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10- The D8ily Sent~!, Ml~eport-Pomeroy, 0., Aprif9, 1971

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First Holy Week's Last Days :Recalled . ~- Q.n~ph;~y Cha.rged
..... Ge
11a ...
Sape-'-tendent
"'1
orge reooVOI!
•w
MelgsLocalScbooiDilllrlct
Let's let our thoughls leave today and schoOL\~
behind and move back acrnss nearly 20 cenluries to
consider the evenls and significance of the last days of
. t H01 w k,
Illat fII'S
Y ee · ·
Follwing a lriUIIlphal entrY into Jerusalem, Jesus
was harassed, pursued and betrayed. The suffering
used by H'
1 and by the Romans finally
15
ca
own peop e

Speaking of Schools-No. 183
led to His death gasp, "It is fmished," and the great
darkening of the sky.
And then the red-tinged crucifiXion tree stood
starkly empty and lonesome against the background of
the departing day. The Body was spirited away and
placed in a rock tomb by a friend.
His followers were leaderless and confused. One
bad taken his own wretched life. Another bore the
heavy burden of a foretold triple denial. Ten others
huddled as sheep whose shepherd was gone. That first
Good Friday was a day of deep misery for the followers
of Jesus.
Thus, came to a conclusion the mortal existence of
the man called Christ. A hush covered those who bad so
recently pressed close to Him as they cried out
Hosanna. His enemies were frightened Ill' the rumbling
of the earth and the darkness of the afternoon, but they
were pleased that this threat to their power and plenty

bad been eliminated. Truly, Jerusalem was the center
'
'
of many deep emotions on that hrst Good Friday
evening. Troubled sleep, Indeed if any came at all, was
the lotofthose called Christians on thatlong night.
Then came the long hours.of Salurday - the day
between. What would they do? Where woold they go?
·
'
What would become of them? They forgot - as do little
children - the words of their Father. They forgot His
p-omise to burst the chains of death 011 the third day of
His entombment.
Without their leader their direction was gone.
Doubt about the present, the fulure and certainly the
past bore heavily u~n their troobled minds. Fear for
their own safety covered them like a shroud of torment. Had they been misled? Just who was this nowdead teacher to whom they .bad given themselves so
freely? In the Latin phrase -Quo Vadis? they truly
asked "where do you go now ?".
Then came another long night and it must-have
been evim longer than Friday's lengthy period of
darknesS~ The body lay in the tomb. Guards stood at its
entrance. The fate of Christ seemed sealed. His life and
work seemed at an end. The religious and governmental rulers were content that they had done what
was necessary. They felt that time would cool the
passions of Christ's ·followers and things would get
back to normal very soon now.
But then came the dawn of the third day. It brought
a bright glow that has been a guide for the world since
that day and will be until the final day. Amazement
pressed its mark on the faces of His followers as they

saw and touched the emptiness of the .shell of stone m
hi b til bod of J
bad )a ' •
Fr'da I d k
w c e
Y esus
m ~ce I ~ s ar
~urs. Had the body bee? stolen . Was .thiS ~ore
WICked work ~ought by King Her~, the h1gh pries~
Annas and Ca1phas, or by R~me s Pontius Pilate.
What bad they done with Him .
Tb the
Him nd 1m Him finall Th
en Y sa~
a
ew
. y. .en
they knew that His prophecy of resurrectiOn was, ..mdeed, the truth of God. They knew Him as more than a
Jewish teacher. He bad been God in the frail, mortal
body of a man, but He was God. Now He was a Spirit,
but He ~as God. .
.
He IS God. He IS a Sa~wr . He d~eated death. He
promiSes that those who will follow Him .can also share
in His victocy over de3th. His beckoning fingers reach
out to touch ours as they grope for A way, THE way.
Today, toptorrow and Sonday we should relive
these great happenings in oor minds. Song, story, and
sermon will help to rekindle our awareness of the
import of these events. Truly, they form the core for
the key to all living f?r a Christian.
.
Friday brooght pam, suffering, desperation.• d~th
and despair. Salurday brought confUSion, angwsh and
fear. Sunday brought hope, promise and new life.
Try to relive in your mind those events during the
h~urs of these three days. I firmly believe ~?at to do so
will be a tremendously_positive Influence m your life
and that next Monday will find you a better human
being ..
Best wishes for a joyous Easter from all of us to all
of you.

Frank Call Sr.
Dies Recently

Wahama Downs Buffalo
The Wahama White Falcons ing abilities as he blasted a
blasted the host Bisons o! Buf- home run after HoWard bad
falo, tn Putnam County, with a reached base on an error.
7-1 decision Thursday.
Smith, besides his · booming
Once again Wahama broke home run, managed a very reloose tn the first toning as their speclJlble round performance
first three batters reached as he pitched 7 innings, giving
base. Brent Clark reached up no ea. ned runs, striking
first on an error, Mike White out 15 batters and allowing
walked and Chester Roush hust- · only 2 walks.
led out an tn!ield single setting
The Falcons picked up their
the stage for Tim Howard's final tally in the sixth when
bases ltl8ded single. Two runs Randy Clark walked, stole ••·
scored on Howard's blast and cond, advanced to third on a
. the third runner scored on an fll'(lUnd out and scored on a
Infield out.
strategic double steal when
In the second inning the Fal- Robbie Lambert created a nmcons picked up another tally down between first and second
when Keith Sayre singled and as Clark scored wring the
then was replaced by Brent conflict.
Clark after a fielders choice.
Buffalo picked up their only
Brent moved to second base run on a double and a single
on a fll'(lUnd out and proceed- combined wlthathrowingerror.
ed to score on Chester Roush's
Higginbotham and Thornton
second hit of the evening.
had two base hits for Bul!alo
In the fifth inning, pitcher and Randy Clark chipped In
Ran&lt;\y Smith displayed his hltt. one for Wahama and Randy

Smith's two run homer roonded out the extra base hits.
Wahama,

2-0, travels to

Southwestern Monday to take
on the Highlanders. The game
is to be played at Rio Grande

DATE CHANGED
Date for the next visit of an
American
Red 'Cross
bloodmobile to Meigs County
has been changed from
Tuesday, Aprll27, to Monday,
April26, Vernon Nease, blood
program chairman, said
today. The unit will be at the
Pomeroy Elementary School
from I to 6 p.m.

Mr. and Mrs. David D.
College's baseball diamomi Campbell, Pomhoy, received
starting at 4:30.
word Wednesday of the death of
WAHAMA 3 1 0 0 2 0 1 7 Mrs. Campbell's father, F-ank
BUFFALO 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 P. Call, Sr., of Norwich, N. Y.,
in the Veterans Administration
Hospital at Syracuse, N. Y.
Little Duke Wins
Funeral services will be held
"Roxie" owned by Everett Saturday at the Fahy 's Funeral
Thomas took first place honors Home in Norwich.
when the Meigs County Fox Attending the services will be
Hunters Assn. held a field trial Mr. and Mrs . Campbell and five
daughters, Debbie, Kathy,
recently at Snow Ball Hill.
Second place went lo "Little Cindy and Constance Patterson
Duke" owned by Herschel all of Pomeroy, and Mr. and
Roush and third went to "Lone Mrs. Jerry (Sandra) Edwards
Ranger" owned by Roy Armes. of Cincinnati, also four grand·
Approximately 25 hunters at- children.
tended with some 30 dogs IA:pl. David Frank Campparticipating. Plans are being bell, stationed at Da Nang, was
made to hold a large field trial brought home recently by the
Meigs Chapter of the American
in the fall.
Red Cross due to the serious
illness of his grandfather. Cpl.
Campbell has returned to Da
Nang.

Troika Re-elected

CANADA HOUSING COSTS
OTTAWA (UP!) - Housing
prices in Canada rose 10 per
cent between February, 1970,
and February, 1971, the
Dominion Bureau of Statistics
reported Thursday. The increase was almost entirely due
to a 17.2 per cent increase in
construction industry wages,
the bureau said.

MOSCOW (UPll - The 24th Soviet Com·
munist Party Congress announced today . the
reelection of Party Chief Leonid I. Brezhnev,
Premier Alexei N. Kosygin and President
Nikolai V. Podgorny for another five years.
The troika and the other eight incumbents on
the ruling Politburo were re-elected to a Politburo expanded to 15 members

Auxiliary Has New Officers
MASON - Mason County
Little Men's League Auxiliary
held ifS first meeting of the new
season on Monday evening at
the Point Pleasant Senior High
school. Officers named were :
president, Barbara Smith; first
vice president in charge of Pony
League Field, Barbara Miller;
second vice president in charge
of Little League Field, Wanda
Gabritsch; third vice president

MEIGS lliEATRE .
'And may the world soon
len ow its lasting joys •••
Especially at Easter, our thoughts
turn to the hope of peace for all
the world. We unite with you in the
I

heartfelt prayer that the spirit of this
Easter season may soon be fulfilled
by lasting peace. Greetings, and may.your
Easter be radiant with many joys.

Topight &amp; Saturday

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Aprif9.10
TOO LATE
THE HERO

Michael Caine
Cliff Robertson
IGP)

Colarr::artoon:
It's For The Birds
Sun., Mon .. &amp; Tues.

Aprilll-12·13
ON A CLEAR
DAY YOU CAN
SEE FOREVER

ITechnicolorJ
Barbara Streisand
Yves Mont and
(Gl
Cartoons:

Where Are You
Happy Days

SHOW STARTS 1 P.M.

cJ!joyous Easter
to all our friends.

in charge ofT-Ball and Pee Wee
League Field, Mimi Slone;
secretary-treasurer, Nancy
Warner, and director, Katie
Oliver.
The auxiliary is operating the
Pony League concession stand
for the high school baseball
games and will have the stands
opened for the league season
starting in May.
PLEASANT VALLEY
ADMISSIONS - Elizabeth
Jones, Letart; Keith Bragg,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Keith
Holley, Jr .,· Apple Grove ;
Lawrence Neal, West Columbia ; Mrs . Paul Smith,
Pomeroy; Virginia Rirnmey,
Point Pleasant; Charris McDaniel, Point Pleasant; Eva
Hones Oliver, Gallipolis Ferry.
DISCHARGES
John
Woody, Mrs. Lonnie Stanley,
Roger Dale Blake, Mrs. Kenna
Bush, Mrs. Homer Stevens,
Mrs. Nancy Woodard, Floyd
Sayre, Mrs. Mary Allbaugh,
Mrs. William Yeager, Mrs. Otis
Neal and John Bryant.

_POMEROY
·NATIONAL BANK
POMEROY
.

Run.AND
.

Serving Meigs County

ganization petition.
,
Bevan, Hodge and Gerstneck·
er. the suit charged, created
Penpbil and thereafter "covertly utili•ed ·and manipulated all
of the resources of the Penn
Central" for their own personal
gain and that of Penphil and
its shareholders.
The purpose of the alleged
conspiracy, the suit charged,
was the "exploitation of Penn
Central's resources" for the
"unjust enrichment" of Penphil.
The suit claimed Bevan and
Hodge advised Penn Central to
embark on a program of nonrailroad diversification which
deprived the line of large
amounts of cash and forced it
to borrow.
The two men along with
SESSION PLANNED
A work session will be held at
the American Legion. Memorial
Park, Mill St., Middleport at !!
a.m. Saturday morning, Paul
Haptonstall, commander of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, announced.

Gerstnecker I the SUit said, also .
used Penn Centra! 's line of ·
credit to obtain a "highly pref·
erential" line of credit for Penphil.
Bevan and Gerstnecker, the
suit charged, also authori•ed $4
million of railroad money to be
placed in a European trust
where it was allegedly misap·
propria ted.
·The suit accused the defendants of advising Penn Central
to invest in among others, Great
Southwest Realty Corp.,· and
Executive Jet. Aviation. Penn
Central's original $92 million in·
vestment in the realty company depreciated more than
$40 million, the suit said.
Penn Central lost $22 million
in the aviation company. In addition the railroad had to unload the company for violating
a federal statute.
The railroad fired Bevan June
8, 1970, in a top management
shakeup.
Twelve days later the line
said it was broke. Gerstnecker
left to a top post with a local
bank.

FIRE INTRUDER - The high country between, Pomeroy and Middleport
burned over Friday afternoon and threatened business places along Route 7. .
Fismes are visible above 011 the clifftop above the Certified Service Station near
.the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge.

Friday .and Saturday
Elberfelds In Pomeroy
•

8-Alarm
Fire is
Put Out

are open

until 9 in the evening A Good Time For Family Shopping ·
all over the store.

POM::o~OB ~eE~~e~oy

Wearing Apparel for Your Family and

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Furnishings For Your Home
,-· "':"'""-~..-..--_....-..-._..-:::---·~...--w.._.._,.._..._.._..._.__..

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Visit The Music Department On 2nd

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floj)r

- New shipment of 8-track Stereo tapes. A large selection in
easy listening, Rock, Country Western and Sacred.
-Also come in and browse through our Record Albums, a large
selection just received in Country Western, Sacred, Popular,
Roek and easy listening.

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ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

You waited 'til now
to get the deal of the year.
Don't blow it on the wrong car.

0

1971 Maverick 2-Door Sedan

-M~SQN DRIVI·IIf\

• Middleport area got a kingoflize sample of air
pollution Friday when a brush fire broke
out requiring e~ght area fire depa~tments
and other awnbary units to brmg 1t under
control.
One unoccupied frame house was
destroyed by the fast,.moving fire as were
several outbuildings. The blaze swept
several hundred acres extending from
Rutland St. In Middleport to lower Monkey
Run in Pomeroy.
Fire departments joined by volunteers
were everywhere fighting the fire which
threatened many homes and business
establiahments, particularly on West Main
St., where the f~ reacl)ed the cliffs above
them. The fire came to the edge of the cliff
from where burning particles falling over
the cliff set fire to brush and leaves below.
Firemen el!'tinguished the blazes as they
developed.
The air was heayy with smoke and
ashes as the fire spread over the wide
acreage.
Fire departments on the scene were
Middleport, Pomeroy, Rutland, Syracuse,
Racine, Mason, New Haven and Point
Pleasant. In addition, the Meigs County
Civil Defense tank was pressed into use as
was a Gallia County Civil Defense vehicle.
The state Forestry division was on band to
help and a plane circled the area
throughout the afternoon and evening to
alert firemen of dangers as they arose.
The radio system among the fire
departments was a tremendous asset. As
soon as a danger area was spotted,
departments, although hampered by
heavy traffic, were moved rapidly to it.
Rumor ran high. Some reports stated
that as many as six homes bad been
destroyed: At one time it was reported that
the large cross overlooking Pomeroy was
on fire, as well as the home of Mrs. Nolan
Shuster on whose property the cross is
located. However, this report, as well as
(Continued on,page 2)

1971 Ford LTD Brougham 2-Door Hardlop

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"Explosions Of Laiiohler!"
~IIIM'1fq._• '

I. ,

~w,OH .

IIAY\WSill'lllAMQEII. . ,If'
•• b

PUIS -

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SUNDAY, APRil!!, 1971

.Pomeroy-Middleport

•

Gall•I a Exp Iam
• ed
·

·

· GALLIPOUS - Volers' doubts in
connection with the proposed Gallia
County Vocational Education School
project were answered Saturday by
members of the Gallia County Vocational
School Board, Supt. of Schools Clarence B.
Thompson, and county auditor Mort
Dickey.
The board - Marlin G. Kerns, Harold
E. Wiseman, Granville Bu&lt;netle, C. A.
Evans and Merrill Bunce, with Thompson
and Dickey, prepared 12 "questions and
answers" addressed primarily to the
firumciallssues involved.
Following is their statement:

WHAT SCHOOL districts are a part of
this proposed Gallia County Joint
Vocational School?
.
A - The following school districts
comprise the Gallia County Joint
Vocational School: Gallipolis City, Kyger
Creek Local, Hannan Trace Local, Southwestern Local, and North Gallia Local.
These districts have been approved by
their local boards of education and the
State Board of Education.
WHY WAS the Gallia County Joint
Vocational District formed?
A- In 1969, House Bill 53! was passed
by the State Legislature which stated: By
1974 all !!Chool districts in the State of Ohio
must have a vocational program that
would support 40 per cent of the ~tudent
body. This program must compnse not
·
less than 12 (twelve) different curricu!WII
offerings and 20 (twenty) classes with not
less than 15 students per class. None of the
schools in the Gallia County Joint
Vocational School District meets those
MIDDLEPORT - People have to requirements. Gallia County, as well as
make up their minds what kind of en- other school districts throughout the state,
bad to join forces to meet mandate set by
·vironment they want.
That was the suggestion of Meigs the state.
WHAT STUDENTS would attend the
County Agricullural Agent-and Rotarian
- C. E. Blakeslee had for the Middleport • Gallia County Joint Vocational School?
A- Students in the lith or 12th grade
Pomeroy Rotary Club Friday night at
of
all
of the five schools that comprise the
Heath Church in a talk on "Environmental
Gallia County Joint Vocational School are
Quality." Blakeslee reviewed the effects of
DDT and other pesticides that have come eligible to attend regardless of academic
to have apparent detrimental effects on standing (high, low, or medium).
WOULD THESE students, who attend
people and wildlife. He Indicated public
concern in ecology problems will depend the Gallia County Joint Vocational School
on what people decide they are willing to lose their identity with their original
school district?
pay.
A - No. Any student attending ,the
President Charles Simons presided.
Gallia County ·Joint Vocational School
One guest, Harold Henderson, Elmhurst,
would still be a student of. the school
Ill., was introduced by John Werner.
district from which he came. The student
would graduate from his parent school, he
would be eligible to participate in any
extra-&lt;:urricnlar activities in his ·home
school. (Such as athletics, band, music,
class officers, etc.)
(Muskingum County Joint Vocational
School had four students participate in the
Ohio State BasketbaU.. Townament - 2
frotn Zanesville Roseeranl and two from
Maysville.),__
WHAT COURSES will be offered in the
Gallia County Joint Vocational School?
A - Agricultural (Agriculture
Business, Agriculture Mechanics · and
Diesel, Forestry, Horticulture, Landscaping, Conservation); Business Office
(Entry Business Dala Processing,
'
(Continued on page 2) ·

•
EnVJ.ronment
Has Quality

'l1dl rubbllllllllte II bQII' ~'OilletlcJilat tile side tbe Mlrtla Reltlunnt In
' Mid!~Jepcrt foUowlnC the cloelng II
Friday. An official
nollllcatlm d. tbe Me!Ca County Health Board's
to permit the
dump wu receiftd Friday by MayII' C. 0. Fish.,, and the dump was clolled. The
"'"'•'"•nil¥, u 1 ,reeult, II without a dwnp facility and collection service. Village
Ouuitdl wiD allliiupt kl reach a 10Iutlon to the problem at a regular meeting
""""f iilchl MenHme, trub and garbage;,, the Cll"'inunity Is piling up.
I

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NE~~~l~ND 15 CENTS

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

voc.Ed Issues in

independent survey. ·Maverick offers a.choice
of 2-door, 4-door and sporty Grabber. ·And
now.there's a V-8.to go with three economical
Sixes.
Ford LTO gives you the strength and luxury-of
cars costing hundreds of dollars more and a
quiet ride .that many of the more expensive
cars can't measure up to. Maybe that's why
LTO is tops in its class .in sales,
·

KEITH GOBLE FORD INC., 46lS. JHI.RD :ST., MIDDLEPORT, OHIQ-

Member Federal Deposit Ln•urar\ce Corporation
AU Accounts Insured Up To ~20,000.20

.

VOL. VI NO. 11

of God and Man

..

Member Federal Reserve · System

THREE SECTIONS

32 PAGES

Easter

, . Pinto, Mavttrick; Mustang; Torino, Ford: Better Ideas whose time Is now.

Since 1872

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

.

Price is only part of a good deal. It's what you
get for your money that counts. And your Ford
healer can do justic~t to you on both scores.
,
,
,
l.
Maverick's low price has always made it.
simple to own. But what you get for that
simple price is a compact economy,car that's
not only simple to drive and maintain, but
also has the best frequency of ·repair record
of any American . c;ar, according to a recent

SAFETY MEASURE - Adolph Saelens squirts water on the top of his Dairy
Queen as burning embers come down from the cliff to his right threatening to
destroy structures along Route 7 near the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge.

tmts

Your Ford Dealer's
'
g
ot
the
right
cars
right
now.
.
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WATER SUPPLY WEAK - A fireman belplessly holds a hose against the fire
along Liberty Ave ., but he wasn't doing much good.

+

FORD

Tonight, Sat. &amp; Sun., April 9·10·11
DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM

-

{

MEETING DELAYED
The World War I veterans
April meeting has been postponed until the second Sunday
in May.

-- .

Contl!'uous Service On
Fridays 9 ad.i·. to 7 p~m • .

PHILADELPHIA (UPI)-Two
Penn Central officers and anall;ged partner conspired to turn
a 600 per cent personal profit
while the railroad barrelled
down the bankruptcy line, a
suit claims.
.
The railroad's trustees, appointed to put the line back on
the track to solverncy, filed the
suit '(hursday in U.S. District
Court, claiming the Penn Centrallost millions of ,dollars due
to the conspiracy.
t:iamed in the suit were:
David c. Bevan, Gladwyne, Pa.
former chairman of the Penn
Centralfinancecommittee; Wllliam R. Gerstnecker, Philadel·
phia, a former railroad vice
president; and Charles J.
Hodge, Short Hills, N.J., a part·
ner in the investment firm of
F.I. DuPont Glore Forgan Inc.
Du Pont abo was named as
a · defendant, along with Penphil Co.
·The suit charged Penn Central suffered "monetary damage as a direct and proximate
result of the conspiracy" that
ultimately resulted in the reor-

.. I

Saturday afternoon reminding residents that the Broadway
musical, "The Music Man," will be presented on Friday and
Salurday, beginning at 8 p.m., in the Washington School
auditorium.

STUDENTS ADVERTISE 'MUSIC MAN' - Vocal mualc
sludents of Gallis Academy High School formed a caravan
and motored up and down and around the Old French City

Students Advertise Music Man
GALLIPOLIS - Vocal music students will direct the liJO..member choir in the
of Gallia Academy High School formed a musical. II will be the sixth Broadway
caravan and motored through the com- production for GAHS students in as many
munity Saturday afternoon advertising years under Mrs. Fischer.
their Broadway musical, "The Music
The Music Man was a 1957 Broadway
Man," which Will be presented Friday and hit by Meredith Wilson.
Saturday in the Washington School
The show is rounding into shape right
auditorium. Each performance will start on schedule. After the scenery and
at 8 p.m.
costumes arrived, e~erything started to
Anne Fischer, vocal music instructor. fall into place. Mrs. Fischer said, "This

Strip Mine Meet
Set
.
)

POMEROY - A meeting on strip
mining will be held Sunday, April 18, at 3
p.m. at Meigs High School, Jack Crisp,
president of the Leading Creek Conservancy District announced Saturday.
Crisp said he has learned that a strip
mining operation is being planned in the
western part of Meigs County and the
eastern part of Vinton County.
' The purpose of the meeting is to
discuss what additional effects strip
mining. will have on Meigs County.

,

Messag~
·

Ralph Welker, state representative,
has been asked to attend and explain the
bill he !)as proposed on the con trot Of strip
mining . Other· representatives and
senators have also been invited.
People of Meigs County are urged to
attend and offer their views on strip
mining, Crisp said.
Edward Dobson, president of the
Ecology Club, Athens, will serve as
chairman. Pros and cons of ·strip mining
will be discussed.

Keys on 'Now'

BY LOUIS CASSElS
for His disciples' unshakable II is possible to turn away
UPI Religion Writer . · conviction that He had over- from the challenge. Millions do
The message of Easter is not come death. It is very doubtful, every day.
past tense: Once upon a time, · however,. whether anyone has The other response is vividly
Jesus rose from th'e dead.
ever been promp,ted to bet his described by German the·
It is present tense: ·Jesus is life on Jesus simply because t!Ie ologian Willi Marx~n:
risen.
arguments .for the historicity of "I take the risk of doing what
The distinction is important. the resur.rection seemed to him ·He asks, contrary to all human
Past tense statements about plausible.
reason. In the course o! doing, I
an event ·which is believed to Infinitely more stirring is the experience the fact : II is true. I
. have occurr~ ·2,000. years ago present tense assertion, Jesus is do not need to save myself, but
obvioqsly arii'not susceptib.le Of risen. For . that means Jesus' at the very point where I let
hard-and-fas,t proof. The ~st lives. He ·lives ·now'. He con- my!ielf g.o I discover that I am
"that can be done ~t this point' so f~onts us loday, · not· as a being held.by something outside
removed in time is to show memory out of the past, but as a ~ myself. Once I wanted to live,
historical evidence for the present · fact and a present but could ~ot do so. Fear
a~tuality of Jeslrll' resurrection. challenge. ·
·
stopped me . Now ! 'give Up the
·This is more jlersuaslve, to liis challenge iS empirical : attempt to live, in th~ sense in
anyonewhoexaminesitwlthan ·Try my w~y. See ·for' youtself which I have hitherto unopen mind, than any alternative whether it will lead you to derstood living, and discover
explanation that can be offered authentic, abundant.life.
that now, suddenly, I am really

·

living."
No human experience can be
fully.captured and explained in
words. Marxsen's description of
the way a person arrives at
faith in Jesus . may · not be
meaningful to everyone. ·Some
will say, quite validly, that they
reached the same point by
another route.
But anyone who ·attempts to
describe what it means to follow
Jesus finds himself compeiled
to speak not of dogmas and
rituals, but of risk, commitment
and experience. The experience
is open to anyone who will take
the r,isk of making the commilrnent - and it cannot be had .
on any other terms.
I

year, we'll be doing something new by
using people outside the choir for speaking ·
and sipging roles."
The Four Gone Conclusions, Dr. John
Markley, Dr. Tom Morgan, Mr. Manning
Wetherholt, and Mr. Kimball "Red" Suiter
will pose as the highly incapable school
board of I,liver City, Iowa who are caplured under the salesmanship of the
"Music Man" (Harold Hill). There will
also be a number of y.ounger vocal
students and children who will comprise
the youth of this small 1912 Iowa community.
·
Miss Marlene Hoffman, Assistant
Bantl Director at Gallia Academy High
School, will conduct a 21).member or.
chestra comprised of students from the
GAHS band who -.;~1 1 play the bverture and
will re-appear later in the performance.
These children have really worked hard.
This music is snappy · and will really
stimulate the mood of the production.
"I'm really proud of them," said Miss
Hoffman.
Mrs. Fischer also announced many
hours of assistance and hard work lurned
,in by Mrs. James Bennett, Mrs. Kathy
Junker and Mis8 Becky Nolt ( teach~rs at
GAHS) and Mrs. Ann Rieser who has
helped with the dances. Stage manager is
P. J. Ryal.
David Chapman as "Tbe Music Man," ·
has ability that really shine. He's a natural
oh stage and·he will cap lure every heart ilt
the audience,"
said
Mrs. Fischer
...
.
.
I

Thieves Hit
'

.

~agles

.

Club

GALLIPOLIS :.._ Money, jewelry,
cigarettes and whiskey were taken in a
breaking and entering investigated Frldlly
evening at the Eagles Club on Third A~e.
Cily police said entry was .made by
unlocking a window.
Missing was approxi.m&amp;tely $511.50 in
cash and change, three packs Of
ci!(al'littes, two men's watched vahMIIJ ~~ ~
!Cootinued on ' page 2)

�~ ·'

3- The Sunday Times- Sen11ne1; Sunday. Aprllu, 1rn · ·

Fiery Weekend

Team Captains

Meigs-Gallia Fight Fire

Are Announced

Sunda)'Times-Seallnei,Sunday,Apriln,lrn ·

ltl•.••

RACINE - Racine firemen
1ere busy Fr(day with fire and
emergency calls.
. ·
Firemen went to the old Bill
Crow farm in Letart Township
at 10:45 a.m. Friday to extinguiBh a brush fire which

swept over a 'one half acre area.
At 11;45 a.m., they went to near
the Lawrence Rose home in
Antiquity wnere trash being
burned set a woods on fire .
At 5:30 p.m. Friday the E-R
squad went to the Charles

Beegle home in Dorcas. Beegle,
who .had become ill, was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was admitted.
At 9;30 p.m. ' Friday, the
squad was called to the Charles
McNickle home at Racine

Dock Plans are Revised
The
GALLIPOLIS
Department of the Army,
Huntington District Corps of
Engineers, announced Saturday
that the Consolidation Coal Co.,
· Cadiz, Ohio, has submitted
revised plans for a proposed
coal loading dock and dredge on
the right side of the Ohio River
approximately 1.5 miles upstream from Crown City.
On Feb. 23, 1971, the company
applied for a permit to construct a loading dock and
dredge at Big and Little Double
Creeks, 289.5 miles below
Pittsburgh.
The dock, as now proposed,
will be about 1,760 feet in length
and will consist of three 13'
diameter steel sheet pile cells,
seven 12-inch pipe tripod

HOUSE THREATENED- A sma:ll
house nestled on a ledge of the cliff
abQve Rt. 7 in lower Pomeroy is
threatened by fire. Firemen got water
on it.

Thieves

Voc-Ed

dolphins and a conveyor suppori tower. The conveyor
support tower will be located at
the shore line at normal pool
elevation (515.0').
The river face of the dock wiU
be 20 feet at the upstream end,
60 feet at .the downstream end
and a maximum of 75 feet,
about 800 feet downstream from
the upstream enp of the dock,
riverward from the shore line.
All the cells and tripod dolphins
will project 30 feet abQve normal pool elevation.

A 12-inch pipe filled with
concrete will project 10 feet
above the top of all the cells.
Approximately 8,000 cubic
yards of material will be
dredged and disposed of on the

Two Local Option
Motions Are Out

Route 2. McNickle who had a
leg injury, declined treatment.
At 12:30 p.:n. Saturday the
squad ·went to the Sloter Soliio.
· Statjon !n Racine for Kenneth
Layne, !!)-months old, who lives
close to the station. The child,
having difficulty breathing, was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital for treatment.
CALLED BACK
MIDDLEPoRT- Middleport
firemen were called at 2:06p.m.
Saturday to extinguish a brush
fire which broke out on Rutland
St., in the same location as the
one that got out of control
Friday.
Firemen also were called
Saturday afternoon to extinguish a brush fire on Vine St.

applicant's property above high
water elevation.
Interested parties are invited
to state any Objections they,may
have to the work as now
proposed. The decision as to
whether a permit will he issued
will be based on an evaluation of
the Impact of the proposed work
on the public inteest.
Factors affecting the publio
interest include, but are not
TWO FmES
limHed to, navigation, fish and GALLIPOLIS - Two minor
wildlife, water quality, grass fires were extinguished
economics, conservation, . Friday afternoon by Gallipolis
aesthetics, recreation, water Volunteer Firemen, the first at
supply,
flood
damage I p.m. at the west end of Kineon
prevention, ecosystems, and, in Dr. A fire of undetermined
general, the needs and welfare origin burned three tenths of an
of the people.
acre owned by the State of Ohio
Written statements on these and Oscar Bastian!, Jr.
factors received in Huntington ·A similar blaze scorched one
DistrictO!Iice on or before May half acre at 5·15 p.m. on the
7, 1971 will become a part of the Charles Bell property on
record and will be considered in Sanders Dr. Thirteen men and
determining whether it would two trucks responded to the
he in the best public interest to emergency alarm.
grant a permit.
Plans of the work as now
proposed may be seen in the ·
Huntington office . .

(Continued from page!)
(Continued from page I)
$25 and a fifth of whiskey. The theft ocCooperative
Office
Education);
curred between 9:30p.m. Wednesday and GALLIPOLIS _ Common to dismiss prior to the
Distributive Education (Distributive
Pleas Court Judge Ronald R. scheduling of the case for
Education); Home Economics (Food 4:30 p.m. Friday.
SUNDAY
i
Gallia County sheriff's deputies Calhoun Saturday overruled hearing and then complain
Services, Home Nursing Aides); Trade '
TIMES.SENTINEL
i . Tonighlthru Wednesday
(Continued from page I)
and Industrial (Auto Mechanics, Auto Friday investigated a theft reported by ·two motions filed in an attempt because such motions delayed
Pvblllhfil ntrr 5u!'1 Gt~ D~ tnt 01110 I
Publllhlng Co .
I
GALLIPOLIS OAIL'I" TR:IIIUNE
Body Repair, Cosmetology, Drafting, John Metzger, Rt. I, Cheshire. Metzger to halt him from hearing futther the hearing of the case on its \liitltV
others circulated, was not true.
They challenged
125 Thi rd Ave , (lalllpollt. , Oh io, d'J 1
tVtrV wukdly ev..,l"ll . . cept
Electrical, Electronics, Machine Shop, said someone took a stereo tape player and proceedings on the disputed merits.
~near as could be determined, the fire
5tlurCiay . St cMCI C"u Po111ge hid al
an untamed land!
one tape from his car parked Thursday local option election held last( , The case was originally slated
-456)1
THE OAII.&lt;'I' SENTINEL
started on Rutland St. In Middleport Diversified Co-op Training, Diversified night at the Kyger Creek . High School November in the Rio Grande for hearingonFeb.l7butitwas
Ill COYrl Sl ., POmtror, 0 .. "'5J6t .
evtrr wukU'I' tvtnlnll txCtPI
WALT DISNEY
Friday morning when a resident was Co-op Training &amp; Health Services, Sheet parking lot.
s,tu rd•r · Enttrtd 11 MCIM1d c ltll mtll lf\CI
area.
later
postponed
until
April
5
on
.P RODUCTIOifl'
m111er
11
P omtroy , Oh lll, POll Ol!lct .
Metal
and
Welding,
Industrial
Mainburning brush. It spread rapidly. Pomeroy
TERMS OF SUIISCRIPTION
-· Arlow Bowden-, Smokey Run Rd., Judge Calhoun overruled the a con 1·mu ed mo t'10n 1·11edby the
8y CtH itr IIIIIV
Sund1 y , SOc par
firemen got their first call just after ll tenance).
M•IL
AollE S
l ht Gtil iPOIII
In
and West"
WHAT WILL be the cost of con- reported the theft of an electric welding set motions filed by the defendants plaintiffs.
a.m. to the Liberty Lane area. .
Yirglnll . Ollt yur S1l .00 ; I IX moMM 11 ;
and
a
vandalism
complaint
concerning
in
the
issue,
the
Gallia
County
The
court
further
ruled
that
lhree
month
l
tlltwntn
.
Of\t rur
Soon other departments had to be called struction and equipping the Gallia County
Ul : 1i• mlln t hl11 : tnru montnl 55 .00 .
damaged
windshield
wiper
and
chrome
Board
of
Elections.
the
action
taken
by
the
board
in
Th1 Oatly Sentinel. one rur 11oi.IICI :
11.U ; thru mon l hl U .SO.
to the scene to assist. There was just too Joint Vocational School?
The Uf\lltd Prtn l nltrnl tiOnll II u
siding was reported by June Vinson, an Attorneys for the election filing a motion to dismiss the CIUIIVtiY
enlillfd I Oli"lt UM lor pubilt lll lon
AThe
total
cost
for
construction
and
much fire ·going in too many directions.
Ol Ill 1\fWI
crtillltd IO 11"1 1•
employee
of
the
~obbins-Myers Co. The board last Dec. 8, filed a motion petition, was a waiver of any
ntwlptptr
tnO IT.O lht Iotti new1
Firemen were fighting the fire from the equipping the Gallia County Joint incident occurred while her car was
publ ilhtO 1\trt ln .
·
·sd·
t•
1
tim
1·
•tat•
to dismiss the complaint on JUri 1c wna
e IITII 10ns.
Rutland St. area, the Flood Road, Liberty Vocational School will be $2,840,000. Of this
~------------------~
Lane where flames leaped high near amount $1,420,000 or SO per cent will be parked in the R&amp;M parking lot on Bob several grounds, basically, that The election was held on six
Judge calhoun does not have issues in Raccoon Twp., with
paid directly by the State Department of McCormick Rd.
homes, and lower Monkey Run.
jurisdiction to hold {urther , resu~ts tabulated by the board
The unoccupied small frame home of Education, leaving $1,420,000 to be paid
Charles Pullins on Liberty Lane was locally. An additional $240,000 is expected mean we would have to start over again at hearings . Assistant County showmg the area was voted dry.
Tonight, Mon .• Tues . .
destroyed. On Liberty Lane some families by Appalachian funds after July 1, 1971. the bottom of the list on State funding. Prosecutor James Bennett . On Nov. 25, Leslie E. Carter,
April11·12-13
WHAT WILL it cost the taxpayer to Second, the State Department of contended that all election et al, filed a complaint alleging
left their homes as the fire continued its
ON A CLEAR
' . build, site, equip, and operate the Gallia Education would have the authority to contests must be heard within that there were certain
DAY YOU CAN
advance. However, \heir houses J~re
assign
the
present
school
districts
to
the
30
days
after
they
are
filed.
He
irregularities
in
the
presenSEE FOREVER
County Joint Vocational School?
saved by the firemen .
nearest
operating
vocational
school
later
filed
a
writ
of
prohibition
tali
on
of
several
questions
to
the
(Technicolorl
A
The
millage
for
constructing,
Pomeroy firemen moving behind the
Disney Short
Barbara
Streisand
·
district,
for
the
students'
vocational
with
the
Fourth
District
Court
voters
regarding
the
sale
of
obtaining
the
site
and
equipping
the
Gallia
Raub and Andrews homes in lower
Dad Can I Borrow
Yves Mont and
Monkey Run about mid-afternoon "back· County Joint Vocational School iB .9 of a training. This is being done throughout the of Appeals asking that Judge liquor ana beer in Raccoon
(G)
The Car Tonight
Calhoun be stopped from Twp.
fired" the blaze, burning down river to mill or nine cents on a hundred dollar State where districts are not voted in.
cartoons:
CARTOON
DO THE parent schools lose the state conducting further hearings but . Two liquor establishments
evaluation or 90 cents on a thousand
meet the fire coming upriver.
Where Are You
Matinee Showing
affected by the vote were the
Happy Days
Several firemen and volunteers were dollars evaluation.. For operating tlie foundation money for students going to the it was denied.
Sat. &amp; Sun.
The appellate court ruled that Redman Inn and Tycoon Lake
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.
Injured. Charte.s Bailey, E. Main St., a Gallia County Joint Vocational S.chool the Gallia County Joint Vocational School?
2 P.M. Only
A- No. The state foundation funding general jurisdiction in such Carryout.
volunteer, was treated at Veterans millage is 2.2mills or 22 cents on a hundred
Memorial Hospital after running a nail In dollar" evaluation or $2.20 on a thousand would be the same as it is now in the local election issue was granted to
his foot. David Jeffers was treated for a dollars evaluation. This makes the total schools. The parent schools would receive ):he Common Pleas Court by
burned foot and Ronnie Adams of the for both construction, site, equipping and 75 per cent funding lor all their students ·' section 3515.08- of the Ohio
Racine Department was treated at the · operating the Gallia County Joint going to the Gallia County Joint Vocational Revised Code.
Vocational School 3.1 millage or31 cents · School. This is the same funding they are Judge Calhoun in overrultng
hospital for injuries suffered in a fall.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Pomeroy firemen were on the scene on a hundred dollars evaluation or $3.10 on now receiving for their present vocational the motions said it may well be
until about 10:30 p.m. Friday to make sure a thousand dollars evaluation. An example units (such as Home Economics, that the plaintiffs in the action,
the blaze would not reoccur. Departments would be a home worth $10,1100 iB on the tax vocational agriculture, etc.) in their own Leslie Carter et al, were
responsible for having the case
from the various conununlties returned to books at 40 per cent or $4,1100, this would school district.
WILL THE Gallia County Joint heard between the 15th and 30th
their home stations from time to time cost th~ taxpayer $12.40 a year, or about 25
Vocational School be available for adult day after the complaint was
during the evening hours as it became cents a week for this schooL
filed; however, the defendants
WOULD THE influx of new industry programs?
apparent that the blaze was under control.
A - Yes. There would he adult (election board) may not delay
Pomeroy police made spot checks about reduce this present 3.1 millage?
A - Definitely yes. Whenever a education programs in the evenings. The the case by the filing of motions
the fire area overnight for any reoc-·
sudden increase in taxes is added to the courses offered would be based upon the
currences.
valuation and the monies from these taxes interest of the adults . .Adult training and
AT CAMP LEJEUNE
are more than is needed to meet voted re-lraining is a very important role of the
vocational
school.
GALLIPOLIS
.,- Marine Pic.
1
obligation then the county auditor, by law,
WHERE WILL the school be ·located? Roger W. Thompson, son of
GALLIPOLIS - County sanitarian
must reduce the millage, accordingly.
Frank Petrie appealed Friday to all dog
When the proposed power plant at - A _ Several areas have been Mrs. Winifred L. Thompson of
owners to have their dogs vaccinated
Cheshire is added to the tax duplicate of discussed by the Gallia county Joint 1701 Chestnut St., iB serving at
agalost rabies.
Gallia County it would more than cut in Vocational School Bi&gt;ard. No decision has the Marine Corps Base, Carny
. .,
,
Last spring, Petrie conducted
half the cost of building, equipping, and been made or will be made without further Lejeune, N. C.
cUnlcs throughout the county for this
openiting the Gallia County Joint study by the board Md the State Departpurpose, but, the response was
ment of Education.
Vocational SchooL
somewhat disappointing. Dogs may be
Prepared and approved by the Gallia
WHAT HAPPENS if the bond issue
vaccinated at the office of Dr. Dan
County
Vocational Board of Education,
and operating levies fail?
Nolter or Dr. Philip Edmlnston,
A - First, we would lose the number Marljn G. Kerns, Harold E. Wiseman,
veterjnarlans.
one priority for Stale and Appalachian Granville Burnette, C. A. Evans, MerreD
Funds, which we now have. This would Bunce.
TONIGHT ONLY •

r-------------------·

Fire Beaten

Publis~tG

GIIII~Olll. 0~10,
Publll~l"d

l~d

Wtek .

~U8SCAIPTION
lrltlu~t
0~10
1~ . iO ;

1 1~

mont~l

OII~IT(I\11

GALLIPOLIS
Team
capta!ns for the 1971 city and
Gallipolis Twp., canvassing for
the annual Cancer Crusade
were announced Saturday by
Mrs. David Allen, chairman.
The event is being conducted
by members of the Gallipolis
Junior Women's Club.
Officials will meet .on Aprill9
to complete canvassing plans.
Here are the team captains:
Mrs. Mike Neal, Lower Rive•
Rd.; Mrs . Tom Milstead,
.. Garfield Ave.; Mrs. Jack Carty,
Portsmouth Rd.; Mrs. Robert
o ,W. Saunders, Chillicothe Rd.;
Mrs . Farrell Houck, Old
Chillicothe Rd:
Mrs. Charles Reimund, Orchard Hill area; Mrs. Hennan
Koby, Rt. 35, city limits IQ

POMEROY - Ten defendants were fined and six forfeited bQnds in Meigs County
CourfFriday.
Fined by Judge Frank W.
Porter were Leonard C. Lyons,
Pomeroy, Rt. 2, $5 and costs,
defective exhaust; Charles R.
" Lyons, Mason, $10 and costs,
.,, stop sign violation; Henry P.
Price, Long Bottom, Rt. I, $15
and costs, speeding; William J.
Harvey, Columbus, $10 and
costs, speeding; Roger B. Hill,
Racine, Rt. I, $10 and costs,
passing at intersection; Melvin
Lee Cunillngham, Pomeroy, Rt.
3, $5 and costs, no brakes;
Don8!d E. Green, Racine, Rt. 2,
$10and costs, failure to transfer
license; Kermit Gilkey, Middleport, $73, and costs, $50
suspended, overload; Bertram
B. Grueser, Minersville, $150
and costs, three days confinement, license suspended for
six months, driving while Intoxicated; Romanceles Tunstalle, Lakin, costs only, 60 days
.conf'mement, 53 days suspended, license suspended for one

. Appeal Denied
'

GALLIPOUS - The Ohio
Supreme Court has dismissed
an appeal by Raymond Farra,
Gallipolis, convicted in 1954 by a
Gallla County Petit Jury on auto
theft charges involving a 1954
DeSoto owned by the late Carl
c. Myers.
Farra's
.appeal
was
• disallowed on the basis that no
substantial constitutional
question was involved in his
conviction. He had previously
appealed to the Gallla County
Pleas Court and Fourth District
Court . of Appeals. Farra had
been sentenced to a 1-20 year
tenn in the Ohio State Reformatory.

Tonight, April l1
DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM
"Explosions Of Laughter!"
~r-lllo•u•'

'IWY Marflll '

•

•

.:. Wilbur French

AWOftLD' WIDI PtCTUIQ PltiiiNTITION

MINT\t)IJRNfi .

MY\\IUSJOO I!Al'IEIIIElNEIJ. . ,.,

I'WI ·----"111 ...111~1
·• ill. . .

'IIIWIIIIIIL

•• tsll
lz ,,. rl'l I L'l"
lllfl .... ., rlulfllu II

~

·Groom :AI Freeman ~r. ·John Milford
A IICOt!l'fl! WRII If N~ OlAf tllO BY JAMES f.oot.UER

POMEROY - Twirlers from
Kentucky, Pennsylvania, West
Virginia and Ohio took part in a
National Baton Twirling
Association contest held in
Racine last Sunday under the
direction of Miss Gloria Buck.
High point trophy of the

speeding.

Point
Group

-

..

with the number of trophies

contest, sponsored by the
Southern Athletic Boosters,
went to Rona Jo Livingston of
Pittsburgh, Pa., who scored 39
points. The traveling trophy
went to a girl who had traveled
247 miles, one way, to take part.
Area winners only are listed

•
S
Wm

.
.
POMEROY - The Battle of
the Bands Thursday of
Pomeroy Junior High School,
sponsored by Meigs Chapter of
Vocational Industrial Clubs of
America (VICA) was a "huge
success", according to M~ry
Powell, cosmotology instructor
at Meigs High School.
Six bands participated with
over 400 persons attending.
Taking first place was the
Blue Rose Cathedral of Pt.
Pleasant. Second place went to
Tiny and Tim, Pt. Pleasant, and
third to the 15th Street Band,
also of Pt. Pleasant. The first ·
place GOCC group received $100
and the second and third place
winners were awarded trophies.
Other bands participating
were Sound Limit, Pt.
Pleasant; The Boxx Fox, Middleport, and C. 0. D., Athens.
Judges were Janet Korn,
WJEH, Jack Kane, WMPO, and
Joseph White, Minersville. The
VICA Club netted $300 from the
event.

Elmer Brown

POMEROY- Four persons operation.
were hospitalized and four At !2 :40a.m . on SR 7, northof
vehicles were demolished in Shenang Springs, Howard
three separate accidents Friday
according to the Meigs County
Sheriff's department.
Friday at 8 p.m. on SR 7, near
Sumner Road, Richard E. Gill,
31, Whipple, Ohio, was traveling GALLIPOLIS _ Sherman
north when his car went off the MeGUlre,
· 51 , Rt. 2, .Northup,
highway on the right after was cited to Municipal Court on
passing two other vehicles a,f!l.arge ~f failure \0 ,~lpttwit!Jin
going in the same directio~. cut the assured distance following a
bac.k to left, spun around and traffic accident Friday afwent through a guard rail and ternoon on Pine St. in front of
over a steep embankment.
John Gee ChapeL ·
The Pomeroy E-R unit was McGuire's car struck the rear
summoned but was unable to of an auto driven by Richard w.
answer the call due to a brush Price, 17, Gallipolis. There was
fire. The Middleport E-R squad moderate damage to the Price
wentto the scene, but the driver car.
refused treatment. He was A second mishap was at 3:50
placed in M~igs County jail and p.m. on Frist Ave. and Grape
later admitted to Veterans . St. where vehicles driven by
Memorial
Hospital
for Sharon A. Beer, 25, Hudson,
lacer~tions o~ his arm and the . Ind., and Ebner E. Gothard, 16,
lefts1de of his face .
Rt. I, Gallipolis, collided.
Gill was arrested for reckless Again, there was moderate
damage to both vehicles.

Citation Js
Given Driver

EX.Teachers Skin Testing
.

Plan to DineHours are Set

Pomeroy : Junior Gio-ettes,
two; Wee Glo-ettes one ·
Tammy Eichinger, 8;' Kath;
Werry, 6; Jennifer Chapman, 6;
Brenda Taylor, 5; Peggy
O'Brien, 2; Jody G1·ueser, 4;
Linda Eason, Toni Pope, two
each, and Leta Floyd, Jennifer
Gobfe and Mal'y Hawley, 1
each.

Leroy Barber, 21, Reedsville,
Rt. I, was moving south at an
apparent high rate of speed. He
lost control, skidded and struck
broadside into the front of a car
driven by William Reed of
Chester, traveling north.
The Middleport and Pomeroy
E·R units and a Ewing ambulance were dispatched to the

. I

Sunny and warmer Sunday
and Monday. High Sunda y in
the 60s. LowSunday night in the
40s and low 50s. High Monday in
the upper 60s and 70s.

scene.

Reed sustai ned numerous
lacerations to his head·and face
and a fractured leg . Mrs. Reed
suffered a broken hip and
lacerations to her head and
face. Barber, thrown from his
car into a creek, suffered internal injuries and possible
back and neck injuries. All the
injured were taken to Veterans
Memorial HospitaL
Barber will be charged with
reckless operation it was

On this most holy day of days,
To God your hearts and voices raise,
In laud and jubilee and praise.

Bailey, 26, Pomeroy, was

traveling south on SR 7, just
south of the Forest Run Road ·
when he lost control of his car in'
a curve, skidded and smashed
through a guardrail and went
over an embankment.
Bailey was arrested on
charges of driving while intoxicated. He was not injured.
Kyle J. Barnett, 29, Syracuse,
was charged with petty larceny
in connection with the theft of a
battery from the Barber car
while it was being hooked to a
wrecker.

Alleluia!
15th Century Hymn

OHIO ALLEY BANK
Gi'.,aliS '' ·'

OPEN -EVERY
MONDAY •tlt9

Mobile Home

AFTER
EASTER
ClEARANCE

AI MIIWI'IP' ~

Program Set

"CHARGE IT"
'

I•

'

SIZES
32.38

By VA Office

MONDA·Y
SAVE ON:

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Retired Teachers
Association will meet for a
luncheon at the Trinity Church
in Pomeroy at 12 :30 p.m.
Saturday.
Brian Simpson, formerly of
Meigs County and a graduate of
Racine High School, will speak
and show movies on fish,
animals and plant life stressing
their importance to Ohio's
ecology. He Is associated with
the Ohio Depariment of Conservation and Wildlife and
resides in Baltimore, Ohio with
his wife and children.
Bills pending in the Ohio
Legislature relative to pensions • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
and other matters will be ~
discussed. Reservations at $2.25
are to be made with Mrs. Anna
HiUdore, Syracuse. All retired
teachers are invited to a\tend.

READY TO WEAR
HOUSEWARES TOYS
OF
PERMANENT PRESS, POLYESTER/COTTON

MISSES' SPRING BLOUSES
No iron polyuhr cotton. Body ,hirts,

9~~cho, yoke front or Ap•chi.ascot 1fylu

Sol1d colors and prints. Short sleeves. Get
several now!

New Eviryday low ••••

PHOTO
-z . '
PROCESSING

'PRICES
0.. ahtiOIII. Talle •n ....,.
,actvr• or two. Wttt. .., .,..,.
cl•r low prlcet on filM· •n•

,.......,. rov cen....,• ..,.

......,,

plcturo·talr.lnt fvn for le11

SQUARE PRINU FROM ROILS

Color Prints
Black White
Prints

tu·

J
.

.

FOR BIG DISCOUNT
SAVINGS I'
~
'
.
137 Ptne Street
Gallipolis, Ohio

'

.

.

I~!

GET YOUR
EASTER
. PHOTOS
PROCESSED

AT

MURPHYS
YOU SA,VE

Ko~acolor

METZGER ASSIGNED
CHESHlRE - Army Private
First Class Richard A. Metzger,
20, son of Mr.1and t&gt;'lrs. John C.
Metzger, Route I, was recenUy
assigned to the U. S. Army
.
Strategic Communications
Command fac11ity near Da . · .
Nang, Vietnam. He is a 1968
gradliate of Kyger Creek High
··
. .
SchooL

Weather

Easter Sunday

reported.
At 1:10 a.m ., Charles W.

CLEVELAND
The
POMEROY - Free skin Veterans Administration has
testing for aU Meigs County announced standards for its
residents who will need a food • mObile . home program which
handlers' card for any reason guarantees lip to 30 per cent of
during the next year will be . loans - up to a maximum of
done from 2 to 6 .p.m. Monday $10,000 for mobile homes, or up
and Tuesday at the offices of the to $17,500 if the loan Is also for a
Meigs County Health Depart- ful)y developed lot. Mobile
ment, East Main St.
homes purchased under the
The tests will be read on VA's program must be at least
Wednesday and Thursday. A 40 feet lbng and 10 feet wide,
mobile Hay unit will be in with a minimum of 400 square .
Pomeroy on Tuesday, Wed: feet.
·
neaday and Thursday for the Further information may be
benefit of positive reactors to secured from the VA Regional
the skin testing program. No Office, Federal Office Building, .
one is to be x-£ayed, however, 1240 East Ninth Street,
until he is a positive reactor. Cleveland, Ohio, 44199.

• Pleasaat Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Mrs. Hoyt
Jividen, Point Pleasant; Monte
Davis, Columbus; Mrs. Robert
Newman, Rutland, and Nancy
See, Point Pleasant.
DISCHARGES : Kenneth
Pridemore, Nellie Zahrndt,
Clarence Schurman, Mrs. John
Kauff, Eimer Fife, Mrs .
Wesley Adams, Mrs. Doily
Waugh, Mrs. Lewis Peters and
son; Danny l!armon, Mrs.
Johnny Donahue, Mrs. Inez
Burdette.

O'BRIEN APPOINTED
GALLIPOLIS- Chief Justice
C. William O'Neil, Ohio
Supreme Court, has appointed
Judge F. H·. O'Brien of Meigs
County as acting Probate and
Juvenile Court Judge for Gallia
County during the months of
April and May. Judge O'Brien
will hold his first court session
on Tuesday . He replaces Judge
Roy Gilliland of Jackson
County .

Point Plea sant: Mason
County Twirling Corps , I;
Jacque Gabl'istch, 9; Martha
Johnson, 2; LaTrenda Lf,ach,
Amy Roush, Alicia Roush, Lisa
Siders, 1 each.
Gallipolis: Patty Patrick, 2;
Sonja Sisson, 2; Melissa McDade, 3; Julia Lane, 2; Lisa
Atkins, L
Minersville : Debbie Jeffers,
7.
Mason City : Carla Hood, 2.

Four Hurt in Highway Carnage

: : FOSTORIA- Wilbur French,
PT. PLEASANT . - Elmer
::· Fostoria, died unexpectedly at Brown, · 64, of Huntington,
;:. his home Thursday morning. formerly of Point Pleasant and
: · Mr~ French was bQrn in ·an employe of the Railroad lor
"" Fostoria, son of Mr. and Mrs. 30 years, died ·at 8 a.m.
:. James French, former Gallia Saturday in the Cabell:: County residents.
Huntington Hospital.
:: Surviving besides the parents He is survived by his widow,
:;: are his wif~. two brothers, and Geraldine Morrow Brown; one
:; one sister.
son, Jack Brown, Huntington ;
:: Funeral services were held three daughters, Dorothy,
:; Satur&lt;i~Y afternoon in Fostoria. Connie and Sharon Kay, all
Mrs. E. E. Ecker, Gallipolis, Huntington ; .and three sisters,
:: is an aunt.
Mrs. Frank (Oma) Brown, Mrs.
:.
Charles (Bessie) wathsley, and
;:;
Mrs. Ada Greenlee, all Point
""'
BIG HIT COMING
Pleasant.
... ATHENS - Oneoftheblggest Funeral arrangements were
::: hits in the American musical · Incomplete.
·
:: theater t "You're a Good Man,
:· Charlie Brown," comes to' the
:; stage of Ohio University's
BOND FORFEITED
ft
Memorial Auditorium on
:: Wednesday, Aprlll4, al8 p.m., SYRACUSE '- One bond was
: one of the university's comedy forfeited Thursday in Syracuse
Mayor Herman London's Court
:::' drama series.
and one defendant . was fined
Friday in the same court.
.•
GRIM PROSPECT
Daniel Jeffers, 24, Pomeroy,
"" WASHINGTON (UP!)
forfeited a $25 bond posted on ·
:: Chemical. &amp; Engineering News, unsafe operation of · a motor
the we~kly newsmagazine of the vehicle. Jimmy W. Johnson; IB,
Americiln Chemical Society, Racine, was fined· $5 and costs
· said Saturday the worst job_ on charges of speeding, Both
market In 25 years is the grim were cited into court by Marprospect for 1971 graduates in shall Milton V.arian.
chemistry and chemical
engineering.
HIP. FRACTURED
GALUPOUS - Mrs. Curt
VISITS U.S.
Coffey,
53, Rt. 3, Jackson,
BELGRADE (UP!) - Yugoslave Finance Minister Janko fractured her right hip in an
Smote . left Saturday for · a acciden.t Friday at her home.
seven-day visit to the United She sustained the lnjury when
States to diScuss po~~SiblliUes she fell from a truck,. She was
for expandi~g YugOBiav exports admitted to the Holzer ·Medical
nter at 10:!5 P,.m.
'
to the Uni.led States.
•
~

:"'-'- lWY-TimAI
MATIWIWIIITBI

Twirlers In Meigs

control or his car on the wet
pavement near the approach to
a small bridge, ran off ihe left
side of the bridge and over an
embankment. Darnell's car was
demolished.

THE FIVE-COUNTY STRUTTING champions of the
NBTA twirling contest held in Racine Sunday are, from the
left, Jacque Gabristch, Jennifer Chapman, Patty Patrick
and Tammy Eichinger.

each won:

;.: !I Area Deaths !

.-.

Ill 111AW11

year and placed on one years
probation, driving while intoxicated.
Forfeiting bQnds were Gerald
Arnold, Minersville, $25 posted,
disturbing the peace; Julian
Hoffman, Pomeroy, Rt. 3,
$257.50, driving while intoxicated; Donna Fry, Rutland,
RD, $25, disturbing the peace;
Vernon Hysell, Pomeroy, RD
$25, Intoxication; Martin L.
Moore; · Belpre, $50, no
operators ~cense, $250, driving
while intoxicated; Clarence
Walker, Jr., Cincinnati, $27.50,

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

...

---.......
.
==.....

'

;rrB,r High Court

The perils or a

GALLIPOLIS Three County . Stewart later was
persons apprehended early robbed, knocked unconscious,
Thursday mormng at a road- tied and thrown in a ditch on
block near Hanover, ~· Va ., Thompson Rd., in . northeast
sought m connection w1th the Gallia County .·The suspects had
alleged armed robbery of a been hitchhiking on Rt. 23, south
Columbus, Ohw man Wed- of Columbus when Stewart
nesday aft~rnoon In G~llia offered them a ride. Taken in
Co~nty wa1ved extradition addition to his car and wallet
Fr1day. .
.
.~
containing an undetermined
Booked m· the .county Jail for amount of cash and credit cards
app~arances Monday in were Stewart's personal
Mumc1pal Court ?n auto theft belongings valued at $1,1100.
charges were Dav1d Shanks, 30, . West Virginia State Troopers
.his Wife, Bun~y Shanks, 20, and joined in an intensive · search
f&gt;av1d . Hatf1el.d, 19, all of after an armed robbery . at a
Columbus. Hatfield for~erly of drive-in restaurant in Mingo
Delbarton, W. Va., 1s also County.
wanted· for being AWOL from
the U. S. Army.
BOARD TO MEET
They were returned late RACINE "- The Southern
Friday night from Pineville, W. Local School Board will meet
Va . by deputy sheriffs Ken Tuesday at 8 .P.m. instead of
Deckard and Lew Plank and Thursday as .was previously
Prosecutors I Hamlin C. King announced.
and Jim Bennett.
The trio is charged in the theft .. MEETING POSTPONED .
of a 1970 Ford Galaxie taken at , POMEROY - World War 1
gunpoint Wendesay afternoon . Veterans meeting to be held In
from Rober! Stewart, 4,3, April has been postponed until
lllacklick, Ohio, Fran~lin · the second Sunday in May.

THESE ARE THE TWIRLING CHAMPS from the five
county area of Meigs, Athens, Mason, Gallia and Vinton
Counties, selected at the Racine NBTA contest, from the left,
Debbie Jeffers, 15 to 20 years age group; Jennifer Chapman,
11 to 14 group; Carla Hood, 7 to 10 group, and Tammy
Eichinger, 0-6 years.

'

One Week April 15th thru 21st

3 Suspects ·Waive Extradition

Mabelene Drive; Mrs. J9hn
Smith, Rt. 35 Maelene Drive to
Green Twp.; Mrs. Carl Morrow,
Kanauga; Mrs. James Whit.
tington, East Gallipolls; Mrs.
Dick MacKenzie, Vine St.; Mrs.
T. A. Thomas, 100 blocks; Mrs.
Aldeth Robinson, 200 blocks . .
Mrs. Roger l!ood, 300 blocks;
Mrs . Gene Wetherholt, .400
blocks; Mrs. Harry Hamilton,
500 blocks; Mrs. Wayne Ams· ·
bary, 600 blocks; Miss Brenda
Lee, 700 blocks; Mrs. Geneva
Howell, BOO blocks ; Mrs.
Herman Candee, 900 blocks;
Mrs. Raph R. Martin, 1000
blocks.
Mrs. Robert DaytOn, Bastiani
Drive and Kineon and Mrs;
William Smeltzer, Vinton, Neal
and vinton Court.

:'Ten Draw Fines

Appearing At The Colony Theater

race-to-race wnh

.GALUPOUS - Douglas E.
HaUhiU, 20, Rt. I, Cheshire, was
listed in good condition
Saturday where he was admilled at 3:50 a.m. following a
single car accident on Gravel
Hill Rd., two tenths of a mile
north of Rt. 7.
According to the state highway palrol, Halfhill, traveling
south, loot control of his auto,
ran off the roadway and struck
two power poles. Halfhill
sustained a fractured jaw and
multiple lacerations. The case
is stili under investigation. His
car was demolished.
A second mishap occurred at
the same loca lion just second~
later when one of the power
poles cut off by the iinpact of
HaUhill 's car fell on an auto
- owned by Jerry Ramsey, 22,
Cheshire.
Paul Darnell, 17, Pomeroy,
suffered minor . injuries in an
accident at 6;35 p.m. Friday on
Rt. 7. Officers said Darnell lost

'·

MEIGS THEATR[

•

Driver Injured

EA.

ON All
PHOTO NEEDS .
AT

�~ ·'

3- The Sunday Times- Sen11ne1; Sunday. Aprllu, 1rn · ·

Fiery Weekend

Team Captains

Meigs-Gallia Fight Fire

Are Announced

Sunda)'Times-Seallnei,Sunday,Apriln,lrn ·

ltl•.••

RACINE - Racine firemen
1ere busy Fr(day with fire and
emergency calls.
. ·
Firemen went to the old Bill
Crow farm in Letart Township
at 10:45 a.m. Friday to extinguiBh a brush fire which

swept over a 'one half acre area.
At 11;45 a.m., they went to near
the Lawrence Rose home in
Antiquity wnere trash being
burned set a woods on fire .
At 5:30 p.m. Friday the E-R
squad went to the Charles

Beegle home in Dorcas. Beegle,
who .had become ill, was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was admitted.
At 9;30 p.m. ' Friday, the
squad was called to the Charles
McNickle home at Racine

Dock Plans are Revised
The
GALLIPOLIS
Department of the Army,
Huntington District Corps of
Engineers, announced Saturday
that the Consolidation Coal Co.,
· Cadiz, Ohio, has submitted
revised plans for a proposed
coal loading dock and dredge on
the right side of the Ohio River
approximately 1.5 miles upstream from Crown City.
On Feb. 23, 1971, the company
applied for a permit to construct a loading dock and
dredge at Big and Little Double
Creeks, 289.5 miles below
Pittsburgh.
The dock, as now proposed,
will be about 1,760 feet in length
and will consist of three 13'
diameter steel sheet pile cells,
seven 12-inch pipe tripod

HOUSE THREATENED- A sma:ll
house nestled on a ledge of the cliff
abQve Rt. 7 in lower Pomeroy is
threatened by fire. Firemen got water
on it.

Thieves

Voc-Ed

dolphins and a conveyor suppori tower. The conveyor
support tower will be located at
the shore line at normal pool
elevation (515.0').
The river face of the dock wiU
be 20 feet at the upstream end,
60 feet at .the downstream end
and a maximum of 75 feet,
about 800 feet downstream from
the upstream enp of the dock,
riverward from the shore line.
All the cells and tripod dolphins
will project 30 feet abQve normal pool elevation.

A 12-inch pipe filled with
concrete will project 10 feet
above the top of all the cells.
Approximately 8,000 cubic
yards of material will be
dredged and disposed of on the

Two Local Option
Motions Are Out

Route 2. McNickle who had a
leg injury, declined treatment.
At 12:30 p.:n. Saturday the
squad ·went to the Sloter Soliio.
· Statjon !n Racine for Kenneth
Layne, !!)-months old, who lives
close to the station. The child,
having difficulty breathing, was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital for treatment.
CALLED BACK
MIDDLEPoRT- Middleport
firemen were called at 2:06p.m.
Saturday to extinguish a brush
fire which broke out on Rutland
St., in the same location as the
one that got out of control
Friday.
Firemen also were called
Saturday afternoon to extinguish a brush fire on Vine St.

applicant's property above high
water elevation.
Interested parties are invited
to state any Objections they,may
have to the work as now
proposed. The decision as to
whether a permit will he issued
will be based on an evaluation of
the Impact of the proposed work
on the public inteest.
Factors affecting the publio
interest include, but are not
TWO FmES
limHed to, navigation, fish and GALLIPOLIS - Two minor
wildlife, water quality, grass fires were extinguished
economics, conservation, . Friday afternoon by Gallipolis
aesthetics, recreation, water Volunteer Firemen, the first at
supply,
flood
damage I p.m. at the west end of Kineon
prevention, ecosystems, and, in Dr. A fire of undetermined
general, the needs and welfare origin burned three tenths of an
of the people.
acre owned by the State of Ohio
Written statements on these and Oscar Bastian!, Jr.
factors received in Huntington ·A similar blaze scorched one
DistrictO!Iice on or before May half acre at 5·15 p.m. on the
7, 1971 will become a part of the Charles Bell property on
record and will be considered in Sanders Dr. Thirteen men and
determining whether it would two trucks responded to the
he in the best public interest to emergency alarm.
grant a permit.
Plans of the work as now
proposed may be seen in the ·
Huntington office . .

(Continued from page!)
(Continued from page I)
$25 and a fifth of whiskey. The theft ocCooperative
Office
Education);
curred between 9:30p.m. Wednesday and GALLIPOLIS _ Common to dismiss prior to the
Distributive Education (Distributive
Pleas Court Judge Ronald R. scheduling of the case for
Education); Home Economics (Food 4:30 p.m. Friday.
SUNDAY
i
Gallia County sheriff's deputies Calhoun Saturday overruled hearing and then complain
Services, Home Nursing Aides); Trade '
TIMES.SENTINEL
i . Tonighlthru Wednesday
(Continued from page I)
and Industrial (Auto Mechanics, Auto Friday investigated a theft reported by ·two motions filed in an attempt because such motions delayed
Pvblllhfil ntrr 5u!'1 Gt~ D~ tnt 01110 I
Publllhlng Co .
I
GALLIPOLIS OAIL'I" TR:IIIUNE
Body Repair, Cosmetology, Drafting, John Metzger, Rt. I, Cheshire. Metzger to halt him from hearing futther the hearing of the case on its \liitltV
others circulated, was not true.
They challenged
125 Thi rd Ave , (lalllpollt. , Oh io, d'J 1
tVtrV wukdly ev..,l"ll . . cept
Electrical, Electronics, Machine Shop, said someone took a stereo tape player and proceedings on the disputed merits.
~near as could be determined, the fire
5tlurCiay . St cMCI C"u Po111ge hid al
an untamed land!
one tape from his car parked Thursday local option election held last( , The case was originally slated
-456)1
THE OAII.&lt;'I' SENTINEL
started on Rutland St. In Middleport Diversified Co-op Training, Diversified night at the Kyger Creek . High School November in the Rio Grande for hearingonFeb.l7butitwas
Ill COYrl Sl ., POmtror, 0 .. "'5J6t .
evtrr wukU'I' tvtnlnll txCtPI
WALT DISNEY
Friday morning when a resident was Co-op Training &amp; Health Services, Sheet parking lot.
s,tu rd•r · Enttrtd 11 MCIM1d c ltll mtll lf\CI
area.
later
postponed
until
April
5
on
.P RODUCTIOifl'
m111er
11
P omtroy , Oh lll, POll Ol!lct .
Metal
and
Welding,
Industrial
Mainburning brush. It spread rapidly. Pomeroy
TERMS OF SUIISCRIPTION
-· Arlow Bowden-, Smokey Run Rd., Judge Calhoun overruled the a con 1·mu ed mo t'10n 1·11edby the
8y CtH itr IIIIIV
Sund1 y , SOc par
firemen got their first call just after ll tenance).
M•IL
AollE S
l ht Gtil iPOIII
In
and West"
WHAT WILL be the cost of con- reported the theft of an electric welding set motions filed by the defendants plaintiffs.
a.m. to the Liberty Lane area. .
Yirglnll . Ollt yur S1l .00 ; I IX moMM 11 ;
and
a
vandalism
complaint
concerning
in
the
issue,
the
Gallia
County
The
court
further
ruled
that
lhree
month
l
tlltwntn
.
Of\t rur
Soon other departments had to be called struction and equipping the Gallia County
Ul : 1i• mlln t hl11 : tnru montnl 55 .00 .
damaged
windshield
wiper
and
chrome
Board
of
Elections.
the
action
taken
by
the
board
in
Th1 Oatly Sentinel. one rur 11oi.IICI :
11.U ; thru mon l hl U .SO.
to the scene to assist. There was just too Joint Vocational School?
The Uf\lltd Prtn l nltrnl tiOnll II u
siding was reported by June Vinson, an Attorneys for the election filing a motion to dismiss the CIUIIVtiY
enlillfd I Oli"lt UM lor pubilt lll lon
AThe
total
cost
for
construction
and
much fire ·going in too many directions.
Ol Ill 1\fWI
crtillltd IO 11"1 1•
employee
of
the
~obbins-Myers Co. The board last Dec. 8, filed a motion petition, was a waiver of any
ntwlptptr
tnO IT.O lht Iotti new1
Firemen were fighting the fire from the equipping the Gallia County Joint incident occurred while her car was
publ ilhtO 1\trt ln .
·
·sd·
t•
1
tim
1·
•tat•
to dismiss the complaint on JUri 1c wna
e IITII 10ns.
Rutland St. area, the Flood Road, Liberty Vocational School will be $2,840,000. Of this
~------------------~
Lane where flames leaped high near amount $1,420,000 or SO per cent will be parked in the R&amp;M parking lot on Bob several grounds, basically, that The election was held on six
Judge calhoun does not have issues in Raccoon Twp., with
paid directly by the State Department of McCormick Rd.
homes, and lower Monkey Run.
jurisdiction to hold {urther , resu~ts tabulated by the board
The unoccupied small frame home of Education, leaving $1,420,000 to be paid
Charles Pullins on Liberty Lane was locally. An additional $240,000 is expected mean we would have to start over again at hearings . Assistant County showmg the area was voted dry.
Tonight, Mon .• Tues . .
destroyed. On Liberty Lane some families by Appalachian funds after July 1, 1971. the bottom of the list on State funding. Prosecutor James Bennett . On Nov. 25, Leslie E. Carter,
April11·12-13
WHAT WILL it cost the taxpayer to Second, the State Department of contended that all election et al, filed a complaint alleging
left their homes as the fire continued its
ON A CLEAR
' . build, site, equip, and operate the Gallia Education would have the authority to contests must be heard within that there were certain
DAY YOU CAN
advance. However, \heir houses J~re
assign
the
present
school
districts
to
the
30
days
after
they
are
filed.
He
irregularities
in
the
presenSEE FOREVER
County Joint Vocational School?
saved by the firemen .
nearest
operating
vocational
school
later
filed
a
writ
of
prohibition
tali
on
of
several
questions
to
the
(Technicolorl
A
The
millage
for
constructing,
Pomeroy firemen moving behind the
Disney Short
Barbara
Streisand
·
district,
for
the
students'
vocational
with
the
Fourth
District
Court
voters
regarding
the
sale
of
obtaining
the
site
and
equipping
the
Gallia
Raub and Andrews homes in lower
Dad Can I Borrow
Yves Mont and
Monkey Run about mid-afternoon "back· County Joint Vocational School iB .9 of a training. This is being done throughout the of Appeals asking that Judge liquor ana beer in Raccoon
(G)
The Car Tonight
Calhoun be stopped from Twp.
fired" the blaze, burning down river to mill or nine cents on a hundred dollar State where districts are not voted in.
cartoons:
CARTOON
DO THE parent schools lose the state conducting further hearings but . Two liquor establishments
evaluation or 90 cents on a thousand
meet the fire coming upriver.
Where Are You
Matinee Showing
affected by the vote were the
Happy Days
Several firemen and volunteers were dollars evaluation.. For operating tlie foundation money for students going to the it was denied.
Sat. &amp; Sun.
The appellate court ruled that Redman Inn and Tycoon Lake
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.
Injured. Charte.s Bailey, E. Main St., a Gallia County Joint Vocational S.chool the Gallia County Joint Vocational School?
2 P.M. Only
A- No. The state foundation funding general jurisdiction in such Carryout.
volunteer, was treated at Veterans millage is 2.2mills or 22 cents on a hundred
Memorial Hospital after running a nail In dollar" evaluation or $2.20 on a thousand would be the same as it is now in the local election issue was granted to
his foot. David Jeffers was treated for a dollars evaluation. This makes the total schools. The parent schools would receive ):he Common Pleas Court by
burned foot and Ronnie Adams of the for both construction, site, equipping and 75 per cent funding lor all their students ·' section 3515.08- of the Ohio
Racine Department was treated at the · operating the Gallia County Joint going to the Gallia County Joint Vocational Revised Code.
Vocational School 3.1 millage or31 cents · School. This is the same funding they are Judge Calhoun in overrultng
hospital for injuries suffered in a fall.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Pomeroy firemen were on the scene on a hundred dollars evaluation or $3.10 on now receiving for their present vocational the motions said it may well be
until about 10:30 p.m. Friday to make sure a thousand dollars evaluation. An example units (such as Home Economics, that the plaintiffs in the action,
the blaze would not reoccur. Departments would be a home worth $10,1100 iB on the tax vocational agriculture, etc.) in their own Leslie Carter et al, were
responsible for having the case
from the various conununlties returned to books at 40 per cent or $4,1100, this would school district.
WILL THE Gallia County Joint heard between the 15th and 30th
their home stations from time to time cost th~ taxpayer $12.40 a year, or about 25
Vocational School be available for adult day after the complaint was
during the evening hours as it became cents a week for this schooL
filed; however, the defendants
WOULD THE influx of new industry programs?
apparent that the blaze was under control.
A - Yes. There would he adult (election board) may not delay
Pomeroy police made spot checks about reduce this present 3.1 millage?
A - Definitely yes. Whenever a education programs in the evenings. The the case by the filing of motions
the fire area overnight for any reoc-·
sudden increase in taxes is added to the courses offered would be based upon the
currences.
valuation and the monies from these taxes interest of the adults . .Adult training and
AT CAMP LEJEUNE
are more than is needed to meet voted re-lraining is a very important role of the
vocational
school.
GALLIPOLIS
.,- Marine Pic.
1
obligation then the county auditor, by law,
WHERE WILL the school be ·located? Roger W. Thompson, son of
GALLIPOLIS - County sanitarian
must reduce the millage, accordingly.
Frank Petrie appealed Friday to all dog
When the proposed power plant at - A _ Several areas have been Mrs. Winifred L. Thompson of
owners to have their dogs vaccinated
Cheshire is added to the tax duplicate of discussed by the Gallia county Joint 1701 Chestnut St., iB serving at
agalost rabies.
Gallia County it would more than cut in Vocational School Bi&gt;ard. No decision has the Marine Corps Base, Carny
. .,
,
Last spring, Petrie conducted
half the cost of building, equipping, and been made or will be made without further Lejeune, N. C.
cUnlcs throughout the county for this
openiting the Gallia County Joint study by the board Md the State Departpurpose, but, the response was
ment of Education.
Vocational SchooL
somewhat disappointing. Dogs may be
Prepared and approved by the Gallia
WHAT HAPPENS if the bond issue
vaccinated at the office of Dr. Dan
County
Vocational Board of Education,
and operating levies fail?
Nolter or Dr. Philip Edmlnston,
A - First, we would lose the number Marljn G. Kerns, Harold E. Wiseman,
veterjnarlans.
one priority for Stale and Appalachian Granville Burnette, C. A. Evans, MerreD
Funds, which we now have. This would Bunce.
TONIGHT ONLY •

r-------------------·

Fire Beaten

Publis~tG

GIIII~Olll. 0~10,
Publll~l"d

l~d

Wtek .

~U8SCAIPTION
lrltlu~t
0~10
1~ . iO ;

1 1~

mont~l

OII~IT(I\11

GALLIPOLIS
Team
capta!ns for the 1971 city and
Gallipolis Twp., canvassing for
the annual Cancer Crusade
were announced Saturday by
Mrs. David Allen, chairman.
The event is being conducted
by members of the Gallipolis
Junior Women's Club.
Officials will meet .on Aprill9
to complete canvassing plans.
Here are the team captains:
Mrs. Mike Neal, Lower Rive•
Rd.; Mrs . Tom Milstead,
.. Garfield Ave.; Mrs. Jack Carty,
Portsmouth Rd.; Mrs. Robert
o ,W. Saunders, Chillicothe Rd.;
Mrs . Farrell Houck, Old
Chillicothe Rd:
Mrs. Charles Reimund, Orchard Hill area; Mrs. Hennan
Koby, Rt. 35, city limits IQ

POMEROY - Ten defendants were fined and six forfeited bQnds in Meigs County
CourfFriday.
Fined by Judge Frank W.
Porter were Leonard C. Lyons,
Pomeroy, Rt. 2, $5 and costs,
defective exhaust; Charles R.
" Lyons, Mason, $10 and costs,
.,, stop sign violation; Henry P.
Price, Long Bottom, Rt. I, $15
and costs, speeding; William J.
Harvey, Columbus, $10 and
costs, speeding; Roger B. Hill,
Racine, Rt. I, $10 and costs,
passing at intersection; Melvin
Lee Cunillngham, Pomeroy, Rt.
3, $5 and costs, no brakes;
Don8!d E. Green, Racine, Rt. 2,
$10and costs, failure to transfer
license; Kermit Gilkey, Middleport, $73, and costs, $50
suspended, overload; Bertram
B. Grueser, Minersville, $150
and costs, three days confinement, license suspended for
six months, driving while Intoxicated; Romanceles Tunstalle, Lakin, costs only, 60 days
.conf'mement, 53 days suspended, license suspended for one

. Appeal Denied
'

GALLIPOUS - The Ohio
Supreme Court has dismissed
an appeal by Raymond Farra,
Gallipolis, convicted in 1954 by a
Gallla County Petit Jury on auto
theft charges involving a 1954
DeSoto owned by the late Carl
c. Myers.
Farra's
.appeal
was
• disallowed on the basis that no
substantial constitutional
question was involved in his
conviction. He had previously
appealed to the Gallla County
Pleas Court and Fourth District
Court . of Appeals. Farra had
been sentenced to a 1-20 year
tenn in the Ohio State Reformatory.

Tonight, April l1
DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM
"Explosions Of Laughter!"
~r-lllo•u•'

'IWY Marflll '

•

•

.:. Wilbur French

AWOftLD' WIDI PtCTUIQ PltiiiNTITION

MINT\t)IJRNfi .

MY\\IUSJOO I!Al'IEIIIElNEIJ. . ,.,

I'WI ·----"111 ...111~1
·• ill. . .

'IIIWIIIIIIL

•• tsll
lz ,,. rl'l I L'l"
lllfl .... ., rlulfllu II

~

·Groom :AI Freeman ~r. ·John Milford
A IICOt!l'fl! WRII If N~ OlAf tllO BY JAMES f.oot.UER

POMEROY - Twirlers from
Kentucky, Pennsylvania, West
Virginia and Ohio took part in a
National Baton Twirling
Association contest held in
Racine last Sunday under the
direction of Miss Gloria Buck.
High point trophy of the

speeding.

Point
Group

-

..

with the number of trophies

contest, sponsored by the
Southern Athletic Boosters,
went to Rona Jo Livingston of
Pittsburgh, Pa., who scored 39
points. The traveling trophy
went to a girl who had traveled
247 miles, one way, to take part.
Area winners only are listed

•
S
Wm

.
.
POMEROY - The Battle of
the Bands Thursday of
Pomeroy Junior High School,
sponsored by Meigs Chapter of
Vocational Industrial Clubs of
America (VICA) was a "huge
success", according to M~ry
Powell, cosmotology instructor
at Meigs High School.
Six bands participated with
over 400 persons attending.
Taking first place was the
Blue Rose Cathedral of Pt.
Pleasant. Second place went to
Tiny and Tim, Pt. Pleasant, and
third to the 15th Street Band,
also of Pt. Pleasant. The first ·
place GOCC group received $100
and the second and third place
winners were awarded trophies.
Other bands participating
were Sound Limit, Pt.
Pleasant; The Boxx Fox, Middleport, and C. 0. D., Athens.
Judges were Janet Korn,
WJEH, Jack Kane, WMPO, and
Joseph White, Minersville. The
VICA Club netted $300 from the
event.

Elmer Brown

POMEROY- Four persons operation.
were hospitalized and four At !2 :40a.m . on SR 7, northof
vehicles were demolished in Shenang Springs, Howard
three separate accidents Friday
according to the Meigs County
Sheriff's department.
Friday at 8 p.m. on SR 7, near
Sumner Road, Richard E. Gill,
31, Whipple, Ohio, was traveling GALLIPOLIS _ Sherman
north when his car went off the MeGUlre,
· 51 , Rt. 2, .Northup,
highway on the right after was cited to Municipal Court on
passing two other vehicles a,f!l.arge ~f failure \0 ,~lpttwit!Jin
going in the same directio~. cut the assured distance following a
bac.k to left, spun around and traffic accident Friday afwent through a guard rail and ternoon on Pine St. in front of
over a steep embankment.
John Gee ChapeL ·
The Pomeroy E-R unit was McGuire's car struck the rear
summoned but was unable to of an auto driven by Richard w.
answer the call due to a brush Price, 17, Gallipolis. There was
fire. The Middleport E-R squad moderate damage to the Price
wentto the scene, but the driver car.
refused treatment. He was A second mishap was at 3:50
placed in M~igs County jail and p.m. on Frist Ave. and Grape
later admitted to Veterans . St. where vehicles driven by
Memorial
Hospital
for Sharon A. Beer, 25, Hudson,
lacer~tions o~ his arm and the . Ind., and Ebner E. Gothard, 16,
lefts1de of his face .
Rt. I, Gallipolis, collided.
Gill was arrested for reckless Again, there was moderate
damage to both vehicles.

Citation Js
Given Driver

EX.Teachers Skin Testing
.

Plan to DineHours are Set

Pomeroy : Junior Gio-ettes,
two; Wee Glo-ettes one ·
Tammy Eichinger, 8;' Kath;
Werry, 6; Jennifer Chapman, 6;
Brenda Taylor, 5; Peggy
O'Brien, 2; Jody G1·ueser, 4;
Linda Eason, Toni Pope, two
each, and Leta Floyd, Jennifer
Gobfe and Mal'y Hawley, 1
each.

Leroy Barber, 21, Reedsville,
Rt. I, was moving south at an
apparent high rate of speed. He
lost control, skidded and struck
broadside into the front of a car
driven by William Reed of
Chester, traveling north.
The Middleport and Pomeroy
E·R units and a Ewing ambulance were dispatched to the

. I

Sunny and warmer Sunday
and Monday. High Sunda y in
the 60s. LowSunday night in the
40s and low 50s. High Monday in
the upper 60s and 70s.

scene.

Reed sustai ned numerous
lacerations to his head·and face
and a fractured leg . Mrs. Reed
suffered a broken hip and
lacerations to her head and
face. Barber, thrown from his
car into a creek, suffered internal injuries and possible
back and neck injuries. All the
injured were taken to Veterans
Memorial HospitaL
Barber will be charged with
reckless operation it was

On this most holy day of days,
To God your hearts and voices raise,
In laud and jubilee and praise.

Bailey, 26, Pomeroy, was

traveling south on SR 7, just
south of the Forest Run Road ·
when he lost control of his car in'
a curve, skidded and smashed
through a guardrail and went
over an embankment.
Bailey was arrested on
charges of driving while intoxicated. He was not injured.
Kyle J. Barnett, 29, Syracuse,
was charged with petty larceny
in connection with the theft of a
battery from the Barber car
while it was being hooked to a
wrecker.

Alleluia!
15th Century Hymn

OHIO ALLEY BANK
Gi'.,aliS '' ·'

OPEN -EVERY
MONDAY •tlt9

Mobile Home

AFTER
EASTER
ClEARANCE

AI MIIWI'IP' ~

Program Set

"CHARGE IT"
'

I•

'

SIZES
32.38

By VA Office

MONDA·Y
SAVE ON:

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Retired Teachers
Association will meet for a
luncheon at the Trinity Church
in Pomeroy at 12 :30 p.m.
Saturday.
Brian Simpson, formerly of
Meigs County and a graduate of
Racine High School, will speak
and show movies on fish,
animals and plant life stressing
their importance to Ohio's
ecology. He Is associated with
the Ohio Depariment of Conservation and Wildlife and
resides in Baltimore, Ohio with
his wife and children.
Bills pending in the Ohio
Legislature relative to pensions • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
and other matters will be ~
discussed. Reservations at $2.25
are to be made with Mrs. Anna
HiUdore, Syracuse. All retired
teachers are invited to a\tend.

READY TO WEAR
HOUSEWARES TOYS
OF
PERMANENT PRESS, POLYESTER/COTTON

MISSES' SPRING BLOUSES
No iron polyuhr cotton. Body ,hirts,

9~~cho, yoke front or Ap•chi.ascot 1fylu

Sol1d colors and prints. Short sleeves. Get
several now!

New Eviryday low ••••

PHOTO
-z . '
PROCESSING

'PRICES
0.. ahtiOIII. Talle •n ....,.
,actvr• or two. Wttt. .., .,..,.
cl•r low prlcet on filM· •n•

,.......,. rov cen....,• ..,.

......,,

plcturo·talr.lnt fvn for le11

SQUARE PRINU FROM ROILS

Color Prints
Black White
Prints

tu·

J
.

.

FOR BIG DISCOUNT
SAVINGS I'
~
'
.
137 Ptne Street
Gallipolis, Ohio

'

.

.

I~!

GET YOUR
EASTER
. PHOTOS
PROCESSED

AT

MURPHYS
YOU SA,VE

Ko~acolor

METZGER ASSIGNED
CHESHlRE - Army Private
First Class Richard A. Metzger,
20, son of Mr.1and t&gt;'lrs. John C.
Metzger, Route I, was recenUy
assigned to the U. S. Army
.
Strategic Communications
Command fac11ity near Da . · .
Nang, Vietnam. He is a 1968
gradliate of Kyger Creek High
··
. .
SchooL

Weather

Easter Sunday

reported.
At 1:10 a.m ., Charles W.

CLEVELAND
The
POMEROY - Free skin Veterans Administration has
testing for aU Meigs County announced standards for its
residents who will need a food • mObile . home program which
handlers' card for any reason guarantees lip to 30 per cent of
during the next year will be . loans - up to a maximum of
done from 2 to 6 .p.m. Monday $10,000 for mobile homes, or up
and Tuesday at the offices of the to $17,500 if the loan Is also for a
Meigs County Health Depart- ful)y developed lot. Mobile
ment, East Main St.
homes purchased under the
The tests will be read on VA's program must be at least
Wednesday and Thursday. A 40 feet lbng and 10 feet wide,
mobile Hay unit will be in with a minimum of 400 square .
Pomeroy on Tuesday, Wed: feet.
·
neaday and Thursday for the Further information may be
benefit of positive reactors to secured from the VA Regional
the skin testing program. No Office, Federal Office Building, .
one is to be x-£ayed, however, 1240 East Ninth Street,
until he is a positive reactor. Cleveland, Ohio, 44199.

• Pleasaat Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Mrs. Hoyt
Jividen, Point Pleasant; Monte
Davis, Columbus; Mrs. Robert
Newman, Rutland, and Nancy
See, Point Pleasant.
DISCHARGES : Kenneth
Pridemore, Nellie Zahrndt,
Clarence Schurman, Mrs. John
Kauff, Eimer Fife, Mrs .
Wesley Adams, Mrs. Doily
Waugh, Mrs. Lewis Peters and
son; Danny l!armon, Mrs.
Johnny Donahue, Mrs. Inez
Burdette.

O'BRIEN APPOINTED
GALLIPOLIS- Chief Justice
C. William O'Neil, Ohio
Supreme Court, has appointed
Judge F. H·. O'Brien of Meigs
County as acting Probate and
Juvenile Court Judge for Gallia
County during the months of
April and May. Judge O'Brien
will hold his first court session
on Tuesday . He replaces Judge
Roy Gilliland of Jackson
County .

Point Plea sant: Mason
County Twirling Corps , I;
Jacque Gabl'istch, 9; Martha
Johnson, 2; LaTrenda Lf,ach,
Amy Roush, Alicia Roush, Lisa
Siders, 1 each.
Gallipolis: Patty Patrick, 2;
Sonja Sisson, 2; Melissa McDade, 3; Julia Lane, 2; Lisa
Atkins, L
Minersville : Debbie Jeffers,
7.
Mason City : Carla Hood, 2.

Four Hurt in Highway Carnage

: : FOSTORIA- Wilbur French,
PT. PLEASANT . - Elmer
::· Fostoria, died unexpectedly at Brown, · 64, of Huntington,
;:. his home Thursday morning. formerly of Point Pleasant and
: · Mr~ French was bQrn in ·an employe of the Railroad lor
"" Fostoria, son of Mr. and Mrs. 30 years, died ·at 8 a.m.
:. James French, former Gallia Saturday in the Cabell:: County residents.
Huntington Hospital.
:: Surviving besides the parents He is survived by his widow,
:;: are his wif~. two brothers, and Geraldine Morrow Brown; one
:; one sister.
son, Jack Brown, Huntington ;
:: Funeral services were held three daughters, Dorothy,
:; Satur&lt;i~Y afternoon in Fostoria. Connie and Sharon Kay, all
Mrs. E. E. Ecker, Gallipolis, Huntington ; .and three sisters,
:: is an aunt.
Mrs. Frank (Oma) Brown, Mrs.
:.
Charles (Bessie) wathsley, and
;:;
Mrs. Ada Greenlee, all Point
""'
BIG HIT COMING
Pleasant.
... ATHENS - Oneoftheblggest Funeral arrangements were
::: hits in the American musical · Incomplete.
·
:: theater t "You're a Good Man,
:· Charlie Brown," comes to' the
:; stage of Ohio University's
BOND FORFEITED
ft
Memorial Auditorium on
:: Wednesday, Aprlll4, al8 p.m., SYRACUSE '- One bond was
: one of the university's comedy forfeited Thursday in Syracuse
Mayor Herman London's Court
:::' drama series.
and one defendant . was fined
Friday in the same court.
.•
GRIM PROSPECT
Daniel Jeffers, 24, Pomeroy,
"" WASHINGTON (UP!)
forfeited a $25 bond posted on ·
:: Chemical. &amp; Engineering News, unsafe operation of · a motor
the we~kly newsmagazine of the vehicle. Jimmy W. Johnson; IB,
Americiln Chemical Society, Racine, was fined· $5 and costs
· said Saturday the worst job_ on charges of speeding, Both
market In 25 years is the grim were cited into court by Marprospect for 1971 graduates in shall Milton V.arian.
chemistry and chemical
engineering.
HIP. FRACTURED
GALUPOUS - Mrs. Curt
VISITS U.S.
Coffey,
53, Rt. 3, Jackson,
BELGRADE (UP!) - Yugoslave Finance Minister Janko fractured her right hip in an
Smote . left Saturday for · a acciden.t Friday at her home.
seven-day visit to the United She sustained the lnjury when
States to diScuss po~~SiblliUes she fell from a truck,. She was
for expandi~g YugOBiav exports admitted to the Holzer ·Medical
nter at 10:!5 P,.m.
'
to the Uni.led States.
•
~

:"'-'- lWY-TimAI
MATIWIWIIITBI

Twirlers In Meigs

control or his car on the wet
pavement near the approach to
a small bridge, ran off ihe left
side of the bridge and over an
embankment. Darnell's car was
demolished.

THE FIVE-COUNTY STRUTTING champions of the
NBTA twirling contest held in Racine Sunday are, from the
left, Jacque Gabristch, Jennifer Chapman, Patty Patrick
and Tammy Eichinger.

each won:

;.: !I Area Deaths !

.-.

Ill 111AW11

year and placed on one years
probation, driving while intoxicated.
Forfeiting bQnds were Gerald
Arnold, Minersville, $25 posted,
disturbing the peace; Julian
Hoffman, Pomeroy, Rt. 3,
$257.50, driving while intoxicated; Donna Fry, Rutland,
RD, $25, disturbing the peace;
Vernon Hysell, Pomeroy, RD
$25, Intoxication; Martin L.
Moore; · Belpre, $50, no
operators ~cense, $250, driving
while intoxicated; Clarence
Walker, Jr., Cincinnati, $27.50,

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

...

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.
==.....

'

;rrB,r High Court

The perils or a

GALLIPOLIS Three County . Stewart later was
persons apprehended early robbed, knocked unconscious,
Thursday mormng at a road- tied and thrown in a ditch on
block near Hanover, ~· Va ., Thompson Rd., in . northeast
sought m connection w1th the Gallia County .·The suspects had
alleged armed robbery of a been hitchhiking on Rt. 23, south
Columbus, Ohw man Wed- of Columbus when Stewart
nesday aft~rnoon In G~llia offered them a ride. Taken in
Co~nty wa1ved extradition addition to his car and wallet
Fr1day. .
.
.~
containing an undetermined
Booked m· the .county Jail for amount of cash and credit cards
app~arances Monday in were Stewart's personal
Mumc1pal Court ?n auto theft belongings valued at $1,1100.
charges were Dav1d Shanks, 30, . West Virginia State Troopers
.his Wife, Bun~y Shanks, 20, and joined in an intensive · search
f&gt;av1d . Hatf1el.d, 19, all of after an armed robbery . at a
Columbus. Hatfield for~erly of drive-in restaurant in Mingo
Delbarton, W. Va., 1s also County.
wanted· for being AWOL from
the U. S. Army.
BOARD TO MEET
They were returned late RACINE "- The Southern
Friday night from Pineville, W. Local School Board will meet
Va . by deputy sheriffs Ken Tuesday at 8 .P.m. instead of
Deckard and Lew Plank and Thursday as .was previously
Prosecutors I Hamlin C. King announced.
and Jim Bennett.
The trio is charged in the theft .. MEETING POSTPONED .
of a 1970 Ford Galaxie taken at , POMEROY - World War 1
gunpoint Wendesay afternoon . Veterans meeting to be held In
from Rober! Stewart, 4,3, April has been postponed until
lllacklick, Ohio, Fran~lin · the second Sunday in May.

THESE ARE THE TWIRLING CHAMPS from the five
county area of Meigs, Athens, Mason, Gallia and Vinton
Counties, selected at the Racine NBTA contest, from the left,
Debbie Jeffers, 15 to 20 years age group; Jennifer Chapman,
11 to 14 group; Carla Hood, 7 to 10 group, and Tammy
Eichinger, 0-6 years.

'

One Week April 15th thru 21st

3 Suspects ·Waive Extradition

Mabelene Drive; Mrs. J9hn
Smith, Rt. 35 Maelene Drive to
Green Twp.; Mrs. Carl Morrow,
Kanauga; Mrs. James Whit.
tington, East Gallipolls; Mrs.
Dick MacKenzie, Vine St.; Mrs.
T. A. Thomas, 100 blocks; Mrs.
Aldeth Robinson, 200 blocks . .
Mrs. Roger l!ood, 300 blocks;
Mrs . Gene Wetherholt, .400
blocks; Mrs. Harry Hamilton,
500 blocks; Mrs. Wayne Ams· ·
bary, 600 blocks; Miss Brenda
Lee, 700 blocks; Mrs. Geneva
Howell, BOO blocks ; Mrs.
Herman Candee, 900 blocks;
Mrs. Raph R. Martin, 1000
blocks.
Mrs. Robert DaytOn, Bastiani
Drive and Kineon and Mrs;
William Smeltzer, Vinton, Neal
and vinton Court.

:'Ten Draw Fines

Appearing At The Colony Theater

race-to-race wnh

.GALUPOUS - Douglas E.
HaUhiU, 20, Rt. I, Cheshire, was
listed in good condition
Saturday where he was admilled at 3:50 a.m. following a
single car accident on Gravel
Hill Rd., two tenths of a mile
north of Rt. 7.
According to the state highway palrol, Halfhill, traveling
south, loot control of his auto,
ran off the roadway and struck
two power poles. Halfhill
sustained a fractured jaw and
multiple lacerations. The case
is stili under investigation. His
car was demolished.
A second mishap occurred at
the same loca lion just second~
later when one of the power
poles cut off by the iinpact of
HaUhill 's car fell on an auto
- owned by Jerry Ramsey, 22,
Cheshire.
Paul Darnell, 17, Pomeroy,
suffered minor . injuries in an
accident at 6;35 p.m. Friday on
Rt. 7. Officers said Darnell lost

'·

MEIGS THEATR[

•

Driver Injured

EA.

ON All
PHOTO NEEDS .
AT

�I .

.

.;

\

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'

_, S~ The SUnday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, April 11, 1971

AAuw·and

· 4- The Swulav Tim&lt;'ll-

.Public
Invited
to
Coming
View
Ecology
Parade
Events ·

Faculty Women
Have Combined Meeting

Just Between
Us

GALLIPOLIS
The China, and, therefore, men have · many years. Mrs. Sattler also MONDAy
Gallipolis and Jackson Chap- a much better. chance for a feels . that the German ?nd Centenary Grange will meet at
ters of AAUW met with the Rio university education, par- Austrian emphasis on physical 7·30 pin
By Pat Houck
Grande College Faculty. Women · ticularly in the professions. She education is beneficial . All . TUESDAy
in the college Dining Hall for a also pointed out that the com- three l~dies .spiced their RIVERSIDE Study Club meets
I always feel bad when I drive right on past a person seeking a dinner meeting, Monday. Mrs. petition for study in the presentatiOns With humor and with Mrs. Ben Eaches at 1 p.m.
ride. It makes me feel Uke I'm not helping my brother. But when I Clare GettJes, president of the universities is tremendous and charm, and they "':ere warmly ·PEMBROKE CLUB will meet
by thell' listeners. wi·th Mrs· Ald th R
. b'
read o( thlngs like the recent robbery of Robert Stewarl by the Faculty Women, welcomed the · the cost is high. Only· , the applauded
ll · th
th
.
e
o mson,
three people he gave a ride to, I know I'll just have to keep on clubs, along with Rio Grande weallhy can afford an Fo owmg e program, e First Ave
Jackson and Gallipolis Chap· ANNUAL Love Gift Box
going In spite of the way I feel about it. It seems a shame, doesn't senior women, who were guests. education.
Mrs. Arthur Espenscheid said Mrs. Olive Bernard, wife of ters of AAUW held meetings. opening at Calvary Baptist
it?
.
faculty member John Bernard, Mrs. James Orr, pl'l'sldent of Church by the ladies auxiliary,
It'sgetllng more and more difficult to be a ','friend to man." grace before the dinner.
Following a delicious meal is from Ireland. She was the Gallipolis Chap:er, in- 7:30p.m.
CREEK
Band
. FOR AN ALL&lt;lUT GOOD TIME for a lot of people, the GSI with swiss steak as a main educated in a private school. troduced the following guests KYGER
course, Mrs. Gettles introduced She noted that Irish is taught and new members: Meli~da Boosters 7:30 p.m. at the high
TalentShowcoul~'tbe beat. The residents really enjoyed it and I
Mrs. Robert Evans of Colum- along with English, and ttuit Thompson, a guest, and W1lhe school cafeteria. Election of
have to say, so did I!
bus, Branch Consultant for the even a doctor must pass an Edwards, Jean. Kuhn, and officers and plans for band
·
.
Gallipolis Chapter of AAUW. examination in Irish. Mrs. Marsha Stewart, new members. concert Will be made.
· HOW ANYONE CAN DRIVE day after day across tbe roads . Mrs John Wickline gave a brief Bernard attended school six Ruth Tapp gave the treasurer's GRACE UNITED ]&gt;lethodist
between the hills of Gallia County and not feel a part of them, is expl~nation of "AAUW- What days a week, but Saturday was report. Aileen Rutz of the Church Cir~le 5at the church at
· more than I can underswnd.
is It" for the benefit of the given to cooking, sewing, nommat1ng
comm1ttee 1 p.m.; Circle 6 with Mrs.
senior women, who will be music, and visits to concerts pr~sented the following_ list of Donald Galloway, 1 p.m.
ON MY WAY TO AND FROM Rio Grande College (on ii88) eligible to join , AAUW upon and museums .
officers, who were unammously WEDNESDAY
I've seen the snow melt and the farmers begin their plowing. I've graduation.
Mrs. Gaby Sattler, educated confirmed: Jane Yokum, GRACE UNITED Methodist
seen the folks at ooe house put blue Outdoor carpeting on thiir
Mrs. Herman Koby, program in Germany, explained her president; Sara Porter, Church Circle 1 with Mrs. John
. porch. I've seen the two little farm ponds grow clearer day.by chairman, introduced the country's educational system of recording secretary, and Cathy Milhoan 501 Oak Drive· Circle
day.l've seen the SkY purple, pink, gray, red and orange. Now, speakers for the evening, who different "tracks" (vocational, Bennett, corresponding 2 with Mrs. Charles La;uer, 12
I'm seeing the green creeping aqoss·everything, right up to the presented a program on "The business, and university secrewry. Mrs. Deanna Cook Edgemont Drive; Circle 3 with
Education of Women in Foreign education) and their use of presented plans for the Coke Mrs. William J. Brown, 451
edge of the road.
Lands." Mrs. Diana Cheng of examinations. She sll!ted that party for eighth grade girls on Hedgewood Drive, 7:30 p.m.;
SOME PEOPLE NEVER MISS a chance to encourage their Point Pleasant was born in she was happy to see the United May 8 at Rio Grande College. Circle 4 with Mrs. Perry Bailes,
fellow man or give a k~ word. Bee Woods, Helen Roush and Peking, China, and educated in States begin to emphasize The purpose of this annual 443 Hedgewood, 7:30 p.m.
Sadie Notter are three people like that. There are many more Hong Kong. She emphasized vocational trainihg, which has outing is to encourage girls LADIES GOLD Luncheon on
that the male is still dominant in been offered in Germany for entering high school to consider the patio at the club. In case of
(thank God) but these are three I heard about this week.
a college prep course and en- bad weather it will be at the
lerlng college.
home. of Mrs John Evans 11
I WISH I HAD ANICKEL for every hour of rehearsal that has
The next AAUW meeting will a.m. Golf t; follow. Call' for
gone into the making of "Music Man." Each of the musicals put
be at the Episcopal Church on reservations no later than
on by the GAHS choir has been an outstanding highlight for me. If
May
3. Several guest speakers Tuesday.
you have missed any one of them, you've really missed a treat.
from industries in the area will
Tickets are available from any choir member, so be sure to
be present to discuss pollution. WEDNESDAY
GALLIA CO.
Extension
get yours.
The public is invited to hear the
Homemakers
meeting,
10 a.m.
viewpoints of the industrialists
RIO GRANDE .,.. The Rio her flower plaques.
IT WAS MY PLEASURE to show Glenna Shuler, our Grande College Cafeteria was
There were no new members 1 on this very important problem. Grace United Methodist
Church. Free chair caning and
correspondent from Storys Run, through the plant. We here at the the setting for the Newcomers, so the newest newcomer
splitting
workshop by Mrs. Pat
office are grateful for the work our correspondents do and would Do Your Own Thing, luncheon present was-given to Mrs. John
Lochary. Potluck lunch at noon.
Uke to have them come in any time. There is something extra Thursday afternoon . The L. Evans for being ll member
Everyone welcome.
special about getting to meet someone in the flesh that you've twenty-two members attending the longest. Mrs. Eva [Is, in turn,
THURSDAY
known only by letter or phone.
brought samples of their hob- gave the present to Mrs : Miles
WOMEN'S Fellowship at First
bies. A wide variety of in· Epling for all she has conBaptist Church, Theme, Living
·
MY POISON NY is getting better at last. I had to wear my terestlng Items·were displayed. tributed to the Newcomers Club
the Abundant Life in This
pants suit several days !sst we·ek because It looked so ugly on my
The members a !tending voted over the years.
World. Rio Grande students will
right leg. You wouldn't believe what I put on lt. Tea! Helped too. on the three items they thought
be guests.
Mrs. Herman was chairman
I didn't think I would get poisoned when the Ivy had no leaves were best. Prizes were awarded
,
'
mit, but I was fooled. So if you are as succeptlble as I am, watch to Mrs. Frank Porter for her for the luncheon.
It was announced that the GALLIPOLIS Gailia
hand-made poncho, Mrs.
out for lt.
next
meeting
will
be
a
trip
to
County
Extension
Homemakers
Krishna Kool for her embroidered jacket, and Mrs . Scioto Downs for members and w1ll meet Wednesday at 10 a.m.
at the Grace United Methodist
Russell Morgan, Columbus, for their husbands May 27.
'
Church. Mrs. Pat Lochary will
conduct a Chair Caning and
Splitting Workshop at the
morning
and
afternoon
GALLIPOLIS - Wedding
sessions. Bring ·an article to be plans have been completed for
'
caned or split or come and learn li)e l)larriage of Linda Work·
to do' this fascinating craft.
GALLIPOLIS - The Cora presented to Mrs. Grady Waugh
man, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Officers for the 1971-72 term Dale Workman of Mill Creek
Women's Society of Christian with the group singing, "Happy
will be installed at this meeting Rd., Gllllipolis, to Richard
Workers met Thursday at the Birthday" to her.
crack
to
let
in
a
little
air.
To
which will be the last Extension
GALLIPOLIS - Ye Olde
home of Mrs. John R. Morgan. Mrs. Melvin Gilbert and Mrs.
Scott, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
A delicious covered dish dinner Sylvia Gllllam were in charge of Village Garden Club met ·with avoid cooking the plants, never Homemakers meeting until Scott, of 1129 Second Avenue.
was served at noon to 17 the program. Opening devotions Mrs. Charles Allman Thursday place a glass garden in a sunny September. Potluck lunch will
The bride's attendants will be
be served at noon. This and ail maid of honor, Sharon Cooper,.
members and the following were by Mrs. Gilliam from afternoon with Mrs. Marion window.
Williams as co-hostess. Each Mrs. Bill Davis, president, meetings are free and open to
guests: Miss Iris Hiessenbuttel, the Upper Room.
The two bridesmaids will be
Mrs. Jane Ann Slagle, Mrs. Opening song was, Showers of member took an attractive welcomed Mrs. Herman Lynch all interested persons.
Linda Shupe and Lynn Rice.
Micky Morgan and Rodney, Blessing. Everyone responded glass container and materials as a guest, after which the
The groom's best man will be
Gretchen and Mike Wood, with their special feelings on · for a workshop to make a members gave the club prayer
Dan Vance. Jeff Fulkerson and
.
Cynthia and Ricky Niday.
Easter. Readings were, Our terrarium. Placed in the con- and the pledge of allegiance to
Jim Steinbeck will serve as the
Mrs. Lawrence Akers Lord is There, by Ina Webster; winer was an inch of pea-size the flag. Mrs. Davis read an
ushers.
presided over the business Sunday Morning Excuses, by gravel and a layer of charcoal invtwtion from Mrs. John H.
The wedding will be April 17
draining,
a light Reese, Regional Director for
meeting. A motion was made Etlll Altzier; Today's FaCI!s on for
at The First Church of the
and carried to sell packages of the Cross, by Florence Gilbert; and porous soil mix with the Ohio Associa lion of Garden
GALLIPOLIS - The Catholic Nazarene . The double-ring
dish cloths.
The Bretrayal, by Daisy Evans; equal _parts peat, perlite and Clubs, to attend the Spring
Woman's Club of St. Louis ceremony will be performed by
Mrs . Akers appointed Mrs. Road Maps, by Anna Mae soil. The mix was dampened Regional meeting to be held
Church will have a potluck the Rev. Ronald Justice, and
Swnley Wood and Mrs. Ina Morgan, and In His Steps, by before spreading over the Saturday, April 24, at Rutland.
drainage. Small plants that Prepaid luncheon reservations supper on Tuesday evening,
Webster chairmen of Spiritual Anise Wood.
April 13, at 7 p.m. in the church Church.
Life Committee which will · Florence Gilbert explained would not soon outgrow the of $1.50 are to be sent lo t Mrs.
basement. Husbands are in- Mrs. John Carty has charge of
conduct Bible study for future her worship center carrying out container were used . Each Joe Bolin, Rutland, by April 19.
vited.
Tuesday
evening ' s
meetings. Next month we will the Showers of Blessing theme, plant was watered just enough An invitation was read from
Afterward Monsignor John arrangements. No reservations
study the first four chapters of which she read about. Song to settle it Into place. Plants the French City Garden Club to
Yonk
of the Ironton Deahery are necessary but please bring
Luke and ask each other "Christ Arose" was sung by used were dwarf palm, English enter the Spring Flower Show
will speak on the subject of, Wbie service and a covered
questions. We are divided into group. Something to Ponder, ivy, fern, boxwood, dracema. April 17 and 18 at Washington
Liturgical Changes in · the dish.
two teams of six each.
was read by Mary Jane Evans. . After plants are in place, you School Cafeteria. Mrs. Williams
Mrs.
Akers
reminded The meeting closed with can cover the soil with chips for gave the treasurer's report and
a more pleasing appearance members to save bottle caps. prayer.
read an appropriate poem, Are
The business meeting closed
A spring flower exchange a~d add a figurine for interest. You Planning Your Garden.
Aglass dish just large enough to Refreshments of salad, cup
by the group praying the WSCW followed.
prayer.
Next meeting will be with cover the opening, is used to cakes, coffee and tea were
maintain uniform moisture. If enjoyed by all . The May
A birthday cake was Mrs. Lawrence Akers.
conwiner clouds with moisture, meeting will be a sack lunch on
remove lid until moisture Park Front at I p.m. followed
Keep · lid open a by a wildflower tour.
disappears.
r---------~-----------------1

'Do Your Own Thing'
Newcomers Theme

Ch aIr"
. Can m
,g

Workshop Set

By Homemakers

Cora WSCS Meets
With Mrs. Morgan

Terrariums Made by
Ye Old~ Village Club

Po·tluck Dl'nner

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

MONDAY,
APRIL

I

I

~

.

French

a

Send your teenage questions to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care
of Helen Help Us! this newspaper.
HOAXES MAINLY UNPRINTABLE
Dear Helen :
Have you had any good hoaxes lately? Please print. -KARL
Dear Karl:
The Great New Jersey Hoaxer gave up about a year ago and
since then I haven't received many outstanding conllibutions,
printable ones, that is.
How's lbla?
Dear Helen:
I have a terrible problem. When I was two, my brother
heaved me over the banister and damaged my nose forever. It is
ao crooked that If I '1olltiwed my nose" they'd bust me for being
stone.
·
A terrible 'thing hapjlened last ~eek. I was shopping and my
nosegotcaughtin a department store elevator door. And I wasn't
even fac;lng that way!
·
.
I'm sorry my typing is so bad. My nose cuts Off the vision

the American Revolution met at
the home of Mrs. Ralph Burner
Monday afternoon. Mrs. L. H.
Nelson was a co-hostess.
Refreshments were served by
the hostesses prior to the
meeting. Mrs. Catherine
Hayward acted as chaplain and
'opened the meeting. ·
Following the business
meeting, Mrs. Howard I. Neal
gave the program, "Portraits of
Presidential Ladles," a paper
written by Betty Shutts, a DAR
member. She said Grace
Coolidge, one of the most
. popular of the first ladles, was
married to Calvin Coolidge;

The Almanac
By United PressiDtematlonal
Today is Sunday, Aprilu, the
JOist day of 1971. Today is
Easter. .
The moon Is between its full
" and la~t quarter.
phase
The morning stars are Venus,
Mars and Jupiter. ·
The evening sta~s are Mereu- '
ry and Saturn.
Those born on this day are
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs. und.er the sign Of Aries.
New York fashion designer
George F. Tabit~Hl~Mulberry
!rom my rlcht eye.
Driye announce the birth of Oleg Cassin! was born April 11,
And I get In very emliarriiSilng situations when I try to kiss ·
their third son, George Fisher 1913.
my boy friend good night, aa I'm constantly lreathing dm his ·Tabit, Jrr .
On thls day in history : .
beck, .
. '•
In . 1947 Jackie Pobinson
The baby wia born on March
· My cloctqt: won't operate as he aayalt would be destroying the . 'l1 at Holzer Ml!lliCJil Center, ~aine lhe '(irst Negro · in
·elchlh wonder Of the world:.Wbat do you suggest?-HOSENOSE First Ave. He weighed 8 pounds. major league baseball
.when he
'
Dear
played for the Brooklyn Oodgand 10 ounces.
"Watdl out flir postnasal drip . .:.. H.
·ersin
an .exhibition . game '
Maternal gtandrnqther is
Margaret Fish, Baltimore, !It'd. againSt the New York Yankees.

u-roae:

.

1&gt;

~~

Miss Brenda Campbell

See Our Complete
Selection Of
Exquisite New

APRIL WEDDING PLANNED The engagement and forthcoming
marriage of Miss Brenda Campbell to
Robert W. Hannah, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Alvin W. Hannah, 657 Joan Ave.,
Girard, Ohio, is being announced by her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John G. Campbell,1490Maplewood, N. E., Warren, 0.
The open church ceremony will be
solemnized on April 24 at II a.m. in St.
Rose Church, Girard.
The reception will follow at the
Mahoning Country Club, Girard, from I
to 5 p.m.
Miss Campbell graduated from
Harding High School. She is a student at
Warren College of Business and is
presently employed at Packard
Electric Division of General Motors
Corporation.
Her fiance is a graduate of Girard
High School. He is presently employed
by General Motors Corporation,
Lordstown, 0 .
·' . . ;
Miss Campbell is the granddaughter of i&gt;lr. and Mrs. John C.
Campbell, Lower River Rd., and the
late B. W. Ross and Lucy May (Kale)
Ross.

DIAMOND
RINGS
By:

will start at 7:30 p.m., with a
half hour of nuptial music
starting at 7 p.m.
The gracious custom of an
open church will be observed. A
reception at the church will
follow the wedding .

,

150

1

'I

TAWNEY
JEWELERS

Miss Mardella Blevins

422 Second Ave.
Galli lis, Ohio

Goof around in your goof-off
shoes with your favorite one.
See how much fun you can
have. Wear your goof-offs with
jeans or whatever. They come
with White, Black or Brown
crinkle patent uppers. The
curvy sole looks like cork, $14.

TO WED -Mr. and Mrs. Estlll Blevins of Thurman .are

announcing the forthcoming marriage of their daughter,
Mardella, to Pvt. William E. Adrian, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Dana Adrian of Gallipolis.
Miss Blevins is a 1970 graduate of Southwestern High
School and is presently at horne. Pvt. Adrian, now serving
with the U.S. Army at Fort Gordon, Ga., is a 1969 graduate of
Gallia Academy High School. He was formerly employed
with the Tecumseh Products in Marion, Ohio.

PERFECT
FOR HER
Catch a sparkle from the
morning sun . Hold the magic of

a sudden breeze. Keep those
moments alive. They're yours
for a tlfetlme with a diamond
engage!"ent ring from Q-ange

Blossom.

$150 Up

.PAUL DAVIES

...

. JEWELERS~.,, ..•

' !l'' I f
'., II
u~

"

4o!4 S.co\id'Avi. " ·
Galllpllllo, Ol!lo

,

)

donna
miSS

have
some-fun
•

KNIT: AND FIT KNOW-HOW

1n

SAVE~gt•75

in a Sunday kind of dress that
makes any day lots better . for
wearing it. Pu zzle-print star!
sets off the easy lines of wash·
able crepestitch polyester. Vel·
low, or blue: Sizes 6·16.

goof•off shoes·

OFF REG.PRICE

EXTRA SHEER

History; Jacqueline numbef
one "Deb" of the year, was
married to John H. Kennedy in
1953 after having been engaged
to John Huston Jr. The paper
was interesting an
informative.
Following the program the
guests lingered for discussion
and a social period.
'

SUPPORT
..
Ll.,;lted au.ntlllesl
Get One Touch Sewing at a great saving only
because it's a floor rnodel demonstrator of the
Golden To'uch &amp; Sew• sewing machine of the ?o:s!
Other Touch &amp; Sew• sewing machines by Singer ,
included in !his sale

Reg.
$3.49
•

Birth of Son

.

eMANY FABRIC ·SPECIALS

12% LYCRA · SPANDEX
88% .NYLON

Tabits Announce

.

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Keenan of 1104 Teodora
Ave., announce the birth of their
second child, a son, March 29, at
9:21 a.m., at the Holzer Medical
Center. The new arrival
weighed 8 pounds, 9 ounces, and
has been named John Dennis
Keenan. He is being welcomed
home by a brother, Ronald
Eric, 22 months.
'Maternal grandparents are
Mr : and Mrs. Wilbur A. Dennis,
Gallipolis, and maternal great- .
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence E . Dennis, Lancaster.
Paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Ahblett,
Gallipolis, and Mr. and Mrs .
Denver Keenan, Dayton.
Paternal great-grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Harry A. Betz,
Gallipolis.
Mrs. Ollie Straight, Northup,
is a great-great-grandmother.

ONLY

1 Colony Chapter Daughters of Eleanor Roosevelt was the most
active first lady iQ American

YOUTH ASKED FOR IT!
This colWM is 'for young people, their problems and
pleasures, their troubles and fun. As with the rest of Helen Help
Us!,it welcomes laughs but won'tdodge serious question with a

brush-off.

GALLIPOLIS

Kennans Announce
Birth of Son

the event. The parade will then
return to the Public Use Area
via Court Street at approximate~ 2:30 p.m.
··
Environmenwl problems that
will be emphasized are the use
of laundry detergents with no
ph osphates; no-pollution
transportation; conservation of
trees, water, wildlife and land;
river and air pollution and
litter. One unit is emphasizing
Project Pride, currently .under
way in Galiia County.
The planning group for the
parade is eight Cadette Girl
Scouis from Troop 1111 who
have chosen this project as their
way of contributing something
to Gallia County and to the
larger community of the state
and the world. They are Julia
Carr, Sheila Cassidy, Nancy
Fraley, Donna Holderby, Judy
Kemp, Nancy Sager, Robin
Shaffer and Stephanie Wuerch.
They wish to thank Mr. Kenneth
Morgan, City Manager, Simmons Printing Co. and the VFW
for their help.
All parade units are reminded
to meet at the public use area
parking lot at I p.m. on April12,
ready to march.
In case of threatening
weather, listen to WJEH for
information.

12th

Help Us !I Mrs. Burner Hosts DAR

By Helen Bottel

GALLIPOLIS - The Ecology
flag is finished and approximately twenty units of
young people have finished
preparations for their parade
for a cleaner environment on
Monday, April 12.
Ecology clowns will accompany the parade and pass
out suggestions for improving
our water, land and air.
The parade will leave the
Public Use Area at 1:40 p.m.,
proceed out Grape Street, up
Third 'Avenue to Locust Street
and down Second Avenue to the
City Park for a flag ceremony
at 2 p.m. At that time the
Ecology flag will be raised. The
color guard will include a
representative of the VFW, 1cub
scouts, boy scouts, Brownie girl
scou ts and the Active
Citizenship group who planned

Miss Linda Workman
Completes Plans

CWC pI an s

!Helen

)

_. ,

'

99

THE UNIFORM CENTER
Second Ave.
Ga11ipolis, Ohio
Across from the Post Office
''

Dan Thomas
&amp; Son

· Save Now On All Mo,dels
Service - Delivery- Savings
Open Til8 Mon. &amp; Fri. Nights

\

\

Mis5 Sandr~t Sue Montgomery

''Serving You Since 1936"
324 Second Ave. Gallipolis

••

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED- Mr. and Mrs. James
W. Mmtgomery, 19(0 Chatham Street, Gallipolis, ate announcing ~ engagement of their daUKhter, Sandra Sue, to
Mr, Ronald Jay Slme, 11011 of Mr. and Mrs. S. o. Slone of
Crown aty.
Miss Montgomery Is a 1968 graduate Of Gallia Academy
High School. She attended Rio Grande COllege and is now
emplO)'ed at the Holzer ·Medical Center.
·
. M,r. Slme Is a 1918 graduate of Hannan Trace High
School. He Is errip!oyed at the Gallij)l)Ua Slate Institute.
A\ present, wedding plans are incomplete.

FRENCH CITY
FABRIC SHOPPE

Simplicity, McCalls, Buflerick, Vogue Patterns
2 Complete Floors of Fabrics &amp; Notions .
We Do Custom D~ess Making

Ave.

-

singer Sates &amp; syrvi.ce
'

'444-9255

58 Court
Ga ttipotis, 0 .
G~llipolis,

o.

..

�I .

.

.;

\

'

'

_, S~ The SUnday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, April 11, 1971

AAuw·and

· 4- The Swulav Tim&lt;'ll-

.Public
Invited
to
Coming
View
Ecology
Parade
Events ·

Faculty Women
Have Combined Meeting

Just Between
Us

GALLIPOLIS
The China, and, therefore, men have · many years. Mrs. Sattler also MONDAy
Gallipolis and Jackson Chap- a much better. chance for a feels . that the German ?nd Centenary Grange will meet at
ters of AAUW met with the Rio university education, par- Austrian emphasis on physical 7·30 pin
By Pat Houck
Grande College Faculty. Women · ticularly in the professions. She education is beneficial . All . TUESDAy
in the college Dining Hall for a also pointed out that the com- three l~dies .spiced their RIVERSIDE Study Club meets
I always feel bad when I drive right on past a person seeking a dinner meeting, Monday. Mrs. petition for study in the presentatiOns With humor and with Mrs. Ben Eaches at 1 p.m.
ride. It makes me feel Uke I'm not helping my brother. But when I Clare GettJes, president of the universities is tremendous and charm, and they "':ere warmly ·PEMBROKE CLUB will meet
by thell' listeners. wi·th Mrs· Ald th R
. b'
read o( thlngs like the recent robbery of Robert Stewarl by the Faculty Women, welcomed the · the cost is high. Only· , the applauded
ll · th
th
.
e
o mson,
three people he gave a ride to, I know I'll just have to keep on clubs, along with Rio Grande weallhy can afford an Fo owmg e program, e First Ave
Jackson and Gallipolis Chap· ANNUAL Love Gift Box
going In spite of the way I feel about it. It seems a shame, doesn't senior women, who were guests. education.
Mrs. Arthur Espenscheid said Mrs. Olive Bernard, wife of ters of AAUW held meetings. opening at Calvary Baptist
it?
.
faculty member John Bernard, Mrs. James Orr, pl'l'sldent of Church by the ladies auxiliary,
It'sgetllng more and more difficult to be a ','friend to man." grace before the dinner.
Following a delicious meal is from Ireland. She was the Gallipolis Chap:er, in- 7:30p.m.
CREEK
Band
. FOR AN ALL&lt;lUT GOOD TIME for a lot of people, the GSI with swiss steak as a main educated in a private school. troduced the following guests KYGER
course, Mrs. Gettles introduced She noted that Irish is taught and new members: Meli~da Boosters 7:30 p.m. at the high
TalentShowcoul~'tbe beat. The residents really enjoyed it and I
Mrs. Robert Evans of Colum- along with English, and ttuit Thompson, a guest, and W1lhe school cafeteria. Election of
have to say, so did I!
bus, Branch Consultant for the even a doctor must pass an Edwards, Jean. Kuhn, and officers and plans for band
·
.
Gallipolis Chapter of AAUW. examination in Irish. Mrs. Marsha Stewart, new members. concert Will be made.
· HOW ANYONE CAN DRIVE day after day across tbe roads . Mrs John Wickline gave a brief Bernard attended school six Ruth Tapp gave the treasurer's GRACE UNITED ]&gt;lethodist
between the hills of Gallia County and not feel a part of them, is expl~nation of "AAUW- What days a week, but Saturday was report. Aileen Rutz of the Church Cir~le 5at the church at
· more than I can underswnd.
is It" for the benefit of the given to cooking, sewing, nommat1ng
comm1ttee 1 p.m.; Circle 6 with Mrs.
senior women, who will be music, and visits to concerts pr~sented the following_ list of Donald Galloway, 1 p.m.
ON MY WAY TO AND FROM Rio Grande College (on ii88) eligible to join , AAUW upon and museums .
officers, who were unammously WEDNESDAY
I've seen the snow melt and the farmers begin their plowing. I've graduation.
Mrs. Gaby Sattler, educated confirmed: Jane Yokum, GRACE UNITED Methodist
seen the folks at ooe house put blue Outdoor carpeting on thiir
Mrs. Herman Koby, program in Germany, explained her president; Sara Porter, Church Circle 1 with Mrs. John
. porch. I've seen the two little farm ponds grow clearer day.by chairman, introduced the country's educational system of recording secretary, and Cathy Milhoan 501 Oak Drive· Circle
day.l've seen the SkY purple, pink, gray, red and orange. Now, speakers for the evening, who different "tracks" (vocational, Bennett, corresponding 2 with Mrs. Charles La;uer, 12
I'm seeing the green creeping aqoss·everything, right up to the presented a program on "The business, and university secrewry. Mrs. Deanna Cook Edgemont Drive; Circle 3 with
Education of Women in Foreign education) and their use of presented plans for the Coke Mrs. William J. Brown, 451
edge of the road.
Lands." Mrs. Diana Cheng of examinations. She sll!ted that party for eighth grade girls on Hedgewood Drive, 7:30 p.m.;
SOME PEOPLE NEVER MISS a chance to encourage their Point Pleasant was born in she was happy to see the United May 8 at Rio Grande College. Circle 4 with Mrs. Perry Bailes,
fellow man or give a k~ word. Bee Woods, Helen Roush and Peking, China, and educated in States begin to emphasize The purpose of this annual 443 Hedgewood, 7:30 p.m.
Sadie Notter are three people like that. There are many more Hong Kong. She emphasized vocational trainihg, which has outing is to encourage girls LADIES GOLD Luncheon on
that the male is still dominant in been offered in Germany for entering high school to consider the patio at the club. In case of
(thank God) but these are three I heard about this week.
a college prep course and en- bad weather it will be at the
lerlng college.
home. of Mrs John Evans 11
I WISH I HAD ANICKEL for every hour of rehearsal that has
The next AAUW meeting will a.m. Golf t; follow. Call' for
gone into the making of "Music Man." Each of the musicals put
be at the Episcopal Church on reservations no later than
on by the GAHS choir has been an outstanding highlight for me. If
May
3. Several guest speakers Tuesday.
you have missed any one of them, you've really missed a treat.
from industries in the area will
Tickets are available from any choir member, so be sure to
be present to discuss pollution. WEDNESDAY
GALLIA CO.
Extension
get yours.
The public is invited to hear the
Homemakers
meeting,
10 a.m.
viewpoints of the industrialists
RIO GRANDE .,.. The Rio her flower plaques.
IT WAS MY PLEASURE to show Glenna Shuler, our Grande College Cafeteria was
There were no new members 1 on this very important problem. Grace United Methodist
Church. Free chair caning and
correspondent from Storys Run, through the plant. We here at the the setting for the Newcomers, so the newest newcomer
splitting
workshop by Mrs. Pat
office are grateful for the work our correspondents do and would Do Your Own Thing, luncheon present was-given to Mrs. John
Lochary. Potluck lunch at noon.
Uke to have them come in any time. There is something extra Thursday afternoon . The L. Evans for being ll member
Everyone welcome.
special about getting to meet someone in the flesh that you've twenty-two members attending the longest. Mrs. Eva [Is, in turn,
THURSDAY
known only by letter or phone.
brought samples of their hob- gave the present to Mrs : Miles
WOMEN'S Fellowship at First
bies. A wide variety of in· Epling for all she has conBaptist Church, Theme, Living
·
MY POISON NY is getting better at last. I had to wear my terestlng Items·were displayed. tributed to the Newcomers Club
the Abundant Life in This
pants suit several days !sst we·ek because It looked so ugly on my
The members a !tending voted over the years.
World. Rio Grande students will
right leg. You wouldn't believe what I put on lt. Tea! Helped too. on the three items they thought
be guests.
Mrs. Herman was chairman
I didn't think I would get poisoned when the Ivy had no leaves were best. Prizes were awarded
,
'
mit, but I was fooled. So if you are as succeptlble as I am, watch to Mrs. Frank Porter for her for the luncheon.
It was announced that the GALLIPOLIS Gailia
hand-made poncho, Mrs.
out for lt.
next
meeting
will
be
a
trip
to
County
Extension
Homemakers
Krishna Kool for her embroidered jacket, and Mrs . Scioto Downs for members and w1ll meet Wednesday at 10 a.m.
at the Grace United Methodist
Russell Morgan, Columbus, for their husbands May 27.
'
Church. Mrs. Pat Lochary will
conduct a Chair Caning and
Splitting Workshop at the
morning
and
afternoon
GALLIPOLIS - Wedding
sessions. Bring ·an article to be plans have been completed for
'
caned or split or come and learn li)e l)larriage of Linda Work·
to do' this fascinating craft.
GALLIPOLIS - The Cora presented to Mrs. Grady Waugh
man, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Officers for the 1971-72 term Dale Workman of Mill Creek
Women's Society of Christian with the group singing, "Happy
will be installed at this meeting Rd., Gllllipolis, to Richard
Workers met Thursday at the Birthday" to her.
crack
to
let
in
a
little
air.
To
which will be the last Extension
GALLIPOLIS - Ye Olde
home of Mrs. John R. Morgan. Mrs. Melvin Gilbert and Mrs.
Scott, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
A delicious covered dish dinner Sylvia Gllllam were in charge of Village Garden Club met ·with avoid cooking the plants, never Homemakers meeting until Scott, of 1129 Second Avenue.
was served at noon to 17 the program. Opening devotions Mrs. Charles Allman Thursday place a glass garden in a sunny September. Potluck lunch will
The bride's attendants will be
be served at noon. This and ail maid of honor, Sharon Cooper,.
members and the following were by Mrs. Gilliam from afternoon with Mrs. Marion window.
Williams as co-hostess. Each Mrs. Bill Davis, president, meetings are free and open to
guests: Miss Iris Hiessenbuttel, the Upper Room.
The two bridesmaids will be
Mrs. Jane Ann Slagle, Mrs. Opening song was, Showers of member took an attractive welcomed Mrs. Herman Lynch all interested persons.
Linda Shupe and Lynn Rice.
Micky Morgan and Rodney, Blessing. Everyone responded glass container and materials as a guest, after which the
The groom's best man will be
Gretchen and Mike Wood, with their special feelings on · for a workshop to make a members gave the club prayer
Dan Vance. Jeff Fulkerson and
.
Cynthia and Ricky Niday.
Easter. Readings were, Our terrarium. Placed in the con- and the pledge of allegiance to
Jim Steinbeck will serve as the
Mrs. Lawrence Akers Lord is There, by Ina Webster; winer was an inch of pea-size the flag. Mrs. Davis read an
ushers.
presided over the business Sunday Morning Excuses, by gravel and a layer of charcoal invtwtion from Mrs. John H.
The wedding will be April 17
draining,
a light Reese, Regional Director for
meeting. A motion was made Etlll Altzier; Today's FaCI!s on for
at The First Church of the
and carried to sell packages of the Cross, by Florence Gilbert; and porous soil mix with the Ohio Associa lion of Garden
GALLIPOLIS - The Catholic Nazarene . The double-ring
dish cloths.
The Bretrayal, by Daisy Evans; equal _parts peat, perlite and Clubs, to attend the Spring
Woman's Club of St. Louis ceremony will be performed by
Mrs . Akers appointed Mrs. Road Maps, by Anna Mae soil. The mix was dampened Regional meeting to be held
Church will have a potluck the Rev. Ronald Justice, and
Swnley Wood and Mrs. Ina Morgan, and In His Steps, by before spreading over the Saturday, April 24, at Rutland.
drainage. Small plants that Prepaid luncheon reservations supper on Tuesday evening,
Webster chairmen of Spiritual Anise Wood.
April 13, at 7 p.m. in the church Church.
Life Committee which will · Florence Gilbert explained would not soon outgrow the of $1.50 are to be sent lo t Mrs.
basement. Husbands are in- Mrs. John Carty has charge of
conduct Bible study for future her worship center carrying out container were used . Each Joe Bolin, Rutland, by April 19.
vited.
Tuesday
evening ' s
meetings. Next month we will the Showers of Blessing theme, plant was watered just enough An invitation was read from
Afterward Monsignor John arrangements. No reservations
study the first four chapters of which she read about. Song to settle it Into place. Plants the French City Garden Club to
Yonk
of the Ironton Deahery are necessary but please bring
Luke and ask each other "Christ Arose" was sung by used were dwarf palm, English enter the Spring Flower Show
will speak on the subject of, Wbie service and a covered
questions. We are divided into group. Something to Ponder, ivy, fern, boxwood, dracema. April 17 and 18 at Washington
Liturgical Changes in · the dish.
two teams of six each.
was read by Mary Jane Evans. . After plants are in place, you School Cafeteria. Mrs. Williams
Mrs.
Akers
reminded The meeting closed with can cover the soil with chips for gave the treasurer's report and
a more pleasing appearance members to save bottle caps. prayer.
read an appropriate poem, Are
The business meeting closed
A spring flower exchange a~d add a figurine for interest. You Planning Your Garden.
Aglass dish just large enough to Refreshments of salad, cup
by the group praying the WSCW followed.
prayer.
Next meeting will be with cover the opening, is used to cakes, coffee and tea were
maintain uniform moisture. If enjoyed by all . The May
A birthday cake was Mrs. Lawrence Akers.
conwiner clouds with moisture, meeting will be a sack lunch on
remove lid until moisture Park Front at I p.m. followed
Keep · lid open a by a wildflower tour.
disappears.
r---------~-----------------1

'Do Your Own Thing'
Newcomers Theme

Ch aIr"
. Can m
,g

Workshop Set

By Homemakers

Cora WSCS Meets
With Mrs. Morgan

Terrariums Made by
Ye Old~ Village Club

Po·tluck Dl'nner

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

MONDAY,
APRIL

I

I

~

.

French

a

Send your teenage questions to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care
of Helen Help Us! this newspaper.
HOAXES MAINLY UNPRINTABLE
Dear Helen :
Have you had any good hoaxes lately? Please print. -KARL
Dear Karl:
The Great New Jersey Hoaxer gave up about a year ago and
since then I haven't received many outstanding conllibutions,
printable ones, that is.
How's lbla?
Dear Helen:
I have a terrible problem. When I was two, my brother
heaved me over the banister and damaged my nose forever. It is
ao crooked that If I '1olltiwed my nose" they'd bust me for being
stone.
·
A terrible 'thing hapjlened last ~eek. I was shopping and my
nosegotcaughtin a department store elevator door. And I wasn't
even fac;lng that way!
·
.
I'm sorry my typing is so bad. My nose cuts Off the vision

the American Revolution met at
the home of Mrs. Ralph Burner
Monday afternoon. Mrs. L. H.
Nelson was a co-hostess.
Refreshments were served by
the hostesses prior to the
meeting. Mrs. Catherine
Hayward acted as chaplain and
'opened the meeting. ·
Following the business
meeting, Mrs. Howard I. Neal
gave the program, "Portraits of
Presidential Ladles," a paper
written by Betty Shutts, a DAR
member. She said Grace
Coolidge, one of the most
. popular of the first ladles, was
married to Calvin Coolidge;

The Almanac
By United PressiDtematlonal
Today is Sunday, Aprilu, the
JOist day of 1971. Today is
Easter. .
The moon Is between its full
" and la~t quarter.
phase
The morning stars are Venus,
Mars and Jupiter. ·
The evening sta~s are Mereu- '
ry and Saturn.
Those born on this day are
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs. und.er the sign Of Aries.
New York fashion designer
George F. Tabit~Hl~Mulberry
!rom my rlcht eye.
Driye announce the birth of Oleg Cassin! was born April 11,
And I get In very emliarriiSilng situations when I try to kiss ·
their third son, George Fisher 1913.
my boy friend good night, aa I'm constantly lreathing dm his ·Tabit, Jrr .
On thls day in history : .
beck, .
. '•
In . 1947 Jackie Pobinson
The baby wia born on March
· My cloctqt: won't operate as he aayalt would be destroying the . 'l1 at Holzer Ml!lliCJil Center, ~aine lhe '(irst Negro · in
·elchlh wonder Of the world:.Wbat do you suggest?-HOSENOSE First Ave. He weighed 8 pounds. major league baseball
.when he
'
Dear
played for the Brooklyn Oodgand 10 ounces.
"Watdl out flir postnasal drip . .:.. H.
·ersin
an .exhibition . game '
Maternal gtandrnqther is
Margaret Fish, Baltimore, !It'd. againSt the New York Yankees.

u-roae:

.

1&gt;

~~

Miss Brenda Campbell

See Our Complete
Selection Of
Exquisite New

APRIL WEDDING PLANNED The engagement and forthcoming
marriage of Miss Brenda Campbell to
Robert W. Hannah, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Alvin W. Hannah, 657 Joan Ave.,
Girard, Ohio, is being announced by her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John G. Campbell,1490Maplewood, N. E., Warren, 0.
The open church ceremony will be
solemnized on April 24 at II a.m. in St.
Rose Church, Girard.
The reception will follow at the
Mahoning Country Club, Girard, from I
to 5 p.m.
Miss Campbell graduated from
Harding High School. She is a student at
Warren College of Business and is
presently employed at Packard
Electric Division of General Motors
Corporation.
Her fiance is a graduate of Girard
High School. He is presently employed
by General Motors Corporation,
Lordstown, 0 .
·' . . ;
Miss Campbell is the granddaughter of i&gt;lr. and Mrs. John C.
Campbell, Lower River Rd., and the
late B. W. Ross and Lucy May (Kale)
Ross.

DIAMOND
RINGS
By:

will start at 7:30 p.m., with a
half hour of nuptial music
starting at 7 p.m.
The gracious custom of an
open church will be observed. A
reception at the church will
follow the wedding .

,

150

1

'I

TAWNEY
JEWELERS

Miss Mardella Blevins

422 Second Ave.
Galli lis, Ohio

Goof around in your goof-off
shoes with your favorite one.
See how much fun you can
have. Wear your goof-offs with
jeans or whatever. They come
with White, Black or Brown
crinkle patent uppers. The
curvy sole looks like cork, $14.

TO WED -Mr. and Mrs. Estlll Blevins of Thurman .are

announcing the forthcoming marriage of their daughter,
Mardella, to Pvt. William E. Adrian, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Dana Adrian of Gallipolis.
Miss Blevins is a 1970 graduate of Southwestern High
School and is presently at horne. Pvt. Adrian, now serving
with the U.S. Army at Fort Gordon, Ga., is a 1969 graduate of
Gallia Academy High School. He was formerly employed
with the Tecumseh Products in Marion, Ohio.

PERFECT
FOR HER
Catch a sparkle from the
morning sun . Hold the magic of

a sudden breeze. Keep those
moments alive. They're yours
for a tlfetlme with a diamond
engage!"ent ring from Q-ange

Blossom.

$150 Up

.PAUL DAVIES

...

. JEWELERS~.,, ..•

' !l'' I f
'., II
u~

"

4o!4 S.co\id'Avi. " ·
Galllpllllo, Ol!lo

,

)

donna
miSS

have
some-fun
•

KNIT: AND FIT KNOW-HOW

1n

SAVE~gt•75

in a Sunday kind of dress that
makes any day lots better . for
wearing it. Pu zzle-print star!
sets off the easy lines of wash·
able crepestitch polyester. Vel·
low, or blue: Sizes 6·16.

goof•off shoes·

OFF REG.PRICE

EXTRA SHEER

History; Jacqueline numbef
one "Deb" of the year, was
married to John H. Kennedy in
1953 after having been engaged
to John Huston Jr. The paper
was interesting an
informative.
Following the program the
guests lingered for discussion
and a social period.
'

SUPPORT
..
Ll.,;lted au.ntlllesl
Get One Touch Sewing at a great saving only
because it's a floor rnodel demonstrator of the
Golden To'uch &amp; Sew• sewing machine of the ?o:s!
Other Touch &amp; Sew• sewing machines by Singer ,
included in !his sale

Reg.
$3.49
•

Birth of Son

.

eMANY FABRIC ·SPECIALS

12% LYCRA · SPANDEX
88% .NYLON

Tabits Announce

.

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Keenan of 1104 Teodora
Ave., announce the birth of their
second child, a son, March 29, at
9:21 a.m., at the Holzer Medical
Center. The new arrival
weighed 8 pounds, 9 ounces, and
has been named John Dennis
Keenan. He is being welcomed
home by a brother, Ronald
Eric, 22 months.
'Maternal grandparents are
Mr : and Mrs. Wilbur A. Dennis,
Gallipolis, and maternal great- .
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence E . Dennis, Lancaster.
Paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Ahblett,
Gallipolis, and Mr. and Mrs .
Denver Keenan, Dayton.
Paternal great-grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Harry A. Betz,
Gallipolis.
Mrs. Ollie Straight, Northup,
is a great-great-grandmother.

ONLY

1 Colony Chapter Daughters of Eleanor Roosevelt was the most
active first lady iQ American

YOUTH ASKED FOR IT!
This colWM is 'for young people, their problems and
pleasures, their troubles and fun. As with the rest of Helen Help
Us!,it welcomes laughs but won'tdodge serious question with a

brush-off.

GALLIPOLIS

Kennans Announce
Birth of Son

the event. The parade will then
return to the Public Use Area
via Court Street at approximate~ 2:30 p.m.
··
Environmenwl problems that
will be emphasized are the use
of laundry detergents with no
ph osphates; no-pollution
transportation; conservation of
trees, water, wildlife and land;
river and air pollution and
litter. One unit is emphasizing
Project Pride, currently .under
way in Galiia County.
The planning group for the
parade is eight Cadette Girl
Scouis from Troop 1111 who
have chosen this project as their
way of contributing something
to Gallia County and to the
larger community of the state
and the world. They are Julia
Carr, Sheila Cassidy, Nancy
Fraley, Donna Holderby, Judy
Kemp, Nancy Sager, Robin
Shaffer and Stephanie Wuerch.
They wish to thank Mr. Kenneth
Morgan, City Manager, Simmons Printing Co. and the VFW
for their help.
All parade units are reminded
to meet at the public use area
parking lot at I p.m. on April12,
ready to march.
In case of threatening
weather, listen to WJEH for
information.

12th

Help Us !I Mrs. Burner Hosts DAR

By Helen Bottel

GALLIPOLIS - The Ecology
flag is finished and approximately twenty units of
young people have finished
preparations for their parade
for a cleaner environment on
Monday, April 12.
Ecology clowns will accompany the parade and pass
out suggestions for improving
our water, land and air.
The parade will leave the
Public Use Area at 1:40 p.m.,
proceed out Grape Street, up
Third 'Avenue to Locust Street
and down Second Avenue to the
City Park for a flag ceremony
at 2 p.m. At that time the
Ecology flag will be raised. The
color guard will include a
representative of the VFW, 1cub
scouts, boy scouts, Brownie girl
scou ts and the Active
Citizenship group who planned

Miss Linda Workman
Completes Plans

CWC pI an s

!Helen

)

_. ,

'

99

THE UNIFORM CENTER
Second Ave.
Ga11ipolis, Ohio
Across from the Post Office
''

Dan Thomas
&amp; Son

· Save Now On All Mo,dels
Service - Delivery- Savings
Open Til8 Mon. &amp; Fri. Nights

\

\

Mis5 Sandr~t Sue Montgomery

''Serving You Since 1936"
324 Second Ave. Gallipolis

••

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED- Mr. and Mrs. James
W. Mmtgomery, 19(0 Chatham Street, Gallipolis, ate announcing ~ engagement of their daUKhter, Sandra Sue, to
Mr, Ronald Jay Slme, 11011 of Mr. and Mrs. S. o. Slone of
Crown aty.
Miss Montgomery Is a 1968 graduate Of Gallia Academy
High School. She attended Rio Grande COllege and is now
emplO)'ed at the Holzer ·Medical Center.
·
. M,r. Slme Is a 1918 graduate of Hannan Trace High
School. He Is errip!oyed at the Gallij)l)Ua Slate Institute.
A\ present, wedding plans are incomplete.

FRENCH CITY
FABRIC SHOPPE

Simplicity, McCalls, Buflerick, Vogue Patterns
2 Complete Floors of Fabrics &amp; Notions .
We Do Custom D~ess Making

Ave.

-

singer Sates &amp; syrvi.ce
'

'444-9255

58 Court
Ga ttipotis, 0 .
G~llipolis,

o.

..

�.,

-- .

'I

'

. '

6-

TN&gt; S•mday Times -Sentinel, Sunday,

Congressman -Just Disappeared

AprU 11, 1971

Paiva said·, where Eliana was . Whatever -his fate, Paiva's a gun battle with police, and
released after one night, and case has beCO!Ile a symbol of the terrorists fled taking Paiva
the , mother was held lor · 12 . the conflict liere between with them. He sa,i~ Paiva mighi ·
days of questioni!!Jl:
Brazil's democratic traditiona- have been wounded.
Since Mrs. Paiva's "release lists and the unlimifed police Source Says Paiva Suspect
two months ag·o, she bas 'powers under· thP military The same source said Paiva
conducted a fruitless search for government of,Ptesident Emilio was suspected-of organiZing the
her husband. H~r search, she Garraslazu Medici.
returo to Brazil of terrorists
said, has been a series of
The case has been taken who were banished after being
frustrations , compounded by before Brazil's Council for the exchanged as • ransom for
the !act that officials to whom Defense of Human Rights and kidnaped diplomats.
she has talked, she said, have also has received some re- Paiva, an engineer, was
given her contradictory reports served publicity in the often- leader of the Brazilian Workers
or what happened to · her censored press.·
party and a member of
husband after his arrest. She
All of Brazil's security forces congress until 1964 when the
cannot confirm even if he is now maintain officially that armed forces ousted President
alive.
Paiva , H, is not a prisoner.
Joao Goulart and established a
No Charges Filed
Mrs. Paiva said in an militaryregime.Likethousands
There have been no charges interview that one high govern- of other politicians, he was
of any kind filed against him. ment official told her that her stripped of his political rights
And the army has formally · husband was still· in jail, may lor 10 years by the regbne .
denied before the Supreme be ~uffering from a gunshot
Mrs. Paiva ridiculed the
Court that either Paiva or his wound and would soon be report that he was a subversive
wife was ever arrested.
released. A military official agent, a topic ori which she said
told her, she said, that her she was questioned while being
COLUMBUS - John A.
husband had been captured by held.
Epling, 510 Jackson Pike ,
urban terrorists after his
"With ail the work he does
APARTMENTS BURN
arrest.
for the engineering firms and
Gallipolis, was arraigned
Friday before the U.S. District AKRON (UP!) _ Damage
Another military sour~e. who at home, he has no time," she

By DIANA PAGE
RIO DE JANEIRO (UPI )Last Jan. 20, six men identifying
themselves as plainclothes detectives ' arrested a former
Brazilian congressman, Rubens
Beyrodt Paiva, in his home
. while his wile and live children
watched in disbelief.
The following day, more men
identifying themselves as police
returned, and arr-ested Mrs .
Paiva and the couple's 15-yearold daughter, Eliana. They put
black hoods over the heads of
the mother and daughter for
the automobile ride to jail, Mrs.

Epling Says

RED STEWART AND THE AMB~RS - A
professional group from Parkersburg played following the

.. ,
annual GSI Talent Show.'Shown with Red, (far right) are
Gene Dunn, Richard Butcher, Bob Schuck, Sandy Butcher,
Sheryl Stewart and Pee Wee Parsons, a guest.

Combo. Above, left to right, aeated, are Sylvan Gardner,
chaplain; Earl Mills, treasurer; Frank Snedaker, trustee;
Edsel New, secr~tary; James Mills, Ill, tyler; standing,
Jerry Shelton, trustee; William Tawney, esquire; LoweD
Allen, leading knight; Robert Nibert, exalted ruler; Dwight
Sievers, Joyal knight; Ulwrence Tawney, lecturing knight,
and James Robinson, trustee._
_

?FFICERS I)'ISTALLED -Ill an bnpresslve ceremony,
Gallipolis Elks Lodge No. 107 installed new officers for the
year_ 1971·72, with Irvin Folden, Past Exalted Ruler,
preSiding and James Robinson, Past Exalted Ruler, ·
assisting. Fo~owing the installation-approximately 200 Elks
and their wives enjoyed a social hour and dance with the
music furnished by Harry Washington and his Capital

Not Guilty

;~,.,Ci ~Ci¥~=~\:::1 ~;~~~i~~ ;;.~?;g~n?~i ~b;:g;.~~~ g¥~;-:t~
I ~u:,.u~,;-.::;•:: :!':!.,"::.: .= I :=:::'/.·~::£;~ ;;;;?.::r.:::-::: .~M'':£~~------~~~~!!!!1!!!!!!!~~

SECOND ROUND

~~!~:"a~::~~.:pp~y~·~r::~::::
!._ ~_..i f_!.· ~~::\~~t;y ~rli~i~e:a~~~ali~: ri~ iesn~:~ub·: t~.~r"b:li~~!~
u.,.

,

Sears

$30,000 and - or three years in responsible.

EMPIRE'S

~;~~ I ~~·~::~=

25th

money Is provided by the club for commissary treats
throughout the year
Tbe so-called "~doption" policy can be done by

':\{ indefinite suspension from the
·•· ··•· practice of law by the Ohio State
{} Bar Association.

~::m.::s::c~tl~~a;e~::~hich brings • • • • • • th!h;r~:~~~i~~~~~~ ~~~~~~n~~
t1 !~Mf : @JI:lri•Jti\1% ·:.· ·••·•·•··• ·. :·•..· •·/·:; r··.•· \••• r · !·.·.~ ~~~~~o~ ~ ~~~.~n~~~;~~~~

Since 1859-

Save

20-in. Push-Type
Rotary Mowt&gt;.r

rum

· HAPPINESS IS ASUCCESSFUL ENDEAVOR- Talent
Sbow Co-chairmen, Bill Davis of the ·Physical Education
Deparbnent and Mrs. Bernard Guinther, of the Recreation
Deparbnent, look over the program for the_ir highly successful show. Practice for the event started back in March. It
was the cinnbined effort of residents, employees, employees'
relatives, and the Recreation and Physical Education
Deparbnents. In the picture are, left to right, back row,
Ulrry North, Physical Education Department, Dr. Bernard

NORWALK SPANISH

lASSEn MODERN
LIVING ROOM _$~m~

Niehm, Superintendent of the Gallipolis State Inatltute, f\lly
Wedemyer and Sharon Fay Waugh. Sharon played the piano
and sang. Front row,)eft to right, kneeling, Bill Davis, Mrs.
Guinther and Chris and Kathie McCoy. Chris and Kathie
sang a duet in the talent show.

E~95----!.17 4 95'
7 PC. EARLY AMERICAN
SUITE, WITH TABLES

Pictures and layout by Pat Houck
FIRST PLACE WINNER Resident Wanda Wheeler won
first place in the talent
contest with her presentation
of "It's Never Too Late"
Judges were Mrs. Pa~l
(Chatterbox of WJEH)
Wagner, Clarence Thompson ·
and Susan Davis.

REG.

COUCH

•29
. 995
'

$439.95-----·

2 Couches, Contemporary

MODERN COU_CH
AND CHAIR

TRADITIONAL COUCH

REG.
~~9~95---!219'~

$369.95----

•29995

UVING
6 PC.

DINING ROOM SUITE

REG. 1499.95

PC. DINING ROOM SUITE

•39995

5 PIECE DINEnE SET

REG. 1499.95
-

$39995

5 PIECE DINEnE SET
'

95
REG.
•11
~~9~95-----~89
$159.95-----7 PIECE DINEnE SET
5 PIECE DINEnE SET
REG. '15995 $129.95-------REG. .
•9995
~189.95------

5 PIECE DINEnE SET

FLAG CEREMONY - .Webeloes of Pack 205 Church of
God gave the flag ceremony at the talent show held at West
. Hall Audioorium Thursday and Friday at 7:30p.m. Scoutmaster is Bill Ulyne.

BATON TWIRIJNG ACT - Little Missy McDade,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Don McDade, led off the talent
show at the GSL Tbis w~s. the first Ye&amp;l' employees' relatives
rook part. ·
·
·
· ,

OHIO UNIVERSITY
STUDENT, Dale Ransom, a
votun leer worker, leads the
senior band in several instrumental numbers.

7 PIECE DINETTE SET

95
95
· ~~9.~95-----~119 ~~9~95-----~-1 09
9' PIECE
~
REG.95 •13995
.
.
$159.
DINmE SO -----------------·
eALL OTHER DINING ROOM FURNITURE ON SALE

DINING
ROOM
SUITE
ROUND

liiVEN AWAY ON

Yes, We will give away FREE your -choice ot any ~~uu.oo Regular
Retail ·Dining Room Suite on April 30, 1971 . No purchase necessary,
just c~me in and register.

BEDROOM FURNITURE
BASSETT ITALIAN

BASSETT MEDITERRANEAN

4 PIECE SUITE

· 4 PIECE SUITE

REG. •24995 $449.95----.;.
REG. •34995
$499.95·--SI'UDENT VOLUNTEERS - Ken Hall, left, and
Cathryn Hargis of Ohio University are among the student
voluntllers giving of their time (withoul credit) to help with
residents of the IMtitute.
'

MUSLIN
·
'

.

MATTRESS COVERS

•
I

Sanforized, Zippered

'
I

•

FULL OR
TWIN .SIZ£

.I

I

.,

I

•

• I• ,

•
I

I

''
'

&gt;

MIKE STEWART AND 'l1IE ROAD RUNNERS- Mike siewart, Mark .Ciark and Marty
Seelig partldpated in die llllllical program .which foUowed the talent show.
·.

$329

Darnbrough's
DEPT. STORE
OHIO
GJIIIPOIJS,

. KINCAID SOLID MAPLE

CALDWELL FRENCI-j

2 PC. SUITE, 2 Finishes

4 PIECE SUITE

REG. · ·2
-- 7495
$329.95:---:KINCAID SPANISH

~~9~9.·5---!399 95

REG.
•58995
_...__...._$699.95--

4 PIECE

Revival in
Minersville

I Green Velvet. 1 Black Vinyl

~~9~95 ----•49995 ~1~9~95----$.12995
eAU.

REV. LOWTHER

MINERSVILLE- Rev. Guy
W. Lowther, Jr. , associate
pastor of Baptist Gospel Temple
of Parkersburg, will he at the
Bible Baptist Temple, Minersville, to conduct revival service
beginning this evening at 7:3.0
p.m. through Saturday.
;'&lt; , Rev . Lowt_
her attended
SQ£ingfield Bible College,
Moody Bible College, Emmaus
Bible College and the Jack
Hyles Pastors' School.
Rev . Lowther has been
president of Revival Rally Tbne
since1968. Through his ministry
1004 souls have accepted Christ.
He has been associate pastor of
Baptist Gospel Temple for the
last tWo years. He is 29 years of
age and resides with wife,
Dottie, and six month-old
daughter, Christy In Parkersburg.

HARRY AllfSBARY, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Ams·
bary of 631 Fourth Ave.,
Gallipolis, was recently
GALLIPOLIS - Volunteer of
selected a member of the
the
month at the Gallipolis State
Epsilon Chapter, Phi Beta
Kappa at Ohio Stale Institute, Mrs. Sandra Koby,
University. Amsbary is a has been involved in a special
student in the three-year way - one we hear very little
program of the Ohio Stale about - the Ways and Means
Medical
School.
He . Committee.
Since volunteers are unpaid
graduated last June, Cum
Laude, from the Ohio State members of the hospital family
pre-med school with a 4.0 staff and no membershjp dues
average his senior year. are imposed, the volunteers
Harry Is the brother of must meet a few necessary
Kenneth Amsbary, a school expenditures.
Mrs. Koby helped to meet
teacher In Madison 'County,
and Dr. Gordon Amsbary,
Gallipolis dentist. Harry wm
be Initiated In the United
States' highest honorary
society on May 3.

Mrs. Koby Volunteer of April

SIZE)

Ready-Made Drapes
· 75", 100'' 150" WI.D.E

.I

REG. PRICE

these needs by selecting
sketches made by the art
students from Miss Nelle
Shaw's therapy classes. These
drawings were reproduced on
note paper and sold for the
benefit of the volunteer
association She is a member of
the Advisory Council.

Newlyweds

Given Shower

LIQI,JOR RAID '
CANTON, Ohio (UP!)
~nver Norri~, 55, was charged
REEDSVILLE _ A shower
wtth possesston of a still, un- was held at th K'bbl
1
.
e
taxed liquor and mash, after .
• •
Stark County sheriff's deputies Recre_atton llall on Aprtl 2
and federal agents Friday h&lt;ywrtng Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Hudnell, recent newlyweds
D
F te
•
uncovere d a 35 -ga 11 on op- 'th M
eration.
Wl
rs. o1ores os r as
hostess.
G.~mes were played and
prizes awarded to Judy Brunty,
Alice Mortimer, Debbie Miller,
Marlene
Putman, Roxie Reed
REEDSVILLE
The dueled on Wednesday with and Virginia Carter. The door
Riverview P.T.A. met at the room mothers in charge. Mrs.
prize was given to Roxie Reed.
school Tuesday evening, April Margaret Brown announced a 4Present were Mrs. Wihna
6. Riverview Girl Scout Troop 67 H club would organize Aprill3. Nelson, Mrs ..Mamie Bond, Mrs.
conducted the flag ceremony. Girls interested should contact
Judy Brunty, of Coolville; Miss
Mrs. Dolores Frank, vice Mrs. Brown.
For the program Mrs. Brown Debbie MiUer, Mrs. Margaret
president, conducted the
Schwarze!, Mrs. Sandra Sch·
business meeting when P.T.A. presented two readings, Easter
warzel and Sonja, Hockingport;
members voted to give $50 for Season and Twelve Tlioughts to Mrs . Frances Reed, Mrs .
Live By, and the fibn strips,
playground equipment.
Elizabeth Smith, Mrs. Roxie
It was announced that the How We Got Our Easter
Reed, Mrs. Phyllis Hetzer, Mrs.
Spring Confer~nce of District 16 CUstoms and Easter Around the Pamela Hoffman, Mrs. Alice
will be May I at the Pomeroy World.
Fred Kessinger, homeroom Mortimer, Mrs. Mary Bise,
Elementary School with the
Mrs. Connie Reed and Lisa,
coffee hour to begin at 9 a.m. teacher for 4th and 5th grades, Mrs . Wanda Kimes, Mrs.
Appointed to the nominating won the attendance banner, and
Virginia Carter, Mrs. Nell
committee were Mrs. Darlene reading circle book. Students of Wilson, Mrs. Marlene Pubnan,
Eleanor . Knight,
Reed, Mrs. Frances Reed, and Mrs.
developmental
reading teacher, Mrs. Garnet Johnson and the
Mrs. Elizabeth Smith.
honorees, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Easter parties will he con- will travel to Columbus May ·l7. Hudne'il and hostess, Mrs.
Dolores Foster.
Sending gifts were Dorotha
Riebel, Verna Rose, Mamie
Buckley, Rose Thomas, Inez
GALUPO!JS - Mr. and Mrs. where she will graduate in May. Boring, Virginia Walton, Susie
James Kenton Shawver, Evans While attending Rio Grande Cowdery, Julie Bond, Vesta
Heights, are announcing the College Miss Shawver has been Bise, Martha . Orr, Lena
engagement and forthcoming a Re~iderit Assistant, Student Pickering, Darlene Reed,
marriage of their . daughter Senator and a meSJ!ber of Alpha Lucille Smith, Grace Weber,
Ju~a Kay,. to Mr. John Phillip Mu Beta Social Sorority. Mr. Peg Buckley, Gladys Williams,
"Roderus, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roderus is a graduate ot Ruth Ann Balderson, EISlJIIa
William Roderus, 3729 Rural 'churchill Area High School and Dtirst, Mary Jamison, BerCourt, Pittsburgh, Penn· Rio Granqe College, where he nadine Snyder, Bess Ulrkins,
was a membel" of the Fraternal
LiUian Pickellll, Thehna Smith,
sylvania.
The bride-elect graduated Order of Archon.
Phyllis Reed, Florence Bay,
The wedding is planned for
from Gallia Academy High
Maxine Whitehead, Sandra
School in the class of !967J1nd is May 31, 1971.
Ulndon, Violet Conn and Gladys
a seiiior at Rio Grande College,
Smith.

Wolfpen
News, Notes
"
Mr. and Mrs. Don Murphy of
Pittsburgh,- Pa., and Mr. and
Mrs. Dwight Logan of Pomeroy

PTA Votes $50 For Playground

Miss Shawver to Wed

Hoffa Spending Ea,ster at Home

eAU

Revenue Service, Cincinnati,
Ohio.

, SAN FRANCISCO, (UP!) ~
Teamster leader · James ~­
Hoffa, temporarily freed from
prison without a guard so he can
visit his seriously Ul wife, was
spending Easter weekend at her
bedside.
Hoffa, serving a 13-year
Mntence for jury tampering,
was. given a week's furlough
from Lewisburg, Pa., Federal
Penitentiary at ihe request .of
his wife Josephine's doctor.
He arrived Wednesday af·
ternoon and had ~de several
visit&amp; to ~;n, lloffa'• flft' ' loor

room at the University of
California Medical Center
before the U. s . Bureau of
Prisons announced his release
Friday. He will return to prison
Monday. · .
-'

CHAIN REACTION
FRANKFURT, . Germany
(UPI)-More than 100 cars
piled ~P in a chain reaction
accident on a high speed West
German autobahn Friday, aeriously' injuring 30 persons and
tying up traffic between Kassel
and Frankfurt for hours.

ATTEMPT EVEREST ·
KATMANDU '(UPI)-An in·,
KILLED IN CRASH
. ~rnational group of mountain
VAN WERT, Ohio (UP!) clbnber_s . have established a. Donna· · Wilson,
20, - of
camp at 2~,500 ,feet on the ,Monroeville, Ind., was . kiUeCl
southwest face of. MI. Ev~rest, early Saturday in a one-car
the N"14l Foreign Ministry crash on U. S. 224, northeast of
reported lialurday.
this northwestern Ohio city.

•

were recent visitor of Mr. and
Mrs. J . R. Murphy and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson
were !Iunday visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. J. R. Murphy and family.
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Murphy
and Mr . Harley Johnson and
Terry were Saturday evening
visitors of their parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Harley T. Johnson.
Monday visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Harley Johnson were Mr.
Howard Thoma Jr., Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Barr, David and
Michelle of Rutland and Mrs.
Howard Thoma Sr. ·
·
Thelma Giles was a recent
visitor of Mrs .•Harley Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey
and family of Albany were
Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Lincoln Russell.

soo

Regular
97.99

Is
Guaranteed

fnrvthing

$]899

Catalog l'rice
Craftsman Lawn Mower
with Eager-! Engine
st.nrts inst.nntly with
. a gentle pull of the
cord. Gives plenty of
power for big or
small mow;ng jGbs.

To Sotisfy9r Money Back

A&amp;P
ulated
SUGAR
'"

5-IA BAli
59~

·

Va~&amp;&lt;~n

Eu11 Pa11merat Pltln
Sali•faclioll Gllj,anlred iir Your Mont.v Back
SHOP AT SEARS ~
435 Second Ave. ·
446-2770
AND SAVE
Gallipolis, Ohio
Mon.-Tllur. 9-5
SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. ~·
• ... 9-8, 5 • t • 9 -5

ears

�.,

-- .

'I

'

. '

6-

TN&gt; S•mday Times -Sentinel, Sunday,

Congressman -Just Disappeared

AprU 11, 1971

Paiva said·, where Eliana was . Whatever -his fate, Paiva's a gun battle with police, and
released after one night, and case has beCO!Ile a symbol of the terrorists fled taking Paiva
the , mother was held lor · 12 . the conflict liere between with them. He sa,i~ Paiva mighi ·
days of questioni!!Jl:
Brazil's democratic traditiona- have been wounded.
Since Mrs. Paiva's "release lists and the unlimifed police Source Says Paiva Suspect
two months ag·o, she bas 'powers under· thP military The same source said Paiva
conducted a fruitless search for government of,Ptesident Emilio was suspected-of organiZing the
her husband. H~r search, she Garraslazu Medici.
returo to Brazil of terrorists
said, has been a series of
The case has been taken who were banished after being
frustrations , compounded by before Brazil's Council for the exchanged as • ransom for
the !act that officials to whom Defense of Human Rights and kidnaped diplomats.
she has talked, she said, have also has received some re- Paiva, an engineer, was
given her contradictory reports served publicity in the often- leader of the Brazilian Workers
or what happened to · her censored press.·
party and a member of
husband after his arrest. She
All of Brazil's security forces congress until 1964 when the
cannot confirm even if he is now maintain officially that armed forces ousted President
alive.
Paiva , H, is not a prisoner.
Joao Goulart and established a
No Charges Filed
Mrs. Paiva said in an militaryregime.Likethousands
There have been no charges interview that one high govern- of other politicians, he was
of any kind filed against him. ment official told her that her stripped of his political rights
And the army has formally · husband was still· in jail, may lor 10 years by the regbne .
denied before the Supreme be ~uffering from a gunshot
Mrs. Paiva ridiculed the
Court that either Paiva or his wound and would soon be report that he was a subversive
wife was ever arrested.
released. A military official agent, a topic ori which she said
told her, she said, that her she was questioned while being
COLUMBUS - John A.
husband had been captured by held.
Epling, 510 Jackson Pike ,
urban terrorists after his
"With ail the work he does
APARTMENTS BURN
arrest.
for the engineering firms and
Gallipolis, was arraigned
Friday before the U.S. District AKRON (UP!) _ Damage
Another military sour~e. who at home, he has no time," she

By DIANA PAGE
RIO DE JANEIRO (UPI )Last Jan. 20, six men identifying
themselves as plainclothes detectives ' arrested a former
Brazilian congressman, Rubens
Beyrodt Paiva, in his home
. while his wile and live children
watched in disbelief.
The following day, more men
identifying themselves as police
returned, and arr-ested Mrs .
Paiva and the couple's 15-yearold daughter, Eliana. They put
black hoods over the heads of
the mother and daughter for
the automobile ride to jail, Mrs.

Epling Says

RED STEWART AND THE AMB~RS - A
professional group from Parkersburg played following the

.. ,
annual GSI Talent Show.'Shown with Red, (far right) are
Gene Dunn, Richard Butcher, Bob Schuck, Sandy Butcher,
Sheryl Stewart and Pee Wee Parsons, a guest.

Combo. Above, left to right, aeated, are Sylvan Gardner,
chaplain; Earl Mills, treasurer; Frank Snedaker, trustee;
Edsel New, secr~tary; James Mills, Ill, tyler; standing,
Jerry Shelton, trustee; William Tawney, esquire; LoweD
Allen, leading knight; Robert Nibert, exalted ruler; Dwight
Sievers, Joyal knight; Ulwrence Tawney, lecturing knight,
and James Robinson, trustee._
_

?FFICERS I)'ISTALLED -Ill an bnpresslve ceremony,
Gallipolis Elks Lodge No. 107 installed new officers for the
year_ 1971·72, with Irvin Folden, Past Exalted Ruler,
preSiding and James Robinson, Past Exalted Ruler, ·
assisting. Fo~owing the installation-approximately 200 Elks
and their wives enjoyed a social hour and dance with the
music furnished by Harry Washington and his Capital

Not Guilty

;~,.,Ci ~Ci¥~=~\:::1 ~;~~~i~~ ;;.~?;g~n?~i ~b;:g;.~~~ g¥~;-:t~
I ~u:,.u~,;-.::;•:: :!':!.,"::.: .= I :=:::'/.·~::£;~ ;;;;?.::r.:::-::: .~M'':£~~------~~~~!!!!1!!!!!!!~~

SECOND ROUND

~~!~:"a~::~~.:pp~y~·~r::~::::
!._ ~_..i f_!.· ~~::\~~t;y ~rli~i~e:a~~~ali~: ri~ iesn~:~ub·: t~.~r"b:li~~!~
u.,.

,

Sears

$30,000 and - or three years in responsible.

EMPIRE'S

~;~~ I ~~·~::~=

25th

money Is provided by the club for commissary treats
throughout the year
Tbe so-called "~doption" policy can be done by

':\{ indefinite suspension from the
·•· ··•· practice of law by the Ohio State
{} Bar Association.

~::m.::s::c~tl~~a;e~::~hich brings • • • • • • th!h;r~:~~~i~~~~~~ ~~~~~~n~~
t1 !~Mf : @JI:lri•Jti\1% ·:.· ·••·•·•··• ·. :·•..· •·/·:; r··.•· \••• r · !·.·.~ ~~~~~o~ ~ ~~~.~n~~~;~~~~

Since 1859-

Save

20-in. Push-Type
Rotary Mowt&gt;.r

rum

· HAPPINESS IS ASUCCESSFUL ENDEAVOR- Talent
Sbow Co-chairmen, Bill Davis of the ·Physical Education
Deparbnent and Mrs. Bernard Guinther, of the Recreation
Deparbnent, look over the program for the_ir highly successful show. Practice for the event started back in March. It
was the cinnbined effort of residents, employees, employees'
relatives, and the Recreation and Physical Education
Deparbnents. In the picture are, left to right, back row,
Ulrry North, Physical Education Department, Dr. Bernard

NORWALK SPANISH

lASSEn MODERN
LIVING ROOM _$~m~

Niehm, Superintendent of the Gallipolis State Inatltute, f\lly
Wedemyer and Sharon Fay Waugh. Sharon played the piano
and sang. Front row,)eft to right, kneeling, Bill Davis, Mrs.
Guinther and Chris and Kathie McCoy. Chris and Kathie
sang a duet in the talent show.

E~95----!.17 4 95'
7 PC. EARLY AMERICAN
SUITE, WITH TABLES

Pictures and layout by Pat Houck
FIRST PLACE WINNER Resident Wanda Wheeler won
first place in the talent
contest with her presentation
of "It's Never Too Late"
Judges were Mrs. Pa~l
(Chatterbox of WJEH)
Wagner, Clarence Thompson ·
and Susan Davis.

REG.

COUCH

•29
. 995
'

$439.95-----·

2 Couches, Contemporary

MODERN COU_CH
AND CHAIR

TRADITIONAL COUCH

REG.
~~9~95---!219'~

$369.95----

•29995

UVING
6 PC.

DINING ROOM SUITE

REG. 1499.95

PC. DINING ROOM SUITE

•39995

5 PIECE DINEnE SET

REG. 1499.95
-

$39995

5 PIECE DINEnE SET
'

95
REG.
•11
~~9~95-----~89
$159.95-----7 PIECE DINEnE SET
5 PIECE DINEnE SET
REG. '15995 $129.95-------REG. .
•9995
~189.95------

5 PIECE DINEnE SET

FLAG CEREMONY - .Webeloes of Pack 205 Church of
God gave the flag ceremony at the talent show held at West
. Hall Audioorium Thursday and Friday at 7:30p.m. Scoutmaster is Bill Ulyne.

BATON TWIRIJNG ACT - Little Missy McDade,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Don McDade, led off the talent
show at the GSL Tbis w~s. the first Ye&amp;l' employees' relatives
rook part. ·
·
·
· ,

OHIO UNIVERSITY
STUDENT, Dale Ransom, a
votun leer worker, leads the
senior band in several instrumental numbers.

7 PIECE DINETTE SET

95
95
· ~~9.~95-----~119 ~~9~95-----~-1 09
9' PIECE
~
REG.95 •13995
.
.
$159.
DINmE SO -----------------·
eALL OTHER DINING ROOM FURNITURE ON SALE

DINING
ROOM
SUITE
ROUND

liiVEN AWAY ON

Yes, We will give away FREE your -choice ot any ~~uu.oo Regular
Retail ·Dining Room Suite on April 30, 1971 . No purchase necessary,
just c~me in and register.

BEDROOM FURNITURE
BASSETT ITALIAN

BASSETT MEDITERRANEAN

4 PIECE SUITE

· 4 PIECE SUITE

REG. •24995 $449.95----.;.
REG. •34995
$499.95·--SI'UDENT VOLUNTEERS - Ken Hall, left, and
Cathryn Hargis of Ohio University are among the student
voluntllers giving of their time (withoul credit) to help with
residents of the IMtitute.
'

MUSLIN
·
'

.

MATTRESS COVERS

•
I

Sanforized, Zippered

'
I

•

FULL OR
TWIN .SIZ£

.I

I

.,

I

•

• I• ,

•
I

I

''
'

&gt;

MIKE STEWART AND 'l1IE ROAD RUNNERS- Mike siewart, Mark .Ciark and Marty
Seelig partldpated in die llllllical program .which foUowed the talent show.
·.

$329

Darnbrough's
DEPT. STORE
OHIO
GJIIIPOIJS,

. KINCAID SOLID MAPLE

CALDWELL FRENCI-j

2 PC. SUITE, 2 Finishes

4 PIECE SUITE

REG. · ·2
-- 7495
$329.95:---:KINCAID SPANISH

~~9~9.·5---!399 95

REG.
•58995
_...__...._$699.95--

4 PIECE

Revival in
Minersville

I Green Velvet. 1 Black Vinyl

~~9~95 ----•49995 ~1~9~95----$.12995
eAU.

REV. LOWTHER

MINERSVILLE- Rev. Guy
W. Lowther, Jr. , associate
pastor of Baptist Gospel Temple
of Parkersburg, will he at the
Bible Baptist Temple, Minersville, to conduct revival service
beginning this evening at 7:3.0
p.m. through Saturday.
;'&lt; , Rev . Lowt_
her attended
SQ£ingfield Bible College,
Moody Bible College, Emmaus
Bible College and the Jack
Hyles Pastors' School.
Rev . Lowther has been
president of Revival Rally Tbne
since1968. Through his ministry
1004 souls have accepted Christ.
He has been associate pastor of
Baptist Gospel Temple for the
last tWo years. He is 29 years of
age and resides with wife,
Dottie, and six month-old
daughter, Christy In Parkersburg.

HARRY AllfSBARY, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Ams·
bary of 631 Fourth Ave.,
Gallipolis, was recently
GALLIPOLIS - Volunteer of
selected a member of the
the
month at the Gallipolis State
Epsilon Chapter, Phi Beta
Kappa at Ohio Stale Institute, Mrs. Sandra Koby,
University. Amsbary is a has been involved in a special
student in the three-year way - one we hear very little
program of the Ohio Stale about - the Ways and Means
Medical
School.
He . Committee.
Since volunteers are unpaid
graduated last June, Cum
Laude, from the Ohio State members of the hospital family
pre-med school with a 4.0 staff and no membershjp dues
average his senior year. are imposed, the volunteers
Harry Is the brother of must meet a few necessary
Kenneth Amsbary, a school expenditures.
Mrs. Koby helped to meet
teacher In Madison 'County,
and Dr. Gordon Amsbary,
Gallipolis dentist. Harry wm
be Initiated In the United
States' highest honorary
society on May 3.

Mrs. Koby Volunteer of April

SIZE)

Ready-Made Drapes
· 75", 100'' 150" WI.D.E

.I

REG. PRICE

these needs by selecting
sketches made by the art
students from Miss Nelle
Shaw's therapy classes. These
drawings were reproduced on
note paper and sold for the
benefit of the volunteer
association She is a member of
the Advisory Council.

Newlyweds

Given Shower

LIQI,JOR RAID '
CANTON, Ohio (UP!)
~nver Norri~, 55, was charged
REEDSVILLE _ A shower
wtth possesston of a still, un- was held at th K'bbl
1
.
e
taxed liquor and mash, after .
• •
Stark County sheriff's deputies Recre_atton llall on Aprtl 2
and federal agents Friday h&lt;ywrtng Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Hudnell, recent newlyweds
D
F te
•
uncovere d a 35 -ga 11 on op- 'th M
eration.
Wl
rs. o1ores os r as
hostess.
G.~mes were played and
prizes awarded to Judy Brunty,
Alice Mortimer, Debbie Miller,
Marlene
Putman, Roxie Reed
REEDSVILLE
The dueled on Wednesday with and Virginia Carter. The door
Riverview P.T.A. met at the room mothers in charge. Mrs.
prize was given to Roxie Reed.
school Tuesday evening, April Margaret Brown announced a 4Present were Mrs. Wihna
6. Riverview Girl Scout Troop 67 H club would organize Aprill3. Nelson, Mrs ..Mamie Bond, Mrs.
conducted the flag ceremony. Girls interested should contact
Judy Brunty, of Coolville; Miss
Mrs. Dolores Frank, vice Mrs. Brown.
For the program Mrs. Brown Debbie MiUer, Mrs. Margaret
president, conducted the
Schwarze!, Mrs. Sandra Sch·
business meeting when P.T.A. presented two readings, Easter
warzel and Sonja, Hockingport;
members voted to give $50 for Season and Twelve Tlioughts to Mrs . Frances Reed, Mrs .
Live By, and the fibn strips,
playground equipment.
Elizabeth Smith, Mrs. Roxie
It was announced that the How We Got Our Easter
Reed, Mrs. Phyllis Hetzer, Mrs.
Spring Confer~nce of District 16 CUstoms and Easter Around the Pamela Hoffman, Mrs. Alice
will be May I at the Pomeroy World.
Fred Kessinger, homeroom Mortimer, Mrs. Mary Bise,
Elementary School with the
Mrs. Connie Reed and Lisa,
coffee hour to begin at 9 a.m. teacher for 4th and 5th grades, Mrs . Wanda Kimes, Mrs.
Appointed to the nominating won the attendance banner, and
Virginia Carter, Mrs. Nell
committee were Mrs. Darlene reading circle book. Students of Wilson, Mrs. Marlene Pubnan,
Eleanor . Knight,
Reed, Mrs. Frances Reed, and Mrs.
developmental
reading teacher, Mrs. Garnet Johnson and the
Mrs. Elizabeth Smith.
honorees, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Easter parties will he con- will travel to Columbus May ·l7. Hudne'il and hostess, Mrs.
Dolores Foster.
Sending gifts were Dorotha
Riebel, Verna Rose, Mamie
Buckley, Rose Thomas, Inez
GALUPO!JS - Mr. and Mrs. where she will graduate in May. Boring, Virginia Walton, Susie
James Kenton Shawver, Evans While attending Rio Grande Cowdery, Julie Bond, Vesta
Heights, are announcing the College Miss Shawver has been Bise, Martha . Orr, Lena
engagement and forthcoming a Re~iderit Assistant, Student Pickering, Darlene Reed,
marriage of their . daughter Senator and a meSJ!ber of Alpha Lucille Smith, Grace Weber,
Ju~a Kay,. to Mr. John Phillip Mu Beta Social Sorority. Mr. Peg Buckley, Gladys Williams,
"Roderus, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roderus is a graduate ot Ruth Ann Balderson, EISlJIIa
William Roderus, 3729 Rural 'churchill Area High School and Dtirst, Mary Jamison, BerCourt, Pittsburgh, Penn· Rio Granqe College, where he nadine Snyder, Bess Ulrkins,
was a membel" of the Fraternal
LiUian Pickellll, Thehna Smith,
sylvania.
The bride-elect graduated Order of Archon.
Phyllis Reed, Florence Bay,
The wedding is planned for
from Gallia Academy High
Maxine Whitehead, Sandra
School in the class of !967J1nd is May 31, 1971.
Ulndon, Violet Conn and Gladys
a seiiior at Rio Grande College,
Smith.

Wolfpen
News, Notes
"
Mr. and Mrs. Don Murphy of
Pittsburgh,- Pa., and Mr. and
Mrs. Dwight Logan of Pomeroy

PTA Votes $50 For Playground

Miss Shawver to Wed

Hoffa Spending Ea,ster at Home

eAU

Revenue Service, Cincinnati,
Ohio.

, SAN FRANCISCO, (UP!) ~
Teamster leader · James ~­
Hoffa, temporarily freed from
prison without a guard so he can
visit his seriously Ul wife, was
spending Easter weekend at her
bedside.
Hoffa, serving a 13-year
Mntence for jury tampering,
was. given a week's furlough
from Lewisburg, Pa., Federal
Penitentiary at ihe request .of
his wife Josephine's doctor.
He arrived Wednesday af·
ternoon and had ~de several
visit&amp; to ~;n, lloffa'• flft' ' loor

room at the University of
California Medical Center
before the U. s . Bureau of
Prisons announced his release
Friday. He will return to prison
Monday. · .
-'

CHAIN REACTION
FRANKFURT, . Germany
(UPI)-More than 100 cars
piled ~P in a chain reaction
accident on a high speed West
German autobahn Friday, aeriously' injuring 30 persons and
tying up traffic between Kassel
and Frankfurt for hours.

ATTEMPT EVEREST ·
KATMANDU '(UPI)-An in·,
KILLED IN CRASH
. ~rnational group of mountain
VAN WERT, Ohio (UP!) clbnber_s . have established a. Donna· · Wilson,
20, - of
camp at 2~,500 ,feet on the ,Monroeville, Ind., was . kiUeCl
southwest face of. MI. Ev~rest, early Saturday in a one-car
the N"14l Foreign Ministry crash on U. S. 224, northeast of
reported lialurday.
this northwestern Ohio city.

•

were recent visitor of Mr. and
Mrs. J . R. Murphy and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson
were !Iunday visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. J. R. Murphy and family.
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Murphy
and Mr . Harley Johnson and
Terry were Saturday evening
visitors of their parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Harley T. Johnson.
Monday visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Harley Johnson were Mr.
Howard Thoma Jr., Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Barr, David and
Michelle of Rutland and Mrs.
Howard Thoma Sr. ·
·
Thelma Giles was a recent
visitor of Mrs .•Harley Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey
and family of Albany were
Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Lincoln Russell.

soo

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Guaranteed

fnrvthing

$]899

Catalog l'rice
Craftsman Lawn Mower
with Eager-! Engine
st.nrts inst.nntly with
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cord. Gives plenty of
power for big or
small mow;ng jGbs.

To Sotisfy9r Money Back

A&amp;P
ulated
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'"

5-IA BAli
59~

·

Va~&amp;&lt;~n

Eu11 Pa11merat Pltln
Sali•faclioll Gllj,anlred iir Your Mont.v Back
SHOP AT SEARS ~
435 Second Ave. ·
446-2770
AND SAVE
Gallipolis, Ohio
Mon.-Tllur. 9-5
SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. ~·
• ... 9-8, 5 • t • 9 -5

ears

�._.,

1-TheSundayTimes-Sentinel,Sunday, Aprilll,l97r

9-The SundayTimes-Sentlnel,Sunday, Aprllll,l971

.

Strip Mining Proposals
Will Occupy ·Legislat
.

.

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Consid·
era lion of the various proposals
to regulate strip mining ought
to be enough to occupy the
Gen~ral Assembly for a full
year in the area of mining.
But Reps. A. G. Lancione, [)..
Bellaire, and Keith McNamara,

Ohio Politics
R • Columbus, have tossed in
another mining bill that could
get as much if not more allen·
lion before the session is over.
The measure is designed to
bring Ohio law up to or above
federal standards for compensa·
ling victims of miner's asthma,
or ·"black lung" disease.
Lancione and McNamara
were the main proponents of
hard.fought legislation in 1969
making "black lung" a compensable disease under work·
men's compensation in Ohio.
Their new bill could be
equally as spectacular. It contains so many innovative plums
for coal miners it is almost
certain to be the target of lobby

groups of all stripes.
The United Mine Workers
Union is expected to support the
legislation, but the Ohio AFLCIO may try to get rid of one
section - allowing nine
operators to write off the risk of
"black lung" in their mines
through private insurance
companies.
Mining and manufacturing
groups are expected to take
aim at a number o£ provisions
in the bill . And it is anticipated
rubber, glass and asbestos
workers may be put out
because they are not . included
in the legislation, which applies
to deep coal mines but no other
occupa tiona! sites.
The names of Lancione and
McNamara alone on the bill
gives it a good chance of top
consideration. Lancione is the
House Democratic leader and
McNamara is a member of the
House Republican inner circle
and chairman of the Reference
Committee.
One landmark provison in the
bill applies to persons who have
worked in a ~oal mine for 10
years. If such persons were to

Community
Corner By

be totally disabled or killed by
"black lung" it would, be automatically presumed th~ disease
was occupational.
This presumption would be
"irrebuttable" if diagnosis were
made by X • ray, biopsy or
autopsy.
The "presumption" provision
is part of federal law but does
not apply to Ohio statutes .
Naturally, the mining industry
would oppose it, as would other
industries fearing it might
spread to them.
The bill also upgrades bene·
fits for widows and orphans of
miners who die of "black
lung," removing a $20,000 ceiling for a widow with two child·
ren.
Extras For Miners
Benefits for a totally disabled
miner would remain at two·
thirds of his weekly wage up to
$56 a week, but he would get
an extra 50 per cent if he was
married and an extra 75 per
cent if he had a child or adult
dependent.
Three or more dependents
would double the maximum
benefits to $112 a week. These

charlene .Hoetlich

same benefits would apply for
the life of a widow and for the
period of dependency of a deceased miner's children.
Another new feature in the
bill is judicial review for anyone dissatisfied with a decision
by the Bureau of Workmen's.
Compensation.
McNamara said the AFL-CJO
has opposed the feature allowing mine operators to use pri·
vale insurance companies ever
since U.S. Sen. Robert Taft Jr.
first presented it 15 years ago
when he was in the legislature.
He said the labor organization
apparently felt privale firms
would be more difficult for em·
·ployes to deal with.
The total package, McNamara
said is designed to make it
cheaper for the mining industry
to install devices to eliminate
coal dust than to pay for dis·
ability claims.
He said the industry would find
it advantageous to apply the
federal standards through the
Bureau of Workmen's Compensation than through the federal
Social Security syslem.

OPEN 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

ARMOUR*STAR SELECTED PORK. U~S. Govt. ·Inspected

WHOLE

By ANN ARNOLD
AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) - A
letter from Soviet Premier
Nikita Khrushchev, warning
that only "Madmen and
politicia_. blinded by hatred"
would enter a nuclear war, is
one of 31 million documents
from the papers of Lyndon B.

Johnson to be opeped to the
public May 22 at ·the former
president's library .
Khrushchev's letter and
Johnson's reply were among 14
documents shown to newsmen
thls week in a preview of what
visitors to the nation's sixth and
largest presidential library will
see.

Meigs

Property
Transfers
, , , j'\f~hie
1

lj:. Lee, June P. Lee, to

ill!vid
Bowen, Jeanne Bowen,
I
r
· .37 Acre, Syracuse-Sutton.
Frank Cleland, Delores
Cleland to Franklin B. Wilson ~
Jr., Eunice Wilson, .14 Acre,
Sutton.
Olaf A. Peterson, Alma G.
Peterson to Jack Bernard
Peterson, Joyce Ann Peterson,
2 Acres, Rutland.
·
Albert Wigal, Sylvia Wigal,
Otis Bailey, Phyllis Bailey to
Gene David Hudson, 1.85 Acres,
Sutton-Racine.
Carl Hysell, Thelma Hysell to
Orville Johnson, Velma
Johnson, .42 Acre, Rutland.
Clair 0. Nelson, Eleanor
, Nelson to Franklin Real Estate,
9.'672 Acres, Rutland.
'
C. W. Hoback to General
Telephone Co., Ease., Lebanon.
Roger Powell, Hattie Powell
to General Telephone Co.,
Ease., Lebanon.
Edward N. Humphrey, Waid
C. Humphrey, to Ohio Fuel Gas
Co . .083 Acre, Salisbury.
Sherman Tillis, Kathleen
Tillis to Roger Black, .12 Acre,
Rutland.
Bernard V. Fultz, Betty J.
Fultz to Rankin Ray Pickens,
Lot, Pomeroy.
1o

~

I

•

DIVORCE ASKED
GALLIPOLIS - Charging
gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty, Deborah
Gooderham, a minor by Thelma
Sibley, Rt. 2, Crown City, filed a
petition Friday in Gallia County
Cornman Pleas Court seeking a
divorce
from
Gregory
Gooderham, Crown Cily. The
couple was married Dec. 26,
1970.
WINS KEY
POMEROY - Frank A. Titus
of Pomeroy, a graduate of
Pomeroy High School, Is one of
t:J:l new members of the Ohio
Slate University Chapter of Phi
Beta Kappa, national scholastic
honor society: The chapter will
hold its annual'- initiation
· ceremonies and · program on
Monday, May 3, at the . Ohio
Union Oil the campus.

EDWARD ROWLES

Granges to

Dine Friday
POMEROY - Edward W.
Rowles, Pleasantville, Ohio,
will be guest speaker at the
annual banquet of Meigs County
granges to be held at 7 p.m.
Friday at the Salisbury
Elementary School.
A graduate of Ohio State
University with a BS in
agriculture, Mr. Rowles is a
dairy farmer. He is a member
and past master of Pleasant
Grange in Fairfield County and
is a state and national grange
member. He is now serving as
assistant steward of the Ohio
State Grange.
A member of the Pleasant·
ville United Methodist Church
where he serves on the ad·
ministrative board, Rowles is a
member of the board of
directors of the Grange Mutual
Insurance Co., a member of the
Masonic Lodge, a past master;
a member of the York Rite
bodies and is also active with
farm and Pleasantville area
civic groups.

14-lb. Avg•.

INTERESTING BUT UNUSUAL were the latest figures
released by Vilma Pikkoja of the Meigs Library Extension Ser·
vice. She tells us that the Meigs County adult reader registration
is over 2,000 higher than the juvenile reader registralion, a
situation reversed in most areas.
As of this month, 5,398 adult readers and 3,292 juvenile
readers are registered making a total of 8,690 people using the
bookmobile facilities.

1M

wife.

~"

.

W1 ReaerYe The Right To
limit Quantitin

lb.

AS OF FRIDAY the Pomeroy Elementary School was within
$250of having enough money to send the sixth grade safety patrol
students to Washington, D. C. The total cost for the weekend trip
for the 29 students is $1,450.

On All

Item• In This Ad. Prices
EffecH" Thno Sot., April
17, 1971. None Sold To
Dnlers.

REMEMBER EASTER 1970? It snowed. Now a repeat of that
we don't need!

RUMMAGE WANTED
MIDDLEPORT - Rummage
is being collected by the junior
auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, American Legion for a·
sale to he held sometime in

Attending the meeting
besides those named were Mrs.
Mildred Donahue, Mrs. Mary
Roush, Mrs. Focie .Hayman,
.Mrs. Barbara Dugan, and
1
guestS, Dixie Dugan, and Mrs.
Georgia Milliron of Beaver
Falls, Pa .
A hobby of Mrs. Winebrenner's the past 25 years has
been keeping a diary. Her life 's activities are recorded in her
diaries and the family Bible which she refers to when
necessary.

May. Residents with items to
contribute are asked to call
Mrs. Etta Will, Mrs. Albert
Roush, or Mrs . Charles
Kessinger.

By POLLY CRAMER
DEAR POLLY-Please tell Mrs. H. W. E. NOT to wear
her hearing aid when she goes swimming. Don't do it'
All our family wear hearing aids and we were warned
not to get them wet or leave them where they would get
too warm. Such an aid is too great an investment to take
a chance on ruining il.- A. I. R.
· .

DEAR POLLY-Mrs. H. W. E. can obtain some help
wtth any mo!sture problems in her hearing aid if she (II
Takes the atd to . her dealer for regular cleanings. He
should make it less prone to moisture. (2) Purchases a
c?m~ercial ki_
t made ~o help this problem and places the
~1d ~n this ~1t ov~rntght. By. doing so she will prevent
mOisture bwld-up· and her atd wtll not shut off as easily
from dampness. When swimming, let a friend hold the
aid or if a check room is available check it with other
valuables. (3) As far as swimming is concerned some
doctors discourage this for people like us who have ear
problems.-H. J . F., another hearing aid user.

iilll',-----;111 Polly's

Problem ~Bfmmmn~%i1Ml@j\J{:·,

DEA~ POLLY-l'haye a walnut coffee table

and !,~
for the 'past four years have waxed it with lem'on !I;
wax. _Thls was very satisfactory until recently when i~
I notice~ a very large dull mark on it. I have tried ;,
everything I know of to restore that part to a shine fi
but unsuccessfully. I do not know what to do and · ii
hope someone can help me.-JOAN
ti

. .....,
tt
··---~~--. '"
DEAR POLLY-I make my own plant labels from I·
i

~%'®$l'i'"~

by-3-inch strips cut from
use d bleach bottles. I
scratch or write on these
with a lar~e. needle inserted
in a two-mch section of a
wooden broom handle . Next
I rub dark shoe polish over
the label and wipe off the
excess. This makes the
writing brightly visible.
I place strawberry run·
ners for new plants where
I want them and then hold
them in place by P.ressing heavy wire hairpins over them
and on into the soli. When the plants are rooted, I remove
the hairpins and use them to hold runners for other
plants.-CELES'I'IA

Value
built
in by
Jarman

48 Recipes' ta Help Your Meal Planning

She Looks on
·
· t h e Sunny s.·de

DEAR GIRLS-The following letter Is from a gentleman
who has a hearing ald service and wears one himself.POLLY

Styrmg ...
with
EXTRA

BETTER HOMES &amp;GARDENS I.U~USTRATED MEAT
RECIPES RIGHT ON OUR FRESH MEAT PACKAGES

.

·On Ruining Heating Aid

Newest

Exclusive at Pennyfare and At No Extra Charge!

.

Don't Take Anv Chances

lJ1

U. S. ·No. 1Grade

Idaho Potatoes
N·utritious

10.1b.

Bag

I have found this great for use when trying to root long
Ivy clippings with which I want to cover an area.POLLY
.

Healthful and

(NEWSPAPER ENTHPRISE ASSN.)

You will receive a dollar If Polly uses your favorite
homemalrlng Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solu·
tlon to a problem. Write Polly In care of this newspaper.

JOAN OF ARC
LIGHT RED

THOROFARE

KIDN'EY·

"BEVERAGES

"

'STATE ·FARE
Sliced White

-

•

'BR'EAD .

·· -

BEAlS
.
1-lb. 1-oz. Cans

Ph•t lottie

New Haven Club
to Dine on May 26

You win two
ways here : You

1-lb. 4-oz. Loaves

rar

POMEROY - A benefit
square dance for the George
Thompson Kidney Fund will
be held Saturday night at the
archery building of Royal
Oak Park.
An orchestra - Gary
Thoma and the Com Huskers
- Is donating lt~ services for
the dance which Is open to the
public. Sileclal callers will be
featured and a cake walk is
planned. Ellen Thoma is
heading the event.

ASK TO WED
GALLIPOUS - Two couples
applied for marriage licenses
Friday In Gallla County
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
Coolman Pleas Court. They
The
were Richard Dale scott, 19, MIDDLEPOl\T
Gallipolis; bookkeeper and Middleport E-R unit answered a
Linda Mae W9rkman, 18, ~,1 at 5:08p.m. Friday to the
Gllllpoll1, clerk. James ClaY, ton home of Elmer Napper on
Dovenbarfler, 29, Gallipolis, . Cooks Gap Hill, who was taken
deckhand, and Belly Jane to Vc.terans Memorial Hospital
L;JIIbtrt, :18, Glllipolls, ·and admitted as a medical
patient. .

Prayer by Mrs. Nora Pierson
opened the meeting. Devotions
were given by Mrs. Mabel
Shields. The group sang "In the
Garden," and scriptures from
1st Cor. 5, 1-1$ and St. John. 12,
verse 20, were read. The Lord's
prayer in unison was given.
Read at the meeting was a
thank-you note from the Bend.
0' the River Garden Club for a
donation towards the planting
at the Letart Falls cemetery
entrance.
Mrs. Eulah Wolfe, assisted by
Mrs. Julia Norris, gave the
program on "The Woman Who
Missed Easter". Mrs. Clara
Adams and Mrs. Shields served
refreshments. The birthdays of
Mrs. Doris Sayre and Mrs.
Hazel Fox were observed.

POLLY'S POINTERS

Khrushchev Letter Revealing
The other 12 documents in· disputes by force of arms, a
eluded a card from 'which world thermonuclear war
Johnson read his brief should come about, no one will
sta tement on Nov. 22, 1962, be spared, no one will be able to
asking the nation's support protect himself against it.
"No one, except madmen and
after the assassination of
President John F. Kennedy, a poll ticians blinded by haIred,
letler from Mrs. Johnson urging can acquiesce to such a
her husband to seek the 1964 prospect. I want to declare
Democratic nomination and a definitely and firmly that in the
thank you note from Ho Chi Soviet Union there are no such
Minh that did not reach Johnson politicians, and if some should
until nearly four months after come to the fore, they will
he left office. The North Viet- unquestionably be placed in an
namese leader's thanks were insane asylum," Khrushchev
for copies of Apollo 8 said .
In his four -page reply,
photographs Johnson sent to all
Johnson assured Khrushchev
world leaders.
Khrushchev's rambling, 18· "that practical progress toward
page letter proposed an in· peace is my most fervent
lerna tiona! treaty to ban the use desire.''
of force in territorial disputes as The documen Is shown to
a step towards reduction of reporters were selected by
world tensions and eventual library officials as represen·
agreement on complete tative samples of the more
interesting papers in the
disarmament.
The letter, dated Dec. 31, 1963, collection spanning Johnson's
is described by archivists as the . 34-year career in public office.
Johnson himseli took a hand
first substantive correspon·
dence between the Russian in selecting the memorabilia,
leade{ and Johnson following photographs and official
documen Is that will be
the Kennedy assassination.
" In the nuclear age, war can spotlighted in displays at the
no longer be the means for presidential library on the
solving international disputes," University of Texas campus.
The library is part of an $18.6
Khrushchev wrote. " II cannot
million
complex that also
be doubted that if, because of a
local collision of stales striving houses the Lyndon B. Johnson
to resolve their territorial School of Public Affairs.

Social
Calendar

'

POMEROY - Easte.r outfits
_ POMEROY - Easter has been a .real big thing for the for two girls at the Gallipolis
youngstera of the Meigs County Community Classes Or Retarded State Institute were provided by
Children, thanks to a number of individuals and organizations.
the Women 's. Society of
Thursday Coleen Ohlinger, .Carolyn Satterfield, Olarlotte Christian Service of the East
. Hanning, and Beverly Long of the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta Letart United Methodist
Sigma Phi Sorority staged an egg hunt at Forest Acres Park for Church.
lhe children and then presented each one with a nice Easter
During a recent meeting Mrs.
basket.
Eileen Roush reported on a visit
Mrs. Fred Crow gave Easter favors to each one during a visit with the two patients who are
to her ho~e in Syracuse Wednesday, and miniature baskets of sponsored by the Society and
candies were provide(! for each child by the Junior American arrangements were made to
provide new dresses, shoes and
Legion AuXiliary of Drew Webster Post 39.
A visit to Landmark was also made and Jack Carsey, socks for each one. Mrs. Roush
manager, gave 10 baby chickens to the children along with some also explained the "country
store" maintained by volun·
trinkets and refreshments.
·
And next Monday through the courtesy of the local Shrine teers and told of their need for
Club, the 13 children, their teachers, aides and bus drivers will good used clothing to be
attend a special performance of the Shriners Circus in Columbus. distributed to the patients.
Mrs. Ferne B. Hayman
The children will have a picnic lunch at noon and then will be
presided at the meeting during
given refreslunents during the circus intermission.
which tlme a $25 contribution
was made to the George
SURPRISES ARE SUCH FUN ! Ernest Weber, 82 on April Thompson·Kidney Fund and $10
Fool's Day, is trying to figure out who sent a large decorated · was given to the Crippled
birthday cake to him. Thursday after Thursday he bowls at the Children's Society.
Pomeroy Lanes and on the day of his birlhday, there it was,
The spring district meeting to
beautifully decorated .and appropriately inscribed.
be held at Logan on April 14 was
announced and plans were
'qlE TRADITIONAL EGG hunt of the Middleport-Pomeroy made for a work session at the
Rotary Club will be staged this afternoon at 2 p.m. at the Mid· church on April 16.
dleport park so take yours in tow and go. It's sure to be an ex·
perience, hopefully happy.
Anyways, as in years past over 400 prizes will be awarded and
the finder of that lucky golden egg will get $10. The silver egg is
worth $5. So if you're 12 or under, happy hunting!

· 252 THIRD AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
SU..IR MARKITS

Easter Outti"ts for
Two Girls .Provided·

gel always·
correcl styling
and you get Jexseal
conslrucllon with the
tough tnjecllon-molded
·polyvinyl sole and heel
that weor "afrnost forever."
Clime In and lei us fit you !n
this extra-value Iannan style .

We have a complete selection
of Jarman shoes for men ...
14.99to25.99

·HEINZ

Uc

BRDiflST DRill
3 ~h. $1

CRISCO

KEEILER'S ·

KETCHUP
'14·01.

Bottlt

OIL
1-Qt. 1-Pt.

lottie

'842 S.co•nd

- WAGNERS

$119
•

PEal WilES
J4.lo}•OJ.

Pkp.'

1

•.

4ft•7C

KRAFT FEATURES
•

1.

'

M•shmallow (reme . . . . . . .
M1nhmallow Creme --..'. . . . . ~~:.··
ltalllll Dressi!'G . . . . . . _.. . . . ::i.·
S.lld Secret Dressing . . . . . . . ••:::
P•kly Margarine ·. . . . . . . . . . ~~•.
Parkey Soft Diet M1rgarine . . . . ~i~:
7i!:·

•

29c
39c

6k
.1t

llt
45c

•

MIDDLE OF THE tiPPER BLOCK
~MEROY,
.
,•

Phone «6·
Is

·~

OHIO
.

Open Friday Nights Til9
Open All Day Thursdays

BY !\ATIE CROW
SYRACUSE - Look for the
sunny side of life is the
philosophy of Mrs. Oma
Winebrenner, known a f.
fectionately by children in lhe
neighborhood as "Grandma."
Mrs. Winebrenner resides
with her daughter, Mrs. Beulah
Ward, director of nurses at
Holzer Medical Center, in the
Lee addition of lower Syracuse.
Her ou !look on life is
tremendous! At 87 years of age
she can hold one spellbound
with interesting conversation.
A devoted christian, Mrs.
Winebrenner looks on the
" bright" side of life. "The Lord
leads us and God has a hand in
all things," Mrs. Winebrenner
insists.
Her strong love for her family
is apparent as she relates story
after story of bygone days and
the present activities of her
children and grandchildren.
Mrs. Winebrenner was
married to Frank Winebrenner
' 50 years. Mr. Winebrenner died
July 27, 1955. The couple had
nine children, one set of.triplets.
One of the triplets died at five
months and the couple lost their
oldest son in the 1940s. Mrs.
Winebrenner has 15 grand·
children, 12 great-grandchildren and one great :
great-grandchild.
She is a me'!lber of, the

ll_,!=~~~=======~~~~~~~~~~ .

reg.istrallon
forms
wtllIf
maUed
at a later
.date.

~e

10·

friendaatH
Burdette Addluon,
Point Pleasant.

meeting Middleport Lodge 363
F&amp;AM, 6:30p.m. Master Mason
Degree.
Syracuse Asbury Un't d POMEROY PTA, Tuesday,
inMe th od.lS 1 Ch urc h an d 'the e 7:30 p.m. David. Bowen,
·
. A'd H d
.
s trumental mustc tnstructor
Lad tes
1 . er ays are g1ven
.
t h
to quilting for the Aid at home WI 11 presen 1 e program.
and at the group's weekly MINISTERIAL Assn.,
meeting. ,
Tuesday at Middleport Church
Mrs. Winebrenner has kept a of the Nazarene at 10 a.m.
diar~ of her activities for past 26
WEDNESDAY
years. "! like to put something
POMEROY · MIDDLEPORT
humorous in my diary. The Lions Club, Wednesday noon,
family loves to read what 1 have United Methodist Church.
written and ·when I am gone Program will be the fUm, "The
they will read the writings and J1e.k!!l an Delta."
perhaps, enjoy a laugh or tw~ _ POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
she quips.
·
Royal Arch Masons, 7:30
"I don't have an ache or a Wednesday, Pomeroy Masonic
pain, l'm very content. 1 like Temple.
.
everybody. You can't have hate
THURSDAY
in your heart and be happy,"
ROCK SPRINGS~.fuetter
she noted.
Health Club, Thursdllit, !:IS
In addition to her quilting and p.m. home of Mrs. William
recordings made in her diaries Grueser.
and family Bible, Mrs .
Winebrenner works crossword
puzzles and jumbled words. She
also likes to read but is very
critical of television . Mrs.
Winebrenner has always been a
wonderful cook and seamstress
but today is just content to quilt.
One thing certain if when you
stop to visit Mrs. Winebrenner
and you aren't feeling up to par
you will feel on top of the world
when you leave.

.

Spiritual Program
Given at Church
POMEROY - A program of
spiritual music was presented
by the Ambassadors Quartet of
the Circleville Bible College
Wednesday night at the Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church.
Charles Haddocks was pianist
for the singers, Dan Poler, Mike
Walters, Dennis Rawlins and
Earl Blair. They opened with
their theme song, "Thank God I
am Free." Prayer was by the
Rev . Eugene Gill. The
.congregation sang several
numbers and there was a plano
solo by Haddocks, "Led by the
Master's Hand." Mr, Blair was
speaker for the service.

POMEROY - A hymn sing
was planned for May 2 at 2 p.m.
at the United Faith Nondemoninational Church located
on the Pomeroy • Middleport
bypass during the Wednesday
night meeting at the church.
Plans were also made for a
revival service to begin the
same day and continue through
May 8,. 7:30 each evening. The
Bissell Brothers will sing at the
hymn sing and other singers are
in vi ~d to take part in the
revival services. Evangelist for
the services will be the Rev.
Dennis Weaver.
GOING WEST
A communion service will be
POMEROY
- Mrs. Herman
held at the church on April18.
Thirteen adults and five Carson, Long Bottom, RD and
children were present for the Mrs. Mildred Frank, Pomeroy,
RD, left Saturday for Ventura,
meeting.
Calif., for an exlenqed visit with
their sister, Mrs. Nell Albinger. ,

"
NEW HAVEN - The New terested, contact Shirley
1134,
'Haven Woman's Club annual Campbell, . Room
Sciences
.Building,
Agricultural
dinner meeting will be held this
year at the Uptowner Inn in W. Va. University, Morgan·
Parkersburg, Tuesday, May 26 town, 26506.----_,
at 6:30p.m., according to Mrs.
Kenneth Thompson, chairman.
She reports that the reservation
fee Is $4.10 and this Includes tax
and tip. Reservations are to be
made to her no later than April
27.
Mrs.
Perdue, District
PT. PLEASANT _ Trinity
!;'resident, will install the Club United. Methodist Church
Officers at the meeting in chapel was the setting for the
Parkersburg, May 25. The local marriage of Opal D. Jell and
club will hold an election of Wilbur Jack Stewart on
officers at the next scheduled Saturday, April 3. The Rev.
meeting, wqich will be Tuesday, Charles' S. Thompson perMay 27 at 8 p.m.
formed
the
double-ring
Mrs.CharlesSmlth,president ceremony.
Df the New Haven Club, has Mrs. Stewart is a daughter of
announced other dates con- Mrs. Vadie Abbott .oi Walton,
cerning the club. The !Sth West Virginia, and the
Annual Educational Institute groom is a son of Mr. and
will be held at Marshall July 21 Mrs. Wilbur Stewart of Mason.
through the 23rd. Costs are · For· her wedding, the bride'
approximately $15, which in· wore a pink A-line street dress
elude~ room. Me~ls are extra . .and a corsage 0! white car·
Mlm College wtll be held at · nations. She is ' employed as
Morgantown June 14 . through secretary i!l the office 01 Dr.
June 11: The cost forth~ will~ Randall'Taylor and Mr. Stewart
~pproxtmately $50, whtch Will is employed at the Amos Power ·
mclude room and .board. Plant it Winfield.
Complete . ~ourse detatls and 'J:he couple is at home to their

Nuptial Rites
Were April 3rd

for

.

SUNDAY ..
SUNRISE sERVICE Sunctay
Hemlock Grove Christian
Church 5:30 a.m. Worship
service and Sunday School at
regular time .
SUNRISE SERVICE Letart
Falls U. B. Church Sunda 6 a.m.
Breakfast will be served at
home of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Norris.
RUTLAND Co mmunity
Church prayer praise and
communion' service, Sunday, 2
p. m. Rev . Amos Tillis extends
public welcome.
SUNRISE SERVICE, 6:30 a.
m. Sunday, Rock Springs
Methodist Church , youth
fellowship in charge. Worship
and Sunday SChool at 9:30a.m.
followed by egg hunt.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF
Christ, 6 a.m. Sunday, sun~ise
service. Public invited.
SUNRISE Services, 6 a.m.
Easter, Hartford Church of
Christ in Christian Union, Rev.
O'dell Manley , pastor . Public
welcome.
MONDAY
POMEROY High Alumni
Association meeting, 7:30p.m.
Monday at Pomeroy City Hall
council chambers. All alumni
invited.
MONDAY, April 12 special
meeting, Middleport Lodge 363
F&amp;AM, 7:30p.m. E. A. Degree.
W.S.C.S. HEATH United
Methodist Church, 7:30 p.m.
Monday night at the church.
TUESDAY
TUESDAY, APRIL 13 special

Installation
Of Officers
Conducted
MIDDLEPORT
In
s lallation of new officero
highlighted the Tuesday nigh
meeting ol Meigs Temple IS3.
Pythian Sisters, at the hall.
Installed by Mrs. MarUu
Childs in the absence of Mrs
Elizabeth Allman due to illness
were Mrs. Opal Biggs, pas
chief;
Mrs·.
Margare
Seidenabel, most excellen
chief ; Mrs. Virginia Owen
excellent senior; Mrs. Bell~
Hayes, excellent junior; Mrs
Betty Biggs, manager; Mrs
Genevieve Meinhart, guard
Mrs. Ella Will, protector; Mrs
Gertrude Andrews, secretary
and Mrs. Betty Spencer
treasurer.

Assisting Mrs. Childs with tht
installation .was Mrs. Neil•
Bahr, grand senior and Mrs
Doris Bailey, grand manager
Tl1e commission of Mrs
Allman was read and th&lt;
charier was draped in th&lt;
memory of Mrs. Edith Russell
Music was provided by · Mrs
Childs who also rep(){ted on th&lt;
knife sale.
A letter was read from Mrs.
Helen Lathan, grand chief, .
announcing the appointment of
Mrs. Betty Weber as diatrict
deputy. Inspection was set for
June 1 at the hall.
It was reported that $89 had
been spent for altruistic work
and that 207 sick calls were
made in March. Several
members were reported ill . .

Eddy's

Schedul~:

POMEROY - April 12 - 910:25, Salisbury; 11·11: 15,
Snowville; 12 :31).3:00, Zaleski;
3:45-4, Prattsville ; 4:10-5,
SChool Lot ; 5:l:Hl, Carpenter;
6:30· 7, Harrisonville; 7: 30·8,
Wolf Pen .
April 13 - 12: 3().3, Racine;
3:15-3 :30, Wagner's; 4-4:30,
Harden's; 4:45-5:30, Rizer's;
5:45-6:45, Forest Run.
April15 - 9-10:30, Syracuse;
11·11:15, Antiquity; 12·2,
Letart; 2:15-4, East Letart; ~
5:30, Applet'Grove; 11-7, Great
Bend; 7:3(1.8:30, Syracuse P. 0.
April 16 - 9-2:30,, Ppmerj)Y
Ele. ; 3-3:30, Pomeroy Ulx'ary.
Please help Mr. Eddy and
return all overdue books
without a notice being sent.

AN·
"And, lo, I am with you alway, even unto the
end ol the world." .
- Matthew .28:20.
Thus spoke Jesus, rise~ from the tomb, to His
disciples . As they found comfort and inspir·
at ion in His words and in His presence, so
may the Miracle of Easter hearten and in·
spire us in our daily lives. To you at Easter,
our warm regards .

Specials
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PLA
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From The

Friend~

Folks At

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POMEROY, 0.
Member Federal Reserve System ·

On Fridays Our Drive-In Window
is Open 9 a.m. ,fa 7 p.m., (Con-

-----.-·.;;·l:i.o----· •__________.........

TUPPERS
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1-TheSundayTimes-Sentinel,Sunday, Aprilll,l97r

9-The SundayTimes-Sentlnel,Sunday, Aprllll,l971

.

Strip Mining Proposals
Will Occupy ·Legislat
.

.

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Consid·
era lion of the various proposals
to regulate strip mining ought
to be enough to occupy the
Gen~ral Assembly for a full
year in the area of mining.
But Reps. A. G. Lancione, [)..
Bellaire, and Keith McNamara,

Ohio Politics
R • Columbus, have tossed in
another mining bill that could
get as much if not more allen·
lion before the session is over.
The measure is designed to
bring Ohio law up to or above
federal standards for compensa·
ling victims of miner's asthma,
or ·"black lung" disease.
Lancione and McNamara
were the main proponents of
hard.fought legislation in 1969
making "black lung" a compensable disease under work·
men's compensation in Ohio.
Their new bill could be
equally as spectacular. It contains so many innovative plums
for coal miners it is almost
certain to be the target of lobby

groups of all stripes.
The United Mine Workers
Union is expected to support the
legislation, but the Ohio AFLCIO may try to get rid of one
section - allowing nine
operators to write off the risk of
"black lung" in their mines
through private insurance
companies.
Mining and manufacturing
groups are expected to take
aim at a number o£ provisions
in the bill . And it is anticipated
rubber, glass and asbestos
workers may be put out
because they are not . included
in the legislation, which applies
to deep coal mines but no other
occupa tiona! sites.
The names of Lancione and
McNamara alone on the bill
gives it a good chance of top
consideration. Lancione is the
House Democratic leader and
McNamara is a member of the
House Republican inner circle
and chairman of the Reference
Committee.
One landmark provison in the
bill applies to persons who have
worked in a ~oal mine for 10
years. If such persons were to

Community
Corner By

be totally disabled or killed by
"black lung" it would, be automatically presumed th~ disease
was occupational.
This presumption would be
"irrebuttable" if diagnosis were
made by X • ray, biopsy or
autopsy.
The "presumption" provision
is part of federal law but does
not apply to Ohio statutes .
Naturally, the mining industry
would oppose it, as would other
industries fearing it might
spread to them.
The bill also upgrades bene·
fits for widows and orphans of
miners who die of "black
lung," removing a $20,000 ceiling for a widow with two child·
ren.
Extras For Miners
Benefits for a totally disabled
miner would remain at two·
thirds of his weekly wage up to
$56 a week, but he would get
an extra 50 per cent if he was
married and an extra 75 per
cent if he had a child or adult
dependent.
Three or more dependents
would double the maximum
benefits to $112 a week. These

charlene .Hoetlich

same benefits would apply for
the life of a widow and for the
period of dependency of a deceased miner's children.
Another new feature in the
bill is judicial review for anyone dissatisfied with a decision
by the Bureau of Workmen's.
Compensation.
McNamara said the AFL-CJO
has opposed the feature allowing mine operators to use pri·
vale insurance companies ever
since U.S. Sen. Robert Taft Jr.
first presented it 15 years ago
when he was in the legislature.
He said the labor organization
apparently felt privale firms
would be more difficult for em·
·ployes to deal with.
The total package, McNamara
said is designed to make it
cheaper for the mining industry
to install devices to eliminate
coal dust than to pay for dis·
ability claims.
He said the industry would find
it advantageous to apply the
federal standards through the
Bureau of Workmen's Compensation than through the federal
Social Security syslem.

OPEN 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

ARMOUR*STAR SELECTED PORK. U~S. Govt. ·Inspected

WHOLE

By ANN ARNOLD
AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) - A
letter from Soviet Premier
Nikita Khrushchev, warning
that only "Madmen and
politicia_. blinded by hatred"
would enter a nuclear war, is
one of 31 million documents
from the papers of Lyndon B.

Johnson to be opeped to the
public May 22 at ·the former
president's library .
Khrushchev's letter and
Johnson's reply were among 14
documents shown to newsmen
thls week in a preview of what
visitors to the nation's sixth and
largest presidential library will
see.

Meigs

Property
Transfers
, , , j'\f~hie
1

lj:. Lee, June P. Lee, to

ill!vid
Bowen, Jeanne Bowen,
I
r
· .37 Acre, Syracuse-Sutton.
Frank Cleland, Delores
Cleland to Franklin B. Wilson ~
Jr., Eunice Wilson, .14 Acre,
Sutton.
Olaf A. Peterson, Alma G.
Peterson to Jack Bernard
Peterson, Joyce Ann Peterson,
2 Acres, Rutland.
·
Albert Wigal, Sylvia Wigal,
Otis Bailey, Phyllis Bailey to
Gene David Hudson, 1.85 Acres,
Sutton-Racine.
Carl Hysell, Thelma Hysell to
Orville Johnson, Velma
Johnson, .42 Acre, Rutland.
Clair 0. Nelson, Eleanor
, Nelson to Franklin Real Estate,
9.'672 Acres, Rutland.
'
C. W. Hoback to General
Telephone Co., Ease., Lebanon.
Roger Powell, Hattie Powell
to General Telephone Co.,
Ease., Lebanon.
Edward N. Humphrey, Waid
C. Humphrey, to Ohio Fuel Gas
Co . .083 Acre, Salisbury.
Sherman Tillis, Kathleen
Tillis to Roger Black, .12 Acre,
Rutland.
Bernard V. Fultz, Betty J.
Fultz to Rankin Ray Pickens,
Lot, Pomeroy.
1o

~

I

•

DIVORCE ASKED
GALLIPOLIS - Charging
gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty, Deborah
Gooderham, a minor by Thelma
Sibley, Rt. 2, Crown City, filed a
petition Friday in Gallia County
Cornman Pleas Court seeking a
divorce
from
Gregory
Gooderham, Crown Cily. The
couple was married Dec. 26,
1970.
WINS KEY
POMEROY - Frank A. Titus
of Pomeroy, a graduate of
Pomeroy High School, Is one of
t:J:l new members of the Ohio
Slate University Chapter of Phi
Beta Kappa, national scholastic
honor society: The chapter will
hold its annual'- initiation
· ceremonies and · program on
Monday, May 3, at the . Ohio
Union Oil the campus.

EDWARD ROWLES

Granges to

Dine Friday
POMEROY - Edward W.
Rowles, Pleasantville, Ohio,
will be guest speaker at the
annual banquet of Meigs County
granges to be held at 7 p.m.
Friday at the Salisbury
Elementary School.
A graduate of Ohio State
University with a BS in
agriculture, Mr. Rowles is a
dairy farmer. He is a member
and past master of Pleasant
Grange in Fairfield County and
is a state and national grange
member. He is now serving as
assistant steward of the Ohio
State Grange.
A member of the Pleasant·
ville United Methodist Church
where he serves on the ad·
ministrative board, Rowles is a
member of the board of
directors of the Grange Mutual
Insurance Co., a member of the
Masonic Lodge, a past master;
a member of the York Rite
bodies and is also active with
farm and Pleasantville area
civic groups.

14-lb. Avg•.

INTERESTING BUT UNUSUAL were the latest figures
released by Vilma Pikkoja of the Meigs Library Extension Ser·
vice. She tells us that the Meigs County adult reader registration
is over 2,000 higher than the juvenile reader registralion, a
situation reversed in most areas.
As of this month, 5,398 adult readers and 3,292 juvenile
readers are registered making a total of 8,690 people using the
bookmobile facilities.

1M

wife.

~"

.

W1 ReaerYe The Right To
limit Quantitin

lb.

AS OF FRIDAY the Pomeroy Elementary School was within
$250of having enough money to send the sixth grade safety patrol
students to Washington, D. C. The total cost for the weekend trip
for the 29 students is $1,450.

On All

Item• In This Ad. Prices
EffecH" Thno Sot., April
17, 1971. None Sold To
Dnlers.

REMEMBER EASTER 1970? It snowed. Now a repeat of that
we don't need!

RUMMAGE WANTED
MIDDLEPORT - Rummage
is being collected by the junior
auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, American Legion for a·
sale to he held sometime in

Attending the meeting
besides those named were Mrs.
Mildred Donahue, Mrs. Mary
Roush, Mrs. Focie .Hayman,
.Mrs. Barbara Dugan, and
1
guestS, Dixie Dugan, and Mrs.
Georgia Milliron of Beaver
Falls, Pa .
A hobby of Mrs. Winebrenner's the past 25 years has
been keeping a diary. Her life 's activities are recorded in her
diaries and the family Bible which she refers to when
necessary.

May. Residents with items to
contribute are asked to call
Mrs. Etta Will, Mrs. Albert
Roush, or Mrs . Charles
Kessinger.

By POLLY CRAMER
DEAR POLLY-Please tell Mrs. H. W. E. NOT to wear
her hearing aid when she goes swimming. Don't do it'
All our family wear hearing aids and we were warned
not to get them wet or leave them where they would get
too warm. Such an aid is too great an investment to take
a chance on ruining il.- A. I. R.
· .

DEAR POLLY-Mrs. H. W. E. can obtain some help
wtth any mo!sture problems in her hearing aid if she (II
Takes the atd to . her dealer for regular cleanings. He
should make it less prone to moisture. (2) Purchases a
c?m~ercial ki_
t made ~o help this problem and places the
~1d ~n this ~1t ov~rntght. By. doing so she will prevent
mOisture bwld-up· and her atd wtll not shut off as easily
from dampness. When swimming, let a friend hold the
aid or if a check room is available check it with other
valuables. (3) As far as swimming is concerned some
doctors discourage this for people like us who have ear
problems.-H. J . F., another hearing aid user.

iilll',-----;111 Polly's

Problem ~Bfmmmn~%i1Ml@j\J{:·,

DEA~ POLLY-l'haye a walnut coffee table

and !,~
for the 'past four years have waxed it with lem'on !I;
wax. _Thls was very satisfactory until recently when i~
I notice~ a very large dull mark on it. I have tried ;,
everything I know of to restore that part to a shine fi
but unsuccessfully. I do not know what to do and · ii
hope someone can help me.-JOAN
ti

. .....,
tt
··---~~--. '"
DEAR POLLY-I make my own plant labels from I·
i

~%'®$l'i'"~

by-3-inch strips cut from
use d bleach bottles. I
scratch or write on these
with a lar~e. needle inserted
in a two-mch section of a
wooden broom handle . Next
I rub dark shoe polish over
the label and wipe off the
excess. This makes the
writing brightly visible.
I place strawberry run·
ners for new plants where
I want them and then hold
them in place by P.ressing heavy wire hairpins over them
and on into the soli. When the plants are rooted, I remove
the hairpins and use them to hold runners for other
plants.-CELES'I'IA

Value
built
in by
Jarman

48 Recipes' ta Help Your Meal Planning

She Looks on
·
· t h e Sunny s.·de

DEAR GIRLS-The following letter Is from a gentleman
who has a hearing ald service and wears one himself.POLLY

Styrmg ...
with
EXTRA

BETTER HOMES &amp;GARDENS I.U~USTRATED MEAT
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.

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Don't Take Anv Chances

lJ1

U. S. ·No. 1Grade

Idaho Potatoes
N·utritious

10.1b.

Bag

I have found this great for use when trying to root long
Ivy clippings with which I want to cover an area.POLLY
.

Healthful and

(NEWSPAPER ENTHPRISE ASSN.)

You will receive a dollar If Polly uses your favorite
homemalrlng Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solu·
tlon to a problem. Write Polly In care of this newspaper.

JOAN OF ARC
LIGHT RED

THOROFARE

KIDN'EY·

"BEVERAGES

"

'STATE ·FARE
Sliced White

-

•

'BR'EAD .

·· -

BEAlS
.
1-lb. 1-oz. Cans

Ph•t lottie

New Haven Club
to Dine on May 26

You win two
ways here : You

1-lb. 4-oz. Loaves

rar

POMEROY - A benefit
square dance for the George
Thompson Kidney Fund will
be held Saturday night at the
archery building of Royal
Oak Park.
An orchestra - Gary
Thoma and the Com Huskers
- Is donating lt~ services for
the dance which Is open to the
public. Sileclal callers will be
featured and a cake walk is
planned. Ellen Thoma is
heading the event.

ASK TO WED
GALLIPOUS - Two couples
applied for marriage licenses
Friday In Gallla County
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
Coolman Pleas Court. They
The
were Richard Dale scott, 19, MIDDLEPOl\T
Gallipolis; bookkeeper and Middleport E-R unit answered a
Linda Mae W9rkman, 18, ~,1 at 5:08p.m. Friday to the
Gllllpoll1, clerk. James ClaY, ton home of Elmer Napper on
Dovenbarfler, 29, Gallipolis, . Cooks Gap Hill, who was taken
deckhand, and Belly Jane to Vc.terans Memorial Hospital
L;JIIbtrt, :18, Glllipolls, ·and admitted as a medical
patient. .

Prayer by Mrs. Nora Pierson
opened the meeting. Devotions
were given by Mrs. Mabel
Shields. The group sang "In the
Garden," and scriptures from
1st Cor. 5, 1-1$ and St. John. 12,
verse 20, were read. The Lord's
prayer in unison was given.
Read at the meeting was a
thank-you note from the Bend.
0' the River Garden Club for a
donation towards the planting
at the Letart Falls cemetery
entrance.
Mrs. Eulah Wolfe, assisted by
Mrs. Julia Norris, gave the
program on "The Woman Who
Missed Easter". Mrs. Clara
Adams and Mrs. Shields served
refreshments. The birthdays of
Mrs. Doris Sayre and Mrs.
Hazel Fox were observed.

POLLY'S POINTERS

Khrushchev Letter Revealing
The other 12 documents in· disputes by force of arms, a
eluded a card from 'which world thermonuclear war
Johnson read his brief should come about, no one will
sta tement on Nov. 22, 1962, be spared, no one will be able to
asking the nation's support protect himself against it.
"No one, except madmen and
after the assassination of
President John F. Kennedy, a poll ticians blinded by haIred,
letler from Mrs. Johnson urging can acquiesce to such a
her husband to seek the 1964 prospect. I want to declare
Democratic nomination and a definitely and firmly that in the
thank you note from Ho Chi Soviet Union there are no such
Minh that did not reach Johnson politicians, and if some should
until nearly four months after come to the fore, they will
he left office. The North Viet- unquestionably be placed in an
namese leader's thanks were insane asylum," Khrushchev
for copies of Apollo 8 said .
In his four -page reply,
photographs Johnson sent to all
Johnson assured Khrushchev
world leaders.
Khrushchev's rambling, 18· "that practical progress toward
page letter proposed an in· peace is my most fervent
lerna tiona! treaty to ban the use desire.''
of force in territorial disputes as The documen Is shown to
a step towards reduction of reporters were selected by
world tensions and eventual library officials as represen·
agreement on complete tative samples of the more
interesting papers in the
disarmament.
The letter, dated Dec. 31, 1963, collection spanning Johnson's
is described by archivists as the . 34-year career in public office.
Johnson himseli took a hand
first substantive correspon·
dence between the Russian in selecting the memorabilia,
leade{ and Johnson following photographs and official
documen Is that will be
the Kennedy assassination.
" In the nuclear age, war can spotlighted in displays at the
no longer be the means for presidential library on the
solving international disputes," University of Texas campus.
The library is part of an $18.6
Khrushchev wrote. " II cannot
million
complex that also
be doubted that if, because of a
local collision of stales striving houses the Lyndon B. Johnson
to resolve their territorial School of Public Affairs.

Social
Calendar

'

POMEROY - Easte.r outfits
_ POMEROY - Easter has been a .real big thing for the for two girls at the Gallipolis
youngstera of the Meigs County Community Classes Or Retarded State Institute were provided by
Children, thanks to a number of individuals and organizations.
the Women 's. Society of
Thursday Coleen Ohlinger, .Carolyn Satterfield, Olarlotte Christian Service of the East
. Hanning, and Beverly Long of the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta Letart United Methodist
Sigma Phi Sorority staged an egg hunt at Forest Acres Park for Church.
lhe children and then presented each one with a nice Easter
During a recent meeting Mrs.
basket.
Eileen Roush reported on a visit
Mrs. Fred Crow gave Easter favors to each one during a visit with the two patients who are
to her ho~e in Syracuse Wednesday, and miniature baskets of sponsored by the Society and
candies were provide(! for each child by the Junior American arrangements were made to
provide new dresses, shoes and
Legion AuXiliary of Drew Webster Post 39.
A visit to Landmark was also made and Jack Carsey, socks for each one. Mrs. Roush
manager, gave 10 baby chickens to the children along with some also explained the "country
store" maintained by volun·
trinkets and refreshments.
·
And next Monday through the courtesy of the local Shrine teers and told of their need for
Club, the 13 children, their teachers, aides and bus drivers will good used clothing to be
attend a special performance of the Shriners Circus in Columbus. distributed to the patients.
Mrs. Ferne B. Hayman
The children will have a picnic lunch at noon and then will be
presided at the meeting during
given refreslunents during the circus intermission.
which tlme a $25 contribution
was made to the George
SURPRISES ARE SUCH FUN ! Ernest Weber, 82 on April Thompson·Kidney Fund and $10
Fool's Day, is trying to figure out who sent a large decorated · was given to the Crippled
birthday cake to him. Thursday after Thursday he bowls at the Children's Society.
Pomeroy Lanes and on the day of his birlhday, there it was,
The spring district meeting to
beautifully decorated .and appropriately inscribed.
be held at Logan on April 14 was
announced and plans were
'qlE TRADITIONAL EGG hunt of the Middleport-Pomeroy made for a work session at the
Rotary Club will be staged this afternoon at 2 p.m. at the Mid· church on April 16.
dleport park so take yours in tow and go. It's sure to be an ex·
perience, hopefully happy.
Anyways, as in years past over 400 prizes will be awarded and
the finder of that lucky golden egg will get $10. The silver egg is
worth $5. So if you're 12 or under, happy hunting!

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.

Open Friday Nights Til9
Open All Day Thursdays

BY !\ATIE CROW
SYRACUSE - Look for the
sunny side of life is the
philosophy of Mrs. Oma
Winebrenner, known a f.
fectionately by children in lhe
neighborhood as "Grandma."
Mrs. Winebrenner resides
with her daughter, Mrs. Beulah
Ward, director of nurses at
Holzer Medical Center, in the
Lee addition of lower Syracuse.
Her ou !look on life is
tremendous! At 87 years of age
she can hold one spellbound
with interesting conversation.
A devoted christian, Mrs.
Winebrenner looks on the
" bright" side of life. "The Lord
leads us and God has a hand in
all things," Mrs. Winebrenner
insists.
Her strong love for her family
is apparent as she relates story
after story of bygone days and
the present activities of her
children and grandchildren.
Mrs. Winebrenner was
married to Frank Winebrenner
' 50 years. Mr. Winebrenner died
July 27, 1955. The couple had
nine children, one set of.triplets.
One of the triplets died at five
months and the couple lost their
oldest son in the 1940s. Mrs.
Winebrenner has 15 grand·
children, 12 great-grandchildren and one great :
great-grandchild.
She is a me'!lber of, the

ll_,!=~~~=======~~~~~~~~~~ .

reg.istrallon
forms
wtllIf
maUed
at a later
.date.

~e

10·

friendaatH
Burdette Addluon,
Point Pleasant.

meeting Middleport Lodge 363
F&amp;AM, 6:30p.m. Master Mason
Degree.
Syracuse Asbury Un't d POMEROY PTA, Tuesday,
inMe th od.lS 1 Ch urc h an d 'the e 7:30 p.m. David. Bowen,
·
. A'd H d
.
s trumental mustc tnstructor
Lad tes
1 . er ays are g1ven
.
t h
to quilting for the Aid at home WI 11 presen 1 e program.
and at the group's weekly MINISTERIAL Assn.,
meeting. ,
Tuesday at Middleport Church
Mrs. Winebrenner has kept a of the Nazarene at 10 a.m.
diar~ of her activities for past 26
WEDNESDAY
years. "! like to put something
POMEROY · MIDDLEPORT
humorous in my diary. The Lions Club, Wednesday noon,
family loves to read what 1 have United Methodist Church.
written and ·when I am gone Program will be the fUm, "The
they will read the writings and J1e.k!!l an Delta."
perhaps, enjoy a laugh or tw~ _ POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
she quips.
·
Royal Arch Masons, 7:30
"I don't have an ache or a Wednesday, Pomeroy Masonic
pain, l'm very content. 1 like Temple.
.
everybody. You can't have hate
THURSDAY
in your heart and be happy,"
ROCK SPRINGS~.fuetter
she noted.
Health Club, Thursdllit, !:IS
In addition to her quilting and p.m. home of Mrs. William
recordings made in her diaries Grueser.
and family Bible, Mrs .
Winebrenner works crossword
puzzles and jumbled words. She
also likes to read but is very
critical of television . Mrs.
Winebrenner has always been a
wonderful cook and seamstress
but today is just content to quilt.
One thing certain if when you
stop to visit Mrs. Winebrenner
and you aren't feeling up to par
you will feel on top of the world
when you leave.

.

Spiritual Program
Given at Church
POMEROY - A program of
spiritual music was presented
by the Ambassadors Quartet of
the Circleville Bible College
Wednesday night at the Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church.
Charles Haddocks was pianist
for the singers, Dan Poler, Mike
Walters, Dennis Rawlins and
Earl Blair. They opened with
their theme song, "Thank God I
am Free." Prayer was by the
Rev . Eugene Gill. The
.congregation sang several
numbers and there was a plano
solo by Haddocks, "Led by the
Master's Hand." Mr, Blair was
speaker for the service.

POMEROY - A hymn sing
was planned for May 2 at 2 p.m.
at the United Faith Nondemoninational Church located
on the Pomeroy • Middleport
bypass during the Wednesday
night meeting at the church.
Plans were also made for a
revival service to begin the
same day and continue through
May 8,. 7:30 each evening. The
Bissell Brothers will sing at the
hymn sing and other singers are
in vi ~d to take part in the
revival services. Evangelist for
the services will be the Rev.
Dennis Weaver.
GOING WEST
A communion service will be
POMEROY
- Mrs. Herman
held at the church on April18.
Thirteen adults and five Carson, Long Bottom, RD and
children were present for the Mrs. Mildred Frank, Pomeroy,
RD, left Saturday for Ventura,
meeting.
Calif., for an exlenqed visit with
their sister, Mrs. Nell Albinger. ,

"
NEW HAVEN - The New terested, contact Shirley
1134,
'Haven Woman's Club annual Campbell, . Room
Sciences
.Building,
Agricultural
dinner meeting will be held this
year at the Uptowner Inn in W. Va. University, Morgan·
Parkersburg, Tuesday, May 26 town, 26506.----_,
at 6:30p.m., according to Mrs.
Kenneth Thompson, chairman.
She reports that the reservation
fee Is $4.10 and this Includes tax
and tip. Reservations are to be
made to her no later than April
27.
Mrs.
Perdue, District
PT. PLEASANT _ Trinity
!;'resident, will install the Club United. Methodist Church
Officers at the meeting in chapel was the setting for the
Parkersburg, May 25. The local marriage of Opal D. Jell and
club will hold an election of Wilbur Jack Stewart on
officers at the next scheduled Saturday, April 3. The Rev.
meeting, wqich will be Tuesday, Charles' S. Thompson perMay 27 at 8 p.m.
formed
the
double-ring
Mrs.CharlesSmlth,president ceremony.
Df the New Haven Club, has Mrs. Stewart is a daughter of
announced other dates con- Mrs. Vadie Abbott .oi Walton,
cerning the club. The !Sth West Virginia, and the
Annual Educational Institute groom is a son of Mr. and
will be held at Marshall July 21 Mrs. Wilbur Stewart of Mason.
through the 23rd. Costs are · For· her wedding, the bride'
approximately $15, which in· wore a pink A-line street dress
elude~ room. Me~ls are extra . .and a corsage 0! white car·
Mlm College wtll be held at · nations. She is ' employed as
Morgantown June 14 . through secretary i!l the office 01 Dr.
June 11: The cost forth~ will~ Randall'Taylor and Mr. Stewart
~pproxtmately $50, whtch Will is employed at the Amos Power ·
mclude room and .board. Plant it Winfield.
Complete . ~ourse detatls and 'J:he couple is at home to their

Nuptial Rites
Were April 3rd

for

.

SUNDAY ..
SUNRISE sERVICE Sunctay
Hemlock Grove Christian
Church 5:30 a.m. Worship
service and Sunday School at
regular time .
SUNRISE SERVICE Letart
Falls U. B. Church Sunda 6 a.m.
Breakfast will be served at
home of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Norris.
RUTLAND Co mmunity
Church prayer praise and
communion' service, Sunday, 2
p. m. Rev . Amos Tillis extends
public welcome.
SUNRISE SERVICE, 6:30 a.
m. Sunday, Rock Springs
Methodist Church , youth
fellowship in charge. Worship
and Sunday SChool at 9:30a.m.
followed by egg hunt.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF
Christ, 6 a.m. Sunday, sun~ise
service. Public invited.
SUNRISE Services, 6 a.m.
Easter, Hartford Church of
Christ in Christian Union, Rev.
O'dell Manley , pastor . Public
welcome.
MONDAY
POMEROY High Alumni
Association meeting, 7:30p.m.
Monday at Pomeroy City Hall
council chambers. All alumni
invited.
MONDAY, April 12 special
meeting, Middleport Lodge 363
F&amp;AM, 7:30p.m. E. A. Degree.
W.S.C.S. HEATH United
Methodist Church, 7:30 p.m.
Monday night at the church.
TUESDAY
TUESDAY, APRIL 13 special

Installation
Of Officers
Conducted
MIDDLEPORT
In
s lallation of new officero
highlighted the Tuesday nigh
meeting ol Meigs Temple IS3.
Pythian Sisters, at the hall.
Installed by Mrs. MarUu
Childs in the absence of Mrs
Elizabeth Allman due to illness
were Mrs. Opal Biggs, pas
chief;
Mrs·.
Margare
Seidenabel, most excellen
chief ; Mrs. Virginia Owen
excellent senior; Mrs. Bell~
Hayes, excellent junior; Mrs
Betty Biggs, manager; Mrs
Genevieve Meinhart, guard
Mrs. Ella Will, protector; Mrs
Gertrude Andrews, secretary
and Mrs. Betty Spencer
treasurer.

Assisting Mrs. Childs with tht
installation .was Mrs. Neil•
Bahr, grand senior and Mrs
Doris Bailey, grand manager
Tl1e commission of Mrs
Allman was read and th&lt;
charier was draped in th&lt;
memory of Mrs. Edith Russell
Music was provided by · Mrs
Childs who also rep(){ted on th&lt;
knife sale.
A letter was read from Mrs.
Helen Lathan, grand chief, .
announcing the appointment of
Mrs. Betty Weber as diatrict
deputy. Inspection was set for
June 1 at the hall.
It was reported that $89 had
been spent for altruistic work
and that 207 sick calls were
made in March. Several
members were reported ill . .

Eddy's

Schedul~:

POMEROY - April 12 - 910:25, Salisbury; 11·11: 15,
Snowville; 12 :31).3:00, Zaleski;
3:45-4, Prattsville ; 4:10-5,
SChool Lot ; 5:l:Hl, Carpenter;
6:30· 7, Harrisonville; 7: 30·8,
Wolf Pen .
April 13 - 12: 3().3, Racine;
3:15-3 :30, Wagner's; 4-4:30,
Harden's; 4:45-5:30, Rizer's;
5:45-6:45, Forest Run.
April15 - 9-10:30, Syracuse;
11·11:15, Antiquity; 12·2,
Letart; 2:15-4, East Letart; ~
5:30, Applet'Grove; 11-7, Great
Bend; 7:3(1.8:30, Syracuse P. 0.
April 16 - 9-2:30,, Ppmerj)Y
Ele. ; 3-3:30, Pomeroy Ulx'ary.
Please help Mr. Eddy and
return all overdue books
without a notice being sent.

AN·
"And, lo, I am with you alway, even unto the
end ol the world." .
- Matthew .28:20.
Thus spoke Jesus, rise~ from the tomb, to His
disciples . As they found comfort and inspir·
at ion in His words and in His presence, so
may the Miracle of Easter hearten and in·
spire us in our daily lives. To you at Easter,
our warm regards .

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POMEROY, 0.
Member Federal Reserve System ·

On Fridays Our Drive-In Window
is Open 9 a.m. ,fa 7 p.m., (Con-

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11- The Sunday Times -Sentlnel,SUnday,Aprilll, 1971

Bridal ·. Shower is
Given in Pomeroy ·

-·carole Anderson i·s·
Wed in White Satin
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cake. Abride doU centered the
table and th~ room ,was ·
decorated with pink and white
streamers. Miniature ~m­
brellas were given as favor's •
Attending the shower in
addition to those named were
Mis. Sandy !Ianning, Mrs..
Mary Woods, Mrs. Margaret
Van Cooney, Mrs. Allen King,
April and Allen Lee, Middleport; Miss Vicki Clark and
Mrs. Ellen Couch, Pomeroy,
and Mrs. Jane. Eblln of
Columbus.
Others presenting gifts were
Mrs. Stan Craig, Mrs. Olan
Neal, Mrs. Carla King, Mrs.
·Linda Carhart, Mrs: Don
Becker, and Mrs. Sue Grueser.

.•

SHOES FOR OIRL$

Free
Balloons '
For
Kiddies

Mrs. Harold. Elliott
(the former Catherine Manley
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford E. Manley are aMouncing the
marriage of their daughter, Catherine Ann, to Mr. Harold
Franklin Elliott, son of Mrs. Thelma Elliott, Point Pleasant.
The wedding vows were exchanged on March 26 at 1:30
p.m. at the Middleport Church of Christ. The Rev. Raullin
Moyer officiated at the ceremony.
Miss Kathy Elliott, sister of the-groom, served as maid of
honorf~r the bride, and Mr. Herbert Elliott was best man for
his brother.
The new Mrs. Elliott is presently employed at the Dairy
Isle in Middleport. She resides with her parents while her
husband serves in the U. S. Army stationed at Arlington
Heights, m.

Miss Marianne Kloes
.

MAY WEDDING PLANNED- Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
A. Kloes, Middleport, are announcing the engagement of
their daughter, Marianne, to Mr. Michael E. Caruthers, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Levi E. Caruthers of Cheshire.
Miss Kloes is a senior at Meigs High School. Mr.
Caruthers, a 1970 gr~duate of Mei~sHigh School, is employed
by the ,VIllage of Middleport.
." ...... ,.· . · ,
A May wedding is being planned.

'

&gt;

Finlaw-Wight Vows
Read in Cincinnati

Mrs. Ralph D. Painter

(Contmued trom page 10)
Robert Kuhn officiated at the
double ring ceremony before
the altar decorated with vases
of white mums and lilies, palms
and candelabra. Mrs. Robert
Kuhn presented organ music .
The bride was given in
marriage by her lather.
Mrs . Stephen Finlaw of
Pomeroy, sister-in-law of the
bride, serVed as matron of
honor. Mr. Andy Wight of
Milford, Conn., was best man
for his brother. A reception
honoring the couple was held at
the home of the bride's parents.
Following a trip to New
Orleans, La., the couple will
reside at 5509 Belmont Ave.,
Apt. 412, Cincinnati.
The new Mrs. Wight is a
graduate of Pomeroy· High

(the former Carole Ann Anderson)

Carole Anderson is
Wed in White Satin

•

•

tf ..." /&lt;d
. .. . .
'

MIDDLEPORT - In a
candlelight ceremony before an
altar decorated with vases of
white gladioli, palms and sevenbranch candelabra, Miss Carole
Ann Anderson of Columbus
became the bride of Mr. Ralph
D. Painter of Lima.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Francis 0. Anderson of Middleport, and the
bridegroom is the son of Mr .
and Mrs. Lloyd W. Painter of .

'

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"
,."
"•'

Lima .

.,..
·,
'•

..'•
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,.
•'•'
•'

Mrs. Gregory Donald Wight
(the former Miss Tamara Joan Finlaw

·:'
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..,,
..,.
,.,,
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,,

Fin law-Wight Vows ·
Read in Cincinnati
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
, First Baptist Church was the
scene of the weddirig of Miss
Tamara Joan Finlaw to Captain
Gregory Donald Wight, both of
Cincinnati.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard A.

Finlaw, 512 E. Main St.,
Pomeroy., and the bridegroom
is the son of Mrs. William W.
Wight of Milford, Conn. and the
late Mr. Wight,
The wedding was an event of
1:30 p.m. on April3. The Rev.
(Continued on page 11)

LET'S GET TOGETHER

Vows of the double ring
ceremony were ·exchanged at
6:30p.m. on Saturday, April 3,
at the Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church with the
Rev. Russell Lester officiating.
Music for the wedding
presented by Mrs . Ben Neutzling, organist, and Mrs.
Marvin Burt, soloist, included
themes from "Romeo and
Juliet," and 'Love Story,"
" Wedding Prayer," "Clair
1

DeLune," "Whither Thou
Goest," "God Gave Me You/'
and "Tl\e Bridal Prayer" while
the couple knelt at the altar.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride was attired in a
satin peau floor-length gown
fashioned in empire style by her
mother. The gown featured a
Victorian collar, Bishop sleeves
with wide cuffs, and a_n A-lirie

skirt which fell into a sweeping
train. Accent trim on the fitted
bodice and the deep cuffs, and
circling the skirt was blue satin
ribbon under white Guipure
lace.
The bride's elbow length veil
of illusion fell from a Camelot
cap featuring the same satin
ribbon and lace trim as was
used on the gown. She carried a
cascade of white and yellow
roses with stephanotis and ivy,
and a silk handkerchief
belonging to her greatgrandmother.
Mrs. Emerson Heighton,
Middleport, was the matron of
honor for the bride, and the
bridesmaids were Miss Valerie
Swisher, Mrs. Michael Krutulis
and Mrs. James Beall, all of
Columbus.
The attendants wore empire
style gowns with high collars
and long full sleeves with multicolored lace flower trim around
the bodice and the neckline.
Mrs. Heighton was in twinkle
blue and the bridesmaids were
gowns of a pale blue. They wore
blue stone necklaces, gifts of
the bride.
The attendants wore bow
headpieces with circular veils
accented with miniature lace
flowers, and carried fireside
(Continued on page 11)

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School and Ohio University. She
is employed as a teacher in the
Cincinnati schools.
The bridegroom received his
bachelor of science degree from
the Massachusetts Institute of
Technol0gy and his master's
degree from the University of
Florida. He is a captain in the
U. S. Air Force currently
stationed at General Electric in
Cincinnati.
Out of town guests at the
wedding and reception were
Mrs. William W. Wight, Amy
and Andy. Milford, Conn.; Capt.
and Mrs. Steve Wight of
Langley Air Force Base in
Virginia; Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Van Horn, Columbus; and Mr.
and Mrs. James Sheets,
Hillsboro.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical-Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity viSiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
· Mr. and Mrs. Henry D. Hill,
Racine, a daugh-ter.
Discharges
Tinni
Boggess,
Mrs .
Frederick Calvert and son, Mrs.
Chester Cline, Mrs. Donald
Crabtree, Tony Dixon, Mrs.
Gordon Faitght, Roscoe Fout,
Mrs. Maggie Gilmore, Mrs,
Donald Gosney, Paul Halley,
Albert Honstine, Mrs. Donald
E. Johnson and son; Mrs. Harry
Mason and daughter, Mrs. Vera
Mason, D. Aaron Phillips, Mrs.

Happy Home of Bear and Forebear

$440 Given in Canvass

Frank Puckett, Mrs. Garland
Sharp, Sr., Mrs. GrJ!nville POMEROY - A total of Erma ltendricks, Trudy
Smtih, James Turley, Jr ., $440.15 was contributed to the Hendricks, Mrs. Etta Will, Mrs.
Donna Welch, and Oscar George Thompson Kidney Fund Albert Roush, . MissWBecky
through a house-to-house Roush, Mrs. Norman ay 1an d,
Pauley.
I M Helen
canvass by the American Mrs. Rosa Sear s, rs.
Legion Auxiliary units of Meigs Kennedy • Mrs. Ernest Bowles,
·
• ·t~Jrs Virginia DeLegal Mrs
Veterans Memorial Hospitals County.
• '' . ;
·
' 1~ .
ADMITTED - Richard Gill, Mrs. Ben Neutzling h~aded Dorothy McGuffin, Mrs. Go
Whipple, Ohio; George _Batey, the drive _and bas extended her Mourmng.
Middleport; Eber Gtlhlan ; apprecrai!Qn to the solicrtors,
Cheshire; Neva Pratt, Mid- Mrs. Harry Davis, Mrs. Peg
dleport; Elmer Napper, Mid- Taylor, Mrs. Danny Brown,
dleport ; Charles Beegle, Mrs. Gerald Wildermuth, Mrs. NAB SUSPECT
Racine.
J. M. Thornton, Mrs. Roy STOCKHOLM (UP!) - A
DISCHARGED - Harry Reuter, Miss Janice Couch, fourth Yugoslav suspect was
Cross, Larry Werry, Robert Mrs. Robert Couch, Mrs. Jean arrested Saturday in connection
Grueser, Earla Pickens, Erna Warner, Mrs. E. M. McKinney, with the shooting of Yugoslav
Haynes, Connie Kiser, Tammy Mrs. Elza Gilmore, Jr., Mrs. Ambassador Vladimir Rolovlc
Pitzer, Clinton Pitzer, Jr ., Margaret Yost, Mrs. Dixie and his secretary, pollee said.
Ernest Boothe.
Smith, Mrs. Robert Beegle, Two Croatian nationalists
Mrs. Kenneth Theiss.
wounded the pair Wednesday at
Mrs. Herschel Roush, Mrs. the Yugbslav embassy. Rolovi~
Dallas Hill, Sandra and Patricia is still in serious condition but
Might, Mrs. Charles Kessinger, the secretary was reported "out
Miss Cheryl Barnhart, Mrs. of danger.'·'

IQgredients of Wedded Bliss
Miss Cathy Stone

You know you have a good marriage if :

ENGAqEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs.
- Thurston Stone, Jr. are announcing the engagement of their
daughter, Cathy, to Mr. Rick L. Clark, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Clark, Mason, W. Va.
Miss Stone is a senior at Meigs High School. Mr. Clark
graduated from Wahama High School in 1969 and is presenily
employed at Malleable in Point Pleasant, W. Va.
Wedding plans are incomplete.

Your husband asks , "Are you having onions Qn your
hamburger?"
Your wife never asks, "When are you going to tell off
that dull-dumb boss of yours?"
After 10 years, she still tucks an "I love you" note
into your suitcase .
After 10 years, you still look for the note. And read it.

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She still laughs when you tell you~ famous story abo~t
how you met that bear on the trail when you were m
Boy Scout camp. .
· ,
He still murmurs sympathetically when you _tell about
losing out on your chance to be a star m the hrgh s~hool
play .
When the eldest child turns 18, both of you still call
each other by name instead of "Mother" and "Dad."

992·5560

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Your FTD
Florist

.

Serving: Gallipolis, ~omeroy, Nliddleport,10.
&amp;Mason Co. W. Va.

2•Door Refrigerator from

·FORD
14 2
,

capacity

Rt. 124 Minersville, Ohio
(Entrance of Brown's Trailer Park)

April 11 thru 17th

At

Services start each evening
aL7:30 o'clock

'4%%

SPECIAL -SINGING
EACH EVENING

296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

BIG CAPACITY. LOW PRICE I
BIG
CU.FT.

l

Model

ROI4M2

Look at these famous
Philco features

THE OW GOSPEL

•free.. r alone holds 102 lba.
of frozen foods

•Adjustable cold control

•Twin porcelain-enamel
veaetable criapera

FOR ANEW DAY

Sympathy Flower:s

Phone
.
446-1777 or

MIDDLEP.ORT, 0.

Will be at BIBLE BAPTIST TEMPLE

Savings Account

!hens County Savings &amp;
Loan Co.

Where Shoes are Sensibly ·
Priced .

(Asst. Pastor of Baptist Gospel Temple)
Of Parkersburg, W. Va.

American Legion l\uxillary.
.The Ohio ~partrnent of the
Mrs. Mary Martin, hospital Auxiliary provided Easter
ehairman for the auxiliary, baskets for ·each of the The Meigs Co. Branch
Mrs. J. M. Thornton and Mrs. veterans. Decorated cupcakes, of the Athens Co .
George Hackett, Sr., of cake, sandwiches, Easter eggs Savings &amp; Loan Co. is a
Pomeroy Post 39, Mrs, Dolly and candy rabbits were given to safe profitable investm~nt.
CRUSADE COMING
Kleinschmidt, Logan unit; and each one. ·
SYRACUSE - The "Com· · Mrs. Anna Riggs, Mrs. Lenora
Games were played with
munity Crusade" held each Atkins, crooksville unit, staged prlzes of purses, bats, tobacco,
spring at the Asbury Methodist the party for the veterans. handkerchiefs, C91l,lbs, Current passbook rate.
Church will be held Monday contributing were the units of coslnetics, jewelry, stationery Begin savings here ...
through Thursday with services Millersport, Racine and and· books, and nailclips being . any amount ... any
: awarded.
·
at 7:30 each evening. This is a Pomeroy.
lime. ·
community. effort wit~ all
Mei&amp;s l'AI. Branch
Syracuse
churches _ of
cooperating. The pastors will
preach each evening and
special singing wlll be
pre~ented by local groups. The
COnvey your deepest thoughts, when words
public Is invited.
· ·
Meigs County Branch of The
··
are hard to find.
·

YOUTHS TO MEET.
POMEROY -' The Youth
group of the Zion Ch~rch of
Christ,. Pomeroy-Harrisopville
Road, will present a ··one-act
play o! the reSurrection this
evening at 7 p.m. The public is
invited.
'.

BOX

SHOE

EVANGELIST GUY LOWTHER

YOUR

pOMEROY - An Easter
party was held Thursday afternoon at the southeastern
Ohio Mental Health Center for
the veterans• there by the

r

REVIVAL RALLY
TIME!

, E;ven though he sometimes forgets the date ~f your
wedding anniversary, he always remembers to krss you
good night.
She can tell at a glance what sort of day you've had
and when you need this sort of consideration the most,
waits for awhile before telling you what sort of day she's
had.
·
. · At a ~arty, he whispers into your ear, "I'm glad you're
the one I'm taking home! "
'
Dtiring an argument, neither says, "you .always" or
llyou never" more than once.
During the past year, neither has ever said, "If it
weren't for you, I'd .. ."
When the two of you see that first grandchild, she
doesn't laugh and ask, "How's it feel to be a grandpa?"
But: instead, says, "What a perfectly grand father you've
turned out to be!"

Party Given Veterans by Auxiliary

MEETING CHANGED
POMEROY - A meeting of
p t J'r ld ts of th Li.dl
Aas ·u es Dren W bsete . p est
UXl ary •
ew e
OS
39 American Legion, sc llled
·fo~ Wednesday Aprll
has
been changed 'to Wedni!lday,
April 21 and wiU be held at 7:30
p.m. at Ute home of Mis. Edith
Fox
·

The laced-up oxford In a
leather and shag comllo.
Brass eyelets set off the
·~wlth·lt" colors. It
also features a genuine
leather sole.

·2 doep door shelves with

People c'ome to Christ in our meetings
'·

'

•
EverybOdy Welcome

• removable 1uerda
·Encloaed butter keeper
•Whlte,.AvOCido, or
Shaded Copper cabinet

PHILCO

.

Come with a . Friend and your Bible,_

c~

OUR
INFLATION
FIGHTER.·
PRICE

$24995
ONLY
.

This Week's Special.

Tilt better ldu peaplt In llfrl.. llela.

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTI ·
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

�.

'

11- The Sunday Times -Sentlnel,SUnday,Aprilll, 1971

Bridal ·. Shower is
Given in Pomeroy ·

-·carole Anderson i·s·
Wed in White Satin
'

.

cake. Abride doU centered the
table and th~ room ,was ·
decorated with pink and white
streamers. Miniature ~m­
brellas were given as favor's •
Attending the shower in
addition to those named were
Mis. Sandy !Ianning, Mrs..
Mary Woods, Mrs. Margaret
Van Cooney, Mrs. Allen King,
April and Allen Lee, Middleport; Miss Vicki Clark and
Mrs. Ellen Couch, Pomeroy,
and Mrs. Jane. Eblln of
Columbus.
Others presenting gifts were
Mrs. Stan Craig, Mrs. Olan
Neal, Mrs. Carla King, Mrs.
·Linda Carhart, Mrs: Don
Becker, and Mrs. Sue Grueser.

.•

SHOES FOR OIRL$

Free
Balloons '
For
Kiddies

Mrs. Harold. Elliott
(the former Catherine Manley
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford E. Manley are aMouncing the
marriage of their daughter, Catherine Ann, to Mr. Harold
Franklin Elliott, son of Mrs. Thelma Elliott, Point Pleasant.
The wedding vows were exchanged on March 26 at 1:30
p.m. at the Middleport Church of Christ. The Rev. Raullin
Moyer officiated at the ceremony.
Miss Kathy Elliott, sister of the-groom, served as maid of
honorf~r the bride, and Mr. Herbert Elliott was best man for
his brother.
The new Mrs. Elliott is presently employed at the Dairy
Isle in Middleport. She resides with her parents while her
husband serves in the U. S. Army stationed at Arlington
Heights, m.

Miss Marianne Kloes
.

MAY WEDDING PLANNED- Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
A. Kloes, Middleport, are announcing the engagement of
their daughter, Marianne, to Mr. Michael E. Caruthers, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Levi E. Caruthers of Cheshire.
Miss Kloes is a senior at Meigs High School. Mr.
Caruthers, a 1970 gr~duate of Mei~sHigh School, is employed
by the ,VIllage of Middleport.
." ...... ,.· . · ,
A May wedding is being planned.

'

&gt;

Finlaw-Wight Vows
Read in Cincinnati

Mrs. Ralph D. Painter

(Contmued trom page 10)
Robert Kuhn officiated at the
double ring ceremony before
the altar decorated with vases
of white mums and lilies, palms
and candelabra. Mrs. Robert
Kuhn presented organ music .
The bride was given in
marriage by her lather.
Mrs . Stephen Finlaw of
Pomeroy, sister-in-law of the
bride, serVed as matron of
honor. Mr. Andy Wight of
Milford, Conn., was best man
for his brother. A reception
honoring the couple was held at
the home of the bride's parents.
Following a trip to New
Orleans, La., the couple will
reside at 5509 Belmont Ave.,
Apt. 412, Cincinnati.
The new Mrs. Wight is a
graduate of Pomeroy· High

(the former Carole Ann Anderson)

Carole Anderson is
Wed in White Satin

•

•

tf ..." /&lt;d
. .. . .
'

MIDDLEPORT - In a
candlelight ceremony before an
altar decorated with vases of
white gladioli, palms and sevenbranch candelabra, Miss Carole
Ann Anderson of Columbus
became the bride of Mr. Ralph
D. Painter of Lima.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Francis 0. Anderson of Middleport, and the
bridegroom is the son of Mr .
and Mrs. Lloyd W. Painter of .

'

~'

..'.,

'•

"
,."
"•'

Lima .

.,..
·,
'•

..'•
"
,.
•'•'
•'

Mrs. Gregory Donald Wight
(the former Miss Tamara Joan Finlaw

·:'
'•'·

.

·'
,."
'

'•
'·

'·

,.

..,,
..,.
,.,,
'~
'

,,

,.
,.'
,,,,"
,,

Fin law-Wight Vows ·
Read in Cincinnati
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
, First Baptist Church was the
scene of the weddirig of Miss
Tamara Joan Finlaw to Captain
Gregory Donald Wight, both of
Cincinnati.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard A.

Finlaw, 512 E. Main St.,
Pomeroy., and the bridegroom
is the son of Mrs. William W.
Wight of Milford, Conn. and the
late Mr. Wight,
The wedding was an event of
1:30 p.m. on April3. The Rev.
(Continued on page 11)

LET'S GET TOGETHER

Vows of the double ring
ceremony were ·exchanged at
6:30p.m. on Saturday, April 3,
at the Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church with the
Rev. Russell Lester officiating.
Music for the wedding
presented by Mrs . Ben Neutzling, organist, and Mrs.
Marvin Burt, soloist, included
themes from "Romeo and
Juliet," and 'Love Story,"
" Wedding Prayer," "Clair
1

DeLune," "Whither Thou
Goest," "God Gave Me You/'
and "Tl\e Bridal Prayer" while
the couple knelt at the altar.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride was attired in a
satin peau floor-length gown
fashioned in empire style by her
mother. The gown featured a
Victorian collar, Bishop sleeves
with wide cuffs, and a_n A-lirie

skirt which fell into a sweeping
train. Accent trim on the fitted
bodice and the deep cuffs, and
circling the skirt was blue satin
ribbon under white Guipure
lace.
The bride's elbow length veil
of illusion fell from a Camelot
cap featuring the same satin
ribbon and lace trim as was
used on the gown. She carried a
cascade of white and yellow
roses with stephanotis and ivy,
and a silk handkerchief
belonging to her greatgrandmother.
Mrs. Emerson Heighton,
Middleport, was the matron of
honor for the bride, and the
bridesmaids were Miss Valerie
Swisher, Mrs. Michael Krutulis
and Mrs. James Beall, all of
Columbus.
The attendants wore empire
style gowns with high collars
and long full sleeves with multicolored lace flower trim around
the bodice and the neckline.
Mrs. Heighton was in twinkle
blue and the bridesmaids were
gowns of a pale blue. They wore
blue stone necklaces, gifts of
the bride.
The attendants wore bow
headpieces with circular veils
accented with miniature lace
flowers, and carried fireside
(Continued on page 11)

Join Us .lor 11
Delicious E11ster ••

I

.,•'

t
:'
·:
'

i

See our vast display of
merchandise . . . newest
shipments from all over
the
nation
grouped
together at one location for
your
shopping
convenience! Take advantage
of the many ~pecial values
Bakers offer.

\\\\0 @PENING
TODAY

FURNITURE FOR TODAY'S HOMEMAKERS
See . mtmy total look
inspiratio-ns and new
ideas
'
I
11

waitinp

y()U

at. ... ·

1 hOO AM • 5s00 PM

..

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0,

Buffet with Choi~e of a Hot Entree - Baked
Ham, Roast Beef, Fried Chicken •.
SJ25 Adults
S}SI Child ·
·
· Uoder 12
In addition to regular menu:

~

PWS: ARMAND 'AT THE "ORGAN

Martin

Restaurant

School and Ohio University. She
is employed as a teacher in the
Cincinnati schools.
The bridegroom received his
bachelor of science degree from
the Massachusetts Institute of
Technol0gy and his master's
degree from the University of
Florida. He is a captain in the
U. S. Air Force currently
stationed at General Electric in
Cincinnati.
Out of town guests at the
wedding and reception were
Mrs. William W. Wight, Amy
and Andy. Milford, Conn.; Capt.
and Mrs. Steve Wight of
Langley Air Force Base in
Virginia; Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Van Horn, Columbus; and Mr.
and Mrs. James Sheets,
Hillsboro.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical-Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity viSiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
· Mr. and Mrs. Henry D. Hill,
Racine, a daugh-ter.
Discharges
Tinni
Boggess,
Mrs .
Frederick Calvert and son, Mrs.
Chester Cline, Mrs. Donald
Crabtree, Tony Dixon, Mrs.
Gordon Faitght, Roscoe Fout,
Mrs. Maggie Gilmore, Mrs,
Donald Gosney, Paul Halley,
Albert Honstine, Mrs. Donald
E. Johnson and son; Mrs. Harry
Mason and daughter, Mrs. Vera
Mason, D. Aaron Phillips, Mrs.

Happy Home of Bear and Forebear

$440 Given in Canvass

Frank Puckett, Mrs. Garland
Sharp, Sr., Mrs. GrJ!nville POMEROY - A total of Erma ltendricks, Trudy
Smtih, James Turley, Jr ., $440.15 was contributed to the Hendricks, Mrs. Etta Will, Mrs.
Donna Welch, and Oscar George Thompson Kidney Fund Albert Roush, . MissWBecky
through a house-to-house Roush, Mrs. Norman ay 1an d,
Pauley.
I M Helen
canvass by the American Mrs. Rosa Sear s, rs.
Legion Auxiliary units of Meigs Kennedy • Mrs. Ernest Bowles,
·
• ·t~Jrs Virginia DeLegal Mrs
Veterans Memorial Hospitals County.
• '' . ;
·
' 1~ .
ADMITTED - Richard Gill, Mrs. Ben Neutzling h~aded Dorothy McGuffin, Mrs. Go
Whipple, Ohio; George _Batey, the drive _and bas extended her Mourmng.
Middleport; Eber Gtlhlan ; apprecrai!Qn to the solicrtors,
Cheshire; Neva Pratt, Mid- Mrs. Harry Davis, Mrs. Peg
dleport; Elmer Napper, Mid- Taylor, Mrs. Danny Brown,
dleport ; Charles Beegle, Mrs. Gerald Wildermuth, Mrs. NAB SUSPECT
Racine.
J. M. Thornton, Mrs. Roy STOCKHOLM (UP!) - A
DISCHARGED - Harry Reuter, Miss Janice Couch, fourth Yugoslav suspect was
Cross, Larry Werry, Robert Mrs. Robert Couch, Mrs. Jean arrested Saturday in connection
Grueser, Earla Pickens, Erna Warner, Mrs. E. M. McKinney, with the shooting of Yugoslav
Haynes, Connie Kiser, Tammy Mrs. Elza Gilmore, Jr., Mrs. Ambassador Vladimir Rolovlc
Pitzer, Clinton Pitzer, Jr ., Margaret Yost, Mrs. Dixie and his secretary, pollee said.
Ernest Boothe.
Smith, Mrs. Robert Beegle, Two Croatian nationalists
Mrs. Kenneth Theiss.
wounded the pair Wednesday at
Mrs. Herschel Roush, Mrs. the Yugbslav embassy. Rolovi~
Dallas Hill, Sandra and Patricia is still in serious condition but
Might, Mrs. Charles Kessinger, the secretary was reported "out
Miss Cheryl Barnhart, Mrs. of danger.'·'

IQgredients of Wedded Bliss
Miss Cathy Stone

You know you have a good marriage if :

ENGAqEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs.
- Thurston Stone, Jr. are announcing the engagement of their
daughter, Cathy, to Mr. Rick L. Clark, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Clark, Mason, W. Va.
Miss Stone is a senior at Meigs High School. Mr. Clark
graduated from Wahama High School in 1969 and is presenily
employed at Malleable in Point Pleasant, W. Va.
Wedding plans are incomplete.

Your husband asks , "Are you having onions Qn your
hamburger?"
Your wife never asks, "When are you going to tell off
that dull-dumb boss of yours?"
After 10 years, she still tucks an "I love you" note
into your suitcase .
After 10 years, you still look for the note. And read it.

Biggest Men's Pant Sale
•
In The Ohi~ Valley .
'

SPECIAL CLOSE OUT GROUP OF

FAMOUS DICKIES DRESS PANTS·
Aare Styles - Reg. Styles · Slim Cuts · Executive Cuts and many
other styles. Never Need Ironing. Polyester, Dacron Polyester,
Stripes, ·Plaids, Plains and many other styles •
250 PJIRS ON SALE

. ARMAND'S.

THE
"CHARLIE
BROWN"
LOOK

THIS IS WHAT YOU SAVE
REG. 7.00 .VALUES ................................ 5.00
REG. 8~00 VALUES ....._........................... 6.00
REG. 9.00 VALUES ................................ 'J.OO
REG. 10.00 VALUES ............ -;-............... 8.00
REG. 11.00 VALUES ........................... ~: 9.0o ,
•

'

.

She still laughs when you tell you~ famous story abo~t
how you met that bear on the trail when you were m
Boy Scout camp. .
· ,
He still murmurs sympathetically when you _tell about
losing out on your chance to be a star m the hrgh s~hool
play .
When the eldest child turns 18, both of you still call
each other by name instead of "Mother" and "Dad."

992·5560

I

1

Dud ey ~

.

Your FTD
Florist

.

Serving: Gallipolis, ~omeroy, Nliddleport,10.
&amp;Mason Co. W. Va.

2•Door Refrigerator from

·FORD
14 2
,

capacity

Rt. 124 Minersville, Ohio
(Entrance of Brown's Trailer Park)

April 11 thru 17th

At

Services start each evening
aL7:30 o'clock

'4%%

SPECIAL -SINGING
EACH EVENING

296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

BIG CAPACITY. LOW PRICE I
BIG
CU.FT.

l

Model

ROI4M2

Look at these famous
Philco features

THE OW GOSPEL

•free.. r alone holds 102 lba.
of frozen foods

•Adjustable cold control

•Twin porcelain-enamel
veaetable criapera

FOR ANEW DAY

Sympathy Flower:s

Phone
.
446-1777 or

MIDDLEP.ORT, 0.

Will be at BIBLE BAPTIST TEMPLE

Savings Account

!hens County Savings &amp;
Loan Co.

Where Shoes are Sensibly ·
Priced .

(Asst. Pastor of Baptist Gospel Temple)
Of Parkersburg, W. Va.

American Legion l\uxillary.
.The Ohio ~partrnent of the
Mrs. Mary Martin, hospital Auxiliary provided Easter
ehairman for the auxiliary, baskets for ·each of the The Meigs Co. Branch
Mrs. J. M. Thornton and Mrs. veterans. Decorated cupcakes, of the Athens Co .
George Hackett, Sr., of cake, sandwiches, Easter eggs Savings &amp; Loan Co. is a
Pomeroy Post 39, Mrs, Dolly and candy rabbits were given to safe profitable investm~nt.
CRUSADE COMING
Kleinschmidt, Logan unit; and each one. ·
SYRACUSE - The "Com· · Mrs. Anna Riggs, Mrs. Lenora
Games were played with
munity Crusade" held each Atkins, crooksville unit, staged prlzes of purses, bats, tobacco,
spring at the Asbury Methodist the party for the veterans. handkerchiefs, C91l,lbs, Current passbook rate.
Church will be held Monday contributing were the units of coslnetics, jewelry, stationery Begin savings here ...
through Thursday with services Millersport, Racine and and· books, and nailclips being . any amount ... any
: awarded.
·
at 7:30 each evening. This is a Pomeroy.
lime. ·
community. effort wit~ all
Mei&amp;s l'AI. Branch
Syracuse
churches _ of
cooperating. The pastors will
preach each evening and
special singing wlll be
pre~ented by local groups. The
COnvey your deepest thoughts, when words
public Is invited.
· ·
Meigs County Branch of The
··
are hard to find.
·

YOUTHS TO MEET.
POMEROY -' The Youth
group of the Zion Ch~rch of
Christ,. Pomeroy-Harrisopville
Road, will present a ··one-act
play o! the reSurrection this
evening at 7 p.m. The public is
invited.
'.

BOX

SHOE

EVANGELIST GUY LOWTHER

YOUR

pOMEROY - An Easter
party was held Thursday afternoon at the southeastern
Ohio Mental Health Center for
the veterans• there by the

r

REVIVAL RALLY
TIME!

, E;ven though he sometimes forgets the date ~f your
wedding anniversary, he always remembers to krss you
good night.
She can tell at a glance what sort of day you've had
and when you need this sort of consideration the most,
waits for awhile before telling you what sort of day she's
had.
·
. · At a ~arty, he whispers into your ear, "I'm glad you're
the one I'm taking home! "
'
Dtiring an argument, neither says, "you .always" or
llyou never" more than once.
During the past year, neither has ever said, "If it
weren't for you, I'd .. ."
When the two of you see that first grandchild, she
doesn't laugh and ask, "How's it feel to be a grandpa?"
But: instead, says, "What a perfectly grand father you've
turned out to be!"

Party Given Veterans by Auxiliary

MEETING CHANGED
POMEROY - A meeting of
p t J'r ld ts of th Li.dl
Aas ·u es Dren W bsete . p est
UXl ary •
ew e
OS
39 American Legion, sc llled
·fo~ Wednesday Aprll
has
been changed 'to Wedni!lday,
April 21 and wiU be held at 7:30
p.m. at Ute home of Mis. Edith
Fox
·

The laced-up oxford In a
leather and shag comllo.
Brass eyelets set off the
·~wlth·lt" colors. It
also features a genuine
leather sole.

·2 doep door shelves with

People c'ome to Christ in our meetings
'·

'

•
EverybOdy Welcome

• removable 1uerda
·Encloaed butter keeper
•Whlte,.AvOCido, or
Shaded Copper cabinet

PHILCO

.

Come with a . Friend and your Bible,_

c~

OUR
INFLATION
FIGHTER.·
PRICE

$24995
ONLY
.

This Week's Special.

Tilt better ldu peaplt In llfrl.. llela.

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTI ·
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

�·-·---.
- 12~ TheSundayTimes-Sentinel,SWlday, April II, 1971

e

.

Detroit, with New Ll

'

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.

..

Heartens Economzsts
reporte~ a $1.01 a share profit
Porcupine Mines up 7.
Other firm spots were Coca· for the first quarter after a toss
Cola 5Y.,' Barber Oil 5\'.z, Mis· in the strike-affected year ago
sion 5'k, Simplicity Pattern 51:! quarter.
Manufactures Hanover slid
and General Eelctric 5'1s. GE

6¥., .Memorex 6% and First

fd

the Changing nature of its

"

I

lows.
National City 41'. . Memorex business. ·
By HOWARD LUXENBERG the rise in auto sales is a sign assurance of five years of pre· 36Among
the week's strongest
reported a 83 cent a.share pro- Federal National Mortgage,
UPl Business Writer
things are getting .better. 'But dictable price increases will features ,were · SUpertor Oil
fit for 1970 but gave no com· tile week's most heavily traded .
NEW YORK (UPI) - F.or " no one should expect any provide fqr greater efficiency.
which soared 11, Natomas 8,
parison because of whatit call· issue, rose 21&gt; to 71% on 1,078,·
months the nation's foremost burst in consumer spending un· For the week, tile New York Southdown 7Ys and Mcintyre
000 shares.
economistshavebeensayingthe til the end of the year," he add- Stock Exchange CO!lllllon stock
'
.
index posted a gain of 0.75 to
key to the country's recovery ed.
FATAL CRASH
rests with the consumer.·
"And the likelihood of a de· 56.33. Standard &amp; Poor's 500
•
stock
index
climbed
1.54
to
KUWAIT (UPI)-A Kuwait
Well, last week Wall Street lay in consumer spending puts
102.10
and
the
Dow
Jones
in·
air force plane crashed in
was cheered by reports from all the more strength into 1972,
dustrial
average
of
30
selected
Kuwait city Saturday, ldlling
·netroit, the motor capital of and 'indicates it is going to be
blue
chips
finished
up
17.35·
to
·three civilians, the headquarthe world, indicating that the arip-roaringyear,"heobserved.
920.39
its
highest
mark
since
ters chief ·of staff said. The
consumer is gradually regaining
Despite the optimistic for~ast
June
6,
1969
when
it
closed
at
military statement broadcast
confidence in the economy. Late for next year, Conlan satd he
924.77.
on Kuw,it Radio said the pilot
March car sales jumped a ro- believed unemployment stdl
Volume
Well
Up
parachuted to safety.
bust 24.1 per cent, triggering should be htgh, although he satd
By RICHARD PUTNAM PRATT
Volume
rose
to
75,8116,690
the first weekly stock market it will be coming d?W" by the.n.
rise in lhree weeks.
First National Ctty Bank, m shares from tile 74,705,752 trad·
"This is one of the more de· its April ecoMmic. l~tter, sa1d ed a week earlier, even though
a bargain that suits manship a good idea if- you
How would you like to buy coding form for the car that strike
finitive signs that the econo~y the economy ts deftruteiy show- there were only four trading
you. Or, you can ask Car/ are in the market for a car? preaching and the pastor •.
lists
all
available
options
has turned the corner and is ing strength and headed toward days this week. The market any brand new car for just from air conditioning to Puler to put you in touch Probably it is, since it gives Charles Domtgan lsaong leader
with one of the dealers on , you an edge in any bargain· with Mrs. Domingan,. pianist.
doing better " Newton Zinder, "vigorous expansion."-!1 added was closed Good Friday. Thill $125 over dealer's cost?
white
sidewails
.
That's not as unlikely as•it
Easter Sunrise Services will
ing session.
Using the form, you check its list.
analyst for E. F. Hutton &amp; Co., that high incom~ consumers ~re week's figure was well above sounds.
All it requires is that off whatever options suit
the
45,048,190
shares
changing
Cooperating dealers are
You can accomplish some· be held at tile Alfred Methodist
declared.
leading a spendmg nse to which
you know the exact cost of your ·whim, and mail it back. pledged to sell you any car what the same thing, how· Church here Sunday morning at
hands
during
the
year
ago
per·
Robert s. Waill, vice presi· the mass of cons~ers can be
the car, and be able to locate The company's computer at cost, plus $125.
ever, by using one of the 6 b'clock, followed by breakfast
dent of Inverness Counsel, Inc., expected to contribute after a iod.
.a dealer willing to settle for then goes to work. It prices
Car
/Puler
m
a
k
e
s
its
price booklets now sold on · in the church basement. Sunday
said the initial impetus in the short time lag, fueling a general Of the ·1,806 issued traded, a $125 markup.
money
in
two
ways
in
this
many newsstands. The
the basic car, plus every
1,034 advanced while 615 deIt's true that under· ordin- option you've selected, and operation. It charges $5 for printed information is more School will be held at 9: t5
business recovery is coming business rebound.
from the auto sector and from
Other items providing encour- clined. There were 356 highs, ary circumstances you'd prints ail the information on its computerized data sheets, apt to be out of date, though, followed by an egg bunt on the
have a toul\h time discov.er- a data sheet that's mailed and it gets $25 (out of the and it lacks the access to church lawn. Worship services
steei. But he.also looked for a agement for investors were
ing
a cost figure or locatmg back to you.
$125) when it consummates dealers that guarantees a will be at 11 with the Rev.
pickup in residential home 'Strong gains in some of the
an amenable dealer. But This data sheet looks very a sale.
ceiling price.
Lavender. Anyone is welcome
building with the approach of popular blue chip and glamor
these two elements are the much like the "sticker"
The
cooperating
dealers
to any or all of these services.
warmer weather.
stocks; a favorable earnmgs HAPPY BIRTHDAY
. base for a new kind of bust- found on the left rear winMrs. Genevieve - Guthrie
Herbert G. Klein, White estimate by Chrysler Corp., one TOKYO (UP!) . - Mahalia ness enterprise that's adding dow of'every new car. But it are happy, too. They get $100
for
a
sale
they
figure
they'd
Afr
r,
d
attended services for her
Housecommunicationsdirector, of the big ~ee auto makers; Jackson, American gospel· economic muscle to the con- has one essential difference. never have gotten otherwise.
J
re
cousin;
Virgil Campbell at
Your data sheet shows two And they get a year-end resaid ail indications are that the and the sigrung of a flve-year singer, said her performance sumer movement.
Pomeroy, who succumed
economy has strengthened and agreement between. Ubya and for Emperor Hirohito will be a Armed with a computer prices for each element, in- bate from the manufacturer
recently to a heart attack.
unemployment has stabilized. Western .Oil compames on htgh- "birthday present" to . the crammed full of cost figures, stead of one: It has a "list based on annual volume.
emperor.
The
performance
wUI
·and
a
list
of
cooperative
price
"
just
as
the
new
car
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Woode and
"We believe the economy Ill er prices for Ubyan o~.
Is computerized one-ups·
Sunday
School
attendance
on
dealers, a former auto sales- sticker does. But it also has
Connie of CirclevUle pleasantly
getting stronger," he added.
The agreement provtdes for be. April• 23 ' six · days before
April 4 was 57, the offering, surprised his parents, Mr. and
M' man has developed a thnv- the dealer's cost printed in
Auto Sales Clue
the continued now of oil to Htrohito s yoth btrthday . . ~ ing trade in bird-dogging an adjoining column.
$26.40. Worship services were Mrs. Charles Woode SWlday
Don R. Conlan, chief econo- Western nations. But oil men Jackson ISm Japan for a sertes llargains for his customers.
This means that there are SLIDES KILL SIX
held at 11 with the Rev.
mist at Dean Witter &amp; Co., said believed the key pomt ts that the of concerts.
· The firm is called Car I two totals at the bottom of VIENNA (UPI)-Two ava- Lavender, with an attendance morning for the birthday of
Puler and its services are the sheet. One is the list lanches claimed six lives in of 30. The message was taken Mrs. Woode, which had fallen
on April!. They also visited Mr.
available on a nationwide price suggested by the manu· Austria as the Easter holiday from Luke 19: 29-40 . .: .
basis. Here's how it works : facturer for retail' ~l!les. The weekend began. Four French
and Mrs. William Carr and
If you're a potential new- other is the price the-dealer tourists were buried under wet
Several local people are at- daughters Sunday evening.
car buyer, you write to Car l must pay for the car him- snow near Galtuer in the tending revival services at the Mrs. Eleanor Boyles spent
·Puter (1603 Bushwtck Ave ., self.
Austrian TYrol and two Aus·
Brooklyn, N.Y. 11207) and At this point, you have a trian skiers died in an · Orange Christian Church here, from Monday till Friday last
which will continue through this week in camden-Clark Hospital
At Birmingham - Southern the London TIMES for the teil them the make ~nd choice to make. Using your
GALUPOUS - Beauty will Coilege they studied four years "singlemindedness" and model you have m mmd. information, you can go to avalanche near Kapnin in week. Vernon Russell of New in Parkersburg for surgery on
compliment musical ability with Hugh Thomas. Upon "oneness" of their concert Back comes a computer your local dealer and try to Salzburg province.
Marshfield, 0., Ill doing the her hand.
when duo-pianists Hodgens and graduation they went to New performances, - and these
ijoward present the final
York for advanced studies at qualities extend to tile artists'
concert of the Tri-County
Community
Concert the Juiliiard School of Music lives in private. Both are
(Mr. Howard on scholarship) gregarious and delight in enAssociation's current series at 8
with Rosina Lhevinne. In 1960 tertaining their friends in a
p.m. Monday at the Gallia they ·made their professional home which they enjoy
Academy High School in
debuts as duo-pianists in Bir· decorating. They spend much
Gailipolis.
mingham. The success of this time Utere rehearsing on two
Delores Hodgens, the concert helped them toward handsome ebony Steinway
feminine half of the duo, was another goal- a year of study grand pianos.
chosen MtSs Alabama of 1961 in London with Dona Kabos, a Asked about special awards
and was among tile top ten celebrated teacher who inspired or citations, Mr. Howard, with a
finalists in the Miss America them originally to careers in the wonderful sense of humor
contest in Atlantic City.
duo-piano medium.
replied, "My wife has wo.t a
Hodgens and Howard,
In the fall of 1964 Hodgens and whole·string of awards, so I just
following · two enormously Howard auditioned for the married them!" Her academic
successful tours of Europe in R&amp;kefeller Foundation which honors include Alpha Lambda
1965 and 1966, have returned to was so impressed by their Delta, . scholastic honorary,
their native land to captivate talents they were granted $3,000 magna cum laude, and she is
audiences with their very which financed their first also listed in "Who's Who in
special artistr,Y.
European tour in the spring of American Colleges and
1965. The reviews from over· Universities." Her beauty
They met with equal acclaim seas led to an additional grant contest citations each carried a
during their first extended from the same foundation which $1,000 scholarship, and David
concert tour of North America afforded tllem theil) ..Town Hall Merrick, the noted Broadway
during the t~9 season under debut in New York, March 15, producer, was so impressed
the · aegis of Columbia 1966.
with her performances at the .
Management of New York.
The art of the duo-piano· piano tllat he added a Special
Privately the artists are Mr. concert involves a kind of Award of $1,000. Notable, too, is
and Mrs. Samuel Howard. On marriage of talents. In the case the fact that Delores Hodgens
September 8, 1969, they became of Hodgens and Howard this Howard is listed in the 1965 and
the happy parents of their first was literally quite true . 1967 editions of "Outstanding
baby - a daughter, Hilary "Fortunately," she explains, Young Women of Ameri)B."
Hodgens Howard. Both artists · "our marriage came before our When not on tour, both artists
were born in Alabama and both career. ln.fact, our career came are on the music faculty of
began piano studies at a very as a result of our marriage." Birmingham· SOuthern College
early age.
The pair has been 'praised by in Birmingham, Ala.

PERSONAL FINANCE

Buy a New Car by Computer

Defen ers
SAIGON (UPI)-South Vietnamese defenders supported by
u.s( artillery crushed a North
Vietnamese ground assault on
Fire Base 6 Saturday in the
·nth day of fighting around the
Central Highlands outpost near
the Laotian and Cambodian
borders, military sources said.
Heavy fighting erupted about
a mile from Fire Base 6 later
in the day, UPI correspondent
Robert E. Sullivan reported
from the front. He said atiout
1,000 South VietnameSe troops
were involved on a batUefield
where U.S. Ail Force B52
Stratofortre8ses had made nine
saturation bombing raids.
Rescue Officer
A delayed report said one
U.S. artillery officer, Lt. Brian

M Thacker, 25, had made his
way back to Fire Base 6 after
10 harrowing days in the jungle.
U.S. helicoptl!r crews swooped
into tile hilltop base to pick up
Thacker lvho had been listed as
missing on March 31 when
North Vietnamese units overran
the outpost on the first day of a
se!l83W batUe.
Thacker, a native of Columbus, Ohio, whose father V; an
Air For.ce colon~! at Hickam
Air Force Base near Honolulu,
Hawaii, was reported in "satisfactory" · condition but de·
scribed as "very weak." He
had remained behind at Fire
Base 6 to cover the retreat of
other Americans.
North Vietnamese forces
have made Fire Base 6 tile

drove back the attackers. No
South Vietnamese casualties
were. reported.
In Cambodia, government
troops reported blunting three
Collllliunist attacks in the Pich
Nil Pass area on Highway 4
about 55 miles southwest of the
capital of Phnom Penh.
There was no riew word on
the fate of Catherine M. (Kate)
Webb, UPI's ·Phnom Penh
bureau manager, who disappeared with' anotller correspondent and three assistants in the
Pich Nil Pass area last
Wednesday during heavy fighting.
It was regarded as possible
that some of the five may have
been.captured but there was no
confirmation of this.

focal point of a Central
Highlands offensive and the
Viet Cong Radio said Saturday
night the campaign would
continue.
Military sources said the
Commllnist assault on Fire
Base 6 Saturday was "right on"
the outpost. The North Vietnamese apparenUy moved into
attacking positions at the base
of the hilt during the night after
U.S. Army helicopters had
dropped thousands of pounds of
napalm jellied gasoline to burn
away jungle foliage.
Find Bodies
Sources said the bOdies of 11
Communists were found Saturday after U.S. and South
Vietnamese artillery laid salvos
close to base defenders and

VOL. VI ~N~O-....1_1~--_.....
SU~N.:...DA..:..:Y,....,A....,PR;,;;IL...;;l,;,:,l,..,;;,19;;..:,.7::..=
1 _ _ __ _ __

Duo at Piano a n d R Orne

$~75,

•••••

KENT, Ohio (UP!) - Noted
Historian Henry Steel Com·
mager said today the nation's
universities are under a ''relentless attack unprecedented in
our history" but they must survive or society would cease to
function.
"What we are witnessing now
is a paradox which almost defies understanding," he said at
dedica lion ceremonies of a new
library here." At a time when
a university has achieved its
greatest prosperity; exercises
its most far reaching innuence
- and must be conceded its
greatest distinction ... at this
time it is the object of
acrimonious · criticism,

Especially at Easter, our thoughts
turn to the hope of peace for all
the world. We uriite with you in the
heartfelt prayer that the spirit of t.his
Easter season may soon be fuiAIIed
by lasting peac&amp;. Greetings, and may your
'

.,

Easter be ~adiant with many joys.

disrupt the. work of the university and of scholars, to intimidate or siiencP those whose
views they ~\ljlot share, to attack libraries and labora tortesand how does tllis differ from
Nazi bookburnings - and by
theseandsimilarinterventions
to repudiate the function of the
university as a citadel of reason," he said.
"There is readon to doubt the
universities will survive the
present crisis if indeed civilization as we have known it, survives that crisis," tile historian
said.
"May we not say quite simply
that the university !!lUSt survive
because society cannot function
without it," said Commager.

by rhetoric of a Governor of
Alabama or Governor Reagan
of California," he said. "The
hostility takes a more dangerous form in the overt threat to
academic freedom posed by the
infiltration of a thousand army
intelligence agents into the
classrooms and libraries and
meeting places of the universities or the despicible activities
of agents and provacatuers serving the interest of the FBI."
Commager also condemned
students bent on disruption and
destruction.
"! refer to those misguided
students who have so litUe
understanding of the nature and
obliga lions of academic freedom
that they are prepared to

i.s "rooted in a suspicision of

intellectuals" and has manifested ilseif in many ways includ·
ing the report of the special
grand jury on the Kent State
disturbances.
"The sensational and tragic
expression of tllis hostility can
be read into the report of the
grand jury of Portage County,
in the formal indictments which
the jury reported, not against
those who had shot students but as in facist countries against the victims," he s;!id.
"It can be read in the shab-

.Everything in Ninth Grader is
Attack on East

.·scout of Month

N~WDELHI (UPI)_.:.Pakista- Friday at Feni, a strategic rail

ni army troops laWlched a
major offensive throughout
embatUed East Paldatan Sa~·
day, attacktng the rebels With
tanks, air strikes, artillery and
foot soldiers.
Reports from the border
i~dicated that the East Pak.~tam forces of Sheikh Mu]tbur
Rahman, had suffered major
setbacks.
In an all-out bid to maintain
control over the crucial eastern
city of Comilla, tile Pakistan
air force new in 10 planeloads
of troops and supplies to
Dhupuria airfield, West Pakistan's only link with the army
base which was surrounded
with Bengali freedom fighters.
Reports from the border said
the guerrillas had shot down
two Pakistan air force planes

. and road town in a 20-mile belt
that separates the southern
district of Chittagong-and the
vital port-from ihe rest of
East Pakistan.
Radio Pakistan announced
Saturday that its army troops
had captured .two Indian
soldiers two miles inside East
Pakistan.

Biggest Erupter
Puts on Hot Show

In Wash Machine

CATANIA, Sicily (UPI) Europe's tallest volcano put on
another spectacular · show
Saturday, spewing molten rock
in to the sky arid down· snowcovered slopes where world
champion skiers competed 14
days ago.
The 10,90Uoot cone of Mt.
Etna began rumbling and
bubbling incandescent sand,
rock, steam and smoke five
days ago. It showed no signs of
stopping Saturday.

PARMA HEIGHTS, Ohio
(UP!) ~ Police here found the
body of a two-year-old boy inside his mother's washing
machine, after he apparenUy
climbed on top of it, fell Inside
and drowned,
Brian J. Edwards, the son of
Mr. and Mrs, Gary Edwards,
was pronounced dead at
Deaconess Hospital. His mother
said she left young Brian for a
few minutes, but when she
returned he was gone. She then
called the police. Authorities
found the youth abOut io:30'a.m.
Friday, inside the top-loading
automatic machine, which was'
still running.

AffiMAN KILLED
AGANA, Guam (UP!) - A
'Toledo; Ohio, airman was killed
Friday night when ·he feU down
a 25-foot elevator shaft at a
tourist spa. Witnesses said
airman Jack Ickes, 24, was
climbing down the shaft on a
rope when he lost his grip.
BODIES RECOVERED
BELGRADE (UP!)- Rescue
workers recovered Saturday
the last two bodies of nine
miners killed Thursday when a
torrent of water burst into a
gallery of the Ojstro pit at
Hrastnik, Slovenia, the
Yugoslav news agency Tanjug
said.
·

2- Year-Old Dies

And may the world soon
lcnow its lasting ioys .•.

prevasive hostilities and
relentless
attacks,
unprecedented in our history."
Coinmager said the hostility

PT. PLEASANT - Rocky
Handley, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Handley, 108 South Park
Drive, Saturday was selected as
the first in a series of "Scouts of
the Month" to be honored by the
M-G-M District.
The selection of Handley, a
Point Pleasant JW1ior High
ninth grader, was announced by
Chadds HaD, M-G·M District
Scout Executive.
Han4ley received area wide
recognition earlier this year
when he found $222.69 in cash
and negotiable checks on a store
parking tot in Point Pleasant
and returned the money to its
rightful owner.
A member of Scout Troop 261,
Rocky entered scouting in 1967.
He is the troop bugler, has the
star rank and eight merit
haclges. He has also served as
den chief, assistant patrol
leader and scribe and has two
scout meetings.
Rocky Ill a member of the
Main Street Baptist Church and
member of the Crusader
SWlday School Class there. He
also serves as a Junior Usher of
the church.
In otller activities of Rocky's

ROCKY HANDLEY

busy schedule, he is a Point
Pleasant Regisier carrier with
139 customers, member of the
Tani Judo Club, plays the
trumpet in the junior high liand
and is known as the "Neighborhood Handyman' ~ on Park
Drive because of his willingness
to mow lawns, rake yards,
shovel snow, etc.
Rocky's hobbies are fishing
and motorcycle riding.

It's true. When you rrtove into your
JU:W home, we'll install this many phories
for $9. 75.
; ·
But only·ifyou have therrt allmstalled
at the IQJI)e time. Certain wall and desk
phones, however, require an added one·
time color charge.
·
The point is, !fyou're moving or plan·

'1Hf
OLD.BANK.WITH NEW IDEAS"
.
'
'

'

'

.

.

ning to in the near future, it's worth your and, of course, stop your old.
And, with a little advance notice,
while to decide how many phones you'll
she'll have our installer at your door the
need, now. Before you move.
Secause if you ask us to come back day• yOU: move in.
. again later; there's an additional charge. . . Aa we say. lt pays to phone ahead.
· So call your .service representative
ahead of time.
··
.
She'll help you plan your new serViCe

@aioeM

R
k
eam zn e zng
R0 r
Tennis Play
~

e·

e

·

·

PEKING (UPI)- The u.s.
table tennis team arrived in the
capital of the People's Republic
of China by plane Saturday
night for a weeklong series of
matches with top players of
this country's favorite sport.
Graham B. Steenhoven of
Detroit, Mich., president of tlte
U.S. Table Tennis Association,
led the delegation of · ·~
.
Amencans
o11 th e p1anew hen 1.t
landed at 10 p.m. at the Peking
Airport.
The Americans greeted a
group of Chinese table tennis
then proceeded into the capital
for lodging.
The American players will
make their debut in Peking in
the 18,000-seat indoor Sports
Palace, and the matches are
expected to draw capacity
crowds.
The matches will be covered
by television and newspapers
from tllroughout the nation.
Steen hoven, chatting with
reporters and others over a cup
· the atrpor
·
t recep tion
of te a m
d
·
Iounge, pratse as cour te ous
and friendly the manner in
. h the Amencan
.
group had
whtc
been we1come d.
·
The Amer1cans,
accompam'ed
. tabl e te nms
.
by the Coom
1 btan
.
f
te am, II ew to Pekmg rom
Can ton. Th ey had tr ave1ed to
· from Hong
Can ton. by t ram
Kong, about 50 miles '-to the
southeast.
The visit of the Americans to
China was seen in this capital
as the first step toward whal
could be the beginning of SinoAmerican rapport on a peopleto-people basis.
They are the first U.S.
citizens to visit China with

·

tm it

i

r; IF

:F&lt;

gg: :@t

nmn:

HONG KONG (UPl) -John TBDDehlll, 19, Middleport,
Ohio, wore a pair of farmer-type overalla when be and
members tlthe u. s. Table Tennis team crossed mto Com·
maillst Cblu.
The 15 were the first group of ordinary Amerlclllll to villi
the mainland &amp;IDee l1N 9• The group IDcluded seven players, a
Cllllch, Itve Glflclals and two wlvee.
AD
..,_A,~
. ..... go\ u,..,......:.haad ·~" lf0111l!!!lf9rmed.I;!W!Jlte '
Glllclals after lbelr urival.
"s ·
Taanehlll, the No. Zl'llllked lable lelll\l&amp; player Ill the U.
S.ls a freslmwut lhe Unlvenily of Cincinnati . He lithe son
tl Chester Talllleblll, execuUve editor of the Ohio Vlllley
Publlsblng Co.

•-

HONOLULU (UP! ) - Two
hundred policemen searched
Oahu Saturday for six "extremely dangerous" men-five
of them convicted or accused of
seven murders in ali- who
escaped jail at gunpoint.
Police Chief Francis Keaia,
directing the manhunt across
the island, said the fugitives
were armed with at least two
.45 caliber automatics and a .38
caliber revolver smuggled to
them in Halawa JaiL
One of the escapers was
William K. "Willie" Medeiros,
25, a suspect in Honolulu's
"chain-reaction" murder witness siayings last year .
The prisoners used bed sheets
to bind six jail guards who
were left in locked cells in .the
maximum security block. A
police lieutenant was robbed of
$26.
The escape operation began
when William C. Brown Jr., 21,
who was appealing a 4{).year
sentence for armed robbery
and first degree larceny,
summoned a guard to his cell
corridor and took him hostage
with a gun .
Within minutes, Brown had
freed the other five pri&gt;oners
from their cells. They ordered
the hostage to direct the
lieutenant to open the electri·
caUy locked door to the main
office.
. None of the guards nor any
other inmates were injured
during the fast-moving escape.
But police were warned that
·the r·eseaped prisoners, were
"extreme1y dangerous - ·approach with caution."
The six stole two cars and
both vehicles were found
abandoned a few hours later.

· · •• · · · •·•···········•·•••••.)t... •·· · · •· · · ·t·•·•· ·· tt/ ·••·•••u·•!ll !i 1
~~:c:Y ~~e~~he~~a~~~o;e~~ .
· trave1 to (NBC), Life magazine and the them driven by women.
passpor Is not banmng
th'ts coun try smce
· three Amen-· Associated Press received entry Medeiros was awaiting trial
cans arrived here with unre- visas to Communist China to on first degree murder charges
stricted passports in 1970.
cover the Americans' activities in the killings of 111-year.oid
The American visit, the first there. They wiH foUow the learn Mitzi !so Klotzbach, his oneby mvt
· 'tat··ton o1 the commums
· t into China Sunday.
time girl friend, Herman Marfil
Chinese .and approved by the (In Washington, a U.S. State and Charles M. Akana Jr., a
um' ted States governmen 1, Department official said he narcotics pusher.
drew sharp crtticlSIO
···
Miss Klotzbach was the
ear1ier could foresee no difficulties in
Satur.day 1rom Na tiona llst Ch'1· arranging for a visit by a ob]'ect of an intensive police
na
search until her body was found
·
Communist Chinese delega lion in a beach grave the day before
In Taipei, the nationalist to the United States if Peking Christmas. Police said she was
government of Generallsst' mo agrees to the idea.)
killed beeause s he was to be a
Cht'ang Ka1'-•hek
called
the
The
Red
Chinese
extended
.
.
.m
v
~ey prosecution
wttness
Communist invitation to tile the invitation to the Americans another murder case.
Amert"cans a "political plot ... last Wednesday, the final day
Th e other escapers were
,
ft'itrate
'nto
the
of
the
world
table
tennis
1
to further m
identified as Edward L. Silva,
free world."
championships in Nagoya, Ja- 2•,
, charged wi th Medeiros in
The Amert"can group was pan. The Communist Chinese Lemur
h
der of A"·.....a an d aiso
made up of 15 persons, seven of team, competing for the first indicted for aiding in a hank
. 1 L. Cuevas, 21,
them Players' thel·r coach, ft' ve time since 1960, won tile team robbery ; Dame
offt'ct"ais and two wives. It was championship and four of the serving .a 4{).year sentence for
the first American group to seven division titles. The United
enter mainland China under States - finished 24th in team
(Continued on Page 14)
such circumstances since party standings.
Chairman Mao Tse-tung esta- ESPERANTO CONFAB
blished his Communist regime LYON,- France (UPI)-Hunthere in 1949 and forced dreds of supporters of tile
Chiang's government to the internationallanguage Esperan· ·
island of Formosa.
to from 13 countries attended . 1
Four newsmen representing the 63rd Esperanto congress
the National Broadcasting Co. Saturday.
'

'N:Wflfk •:?•••••· · •

M·e rcury
1 raced

CHARLESTON, W. Va. (UP!)
-Coal may be the source of
the mercury that has shown up
in a sampling of fish taken by 1.
the state Natural Resources De·
Gettysburg has pews named for
partment.
Presidents Abraham Uncoin
The state Geological Survey
and Dwight D. Eisenhower,
bas begun· exam'ining coal
both ·of whom atiended services
seams in areas where fish with
there.
high concentrations of mercury
were found in a preliminary
sampling by tile department.
Water Resources Division
Chief Edgar Henry said, "If
hamlet home.
it's coming from there, we've
Two other children, Ailen, 10, probably had it in the saMe
and Evelyn, 8, whom she had amounts for years. "
sent away with kisses, went
The DNR .reported Friday 17
barefoot to neighbor's home walleyes caught in Summers·
for help, police said.
ville reservoir had mercury
.concentrationsrangingfromt.77
Police, who could not give a to .27 milligrams of mercury
reason for the shootings, said per kilogram.
the three dead children had
The U.S. Food and Drug Ad·
been shot in the head; They ministration. sets a maxlmUII)
said they found a gun beneath level of mercury safe for huMrs. Townsend. Roger Town- man consumption at .5 mJl.
send, her husband, was at work ligrams per kilogram.
at the Buffalo International · A channel catfish caught In~
Airport, where he is a the Ohio River !ll!ar Parkera-1
mechani&lt;!"'for Uni~ Airlines, burg had a concentration of .113 ..
when the shootings occurred.
Director Ira LaUmer aaifl he
Mrs. Iownsend, a fonner :_'felt the preliminary fincllnCI did
outpatient at the Rochester not warrant a ·need to ralrld ,
State Mental Hospital, did not sport fishing in any llllr~ of lhl
leave a note, state.police said. sbote
.

First Families Are United
. By RICHARD E. LERNER perhaps at Mrs. Eisenhower's
THURMONT, ~d. (UPI)- regular place of worship, the
Mrs. Mamie Eisenhower joined Presbyterian Church of GettysPresident Nixon and his family burg.
for a rare family reunion The historic old church in
Saturday, and the group made
tentative plans to attend church
together on Easter sunday.
Mrs. Eisenhower, wearing a ·
lavender coat and veil, was
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (UP!)driven to the presidential Ahousewife who allegedly shot
mountain retreat at Camp three of her five children to
David from her farm home a\ dea·th and thrned the gun on
Gettysburg, Pa., about 25 miles herself underwent surgery at
away, Saturday afternoon.
Rochester General Hospital
A few moments after her S~turday for removal of a .22
arrival, Nixon's elder daughter, caliber bullet from ·her head.
Tricia, reached the camp with
A hospital spokesman said
her fiance, Edward Finch Cox, Mrs. Lois Townsend, 34, of
after' a motor trip from Bennington, N.Y., was listed In
Washington.
poor condition foilowing the
President and Mr; Nixon and surgery: She had been transtheir younger dauglnar.. Julie, · !erred here from Genesee
and her . husband, NayY Ens. Memorial Hospital at Batavia
Daytd Etsen~ower am~ed. by earlier in t~e day.
•helicopter Fnday from Vtr.gm~a P.olice'SBid Mrs.' Townsend, a
Beach, ~a., where Davtd IS • former state mental hospital
, teMpora.rtly stati?ned. He IS outpi'tient, shot tllree o( her
Mrs. Etsenh~wer s grandson. children-Craig, 2, Julie, 3, and
1 The .families may attend Robin, 7- before wounding her•
church m the Thurmont area or self in their Wyoming CQunty

1

Bullet Taken Out

54% Like Nixon
WASHINGTON (UPl) - presidency, compared with 36
Opinion Research Corp., per cent one month ago.
'
Princeton, N. J., said Saturday The same survey revealed
that 54 per cent of the public that 75 per cent of the public
now approves of President approve of Nixon's decision to
Nixon's performance as Chief rev\ew tile case of Calley, who
· ExecuUve.
was convicted of murdering 22
In a statement released in Vietnamese civliians at My Lai,
Washington, the organization and 17 per cent dlsapprove: ·
said ita nationwide survey was The poll also showed that !15
taken after Nixon said he would per -cent of the people were
review the case of' Lt..Wllllam opposed to the antiwar
L. Calley, Jr., but before his uemonslratlons planned for
April 7 speech on Vietnam.
Washington during the next few
The ·organlzaUon ·said the . weeb and 28 per cent favored
favorable pereentage one them. '!'lie !lrm sal~ it polled 973
month ago was 51 per cent It persons aged 18 and liver by
uid 31 per cent now disapprove telephone on April 5 and 6.
of Nlxon'a handling of the ·
'

CUB SCOUT VISIT - Cub Scout Den 3, Pack 245 of Middleport, toured the offset plant
printing plant and editorial offices Friday in Gallipolis in company with Den Mother Mrs. Eula
Francis and "den dad" Marion French. Above, I tor, are James Gheen, Keith Black, James
Scally, David Vance, Max Geary, Ray Stewart and Fred Knapp. Accompanying the scouts as a
driver was Mrs. Donna Gheen.

::~~s:~iv~~th ~~~~:~.~the~

·

A~G'=-E~
13

...!...:?

·K illers .
Hunted

Social Notes

Universities Must Live

_

.WINNING.POLITICIANS all, the ruling SOviet trlumvi·
rate caals ballols at the -Moscow City Communist
party conference. Left to right, Part;· First· Secretary
Leonid I. BrMhnev, Premier Alekse N. Kosygln and
President Nikolai V. Podgorny. 'f,he Issue decided wu
the Moscow slate of 1elegales to..the .24th Communist
Party Con~rt'll of the Soviet l'nion.

a

1

�·-·---.
- 12~ TheSundayTimes-Sentinel,SWlday, April II, 1971

e

.

Detroit, with New Ll

'

.

.

..

Heartens Economzsts
reporte~ a $1.01 a share profit
Porcupine Mines up 7.
Other firm spots were Coca· for the first quarter after a toss
Cola 5Y.,' Barber Oil 5\'.z, Mis· in the strike-affected year ago
sion 5'k, Simplicity Pattern 51:! quarter.
Manufactures Hanover slid
and General Eelctric 5'1s. GE

6¥., .Memorex 6% and First

fd

the Changing nature of its

"

I

lows.
National City 41'. . Memorex business. ·
By HOWARD LUXENBERG the rise in auto sales is a sign assurance of five years of pre· 36Among
the week's strongest
reported a 83 cent a.share pro- Federal National Mortgage,
UPl Business Writer
things are getting .better. 'But dictable price increases will features ,were · SUpertor Oil
fit for 1970 but gave no com· tile week's most heavily traded .
NEW YORK (UPI) - F.or " no one should expect any provide fqr greater efficiency.
which soared 11, Natomas 8,
parison because of whatit call· issue, rose 21&gt; to 71% on 1,078,·
months the nation's foremost burst in consumer spending un· For the week, tile New York Southdown 7Ys and Mcintyre
000 shares.
economistshavebeensayingthe til the end of the year," he add- Stock Exchange CO!lllllon stock
'
.
index posted a gain of 0.75 to
key to the country's recovery ed.
FATAL CRASH
rests with the consumer.·
"And the likelihood of a de· 56.33. Standard &amp; Poor's 500
•
stock
index
climbed
1.54
to
KUWAIT (UPI)-A Kuwait
Well, last week Wall Street lay in consumer spending puts
102.10
and
the
Dow
Jones
in·
air force plane crashed in
was cheered by reports from all the more strength into 1972,
dustrial
average
of
30
selected
Kuwait city Saturday, ldlling
·netroit, the motor capital of and 'indicates it is going to be
blue
chips
finished
up
17.35·
to
·three civilians, the headquarthe world, indicating that the arip-roaringyear,"heobserved.
920.39
its
highest
mark
since
ters chief ·of staff said. The
consumer is gradually regaining
Despite the optimistic for~ast
June
6,
1969
when
it
closed
at
military statement broadcast
confidence in the economy. Late for next year, Conlan satd he
924.77.
on Kuw,it Radio said the pilot
March car sales jumped a ro- believed unemployment stdl
Volume
Well
Up
parachuted to safety.
bust 24.1 per cent, triggering should be htgh, although he satd
By RICHARD PUTNAM PRATT
Volume
rose
to
75,8116,690
the first weekly stock market it will be coming d?W" by the.n.
rise in lhree weeks.
First National Ctty Bank, m shares from tile 74,705,752 trad·
"This is one of the more de· its April ecoMmic. l~tter, sa1d ed a week earlier, even though
a bargain that suits manship a good idea if- you
How would you like to buy coding form for the car that strike
finitive signs that the econo~y the economy ts deftruteiy show- there were only four trading
you. Or, you can ask Car/ are in the market for a car? preaching and the pastor •.
lists
all
available
options
has turned the corner and is ing strength and headed toward days this week. The market any brand new car for just from air conditioning to Puler to put you in touch Probably it is, since it gives Charles Domtgan lsaong leader
with one of the dealers on , you an edge in any bargain· with Mrs. Domingan,. pianist.
doing better " Newton Zinder, "vigorous expansion."-!1 added was closed Good Friday. Thill $125 over dealer's cost?
white
sidewails
.
That's not as unlikely as•it
Easter Sunrise Services will
ing session.
Using the form, you check its list.
analyst for E. F. Hutton &amp; Co., that high incom~ consumers ~re week's figure was well above sounds.
All it requires is that off whatever options suit
the
45,048,190
shares
changing
Cooperating dealers are
You can accomplish some· be held at tile Alfred Methodist
declared.
leading a spendmg nse to which
you know the exact cost of your ·whim, and mail it back. pledged to sell you any car what the same thing, how· Church here Sunday morning at
hands
during
the
year
ago
per·
Robert s. Waill, vice presi· the mass of cons~ers can be
the car, and be able to locate The company's computer at cost, plus $125.
ever, by using one of the 6 b'clock, followed by breakfast
dent of Inverness Counsel, Inc., expected to contribute after a iod.
.a dealer willing to settle for then goes to work. It prices
Car
/Puler
m
a
k
e
s
its
price booklets now sold on · in the church basement. Sunday
said the initial impetus in the short time lag, fueling a general Of the ·1,806 issued traded, a $125 markup.
money
in
two
ways
in
this
many newsstands. The
the basic car, plus every
1,034 advanced while 615 deIt's true that under· ordin- option you've selected, and operation. It charges $5 for printed information is more School will be held at 9: t5
business recovery is coming business rebound.
from the auto sector and from
Other items providing encour- clined. There were 356 highs, ary circumstances you'd prints ail the information on its computerized data sheets, apt to be out of date, though, followed by an egg bunt on the
have a toul\h time discov.er- a data sheet that's mailed and it gets $25 (out of the and it lacks the access to church lawn. Worship services
steei. But he.also looked for a agement for investors were
ing
a cost figure or locatmg back to you.
$125) when it consummates dealers that guarantees a will be at 11 with the Rev.
pickup in residential home 'Strong gains in some of the
an amenable dealer. But This data sheet looks very a sale.
ceiling price.
Lavender. Anyone is welcome
building with the approach of popular blue chip and glamor
these two elements are the much like the "sticker"
The
cooperating
dealers
to any or all of these services.
warmer weather.
stocks; a favorable earnmgs HAPPY BIRTHDAY
. base for a new kind of bust- found on the left rear winMrs. Genevieve - Guthrie
Herbert G. Klein, White estimate by Chrysler Corp., one TOKYO (UP!) . - Mahalia ness enterprise that's adding dow of'every new car. But it are happy, too. They get $100
for
a
sale
they
figure
they'd
Afr
r,
d
attended services for her
Housecommunicationsdirector, of the big ~ee auto makers; Jackson, American gospel· economic muscle to the con- has one essential difference. never have gotten otherwise.
J
re
cousin;
Virgil Campbell at
Your data sheet shows two And they get a year-end resaid ail indications are that the and the sigrung of a flve-year singer, said her performance sumer movement.
Pomeroy, who succumed
economy has strengthened and agreement between. Ubya and for Emperor Hirohito will be a Armed with a computer prices for each element, in- bate from the manufacturer
recently to a heart attack.
unemployment has stabilized. Western .Oil compames on htgh- "birthday present" to . the crammed full of cost figures, stead of one: It has a "list based on annual volume.
emperor.
The
performance
wUI
·and
a
list
of
cooperative
price
"
just
as
the
new
car
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Woode and
"We believe the economy Ill er prices for Ubyan o~.
Is computerized one-ups·
Sunday
School
attendance
on
dealers, a former auto sales- sticker does. But it also has
Connie of CirclevUle pleasantly
getting stronger," he added.
The agreement provtdes for be. April• 23 ' six · days before
April 4 was 57, the offering, surprised his parents, Mr. and
M' man has developed a thnv- the dealer's cost printed in
Auto Sales Clue
the continued now of oil to Htrohito s yoth btrthday . . ~ ing trade in bird-dogging an adjoining column.
$26.40. Worship services were Mrs. Charles Woode SWlday
Don R. Conlan, chief econo- Western nations. But oil men Jackson ISm Japan for a sertes llargains for his customers.
This means that there are SLIDES KILL SIX
held at 11 with the Rev.
mist at Dean Witter &amp; Co., said believed the key pomt ts that the of concerts.
· The firm is called Car I two totals at the bottom of VIENNA (UPI)-Two ava- Lavender, with an attendance morning for the birthday of
Puler and its services are the sheet. One is the list lanches claimed six lives in of 30. The message was taken Mrs. Woode, which had fallen
on April!. They also visited Mr.
available on a nationwide price suggested by the manu· Austria as the Easter holiday from Luke 19: 29-40 . .: .
basis. Here's how it works : facturer for retail' ~l!les. The weekend began. Four French
and Mrs. William Carr and
If you're a potential new- other is the price the-dealer tourists were buried under wet
Several local people are at- daughters Sunday evening.
car buyer, you write to Car l must pay for the car him- snow near Galtuer in the tending revival services at the Mrs. Eleanor Boyles spent
·Puter (1603 Bushwtck Ave ., self.
Austrian TYrol and two Aus·
Brooklyn, N.Y. 11207) and At this point, you have a trian skiers died in an · Orange Christian Church here, from Monday till Friday last
which will continue through this week in camden-Clark Hospital
At Birmingham - Southern the London TIMES for the teil them the make ~nd choice to make. Using your
GALUPOUS - Beauty will Coilege they studied four years "singlemindedness" and model you have m mmd. information, you can go to avalanche near Kapnin in week. Vernon Russell of New in Parkersburg for surgery on
compliment musical ability with Hugh Thomas. Upon "oneness" of their concert Back comes a computer your local dealer and try to Salzburg province.
Marshfield, 0., Ill doing the her hand.
when duo-pianists Hodgens and graduation they went to New performances, - and these
ijoward present the final
York for advanced studies at qualities extend to tile artists'
concert of the Tri-County
Community
Concert the Juiliiard School of Music lives in private. Both are
(Mr. Howard on scholarship) gregarious and delight in enAssociation's current series at 8
with Rosina Lhevinne. In 1960 tertaining their friends in a
p.m. Monday at the Gallia they ·made their professional home which they enjoy
Academy High School in
debuts as duo-pianists in Bir· decorating. They spend much
Gailipolis.
mingham. The success of this time Utere rehearsing on two
Delores Hodgens, the concert helped them toward handsome ebony Steinway
feminine half of the duo, was another goal- a year of study grand pianos.
chosen MtSs Alabama of 1961 in London with Dona Kabos, a Asked about special awards
and was among tile top ten celebrated teacher who inspired or citations, Mr. Howard, with a
finalists in the Miss America them originally to careers in the wonderful sense of humor
contest in Atlantic City.
duo-piano medium.
replied, "My wife has wo.t a
Hodgens and Howard,
In the fall of 1964 Hodgens and whole·string of awards, so I just
following · two enormously Howard auditioned for the married them!" Her academic
successful tours of Europe in R&amp;kefeller Foundation which honors include Alpha Lambda
1965 and 1966, have returned to was so impressed by their Delta, . scholastic honorary,
their native land to captivate talents they were granted $3,000 magna cum laude, and she is
audiences with their very which financed their first also listed in "Who's Who in
special artistr,Y.
European tour in the spring of American Colleges and
1965. The reviews from over· Universities." Her beauty
They met with equal acclaim seas led to an additional grant contest citations each carried a
during their first extended from the same foundation which $1,000 scholarship, and David
concert tour of North America afforded tllem theil) ..Town Hall Merrick, the noted Broadway
during the t~9 season under debut in New York, March 15, producer, was so impressed
the · aegis of Columbia 1966.
with her performances at the .
Management of New York.
The art of the duo-piano· piano tllat he added a Special
Privately the artists are Mr. concert involves a kind of Award of $1,000. Notable, too, is
and Mrs. Samuel Howard. On marriage of talents. In the case the fact that Delores Hodgens
September 8, 1969, they became of Hodgens and Howard this Howard is listed in the 1965 and
the happy parents of their first was literally quite true . 1967 editions of "Outstanding
baby - a daughter, Hilary "Fortunately," she explains, Young Women of Ameri)B."
Hodgens Howard. Both artists · "our marriage came before our When not on tour, both artists
were born in Alabama and both career. ln.fact, our career came are on the music faculty of
began piano studies at a very as a result of our marriage." Birmingham· SOuthern College
early age.
The pair has been 'praised by in Birmingham, Ala.

PERSONAL FINANCE

Buy a New Car by Computer

Defen ers
SAIGON (UPI)-South Vietnamese defenders supported by
u.s( artillery crushed a North
Vietnamese ground assault on
Fire Base 6 Saturday in the
·nth day of fighting around the
Central Highlands outpost near
the Laotian and Cambodian
borders, military sources said.
Heavy fighting erupted about
a mile from Fire Base 6 later
in the day, UPI correspondent
Robert E. Sullivan reported
from the front. He said atiout
1,000 South VietnameSe troops
were involved on a batUefield
where U.S. Ail Force B52
Stratofortre8ses had made nine
saturation bombing raids.
Rescue Officer
A delayed report said one
U.S. artillery officer, Lt. Brian

M Thacker, 25, had made his
way back to Fire Base 6 after
10 harrowing days in the jungle.
U.S. helicoptl!r crews swooped
into tile hilltop base to pick up
Thacker lvho had been listed as
missing on March 31 when
North Vietnamese units overran
the outpost on the first day of a
se!l83W batUe.
Thacker, a native of Columbus, Ohio, whose father V; an
Air For.ce colon~! at Hickam
Air Force Base near Honolulu,
Hawaii, was reported in "satisfactory" · condition but de·
scribed as "very weak." He
had remained behind at Fire
Base 6 to cover the retreat of
other Americans.
North Vietnamese forces
have made Fire Base 6 tile

drove back the attackers. No
South Vietnamese casualties
were. reported.
In Cambodia, government
troops reported blunting three
Collllliunist attacks in the Pich
Nil Pass area on Highway 4
about 55 miles southwest of the
capital of Phnom Penh.
There was no riew word on
the fate of Catherine M. (Kate)
Webb, UPI's ·Phnom Penh
bureau manager, who disappeared with' anotller correspondent and three assistants in the
Pich Nil Pass area last
Wednesday during heavy fighting.
It was regarded as possible
that some of the five may have
been.captured but there was no
confirmation of this.

focal point of a Central
Highlands offensive and the
Viet Cong Radio said Saturday
night the campaign would
continue.
Military sources said the
Commllnist assault on Fire
Base 6 Saturday was "right on"
the outpost. The North Vietnamese apparenUy moved into
attacking positions at the base
of the hilt during the night after
U.S. Army helicopters had
dropped thousands of pounds of
napalm jellied gasoline to burn
away jungle foliage.
Find Bodies
Sources said the bOdies of 11
Communists were found Saturday after U.S. and South
Vietnamese artillery laid salvos
close to base defenders and

VOL. VI ~N~O-....1_1~--_.....
SU~N.:...DA..:..:Y,....,A....,PR;,;;IL...;;l,;,:,l,..,;;,19;;..:,.7::..=
1 _ _ __ _ __

Duo at Piano a n d R Orne

$~75,

•••••

KENT, Ohio (UP!) - Noted
Historian Henry Steel Com·
mager said today the nation's
universities are under a ''relentless attack unprecedented in
our history" but they must survive or society would cease to
function.
"What we are witnessing now
is a paradox which almost defies understanding," he said at
dedica lion ceremonies of a new
library here." At a time when
a university has achieved its
greatest prosperity; exercises
its most far reaching innuence
- and must be conceded its
greatest distinction ... at this
time it is the object of
acrimonious · criticism,

Especially at Easter, our thoughts
turn to the hope of peace for all
the world. We uriite with you in the
heartfelt prayer that the spirit of t.his
Easter season may soon be fuiAIIed
by lasting peac&amp;. Greetings, and may your
'

.,

Easter be ~adiant with many joys.

disrupt the. work of the university and of scholars, to intimidate or siiencP those whose
views they ~\ljlot share, to attack libraries and labora tortesand how does tllis differ from
Nazi bookburnings - and by
theseandsimilarinterventions
to repudiate the function of the
university as a citadel of reason," he said.
"There is readon to doubt the
universities will survive the
present crisis if indeed civilization as we have known it, survives that crisis," tile historian
said.
"May we not say quite simply
that the university !!lUSt survive
because society cannot function
without it," said Commager.

by rhetoric of a Governor of
Alabama or Governor Reagan
of California," he said. "The
hostility takes a more dangerous form in the overt threat to
academic freedom posed by the
infiltration of a thousand army
intelligence agents into the
classrooms and libraries and
meeting places of the universities or the despicible activities
of agents and provacatuers serving the interest of the FBI."
Commager also condemned
students bent on disruption and
destruction.
"! refer to those misguided
students who have so litUe
understanding of the nature and
obliga lions of academic freedom
that they are prepared to

i.s "rooted in a suspicision of

intellectuals" and has manifested ilseif in many ways includ·
ing the report of the special
grand jury on the Kent State
disturbances.
"The sensational and tragic
expression of tllis hostility can
be read into the report of the
grand jury of Portage County,
in the formal indictments which
the jury reported, not against
those who had shot students but as in facist countries against the victims," he s;!id.
"It can be read in the shab-

.Everything in Ninth Grader is
Attack on East

.·scout of Month

N~WDELHI (UPI)_.:.Pakista- Friday at Feni, a strategic rail

ni army troops laWlched a
major offensive throughout
embatUed East Paldatan Sa~·
day, attacktng the rebels With
tanks, air strikes, artillery and
foot soldiers.
Reports from the border
i~dicated that the East Pak.~tam forces of Sheikh Mu]tbur
Rahman, had suffered major
setbacks.
In an all-out bid to maintain
control over the crucial eastern
city of Comilla, tile Pakistan
air force new in 10 planeloads
of troops and supplies to
Dhupuria airfield, West Pakistan's only link with the army
base which was surrounded
with Bengali freedom fighters.
Reports from the border said
the guerrillas had shot down
two Pakistan air force planes

. and road town in a 20-mile belt
that separates the southern
district of Chittagong-and the
vital port-from ihe rest of
East Pakistan.
Radio Pakistan announced
Saturday that its army troops
had captured .two Indian
soldiers two miles inside East
Pakistan.

Biggest Erupter
Puts on Hot Show

In Wash Machine

CATANIA, Sicily (UPI) Europe's tallest volcano put on
another spectacular · show
Saturday, spewing molten rock
in to the sky arid down· snowcovered slopes where world
champion skiers competed 14
days ago.
The 10,90Uoot cone of Mt.
Etna began rumbling and
bubbling incandescent sand,
rock, steam and smoke five
days ago. It showed no signs of
stopping Saturday.

PARMA HEIGHTS, Ohio
(UP!) ~ Police here found the
body of a two-year-old boy inside his mother's washing
machine, after he apparenUy
climbed on top of it, fell Inside
and drowned,
Brian J. Edwards, the son of
Mr. and Mrs, Gary Edwards,
was pronounced dead at
Deaconess Hospital. His mother
said she left young Brian for a
few minutes, but when she
returned he was gone. She then
called the police. Authorities
found the youth abOut io:30'a.m.
Friday, inside the top-loading
automatic machine, which was'
still running.

AffiMAN KILLED
AGANA, Guam (UP!) - A
'Toledo; Ohio, airman was killed
Friday night when ·he feU down
a 25-foot elevator shaft at a
tourist spa. Witnesses said
airman Jack Ickes, 24, was
climbing down the shaft on a
rope when he lost his grip.
BODIES RECOVERED
BELGRADE (UP!)- Rescue
workers recovered Saturday
the last two bodies of nine
miners killed Thursday when a
torrent of water burst into a
gallery of the Ojstro pit at
Hrastnik, Slovenia, the
Yugoslav news agency Tanjug
said.
·

2- Year-Old Dies

And may the world soon
lcnow its lasting ioys .•.

prevasive hostilities and
relentless
attacks,
unprecedented in our history."
Coinmager said the hostility

PT. PLEASANT - Rocky
Handley, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Handley, 108 South Park
Drive, Saturday was selected as
the first in a series of "Scouts of
the Month" to be honored by the
M-G-M District.
The selection of Handley, a
Point Pleasant JW1ior High
ninth grader, was announced by
Chadds HaD, M-G·M District
Scout Executive.
Han4ley received area wide
recognition earlier this year
when he found $222.69 in cash
and negotiable checks on a store
parking tot in Point Pleasant
and returned the money to its
rightful owner.
A member of Scout Troop 261,
Rocky entered scouting in 1967.
He is the troop bugler, has the
star rank and eight merit
haclges. He has also served as
den chief, assistant patrol
leader and scribe and has two
scout meetings.
Rocky Ill a member of the
Main Street Baptist Church and
member of the Crusader
SWlday School Class there. He
also serves as a Junior Usher of
the church.
In otller activities of Rocky's

ROCKY HANDLEY

busy schedule, he is a Point
Pleasant Regisier carrier with
139 customers, member of the
Tani Judo Club, plays the
trumpet in the junior high liand
and is known as the "Neighborhood Handyman' ~ on Park
Drive because of his willingness
to mow lawns, rake yards,
shovel snow, etc.
Rocky's hobbies are fishing
and motorcycle riding.

It's true. When you rrtove into your
JU:W home, we'll install this many phories
for $9. 75.
; ·
But only·ifyou have therrt allmstalled
at the IQJI)e time. Certain wall and desk
phones, however, require an added one·
time color charge.
·
The point is, !fyou're moving or plan·

'1Hf
OLD.BANK.WITH NEW IDEAS"
.
'
'

'

'

.

.

ning to in the near future, it's worth your and, of course, stop your old.
And, with a little advance notice,
while to decide how many phones you'll
she'll have our installer at your door the
need, now. Before you move.
Secause if you ask us to come back day• yOU: move in.
. again later; there's an additional charge. . . Aa we say. lt pays to phone ahead.
· So call your .service representative
ahead of time.
··
.
She'll help you plan your new serViCe

@aioeM

R
k
eam zn e zng
R0 r
Tennis Play
~

e·

e

·

·

PEKING (UPI)- The u.s.
table tennis team arrived in the
capital of the People's Republic
of China by plane Saturday
night for a weeklong series of
matches with top players of
this country's favorite sport.
Graham B. Steenhoven of
Detroit, Mich., president of tlte
U.S. Table Tennis Association,
led the delegation of · ·~
.
Amencans
o11 th e p1anew hen 1.t
landed at 10 p.m. at the Peking
Airport.
The Americans greeted a
group of Chinese table tennis
then proceeded into the capital
for lodging.
The American players will
make their debut in Peking in
the 18,000-seat indoor Sports
Palace, and the matches are
expected to draw capacity
crowds.
The matches will be covered
by television and newspapers
from tllroughout the nation.
Steen hoven, chatting with
reporters and others over a cup
· the atrpor
·
t recep tion
of te a m
d
·
Iounge, pratse as cour te ous
and friendly the manner in
. h the Amencan
.
group had
whtc
been we1come d.
·
The Amer1cans,
accompam'ed
. tabl e te nms
.
by the Coom
1 btan
.
f
te am, II ew to Pekmg rom
Can ton. Th ey had tr ave1ed to
· from Hong
Can ton. by t ram
Kong, about 50 miles '-to the
southeast.
The visit of the Americans to
China was seen in this capital
as the first step toward whal
could be the beginning of SinoAmerican rapport on a peopleto-people basis.
They are the first U.S.
citizens to visit China with

·

tm it

i

r; IF

:F&lt;

gg: :@t

nmn:

HONG KONG (UPl) -John TBDDehlll, 19, Middleport,
Ohio, wore a pair of farmer-type overalla when be and
members tlthe u. s. Table Tennis team crossed mto Com·
maillst Cblu.
The 15 were the first group of ordinary Amerlclllll to villi
the mainland &amp;IDee l1N 9• The group IDcluded seven players, a
Cllllch, Itve Glflclals and two wlvee.
AD
..,_A,~
. ..... go\ u,..,......:.haad ·~" lf0111l!!!lf9rmed.I;!W!Jlte '
Glllclals after lbelr urival.
"s ·
Taanehlll, the No. Zl'llllked lable lelll\l&amp; player Ill the U.
S.ls a freslmwut lhe Unlvenily of Cincinnati . He lithe son
tl Chester Talllleblll, execuUve editor of the Ohio Vlllley
Publlsblng Co.

•-

HONOLULU (UP! ) - Two
hundred policemen searched
Oahu Saturday for six "extremely dangerous" men-five
of them convicted or accused of
seven murders in ali- who
escaped jail at gunpoint.
Police Chief Francis Keaia,
directing the manhunt across
the island, said the fugitives
were armed with at least two
.45 caliber automatics and a .38
caliber revolver smuggled to
them in Halawa JaiL
One of the escapers was
William K. "Willie" Medeiros,
25, a suspect in Honolulu's
"chain-reaction" murder witness siayings last year .
The prisoners used bed sheets
to bind six jail guards who
were left in locked cells in .the
maximum security block. A
police lieutenant was robbed of
$26.
The escape operation began
when William C. Brown Jr., 21,
who was appealing a 4{).year
sentence for armed robbery
and first degree larceny,
summoned a guard to his cell
corridor and took him hostage
with a gun .
Within minutes, Brown had
freed the other five pri&gt;oners
from their cells. They ordered
the hostage to direct the
lieutenant to open the electri·
caUy locked door to the main
office.
. None of the guards nor any
other inmates were injured
during the fast-moving escape.
But police were warned that
·the r·eseaped prisoners, were
"extreme1y dangerous - ·approach with caution."
The six stole two cars and
both vehicles were found
abandoned a few hours later.

· · •• · · · •·•···········•·•••••.)t... •·· · · •· · · ·t·•·•· ·· tt/ ·••·•••u·•!ll !i 1
~~:c:Y ~~e~~he~~a~~~o;e~~ .
· trave1 to (NBC), Life magazine and the them driven by women.
passpor Is not banmng
th'ts coun try smce
· three Amen-· Associated Press received entry Medeiros was awaiting trial
cans arrived here with unre- visas to Communist China to on first degree murder charges
stricted passports in 1970.
cover the Americans' activities in the killings of 111-year.oid
The American visit, the first there. They wiH foUow the learn Mitzi !so Klotzbach, his oneby mvt
· 'tat··ton o1 the commums
· t into China Sunday.
time girl friend, Herman Marfil
Chinese .and approved by the (In Washington, a U.S. State and Charles M. Akana Jr., a
um' ted States governmen 1, Department official said he narcotics pusher.
drew sharp crtticlSIO
···
Miss Klotzbach was the
ear1ier could foresee no difficulties in
Satur.day 1rom Na tiona llst Ch'1· arranging for a visit by a ob]'ect of an intensive police
na
search until her body was found
·
Communist Chinese delega lion in a beach grave the day before
In Taipei, the nationalist to the United States if Peking Christmas. Police said she was
government of Generallsst' mo agrees to the idea.)
killed beeause s he was to be a
Cht'ang Ka1'-•hek
called
the
The
Red
Chinese
extended
.
.
.m
v
~ey prosecution
wttness
Communist invitation to tile the invitation to the Americans another murder case.
Amert"cans a "political plot ... last Wednesday, the final day
Th e other escapers were
,
ft'itrate
'nto
the
of
the
world
table
tennis
1
to further m
identified as Edward L. Silva,
free world."
championships in Nagoya, Ja- 2•,
, charged wi th Medeiros in
The Amert"can group was pan. The Communist Chinese Lemur
h
der of A"·.....a an d aiso
made up of 15 persons, seven of team, competing for the first indicted for aiding in a hank
. 1 L. Cuevas, 21,
them Players' thel·r coach, ft' ve time since 1960, won tile team robbery ; Dame
offt'ct"ais and two wives. It was championship and four of the serving .a 4{).year sentence for
the first American group to seven division titles. The United
enter mainland China under States - finished 24th in team
(Continued on Page 14)
such circumstances since party standings.
Chairman Mao Tse-tung esta- ESPERANTO CONFAB
blished his Communist regime LYON,- France (UPI)-Hunthere in 1949 and forced dreds of supporters of tile
Chiang's government to the internationallanguage Esperan· ·
island of Formosa.
to from 13 countries attended . 1
Four newsmen representing the 63rd Esperanto congress
the National Broadcasting Co. Saturday.
'

'N:Wflfk •:?•••••· · •

M·e rcury
1 raced

CHARLESTON, W. Va. (UP!)
-Coal may be the source of
the mercury that has shown up
in a sampling of fish taken by 1.
the state Natural Resources De·
Gettysburg has pews named for
partment.
Presidents Abraham Uncoin
The state Geological Survey
and Dwight D. Eisenhower,
bas begun· exam'ining coal
both ·of whom atiended services
seams in areas where fish with
there.
high concentrations of mercury
were found in a preliminary
sampling by tile department.
Water Resources Division
Chief Edgar Henry said, "If
hamlet home.
it's coming from there, we've
Two other children, Ailen, 10, probably had it in the saMe
and Evelyn, 8, whom she had amounts for years. "
sent away with kisses, went
The DNR .reported Friday 17
barefoot to neighbor's home walleyes caught in Summers·
for help, police said.
ville reservoir had mercury
.concentrationsrangingfromt.77
Police, who could not give a to .27 milligrams of mercury
reason for the shootings, said per kilogram.
the three dead children had
The U.S. Food and Drug Ad·
been shot in the head; They ministration. sets a maxlmUII)
said they found a gun beneath level of mercury safe for huMrs. Townsend. Roger Town- man consumption at .5 mJl.
send, her husband, was at work ligrams per kilogram.
at the Buffalo International · A channel catfish caught In~
Airport, where he is a the Ohio River !ll!ar Parkera-1
mechani&lt;!"'for Uni~ Airlines, burg had a concentration of .113 ..
when the shootings occurred.
Director Ira LaUmer aaifl he
Mrs. Iownsend, a fonner :_'felt the preliminary fincllnCI did
outpatient at the Rochester not warrant a ·need to ralrld ,
State Mental Hospital, did not sport fishing in any llllr~ of lhl
leave a note, state.police said. sbote
.

First Families Are United
. By RICHARD E. LERNER perhaps at Mrs. Eisenhower's
THURMONT, ~d. (UPI)- regular place of worship, the
Mrs. Mamie Eisenhower joined Presbyterian Church of GettysPresident Nixon and his family burg.
for a rare family reunion The historic old church in
Saturday, and the group made
tentative plans to attend church
together on Easter sunday.
Mrs. Eisenhower, wearing a ·
lavender coat and veil, was
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (UP!)driven to the presidential Ahousewife who allegedly shot
mountain retreat at Camp three of her five children to
David from her farm home a\ dea·th and thrned the gun on
Gettysburg, Pa., about 25 miles herself underwent surgery at
away, Saturday afternoon.
Rochester General Hospital
A few moments after her S~turday for removal of a .22
arrival, Nixon's elder daughter, caliber bullet from ·her head.
Tricia, reached the camp with
A hospital spokesman said
her fiance, Edward Finch Cox, Mrs. Lois Townsend, 34, of
after' a motor trip from Bennington, N.Y., was listed In
Washington.
poor condition foilowing the
President and Mr; Nixon and surgery: She had been transtheir younger dauglnar.. Julie, · !erred here from Genesee
and her . husband, NayY Ens. Memorial Hospital at Batavia
Daytd Etsen~ower am~ed. by earlier in t~e day.
•helicopter Fnday from Vtr.gm~a P.olice'SBid Mrs.' Townsend, a
Beach, ~a., where Davtd IS • former state mental hospital
, teMpora.rtly stati?ned. He IS outpi'tient, shot tllree o( her
Mrs. Etsenh~wer s grandson. children-Craig, 2, Julie, 3, and
1 The .families may attend Robin, 7- before wounding her•
church m the Thurmont area or self in their Wyoming CQunty

1

Bullet Taken Out

54% Like Nixon
WASHINGTON (UPl) - presidency, compared with 36
Opinion Research Corp., per cent one month ago.
'
Princeton, N. J., said Saturday The same survey revealed
that 54 per cent of the public that 75 per cent of the public
now approves of President approve of Nixon's decision to
Nixon's performance as Chief rev\ew tile case of Calley, who
· ExecuUve.
was convicted of murdering 22
In a statement released in Vietnamese civliians at My Lai,
Washington, the organization and 17 per cent dlsapprove: ·
said ita nationwide survey was The poll also showed that !15
taken after Nixon said he would per -cent of the people were
review the case of' Lt..Wllllam opposed to the antiwar
L. Calley, Jr., but before his uemonslratlons planned for
April 7 speech on Vietnam.
Washington during the next few
The ·organlzaUon ·said the . weeb and 28 per cent favored
favorable pereentage one them. '!'lie !lrm sal~ it polled 973
month ago was 51 per cent It persons aged 18 and liver by
uid 31 per cent now disapprove telephone on April 5 and 6.
of Nlxon'a handling of the ·
'

CUB SCOUT VISIT - Cub Scout Den 3, Pack 245 of Middleport, toured the offset plant
printing plant and editorial offices Friday in Gallipolis in company with Den Mother Mrs. Eula
Francis and "den dad" Marion French. Above, I tor, are James Gheen, Keith Black, James
Scally, David Vance, Max Geary, Ray Stewart and Fred Knapp. Accompanying the scouts as a
driver was Mrs. Donna Gheen.

::~~s:~iv~~th ~~~~:~.~the~

·

A~G'=-E~
13

...!...:?

·K illers .
Hunted

Social Notes

Universities Must Live

_

.WINNING.POLITICIANS all, the ruling SOviet trlumvi·
rate caals ballols at the -Moscow City Communist
party conference. Left to right, Part;· First· Secretary
Leonid I. BrMhnev, Premier Alekse N. Kosygln and
President Nikolai V. Podgorny. 'f,he Issue decided wu
the Moscow slate of 1elegales to..the .24th Communist
Party Con~rt'll of the Soviet l'nion.

a

1

�'-

.

..

- .-

.

15-The SundJ&gt;v Tillie$. Sentinel, Sunday, Aprllll, 1971

14-TbeSundayTiffiel!·Sentinei.Sim!lav. Aprilll, 1971

New Realism in, Arab World May Lead to Peace •

By U!llled Press lnlernatloaal
Isrseli Foreign Minister Abba
Eban said Saturday the Arab
II(OS:ld was ·turning toward · a
"realism" that augured well for
a Middle East peace. He said
Israel was willing to negotiate
an agreement to reopen the
Suez canal and said such a
move was feasible if both sides
approached it realistically.
Eban spoke in an Israeli
radio interview even all an
Israeli military spokesman
accused the Egyptiana of
sending two Soviet-made Sukhol
fighte,r planes across the. Suez
canal Saturday in the se~nd
such overflight reported since
the March 7th expiration of the
formal Middle East cease .fire.
The spokesman said a complaint was filed with U,N. truce
supervision authorities.
Dlscuas Developmenls
In Cairo, Egyptian President
Anwar Sadat met for hours
with top aides to discuss latest

Middle East military and
political developments while
representatives of eight Arab
heads of state began a closed
meeting to discuss the situation
in Jordari.
While they met, King Hussein
ordered that capital punishment
be introduced in Jordan for gun
law violators once the present
withdrawal of armed Palestinian guerrillas from the Jordanian capital was completed,
official Amman radio said.
"There has been some
turning toward realism in the
Arab world," Eban said, ciling
the revolt againat extremists
and Arab guerrillas in Jordan
and the avowed willingness of
Sadat to make peace with
Israel.
"That is not to say a peace
agreement is around the
corner, because they slill make
one sided and unacceptable.
conditions," the Israeli Foreign

Ki11ers
(Continued from Page 13)
the i966 murder of a service
station operator; Wendell Kealoha, 18, indicted for the first
degree murder of a sailor and
also indicted for rape and four
first degree robberies; and
Eddie Hoss Ill, 32, indicted for
the first degree murder of his
wife last September.
AGE NO FACl'OR
AUGUSTA, Maine (UP!)
Companies writing automobile
insurance in Maine will be
unable to discriminate arbitrarily against a policy.)lolder
solely because of old age, under
legislation to become effective
91 days after the regular session
of the legislature adjourns. The
new Jaw prohibits insurance
companies from reducing
liability limits, Increasing
premiums, cancelling or
refusing to renew any
automobile insurance policy. on
the basis of old age alone.

:~
AIRMAN EVANS
Airman Rickey A. Evaos,
son of Mr. and Mrs. ·walter
Evans Jr., Rt. I, Crown City,
bas completed basic tralnlng
at Laekland AFB, Tex. He
has been assigned to Keesler
AFB, Miss., for training In
the communications field ,
Airman Evans Is a 1970
graduate of Hannan Trace
High School, Mercerville,
Ohio.

RAY CROMLEY
''

U.S. Aims to Split
Solid Red Bloc

'

:·:

..:!.•
,.,,
,.,.
..

Minister said in an interview "But I think there is SOJ!Ie probably get poisoned- if you Augilst of last year, the
recorded earlier for broadcast fruit on the tree. II is not yet eat it prematurely. But if .we movement has been slow .and
on the first day of Passover. ripe. If you eat it you will &gt;Study what has happened since insufficient but nevertheless in
a faVorable direction."
Israeli Polley'
Eban said Israel's policy now
~-----------------------------------------is "not only wait and see but
use every opportunity to get the
dialogue going."
"We:lay yes to negotiation on
I
.
a
separate agreement for
BY JACK O'BRlAN
has his dream: To live long enough to see his
'

1

Voice along Broadway !!
TED HAD A SHORT

TALK WJTH 'JOAN
NEW YORK - Tony Award nominee Ed
ZimmermaM (of "The Philanthropist") was
mugged at knlfepoint in his apartment elevator
.... Joan Kennedy's White House luncheon appearance in Gaucho psnts was decorous
alongside the costmne her friends said Sen.
Teddy vetoed: hotpants ... Ali MacGraw's
Rome "L0ve Story" premiere will have io do
without Ali's unnecessary four-letter words in
the film: Italian censors erased them .... It
should make the movie better .... It is a ludicrous
note that "Love Story" supposedly is a return to
romance and simplicity when Ali's character
japes thrQUgh the four~etter voc~lary, including one scene with kids in church .... The
H'wood fibn squeeze : Ex-MGM writer Rolfe
Passer at the Japsnese Steak House told us he's
had to return to his first show biz profession,
nightclub mentalist.
West Virginia's sec-of-state John D.
Rockefeller's IV's ·new daughter will be
christened Valerie, after Mrs. IV's mysteriously
murdered (in '66) twin sister, daughter of Sen.
Charles Percy .... Boston Pops conductor Arthur
Fiedler's pitching a TV commercial for burlj!l
monmnents, and It seems sacrilegious .... Attorney Gen'l John Mitchell's Cavettcaat appearance belied the hysterical editorialist •
!~ties .... Very sane gent.
·
X-rated fibns get that way via their
brutalized sex scenes; but a flock of GP flicks
are as bad in their disgraceful depiction of
frightening violence parents don't suspect flares
there under that bland GP label .... Pat Henry,
befriendly by Sinatra and hired for shows with
him, tells the audience at the Las Vegas Riviera
that when he worked with Elvis and Tom Jones,
fans tossed their panties on stage: "With Frank,
all we got were two psirs of corrective stockings
and an old corset."
Judy Garland's family bought a permanent
crypt in the Ferncllff Mausoleum .... We knew
those old Dead End Kids weren't all bad: Hunt%
Hall of those original flick delinquenls and his
wife adopted a baby boy .... Jinuny Durante, 78,

WASHINGTON- (NEA)
, What is perhaps the most significant shift in foreign
policy in the past decade has been largely overlooked.
It abandons the concept of .the Communist world as a
unified bloc.
·
Instead, as a basic strategy of the Nixon Doctrine an
atteml,'t will be made to split the Communist bloc politlcal·
ly, butld relationships where they can be built, use this
leverage to reduce the chances of a major Communist
coalition against us , our friends or other threatened countries in the future .
From what this reporter can gain from men working on
this problem at the White House, State Department and
Pentagon, the first prio_rities will be Romania, Red China
- and North Vtetnam (If the Indochina war ends in some
sort of peacefuJ·arrangement) .
In part, these are targets of opportunity,
Romania has shown an interest in building , closer
Western ties . And it could be an entering wedge for contacts with other East European countries.
Behind-the-scenes shifts now taking place in Red China
suggest the possibility of b~tter relationships. Some very
influential Communist Chinese are reportedly arguing in
Pekmg that they need American, British and Japanese
know-how and some political understanding with the
United States- however minimal- if Red China is to ef·
fectively rival the Soviet Union .
The Nixon interest in Hanoi counts on the traditional
fear most Vietnamese have for China. American postwar
aid would be an attempt to demonstrate to Asia and
Europe that an independent . Communist nation, which
respects the. borders of its neighbors, has nothing to fear
from !he Umted States and a great deal to gain. There are
men m the State Department who believe North Viet·
nam could turn out to be tlie Yugoslavia of Asia.
There seems to be no doubt, in fact, that the new doctrin.e is based in considerable measure on what some
White House and State Department analysts consider to
be a very successful U.S. experiment in Yugoslavia over
the past two decades .
• . Some men in ,hij:h places here believe the very conSiderable lj.S. a1d m past years has paid off handsomely
m weakemng .the hegemony of the Soviet Union. Though
T1to has certamly been no friend of the United States this
government's Kremlin watchers feel on balance that he
has also been a thorn in the flesh of Stalin Khrushchev
and Brezhnev.
'
.
This p~licy shift was laid out in the Nixon Doctrine. But
the stgmftcance has gone largely unnoticed; Nixon has so
long been .Pictured as the hard-line anti-Communist (a
p1cture whtch grew as the result of his contest with Helen
Gahagan Douglas. his role in the All!er Hiss case his
(debates with Nikita Krushchev and h1s speeches on the
Co~mumst danger). that It is difficult for most people to
reahze that what N1xon ts now proposing is that we regard the Commumst countnes as individual nations, some
of wh1ch ca~ be wooed, perhaps into ~ositions of benevolent neutrahty or mutual accommodatwn.

Now You Know
In 1970 the Apollo IJ
spacecraft headed for the third
U.S. landing on the moon but
the attempt was aborted when
. a faulty oxygen tailk exploded.
The•trlp was shortened and the
astronauts returned safely. ·
A thought for today : General
~ the Army Douglas MacArthur 11id, ''There is no substitute
"
'

.

opening the Suez 'canal," Eban
said. .
.
.
. "But of course," he added,
"under terms and conditions
that insure our security and our
rights, under terms and condilions that insure fair balance
of advantage and !hal do not
simply leave open the option to
make war against us in more
favorable conditions."

a

In the Gaza strip Saturday,
an. Arab guerrilla bomb exJ&gt;losion killed two .childrenbrother and sister-and wounded their mother and two
sisters, military spokesmen
said. An announcement said the
explosives were ·planted in a
house in Rafiah and went off at
11 a.m. The boy was 13 and his
sister, 7.

daughter Cece married; she's nine .... The true
frontier hired guns were dirty, filthily dressed
bums; Yul Brynner's search for ''reality" in
"Callow" went astray-Pierre CardiD designed
his dear little duds, which seem really full of chic
.... Barney Goagle's signed the Harry Janes big
band for May 9, Mother's Day, and already
young folks are making reservations - to take
dear old mom there to do the Dip and ·the Shag. ·
The junior Sinalras, Frank &amp; Nancy, wllrtry
to make it as a ruo in the summer tenia .... The
Forest Hills musical festival Is very Iffy for this
summer- can't sign up one tickewelltng name
so far .... The Met. Muaeum cf Art's Arnolil Leb·
man and his wife, Pamela Gimbel cf the dep't
store chain, have their own new ·priceless
bargain: Newborn Nicholas .... Ed Sl!llivan will
host theN. Y. banquet for the local TV Academy
Awards, May 7 .... Radio City Music Hall veep
John Jackson's gifted dancer . daughter Denille
stars with the Jaffrey Ballet at City Center.
Ralph Kiner of the TV sports beat told this
gentle giggler about Little Leaguers when they
win their neighborhood championships: Just Uke
the Hank Aarons and Tom Seavers, when they
.win the big one, "they douse each Other's beads
with ginger ale," he said at Mike Manuche's
sporls hangout .... Mike Tell, Patty Duke's exhusband, is writing (in an Aspen, Colo., cabin) a
book about his life with Patty; the title, "Kiss &amp;
Tell."
Midtown · pros ties have becOme a lourist
attraction for sighlseeing buses, with guides
identifying the ~enereal attractions by their skypiled wigs and sleazy hot psnls costume ....
Probably many a decent sartorial slob gels a
bum rap this way .... What price titles: Las
Vegas psper listed the undisputed champ as
"Singer Joe Frazier and his rock group, 'The
Knockouls,' ., .... James Chasse, 30, of Vineland,
N.J., plans opening several reducing salons: He
just lf&gt;Sl J95lbs. and intends to shed scads more
- he's down to 560 now .... Anti-rock note: the
Angry Squire spot's adding a classical guitarist
and a flautist (a flautiat is a person who plays a
flaut, philosopher Rod Reed wrote) to Its en- .
tertaininent.

port

1-Maenlflcent
77- Roman road
6-Mammal of
78-Escape
Far North
79-Hua:e
11-Unused
82-Part of
16--lncllne
camera (pl.)
21-Norse sods
84--City In Egypt
22-Tast
85--Warble
23-Welrd
86-Unlock
24--Kind of beer
88-Small valley
25--Afrlcan
89--Winged insect
Naarlto
90-Squander
26- Ptrlods of time
92--Coln
28-liberatea
94-Dogs:ed
30-HIIhway
98-Sollcltude
32--Parent (colloq .) 99-South Afrlci!ln
33-Chlnese mHe
Dutch
34--Man's nickname 100-Pinch
]~Antlered
102- River In
animal ·
Fr21nc:e
36-Saucy
103-Cllck beetle
37-Siamese native 104-Unlt of
38- Sweet potato
SlaAlese
40--Book or maps
cu rrent~
42--Ethioplan ti tle
l OS-Traded for
43-Port lon of
money ,
medicine
106--Goddess of
44- Laree oven
vegetation
45- Pone 1 s
108-Norse lilOd
47--Worn away
109--Symbol for
· tantalum
49- Well ventil ated 110_ Note of sca,le
50--Storaae
Ill-Reflect
eompertment
112-0ne who .
51-Strike out
prepares and
54- Classify
serveS food
55- let It stand
114-Encountered
56-Ceke mile
116--Dress bo rder
59-Goal
117- Feels
covetousness
60--Emmet
119- Bioody
62-Havina: Ieath
12Q-Propel onsalf
64- Ventllates
through water
65- Beholdl
122--Anc:lent Celtic
priests '
66--Naar
124-Aged
67-Speck
125- Harvest
· 69-Mal ay canoes
126-Billboard
7o-Hurrled
128-Employ
71-Sum up
1 29~Selze with
72-Conducted
teitth
74-Falslflers
131- Post

132-Unlt of
Japanese

.,.

cu rrency
133-Roman official
135--Sink in middle
138--Number
139-Staff
140-Be in debt
141--Perlod of time
142-No un suffi.:
143-lildeflnite
article
144-l{ehlcle
145-Macaw
147-Change
149--French for
"friend"
150-Suralcal thraad
152-Chemlcal
compound
154--Genus of moths
156-Specles of
poplar
158-Fia:ure of
speech
159-Domain
160--Mahammedan
rulers
161 --Ca rrlu

15- Laek of

89-Havlng wings

orthodo)( belief
16-Narrow, flat

90-Frighten
91-Communion

board

92- Food fis h
93-lreland
95--Country of Asia
96-Famed
97- Brltlsh

27- Dine
29-Peruse

streetcars
99- Foreman

31-Natlve metal

36-Harbor

l - Merrlly
2-Nerve networks
3- Man's name
4- Symbol for
nickel
5--Arid
6-Home for
horses
7-Thal which
is unpaid
8-Encorel (Fr.) '
9--Not• of scale

10-Falry
11-Senses
12-Disas:reeable
odor
13-Bitter vetch
14- Spanlsh. for

"yes"

101-lndlvidual
105-Petlttoned
106----Cavil

37-Shade
39-Form
107-Stltches
40-Pilnter
Ill- Distance
41-Chimney carbon
musure
42- Reply
, 112-Temperate
43-Explred
113-Ceremony
.44-0utflts
115-Exact
46-Pronoun
116-Hastens
48-let fall
118-Ballot
49-The sweetsop
119-Gratln&amp;
50-Poet
121-lntarferar
5\-Apportlonad
123-Pronoun
52-Go In
125-Easy aallop
53-Finishlna
126-Nobleman
55-Fonned
127--Lassos
6-COffin
129--Bras:
5

57-Church official
DOWN

plate

17-Young boy
18-S )fmbol for
silver
19-Country of A1la
20-Retinue

58-Cowboy
competition

61-Froa:
63-·lnstrument
64-lmltatfs,.
68-Marched
70-Guided
71- Wins:·footed
73-Sandy wasta
'74--Grant use of
75--Staa:e e.:tra
(colloq .)
77'-Small Islands
78-Swlft
80--Undera:round

. excavation
81--0ry, as wine
Bi-Short sleep
84-C rate
87--Number

130-lntarior
131-Daface

132-Crowd
134--Caustlc
substance
136--Girl's name

137- Proflts
139- Dimlnlsh
140-City In Russia
144-Pollceman
(slans)
145-lndoneslan
tribesman
146--Dtvoured

147-Southem
blackbird
148-Rodent
149- Likely

_ lSI-Preposition
153-Compass point
155--Preflx: not
157-Conjunctlon

.

reading the Wedneaday Sentinel, I began to leaf through my mail ·
for the day and found, by.coincidence, the following material :
In "KEEPING YOU PO.STED," a monthly publication issued
by one of the largest Protestant denominations in America, there
appeared an article stating that . at Lancaster Theological·
Seminary, Lancaster, Pa., staff members of the Council For.
Chrisljan Social Action are now teaching ·&amp;course entiUed "The
Public Schools As Cruelty Systems." This seems a bit strange, to
say tl!e least. I woUld hope that Protestants supplying financial
support for the Lancaster Theological Seminary realize exactly
what manner of "modern ·enlightenment" is being fed to the
ministers-to-be.
Mr. Sauer has stated the case of public education quite
clearly, For a Council For Christian Social Action to jump into the
education field to the extent of teaching seminarians about "The
Public Schools As Cruelty Systems" appears a bit absurd. I
wonder whether or not the ordained ministerial faculty at Lancaster Seminary would invite public school teachers to the
campus to teach courses on religion. At any rate, I just thought
l'dletsome of your readers know how a few more of their Sunday
offering plate dollars are being spent. I have the April issue of
"KEEPING YOU POSTED" here at the parsonage for
verification. It mentions another course now being taught· at
Lancaster, and that course is called "United States Involvement
In Exploitation." I'm seriously considering requesting public
donations for the purpose of buying the seminarians some Bibles.
!think maybe that's what they ougilt to be studying.
Rev. Bill Perrin; Trinity Church.

NCAA .Record Set at Relays
'
te.o.
ana compe

of the meet's two double win- were set when John Stuart of
AI Schoterman of Kent State, ner s.
the University of Ke!'Jucky hurlwho posted an NCAA record of AI Lanier of Cincinnati won ed the shot 56 fe~ t. 8 inches, 10
215 feet, 5 inches in the ham- the long jump with a distance inches be tter than the old·mark ·'
mer throw las.t weekend, pitch- of 24 feel, 10 inches and the Laurie Barr of the Ohio Track
ed 224 feel, 6 inches here. He triple jump at 46 feet, lOo/• . Club, Columbus, raced the'22Dyard dash in 24.7 seconds, to be
universities as well as track also won ,the discus with a toss inches.
Three
othor
:neet
r~cords
c.1e-tenth second faster ; and Ed
175
feet,
7
inches
to
be
one
of
clubs. for the biggest ever field.
Norris of ~ Kent Track Club
Kentucky State dominated the
Can ThU, be Afforded?
ran the three-miles in 13 :45.9,
relay events, winning three,
"
or 5.5 seconds less.
while host Ohio University took
Gallipolis, Ohio
two.
April2, 1971
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Memorial Hospital.
All but one of the 26 events
Dear Sir:
Mr.
Frank
Cleland, Mrs. Albert Paynter attended
in the two-day track and field
If an irresponsible youngster destroys public property, we
of
the
First the funeral services of Mr.
Superintendent
meet were held Saturday. Ath·
call him a vandal, levy a fine, put him on probation, or ship him
letes from Ohio, Kentucky West Baptist Church School, a nd Clyde Paynter at New
off to a reformatory .If an adult deliberately sets fire to property,
Mrs. Cleland hosted a dinner Matamoras.
Virginia, Pennsylvania and lndihis own or others, we call him an arsonist, track him down, tes.t
meeting of Sunday School of. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Walker
his sani_ty, try him in court, and send him tAl a mental institution or
ficers , teachers and 'the Board and son, Roland, of Ashland
to prison. ·
of Education at 6:30 Friday were weekend guests of her
'
'
A person who creeps ihto a house in the dead of l)ight and
evening, April 2, in the church parents, Rev. and Mrs. Dale
takes what doesn 'I belong to him is called a thief and is put behind
basement dining area. Twenty McClurg. Baby Roland was
bars for a number of years. Let a man place rat poison where
were present for the dinner, christened during morning
prepared and served by Mrs. worship serv ice at the
children or pets might find it and he may be called a murderer
Cleland, assisted by her Methodist church.
and dealt with accordingly.
daughter, Mrs. Evelyn Young. Saturda y afternoon callers or
But let a business organization come out in the open and
Mr. and Mrs . William Several others came for the Mr . and Mrs. Ralph McKenzie
commit a variation of all these acts in the. Ught cf day and we
Thomas were in Columbus planning program which were Mr . and Mrs. Bill
merely shake our heads and call it a STRIPMINING COAL Community is Appreciative
Tuesday on business.
followed with Mr . Cleland in McKenzie and children of
COMPANY!
Guests of Elza McComas at charge. Several items were Gallipolis. Sunday visitors were
But, they argue, the land is theirs to do with as they please , Dear Sirs :
,
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Victor
On behalf of the Rio Grande Corrununity, the undersigned Perry were Mr. and Mrs. Ar- discussed to present to the Mr . and Mrs. Henry M·c·
and they have the papers to prove It!
·
But does the deed to a piece of land give anyone the right to wish to thank the many individuals of Rio Grande Village, the Rio thur Varner, son, John, and quarterly business meeting of Cormick and son, Pat, and
ravage it, or is it merely a loan for a short time? If each person Grande Staff, Faculty. and Students, the Times-Sentinel, Radio grandson, John, Jr., of Dayton. the church on Saturday friend of Columbus, spending
evening.
the day, and afternoon and
chose to despoil his own personal piece of property, the world Station WJEH, the merchants of Rio Grande, the volunteers from
Mrs. Edna Bolton, Piqua,
Mrs.
Richard
Roush
is
a
evening
visitors were Mr. and
would long ago have ceased to be a habitable place. A deed is, in the American Red Cross in Gallia County, and in psrticular the spent a day with Mrs. Goldie
hospital patient.
Mrs . Dallas Casley of Belpre
essence, a sort of promissory note that in return for the use of a Trl.State Red Cross Blood Center in Huntington for the splendid Gillogly. Mrs. Bolton formerly
Connie Kiser, daughter of Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lewis,
piece of property during our brief stay on earth, we will use it cooperation and coordination of e!fort that culminated in our lived in the community.
and Mrs. James Kiser, is a David and Carol, of Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs . Earl Starkey pneumonia patient at Veterans Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
wisely, kindly, and leave it somewhat better than we found it, if successful blood donor program thiS past Wednesday.
We
are
just
as
grateful
to
the
many
prospective
donors,
who
attended
a State Grange finals
possible. This was a requirement in order to obtain land by
Riffle at their home recently
were not accepted due to various medical precautions, as we are of ritualistic and drill contests
homesteading.
purchased on Vine Stree t
Land devaatated by tornadoes or hurricanes Is called a tAl those whose blood was taken. The cooperatiOn of the students at Walkins Memorial High
(moving from Pomeroy) were
BUSINESS IS BRISK
disaster area and yet damage done to the land itself is less than and the community was particulary gratifying to all who par- School between Etna and
NEW YORK (UP!) - New Ml' . Ill elvin Riffle of Columbus
that done by a strip mine. We deplore the ravages of'war but are ticipated. We especially appreciate the work of the many Kirkersville on Saturday.
and Mr. and Mrs. Bill McKenzie
York
City's
Offlrack
Betting
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Noble
Hamon
of
organizations
who
worked
behind
the
scenes
in
preparation
for
we to sanction the ravages of strip mines merely because the loss
Corp ., which on Thurs day and children of Gallipolis.
of life is tb birds, animals and vegetation rather than to humans, our event: the Freshman Cabinet, the Alpha Delta Epsilon Zaleskie, Mr. and Mrs. Terry
opened 10 belting windows in Mr. and Mrs. Henry Roush,
and the destruction Is seen only on occasional trips through the Fraternity, Rio Grande Boy Scout Troop 230, the Rio Grande and Wiseman and childr.en of
Mildred and Dale, went to
Grand
Central
Terminal
the
Hamden
and
Mrs.
Idras
country? If a corporation were to purchase a section of the the Open Gate Garden Clubs, the Rio Grande Faculty Women's
nation's first legal pari-mutuel Akron over the weekend to visit
Bowman
of
Diamond,
W
.
Va
.,
Club,
the
Rio
Grande
Facull)r_
Association,
the
Rio
Grande
Mr . and Mrs . John Fisher and
downtown area, set fire to It, allow the fire to spread to other
visited with Mr. and Mrs. Rex betting parlor - opened four other relatives. Mildred and
Faculty
Women's
Club,
the
Physical
Education
Major's
Club
and
areaa, and then move on to other towns to repeat that procedure,
more Saturday to cash winning
Dale returned Sunday and Mr.
the various officials of Rio Grande Village and Rio Grande Cheadle.
the uproar could be heard from Miami to Adak.
Sunday guests of Mr. and tickets. Business was reported
and Mrs. Roush remained for a
In a way, this is what the strip mine does to the countryside, College.
Mrs. Robert Mattox were her brisk at Grand Central, in week.
Conceived as a project of the Freshman Class, the idea of a brother-in-law and sister , Mr. Forest Hills and in telephone
hut more permanently so.ltnot·only destroys what Is there, but it
Mrs. Vashti Grimm of Letart
blood
"donor program on a community level beeame a reality and Mrs. Edwin Tague, of rooms.
prevents it from relul'ning naturally to its former state. The
Falls spent Monday afternoon
sulfuric acid formed when coal is exposed to the air is washed by thanks to the Village Council, the know-how of Mr . and Mrs. Columbus, and her father,
with Mrs. Frankie Neigler.
rains into the streams, and mile upon endless miles of streams Wayne Davis of Gallipolis and the willingness of everyone con- Charles Yates, Hamden.
Miss Alicia Knightste~ of
and the creatures that live in them afe destroyed. For a hundred cerned to devote the time and effort necessary to recruit workers
Those visiting with their
patient at a Huntington Hospital Columbus was a weekend guest
and prospective donors.
years theslreamisdead. There Is noway to reclaim it.
grandmother, Mrs . Murl
where
he is undergoing treat- of her grandmother, Mrs.
The initial success, of this the second Rio Grande Bloodmobile Galaway on Sunday were Mr.
As for the land, even with tbe best reclamation procedures, it
Lavini" ~Impson .
cannot return to anything like Its former state in less than a in 20 years, has prompted a repeat perfornlance on Monday, and Mrs. Bob Woodrum , Tracy ment for a leg infection.
generation's time. So for most of us, it may as well be gone October 4th. It is our hope to extend the geographic concentration and Timmie, McArthur and Mr. and Mrs. Steve Malesko
and children and his mother,
of our endeavors to include all of Raccoon Township.
Mrs. Donald Crabtre e and Dayton, spent a weekend here
forever.
Weare proud that our community added 120 first time donors Cindy, local.
In a once lovely valley cf the Rocky Mountains in western
with Mrs. Malesko's mother,
Carl Greenlees visited
Montana lies a city bereft of beauty. Once it waa the largest, to the Gallia County Blood Donor Program. And we extend to
Mrs. Webster Facemyre, and
fastest growing city in the state. In the past 20 years it has lost others within our community and township, who have not yet relatives in the Fleming area. Mrs. Malesko and childre n will
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Black10,000 of its population, and has been surpassed in size by three participated, the opportunity to give blood at the next Gallia
wood,
Sr., Pomeroy, spent an visit in the area with relatives
other towns. The business section is riddled with empty, decaying County Bloodmobile to be held :rhursday, April 22, in Gallipolis.
this week.
Arlen Owens, Mayor of Rio Grande, and evening with Mr. and Mrs. Earl Mr. and Mrs. Dale Stansbury
buildings. Those who must live there arid can afford It, live
Merrill Grodin, Advisor to the Starkey.
beyond the city limils, out of sight of the city's ugliness. What
were overnight guests of their
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Parker,
Rio Grande College Class of 1974.
deep mining did to Butte, Montana in 50 years, strip mining can do
Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Parker son and daughter-in-law , Mr.
in months or even weeks to Gallia County.
and Mrs. Clair Stansbury and
and
Slacy
Ann
of
Strasburg
and
Several years ago when the Ohio River was flooding, we were ·Favors Gilligan Plan for Fair
family of Groveport, and visited
Ney and Robbie Parker of another spn and daughter-inforced to drive to another town on a winding, back-country road.
1792 E. Hopkins St. Middleport were overnight
It took us along a ridge overlooking a lovely stream meandering
Defiance, Ohio 43512 guests of Mrs. Parker's law, Mr . and Mrs. Larry
through a wooded valley. We were Impressed with the beauty of
March 30, 1971 parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ney Stansbury, Reynoldsburg .
Their son-in-law and daughter,
the region and commented that the flooding river had done us a Dear Sir:
Carpenter and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Oxley
favor in forcing us to see an area we didn't know existed.
1am writing in regard to a recent U.P.I. news release which Martha Mays.
brought them home and are
An article published by the Sierrra Club, a national con- appeared in the Defiance (Ohio) Crescent News on Thursday,
Ruth, Jane and Barbara
servation organization that has becollle concerned about and March 18, 1971. The article stated that State Representative Jordan, Margie Jeffers and spending a few days here.
made considerable study of strlpmining practices, states that, Ralph Welker, R-Pomeroy, is greatly opposed to Governor Michael Lawson were among Mr. and Mrs. Walter Sw'ett
by
Mrs.
"We could not have designed a better system to ruin the Gilligan's reduction of the Ohio State Fair budget by $325,000. His the 4-H members who a!tended accompanied
Marguerite Frank of Athens
. maximum number of streams In a shorter period."
reasons included and I quote " ... to reduce the Ohio State Fair a 4-H Junior Leader mel)ting in visited Mr. and Mrs. Clair
Without clean SlreBJI)S we have no fish, no lakes fit for budget ... will 'scalp' it of high class entertainment." "Without Pomeroy recently .
Dudgeon in Columbus.
swimming or camping or just-enjoying their beauty, nor can the gate receipts, how can we help these kids participate in the Webster Facemyre is a
saves you $100 and mora over
birds and other wlldlHe long survtve.
state fair and ·build their interest in this kind of responsible ac- - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - -· cost of exterminating firm.
According to an authority, there are five billion tons of low tivity." As I see it, our Ohio farm youth aren't so shallow that they
Chemically kills subterranean
assistance
to
their
taxpayers.
termites and forms lasting bar·
grade coal lying near the surface between Cincinnati and the east- need that kind of encouragement.
We
do
extend
our
thanks
and
appreciation
to
Christy
Baer
for
rier against reinfestation.
central border cf Ohio and already "giant electric shovels are
I am an outgrowth of the Cleveland area and attended Ohio
giving
the
land
that
we
could
have
a
nice
road
as
an
outlet
to
our
scooping up farma, barns, silos, churches and roads to uncover University where I received a Bachelor's Degree in Home
town. Also, all others who helped wfth the road . We say thanks
the coal, piling the rubble into strip mine spoil banks."
Economics in 1967. I taught one year in the urban Elyria area and
again.
Is this really progress? Will this really benefit our area
I am now in my ·third year of teaching Vocational Home
Supp~
Lewis and Mary Harris, Fannie Phillips, Cl&amp;ra Garland, Mr.
economically? Is employment to a few at the expense of many an Economics in the farm land of Northwestern Ohio, presently at
and Mrs. Ross Stewart, Alice White, Mr. and Mrs. Hosmer Roush,
improvement? Southern Ohio is probably the loveliest portion of Tinora High School.
312 Sixth St.
Mrs.
Calvin
Imboden,
Lawrence
and
Patricia
Kelin,
and
Mr.
and
the state and offers unllmlted possibillties as a (9urist area,
Point .Pleasant, W.Va.
In my four years of teaching I have seen both urban and
Mrs.
Ernest
Stewart
giving employment to a far.greater number than the strip mines educational problems. It is easy to see that Ohio needs imoffer. Are we going to allow It to become the ugliest section of the provement in many areas.
state with tourists driving out of their way to avoid it?
I can't believe, however, that one of our major concerns is the
Paul Moore and Larry Circle
Wbal are we going to .do abool It?
loss of big name entertainment at the State Fair. Our farm youth
Susan K. Clarke· don't need this kind of ''protection" as Mr. Welker states. They ~pent the weekend in Roanoke,
seem more aware than he does of the need for improvements in Va., with the former 's sister,
Mr. and Mrs. Aldon Sp~inger
financial
and
administrative
aspects
of
our
State
government.
About County-.wide Service
and ianiily.
The farm youth realize, even if Mr. Welker doesn't, that Ohio has
Mr. and Mrs. Garrett Circle
. April7, 1971 more pressing problems than getting Bob Hope to tell jokes at the
of Racine visited at the home of
VInton, Ohio State Fair,
I 1 ·
•
Douglas Circle on a Thursday.
I realize that big name entertainment draws people to the
To the Editor:
Mr . and Mrs. Raymond
· I am writing in regard to the tlllephone service in Gallla State Fair and I wonder if Mr. Welker isn't a bit worried about Snyder and son of Columbus
County.! think all ofGallia CouniY should have (county-wide) toll losing a political showcase with its "free tickets, exposure, and visited Mr. and Mrs . Homer
free telephone service. Ohio Bellis spending thousands of dollars political patronage,'' should attendance drop. He might be Circle on a S~nday .
so we can have (county-wide) direct dlaling. But what good is that worried bull doubt thatfarmyouth are worried. They seem more
Thirty-nine were present for
going to do us, if theyslillleave the toll charge on? We who have a concerned about the total welfare of Ohio than does Mr. Welker. Sunday School and the
Vinton, Cheshire, Rio Grande, Guydn and Walnut exchange
The Southern Ohio legislator haa further stated "No budget collection was $25.11 on April 4.
should have the same privileges as those who hitve the (446) that makes the Ohio State Fair second class will get my vote and
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Circle
I'll work to keep the fair number one in the nation." What about and family of Columbus, Mr.
exchange.
' .
Other counties have .toU free telephone service. Why can't getting Ohio up from its rank as 47th in the nation in education ? and Mrs. George Circle and
we? I think it is very unjust and unfair. And, I have talked to so
Jolm Gilligan hasn't proposed a cut in the fair budget to hUi't family , and Mr. and Mrs.
' many people who feel thesamew~y Idoaboutthis matter.
Ohio farm youth. He has done It to help them by allocating that James Circle of New Haven, W.
An interested' Citizen of Gallia Co. $325,000 to such things as education, vocational training, and jobs. Va., spent Sunday with Mrs.
Name withheld on request. Mr. Gilligan is looking to the future while Mr. Welker Is so short Mary Circle.
Francine Perry of Holland,
visioned that he has allowed one economy move, that of reducing
Ohio
is spending a week's
the Ohio State Fair budget, convince him that the Governor's
entire budget proposal is not worth his vote. A man like this vacation with Iier grandmother,
Thanks Extended for Help
should be replaced in the State Legislature. Ohio must have Mrs. Mary Circle.
Terry and Brent Patterson of
Pomeroy,
• leaders who can see its "real" needs and will run its government
Spiller spent Sunday with their
April1, 1971 accordingly.
·grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
I hope you will permit my view.&gt; to be expressed tO your
Dear Sir:
Douglas Circle.
We, the planning committee for the George Thompson Fund . readers.
Mr . . and Mrs. Arthur Earl
Mrs. John Kissner, Jr. Johnson, son, Patrick, called on
Cafeteria dinner, held at the Tl:inity Church.would like..to thank
everyone thatdonatedfOoctandbelped with the dinner in any way.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wood of
It was the cooperation of everyone that made it the success it
They're Taxpayers, t~o
Apple Grove on Sunday.
was.
Mr. and Mrs. William ·
SO OUR EMPLOYEES MAY SPEND
' Mary Kauti:, Chairman, May Mora, Publi~lty Chairman, EUa
Carleton oi Racine called on
" \
Smith, Gay Perrin, Allee Globokar, Rose Ginther, Wilma Terrell To the Editor:
THE HOLIDAY WITH THEIR FAMILIES.
., We"llie undersigned of the village of Pomeroy living in the Betty Van Meter on a Sunday
and Carrie Kennedy.
afternoon.
Welch Town area do heartily stand by 'the letter of Mrs. Aaron
Mrs . Mary Martin, Mrs.
..
Kelton of the Sunday 'TimeS,sentinel concernin'g the clean-up of
''
Catherine Welsh, !.:Irs. ~yrthi..
Welch town.
·
Schools .as Cruelty Systems
Walker, Mrs. Eunie Brinker of
We are.laxpsyer!l of the village of Pomeroy as well as those
Salon No. 710 were guests at a
Pomeroy, Ohi()
living in the businesS district, but it's very little we ~et to benefit dinner of Erie County ·Salon No,
. April?, 1971 .• us,
. .
.
.
.
613 held at the Ramada Inn at
Oear Sir:
There.are several old hOuses lhllt are not livable and are only Saudusky, . Ohio on Monday
I
I
I enjoyed reading the article•by Mr. Harold Sauer, guidance fire hazards that should be torn or burned down.'
evening and were overnight
' COW18elor atMelgaHigbScbool.l am In agreement with the Ideas ·.
It also seems that when our sister town Or Racine can afford a guests of Mrs . Betty Fellows jn
i be ~esseil. and_Ute concluaionS he has drtt~a;. As I finlltbed · truck to pick up garbage, surely our town could ~ford a little Shelby, Ohio .

.

· ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) - Four
records were se t, including an
NCAA mark, Saturday at the
12th annual Ohio University relays which attracted some 500
athletes from 24 colleges and

.

Racine Social Events

SPECIAL'

IDAY •

AND SUNDAY

Carpenter

News, Event

PROOF
YOUR

SUNDAY, APRIL 11, 1971
76- Uppermost

Qwlrudlw Leuen ol Opii!M, 111 cOld lule, are
weleomed. fte edllllr raenw 1!1• npt to lllorta letlerl.
All letlen malt lie llped, wltll a filii addral, a1111oqla
lallblll may be illed apoa req11eet. ,

.

TERMITE

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS

I

'' .

I CAN'T' STUt1Y' Wm.l
TliAT ltOCK

M~IC

BUitiNQ AWA'Y

l

U'LAIINEII
Ai.. ME 1-Kl

QUE5TIONS
AN'AH'LL
TELL 'fO'NO
LIES.~'

/

.

//.

OOPS.'.'- DID '{Q' BRING A

,'

PANTS UEST
WSTED .''.''

I

~,-j

Rr~~

;

1530

Carolina Lumber
and
Co.

EASTERN
AVENUE

'

Carmel News.

'

HAPPY EASTER
FROM HECK'S!
ALL'-STORES WILL
CLOSE
EASTfR SUNDAY
APRIL 11th.

OPEN FOR BUSINESS AS
USUAL - 10 ·A. M. MONDAY
A.PRIL 121 h

�'-

.

..

- .-

.

15-The SundJ&gt;v Tillie$. Sentinel, Sunday, Aprllll, 1971

14-TbeSundayTiffiel!·Sentinei.Sim!lav. Aprilll, 1971

New Realism in, Arab World May Lead to Peace •

By U!llled Press lnlernatloaal
Isrseli Foreign Minister Abba
Eban said Saturday the Arab
II(OS:ld was ·turning toward · a
"realism" that augured well for
a Middle East peace. He said
Israel was willing to negotiate
an agreement to reopen the
Suez canal and said such a
move was feasible if both sides
approached it realistically.
Eban spoke in an Israeli
radio interview even all an
Israeli military spokesman
accused the Egyptiana of
sending two Soviet-made Sukhol
fighte,r planes across the. Suez
canal Saturday in the se~nd
such overflight reported since
the March 7th expiration of the
formal Middle East cease .fire.
The spokesman said a complaint was filed with U,N. truce
supervision authorities.
Dlscuas Developmenls
In Cairo, Egyptian President
Anwar Sadat met for hours
with top aides to discuss latest

Middle East military and
political developments while
representatives of eight Arab
heads of state began a closed
meeting to discuss the situation
in Jordari.
While they met, King Hussein
ordered that capital punishment
be introduced in Jordan for gun
law violators once the present
withdrawal of armed Palestinian guerrillas from the Jordanian capital was completed,
official Amman radio said.
"There has been some
turning toward realism in the
Arab world," Eban said, ciling
the revolt againat extremists
and Arab guerrillas in Jordan
and the avowed willingness of
Sadat to make peace with
Israel.
"That is not to say a peace
agreement is around the
corner, because they slill make
one sided and unacceptable.
conditions," the Israeli Foreign

Ki11ers
(Continued from Page 13)
the i966 murder of a service
station operator; Wendell Kealoha, 18, indicted for the first
degree murder of a sailor and
also indicted for rape and four
first degree robberies; and
Eddie Hoss Ill, 32, indicted for
the first degree murder of his
wife last September.
AGE NO FACl'OR
AUGUSTA, Maine (UP!)
Companies writing automobile
insurance in Maine will be
unable to discriminate arbitrarily against a policy.)lolder
solely because of old age, under
legislation to become effective
91 days after the regular session
of the legislature adjourns. The
new Jaw prohibits insurance
companies from reducing
liability limits, Increasing
premiums, cancelling or
refusing to renew any
automobile insurance policy. on
the basis of old age alone.

:~
AIRMAN EVANS
Airman Rickey A. Evaos,
son of Mr. and Mrs. ·walter
Evans Jr., Rt. I, Crown City,
bas completed basic tralnlng
at Laekland AFB, Tex. He
has been assigned to Keesler
AFB, Miss., for training In
the communications field ,
Airman Evans Is a 1970
graduate of Hannan Trace
High School, Mercerville,
Ohio.

RAY CROMLEY
''

U.S. Aims to Split
Solid Red Bloc

'

:·:

..:!.•
,.,,
,.,.
..

Minister said in an interview "But I think there is SOJ!Ie probably get poisoned- if you Augilst of last year, the
recorded earlier for broadcast fruit on the tree. II is not yet eat it prematurely. But if .we movement has been slow .and
on the first day of Passover. ripe. If you eat it you will &gt;Study what has happened since insufficient but nevertheless in
a faVorable direction."
Israeli Polley'
Eban said Israel's policy now
~-----------------------------------------is "not only wait and see but
use every opportunity to get the
dialogue going."
"We:lay yes to negotiation on
I
.
a
separate agreement for
BY JACK O'BRlAN
has his dream: To live long enough to see his
'

1

Voice along Broadway !!
TED HAD A SHORT

TALK WJTH 'JOAN
NEW YORK - Tony Award nominee Ed
ZimmermaM (of "The Philanthropist") was
mugged at knlfepoint in his apartment elevator
.... Joan Kennedy's White House luncheon appearance in Gaucho psnts was decorous
alongside the costmne her friends said Sen.
Teddy vetoed: hotpants ... Ali MacGraw's
Rome "L0ve Story" premiere will have io do
without Ali's unnecessary four-letter words in
the film: Italian censors erased them .... It
should make the movie better .... It is a ludicrous
note that "Love Story" supposedly is a return to
romance and simplicity when Ali's character
japes thrQUgh the four~etter voc~lary, including one scene with kids in church .... The
H'wood fibn squeeze : Ex-MGM writer Rolfe
Passer at the Japsnese Steak House told us he's
had to return to his first show biz profession,
nightclub mentalist.
West Virginia's sec-of-state John D.
Rockefeller's IV's ·new daughter will be
christened Valerie, after Mrs. IV's mysteriously
murdered (in '66) twin sister, daughter of Sen.
Charles Percy .... Boston Pops conductor Arthur
Fiedler's pitching a TV commercial for burlj!l
monmnents, and It seems sacrilegious .... Attorney Gen'l John Mitchell's Cavettcaat appearance belied the hysterical editorialist •
!~ties .... Very sane gent.
·
X-rated fibns get that way via their
brutalized sex scenes; but a flock of GP flicks
are as bad in their disgraceful depiction of
frightening violence parents don't suspect flares
there under that bland GP label .... Pat Henry,
befriendly by Sinatra and hired for shows with
him, tells the audience at the Las Vegas Riviera
that when he worked with Elvis and Tom Jones,
fans tossed their panties on stage: "With Frank,
all we got were two psirs of corrective stockings
and an old corset."
Judy Garland's family bought a permanent
crypt in the Ferncllff Mausoleum .... We knew
those old Dead End Kids weren't all bad: Hunt%
Hall of those original flick delinquenls and his
wife adopted a baby boy .... Jinuny Durante, 78,

WASHINGTON- (NEA)
, What is perhaps the most significant shift in foreign
policy in the past decade has been largely overlooked.
It abandons the concept of .the Communist world as a
unified bloc.
·
Instead, as a basic strategy of the Nixon Doctrine an
atteml,'t will be made to split the Communist bloc politlcal·
ly, butld relationships where they can be built, use this
leverage to reduce the chances of a major Communist
coalition against us , our friends or other threatened countries in the future .
From what this reporter can gain from men working on
this problem at the White House, State Department and
Pentagon, the first prio_rities will be Romania, Red China
- and North Vtetnam (If the Indochina war ends in some
sort of peacefuJ·arrangement) .
In part, these are targets of opportunity,
Romania has shown an interest in building , closer
Western ties . And it could be an entering wedge for contacts with other East European countries.
Behind-the-scenes shifts now taking place in Red China
suggest the possibility of b~tter relationships. Some very
influential Communist Chinese are reportedly arguing in
Pekmg that they need American, British and Japanese
know-how and some political understanding with the
United States- however minimal- if Red China is to ef·
fectively rival the Soviet Union .
The Nixon interest in Hanoi counts on the traditional
fear most Vietnamese have for China. American postwar
aid would be an attempt to demonstrate to Asia and
Europe that an independent . Communist nation, which
respects the. borders of its neighbors, has nothing to fear
from !he Umted States and a great deal to gain. There are
men m the State Department who believe North Viet·
nam could turn out to be tlie Yugoslavia of Asia.
There seems to be no doubt, in fact, that the new doctrin.e is based in considerable measure on what some
White House and State Department analysts consider to
be a very successful U.S. experiment in Yugoslavia over
the past two decades .
• . Some men in ,hij:h places here believe the very conSiderable lj.S. a1d m past years has paid off handsomely
m weakemng .the hegemony of the Soviet Union. Though
T1to has certamly been no friend of the United States this
government's Kremlin watchers feel on balance that he
has also been a thorn in the flesh of Stalin Khrushchev
and Brezhnev.
'
.
This p~licy shift was laid out in the Nixon Doctrine. But
the stgmftcance has gone largely unnoticed; Nixon has so
long been .Pictured as the hard-line anti-Communist (a
p1cture whtch grew as the result of his contest with Helen
Gahagan Douglas. his role in the All!er Hiss case his
(debates with Nikita Krushchev and h1s speeches on the
Co~mumst danger). that It is difficult for most people to
reahze that what N1xon ts now proposing is that we regard the Commumst countnes as individual nations, some
of wh1ch ca~ be wooed, perhaps into ~ositions of benevolent neutrahty or mutual accommodatwn.

Now You Know
In 1970 the Apollo IJ
spacecraft headed for the third
U.S. landing on the moon but
the attempt was aborted when
. a faulty oxygen tailk exploded.
The•trlp was shortened and the
astronauts returned safely. ·
A thought for today : General
~ the Army Douglas MacArthur 11id, ''There is no substitute
"
'

.

opening the Suez 'canal," Eban
said. .
.
.
. "But of course," he added,
"under terms and conditions
that insure our security and our
rights, under terms and condilions that insure fair balance
of advantage and !hal do not
simply leave open the option to
make war against us in more
favorable conditions."

a

In the Gaza strip Saturday,
an. Arab guerrilla bomb exJ&gt;losion killed two .childrenbrother and sister-and wounded their mother and two
sisters, military spokesmen
said. An announcement said the
explosives were ·planted in a
house in Rafiah and went off at
11 a.m. The boy was 13 and his
sister, 7.

daughter Cece married; she's nine .... The true
frontier hired guns were dirty, filthily dressed
bums; Yul Brynner's search for ''reality" in
"Callow" went astray-Pierre CardiD designed
his dear little duds, which seem really full of chic
.... Barney Goagle's signed the Harry Janes big
band for May 9, Mother's Day, and already
young folks are making reservations - to take
dear old mom there to do the Dip and ·the Shag. ·
The junior Sinalras, Frank &amp; Nancy, wllrtry
to make it as a ruo in the summer tenia .... The
Forest Hills musical festival Is very Iffy for this
summer- can't sign up one tickewelltng name
so far .... The Met. Muaeum cf Art's Arnolil Leb·
man and his wife, Pamela Gimbel cf the dep't
store chain, have their own new ·priceless
bargain: Newborn Nicholas .... Ed Sl!llivan will
host theN. Y. banquet for the local TV Academy
Awards, May 7 .... Radio City Music Hall veep
John Jackson's gifted dancer . daughter Denille
stars with the Jaffrey Ballet at City Center.
Ralph Kiner of the TV sports beat told this
gentle giggler about Little Leaguers when they
win their neighborhood championships: Just Uke
the Hank Aarons and Tom Seavers, when they
.win the big one, "they douse each Other's beads
with ginger ale," he said at Mike Manuche's
sporls hangout .... Mike Tell, Patty Duke's exhusband, is writing (in an Aspen, Colo., cabin) a
book about his life with Patty; the title, "Kiss &amp;
Tell."
Midtown · pros ties have becOme a lourist
attraction for sighlseeing buses, with guides
identifying the ~enereal attractions by their skypiled wigs and sleazy hot psnls costume ....
Probably many a decent sartorial slob gels a
bum rap this way .... What price titles: Las
Vegas psper listed the undisputed champ as
"Singer Joe Frazier and his rock group, 'The
Knockouls,' ., .... James Chasse, 30, of Vineland,
N.J., plans opening several reducing salons: He
just lf&gt;Sl J95lbs. and intends to shed scads more
- he's down to 560 now .... Anti-rock note: the
Angry Squire spot's adding a classical guitarist
and a flautist (a flautiat is a person who plays a
flaut, philosopher Rod Reed wrote) to Its en- .
tertaininent.

port

1-Maenlflcent
77- Roman road
6-Mammal of
78-Escape
Far North
79-Hua:e
11-Unused
82-Part of
16--lncllne
camera (pl.)
21-Norse sods
84--City In Egypt
22-Tast
85--Warble
23-Welrd
86-Unlock
24--Kind of beer
88-Small valley
25--Afrlcan
89--Winged insect
Naarlto
90-Squander
26- Ptrlods of time
92--Coln
28-liberatea
94-Dogs:ed
30-HIIhway
98-Sollcltude
32--Parent (colloq .) 99-South Afrlci!ln
33-Chlnese mHe
Dutch
34--Man's nickname 100-Pinch
]~Antlered
102- River In
animal ·
Fr21nc:e
36-Saucy
103-Cllck beetle
37-Siamese native 104-Unlt of
38- Sweet potato
SlaAlese
40--Book or maps
cu rrent~
42--Ethioplan ti tle
l OS-Traded for
43-Port lon of
money ,
medicine
106--Goddess of
44- Laree oven
vegetation
45- Pone 1 s
108-Norse lilOd
47--Worn away
109--Symbol for
· tantalum
49- Well ventil ated 110_ Note of sca,le
50--Storaae
Ill-Reflect
eompertment
112-0ne who .
51-Strike out
prepares and
54- Classify
serveS food
55- let It stand
114-Encountered
56-Ceke mile
116--Dress bo rder
59-Goal
117- Feels
covetousness
60--Emmet
119- Bioody
62-Havina: Ieath
12Q-Propel onsalf
64- Ventllates
through water
65- Beholdl
122--Anc:lent Celtic
priests '
66--Naar
124-Aged
67-Speck
125- Harvest
· 69-Mal ay canoes
126-Billboard
7o-Hurrled
128-Employ
71-Sum up
1 29~Selze with
72-Conducted
teitth
74-Falslflers
131- Post

132-Unlt of
Japanese

.,.

cu rrency
133-Roman official
135--Sink in middle
138--Number
139-Staff
140-Be in debt
141--Perlod of time
142-No un suffi.:
143-lildeflnite
article
144-l{ehlcle
145-Macaw
147-Change
149--French for
"friend"
150-Suralcal thraad
152-Chemlcal
compound
154--Genus of moths
156-Specles of
poplar
158-Fia:ure of
speech
159-Domain
160--Mahammedan
rulers
161 --Ca rrlu

15- Laek of

89-Havlng wings

orthodo)( belief
16-Narrow, flat

90-Frighten
91-Communion

board

92- Food fis h
93-lreland
95--Country of Asia
96-Famed
97- Brltlsh

27- Dine
29-Peruse

streetcars
99- Foreman

31-Natlve metal

36-Harbor

l - Merrlly
2-Nerve networks
3- Man's name
4- Symbol for
nickel
5--Arid
6-Home for
horses
7-Thal which
is unpaid
8-Encorel (Fr.) '
9--Not• of scale

10-Falry
11-Senses
12-Disas:reeable
odor
13-Bitter vetch
14- Spanlsh. for

"yes"

101-lndlvidual
105-Petlttoned
106----Cavil

37-Shade
39-Form
107-Stltches
40-Pilnter
Ill- Distance
41-Chimney carbon
musure
42- Reply
, 112-Temperate
43-Explred
113-Ceremony
.44-0utflts
115-Exact
46-Pronoun
116-Hastens
48-let fall
118-Ballot
49-The sweetsop
119-Gratln&amp;
50-Poet
121-lntarferar
5\-Apportlonad
123-Pronoun
52-Go In
125-Easy aallop
53-Finishlna
126-Nobleman
55-Fonned
127--Lassos
6-COffin
129--Bras:
5

57-Church official
DOWN

plate

17-Young boy
18-S )fmbol for
silver
19-Country of A1la
20-Retinue

58-Cowboy
competition

61-Froa:
63-·lnstrument
64-lmltatfs,.
68-Marched
70-Guided
71- Wins:·footed
73-Sandy wasta
'74--Grant use of
75--Staa:e e.:tra
(colloq .)
77'-Small Islands
78-Swlft
80--Undera:round

. excavation
81--0ry, as wine
Bi-Short sleep
84-C rate
87--Number

130-lntarior
131-Daface

132-Crowd
134--Caustlc
substance
136--Girl's name

137- Proflts
139- Dimlnlsh
140-City In Russia
144-Pollceman
(slans)
145-lndoneslan
tribesman
146--Dtvoured

147-Southem
blackbird
148-Rodent
149- Likely

_ lSI-Preposition
153-Compass point
155--Preflx: not
157-Conjunctlon

.

reading the Wedneaday Sentinel, I began to leaf through my mail ·
for the day and found, by.coincidence, the following material :
In "KEEPING YOU PO.STED," a monthly publication issued
by one of the largest Protestant denominations in America, there
appeared an article stating that . at Lancaster Theological·
Seminary, Lancaster, Pa., staff members of the Council For.
Chrisljan Social Action are now teaching ·&amp;course entiUed "The
Public Schools As Cruelty Systems." This seems a bit strange, to
say tl!e least. I woUld hope that Protestants supplying financial
support for the Lancaster Theological Seminary realize exactly
what manner of "modern ·enlightenment" is being fed to the
ministers-to-be.
Mr. Sauer has stated the case of public education quite
clearly, For a Council For Christian Social Action to jump into the
education field to the extent of teaching seminarians about "The
Public Schools As Cruelty Systems" appears a bit absurd. I
wonder whether or not the ordained ministerial faculty at Lancaster Seminary would invite public school teachers to the
campus to teach courses on religion. At any rate, I just thought
l'dletsome of your readers know how a few more of their Sunday
offering plate dollars are being spent. I have the April issue of
"KEEPING YOU POSTED" here at the parsonage for
verification. It mentions another course now being taught· at
Lancaster, and that course is called "United States Involvement
In Exploitation." I'm seriously considering requesting public
donations for the purpose of buying the seminarians some Bibles.
!think maybe that's what they ougilt to be studying.
Rev. Bill Perrin; Trinity Church.

NCAA .Record Set at Relays
'
te.o.
ana compe

of the meet's two double win- were set when John Stuart of
AI Schoterman of Kent State, ner s.
the University of Ke!'Jucky hurlwho posted an NCAA record of AI Lanier of Cincinnati won ed the shot 56 fe~ t. 8 inches, 10
215 feet, 5 inches in the ham- the long jump with a distance inches be tter than the old·mark ·'
mer throw las.t weekend, pitch- of 24 feel, 10 inches and the Laurie Barr of the Ohio Track
ed 224 feel, 6 inches here. He triple jump at 46 feet, lOo/• . Club, Columbus, raced the'22Dyard dash in 24.7 seconds, to be
universities as well as track also won ,the discus with a toss inches.
Three
othor
:neet
r~cords
c.1e-tenth second faster ; and Ed
175
feet,
7
inches
to
be
one
of
clubs. for the biggest ever field.
Norris of ~ Kent Track Club
Kentucky State dominated the
Can ThU, be Afforded?
ran the three-miles in 13 :45.9,
relay events, winning three,
"
or 5.5 seconds less.
while host Ohio University took
Gallipolis, Ohio
two.
April2, 1971
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Memorial Hospital.
All but one of the 26 events
Dear Sir:
Mr.
Frank
Cleland, Mrs. Albert Paynter attended
in the two-day track and field
If an irresponsible youngster destroys public property, we
of
the
First the funeral services of Mr.
Superintendent
meet were held Saturday. Ath·
call him a vandal, levy a fine, put him on probation, or ship him
letes from Ohio, Kentucky West Baptist Church School, a nd Clyde Paynter at New
off to a reformatory .If an adult deliberately sets fire to property,
Mrs. Cleland hosted a dinner Matamoras.
Virginia, Pennsylvania and lndihis own or others, we call him an arsonist, track him down, tes.t
meeting of Sunday School of. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Walker
his sani_ty, try him in court, and send him tAl a mental institution or
ficers , teachers and 'the Board and son, Roland, of Ashland
to prison. ·
of Education at 6:30 Friday were weekend guests of her
'
'
A person who creeps ihto a house in the dead of l)ight and
evening, April 2, in the church parents, Rev. and Mrs. Dale
takes what doesn 'I belong to him is called a thief and is put behind
basement dining area. Twenty McClurg. Baby Roland was
bars for a number of years. Let a man place rat poison where
were present for the dinner, christened during morning
prepared and served by Mrs. worship serv ice at the
children or pets might find it and he may be called a murderer
Cleland, assisted by her Methodist church.
and dealt with accordingly.
daughter, Mrs. Evelyn Young. Saturda y afternoon callers or
But let a business organization come out in the open and
Mr. and Mrs . William Several others came for the Mr . and Mrs. Ralph McKenzie
commit a variation of all these acts in the. Ught cf day and we
Thomas were in Columbus planning program which were Mr . and Mrs. Bill
merely shake our heads and call it a STRIPMINING COAL Community is Appreciative
Tuesday on business.
followed with Mr . Cleland in McKenzie and children of
COMPANY!
Guests of Elza McComas at charge. Several items were Gallipolis. Sunday visitors were
But, they argue, the land is theirs to do with as they please , Dear Sirs :
,
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Victor
On behalf of the Rio Grande Corrununity, the undersigned Perry were Mr. and Mrs. Ar- discussed to present to the Mr . and Mrs. Henry M·c·
and they have the papers to prove It!
·
But does the deed to a piece of land give anyone the right to wish to thank the many individuals of Rio Grande Village, the Rio thur Varner, son, John, and quarterly business meeting of Cormick and son, Pat, and
ravage it, or is it merely a loan for a short time? If each person Grande Staff, Faculty. and Students, the Times-Sentinel, Radio grandson, John, Jr., of Dayton. the church on Saturday friend of Columbus, spending
evening.
the day, and afternoon and
chose to despoil his own personal piece of property, the world Station WJEH, the merchants of Rio Grande, the volunteers from
Mrs. Edna Bolton, Piqua,
Mrs.
Richard
Roush
is
a
evening
visitors were Mr. and
would long ago have ceased to be a habitable place. A deed is, in the American Red Cross in Gallia County, and in psrticular the spent a day with Mrs. Goldie
hospital patient.
Mrs . Dallas Casley of Belpre
essence, a sort of promissory note that in return for the use of a Trl.State Red Cross Blood Center in Huntington for the splendid Gillogly. Mrs. Bolton formerly
Connie Kiser, daughter of Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lewis,
piece of property during our brief stay on earth, we will use it cooperation and coordination of e!fort that culminated in our lived in the community.
and Mrs. James Kiser, is a David and Carol, of Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs . Earl Starkey pneumonia patient at Veterans Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
wisely, kindly, and leave it somewhat better than we found it, if successful blood donor program thiS past Wednesday.
We
are
just
as
grateful
to
the
many
prospective
donors,
who
attended
a State Grange finals
possible. This was a requirement in order to obtain land by
Riffle at their home recently
were not accepted due to various medical precautions, as we are of ritualistic and drill contests
homesteading.
purchased on Vine Stree t
Land devaatated by tornadoes or hurricanes Is called a tAl those whose blood was taken. The cooperatiOn of the students at Walkins Memorial High
(moving from Pomeroy) were
BUSINESS IS BRISK
disaster area and yet damage done to the land itself is less than and the community was particulary gratifying to all who par- School between Etna and
NEW YORK (UP!) - New Ml' . Ill elvin Riffle of Columbus
that done by a strip mine. We deplore the ravages of'war but are ticipated. We especially appreciate the work of the many Kirkersville on Saturday.
and Mr. and Mrs. Bill McKenzie
York
City's
Offlrack
Betting
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Noble
Hamon
of
organizations
who
worked
behind
the
scenes
in
preparation
for
we to sanction the ravages of strip mines merely because the loss
Corp ., which on Thurs day and children of Gallipolis.
of life is tb birds, animals and vegetation rather than to humans, our event: the Freshman Cabinet, the Alpha Delta Epsilon Zaleskie, Mr. and Mrs. Terry
opened 10 belting windows in Mr. and Mrs. Henry Roush,
and the destruction Is seen only on occasional trips through the Fraternity, Rio Grande Boy Scout Troop 230, the Rio Grande and Wiseman and childr.en of
Mildred and Dale, went to
Grand
Central
Terminal
the
Hamden
and
Mrs.
Idras
country? If a corporation were to purchase a section of the the Open Gate Garden Clubs, the Rio Grande Faculty Women's
nation's first legal pari-mutuel Akron over the weekend to visit
Bowman
of
Diamond,
W
.
Va
.,
Club,
the
Rio
Grande
Facull)r_
Association,
the
Rio
Grande
Mr . and Mrs . John Fisher and
downtown area, set fire to It, allow the fire to spread to other
visited with Mr. and Mrs. Rex betting parlor - opened four other relatives. Mildred and
Faculty
Women's
Club,
the
Physical
Education
Major's
Club
and
areaa, and then move on to other towns to repeat that procedure,
more Saturday to cash winning
Dale returned Sunday and Mr.
the various officials of Rio Grande Village and Rio Grande Cheadle.
the uproar could be heard from Miami to Adak.
Sunday guests of Mr. and tickets. Business was reported
and Mrs. Roush remained for a
In a way, this is what the strip mine does to the countryside, College.
Mrs. Robert Mattox were her brisk at Grand Central, in week.
Conceived as a project of the Freshman Class, the idea of a brother-in-law and sister , Mr. Forest Hills and in telephone
hut more permanently so.ltnot·only destroys what Is there, but it
Mrs. Vashti Grimm of Letart
blood
"donor program on a community level beeame a reality and Mrs. Edwin Tague, of rooms.
prevents it from relul'ning naturally to its former state. The
Falls spent Monday afternoon
sulfuric acid formed when coal is exposed to the air is washed by thanks to the Village Council, the know-how of Mr . and Mrs. Columbus, and her father,
with Mrs. Frankie Neigler.
rains into the streams, and mile upon endless miles of streams Wayne Davis of Gallipolis and the willingness of everyone con- Charles Yates, Hamden.
Miss Alicia Knightste~ of
and the creatures that live in them afe destroyed. For a hundred cerned to devote the time and effort necessary to recruit workers
Those visiting with their
patient at a Huntington Hospital Columbus was a weekend guest
and prospective donors.
years theslreamisdead. There Is noway to reclaim it.
grandmother, Mrs . Murl
where
he is undergoing treat- of her grandmother, Mrs.
The initial success, of this the second Rio Grande Bloodmobile Galaway on Sunday were Mr.
As for the land, even with tbe best reclamation procedures, it
Lavini" ~Impson .
cannot return to anything like Its former state in less than a in 20 years, has prompted a repeat perfornlance on Monday, and Mrs. Bob Woodrum , Tracy ment for a leg infection.
generation's time. So for most of us, it may as well be gone October 4th. It is our hope to extend the geographic concentration and Timmie, McArthur and Mr. and Mrs. Steve Malesko
and children and his mother,
of our endeavors to include all of Raccoon Township.
Mrs. Donald Crabtre e and Dayton, spent a weekend here
forever.
Weare proud that our community added 120 first time donors Cindy, local.
In a once lovely valley cf the Rocky Mountains in western
with Mrs. Malesko's mother,
Carl Greenlees visited
Montana lies a city bereft of beauty. Once it waa the largest, to the Gallia County Blood Donor Program. And we extend to
Mrs. Webster Facemyre, and
fastest growing city in the state. In the past 20 years it has lost others within our community and township, who have not yet relatives in the Fleming area. Mrs. Malesko and childre n will
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Black10,000 of its population, and has been surpassed in size by three participated, the opportunity to give blood at the next Gallia
wood,
Sr., Pomeroy, spent an visit in the area with relatives
other towns. The business section is riddled with empty, decaying County Bloodmobile to be held :rhursday, April 22, in Gallipolis.
this week.
Arlen Owens, Mayor of Rio Grande, and evening with Mr. and Mrs. Earl Mr. and Mrs. Dale Stansbury
buildings. Those who must live there arid can afford It, live
Merrill Grodin, Advisor to the Starkey.
beyond the city limils, out of sight of the city's ugliness. What
were overnight guests of their
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Parker,
Rio Grande College Class of 1974.
deep mining did to Butte, Montana in 50 years, strip mining can do
Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Parker son and daughter-in-law , Mr.
in months or even weeks to Gallia County.
and Mrs. Clair Stansbury and
and
Slacy
Ann
of
Strasburg
and
Several years ago when the Ohio River was flooding, we were ·Favors Gilligan Plan for Fair
family of Groveport, and visited
Ney and Robbie Parker of another spn and daughter-inforced to drive to another town on a winding, back-country road.
1792 E. Hopkins St. Middleport were overnight
It took us along a ridge overlooking a lovely stream meandering
Defiance, Ohio 43512 guests of Mrs. Parker's law, Mr . and Mrs. Larry
through a wooded valley. We were Impressed with the beauty of
March 30, 1971 parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ney Stansbury, Reynoldsburg .
Their son-in-law and daughter,
the region and commented that the flooding river had done us a Dear Sir:
Carpenter and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Oxley
favor in forcing us to see an area we didn't know existed.
1am writing in regard to a recent U.P.I. news release which Martha Mays.
brought them home and are
An article published by the Sierrra Club, a national con- appeared in the Defiance (Ohio) Crescent News on Thursday,
Ruth, Jane and Barbara
servation organization that has becollle concerned about and March 18, 1971. The article stated that State Representative Jordan, Margie Jeffers and spending a few days here.
made considerable study of strlpmining practices, states that, Ralph Welker, R-Pomeroy, is greatly opposed to Governor Michael Lawson were among Mr. and Mrs. Walter Sw'ett
by
Mrs.
"We could not have designed a better system to ruin the Gilligan's reduction of the Ohio State Fair budget by $325,000. His the 4-H members who a!tended accompanied
Marguerite Frank of Athens
. maximum number of streams In a shorter period."
reasons included and I quote " ... to reduce the Ohio State Fair a 4-H Junior Leader mel)ting in visited Mr. and Mrs. Clair
Without clean SlreBJI)S we have no fish, no lakes fit for budget ... will 'scalp' it of high class entertainment." "Without Pomeroy recently .
Dudgeon in Columbus.
swimming or camping or just-enjoying their beauty, nor can the gate receipts, how can we help these kids participate in the Webster Facemyre is a
saves you $100 and mora over
birds and other wlldlHe long survtve.
state fair and ·build their interest in this kind of responsible ac- - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - -· cost of exterminating firm.
According to an authority, there are five billion tons of low tivity." As I see it, our Ohio farm youth aren't so shallow that they
Chemically kills subterranean
assistance
to
their
taxpayers.
termites and forms lasting bar·
grade coal lying near the surface between Cincinnati and the east- need that kind of encouragement.
We
do
extend
our
thanks
and
appreciation
to
Christy
Baer
for
rier against reinfestation.
central border cf Ohio and already "giant electric shovels are
I am an outgrowth of the Cleveland area and attended Ohio
giving
the
land
that
we
could
have
a
nice
road
as
an
outlet
to
our
scooping up farma, barns, silos, churches and roads to uncover University where I received a Bachelor's Degree in Home
town. Also, all others who helped wfth the road . We say thanks
the coal, piling the rubble into strip mine spoil banks."
Economics in 1967. I taught one year in the urban Elyria area and
again.
Is this really progress? Will this really benefit our area
I am now in my ·third year of teaching Vocational Home
Supp~
Lewis and Mary Harris, Fannie Phillips, Cl&amp;ra Garland, Mr.
economically? Is employment to a few at the expense of many an Economics in the farm land of Northwestern Ohio, presently at
and Mrs. Ross Stewart, Alice White, Mr. and Mrs. Hosmer Roush,
improvement? Southern Ohio is probably the loveliest portion of Tinora High School.
312 Sixth St.
Mrs.
Calvin
Imboden,
Lawrence
and
Patricia
Kelin,
and
Mr.
and
the state and offers unllmlted possibillties as a (9urist area,
Point .Pleasant, W.Va.
In my four years of teaching I have seen both urban and
Mrs.
Ernest
Stewart
giving employment to a far.greater number than the strip mines educational problems. It is easy to see that Ohio needs imoffer. Are we going to allow It to become the ugliest section of the provement in many areas.
state with tourists driving out of their way to avoid it?
I can't believe, however, that one of our major concerns is the
Paul Moore and Larry Circle
Wbal are we going to .do abool It?
loss of big name entertainment at the State Fair. Our farm youth
Susan K. Clarke· don't need this kind of ''protection" as Mr. Welker states. They ~pent the weekend in Roanoke,
seem more aware than he does of the need for improvements in Va., with the former 's sister,
Mr. and Mrs. Aldon Sp~inger
financial
and
administrative
aspects
of
our
State
government.
About County-.wide Service
and ianiily.
The farm youth realize, even if Mr. Welker doesn't, that Ohio has
Mr. and Mrs. Garrett Circle
. April7, 1971 more pressing problems than getting Bob Hope to tell jokes at the
of Racine visited at the home of
VInton, Ohio State Fair,
I 1 ·
•
Douglas Circle on a Thursday.
I realize that big name entertainment draws people to the
To the Editor:
Mr . and Mrs. Raymond
· I am writing in regard to the tlllephone service in Gallla State Fair and I wonder if Mr. Welker isn't a bit worried about Snyder and son of Columbus
County.! think all ofGallia CouniY should have (county-wide) toll losing a political showcase with its "free tickets, exposure, and visited Mr. and Mrs . Homer
free telephone service. Ohio Bellis spending thousands of dollars political patronage,'' should attendance drop. He might be Circle on a S~nday .
so we can have (county-wide) direct dlaling. But what good is that worried bull doubt thatfarmyouth are worried. They seem more
Thirty-nine were present for
going to do us, if theyslillleave the toll charge on? We who have a concerned about the total welfare of Ohio than does Mr. Welker. Sunday School and the
Vinton, Cheshire, Rio Grande, Guydn and Walnut exchange
The Southern Ohio legislator haa further stated "No budget collection was $25.11 on April 4.
should have the same privileges as those who hitve the (446) that makes the Ohio State Fair second class will get my vote and
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Circle
I'll work to keep the fair number one in the nation." What about and family of Columbus, Mr.
exchange.
' .
Other counties have .toU free telephone service. Why can't getting Ohio up from its rank as 47th in the nation in education ? and Mrs. George Circle and
we? I think it is very unjust and unfair. And, I have talked to so
Jolm Gilligan hasn't proposed a cut in the fair budget to hUi't family , and Mr. and Mrs.
' many people who feel thesamew~y Idoaboutthis matter.
Ohio farm youth. He has done It to help them by allocating that James Circle of New Haven, W.
An interested' Citizen of Gallia Co. $325,000 to such things as education, vocational training, and jobs. Va., spent Sunday with Mrs.
Name withheld on request. Mr. Gilligan is looking to the future while Mr. Welker Is so short Mary Circle.
Francine Perry of Holland,
visioned that he has allowed one economy move, that of reducing
Ohio
is spending a week's
the Ohio State Fair budget, convince him that the Governor's
entire budget proposal is not worth his vote. A man like this vacation with Iier grandmother,
Thanks Extended for Help
should be replaced in the State Legislature. Ohio must have Mrs. Mary Circle.
Terry and Brent Patterson of
Pomeroy,
• leaders who can see its "real" needs and will run its government
Spiller spent Sunday with their
April1, 1971 accordingly.
·grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
I hope you will permit my view.&gt; to be expressed tO your
Dear Sir:
Douglas Circle.
We, the planning committee for the George Thompson Fund . readers.
Mr . . and Mrs. Arthur Earl
Mrs. John Kissner, Jr. Johnson, son, Patrick, called on
Cafeteria dinner, held at the Tl:inity Church.would like..to thank
everyone thatdonatedfOoctandbelped with the dinner in any way.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wood of
It was the cooperation of everyone that made it the success it
They're Taxpayers, t~o
Apple Grove on Sunday.
was.
Mr. and Mrs. William ·
SO OUR EMPLOYEES MAY SPEND
' Mary Kauti:, Chairman, May Mora, Publi~lty Chairman, EUa
Carleton oi Racine called on
" \
Smith, Gay Perrin, Allee Globokar, Rose Ginther, Wilma Terrell To the Editor:
THE HOLIDAY WITH THEIR FAMILIES.
., We"llie undersigned of the village of Pomeroy living in the Betty Van Meter on a Sunday
and Carrie Kennedy.
afternoon.
Welch Town area do heartily stand by 'the letter of Mrs. Aaron
Mrs . Mary Martin, Mrs.
..
Kelton of the Sunday 'TimeS,sentinel concernin'g the clean-up of
''
Catherine Welsh, !.:Irs. ~yrthi..
Welch town.
·
Schools .as Cruelty Systems
Walker, Mrs. Eunie Brinker of
We are.laxpsyer!l of the village of Pomeroy as well as those
Salon No. 710 were guests at a
Pomeroy, Ohi()
living in the businesS district, but it's very little we ~et to benefit dinner of Erie County ·Salon No,
. April?, 1971 .• us,
. .
.
.
.
613 held at the Ramada Inn at
Oear Sir:
There.are several old hOuses lhllt are not livable and are only Saudusky, . Ohio on Monday
I
I
I enjoyed reading the article•by Mr. Harold Sauer, guidance fire hazards that should be torn or burned down.'
evening and were overnight
' COW18elor atMelgaHigbScbool.l am In agreement with the Ideas ·.
It also seems that when our sister town Or Racine can afford a guests of Mrs . Betty Fellows jn
i be ~esseil. and_Ute concluaionS he has drtt~a;. As I finlltbed · truck to pick up garbage, surely our town could ~ford a little Shelby, Ohio .

.

· ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) - Four
records were se t, including an
NCAA mark, Saturday at the
12th annual Ohio University relays which attracted some 500
athletes from 24 colleges and

.

Racine Social Events

SPECIAL'

IDAY •

AND SUNDAY

Carpenter

News, Event

PROOF
YOUR

SUNDAY, APRIL 11, 1971
76- Uppermost

Qwlrudlw Leuen ol Opii!M, 111 cOld lule, are
weleomed. fte edllllr raenw 1!1• npt to lllorta letlerl.
All letlen malt lie llped, wltll a filii addral, a1111oqla
lallblll may be illed apoa req11eet. ,

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TERMITE

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS

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I CAN'T' STUt1Y' Wm.l
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QUE5TIONS
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Carmel News.

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HAPPY EASTER
FROM HECK'S!
ALL'-STORES WILL
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EASTfR SUNDAY
APRIL 11th.

OPEN FOR BUSINESS AS
USUAL - 10 ·A. M. MONDAY
A.PRIL 121 h

�'

..
16- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, April 11, 1971

Jackson Stops Ironton, .11-10

-F or Masters Lea
and British Open champ lost his · fessed.
"Because of the slam, of J,lale Irwin were both at 4chance to move-into the lead
Nicklaus, .only man tO win all
alone when he bogeyed the course. The next two tour- under-par 212 at the end of the four of the major tournaments
last hole and had to settle for a naments in the slam are on third round. Weiskopf, six under at least twice each, had 70-71 in
54-hole total of 7-under-par 209, courses I like and when you feel four holes from the end, suf- the fi rst two rounds. He shot a 2which Coody, a 33-year-old you have a chance for fered two straight bogeys and . under-par 34 on the front nine
Texan, matched by posting an something, it adds to the had to settle f9r an even-par 72 Saturday with birdie putts at
·
pressu re .·~
erratic Z..Under..par 70.
for the day while Irwin shot a 71.
Qnly one other golfer ever
Nickl&lt;ius was referring to the
Next, at 213, came 23-year-old
won more " major " tour- U. S. open which will be held in John Miller, appearing in his
naments than Jack Nicklaus. Merion, Pa., in June and the first Masters. Miller matched
ThatwasamateurBobby Jones, Bri tish Open, the following Nicklaus' 68 after , like
~
who had 13such titles, two more month, where he will be the Nicklaus, bogeying •the last . ·
than Nicklaus, when he retired defending champion.
hole .
·
Gene Littler, who lost in last
41 years ago.
Condy, who has been playing
"I feel I am playing under feast-or-famine in this Masters year's Masters playoff to Billy
more pressure than I would be tournament, held a four-stroke Casper. had a 73 Saturday for~~
ordinarily," Nicklaus con- lead over Nicklaus and three 214 total that tied low foreigner ·
others witH five holes to play Bruce Devlin of Australia who
Saturday but promptly bogeyed had a 72and Dave Stockton who
three of his next four holes ;md had a 69.
.
ST. LOUIS (UP! ) - Two run
saw that lead fade away in the
That left Murphy '" .a three- homers by Willie Mays and
face of the Nicklaus' charge.
way he,for 10thplace wtth South Dick Dietz gave the San
Don January, who started the Afrtea s Gary P1ayer , only Francisco Giants a 6-4 win
third round with a one-11troke foreigner ever to wm the Saturday over the St. Louis
lead over then runnersup Coody Masters (1961) and Ken Still. Cardinals in the Cardinals'
and. Bob Murphy, shot a 73 Pla yer had a 71 Saturday and home opener.
Saturday after two earlier 69s Sttl1 a 72.
Giant righthander Frank
for a 211 that left him two
Arnold Palmer shot .a 71 Reberger, a 7-8 pitcher last
strokes behind the co-leaders. Sat'!"day but that left him at season , picked up his first
Murphy skied to a 76 to finish evenilar 216 and the .four-time victory but needed ninth inning
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Donn allowedfive hitsoverthefirst10 well back in the pack at !-under- M~sNters chtamd pwn.tsalld :k
relief help from Jerry Johnson.
0 very
Clendenon raced home from innings before giving way to par 215.
ow. ' . oesn
Mays' homer to the Jeff field
third base with two outs in the winning pitcher Danny Frisella, Tom Weiskopf, who followed good . I figured fou r-under stands in the third inning drove
Nicklaus as an Ohio Slate would be good position - but home Chris Speier, who had
lith inning when relief pitcher who took over in the lith.
Wayne Granger uncorked a Nolan, who had shoulder.
drawn a walk off St. Louis
wild pitch Saturday to give the trouble two years ago, pitched
starter and loser Jerry Reuss. It
New York Mets a 3-2 victory the first eight for the Reds,
was Mays' fourth home run in
over the Cincinnati Reds.
allowing six hits, striking out
Granger had an 0-2 count on two and walking one.
Jerry Grote with the bases. The Reds scored an unearned r;r
'7\
loaded when he let loose a curve run in the first inning when Pete L'
1
ball that skipPecl by all-star Rose singled and scored after
catcher Johnny ·Bench and Tony Perez' double. Second
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio (UPI) rolled to the screen behind baseman Ken Boswell's relay
The father of John Tannehill, 18, often.
"I am not concerned about his
home plate as Clendenon scored had Rose beaten at the plate but
Middleport,
Ohio,
a
member
of
safety
or anything like that.
easily.
catcher Grote dropped the ball
the U.S. Table Tennis team that
"It is another of many ways MORGANTOWN,
v a.
Later Bench admitted he had as Rose slid home.
is
visiting
Communist
China
,
that
the
m~ch
mahgned
sport
uf
(UP!
)
Six
home
games
and
a
signalled for a fast ball, but
Bernie Carbo's two-out homer
said Saturday be was "not table . te~ts has opened doors trip to the West Coast highlight
Granger missed the sign and in the seventh tied the game, 2concerned" about the safety of for hun.
West Virginia University's 1972
threw a curve.
2,
his
son
or
the
team.
Ta?Jlehill
said
he
felt
table
football
schedule, announced on
The Mets loaded the bases on
Tile Mets scored two runs in
Tannehill,
executive
Chester
~nms had been somewhat Sunday by Athletic Director
singles by Ken Singleton and the second on consecutive hits
editor
of
the
Ohio
Valley
Ignored
over the years ~nd had Robert N. "Red" Brown.
Clendenon and an intentional · by Clendenon, who now has
Publishing Co., said he felt the never gotten the publictty it The schedule includes a trip
walk to Ken Boswell. Tim Foli eight hits in 12 at bats, Boswell
to 1970 Rose Bowl champ
then. grounded to second and Bob Aspromonte. Clen- team would have "a very nice de.~erved.
trip
."
Jo~ took a l~t of plc~e~ in Stanford and· a home opener
basellll\n 'l'ommy Helms, who denon singled through the left
"I'm just tickled about him Japan, Tannehtll s~ud. I l,?"t Sept. 9 with Villanova. Other
threw home to force Singleton side of the infield and scored on
new faces include Virginia
for the second out of the inning. Boswell's double to left-center getting to go," Tannehill said. hope he has some film .left.
"A trip to China is one of those
Th~ youn~ Tannehill was away on Sept. 23 and Tulane at
Grote then m[~ the first two when centerfielder Hal McRae
things that don't happen very weartng a parr of ove~alls when home on Oct. 21. The rest of the
pitches before :th.e deciding slipped on the lanse outfield sod
the team crossed mto Red home foes are Richmond on
pitch eluded Bench. .
while chasin g the ball .
Sore arn~ pitchers Jerry Aspromonte followed with a
~~:;:hn's a little bit of a free Sept. 16, William &amp; Mary on
Koosman of the Mets and Gary single to score Boswell.
TOWNSEND WINS
Oct. 7, Penn Slate on Oct. 28 and
th .nk , Tanne hill sru'd . "He S
Nolan of the Reda hatUed
The Reds , · the defending . ROME (UP!) - Pete: lik1 er,
yracuse Nov. 18 .
to
that
the
th
cl
es prove
e o s Wes 1 v·trgm1a
. . an d V'lla
through the first. eight innings National League . champions, Townsend rode his third ruund
1 nova
don 't ma ke the man.,
•~ t
t
.
th
f'
t
with th~ score tied 2-2.
have now lost their first three lead through the final 18 holes
game of th e
Tanne h1·n , th e·· No. 2 ranked ... s me m e trs
'th
th M
·
Koosman, battled back from games Of the 1970 season, while Saturday to win the Walworth table tennis player in the U. S., 1967
. season .w1
e . ou?·
an elbow injury and a disap- the Mets .raised their record to Golf tournament with a four is a freshman at the University lameers wmmng 4M. Vtrgmta
pointing spring training, 2-1.
round total of 271 and took home of Cin in ti
was las t played m 1965 wtth the
$4,800 top prize money.
c na ·
Cavaliers winning 4J.11. The only
Townsend, member of
meeting with Tulane showed the
Britain's Ryder Cup team,
Mountaineers coming out on top
turned in a final round 71 to
with a 35-17 decision in 1969.
TO RAZE STADIUM
edge fellow Englishman
BOWLING GREEN , Ohio
Malcolm Bembridge by two (UP!) - Bowling Green State
strokes. Bembridge covered the Unlversi ty stadium, built in 1937
final 18 in 68 and took home is being demolished this month
second place prize of $2,400.
to make way for a $2.8 million
Italians Mario Napoleoni , business administration
Albert Croce and Briton building, it was announced
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) - on a pair of lucky doubles. Ron Maurice Gregson tied for third Friday.
Shortstop Don Money drove in Huntreachedsecondwitha one- place three stroke off the pace. The 3,400-seat stadiwn was
two runs with a homer and a out ground rule double on a pop Ireland's Christy O'Connor
last used Oct. 30, 1965 when
sacrifice
fly
to
lead inside the rightfield foul line was one of three golfers tied for Bowling Green was defeated 23Philadelphia to a 4-1 victory which bounced into the box fourth at 284 and Australian 7 by Miami.
over Montreal Saturday before seats.
Guy Wolsteinhelm and Briton
Falcon fans have been seated
55 ,352 spectlltors at the
After Bunning fanned Rusty Neil Coles tied for fifth at 286. in the new 22,()()(H;eat stadium
inaugural of the Phils' Veterans Staub, Bob Bailey tried to check
since 1966,
Stadium .
his swing on an outside pitch but OLDHAM's NEW JOB
Money's fir st homer just blooped a soft liner over the
BOWLING GREEN, Ky.
inside the leftfield foul pole outstretched glove of first (UPI )- Basketball Coach Johnignited a three-run rally in the baseman De ron Johnson. The ny Oldham, who led his team to
sixth inning which routed loser ball dropped for a double and the semi-finals of the NCAA
Bill Stoneman.
Hunt raced home with the run. Tournament in 1970-71, Friday
Veteran Jim Bunning, with
Affer Money's leadoff homer was named athletic director at
eighth inning relief help from in the sixth a walk to rookie Western Kentucky University,
Joe Hoerner , won his 220th Willie Montanez, a single by effective July 1. Oldham
major league game. Hoerner · Johnson, an error by Jones in succeeds Ted . Hornback, who
struck out Mack Jones and John leftfield and an intentional walk has announced his retirement.
Bateman in the eighth after a to John Briggs filled the bases.
hit batsman, a single by Rusty Rookie Roger Freed singled
DAN THO"AS
Staub and a walk to Ron Fairly home Montanez and Tim Me- In 1968 President Lyndon
AND SON
had fllled the bases.
Carver greeted reliever John Johnson ordered 24,500 military
' '"$'"'"!
you ainu 1936"'
Money' s sacrifice · scored O'Donoghue with a sacrifice fly reservists called up, half of
Cia lipoll•, Ohio
Larry Bowa after he tripled off scoring Johnson. Mike Marshall
reliever Claude Raymond in the relieved O'Donoghue and got them for duty in
seventh for his second hit of the plnch-hltter Tony Taylor to hit
game.
into a double play.
The Expos scored in the sixth

AUGUSTA, Ga. (UPI ) - A
very
determined
J ack
Nicklaud, bidding to become the
first man to·ever win pro golf's
"grand slam," charged from
behind with a 4-und~ril"r 68
Saturday to tie Charles Coody
for the lead at the ·end of the
third round of the Masters.
·Nicklaus, who already has
won more major tournaments
than any other professional,
· started the day three strokes
behind but chalked up five
birdies in a six-hole span late in
the round to set the stage for
today's dramatic finale.
The ·31-year-old reigning PGA

the two par fi ves but at tha t
point was still three strokes
behind Coody, who.had a frontnine 33.
When Nicklaus went into the
creek at No. 11 to fall four
strokes back and the n didn't

gain a stroke on Condy with two misfor tune here before ,
str~ig h t birdies, it looked like couldn 't hold his pace.
the ma n from Abilene was a
near cinch to hold a fairly , . - - - - - - - -. .
commanding lead at the end of
the third round.
But Coody, who has known

M.ay.•Q Hits 4th
As
Giants Win

Mets Trip
Reds, 3-2

°

Red China Vis,it Rare;
h
r. c
d
at er lOt oncerne '

four games.
Reuss also yielded the homer
to Dietz in the fourth after Ken
Henderson had singled.
Fred Norman pitched for the
Cardinals in the fifth and
allowed a run-scoring single by
Reberger in the sixth before
being relieved by Frank Lizy.
Reberger drove home Dietz,
who had walked, Linzy loaded
the bases on a fielder 's choice
before striking out Speier and
getting Mays to hi t into a force
play to end the inning.
.
Linzy gave up the final San
Francisco run in the seventh
when Henderson walked, stole

HOME
LOANS
Home own ership may

Don Money ·Is

Phillies Hero

cl oser

be

than

you

second and came home on a
lthink. Stoo in today
single by Alan Gallagher.
The Cards got to Reberger and talk with us. We'll
when J ue Torre homered with
Lou Brock aboard in the eighth, help you set up a low•l
and then in the ninth, with one
cost, long term lloar1l
out, pinch hitter Jim
Beauchamp singled and Matty that'-S' easy to pay.
Alou doubled.
With a 2-0 count on Ted
Sizemore, Johnson relieved
Reberger , walked Sizemore ,
allowed a sacrifice fly by Brock
and a run-scoring single by
Torre before ge tting J ose
Carde nal to end the game with a
Opp. Post Office
force play.
Galtioolis, O~io .

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ON

4-3 &lt;&gt;ver ~els
MILWAUKEE ( UPI) Reliefer Mel Queen issued
bues-loaded walk to Roberto
Pena In the eighth inning
Salilrday to force home the liebreaking run and give the
Milwaukee Brewers a 4-3 vicIGi')' over tile CaUfornia Angels
belen 40,166 falll.
The walk scored Tommy
Harper and gave the victory to
newly-acquired
Marcelino
Lopez, wbo relieved starter
Sldp Loclnrood In the elcbth.
· Home 111111 aCCGantaUw the
111'11 line 1'1811 of !be game.
· Jim 8pe11cet'1 IOio blllllln the

onadoublebyPenaandarunscoring single by Ellle
Rodriguez.
A double by Tony Conigliaro
to lead off the etshth, a stolen
base and Ken McMullen's
sacrlfice fly lied the IICOI'e
again.
,
Harper led off the Brewers'
eighth with a walk, moved to
second oo Bernie Smith's single
and took third on Dave May's
sacrifice bunt. California
starter Clyde .· Wright then
walked Andy Kosco lntentlorially and Queen '!f8S
lrought In to face pinch-hitter
tGurtb pve , Callffll'llia 1 1.0_ Bill VOSB. Voss ist:ruck out, but
leld, and Dlnay Wlllllll'l IWO- ~een walked Pena ·on sill
1'1111 bamer In the lidltl pltcltes. · · '
·
lllhrnbe • S.llliHinflle. Wright look the 10111, the
BlttllOIIr ICGied fl'l1m .,.... IICOnd .of the aeason for JUt
·Gill wild pltdlln !be llda to .. J'tlf's 22iame wlnqer. The win
t11e1carut s.t, IIIII tbe aoaaa . . the llnt for IApez.

YOUR ·

.

aot

.__...ull......uodnJnJIM.-......_

Are ncame
problems
about to blow your mind?
Bring your return lo H &amp; R
BLOCK. We'll prepare,
chock and guarantee the
accuracy of your return.

2nd &amp;
Pine st·

ASHLAND·OIL SERVICE STATION

a

FORMERLY FOLDENS ASHLAND
1

AND ,

STATE

So set your sights on the
neare•t H &amp; R BLOCK office. It's a good
to

304 J: . Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
.2nd &amp; Sycamore
Ph. 446-0303
Ohio

~

.

WAHAMA BASEBAlL TEAM - Coach Llirry Morgan's
Wahama High School baseball team, ~on the year, will
battle Gallipolis Saturday on Memorial Field in Gallipolis. It
· will be a doubleheader, beginning at 2p.m., in the Old French
City . .GAHS is Won the season thus far. White Falcons
pictured above are : from left, Rob Lambert, Mike Finnicum,

Richard Kent, Mike Wl)ite, Rick Hesson. Second row, Curtis
Roush, Keith Sayre, Stanley Adkins, Mike Lewis, Brent
Clark, Chester Roush. Back row, Coach Morgan, Randy
Clark, Randy Smith, Tim Howard, Jeff Riley and Eric
Morris. Danny Gardner is absent.

.

r------·-·-----~---·-·l ·

1

the Sports Desk

Upriver a piece at Racine Hilton Wolfe, Jr. is bubbling over
about his 1971 Tornado bsseball team. They won't go undefeated,
he allows, but "We 'II win a lot of ball games," and "look outfor us
next year," warns Big Fooz. Key to next year is that all but two of
his starters are back for anqther season of bat swinging.
The_Southern Tornadoes play their home ~es on the old high
school diamond, scene of many, many exclting contests dating
way, way back. Early editions ofthe old Racine High School
teams played a lot of fine baseball there and so did many strong
Racine entries in first the Ohio Valley Association and later the
Hocking Valley League.
'
Sunday after Sunday, down through the years, the grandstand
there was packed to its limit with fa115 of aU ages and descriptions.
The big clump of bushes in short left field, perhaps 325 feet
away, was and perhaps still is a target for righthanded batters.
Big Fred Crow, allli-5 and 250 lbs. of him could reach it easily, and
did one memorable Sunday afternoon. His high, soaring drive
landed in the gravel of the old high school parking lot and bounced
into the school building. That was in an OVA game between
Pomeroy and Racine. I don't recall the name of the unfortunate
Racine pitcher that day. But Fred wasn't much faster afoot in
those days then he is now. I believe he staggered into third base
after his gigantic clout.
Baseball had much wider appeal 25 years ago to athletes
lately out of high school or college. Most of the "good athletes"
also played basebaU into and through their ~. Remember
Clarence (Fagin) Price? How about Jake Gaul? Both were on a
number of Racine teams, and I watched Clarence once in a game.
in the twilight of his career. An infielder, hewasfastand graceful,
with a good glove.
But any more there is little carryover into the young married
years by the good athletes. Early in the 60s attempts were made
to field teams in Pomeroy and Middleport, unsuccessfully. Racine
hung on the longest, with a strong entry in the Hocking Valley
League, made that way principally because of the talented left
arm of Larry (Ilttle Fooz) Wolfe.
Note to present generation baseball players: Did you catch
the fact that "Utile" pitched a couple of innings in the Southern
varsity-Alumni game earlier this week?
Said Little's brother, Big: "He's still got it !"

.. ·

NOW BEING OPE.RATED BY

I

I

I

I

GALLIPOLIS- A meeting
for aU Gallipolis Church Slow
Pitch Softball League
managers will be held at the
First BapUst Church Thursday, April 15, beginning at 7
p.pt. AU churches interested
In taklng part In · the 1971
program should contact
Ronald Keenan, 446-4436.

PETE HE.NSON
.

.'

\

We would .appr~cia.te the opportunity
•

I

to serve you.

Series " 8"

2 '1l .400

w.

Bucks

Whip
Lakers

,; BY GARY KALE
UPI Sports Writer
The architects who built
division championships •r the
Milwaukee Bucks ar.. New
York Knicks are blueprinting
their meeting in the National
Basketball Association Playoff
Finals.
Lew Alcindor, the league's
leading scorer, tallied 32 points
IRONTON
Nolan Friday night in leading the
Swackhamer's Meigs High golf Bucks to an easy 106-85 victory
team went down to defeat in a over the Los Angeles Lakers
four-way match with Ironton, and a 1-0 lead in their Western
Mansfield Malabar , and Conference finals.
Jackson Friday at Ironton.
Dick
Barnett,
" Mr .
Ironton finished first with 414 Moneyman" of the Knicks,
and was followed by Mansfield netted 29 points with some slick
Malabar with a 428, Jackson outside shooting Friday afwith a 457, and Meigs wiih a 469. ternoon as New York routed the
Richard Anderson of Ironton Baltimore Bullets, 107-88, for a
was match medalist with score 2-0 margin in their Best-ofof 79 for 18 holes. Meigs was led Seven Eastern. Conference
again by senior Bill Hensler Playoff Ftnal Sc.rtes.
who finished fifth with an 85. , Conference winners stand to
Also for Meigs were Chuck gain $40,000, with the losing club
Hannahs at 93, Steve Story at 94, earning $30,000. The survivors
Frank Girolami at 96 and go on to. the Jackpot round that
Bobby Werry, 101.
'
pays $90,000-to the winning team
The Marauders will be at and $60,000 to the loser. Should
Waverly Monday and will see Milwaukee take the title, each
action against Athens Tuesday Buck wtll collect $16,300. The
at home.
share would include money
Milwaukee earned for finishing
with the best won-lost re~ord
during the regular season.
Actually, Milwaukee had to
rally from a 44-43 halftime
deficit to lake Los Angeles in
GALLIPOLIS - Here's this their playoff opener as the
week's GAHS spring sports Lakers attempted a slowdown
schedule:
style of play designed to curtail
BASEBALL
the Bucks' fast break.
Tuesday - Ironton, home, 4 Alcindor countered this
p.m.
measure by scoring 20 points in
Thursday ..:. Cllesapeake, the first half and scored his
home; 4:30p.m.
remaining points in the third
Saturday - Wahama , home, 2 quarter as Milwaukee mounted
p.m., doubleheader.
an attack that ripped the Los
TRACK
Angeles
defense . Jon
Tuesday - Chesapeake, McGlocklin, who finished with
home, 4:30p.m.
18 points, netted 12 in the third
Saturday - Ironton In- stanza.· The Bucks completed
vitational, at Ironton, 12 noon. the job by outscoring Los
GOLF
Angeles, 34-19, ll1 the final
Tuesday- Wahama, home, 4 period:
p.m.
•
Wednesday - At Huntington
High
Friday- Pt. Pleasant, home,
4 p.m.
AH L Playoff Standings
Ay United Press International
tQuarterflnalsl

This Week's

Spring Card

W. L. Pd.
NBA Playoff Standings
3 1 .600 ·By United Press International

Final Division Playoff
-. Eastern Conference
· ( Best of'Seven)

L. Pd ·
Kentuck y
2 2 .550000
W. L.
2
Floridians
·
New York
2 0
West
Baltimore
·0 2
Series "("
Western Conference
W. L'. Pd.
W L
·&lt;. Indiana
4 0 1.000 Milwaukee
.
1
(1'\ emphis Serie~ · "0" 0 4 .000 Los Angeles
.
.0 i
·
. Friday's Results
·
'
W. L. Pd. New Y.ork 107 Ballimor~. 88
4
&lt;· Utah
Texas
o 04 1.000
.ooo · Milwaukee 106 Los Angeles 85
X - Clinched series title
Sunday's &lt;fames
Friday's
New York • Hialllmore
1/irainla 12; Now Yor• 124
Los Angel~~ al 1\Mlwaukee

o

.home runs.

Bullets Down 0-2
In Playoff Series

Golfers
Triumph

Series uA"

the bottom of the sixth inning.
Ironton threatened in the lop
of the seventh. The Tigers had a
ma n on third with one out. · A
Tiger attempted to squeeze in
the tying run, but popped up to
the third baseman fo r a gameending double play.
Ironton is now 8-2-1 on the
year, and 0-1inconference play.
Jackson slammed four out of
the park, Ironton belted three
In the third, Ironton's Jim
Payne and John Myers hit two·
run homers. Tiger ace Ke ith
Parker hit a grand slam home

the second, and Mike Rouse a
two-run homer in the third.
Bill· Murnaba n started on the
mound for Coach Mike Burcham's Tiger's. He.was replaced
by Jack McClung in the second
and Doug Henry in the third.
Henry was c_(larged · with the
loss.
Mike Rouse started 'fo r
Jackson. He was replaced by
Dave Swan in the fourth. Swan
was credi ted with the victory.
Jackson had II runs on 13 hits.
Ironton had 10 runs on 12 hits.
The Tige.rs ·wiit battle
Galliiwlis on Memorial Field
Tuesday while Jackson ta kes on
Waverly in a Southern Division

run in the fourth rung. .
For Jackson, Dan Murphy
had two homers, one in the contest.
seco nd wi th non e on, and

Li ne score :

014 401 0-W-12·1
424 001 X- 11-13-3

anotl)er in the third'with one on. Ironton
Way ne Smith had a solo shot in Jackson

Meigs Thinclads
Lose To Jackson
I

Ironton

Chicago 060 000 ooo- 6 7 1
Houston 000 000 DOO- 0 3 1
Pappas (1 .0) and Martin ; NEW CAVALIERS
Griffin, Forsc h 121. Harris (7) ,
CLEVELAND (UPI ) - The
Lemaster (9) and Edwards. LP
- Gr iff in (0·11.
Cleveland Cayaliers of the
National Basketball Association
Pills
ooo 142 001- 8 16 o announ-ced Friday the acquisiAIIanta 000 000 011- 2 11 1 ·
f
k
Moose, Giusti (9 1 and San· lion o guard Mi e Casey and
guillen ; -Jarvis, Barber (51. five other players in · a
Herbel (6}, Kelly ( 9 ) and King . supplemental draft. Casey was
WP·Moose (1 .0). LP-Jarvis 10· a three-time All.SOutheastern
1) . Hr·Siargell (lsi) .
Conference performer at Ken(Qnlygamesscheduledl
lucky.
American League
Also chosen .by the Cavaliers
Minn.
000 000 02o-2 9 0
Chicago 010 001 001 - 3 9 1 were Doug Hess of the
Hall , Campisi (61. Williams . University of Toledo, Bobby
(7), Perranosk l (9) and Ratliff, J
f Dr k J
(B b
Tischinskl m. Mitterwald (9); ones 0
a e, ames u •
Bradley, Romo (9) and Egan , bles ) Harris of Indiana, Larry
Herrmann (8) . WP.Romo (1 .0) . Baker of Wittenberg and Vance
LP.Peranoskl (0·11 .
· Tyree of Wisconsin State at
Delroit
220 001 ooo-s 10 1 Oshkosh,
Ball.
001 103 01 &lt;- 6 8 1
Niekro, Foor (8 ), Timmer·
man (8) and Freehan ; Cuellar, FATHER APPOINTS SON
Hall (8) and Hendricks. Etche- NASVILLE, Tenn. (UPI)barren (9) . WP.Hall (1-01 LP- Ronnie Lawson was named
Niekro (0.1) . HR- Powell (1st) ,
Rodriguez (1st). Johnson (1st). Friday as the head coach of
Fisk University after compiling
a 143-18 record at Nashville's
Cameron High School.
ABA Playoff Standings
The announcement was made
By United Press International by Fisk President Dr. Jame R.
Division Semifinals
Lawson, father of the '(leW
Best of Seven..
coach.
East
Virginia
New York

RIO GRANDE LYNE CENTER
GYM AND POOL SCHEDULE
POOL
DATE -GYMNASRJM
Closed
Aprlll%-Ciosed
7~
College
Swim
Aprlll3 -7·10 OpeD Rec. (C)
7~C&amp;CSwlm
AprllU -7-10\)pell Rec. (C)
April IS -7-100penRec. (C)
7-BC&amp;CSwlm
8-9:30a.m.-GSI
Aprll16 - 7-100peu Rec. (C &amp;C)
7-9 C 4&lt; CSwlm
April 17 -1-4 Open Rec. (C &amp;C) ~10a .m. Cblldren's Home
7-90penRec. (C&amp;C) 10-1% a.m. Ufesavlng Class
tt-l p.m. Girl Scouts
Closed Sat. evening
Closed all day
• • Aprlll8 - l-5Ali-Oblo YouCb
Choir Performance
Gym closed to regular acUvlty
C - College
CC - College and CommUDity

'

By United Press International (51f2 innings rain)
National League
Kan . City
000 ooo- 0 3 2
San Diego 330 000 ooo- 6 8 0 Oakland
050 00&lt;- 5 2 1
L.A.
210 000 000- 3 6 1 Rooker, Wright (3) and May ;
Coombs, Severlnsen (8) and Blue (1 .1) and Duncan. LP·
Canni zzaro; Si nger, Downing Rooker (0·11.
(2), Mikkelsen ( 8) and Sudakis.
WP- Coombs (1·0) . LP- Singer
(Only games scheduled)
(0-2) . HR- Garve y (lsi) .

DON'T
GIVE UP

Triumph

"

.. .

Friday's Linescores

Vietnam~.-~~=======~~

~rewers

.

by Chet Tannehill

-·:to
·-"'

The schedule:
Sept. 9-'-Villanova, home
Sept. 16-Richmond , home
Sept. 23-Virginia, away
Sept. 30-Stanford, away
Oct. 7- William &amp; Mary, home
Oct. 14- Temple, away
Oct. 21- Tulane, home
Oct. 28-Penn Slate, home
Nov. 4- Pitt, away
Nov. 11- VMI, away
Nov. 18--Syracuse, home

For

JACKSON - Coach Dick hit in the high-scoring contest.
Heller 's Jackson Ironmen The loss snapped Ironton's
ou tla s t e d d e f e nd i n g SEOAL winning streak at eight
Sou theastern Ohio League · straight covering a two-year
champion Ironton 11-10 here · period. ·
Friday afternoon in a makeup
The Ironmen, now 1-1 in
contest on the Ironmen's conference play, tumbled the
diamond. Eight homeruns were high-flying Tigers with a run in

NEW YORI\ (UPI)-Can the
Baltimore Bullets rally from a
~ playoff deficit two years in
a row?
Last year, the Bullets were
able to extend the New York
Knicks through seven games
after losing the first two before
they were eliminated from the
National Basketball Association
post-season games.
Baltimore dropped a 107-88
decision to New York Friday
and again the Bullets are on
the short end of a 2-0 record as
the series moves to Maryland
for game No. 3 on Sunday
afternoon.
This time the BUllets' chances of recovery appear slimmer
than ever . Gus Johnson, who
helped Baltimore win the
Central Division title , remains
a doubtful starter. Johnson 's
left knee, which required
constant doses of a pain-killer
to activate him, forced him to
sit out the first two games .
Understandably, the Baltimor~ . {Qrwar4 is.,torn)l~~een

wanting to play and laking a
chance on risking permanent
injury by playing.
Coach Gene Shue says it's
Johnson's decision to make.
2 Players Forced OUt
"Actually, you've got to be
careful with a knee injury. "
Shue said. "It's not like Kevin's
(Loughery ) heel bruise or
Earl's (Monroe) ankle sprain.
Bruises and sprains heal
readily, while many knee
injuries require corrective sur-

forced out of Friday's game
early in the fourth quarter
when pain overcame · their
intense desire to play .
Baltimore was only six points
back at 81-75 when they
departed. Then disaster struck
as New York ran off a 16-2
string 1n a 4:58 stretch that put
the Knicks in front, 97-77. Two
minutes tater the Knicks were
! head, 103-79 and Coach Red
Holzman finally felt confident
enough to clear his bench.
"With Monroe and Loughery
out, we were able to steal the
ball more often," said Dick
Barnett in explaining the New
York· . surge. "Earlier, we
weren't coming up with the
rebounds or steals. When you
do both, then yo ur defense
becomes part of your offense. "
Barnett scored a game high
29points and backcourt partner
Walt Frazier netted 23. They
keyed two vital dri ves that
assured the, New Yor k triwnph .
After New York rallied from
a ~3-23 , 'secon\1 9uarter defic.'t
and tied the game, 48-4B, at
halftime, Barnett and Frazier
combined for eight of 10 points
in a Knick spurt that carried
the club from a slim 61.09 lead
to a 71.09 margin and then a 7363 spread entering the fourth
quarter.

MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs
High track and field team lost to
Jac kson 93 to 34 here Thursday
at the Jr. High field.
Meigs Coach John Bentley
said one bright spot was the
broad jump record made by
Chuck Faulk. Faulk broke the
old school record of 18' 81f.! "
with an 18' 111&gt; " jump .
F'aulk also tied for first place
in the 100 ya rd da.sh, and second
in the 220. Bob Grimm was third
in the 220, second in the 440, and
third in the ·100.
In the 880, Mickey Ash was
nosed out at the fi nish line, in
217.9.
Keith Va nlnwagen . was first
in the pole vaul t event and John
Thomas was second. Van In-

wagen was third in the high
jump .
Way ne Well was third in the
high hu rdles and John Thomas
third in the low hurdl!,g . Steve
SU.nley was second in the mile
and John Lehew third in the two
mile. Bill Slack finished third in
the discus throw .

SEO Standings
NORTHERN DIVISION
TEAM
W L R OR
Logan
2 o 10 6
At hens
1 1 10 3
Meigs
1 1 lO 7
Well ston
o 2 o 14
TOTALS
4 4 30 30
SOUTH ERN DIVISION
TEAM
W L R OR
Gall ipolis
2 o 9 1 saves you $100 and more over
Jackson
1 1 12 12
·
•
Ironton
0 1 10 11 cost of .exterminating firm .
Waverly
o 1 o 7 Chemically kills subterranean
TOTALS .. .. , .. ; ,L . .!j IJ&gt;01 31.. .termites and forms lastlng ·bar· "
LAST WEEK' S RESULTS : rler a~alhst reirifeslation.
'
Gall ipolis 7 Waverly 0
Loga n 3 At hens 2
Jackson 11 Ironton 10
Carol.i~

M~i3Ho~e~.~oG1MES ·

Logan at Wellston
·
Ironton at Ga ll ipolis
Jac kson vs. Waverl y
Meigs vs . Athens

Lumber

and

Supp~

312 Sixth St.

Point Pleasant, W.Va.

gery."
Monroe and ,Loughery were

TROPHIES
For All
Occasions ·

...

Plaques
. and
Expert
Engraving

TAWNEY'S

TROPHY HOUSE

422 Second Ave.

Gallipolis

SPRING r(
IS HERE! '
AND Tlt.1E

Series I' A"

(Best of Seven)
Providence
Bal t imore

w. L.
1 0
0 1

tingfield

w. L.
1 0
0 I

Series ue"
(Best of Five)

ntreal

Series " C"

!Best of Five)
W. L.

Hershey
1 1
Cleveland
1 1
Friday's Results
Cleveland 4 Hershey 1
Sp•lngfield 3 Montreal 2

TO MOVE 1

Visit Our l..ot

UPPER ROUTE 7

(Next Door 10 Auto _Auction!
H.s. : Mon.-Fri. 9-8 ·sat. 9-5 Sun. ·2·6

..

J

Aprl111·18, 1911 '

Nate: Excellent fobd serv.ed

by

the

local

R'os e

City

Cafeter ia . My' next schedUled
show will be in Boston
Hei(fhls , Oh i o, September 18·
19, 1971 , Akron , Oh io 44305 . .
H. H , Ange, Director

-

Everyone laughe d.wh en they cam e
.'

-MANOR
HOME
It's well-tonstructed

Pa.rkJ, Chlrleston, West Va.

Another fabulou s Antique
Show and Sale witt'! 40 quality
e)( hib l tors from
several
states , ct lspfaying the world 's
f inest antiques . Thousand!~ of
antiques for everyone , Jn.
c ludino
th e
advanced
collectors.
.
Free Parking AdmlssionS1.25

Two·ridiculous 9mmicks of the 1940's.
'·.

ANTIQUE SHOW &amp; SALE
Presented in the West va .
National Guard Armory, 1701 . 05 Coonskin Drive (Coonskin

Slturday, noon 11110 p.m.
Sunday, N()on til' p.m .

\\

Come in ·t his Weekend
and See our all-new

Sol~,

erected &amp; backed by Your MOST
EXPERIENCED DEALER IN
SECTIONAL HOUSING.
~les

&amp;

~rvice

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HOME SALES
.
Upper Rt. 1, Next Door to Auto Auctton
· Phone 446-9340
·
See Joe Giles or Jil1) Staats . ·

.....--

--~

out witlfthe television.
A box that could show pic luras

fro m 3,000 miles away? Absurd,
Bul everyone real ly cracked Up
when we com e o ut w ith the Vol ks-

Wagen.
A cor with its eng ine in the back?
Its tr unk in the fr o nt? And its ra dia tor

l n neith er th e fro nt nor the bo ck?

lt.even looked like o joke.
Bu t time marched on.
The te levisio n clicked.

The Volkswagen orce lerated.
People liked the ideo of o car that

Co.

didn't dri nk gas like wot~ r . O r oil like
wa ter. O r, for tha t ma tt er, 'didn't
eve n drink w ater.
Some strange peo pl e even liked
the ide a that it was strange !ook1ng.
In fac t, Det ro it co r makers n·o w
like the id ea o f a Volkswage n · so

much that. they decided to make
thei r own .
And eve n wilh ' all th.o se new sm all
cars around, th e fate o f the bug is
still sec ure.

This is the first yeo r lor oil ol the
o thers.
W e've hod 23 y~ors o f re- runs.

~S~p~~}~!~ R~~~~~~~!a~i,po~~~hio V/I1J
ifh.·
Phone ( 614) 446 ' 9800 ·
Open: Sales, Mon.-Fri. 8 to B..t .Sa.t. 8; 5..-... Service,
Parts .&amp; Office Mon .- Fri. 8-5, Sat. 8- 12
.

":~~;~" ·

�'

..
16- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, April 11, 1971

Jackson Stops Ironton, .11-10

-F or Masters Lea
and British Open champ lost his · fessed.
"Because of the slam, of J,lale Irwin were both at 4chance to move-into the lead
Nicklaus, .only man tO win all
alone when he bogeyed the course. The next two tour- under-par 212 at the end of the four of the major tournaments
last hole and had to settle for a naments in the slam are on third round. Weiskopf, six under at least twice each, had 70-71 in
54-hole total of 7-under-par 209, courses I like and when you feel four holes from the end, suf- the fi rst two rounds. He shot a 2which Coody, a 33-year-old you have a chance for fered two straight bogeys and . under-par 34 on the front nine
Texan, matched by posting an something, it adds to the had to settle f9r an even-par 72 Saturday with birdie putts at
·
pressu re .·~
erratic Z..Under..par 70.
for the day while Irwin shot a 71.
Qnly one other golfer ever
Nickl&lt;ius was referring to the
Next, at 213, came 23-year-old
won more " major " tour- U. S. open which will be held in John Miller, appearing in his
naments than Jack Nicklaus. Merion, Pa., in June and the first Masters. Miller matched
ThatwasamateurBobby Jones, Bri tish Open, the following Nicklaus' 68 after , like
~
who had 13such titles, two more month, where he will be the Nicklaus, bogeying •the last . ·
than Nicklaus, when he retired defending champion.
hole .
·
Gene Littler, who lost in last
41 years ago.
Condy, who has been playing
"I feel I am playing under feast-or-famine in this Masters year's Masters playoff to Billy
more pressure than I would be tournament, held a four-stroke Casper. had a 73 Saturday for~~
ordinarily," Nicklaus con- lead over Nicklaus and three 214 total that tied low foreigner ·
others witH five holes to play Bruce Devlin of Australia who
Saturday but promptly bogeyed had a 72and Dave Stockton who
three of his next four holes ;md had a 69.
.
ST. LOUIS (UP! ) - Two run
saw that lead fade away in the
That left Murphy '" .a three- homers by Willie Mays and
face of the Nicklaus' charge.
way he,for 10thplace wtth South Dick Dietz gave the San
Don January, who started the Afrtea s Gary P1ayer , only Francisco Giants a 6-4 win
third round with a one-11troke foreigner ever to wm the Saturday over the St. Louis
lead over then runnersup Coody Masters (1961) and Ken Still. Cardinals in the Cardinals'
and. Bob Murphy, shot a 73 Pla yer had a 71 Saturday and home opener.
Saturday after two earlier 69s Sttl1 a 72.
Giant righthander Frank
for a 211 that left him two
Arnold Palmer shot .a 71 Reberger, a 7-8 pitcher last
strokes behind the co-leaders. Sat'!"day but that left him at season , picked up his first
Murphy skied to a 76 to finish evenilar 216 and the .four-time victory but needed ninth inning
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Donn allowedfive hitsoverthefirst10 well back in the pack at !-under- M~sNters chtamd pwn.tsalld :k
relief help from Jerry Johnson.
0 very
Clendenon raced home from innings before giving way to par 215.
ow. ' . oesn
Mays' homer to the Jeff field
third base with two outs in the winning pitcher Danny Frisella, Tom Weiskopf, who followed good . I figured fou r-under stands in the third inning drove
Nicklaus as an Ohio Slate would be good position - but home Chris Speier, who had
lith inning when relief pitcher who took over in the lith.
Wayne Granger uncorked a Nolan, who had shoulder.
drawn a walk off St. Louis
wild pitch Saturday to give the trouble two years ago, pitched
starter and loser Jerry Reuss. It
New York Mets a 3-2 victory the first eight for the Reds,
was Mays' fourth home run in
over the Cincinnati Reds.
allowing six hits, striking out
Granger had an 0-2 count on two and walking one.
Jerry Grote with the bases. The Reds scored an unearned r;r
'7\
loaded when he let loose a curve run in the first inning when Pete L'
1
ball that skipPecl by all-star Rose singled and scored after
catcher Johnny ·Bench and Tony Perez' double. Second
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio (UPI) rolled to the screen behind baseman Ken Boswell's relay
The father of John Tannehill, 18, often.
"I am not concerned about his
home plate as Clendenon scored had Rose beaten at the plate but
Middleport,
Ohio,
a
member
of
safety
or anything like that.
easily.
catcher Grote dropped the ball
the U.S. Table Tennis team that
"It is another of many ways MORGANTOWN,
v a.
Later Bench admitted he had as Rose slid home.
is
visiting
Communist
China
,
that
the
m~ch
mahgned
sport
uf
(UP!
)
Six
home
games
and
a
signalled for a fast ball, but
Bernie Carbo's two-out homer
said Saturday be was "not table . te~ts has opened doors trip to the West Coast highlight
Granger missed the sign and in the seventh tied the game, 2concerned" about the safety of for hun.
West Virginia University's 1972
threw a curve.
2,
his
son
or
the
team.
Ta?Jlehill
said
he
felt
table
football
schedule, announced on
The Mets loaded the bases on
Tile Mets scored two runs in
Tannehill,
executive
Chester
~nms had been somewhat Sunday by Athletic Director
singles by Ken Singleton and the second on consecutive hits
editor
of
the
Ohio
Valley
Ignored
over the years ~nd had Robert N. "Red" Brown.
Clendenon and an intentional · by Clendenon, who now has
Publishing Co., said he felt the never gotten the publictty it The schedule includes a trip
walk to Ken Boswell. Tim Foli eight hits in 12 at bats, Boswell
to 1970 Rose Bowl champ
then. grounded to second and Bob Aspromonte. Clen- team would have "a very nice de.~erved.
trip
."
Jo~ took a l~t of plc~e~ in Stanford and· a home opener
basellll\n 'l'ommy Helms, who denon singled through the left
"I'm just tickled about him Japan, Tannehtll s~ud. I l,?"t Sept. 9 with Villanova. Other
threw home to force Singleton side of the infield and scored on
new faces include Virginia
for the second out of the inning. Boswell's double to left-center getting to go," Tannehill said. hope he has some film .left.
"A trip to China is one of those
Th~ youn~ Tannehill was away on Sept. 23 and Tulane at
Grote then m[~ the first two when centerfielder Hal McRae
things that don't happen very weartng a parr of ove~alls when home on Oct. 21. The rest of the
pitches before :th.e deciding slipped on the lanse outfield sod
the team crossed mto Red home foes are Richmond on
pitch eluded Bench. .
while chasin g the ball .
Sore arn~ pitchers Jerry Aspromonte followed with a
~~:;:hn's a little bit of a free Sept. 16, William &amp; Mary on
Koosman of the Mets and Gary single to score Boswell.
TOWNSEND WINS
Oct. 7, Penn Slate on Oct. 28 and
th .nk , Tanne hill sru'd . "He S
Nolan of the Reda hatUed
The Reds , · the defending . ROME (UP!) - Pete: lik1 er,
yracuse Nov. 18 .
to
that
the
th
cl
es prove
e o s Wes 1 v·trgm1a
. . an d V'lla
through the first. eight innings National League . champions, Townsend rode his third ruund
1 nova
don 't ma ke the man.,
•~ t
t
.
th
f'
t
with th~ score tied 2-2.
have now lost their first three lead through the final 18 holes
game of th e
Tanne h1·n , th e·· No. 2 ranked ... s me m e trs
'th
th M
·
Koosman, battled back from games Of the 1970 season, while Saturday to win the Walworth table tennis player in the U. S., 1967
. season .w1
e . ou?·
an elbow injury and a disap- the Mets .raised their record to Golf tournament with a four is a freshman at the University lameers wmmng 4M. Vtrgmta
pointing spring training, 2-1.
round total of 271 and took home of Cin in ti
was las t played m 1965 wtth the
$4,800 top prize money.
c na ·
Cavaliers winning 4J.11. The only
Townsend, member of
meeting with Tulane showed the
Britain's Ryder Cup team,
Mountaineers coming out on top
turned in a final round 71 to
with a 35-17 decision in 1969.
TO RAZE STADIUM
edge fellow Englishman
BOWLING GREEN , Ohio
Malcolm Bembridge by two (UP!) - Bowling Green State
strokes. Bembridge covered the Unlversi ty stadium, built in 1937
final 18 in 68 and took home is being demolished this month
second place prize of $2,400.
to make way for a $2.8 million
Italians Mario Napoleoni , business administration
Albert Croce and Briton building, it was announced
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) - on a pair of lucky doubles. Ron Maurice Gregson tied for third Friday.
Shortstop Don Money drove in Huntreachedsecondwitha one- place three stroke off the pace. The 3,400-seat stadiwn was
two runs with a homer and a out ground rule double on a pop Ireland's Christy O'Connor
last used Oct. 30, 1965 when
sacrifice
fly
to
lead inside the rightfield foul line was one of three golfers tied for Bowling Green was defeated 23Philadelphia to a 4-1 victory which bounced into the box fourth at 284 and Australian 7 by Miami.
over Montreal Saturday before seats.
Guy Wolsteinhelm and Briton
Falcon fans have been seated
55 ,352 spectlltors at the
After Bunning fanned Rusty Neil Coles tied for fifth at 286. in the new 22,()()(H;eat stadium
inaugural of the Phils' Veterans Staub, Bob Bailey tried to check
since 1966,
Stadium .
his swing on an outside pitch but OLDHAM's NEW JOB
Money's fir st homer just blooped a soft liner over the
BOWLING GREEN, Ky.
inside the leftfield foul pole outstretched glove of first (UPI )- Basketball Coach Johnignited a three-run rally in the baseman De ron Johnson. The ny Oldham, who led his team to
sixth inning which routed loser ball dropped for a double and the semi-finals of the NCAA
Bill Stoneman.
Hunt raced home with the run. Tournament in 1970-71, Friday
Veteran Jim Bunning, with
Affer Money's leadoff homer was named athletic director at
eighth inning relief help from in the sixth a walk to rookie Western Kentucky University,
Joe Hoerner , won his 220th Willie Montanez, a single by effective July 1. Oldham
major league game. Hoerner · Johnson, an error by Jones in succeeds Ted . Hornback, who
struck out Mack Jones and John leftfield and an intentional walk has announced his retirement.
Bateman in the eighth after a to John Briggs filled the bases.
hit batsman, a single by Rusty Rookie Roger Freed singled
DAN THO"AS
Staub and a walk to Ron Fairly home Montanez and Tim Me- In 1968 President Lyndon
AND SON
had fllled the bases.
Carver greeted reliever John Johnson ordered 24,500 military
' '"$'"'"!
you ainu 1936"'
Money' s sacrifice · scored O'Donoghue with a sacrifice fly reservists called up, half of
Cia lipoll•, Ohio
Larry Bowa after he tripled off scoring Johnson. Mike Marshall
reliever Claude Raymond in the relieved O'Donoghue and got them for duty in
seventh for his second hit of the plnch-hltter Tony Taylor to hit
game.
into a double play.
The Expos scored in the sixth

AUGUSTA, Ga. (UPI ) - A
very
determined
J ack
Nicklaud, bidding to become the
first man to·ever win pro golf's
"grand slam," charged from
behind with a 4-und~ril"r 68
Saturday to tie Charles Coody
for the lead at the ·end of the
third round of the Masters.
·Nicklaus, who already has
won more major tournaments
than any other professional,
· started the day three strokes
behind but chalked up five
birdies in a six-hole span late in
the round to set the stage for
today's dramatic finale.
The ·31-year-old reigning PGA

the two par fi ves but at tha t
point was still three strokes
behind Coody, who.had a frontnine 33.
When Nicklaus went into the
creek at No. 11 to fall four
strokes back and the n didn't

gain a stroke on Condy with two misfor tune here before ,
str~ig h t birdies, it looked like couldn 't hold his pace.
the ma n from Abilene was a
near cinch to hold a fairly , . - - - - - - - -. .
commanding lead at the end of
the third round.
But Coody, who has known

M.ay.•Q Hits 4th
As
Giants Win

Mets Trip
Reds, 3-2

°

Red China Vis,it Rare;
h
r. c
d
at er lOt oncerne '

four games.
Reuss also yielded the homer
to Dietz in the fourth after Ken
Henderson had singled.
Fred Norman pitched for the
Cardinals in the fifth and
allowed a run-scoring single by
Reberger in the sixth before
being relieved by Frank Lizy.
Reberger drove home Dietz,
who had walked, Linzy loaded
the bases on a fielder 's choice
before striking out Speier and
getting Mays to hi t into a force
play to end the inning.
.
Linzy gave up the final San
Francisco run in the seventh
when Henderson walked, stole

HOME
LOANS
Home own ership may

Don Money ·Is

Phillies Hero

cl oser

be

than

you

second and came home on a
lthink. Stoo in today
single by Alan Gallagher.
The Cards got to Reberger and talk with us. We'll
when J ue Torre homered with
Lou Brock aboard in the eighth, help you set up a low•l
and then in the ninth, with one
cost, long term lloar1l
out, pinch hitter Jim
Beauchamp singled and Matty that'-S' easy to pay.
Alou doubled.
With a 2-0 count on Ted
Sizemore, Johnson relieved
Reberger , walked Sizemore ,
allowed a sacrifice fly by Brock
and a run-scoring single by
Torre before ge tting J ose
Carde nal to end the game with a
Opp. Post Office
force play.
Galtioolis, O~io .

GALLIPOLIS

SAVINGS
&amp; LOAN CO.

Stanford .On
wvu Schedule
w:

:::1

0'

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Quality!

See Our Fine Selection

of Schult Mobile Homes Today!

smoking plea sure

select a . . .

.. • ' CHARATAN
from ...
Rt. 62

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SEE PAUL OR GARY NORTHUP

Gallipolis

OUNCJNG NEW MANAGEM..a..J.J.

ON

4-3 &lt;&gt;ver ~els
MILWAUKEE ( UPI) Reliefer Mel Queen issued
bues-loaded walk to Roberto
Pena In the eighth inning
Salilrday to force home the liebreaking run and give the
Milwaukee Brewers a 4-3 vicIGi')' over tile CaUfornia Angels
belen 40,166 falll.
The walk scored Tommy
Harper and gave the victory to
newly-acquired
Marcelino
Lopez, wbo relieved starter
Sldp Loclnrood In the elcbth.
· Home 111111 aCCGantaUw the
111'11 line 1'1811 of !be game.
· Jim 8pe11cet'1 IOio blllllln the

onadoublebyPenaandarunscoring single by Ellle
Rodriguez.
A double by Tony Conigliaro
to lead off the etshth, a stolen
base and Ken McMullen's
sacrlfice fly lied the IICOI'e
again.
,
Harper led off the Brewers'
eighth with a walk, moved to
second oo Bernie Smith's single
and took third on Dave May's
sacrifice bunt. California
starter Clyde .· Wright then
walked Andy Kosco lntentlorially and Queen '!f8S
lrought In to face pinch-hitter
tGurtb pve , Callffll'llia 1 1.0_ Bill VOSB. Voss ist:ruck out, but
leld, and Dlnay Wlllllll'l IWO- ~een walked Pena ·on sill
1'1111 bamer In the lidltl pltcltes. · · '
·
lllhrnbe • S.llliHinflle. Wright look the 10111, the
BlttllOIIr ICGied fl'l1m .,.... IICOnd .of the aeason for JUt
·Gill wild pltdlln !be llda to .. J'tlf's 22iame wlnqer. The win
t11e1carut s.t, IIIII tbe aoaaa . . the llnt for IApez.

YOUR ·

.

aot

.__...ull......uodnJnJIM.-......_

Are ncame
problems
about to blow your mind?
Bring your return lo H &amp; R
BLOCK. We'll prepare,
chock and guarantee the
accuracy of your return.

2nd &amp;
Pine st·

ASHLAND·OIL SERVICE STATION

a

FORMERLY FOLDENS ASHLAND
1

AND ,

STATE

So set your sights on the
neare•t H &amp; R BLOCK office. It's a good
to

304 J: . Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
.2nd &amp; Sycamore
Ph. 446-0303
Ohio

~

.

WAHAMA BASEBAlL TEAM - Coach Llirry Morgan's
Wahama High School baseball team, ~on the year, will
battle Gallipolis Saturday on Memorial Field in Gallipolis. It
· will be a doubleheader, beginning at 2p.m., in the Old French
City . .GAHS is Won the season thus far. White Falcons
pictured above are : from left, Rob Lambert, Mike Finnicum,

Richard Kent, Mike Wl)ite, Rick Hesson. Second row, Curtis
Roush, Keith Sayre, Stanley Adkins, Mike Lewis, Brent
Clark, Chester Roush. Back row, Coach Morgan, Randy
Clark, Randy Smith, Tim Howard, Jeff Riley and Eric
Morris. Danny Gardner is absent.

.

r------·-·-----~---·-·l ·

1

the Sports Desk

Upriver a piece at Racine Hilton Wolfe, Jr. is bubbling over
about his 1971 Tornado bsseball team. They won't go undefeated,
he allows, but "We 'II win a lot of ball games," and "look outfor us
next year," warns Big Fooz. Key to next year is that all but two of
his starters are back for anqther season of bat swinging.
The_Southern Tornadoes play their home ~es on the old high
school diamond, scene of many, many exclting contests dating
way, way back. Early editions ofthe old Racine High School
teams played a lot of fine baseball there and so did many strong
Racine entries in first the Ohio Valley Association and later the
Hocking Valley League.
'
Sunday after Sunday, down through the years, the grandstand
there was packed to its limit with fa115 of aU ages and descriptions.
The big clump of bushes in short left field, perhaps 325 feet
away, was and perhaps still is a target for righthanded batters.
Big Fred Crow, allli-5 and 250 lbs. of him could reach it easily, and
did one memorable Sunday afternoon. His high, soaring drive
landed in the gravel of the old high school parking lot and bounced
into the school building. That was in an OVA game between
Pomeroy and Racine. I don't recall the name of the unfortunate
Racine pitcher that day. But Fred wasn't much faster afoot in
those days then he is now. I believe he staggered into third base
after his gigantic clout.
Baseball had much wider appeal 25 years ago to athletes
lately out of high school or college. Most of the "good athletes"
also played basebaU into and through their ~. Remember
Clarence (Fagin) Price? How about Jake Gaul? Both were on a
number of Racine teams, and I watched Clarence once in a game.
in the twilight of his career. An infielder, hewasfastand graceful,
with a good glove.
But any more there is little carryover into the young married
years by the good athletes. Early in the 60s attempts were made
to field teams in Pomeroy and Middleport, unsuccessfully. Racine
hung on the longest, with a strong entry in the Hocking Valley
League, made that way principally because of the talented left
arm of Larry (Ilttle Fooz) Wolfe.
Note to present generation baseball players: Did you catch
the fact that "Utile" pitched a couple of innings in the Southern
varsity-Alumni game earlier this week?
Said Little's brother, Big: "He's still got it !"

.. ·

NOW BEING OPE.RATED BY

I

I

I

I

GALLIPOLIS- A meeting
for aU Gallipolis Church Slow
Pitch Softball League
managers will be held at the
First BapUst Church Thursday, April 15, beginning at 7
p.pt. AU churches interested
In taklng part In · the 1971
program should contact
Ronald Keenan, 446-4436.

PETE HE.NSON
.

.'

\

We would .appr~cia.te the opportunity
•

I

to serve you.

Series " 8"

2 '1l .400

w.

Bucks

Whip
Lakers

,; BY GARY KALE
UPI Sports Writer
The architects who built
division championships •r the
Milwaukee Bucks ar.. New
York Knicks are blueprinting
their meeting in the National
Basketball Association Playoff
Finals.
Lew Alcindor, the league's
leading scorer, tallied 32 points
IRONTON
Nolan Friday night in leading the
Swackhamer's Meigs High golf Bucks to an easy 106-85 victory
team went down to defeat in a over the Los Angeles Lakers
four-way match with Ironton, and a 1-0 lead in their Western
Mansfield Malabar , and Conference finals.
Jackson Friday at Ironton.
Dick
Barnett,
" Mr .
Ironton finished first with 414 Moneyman" of the Knicks,
and was followed by Mansfield netted 29 points with some slick
Malabar with a 428, Jackson outside shooting Friday afwith a 457, and Meigs wiih a 469. ternoon as New York routed the
Richard Anderson of Ironton Baltimore Bullets, 107-88, for a
was match medalist with score 2-0 margin in their Best-ofof 79 for 18 holes. Meigs was led Seven Eastern. Conference
again by senior Bill Hensler Playoff Ftnal Sc.rtes.
who finished fifth with an 85. , Conference winners stand to
Also for Meigs were Chuck gain $40,000, with the losing club
Hannahs at 93, Steve Story at 94, earning $30,000. The survivors
Frank Girolami at 96 and go on to. the Jackpot round that
Bobby Werry, 101.
'
pays $90,000-to the winning team
The Marauders will be at and $60,000 to the loser. Should
Waverly Monday and will see Milwaukee take the title, each
action against Athens Tuesday Buck wtll collect $16,300. The
at home.
share would include money
Milwaukee earned for finishing
with the best won-lost re~ord
during the regular season.
Actually, Milwaukee had to
rally from a 44-43 halftime
deficit to lake Los Angeles in
GALLIPOLIS - Here's this their playoff opener as the
week's GAHS spring sports Lakers attempted a slowdown
schedule:
style of play designed to curtail
BASEBALL
the Bucks' fast break.
Tuesday - Ironton, home, 4 Alcindor countered this
p.m.
measure by scoring 20 points in
Thursday ..:. Cllesapeake, the first half and scored his
home; 4:30p.m.
remaining points in the third
Saturday - Wahama , home, 2 quarter as Milwaukee mounted
p.m., doubleheader.
an attack that ripped the Los
TRACK
Angeles
defense . Jon
Tuesday - Chesapeake, McGlocklin, who finished with
home, 4:30p.m.
18 points, netted 12 in the third
Saturday - Ironton In- stanza.· The Bucks completed
vitational, at Ironton, 12 noon. the job by outscoring Los
GOLF
Angeles, 34-19, ll1 the final
Tuesday- Wahama, home, 4 period:
p.m.
•
Wednesday - At Huntington
High
Friday- Pt. Pleasant, home,
4 p.m.
AH L Playoff Standings
Ay United Press International
tQuarterflnalsl

This Week's

Spring Card

W. L. Pd.
NBA Playoff Standings
3 1 .600 ·By United Press International

Final Division Playoff
-. Eastern Conference
· ( Best of'Seven)

L. Pd ·
Kentuck y
2 2 .550000
W. L.
2
Floridians
·
New York
2 0
West
Baltimore
·0 2
Series "("
Western Conference
W. L'. Pd.
W L
·&lt;. Indiana
4 0 1.000 Milwaukee
.
1
(1'\ emphis Serie~ · "0" 0 4 .000 Los Angeles
.
.0 i
·
. Friday's Results
·
'
W. L. Pd. New Y.ork 107 Ballimor~. 88
4
&lt;· Utah
Texas
o 04 1.000
.ooo · Milwaukee 106 Los Angeles 85
X - Clinched series title
Sunday's &lt;fames
Friday's
New York • Hialllmore
1/irainla 12; Now Yor• 124
Los Angel~~ al 1\Mlwaukee

o

.home runs.

Bullets Down 0-2
In Playoff Series

Golfers
Triumph

Series uA"

the bottom of the sixth inning.
Ironton threatened in the lop
of the seventh. The Tigers had a
ma n on third with one out. · A
Tiger attempted to squeeze in
the tying run, but popped up to
the third baseman fo r a gameending double play.
Ironton is now 8-2-1 on the
year, and 0-1inconference play.
Jackson slammed four out of
the park, Ironton belted three
In the third, Ironton's Jim
Payne and John Myers hit two·
run homers. Tiger ace Ke ith
Parker hit a grand slam home

the second, and Mike Rouse a
two-run homer in the third.
Bill· Murnaba n started on the
mound for Coach Mike Burcham's Tiger's. He.was replaced
by Jack McClung in the second
and Doug Henry in the third.
Henry was c_(larged · with the
loss.
Mike Rouse started 'fo r
Jackson. He was replaced by
Dave Swan in the fourth. Swan
was credi ted with the victory.
Jackson had II runs on 13 hits.
Ironton had 10 runs on 12 hits.
The Tige.rs ·wiit battle
Galliiwlis on Memorial Field
Tuesday while Jackson ta kes on
Waverly in a Southern Division

run in the fourth rung. .
For Jackson, Dan Murphy
had two homers, one in the contest.
seco nd wi th non e on, and

Li ne score :

014 401 0-W-12·1
424 001 X- 11-13-3

anotl)er in the third'with one on. Ironton
Way ne Smith had a solo shot in Jackson

Meigs Thinclads
Lose To Jackson
I

Ironton

Chicago 060 000 ooo- 6 7 1
Houston 000 000 DOO- 0 3 1
Pappas (1 .0) and Martin ; NEW CAVALIERS
Griffin, Forsc h 121. Harris (7) ,
CLEVELAND (UPI ) - The
Lemaster (9) and Edwards. LP
- Gr iff in (0·11.
Cleveland Cayaliers of the
National Basketball Association
Pills
ooo 142 001- 8 16 o announ-ced Friday the acquisiAIIanta 000 000 011- 2 11 1 ·
f
k
Moose, Giusti (9 1 and San· lion o guard Mi e Casey and
guillen ; -Jarvis, Barber (51. five other players in · a
Herbel (6}, Kelly ( 9 ) and King . supplemental draft. Casey was
WP·Moose (1 .0). LP-Jarvis 10· a three-time All.SOutheastern
1) . Hr·Siargell (lsi) .
Conference performer at Ken(Qnlygamesscheduledl
lucky.
American League
Also chosen .by the Cavaliers
Minn.
000 000 02o-2 9 0
Chicago 010 001 001 - 3 9 1 were Doug Hess of the
Hall , Campisi (61. Williams . University of Toledo, Bobby
(7), Perranosk l (9) and Ratliff, J
f Dr k J
(B b
Tischinskl m. Mitterwald (9); ones 0
a e, ames u •
Bradley, Romo (9) and Egan , bles ) Harris of Indiana, Larry
Herrmann (8) . WP.Romo (1 .0) . Baker of Wittenberg and Vance
LP.Peranoskl (0·11 .
· Tyree of Wisconsin State at
Delroit
220 001 ooo-s 10 1 Oshkosh,
Ball.
001 103 01 &lt;- 6 8 1
Niekro, Foor (8 ), Timmer·
man (8) and Freehan ; Cuellar, FATHER APPOINTS SON
Hall (8) and Hendricks. Etche- NASVILLE, Tenn. (UPI)barren (9) . WP.Hall (1-01 LP- Ronnie Lawson was named
Niekro (0.1) . HR- Powell (1st) ,
Rodriguez (1st). Johnson (1st). Friday as the head coach of
Fisk University after compiling
a 143-18 record at Nashville's
Cameron High School.
ABA Playoff Standings
The announcement was made
By United Press International by Fisk President Dr. Jame R.
Division Semifinals
Lawson, father of the '(leW
Best of Seven..
coach.
East
Virginia
New York

RIO GRANDE LYNE CENTER
GYM AND POOL SCHEDULE
POOL
DATE -GYMNASRJM
Closed
Aprlll%-Ciosed
7~
College
Swim
Aprlll3 -7·10 OpeD Rec. (C)
7~C&amp;CSwlm
AprllU -7-10\)pell Rec. (C)
April IS -7-100penRec. (C)
7-BC&amp;CSwlm
8-9:30a.m.-GSI
Aprll16 - 7-100peu Rec. (C &amp;C)
7-9 C 4&lt; CSwlm
April 17 -1-4 Open Rec. (C &amp;C) ~10a .m. Cblldren's Home
7-90penRec. (C&amp;C) 10-1% a.m. Ufesavlng Class
tt-l p.m. Girl Scouts
Closed Sat. evening
Closed all day
• • Aprlll8 - l-5Ali-Oblo YouCb
Choir Performance
Gym closed to regular acUvlty
C - College
CC - College and CommUDity

'

By United Press International (51f2 innings rain)
National League
Kan . City
000 ooo- 0 3 2
San Diego 330 000 ooo- 6 8 0 Oakland
050 00&lt;- 5 2 1
L.A.
210 000 000- 3 6 1 Rooker, Wright (3) and May ;
Coombs, Severlnsen (8) and Blue (1 .1) and Duncan. LP·
Canni zzaro; Si nger, Downing Rooker (0·11.
(2), Mikkelsen ( 8) and Sudakis.
WP- Coombs (1·0) . LP- Singer
(Only games scheduled)
(0-2) . HR- Garve y (lsi) .

DON'T
GIVE UP

Triumph

"

.. .

Friday's Linescores

Vietnam~.-~~=======~~

~rewers

.

by Chet Tannehill

-·:to
·-"'

The schedule:
Sept. 9-'-Villanova, home
Sept. 16-Richmond , home
Sept. 23-Virginia, away
Sept. 30-Stanford, away
Oct. 7- William &amp; Mary, home
Oct. 14- Temple, away
Oct. 21- Tulane, home
Oct. 28-Penn Slate, home
Nov. 4- Pitt, away
Nov. 11- VMI, away
Nov. 18--Syracuse, home

For

JACKSON - Coach Dick hit in the high-scoring contest.
Heller 's Jackson Ironmen The loss snapped Ironton's
ou tla s t e d d e f e nd i n g SEOAL winning streak at eight
Sou theastern Ohio League · straight covering a two-year
champion Ironton 11-10 here · period. ·
Friday afternoon in a makeup
The Ironmen, now 1-1 in
contest on the Ironmen's conference play, tumbled the
diamond. Eight homeruns were high-flying Tigers with a run in

NEW YORI\ (UPI)-Can the
Baltimore Bullets rally from a
~ playoff deficit two years in
a row?
Last year, the Bullets were
able to extend the New York
Knicks through seven games
after losing the first two before
they were eliminated from the
National Basketball Association
post-season games.
Baltimore dropped a 107-88
decision to New York Friday
and again the Bullets are on
the short end of a 2-0 record as
the series moves to Maryland
for game No. 3 on Sunday
afternoon.
This time the BUllets' chances of recovery appear slimmer
than ever . Gus Johnson, who
helped Baltimore win the
Central Division title , remains
a doubtful starter. Johnson 's
left knee, which required
constant doses of a pain-killer
to activate him, forced him to
sit out the first two games .
Understandably, the Baltimor~ . {Qrwar4 is.,torn)l~~een

wanting to play and laking a
chance on risking permanent
injury by playing.
Coach Gene Shue says it's
Johnson's decision to make.
2 Players Forced OUt
"Actually, you've got to be
careful with a knee injury. "
Shue said. "It's not like Kevin's
(Loughery ) heel bruise or
Earl's (Monroe) ankle sprain.
Bruises and sprains heal
readily, while many knee
injuries require corrective sur-

forced out of Friday's game
early in the fourth quarter
when pain overcame · their
intense desire to play .
Baltimore was only six points
back at 81-75 when they
departed. Then disaster struck
as New York ran off a 16-2
string 1n a 4:58 stretch that put
the Knicks in front, 97-77. Two
minutes tater the Knicks were
! head, 103-79 and Coach Red
Holzman finally felt confident
enough to clear his bench.
"With Monroe and Loughery
out, we were able to steal the
ball more often," said Dick
Barnett in explaining the New
York· . surge. "Earlier, we
weren't coming up with the
rebounds or steals. When you
do both, then yo ur defense
becomes part of your offense. "
Barnett scored a game high
29points and backcourt partner
Walt Frazier netted 23. They
keyed two vital dri ves that
assured the, New Yor k triwnph .
After New York rallied from
a ~3-23 , 'secon\1 9uarter defic.'t
and tied the game, 48-4B, at
halftime, Barnett and Frazier
combined for eight of 10 points
in a Knick spurt that carried
the club from a slim 61.09 lead
to a 71.09 margin and then a 7363 spread entering the fourth
quarter.

MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs
High track and field team lost to
Jac kson 93 to 34 here Thursday
at the Jr. High field.
Meigs Coach John Bentley
said one bright spot was the
broad jump record made by
Chuck Faulk. Faulk broke the
old school record of 18' 81f.! "
with an 18' 111&gt; " jump .
F'aulk also tied for first place
in the 100 ya rd da.sh, and second
in the 220. Bob Grimm was third
in the 220, second in the 440, and
third in the ·100.
In the 880, Mickey Ash was
nosed out at the fi nish line, in
217.9.
Keith Va nlnwagen . was first
in the pole vaul t event and John
Thomas was second. Van In-

wagen was third in the high
jump .
Way ne Well was third in the
high hu rdles and John Thomas
third in the low hurdl!,g . Steve
SU.nley was second in the mile
and John Lehew third in the two
mile. Bill Slack finished third in
the discus throw .

SEO Standings
NORTHERN DIVISION
TEAM
W L R OR
Logan
2 o 10 6
At hens
1 1 10 3
Meigs
1 1 lO 7
Well ston
o 2 o 14
TOTALS
4 4 30 30
SOUTH ERN DIVISION
TEAM
W L R OR
Gall ipolis
2 o 9 1 saves you $100 and more over
Jackson
1 1 12 12
·
•
Ironton
0 1 10 11 cost of .exterminating firm .
Waverly
o 1 o 7 Chemically kills subterranean
TOTALS .. .. , .. ; ,L . .!j IJ&gt;01 31.. .termites and forms lastlng ·bar· "
LAST WEEK' S RESULTS : rler a~alhst reirifeslation.
'
Gall ipolis 7 Waverly 0
Loga n 3 At hens 2
Jackson 11 Ironton 10
Carol.i~

M~i3Ho~e~.~oG1MES ·

Logan at Wellston
·
Ironton at Ga ll ipolis
Jac kson vs. Waverl y
Meigs vs . Athens

Lumber

and

Supp~

312 Sixth St.

Point Pleasant, W.Va.

gery."
Monroe and ,Loughery were

TROPHIES
For All
Occasions ·

...

Plaques
. and
Expert
Engraving

TAWNEY'S

TROPHY HOUSE

422 Second Ave.

Gallipolis

SPRING r(
IS HERE! '
AND Tlt.1E

Series I' A"

(Best of Seven)
Providence
Bal t imore

w. L.
1 0
0 1

tingfield

w. L.
1 0
0 I

Series ue"
(Best of Five)

ntreal

Series " C"

!Best of Five)
W. L.

Hershey
1 1
Cleveland
1 1
Friday's Results
Cleveland 4 Hershey 1
Sp•lngfield 3 Montreal 2

TO MOVE 1

Visit Our l..ot

UPPER ROUTE 7

(Next Door 10 Auto _Auction!
H.s. : Mon.-Fri. 9-8 ·sat. 9-5 Sun. ·2·6

..

J

Aprl111·18, 1911 '

Nate: Excellent fobd serv.ed

by

the

local

R'os e

City

Cafeter ia . My' next schedUled
show will be in Boston
Hei(fhls , Oh i o, September 18·
19, 1971 , Akron , Oh io 44305 . .
H. H , Ange, Director

-

Everyone laughe d.wh en they cam e
.'

-MANOR
HOME
It's well-tonstructed

Pa.rkJ, Chlrleston, West Va.

Another fabulou s Antique
Show and Sale witt'! 40 quality
e)( hib l tors from
several
states , ct lspfaying the world 's
f inest antiques . Thousand!~ of
antiques for everyone , Jn.
c ludino
th e
advanced
collectors.
.
Free Parking AdmlssionS1.25

Two·ridiculous 9mmicks of the 1940's.
'·.

ANTIQUE SHOW &amp; SALE
Presented in the West va .
National Guard Armory, 1701 . 05 Coonskin Drive (Coonskin

Slturday, noon 11110 p.m.
Sunday, N()on til' p.m .

\\

Come in ·t his Weekend
and See our all-new

Sol~,

erected &amp; backed by Your MOST
EXPERIENCED DEALER IN
SECTIONAL HOUSING.
~les

&amp;

~rvice

&amp;'Md~~
MOBILE
HOME SALES
.
Upper Rt. 1, Next Door to Auto Auctton
· Phone 446-9340
·
See Joe Giles or Jil1) Staats . ·

.....--

--~

out witlfthe television.
A box that could show pic luras

fro m 3,000 miles away? Absurd,
Bul everyone real ly cracked Up
when we com e o ut w ith the Vol ks-

Wagen.
A cor with its eng ine in the back?
Its tr unk in the fr o nt? And its ra dia tor

l n neith er th e fro nt nor the bo ck?

lt.even looked like o joke.
Bu t time marched on.
The te levisio n clicked.

The Volkswagen orce lerated.
People liked the ideo of o car that

Co.

didn't dri nk gas like wot~ r . O r oil like
wa ter. O r, for tha t ma tt er, 'didn't
eve n drink w ater.
Some strange peo pl e even liked
the ide a that it was strange !ook1ng.
In fac t, Det ro it co r makers n·o w
like the id ea o f a Volkswage n · so

much that. they decided to make
thei r own .
And eve n wilh ' all th.o se new sm all
cars around, th e fate o f the bug is
still sec ure.

This is the first yeo r lor oil ol the
o thers.
W e've hod 23 y~ors o f re- runs.

~S~p~~}~!~ R~~~~~~~!a~i,po~~~hio V/I1J
ifh.·
Phone ( 614) 446 ' 9800 ·
Open: Sales, Mon.-Fri. 8 to B..t .Sa.t. 8; 5..-... Service,
Parts .&amp; Office Mon .- Fri. 8-5, Sat. 8- 12
.

":~~;~" ·

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19 ~ The Sunday~ · Sentinel, Sunday, AprU 11,1971

18-The Sundax.Times- Sentinel, Sunday, April II, 1971

without charge from the Extension Office.
One of the new features in it is
a·section on commOnJlardenifg
problems. This lists five
possible causes for plants
stunl;,d in growth or sickly
yellow in color, seven possible
· ca·uses and corrective action
New in Farming are listed for blossom drop and
four causes for tomato leaf roll.
potatoes on St. Patrick's Day. The bulletin has a section on
Here in Meigs County, cab- planning for the garden,
bage has been out in some cases production procedure for each
almost a month although some crop, soil improvement, seeding
of it will have to be replanted. and planting, mulches aM weed
Our commercial growers will 'C ontrol , as well as an index of
be planting their tomatoes the common gardening terins. Also
last of this month and hoping listed is
recommended
that tlie frost does not gel them. varieties, dates of planting and
The best reference available seasonal availability of prinon a home vegetable ·garden is cipal outdoor-grown vegetables
Bulletin 287. This is put together and potatoes.
by J . D. Utzinger, W. M. Brooks · Among other suggestions of
and E. C. Wittmeyer , Extension the extension specialists under
Horticulturists at Ohio State the heading, " And So It
University . It is available Grows," is information on

pruning and other activities.
Prune Taxus (Yew) and
Juniper before new growth
starts. Thinning is recom.
mended by Extension landscape specialists for most
evergreens . Cut off long
branches at point of origin or
back to a lateral side branch.
Then, remaining branches
become the new terminal part
of the plant.
Thinning out is the less
conspicuous of
pruning
methods. You get a more open
plant with
natural or unpruned lo 0k. Thinning dries not
stimulate excessive terminal
growth, as does shearing, and
you can reJTIOVe a lot of growth
and reduce the plant's total size
without chan·ging its natural
appearance.
CLEAN STRAWBERRY
"BED - Remove winter mulch
from your strawberry plants
now. Leave enough on ·the

a

.

For ·Stockholders
GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Charles
H. Ingraham will be guest
speaker for the annual
stockholders meeting of the
Federal Land Bank Association
of Gallipolis Thursday.
The event will be held at
Grace United Methodist
Church, beginning at 7 p.m.
Dr. Ingraham is an associate
professor in the Department of
Agricultural Economics and
Rural Sociology of the College
of Agriculture and Home
Economics,
Ohio
State
University, and is a member of
the Ohio Agricultural Research

Some cool season crops such layer of insecticide over ~·­
a&amp;carrots, leaf lettuce, early posed S\ll"faces of the plants ~o
potatoes and many ·others cap _ that wherever insects eat or
be planted now, The rest of the ·· walk on the plant, they will be ·
garden will have to wait until coniFolled.
about May 15.
Bulletin 298, Home Vegetable
PROTECT AGAINST IN- Garden Insect Control, is
SECTS - Most home gardeners available through your county
are guilty of waiting until they agent's office.
have a severe insect infestation Four-H Club members inbefore applying control terested in market iambs and
measures. This could be too late breeding sheep projects are
to prevent" costly injury . Make invited to attend the countyfrequent inspections of the wide sheep club meeting to be
entire garden at least once.each held Monday evening, April 12,
week . At the first sign of an from 7:30to 9 p.m. at the County
infestation, start your spray Extension Office in Pomeroy,
program.
according to Mrs . Clayton
Home ...gardeners can avoid Coffey, .4-H .club advisor.
.insect injury to their vegetables Interesting slides showing
if a regular spray schedule is market iamb carcass quality
followed throughout the ·will be shown at the meeting.
growing season. Make ap - These will assist in selecting
piications every 7 to 14 days. desirable types of iambs for the
Thorough · coverage is im- market lamb class. Parents of
portant. Be sure ypu get a thin club members are also invited.

Long Ridge Recreation
. n· l.
Spa lJn d er. eve O.z:'

Ingraham Speaker
-

ground around and under plants
to keep berries from coming in
contact with the soil. Normally ,
enough straw will sift down
around the plants to give them
adequate mulch, but you may
have to hand place or sprinkle
in straw where needed. Your
berries will be cleaner and have
less bottom rot if nested on
clean straw.
Clean out dead or diseased
plants. Many home gardeners
like to use a season-long insect
and disease control program.
Spray programs should begin
when the first blossom clusters
appear.
SPRING GARDEN - Clean
up the garden spot and get
ready to plant. Prepare soil as
soon as it is dry enough. If you
can crumble a soil ball with
your fingers , it's ready to plant.
If it clings together, it's still too
wet.

·
BY JOHN COOPER
Soil Conservation Service
PT. PLEASANT - Donald Nowlin has begun
development of his recreation complex one mile
off Jerries Run Road ori Long Ridge. He has
asked the Soil Conservation Service and Extension Service for advice and planning help.
William Melven and Edward Gaskins of SCS
and George Breiding of W. Va. University Extension met with Carl Cook, Mason County
Extension Agent, and me on the site to help Mr.

,,,

and Development Center,
Wooster, and extension
economist , Agricultural
Business Manangement, Ohio
Cooperative Extension Service.
The speaker is an author of a
number of publications and
articles in the area :or feeder
calf marketing, agricultural
marketing,
agricultural
business and management and
cooperatives and taxation.

Lay of the Land

For the·27th consecutive year,
Ohio Power Co. is plantirig a
wide variety of trees on lands
which have given up coal used
in the production of electricity.
In mined 'lands of Guernsey,
Noble, Muskingum and Morgan
counties, crews are 'planting
seedlings which will grow into
yellow poplar, red oak, white
oak, white ash, silver maple,
cottonwood, basswood,
buckeye, black walnut, black
locust, sycamore, white pine,
red pine and larch trees.
Walter D. Smith, the company's reclamation supervisor,
said that 1.9-miliiOn seedluigs
are being planted this year on

GALUA Countis ·proposed $2 million plus vocational
education project, endorsed by 89 Gallipolis Lions, Rotarians and
Kiwanians during Wednesday night's annual joint Li-Ro-Ki
meeting, will help area youth achieve a niche in life that is being
denied them if approved at the polls on May 4.
·

+++++

AS former City Schools Superintendent A. R. Durose said,
"It's something we've needed in this area, sm;nething we should
have had before now." With the addition of a vocatiqnal sChool,
many of our youth will receive training which will enable them to
earn a respectable living.
·

+++++

MOST of the emphasis today is on college preparatory
training with the evidence pointing strongly to the fact that many
of the students thus aimed are not going toi)it the mark or achieve
the goal for which the training is designed.

+++++

BESIDES training many youths so that they can earn a
meaningful living in a trade, the facility would have many allied
assets, among them aiding already established industries to train
workers. Gallia County residents who have read eight previous
articles in the Tribune describing various units that will be offered should now realize the overall importance of a v~d school.
We urge all registered voters to support tbe issue on May 4 with a
yes vote.

•••
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START CHICK
SAFE.. ;~ ·
FAST...

Feed Purina"Chick Startena~~

We're wheeling and dealing on all models
from thrifty seven's to powerful14's.
Price starts from $499.00 on Lawn Ranger.
advantage ol this once·a·year sale to get-the best deal on a new Wheel
Horse lawn' or garden trac tor. Come in t oday lor a lree dem onstrat ion ride. Put
your favorite Wheel Horse tractor to the test. .Hurryl Sate lasts only two weeks.
The best time to make the best deal 'is now I . "
Easy terms available. Bring the kids. Free
11/llzld
1
1

Wheel and Deal Day balloons for all!

4000 f~RM£RS
tbSl \NTlRlSll
*

~:

Piontert In Trtclorlng

BANK FINANCING
EASY TERMS
WE TAKE TRADE-IN
WliEEL HORSE SALES &amp; SERVICE

BAUM LUMBER COMPANY

li•.tln ;i i: 11MORE

&gt;:~

s

Come in and

COMPARE
the NEW
INTERNATIONAl: 444

'
lint to ••rv•
thlllfmll

BUY YOUR

'
We'll
prove to you why this new tractor is your
finest choice, whether you need a three-plow first
tractor or "a take-charge utility ht~lper. • Thrifty,
quiet4·cylinder power, 36.9 hp P1'6• or 38 hp PTO'
gasoline. • 8-forward, 2-reverse transmission gives
wide choice of speeds. • Differential lock fpr extra
traction.eConstant-running 5:40 rpm PTO. • B'h·foot
turning radi.us for easy man!luvering. • Low, Sl· ··
inch hood height for outstanding visibility. • Draft·
controlled 3-point hitch adjusts automatically far
smooth, steady,plowing. • Added convenience: convenient controls, faster-reading instrurnert panel,
deluxe thick-foam seat.
See lhe new International 444 here now ... put
it through its paces ... find out fQr ·yourself-what it
can do.
·•

..

.

1 .. •

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COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Natural Resources
Department says at least 85
fires burned over 900 acres in
southern and eastern parts of
the state so far this month and
the danger of wildfires will be
very high during the next"four
or five days.
"Wildfires have been raging
throughout the state during the

past week," the department
said, including 10 blazes in the
area arourd New Philadelphia
and TUscarawas Counly Friday
afternoon .
Lack of rainfall has made the
grass and forest lands extremely inflammable, according to Ernest J. Gebhart,
chief of the state Forestry and
Reclamation Division.

Two Held In Murder
ZANESVILLE (UP!) - Two
Zanesville men were held in
Muskingum County jail during
the weekend on firsWegree
murder charges in the Dec. 11
fatal shooting of James Edward
.Holmes, 36, Zanesville, whose
badly decomposed body was
found in a grave in the Owens

Hill area.
Freeman Larry Stage, 26, and
Dave Homer McCoy, 22, ·were
arrested in the gunshot killing
of Holmes which involved
robbery, according to the
charges filed against them.
Sheriff Fred Uffner refused to
discusS where the slaying occurred or the circumstances,
pending further investigation.
YOUNG HOOKEY PLAYER He said robbery was either a
LIVERPOOL, England (UP!) secondary or primary motive.
- The Leamington Road
Primary School has expelled 3ACTING DIRECTOR
year-old Christopher Baker for COVINGTON, Ky. (UP!)
twice wandering away from the Robert Keefe, director of
school. "He's a real live-wire planning and development at
and obviously too quick for the ~e Greater Cincinnati Airport,
teachers," his mother Sandra wtll take over as acting airport
Baker said . She said director, replacing Bryon
Christopher would return to Dickey whose contract was not
school when he turned 5.
renewed.

The garden tractor
that thinks its a sports car.
(And a Jnowlhrower. And a mower. And a •.. )

Put an end to back-brea ki ng , snow-removal chores
w1th the garden tracto r that thin ks it's a sports
car. Check these unique convenience features:
• Ope rator's deck is free of knee-knocking
leve rs and knobs, so mounting is easier.
• Steering wheel adjusts to any of five
POSitiOns.
• Op e rating co ntrol s are located In c
sports oar console.
• Comfortable bucket seat is adjustable
S~owthrower cuts a full 48-inch path - clears
drives and walkways quickly. Extra-large spout
openmg helps prevent plugging. Twelve- and 14-hp
tractors available, both with hydrostatic drive for
easy handling. Variety of attachments, too.

Stop In aoon lor • tll'flt•hend /oo/c,

FUlTON-THOMPSON
· TRACTOR SALES
Spring Ave.

Pomeroy

992-5101

SPRING SALE SPECIALS THROUGH APRIL
••.·~··································································~······························· · ············· ••
••

ECONOMY MOWERS
Two mowers, one nand-push and

•

ECONOMY
TILLER

one self·propelled. Both have 3'12

•••
••
•••
••
•••
••
••
••

HP Br iggs engin es , suct ion· lift

blades, reinforced decks and non .

tatch circu lar housings . Self·
pr opell ed
drive.

ha s · p osi ti".~ e

lr ic t ion

Has 93% of its weight concen·
trated over the tines for easier
tilling, bett er digging·in. En·

~

gine is 3'1, HP Briggs &amp; Slral·

SELF-PROPELLED

(22·3016)
In carton $77.95
Set up 58 2.9 5

•
••

ton, t mes are

·'•

(22-1215) Reg. $149.95

HANO.PUSH
"122-3015)
fn carton $63.95
. Set.up 568.95
.

o t I t 11 1 111 o 11 • 0 •

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•

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····-· " ......................_.,._ .....................
........................ ..
.' .

llo .....

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RIDING MOWERS

We've never seen tractors
that hold up like a Gravely.
And so many models
. . . riders !rom 8 to
16.5 HP, convertibles
(which let you ride or
walk) from 7.6 to
12 HP, and attachments
to mow, move snow,
plow; cultivate, etc.
Come in ·and test
Gravely's ail-gear
drive today.

25" STANDARD
Model 3254- 5 HP, 25" cui. Designed
for the man who wants a bit more in a

, small rider. Powered by Bliggs.&amp; Strat .
ton , thts model has a single speed trans·
missio.n, 25", single blade mower deck
with. antJ.scalp plate and is chain driven .

Rew;nd Starter, Color; Turquoise/Black.

122·49621

.

OTHER RIDERS
340.95
to
635.95

WHITE IMPLEMENT co~

Meigs Equipment" Co.
POMEROY, OHIO PH. '992-2176

r

I

•Manufacturer's estimate

BURPEE'S GARDEN SEEDS

WHY WAIT

Sfort CIPtti MDII.
S.t . .unnl • .P.M.
Statton Open
24 Hours

BUY YOUR
'

Grii\'C&gt;i)' Ridlnr

Tr.ctor with

w· Rotar)-', .Mt~wer

OPEN 8 TO 5 MON.

THRU .

"

.

SAT.

SALES &amp;'. SERVICE
Phone 992· 2975

· Pomeroy, Ohio

FERTILIZER
and Get Eal1y and Quantity

GRAvEi~vByiiiicfDR

DISCOUNT
Bag, Bulk and Liquid Fertiiizer, all available

, now. Take delivery now from our area
warehol!n at Pomeroy.

~

•

•
••

.

-

•

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Depth bar ea sily adjustabl e, · :

•

••
•

12" diameter

. Hahn hoe ti nes. 20 " wide.

TIME TO GET GROWING WITH

•

Central Soya·~

TBE EXCELSIOR
SALT WORKS
Can you name the last
company to produce salt
manually in the United States?
Is it in Southeastern Ohio? The

nEW from 1\SW HOLL.."'"

answer is found in Pomeroy, until it has reached full
Ohio. The Excelsior Salt Works, saturation. Here the brine is
Inc., producer of Ohio River ready for the formation of the .
Salt since 1660, is the last salt.
manual salt plant left in the This saturated brine goes to
United State~ .
an open grainer and forms flaky
The natural brine used in grains on the surface and settles
making the Excelsior salt is to l)le bottom, where the salt
found 1,200 feet underground. grains are picked up by
The brine is pumped to the automatic rakes and deposited
surface at a rate of 140. gallons in draining bins. The salt is held
per minute and is stored in a in the draining bins for 24 hours
tank with a capacity of 60,000 and then conveyed to the
gallons.
warehouse, where it is packed
The brine is then passed into paper bags for shipment.
through a pre-heater, a large Some interesting facts about
vat with low pressure steam the Excelsior Salt Works are as
pipes in it, where the brine is follows : 30 tons of coal are used
heated to a low temperature. daily, 20 to 25 tons of salt are
Next, the brine goes to an made each day, and the only
evaporator over a hand-fired automation in the plant is in the
coal furnace , where it is boiled, use of pumps and rakes.
beginning the process of Tours of the plant are
by available at any lime. I perremoving
water
evaporation.
sonally suggest going on a tour
Now the hot brine passes ·of the Sa't Works, for it is
through a filtering vat where refreshing to see that in this
iron is settled out. Then the \j'orld of automation, there is a
brine is conducted to a draw vat place for the old methods of
and held for further evaporation production.

II II I I I I I I I 0 I

BIKE

Buy Your" Fertilizer
From The Largest
Dealer In The Area.

United States, as his subject.
II follows:

with any other 3-plow

'

NEEDS APPROVAL
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The .
U. S. Senate was to act upon the
~ r es id e ntial appointment of
William N. Letson, Warren,
Ohio, as chief legal officer lor
the U. S. -Department of
Commerce. Letson , 41 , a
graduate of Harvard University, has served with a Warren
law firm since 1961

OIDO POWER CO. forester, Joe Pyatt (left) and Walter D. .Smith, the company'S
reclamation supervisor, discuss tbe 1971 tree planting program while standing in the midst of
an area planted in 1962. Each of the men is holding a pine seedling being planted this year .
Pines and other trees in the background indicate the growth which can be realized in a
relatively short period of time through planned planting programs.

900 Ohio Acres Bumed

*

FE R:tl'L·IZE R
NOWl

SPECIAL DUTY OVEN
· GAYTON , England (UP!) Iref\e ·Hodson said she has
tempora r ily di sco ntinued
cooking meals in her oyen while
she uses it as an incubator for
four puppies born two weeks
prematurely.

week this year - 61.7. Last year
- 62.7.
Average low temperature for · ·
week this year - 30.8. Last year
- 36.5.
•
·
Total precipitation for week
this year - .15 inch. Last year
- .16 inch.
Total precipitation to date
this year - 6.94 inches. Last
year - 9.98 inches.
Normal averagepr•cipitation
annually - 40.99 inches.
·

Last Manual Salt Plant in Pomeroy
Ed. Note: Edward Sayre, a
·Student at Rio Grande
College, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Sayre, Rio Grande,
received top marks for a
recent paper on the
manufacture of salt. He
selected the Excelsior Salt
Works of Pomeroy, the last
"manual'' salt plant in the

THIS
SUPER
'TRAIL

J.D. NORTH PRODUCE co~

The wooded areas already
fully grown are attracting
nationwide attention, Mr. Smith
said. The company · has
established 14 camping areas
which are available· to the
public free of charge. A permit,
available from any Ohio Power
office or · from the Ohio
Department of
Natural
Resources, is required, as is an
Ohio fishing license if people
care to fish in any of the. 300
stocked lakes. ·
Mr. Smith said that 54,000
people registered at the
parksites in 1970. Total
registrations since 1964, when
the. first parksite opened, now
amounts to about 236,250.
People have registered from
ail 50 states and 17 foreign
countries, the reclamation
supervisor said.
· Texas, Hawaii and Vermont were once independent
republics.

,,

DON'T WAIT

areas.

The best time
to buy a
Wheel Horse is
. NOW
during Wheel
and Deal
Days

Tuppers Plains
Society News

•

GALLIPOLIS
Ternperature , precipitation, and
weather conditions for each 24
hour period as recorded by Pete
McCormick, Fairfield Weather
Observer :
Day
High Low Prec.
Sunday
63 · 26
Monday
61
33
TUesday
51
40
.08.
Wednesday
61
25
.07
Thursday
70 30
Friday
. 79 · 31
Saturday
50 31
Average high temperature for

of land in those ..four counties
since the planUng program
!Jegan in 1945, An estimated 75
per cent of all the seedlings
planted grow to maturity,
resulting in heavily wooded

+++++

*

•

some 1,500 acres of land.
"The underlying factors in
Ohio Power Co.'s post-surface
mining ·operations," Mr. Smith
said, "are a since~e belief in the
need .for reclamation ami a
dedication tO the philosophy of
making the land useful and
productive."
The seedlings being planted
this month will grow into large
hardwood llf!d softwood trees
within 10 to 20 years. Additional
groundcoyer, in the form of
grasses and berries, accompany the forest growth.
By the end of April, the company will have planted 30.4million seedlings on 28,000 acres

WBIIL

LOOSE NOTES - The Rio Grande College Redmen Boosters
~nment will he in·charge of the 1970-71 All-Sports Banquet on Ma
. y 9 accordmg ·to Dr. James L. Datley. Guest speaker will . ~ sports
·
essayist Heywood Hale Broun. Area horse racing fans viewing the
public for camping and recreation purposes soon Kentucky Derby on TV on May 1 will get an idea of what to expect
after the first of May.
· when the nationally-famous Broun appears at Rio next month. He
will be the color man for the big derby event on CBS-TV .... Robert
DENVER YOHO OF SCS made detailed (Bob) Wagner, former GAHS assistant football coach and head
engineering designs for tile drains on Herbert track coach has applied for the head football job at Athens Hjgh
Henderson farm at Henderson and the Deibert School. "Wags" guided the 1970 GAHS thincladito a 42-lseason
Newberry farm near White Church. The Hen- record and the SEOAL championship. He is a graduate of Witderson tile will be an extension of an existing tenberg University, and is presently working towards his Masters
system which was begun some years ago. It is a Degree at Ohio University. Don Eskey, who chached Athens from
4-inch tile but will carry· the water to a 10-inch 1957 through 1970, announced his resignation last month ....
main. The soil is Lindside Silt Loam.
Barney Adams, before entering the hospital last Monday, said
The Newberry tile will be installed in area scouts should take up ·a project collecting old throw-away
Monongahela Silt Loam and the cause of this wet bo!Ues, newspapers and tin cans. He said scouts in neighboring
area is several water seeps along the side of the West Virginia did this, and not only cleaned up the countryside,
slope. Care was taken in locating this tile so that but made a profit as well. Sounds like a good idea. Maybe this
it would be higher on the slope than where the could be tied in with the county-wide Project Pride which got
waterappearedatthesurfaceoftheground.Itis underway in Gallia last Monday .... Glen Trout, former GAHS
planned that the tile will be put at such a depth football coach, is a candida"te for the head coaching job at Naples
that the water can be intercepted before it HighSchool in Florida .... Trout, whocoachedatGAHS in 1967 and ,.
breaks to the surface.
1968, is presently an assistant coach at Naples ... Gallia's Tom
We were glad recently to see John Collins of gpencer, who played in several pre-season exhibition games for
Pt.Pieasant,whoownsseveralfarmsaroundthe the Cincinnati Reds, is pictured on page 54 of .the Reds' 1971
county. Mr. Collins has recently returned from Yearbook, now available at Gillingham's Drug Store in the Old
an extended ocean voyage which took him and French City. Tommy, after coming down with the flu two weeks
Mrs. Collins around South Africa and up on the ago and a sore throat last week, is scheduled to report to Three
east side of Africa to Madagascar. Mr. Collins Rivers, Canada in the Double AA League this week. The GAHS
stopped at our office for the purpose of checking graduate hopes to play Triple A ball at Indianapolis before the
some soil on his farm at Southside.
1971 campaign Climes to an end.

Meigs 4-H Notes and News

Weather Roundup ·

Qn OPCO. Coal Lands

DR. C. H. INGRAHAM
Clyde B. Walker, manager of
Nowlin. Mr. Melven is the state recreation and
the Gallipolis FLBA, will will
wildlife specialist for SCS and Mr. Breiding is the
serve as master of ceremonies. Meriett Sanders and his specialist in the same field with WVU. The group
Entertainment . will be by grandson, Terry Sanders.
looked a this project and pointed out to him some
things that are necessruj for a successful
recreation facility .
Mr. Nowlin is now drilling a well, clearing
trees along the secondary road approach to the
site as well as doing a lot of grading work on the
secondary road. He has made some approached
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Se- sioner Sidney P. Marland said. made to also tailor it for seven to camp sites whlch will be located in wooded
same Street, the widely ac- Sesame Street also is supported to 10-year·olds with reading areas adjacent to the road.
daimed educational television by private foundations and difficulties.
He plans to build a pond about an acre and a
"Our experience with Sesame
program for pre-school child- other government agencies.
half in size and 14 feet deep across the head of
ren, will be expanded to include
"We pian to extend this kind Sb·eet," said Marland, "has Hughes Branch of Eighteen Mile Creek, which is
)earning programs for adults , of programming to cove&lt; other given us a provocative view of
JOHN DALTON OF Ohio Eighteen Mile
!pealed at the back end of his property.
Federal Land Bank New~
!!he U.S Offi~ • of,:·Educatjon ·· Priqr~llfW"e~s ·high on DE's the great potential that educaCreek
a'nd
Darrell
Hoffman
of
Letart
are
scs·technician
did
the
design
work
for
this
announced Saturday.
agend;f.,areas such as the Right tional television holds for our
planning to plant sorne trees for erosion control
The - education office will to Read, career education and society, and we would like to pond last fall and construction was started, but it and beautification. Denver Yoho of SCS and
increase its financing of the environmentaieducation,'' Mar. expand our engagement with became too wet to follow through. He plans to Johnny Looney of the W. Va. Department of
the new kind of programming." finish this pond as soon as the site dries up
program from $2 million to $7 land said in a statement.
Natural Resources helped them plan these
million a year to facilitate the
Right to Read is a govern- Marland said the decision to enough to permit equipment to work. Mr. Nowlin
expansion , Education Commis- ment project to improve expand Seasame Street was said that he hopes to have this facility open to the plantings.
reached at a meeting of federal
literacy.
Sesame Street, broadcast on educational officials, represen·
sPECIAL EDITION
some 200 television stations, tatives of the Children's Television
Workshop,
which
produces
most of them non-commercial,
VOL. 16, No. 21
NEW ENGINEER
the
show,
and
financing
organireaches some seven million
HUNTINGTON
Col. children. The program empha- zations.
POMEROY - The Green and whether or not to buy flags wi th II members present.
Kenneth E. Mcintyre will sizes early childhood learning
Hornets 4-H Club met on March for the club. Sherry Epple was The group discussed program
become District Engineer for such as i!lphabet recognition,
23 at the home of Charlotte in charge of recreation . planning and how to help with
the Army Corps of Engineers at counting and deportment.
Some
Cereal
may
Peckham, with Mrs. Rife, Refreshments of cherry Kooi- the Project Plan-O-Ram a.
Huntington, West Virginia,
It has proved so popular with
LOUISVILLE, KY. • FLS •
advisor . The group decided to Aid, cookies and potato chips Sherry Epple was in charge of
early in September. He will educators, children and parents Have Glass in it
recreation.
The
group
played
Due to more favorable eco
do something to make Rutland were served by the Epples .
Ri&amp;ht now - you too ca n
succeed ~olonel Maurice D. - although a few child experts
nomic condi iiOM. the inter
the
mimic
game
and
crazy
take advantage of th is n1w
The U. S. Food and Drug more attractive and to make a The second meeting was on
est on new Federa l la nd
Roush, District Engineer since say its value has not been
lower intuut ra te to purchue
Bank Loans has beera low·
1968, who is being reassigned to proven- that plans are being Administration has notified the list of safety rules by the next April 1 at the home of Mr. and questions and answers. Nancy
land; or make those farm im·
ered 11nd over 4.000 e•isl ·
1ng l oan ~ h ~ v e had th ei r
Consumer Protection Division meeting. The members also Mrs. Gocdon Ridenour, also Ridenour served refreshments.
provemenh you 'vt been need·
Okinawa.
inter est lowere d vo ll.mtar l·
ina. You ue, when you do busi·
Tammy
Fitch.
that two lots of "Farina Cereal" plan lo take a hike to explore the
ly to l he new lowe r rate.
nen with the Federal land Bank
Just anot her of lhe many
manufactured by the Pillsbury outdoors.
you nenr lose. Call your IO&lt;:al
benelils ol a Fed eral l and
Company, Minneapolis, Min- . Jeff Peckham was in charge
Manaaer ri&amp;ht away!
Ban k Loan.
Athens were Sunday guests of
nesota, At its Springfield, of recreation and Charlotte
his mother, Mrs. Effie Watson.
Illinois plant, and distributed Peckham served refreshments.
Mr. and Mrs. John Hayes of
nationally may contain gla,ss The nex.t meeting will be held on
Chester were Sunday guests of
Oyde B. Walker,
particles and should not be April 17 at Mrs. Rife's .when
Mr. and Mrs. Fon Halsey .
used . The contaminated they pian to talk about safety
By Mrs. Evelyn Brickles
Manager
Mrs. Maud Seals returned to
product, FDA said, can be rules and their first lesson. Attendance at the United her home here after spending ·
identified by the codes Kim Dewhurst, Reporter.
Methodist Sunday School last the winter with relatives. MrSf
"KOW23" or "KOW24" im- The Pine Grove Pals 4-H Club week was 67. Offering was Seals and Mrs. Lola Griffin
19 locust St. Phone 446.0203
printed on the top or bottom of has held two meetings recentiy. $18.73. Worship attendance was called on Mr. and Mrs. Jessie
Gallipolis, Ohio
the cereal cartons.
The first was on March 25 at the 33 with an offering of $62.74.
Newell one day.
home of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Watson
d"ff
b tw
Epple with II members present. and his brother; Ray, spent a
0 1
rub~ ~nd ;r;~~~hi;e i~e~h~ The group discussed lvhat to weekend with their mother, Mr.
·- ·'
color, · which is caused by name thetr club, how much to and Mrs. Ralph Brooks of North
. ' J I? .
impurities.
pay for dues, elected officers, Carolina .
lt '
Mrs. David · Riggs and two
children of Vienna, W.Va. were
'·
Wednesday dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Oscar Babcock.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Be !zing
were Sunday dinner guests of
With the purchase of any model DAVID
Mrs. Mabel Swariz.
Mrs. H. T. Dotson returned to
BROWN tractor from 31l to 72 horsepower.
her home bere after spending
Diesel or Gasoline - Mar. 1S to Apr. 30·
.the winter at Parkersburg with
her sister, Mrs. Louise Roach.
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Biram and·
family, Kenneth Biram, of
Light-weight (90 pounds) but
•
super-power
- 4-hp, 4-cycle. A
Parkersburg, George Sellers,
hard-charging on-road, · off.road
Mr. and Mrs. Sammy Rardin of
workmate or playmate.
Long Botiom, Mr. and MfS. Ray'
Justis, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Brown, local, Mr. and Mrs.
T~e famous rugged-powerNow Purina Ch;ck Startena helps sa ve about one cent pei ·
David
Riggs
and
.
children
of
economy giant
with
ch;ck 'in grow ;ng costs. Thanks to Punna 's cont;nu ing
Vienna
,
W.
Va
.,
all
were
recent
Selectamatic.
.
.
leadersh;p ;n pou ltry re sea rch and to Punna's new Least ·
guests of Mr. and Mrs . Oscar
S{\ VE UP TO S1.000 ON
Cost Pe rf orman ~e formul a!lon program . Take advantage
Babcock,
·COMPARABLE
of th is sav;ngs opportwnlly. Drop·;n and pic k up a supply'
Mr. and Mrs . William
COMPETITIVE
of P.unna Ch;ck Stortena . Get ch;cks olf to a safe start and
Frecker of Minersville, Mr. and
MODELS!
keep ·em gro,;ng fast on Pu nna Poultry Chows.
Mrs. Wateman White of Keno
spent a recent day here with
Time is limited - this offer good from
Mr. and Mrs. Jessie Newell.
Mr: and Mrs . Clair Newell of
March IS to April 30 only nt participating
now.
Columbus,
Mr. and Mrs. Hobert
B1,1lk
.
all
available
B;ag or
dealers. Also •. limited supply of Tn1~l Bikes.
Newell of Chester, Mr. and Mrs.
At
I·
..
Wateman White of Keno were·
Com~ in and get details NOW!
here for the funeral of Turner
GaiUpolis, 0.
Vine St
'
Newland. They laJso · visited
.
their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Jessie NewelL Turner Newland
"(M fOODI'OWEtfPtoplt
w~s a brother o( Mrs. Jessie
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Newell. .
1 •
. Ph. 446-0523
·Gallipolis, Ohio
Rt. 1 (Upper Rt.7)
Mr. and Mrs·. Harold Wataon
'·
and son Mike and girl friend of·

Sesame St. Growing Up

·· \

Tr~es Being Planted

April Busy ·Time or Homemakers
BY C. E. BLAKESLEE
Ext. Agent, Agriculture
POMEROY - April is t})e
month of ga~den planting which
is a part of the"multitude of
othet. outside activities around
ihe home. The oldlimers, of
course, say they planted their

.

I

E. l1l1 St.

992· 2111

POMEROYI OHIO

�'
;

.'

19 ~ The Sunday~ · Sentinel, Sunday, AprU 11,1971

18-The Sundax.Times- Sentinel, Sunday, April II, 1971

without charge from the Extension Office.
One of the new features in it is
a·section on commOnJlardenifg
problems. This lists five
possible causes for plants
stunl;,d in growth or sickly
yellow in color, seven possible
· ca·uses and corrective action
New in Farming are listed for blossom drop and
four causes for tomato leaf roll.
potatoes on St. Patrick's Day. The bulletin has a section on
Here in Meigs County, cab- planning for the garden,
bage has been out in some cases production procedure for each
almost a month although some crop, soil improvement, seeding
of it will have to be replanted. and planting, mulches aM weed
Our commercial growers will 'C ontrol , as well as an index of
be planting their tomatoes the common gardening terins. Also
last of this month and hoping listed is
recommended
that tlie frost does not gel them. varieties, dates of planting and
The best reference available seasonal availability of prinon a home vegetable ·garden is cipal outdoor-grown vegetables
Bulletin 287. This is put together and potatoes.
by J . D. Utzinger, W. M. Brooks · Among other suggestions of
and E. C. Wittmeyer , Extension the extension specialists under
Horticulturists at Ohio State the heading, " And So It
University . It is available Grows," is information on

pruning and other activities.
Prune Taxus (Yew) and
Juniper before new growth
starts. Thinning is recom.
mended by Extension landscape specialists for most
evergreens . Cut off long
branches at point of origin or
back to a lateral side branch.
Then, remaining branches
become the new terminal part
of the plant.
Thinning out is the less
conspicuous of
pruning
methods. You get a more open
plant with
natural or unpruned lo 0k. Thinning dries not
stimulate excessive terminal
growth, as does shearing, and
you can reJTIOVe a lot of growth
and reduce the plant's total size
without chan·ging its natural
appearance.
CLEAN STRAWBERRY
"BED - Remove winter mulch
from your strawberry plants
now. Leave enough on ·the

a

.

For ·Stockholders
GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Charles
H. Ingraham will be guest
speaker for the annual
stockholders meeting of the
Federal Land Bank Association
of Gallipolis Thursday.
The event will be held at
Grace United Methodist
Church, beginning at 7 p.m.
Dr. Ingraham is an associate
professor in the Department of
Agricultural Economics and
Rural Sociology of the College
of Agriculture and Home
Economics,
Ohio
State
University, and is a member of
the Ohio Agricultural Research

Some cool season crops such layer of insecticide over ~·­
a&amp;carrots, leaf lettuce, early posed S\ll"faces of the plants ~o
potatoes and many ·others cap _ that wherever insects eat or
be planted now, The rest of the ·· walk on the plant, they will be ·
garden will have to wait until coniFolled.
about May 15.
Bulletin 298, Home Vegetable
PROTECT AGAINST IN- Garden Insect Control, is
SECTS - Most home gardeners available through your county
are guilty of waiting until they agent's office.
have a severe insect infestation Four-H Club members inbefore applying control terested in market iambs and
measures. This could be too late breeding sheep projects are
to prevent" costly injury . Make invited to attend the countyfrequent inspections of the wide sheep club meeting to be
entire garden at least once.each held Monday evening, April 12,
week . At the first sign of an from 7:30to 9 p.m. at the County
infestation, start your spray Extension Office in Pomeroy,
program.
according to Mrs . Clayton
Home ...gardeners can avoid Coffey, .4-H .club advisor.
.insect injury to their vegetables Interesting slides showing
if a regular spray schedule is market iamb carcass quality
followed throughout the ·will be shown at the meeting.
growing season. Make ap - These will assist in selecting
piications every 7 to 14 days. desirable types of iambs for the
Thorough · coverage is im- market lamb class. Parents of
portant. Be sure ypu get a thin club members are also invited.

Long Ridge Recreation
. n· l.
Spa lJn d er. eve O.z:'

Ingraham Speaker
-

ground around and under plants
to keep berries from coming in
contact with the soil. Normally ,
enough straw will sift down
around the plants to give them
adequate mulch, but you may
have to hand place or sprinkle
in straw where needed. Your
berries will be cleaner and have
less bottom rot if nested on
clean straw.
Clean out dead or diseased
plants. Many home gardeners
like to use a season-long insect
and disease control program.
Spray programs should begin
when the first blossom clusters
appear.
SPRING GARDEN - Clean
up the garden spot and get
ready to plant. Prepare soil as
soon as it is dry enough. If you
can crumble a soil ball with
your fingers , it's ready to plant.
If it clings together, it's still too
wet.

·
BY JOHN COOPER
Soil Conservation Service
PT. PLEASANT - Donald Nowlin has begun
development of his recreation complex one mile
off Jerries Run Road ori Long Ridge. He has
asked the Soil Conservation Service and Extension Service for advice and planning help.
William Melven and Edward Gaskins of SCS
and George Breiding of W. Va. University Extension met with Carl Cook, Mason County
Extension Agent, and me on the site to help Mr.

,,,

and Development Center,
Wooster, and extension
economist , Agricultural
Business Manangement, Ohio
Cooperative Extension Service.
The speaker is an author of a
number of publications and
articles in the area :or feeder
calf marketing, agricultural
marketing,
agricultural
business and management and
cooperatives and taxation.

Lay of the Land

For the·27th consecutive year,
Ohio Power Co. is plantirig a
wide variety of trees on lands
which have given up coal used
in the production of electricity.
In mined 'lands of Guernsey,
Noble, Muskingum and Morgan
counties, crews are 'planting
seedlings which will grow into
yellow poplar, red oak, white
oak, white ash, silver maple,
cottonwood, basswood,
buckeye, black walnut, black
locust, sycamore, white pine,
red pine and larch trees.
Walter D. Smith, the company's reclamation supervisor,
said that 1.9-miliiOn seedluigs
are being planted this year on

GALUA Countis ·proposed $2 million plus vocational
education project, endorsed by 89 Gallipolis Lions, Rotarians and
Kiwanians during Wednesday night's annual joint Li-Ro-Ki
meeting, will help area youth achieve a niche in life that is being
denied them if approved at the polls on May 4.
·

+++++

AS former City Schools Superintendent A. R. Durose said,
"It's something we've needed in this area, sm;nething we should
have had before now." With the addition of a vocatiqnal sChool,
many of our youth will receive training which will enable them to
earn a respectable living.
·

+++++

MOST of the emphasis today is on college preparatory
training with the evidence pointing strongly to the fact that many
of the students thus aimed are not going toi)it the mark or achieve
the goal for which the training is designed.

+++++

BESIDES training many youths so that they can earn a
meaningful living in a trade, the facility would have many allied
assets, among them aiding already established industries to train
workers. Gallia County residents who have read eight previous
articles in the Tribune describing various units that will be offered should now realize the overall importance of a v~d school.
We urge all registered voters to support tbe issue on May 4 with a
yes vote.

•••
•'
••
•'

''

•'
'

START CHICK
SAFE.. ;~ ·
FAST...

Feed Purina"Chick Startena~~

We're wheeling and dealing on all models
from thrifty seven's to powerful14's.
Price starts from $499.00 on Lawn Ranger.
advantage ol this once·a·year sale to get-the best deal on a new Wheel
Horse lawn' or garden trac tor. Come in t oday lor a lree dem onstrat ion ride. Put
your favorite Wheel Horse tractor to the test. .Hurryl Sate lasts only two weeks.
The best time to make the best deal 'is now I . "
Easy terms available. Bring the kids. Free
11/llzld
1
1

Wheel and Deal Day balloons for all!

4000 f~RM£RS
tbSl \NTlRlSll
*

~:

Piontert In Trtclorlng

BANK FINANCING
EASY TERMS
WE TAKE TRADE-IN
WliEEL HORSE SALES &amp; SERVICE

BAUM LUMBER COMPANY

li•.tln ;i i: 11MORE

&gt;:~

s

Come in and

COMPARE
the NEW
INTERNATIONAl: 444

'
lint to ••rv•
thlllfmll

BUY YOUR

'
We'll
prove to you why this new tractor is your
finest choice, whether you need a three-plow first
tractor or "a take-charge utility ht~lper. • Thrifty,
quiet4·cylinder power, 36.9 hp P1'6• or 38 hp PTO'
gasoline. • 8-forward, 2-reverse transmission gives
wide choice of speeds. • Differential lock fpr extra
traction.eConstant-running 5:40 rpm PTO. • B'h·foot
turning radi.us for easy man!luvering. • Low, Sl· ··
inch hood height for outstanding visibility. • Draft·
controlled 3-point hitch adjusts automatically far
smooth, steady,plowing. • Added convenience: convenient controls, faster-reading instrurnert panel,
deluxe thick-foam seat.
See lhe new International 444 here now ... put
it through its paces ... find out fQr ·yourself-what it
can do.
·•

..

.

1 .. •

'.

.

'

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Natural Resources
Department says at least 85
fires burned over 900 acres in
southern and eastern parts of
the state so far this month and
the danger of wildfires will be
very high during the next"four
or five days.
"Wildfires have been raging
throughout the state during the

past week," the department
said, including 10 blazes in the
area arourd New Philadelphia
and TUscarawas Counly Friday
afternoon .
Lack of rainfall has made the
grass and forest lands extremely inflammable, according to Ernest J. Gebhart,
chief of the state Forestry and
Reclamation Division.

Two Held In Murder
ZANESVILLE (UP!) - Two
Zanesville men were held in
Muskingum County jail during
the weekend on firsWegree
murder charges in the Dec. 11
fatal shooting of James Edward
.Holmes, 36, Zanesville, whose
badly decomposed body was
found in a grave in the Owens

Hill area.
Freeman Larry Stage, 26, and
Dave Homer McCoy, 22, ·were
arrested in the gunshot killing
of Holmes which involved
robbery, according to the
charges filed against them.
Sheriff Fred Uffner refused to
discusS where the slaying occurred or the circumstances,
pending further investigation.
YOUNG HOOKEY PLAYER He said robbery was either a
LIVERPOOL, England (UP!) secondary or primary motive.
- The Leamington Road
Primary School has expelled 3ACTING DIRECTOR
year-old Christopher Baker for COVINGTON, Ky. (UP!)
twice wandering away from the Robert Keefe, director of
school. "He's a real live-wire planning and development at
and obviously too quick for the ~e Greater Cincinnati Airport,
teachers," his mother Sandra wtll take over as acting airport
Baker said . She said director, replacing Bryon
Christopher would return to Dickey whose contract was not
school when he turned 5.
renewed.

The garden tractor
that thinks its a sports car.
(And a Jnowlhrower. And a mower. And a •.. )

Put an end to back-brea ki ng , snow-removal chores
w1th the garden tracto r that thin ks it's a sports
car. Check these unique convenience features:
• Ope rator's deck is free of knee-knocking
leve rs and knobs, so mounting is easier.
• Steering wheel adjusts to any of five
POSitiOns.
• Op e rating co ntrol s are located In c
sports oar console.
• Comfortable bucket seat is adjustable
S~owthrower cuts a full 48-inch path - clears
drives and walkways quickly. Extra-large spout
openmg helps prevent plugging. Twelve- and 14-hp
tractors available, both with hydrostatic drive for
easy handling. Variety of attachments, too.

Stop In aoon lor • tll'flt•hend /oo/c,

FUlTON-THOMPSON
· TRACTOR SALES
Spring Ave.

Pomeroy

992-5101

SPRING SALE SPECIALS THROUGH APRIL
••.·~··································································~······························· · ············· ••
••

ECONOMY MOWERS
Two mowers, one nand-push and

•

ECONOMY
TILLER

one self·propelled. Both have 3'12

•••
••
•••
••
•••
••
••
••

HP Br iggs engin es , suct ion· lift

blades, reinforced decks and non .

tatch circu lar housings . Self·
pr opell ed
drive.

ha s · p osi ti".~ e

lr ic t ion

Has 93% of its weight concen·
trated over the tines for easier
tilling, bett er digging·in. En·

~

gine is 3'1, HP Briggs &amp; Slral·

SELF-PROPELLED

(22·3016)
In carton $77.95
Set up 58 2.9 5

•
••

ton, t mes are

·'•

(22-1215) Reg. $149.95

HANO.PUSH
"122-3015)
fn carton $63.95
. Set.up 568.95
.

o t I t 11 1 111 o 11 • 0 •

-•
•

•••

····-· " ......................_.,._ .....................
........................ ..
.' .

llo .....

I

'

RIDING MOWERS

We've never seen tractors
that hold up like a Gravely.
And so many models
. . . riders !rom 8 to
16.5 HP, convertibles
(which let you ride or
walk) from 7.6 to
12 HP, and attachments
to mow, move snow,
plow; cultivate, etc.
Come in ·and test
Gravely's ail-gear
drive today.

25" STANDARD
Model 3254- 5 HP, 25" cui. Designed
for the man who wants a bit more in a

, small rider. Powered by Bliggs.&amp; Strat .
ton , thts model has a single speed trans·
missio.n, 25", single blade mower deck
with. antJ.scalp plate and is chain driven .

Rew;nd Starter, Color; Turquoise/Black.

122·49621

.

OTHER RIDERS
340.95
to
635.95

WHITE IMPLEMENT co~

Meigs Equipment" Co.
POMEROY, OHIO PH. '992-2176

r

I

•Manufacturer's estimate

BURPEE'S GARDEN SEEDS

WHY WAIT

Sfort CIPtti MDII.
S.t . .unnl • .P.M.
Statton Open
24 Hours

BUY YOUR
'

Grii\'C&gt;i)' Ridlnr

Tr.ctor with

w· Rotar)-', .Mt~wer

OPEN 8 TO 5 MON.

THRU .

"

.

SAT.

SALES &amp;'. SERVICE
Phone 992· 2975

· Pomeroy, Ohio

FERTILIZER
and Get Eal1y and Quantity

GRAvEi~vByiiiicfDR

DISCOUNT
Bag, Bulk and Liquid Fertiiizer, all available

, now. Take delivery now from our area
warehol!n at Pomeroy.

~

•

•
••

.

-

•

•

Depth bar ea sily adjustabl e, · :

•

••
•

12" diameter

. Hahn hoe ti nes. 20 " wide.

TIME TO GET GROWING WITH

•

Central Soya·~

TBE EXCELSIOR
SALT WORKS
Can you name the last
company to produce salt
manually in the United States?
Is it in Southeastern Ohio? The

nEW from 1\SW HOLL.."'"

answer is found in Pomeroy, until it has reached full
Ohio. The Excelsior Salt Works, saturation. Here the brine is
Inc., producer of Ohio River ready for the formation of the .
Salt since 1660, is the last salt.
manual salt plant left in the This saturated brine goes to
United State~ .
an open grainer and forms flaky
The natural brine used in grains on the surface and settles
making the Excelsior salt is to l)le bottom, where the salt
found 1,200 feet underground. grains are picked up by
The brine is pumped to the automatic rakes and deposited
surface at a rate of 140. gallons in draining bins. The salt is held
per minute and is stored in a in the draining bins for 24 hours
tank with a capacity of 60,000 and then conveyed to the
gallons.
warehouse, where it is packed
The brine is then passed into paper bags for shipment.
through a pre-heater, a large Some interesting facts about
vat with low pressure steam the Excelsior Salt Works are as
pipes in it, where the brine is follows : 30 tons of coal are used
heated to a low temperature. daily, 20 to 25 tons of salt are
Next, the brine goes to an made each day, and the only
evaporator over a hand-fired automation in the plant is in the
coal furnace , where it is boiled, use of pumps and rakes.
beginning the process of Tours of the plant are
by available at any lime. I perremoving
water
evaporation.
sonally suggest going on a tour
Now the hot brine passes ·of the Sa't Works, for it is
through a filtering vat where refreshing to see that in this
iron is settled out. Then the \j'orld of automation, there is a
brine is conducted to a draw vat place for the old methods of
and held for further evaporation production.

II II I I I I I I I 0 I

BIKE

Buy Your" Fertilizer
From The Largest
Dealer In The Area.

United States, as his subject.
II follows:

with any other 3-plow

'

NEEDS APPROVAL
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The .
U. S. Senate was to act upon the
~ r es id e ntial appointment of
William N. Letson, Warren,
Ohio, as chief legal officer lor
the U. S. -Department of
Commerce. Letson , 41 , a
graduate of Harvard University, has served with a Warren
law firm since 1961

OIDO POWER CO. forester, Joe Pyatt (left) and Walter D. .Smith, the company'S
reclamation supervisor, discuss tbe 1971 tree planting program while standing in the midst of
an area planted in 1962. Each of the men is holding a pine seedling being planted this year .
Pines and other trees in the background indicate the growth which can be realized in a
relatively short period of time through planned planting programs.

900 Ohio Acres Bumed

*

FE R:tl'L·IZE R
NOWl

SPECIAL DUTY OVEN
· GAYTON , England (UP!) Iref\e ·Hodson said she has
tempora r ily di sco ntinued
cooking meals in her oyen while
she uses it as an incubator for
four puppies born two weeks
prematurely.

week this year - 61.7. Last year
- 62.7.
Average low temperature for · ·
week this year - 30.8. Last year
- 36.5.
•
·
Total precipitation for week
this year - .15 inch. Last year
- .16 inch.
Total precipitation to date
this year - 6.94 inches. Last
year - 9.98 inches.
Normal averagepr•cipitation
annually - 40.99 inches.
·

Last Manual Salt Plant in Pomeroy
Ed. Note: Edward Sayre, a
·Student at Rio Grande
College, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Sayre, Rio Grande,
received top marks for a
recent paper on the
manufacture of salt. He
selected the Excelsior Salt
Works of Pomeroy, the last
"manual'' salt plant in the

THIS
SUPER
'TRAIL

J.D. NORTH PRODUCE co~

The wooded areas already
fully grown are attracting
nationwide attention, Mr. Smith
said. The company · has
established 14 camping areas
which are available· to the
public free of charge. A permit,
available from any Ohio Power
office or · from the Ohio
Department of
Natural
Resources, is required, as is an
Ohio fishing license if people
care to fish in any of the. 300
stocked lakes. ·
Mr. Smith said that 54,000
people registered at the
parksites in 1970. Total
registrations since 1964, when
the. first parksite opened, now
amounts to about 236,250.
People have registered from
ail 50 states and 17 foreign
countries, the reclamation
supervisor said.
· Texas, Hawaii and Vermont were once independent
republics.

,,

DON'T WAIT

areas.

The best time
to buy a
Wheel Horse is
. NOW
during Wheel
and Deal
Days

Tuppers Plains
Society News

•

GALLIPOLIS
Ternperature , precipitation, and
weather conditions for each 24
hour period as recorded by Pete
McCormick, Fairfield Weather
Observer :
Day
High Low Prec.
Sunday
63 · 26
Monday
61
33
TUesday
51
40
.08.
Wednesday
61
25
.07
Thursday
70 30
Friday
. 79 · 31
Saturday
50 31
Average high temperature for

of land in those ..four counties
since the planUng program
!Jegan in 1945, An estimated 75
per cent of all the seedlings
planted grow to maturity,
resulting in heavily wooded

+++++

*

•

some 1,500 acres of land.
"The underlying factors in
Ohio Power Co.'s post-surface
mining ·operations," Mr. Smith
said, "are a since~e belief in the
need .for reclamation ami a
dedication tO the philosophy of
making the land useful and
productive."
The seedlings being planted
this month will grow into large
hardwood llf!d softwood trees
within 10 to 20 years. Additional
groundcoyer, in the form of
grasses and berries, accompany the forest growth.
By the end of April, the company will have planted 30.4million seedlings on 28,000 acres

WBIIL

LOOSE NOTES - The Rio Grande College Redmen Boosters
~nment will he in·charge of the 1970-71 All-Sports Banquet on Ma
. y 9 accordmg ·to Dr. James L. Datley. Guest speaker will . ~ sports
·
essayist Heywood Hale Broun. Area horse racing fans viewing the
public for camping and recreation purposes soon Kentucky Derby on TV on May 1 will get an idea of what to expect
after the first of May.
· when the nationally-famous Broun appears at Rio next month. He
will be the color man for the big derby event on CBS-TV .... Robert
DENVER YOHO OF SCS made detailed (Bob) Wagner, former GAHS assistant football coach and head
engineering designs for tile drains on Herbert track coach has applied for the head football job at Athens Hjgh
Henderson farm at Henderson and the Deibert School. "Wags" guided the 1970 GAHS thincladito a 42-lseason
Newberry farm near White Church. The Hen- record and the SEOAL championship. He is a graduate of Witderson tile will be an extension of an existing tenberg University, and is presently working towards his Masters
system which was begun some years ago. It is a Degree at Ohio University. Don Eskey, who chached Athens from
4-inch tile but will carry· the water to a 10-inch 1957 through 1970, announced his resignation last month ....
main. The soil is Lindside Silt Loam.
Barney Adams, before entering the hospital last Monday, said
The Newberry tile will be installed in area scouts should take up ·a project collecting old throw-away
Monongahela Silt Loam and the cause of this wet bo!Ues, newspapers and tin cans. He said scouts in neighboring
area is several water seeps along the side of the West Virginia did this, and not only cleaned up the countryside,
slope. Care was taken in locating this tile so that but made a profit as well. Sounds like a good idea. Maybe this
it would be higher on the slope than where the could be tied in with the county-wide Project Pride which got
waterappearedatthesurfaceoftheground.Itis underway in Gallia last Monday .... Glen Trout, former GAHS
planned that the tile will be put at such a depth football coach, is a candida"te for the head coaching job at Naples
that the water can be intercepted before it HighSchool in Florida .... Trout, whocoachedatGAHS in 1967 and ,.
breaks to the surface.
1968, is presently an assistant coach at Naples ... Gallia's Tom
We were glad recently to see John Collins of gpencer, who played in several pre-season exhibition games for
Pt.Pieasant,whoownsseveralfarmsaroundthe the Cincinnati Reds, is pictured on page 54 of .the Reds' 1971
county. Mr. Collins has recently returned from Yearbook, now available at Gillingham's Drug Store in the Old
an extended ocean voyage which took him and French City. Tommy, after coming down with the flu two weeks
Mrs. Collins around South Africa and up on the ago and a sore throat last week, is scheduled to report to Three
east side of Africa to Madagascar. Mr. Collins Rivers, Canada in the Double AA League this week. The GAHS
stopped at our office for the purpose of checking graduate hopes to play Triple A ball at Indianapolis before the
some soil on his farm at Southside.
1971 campaign Climes to an end.

Meigs 4-H Notes and News

Weather Roundup ·

Qn OPCO. Coal Lands

DR. C. H. INGRAHAM
Clyde B. Walker, manager of
Nowlin. Mr. Melven is the state recreation and
the Gallipolis FLBA, will will
wildlife specialist for SCS and Mr. Breiding is the
serve as master of ceremonies. Meriett Sanders and his specialist in the same field with WVU. The group
Entertainment . will be by grandson, Terry Sanders.
looked a this project and pointed out to him some
things that are necessruj for a successful
recreation facility .
Mr. Nowlin is now drilling a well, clearing
trees along the secondary road approach to the
site as well as doing a lot of grading work on the
secondary road. He has made some approached
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Se- sioner Sidney P. Marland said. made to also tailor it for seven to camp sites whlch will be located in wooded
same Street, the widely ac- Sesame Street also is supported to 10-year·olds with reading areas adjacent to the road.
daimed educational television by private foundations and difficulties.
He plans to build a pond about an acre and a
"Our experience with Sesame
program for pre-school child- other government agencies.
half in size and 14 feet deep across the head of
ren, will be expanded to include
"We pian to extend this kind Sb·eet," said Marland, "has Hughes Branch of Eighteen Mile Creek, which is
)earning programs for adults , of programming to cove&lt; other given us a provocative view of
JOHN DALTON OF Ohio Eighteen Mile
!pealed at the back end of his property.
Federal Land Bank New~
!!he U.S Offi~ • of,:·Educatjon ·· Priqr~llfW"e~s ·high on DE's the great potential that educaCreek
a'nd
Darrell
Hoffman
of
Letart
are
scs·technician
did
the
design
work
for
this
announced Saturday.
agend;f.,areas such as the Right tional television holds for our
planning to plant sorne trees for erosion control
The - education office will to Read, career education and society, and we would like to pond last fall and construction was started, but it and beautification. Denver Yoho of SCS and
increase its financing of the environmentaieducation,'' Mar. expand our engagement with became too wet to follow through. He plans to Johnny Looney of the W. Va. Department of
the new kind of programming." finish this pond as soon as the site dries up
program from $2 million to $7 land said in a statement.
Natural Resources helped them plan these
million a year to facilitate the
Right to Read is a govern- Marland said the decision to enough to permit equipment to work. Mr. Nowlin
expansion , Education Commis- ment project to improve expand Seasame Street was said that he hopes to have this facility open to the plantings.
reached at a meeting of federal
literacy.
Sesame Street, broadcast on educational officials, represen·
sPECIAL EDITION
some 200 television stations, tatives of the Children's Television
Workshop,
which
produces
most of them non-commercial,
VOL. 16, No. 21
NEW ENGINEER
the
show,
and
financing
organireaches some seven million
HUNTINGTON
Col. children. The program empha- zations.
POMEROY - The Green and whether or not to buy flags wi th II members present.
Kenneth E. Mcintyre will sizes early childhood learning
Hornets 4-H Club met on March for the club. Sherry Epple was The group discussed program
become District Engineer for such as i!lphabet recognition,
23 at the home of Charlotte in charge of recreation . planning and how to help with
the Army Corps of Engineers at counting and deportment.
Some
Cereal
may
Peckham, with Mrs. Rife, Refreshments of cherry Kooi- the Project Plan-O-Ram a.
Huntington, West Virginia,
It has proved so popular with
LOUISVILLE, KY. • FLS •
advisor . The group decided to Aid, cookies and potato chips Sherry Epple was in charge of
early in September. He will educators, children and parents Have Glass in it
recreation.
The
group
played
Due to more favorable eco
do something to make Rutland were served by the Epples .
Ri&amp;ht now - you too ca n
succeed ~olonel Maurice D. - although a few child experts
nomic condi iiOM. the inter
the
mimic
game
and
crazy
take advantage of th is n1w
The U. S. Food and Drug more attractive and to make a The second meeting was on
est on new Federa l la nd
Roush, District Engineer since say its value has not been
lower intuut ra te to purchue
Bank Loans has beera low·
1968, who is being reassigned to proven- that plans are being Administration has notified the list of safety rules by the next April 1 at the home of Mr. and questions and answers. Nancy
land; or make those farm im·
ered 11nd over 4.000 e•isl ·
1ng l oan ~ h ~ v e had th ei r
Consumer Protection Division meeting. The members also Mrs. Gocdon Ridenour, also Ridenour served refreshments.
provemenh you 'vt been need·
Okinawa.
inter est lowere d vo ll.mtar l·
ina. You ue, when you do busi·
Tammy
Fitch.
that two lots of "Farina Cereal" plan lo take a hike to explore the
ly to l he new lowe r rate.
nen with the Federal land Bank
Just anot her of lhe many
manufactured by the Pillsbury outdoors.
you nenr lose. Call your IO&lt;:al
benelils ol a Fed eral l and
Company, Minneapolis, Min- . Jeff Peckham was in charge
Manaaer ri&amp;ht away!
Ban k Loan.
Athens were Sunday guests of
nesota, At its Springfield, of recreation and Charlotte
his mother, Mrs. Effie Watson.
Illinois plant, and distributed Peckham served refreshments.
Mr. and Mrs. John Hayes of
nationally may contain gla,ss The nex.t meeting will be held on
Chester were Sunday guests of
Oyde B. Walker,
particles and should not be April 17 at Mrs. Rife's .when
Mr. and Mrs. Fon Halsey .
used . The contaminated they pian to talk about safety
By Mrs. Evelyn Brickles
Manager
Mrs. Maud Seals returned to
product, FDA said, can be rules and their first lesson. Attendance at the United her home here after spending ·
identified by the codes Kim Dewhurst, Reporter.
Methodist Sunday School last the winter with relatives. MrSf
"KOW23" or "KOW24" im- The Pine Grove Pals 4-H Club week was 67. Offering was Seals and Mrs. Lola Griffin
19 locust St. Phone 446.0203
printed on the top or bottom of has held two meetings recentiy. $18.73. Worship attendance was called on Mr. and Mrs. Jessie
Gallipolis, Ohio
the cereal cartons.
The first was on March 25 at the 33 with an offering of $62.74.
Newell one day.
home of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Watson
d"ff
b tw
Epple with II members present. and his brother; Ray, spent a
0 1
rub~ ~nd ;r;~~~hi;e i~e~h~ The group discussed lvhat to weekend with their mother, Mr.
·- ·'
color, · which is caused by name thetr club, how much to and Mrs. Ralph Brooks of North
. ' J I? .
impurities.
pay for dues, elected officers, Carolina .
lt '
Mrs. David · Riggs and two
children of Vienna, W.Va. were
'·
Wednesday dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Oscar Babcock.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Be !zing
were Sunday dinner guests of
With the purchase of any model DAVID
Mrs. Mabel Swariz.
Mrs. H. T. Dotson returned to
BROWN tractor from 31l to 72 horsepower.
her home bere after spending
Diesel or Gasoline - Mar. 1S to Apr. 30·
.the winter at Parkersburg with
her sister, Mrs. Louise Roach.
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Biram and·
family, Kenneth Biram, of
Light-weight (90 pounds) but
•
super-power
- 4-hp, 4-cycle. A
Parkersburg, George Sellers,
hard-charging on-road, · off.road
Mr. and Mrs. Sammy Rardin of
workmate or playmate.
Long Botiom, Mr. and MfS. Ray'
Justis, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Brown, local, Mr. and Mrs.
T~e famous rugged-powerNow Purina Ch;ck Startena helps sa ve about one cent pei ·
David
Riggs
and
.
children
of
economy giant
with
ch;ck 'in grow ;ng costs. Thanks to Punna 's cont;nu ing
Vienna
,
W.
Va
.,
all
were
recent
Selectamatic.
.
.
leadersh;p ;n pou ltry re sea rch and to Punna's new Least ·
guests of Mr. and Mrs . Oscar
S{\ VE UP TO S1.000 ON
Cost Pe rf orman ~e formul a!lon program . Take advantage
Babcock,
·COMPARABLE
of th is sav;ngs opportwnlly. Drop·;n and pic k up a supply'
Mr. and Mrs . William
COMPETITIVE
of P.unna Ch;ck Stortena . Get ch;cks olf to a safe start and
Frecker of Minersville, Mr. and
MODELS!
keep ·em gro,;ng fast on Pu nna Poultry Chows.
Mrs. Wateman White of Keno
spent a recent day here with
Time is limited - this offer good from
Mr. and Mrs. Jessie Newell.
Mr: and Mrs . Clair Newell of
March IS to April 30 only nt participating
now.
Columbus,
Mr. and Mrs. Hobert
B1,1lk
.
all
available
B;ag or
dealers. Also •. limited supply of Tn1~l Bikes.
Newell of Chester, Mr. and Mrs.
At
I·
..
Wateman White of Keno were·
Com~ in and get details NOW!
here for the funeral of Turner
GaiUpolis, 0.
Vine St
'
Newland. They laJso · visited
.
their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Jessie NewelL Turner Newland
"(M fOODI'OWEtfPtoplt
w~s a brother o( Mrs. Jessie
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Newell. .
1 •
. Ph. 446-0523
·Gallipolis, Ohio
Rt. 1 (Upper Rt.7)
Mr. and Mrs·. Harold Wataon
'·
and son Mike and girl friend of·

Sesame St. Growing Up

·· \

Tr~es Being Planted

April Busy ·Time or Homemakers
BY C. E. BLAKESLEE
Ext. Agent, Agriculture
POMEROY - April is t})e
month of ga~den planting which
is a part of the"multitude of
othet. outside activities around
ihe home. The oldlimers, of
course, say they planted their

.

I

E. l1l1 St.

992· 2111

POMEROYI OHIO

�·.
_,

•
l

:111-TbeSUnday Tlmei-SenUnel,SUnday , April 11,1971

21-The SundayTlmei - Sehtinel,Sunday, Aprilll,l971.

..._

F~d lt~ms

Yanks.B lank Indians Outlast Bosox 11-10
.Sens, 8-0

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Larry hours, rune minutes, included 20 times in the second on Duane
Brown drove in five runs and hits, IOpitchers, 19 walks and 14 Josephson's run-~JCoring single
Ray Fosse belted his nrst home strikeouts.
and Luis Aparicio's second
_~ run of the season Saturday to
career grand slam homer.
pace the Cleveland Indians to
After Fosse put Cleveland Browndroveinhisrtrstrunas
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Mel first game of the season, moved an 11-10 victory over the Boston ahead with a two-run homer in the Indians tied the score with
Stottlemyre demonstrated his m front w1th a first inning run Red Sox.
the first inning, the Red Sox three runs in the second inning,
mastery against Washington when Horace Clarke drew a
The game, which lasted three boiinced back to score five and he put Cleveland ahead
again Saturday by pttching the leadoff walk, went to lhtrd on
'
New York Yankees to a three- Ron Woods' single and scored
htt 6-0 victory over the Senators. a~ Thurman Munson grounded
Stottlemyre, whose lifellme into a double play.
record against Washington is 21
Smgles by Danny Cater, John
wins and nine losses, also drove Ellis, Gene Michael and Swt.
m a run with a single to help his tlemyre produced two more
PHILADELPHIA (UP!)- A today. The Phlls won, 4·1.
Montreal Expos.
cause.
New York runs 10 the fourth
brave
Manne,
a
courageous
Manne
Cp
l.
Frank
But it took a lot of courage on
The Yankees, winning their mmng off Jun Shellenback.
The Yankees added two more catc her and an old pro Mastrogiovanni, who lost both the part of Phils' catcher Mike
runs in the eighth inmng Cal!!r h1ghhghted the cerem,mes as legs m Vietnam last January, Ryan for him to get the ball
swgled and scored from first the ma jor leag ues' newest threw out the first ball for the The bali MastrogiOvanni used
between
the was dropped to Ryan, watting at
when Jerry Kenney's smgle ballpark, the $45 m11l1on waugural
Veterans
Stadium,
opened
here
Phtladelphla
Phtllies
and
the seco~d base, from a hehcopter
went through centerftelder Curt
Flood for a two-base error
Bobby Murcer doubl ed m
Kenney.
MONTE CARLO, Monaco
Woods walked and scored on
(UPI)- Tom Okker of Holland Roy Whtte's double in the mnth
CHICAGO (UP!) - Tony a two-run fifth inning for the and scored on Rick ReiGba~dt's
.and Ilie Nastase of Romania w complete New York's 13-hit
Oliva and Paul Powell, with his Twins and Powell's drive on the double. Lee Richard tripled in
Saturday reached the final of attack .
The only htls Stoltlemyre ftrst major league hit, slammed eighth off reliever Don Eddy the fifth and scored Chicago's
the men's singles in the Monte
final run on Mike Andrews'
Carlo Open tennis tournament. allowed were a pair of smgles to home runs Saturday to power furnished an insurance run.
Nastase used the slow court to Mike Epstein and a double by the Minnesota Twins to a 1&gt;-3 Earlier in the fifth Cesar
v1ctory over the Chicago White Tovar put the Twins ahead to
its full advantage to defeat Joe Foy
Sox, which hauled the. White Sox stay 3-2 when he singled, stole
hard-serving British pro Roger
their first loss after three second , advanced on Rod
Taylor 2-6, 7..1, 6-1, 6-1.
VIctories.
Carew's outfield fly an&lt;\ scored
Okker, the pre-tournament
Oliva's homer off starter and on John's wild pitch.
favorite, also took four sets to
down Nastase's fellow counEarly Wednesday
loser Tommy John wrapped up The Twins got two runs, ouly
...
Mixed League
one of them earned, in the thtrd
.. yman, Ion Tiriac, 6-4, IHJ, 4-6,
March 24, 1971
American League Standings
when winning pitcher Jim
IHJ.
Won Lost
OHIOANS HONORED
By
United Press International
Taylor started well and his Zlde's Sport Shop
88 24
NEW YORK (UP!) - Ohio Perry singled, reached third on
I Easfl
Porter-Sm ith
61 51
powerful service never allowed Ashland 011
s9 s3 placed three players on the All- Carew 's double and after
W. L. Pet. GB
Killebrew
walked,
both
Ball1mare
Harmon
Nast.ase to find his rhythm in Lou's Ashland
52 60 American
3 0 1.000
high
school
2 I .667 I
the first set. But Nastase Oller's Sohlo
42 70 basketball team selected by Perry and Carew scored on Cleveland
Washington
2
2 .500 Ph
h · th f
th
. ' Nelson's Druq
34 78
Carlos May's throwing error New York
sthowmg ' etitlormt at wbonNhlm . High Ind. Game - Russ Scholasbc Magazine.
I 2 333 2
e mens e a near y tee ' Carson 230 and Wanda Queen
123332
They are Ed Stahl of Walnut trying for a force out at the Detro of
Boston
123332
last week, took control over 194; High Series - Bill Porter Ridge in Columbus; Joe Fisher plate .
I
West
I
Taylor who appeared tired 566 an~ Wanda Queen 509 . of Urna Cen Ira! Catholic and
Ed Herrmann homered in the
'
Team H1gh Game and Series W. L. Pet. GB
after last week 's World Nelson's Drugs 741 and 2040
3 1 750
Kevm Grevey of Hamtlton Taft. third for Chicago's first run and Ch icago
2 1 667
112
Champion tournament at
in the fourth Bill Melton tripled Milwaukee
Mmnesota
2
2
500
1
Miami, Fla.
Kansas Coly
2 3 400 p;,
Tiriac, Nastase's Davts Cup
Oakland
2 3 .400 'I'
California
I 3 .250 2
teanunate, got off to a good
Saturday
's
Results
start against Okker, breaking
Oakland 5 Kansas Coty 4
through in the first set to lead 4· •
Molwa ukee 4 C.loforn1a 3
Mo
nnesota 5 Ch1 cago 3
3. But Okker immediately broke
BALTIMORE (UP!) - Dave Robmson. Detro1t Manager on a single by Dtek McAuhffe
Cleveland
11 Boston 10
back and then served up two Johnson, who drove in four runs Bllly Marlin elected to slay wtth and went to thtrd when right·
Baltimore 2 Detro•! I
quick aces to seal the set 6-4.
Fnday night to spark Baltimore Lohch and Johnson rapped a 2·1 fielder Frank Robinson bobbled New York 6 Washington 0
Okker swept the following set to a vtctory over Detroit pitch rightfield for a single.
Sunday's Games
McAuhffe's hit for an error.
.
'
All Times EST
at Love, but Tiriac bounced smgled home Frank Robmson
Jim Palmer went the route Bnnkman scored as Wtlhe Kan sas Coty at Oakland. 4. 30
back in the third with fine with two out in the mnth mning for Balllmore, allowmg seven Horton h1t inw a force out.
pm
baseline play.
Cal1forn1a
at Molwaukee, 2:30
Saturday to give the Orioles a 2· htls and strandng nine runners. The Onoles lied it in thetr half
pm.
But then the Dutchman I trmmph over the Tigers.
Lohch allowed SIX hils and 1s of the third mning when Andy Monnesota at Chocago, 2 15 p.m.
decided to apply the pressure
Frank Robinson singled w1th now 1·1.
E tchebarren walked, took Boston at Cleveland, 1· 30 p m
and rushing the net whenever one out in the mnth off loser
The Tigers gave Lolich a 1.0 second on Palmer's sacnfice Detroit at Baltimore, (2) 2 p m
possible, finished off the final Mickey Lolich and took third on lead m the third mning. Ed bunt and scored on Merv New York at Washington (2)
I 30 p m.
~6-0
a two'out smgle by Brooks Bnnkman walked, took second Retlenmund's smgle.
ij 41(0
Monday's Games
Monnesota at Kansas Coly, night

•
WE WISH to thank all our SLEEPING ROOMS, ,weekly
friends for their prayers, rates. Park ~entral Hot~·)!
cards, flowers, visits and .
thoughtfulness during the
1iiness of Edward Lynch and "S LEEPING - ROOMS weeki)
Earl Sayre at Hol zer Medical r.tes. free garage parking,
Center. ill so thanks to Waugh Libby Hotel.
. Halley . Wood for ambulance
service, sheriff's departmenl
and city pollee . Special
!hanks to Dr . Harder, Dr Real Estate For Sale
Somon, Dr . Vallee, and Dr.
Berkich and all nurses and
a1des on Second floor for the ir
kindness and

Philadelphia Dedicates New Stadium

Advance

To Finals

hovering in 21 mph winds, some
130 feet over the mfield.
After Ryan made his per1Ious
ca tch and Mastrogiovanni
made the formal opening toss,
Jtm Bunmng, the Phtlhes'
oldest player, took the mound to

H,omers Power Twins To 5-3

Triu~ph

sacrifice fly.
Perry worked six innings and
got his first win as Stan
Williams worked the final tllree

Local Bowling

Orioles Remain Unbeaten

"1

start play at the etght-sided two.
bered stadium that was 18
years in the planning and
making.
Bowie Kuhn, baseball com.
mtssioner, Bob Carpenter ,
owner of the Ph~hes and C1ty

&lt;Jakland at Milwaukee
California at Chicago
Boston at Washington, mght
(Only games scheduled)

frames for his first save. John
lasted seven innings and the
defeat gave him a 1·1 season

mark.

PETERSON NAMED MVP
LOS ANGELES I UPI)- Hir·
am Peterson , who averaged
12 points and 10 rebounds per
game, has been named Pepperdin e
College's
Most
Valuable Basketball Player for
the 197().71 season.

-WOULD
- --like to thank the

Council Prestdent Paul D'Orton a made bnef opening
remarks
in
pre-game

1

many churches, the prayers
of all the good people, the
Holzer Hosp1lal sta ff, the
doctors and the nurses; the
ones that came so far and

cer~momes .

GRAY NAMED COACH
KENT, , Oh10 .( UPI )- Ron
Gray , former All Amenca and
B1g Etght wrestling champ at
Iowa state, Frtday was named
head wresthng coach at Kent
State Umverstty, succeedmg
Joe Begala.

SALE

E

Business Opportunities

PANELING
REGULAR
PRICE

CLOSE OUT

PACEMAKER LIGHT

SPECIALS

3.59

1

'6.95

CLOSE
OUT
PRICE

SERVICE station for lease.
Paid tra ining program .
Contaci ' Bob Myers, 446-1085
58-If

IN •
STOCK

Help Wanted

'5.69

WANTED for downtown offiCe.
Mature , exec utive type
secretary. Must · take dictation and have general office

4.95

1

CHERRY PLANK
LODGEWOOD YOSEMITE
HERITAGE BIRCH
HONEY BIRCH
NEW YORK BIRCH

knowledge. Annual vacation

4.59

4:5·9

~.59

5

SPUN GOLD DECORATIV-.E-.....~'lnr0.95

~.69

'6.39
'6.95

7.95

1

REGULAR
PRICE

••••••••••••••••••••••••

CARRY
..

15,95
15.95
15.95

WANTED future executives.
Men over 21, high school

Stop
In and Register
I
For Door Prize.

1st PRIZE
10 Pes. Paneling

education~

excellent company
benefits , insurance, profit

shanng and vacations . Apply
in person . Credit Thrift of
America, 300 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis.
64·26

Value

52.50

SPR lNG fever? Gel more out of
life be an Avon
Representative. Turn extra
· hours Into extra cash. It's fun

2nd PRICE
!-Aluminum Storm Door (any size) 127.95
or
2-Aiuminum Storm Windows
'27.95
3rd PRIZE No Purchase
$9.95

I

and easy ; no experience

•'

i necessary. Write or call

Mrs.
Helen Yea9er, BOJ&lt; 172,
Jackson, Oh1o. Ph. 286-4028.

80·6

Necessary to Register

••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••
4x8 .SHALE WHITE
19.95
ROUGH SAWN

EVANS
PANEL CARE
WITH
LEMON OIL
t
REGUlAR 11.95

Carter &amp; Evans, a name familier to all, 15 yr.,:;. experience in the building
business, Stop at 87 Olive Street,
friendly ones will Wl!lcome you .

'

wigs. No ter ritory reslpoC·
lions . Advertised nalionally
on " Bewitched." C. II 446 4959
or Mary Tomlin, Portsmo.ulh
353-4254.
85-6

•

SPECIAL $1.49

CASH
&amp;
CARRY

.

I

TO

· SATURDAY J1A.M. ro 4 P~M.

'

80·6

•

.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO....
'

PHONE 446-4905

FlNALL'YI!
YOU CAN train for a better fOb
in the comfort of ·your home.
Become a COMPUTER
PROGRAMMER or learn
DRAFTING while you keep
your present job. No down
payment required - com·
plete government finan cing veteran approved. For a
betler future write P. 0 . Box
977, Huntington, W. Va . 25713.
Include age and phone
number.

\

CAR.TER AND EVANS-I-NC.· BUILDING' SUPPLI·ES
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 7 A.M. 5 P.M. ·

87 OLIVE STREET
'

SALE
PRICE

~.95
I

----SELL Luzier Cosmetics and

on enamel finish

MASONITE HARDBOARD PANELI

·cASH
&amp;'

and sick le ave. Salary
com mens urate with experience and ability. Send
resumes to Box 177, C·O The
Gallirolis Daily Tribune. An
equa opportunity employer.
85·1

1

. I

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

Dillon
Agency
'

Is both the name of a TV show
and a firm rule of our
business. We prefer t6 tell you
lhe WHOLE story on any

Oft, 446-3643

USSElL WOOD
REALTOR

Hobart Dillon, Realtor
Office 446·2674
Howard or Lucille Brilllnon
Evenings 446·1226
Robert co""ndee, 446~tNoi&lt;A

Services Offered

•
'

To Tell The Truth ....

TV"Anlenna Sa les lnstallalion &amp;
Service Estimates Ph 446·
1673 or 446-9679
63-tt
•

446-3796

446 4500

YOU'L L BE SURP RISED
BY THI S ONE VERY NICE
KITCHEN , CARPETED
LIVING
ROOM
AND
FAM ILY ROOM , 3 NICE
SIZED BEDROOMS ON
LARGE DEEP LOT IN
TOWN, FULL PRI CE
$14,500

$11,000 3 Bedroom
With River View

Two story home located at
No. 144 Mulberry 51. in
Pomeroy, high above flood
waters, bea ull ful kitchen
includong two ovens, dish
washer, refrtgerator, range

top, double sink all in cop·
per tone,

large dining , and

'Saunders
•.• Evans
Insurance Inc.

We know a modern nu sband who wa s disappointed when

hi s wife gave birth to a daughter, he was hopong for a boy
,.to help him with the housework
It's tome again to fill out those 1ncome lax blank ely-blanks

+

· Modern Home 3 A.
UNBELIEVEABLE,
3
BEDROOM HOME WITH
FIREPLACE IN .LARGE
LIVING ROOM - NI CE
KITCHEN, BATH AND
MODERN
FURNACE ,
18.500.
Building Lots- For
Homes
Mobile Homes &amp;
Business
THIS LAR GE LOT COULD
BE USE D FOR 4 MOBILE
HOME S OR TWO HOME
SITES , CITY WATER,
SC HOOL S, NAT
GAS ,
AVAILABLE ON RT 141 AT
EDGE OF TOWN .
2 LARGE BUILDING LOTS
IN SPRING VALLEY . BUY
THEM BOTH FOR $6,00000
WE HAVE TWO OF THE
MO ST BEAUTIFUL HOME
SITES IN THE COUNTY
1'1• ACRE EACH WITH
VIRGIN
TIMBER
COVERING BOTH . EX ·
CELLENT
NEIGH
BORHOOD
WATER
AVAIL 3MILE FROM NEW
HOSPITAL
IN
CITY
SC HOOL OIST
Hardware Store Doing
Very Good Business
OWNER
WILL
SELL
ESTABLISHED
HARD ·
WARE STORE AT THE
INVENTORY PRICE . BE
YOUR OWN BOSS AND
MAKE A GOOD LIVING
TOO

We Sold8
Homes and Farms
For Rent
IN LAST 2 WEEKS AND
FURN . apt., 2 rooms'and bath, NEED
YO~R PROPERTY
ulilities paid, adults only . Ph
TO SELL WE HAVE
446-3748 or 256·6903.
BUYER S READY TO BUY
85-3 RIGHT NOW SO IF YOU
WANT YOURS SOLD CALL
MOBILE home, 2 bedrooms.' THE SELLINGEST OF ·
located next door to Gallipolis FICE IN TOWN . '
Auto Auction. Ph. 446-3776 or,
We Need Large
446·1S76.
85·3
&amp; Small Farms Any
Place· in the County.
FURNISHED apartment.
Inquire at 631 Fourlh Ave.
~~~~"~G REAT NEED FOR
BS·lf
NT '"L PROP .

thos one immediately tor quick sa le Proce $14,000.

been remodeled, alummum
Siding, storm windows and

Cement block dwelling on approximately 2 acres of
ground. Across from Green Gables on Route 7. For

doors, 2 n1 ce porches . You'll
agree it's priced way way low
at $18,500.

commercial purposes. Call for more information .

OFF lC E 446·1066
Evenings Call Ron Canaday 446-3636
Or John l. Richards 446·0280
Russell D. Wood446-4618

Both Town &amp; Country!
Yes, you can have your cake
and eat It too! 8112 acres, 5

miles from new hospital on
8 T. road, 8 room s all on one

floor, a dream kitchen, 4 BR ,
part basement, gas for ced air

R~ltor, 32 State St

Tel. 446-1998

water line

High up on a hill, 2 acres of good
land,

m obile

home com-

bmat1on 18'x39' , 2 BR, cellar
house, workshop , small barn,

pl enty wa ler, fru ol lrees,

owner movmg to Fl orida . A
real retirement home, pn ce
$3,900

Why Pay Rent?
Here's a large two story home
on First Ave. with a great
view of the nver. Live 1n one

110 Acres
needs some repair , gas wel L

free gas In home. good fence,
some timber Located 3 miles

from Rl. 7.

31 Acres
Located near Cr own City, ll/2

story 3 BR home, 2 Cisterns.
fair fence . Price $9,500.

2 Extra Good
3 BR homes located in the
village of Crown City on large
lots. These homes are in extra
good condition, one home is

carpeled throughou t and has
baseme~t . Priced SIO,SOO ·and
$12,000.

Without A Doubt ...
This is the most beaul1ful
campsite in Southern Ohio,
located 8 mi . from Gallipolos,
one mile from Ohi o River on

Bidwell

Spring Special
Three bedroom one floor plan
home, nice kitchen with
d1ning area, gas forced air
well, new water line across

lot, located on BT road 4 mile
from cily . Price $12,000.

Assure Yourself
Of Positive Results
Buying or Selling
See Di lion Agency

0. D. PARSONS
JAY SHEPPARD
REALTORS

Farm, VIllage, Cily Property
First &amp; Olive
Phone 446·11219

Spring Valley
Exciting
TRI -LEVEL . Brick and red·
wood with 3 bedrooms· and
two baths. Living room and
•dining room carpeted . Large
eat-in kitchen with stainless
steel buill-in range, oven and
dishwasher. Family room
with large stone fireplace.
Laundry

room .

Two -c ar

garage . Call for an ap .
pointment to Inspect.

Kanauga
NEARLy"new 3 bedroom home
in Kanauga . Large kitchendining area. Bath. Garage.
&lt;Jak floors .

VACANT LAND

48 ACRES located near VInton .

A good place for a mobile
home. $3,000.

FARM
91 AC~ ES located near Mudsoc.
5 acres corn base., .58 acre
tobacco base, J"'room house

with running water . Can be
bought with or without farm
machinery .
'
Otlice
Phone 446·1694
Evenings
Charles M. Neal. 446·1546 ·
J. Michael Neal, 446·1503

84-lf

FORD dump truck
Ph 446·3838

81 -6

Ph. 388-8713

-·.

NEW LISTING
NICE 2 slory home 1n country
wi th 7 rooms and bath, 2 car
garage, 3 large lots and water
·
lap paid
LOW TAX DISTRICT
2 HOMES for $13,000 total. One
modern 3 bedroom home in

good condition and I older
home m need ol some repair .
Buy one or both.
.
CHANCE OF A LIFETIME
CLARK Chapel acres - 75 acre
resort

matena ls, block, bn ck, sewer

pipes, wmdows, lintels, etc.
Claude Win ters, Rio Grande,
0 . Ph. 245-5121 after s.
91 -tf

FLOOR COVERING BY
ARMSTRONG

USE D
Mobil e
Home
Headqua rters. All SIZe mobile
homes on stock. B &amp; S Mobile
Home Sales, Second &amp; Viand,
Pl. Pleasant, ne xt to Heck's.
67-tf

CORNELL, MONTINA,
CASTILEAN

'5 to '8.25 Sq. Yd.
FLOOR COVERING BY
CONGOLEUM
13.95 to '5 Sq. Yd.
CERAMIC TILE
11.40 Sq. Ft

IF YOU are building a new
home cr remodeling, see us.
We are buliders. Distributor
for Holpoi nl Appl iances,
Allison Eteclrlc.
154·11
1969 PLYMOUTH Roadrunner,
V-8 auto ' p s.. fa ctory stereo
tape syslem, Keystone Mags,

INSTALLING INCLUDED
FREE ESTIMATE

vi nyl top , excel. cond Must

see to appreciate Ph 446-2949
a fter 5 p m.

Phone Ashworth
446-9368

BJ.6

and ca mping area .

Space for 60 campers, 9lf2
acre lake for pay fishing and
swimmmg . Snack bar with
equipment, garage apt., 12 X
60 houselra1ler, 2 publi c
shower houses, laund ., truck ,

DEAD STOC~
$5.00 Service Char~e
Will remove Jour d ad
horse an cows
Call',lackson 286-4531

tractor and equipment ,
several boats and pic ni c
tables, ouldoor dancing area
Idea l Investment for cou ple.
L. E PENCE Masonry Repa ir,
FARMS
sand blasting , tuck pointing,
41 A. Springfield Twp.
caulking, water proofing . For
60 A. Morgan Twp.
free estimates ca ll Pori ·
50 A. Addison Twp.
smoulh
259-4253.
246 A. Springfoeld Twp
58-If
160 A. Morgan Twp.
64 A. Spnngfield Twp.
D. P. 1VIARTIN &amp; Son Water'
43 A. Morgan Twp.
Deli ve ry
Service.
Your
41f2 A Route 160, modern home
' pat ronage wi ll be ap.
93 A. Green Twp.
predated . Ph. 446·0463.
10 A. Vacanl, Green Twp.
].If
71 A., Perry Twp.
16 A., Addison Twp
FAIN
31 A , 7 room home, barn,
EXTERMINATING' CO.
smoke house, chicken house,
Termite &amp; Pest Control
lob. base, $8,500.
Wheelersburg , Ohio
LISTINGS WANTED
Ph. 574-6112
NATIONWIDE adverti si ng
52-If
brings
buyers
from

SINGER Sewmg Machine Sales
&amp; ServiCe. All models m stock.
Free de llv_j!ry.
Service
guaranteed . Models prj ced
from $69 .95 . French Cily
Fabric Shoppe, Singer ap·
proved dealer, 58 Co urt St. Ph.
446-9255.
308·11

.WANTED
Used Furniture
oots, D1snes and
other
Miscellaneous
Items. We Also Buy
Complete Estates , ~

Knotts
Used Furniture
t 163 Second Ave.
Ph""e 446-2917

il;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.._~. .. ; . - - - - - - . ,

everywhere.
Ranriy Btar.kburn
Bran~h Manager

BAIRD IlEALTY CO.
Oscar Baird, Realtor

THREE BR IN TOWN - Large
kitchen, full bath, level lot,
close to everything , priced
rlghl.

t6ACRES, 7 ROOMS -

L:arge
home on stale route, 6 acres

meadow, 10 acres pasture,

small barn , 10 miles out 'of
town .

Oscar Baird, 446·4632
Doug Wetherholl, 446-4244

PUBLIC. AUCTION
I

Located at Centerpoint, Ohio, on County Road No. 3, off
Slate Route 279. Watch for signs.

SATURDAY, APRIL 17, 1971
Starting at 1:00 P.M.
' Consisting of a Ford l'ractor, 2·12" turn plows, drag type
disk, scraper, 2 wheeled trailer, 1961 Chevy 4 dr. sedan,
Hometite XL-12 chain saw, Law n Boy lawn mower, AlliS·
Chalmers refr igerator (new ), Magic Chef kitchen range,
dinelfe set, drop-leaf dining room table &amp; chairs, several
nice pieces of Antique oak furniture, fru it jars, &amp; bottles,
household furniture, and other items too numerous to
mention.

Terms : Cash

"'

Terms : Cash -

'
NEW homes - brick front,
The Esta1eofthe Late Emerson S_•ms
IOO'x230' tot, built-In kitchen,
,
Janel M. Jones- AdminiSiratrox
carpeted. If you qualify, you
Warren Sheels - Attorney
can bprrow full amount. Barr
Dar.·• I Alban - Auctioneer - oa. k Hill, OhiO
Construcllon. 16 Pine St. Ph.
,.
446-3746. Mon . thru Fri . 9 to 5.
Nol Responsible For Accidents
Sat. 8 to 12. •
.__1,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,,- - - - - - •

•••

LARRi
EVAN S

Howard B.
Saunders

FOR ALL YOUR
INSURANCE NEEDS
eAutomobile
eHome Owners
eMobile Homes

eBusiness eBoats
eUability elrip
eFarms eHonds
eUfe
LIFE&amp;CASUALTY
( Phone 446-0404 l

----~R~U~S7
SE
~L
~L~'S~-­

Earl Carman

Vacant Land

Patriot
450 Second Ave.
TWO HOMES. Corner Location.'
Ph. 446-4775
Larger home has 7 rooms and TRAILER SPOT - Drilled wensmaller home has 4 rooms.
with pump, septic tan~ . 29
Will sell outright or trade for . acres, creek frontage, good
bottom farm or city proporly.
county road , city sctlool
diStrict .

Meal Realty

Ph 992 389 1.

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
28-tf SEPTIC tank cleanmg. d1 t
l1l e ceiling, new addition is _....:.--..,.-::-:=::-::-:-:-:-:-.,-::ch1ng, e!ectnc Eel serv Ph.
lhe kolchen &amp; d1 n. area, elec.
ALBERT EHMAN
446-4782, Gallipolis, 0
range and beautiful cabinets.
Water Del1very Service
70-tf
Wa te r tap pd and owner will
Patriot Star Rl., Gallipolis
complete lhe hook-up or leave
Ph 379-2133
STA NDA RD
i43 tt
present water system. $9.000.
Plumbing
&amp; Heat1 ng
-Third
Ave
, 446-3782 ·
215
10112 Acres
TERMITE PEF CONTROL.
187-lt
FREE inspection Call 446-3245,
1DEAL for rearing that l ~ rg e
famil y, 7 big rms., sun porch, Mernll O' Dell , Operator for Brammer Plumbing &amp; Heating
balh and partial base. II has a E)(termmal Termite Serv1ce,
300 Fourth Ave.
19 Belmont Dr.
huge liv. rm. with F. P. fur
Phone 446 1637
267-lf
heat, garage and bldg . sites
Gene
PI an Is, ().om er
Buy - sell some lots and have -~---298-11
GILLENWATER'S Septic Tank
a cheap home. $14,500.
Cleaning &amp; Repa ir. Ph 446DEWITT'S PLUMBING
Rodney
9499. Price is right
AND HEATING
174-tf
2 STORY , 6 la rge rms., balh,
Route
160 at Evergreen
parlial ba ~e. , new .roof, new
Phbne
'446-2735
Central Air Conditioning
Alum. siding, H. W. firs. , new
281 tt
Heating
factory kilchen, lots of
Free Estimates
paneling, water lap pd. Nat .
Stewart's Hardware
Gas in yard and F.H.A. ap.
For Sale
Vinton, Ohio
proved . Only $11,500.
144-tl ALL TY PE S of bu ildi ng

STROUT REALTY

446-2674 or Howard or Lucille
Brannon 446-1226 after 5 p. m.

L1mestone and coa l for sale,
lump, egg , stoker an d m~ne
run E Mam St., Pomeroy, 0.

NATIONWID E IN ~URANL~
AUTO, F~re , life, 45 State St
RlBBO,,,
outbldgs. Ph 388 8615
Waldo F. Brown. W R Brown , SPEC IAL $7 50 a dozen IBM
THI S nea rly new big 5 rm . home
85 3 446- 1960.
/
electriC polylhylene ribbons .
features a large llv rm ., huge
CARBON PAPER
kotc hen w1fh plenty cabonefs,
BOX of Carbon paper reg . $5.00
J mce bdrm s , quiet street and
Services Offered
priced at $14,750.
only $3.50.
'TIME CLuCKS
Plumbing
&amp;
Heating
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
Cheap Housing
WE ARE now lhe agency for
COMMERCIAL maon t Paul
CARiEk 'S PLUMBIN G
LOCATED at 238 Fourth Ave. 5
T S.l lime clocks.
Knox, office Ph. 446-1011 or
AND HEATI NG
S1mmons Pig. &amp; Office
rms. &amp; bath, large lot, idea l, home Ph . 446 4822.
830 Fourth Avenue
Equip., 446·1397
for the c1ly farmer . Pmed at
70 If
Phone 446-3888 or 446 4477 .
72-tf
only $9,500.
ISS
If
MASONRY CONTR ACTOR

City

14 A. 4 Ml from town, 1,500'
Raccoon Creek, 40 acres, 31
fronlage, rollmg hill land ,
lois have been surveyed, 12
pond site, bldg. sites , only I
lots sold, 19 tots for sale,
per A.
pmed from $1,250 to $3,000. 11 $400
A edge of town, ready for
The owner has taken great
t. $10,000.
pride building roads to the 6 developmen
A. 5 mi. from town, $8,000.
lois and has one of the finest 55 A. $100 per A
water systems with water
ANY HR. 446-1998
available to each lol. Due to
health reasons owner will sell
the entire campsite. Room for
.
25 more wood lots with water
Ph. 44~0008
fronls. All lots have boat dock
privil eges. If intere~ ted in a
lo t for more information call

EXCE LSIOR Sa lt works ·

ba se. house, 6 r oom s and
bath, utihty room, modern
kitchen , barn, corn cri b, other

Side and let the other 1l2 help OLDER home completely
pay for it
remodeled, lots of paneling,

Addison Twp., 7 room home.

Insurance

60 WOODED acres, 2 mites F-OR ALL your msurance needs
check with yo ur Grange agents
from lown. Ph 446-0274.
85·3 al the Neal Ins. Age ncy. 64
Slate St. Agen js for auto, f~r e .
FARM by owner - 60 acres hom eow ners, hospi ta l and
level to r olling , in good gra ss,
general liabi li ty
84tt
plenty water , .5 acre to b.

MASSIE.

furnace, drilled well , new

Cheap,Cheap,Cheap!

1966 'I' T GMC p&gt;ckup
1961 2 T GMC
cam ping trader See lhe all 1964 3 T. GMC
new Starcraf t truck cam per 1966 'h T. Chev
and fish ong boats add ed to our 1966 1;, T Int . P U
recreat 1onallme We all ow up 1966 1;, T. Ford P U
to $300 trade 1n on any Ieni s 1963 112 T GMC P U
We stock all accesson es, 1956 1'12 T. Chev van
service what we sell
Tires - 10.00x20, 12 pi) nylon
F~nanc1ng arranged , qual ity
ll res S90 me. Fed tax
and pnce Cam p c onley,
SOMMER'S G.M.C.
Starcrafl Sa les behind
TRUCKS, INC.
Plea sant P01nt Resort , Pomt
133 Pine St.
Pleasant, W Va
Ph. 446·2532
82-lf
241 ·11

We have a s1x-room home on Cha tham Avenue in ex
ce lleAt cond ition Home approximately 8 years old . See

redecorahng . Price $13,500.

bath apartment. Home has

verter sta ndard equipmenl.
ca mper s 11 models 14 thru 20
ft , Amenca's number one

wall carpetmg Extra lot wit h low taxes. Price $14.750

Older home 1n ex cellent loca tion on Vme Street Needs

furnace, 2 acres of land, deep
HARD TO BELIEVE BUT
HERE IT IS 3 BEDROOM S
WITH CARPETED LIYING
ROOM , BATH, BASEMENT
AND MODERN FURNACE

ALL NEW LISTINGS
Six.room home on fwo acres of ground at the edge of clfy
This home has a modern k 1tchen, gas furnace and wa ll to

furnaces , al so, 3 r oom and

For Sale
New GMC Truck
Headquarters·

1963 11, T. Chevrolet pickup
1965
1'12 T. Chevrolet Truck
FREE es limales . liability in·
. ELECTRIC Gibson guilar and
1967
Whol
e Diesel Truck
surance Prunmg , trimmmg
Sunn amplifier Ph . 446·9628.
and cav1 ty work , tree and 1969 Chev dump truck
84-6
1
s tump removal. Ph 446-4953 1968 12 T GMC P U.
•
7J.lf 1965 1· T. GMC
1969 GMC 4 T. log truck
1962 '4 T GMC PICkup
REFR IGER ATIO N &amp; A1r 1963
1 T GMC
Cond1tionmg Ra1ke's Refng
1965
'h T. Ford P U
&amp; Air Cond Ph 367 7200 .
56 If 1963 112 T Chev P U
1965 'h T GMC P U
1969 I T GMC
REFRIGERATIOI&lt;
1967 'I' T. GMC P U
Ph. 446·9a6s
1969 FORD Ecanolone van
22· 1'
1966 Ji!2 T GMC
196B Chev Subu rban
487 Second Ave.
-Camping Equipment
1962 'f' T GMC P U
1968 wh1l e diesel truck
STARCRAFT travel traders 12 1965 'I• T GMC P U.
(Opposite Post Office)
models, 18 lhru 27 ft ., com · l967 J14 T. Chevrolet picku p
pletety self conta1ned, con 1963 Ffl{l() Fnrrl trwlt

446-1066

family room , carpeted LR, 4
BR, 2 full baths m color,
basement, 2 gas forced air

CH INE SE Pug puppies in lime
for Easter . Stud service. Ph
675 1779 or 675·1595 .
81-5
REG coli ••• Bob Jones, 446-2789
afler 4 p.m.
84-3

Banks Tree Servite

house we show For example,

8].6

REGULAR
PRICE

PREFINlSHED MOUlDING
AND NAILS TO MATCH.
PANEL ADHESIVE 99 EA.
PurrY STICKS 29 EA.

REALTOR

Charm, Location
Convenience
IF YOU HAVE BEEN
near to see me whi le I was In
WAITING
FOR JU ST THE
the hospitaL also for the ·
RI GHT HOME WE THINK
beautif ul cards and flowers . THIS
IS IT VERY AT
God bless each and everyone.
TRACTIVE SPLI T LEV EL
Cornelia Hutchmson
WITH 3 BEDROOMS,
85-1 LARGE LIVING 8. DININ G
ROOM ,
COMPLETELY
BUILT IN KITCHEN WITH
Notice
RANGE, DISH WA SHER
ETC , 2 BATHS, LARGE
CALL after 5 p m for Rawleigh
SCR EENED PATIO AND
Products, 1924 E. Ave. Ph
GARAGE . THI S HOME IS
446-2089 or 446-3387.
PLETELY CAR ·
85-1 COM
PETED AND HAS AN
ATTRACTIVE FIREPLACE
PLUS CE NTR AL AIR ON A
FREE Used clot hing for
BIG SHADY LANDSCA PED
anyone who Is in need Church
of Chris!, Bidwell Ph 388- LO T WITH TREMENDOUS
VIEW AND CHILDREN
8429 or 388-8787.
CA N WAL K TO SC HOOL .
85 1 ORCHARD
HILL AD ·
- ---:cc-- = - -,.,...DRE SS 'NUFF SA ID , NOW
HEY! HEY! Flea Market,
CA LL IKE WI SE MAN FOR
Sa lurday &amp; Sunday, Crown
AN APPOINTMENT
City , Ohio, if weather per.
Under Construction
mds.
83-3
Ready In 4 Weeks
-1N
- Cc:-O'"M
'=E-:ta_x_ r_e-,lu_r_n_s -::-::
W1lson ATTRACTIVE , CA RPETED
BECROOM
HOME.
Rusk, 280 State Sf Ph 446· 3LARGE
LIVING
AND
2476 after 4 p m.
DIN lNG AREA , LOVELY
61 -tf KITCHEN
AND BATH
FULL
DIV IDE D
SUN·VALLE Y Nursery Sciio(;l~ BA SE MENT . GA RAGE .
577 Sun Valley Drive, now LAR GE LOT AN D EX
prov1ding full day care and CELLENT LOCA TION 2
chol d development program MILE OUT IN CITY
HO OL
DISTRICT
, or pre-school children . In· SC
NEARLY 1,300SQ FT FOR
fants excluded . Open 7:30 a. LE SS THAN $20.000 00.
m to 6 p. m Monday lbrough
ALOHA!
Froday . Fees: $20 for full fiv e
day week . $5 per day if less
(Means "Good Buy")
than five days. $3 per day for AND YOU ' LL AGREE
morning sessions. Ph . 446AFTER READING THESE
3657
Madg e Hauldr en, FEATURES
LARGE
Owner -Direc tor; John and LIVING ROOM WITH
FIREPLACE
FORMAL
Loredi lh
Hau~dren ,
DININ G, AND NICE SIZED
operators.
35-lf BEDROOM S, l'l2 BATH S,
LOVEL Y BUILT -IN KIT
CABINETS WITH RANGE ,
RALPH'S Careet- Upholstery OVEN ,
DI SHWASHER ,
Cleaning Service. Free ETC ,
CA RPETING
THR OUG HOUT PLUS 2
esl1 mates. Ph 446-0294.
197·11 CAR GARAGE , FULL
-~
BASEMENT AND ELEC
TRI C HEAT
WE BUY gold co1ns ana suv~r
dollars. Tawney Jewelers
No Down Payment
62-tf
Low Mo. Payment
YOU CAN NOW OWN YOUR
Lost
OWN HOME IN TOWN OR
CAT, male, gray &amp; white, long OUT IF YOU HAVE
STEAD Y EMPLOYMENT
hair . chi ld ren's pet, near
AND GOOD CRED IT. THE;
AddiSon. Ph 446-2805 .
HOM ES DESCRIBED
83 3 BELOW
SHO ULD
QUALIFY
CA LL IKE
WISEMAN FOR DETAILS
Wanted
Home &amp; 2 Acres
TO RENT toba cco .base. Ph .
379-2649.
JUST o;, MILE FROM CITY
83·3 LIM ITS LOCATE D ON 2 A
LOT
MODERN
3
-----~ .
HOME for puppy, part Toy BEDROOM HOME WITH
NICE BU ILT -IN KITCHEN ,
Collie . Ph 446-9529.
BATH , UTILITY ROOM
83 3 AND
GARAGE WITH
LARGE STORAGE AREA
NAT GA S, CITY WATER
Wanted .To Do
AN D SC HOOL S
WALL PAPER hangmg. Ph .
446-3631 or 446-2647
Lovely 3 Bedroom

Others on hand w cluded
Charles Feeney, prestdenl of
the Natwnal League, Warren
Gtles,
NatiOnal
League
Prestdent ementus and various
Canadian official s including
Donald Armstrong, Canadian
Consulate General
The stadium, located in south·
Phtladelphta, was sold out for
the opener but a good number of
the 56,371 holding bckets falled
to show up because of the 47degree cold , wmdy and overcast
weather .
After the Expos took a 1.0 lead
m the stxth mning, the tionor of
scormg the first Phtllies run in
thetr facilibes went to th1rd
basema n Don Money when he
drove a home run mto the left.
field stands.

1-22-23 and 24th

CRESTWALL

con~ ideration

during our slay.
Families of Edward H.
Lynch of Thurman, 0 .;
Families of Earl Sayre of
Gromms Landmg, W Va .
85-1

LYTTLE HOSPITALIZED
WASHINGTON (UP!) Outfielder Jtm Lyttle of the
New York Ya nkees was
hospitalized wtth an attack of
appendtcitis Saturday and hand
an appendectomy Saturday
mghl.
Lyttle complained of pams
when he arnved at the ballpark
fo r a game with the Washington
Senators and was taken to
Hou ston
3 2 600
11:1 Chicago at Housto,n 13 p m I
Doctors Hospital where he was
Pittsburg h at Atlanta
San Diego
2 2 500 I
exammed by George A. Resta,
(2: 15 p.m.)
Los Angeles
1 3 250 2
Cmcinnah
at
New
York
the Senators' team physician.
Cincmnati
0 3 000 21!2
(2 :05p.m.)
Saturday's Results
Resta conftrmed the trouble
San Fran. at St Louis 121
New York 3 Ci ncinnati 2
as append1c1tis and scheduled
(2:15p.m.!
( 11 onnings)
Montreal
at
Ph
iladelph
ia
an operation .
San Fran. 6 St Louis 4
(1
:35pm)
Lyttle 1s expected to remam
Phol~delphta 4 Montreat 1
Monday's Games
Pittsburgh at Atlanta (night)
1n the hospital for three or four
Pittsburgh at Philadelphia
Chicago at Houston (night)
(night)
days, and will be out of action
San Diego at Los Angeles
Houston at St Lou is (night)
(night)
for three to four weeks.
Cincinnati at Atlanta (n ' ''II
Toclay's Games
The Yankees sa1d they would
Chicago at Los Angeles (nl, nt)
(All Times ESTI
place htm on the disabled hst.
San Diego at San Francisco
San Diego at Los Angeles
!Only games scheduled )
(4 p m . )
National League Standings
By Umted Press lnlernatoonat
I Noghl games not included!
East
W L Pet. GB
Pittsburgh
3 o 1.000
New York
2 1 .667 1
Chocago
2 2 .500 1'12
Sf Louis
1 2 .333 2
Montreal
I 2 .333 2
Philadelphia
I 2 .333 2
West
W L Pet. GB
San Fran
3 I 750
Atlanta
2 1 .667 'h

Fqr Rent

Card of Thanks

Machemehl came in to hold the
Red Sox scoreless and got three
men out in order in the ninth .
Camilo Pascual, who hurled 3
~ innings, pi_cked up his firs~
victory of the season while
r~hever Ken Brett lost hls first
for the Red Sox.

with a two-run double to left to The Red Sox scored three
cap a three-run fourth inning, times in the sixth and Aparicto
knocked in his sixth run of the
The Cleveland shortstop game by slicing a two-run
capped another three-run in· double to right in the seventh .
ning with a two-out, two-run Boston put the tymg run on
single in the fifth that put the third with one out in the etghth,
Indians ahead, 11-5.
but rookie righthander Chuck

You Need, Sell Items You Don-'t In The Tribune Oassifieds

PUBLIC SALE
11

SATURDAY MORNING APRIL 17th O'aDCK
1159 SEt AVE. GAUIPOLIS, Ohio
Selling the personal effects. including fur·
niture and household items, from the late
Della Boggs Estate.
Severa l old dishes, Including some Willow Ware Royal
China. 2 sets of dishes and other gl~ss ware, 8 pc. dining
room su ole, including a glass front china cabinet ; oil
lamp, punch bowl set, oak library table, 5 pc. chrome
dinette set with drop-leaf, late model Hotpolnt
refrigerator, In excellent condlllon 1 utility table, step
st90L usual ~ llc~~P; .~l,t~.sll ~, old wood rocker, metal b"'1,k,.
shelf, picture frames and mirrors, twin size bed, throw
rugs, 1-3 pc. genuine solid cedar bedroom suite, complete
with sRrong and mattress; numerous quilts, pillows and
blankets, floor lamp, stand table, 5 ft. step ladder, lawn
cha irs, 3 wooden chairs, chest of drawers, Maytag
automati c washer , towel pole, elec. sweeper, elec. fans,

late model ca binet elec. sewing machine, bathroom
scales, nest of serving trays, I old RCA cabinet radio,
cedar chest, !able tamps, clocks, milk can, 1·3 pc.
bedroom suit e, complete with spring and mattress, 1
walnut stand table with castors, I gas heater, elec. wa ll
'clocks, 2 pc nylon living room suite, 3 ladder back chairs,
1 maple lamp table, 2 platform rockers, folding chair and
card table, 1 pole lamp, RCA television, porch swing,
glider, quilting frame, old trunk , foot stool , day bed ,
clothes basket, push lawn mower, 1 apt. size gas range,
fruit jars, stone .jars, apple butter stirrer, Iron kettle,
misc. hand tools. Plus many other items of val ue.
AUCTIONEERS : Col. R. E, Knolls and Son Dave
Marshall Boggs and Russell Hartell, Executors
Tom Moullon, Attorney for I he Est ale
Auclioneers Remarks: "This Is one of lhe cleanesl
that we hllve ever sold, "

PUBLIC SALE
.Friday, April 16, 11:00 A.M.
Complete Farm Machine!J Dispersal
1967 M-F tractor No. 165, 1178 hrs .; 1969 M· F
tractor No . 135,563hrs.; M· Fplows. 3·143 PH;
M· F 5 ft . brush hog; M· F post hole digger ; 3
PH cultivators.
John DeereEquipment: No. 24T baler ; hay
conditioner No . 32; .disc on rubber, 8ft.; steel
harrow; mower No. 39, 3 PH ; corn planter No.
247; 2 wagol)s with 16ft. racks; lime spreader
on rubber, like new.
New Holland Equipment: Rake, used 2
seasons; No. 327-S spreader with false end
gate . used 1 season; No. 717 forage harvester,
1969 model ; ensilage blower .
Cobey ensilage wagon , chain f~d; Case 26
ft. elevator; portable air compressor, used 1
year ; 18ft. aluminum grain elevator with 34
h.p. electric motor ; Stewart electric ca.ttle
clippers; 6-row corn spray;
double
cultipacker ; scraper blade ; · end loader;
Papek ensilage cutter ; good 2-wheel trailer ;
ladder for Marietta silo; Bolens garden Roto·
tiller, chain saw.
5-16 ft . feed bunks , 7 feed boxes ; 2 cattle
oil e rs ; 2 grinders with electric motors; 24ft .
aluminum ext. ladders. locust posts ; , steel
posts ; 3 steel culverts; 1 200-gal . stilL if not
sold or confiscated before sale date ; several
log chains; 50 gal. wood preservative ; one lot
new and used pipe ; large galvan ized watering
trough ; Tarpaulins ; work bench with vise ; 175
bu. corn; 200 bales hay ; one lot hand tools,
numerous other items .

JOHN McNEIU
Ph. 675-2413
Pt . Pleasant,
, W. Va.
•
HAROLD FLAX and LEE JOHNSON, Aucts.
Pete, Grant and Bob - Clerks
Lunch will,be Served ,
Farm located 3 miles East of West Columbia
near Lieving Coal mine.

�·.
_,

•
l

:111-TbeSUnday Tlmei-SenUnel,SUnday , April 11,1971

21-The SundayTlmei - Sehtinel,Sunday, Aprilll,l971.

..._

F~d lt~ms

Yanks.B lank Indians Outlast Bosox 11-10
.Sens, 8-0

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Larry hours, rune minutes, included 20 times in the second on Duane
Brown drove in five runs and hits, IOpitchers, 19 walks and 14 Josephson's run-~JCoring single
Ray Fosse belted his nrst home strikeouts.
and Luis Aparicio's second
_~ run of the season Saturday to
career grand slam homer.
pace the Cleveland Indians to
After Fosse put Cleveland Browndroveinhisrtrstrunas
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Mel first game of the season, moved an 11-10 victory over the Boston ahead with a two-run homer in the Indians tied the score with
Stottlemyre demonstrated his m front w1th a first inning run Red Sox.
the first inning, the Red Sox three runs in the second inning,
mastery against Washington when Horace Clarke drew a
The game, which lasted three boiinced back to score five and he put Cleveland ahead
again Saturday by pttching the leadoff walk, went to lhtrd on
'
New York Yankees to a three- Ron Woods' single and scored
htt 6-0 victory over the Senators. a~ Thurman Munson grounded
Stottlemyre, whose lifellme into a double play.
record against Washington is 21
Smgles by Danny Cater, John
wins and nine losses, also drove Ellis, Gene Michael and Swt.
m a run with a single to help his tlemyre produced two more
PHILADELPHIA (UP!)- A today. The Phlls won, 4·1.
Montreal Expos.
cause.
New York runs 10 the fourth
brave
Manne,
a
courageous
Manne
Cp
l.
Frank
But it took a lot of courage on
The Yankees, winning their mmng off Jun Shellenback.
The Yankees added two more catc her and an old pro Mastrogiovanni, who lost both the part of Phils' catcher Mike
runs in the eighth inmng Cal!!r h1ghhghted the cerem,mes as legs m Vietnam last January, Ryan for him to get the ball
swgled and scored from first the ma jor leag ues' newest threw out the first ball for the The bali MastrogiOvanni used
between
the was dropped to Ryan, watting at
when Jerry Kenney's smgle ballpark, the $45 m11l1on waugural
Veterans
Stadium,
opened
here
Phtladelphla
Phtllies
and
the seco~d base, from a hehcopter
went through centerftelder Curt
Flood for a two-base error
Bobby Murcer doubl ed m
Kenney.
MONTE CARLO, Monaco
Woods walked and scored on
(UPI)- Tom Okker of Holland Roy Whtte's double in the mnth
CHICAGO (UP!) - Tony a two-run fifth inning for the and scored on Rick ReiGba~dt's
.and Ilie Nastase of Romania w complete New York's 13-hit
Oliva and Paul Powell, with his Twins and Powell's drive on the double. Lee Richard tripled in
Saturday reached the final of attack .
The only htls Stoltlemyre ftrst major league hit, slammed eighth off reliever Don Eddy the fifth and scored Chicago's
the men's singles in the Monte
final run on Mike Andrews'
Carlo Open tennis tournament. allowed were a pair of smgles to home runs Saturday to power furnished an insurance run.
Nastase used the slow court to Mike Epstein and a double by the Minnesota Twins to a 1&gt;-3 Earlier in the fifth Cesar
v1ctory over the Chicago White Tovar put the Twins ahead to
its full advantage to defeat Joe Foy
Sox, which hauled the. White Sox stay 3-2 when he singled, stole
hard-serving British pro Roger
their first loss after three second , advanced on Rod
Taylor 2-6, 7..1, 6-1, 6-1.
VIctories.
Carew's outfield fly an&lt;\ scored
Okker, the pre-tournament
Oliva's homer off starter and on John's wild pitch.
favorite, also took four sets to
down Nastase's fellow counEarly Wednesday
loser Tommy John wrapped up The Twins got two runs, ouly
...
Mixed League
one of them earned, in the thtrd
.. yman, Ion Tiriac, 6-4, IHJ, 4-6,
March 24, 1971
American League Standings
when winning pitcher Jim
IHJ.
Won Lost
OHIOANS HONORED
By
United Press International
Taylor started well and his Zlde's Sport Shop
88 24
NEW YORK (UP!) - Ohio Perry singled, reached third on
I Easfl
Porter-Sm ith
61 51
powerful service never allowed Ashland 011
s9 s3 placed three players on the All- Carew 's double and after
W. L. Pet. GB
Killebrew
walked,
both
Ball1mare
Harmon
Nast.ase to find his rhythm in Lou's Ashland
52 60 American
3 0 1.000
high
school
2 I .667 I
the first set. But Nastase Oller's Sohlo
42 70 basketball team selected by Perry and Carew scored on Cleveland
Washington
2
2 .500 Ph
h · th f
th
. ' Nelson's Druq
34 78
Carlos May's throwing error New York
sthowmg ' etitlormt at wbonNhlm . High Ind. Game - Russ Scholasbc Magazine.
I 2 333 2
e mens e a near y tee ' Carson 230 and Wanda Queen
123332
They are Ed Stahl of Walnut trying for a force out at the Detro of
Boston
123332
last week, took control over 194; High Series - Bill Porter Ridge in Columbus; Joe Fisher plate .
I
West
I
Taylor who appeared tired 566 an~ Wanda Queen 509 . of Urna Cen Ira! Catholic and
Ed Herrmann homered in the
'
Team H1gh Game and Series W. L. Pet. GB
after last week 's World Nelson's Drugs 741 and 2040
3 1 750
Kevm Grevey of Hamtlton Taft. third for Chicago's first run and Ch icago
2 1 667
112
Champion tournament at
in the fourth Bill Melton tripled Milwaukee
Mmnesota
2
2
500
1
Miami, Fla.
Kansas Coly
2 3 400 p;,
Tiriac, Nastase's Davts Cup
Oakland
2 3 .400 'I'
California
I 3 .250 2
teanunate, got off to a good
Saturday
's
Results
start against Okker, breaking
Oakland 5 Kansas Coty 4
through in the first set to lead 4· •
Molwa ukee 4 C.loforn1a 3
Mo
nnesota 5 Ch1 cago 3
3. But Okker immediately broke
BALTIMORE (UP!) - Dave Robmson. Detro1t Manager on a single by Dtek McAuhffe
Cleveland
11 Boston 10
back and then served up two Johnson, who drove in four runs Bllly Marlin elected to slay wtth and went to thtrd when right·
Baltimore 2 Detro•! I
quick aces to seal the set 6-4.
Fnday night to spark Baltimore Lohch and Johnson rapped a 2·1 fielder Frank Robinson bobbled New York 6 Washington 0
Okker swept the following set to a vtctory over Detroit pitch rightfield for a single.
Sunday's Games
McAuhffe's hit for an error.
.
'
All Times EST
at Love, but Tiriac bounced smgled home Frank Robmson
Jim Palmer went the route Bnnkman scored as Wtlhe Kan sas Coty at Oakland. 4. 30
back in the third with fine with two out in the mnth mning for Balllmore, allowmg seven Horton h1t inw a force out.
pm
baseline play.
Cal1forn1a
at Molwaukee, 2:30
Saturday to give the Orioles a 2· htls and strandng nine runners. The Onoles lied it in thetr half
pm.
But then the Dutchman I trmmph over the Tigers.
Lohch allowed SIX hils and 1s of the third mning when Andy Monnesota at Chocago, 2 15 p.m.
decided to apply the pressure
Frank Robinson singled w1th now 1·1.
E tchebarren walked, took Boston at Cleveland, 1· 30 p m
and rushing the net whenever one out in the mnth off loser
The Tigers gave Lolich a 1.0 second on Palmer's sacnfice Detroit at Baltimore, (2) 2 p m
possible, finished off the final Mickey Lolich and took third on lead m the third mning. Ed bunt and scored on Merv New York at Washington (2)
I 30 p m.
~6-0
a two'out smgle by Brooks Bnnkman walked, took second Retlenmund's smgle.
ij 41(0
Monday's Games
Monnesota at Kansas Coly, night

•
WE WISH to thank all our SLEEPING ROOMS, ,weekly
friends for their prayers, rates. Park ~entral Hot~·)!
cards, flowers, visits and .
thoughtfulness during the
1iiness of Edward Lynch and "S LEEPING - ROOMS weeki)
Earl Sayre at Hol zer Medical r.tes. free garage parking,
Center. ill so thanks to Waugh Libby Hotel.
. Halley . Wood for ambulance
service, sheriff's departmenl
and city pollee . Special
!hanks to Dr . Harder, Dr Real Estate For Sale
Somon, Dr . Vallee, and Dr.
Berkich and all nurses and
a1des on Second floor for the ir
kindness and

Philadelphia Dedicates New Stadium

Advance

To Finals

hovering in 21 mph winds, some
130 feet over the mfield.
After Ryan made his per1Ious
ca tch and Mastrogiovanni
made the formal opening toss,
Jtm Bunmng, the Phtlhes'
oldest player, took the mound to

H,omers Power Twins To 5-3

Triu~ph

sacrifice fly.
Perry worked six innings and
got his first win as Stan
Williams worked the final tllree

Local Bowling

Orioles Remain Unbeaten

"1

start play at the etght-sided two.
bered stadium that was 18
years in the planning and
making.
Bowie Kuhn, baseball com.
mtssioner, Bob Carpenter ,
owner of the Ph~hes and C1ty

&lt;Jakland at Milwaukee
California at Chicago
Boston at Washington, mght
(Only games scheduled)

frames for his first save. John
lasted seven innings and the
defeat gave him a 1·1 season

mark.

PETERSON NAMED MVP
LOS ANGELES I UPI)- Hir·
am Peterson , who averaged
12 points and 10 rebounds per
game, has been named Pepperdin e
College's
Most
Valuable Basketball Player for
the 197().71 season.

-WOULD
- --like to thank the

Council Prestdent Paul D'Orton a made bnef opening
remarks
in
pre-game

1

many churches, the prayers
of all the good people, the
Holzer Hosp1lal sta ff, the
doctors and the nurses; the
ones that came so far and

cer~momes .

GRAY NAMED COACH
KENT, , Oh10 .( UPI )- Ron
Gray , former All Amenca and
B1g Etght wrestling champ at
Iowa state, Frtday was named
head wresthng coach at Kent
State Umverstty, succeedmg
Joe Begala.

SALE

E

Business Opportunities

PANELING
REGULAR
PRICE

CLOSE OUT

PACEMAKER LIGHT

SPECIALS

3.59

1

'6.95

CLOSE
OUT
PRICE

SERVICE station for lease.
Paid tra ining program .
Contaci ' Bob Myers, 446-1085
58-If

IN •
STOCK

Help Wanted

'5.69

WANTED for downtown offiCe.
Mature , exec utive type
secretary. Must · take dictation and have general office

4.95

1

CHERRY PLANK
LODGEWOOD YOSEMITE
HERITAGE BIRCH
HONEY BIRCH
NEW YORK BIRCH

knowledge. Annual vacation

4.59

4:5·9

~.59

5

SPUN GOLD DECORATIV-.E-.....~'lnr0.95

~.69

'6.39
'6.95

7.95

1

REGULAR
PRICE

••••••••••••••••••••••••

CARRY
..

15,95
15.95
15.95

WANTED future executives.
Men over 21, high school

Stop
In and Register
I
For Door Prize.

1st PRIZE
10 Pes. Paneling

education~

excellent company
benefits , insurance, profit

shanng and vacations . Apply
in person . Credit Thrift of
America, 300 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis.
64·26

Value

52.50

SPR lNG fever? Gel more out of
life be an Avon
Representative. Turn extra
· hours Into extra cash. It's fun

2nd PRICE
!-Aluminum Storm Door (any size) 127.95
or
2-Aiuminum Storm Windows
'27.95
3rd PRIZE No Purchase
$9.95

I

and easy ; no experience

•'

i necessary. Write or call

Mrs.
Helen Yea9er, BOJ&lt; 172,
Jackson, Oh1o. Ph. 286-4028.

80·6

Necessary to Register

••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••
4x8 .SHALE WHITE
19.95
ROUGH SAWN

EVANS
PANEL CARE
WITH
LEMON OIL
t
REGUlAR 11.95

Carter &amp; Evans, a name familier to all, 15 yr.,:;. experience in the building
business, Stop at 87 Olive Street,
friendly ones will Wl!lcome you .

'

wigs. No ter ritory reslpoC·
lions . Advertised nalionally
on " Bewitched." C. II 446 4959
or Mary Tomlin, Portsmo.ulh
353-4254.
85-6

•

SPECIAL $1.49

CASH
&amp;
CARRY

.

I

TO

· SATURDAY J1A.M. ro 4 P~M.

'

80·6

•

.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO....
'

PHONE 446-4905

FlNALL'YI!
YOU CAN train for a better fOb
in the comfort of ·your home.
Become a COMPUTER
PROGRAMMER or learn
DRAFTING while you keep
your present job. No down
payment required - com·
plete government finan cing veteran approved. For a
betler future write P. 0 . Box
977, Huntington, W. Va . 25713.
Include age and phone
number.

\

CAR.TER AND EVANS-I-NC.· BUILDING' SUPPLI·ES
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 7 A.M. 5 P.M. ·

87 OLIVE STREET
'

SALE
PRICE

~.95
I

----SELL Luzier Cosmetics and

on enamel finish

MASONITE HARDBOARD PANELI

·cASH
&amp;'

and sick le ave. Salary
com mens urate with experience and ability. Send
resumes to Box 177, C·O The
Gallirolis Daily Tribune. An
equa opportunity employer.
85·1

1

. I

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

Dillon
Agency
'

Is both the name of a TV show
and a firm rule of our
business. We prefer t6 tell you
lhe WHOLE story on any

Oft, 446-3643

USSElL WOOD
REALTOR

Hobart Dillon, Realtor
Office 446·2674
Howard or Lucille Brilllnon
Evenings 446·1226
Robert co""ndee, 446~tNoi&lt;A

Services Offered

•
'

To Tell The Truth ....

TV"Anlenna Sa les lnstallalion &amp;
Service Estimates Ph 446·
1673 or 446-9679
63-tt
•

446-3796

446 4500

YOU'L L BE SURP RISED
BY THI S ONE VERY NICE
KITCHEN , CARPETED
LIVING
ROOM
AND
FAM ILY ROOM , 3 NICE
SIZED BEDROOMS ON
LARGE DEEP LOT IN
TOWN, FULL PRI CE
$14,500

$11,000 3 Bedroom
With River View

Two story home located at
No. 144 Mulberry 51. in
Pomeroy, high above flood
waters, bea ull ful kitchen
includong two ovens, dish
washer, refrtgerator, range

top, double sink all in cop·
per tone,

large dining , and

'Saunders
•.• Evans
Insurance Inc.

We know a modern nu sband who wa s disappointed when

hi s wife gave birth to a daughter, he was hopong for a boy
,.to help him with the housework
It's tome again to fill out those 1ncome lax blank ely-blanks

+

· Modern Home 3 A.
UNBELIEVEABLE,
3
BEDROOM HOME WITH
FIREPLACE IN .LARGE
LIVING ROOM - NI CE
KITCHEN, BATH AND
MODERN
FURNACE ,
18.500.
Building Lots- For
Homes
Mobile Homes &amp;
Business
THIS LAR GE LOT COULD
BE USE D FOR 4 MOBILE
HOME S OR TWO HOME
SITES , CITY WATER,
SC HOOL S, NAT
GAS ,
AVAILABLE ON RT 141 AT
EDGE OF TOWN .
2 LARGE BUILDING LOTS
IN SPRING VALLEY . BUY
THEM BOTH FOR $6,00000
WE HAVE TWO OF THE
MO ST BEAUTIFUL HOME
SITES IN THE COUNTY
1'1• ACRE EACH WITH
VIRGIN
TIMBER
COVERING BOTH . EX ·
CELLENT
NEIGH
BORHOOD
WATER
AVAIL 3MILE FROM NEW
HOSPITAL
IN
CITY
SC HOOL OIST
Hardware Store Doing
Very Good Business
OWNER
WILL
SELL
ESTABLISHED
HARD ·
WARE STORE AT THE
INVENTORY PRICE . BE
YOUR OWN BOSS AND
MAKE A GOOD LIVING
TOO

We Sold8
Homes and Farms
For Rent
IN LAST 2 WEEKS AND
FURN . apt., 2 rooms'and bath, NEED
YO~R PROPERTY
ulilities paid, adults only . Ph
TO SELL WE HAVE
446-3748 or 256·6903.
BUYER S READY TO BUY
85-3 RIGHT NOW SO IF YOU
WANT YOURS SOLD CALL
MOBILE home, 2 bedrooms.' THE SELLINGEST OF ·
located next door to Gallipolis FICE IN TOWN . '
Auto Auction. Ph. 446-3776 or,
We Need Large
446·1S76.
85·3
&amp; Small Farms Any
Place· in the County.
FURNISHED apartment.
Inquire at 631 Fourlh Ave.
~~~~"~G REAT NEED FOR
BS·lf
NT '"L PROP .

thos one immediately tor quick sa le Proce $14,000.

been remodeled, alummum
Siding, storm windows and

Cement block dwelling on approximately 2 acres of
ground. Across from Green Gables on Route 7. For

doors, 2 n1 ce porches . You'll
agree it's priced way way low
at $18,500.

commercial purposes. Call for more information .

OFF lC E 446·1066
Evenings Call Ron Canaday 446-3636
Or John l. Richards 446·0280
Russell D. Wood446-4618

Both Town &amp; Country!
Yes, you can have your cake
and eat It too! 8112 acres, 5

miles from new hospital on
8 T. road, 8 room s all on one

floor, a dream kitchen, 4 BR ,
part basement, gas for ced air

R~ltor, 32 State St

Tel. 446-1998

water line

High up on a hill, 2 acres of good
land,

m obile

home com-

bmat1on 18'x39' , 2 BR, cellar
house, workshop , small barn,

pl enty wa ler, fru ol lrees,

owner movmg to Fl orida . A
real retirement home, pn ce
$3,900

Why Pay Rent?
Here's a large two story home
on First Ave. with a great
view of the nver. Live 1n one

110 Acres
needs some repair , gas wel L

free gas In home. good fence,
some timber Located 3 miles

from Rl. 7.

31 Acres
Located near Cr own City, ll/2

story 3 BR home, 2 Cisterns.
fair fence . Price $9,500.

2 Extra Good
3 BR homes located in the
village of Crown City on large
lots. These homes are in extra
good condition, one home is

carpeled throughou t and has
baseme~t . Priced SIO,SOO ·and
$12,000.

Without A Doubt ...
This is the most beaul1ful
campsite in Southern Ohio,
located 8 mi . from Gallipolos,
one mile from Ohi o River on

Bidwell

Spring Special
Three bedroom one floor plan
home, nice kitchen with
d1ning area, gas forced air
well, new water line across

lot, located on BT road 4 mile
from cily . Price $12,000.

Assure Yourself
Of Positive Results
Buying or Selling
See Di lion Agency

0. D. PARSONS
JAY SHEPPARD
REALTORS

Farm, VIllage, Cily Property
First &amp; Olive
Phone 446·11219

Spring Valley
Exciting
TRI -LEVEL . Brick and red·
wood with 3 bedrooms· and
two baths. Living room and
•dining room carpeted . Large
eat-in kitchen with stainless
steel buill-in range, oven and
dishwasher. Family room
with large stone fireplace.
Laundry

room .

Two -c ar

garage . Call for an ap .
pointment to Inspect.

Kanauga
NEARLy"new 3 bedroom home
in Kanauga . Large kitchendining area. Bath. Garage.
&lt;Jak floors .

VACANT LAND

48 ACRES located near VInton .

A good place for a mobile
home. $3,000.

FARM
91 AC~ ES located near Mudsoc.
5 acres corn base., .58 acre
tobacco base, J"'room house

with running water . Can be
bought with or without farm
machinery .
'
Otlice
Phone 446·1694
Evenings
Charles M. Neal. 446·1546 ·
J. Michael Neal, 446·1503

84-lf

FORD dump truck
Ph 446·3838

81 -6

Ph. 388-8713

-·.

NEW LISTING
NICE 2 slory home 1n country
wi th 7 rooms and bath, 2 car
garage, 3 large lots and water
·
lap paid
LOW TAX DISTRICT
2 HOMES for $13,000 total. One
modern 3 bedroom home in

good condition and I older
home m need ol some repair .
Buy one or both.
.
CHANCE OF A LIFETIME
CLARK Chapel acres - 75 acre
resort

matena ls, block, bn ck, sewer

pipes, wmdows, lintels, etc.
Claude Win ters, Rio Grande,
0 . Ph. 245-5121 after s.
91 -tf

FLOOR COVERING BY
ARMSTRONG

USE D
Mobil e
Home
Headqua rters. All SIZe mobile
homes on stock. B &amp; S Mobile
Home Sales, Second &amp; Viand,
Pl. Pleasant, ne xt to Heck's.
67-tf

CORNELL, MONTINA,
CASTILEAN

'5 to '8.25 Sq. Yd.
FLOOR COVERING BY
CONGOLEUM
13.95 to '5 Sq. Yd.
CERAMIC TILE
11.40 Sq. Ft

IF YOU are building a new
home cr remodeling, see us.
We are buliders. Distributor
for Holpoi nl Appl iances,
Allison Eteclrlc.
154·11
1969 PLYMOUTH Roadrunner,
V-8 auto ' p s.. fa ctory stereo
tape syslem, Keystone Mags,

INSTALLING INCLUDED
FREE ESTIMATE

vi nyl top , excel. cond Must

see to appreciate Ph 446-2949
a fter 5 p m.

Phone Ashworth
446-9368

BJ.6

and ca mping area .

Space for 60 campers, 9lf2
acre lake for pay fishing and
swimmmg . Snack bar with
equipment, garage apt., 12 X
60 houselra1ler, 2 publi c
shower houses, laund ., truck ,

DEAD STOC~
$5.00 Service Char~e
Will remove Jour d ad
horse an cows
Call',lackson 286-4531

tractor and equipment ,
several boats and pic ni c
tables, ouldoor dancing area
Idea l Investment for cou ple.
L. E PENCE Masonry Repa ir,
FARMS
sand blasting , tuck pointing,
41 A. Springfield Twp.
caulking, water proofing . For
60 A. Morgan Twp.
free estimates ca ll Pori ·
50 A. Addison Twp.
smoulh
259-4253.
246 A. Springfoeld Twp
58-If
160 A. Morgan Twp.
64 A. Spnngfield Twp.
D. P. 1VIARTIN &amp; Son Water'
43 A. Morgan Twp.
Deli ve ry
Service.
Your
41f2 A Route 160, modern home
' pat ronage wi ll be ap.
93 A. Green Twp.
predated . Ph. 446·0463.
10 A. Vacanl, Green Twp.
].If
71 A., Perry Twp.
16 A., Addison Twp
FAIN
31 A , 7 room home, barn,
EXTERMINATING' CO.
smoke house, chicken house,
Termite &amp; Pest Control
lob. base, $8,500.
Wheelersburg , Ohio
LISTINGS WANTED
Ph. 574-6112
NATIONWIDE adverti si ng
52-If
brings
buyers
from

SINGER Sewmg Machine Sales
&amp; ServiCe. All models m stock.
Free de llv_j!ry.
Service
guaranteed . Models prj ced
from $69 .95 . French Cily
Fabric Shoppe, Singer ap·
proved dealer, 58 Co urt St. Ph.
446-9255.
308·11

.WANTED
Used Furniture
oots, D1snes and
other
Miscellaneous
Items. We Also Buy
Complete Estates , ~

Knotts
Used Furniture
t 163 Second Ave.
Ph""e 446-2917

il;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.._~. .. ; . - - - - - - . ,

everywhere.
Ranriy Btar.kburn
Bran~h Manager

BAIRD IlEALTY CO.
Oscar Baird, Realtor

THREE BR IN TOWN - Large
kitchen, full bath, level lot,
close to everything , priced
rlghl.

t6ACRES, 7 ROOMS -

L:arge
home on stale route, 6 acres

meadow, 10 acres pasture,

small barn , 10 miles out 'of
town .

Oscar Baird, 446·4632
Doug Wetherholl, 446-4244

PUBLIC. AUCTION
I

Located at Centerpoint, Ohio, on County Road No. 3, off
Slate Route 279. Watch for signs.

SATURDAY, APRIL 17, 1971
Starting at 1:00 P.M.
' Consisting of a Ford l'ractor, 2·12" turn plows, drag type
disk, scraper, 2 wheeled trailer, 1961 Chevy 4 dr. sedan,
Hometite XL-12 chain saw, Law n Boy lawn mower, AlliS·
Chalmers refr igerator (new ), Magic Chef kitchen range,
dinelfe set, drop-leaf dining room table &amp; chairs, several
nice pieces of Antique oak furniture, fru it jars, &amp; bottles,
household furniture, and other items too numerous to
mention.

Terms : Cash

"'

Terms : Cash -

'
NEW homes - brick front,
The Esta1eofthe Late Emerson S_•ms
IOO'x230' tot, built-In kitchen,
,
Janel M. Jones- AdminiSiratrox
carpeted. If you qualify, you
Warren Sheels - Attorney
can bprrow full amount. Barr
Dar.·• I Alban - Auctioneer - oa. k Hill, OhiO
Construcllon. 16 Pine St. Ph.
,.
446-3746. Mon . thru Fri . 9 to 5.
Nol Responsible For Accidents
Sat. 8 to 12. •
.__1,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,,- - - - - - •

•••

LARRi
EVAN S

Howard B.
Saunders

FOR ALL YOUR
INSURANCE NEEDS
eAutomobile
eHome Owners
eMobile Homes

eBusiness eBoats
eUability elrip
eFarms eHonds
eUfe
LIFE&amp;CASUALTY
( Phone 446-0404 l

----~R~U~S7
SE
~L
~L~'S~-­

Earl Carman

Vacant Land

Patriot
450 Second Ave.
TWO HOMES. Corner Location.'
Ph. 446-4775
Larger home has 7 rooms and TRAILER SPOT - Drilled wensmaller home has 4 rooms.
with pump, septic tan~ . 29
Will sell outright or trade for . acres, creek frontage, good
bottom farm or city proporly.
county road , city sctlool
diStrict .

Meal Realty

Ph 992 389 1.

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
28-tf SEPTIC tank cleanmg. d1 t
l1l e ceiling, new addition is _....:.--..,.-::-:=::-::-:-:-:-:-.,-::ch1ng, e!ectnc Eel serv Ph.
lhe kolchen &amp; d1 n. area, elec.
ALBERT EHMAN
446-4782, Gallipolis, 0
range and beautiful cabinets.
Water Del1very Service
70-tf
Wa te r tap pd and owner will
Patriot Star Rl., Gallipolis
complete lhe hook-up or leave
Ph 379-2133
STA NDA RD
i43 tt
present water system. $9.000.
Plumbing
&amp; Heat1 ng
-Third
Ave
, 446-3782 ·
215
10112 Acres
TERMITE PEF CONTROL.
187-lt
FREE inspection Call 446-3245,
1DEAL for rearing that l ~ rg e
famil y, 7 big rms., sun porch, Mernll O' Dell , Operator for Brammer Plumbing &amp; Heating
balh and partial base. II has a E)(termmal Termite Serv1ce,
300 Fourth Ave.
19 Belmont Dr.
huge liv. rm. with F. P. fur
Phone 446 1637
267-lf
heat, garage and bldg . sites
Gene
PI an Is, ().om er
Buy - sell some lots and have -~---298-11
GILLENWATER'S Septic Tank
a cheap home. $14,500.
Cleaning &amp; Repa ir. Ph 446DEWITT'S PLUMBING
Rodney
9499. Price is right
AND HEATING
174-tf
2 STORY , 6 la rge rms., balh,
Route
160 at Evergreen
parlial ba ~e. , new .roof, new
Phbne
'446-2735
Central Air Conditioning
Alum. siding, H. W. firs. , new
281 tt
Heating
factory kilchen, lots of
Free Estimates
paneling, water lap pd. Nat .
Stewart's Hardware
Gas in yard and F.H.A. ap.
For Sale
Vinton, Ohio
proved . Only $11,500.
144-tl ALL TY PE S of bu ildi ng

STROUT REALTY

446-2674 or Howard or Lucille
Brannon 446-1226 after 5 p. m.

L1mestone and coa l for sale,
lump, egg , stoker an d m~ne
run E Mam St., Pomeroy, 0.

NATIONWID E IN ~URANL~
AUTO, F~re , life, 45 State St
RlBBO,,,
outbldgs. Ph 388 8615
Waldo F. Brown. W R Brown , SPEC IAL $7 50 a dozen IBM
THI S nea rly new big 5 rm . home
85 3 446- 1960.
/
electriC polylhylene ribbons .
features a large llv rm ., huge
CARBON PAPER
kotc hen w1fh plenty cabonefs,
BOX of Carbon paper reg . $5.00
J mce bdrm s , quiet street and
Services Offered
priced at $14,750.
only $3.50.
'TIME CLuCKS
Plumbing
&amp;
Heating
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
Cheap Housing
WE ARE now lhe agency for
COMMERCIAL maon t Paul
CARiEk 'S PLUMBIN G
LOCATED at 238 Fourth Ave. 5
T S.l lime clocks.
Knox, office Ph. 446-1011 or
AND HEATI NG
S1mmons Pig. &amp; Office
rms. &amp; bath, large lot, idea l, home Ph . 446 4822.
830 Fourth Avenue
Equip., 446·1397
for the c1ly farmer . Pmed at
70 If
Phone 446-3888 or 446 4477 .
72-tf
only $9,500.
ISS
If
MASONRY CONTR ACTOR

City

14 A. 4 Ml from town, 1,500'
Raccoon Creek, 40 acres, 31
fronlage, rollmg hill land ,
lois have been surveyed, 12
pond site, bldg. sites , only I
lots sold, 19 tots for sale,
per A.
pmed from $1,250 to $3,000. 11 $400
A edge of town, ready for
The owner has taken great
t. $10,000.
pride building roads to the 6 developmen
A. 5 mi. from town, $8,000.
lois and has one of the finest 55 A. $100 per A
water systems with water
ANY HR. 446-1998
available to each lol. Due to
health reasons owner will sell
the entire campsite. Room for
.
25 more wood lots with water
Ph. 44~0008
fronls. All lots have boat dock
privil eges. If intere~ ted in a
lo t for more information call

EXCE LSIOR Sa lt works ·

ba se. house, 6 r oom s and
bath, utihty room, modern
kitchen , barn, corn cri b, other

Side and let the other 1l2 help OLDER home completely
pay for it
remodeled, lots of paneling,

Addison Twp., 7 room home.

Insurance

60 WOODED acres, 2 mites F-OR ALL your msurance needs
check with yo ur Grange agents
from lown. Ph 446-0274.
85·3 al the Neal Ins. Age ncy. 64
Slate St. Agen js for auto, f~r e .
FARM by owner - 60 acres hom eow ners, hospi ta l and
level to r olling , in good gra ss,
general liabi li ty
84tt
plenty water , .5 acre to b.

MASSIE.

furnace, drilled well , new

Cheap,Cheap,Cheap!

1966 'I' T GMC p&gt;ckup
1961 2 T GMC
cam ping trader See lhe all 1964 3 T. GMC
new Starcraf t truck cam per 1966 'h T. Chev
and fish ong boats add ed to our 1966 1;, T Int . P U
recreat 1onallme We all ow up 1966 1;, T. Ford P U
to $300 trade 1n on any Ieni s 1963 112 T GMC P U
We stock all accesson es, 1956 1'12 T. Chev van
service what we sell
Tires - 10.00x20, 12 pi) nylon
F~nanc1ng arranged , qual ity
ll res S90 me. Fed tax
and pnce Cam p c onley,
SOMMER'S G.M.C.
Starcrafl Sa les behind
TRUCKS, INC.
Plea sant P01nt Resort , Pomt
133 Pine St.
Pleasant, W Va
Ph. 446·2532
82-lf
241 ·11

We have a s1x-room home on Cha tham Avenue in ex
ce lleAt cond ition Home approximately 8 years old . See

redecorahng . Price $13,500.

bath apartment. Home has

verter sta ndard equipmenl.
ca mper s 11 models 14 thru 20
ft , Amenca's number one

wall carpetmg Extra lot wit h low taxes. Price $14.750

Older home 1n ex cellent loca tion on Vme Street Needs

furnace, 2 acres of land, deep
HARD TO BELIEVE BUT
HERE IT IS 3 BEDROOM S
WITH CARPETED LIYING
ROOM , BATH, BASEMENT
AND MODERN FURNACE

ALL NEW LISTINGS
Six.room home on fwo acres of ground at the edge of clfy
This home has a modern k 1tchen, gas furnace and wa ll to

furnaces , al so, 3 r oom and

For Sale
New GMC Truck
Headquarters·

1963 11, T. Chevrolet pickup
1965
1'12 T. Chevrolet Truck
FREE es limales . liability in·
. ELECTRIC Gibson guilar and
1967
Whol
e Diesel Truck
surance Prunmg , trimmmg
Sunn amplifier Ph . 446·9628.
and cav1 ty work , tree and 1969 Chev dump truck
84-6
1
s tump removal. Ph 446-4953 1968 12 T GMC P U.
•
7J.lf 1965 1· T. GMC
1969 GMC 4 T. log truck
1962 '4 T GMC PICkup
REFR IGER ATIO N &amp; A1r 1963
1 T GMC
Cond1tionmg Ra1ke's Refng
1965
'h T. Ford P U
&amp; Air Cond Ph 367 7200 .
56 If 1963 112 T Chev P U
1965 'h T GMC P U
1969 I T GMC
REFRIGERATIOI&lt;
1967 'I' T. GMC P U
Ph. 446·9a6s
1969 FORD Ecanolone van
22· 1'
1966 Ji!2 T GMC
196B Chev Subu rban
487 Second Ave.
-Camping Equipment
1962 'f' T GMC P U
1968 wh1l e diesel truck
STARCRAFT travel traders 12 1965 'I• T GMC P U.
(Opposite Post Office)
models, 18 lhru 27 ft ., com · l967 J14 T. Chevrolet picku p
pletety self conta1ned, con 1963 Ffl{l() Fnrrl trwlt

446-1066

family room , carpeted LR, 4
BR, 2 full baths m color,
basement, 2 gas forced air

CH INE SE Pug puppies in lime
for Easter . Stud service. Ph
675 1779 or 675·1595 .
81-5
REG coli ••• Bob Jones, 446-2789
afler 4 p.m.
84-3

Banks Tree Servite

house we show For example,

8].6

REGULAR
PRICE

PREFINlSHED MOUlDING
AND NAILS TO MATCH.
PANEL ADHESIVE 99 EA.
PurrY STICKS 29 EA.

REALTOR

Charm, Location
Convenience
IF YOU HAVE BEEN
near to see me whi le I was In
WAITING
FOR JU ST THE
the hospitaL also for the ·
RI GHT HOME WE THINK
beautif ul cards and flowers . THIS
IS IT VERY AT
God bless each and everyone.
TRACTIVE SPLI T LEV EL
Cornelia Hutchmson
WITH 3 BEDROOMS,
85-1 LARGE LIVING 8. DININ G
ROOM ,
COMPLETELY
BUILT IN KITCHEN WITH
Notice
RANGE, DISH WA SHER
ETC , 2 BATHS, LARGE
CALL after 5 p m for Rawleigh
SCR EENED PATIO AND
Products, 1924 E. Ave. Ph
GARAGE . THI S HOME IS
446-2089 or 446-3387.
PLETELY CAR ·
85-1 COM
PETED AND HAS AN
ATTRACTIVE FIREPLACE
PLUS CE NTR AL AIR ON A
FREE Used clot hing for
BIG SHADY LANDSCA PED
anyone who Is in need Church
of Chris!, Bidwell Ph 388- LO T WITH TREMENDOUS
VIEW AND CHILDREN
8429 or 388-8787.
CA N WAL K TO SC HOOL .
85 1 ORCHARD
HILL AD ·
- ---:cc-- = - -,.,...DRE SS 'NUFF SA ID , NOW
HEY! HEY! Flea Market,
CA LL IKE WI SE MAN FOR
Sa lurday &amp; Sunday, Crown
AN APPOINTMENT
City , Ohio, if weather per.
Under Construction
mds.
83-3
Ready In 4 Weeks
-1N
- Cc:-O'"M
'=E-:ta_x_ r_e-,lu_r_n_s -::-::
W1lson ATTRACTIVE , CA RPETED
BECROOM
HOME.
Rusk, 280 State Sf Ph 446· 3LARGE
LIVING
AND
2476 after 4 p m.
DIN lNG AREA , LOVELY
61 -tf KITCHEN
AND BATH
FULL
DIV IDE D
SUN·VALLE Y Nursery Sciio(;l~ BA SE MENT . GA RAGE .
577 Sun Valley Drive, now LAR GE LOT AN D EX
prov1ding full day care and CELLENT LOCA TION 2
chol d development program MILE OUT IN CITY
HO OL
DISTRICT
, or pre-school children . In· SC
NEARLY 1,300SQ FT FOR
fants excluded . Open 7:30 a. LE SS THAN $20.000 00.
m to 6 p. m Monday lbrough
ALOHA!
Froday . Fees: $20 for full fiv e
day week . $5 per day if less
(Means "Good Buy")
than five days. $3 per day for AND YOU ' LL AGREE
morning sessions. Ph . 446AFTER READING THESE
3657
Madg e Hauldr en, FEATURES
LARGE
Owner -Direc tor; John and LIVING ROOM WITH
FIREPLACE
FORMAL
Loredi lh
Hau~dren ,
DININ G, AND NICE SIZED
operators.
35-lf BEDROOM S, l'l2 BATH S,
LOVEL Y BUILT -IN KIT
CABINETS WITH RANGE ,
RALPH'S Careet- Upholstery OVEN ,
DI SHWASHER ,
Cleaning Service. Free ETC ,
CA RPETING
THR OUG HOUT PLUS 2
esl1 mates. Ph 446-0294.
197·11 CAR GARAGE , FULL
-~
BASEMENT AND ELEC
TRI C HEAT
WE BUY gold co1ns ana suv~r
dollars. Tawney Jewelers
No Down Payment
62-tf
Low Mo. Payment
YOU CAN NOW OWN YOUR
Lost
OWN HOME IN TOWN OR
CAT, male, gray &amp; white, long OUT IF YOU HAVE
STEAD Y EMPLOYMENT
hair . chi ld ren's pet, near
AND GOOD CRED IT. THE;
AddiSon. Ph 446-2805 .
HOM ES DESCRIBED
83 3 BELOW
SHO ULD
QUALIFY
CA LL IKE
WISEMAN FOR DETAILS
Wanted
Home &amp; 2 Acres
TO RENT toba cco .base. Ph .
379-2649.
JUST o;, MILE FROM CITY
83·3 LIM ITS LOCATE D ON 2 A
LOT
MODERN
3
-----~ .
HOME for puppy, part Toy BEDROOM HOME WITH
NICE BU ILT -IN KITCHEN ,
Collie . Ph 446-9529.
BATH , UTILITY ROOM
83 3 AND
GARAGE WITH
LARGE STORAGE AREA
NAT GA S, CITY WATER
Wanted .To Do
AN D SC HOOL S
WALL PAPER hangmg. Ph .
446-3631 or 446-2647
Lovely 3 Bedroom

Others on hand w cluded
Charles Feeney, prestdenl of
the Natwnal League, Warren
Gtles,
NatiOnal
League
Prestdent ementus and various
Canadian official s including
Donald Armstrong, Canadian
Consulate General
The stadium, located in south·
Phtladelphta, was sold out for
the opener but a good number of
the 56,371 holding bckets falled
to show up because of the 47degree cold , wmdy and overcast
weather .
After the Expos took a 1.0 lead
m the stxth mning, the tionor of
scormg the first Phtllies run in
thetr facilibes went to th1rd
basema n Don Money when he
drove a home run mto the left.
field stands.

1-22-23 and 24th

CRESTWALL

con~ ideration

during our slay.
Families of Edward H.
Lynch of Thurman, 0 .;
Families of Earl Sayre of
Gromms Landmg, W Va .
85-1

LYTTLE HOSPITALIZED
WASHINGTON (UP!) Outfielder Jtm Lyttle of the
New York Ya nkees was
hospitalized wtth an attack of
appendtcitis Saturday and hand
an appendectomy Saturday
mghl.
Lyttle complained of pams
when he arnved at the ballpark
fo r a game with the Washington
Senators and was taken to
Hou ston
3 2 600
11:1 Chicago at Housto,n 13 p m I
Doctors Hospital where he was
Pittsburg h at Atlanta
San Diego
2 2 500 I
exammed by George A. Resta,
(2: 15 p.m.)
Los Angeles
1 3 250 2
Cmcinnah
at
New
York
the Senators' team physician.
Cincmnati
0 3 000 21!2
(2 :05p.m.)
Saturday's Results
Resta conftrmed the trouble
San Fran. at St Louis 121
New York 3 Ci ncinnati 2
as append1c1tis and scheduled
(2:15p.m.!
( 11 onnings)
Montreal
at
Ph
iladelph
ia
an operation .
San Fran. 6 St Louis 4
(1
:35pm)
Lyttle 1s expected to remam
Phol~delphta 4 Montreat 1
Monday's Games
Pittsburgh at Atlanta (night)
1n the hospital for three or four
Pittsburgh at Philadelphia
Chicago at Houston (night)
(night)
days, and will be out of action
San Diego at Los Angeles
Houston at St Lou is (night)
(night)
for three to four weeks.
Cincinnati at Atlanta (n ' ''II
Toclay's Games
The Yankees sa1d they would
Chicago at Los Angeles (nl, nt)
(All Times ESTI
place htm on the disabled hst.
San Diego at San Francisco
San Diego at Los Angeles
!Only games scheduled )
(4 p m . )
National League Standings
By Umted Press lnlernatoonat
I Noghl games not included!
East
W L Pet. GB
Pittsburgh
3 o 1.000
New York
2 1 .667 1
Chocago
2 2 .500 1'12
Sf Louis
1 2 .333 2
Montreal
I 2 .333 2
Philadelphia
I 2 .333 2
West
W L Pet. GB
San Fran
3 I 750
Atlanta
2 1 .667 'h

Fqr Rent

Card of Thanks

Machemehl came in to hold the
Red Sox scoreless and got three
men out in order in the ninth .
Camilo Pascual, who hurled 3
~ innings, pi_cked up his firs~
victory of the season while
r~hever Ken Brett lost hls first
for the Red Sox.

with a two-run double to left to The Red Sox scored three
cap a three-run fourth inning, times in the sixth and Aparicto
knocked in his sixth run of the
The Cleveland shortstop game by slicing a two-run
capped another three-run in· double to right in the seventh .
ning with a two-out, two-run Boston put the tymg run on
single in the fifth that put the third with one out in the etghth,
Indians ahead, 11-5.
but rookie righthander Chuck

You Need, Sell Items You Don-'t In The Tribune Oassifieds

PUBLIC SALE
11

SATURDAY MORNING APRIL 17th O'aDCK
1159 SEt AVE. GAUIPOLIS, Ohio
Selling the personal effects. including fur·
niture and household items, from the late
Della Boggs Estate.
Severa l old dishes, Including some Willow Ware Royal
China. 2 sets of dishes and other gl~ss ware, 8 pc. dining
room su ole, including a glass front china cabinet ; oil
lamp, punch bowl set, oak library table, 5 pc. chrome
dinette set with drop-leaf, late model Hotpolnt
refrigerator, In excellent condlllon 1 utility table, step
st90L usual ~ llc~~P; .~l,t~.sll ~, old wood rocker, metal b"'1,k,.
shelf, picture frames and mirrors, twin size bed, throw
rugs, 1-3 pc. genuine solid cedar bedroom suite, complete
with sRrong and mattress; numerous quilts, pillows and
blankets, floor lamp, stand table, 5 ft. step ladder, lawn
cha irs, 3 wooden chairs, chest of drawers, Maytag
automati c washer , towel pole, elec. sweeper, elec. fans,

late model ca binet elec. sewing machine, bathroom
scales, nest of serving trays, I old RCA cabinet radio,
cedar chest, !able tamps, clocks, milk can, 1·3 pc.
bedroom suit e, complete with spring and mattress, 1
walnut stand table with castors, I gas heater, elec. wa ll
'clocks, 2 pc nylon living room suite, 3 ladder back chairs,
1 maple lamp table, 2 platform rockers, folding chair and
card table, 1 pole lamp, RCA television, porch swing,
glider, quilting frame, old trunk , foot stool , day bed ,
clothes basket, push lawn mower, 1 apt. size gas range,
fruit jars, stone .jars, apple butter stirrer, Iron kettle,
misc. hand tools. Plus many other items of val ue.
AUCTIONEERS : Col. R. E, Knolls and Son Dave
Marshall Boggs and Russell Hartell, Executors
Tom Moullon, Attorney for I he Est ale
Auclioneers Remarks: "This Is one of lhe cleanesl
that we hllve ever sold, "

PUBLIC SALE
.Friday, April 16, 11:00 A.M.
Complete Farm Machine!J Dispersal
1967 M-F tractor No. 165, 1178 hrs .; 1969 M· F
tractor No . 135,563hrs.; M· Fplows. 3·143 PH;
M· F 5 ft . brush hog; M· F post hole digger ; 3
PH cultivators.
John DeereEquipment: No. 24T baler ; hay
conditioner No . 32; .disc on rubber, 8ft.; steel
harrow; mower No. 39, 3 PH ; corn planter No.
247; 2 wagol)s with 16ft. racks; lime spreader
on rubber, like new.
New Holland Equipment: Rake, used 2
seasons; No. 327-S spreader with false end
gate . used 1 season; No. 717 forage harvester,
1969 model ; ensilage blower .
Cobey ensilage wagon , chain f~d; Case 26
ft. elevator; portable air compressor, used 1
year ; 18ft. aluminum grain elevator with 34
h.p. electric motor ; Stewart electric ca.ttle
clippers; 6-row corn spray;
double
cultipacker ; scraper blade ; · end loader;
Papek ensilage cutter ; good 2-wheel trailer ;
ladder for Marietta silo; Bolens garden Roto·
tiller, chain saw.
5-16 ft . feed bunks , 7 feed boxes ; 2 cattle
oil e rs ; 2 grinders with electric motors; 24ft .
aluminum ext. ladders. locust posts ; , steel
posts ; 3 steel culverts; 1 200-gal . stilL if not
sold or confiscated before sale date ; several
log chains; 50 gal. wood preservative ; one lot
new and used pipe ; large galvan ized watering
trough ; Tarpaulins ; work bench with vise ; 175
bu. corn; 200 bales hay ; one lot hand tools,
numerous other items .

JOHN McNEIU
Ph. 675-2413
Pt . Pleasant,
, W. Va.
•
HAROLD FLAX and LEE JOHNSON, Aucts.
Pete, Grant and Bob - Clerks
Lunch will,be Served ,
Farm located 3 miles East of West Columbia
near Lieving Coal mine.

�•
23-TheSundayTimes-SenUnel,SUnday, Aprilll,l971
/fl.

.

I :

;...:

.

I

-

:

I

I

SMITH BUICK
UPPlR RT I

GALLIPOL IS

1969 Cadillac Cpe, __________'5()00
DeVille. 18,000 miles, lo~al river boat capt.
trade .

1969 Pontiac Gran Prix _______ 53295
Air, vinyl top, P.W. , P.S.. , mag . wheels .
Sharp.

1970 Chev. MalibU----------52695
2 Dr . Hdtp ., V-8, P.S., vinyl top, 16,000
miles·. 5 Year warranty.

1969 Chev. Malibu----------$2495
Bucket seats. 4 speed, tape, 350 engine. One
local owner . Sharp .

1968 Buick LeSabre _________ $2195
4 Dr. cust., air cond., one owner.

1969 Ply. Roadrunner_ _______ 51995
4 Speed. 383 eng., Skylark trade . Nice.
'

1967 Buick Wildcat_ ________11995
4 Dr . Hdtp .• vinyl fop. air cond .• one owner .
Sharp .
•

1965 Buick Wildcat-________11195
4 Dr. Hdtp .• white. black vinyl top, air
cond., one local owner. Like new cond.

1964 Cadillac 4 Dr. ---------·5450

Air, Runs Good .

36 Month Financing On 68, 69, 70 Models

22-71 BUICKS &amp; OPELS
ELECTRAS, LeSABRES, &amp; SKYLARKS

SMITH BUICK
l1f'l'l R Rl I

GALLIPOLI S

.

Take a
close look
at these
Spring
Speciab
$2495

68 CHEVROLET, Impala, 4 Or. HT. AC.- 52495
$2095

68 DODGE, Coronet, 2 Dr. Hdtp.
68 FORD, Station Wagon, VB

$1895

67 DODGE, Monaco 4 Dr. Hdtp .. V8.

$1895

67 OPEL, Kadette Station Wagon, V8.

$1295

66 DODGE, Charger2 Dr. Hdtp., VB.
66 CHEVROLET, Impala 2

$1395

or. Hdtp., VS.$1095

65 BUICK, 2 Or, Hardtop, VB.

$1195

65 PLYMOUTH, Fury 2 Dr. Hdtp., VB.

KEITH GOBLE FORD
BOWLING LEAGUE
April6, 1971
With only one week to go, the
Keith Goble Ford Bowling
'"·League has just oboul completed a very successful season .
Teams No. 5 and No. 8 have
battled down to the wire, and
next week on April 13, the
second half winner will be
determined. A possibility of a
lie exists only if Team No. 5
loses all eight points and T~!&lt;&gt;m
No. a wins all eight points.
Team No. 2 came very close to

the top, having a close 79 points.
The winner of the second half
will meet Team No. 4, who won
the first half, In a roll-off on
Tuesday, April 20.
The onnual bowling banquet
is to be held on Tuesdoy, April
27, at Oscar's Restaurant in
Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs. Keith
Goble will be guests of the
League. Mr. Goble has sponsored the League lhi&lt; season
and will present trophies to the
two top teams as well as Individual winners.
Standings week of April 6:
Team
W L
No. 5
88 32
No.8
80 40
No.2
79 41
No. 10
68 52
No 11
61 59
No.6
56 64
No 12
52 68
No. 3
50 70
No. 4
48 72
No. 7
48 72
No. 1
46 74
No.9
44 76
On April 6, Team No. 5 took
eight points from Team No. 3.
Georgia Richie was high for
Team No. 5 with 504 pins and
Jack Janey was high for Team
No. 3 with 509 pi ns.
Team No. 23 look six poinls
from Team No. 8. Betty Saxon
and Charlie Lupton were high
for Team No. 12 with 509 pins
each and Wanda Gabrllsc~ was
high for Team No. 8 with 472
pins.
Team No. 11 took five points
lrom Team No. 2. Elmer
Gardner was high for Team No.
11 with 513 pins and Gloria
Choquette was high for Team
No. 2 with 496 pins.
Team No. 4 took eight points
from Team No. 9. Charlie Neal
was high for Team No. 4 with
555 pins and Mary Janey was
high for Team No. 9 with 411
pins.
Team No. 6 look six points
from Tean No. 1. Merida Shaw
was high for Team No. 6 with
456 pins and Kerm Malone was
high for Team No. 1 with 460
pins.
Team No. 7 took six points
from nam· No. 10. Ralph
Johnston was high for Team No.
7 with 512 pins and John Lloyd
was high for Team No. 10 with
490 pins.
High single game for the
ladies for the evening was 215
pins each held by Georgia
Richie and Betty Saxon and for
the men was 212 pins held by
Charlie Lupton.
High series for. the ladles was
509 total pins, held by Belly
Saxon and for the men 555 lot&lt; I
pins held by Charlie Neal.

.q

on late ~ode/

THE LAMPLIGHTERS
Standings
Team
Name
Us&amp; Co.
80
Lucky Strikes
75
Brite Liles
57
Untouchables
56
L&amp; N
40
Tagalongs
28
Team High Series - Us &amp; Co.
2128.
Team High Game - L &amp; N
2104.
High Ind. Series - Harold
Lohse 645; Mary Voss 541.
Second High Ind. Series- Ed
Voss 627; Betty Smith 509.
High Ind. Game - Harold
Lohse 245; Maxine Dugan 204.
Second High Ind. Game Willard Boyer 237; Betty Smith
200.

70 PONTIAC

Who says it's hard to find a new 1971 car for
under $3000 today. Not us, and here are 8
examples from our American Motors inventory.

NOW

Gremlin 2 Door Sedan ______ 52174.10

2995

$2795

Light green, 3 speed, radio, 6 c ylinder .

Catalina 2 Dr. hardtop. one careful local owner ,
extra nice, power steering, auto. trans.

Gremlin 2 Door Sedan ______$2326.10

69 PONTIAC

Mepium gree n, automatic, radio, w-s- w, 6
cylinder.

2795

1

Catalina Safari Sta . Wagon : factory air eon ditioned, fully equipped. This car is from a very
satisfied customer , and very care.ful one .

68 CHRYSLER

2395

1

Silver , GX package, mag . wheels . wide oval s ,
floor shift, the little sports special.

12195

Gremlin 2 Door Sedan ______ 2632.90
1

Blue. automatic, deluxe package, 6 cylinder.

~et

1595

1

6 Sprint 2 dr . hardtop, overhead Cam 6-Sprint, 4
sp . trans., bucket seats. Sharp car .

67 BUICK

1795 $1695

1

1895

SJ95

'

BLAETTNARS

Seda~---·52571.20
Sedan---~2606.20

. R. H. Rawlings Sons

.PONTIAC
GMC TRUCKS
BUICK
116 Years of Continuous Business
PH.ON E 992-2143
POMEROY, OH 10

992-2151

rl!dio Pleasing blue finish.
See this before you buy.

NORRIS DODGE

Cutlass 4 Door Sedan, V-8
engine, automatic trans., p.

Morning Star 24'x481

1968 Olds $1895
sfeering &amp; brakes, vinyl

Valiant 4 Dr ., local 1 owner
car, clean interior, dark
aqua fin1sh , like new tires, 6
cyl. engin e &amp; automatic
trans , radio. Popular model

•11 MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY •
• CIIP-IIIU, 1•1 Lllilro., lo1 l.tllil"rllll.
1111.
Bernard
Stewart • Cllll..., lo~ lUll .
l'ltlllltnd mo FREE CATALOG
No 1145
Route 1, Hide~a. 1·
• NAME
'
Your CAPP·HOM~8
reprnentltivt 11:

Way Hills
Bremen, Ohio 4l107

&amp; priced to go

•
•

Phone: 614·569·4586

=
•B
••••••••••••••••••••

70 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

$6000

Black finish with gold leather interior, full power
equipment, AM-FM stereo radio, Climate Control air
conditioning, 16.000 ml

¥K652
tAQ2
.KJ7

.3

EAST
• A 1084
tKl063
&lt;foQ9 52

• QJ9
• J98

&lt;fo10 843
SOUTH
.AKJ1064
., 7 3

$5000

Gold finish. black vinyl lop, match ing inter ior, fu ll power
equipment, Climate Control air cond itioni ng, low mileage.
SHARP•

Players with No .Finesse

• 8 72

$6250

interior, full power equ i pm e nt~ tilt &amp; telescope whee l.
Climate Control air {:Onditioning, 6,700 mdes

WIN AT BRIDGE

WEST

terior , auto. trans .• power

Sauterne metallic finish, be ige lop, matching leather

69 Cadillac Sedan DeVille

.Q95

We are s orry for our
reader. He would have made
his contract if any one of
three cards had been right
for him, but we aren't too
sorry because he should have
made his contract in spite of
all the bad breaks.
Remember that he ruffed
the third heart and that East
was left with the ace. South
was correct to play three
rounds of trumps. but he
should have won the third
trump in dummy and lej out
dummy's kmg of hearts ..East
would cover with the ace and
South should simply discard
a low diamond and show
East his hand.
It wouldn't matter a bit
where the king of diamonds
and queen of clubs were lo·
cated. East would ha ve to
lead one of those suits and
make South's fine s se for

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
'

Open Eves. Til6- Til S P.M. Sat.
992-5342
GMAC Financing Available
POMEROY
" You'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business"
T ---1

I.AJCUJ

Bowling

For Sale

Tri County League
March 28, 1971

ANTIQUES, phone 992-5327.
4-7-301c

.

H.. -UI'I'Ej.I

.I I

2 Ton Cab-Chassis, 84"-cab
to axle Good 825x20 tires, 2speed rear axle, clean cab,
292 cu. ln . 6 cyl engine.

1963 Chevrolet
SS95
2 Ton cab &amp; chassis, 102" cab
to axle, good 825x20 tires,
clean cab, 292 cu. in. 6 cyl.

Yes .• • We have

~I~Pill~'~IM~SIII~f~II~AIISWIII~~~

- -- - -'--

...ltrl..

•

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o

•

I I )-(I]'!

.........

------:--

PPINESS

FREE

FREE

~g

c~

~

r-

m

0

:1:

m

m

~

~

VI

int . bumper , radio, white &amp;

....

I I

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:1:

HOME

1st in Service

z
z

mobile home purchased Fri., Sat., Sun.,
Mon., April 9-10-11-12

VI

- ~

0

Ill

r-

~

~

m Open 7 Days A Week
VI ,

Phone 992-7195

~

~

m
VI

I

WANT AD '
Notice
INFORMATION
RUBBER
STAMPS made to
DEADLINES
order
.
24
hour
service. Dwain
5 Pdl). Oay Bofore eublication
or Wilma Casto , Portland •
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Ohio .
Will be accepted untO 9 a.m . f
2-12-90tc
Oay of Publicalion
REGULATIONS
FRESH
bakery
Tho Publisher reserves the OVEN
producls
.
Jimmy's
PastrJ.
r:lght to edit of reject any ads.
Shop, N. 2nd Ave., Mi deemed
ob/ectlonat.
The
dlepor l. Phone 992-3555.
publisher will not be responsible
3-28-30tc
for ' more than one Incorrect
Insertion .

RATES

For Want Ad Service
5 cents oer Word on A Insertion
Min1mtl'm C'ftarge I!IC

12 cents per word lhre&lt;

consecutiY'1!. 1nsertlons.
18 cents ~ per word sjx con ·

secutlve insertions . .
25 Per cent Oiscount

ATfEfnioN ladies! Would you
like to try a wig on in lhe
privacy of your own home?
You can.Just call us. We also
have the Mink Oil Kosmelics,
Kosco!,
of
course.
Dislrlbutors, Brown's. Phone
Middleport 992-5113.
12-31 -11&lt;

on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days .
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
992-5327.
$1.50 for 50 word• minimum. HOME sewing . Phone 3-J0.30tc
Each additional word 2c.
'BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertlstment.

·

Auction

OFFICE HOURS
8:30 e·.m. to· 5:00pm. Oally,

AUCTION
SATURDAY, April 17, at the
8 : 30 a .m . to 12:00 Noon
Virgil Price farm 21h miles E.
~saturday .
of Chester -on Riebel Road.
Follow auction signs from S.
R. 248 at Chesler Golf Course.
In Memory
Livestock
IN MEMORY of Robert Marion 1
CHAROLAIS -Hereford
Cowdery who left us seven
springer cow, 2 yearling
years ago today, April 11 ,
Holslein heifers, 2 Angus
1964; •
heifers, 1 Charolais-Holstein
heifer, 2 yearling Holstein
May you always walk in sunbulls .
shine.
Farm Machinery
God's love around you glow,
1969 MASSEY-Ferguson 135
For the happiness you brought
Tractor (only 136 hrs. use) , 2
us
\
Botlom Plows, 6 fl. disc, 5 fl.
Everyone was sure to know.
brush hog, spring tooth
It broke our heart 'to lose you,
harrow, (all with 3 pl. hitch),
But you did not go alone,
2-wheel trailer ; Dual -Wheel
Part of us went with you,
Gravely Tractor with Rotary
The day God called you home.
Mower , plow, cultivator,
The Family.
Grader blade, seed and
4-11 -llc
ferlilizer spreader, saw, and
riding sulky; Toro lawn
combination.
mower-llller
Lost
Tools and Misc. equip.
A MOTHER'S pin, vicinity of HOME LITE XL 101 Chain saw,
Elberfelds Store . Reward.
2 carpenter saws (power), 2
Phone 992·5010.
elec. grinders; 2 elec. drills,
4-11-31c
vise and anvil, cider mill, slipscraper, plastic and iron pipe,

Notice -

WILL DO tailoring and
1 upholstery. Phone 992-3561.
3-31-JOic
PAYING ,fop. prices for nigbl
crawlers and dug bell. Bail
store will open In near future.
Ball of all kinds. Watch for
announcement, 320 N. .2nd,
Middleport.
4-8-3tc

SPACIOUS
3 bedroom
brick
ranch house,
large living.
dining, and family rooms.
Basement, 2 car garage. All
eleclric central air. Very
comfortable. Upper twenties.
New Haven, Weekends only.
Phone New Haven 882-2712.
4-9-2tc

HOBSTEIIER
REAL ESTATE
George S. HobsteHer, Jr.
Broker
Phone 985-4186
Hilton Wolfe, Salesman
Phone 949-3211
CALL US for all yourreal estate

O'DELL WHEEL aiignmenl
located at Crossroads, Rt . 124.
Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service.
Wheels balanced elec tronically .
All
work ·
guaranleed .
Reasonable
rates. 992-3213.
3-17-30tc
HARRISON'S TV AND AN TENNA SERVICE . Phone
992-2522.
6-10-lfc
TREE -TRIMMING
and
removal. Full y insured. Free
estimates. Call after 5 p.m ..
collect
Dick
Hayman,
Coolville 667-3041 or Tom
Hayman, Chester 985-3509.
·
3-28-30ip

needs. Inquire of our listings

before you buy .

plus, you gain an.

Income Tax benefit, you build an equHy and you are not
bound by the terms of a rental agreement.
.

•

Let Us Show You How You Can Become A Homeowner We Do The Paperwork On Farmer's Home, V.A., F.H.A.,
And Conventional Loans.
Come See Us At 97'12 N. Second St., Middleport.

READY -MIX
CONCRETE
delivered right to your
projecl. Fasl and easy. Free
estimates . Phone 992-3284.
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co ..
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30-lfc

ITCIMCIBILE insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your O'BRIEN ELECTRIC Service.
operator's license? Call 992Commercial, residenl1ai and
2966.
Industrial wiring . Phone 2476-15-lfc
2113.
3-12-lfc

Real Estate For Sale

You will have something of value to show for the SSS you
spend when you buy your own home -

992·7in
Evenings Call: 992-2534 992-l4n 992-2580
Dutton
Spencer
~row

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS! '
40 ~inutes of. Y.,ur Time Can Well Be the Most Profitable
Time You Ever Spent.
Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle! .
icWINSOR
«BUDDY

.. CHAMPION
1t'VAN DYKE

-t!ALSO
DOUBLE~WIDES

SEE TOM CROW, GUY SHULER OR BOB CROW

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.
MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W.VA.

Real Estate For Sale

Virgil B.

[ EXPERIENCED
Radiator.Service

PAPER-HANGING, painting,
plastering, dry wall . Arthur
Musser . Phone 992-3630.
3-28-30tp
SR.
HOUSE, 6 rooms and bath,
Broker
phone
742-5613.
3 BEDROOM RANCH with wall-to.waii carpeting,
110 Mechanic St.
4-ll -12tc SEPTIC tanks cleaned . Miller
aluminum siding AVAILABLE NOW.
Pqmeroy, Ohio
CALL AL MOODY, 992-7034
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph:
HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln His.,
662-3035.
lor appointment or see at 203 Park St .. Middleport.
4 bedrooms,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
2-12-tfc MIDDLEPORTFrom the Largest Truck or
bath, gas forced air furnace
10-25-tfc
wilh
air
conditioning .
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Beautiful kitchen with cook
$mallesl Heater Core.
HOUSE , 4 rooms, bath, 2 lots FOR expert electrical work call
and oven unils. Nice 2 car
located in Syracuse. Call after
992-5179.
garage . $14,500.00.
4-6-24tp
3 p.m. weekdays, phone 9922806.
SYRACUSE - 4 bedrooms,
Ph.f92..2143
Pomero-t,
0 -6fc
bath, dining with fireplace.
Full basement. Gas furnace. 3
CONVENIENT bul secluded Real Estate For Sale
porches
. Modern kitchen,
building lois on T79 al Rock
paneled.
Large garden.
Springs . Wi thin walk!ng
On your lot or ours. Under our financing program you can
"'
Asking
S13,000.!)q.,
--~~ \ _
dislance of Meigs Hogh
buy a new home FOR LESS'than you can rent.
School, a 5 minute drive from
COMMIDDLEPORT
Pomeroy . Call or see BUI
608 East }~1ln Stroet
MERCIAL
LOTNeKI
toM.
W1lle weekends, or afler 5
POMEROY
and R. Only $3,500.00.
CALL TODAY FOR INFORMATION
p.m. weekdays. Phone 992- TUPPER~ PLAINS- Route 7
992-7034 or 268-1810 Collect
6887.
- 1 LEVEL ACRE, 7 rooms,
- 3 'bedroom
7-1-tfc bath, 4 bedrooms, cellar, MIDDLEPORT
one story ho1.1se near stores.
- - - - - - - - - - garage, city water and deep
Bath, large kitchen and
-GUARAf.ITEEDHOUSE, 6 rooms and bath, well. $9,308.
dining area . 2 level lots, Only
Phone 992-2094
phone 742-5613.
$5,000.00.
3-30-12tp POMEROY- 2 slory frame, 6
- -- - - - - -- rooms, 3 bedrooms, bath. COUNTRY HOME - 4 nice
Park &amp; Sycamore
Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
"Middlej)Orf, 0.
LINCOLN ST., Middleport.
$3,750.
bedrooms. modern bath. and
..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __, Modern, 3 bedrooms, 1112 NEAR CARPENTER- FARM
606 E. ~n. Pomeroy,
kitchen. Gas furnace. Drilled
well
.
Good
cellar
.
57
ACRES
Wanted To Buy
For Sale
bath. Call collect 1' 614·962· -about 110 acres, 3 barns,
Minerals. Asking $10,000.00.
2018, between 9 a.m. and 5 silo, pond, 2 wells. other
OLD furnlture, dishes, brass ONE saddle horse. One brood
p.m., Monday through
buildings. Home has new
.1 M D M'll
mare. Dave Yosl, Portland,
Friday.
A
d'
bed
beds, etc. W"e
ACRES - 20 tractor land.
&amp;
. . ' er,
Ohio. Phone 843-2242 .
4-8-6tc
lum . si mg, 4
rooms, 76 Good
implemenl
shed
and
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
bath. $2~,000.
4_9_31 P -- -- - - -- - cellar. 8 room older home
992-6271.
- -- - - - - TO BUY OR SELL
wilh 4 bedrooms. Running
9· 1·ffc LOCUST POSTS, John Wells, 2 STORY modern home, 7
CALL US
water . $13,500.00.
Spouting,. Roof
- - - - - - - -Long Bottom, Ohio.
rooms and bath. Can be seen
HENRY CLELAND
Wanted
4-9-3tp
after 5 p.m. or all day on
REALTOR
NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY
Painting
- -- - - - - - - , .
Sundays or Mondays. Phone
Office 992-2259
BEFORE
THEY
GO
FEMALE Basse! Hound. Phone 1967 FORD pickup . Lime 985-4175.
Residence 992·2568
NEW &amp; OLD WORK
HIGHER. CALt US TODAY .
949-3056 after 5 p.m .
spreader. Double-barrel 12
4-8-5lc
·4-11-6fc
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
4-11 -3fp
gauge. 1890 Winchester pump. - - - - - - - - All WOIIhtr Roofing I
ASSOCIATE
Construction Ca.
Hopkins and Aliens single~--------------------..
992-3325
PATIENTS lo care for in my
DEXTER,
0, 45726 ·
shot.
Phone
247-2161.
t--------..,---'----1
home. Phone Mason 773-5712.
PHONE
742·3,41
4-6-Sic
PUBLIC SALE (Grocery Closeoull
4-6-12tc
= =cc-:-:::--=:==:;:;;::--:
Saturday, April17, 1971 - 11: oo A.M. ·
Insured-Experienced
BESTLI NE PRODUCTS. Call
we are discontinuing our business and will sell the
Work Guaranteed,
The spacious home of the
Myron Bailey, Phone 99 2-5327 ·
merchandise at the store located on SR 124 in Syracuse.
Help Wanted
Oh io, former Iy R'1zer •s Grocery.
late Mrs. Bessie M. Pickens,
- - - - - - -- 4-4-301c
on approximately
situated
Canned goods of all kinds, baking Items, soaps &amp;
1965 HONDA 250. Call 742 _5042
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
six
acres
in Racine, Ohio .
WANTED
f
detergents, cosmetics, cleaning items, baby items.
15
4
Complete Service
Hot water heat by free gas .
a fer ' p.m.
This is an opportunity to buy grocery items that are fresh
4_5_61 c
Phone 949-3821
Interest in producing gas
and at your price. - Bring your chair.
Racine, Ohio
well .
ALUMINUM car top boats, 10MR. &amp; MRS. RAYMOND BUTCHER
Crill Bradford
12-13 foot . Lorenzo D. Davis,
Terms; Cash
Lunch Available
5·1-lfc
Kingsbury Road.
Carnahan Auction Service
------~3-24-JOtc
J. Carnahan
D. Smith
~EWING MACHINES. Kepair
949-2708
' Racine, Ohio
949-2033
Exec. of!: state
service, all makes. m-2284
Kl LL TERMITES and yard
Not Responsible for Accidents
Reedsville, Ohio
The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
II ." King
Builders
Supply
L_ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ ___J : Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
insects
wiJh ARAB
"You-Do-378-6289
Company, Middleport.
3-29-lfc
2-21 -60tc
24 ACRE FARM, Long Bottom,
with or without farm . NEIGLER Construction. For
.
PAINT DAMAGE, 1971 Zig-2ag
machinery . House with 3
building or remodeling your
machines. Still in
bedrooms, dining room, living
home, Call Guy Nelgler,
L - - - -- - - - - - " sewing
original cartons . No at room. 1'12 baths, enclosed
Racine, Oltlo.
·
lachments needed, as our ·
back porch, wall fo wall
For Rent
7-31-lfc
conlrols are buill in. Sews
carpeting, Aluminum siding,
ANTIQUES, Phone 992-5327.
with
1
or
2
needles,
makes
awning,
storm windows and RALPH'S
CARPET
4-6-301c
storm doors . City water.
bultonholes, sew on buttons,
Upholstery Cleaning Service.
monograms, and blind hem
Selling due to Ill health. Phone
Free estimates. Phon•
TRAILER LOTS. Bob's Mobile
slilch . Full cash price, $38.50
614-985-3938.
Gallipolis
446-0294.
Courl. Rl . 124, Syracuse,
or budget plan available.
4-9-12lp
3-12-ttc
Ohio. 992-2951 . •
Phone 992-5641.
PLACE - At the Orville Johnson Farm, Dexter, Ohto.
4-2-lfc
4-6-6tc
Turn off St. Route 124 at Langsvttte, Ohio, go through
- - - -----:Dexter, turn second road to right (tilatch tor sale signs).
TRAILER, Brown's Trailer ELECTROLUX Vacuum
As we have quit farming
offer for Public S.lt our
Park , Minersville. Phone 992Cleaner complete with at 3324.
farr.n equipment, household Items and antiques, conlachments,
cordwlnder
and
4-9-61c
sisting of:
painl spray. Used bul in like
new condition. Pay $37.45
UNFURNISHEO 3
room
cash or credit terms
Oliver tractor, size 1250;, 2 yrs. old, (less than 300 hrs.); 3aparlment. Phone 992-2288.
available.
Phone
992-5641
.
point hltch, set ol breaking_plows, 2 yrs. old· 3 point, set of
1·31-lfc
4-6-6fc
pick-up discs I Ford), 3 point; set of cultlvatprs (Ford). 3
This yNr the total dollll YOIU1111 ol V111dln1 II llqiiCt.d Ill
point ; Black Hawk corn planter 3 point, brush"'hoy, 1 yr.
TWO OR three bedroom home, TESTED and approved by
reach almosl SIX BILLION DOLLARS! That's not nir:tcel
Cottage Road, Syracuse.
old,
3
point;
International
mowing
machine,
set
of
drag
and dlma stu .
·
millions of homemakers. Blue
Adults only. Phone 992-5133.
harrows,
International
hayrake,
farm
wagon,
2
wheel
Lustre carpel cleaner Is tops.
Ussery Industries can make you a part of this industry lor an
3-2-lfc
tralier, J og chains, set of com-a-longs, hog feeders, 25
Baker Furniture, Middleport.
investment of as little as $700 to $7,000. Vandlna not
heavy chickens; water pump with tank.
4-7-71
-:::T_R_A_IL-::E-::R-::S-::PA:-C:-:E::-o-n-o-:1d:-;R:::t. 33,
just plod alona keeplna ll's own In . the buslneu -ld.
ANTIQUES AhD COLLECTORs·
,
Vendlna is a foleluMer In this country's economy and it's
'12-mile north of new Meigs
Iron
kettle
with
stand,
lard
press,
wagon
seat,
old
buggy,
future Ia on the brink ol 1 flntastic doiial volume ltowth.
High School. Phone 992-2941. 1964 TRIUMPH motorcycle,
old steam boat light, 6 wagon wheels, cow bells, lime bell,
good condilion, $200. Harry
3-5-tlc
· Wouldn't you like to have a part of thtt IIDWih? Wouldn'l
Brown,
phone
985-3833.
sliver bell, blacksmith anvil, 60 Avon bottles (mostly
---:--:you love to work lor yoursalf? You can be you1 own bon
FURNISHED and unfurnished
4-6-Sip
pairs), 20 novelty bottles, collection of old'bottles. pewter
and have the but -dln1 uperience !hero is bellind you
aparlments. Close to school.
and silver items, butter churn, 2 old cream separators,
every
step ol the way.
Phone 992-5434.
butter mold and peddle, antique pictures, 3 piece antique
10-18-lfc
U.l.l. can offer you oppotiUnltY in tile vandin1 business. You
bedroom suite, antique dresser, collection of old Irons,
can
1 make nickels and di1111s arow Into BIG MONEY! Alllr
brass dog irons and others, fireside set, steamer, trunk
3 ROOM, bath, furnished or
investln&amp; In rour e"'lpment, you maintain the maclllntr)
Carnival glass, numerous pieces of other glass, walnut
semi-furnished apartment .
and
service It U.l.l. secu1es tha locations for you. U.l:l.
china closet, old books, approx. 30 stone jars and lugs
Also, 2 room, bath, furnished
.
provides
a toll· free telephone system so that you can capartment. Mulberry Ave.,
(some embossed), maple desk, old wall telephone, 2
municate
11pldly with ou1 speclali~tl. U.l.l. oll111 an inttlPomeroy . References
antique guns.
.
llaent
flnanclna
plan which can help you &amp;lOW from part·ll•
required. Pho~e m -6698.
Sale Conducted By Adoms Auction Service
to
1\111-timo.
Above
ail U.l.l . trains you lo opetale ,..
3-23-tfc
Terms: Cash
'
Lunch Served
buaintas and then holds yout hand until you1 lftt are lltllll,
Not Responsible For Accidents
011 the &amp;IOIIId.
AUCTIONEERS
For Sale
II
you 110 lnte1ested in becomln1 a ptrt ol one of the lu!Mt
Col. Bill Brown
Col. Jim Adams
IIOwina
inck!striu in Am•ica, write U.l,l. todl1'! lncllltlt
CbAL, 'limest(fle . Excelslo:
New Marshfield, Ohio
Rutland, Ohio
phone numbe1 and rofeJances.
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Ph. 742-4461
/
Ph. 664·3504
Pomeroy. Phone 9:92-:lltf.
........ lll.oll'l!i Eo!'• ColllltoDIIIIS. T( Cltp This Ad1 '
4-9-ttc

TEAFORD

4-6-6fc

BlAETTNARS

$5.55

~

bANNIE'S MOBILE HOMES- DANNIE'S MOBILE HOMd

Insurance

* A STACK OF WORTHlESS RECEIPTS! ! *

Cleland Realty

"'

...

DANNIE'S AT POMEROY

res, camper top,

THE $$$ YOU PAY IN RENT?

Build Homes. • •

~

z

-m FREE: 8x20 Aluminum awning with any ~
r

new

good condi tion . Phone 9922805, Eldon Walburn .
3-28-lfc

WHAT DO YOU HAVE FOR

We Custom

VI

-

0
:J&gt;

red finish . Good tires .

1966 Chevrolet
'1695

H

OMES

.

cab. R step bumper, chrome

- -----

tJ I

rm

'12 Ton 8' Styieside Pickup, V8 engine, std . trans ., custom

~

II

OBILE

Ill

1968 Ford

...,_...~

------

ANNIE'S

0

steering and brakes, radio,
heater.

engi ne.

VENDING IS A NICKEL
&amp; DIME BUSINESS ...
SS Billion Worth!

------------

!DRABIUTYM:NI~CEN&amp;!
c~

H. T. Cpe ., lite blue finish,
good tires. clean vinyl in-

Gallipolis! Ohio

10

I own a lot. Phone•- - - - - I don't own slot bull could Itt one.

--

1962 T. Bird $495

•2,395
WOOD MOTOR SALES

NORTH (D)

TOWN OR RFD•----- - - STATE,_ _ _ _ _ _ ZIP•_ __

•

car .

70 Cadillac DeVille Convertible

YOUR NEW

AODRESS~--------

steering , radio. Nice family

Previously Owned Cars

Mother's Day In

American, walnut, 7-gun
TANKS CLEANED.
capacity. Reasonable. One "SEPTIC
Ditching.
Electric sewer
walnut round coffee fable,
cleaning."
Reasonable
rates .
web legs, 30x30x181h (high) . ·Phone
John
Russell,
Phone 992-2936.
Gallipolis 446-4782.
4-8-3tc
4-7-lfc

~~~MCY.Tcmp~~2J.~

:=========~

owner car.

i nterior, good tires, V-8
engine, automatic trans . &amp; p.

heater. automatic trans., w-s-w tires,
,burgundy mist, white top, white vinyl interior .
Ole owner car in excellent cond.

•FIN.4NCINC
•INSUJUNCE

LOT PHONE 992-7004, IF NO ANSWER PHONE 992-3422,
HOURS DAILY 12·9, SUNDAY 1:6.
5a:t Locust St,
Middleport, Ohio
(Opposite Goble's Usee!. Car Lot)

with 6'x24' "L"

H.T. Sedan , local 1 owner
car, blk finish &amp; red cloth

4 Dr . Sedan, p. steering, p. brakes. radio &amp;

'

We Give Complete Servicing

interior. radio, V(hite over
turq finish , good tires . Local
1

(AVAILAILE IN
ELECTRIC- FUEL OIL, ETC.

KEITH GOBLE MOBILE
HOME SALES, INC.

. NOW! Enjoy the kind of home that thousands of happy
people have enjoyed for 25 years-a Capp Home,
and sav~ money! We deliver and erect on your lot, enclose the home, furnish all finishing materials, inside
and out- at the price we quote! Just do the easy
finishing or sub-contract, and SAVE, ~AVE, SAVE!

1966 Impala

69 BUICK LeSABRE

&amp; SCREENS- CARPmNG.

financed by us!

992-2152

0.

Compllteplumbln~o

1nd
hutlnJ, kitchen
FIRM PRICE! ublneta, electrletl
packla•• can be

-rourownkt"''

interior,
6
cyl . eng ,
automatic trans., new tires,

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

·-

Low lnterut

dtooH f111111; Dr Ult

2
IEDIIOOMS- FRONT KITCHEN
eHOUSE TYPE DOORS. STORMS

THINK ABOUT·ITI

.

HIAnD
FU~NISHEO

eCOMHmLY

lOD'a of pl1n1 to

Pis
new 1971
Thursday Afternoon League
Mason Furniture
83 MODERN WALNUT stereo Arpil I, 1971
radio combination. 4 speaker
Rawlings Dodge
63
Chevrolet cars
Standings
soun
d system, 4 speed
Davis-Warner Ins.
57
Team
Name
changer , separate controls.
H&amp;R Firestone
44
M&amp; R Food liner
162
Eagles
43
Bal an ce $68 .3 1. Use our
and trucksSimons Market
159
Holsum Sales Dept.
22 budgel lerms . Call 992-3352.
Pass Pass
Pass
New York Clothing
103
Team High Series and Game
4-8-6fc
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
102
Opening lead- • Q
You1llove
- Mason Furnilure 2776 and - - - - - Upper Rt. 7
Phone 446-0605 or 446-0B42
Racine Food Market
89
993.
MAPLE STEREO -rad&lt;o
Moore's
89
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Ind. High Series - John combination AM&amp;FM radio,
our deals!
Team High Series - M &amp; R By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Grate
622,
Roy
Grueser,
61
8,
four speak er s, 4 speed
,..,." n n
Foodliner 2269.
auloma lic changer , dual
Bill Wilford 594; Ind. H•gh
Team High Game - M &amp; R
A plaintive letter from a
Game - Roy Grueser, 222.
vo l u m e conlr ol . Use ou r
Food liner 764.
Washington reader asks , him .
For
Sale
budge! lerms, or pay balance
CITY
LEAGUE
L
For Sale
High Ind. Series - Betty "Why do finesses a 1ways
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE A55N.j
Won ost
of
$8'3.29 . Call 992-3352.
USED l'URNITURE
GOOD CLEAN LUMP ano Smith 546.
work for experts in your colLou's Ashland
76 36
4-8-6tc
4 PC. sectional couch, twin
stoker coal. Carl Winters, Rio Second High Ind. Series umn and never work for us
Swisher-Lohse
70
42
-Carolyn Bachner 465.
melal bed &amp; tlal spnngs, Grande. Phone 245-5115.
Firestone
60 72 1968 BU LTACO 100 c.c. Lobilo.
Kenmore dryer .
8-lf High Ind. Game _ Betty ordinary rubber bridge playNew pa int and cables, exThe
bidding
has
been:
Quality
Print
56 56
Smith 198.
ers?"
NEW FURNITURI!'
condit ion. Asking $325
cellent
West
North
East
South
Cement
Block
54
58
E
Second High Ind. Game Then he shows today's
IF YOU are cleanln9 house and
SPECIAL
SAL
1•
Pass
2"'
High
Team
Series
Quality
or
best
offer
. Must sell . Phone
Your Chevy Dealer
need a new rug, gtve us a try
Betty Smith 189.
hand and explains that West Pass
3
_..
Pass
,.
Print
2644
;
Cement
Block
2607:
Syra
cuse,
Ohio
992-7173
3
opened the queen of hearts
for a good buy. Room size We will lake your old furnilure
"Where Your
"'
'" Swisher-Lohse, 2583;
evening only .
in on lrade or buy it outright.
nylon rugs 9x12 $37.95 ; 12x12 NEW
3 N.T. Pass 5 &lt;fo
Team High Game - SwisherDollar Buys N'ore"
- 2 pc. Early American
S
and continued the suit while Pass
4-7 ·6tc
$49.75 : also have 12x11, 12x15,
Pass
5+
Pass
?
Lohse 899 ; Quality Prinl 893 ; - - -- -lving
room
sulles
trimmed
in
For
ale
he
ducked
in
the
hope
that
Ph. 992-2126
12x15'6" ; oval braided rugs;
You. Soulh, hold:
Quality Print 897.
·
maple with strong Herculon 14 FT. runabout, lralier 25 HP, East's ace would drop. Anylinoleum rugs 9x12, 12xl2,
Open Eves. TillS
cover 5169 .95, firm mal - Johnson Motor, Phone 446· way, he ruffed the third •A2 ¥AJ4 t63 •KQJ753 Highlnd. Series - Sauer595 ;
12x15. Anniversary Sale now
What
do
you
do
now?
Clatworlhy
579
;
B.
Boyles
558.
lresses were s59.9 5 nowd 0606.
heart. drew trumps and tried
in progress. Come in and see
A- Bid six clubs only. You. High Ind. Game - B. Boyles Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
102
539.95, 7 pc. map 1e a 11 woo
84-3 the club fine s se . East led
many good values. Plenty
Moore's
83
Auto Sales
S
is
showing
first
round
213;
auer
212;
Davis
209.
Racine
Food
Markel
81
partner
dinetle sets with 6 chairs and · - --::-::::-::-::-:-::-;-':'b k h f
h h
d
free parking . Corbin &amp; Snyder
table42x42x66S159.95. Always SPECIAL SALE
ac t e o~rt
e~rt an
diamond control,but .there must
POMEROY LANES
High Ind . Game - Pandora 1958 FORD 6-cylinder, excellent
Furn ., 955 Second Ave. Ph .
in
rear
.
Rice's
New
&amp;
APACHE
Travel
trailers,
only
n.ow
South
tned
the
diamond be a weakness m hiS hand. ·
parking
2
r unning condllion . Body
T
d
Af
Coll
insS 212. Dreama Smith 193 :
446-1171 .
'S
QUjlSTION
hurs
ay
ternoon
League
Used
Furn
.,
854
Sec.
446-9523.
left,
as
low
as
$1,595
F.O.B.
fmesse.
He
was
down
~ne
beTODAY
needs some repair, 5100.
82-11
· b'd
d 1
March 25, 1971
High eries - Pandora Collins
Wh at do you
83-lf
Amsbary Apache Trailer cause two out of two fmesses
Phone 949-2755.
1
as ea er
Pfs 554, Norma Amsbary 521 ; Team
Sales, 631 Fourth Ave. Now is had lost and the ace of hearts · wJLh :
4-9-3tc
REBUILT Electroiux cleaners. - - - -- - - - Simon's Markel
157 High Game - New York
EARLY AMERICAN Stereo- Ihe time lo reserve rentals for had also been in the wrong •A K Q J 54 •K J 3 2 t6 5 &lt;fo2 M&amp;R Foodiirler
Guaranteed. Ph . 446-9453.
154 Clothing House 830 ; Team High
radio combinalion, beautiful
your summer vacation.
place.
1958 FORD 6-cyllnder, e•celfent
. 82-6
New York Clothing
103 Series - Simon's Market 2309
-solid
state
unit
with
4
speed
,
85-3
running condition. Body
-------:record · changer, 4 speaker
needs some repair, $100 .
'67 DODGE &lt;
; , T. pickup, 'extra
sound syslem . Balance $82.63. 4 ROOMS furniture and other
mce. Ph. 446-3246.
r»lJJJJOOID~;IkJ 44•-&amp;'..1.-J ,_. Phone 949-2755.
Use our lime payment plan . items . Call 44 Neil Ave.
4-8-3tc
83-3
Cali 446-1028.
'
between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m .
85-3
85-3
1969 BLi11..~&lt;. Le ~aore, ~ - ar .
STRAW for sale . Lawrence
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
--.,-----hardlop, power steering,
Burdell. Ph. 245-5203.
one letter to each square, to
power
brakes, air , ta,poo
83-3 'sTEREO. Modern Wainuf 1 TON Ford truck, stake body,
Corm four ordinary words.
stereo -radio combination , 292 V-8 motor, mud and snow
mli~s. l!xcellent condiflbn.·
with four speed intermixed llres, good condition. C. M.
Phone 992·2288.
•
·
18,000 BTU air cOnditioner,
This ye8r the total doll a1 volume or vendine is expected to
changer.
Four speed sound
1
Carmichael, Bidwell. Ph . 44611·10·1fs.
$175 ; 5,000 BTU a1r con NOJ/1'
1aach almost SIX BILLION · DOLLARS! That's not nickel
system . •Balance $69.42. Use
2412.
ditioner, $50 ; 20" girl 's bike,
1968 CHI:VROLET Super Sport
and dime stuff.
our
budget
terms.
Call
44685-1
$17 : 36" gas range, 575 ; 9x12
396, 2 door. 4 on the floor, 375
1028.
...
Ussety Industries can mako you a pa1t of this industty for an
.orienlal lype rug, $12 . Call
H. P., $14~. Phone 949-4843.
85-3 '66 MUSTANG convertible, 8
after 6, 446-0004.
Investment of as little as $700 lo $7,000. Vending does not
4-9-31p
cyl ., 51.095. Ph . 256-6506.
BJ-3
just
plod
alone
keepi
R
g
it's
own
In
the
business
wo1ld.
14FT. fiberglass ski boat, 35 HP
85-3
IHJl'IJD
1965 MUSTANG converllbie,
Vending Is a forerunne1 In this count1y's economy and it's
Johnson motor and trailer,
1963 OLDS Dynamic 88 4 dr . V8
fair condition, $300. See Dan
l\ltute
1~,
on
the
blink
of
a
fantastic
•
dollar
volume
growth.
$500. Also 1961 Chev . plckur. YOU saved and slaved for wail
aulo., R&amp;H, reg . gas, w-s,w
Cremeans , Nelson Road,
truck wilh callle racks, exce .
to wall carpet. Keep II new
Wouldn't you ltke ·to have a patt of thai growth7 Wouldn't
lires, wheel covers. Ph. 446Rutland.
·
cond. Ph. 446-1330.
wilh Blue Lustre. Rent
you love to work for yourself? You can be your own boss
4-9-31p
9320.
83-3.
85-3 electric shampooer 51.
and haw the besl vending experience there Is behind you
Cenlrai Supply Co.
every step· of the way.
~~------~
1971 FORD PICKUP, ·v, ton
196i PONTIAC GTO, $1500: Ph. HAND stitched quilt, large in
Ranger, automatic. power
IIi
WHAT THE C~Z~
U.t.'l. can offer you oppottunitY in the vending llusiness: You
size. Can be seen at Mrs. Nan
446 _4477 _
sleerlng,
360 engine!. ~ed and
· &amp;WIMMSII: WAS.
•~ •~
can make nickels llld.dimes 110w 1nto BIG MONEY! Afte1
83-3 McCormick, 147 Seco~d Ave. ADD-A-ROOMS. Overcrowded?
white, like new. will sell
Offered by the Alexander
lnv8$1inl in you1 e!JJ ipment, ~ou maintain the machinery .
Investigate beautiful Vemco
under dealer's colt. Also,
Social Club.
Roomettes. Separate family
and service it. U.l.i. secu1es the locations for you. U.l .l.
camper top with or without
· BRIDAL dress, train and veil,
85-3
rooms; extra bedrooms;
provides a toll·ftee telephone system so thai you can comtruck . Herold E. Hysell,
small size 18, $45. 1 long
.
_.
Now arranre the clrc:l.. letten
----;-laundry I rooms ; baths .
phone 742-3154,
municate rapidly with out specialists. U.l.l. oflets an mtelformal , small size 15, $15. Cali
to form the ourpriM -..-. II
1 CASE tractor with plows and
Young's Mobile Homes, Stale
~ -9- 3tc..
li&amp;anllinancina plan which can help you grow from pa1t-time
446-4092 afler 5,
.
~
.
.
ourreeted
by the"'""' eutooll.
Ph.
367-7757
.
Rt
.
7
and
35
(below
Silver
cultivalors.
83-3
to full-time. Above_. ail U.l.l. trains you to ope1ate .you1
• 85-3
Memorial Bridge), Gallipolis.
business and then holds your hand until your feel ate firmly
85-1
..
"(
dil the atound;
LO'tv, •vw prices on Bemco and _CLEAN e~penslve carpets wilh
the best. Blue Lustre is WE CARRY a large lelection of
Serla mattresses and box
..(Utwer;t i'lbM•yJ
II ~ou a1e intetested ip becomina a part of one of the fastest
Only a n a r I' Qw strip of
llmerica's favorite. Rent
springs. Corbin &amp; Snyder
clock radios, transistor
· I]Jowina industries in America, wiite U.l.l. today! Include
• land between Bhutan and
Jumhlco111 TWill GROOM NtiiLI LIOUM.
Furn., 95.$ Second Ave. Ph.
electric shampooer Sl. Lower
radios, AM &amp; FM. Tawney
phone number 111d references.
Easl 'P a k i s t a n- connects
G. C. Murphy Store.
Jewelers.
A&lt;l6·
Assam
lo the main body of
~"''"'
lf'hal
rlr•
fillY
who
.-r""'"
him.,IJ'
"I'
,
II ~ 'Em~" ~lrol oDallas, r,,., IS241o
Alii .~
Ll
r-.u ...

•

$3995

power steering, new tires,

radio &amp; heater .

Gold, 6 cyl., automatic, radio.
Eight examples of economy, both now on
purchase and later in driving, from R. H.
Rawlings Sons Co . Middleport, Ohio American '
Motors Dealer since 1968.
See Bob, Wallace. Emerson. Hilton or Dick for
your transportation needs now ...

Many more

I

Nova 2 dr ., white finish, blue

Hornet Basic 4 Door

Catalinas. We have two rather sharp and one that
runs good but ~eeds body ·w ork .

Townsman Station ~~;,o;,j
low mileage, local •
with V-Bengine, auto. trans.,

Hornet Basic 2 Door Sedan ___ 52396.35

Blue. 6 cyl., automatic, radio.

From SS95

CHOICE OF 3

1969 Chev.

52495

4-1.1 -3tp BACK HUt ana ena-loaoer
work . Septic tanl&lt;s installed.
LIVING
ROOM
suite,
George (Bill) Pullins. Phone
aytomalic washer and dryer,
992-2478.
kitchen wall cabinet, beds and
11 -29-lfc
dresser. Depot Sl. , Rutland.
Sale signs up.
EXPERT lawn mower and
4-11-31c
Iiiier repair . Free pickup and
delivery . Warren's Mower
H AND N DAY-OLD or started
Shop, 248 Condor St. Phone
Leghorn pullets, both floor or
992-7357 .
cage grown available.
4-6-61c
Poultry
housing
and
automation, 399 W. Main St., PAINTING , roofing and
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2164.
spouting service . Richard
4-11 -ltc
Will, phone m-2889.
.
3-11 -30tc
GUN
CABINET,
early

To Goble Mobile Homes·For Best Buys!

OK CARS
Big Savings

1968 Chevj II 51595

Hornet Basic 4 Door

Coronet 4 dr. Sedan, 6 cyl., std . shift . Shows extra·
good care .

65 PONTIAC

,

Green. 6 cyl., 3 speed , radio.

Red. 6 cyl., 3 speed. radio.

Wildcat 4 dr . hardtop, like new finish. power
steering, power brakes, auto . trans .

65 DODGE

Basic 4 Door Sedan ___ 12379.45

Business Services

Get more home for
.. with

Gremlin 2 Door Sedan. _____ 12566.25

Newport V-8, 2 dr . hardtop. factory air conditioned. ·
This car is exceptional in every way. and shows
best of care.

67 PONTIAC

:Bargains, Bargains, and More Bal-gairis In ·s entinel Classifieds

1971.

WAS
1

• 7 54
• A6.
Both vulnerable
West North East South
'1&lt;fo
Pass 1•
Pass 1 N.T. Pass 4 •

$1095

caf..·;-··

EARLY BIRD SALE

Eastern Ave.

"YA HEAR"
690LOSMOBILE, Delta4 Or. Hdtp.

Local Bowling

smooth and woven wire, 2 air
compressors, lard -trees, 2

tarps, truck rack, large ami.
of hand tools, ropes. chains,
and other tools. '
Household Furniture
3-PIECE living room suite, 2piece living room suite, 2
bedroom suites (like new),
Grand Gas range, 2
Frigidaire refrigeralors, 1 7piece dipette set, 2 5-piece
dinette sets. Antique cupboard, Empire gas heater, 3
21 in. Television 5ets, large
amt. of dishes, pots, pans,
etc., end tables, odd chairs,
lables, and many other Items.

WILL PICK up merchandise
and take lo · auction on a
percentage basis . Call Jim
Adams, 8Uctioneer, Rutland.
Phone 742-4461.
9-23-tfc THIS IS a large sale of good
merchandise.
Sale
of
AUCTION - WHEN? Each
Household will star! promptly
. Friday night, ~ p.m. Where?
al 10:00 A.M. Farm ilems in
Hayman's Auction House,
aflernoon . Lunch served. Not
, Laurel Cliff on neot ljt. 7 responsible for accidents.
Pomeroy ' - Middl•porl ByAucl. : I. 0. "Mac" McCoy
pass.
Owner: Virqil Price
2-7-tfc

JEMO ASSOCIATES

o:

Roofing Carpenter
WOit

'fOR SALE

SENt'iNEL
CARRIER

Warren Pickens

FOR

:::::::::::::::::::::::~

HARTFORD,
WEST VIRGINIA

AUCTION SALE
SAT., APRIL 17fh
TIME: 11 A.M.

------

will

---

WMP0/1390

llonl " " "

�•
23-TheSundayTimes-SenUnel,SUnday, Aprilll,l971
/fl.

.

I :

;...:

.

I

-

:

I

I

SMITH BUICK
UPPlR RT I

GALLIPOL IS

1969 Cadillac Cpe, __________'5()00
DeVille. 18,000 miles, lo~al river boat capt.
trade .

1969 Pontiac Gran Prix _______ 53295
Air, vinyl top, P.W. , P.S.. , mag . wheels .
Sharp.

1970 Chev. MalibU----------52695
2 Dr . Hdtp ., V-8, P.S., vinyl top, 16,000
miles·. 5 Year warranty.

1969 Chev. Malibu----------$2495
Bucket seats. 4 speed, tape, 350 engine. One
local owner . Sharp .

1968 Buick LeSabre _________ $2195
4 Dr. cust., air cond., one owner.

1969 Ply. Roadrunner_ _______ 51995
4 Speed. 383 eng., Skylark trade . Nice.
'

1967 Buick Wildcat_ ________11995
4 Dr . Hdtp .• vinyl fop. air cond .• one owner .
Sharp .
•

1965 Buick Wildcat-________11195
4 Dr. Hdtp .• white. black vinyl top, air
cond., one local owner. Like new cond.

1964 Cadillac 4 Dr. ---------·5450

Air, Runs Good .

36 Month Financing On 68, 69, 70 Models

22-71 BUICKS &amp; OPELS
ELECTRAS, LeSABRES, &amp; SKYLARKS

SMITH BUICK
l1f'l'l R Rl I

GALLIPOLI S

.

Take a
close look
at these
Spring
Speciab
$2495

68 CHEVROLET, Impala, 4 Or. HT. AC.- 52495
$2095

68 DODGE, Coronet, 2 Dr. Hdtp.
68 FORD, Station Wagon, VB

$1895

67 DODGE, Monaco 4 Dr. Hdtp .. V8.

$1895

67 OPEL, Kadette Station Wagon, V8.

$1295

66 DODGE, Charger2 Dr. Hdtp., VB.
66 CHEVROLET, Impala 2

$1395

or. Hdtp., VS.$1095

65 BUICK, 2 Or, Hardtop, VB.

$1195

65 PLYMOUTH, Fury 2 Dr. Hdtp., VB.

KEITH GOBLE FORD
BOWLING LEAGUE
April6, 1971
With only one week to go, the
Keith Goble Ford Bowling
'"·League has just oboul completed a very successful season .
Teams No. 5 and No. 8 have
battled down to the wire, and
next week on April 13, the
second half winner will be
determined. A possibility of a
lie exists only if Team No. 5
loses all eight points and T~!&lt;&gt;m
No. a wins all eight points.
Team No. 2 came very close to

the top, having a close 79 points.
The winner of the second half
will meet Team No. 4, who won
the first half, In a roll-off on
Tuesday, April 20.
The onnual bowling banquet
is to be held on Tuesdoy, April
27, at Oscar's Restaurant in
Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs. Keith
Goble will be guests of the
League. Mr. Goble has sponsored the League lhi&lt; season
and will present trophies to the
two top teams as well as Individual winners.
Standings week of April 6:
Team
W L
No. 5
88 32
No.8
80 40
No.2
79 41
No. 10
68 52
No 11
61 59
No.6
56 64
No 12
52 68
No. 3
50 70
No. 4
48 72
No. 7
48 72
No. 1
46 74
No.9
44 76
On April 6, Team No. 5 took
eight points from Team No. 3.
Georgia Richie was high for
Team No. 5 with 504 pins and
Jack Janey was high for Team
No. 3 with 509 pi ns.
Team No. 23 look six poinls
from Team No. 8. Betty Saxon
and Charlie Lupton were high
for Team No. 12 with 509 pins
each and Wanda Gabrllsc~ was
high for Team No. 8 with 472
pins.
Team No. 11 took five points
lrom Team No. 2. Elmer
Gardner was high for Team No.
11 with 513 pins and Gloria
Choquette was high for Team
No. 2 with 496 pins.
Team No. 4 took eight points
from Team No. 9. Charlie Neal
was high for Team No. 4 with
555 pins and Mary Janey was
high for Team No. 9 with 411
pins.
Team No. 6 look six points
from Tean No. 1. Merida Shaw
was high for Team No. 6 with
456 pins and Kerm Malone was
high for Team No. 1 with 460
pins.
Team No. 7 took six points
from nam· No. 10. Ralph
Johnston was high for Team No.
7 with 512 pins and John Lloyd
was high for Team No. 10 with
490 pins.
High single game for the
ladies for the evening was 215
pins each held by Georgia
Richie and Betty Saxon and for
the men was 212 pins held by
Charlie Lupton.
High series for. the ladles was
509 total pins, held by Belly
Saxon and for the men 555 lot&lt; I
pins held by Charlie Neal.

.q

on late ~ode/

THE LAMPLIGHTERS
Standings
Team
Name
Us&amp; Co.
80
Lucky Strikes
75
Brite Liles
57
Untouchables
56
L&amp; N
40
Tagalongs
28
Team High Series - Us &amp; Co.
2128.
Team High Game - L &amp; N
2104.
High Ind. Series - Harold
Lohse 645; Mary Voss 541.
Second High Ind. Series- Ed
Voss 627; Betty Smith 509.
High Ind. Game - Harold
Lohse 245; Maxine Dugan 204.
Second High Ind. Game Willard Boyer 237; Betty Smith
200.

70 PONTIAC

Who says it's hard to find a new 1971 car for
under $3000 today. Not us, and here are 8
examples from our American Motors inventory.

NOW

Gremlin 2 Door Sedan ______ 52174.10

2995

$2795

Light green, 3 speed, radio, 6 c ylinder .

Catalina 2 Dr. hardtop. one careful local owner ,
extra nice, power steering, auto. trans.

Gremlin 2 Door Sedan ______$2326.10

69 PONTIAC

Mepium gree n, automatic, radio, w-s- w, 6
cylinder.

2795

1

Catalina Safari Sta . Wagon : factory air eon ditioned, fully equipped. This car is from a very
satisfied customer , and very care.ful one .

68 CHRYSLER

2395

1

Silver , GX package, mag . wheels . wide oval s ,
floor shift, the little sports special.

12195

Gremlin 2 Door Sedan ______ 2632.90
1

Blue. automatic, deluxe package, 6 cylinder.

~et

1595

1

6 Sprint 2 dr . hardtop, overhead Cam 6-Sprint, 4
sp . trans., bucket seats. Sharp car .

67 BUICK

1795 $1695

1

1895

SJ95

'

BLAETTNARS

Seda~---·52571.20
Sedan---~2606.20

. R. H. Rawlings Sons

.PONTIAC
GMC TRUCKS
BUICK
116 Years of Continuous Business
PH.ON E 992-2143
POMEROY, OH 10

992-2151

rl!dio Pleasing blue finish.
See this before you buy.

NORRIS DODGE

Cutlass 4 Door Sedan, V-8
engine, automatic trans., p.

Morning Star 24'x481

1968 Olds $1895
sfeering &amp; brakes, vinyl

Valiant 4 Dr ., local 1 owner
car, clean interior, dark
aqua fin1sh , like new tires, 6
cyl. engin e &amp; automatic
trans , radio. Popular model

•11 MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY •
• CIIP-IIIU, 1•1 Lllilro., lo1 l.tllil"rllll.
1111.
Bernard
Stewart • Cllll..., lo~ lUll .
l'ltlllltnd mo FREE CATALOG
No 1145
Route 1, Hide~a. 1·
• NAME
'
Your CAPP·HOM~8
reprnentltivt 11:

Way Hills
Bremen, Ohio 4l107

&amp; priced to go

•
•

Phone: 614·569·4586

=
•B
••••••••••••••••••••

70 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

$6000

Black finish with gold leather interior, full power
equipment, AM-FM stereo radio, Climate Control air
conditioning, 16.000 ml

¥K652
tAQ2
.KJ7

.3

EAST
• A 1084
tKl063
&lt;foQ9 52

• QJ9
• J98

&lt;fo10 843
SOUTH
.AKJ1064
., 7 3

$5000

Gold finish. black vinyl lop, match ing inter ior, fu ll power
equipment, Climate Control air cond itioni ng, low mileage.
SHARP•

Players with No .Finesse

• 8 72

$6250

interior, full power equ i pm e nt~ tilt &amp; telescope whee l.
Climate Control air {:Onditioning, 6,700 mdes

WIN AT BRIDGE

WEST

terior , auto. trans .• power

Sauterne metallic finish, be ige lop, matching leather

69 Cadillac Sedan DeVille

.Q95

We are s orry for our
reader. He would have made
his contract if any one of
three cards had been right
for him, but we aren't too
sorry because he should have
made his contract in spite of
all the bad breaks.
Remember that he ruffed
the third heart and that East
was left with the ace. South
was correct to play three
rounds of trumps. but he
should have won the third
trump in dummy and lej out
dummy's kmg of hearts ..East
would cover with the ace and
South should simply discard
a low diamond and show
East his hand.
It wouldn't matter a bit
where the king of diamonds
and queen of clubs were lo·
cated. East would ha ve to
lead one of those suits and
make South's fine s se for

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
'

Open Eves. Til6- Til S P.M. Sat.
992-5342
GMAC Financing Available
POMEROY
" You'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business"
T ---1

I.AJCUJ

Bowling

For Sale

Tri County League
March 28, 1971

ANTIQUES, phone 992-5327.
4-7-301c

.

H.. -UI'I'Ej.I

.I I

2 Ton Cab-Chassis, 84"-cab
to axle Good 825x20 tires, 2speed rear axle, clean cab,
292 cu. ln . 6 cyl engine.

1963 Chevrolet
SS95
2 Ton cab &amp; chassis, 102" cab
to axle, good 825x20 tires,
clean cab, 292 cu. in. 6 cyl.

Yes .• • We have

~I~Pill~'~IM~SIII~f~II~AIISWIII~~~

- -- - -'--

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PPINESS

FREE

FREE

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int . bumper , radio, white &amp;

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HOME

1st in Service

z
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mobile home purchased Fri., Sat., Sun.,
Mon., April 9-10-11-12

VI

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Ill

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m Open 7 Days A Week
VI ,

Phone 992-7195

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WANT AD '
Notice
INFORMATION
RUBBER
STAMPS made to
DEADLINES
order
.
24
hour
service. Dwain
5 Pdl). Oay Bofore eublication
or Wilma Casto , Portland •
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Ohio .
Will be accepted untO 9 a.m . f
2-12-90tc
Oay of Publicalion
REGULATIONS
FRESH
bakery
Tho Publisher reserves the OVEN
producls
.
Jimmy's
PastrJ.
r:lght to edit of reject any ads.
Shop, N. 2nd Ave., Mi deemed
ob/ectlonat.
The
dlepor l. Phone 992-3555.
publisher will not be responsible
3-28-30tc
for ' more than one Incorrect
Insertion .

RATES

For Want Ad Service
5 cents oer Word on A Insertion
Min1mtl'm C'ftarge I!IC

12 cents per word lhre&lt;

consecutiY'1!. 1nsertlons.
18 cents ~ per word sjx con ·

secutlve insertions . .
25 Per cent Oiscount

ATfEfnioN ladies! Would you
like to try a wig on in lhe
privacy of your own home?
You can.Just call us. We also
have the Mink Oil Kosmelics,
Kosco!,
of
course.
Dislrlbutors, Brown's. Phone
Middleport 992-5113.
12-31 -11&lt;

on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days .
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
992-5327.
$1.50 for 50 word• minimum. HOME sewing . Phone 3-J0.30tc
Each additional word 2c.
'BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertlstment.

·

Auction

OFFICE HOURS
8:30 e·.m. to· 5:00pm. Oally,

AUCTION
SATURDAY, April 17, at the
8 : 30 a .m . to 12:00 Noon
Virgil Price farm 21h miles E.
~saturday .
of Chester -on Riebel Road.
Follow auction signs from S.
R. 248 at Chesler Golf Course.
In Memory
Livestock
IN MEMORY of Robert Marion 1
CHAROLAIS -Hereford
Cowdery who left us seven
springer cow, 2 yearling
years ago today, April 11 ,
Holslein heifers, 2 Angus
1964; •
heifers, 1 Charolais-Holstein
heifer, 2 yearling Holstein
May you always walk in sunbulls .
shine.
Farm Machinery
God's love around you glow,
1969 MASSEY-Ferguson 135
For the happiness you brought
Tractor (only 136 hrs. use) , 2
us
\
Botlom Plows, 6 fl. disc, 5 fl.
Everyone was sure to know.
brush hog, spring tooth
It broke our heart 'to lose you,
harrow, (all with 3 pl. hitch),
But you did not go alone,
2-wheel trailer ; Dual -Wheel
Part of us went with you,
Gravely Tractor with Rotary
The day God called you home.
Mower , plow, cultivator,
The Family.
Grader blade, seed and
4-11 -llc
ferlilizer spreader, saw, and
riding sulky; Toro lawn
combination.
mower-llller
Lost
Tools and Misc. equip.
A MOTHER'S pin, vicinity of HOME LITE XL 101 Chain saw,
Elberfelds Store . Reward.
2 carpenter saws (power), 2
Phone 992·5010.
elec. grinders; 2 elec. drills,
4-11-31c
vise and anvil, cider mill, slipscraper, plastic and iron pipe,

Notice -

WILL DO tailoring and
1 upholstery. Phone 992-3561.
3-31-JOic
PAYING ,fop. prices for nigbl
crawlers and dug bell. Bail
store will open In near future.
Ball of all kinds. Watch for
announcement, 320 N. .2nd,
Middleport.
4-8-3tc

SPACIOUS
3 bedroom
brick
ranch house,
large living.
dining, and family rooms.
Basement, 2 car garage. All
eleclric central air. Very
comfortable. Upper twenties.
New Haven, Weekends only.
Phone New Haven 882-2712.
4-9-2tc

HOBSTEIIER
REAL ESTATE
George S. HobsteHer, Jr.
Broker
Phone 985-4186
Hilton Wolfe, Salesman
Phone 949-3211
CALL US for all yourreal estate

O'DELL WHEEL aiignmenl
located at Crossroads, Rt . 124.
Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service.
Wheels balanced elec tronically .
All
work ·
guaranleed .
Reasonable
rates. 992-3213.
3-17-30tc
HARRISON'S TV AND AN TENNA SERVICE . Phone
992-2522.
6-10-lfc
TREE -TRIMMING
and
removal. Full y insured. Free
estimates. Call after 5 p.m ..
collect
Dick
Hayman,
Coolville 667-3041 or Tom
Hayman, Chester 985-3509.
·
3-28-30ip

needs. Inquire of our listings

before you buy .

plus, you gain an.

Income Tax benefit, you build an equHy and you are not
bound by the terms of a rental agreement.
.

•

Let Us Show You How You Can Become A Homeowner We Do The Paperwork On Farmer's Home, V.A., F.H.A.,
And Conventional Loans.
Come See Us At 97'12 N. Second St., Middleport.

READY -MIX
CONCRETE
delivered right to your
projecl. Fasl and easy. Free
estimates . Phone 992-3284.
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co ..
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30-lfc

ITCIMCIBILE insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your O'BRIEN ELECTRIC Service.
operator's license? Call 992Commercial, residenl1ai and
2966.
Industrial wiring . Phone 2476-15-lfc
2113.
3-12-lfc

Real Estate For Sale

You will have something of value to show for the SSS you
spend when you buy your own home -

992·7in
Evenings Call: 992-2534 992-l4n 992-2580
Dutton
Spencer
~row

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS! '
40 ~inutes of. Y.,ur Time Can Well Be the Most Profitable
Time You Ever Spent.
Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle! .
icWINSOR
«BUDDY

.. CHAMPION
1t'VAN DYKE

-t!ALSO
DOUBLE~WIDES

SEE TOM CROW, GUY SHULER OR BOB CROW

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.
MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W.VA.

Real Estate For Sale

Virgil B.

[ EXPERIENCED
Radiator.Service

PAPER-HANGING, painting,
plastering, dry wall . Arthur
Musser . Phone 992-3630.
3-28-30tp
SR.
HOUSE, 6 rooms and bath,
Broker
phone
742-5613.
3 BEDROOM RANCH with wall-to.waii carpeting,
110 Mechanic St.
4-ll -12tc SEPTIC tanks cleaned . Miller
aluminum siding AVAILABLE NOW.
Pqmeroy, Ohio
CALL AL MOODY, 992-7034
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph:
HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln His.,
662-3035.
lor appointment or see at 203 Park St .. Middleport.
4 bedrooms,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
2-12-tfc MIDDLEPORTFrom the Largest Truck or
bath, gas forced air furnace
10-25-tfc
wilh
air
conditioning .
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Beautiful kitchen with cook
$mallesl Heater Core.
HOUSE , 4 rooms, bath, 2 lots FOR expert electrical work call
and oven unils. Nice 2 car
located in Syracuse. Call after
992-5179.
garage . $14,500.00.
4-6-24tp
3 p.m. weekdays, phone 9922806.
SYRACUSE - 4 bedrooms,
Ph.f92..2143
Pomero-t,
0 -6fc
bath, dining with fireplace.
Full basement. Gas furnace. 3
CONVENIENT bul secluded Real Estate For Sale
porches
. Modern kitchen,
building lois on T79 al Rock
paneled.
Large garden.
Springs . Wi thin walk!ng
On your lot or ours. Under our financing program you can
"'
Asking
S13,000.!)q.,
--~~ \ _
dislance of Meigs Hogh
buy a new home FOR LESS'than you can rent.
School, a 5 minute drive from
COMMIDDLEPORT
Pomeroy . Call or see BUI
608 East }~1ln Stroet
MERCIAL
LOTNeKI
toM.
W1lle weekends, or afler 5
POMEROY
and R. Only $3,500.00.
CALL TODAY FOR INFORMATION
p.m. weekdays. Phone 992- TUPPER~ PLAINS- Route 7
992-7034 or 268-1810 Collect
6887.
- 1 LEVEL ACRE, 7 rooms,
- 3 'bedroom
7-1-tfc bath, 4 bedrooms, cellar, MIDDLEPORT
one story ho1.1se near stores.
- - - - - - - - - - garage, city water and deep
Bath, large kitchen and
-GUARAf.ITEEDHOUSE, 6 rooms and bath, well. $9,308.
dining area . 2 level lots, Only
Phone 992-2094
phone 742-5613.
$5,000.00.
3-30-12tp POMEROY- 2 slory frame, 6
- -- - - - - -- rooms, 3 bedrooms, bath. COUNTRY HOME - 4 nice
Park &amp; Sycamore
Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
"Middlej)Orf, 0.
LINCOLN ST., Middleport.
$3,750.
bedrooms. modern bath. and
..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __, Modern, 3 bedrooms, 1112 NEAR CARPENTER- FARM
606 E. ~n. Pomeroy,
kitchen. Gas furnace. Drilled
well
.
Good
cellar
.
57
ACRES
Wanted To Buy
For Sale
bath. Call collect 1' 614·962· -about 110 acres, 3 barns,
Minerals. Asking $10,000.00.
2018, between 9 a.m. and 5 silo, pond, 2 wells. other
OLD furnlture, dishes, brass ONE saddle horse. One brood
p.m., Monday through
buildings. Home has new
.1 M D M'll
mare. Dave Yosl, Portland,
Friday.
A
d'
bed
beds, etc. W"e
ACRES - 20 tractor land.
&amp;
. . ' er,
Ohio. Phone 843-2242 .
4-8-6tc
lum . si mg, 4
rooms, 76 Good
implemenl
shed
and
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
bath. $2~,000.
4_9_31 P -- -- - - -- - cellar. 8 room older home
992-6271.
- -- - - - - TO BUY OR SELL
wilh 4 bedrooms. Running
9· 1·ffc LOCUST POSTS, John Wells, 2 STORY modern home, 7
CALL US
water . $13,500.00.
Spouting,. Roof
- - - - - - - -Long Bottom, Ohio.
rooms and bath. Can be seen
HENRY CLELAND
Wanted
4-9-3tp
after 5 p.m. or all day on
REALTOR
NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY
Painting
- -- - - - - - - , .
Sundays or Mondays. Phone
Office 992-2259
BEFORE
THEY
GO
FEMALE Basse! Hound. Phone 1967 FORD pickup . Lime 985-4175.
Residence 992·2568
NEW &amp; OLD WORK
HIGHER. CALt US TODAY .
949-3056 after 5 p.m .
spreader. Double-barrel 12
4-8-5lc
·4-11-6fc
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
4-11 -3fp
gauge. 1890 Winchester pump. - - - - - - - - All WOIIhtr Roofing I
ASSOCIATE
Construction Ca.
Hopkins and Aliens single~--------------------..
992-3325
PATIENTS lo care for in my
DEXTER,
0, 45726 ·
shot.
Phone
247-2161.
t--------..,---'----1
home. Phone Mason 773-5712.
PHONE
742·3,41
4-6-Sic
PUBLIC SALE (Grocery Closeoull
4-6-12tc
= =cc-:-:::--=:==:;:;;::--:
Saturday, April17, 1971 - 11: oo A.M. ·
Insured-Experienced
BESTLI NE PRODUCTS. Call
we are discontinuing our business and will sell the
Work Guaranteed,
The spacious home of the
Myron Bailey, Phone 99 2-5327 ·
merchandise at the store located on SR 124 in Syracuse.
Help Wanted
Oh io, former Iy R'1zer •s Grocery.
late Mrs. Bessie M. Pickens,
- - - - - - -- 4-4-301c
on approximately
situated
Canned goods of all kinds, baking Items, soaps &amp;
1965 HONDA 250. Call 742 _5042
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
six
acres
in Racine, Ohio .
WANTED
f
detergents, cosmetics, cleaning items, baby items.
15
4
Complete Service
Hot water heat by free gas .
a fer ' p.m.
This is an opportunity to buy grocery items that are fresh
4_5_61 c
Phone 949-3821
Interest in producing gas
and at your price. - Bring your chair.
Racine, Ohio
well .
ALUMINUM car top boats, 10MR. &amp; MRS. RAYMOND BUTCHER
Crill Bradford
12-13 foot . Lorenzo D. Davis,
Terms; Cash
Lunch Available
5·1-lfc
Kingsbury Road.
Carnahan Auction Service
------~3-24-JOtc
J. Carnahan
D. Smith
~EWING MACHINES. Kepair
949-2708
' Racine, Ohio
949-2033
Exec. of!: state
service, all makes. m-2284
Kl LL TERMITES and yard
Not Responsible for Accidents
Reedsville, Ohio
The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
II ." King
Builders
Supply
L_ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ ___J : Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
insects
wiJh ARAB
"You-Do-378-6289
Company, Middleport.
3-29-lfc
2-21 -60tc
24 ACRE FARM, Long Bottom,
with or without farm . NEIGLER Construction. For
.
PAINT DAMAGE, 1971 Zig-2ag
machinery . House with 3
building or remodeling your
machines. Still in
bedrooms, dining room, living
home, Call Guy Nelgler,
L - - - -- - - - - - " sewing
original cartons . No at room. 1'12 baths, enclosed
Racine, Oltlo.
·
lachments needed, as our ·
back porch, wall fo wall
For Rent
7-31-lfc
conlrols are buill in. Sews
carpeting, Aluminum siding,
ANTIQUES, Phone 992-5327.
with
1
or
2
needles,
makes
awning,
storm windows and RALPH'S
CARPET
4-6-301c
storm doors . City water.
bultonholes, sew on buttons,
Upholstery Cleaning Service.
monograms, and blind hem
Selling due to Ill health. Phone
Free estimates. Phon•
TRAILER LOTS. Bob's Mobile
slilch . Full cash price, $38.50
614-985-3938.
Gallipolis
446-0294.
Courl. Rl . 124, Syracuse,
or budget plan available.
4-9-12lp
3-12-ttc
Ohio. 992-2951 . •
Phone 992-5641.
PLACE - At the Orville Johnson Farm, Dexter, Ohto.
4-2-lfc
4-6-6tc
Turn off St. Route 124 at Langsvttte, Ohio, go through
- - - -----:Dexter, turn second road to right (tilatch tor sale signs).
TRAILER, Brown's Trailer ELECTROLUX Vacuum
As we have quit farming
offer for Public S.lt our
Park , Minersville. Phone 992Cleaner complete with at 3324.
farr.n equipment, household Items and antiques, conlachments,
cordwlnder
and
4-9-61c
sisting of:
painl spray. Used bul in like
new condition. Pay $37.45
UNFURNISHEO 3
room
cash or credit terms
Oliver tractor, size 1250;, 2 yrs. old, (less than 300 hrs.); 3aparlment. Phone 992-2288.
available.
Phone
992-5641
.
point hltch, set ol breaking_plows, 2 yrs. old· 3 point, set of
1·31-lfc
4-6-6fc
pick-up discs I Ford), 3 point; set of cultlvatprs (Ford). 3
This yNr the total dollll YOIU1111 ol V111dln1 II llqiiCt.d Ill
point ; Black Hawk corn planter 3 point, brush"'hoy, 1 yr.
TWO OR three bedroom home, TESTED and approved by
reach almosl SIX BILLION DOLLARS! That's not nir:tcel
Cottage Road, Syracuse.
old,
3
point;
International
mowing
machine,
set
of
drag
and dlma stu .
·
millions of homemakers. Blue
Adults only. Phone 992-5133.
harrows,
International
hayrake,
farm
wagon,
2
wheel
Lustre carpel cleaner Is tops.
Ussery Industries can make you a part of this industry lor an
3-2-lfc
tralier, J og chains, set of com-a-longs, hog feeders, 25
Baker Furniture, Middleport.
investment of as little as $700 to $7,000. Vandlna not
heavy chickens; water pump with tank.
4-7-71
-:::T_R_A_IL-::E-::R-::S-::PA:-C:-:E::-o-n-o-:1d:-;R:::t. 33,
just plod alona keeplna ll's own In . the buslneu -ld.
ANTIQUES AhD COLLECTORs·
,
Vendlna is a foleluMer In this country's economy and it's
'12-mile north of new Meigs
Iron
kettle
with
stand,
lard
press,
wagon
seat,
old
buggy,
future Ia on the brink ol 1 flntastic doiial volume ltowth.
High School. Phone 992-2941. 1964 TRIUMPH motorcycle,
old steam boat light, 6 wagon wheels, cow bells, lime bell,
good condilion, $200. Harry
3-5-tlc
· Wouldn't you like to have a part of thtt IIDWih? Wouldn'l
Brown,
phone
985-3833.
sliver bell, blacksmith anvil, 60 Avon bottles (mostly
---:--:you love to work lor yoursalf? You can be you1 own bon
FURNISHED and unfurnished
4-6-Sip
pairs), 20 novelty bottles, collection of old'bottles. pewter
and have the but -dln1 uperience !hero is bellind you
aparlments. Close to school.
and silver items, butter churn, 2 old cream separators,
every
step ol the way.
Phone 992-5434.
butter mold and peddle, antique pictures, 3 piece antique
10-18-lfc
U.l.l. can offer you oppotiUnltY in tile vandin1 business. You
bedroom suite, antique dresser, collection of old Irons,
can
1 make nickels and di1111s arow Into BIG MONEY! Alllr
brass dog irons and others, fireside set, steamer, trunk
3 ROOM, bath, furnished or
investln&amp; In rour e"'lpment, you maintain the maclllntr)
Carnival glass, numerous pieces of other glass, walnut
semi-furnished apartment .
and
service It U.l.l. secu1es tha locations for you. U.l:l.
china closet, old books, approx. 30 stone jars and lugs
Also, 2 room, bath, furnished
.
provides
a toll· free telephone system so that you can capartment. Mulberry Ave.,
(some embossed), maple desk, old wall telephone, 2
municate
11pldly with ou1 speclali~tl. U.l.l. oll111 an inttlPomeroy . References
antique guns.
.
llaent
flnanclna
plan which can help you &amp;lOW from part·ll•
required. Pho~e m -6698.
Sale Conducted By Adoms Auction Service
to
1\111-timo.
Above
ail U.l.l . trains you lo opetale ,..
3-23-tfc
Terms: Cash
'
Lunch Served
buaintas and then holds yout hand until you1 lftt are lltllll,
Not Responsible For Accidents
011 the &amp;IOIIId.
AUCTIONEERS
For Sale
II
you 110 lnte1ested in becomln1 a ptrt ol one of the lu!Mt
Col. Bill Brown
Col. Jim Adams
IIOwina
inck!striu in Am•ica, write U.l,l. todl1'! lncllltlt
CbAL, 'limest(fle . Excelslo:
New Marshfield, Ohio
Rutland, Ohio
phone numbe1 and rofeJances.
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Ph. 742-4461
/
Ph. 664·3504
Pomeroy. Phone 9:92-:lltf.
........ lll.oll'l!i Eo!'• ColllltoDIIIIS. T( Cltp This Ad1 '
4-9-ttc

TEAFORD

4-6-6fc

BlAETTNARS

$5.55

~

bANNIE'S MOBILE HOMES- DANNIE'S MOBILE HOMd

Insurance

* A STACK OF WORTHlESS RECEIPTS! ! *

Cleland Realty

"'

...

DANNIE'S AT POMEROY

res, camper top,

THE $$$ YOU PAY IN RENT?

Build Homes. • •

~

z

-m FREE: 8x20 Aluminum awning with any ~
r

new

good condi tion . Phone 9922805, Eldon Walburn .
3-28-lfc

WHAT DO YOU HAVE FOR

We Custom

VI

-

0
:J&gt;

red finish . Good tires .

1966 Chevrolet
'1695

H

OMES

.

cab. R step bumper, chrome

- -----

tJ I

rm

'12 Ton 8' Styieside Pickup, V8 engine, std . trans ., custom

~

II

OBILE

Ill

1968 Ford

...,_...~

------

ANNIE'S

0

steering and brakes, radio,
heater.

engi ne.

VENDING IS A NICKEL
&amp; DIME BUSINESS ...
SS Billion Worth!

------------

!DRABIUTYM:NI~CEN&amp;!
c~

H. T. Cpe ., lite blue finish,
good tires. clean vinyl in-

Gallipolis! Ohio

10

I own a lot. Phone•- - - - - I don't own slot bull could Itt one.

--

1962 T. Bird $495

•2,395
WOOD MOTOR SALES

NORTH (D)

TOWN OR RFD•----- - - STATE,_ _ _ _ _ _ ZIP•_ __

•

car .

70 Cadillac DeVille Convertible

YOUR NEW

AODRESS~--------

steering , radio. Nice family

Previously Owned Cars

Mother's Day In

American, walnut, 7-gun
TANKS CLEANED.
capacity. Reasonable. One "SEPTIC
Ditching.
Electric sewer
walnut round coffee fable,
cleaning."
Reasonable
rates .
web legs, 30x30x181h (high) . ·Phone
John
Russell,
Phone 992-2936.
Gallipolis 446-4782.
4-8-3tc
4-7-lfc

~~~MCY.Tcmp~~2J.~

:=========~

owner car.

i nterior, good tires, V-8
engine, automatic trans . &amp; p.

heater. automatic trans., w-s-w tires,
,burgundy mist, white top, white vinyl interior .
Ole owner car in excellent cond.

•FIN.4NCINC
•INSUJUNCE

LOT PHONE 992-7004, IF NO ANSWER PHONE 992-3422,
HOURS DAILY 12·9, SUNDAY 1:6.
5a:t Locust St,
Middleport, Ohio
(Opposite Goble's Usee!. Car Lot)

with 6'x24' "L"

H.T. Sedan , local 1 owner
car, blk finish &amp; red cloth

4 Dr . Sedan, p. steering, p. brakes. radio &amp;

'

We Give Complete Servicing

interior. radio, V(hite over
turq finish , good tires . Local
1

(AVAILAILE IN
ELECTRIC- FUEL OIL, ETC.

KEITH GOBLE MOBILE
HOME SALES, INC.

. NOW! Enjoy the kind of home that thousands of happy
people have enjoyed for 25 years-a Capp Home,
and sav~ money! We deliver and erect on your lot, enclose the home, furnish all finishing materials, inside
and out- at the price we quote! Just do the easy
finishing or sub-contract, and SAVE, ~AVE, SAVE!

1966 Impala

69 BUICK LeSABRE

&amp; SCREENS- CARPmNG.

financed by us!

992-2152

0.

Compllteplumbln~o

1nd
hutlnJ, kitchen
FIRM PRICE! ublneta, electrletl
packla•• can be

-rourownkt"''

interior,
6
cyl . eng ,
automatic trans., new tires,

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

·-

Low lnterut

dtooH f111111; Dr Ult

2
IEDIIOOMS- FRONT KITCHEN
eHOUSE TYPE DOORS. STORMS

THINK ABOUT·ITI

.

HIAnD
FU~NISHEO

eCOMHmLY

lOD'a of pl1n1 to

Pis
new 1971
Thursday Afternoon League
Mason Furniture
83 MODERN WALNUT stereo Arpil I, 1971
radio combination. 4 speaker
Rawlings Dodge
63
Chevrolet cars
Standings
soun
d system, 4 speed
Davis-Warner Ins.
57
Team
Name
changer , separate controls.
H&amp;R Firestone
44
M&amp; R Food liner
162
Eagles
43
Bal an ce $68 .3 1. Use our
and trucksSimons Market
159
Holsum Sales Dept.
22 budgel lerms . Call 992-3352.
Pass Pass
Pass
New York Clothing
103
Team High Series and Game
4-8-6fc
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
102
Opening lead- • Q
You1llove
- Mason Furnilure 2776 and - - - - - Upper Rt. 7
Phone 446-0605 or 446-0B42
Racine Food Market
89
993.
MAPLE STEREO -rad&lt;o
Moore's
89
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Ind. High Series - John combination AM&amp;FM radio,
our deals!
Team High Series - M &amp; R By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Grate
622,
Roy
Grueser,
61
8,
four speak er s, 4 speed
,..,." n n
Foodliner 2269.
auloma lic changer , dual
Bill Wilford 594; Ind. H•gh
Team High Game - M &amp; R
A plaintive letter from a
Game - Roy Grueser, 222.
vo l u m e conlr ol . Use ou r
Food liner 764.
Washington reader asks , him .
For
Sale
budge! lerms, or pay balance
CITY
LEAGUE
L
For Sale
High Ind. Series - Betty "Why do finesses a 1ways
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE A55N.j
Won ost
of
$8'3.29 . Call 992-3352.
USED l'URNITURE
GOOD CLEAN LUMP ano Smith 546.
work for experts in your colLou's Ashland
76 36
4-8-6tc
4 PC. sectional couch, twin
stoker coal. Carl Winters, Rio Second High Ind. Series umn and never work for us
Swisher-Lohse
70
42
-Carolyn Bachner 465.
melal bed &amp; tlal spnngs, Grande. Phone 245-5115.
Firestone
60 72 1968 BU LTACO 100 c.c. Lobilo.
Kenmore dryer .
8-lf High Ind. Game _ Betty ordinary rubber bridge playNew pa int and cables, exThe
bidding
has
been:
Quality
Print
56 56
Smith 198.
ers?"
NEW FURNITURI!'
condit ion. Asking $325
cellent
West
North
East
South
Cement
Block
54
58
E
Second High Ind. Game Then he shows today's
IF YOU are cleanln9 house and
SPECIAL
SAL
1•
Pass
2"'
High
Team
Series
Quality
or
best
offer
. Must sell . Phone
Your Chevy Dealer
need a new rug, gtve us a try
Betty Smith 189.
hand and explains that West Pass
3
_..
Pass
,.
Print
2644
;
Cement
Block
2607:
Syra
cuse,
Ohio
992-7173
3
opened the queen of hearts
for a good buy. Room size We will lake your old furnilure
"Where Your
"'
'" Swisher-Lohse, 2583;
evening only .
in on lrade or buy it outright.
nylon rugs 9x12 $37.95 ; 12x12 NEW
3 N.T. Pass 5 &lt;fo
Team High Game - SwisherDollar Buys N'ore"
- 2 pc. Early American
S
and continued the suit while Pass
4-7 ·6tc
$49.75 : also have 12x11, 12x15,
Pass
5+
Pass
?
Lohse 899 ; Quality Prinl 893 ; - - -- -lving
room
sulles
trimmed
in
For
ale
he
ducked
in
the
hope
that
Ph. 992-2126
12x15'6" ; oval braided rugs;
You. Soulh, hold:
Quality Print 897.
·
maple with strong Herculon 14 FT. runabout, lralier 25 HP, East's ace would drop. Anylinoleum rugs 9x12, 12xl2,
Open Eves. TillS
cover 5169 .95, firm mal - Johnson Motor, Phone 446· way, he ruffed the third •A2 ¥AJ4 t63 •KQJ753 Highlnd. Series - Sauer595 ;
12x15. Anniversary Sale now
What
do
you
do
now?
Clatworlhy
579
;
B.
Boyles
558.
lresses were s59.9 5 nowd 0606.
heart. drew trumps and tried
in progress. Come in and see
A- Bid six clubs only. You. High Ind. Game - B. Boyles Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
102
539.95, 7 pc. map 1e a 11 woo
84-3 the club fine s se . East led
many good values. Plenty
Moore's
83
Auto Sales
S
is
showing
first
round
213;
auer
212;
Davis
209.
Racine
Food
Markel
81
partner
dinetle sets with 6 chairs and · - --::-::::-::-::-:-::-;-':'b k h f
h h
d
free parking . Corbin &amp; Snyder
table42x42x66S159.95. Always SPECIAL SALE
ac t e o~rt
e~rt an
diamond control,but .there must
POMEROY LANES
High Ind . Game - Pandora 1958 FORD 6-cylinder, excellent
Furn ., 955 Second Ave. Ph .
in
rear
.
Rice's
New
&amp;
APACHE
Travel
trailers,
only
n.ow
South
tned
the
diamond be a weakness m hiS hand. ·
parking
2
r unning condllion . Body
T
d
Af
Coll
insS 212. Dreama Smith 193 :
446-1171 .
'S
QUjlSTION
hurs
ay
ternoon
League
Used
Furn
.,
854
Sec.
446-9523.
left,
as
low
as
$1,595
F.O.B.
fmesse.
He
was
down
~ne
beTODAY
needs some repair, 5100.
82-11
· b'd
d 1
March 25, 1971
High eries - Pandora Collins
Wh at do you
83-lf
Amsbary Apache Trailer cause two out of two fmesses
Phone 949-2755.
1
as ea er
Pfs 554, Norma Amsbary 521 ; Team
Sales, 631 Fourth Ave. Now is had lost and the ace of hearts · wJLh :
4-9-3tc
REBUILT Electroiux cleaners. - - - -- - - - Simon's Markel
157 High Game - New York
EARLY AMERICAN Stereo- Ihe time lo reserve rentals for had also been in the wrong •A K Q J 54 •K J 3 2 t6 5 &lt;fo2 M&amp;R Foodiirler
Guaranteed. Ph . 446-9453.
154 Clothing House 830 ; Team High
radio combinalion, beautiful
your summer vacation.
place.
1958 FORD 6-cyllnder, e•celfent
. 82-6
New York Clothing
103 Series - Simon's Market 2309
-solid
state
unit
with
4
speed
,
85-3
running condition. Body
-------:record · changer, 4 speaker
needs some repair, $100 .
'67 DODGE &lt;
; , T. pickup, 'extra
sound syslem . Balance $82.63. 4 ROOMS furniture and other
mce. Ph. 446-3246.
r»lJJJJOOID~;IkJ 44•-&amp;'..1.-J ,_. Phone 949-2755.
Use our lime payment plan . items . Call 44 Neil Ave.
4-8-3tc
83-3
Cali 446-1028.
'
between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m .
85-3
85-3
1969 BLi11..~&lt;. Le ~aore, ~ - ar .
STRAW for sale . Lawrence
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
--.,-----hardlop, power steering,
Burdell. Ph. 245-5203.
one letter to each square, to
power
brakes, air , ta,poo
83-3 'sTEREO. Modern Wainuf 1 TON Ford truck, stake body,
Corm four ordinary words.
stereo -radio combination , 292 V-8 motor, mud and snow
mli~s. l!xcellent condiflbn.·
with four speed intermixed llres, good condition. C. M.
Phone 992·2288.
•
·
18,000 BTU air cOnditioner,
This ye8r the total doll a1 volume or vendine is expected to
changer.
Four speed sound
1
Carmichael, Bidwell. Ph . 44611·10·1fs.
$175 ; 5,000 BTU a1r con NOJ/1'
1aach almost SIX BILLION · DOLLARS! That's not nickel
system . •Balance $69.42. Use
2412.
ditioner, $50 ; 20" girl 's bike,
1968 CHI:VROLET Super Sport
and dime stuff.
our
budget
terms.
Call
44685-1
$17 : 36" gas range, 575 ; 9x12
396, 2 door. 4 on the floor, 375
1028.
...
Ussety Industries can mako you a pa1t of this industty for an
.orienlal lype rug, $12 . Call
H. P., $14~. Phone 949-4843.
85-3 '66 MUSTANG convertible, 8
after 6, 446-0004.
Investment of as little as $700 lo $7,000. Vending does not
4-9-31p
cyl ., 51.095. Ph . 256-6506.
BJ-3
just
plod
alone
keepi
R
g
it's
own
In
the
business
wo1ld.
14FT. fiberglass ski boat, 35 HP
85-3
IHJl'IJD
1965 MUSTANG converllbie,
Vending Is a forerunne1 In this count1y's economy and it's
Johnson motor and trailer,
1963 OLDS Dynamic 88 4 dr . V8
fair condition, $300. See Dan
l\ltute
1~,
on
the
blink
of
a
fantastic
•
dollar
volume
growth.
$500. Also 1961 Chev . plckur. YOU saved and slaved for wail
aulo., R&amp;H, reg . gas, w-s,w
Cremeans , Nelson Road,
truck wilh callle racks, exce .
to wall carpet. Keep II new
Wouldn't you ltke ·to have a patt of thai growth7 Wouldn't
lires, wheel covers. Ph. 446Rutland.
·
cond. Ph. 446-1330.
wilh Blue Lustre. Rent
you love to work for yourself? You can be your own boss
4-9-31p
9320.
83-3.
85-3 electric shampooer 51.
and haw the besl vending experience there Is behind you
Cenlrai Supply Co.
every step· of the way.
~~------~
1971 FORD PICKUP, ·v, ton
196i PONTIAC GTO, $1500: Ph. HAND stitched quilt, large in
Ranger, automatic. power
IIi
WHAT THE C~Z~
U.t.'l. can offer you oppottunitY in the vending llusiness: You
size. Can be seen at Mrs. Nan
446 _4477 _
sleerlng,
360 engine!. ~ed and
· &amp;WIMMSII: WAS.
•~ •~
can make nickels llld.dimes 110w 1nto BIG MONEY! Afte1
83-3 McCormick, 147 Seco~d Ave. ADD-A-ROOMS. Overcrowded?
white, like new. will sell
Offered by the Alexander
lnv8$1inl in you1 e!JJ ipment, ~ou maintain the machinery .
Investigate beautiful Vemco
under dealer's colt. Also,
Social Club.
Roomettes. Separate family
and service it. U.l.i. secu1es the locations for you. U.l .l.
camper top with or without
· BRIDAL dress, train and veil,
85-3
rooms; extra bedrooms;
provides a toll·ftee telephone system so thai you can comtruck . Herold E. Hysell,
small size 18, $45. 1 long
.
_.
Now arranre the clrc:l.. letten
----;-laundry I rooms ; baths .
phone 742-3154,
municate rapidly with out specialists. U.l.l. oflets an mtelformal , small size 15, $15. Cali
to form the ourpriM -..-. II
1 CASE tractor with plows and
Young's Mobile Homes, Stale
~ -9- 3tc..
li&amp;anllinancina plan which can help you grow from pa1t-time
446-4092 afler 5,
.
~
.
.
ourreeted
by the"'""' eutooll.
Ph.
367-7757
.
Rt
.
7
and
35
(below
Silver
cultivalors.
83-3
to full-time. Above_. ail U.l.l. trains you to ope1ate .you1
• 85-3
Memorial Bridge), Gallipolis.
business and then holds your hand until your feel ate firmly
85-1
..
"(
dil the atound;
LO'tv, •vw prices on Bemco and _CLEAN e~penslve carpets wilh
the best. Blue Lustre is WE CARRY a large lelection of
Serla mattresses and box
..(Utwer;t i'lbM•yJ
II ~ou a1e intetested ip becomina a part of one of the fastest
Only a n a r I' Qw strip of
llmerica's favorite. Rent
springs. Corbin &amp; Snyder
clock radios, transistor
· I]Jowina industries in America, wiite U.l.l. today! Include
• land between Bhutan and
Jumhlco111 TWill GROOM NtiiLI LIOUM.
Furn., 95.$ Second Ave. Ph.
electric shampooer Sl. Lower
radios, AM &amp; FM. Tawney
phone number 111d references.
Easl 'P a k i s t a n- connects
G. C. Murphy Store.
Jewelers.
A&lt;l6·
Assam
lo the main body of
~"''"'
lf'hal
rlr•
fillY
who
.-r""'"
him.,IJ'
"I'
,
II ~ 'Em~" ~lrol oDallas, r,,., IS241o
Alii .~
Ll
r-.u ...

•

$3995

power steering, new tires,

radio &amp; heater .

Gold, 6 cyl., automatic, radio.
Eight examples of economy, both now on
purchase and later in driving, from R. H.
Rawlings Sons Co . Middleport, Ohio American '
Motors Dealer since 1968.
See Bob, Wallace. Emerson. Hilton or Dick for
your transportation needs now ...

Many more

I

Nova 2 dr ., white finish, blue

Hornet Basic 4 Door

Catalinas. We have two rather sharp and one that
runs good but ~eeds body ·w ork .

Townsman Station ~~;,o;,j
low mileage, local •
with V-Bengine, auto. trans.,

Hornet Basic 2 Door Sedan ___ 52396.35

Blue. 6 cyl., automatic, radio.

From SS95

CHOICE OF 3

1969 Chev.

52495

4-1.1 -3tp BACK HUt ana ena-loaoer
work . Septic tanl&lt;s installed.
LIVING
ROOM
suite,
George (Bill) Pullins. Phone
aytomalic washer and dryer,
992-2478.
kitchen wall cabinet, beds and
11 -29-lfc
dresser. Depot Sl. , Rutland.
Sale signs up.
EXPERT lawn mower and
4-11-31c
Iiiier repair . Free pickup and
delivery . Warren's Mower
H AND N DAY-OLD or started
Shop, 248 Condor St. Phone
Leghorn pullets, both floor or
992-7357 .
cage grown available.
4-6-61c
Poultry
housing
and
automation, 399 W. Main St., PAINTING , roofing and
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2164.
spouting service . Richard
4-11 -ltc
Will, phone m-2889.
.
3-11 -30tc
GUN
CABINET,
early

To Goble Mobile Homes·For Best Buys!

OK CARS
Big Savings

1968 Chevj II 51595

Hornet Basic 4 Door

Coronet 4 dr. Sedan, 6 cyl., std . shift . Shows extra·
good care .

65 PONTIAC

,

Green. 6 cyl., 3 speed , radio.

Red. 6 cyl., 3 speed. radio.

Wildcat 4 dr . hardtop, like new finish. power
steering, power brakes, auto . trans .

65 DODGE

Basic 4 Door Sedan ___ 12379.45

Business Services

Get more home for
.. with

Gremlin 2 Door Sedan. _____ 12566.25

Newport V-8, 2 dr . hardtop. factory air conditioned. ·
This car is exceptional in every way. and shows
best of care.

67 PONTIAC

:Bargains, Bargains, and More Bal-gairis In ·s entinel Classifieds

1971.

WAS
1

• 7 54
• A6.
Both vulnerable
West North East South
'1&lt;fo
Pass 1•
Pass 1 N.T. Pass 4 •

$1095

caf..·;-··

EARLY BIRD SALE

Eastern Ave.

"YA HEAR"
690LOSMOBILE, Delta4 Or. Hdtp.

Local Bowling

smooth and woven wire, 2 air
compressors, lard -trees, 2

tarps, truck rack, large ami.
of hand tools, ropes. chains,
and other tools. '
Household Furniture
3-PIECE living room suite, 2piece living room suite, 2
bedroom suites (like new),
Grand Gas range, 2
Frigidaire refrigeralors, 1 7piece dipette set, 2 5-piece
dinette sets. Antique cupboard, Empire gas heater, 3
21 in. Television 5ets, large
amt. of dishes, pots, pans,
etc., end tables, odd chairs,
lables, and many other Items.

WILL PICK up merchandise
and take lo · auction on a
percentage basis . Call Jim
Adams, 8Uctioneer, Rutland.
Phone 742-4461.
9-23-tfc THIS IS a large sale of good
merchandise.
Sale
of
AUCTION - WHEN? Each
Household will star! promptly
. Friday night, ~ p.m. Where?
al 10:00 A.M. Farm ilems in
Hayman's Auction House,
aflernoon . Lunch served. Not
, Laurel Cliff on neot ljt. 7 responsible for accidents.
Pomeroy ' - Middl•porl ByAucl. : I. 0. "Mac" McCoy
pass.
Owner: Virqil Price
2-7-tfc

JEMO ASSOCIATES

o:

Roofing Carpenter
WOit

'fOR SALE

SENt'iNEL
CARRIER

Warren Pickens

FOR

:::::::::::::::::::::::~

HARTFORD,
WEST VIRGINIA

AUCTION SALE
SAT., APRIL 17fh
TIME: 11 A.M.

------

will

---

WMP0/1390

llonl " " "

�24 ~ The Sunday TimeS -Sentinel, SUnday, April II, 1971

.::f!HI:mtm :;m;:;;:;r nMMWt'::tT!iiit:NI!l)'@~:fHt;;l@:MlMUEMWJWMl'l"fn.f1f!WMiMHI:;;:::;;;::;::;;:) iiiitfl:fJ.'

Vietnam Holds Nixon's Fate
BY WlWAM S. WHITE
WASHINGTON - President Nixon has crossed the deep,
' dark river of doubt and indecision in Vietnam and no man can
now doubt that he has the courage to resist the sweltlng
demands for a de facto surrender there.
That he has got the guts to throw off thls preSBUI'e, much of it
coming from senators of his own party far more concerned
about their own re-election in 1972 than his own, has been made

the White Paper
perfecUy plain In his latest address to the · ·llion.
. And yet an achin$ question remalr~ . ls toe going to have the
fire.i&gt;ower \o acceler~.te the withdrawal of our forces, free our
prisoners of war ln.what. is, In fact, a gathering flight from
Vlelnam, and malntaln_.ll at the same time-the world's
confidence in the credibility of what was once a world-wide,
genuine deterrent ·to Cooununlst aggression?
When he says, In substance, tha.t the South Vietnamese now
have the combat capability - Immensely heightened by our .
assistance to them in the cam~n and Laotian operations to prevent a Communist swallow-up of Indochina, this columnist, for one, has no question whatever of his sincerity.
But what men (and even Presidents) think may be the case
and what may actually be the case can sometimes be two
mortsUy different things. The long and short of It is that the
President hill! given a terrible hostage to fortune here. His
bravery in rej~ting the cruelest of demands1hat he present the
Communists here ani! now with the inestimable gift of a promise
to get out on a specific date, willy-nllly and regsrdless of what
might !,hen be the military position of our forces, cannot be
contested by any fair observer. Had he succumbed to this, even

New Hope

BY ADA KEELS
Did you
Bill Howard made a business
trip
to Chillicothe recently.
know that· Leroy
Jenkins, Columbus,

Caroll K. Snowden

is good
for Life?

A food penon to ... for all your
family life fnaurance, that II. He

can provid=ou with a Ste.te
Farm IJte
cleolpecl to 61
your neeclo
y, ADd hlo apeoW tralniolr ODd 8J:perieDce make
him. quelll!id to IOJIIWer any in-

IUI'ance qUIItlon yoil micht have.
So caU """'• ODd uk about Slate

Farm'a up-to-date _pro tee lion.
(lt'o the oame aood deal u Stale
Farm auto IDoilranool)
··

Coroll K.
Snowden

Second Ave.

Phone 4-46•4290
Homo 4-46-4518

ftA,.. J'4UI Un JNIVltA.Nc• 00MPAN1'
BCDIII Onw:ll: aLOOMIHOTON, IUDI,.OII

P6649

and Madison Stewart, local,
called on Mrs. Daisy Ross
recenUy.
Roscoe Pierson of Corinth
visited Mr. and Mrs. lloyd
Hutcheson recenUy.
Mrs . Mary Howard and Mrs.
Daisy Ross, local, attended the
funeral of Harold Hogans at
Waugh-Halley-Wood funeral
home in Gallipolis recently.
Mrs. Edna Long of Columbus
came recently for the funeral of
Harold Hogans in Gallipolis and
spent over night with her
mother, Mrs. Daisy Ross.
Mr. and Mrs . Chester
Craddolph of Blackfork visited
Mrs. Daisy Ross a recent
Sunday afternoon.
Rev. Henry Sherrod of Leslie,
•w. Va. called his mother, ll'lrs.
Lloyd Hutcheson, stating he will
see them soon. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Donalson Keels
of Gallipolis called on Mrs.
Daial'l Ross recently.
Mr.a. Charles Howard and
daughters of Jackson visited
Mrs . Mary Howard and family
after attending Sunday School
and church services at Mount
Hope a recent Sunday.

Time for aChange!
These homes have brick front&amp;, ·single car garages,
concrete drives, seeded yards, shrubbery, well to well
carpet. Built-In kitchen and ranges, ceramic baths. Kyger
Creek School District. Low taxes. All these homes now
under construction to qualify for the Farmers Home
Administration Rural HOusing Program.
LOTS OF...Jtl.ANS..TO CHOOSE FROM
ALL TOTAL ELECTRIC
31!&gt; Miles from Rt. 35 on .Bulavlllt Road

All OOMES UNDER

~17,500

JARR CONSTRUCTION
16 PINE

PH. 446-37.c6

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

S.l.
ea.m. to 11

Mon. lhru Fri.

h.m. lo 5 p.m.
liOI$1. I( AICADE C:OAP'OR-'TIOfl

A Sort of
~~ J . a1 ·
it¥1 .• ourn IL . •

~~
w
,•.-:« •;

with some mumOO.jumbo insisting that he was not doing so, at
that instant the Unite&lt;! States of America would have lost the
first war in its history.
Nevertheless, in putting his whole stack of chips on the
militarY capu.citles of the South Vietnamese he is taking a
gsmble no other President has ever taken. For if aU does not go
according to plan (and in military matters all very often does
not go that way) all his gallantry to date will not save him from
the epitaph ths the was the first American leader ever to preside
over a measureless tragedy for American anns.
No one knows this better than Mr. Nixon, who himself really
said just about as much in observing that be e:q&gt;eeted "to be
held accountable to the American people if I fail." This was a
Poignant glimpse of the authentic Richard Nixon; or, rather, of
one side of the authentic Richard Nixon. He has the strongest
streak of fatalism of any politician ever known to this colurimist
- and here was that fatalism in action.
Indeed, on the ba.'lis of 25 years of reasonably Intimate
knowledge of both the public and private Nixon, plus some bits
and pieces of insight picked up by some small personal contact
with him in the years of his Presidency, I myself believe what
never, never would be said by Richard Nixon or anybody In any
way officially connected with him.
·
This 1believe: Though it.may be and probably is far too late
to reverse his course of withdrawal and thus go in all the way
short of the use of atomic weapons, Mr. Nixon has reached a
fateful decision, indeed. This in my opinion - and again this is
only the speculation of one man who nevertheless thinks he
knows Richard Nixon pretty well- is that If in order to be reelected he must literally cut and run from Vietnam, heedless of
all consequences and inevitably risking a Dunkirk for American
troops, he will conclude that not even the Presidency could
possibly be worth thls ghastly end of the game.
Naive or not, I believe that If the point must be reached
where absolute personal and national humiliation if required of
him he will step down and say to his tireless critics : "Very well.
You know all the answers. You takeover then." .
·,
Everybody "knows that he won:t,give up power" - but it is
.
,
just conceivable that "everybody" won't be right.
,-----. .
I
I
I
I
I

______________________

t....

Bea

}fi

d§
'iW

BY J. A. McKEAN
GALLIPOUS -. Bonnie and Clyde
·
ba k
b
I an Tho
i¥:\
are c --:- m~ ro ms, me . . se
.;.·.•t.
!il ar. tful dodgmg, mdecorous mates which
5'• d t bed th
'""~ IS ur
e peace around he.re all last
:Jifj spmrner. You can wager your front
teeth they know a sucker when they
J% meet ?ne ·
.
:cr::: The1r outrageously raucous arn val
nw was heral.ded in mid-March by
;:; clamor.ous 'skeet..skeets' and hissings
: ;: : •: and trillmgs enough to destroy any
J semblance of their one.time benefac/} tor's restful slumber. This tell.m rattles
(:@ th~ wmdows. Why must robms be so
i/) nmsy at da~break? The ne~ Army
:,f:•: should tram em to blow reveille:
Hi Oh! they're a guileful twain. Last
tf: sprmg, wh1le doing some rout~ne
??'l maintenance to lawn and want:&gt;, I f~rst
::::•: observed them with casual mterest,
even friendship, by tossing"a grub or
ti:i worm their way. They reciprocated
ffl: with initial, reserved caution. By the
ti:i time I got around to filling andrefti sodding a few bare spots and potholes,
•fb which naturally uncovered a sub}(' stantial harvest of their favorite foods,
:fit they became more trusting and acttl cepted my freely proffered gifts with
:\ ') alacrity and gusto.
Really, I imagined myself
f.O.:.f.••.·

:.:.:.·.:.·.i.l.'.

rn

ft::

•..:..'.\.'i.·

Jfi

Ah ! nature is marvelous.

over~~:~s h~~~~a!~!d. ~ysi=~~
::~ ~=:~~~i~~ba:f~!:

:?:

angle combine to make it vittually
impossible to maintain grass on the
small plot between house and sidewalk.
Being a self,taught, quasi-authority on
grasses, I determined to correct the

situation, complete with flowerbed.
The male robi'n watched my
preparations with abnormal interest
and constant vigilance. With the first
turn of the spade he nearly took my
handoffsnatchingafatearthworm.His
avarice • my chagrin, the worm's size,
and a balmy sunny day gave me a
bright idea: a can of worms, a fish pole,
and Chickamauga Creek two blcoks
away mean .... Catfish!
It was not to be, for he.was quicker
and more aggressive than me. Very

'I
MJ

spotted a bird nest. Inside, upsta~s,
peering down the branch over~gmg
the porch roof, the mother robm could : ii
be seen nesting and her energetic, . fi
.:·0·$
~
tw '1%
pillaging mate bringing focld. Those o @#,
have a mile of nerve. Or cunn.ing?
k.'"
·l·
Then came the first criSIS; Bob *~·:~.
Burns' boys came down one day to illlf
install a new eave trough. I wanted the @{
'"~
lads to cut back .the overgrown limbs )N
while they were on the roof but how K1
about the nest? Could they tr~ and not
molest the robin family? After con- w~
siderable consultation and careful @!
survey, with gentle, leisurely care, the~ i@J1
· did the job without mishap. That mama iJj:)
bird really hung in the~e, and in.a.few
days two large, carniVorous, tlliSued ?1\~
mouths appeared gulping, all the chow h:!
both parents could fly in. For days It ff\
resembl¢ the Berlin airlift. But, I :ffl
kinda felt like a papa myself.
·:: : •:•·•
:;::::::'
Another crisis! 'one day a terrible •. • .•.•••..
racket kept sounding ·at intervals
outside my open window, conning from (::;:,
. my neighbor, Harry Mendenhall's
lawn. Curiosity revealed a baby robin,
yet showing his thrush-like spotted
breast, swaggering and stumbling all
aroundHarry'syardandwalkway,and
shouting defiance to every cat in town.
Alanned, 1 rushed out and e~
toward the Uttle idiot, who ducked

Mi

rn

~::thg:~~e !: a;~~a~~ s::Yo~~~ f;~:~~~ Off~~di~~::·:::~in~~~~~~
::~or~:rn~~~tyren::edpla:~~ :
g
ful
bbe and

!(\1.:

moving
tons Thomas'
of rich earth
ever-so-slight, unnatural movement
the Doctors
new landscaping
building. I an
inalimbabovecaughtmyattention.
By
thought, perhaps they're leery of easing around on the porch railing I

SUNDAY'·&amp;'MONDAY
"Fixed The
Way You

Like .em"

FOOTLONG
HOT DOGS
-~ '

-No Limit-

'
·,

.,. -,

.

-

'

•

.••

•

.: . '

.I

:··

',_ '

··-- ' ..

.

\

' ' SUPPLEMENY..TO;

Wheelng ..te.gencer ·&amp; New$ R'gister ·
". Pomeroy 4Gallpolis~. Ohio Sunday .,
·,· , TiiMs ..Sentinel
'.

PRIQS IN EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY, APR~ 1
WHILE QUANTITIES
l:AST.
'
.

,.• .

.

l . , , /.

,f...·

I

&lt;

'

b.i:,;,:
.,: .;.:·.:.'

·•;:m:::r::;;::: ::;;:::;.;.mmr m
rrrr::;;;;:;:tm:;;; ::::: :; :wm::;;n;:n;.n:It·' rr :: I

.,

•'

l.c·'.~,:·'\.~

.• ....'* ···:'
, :..,;·
..•·''
·.,' :,:.:

w: ::::y;::::it.':ie::::m:mmi!E

Commander-in -Chief Lectured
United Press International
An American soldier this
week lectured a superior on
military procedure and it made
news not only in the United
States but in the rest of the
world.

Week in Review
The reason: The soldier was
Capt. Aubrey M. Daniel, the
successful prosecut~r of Lt.
William L. . Calley Jr . The
superior officer was the Com·
mander in Chief of the Armed
Forces - President NixQn.
Capt. Daniel was indignant
because Nixon had Intervened
in the case and ordered Calley
released from the stockade at
Ft. Benning, Ga., and confined
to quarters pending a presidential review of the case.
In an angry letter to the
President, · Daniel said Nixon
.had weakened respect for the
judicial process.
"You have subjected a
judicial system o( this country
to the criticism that it is
subject to political influence
when it .is a fundamental
precept of our judicial system
that the legal processes of this
country must be kept free from
any outside influences," Daniel
wrote.
But President Nixon, in his
dual role as head of the civil
population and of the armed
forces, was subject to an
unusual array of pressures:
He and his staff were deluged
by thousands of letters and
telegrams, most of them
protesting the conviction of

Calley for his role in the My
Lai massacre.
The situation was further
complicated by the fact that
both ''hawks" and

~~doves "

were among those objecting to
the military panel's verdict.
Opinions on Calley's conviction ranged from the belief the
officer was in reality a hero,
following the orders of superiors, to the conviction that he
was a merciless killer .
Thus a tragic event that

Ha.;risonville
Society News
Mr. and Mrs . F. 0 . Whaley
and grandchildren, Terry Jr.
and Ann, were weekend visitors
of Edith Whaley and Ava
Gilkey.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jewell
were supper guests of the Glen
Jewells in Downington, Sunday
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Gilkey and
son, Joey, of Columbus called
on Ava Gilkey and -visited Mrs.
Bertha Heilman at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Mrs .
Heilman does not show much
improvement.
Mrs. Mollie McGrath and son
of Logan visited the Earl
McGraths Saturday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey
of Albany visited Ava Gilkey on
Friday evening and also visited
the Lincoln Russells. Mrs .
Russell has been ailing.
Frank Epple of Middleport
visited the M. A. Epples Sunday.
Mrs. Eliza Powell and Mrs.

occurred · two years ago halfway around the world continued
to plague the conscience of
Americans.
Washington...:. President Nixon
on nationwide television defended the invasion of Laos and
promised the withdrawal of
100,000 more American troops
from South Vietnam by next
Dec. 1.
New York- Famed Russianborn composer Igor Stravinsky
died following several years of
ill health. He was 88.
Moscow - As expected the
24th Soviet Party Congress reJohn Stout made a business trip
to Pomeroy.
Dr. and Mrs. Don Gibson and
Mark and Gay Lynn of Rockville, Md., are expected to
spend Easter with relatives
here.
Mr.andMrs. F.O. Whaley are
spending their Easter vacation
with Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Whaley in Washington, D. C.
The Ryan Homes recently
transferred Whaley from New
Yorjl to Washingto!l, D. C.
Mr. and Mrs. Dillon have sold
their farm fonnerly the Leo
Welsh farm and have purchased
a new trailer.
Mrs. Frances Alkire and
Alice Whaley took Ann. Whaley
and Tammy Clark to the park
Saturday. There were 400 there
fishing.
Robert Alkire and Kenneth
Payne attended the cattle sale
Saturday.
"
Mrs . Golda Jones is
hospitalized with a blood clot

elected party chief Leonid I. ·
Brezhnev, Premier Alexei N.
Kosygin and President Nikolai
Podgorny for another five
years.
Nagoya, Japan- An American
iable tennis team was invited
by Peking to visit Communist
China, the first such type of
inVItation Issued to Americans
.in almost 20 years. The United
States called the development
"encouraging."
.
Chicago-Mayor Richard J.
Daley won his fifth te.::m in 11
lop-sided victory over Republican opponent · Richard E
Friedman.

due to her rec •.• t surgery
'following a wreck. She will be in
hospital at least two weeks. Her
address is Room 1143, Good
Samaritan Hospital, Zanesville,
Ohio.
Mrs. Foil's granddaughter of
Columbus is spending the week
with her.
Mrs. Lola Cain is still confined to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and is not much Improved.
Mrs. Katie Wilson is much
Improved and plans to return
home soon.
Mrs. Eastman is Improving
slowly and can now use her
walker.
Two of Ray Alkire's friends
from Athens joined him in a
fishing expedition at Forest
Acres Park Saturday.
In 1966 -Guam-based B52.!1
bombed Vietnam for the first
time.

JLfMBO ·

MIN'S
~ENt .PRESS'

r

BOUNTY TOWELS

sPottsllns
.
'
'

W~ht. f!ft091~,. ifio.i •.-,.
m~~~'s sport .him wiH. ~'( of fii.hian

,htd.

.........

fr.•••"'·

.....lr

Ooow from ouort~it 1olid coloirl,
pklldi, aMI prifttt.~t9Uior c.ollor IJH)Cj,
.1. 5Mp •..., vp IIOW! ~ S.M-1.

·LIIIt 4

COol, nt~- iro~t, pe rlht ... nf '
·~u lobric• with l9h' of dcunino .

ROLLS

,3 f8RS500

..,....

'

Free Parking on our Second Street Lot Walk up to the 3rd Floor and Save on the leadine makes
.
.
of furniture • Let us outfit JOUr home,completeJr • WhHe on lt,Je 3rd Floor • Visit the Lees Carpet
Department • Younptown Sinks • and .Air Conditioner$ 111. the ~nd Floor.
'.

EL-ERFELDS IN POM

Y- ·

I

MESH·HOSE

Nylon m•sh ha11 in siN• A, 'a.""
C. Colon: &amp;.!go and pnnainan . •

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

4FOR

, • n.

. ...,
111M

·hrlttrt'
LilT I .

'.,.....
3&amp;~:,
lev.

.- lac .
~

_H.:~·

AUTOMon¥1 1*'1'.

Monday Elberfelds in Pomeroy are starting the Spring
Furniture Sale. Living Room S~ites • Sofas - Easy ·Chairs
• Recliners - Hide·A~Beds • Sofa Lounges. ·• Easy Chairs
with Ottomans • Hassocks • Living Room ·Tables -.Cabinets
· Desks - Bedroom Suites • Hollywood ·Beds, King, Queen,
Double or Twin Sizes.- Complete line of Bedding •
Innerspring Mattresses • Box Springs .- Hollaway Beds Dining Room Furniture -·Kitchen.Furniture·· Refrigerators
•
• Freezers
•
Gas
and
Electric
Ranges
•
W
·
'
1
ers
·
•
Drye~ •
. '
.
.
Furniture for every room in your home •·Sensible' Credit -

"

LADIES' NYI.ON ·

'

5fr.

.

Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gillogly,
Vicki and Bruce of Albany,
were Saturday visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. Lincoln Russell.
Mr . and Mrs. Franklin
Russell of Middleport were
Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
lJncoln Russell and Guy.
Mrs. Howard Thoma · and
Mrs. Clinton Gilkey of Albany
and Mrs. Fred Tuckerman were
visitOrs of Mr. and Mrs. llricoln
Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. William Boyce
of Columbus were· weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mrs Howard
Russell.
Mrs. J. B. Hatfield and family
of Madison were weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Hatfield . .
. Mrs. Lee Roush and children
of Logan were weeke~d visitors
of hor .mother, Mrs. Helen
Jobnson.
Mrs. Lee Rouah :and family
and Mrs. Helen Jqbnson visited
Sunday with Mr. ' and Mrs,
Kenneth Grover and faintly or
.tbester, 1110 with Mr. and Mrs.

%*
~~f.f:

But I'm considering
the ::..:.
flowerbeds
at night this working
year.

I

Wolfpen

machinery; such is the reasoning of a
d
·
ope.
The days progressed from April
into May, and the pair was seen flitting
about with weed scraps, twigs, and
such, portending nest building and a
family. Their'tut-tut'warningcalls·had
given way to morning-eve'nlng
carolings of 'cheerup - cheerup cheerup _ cheerily! ,

i'f}
\@

I By Bob Hoeflich

POMEROY -Meigs County's greatest
been
the quality of its people who have again "come through"
beautifully in the George Thompson Kidney Fund activity which
has been under way several weeks.
The fund drive for the benefit of the 18-year-old son of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Thompson has gone over the $6,500 mark and is still
going strong.
George is still confined to the Cleveland Clinic following his
March 30 kidney transplant but his mother reported Friday that
he's getting along extremely well. The family is so encouraged!
George's sister, Louella Roush, Belpre, has been taken to the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Orion Roush at Salem Center and will
recuperate there for awhile. Louella was the donor of the kidney
used in .the transplant. Mr. and Mrs. Roush are Louella's motherin-law and father-in-law.
According to the latest word, George may he discharged from
the Clinic in a week or 10 days. His room number, in the meantime, is 705.
It's sw'prlsing that many outside.«,Melgs County have joined
In the successful fund drive which has been carried out unde0he
sponsorship of the Winding Trail Garden Club·with Mrs. Robert
Lewis as chalnnan.
It's sometimes hard to 'believe but there's really a lot of good
around. For example, the Wesley Foundation Choir of Ohio
University was singing at the Asbury Methodist Church in
Syracuse when an announcement was made concerning George.
In a few days, the young people of the choir had collected $25
which they sent down to the Rev. Forrest R. Donley to be turned
into the fund.
Ethel Grueser of Monessen, Pa., was visiting here and
learned about the fund drive. She returned home, told her Sunday
school class of the young man's problem and the class sent a nice
contribution "along with our prayers" for George and his sister.
Mr. and Mrs. Olden Thaxton, fonner residents now In
Brandon, Fla., faithful Sentinel readers, sent through a contribution. "Our prayers are for this dear boy and his parents. May
God bless," they wrote.
Many people have sent notes for George and his family along
with their contributions and these are all being turned over to tbe
family by Mrs. Inls.
. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Keaton, and son, Robert, Coolville, wrote
in part:
"H the people in this great world would think of helping one
another instead of hilrtlng one another, we would have a better
world to live ln. We wUI remember George and his sister in our
prayers that 'God the GreatPhysiclan'wUI be with them."
Salisbury Brownie Troop 220 wrote along with their contribution "Our help in money lsn 'I much but our prayers and good
wishes for you are many. God be with you during your operation
and all the days oi your i!fe."
And, from the Zion Church of Christ, these words:
''Our prayers go out for George and his sister and the family .
May everything be very gocld for all of you." ·
Yes, George has had a lot of things going for hbn at this time.
He's doing fine and so Is Louella. Co)l!d It be that those many
prayers 1111 their behaH are being answered? It really Isn't too
hard to believe 1111 Easter Sunday, Is It?!

~
~·:::: .'

.

sure, he could fly well enough: likely •i}~?his old man had kicked him out of the FH
nest for boisterous conduct.
Anyway, my experience last year : ".
with Bonnie and Clyde was something M~
less than sublime. Maybe that's life. 'fj

·1 fM
I

•

the Retum of
. i~&amp;
Bonnie &amp; Oy.. de.. ftirm

fragile legs and big feet; their flashing renzy
s race
ro ry
t1i black wings, brick red chests, and darting escape.
'tf! unerringly accurate .Yellow beaks.
Perhaps a ·week passed. While
:@fl Though it did occur to me why they p~id sitting on the front steps with 8 soothing
lti me such studious attention when pitcher of Kool-Aid waiting for young
i:i:i' contractors down the street were Doug Mullineaux to deliver the paper •

! Of the Bend
I

-

•

,. ·

36c. Pl.l tti.

Pill .a.onttNG

TUCKER PLASTIC

SYCAMORE

LIUI.Y
BASKET
BUSHEL SIZE

19" LA WM MOWER

' 1

. LIMITZ

.....

Heclo'o Rev.
..
'
HOUSIWARI
DIPT.
. '
•'

�24 ~ The Sunday TimeS -Sentinel, SUnday, April II, 1971

.::f!HI:mtm :;m;:;;:;r nMMWt'::tT!iiit:NI!l)'@~:fHt;;l@:MlMUEMWJWMl'l"fn.f1f!WMiMHI:;;:::;;;::;::;;:) iiiitfl:fJ.'

Vietnam Holds Nixon's Fate
BY WlWAM S. WHITE
WASHINGTON - President Nixon has crossed the deep,
' dark river of doubt and indecision in Vietnam and no man can
now doubt that he has the courage to resist the sweltlng
demands for a de facto surrender there.
That he has got the guts to throw off thls preSBUI'e, much of it
coming from senators of his own party far more concerned
about their own re-election in 1972 than his own, has been made

the White Paper
perfecUy plain In his latest address to the · ·llion.
. And yet an achin$ question remalr~ . ls toe going to have the
fire.i&gt;ower \o acceler~.te the withdrawal of our forces, free our
prisoners of war ln.what. is, In fact, a gathering flight from
Vlelnam, and malntaln_.ll at the same time-the world's
confidence in the credibility of what was once a world-wide,
genuine deterrent ·to Cooununlst aggression?
When he says, In substance, tha.t the South Vietnamese now
have the combat capability - Immensely heightened by our .
assistance to them in the cam~n and Laotian operations to prevent a Communist swallow-up of Indochina, this columnist, for one, has no question whatever of his sincerity.
But what men (and even Presidents) think may be the case
and what may actually be the case can sometimes be two
mortsUy different things. The long and short of It is that the
President hill! given a terrible hostage to fortune here. His
bravery in rej~ting the cruelest of demands1hat he present the
Communists here ani! now with the inestimable gift of a promise
to get out on a specific date, willy-nllly and regsrdless of what
might !,hen be the military position of our forces, cannot be
contested by any fair observer. Had he succumbed to this, even

New Hope

BY ADA KEELS
Did you
Bill Howard made a business
trip
to Chillicothe recently.
know that· Leroy
Jenkins, Columbus,

Caroll K. Snowden

is good
for Life?

A food penon to ... for all your
family life fnaurance, that II. He

can provid=ou with a Ste.te
Farm IJte
cleolpecl to 61
your neeclo
y, ADd hlo apeoW tralniolr ODd 8J:perieDce make
him. quelll!id to IOJIIWer any in-

IUI'ance qUIItlon yoil micht have.
So caU """'• ODd uk about Slate

Farm'a up-to-date _pro tee lion.
(lt'o the oame aood deal u Stale
Farm auto IDoilranool)
··

Coroll K.
Snowden

Second Ave.

Phone 4-46•4290
Homo 4-46-4518

ftA,.. J'4UI Un JNIVltA.Nc• 00MPAN1'
BCDIII Onw:ll: aLOOMIHOTON, IUDI,.OII

P6649

and Madison Stewart, local,
called on Mrs. Daisy Ross
recenUy.
Roscoe Pierson of Corinth
visited Mr. and Mrs. lloyd
Hutcheson recenUy.
Mrs . Mary Howard and Mrs.
Daisy Ross, local, attended the
funeral of Harold Hogans at
Waugh-Halley-Wood funeral
home in Gallipolis recently.
Mrs. Edna Long of Columbus
came recently for the funeral of
Harold Hogans in Gallipolis and
spent over night with her
mother, Mrs. Daisy Ross.
Mr. and Mrs . Chester
Craddolph of Blackfork visited
Mrs. Daisy Ross a recent
Sunday afternoon.
Rev. Henry Sherrod of Leslie,
•w. Va. called his mother, ll'lrs.
Lloyd Hutcheson, stating he will
see them soon. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Donalson Keels
of Gallipolis called on Mrs.
Daial'l Ross recently.
Mr.a. Charles Howard and
daughters of Jackson visited
Mrs . Mary Howard and family
after attending Sunday School
and church services at Mount
Hope a recent Sunday.

Time for aChange!
These homes have brick front&amp;, ·single car garages,
concrete drives, seeded yards, shrubbery, well to well
carpet. Built-In kitchen and ranges, ceramic baths. Kyger
Creek School District. Low taxes. All these homes now
under construction to qualify for the Farmers Home
Administration Rural HOusing Program.
LOTS OF...Jtl.ANS..TO CHOOSE FROM
ALL TOTAL ELECTRIC
31!&gt; Miles from Rt. 35 on .Bulavlllt Road

All OOMES UNDER

~17,500

JARR CONSTRUCTION
16 PINE

PH. 446-37.c6

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

S.l.
ea.m. to 11

Mon. lhru Fri.

h.m. lo 5 p.m.
liOI$1. I( AICADE C:OAP'OR-'TIOfl

A Sort of
~~ J . a1 ·
it¥1 .• ourn IL . •

~~
w
,•.-:« •;

with some mumOO.jumbo insisting that he was not doing so, at
that instant the Unite&lt;! States of America would have lost the
first war in its history.
Nevertheless, in putting his whole stack of chips on the
militarY capu.citles of the South Vietnamese he is taking a
gsmble no other President has ever taken. For if aU does not go
according to plan (and in military matters all very often does
not go that way) all his gallantry to date will not save him from
the epitaph ths the was the first American leader ever to preside
over a measureless tragedy for American anns.
No one knows this better than Mr. Nixon, who himself really
said just about as much in observing that be e:q&gt;eeted "to be
held accountable to the American people if I fail." This was a
Poignant glimpse of the authentic Richard Nixon; or, rather, of
one side of the authentic Richard Nixon. He has the strongest
streak of fatalism of any politician ever known to this colurimist
- and here was that fatalism in action.
Indeed, on the ba.'lis of 25 years of reasonably Intimate
knowledge of both the public and private Nixon, plus some bits
and pieces of insight picked up by some small personal contact
with him in the years of his Presidency, I myself believe what
never, never would be said by Richard Nixon or anybody In any
way officially connected with him.
·
This 1believe: Though it.may be and probably is far too late
to reverse his course of withdrawal and thus go in all the way
short of the use of atomic weapons, Mr. Nixon has reached a
fateful decision, indeed. This in my opinion - and again this is
only the speculation of one man who nevertheless thinks he
knows Richard Nixon pretty well- is that If in order to be reelected he must literally cut and run from Vietnam, heedless of
all consequences and inevitably risking a Dunkirk for American
troops, he will conclude that not even the Presidency could
possibly be worth thls ghastly end of the game.
Naive or not, I believe that If the point must be reached
where absolute personal and national humiliation if required of
him he will step down and say to his tireless critics : "Very well.
You know all the answers. You takeover then." .
·,
Everybody "knows that he won:t,give up power" - but it is
.
,
just conceivable that "everybody" won't be right.
,-----. .
I
I
I
I
I

______________________

t....

Bea

}fi

d§
'iW

BY J. A. McKEAN
GALLIPOUS -. Bonnie and Clyde
·
ba k
b
I an Tho
i¥:\
are c --:- m~ ro ms, me . . se
.;.·.•t.
!il ar. tful dodgmg, mdecorous mates which
5'• d t bed th
'""~ IS ur
e peace around he.re all last
:Jifj spmrner. You can wager your front
teeth they know a sucker when they
J% meet ?ne ·
.
:cr::: The1r outrageously raucous arn val
nw was heral.ded in mid-March by
;:; clamor.ous 'skeet..skeets' and hissings
: ;: : •: and trillmgs enough to destroy any
J semblance of their one.time benefac/} tor's restful slumber. This tell.m rattles
(:@ th~ wmdows. Why must robms be so
i/) nmsy at da~break? The ne~ Army
:,f:•: should tram em to blow reveille:
Hi Oh! they're a guileful twain. Last
tf: sprmg, wh1le doing some rout~ne
??'l maintenance to lawn and want:&gt;, I f~rst
::::•: observed them with casual mterest,
even friendship, by tossing"a grub or
ti:i worm their way. They reciprocated
ffl: with initial, reserved caution. By the
ti:i time I got around to filling andrefti sodding a few bare spots and potholes,
•fb which naturally uncovered a sub}(' stantial harvest of their favorite foods,
:fit they became more trusting and acttl cepted my freely proffered gifts with
:\ ') alacrity and gusto.
Really, I imagined myself
f.O.:.f.••.·

:.:.:.·.:.·.i.l.'.

rn

ft::

•..:..'.\.'i.·

Jfi

Ah ! nature is marvelous.

over~~:~s h~~~~a!~!d. ~ysi=~~
::~ ~=:~~~i~~ba:f~!:

:?:

angle combine to make it vittually
impossible to maintain grass on the
small plot between house and sidewalk.
Being a self,taught, quasi-authority on
grasses, I determined to correct the

situation, complete with flowerbed.
The male robi'n watched my
preparations with abnormal interest
and constant vigilance. With the first
turn of the spade he nearly took my
handoffsnatchingafatearthworm.His
avarice • my chagrin, the worm's size,
and a balmy sunny day gave me a
bright idea: a can of worms, a fish pole,
and Chickamauga Creek two blcoks
away mean .... Catfish!
It was not to be, for he.was quicker
and more aggressive than me. Very

'I
MJ

spotted a bird nest. Inside, upsta~s,
peering down the branch over~gmg
the porch roof, the mother robm could : ii
be seen nesting and her energetic, . fi
.:·0·$
~
tw '1%
pillaging mate bringing focld. Those o @#,
have a mile of nerve. Or cunn.ing?
k.'"
·l·
Then came the first criSIS; Bob *~·:~.
Burns' boys came down one day to illlf
install a new eave trough. I wanted the @{
'"~
lads to cut back .the overgrown limbs )N
while they were on the roof but how K1
about the nest? Could they tr~ and not
molest the robin family? After con- w~
siderable consultation and careful @!
survey, with gentle, leisurely care, the~ i@J1
· did the job without mishap. That mama iJj:)
bird really hung in the~e, and in.a.few
days two large, carniVorous, tlliSued ?1\~
mouths appeared gulping, all the chow h:!
both parents could fly in. For days It ff\
resembl¢ the Berlin airlift. But, I :ffl
kinda felt like a papa myself.
·:: : •:•·•
:;::::::'
Another crisis! 'one day a terrible •. • .•.•••..
racket kept sounding ·at intervals
outside my open window, conning from (::;:,
. my neighbor, Harry Mendenhall's
lawn. Curiosity revealed a baby robin,
yet showing his thrush-like spotted
breast, swaggering and stumbling all
aroundHarry'syardandwalkway,and
shouting defiance to every cat in town.
Alanned, 1 rushed out and e~
toward the Uttle idiot, who ducked

Mi

rn

~::thg:~~e !: a;~~a~~ s::Yo~~~ f;~:~~~ Off~~di~~::·:::~in~~~~~~
::~or~:rn~~~tyren::edpla:~~ :
g
ful
bbe and

!(\1.:

moving
tons Thomas'
of rich earth
ever-so-slight, unnatural movement
the Doctors
new landscaping
building. I an
inalimbabovecaughtmyattention.
By
thought, perhaps they're leery of easing around on the porch railing I

SUNDAY'·&amp;'MONDAY
"Fixed The
Way You

Like .em"

FOOTLONG
HOT DOGS
-~ '

-No Limit-

'
·,

.,. -,

.

-

'

•

.••

•

.: . '

.I

:··

',_ '

··-- ' ..

.

\

' ' SUPPLEMENY..TO;

Wheelng ..te.gencer ·&amp; New$ R'gister ·
". Pomeroy 4Gallpolis~. Ohio Sunday .,
·,· , TiiMs ..Sentinel
'.

PRIQS IN EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY, APR~ 1
WHILE QUANTITIES
l:AST.
'
.

,.• .

.

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,f...·

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&lt;

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.,: .;.:·.:.'

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Commander-in -Chief Lectured
United Press International
An American soldier this
week lectured a superior on
military procedure and it made
news not only in the United
States but in the rest of the
world.

Week in Review
The reason: The soldier was
Capt. Aubrey M. Daniel, the
successful prosecut~r of Lt.
William L. . Calley Jr . The
superior officer was the Com·
mander in Chief of the Armed
Forces - President NixQn.
Capt. Daniel was indignant
because Nixon had Intervened
in the case and ordered Calley
released from the stockade at
Ft. Benning, Ga., and confined
to quarters pending a presidential review of the case.
In an angry letter to the
President, · Daniel said Nixon
.had weakened respect for the
judicial process.
"You have subjected a
judicial system o( this country
to the criticism that it is
subject to political influence
when it .is a fundamental
precept of our judicial system
that the legal processes of this
country must be kept free from
any outside influences," Daniel
wrote.
But President Nixon, in his
dual role as head of the civil
population and of the armed
forces, was subject to an
unusual array of pressures:
He and his staff were deluged
by thousands of letters and
telegrams, most of them
protesting the conviction of

Calley for his role in the My
Lai massacre.
The situation was further
complicated by the fact that
both ''hawks" and

~~doves "

were among those objecting to
the military panel's verdict.
Opinions on Calley's conviction ranged from the belief the
officer was in reality a hero,
following the orders of superiors, to the conviction that he
was a merciless killer .
Thus a tragic event that

Ha.;risonville
Society News
Mr. and Mrs . F. 0 . Whaley
and grandchildren, Terry Jr.
and Ann, were weekend visitors
of Edith Whaley and Ava
Gilkey.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jewell
were supper guests of the Glen
Jewells in Downington, Sunday
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Gilkey and
son, Joey, of Columbus called
on Ava Gilkey and -visited Mrs.
Bertha Heilman at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Mrs .
Heilman does not show much
improvement.
Mrs. Mollie McGrath and son
of Logan visited the Earl
McGraths Saturday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey
of Albany visited Ava Gilkey on
Friday evening and also visited
the Lincoln Russells. Mrs .
Russell has been ailing.
Frank Epple of Middleport
visited the M. A. Epples Sunday.
Mrs. Eliza Powell and Mrs.

occurred · two years ago halfway around the world continued
to plague the conscience of
Americans.
Washington...:. President Nixon
on nationwide television defended the invasion of Laos and
promised the withdrawal of
100,000 more American troops
from South Vietnam by next
Dec. 1.
New York- Famed Russianborn composer Igor Stravinsky
died following several years of
ill health. He was 88.
Moscow - As expected the
24th Soviet Party Congress reJohn Stout made a business trip
to Pomeroy.
Dr. and Mrs. Don Gibson and
Mark and Gay Lynn of Rockville, Md., are expected to
spend Easter with relatives
here.
Mr.andMrs. F.O. Whaley are
spending their Easter vacation
with Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Whaley in Washington, D. C.
The Ryan Homes recently
transferred Whaley from New
Yorjl to Washingto!l, D. C.
Mr. and Mrs. Dillon have sold
their farm fonnerly the Leo
Welsh farm and have purchased
a new trailer.
Mrs. Frances Alkire and
Alice Whaley took Ann. Whaley
and Tammy Clark to the park
Saturday. There were 400 there
fishing.
Robert Alkire and Kenneth
Payne attended the cattle sale
Saturday.
"
Mrs . Golda Jones is
hospitalized with a blood clot

elected party chief Leonid I. ·
Brezhnev, Premier Alexei N.
Kosygin and President Nikolai
Podgorny for another five
years.
Nagoya, Japan- An American
iable tennis team was invited
by Peking to visit Communist
China, the first such type of
inVItation Issued to Americans
.in almost 20 years. The United
States called the development
"encouraging."
.
Chicago-Mayor Richard J.
Daley won his fifth te.::m in 11
lop-sided victory over Republican opponent · Richard E
Friedman.

due to her rec •.• t surgery
'following a wreck. She will be in
hospital at least two weeks. Her
address is Room 1143, Good
Samaritan Hospital, Zanesville,
Ohio.
Mrs. Foil's granddaughter of
Columbus is spending the week
with her.
Mrs. Lola Cain is still confined to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and is not much Improved.
Mrs. Katie Wilson is much
Improved and plans to return
home soon.
Mrs. Eastman is Improving
slowly and can now use her
walker.
Two of Ray Alkire's friends
from Athens joined him in a
fishing expedition at Forest
Acres Park Saturday.
In 1966 -Guam-based B52.!1
bombed Vietnam for the first
time.

JLfMBO ·

MIN'S
~ENt .PRESS'

r

BOUNTY TOWELS

sPottsllns
.
'
'

W~ht. f!ft091~,. ifio.i •.-,.
m~~~'s sport .him wiH. ~'( of fii.hian

,htd.

.........

fr.•••"'·

.....lr

Ooow from ouort~it 1olid coloirl,
pklldi, aMI prifttt.~t9Uior c.ollor IJH)Cj,
.1. 5Mp •..., vp IIOW! ~ S.M-1.

·LIIIt 4

COol, nt~- iro~t, pe rlht ... nf '
·~u lobric• with l9h' of dcunino .

ROLLS

,3 f8RS500

..,....

'

Free Parking on our Second Street Lot Walk up to the 3rd Floor and Save on the leadine makes
.
.
of furniture • Let us outfit JOUr home,completeJr • WhHe on lt,Je 3rd Floor • Visit the Lees Carpet
Department • Younptown Sinks • and .Air Conditioner$ 111. the ~nd Floor.
'.

EL-ERFELDS IN POM

Y- ·

I

MESH·HOSE

Nylon m•sh ha11 in siN• A, 'a.""
C. Colon: &amp;.!go and pnnainan . •

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

4FOR

, • n.

. ...,
111M

·hrlttrt'
LilT I .

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3&amp;~:,
lev.

.- lac .
~

_H.:~·

AUTOMon¥1 1*'1'.

Monday Elberfelds in Pomeroy are starting the Spring
Furniture Sale. Living Room S~ites • Sofas - Easy ·Chairs
• Recliners - Hide·A~Beds • Sofa Lounges. ·• Easy Chairs
with Ottomans • Hassocks • Living Room ·Tables -.Cabinets
· Desks - Bedroom Suites • Hollywood ·Beds, King, Queen,
Double or Twin Sizes.- Complete line of Bedding •
Innerspring Mattresses • Box Springs .- Hollaway Beds Dining Room Furniture -·Kitchen.Furniture·· Refrigerators
•
• Freezers
•
Gas
and
Electric
Ranges
•
W
·
'
1
ers
·
•
Drye~ •
. '
.
.
Furniture for every room in your home •·Sensible' Credit -

"

LADIES' NYI.ON ·

'

5fr.

.

Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gillogly,
Vicki and Bruce of Albany,
were Saturday visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. Lincoln Russell.
Mr . and Mrs. Franklin
Russell of Middleport were
Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
lJncoln Russell and Guy.
Mrs. Howard Thoma · and
Mrs. Clinton Gilkey of Albany
and Mrs. Fred Tuckerman were
visitOrs of Mr. and Mrs. llricoln
Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. William Boyce
of Columbus were· weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mrs Howard
Russell.
Mrs. J. B. Hatfield and family
of Madison were weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Hatfield . .
. Mrs. Lee Roush and children
of Logan were weeke~d visitors
of hor .mother, Mrs. Helen
Jobnson.
Mrs. Lee Rouah :and family
and Mrs. Helen Jqbnson visited
Sunday with Mr. ' and Mrs,
Kenneth Grover and faintly or
.tbester, 1110 with Mr. and Mrs.

%*
~~f.f:

But I'm considering
the ::..:.
flowerbeds
at night this working
year.

I

Wolfpen

machinery; such is the reasoning of a
d
·
ope.
The days progressed from April
into May, and the pair was seen flitting
about with weed scraps, twigs, and
such, portending nest building and a
family. Their'tut-tut'warningcalls·had
given way to morning-eve'nlng
carolings of 'cheerup - cheerup cheerup _ cheerily! ,

i'f}
\@

I By Bob Hoeflich

POMEROY -Meigs County's greatest
been
the quality of its people who have again "come through"
beautifully in the George Thompson Kidney Fund activity which
has been under way several weeks.
The fund drive for the benefit of the 18-year-old son of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Thompson has gone over the $6,500 mark and is still
going strong.
George is still confined to the Cleveland Clinic following his
March 30 kidney transplant but his mother reported Friday that
he's getting along extremely well. The family is so encouraged!
George's sister, Louella Roush, Belpre, has been taken to the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Orion Roush at Salem Center and will
recuperate there for awhile. Louella was the donor of the kidney
used in .the transplant. Mr. and Mrs. Roush are Louella's motherin-law and father-in-law.
According to the latest word, George may he discharged from
the Clinic in a week or 10 days. His room number, in the meantime, is 705.
It's sw'prlsing that many outside.«,Melgs County have joined
In the successful fund drive which has been carried out unde0he
sponsorship of the Winding Trail Garden Club·with Mrs. Robert
Lewis as chalnnan.
It's sometimes hard to 'believe but there's really a lot of good
around. For example, the Wesley Foundation Choir of Ohio
University was singing at the Asbury Methodist Church in
Syracuse when an announcement was made concerning George.
In a few days, the young people of the choir had collected $25
which they sent down to the Rev. Forrest R. Donley to be turned
into the fund.
Ethel Grueser of Monessen, Pa., was visiting here and
learned about the fund drive. She returned home, told her Sunday
school class of the young man's problem and the class sent a nice
contribution "along with our prayers" for George and his sister.
Mr. and Mrs. Olden Thaxton, fonner residents now In
Brandon, Fla., faithful Sentinel readers, sent through a contribution. "Our prayers are for this dear boy and his parents. May
God bless," they wrote.
Many people have sent notes for George and his family along
with their contributions and these are all being turned over to tbe
family by Mrs. Inls.
. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Keaton, and son, Robert, Coolville, wrote
in part:
"H the people in this great world would think of helping one
another instead of hilrtlng one another, we would have a better
world to live ln. We wUI remember George and his sister in our
prayers that 'God the GreatPhysiclan'wUI be with them."
Salisbury Brownie Troop 220 wrote along with their contribution "Our help in money lsn 'I much but our prayers and good
wishes for you are many. God be with you during your operation
and all the days oi your i!fe."
And, from the Zion Church of Christ, these words:
''Our prayers go out for George and his sister and the family .
May everything be very gocld for all of you." ·
Yes, George has had a lot of things going for hbn at this time.
He's doing fine and so Is Louella. Co)l!d It be that those many
prayers 1111 their behaH are being answered? It really Isn't too
hard to believe 1111 Easter Sunday, Is It?!

~
~·:::: .'

.

sure, he could fly well enough: likely •i}~?his old man had kicked him out of the FH
nest for boisterous conduct.
Anyway, my experience last year : ".
with Bonnie and Clyde was something M~
less than sublime. Maybe that's life. 'fj

·1 fM
I

•

the Retum of
. i~&amp;
Bonnie &amp; Oy.. de.. ftirm

fragile legs and big feet; their flashing renzy
s race
ro ry
t1i black wings, brick red chests, and darting escape.
'tf! unerringly accurate .Yellow beaks.
Perhaps a ·week passed. While
:@fl Though it did occur to me why they p~id sitting on the front steps with 8 soothing
lti me such studious attention when pitcher of Kool-Aid waiting for young
i:i:i' contractors down the street were Doug Mullineaux to deliver the paper •

! Of the Bend
I

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•

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36c. Pl.l tti.

Pill .a.onttNG

TUCKER PLASTIC

SYCAMORE

LIUI.Y
BASKET
BUSHEL SIZE

19" LA WM MOWER

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WITH CouPoN

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DEPT.
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-

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FOOTLOCKER

This sturd y and ru99ed metal footloder is ideal for storage or as o luggage
item . Condruction includes: heavy stay hinges, 2 handles, and hosp-dyle lock .
The ]" troy is removable. Colors: blod, blue, gal~, and green.

I ,

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METAL

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WITHOUT COUPON
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.. · . WITH COUPON

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SPORTS DEPT.

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16" Heck's Reg. $2.88 ............... NOW $2.44
17" ~eclc's Reg. $3.88 ............... NOW $3.44
18" Heck's Reg. $4.88 ............... NOW $3.81
11" Heck's Reg. $5 .88 ............... NOW $4.11
20" Heck's Reg. $6.88 ............... NOW $5.88
21" Heck's Reg. $1.88 ............... NO.W $6.88

•

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LIMIT ONE
WITH COUPON :

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WITtiOUT COUPON
$1.69
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CUP

THESE VALUABLE
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SEE SAC#{ PAG_E FOR SATURDAY CO_UPONS
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WITH CouPoN

$3!• ·:·

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··a·•

$ -99 .

'

WITHOUT COUPON
·S10.11 ..
JEWELRY DEPT.

I
I

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·-

Heck's Regular $10.66

DEPT.
. 'CLOTHING
-

I

I

FOOTLOCKER

This sturd y and ru99ed metal footloder is ideal for storage or as o luggage
item . Condruction includes: heavy stay hinges, 2 handles, and hosp-dyle lock .
The ]" troy is removable. Colors: blod, blue, gal~, and green.

I ,

WITH 'cbuPON

I

$1·2

..

. tlftVJ pNE

I

88

METAL

STORE

I
I

WITH COUPON

WITHOUT
COUPON $21.97

I
I

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I
I

25 ONLY PER STORE

I.

GENERAL ELECTRIC

I
I
I
I

11 0 LB. BARBELL SET

r

WITHOUT COUPON
$5.66
JEWELRY DEPT.

·~

I
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LUGGAGE SPECIAL
I
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9" • 100 COUNT

-PAPER PLATES
.. · . WITH COUPON

LIMIT ONE

·38c ,

WITH COUPON

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$599

I
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LIMIT 2

WITHOUT
COUPON 77c ~
HOUSEWARE DEPT.

SLEEPING BAG

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900 ONLY PER STORE

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COLEMAN

7 S ONLY PER STORE

LIMIT ONE

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58.88

WITH COUPON

$499

I

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WITHOUT COUPoN
$9.18
SPORTS DEPT.

I

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DEPT.

-

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16" Heck's Reg. $2.88 ............... NOW $2.44
17" ~eclc's Reg. $3.88 ............... NOW $3.44
18" Heck's Reg. $4.88 ............... NOW $3.81
11" Heck's Reg. $5 .88 ............... NOW $4.11
20" Heck's Reg. $6.88 ............... NOW $5.88
21" Heck's Reg. $1.88 ............... NO.W $6.88

•

.. '

~

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

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JOHNSON REEL

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Centu,ry

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SPORTS DEPT.

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DEPT.

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STP OIL .
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•

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14

oz.

LISTERIIE

ANnSEPTIC
288 ONLY PaSTORE

LIMIT ONE ,
WITH COUPON

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99c
'COSMETIC DEPT. ·

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WITH COUPON

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�PAMPERS

MEN'S

DISPOSABLE
DIAPERS

.WALK

Soft, absorbent
~nd comfortable.

Pampers

MEN'S NYLON

DRESS SHIRTS

I

The fashionable white and
deep toned colors accent the
styling of these I00% Nylon
tricot shirts. Sizes: 14h-l 7.

DIAPER &amp; PANTS
IN ONE

J9c
29
DAYTIME 30's ........................ $1
OYERNUiHT 12's .............. J9c.
$119"
.
NEWBORN 30's .............
.

DAYTIME 15's ...................;..........

Pre·season so vings are
yours in these wolk shorts.
Choose from stripes, solids and plaids. Sizes: 2938.

$

Heclc's Reg. to $1.79 CLOTHING
DEPT.

. BOYS'

.,

·FLARE STRIPE

2

Heclc's Regular to
$2.99 Each
CLOTHING
DEPT.

FLARE
~EANS

These Hot Pants for girls feature a 5-button
front , and a mock fly. Choose from assorted
prints. Available in denim and poplin. Sizes
4-14.

c

'.

11

DEPT.

.

Heclc's
Regular
$1.99 Each

lEI'S

P~RIAIIEIT ~BESS

. BOYS'

WESTERN
JEANS

..

These jeans make comfortable
casual wear. Choose from assorted colors. Sizes: 29-38.

H·OT PANTS

3 PAIR
$
.

DRESS
SHIRTS

MEN'S

GIRLS'

.Solids and itr4'fs are
available in these flare
leg trousers 'for boy•.
Chool8 from assorted
colors in these permanent press fabrics.
Sizes: 8-18.
IIZEII Til, 2 fer liM

$ 99

Western style or colored jean•
with •wing pockets. Made of
heavy duty, heav-y weight denim.
Choo•e .from assorted colors. ·
Size•: 6·16. ,
'

Heclc' s Regular
$3.99

CLOTHING DEPT;

HICKOK MEN'S
Heclc's Regular $1.28

DRESS ·S OCKS

FomoUI brand orion ere.; lOch. One
lite fit• ,all. 'Colors include: Bloc•,
Charcoal, Brown, and Olive. One lite
fits 10 to 13.

CLOTHING DEPT.

2 PAIR

Short sleeve •hirh with a
long fashionable collar.
Chool8 from medium and
d~ep to"'!•· Size•: 141'1 -17.

CLOTHING
DEPT.

Heclc' s Regular
$2.49 Pair
Heck's leg. $2.99 Each

CLOT.HING DEPT.

· • .$100
BOYS' PERMANENT PRESS

CLOTHING
DEPT.

SPORT ·SHIRTS

BOYS' SHORT SLEEVE

Thi• •pecial •all! mecini, great
· •avings lor. you on tlie••·spilrt ..
mirts. Ch00l8 from a lar9e Ol•
lortment of llyl•·· colors, and
lite•: 6 to 16 and 6 to 18.

KNIT SHIRTS
Choose ., fro'm assorted
mipes and solids. Sizes: 6-

li$ 00

BOYS' PERMANENT PRESS

WALK SHORTS

Heck's Reg~r
to.' $1.66

. Hand•omely llyled · walk
1horh in plaid• and •olid•.
Size•: 11-18.

CLOTHING DEPT.

CLOTHING DEPT.

.-3 PAIR

~500

Heck's Regular to
$2.49

CLOTHING DEPT.

�PAMPERS

MEN'S

DISPOSABLE
DIAPERS

.WALK

Soft, absorbent
~nd comfortable.

Pampers

MEN'S NYLON

DRESS SHIRTS

I

The fashionable white and
deep toned colors accent the
styling of these I00% Nylon
tricot shirts. Sizes: 14h-l 7.

DIAPER &amp; PANTS
IN ONE

J9c
29
DAYTIME 30's ........................ $1
OYERNUiHT 12's .............. J9c.
$119"
.
NEWBORN 30's .............
.

DAYTIME 15's ...................;..........

Pre·season so vings are
yours in these wolk shorts.
Choose from stripes, solids and plaids. Sizes: 2938.

$

Heclc's Reg. to $1.79 CLOTHING
DEPT.

. BOYS'

.,

·FLARE STRIPE

2

Heclc's Regular to
$2.99 Each
CLOTHING
DEPT.

FLARE
~EANS

These Hot Pants for girls feature a 5-button
front , and a mock fly. Choose from assorted
prints. Available in denim and poplin. Sizes
4-14.

c

'.

11

DEPT.

.

Heclc's
Regular
$1.99 Each

lEI'S

P~RIAIIEIT ~BESS

. BOYS'

WESTERN
JEANS

..

These jeans make comfortable
casual wear. Choose from assorted colors. Sizes: 29-38.

H·OT PANTS

3 PAIR
$
.

DRESS
SHIRTS

MEN'S

GIRLS'

.Solids and itr4'fs are
available in these flare
leg trousers 'for boy•.
Chool8 from assorted
colors in these permanent press fabrics.
Sizes: 8-18.
IIZEII Til, 2 fer liM

$ 99

Western style or colored jean•
with •wing pockets. Made of
heavy duty, heav-y weight denim.
Choo•e .from assorted colors. ·
Size•: 6·16. ,
'

Heclc' s Regular
$3.99

CLOTHING DEPT;

HICKOK MEN'S
Heclc's Regular $1.28

DRESS ·S OCKS

FomoUI brand orion ere.; lOch. One
lite fit• ,all. 'Colors include: Bloc•,
Charcoal, Brown, and Olive. One lite
fits 10 to 13.

CLOTHING DEPT.

2 PAIR

Short sleeve •hirh with a
long fashionable collar.
Chool8 from medium and
d~ep to"'!•· Size•: 141'1 -17.

CLOTHING
DEPT.

Heclc' s Regular
$2.49 Pair
Heck's leg. $2.99 Each

CLOT.HING DEPT.

· • .$100
BOYS' PERMANENT PRESS

CLOTHING
DEPT.

SPORT ·SHIRTS

BOYS' SHORT SLEEVE

Thi• •pecial •all! mecini, great
· •avings lor. you on tlie••·spilrt ..
mirts. Ch00l8 from a lar9e Ol•
lortment of llyl•·· colors, and
lite•: 6 to 16 and 6 to 18.

KNIT SHIRTS
Choose ., fro'm assorted
mipes and solids. Sizes: 6-

li$ 00

BOYS' PERMANENT PRESS

WALK SHORTS

Heck's Reg~r
to.' $1.66

. Hand•omely llyled · walk
1horh in plaid• and •olid•.
Size•: 11-18.

CLOTHING DEPT.

CLOTHING DEPT.

.-3 PAIR

~500

Heck's Regular to
$2.49

CLOTHING DEPT.

�5 1/2 FT. 2-~IECE

ZEBCO 2490

ROD &amp;REEL COMBO
$ 99

MITCHELL 300
REEL

"America's most popular combination". Includes: Zebco 600
Reel and 3300 Rod.
• All metol construction
• Smooth wide-range drag
• Complete with line
• 6 ft. two piece fiber glass rod

SPORTS QEPT.

·•

$

8

Heck's

Angler BJ33 blad SY. ft. cork handle, 3 guides, medium weight.

Regular
$1J .97

Heck'.s Regular $3.99
SPORTS DEPT.

Black finish. · Small size for fresh water
use. Two spools. Thumb handle kneb.
Standard retrieve.

leather quarter lining, neolite sole with deel golf plate.
Green and blad color combination. Sizes: 7Ji.! to II.

FISH LINE

99

$

ROD

large spool· of monofilament
fishing line, 6 to 20 lb. test.

Heck's Regular
$15.99

c

Heck's Reg. $16.97

$

I

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

Heclc'$ Reg.
99c

SOUTH
BEND

SPORTS DEPT.
I

ZEBCO 1445

SPINNING REEL
I

Full chromed 1teel bail 1ystems with
odju•toblelint rollers to pre vent line

ftoy; quiet dependable trip action: new
multiplt-diK drag syttem for ~mooth,
study dro9 actio:n so euential for big
CJGmt. Anti-revert~ hos wltctive convenient elfra lorCJI on-on lever. ·

$599

ROD &amp;REEL COMBO
$ 9
New unde r the rod companion to the
fomous Zebco 202! Model 444 rHI ond
Zebco 4440 rod. RHI feoture1 patent·
ed trigger control ; high4mpact, non·
corro1ive Krolostic construction, light·
oetion 5~ ' two -piece fiber glou rod
hos fited reel seot, 1el'ect specie cor~
grip, chromed brou ferrule . Complete
with line.
'

LIFE VESTS
U.S. Coast Guord approved
life preserver vests kapok
filled, made of rugged marine
fabrics. Yoke style vest keeps
weorer in o "heods up" position at all times. Available in
solid pad oronge. Small, Med.
and large.

GOLF BAG
Roomy ball pocket. large pro
Ioder podet. leather umbrella holder. Erlra rugged zippers,
in attractive expanded vinyl
fabrics.

$244

Heck's Reg. $7.99
SPORTS DEPT.

Heck's Reg. $8.88

18 CLUB

SPORTS DEPT.

Heck's Reg. to $3.3_8

72S/Jo ·

$1218

SPORTS DEPT.

Heck's Reg.
$17.99

SPORTS DEPT.
'

•

6 VOLT .

· ZEBCO 33.

..

'

REEL

New model 33 lighter. in weight and quieter in
· action. &amp;elusive Zebco fitted thumb control.
· Weight 8YI ounces. Complete with appro•i·
mately 125 y~s. o-f 6 lb. test monofilament line.

LAWN DARTS
•

·Quality dart game for adult entertainment.
Twa ted and two yellow darts. Two target
. · rings, instruction book. Darb are of one
piece fin and shaft construction for durabil-

ity.

.&gt;

·.,

LANTERN·
BATTERY

HECK'S "D'' SIZE

FLA .

·BAREIIES •

c

....

.

Heclr.is leg. $ll.97

. SPORn DEPT.

Heck's Reg. $4.68

SPORTS DEPT.

Heclc's Reg. 99c
· SPORTS DEPT.

•

~ ...l.

'

Heclc' s a..,. r2c' Each
'' SPORTS PJPT.

.

�5 1/2 FT. 2-~IECE

ZEBCO 2490

ROD &amp;REEL COMBO
$ 99

MITCHELL 300
REEL

"America's most popular combination". Includes: Zebco 600
Reel and 3300 Rod.
• All metol construction
• Smooth wide-range drag
• Complete with line
• 6 ft. two piece fiber glass rod

SPORTS QEPT.

·•

$

8

Heck's

Angler BJ33 blad SY. ft. cork handle, 3 guides, medium weight.

Regular
$1J .97

Heck'.s Regular $3.99
SPORTS DEPT.

Black finish. · Small size for fresh water
use. Two spools. Thumb handle kneb.
Standard retrieve.

leather quarter lining, neolite sole with deel golf plate.
Green and blad color combination. Sizes: 7Ji.! to II.

FISH LINE

99

$

ROD

large spool· of monofilament
fishing line, 6 to 20 lb. test.

Heck's Regular
$15.99

c

Heck's Reg. $16.97

$

I

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

Heclc'$ Reg.
99c

SOUTH
BEND

SPORTS DEPT.
I

ZEBCO 1445

SPINNING REEL
I

Full chromed 1teel bail 1ystems with
odju•toblelint rollers to pre vent line

ftoy; quiet dependable trip action: new
multiplt-diK drag syttem for ~mooth,
study dro9 actio:n so euential for big
CJGmt. Anti-revert~ hos wltctive convenient elfra lorCJI on-on lever. ·

$599

ROD &amp;REEL COMBO
$ 9
New unde r the rod companion to the
fomous Zebco 202! Model 444 rHI ond
Zebco 4440 rod. RHI feoture1 patent·
ed trigger control ; high4mpact, non·
corro1ive Krolostic construction, light·
oetion 5~ ' two -piece fiber glou rod
hos fited reel seot, 1el'ect specie cor~
grip, chromed brou ferrule . Complete
with line.
'

LIFE VESTS
U.S. Coast Guord approved
life preserver vests kapok
filled, made of rugged marine
fabrics. Yoke style vest keeps
weorer in o "heods up" position at all times. Available in
solid pad oronge. Small, Med.
and large.

GOLF BAG
Roomy ball pocket. large pro
Ioder podet. leather umbrella holder. Erlra rugged zippers,
in attractive expanded vinyl
fabrics.

$244

Heck's Reg. $7.99
SPORTS DEPT.

Heck's Reg. $8.88

18 CLUB

SPORTS DEPT.

Heck's Reg. to $3.3_8

72S/Jo ·

$1218

SPORTS DEPT.

Heck's Reg.
$17.99

SPORTS DEPT.
'

•

6 VOLT .

· ZEBCO 33.

..

'

REEL

New model 33 lighter. in weight and quieter in
· action. &amp;elusive Zebco fitted thumb control.
· Weight 8YI ounces. Complete with appro•i·
mately 125 y~s. o-f 6 lb. test monofilament line.

LAWN DARTS
•

·Quality dart game for adult entertainment.
Twa ted and two yellow darts. Two target
. · rings, instruction book. Darb are of one
piece fin and shaft construction for durabil-

ity.

.&gt;

·.,

LANTERN·
BATTERY

HECK'S "D'' SIZE

FLA .

·BAREIIES •

c

....

.

Heclr.is leg. $ll.97

. SPORn DEPT.

Heck's Reg. $4.68

SPORTS DEPT.

Heclc's Reg. 99c
· SPORTS DEPT.

•

~ ...l.

'

Heclc' s a..,. r2c' Each
'' SPORTS PJPT.

.

�..

· ~

"

..

·MURRAY 20..' ' BOYS'
&amp; GI-RtS~ -DRAGS
TEl
.
.
..
.

.

a.' '·\, .
'

.

.

/'

'.

.

'

·;;

'

/
I

....'··..

,~

.

.

BICYCLES
U.-S. MADE _

Patented 'hydr:dgen brazed frame·
and fo~k. Con.trol eontour hi.rise
handlebars. Black bucket banana
seat w&gt;ith 3" reflector and sAl" '
chrome support rails. New sporty
.chrome fenders. Tires: 20"x 1.75" with
rear knobby. Pedals: Black'with white
reflector. Black grips. ·
'

99

$

CHARGE IT

Heclc's Regular $37.99

TOY DEPT.
HEDSTROM

SIIDEWALK BIKE
......

• 13 Inches High

· • Lime in Color

.,

'

9

1/2

$

INCH

PLAY. BALL

•

BLAZON

GYM SET

c

Great value in backyard fun!
Perfect far younger children.
Airglide teaches pumping motion; safe lawn swing. Seven
foot slide safety engineered.
Size: 8'6" overall top bar with .
7' slide. All 2" tubing.

-Heclc's Regular 68c

'TOY DEPT.
'

$2966

• Heclc's Reg.
$17.88 '

Heck's R._eg.
$36.99

TOY DEPT.

TOY DEPT.

.

'
WINGEE
PLASTIC.

ROLLER
SKATES
·BY SAMSONITE

Not exactly
as piCtured.

3-PIECE METAL

· GAIDEI SET ·.

' Your child con enjoY,. endless houn
of fun in this wooden sandbox.
' Complete with two bench StGts and
canopy.

' ·&amp;8~

MAna

·

IIRumblers

Heck's R.eflular $l.99
TOY DEPT.

RICYC
Great fun for the kiddies. Buy one now and
save during this great sale on wheel goods.
'

Heclc'J legular 94c

TOY DEPT.

$144,

Heck's legular $l0.99 .
TOY DEPT.

•

STUNT RIDER SET
Trock rit9od
choltoov" tho
.
mrtft't tnachines • • • captwes
looys' ....... RRR...Won Stuot
RRR...Won Motorcycle, I Rider, 16' Hot
Slrip T""'i, I DoN.O.vil loop, I C.... ~. l
Jump Rompo. 4 Joinon,lllloo11olioool Colt,&lt;h&gt;n'Cototo,.

10'' .;........................................'"""" $Jl~ ...

12'' _,. . . . . -.. . . . . . . . ."!"""'"" _$ 877
. 6'' . . . . ..;:..............:....................... $977
Heck's Regular to $12.97
TOY DEPT.

' •2.99
•

-

•

TOY
DEPT.

Hech ••· $3.99
TOY Dart:

I

6 1/2" .

JUDY

FASHION
'DOLL

&amp;4c

�7~PIECE 'TEFlON]t,SD
..

. CHARMIN
160 COUll

.

SLIDE TOP WASTE liN

FESCO PLASTIC-

Heck's Regular to
$7.18

175 COUNT

HOUSEWARE DEPT.·

PUFFS

• 20 GAL. TRASH CAN ·
e 36 QT. SPIN TOP
• 44 QT. SLIDE TOP WASTE BIN
• 40QT. SWING TOP
·
DUST BIN

MARSHALLAN

. PRINTS .

3-TIER
UTILITY TABLE

4 F.OR

$ 00

$5.33

HOUSEWARE
DEPT. .

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

-

•

POLE
LAMP

• A real space maker
• Spring adjustable
• Three shelves with
two towel holders

"

EACH

sa••
Hec"'s

~

Regular
$12.88

HO'USEWARE
DEPT.

'·

•

-.

-

'

LIMIT
3 PACKS

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

-

-,

". I,'

,.
: ,¥

;

. I,;

SEWING
CHEST

Heclc's·
Reg .
to
$3,99 I
HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

LEE ~OWII

GARMENT
RACK·

, - Portable sewing chest
· · made of Wonder,
ood. Comes wit
removable ll:Qy.

Here's the item
that is the answer
Ia that erlra clos·
et.

II

$ 44

Heck's

: -~

( 12 Rolls)

\

I \
··.

Regular
$2.88

!.

. BALLERINA
I

' Heck's Regular
$4.80

.

~uperbly comfortable. lightweight and durable molded

.

Hec"'s
Regular
$6.44

&amp;&amp;~

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

Hec/c's Regular 99c .

'

•

' HOUSEWARE DEPT.

I

f:g~ palyprop.y~ene plastic • sa flexible it shapes ikelf to 1;1
and htte\yjd' olhes s~ronger 'than metal. Resists acids, alkali,
ause ° C mocals. Assorted colors.

1

LAMP SHADES

, ~eautiful styli~g accents this 12mch ballerina lamp shade .

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

SCOOP CHAIRS

. HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

00

3 PICKS

4 d.c:orotor eoiOfs and des19ns f,'om which t
with venttloted
boo o chOOie .. All ore constructed
P'9 rd back; vtnyl _covtrtd lid.

,

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

j

At·r:: :.~

4-ROLLS II PICK .

over furntture fro me

TOP
WASTE

I

• White pole with brass
lamp section
• 3 Colonial hobnail
linear polyethylene
white shades
• 3-Way switch

Hec"'s
Regular
'$7.44

..

·~

HAMPER

Heclc' ~ Regular:to·$8.88

Wllile I .." Fiailll

$466
....

C~OTHES

SPIN

This gleaming space saver leti you
hang extra bath or guest towels in
the mast convenient spot in bath or
rowder_ room. Far ertra towel space
on the kotchen, tao!

I!

.CHARMIN TOILET TISSUE

. '

TOWEL POLE "

COLONIAL

SNYDER
BATHROOM
ORGANIZER

00

3

. REDMON

SNYDER

SNYDER

··

LIMIT

Reg. $14.88

88··
BIN

..

3 FOR$

. HOUSEWARE DEPT.

$399

Regular

· LIMIT 4

-·

kitchen. Won't fade or disc~ d tSofa.tcn-ma~e your
er! Takes toughest
. h or. . e1n the doshwash.
tains: 1 and 2 qua~:n~:eme;k wothaut chipping. CanOven, 1O" Fr p ' . ~ saucepan. 5 quart Duts:h ~ec"'s
y an, cover lots fry pan and Dutch Oven.

This 3-tiered· table also comes with
a receptacle on one side.
Hec"'s

NAPKINS

sgaa

~:~eF;::eew ab:;u~ya~;e;tC~L~R-CRAFTED in Avoca-

•

'

r

'

••

:.

Hec"'s Regular
$4.44 Each

SNYDER

i
MARSHAtLAN
liiiCI.TlL

BAR

~olity and sturdy design rna~•
~os attraclive 1 streamlined staql

odeal for use in ~itchen, den or
bar. Wood &amp;lot teal and back.
SIZES; 14" AND JO" ·

Hedc's
Regular $9.44

$699•

WALL 'MIRROR
A~tractiv~

wall mirrors in Ver·
saolles. Voeloria and Ve neua
,
styIes. Assorted sizes.

.$ 544

PATIO TABLE
.~122
J

Hetk's
. Rf9u/ar $1.58

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

CEILING
LIGHT

Clanit de•i9"· Sturdy two -piece
COttJtruction. Self«•iftl if\jectton-

'

.JJc

He~k', liegu.lgr $ 1,09
.HOUS.ARE DEPT.

-

·BIRD BATH

• White styrene globe with
cylindrical diffuser in color •
• Screw into any soc~et like 0
light bulb
'

.

10 COUNT'

HOUSEWAIE

.. DEPT. ·

JUST
SAY
'!CHAIGE I IT''

$'ji9

•
HOUSEWARE

Heclc's Reg .

. DEPT.

Heck's Regular '

. . ,• $3:99

., HOUSIWAIE DEPi

-

$2.66
HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

·. GALLON
:

PlA~TIC

DECANTER

29c

TOTEM

TRASH BAGS
c

49c

Heck's Regular
79c

HOUSEWARE
' DEPT. ·

, HOUSEWARE DEPT,

H~c/c's lf9ular .

�,

0

45 PIECE

MELAMINE
DINNERWARE
SETS
.•
'.

ENCYCLOPEDIA

0

•

•

0

BOOK CASE

Set a full table with this complete dinnerware set.
Available .in Golden, Duet, Colonial, Feminique, and·
Breath of Spring.
·

Multi·u5e cabinet with lliding
brou plated ~nob1. 2311"
wide, 2511" high in durable but
very attractive Walnut PERVA·
NEER finish.

Attractive Walnut PERVANEER baa~case is a
great gift ideo for a den, or child's room . .28"
high with gloss doors.

CHOICE

$1088

0

RECORD CABINET
door~,

$1111
,

Heck's Regular $11.44

Heck's Regular $16.88
HOUSEWARE
DEPT. ·

Heck's Reg. $15.88
HOUSEWARE DEPT.

$ 88

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

LUCJTE
.. .

WALL
PAINT

QUART SIZE

·· · · THERMOS

'

..

BOnLE

$ 44

51AINLESS . ,
TABLEWARE
Choose lrorri 4 pat.
terns. Set contains: 8
teaspoons, 4 soup, spoons, 4 dinner forks,
4 knives, and 4 sa lad
fork

HOUSEWARE DEPT.
IIIIIIII
fill

2

FRAMED PICI. . ES
, , •4.99

24 PIECE SE.T

Heck's Reg.
$2.88

flf/Regnolds Wrap

• Skip the stirring, thinning,
'priming; best of all ... skip the
"ordinary paint" dripping • S~ip
troublesome dean-up . . . tools
come clean .in jud soap and
water • S~ip the inconvenience
... dri~ s in only 30 minutes •
Choose from a wide range of
'new colors in gallons and quarts.

Heck's Regular '$1.99
A comple~ Mrio1 of JIO!&gt;Uiar 24"""" or 24"116" roprodiiC~OM of fino oil palntiniJI. ooch
Nndered wtth h•9hly dramatic and ~WGiistic br•h strokM. lncll.tded in this fabulous a~aorirnent
oro ,.._~ lo..... pos. modorm ond 1tlll ~fo.. filch ...Ojoct lo tootoholly fromod in wpa&lt;bly-lo&amp;hionod fi~ly-croftod, cont-.d.....,uldlng pottwN. Tho moulding• footuro docoretor~f'rod colon .'" " ' - ond ~non1tylo li,...., ~nod to enhonco ond complement 1M color
hi&lt;Jhlt,hts of ttio Mjoct. Tho """'"' oro fonioltod willl o hoovy dtat bocl ond white cor-

$ 88

Heck's
Regular

protecton.

•

HOUSEWARE DEPT•

10'' TEFLOI II SKILLET

Heck's Reg.
$6.44

Available ' in:
Flame or Avoco~o colon and Polished Aluminum.

$)00

FOR

-G 'u lf

$6.68
HARDWARE
DEPT.

$.

188

Heck's Regular to $2.99

l.ite

.LUCilE
HOUSE
PAINT

• S~ip priming on most bare
woods • it has Its own primer
• Skip frequent repainting •
now is lasts even longer than
before • Skip waiting lor
second coats - it dries in only
an hour • S~ip lengthy deanup time - tools come clean in
just soap and water • Wide
range of color~, plus white,
in quarts and gallons.

·.

·SUN COUNTRY
32 OUNCE

·LIQUID

&amp;&amp;c

50 COUNT
7 OUNCE

FOAM

CUPS

3·1C

27

KLEAR

aac

FLOOIWAX

Heck's leg. $1.09
'

..

~

oz.

• 111 Flillau
7 oz.

PLEDG'E

69c;

·Hick's ~·~· S7c

Fragrance• 'include:
Alpen, Trodewind and
Carol Isle. , . ·

........

~

I

15

oz. PRUF

SPRAl STARCH

' 33'-

Heck~s

240Z.

. Regular

GLORY
.FOAM lUG 0 IAIB

$7.68

. ; $144

'

Heck', Reg.
49c

Heclr's IJg. $1.83

.
•

'

charcoal
starter'

�CAR TOP ·cARRIER

&amp;.

Large load capacity ... rigid one piece
construction. · Attractive baked-on enamel
finish. Complete with lashing straps. Suction
cups assure sol!d position grip.
.

SEAT COVERS

PIIR

Of the finest nylon and foam construction that mokes
these the finest seot covers you con buy. These covers fit
as though they were built right into the cor. The beautiful
styling ond protection of these popular seat covers offer
years of comfort and elegance. For split or solid bock .

· Heck's Regular
. $4.99 '.

.

•

- AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

WEN

%"DRILL

$ 99

JUST SAY

"CHARGE
IT' '

Powerful 2.6 amp. \; H.P. motor, 0.1200 R.P.M. with odiudoble speed
lock, boll thrust and need le bearings, double reduction geon, Jacobs
chud. The ultimate in ptrformonce, balance, and ease of handling, with
fhe man-sired grip on«)' center drop design handle. Pre-select any speed
from 0-1200 R.P.M. Of lock in desired lpHd fOf specific drilling requirement.

Heck's
Reg.

· Extro strong, exlro sofe. The
Motco Jock Stond is the ultimote in safety ond ouuronce. It
has been thoroughly load tested
in a laboratory and approved .
4,000 lb. capacity.

$4.99

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

Heclc's Regular $ J 9.88
HARDWARE DEPT.

ROBERK

Heclc's·Reg.
$3.99 Each
AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.
.

TRUCK
RUBBER

SCISSORS- JACK

FLOOR MATS

3000 lbs. capacity, equipped with 52" folding
handle, lifts from 3-7/ 8" to 14-3/ 4".

Heavy rubber auto floor mat. Full across
front and rear. Assorted colors.

RUR
Heclr's Reg.

HEDGE TRIMMER

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

Heclc' s Regular $ J 9.88
HARDWARE DEPT.

$222

$6.99

· FROIT

$322
AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

SIMILAR TO ILLUSTRATION

WIPER
BLADE '
REFILLS

13 1/J

'

l PER PACKAGE ..

STATION WAGON
4

Reg.
$8.99
AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.
iH-·It's

AND

WEN
Powerful 2.6 amp. Y, H.P. motor, heavy steel double
cutting bar • 1200 strokes per minute, enclosed handle
with built-in front guide grip. Balance, design, and a
powerful motor provide high performance at o promo·
lienal price . .Enclosed handle and front guide grip for
added safety and control.

'· pro•·
Plck..p, po~~tl oocl .... 11 trvck mirror
ideo boi!Of, oofor ,.., tr.oHic viowi"'ll F.olly
adj"'tobt., eatro Iorge 6"all " head 1i1t,
camplotoly r..tproof oocl vibration proof.
For full ~lion .. . IVY A PAIR.

• Top quality
• Tokes seconds
to change
.
• Self cleaning, will not trop
ice or dirt
• Sizes 15", 16"" 18"

PAD
• Assorted colors
• I" fooW~

.

.

oz.

USY WAY

SPRAY PAINT
•
The most beautiful colorful spray
for home decorating. Goes over
everything including metal, wood
ond glass. Assorted colors.

c

• 42"x72"
i

''

17·
Heclc's Regular
'to $2.68

Heclc'_s Regular $5.99
'

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT. ·
JIAGE16

I•

1

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

- 5 PIECE AUTO

CLEAN-UP .KIT
Kit contains: jumbo sponge, sponge mitt,
polishing cloth, scouring sponge ond
plostic poil
·

•

c

Heclc's

Regular ,
99c
HARDWARE
DEPT.

•

Heclc's ReguiQr $ J. J8
AUTOMOTM DEPT.

�170Z.

SCOPE
MOUTHWASH

Heck's Reg.
$1.19

COSMETIC
DEPT.

.

.

LEE

OIL FILTERS
• Sizes to fit most popular cars

oz.
VASELINE
INTENSIVE
. CARE
LOTION

CARTRIDGE

15

TYPE

'99c
·. SPIN-ON TYPE

$166
AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

Heck's Reg. $1.JB

COSMETIC
DEPT.

WIRE VENTILATED

AUTO CUSHION .

$ 00 .
AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

I

�SHETLAND

ELECTRI.CBROOM
VAC

SHETLAND
RUG
SHAftfOOER .

'

Color: Avocado with Pear4
A~cenh. Lightweight Voc
with Powerful 2 Speed Mo.
tor. Features include Power
Dial, Exclusive Mid-Grip
Handle, Snap Stand, Crevice Tool and Uph9lstery
Noule (for Above the Floor
Cleaning), Swivel Nozzle
. with Triple Position Brush,
Giant Disposable Bogs. One
Year Gyarontee.

SingIIi Speed Polisher/ Shof!l·
pooer. Color: Avocado. Pre·
foaming Trigger Dispensing
120 oL Dispenser. Complete·
with One Pair of Combina·
tion Polishing ( Shampooing
Brushes, One Pair of Felt Buff·
ing Pods, Vanishing Foam
Shampoo, Rug Cleaning
Unit. Two Year Guarantee.

$1. 6''

KODAK

SPECIAL CAMERA KIT

$18

Heck's Regular
$19.88

AX15RS
Fott -setl ing Kodo~ lnstomotic® X-15 Cam ero with handy wrist 1tro p.
Tokes fla sh pictures without flash botteriu. Att_roctive, durable _ca mera
pouch. C X126 -12 Kodocolor -X film . 3 Sy lvon10 blu e dot mog.cubel ·

JEWELRY
DEPT.

enough to to~e 12 fla sh pictures. Podet picture album .

'.

·-

879

88

Heck's Regular
I
$24,88
JEWELRY
DEPT.

6786

Heck's Regular $2 1.88
JEWELRY
DEPT.

I

ELECTRIC MAKE-UP
MillO I

Hcindy and convenient.
This mirror f~o~rnishes jud
the right amount of light
for you to apply a neat
and even amount of

mole-up.

Kodachrome II

'

KODAK

ex 116-12

$2~2 ·

COLOR PRINT.
FILM
$100

JEWELRY DEPT.

JEWELRY DEPT.

·MOVIE FILM

KODAK

KODAK

INDOOR/OUTDOOR

KODACHROME

RE.LIR 8
MOVIE' FILM
$200

351M

·

JEW~LRY

DEPT.

.. SLIDE FILM
$157
JEWELRY DEPT.

WAHL .

G. E.

PET CLIPPER SET

AUTOMATIC

Dehumidifier

Complete with Clip·
per, I Aluminum At·
tachment Comb, I
Nylon Attach.,ent
Comb, Blade Guard,
Oil and Instruction
Booklet.

Sooks up moisture in the air
quietly and efficiently to help
protect basements, dens and
playrooms from the damaging effects of excess humidity.

Heck's Regular
$87.88
DH-1

KODAK

SUPER 8

Heck's Regular
$5.99

Heck' s·Regular -

$li.96

"'

JEWELRY DEPT.

JEWELRY DEPT.

WAHL
..

HOME BARBER SET
'

G.l.

CANlSTER VACUUM
.
ClEANER
• Swivel top .•. turns a full circle to help
you clean
• Wrap around vinyl bumper ..• helps
protecHurniture
·
• 3 tracking casters
• Permanently lubricated GE motor ,
,• Eo_sy, lock.in attachments

.

'

9160

JEWELRY DEPT.

TELEVISION
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

High Gain VHF Tuner
Solid State UHF Tuner
Fron~ Sound ·
Front Controls
Built~n . Molded Handle
Monopole Antenna
74 Sq. ln. Viewing Areo

$&amp;a••

JEWELRY
DEPf.

I

I

&amp; WHITE

All ; quipment il firmly held in its own comportment. Th. •it include~ tht
powerful SINGLE·CUT electric hoir clipper, the quiet, unooth.f'unning clip·
per specially de~gned for home use. AIJO included ore four 'attachment
combs, borbt~ comb, and haircutting iMtruction bookt.f; barber shear~ ond
clipper oil, SincJit-cut clipper comes with bottom blodt •i• 000. .

$&amp;··

$28ll
Heclc's Reg.
$32.96

Heck's Regular $9.96
JEWELRY DEPT.

-----

CHARGE
IT
- -· -- -------

Heck's
Regular
$79.88

1()" PORTABLE

COLOR IV
• GEPORTACOLOR®Chon;,
• GE " ln -L;.,." P;dute Tube Syllom
• UHF Solid State Tuner
• VHF "Pre-Set" Fine Tuning Co(tfrol

$1 l I 88

• Push Bution Color Purifier
• Keyed AGC
• TeleKoping Dipole Antenna

• Die-Cost Metal Handle
• 10" Diagonal , 60 •q. inch viewing area

JEWELRY
DEPT.

Heck's
Regular
$198.88

�SCHICK

.·PRO SIYLE

# VW-58

HAIR DR,YER.
18

VANWYCK

.

'

10 SPEED CHRaME

·.

Fast, comfortable drying at
home or away, portable and
compact . for Uora9e, four '
. iemperature rettin9' from Hot
to Coal, not~ing touches the
ho.ir but warm oil', roomy hood
for 9'"*"! c:Qiftfort.

HAND MIXER

• II position switch • 10 speeds ~ icing, beat eggs, desserts,
whipping, blending, cake mix, creaming, phi-mix, folding ,
stirring • Twin powerful chrome beaters • Lightweight for
portable mixing • Fing~ rlip control • Automatic beater
release.

ASSORTED

$17

Heclc':a •' · ..... ·

..

1Btautifyii\C) mid breed~• moidurt into hair gives o d!ining:"'naturol, long-last.
ing aet, 20 jumbo roll.n: 4 unall, 10 lorC)I, h jumbo-for venotilt hoir stYling.
' Red dot indicofM "\then rollen are ready to UM, outomatk: .Ofety features,
beoutiful, compoct caN, added conveni..,ce . . . o tote bag f• +roveli"9, in·

· ·~·

$23·.88

JEWEtRY DEPT.

NECKLACES AID
EARRINGS ·
. llc,~144 .

· clips. meosuring ,c:up.

·

JEWELRY DEPT.
'
I

Heck's Regular

.

Heclc' s Regular $2 r. 96

$14.96

WALTHAM

.

JEWELRY DEPT.

.WillS I WATCHES ·

JEWELRY
DEPT.

,

.

.

(17 JEWELl

I

Reliable · performers . • . e!Jch watch is .shock resistant and has unbreakable mainspring. Assorted ·
styles fcsr men and ladies. --

$19

·WARING ·
BLENDER

88

Heck's 8eg.
$24.88

Heck's

. H4040

Reg.
$23.96

WAL . *'CLOCK. ..

·•s••·

,

"Blend (;ontrol" for 7 regular speeds and flash blend, Sol·
id state, 900 watt motor. Low silhouette. 5 c:up heat resilf. ·
ant glass jar with handle. 2 piece color-coordinated lid.
Cord storage. "Pleasure of Blending" recipe book . .

JEWELRY
DEPT. .

Heck's legular $7.59

•

SUNBEAM
'

'

L4DIES' PENDANT

LADIES' SHAVER ,
JEWELRY DEPT.

·~ WAlCHli
e:Assorted styles and d~signs

Micro-twin 1having .head . . ·
011e 1ide for underarms, the
other sid~ for legs. Fast, safe
and smooth feminine grooming
action.

' .

5·5
.

~
·~

,.

ELECTRIC SCISSORS.

.

'

Heclc's Regular $8.88

H.eci's Reg. $8.99-

. ... JEWELRY
. . - DEPT.

,.
•

• Built-in GUide Ught
• High Carbon Steel Blades · ~ Push Button Switch
• Durable Plastic: HeMin", '
• 8ft. Electric: Cord

Heclc'1 legulor
. ~. $4.99
JEWELRY DEPT.

•'

· . JEWELRY
DEPT.
-

LS4·D

~

I

•

\

NORElCO . ·l'

·TRIPLE.HEAD ·SHAV~J.

,•2171'

New super Mic:rograove float·
ing-lieads deliver rnic:r -a.lose
shaves. Flip-tap c:leanl!ig. Pap.
out trimmer, on/ off switch,
11 O/ 220 .volt11ge, coil cord a~d • '
traYel wallet.

·· $3ll

. Heclc's Reg.
''$23.9, .
\

' .

·· NORTHERN

.HEATING PAD
•
• hilo-typo COftlrol witt. J
.-!!iYe ~h: low, medium,

'""''.

•Mill..,

. • Fullli•ll"• IS" hHt
plotlic pod jo&lt;kei
•
• ltomo•oblo, woollobl. flo""'l
... cover

Heclc:s leg.
$3.J9 .

JEWEUY DEPT.

�.. '

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'

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'

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..

.

•

.

The Greater
flliddle Ohio V~Ue~
'
\.
'

'

,

I

J

..

'

'\-

·

,

·

. COUPONS ON THIS PAGE GOOD SAT., APR. 17 .ONLY
.

SEE ·PAGE. 2 FOR WEDNESDAY
COUPONS
.
.
'

'

'

\

t

•

•

.• ,

'

'

' ..~.. "

NEW

COMPAC 37

COLEMAN •

SPARK PLUGS

FISHING RIEL···

LAN·
TERN
50 OILY I'll STOll

IC, IUTOLITE
OR CHIIPIOII

• s;,., to f;t most co.rs

•

LIMIT 8
WITH COUPOI

LIMIT OiiE
WITH CIUPOI

48C:W

$1099

WITHOUT COUPOI
77c
AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

ISO OILY HI STOll

,LIMIT liE
WITH CDIPDI

WITMOUT COUPOII
$15.99
SHilTS IEPT.

•

WITHOUT COIPOR
$1.99
SPORTS P£PT.

SHOOK HANDG WITH THe EA~TSR
JSgA~LE, AND liE GAVE ME A COLORED E66!

I . JU5T

·

....~ ..

'
..

HIPWELL

BATH SCALES
,.
\

preti" .., 1f-M ...I&gt;n 9 mov• ment that w1igh1 aecurofely .
on ony !IGOr 1urlun .. , witfl
o lbO-Ib. w1i9ht tapoeity.

LIMIT OlE
WITH COUPOI

..

6-VOLTLANJER'N

72 OILY PEl STOlE ,.

•

LIMIT OlE
WITH COIPDI

·"'

..

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1, __

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Bit,~

lie! .. dy110mi' lptOler

uo oat HI non
LIMIT OlE
WITII COliPDI

' $100

WITHOUT COUI'OI
$1.58
HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

'

· • S&lt;llid-stott

SDO OILY PR STOlE

$199

' ....... ;l.

•~ '·-

$299

WITIOUT COUPOI
$1.99
SNITS IEPT.

WITIOUT COIPOR
$....
JEWI!LIIY DEPT.

'•

. '

''

.....:' ·:

-~ :· -~

' I

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'

SYLVANIA

DOOR MIRROR

LIGHT BULBS

NATURAL FINISH
300 OILY PEl STOlE

SOU 2 IILaS • PACI
loot lULlS OILY HI STOll

LIMIT OlE

. LIMIT 11 IILIS
WITI Cl!l~

$199

. ' MIRRO 4 QT.

COUPOR

'

•

$499

(1~1)

M0404

••

c

LIIIJT ME
WITI _.....

-

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SUI
JEWELIIY DEPT. '

( r·

Art

13

lllti• ..,..fo'IIW,.•m•tt•
Lllll TWI
,WITH CIIPQII

38°
...

~
'

100-Y HI STOll

u.lULl
uCH. . , $too
'

WRMOUT COUI'OI
' $4.99
HOUSEWARE DEPT.

,,

PRESSURE COOKER

WITROIIT . 11 PLIS
'

oz:
.STYLE
·HAIR SPUY '

'

PANn ·HOSE

....., ~ Colon;_ Beige. Ctn~mon, ..,. .
Brown &amp; Smoke '
'

•

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' WITI COUPH

.

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48c(
...:
.

WITIIOUT COUPOR

. WIIUIT c1•01

COSMETIC DEPT.

~01HING DEP'F.

$!.11

7 OZ. GILLETTE

RIGHT
GUARD
. DEODO!IANT ·
LIMIT )WI
·Will COUPOI·

sac
.. ...

WITIIGUT CDIPOI
COSMETIC D.~T.

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'

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.

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.

The Greater
flliddle Ohio V~Ue~
'
\.
'

'

,

I

J

..

'

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,

·

. COUPONS ON THIS PAGE GOOD SAT., APR. 17 .ONLY
.

SEE ·PAGE. 2 FOR WEDNESDAY
COUPONS
.
.
'

'

'

\

t

•

•

.• ,

'

'

' ..~.. "

NEW

COMPAC 37

COLEMAN •

SPARK PLUGS

FISHING RIEL···

LAN·
TERN
50 OILY I'll STOll

IC, IUTOLITE
OR CHIIPIOII

• s;,., to f;t most co.rs

•

LIMIT 8
WITH COUPOI

LIMIT OiiE
WITH CIUPOI

48C:W

$1099

WITHOUT COUPOI
77c
AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

ISO OILY HI STOll

,LIMIT liE
WITH CDIPDI

WITMOUT COUPOII
$15.99
SHilTS IEPT.

•

WITHOUT COIPOR
$1.99
SPORTS P£PT.

SHOOK HANDG WITH THe EA~TSR
JSgA~LE, AND liE GAVE ME A COLORED E66!

I . JU5T

·

....~ ..

'
..

HIPWELL

BATH SCALES
,.
\

preti" .., 1f-M ...I&gt;n 9 mov• ment that w1igh1 aecurofely .
on ony !IGOr 1urlun .. , witfl
o lbO-Ib. w1i9ht tapoeity.

LIMIT OlE
WITH COUPOI

..

6-VOLTLANJER'N

72 OILY PEl STOlE ,.

•

LIMIT OlE
WITH COIPDI

·"'

..

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1, __

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lie! .. dy110mi' lptOler

uo oat HI non
LIMIT OlE
WITII COliPDI

' $100

WITHOUT COUI'OI
$1.58
HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

'

· • S&lt;llid-stott

SDO OILY PR STOlE

$199

' ....... ;l.

•~ '·-

$299

WITIOUT COUPOI
$1.99
SNITS IEPT.

WITIOUT COIPOR
$....
JEWI!LIIY DEPT.

'•

. '

''

.....:' ·:

-~ :· -~

' I

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'

SYLVANIA

DOOR MIRROR

LIGHT BULBS

NATURAL FINISH
300 OILY PEl STOlE

SOU 2 IILaS • PACI
loot lULlS OILY HI STOll

LIMIT OlE

. LIMIT 11 IILIS
WITI Cl!l~

$199

. ' MIRRO 4 QT.

COUPOR

'

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$499

(1~1)

M0404

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LIIIJT ME
WITI _.....

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JEWELIIY DEPT. '

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Lllll TWI
,WITH CIIPQII

38°
...

~
'

100-Y HI STOll

u.lULl
uCH. . , $too
'

WRMOUT COUI'OI
' $4.99
HOUSEWARE DEPT.

,,

PRESSURE COOKER

WITROIIT . 11 PLIS
'

oz:
.STYLE
·HAIR SPUY '

'

PANn ·HOSE

....., ~ Colon;_ Beige. Ctn~mon, ..,. .
Brown &amp; Smoke '
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COSMETIC DEPT.

~01HING DEP'F.

$!.11

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RIGHT
GUARD
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'

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.

The Greater
flliddle Ohio V~Ue~
'
\.
'

'

,

I

J

..

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,

·

. COUPONS ON THIS PAGE GOOD SAT., APR. 17 .ONLY
.

SEE ·PAGE. 2 FOR WEDNESDAY
COUPONS
.
.
'

'

'

\

t

•

•

.• ,

'

'

' ..~.. "

NEW

COMPAC 37

COLEMAN •

SPARK PLUGS

FISHING RIEL···

LAN·
TERN
50 OILY I'll STOll

IC, IUTOLITE
OR CHIIPIOII

• s;,., to f;t most co.rs

•

LIMIT 8
WITH COUPOI

LIMIT OiiE
WITH CIUPOI

48C:W

$1099

WITHOUT COUPOI
77c
AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

ISO OILY HI STOll

,LIMIT liE
WITH CDIPDI

WITMOUT COUPOII
$15.99
SHilTS IEPT.

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WITHOUT COIPOR
$1.99
SPORTS P£PT.

SHOOK HANDG WITH THe EA~TSR
JSgA~LE, AND liE GAVE ME A COLORED E66!

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BATH SCALES
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preti" .., 1f-M ...I&gt;n 9 mov• ment that w1igh1 aecurofely .
on ony !IGOr 1urlun .. , witfl
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LIMIT OlE
WITH COUPOI

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6-VOLTLANJER'N

72 OILY PEl STOlE ,.

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WITH COIPDI

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LIMIT OlE
WITII COliPDI

' $100

WITHOUT COUI'OI
$1.58
HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

'

· • S&lt;llid-stott

SDO OILY PR STOlE

$199

' ....... ;l.

•~ '·-

$299

WITIOUT COUPOI
$1.99
SNITS IEPT.

WITIOUT COIPOR
$....
JEWI!LIIY DEPT.

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SYLVANIA

DOOR MIRROR

LIGHT BULBS

NATURAL FINISH
300 OILY PEl STOlE

SOU 2 IILaS • PACI
loot lULlS OILY HI STOll

LIMIT OlE

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WITI Cl!l~

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uCH. . , $too
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WRMOUT COUI'OI
' $4.99
HOUSEWARE DEPT.

,,

PRESSURE COOKER

WITROIIT . 11 PLIS
'

oz:
.STYLE
·HAIR SPUY '

'

PANn ·HOSE

....., ~ Colon;_ Beige. Ctn~mon, ..,. .
Brown &amp; Smoke '
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WITIIOUT COUPOR

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~01HING DEP'F.

$!.11

7 OZ. GILLETTE

RIGHT
GUARD
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LIMIT )WI
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by .Fz-ank O'Neal ·

SBOBT RIBS

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WAtJ1&lt;;; ME ~o QU rr .. ·

PRlN\&lt;INb AND SMOkiNe:•..

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COM~S H ~LP!

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WITH IT, PAL!

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CAPTAIN EASY

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t'M fi.A'f1N6 IN M~ fi~SI

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OKAY... !70 ME:
DANCE- TE?T P.ROVS7
IM THE TYPE: CHICK
YER. LOOKIN' FE!&lt;: ...
WOT'f7 THI? GIG
Al-L- ABOIJH

MAS1'~~ 'fO()~~~~E~~. ~~~E,
. A'f 6£AUI'IfLlt. AlJ~lJSIA
N".1'10N.M- 60~f CC()f\5£.

••

1~1s

by :Crooks &amp; Lawrence
..-H-E-1:7-:7-CO_M_I~-K-TO_T_H_E~
· -5-0-17-!?-FE-L.T-:-A:-:~=:T;=::;q;-::/1.;:--,
LJ.:&gt;.A. TO 5 1GN A MI~IN0
DANt;II\IG GIRl- WITH 'iOL!R.
DE:AL. WITH MckE:E
TYP&amp;' CHAF:M7. Wll..J... HE:L.P
I~DL!?T~IE7l
TO PUTTINK HIM I~
GOOD HUMO~l

OUR: AP 15 5AYI~K "PANG~R' AND
.
ADWE:NTUF:E" BECAU~E THE PA7HA .
5EXY HULA I~ 7Hl:7
MAY INWITS 'iOU TO .
GIT·UP WOULr:&gt; BE
A CO~YSIJPPE~
ff{_~E~/~I&lt;IBL-J;; ~·
AFTSF&lt;: THE

I F/66ERiP ME

~HOW!

\S 11-\~ 6ta&amp;\€- ...

~ f!\O~E~_- ~ .~f5fl6£?..
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wAK6 UP, MAt! !

~OO'R~ MI5SIN~

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AGf&lt;EAf fiNISH .

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-ro 1H~ f1t~sr~~s!

0

...,~

WHAT HE DOE?N'T
'3AYr PRINCE ASOUL•.
J~ T~AT HER DA~ CI~C1
COSTUME: WIJ..L- BE
. PADDED Wl:TH

YER AFRAID I MAY ROU7E TH'
!!&gt;EA5f IN HIM ~ ... DO~'T WORRY.
!Kit-! HANDL.E MA5-'HI.:R7~

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. o"'l ~~·
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!t

CO~TAININK

...;

ELECTWNIC SLJ6,..
VEN YOU iLIR'N IT,'
WE HEAI&lt;:INK If HE'
0t:T? FRE?H- AND
COME: TO YOUR:.

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.
..

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I

ALA6f FCOR '&gt;ORr~.
I KNEW HIM,
HORt&gt;.TIOi A FE:Ll.OW

t11 MANY BRA.VE
p,
Ht:A/ZTS
.1:J
Me A'5/£!3P lN
7He DEeE/tf;:.. ~

· OF INFIN17E'
', ..JE6"T, OFM05T"

S:XCEL..L.J:Nr ~CY.~. ·

R85CIJ~l

'THAI'$. lf-\E FU251'
'TIME. 1'\/5 ~EEN iH6M

et-~-.roY -r1-1e
eA~TEI&lt;

OLII 10GE1'Hpl2
~SINC..t: THE HOU~E
. CAUGHT Fti&lt;.E

. ' PA12ADE ,
FOLK~!

lt-.1 '62.!

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1\l- 14AVE

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A MIL..Lia-1
Pe151N · ·

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·1'\0WPY, Mf&gt;;JOFZ.! AIN'T
f:'t./IG'TL..Y "!aPI2UCED·UP ..
f012. EAST6(2, 81JT•••

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'iHESHOP. ••

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Tli'AN?MIT7'ER- ANI'
~ WI L.L. BE- THE:
f::!iit.I PA!&gt; HA OF
FAZOOI-t

cavalli-

by Dick

.

gAO!O iRl68ER-

· 51(5N~k FF:OM 1H17

TH1:7 JEWEL.' I?

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WINTHROP

-AND iUR~IN(!I THAT JEWEL- WILL.
AL80 A~M TH~ .P~TtlNATO~ l
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•• [ Mc&amp;i' -r~e: f&lt;AMiLY! AF1'eR.
YOLI MtGJ-\-r 5AY ,
t:;;E-rt'l~t~ · ·r=M OU'TFii'TSP, ~ .'1 GiOT CP..LlGJ-I.T IN
! SEi"fLEC&gt; FOR.
"TJ-\E E,AI;iEf'
DR'l~'CLe:At-llNcS M'/
, PAY FZP..IP.'
'

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by .Fz-ank O'Neal ·

SBOBT RIBS

\-\~

WAtJ1&lt;;; ME ~o QU rr .. ·

PRlN\&lt;INb AND SMOkiNe:•..

.,

'

.

''

.

'

..

,.,.,.~v

COM~S H ~LP!

-·- SdGAR. Mlt.K.AND BU11fR!
I

WITH IT, PAL!

·• ·,

i

•. ,.

·,

~

'

'

.

.

.

.

,.

CAPTAIN EASY

.

t'M fi.A'f1N6 IN M~ fi~SI

'

OKAY... !70 ME:
DANCE- TE?T P.ROVS7
IM THE TYPE: CHICK
YER. LOOKIN' FE!&lt;: ...
WOT'f7 THI? GIG
Al-L- ABOIJH

MAS1'~~ 'fO()~~~~E~~. ~~~E,
. A'f 6£AUI'IfLlt. AlJ~lJSIA
N".1'10N.M- 60~f CC()f\5£.

••

1~1s

by :Crooks &amp; Lawrence
..-H-E-1:7-:7-CO_M_I~-K-TO_T_H_E~
· -5-0-17-!?-FE-L.T-:-A:-:~=:T;=::;q;-::/1.;:--,
LJ.:&gt;.A. TO 5 1GN A MI~IN0
DANt;II\IG GIRl- WITH 'iOL!R.
DE:AL. WITH MckE:E
TYP&amp;' CHAF:M7. Wll..J... HE:L.P
I~DL!?T~IE7l
TO PUTTINK HIM I~
GOOD HUMO~l

OUR: AP 15 5AYI~K "PANG~R' AND
.
ADWE:NTUF:E" BECAU~E THE PA7HA .
5EXY HULA I~ 7Hl:7
MAY INWITS 'iOU TO .
GIT·UP WOULr:&gt; BE
A CO~YSIJPPE~
ff{_~E~/~I&lt;IBL-J;; ~·
AFTSF&lt;: THE

I F/66ERiP ME

~HOW!

\S 11-\~ 6ta&amp;\€- ...

~ f!\O~E~_- ~ .~f5fl6£?..
·'
'

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wAK6 UP, MAt! !

~OO'R~ MI5SIN~

I

AGf&lt;EAf fiNISH .

,.'

-ro 1H~ f1t~sr~~s!

0

...,~

WHAT HE DOE?N'T
'3AYr PRINCE ASOUL•.
J~ T~AT HER DA~ CI~C1
COSTUME: WIJ..L- BE
. PADDED Wl:TH

YER AFRAID I MAY ROU7E TH'
!!&gt;EA5f IN HIM ~ ... DO~'T WORRY.
!Kit-! HANDL.E MA5-'HI.:R7~

,.
•'

'

·EXPL051VE!

. o"'l ~~·
'

!t

CO~TAININK

...;

ELECTWNIC SLJ6,..
VEN YOU iLIR'N IT,'
WE HEAI&lt;:INK If HE'
0t:T? FRE?H- AND
COME: TO YOUR:.

I

•

'
.''

.
..

·

I

ALA6f FCOR '&gt;ORr~.
I KNEW HIM,
HORt&gt;.TIOi A FE:Ll.OW

t11 MANY BRA.VE
p,
Ht:A/ZTS
.1:J
Me A'5/£!3P lN
7He DEeE/tf;:.. ~

· OF INFIN17E'
', ..JE6"T, OFM05T"

S:XCEL..L.J:Nr ~CY.~. ·

R85CIJ~l

'THAI'$. lf-\E FU251'
'TIME. 1'\/5 ~EEN iH6M

et-~-.roY -r1-1e
eA~TEI&lt;

OLII 10GE1'Hpl2
~SINC..t: THE HOU~E
. CAUGHT Fti&lt;.E

. ' PA12ADE ,
FOLK~!

lt-.1 '62.!

"

1\l- 14AVE

,..t••
•

.
·.

-

t
l...

.

'

.·~ ·

A MIL..Lia-1
Pe151N · ·

.

·1'\0WPY, Mf&gt;;JOFZ.! AIN'T
f:'t./IG'TL..Y "!aPI2UCED·UP ..
f012. EAST6(2, 81JT•••

f.t!.J&lt;Ror WflHIN50MNIA/

(CI-\UCI"L'E)

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11-\E- FOO'I
Llr-.1\ME-r-l"T.
~eADY WKCN
Y~Ge.T
SACK! '

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AND I HAVE10 Pia&lt; A

'iHESHOP. ••

.I

.

AN

!:1-

:!

)

Tli'AN?MIT7'ER- ANI'
~ WI L.L. BE- THE:
f::!iit.I PA!&gt; HA OF
FAZOOI-t

cavalli-

by Dick

.

gAO!O iRl68ER-

· 51(5N~k FF:OM 1H17

TH1:7 JEWEL.' I?

.,'' .

..

•,

i

i'•:

WINTHROP

-AND iUR~IN(!I THAT JEWEL- WILL.
AL80 A~M TH~ .P~TtlNATO~ l
• I 0"""
...,..;....;.,...--~
7HE"' "' fV"'

.

.

•• [ Mc&amp;i' -r~e: f&lt;AMiLY! AF1'eR.
YOLI MtGJ-\-r 5AY ,
t:;;E-rt'l~t~ · ·r=M OU'TFii'TSP, ~ .'1 GiOT CP..LlGJ-I.T IN
! SEi"fLEC&gt; FOR.
"TJ-\E E,AI;iEf'
DR'l~'CLe:At-llNcS M'/
, PAY FZP..IP.'
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CAMPUS CL.ATTER

LANCELOT

II

Iy'. ,.

, ', /

(;

.'

by · Coker &amp; Penn

)

D

WI-lEN I'M STUOYING, I CAN'T
STAND 70 J.IAVE SOME NOWH&amp;RE.

~-1 ~~

FL.Y Keep
ME. AWAKE!
•

.

(

~

by V. T.•·Ba:anlin

ALLBY--OOP
1-!ELlO,GRA.N'FATH~R...

SEJ; WHAT I'VE GOT! .

~------------~--~
...BY GOLl.Y, WHEN THAT OH,NO,
CRA';ZY MOOVJAN RODE
OFF WITH YOU1 I WAS

NOT
QUITE!

ANDY CAPA

...aUT I SHOULPA. J&lt;NOWN 'IDU'D LIVE UP
10 OUR 1RADITIONS AN' COME BACK
LOADJ;;D WJlH 1H'SPOILS OF COMBAT...

NEVER SPEAK

TOME~-

AFRAID WE'D

AGAIN-:

lH'LASTOF

YDU!

.

:.

•

... BUT WH.A.TCHI\ BRING THAT
LUI\IK BACK FOR? AIN'T

OUR YOUNG MEN GOOI&gt;
JSNOUGH fO!t ~r

... I THOUGHT l-IE'D
LOOK GOOD IN MY

WHAT~VEI ~NE'?

IT'S PROBABLY A. TRAIT

W'ii INHERITED FROM

'AVE ! 'DONE?'

GRANDMOTI-IER!

TROPHY ROOM ·

'101./KNOW
VER.Y WELL. .
WHAT,VER'VE

---OONE-!

'By Howard Post

THE DROPOUTS

DEAR POLLY-1 am a young 9uitar
player who is always losing my pick.
Now I make my own by cutting tne
shape of the pick out of the plastic lid
from a cottage cheese container,-

v ..'

CATHERINE.

J)!AR rOLLY.l.;lfse an angel food ca!ce

pan~~~ Gil

outs1d1 water disk for your
tfog. Drive.a stah 'through hole in the
middleand into the ground and the pan
will not tie ·over or be blown away.-

RUTH

\

•
••

'l c;U'i 11-\E: 'PO,. ,
,.
\N 1-\P..I..t=:

I&gt;tAR POllY-[very time I c~ange th
bag in my vacuum cleaner I insert in it
four cloves. Wnen I finish vacuuming,
the rooms have a clean, fresh scent that
is veiy pleasant, Much cheaper, too,
than buying an air freshened-DORA·
THE

,;:z--

.

-1 r&lt;~&lt;'w

M'f RIGHts[

•

.

'

,·,
A r(omfortabto 1t,le. to wear
d~ring lej~u'e moments is tht
• ." jumpsuot! No. 8191 with ·,
• PHOTO.GUIDE is in Si,ts I to
• · lllbuttliV.-4Ql.SiuiO.llV.
. . bUll, lV2 y~rds of 45-inch for

•,

tenion; lh yards lor

lo~g

· thort• . '
'. ' .

...

)EAR POLLY-Thoroughly wash an
empty ifeo~orent bottle, fill with conctntraied sodp .and illt to apply to
'oiled' spah on collars and cuffs before
wa1hi11a. · Uslng a hand brush saves
rubb_ing and dpu .a good job,-LUCILLl

, ' ·i ·

•

· •
,

•·
,, ).
,
. Thi• cool culollf '!ill bf a lior~~wl
·' robe lot.tlooSO;!'fTl" deysl

'

.

1.

-..

:

.

.

DEAR POLLY-I~n an apartme~t
with little storage space for bath mats,
etc:., so I use two mats at once in the
bathroom •. I place them one on top of
the ather. When company comes, it is
quick and easy to remove the top one
and have a nice clean one oppear."CLAIRE

•

J~e yordlll45·inch•. • ,

nRESA

•

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.. ',

' ____
._ ________ l'
.

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·····-----··-

• 'loffr )e)'s , i Jolfor ''' ererr
llsld,
$tal t~tin to hr, ~oit of this ntwspitpot,

'

'

I

'

'

.

,

•

DEAR POLLY-Mv favlll'ite way of reo
moving white rings left on furnitu re
otter liquids have been spilled is to
dpply warm linseed oil. I have even used
this on spills left for a. long period of
time, and it truly works! .
A plastic cover from a two· pound·coffee
can fits nicely in my flour sifter, and
keeps it neat and ready for use.-E.

A.

.:

c.

DEAR POLLY- We have a large fom·
ily. To avoid confusion, each of us signs
his name on the front of any magazine
he has finished reading. When Mom
sees a magazine with all our names on
the front, she knows it is sole to throw
it away. If anyone wants to save a certain one~ this also is written on the
front. It then is placed in th.9t person's
'p am when .everyone elsa iJ finished

" ~EAR POLLY-An easy way ro make
book markers is ·to &lt;ut the•cornert off
envelopes lind slip one of these over the
corner · of the page ·to be ·marked,-

in 'New Si"' 101:.l.lt (bfsl

''~US) ; ... TTUt~S TSf oech
,+

•

' '

.~

.Jt""~( l•

DEAR POLLY-Fasten a long piece of
ribbon or string acron one end of a
dresser and hang Hair bands or JCarves
over it, This will keep. them from getting
wrinkled, and also cion at harid.-LORI

11-11

..--~

DEAR POLLY--If a whe t ston e isn't
handy, I lhink a ro ugh edge on o cloy
flower pot does a good job when some•
thing needs shorpening .- VIRGINIA
(Polly's nolc: Trying this caused me to
find thanhe edge ol a concrete pol or
#tep works even better.)

2987
These enchanting designs in . crochet
and embroidery make the most charming acce·nls for pillowcases or scarf!
Pattern No. 2987 has hot-iron trans·
fer for 2 designs; .color chart; full .directions.
·

11ith i!.~KAR~N

..

~

., t

I

I

•

~•

�•

CAMPUS CL.ATTER

LANCELOT

II

Iy'. ,.

, ', /

(;

.'

by · Coker &amp; Penn

)

D

WI-lEN I'M STUOYING, I CAN'T
STAND 70 J.IAVE SOME NOWH&amp;RE.

~-1 ~~

FL.Y Keep
ME. AWAKE!
•

.

(

~

by V. T.•·Ba:anlin

ALLBY--OOP
1-!ELlO,GRA.N'FATH~R...

SEJ; WHAT I'VE GOT! .

~------------~--~
...BY GOLl.Y, WHEN THAT OH,NO,
CRA';ZY MOOVJAN RODE
OFF WITH YOU1 I WAS

NOT
QUITE!

ANDY CAPA

...aUT I SHOULPA. J&lt;NOWN 'IDU'D LIVE UP
10 OUR 1RADITIONS AN' COME BACK
LOADJ;;D WJlH 1H'SPOILS OF COMBAT...

NEVER SPEAK

TOME~-

AFRAID WE'D

AGAIN-:

lH'LASTOF

YDU!

.

:.

•

... BUT WH.A.TCHI\ BRING THAT
LUI\IK BACK FOR? AIN'T

OUR YOUNG MEN GOOI&gt;
JSNOUGH fO!t ~r

... I THOUGHT l-IE'D
LOOK GOOD IN MY

WHAT~VEI ~NE'?

IT'S PROBABLY A. TRAIT

W'ii INHERITED FROM

'AVE ! 'DONE?'

GRANDMOTI-IER!

TROPHY ROOM ·

'101./KNOW
VER.Y WELL. .
WHAT,VER'VE

---OONE-!

'By Howard Post

THE DROPOUTS

DEAR POLLY-1 am a young 9uitar
player who is always losing my pick.
Now I make my own by cutting tne
shape of the pick out of the plastic lid
from a cottage cheese container,-

v ..'

CATHERINE.

J)!AR rOLLY.l.;lfse an angel food ca!ce

pan~~~ Gil

outs1d1 water disk for your
tfog. Drive.a stah 'through hole in the
middleand into the ground and the pan
will not tie ·over or be blown away.-

RUTH

\

•
••

'l c;U'i 11-\E: 'PO,. ,
,.
\N 1-\P..I..t=:

I&gt;tAR POllY-[very time I c~ange th
bag in my vacuum cleaner I insert in it
four cloves. Wnen I finish vacuuming,
the rooms have a clean, fresh scent that
is veiy pleasant, Much cheaper, too,
than buying an air freshened-DORA·
THE

,;:z--

.

-1 r&lt;~&lt;'w

M'f RIGHts[

•

.

'

,·,
A r(omfortabto 1t,le. to wear
d~ring lej~u'e moments is tht
• ." jumpsuot! No. 8191 with ·,
• PHOTO.GUIDE is in Si,ts I to
• · lllbuttliV.-4Ql.SiuiO.llV.
. . bUll, lV2 y~rds of 45-inch for

•,

tenion; lh yards lor

lo~g

· thort• . '
'. ' .

...

)EAR POLLY-Thoroughly wash an
empty ifeo~orent bottle, fill with conctntraied sodp .and illt to apply to
'oiled' spah on collars and cuffs before
wa1hi11a. · Uslng a hand brush saves
rubb_ing and dpu .a good job,-LUCILLl

, ' ·i ·

•

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,

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,
. Thi• cool culollf '!ill bf a lior~~wl
·' robe lot.tlooSO;!'fTl" deysl

'

.

1.

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.

.

DEAR POLLY-I~n an apartme~t
with little storage space for bath mats,
etc:., so I use two mats at once in the
bathroom •. I place them one on top of
the ather. When company comes, it is
quick and easy to remove the top one
and have a nice clean one oppear."CLAIRE

•

J~e yordlll45·inch•. • ,

nRESA

•

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' ____
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.

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• 'loffr )e)'s , i Jolfor ''' ererr
llsld,
$tal t~tin to hr, ~oit of this ntwspitpot,

'

'

I

'

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.

,

•

DEAR POLLY-Mv favlll'ite way of reo
moving white rings left on furnitu re
otter liquids have been spilled is to
dpply warm linseed oil. I have even used
this on spills left for a. long period of
time, and it truly works! .
A plastic cover from a two· pound·coffee
can fits nicely in my flour sifter, and
keeps it neat and ready for use.-E.

A.

.:

c.

DEAR POLLY- We have a large fom·
ily. To avoid confusion, each of us signs
his name on the front of any magazine
he has finished reading. When Mom
sees a magazine with all our names on
the front, she knows it is sole to throw
it away. If anyone wants to save a certain one~ this also is written on the
front. It then is placed in th.9t person's
'p am when .everyone elsa iJ finished

" ~EAR POLLY-An easy way ro make
book markers is ·to &lt;ut the•cornert off
envelopes lind slip one of these over the
corner · of the page ·to be ·marked,-

in 'New Si"' 101:.l.lt (bfsl

''~US) ; ... TTUt~S TSf oech
,+

•

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DEAR POLLY-Fasten a long piece of
ribbon or string acron one end of a
dresser and hang Hair bands or JCarves
over it, This will keep. them from getting
wrinkled, and also cion at harid.-LORI

11-11

..--~

DEAR POLLY--If a whe t ston e isn't
handy, I lhink a ro ugh edge on o cloy
flower pot does a good job when some•
thing needs shorpening .- VIRGINIA
(Polly's nolc: Trying this caused me to
find thanhe edge ol a concrete pol or
#tep works even better.)

2987
These enchanting designs in . crochet
and embroidery make the most charming acce·nls for pillowcases or scarf!
Pattern No. 2987 has hot-iron trans·
fer for 2 designs; .color chart; full .directions.
·

11ith i!.~KAR~N

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PRI.S CILLA'S POP

,,"I
HOW MUCH EXPERIENC_E YOUR BEST FRIEND HAD
\VIT,H YOUR TRO UBLE. I'M NOT CALLING :HER INTO CONSULTATION'"

&lt;.'

~OW MUC\-1

SNARED

;

BETTER 10 Be:

IN TI-lE

...

W\-10 WOULD

SEE IT EXCEPT
MY DENTIST?.2'

13EAUTIFUL

IRREVOCABLE
WEB OF
TIME:

,. '

WI TI-l IN ...

"I'LL HLL YOU SOMETHING ELSE MONEY CAN'T BUY, R£V£1\fND •• ,

-by

I-I iVA, FUDOSY.' 1 001 A WHOL.E.
NEW t..INE o' 1GIMMICK'5 T' S~
YA ... HEY/ WI-IV TI-l' cANE: ,

STEP INSiDE.! THIS IS
y~ I..UCKY DAY!

Stoff~l

"HOME', HUH! MAN, HIS WIFE MUST HAVE BEEN A LOUSY HOUSEKEEPER!"

A GK£AT PUTTING TOUCH!''

•

U.S. Pat. Off.

'BUGS BUNNY

"JUST .GETT'ING A FEW SIGNS READY FOR THE DRIVEWAY, HERBIE !"
MOM'S HAY·IN\i HER CLUB MEETING HERE THIS AFTERNOON !"

&amp; llei:andahl

I

'CEPrTHAT
GENNULMAN···

I't.L. I-lAVE. YA JUMPIN' A~ND
I..IKE. A 6A'ZELLE IN MO
TIME!
WHATARE. -

YOU GOING TO DO;?.

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A-ONE. ... A·TWO·u A- THREE/
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Ot1T OtrR WAY

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P;~TTet?ON

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I'D &amp;IS Ae;J...t;:: "TV
~ OUT ! I'P l-IKS
TO ~OP HE:~ trr

bF Paul Gringle

GSS, WI?~ I HAD

A

AP::E 'YOU
A. GIFC:L.S SPQR:T·· ~...., A.Ffl:.AID 1
BOXIt-lG .,ISJ..l't"

E5-~0TH9~ TO ~X'

. WlTHi

MA.'If?le ~Ll'P ~eneF::
NOT'i

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AWAYWITH IT·•
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by AI VerD1eer

PRI.S CILLA'S POP

,,"I
HOW MUCH EXPERIENC_E YOUR BEST FRIEND HAD
\VIT,H YOUR TRO UBLE. I'M NOT CALLING :HER INTO CONSULTATION'"

&lt;.'

~OW MUC\-1

SNARED

;

BETTER 10 Be:

IN TI-lE

...

W\-10 WOULD

SEE IT EXCEPT
MY DENTIST?.2'

13EAUTIFUL

IRREVOCABLE
WEB OF
TIME:

,. '

WI TI-l IN ...

"I'LL HLL YOU SOMETHING ELSE MONEY CAN'T BUY, R£V£1\fND •• ,

-by

I-I iVA, FUDOSY.' 1 001 A WHOL.E.
NEW t..INE o' 1GIMMICK'5 T' S~
YA ... HEY/ WI-IV TI-l' cANE: ,

STEP INSiDE.! THIS IS
y~ I..UCKY DAY!

Stoff~l

"HOME', HUH! MAN, HIS WIFE MUST HAVE BEEN A LOUSY HOUSEKEEPER!"

A GK£AT PUTTING TOUCH!''

•

U.S. Pat. Off.

'BUGS BUNNY

"JUST .GETT'ING A FEW SIGNS READY FOR THE DRIVEWAY, HERBIE !"
MOM'S HAY·IN\i HER CLUB MEETING HERE THIS AFTERNOON !"

&amp; llei:andahl

I

'CEPrTHAT
GENNULMAN···

I't.L. I-lAVE. YA JUMPIN' A~ND
I..IKE. A 6A'ZELLE IN MO
TIME!
WHATARE. -

YOU GOING TO DO;?.

l t l : !;. ...... . ,... ••• ~

"''~ ·· "''

.........

A-ONE. ... A·TWO·u A- THREE/
' '
''

'

...

J '

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•.

••

JOHNNY _WOND:i.B, .

7ie 1flateu

Ot1T OtrR WAY

'

•

GHE 14A.DI\i'l
P;~TTet?ON

·~
·

- Mf!i,-,....

I'D &amp;IS Ae;J...t;:: "TV
~ OUT ! I'P l-IKS
TO ~OP HE:~ trr

bF Paul Gringle

GSS, WI?~ I HAD

A

AP::E 'YOU
A. GIFC:L.S SPQR:T·· ~...., A.Ffl:.AID 1
BOXIt-lG .,ISJ..l't"

E5-~0TH9~ TO ~X'

. WlTHi

MA.'If?le ~Ll'P ~eneF::
NOT'i

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AWAYWITH IT·•
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·Hundreds Hunt

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For Prize Eggs

•

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JACK WE13H, Rotary Clul&gt; treasurer, presents a P cash !rlze to Darin Marr, son of Mr •.
and Mrs. Gerald Marr, New Haven, who found the .silver egg during the annual Easter Egg
Hunt of the Middleport. Pomeroy Rotary Club Sunday .

• ' '

i'M WRJTI~G.
MY i MEMOIR~~

WHAT A.RE 'TbU
001 tJG I ME.E.k ?

BUT I DOf.J'T ktJO~
VVHA.T TO CALL IT !

;

Another successful Easter
Egg hunt was staged Sunday
afternoon by the MiddleportPomeroy Rotary Club at . the
Middleport Community Park.
Hundreds of children from
toddlers through age 12 of the
area searched for over 400 eggs
with as mimy prizes awarded by
area business houses. Chief of
Police J, J, Cremeans fired a
gun to signal the official
opening of the hunt following

remarks of welcome by Middleport Mayor C. 0. Fisher.
Middleport firemen were
traditionally on hand to assist
Rotary Club members. A public
address system was provided
by John Werner.

A silver egg worth $5 was won
by Darin Matr, son of Mr . and · ·
Mrs. Gerald Marr of New
Haven. Cash prizes for the two
eggs were provided by the
Rotary Club. Chairman of the
hunt was Cash Bahr. ·

Top find ·of the day was the
gold egg which was good for a
$10 cash prize. It was found by
Joe Gleason, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Gleason, Middleport.

A perfect, sunny and warm
Easter Sunday afternoon with
temperatures in the mid-70s
helped make the annual event a
success.

•

Devoled To 'l7u! lntere.ll Of 'l7u! Meigs-Maaon Area

VOL XXIII NO. 253

THAT'S GOWfVA. E£'
'3:::M5 BOOK !

'

By United Press lnlernatiooal

Pakistan Confrontation Feared

SAIGON (UP!) - U.S. milita· frequently to avoid bombing
ry sources said today the U.S. attacks. The headquarters is·
Air Force was dropping 7.5-ton •known as B3.
bombs on Coinmunist troop The 7.5-ton bombs have been
concentrations around besieged used previously to blast out
Fire Base 6 in the first such landing pads in the jungles for
tactical use of the weapons in U.S. helicopters but mllitary
the war. B52s also hit sources said they were effective
Communist positions there to- against massed Communist
day with 500 tons of bombs.
troops. In some operations the
UP! correspondent Robert E. big bombs are floated down by
Sullivan reported from the area parachute and detonated a few
that the North Vietnamese yards off the ground to blast
Soviets Beefing Up Sadat ~ AF
commander in charge of the out an area the site of a
AN ISRAELI SOURCE SAID TODAY in Tel Aviv Egypt had . attack on Fire Base 6 had football field.
received ·"new types of aircraft" from the Soviet Union and that II)OVed his headquarters from Front dispatches said the
they were manned by Soviet crews. He declined to specify the j..aos into South Vietnam to bombs were used today six to
make of the new combat jets involved, but previous reports said direct the fight. The base is eight miles southwest of the
they were MIG23s which can outperform American F4 Phantoms. near the intersection· of Laos, border ranger post of Ben· Het,
The diaclosure came as political sources said Prime Minister Cambodia and South Vietnam itself six mil s northwest of
Golda Melr may call a special meeting to diacuss the final draft of in the Central Highlands.
Fire Base 6.
Israel's coun!eri&gt;lan for reopening the SUez Canal under an in·
Sullivan, quoting highly Sullivlm, reporting from the
terim setUeinent of the Middle East conflict. '['he Israeli source, placed South Vietnamese mili- Central Highlands, said a North
comii\Emting on newspaper reports Egypt has acquired MIG23s tary sources, said the head- Vietnamese defector told inter·
and possibly an advanced version of the Sukhoi7 fighter-bomber, quarters of Hoang Minh Thoa, rogators he had seen 2,000 fresh
said "it constituted a qualitative contribution" to Egypt's commander of the 13-day-old North Vietnamese troops in a
offensive against the base, was rear area awaiting orders to
military might:
believed located about 14 miles move into the battle area. He
Hanky Panky Denied
southwest of the base, but that said the defector, Lt. Bui Ngoc
PIDLADELPHIA - CHARGES OF WRONGDOING which he moved · his headquarters Chieu, told questioners his
· battalion had been ordered . to
repcrtedly caused the plunge into bankruptcy of the huge Penn
cut HighW&lt;~Y 5i2 east of Ben
Central Railroad have been denied by its former chief financial
Ret, the base's only land link to
officer. David C. Bevan !Bsued a statement Sunday saying that the
the outside.
blame should be pinned on the two former top officials of the Penn
Central, Stuart T. Satinders and Alfred E. Perlman.
ACcording to Bevan, it was the job of Saunders, the former
ch8irman, and Perlman, the vice chairman, to run the railroad
and they were responsible for the results. All three were fired 12
Brush fires continued to
days before the Penn Central filed for reorganization under the
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
Bankruptcy Act on June 20, 1970. The huge carrier said it was plague Middleport firemen over
recently
completed private surthe weekend.
virtually without cash and could not pay its bills.
At 5:33 p.m. Saturday, the vey of intended com planting
lir~me11 went to Vine St. to stop indicateS acreage seeded in the
Mandatory Pay~ents Recf?mmended
one, their second trip to the heart of the corn belt this spring
. .
may fall short of earlier gov·
location that day.
CJDCAGO -AN AMENDMENT to the Eastern Ohio-Western
At 11:20p.m. they were called
PennsYlilanla federal milk marketing order, which would make to the Hudson St. area where a
Ag-Notes
. partial payments by milk dealers mandatory for milk delivered to fire was reported, but none
them the first 15 days of the monl,b, has been recommended by the could be found. At 2:02 p.m. ernment estimates.
. The survey &lt;vas made in five
Agriculture Department.
·
Sunday, firemen went to the major, corn belt states, where
Partial payments to producers or cooperative associations Little Kyger road near
68 pet cent of the nation's corn
are presently required only when requested.
·
Cheshire. Residents of the area crop is produced, by the Corn
had kept a brush fire there Refiners Association.
under control until the depart· The association report indicatment arrived.
ed farmers in the five states
wouid expand corn plantings 3.2
per cent this year -less than
half the 7A per cent increase
forecasi in an Agriculture De·
o
pariment survey made five
weeks.earlier.
WASlUNGTON (UP!) -The of the Department of HealU1,

•

•
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.
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Wf.lAT5
lRAT

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•

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Brush Fires
Persisting

•

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WO~DER

.. \NEL.L.TH~RE~ ONE
WP...Y TO Fit-.ID CVT!

SA'M IF THIS lP.NTEJ&lt;I-J IS

THAT LANTE:I&lt;N WAS MP.NUFACfi.Jj;1ED

REALLY GENUI~E IT WILl..

IN A~{2.0N, OHIO·--···.AND l CAN
PROVE fM ·Af.l HONEST MAN ! .

I

HElP ME FIND AN
HONE.Sf MAN!

. · IF THE LANTERN

i&lt;EALLY .
BE.\..ON&lt;SED To
· D103ENESi' ·

.. 7

.· ONLY AN HONE.ST MA.N
WOULD ADMITTK~T He
. Cf{EATED SOMe~DY/.

~:tow.

_More Leadership
Wh0 Ie Sta•l e
N·eeded in Health
d
·Like Tm er

...

+

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. I

HAVE' AN fl.PPOINTMf;I-JTAT THE COJ&lt;}J ER.

I

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~U,ESS SHE'S BEEN
HEr(f: .Af.DGONE! ~....,

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TEN CENTS

usters

NEW DELHI- INDIAN AND WEm' PAKISTAN troops
stood within nine mlles of each other along the East Pakistan
border today, increasing fears of a confrontation between the two
nations. Official Pakistan Radio said Sunday Pakistani troops had
''wiped out" two companies of Indian border security forces in the
Benapole area two mlles inside East Pakistan Saturday,
India denied the claim and accused Pakistan of kidnaping three
of Its border security gumts who had been on a routine patrol in
the Petrapole region on the Indian side of the border. The Indian
government demanded the release of the men.
Fears the Civil War In East PakiStan might lead to fighting
between India and Pakistan have swept New Delhi for several
days. Indl8 has voiced support of the East Pakistani rebels but
has denied Pakistan's charges it is smuggling arms to them
a~r!ll!!f the border.

'.

PHONt: 992-2156

MONDAY, APRIL 12, 1971

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .

RECEIVING A$10 CASH award for finding the gold egg
in Sunday's Rotary Club Easter Egg Hunt held in Middlepol't
from Jack Welsh, treasurer, is Joe .Gleason, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Gleason, Middleport.

..

president of the Blue Cross
Association said Sunday in·
creased leadership from the
federal government ls essential
to any plan aimed at Improving
the nation's ]lealth care sysl.eiJI.
Appearing on NBC's Meet the·
Preas, Walter J. McNerney said
while the demands for quality
and additional facUlties have
grown steadily, "the apparatus
we've used for year ls now
outdated."
·
He stopped short of calling
fer a complete govel'lllllent
takeover of health care, saying
· public and private &amp;ectors must
. share responsibility_and "neith·
«can do II illone." ·
· He said .the federal govern·
Jllfint currently ·contributes up
to one-thlr~ of . health care
expe,ildllures thro11gh such
plans as r.fedlcare and Medi·

U.S. helicopters managed to
resupply the base today despite
heavy ground fire. All were
fired upon today but none was
shot down . Sunday, only 5 to 10
.helicopters managed to land at
the base and one of these was
shot down.
The U.S. command reported
Communist troops inflicted the
worst American casualties in
two weeks Sunday when they
shot down a U.S. helicopter on
South Vietnam's upper coast
and ambushed ground forces
that . ~arne to rescue the
crewmen. One airman and 10
rescuers were killed.

Seedings Down

Education and Welfare, saytng
"No plan will work unless HEW
The continuing dry spell has • WASHINGTON (UP!)- Stor·
is ·strengthened and control left West Virginia woodlands a age fees paid by the governmust be ·given tile backing of ~irtual tinderbox, promptiD!l ment for federal surplus grain
governmenC'
officials to warn that the foresi held in commercial warehouses
McNerney criticized the Nix- fire potentiarremalns critically will be increased soon, Agrlcul·
on · administration proposal high again today, the UP! ture Department Sources have
which would give greater health r.eported.
.
hinted.
insurance benefitS io poor
Since Fflday, the Department I Officials shied Away . from
families with .children, saying of Natural · Resources' fire speciflcforecasts,bqtconftrmed
"All persons under a given controldlvisionhasreported 144 they had been "NegQtlating"
income should be included and · ·separate fires, mostly in over an increase in rates paid'
should be involved in the southern counties.
under the uniform grain storgraduated payment of preOnly light rainfall has · been ageagreementwithwarehousea.
miums ."
recorded. during the period and
At present, a warehoUseman
Asked-why hospital costs has the National Weather Office In who takes in a bushel of gov·
gone up 12'h per cent In the CharlestOn says precipitation is ernment-owned grain or farmer
psst year, McNerney ~ld the well below the normal rate for owned grain, held under price
chief reason Is increased cost of · April.
supp(Jrts, and holds it for a
labor for !iervices provided by
New fires Sunday totaled .49 year before shipping It out, gets
hospitals -labor costs accOunt- and inclUded six each ln Mingo a total of 18.5 tQ !9.5 cents a
lng for. 70 per cent of hospital and Wyoming, four In Kanawha bushel for storage and handling
expenditures. Another reason, and Raleigh and three. ea~h m IM!rvices. W11rehouse induatcy
~e said, is that hospitals are Harrison and Barbour counties. g~oups reportedly have been
not conipetltive arid/there is no• (~NR) Forester A.
Kelly Seeking an increase of about 5
· cald.
force operating to make 1\lem sa!d . none . of the blazes was cent.t a buahel to offset riaing
He callecUor reoraanizatlon efficient and economic.~·
conSidered major: .
COf!ts,

w.

Ben Ret withsto.od a 5Eklay
Communist. siege in the spring
of 1969 when it was a Green
Beret camp.
While the C131ls unloaded
their blockbusters, B52s returned to the area in strength.
Military sources said the big
eight-engine bombers have
dropped nearly 2,500 tons of
bombs on the Communists
around Fire Base 6 since the
post was overrun 13 days ago.
It was recaptured later and is
still in government hands .

WASHINGTON (UPl) - Agri·
culture Depariment officials,
who have !placed a $150 per
Copy Charge On their list Of far·
mers who got big government
subsidies in 1970, say there
have been no cash orders since
the lists were made available
last Thursday.
But a number of congressmen
have been calling for free excerpts from the list, spokesmen
reported.
The list includes the list of
137,000 farms and fanners who
got federal farm subsidies of
$5,000 apiece or more in 1970.
The list, b.rok~n down by states
and counttes, mcluded 14 recip·
ients of $500,000 to $1 million,

ANYTHING GOES! - Apparently anythilig goes these days in Meigs County when it
comes to dumping solid waste. This impromptu dump Is one which has developed on the Rock
Springs fairgrounds. In Pomeroy, residents are using an area between Mechanic St. and
Butternut Ave. to dispose of their trash and garbage. Meantime, the Mi.ddleport dump off the
Route 7 by-Jllii!S has been closed. The latter problem will be taken up tonight when Middleport
Council meets.
·

Prizes Awar.ded
Money prizes were awarded
at the annual Easter egg hunt
staged Sunday at the Rutland
American Legion farm on the
Beech· Grove Road by the
Auxiliary of the Rutland Fire
Department.
·
Prize money for the hunt was
donated by the American
Legion and · the Rutland
firemen. Candy for treats was
provided by the legion, and free
coffee and donuts w~re set:,.ved
throughout the afternoon by
Archie's Recreation Center at

•

rrr0 'E.aa v 1• J.ll
~~ .L' I n.rers
Rutland.
Alarge crowd was on hand for
the hunt. A $100 savings bond
was awarded to Ray Hood of
Mansfield. Proceeds from the
project sponsored by the
Rutland firemen will be used to
purchase?.. new alarm siren for
the village.
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown
Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Monday
was 64 degrees. under sunny
skipr

Ousted Liu's Thought is
PEKING (UPI)- American
table tennis players talked and
played basketball today will\
Chinese Communist university
students who told them that
ousted Presiden~ Uu Sha~hi
was alive but ''his thought is
dead." ·
The 15-member U. S. contingent st9pped off at Chinghua
University on the way to see the
Great Wall of China. They were
delayed for about five hours as
they talked with the students
and toured the university
grounds 'in Peking.
After eating a late lunch at
the university, the Americans
piled into
and two bpses
and travled .to the Great WalL
They Jater returned to their
hotel in Peking~
The "American table tepnis
teani has .yet to play a.formal

cars

match, b4t officials said the U.
S. players , who arrived
Saturday on an unprecedented
visit, would play here Tuesday
afternoon and then leave for
Shanghai on Wednesday.
The highlight of the day for
the Americans was the trip to
the university .
They left their hotel about" 9
a.m. and reached the university
at 10 a.m. where they were
greeted by the school's
revolutionary committee
members, teachers, students
and school workers.
The Americana sat in a
reception ·room around a table
with a white•. table cloth,
sn1oklng ·cigarettes and sipping
black Chinese tea .
· Later, .the Americans were
taken on a t.our of the .school
grounds a~d they chatted with a

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook
Wednesday through Friday:
Cool Wednesday through
Friday. A chance of showers,
mainly east, Wednesday.
High. mostly in the 50s()
Wedn~sday and u~per 40s to
mid 50s· Thursday and
Frid&amp;y. Lows in the upper 30s
and low 40s Wednesday
· morning, dropping into the
upper 20s and low 30s by
Thursday· night. '

De~d

number of other teachers in ship with Foreign Co).Ultries,
their late 50's and 60's who had the Chinese and the Americans
studied in the states.
toasted each other with glass .
When they stopped off at a after glass of mau tai, a
"727 truck" factory, Graham powerful wine made in Nor~h
Steenhoven
of · Detroit, China from sorghwn.
president of the U. S. Table Speeches given by the Chi·
Tennis Association, climbed. up nese and Americans were ·
into the cab of one of the trucks shor', based on the theme of
and drove it. around.
friendship between the two
The "7'1:1" stands for July 7, peoples.
1968, when the first propaganda ." We do not confuse tl1e
team came in to help run the American people with the U.S. .
school and uniie two disputing governme.nt, " one Chinese offi·
factions during the cultural cial told the American visitors.
revolution.
In his banquet toast tO the
On their way back from the ' .nericans, .U Ching-Chuan, an
faCtorY, the Americans ambled official in the Chinese Peoples' f
into an open basketball class AssociatiOJl, said:
and paused to try a f~w sho'ts. . ."The &lt;;hinese people anrl the ·
,At a S\mday nighi' banq~el American people have always
g1ven by the Ali-China Sports . been friendly to each other.:We
Federation and the Chinese express our good w1shes for the
Peoples' Association fo~ Friend(Continued on Page 8) ·

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