft. disc, 2 wheel trailer, wlth steel bed, Ottawa post
hole digger, Ferguson 2-14 plows, wagon on rubber with 14'
bed, Jeep pick.q~ truck in poor condition, 3power lawn mowers, work bench with table saw and jointer, large fan with
motor, electric motors, Johnson 3 hp. outbalrd motor, 24
foot extension ladders, one lot paving bricks, electric grind. er, one lot of locust posts, 4 bathroom fixtures, 10 locker
chests with keys. One large lot miscellaneous Items and
hand tools.
800 bales hay, 75 bales Straw.
Farm located 5 miles North of Pomeroy, Ohio. Follow
Rte. 7 from Pomeroy, turn lett at skat!~ rink, watch for

auction arrows.

Mrs. Wilma Par main

John McNeill, Auction•••
Pete Sommer, Clerk

Mlddloport, Ohio
Bob Boird, Co shier

PUBLIC AUCTION
Thursday, Aprll17, 11:00 A.M.

Ii'

Since I have sold my farm I will sell at publi~ auction
my Holstoin dairy hord and for., mochinory. Tho form
is lacated 1 mile west of Rutland, Ohio, on Route 124.
46 head dairy cows, 35 now milking and 11 head ot
apr~rs. This is a yoong herd of Holstein cows. Many
are arttrica.Uy sired alii all bred ardma1s are bred to either
COBA or Curtiss sires. This Is a nJce set of cows that wUl
fill your replacement need. Bangs' tested; health papers will
be rurnished.
4 head Angu1 cows with calves by side.
4 head bred Holstein heifers.
'62 M-F tractor model 35 Diesel with rna111re loader,

rakelikenew,J-Dcornplanteruaedlseason, Ford corn
picker u.&amp;ed 3 seasons, M-F cultivator with side dresser, J.[)
1preader, J-D rotary hoe, Ferguson si~ounted mower,
M-F

J-0 fie1d chopper No. 6 wHh corn ard grau heads, 32 rt.
case elevator, A-C Blower with 50 ft. plpe, Ford disc plow,

Ford 2-12 plows, disc harrow, hammer mill, 1-tonfeed mixer' lat. SO.T baler I ulne spreaderI 2 wagons with floating
et1llillta eaollqe beds, 500 gaL steel tank, feeding bunk on
wheels, com spray, Ford 5 ft.. buabhog, one lot loeust posts
and ralltaad ties, 2 cattleoUera,onelotmi•cellaneous tools

aiOI.....,Jieo.

Milo B. Hutchinson
Rutland, Ohlo
John III&lt;Molll, Auctlonoor

Phone 7'2·5190
Poto SOm.,er, Clorlc

Boil Boird, Cashier

Lunch wlll be urvod

M010bon ood Fa!!!ili••
Onlr - Dlnnon To Go
Muolc by Mar"'rot NouMali
5 to 8 P.M.
FOR SALE
SCOTTIE TnUer, ready to go,
204 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
Phone 992-5467.

WANT AD

5

p.m.

DE~DLINU
Por Bpf~o P ... Ucotlev~ ·

MoMI'oy DHclllr. 9 o.l...
Co~~c:ollotlon• &amp; c.,rocllon•

REGULATIONS
Tht P'*li•her ,.,,,.... , the rl1h1

5 R-• ond Batlt on Flnt
Float, 5 Roomo a~d bath

to ocUt or reject any ada doo~~~ed oa,.
t-ctiOMI. Tht •'*lioMr will not
llo reo~tc~n•iblo fOr moro than lnconoct lrwortlon.

RATU
5 nntl ,., Word oM intortion
Mlnhnllfll Chort• 75c
12 Untl por word thrH con.. cu-

For $•1• .,. Tr.de
1flftl CAMI!IRO VII. 4 meed:
111'1 Plnhlrd VII, 4 llleed.
can IIIPJ.4I4'1 or lfi.M.

~lie

tlvo intertloM .

18

oM od1 paid within 10 day1.
CARD OF THANkS &amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 fot 50 word minitnum. Eo .
oddltional word

2~ .

BLIND ADS
Aclllltlonol 25c Chorg• por Allv•r-

..

OFFICE HOURS

8:30 a.m . to .5:00
.t,~

Weather
Roundup

p. l'll .

Doily

m. lo 12100 Noon Soturlloy

lost

QUARTER bol'lll, brolnl, eontact Ml'l. Llfldl lllYIIII, Min·
emilie or Phone t!N6'1S.
'-lt-31p

4 Union
Leaders
Depart

Auto Stlts

11141 ClllllVY balflon plclNp HAY. Phone 817.et81. · f.IU\p
trudr. Good molor, f!OO,
Phone tft.IMI.
'-lWIP 14 FOOT Thompson Motor boll.
25 HP motor, traner with
19M DODGE, &amp;eyllnckr, :a. wtneb. $SOil. l'llone 1111J.5441.
'-J3.SIP
door. standard tranlmllalon,
good rllllllltw eondiUon, ...
Phone 118Uff'J,
f.JS.31c STERID PIIONO Mldlo """'·
~!nation. reaaaessed. loob
\
just like new. Multiple IIIIOik·
l!lli COMET, lkyllnder, ataftd.
en. 4-speed automatic recani transmission, A·l ®tldl.
ord dlancer. Beautiful hand
lion. Call IIUIJ30 betwNII I
Mbed oMed walmlt 01billet.
a.m. and S p.m. or 7U8u
Take over navmenlll of only
alter I p.m.
f.!Hie
SUO weekly or nav balance.
fllUII. C•ll 119:a.21311. 4-1~
1984 MERCURY Marauder,
lln&gt;door lwdtop, JIO'Iftf
'teerlnl!, I]OOd condition. Pearl l'OUR BRAN'D new demollliroPowal, Long Bottom. Phone tors, zl~ Z8lf sewiM madl1,... Close out at $11. Call
11115-fi:IO.
f.l141p
192-28311.
f.IUic
~- OHEVY Ito-ton . plctup,
good tireS. engine re- ElllRT AORJI!S. S-bedtoom
hou11e. bath, llesement. near
cenUy lnatalled, tllllll. Harold
lionj! Bottom. Water tao 101.
Brewer, Long Botlom. Phone
A nt-e eountrv bome, 1'1!10'1.
......
f.IUip

s, tafton Wagons.

,

1969 .Buickc·Specials

Availoblo in 155 H p 6 1
·
230
Cuotom, Grand
~nd ~~~~g~:g:r 2 r 2sg
Station Wagons, and Convertiblet.
n,
r.,

s,.ri

0

1~69. Pontiac

'

•

!~69,

$3,290

This One In Stock and 011' Selection 01 •..

Friday, Aprll'18, 1969-1 •·•·

38 HOLSTEINS

-r

----

H;t;WeiiiiCI

· · ·· ,

' . .

.'

.

111&gt;1 ,..,,,..

..

burn ComelarJ.

'

FARMAUL CUB
Phone tft.MIS,

TRAcToR.

Beige finish with white nylon top, automatic, PS, PB, radio, new WW tires,

sharp brown contrasting interior with
beige body and white nylon top.

GMC TRUCKS
POMEROY, OHIC

1963 CHEVY II NOVA ••.•.•• $895

Super Sport, bucket seats, new 6 cyl.
mol.or, 3 speed std. shift, turq . finish .

R&amp;H.

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

Mal.ibu Conv. VS engine, powerglide,
radto, heater, new whitewall tires
green exterior finish with white nylo~
top, Yinyl interior trim.

CLIP THIS AD

•
'

SKA

..

'•'

cd

Phone li&amp;U035.

Business Services
EIPEIIENCED
Wllftr Stnlce

SERVICE

with Fluldex Tablets, only
.t U9 at Nelson Drug, S-14-45\p

ri •

ill DAY·OLD '"' st81'lell

,t.ef!IOf'OI JIUIIP!o. flnth flonr
or Clt!e ili'GWn ovallablo.
Poultrv houslnlr and automa.
lion. Modem Poultry, 3119 w.
Main, Pomeroy, Phone 11112·
·1111,
f.J3.1tc

Beautiful arctic blue finish with black interior, equiP"
ped with radio, power antenna, rear seat speaker,
new white wall tires, climate control air ccnditioning,
remote control outside mirror . Only 19,000 milu and
shows very best of care.

POODLE PUPPIES, AICC Toy
miniature, m and IIJI. Blucl
service and ll'OOminl· PIIOie

II I trc

lfl.5441.

SOUTIIEIIN planll,

tomatoes,
~.

cablilge,
l!mOt' and IWeel

Onler

11011'.

Charles

R. llarrll, Portland, Pl1one
......

1$-tlle

LOT 00 Mill Sl .. ln illddll!»rr
dOll to [lllllillflce.. 4Hoot
wkie. 12!1 fool deep, Em[.
lent lot, 20 l'onl alley In back.
Phone lft.Nil.
f.l.trc

Baker Furniture, Middleport.
Oblo.
D4le

..•

1968 Cadillac Calais Hardtop Coupe ...... $5100

!li!:MOVE EXCESS body l1uid

S.J:a.lfc

C. C. BRADFORD
AucnDNEI!R
SEWING MACHINES, rePifr
Complete Servke
service. aD makes. WY S.
.... Mf.3lll
2284. The Fabrle Shop, PomJladoe. liMo
eroy. Authorized Singer Saloa
Ciitl Bradford
and Service. We Sbarpen
s.ll-lfc
I I tic Sclsson.

Phone 992·2126

American Motors' popular intermediate car, lng new wrap-around tail lamp assemblies
the Rebel. offers for 1969 a widened stance, with integrated back up lights. The Rebel
numerous engineering improvements and SST series also features stainless steel side
many new styling touches, lncludJn~ a new trim strips and, in the 2-door hardtop model
grllle accented by bright horizontal lines. shown here, simulated louvers rorward of the
The Rebel features new rear styllng, includ- rear wheel opening.

,.,_.
•-L

XWHUOW

SEPTIC tsnb cmanea:· Mlllerii!JOGET ' PlfiCE lurnllure
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio,
our lbird floor budget shop.

co.

''

"OHIO'S OLDEST DODGE DEALER"
Mlddle~ort, OHio
II S. Second A~•·

OHLZ

AIR CONDmoNtNG Refrfger.
SEE NEIGLER Building .sup.
atlon service. Jack's Relrlfply for hoOding yOid' home.
eratlon, New Haven. liCIIIe
Call Guy Nelgler, Racine, 0.
1112-20'19,
4 • fie
S-28-tfc
READY • 1II1X conerete delivCJIUCK'S Casb and Carry TV
ered right to your proJect.
Service, save up to ono&gt;balf
Fast and easy, Free eiBon repairs. Briflll them In and
mateo. Phone 992·3214, Goes·
save. Clnx:k's TV. 1&amp;2 BuUer·
leln Ready • Mix Co., Middlenut Ave., Pomeroy. s-23-Uc
port, Ohio,
I Ill trc

dark green finish, excellent nylon top,
radio, WW tires.

, KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT Has An
Outstanding Selection Of
Pre-Owned•••

R. H. Rawlings
Sons Co.

KWLJdANY. -

H

Business S.rvlces

tire stock of quality cars . We're here to serve you.

"

LHQA

(C JKI. Kia1 Future1 SyDIJicalt, IDe .•

1963 CHEVROLET IMPALA ... $895
va engine, automotic, p. steering, sharp

Yoll' Chevrolet Dealer

EY

SE

WZHNWAZ·

KOBTELANETZ

Most oil of tho obove units ore LOCAL I·OWNER CARS. Como in ond inspect our en·

Open Evenings Til 8

UWFKB

SKA

FWCAK

YeoterdaJ'I Cryptoquote: THE CONDUCTOR HAlt THE
ADVANTAGE OF NOT SEEING THE AUDIENCE.- ANDRE

Automatic trans., PS, PB, bucket seat
&amp; console, PB radio, sharp blue fin·
ish with white nylon top, plenty of go
and lots of class.

'

HLAUWXHZ

HPNA

1966 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE $1795

VISIT YOUR FAVORITE SALESMAN AT

f

' I

XEZMSWSTSWEZ

ACAUR

1963 PONTIAC LE MANS .................... $695

. The l'tllng Mout The Re..lli: People-like It·· ··" -·

'

A «Jrnrtopom Q a a -

326 engme, 3 speed on floor, bucket seats red finish
white top, red vinyl interior, radio, new tires. '
......, '
' . ....
.,,. "
""-'·

YOUR CAR
NEEDs

1967 Cadillac c-.e Deville ........... t$4300
ha.s

a full compliment of powel equip-

Pomeroy

DPEIT
. . Alllll•••• .

S5.55

•

merit •ncludtng Windows and six way power stat tilt
&amp;. telucoping steering wheel, tinted glou, ~dio
wtth power antenno and rear seat speaker, white wall
tires. Hal had very best of core since 1new.

,.•...., .... ,....

1967 tadlllac Coupe Deville ............ $4300

·•

Gold metollic finish with a black vinyl top and beige
interior and equipped with power ·windows and six
way power seat, radio with power antenna and rear
seat speaker, tinted glass, white wall tires, autOmat•
· ic headlight control ~:~nd climate control air condi··
ti~ing.

BLAETTNAR'S

ILAEnNAits '

PH. 99a.2143

Here's one with a Gold metallic finish with like new
green. interi~r,

Complete Front-End
and Brake S•vica

From the Larpll TruCk or
Bullcbaor Ratlator To The
linalloat H - Core.

1967 Cadillac Hardtop Sedan Deville ••••.. $4300
This one has an ivory finish with a black interior,
radio with power antenna and rear seat speaker, tinted glau, white wall tires, automatic headlight control ~ith twiliuht sentinel, power windowt and six
way pawer ~tat, and climate control air conditioning.

For The Fastest

Service DAy or
NIGHT , •. CALL
RAWLINGS SERVICE
DAY 992·2151
NIGHT 992·7324,
R. h. RAWLINGS SONS

I

MIDDLEPORT, OHip

I

•

-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992·2094

E. Malo P. .oroy, 0.

'

~tg~~;~=~-i=
Unatrambltthese four Jumble8.
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words .

'
' ''

••

t
]
II
II

I .m/fn·:

Business Services

'·'

CJGARm'E vending llliiCbiDea

and service. ABC Enterprlloa,
Muon, W, Va. Phone 'I'INI4S.

larr &amp; Van IIndt
S.les

~Me

HAIIIWION'S

TV

· ~~~mce.

Houle ealla 8lld . . . . . . .
ilttl IIi olte. 8omt all •

' ..... he wl!b - . . ,
·Jihaal .•

Atfctln Service

, f.l1-31p

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter Bimply 1tand8 for another. In Utia aample A 1.1 UHd
for the three L's. X for the t.wo 0'1, etc. SLncle letterl, l.pNtrophles, the lenst;h and formatloD. of tbe wordl au an blatl.
F..actl day the code letters are dltferent.

YEEN

:11'1,...

.

els

QAILV CRVPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

HAS THE AREA DROOLING!

1965 BUICK LESABRE ..... $1495

•' ·- :~' ....,.~ ~. ~· ..

( '

!

DOWN
1. Forerunner

Used Sunshine

BLAEftNARS

;~- rr

t

painter
41 . Sleigh
42. Astonished

eauti u 1ght cream finish, 4 sp. shift 1 extra nice, black all vinyl buc-ket seat i"teri..,r

'

•ymbOJ

JandscaJM~

PONTIAC VENTURA.4 DOOR HARD TOP SEDAN ................... $1995

For Sal.e

nate

39. Artleaa
40. French

Camaro CQnverlible , w/ Rali~ Sport equipment

~965 .~~~TANG 2 DR. HARD TOP ........................... :'........ .. $1395

DAIRY DISPERSAL SALE

38. L&amp;nd r
m.ea1un
-&amp;0. Calcium

bulldJng

~ctory Otr cond. Power steertng, power brakes, like new, all vinyl interior. Hydramotic drive

BERRY'S

~

35. PlagueK
37.Fann

Beautiful turquoise finish with white
nylon top, VB engine, P. Glide &amp; steer·
ing. Like new WW tires. R&amp;H. See this
popular model now .

See The •••
At•••••

plant•
28. Hunter
29. To contami-

33. Speck

1966 CHEVELLE MALIBU ••• $1695

lib people?

38. Nothlae
37. Hair
ribbon j

ing

;.

'·

·34. Music not..

cond. Low mtleage, new car title, balance of factory war·

Canalll8d,Wie

poittkln

26 . Climb-

Open Fire"

f

~

Btz.ertc hi
32. Tantalum
symbol

rua

wan

bids

~' _.t~~ · ·

33,,Cheftp

mta.IUJ"e

Roa.atlng
on an

'

Bot

~~&amp;84 ~~~~~~~!SAJ!RE CUSTOM ........,. ....................... SAVE A$1000

' •

25 . Lucifer

~

30. Sloth:-4
31. Whert

VB, ~uto. trans., spotleu ortginol white finish with buck skin all vinyl interior. Power
steenng, power bra~es, very careful local owner.

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

9. RuKslan
river

Frlench

r .....,..,..

· ·~ 31. ~~. ',(; '.''·

metal

1965 PONTIAC CATALINA.cONVERTIBLE COUPE ...................... $2295

._ .,...1 .

prtflx
24. Old

17. Drooplnf! :.

SHARP USED CARS AT BEnER BUYS

PONTIAC

1. Symbol
of Industry
s. -.Arthurlan
magician

pl8.ids
25. Dross of

•a•.lablod In 230 ~r 2BO H.P. VB engines, in 2 Dr,, Hard Tops 4 Or. Hord Top 4 0 ·S
dan1, on convertibles.
'
s,
r. .,.

~96&amp;

pou,
22:. Acalm:t:

23. Scottish

Catallnas ••lowos$3 157.50

OH

. . .WI ;

21. Beloved
of 9 Ac rot~ll
22. Fln;t-cla.K!e

'

a ton n"Ogons.

ra~ty. DemOn.atrat~r. actory

20. Roee

fabric
13. ..

abbr.

Tops, 4 Dr., 4 Dr. Hard Top,

as low a3

hidden

oboll!cl•

11. Suiting

17. Shine
20. Manlpubttf',

I
~.P.HV8din Spociol Dlx. Skylork, Slcylark

Buick ileSabre

clol

6. Peel

publk:a.Uon :

Avodoblo 1n 290 Hors
VB 335 H
I
tibles, 4 Dr Hard Top•::wnodrSt ,·.
"' orsepower VB in 4 Drs., 2 Drs., Hard Tops, Conver.

18.A

dirt

16. Maritime

1

or

f,Poww

from

abbr.

·· •w .. .$2 620

r.

18, Partl· ,

s.n..

atate :

&amp;K

-

11. Al!lo·

I. Gloomy
ve~~~et :

12. Mine
extrac::ta
13. Middle,
to an
Engll8hmRn

.CONVERTIBLE

~

abbr.

15. Flah

v:io.trc

san.

~~

O{beauty

10. Actor'11
WOI'd•

And 011' Beautiful New

Avoilablo in 170 HP ovo h d
ho .
·
· ·
1
.&amp; GTO's2 D 4 Door r s'" .cam, 6 cy · 265 ""l"'wor VB, Tempest, CustomS Lemons
rt.,

~. ...._ ,

_;" IWOOp' '

14. Creole

. Tempest .. low .. $2,566.75

1969 .

...

·~

•tSwln,
&amp;. Overcrowl
I. Roman
l"l"Jdde-u

Spring

•

lA APACHE ca~ trafler.
GUNs for real -te ill Melfi&amp; nsod three times. Sleeos 4 to
Coutlty. Phone 89WIIII.
e. 15011. WUUe Guinther. Syr•
f.IW!e
cuse. Phone lft.2801, See alii'·
time.
f.u.elp

PbotJe

O.(ILY CROSSWORD

CAMARO

GALLIPOLIS - T e m p e r·
atures, precipitation andweether
Notice
conditions tor each 2~r per~TI'EN'I10N, Bee Line FullIod as recorded by Pete McCOC'·
lOllS, for home obowa, c:arda
THE BASEBALL SEASON Ia In full awiog, with all schools of mlck at the Falrlletd Weather
lhowa,
or your '""' penonal
the area partlcljJatiJw, It you get a chance you ohould try and see !ration.
lasblonl.
CaD Ettie! llenla
Day
High Low Prec.
oome of the games, The boys gl'" yOU a good two hwrs of enterMNIIO
or
Linda (Bahr)
amday • " " " " 67 40 .23
tainment without any cilu'ge.
Bentl, M9-3110, or Olesler
This prDf!I'IJil needs support. Home pmes are weU attended but Monday " ' " " . 76 26
'-u.slc
Tuesday ....... , 83 33
out of town games could use some local booster&amp;.
Wednesday , .... , 82 41
AUCI'ION, Saturday, Aprl It,
Thursday , ..... , 14 60
10 a.m. We have aold our
Friday ......... , 67 39
!lome and will seD the lolJow.
Saturday " " • " " 54 34
POINT PLEASANT - Julia
IIIII personal IJIVI61y locatAverage
high
temperature
for
Jo Bradshaw, chairman t1 the
the
week
this
year
64.5
deed IIWI mDes IOOtllwesl Ill
Executive CommltteeoltheRelli'OOB, last year- 68.3degrees,
logavile. LeaWI State Route
publlcan Party of !'oint PleasAverage
low
temperature
for
124, lito mlleo west ol Lanp.
ant, has amounced the Repubthe
week
this
year
39.0
deville
m State Rl. 325 to the
lican City Convention to be held
grees,
laat
year37.4degrees,
viUage of Danl'llle. Wateb for
Wednesday, April 16, at 7:30
For tnfomatlon call R.eds·
Total
preclpltaUon
tor
t
h
e
oii!JIO.
Complete bedroom
p.m. at the courthouse.
viDe.
817-3333.
;.)Ute
week this year- 0.23 alanlnch,
suite, living room suite, IIJdt. 191r.! RAMBLER, alllndard shill.
The purpose Is to nominate
last year - 0.06 al an Inch.
on and other chain. 4 wool
"00. Phone lmo6&amp;11. f.IU!c
candidates tor mayor, city
Total precipitation to date thla
J'UCI, wardrobes, studio coucb,
PT, PLEASANT - FOld' union clerk and 14 C(llllcilmen for
Business Opportunity
year5.631nehes,
last
year
metal
bed, Ironer, two gas
For Rent
leaders here ln the matter of Ute municipal election to be
OWN YOOR own dry cleanlng
11.67 lnclles.
heaters, Maytag Wilber. EIOHT·ROOM boule, two balba, buailless. Amtllllotis man or
the ~allty Mfg. Co. strike 1\eve held May 10.
Normal average precipitation
glaa cans, antiques, mlltlle
in gyracuse, Good for famlly.
ten the city.
woman to take over and OWD
annually - 40.70 Inches.
top dreaaer bureau, plclurel,
They are Joel Goolst, director,
Jaoob Turner, phone . . . .
lrutk and route. We wUJ do
wash stand, round table, oet
Upper South District, lnterna·
f.f.71p
cleaning wbnleeale. Apply In
tiona! Ladles Garment Workers
of chaln, two beds. glass
pen10n. A.B.C. Cleauei'l, M•
Unloo, AFL.CIO, and Carl Sigdoor cupboenl, two vlolhls, FURNISHED and unlurnillled
11011, W. Va.
f.IO.Ife
man, organizer, Upper South Disbanjo, Dulclmer. reoonl eabl.
apartments. Cloee to tchool.
trict, ILGWU, trom the Baltinet, cannon, Anny rlfle wllll
Phone tn-11434,
10-Uc
•DlllliDlitlon, many oman arWILL SELL 01111 or both of 1111
more, Md., office, and Martin
titles:
lumbet',
foooe
posts,
'I'RAILER
LOTS.
Bob's
Mobtte
cleaning pllllls. A. B. C.
Vest, State Director of Virginia,
Upper South District, ILGWU,
extenolon ladders, log dlalns,
Court, Syracuae, Oblo on State Cleanen, M-. W,
rle,
all
at
home;
hi&amp;
mother
and Nelson HUL, International
Ro!H&gt;rl lloudillol
grindstones. Garclen tiller. 811
RL 124
llft.IM1.
t1 New Lexingtonj two slstera,
Representative, Upper South Disbalesolhay,IO~&lt;illmr,
.
,, • . ~ ' · ~~· ·~ · .f.11-tle 'if
,. .~~nterel
LOGAN - Robert A, Boudl- Mn Norman W6l!e of New Lex-" ' hand toola, some old: many
Ill~ ILGWU, troln the Roanoke,
,,,.... m a
·niJI, n; Logan, and a former ' Lngton and a sister, Miss JoaMe
VIrginia olllce.
arleles not listed. J. E. Vanee, FllRNISRED bouse ill Pome·
you, you lntmlt us. Openlnl
They have been ln Point Plea•· Gallipolis resident, died In his Boudlnol of MI. Morris, Mich.
owner. Temtl cub. Not refor man over 40 In Pomeroy
sponslble for areldents or
roy, flv• rooms 8lld batll.
area. No uperteDce requlrant negotiating a settlement ln home at 155 Mound St., here An infant brother preceded him
Thursday
evening
of
an
awarin
death.
loas. Lundt lei'Wlll, Bale ..,.
Call evenlnp, tft.l2ft. M-Ile
ed. Cash bonuses. Air Mall
the strike at the ~allty ManuFuneral services will be con.
facturing Co., and will return ent heart attack.
dueled by llrdorcl Auot1on
J. E. CriiWforcl, Pres., Pan.
Mr. Boudloot was the sixth dueled SUnda.Y at 2 p.m. ln the
here about Wednesday lor furCo., Raclne. Ohio, Phone MJ. FURNlliHED TWO BEDROOM
thor Chemical Co., IIIC., Do&lt;
president (1961) ol the GaiUpo- ilelnlein Funeral Home by Pasther negotiations.
f.!Uic!
52, Fort wor111,
'11101.
aparlment, Middleport. I"*M
4-lo.tlp
The Upper South District Is Us Lions Club, and in 1961, tor Clyde P, Miller. Burial will
812#14.
U.lfc
the ILGWU ol foor states, VIr- he also served as general chair- be in New Lexington Cemetery.
4UCTION
emy
Friday
nll!bt.
ginia, Maryland, West VIrginia man of the Gauta County CanReal &amp;tete For S.le
George's Auction !louie. ·J'RAIUlll. Brown'• TraDer
cer Crusade. He recently reCur/is l..tmhner
and Delaware. ·
RODNEY DOWNINO
Ru11ond. Co111igmnenlll wel·
Park, Mlnenvllle, Phone IIIJ.
A meeting of the ILGW Union ceived a 15-year service award
Real Ellale Brwbr
I'OMEROY- CUrtis Laubner,
1'01110. Porelt G«&lt;lte. MRr.
•.
f.t-121C
members in Point Pleasant was for his work with cancer units
l'llelll . . .
f.ll-lte
held at 9 a.m. at the carpenter's ln Gallia, Perry and Hock!og 74, of Marlon, Ohio, a former
MkldlepCirt.
...
union hall Friday morning. There counties. He was also a mem- resident 11 Meigs County, died
Pets
For
Sale
f.I ..!Ole
was optimism the strike would ber of the Gallipolis Chomber Friday In Merton, Mr. Laubner Rl!lYIVAL SERVICI!B will be EABTER SPI!lCML. IIIDIII minwas born at Rock ~rings.
t1 Commerce.
conducted at the Laurel Cllfl
end soon.
Iature poodles, puppy trim InHe Is survived by his wife,
Mr. Boudlnot was a native
Free MetbocliBt a.ureh be·
cluded, te&amp;: also pup, 11001·
of New Lexington and a 8011 ot Mary; two children, several
ginning April 14 and C&lt;lllfutu.
lies, wires. lreJarld Road KenPl!l'ker and G¢rude Crooks Bou- grandchildren, and one slater,
' LICENSES ISSUED
tng through April 20, 7:30 p.
nell, Coutlly Rd. st, CoolvUle,
POINT PLEASANT - Mar- dlnot. "lie had lived In Logan Mrs. Modo Jenkinson, ~ring
m. each evening. The Rev. l'tlone
817-36115.
f.f.lotc
riage licenses have been issued lor the last five yeors and he· Ave. Pomeroy.
Clyde J. Bartlett wiD aene
GEO. ROBEl I'ER, Bnbr
Funeral services will he held
to Fronk Beard, 44, Columbus, fore that ln Gallipolis tor SOY·
u evangellJI. SUnday, April
JIURLING~ room rrame.
ForS.Ie
and Patty Lou Wolllngborger, 27, en years. He was manager or Tuesday at the Boyd Funeral
!10, there wUJ be a Slllgaplr•
ceDar. garage.
water. 1
Jolm Deere R Traetor and
1420 Lewis st., Pl. Pleaaant, and the Logan ol!lce of the Ecm· Home ln Marlon.
Uon conducted at 2:80 p.m.
acre. $1,GOO.OO.
Michael Edward Pauley, 19, omy Savings and Loan Co. and
wllb the Grable family of plow, Another tra&lt;lor for MINERSVIlLE - 7 1'001111,
Pliny, and Brenda Cerol }'tau· had been employed by that COI&gt;parts. Good rear Ures on both
Lil/irm 11/ack Lu~k
Philo, leading the service.
bath. balemenl, prage.
cern for 17 years.
gber, 21, Pliny.
f.ll.ac tractors, aU for fZIS. Ray
t:I.GOO.Oil.
Mr, Bcudlnot was a veteran
MIDDLEPORT
Ulllan
Y~. SuccesS Road, Phone
POMEROY
IWRAL - 35 acres
~_ of the Korean conflict having
(Black&gt; Lusk passed away Frlda.Y GUN SIIOOI'. BrOid Run Rod Coolville 817-Hil2 ,.. 167-3462.
ol nice laying land, Good
f.u.stp
King Louis XIV of France s,rving with the U. S. Army. ln Tucson, Ariz. at age 65.
nnd Gun aub, New Haven,
barn, out!JuYdlnge. Nice t bed·
He Is survived by his wife,
!lie was a former resident of
had the longest reign of any
W. Va., Imlay, April II,
rilom
home. bath, tumace,
monarch in European history Janice, two 10118, Robert n and Middleport, Rl. I. Sl!e was a tor·
RIGHT GRADE Angus heifers.
noon
tiD
.
'-11-ac
full basement. SII.OOUO.
stephen, a daughter, AM Ma· mer member of the Bradtclnl
- 72 years.
yearll~l'll. Tbomu D. Sayre.
11ELEN
ar VIRGIL TEAPORD
Chorch 11 Christ. Silo wao also AIL CIIUIICIIES In &amp;1lion Great n.nd, Phone eu.u.
a member of the Church 11 Christ
·
4-IJ.Itp AIISOCIATES
Townablp BN roqueolod to
f.IWie
ln Tucson at the Ume 11 h e r
dlmlt a lilt of dlurth memdeath.
benhlp, 16 yeara ol age and
She Ia survived by her lUI·
over, to WIDiam S. Croll,
band, VIctor Luok; two slatara,
clerk
of SUUon Township, 111Bello Laming or RuUand R. D.,
clns,
Ohio.
f.U4c
and Mildred l&lt;arr, Franklin
Grove, Dl.; two brothero, Burdell Black, POmeroy Rt. f, and IWI II1IOOT SUnday from I
-110. Racine Gun Qjj), lllotCalvin Black, Venice, Fla., and
pntl only,
f.to.ae
many nieces and nephewo.
Due to Iabar problenio, wo wlll diaporoo our mllklng
Funeral services and burial
hord and brod hothro at ovr form locotod opp. 4 mlloa
AQUAIU'8TS - llaUr'a dmen
will be ln TuCIIon.
north of Pomeroy, Ohio on S.R. 7, then lli Mlltl Mil
- II food and lonlelor aon Co. Rd. 53. Watch far &amp; follow ulo oigns " otic IIIII, oavo :JO per cent
Stoto llouto 7.
.
&amp;ta Blackburn
The Houoe ol Wlllon Emile
Aqaarlst 8poclaHIIes. Pb.
fl$.11111.
Flnl
below
BIDWELL - Eats Baisden
Pleoant Point llelort.
Blackburn, 67, Rt.2Bidwell,dled
15 of tltese cows fresh In March and April. The
U.lotc
T!Uraday at Holzer Medical Cenremainder .of the caws In all staps olla~lon.
ter.
7 bred heifers - due Uay &amp; June - pasture bred
Mn. Blackburn, bom Jan. 15, VACANCY for two•elderly peo.
pie. Prefer private plkl pa.
1902 ln Lo&amp;an County, w. va.,
THIS I$ AM EXCELLENT O.. PORTUNITY TO BUY
Wll the dsu&amp;blar or the late Polll«da. ~ ........ .,.. .
MII,.K TO •CARRY YOU THRU THE SUMMER. THIS
ly and Jullul Baisden.
IN-Uc
HEllO MERITS, YOUR ~'rTENTIOM.
Her tuiband, WDilam mackhorn, preceded ..... ' In death.
One daulhter, Mra. K4&gt;rmli HOU8EitEilPER I day~ a weeli,
IIR. AND liAS. NORMAN 'ROSE, OWNERS
(AifUla) Jolltoon, Rt. 2 BldwoU;
llvil Ill or 0!11. can • • or
TERIIS- CASH
4-INit
..,. aranddaulhler, s • n d r a
Browjdnl. Falrbofn, Ohio, and
Jim C•harl
.
.Dan Smith
one jP'andiiOll, Korjillt JciiiiiiOll, MEN WILLING to work. .,_
(atnaht~n
1:11.:. Pl.....Rt. 1 Bidwell IUrvlve.
lie, lllle to !ravel. PI!OM •
&gt;&amp; " " ~ IUA, JIIC. ~·r'rho McCoy Funeral Home took • .
f.lt~
(614) 949·2708
IIAOME, OHIJ)
94,_~68
the boob' to Verdunville, w. Va.
Nat
........
1~1•
fM,
eci:ld~nh
or
lo11
of
pNpOtly
, "Sur•, , ... loti our """"· but It L.A.'s hcla,.,j a
wllere oerYlcea will be today at
. Wentld To luv
&lt;lisaslt,l ,. ~ltiM ol 1,. Ia• dtductiGa w'll have
2 ~.m. Burial wlltbe'lntheBiack·

.....m.

r:J ~.

·o.

For fr1de

tiiOIItlnt ,

-·~·---

ITia

'

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR ON TRADE

on Socond Floor, 2 Cor
Garogo and 3 Raa111 Utll·
lty Bui)dlng. Coli 949•
3311 01 949·2153, Racine,
Could bo Income Proparty or For Lar,. Family.

COIIII por Word 11• COftiOCuflyo

ln .. rtiont.
25 par cent Dltcount on paid ad1

AUTO SALES
1964 GMC Plciq, 'h ton. Phone
992-5990.

FOR SALE
TWO FAMILY HOME

Will bo acnptod un4ll 9 a.m. f.,
Day of Publication

For Wont Ad S.rvlco

,
•
,CLEAN USED CARS

FOI Sale

INFORMATION

.

•

1D - The Sundll)' Times.S.ntlnel, Sundaj-, APrU J:i, 1969

EAGLES CLUB
CHICKEN
N-DRESSING

~ ""-

~ ..

1

.

'

.

tr••··. ..r'f ..._.

•

�!.

--nel.

·~· lta

SUndo7. April

'

'

. ·,

•

·I I

4dininistrati. on.· to ..Pull .Bnakes ~n.· ·-~r":ergers

,. - Tilt !l!a*Y

II
.
I

w·--.i......;.,. .'"PO

""""""'"" ,.
Alal'lnt!d .at • pUCIPIJW 68 por

- ·--.a i:•.· •··~-u

19";&amp;7""111o

;;;..,"1di.iv
F-'a
; . (J'TC)

~--

.,._..
:lxloiDcSL

lctivltl were ecll»&gt;ed 1a 1968,"
tile commloila! l8ld, raJ,101'11Dr
--0 were ~oos merpralast

.

;;...
.,
1bo FTC wu moot ....eemod
wltll 111o fact t11at 192 af lllo
natloo'• 200 Jargeoteorporatlana

..., marmacturinl
aaoets worth $12.6
bWion 1n 1968. 'This aetlvli;y
aceelorated furlber ~-'•• tile

a-•rod

~lr7.:.:..::.~b: .;;-mining

I

J

'

"

'J'rldo COmmloola!
Satiii'CII.Y llllllllll4lod
..., ~ proee.

.

uAJ1 previous level lh• merger

\RII.-,...

La'J OJ.r t1w Land
•
Effi

'

Dralnage ects
Proved VaIUable

.

. .

. -:1 .~· .lo
..'=*•
'·" __~
.,._._.__

.

1

actlv!IY, It Oj)JI081'ed auml&gt;tr of cll,...rancea af
companies . wllh aolell of $250
mlUICII or mare," It added.
.During the entire period from

•
ROtarUJRS to

Entertain
Rotary Ann3

built was formerly a series ~

MIDDLEPORT -

deep gullies, The water wlllllll

Soli Cmoervatloo District for

Ill led.

many years. He has operated a
dairy and poultry farm and Is a

director It the Federal Land

Bank. Over the years Mr, Rouob

has carried out I1WJ1 conservation .PJ'8Ctiees, some or which
were the construction fl. farm
ponds and lnBialladoo of tile
dralnap.
In re)lOrtiDg fD Yoho about the
success fA the drainage, Roush
said, "I 80Wed oats on a piece ~

Alms lo plamod for Frldl,y, Ma:r
2, at Ooear'o In GalltpoUa with

McKinney · ~lans to uoe t h e
water !or waterlng livestock. He
will build a troutlh and filiiI with
water from the pood.

WE HAVE NOTICED lhat tile
playground at the Beale School
II looking much better than In
former years. This is the result
of efforts o! IIW\Y people in the
Gallipolis Ferry community and
also the re•ult of work done by
former principal, Horton Eckard.
We worked oot plaos wltll ldr.
Eckard for seeding aod mulcblng
the grounds. These plans were
carried oot and tho good reoults

land this year and was able fD
work mer it earlier and with
greater 111ccess than ever before." He went on to say that the
ef!ects It !lie drainage as well
as shortage o! rain had both C&lt;ll· can now be seen.
trlbuted to this.
JIMMY WA'ITER SON of AIIJ&gt;le
THE Tn.E DITCIIER made Grove Is plamlng to buDd a pond
ovatlllble by WSCD will be work- on the former ·~armer Click"
Ing In Malon County at twa limes farm at Glenwood. Watterson oow
this. year. Tho flrlt II Jjlne t- owns this farm.
It will be a dugout pond in a
13 and the sseood,
15
througb Oct. 2. LandoWners bottom. By a dugout pond, we
scheolllod to Install tile cmlng mean that most of the water will
the llrst period are Clllr fot- be tmpaundod below the present
trUI, Bert Hess, John Colllna, larll surface. The earth wiU
Robert Burdette and Henry Up. be escavated and removed trom
ton and In tile second period, tile area. In the construction proGrmt Stanley, Robert rum and cess, hoWeVer, a fill two to three
feet hlsJt with back slope of afD 1
c. c. Lewis.
will he built.
R. II. McKINNEY of Rod Mud
Watterson will build a waterRidge bas firdobed hlo!armpood. Ing lroosJt below the pond and
It II located near tho lop It a water livestock from ll

*

A Ladles

N1Sht for Rotarians IIIII Rotar7

It BroadRoncoiiUilUIIlcyondraln- this area. Care was taken Wring

construction so as not to disturb aJil' soU above the level of
tho water after the pood will be

~ ._;_

•M'f·

:

Dick Rooerbawn and Bernard
Fultz as cbolrman.
Blrthda,ys celebrated by member&amp; It tile Middleport. i'omeJ'Ol'
Rotar7 Club Frldl,ynlsJttatHeaih
Church were C&amp;ab Babr, EmmeU
51lultr and Dr. RQ Pld&lt;OIUI.
Rotarian c, E. Blakeslee roported Cll tile progreas It t h e
Metga County Pioneer and rus.
torleal Soclot.Y propooed Milaaun
and Invited Rotarians fD "do
what tlley ean• to help make the

JOHN GARRET!'

Garrett Taking
16 County Area
PT. PLEASANT - Robert
Qdlllam, state C...servationl at
for tile U, S. Soil Consorvatloo
Service, Morgantown, W. Va.,
has amounced that Jobn Gar·
retl bos been selected fD 1111
tho pooltiOO of Area Conoervadonlli at Parkersburg.
As Area CUtsenationJst, Mr.
Garrett will supervise SCSactlvltiesln a 16-count;y areaolnorth·
western Well Vlrglnln. Garrett
is a native of Belmont ColatQr,
Ohio, and formerll' served as
District C...servatlonlet In Holmes County and more recently Ia
Ucking COUll\)' with headquar·
tors at Newark, Ohio.
He Is a graduate o! the atlo
state Unlversl~J and has beeo
wttll scs afnee 19t9. He Is a
veteran of World War B and
the Korean War.
The Garreets have twa dausJt·
tera, ages 14 and IL Tbe,y will
make their home In Vlema.

muaeum a realltjy.

Preafdonl WUbur Theobald OX·
proased appreciation fD the Eas·
ter Egg Roll Commlllee.
Women oervlng and pr~
the dlmer were Mrs. Mae Lam·
bert, lllrs. Jane Gilkey, M r s.
Bernice Haddox, Mrs. Beulah
Hayes, Mrs, Francis wu.... and
Miss Beaa Sanborn.

F'Jremen Answer Call
At Henderson Stop
POINT PLEASANT - VoiWIteer Firemen answered a call
at 11:19 p.m. Friday niSht m the
HendariCOI Truck Slop In Hlll·
deriCOI.
were eotiJnat.
od at $4,000 by tile fire cauoed
by ao 011011 can of psollne,
Dwyer Henshaw, af tile 2500
block af Jef!er100 Avenue, had
reeentl,y purebased the truck stop
and was plllllllng to r _ . It

llamaS••

.

PT,PLEASANT-Petltjuroro Ferry,
far tho May term of the Masoo
Grand Jury, May Term:
CGunt;y Circuit Court bave been · Arbuckle Dlotrlct, HeIll')' stew·
amwncod:
art, Southside; !;lendtoln m..
EYOI'Ott H. Donbam, PI, Pia"' ' trict, Arelllt R. HOIIl')', .Hendor·
ant; Alvin M. Bowman,Giemrood; oan; lllra. Rabort r-n, He~
VlrKinla Rayburn, Rt. 2, Pt. deroon; Cologne Dllirlct, Bllly
Plea11nt; Cbarlto W. Oebal, Rt. F. KiJW, Looo; CooPer Dlttrlct,
2, Pt.. Ploaaant; Le• 1. Fasle- Walter F. Johnson, 2, Pt.
oq, PI, P1euant; Thomas D, Ploaaant; Grabam District, W.
-aile, AilP!e Grove; Bertha W. Brown, I:.etart; Letbla BeUe
Bower&amp;, Grbnm; Cbarlotte Rtee, Bumpmer, Route1,Lelart;HaJ&gt;.
P~ Plea11nt; Cllarllt 1. Rulon, nan District, carl Dabney, Fraz.
Gallipolis Ferry; Vlrl(bU S. lora Bottmn; Leo Johnaon, RFtl,
Boyle, P~ Plea11nt; Earl N. Ew· Milton; Lewis District, J o h n
lng, Mason; Vlrglnlal Hatfield, Cooper, P~ Plea11nt; Lawrence
Gallipolis Ferry; Thorntoll Bur· Mohr, Pt Pleuam; Byron Gr..,..
gesa, P~ Pleasant; Homer M. lee, Jr., Route 2, P~ Pleaoant;
weever, Rt. 2, Letart; Wayne E. Roblnsoo District, Wnltam H.
Kincaid, Pt. Pleasant; Troy D. Potts, P~ Pleaaant; Unloo DisRusoell, Rt 1, Pt. Pleaoant; trlct, lllra. Ada Bennett, Rc!ute
George B. Mccauslanl, South- 3, Looo; Wasgener District. Fer·
'
otde; Vernoo
A. C&amp;dle, Leao; rls Juetla, Mason, and Lllllan
Pbyllis V. Deroos, Pt Plea11nt; Grbnm, Mason.
Adrlan.Lotlley, R~ 1, Letart; Larama M. Arrlnglon,Aahtoo; Watt. PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
er WlndiDI', Pl. Pleaoont; EmoADMITTED - Trloha C&amp;sto,
Wwtameon, Go!IWdiB Fer· RobeJtaburg; Jessie Leu. Lecll;
ry; Cbarles ·Duncan, Hend!ll"ICOil lllrs. Sarah Byus, Pt. Pleas·
Terzeh K. Dlckoon, Pt. Pl.... ant; Roser Halihllrl, Pt. Pleosant; MUdrod R. Watson, Render· ant; Wosle,y McCoy, Galllpolta
san; Nancy 1. Nott, Galllpollo
Ferry; Evatee A. McKbmey, F~~CuAR&lt;iED _ Cume,y Helb,
Leon; Herman Sinn!, Rt 3,
Walter Selby, lllrs. wwtam
Looo; 111ra. ouve Cottrtll, Pt.
Ploaaant; Mrs. .Mabel Morp.n, Nadlr, Lula Jef!ers, 1'aiiUD1
New Haven; Clyde F. Adams, Meeks.
PIIIIl'; Clyde F. Adalils, Pliny;
Kenneth 1. Roush, Pt. Pleeoont;
TREATED, RELEASED
Jeu Brown, Letart; Cbarlos
POINT PLEASANT _ CharPowera, Pliny; Margaret M. loB Rayburn, 29, Southside, was
Greenlee, Pt. Pleosant; carl I. treated and releaoed at Pleaaant
Velle,y u..-tw Fr'•·- ror a
Tennant, Now Haven; L I o Yd
,....,.
-.
Erwin. Soutltalde; Roy Ra.lmOnd Iorge l...raWJn of tho forehead
Yallll8r, Southside; Wanda M. .,atalnod In an accldonte~~Greer
Kay, Soutltolde; Clyde Gerlach, Rood and Route 2 lnterMC!Ion.
Jr., Letart; Mary l Slellhenaon, The accident was tnveatlpted
R~ 2, p~ Pleallnl; Robert E. by tilt state PoUco.
Brenaenham, AIIJ&gt;Io Grove; Ger·
aid Sayre, Arbuckle; John Me·
DRIVER CITED
Coy,,(illllRalle li''f"Yl 1\larUn F.
POINT PLEASANT - Doana
C&amp;lnpball, Gallipolis Ferm WU· 'Mloh, ~ ·ID an aulD ace!·
llam G. Roberts, Pl. Plea11nt; dent Tltllroda.Y at 10111 IIIII lllaln
1\larpret Swan, R1. 2, Pl. Pleas· Streett, has been cited by elcy
ant; Froncca E. Stanley, south- pollee for failure fD yield the
side; Fronk E. Yester,GaUipolls rlaltt af wa,y,

Mio.

.

21- 'l1lt SUndaj

Jne,, · af mOr. ahall noll()' 1he COIIIIIIIa.
.~-~VOIII!II,
D81lal, ~-·, Ia ..,
· clor ··-·· aiiJn af IUeb IIDck lloicllnp IIIII
··-

lenae from the
meilt.

·

~atlee Doport.

• Five other 1111111.....- 1111

.-.c 111o 200
lorpll~ to .1967,
' 111.1918: It~ cilar-

year were

G
d
J
•
::lela~...
~ ~alh'elymore c etit,
ran urors
Ilk-or,"
N
d
:~~sr::.far..::
tr~:,.: For May Term arne ~.~~.. wltli
m meraer

hill, In Ups!xlr cla,y loam soiL
Tbls type lOll usually Is vert
good for holding water beeauae
PT. PLEASANI'- Denver Yo.. It Us hiSh clay content. The Jo.
llo, C...servatlon Techelclao of cation In which tho pond waa

ago practleeo.
Boulh bas been a farmer and
a cooperator with the Western

-~

!!ret ,12 w.,ka.aflh!i
\ be'.
18tl tbrall&amp;h
l!lll12
a at tldl lllllueiiee·hld
·-"-~
'"~·.....
at lealt ..
u~.u~...· Jdibir,
' .'
af tldo me-·...........
- · ..._,_
IIIII mlDfng earporaiiDDa with
1be ·lllillber af lorp ·aeflllll· ' a. 1888 11-. 12 bll ~ · 1bl, firm wao Jones "
combined auela af ff-5 billion WJn• hU IDcreulld 2!.0 per _ , aeflllred lncludbw .... Lollllblln Slool carp. or Pitta.
were acquired.
from '1810 to 1H8, lllo FTC'I with auetl Ia · esee~l of $1 burab ac&lt;flllitiCII b):
200 CCrdlol aklorifl
BureaU of - . l e o ._wd. blllllin, 111o llrll time In biiAor)' ..lllo t3 billion ecqlomerate,
it 1967, 58.7 per cent of lllo
"Clearb", lhalej'Ore, u inor·
.
tlon'
total maruCaclurlng
aet1v1f;r 11a lncreued, ll 0
•
Ia tile bllldo oflllo . ::.
q, 200 lorgelllnduotrlalllr!nl. ......nlraled a m a n 1 lorp
·
Tho FTC bu not yet evaluated llrmo,"lllo bureau oald.

Ill' JOHN COOPER
Soli C...servatlon Sarvlce
Muon Countl

son CGuel'YatiOil Service, has
bad a report ti-om Artie 0. Roosh

.

not 8YIIl lllo lar&amp;ell llrm.t Ia
tile ocanamy were free from the
threat af
the buraou

llleaapoclalreporl.
AI lout 60 dl,ye prior to
olfeetlng a IIDck ~flllallk&gt;n
whleb will relUlt · Ill . lllo
&amp;e:Qdrlng -atloaholdlng 50 .
~ cent or more af tile yotlng
itock af -with i~ ~!!~ llllilla!l"~

more.

':.

lilY • • - - - • -

:e·:.~ ~ ......m'!
$2

niDIIGn

-memberconunlaalaa,
...,.anted
"tile aharp aiiJn IIIII me a apodal rapll'l.
ecceleralliln In merger aetlv:l.
The commlaaloo emphaaf•od
i;l'," paasedareaoiutlaDAprU8 IIIII tile rulea shoul4 nat be
ordering all -atla!s wltll

aalelo of $1011111llan or more m
notlf;y It of merger plana;
Bealdea tlllayear•a faot.poeed
merser aetlviiJ, lllo FTC'•
bureiU oald etockholder voting
elates had been ott for 17 more
large mergers wltll a11eta
tDtattng $2.7 bllltaa, IIIII negotla.
Wino are currenlb' Wider way
far another 62 merseri with
total aaoeta It $f,7 billion.
New MerprRules
The rules require that eompa.
nlos planning IIIII' meraer or
aCQJiaiWJn Involving llrma oubjeet to FTC jurlodlctla! wltll
as oats of $10 mUIIGn or more
and cornblnod aaoeta It $250
milllnn or more report u
follows:
Wltllln 10 . ~· Iller "IIIII'
agreement or underatandlng In
principle" Is reaehecl m merp
or to aeflllre asoeta ol $10
million or more, and IKI lesa
lor
~6 •··
than 0 - · pr
to -~
consummation, a. partie&amp; noll·
fy the commlaallln; aJil' oucb
parcy wltll aoseta af $:150 mUiloo
or more muet me a special
report.
Within 10 dl,yolfler amasalng
10 par cent or more of the
voting otD&lt;:k &lt;t another corporaWin wltllaooets of $10 mD!Ionor
more, IIIII' oc&lt;fllring com,pony
with asset• .t 11250 million or

lmorprllod

m

..,_

-•linD• mull ~ell -

IIIII

mloalnn ljlpi'OVII prior m 111o •
CCIIIWIIIIlaiiDD af aJil' mtrPrl
or. ac&lt;fllaiiiDDa.
But It oald, "nor should lllo
Tact lhat tile eammlukiil llao
not ehallenged a merga' oi'
ac&lt;fllaiiiDD prior fD Ill~-­
matlm be lnle11&gt;rtte4 u
commlaafCII _.ovll of tile
lepllzy of tho tranoactlon."

YOUR HOUlE·
·
PLIII .I aauu
INCLUDE 0URI
'The best plan to protect
that new home of your6 Is,
a State Farm Homeowners
!Policy ... the low·coStrack·
·:ne of protection tha pro~eshbroaderdcobve rag~e lor
·your orne a~ a1on nss
and lor you, tR case o .law•
SUits. S0 ~all me "'"today and lind ..A.
·oprotect
ut howyour
you csn new '"'""''"l
home from the\,;,...;;;.;;.»
·ground upl

P64t1 '
·I'I'A11 rMM fill AND CASUALTY OOMPArn
.OffiCI: ii,LOOIII-IWNGII

-·

Time-not, SUillla.f, April ~3,19~'

Voice
Along

THE 816-LEAIJUE SAVERS
Pork
1TH FOODLA D'S
LOWER PRICES! 1-4 Pork Loi1

Br'way
BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - A lipreading
(I .Irate Green Bay, Wlac.
!ano wants VIDeo I.ombordl'o
llllllt removed from tile atreot
IIIUil8d liter him .... Didn't take
~rom.cer Allan BIJe af t h e
-ered
TV obolr fD
· 100 tho coniJOverafal writing..,
the TV tube: be'• alrtody jump.
ed to the fall Alley Wllllaml serIes "" Good thing Deputy Jl&amp;.
reooe Seq, Darid Paekard'olha
rlebell NI-lan: ho Jul\ paid
~.ooo far blo new Walbln&amp;ton
pod .... It was the CUban ambosoador'l until Castro -.erted
things ....
John Gary oo
a mo!Drblke loll a battle with a
lxla and Is lloiiPitallzed In Santa
-!'" .... StokowBkt, moveover:
Guy Lombardo pla,yo hit first
Carnegie Hall cooeert noxt D..
cember .... No craeka about, tt•n
be • cold ~ When, etc.
Pola Negri cbecka ·lDio t b e
SltreyoNttllerlllllda May f todleker ber autabloll'aplv .... T h e

TENDEBBEST SLICED

-rs

Galcllerg quit ABC-TV IIIII IIJ'Ilbbod Jackie COopor•a Job ao TV

p...Wctlnn boos · at Columbia's
SorteD Gems .... Jackie oe,yo
he'D prom.e~ feature fllma ....
Impeccable cary Grant was '"r:Y
peecable aa be apllt blo pants
riSht doWn tile back oeam When
he 8'-&lt;1 fD tie blslaceo at lha
BeYerb" IWton the other embarrulltllellt.
Plans to tope a llock It JackIe Gloa100 slurws &amp;tarring Milton Berle next seaaoo aank In
the - · the public was poU.
od IIIII prefers Art cam11 ....
Glea100 h•• Jimmy 9lelton and
Bud(ly Amold writing a niSht club
act for tilt fall .... ll'a ono Jl)laoe
af olloW biz G1ea100 baan•t CCII·
011erod blg .... Rooemary CIOODey'a deelola! fD otay ratlrod
went tholaway wh111 the Lao Vegas
Troptcaoo alferod her $125,000
far eJalrt wttko.
The overiiOteot frlil&gt;t.mm •
polollc lhilolld bo 111111~~
·when Edpr Allen Pile'l "~­
Ita af lllo Dead" morle lcmlla..
towel alf Brlgltle Berdot; atarl
DB, Peter aud Jane Fonda ...,
John !ln1ager to writing "T h e
Fabulau1 Fandu," . a work af
love: John Ia Hank'a
apnt
.... Life follows art: u Ia ''Vir·
glnla Woolf," Rleblrd Burlnn
become&amp; an Oxford p'fesoor next

rre••

WIT!i BIG SAVINGS.
BRING YOUR 1Eifol HCf£ A Wut£R, Nil BE A WIN£R
YOURSELF BY SHa'PING

FOODLAND
THE "HOME PLATE" OF 4000
EVERYDAY LOW PRICES

AUNT lANE HAMBURGER

WE'RE PUSHING GREAT
DEALS TO CLEAR OUR LOTI
63 FORD
59 PLYMOUTH
Country Sedan 9 passenger station wagon. VS, aut.

4 dr. sedan. Goocltransporta·
tlon.

trana. Power steering. power brakes, air cond., radio, locally owned. Clean.

$795

39c
~~.~·· 45c

P.D.Q.

Chocolate Beads

3 Qt. '1

PETAL SOFT

Liquid Deteraent

btl•.

KRAFT PHILADELPHIA

~:;:

Cream Cheese

a ls'W'a""'' at rw .,.,...........-. e a ,..,•• a u

65 FORD THUNDERBIRD
2 dr. llarc1top. Locally owned, white with beautiful

ZESTEE
e STRAWBERRY PRESERVES
e BLACKBERRY PRESERVES
e BLACKBERRY lELLY

-·

2 dr. Hardtop, power steerlww,powerbrakes,bucket
seats, radio. w-t11"" tires, deluxe wheel covers,
fender oklrta. One owner. This car In ohpwJoom

cond. ExceJJent tires. This car will hold 1V tmder

aDJibody'a inspection.

4.:1 1095

cond.

.... ._..... 5 • , . tA94 . . . . . . . . . 'Willi• ., . . . . . , . , . , ..,..,

65 FORD RANCH WAGOft

66 FIAT

$795

67 FORD GAL 500

2 dr. Hardtq&gt;, 390 V-8 engine, Crul........,.tlc, P.
ateeriJW, n.dio, W·Hf Ures, 16,000 actual mllea,
ooe owner. StUl has new car warranty.

$2295

aut., radio,

tirest red with red Interior.
Luggage rack. Ex. Cond., from bun.,er to
VB

2 dr. four apeed trans. Vllll'l Interior. Excelleat

condition.

ua

'"""'"r,

$1395

a~

Falrlane G, T,A. 2 dr, Hardtop, 390 V8englno, ,_

WIWV%1

Tax Loophole Law
Is Being Readied ..

aa•

4 dr. bordtop, power steerlftl, power .brakes, au~
trano, Factory alr, beautiful dark blue with wblte
t~ Locally owned. 34,000 mUeo.
e JtOili:P4 . -

~

u ,.,....,.•._4 _.. u a a

63 GAL. 500
4 dr, sodln,

PICKUP TRUCK WITH

UTILITY BODY

vs engine, aut. trans., rod and wblw

ftntob, beautiful red Interior. Radle.

$795

COULD BE USED FOR
CAMPER

' t dr., 6 passenger, V8 aut. tra"" Good trarispor.

$795

60 F-600 DU.P TRUCK

$195

$1995

$150

63 MOllO UTILITY TRUCK

61 FORD STATION WAGON
Ia don.

. WASIIINGTON {liP() - T h t
Nblll admlnlllra1l.ille - ·
IDB leglalatiCII to plui loapbalaa
alod by _,. wealtiQr ,paaple to
.• eaeepe boa'¥)' tu pi111118111, a

57 FORD F-100

$1,95

$1095

wide oql tlree, power steertr~, JOW'W brakes, raclla. Olio ownar, Sold new by thlo In mint
....UUon. lllknee It now ear werrant,y.

CHECK
THESE VALVES!

64 BUICK ElECTRA 225

64 PONTIAC FIRECHIEF
t dr, Sedan, Power steering, power brake&amp;. Turquoise and White. Radio, W+W tlroa. A real clean

W•I"W

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

_....llil!l'-.s

car.

=

The Black Mlaa America CCII•
tell at Macllllon Square Gorden
Ia Sept. wiU be tlmtd CIJPiaflt
tho Atleotle Clt;r Mlaa .\!Dilrl&lt;'
fUll '"' Mo.- hal. ol1artap
af . . . . _ . IIIII wlnoe: eaa't
. . -ahbotUelooHFrtneb .....
bb'l•batler.

·In Good lll!:hanlcal

Cotid.

; pemmllll .....,. aatd Friday.
1be plu. 1l1P171111Dtlb" to par.

..a. Ml4lkllll to aempt flll,OOO

s1695

66 FORD F-100
Val •l'lflnt, cu1ta1n ~~~~ IIMIN41

'"' cwul
.... whit•
••I•, flnl1h.
...... Atdl•l
rM
tH
sharp ptckup ffVck.

ar man from lllolr

talllblt

tn..

~o, 1101114 llmll .............
m so~ eta1 at,U .IupiJ&amp;r'•

.. ....,,.; AI pnJtal, &amp;0111!1 I'*·
.... lit ..... 11\C)aalt' llraebla
. . write . .. tiiiOUiitl ratll1aJ
\ .. to lbo point .. . ,lbotr ~
...,. lillie tax or - ., tax at

au.

RETUIINS 10 IIlLEY

·Fits Clan Frlllk 1t
21, tCOiofMI'oiiiiiJin.

1. . ....
lljl-

'
,_)

.

1'1

•' •

'"

L

'

.

1111.

Vae-Pak

TE..VDEBBEST

TENDERBEST
CENTER CUT

Rib Chops
~

lb.

TENDERBEST

Loin End Pork Roast
TENDERBEST FARMERS STYLE

SPARERIBS

59#&gt;\'
JL.69#&gt;
lb.

u

\'

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

3c of1

FROZEN . .

Strawberries
FRESH

Ancel Food Cake

CLOROX
•

c

Gal.

PIU.SBURY or BALLARD

Biscuits

CELERl'
lie h.

8.:Ui!. 69c

• Foodland Produce Buys!

Rhubarb ~·38
lb.l 0
Carrots
Potatoes 10
pkg. •

Br&lt;llherhaod'') IIIII wife Joama
Fetet cllnod like ataruttlle"*'·
lt1l Pa'flllon - caviar IIIII cbom-

65 PLYMOUTH SPT. FURY

aqua interior. Power steering. power brakes, alr

35c

......, (ihey're pttlng IDIITiecO
were eaoldng wltll thelrowallec·
trlclzy II the Cbardal ,.., Ala
Cord (!he- Jlaflooo Ia "Tho

$99

Luncheo1
Pork C1lle Steak

~~·

Sliced Dills

, ..., teaehlng Sbokeapeare.

CBS newoealier HarrY Rea·
......... .... 11lrr7 91uart wodl
Com, luo Allee Smtih June It
.... Uko pop, Harey S. ReaiiOIIfl'
II Ia TV, with a Phllly llaiiDD
.... Sen. Jake ~Q\111' 11"11 aide
Paul Leventhal IIIII bla 9llml
welcomed a ..., .... Ftnllllld'l
leacltJll eullnlr,y -rt, beauty
Kalaa Soar! IIIII oiDpr AI LlW•

Pork Liver

WEI.CQ.E IN 11£ BIG lEAGUE SEASaol WIT!i BIG lEAGUE
SAVINGS AT FOODI.AND. Sl.I'PORT YOUR FAVORITE TEN4.
TtfN AFIER 11£ &amp;11£, I£AD FOR 1101£ PLATE WHICH IS
YW\ NEARBY I'OOili..A'ID lf£RE Ya.l NJIIAYS SCORE MlRE

s-

Americana' a 1lo,ya! Box &amp;ell En1181bert llunperdlnck Nov.
If bla papulariiJ bongo 111 ....
Mario Thomas' beau 1.-ard

~"~~~-

lb•48

CRISCO
3
Ill.

CAN ·

TINY'S

�22- The Sunday

~k'iontlnel, Sunday,

AprU .!S, 1969

mE:W~ARMiNG1

1

Standability..Profita.Bility · (Wilillife
,,

Adeeply rooted reason for plant~
ing Funk's G-Hybrids-their su-

'

FIJ~ K' S

perior standability against heavy
HtRAID

•

J.D. ·NORTH PRODUCE.CO.
YIN~

GALLIPOLIS, OHiO

STREET

Alent, Atrteulture
Melga

winds and rains. You haiVest all

you plant-lor greater profiis I

is :Nice, ·but T:her~ ·. IJ~~·. Draw baJ~ks .

BY C,. E. BLAK!&amp;EE
Ext.

'

Ccllm\l'

POMEROY - We ~I like !0
have Jilldlite II!'OIIIlll us but we
never like to hllvo .0 much lhaf

,u is anulsanee.ordamapcrope,

or pl'OJ)01'1;y.
Mall)' oalls hlvo come In recently oo bow to ecrirOI moles
'In IIIWJIB.
Moles destroy few plants or
bulbs by direct feeding. The main
damage Is dooe when plant roots
are dlslodgocl as the animals
work thralgb the soli In search
oi earthworms and Insects which
form the bWk of their die~ Plant
seeds, roots, and bulbs in mole

runs are usuall,y destroyed by
mice or other rodents that use
the passages.
Earthworms are beneficial In
malntalnlag good texture and pcroslly of the soli. However, soils
containing manY earthworms and
Insects, larvae and p s will
attract moles and their reJDOYal
or reOOction mB3 be desired in

some Jooallms.
Moles produce one Utter of
about four each year. Nests are
usually deep, beneath lbe protec-

ore actl~o 'hi reorAnbdlor ~ serious
IDg lbelr ;ruung.
j)l'lll)lom In Ohio Is larp mlIn moat ~eao, March, April, sratlng .flock• Ill ~arlouo spe· IJI&lt;I,M.7'1re die liotmmlha•fOt '.,.ctaa ot.blrdll; Mollt·blrd diunaiO
making~ At Ibis tiuul ::'io·c_orn Is by ·red-winged blackthe wmdchucka reaeilt lnlrUslon blrda aild cotnmclD 8J'&amp;cldea. Yel·
by oth'er animals and will keep tow-llalred blackbirds andbrowolllem r....., their dena. There- boadod c-rd· also damage
fore, tho · chlnce of deBtro71ni corn, but to a more limited exother anlmalslbrougll treatment tent. SeariOWbouldered, black
Ill -l,y-ldentllled wmdchuck adUlt malo redwlngs are !amllburrowala n06111Q&gt;Ie dur!Dg urts . tar and unmistakable, but I h e
period.
broWn sparrow-like females end
In late oummer, fall, end wJn- lmmalllre males wllb t h el r
ter, game animals will scurry 11reaked breuta afton &amp;0 unrecInto wmdebuck burrows for brio! oplzed. ·
protectlm~ aad ma;y even take UP · So !ar there Ia no sure ~
patmanent - e during tbo per- of preventlnl bird damage
lod. of woodchuck blbernatloa. to com. CUltural measures,
1bo 881 cartrld6el avsllohJe ftlahtenlnc•deviCe&amp;, 888 explodare fllled w!Ut combusUble lilA- ers, rUle and aJtotaun shoollll(,
teriala and must be lplted by and rope flrecrackOI's ha~ all
ilghtlng the fUse. In treaUni a been tried. No economical metbburrow, light the fUse and lbrullt
the cartrlcl&amp;e CJJickl,y Into lbe
burrow as far •• posalble. Cloae
the opening tlgbtl,y as sooo as
the cartridge bursts Into !lame,
tak1D6 care not to amolher the
ground.
bumlns cartridge with loose~
Burrows In the earthen parts Use a camldge lor each burrow
of levees, bridge abutments, and ..,...06.
other water-cetalnln6 structures
ereate a danger to human lives
and properly In times of hJgb wa-

tWo &lt;over oi a·Jarie stale, !hOi
sidewalk or I'OI&lt;IWIO'. The bardwoJ,'klnl .little '!JIImal has .keen
llf:IISOI' oi'imell, toucl\ oii&lt;J·~earIn&amp; buf Ia almOIIt .&amp;Iiqcl, Maiea
are 11\oet active m dunli, cJoiob.
da,)'sln apr!Dg and fall.
11: deprived oflbelr fmd ouppl,y (eartJnrorms, Insecta), moles
will move to otherareao. Tho use
Ill lnsecUcldes will recllce lhla
!md SIIIJI)l,y,
In Ohio, recommendaUona for
the control of' grubs end earthworms Include use o! aldrin,
chlordane, dieldrin, or hoptachlor.
Anothei serious problem to
many !armors, and much more a
80UI'Ce or pleasure to sportsmen,
JS lbo woodchuck or groundhog.
Woodchucks !roquentl,y move
from ueflllable land to open pastures, llelda, or orchards. In
such places tboy destroy trees
and .crops. Their burrowln6 also
causes Injuries to livestock and
damage tomachlnerywbonbreahIDg thraiBI&gt; the undermined

~cko

odhU~boon-.

Each J.Ur calls .;e .....,lved '"' &lt;GIIIroUin6 ol ~.
sparrows llid similar bird•. Pol-

1111111edmos when. ""'"chlng !or
blbernatln( quarters or mtce.
Thay are'. almost ai!'IJ.•· harm·
less kinds, 'l'bey do not breed
In hou se•, but h•ve been known
to lay ew In or under !oundadons.
'Tho prolJiem 11 to set rid Ill .
the snake that haa been seen and
to prevent others from entering.
II: lhe snake hide• bofora It can
be caught, put wet clolblm Ute
!loor near where the snake Is
tbousJ&gt;t to be, and cover with dry
clcths or burlap bogs, &amp;lakes
Uke moisture and shelter, 110
thay tend to crawl under or be-

ER

THIS SU

lOll materlils hiYe been u&amp;ed
l!'lllbor• Ia ·frtlllenl opposltim
111 lbla meCbocl. There are some
ropeUent cbemlcall avalloble
which haVe stven aome success.
These are etlckJ materials which
deter lbo birds from rooatlns on tween the cloths and can then be
leclgeL These are not normally removed.
To keep other snakes from
harmful but are rather messy.
gett1D6 In the
au pointe
where
lhey
might
enter
should
THE HATED SNAKE
be
blocked.
Remember
lllel
Occaslooall,y , IJIOstlons a r e
snakes
can
paso
thiwgb
exraised about snakes. Most or
thorn are notpollllioous,andmany tremely small openings, and usare bene!lclal due to lbo num- ually enter near or balow ground
ber Ill rodeata and Jnilects thay tevet. Cellar doors, windows,
and scrsens must 01 til!hll.Y.
eat.
&amp;lakes occaatOnall.r o n t e r Walla and Doors should bo
houses, sometimes by accident, aearehed for crevices.

-

boo...

O)ITARGET ..

WITH THE BICGEST SAVINGS OF THE YEAR!
TOTAL COMFORT WITH COMFORT·AIRE ROOM AIR·
..•
CONDITIONERS AT YOUR COMMAND ALL SUMMER

Charolais

LONG. DIAL YOUR OWN WEATHER.

ter.
Woodchucks can be removed

JUST ARRIJED

from places where they are trou-

blesome by means of fumigants,
traps, and shooting. ID some
states woodchucks are recognlz.

CARLOAD

ed as game animals and regula-

tions exist regardlog their control.

RED BRAND FENCE

INVITE SHOOTUP
If farmers have problems in

tho cootrol of woodchucks they
ma.y lnvite Bportsmen to come
In and shoot the woodchucks, I!
thls doesn't work satisfactorily
there are gas cartridges available which can be used for con-

"FOR LONG STRETCH YOU CAN'T BEAT RED BRANO!!

trol porposes. The best time
for treatment of the burrows is
during lbe sprin6 months when

more CARLOADS are on
their way nowl

Timely Quotes
The cause of violence in
Harlem is poverty and dope
and tbe refusal of the au·
lborilies to crack down on
the Mafia, which traffics in

Central Soya

narcotics.

The FOODPOWEtfPeople

~AWY.lt.u~L':;;.~

lf;ALtiPOLIS, OHIO '

l#lglf!U

a,_,;m~n ~

some teltmsron pTograw
c011tribute to violence ln
the ghettos.

Amnesty differs from pardon in that tbe former is
granted before rather than
after conviction.

ITH

Show, Sale. EARLY SPRING
May 25-28 DISCOUNT
COWMBUS - Twenb' -!lvo
major breeders of Charolall catUe !rom 18 states and Canada
will conslsn more then 60 Ill
lbe breed's top animals to lbe
2nd North American Charol!'l•
Classic Slow and Sale here ~
25.:18.
illoosored joJntJy by the Ohio
Dcparbnenl of Agriculture a n d
the Ohio Slate Charolalo Association and the American International Charolals . AssoclaUoo
AJCA), the Classic his a premium prize Jist &lt;1 more than $10,000 - lbe largest of lillY show
of Its kind In lbe country.
The 12th annual meeting of'
lbe AICA will be held In cmjunctlon with the Classic a n d
Sale, according to Joe Bryan ol.

Buy Naw and
'
$ave Up To

I -CONDITIONIN

$160

FOR THE
Fl

• HYDROSTATIC DRIVEl
• ELECTRIC STARTING!

IO)IIIonlll

·~

. . ...................

theMniPIWit',wtrk....,_.,llftll
topaWtreltMnewCu~c.cllt 1

992-2176

·

The host group will Include
Bryan, Emersm E\'8111 Ill Triple E Ranch, Gall!j)olls, h o a t

chairman, and Norman Godden,
president Ill G, &amp; H. Research

Thanks To All ........
S.ys:

Farms, Circleville,
host chalrinan.

$

to

"
•

Who attended our Big Game
!Hunt OPEN HOUSE

~--------------------------·-·
Special prices will be effective all this week, or
as long as tile supply lasts.

Why buy a BO~NS
-.....HUSKy 1050?

MODEL
WG213

' DO-IT YOURSELf-

w~. ~resldenl'ot
lhil'~Ch.iifOW• As!IOCia-

iion. ' '

Superbly enaineered refrieeration system lor maximum
s1111mer coollna. 21,000 BTU coollna capacity plus
adjustable air deflection elves you the ability to direct cool filtered conditioned air where you want H.
Add these features, quiet operation rust free lone life
plus five year warranty and you'li have the coolest
summer you've ever had. See the experts today and be
cool tomorrow,

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LITERALLY HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS BY INSTALLING YOUR OWN
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IN TODAY. LEARN HOW YOU CAN HAVE CENTRAL AIR CONDITION·
lNG FOR AS LOW AS:

'

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•

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"

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KATIE WELL SAYS:

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DEAL IN ONE
PACKAGE

0

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•

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~ HEll

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The New GRAVELV-430
Commercial Compact Tractor
• All 1ear and steel shaft drive direct · • Super-traction from rear-mounted en-

to attachments

gine, low c:enter of aravlty

• Now heavy duty 12 hp enaine
• Steel fuel tank with a capacity of more
than llvo pllons
• Mower mounted down under or out in

front lor cutting ease

• Independent rear wheel brakes, tun,.
shielded drives

• Wide ranee of attachments lor mowing, snow removal, dozlns, haullnc
and maintenance

Gravely revolutionized the 4-wheel garden tractor market with it.. rear-engine
Gravely 424. Now that fabulous tractor has been redesigned for the commercial user or the homeowner with demanding estate grounds to be maintained. This new tractor has more muscle- 12 HP, automotive type starter
and alternator, a aelf-cleaning air cooling system and many more important
, modifications. It's the Gravely-4:10.
·
WHEREVER THERE'S A GROUNDS MAINTENANCE OR LANDSCAPE
.108 TO BE DONE .•. WE HAVE THE RIGHT GRAVELY COMPACl
TRACTOR TO 1&gt;0 THE JOB. COME IN FOR A DEMONSTRATION RIDE.

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES .
· AND SERVICE
E. MAJN ST.

'

992·2975

POMEROY, o,

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Wo hove ...,_tabluppllancebuys·ouchae:a28 cu. !L cheat:
fr~r or a 23 cu. IL uPrtshl freezer at onl,y 269.95 eoch.
chock this Pacemaker washer &amp; dryer special: Washer,
Regular 255.00, ON SPECIAL AT 219.95. Dryer, Resular .
175.00, ON SPECIAL AT 139.95,
.

The reasons are In Bolens
Difference DeslgniHI Features

*

Garden

10 hp compact with s\3ndard transmission
*Attachments plug into a shaft type PTO coupling,
without belts * Controlled differential lor extra
·traction on wet or loose ground * Two speed
ranges lor six folward, 1\yo reverse speeds
Parking brake and electric Ughts are standard
35 attachments available lor year 'round versatility

HOES-~-..:J.67
iAUL-~.1.99 .
. Lone 6andled .... ;:· ~·~

**

.SHOVlL. __ 1.99

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VILLAGER SERIES IS HERE I

HO.ME

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Whtn tho nood is lor a highly olliclent air conditioning syslem at moderate cost
HElL offtrl tho Villoper. It ia especially advanlagooua lor builders of planned
devtlopmtntl and la~t subdivisions. The Villagar s~ries contains five modtls
ranti~~ from 22,000 Btuh through 47,000 Btuh •. Kitten-quiet performance ia achieYed by a specially constructed sound chamber within which the comprilsa·r
ia lsclated. The cabinet is finished in gleaming Borkahiro Groy' and ~ccontod
by ·a beauliful oyator white accou door with matchlnt frame and grille, Thlo·
taattlul appearance lo further tni1anced by a compact, low silhouttto only 25
inchu high. All cabinell oro sturdily constructed of highly rull•rtllafant zinc•
clad stool which i1 further protected by baked-on acrylic enamel. Five Yoar
Warranty.

AS LOW AS

$775

EACH UNIT IS FACTORY·TESTED TO INSURE RELIABILITY

AIR-CONDITIONING
H

Every Villoter Condtnaing Unit i1 completely tuttd and proved aptrotional btlore It \" tvor cartonod lor ahipment. During thlstut tvtry component rocoivos
a comp eft ond rigid, inapecti~n. Aa . ~ result, every unit leaves the factory in
.-rfect running cond1tion. You art ouurtd of .a Cpndenaing unit that is unaur•
pautd lor long-lilt and troubl .. froo sorvlct.
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Uwf:t ,PEP

BOLENS

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CENTRAL

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EACTO,RY TRAINED
y

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..Pk, "2-2111 Joak W,

c.,..,, Mit•

Hm.. Dally Until

6:00 P:M.

f ·"

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AUTHORIZED SALES AND SERVICE
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1969

Readings Given a~ .Service

' in Revi~w
"

SYRACUSE _ The Easter soD.
rise Service wao bald at 6 i. m.
at the Firat United Presbyterian
Church with 11ra. WOllam F
Wlnebnimer In clarge,
•
HQIIBtoo: Haokoll Karp, the Edwanl 1(, Kennedy, Char81118
Resdlnss were· oidDD!tted ·by
flrat IIWI ever to ha'" an art tt-at the · lolao:O.chu..Uo Jlomo. · Mra. ~go Schneider, M r a.
lclal heart lqlanled tJi hla. crat wis ulllllil the IAlur to &amp;afn Charles illake srol MrL Winol&gt;oolf, died of lddMt llUure alii per-.J pablldl;f at tho ~­ bremer aD:I Mra. Robert Hlrden
p•llllODia alter the era' e..._, .1'he RcnDIJcana, wao 10118 leader. A medltatlm
plaatlc device which had kept Georp MUI'JihY fl. California, by the Rev. LlnoonH. Stehblna fol·
hbn all"' for G5 hours wsa Henry Bollmon 111 Oklahoma llllrOCI, and thecloalDSPI'OY•rwas
r"'laeed by a transPlanted aDd wuuam B. Bubo of Ohio, by Mrs, Harden.
were inembera ol a auheommitDonuts and coaee wore seroed
heart.
Nome, Alasl•u Tl1ree Repllbll- tee ln..•IIPIIIIil the educatloo In the social room,prealdedover
can aeoaton withdrew from an of Alaslca's EaklmDa, lrollans by Mrs. Walter Harris and Mrs.
Lawronce Diddle. .
lmestlptlng psriJI led by Sen. arol Aleuts.

Nixon Offers Soviets ·Peace
I

,w!&gt;Uid

unwloa · to reb\x
NATO's vigilance untll II Ia
United PreSIInternollonll
Tho North Allanllc TreliJI clear !hot proposals for a
Orpnllltion (NATO) relebnt- setllement have the !l&lt;'nolne
ed Ita 20th aaniveraary this political content thai would
week against a background of prevent "detente from bee~
SOviet reaction that ml~ed ing delusion." .
As Nlxoo spoke, olllclala of
loootliiiJI with guarded overtures
the
alliance were conlllderi!V a
ror a EIJI'OI)Ban settlement.
President Nixon, addressing hint from SOviet Ambeaoaclor to
NATO foreign arol defense Washington ~toly F. Dobryin.inlsters at a Connal anniver- nln that the United states would
sary ceremony Thursday. said not be autoo:atlcalb' exchllod
the alliance should be ready to from an all-European securiiJI
extend the harol of frlerolshljJ to conference proposed by the
the SOviet bloe If a gemllne WarSiw Pact (SOvlet-bloe) alliance.
oetllement appearedpossiLie.
Balanced against this ImplicaHe warned, however, that it
tion of amity was the news that ·
seven Soviet warships had
ertered the Medlterra,..n to
reinforce the 30-ship Russian
fieet already on station there.
Arol oo Wednesday the SOviet
government had pllblllhed a
s t a t e m e n t that denounced
NATO as tile main threat to
world peace am accused it of
SYRACUSE - A "&amp;I.Duner ''inspiring counter-revolutimw.ry
Fair'' was dJscusse4 by the La- c~:qJ attempts" Ln Communist
dleo Auxiliary &lt;t the Volunteer nations.
Firemen Tuesda¥ night at the
There was nothing new in the
psrk headquarters. The pres!- SOviet talk about aU-European
dent, Jean Hall, presided.
security talks. Previoos propo.
Edl1b Hood read the l21at sals ror such a conference,
Psalm for devotloiUI and roll ceil · however, had stipulated thlt the
was answered wlth an Easter United States must be excluded.
reading. 'I'M treosurer report.
Around the World:
ad $140.30 was cleered on the
saJgon: A decline In betlleVorlel;f at the elementary field sctivity last week reduced
school, all to go to the firemen combat losses on both sides to
to purchase a new bed for the die lowest level since this
fire truck.
year's Communist offensive
MemorW Day, lolaY 30, has began. Official figures listed 222
been set for the u&amp;unmer Fair" AmerlcantJ, 246 South Vietra..
at the park. Conunittees to work mese and 3,200 enemy soldiers
aut details are Marie Rizer, Peg- killed.
gy Salls, Mildred Pierce, Edith
Washington: The !q&gt;reme
Hood and M)'Ia Hudsoo.
Court ruled unanimouel)' !hot
Mn. Hall said 1,120 Easter reading or . vlewlns obscene
bitlkets and 1,600 homemade Eas- material In the privacy of the
ter eggs were made and sold home is not unconstitutional.
!lie wilhes to tllank Auxiliary
Jeru..lem: lorael clarged
members. firemen and all oth- that Arab terrorists t.d fired
eu who helped In so many wsyo rockets Into the port town of
to make the project a succon. Elalh, adJoining the Jordanl.an
A "special thanks" went to ev- port of Aqaba, wourdi~ 13
eryone that gave dmatlons. Pro- persona. An Israeli army
coeds will be announced later. opokesman sold laraell jets
People are asked to contlnup sUenced the attack.
saving Ill their plasUc )lgs and
Waohiovton: Jordan's Kl!V
phone or see 11111 auxiliary mem- Hussein, speald!V with the
ber for pickup, as they can be Hperaca.l authority" of F..gyplfm'lll! for next yeor'a project; ' ilall President Gamal
! Thifnen meeting will be Ap- Nasser, offered Israel a p l .
rll 22, when a poUuck dinner ot free nn1ptlon through the
wDl be held at 6:30 p.m. lloat- SIIOZ C&amp;nal This of!er, adBy DOUG ANDERSON

be

AtieliilaiiCO for Cilurch School
wa8 .52, 'nd the collectloo ·n~
$47.62. ·
.
'I'M church altar wsa decol'lltod with IIUea aDd a looeb' pink
hYdra-. Lutes wsn In lovllll
meme..lalo to Flolale RouJh, the
Aaroo NeaoelamUy, Roscoe Darden; for Mrs. James Quick trom
the SUnshine lolakero claoa; AI·
bert Duckworth arol JOBOPhlll!
Duckworth Harden, bytholamUy;
the Deon famUy, Roy Holmaaarol
Miriam Holmes Weyersmlllerby
Mrs. Mayme HoiP,ea arol lira.
Helen .Wotoel and llmlllao; to
lito. Agnes Jenkins and horchU-

IJie Spall Vary ·
. Ule span am0111 ln..CII
ranges from less !han two
hours In some May Oleo to·
&amp;&amp;lone as SO yea!'l·for queen
termites, accordln( ·to the
Encyclopaedia Britannica.

dren, Bert, Dora, F.,_, Georst
erol William, by Marie Kolqlllot;
to "Our PareiU", by Mt, and
llrL. Thomas Clark; the J o h n
Mumaw lamlb' by Miss Frankie
, Mumaw, and to MrL Llnooo H.
Stebbins, by the Rev. Stebblnaarol
daURhter, tarollco.

Too Daa•enu•
Not a single vessel wao
sunk by Runfire In the Battle
of Trafalaar. The llrlnJ of
explolllve mells aboard lhiPI
was then considered too dangerous to the user.

The hydranaea ~· Ill memory

of "Our Parenlo . by Mr. and
Mrs. Peorl McBride.
The Rev. Troy Orson of the
Westminster F~ndatloo of Ohio
UnlveriiiJI dell..red the Easter
aertlion at tho 10:30 L m. oervIce. llol1 Cemmunl011wsa served
by Mra. Arthur Sylvoater, Mrs.

Wl..bronner, Mra. ~. lira.
Dlcldlo, Mra. Harris, aDd lit.
Horman London, elders of t h 1
church.

Summer Fair

to the many millions who have helped.make
Revco's first 12 years the savingest years for all.

Committee is
,Organized

With the cooperation of top health &amp; beauty aid manufacturers
Revco out-discounts Revco with these extra cents off discounts.
EXTRA

EXTRA

(

lOC 0 f f

--·-

~eolj
W,, : th~~o·~h G.!I J,,

••

on 14 oz.

lOC OFF

Mfrs.

1.09

Mfrs.

Revco
Everyday

Regular
Retail
Price

77¢

Discount

Price

~::nt 67e

Rovco

.....

YOU SAVE UP TO 42C

Zwilling oerved delicious re- part ot a slxi&gt;Olnt peace
freBiuruDs to 16 membon.
pact.age proposed by Hussein.

YOUTH ASKED FOR rTl
:J'hl• column lo for young people, their problems and plesaures, 1heir troubles and tun. As
with tho rest fl. Helen HoljJ Ual,
it welcomes Laughs but won't
dodp a Berl&lt;l'\8 quesUon with a
brulh.fl.!. ('
Seed your~ quesUons to
YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care of
Halon Help USI this new-r.
JEALOUSY:CAUSE,ANDCURE?
Dear Helen:
rd like to make a ouggesUon
reprdlng the jealoosy of which
10 ~

or our eorreaJ)Ondents

oomplaln.
In most cases, jea.loosy isn't
a disease, but a resultofthought-

lesa treatment. How else can a
girl reset when a boy friend
rates on about another girl, or
aneaks glances at her. or rurts?
SOmetimes these fellows do it

•

just to get a rise oot of their
llleadles, but often they oa.v things
like, ''Honey, Why doo't yoo do
your hair like Nancy?'' and boy,
that detlateal Then they can't
understand why she doesn't like

Nancy, the dopes!
When a girl ia jealous, she
ulllllll7 has a good reason, and
the paraoo who complains should
aok hbn (or her) sell, ''What did
I do to cause It?'' - T. Y.
Dear T:
AJ rve aaid before, it's the
rare per~m~ who doe10't have a
jealous, poaaeuive Btreak, How' ever, well.adjusted - ' e dlvart
It IIIIo the prq~~r cbannela: They
cumpete, but don't explode. - H.
, Dear Helen:
How' I IIIII for 110011 deocrlp.

-7

'J'M world loaglantJlgiiWIIJZ·
lle .. wlth .a ''POle•" mlallng. QVQ'i'ER •OF QUOTES
Dell' Qloter:
· F-IUcllhou have11111 more
' ..... a1 bomo llko thil, I'll be

~ 111 prlut them. H.

·. J)fltHelee:
Pllue Jll'int thlo for the strl
.. •
IIQIIdered lllhe ... a "bad

ing up, :!ile WB5 the f a m 11 y
"shame," and I reminded them
of her.

Well, I showed them alll I put
m,yoelf throuBf! col lap and hsvo
a bettor career than m,y two hallbrothers put together.
People who cell you a bad seed
are really doing you a favor. The
more they throwthatnameatyou,
the harder you try to throw It
back in their faces. And whlle
you are proving yourself to others, yoo are Improving yourself
more than you realize.
I don't hold a grudge. Hating
sUfies you. In fact I seldom think
about the bad paris of m,y childhood. rm too busy Ol\iOylnB the
present, and feeling just pride In
m,y accomplishments. - DEFINITELY NOT SEEDY
Dear Helen:
May I tell the girl " b o s e
mother gave her aw;t¥ that she
is not a 'tbad Heel," but her belltlllng aunt Ia dollnlleb' a rotten8ptlle.
I kmw, because I had a dau&amp;ll·
ter I was forced to put up tw
ldclption. I ollor no defense tw
my weakno... I pay the price for
It with m,y lou.
Here's my note to"BadSied:"
Your mother didn't .,give you
away," lhe gave you hope instead. 91e pvo you a chanco to
have two loving psrenla and to
build a toondal!on for 7fN!t llle
that llho woo too well&lt; to do for
herself. Don't bolleveyouraunl'a
IJ)ItoiW tole•. 'I'M olbor aide &lt;II
the llorl' mlabt ev• oholr you
that her joalouoy drove y o u r
mother away. - I KNOW

.

I .
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cause her mother uwent wild
and gave her awa,y. ••
It happened to me, too. I was
told not just by an aunt, but by
grandmother, coua1Ds, (somew
times even m,y fsther aad step.
mother when they were mad),
that rd "tum out just like m,y
m«her." I never heard anything
good about her when I was grow.

''

I,

Mfrs.

Discount
Price

Regular
Retail
Price

77¢

Mfrs.
Regular
Retail
Price

1.09

Everyday

YOU SAVE UP TO 49C

Mfrs.
Rqular
Retail
Price

84¢

Discount

Price

1.59

on10

18C OFF

Ravco
Evorydey
Discount

1.19

YOU SAVE UP TO 35C

YOU SAVE UP TO 61C

Mfrs.

Discount
Price

Regular
Retail
Price

99¢

~n~89e
YOU SAVE UP TO &amp;OC

15 C OFF

on 11 oz.

Retail
Price

1.19

Olacount

Price

Rovco
E•oryday

Discount

Mfrs.
R11ular
Retail
Price

84•Jo

Price

•'·

87¢

Retail

OfFEH

Price

~nt 72•

1•85

Mfrt.

1 49

Resuler
Retail

Price

Prlco

YOU SAVE UP TO 47C

'

.....
wldi

ROYCO
[YOryday
Discount
Price

1 ()9
•

YOU SAVE UP TO tl.30

DAILY 9 A.M.

(

2•09

11L ·6 P
CHAIN/
I

I '

GALLIPOLIS - Captain .1o1m
W. Lane hu purchaeed tho Golllpolla ferJ1boat Fr1111cl1 and tho
franchloe of captain Cordill C.
Greene aad captain Cblrlea F.
Slaldor and took cblrp t b I 1
mornfn&amp; we are 'Informed.
World fl. the sale wu pub.
lllhed In the River Newl Gf 11le ,
AprU 11, 1919 C'•IIWOlla llaUJ
Tribune. Here are other llalll
fl. River News !rom the TrJb.
unes:

houri.

~nt 79•

!:nt $138

YOU SAVE UP TO 47C

++++++

tee-

Copyright, Tilt Kroaor Co., 1969
Wo re10rve .... rlpht to limit quootltiH.

,
•

Ooly K,..., Hoo Till Vohlo Sto-, Suorlo•FrHh Prodoco, U.S.D.A. Chilco
Tltlderoy ....... - · Dlocooint Hoallll Ol!d lloauty Aldol

actlvlllt1 thuo lar !Delude •t. air arol art ahowa, arol
a barbecue dtm.r IIPCJII8C)red by the Gallipolis Ell&lt;&amp;

Swift's Premium
Sliced

++++++

VAIUOUS cOIIUIIWIIt)' orpalzaUOIIo ilre Involved In the Rloer
Reueatl111 Feotlval. Tho Klwlllls Club and a.allleaa arol Profeoaloaal Womeo will landle tho Celebration Ball. 'I'M Lions are Ia
chaqe or uck races, aDd the Alles Jaycee• will be re...,..lble
for the parade apLD thlo year.

Bacon

++ ++++
THE Rotary Club has been asked to oupport mllltary dloplaya,
equipment aDd marchiDS units. The Jwdor Women's Club wiiiJIIlOD'
""' the Cl'"'"" contelll cmce opln. Gallijlolla Volunteer Firemen are
tn charge fl. the ftraworks dloplay. 'I'M GaHLpolla Boat Clob arol
Chamber of Commerce will C""PORBDr the annual • t - ·

++++++

NUMEROUS concession starols will be oet "' for the bll event.
Caroll S-den, who served as generll chairman of the festival dur·
lng Ill first three years, Ia In charge of aU concession stonda tl&gt;lo
year. Gerald Tussing will be reoponalble for the programs. Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Hudson will be In charge of the art sholrs. Grady Twyman
wiD be In charge 111 the bean dm..rs.

++++++
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from tho Illes of the Dalb' Tribune arol
weekly Gallla Times ... Amoal tund-ralall!i campolgn underway by
Gallla Counzy Chapter, American Cencer SOcteiJI according to Glenn
P. Campbell, general chalrmaa ... Golllpolls City School Board
seeking asslstont coach for James F. (Jim) Halderman ... Joe D.
Miller to dl&amp;p088 of contracting COII!jllll\l' In order to becmne 1118111'·
ance compal\l' representative ... Fl .. candidates file for city lnsurmhsio... !r's race. They are: J&amp;ck Knight. A. F. Frye, W, R. McKnf8ht, Dr. RaymonAUisonalldThiBD&amp;aE.MIIlo ... Huby Coughenour,
Kyger ooventh grader, wins 1949 counJy opeliiJ18 bee by defeating
her brother, Jack, In finals ... GARS opoiUI SEOAL beseball campaign with 7-1 win over previoooly unbeaten Wellston.

on tM River

at the Clncbmatl Pllhlie LalidlnB wss vlaltlllil by lhoullillllo
fl. -'e. RIIUllng aplnot allwlll
current lhe made the trip from
New Orleans to Clllcbmatl . In
Ove da,ya aad 20 aDd - hall

DBNTURB CWN81B8

Discount •
RIYCO

FHU

IJflO

APRIL 7, 1919- FIFTY;yean

53¢

EXTRA

50 Yean

""'Saturday, J\prU 5, the steamer Robert E. Leo whlle 111111

..·POLIDENT 40's

on 5 oz.

EYerydoy
Price

on 3.25 oz.

YOU SAVE UP TO 41C
'

BEAD&amp;
SHOULDERS
Regular

.

..

1.27

~12•

YOU SAVE UP TO 38C

Mfrs.

Discount
Price

YOU SAVE UP TO 800

~nt 73•
11C Off

Rm:o

Everyday

•

ROYCO
E•erydey

LISTERINE
TOOTHPASTE

EXTRA

RISE LATHER
(all3-scents)
Mfrs.
Regular

I

on40

Revto

EXTRA

·-

1.69

DI SC OUNT
SCOOP

Mtrs.

1. 49

++++++

ON July 5, actlvltleo lllclude a IPOclal sales
J)I'CIIIIOtlon by the Gallipolis Hetall Merch&amp;IU Aoaoclatlon, a bean ~ arol po811ble coru ._at,
oack races, sky dlnJii, a performance by Ernie
stuaw, cOUillr)' srol western bend coolest arol a
drum arol bugle COil! contellt. Satunlo,7'a actlviUeo
will•be climaxed With the tlrat aruul Rlvw Recrealim Feslivall!lll, srol a
dance.

Swift's Prtmium Slclnlelt

Wienel's __. __

N,,

69c
'

lb.
pkg,

Hllgradt Pure Pork

Sausage .. __ .

:it 39t~

Kroger's Famous Beef or Pork
51 EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS
with this coupon and purcha" ot
2 IlK. Boef 0&lt; Pori.
BUCKET STEAK

the management of Col. Mitis
M, Kluffman. The ~een now
In better shapo thlltl over before will no doobt have the largest crowds abe has ever carried.
Captoln Charles F. Slalder aad

~~ -e:~-~

EXTRA

DEODORANT
Retail
Price

~

EFFERDENT
1 09

++++++

·Tbe Slcond aiiiUil July Fourth parade Ia scheduled for 10
L m. 011 llllopeodeACe Ill)', Other July Fourth activities lnclulle
a bean dinner, art ohow, dance arol tlreworl&lt;a.

on 7 oz.

Price

EXTRA

EYerydey

-.e

s
F

Bucket Steak ... ••· 99c

Exp. 4/ 19/ fl.l

Dlocount *109
=

1~ 111'1 ~J''R~ I

DBNTURB CLUNSBRS

Regular

Regular
Retail
Price

Prlco

RIGHT GUARD

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Do you
know what number to dial to
summon a policeman ln an
emorgencj'? Most people do.
Do yooi know how much that
Policeman earns? What his specific duties are? Most people pmb)IJ18,
••1 bel,ve our 1ex laws ue
do not.
But . maay are quick to orter often WIWOrkable," he aaJd.
criticism, bcJ:h valid and Uftde.. "Morljuana should be studied to
aerved, of tho more thaD 13,000 dotennl• If It really should be
Ohio pollee oiOcero.
a felony violation. But we juJt
Some feel there Is not enough keep going on arol on, • he 111d.
.,'Iblrty )'ears ago," HolloweD
criticism of pollee, at least trom
certain quarters.
said, "when I ftrst' became a
John CbUdroo, chairman of policeman we were fl¥lll8 blthe central Ohio lepl CCIIIIIllt- plaooa. Today we are sending
tee of the American ClvU Lib- men to the moon but pollee d,..
erties Union, said there is not portmonlo and tho laws, for the
enough criticism of the pollee moat part, ha.. not changed ooe
d"'"rtmenls from city olllclalL bU."
''Blanket Approval"
The moot bllsteriDS crltlclam
"There seems to be blanket o! pollee today c1111ea !rom the
and
non.conlormlat
approval o( all pollee actlooa by Negro
clcy administrators," Orllders groqJI In our ooeloty.
•'Ignorant Atdtu:le11
oald, "without giving censorship
William Davis, a Negro C...
to Ulopl pollee acUYIUoa, such
lumbus
attorney, blame• thla
as occurred In Chicago.
"Admittedly, most of the po- dlallke of pollee on "· •• buUIJh
lice offtcera there a.eted well, arol lgnoraDt attitude&amp; of pollee·
but a few illepl actlooa were men."He
said,
"Some of our leaat
coodoned and approwd. This
fruatrates good officers srol of· capoble citizens are policemen.
fera no incentive tor them to It amuos me tlet the chloiJ of
pollee In ma~ of our larger
act weU," he uid.
Ohio cities are complete!)' unPollee officers clabn they
confused and are largets ol un- lfi!IUI1I.tical and can't even
give a 10011 -ch. Pollee work
Just remarks.
Springfield Pollee Chief 1111c It appears, Ia for a lot of men
Hollowell, president of the Ohio who cannot make it elsewhere."
"I was ~ by a pollee ofAosoelaUon o! Chiefs of Pollee,
setd a patrolman's big problem fl eer last week who, llke rnarzy
Is that he doesn't know what ot:ftcers, forgot he is a public
to do or what the public wants servant and apporently gets ego
aatlolacUon out of wearing a
him to do.
u Admittedly
policemen are badge. I asked hbn a question
usually wry conservative per- arol he ..td, 'Doo't talk beck to
sons and are raU1er slow to me.'
41
Well, of course I'D talk
change. But we resUze chaDSO
beck to him when I have a rea·
La needed," Hollowell oald.
•~le argument. I'd talk back
"We Are Blamed"
~'We don't know where to to the mayor If I felt such acturn. Some laws are actually tlon relevant!"
11111ust But we are blamed for

I

ANTI-PERSPIRANT .

Price

11C 0 f f

BY HOBART W!UiON, JR.
AT LEAST 21 t...U are lined UP tllualar lor tho Fourth Annual
them when all we do lo enfOrce, River Recreation Ftotlval accordiDSto Claudellanlalo, aeneral choirnot make, the laWL"
. man.
Hollowell oald pllbllc referea++++++
dUDll are needed 9ft laws reTHE 1t69 teaUval wDl becln Thuraday even~~~&amp; July 3, with the
llrdiDS ouch subJect• ao mari- ooconl annual queen contea~ This will be toll..,ed by a queen' a bill
Juua, sexual behavior aDd alld
dllllcea.

DRY BAN
Mtrs.

Ent98e

on 7 oz.

Not Appreciated

EXTRA

~~nt 74e
10C 0 FF

1.07

YOU SAVE UP TO 31C

STAINLESS BLADES

Rev&lt;:o

Discount
Price

~nt96e

SCHICK SflltER

TOOTHPASTE

1.45

Revco
EYerydey

~~nt67e
21C OFF

EXTRA
seed" as her aunt IIJd, jist be-

98¢

Revco

Everyday

on 5 oz.

PRELL
SHAMPOO

EXTRA

.-1

eases Doris Friend and ~Jvta vanced for the first time, waa

II C OFF

SOFI'IQUE
BATH BEADS

CEPACOL
MOUTHWASH
Regular
Retail
Price

EXTRA

on 14.5 oz.

Cop on the'Beat is

are

(of course, there's many more in every Revco Store.)

I

27- 'I'M Sunday Tlme&amp;o&amp;ntlnel, Soally, Aprllll, 1949

The Homer Smith opened the
seaaoo !lmday mosiCCIIIJII,...,.a17 with a trip from l'llllleral in
llwttlngton. 'I'M crowd wu the
largest ever carried bJ the Jlo.
mer Smith 111 Cllletlln8 da,y, Tbe
boat ran a llplldll trip clOwn the
river from illmiiDilllR 9mdll
allornooo and carried al a r 1 e
crowd. 'I'M weather ... ldell.

lfondaJ alabt for Plttabur8h. Tho who AsiOdatlonofEnginMrawlll

a.dll, Slln Blrnum srol VolCIIIO
are owned by tho Diamond COil
CO., and ware boUt UDder
the -malon o1 the colored
CIJII.aln G.W.C. POle)', now ruo~111118 at Atlantic City, N, J,
c.patn Poaey Ia wellolmown In
GoJU.polla, l&gt;elq an old friend
of ·Nr. TCMI1 IUD, 11le loiUiorlal
arUIIt:

not accept a cut ·1n wage• to be
made by towboat ownon J\prU
15. Wapa r1. tlllcu and cap1a1na
an aliiG 111 be reduced, we are
111formed. Nearll' every eaglneor
In tide belonp to
the Aosoclatlon and tho pllolll
and mateo are also organized.

APRIL 12, 1919 - THE BIG
llldewheelor Illand ~esn and
AP1UL 10, 1919 - 111E An- her callope WUI be here WedDiversary or Jublloo edlllm fl. nelday, AprU 23, for her amua1
the st. Louis Waterway• J&lt;umal llf\Ol'ROOIHII81It excurskln under
wDl be the srwst river publl.catloa ever printed. II come• aut
April 17 "" editor Arate 1111·
....,.... Ga114x&gt;lla wDl be rop..
nleated In tide edlllm.
OVerchar8lnl wDl DOt brlllg
river buallleaa bock, aeya a veteran rivwman. Tbe ateomboat•
haw been charllal the 1118host
ratea ever In aomo lnllancea.

purc¥sed the lolaY8YIIle, Ky. aad
Aberdeen, Ohio fer~t Lawrence from Ctpsln ca. Phlater, Who retires from the river
l&gt;llllneoa entlreb'. captain Slalder will 1110\'e his fllll1lb' trom
Ga111p&gt;Us to lolaYIIYille srol wDl
lake .charge fl. the - Pll'Chall
In a short llme. II Ia reported
that engineer Jolrl MIUa will
leave hero and co on the Mayo-

MELAMINE
DINNERWARE

H. C..,.,l
Llmltl

3 lbs. or mort
GROUND MEATS
E.w. 4/ 19/69

FRESH

ea.

39

(

Kroaor B &amp; 5 Rollo, Wllftor &amp; Sandwich ....,, Ryo, Italian, er 20 01.

vDiofer~l.

Clpta1n EmeoiSIIter whopurchased tho for~t CIIJI of llwtt..
lnglon fl. C~ Ben Fisher at a
barpln has docked the beet on
the bank al Manchester. He repaired the lluntlngtoo' s hull and
Ia oow aald to have an oxceUeet
ferryboat, ..,. of the best on the
river. Clpta1n Sliter 011111 the
Manchester ferryboat lranchloe.

PIECE OF THE WEEKI

filio''\lli:tlf'

50 EXTRA
iT&amp;•ll'f''
wiN! Hils c:aupon and put'tha11 of

IVORY SOAP

12

bars

75¢

Whitl' Bread ... __. ______ 4 '::";"•. 88c
K.....,lrllldFmon

Shoestring Potatoes
AU Varllflos -~~~ (EI&lt;COf'l ShrU.. &amp; Hom)

Dinners . . __ . ____ . ___ 3

65 Attended Skating Party

~-:_

$1.09

K._Satftl.sott

50 EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS
wiN! IIIII coupoo OONI purd•n• of

s-n.. bat
GRAPEFRUIT
Exp, 4/19/89

Longhorn Cheese .. __ ___ .__ •. 77e
Krtttr

2% Butltrfat Hi.Jiu

T.owfat Milk _______ . _____ . ::. 89e
Country Club All Flavors

Gallipolis &amp; Pomeroy

KROGER STORES

OPEN SUNDAY
lOam - 7pm~
Pri&lt;.. loo tilio ed oftlctiYO S.... - ·
T-, Will. ONLY In al K...., S10NL

Ice Cream

-.

1/2-gal.

59c

Tumatol's . _____ . _______ 3 ... $1
Mieh. ~eat------------1oa,
SO I~ . 99t

�--.. --~

~- ·~--

'

...

. . . . .-..,. .,.,.•... .

-*""'.--.;.~--, ~

.

·""'! __

....,.,..~ ...... • · ~ • • • ..;...... ...,..__, ..... _.... . ..........

.

.•

.."t.
,. ·~·.. . .,. Jju ~~--t.f?·~~E~,-·~_,r.·a
_' . 'es

•
%Yif~

WASHINGTON · (UJ&gt;l) - A
handl\.1 or lllOth8dotle !Ills a
week can reltore a hard core
nlrcotlcs addict and habitual
erllnlnal to a ...rut place in
~. a Senate committee

Aroused Taxpayers Keep

. .... told lodsf,
Dro Vlnetllll Dole, Rockefel' medical prol'e,_
lor Unlverlllt¥

Big Box for Letters Full

aor 'IIIIo ieveloped the 11111thetlc norcotle 111ldm-ohed

WASiliNGTON

(UP!)

There'• a big black box ticking
aw~

in Congress.

It's made rrom cardtMBrd al'll

l111ded only with letters. Yet it
packs the waU~ of dynamite.

The box symbollzes a "tax
revolt" brewing in America.
Several times a day, postmen

dllll'(l hundreds of letters into
the

box,

perched

at

the

entrance of the House Ways alll

Means Committee. A shapely
brunette empties the container,

only to find it bursting with
letters

again

at

the

next

delivery.

jI

some letters are scrllbbled.
Others are typed bJ secretaries.
All have similar messages from
angry taxpayers: Do something
about the tax system to make it

fairer.
W~s

and Means Committee

taxwrtters,

who

investigating

have

been

loopholes in the

tax laws, don't expect another
Boston Tea Party.

taxpayers claim they pay more
than thelr share of taxes,
especially after they read about
some millionalres who pay little
or no taxes because of loopholes
in the laws.
For every letter arrlvi!W' at
the Ways and Means Committee
room, there are dozens going to
individual semtors and House
members.
Rep, James A Burke, DMass., a House taxwrlter, has
received dozens of tea bags,
symbolizing the Boston Tea
Party revolt against British
taxes in 1773.
Rep. John Saylor, R-Pa., who
is not a taxwrlter, has mailed
teabags himself- to each senator aOO congressman.
ur•ve never had more mail on
a subject than I've had on tax
reform," said Rep, Henry
Reuss, D-Wis., a 14-year House
veteran.
Ways and Means chairman
Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark., and

Rep. John W. Byrnes, R-Wis.,
senior RepubJican on the panel
where aU tax bills originate.
explode into a widespread said they are determined to get
breakdown in voluntary com- tax reform legi station.
The committee plans to start
pliance with tax laws.
writing a measure in closedVoters Angry
Why are they angry? Both door sessions sometime this
wealthy and mili:lle income spring.
While the thrust of the tax
reform bill would be on closing
loopholes which benefit the rich,
proposals also have been made
to relieve the burden on middle
aM lower income taxpayers.
SYRACUSE - Roll call was
Under one proposal, the
answered by five members with present 10 per cent standard
a scripture verse containing the deduction of up to $1,000word uWind" when the Star Class allowed to people who don't
of the First United Presbyter. Itemize deductions- would be
ian Church School met in the Increased to 14 per cent with a
80clal room rt the church Tues-. maximum deduction of$1,800
Low income families would
~;
Miss Franld.e Mumaw, presi- pay no taxes under some
dent,
the meeting with a perxting proposals for changes
reading of Psalm 136 for dev&lt;&gt;- in
the
minimum standard
tlons, followed by prayer, Roo.- deduction.
tine reports were read and ap.
The shape of the tax reform
proved. Ml.as Mumaw arm.ounc- blll will depend in part of
ed that she still has greeting proposals yet to be submitted
cards for sale.
by the Nixon Administration.
For tile program, Ads Slack The last major review of the
read from Presbyterian Life, tax laws was in 1954.
'~'I1:lere Are Some Things I Don't
Like About Christ, •• which was
The Almanac
-.Jing and unbelievable to By United Press International
those Jll'esent. "That Boy That
Today Is &amp;Jndsy, Aprll l3, the
.llade Me Diet,~ was reed by 103rd day of 1969 with 262 to
~sle Fisher; "The Quiet J'eG. follow,
pie, n by Mayme Holmes: HMy
The moon is between its last
Prayer For You," by Myla Hud· quarter and new phase.
lOll, and ''The lliBh VIew," by
The morning stars are Venus,
'Miss Mumaw, all from Guidepost, Mars and Jupiter.
conchoted the program,
The evening stars are Mer~
The A,[lrll hostess will be Mrs. cury and Saturn.
Flacher, and the roll call word
On this ~In history:
will be u~owers."
In m6 the Pennsylvania RailFlorence Potts, hostess, serv- road received lts charter.
r 1 refrelbments.
In 186S, Gen. William T. !he~·

But, unle58 something is done,

they fear that the wrath now
bei~ expressed in Letters could

'

Oass Metting

Attended by 5

-ed

Should the present _.tar
view prevaU, hoWeVer, tax
revisions would loclude crackclowns and chi~s in some of
the following areas develqled
during q,&gt;en hearings:
-Tax exemPt founlatlons.
More than 30,000 of these
foundations are virtually uncontrolled by the Treasury,
- Oil Industry laxation. The
petroleum industry receives
several billion dollars annually
in tax advantages, through
special depletion aUowances ard
other tax wrlteotfs.
- Charllable contributions.
some wealthy people qoallfy for
unlimited cherltable contributions. In some cases, millionaires have donated paintlngs
ard buildings al'll have eliminated taxes entirely.
-Hobby farms. Some 2,400
people a year, for example,
with nonfarm income or more
then $100,000 write off more
than $90 mlJUon annually !rom
their farm losses.
-Estate taxes. Numerous
high income people pass on
stock and other property from
generation to generation without
paying taxes.
-Real estate shelters. ~ecial
depredation allowances for
apartmetts arxl other few
buildings allow people high lax
writeoffs, called real estate tax
shelters.
- Investment tax credit. A
growif'€ number or congressmen want repeal of the 1 per
cent investment tax credit
which pumps $3 billion a year
into the overheated economy, by
allowing industries large discounts through the tax laws on
purchases of plant an:l eCJJi.Pment.
-Tax-free boJKis. The interest
on municipal bonds is not
subject to federal taxation.
Many high income people invest
millions of dollars and get a
tax-free income. Many congressmen have suggested federal subsidies to municipalities to
help them fi&lt;llt bonds. The
subsidy cost would be h"'er
than the lost revenue now.
man took Raleigh, N. C., ending his march to the sea.

In 1934, In the de,Pths of t h e
depression, Clvll Works AdminIstrator Harry Hopkins reported
that 4. 7 mUJlon families were
receiving welfare payments.
In 1941 Russia and Japan signed a five-year neutrality pact
A

thought

for

the

~:

Thomas Jeffer1011 said, uWhen
angry, count;y 10 before y o u
speak; iC very angry, 100."

THIS IS THE SEASON FOR REPAIR PROJECTSI
The old roof leaks, needs replaced or repaired' The little wife wants a
· ~ew patio? The furnace needs repair' AddinA an exira bedroom or mod·
emizing the kitchen' Spring is the season to do these things. Apply todJiy for a low cost home improvement loan.

..

.~. &lt;fht
Jin;t NalhtnalJ&amp;nuh.·
..
.

.

.

"THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

AVENUE
.-,.

made It pe~~lllbJe to 111m drul
eddle&amp;n Into a "treatable disease. 11

Quet~tion

Arises:

Who's Out, and In

'!':~;~~~~!,

I May Go for $30,000 I

One of 8 Fi~st Printings
Of Constitution on Block
of
the eight exlotlng cq,&gt;les of the
llrst prlndng of the ConsUtuUon
of the United Statea will cross
the auction bloek on Tue~
after remaining in the possession of one famUy for 182 yean.
'Jbe historic document was
one of 60 first printings
preseded to members of the
Federal Convention that framed
the Constitution before it was
submilted to the Committee on
Scyle for reworking.. It Is signed
by Pierce Butler, a delegate
from
Sooth Carolina, who
annotated the cq,&gt;y in both Ink
NEW YORK

LANSING, 'Mich. (UPl) - Selective Service Director Lewis
B. Hershey saldFrl~consclen­
tlous ob,iectors who real thtiY got
a blg break from a recent feel.
eral court cleclalon slrlldngdown
parts of Ute draft Jaw conld be
and pencil.
badly mistaken.
Lt. Gen. Hershey said If the
u. S. ~preme Court uJ)bolds tile
ruling, It could end the granting
of all deferments oo rellslous or

(UPl)-One

.

ble, and eventtaUy to novella!
A!llhorltiea at the Park-Bernet OWen Wiater, wllose mother
Auctl.oo Galleries eattmaw thet waa · a Butler.
lroo!Cauy It was Fannie
·Buller's copy, u the document
Kemble's
book on life oo a
Is known to historians, ~
southern
plantadon
that was
bring aa much aa $30,000
used
by
northern
abolitionists
to
Enhancing Its value Is a COllY of
Buller's fugiUve alave laW, discredit the Sooth throush the
which become ArUcle 4, Sectlm anti • slavery sentiments ex2, Clause 3 In the original pressed by the author. It was
Constitution, in Butler'• own published in England In an
allelqlt to bring E!Wiaal Into
handWriting.
The consignor Is a Philadel- the war on the North' a side.
FlratDrall
phia descendant of Bitler. OWr
A
allp
of
paper a«OJI1Ianylng
the years It has pa81ed, to
the
printed
document bears
Butler's g r a n d son, Pierce
Mease BuUer. who was married what a,ppears to be the ftrat
for a time to the famous draft of the fugitive slave law,
English actress, Fannie Kern- which was abolla~ed by the
May Be Worth tao,ooo

Thirteenth Amendment. II road•
"Whe~aoever any person boUnd
to serVIce or !about in any state
shall flee Into aoother state, he
shall not be thereb)' dlschar6ed
trom such service or latiOur:
but the Jeglslatureo of the
severat slltos shaD make
provision for the recovery of
such person."
The first draft of the
C0118tltuUon was prlllted ill'
Dunlap &amp; ~e In Philadelphia on Aug. 6, 1787 and the
coovention adjourned at tha
signing or the finished COnstitution the following SepL 18. The
signed dO&lt;Ument Is exhibited at
the Library of Congreoa In
Washington.
Pierce was born in Ireland,
the son of a British baronet.. He
came to Massachusetts as a
member of the British l1'llly
prior tO the American Revolutloo and met and married a
belle of the Mla&lt;neton famUy of
SOUth Caroll111 wh~ was summering in Newport, R.~ He
moved to Charleston, S.C., and
became a member of the state
legislature within a few yean.

84 Pupils Are Named To Junior High Honor Roll

moral grounds. "Some ~le interpret this decision as meanIng everyone clalmlng C. 0. clulllflcatloo could be out of t h e
draft,,. Hershey told a news canterence.
"Well, Pm not a lawyer, but
I interpret It to mean everyooe
would be in .... because there
would be no provision In the law
for granting a c. 0. deferment.,.

.

~8•:i:'ti&amp;~-~

~

Harder, June Jones, Alan Kemp, Th&lt;11111s, Rita Valertlne, Barbara
Rebecca Naskey, Crystal 1'11- Wallen, and Jan Wiseman.
Other studenla on the honor
mer, steven Rose, Harlalll Sander a, Larry Saunders, David roll were:
Seventh - Sheri Alley, Regina
Angel, !.alB Armstrong, Rlcfile box or ta,pecl to the back of
JQ&gt;
JW&lt;er,
Teresa Bane, Mike
the door to atnrage cloael or
Berridge,
Pat
Boster,Davld Byattic. 11da saves time when lookIng for me particular garment ers, Julia Carr, Patey Clark,
Jenny Clarke, Twlla Harrison,
In storage.
Store Items according to prob- Wilma Hill, Barbera Hueholt,
able use. For example, really EDen McCreedy, Tom Morgan,
heavy coats and snowpants need- Patt;v Nlher4 Timothy Perry,
ed for cold weather should 110 m Jell Phillips, Sherry Rarick, Victhe bottom, Jeevtng room ror kie R&lt;Jth, Connie Seundera, Dow
lighter weight Jackets, sweat- Sounders, Jatla Smeltzer, Cindy
Smith, Deborah Taylor, Craig
ers, and corduroys on top.
Mothballs are goud insurance 'l'hiii!II&amp;OD, Pat Weterholt, Marror woolens. There are several vin Wlcldlne, ant' Stephanie
container t;n&gt;es a•allable I o r Wuerch.
Eighth - Lisa Aikins, Jachanging in closets. Packets of
queline
Bennett, Cynthia Jlosgs,
crystals or paper lmpresnated
Linda
carmen,
Kathy Davies,
with mothi)l'OOier are goud for
boxes, loaded with winter gear drawers and boxes. Or, you can Jut Dett;v, Shelley Fisher, Marma,y be covered with stained buy mothballs or crystals In bUlk lin Hughes, Jennifer Kerns,
wood tops to serve as tables in and make yoor own ~~mothball James Klslds, Steve Lee, Kevin
a tamlly room or night standi doll a." Cut three or four thick- Miller, Letitia Mlller, Dana
ness of nylon net in a ginger. Mink, Steve Morgan, Debbie Nortn children's rooms.
Ir clothing Is pocked away, bread man abape (or any other ih"', WOllam orr, Martha SoIt's a good Idea to ~&gt;~mber the shape). Sew edgN leaving an las, Randy Scott, Kaven Sheets,
boxes. Then number index cards opening In the head aectloo. Then David swain, Debbie Thllnas,
the dolls with IMthballs or Jobn Walter, Kala Sue Waugh,
and list what each box eootains. and Carla Young.
The cards can be ko,P! In a ceyst.alo.

The third nine - week period dents were: Judy Cole, Kemeth
honor roll for the seveJth - CoJHer, Joon Cornett, Janet EllioU, Matthew Epling, Brenda
elg~th grades at Gallla Academy
High School listed 84 students, Finnicum, Lu Ann Folden, Fred
28 of whom had aU-A grades. Ford, Sherrt Jarvis, Judy Kemp,
There were 43 seventh grad- and Deborah Tackett.
T"' (AlJ.A) eighth grade stuers, 12 of whom had all-A gradss
and 41 eighth graders, 16 of dent! were Brantley Adams,
Eli2abeth Boster, David Burwhom had aU-A grades,
Top (Ail-Al seventh grade stu- nette, Donald Corbin, Hubert

The Pat Glass Newsletter .

Planning Needed to Store
Winter Clothing Articles
BY PAT GLASS
Ext. Agent, Home Economics
GeHl" eouncy
GALLIPOLIS - Persons living In four season climate areas
have the wondrous pleasure of
watching nature change her garb
every few months.
Poetry aside, homemakers
must face practical aspects or
changes in weather. One perennial problem posed Is the sort.
ing and pocking awa,y of seasonal cl&lt;ithlng. · The dtrflculcy lies
in the fact that winter doesn't
become spring overnight. It rath·
er melts Into spring with cold
days lnU!rspersed with warm.
lla1fWa,y
between seasons,
clothes closets, dresser drawera, and back door entries tend
to become cluttered. And the
more children there are In a fam.
lly, the more muddled a mother
IIIII' reel. Now Is the time to
andclpote this cmdition and plan
for as smooth a tranaltion as
possible.
First, Jist the major Items in
esch child's wardrobe and aceessorles such as mittens, hats,
and scarves that are in good condltloo and wearableanotheryear.
Thlnldng ahead, If an Item Ia outgrown by one and can be pasS·
ed down, put It on the wardrobe
list or the reeetver. 1n a aoparate column note clothing that
will hove to be purchased. This
way you can more reacllly take
advantage of - s o n and speclal sales. Now Is the time to
discard worn out clothing and
BIJ'ments outgrown by the entire

en bOots, pack them awa,y with
an 1mwrapped bar of soap tucked
Into each toe.
Of course, an attic or separate close! Is ideal for out.&lt;&gt;l'·
season, out-&lt;&gt;f-slght storage. But
many hornamakers must settle
for an under-&lt;h~ or part.&lt;&gt;f.
the.(urnlture system of storing
boxes. strong, generous - sJzes

. ,....•

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I
I
tamlly.
I
As Winter wanes, resdy a stur- 1
dy box or plastic basket and keep 1
It handy. When the weather I
breaks, those heavy, opace.tak- I
lng clothes can be dropped in the
box or baskst - bUt still ~ckly I
retrieved In case of a cold snap. I
In two or three weeko when It I
looks as If Winter Ia really oo
ltJ wa,y out, begin to read1winterwear for stnrage. Acardinal nde
when storing clothing Is to pack
or hang It awey clean. Clean fibers will not deteriorate as rapldl,y as soiled fabric, So wash,
rinse, and dry those that a r e
nahal&gt;le. Also, mend rips, re.
place buttons, and make other
repairs as YIJU liD· You'll awreelate aJch forelllght next winter,
!Ws • sponge the outside of
lined boote; a!)p)y a shoe dresslng to lealrter, Rubber and vinyl
boola need only aoap or deterpnt and water care. Be sure
n..,.e lining Ia clean before stnrIlls. The crevice tool attachment
of the vacuum &lt;leaner lo a unM tool In thlo rNpect. Tofreah-

Healed From Sprl•«•
Re,JkJ&amp;vlk means "Slnoky

bay' In the Icelandlc lanRillll'· Steam rising from bot

sprlDp caused lhe "smoke"
.seen by 9th..enlury settlers.
Tod&amp;J, ReykJavik l&amp; a cl~n
and ainokeleas city, all Its
!lonlea and businesses being
"heated by the natural steam
and hot water piped to them
from these hot springs.

I
1
1
I

I
I
I
I
1
I

I
I
I
I
I
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1
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--· .....

·~·-··

-

.

,.,_,, .. ·"

,•

i

admljied

. ..

1\ ~PU~I

'kfnd&lt;t.llllf ......
~ ICil'i of llllf luck
not ha.. beaD
the admllll..
ire.~ bo aald, "Ia
jorry, they dldll't
was loaded. Well,

Wt.t

'

,

'

. :., .

j~
,jo,

.,,

.,

~
. •~

good

enoualt. ..

'

aer
lltCIIIWecllalllll
lll8b toLow tonllllit 1m
lOnging to acat101'1hea81 Tueaclearlng--

Onlght.

·mer.

TEN CENTS

~in

ss
;es time.

We ha"

le."
rwres11 his IC~~WW·
l&amp;ls will not ,..
tlon until tile ad
has c0111JIIIted ad

os and p]amtng. .
the longer terti
said, Include set
lllce of chUcl de
Improve the en
I nrtrltloo of chll·
lve years of 181
1. of the cities, hun
llll'IWIII 1011 'e proer.m,a al11

ELBERFElDS IN POMEROY
SALE
MEN'S SLACKS

led against "bos~
eel on Jllge 8)

~er

lents
ners
cond stralgllt yell
• the Holzer Mod
School of Nurllllq
District It, wo
!ltest at Ute 11111
. the llllldent Marl
Oblo tid• ~~~'
layton. Two Mlddil
ote the wlnnlnllllllli
zer students,lnclw
Flood, AthOIII, ne
lllstrlct 14; Ca'roQ
on 9teeta and II&gt;
Gallipolis; ~e A""
M a r y Crabtre
rmie Morris, 8111
t.; SaiMtra DavidiOI
Cynthia Jellldn
I Betsy CumlJigha
Bahr of Mlddlepor

Big, blg ••lectlon of fine quallt,y Slacks on die in the busy
mons and boya department on
the Is~ floor - In all alzes 28
to 50 waist and Jn your correct
length.

or

Every pair is Permanent
All are famous makeo that
recognize - and are well known
for their fine scyllng and neat appearance - Smart new colora
tor aprlrw, summer and year
'round wear, am a fine gro~,
too, of plaids and checks that
everyone likes so well.

' sang "Up w i t

eonventloo-

est Saturday nil
t the Dnal buliDoJ
llnday when the !II

Choose from the trim cut slacks
that have more ta,pered legs. A
JltUe cloaer fitung and are so
popular with the young men who
like the trim, Ivy look - Or
choose the fuller cut slacks for
the older man who wantfl less
ta,per - a fuller cut - a IIWe
more roominess. There are mod-els with bolt Joq,&gt;s, cuffed bottoms - Others are the Collllnental at,yle worn without a belt
a~ cumess.

amoomced.
rs
of the U. S.- All

ng song, wrlttan I
~lam and'lolluBah
I b1 the 01llo dol
i nattonal eonvllld

-~.

t.le Fonl

or

Mli

the~loo

tile......,...,
~CI&lt;·qi lruek """
Mtlp C4lnlmll
thll IIICII ..... A

St"' in Elberfelds mona department - See the nne selection of
slacks - try on several pairs
- btu' what you want arw:l Jl\"e
during this .Slack Sale.

p
wudt
~=.tolllrtherlllliii'C

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

\
:

Sal•l .loys Hondo ~ .,.,.Wr~i1l., ..
'·Ptrllilaent PrHJ Sl•ks · ·
-.w.a ~'thl la!o -

:

:

to

1 Slzn 8
18 1loada .Slack&amp; at a real
..
Slim fit wltllliolt loq)a, I
1 IIIICUitld bottoma - V017 well mldo; Stilld colbra at lll'oim. I~ kr ......blaek, dark I

l ....~ ""'' ll\lld.
~

-"'l"--.. ,._._ .,. . _ -----_.__ ,..._
~

· ·

·

--..J.-'.;.;.-.:..----~---

·•!. .

·'"

.

,
----

.JI

0,111 ,l""y We.. Day 9r~ AM to·$ PMi• Frliloy iln~ Sc!~•'*'r ·9:3CI AM !o 9 PM

· tLBERJ·E:L-·S '·:~ tM

••

-·~·--···-··--··-····--':

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