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10-The Daily Sentinel,Middlepori-POO!erpy, 0., May 28,1971

Student Appeals
Partly Ignored

One hundred and four seniors
will graduate Tuesday from
Wahama High School with
Baccalaureate exercises to he
held Sunday_ Commencement
and Baccalaureate exercises
will be held at the Wahama
High School gym at 8 p.m.
The Rev. Parker Hinzman,
pastor of the Mason United
Methodist Church, will speak on
the topic "Life's Three Most
Important Choices." The choir
will present two numbers,
Praise the Lord, Our God,"
and "Bless the Lord, Oh My
Soul." The Rev. Hinzman will
give the invocation and
benediction.
At the commencement the
salutatory address will be given

PT. PLEASANT - A
delegation representing Hannan High School 's Student
Council was left almost emptyhanded of its requests tD the
Mason County Board of
Education Thursday evening.
The board revoked the
placement of Olston Wright as a
reacher at Wahama High School
and will hold a hearing not less
than 10 days from official
notification to Wright to consider the superintendent's

recommendation on Wright's cause our school. We feel our
assignment, and to hear Wright, athletic program will be
if he chooses.
jeopardized . Wr wlll be
This came in a 3-1 vote deprived of our · Educational
through a motion by Charles Program because I f inability to
Eshenaur and a second by Ray make field trips. Because of our
Fields with Bill Withers great concern we request that
president pro-rem, also a~ · you act promptly to retain Mrs.
proving. Harry Siders voted no. Smith in her current job. In
A fifth member, Ted stevens,- s_upport of our request we would
board president, was absent due hk~ _to pre_sent you with_ this
to a deat~ in his family .
petition whicll has been signed
Freddi~ Green, president of With over 90 per cent of the
Hannan'$ Student Council, student body and an amazmg
asked the board to retain Lillie amount of parents and con·
Smith as a bus driver, why it cerned citizens."
had acted as it did in the case of The Hannan group asked,
Hannan's principal, asked "Why the board of education
Tonight &amp; Saturday
grass on school grounds be had to go out of the coun_t~ to get
May 28-29
mowed, and questioned the a .m~n for the pOSition . of
THE VAMPIRE LOVERS
board on where the reacher is pTinc!pal at Hannan Htgh
ITechnicolorl
who is to replace Charles School when one of our own
Ingrid Pill
Chambers.
school personnel Is very well
George Cole ' ~·
In behalf of Mrs. Smith, qualified ." They referred to
Also
THE WALKING STICK
young Green presented the Charles Keefer, counselor at
ITechnicolorJ
board group with a petition Hanna, as their choice.
David Hemmings
after reading a prepared Green cited the fact Keefer
Samantha Eggar
statement pertaining to had been at Hannan more than
reemployment for her. The three years and, "he knows the
Sun.-Mon.· Tues.
May 30-31-June 1
statement labeled Mrs. Smith students, he knows what the
A BOY NAMED
as an "excellent bus driver" school needs and understands
CHARLIE BROWN
and asked why she had not been the problems of the school as a
IT echnicolor I
rehired. Further it said: "We whole."
Charlie Brown and the
"Peanufs" Gang.
are here tonight to inform you
The group was concerned
"G"
the harm that this action will about a replacement for
Plus
Charles Chambers, who forLATITUDE ZERO
merly was a teacher there until
ITechnicolorl
Cesar Romero
his assignment a_s director of
Joseph Collen
secondary education.
"G"
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.
(Continued from Page 1)
The board took no official
hacked remains from shallow action in any of the requests,
graves inbl hearses for trans- but Acting Supt. Michael
port to a mortuary in neigh- Whalen said he would send a
boring Marysville.
maintenance man to the school
Sheriff Roy Whiteaker, who bJ mow grass.
ordered the tO officers back into Eight teachers were emthe lush orchards and river played and placed after exTonight, May 28
bottom today, said the search tensive discussion which
Double Feature Program
would continue "until we stop resulted in another vote of 3-1.
GONE WITH
finding bodies." Wlllteaker, These include the following :
THE WIND
who barred newsmen from the LindaKayMiller,Central; Mrs.
Clark Gable
gravesite area, said five of the Bonnie Hunt, Central; Ronald
Vivien Leigh
lw1nn1er ot Ten Academy
victims have been identified. Hancher, North Point Pleasant;
But only two names were Ramona Lee Lewis, Wahama;
I Color I
released. He said one body Gary R. Bogolin, Beale; Mrs.
-Piuomight be that of a Negro. The Judith Anne Wilcox, Sunnyside;
MARLOWE
I Color)
others were middle-aged Charles A. Carey, Beale;
James Garner
whltes.
Charles William Jordan,
Gayle Hunnicutt
Identifications have been Hannan.
hampered by the transient life In further action the board :
of the farm workers, many of - Heard reports on a lot for
Saturday, May 29
Double Feature
whom had not been in touch Hartford School, but learned
UNDERGROUND
with "their families for years. that the owners are not In(Color)
The' lrictims were hacked in teres led in selling at this time.
Robert Goulef
the
back of the head with a - Accepted the resignations
Daniele Gauberf
-Plusheavy, sharp Instrument, possi- of Raymond Zuspan, bus
TARZAN'S
bly a machete or meat cleaver. driver; Geraldine Melton,
JUNGLE REBELLION
All
were buried on their backs, teacher at Beech Hill; Kay
(Color I
with arms raised in a sup· Nesbit, teacher at Ordnance ;
Ron Ely
G
pllcating position and shirts Rebecca Mabry, Vocational
pulled over their bloody heads. Home Economics teacher at
Sun, Mon. &amp; Tues.
Hannan.
May 30-31, June 1
- Transferred Wyatt Wayne
Double Feature Program
Gibbeaut from New Haven
THE CHEYENNE
Elementary to North Point
DIED IN CINCINNATI
SOCIAL CLUB
James Stewart
William (Mlck) Scholl died Pleasant.
Henry Fonda
- Employed Mrs. Florence
Sunday night in Cincinnati .
(Calor)
Burial was held Wednesday at Staats as cook at Letart School
GP
- PlusPoint Pleasant, his former 1971-72.
- Agreed to grant the Little
QARKER THAN
residence. Mrs. Ellen Wilson
AMBER
and Oscar Scholl attended the League permission to build a
concession stand on school
.__ _R•od-Ta.;y.lo•r_ _ _. . graveside services.
grounds at New Haven.
- Extended employment of
two custodians from 10 months
to 12 months. This included

11

;

MIDDLEPORT FIRE DEPARTMENT members are spending their spare time by helping
create a mobile refreshment center near Middleport Village Hall. The group has purchased a
used mobile home which is being completely revamped for dispensing food, soft drinks and
treats. The unit will be used in conjunction with the regular chicken barbecues staged by
firemen during the summer months. The exterior will be painted fire engine red. Firemen hope
bJ increase the balance in their building fund by use of the mobile unit which they bope to have
ready in time for the Big Bend Regatta Week End.

Drivers, Cooks, Employed
Non-teaching personnel of
Southern Local School District
were hired by Southern Local
school board in a special session
Thursday night.
Charles Norris, clerk, said
that Marilyn Powell who has
been absent for one year due to
injuries received in an
automobile accident will
resume her secretary duties
Tuesday.
Edwin Cozart was hired as
bus mechanic. Bus drivers
hired were Albert Hill, Jr., Ray
Proffitt, Marshall Adams,
Clarence Wickline, Delbert

Body Count

Two persons had minor injuries in a traffic mishap at 8:45
a. m. Thursday on Rt. 124, three
miles west of Rt. 7 where
vehicles driven by James L.
Mohler, 34, Rt. 1, Middleport,
and Carl Vanover, 28, Syracuse,
collided. The state highway
patrol said Mohler's auto also
struck a house owned by
Charles Carson, causing minor
damage.
Two passengers, Jerry Jacks,
26, Rutland, and Dennis
Searles, 58, Rutland, both
suffered lacerations and
abrasions. There was minor
damage to both cars. Nc
citation was· issued.
The first of two Gallia County
accidents occurred at 1:25 p. m.
on Rt. 160, two-tenths of a mile
south of Rt. 325.
Jackie Cheatham: 18, Vinton,
backed his car into another
operated by Mona Bartley, 46,
Vinton . There was minor
damage. No citation was issued.
The other mishap occurred at
8:45 p. m. on Rt. 141, one and
four-tenths miles west of
Gallipolis where Mark M.
Davis , 17, Gallipolis, apWahama and Sunnyside. Siders
cast a dissenting vote saying he
felt it needed further study.
- Placed Norman Eugene
Benson on bus route formerly
held by Raymond Suzpan. who
resigned. Siders disapproved of
this on the grounds that the
Transportation Director had not
been
consulted.
1
-Changed its next meeting
from June 8 to June 11 due to the
scheduled West Virginia
Education Association in-

r•tllli•II!II•••IIIIII..
for All Occasions·
We wire flowers nerywhere

992-2039

On Memorial Day..•

Pomeroy .Flower Shop
BuHtrnui 'Avo. Pomeroy
Mrs. Millard Van Meter

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v011Ugation.

We join in honoring those who gave their lives
in our country 's service

In observance of Memorial Day, we will not
transact business next Monday.

Memorial Day
Continuous S~rvlc:@. ~n
Fridays 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.

SWIM WEAR
AND
SPORTSWEAR

POMEROY

An Excellent
Selection

NATIONAL BANK

Of Famous

POMEROY

RUTIMD

Name Brands

Servw.g Meigs County
Since 1872
Member Federal Reserve System

•

Member Federal Deposll Insurance Corporation
All ACIOII'IIlfs Insured Up To S20,000.00 .

Smith, Earl Cross, Dan Smith,
Gordon Proffitt, Russell Cline,
Billy Hill, Charles Cornell, Jr.,
Bernice Levacy, a contract
driver.
Hired as cooks were Eleanor
Wingett, Anna Grace Oiler,
Dorothy Glenn, Mary Virginia
Easterday, Josephine Smith,
Anna Obitz, Helen Simpson,
Gera!dine Cleland, Laura
Circle, Cora Birch, and Evelyn
Moore. Substitute cooks are
Jane Ashley, Helen Diddle and
Emma Salser.
Janitors hired were Gerald
Nease, Paul Cleland, Floyd

Two Have Minor Hurts

0

BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

a

by Cozy Cooke . and the
valedictory address by Harriett
Layne. Presentation of the class
will be made by principal Albert
R. Durose. The band will
present tWo selections. The
Rev. James )\loy of the New
Haven Lutheran Church will
give the invocation and
benediction.
Seniors are: Oorsel Adkins,

proaching an oncoming car,
swerved, lost control, ran off
the right Side of the road and
struck a guardraiL Damage
was minor and no charge was
filed.

Mrs. Pratt, 82

Died on Friday
Mrs. Neva Pratt, 82, North
Second Ave., Middleport, died
this morning at Veterans
Memorial HospitaL _
Mrs. Pratt was a member of
the Middleport Church of
Christ, a charter member of the
Philathea Society of that
church, and a member of the
Loyal Women's Class.
She was born at West
Lafayette, Ohio, the daughter .&gt;f
the late Sherman and Rose
Poland Reed . Besides her
parents, she was preceded in
death by her husband, Lee
Pratt; two sons, two brothers,
and a sister.
Surviving are a daughter,
Mrs. Walter (June) Roush,
Middleport, with whom she
made her home; a son, Ralph R.
Pratt, Middleport ; four sisters,
Mrs. Marie Postlewait, Middleport; Mrs. L. V. (Carrie)
Carr, Canton; Mrs. Lewis
(Jessie) Powell of Coshocton;
Mrs. Hazel Babcock, West
Lafayette; a brother, Lawrence
Reed, of Middleport; seven
grandchildren and 12 greatgrandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
at 1 p.m. Sunday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
with the Rev. Raullin Moyer
officiating. Burial will be in the
Riverview Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
any time after 10 a.m. Saturday.

FISHING REPORT
District four of the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources, Division of WUdlife,
in reporting fishing prospects
today said water at Forked Run
Lake in Meigs County is 66
degrees and giving sportsmen
bluegill on worms, crappies on
minnows and bass on small
spinners during the . evening
hours. A few trout and a few
bass are being taken on small
spinners below the spillway.

HEADS GUARDS
Michael Hargraves, son of
Mr. and Mrs. George Hargraves and a junior at Ohio
University, has been employed
as head lifeguard at Royal oak
Park which will open for
swimming Saturday. Other
lifeguarda are Melanie Hackett
·
I
&gt;
and Roger Kl!rr. Hours ot
swiinmlng will be from 10 a.m. '
to 8 p.m. each day.
I

Dl'ddle, Elsie Roush, Nellie
Connolly, Ruth Ann Hill and
Anna Nease. Mrs. Nease will
begin her duties at the beginning of the school year. Substitute janitors hired were
David Diddle and Everett
Connolly.
Substitute drivers hired were
Ear I Adams, Harold Circ1e,
Jesse Brinker, Warren Rose
and Lawrence Weddle. •
In other business the board
agreed to purchase a deep
freeze lor Syracuse elementary.
The board also voted to hold
an auction at the school garage
on June 4 at 6 p.m. where the
following items will he sold:
three busses (1958 Dodge, 1960
Dodge and 1958 GMC), four
electric stoves, white ; three
electric stoves, cast iron ; one
upright freezer, one floor
sweeper, one lawn mower, two
work benches, and a vacuum
rubber cable.
Attending were Ralph Sayre,
superintendent; Charles Pyles,
Clarence Lawrence, Dennie
Hill, David Nease and Gene
Yost, board members, and
Norris, clerk.

Bruce Alexander, Denver Arfls,

Bumgarner, Marsha Carpenter,

Sarah Carsey, Richard Carson,
Brenf Clark, June Clark, Larry

AUTO DAMAGED
Heavy property damage was
reported when a car struck a
deer on SR 7 south of Tuppers
Plains Thursday at 5:30 p.m.
The sheriff's department said
John A. Wyatt, 56, Pomeroy,
was traveling north when the
deer ran in front of his car. The
deer was not killed. There were
no injuries or arrest.
TWO HURT IN FAW
Mrs. Delores Aeiker, 1669
Lincoln Heights, was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital at
9 a.m. today by the Pomeroy ER squad suffering from a back
injury in a fall at home. At 7:05
p.m. Thursday, Edith Rice, 122
Butternut Ave., was taken to
VMH by the squad for head
injuries suffered also in a fall at
home.

&lt;;:ontinued

T.ohn L• Roml'ne

J•

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Dies on Friday
John L. Romine 74 Middleport Route 1, died today at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Surviving are his wife, Mary
Margaret McKee Romine; and
these children, Henry E.,
Columbus;
Edward
F.,
Waukegan, 01.; Mrs. Daniel
(Juanita) Hewlett, Columbus;
Mrs. Lester (Betty) Wise, and
Robert E. Romine, both of
Crystal Lake, Ill ., and 15
grandchildren.
He was preceded In death by
his parents, John M. and Mattie
Boice Romine; a son, a
daughter, and a sister.
Funeral services will be held
at 4 p.m. Sunday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
with the Rev. James Satterfield
officiating. Burial will be in
Miles Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home after 10
a.m. Saturday.

in the program:
Ernest Wood: Leave home to
681, down 681 to Route 33
Darwin, down old 33 past
Salisbury School, Karr's Run,
33 &amp; 7 to Pomeroy Elementary.
Approximately 45 minutes,
leave home 7:45, arrive Bedford
8, Salisbury Elementary 8:15,
Pomeroy Elementary 8:30.
Ralph Macomber - Leave
home 7:30, leave Harrisonville
Elementary 7:45, Route 7 bypass, lower end of Middleport
8:15, Tiny's 8:20, Pomeroy
•Elemen_tary 8:30. _
Marvm Wilson- Leave borne
7:30,leave Salem Center 7:40, 8
Rutland, 8:15 Pomeroy, 8:30
Pomeroy Elementary.
Veterans Memorial Hospllal
ADMITTED
Frank
Murray, Middleport; John
Cottrill, Lancaster; Charles
Ohlinger, Rutland; Edith Rlce,
Pomeroy; Florence Hinegar,
Hartford.
DISCHARGED - Marie
Mills, Ernestine Faber, Albert
Fields, Zellah Lawson, Rosie
Rayburn, Mary Meints, Alice
Coleman, Edith Durham,
Kenneth Luikart, Alpha
Russell.
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown
Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Friday was
58 degrees under sunny skies.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
END-OF-MONTH SALE
OPEN TONIGHT AND SATURDAY UNTIL 9 P.M.
SHOP AND SAVE IN AIR CONDITIONED
COMFORT DURING OUR BIG STOREWIDE
END OF THE MONTH SALE
WOMENS SWIMWEAR-ROBES-LOUNGEWEAR SLEEPWEARJEWELRY-SCARFS-HANDBAGS HOT PANTS-DRESSES-

POLYESTER IFABRICS-BEDSPREADS .{l~JILJS.BLA~KETSWORK- SHIRTWRE SLACJ(S-BATH SHOP-FURNITURE

FREE CUSTOMER PARKING ACROSS FROM .
SECOND ~T.REET
'

Elberfelds-Pomeroy

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Memorial
Services

Planned
Patriotic citizens of Gallia-Meigs
observe Memorial Day today and Monday
to remember the sacrifices men and
women have made for their country.
Following are scheduled events:
IN MEIGS
Pomeroy: Drew Webs~r Post 39,
American Legion. Sunday, meet at the
post home 12:30 p.m. preparatory to going
tD Hemlock Grove. Stop at the Rock
Springs Cemetery for a prayer and salute.
Monday, perade forming at 9 a.m. rear of
Pomeroy Junior High. Program at flag
pole on upper parking lot followil)g parade
with George Hargraves, Jr., spaaking.
Then to Beech Grove for short service,
then to Sacred Heart Cemetery. Following
dinner at post home, leave for Chester at
12:45 p.m. stopping at Rock gprings
Cemetery en route to Pomeroy.
Rutland American Legion Post 467 Post .members meet at hall at 9 a.m.
Sunday,preparatory to visiting some dozen
cemeteries in Westflrn Meigs County. First
will be Miles.
Middleport's Feeney-Bennett Post 128
- Sunday, 12:30 p.m. service at Ohio
Rlver; post office memorial, Riverview
and Middleport Hill; Burlingham at 2
p.m., Bradford and Gravel Hill, Middleport. Monday, members meet at post
home at 8:45a.m. arriving at Cheshire at
9: 15, then to Addison. All brief services.
Racine Post 602 - Letart Falls
Cemetery, 10 a.m. Racine Cemetery, 11
a.m. with C. William Heacock, past state
commander, speaking.
IN GALLIA
MeQlorial Day services afe scheduled
today at Rife Cemetery, Bulaville,
beginning at 10:30 a.m. Rev. Alden Carico
and Rev. Willlam Burke will be the guest
speakers.
At Vinton Memorial Park, Alex Blair
will be the principal speaker today. The
Vinton services are scheduled for 2 p.m.
Monday, two Memorial Day services are
scheduled at Gallipolis. The first will begin
at 9 a.m., in the Public Square. E. E.
Caldwell :will be the speaker.
At 10 a.m., services will be held in the
Pine Street Cemetery. Rev. Paul W.
Hawks will be the speaker.
Miles Trout will be the speaker at
Addison's Reynolds Cemetery Monilay.
Services there wlll start at 9:30 a.m.

better. Early-modern merchandizing
perhaps. Then it could 've been some
'shine contained a few honestto goodness ~piders and the web
decoration made 'em feel to home .)
Anyway, by energetically and
thoroughly scouring the alleys, dumps,
banks, and roadsides in his area, the
kid built a sizeable pocket of change. It
paid to know the habitual haunts of
litterbugs and whiskey-heads, and the
boy knew them better than Glade
Jones, Chief of Police.
Apropos, that week, 0 . 0 . Mcintyre
in his New York Day by Day colmnn
related Bert Lahr's tale of meeting a
weaving friend on 46th Street :
"Fellow/' he said, "you are drunk -

piffllcated." To which the guy muttered, "Well, If I'm not I'm out eight
dollars." The moonshine business
always boomed at holiday time.
The Gallipolis Tribune noted during
the week several Leglonaires had
received complete new regulation
uniforms through Moch's Clothing
Store for the impending ceremonies.
Also, It carried this large ad:
"THE FORD ROADSTER
(Continued on page 2)

Your Invited Guest
Reaching More
Than 11,000
Families

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

FOUR SECTIONS
SUNDAY, MAY 30, 1971

Pomeroy-Middleport

NO. 18

-

-of the Amerit;an Doughboy'
was unveiled in City 'Park

most whose contents were grossly
fictionalized heroic versions of World
War I conflict, the prospect of viewing a
cast bronze doughboy, poised in action,
would be very close to actually seeing
the real McCoy. Too, there'd be
refreshment stands, and. Buck Jones in
"The Avenger" at Wheeler's Gallipolis
Theater (with the filmed in A!Fica
picture "Trader Horn" coming in
Monday), and other incidental expense ; so a bit of cash was necessary.
Well, the boy knew how to acquire
that. Early on he set to Jicr-ounging,
starting along the high, weed'{(rown
banks of the Chillicothe Road levee.
Three items had priority : discarded
aubl tires, whiskey bottles, and scrap
metal. Mr. Catzen, the junkyard owner,
and the boy had a very solid business
relationship. Ten cents for tires and the
going price for various scrap, F.O.B.
Catzen's Alley below and parallel to
Court St. The whiskey bottles were sold
bJ local bootleggers: five cents for plain
half-pints, ~n cents for pints, and a
nickle more if they were fancy
spiderweb bottles. (Since the hootch all
came from the same keg, it was ever a
mystery why the spiderweb flasks sold

36 PAGES
. VOL VI

f

tmts

A little warmer Sunday with
highs from the mid 60s to the
mid 70s. Lows Sunday night in
the 40s. Mostly sunny Monday
and warmer in the ·southeast.
Highs Monday in the 70s.

-

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

PRirE

t:ENT~

--15 -

NEWST_lll l D-

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MEMORIAL TO FAMOUS MEN
Memorial Day is 103 years old this year and, as such,
one of the oldest of our nationally observed occasions.
Thanksgiving, as an annual observance, is only five years
older. Labor Day came along several years later and
Veteran&gt; Day, once Armistice Day, is, with its World War
I origin, a recent development in comparison.
1
For all its venerabillty and solemn significance, however, Memorial Day bas not always made so meaningful
an Impression on the national consciousness as other and
less-significant occasions. This, in the historical view,
may be understandable. Established as a reminder of the
tragic consequences of war, Memorial Day bas far more
often than not been observed in peace. For most Americans, those without close personal loss to give the day
special poignancy, it all too easily may become another
holiday, a respite from work and welcome break in the
routine.
That cannot be said this Memorial Day. The occasion
cannot be separated from the times and for six years now
-or more, depending upon how one chooses to dare the
beginning of involvement-the observance has been in
time of-war, a war that may be winding down but continues inexorably to claim young American lives. -

It is a war that from so-limited beginnings has gone or:
and on until today i! ranks as the longest major military
engagement in our history with the third greatest toll In
lives. No American can escape its impact. None can be
indifferent to the sacrifice it has exacted.
On this Memorial Day like no others, to give expression
to the meaning of that sacrifice to ·us and of our dedication to those we honor, we could do worse than turn back
more than 2,000 years to the Athenian Thucydldes, chronicler of another seemingly endless conflict, who recorded
the funeral oration of Pericles for the fallen of the
Peloponnesian War in words that speak movingly across
the centuries :
So they gave their bodies to the commonwealth and

received, each tor his own memory, praise that will
never die, and with it the grandest of all sepulchers,
not that in which their mortal bones are laid, but a
home Jn the minds of men . __ For the whole earth
is th.e sepulcher of famous men; and their story is
not graven only on stone over their native earth, but
lives on jar away, without visible symbol, woven into
the stuff of other men's lives . . .

Martin Heads Trustees
GALUPOLIS - The Holzer Hospital
Foundation board of trustees, the
governing body of the Holzer Medical
Center, adopted a new organizational
structure and elected officers Friday at
the medical center in Gallipolis. Harlan
Martin, prominent Gallla County
businessman, was elected chairman.
Following recommendations made by
Ernst and Ernst, an accounting and
management consulting firm, the , board
approved an expanded organizational
structure fashioned along modern corporate lines.
Other new officers elected for the
coming year were E. Neal Taylor, first\

vice-dlairman; Max W. Morrow, second
vice-ehairman; Miss Alma McCormick,
secretary, and Emerson E. Evans,
treasurer.
The board also created a new
operational organization built around the
corporate structure.
Medical Center Administrator John
W. Rafferty, was named executive vice
president, and three new operational vice
presidencies were created to work with
him. In the near future there will be a vice
president of professional services, of
general services, and of fiscal an'd administrative services named to assist the
executive vice president.

GAWPOLIS- A$12,250 damage suit
was filed in Galllll County Common Pleaa
Court Friday as a result Or a car-truck
accident May 29,1969atthe jUnction of Rt.
35 and Rt. 160.
Mary }lowell, Bidwell, is the plaintiff
in the action agalnat Dewey and MBrk
Floyd, Wellaton. Mra. Howell claims the ,,
accident was tile direct cause of
nepicence ol Mark Rloyd. She seeks the
dll"'a- lor injurle. llld eXJiell8es, In-

Up New Record
The 24-member board of trustees also
adopted changes in ita own organization
creating lhree year terms of office lor
themselves and permitting reelection .
In order to accomplish this, however,
they decided to draw lots for three, four
and fi ~e year terms so all 24 members
wouldn't be going off the board at the same
Ume. Eight members' names were drawn
for each three year category, one to expire
In 1974, one In 1975 and the other in 1976.
Three year members are: John
Stiffler, Harland Martin, Max W. Morrow,
Wllliam P. Cherrington, U. A. Cornet,
WarrenS. Earhart, E. E. Davis, aqd Miss
Alma McCormick.
Four year : E. Neal Taylor, Gary R.
(Continued on Page 3)

t.IUsiC WITH A BEAT - 'l'hele four lludenll ol lbe 81. Jahn CIIJioUc
Seminary at Steubenville - one of whom Is of Pomeroy - will present religious
music with a beat at the Sacred Heart Olurch durtng,Sunday's 10 a.m. maee: IntormaUy dressell the !our reheaned Friday night at the church. Fronl the left 'are
Donald Wehrung; 11011 of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Wehrung, Pomeroy; VIctor Clnson of .
near Canton; 'Paul Walker of McConnelllvllle, and David Shinn of Magnolia.
' Wehrungand Walllerhaveonly one more ,ear's tnlntng before lbey'are ordained.

DR. B. D. VanStavern, right, Ohio Slate University Extension Meat Specialist,
conducted Friday's carcasa evaluation on 10 Triple EEE Ranch research
Charolals·steers at the Evans Packing Co., in GalUpolls. Looking on is Larry Arthur, Galllpoll9.

Triple E Puts

, HARLAN MARTIN

$12,250 Asked in
Gallia Court Suit
.

FOR YOUR HOME, LAWN AND PATIO

40 years since the 'Spirit -

.

+

WEATHER REPORT

Classes Starl Monday, Jrme 7 ·
A summer school under Title
II for the Meigs Local School
District will begin Monday,
June 7 with Robert Morris,
director. Classes will be held in
the Pomeroy Elementary
School beginning at 8:45 a.m.
Following is a schedule of the
three buses which will be used

Sort o

By J.l!.. McKEAN
GALUPOLIS - The lad from
Brandstetter Heights was in a stare ·of
near frenzy all week - that last in May,
193L
He had it made, by the fifth grade:
the catfish were biting off hooks in
Chickamauga Creek, winter shoes had
been retired for sneakers or barefoot, a
daily swim was v~ tually mandatory,
and marble games were going on all
over town; the cl~ park, the small,
upper (State St.) levee, in "The Lane."
Grand plans were being fonned for
summer play ar~und Lucetta (Set)
Halley's barn by the "Barn Gang." A
ball, bat, and slingshot were his
standard walk..around gear along with
Spot, his collie dog of questionable
ancestry.
But, bigger things were in the
Immediate offing. The American
lA!glon Post was going to dedicate the
new "Spirit of the American Doughboy" monument on Saturday Memorial Day - and the lad bad his
)wn prepara lions to make : chiefly
,nonetary.
For an avid, young, imaginative
reader of that era's pulp magazines,

Susan Ball, Robert Barton,
Karen
Bissell,
Gary
Blackhurst, Irma Boothe, Allee
Brown, Kent Brown, Vicki
Bumgardner, Leland

Elton Clevenger, Cozelle Cooke,
Victoria Crow, Conley Dudley,
Jr., Robert Paiae Dve, Jr .. John
Elias, Larrv. Fields, Patrick
Fields, Floyd Finnicum, Kathy
Sue Foglesong, Jeffrey Fowler.
Jerri Gerlach, Jack Gibbs,
Connie Gilland, Rebecca
Gilmore, Howard Goodnlte,
Constance Haggerty, Joyce
Hall, Dwight Hanlon, Dennis
Harris, Carol Harrell. Sherrv
Hartley, Archetta Hayes,
Regena Hesson, Daryl HoffSAIGON (UP!) - South man. Kay Hoffman. Linda
Holbrook. Tlmofhy Howard,
Vietnamese infantrymen and Sharon Hussell, William James,
.tank crews with heavy U. S. air Alicia Jeffers, Carl Jeffers,
support killed 219 Communist Deborah Jones, Joel Jones,
. tod . th thi dda f Robert Keathley.
sold Iers ay m e r
YO
Richard Kent, Carl King,
bitter fighting around the town Debra King. Harriett Layne,
of Snoul in northeastern Faye McCoy, Virginia McDaniel, Cathy McDermitt,
Cambodia, military spokesmen Raymond McFarland, Sharon
in Saigon reported.
Miller, Eric Morris, Steve
.S_outh VI'etnamese
Morris, Lester Ohlinger, Bonnie
. 1 trspokesmen Ord,
d c
Sharon Pauley, Yvonna
sa~
ommums oops were Reltmire, Angela Rice, Leroy
•dnven out of Snoul Thursday Riffle, Jan Riley, Marshall
but had counter-attacked with Riley, Alfred Roush, Janice
.
. . Roush, Joyce Ann Roush, Joyce
mortars and mfantry to Withm Mae Roush, Nancy Roush,
500 yards of the town.
Randal Roush, David Russell.
The fighting cost the Army of i Marilyn Jeanette Russell
the Rpublic of south Vietnam Sheridan Russell, Ill, James
.
Ryan, Angela Sayre, Dwight
(ARVN) at least eight dead and Sayre II, Ralph Sayre, Jr., Roy
18 wounded, ARVN spokesmen Scarberry, David Singer, Cathy
said for a total of at least 12 Weave_r. Richard White 1_1.
•
.
V1clo"a Shrlmplln, Virginia
over the thr~ay period.
Shrimplin, Cecilia Smlfh,
Other military sources said Randon Smith,
Michael.
more than 30 South Vietnamese Smithson, Sherry Sole. Bernita
. .
Staats, Max Staats, Barbara
have been killed 10 three days of Stanley, Danny Taylor. Gary
the heaviest combat around Tedesco, Chester Young,
Snoul since the allied invasion Katheryn Young, Patsy Young,
of Cambodia 13 months ago
Ronald Zerkle, Allee Zuspan,
·
Constance Zuspan.

Today, it is precisely

Journal ...

Snoul Fight

. MEIGS THEATRE

'flOWERS

Calling the Roll

104 to Graduate

GALLIPOLIS - AU Girl Scouts,
•BroWllle&amp; through senlon, are Invited
to m(rcb In the perade ou Memorial
Day. Please meet at the Doughboy lD
the City Park at 8: t5 a.m. Pareuts are
asked to pick up their girls at the Pine
Street Cemetery following the parade.
Girls il\ould wear their uniforms Uthey
have one, otberwlse they may wear
street clothes.

GALLIPOLIS - Ten research
Charolaid on commercial feedlot rest for
140 days exc~ded the national record set
by Triple EEE Ranch in 1967 following
carcass evaluation activities Friday afternoon .
· Results revealed the steer carcass
weight gain per day of age steer at 2.105,
bettering Triple EEE's 1967 mark of 1.974.
Emerson E. Evans, following Friday
activities stated that the research fwes ·
compiled,make FCI Tartarin Jr., B-71 the
b!p progendy sire out of 200 bulls tested in
America (of all breeds) and added, "We
are pleased to have one-fourth interest
"lase on the No. 1 bull In America In
production of quality beef to ppgrade our
herd of Charolais cattle."
Friday's carcass evaluation was

Fann Prices Up
2 Pet. in May

performed by Dr. B. D. VanStavern, Otilo
State University, Extension Meat
Specialist.
The cattle produced more pounds per
day of age than any 10 animals that have
ever been. certified with Performance.
Registry International.
The animals thus qualified FCI
Tartarin Jr., B-71 as a 100 per cent certified meat sire. The 10 research steera
were all sired by FCI Tartarln Jr., B-71,
leased by the Triple EEE from Ralph W.
Hutchins, Raymondsvllle 1Te~as. This was
the first complete progendy evaluation on
steers.
Friday's carcass evaluation revealed
the 10 head of cattle averaged 1,229
pounds, gaining an average of 388 poundll
for an average daily gain of 2.77 pounda.
Steers averaged m days each, with a Uve
weight per day of age of 2.99. Cutablllty
averaged 54.28, rib eye per hundred
weight 2.28, fat thickness per hundred
weight .04, marbling was modest, wann
carcass weight per ~ay of age 1.943, wann.
carcass weight 799, quality was choice,
dressed 65 per cent and trimmed rellll
cuts per day of age 1.0549.
Triple EEE Ranch is owned by
Emerson E. Evans and Daniel E. Ev1111.
See Page 2 lor more pictures of evenll at
the Triple E.
-

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The U. S.
Agriculture Department has reported
rising prices for hogs and potatoes pushed
the national farm price average up 2 per
cent in the month which ended May 15. The
increase came after a slight decline in
prices, but yet left average priceo 3 per
HOLIDAY ON MONDAY
cent above what they were one year ago:
' . Lower pric•s for eggs and milk pertly - · The Ohlo Valley Publishing Co. stafb ,
offset increases for bogs alid other com- will observe the Memorial Day llollda7 Gil
Monday, May 31, there being no
modities.
The monthly farni report, said prices , publication of the Galllpoll9 Dally Trlbullt
and cost movements during that period, or The Daily Sentinel that day. Ret*
with prices rising faster !hll!'·cclsts, pushed P1!blicatlon will be resumed Tuflday, .._
(Continued on 'page 3) ,
I.

�3-The Sunday Times . Sentinel, Sunday, May 30, 1971

z_ The sunday TimeS . Sentinel, Sullday, May 30,1971

·

i

I

No~e
Hurt In

I

' a Sort of Journal: the Doughboy

,
(Coollnued frol!l Page 11
; Beauty of lin~ and collll' ~ Attractive
' Upholstery -55 to 60 n&gt;Ues per hour 1 Quick Acceleration - 20 Roller
: Bearings - Economy - Reliability : Long Ufe - $t30 to $630!"
,
Aclassified ad read: FOR SALE : $60, Chevrolet Coach, late 1926 model,
: mecbanically 0. K., Tony McHale.
; • Now, tbe Ford ad may've stretched
ooe claim a wee .bit. Henry Flll'd's .
: Modei·A came in any color desired, ao
: long ss it was blaCk. Tony didn't state
: bis Olevy's color.
:
The Ohio Valley livestoCk reported
: sales prices: Top Hogs, $6.00; Top
: Heifers, $6.00; Calves, $8.~; Fat COws,
: $t.25 • $5.25; ,Tbln Cows, $2.50 • ~.85.
; And, Halliday'sDept. Store advertised:
: "Attractive, all Silk Pongee Dresaes,
juet tbe froCk for street wear - $1.98,."
On '11tursday tbe Tribune ~ed
full description of the planned
Memorial Day program, and a feabjre
article m the·sculpture's significance,
The sculptor was E. M. Vlquesney,
~cer, Ind. 'l1te first sketches were
made in 1918, and tbe statue was con·
structed on tbe IICUiplllral principles
used in tbe Statue It Liberty, of Stan·
dard U. s. 32 oz. monumental bronze.
The finished work was endorsed by the
National Memorial Commission and a
host of A.E.F. veterans. Tribune
feature quote:
"The Spirit of the American
Doughboy. 'l1te upraised band holds
threatenly that trencll horror, a band
grenade; tbe free swinging left band
grips firmly and ready for action the
modern rifle and keen bayonet; tbe gas
mask represents lllose Insidious hidden
· gas attacks; the barbed-wire at the feet
. represents methods for hindering and
:' confua1ng attscks; the metal trench
· helmet, strapped firmly to the well
modelled American head, brings to
mind moat vividly tbe danger from the
air during times of war; not tbe finest
detaU has been omitted; note the
ground on which his bobnaUed shoes
tread - battle torn, sheD pitted; the
stumps of trees; no vegetstion - not a
blade of grass showing; long sleeved
·shirt; tOt of helmet."
By eight o'cloCk Salllrday morning

i

a

the parade was forming at city Hall, to
be led by the G.A.H.S. band, and the
boy was tbere too, skittering hither and
yon, alert as a chipmunk, to take it an
in.
Color, noise, dignity, organized
disorder. Majl!' H. E. HouCk was the
Parade M&amp;rsball. The retinue com·
prised veterana of the Grand Army of
the Republic, the Spanish-American
War, and the American Legion. The
!4ioo Auxiliary, Legion Heirs, Girl
and Boy Scouts, churches, fraternal
. orders, local and visiting dignitaries all were present to .make a sir.eable
gatberlng, indeed.
· It seemed baH the townspeople
were In the procession and the other
baH were apectators.
The line of march began at City
Hall, proceeded to Pine St. Cemetery,
where tbe principal speaker, Col. Ralph
D. Cole, delivered hla first address. A
bugle sounded, a prayer, some music,
and the Girl Scouts placed flags on the
aoldiers' graves.
But the top ceremony for the kid
waa the subsequent dedication in City
Park. The band played America, and
Rev. Geocge Sagen led the assemblage
in prayer, and Mrs. Huntington aang.
As this was going on, the boy squirmed,
crawled, and elbowed himself to a
position directly in front of that veUed
.statue.
Never mind the preliminaries get to the main event!
Soon enough, the Legion Auxiliary

ladies unveiled tbe scultpture.lt was all
the advance publicity bad promised,
and more. So reallatic, in fact, the lad
COUld vlrtuaDy smell the batDe-11111oke.
The aoldier loomed huge and fierce and
defiant, and tbe boy could faintly hear
the sheD-lire and abrapnel.
It is recl!'ded Lt. Alfred M. Barlow
spoke on hla recoDections of service
with ~ old Co. F, 'Ohio National
· Gtiard, which camped on this very spot
before moving to Alabama and thence
to France; that the National Antbem
was played, and Col. Cole made another
speech; Mrs. Lee Moore and Elaine
Lear participated, Mrs. James Oliver
presented the monument lor the
AuXlliary and Post Commander H. Poe

L21 Draw Fines

\~ '

I'!

·-·
;zn
i

~ounty

Co U rt

•'
~

Bradbury accepted for the !Algion, and
Rev. Wood Duff gave tbe benedicti011.
But the boy doesn't remember all
!bat. Just confusion. Not crowd confusion, but peraonal churning mental
disarray, wbUe staring intently up into
the features and equipage of the hypnotic doughboy sculpture.
WEU., IN EVERYONE'S LIFE
some things dweD in the mind forever.
The more from wider experience and
greater age. Some are niemorable,
some .traumatic -who lor sure can teO
the differenee. Since th8t eventful day
the boy~s COII!IlrY bas engaged in three
major wars, twoinwhlchheserved, the
third hopeluDy closing shop aoon.
He has toured the significant
American World War I battlegrounds of
France: BeDeau Wood, the Argonne,
Chateau-Thierry, the Somme, a11d
stood atop the ruins of Fort DQuaumont
at Verdun and gazed across a land·
acape in which one mlllion men died
within bta eyes' view- where sttn the
trees are mere shrubs, genticaDy
stunted by the Indescribable violent
conruct of 1914--1918, and into which,
yet, only trained explosive experts are
permitted to venture. For in the
awesome quiet of night or early mom,
Datening carefully, one can hear ran·
dom explosions triggered by birds,
hares, rats, ... or ghosts.
World War I was, ostensibly, the
war to end all wats.It dldn't.lt is quite
clear to knowledgeable students of such
matters that lor three generations,
either grave inexcusable miscaJ.
culations were made in high places,
or a raft of people were conned out of
their wits.
. .

GAWPOUS - No one was
injured 'or cited in two minor
traffic accidents investigated
Friday in Gallia County by the
Gallipolis Post State Highway
Patrol. The first occurred at 7
p.m. on Ridge Rd., ~.9 miles
west of Rt. 790 where Michael
D. Trout,l7, Rt. I, Northup, lost
control of his car on a sharp
curve, ran off the right side of
tbe highway and struck a fence.
There was slight damage to his
car.
,
A second mishap occurred at
10:15 p.m. at the junction of
Bulaville-Porter· and Johnson
Ridge Roads. Officers said
Melody J. Wiseman, 17,
Gallipolis, failed to negotiate a
sharp curve, lost control of her
car and struck a fence. There
was minor damage to her auto.
AMBULANCE DE LUXE
CROWLAND, England (UP!)
When Doreen Grief
swallowed a fish bone at supper
Friday, her husband, a railway
gatekeeper, walked outside and
stopped a train, which took her
to a· hospital at Spalding, seven
miles away.

I

GALLIPOLIS - Jay L.
Hanna, assistant vice-president
of public relations for the Ohio
Bell Telephone Company, will
deliver the address at Gallia
Academy High School's combined baccalaureate and
commencement ceremony to be
held at 2:30p.m. Sunday, June
6.
James N. M. Davis, principal,
said 193 seniors are to be
honored. The event will be

2 Accidents Were Minor
GALUPOUS -Two minor
traffic accidents were in·
vestigated here Friday by city
police officers. The ftrst OC·
curred at 1:22 p.m. at the intersection of Third Ave. and
Court St. where an auto driven
by Billy W. Shaffer, 32,
GallipoDa, struck a van owned
by the Cbarleaton Hardware
Co., Cblrleston. W. Va.

There was slight damage to
both vehicles. No one was in·
jured or cited.
A backing accident occurred
on Vine St. on ·the Johnson's
Super Market parking lot. The
police said Uoyd R. Finley, 54,
Rt. 2, Gallipolis, backed his car
into a parked auto driven by
Jeffery Blevins, 18, Gallipolis.

Mazda's Innards
Go
Roood, not up

Goventment Blistered

DRIVE·IH

,...,:a=

~.l_~~~~K~I~I~~--_L

(Continued from

Pa~e

11

Short, Emerson E. Evans, Dr. Charles E.
Holzer, Jr., Walter. Windaor, Warren F.
Sheets, James A. Stiffler and Dr. Th.omas ·
W. Morgan. These terms will expire in ·
1975.
Five year: Stanley L. Evans, J.,Sber·
man Porter; Marlin G, Kerns, Theodore
Reed, Jr., Dr. Oscar W. Clarke, Robert H.
Bosworth, Dr. Homer B. Thomas and E.
Bartow Jones. These terms will expire in
1976.
The Holzer Hospital Board of Trustees
also named eight members as an
executive committee, John F. Stiffler, E.
Neal Taylor, Stanley I. Evans, Harlan
Martin, Gary R. Short, J. Sherman Porter,
Max W. Morrow, and Emerson E. Evans.
Following tbe meeting, the new board
chairman, Harland Martin, said, in an

Mrs. Judy Riggs
appear in the book.
Featured in the "Blue Book
Section" of the Who's Who,
which is lor top Corps and
Teams across the nation, are
three groups directed by Mrs.
Riggs. They are, The Riggs
Royal Kad-ettes Baton Col")lll,
which is made up of girls from
Meigs and Athens Counties, and
the Eastern High Majorette
Dance-Twirl team, composed of
Debbie Jeffers, Jan Holter,

Vicki Spencer, Cheryl Kuhn and
Jennifer Bailey: Also pictured
in the outstanding team portion
of the boo~ is the Federal
Hocking Lancer Marjoette
Line. Both teams have won
many top honors in Baton
contests.
This is the first time a Baton
Corps or team has ever been
selected for the Who's Who
Book in the Southeastern Ohio
area.

inaugural statement:
"I feel honored to be a part of this
organization, and I want to give credit to
the board members for their support in
bringing about Ibis drastic change in
organizational thinking. I (eel that with
our new structure, we will be better able to
work with the medical group and to function more effectively in the community."
In other business, the board adopted a
resolution in memoriam to the late Henry
E. Cherrington, who served as president of
tbe board of trustees since its formation in
1929 until his death earlier this month,
The board also accepted with regret
the resignation of Mrs. Leo (Julia ) Bean
from the board and elected her to emeritus
status.
Concerning the move to the new

conducted in the Paul Lyne
Field House at Rio Grande
College.
"Those who · expect the nor·
mal commencement speaker
are in for a surprise," ac·
cording to Richard RoderiCk,
commercial manager for Ohio
Bell. "Jay Hanna has
established a reputation in both
his business and community
activities as an aggressive
innovator and a 'doer.' His

Market

(Continued from Pal(e I)
prices to 70 per cent of the traditional "fair
earning power" parity leveL This com·
pared with a parity ratio of 69 per cent last
morith and 72 per cent a year' ago.
Average mid-May prices for 80me
leading commodities compared with last
month included:
Hogs $17 per hundredweight, $16; beef
catUe $29.40 per hundredweight, $29.10;
corn $1.38 per bushel, $1.41; wheat $1.43
per bushel, $1.40; soybeans $2.85 per
bushel, $2.80; eggs 29.5cents per dozen 31.9
cent; milk (all grades) $5.60 per hun·
dredweight $5.71.

McDonnell-Douglas was also ap·
proved .to convert the medical center
business office to a computer system. This
will be a shared computer system
operated by McDonnell-Douglas, which
now has 57 hospitals totaling more than
11,000 beds connected to it.
Memory banks will be located in
Peoria, Ill., with on-site terminals
strategically located in the Holzer Medical
Center business office. Company officials
said installation of the system would lake
about four months.

from the center."
"Such is not the case at all," he said.

"We feel the addition of a computer to the
business office will give us more time
better to serve and take more personal
interest in the patient here at the medical
center."
Concerning the new organizational
structure, he said:
"This reorganization is a result of
several months study by the board, and
executive committee, all oriented toward
giving better patient care. It's our belief
that this type organization will allow us to
grow, without abandoning our personal

WATER TESTS DUE
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport water
tesl.s will be made about 7:30 a.m. on
Tuesday, the water department an nounced.
The tesl.s are required by the state.
Residents of Locust, Ash and Park Sts.,
and on Gravel Hili in general ai'e warned
that water will be muddy following the
testing. However, the water should clear
by 9 a.m. Tuesday, it is reported.

interest in our patients."

DAY

Gravity
A man. who can jump six
feet high on the earth could
JUmp 36 feet high on the
?:::" ~or 16 feet big b on
on ~p~t~~-only 2\2 feet high

•

J .

I'

'Tonight thru
Wednesday

••
'

Look whq's gone
Get set N·ow for o woiidtr·
ful summer of boating! We

make economical loons on all
tyPes Of boats, ~otors and
trailers.. You'll be aRoat in no

Mly Jt.Sl-J-1 ·
A BOY NAMED

.CH~~~:')WN
le Brown •nd llle

Gang.
Plus

,. "G"

LATITUDE ZER~
.ITldlllicolor)
t..R-o '
JOMpll Calltn

~-

mcuine financing with us!

"'WW MULES FOR
SISI'U $AU'

.

Clint Eastwood
'

In

.aJOUIIS IWfF

J

statements are noted for being
graphic, current, brief and
provocative.''
The title lor Hanna's address
is "Love Is a Growing Thing"
according to Roderick.
Hanna began bta telephone
career as a service represen·
tative in Youngstown in 1948. A
year later, he was promoted to
outside representative.
In 1950, be became a business
office supervisor in Canton,
where he also served as commercial manager, In 1955 he
moved to Cleveland when be
was named assistant com·
mercia! supervisor on the
company's headquarters stall.
Later in the same year,
Hanna went to New York City
where he served as a business
RICHARD BODAMER
office training engineer lor the
American . Telephone and
Telegraph Company. In 1960, he
returned to Ohio Bell as divisiop
commercial manager and alao
served as general sales
manager in the Marketing
Department before being
COLUMBUS- Dr. David C. ''The program will provide a named the general traffic
Sweet, Director of the Ohio public utilities and services manager for Ohio Bell in 1963.
Department of Development, base in 28 rural aoutheast Ohio Hanna was named to his
today announced the ap· counties of a magnitude that present position in 1968.
Hanna 's community ac·
pointment of Richard J , will a!tract industry to the
tivities
reflect his continuing
Bodamer as Federal-State area," said Bodamer.
Liaison, His responsibilities
Transferred to the Depart· interest in young people, He
include coordinating federaDy ment of Development from the serves on the Board of Trustees
funded development programs Urban Affairs Department, the . of his Alma Mater. Mt. Union
in the state and assisting Ohio Appalachian Regional Com·· College; is a member of the
industry obtain maximum mission Program is an essential Orange School Board; is on the
participation in federal grant element in the Department's executive board of the Boy
programs.
plan for selective growth and Scouis of America; serves as a
· Working closely with Mark development evenly spread division chairman of tbe Junior
Achievement Finance Com·
Shields, director of the state's over all regions of the state.
Washington office and assistant
Bodamer, 29, comes to the mittee and is a member of the
to Governor Gilligan for federal Departmentfrom the position of Ohio Foundation of Independent
relations, Bodamer will make Assistant Director of Urban· Colleges.
He serves on the Board of the
Ohio's development programs, Federal Affairs for Tennessee
needs and views known to the Governor Buford , Ellington. Garfield Memorial Methodist
federal government and alert From 1966 to 1968, be was Church. Hanna currently is the
the stale to relevant federal planning coordinator to South chairman of the "Gateway
legislative and administrative Carolina Governor Robert Project" for the Greater
developments.
McNair's Appalachian Ad· Cleveland Growth Association;
Governor Gilligan has ap- visory Committee. He has also is a member of the Ohio and
pointed Bodamer and . Shields served as assistant director of United States Chamber of
Ohio State-Federal Relations the Tennessee State Planning CommerCe; is active in the
Coordinators to the National Commission and planning Greater Cleveland United
Governors' Conference in commission member for the Appeal ,and ·has just been
elected President of tbe Sales
Washington. The conference city of Cincinnati.
seJts to lurtber the interest of i!odamer holds a B.S. in and Marketing Executives Club
the states in the national arena. bUsiness administration from' of Cleveland.
He finds time to test his golf
Bodamer alao directs the Bowling Green State University
Appalachian Regional Com· .and a master In conununlty' game at the Shaker Heights
mission Program within the pianning from the University of Country Club, where he also
serves as a director.
Department of Developnent. Cincinnati.

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T~rottle

JAY IlANNA

THREE RACERS NAMED
Gold Pruducers
INDIANAPOUS (llPII-WU- The four major countries
her Shaw, Jimmy Clark and that produce over 85 per cent
A.J. Foyt were named Thurs· of the world's gold are South
day as the first three members Africa, U.S.S.R., .Canada and
· of the Auto Bacing · Hall i&gt;f the United States, according
Fame aponsored by the Amfll'i· . to Encyclopaedia Britannica.
can Auto Racina
--.. Writers and
Broadcasters Association.
The ,three were &amp;elected by a
vote of 171 members of the

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APPROXIMATELY 40 Ohio State University judging
team slu!lents of 'Dr. George R. WUson's Animal Science
Department took part in Tuesday's live evaluation of 10
Cbarolaia research steers off J4(klay feed test at the Triple
EEE Ranch. The steers were enrOlled on Jan. 5 in Per.
fOt-mance Registry International feed test and carcass
evalualion research.
·-

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A.M. TO

BOTH STORES

DEPENDABLE BRIGGS &amp;. STRATTON ENGINE

AMONG THOSE TAKING part In Friday's carcass evaluation of 10 Triple EEE Ranch
research Charolais steers were, left to right, Professor W. W. Wha~, Extension Specialist,
Animal Science, Ohio State University; Dr. George R. Johnson, chairman, Animal Science
Department, OSU; Dr. Roy M. Kollman, Dean, College of Agriculture and Home Economics,
OSU; Emerson E. Evans, Triple EEE Ranch and Bill Durley, Director of Performance and
Research, American-International Charolaia, Houaton, Tezas.

I"'

The heart of an Accutron
watch is a tiny, tuning fork
that splits a seco nd into
360 equal intervals.
Accutron time is so nearly
perfect that Bulova guar·
antees monthly accuracy to
within 60 seconds. *

•
I

MEMORIAL

'·~

association from a list of 30
candidates. Election to the Hali
of Fame reqll\red votes of at
least 70 per cent of those
casting ballots.

®

GALLIPOLIS - A 1962 Chevrolet
reported stolen early Saturday morning
was recovered, wreeked and abandoned, a
short time later on Bob McCorwlck Rd .
Jack Price, Bidwell, called the Gallia
County sheriff's department at 3:55 a.m.
Saturday reporting his car had been taken
from the parking lot at the Skyline Lanes
Bowling Alley. The car was located at 4:30
a.m. overturned in a ditch on Bob Me·
Cormick Rd., eight tenths of a mile west of
Gallipolis.

Medical Center Administrator and the
newly elected executive vice president,
John W. Rafferty, was concerned that
some people might conclude a computer
system would "remove the personal touch

•

Northweat since last year.
Callfonlls Is Target
Mazda General Manager C.
R. "Dick" Brown bopea to be
selllhg Z,OOO Mazda's a month in
California by the end of thf
year, tsking a share of about
500,000 units that Japanese
carmakers project lor 197!.
( Mazda has setup 30dealers in
CaUfornia, 22 of them in the
aouthern baH of the state.
Brown ' says tblit the dealers,
although tbeymay handle other
makes, will have separate
Ma~da service and sales
lacilitie
. s.
....
au e Mazda arrival bas
crea
· ted Interest among car
buffs: The rotary engine bas
been around for a long time but
never in a productloo car in tbe
u 'ted
ru States.

Graduation,
Give
Accutron
by Bulova

Stolen Car Wrecked

~-

Jay Hanna to Address
193 GAHS Graduates

This weeK, the boy, now in bta
October years, sat lor a time near the
. statue in deep study - recalling bta
I many friends, compatriots, and
enemies who died so gallantly,
foolishly, horribly, stupidly - comparing the exbuberant, patriotic fervl!'
of that long ago Depression-year day
against the current national turbulence, disunity, and "affluent
society:" He reflected ... questioned ...
pondered ... and had no answers.
Today, it is precisely 40 years since
the 'Spirit of the American Doughboy'
was unveiled.

POMEROY - Twenty-one GallipoDa, Rt. I, $143 and coats,
~ defendants were fined and 11 $83 suspended, overload;
I, otbers forfeited bonds in Meigs Gel!'ge 0. DaVis, Jackson, $57
I County Court Friday. Fined by and costa, $27 suspended,
~ Judge Frank W. Porter were : overload; James Vittitoe, Jr.,
~ It,
~ Shelby Sanders, Gallipolis, RadclHfe, Rt. I, $73 and costs,
' I"
~ $150 and costs, 30 days con. $43 suspended, overload;
~--~ linemen t, $itO suspended, Thomas Hughes, Jackson; Rt.3,
: confinement suspended, six $25 and costs, $10 auspended,
' months probation, threatening overload; Jack E. Hall,
assault; Flossie M. Muson, Cheshire, Rt. 1, $58 and costa,
Reedsville, Rt. 1, and Michael $28 suspended, o.verload; Sally
J.Hargraves,Pomeroy,$10and Ann Yeager, Mason, $10
costs each, speeding; Robert · and c04ts, stop sign violation;
. Uno Marchi, GallipoDa, $15 and Kenneth Hayes, Pomeroy, Rt. 2,
costs, speeding; Lee Hull, $10 and costs, speeding; Dale
Mansfield, $10 and costa, Eatep, Harrisonville, costs only,
crossing fresh paint; Lawrence disturbing the peace; Coy ~itz,
C. Field&amp;, Pomeroy, $10 and Ponreroy, costs only, dumping
costa, failure to display rubbish.
registration; WOmer w. Black,
Forfeiting bonds were
Racine, Rt. I, $5 and costa, Charles B. Buckley, Minersdefective brakes, $150 and ville, Sandra A. Keney,
costs, three days confinement, Pomeroy; Kenneth E. Taylor,
license suspended for siz Jacltaon; Robert .L. Levering,
months, restricted driving Logan; James N. Schmidt,
privileges, driving wbUe in· Athens, and Gary A. Jobnaon,
toxicated; Erneat R. Lamberi, The Plains, $27.50 each posted,
RuUand, Rt. 1, $10 and coata, speeding; Lewis Smith,
expired operator's license; Pomeroy, RD, $50, assault and
'
Gary Lee Slmpson Pomeroy battery; Joseph A. Sauns,
Rt. 3, and Joseph A: Sismondo: Yorksville and Ralph C.
Middleport, $10 and costa each, Daniels, Parkersburg, $27.50 • ·
no vaUd operator's license; each, passing at Intersection;
David Napper, Rutland, and Gaylord P. Flowers, WUson.
Stephen Walton, Wellston, $25 berg, W. Va., $57.50, passing at LOS ANGELES (UPI)- The conventional engines. The
and costs each, $15 suspended, intersection; Judy J. Cavote, unconventional rotary engine, ezbaust sound, nearly inaudible
overload; Uoyd Gindlesberger, Nelsonville, $52.50, speeding. in wbich the Innards go around at idle: rises during bard acand around rather tban up and cele~at1on to~ cross between a
down, · was · iiltroduced In sewmg machine aud an out.
Caillornla recenUy in a new board motor.
.
Japaiteae imported car caDed At 85 mUes an hour, tbere ts
the Mazda.
enoduough power in reserve to
'
pr
ce s surge_forward wb
. en
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -.A nun's rights were "violated
as a 'l1te car i6.elf Is con~entional
·
, use in styling,
but its powerplant is the accelerator ts punched. In
I e deraI Appea I s C9urt has result of th e governments
e•~•ftft elae
of meg 1 . ta
N th som -..,
.
fact, the Mazda engine seems
severe1Y rebuked the govern·
a wtre pa. ow e , In the normal "re· appropriate as a perf
men! lor using "illegal governmenl8eeks to profltfrom clprocating" engine the up
o~ce
wiretap,s" against a Catholic its unconstitutional conduct bY. and down p'-ton motio'n must be sports car because of 1~s
"'
ftelibillty light """•ht and m
nun Cited for contempt for propounding questions.based on mechanically ' translated the\ !a;ge ;e~~ion, '120
refusing to testify ~M;fore a Improperly seized information. through connecting rOds and hocSepower.
grand jury mvestigatlng an The very existence of the crankshaft to produce the Mazda is a subsidiary of Toyo
alleged kidnap-bomb plot.
government will~ lmperUed if rotary motion required to drive Kogo , Ltd. of Hiroshima,
The U. S. 3rd Cirtult Court of it faDs to oblerve the wiretip the wheels.
· Japan's No.3 automaker Which
Appeals, after a full beai'lng, lawsc.rupuloUSly," tile majority The Mazda engine does away ae11s cars In more than 10
Friday dismissed a contempt opinion said.
witll aft lhiBBiid, in~ bargalh, coUntries, It has been seDlng In
etiiUon against Sister Joguea "The government," it weht is lighter in weight and has Florida and the Pacific
Epn, 52, white-hatred ·foniler on, "teaches the whole people about one third the engine
collele president, and bllstered by its example, and if lhe par•-....
lbe fedel al government's ac· government becomes a law
u.. Two Rolen
in l1er case. ·
.
breaker it breeds contempt lor The Ma'zda rotary has neitber
~·!~SON
...., Epn was named • co- the law." ·
pistons IIGI' cyllnderi •in tbe
_.fljl•l'llklr ill a case in wbldl
UIUal IIIIIM. Instead, it baa' i
tlllll .._. enUwar ac:tlvllle
rou8hJy oval""'aped d!ambel:
TonttM-Mon.-T-.
_.. Indicted by a r.dal'l
•. · .
inllde wlllcb a ~ ro111t . Mof lt-JI-J-1
• llln'lsburg, Pl.,
llEroRNED HOME
revolves, Tbl1 "IJtree.llded D.ublt Feelu;. Protram
THE CHEYENNE
to ldck P POMEROY - Aar11D Kellari, piltoD" II tepl tia1tlttC by !lie
SOCIAL CLUB
lltiii'J wbo . has beeit called 1o em- aplclllon Ill the IIMI JIHir
James Stewart
.--Ill
the Gavlil Plant al mixture compreued bt tbe
Henry Fonda
· ":~ fl
IIIIIMta.ltllloDIIne ~fwiDiCib(tblflallldeol •
CColorl
1Jc1
II
IWAJ IG
Ill M 'Te 11M! lbe caned
GP
01111. - Willi. 'ftJI M w
-1'111•

u-

POMEROY - The 1971
"Who's Who Book" in Baton
Twirling has just been released,
and featured in the book again
for the 16th consecutive year is
Mrs. Judy Riggs, former
contest champion and well
known Baton Teacher and
, Judge here.
Also featured in the book are
two of Judy's top students, Miss
Diana Guthrie and Karen
Strausbaugh. The selections 'are
made by the National Baton
Twirling Association and are
based on the twirling honors
won by each. They are the first
students from tbe area to ever
be selected for the book.
Diana is the 13-year-oid
daugllter of Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Guthrie of Rt. 3
Coolville. She is the "Miss TriState Majorette Princess" and
during her two years in Baton
Competition has chalked up a
total oi!IO trophies. She is the
only student to ever surpass the
total of 101 trophies won by her
teacher, Mrs. Riggs. This is her
second year to be selected for
the Who's Who.
Karen Strausbaugh is the 9
year old daughter of Mr . and
Mrs. Kenneth L. Strausbaugh of
Rt. 5, Athens, and she has won a
total of 65 trophies in competition. This is her first time to

Accident

The Doughboy in C'r.ty Park, Dedicated 40 Years ago

Trustee Board

She's in
Book for .
16th Year

'

medical center now under construction ,
the board approved em]iloyment..of McDonnell-Douglas Automation Co. of St.
Louis, Mo., as consultants to plan and
supervise the moving operations to the
new location on Rt. 35.

~ BTRUCroJ

47~

Be sure to qet pltnty now .
You ean save!

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OPEN. MONDAY; 11 AM TO 4 PM

.,

�3-The Sunday Times . Sentinel, Sunday, May 30, 1971

z_ The sunday TimeS . Sentinel, Sullday, May 30,1971

·

i

I

No~e
Hurt In

I

' a Sort of Journal: the Doughboy

,
(Coollnued frol!l Page 11
; Beauty of lin~ and collll' ~ Attractive
' Upholstery -55 to 60 n&gt;Ues per hour 1 Quick Acceleration - 20 Roller
: Bearings - Economy - Reliability : Long Ufe - $t30 to $630!"
,
Aclassified ad read: FOR SALE : $60, Chevrolet Coach, late 1926 model,
: mecbanically 0. K., Tony McHale.
; • Now, tbe Ford ad may've stretched
ooe claim a wee .bit. Henry Flll'd's .
: Modei·A came in any color desired, ao
: long ss it was blaCk. Tony didn't state
: bis Olevy's color.
:
The Ohio Valley livestoCk reported
: sales prices: Top Hogs, $6.00; Top
: Heifers, $6.00; Calves, $8.~; Fat COws,
: $t.25 • $5.25; ,Tbln Cows, $2.50 • ~.85.
; And, Halliday'sDept. Store advertised:
: "Attractive, all Silk Pongee Dresaes,
juet tbe froCk for street wear - $1.98,."
On '11tursday tbe Tribune ~ed
full description of the planned
Memorial Day program, and a feabjre
article m the·sculpture's significance,
The sculptor was E. M. Vlquesney,
~cer, Ind. 'l1te first sketches were
made in 1918, and tbe statue was con·
structed on tbe IICUiplllral principles
used in tbe Statue It Liberty, of Stan·
dard U. s. 32 oz. monumental bronze.
The finished work was endorsed by the
National Memorial Commission and a
host of A.E.F. veterans. Tribune
feature quote:
"The Spirit of the American
Doughboy. 'l1te upraised band holds
threatenly that trencll horror, a band
grenade; tbe free swinging left band
grips firmly and ready for action the
modern rifle and keen bayonet; tbe gas
mask represents lllose Insidious hidden
· gas attacks; the barbed-wire at the feet
. represents methods for hindering and
:' confua1ng attscks; the metal trench
· helmet, strapped firmly to the well
modelled American head, brings to
mind moat vividly tbe danger from the
air during times of war; not tbe finest
detaU has been omitted; note the
ground on which his bobnaUed shoes
tread - battle torn, sheD pitted; the
stumps of trees; no vegetstion - not a
blade of grass showing; long sleeved
·shirt; tOt of helmet."
By eight o'cloCk Salllrday morning

i

a

the parade was forming at city Hall, to
be led by the G.A.H.S. band, and the
boy was tbere too, skittering hither and
yon, alert as a chipmunk, to take it an
in.
Color, noise, dignity, organized
disorder. Majl!' H. E. HouCk was the
Parade M&amp;rsball. The retinue com·
prised veterana of the Grand Army of
the Republic, the Spanish-American
War, and the American Legion. The
!4ioo Auxiliary, Legion Heirs, Girl
and Boy Scouts, churches, fraternal
. orders, local and visiting dignitaries all were present to .make a sir.eable
gatberlng, indeed.
· It seemed baH the townspeople
were In the procession and the other
baH were apectators.
The line of march began at City
Hall, proceeded to Pine St. Cemetery,
where tbe principal speaker, Col. Ralph
D. Cole, delivered hla first address. A
bugle sounded, a prayer, some music,
and the Girl Scouts placed flags on the
aoldiers' graves.
But the top ceremony for the kid
waa the subsequent dedication in City
Park. The band played America, and
Rev. Geocge Sagen led the assemblage
in prayer, and Mrs. Huntington aang.
As this was going on, the boy squirmed,
crawled, and elbowed himself to a
position directly in front of that veUed
.statue.
Never mind the preliminaries get to the main event!
Soon enough, the Legion Auxiliary

ladies unveiled tbe scultpture.lt was all
the advance publicity bad promised,
and more. So reallatic, in fact, the lad
COUld vlrtuaDy smell the batDe-11111oke.
The aoldier loomed huge and fierce and
defiant, and tbe boy could faintly hear
the sheD-lire and abrapnel.
It is recl!'ded Lt. Alfred M. Barlow
spoke on hla recoDections of service
with ~ old Co. F, 'Ohio National
· Gtiard, which camped on this very spot
before moving to Alabama and thence
to France; that the National Antbem
was played, and Col. Cole made another
speech; Mrs. Lee Moore and Elaine
Lear participated, Mrs. James Oliver
presented the monument lor the
AuXlliary and Post Commander H. Poe

L21 Draw Fines

\~ '

I'!

·-·
;zn
i

~ounty

Co U rt

•'
~

Bradbury accepted for the !Algion, and
Rev. Wood Duff gave tbe benedicti011.
But the boy doesn't remember all
!bat. Just confusion. Not crowd confusion, but peraonal churning mental
disarray, wbUe staring intently up into
the features and equipage of the hypnotic doughboy sculpture.
WEU., IN EVERYONE'S LIFE
some things dweD in the mind forever.
The more from wider experience and
greater age. Some are niemorable,
some .traumatic -who lor sure can teO
the differenee. Since th8t eventful day
the boy~s COII!IlrY bas engaged in three
major wars, twoinwhlchheserved, the
third hopeluDy closing shop aoon.
He has toured the significant
American World War I battlegrounds of
France: BeDeau Wood, the Argonne,
Chateau-Thierry, the Somme, a11d
stood atop the ruins of Fort DQuaumont
at Verdun and gazed across a land·
acape in which one mlllion men died
within bta eyes' view- where sttn the
trees are mere shrubs, genticaDy
stunted by the Indescribable violent
conruct of 1914--1918, and into which,
yet, only trained explosive experts are
permitted to venture. For in the
awesome quiet of night or early mom,
Datening carefully, one can hear ran·
dom explosions triggered by birds,
hares, rats, ... or ghosts.
World War I was, ostensibly, the
war to end all wats.It dldn't.lt is quite
clear to knowledgeable students of such
matters that lor three generations,
either grave inexcusable miscaJ.
culations were made in high places,
or a raft of people were conned out of
their wits.
. .

GAWPOUS - No one was
injured 'or cited in two minor
traffic accidents investigated
Friday in Gallia County by the
Gallipolis Post State Highway
Patrol. The first occurred at 7
p.m. on Ridge Rd., ~.9 miles
west of Rt. 790 where Michael
D. Trout,l7, Rt. I, Northup, lost
control of his car on a sharp
curve, ran off the right side of
tbe highway and struck a fence.
There was slight damage to his
car.
,
A second mishap occurred at
10:15 p.m. at the junction of
Bulaville-Porter· and Johnson
Ridge Roads. Officers said
Melody J. Wiseman, 17,
Gallipolis, failed to negotiate a
sharp curve, lost control of her
car and struck a fence. There
was minor damage to her auto.
AMBULANCE DE LUXE
CROWLAND, England (UP!)
When Doreen Grief
swallowed a fish bone at supper
Friday, her husband, a railway
gatekeeper, walked outside and
stopped a train, which took her
to a· hospital at Spalding, seven
miles away.

I

GALLIPOLIS - Jay L.
Hanna, assistant vice-president
of public relations for the Ohio
Bell Telephone Company, will
deliver the address at Gallia
Academy High School's combined baccalaureate and
commencement ceremony to be
held at 2:30p.m. Sunday, June
6.
James N. M. Davis, principal,
said 193 seniors are to be
honored. The event will be

2 Accidents Were Minor
GALUPOUS -Two minor
traffic accidents were in·
vestigated here Friday by city
police officers. The ftrst OC·
curred at 1:22 p.m. at the intersection of Third Ave. and
Court St. where an auto driven
by Billy W. Shaffer, 32,
GallipoDa, struck a van owned
by the Cbarleaton Hardware
Co., Cblrleston. W. Va.

There was slight damage to
both vehicles. No one was in·
jured or cited.
A backing accident occurred
on Vine St. on ·the Johnson's
Super Market parking lot. The
police said Uoyd R. Finley, 54,
Rt. 2, Gallipolis, backed his car
into a parked auto driven by
Jeffery Blevins, 18, Gallipolis.

Mazda's Innards
Go
Roood, not up

Goventment Blistered

DRIVE·IH

,...,:a=

~.l_~~~~K~I~I~~--_L

(Continued from

Pa~e

11

Short, Emerson E. Evans, Dr. Charles E.
Holzer, Jr., Walter. Windaor, Warren F.
Sheets, James A. Stiffler and Dr. Th.omas ·
W. Morgan. These terms will expire in ·
1975.
Five year: Stanley L. Evans, J.,Sber·
man Porter; Marlin G, Kerns, Theodore
Reed, Jr., Dr. Oscar W. Clarke, Robert H.
Bosworth, Dr. Homer B. Thomas and E.
Bartow Jones. These terms will expire in
1976.
The Holzer Hospital Board of Trustees
also named eight members as an
executive committee, John F. Stiffler, E.
Neal Taylor, Stanley I. Evans, Harlan
Martin, Gary R. Short, J. Sherman Porter,
Max W. Morrow, and Emerson E. Evans.
Following tbe meeting, the new board
chairman, Harland Martin, said, in an

Mrs. Judy Riggs
appear in the book.
Featured in the "Blue Book
Section" of the Who's Who,
which is lor top Corps and
Teams across the nation, are
three groups directed by Mrs.
Riggs. They are, The Riggs
Royal Kad-ettes Baton Col")lll,
which is made up of girls from
Meigs and Athens Counties, and
the Eastern High Majorette
Dance-Twirl team, composed of
Debbie Jeffers, Jan Holter,

Vicki Spencer, Cheryl Kuhn and
Jennifer Bailey: Also pictured
in the outstanding team portion
of the boo~ is the Federal
Hocking Lancer Marjoette
Line. Both teams have won
many top honors in Baton
contests.
This is the first time a Baton
Corps or team has ever been
selected for the Who's Who
Book in the Southeastern Ohio
area.

inaugural statement:
"I feel honored to be a part of this
organization, and I want to give credit to
the board members for their support in
bringing about Ibis drastic change in
organizational thinking. I (eel that with
our new structure, we will be better able to
work with the medical group and to function more effectively in the community."
In other business, the board adopted a
resolution in memoriam to the late Henry
E. Cherrington, who served as president of
tbe board of trustees since its formation in
1929 until his death earlier this month,
The board also accepted with regret
the resignation of Mrs. Leo (Julia ) Bean
from the board and elected her to emeritus
status.
Concerning the move to the new

conducted in the Paul Lyne
Field House at Rio Grande
College.
"Those who · expect the nor·
mal commencement speaker
are in for a surprise," ac·
cording to Richard RoderiCk,
commercial manager for Ohio
Bell. "Jay Hanna has
established a reputation in both
his business and community
activities as an aggressive
innovator and a 'doer.' His

Market

(Continued from Pal(e I)
prices to 70 per cent of the traditional "fair
earning power" parity leveL This com·
pared with a parity ratio of 69 per cent last
morith and 72 per cent a year' ago.
Average mid-May prices for 80me
leading commodities compared with last
month included:
Hogs $17 per hundredweight, $16; beef
catUe $29.40 per hundredweight, $29.10;
corn $1.38 per bushel, $1.41; wheat $1.43
per bushel, $1.40; soybeans $2.85 per
bushel, $2.80; eggs 29.5cents per dozen 31.9
cent; milk (all grades) $5.60 per hun·
dredweight $5.71.

McDonnell-Douglas was also ap·
proved .to convert the medical center
business office to a computer system. This
will be a shared computer system
operated by McDonnell-Douglas, which
now has 57 hospitals totaling more than
11,000 beds connected to it.
Memory banks will be located in
Peoria, Ill., with on-site terminals
strategically located in the Holzer Medical
Center business office. Company officials
said installation of the system would lake
about four months.

from the center."
"Such is not the case at all," he said.

"We feel the addition of a computer to the
business office will give us more time
better to serve and take more personal
interest in the patient here at the medical
center."
Concerning the new organizational
structure, he said:
"This reorganization is a result of
several months study by the board, and
executive committee, all oriented toward
giving better patient care. It's our belief
that this type organization will allow us to
grow, without abandoning our personal

WATER TESTS DUE
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport water
tesl.s will be made about 7:30 a.m. on
Tuesday, the water department an nounced.
The tesl.s are required by the state.
Residents of Locust, Ash and Park Sts.,
and on Gravel Hili in general ai'e warned
that water will be muddy following the
testing. However, the water should clear
by 9 a.m. Tuesday, it is reported.

interest in our patients."

DAY

Gravity
A man. who can jump six
feet high on the earth could
JUmp 36 feet high on the
?:::" ~or 16 feet big b on
on ~p~t~~-only 2\2 feet high

•

J .

I'

'Tonight thru
Wednesday

••
'

Look whq's gone
Get set N·ow for o woiidtr·
ful summer of boating! We

make economical loons on all
tyPes Of boats, ~otors and
trailers.. You'll be aRoat in no

Mly Jt.Sl-J-1 ·
A BOY NAMED

.CH~~~:')WN
le Brown •nd llle

Gang.
Plus

,. "G"

LATITUDE ZER~
.ITldlllicolor)
t..R-o '
JOMpll Calltn

~-

mcuine financing with us!

"'WW MULES FOR
SISI'U $AU'

.

Clint Eastwood
'

In

.aJOUIIS IWfF

J

statements are noted for being
graphic, current, brief and
provocative.''
The title lor Hanna's address
is "Love Is a Growing Thing"
according to Roderick.
Hanna began bta telephone
career as a service represen·
tative in Youngstown in 1948. A
year later, he was promoted to
outside representative.
In 1950, be became a business
office supervisor in Canton,
where he also served as commercial manager, In 1955 he
moved to Cleveland when be
was named assistant com·
mercia! supervisor on the
company's headquarters stall.
Later in the same year,
Hanna went to New York City
where he served as a business
RICHARD BODAMER
office training engineer lor the
American . Telephone and
Telegraph Company. In 1960, he
returned to Ohio Bell as divisiop
commercial manager and alao
served as general sales
manager in the Marketing
Department before being
COLUMBUS- Dr. David C. ''The program will provide a named the general traffic
Sweet, Director of the Ohio public utilities and services manager for Ohio Bell in 1963.
Department of Development, base in 28 rural aoutheast Ohio Hanna was named to his
today announced the ap· counties of a magnitude that present position in 1968.
Hanna 's community ac·
pointment of Richard J , will a!tract industry to the
tivities
reflect his continuing
Bodamer as Federal-State area," said Bodamer.
Liaison, His responsibilities
Transferred to the Depart· interest in young people, He
include coordinating federaDy ment of Development from the serves on the Board of Trustees
funded development programs Urban Affairs Department, the . of his Alma Mater. Mt. Union
in the state and assisting Ohio Appalachian Regional Com·· College; is a member of the
industry obtain maximum mission Program is an essential Orange School Board; is on the
participation in federal grant element in the Department's executive board of the Boy
programs.
plan for selective growth and Scouis of America; serves as a
· Working closely with Mark development evenly spread division chairman of tbe Junior
Achievement Finance Com·
Shields, director of the state's over all regions of the state.
Washington office and assistant
Bodamer, 29, comes to the mittee and is a member of the
to Governor Gilligan for federal Departmentfrom the position of Ohio Foundation of Independent
relations, Bodamer will make Assistant Director of Urban· Colleges.
He serves on the Board of the
Ohio's development programs, Federal Affairs for Tennessee
needs and views known to the Governor Buford , Ellington. Garfield Memorial Methodist
federal government and alert From 1966 to 1968, be was Church. Hanna currently is the
the stale to relevant federal planning coordinator to South chairman of the "Gateway
legislative and administrative Carolina Governor Robert Project" for the Greater
developments.
McNair's Appalachian Ad· Cleveland Growth Association;
Governor Gilligan has ap- visory Committee. He has also is a member of the Ohio and
pointed Bodamer and . Shields served as assistant director of United States Chamber of
Ohio State-Federal Relations the Tennessee State Planning CommerCe; is active in the
Coordinators to the National Commission and planning Greater Cleveland United
Governors' Conference in commission member for the Appeal ,and ·has just been
elected President of tbe Sales
Washington. The conference city of Cincinnati.
seJts to lurtber the interest of i!odamer holds a B.S. in and Marketing Executives Club
the states in the national arena. bUsiness administration from' of Cleveland.
He finds time to test his golf
Bodamer alao directs the Bowling Green State University
Appalachian Regional Com· .and a master In conununlty' game at the Shaker Heights
mission Program within the pianning from the University of Country Club, where he also
serves as a director.
Department of Developnent. Cincinnati.

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JAY IlANNA

THREE RACERS NAMED
Gold Pruducers
INDIANAPOUS (llPII-WU- The four major countries
her Shaw, Jimmy Clark and that produce over 85 per cent
A.J. Foyt were named Thurs· of the world's gold are South
day as the first three members Africa, U.S.S.R., .Canada and
· of the Auto Bacing · Hall i&gt;f the United States, according
Fame aponsored by the Amfll'i· . to Encyclopaedia Britannica.
can Auto Racina
--.. Writers and
Broadcasters Association.
The ,three were &amp;elected by a
vote of 171 members of the

.MEIGS THEATRE

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Gallipolis, Ohio

TERRIFIC WAYS TO SAVE ON SUMMER NEEDS

fingertip
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Clint Eastwood
Shirley Maclalne

STORE
342

3-H.P.-20-INCH

APPROXIMATELY 40 Ohio State University judging
team slu!lents of 'Dr. George R. WUson's Animal Science
Department took part in Tuesday's live evaluation of 10
Cbarolaia research steers off J4(klay feed test at the Triple
EEE Ranch. The steers were enrOlled on Jan. 5 in Per.
fOt-mance Registry International feed test and carcass
evalualion research.
·-

BANANAS!

second hand, blue dial with blue
strap, $110.

P.M.

OPEN MONDAY

JUSf SAY

!Iff

ACCUTADN ''24l 'L Siainleu
steel , water ru lslant. Sweep

A.M. TO

BOTH STORES

DEPENDABLE BRIGGS &amp;. STRATTON ENGINE

AMONG THOSE TAKING part In Friday's carcass evaluation of 10 Triple EEE Ranch
research Charolais steers were, left to right, Professor W. W. Wha~, Extension Specialist,
Animal Science, Ohio State University; Dr. George R. Johnson, chairman, Animal Science
Department, OSU; Dr. Roy M. Kollman, Dean, College of Agriculture and Home Economics,
OSU; Emerson E. Evans, Triple EEE Ranch and Bill Durley, Director of Performance and
Research, American-International Charolaia, Houaton, Tezas.

I"'

The heart of an Accutron
watch is a tiny, tuning fork
that splits a seco nd into
360 equal intervals.
Accutron time is so nearly
perfect that Bulova guar·
antees monthly accuracy to
within 60 seconds. *

•
I

MEMORIAL

'·~

association from a list of 30
candidates. Election to the Hali
of Fame reqll\red votes of at
least 70 per cent of those
casting ballots.

®

GALLIPOLIS - A 1962 Chevrolet
reported stolen early Saturday morning
was recovered, wreeked and abandoned, a
short time later on Bob McCorwlck Rd .
Jack Price, Bidwell, called the Gallia
County sheriff's department at 3:55 a.m.
Saturday reporting his car had been taken
from the parking lot at the Skyline Lanes
Bowling Alley. The car was located at 4:30
a.m. overturned in a ditch on Bob Me·
Cormick Rd., eight tenths of a mile west of
Gallipolis.

Medical Center Administrator and the
newly elected executive vice president,
John W. Rafferty, was concerned that
some people might conclude a computer
system would "remove the personal touch

•

Northweat since last year.
Callfonlls Is Target
Mazda General Manager C.
R. "Dick" Brown bopea to be
selllhg Z,OOO Mazda's a month in
California by the end of thf
year, tsking a share of about
500,000 units that Japanese
carmakers project lor 197!.
( Mazda has setup 30dealers in
CaUfornia, 22 of them in the
aouthern baH of the state.
Brown ' says tblit the dealers,
although tbeymay handle other
makes, will have separate
Ma~da service and sales
lacilitie
. s.
....
au e Mazda arrival bas
crea
· ted Interest among car
buffs: The rotary engine bas
been around for a long time but
never in a productloo car in tbe
u 'ted
ru States.

Graduation,
Give
Accutron
by Bulova

Stolen Car Wrecked

~-

Jay Hanna to Address
193 GAHS Graduates

This weeK, the boy, now in bta
October years, sat lor a time near the
. statue in deep study - recalling bta
I many friends, compatriots, and
enemies who died so gallantly,
foolishly, horribly, stupidly - comparing the exbuberant, patriotic fervl!'
of that long ago Depression-year day
against the current national turbulence, disunity, and "affluent
society:" He reflected ... questioned ...
pondered ... and had no answers.
Today, it is precisely 40 years since
the 'Spirit of the American Doughboy'
was unveiled.

POMEROY - Twenty-one GallipoDa, Rt. I, $143 and coats,
~ defendants were fined and 11 $83 suspended, overload;
I, otbers forfeited bonds in Meigs Gel!'ge 0. DaVis, Jackson, $57
I County Court Friday. Fined by and costa, $27 suspended,
~ Judge Frank W. Porter were : overload; James Vittitoe, Jr.,
~ It,
~ Shelby Sanders, Gallipolis, RadclHfe, Rt. I, $73 and costs,
' I"
~ $150 and costs, 30 days con. $43 suspended, overload;
~--~ linemen t, $itO suspended, Thomas Hughes, Jackson; Rt.3,
: confinement suspended, six $25 and costs, $10 auspended,
' months probation, threatening overload; Jack E. Hall,
assault; Flossie M. Muson, Cheshire, Rt. 1, $58 and costa,
Reedsville, Rt. 1, and Michael $28 suspended, o.verload; Sally
J.Hargraves,Pomeroy,$10and Ann Yeager, Mason, $10
costs each, speeding; Robert · and c04ts, stop sign violation;
. Uno Marchi, GallipoDa, $15 and Kenneth Hayes, Pomeroy, Rt. 2,
costs, speeding; Lee Hull, $10 and costs, speeding; Dale
Mansfield, $10 and costa, Eatep, Harrisonville, costs only,
crossing fresh paint; Lawrence disturbing the peace; Coy ~itz,
C. Field&amp;, Pomeroy, $10 and Ponreroy, costs only, dumping
costa, failure to display rubbish.
registration; WOmer w. Black,
Forfeiting bonds were
Racine, Rt. I, $5 and costa, Charles B. Buckley, Minersdefective brakes, $150 and ville, Sandra A. Keney,
costs, three days confinement, Pomeroy; Kenneth E. Taylor,
license suspended for siz Jacltaon; Robert .L. Levering,
months, restricted driving Logan; James N. Schmidt,
privileges, driving wbUe in· Athens, and Gary A. Jobnaon,
toxicated; Erneat R. Lamberi, The Plains, $27.50 each posted,
RuUand, Rt. 1, $10 and coata, speeding; Lewis Smith,
expired operator's license; Pomeroy, RD, $50, assault and
'
Gary Lee Slmpson Pomeroy battery; Joseph A. Sauns,
Rt. 3, and Joseph A: Sismondo: Yorksville and Ralph C.
Middleport, $10 and costa each, Daniels, Parkersburg, $27.50 • ·
no vaUd operator's license; each, passing at Intersection;
David Napper, Rutland, and Gaylord P. Flowers, WUson.
Stephen Walton, Wellston, $25 berg, W. Va., $57.50, passing at LOS ANGELES (UPI)- The conventional engines. The
and costs each, $15 suspended, intersection; Judy J. Cavote, unconventional rotary engine, ezbaust sound, nearly inaudible
overload; Uoyd Gindlesberger, Nelsonville, $52.50, speeding. in wbich the Innards go around at idle: rises during bard acand around rather tban up and cele~at1on to~ cross between a
down, · was · iiltroduced In sewmg machine aud an out.
Caillornla recenUy in a new board motor.
.
Japaiteae imported car caDed At 85 mUes an hour, tbere ts
the Mazda.
enoduough power in reserve to
'
pr
ce s surge_forward wb
. en
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -.A nun's rights were "violated
as a 'l1te car i6.elf Is con~entional
·
, use in styling,
but its powerplant is the accelerator ts punched. In
I e deraI Appea I s C9urt has result of th e governments
e•~•ftft elae
of meg 1 . ta
N th som -..,
.
fact, the Mazda engine seems
severe1Y rebuked the govern·
a wtre pa. ow e , In the normal "re· appropriate as a perf
men! lor using "illegal governmenl8eeks to profltfrom clprocating" engine the up
o~ce
wiretap,s" against a Catholic its unconstitutional conduct bY. and down p'-ton motio'n must be sports car because of 1~s
"'
ftelibillty light """•ht and m
nun Cited for contempt for propounding questions.based on mechanically ' translated the\ !a;ge ;e~~ion, '120
refusing to testify ~M;fore a Improperly seized information. through connecting rOds and hocSepower.
grand jury mvestigatlng an The very existence of the crankshaft to produce the Mazda is a subsidiary of Toyo
alleged kidnap-bomb plot.
government will~ lmperUed if rotary motion required to drive Kogo , Ltd. of Hiroshima,
The U. S. 3rd Cirtult Court of it faDs to oblerve the wiretip the wheels.
· Japan's No.3 automaker Which
Appeals, after a full beai'lng, lawsc.rupuloUSly," tile majority The Mazda engine does away ae11s cars In more than 10
Friday dismissed a contempt opinion said.
witll aft lhiBBiid, in~ bargalh, coUntries, It has been seDlng In
etiiUon against Sister Joguea "The government," it weht is lighter in weight and has Florida and the Pacific
Epn, 52, white-hatred ·foniler on, "teaches the whole people about one third the engine
collele president, and bllstered by its example, and if lhe par•-....
lbe fedel al government's ac· government becomes a law
u.. Two Rolen
in l1er case. ·
.
breaker it breeds contempt lor The Ma'zda rotary has neitber
~·!~SON
...., Epn was named • co- the law." ·
pistons IIGI' cyllnderi •in tbe
_.fljl•l'llklr ill a case in wbldl
UIUal IIIIIM. Instead, it baa' i
tlllll .._. enUwar ac:tlvllle
rou8hJy oval""'aped d!ambel:
TonttM-Mon.-T-.
_.. Indicted by a r.dal'l
•. · .
inllde wlllcb a ~ ro111t . Mof lt-JI-J-1
• llln'lsburg, Pl.,
llEroRNED HOME
revolves, Tbl1 "IJtree.llded D.ublt Feelu;. Protram
THE CHEYENNE
to ldck P POMEROY - Aar11D Kellari, piltoD" II tepl tia1tlttC by !lie
SOCIAL CLUB
lltiii'J wbo . has beeit called 1o em- aplclllon Ill the IIMI JIHir
James Stewart
.--Ill
the Gavlil Plant al mixture compreued bt tbe
Henry Fonda
· ":~ fl
IIIIIMta.ltllloDIIne ~fwiDiCib(tblflallldeol •
CColorl
1Jc1
II
IWAJ IG
Ill M 'Te 11M! lbe caned
GP
01111. - Willi. 'ftJI M w
-1'111•

u-

POMEROY - The 1971
"Who's Who Book" in Baton
Twirling has just been released,
and featured in the book again
for the 16th consecutive year is
Mrs. Judy Riggs, former
contest champion and well
known Baton Teacher and
, Judge here.
Also featured in the book are
two of Judy's top students, Miss
Diana Guthrie and Karen
Strausbaugh. The selections 'are
made by the National Baton
Twirling Association and are
based on the twirling honors
won by each. They are the first
students from tbe area to ever
be selected for the book.
Diana is the 13-year-oid
daugllter of Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Guthrie of Rt. 3
Coolville. She is the "Miss TriState Majorette Princess" and
during her two years in Baton
Competition has chalked up a
total oi!IO trophies. She is the
only student to ever surpass the
total of 101 trophies won by her
teacher, Mrs. Riggs. This is her
second year to be selected for
the Who's Who.
Karen Strausbaugh is the 9
year old daughter of Mr . and
Mrs. Kenneth L. Strausbaugh of
Rt. 5, Athens, and she has won a
total of 65 trophies in competition. This is her first time to

Accident

The Doughboy in C'r.ty Park, Dedicated 40 Years ago

Trustee Board

She's in
Book for .
16th Year

'

medical center now under construction ,
the board approved em]iloyment..of McDonnell-Douglas Automation Co. of St.
Louis, Mo., as consultants to plan and
supervise the moving operations to the
new location on Rt. 35.

~ BTRUCroJ

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.,

�'.

Mrs. Hughes Spring Valley Homem,akers
Hosts WSCS Plan Family Poduck •
Of Addision

Sally Davis
Honored·with
Linen Shower

I

Miss Sharon Sheets
,

GALLIPOUS- The home of
Mrs. James D. Walker on
Lower River Road was the
scene of a luncheon and linen
shower on May 22, honoring
· Miss Sallie Davis, bride-elect of
Mr. John N~iman . Mrs .
Walker's C()-hostess was her
daughter-in;Jaw, Mrs. James H.
Walker.
Summer flowers decorated
the tables and lhe gift table was
centered with a miniature
bride.
Besides the honoree, the guest
list included Mrs. George
Davis, Miss Cathy Davis, Miss
,
Cristy Davis, Mrs. Jack Carty,
Mrs. Lawrence Bastian!, Mrs.
Vaught Smith, Mrs. Tim Evans,
Mrs. Oscar Clarke, Mrs . .Loren
l\llUer, Mrs. C. R. McGinness,
Mrs. William Cherrington, Mrs.
A. Darnbrought, Jr., ail of
Gallipolis, and Mrs. Theodore
Reed of Pomeroy.

GALIJPOUS - The Addison
WSCS met at the home of Mrs.
Lewis Hughes with nine
members present. Mrs. Huldah
Rope read devotions froin
Corinthians and then led
prayer. She also had the
program entitled, The Middle
Years, A Time for New Risks.
The members assisted her il
the pr.ogram.
·Mrs. Ray Hughes read the
secretary 's report, followed
with the treasurer's report by
Mrs. Larry Hood. The group
decided to give $50 toward the
church apportionments.
Missionaries will be remembered with birthday cards and
prayers from the group.
Mrs. Charles Shaver reported
on the missionaries for the
month of May. Also during the
meeting, a quilt was worked on.
Their next meeting will be a
picnic, June 23, for members
and their families at the Upper
Rt. 7 Roadside Park.

Miss Marsha Rodgers

SharonSheetsEngagedvinton Auxiliary Rodgers to Wed
GALUPOUS-Mr. and Mrs.
Melvin J. Sheela, Patriot Star
Route, are proudly announcing
the engagement and approaching marriage ·of their
daughter, Sharon Ann, to Mr.
James Howard Houck, son of
Mr. and Mrs. William Robert
Houck, 1~0 First Ave.,
Gallipolis.
Miss Sheela graduated from
GalUs Academy High School in
1968, and she Is presently attending Holzer Medical Center
School of Nursing where she
will graduate in June. ·
Mr. Houck graduated from
Gallla Academy High School
with the class of 1966. He then

attended Rio Grande College
where he was a member of the
Alpha Delta Epsilon Fraternity
and the graduating class of 1970.
Mr . Houck is presently a
teacher In the Circleville City
Schools, CirclevUJe, Ohio.
The wedding will be an event
of Aug. I in the Grace United
Methodist Church. Complete
wedding plans will be announced at a later date.

Mrs. Jones Hosts
Eno Ladies Aid

GALLIPOUS - Eno Ladies
Aid met at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Clinton Jones recently for
the all day May meeting with a
potluck lunch. Seven members
and one guest were present.
In the absence of the
president, Mrs . Kenneth
· Swisher had charge of the
meeting. The group opened with
SUNDAY
Amazing Grace followed by the
MURL RUSH exhibits at repeating of the Lord's Prayer.
iverby, 1-5 o m.
Mrs. Clinton Jones read the 19th
]'UESDA ~
. Psalm.
, PATRIOT GRANGE, regular Rev a ~ Reynolds, Georgia
meeting, 8 p. m. Potluck dinner. George, Gladys Frederick, .Ora
WAYSIDE G d C1 b Old Kemper, Goldie Swlsh~r and
ar en u •
Rosetta Jones gave readings for
Oleshire School, Oleshire, 6 the group.
p.m. for garden club tours.
The group was dismissed by
Gladys Frederick with the
WEDNESDAY
singing of Leaning on the
GALUA County CB Radio Club Everlasting Arms. The next
willmeetat7:30p.m.attheKof meeting will be at the home of
P Hall.
Mrs. Marie Frederick.
THURSDAY .
SPRINGF: ·· ,,L &lt;range No. 210
will meet at the Grange Hall, 8
Joneses Announce
p.m. Light refreshments will be
served.
Birth of Third Son

Coming
Events

Cloverettes Meet

GALUPOUS - Mr.and Mrs.
John I. Jones, Sr., of 300 Le
GALUPOUS - The Gallia Grande Blvd., are announcing
Cloverettes met recently at the birth of .. their third son,
Gallia School with Mary Joseph Isaac. Joey, born March
Ramsey presiding. Steve Miller 21, at Holzer Hospital, weighed
had a demonstration on 8 pounds and 9 ounces.
forestry. Sherry Daniels led
Joey will be wel~omed home
songs.
by his two big brothers, John I.,
The next meeting will be Jr., and James 1.
June ·7 at Gall(a School.
Maternal grandparents are
The club advisors, Mrs. T. R. Mrs. Bernice West of Lebanon
Ball and Mrs. Alex Roese, were and Mr. William E. West, also
'present as well as members, of Lebanon.
•Mary and Deniese and Sharon Paternal grandparents are
(Woolum , Barbara Denlels, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Phtlllps,
tVernon, Steve and Teresa · Bidwell.
Miller, Ellen and Glenna Lewis,
Vickie Bloomfield and Debbie
Bartels. One guest, Rusty
NEWCOMERS CLUB
Phillips, was also present.
GALLIPOUS - Newcomers

!·Porter WSCS Meets
1

!

PORTER - Ten members
were present at the May
1meeting of tile Porter WSCS.
The meeting opened with Let
the Lower Lights Be Burping,
foliowed by roll call. Roll call
was answered with a verse of
scripture.
Minutes were read and approved. Mrs. Della SU)vens
gave the treasurer's report.
Several sick calls were
· reported. Correspondence was
read by the president.
Mrs. Walter Neal, May
program chairman, talked on
~ middle years, from a book of
11M! aame name. The book was
dl8cul8ed with members taking

part.

GBC Accepts

Diana Stanley
,~:~,te~- ofMissMr.Diana
and

•

IAaJiey, Jr., Kerr,
at GalllpoJIJ
for the
beginning

Legion Meets
VINTON - The Vinton
American Legion Auxiliary No.
161 met at the Stevena Insurance office with ten members present recently.
President Lavina Swisher
called the meeting to order with
officers answering roll call.
.Secretary's and treasurer's
reports were read and ap·
proved. Communications were
also read.
The election of officers for the
coming year was held. The new
officers are, Lavina Swisher,
president; Esta Dee!, first vice
president; Peggy Stevens,
second vice president; Hazel
Amos, secretary; Thelma
Fisher, treasurer; Beatrice
Cremeens, historian; Clara
Fisher, sergean~t-arms.
Discussion on the parade for
the annual Vinton ~an Dinner
followed. The bean dinner will
be held on Aug. 7.

GALLIPOLIS-The forthcoming marriage of Miss
Marsha Ann Rodgers to Edward 0. Pauley, II, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Edward 0 . Pauley,
Charleston, is being announced
by her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
James M. Rodgers, II,
Cheshire.
The Grace United Methodist
Church in Gallipolis will be the
setting on July 24, for the open
church wedding and reception
to follow .

A graduate of Kyger Creek
High School and Gallipolis
Business College, Miss Rodgers
is employed by the West
Virginia Malleable Iron Co., Pt.
Pleasant.
Her fiance was graduated
from South Charleston High
School and earned a B. S.
degree in Biology at' Wake
Forest University, where he
was a member of Theta Chi
Fraternity. He is employed by
the Gallipolis City School
System in varsity athletics and
teaches at Gallia Academy
High School.

STUDY CLUB MEETS
GALUPOLIS - Riverside
Study 'Club held a picnic, the
final meeting of the year at the
home of Mrs. Harry King,
Tuesday. Ten members had
their picture taken by Dr. King.
A very pleasant social hour was
enjoyed during the bountiful
picnic dinner .

·Wedding Shower Ho,nors.
Miss Lonna ]o Thompson

Boyers Announce
Birth of Son
GALLIPOLIS- Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Boyer, 621'h Third Ave.,
announce the birth of their first
child, a son, born at 9:23 a.m.,
Saturday in the Holzer Medical
Center.
The new arrival weighed
seven pounds, 14 ounces, and
has been named Jeffery Allen.
Mrs.
Georgia
Boyer,
Gallipolis, is paternal grandmother and Mrs . Emma
Quickie, Vinton, is paternal
great-grandmother.

GALLIPOLIS - The Fairview-Spring Valley Homemakers Club held its May
m~ting Thursday evening with
Mrs. Otis Johnson, with 22
members and one guest, Mrs.
Fred Carmean, present.
Mrs. Otis Johnson read a
poem entitled Neighbors for
devoFons.
Mrs. Herman Dillon presided
over the business meeting and
induction of the new officers
which included, president, Mrs.
Richard Steinbeck; vice
president, Mrs. Dan Thomas;
secretary, Mrs. Charles Knotts;
treasurer, Mrs. Don M. Brown.
The 1970-71 officers presented
the new officers a carnation
corsage and a job description of
each individual office, one at a
time.
Mrs. Bobby Gillespie
presented Mrs. Dillon a silver

Mrs. Sherman Parsons, Mrs.
Denise Mitchell, Mrs. Cecil
Thompson, Mrs. Leah Wilcox,
Mrs. Roy Barcus and daughter,
Theresa, Mrs. Lonnie Thompson, Miss Theresa Thompson
and Miss Geri Bowling.
Sending gifts were Mrs. Mary
Kay Robinson, Mrs. Mildred
Kerr, Mrs. Mildred Hamilton,
Mrs. Bill Joe Johnson, Mrs.
Glenna Williams, Mrs. John
Allison, Mrs.- Jonnie Lou
Northup, Mrs. Bob Myers, Mrs.
Richard Lakin, Mrs. Jack Mills,
Mrs. John Howell, Mrs. Ervin
Crabtree, Donna Crabtree, Mrs.
John Baker, Mrs. Julius Janey,
Mrs. Lena Thompson, Mrs.
Lynn Tawney , Mrs. Paul
Williams and Miss Robin
Barcus.

'

.

Seen and Heard

'

.t•

I

"'

'

•

'

Mr. Thurman Plummer of
Washington Court House, was a
recent guest of Dr. and Mrs.
Samuel Bossard. Mr. Plummer
is Mrs. Bossard's brother.
SONG FEST
GALLIPOLIS
Kings
Chapel Church . will hold a
songfest June 5 at 7:30p.m. The
pastor, Rev. Jack Rankin, invites the public to attend. All
singers are welcome.
A thought for today: Jean
Baptiste Moliere said, "A
woman always has her revenge

A Cross.
Mrs. Clark Caldwell read a
poem, The Way of the Cross
Leads to God.
Refreshments were served by
the committee, Mrs. Everett
Murray, chairman, Mrs.
William Urwin, Mrs. Eva
Gilmore, Mrs. R. E. Lewis and
Mrs. Verne Berridge.

\

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Monday 1 p.m . to 6 p.m .

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FISHING

Rods, reels, sets, fish hooks,

floats, li ne, baskets, lure-s, rigged

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Honors Mrs. Roy

Mrs. Laura McGuire was .
recent guest of her sister, Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Bowen of Willow
Wood, Ohio.
Misses Lori Lee and Cathy
Tucker of Addison and John
Carmichael were recent guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Whitmore.
Mr. and Mrs. Freddie Queen
and daughter, Terri, of Eureka
were recent guests of his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Queen.
Mrs. Evelyn Boggs and son,
Richard, of Washington C: H.
spent the weekend with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Grover
Smith. Mr. Philbert Boggs of
near Newark, Ohio was also
guest of the Smiths and Mr.
Charles Boggs of Proctorville
was also a guest.
Mr . and Mrs. Ralph
Whitemore were recent guests
of her sister, Mrs. Lucille
Watson and family. Mrs.
Watson has not been well for a
few days.
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Unroe and
family were recent guests of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Shelly
Slone and family.
Joel Spencer celebrated his
birthday recenUy . His father
and mother and two sisters';
Carla and Melinda, and baby;
Jeremy, all helped him to
celebrate.
Mr. and Mrs . Jimmie
Chapman took their little
daughter, Jami , to the
Children's hospital at Columbus
for a check-up on Saturday. She
has an asthma condition. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Randfor!l Cox
were· recent guests of his
mother, Mrs. Almira Cox.
Mrs. Gypsy Chapman was
recent guest of her son, Mr. and
Mrs. David Chapman and
family .
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Duncan
and family were recent guests
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Perry Lambert and Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Duncan and
family.
Mrs . Russell Stover was
recent guest of her father, Mr.
Brodie Halley. Mr. Halley is in
his nineties and lives alone and
does his own work, and gets
around good for his age .
The former Judy Anthony and
children have returned to their
home in Columbus after visiting

GALLIPOLIS
· Mrs.
Richard Roy, 507 Maple Dr.,
was honored Tuesday evening
with a layette shower at the
home of Mrs . Earl W. Robinson,
515 Oak Dr., Spring Valley.
Hostesses Were Mrs. Steve
Geremesz, Mrs. M. T. Bucci
and Mrs. Lowell Call.
During the evening, games
were played with prizes won by
Mrs. Fran Jolin, Mrs. Dan
Thomas, Mrs. Paul Wagner,
Mrs. Charles Ball and Mrs. Otis
Johnson. Mrs. J. C. Blonde won
the door prize.
A highlight of the evening was
the surprise arrival of Mrs.
Roy's mother, Mrs. J. C.
Blonde, Windsor, Ontario,
Canada and sister, Mrs. H. G.
Mohan, Holly, Michigan. ·
Mrs. Roy, assisted by her
daughters, Karen and Charlene,
opened her many lovely gifts,
from a table centered with a
stork and decorated in a pink
and blue color scheme.
Miss Sandra Hively
The hostesses, . serving
refreshments were assisted by
their daughters, Chris Bucci,
~ ecky
Call and Cheryl
1Robin.son.
Attending were Mrs. Cecil
Rice, Jr., Mrs. Calvin Mitchell,
Mrs. Charles Knotts, Mrs. Dan
Thomas, Mrs. Otis Johnson,
Mrs. Paul Wagner, Mrs. H. G. GALLIPOLIS-Mr. and Mrs . Mr. Perkins is a graduate of
Mohan, Mrs. J. C. Blonde, Mrs. Earnest Hively, 162 Fourth Hannan Trace High School and
Charles Bell, Mrs. Len Biland Ave., are announcing the ap- has completed three years of
and Mrs. Fran Jolin.
proaching marriage of their military service . He is
Sending gifts were Mrs . daughter, Sandra, to Thomas E. presently employed by the
Herman Dillon, Mrs. Theresa Perkins, son of Mrs. Opal Point View Cable TV Service,
Frank, Mrs. Raymond Stewart, Perkins, Eureka Star Route, Pt. Pleasant.
Mrs. James Beverly, Mrs. and Mr. Merrill J. Perkins, The open church wedding will
Herman Koby, Mrs. James Vinton.
be an event of Saturday, June 5,
Bennett, Mrs. Robert Olsen and. Miss Hively is a graduate of at Providence Baptist Church
Mrs. Larry Evans.
Gallia Academy High School on Teens Run-Province Road at
and is employed by G. C. 7:30p.m.
Murphy Co., Gallipolis.
The first railroad bridge
over the Mississippi River
was completed April21,
1857. It · ran between Rock
Island, Ill., and Davenport,
Iowa.

Sandra Hively to
Wed E. Perkins

District Library News
.

For information, past, necessary tools and parts, but
present, and future, try your you can't find where the
Gallia County District library. manufacturer hid the com. 'Whether it's educational in- ponents? Pick an automotive
formational or recreati~nal manual up at the library. Air'
' conditioning, and wiring
try your Library.
If it's world, national, or local diagrams are the lastest adhistory, we have it. Where, at dition to this popular section.
7:30p.m.,onThursday,canyou Your cousin from Paw Paw,
see a report on the county Michigan is visiting you, and
commissioners meeting, or you have an executive Board
your local school board? At Meeting to attend, where can
your library, in the newspaper you meet her? At the li~rary.
files, from 1895 to the present. Not only does your library
Thirty minutes before the have a wide range of service,
meeting time of your club your but it's open from 9-9 Mondayspeaker for the evening can- Friday, and 9-5 on Saturday. If
LCII'IlLi'.! u'o
eels? Pick a film up at the you aren't a user of the library,
Wt:OOINCJ AI NG
DAN
library!
come in and explore the vast
Exc iting Keepsake stylesAre you starting on ·\1 repair- and varied resources available.
AND SON
from classiCa lly simple to inSen•lnf you sine:• 1936"
job on your car with all the Ifyouareauser,trysomeofthe
tricately ca rved. Ea.c h with a
Go lipolh, Ohio
new
services
such
as
flawless cen t er diamond,
photocopying.
Elected by Senate
-· .
In the election ol 1836, ho
candidate for the vice·presidency received a majority of
the votes of the Electoral
College. Richard Mentor
Johnson was elected by the
Senate and served for one
342 Second Ave .
term , the only vice-president
Gallipolis, Ohio
ever elected directly by the
Di8cover thl' WondR~fu! World of Mu1ic
'--- - - -- - Senate.
Spring &amp; Summer Time Enjoyment
2• . 1~

CB radios can increase ef-

ficiency and profit in business,
keep individua ls in touch with
CB friends and neighbors, bring
vital services and help when one
is on an isolated highway, increase safety and peace of mind
when driving at night alone ,
secure immediate aid in case of
fir e, acc ident or other
emergency.
But most of the pleasure of CB
is in the actual operating of your
own station. CB can keep an
individual in touch and widen
one 's world .
The nearest dealer of CB
radios in this area is Bob's
Citizen's Band Radio and
Equipment on George's Greek
Road in Gallipolis.

SEE

her sister, Mrs. Nancy Johnson
and children a few days.
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Angell
and family were recent guests
of his grandmother, Mrs. Laura
Clark.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Stocker
and two children and Mr. and
Mrs . David · Freezle of
Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Danner and two
children and Mrs. Robert
Johnson and family were
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Charley Johnson and Lauretta.
SP-4 Gary L. Dray, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Vaace Dray was
awarded the good conduct
medal in the line of duty in
Vie!Jlam. Anyone wishing to
write to Mr. Dray may send it
to, SP-4 Gary L. Dray, 27&amp;-525882, ABtry 2x 11 B.N. Arty, 101
Born. Div ., APO, San Francisco, Calif.

FOR YOUR COMPLETE
WARDROBE OF

PLAY CLOTHES
FOR THE
PLAY SET

rrr"i~:J~~,::~0 ~·· ;,~

,

BULOVA
... the
well-timed
Graduation
gift

We have a choice
collection of
modestly priced
Bulova watches,
timed for
Graduation.
Illustrated: Two new
17 jewel models,
on ly ~~5 .

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
422 Second Ave.
Ga

Ohio

eADULT DANCE INSTRUCTION
eWORKSHOPS &amp; CLINICS
eKEYBOARD HARMONY
eFUNADMENTALS OF SONG WRITING
.eLEARN TO READ MUSIC

White and navy . sizes 7·8 to 18.

Darnbrough's
DEPT. STORE GALUPOUS

lJ I f 'f """- C' 8
f\ADID I!
·- Drawing by Ronald Fraley, Addaville School
another channel on which to
carry out the conversation.

EASY CARE AND
PERMANENT PRESS
FABRICS

trod3
Summer sets that take star
billing
with
mothers
everywhere. Why? Because
they're made with soil release
protection and need no
ironing. Assorted styles and
colors.
STORE HOURS

TODDLER
2-4
3-6X and 7-14
SIZES
.

Mon . Tues . Wed. Sat. 9: 30 to 5
Thursday 9: 30-12. Friday 9:30-8 p.m,

OfFERED!

.

•4·49 '

every kind .of business
profesSion as well as individuals
for non-commercial purposes.
They are involved in family use,
farm and ranch use, boat use,
search and rescu e, service
trades, school buses, police and
sheriff officers, civil defense,
fire .departments, aviation and
even medicine.
For CB two-way radio
operations, no tests or operators
license is required. However, a
radio station license is required.
This is valid for five years and
the cost of the station license is
now $20.
Any US citizen over 18 years
of age is eligible to apply fo r a
Class-D, CB radio license.
There are 23 channels -on a
tw()-way radio band. Seven of
these channels are for general
use (9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14 and 23).
The other sixteen channels are
reserved for communication
between base and mobile units
of the saine licensee. Channel 9
Is the official emergency
channel and is used for
emergencies only.
Channel 11 is the calling
channel in our area . This is the
channel on which calls are
made and then switched to

SOON TO BE

FRINGED .JAMAICAS

ALL s S'FORES

GALUI"()US - The Gallia
County CB Radio Jamboree
planned for Jun1 20, will climax
mon~ of pr~aration by the
local CB Club. In order to inform the public, the history of
CB radios is being told.
Tw()-way radios were being
used on a limited scale by police
departments as early as 1939.
After ita use during World War
II, it became popular for
taxicab drivers, power companies, pipelines and railroads.
In 1953, the Federal Communications Commission
decided to permit aU commercial enterprises and private
citizens to use two-way radios.
The FCC established the atizen
Radio Service (CRS) and later
allocated 23 radio channels to
S()-Called Class-D citizen band
(CB) radio stations. Two,way
radio communications are now
available to all citizens for
business or personal use.
The most common use of twoway radios is communication
between mobile (radio equipped
vehicles) units to base stations
(fixed locati.ons).
Tw()-way radio is also often
used in place of a telephone for
tw()-way voice communications
between two or more fixed
points.
CB radios are used by almost

SERVICES·

LADIES

e Pt. Plea~ant , .
•Gallipolis .
•MalOn

History of Citizen
Band Radio Explained r&lt;t:~.. .:-.

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE_

.

APPLE

SAUCE

Blue Lake

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Layette Shower

Gallia County

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~"THICK

. RIO GRANDE - The Rio
Grande Mothers League in•
stallatioil dinner · was held
recently at the Coloni~l Inn in
Jackson . After the dinner,
District President of OCCL,
Mrs . Donna Stewart, Middleport, installed the new of. fleers for tlie 1971-72 year.
They were, president, Mrs.
Robert Brandeberry ; vice
president, Mrs. Ray Davis;
secretary, Mrs. Charles Vanco;
treasurer , Mrs. William
Shockey ; historian , Mrs.
William Merry; Sunshine
chairman, Mrs . Mickey
Morgan.
Mrs. Brandeberry conducted
a short business meeting,
reminding members of the
spring conference, June ~. at
Middleport and the family
picnic, June 20.
Mrs. Brandeberry gave each
of the members a small planter
to show her appreciation for
their cooperation. A social hour
followed .

:::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::~;:;::::~:~:::~..:::::;:::;;.-g.;.

, . FOR ,SUNDAY AND MONDAY-OPEN 1 P.M. TO 6 P.M.
'

Ann judson Bible Class Meets

GALUPOUS - The Ann
Judson Bible Class of the First
Baptist Church recently met in
the fellowship room with Mrs.
Wtlliam Urwin presiding. The
meeting was opened with the
singing of The Old Rugged Class
accompanied by Mrs. Bert
Club had a very unique and Harrison followed with 'prayer
enjoyable evening Thursday by Mrs. Earl Saunders.
when twenty-two couples Mrs. Everette Murray was in
journeyed to Columbus on the charge of the program. Mrs.
Rio Grande bus to Scioto Verne Berridge gave the
Downs.
devotions reading and comThose attending had dinner in menting on scriptures from the
the track restaurant and sixth chapter of Galatians. As a
watched the races from there. part of the devotional Mrs. R. E.
The event was planned by Lewis read an article titled The
Mrs. Frank Porter, chairman, Cross That He Bore Was His
with the help Of .Mrs. Jacob Own.
·
Weinberger, Mrs. Warren Mrs. James L. Clark, guest
Sheets, Mrs. Joe Fenderbosch, speaker, presented an inMrs. Donald Galloway, Mrs. Ike teresting program on Christian
Wiseman, Mrs. Wilson .Bowers crosses stating that more than
and Mrs. Bruce McDonald.
fifty different crosSes are used
in church symbolism but most
of them are variations of five
The first 18 - hole golf ancient types.
course in the United States
Mrs. Clark pr.esented each
was at the C hicago Golf person with a booklet which she
Club, founded in 1891. .
has written giving a short
history of some of the better
known cro'ases in the hope that it
will add to the appreciation of
the sacredness, the beauty, and
the
Christian
history
surrounding the cross. The
, booklet also shows drawings of
these crosses.
Mrs . . Clark diJplayed and
commented on several of her
colleetton of croues accumulating from many areal
includlllg her 'Viall to lhe Holy
Laftcl. Mn. Clark concluded IMr
program with a poem~ What Ia

THE l'HlLDREN OF ADDAVll.LE school chose the following individuals for their
reigning royalty of May Day 1971. They are : Queen, Cindy Meaige; King, Randy Brown,
Princess, Sara Drummond; Prince, Mickey Graham; Duke, Von Taylor and Duchess, Patty
McKenney.

~::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::!:"0:::!:!:~:::::::::::::::::~.:::::::

.

GALUPOLIS '-- A wedding
shower was given for Miss
Lonna Jo Thompson Thursday
evening by Mrs. Ruth Bailes.
The color scheme for her
shower was pink and white.
Games were played and
prizes were won by Miss Geri
Bowling, Mrs. Carl Drummond
and Mrs. Sherman Parsons.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Balles.
Those attending were Mrs.
Carl Drummond, Miss Linda
Crabtree, Mrs. Kristi Humphreys, Mrs. David White, Mrs.
Russell Young, Mrs. Dayton
Humphreys, Mrs. R. E. White,
Mrs. David Tawney and sons,
Chris and Timmy, Mrs. Bruce
Unroe, Mrs. Jeff Mtller, \Mrs.
Allee Frazier, Mrs . Calvin
Mitchell, Mrs. Jack Canaday,

tray on behalf of the.club for a
job well done.
·
Mrs. Welker announced plans
for the annual family poiluck to
be held on June 12 at 6 at the
Gun Club.
Each family in the two areas
is encouraged to suppori the
Gallia County Mosquito Control
Program by paying the $3.50.
Delicious refreshments were
served by co-hostesses, Mrs.
Kenneth Welker and Mrs.
Lowell Gothard.

EMORIAL DAY SPECIALS
.. .·..

RG Mothers League
Installs Officers

EDEN
MUSIC

eTOTAL AIR ' CONDITIONING
I

'

eMUSIC APPRECIATION GROUPS .

'.'ONE OF OHIO'S./ine STORES''

.(}allipol~, Ohio

�'.

Mrs. Hughes Spring Valley Homem,akers
Hosts WSCS Plan Family Poduck •
Of Addision

Sally Davis
Honored·with
Linen Shower

I

Miss Sharon Sheets
,

GALLIPOUS- The home of
Mrs. James D. Walker on
Lower River Road was the
scene of a luncheon and linen
shower on May 22, honoring
· Miss Sallie Davis, bride-elect of
Mr. John N~iman . Mrs .
Walker's C()-hostess was her
daughter-in;Jaw, Mrs. James H.
Walker.
Summer flowers decorated
the tables and lhe gift table was
centered with a miniature
bride.
Besides the honoree, the guest
list included Mrs. George
Davis, Miss Cathy Davis, Miss
,
Cristy Davis, Mrs. Jack Carty,
Mrs. Lawrence Bastian!, Mrs.
Vaught Smith, Mrs. Tim Evans,
Mrs. Oscar Clarke, Mrs . .Loren
l\llUer, Mrs. C. R. McGinness,
Mrs. William Cherrington, Mrs.
A. Darnbrought, Jr., ail of
Gallipolis, and Mrs. Theodore
Reed of Pomeroy.

GALIJPOUS - The Addison
WSCS met at the home of Mrs.
Lewis Hughes with nine
members present. Mrs. Huldah
Rope read devotions froin
Corinthians and then led
prayer. She also had the
program entitled, The Middle
Years, A Time for New Risks.
The members assisted her il
the pr.ogram.
·Mrs. Ray Hughes read the
secretary 's report, followed
with the treasurer's report by
Mrs. Larry Hood. The group
decided to give $50 toward the
church apportionments.
Missionaries will be remembered with birthday cards and
prayers from the group.
Mrs. Charles Shaver reported
on the missionaries for the
month of May. Also during the
meeting, a quilt was worked on.
Their next meeting will be a
picnic, June 23, for members
and their families at the Upper
Rt. 7 Roadside Park.

Miss Marsha Rodgers

SharonSheetsEngagedvinton Auxiliary Rodgers to Wed
GALUPOUS-Mr. and Mrs.
Melvin J. Sheela, Patriot Star
Route, are proudly announcing
the engagement and approaching marriage ·of their
daughter, Sharon Ann, to Mr.
James Howard Houck, son of
Mr. and Mrs. William Robert
Houck, 1~0 First Ave.,
Gallipolis.
Miss Sheela graduated from
GalUs Academy High School in
1968, and she Is presently attending Holzer Medical Center
School of Nursing where she
will graduate in June. ·
Mr. Houck graduated from
Gallla Academy High School
with the class of 1966. He then

attended Rio Grande College
where he was a member of the
Alpha Delta Epsilon Fraternity
and the graduating class of 1970.
Mr . Houck is presently a
teacher In the Circleville City
Schools, CirclevUJe, Ohio.
The wedding will be an event
of Aug. I in the Grace United
Methodist Church. Complete
wedding plans will be announced at a later date.

Mrs. Jones Hosts
Eno Ladies Aid

GALLIPOUS - Eno Ladies
Aid met at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Clinton Jones recently for
the all day May meeting with a
potluck lunch. Seven members
and one guest were present.
In the absence of the
president, Mrs . Kenneth
· Swisher had charge of the
meeting. The group opened with
SUNDAY
Amazing Grace followed by the
MURL RUSH exhibits at repeating of the Lord's Prayer.
iverby, 1-5 o m.
Mrs. Clinton Jones read the 19th
]'UESDA ~
. Psalm.
, PATRIOT GRANGE, regular Rev a ~ Reynolds, Georgia
meeting, 8 p. m. Potluck dinner. George, Gladys Frederick, .Ora
WAYSIDE G d C1 b Old Kemper, Goldie Swlsh~r and
ar en u •
Rosetta Jones gave readings for
Oleshire School, Oleshire, 6 the group.
p.m. for garden club tours.
The group was dismissed by
Gladys Frederick with the
WEDNESDAY
singing of Leaning on the
GALUA County CB Radio Club Everlasting Arms. The next
willmeetat7:30p.m.attheKof meeting will be at the home of
P Hall.
Mrs. Marie Frederick.
THURSDAY .
SPRINGF: ·· ,,L &lt;range No. 210
will meet at the Grange Hall, 8
Joneses Announce
p.m. Light refreshments will be
served.
Birth of Third Son

Coming
Events

Cloverettes Meet

GALUPOUS - Mr.and Mrs.
John I. Jones, Sr., of 300 Le
GALUPOUS - The Gallia Grande Blvd., are announcing
Cloverettes met recently at the birth of .. their third son,
Gallia School with Mary Joseph Isaac. Joey, born March
Ramsey presiding. Steve Miller 21, at Holzer Hospital, weighed
had a demonstration on 8 pounds and 9 ounces.
forestry. Sherry Daniels led
Joey will be wel~omed home
songs.
by his two big brothers, John I.,
The next meeting will be Jr., and James 1.
June ·7 at Gall(a School.
Maternal grandparents are
The club advisors, Mrs. T. R. Mrs. Bernice West of Lebanon
Ball and Mrs. Alex Roese, were and Mr. William E. West, also
'present as well as members, of Lebanon.
•Mary and Deniese and Sharon Paternal grandparents are
(Woolum , Barbara Denlels, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Phtlllps,
tVernon, Steve and Teresa · Bidwell.
Miller, Ellen and Glenna Lewis,
Vickie Bloomfield and Debbie
Bartels. One guest, Rusty
NEWCOMERS CLUB
Phillips, was also present.
GALLIPOUS - Newcomers

!·Porter WSCS Meets
1

!

PORTER - Ten members
were present at the May
1meeting of tile Porter WSCS.
The meeting opened with Let
the Lower Lights Be Burping,
foliowed by roll call. Roll call
was answered with a verse of
scripture.
Minutes were read and approved. Mrs. Della SU)vens
gave the treasurer's report.
Several sick calls were
· reported. Correspondence was
read by the president.
Mrs. Walter Neal, May
program chairman, talked on
~ middle years, from a book of
11M! aame name. The book was
dl8cul8ed with members taking

part.

GBC Accepts

Diana Stanley
,~:~,te~- ofMissMr.Diana
and

•

IAaJiey, Jr., Kerr,
at GalllpoJIJ
for the
beginning

Legion Meets
VINTON - The Vinton
American Legion Auxiliary No.
161 met at the Stevena Insurance office with ten members present recently.
President Lavina Swisher
called the meeting to order with
officers answering roll call.
.Secretary's and treasurer's
reports were read and ap·
proved. Communications were
also read.
The election of officers for the
coming year was held. The new
officers are, Lavina Swisher,
president; Esta Dee!, first vice
president; Peggy Stevens,
second vice president; Hazel
Amos, secretary; Thelma
Fisher, treasurer; Beatrice
Cremeens, historian; Clara
Fisher, sergean~t-arms.
Discussion on the parade for
the annual Vinton ~an Dinner
followed. The bean dinner will
be held on Aug. 7.

GALLIPOLIS-The forthcoming marriage of Miss
Marsha Ann Rodgers to Edward 0. Pauley, II, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Edward 0 . Pauley,
Charleston, is being announced
by her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
James M. Rodgers, II,
Cheshire.
The Grace United Methodist
Church in Gallipolis will be the
setting on July 24, for the open
church wedding and reception
to follow .

A graduate of Kyger Creek
High School and Gallipolis
Business College, Miss Rodgers
is employed by the West
Virginia Malleable Iron Co., Pt.
Pleasant.
Her fiance was graduated
from South Charleston High
School and earned a B. S.
degree in Biology at' Wake
Forest University, where he
was a member of Theta Chi
Fraternity. He is employed by
the Gallipolis City School
System in varsity athletics and
teaches at Gallia Academy
High School.

STUDY CLUB MEETS
GALUPOLIS - Riverside
Study 'Club held a picnic, the
final meeting of the year at the
home of Mrs. Harry King,
Tuesday. Ten members had
their picture taken by Dr. King.
A very pleasant social hour was
enjoyed during the bountiful
picnic dinner .

·Wedding Shower Ho,nors.
Miss Lonna ]o Thompson

Boyers Announce
Birth of Son
GALLIPOLIS- Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Boyer, 621'h Third Ave.,
announce the birth of their first
child, a son, born at 9:23 a.m.,
Saturday in the Holzer Medical
Center.
The new arrival weighed
seven pounds, 14 ounces, and
has been named Jeffery Allen.
Mrs.
Georgia
Boyer,
Gallipolis, is paternal grandmother and Mrs . Emma
Quickie, Vinton, is paternal
great-grandmother.

GALLIPOLIS - The Fairview-Spring Valley Homemakers Club held its May
m~ting Thursday evening with
Mrs. Otis Johnson, with 22
members and one guest, Mrs.
Fred Carmean, present.
Mrs. Otis Johnson read a
poem entitled Neighbors for
devoFons.
Mrs. Herman Dillon presided
over the business meeting and
induction of the new officers
which included, president, Mrs.
Richard Steinbeck; vice
president, Mrs. Dan Thomas;
secretary, Mrs. Charles Knotts;
treasurer, Mrs. Don M. Brown.
The 1970-71 officers presented
the new officers a carnation
corsage and a job description of
each individual office, one at a
time.
Mrs. Bobby Gillespie
presented Mrs. Dillon a silver

Mrs. Sherman Parsons, Mrs.
Denise Mitchell, Mrs. Cecil
Thompson, Mrs. Leah Wilcox,
Mrs. Roy Barcus and daughter,
Theresa, Mrs. Lonnie Thompson, Miss Theresa Thompson
and Miss Geri Bowling.
Sending gifts were Mrs. Mary
Kay Robinson, Mrs. Mildred
Kerr, Mrs. Mildred Hamilton,
Mrs. Bill Joe Johnson, Mrs.
Glenna Williams, Mrs. John
Allison, Mrs.- Jonnie Lou
Northup, Mrs. Bob Myers, Mrs.
Richard Lakin, Mrs. Jack Mills,
Mrs. John Howell, Mrs. Ervin
Crabtree, Donna Crabtree, Mrs.
John Baker, Mrs. Julius Janey,
Mrs. Lena Thompson, Mrs.
Lynn Tawney , Mrs. Paul
Williams and Miss Robin
Barcus.

'

.

Seen and Heard

'

.t•

I

"'

'

•

'

Mr. Thurman Plummer of
Washington Court House, was a
recent guest of Dr. and Mrs.
Samuel Bossard. Mr. Plummer
is Mrs. Bossard's brother.
SONG FEST
GALLIPOLIS
Kings
Chapel Church . will hold a
songfest June 5 at 7:30p.m. The
pastor, Rev. Jack Rankin, invites the public to attend. All
singers are welcome.
A thought for today: Jean
Baptiste Moliere said, "A
woman always has her revenge

A Cross.
Mrs. Clark Caldwell read a
poem, The Way of the Cross
Leads to God.
Refreshments were served by
the committee, Mrs. Everett
Murray, chairman, Mrs.
William Urwin, Mrs. Eva
Gilmore, Mrs. R. E. Lewis and
Mrs. Verne Berridge.

\

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30 quart, moulded handle, self in·
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Monday 1 p.m . to 6 p.m .

1 · 9~

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Girls Sleeveless
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AND

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Includes all 76c glasses up to 2.44 glas~ .
Protec t your eyes, help your budge t _
they all go - basics, mods, wires, &amp; huge
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MONDAY

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BBQ
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FISHING

Rods, reels, sets, fish hooks,

floats, li ne, baskets, lure-s, rigged

worms. Your opportunity to saVe
50 per cent. StoCk up on your

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Folds easil y for storage.
will l it In trunk of c a~ or

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cans

Honors Mrs. Roy

Mrs. Laura McGuire was .
recent guest of her sister, Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Bowen of Willow
Wood, Ohio.
Misses Lori Lee and Cathy
Tucker of Addison and John
Carmichael were recent guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Whitmore.
Mr. and Mrs. Freddie Queen
and daughter, Terri, of Eureka
were recent guests of his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Queen.
Mrs. Evelyn Boggs and son,
Richard, of Washington C: H.
spent the weekend with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Grover
Smith. Mr. Philbert Boggs of
near Newark, Ohio was also
guest of the Smiths and Mr.
Charles Boggs of Proctorville
was also a guest.
Mr . and Mrs. Ralph
Whitemore were recent guests
of her sister, Mrs. Lucille
Watson and family. Mrs.
Watson has not been well for a
few days.
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Unroe and
family were recent guests of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Shelly
Slone and family.
Joel Spencer celebrated his
birthday recenUy . His father
and mother and two sisters';
Carla and Melinda, and baby;
Jeremy, all helped him to
celebrate.
Mr. and Mrs . Jimmie
Chapman took their little
daughter, Jami , to the
Children's hospital at Columbus
for a check-up on Saturday. She
has an asthma condition. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Randfor!l Cox
were· recent guests of his
mother, Mrs. Almira Cox.
Mrs. Gypsy Chapman was
recent guest of her son, Mr. and
Mrs. David Chapman and
family .
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Duncan
and family were recent guests
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Perry Lambert and Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Duncan and
family.
Mrs . Russell Stover was
recent guest of her father, Mr.
Brodie Halley. Mr. Halley is in
his nineties and lives alone and
does his own work, and gets
around good for his age .
The former Judy Anthony and
children have returned to their
home in Columbus after visiting

GALLIPOLIS
· Mrs.
Richard Roy, 507 Maple Dr.,
was honored Tuesday evening
with a layette shower at the
home of Mrs . Earl W. Robinson,
515 Oak Dr., Spring Valley.
Hostesses Were Mrs. Steve
Geremesz, Mrs. M. T. Bucci
and Mrs. Lowell Call.
During the evening, games
were played with prizes won by
Mrs. Fran Jolin, Mrs. Dan
Thomas, Mrs. Paul Wagner,
Mrs. Charles Ball and Mrs. Otis
Johnson. Mrs. J. C. Blonde won
the door prize.
A highlight of the evening was
the surprise arrival of Mrs.
Roy's mother, Mrs. J. C.
Blonde, Windsor, Ontario,
Canada and sister, Mrs. H. G.
Mohan, Holly, Michigan. ·
Mrs. Roy, assisted by her
daughters, Karen and Charlene,
opened her many lovely gifts,
from a table centered with a
stork and decorated in a pink
and blue color scheme.
Miss Sandra Hively
The hostesses, . serving
refreshments were assisted by
their daughters, Chris Bucci,
~ ecky
Call and Cheryl
1Robin.son.
Attending were Mrs. Cecil
Rice, Jr., Mrs. Calvin Mitchell,
Mrs. Charles Knotts, Mrs. Dan
Thomas, Mrs. Otis Johnson,
Mrs. Paul Wagner, Mrs. H. G. GALLIPOLIS-Mr. and Mrs . Mr. Perkins is a graduate of
Mohan, Mrs. J. C. Blonde, Mrs. Earnest Hively, 162 Fourth Hannan Trace High School and
Charles Bell, Mrs. Len Biland Ave., are announcing the ap- has completed three years of
and Mrs. Fran Jolin.
proaching marriage of their military service . He is
Sending gifts were Mrs . daughter, Sandra, to Thomas E. presently employed by the
Herman Dillon, Mrs. Theresa Perkins, son of Mrs. Opal Point View Cable TV Service,
Frank, Mrs. Raymond Stewart, Perkins, Eureka Star Route, Pt. Pleasant.
Mrs. James Beverly, Mrs. and Mr. Merrill J. Perkins, The open church wedding will
Herman Koby, Mrs. James Vinton.
be an event of Saturday, June 5,
Bennett, Mrs. Robert Olsen and. Miss Hively is a graduate of at Providence Baptist Church
Mrs. Larry Evans.
Gallia Academy High School on Teens Run-Province Road at
and is employed by G. C. 7:30p.m.
Murphy Co., Gallipolis.
The first railroad bridge
over the Mississippi River
was completed April21,
1857. It · ran between Rock
Island, Ill., and Davenport,
Iowa.

Sandra Hively to
Wed E. Perkins

District Library News
.

For information, past, necessary tools and parts, but
present, and future, try your you can't find where the
Gallia County District library. manufacturer hid the com. 'Whether it's educational in- ponents? Pick an automotive
formational or recreati~nal manual up at the library. Air'
' conditioning, and wiring
try your Library.
If it's world, national, or local diagrams are the lastest adhistory, we have it. Where, at dition to this popular section.
7:30p.m.,onThursday,canyou Your cousin from Paw Paw,
see a report on the county Michigan is visiting you, and
commissioners meeting, or you have an executive Board
your local school board? At Meeting to attend, where can
your library, in the newspaper you meet her? At the li~rary.
files, from 1895 to the present. Not only does your library
Thirty minutes before the have a wide range of service,
meeting time of your club your but it's open from 9-9 Mondayspeaker for the evening can- Friday, and 9-5 on Saturday. If
LCII'IlLi'.! u'o
eels? Pick a film up at the you aren't a user of the library,
Wt:OOINCJ AI NG
DAN
library!
come in and explore the vast
Exc iting Keepsake stylesAre you starting on ·\1 repair- and varied resources available.
AND SON
from classiCa lly simple to inSen•lnf you sine:• 1936"
job on your car with all the Ifyouareauser,trysomeofthe
tricately ca rved. Ea.c h with a
Go lipolh, Ohio
new
services
such
as
flawless cen t er diamond,
photocopying.
Elected by Senate
-· .
In the election ol 1836, ho
candidate for the vice·presidency received a majority of
the votes of the Electoral
College. Richard Mentor
Johnson was elected by the
Senate and served for one
342 Second Ave .
term , the only vice-president
Gallipolis, Ohio
ever elected directly by the
Di8cover thl' WondR~fu! World of Mu1ic
'--- - - -- - Senate.
Spring &amp; Summer Time Enjoyment
2• . 1~

CB radios can increase ef-

ficiency and profit in business,
keep individua ls in touch with
CB friends and neighbors, bring
vital services and help when one
is on an isolated highway, increase safety and peace of mind
when driving at night alone ,
secure immediate aid in case of
fir e, acc ident or other
emergency.
But most of the pleasure of CB
is in the actual operating of your
own station. CB can keep an
individual in touch and widen
one 's world .
The nearest dealer of CB
radios in this area is Bob's
Citizen's Band Radio and
Equipment on George's Greek
Road in Gallipolis.

SEE

her sister, Mrs. Nancy Johnson
and children a few days.
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Angell
and family were recent guests
of his grandmother, Mrs. Laura
Clark.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Stocker
and two children and Mr. and
Mrs . David · Freezle of
Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Danner and two
children and Mrs. Robert
Johnson and family were
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Charley Johnson and Lauretta.
SP-4 Gary L. Dray, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Vaace Dray was
awarded the good conduct
medal in the line of duty in
Vie!Jlam. Anyone wishing to
write to Mr. Dray may send it
to, SP-4 Gary L. Dray, 27&amp;-525882, ABtry 2x 11 B.N. Arty, 101
Born. Div ., APO, San Francisco, Calif.

FOR YOUR COMPLETE
WARDROBE OF

PLAY CLOTHES
FOR THE
PLAY SET

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BULOVA
... the
well-timed
Graduation
gift

We have a choice
collection of
modestly priced
Bulova watches,
timed for
Graduation.
Illustrated: Two new
17 jewel models,
on ly ~~5 .

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
422 Second Ave.
Ga

Ohio

eADULT DANCE INSTRUCTION
eWORKSHOPS &amp; CLINICS
eKEYBOARD HARMONY
eFUNADMENTALS OF SONG WRITING
.eLEARN TO READ MUSIC

White and navy . sizes 7·8 to 18.

Darnbrough's
DEPT. STORE GALUPOUS

lJ I f 'f """- C' 8
f\ADID I!
·- Drawing by Ronald Fraley, Addaville School
another channel on which to
carry out the conversation.

EASY CARE AND
PERMANENT PRESS
FABRICS

trod3
Summer sets that take star
billing
with
mothers
everywhere. Why? Because
they're made with soil release
protection and need no
ironing. Assorted styles and
colors.
STORE HOURS

TODDLER
2-4
3-6X and 7-14
SIZES
.

Mon . Tues . Wed. Sat. 9: 30 to 5
Thursday 9: 30-12. Friday 9:30-8 p.m,

OfFERED!

.

•4·49 '

every kind .of business
profesSion as well as individuals
for non-commercial purposes.
They are involved in family use,
farm and ranch use, boat use,
search and rescu e, service
trades, school buses, police and
sheriff officers, civil defense,
fire .departments, aviation and
even medicine.
For CB two-way radio
operations, no tests or operators
license is required. However, a
radio station license is required.
This is valid for five years and
the cost of the station license is
now $20.
Any US citizen over 18 years
of age is eligible to apply fo r a
Class-D, CB radio license.
There are 23 channels -on a
tw()-way radio band. Seven of
these channels are for general
use (9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14 and 23).
The other sixteen channels are
reserved for communication
between base and mobile units
of the saine licensee. Channel 9
Is the official emergency
channel and is used for
emergencies only.
Channel 11 is the calling
channel in our area . This is the
channel on which calls are
made and then switched to

SOON TO BE

FRINGED .JAMAICAS

ALL s S'FORES

GALUI"()US - The Gallia
County CB Radio Jamboree
planned for Jun1 20, will climax
mon~ of pr~aration by the
local CB Club. In order to inform the public, the history of
CB radios is being told.
Tw()-way radios were being
used on a limited scale by police
departments as early as 1939.
After ita use during World War
II, it became popular for
taxicab drivers, power companies, pipelines and railroads.
In 1953, the Federal Communications Commission
decided to permit aU commercial enterprises and private
citizens to use two-way radios.
The FCC established the atizen
Radio Service (CRS) and later
allocated 23 radio channels to
S()-Called Class-D citizen band
(CB) radio stations. Two,way
radio communications are now
available to all citizens for
business or personal use.
The most common use of twoway radios is communication
between mobile (radio equipped
vehicles) units to base stations
(fixed locati.ons).
Tw()-way radio is also often
used in place of a telephone for
tw()-way voice communications
between two or more fixed
points.
CB radios are used by almost

SERVICES·

LADIES

e Pt. Plea~ant , .
•Gallipolis .
•MalOn

History of Citizen
Band Radio Explained r&lt;t:~.. .:-.

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE_

.

APPLE

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Blue Lake

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Gallia County

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~"THICK

. RIO GRANDE - The Rio
Grande Mothers League in•
stallatioil dinner · was held
recently at the Coloni~l Inn in
Jackson . After the dinner,
District President of OCCL,
Mrs . Donna Stewart, Middleport, installed the new of. fleers for tlie 1971-72 year.
They were, president, Mrs.
Robert Brandeberry ; vice
president, Mrs. Ray Davis;
secretary, Mrs. Charles Vanco;
treasurer , Mrs. William
Shockey ; historian , Mrs.
William Merry; Sunshine
chairman, Mrs . Mickey
Morgan.
Mrs. Brandeberry conducted
a short business meeting,
reminding members of the
spring conference, June ~. at
Middleport and the family
picnic, June 20.
Mrs. Brandeberry gave each
of the members a small planter
to show her appreciation for
their cooperation. A social hour
followed .

:::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::~;:;::::~:~:::~..:::::;:::;;.-g.;.

, . FOR ,SUNDAY AND MONDAY-OPEN 1 P.M. TO 6 P.M.
'

Ann judson Bible Class Meets

GALUPOUS - The Ann
Judson Bible Class of the First
Baptist Church recently met in
the fellowship room with Mrs.
Wtlliam Urwin presiding. The
meeting was opened with the
singing of The Old Rugged Class
accompanied by Mrs. Bert
Club had a very unique and Harrison followed with 'prayer
enjoyable evening Thursday by Mrs. Earl Saunders.
when twenty-two couples Mrs. Everette Murray was in
journeyed to Columbus on the charge of the program. Mrs.
Rio Grande bus to Scioto Verne Berridge gave the
Downs.
devotions reading and comThose attending had dinner in menting on scriptures from the
the track restaurant and sixth chapter of Galatians. As a
watched the races from there. part of the devotional Mrs. R. E.
The event was planned by Lewis read an article titled The
Mrs. Frank Porter, chairman, Cross That He Bore Was His
with the help Of .Mrs. Jacob Own.
·
Weinberger, Mrs. Warren Mrs. James L. Clark, guest
Sheets, Mrs. Joe Fenderbosch, speaker, presented an inMrs. Donald Galloway, Mrs. Ike teresting program on Christian
Wiseman, Mrs. Wilson .Bowers crosses stating that more than
and Mrs. Bruce McDonald.
fifty different crosSes are used
in church symbolism but most
of them are variations of five
The first 18 - hole golf ancient types.
course in the United States
Mrs. Clark pr.esented each
was at the C hicago Golf person with a booklet which she
Club, founded in 1891. .
has written giving a short
history of some of the better
known cro'ases in the hope that it
will add to the appreciation of
the sacredness, the beauty, and
the
Christian
history
surrounding the cross. The
, booklet also shows drawings of
these crosses.
Mrs . . Clark diJplayed and
commented on several of her
colleetton of croues accumulating from many areal
includlllg her 'Viall to lhe Holy
Laftcl. Mn. Clark concluded IMr
program with a poem~ What Ia

THE l'HlLDREN OF ADDAVll.LE school chose the following individuals for their
reigning royalty of May Day 1971. They are : Queen, Cindy Meaige; King, Randy Brown,
Princess, Sara Drummond; Prince, Mickey Graham; Duke, Von Taylor and Duchess, Patty
McKenney.

~::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::!:"0:::!:!:~:::::::::::::::::~.:::::::

.

GALUPOLIS '-- A wedding
shower was given for Miss
Lonna Jo Thompson Thursday
evening by Mrs. Ruth Bailes.
The color scheme for her
shower was pink and white.
Games were played and
prizes were won by Miss Geri
Bowling, Mrs. Carl Drummond
and Mrs. Sherman Parsons.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Balles.
Those attending were Mrs.
Carl Drummond, Miss Linda
Crabtree, Mrs. Kristi Humphreys, Mrs. David White, Mrs.
Russell Young, Mrs. Dayton
Humphreys, Mrs. R. E. White,
Mrs. David Tawney and sons,
Chris and Timmy, Mrs. Bruce
Unroe, Mrs. Jeff Mtller, \Mrs.
Allee Frazier, Mrs . Calvin
Mitchell, Mrs. Jack Canaday,

tray on behalf of the.club for a
job well done.
·
Mrs. Welker announced plans
for the annual family poiluck to
be held on June 12 at 6 at the
Gun Club.
Each family in the two areas
is encouraged to suppori the
Gallia County Mosquito Control
Program by paying the $3.50.
Delicious refreshments were
served by co-hostesses, Mrs.
Kenneth Welker and Mrs.
Lowell Gothard.

EMORIAL DAY SPECIALS
.. .·..

RG Mothers League
Installs Officers

EDEN
MUSIC

eTOTAL AIR ' CONDITIONING
I

'

eMUSIC APPRECIATION GROUPS .

'.'ONE OF OHIO'S./ine STORES''

.(}allipol~, Ohio

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R- Tho Sundav TimeS-Sentinel.Sundav.Mav 30.1971

Youth Wo,uld Restore, not Destroy
BY DIANA BROWN ·
· TiJ!tea-8enUnel StaH
GALUPOlJS- Adulla say they don'l understand youths of
today. That may well be true, However, it may not be the youths'
fault.
You've beard it said before, I'm sure, that today's young
peOple are more sensitive about things that occur around them.
They're not as concerned with material wealth as Dad's

A .College Student Speaks
generati011 wK•.
Why must this be so repulsive to parents 'I
My pet peeve has recenUy become a very popular topic In the
news. The vote 18 scheduled as an amendment to be brought
befOI'e the legislatures of the slates for ratification, ought to be
passed.
Thegreatestobjection to this is raised by people who say that
we are -not·mature enough to vote. Our·soclety has set the age of
adulthood at 21, yet 18-year olds can be tried as adults. Adulthood
c0111es ala different time and age to each person.
Many, or perhaps most, of today's young people are not
mature enough to make complex decisions on tbeir own, free from
parents' guiding hands, which having been admitted, stands as a
poOl' recOmmendatioo fOI' parents who have guided their sons to a

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grave in Vietnam.
once I've decided, as are most youths of today.
Adults wonder why young people have become antiWe do not know if we'll be here tomorrow. My generation,
establl.!llunent. They wonder why young people today dislike the different from any other, has been born and ralsedand must learn
ruling Image and people In high places who regard their.material to live with the fact that we inay or may not be here tnmorrow.
wealth of utmost imparlance.
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The threat of THE BOMB is.so great that it frightens many
And, Is it even any wonder that some young 'people have people Into radical views. Perhaps the scare tactic has been used
doubts of the democratic Ideals? We tell them that this is the land too successfully.
·
of the free and the lando! equality. Here, everybody gets a square
It does no good to worry about the threat of bombing. Either
deal; if not, they at least have the right to complain about it. Yet, we die, or we don't. But is there something we can do about it?
they who must die for llieir country have no right to speak out for Hardly, without the vote!
their candidates by casting a vote for them.
Perhaps my generation can learn to help yours to learn,
I do not feel that maturity has anything to do willi the idea of rather than try to destruct what already is here. I think all of us
voting. There are apparently many middle-aged adults who do not must learn to work more faithfully within the framework of
yet have mature attitudes about politics, if the present state of our government already set up. Charges and countercharges of
country is considered.
·
"dirty politics," and our nation's courts socked tight by lawsuits
The important fact to remember is that young people of this · of every description pitting neighbor against neighbor, suggest
country are dying for it and its ideals but have no right to speak that my generation is notthe only breaker of laws.
for or against llie party in power, or the government, by casting a ·
I think most young people believe peaceful change within our
vote. It makes one wonder.
. ,
present constitutional framework is llie best process tn satisfy
Now, don't get me wrong. I'm no radical. I'm probably very America 's democratic tradition. We would restore this tradition,
conservative. Conservatism has been defined to be a slow- not destroy it.
changing process. That's me. Slow and deliberate In making up
Have you heard the old Latin saying, "We who are about to
my mind.
die, salute you !''
However, once it's made up, I want action. I'm impatient,
But not without the vote!

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CHAS. A. BRADBURY n
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POMEROY - TWO MEIGS County young people
received their degrees from Marietta College this spring.
They are Therese D. Fultz, (BS), daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
leslie F. Fultz, 110 High St., Pomeroy, and Charles A.
Bradbury II, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bradbury, 244 s.
Third St., Middieport. Bradbury was recently employed as
head basketball coach at Southern High School the next
school year.

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Meigs

start at 1 p.m. both days. Young people from Chauncey,
Athens, Columbus, The Plains, New Lexington and
Hockingport will perform on lhe water. Races will begin both
days at 4 p.m. New boats and campers will be on display. All
entertainment is free and the public is invited. The club has
members of Meigs and Gailia counties.

Property
Transfers

lassy ·but

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By United Press International
The murder by stealth of at
least 21 middle-aged wanderers
In ·the fruit groves of Yuba
City, Calif., is sure to become a
classic case of its grisly kind.
Such murders, as dlstinguished from sniper killings
and P'!.blic ram)lages, have not
been numerous in the United
States and the depredations of
London's Infamous Jack the
Ripper in 1888 are still the best
known of the . type. But the
Yuba City massacre dwarfs the
Ripper's crime.
The Ripper killed six and
possibiy elglit women drunkards and prostitutes. He was
never arrested but Russian
autnonues belie~e Vassily Konovalov, who died in im asylum
after killing a woman · In
Petrograd in 1891, was living in

London in 1888 and may have
been the Ripper.
Until the Yuba City crime
was uncovered, Mrs. Bella
Poulsdatter Sorensen Gunness
of Laporte, Ind., apparenUy
h•ld lhe mass murder record
with "' known victims and a
possible 12 more, for. a total of
28. She buried the bodies in a
pig pen. Victims included two
husbands, 20 would-be suitors
lured by "lonely hearts" ads,
three women and three children . Mrs. Gunness committed
suicide in 1908.
Also ranking near the top of
the list was Herman Webster
Mudgett, a native of Gilmanton,
N.H. Mudgett, who changed his
name to H. H. Holmes when he
moved to Chicago, murdered at
least 12 young women in his
63rd Street home. Some esti-

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ISears lWhen summer heat is frightful,
your home can still be delightful ...

mated he killed as many as 150
persons.
Mudgett was convicted of
murdering an associate, Benjamin Pitezel, and was hanged on
May 7, 1893.
Zodiac, the San Francisco
area 's phantom murderer ,
claimed 17 victims in a note
written last March. Law
enforcement officials link him
definitely to five . He struck
first in a "lover's lane" near
Vallejo, Calif., and the fifth
victim, a cab driver, was shot
10 months later.
Between 1962 and 1964 in
Boston, 11 murders-and possi·
bly 13-were ascribed to the
"Phantom Strangler." Ali victims lived alone and had
hospital-related backgrounds.
The lingerie with which they
were strangled was tied in
surgical knots. A 33-year-old
handyman confessed to the

slayings. He is confined in a
mental hospital, but no charges
ever been filed.
Sleven A. Nash, a former
truck driver, boasted of killing
11 persons during his trial in
California in the mid-1950's.
"Yes, I killed all II of them. l
only wish I could kill a
thousand and II more," Nash
screamed at court spectators
during his sentencing. He die~
in the San Quentin gas eha; .,ber
on Aug. 21, 1959.
· A series of seven murders
baffled Chicago. police in 1946.
At the scene of one, the
murderer scribbled on a mirror
with lipstick, "For heavens
sake, catCh .me before I kill
more ." William Heirens, an Illyear-old college student, later
confessed to at least three of
the murders when he was
questioned while under the
influence of truth serum.

Celebration Set

ELECTION SET
RACINE - Officers will be
elected by the Southern Local
School District Chapter of the
Ohio Assn. of Public School
Employes at 8 p.m. Tuesday at
the high school here. All
members are urged to attend. A
committee meeting of the
organization will be held at 8
p.m. Wednesday at the school.

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MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
Mrs . J . W. Shoemaker of
Butyrus, former residents of
·OJ
·Middleport, will observe their
L---~----..1. golden wedding anniversary on
June 18.
An open house will be held on
Sunday, June 20, from 2 to 7 p.
m. at their home 427 East

I

Save SI:Q

24,000 BTU
Central Air
Conditioning

Southern Ave., Bucyrus, and
friends and relatives of the
couple are invited to attend.
Mrs. Shoemaker is the former
Condenser Unit nnd
May Ralph. She and J. w.
'';\" &lt;'Oil
Shoemaker were married in
Pomeroy on June 15, 1921 and
inoved to Bucyrus in 1928 when
he was transferred by the New
York Central Railroad there.
Mr. Shoemaker retired . in 1951
arter 38 years with the New
YOrk Central. The couple have
daughter, Mrs. John (Carol)
Harrison, and two granddaughters, Debbie Harrison and
, • Condenser i'ntdaiiN nut - • Condt•nAer trcutud to rc·
•'de; coil in furn nc•~
• s hot ru st, ~.: urrmdon
Stephanie Harrison, all of
• 2-Mpt:,·d cnnd•·n -= •·r f 1111
• Ofit· t·.ldttting dau·twl&gt;t'k,
' Bucyrus.
n1n11 quil'lly
r't•.CiHt,•rR nnd hluw('r "
· All other sizes on sale, save S50 to HO
I•

Elwood Bowers, Eileen
Bowers to Sybil Ebersbach.
percels, Chester, Pomeroy.
Sybil Ebersbach to Elwood
Bowers, Eileen Bowers, parcels, Pomeroy, Chester.
Homer Carman, to Elizabeth
Carman, lots, Pomeroy.
Jemo Associates Inc. to John
C. Bacon Jr., Judith A. Bacon,
lot, Middleport.
Green Hill Homes, Inc. to
Nancy L. Pope, lot, Middleport.
Nial E. Salser, Virginia
Salser to Russell Radcliffe, lot,
Syracuse.
William R. Nd,on, Rachel
Ann Jll''""n to Franklin Real
Estate, 241 acres, Salem.
John J. Fick, Jane Fick to
Roy E. Fick, Richard F. Fick,
Charles T. Fick, 128.50 acre Int.,
Chester.
Harry Eugene Guthrie, aka,
Harry E. Guthrie, to Genevieve
Guthrie, Maxine Yost, cert. for
trans., Orange.
Eleazady , Manley Clark,
Samuel E. Clark to Neva
Bolyard, lot, Middleport.
SHOOTS CUSTOMER
PESHAWAR, Pakistan (UP!)
- Police said today a bank
manager held up a customer. ·
The manager became so
enraged at a customer who
wanted to cash a telegraphic
money order for $400, but
refused to open an account, that
he fired four shots at him.
Nobody was hurt. They
withheld the bank manager's
name.

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REGISTRAR •.
by P.HINCI&lt;: (;AHI)NE:H.'

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House GOP Defeats G. gan
By LEE LEONARD
· UPI .Statehouse Reporter .
COL~MBUS (UP!) - House
Repubhca~shave cleared a record $7 .~. billion two • year appropria lions bill to llie state
Senate, but must still adopt the
means of financing $825 million
worth of spending i~creases
over the current btenmum.
GOP leaders, in a showdown
of strength against Gov. John
J .. Gtlligan and House Democrats, mustered 52 votes Fri·

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Call 446-2770 for Free Home Survey
Use Sears Easy Pa.IJmtnf Plan

Sotht/octian Grmrtm ,,.rrf r&gt;r Y our .1 1r1m·y nn ,.k
SHOP AT SEARS
ANn RAVI&gt; ·

Phone 446-2770

435 Sec. Ave.

Glllipotlt, Ohio

TO WIN DEGREE

· POMEROY
Jon ·J.
Guinther, son of Mr. and Mrs.
' Shirley Guinther, of Pomeroy,
will receive his bachelor ·of
science degree in Pharmacy on
June 13 at Ohio Northern
University.

FOR GRADUATION
E~c:l.ull\'f AOAPT~ ·S NAP

l

u ·lf.(,nd tng, ~..,l f · odjiiUII' II

I . or. temOYable ph olo•&lt;ord co1e , . , to rorr y
you ntid .
, without a bulge . Stlow•A·Cbrd
lo add or r~mo'fc 2 wl ndowJ ot o tim• . eo1ily•
tord and ticke t pockets , Bill di'fidtr with ,o,...
~::~: •mo,tjy llop Ovpllcntt hv tlot1 l"'ond1ome
. Hit colo" .

Styles
From

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'ProtecottO Dy "AN 11-.VISIILE Sll
No outside seams to lttr or "D·

BIRTHDAY HONORED
PT. PLEASANT - Russell
Maynard was honored with a
surprise birthday party at his
home in Point Pleasant, May 16,
by his wife, Patty. The dining
table was covered with a table
cloth of pink roses and mat.
ching napkins and plates. A
traditional birthday cake was
decora ted with pink rosebuds,
·and two blue lovebirds nested in
the center with a ribbon border
o! blue edging the cake served
wiL 1 ice cream and punch. The
livin,1 room coffee tab!~ w~s
decOJ a led with the same color
tabk cloth and held the gifts.
At:ending were Mr. and Mrs.
Jesse l1hynard, Mr. and Mrs.
David ZE r~Je and daughters,
Terri and •.. •bbie, Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Maynal'•l, and the hostess
and honoree, Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Mayn Jrd.

Gallipolis, Ohio

plan.
House Speaker Charles f.
Kurfess, R·Bowling Green, said
his party still plans to push for
a H'• per cent flat county individual income tax, but that he
does not expect a vote next
week.
· The Senate will have until
June 30 to adopt the budget-tax
plan before the new fiscal year
begins.
The House-passed appropria·
tio.ns bill contains $1.6 billion

SAN .FRANCISCO (UP!)

Canada balsam is a natural vegetable substance that
is transparent. It is used in
the manufacture of optical
instruments.

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PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS
404 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
'We will adjust l o till s tole rance, il
ne cessar~. Gt~a r antee

Is lor one year .

THE LOVELY 5\&gt; FT. marble statue above, ''Our Lady of Fatima," will be dedicated alii
a.m. Sunday at the Sacred Heart Cemetery In Pomeroy by the congregation of the Sacred
Heart Church. The statue, imported from Italy six years ago, is enhanced by a marble archway
that adds two,feet to its height. The statue has been given anonymously to the church for use in
llie cemetery.

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.Mar.ket Atmospheres Mixed
NEW YORK (UP!) - Fear
that rising interest rates may
hamper economic growth sent
stocks lower last week, but in
the lightest weekly turnover of
the year.
The decline was given a push
by Henry Kaufman, partner
and economist of Salamon
Brothers, an . investment
bankir.g firm . He said interest
' ales probably will move upward in coming months and put
a damper on economic
recovery .
·
Kaufman told a meeting of
security analysts Monday that a
rise in short term interest rates
could slow housing activity by

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t'UR Bl&amp; DISCOUNT SAVING:-.
137 Pine Street
Gallipolis. Ohio

dragging money away from
trust institutions that provide
the bulk of the nation's home
mortgage money.
David A. Baker, vice
president of Dean Witter &amp; Co. ,
offered a somewhat different
view.
While conceding that Wall
Street is worried about higher
money rates, Baker said
"earnings of corporations are
likely to be more instrumental
in the stock market's behavior
over the next 12 months than
interest rates."
Baker said he expected a 9
per cent increase in corporate
earnings this year and 15 per

cent rise In 1972 which "might
make '72 the best year in the
next five ."
For the week, volume on Wall
Street aggregated 66,066,170
shares more than four million
shares below the previous week
and the lightest since 70,129,920
shares changed hands in the
week ended Jan. 8.
The NYSE Common Stock
index dipped 0.69 to 54.92, while
Standard &amp; Poor's 500 Stock
Index felll.36 to 99.63. The Dow
Jones Industrial Average
dropped 14.06 to 907.81. Declines
outscored advances, 1,136 to 503
emong the I ,828 issues crossing
the tape.

Attention Parents!

CARROLL STEWART
Airman Carroll R. Stewart,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl R.
Stewart, R.D. I, Middleport,
has completed basic training
at Lackland AFB, Tex., and Is
assigned In Keesler AFB,
Miss., for training In the
administrative field. He .!s a
1970 graduate of Meigs High
Sehool.

One by one, Democratic at- .
tempts to increase aid to
schools, welfare programs
health .care. programs, state
employe~ and environmental
programs, were knocked down
without direct votes.
When the final vote came,
only two Republicans ·crossed
party lines to join 44 Democrats
opposing the bill. They were
Reps. Ross G. Heintzelman o(
Canton and George V. Voino·
vich of Cleveland.
· Rep. Patrick A. Sweeney, D·
Cleveland, left the floor and did
not vote on the bill.
The debate contained every.
thing from jokes Lo charges Gil·
ligan tried to strongarm Republican votes for his plan.
Rep. Gertrude Polcar, R-Par·
ma, said two Gilligan staff
members approached her before
the session and threatened if
she didn't vote for the governor's bill, he would go to Parma and campaign against her
election to a municipal judgeship.
·
Gilligan denied later that any
threats were made to anyone.
"! didn't know she was running
for anything,'' Gilligan said tartly, "but after what happened
today, she ought to. "
Reapportionment Battle
Kurfess charged in a letter to
Gilligan that the governor used
reapportionment threats to get
Republican support.
Democrats control the board
which later this year will realign legislative districts.
The Speaker said llie alleged
reapportionment threats were
"some of the lowest, cheapest,
political skullduggery most of
us have ever witnessed."
"While we are all here as the
result of the political process,
the brazen, bel,ow-the-belt
tactics of your staff people
constitute a crass and ugly form
of political machination ,"
Kurfess wrote the governor.
Democrats wanted $70 million
more for aid to nonpublic
schools, $60 million more for
state employe pay increases, $12
million more for pollution control and $9 million more for
highway safety in addition to
restoration of t!le education and
welfare cuts.
Republicans said 'the budget
'
was a ' reasonable comwomise
between current spending and
the Gilligan proposal. They
pointed out the bill included almost $500 million extra in aid
to public schools, $129 million
more iri higher education expenditures, and healthy increases in certain welfare programs
and mental health and retards·
lion programs.

CORA DAM

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SUPER MARKETS

AL:L STOR'ES OPEN .M'ON. MAY 31
9:00 A.M. to 6:00 ·P.M.

·ARMOUR*STAR SEI.iEOTED PORK • U.S. Oovt. Inspected:

WHOLE
~

Pork Loins.
14-lb. Avg.

Fresh·Ground"

Family Pak - 3-lbs. ar More
LESSER QUANTITIES lb. 79c

GOLDEN YELLOW

SWEET

A new Flutophone class for the 4th and 5th graders is schedul ed to
begin immediately. This course is a package deal inc luding a
Fl utophone, stand, book and lessons all for the low price of $15.00
total cost .

HANDICRAFTS

STATE ·FARE
SLICED

NOW OPEN

WHIT'
E
'
B
READ
1-lb. 4-oz. Loaf

CORA PARK

THOROF~RE
GRADE A LARGE

WHITE
EG·
o
s
Dozen Carton
TI·DE

~her courses include lessons for Piano, Guitar and v~ious band

DET'ERGE:NT

mstr.u~ents. Where else, can you get complete instruction from such
qualified teachers? Don t Delay! ! We are taking applications now!

The new memb7rs of. our :eaching staff are: Mr . Douglas A. Day,
Graduate .of Oh1o Un1vers1ty School of Music. Mr . Day will t each
P.•ano: Guttar, and Brass Instruments. Mr . Lewi s Shields. Gr.aduat e
of Ohio State School of Music. Mr . Shields will be teaching the
Flutophone. Class. Clarinets, Flutes and Saxophones. Ilk. Mike
Jones. West Virgin ia University School of Music. Mr . Jones will be
t~aching students majoring on drum s. They will be joining the other
fme members o~ our. staff which include : Mr . David Erhman .
Gradu~te of Cmcmnat1 Conservatory of Mus ic, teac~ing Piano unci
Wo_o dwmds . Mr. and Mrs. Charles Murray, Graduale of Ohio
Un1v~rs1ty ~chool of Music. teaching Piano. Mr . Marlin Lear
teac~rng ~u1tar. Mr. J'ohn Lynch teaching percussion . John
Brun1card1, Graduate of Ohio Univers~ty school of Musi c, teaching
Brass and Flutophones . Look to Brun1cardr's for all your musical
needs!

COME IN or CAU 446-0687

Brunicardi ·House of Music

BRE.AKING GROUND -Ground was broken Friday at the site of the future home of the
Mason First Baptist Church. FOnl)lll groundbreaking ceremonies will be held today following
llie regular ~burch services.
·

Farm BUN?JJ~ Roster Larger Than Last
Year
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54 STATE STREET GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

AN
EAR

CORN

CARPET
SPECIAL

The Brunicardi House of Music proudly announces the best summer
musical instruction class ever with teachers from fine universities
sue~ as ?flio University, ~io State, and West Virginia University .
Don t m1ss th1s opportunity for fine quality instruction .

Clark's Jewelry Store ··
342 Second Ave.

day evening - two more than
llie fiO required for passage to get the giant spending blueprint over to the Senate and
send their members home for
llie Memorial Day weekend.·
The final vote which officially shaved $1.3 billion from the
governor's $9.1 billion budget,
climaxed 4% hours of debate
sonie rancorous and some hu:
morous, during which the RepublicansshutoffallDemoeratic attempts to restore Gilligan's

&amp;ale Home Free
In Frisco Area
Waving to supporters chanting
"Power to the People," Black
Panther Chairman l)obby G.
Seale arrived home a free man
Friday after nearly two years
confinement in prisons from
coast to coast.
Seale embraced party
bodyguards at San FranCisco
International Airport before
'getting into a waiting
automobile for the final trip
across San Francisco Bay to his
Oakland home. About 100
persons turned out to greet the
Panther leader who was
released Friday afternoon from
a New Haven, Connecticut,
courthouse on $25,000 bond.

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more than the current two-year
budget. It Is expected to go
even higher when the tax ,Package Is added, calling for · the
state to pay the cost of proper-'
ty tax relief and homesteaq exemptions.
Offers Increases
Kurfess called the proposal a
"very responsible budget which
offers exceedingly substantive
increases in most areas of
concern."
Gilligan, who bad proclaimed
he could count on 55 to 58 votes
for his program, appeared bit~r in sustaining the first legislative defeat of his brief tenure.
The governor said the GOP·
written spending measure was
"the worst sort of fiscal irresponsibility" which showed a
"serious f~ilure to deal with
the problems confronting Ohio."
The Republican tactics on the
flnor perhaps rankled Gilligan
and the Democrats more than
the $416 million slice out of the
welfare budget and the $531 million cut from educational spending.
The House GOP forced a vote
on the provisions of Gilligan 's
original budget by inserting
them in their own bill.
Democrats were taken by
surprise, but had to oppose the
amendment because it was not
the
current
GilliganDemocratic budget but was
more than two months old.
Republicans naturally voted
against it, and the amendment
failed unanimously. They said,
however, they had given the
governor the vote he had asked
for on his budget. Gilligan
te~med the parliamentary maneuver a "cheap, sophomoric
trick that was even beneath
contempt."
· GOP Bypassed Proposals
Using a House rule which
forbids a vote on an individual
amendment if it already has
been voted on in a package, the
Republicans methodically bypassed as out of order all Dem·
ocraUc attempts to change the
bill.
.

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CAN .CAN GIRLS who will perform on skis at the annual
open house observance of tlle Athena Boat and Ski Club at
Hockingport next weekend are,left to right, Dianne Stauder,
i.aa Brundige, Christy Shaeffer, Melody Stauder, Shauna
Pierce, and SheiTY Canter. The water shows and boat races
will be Saturday and Sunday, Ju~ 5 and 6. Water shows will

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THERESE FULTZ

7-The SundayTirnes-Sentinel,Sunday, May 30.1971

WOMAN KILLED
MARYSVILLE, Ohio tUP!)
- Mrs. Ruth Ackley , 68, of rural
Urgent Alerl
Plain . City was ~illed 'late
Wednesday in a two-car crash
For &amp;laper Pill
COLUMBUS (iJPli - An · on Ohio 38 in Union &lt;;ounty.
"urgent alert" was issued
Friday 'by Attorney General. ·
William J. Brown for an
illegal drug, known as a
"soapcr" which Brown said
causes the heart to stop.
Brown said the pills, bright
orange, have been reported in
Coshocton, Athens ·and
Greene Counties and are
believed also to be in Mont·
gomery County:
He urged persons having
such pills to turn them over to
local authorities or to destroy
them.

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COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio said the group has reached will push hard to have the 1971
Farm Bureau Federation of. 55,100 members, exceeding its Ohio Marketing and Bargaining
ficials have announced a'' 1971 membership goal of ~5,000. Act passed into law," he added.
membership growth for the fi(th "This is clear testimony that "Enactment of lliis measure
consecutive year.
Ohio fa~m people· believe will give farmers power to
c. William Swank, executive strongly m workmg together bargain with processors, which
vice president of the federation, toward mutual' goals," Swank they've been entitled to for.
said.
'
many yeors."
"With this strength of these .
OBTAINS DEGREE
thousands of members behind
Lt. Col. Cedric Ollio Parker us, we will continue to work for
(ret.) whowas .discharged from meaningful changes in the tax
STAY ALERT
the U.S. Army after 22 years structure with strong emphasis
YAKIMA, Wash. (UP!)
service last July, received his on real property tax relief. We Rep. Clarence Bliwn, R.Qhio,
bachelor of science degree In
'told a meeting of newspaper
Business Administration on
publishers Friday there is
May 23 at Our Lady of the Lake
BAKE SALE SET
danger of Congres.! trying to
College In San Antonio, Tex. A RACINE - The Letart BQys ' establish standards for "honest,
1948 graduate of Pomeroy High Farm 4-H Club will hold a hake truthful news" and that tbe
School, he is the son of Mrs. sale beginning at. 8:30 a.m. news media must stay a~rt to
Pearl ,Parker, Laurel Cliff, and Saturday at the Racine Food fight for its rights under the
the late jl!r. Parker.
Market. .
first amendment,.
I

•

.95
sq. yd.
and up

.· Padding
and Labor
INCLUDED

Minimum 20 Sq . Yds .
Nylon, Polyester, Acrilan, Herculon. Over 500
colors and patterns to select from . Come in
today and make your selection.

INDOOR-OUTDOOR CARPET
NOT
INCLUDED IN THIS SpECIAL!
WE ALSO HAYE •.•

e ARMSTRONG VINYL QUAKERTONE
LINOLEUM, 9 &amp; 12 WIDtHS
e ARMSTRONG VINYL CUSHION
FLOOR LINOLEUM

Giant Pkg. · IOc Off Label

1·1b. 1-oz. Pkg.
CHEf'S DELIGHT
Reg. or Pimento

,FOLGER•s
COFFEE

2-lb.

3-lb.

·Cheese Spread
...., Pkg.

69c

KRAFT
Features
ITALIAN DRESSING
8-oz.
Bot.

41c

Miracle Margarine
1-lb.
Pkg .

39c

Porkoy Whipped

MARGARINE
1-lb.

Pkg.

~··-----------------------------~----~~---~-

47c

Can

$2.69

CAMAY
SOAP
5.5-oz.
Bar

19c

CRISCO
. OIL
:1-Pt.S-oz.

Bot.

65c

TASTE

PERCH
FILLm
lUll( STYU

·COMET
CLEANSE'R
' 14· 01.

Can

18c

\¥£ USlAVE THE RIGHT
PRI(lS EFfECTIVE THlU

----------------

lb.

�....•

..

\

R- Tho Sundav TimeS-Sentinel.Sundav.Mav 30.1971

Youth Wo,uld Restore, not Destroy
BY DIANA BROWN ·
· TiJ!tea-8enUnel StaH
GALUPOlJS- Adulla say they don'l understand youths of
today. That may well be true, However, it may not be the youths'
fault.
You've beard it said before, I'm sure, that today's young
peOple are more sensitive about things that occur around them.
They're not as concerned with material wealth as Dad's

A .College Student Speaks
generati011 wK•.
Why must this be so repulsive to parents 'I
My pet peeve has recenUy become a very popular topic In the
news. The vote 18 scheduled as an amendment to be brought
befOI'e the legislatures of the slates for ratification, ought to be
passed.
Thegreatestobjection to this is raised by people who say that
we are -not·mature enough to vote. Our·soclety has set the age of
adulthood at 21, yet 18-year olds can be tried as adults. Adulthood
c0111es ala different time and age to each person.
Many, or perhaps most, of today's young people are not
mature enough to make complex decisions on tbeir own, free from
parents' guiding hands, which having been admitted, stands as a
poOl' recOmmendatioo fOI' parents who have guided their sons to a

...

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·.,.'•'~...:

grave in Vietnam.
once I've decided, as are most youths of today.
Adults wonder why young people have become antiWe do not know if we'll be here tomorrow. My generation,
establl.!llunent. They wonder why young people today dislike the different from any other, has been born and ralsedand must learn
ruling Image and people In high places who regard their.material to live with the fact that we inay or may not be here tnmorrow.
wealth of utmost imparlance.
'
The threat of THE BOMB is.so great that it frightens many
And, Is it even any wonder that some young 'people have people Into radical views. Perhaps the scare tactic has been used
doubts of the democratic Ideals? We tell them that this is the land too successfully.
·
of the free and the lando! equality. Here, everybody gets a square
It does no good to worry about the threat of bombing. Either
deal; if not, they at least have the right to complain about it. Yet, we die, or we don't. But is there something we can do about it?
they who must die for llieir country have no right to speak out for Hardly, without the vote!
their candidates by casting a vote for them.
Perhaps my generation can learn to help yours to learn,
I do not feel that maturity has anything to do willi the idea of rather than try to destruct what already is here. I think all of us
voting. There are apparently many middle-aged adults who do not must learn to work more faithfully within the framework of
yet have mature attitudes about politics, if the present state of our government already set up. Charges and countercharges of
country is considered.
·
"dirty politics," and our nation's courts socked tight by lawsuits
The important fact to remember is that young people of this · of every description pitting neighbor against neighbor, suggest
country are dying for it and its ideals but have no right to speak that my generation is notthe only breaker of laws.
for or against llie party in power, or the government, by casting a ·
I think most young people believe peaceful change within our
vote. It makes one wonder.
. ,
present constitutional framework is llie best process tn satisfy
Now, don't get me wrong. I'm no radical. I'm probably very America 's democratic tradition. We would restore this tradition,
conservative. Conservatism has been defined to be a slow- not destroy it.
changing process. That's me. Slow and deliberate In making up
Have you heard the old Latin saying, "We who are about to
my mind.
die, salute you !''
However, once it's made up, I want action. I'm impatient,
But not without the vote!

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CHAS. A. BRADBURY n
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'1&gt;,...,

POMEROY - TWO MEIGS County young people
received their degrees from Marietta College this spring.
They are Therese D. Fultz, (BS), daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
leslie F. Fultz, 110 High St., Pomeroy, and Charles A.
Bradbury II, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bradbury, 244 s.
Third St., Middieport. Bradbury was recently employed as
head basketball coach at Southern High School the next
school year.

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~v-.~;.;

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Meigs

start at 1 p.m. both days. Young people from Chauncey,
Athens, Columbus, The Plains, New Lexington and
Hockingport will perform on lhe water. Races will begin both
days at 4 p.m. New boats and campers will be on display. All
entertainment is free and the public is invited. The club has
members of Meigs and Gailia counties.

Property
Transfers

lassy ·but

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By United Press International
The murder by stealth of at
least 21 middle-aged wanderers
In ·the fruit groves of Yuba
City, Calif., is sure to become a
classic case of its grisly kind.
Such murders, as dlstinguished from sniper killings
and P'!.blic ram)lages, have not
been numerous in the United
States and the depredations of
London's Infamous Jack the
Ripper in 1888 are still the best
known of the . type. But the
Yuba City massacre dwarfs the
Ripper's crime.
The Ripper killed six and
possibiy elglit women drunkards and prostitutes. He was
never arrested but Russian
autnonues belie~e Vassily Konovalov, who died in im asylum
after killing a woman · In
Petrograd in 1891, was living in

London in 1888 and may have
been the Ripper.
Until the Yuba City crime
was uncovered, Mrs. Bella
Poulsdatter Sorensen Gunness
of Laporte, Ind., apparenUy
h•ld lhe mass murder record
with "' known victims and a
possible 12 more, for. a total of
28. She buried the bodies in a
pig pen. Victims included two
husbands, 20 would-be suitors
lured by "lonely hearts" ads,
three women and three children . Mrs. Gunness committed
suicide in 1908.
Also ranking near the top of
the list was Herman Webster
Mudgett, a native of Gilmanton,
N.H. Mudgett, who changed his
name to H. H. Holmes when he
moved to Chicago, murdered at
least 12 young women in his
63rd Street home. Some esti-

l•

~.-.

·~•.

ISears lWhen summer heat is frightful,
your home can still be delightful ...

mated he killed as many as 150
persons.
Mudgett was convicted of
murdering an associate, Benjamin Pitezel, and was hanged on
May 7, 1893.
Zodiac, the San Francisco
area 's phantom murderer ,
claimed 17 victims in a note
written last March. Law
enforcement officials link him
definitely to five . He struck
first in a "lover's lane" near
Vallejo, Calif., and the fifth
victim, a cab driver, was shot
10 months later.
Between 1962 and 1964 in
Boston, 11 murders-and possi·
bly 13-were ascribed to the
"Phantom Strangler." Ali victims lived alone and had
hospital-related backgrounds.
The lingerie with which they
were strangled was tied in
surgical knots. A 33-year-old
handyman confessed to the

slayings. He is confined in a
mental hospital, but no charges
ever been filed.
Sleven A. Nash, a former
truck driver, boasted of killing
11 persons during his trial in
California in the mid-1950's.
"Yes, I killed all II of them. l
only wish I could kill a
thousand and II more," Nash
screamed at court spectators
during his sentencing. He die~
in the San Quentin gas eha; .,ber
on Aug. 21, 1959.
· A series of seven murders
baffled Chicago. police in 1946.
At the scene of one, the
murderer scribbled on a mirror
with lipstick, "For heavens
sake, catCh .me before I kill
more ." William Heirens, an Illyear-old college student, later
confessed to at least three of
the murders when he was
questioned while under the
influence of truth serum.

Celebration Set

ELECTION SET
RACINE - Officers will be
elected by the Southern Local
School District Chapter of the
Ohio Assn. of Public School
Employes at 8 p.m. Tuesday at
the high school here. All
members are urged to attend. A
committee meeting of the
organization will be held at 8
p.m. Wednesday at the school.

I

MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
Mrs . J . W. Shoemaker of
Butyrus, former residents of
·OJ
·Middleport, will observe their
L---~----..1. golden wedding anniversary on
June 18.
An open house will be held on
Sunday, June 20, from 2 to 7 p.
m. at their home 427 East

I

Save SI:Q

24,000 BTU
Central Air
Conditioning

Southern Ave., Bucyrus, and
friends and relatives of the
couple are invited to attend.
Mrs. Shoemaker is the former
Condenser Unit nnd
May Ralph. She and J. w.
'';\" &lt;'Oil
Shoemaker were married in
Pomeroy on June 15, 1921 and
inoved to Bucyrus in 1928 when
he was transferred by the New
York Central Railroad there.
Mr. Shoemaker retired . in 1951
arter 38 years with the New
YOrk Central. The couple have
daughter, Mrs. John (Carol)
Harrison, and two granddaughters, Debbie Harrison and
, • Condenser i'ntdaiiN nut - • Condt•nAer trcutud to rc·
•'de; coil in furn nc•~
• s hot ru st, ~.: urrmdon
Stephanie Harrison, all of
• 2-Mpt:,·d cnnd•·n -= •·r f 1111
• Ofit· t·.ldttting dau·twl&gt;t'k,
' Bucyrus.
n1n11 quil'lly
r't•.CiHt,•rR nnd hluw('r "
· All other sizes on sale, save S50 to HO
I•

Elwood Bowers, Eileen
Bowers to Sybil Ebersbach.
percels, Chester, Pomeroy.
Sybil Ebersbach to Elwood
Bowers, Eileen Bowers, parcels, Pomeroy, Chester.
Homer Carman, to Elizabeth
Carman, lots, Pomeroy.
Jemo Associates Inc. to John
C. Bacon Jr., Judith A. Bacon,
lot, Middleport.
Green Hill Homes, Inc. to
Nancy L. Pope, lot, Middleport.
Nial E. Salser, Virginia
Salser to Russell Radcliffe, lot,
Syracuse.
William R. Nd,on, Rachel
Ann Jll''""n to Franklin Real
Estate, 241 acres, Salem.
John J. Fick, Jane Fick to
Roy E. Fick, Richard F. Fick,
Charles T. Fick, 128.50 acre Int.,
Chester.
Harry Eugene Guthrie, aka,
Harry E. Guthrie, to Genevieve
Guthrie, Maxine Yost, cert. for
trans., Orange.
Eleazady , Manley Clark,
Samuel E. Clark to Neva
Bolyard, lot, Middleport.
SHOOTS CUSTOMER
PESHAWAR, Pakistan (UP!)
- Police said today a bank
manager held up a customer. ·
The manager became so
enraged at a customer who
wanted to cash a telegraphic
money order for $400, but
refused to open an account, that
he fired four shots at him.
Nobody was hurt. They
withheld the bank manager's
name.

,.-----------""'1-------.
REGISTRAR •.
by P.HINCI&lt;: (;AHI)NE:H.'

a

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House GOP Defeats G. gan
By LEE LEONARD
· UPI .Statehouse Reporter .
COL~MBUS (UP!) - House
Repubhca~shave cleared a record $7 .~. billion two • year appropria lions bill to llie state
Senate, but must still adopt the
means of financing $825 million
worth of spending i~creases
over the current btenmum.
GOP leaders, in a showdown
of strength against Gov. John
J .. Gtlligan and House Democrats, mustered 52 votes Fri·

r::========::i

Call 446-2770 for Free Home Survey
Use Sears Easy Pa.IJmtnf Plan

Sotht/octian Grmrtm ,,.rrf r&gt;r Y our .1 1r1m·y nn ,.k
SHOP AT SEARS
ANn RAVI&gt; ·

Phone 446-2770

435 Sec. Ave.

Glllipotlt, Ohio

TO WIN DEGREE

· POMEROY
Jon ·J.
Guinther, son of Mr. and Mrs.
' Shirley Guinther, of Pomeroy,
will receive his bachelor ·of
science degree in Pharmacy on
June 13 at Ohio Northern
University.

FOR GRADUATION
E~c:l.ull\'f AOAPT~ ·S NAP

l

u ·lf.(,nd tng, ~..,l f · odjiiUII' II

I . or. temOYable ph olo•&lt;ord co1e , . , to rorr y
you ntid .
, without a bulge . Stlow•A·Cbrd
lo add or r~mo'fc 2 wl ndowJ ot o tim• . eo1ily•
tord and ticke t pockets , Bill di'fidtr with ,o,...
~::~: •mo,tjy llop Ovpllcntt hv tlot1 l"'ond1ome
. Hit colo" .

Styles
From

..

'ProtecottO Dy "AN 11-.VISIILE Sll
No outside seams to lttr or "D·

BIRTHDAY HONORED
PT. PLEASANT - Russell
Maynard was honored with a
surprise birthday party at his
home in Point Pleasant, May 16,
by his wife, Patty. The dining
table was covered with a table
cloth of pink roses and mat.
ching napkins and plates. A
traditional birthday cake was
decora ted with pink rosebuds,
·and two blue lovebirds nested in
the center with a ribbon border
o! blue edging the cake served
wiL 1 ice cream and punch. The
livin,1 room coffee tab!~ w~s
decOJ a led with the same color
tabk cloth and held the gifts.
At:ending were Mr. and Mrs.
Jesse l1hynard, Mr. and Mrs.
David ZE r~Je and daughters,
Terri and •.. •bbie, Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Maynal'•l, and the hostess
and honoree, Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Mayn Jrd.

Gallipolis, Ohio

plan.
House Speaker Charles f.
Kurfess, R·Bowling Green, said
his party still plans to push for
a H'• per cent flat county individual income tax, but that he
does not expect a vote next
week.
· The Senate will have until
June 30 to adopt the budget-tax
plan before the new fiscal year
begins.
The House-passed appropria·
tio.ns bill contains $1.6 billion

SAN .FRANCISCO (UP!)

Canada balsam is a natural vegetable substance that
is transparent. It is used in
the manufacture of optical
instruments.

'
. .,.,,

'

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PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS
404 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
'We will adjust l o till s tole rance, il
ne cessar~. Gt~a r antee

Is lor one year .

THE LOVELY 5\&gt; FT. marble statue above, ''Our Lady of Fatima," will be dedicated alii
a.m. Sunday at the Sacred Heart Cemetery In Pomeroy by the congregation of the Sacred
Heart Church. The statue, imported from Italy six years ago, is enhanced by a marble archway
that adds two,feet to its height. The statue has been given anonymously to the church for use in
llie cemetery.

.

.Mar.ket Atmospheres Mixed
NEW YORK (UP!) - Fear
that rising interest rates may
hamper economic growth sent
stocks lower last week, but in
the lightest weekly turnover of
the year.
The decline was given a push
by Henry Kaufman, partner
and economist of Salamon
Brothers, an . investment
bankir.g firm . He said interest
' ales probably will move upward in coming months and put
a damper on economic
recovery .
·
Kaufman told a meeting of
security analysts Monday that a
rise in short term interest rates
could slow housing activity by

thI

'
t'UR Bl&amp; DISCOUNT SAVING:-.
137 Pine Street
Gallipolis. Ohio

dragging money away from
trust institutions that provide
the bulk of the nation's home
mortgage money.
David A. Baker, vice
president of Dean Witter &amp; Co. ,
offered a somewhat different
view.
While conceding that Wall
Street is worried about higher
money rates, Baker said
"earnings of corporations are
likely to be more instrumental
in the stock market's behavior
over the next 12 months than
interest rates."
Baker said he expected a 9
per cent increase in corporate
earnings this year and 15 per

cent rise In 1972 which "might
make '72 the best year in the
next five ."
For the week, volume on Wall
Street aggregated 66,066,170
shares more than four million
shares below the previous week
and the lightest since 70,129,920
shares changed hands in the
week ended Jan. 8.
The NYSE Common Stock
index dipped 0.69 to 54.92, while
Standard &amp; Poor's 500 Stock
Index felll.36 to 99.63. The Dow
Jones Industrial Average
dropped 14.06 to 907.81. Declines
outscored advances, 1,136 to 503
emong the I ,828 issues crossing
the tape.

Attention Parents!

CARROLL STEWART
Airman Carroll R. Stewart,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl R.
Stewart, R.D. I, Middleport,
has completed basic training
at Lackland AFB, Tex., and Is
assigned In Keesler AFB,
Miss., for training In the
administrative field. He .!s a
1970 graduate of Meigs High
Sehool.

One by one, Democratic at- .
tempts to increase aid to
schools, welfare programs
health .care. programs, state
employe~ and environmental
programs, were knocked down
without direct votes.
When the final vote came,
only two Republicans ·crossed
party lines to join 44 Democrats
opposing the bill. They were
Reps. Ross G. Heintzelman o(
Canton and George V. Voino·
vich of Cleveland.
· Rep. Patrick A. Sweeney, D·
Cleveland, left the floor and did
not vote on the bill.
The debate contained every.
thing from jokes Lo charges Gil·
ligan tried to strongarm Republican votes for his plan.
Rep. Gertrude Polcar, R-Par·
ma, said two Gilligan staff
members approached her before
the session and threatened if
she didn't vote for the governor's bill, he would go to Parma and campaign against her
election to a municipal judgeship.
·
Gilligan denied later that any
threats were made to anyone.
"! didn't know she was running
for anything,'' Gilligan said tartly, "but after what happened
today, she ought to. "
Reapportionment Battle
Kurfess charged in a letter to
Gilligan that the governor used
reapportionment threats to get
Republican support.
Democrats control the board
which later this year will realign legislative districts.
The Speaker said llie alleged
reapportionment threats were
"some of the lowest, cheapest,
political skullduggery most of
us have ever witnessed."
"While we are all here as the
result of the political process,
the brazen, bel,ow-the-belt
tactics of your staff people
constitute a crass and ugly form
of political machination ,"
Kurfess wrote the governor.
Democrats wanted $70 million
more for aid to nonpublic
schools, $60 million more for
state employe pay increases, $12
million more for pollution control and $9 million more for
highway safety in addition to
restoration of t!le education and
welfare cuts.
Republicans said 'the budget
'
was a ' reasonable comwomise
between current spending and
the Gilligan proposal. They
pointed out the bill included almost $500 million extra in aid
to public schools, $129 million
more iri higher education expenditures, and healthy increases in certain welfare programs
and mental health and retards·
lion programs.

CORA DAM

*
*
*

SUPER MARKETS

AL:L STOR'ES OPEN .M'ON. MAY 31
9:00 A.M. to 6:00 ·P.M.

·ARMOUR*STAR SEI.iEOTED PORK • U.S. Oovt. Inspected:

WHOLE
~

Pork Loins.
14-lb. Avg.

Fresh·Ground"

Family Pak - 3-lbs. ar More
LESSER QUANTITIES lb. 79c

GOLDEN YELLOW

SWEET

A new Flutophone class for the 4th and 5th graders is schedul ed to
begin immediately. This course is a package deal inc luding a
Fl utophone, stand, book and lessons all for the low price of $15.00
total cost .

HANDICRAFTS

STATE ·FARE
SLICED

NOW OPEN

WHIT'
E
'
B
READ
1-lb. 4-oz. Loaf

CORA PARK

THOROF~RE
GRADE A LARGE

WHITE
EG·
o
s
Dozen Carton
TI·DE

~her courses include lessons for Piano, Guitar and v~ious band

DET'ERGE:NT

mstr.u~ents. Where else, can you get complete instruction from such
qualified teachers? Don t Delay! ! We are taking applications now!

The new memb7rs of. our :eaching staff are: Mr . Douglas A. Day,
Graduate .of Oh1o Un1vers1ty School of Music. Mr . Day will t each
P.•ano: Guttar, and Brass Instruments. Mr . Lewi s Shields. Gr.aduat e
of Ohio State School of Music. Mr . Shields will be teaching the
Flutophone. Class. Clarinets, Flutes and Saxophones. Ilk. Mike
Jones. West Virgin ia University School of Music. Mr . Jones will be
t~aching students majoring on drum s. They will be joining the other
fme members o~ our. staff which include : Mr . David Erhman .
Gradu~te of Cmcmnat1 Conservatory of Mus ic, teac~ing Piano unci
Wo_o dwmds . Mr. and Mrs. Charles Murray, Graduale of Ohio
Un1v~rs1ty ~chool of Music. teaching Piano. Mr . Marlin Lear
teac~rng ~u1tar. Mr. J'ohn Lynch teaching percussion . John
Brun1card1, Graduate of Ohio Univers~ty school of Musi c, teaching
Brass and Flutophones . Look to Brun1cardr's for all your musical
needs!

COME IN or CAU 446-0687

Brunicardi ·House of Music

BRE.AKING GROUND -Ground was broken Friday at the site of the future home of the
Mason First Baptist Church. FOnl)lll groundbreaking ceremonies will be held today following
llie regular ~burch services.
·

Farm BUN?JJ~ Roster Larger Than Last
Year
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54 STATE STREET GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

AN
EAR

CORN

CARPET
SPECIAL

The Brunicardi House of Music proudly announces the best summer
musical instruction class ever with teachers from fine universities
sue~ as ?flio University, ~io State, and West Virginia University .
Don t m1ss th1s opportunity for fine quality instruction .

Clark's Jewelry Store ··
342 Second Ave.

day evening - two more than
llie fiO required for passage to get the giant spending blueprint over to the Senate and
send their members home for
llie Memorial Day weekend.·
The final vote which officially shaved $1.3 billion from the
governor's $9.1 billion budget,
climaxed 4% hours of debate
sonie rancorous and some hu:
morous, during which the RepublicansshutoffallDemoeratic attempts to restore Gilligan's

&amp;ale Home Free
In Frisco Area
Waving to supporters chanting
"Power to the People," Black
Panther Chairman l)obby G.
Seale arrived home a free man
Friday after nearly two years
confinement in prisons from
coast to coast.
Seale embraced party
bodyguards at San FranCisco
International Airport before
'getting into a waiting
automobile for the final trip
across San Francisco Bay to his
Oakland home. About 100
persons turned out to greet the
Panther leader who was
released Friday afternoon from
a New Haven, Connecticut,
courthouse on $25,000 bond.

.
more than the current two-year
budget. It Is expected to go
even higher when the tax ,Package Is added, calling for · the
state to pay the cost of proper-'
ty tax relief and homesteaq exemptions.
Offers Increases
Kurfess called the proposal a
"very responsible budget which
offers exceedingly substantive
increases in most areas of
concern."
Gilligan, who bad proclaimed
he could count on 55 to 58 votes
for his program, appeared bit~r in sustaining the first legislative defeat of his brief tenure.
The governor said the GOP·
written spending measure was
"the worst sort of fiscal irresponsibility" which showed a
"serious f~ilure to deal with
the problems confronting Ohio."
The Republican tactics on the
flnor perhaps rankled Gilligan
and the Democrats more than
the $416 million slice out of the
welfare budget and the $531 million cut from educational spending.
The House GOP forced a vote
on the provisions of Gilligan 's
original budget by inserting
them in their own bill.
Democrats were taken by
surprise, but had to oppose the
amendment because it was not
the
current
GilliganDemocratic budget but was
more than two months old.
Republicans naturally voted
against it, and the amendment
failed unanimously. They said,
however, they had given the
governor the vote he had asked
for on his budget. Gilligan
te~med the parliamentary maneuver a "cheap, sophomoric
trick that was even beneath
contempt."
· GOP Bypassed Proposals
Using a House rule which
forbids a vote on an individual
amendment if it already has
been voted on in a package, the
Republicans methodically bypassed as out of order all Dem·
ocraUc attempts to change the
bill.
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...
CAN .CAN GIRLS who will perform on skis at the annual
open house observance of tlle Athena Boat and Ski Club at
Hockingport next weekend are,left to right, Dianne Stauder,
i.aa Brundige, Christy Shaeffer, Melody Stauder, Shauna
Pierce, and SheiTY Canter. The water shows and boat races
will be Saturday and Sunday, Ju~ 5 and 6. Water shows will

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THERESE FULTZ

7-The SundayTirnes-Sentinel,Sunday, May 30.1971

WOMAN KILLED
MARYSVILLE, Ohio tUP!)
- Mrs. Ruth Ackley , 68, of rural
Urgent Alerl
Plain . City was ~illed 'late
Wednesday in a two-car crash
For &amp;laper Pill
COLUMBUS (iJPli - An · on Ohio 38 in Union &lt;;ounty.
"urgent alert" was issued
Friday 'by Attorney General. ·
William J. Brown for an
illegal drug, known as a
"soapcr" which Brown said
causes the heart to stop.
Brown said the pills, bright
orange, have been reported in
Coshocton, Athens ·and
Greene Counties and are
believed also to be in Mont·
gomery County:
He urged persons having
such pills to turn them over to
local authorities or to destroy
them.

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COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio said the group has reached will push hard to have the 1971
Farm Bureau Federation of. 55,100 members, exceeding its Ohio Marketing and Bargaining
ficials have announced a'' 1971 membership goal of ~5,000. Act passed into law," he added.
membership growth for the fi(th "This is clear testimony that "Enactment of lliis measure
consecutive year.
Ohio fa~m people· believe will give farmers power to
c. William Swank, executive strongly m workmg together bargain with processors, which
vice president of the federation, toward mutual' goals," Swank they've been entitled to for.
said.
'
many yeors."
"With this strength of these .
OBTAINS DEGREE
thousands of members behind
Lt. Col. Cedric Ollio Parker us, we will continue to work for
(ret.) whowas .discharged from meaningful changes in the tax
STAY ALERT
the U.S. Army after 22 years structure with strong emphasis
YAKIMA, Wash. (UP!)
service last July, received his on real property tax relief. We Rep. Clarence Bliwn, R.Qhio,
bachelor of science degree In
'told a meeting of newspaper
Business Administration on
publishers Friday there is
May 23 at Our Lady of the Lake
BAKE SALE SET
danger of Congres.! trying to
College In San Antonio, Tex. A RACINE - The Letart BQys ' establish standards for "honest,
1948 graduate of Pomeroy High Farm 4-H Club will hold a hake truthful news" and that tbe
School, he is the son of Mrs. sale beginning at. 8:30 a.m. news media must stay a~rt to
Pearl ,Parker, Laurel Cliff, and Saturday at the Racine Food fight for its rights under the
the late jl!r. Parker.
Market. .
first amendment,.
I

•

.95
sq. yd.
and up

.· Padding
and Labor
INCLUDED

Minimum 20 Sq . Yds .
Nylon, Polyester, Acrilan, Herculon. Over 500
colors and patterns to select from . Come in
today and make your selection.

INDOOR-OUTDOOR CARPET
NOT
INCLUDED IN THIS SpECIAL!
WE ALSO HAYE •.•

e ARMSTRONG VINYL QUAKERTONE
LINOLEUM, 9 &amp; 12 WIDtHS
e ARMSTRONG VINYL CUSHION
FLOOR LINOLEUM

Giant Pkg. · IOc Off Label

1·1b. 1-oz. Pkg.
CHEf'S DELIGHT
Reg. or Pimento

,FOLGER•s
COFFEE

2-lb.

3-lb.

·Cheese Spread
...., Pkg.

69c

KRAFT
Features
ITALIAN DRESSING
8-oz.
Bot.

41c

Miracle Margarine
1-lb.
Pkg .

39c

Porkoy Whipped

MARGARINE
1-lb.

Pkg.

~··-----------------------------~----~~---~-

47c

Can

$2.69

CAMAY
SOAP
5.5-oz.
Bar

19c

CRISCO
. OIL
:1-Pt.S-oz.

Bot.

65c

TASTE

PERCH
FILLm
lUll( STYU

·COMET
CLEANSE'R
' 14· 01.

Can

18c

\¥£ USlAVE THE RIGHT
PRI(lS EFfECTIVE THlU

----------------

lb.

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Personality Profile
has found her niche in village government.
Being involved with projects and
problems of a small town is nothing new
for her.
Off and on for 30 years, she's been
where the action is; presently she is in
her second year as a village councilwoman - Pomeroy's first.
Elma alsg has the distinction ot
being Pomeroy's first woman
treasurer, an elective position she held
12 years. Before that she was a
secretarial "Girl Friday" for four
former mayors, Malcolm Hartley, E.
F. Robinson, George Howe and Sidney
Spencer.
Insofar as her work on village
council, Elma admits that on occasion
she's guilty of "opening her mouth and
sticking her foot into it." She admits
that perhaps she 's not always al tactful
as she should he, and probably a little
too outspoken. But Elma is emphatic in
her conviction that she was elected by
the people of Pomeroy to do a job and
that's exactly what she tries to do.
"My objective as a councilwoman
is to do what the public wants done."
ELMA RUSSELL
She confides that there are times
when she feels the men on council take
a dim view of women in politics.
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Asked how that affected her, she
POMEROY - Elma Russell likes
to tie where the action is and seemingly replied, " It doesn't bother me a bit ••

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just gives me a chance to remind them
that lied the ticket when the votes were
counted."
Personable, with a keen sense of
huin6r, Elma is dedicated to domg what
she can toward making the community
a better place to live .
She thinks that the world would
benefit if more women were actively
involved in civic government and af.
fairs, although she's quick to express
her opinion that high places of
leadership should remain with the men.

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Miss Hackett Sets Wedding Day
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs. George William
Hackett, Jr., Middleport, announce the engagement and
approaching marriage of their daughter, Rose Marie, to
Marvin Allen Fry, son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Wesley Fry,
also of Middleport.
Miss Hackett, a 1967 graduate of Middleport High School,
received her bachelor of science degree from The Ohio State
University College of Biological Sciences in March, and is
currently employed by the Ohio State University. Mr. Fray
graduated from Middleport High School in 1967, attended
Ohio State University, and is employed by Riverside
Methodist Hospital as an inhalation therapist.
The wedding will be an event of Aug. 21, 1971, at the
Sacred Heart Church in Pomeroy.

·Officers Elected by Garden Club
RUTLAND - An open Homer Parker made ones for
meeting to be held June 23at the the Rutland Church of Christ.
Rutland Church of Christ was All club members are to make
planned and officers for t971-72 table arrangementa for the
were- elected at Wednesday -Rutland Alumni Banquet
night's meeting of the Rutland held Saturday night.
Friendly Gardeners at the home Mrs. May was named to
of Mrs. Bill Williamson.
prepare the Green Thumb
Mrs. Earl Dean of the Chester Notes for the Daily Sentinel,
Garden Club will be the guest June 7. Mrs. Wolfe was awarded
demonstrator at the open a first place for her floral
,meeting to be held at 7:30p.m. arrangement, Wildlife, using
with the theme "Interpretive wildflowers, and Mrs. Homer
Arranging."
Parker received second. It was
Invitations have been issued noted that Mrs. Tom Martin,
to all Meigs County Garden former member, is painting the
Clubs and other interested street plan ters. Mrs. Bolin will
persons are welcome to attend. paint the new grill recently
Special guests will be Mrs. John installed at the civic park. Mrs.
Reese of Gallipolis, .Region 11 Snowden volunteered to spray
OAGC director, and Mrs. Fred trees at the park .
Blaettnar, Pomeroy, Meigs Her
husband, Robert
County contact chairman. Mrs. Snowden, sprayed shrubbery at
Robert Snowden , Mrs. Bill the Rutland High School
Brown, Mrs. Jerry !&gt;ads, Mrs. buildings, donating the spray
Fetty, and Mrs. Harold Wolfe ma terials. Other members
will be the hostesses.
agreed to trim trees along the
Mrs. Wolfe was re-elected streets.
president of the club with Mrs. Mrs. Birchfield and Mrs .
Larry Edwards being named May, civic co-chairman , said
vice president; Mrs. Howard the projec t, "Let's" Keep
Birchfield, treasurer; and Mrs. Rutland A Bloomin' Clean
Bill Williamson, secretary.
Town," is nearly complete and
Reorganization of the Merry Mrs. May is making the contest
Gardeners, the junior garden book, which will be entered into
club, was discussed with Mrs. regional and state competition
Bill Brown as advisor with Mrs. in the SCIP contest of the
Robert Snowden as assistant. OAGC .
Each club member is to assist Mrs. Carpenter and Mrs.
with the meeting and refresh- Fred Williamson, garde n
ments.
therapy co-chairmen, noted
Mrs. Bruce May, ban k that only $6.50 had been spent
arrangement chairman, named from the treasury on the
, Mrs. Snowden, Mrs. Bill therapy work done with the
Williamson, Mrs . Bruce Davis special education class at
and Mrs. Richard Fetty, Jr., to Rutland Elementary School
provide floral pieces during during nine sessions. All other
June for the Rutland Branch of materials an d refreshments
the Pomeroy National Bank. were donated by club members
Mrs. Joe Bolin .and Mrs. Tom for other interested persons and
Stewart provided floral merchants. A contest book is
arrangements
for
the being completed for entry in the
Harrisonville Eastern Star, region and state level. It was
Mrs. Fred Williamson an altar noted that the students have
arrangement at the Rutland done plantings at the school,
United Methodist Church and civic park, the street planters
Mrs. Jim Carpenter and Mrs. and their homes with several

trees and flowers.
Members toured the Blenko
Glass Works at Milton , W. Va.,
on May 12.
Each member &lt;lonated $2 in
lieu of a bake sale. Mrs. Edwards won the door prize and
Mrs. Snowden the traveling
prize donated by Mrs. May.
Members brought chrysanthemum cuttings for an exchange.
Thanks Read
A letter of thanks was read
from the students who participated in garden therapy, to
the club members who spent
time with them and for all the
materials provided to them for
use in the many projects.
Mrs . William Willford
presented gardening tips for
June, suggesting it is most
Important to keep the fl ower
gardens and beds cultivated
shallow, doing it frequently to
keep plants growing without
check; to water growing plants
when the weather is dr y,
thoroughly, and then no more
un til plants are about to show a
sign of dryness; to feed fertilizer little and often, that
dahlias, gladioli and cannas
should be planted now (also
many of the perennials); to
keep spent blooms removed and
keep watering to insure a
second blooming period ; to
plant biennials; to mow lawns
fairly low until July, then raise
the mower blades %inch, and to
wage constant warfare against
pests and diseases to keep one's
garden growing.
Mrs. Willford had an outstanding display of wildflowers.
Mrs . Bruce May gave a paper
on Wildflowers for a Garden.
She noted that many of the
wildflowers will grow nearly
anywhere If you select the right
ones. She suggested a bed of
violets for the gardener who
doesn 't work very hard at it.
She said the Trillium-grandflorum, the great white trillium

This announcement is neither an offer t o se ll nor a sol icita tion to buy any of th ese unit s,,.••:rfie
offer i s made on l y by the prospedus and solely to bona fide residen ts ot the State ol Ohio .~

THE OHIO REAL ESTATE
EQUITIES COMPANY
A Real Estate Investment Trust

NEW ISSUE

$6,000,()00 ISSUE
ISSUE PRICE $12.00
PER SHARE
'
Current Return of 7% is Equal to 84' Per Share

MANAGEMENT CURRENTLY OPERATING
$28,000,000 R.E.I.T.
Return Paid Monthly

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copy otthe prospectus may be obtained from
Kenneth e. Russell

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PROVIDENT SECU:f~ITIES, INC.
2.S,Uth Co_ngres&gt;St ., Athens, O~io, 4S701, PhoneS92-&lt;SS9

Name -~--:--------~---Phone -,---~-.,-

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Address'---'-::-.....:::-'--- -- - - - - - - : - __ _ _ _ _......;,....._,_ I
"(y_ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ Stote ___ __ _ ___ Zip

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wiUi three snowy petals above
the green leaves, is the more
dramatic of the spring blooming
wildflowers. It needs a light
composty soil and partial
shade. They remain in bloom a
week or two, slowly fade to
pinkish.
Th e wild bleeding heart,
Dicentra eximia , is in bJoom
longer, with elongated hearts,
and grow more in clusters.
Dutchman's Breeches bloom
shortly after frost has left.
Galaz aphylla makes a low
edging, the leaves grow in
clusters and are glossy and
green. Woodsy compost should
be dug in around them. Small
white blossoms crowded
together in 3 to 4 inch spikes last
for several weeks.
For a partly shaded garden
establish a few clumps of
blackeyes susans, Ru~heckia
hirta. The bloom is a soft burnt
orange and the raised center is
deep purplish brown. Alter the
old flowers fade, new ones open
over a period of 6 to 6 weeks.
She noted that ,goldenrod will
make a bright splash of color in
sun or shade and that there are
some 125 species. She cautioned
that naturally in using wild
flowers in a ·cultivated garden,
one must use common sense.
Compost is excellent for
replenishing any garden soil
but, if you plant a wildflower
that grows rampantly anyway
or normally grows in poor soil
don't he too kind to it. On the
other hand to treat well those
that need special encouragement. Mrs. May showed
color pictures of 50 favorite wild
flowers and many varieties to
pick.
Mrs . James Carpenter
reviewed the book , Using
Wayside Plants by Nelson Coon.
She noted that there are about
2,400 pianls and many products
of our American wild plants are
found in the average home,
including maple syrup, clover
honey , wild rice; canned
blueberries, Blackberry jam,
Elderberry wine to name a few
of the food items.
She told how to pick edible
mushrooms and how to
recognize the poisonous one.
She told how to cook Fern
croziers, to use the young stalks
not over 6 inches high, remove
with the hand the wooly
coating, wash and bunch like
asparagus. They may be boiled
in salted water or steamed until
tender, then season with melted
butter or creSB sauce. Mrs.
Carpenter said that Bayberry
candles are made by collecting
the berries when grayish white
in color in October. The wax is
obtained by boiling the berries
in water and letting the wax
harden when cooled. This wax
may then he melted and used In
the pure state (or mixed with
tallow) for candle dipping. The
bayberries wax does not
produce as bright a light as
regular candles, but gives off a
delightful perfume in burning.
She outlined the many ways
plants have been used by
children lot making toys, how to
dye with roadside plants, and
the many drug items made
fromroadsideplantsandherbs.
Some of the plants used by
· flower arrangers are wild
barberry, dandellon, plum and
· cherry bloom&amp;, skunk cabbage,
11
mu ein, cattail&amp;, p,arly

POMEROY - Miss Brenda
Darlene Boyer and Mr. Reaford
Prater exchanged wedding
vows in a double ring ceremony
at the Middleport Church of
Christ at 2:30 p.m. on May 9.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Boyer,
Lincoln,Heights, Pomeroy, and
the bridegroom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Andrew Prater, Pike
County, Ky.
The Rev. Raullin Moyer of.
ficiated at the ceremony
following a brief program of
nuptial '!lUSI.c by Mrs. Chester
Erwin, org8nist.
Given In marriage by her
father, the bride was attired in a
floor.Jength gown of chiffon and
silk with lace accent lrlm. It
was fashioned with an empire
waist, a high neckline with lace
and seed pearl trim and long
combination fitted and full
sleeves. The A·line skirt of the
gown terminated in a chapel
length train.
Her bouffant veil of illusion
was held in place by a petal
plateau of sllk and chiffon with
seed pearl accent, and her only
jewelry was a necklace, gift of
the bridegroom. The bride
carried a colonial bouquet of
mixed flowers.
Mrs. Barry Boyer, Nelsonville, sister-in-law of the bride,
served as matron of honor. She
was in a floor-length gown of
blue chiffon with a matching
veiled headpiece and had a pink
carnation corsage.
Best man was Mr. Barry
Boyer, Nelsonville, brother of
the bride.
A reception honoring the
uple was held~! the home ot
,e brtd~'S parentS. the bride's'
ble featured a three tiered
cake topped with the traditional
bride and groom. Mrs. Flo
Strickland presided at the table,
and guf!ils were registered by
Mrs. George Hoffman.
For a wedding trip to Burr
Oak near Glouster, the bride
changed into a teal blue pant
suit. The couple reside at 2909
Grasmere Ave., Columbus_
The new Mrs. Prater is a
graduate of Meigs High School
and the Ohio State Cosmetology
School. She is a member of the
Middleport Church of Christ.
Currently she is employed at
Fantasy Hair Fashions, North
High St., Columbus.
Mr. Prater graduated from
Virgie J:ligh School and the
Andiew' ' Barber College. He
served. four years In the U. S.
Air Force, He is employed as a
stylist and barber at the Great
Southern Barber Shop.
Out-of-town guests at the
wedding and reception were
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Haley,
Columbus; Lester Bowers,
Springfield; and Mr. and Mrs.
George Hoffman, Tammy and
Usa, Gallipolis.

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Community
Corner By

Barbara Kay Crooks Engaged
COLUMBUS - Mr. and Mrs. John S. Crooks, 1000
Loretta Ave., Columbus, announce the engagement of their
daughter, Barbara Kay, to Mr. James Ray Lawrence, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Oarence Lawrence of PorUand.
The bride-elect is the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Orville Crooks and the late Mr. and Mrs. Ked Lisle, both of
Syracuse.
Miss Crooks, a 1968 graduate of Linden McKinley High
School in Columbus, is a junior at Ohio State University
majoring in elementary education. S)1e is affillated with
Kappa Phi service sorority . .
Mr. Lawrence, a 1968 graduate of Southern High School,
Racine, also is a junior at Ohio State University majoring in
social studies in the college of education.

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Atomic c I oc k s are the
Marijuana is derived from
the leaves and other tissues most accurate in the world.
of the hemp plant, according Some of them will gain or
POMEROY - Ninety.,;even years old on New Year's Day and to Encyclopaedia Britannica. lose only · a few seconds in
100,000 years.
her biggest complaint is "a little arthritis in my knees. " That's
Mrs. Rosa Barnes, for you.
Mrs. Barnes, who for the past four years has made her home opening the meeting. Members
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at Cuyahoga Falls with a daughter, Mildred Heiser, is here responded to roll call by
bringing a wildflower and
visiting her grandson, James Thomas, and his wife, Eleanor.
identifying it. Some of them
Mrs. Barnes spent most of her life in the Rutland-Langsville
displayed by members were a
area and has many friends who, no doubt, will want to call. She daisy, fleabane, wild pinks,
will be with Mr. and Mrs. Thomas at their Lincoln Hill residence violets, red clover, Mayapple,
for about three weeks.
sweet william, Indian paint
brush, Canada hawkweed. Mrs.
CHARLO'ITE HANNING has sorted and counted for days Bill Williamson gave the
and days, but finally, the job is done. She has 5,447 Betty Crocker secretary report and Mrs .
Serving , Gallipolis
coupons totaling 13,262 points lo be turned over to the Holzer Birchfield the treasurer and
Pomeroy,
Middleport, 0 .
Medical Center towards a redemption value on a kidney machine flower fund reports.
&amp; Mason Co., W.Va .
for the hospital. Charlotte carried out the project as a phase of ber
service chairmanship for Ohio Eta Phi Chapter ofB Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority
.,_.lflflflflflflflf'flflf'f'flflflf•lf'flf•'flflflf'flf..'flfl

Charlene Hoeflich

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Mem or"lal Day

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LEE AND SHARON DAVIDSON and children, Anne, three,
and John, one, will be off for Okinawa next month. Lee is an ~
engineer with Standard Oil and just a few months ago returned il
from Singapore. Sharon'S'mother, Mrs. Emerson Jones, flew over il
to Morristown, N. J.for a visit before their departure.
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DORIS AND KARL GRUESER feel as if they're on a merrygo-round, with a formal wedding last weekend and two
graduations this weekend . Their son, Bob, was married at
Williamstown a week ago yesterday, and Friday both he and his
wife graduated from Glenville State College. Bob received his
bachelor's degree in physical education, and his wife got her's in
special education.
EIGHT GRADUATED AND three to go! That's the record of'
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Pettit.
The Pettits have 11 children with the youngest daughter just
completing the first grade, and two boys, one in the junior high
and the other in the sixth grade.
The first seven all graduated from MiddleJ!OI't High School,
andVanessagraduatedthisyearfromMeigsHighSchool.Allllve
in Meigs County except one son who is in Letart, W. Va . and a
daughter; Karen, who is with her husband at Fort Knox.
Ufe hasn't been easy for Mr. and Mrs. Pettit. Several years
ago,Mr. Pettitlosthisvision,butdespitehishandicaphehasthe
determination to see his dream come true - that aU 11 receive
high school diplomas. Eight graduated and three to go.

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! th·ose va Iiant servicemen who gave up t
il life that peace might prevail. Their :f
!il memory lives on in the hearts of all. il~
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il will not transact business next Mont"' day.

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willbeshowingpictureaoftheHolyLand. Thecouplewentthere
last year with a church group.

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MANY H.ERE WILL remember Mrs. Roger Phillips who
moved from Middleport with her family several years ago to
Scotsdale, Arizona. Tuesday she was injured in an automobile
accident and is .currently in a hospital at Mesa, Arizona . The
extent of her injuries and just what her condition is, we don't
know.

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The Farmers· Bank :
a·nd Savl· ngs Co. !
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POMEROY, Q, .

il Member Federal Reser..,e System

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Anne's Lace to name a few. sessions will begin on June 13,
On Fridays Our Drive-In Window
Many native plants are used for and it is hoped that someone
is Open 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., (Conlandscaping such as High Bush from the club will attend.
tinuously)
·cranberry, Decidious Holly and Mrs. Willford and Mrs. Ed·
il·'l
·,,1,\lh'·lllil\ll·~li,l'''l'll
common Barberry while vines wards are to be co-chairmen of
spch as honeysuckle are used the club's flower show to be
for ground cover. She noted that staged on September 11 from 2-7
many edible nuts and fruits are p.m. at the Rutland Grade ojl
derived from trees.
School. Mrs. Snowden will serve il
Mrs. Sllowden will be the as chairman for the club to
demonstrator, conducting a encourage members to enter
wqrkshop on making corS.ges the Meigs County Fair flower
at the July meeting. It was show which will be held in
decided that· she will purcha!IO August. The installation of new
materials needed. All members ollie~~$ will be held at the
WE INVITE YOUR ACCOUNT
will particip~te.'
September meeting.
1
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d
COME IN AND SEE US!
The natilre camp to be held at · rs. rc te rea a poem. ii

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NEWmMERS TO
OUR COMMUNITY

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discuased.
The "The
Keith Splendor
Bennett ofrorSpring"
devotions,
:v:e~rla~s=ti~n~g,~juniper,
f:ern~c~ro~z:and
le~rs~Queen
,~mllk
=~-~CZanesfield
~a~m:p~~Kwu
:l~r~km~on~t
~~near
by \..................~v····~..··~
(:_j~~;~~~~-~-=-~-=-=-=-=-=-=-~-~-::~::::::-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:":~eWeed
poda,

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POMEROY ~ Plans have
been completed for the open
church wedding of Miss Debra
Denise Keebaugh to Mr. Robert
Ewing Buck at 7:30 p. m. on
June 6 at Trinity Church,
Pomeroy.
Music will be presented by
Mrs. Carrie Neutzllng beginning at 7 p. m. The Rev. W. H.
Perrin will officiate at the
double ring ceremony.
Miss linda Baer of Chester
will serve as maid of honor for
the bride, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Marvin Keebaugh, and the
bridesmaids will be Miss Nancy
Hawk and Miss Tonya
Keebaugh, sister of the brideelect.
Mr. Fred Sisson will be Mr.
Buck's best man, and ushers
will ,be Richard Nease,
Pomeroy, Route 3, and Norman
Brague, Wadsworth, a college
classmate.
A reception
honoring the couple will be held
at the Meigs Inn immediately
following the ceremony.

Ronoyce Barnes to Wed

Linda Owens
Cheryl Ann Hoffee, Robert W. Crow S ts th D
Plan Wedding of July 31
e
e ay
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Hendershot, 20 Oearview Drive,
Athens, announce the engagement of Mrs. Hendershot's
daughter, Cheryl Ann Hoffee, to Robert William Crow, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Crow of Syracuse.
The bride-elect will receive an Associate of Arts degree
from Ohio University in June. Her fiance attended Kent State
University and presently is sales manager for Parkersburg
Mobile Homes, Inc.
A July 31, seven-thirty o'clock wedding will be held at the
First Presbyterian Church, Athens. It will be an open church
wedding.

Mr. and Mrs. Reaford Prater

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JUST A REMINDER that tonight at 7:30 at the Middleport
First Baptist Church, Betty Jo and Raymond "Cub" Allensworth

ngs . • •

Couple Wed May 8

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Six yea rs ago, Elma opened the Kut
N' Kurl Beauty Shop which is adjacent
to her Union Ave. home . She was in her
early ·forties when she decided it was
"now or never," if a lifetime ambition
were to he fulfilled. She enrolled at
Southerton's Beauty School in Athens
and nine months later completed her
training.
Uving next door to Elma and her
husband, Truman, an employe of
Kaiser Aluminum, are their son~n4aw
and daughter, Pat and Anita Sue
Neutzling, and their only grandchild,
two-year.()ld Jay Anthony. The
Russell's son, Jay C., will graduate on
June 11 from the Ohio State College of
Pharmacy.
Elma is a member of the Pomeroy
Church of Christ.

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Open Church
Wedding Set

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REVIVAL ANNOUNCED
HEMLOCK GROVE - A
revival wiU be held at the
Hemlock Grove Christian
Church beginning Sunday, June
6, and continuing through June
13. Services will begin'at 8 each
evening with the Rev. James
Quisenberry from Morehead,
Ky., speaking. Vacation Bible
school at the church will begin
on Monday, June 7, with Mrs.
James Quisenberry as the

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Ly1a Games to w_ed
___in.. ::J;..ul""'y;;;..___~_ea.de.r.•All.c·h·nd.re·n·ar.ei.nv.ite.d..
RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs.
Denny W. Garnes, RuUand, are
announcing the engagement
and approaching marriage of
their daughter, Lyla, to Mr.
Kenneth A. Dinguss, son of Mr.
and Mrs . Ted Haifield,
Langsville. The wedding will be
an event of July 17, 7:30p.m. at
the Rutland Methodist Church.

Teresa Ann Nicinsky will
Wed Mark Edward Davis
MIDDLEPORT- Mr. and Mrs. George Nicinsky, 586
lincoln St., Middleport, are announcing the engagement of
their daughter, Teresa Ann, toMr.Mark Edward Davis, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Wllllam Davis, 560 Sycamore st., Mid·
dleport. Miss Nlcinsky is a 1971 graduate of Meigs High
School. Mr. Davis graduated from Racine High School in
1965. Wedding plans are Incomplete.

Farewell Tea
·•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
~as
SlU1Pr1se
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:ee Sprl"ng l"nto Summer
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SAVINGS .
AC.COUNT
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EARNING

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Thafs The Hi&amp;flest PISSbook Rate In The Area!

Slop by 1nd t•tk to E~rll"'ttiJor Donn• Davlds.on

The "•·lhens County .JCm,,...
~-.:n• &amp; Loan Co.

&gt; •

MEIGS CO.
•
IRANCH

296 W. SECOND
POMEROY, OHIO

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centering the table, with' pink
tapers used on the sides.
Besides members of her
family, co-workers and company employes, friends of Miss
Zerkle and representatives
from the Middleport Garden
Club and other organizations in
Heath . Methodist Church al-

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Compounded quarterly on regular passbook savings from day ol deposit to day ot
1
wllhdrawal. as long as you maintain an open occount.
\
-·
A.GtFTFORYOU .,. I Place SettlngotDishes orsetoffourl2ounceTumblers
w1lh a deposit of 525.00. You get a •· Piece Place Setting for a deposit of ssoo.oo.
Open a savings account now.

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:tea
Fridaysocial
afternoon
• company's
room. in the
e A pink and white color
• scheme was carried out on the
e re(reshment table with an
• arrangement of pink roses and
: a variety of white flowers

3.o·

WITH A

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MIDDLEPOi!T - Miss Nellie
• J. Zerkle, Middleport, a veteran
e of 311 years and 10 months of
• service with the Columbus and
• Southern Ohio Electric Co., was
• honored at a surprise farewell

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POMEROY - Plans have
been completed for the wedding
of Miss Linda Owens, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Richard M.
Owens , Pomeroy, to Mr. Jack
Sigman, son of Mrs. Leora
Sigman and the late Hobart
Sigman, Middleport.
The open church wedding will
be an event of June 12 at 1:30 p.
m. at the Middleport First
Baptist Church. Music will be
presented by Mrs. Dorothy
Anthony, organist, and the Rev.
Charles Simons will officiate at
the double ring ceremony.
The bride-elect has chosen
her sister, Mrs. Charles E.
Carson of Hysell Run, as her.
matron of honor.
Mr. Sigman's best man will
be Mr. Randy Humphreys "of
Middleport. Ushers will be Mr.
' Herschel McClure and Mr.
David Taylor. Immediately
followin g the ceremony an
invitational reception will be
held in the church social room.

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tended·
H. H. Trumbo and Ron Me• Dade of the company's employe
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relations department in
• Columbus presented Miss
• Zerkle a pendant watch from
e the firm . Jack Welsh, local
• district manager, presented her
• a gift from employes, and the
• honored guest received a
: number of other gifta, not only
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from employes of the company
but from friends attending.
Among them were two corsages, one of orchids.
Miss ~rkle began her duties
in the Middleport office In 1932
as a bookkeeper and was
promoted to typist-clerk In 1953.
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LEWISTOWN - Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Barnes, Route I,
Lewistown, are announcing the
engagement and approaching
marriage of their eldest
daughter, Ronoyce, to Mr. Gene
Grate, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Arnold Grate, Rutland.

Hays-Sylvester
Vows on June 4
POMEROY -

Miss Barnes, a graduate of
Indian Lake High School, and
her fiance who graduated from
Rutland High School, were
members of the first graduating
class of the Mount Vernon
Nazarene Junior College.
They are presently juniors in
Bethany Nazarene College at
Bethany, Okla. The bride-elect
is majoring In secondary
education and her: fiance Is
preparing for the ministry. An
open church wedding will take
place at the Indian Lake Church
on June 6 at 2:30 p.m.

The open

church
weddingofofMr.
Mrs.
Hays, daughter
andBessie
Mrs. • - - - - - - - - - ·
FOR THE
Harry Watson, to Mr. Robert
Sylvester, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Sylvester, Syracuse, w11l
he an event of Friday, June 4, at
Trinity Church.
The Rev. W. H. Perrin w11l
officiate at the 7:30 p. m.
ceremony following a half.Jtour
of nuptial music by Mrs. Ben
Neutzting, organist, and Mrs.
Marvin Burt, soloist. A
Serving • Gallipolis,
reception w11l be held In the
Pomerpy, Middleport, 0 .
&amp; Mason Co •• w. Va.
church social room.
l.....i1llllllilttii~---~..

THERE~ STILL

TIME TO
BfATlNE

HfAT...

SPECIAL SALE

SUMMER

BATON
CLASSES
AT
ROYAL OAK PARK
AND
RACINE·SYRACUSE AREA

CHECK THESE
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FOR

(1)"5000 BTU Philco
(1) 5000 BTU Westinghouse
(2) 5000 BTU Westinghouie
(1) 6000 BTU' Westinghouse
(1) 8000 BTU Westinghouse
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(1) 15,000 BTU Westini1ouse
(1) 12,000 BTU Philco
(4) 18,000 BTU Westinghouse
(1) 8000 BTU ChiYSier Air Temp

BEGINNERS, INTERMEDIATES, AND
ADVANCED STUDENTS OF All AGES
TAUGHT BY:

JUDY RIGGS
ENROLL NOW!
PHONE:
CHESTER 985-3595
EVERYONE WELCOME!

$129.95
sl59.95
SJ19.95
Sl69.95
'225.00
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'285.00
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'
$225.00

REMAN &amp;ABBOfi
992-5321
'" N! 2nd. Ave.

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Middleptrt, Q,

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Personality Profile
has found her niche in village government.
Being involved with projects and
problems of a small town is nothing new
for her.
Off and on for 30 years, she's been
where the action is; presently she is in
her second year as a village councilwoman - Pomeroy's first.
Elma alsg has the distinction ot
being Pomeroy's first woman
treasurer, an elective position she held
12 years. Before that she was a
secretarial "Girl Friday" for four
former mayors, Malcolm Hartley, E.
F. Robinson, George Howe and Sidney
Spencer.
Insofar as her work on village
council, Elma admits that on occasion
she's guilty of "opening her mouth and
sticking her foot into it." She admits
that perhaps she 's not always al tactful
as she should he, and probably a little
too outspoken. But Elma is emphatic in
her conviction that she was elected by
the people of Pomeroy to do a job and
that's exactly what she tries to do.
"My objective as a councilwoman
is to do what the public wants done."
ELMA RUSSELL
She confides that there are times
when she feels the men on council take
a dim view of women in politics.
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Asked how that affected her, she
POMEROY - Elma Russell likes
to tie where the action is and seemingly replied, " It doesn't bother me a bit ••

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just gives me a chance to remind them
that lied the ticket when the votes were
counted."
Personable, with a keen sense of
huin6r, Elma is dedicated to domg what
she can toward making the community
a better place to live .
She thinks that the world would
benefit if more women were actively
involved in civic government and af.
fairs, although she's quick to express
her opinion that high places of
leadership should remain with the men.

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Miss Hackett Sets Wedding Day
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs. George William
Hackett, Jr., Middleport, announce the engagement and
approaching marriage of their daughter, Rose Marie, to
Marvin Allen Fry, son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Wesley Fry,
also of Middleport.
Miss Hackett, a 1967 graduate of Middleport High School,
received her bachelor of science degree from The Ohio State
University College of Biological Sciences in March, and is
currently employed by the Ohio State University. Mr. Fray
graduated from Middleport High School in 1967, attended
Ohio State University, and is employed by Riverside
Methodist Hospital as an inhalation therapist.
The wedding will be an event of Aug. 21, 1971, at the
Sacred Heart Church in Pomeroy.

·Officers Elected by Garden Club
RUTLAND - An open Homer Parker made ones for
meeting to be held June 23at the the Rutland Church of Christ.
Rutland Church of Christ was All club members are to make
planned and officers for t971-72 table arrangementa for the
were- elected at Wednesday -Rutland Alumni Banquet
night's meeting of the Rutland held Saturday night.
Friendly Gardeners at the home Mrs. May was named to
of Mrs. Bill Williamson.
prepare the Green Thumb
Mrs. Earl Dean of the Chester Notes for the Daily Sentinel,
Garden Club will be the guest June 7. Mrs. Wolfe was awarded
demonstrator at the open a first place for her floral
,meeting to be held at 7:30p.m. arrangement, Wildlife, using
with the theme "Interpretive wildflowers, and Mrs. Homer
Arranging."
Parker received second. It was
Invitations have been issued noted that Mrs. Tom Martin,
to all Meigs County Garden former member, is painting the
Clubs and other interested street plan ters. Mrs. Bolin will
persons are welcome to attend. paint the new grill recently
Special guests will be Mrs. John installed at the civic park. Mrs.
Reese of Gallipolis, .Region 11 Snowden volunteered to spray
OAGC director, and Mrs. Fred trees at the park .
Blaettnar, Pomeroy, Meigs Her
husband, Robert
County contact chairman. Mrs. Snowden, sprayed shrubbery at
Robert Snowden , Mrs. Bill the Rutland High School
Brown, Mrs. Jerry !&gt;ads, Mrs. buildings, donating the spray
Fetty, and Mrs. Harold Wolfe ma terials. Other members
will be the hostesses.
agreed to trim trees along the
Mrs. Wolfe was re-elected streets.
president of the club with Mrs. Mrs. Birchfield and Mrs .
Larry Edwards being named May, civic co-chairman , said
vice president; Mrs. Howard the projec t, "Let's" Keep
Birchfield, treasurer; and Mrs. Rutland A Bloomin' Clean
Bill Williamson, secretary.
Town," is nearly complete and
Reorganization of the Merry Mrs. May is making the contest
Gardeners, the junior garden book, which will be entered into
club, was discussed with Mrs. regional and state competition
Bill Brown as advisor with Mrs. in the SCIP contest of the
Robert Snowden as assistant. OAGC .
Each club member is to assist Mrs. Carpenter and Mrs.
with the meeting and refresh- Fred Williamson, garde n
ments.
therapy co-chairmen, noted
Mrs. Bruce May, ban k that only $6.50 had been spent
arrangement chairman, named from the treasury on the
, Mrs. Snowden, Mrs. Bill therapy work done with the
Williamson, Mrs . Bruce Davis special education class at
and Mrs. Richard Fetty, Jr., to Rutland Elementary School
provide floral pieces during during nine sessions. All other
June for the Rutland Branch of materials an d refreshments
the Pomeroy National Bank. were donated by club members
Mrs. Joe Bolin .and Mrs. Tom for other interested persons and
Stewart provided floral merchants. A contest book is
arrangements
for
the being completed for entry in the
Harrisonville Eastern Star, region and state level. It was
Mrs. Fred Williamson an altar noted that the students have
arrangement at the Rutland done plantings at the school,
United Methodist Church and civic park, the street planters
Mrs. Jim Carpenter and Mrs. and their homes with several

trees and flowers.
Members toured the Blenko
Glass Works at Milton , W. Va.,
on May 12.
Each member &lt;lonated $2 in
lieu of a bake sale. Mrs. Edwards won the door prize and
Mrs. Snowden the traveling
prize donated by Mrs. May.
Members brought chrysanthemum cuttings for an exchange.
Thanks Read
A letter of thanks was read
from the students who participated in garden therapy, to
the club members who spent
time with them and for all the
materials provided to them for
use in the many projects.
Mrs . William Willford
presented gardening tips for
June, suggesting it is most
Important to keep the fl ower
gardens and beds cultivated
shallow, doing it frequently to
keep plants growing without
check; to water growing plants
when the weather is dr y,
thoroughly, and then no more
un til plants are about to show a
sign of dryness; to feed fertilizer little and often, that
dahlias, gladioli and cannas
should be planted now (also
many of the perennials); to
keep spent blooms removed and
keep watering to insure a
second blooming period ; to
plant biennials; to mow lawns
fairly low until July, then raise
the mower blades %inch, and to
wage constant warfare against
pests and diseases to keep one's
garden growing.
Mrs. Willford had an outstanding display of wildflowers.
Mrs . Bruce May gave a paper
on Wildflowers for a Garden.
She noted that many of the
wildflowers will grow nearly
anywhere If you select the right
ones. She suggested a bed of
violets for the gardener who
doesn 't work very hard at it.
She said the Trillium-grandflorum, the great white trillium

This announcement is neither an offer t o se ll nor a sol icita tion to buy any of th ese unit s,,.••:rfie
offer i s made on l y by the prospedus and solely to bona fide residen ts ot the State ol Ohio .~

THE OHIO REAL ESTATE
EQUITIES COMPANY
A Real Estate Investment Trust

NEW ISSUE

$6,000,()00 ISSUE
ISSUE PRICE $12.00
PER SHARE
'
Current Return of 7% is Equal to 84' Per Share

MANAGEMENT CURRENTLY OPERATING
$28,000,000 R.E.I.T.
Return Paid Monthly

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copy otthe prospectus may be obtained from
Kenneth e. Russell

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PROVIDENT SECU:f~ITIES, INC.
2.S,Uth Co_ngres&gt;St ., Athens, O~io, 4S701, PhoneS92-&lt;SS9

Name -~--:--------~---Phone -,---~-.,-

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Address'---'-::-.....:::-'--- -- - - - - - - : - __ _ _ _ _......;,....._,_ I
"(y_ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ Stote ___ __ _ ___ Zip

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wiUi three snowy petals above
the green leaves, is the more
dramatic of the spring blooming
wildflowers. It needs a light
composty soil and partial
shade. They remain in bloom a
week or two, slowly fade to
pinkish.
Th e wild bleeding heart,
Dicentra eximia , is in bJoom
longer, with elongated hearts,
and grow more in clusters.
Dutchman's Breeches bloom
shortly after frost has left.
Galaz aphylla makes a low
edging, the leaves grow in
clusters and are glossy and
green. Woodsy compost should
be dug in around them. Small
white blossoms crowded
together in 3 to 4 inch spikes last
for several weeks.
For a partly shaded garden
establish a few clumps of
blackeyes susans, Ru~heckia
hirta. The bloom is a soft burnt
orange and the raised center is
deep purplish brown. Alter the
old flowers fade, new ones open
over a period of 6 to 6 weeks.
She noted that ,goldenrod will
make a bright splash of color in
sun or shade and that there are
some 125 species. She cautioned
that naturally in using wild
flowers in a ·cultivated garden,
one must use common sense.
Compost is excellent for
replenishing any garden soil
but, if you plant a wildflower
that grows rampantly anyway
or normally grows in poor soil
don't he too kind to it. On the
other hand to treat well those
that need special encouragement. Mrs. May showed
color pictures of 50 favorite wild
flowers and many varieties to
pick.
Mrs . James Carpenter
reviewed the book , Using
Wayside Plants by Nelson Coon.
She noted that there are about
2,400 pianls and many products
of our American wild plants are
found in the average home,
including maple syrup, clover
honey , wild rice; canned
blueberries, Blackberry jam,
Elderberry wine to name a few
of the food items.
She told how to pick edible
mushrooms and how to
recognize the poisonous one.
She told how to cook Fern
croziers, to use the young stalks
not over 6 inches high, remove
with the hand the wooly
coating, wash and bunch like
asparagus. They may be boiled
in salted water or steamed until
tender, then season with melted
butter or creSB sauce. Mrs.
Carpenter said that Bayberry
candles are made by collecting
the berries when grayish white
in color in October. The wax is
obtained by boiling the berries
in water and letting the wax
harden when cooled. This wax
may then he melted and used In
the pure state (or mixed with
tallow) for candle dipping. The
bayberries wax does not
produce as bright a light as
regular candles, but gives off a
delightful perfume in burning.
She outlined the many ways
plants have been used by
children lot making toys, how to
dye with roadside plants, and
the many drug items made
fromroadsideplantsandherbs.
Some of the plants used by
· flower arrangers are wild
barberry, dandellon, plum and
· cherry bloom&amp;, skunk cabbage,
11
mu ein, cattail&amp;, p,arly

POMEROY - Miss Brenda
Darlene Boyer and Mr. Reaford
Prater exchanged wedding
vows in a double ring ceremony
at the Middleport Church of
Christ at 2:30 p.m. on May 9.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Boyer,
Lincoln,Heights, Pomeroy, and
the bridegroom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Andrew Prater, Pike
County, Ky.
The Rev. Raullin Moyer of.
ficiated at the ceremony
following a brief program of
nuptial '!lUSI.c by Mrs. Chester
Erwin, org8nist.
Given In marriage by her
father, the bride was attired in a
floor.Jength gown of chiffon and
silk with lace accent lrlm. It
was fashioned with an empire
waist, a high neckline with lace
and seed pearl trim and long
combination fitted and full
sleeves. The A·line skirt of the
gown terminated in a chapel
length train.
Her bouffant veil of illusion
was held in place by a petal
plateau of sllk and chiffon with
seed pearl accent, and her only
jewelry was a necklace, gift of
the bridegroom. The bride
carried a colonial bouquet of
mixed flowers.
Mrs. Barry Boyer, Nelsonville, sister-in-law of the bride,
served as matron of honor. She
was in a floor-length gown of
blue chiffon with a matching
veiled headpiece and had a pink
carnation corsage.
Best man was Mr. Barry
Boyer, Nelsonville, brother of
the bride.
A reception honoring the
uple was held~! the home ot
,e brtd~'S parentS. the bride's'
ble featured a three tiered
cake topped with the traditional
bride and groom. Mrs. Flo
Strickland presided at the table,
and guf!ils were registered by
Mrs. George Hoffman.
For a wedding trip to Burr
Oak near Glouster, the bride
changed into a teal blue pant
suit. The couple reside at 2909
Grasmere Ave., Columbus_
The new Mrs. Prater is a
graduate of Meigs High School
and the Ohio State Cosmetology
School. She is a member of the
Middleport Church of Christ.
Currently she is employed at
Fantasy Hair Fashions, North
High St., Columbus.
Mr. Prater graduated from
Virgie J:ligh School and the
Andiew' ' Barber College. He
served. four years In the U. S.
Air Force, He is employed as a
stylist and barber at the Great
Southern Barber Shop.
Out-of-town guests at the
wedding and reception were
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Haley,
Columbus; Lester Bowers,
Springfield; and Mr. and Mrs.
George Hoffman, Tammy and
Usa, Gallipolis.

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Community
Corner By

Barbara Kay Crooks Engaged
COLUMBUS - Mr. and Mrs. John S. Crooks, 1000
Loretta Ave., Columbus, announce the engagement of their
daughter, Barbara Kay, to Mr. James Ray Lawrence, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Oarence Lawrence of PorUand.
The bride-elect is the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Orville Crooks and the late Mr. and Mrs. Ked Lisle, both of
Syracuse.
Miss Crooks, a 1968 graduate of Linden McKinley High
School in Columbus, is a junior at Ohio State University
majoring in elementary education. S)1e is affillated with
Kappa Phi service sorority . .
Mr. Lawrence, a 1968 graduate of Southern High School,
Racine, also is a junior at Ohio State University majoring in
social studies in the college of education.

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Atomic c I oc k s are the
Marijuana is derived from
the leaves and other tissues most accurate in the world.
of the hemp plant, according Some of them will gain or
POMEROY - Ninety.,;even years old on New Year's Day and to Encyclopaedia Britannica. lose only · a few seconds in
100,000 years.
her biggest complaint is "a little arthritis in my knees. " That's
Mrs. Rosa Barnes, for you.
Mrs. Barnes, who for the past four years has made her home opening the meeting. Members
'ti' 'I
at Cuyahoga Falls with a daughter, Mildred Heiser, is here responded to roll call by
bringing a wildflower and
visiting her grandson, James Thomas, and his wife, Eleanor.
identifying it. Some of them
Mrs. Barnes spent most of her life in the Rutland-Langsville
displayed by members were a
area and has many friends who, no doubt, will want to call. She daisy, fleabane, wild pinks,
will be with Mr. and Mrs. Thomas at their Lincoln Hill residence violets, red clover, Mayapple,
for about three weeks.
sweet william, Indian paint
brush, Canada hawkweed. Mrs.
CHARLO'ITE HANNING has sorted and counted for days Bill Williamson gave the
and days, but finally, the job is done. She has 5,447 Betty Crocker secretary report and Mrs .
Serving , Gallipolis
coupons totaling 13,262 points lo be turned over to the Holzer Birchfield the treasurer and
Pomeroy,
Middleport, 0 .
Medical Center towards a redemption value on a kidney machine flower fund reports.
&amp; Mason Co., W.Va .
for the hospital. Charlotte carried out the project as a phase of ber
service chairmanship for Ohio Eta Phi Chapter ofB Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority
.,_.lflflflflflflflf'flflf'f'flflflf•lf'flf•'flflflf'flf..'flfl

Charlene Hoeflich

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Mem or"lal Day

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LEE AND SHARON DAVIDSON and children, Anne, three,
and John, one, will be off for Okinawa next month. Lee is an ~
engineer with Standard Oil and just a few months ago returned il
from Singapore. Sharon'S'mother, Mrs. Emerson Jones, flew over il
to Morristown, N. J.for a visit before their departure.
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DORIS AND KARL GRUESER feel as if they're on a merrygo-round, with a formal wedding last weekend and two
graduations this weekend . Their son, Bob, was married at
Williamstown a week ago yesterday, and Friday both he and his
wife graduated from Glenville State College. Bob received his
bachelor's degree in physical education, and his wife got her's in
special education.
EIGHT GRADUATED AND three to go! That's the record of'
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Pettit.
The Pettits have 11 children with the youngest daughter just
completing the first grade, and two boys, one in the junior high
and the other in the sixth grade.
The first seven all graduated from MiddleJ!OI't High School,
andVanessagraduatedthisyearfromMeigsHighSchool.Allllve
in Meigs County except one son who is in Letart, W. Va . and a
daughter; Karen, who is with her husband at Fort Knox.
Ufe hasn't been easy for Mr. and Mrs. Pettit. Several years
ago,Mr. Pettitlosthisvision,butdespitehishandicaphehasthe
determination to see his dream come true - that aU 11 receive
high school diplomas. Eight graduated and three to go.

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il At this special time, we pause to honor

! th·ose va Iiant servicemen who gave up t
il life that peace might prevail. Their :f
!il memory lives on in the hearts of all. il~
il
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t In observance of Memorial Day, .We t
il will not transact business next Mont"' day.

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willbeshowingpictureaoftheHolyLand. Thecouplewentthere
last year with a church group.

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MANY H.ERE WILL remember Mrs. Roger Phillips who
moved from Middleport with her family several years ago to
Scotsdale, Arizona. Tuesday she was injured in an automobile
accident and is .currently in a hospital at Mesa, Arizona . The
extent of her injuries and just what her condition is, we don't
know.

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The Farmers· Bank :
a·nd Savl· ngs Co. !
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POMEROY, Q, .

il Member Federal Reser..,e System

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Anne's Lace to name a few. sessions will begin on June 13,
On Fridays Our Drive-In Window
Many native plants are used for and it is hoped that someone
is Open 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., (Conlandscaping such as High Bush from the club will attend.
tinuously)
·cranberry, Decidious Holly and Mrs. Willford and Mrs. Ed·
il·'l
·,,1,\lh'·lllil\ll·~li,l'''l'll
common Barberry while vines wards are to be co-chairmen of
spch as honeysuckle are used the club's flower show to be
for ground cover. She noted that staged on September 11 from 2-7
many edible nuts and fruits are p.m. at the Rutland Grade ojl
derived from trees.
School. Mrs. Snowden will serve il
Mrs. Sllowden will be the as chairman for the club to
demonstrator, conducting a encourage members to enter
wqrkshop on making corS.ges the Meigs County Fair flower
at the July meeting. It was show which will be held in
decided that· she will purcha!IO August. The installation of new
materials needed. All members ollie~~$ will be held at the
WE INVITE YOUR ACCOUNT
will particip~te.'
September meeting.
1
M ljl hf' ld
d
COME IN AND SEE US!
The natilre camp to be held at · rs. rc te rea a poem. ii

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NEWmMERS TO
OUR COMMUNITY

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discuased.
The "The
Keith Splendor
Bennett ofrorSpring"
devotions,
:v:e~rla~s=ti~n~g,~juniper,
f:ern~c~ro~z:and
le~rs~Queen
,~mllk
=~-~CZanesfield
~a~m:p~~Kwu
:l~r~km~on~t
~~near
by \..................~v····~..··~
(:_j~~;~~~~-~-=-~-=-=-=-=-=-=-~-~-::~::::::-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:":~eWeed
poda,

J

POMEROY ~ Plans have
been completed for the open
church wedding of Miss Debra
Denise Keebaugh to Mr. Robert
Ewing Buck at 7:30 p. m. on
June 6 at Trinity Church,
Pomeroy.
Music will be presented by
Mrs. Carrie Neutzllng beginning at 7 p. m. The Rev. W. H.
Perrin will officiate at the
double ring ceremony.
Miss linda Baer of Chester
will serve as maid of honor for
the bride, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Marvin Keebaugh, and the
bridesmaids will be Miss Nancy
Hawk and Miss Tonya
Keebaugh, sister of the brideelect.
Mr. Fred Sisson will be Mr.
Buck's best man, and ushers
will ,be Richard Nease,
Pomeroy, Route 3, and Norman
Brague, Wadsworth, a college
classmate.
A reception
honoring the couple will be held
at the Meigs Inn immediately
following the ceremony.

Ronoyce Barnes to Wed

Linda Owens
Cheryl Ann Hoffee, Robert W. Crow S ts th D
Plan Wedding of July 31
e
e ay
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Hendershot, 20 Oearview Drive,
Athens, announce the engagement of Mrs. Hendershot's
daughter, Cheryl Ann Hoffee, to Robert William Crow, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Crow of Syracuse.
The bride-elect will receive an Associate of Arts degree
from Ohio University in June. Her fiance attended Kent State
University and presently is sales manager for Parkersburg
Mobile Homes, Inc.
A July 31, seven-thirty o'clock wedding will be held at the
First Presbyterian Church, Athens. It will be an open church
wedding.

Mr. and Mrs. Reaford Prater

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JUST A REMINDER that tonight at 7:30 at the Middleport
First Baptist Church, Betty Jo and Raymond "Cub" Allensworth

ngs . • •

Couple Wed May 8

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Six yea rs ago, Elma opened the Kut
N' Kurl Beauty Shop which is adjacent
to her Union Ave. home . She was in her
early ·forties when she decided it was
"now or never," if a lifetime ambition
were to he fulfilled. She enrolled at
Southerton's Beauty School in Athens
and nine months later completed her
training.
Uving next door to Elma and her
husband, Truman, an employe of
Kaiser Aluminum, are their son~n4aw
and daughter, Pat and Anita Sue
Neutzling, and their only grandchild,
two-year.()ld Jay Anthony. The
Russell's son, Jay C., will graduate on
June 11 from the Ohio State College of
Pharmacy.
Elma is a member of the Pomeroy
Church of Christ.

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Open Church
Wedding Set

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REVIVAL ANNOUNCED
HEMLOCK GROVE - A
revival wiU be held at the
Hemlock Grove Christian
Church beginning Sunday, June
6, and continuing through June
13. Services will begin'at 8 each
evening with the Rev. James
Quisenberry from Morehead,
Ky., speaking. Vacation Bible
school at the church will begin
on Monday, June 7, with Mrs.
James Quisenberry as the

,.

Ly1a Games to w_ed
___in.. ::J;..ul""'y;;;..___~_ea.de.r.•All.c·h·nd.re·n·ar.ei.nv.ite.d..
RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs.
Denny W. Garnes, RuUand, are
announcing the engagement
and approaching marriage of
their daughter, Lyla, to Mr.
Kenneth A. Dinguss, son of Mr.
and Mrs . Ted Haifield,
Langsville. The wedding will be
an event of July 17, 7:30p.m. at
the Rutland Methodist Church.

Teresa Ann Nicinsky will
Wed Mark Edward Davis
MIDDLEPORT- Mr. and Mrs. George Nicinsky, 586
lincoln St., Middleport, are announcing the engagement of
their daughter, Teresa Ann, toMr.Mark Edward Davis, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Wllllam Davis, 560 Sycamore st., Mid·
dleport. Miss Nlcinsky is a 1971 graduate of Meigs High
School. Mr. Davis graduated from Racine High School in
1965. Wedding plans are Incomplete.

Farewell Tea
·•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
~as
SlU1Pr1se
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:ee Sprl"ng l"nto Summer
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SAVINGS .
AC.COUNT
•
EARNING

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Thafs The Hi&amp;flest PISSbook Rate In The Area!

Slop by 1nd t•tk to E~rll"'ttiJor Donn• Davlds.on

The "•·lhens County .JCm,,...
~-.:n• &amp; Loan Co.

&gt; •

MEIGS CO.
•
IRANCH

296 W. SECOND
POMEROY, OHIO

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•• e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e • 1 •
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centering the table, with' pink
tapers used on the sides.
Besides members of her
family, co-workers and company employes, friends of Miss
Zerkle and representatives
from the Middleport Garden
Club and other organizations in
Heath . Methodist Church al-

••

Compounded quarterly on regular passbook savings from day ol deposit to day ot
1
wllhdrawal. as long as you maintain an open occount.
\
-·
A.GtFTFORYOU .,. I Place SettlngotDishes orsetoffourl2ounceTumblers
w1lh a deposit of 525.00. You get a •· Piece Place Setting for a deposit of ssoo.oo.
Open a savings account now.

ee

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:tea
Fridaysocial
afternoon
• company's
room. in the
e A pink and white color
• scheme was carried out on the
e re(reshment table with an
• arrangement of pink roses and
: a variety of white flowers

3.o·

WITH A

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MIDDLEPOi!T - Miss Nellie
• J. Zerkle, Middleport, a veteran
e of 311 years and 10 months of
• service with the Columbus and
• Southern Ohio Electric Co., was
• honored at a surprise farewell

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POMEROY - Plans have
been completed for the wedding
of Miss Linda Owens, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Richard M.
Owens , Pomeroy, to Mr. Jack
Sigman, son of Mrs. Leora
Sigman and the late Hobart
Sigman, Middleport.
The open church wedding will
be an event of June 12 at 1:30 p.
m. at the Middleport First
Baptist Church. Music will be
presented by Mrs. Dorothy
Anthony, organist, and the Rev.
Charles Simons will officiate at
the double ring ceremony.
The bride-elect has chosen
her sister, Mrs. Charles E.
Carson of Hysell Run, as her.
matron of honor.
Mr. Sigman's best man will
be Mr. Randy Humphreys "of
Middleport. Ushers will be Mr.
' Herschel McClure and Mr.
David Taylor. Immediately
followin g the ceremony an
invitational reception will be
held in the church social room.

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tended·
H. H. Trumbo and Ron Me• Dade of the company's employe
:
relations department in
• Columbus presented Miss
• Zerkle a pendant watch from
e the firm . Jack Welsh, local
• district manager, presented her
• a gift from employes, and the
• honored guest received a
: number of other gifta, not only
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from employes of the company
but from friends attending.
Among them were two corsages, one of orchids.
Miss ~rkle began her duties
in the Middleport office In 1932
as a bookkeeper and was
promoted to typist-clerk In 1953.
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LEWISTOWN - Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Barnes, Route I,
Lewistown, are announcing the
engagement and approaching
marriage of their eldest
daughter, Ronoyce, to Mr. Gene
Grate, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Arnold Grate, Rutland.

Hays-Sylvester
Vows on June 4
POMEROY -

Miss Barnes, a graduate of
Indian Lake High School, and
her fiance who graduated from
Rutland High School, were
members of the first graduating
class of the Mount Vernon
Nazarene Junior College.
They are presently juniors in
Bethany Nazarene College at
Bethany, Okla. The bride-elect
is majoring In secondary
education and her: fiance Is
preparing for the ministry. An
open church wedding will take
place at the Indian Lake Church
on June 6 at 2:30 p.m.

The open

church
weddingofofMr.
Mrs.
Hays, daughter
andBessie
Mrs. • - - - - - - - - - ·
FOR THE
Harry Watson, to Mr. Robert
Sylvester, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Sylvester, Syracuse, w11l
he an event of Friday, June 4, at
Trinity Church.
The Rev. W. H. Perrin w11l
officiate at the 7:30 p. m.
ceremony following a half.Jtour
of nuptial music by Mrs. Ben
Neutzting, organist, and Mrs.
Marvin Burt, soloist. A
Serving • Gallipolis,
reception w11l be held In the
Pomerpy, Middleport, 0 .
&amp; Mason Co •• w. Va.
church social room.
l.....i1llllllilttii~---~..

THERE~ STILL

TIME TO
BfATlNE

HfAT...

SPECIAL SALE

SUMMER

BATON
CLASSES
AT
ROYAL OAK PARK
AND
RACINE·SYRACUSE AREA

CHECK THESE
SALE PRICES:

FOR

(1)"5000 BTU Philco
(1) 5000 BTU Westinghouse
(2) 5000 BTU Westinghouie
(1) 6000 BTU' Westinghouse
(1) 8000 BTU Westinghouse
(1) 10,000 BTU Westinghouse
(1) 15,000 BTU Westini1ouse
(1) 12,000 BTU Philco
(4) 18,000 BTU Westinghouse
(1) 8000 BTU ChiYSier Air Temp

BEGINNERS, INTERMEDIATES, AND
ADVANCED STUDENTS OF All AGES
TAUGHT BY:

JUDY RIGGS
ENROLL NOW!
PHONE:
CHESTER 985-3595
EVERYONE WELCOME!

$129.95
sl59.95
SJ19.95
Sl69.95
'225.00
s264.~

'285.00
'259.95
'299.95
'
$225.00

REMAN &amp;ABBOfi
992-5321
'" N! 2nd. Ave.

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Middleptrt, Q,

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• tO-TbeSundaYTimes-Sentinel,SWlday,May 30,1971

Bride-Elect Given Shower

Fraser Students
Prepare Recital
BY BOB HOEFLICH
Rhonda .Reuter dancing to,
POMEROY - Students of the Up, Up and Away.
Mld-Pom School of Danc~under Talk to the Animals will be
the · dlTectlon of Mrs. Judy the tap !\umber for Jayne Lee
Fraser will present their Hoeflich , Kristen Anderson ,
· seventh annual recital at 8 p.m. Carmen Burns, Valerie Lewis,
Tuesday at the Meigs Junior Megar Miller, Robin Southern,
High School in Middleport.
- Jacqueline Van Meter, Sharin
Attractive backbround set- Williams, Rhonda Southern and
lings made by Mrs. Fraser's Andrea Riggs. Another group,
father, Dale M. Jacobs, will Barbara Grueser, Andrea
enhance the young dancers as Batey, Sharon Griffin , Vicki
theY appear bOth in ballet and Morrison, Beth Gloeckner,
tap segments. The dancers will Kimberly Fraley and Kelly
be wearing ail new costumes Tyree will dance to, Thank
designed to carry out the theme Heaven for Uttle Girls.
of the recital.
"The Age of Aquarius" will be Cindy Patterson, Linda
the theme of the primarily tap Rosenbaum, Rebecca Thomas
segment of the program with and Jill Anne Walburn will tap
newer "pop" tunes to be used. to Put on a Happy Face, and
Presenting solo numbers will be Raindrops will be by Anna
Teresa Buckley to Gel Happy, McKinney, Carrie Beth Bearhs,
Esther LOwery doing Promises, Sandra Curtis, Lynetta WhitPromises, Cathy Meadows lington and Vicki Gaul. This
claricing to Spinning Wheel, group will return the Aquarius
April Fraser, daughter of the segment •or a ballet number,
instructor doing Cpme Dance Scarborough Fair. Janet Van
With Me, Danny 'Schultz on Vranken, Susan Wright 'and
Cherokee, Katrina Batey Sandra Hamilton will tap to,
tapping to Hawaii Five.() with Close to You, and Suzy Samuels,
ballet numbers in the _segment Stephanie Radford and June
by Mrs. Fraser, Love Theme, Wamsley will tap to, Don't Rain
from 1\omeo and Juliet and on My Parade.
Denise Hendrix in a ballet to, Mischief in the Toyshop is the
Love Story. Cindy Patterson, a theine of the ballet portion of
baton student of Judy Riggs, the program with a toy shop
will twirl to, WheelS.
scene as the backdrop as the
ModernlBttc backdrops In students appear as clowns, dolls
vivid colora will add to the and other characters of the
Aquarius theme In which shop.
Teresa Buckley and April
An acrobatic segment by ail
Fraaer will team on a students will close the program.
modernistic tap to Aquarius. Accompanist is Mrs. Margaret
Allother team will be Neuman, veteran pianist of
Charlene Goegleln and Syracuse.

Tri-M Held
Initiation

LONG BOTTOM - Miss
Sharori Holter, Long Bottom,
bride-elect of Mr. Curtis F.
Riffle, Rt. 2, Pt. Pleasant, was
honored Friday, May 21, with a
bridal shower given by Mrs.
Sadie Trussell. Mrs. Murl Ours,
and Mrs. Betty Gaul at the
Sutton United Methodist Church
in Racine .
The social room of the church
was done in a pink and white

door prize was won by Miss Rita
Davis.
Each guest brought a favorite
recipe which was given to the
bride-lo-be.
Cake decorated with pink and
white umbrellas, punch and ice
Games were played with the cream were enjoyed.
Attending were Mildred
winners, Mrs. Hattie Frederick,
Frank,
Judy Holter, Alice
Mrs. Belly Frederick, Mrs.
Jeanette Davis and Mrs. Becky Davis, Glada Davis, Jeanette
Pullins, receiving gifts. The Davis, Linnie Taylor, Rita
Davis, Dian Molden, Mrs.
Robert Davis, Betty Van Meter, ·
Eunie Brinker, Patrick Johnson, Julie Rose, Margaret
Tuttle, Martha Lee, Bob Bill
meeting. Prayer was by Mrs. and Becky Lee, Jean Spencer
Wallace and devotions by Mrs. and son, Becky Pullins, Grace
Charles Shumaker laking her Louden, Kathy Johnson, Ethel
meditation irom the Daily Orr, Sue Follrod and daughter,
Devotion. She concluded with a Cinda Davis, Mary K. Holter,
poem entitled Tranquility and a Avis Bing, Goldie Frederick,
prayer on patience.
Mae Spencer, Jean Trussell and
Mrs. Don Lowery gave the daughters, Hattie Frederick,
bOok study using "Revelation in Dorothy Ritchie, Elsie Circle
the Twentieth Century" as her and Florence Circle.
topic. The meeting closed with Sending gifts were Mrs .
group singing of, God Bless Our Bertha Smith, Roberta Jeffers
Native Land, and the Lord's and daughter', Margaret
Prayer.
Johnson, Millie Dill, Erma
Roses from the garden of Johnston and daughter, Olive
Mrs.
Rodney
Downing Weber, Janet Tillis, Myrtle
decorated the tables for Walker, Debbie Rose, Edna
refieshments served by Mrs. Mae Swick, Elsie White, Nellie
Downing, Mrs. Nora Ball, Mrs. Parker, Doris Grueser, ~na
Helen Beeson, and Mrs . · May Murphy, Inez Carson and
Dorothy Morris.
Ruth Tuttle.

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PRICES ON VACATION

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MRS. JUDY FRASER, instructor of the Mld-Pom School of Dance, inspects a tall toy
soldier which Is among the properties made by her father and other family members for
Tuesday evening's recital in Middleport. The drum in the picture was also made for a toyshop
scene. The large panels in the background are in vivid colors and are to be used for the
primarily tap segment of the recital which will carry out an "Aquarius" theme.

MIDDLEPORT
An
overseas sewing contribution of
$24.22 was made when tbe
Women's Association of the
Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church mel
Thursday night at the church.
Read at the meeting •Was a
note of thanks from Mrs. Roger
Banner, project chairman for
the Presbyterian Church. The
local report of contributions'
was given by Mrs. Dwight
Wallace who presided at the
meeting.
Members signed a card for
Miss Margaret Sauer, long-time
active member of the church,
who is currently confined to .the
Angel of Mercy Nursing Home
at Albany. Mrs. J. E. Harley
thanked members for cards
during her illness. The repor ts
wer~ gilien by Mrs . Paul
Hap~onstail, secretary, and
Mrs.·
Waiter
Waddell,
lreasurer.

Group singing of, America,
the Beautiful opened the

POMEROY - Several Bend
area residents have been in
Inez, Ky., for a visit with Mrs.
Vina Preece and a trip to the
grave sites of Garfield Preece
and other relatives in observance of Memorial Day.
Included in the group were
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Maynard, ,
New Haven, W. Va .; Mr. and
Mrs. James Ray Preece,
Pilgrim, Ky.; Mr . and Mrs.
Jimmie Dale Alien, Inez, Ky.,
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Maynard,
and Mr. and Mrs . Paul
Maynard, Point Pleasant,- W.
Va .; Mr. and Mrs. David Zirkle
and daughters, Middleport; Jim
Preece and Mr. and Mrs. Roy
O'Dell, Columbus; Mrs. Margie
Burgess, Mrs. Bill Stepp and
daughter, Judy, and her
children of Columbus.

RACINE - The Southern
I.Dcal Modern Music Masters
SUNDAY
held Its formalintiation of new
GUITAR
MASS, 10 a.m.
members Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.
An Impressive ceremony was Sunday, Sacred Hearl Catholic
conducted by president, Renee Chufch. All teenagers of parish
Burke; vice-president, Diana and other invited to participate.
Norris; secretary, Rita Salser; Practice, 7:30 Friday night in
EVERY SPRING the garage at the Dale M. Jacooo home on Middleport's Second Ave.,
treaaurer, Candy Hoback, and the church basement.
becomes a workshop for creating properties to be Used for the annual recital by students of the
BLESSING of Statue of Our
historian, Sandy Sayre.
Mid-Porn School of Dance operated by the Jacobs' daughter, Mrs. Judy Fraser. Here Jacobs is
A candieilght
setting Lady of Satima at Sacred Heart
pictured with a toy shop setting be has created for a ballet segment for the recital to be held
enhanced the formal event. Cemetery, Pomeroy, by the
Tuesday night at 8 p.m. in the Meigs Junior High School, Middleport. Near Jacobs is a spotlight
Each officer read a selection Rev . Fr. Bernard Krajcovic, 11
which he made to be used for the first time Tuesday.
dinocted especially to the new a.m. Sunday.
.
MONDAY
members, explaining how they
were choeen and why, the BIBLE SCHOOL starting
HUEHOLT INITIATED
meaning of Tri-M, its key, and Monday at Carleton Church,
SPRINGFIELD - Richard
what would be expected of Kingsbury Road, 9 a. m. to 12
Huehoil,
422 Hedgewood Dr.,
them.
noon through June 4; William
POMEROY - New officers by Mrs. Whaley; Slick Tricks, Rock Springs Church at 12:45
Tri-M Is a National· Honor Uber, director, children of were elected at the 34th an- by Mrs . Harold Blackston, and and go to the Grueser home in a Gallipolis, a Wittenberg
University freshman, has been
Society lor music. To be in Tri- community invited.
niversary observance of the Merchants Mislead Kids, by group.
initiated
into the university's--Mrs.
Scott
Folmer.
A cake, sherbet, mints, nuts,
M the new members have to DAILY VACATION Bible Rock Springs Better Health
Mrs. Goegiein conducted the coffee and iced tea were served chapter of Phi Eta Sigma,
belong to band or glee club or School, Rutland Church of Club held at the home of Mrs.
contest which was won by Mrs. by the hostess in observance of national academic honor
both. They were chosen on the Christ, beginning Monday Lewis Grueser.
buill of character, service, through June ll, 6,30 p.m. 10
Elec ted were Mrs. Fred Leonard, Mrs. William Folmer, the club 's an ni versary. At- society . Students must earn an
leadership, scholarship, and 8, 30 p.m.
Goeglein, president; Mrs . and Mrs. Witte.
tending besides those named average of 3.5 or better (4.0 is
Mrs.
Mark
Grueser
will
be
cooperation.
George Skinner, vice president;
were Mrs . Oliver Clark, Mrs. straight "A") to be selected for
As a Modern Music Master,
Mrs. James Conkle, fecretary; hostess for the June meeting . John Goett, and Mrs. Homer membership into the honor
society.
111e new members mwt uphold
· 1
Mrs. Amos Leonard, treasurer. Members are to meet at the Radford.
15
the Ideals and aspirations of the
Mrs. Arlie Abbott was apsoclety, strive always to set a LETART FALLS _ Mrs. pointed chaplain , and Mrs .
and contin e to
Clifford Leifheit was named· as
good e··~pl
-.. e,
u
Lillian Henderson of Athens
be of service through music to visited at the home of Mr. and press secretary.
Mrs. Goeglein, Mrs. Leifheit,
their School Church a nd
'
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Mrs.
Robert
Ashley
and
family
community
and Mrs. Welby Whaley were
Chosen ~~ life members of of Letart Fails last Sunday. appointed to the committee .t?
,... te. ..,5ofTr"1 M
Deli Mrs.
Henderson
came lakeatreattotheMeigsCounty
" were
""ap
r ••
a especially for the graduation
""oas Denise "-oss Beverly
infirmary in June . Mrs. William
'"' •
"' •
ceremonies at the Southern
Ervin, Usa McMillan, Loretta
h
Folmer and Mrs. Amos Leonard
Mlddleswart, Barbara Nease, Hig School where Keith Ashley were named to the sick cornd Ra dy Pyl Jud was a member of the mittee. A report was given
y
erne Or • n
es,
Y graduating class. Also here for
Roberts Doug Rees Robert
during the business meeting
•
•
the
graduation
were
Mrs.
Sayre, Beth Theiss, Debbie
b
presided over by Mrs. William
West, ~dy Winebrenner, and Dorothy Hutc inson, her son, Grueser on the canteen served
Steve Yonker.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Hut- at the biodmobiie.
Prayer and the flag salute
These new members are chinson, and aunt, of Columbus,
greaUy honored to belong to the who called at the Ashley home opened the meeting with Mrs.
only chapte,r of Tri-M In Meigs · prior to graduation ceremonies George
Skin ner
giving
County
at Southern High.
devotions. Mrs . William
Refr~slunents were served Mr. Ashley and Keith left Grueser presented the program
after the special occasion to lhe Monday for Williamsburg, Va ., · with articles · including ,
parents, new members, and to return Mrs. Liza Hobbs of Measure of a Man by Mrs.
•
•
following
her Goeglein; High Blood Pressure
present members. Mrs. Lee Lee Athens
lB the sponsor.- Sandy Sayre. hospitalization there. Mrs . by Mrs. Leonard; Elastic
Hob!I; look ill while louring the Pressure Bandage by Mrs.
Washington, D. C. area with the William Witte ; Side ·Effects of
senior class of Southern High Medication by Mrs. William
School. They returned early Folmer; Thoughts and Smiles
SYRACUSE - The fifth Wednesday.
birthday of Cory McPhail was
DINNER GIVEN
observed with a party Thursday
POMEROY - Mrs. William
at the horne of his parents, Mr.
Smith, 272 West Main St., enand Mrs. Hugh McPhail in
34,000 DIED
tertained in observance of ·her
Syracuse.
Of the 300,000 wsons who birthday with a chicken dinner
A hotdog cookout was held trt.ed to cross Wyollllng before and a decorated cake and ice
and a cake decorated with a ratlroads came to the state, cream Thursday afternoon.
train replica was served. ~ore than on~ tenth (34•000 ) Guests were Mrs. Lula HampGames were played and guests dled on the trad.
ton and Mrs. Con Young.
were given favors. The honored
guest received a number of
gifts. Attending were Brian
Connolly, lleidi Cobb, Mrs.
II
Sandra Cobbs, Mrs . Carol
Adams, Todd and Kim Adams,
Mrs. Marilyn Poulin and son,
·Joey, Mrs. McPhail and son,
Scotl, and the honored guest.
The tax books are now open for the

. .• .

RIO GRANDE - Mias Wendy
...,...,., daughter ol Mr.anct
llfn. Dtncdl Hoffman, of Cllnp
, _ . Alllury, Rio Grande,
bid 1n emergency ap' nfnlioaty 11 Holze Medicll
CHI
Friday morninll.

'1 ...,

T •tl lft41.-Ror at 0..'"~

June· or Second ha If collection of
1970 Real Estate Taxes. Also
. delinquent tax. Closing date will
July 1, 1971.
·

Howard E. Frank,

For Men

'

.

'·

, . ''

'

.• ;

· ..

;

. . . . . ..

REG. 129.95

95
No . (,2 1 S win· l Ro&lt;"" ker
1l 41 W 34 Se•t ll X!! in .
Waln•lt flni6h.

NOW GET

'65
Trade-In
ALLOWANCE FOR YOUR
OLD LIVING ROOM SUITE
ALL THIS MONTH!

$28.95
AA thru EE

also

available
with
steal toe

Here ' s a man's boot
every step of the way!

Din'ette Specials!

...

REG. 299.95

GIBSON BUY!

TRADE 50.00

Th is 12.0 cu. ft. model offers re liable automS.tic cycle defrosti ng in the refrigerator. No pans Ia empty
or dials to set. Keeps temperature at near·perfect
37 degrees In the refrigerator and at safe zero-zone
In the freezer. 73 .9 lb. frozen food capacity .

try on Pecos by Red
Wing and be con vi need!

RED ·
WING

GIBSON

Model B0-252R1

Rugged, handsom e,
ready for a rough day's
work a nytime. Easy on
the feet , too. Stop in -

Gibson Retrlgorator

Open All Day ThuiSdays
Open Friday Nights Til 9

36"x 48"x 60" Table
6 High Back Chairs
Beautiful 2-tone table in easy to clean
wood graine&lt;f ptastic. Self-edged. Easy
to clean .golden vinyl chairs offer a
beautiful contrast.

Modei80-374R1 Frost*Ciear
Refrigerator-Freezer
Th is beaut iful Gibson H cu . ft .
refrigerator -freezer offe rs the same
extensive list of features es Model
80 -J94R 1 excep t that the 'tee N\Uier
automatic Ice maker Is available In
kit form as an option, to be ln&amp;talled
at a later date. A ll tubing and wir ing
has been ins tall ed~~ the factory, so
installation by the dealer Is si mple
and in expensiv e. Comes with two Ice
trays holding 36 cubes. Choice oi
White , Coppertone , Avocado , and

REG. 349.95
TRADE 71.95

Gold .

218~

SHOES
Middle of the Upper Block

42"x60"x72" Table
8 Chairs

POMEROY, OHIO

the
for
be

-----------------1!1"!'1
Meigs County Treasurer

'

high-bod&lt;

•

,

Swivel
Rocker
Buy

;i' . .•·.· ·.:. •

.I \~ •'·• . , .

The warm look of walnut plus the ad·
vantage of carefree plastic. You'll love
the warm copper and brown tones of
the well-built covered chairs.

COME EARLY

MAPLE
&amp;2" TABLE WITH 2 LEAVES
AND 6 QWRS (PlASTIC loP)

AS SHOWN

.-

•

0

oN 'SALI

BTU/Hr.

With Speedy Mounting

'

KELVINATOR

· Series Fourl .Deluxe
Here Is a big model that stores up to

9,0.00, 18,000, 20,000 BTU
With Action Air

633 pounds of food In its 18 cubic feet

o.f space. Fealures Include :
Removable " L" shaped divider ·
Footed divider · Two large storage
baskets · Automotive type lock and
keys . Durable finish . Automatic
Interior light - Defrost drain · fvJ(ustable hinges · All steel construction - Foam Ins ulation Magnetic gaskets · Easy servicing .

A Real June SJH!cial!
Purchase Any

Bassett
Bedroom Suite
..
.

'

Mollrns or Box Spring

And Receive
AT NO EXTRA COST

ASerta Matbess &amp;Box Spring
Make the greatest

BAKER FURNITURE
o. .

~.000 - 8,000

SALE!

tODAYl
'

1·, ,••

ONLY

FREEZER
0

Series Two, Deluxe

/

18 cu. ft.
0

KELVINATOR

DINING ROO'M .SUITE

REAL ESTATE OWNERS

HAS SURGERY

.

" \:

Red Wing Shoes

LEGAL

'

.

,i,,..
•r . ).l,.'f/1
. ·.',.•'J!r

Birthday Observed

·MEIGS COUNTY

.

$3()00 "

Complete Selection of

Mrs. Grueser Health Club Host

-t at Ashleys

\

Save

IPment operators!

Visit in Kentucky

.

•••••. ALL MONTH LONG AT MASON FURNITURE

Contribution Made

Social
Calendar

v

SPECIALS and SAVINGS

decor with streamers accenting
the gift table. A centerpiece
consisting of a tiered base,
resembling · a wedding cake,
held a webbed pink and white
shower unbreiia .

I

Cooking ~~overy
Since ·
an'e In and See' ~

AU June
Newlyweds

Will Receive

SPECIAL

\

..

�.'.'\,

...
' '

• tO-TbeSundaYTimes-Sentinel,SWlday,May 30,1971

Bride-Elect Given Shower

Fraser Students
Prepare Recital
BY BOB HOEFLICH
Rhonda .Reuter dancing to,
POMEROY - Students of the Up, Up and Away.
Mld-Pom School of Danc~under Talk to the Animals will be
the · dlTectlon of Mrs. Judy the tap !\umber for Jayne Lee
Fraser will present their Hoeflich , Kristen Anderson ,
· seventh annual recital at 8 p.m. Carmen Burns, Valerie Lewis,
Tuesday at the Meigs Junior Megar Miller, Robin Southern,
High School in Middleport.
- Jacqueline Van Meter, Sharin
Attractive backbround set- Williams, Rhonda Southern and
lings made by Mrs. Fraser's Andrea Riggs. Another group,
father, Dale M. Jacobs, will Barbara Grueser, Andrea
enhance the young dancers as Batey, Sharon Griffin , Vicki
theY appear bOth in ballet and Morrison, Beth Gloeckner,
tap segments. The dancers will Kimberly Fraley and Kelly
be wearing ail new costumes Tyree will dance to, Thank
designed to carry out the theme Heaven for Uttle Girls.
of the recital.
"The Age of Aquarius" will be Cindy Patterson, Linda
the theme of the primarily tap Rosenbaum, Rebecca Thomas
segment of the program with and Jill Anne Walburn will tap
newer "pop" tunes to be used. to Put on a Happy Face, and
Presenting solo numbers will be Raindrops will be by Anna
Teresa Buckley to Gel Happy, McKinney, Carrie Beth Bearhs,
Esther LOwery doing Promises, Sandra Curtis, Lynetta WhitPromises, Cathy Meadows lington and Vicki Gaul. This
claricing to Spinning Wheel, group will return the Aquarius
April Fraser, daughter of the segment •or a ballet number,
instructor doing Cpme Dance Scarborough Fair. Janet Van
With Me, Danny 'Schultz on Vranken, Susan Wright 'and
Cherokee, Katrina Batey Sandra Hamilton will tap to,
tapping to Hawaii Five.() with Close to You, and Suzy Samuels,
ballet numbers in the _segment Stephanie Radford and June
by Mrs. Fraser, Love Theme, Wamsley will tap to, Don't Rain
from 1\omeo and Juliet and on My Parade.
Denise Hendrix in a ballet to, Mischief in the Toyshop is the
Love Story. Cindy Patterson, a theine of the ballet portion of
baton student of Judy Riggs, the program with a toy shop
will twirl to, WheelS.
scene as the backdrop as the
ModernlBttc backdrops In students appear as clowns, dolls
vivid colora will add to the and other characters of the
Aquarius theme In which shop.
Teresa Buckley and April
An acrobatic segment by ail
Fraaer will team on a students will close the program.
modernistic tap to Aquarius. Accompanist is Mrs. Margaret
Allother team will be Neuman, veteran pianist of
Charlene Goegleln and Syracuse.

Tri-M Held
Initiation

LONG BOTTOM - Miss
Sharori Holter, Long Bottom,
bride-elect of Mr. Curtis F.
Riffle, Rt. 2, Pt. Pleasant, was
honored Friday, May 21, with a
bridal shower given by Mrs.
Sadie Trussell. Mrs. Murl Ours,
and Mrs. Betty Gaul at the
Sutton United Methodist Church
in Racine .
The social room of the church
was done in a pink and white

door prize was won by Miss Rita
Davis.
Each guest brought a favorite
recipe which was given to the
bride-lo-be.
Cake decorated with pink and
white umbrellas, punch and ice
Games were played with the cream were enjoyed.
Attending were Mildred
winners, Mrs. Hattie Frederick,
Frank,
Judy Holter, Alice
Mrs. Belly Frederick, Mrs.
Jeanette Davis and Mrs. Becky Davis, Glada Davis, Jeanette
Pullins, receiving gifts. The Davis, Linnie Taylor, Rita
Davis, Dian Molden, Mrs.
Robert Davis, Betty Van Meter, ·
Eunie Brinker, Patrick Johnson, Julie Rose, Margaret
Tuttle, Martha Lee, Bob Bill
meeting. Prayer was by Mrs. and Becky Lee, Jean Spencer
Wallace and devotions by Mrs. and son, Becky Pullins, Grace
Charles Shumaker laking her Louden, Kathy Johnson, Ethel
meditation irom the Daily Orr, Sue Follrod and daughter,
Devotion. She concluded with a Cinda Davis, Mary K. Holter,
poem entitled Tranquility and a Avis Bing, Goldie Frederick,
prayer on patience.
Mae Spencer, Jean Trussell and
Mrs. Don Lowery gave the daughters, Hattie Frederick,
bOok study using "Revelation in Dorothy Ritchie, Elsie Circle
the Twentieth Century" as her and Florence Circle.
topic. The meeting closed with Sending gifts were Mrs .
group singing of, God Bless Our Bertha Smith, Roberta Jeffers
Native Land, and the Lord's and daughter', Margaret
Prayer.
Johnson, Millie Dill, Erma
Roses from the garden of Johnston and daughter, Olive
Mrs.
Rodney
Downing Weber, Janet Tillis, Myrtle
decorated the tables for Walker, Debbie Rose, Edna
refieshments served by Mrs. Mae Swick, Elsie White, Nellie
Downing, Mrs. Nora Ball, Mrs. Parker, Doris Grueser, ~na
Helen Beeson, and Mrs . · May Murphy, Inez Carson and
Dorothy Morris.
Ruth Tuttle.

'

PRICES ON VACATION

'

'

MRS. JUDY FRASER, instructor of the Mld-Pom School of Dance, inspects a tall toy
soldier which Is among the properties made by her father and other family members for
Tuesday evening's recital in Middleport. The drum in the picture was also made for a toyshop
scene. The large panels in the background are in vivid colors and are to be used for the
primarily tap segment of the recital which will carry out an "Aquarius" theme.

MIDDLEPORT
An
overseas sewing contribution of
$24.22 was made when tbe
Women's Association of the
Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church mel
Thursday night at the church.
Read at the meeting •Was a
note of thanks from Mrs. Roger
Banner, project chairman for
the Presbyterian Church. The
local report of contributions'
was given by Mrs. Dwight
Wallace who presided at the
meeting.
Members signed a card for
Miss Margaret Sauer, long-time
active member of the church,
who is currently confined to .the
Angel of Mercy Nursing Home
at Albany. Mrs. J. E. Harley
thanked members for cards
during her illness. The repor ts
wer~ gilien by Mrs . Paul
Hap~onstail, secretary, and
Mrs.·
Waiter
Waddell,
lreasurer.

Group singing of, America,
the Beautiful opened the

POMEROY - Several Bend
area residents have been in
Inez, Ky., for a visit with Mrs.
Vina Preece and a trip to the
grave sites of Garfield Preece
and other relatives in observance of Memorial Day.
Included in the group were
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Maynard, ,
New Haven, W. Va .; Mr. and
Mrs. James Ray Preece,
Pilgrim, Ky.; Mr . and Mrs.
Jimmie Dale Alien, Inez, Ky.,
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Maynard,
and Mr. and Mrs . Paul
Maynard, Point Pleasant,- W.
Va .; Mr. and Mrs. David Zirkle
and daughters, Middleport; Jim
Preece and Mr. and Mrs. Roy
O'Dell, Columbus; Mrs. Margie
Burgess, Mrs. Bill Stepp and
daughter, Judy, and her
children of Columbus.

RACINE - The Southern
I.Dcal Modern Music Masters
SUNDAY
held Its formalintiation of new
GUITAR
MASS, 10 a.m.
members Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.
An Impressive ceremony was Sunday, Sacred Hearl Catholic
conducted by president, Renee Chufch. All teenagers of parish
Burke; vice-president, Diana and other invited to participate.
Norris; secretary, Rita Salser; Practice, 7:30 Friday night in
EVERY SPRING the garage at the Dale M. Jacooo home on Middleport's Second Ave.,
treaaurer, Candy Hoback, and the church basement.
becomes a workshop for creating properties to be Used for the annual recital by students of the
BLESSING of Statue of Our
historian, Sandy Sayre.
Mid-Porn School of Dance operated by the Jacobs' daughter, Mrs. Judy Fraser. Here Jacobs is
A candieilght
setting Lady of Satima at Sacred Heart
pictured with a toy shop setting be has created for a ballet segment for the recital to be held
enhanced the formal event. Cemetery, Pomeroy, by the
Tuesday night at 8 p.m. in the Meigs Junior High School, Middleport. Near Jacobs is a spotlight
Each officer read a selection Rev . Fr. Bernard Krajcovic, 11
which he made to be used for the first time Tuesday.
dinocted especially to the new a.m. Sunday.
.
MONDAY
members, explaining how they
were choeen and why, the BIBLE SCHOOL starting
HUEHOLT INITIATED
meaning of Tri-M, its key, and Monday at Carleton Church,
SPRINGFIELD - Richard
what would be expected of Kingsbury Road, 9 a. m. to 12
Huehoil,
422 Hedgewood Dr.,
them.
noon through June 4; William
POMEROY - New officers by Mrs. Whaley; Slick Tricks, Rock Springs Church at 12:45
Tri-M Is a National· Honor Uber, director, children of were elected at the 34th an- by Mrs . Harold Blackston, and and go to the Grueser home in a Gallipolis, a Wittenberg
University freshman, has been
Society lor music. To be in Tri- community invited.
niversary observance of the Merchants Mislead Kids, by group.
initiated
into the university's--Mrs.
Scott
Folmer.
A cake, sherbet, mints, nuts,
M the new members have to DAILY VACATION Bible Rock Springs Better Health
Mrs. Goegiein conducted the coffee and iced tea were served chapter of Phi Eta Sigma,
belong to band or glee club or School, Rutland Church of Club held at the home of Mrs.
contest which was won by Mrs. by the hostess in observance of national academic honor
both. They were chosen on the Christ, beginning Monday Lewis Grueser.
buill of character, service, through June ll, 6,30 p.m. 10
Elec ted were Mrs. Fred Leonard, Mrs. William Folmer, the club 's an ni versary. At- society . Students must earn an
leadership, scholarship, and 8, 30 p.m.
Goeglein, president; Mrs . and Mrs. Witte.
tending besides those named average of 3.5 or better (4.0 is
Mrs.
Mark
Grueser
will
be
cooperation.
George Skinner, vice president;
were Mrs . Oliver Clark, Mrs. straight "A") to be selected for
As a Modern Music Master,
Mrs. James Conkle, fecretary; hostess for the June meeting . John Goett, and Mrs. Homer membership into the honor
society.
111e new members mwt uphold
· 1
Mrs. Amos Leonard, treasurer. Members are to meet at the Radford.
15
the Ideals and aspirations of the
Mrs. Arlie Abbott was apsoclety, strive always to set a LETART FALLS _ Mrs. pointed chaplain , and Mrs .
and contin e to
Clifford Leifheit was named· as
good e··~pl
-.. e,
u
Lillian Henderson of Athens
be of service through music to visited at the home of Mr. and press secretary.
Mrs. Goeglein, Mrs. Leifheit,
their School Church a nd
'
•
Mrs.
Robert
Ashley
and
family
community
and Mrs. Welby Whaley were
Chosen ~~ life members of of Letart Fails last Sunday. appointed to the committee .t?
,... te. ..,5ofTr"1 M
Deli Mrs.
Henderson
came lakeatreattotheMeigsCounty
" were
""ap
r ••
a especially for the graduation
""oas Denise "-oss Beverly
infirmary in June . Mrs. William
'"' •
"' •
ceremonies at the Southern
Ervin, Usa McMillan, Loretta
h
Folmer and Mrs. Amos Leonard
Mlddleswart, Barbara Nease, Hig School where Keith Ashley were named to the sick cornd Ra dy Pyl Jud was a member of the mittee. A report was given
y
erne Or • n
es,
Y graduating class. Also here for
Roberts Doug Rees Robert
during the business meeting
•
•
the
graduation
were
Mrs.
Sayre, Beth Theiss, Debbie
b
presided over by Mrs. William
West, ~dy Winebrenner, and Dorothy Hutc inson, her son, Grueser on the canteen served
Steve Yonker.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Hut- at the biodmobiie.
Prayer and the flag salute
These new members are chinson, and aunt, of Columbus,
greaUy honored to belong to the who called at the Ashley home opened the meeting with Mrs.
only chapte,r of Tri-M In Meigs · prior to graduation ceremonies George
Skin ner
giving
County
at Southern High.
devotions. Mrs . William
Refr~slunents were served Mr. Ashley and Keith left Grueser presented the program
after the special occasion to lhe Monday for Williamsburg, Va ., · with articles · including ,
parents, new members, and to return Mrs. Liza Hobbs of Measure of a Man by Mrs.
•
•
following
her Goeglein; High Blood Pressure
present members. Mrs. Lee Lee Athens
lB the sponsor.- Sandy Sayre. hospitalization there. Mrs . by Mrs. Leonard; Elastic
Hob!I; look ill while louring the Pressure Bandage by Mrs.
Washington, D. C. area with the William Witte ; Side ·Effects of
senior class of Southern High Medication by Mrs. William
School. They returned early Folmer; Thoughts and Smiles
SYRACUSE - The fifth Wednesday.
birthday of Cory McPhail was
DINNER GIVEN
observed with a party Thursday
POMEROY - Mrs. William
at the horne of his parents, Mr.
Smith, 272 West Main St., enand Mrs. Hugh McPhail in
34,000 DIED
tertained in observance of ·her
Syracuse.
Of the 300,000 wsons who birthday with a chicken dinner
A hotdog cookout was held trt.ed to cross Wyollllng before and a decorated cake and ice
and a cake decorated with a ratlroads came to the state, cream Thursday afternoon.
train replica was served. ~ore than on~ tenth (34•000 ) Guests were Mrs. Lula HampGames were played and guests dled on the trad.
ton and Mrs. Con Young.
were given favors. The honored
guest received a number of
gifts. Attending were Brian
Connolly, lleidi Cobb, Mrs.
II
Sandra Cobbs, Mrs . Carol
Adams, Todd and Kim Adams,
Mrs. Marilyn Poulin and son,
·Joey, Mrs. McPhail and son,
Scotl, and the honored guest.
The tax books are now open for the

. .• .

RIO GRANDE - Mias Wendy
...,...,., daughter ol Mr.anct
llfn. Dtncdl Hoffman, of Cllnp
, _ . Alllury, Rio Grande,
bid 1n emergency ap' nfnlioaty 11 Holze Medicll
CHI
Friday morninll.

'1 ...,

T •tl lft41.-Ror at 0..'"~

June· or Second ha If collection of
1970 Real Estate Taxes. Also
. delinquent tax. Closing date will
July 1, 1971.
·

Howard E. Frank,

For Men

'

.

'·

, . ''

'

.• ;

· ..

;

. . . . . ..

REG. 129.95

95
No . (,2 1 S win· l Ro&lt;"" ker
1l 41 W 34 Se•t ll X!! in .
Waln•lt flni6h.

NOW GET

'65
Trade-In
ALLOWANCE FOR YOUR
OLD LIVING ROOM SUITE
ALL THIS MONTH!

$28.95
AA thru EE

also

available
with
steal toe

Here ' s a man's boot
every step of the way!

Din'ette Specials!

...

REG. 299.95

GIBSON BUY!

TRADE 50.00

Th is 12.0 cu. ft. model offers re liable automS.tic cycle defrosti ng in the refrigerator. No pans Ia empty
or dials to set. Keeps temperature at near·perfect
37 degrees In the refrigerator and at safe zero-zone
In the freezer. 73 .9 lb. frozen food capacity .

try on Pecos by Red
Wing and be con vi need!

RED ·
WING

GIBSON

Model B0-252R1

Rugged, handsom e,
ready for a rough day's
work a nytime. Easy on
the feet , too. Stop in -

Gibson Retrlgorator

Open All Day ThuiSdays
Open Friday Nights Til 9

36"x 48"x 60" Table
6 High Back Chairs
Beautiful 2-tone table in easy to clean
wood graine&lt;f ptastic. Self-edged. Easy
to clean .golden vinyl chairs offer a
beautiful contrast.

Modei80-374R1 Frost*Ciear
Refrigerator-Freezer
Th is beaut iful Gibson H cu . ft .
refrigerator -freezer offe rs the same
extensive list of features es Model
80 -J94R 1 excep t that the 'tee N\Uier
automatic Ice maker Is available In
kit form as an option, to be ln&amp;talled
at a later date. A ll tubing and wir ing
has been ins tall ed~~ the factory, so
installation by the dealer Is si mple
and in expensiv e. Comes with two Ice
trays holding 36 cubes. Choice oi
White , Coppertone , Avocado , and

REG. 349.95
TRADE 71.95

Gold .

218~

SHOES
Middle of the Upper Block

42"x60"x72" Table
8 Chairs

POMEROY, OHIO

the
for
be

-----------------1!1"!'1
Meigs County Treasurer

'

high-bod&lt;

•

,

Swivel
Rocker
Buy

;i' . .•·.· ·.:. •

.I \~ •'·• . , .

The warm look of walnut plus the ad·
vantage of carefree plastic. You'll love
the warm copper and brown tones of
the well-built covered chairs.

COME EARLY

MAPLE
&amp;2" TABLE WITH 2 LEAVES
AND 6 QWRS (PlASTIC loP)

AS SHOWN

.-

•

0

oN 'SALI

BTU/Hr.

With Speedy Mounting

'

KELVINATOR

· Series Fourl .Deluxe
Here Is a big model that stores up to

9,0.00, 18,000, 20,000 BTU
With Action Air

633 pounds of food In its 18 cubic feet

o.f space. Fealures Include :
Removable " L" shaped divider ·
Footed divider · Two large storage
baskets · Automotive type lock and
keys . Durable finish . Automatic
Interior light - Defrost drain · fvJ(ustable hinges · All steel construction - Foam Ins ulation Magnetic gaskets · Easy servicing .

A Real June SJH!cial!
Purchase Any

Bassett
Bedroom Suite
..
.

'

Mollrns or Box Spring

And Receive
AT NO EXTRA COST

ASerta Matbess &amp;Box Spring
Make the greatest

BAKER FURNITURE
o. .

~.000 - 8,000

SALE!

tODAYl
'

1·, ,••

ONLY

FREEZER
0

Series Two, Deluxe

/

18 cu. ft.
0

KELVINATOR

DINING ROO'M .SUITE

REAL ESTATE OWNERS

HAS SURGERY

.

" \:

Red Wing Shoes

LEGAL

'

.

,i,,..
•r . ).l,.'f/1
. ·.',.•'J!r

Birthday Observed

·MEIGS COUNTY

.

$3()00 "

Complete Selection of

Mrs. Grueser Health Club Host

-t at Ashleys

\

Save

IPment operators!

Visit in Kentucky

.

•••••. ALL MONTH LONG AT MASON FURNITURE

Contribution Made

Social
Calendar

v

SPECIALS and SAVINGS

decor with streamers accenting
the gift table. A centerpiece
consisting of a tiered base,
resembling · a wedding cake,
held a webbed pink and white
shower unbreiia .

I

Cooking ~~overy
Since ·
an'e In and See' ~

AU June
Newlyweds

Will Receive

SPECIAL

\

..

�\

12-The Sundav Times· Sentinel, Sunday, May 30, 1971

.

Oldest Tuppers Plains Home ·to Retain Early American
Pictures ~~d Story
By Agnes C. Hlll
TUPPERS PLAINS
Tommy Powell was the first
known owner of the oldest home
here. Wellington Halsey, age 90,
remembers him there as early
as 1887.
Aibey Campbell and Tommy
Powell were relatives; during
the middle 1800s the two of them
owned all the land between the
house pictured above and the
present VISTA service station.
The land was heavily wooded
then . Richard Powell, a son,
was born in this home in 1878;
he was the father of nine
children including George
Powell , who now resides near

OLD IN 1910, WHEN this picture was taken (reprinted from a copy).

Lam Wants Newer Hardware
SAIGON (UPl)-The So.uth
Vietnamese armed forces,
claiming developments in Laos
this year have shown they are
outgunned by the North Vietnamese, have a shopping list for
better, newer weapons from the
United States.
Because of the cost and
complexity of the items sought,
U.S. military sources say, the
South vietnamese will likely
remain empty-handed.
Last month in a report to the
South Vietnamese Senate De· fense Committee on the ARVN
operations into Laos, Lt. Gen.
ol ,,.H'¥lng'j\Xuan Laf11 urged the
government to seek more
modern artillery from the
Americans.
Early this month, Vic~
President Ng uyen Cao Ky, a
marshal in the Vietnamese Air
Force and a former fighter
pilot, made a public pitch for
better jet planes.
The South 'vietnamese became concerned about their
artillery when for the first time
in the Indochina conflict the
·North Vietnamese made extensive use of conventional howltz-

ers and field guns against the
ARVN along the Ho Chi Minh
trail in Laos. Previously in
Indochina the Reds relied
chiefly on mortars and short
range recoilless rifles. ·
The ARV N found that the
North Vietnamese Army's gunners could stand off out of
range of the South Vietnamese
105 and 155 howitzers and shell
them at will with the NV A's
Russian-built 130 field guns and
!52 gun-howitzers.
.
However, the U.S. command
is reluctant to supply the ARVN
with its big self-propelled
175f,m guns and eight-inch
how1tzers for a number of
reasons. The self propelled
eight-inch howitzer has a shell
with much greater explosive
power than the NV A 152mm
gun-howitzer and one-half mile
less than the 152mm gunhowitzer.
Then there's the matter of
cost. A 105mm howitzer costs
$17,000 and a 155mm howi,tzer
$27,000. A self-propelled eightinch howitzer costs $128,000 and
a 175mm gun $139,000.
The South Vietnamese be•'J!' '

..... ;,! .,..

came concerned about their air
power when American pilots
began sighting Russian-built
MIG21 fighter planes over Laos
three months ago. Since then a
MIG has attacked a U.S. Air
Force OVIO forward air control
plane over Laos and strafed
Royal Laotian army ground
positions.

The only supers01iic jet i the
Vietnamese air force is the F5
Freedom Fighter, with which
two squadrons are equipped.
The only other VNAF jet is the
A37 dragonfly, which is subsonic and which Ky described as
"a woman's plane."
The F5 is about 400 miles-anhour slower than the more than
25 MIG21s in the North
Vietnamese Air Force.
Ky wants F4 Phantoms for
his air force , the same fighterbomber flown by the U.S. Air
Force, Navy and Marines. The
Phantom is slightly faster than
the MIG21, which flies at twice
the speed of sound.
But Phantoms cost more than
$2 million apiece, compared to
$830,000 for the F5S, which are
much easier for ground techniclans to maintain.
"

She's Hot Lips
Sister Madeleva
By VERNON SCOTT
HOLLYWOOD (UPI )
"They . call me Hot Lips
Madeleva when I play that
cornet, " said the pleasant
woman with the serene face.
And wonder of wonders, she is
Sister Mary Madeleva of the
Roman Catholic Order of the
Sisters of Charity.
Sister Madeleva is th e
spiritual leader of a musical
group, th e Remnants, of
Leavenworth, Kan ., who will
play on tile "Here's Lucy" show
earl y next fall.
The combo is composed of
pianist Sister Dominic,
marimbist Sister David Marie, ,
Sister Mary Vncentia (string
bass), Sister Rita (drums) and
Sister Mary Roselle (vocalist).
Sister Mary Lenore, the
group's manager, doubles in
percussion.
AU-female bands are a rarity .
But one consisting entirely of
Roman catholic nuns is virtually unknown in commercial
show biz.
Diners at the Universal
Studios commissary gawked at
the nuns as if seeing a school of
penguins for the first time. The
good sisters looked too
authentic to be extras dressed
as nuns for a movie.
Each nun wore a different
habit. Skirts were knee length.

Veils were of their own
choosing, some looking almost
like hats.
Sister Mary Lenore ex.
plained: "Four years ago we
modernized our habits to
anything we wanted to wear.
We're all ha ppy with the
change. And like all women we
like to shop around and be Individuals."
Sister Madeleva said the
Remnants were named such
because the group is all that
remains of a large musical
congregation.
JOHN SAilLAZ
Their repertoire is primarily
limited to standards of the big
band era of the 30s and 40s but N[;
include "Man and A Woman,"
"Georgy Girl " and "Ailey Cat."
"We even found a biblical
reference to the Remnants,"
GALUPOLIS - Columbia
said Si,ster Madeleva. "It's in National Life Insurance
the Old Testament and applies Company announces the recent
to the Hebrews who remained completion of the Exchequer
loy al after the Babylonian Seminar in Columbus by John
captivity ."
D. Ssllaz. He, who will now
This religious tie appeared to serve as a marketing specialist
give Sister Madeleva great for the company in Gallia
comfort. She is less attuned to County , is associated with
the secular world than her Kaiser
Aluminum
and
fellow musicians.
· Chemical Corp. in Ravenswood
Until now the Remnants have as a crane operator. He atperfor med for chari ty, schools, tended high school in Point
hospitals and conventions and Pleasant.
only for expenses . Their ap- He and his wife, Patricia, live
pearance with Lucille Ball may on Hilltop Drive, Gallipolis,
change all that.
with their children, Tina, John
Jr., and Randall. Sallaz wiU be
working under the supervision
of Columbia
National's
Regional Director for this area,
Andy Toler.

Seminar

Is wmpleted

Ohio Christian
To Stop Awards

PHARMACIST

9:00 A.M. TILL 10:00 P.M.
SEVEN DAYS AWEEK

·FRUTH
PHARMACY

2501
Jackson
Ave.

"Point Pleasant's Leadilli Drue Store"

·-

•

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - A
· Franklin County Common Pleas
Court has Issued a temporary
injunction against the Ohio
Christian College here, enjoining the school from
awarding degrees.
The Injunction was awarded
at· the request of Attorney
General William J. Brown, who
said the injunction also
prohibits the school from using
the designation of "school,
academy, college or univer·
sity." Brown charged the Institution was nothing more than
"a diploma mill, which turns
out worthless dipl01118l1 and
degrees for cold cash with litlle
or no study or learning
required. "

Joppa . George tells about
residing in Tuppers Plains as a
small child and seeing a drove
of turkeys being driven, on foot ,
in the roadway to Parkersburg
and its markets. It was near
dusk when turkeys and drovers
arrived here . Tlie turkeys
roosted overnight in the trees in
the northern end of the village.
Tommy Powell met his death
by slipping and falling on a
bucket of pig feed ; so severely
wounded he died the next day.
Warren Buck, the next owner,
operated a blacksmith shop that

still stands beside the house. In
1908, A. Homer find Lelah
(Clelland ) McLane purchased
the property from Buck.
·
When the McLanes bought the
property they were told by
elderly citizens the house was
the oldest dwelling in town.
None, however, was old enough
to remember when it had been
built. Deducing that since the
·eldest citizen was only 70, the
house dated back to 1838, but
how much older, seems lost to
history. The house in 1908
contained II rooms and (our
large fireplaces.
Children of the McLanes were
Phyllis (Mrs. R. K. Rowan),
Lucille (died 1931 ), Thurl
Webster (Bud), deceased, and
Doris (Mrs. J. S. Davis ). Homer
McLane was a very good
blacksmith, operating the shop
as long as horses were used in
the area . He then bought and
sold hardware and did repair
work. He died in 1929. Mrs.
McLane sold the old home in
1942.
Ownership since has changed
several times. lt was during this
time the upstairs porch was
removed and the "colonial
type " pillars added.
About three years ago the

doastructlve Letlen ol Opbllon, Ill good taste, are
welcomed. '111e editor reserves lbe rlgbt to shorten lettm.
All lettm mUJt be slgoed, wllb a lid! address, allllo~J~b
IDittals may be-d upon request.

Presi ent Sees , En

~oak· · .

WEsT POINT, N.Y. tUP!) Presitlent Nixon told the cadet
corps Saturday that with the
end of the American Vietnam
War Involvement "clearly in
·_sight" they face a demanding
role as peacetime leaders in an
Amiy troubled within itself and
facing dissent without.
The President said that in
Vietnam "we are ending our
involvement with honor" but
that American military
strength would remain "the
keystone in the structure of
peace."
Under sunny skies on his first
visit to the U.S. Military
Academy's green-turfed plain
as commander-in-chief, Nixon
told the corps drawn up before

him in full dress gray tunics
and white trOUBers :
"You must retain your high
sense of honor -knoWing that
you will not receive civilian
recognition in the measure you
deserve, and knowing that the
emotionalantimilitarianismand
moral upheaval of our times
will test you severely.
"It is no secret that the
discipline, integrity, patriotism
andself-sl.crifice, which are the
very life blood of an effective
armed force and which the
corps represents, can no longer
be taken for granted in the
Army in which you wiU serve.
"The symptoms of trouble
are plain enough-from drug
abuse to insubordination. I

believe, in perspective, 1that the
military ethic remains strong in
the hearts of America's fighting
men. Your special task will he
to reaffirm it, and to give it
new life and meaning for the
difficult times ahead.
"Your honor, though high and
true, may meet with the scorn
of some. "But you will have
this great reward: The United
· States and all its people will be
deeply in your debt."
· Nixon flew here to review the
corps of cadets at a time when
military morale is sagging
because of the My Lai charges
and disciplinary breakdowns.
' He stood at attention with Maj .
-Gen. William Knowlton, acade-'
my superintendent, for the

BEING RESTORED in 1971 by Mr. and Mrs. Homer Bowen, UtUe Hocking, jacked up with
new sllls, it will he modern but retain the "early American" look.
home was purchased by Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Bowen of little
Hocking. Restoration was
begun . They hoped to make it
modern while retaining the
"early American" look. Finally
the work was halted because of
a severe heart attack suffered
by Mr , Bowen. Now it has begun
again. The Bowens hope to
occupy the home by mid-

·, .-----'-----------------------•
1

'

1

I

8ea

1....

.

lf
I
[
II

·

l Qf the Bend

1

I
I
:

By Bob Hoeflich

1

~

I

summer.

POMEROY - Meigs County young people wrapped up
Mr. Bowen is employed by the
another
school year Friday. Always a wild day at that final hour,
0 . K. Trucking Company of
a noisy time and a time of just a bit of sadness. But, then the world
Belpre.
does move on.
SOURCES OF Information - .
RESIDENTS - joined by other generous people from out of
Mrs. R. K. Rowan, George
the
county
and out of the state- have "done themselves proud"
Powell, Wellington Halsey,
in their contriliutions to the George Thompson Kidney Fund.
Homer Bowen.
The fund
been quite successful \j'ith the final total to reach
over $8,600. The Winding Trail Garden Club sponsored the drive
with Mrs. Robert Lewis general chainnan.
The fund will be wrapped.up within the next few days so if
you've had good intentions but haven't functioned yet, you can
send your contribution to the Pomeroy Postmaster. HoweVer,
please do so rightjlway since Mrs. Lewis is anxious to close the
drive.
·
Incidentally, George Thompson who underwent a kidney
transplant at Cleveland Clinic is making good progress and attended school for a half day during the final weeks. His sister,
Mrs. Louella Thompson Roush of Belpre, who gave the transplant
Is also doing very well according to the results of a recent checkup
at Cleveland Clinic.

Fire 'em
Or Else

has

a thought for next year
May 26, 1971
Dear Sir:
I had the pleasure of visiting your beautiful new high school
Tuesday night, having come here from Columbus to attend the
graduation of my nephew.
I am sorry to say I was not impressed by the behaviour of the
adults attending. From the time they handed out the first
diploma , there was a constant stream of persons out of the
bleachers and up and down the aisles, having complete disregard
for the remainder of the people who wanted also to see their sons
· or daughters receive their diploma.
Sure it was warm in the gym, but how about 180 young people
in long gowns and caps. Surely, if 'they could endure it, their
parents and friends could have given them the courtesy of
remaining quietly in their seats until the last senior had left the
room.
Don't the adults realize this is probably the most important
night so far in these young · people's lives? And when tbe
recessional began you would have had to see it to believe it. Half
fi the crowd beat the seniors out of the room.
Needless to say, I was completely disgusted as I have never
before seen this happen at a graduation. Everywhere l have been
the crowd remained standing or seated until the last senior had
marched out.
Won't you people who were so discourteous give this a little
thought next year?
Mrs. James Sidney
Columbus, Ohio

Call .to Arms
Gallipolis, Ohio
May 28, 1971
Dear Sir :
Wake up Gallia County!
Are we going to permit strip mining to destroy our beautiful
rugged county?
Are we going to let our country hillsides slip and slide until
only time and mother nature can "reclaim" themof their beauty?
Are we going to have our streams, lakes, and ponds become
void of life?
Are we going to lose our schools, our industry, our new
medical center when people become so repelled by the effects of
strip mining and choose elsewhere to live, work and to raise their
children?
Where are our elected officials - our city fathers ? What is
their stand ? And, what are they doing? Are they condoning this
rape of the land?
Citizens, wake up, become informed, make noise, write your
legislators. Don't let Gallia County become another devastated
area - another Harrison County. And, pray to God our voices are
heard.
Avery concerned citizen,
Mrs. Edward (Karen) Berkich
74Cedar Street.

It Hurt when they walked out
Middleport, Ohio
May 24, 1971

Dear Editor :
l just read that the Hanna Coal Co. was presenting a film at a
meeting to show the way they reclaim land after stripping. It sure
did hurt some because the people there walked out. ·
They're used to seeing stuff in the papers just the opposite,
where the land is tore up and not reclaimed. Now they had a
chance to see just what can be done after coal is taken out. We
have peo_ple who ":'ould cry aboUt anything thilt would benefit a
commumty and g1ve some people employment.
l ~ee where t_bey are going to the Attorney General about our
strlppmg operation. l wonder what good tha,t will do, when we
have a ~trip mine bill pending in the House at Columbus.
l think the House of Representatives and Senators of the State
of Ohio shouldputa law in Ohio to ban raising tol&gt;acco, something
that wlll kill you. Let's make Ohio a clean place to live : quit
raising tobacco.
Yourstruly,BenBatey
P.S. : Cigarette smoking in private places makes air
!"lll~tlon . Maybe some of the tobacco ·raised down that way goes
m Cigarettes.
·
• DOGINTHEMANGER
. SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPI)
- Third-grader John Galvin
called his teacher and said h~
could not attend the last day of
school Friday, a 'day set· aside
for a special progra"l on being
kind to animals. The boy was
bitten on the leg by a dog and
hospitalized.
·

. HE WAS BRUTUS
CHESHIR,E -' Danny
Swis~er had the role of Brutus
in Shakespeare's Julius Ceasar
presented recently by Latin
students ·at Kyger Ci'eek High
School. His name .was unlntentionally omitted frQm a
previous account of the
r~ram.

CATCIIING RAINBOW trout in the Ohio River Is a bit of an
oddity, I'-m told. Don Eblin of Pomeroy did Clltch a 1r.-inch rainbow in the Old Ohio, however, one day during the past week.
'
MR. AND MRS. W!WAM DOWNIE wW be traveling to
Harrogate, Tenn., over next weekend to attend graduation and
other activities at Uncoln Memorial University. Their son, BiU,
wW be receiving his bachelor of science degree in education and
wW be taking part in a concert by a university choral group to
which he has belonged since enter~ the school.
'

MRS. WM. KNIGHT

Mrs. Knight to
Head Day Camp
PT. PLEASANT - Mrs.
William Knight will be director
of the Mason County Girl Scout
Day Camp to be held at the
Shrine Club , near Point
Pleasant, June 21-25, it was
announced Saturday by Mrs.
Charles Johnson, area chairman of the girl scouts and Mrs.
Rex Garrison , day camp
commissioner.
The camp will be conducted
each day from 9 a.m ., until 3
p.m.
Registration forms may be
obtained from Mrs. Knight and
should be returned to Mrs. C. G.
Bauerle, Day Camp Registrar,
by June I. Interested persons
may also contact the leaders for
form.
It was announced it is im··
portan t for all adult LDC
volunteer adults to attend an
indoor training session at Mrs.
Knight's home, 2903 Parrish
Ave., on Wednesday, June 2,
from 9:30 until noon. An on1ite
training session will also be held
at the Shrine Club on June 9
from 10 a.m., until 2 p.m.
Unit leaders and Committee
chairmen wiU be announced at
a later date .
Mr. Knight said all volunteers
are welcome even though they
may not be in scouting at the
present time. Training will be
made available.

"

MR. AND MRS. GENE RIGGS and son, Kenny Ray, have just
returned to their home on Route 7 from a great trip to the West.
Their first stop was at the Lake 9f the Oazarks in Missouri
where they attended the John Hancock Ufe Insurance Company's
annual convention for leading agents. This is the sixth straight
year Gene has qualified to attend,
· Following the convention, they traveled to Albuquerque, New
Mexico, to visit-Mrs. Riggs' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Noble.
Mr. and Mrs. Noble took their grandson, Kenny Ray, on his first ·
train ride for his fourth birthday -aboard the high level, Santa
Fe - a novel ride.
In Almagordo, N. Mex., the Riggs visited her sister, Betty Jo
and family and slopped by the White Sands Mlsslle Range .
The final jaunt of the vacation inclutled a trip into Mexico
where Gene and Judy picked up some unusual items for their
family room which carries out a Spanish motif, alrea4y well
supplied with objects from Mexico. Some of Gene's lucky
relatives are receiving paintings on black velvet with hand
carved frames brought back from Mexico by the couple.

MRS. NORMA GOODWIN is ''perking" again alter being laid
up for a bit at the home of her son and daughter-ln4aw, Mr . and
Mrs. David Goodwin.
Norma was mulling over whether she could attend the
Pomeroy High School Alumni Banquet Saturday evening. It was
the 60th anniversary· of her graduation from high school here.
There were 21 members in the class that year and it was the
largest class to graduate from Pomeroy High up until that time.
CONGRATULATIONS to Mr. and Mrs. Earl (Gran&lt;iloa and
Grandpa) Hart who wW be observing their ·58th wedding an·
niversary at their Racine Route 1home on Memorial Day.

EVEN THOUGH TWO KEY fair board members will not be
on hand this year, plans are being made to stage the annual Meigs
County Fair.
Certainly to be missed wW be the late Charles Radford,
always there with plenty of know-how in getting the fair into
shape and seeing that it stayed.that way. Also a loss to the board
will be Fred Leifheit, president of the board, who is quite iU. He
also devoted endless holU's to the fair staged literally in hia back
New Vaccine for
yard .
·
The fair dates are _Aug. 17 through Aug. 21. The Pugh
Cancer for Tests
Amusement Co. wW be on the midway and country and ~estern
CLEVELAND (UP!)
entertainers wW include Jim Ed Brown on Thursday night and
Testing of a new vaccine for Lonzo and OScar and Helen and Billy Scott on Saturday night.
cancer patients is to begin soon, Rounding out the evening attractiQns wW be the annual horse and .
now that the drug , designed ·to pony pulling contests and'the ob~ance of youth night.
slow the growth of tumors, has
been approved by the Ohio
Division of Food and Drugs.
The drug, called Lewis
Coupled Tumor Protein Antigen
(CfPA ), is' an varian.l..!!f one
recently found to beeessful
in tests on rnice at John Carroll
University.
··.
It is intended to buud up anti·
bodies to combat tumQr grow1h
in the blood serum of patients.
I'
'!'he developer of the vaccine,
Andrew J. Lewis, director of
Lewis Laboratory for Cancer
Research, said.the drug Is 'being
recommended for trial use on
r'
terminal cancer patients where

at.no

charge ••.

• fast Qlurteons Senic:e
• Dllicioui FoOd '

.e FriendiJ Mli.a.~we

t~altt

t4aJIIIt

.h:.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!iii
as.

conventional
treatment . _
failed.

'

review and· was presented a
cadet saber.
Nixon arrived back at An·
dress Air Force Base near
Washington about 3 p. m. EDT
.and left immediately by
helicopter to spend the weekend
at the presidential retreat at
Camp David, Md.
"Through a long and bitter
struggle in Vietnam, American
fighting men have served the
cause of freedom magnificently," he tolil the cadets.
"American military leaderahip,
much of it from here at West
Point, has been superb. And the
American people have· stood
behind our commitment to the
people of South Vietnam in the
face of great temptations to
tur.n aside.
"But now at last we have the
end of the American role in this
war clearly in sight. And we
are ending our involvement
with honor, in a way that will
discourage new aggression and
contribute to a lasting peace in
the Pacific and the world ...
"American strength is the
keystone in the structure of
peace. There are those in the
world who would strike out at
freedom because freedom
makes them afraid .. . as long
as those threats persist, peace
cannot be self-sustaining - it
will ·continue to depend heavily
on the vigilance and power of
those who Jove it."

. FOUR MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS heve been accepted by the all Ohio Youth Choir '
to parUcipate in activities at the Ohio State Fair this fall. Making up the quartet are, standing J.
r, Melanie Hackett, soprano, Jo Ellen Diehl, alto,Steve Powell, tenor and Wayne Well, bass. At
the piano is Mrs. ~tine Guthrie, vocal music instructor at Meigs High School.

Pentagon in Mess
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
congressional report said Saturday that the Defense Department spends an average of 1
hour and 40 minutes sending a
message stamped "immediate"
and 69 minutes to send a
"flash. "
"Then we are in a hell of a
mess," concluded Rep. Ourward G. Hall, R-Mo.
The House Armed Services
Committee's investigating subcorrunittee released the report
on the Pentagon's multibillion
dollar Defense Communication
System (DCS) . The subcommittee found that because of bad
management the DCS performed poorly in three critical
internstional incidents.
In one-e-ase, a U.S. tracking
station in South Korea sent two
"immediate" messages to the
Joint Chiefs of Staff in
Washington about North Korean
planes following an EC121
reconnaissance plane and a
"flash" when the EC121 disappeared from the radar screens.
The "flash" took 38 minutes
to reach the National Military
Command Center in Washington and the "immediate"
transmissions required 1'4
hours and 3 hours. All three
arrived after a "critical"

message reached the center in
10 minutes.
The EC121 was shot down.
The subcommittee report
expressed "grave concern"
about the blunders as well as
misdirected and slow messages
regarding Israel's attack on the
USS Liberty In · 1007 and the
seizure of the USS Pueblo by
North Korea in 1968.

aepartments, the report said,
and "until management responsibility is centralized, either in
DCA or in a designated
military department, the DCS
cannot efficiently function as a

system."
The report said four messages were sent from Washington
instructing the USS Liberty to
move many miles off the coasts
of Israel and Egypt instead of
The subcommittee, chaired its previously assigned 6.5 and
by Rep. Robert H. Mollohan, D- 12.5 nautical miles, respectiveW.Va., said it is worried about ly.
"what could be expected from
Although 13 hours elapsed,
Department of Defense commu- none of the messages reached
nications generally, and the the Liberty before it was
defense communications system attacked by Israel because two
specifically, in a general war messages were misrouted to
1
situation."
the Pacific; a retransmitted
The report said the average message accidentally went
of 69 "processing" minutes for from the Pentagon to Ft.
flash includes
to travel only
from5writer
to Meade,
Md.;
other nine
was
areader
minutes
broadcast
to and
the the
Uberty
for electrical transinission.
hours after the attack.
The repryrt said significant
savings of time could be
In a statement released with
achieved by centralizing respon- the report, Mollohan comsibility in the office of the plained that "instead of the
assistant to the secretary of instantaneous
point-to-point
defense for telecommunica- communications one might
lions.
expect, we find priority traffic
Responsibility for manage- being routed and re-routed
ment of DCS is divided between through numerous intermediate
the Defense Communications . points in a manner reminiscent
Agency (DCA l and the military of the jungle drum technique."

South Hits Sanctuary

WASHINGTON (UP! ) -Sen.
Alan Cranston, D-Calif., has
asked President Nixon to insist
upon the firing of top Lockheed
executives as a condition to the
aircraft corporation's getting
federally guaranteed loans totaling $250 million.
In letters to Nixon and
Treasury Secretary John B.
Connally made public Saturday,
Cranston said something was
wrong with the management of
a firm that lost $60 million on
the Electra jet, $200 million on
the C5A transport, $120 million
on the Cheyenne helicopter,
$130 million on warship contracts and $30 million on the
SRAMissile.
"The management team that
brought the corporation to the
brink of bankruptcy should not
be saved by the government,"
Cranston wrote Connally.
The administration is asking
Congress to guarantee repayment if Lockheed falls to make
good on the bank loans. Nixon
argues only the loan guarantee
will save the nation's No. I
defense contract or from bankruptcy.
Cranston told NiXon that a
number of senators who oppose
the loan guarantee biU have
told him they would support it
if it carried a provision calling
for replacing Lockheed's top
management.

' ~' ' ' ~'~MARS
'~' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' SHOT
' ' ' ' ' ' '~' ' ' ''''K''''''''''"'-@'''
' ' ' '"
RF.'lET
· CAPE KENNEDY (UP!) The laimcy of America's
Mariner 9 television satellite
toward Mars Saturday was
delayed one day because of
an apparent problem In
ground test equipment.
The shot was rescheduled
for 6:17 p.m. EDT Sunday
and a launch control
spokesman said the problem
was expected to be corrected
In time to meet the new
•launch time.

,,,,,,,,,,,,,,l;'' ' ' '-"'' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' "-?-!'' ' '@' ' '"'"' ' ' ' ' ' ';

2 Gallians at
.. .
.
Medicare Workshop

SAIGON (UP! ) -six thousand South Vie.tnamese troops
are pushing through a 250square-mile jungle region in the
Central Highlands used by the
Communists for the past eight
years as a supply base and
headqu~ters area, the operalion commander said Saturday.
Tile newly-ann~ced operaUon in the "Doxa" (secret
base) area 300 miles northeast
of Sslgon began three weekS
ago and is one of the
government drives in progress
in South ··Vietnam's Central
~hlands. Thousands of Con\munist troops' are' 'believect
operating in the area along both
·sides of the Vietnamese borders
·
with Laos and Cambodia.
Maj. Gen. Nguyen Van Toan,
commander of the operation
into the DOxa area, said the
last government operation there
ended ' In 1963 and tliat since
then the Conununists had built
up a vasllogisUcs network i~
the dense jungles.
In Saigon, U.S. spokesmen
said Communist gunners
shelled the key U.S. Navy base

River just below the Cambo- and four were wounded in the
dian border Friday morning attacks about 30 miles northw~nding six American sailors, west of Saigon, spokesman said.
destroying a Navy UH1 Huey The new drive in the Doxa 1 COLUMBUS Two
helicopter and damaging a secret zone covered an area of members of Gallia Cou.nty
2,600-ton repair barge.
25Q square miles of dense health department .- Mrs .
The guerrillas also attached jungleandmountains, in'Cluding Pearl Pope, R.N., director of
two U.S. positions in Hau Nghia the tallest peak in South nursmg , an? Mrs. Wilma
province northwest of Saigon Vietnam, 8,254-foot Ngoc Linh. Brown, Med1care secre~ary,
where American units are Toan told UP! correspondent recently attended a Medicare
clearing out the Hobo Woods Kenneth Braddick during a tour workshop m Columbus concommunist base area with of the area Saturday he dueled by Nationwide Mutual
bulldozers and giant plows. At believes the Communist head- Insurance Company.
least one American was killed quarters for "Military Region Th~ hea!th department, under
'
Five" -emcompassing nine .the dU'ection ofF_. W. Shane, M.
m;1f1'''~''''@'''''''''' '~'''''''''''''''''~'''''''' , , , , , , ,., , , , , ; . provinces of the Central High. D., health comm1ss1oner, ~ffers
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
lands and coasial areas - is care m tile home to all residents
Ohio extended outltiok for located in the zone.
of Gallia COWltY. This includes
Toan commander of the 2nd about
3,000
Medicare
Tue,day through Thursday. Infantry' Division, said 311 beneficia_ries entitled to receiv_ e
Warm Tuesday with a
1
chance of showers Wed· Communists had been slain In the service through the Socia
nesday and tumlOI a little more than 100 contacts since Security insurance program.
cooler Wedneiday night and the operation 'opened. He said
ASKS CALM
Thursday. Daytime blgbs governrrientlosses were 20 dead
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
upper 701 to mid llh Tuesday and 60 wounded.
local chapters of the NAACP
and WedDesday ud Ia the 70s
21ARRESTED
and the Urban League in a joint
·Thursday. Nlgbt lime Iow1ln
statement,
Saturday' made a
the 50s and low 80s Ture~da . DELAWARE,- Ohio (UP!) and Wednuday morning! ' Twenty-one p~rsons were public appeal for an end to
· and In the low and mid 50s arrested late Fr~day night In a racial dissension at area high
Thuroday moralag;
raid on a small farm southwest schools such u the ·trouble that
'
of here. Authorities confiscated forced the clw.lng of Unden
McKinley.
at Tan lchau on the Mekong .,,,,,,,"'' ' ' ' "'.' ' ' ' ' ' 'm' ' ' ' ";'' ' ' 'J' ' '#' ' ' ' ' ' '""''· pipes, marij~ana and pills.
'
.

I

of

ietnam

~E

SISSON, POMEROY, aecond left, was presented a
21&gt;-year service pin Friday night when the 35th anniversary of
Bricklayers Local 32 was observed with a dinner at the
American Legion Home in pomeroy. C. J. Kurlinski, seventh
vice president of the International of Canton, is shown
making the presentatiOn. On the left is Reino Lind, Pomeroy,
business agent of Local 32, and on the right is Jack D.

ar.

Hughes, Columbus, wllll the apprenticeship and training
program of the U. S. Department of Labor. Und holds the
union completion cerlificate of George Donovan while
Hughes holds Donovan's certificate of completion from the
Ohio State Apprenticeship Council. Donovan, Syracuse, was
advanced from an apprentice to a journeymen's status at the
Friday night affair. Donovan was unable to be present.

- ~tntintl
VOL VI .NO. 18

SUNDAY, MAY 30. 1971

PAGE 13

Two More Bodies FotJndQueen Candidate
For Regatta Days
POMEROY - Rhea Mora, a
i
recent graduate of Eastern 1
High School, is one of seven
candidates for the Big Bend
Regatta Queen sponsored by the
Ohio Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi.
Miss Mora was named 1971
Dairy Princess, Junior Fair
Queen for the 70-71 year, ten
year member of 4-H, State
winner of the National4-H Club
Congress, member of Eastern
High School's pep and concert
band, Latin Club, girls ensemble, mixed chorus, glee
club, scholarship team, school
paper staff, member of Chester
United Methodist Church,
assistant
Sunday School'
teacher, MYF, senior choir,
delegate to Farm Bureau Youth
RHEA MORA
School, senior and junior class
play and minstrel cast.
p.m. traveling non-stop to
Other candidates are Jennifer · Pomeroy.
Goble, Lu Ann French, Peggy
Persons attending the parade
Story, Bernadette Hennessy, may vote for the candidate of
Renee Burke and Sandy Ssyre. their choice at the Pomeroy
The queen candidates will Junior High auditorium where
ride on the queen float in the space will be provided. The
Regatta Parade Friday, June queen will be announced at the
18, leaving Middleport at 6:30 .Frog Ball Saturday night.

LSD Film Sure
Hit With Rotary
MIDDLEPORT - Jack
Welsh, making like a· frustrated
utility executive, lived It up
Friday evening at program
time of the Middleport.
Pomeroy Rotary Club.
He released for the first time
outside the confines of the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. his movie, "LSD"
or " Looking (at ) Southern
Division" which he conceived,
produced, directed, and starred
in. Here and there blt parts had
been consigned to other actors,
among them members of the
Rotary club and of the firm he
labors for .
LSD wasn't all fun . It had its
heavy scenes too . Brilliant
pastoral segments of the scenic
southeastern Ohio hill country,

The firm was made especially
to inform Columbus and
Southern Ohio executives of
southeastern Ohio's advantages.
Other subjects explored in the
film included the growing
recreations Industry at parks
and on the river, coal mining,
and outdoor sports.
Rotary President Charles
Simons presided . George
Meinhart said a picnic probably
will be held in July. Ladies of
Heath Methodist Church served
a chicken dinner.

PLENTY MAD
WATERVILLE, Mich. (UPI)
- Charles Johnson, angered
when a neighbor did not answer
his knock on the door Saturday,
accompanied by soft recorded drove his car through a picture
music were offered, as were window into the neighbor's
remarkably informative scenes
.
.
taken at Best Photo in Coolville house, pollee said. Damage was
and in the Ohio Valley estimated at $6,000 to $8,000.
Pub!' h'
C
,
h to · Johnson was charged w1th
IS mg . ?mpany s P 0.
malicious destruction of
offset pnnhng plant m
ty d nken drivblg and
Gallipolis.
pr?per ' . ru
. t dnvmg w1thout a license.
However, exac Uy a t the pom
wbere Welsh's audience began ·
ao N~DF.'l MARCH
dD:Iing, came llilarious scenes ' GULBRAGA India (UP!) featuring his Middleport A crowd ·of 10,0oo turned out to
C&amp;sOE office clerk, _the watch 80 nu\le women carrying
beautiful Mrs. John Redovlan, lamps on their heads march
and a collecti~n of lo~al along the banks of a stream In a
characters standmg _In w1th temple In this south Indian
Lawth-Jn·seGuences.
town.

YUBA CITY, CaW. (UP! ) - Sheriff's deputies recovered the
22nd and 23rd bodies Saturday in the Yuba City mass murders,

already the largest such confirmed mass kUlings on record.
Both victims were recovered in the same general area along
the Feather River north of here where bodies have been dug up
from crude graves for the last 10days. Sheriff Roy Whiteaker said '· ·
there were indications of more.
The digging went on. There was no Indication when it would
end.
Juan V. Corona, ':11, the prime s1111pect In the killings, was
reported ''very calm, very 9uiet" in hia cell at the Sutter Countr
Jail, where public defender Roy Van Den Heuvel visited blm
Saturday and announced he would enter a plea of innocent for blm
at arraignment next Wednesday.
Sheriff Roy Whiteaker said he was coiiSidering moving
Corona to another location, ''for reaso1111 of all around security. I
don't have that adequate a facllity ," the sheriff said.
The bodies found Saturday were in orchards on one side of the
river, where most of the previous bodies also were uncovered.
Whiteaker said so many corpses have b!!en delivered to the tiny
Twin Cities Funeral Home It is getting ''fiUed up" and some of the
rem&amp;!JIB may hlive to bebjken to other mortuaries.
Whiteaker was prohibited by
a judicial order from dbcusslng said the Yuba City murders
the case against Corona, a appeared to have been commit.
farm labor contractor, outside ted by "a homicidal maniac."
of court.
The killings started about
But a series of court April I, officers said, and
affidavits made public Friday apparently went on until at
9ictured Corona, who once least May 21-a day after the
Jpent three months in a mental first body was found and the
hospital, as a man of violent investigation was under way,
temper who owned weapons The first body was found .
smeared with "posmble blood buried in a peach orchard May
stains."
20. Another was found last
A Welfare investigator also Tuesday, seven more that
revealed Corona applied for night, three Wednesday, eight
welfare payments during the Thursday and one Friday.
slack farming season In March The victims were all midand was enraged when the dleaged or elderly males, none
application was rejected .
of Mexican extraction. They .
"He became very hostile," were mostly transients, derethe investigator said. "He said licts or migrant farm workers
he felt he had been singled out and difficult to identify.
and was being picked on" So far , nine had been
because he was a Mexican. "He identified, and the tiny switchcalled me a lot of names."
board at the sheriff's office was
Corona was committed to a swamped night and day with
state mental hospital In 1956, inquiries about missing persons,
diagnosed as possibly schizo- some who hadn't been heard
phrenic suffering (rom delu- from for up to 30 years.
sions and hallucinations. He Corona, held for arraignment
was later released as "recov- next Wednesday, is eating well,
ered."
reading newspapers and magaIn one of the court documents zines and is "very calm, very
made public Friday, Whiteaker quiet," the sheriff said.

Nonsense or Not,
Boaters Have Fun
MARIETTA, Ohio (UP! )Police Oilef Pete K. Gramkow
said his department needs a
boat to patrol the Muskingum
~d Ohio Rivers here to ''put a
stop to a lot of nonsense that
goes on" among pleasure
boaters.
Gramkow has proposed to
city council that the city purchase a boat to patrol the huge
man-made harbor created by
fedet:al engineers which has attracted thousands of new
boaters to the area.
"We have a problem since the
U.S. Corps of Engineers took
out a dam that created four
mile pool in the Muskingum,"
said Gramkow.
·
"Lots of these people opera!·
IIIIi boats have never had any
training and don't know how to
-operate a boat safely,"
Gramkow said. ' " If the

department had one boat It
could put a stop to a lot of
nonsense that goes on.
"Why there are some who
actually thumb their nosea at
police who must st.od
helplessly_ cin shore without
being able to do anything but
call for the Coast Guard," he
said.
Gramkow said the Coast
Guard cannot bait boaters who
violate state laws such u bn·
proper water skiing. drunkea
boat driving and underage drl·
vers.
"We aren't interested in ar-,
resling them," he seid. "We
just want to have boating safety
since we have so many' men
boaters in recent timea."
If Gramkow. gets bla boll, 11'
would be operated in COCiplla·
lion with the Waahlnaton
Countv sheriff's office

�\

12-The Sundav Times· Sentinel, Sunday, May 30, 1971

.

Oldest Tuppers Plains Home ·to Retain Early American
Pictures ~~d Story
By Agnes C. Hlll
TUPPERS PLAINS
Tommy Powell was the first
known owner of the oldest home
here. Wellington Halsey, age 90,
remembers him there as early
as 1887.
Aibey Campbell and Tommy
Powell were relatives; during
the middle 1800s the two of them
owned all the land between the
house pictured above and the
present VISTA service station.
The land was heavily wooded
then . Richard Powell, a son,
was born in this home in 1878;
he was the father of nine
children including George
Powell , who now resides near

OLD IN 1910, WHEN this picture was taken (reprinted from a copy).

Lam Wants Newer Hardware
SAIGON (UPl)-The So.uth
Vietnamese armed forces,
claiming developments in Laos
this year have shown they are
outgunned by the North Vietnamese, have a shopping list for
better, newer weapons from the
United States.
Because of the cost and
complexity of the items sought,
U.S. military sources say, the
South vietnamese will likely
remain empty-handed.
Last month in a report to the
South Vietnamese Senate De· fense Committee on the ARVN
operations into Laos, Lt. Gen.
ol ,,.H'¥lng'j\Xuan Laf11 urged the
government to seek more
modern artillery from the
Americans.
Early this month, Vic~
President Ng uyen Cao Ky, a
marshal in the Vietnamese Air
Force and a former fighter
pilot, made a public pitch for
better jet planes.
The South 'vietnamese became concerned about their
artillery when for the first time
in the Indochina conflict the
·North Vietnamese made extensive use of conventional howltz-

ers and field guns against the
ARVN along the Ho Chi Minh
trail in Laos. Previously in
Indochina the Reds relied
chiefly on mortars and short
range recoilless rifles. ·
The ARV N found that the
North Vietnamese Army's gunners could stand off out of
range of the South Vietnamese
105 and 155 howitzers and shell
them at will with the NV A's
Russian-built 130 field guns and
!52 gun-howitzers.
.
However, the U.S. command
is reluctant to supply the ARVN
with its big self-propelled
175f,m guns and eight-inch
how1tzers for a number of
reasons. The self propelled
eight-inch howitzer has a shell
with much greater explosive
power than the NV A 152mm
gun-howitzer and one-half mile
less than the 152mm gunhowitzer.
Then there's the matter of
cost. A 105mm howitzer costs
$17,000 and a 155mm howi,tzer
$27,000. A self-propelled eightinch howitzer costs $128,000 and
a 175mm gun $139,000.
The South Vietnamese be•'J!' '

..... ;,! .,..

came concerned about their air
power when American pilots
began sighting Russian-built
MIG21 fighter planes over Laos
three months ago. Since then a
MIG has attacked a U.S. Air
Force OVIO forward air control
plane over Laos and strafed
Royal Laotian army ground
positions.

The only supers01iic jet i the
Vietnamese air force is the F5
Freedom Fighter, with which
two squadrons are equipped.
The only other VNAF jet is the
A37 dragonfly, which is subsonic and which Ky described as
"a woman's plane."
The F5 is about 400 miles-anhour slower than the more than
25 MIG21s in the North
Vietnamese Air Force.
Ky wants F4 Phantoms for
his air force , the same fighterbomber flown by the U.S. Air
Force, Navy and Marines. The
Phantom is slightly faster than
the MIG21, which flies at twice
the speed of sound.
But Phantoms cost more than
$2 million apiece, compared to
$830,000 for the F5S, which are
much easier for ground techniclans to maintain.
"

She's Hot Lips
Sister Madeleva
By VERNON SCOTT
HOLLYWOOD (UPI )
"They . call me Hot Lips
Madeleva when I play that
cornet, " said the pleasant
woman with the serene face.
And wonder of wonders, she is
Sister Mary Madeleva of the
Roman Catholic Order of the
Sisters of Charity.
Sister Madeleva is th e
spiritual leader of a musical
group, th e Remnants, of
Leavenworth, Kan ., who will
play on tile "Here's Lucy" show
earl y next fall.
The combo is composed of
pianist Sister Dominic,
marimbist Sister David Marie, ,
Sister Mary Vncentia (string
bass), Sister Rita (drums) and
Sister Mary Roselle (vocalist).
Sister Mary Lenore, the
group's manager, doubles in
percussion.
AU-female bands are a rarity .
But one consisting entirely of
Roman catholic nuns is virtually unknown in commercial
show biz.
Diners at the Universal
Studios commissary gawked at
the nuns as if seeing a school of
penguins for the first time. The
good sisters looked too
authentic to be extras dressed
as nuns for a movie.
Each nun wore a different
habit. Skirts were knee length.

Veils were of their own
choosing, some looking almost
like hats.
Sister Mary Lenore ex.
plained: "Four years ago we
modernized our habits to
anything we wanted to wear.
We're all ha ppy with the
change. And like all women we
like to shop around and be Individuals."
Sister Madeleva said the
Remnants were named such
because the group is all that
remains of a large musical
congregation.
JOHN SAilLAZ
Their repertoire is primarily
limited to standards of the big
band era of the 30s and 40s but N[;
include "Man and A Woman,"
"Georgy Girl " and "Ailey Cat."
"We even found a biblical
reference to the Remnants,"
GALUPOLIS - Columbia
said Si,ster Madeleva. "It's in National Life Insurance
the Old Testament and applies Company announces the recent
to the Hebrews who remained completion of the Exchequer
loy al after the Babylonian Seminar in Columbus by John
captivity ."
D. Ssllaz. He, who will now
This religious tie appeared to serve as a marketing specialist
give Sister Madeleva great for the company in Gallia
comfort. She is less attuned to County , is associated with
the secular world than her Kaiser
Aluminum
and
fellow musicians.
· Chemical Corp. in Ravenswood
Until now the Remnants have as a crane operator. He atperfor med for chari ty, schools, tended high school in Point
hospitals and conventions and Pleasant.
only for expenses . Their ap- He and his wife, Patricia, live
pearance with Lucille Ball may on Hilltop Drive, Gallipolis,
change all that.
with their children, Tina, John
Jr., and Randall. Sallaz wiU be
working under the supervision
of Columbia
National's
Regional Director for this area,
Andy Toler.

Seminar

Is wmpleted

Ohio Christian
To Stop Awards

PHARMACIST

9:00 A.M. TILL 10:00 P.M.
SEVEN DAYS AWEEK

·FRUTH
PHARMACY

2501
Jackson
Ave.

"Point Pleasant's Leadilli Drue Store"

·-

•

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - A
· Franklin County Common Pleas
Court has Issued a temporary
injunction against the Ohio
Christian College here, enjoining the school from
awarding degrees.
The Injunction was awarded
at· the request of Attorney
General William J. Brown, who
said the injunction also
prohibits the school from using
the designation of "school,
academy, college or univer·
sity." Brown charged the Institution was nothing more than
"a diploma mill, which turns
out worthless dipl01118l1 and
degrees for cold cash with litlle
or no study or learning
required. "

Joppa . George tells about
residing in Tuppers Plains as a
small child and seeing a drove
of turkeys being driven, on foot ,
in the roadway to Parkersburg
and its markets. It was near
dusk when turkeys and drovers
arrived here . Tlie turkeys
roosted overnight in the trees in
the northern end of the village.
Tommy Powell met his death
by slipping and falling on a
bucket of pig feed ; so severely
wounded he died the next day.
Warren Buck, the next owner,
operated a blacksmith shop that

still stands beside the house. In
1908, A. Homer find Lelah
(Clelland ) McLane purchased
the property from Buck.
·
When the McLanes bought the
property they were told by
elderly citizens the house was
the oldest dwelling in town.
None, however, was old enough
to remember when it had been
built. Deducing that since the
·eldest citizen was only 70, the
house dated back to 1838, but
how much older, seems lost to
history. The house in 1908
contained II rooms and (our
large fireplaces.
Children of the McLanes were
Phyllis (Mrs. R. K. Rowan),
Lucille (died 1931 ), Thurl
Webster (Bud), deceased, and
Doris (Mrs. J. S. Davis ). Homer
McLane was a very good
blacksmith, operating the shop
as long as horses were used in
the area . He then bought and
sold hardware and did repair
work. He died in 1929. Mrs.
McLane sold the old home in
1942.
Ownership since has changed
several times. lt was during this
time the upstairs porch was
removed and the "colonial
type " pillars added.
About three years ago the

doastructlve Letlen ol Opbllon, Ill good taste, are
welcomed. '111e editor reserves lbe rlgbt to shorten lettm.
All lettm mUJt be slgoed, wllb a lid! address, allllo~J~b
IDittals may be-d upon request.

Presi ent Sees , En

~oak· · .

WEsT POINT, N.Y. tUP!) Presitlent Nixon told the cadet
corps Saturday that with the
end of the American Vietnam
War Involvement "clearly in
·_sight" they face a demanding
role as peacetime leaders in an
Amiy troubled within itself and
facing dissent without.
The President said that in
Vietnam "we are ending our
involvement with honor" but
that American military
strength would remain "the
keystone in the structure of
peace."
Under sunny skies on his first
visit to the U.S. Military
Academy's green-turfed plain
as commander-in-chief, Nixon
told the corps drawn up before

him in full dress gray tunics
and white trOUBers :
"You must retain your high
sense of honor -knoWing that
you will not receive civilian
recognition in the measure you
deserve, and knowing that the
emotionalantimilitarianismand
moral upheaval of our times
will test you severely.
"It is no secret that the
discipline, integrity, patriotism
andself-sl.crifice, which are the
very life blood of an effective
armed force and which the
corps represents, can no longer
be taken for granted in the
Army in which you wiU serve.
"The symptoms of trouble
are plain enough-from drug
abuse to insubordination. I

believe, in perspective, 1that the
military ethic remains strong in
the hearts of America's fighting
men. Your special task will he
to reaffirm it, and to give it
new life and meaning for the
difficult times ahead.
"Your honor, though high and
true, may meet with the scorn
of some. "But you will have
this great reward: The United
· States and all its people will be
deeply in your debt."
· Nixon flew here to review the
corps of cadets at a time when
military morale is sagging
because of the My Lai charges
and disciplinary breakdowns.
' He stood at attention with Maj .
-Gen. William Knowlton, acade-'
my superintendent, for the

BEING RESTORED in 1971 by Mr. and Mrs. Homer Bowen, UtUe Hocking, jacked up with
new sllls, it will he modern but retain the "early American" look.
home was purchased by Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Bowen of little
Hocking. Restoration was
begun . They hoped to make it
modern while retaining the
"early American" look. Finally
the work was halted because of
a severe heart attack suffered
by Mr , Bowen. Now it has begun
again. The Bowens hope to
occupy the home by mid-

·, .-----'-----------------------•
1

'

1

I

8ea

1....

.

lf
I
[
II

·

l Qf the Bend

1

I
I
:

By Bob Hoeflich

1

~

I

summer.

POMEROY - Meigs County young people wrapped up
Mr. Bowen is employed by the
another
school year Friday. Always a wild day at that final hour,
0 . K. Trucking Company of
a noisy time and a time of just a bit of sadness. But, then the world
Belpre.
does move on.
SOURCES OF Information - .
RESIDENTS - joined by other generous people from out of
Mrs. R. K. Rowan, George
the
county
and out of the state- have "done themselves proud"
Powell, Wellington Halsey,
in their contriliutions to the George Thompson Kidney Fund.
Homer Bowen.
The fund
been quite successful \j'ith the final total to reach
over $8,600. The Winding Trail Garden Club sponsored the drive
with Mrs. Robert Lewis general chainnan.
The fund will be wrapped.up within the next few days so if
you've had good intentions but haven't functioned yet, you can
send your contribution to the Pomeroy Postmaster. HoweVer,
please do so rightjlway since Mrs. Lewis is anxious to close the
drive.
·
Incidentally, George Thompson who underwent a kidney
transplant at Cleveland Clinic is making good progress and attended school for a half day during the final weeks. His sister,
Mrs. Louella Thompson Roush of Belpre, who gave the transplant
Is also doing very well according to the results of a recent checkup
at Cleveland Clinic.

Fire 'em
Or Else

has

a thought for next year
May 26, 1971
Dear Sir:
I had the pleasure of visiting your beautiful new high school
Tuesday night, having come here from Columbus to attend the
graduation of my nephew.
I am sorry to say I was not impressed by the behaviour of the
adults attending. From the time they handed out the first
diploma , there was a constant stream of persons out of the
bleachers and up and down the aisles, having complete disregard
for the remainder of the people who wanted also to see their sons
· or daughters receive their diploma.
Sure it was warm in the gym, but how about 180 young people
in long gowns and caps. Surely, if 'they could endure it, their
parents and friends could have given them the courtesy of
remaining quietly in their seats until the last senior had left the
room.
Don't the adults realize this is probably the most important
night so far in these young · people's lives? And when tbe
recessional began you would have had to see it to believe it. Half
fi the crowd beat the seniors out of the room.
Needless to say, I was completely disgusted as I have never
before seen this happen at a graduation. Everywhere l have been
the crowd remained standing or seated until the last senior had
marched out.
Won't you people who were so discourteous give this a little
thought next year?
Mrs. James Sidney
Columbus, Ohio

Call .to Arms
Gallipolis, Ohio
May 28, 1971
Dear Sir :
Wake up Gallia County!
Are we going to permit strip mining to destroy our beautiful
rugged county?
Are we going to let our country hillsides slip and slide until
only time and mother nature can "reclaim" themof their beauty?
Are we going to have our streams, lakes, and ponds become
void of life?
Are we going to lose our schools, our industry, our new
medical center when people become so repelled by the effects of
strip mining and choose elsewhere to live, work and to raise their
children?
Where are our elected officials - our city fathers ? What is
their stand ? And, what are they doing? Are they condoning this
rape of the land?
Citizens, wake up, become informed, make noise, write your
legislators. Don't let Gallia County become another devastated
area - another Harrison County. And, pray to God our voices are
heard.
Avery concerned citizen,
Mrs. Edward (Karen) Berkich
74Cedar Street.

It Hurt when they walked out
Middleport, Ohio
May 24, 1971

Dear Editor :
l just read that the Hanna Coal Co. was presenting a film at a
meeting to show the way they reclaim land after stripping. It sure
did hurt some because the people there walked out. ·
They're used to seeing stuff in the papers just the opposite,
where the land is tore up and not reclaimed. Now they had a
chance to see just what can be done after coal is taken out. We
have peo_ple who ":'ould cry aboUt anything thilt would benefit a
commumty and g1ve some people employment.
l ~ee where t_bey are going to the Attorney General about our
strlppmg operation. l wonder what good tha,t will do, when we
have a ~trip mine bill pending in the House at Columbus.
l think the House of Representatives and Senators of the State
of Ohio shouldputa law in Ohio to ban raising tol&gt;acco, something
that wlll kill you. Let's make Ohio a clean place to live : quit
raising tobacco.
Yourstruly,BenBatey
P.S. : Cigarette smoking in private places makes air
!"lll~tlon . Maybe some of the tobacco ·raised down that way goes
m Cigarettes.
·
• DOGINTHEMANGER
. SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPI)
- Third-grader John Galvin
called his teacher and said h~
could not attend the last day of
school Friday, a 'day set· aside
for a special progra"l on being
kind to animals. The boy was
bitten on the leg by a dog and
hospitalized.
·

. HE WAS BRUTUS
CHESHIR,E -' Danny
Swis~er had the role of Brutus
in Shakespeare's Julius Ceasar
presented recently by Latin
students ·at Kyger Ci'eek High
School. His name .was unlntentionally omitted frQm a
previous account of the
r~ram.

CATCIIING RAINBOW trout in the Ohio River Is a bit of an
oddity, I'-m told. Don Eblin of Pomeroy did Clltch a 1r.-inch rainbow in the Old Ohio, however, one day during the past week.
'
MR. AND MRS. W!WAM DOWNIE wW be traveling to
Harrogate, Tenn., over next weekend to attend graduation and
other activities at Uncoln Memorial University. Their son, BiU,
wW be receiving his bachelor of science degree in education and
wW be taking part in a concert by a university choral group to
which he has belonged since enter~ the school.
'

MRS. WM. KNIGHT

Mrs. Knight to
Head Day Camp
PT. PLEASANT - Mrs.
William Knight will be director
of the Mason County Girl Scout
Day Camp to be held at the
Shrine Club , near Point
Pleasant, June 21-25, it was
announced Saturday by Mrs.
Charles Johnson, area chairman of the girl scouts and Mrs.
Rex Garrison , day camp
commissioner.
The camp will be conducted
each day from 9 a.m ., until 3
p.m.
Registration forms may be
obtained from Mrs. Knight and
should be returned to Mrs. C. G.
Bauerle, Day Camp Registrar,
by June I. Interested persons
may also contact the leaders for
form.
It was announced it is im··
portan t for all adult LDC
volunteer adults to attend an
indoor training session at Mrs.
Knight's home, 2903 Parrish
Ave., on Wednesday, June 2,
from 9:30 until noon. An on1ite
training session will also be held
at the Shrine Club on June 9
from 10 a.m., until 2 p.m.
Unit leaders and Committee
chairmen wiU be announced at
a later date .
Mr. Knight said all volunteers
are welcome even though they
may not be in scouting at the
present time. Training will be
made available.

"

MR. AND MRS. GENE RIGGS and son, Kenny Ray, have just
returned to their home on Route 7 from a great trip to the West.
Their first stop was at the Lake 9f the Oazarks in Missouri
where they attended the John Hancock Ufe Insurance Company's
annual convention for leading agents. This is the sixth straight
year Gene has qualified to attend,
· Following the convention, they traveled to Albuquerque, New
Mexico, to visit-Mrs. Riggs' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Noble.
Mr. and Mrs. Noble took their grandson, Kenny Ray, on his first ·
train ride for his fourth birthday -aboard the high level, Santa
Fe - a novel ride.
In Almagordo, N. Mex., the Riggs visited her sister, Betty Jo
and family and slopped by the White Sands Mlsslle Range .
The final jaunt of the vacation inclutled a trip into Mexico
where Gene and Judy picked up some unusual items for their
family room which carries out a Spanish motif, alrea4y well
supplied with objects from Mexico. Some of Gene's lucky
relatives are receiving paintings on black velvet with hand
carved frames brought back from Mexico by the couple.

MRS. NORMA GOODWIN is ''perking" again alter being laid
up for a bit at the home of her son and daughter-ln4aw, Mr . and
Mrs. David Goodwin.
Norma was mulling over whether she could attend the
Pomeroy High School Alumni Banquet Saturday evening. It was
the 60th anniversary· of her graduation from high school here.
There were 21 members in the class that year and it was the
largest class to graduate from Pomeroy High up until that time.
CONGRATULATIONS to Mr. and Mrs. Earl (Gran&lt;iloa and
Grandpa) Hart who wW be observing their ·58th wedding an·
niversary at their Racine Route 1home on Memorial Day.

EVEN THOUGH TWO KEY fair board members will not be
on hand this year, plans are being made to stage the annual Meigs
County Fair.
Certainly to be missed wW be the late Charles Radford,
always there with plenty of know-how in getting the fair into
shape and seeing that it stayed.that way. Also a loss to the board
will be Fred Leifheit, president of the board, who is quite iU. He
also devoted endless holU's to the fair staged literally in hia back
New Vaccine for
yard .
·
The fair dates are _Aug. 17 through Aug. 21. The Pugh
Cancer for Tests
Amusement Co. wW be on the midway and country and ~estern
CLEVELAND (UP!)
entertainers wW include Jim Ed Brown on Thursday night and
Testing of a new vaccine for Lonzo and OScar and Helen and Billy Scott on Saturday night.
cancer patients is to begin soon, Rounding out the evening attractiQns wW be the annual horse and .
now that the drug , designed ·to pony pulling contests and'the ob~ance of youth night.
slow the growth of tumors, has
been approved by the Ohio
Division of Food and Drugs.
The drug, called Lewis
Coupled Tumor Protein Antigen
(CfPA ), is' an varian.l..!!f one
recently found to beeessful
in tests on rnice at John Carroll
University.
··.
It is intended to buud up anti·
bodies to combat tumQr grow1h
in the blood serum of patients.
I'
'!'he developer of the vaccine,
Andrew J. Lewis, director of
Lewis Laboratory for Cancer
Research, said.the drug Is 'being
recommended for trial use on
r'
terminal cancer patients where

at.no

charge ••.

• fast Qlurteons Senic:e
• Dllicioui FoOd '

.e FriendiJ Mli.a.~we

t~altt

t4aJIIIt

.h:.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!iii
as.

conventional
treatment . _
failed.

'

review and· was presented a
cadet saber.
Nixon arrived back at An·
dress Air Force Base near
Washington about 3 p. m. EDT
.and left immediately by
helicopter to spend the weekend
at the presidential retreat at
Camp David, Md.
"Through a long and bitter
struggle in Vietnam, American
fighting men have served the
cause of freedom magnificently," he tolil the cadets.
"American military leaderahip,
much of it from here at West
Point, has been superb. And the
American people have· stood
behind our commitment to the
people of South Vietnam in the
face of great temptations to
tur.n aside.
"But now at last we have the
end of the American role in this
war clearly in sight. And we
are ending our involvement
with honor, in a way that will
discourage new aggression and
contribute to a lasting peace in
the Pacific and the world ...
"American strength is the
keystone in the structure of
peace. There are those in the
world who would strike out at
freedom because freedom
makes them afraid .. . as long
as those threats persist, peace
cannot be self-sustaining - it
will ·continue to depend heavily
on the vigilance and power of
those who Jove it."

. FOUR MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS heve been accepted by the all Ohio Youth Choir '
to parUcipate in activities at the Ohio State Fair this fall. Making up the quartet are, standing J.
r, Melanie Hackett, soprano, Jo Ellen Diehl, alto,Steve Powell, tenor and Wayne Well, bass. At
the piano is Mrs. ~tine Guthrie, vocal music instructor at Meigs High School.

Pentagon in Mess
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
congressional report said Saturday that the Defense Department spends an average of 1
hour and 40 minutes sending a
message stamped "immediate"
and 69 minutes to send a
"flash. "
"Then we are in a hell of a
mess," concluded Rep. Ourward G. Hall, R-Mo.
The House Armed Services
Committee's investigating subcorrunittee released the report
on the Pentagon's multibillion
dollar Defense Communication
System (DCS) . The subcommittee found that because of bad
management the DCS performed poorly in three critical
internstional incidents.
In one-e-ase, a U.S. tracking
station in South Korea sent two
"immediate" messages to the
Joint Chiefs of Staff in
Washington about North Korean
planes following an EC121
reconnaissance plane and a
"flash" when the EC121 disappeared from the radar screens.
The "flash" took 38 minutes
to reach the National Military
Command Center in Washington and the "immediate"
transmissions required 1'4
hours and 3 hours. All three
arrived after a "critical"

message reached the center in
10 minutes.
The EC121 was shot down.
The subcommittee report
expressed "grave concern"
about the blunders as well as
misdirected and slow messages
regarding Israel's attack on the
USS Liberty In · 1007 and the
seizure of the USS Pueblo by
North Korea in 1968.

aepartments, the report said,
and "until management responsibility is centralized, either in
DCA or in a designated
military department, the DCS
cannot efficiently function as a

system."
The report said four messages were sent from Washington
instructing the USS Liberty to
move many miles off the coasts
of Israel and Egypt instead of
The subcommittee, chaired its previously assigned 6.5 and
by Rep. Robert H. Mollohan, D- 12.5 nautical miles, respectiveW.Va., said it is worried about ly.
"what could be expected from
Although 13 hours elapsed,
Department of Defense commu- none of the messages reached
nications generally, and the the Liberty before it was
defense communications system attacked by Israel because two
specifically, in a general war messages were misrouted to
1
situation."
the Pacific; a retransmitted
The report said the average message accidentally went
of 69 "processing" minutes for from the Pentagon to Ft.
flash includes
to travel only
from5writer
to Meade,
Md.;
other nine
was
areader
minutes
broadcast
to and
the the
Uberty
for electrical transinission.
hours after the attack.
The repryrt said significant
savings of time could be
In a statement released with
achieved by centralizing respon- the report, Mollohan comsibility in the office of the plained that "instead of the
assistant to the secretary of instantaneous
point-to-point
defense for telecommunica- communications one might
lions.
expect, we find priority traffic
Responsibility for manage- being routed and re-routed
ment of DCS is divided between through numerous intermediate
the Defense Communications . points in a manner reminiscent
Agency (DCA l and the military of the jungle drum technique."

South Hits Sanctuary

WASHINGTON (UP! ) -Sen.
Alan Cranston, D-Calif., has
asked President Nixon to insist
upon the firing of top Lockheed
executives as a condition to the
aircraft corporation's getting
federally guaranteed loans totaling $250 million.
In letters to Nixon and
Treasury Secretary John B.
Connally made public Saturday,
Cranston said something was
wrong with the management of
a firm that lost $60 million on
the Electra jet, $200 million on
the C5A transport, $120 million
on the Cheyenne helicopter,
$130 million on warship contracts and $30 million on the
SRAMissile.
"The management team that
brought the corporation to the
brink of bankruptcy should not
be saved by the government,"
Cranston wrote Connally.
The administration is asking
Congress to guarantee repayment if Lockheed falls to make
good on the bank loans. Nixon
argues only the loan guarantee
will save the nation's No. I
defense contract or from bankruptcy.
Cranston told NiXon that a
number of senators who oppose
the loan guarantee biU have
told him they would support it
if it carried a provision calling
for replacing Lockheed's top
management.

' ~' ' ' ~'~MARS
'~' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' SHOT
' ' ' ' ' ' '~' ' ' ''''K''''''''''"'-@'''
' ' ' '"
RF.'lET
· CAPE KENNEDY (UP!) The laimcy of America's
Mariner 9 television satellite
toward Mars Saturday was
delayed one day because of
an apparent problem In
ground test equipment.
The shot was rescheduled
for 6:17 p.m. EDT Sunday
and a launch control
spokesman said the problem
was expected to be corrected
In time to meet the new
•launch time.

,,,,,,,,,,,,,,l;'' ' ' '-"'' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' "-?-!'' ' '@' ' '"'"' ' ' ' ' ' ';

2 Gallians at
.. .
.
Medicare Workshop

SAIGON (UP! ) -six thousand South Vie.tnamese troops
are pushing through a 250square-mile jungle region in the
Central Highlands used by the
Communists for the past eight
years as a supply base and
headqu~ters area, the operalion commander said Saturday.
Tile newly-ann~ced operaUon in the "Doxa" (secret
base) area 300 miles northeast
of Sslgon began three weekS
ago and is one of the
government drives in progress
in South ··Vietnam's Central
~hlands. Thousands of Con\munist troops' are' 'believect
operating in the area along both
·sides of the Vietnamese borders
·
with Laos and Cambodia.
Maj. Gen. Nguyen Van Toan,
commander of the operation
into the DOxa area, said the
last government operation there
ended ' In 1963 and tliat since
then the Conununists had built
up a vasllogisUcs network i~
the dense jungles.
In Saigon, U.S. spokesmen
said Communist gunners
shelled the key U.S. Navy base

River just below the Cambo- and four were wounded in the
dian border Friday morning attacks about 30 miles northw~nding six American sailors, west of Saigon, spokesman said.
destroying a Navy UH1 Huey The new drive in the Doxa 1 COLUMBUS Two
helicopter and damaging a secret zone covered an area of members of Gallia Cou.nty
2,600-ton repair barge.
25Q square miles of dense health department .- Mrs .
The guerrillas also attached jungleandmountains, in'Cluding Pearl Pope, R.N., director of
two U.S. positions in Hau Nghia the tallest peak in South nursmg , an? Mrs. Wilma
province northwest of Saigon Vietnam, 8,254-foot Ngoc Linh. Brown, Med1care secre~ary,
where American units are Toan told UP! correspondent recently attended a Medicare
clearing out the Hobo Woods Kenneth Braddick during a tour workshop m Columbus concommunist base area with of the area Saturday he dueled by Nationwide Mutual
bulldozers and giant plows. At believes the Communist head- Insurance Company.
least one American was killed quarters for "Military Region Th~ hea!th department, under
'
Five" -emcompassing nine .the dU'ection ofF_. W. Shane, M.
m;1f1'''~''''@'''''''''' '~'''''''''''''''''~'''''''' , , , , , , ,., , , , , ; . provinces of the Central High. D., health comm1ss1oner, ~ffers
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
lands and coasial areas - is care m tile home to all residents
Ohio extended outltiok for located in the zone.
of Gallia COWltY. This includes
Toan commander of the 2nd about
3,000
Medicare
Tue,day through Thursday. Infantry' Division, said 311 beneficia_ries entitled to receiv_ e
Warm Tuesday with a
1
chance of showers Wed· Communists had been slain In the service through the Socia
nesday and tumlOI a little more than 100 contacts since Security insurance program.
cooler Wedneiday night and the operation 'opened. He said
ASKS CALM
Thursday. Daytime blgbs governrrientlosses were 20 dead
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
upper 701 to mid llh Tuesday and 60 wounded.
local chapters of the NAACP
and WedDesday ud Ia the 70s
21ARRESTED
and the Urban League in a joint
·Thursday. Nlgbt lime Iow1ln
statement,
Saturday' made a
the 50s and low 80s Ture~da . DELAWARE,- Ohio (UP!) and Wednuday morning! ' Twenty-one p~rsons were public appeal for an end to
· and In the low and mid 50s arrested late Fr~day night In a racial dissension at area high
Thuroday moralag;
raid on a small farm southwest schools such u the ·trouble that
'
of here. Authorities confiscated forced the clw.lng of Unden
McKinley.
at Tan lchau on the Mekong .,,,,,,,"'' ' ' ' "'.' ' ' ' ' ' 'm' ' ' ' ";'' ' ' 'J' ' '#' ' ' ' ' ' '""''· pipes, marij~ana and pills.
'
.

I

of

ietnam

~E

SISSON, POMEROY, aecond left, was presented a
21&gt;-year service pin Friday night when the 35th anniversary of
Bricklayers Local 32 was observed with a dinner at the
American Legion Home in pomeroy. C. J. Kurlinski, seventh
vice president of the International of Canton, is shown
making the presentatiOn. On the left is Reino Lind, Pomeroy,
business agent of Local 32, and on the right is Jack D.

ar.

Hughes, Columbus, wllll the apprenticeship and training
program of the U. S. Department of Labor. Und holds the
union completion cerlificate of George Donovan while
Hughes holds Donovan's certificate of completion from the
Ohio State Apprenticeship Council. Donovan, Syracuse, was
advanced from an apprentice to a journeymen's status at the
Friday night affair. Donovan was unable to be present.

- ~tntintl
VOL VI .NO. 18

SUNDAY, MAY 30. 1971

PAGE 13

Two More Bodies FotJndQueen Candidate
For Regatta Days
POMEROY - Rhea Mora, a
i
recent graduate of Eastern 1
High School, is one of seven
candidates for the Big Bend
Regatta Queen sponsored by the
Ohio Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi.
Miss Mora was named 1971
Dairy Princess, Junior Fair
Queen for the 70-71 year, ten
year member of 4-H, State
winner of the National4-H Club
Congress, member of Eastern
High School's pep and concert
band, Latin Club, girls ensemble, mixed chorus, glee
club, scholarship team, school
paper staff, member of Chester
United Methodist Church,
assistant
Sunday School'
teacher, MYF, senior choir,
delegate to Farm Bureau Youth
RHEA MORA
School, senior and junior class
play and minstrel cast.
p.m. traveling non-stop to
Other candidates are Jennifer · Pomeroy.
Goble, Lu Ann French, Peggy
Persons attending the parade
Story, Bernadette Hennessy, may vote for the candidate of
Renee Burke and Sandy Ssyre. their choice at the Pomeroy
The queen candidates will Junior High auditorium where
ride on the queen float in the space will be provided. The
Regatta Parade Friday, June queen will be announced at the
18, leaving Middleport at 6:30 .Frog Ball Saturday night.

LSD Film Sure
Hit With Rotary
MIDDLEPORT - Jack
Welsh, making like a· frustrated
utility executive, lived It up
Friday evening at program
time of the Middleport.
Pomeroy Rotary Club.
He released for the first time
outside the confines of the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. his movie, "LSD"
or " Looking (at ) Southern
Division" which he conceived,
produced, directed, and starred
in. Here and there blt parts had
been consigned to other actors,
among them members of the
Rotary club and of the firm he
labors for .
LSD wasn't all fun . It had its
heavy scenes too . Brilliant
pastoral segments of the scenic
southeastern Ohio hill country,

The firm was made especially
to inform Columbus and
Southern Ohio executives of
southeastern Ohio's advantages.
Other subjects explored in the
film included the growing
recreations Industry at parks
and on the river, coal mining,
and outdoor sports.
Rotary President Charles
Simons presided . George
Meinhart said a picnic probably
will be held in July. Ladies of
Heath Methodist Church served
a chicken dinner.

PLENTY MAD
WATERVILLE, Mich. (UPI)
- Charles Johnson, angered
when a neighbor did not answer
his knock on the door Saturday,
accompanied by soft recorded drove his car through a picture
music were offered, as were window into the neighbor's
remarkably informative scenes
.
.
taken at Best Photo in Coolville house, pollee said. Damage was
and in the Ohio Valley estimated at $6,000 to $8,000.
Pub!' h'
C
,
h to · Johnson was charged w1th
IS mg . ?mpany s P 0.
malicious destruction of
offset pnnhng plant m
ty d nken drivblg and
Gallipolis.
pr?per ' . ru
. t dnvmg w1thout a license.
However, exac Uy a t the pom
wbere Welsh's audience began ·
ao N~DF.'l MARCH
dD:Iing, came llilarious scenes ' GULBRAGA India (UP!) featuring his Middleport A crowd ·of 10,0oo turned out to
C&amp;sOE office clerk, _the watch 80 nu\le women carrying
beautiful Mrs. John Redovlan, lamps on their heads march
and a collecti~n of lo~al along the banks of a stream In a
characters standmg _In w1th temple In this south Indian
Lawth-Jn·seGuences.
town.

YUBA CITY, CaW. (UP! ) - Sheriff's deputies recovered the
22nd and 23rd bodies Saturday in the Yuba City mass murders,

already the largest such confirmed mass kUlings on record.
Both victims were recovered in the same general area along
the Feather River north of here where bodies have been dug up
from crude graves for the last 10days. Sheriff Roy Whiteaker said '· ·
there were indications of more.
The digging went on. There was no Indication when it would
end.
Juan V. Corona, ':11, the prime s1111pect In the killings, was
reported ''very calm, very 9uiet" in hia cell at the Sutter Countr
Jail, where public defender Roy Van Den Heuvel visited blm
Saturday and announced he would enter a plea of innocent for blm
at arraignment next Wednesday.
Sheriff Roy Whiteaker said he was coiiSidering moving
Corona to another location, ''for reaso1111 of all around security. I
don't have that adequate a facllity ," the sheriff said.
The bodies found Saturday were in orchards on one side of the
river, where most of the previous bodies also were uncovered.
Whiteaker said so many corpses have b!!en delivered to the tiny
Twin Cities Funeral Home It is getting ''fiUed up" and some of the
rem&amp;!JIB may hlive to bebjken to other mortuaries.
Whiteaker was prohibited by
a judicial order from dbcusslng said the Yuba City murders
the case against Corona, a appeared to have been commit.
farm labor contractor, outside ted by "a homicidal maniac."
of court.
The killings started about
But a series of court April I, officers said, and
affidavits made public Friday apparently went on until at
9ictured Corona, who once least May 21-a day after the
Jpent three months in a mental first body was found and the
hospital, as a man of violent investigation was under way,
temper who owned weapons The first body was found .
smeared with "posmble blood buried in a peach orchard May
stains."
20. Another was found last
A Welfare investigator also Tuesday, seven more that
revealed Corona applied for night, three Wednesday, eight
welfare payments during the Thursday and one Friday.
slack farming season In March The victims were all midand was enraged when the dleaged or elderly males, none
application was rejected .
of Mexican extraction. They .
"He became very hostile," were mostly transients, derethe investigator said. "He said licts or migrant farm workers
he felt he had been singled out and difficult to identify.
and was being picked on" So far , nine had been
because he was a Mexican. "He identified, and the tiny switchcalled me a lot of names."
board at the sheriff's office was
Corona was committed to a swamped night and day with
state mental hospital In 1956, inquiries about missing persons,
diagnosed as possibly schizo- some who hadn't been heard
phrenic suffering (rom delu- from for up to 30 years.
sions and hallucinations. He Corona, held for arraignment
was later released as "recov- next Wednesday, is eating well,
ered."
reading newspapers and magaIn one of the court documents zines and is "very calm, very
made public Friday, Whiteaker quiet," the sheriff said.

Nonsense or Not,
Boaters Have Fun
MARIETTA, Ohio (UP! )Police Oilef Pete K. Gramkow
said his department needs a
boat to patrol the Muskingum
~d Ohio Rivers here to ''put a
stop to a lot of nonsense that
goes on" among pleasure
boaters.
Gramkow has proposed to
city council that the city purchase a boat to patrol the huge
man-made harbor created by
fedet:al engineers which has attracted thousands of new
boaters to the area.
"We have a problem since the
U.S. Corps of Engineers took
out a dam that created four
mile pool in the Muskingum,"
said Gramkow.
·
"Lots of these people opera!·
IIIIi boats have never had any
training and don't know how to
-operate a boat safely,"
Gramkow said. ' " If the

department had one boat It
could put a stop to a lot of
nonsense that goes on.
"Why there are some who
actually thumb their nosea at
police who must st.od
helplessly_ cin shore without
being able to do anything but
call for the Coast Guard," he
said.
Gramkow said the Coast
Guard cannot bait boaters who
violate state laws such u bn·
proper water skiing. drunkea
boat driving and underage drl·
vers.
"We aren't interested in ar-,
resling them," he seid. "We
just want to have boating safety
since we have so many' men
boaters in recent timea."
If Gramkow. gets bla boll, 11'
would be operated in COCiplla·
lion with the Waahlnaton
Countv sheriff's office

�-

15-The &amp;\l)daytnne. • Sentlnei,Sunday,May 30,1971

w~;;;A;~ds List Expanded. r·A;;~-neatiiS--1 Heisler ·Top
MASON-Awardsiniddltlon
to thoee already repcl!1ed were
presented at Awards Day at
Wahama High School TburlldaY
by Principal Albert Durose.
Benedum Scholar.shlna to
Mauhall University ' were
presented to Cozy Cooke,
liarrieu Layne and Constance
lll&gt;ggerty,
Bob Dye recelved the John C.
Sbaw Scholarship tO Glenville
.State and G•ov Blackhurst the
_,
Board of Regenta Scho1arshlp in
Engineering wW. Va. Institute
of Technology.
National Honor Society
Awards of~ w
. ent to Archetta

Hayes.
.
David Arritt presented the
Typing I Award to Marilyn
Goodnlte, and the Charleston
Beauty Academy JIOO award
went to Sharon Husaell.
Junior
Miss. Pageanl
Scholarship award of $100 went
to Mlas libby Brown; she also
won the Youth Flln!!&amp;s trophy
and received the Miss PersOn&amp;Uty Trophy, Second runnerup, Min Harriett Layne,
received ~ scholarship, and
tile scholarahlp trllpby.
These awarA- were made.
"" the·generoslty
poeslble through
of 'nl!' Peoples Bank, The

Cltlzena National Bank, Tbe
Point Pleasant Building and
Loan and the Muoo County
Bank.
Archetta Hayes received flOO
for being Miss Muoo County
and a scholarship award, 2nd
runner-up in the State Jwlior
Miss Pageant.
·
Coach Donnie VanMeter
presented trophies to the
followiil,g senlers, Football,
Randy Smith, Nlct "•"'_.....,
Keith Sayre, Alfred RDuah, Pat
Fields, Larry Clevenger, Eric

~a·ym· ond Neville

o~Lz·o
;G. o lr~e
II
J•· r

F~ank t. JlWTay

M.orris. Richard Kent, David '
Riley, Leroy Rlftle and Carl .

PT. PLEASANT- Raymond MIDDLEPORT - Frank
Class AA
Trophies for baseball went to Douglas Ne~llle, 43, Rt. 2, Charles Murray, 56, North COLUMBUS(UPI)-Amazing Aurora u 1 _Kim Heisler n
Brent Clark and Tim Howard, Letart, was dead on arrival at Third Ave., Middleport, died Aurora, operating out of the 75-lo46; Mark Heisler 84·86-170;
and for basketball, to Ralph 11:20 a. m. Friday at Pleasant Friday evening at Veterans Class AA caleglli'Y but literally Doug. Haflovlc 79-U 163; Tim
·
'ty's Courneen
76-76-152.
Sayre and GoU, R;mdy RDuslt. Valley Hospital.
Memorial Hospital.
owning 0 hlo State UmverSJ
Youngstown
~lblrty 6:16 He was hom July 25, 1927, at The son of the late Frank and Scarlet course, won the Class Ken Walters 78-17·155; Sam
Nurses Aide awards wer~ Kanauga, Ohio, Gallia County~ Gertrude Ledford Murray,.Sr., AAstalegolfchampionshiphere santlsl 79·77-156; Mike Taylor
presented by Principal Durose · asooofJohnW.Neville,Sr. and hewasbomDec.5,1914.Hewas Saturday afternoon, taking the 81 -80·169; Bob Fleischer 76 ·80to Connie Zuspan, Alicia Jef- Beulah Huddleston Neville. He a veteran of World War n, 36 - hole tournament in 631 156Kenton 663 - Art Rogers 81fers, Bonnie Ord, Angela Sayre, was a member of the Point having served · in the Corps strokes, 15 strokes better than 77-158; Dan Street 79-79-158;
Susie McDaniel, cathy Me· Pleasant Gospel Tabernacle, Army Engineers. He had ClassAAA winner Hubbard and Bruce Smith 91 ,84-175; Jeff
·
Kinsey 87-85-172.
·
Dennitt, Sherr! Sole and Linda 5th and Viand Street, Point worked as. a practical riurse in 65 pokes better than Clallil ;. Upper Sandusky 663 ;- Bob.
Holbrook.
Pleasant; was a member of the the Burgan County Hospital, champion Mogadore;
Thomas 83-83-165; Ron .Povlck
National Maritime Union, New Jersey, before coming ro Aurora was paced by calm 80-80·160; Kelly Goodrich 82·81·
Mike Borohevlch 86-92-178.
Pitlsburgh, and a former Meigs County, .He was a Heisler, whofireda,finalround 163;
~ouisvilleAqulnas672-John
employe of the American Barge member of the Meigs Chapter, 75 to go with his one-under 71 Spittler, 83-77-160; Dave Mark
Line and Marine Sales Service Disabled American - Veterans Frldaytotaketournamentmed- 84-91-175; Dave Galloway 82-78·
160; Dick Susie 90-87-171.
of Charleroy, Pa.
andofFeeney-BennettPostl28, alist honors in the 43rd Ohio Ashtabula Herbor &lt;ml _
Hlgb
School
Athletic Todd Crandall 75-77- 152; Jim
Funeral services will be held American Legion.
Tuesday at 2 p. m. from the
Surviving are his wife, Association • conducted goU Flier 82-81-163; Larry Starkey
Wilcoxen Fun~al Home with Amanda; a step.son, PhWp eliminations, divided into three :~·8'\91169 ; Chuck Sonstebm 99·
GALUPOUS - "Ring the Match Maker, Traces, and a the Rev. RDscoe Thorne of. Rayburn, of Toledo, and a classes for the first lime In Gallipolis 16161 - J. Cun·
Holzer Medical Center, Firat Michael Olley, Mrs: James
ficlatlng. Burial will be in brother, Jack J., of Lodi, N. J. OHSAA history.
nlngham 88·82- 171; S. GardAve. and Cedar St. General Shook and daUghter' Miss Lola World With I,ove," will be the Plano Solo, by Sue Thompson. Suncrest
Cemetery. Friends Mr. Murray was employed as Not only did Aurora ~eep Its ner, 82:76--160; M. Shaver 93.
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p. m. Ingels, Wm. F. Tolbert, theme ~ the Spring Concert of The Glee Club, with the
.
.
.
to proud . . Joe 90-183
, M. Noe
89-83-172.
I h
Middlelown
Madiion
(696) Maternity vl8ltlng hours 2:30 to ~ L Anderson,- Tammy the , Holzer Medical Center Madrigals of Gallla Academy may call at' the funera orne a dispatcher and a cab driver in porm1se
4
p.m.
Sunday.
Middleport.
Manno
("they
kept
reassuring
G.
Pal82-62168;
P.
Pa180-8safter
School of Nursing Glee Club High School, Love Story, My
4:30 p. m. Parents only on R. Lee.
Friday eveniljg, June 4, at Favorite Things, Close w You, Survivingare his wife, Myrtle Funeral sercices will be held me .. 'don't worry, we're going . 165; J. Rhoads 93-90-183; M.
Pediatrics Ward.
v~ Memorial H01pltal
85-94-179.
Rice Neville; one daughie r, at I p.m. Monday at the Addison to win It for you "') but the Smith
Springboro
1714) - s. Crist
BIRmB
ADMITTED- Joyce Stanley, Davia Hall, 514 First Avenue. Fill the World With Love, Mrs. Cora Alice Blankenship, · Methodist Church with the Rev. Greenmen from Portage County 91.89-180; Zech 86-90-176; J .
Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Galllpolls Ferry; Roma Beal, Singers from the Madrigals of Descant, by Nancy Walker and
Letart; one son, Everett Ray Chester Lemley officiating. managed to grab both the in· Hough 89·78-177; R. Dillon 88Boroff, Jacklon, a daughter; Portland; Delores Aeiker, Gallla Academy liigh School Kathy Fischer.
Burial will be in the · Addison· dlvid~~allstandrun~erup 9~~~~inglon c.H. &lt;720I _Bob
Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Lewis, Pomeroy; Benjamin Brown, will join the nursing students for Members of the Glee Club Neville, Letart.
Four sisters, Mrs. Delores Reynolds cemetery. Friends trophies m the AA division as Herron 88-87-175; Bill Junk 92the second portion of the con· are, Sopranos, Barb Edwards,
Galllpolls, a son; Mr. and Mrs. Pomeroy.
·
Aelker,
Middleport; Mrs. Anita may call at the Rawlings.Coats No. 4. man Tim Cournee took 91 - 183; Dan Mahoney 86-a7Mary Hayes, Janet Minard,
Kelsey E. Kuhn, Oak Hill, a DISCHARGED - Jill eun. cert
styen, Pittsburgh,· Mrs. Funeral Home any lime after 5 Ashtabula
Harbor's Todd Cran· 173; Brad Crosby 94·95- 189.
son; Mr, and Mrs. John M. dlff, Joyce Stanley, Kevin \ Mrs. Anne Fischer will direct Karen Heazlit, Jean Spears,
.
CLASSAA
Keithan
Williams,
Grove
City,
p.m.
today
untllll:30
Monday
dall
m
a
sudden
death
playoff
Hubbard (646) - John
Julie
Sutton;
Second
Sopranos,
with
Lisa
Atkins
the
ac·
Cliii'Y, Crown City, a daughter ; Powell, carson Lingerfelt. .
Ohio;
and
Mrs.
Helen
Johnson,
when
the
body
·will
be
taken
ro
for
runi\er-up
honors,
Doughlon
80-84- 164; AI Tribby
companist.
Leooa Conley, Sue Thompson,
Mr. and Mrt. Ivan L.
Gallipolis, Ohio·, six brothers, the church roUe in state until In the big school section Hub- 77·85-162; Don O'Bruba 81-8oMary Hayes, Sue Thompson and Jan McDougle.
Cremeans, Northup, a son.
.
.
.
.
'
161 ; Bob Pleton ·80-79-159.
William Lee Neville, David time of services. Military ntes bard had to surv1ve a flashy Upper Arlinglon (651) Diane
Lavender,
Altos,
and
Jan
Mc[)ougle
of
the
Glee
DISCHARGES
PleaauiVIiley llolpltal
Carolyn Baldwin, Mary Lee Drew Neville and Robert C. at the grave will be conducted closing finish from six-time Larry Headd 80·84-164 ; Randy
Mrs. Maggie Adkins, WIIUam
ADMISSIONS - Jack Jef- Club will alng as a trio.
golfklngUp~r Arllngton, which ~{.~~!i; 7.{.. 1 k1:~~~m~~~5~
Adkins, Mrs. John Armltrong, fers, Pt. Pleasant; Jacob The program, School of Middleton, Linda Grinstaff, Joy Neville, all Pitl8burgh, Pa.; by Feeney-Bennett Post. was 21 swats better Saturday on Cincinnati St. Xnlerl657) Ernest Bahr, Mrs. James Bush, Greene, Grimms Landing; Mrs. Nursing Glee Club: We've Only Detty, Diane Wilson, Shirley Clarence Neville, Baldwin
Park,
Calif.,
and
Sterling
the6700-yardSCarletthanitwas
M. Zoellner 78-78-156 ; F. LohDebbie Caldwell, Mrs. Earl Charles
Wamsley,
Pt. Just Begun, Raindrops, Love Is Chapman.
Gordon, Middleport, Ohio, and
RABIESREPORTED
Friday, Bill Thomas' Golden man 83-86-169; D. Osthollhoff
Carr, Marshall Craig, Jane Pleasant; Monty Davis, a Many,Splendored Thing, Hello Madrigals singing are, tenors, one gran~child.
Bears finished with 651 compar- 81648·8.o- 164 '. J. Scoltman 90- 78COLUMBUS (UP!) - Acting
Fallon, Edward Fayne, Mrs. A. Columbus; Mrs. Ivan Newell, Young Lovers, Happiness, As David Thomas, Paul Schopis,
State Health Director Dr. T. A. ed to Hubbard's winning ~to- Stow (662)- Jeff Flemln~ 7'l'
Louise FOI'l!ythe, Mrs. Thurston Pt. Pleasant, and Jack Bard, Long As He Needs Me, Scar· Steve Lee ; bass, David
tal.
80·157; Mike Morrow 77·75-152;
borough Fair, by the trio; Chapman, Allen Rose, Greg
Friar, Howard Gahm, Mrs. Columbus.
Gardner
reported
Saturday
Stow's
Mike
Morrow
was
the
Rick Havry 86-92- 178; Jerry
OTB'S BELMONT POOL
Schrader,
and
sopranos,
Kathy
severe
rabies
exposures
have
Dolan 89-86-175.
Elmer Gear, Robert Halley, DISCHARGES
Mrs.
NEW YORK (UPI)- The Off.
top AAA shooter with a 77-75 Columbus Wallerson (66) Fischer and Nancy Walker.
Mrs. E. Elaine Harris, Alden Herbert Condee, Mrs. Charles
occurred recently from biles of for a 152 while Columbus Wat. Paul Tomashevskl 83-85-168;
The Glee Club sang the Track Betting Corp. (OTB) will dogs,
Howell, Thomas Jones, Lester Oliver, Audrey Campbell,
skunks and a fox , Gardner te
, f hman
RaJ h Mondo Lombardi 89-89-178;
evening of May 25 at the Athens operate a separate betting pool, said skunks are responsible for rson s res
ace
P Ralph Guarasci 79-75-154; Bob
Keaton, Mrs. James Kittell, James . Smith, Mrs. Delores
Guarasci was runnerup with a Blsclottl 83-SJ-166.
Mental Health Center, strolling for the June 5 running of the
Mrs. John Napier, Mrs. Gary
Cincinrati Moeller (671)- T.
Duff, William McCoy, Danny n~oy
Belmont Stakes, it was an- nearly 75 per cent of the rabies 79-75- 154.
·on the wards as they sang.
Napper, Mrs. Jimmy Nelson, Hill
and Mra. George Holter.
u
J I
cases
In
Ohio
and
foxes,
bats
WlthJerryFrancistakingthe
Morand
84-75-159; R. Muslard
.uounced, Friday In a joint and raccoons account for the
.
87-91- 178; A. Kramer 84-87statement by OTB Preside_nt remainder.
individual medal in Class A 171 ; M. Doerger 80·83-163.
. POMEROY - Meigs and
Howard Samuels and New York
with a 170 over the two days Findlay 16711 Eric
Gallia County fruit growers are
and teammate Randy Brouse's Chatelain. 78-88- 166; Greg
Racing Association Chairman
.
.
Baird86-82- 168; John Delaney
invited to join in the Tri.COunty
Allred G. VanderbUI.
172 meriting~ runner-up pnze, 82·88-170; craig Vandllnk 83·
Fruit Field Day planned
ENQUIRER SUED
Mogadore, locked In a tie with 84-167.
A large handle expected by
Thursday, June 3.
OTB in the 103rd running of the CINCINNATI (UP!) - The Columbus Academy after first Orange (6771 - Eric Weber
.
f
E
86·87-173; Denny Hanzel 85Assisting speclallsts include
Belmont Stakes, in which 0 h10
Bureau o Law n- roundplay,tookthesmallschool 84- 169; Mike Gleason 81-86Blall' Janaon, state extension PT. PLEASANT - The 19?1 Cononero II will attempt to forcement, Inc., has filed a $6.5· division by 12 strokes with a 167 ; Mark Weber 85-83-168.
pathologist; Garth Cahoon, class of 247 gr~duates, therr complete the triple crown, million suit against the Cin- 696 total. Academy finished al Springfield North (685) - Hill
RIO GRANDE - WilUam T. Rio Grande speech team and state extension horticulturist, parents and friends, heard raised the possibility of error if clnnati Enquirer a private . 708
87-81-168, K. Hughes 82·86.
'
·
168 ; R. Patton 80-91-171 ; E
Hopeo;-a. J97,1 graduate 9f Rio wu active In the college's Wooster, and Dr. Farree, fruit ~~s~Pt. Pl~~sa;til~g~ it were made part of Belmont police organization and three
Carter 93-85-178.
Gran~• ·College, has been dramatic productions, aa well management research,
~ s ' ee mos . r n Park's overall pool.
Individuals charging a story In
COLUMBUS 1UPI) _ Scores A!liance (619) - Bill Lavery
selected for an ualstantshlp at as WRIO, tile campus radio WOOster
seruors Friday night m comthe Enquirer slandered the
84-91- 175:. Jim McCrea~y 85·
intheQrdst~lehlghschoolgolf 81- 166; J om Sxasz 84-89-173;
Southern Illinois University, station. Three years ago, he
Kenneih Ackennan Athens bined Commencementcompany.
tournament played on the 7.120 Dan Allmon 86-89-175.
carbondsle, ru. Hope, a· apeech helped form the first tennis extension agent, who has been Baccalaureate exercises In the
COACH HONORED
yard Ohio State University Lynhur~l Bru•h 1703)- Mark
Scarlet Course:
Frled95·89-184 ; Jeff Sfaker 85major at Rio Grande, will begin team at'Rio Grande College on coordinating arrangements; gym.
OBERLIN, Ohio (UP!)
Ciass
A
81166; Mark Lacheleln 81-90work this fall on his master the intercollegiate leirel, and saldstopeWillbemadeat9a.m. Speakers were. Te~esa Marietta baseball coach Don
Mogadore
696
Gary
171
;
Tom Aitken 92-90-182.
ORIOinWIN
degr
lettered three limes in tennis. at the' Harold Smith fann Lanham, valed 1ctor1an, Schlay was named Ohio ConFrancis
91·114-175;
Jerry
KenAshland
(703) - Robin
Dave
hundred un.
daughter· of Mr. and Mrs. ference coach of the year and BLOOMINGTON, Minn . nedy 87-83-170; Bob Pierson 89- Kreider 91 ·92- 183;
(UPI)- The Baltimore Orioles 90·179; Randy Brouse 81·91 -172. Castor 86·84-170; Kevin Sfrall
1003
dergraduate students applying "''*~"'''''~''''''''''' ' '' ' ' ''''''''~,~~'''''~''' ' ' ~''' ''''''m;;,;;;;';m ·grape research ares and at 1:30 Charles Lanham of
Sunp- five Pioneer players were
ble)f a 7.0 lead 1but then came Columbus Academy 708 - 86·84- 170; Jerry Miller 88-92POMEROY .:_ Tivo cara had p.m. at the Walter Cherry fann son Place; Judy Silver' placed on the all-league team.
at Southern llllnola yearly for
Phll Miller 87-87-174; Dan Sch- 180.
back with four runs In the mldf82-93-175;
Tony Gurvls 92Medalists
aaalstantahips, only a few win · minor damages and one driver near Deavertown in Morgan daughter . of Mr. and Mrs.
Marietta players named to
seventh inning Saturday when 81.173; Jay DuRivage 8)-99·186. Tom Lemon (Roostvllle) 892904
aaalstantahipa In any single waacitedromayor'scourtilian County to see strawberries, Ronald Stiver of
Chandler thefirstunitwerepltchersGary
Portsmoulll Easl722- Doug 86-175; Ken Kocher (Buckeye
year.
accidentatl2:50 a.m. Saturday pears, tart cherries, apples, Drive, and Jan R. Taylor, Latos and AI Witmer, catcher Dave Johnson's two run homer Martin 92-UI76; AI Armbrister Cenlral
88-87- 175;
Rob
snapped a 7-7 tie In an II~ 89·90-179; Mike Schmldl 95-91-. Relnhorn (Bexley)
78&gt;.79-157;
Hope, 100 of Mrs. Pearly on Pcmeroy'a East Main St. peaches, plums, and grapes,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ar· Jerry Tekulve, third baseman
Wollenberg 1 (New
Hope, Steubenville, was editor Pollee said a car driven by A third and final stop will be · nold Taylor of 2512 Jefferson Ed Preston and outfielder Bob victory over the Minnesota 186 ; Pal Muhlerln 82-100-182. M.
Twins.
Ollawa Hills 744 - Pefe Lexlngfon) 81·73- 154; S.
of The Signata, the Rio Grande David L. Higginbotham, at 7p,m, at the Gene Lane fann Avenue, who are c.o· Hoepfinger.
Overslreel 93-93-185; Bill Earman (Eaton) 79·83-162 ;
College student newspaper, for Grimm's Landing, W; Va., in Washington County to visit salutatorians The . Rev. Clif- Others chosen for the team·
Southard 90-96-186; Bill Bales Louis Paullc '!Wikllffe) 81-8593-94-187;
Judd Slverman 91·85· 166; Scott Clark I Lima Senior)
- two years, and previously held llidelrirlped a car driven by his sales room and to see peach ford E. Schane, minister ·of were first baseman Dale
GIANTS ROMP
176.
85-85-170.
the poaltlon of assistant editor. Franklin Holcomb, · Point and apple orchards there.
Christ Epls~opal Church, Herbert of Baldwin-Wallace; SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) _
The Signals was voted, by the Pleasant, pulllng from Lynn St. Detailed copies of the delivered a brtef sermon.
second baseman Dave Lower of Bobby Bonds cracked a threeOhio College Newspaper 011to Main. Higginbotham waa program are avallable from the
Capital, shortstop Willie Avery nm homer and Willie McCovey
Association, the Best Weekly In cited for being left of center. County Extension Office acof Baldwin-Wallace and out. contributed a twOol'UII blast
the state.
There were no InJuries.
cording to C. E. Blakeslee,
TREVINO ON TOP
fielders Don Brunetti of Hiram Saturday to highlight a slx-1'1111
He was alao a member of the ' ' ·' '''' ' '' ''''''~"'~M'''~''''j'';;,~;;;;;u;' ;'IY@% county extension agent.
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP!) _ and Doug Dye of Wooster.
sixth inning that carried Juan
King.

Nursmg
• ·G
· 1ee. Club
.r--"""":-----..------------------.
l " HOSPITAL NEWS ! Program Noted

PRICES
IN EFFECT

v
•
ai
B
d.
I OICe
ong roa w.ay I
I

I
I

I

1

I

e

! .Thomas Memphis175classic.

.
BY JACK O'BRIAN

HERMIONE GINGOLD SMOKES
11IE BLOOMING1111NG
NEW YORK - The Downing Square spot
gives ladies nowers and men cigars after din·
ner : Hermione Gingold sniffed at theftowers and
took a cigar .. .. The Blow market for star comics
coincidentally flnda a Bock ul them feuding: One
· Is feuding with five at once .... EJ:.Jeta and now
horse owner Sonny Werblln decided to give Pen
&amp; Pl!ncll bartender Stan Kelly a race Up out of
the goodness ul his personal stable's In·
formation. Then Sonny couldn't remember his
horse's name .... Probably saved Stan a bundle.
Merle Miller's famed homlH:onteaal9nal
printed In the no doubt staid N. Y. '1\mea was
turned down first by Playboy I .... Best customer
fw U. S. electronics defense suppllea (outalde
our own Pentagon) Ia reportedly llrael (radar
jammers, surveillance gizmos, mll8lle warning
1tuff, etc.) Society novellst and erstwhlle
CQ!nmnlst Phllql Van Rensselaer a~ts guests
at 1111 Greek vllla 011 Hydra - at SI,tnl plus all
lbe fresh fiBh you can eat and an Invitation ro
1111181 the mayor.
,
Kayar Jawn Undaay ducbd Into mOIIly
ll'relldl-vllltOr-cllentele Du Midi .for IIIICh.
NobcldJ recognlred him. Dlcln'i mind ibe
IIICII)'IIIIty -even came baclnrlth a Jm:~e party
....... IIUidium will have 1 Slll'll'llle fqr Its Meta
a. Jell: llynlhetlc turf next Yell' .... Keefe
a * reportedly wed the lilter of hll w:
' a-t .,.at. Tbat's one way to get boc*ed ....
Ollne St. resldenta claim that llrlp
,_ 1r ·va; ro Lafayette 11 Yitlually lmJII Ttle ~I - It's been paved 14 *-l!J I
,_. ._. • llllf,By the same C!GIIbaclll'.
Jllll.
- lbat lbe dty'l
.....!
Jell tba ..,.. q1lllb
expediently; or haul IWIU'
cari at the bellul ot lllltlli
.... Roell II nlllllllltll lbe
too; RalllliAiaa W.I8Jiar,•

..._tlillnl
a

rocbra

~::~~a::.:':~
round lead in the
tn~' Danny
pu on e

...,

Synagogue. For a bot hatikvah?
The "Waiting for .vooot" revival juat
doubled Ita origins! Bert Lahr.etarted N. Y. nm
.... The DusUn Hoffman "Who ill Harry
Kellerman?'.' fllm had lt.s own off«reen in·
tr 1m•• : Co-alar Barbara Harris Is a former gal
·" 'pal of Ita aulh~or, Herb Gardner; Hoffman's
screen wUe RD Gregorio Ia the wife of Its
dire to Ul
-•·-d th
ere other
c r,
U
o...... ; ere W
gosatwcoupllngs, but why should we get sued....
The ''On the Town" revival due next fall bas a
.
"•bbins '-••
, Wuuoc
'sudden emergency: Jerome •w
original idea &amp; choreography fairly controls Its
future, Is' lnaldng bi8 terins ''prohibitive"; Its
·
fl
two prevlOUJ revival attempts opped.
' Producer Mike Abbott changed tbe title of
his nexi-Oet. "The Incomparable Max!"
sllgbtly: dropped !he exclamation pernt ....
''Oklahoma!" started that now tiresome titular
punctuation .... "-· Grant, who tycoons it for
_,
Fabergeantl-&amp;llnk1DII, gave a caae oflt to champ
JoeLoulsatblacaeaarsPalace testimonial. Joe
told Ca..., he · apprec!ated . lt, "But I'd've ....
•,
.,.predated It more 30
ago when training
cam
, na didn't smell so ·15ClOd." •
,..,..
The suave TV Umey's blog "Will You
Welcolile Now- David Frolt" will be authored
·
·
·
by Wllll Frilchauer for Hawtllom Boob. Wllll's
moat recent blop were about Art Onaaala and
the aasorted Aga Khans .:.. Biancllt &amp;
Margbuerlta'a opera care 1n The (Greenwich)
VIllage stars 1 lruncllted Oriental baritone with
8 'tau voice named &amp;mg ~· He booms out
"Some Enchanted Evllnlng" like a real Ezlo
Ginza '
·
·~ big 'linger PldJ Brito IUI'VIVed
atenlive 'open heart llfi'PI')' .., well be's blct
-·~· "Sweet So1nll • Good _lkilll"
·---·
·-~
Ill Phil'' CGI!Wiw\: albin flit J8'lda Recardl,
wlllch ·~ "To Be the One YGU IAN" fnm
·ibe mulU.melodJ platter been• IIIey Clllllllider
It • cllleh blt•linllt · .... . IM Vflll II aeWal
prollciiOIIIIIII ~· ~·•·m: TheUil4n ~ Hotel ~ I~J J111J Ulnd retlnd
Maj. Gen. R. G. r.ck Taylar, WW II ha'o-lllhll!"

years

;,.nd

Trevino bad a nin· ··-Aer.n••
.._.. .201 to pull ahead of surging
Doug Sanders, who burst out of
thepackwithaseven-under-par
63 to give him a ·56-llole total of
203. Trevino started the day one
fr
.shot in ont of Larry Ziegler,
but Ziegler faded with a 73 that
left him back at 204 in a ·tie with
Hale Irwin and Ted Hayes.

Amnesl·Y

TIGERSADVANCE
NEWARK, Ohio - The
Greenfield McClain Tigers
adv~nced to ~e Ohio Class AA
Regwn. al Fmals Friday by
del t Co h to 3-0
ea mg s oc n, ·
JETS SIGN RIGGINS
NEW YORK (UPI)-The New
York Jets of the American
·
Football Conference Friday
signed their No. I draft choice,
6-foot-2, 237.nound running back
r
John Riggins of Kansas.

Progr·a·m

Marichaltohiseigbthvictoryin_
San Francisco's (1..3 win over ·
Montreal.

CHARCOAL
(
HECK'S REG.

88

LIGHTER

LIMIT2

charcoal
starter

. .
•MARV STEWART SIGNED
Sl. ~ouls .
PHILADELPIDA (UP!)
New York
Marv Stewart of Nebraska, a Pltfsburgh
No. 2 draft choice, signed a Montreal
Chicago .

:~tl~:arPh:d~~r:w~:rS:SJ

the National Basketball Association. '
Stewart, a . 6-3 guard from
Chicago, is the fifth of the
·
76ers' top five draft picks ro
sign.

Murtaugh
.
•
,
. ..
For AddiCt S Set • ' T., 0 R~J.·o·m
SAIGON (UP!) -The U.S. mended that the Uri!ted States Jlk
ates
-

··

·

0

Navy will launch a drug amnesty program in VIetnam
similar to the ·Army's U.S.
said Saturda
sources
Y·
The llources said Adm. Elmo
R :lmnwalt Jr U.S chief of
•
.,
•
naval operatlOIIS, would announce the program before
I ving VI8 tn .,..,..~morn
ea
am-·-,
ing. They said It IB a direct
result of Zuniwalt's three-day
vialt ro Vietnam.
The Navy program would
permit sailors addicted to
narcotics ro.turn the1111elves in
for treabnent without penalty.
·Tbe U.8. Army began an am·
nasty )ll'lllfam last December
liter it became apparent that
Ioera lli"'I'1DIII*'I al.,]dlen
11. . . addicted to the
"'"
clleap IIKI plentiful heroin
IIVallabJe 111 Vietnam.
Current wfhulet are that
25,810 to 40,000 Gla In VIetnam

'*'*

n addleled to IIWn.

, A .

.630
25 .610 1'12
27 .587 2
18 .462 7'12
21
.457 8
PhiladelphlaWE~~· 27 .372 11'12
W ~ Pet. GB
san .Francisco 34 14 .70!1
Houston
23 23 .500 10
Los Angeles
u 24 .489 IOif2
Atlanta
22 25 .&lt;168 11'12
Cincinnati
19 27 .413 14
san Diego
13 32 .289 19'12
, saturday's Results
Plflsburgh 9 Chlcago4
san Francisco 8 Monfreal 3
Aflanta at Sf. Louis. (night)
Housfon .at Clnclnnafl !night I
Philadelphia al Los Angeles
(night) .
New York at San Diego 2 ltwinigh!)

.

29

17
16
19
21
25

~:if~i:.":.G:;;:

Boston
Baltimore
Detroll
Cleveland

~~~hy~~l'o.,

~-

:XS..

:&amp;.

'' ..._
· . ...

j

HICK'S
REG.
77c

''\

HOUSEWAIE
DEPT.

WHITE CLOUD

TOILET TISSUE

l9CDt.

HECK'S REG. S9l QT.

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

22 PIECE PLASTIC

1 BOO Per Store

PICNIC PACK

Limit Four

·ln'cludes plates, .i'nugs, and pl~ntic
flatware .

66(

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HOUSEWIIE DEPT.

·· tiOLLPACK

PA~:S~$~ OO
HICK'S REG.
33 1 PKG.

HOUSEWAIE

SOUTH BEND

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For the angler who wonts vol ·
ue but sturdy metal conllruc·
lion. Stron111 metal gears and

UITI•1Nf
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Aluminum noH~·c one, d ie co11
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Filled with line : Capaci ty .
approximately 100 ydt . of 8
lb. mono.

FUEL
GALLON

99(

16 .644
18 .581 3
21 .5.13 4'12
25 ..442 9'12

HECK'S REG. $1 .39

:; ~~ :~~ 1~:~

LISTERINE

LIMIT ONE

68(

$299

HECK'S REG. 99c

West
W. L. Pet. ~B
Oakland
32 17 .653
Mlnnesofa
24 23 .511 7
Kansas Cily
21 22 .488 8
California
23 25 .479 8'12
Milwaukee
18 24 .429 10'12
Chicago
16 24 .400 11'12 .
salurday•s Results
Baltimore 11 Minnesota 8
Milwaukee 9 Detroit 2
New York 6 California 1
Oakland 12 Boston 8
Cleveland at Chicago !night)
Kansas City at Washington
(night)

SPORTS DEPT.

40

toSMITIC DEPT.

• LEAR JET .

8 TRACK TAPE
PLAYER
Stereo 8 tope plu1 a bonu1 of AM-FM radio.

Ploy it on ordinary lla1hlighl baHeries or plug
it ir1to any convenient 110 volt AC outlet . Au·
lomatic tope program changing and lighted

program indicaton.

HECK'S REG. $4.99

S6CJ88

SPORTS DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $89.96

JEWElRY DEPT.

MCGRAW EDISON

20" FAN
• Single Speed
• VInyl Strop Hondlo
el Poli1hed Blades

$,••

HECK'SRIG. $17.99
100 ONLY PER STORE
LIMIT ONE

HAIDWAIE DEPT.

ASSORTED

8TRACK TAPES
FIRST UNE QUALITY

·RCA
• DECA

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p.m.
l';.m.)
Aflanta at St. Louis, 2:15 p.m.
troll at Milwaukee (2: 30
Houston at Clnclnnall, 2:15p.m. , p.m.)
Philadelphia at Los Angeles, 4 Cleveland at Ch lea go (2: 15
p.m,
~m.l
New York at San Diego, 4 p. m. ansas . City af Washlnglon
Montreal at San Francisco, (2), (1 :30 p.m.)
3 p. m.
California at New York (2 p.m.)
Mond1y's Games _
Oakland at Boston (2 p.m.)
Chicago· at Pittsburgh &lt;mor. Monday's G1m11
nlng). ·
Detroll at Mlnnesofa (morning)
Atlanta at St.' Louis (night)
Cleveland at Milwaukee (night)
Houslon at Cincinnati . .
Baltimore at Chicago 12)
Montreal aI Los Angeles (r&gt;lght) california at Washington
Philadelphia af .San Diego (21 Oakland at N~ York .(2 r .m.)
New York at San Francisco
Kansas City at Boston 12

GENERAL

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$1.39

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HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HARDWARE DEPT.

Pet. GB

withdraw all its troops from
South VIetnam Immediately
PITTSBURGH (UPI) _
unless something Is done
qui""'"'
to th fl
of Danny Murtaugh, the manager
• ...., to s P e ow
of the Plttaburgh Pirates who
narcotics to U.S. lrOOJ16. ---- ~sheen hospitalized since May
The amnesty program Zum
·
• II, Wll given a clean bill of
walt was to announce would health Saturday and 'lrill rejoin
cover Ill the approximately the cl bIn lher k
300110 N
in Vie'-·u
ano · !ee ·
• . avy men
""""
Mll'taugb, ,,, wbo bas a
anti aboard ships off the cout, ~tary of heart trouble that
tile sources said.
twice forced him · Into ·
The Navy bas bat! fewer retirement, was sidellned after
problems with drugs here than be CCllllJIIIlned of chest pain&amp;
lbe other IMI'Vicea becallle so . before a game in Cincinnati last
many of Ita men directly baled week.
·
13 Horses Entered
. In Delaware Race
iliVietnamUveln1111811detadl·
But Dr Jileeph Finegold the
meots where It II llaJ1el: to hide Pirates'
]lh)'lliclln, 'aald
•
eng alia thin it lain Dwsiw atenlive leltl lnclleated there STANTON, Del. (UPI) - guesses ranging up to 25,tnl
Jnllallallonil wbere there . . ,.. no dam•p to Murtaugh's Thirteen hones"'" en)ered 1n for the crowd and an estimlited
~of men.
,
.
.
the t25,000 added Brandywine 2 mllll011ln betting.
But lbe IOIIl'CII Aid ZUmwalt heart.
Turf flaodlelp that ldclal off Mrs. Henry Ulna' NOI'UI
\llcONedlbere wu a 11 IJie ,.:·Beca- of 1111 ~ 91nday f1C1D1 at Delaware FlJibt, wbo l'CI1118ed a GirdeD.
and~ froblem wl!lulrua allbe IIIII, i t - be
Plrk.
. · Slate Trachec:wd wlier lbill
uaera at la1tr ._ IIICh u have .~ addllltml -~- to With no establlsbed precedent year while winning • dlvillon of
Ranh Bay IIIII o. Nina.
llld : - '11
to meanre altenduce or lhe VaHey Forge Handlclp 011
and lbellfcu dedrlooS to In- ..._._:.;:::In OllirGrm
Iince Delaware 11 the
wthe JIOil UDder . a pr+llii J!!!lllp to - to nm 011
allll
for the

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2000 PER STORE
LIMIT.5 QTS.

HARDWARE
DEPT.

Amerlcan~eogueStandings
W.
29
25
25
19

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MOTOR OIL

_HECK'S ·•
REG.
49c

· Lite

( ,.. .
'\

' .,'

lOW-40

39(
Gulf

-.....,.

44c

VOLINE OR
VAL·VOLINE ·

CHARCOAL

1

500BAGS
ONLY PER
STORE

600 Per Store
Limit Two
.

HECK'S REG.
49c

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

1Nighlga7l~'included)
syNygn~~e:.:~~~n::~r:J!:lal
w ~ Pet. GB
Ea•t
NATIONALLEAGUE

33(

HECK'S REG. 3Bc

10 LBS.

lOOCOUNT

Limit Two

$100

southwestofGlousterrosee~

Lee Trevino tapped in a ·four!00 t birdie tt th 18th gr en

SO COUNT

lFOR

OPEN DAILY 10 TO 9
SUNDAY 1 TO 7

three Seniors
Give Addresses

,--------------------------------------------

FOAM CUPS

600 Per Store
Limit Three

WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

PAPER PLATES

7 oz.

160COUNT

MAY30AND31

J',une 3

Ofee~everal

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NAPKINS

SUNDAY AND MONDAY ONLY

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Granted Rio Grad

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•

•

•

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HECK'S REG.
79c

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DEPT.

SO QUART

G. E.

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e 8ig 2\4 " dynamic s~ker
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$2.47

WITIDIPT.

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�-

15-The &amp;\l)daytnne. • Sentlnei,Sunday,May 30,1971

w~;;;A;~ds List Expanded. r·A;;~-neatiiS--1 Heisler ·Top
MASON-Awardsiniddltlon
to thoee already repcl!1ed were
presented at Awards Day at
Wahama High School TburlldaY
by Principal Albert Durose.
Benedum Scholar.shlna to
Mauhall University ' were
presented to Cozy Cooke,
liarrieu Layne and Constance
lll&gt;ggerty,
Bob Dye recelved the John C.
Sbaw Scholarship tO Glenville
.State and G•ov Blackhurst the
_,
Board of Regenta Scho1arshlp in
Engineering wW. Va. Institute
of Technology.
National Honor Society
Awards of~ w
. ent to Archetta

Hayes.
.
David Arritt presented the
Typing I Award to Marilyn
Goodnlte, and the Charleston
Beauty Academy JIOO award
went to Sharon Husaell.
Junior
Miss. Pageanl
Scholarship award of $100 went
to Mlas libby Brown; she also
won the Youth Flln!!&amp;s trophy
and received the Miss PersOn&amp;Uty Trophy, Second runnerup, Min Harriett Layne,
received ~ scholarship, and
tile scholarahlp trllpby.
These awarA- were made.
"" the·generoslty
poeslble through
of 'nl!' Peoples Bank, The

Cltlzena National Bank, Tbe
Point Pleasant Building and
Loan and the Muoo County
Bank.
Archetta Hayes received flOO
for being Miss Muoo County
and a scholarship award, 2nd
runner-up in the State Jwlior
Miss Pageant.
·
Coach Donnie VanMeter
presented trophies to the
followiil,g senlers, Football,
Randy Smith, Nlct "•"'_.....,
Keith Sayre, Alfred RDuah, Pat
Fields, Larry Clevenger, Eric

~a·ym· ond Neville

o~Lz·o
;G. o lr~e
II
J•· r

F~ank t. JlWTay

M.orris. Richard Kent, David '
Riley, Leroy Rlftle and Carl .

PT. PLEASANT- Raymond MIDDLEPORT - Frank
Class AA
Trophies for baseball went to Douglas Ne~llle, 43, Rt. 2, Charles Murray, 56, North COLUMBUS(UPI)-Amazing Aurora u 1 _Kim Heisler n
Brent Clark and Tim Howard, Letart, was dead on arrival at Third Ave., Middleport, died Aurora, operating out of the 75-lo46; Mark Heisler 84·86-170;
and for basketball, to Ralph 11:20 a. m. Friday at Pleasant Friday evening at Veterans Class AA caleglli'Y but literally Doug. Haflovlc 79-U 163; Tim
·
'ty's Courneen
76-76-152.
Sayre and GoU, R;mdy RDuslt. Valley Hospital.
Memorial Hospital.
owning 0 hlo State UmverSJ
Youngstown
~lblrty 6:16 He was hom July 25, 1927, at The son of the late Frank and Scarlet course, won the Class Ken Walters 78-17·155; Sam
Nurses Aide awards wer~ Kanauga, Ohio, Gallia County~ Gertrude Ledford Murray,.Sr., AAstalegolfchampionshiphere santlsl 79·77-156; Mike Taylor
presented by Principal Durose · asooofJohnW.Neville,Sr. and hewasbomDec.5,1914.Hewas Saturday afternoon, taking the 81 -80·169; Bob Fleischer 76 ·80to Connie Zuspan, Alicia Jef- Beulah Huddleston Neville. He a veteran of World War n, 36 - hole tournament in 631 156Kenton 663 - Art Rogers 81fers, Bonnie Ord, Angela Sayre, was a member of the Point having served · in the Corps strokes, 15 strokes better than 77-158; Dan Street 79-79-158;
Susie McDaniel, cathy Me· Pleasant Gospel Tabernacle, Army Engineers. He had ClassAAA winner Hubbard and Bruce Smith 91 ,84-175; Jeff
·
Kinsey 87-85-172.
·
Dennitt, Sherr! Sole and Linda 5th and Viand Street, Point worked as. a practical riurse in 65 pokes better than Clallil ;. Upper Sandusky 663 ;- Bob.
Holbrook.
Pleasant; was a member of the the Burgan County Hospital, champion Mogadore;
Thomas 83-83-165; Ron .Povlck
National Maritime Union, New Jersey, before coming ro Aurora was paced by calm 80-80·160; Kelly Goodrich 82·81·
Mike Borohevlch 86-92-178.
Pitlsburgh, and a former Meigs County, .He was a Heisler, whofireda,finalround 163;
~ouisvilleAqulnas672-John
employe of the American Barge member of the Meigs Chapter, 75 to go with his one-under 71 Spittler, 83-77-160; Dave Mark
Line and Marine Sales Service Disabled American - Veterans Frldaytotaketournamentmed- 84-91-175; Dave Galloway 82-78·
160; Dick Susie 90-87-171.
of Charleroy, Pa.
andofFeeney-BennettPostl28, alist honors in the 43rd Ohio Ashtabula Herbor &lt;ml _
Hlgb
School
Athletic Todd Crandall 75-77- 152; Jim
Funeral services will be held American Legion.
Tuesday at 2 p. m. from the
Surviving are his wife, Association • conducted goU Flier 82-81-163; Larry Starkey
Wilcoxen Fun~al Home with Amanda; a step.son, PhWp eliminations, divided into three :~·8'\91169 ; Chuck Sonstebm 99·
GALUPOUS - "Ring the Match Maker, Traces, and a the Rev. RDscoe Thorne of. Rayburn, of Toledo, and a classes for the first lime In Gallipolis 16161 - J. Cun·
Holzer Medical Center, Firat Michael Olley, Mrs: James
ficlatlng. Burial will be in brother, Jack J., of Lodi, N. J. OHSAA history.
nlngham 88·82- 171; S. GardAve. and Cedar St. General Shook and daUghter' Miss Lola World With I,ove," will be the Plano Solo, by Sue Thompson. Suncrest
Cemetery. Friends Mr. Murray was employed as Not only did Aurora ~eep Its ner, 82:76--160; M. Shaver 93.
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p. m. Ingels, Wm. F. Tolbert, theme ~ the Spring Concert of The Glee Club, with the
.
.
.
to proud . . Joe 90-183
, M. Noe
89-83-172.
I h
Middlelown
Madiion
(696) Maternity vl8ltlng hours 2:30 to ~ L Anderson,- Tammy the , Holzer Medical Center Madrigals of Gallla Academy may call at' the funera orne a dispatcher and a cab driver in porm1se
4
p.m.
Sunday.
Middleport.
Manno
("they
kept
reassuring
G.
Pal82-62168;
P.
Pa180-8safter
School of Nursing Glee Club High School, Love Story, My
4:30 p. m. Parents only on R. Lee.
Friday eveniljg, June 4, at Favorite Things, Close w You, Survivingare his wife, Myrtle Funeral sercices will be held me .. 'don't worry, we're going . 165; J. Rhoads 93-90-183; M.
Pediatrics Ward.
v~ Memorial H01pltal
85-94-179.
Rice Neville; one daughie r, at I p.m. Monday at the Addison to win It for you "') but the Smith
Springboro
1714) - s. Crist
BIRmB
ADMITTED- Joyce Stanley, Davia Hall, 514 First Avenue. Fill the World With Love, Mrs. Cora Alice Blankenship, · Methodist Church with the Rev. Greenmen from Portage County 91.89-180; Zech 86-90-176; J .
Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Galllpolls Ferry; Roma Beal, Singers from the Madrigals of Descant, by Nancy Walker and
Letart; one son, Everett Ray Chester Lemley officiating. managed to grab both the in· Hough 89·78-177; R. Dillon 88Boroff, Jacklon, a daughter; Portland; Delores Aeiker, Gallla Academy liigh School Kathy Fischer.
Burial will be in the · Addison· dlvid~~allstandrun~erup 9~~~~inglon c.H. &lt;720I _Bob
Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Lewis, Pomeroy; Benjamin Brown, will join the nursing students for Members of the Glee Club Neville, Letart.
Four sisters, Mrs. Delores Reynolds cemetery. Friends trophies m the AA division as Herron 88-87-175; Bill Junk 92the second portion of the con· are, Sopranos, Barb Edwards,
Galllpolls, a son; Mr. and Mrs. Pomeroy.
·
Aelker,
Middleport; Mrs. Anita may call at the Rawlings.Coats No. 4. man Tim Cournee took 91 - 183; Dan Mahoney 86-a7Mary Hayes, Janet Minard,
Kelsey E. Kuhn, Oak Hill, a DISCHARGED - Jill eun. cert
styen, Pittsburgh,· Mrs. Funeral Home any lime after 5 Ashtabula
Harbor's Todd Cran· 173; Brad Crosby 94·95- 189.
son; Mr, and Mrs. John M. dlff, Joyce Stanley, Kevin \ Mrs. Anne Fischer will direct Karen Heazlit, Jean Spears,
.
CLASSAA
Keithan
Williams,
Grove
City,
p.m.
today
untllll:30
Monday
dall
m
a
sudden
death
playoff
Hubbard (646) - John
Julie
Sutton;
Second
Sopranos,
with
Lisa
Atkins
the
ac·
Cliii'Y, Crown City, a daughter ; Powell, carson Lingerfelt. .
Ohio;
and
Mrs.
Helen
Johnson,
when
the
body
·will
be
taken
ro
for
runi\er-up
honors,
Doughlon
80-84- 164; AI Tribby
companist.
Leooa Conley, Sue Thompson,
Mr. and Mrt. Ivan L.
Gallipolis, Ohio·, six brothers, the church roUe in state until In the big school section Hub- 77·85-162; Don O'Bruba 81-8oMary Hayes, Sue Thompson and Jan McDougle.
Cremeans, Northup, a son.
.
.
.
.
'
161 ; Bob Pleton ·80-79-159.
William Lee Neville, David time of services. Military ntes bard had to surv1ve a flashy Upper Arlinglon (651) Diane
Lavender,
Altos,
and
Jan
Mc[)ougle
of
the
Glee
DISCHARGES
PleaauiVIiley llolpltal
Carolyn Baldwin, Mary Lee Drew Neville and Robert C. at the grave will be conducted closing finish from six-time Larry Headd 80·84-164 ; Randy
Mrs. Maggie Adkins, WIIUam
ADMISSIONS - Jack Jef- Club will alng as a trio.
golfklngUp~r Arllngton, which ~{.~~!i; 7.{.. 1 k1:~~~m~~~5~
Adkins, Mrs. John Armltrong, fers, Pt. Pleasant; Jacob The program, School of Middleton, Linda Grinstaff, Joy Neville, all Pitl8burgh, Pa.; by Feeney-Bennett Post. was 21 swats better Saturday on Cincinnati St. Xnlerl657) Ernest Bahr, Mrs. James Bush, Greene, Grimms Landing; Mrs. Nursing Glee Club: We've Only Detty, Diane Wilson, Shirley Clarence Neville, Baldwin
Park,
Calif.,
and
Sterling
the6700-yardSCarletthanitwas
M. Zoellner 78-78-156 ; F. LohDebbie Caldwell, Mrs. Earl Charles
Wamsley,
Pt. Just Begun, Raindrops, Love Is Chapman.
Gordon, Middleport, Ohio, and
RABIESREPORTED
Friday, Bill Thomas' Golden man 83-86-169; D. Osthollhoff
Carr, Marshall Craig, Jane Pleasant; Monty Davis, a Many,Splendored Thing, Hello Madrigals singing are, tenors, one gran~child.
Bears finished with 651 compar- 81648·8.o- 164 '. J. Scoltman 90- 78COLUMBUS (UP!) - Acting
Fallon, Edward Fayne, Mrs. A. Columbus; Mrs. Ivan Newell, Young Lovers, Happiness, As David Thomas, Paul Schopis,
State Health Director Dr. T. A. ed to Hubbard's winning ~to- Stow (662)- Jeff Flemln~ 7'l'
Louise FOI'l!ythe, Mrs. Thurston Pt. Pleasant, and Jack Bard, Long As He Needs Me, Scar· Steve Lee ; bass, David
tal.
80·157; Mike Morrow 77·75-152;
borough Fair, by the trio; Chapman, Allen Rose, Greg
Friar, Howard Gahm, Mrs. Columbus.
Gardner
reported
Saturday
Stow's
Mike
Morrow
was
the
Rick Havry 86-92- 178; Jerry
OTB'S BELMONT POOL
Schrader,
and
sopranos,
Kathy
severe
rabies
exposures
have
Dolan 89-86-175.
Elmer Gear, Robert Halley, DISCHARGES
Mrs.
NEW YORK (UPI)- The Off.
top AAA shooter with a 77-75 Columbus Wallerson (66) Fischer and Nancy Walker.
Mrs. E. Elaine Harris, Alden Herbert Condee, Mrs. Charles
occurred recently from biles of for a 152 while Columbus Wat. Paul Tomashevskl 83-85-168;
The Glee Club sang the Track Betting Corp. (OTB) will dogs,
Howell, Thomas Jones, Lester Oliver, Audrey Campbell,
skunks and a fox , Gardner te
, f hman
RaJ h Mondo Lombardi 89-89-178;
evening of May 25 at the Athens operate a separate betting pool, said skunks are responsible for rson s res
ace
P Ralph Guarasci 79-75-154; Bob
Keaton, Mrs. James Kittell, James . Smith, Mrs. Delores
Guarasci was runnerup with a Blsclottl 83-SJ-166.
Mental Health Center, strolling for the June 5 running of the
Mrs. John Napier, Mrs. Gary
Cincinrati Moeller (671)- T.
Duff, William McCoy, Danny n~oy
Belmont Stakes, it was an- nearly 75 per cent of the rabies 79-75- 154.
·on the wards as they sang.
Napper, Mrs. Jimmy Nelson, Hill
and Mra. George Holter.
u
J I
cases
In
Ohio
and
foxes,
bats
WlthJerryFrancistakingthe
Morand
84-75-159; R. Muslard
.uounced, Friday In a joint and raccoons account for the
.
87-91- 178; A. Kramer 84-87statement by OTB Preside_nt remainder.
individual medal in Class A 171 ; M. Doerger 80·83-163.
. POMEROY - Meigs and
Howard Samuels and New York
with a 170 over the two days Findlay 16711 Eric
Gallia County fruit growers are
and teammate Randy Brouse's Chatelain. 78-88- 166; Greg
Racing Association Chairman
.
.
Baird86-82- 168; John Delaney
invited to join in the Tri.COunty
Allred G. VanderbUI.
172 meriting~ runner-up pnze, 82·88-170; craig Vandllnk 83·
Fruit Field Day planned
ENQUIRER SUED
Mogadore, locked In a tie with 84-167.
A large handle expected by
Thursday, June 3.
OTB in the 103rd running of the CINCINNATI (UP!) - The Columbus Academy after first Orange (6771 - Eric Weber
.
f
E
86·87-173; Denny Hanzel 85Assisting speclallsts include
Belmont Stakes, in which 0 h10
Bureau o Law n- roundplay,tookthesmallschool 84- 169; Mike Gleason 81-86Blall' Janaon, state extension PT. PLEASANT - The 19?1 Cononero II will attempt to forcement, Inc., has filed a $6.5· division by 12 strokes with a 167 ; Mark Weber 85-83-168.
pathologist; Garth Cahoon, class of 247 gr~duates, therr complete the triple crown, million suit against the Cin- 696 total. Academy finished al Springfield North (685) - Hill
RIO GRANDE - WilUam T. Rio Grande speech team and state extension horticulturist, parents and friends, heard raised the possibility of error if clnnati Enquirer a private . 708
87-81-168, K. Hughes 82·86.
'
·
168 ; R. Patton 80-91-171 ; E
Hopeo;-a. J97,1 graduate 9f Rio wu active In the college's Wooster, and Dr. Farree, fruit ~~s~Pt. Pl~~sa;til~g~ it were made part of Belmont police organization and three
Carter 93-85-178.
Gran~• ·College, has been dramatic productions, aa well management research,
~ s ' ee mos . r n Park's overall pool.
Individuals charging a story In
COLUMBUS 1UPI) _ Scores A!liance (619) - Bill Lavery
selected for an ualstantshlp at as WRIO, tile campus radio WOOster
seruors Friday night m comthe Enquirer slandered the
84-91- 175:. Jim McCrea~y 85·
intheQrdst~lehlghschoolgolf 81- 166; J om Sxasz 84-89-173;
Southern Illinois University, station. Three years ago, he
Kenneih Ackennan Athens bined Commencementcompany.
tournament played on the 7.120 Dan Allmon 86-89-175.
carbondsle, ru. Hope, a· apeech helped form the first tennis extension agent, who has been Baccalaureate exercises In the
COACH HONORED
yard Ohio State University Lynhur~l Bru•h 1703)- Mark
Scarlet Course:
Frled95·89-184 ; Jeff Sfaker 85major at Rio Grande, will begin team at'Rio Grande College on coordinating arrangements; gym.
OBERLIN, Ohio (UP!)
Ciass
A
81166; Mark Lacheleln 81-90work this fall on his master the intercollegiate leirel, and saldstopeWillbemadeat9a.m. Speakers were. Te~esa Marietta baseball coach Don
Mogadore
696
Gary
171
;
Tom Aitken 92-90-182.
ORIOinWIN
degr
lettered three limes in tennis. at the' Harold Smith fann Lanham, valed 1ctor1an, Schlay was named Ohio ConFrancis
91·114-175;
Jerry
KenAshland
(703) - Robin
Dave
hundred un.
daughter· of Mr. and Mrs. ference coach of the year and BLOOMINGTON, Minn . nedy 87-83-170; Bob Pierson 89- Kreider 91 ·92- 183;
(UPI)- The Baltimore Orioles 90·179; Randy Brouse 81·91 -172. Castor 86·84-170; Kevin Sfrall
1003
dergraduate students applying "''*~"'''''~''''''''''' ' '' ' ' ''''''''~,~~'''''~''' ' ' ~''' ''''''m;;,;;;;';m ·grape research ares and at 1:30 Charles Lanham of
Sunp- five Pioneer players were
ble)f a 7.0 lead 1but then came Columbus Academy 708 - 86·84- 170; Jerry Miller 88-92POMEROY .:_ Tivo cara had p.m. at the Walter Cherry fann son Place; Judy Silver' placed on the all-league team.
at Southern llllnola yearly for
Phll Miller 87-87-174; Dan Sch- 180.
back with four runs In the mldf82-93-175;
Tony Gurvls 92Medalists
aaalstantahips, only a few win · minor damages and one driver near Deavertown in Morgan daughter . of Mr. and Mrs.
Marietta players named to
seventh inning Saturday when 81.173; Jay DuRivage 8)-99·186. Tom Lemon (Roostvllle) 892904
aaalstantahipa In any single waacitedromayor'scourtilian County to see strawberries, Ronald Stiver of
Chandler thefirstunitwerepltchersGary
Portsmoulll Easl722- Doug 86-175; Ken Kocher (Buckeye
year.
accidentatl2:50 a.m. Saturday pears, tart cherries, apples, Drive, and Jan R. Taylor, Latos and AI Witmer, catcher Dave Johnson's two run homer Martin 92-UI76; AI Armbrister Cenlral
88-87- 175;
Rob
snapped a 7-7 tie In an II~ 89·90-179; Mike Schmldl 95-91-. Relnhorn (Bexley)
78&gt;.79-157;
Hope, 100 of Mrs. Pearly on Pcmeroy'a East Main St. peaches, plums, and grapes,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ar· Jerry Tekulve, third baseman
Wollenberg 1 (New
Hope, Steubenville, was editor Pollee said a car driven by A third and final stop will be · nold Taylor of 2512 Jefferson Ed Preston and outfielder Bob victory over the Minnesota 186 ; Pal Muhlerln 82-100-182. M.
Twins.
Ollawa Hills 744 - Pefe Lexlngfon) 81·73- 154; S.
of The Signata, the Rio Grande David L. Higginbotham, at 7p,m, at the Gene Lane fann Avenue, who are c.o· Hoepfinger.
Overslreel 93-93-185; Bill Earman (Eaton) 79·83-162 ;
College student newspaper, for Grimm's Landing, W; Va., in Washington County to visit salutatorians The . Rev. Clif- Others chosen for the team·
Southard 90-96-186; Bill Bales Louis Paullc '!Wikllffe) 81-8593-94-187;
Judd Slverman 91·85· 166; Scott Clark I Lima Senior)
- two years, and previously held llidelrirlped a car driven by his sales room and to see peach ford E. Schane, minister ·of were first baseman Dale
GIANTS ROMP
176.
85-85-170.
the poaltlon of assistant editor. Franklin Holcomb, · Point and apple orchards there.
Christ Epls~opal Church, Herbert of Baldwin-Wallace; SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) _
The Signals was voted, by the Pleasant, pulllng from Lynn St. Detailed copies of the delivered a brtef sermon.
second baseman Dave Lower of Bobby Bonds cracked a threeOhio College Newspaper 011to Main. Higginbotham waa program are avallable from the
Capital, shortstop Willie Avery nm homer and Willie McCovey
Association, the Best Weekly In cited for being left of center. County Extension Office acof Baldwin-Wallace and out. contributed a twOol'UII blast
the state.
There were no InJuries.
cording to C. E. Blakeslee,
TREVINO ON TOP
fielders Don Brunetti of Hiram Saturday to highlight a slx-1'1111
He was alao a member of the ' ' ·' '''' ' '' ''''''~"'~M'''~''''j'';;,~;;;;;u;' ;'IY@% county extension agent.
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP!) _ and Doug Dye of Wooster.
sixth inning that carried Juan
King.

Nursmg
• ·G
· 1ee. Club
.r--"""":-----..------------------.
l " HOSPITAL NEWS ! Program Noted

PRICES
IN EFFECT

v
•
ai
B
d.
I OICe
ong roa w.ay I
I

I
I

I

1

I

e

! .Thomas Memphis175classic.

.
BY JACK O'BRIAN

HERMIONE GINGOLD SMOKES
11IE BLOOMING1111NG
NEW YORK - The Downing Square spot
gives ladies nowers and men cigars after din·
ner : Hermione Gingold sniffed at theftowers and
took a cigar .. .. The Blow market for star comics
coincidentally flnda a Bock ul them feuding: One
· Is feuding with five at once .... EJ:.Jeta and now
horse owner Sonny Werblln decided to give Pen
&amp; Pl!ncll bartender Stan Kelly a race Up out of
the goodness ul his personal stable's In·
formation. Then Sonny couldn't remember his
horse's name .... Probably saved Stan a bundle.
Merle Miller's famed homlH:onteaal9nal
printed In the no doubt staid N. Y. '1\mea was
turned down first by Playboy I .... Best customer
fw U. S. electronics defense suppllea (outalde
our own Pentagon) Ia reportedly llrael (radar
jammers, surveillance gizmos, mll8lle warning
1tuff, etc.) Society novellst and erstwhlle
CQ!nmnlst Phllql Van Rensselaer a~ts guests
at 1111 Greek vllla 011 Hydra - at SI,tnl plus all
lbe fresh fiBh you can eat and an Invitation ro
1111181 the mayor.
,
Kayar Jawn Undaay ducbd Into mOIIly
ll'relldl-vllltOr-cllentele Du Midi .for IIIICh.
NobcldJ recognlred him. Dlcln'i mind ibe
IIICII)'IIIIty -even came baclnrlth a Jm:~e party
....... IIUidium will have 1 Slll'll'llle fqr Its Meta
a. Jell: llynlhetlc turf next Yell' .... Keefe
a * reportedly wed the lilter of hll w:
' a-t .,.at. Tbat's one way to get boc*ed ....
Ollne St. resldenta claim that llrlp
,_ 1r ·va; ro Lafayette 11 Yitlually lmJII Ttle ~I - It's been paved 14 *-l!J I
,_. ._. • llllf,By the same C!GIIbaclll'.
Jllll.
- lbat lbe dty'l
.....!
Jell tba ..,.. q1lllb
expediently; or haul IWIU'
cari at the bellul ot lllltlli
.... Roell II nlllllllltll lbe
too; RalllliAiaa W.I8Jiar,•

..._tlillnl
a

rocbra

~::~~a::.:':~
round lead in the
tn~' Danny
pu on e

...,

Synagogue. For a bot hatikvah?
The "Waiting for .vooot" revival juat
doubled Ita origins! Bert Lahr.etarted N. Y. nm
.... The DusUn Hoffman "Who ill Harry
Kellerman?'.' fllm had lt.s own off«reen in·
tr 1m•• : Co-alar Barbara Harris Is a former gal
·" 'pal of Ita aulh~or, Herb Gardner; Hoffman's
screen wUe RD Gregorio Ia the wife of Its
dire to Ul
-•·-d th
ere other
c r,
U
o...... ; ere W
gosatwcoupllngs, but why should we get sued....
The ''On the Town" revival due next fall bas a
.
"•bbins '-••
, Wuuoc
'sudden emergency: Jerome •w
original idea &amp; choreography fairly controls Its
future, Is' lnaldng bi8 terins ''prohibitive"; Its
·
fl
two prevlOUJ revival attempts opped.
' Producer Mike Abbott changed tbe title of
his nexi-Oet. "The Incomparable Max!"
sllgbtly: dropped !he exclamation pernt ....
''Oklahoma!" started that now tiresome titular
punctuation .... "-· Grant, who tycoons it for
_,
Fabergeantl-&amp;llnk1DII, gave a caae oflt to champ
JoeLoulsatblacaeaarsPalace testimonial. Joe
told Ca..., he · apprec!ated . lt, "But I'd've ....
•,
.,.predated It more 30
ago when training
cam
, na didn't smell so ·15ClOd." •
,..,..
The suave TV Umey's blog "Will You
Welcolile Now- David Frolt" will be authored
·
·
·
by Wllll Frilchauer for Hawtllom Boob. Wllll's
moat recent blop were about Art Onaaala and
the aasorted Aga Khans .:.. Biancllt &amp;
Margbuerlta'a opera care 1n The (Greenwich)
VIllage stars 1 lruncllted Oriental baritone with
8 'tau voice named &amp;mg ~· He booms out
"Some Enchanted Evllnlng" like a real Ezlo
Ginza '
·
·~ big 'linger PldJ Brito IUI'VIVed
atenlive 'open heart llfi'PI')' .., well be's blct
-·~· "Sweet So1nll • Good _lkilll"
·---·
·-~
Ill Phil'' CGI!Wiw\: albin flit J8'lda Recardl,
wlllch ·~ "To Be the One YGU IAN" fnm
·ibe mulU.melodJ platter been• IIIey Clllllllider
It • cllleh blt•linllt · .... . IM Vflll II aeWal
prollciiOIIIIIII ~· ~·•·m: TheUil4n ~ Hotel ~ I~J J111J Ulnd retlnd
Maj. Gen. R. G. r.ck Taylar, WW II ha'o-lllhll!"

years

;,.nd

Trevino bad a nin· ··-Aer.n••
.._.. .201 to pull ahead of surging
Doug Sanders, who burst out of
thepackwithaseven-under-par
63 to give him a ·56-llole total of
203. Trevino started the day one
fr
.shot in ont of Larry Ziegler,
but Ziegler faded with a 73 that
left him back at 204 in a ·tie with
Hale Irwin and Ted Hayes.

Amnesl·Y

TIGERSADVANCE
NEWARK, Ohio - The
Greenfield McClain Tigers
adv~nced to ~e Ohio Class AA
Regwn. al Fmals Friday by
del t Co h to 3-0
ea mg s oc n, ·
JETS SIGN RIGGINS
NEW YORK (UPI)-The New
York Jets of the American
·
Football Conference Friday
signed their No. I draft choice,
6-foot-2, 237.nound running back
r
John Riggins of Kansas.

Progr·a·m

Marichaltohiseigbthvictoryin_
San Francisco's (1..3 win over ·
Montreal.

CHARCOAL
(
HECK'S REG.

88

LIGHTER

LIMIT2

charcoal
starter

. .
•MARV STEWART SIGNED
Sl. ~ouls .
PHILADELPIDA (UP!)
New York
Marv Stewart of Nebraska, a Pltfsburgh
No. 2 draft choice, signed a Montreal
Chicago .

:~tl~:arPh:d~~r:w~:rS:SJ

the National Basketball Association. '
Stewart, a . 6-3 guard from
Chicago, is the fifth of the
·
76ers' top five draft picks ro
sign.

Murtaugh
.
•
,
. ..
For AddiCt S Set • ' T., 0 R~J.·o·m
SAIGON (UP!) -The U.S. mended that the Uri!ted States Jlk
ates
-

··

·

0

Navy will launch a drug amnesty program in VIetnam
similar to the ·Army's U.S.
said Saturda
sources
Y·
The llources said Adm. Elmo
R :lmnwalt Jr U.S chief of
•
.,
•
naval operatlOIIS, would announce the program before
I ving VI8 tn .,..,..~morn
ea
am-·-,
ing. They said It IB a direct
result of Zuniwalt's three-day
vialt ro Vietnam.
The Navy program would
permit sailors addicted to
narcotics ro.turn the1111elves in
for treabnent without penalty.
·Tbe U.8. Army began an am·
nasty )ll'lllfam last December
liter it became apparent that
Ioera lli"'I'1DIII*'I al.,]dlen
11. . . addicted to the
"'"
clleap IIKI plentiful heroin
IIVallabJe 111 Vietnam.
Current wfhulet are that
25,810 to 40,000 Gla In VIetnam

'*'*

n addleled to IIWn.

, A .

.630
25 .610 1'12
27 .587 2
18 .462 7'12
21
.457 8
PhiladelphlaWE~~· 27 .372 11'12
W ~ Pet. GB
san .Francisco 34 14 .70!1
Houston
23 23 .500 10
Los Angeles
u 24 .489 IOif2
Atlanta
22 25 .&lt;168 11'12
Cincinnati
19 27 .413 14
san Diego
13 32 .289 19'12
, saturday's Results
Plflsburgh 9 Chlcago4
san Francisco 8 Monfreal 3
Aflanta at Sf. Louis. (night)
Housfon .at Clnclnnafl !night I
Philadelphia al Los Angeles
(night) .
New York at San Diego 2 ltwinigh!)

.

29

17
16
19
21
25

~:if~i:.":.G:;;:

Boston
Baltimore
Detroll
Cleveland

~~~hy~~l'o.,

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West
W. L. Pet. ~B
Oakland
32 17 .653
Mlnnesofa
24 23 .511 7
Kansas Cily
21 22 .488 8
California
23 25 .479 8'12
Milwaukee
18 24 .429 10'12
Chicago
16 24 .400 11'12 .
salurday•s Results
Baltimore 11 Minnesota 8
Milwaukee 9 Detroit 2
New York 6 California 1
Oakland 12 Boston 8
Cleveland at Chicago !night)
Kansas City at Washington
(night)

SPORTS DEPT.

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PLAYER
Stereo 8 tope plu1 a bonu1 of AM-FM radio.

Ploy it on ordinary lla1hlighl baHeries or plug
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program indicaton.

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Aflanta at St. Louis, 2:15 p.m.
troll at Milwaukee (2: 30
Houston at Clnclnnall, 2:15p.m. , p.m.)
Philadelphia at Los Angeles, 4 Cleveland at Ch lea go (2: 15
p.m,
~m.l
New York at San Diego, 4 p. m. ansas . City af Washlnglon
Montreal at San Francisco, (2), (1 :30 p.m.)
3 p. m.
California at New York (2 p.m.)
Mond1y's Games _
Oakland at Boston (2 p.m.)
Chicago· at Pittsburgh &lt;mor. Monday's G1m11
nlng). ·
Detroll at Mlnnesofa (morning)
Atlanta at St.' Louis (night)
Cleveland at Milwaukee (night)
Houslon at Cincinnati . .
Baltimore at Chicago 12)
Montreal aI Los Angeles (r&gt;lght) california at Washington
Philadelphia af .San Diego (21 Oakland at N~ York .(2 r .m.)
New York at San Francisco
Kansas City at Boston 12

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withdraw all its troops from
South VIetnam Immediately
PITTSBURGH (UPI) _
unless something Is done
qui""'"'
to th fl
of Danny Murtaugh, the manager
• ...., to s P e ow
of the Plttaburgh Pirates who
narcotics to U.S. lrOOJ16. ---- ~sheen hospitalized since May
The amnesty program Zum
·
• II, Wll given a clean bill of
walt was to announce would health Saturday and 'lrill rejoin
cover Ill the approximately the cl bIn lher k
300110 N
in Vie'-·u
ano · !ee ·
• . avy men
""""
Mll'taugb, ,,, wbo bas a
anti aboard ships off the cout, ~tary of heart trouble that
tile sources said.
twice forced him · Into ·
The Navy bas bat! fewer retirement, was sidellned after
problems with drugs here than be CCllllJIIIlned of chest pain&amp;
lbe other IMI'Vicea becallle so . before a game in Cincinnati last
many of Ita men directly baled week.
·
13 Horses Entered
. In Delaware Race
iliVietnamUveln1111811detadl·
But Dr Jileeph Finegold the
meots where It II llaJ1el: to hide Pirates'
]lh)'lliclln, 'aald
•
eng alia thin it lain Dwsiw atenlive leltl lnclleated there STANTON, Del. (UPI) - guesses ranging up to 25,tnl
Jnllallallonil wbere there . . ,.. no dam•p to Murtaugh's Thirteen hones"'" en)ered 1n for the crowd and an estimlited
~of men.
,
.
.
the t25,000 added Brandywine 2 mllll011ln betting.
But lbe IOIIl'CII Aid ZUmwalt heart.
Turf flaodlelp that ldclal off Mrs. Henry Ulna' NOI'UI
\llcONedlbere wu a 11 IJie ,.:·Beca- of 1111 ~ 91nday f1C1D1 at Delaware FlJibt, wbo l'CI1118ed a GirdeD.
and~ froblem wl!lulrua allbe IIIII, i t - be
Plrk.
. · Slate Trachec:wd wlier lbill
uaera at la1tr ._ IIICh u have .~ addllltml -~- to With no establlsbed precedent year while winning • dlvillon of
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llld : - '11
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southwestofGlousterrosee~

Lee Trevino tapped in a ·four!00 t birdie tt th 18th gr en

SO COUNT

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..
16.-The Silnday.Times-Sentinei,Sund.ay,May30,1971 ,

17 .:. The Sunday Times · Sentinel, Sunday, May 30, 1971

.

nser

411

.

etruns
.,.... ,,

Sets New Mark;
Race Marred By
Stqnning Crash

..

20 Injured
At Classic

BY ED SAINSBURY
UPI Sports Writer

INDIANAPOLIS, IND. &lt;UPD - AI Unser,
charging through a myriad of wrecks and a mess of
· racing confusion, rode his Johnny Lightning Special
to. victory in the 500 mile auto race Saturday at a
record speed of 157.735 miles per hour.
Unser's trium~h, for the second straight year,
came after a stunnmg crash as the race began when
the pace cat skidded sideways down the pit apron
and into a photographer's stand at the end of the
home stretch. Tw!lllty persons were Injured, one of
them seriously,
.

AUTO RACING stands more thlugs than balr on end.
Findtng out the hard way In recent races .were drivers
Ralph Ugourl, left, Gregg Young, center, ancl Chuck
Am all.

Unser, who celebrated his when Unser was clocked at ·
32nd birthday.wlth his victory, 157.844 m.o.h.

was the first driver to win the
fabled race in consecutive
years since the ill-fated Bill
Vukovich won in 1953 and 1954
-and was killed on the track
while leading the 1955 race.
Unser, who probably will
earn around $280,000 of a
record purse estimated around
$1.1 million, paced the field for
the final 82 laps of the 200
which made the distance,
taking over from· Joe Leonard
on the 118th turn of the !rack.
It was the fifth time Unser
moved In front in the chase,
run before some 300,000 lana in
good racing weather, a temperature In the low 70's with the
sun modified by light breezes.
The race, with the drivers
Ignorant of the pace car crash,
started fast and ended last. In
between with the yellow caution
light on for four times for 53
minutes, the speedsters slowed
to 125 miles per hour, more
than 50 miles an hour below
their usual pace.
, There was no slowdown when
·the pace car, bearing Aslronaut
;John Glenn and speedway
,owner Tony Hulman, slewed
!i!Ito the standa. The racing field
lgol away in a hurst as
ambulances carted Injured
tators to the track hospital,
om which 10 of. them later
were moved to Methodist
:Hospital: Neither Glenn nor
(Bulman were Injured.
: lnatead, Mark Donohue, who
•rnlased a record 181 m.p.h. in
!trials by a clock's tick, swooped
jpast pole winner Peter Revson
;on the first lap and he was
!going a record 166.359 mile.s per
, !hour when 'Denis Hulme spun
~on the second lap and put on
~ the yellow light.
~ The field dido 't get back to
l ecord speed until 180 lsJ)Il

Donohue, one of the lour
pilots in the new Britiah
designed M16 Mclaren cars,
IM!emed about to run off with
the race as he led for the first
50 laJ)Il. Then he had to stop for
' fuel, yielding the lead to Joe
Leonard, who gave way in turn
to Bobby Unser before Donohue
took charge again on the 65th
lap.
Then luck ran out for
Donohue. Something went
wrong In his gears and he spun
out on the northwest turn. What
happened to him could almost
have been the tale of the
fabulour MIG Mclarens, which
dominated the quaUiying runs.
Gordon Johncock drove one of
them, a .Year old, and he got
involved In a four car pileup on
the northeast turn which put
Johncock, Mel Kenyon, Mario
AndretU and Steve Krlsilofl out
of the race. The yeUow light
was on lor nearly 11 minutes.
Hulme kept his new Mclaren
in the running, despite his spin,
until he bad gone 137 laps and
then machine trouble put him
out of action. Only Revson
managed to keep a Mclaren
running, and he finished second.
Unser's paycheck this year
should surpass the $271.697 he
got a year ago, althoogh he
won't pick up as much lap prize
money. BUt the speedway .Purse
will be higher than last year,
and to Unser will go the biggest
portion.
His victory was the third win
for the Unser family at the
same site which once brought
tragedy to them, the. death of
brother Jerry in a racing
accident. But Bobby won the
race Iri 1968 and now AI bas
picked up two straight.
Both should be back next
year.

Stebbins 11th In State

Pirates
Romp To

Aurora Captures

9 4 wm
•

AA Golf Tourney

•

PITTSBURGH (UP!)- The
COLUMBUS- Aurora High School captured the
Pittsburgh Pirates slammed
1971 Ohio Class AA High School golf tournament
four home runs in the first lour
Saturday as the northern Ohioans finished the two·
innings, Including two-run shots
. day 36-hole affair with a near record 631 team effort.
by Riehle Hebner and Bob
The Ohio high school team record is 624.
Robertson, to beat the Chicago
Coach John Milhoan's Gallipolis Blue Devils
Cubs, 9-4, Saturday.
ninth after the first 18 holes of action on the rugged
Given the word before the
OSU Scarlet course, moved up one notch to finish
game
that
hospitalized
manager Danny Murtaugh
eighth in the final standings with a 686 total. GAHS
would rejoin the club in a week,
came back with a 333 Saturday following a 353 effort
the Pirates jumped on Chicago
Friday.
starter Bill Hands for all the ' TONY OLIVA, one of baseYoungstown Liberty Class A title with a 696 effort.
homers In their biggest outburst baD's most consistent bll·
of power since they hit five lers, Is off to a good start .r~~ained In second place, Aurora's Kim Heisler caphomers at Philadelphia April again Ibis year. The Mlnne· f•mshmg wit~ a 636 total. lured medalist honors with a 71sola oulftelder came Into Kenton moved up to a third '75·146 performance. His
13.
the
1971 season with a .311 phlce tie with Upper Sandusky teammate, Tim Courneen was
Hebner, who had three hits,
lifetime balling average.
With a 663 effort. Chlymont runnerup with a 7&amp;-76-152 total.
also singled to score a run and
dropped from third to fifth with Gallia's Steve Gardner was lith
Gene Alley and Milt May hit
in medalist ph!y with a 82-78bases-empty homers lor ' '''''';''''''' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ''' ' ' ' ' ' ' '' ' ' ' ';: :;: ' '' ' ' ' ' ~''''' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' a 666 tally.
St.
Thomas
Aquinas
was
sixth
160 total
000--2
Pittsburgh. May's homer was Houston
000
101
Other Blue Devil scores were:
h1s first In the major leagues .. Cincinnati
ooo 100 000--1 with 672, Ashtabula Harbor
Jim Hickman drove in two DP--Houston 1, Cincinnati 1. seventh with 675, GAHS eighth John Cunningham, 89-82-171;
runs for Chicago with ' a solo LOB-Houston 5, Cincinnati 3. with 686 and Middletown Mike ,Noe, 89-83-172 and Mike
' 2B- Met+ger JB M I
Shaver, 93-91&gt;--183.
homer i~ the second and a HRs-Wynn Ill. May 1 ;).~ger · Madison ninth with 69!!.
Springboro was lOth with 714
Of nine previous trips to the
double . 10 the fourth that
IP H R ER BB so
and
Washington
CH
placed
hlsi
state
meet, this was the
followed a single by Glenn Forsch IW1 -0) 9 3 1 1 2 7
Beckert
Nolan ,( L3·5) a 6 2 2 2 2 with a 720 total. ·
Gallians fourth best score, and
·
Granger
1 0 0 0 0 o
Hubbard captured the Class their highest finish since they
The fourth-inning run trim- T-2:00. A- 15,285.
AAA
championship with a 646 placed second in 1938.
med the Pirates' lead to 3-2 but
in the bottom of the fourth an :~::::m::~:::::.~~::;:;:;~;;:;:;:;:::;::::::::::::::::::::~::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:~-:~::;:;~:::: total. Mogadore capturC!i the
1n the Chlss AA long jump in
track, Gallia's Steve Stebbins
error and homers by Robertson
placed
11th in the state with a
and May on successive pitches
jump of 19 feet, 9'h inches.
made It 6-2.
Rick Upchurch, HollandChicago scored Its final two
Springfield,
captured individual
runs In the sixth when winning
AA long jump honors with a 22'·
piteher Bob Johnson was
9'h" performance.
knocked out. Billy Williams
singled, Ron Santo doubled for
•
one run and Chris Cannizzaro
By GENE CADDES
in the 220 and 49.8 in the 440.
'
singled for another. '
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Dayton
T01 d0 bbe
Galli-.poliS p 001·
·:•
In
th
th
th
Pir
te
Roosevelt,
Cleveland
Gilmour
e
Ll
Y
•
which
finished
ILJ., '
e seven , e a s got
second to Roosevelt jn the AAA
those two runa back on a single Academy and Cleveland Luter- with 31 points, got an out- T 0p
T d
by reliever Jim Nelson, a walk an East captured state cham- standing performance from Bob
0
en 0 ay
to Vic Davalillo, Hebner's plonships Saturday in the first Lawson who took the 100 in 9.6, GALLIPOLIS
The
single and Willie Stargell 's three-division state high school the 220 in 21.6 and anchored the G8u·1 01
ATLANTA (UP!)- The an- could leave Clele Boyer without sacrifice
. They scored again track meet.
Swimming
Pool will
. th Iflyhth
The Ted"'-s of Roosevelt got Cowboys' winning 88D-realy open Pat isI p.m.,
today according
t
that
Cl
te
Bo
nouncemen
e
yer 8 job In basebalL Boyer came m e e g
on a double by
""'
team
would be leaving ~ Atlanta into the major leagues in 1955, Robertson, an infield out and a 28 points from tlreir outstanding Th~ only record set In Satur- to.j;h~ Milhoan, manager·
Braves was cold and unperson- joining the Kansas City A's as passed ball.
Jeff Parks, voted the top per· day's acUon came m· the final
e ocal pool will be open
sharp
tr t to the h t
form · Cl AAA nd dded
from 1-6 p.m., today and
•; ..,__.,
con as
o a "bonus baby" when he was
erm ass
•a a
event of the day, the mile relay, M da
and .personal feud that had only 18 years old.
10 more with. a the
record-5etting
Y• During
the final
day's final when 1\ooseve1t's team clipped of onschool,
pool hours
. willweek
be
performance
10
it
Precipitated ·
He
spent
eight
years
with
the
bette
tha
"Cietls Boyer will be g·
N
event, the mile relay, as they
.r
n a second off the from 3 to 7 p.m. Regular 1-6
.
.
IVen ew York Yankees, including
pr 10
k ·th
hiS unconditional release as the five American League
·
piled up 42 points, 11 more than ci::"kinusg mar WI a 3:16.9 p.m., hours will be o~rved
soon as w&amp;Ivers
·
runnerup Toledo Ubbey.
is dismissed on
.
are obtained•" pennant years of 1960-1964 and CaJi~O'""
11 .1. .1..1.1.
Other · outstanding per- after
June 9school
said the announcement. "The the World Series championship
Gilmour with sensational formances turned In Saturday
agreement between Boyer and years of 1961-62, before being
Eric Penick, named top AA included Rossford' Ron w be
. the Br~ves was consummated acquired by the Braves after
perfonn~r, scoring all of its 30 who captured bo~ AA h;dl:~
POOL OPENS
accordmg to an understanding the 1966 season. Long re\!01!·
points With wins in the 100, 220 events, the 120 highs in 14.5 and
Kyger
Creek Swimming Pool
440
~~ugh~utualagreement." nized as an outstanding fielder
NEW YORK (UPI) - Stan and
• edged Ottawa Glan- thei80lowsinl9.9,andbyLouls
That s ~II there is to It, w~ and a clutch hitter, Boyer is the Bahnsen pitched a lour-bitter dorf, which finlshed .with 28 and DeFreeze of Cleveland Glen- will open May 31, Monday. The
have nothing more to say, last active player from the and Roy White hit a twCH'Uil Columbus DeSales with 27·
ville with 28 Akron Ea t d hours are from 1-6:30 p.m.
Insisted Atlanta. General Mana- Yankees last world champion- homer in the fourth inning . Lutheran East piled up points Sandusky wlth 20 and sBe~ea Evening hours will be scheduled
when the weather permits.
ger Paul Richards . when he ship team.
Saturday to give the New York 10 ~ of the 15 events in out- with 16,
came out of_ a near!y two-hour Boyer bad his best hitting Yankees a 6-1 victory over the sconng runnerup Georgetown Rossford on Wever's two
meeting Friday w1th veteran year his first season as a Brave California Angels.
§.30. All of Georgetown's total hurdles lrl~phs, was fourth in
REDS TRADE DUFFY
third baseman Boyer who bad (1967) when he hit 26 home
Bahnsen, who scored his came from three firsts by Rick AA with 20 points, foUowed by CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
been loudly demanding his runs and drove In 96 runs. But second run ot the seuon against Brown, voted top Class A per- Crestwood with 18 Akr So th Cincinnati Reds Saturday
release for several days.
he missed more· than hall of the sill losses, retired the Angels in former for .his wins In the 100, and Middletown 'Mad~~n u16 acquired outfielder George
The announcement meant '68 season after being hit on the order In five of the nine Innings 220 and 440·
each and Columbus Mifflin 15 Foster from the San Francisco
that · the 34-year-old Boyer, a hand by 8 pitched ball and be and yielded their only run in the
Parks, who set. a ~ew stale . In Class A, Canal Wlnchesle~ Giants in exchange for infielder
major league player for 16 never approached those ligures fourth when Jim Spencer .meet record In Fridays Jl'elim- was the only other serious Frank Duffy and righthander
seasons, would become a "free again.
doubled and scored on a single inaries, won the 120-yard high contender finishing third with 211 pitcher Vern Gelshert.
·
agent" If none of the other 11 His disenchaniment with the by Alex Johnson.
hurdles in 13·9 after getting off points. Kent State 18 and Foster, 22, appeared in 36
National League teams claimed Braves highlighted by several · The Yankees took the lead in to 8 poor slart. He had won the Lockland Cuyahoga H ights games this year for the Giants
him at the $20,000 waiver price. salary ' disputes, apparently their half of the Inning when long jump earUer in the day Frankfori Adena and ~ta · ' and was batting .267 with three
Boyer, who Just the previous crested last week when the Thurman MIDliOilled off with a : : 8 leap of 22 feet, IIW• in- . aU finished with l6. . '
VIB homers and eight RBI's. He
night had repeated his willing- Braves shipped 8 bedtime sin8le and White foUowed with
·
The win 1n AAA was the sec- batted .308 at Phoenix last year.
ness to ''go anywhere, just so 1 curfew on the team and his eighth homer of the season
In the ISO.yard low hurdles, md big school title lor Roosecan get away from Paul became public in an ln~rvlew into the lower leftlield standS. with Parks ~ing for, a triple, veil, having won previously in
Richards," ~eemed oddly sub- wlth the New York Post. in
1be Y&amp;llkees added another Youncstown Ursuline s Ernest 1961 whil both Gilm
d
dued after the meeting.
which he soundly roasted run off c;cyde Wright in the DeOlelUll beathimwitha IBfalt Lutheran eEast were~
"Maybe 1 just talk too much Rlcharda ·
Inning 111 a Bingle by Bobby clo~king, three-tenths of a their first stale 1111
g
when I shouldn't," the $45 OOQ..a.
· •
Murcer, a walk and two second better than Parks who
es. ·
·
year infielder said uncbar'acter·
fielder's choices.
finished second.
A'S SMASH BOSOX
liUcally. "I don't know what 1
The Yankees rocked reilever
Penl~k, who captured the big BOSTON ( UPI) _ Dick
would do ifl had It to do over.
STOP TIGERS
Uoyd ADen for three runs In the school (Clllll AA) 100 llld 220 Green paced a 16-hit, fourIt's Uke taking 1 MC:Oild shot · MILWAUKEE (UP!)_ Lew elghthwiththehelpofa twtH'IIIl Utles last year as a junior, re- homer barrage with 8 pair of
first on a loU COIII'IIl."
Kraulle scattered five hill and double by Jolin Ellll, which feU pealed In o- eventl lhll year homers Saturday a a the
Boyer, wllo 11110' not .._ his the, Milwaukee Brewera bun· between ctlllerflejder Ropr · and added the 440• although he Oakland A's oulaluged the
'
nat allp 1111111 lite waiver ched Ill 11n11e1 for 11 1111111 Repos and rilbtfielder Tciny Wllllltlfly nipped in the kla&amp;er Boaton Red Sox 12-8 in a wUd
ltln1M• nm •'lll!nev, llld nma in the third IMIIII Oonlgll«t ancl a aincle by evetll by Middletown Madlaon's game before 22,811
and 1
. . tGiac lo ''tab 1 ClOtJPie Saturday to beat the red-bot lllnn1 cater.
Mike Helllley.
national televilim aud!enet
llldall alf .a lbiiik IJ Mr.'' Detroit 'l'llen t-1
Penlek, who Is &amp;olng to NOire Green's homers hil sb:th and
~~ llbD Jill lite Jlllllc•• of The Tl&amp;en had won n1ne Gl
Flnt M111
Dame 011 8 foolblll acholarahip, ~evenlh came ln ~ve at

Dayton Roosevelt
AAA Track King

Boyer

Gets His Wzsh

Yanks Hit

.:a

Nine, 6•}

INDIANAPOLIS, IND. (UP!)
- A speeding sports car, which
set . the 125 miles per hour
getaway paee for the 500 mile
auto race field, went out of
control on the pit apron
Saturday, careening into a
photographers stand and injuring 20 persons.
One of the victims, Dr. Vincente Alvarez of Buenos Aires,
Argentina, was listed in serious
condition. Ten of the victims
were taken to Methodist
Hospital in Indianapolis after
examination at the track
hospital.
.
The speeding pace car
carried four people - Driver
Eldon Palmer of Indianapolis,
John Glenn, the first U. S.
Astronaut to orbit the earth,
speedway owner Tony Hulman
and TV sportscaster Chris
Schenkel. None were hurt.
Robert Stamm, a veteran
racing photographer, was one of
the victims on the platform,
which had a bout 50 cameramen
on two tiers.
"I was watching the !rack in
my lens," Stamm said, "and
then I looked down and there it
came. Everybody was watching
the track, and it happened so
fast nobody had time to duck."

:·J,';·.• •·
•
&lt;:

Canonero Prepares For Belmont Race
NEW YORK (UP!) - horse" lor the June 5 Belmont.
Canonero II, responding to Canonero, also treated lor a
1reatment for a slight infection . skin rash which the colt had
in his right hind foot, resumes when he won the Preakness,
preparations today lor the bid to was walked around the shedrow
complete the triple crown on Friday and Saturday, but
sweep that has eluded the resumes his long gallops around
thoroughbred greats since the I% mile main Belmont
Citation's 1948 victories in the track today .
Kentucky Derby, Preakness Arias will have the triple
and Belmont Stakes.
.crown aspirant in the paddock
Trainer Juan Arias dismissed area for a major part of the
reports Saturday that the 3- holiday weekend so that
year-old contender lor racing's Canonero "can see as many
top honor was suffering from people as possible ... I was told
any serious ailment and is "a fit

~ ·

s~~

't\te

o\\
~!~"1:·1~\!1~
~ett 'i \o"' st~"
at oo.~

\lt'e

...

,1.

nt\ce
r

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:::;:.~=~J::::
·
:
:·=~~~to==~-..:ce:::n\:n:
o~rore:
~-:.~:~8.::.:~2~
=:~U...~ooeen:nty:=:
.
lite t¢111 81 n.
Kraulle held lbem hltleulllllll lllau in the Nt)! Wor!d wu Friday quallfyinl! lllli'b, and sb:tb:lnnlna. Joe Rudl hit aaolo
1&amp;'1

"'1..'!'·
}!!"'!&gt;' ~ thellle fourlhthand scoreleu antll
rJ.. l' I ......
IeVen

•

==JY &amp;!~':~"= 41::nO:::.
his voyap.

l ld

in his three homer in the flflh
Ancel
wlnlwert IOflat In the 100 :113 Mancua1 hila l!Oio ltcmer u a

Regaz~ni

Thomas Clothiers

Share Pole

ADENAU, GERMANY (UP!)
- Jacky lckx of Belgium and
Clay Regazzoni of Switzerland,
in a Works Ferrari, Saturday
won the pole position for Sun·
day's 1,000 kilometer auto race
By DARRELL MACK
in the Astrodome Friday night, mic faith prohibited him from fleld and finished with 26 points on the Nuerburgring track by
UP! Sporta Writer
the NBA would be in trouble. flying to Houston after the to win Most Valuable Player posting the highest speed in
HOUSTON (UP!) _ Larry Alcindor did not show up and churchceremonyandphlyingin honors earning him an automo- closing practice runs.
At the wheel of his fire.en~ine­
Jones, the outspoken le1der of the NBA was ·in,t~;o~~le.. ..
the game, according to team- bile he d,id not even know -yas
re~
m~chine ,' Ickx lap~ the ·
the ABA Player's Association, The 7..1 Milwaukee Bucks mate Oscar Robertson.
· · being offered. ·
·
said if Lew Alcindor did not center was married Friday in
But the outside shooting of While his out of shape 14.2 mile road circuit in the
show up for the All-Star game Washington and his new Isla- Walt Frazier of the New York teammates missed 28 of 46 Eifel ·Mountains in the new
Knicks and two clutch free shots in the first balf, Frazier unofficial track record time of 7
throws by Robertson in the hit seven of eight and the NBA minutes, 36.1 seconds for a
final seconds carried the NBA held a 61Hl4 halftime margin. speed of 112.6 m.p.h., topping
to a 125-120 victory Friday The NBA was still struggling his own standard of 7:43.8 set in
·
night over the ABA in the first with a slight lead, 121-120, with a Brabham Formula I car in the
711ondayono&lt;:ourt . rivalry between the 32 seconds remaining when 1969 German Grand Prix.
Bul because Saturday's time
1'~I
1 ~I
two warrmg leagues.
Robertson sank two free throws
was posted in training, it will
Frazier hit 11 ol16 from the to make it 123-120.
PT. PLEASANT - A longest drive on hole No. 14,
Frazier hit the final two free find no official recognition.
The three liter Ferrari 312-P, ·
"Shotgun Start" from every tee shortest drive on hole No .. 6,
·throws with 11 seconds remainpowered by a Grand Prix
of the Hidden Valley Country closest to pin on hole 7 and 11,
ing.
engine,
is the Italian Auto
Club will launch the la.hole most birdies, most 5's
·
The NBA apparently had the
Third Annual Jim Fisher-Paul most
6's,
most
7's
game won, leading by 10&amp;-98 Company's only Works car in
Wedge Memorial Golf Tour- and
most
8's;
most
after reeling off 12 straight the race, the eighth counting
nament Monday at 9:30 a.m. strokes on a single hole, worst
points midway through the final toward the world prototype and
. Sixty-eight golfers will dressed golfer, best dressed
period. But Rick Barry of New sports cars manufacturers cup.
West Germany 's Rolf
participate in the annual event, golfer and to the golfer closest
York and Charlie Scott of
Stommelen
at the wheel of an
according to Team Captains to the tree on No. 6.
Virginia led an ABA surge
Tom K. Fisher and Jimmy Joe Pairings are as follows:
which closed the gap to one Alfa Romeo 33-3 turned in the
Wedge. Bill· Gilmour will coNo. 1 Tee
point with 47 seconds to go on a second best time in training of
7:45.1.
captain the Fisher team and First foursome, Tom Fisher, MIDDLEPORT
Although h!yup by Scott.
Stommelen will be taking
Charles Fowler, Sr., the Wedge Sam Johnson, Carroll Casto, rosters of the Middleport Coach Bill Russell, · the
turns
at the wheel in Sunday's
team.
John Roberts ; second lour· 'Summer Basketball League are former Boston Celtic great,
Trophies will be presented at some, Dan Conners, Art not complete, strength of the complimented the ABA players race with Nan! Galli of Italy.
The highly-touted Porsches,
the conclusion of the tourney to Gilwicks, Joe Antal, Arnold teams appear to be impressive. on their comeback.
current
leaders in the inthe low gross score, low net Bailey; third foursome , Bill As of today, there are lour "They play a little more wide
scorer, runner-up low net scorer Buffington, Jake Somerville, independently sponsored teams open style tban we do," the 6-10 termediary championship
and the golfer with the high Keith Arnold, Rudy O'Dell.
in the league. Each sponsor will Russell said. "We had a Ill- standings, had to settle for the
gross score. .
No. % Tee
supply its team with equipment point lead. Then, zap, we were next positions in the practice
runs.
.
.
Prizes will be presented for Russ Bibbee, Jim Fisher, needed lor the season.
down to one."
A
victory
in
Sunday's
race,
the fewest putts, most putts, George Fisher, Wilbur Dickson. Sponsors are Ohio Valley John Havlicek of Boston said
No. 3 Tee
Baking Company,. Mark V the ABA had nothing to lose by which will be run on a !rack on
which additional safety
First foursome, Nial Minton, Supermarket, Adolph's Dairy its daring phly.
Dave Poore, BiU Rardin, DUane Valley, and The Daily Sentinel. "They were ready to go at measures bave been installed in
Clatworthy; second foursome,
All games will be played on full tilt," Havlicek said. "They recent months, would give
Scott Stricklen, Rudy Fnar, the slab at the Middleport Pool, played It wide open while we Porsche the world cup because
Nick Nicholson, Stanford weather permitting. In case of wanted to get a lead and hold of its commanding lead in the
standings.
Powell.
rain games will be moved inside it. "
No. 4 Tee
to the Middleport Jr. High gym.
PARIS (UPI) - Second- First foursome,
Paul
Among the players on each
· seeded Arthur Ashe and fifth· Somerville, Tom Rose, Eustace team are Jeff Morris, Mickey
seeded Stan 'Smith led a United Wilson, Cliff Bellamy; second Childs, Jim Boggs, and Ron
S~tes sweep through the third foursome, George Ingels, Jack Ferguson, Ohio Valley Bakery ;
round of the $100,000 French Flesher.
Jeff Tyo, Mike Sayre, Bill
Open Tennis championships
No.5 Tee
Vaughn, a~d Mark Werry, on
Saturday wi'th straight set First foursome, Cecil Minton, Mark v; Tony Vaughan, Dennis
victories. ·
Harvey Blaine, J. J. Wedge, Ault, Rick Van Matre, Andy
Ashe, America'sNo. 3 ranked Gary Minton; second, foursome, Vaughn, and Rick Ash on
player from Gum Spring, Va. , Sam Littlepage, J. B. Hoffman, Adolph's, and Steve Dunfee, Ed
had trouble only in the third set Bob Johnson, Bill McCormick. stark, Rich Bailey and Doxie
as he drubbed France's Jean·
No. 6 Tee
Walters, The SentineL
Loup Rouyer IJ.2, 6-3, 7-6. smith, First foursome, Jack Duncan, Four high school age boys , not
No. 2 in the U. S. ranking$, Mike Hall, Bob Stover, Larry in scholastic basketball last
sailed past British pro Graham Markham; second foursome, year will be in the league.
The luggage that has 1qe
' Stillwell, 6-1, 6-1, 6-3.
Clarence Anderson, Jack Fruth, Planning to bid lor a place on
top-level look all the way.
Se.venth-seeded Marty Ralph Warner, Sel Flemming, Coach Carl Wolfe's Marauder
Lightweight magnesium
Riessen of Evanston, Ill.,
No. 7 Tee
varsity next winter are
frames, exclusive hidden·
: needed all the experience he has First foursome, Bob Oliver, Jonathan Scott, Larry Harmon,
locks, scuff· and stain·'
mustered as an amateur and Keith Kilday, Charles Newton; Tom cooke, and Dave File . .
iesistant body of Absolite.
Samsonlte Silhouette
pro to overcome Jean-Claude second foursome, Paul Baker,
gets the grad going to the
Barclay of France, 4-6, 6-1, 6-3, Jim Capehart, Lowell Jewell,
•
right places.
13-11, and Frank Froehling of Buddy Miller ; third foursome , WOMEN'S LIB VICTORY
Colors,
Oxford Crey,
Fort Lauderdale, Fla., made it Charles Lanham, Joe Neeley, INDIANAPOLIS (UPI)-WoDeep Olive.
.lour yanks in the fourth round Paul Ha~brecht, Harley Hart- men's Liberation ghained tha
I Men's Two.Suitel ......... ,$53.00
by stopping Jan Leschly of 1
victory Friday w en
e
b 24 Met1's Companion . ... . .. 43.00
Denmar\1, 4-6, 6-3, ~. 7-6.
ey.
No. 8 Tee
Indianapolis Motor Speediway1
c Men's CarryOn Ont-Suiter ... 43.00
~rica's title hopes in the First foursome, Bill Gilmour, anno~nce&lt;l t_hat. the tradit ona
Women's division now rest with Charles Fowler, Brian Wood- bamer prohibiting w~en fr?m
Nancy Richey Gunter of-.San f d ·J.
N b' t·
d the garage area ~~d pt!a durmg
~ or '
Im . es I ' secon toda 's running of the 500-mlle
Angelo, Tex., and linda Tuero, foursome John Umg George
y
. ba be
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!'fled f
t haJJI •
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or
Ia
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1 the U. . c y cour c
p1on Morrow Leonard Krebs.
, l'f' d
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from Metairie La. after Julie
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Helclmlin of N~ ~·ork dropped Jim . c:~pen~:r,
Jim ":orking ~ress. ~~e ~~wo~an
a4-a.e-.;~.11-4declalotltoMarljke Raymond, Jim Page, Bill policydates'bac o
• wen
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E70-14 Tub.leoo Blockwoll with railed wh;te leuerl.,.
EACH

that on your holiday, many,
many people will be here on
Monday."
The Venezuelan trainer said
that Canonero's layoff from
training for a day doesn't mean
there is anything wrong with
the big bay colt.
"He is a fit horse," Arias
repeated. "You will remember
that at Pimlico he missed a day
of training, too. Yet be ran well
in the Preakness."
Canonero has his own
"family" doctor at barnside to

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Edge ABA Dream Teaml25-120

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CINCINNATI (UP!) - The and get into scoring position or , "I didn't think 'Culver wojl)d fore being lifted for a pinch hit.
want to go3-UwithConcepcion," ler after those ten innings.
game didn't end the way Lee just try to get on?" ·
'
.
May· had figured it would, but Astro third baseman Doug said Anderson, explaining why " It was a real pleasure to
.. . :
.... '
the Cincinnati Reds first base- Rader made up Pete's mind for he put the hit-and-run sign on. watch Gullett pitcn out there,"
Carroll relieved slarter Don said ·Anderson . "That's what
man wasn't coqlplalning.
him.
.
"In games like that," said "Doug was protecting the line Gullett who had worked ten in- we're looking for. If the kid~
' . ·.
can come through, we're gonna
May, "you figure one team Is because of the double I got past nings of scoreless ball.
gonna win, with a guy hitting a him in the lith inning ," said Gullett gave up seven hi!" be· have a slaff. "
bomb.
Rose . "And since he was phly" 1 was hoping," added May, ing about even with the bag I
"that either Johnny Bench or figured a bunt was · worth a
Tony Perez would hit one out. ·try."
I was even looking for Tonuny "Rose could not have made a
Helms to do it." ·
better bunt. He was crossing
As it turned out, May gave first base with a hit as Astro
the Reds a 1-U victory Friday catcher Jack Hiatt and Culver
night over the Houston Astros watched the ball roll dead inwith a one-out single to center side the foul line just a few feet
off George Culver in the 13th from the plate.
· inning to send home Pete Rose. Just three pitches later, with
"Not one of my best shots," the hit-and-run on, Dave Conadmitted May, "but 1 hit it cepcion sent Rose to third with
good enough. It was off the end a Single to center.
of rriy bat."
"Sparky (Anderson ) had the
Rose's one • out bunt single bunt slgri on the first two pitchtouched off the Reds' winning es Culver made to Concepcion ,"
rally.
said Rose.
Debates AI Plate
Culver's first pitch to Concepcion
was a ball . The second
"When I went to the plate,"
said Pete, "I was debating what was a pitch out for ball two.
Anderson Explains
GET THE FACTS FREE, Showing How
to do. Should I try lor a double
Simple It Is To Treat Your Home Your•
self With Arab U-Do-lt. Do It Now And
Prevent Thousondt Of Dollars In Dam·
age By Termites.
COLUMBUS -Mike Burke, Marietta, qua!Uled for the
state finals In the Class AAA 120-yard high hurdles Friday.
Other area lhlnclads reaching the stale finalS were Steve
·wnson, Chesapeake, Class AA «to-yard dash, aud Jim Rock·
check his condition dajly. Dr. well, New Lexington, Class AA JBO.yard low hurdles. North
Jose Hernandez -Rosa!, Galla's Harvey Brown failed to qualify In the Class A 100 and
Canonero's veterinarian,
:120-yard dash events, Gallipolis' Steve . Stebbins was
arrived from Caracas Friday scheduled to take pari In the Class AA long jump event
and reported that the horse's Saturday. Stebbins did not bave to take part In Friday's
675-1160
6TH ST.
"skin rash is of no consequence prellmiDBrles,
and is clearing up. The foot
infection is minor and has
responded to treatment."
Dr. Hernandez-Rosa! was the
vet whom owner Pedro Baptista
consulted prior to the purchasing Canonero and he
bought the colt on the doctor's
health recommendation.
~~

......

Stamm suffered a broken ieft
arm. He said, "Everybody was
dumped seven or eight feet to
the ground, but there was no
confusion. The first aid people
and ambulances were there
right away."
Bill Krider,
a . UP!
cameraman, said, .. i saw UJe
car coming sideways down
through the pits near· the
scoring tower. I was looking
through the view finder and
photographing it as it came
toward me.

Sears

Each

e Astros, 1-0

RedsNu

FINAL BURST TO GLORY

. '

OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 8 P.M.

I

;

I

, II

�..

..
16.-The Silnday.Times-Sentinei,Sund.ay,May30,1971 ,

17 .:. The Sunday Times · Sentinel, Sunday, May 30, 1971

.

nser

411

.

etruns
.,.... ,,

Sets New Mark;
Race Marred By
Stqnning Crash

..

20 Injured
At Classic

BY ED SAINSBURY
UPI Sports Writer

INDIANAPOLIS, IND. &lt;UPD - AI Unser,
charging through a myriad of wrecks and a mess of
· racing confusion, rode his Johnny Lightning Special
to. victory in the 500 mile auto race Saturday at a
record speed of 157.735 miles per hour.
Unser's trium~h, for the second straight year,
came after a stunnmg crash as the race began when
the pace cat skidded sideways down the pit apron
and into a photographer's stand at the end of the
home stretch. Tw!lllty persons were Injured, one of
them seriously,
.

AUTO RACING stands more thlugs than balr on end.
Findtng out the hard way In recent races .were drivers
Ralph Ugourl, left, Gregg Young, center, ancl Chuck
Am all.

Unser, who celebrated his when Unser was clocked at ·
32nd birthday.wlth his victory, 157.844 m.o.h.

was the first driver to win the
fabled race in consecutive
years since the ill-fated Bill
Vukovich won in 1953 and 1954
-and was killed on the track
while leading the 1955 race.
Unser, who probably will
earn around $280,000 of a
record purse estimated around
$1.1 million, paced the field for
the final 82 laps of the 200
which made the distance,
taking over from· Joe Leonard
on the 118th turn of the !rack.
It was the fifth time Unser
moved In front in the chase,
run before some 300,000 lana in
good racing weather, a temperature In the low 70's with the
sun modified by light breezes.
The race, with the drivers
Ignorant of the pace car crash,
started fast and ended last. In
between with the yellow caution
light on for four times for 53
minutes, the speedsters slowed
to 125 miles per hour, more
than 50 miles an hour below
their usual pace.
, There was no slowdown when
·the pace car, bearing Aslronaut
;John Glenn and speedway
,owner Tony Hulman, slewed
!i!Ito the standa. The racing field
lgol away in a hurst as
ambulances carted Injured
tators to the track hospital,
om which 10 of. them later
were moved to Methodist
:Hospital: Neither Glenn nor
(Bulman were Injured.
: lnatead, Mark Donohue, who
•rnlased a record 181 m.p.h. in
!trials by a clock's tick, swooped
jpast pole winner Peter Revson
;on the first lap and he was
!going a record 166.359 mile.s per
, !hour when 'Denis Hulme spun
~on the second lap and put on
~ the yellow light.
~ The field dido 't get back to
l ecord speed until 180 lsJ)Il

Donohue, one of the lour
pilots in the new Britiah
designed M16 Mclaren cars,
IM!emed about to run off with
the race as he led for the first
50 laJ)Il. Then he had to stop for
' fuel, yielding the lead to Joe
Leonard, who gave way in turn
to Bobby Unser before Donohue
took charge again on the 65th
lap.
Then luck ran out for
Donohue. Something went
wrong In his gears and he spun
out on the northwest turn. What
happened to him could almost
have been the tale of the
fabulour MIG Mclarens, which
dominated the quaUiying runs.
Gordon Johncock drove one of
them, a .Year old, and he got
involved In a four car pileup on
the northeast turn which put
Johncock, Mel Kenyon, Mario
AndretU and Steve Krlsilofl out
of the race. The yeUow light
was on lor nearly 11 minutes.
Hulme kept his new Mclaren
in the running, despite his spin,
until he bad gone 137 laps and
then machine trouble put him
out of action. Only Revson
managed to keep a Mclaren
running, and he finished second.
Unser's paycheck this year
should surpass the $271.697 he
got a year ago, althoogh he
won't pick up as much lap prize
money. BUt the speedway .Purse
will be higher than last year,
and to Unser will go the biggest
portion.
His victory was the third win
for the Unser family at the
same site which once brought
tragedy to them, the. death of
brother Jerry in a racing
accident. But Bobby won the
race Iri 1968 and now AI bas
picked up two straight.
Both should be back next
year.

Stebbins 11th In State

Pirates
Romp To

Aurora Captures

9 4 wm
•

AA Golf Tourney

•

PITTSBURGH (UP!)- The
COLUMBUS- Aurora High School captured the
Pittsburgh Pirates slammed
1971 Ohio Class AA High School golf tournament
four home runs in the first lour
Saturday as the northern Ohioans finished the two·
innings, Including two-run shots
. day 36-hole affair with a near record 631 team effort.
by Riehle Hebner and Bob
The Ohio high school team record is 624.
Robertson, to beat the Chicago
Coach John Milhoan's Gallipolis Blue Devils
Cubs, 9-4, Saturday.
ninth after the first 18 holes of action on the rugged
Given the word before the
OSU Scarlet course, moved up one notch to finish
game
that
hospitalized
manager Danny Murtaugh
eighth in the final standings with a 686 total. GAHS
would rejoin the club in a week,
came back with a 333 Saturday following a 353 effort
the Pirates jumped on Chicago
Friday.
starter Bill Hands for all the ' TONY OLIVA, one of baseYoungstown Liberty Class A title with a 696 effort.
homers In their biggest outburst baD's most consistent bll·
of power since they hit five lers, Is off to a good start .r~~ained In second place, Aurora's Kim Heisler caphomers at Philadelphia April again Ibis year. The Mlnne· f•mshmg wit~ a 636 total. lured medalist honors with a 71sola oulftelder came Into Kenton moved up to a third '75·146 performance. His
13.
the
1971 season with a .311 phlce tie with Upper Sandusky teammate, Tim Courneen was
Hebner, who had three hits,
lifetime balling average.
With a 663 effort. Chlymont runnerup with a 7&amp;-76-152 total.
also singled to score a run and
dropped from third to fifth with Gallia's Steve Gardner was lith
Gene Alley and Milt May hit
in medalist ph!y with a 82-78bases-empty homers lor ' '''''';''''''' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ''' ' ' ' ' ' ' '' ' ' ' ';: :;: ' '' ' ' ' ' ~''''' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' a 666 tally.
St.
Thomas
Aquinas
was
sixth
160 total
000--2
Pittsburgh. May's homer was Houston
000
101
Other Blue Devil scores were:
h1s first In the major leagues .. Cincinnati
ooo 100 000--1 with 672, Ashtabula Harbor
Jim Hickman drove in two DP--Houston 1, Cincinnati 1. seventh with 675, GAHS eighth John Cunningham, 89-82-171;
runs for Chicago with ' a solo LOB-Houston 5, Cincinnati 3. with 686 and Middletown Mike ,Noe, 89-83-172 and Mike
' 2B- Met+ger JB M I
Shaver, 93-91&gt;--183.
homer i~ the second and a HRs-Wynn Ill. May 1 ;).~ger · Madison ninth with 69!!.
Springboro was lOth with 714
Of nine previous trips to the
double . 10 the fourth that
IP H R ER BB so
and
Washington
CH
placed
hlsi
state
meet, this was the
followed a single by Glenn Forsch IW1 -0) 9 3 1 1 2 7
Beckert
Nolan ,( L3·5) a 6 2 2 2 2 with a 720 total. ·
Gallians fourth best score, and
·
Granger
1 0 0 0 0 o
Hubbard captured the Class their highest finish since they
The fourth-inning run trim- T-2:00. A- 15,285.
AAA
championship with a 646 placed second in 1938.
med the Pirates' lead to 3-2 but
in the bottom of the fourth an :~::::m::~:::::.~~::;:;:;~;;:;:;:;:::;::::::::::::::::::::~::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:~-:~::;:;~:::: total. Mogadore capturC!i the
1n the Chlss AA long jump in
track, Gallia's Steve Stebbins
error and homers by Robertson
placed
11th in the state with a
and May on successive pitches
jump of 19 feet, 9'h inches.
made It 6-2.
Rick Upchurch, HollandChicago scored Its final two
Springfield,
captured individual
runs In the sixth when winning
AA long jump honors with a 22'·
piteher Bob Johnson was
9'h" performance.
knocked out. Billy Williams
singled, Ron Santo doubled for
•
one run and Chris Cannizzaro
By GENE CADDES
in the 220 and 49.8 in the 440.
'
singled for another. '
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Dayton
T01 d0 bbe
Galli-.poliS p 001·
·:•
In
th
th
th
Pir
te
Roosevelt,
Cleveland
Gilmour
e
Ll
Y
•
which
finished
ILJ., '
e seven , e a s got
second to Roosevelt jn the AAA
those two runa back on a single Academy and Cleveland Luter- with 31 points, got an out- T 0p
T d
by reliever Jim Nelson, a walk an East captured state cham- standing performance from Bob
0
en 0 ay
to Vic Davalillo, Hebner's plonships Saturday in the first Lawson who took the 100 in 9.6, GALLIPOLIS
The
single and Willie Stargell 's three-division state high school the 220 in 21.6 and anchored the G8u·1 01
ATLANTA (UP!)- The an- could leave Clele Boyer without sacrifice
. They scored again track meet.
Swimming
Pool will
. th Iflyhth
The Ted"'-s of Roosevelt got Cowboys' winning 88D-realy open Pat isI p.m.,
today according
t
that
Cl
te
Bo
nouncemen
e
yer 8 job In basebalL Boyer came m e e g
on a double by
""'
team
would be leaving ~ Atlanta into the major leagues in 1955, Robertson, an infield out and a 28 points from tlreir outstanding Th~ only record set In Satur- to.j;h~ Milhoan, manager·
Braves was cold and unperson- joining the Kansas City A's as passed ball.
Jeff Parks, voted the top per· day's acUon came m· the final
e ocal pool will be open
sharp
tr t to the h t
form · Cl AAA nd dded
from 1-6 p.m., today and
•; ..,__.,
con as
o a "bonus baby" when he was
erm ass
•a a
event of the day, the mile relay, M da
and .personal feud that had only 18 years old.
10 more with. a the
record-5etting
Y• During
the final
day's final when 1\ooseve1t's team clipped of onschool,
pool hours
. willweek
be
performance
10
it
Precipitated ·
He
spent
eight
years
with
the
bette
tha
"Cietls Boyer will be g·
N
event, the mile relay, as they
.r
n a second off the from 3 to 7 p.m. Regular 1-6
.
.
IVen ew York Yankees, including
pr 10
k ·th
hiS unconditional release as the five American League
·
piled up 42 points, 11 more than ci::"kinusg mar WI a 3:16.9 p.m., hours will be o~rved
soon as w&amp;Ivers
·
runnerup Toledo Ubbey.
is dismissed on
.
are obtained•" pennant years of 1960-1964 and CaJi~O'""
11 .1. .1..1.1.
Other · outstanding per- after
June 9school
said the announcement. "The the World Series championship
Gilmour with sensational formances turned In Saturday
agreement between Boyer and years of 1961-62, before being
Eric Penick, named top AA included Rossford' Ron w be
. the Br~ves was consummated acquired by the Braves after
perfonn~r, scoring all of its 30 who captured bo~ AA h;dl:~
POOL OPENS
accordmg to an understanding the 1966 season. Long re\!01!·
points With wins in the 100, 220 events, the 120 highs in 14.5 and
Kyger
Creek Swimming Pool
440
~~ugh~utualagreement." nized as an outstanding fielder
NEW YORK (UPI) - Stan and
• edged Ottawa Glan- thei80lowsinl9.9,andbyLouls
That s ~II there is to It, w~ and a clutch hitter, Boyer is the Bahnsen pitched a lour-bitter dorf, which finlshed .with 28 and DeFreeze of Cleveland Glen- will open May 31, Monday. The
have nothing more to say, last active player from the and Roy White hit a twCH'Uil Columbus DeSales with 27·
ville with 28 Akron Ea t d hours are from 1-6:30 p.m.
Insisted Atlanta. General Mana- Yankees last world champion- homer in the fourth inning . Lutheran East piled up points Sandusky wlth 20 and sBe~ea Evening hours will be scheduled
when the weather permits.
ger Paul Richards . when he ship team.
Saturday to give the New York 10 ~ of the 15 events in out- with 16,
came out of_ a near!y two-hour Boyer bad his best hitting Yankees a 6-1 victory over the sconng runnerup Georgetown Rossford on Wever's two
meeting Friday w1th veteran year his first season as a Brave California Angels.
§.30. All of Georgetown's total hurdles lrl~phs, was fourth in
REDS TRADE DUFFY
third baseman Boyer who bad (1967) when he hit 26 home
Bahnsen, who scored his came from three firsts by Rick AA with 20 points, foUowed by CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
been loudly demanding his runs and drove In 96 runs. But second run ot the seuon against Brown, voted top Class A per- Crestwood with 18 Akr So th Cincinnati Reds Saturday
release for several days.
he missed more· than hall of the sill losses, retired the Angels in former for .his wins In the 100, and Middletown 'Mad~~n u16 acquired outfielder George
The announcement meant '68 season after being hit on the order In five of the nine Innings 220 and 440·
each and Columbus Mifflin 15 Foster from the San Francisco
that · the 34-year-old Boyer, a hand by 8 pitched ball and be and yielded their only run in the
Parks, who set. a ~ew stale . In Class A, Canal Wlnchesle~ Giants in exchange for infielder
major league player for 16 never approached those ligures fourth when Jim Spencer .meet record In Fridays Jl'elim- was the only other serious Frank Duffy and righthander
seasons, would become a "free again.
doubled and scored on a single inaries, won the 120-yard high contender finishing third with 211 pitcher Vern Gelshert.
·
agent" If none of the other 11 His disenchaniment with the by Alex Johnson.
hurdles in 13·9 after getting off points. Kent State 18 and Foster, 22, appeared in 36
National League teams claimed Braves highlighted by several · The Yankees took the lead in to 8 poor slart. He had won the Lockland Cuyahoga H ights games this year for the Giants
him at the $20,000 waiver price. salary ' disputes, apparently their half of the Inning when long jump earUer in the day Frankfori Adena and ~ta · ' and was batting .267 with three
Boyer, who Just the previous crested last week when the Thurman MIDliOilled off with a : : 8 leap of 22 feet, IIW• in- . aU finished with l6. . '
VIB homers and eight RBI's. He
night had repeated his willing- Braves shipped 8 bedtime sin8le and White foUowed with
·
The win 1n AAA was the sec- batted .308 at Phoenix last year.
ness to ''go anywhere, just so 1 curfew on the team and his eighth homer of the season
In the ISO.yard low hurdles, md big school title lor Roosecan get away from Paul became public in an ln~rvlew into the lower leftlield standS. with Parks ~ing for, a triple, veil, having won previously in
Richards," ~eemed oddly sub- wlth the New York Post. in
1be Y&amp;llkees added another Youncstown Ursuline s Ernest 1961 whil both Gilm
d
dued after the meeting.
which he soundly roasted run off c;cyde Wright in the DeOlelUll beathimwitha IBfalt Lutheran eEast were~
"Maybe 1 just talk too much Rlcharda ·
Inning 111 a Bingle by Bobby clo~king, three-tenths of a their first stale 1111
g
when I shouldn't," the $45 OOQ..a.
· •
Murcer, a walk and two second better than Parks who
es. ·
·
year infielder said uncbar'acter·
fielder's choices.
finished second.
A'S SMASH BOSOX
liUcally. "I don't know what 1
The Yankees rocked reilever
Penl~k, who captured the big BOSTON ( UPI) _ Dick
would do ifl had It to do over.
STOP TIGERS
Uoyd ADen for three runs In the school (Clllll AA) 100 llld 220 Green paced a 16-hit, fourIt's Uke taking 1 MC:Oild shot · MILWAUKEE (UP!)_ Lew elghthwiththehelpofa twtH'IIIl Utles last year as a junior, re- homer barrage with 8 pair of
first on a loU COIII'IIl."
Kraulle scattered five hill and double by Jolin Ellll, which feU pealed In o- eventl lhll year homers Saturday a a the
Boyer, wllo 11110' not .._ his the, Milwaukee Brewera bun· between ctlllerflejder Ropr · and added the 440• although he Oakland A's oulaluged the
'
nat allp 1111111 lite waiver ched Ill 11n11e1 for 11 1111111 Repos and rilbtfielder Tciny Wllllltlfly nipped in the kla&amp;er Boaton Red Sox 12-8 in a wUd
ltln1M• nm •'lll!nev, llld nma in the third IMIIII Oonlgll«t ancl a aincle by evetll by Middletown Madlaon's game before 22,811
and 1
. . tGiac lo ''tab 1 ClOtJPie Saturday to beat the red-bot lllnn1 cater.
Mike Helllley.
national televilim aud!enet
llldall alf .a lbiiik IJ Mr.'' Detroit 'l'llen t-1
Penlek, who Is &amp;olng to NOire Green's homers hil sb:th and
~~ llbD Jill lite Jlllllc•• of The Tl&amp;en had won n1ne Gl
Flnt M111
Dame 011 8 foolblll acholarahip, ~evenlh came ln ~ve at

Dayton Roosevelt
AAA Track King

Boyer

Gets His Wzsh

Yanks Hit

.:a

Nine, 6•}

INDIANAPOLIS, IND. (UP!)
- A speeding sports car, which
set . the 125 miles per hour
getaway paee for the 500 mile
auto race field, went out of
control on the pit apron
Saturday, careening into a
photographers stand and injuring 20 persons.
One of the victims, Dr. Vincente Alvarez of Buenos Aires,
Argentina, was listed in serious
condition. Ten of the victims
were taken to Methodist
Hospital in Indianapolis after
examination at the track
hospital.
.
The speeding pace car
carried four people - Driver
Eldon Palmer of Indianapolis,
John Glenn, the first U. S.
Astronaut to orbit the earth,
speedway owner Tony Hulman
and TV sportscaster Chris
Schenkel. None were hurt.
Robert Stamm, a veteran
racing photographer, was one of
the victims on the platform,
which had a bout 50 cameramen
on two tiers.
"I was watching the !rack in
my lens," Stamm said, "and
then I looked down and there it
came. Everybody was watching
the track, and it happened so
fast nobody had time to duck."

:·J,';·.• •·
•
&lt;:

Canonero Prepares For Belmont Race
NEW YORK (UP!) - horse" lor the June 5 Belmont.
Canonero II, responding to Canonero, also treated lor a
1reatment for a slight infection . skin rash which the colt had
in his right hind foot, resumes when he won the Preakness,
preparations today lor the bid to was walked around the shedrow
complete the triple crown on Friday and Saturday, but
sweep that has eluded the resumes his long gallops around
thoroughbred greats since the I% mile main Belmont
Citation's 1948 victories in the track today .
Kentucky Derby, Preakness Arias will have the triple
and Belmont Stakes.
.crown aspirant in the paddock
Trainer Juan Arias dismissed area for a major part of the
reports Saturday that the 3- holiday weekend so that
year-old contender lor racing's Canonero "can see as many
top honor was suffering from people as possible ... I was told
any serious ailment and is "a fit

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Regaz~ni

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Share Pole

ADENAU, GERMANY (UP!)
- Jacky lckx of Belgium and
Clay Regazzoni of Switzerland,
in a Works Ferrari, Saturday
won the pole position for Sun·
day's 1,000 kilometer auto race
By DARRELL MACK
in the Astrodome Friday night, mic faith prohibited him from fleld and finished with 26 points on the Nuerburgring track by
UP! Sporta Writer
the NBA would be in trouble. flying to Houston after the to win Most Valuable Player posting the highest speed in
HOUSTON (UP!) _ Larry Alcindor did not show up and churchceremonyandphlyingin honors earning him an automo- closing practice runs.
At the wheel of his fire.en~ine­
Jones, the outspoken le1der of the NBA was ·in,t~;o~~le.. ..
the game, according to team- bile he d,id not even know -yas
re~
m~chine ,' Ickx lap~ the ·
the ABA Player's Association, The 7..1 Milwaukee Bucks mate Oscar Robertson.
· · being offered. ·
·
said if Lew Alcindor did not center was married Friday in
But the outside shooting of While his out of shape 14.2 mile road circuit in the
show up for the All-Star game Washington and his new Isla- Walt Frazier of the New York teammates missed 28 of 46 Eifel ·Mountains in the new
Knicks and two clutch free shots in the first balf, Frazier unofficial track record time of 7
throws by Robertson in the hit seven of eight and the NBA minutes, 36.1 seconds for a
final seconds carried the NBA held a 61Hl4 halftime margin. speed of 112.6 m.p.h., topping
to a 125-120 victory Friday The NBA was still struggling his own standard of 7:43.8 set in
·
night over the ABA in the first with a slight lead, 121-120, with a Brabham Formula I car in the
711ondayono&lt;:ourt . rivalry between the 32 seconds remaining when 1969 German Grand Prix.
Bul because Saturday's time
1'~I
1 ~I
two warrmg leagues.
Robertson sank two free throws
was posted in training, it will
Frazier hit 11 ol16 from the to make it 123-120.
PT. PLEASANT - A longest drive on hole No. 14,
Frazier hit the final two free find no official recognition.
The three liter Ferrari 312-P, ·
"Shotgun Start" from every tee shortest drive on hole No .. 6,
·throws with 11 seconds remainpowered by a Grand Prix
of the Hidden Valley Country closest to pin on hole 7 and 11,
ing.
engine,
is the Italian Auto
Club will launch the la.hole most birdies, most 5's
·
The NBA apparently had the
Third Annual Jim Fisher-Paul most
6's,
most
7's
game won, leading by 10&amp;-98 Company's only Works car in
Wedge Memorial Golf Tour- and
most
8's;
most
after reeling off 12 straight the race, the eighth counting
nament Monday at 9:30 a.m. strokes on a single hole, worst
points midway through the final toward the world prototype and
. Sixty-eight golfers will dressed golfer, best dressed
period. But Rick Barry of New sports cars manufacturers cup.
West Germany 's Rolf
participate in the annual event, golfer and to the golfer closest
York and Charlie Scott of
Stommelen
at the wheel of an
according to Team Captains to the tree on No. 6.
Virginia led an ABA surge
Tom K. Fisher and Jimmy Joe Pairings are as follows:
which closed the gap to one Alfa Romeo 33-3 turned in the
Wedge. Bill· Gilmour will coNo. 1 Tee
point with 47 seconds to go on a second best time in training of
7:45.1.
captain the Fisher team and First foursome, Tom Fisher, MIDDLEPORT
Although h!yup by Scott.
Stommelen will be taking
Charles Fowler, Sr., the Wedge Sam Johnson, Carroll Casto, rosters of the Middleport Coach Bill Russell, · the
turns
at the wheel in Sunday's
team.
John Roberts ; second lour· 'Summer Basketball League are former Boston Celtic great,
Trophies will be presented at some, Dan Conners, Art not complete, strength of the complimented the ABA players race with Nan! Galli of Italy.
The highly-touted Porsches,
the conclusion of the tourney to Gilwicks, Joe Antal, Arnold teams appear to be impressive. on their comeback.
current
leaders in the inthe low gross score, low net Bailey; third foursome , Bill As of today, there are lour "They play a little more wide
scorer, runner-up low net scorer Buffington, Jake Somerville, independently sponsored teams open style tban we do," the 6-10 termediary championship
and the golfer with the high Keith Arnold, Rudy O'Dell.
in the league. Each sponsor will Russell said. "We had a Ill- standings, had to settle for the
gross score. .
No. % Tee
supply its team with equipment point lead. Then, zap, we were next positions in the practice
runs.
.
.
Prizes will be presented for Russ Bibbee, Jim Fisher, needed lor the season.
down to one."
A
victory
in
Sunday's
race,
the fewest putts, most putts, George Fisher, Wilbur Dickson. Sponsors are Ohio Valley John Havlicek of Boston said
No. 3 Tee
Baking Company,. Mark V the ABA had nothing to lose by which will be run on a !rack on
which additional safety
First foursome, Nial Minton, Supermarket, Adolph's Dairy its daring phly.
Dave Poore, BiU Rardin, DUane Valley, and The Daily Sentinel. "They were ready to go at measures bave been installed in
Clatworthy; second foursome,
All games will be played on full tilt," Havlicek said. "They recent months, would give
Scott Stricklen, Rudy Fnar, the slab at the Middleport Pool, played It wide open while we Porsche the world cup because
Nick Nicholson, Stanford weather permitting. In case of wanted to get a lead and hold of its commanding lead in the
standings.
Powell.
rain games will be moved inside it. "
No. 4 Tee
to the Middleport Jr. High gym.
PARIS (UPI) - Second- First foursome,
Paul
Among the players on each
· seeded Arthur Ashe and fifth· Somerville, Tom Rose, Eustace team are Jeff Morris, Mickey
seeded Stan 'Smith led a United Wilson, Cliff Bellamy; second Childs, Jim Boggs, and Ron
S~tes sweep through the third foursome, George Ingels, Jack Ferguson, Ohio Valley Bakery ;
round of the $100,000 French Flesher.
Jeff Tyo, Mike Sayre, Bill
Open Tennis championships
No.5 Tee
Vaughn, a~d Mark Werry, on
Saturday wi'th straight set First foursome, Cecil Minton, Mark v; Tony Vaughan, Dennis
victories. ·
Harvey Blaine, J. J. Wedge, Ault, Rick Van Matre, Andy
Ashe, America'sNo. 3 ranked Gary Minton; second, foursome, Vaughn, and Rick Ash on
player from Gum Spring, Va. , Sam Littlepage, J. B. Hoffman, Adolph's, and Steve Dunfee, Ed
had trouble only in the third set Bob Johnson, Bill McCormick. stark, Rich Bailey and Doxie
as he drubbed France's Jean·
No. 6 Tee
Walters, The SentineL
Loup Rouyer IJ.2, 6-3, 7-6. smith, First foursome, Jack Duncan, Four high school age boys , not
No. 2 in the U. S. ranking$, Mike Hall, Bob Stover, Larry in scholastic basketball last
sailed past British pro Graham Markham; second foursome, year will be in the league.
The luggage that has 1qe
' Stillwell, 6-1, 6-1, 6-3.
Clarence Anderson, Jack Fruth, Planning to bid lor a place on
top-level look all the way.
Se.venth-seeded Marty Ralph Warner, Sel Flemming, Coach Carl Wolfe's Marauder
Lightweight magnesium
Riessen of Evanston, Ill.,
No. 7 Tee
varsity next winter are
frames, exclusive hidden·
: needed all the experience he has First foursome, Bob Oliver, Jonathan Scott, Larry Harmon,
locks, scuff· and stain·'
mustered as an amateur and Keith Kilday, Charles Newton; Tom cooke, and Dave File . .
iesistant body of Absolite.
Samsonlte Silhouette
pro to overcome Jean-Claude second foursome, Paul Baker,
gets the grad going to the
Barclay of France, 4-6, 6-1, 6-3, Jim Capehart, Lowell Jewell,
•
right places.
13-11, and Frank Froehling of Buddy Miller ; third foursome , WOMEN'S LIB VICTORY
Colors,
Oxford Crey,
Fort Lauderdale, Fla., made it Charles Lanham, Joe Neeley, INDIANAPOLIS (UPI)-WoDeep Olive.
.lour yanks in the fourth round Paul Ha~brecht, Harley Hart- men's Liberation ghained tha
I Men's Two.Suitel ......... ,$53.00
by stopping Jan Leschly of 1
victory Friday w en
e
b 24 Met1's Companion . ... . .. 43.00
Denmar\1, 4-6, 6-3, ~. 7-6.
ey.
No. 8 Tee
Indianapolis Motor Speediway1
c Men's CarryOn Ont-Suiter ... 43.00
~rica's title hopes in the First foursome, Bill Gilmour, anno~nce&lt;l t_hat. the tradit ona
Women's division now rest with Charles Fowler, Brian Wood- bamer prohibiting w~en fr?m
Nancy Richey Gunter of-.San f d ·J.
N b' t·
d the garage area ~~d pt!a durmg
~ or '
Im . es I ' secon toda 's running of the 500-mlle
Angelo, Tex., and linda Tuero, foursome John Umg George
y
. ba be
,
!'fled f
t haJJI •
'
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&gt; auto race s en 1
or
Ia
S
1 the U. . c y cour c
p1on Morrow Leonard Krebs.
, l'f' d
be
f the
from Metairie La. after Julie
' N 9T
qua 1 1e mem rs o
Helclmlin of N~ ~·ork dropped Jim . c:~pen~:r,
Jim ":orking ~ress. ~~e ~~wo~an
a4-a.e-.;~.11-4declalotltoMarljke Raymond, Jim Page, Bill policydates'bac o
• wen
the flnit r~ wa~ held.
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Third Annual Golf
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T
Four ea:rns

Make up

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that on your holiday, many,
many people will be here on
Monday."
The Venezuelan trainer said
that Canonero's layoff from
training for a day doesn't mean
there is anything wrong with
the big bay colt.
"He is a fit horse," Arias
repeated. "You will remember
that at Pimlico he missed a day
of training, too. Yet be ran well
in the Preakness."
Canonero has his own
"family" doctor at barnside to

NBA Stars, Minus Alcindor,
Edge ABA Dream Teaml25-120

Guaranteed 36 Months

Enloo Tn

CINCINNATI (UP!) - The and get into scoring position or , "I didn't think 'Culver wojl)d fore being lifted for a pinch hit.
want to go3-UwithConcepcion," ler after those ten innings.
game didn't end the way Lee just try to get on?" ·
'
.
May· had figured it would, but Astro third baseman Doug said Anderson, explaining why " It was a real pleasure to
.. . :
.... '
the Cincinnati Reds first base- Rader made up Pete's mind for he put the hit-and-run sign on. watch Gullett pitcn out there,"
Carroll relieved slarter Don said ·Anderson . "That's what
man wasn't coqlplalning.
him.
.
"In games like that," said "Doug was protecting the line Gullett who had worked ten in- we're looking for. If the kid~
' . ·.
can come through, we're gonna
May, "you figure one team Is because of the double I got past nings of scoreless ball.
gonna win, with a guy hitting a him in the lith inning ," said Gullett gave up seven hi!" be· have a slaff. "
bomb.
Rose . "And since he was phly" 1 was hoping," added May, ing about even with the bag I
"that either Johnny Bench or figured a bunt was · worth a
Tony Perez would hit one out. ·try."
I was even looking for Tonuny "Rose could not have made a
Helms to do it." ·
better bunt. He was crossing
As it turned out, May gave first base with a hit as Astro
the Reds a 1-U victory Friday catcher Jack Hiatt and Culver
night over the Houston Astros watched the ball roll dead inwith a one-out single to center side the foul line just a few feet
off George Culver in the 13th from the plate.
· inning to send home Pete Rose. Just three pitches later, with
"Not one of my best shots," the hit-and-run on, Dave Conadmitted May, "but 1 hit it cepcion sent Rose to third with
good enough. It was off the end a Single to center.
of rriy bat."
"Sparky (Anderson ) had the
Rose's one • out bunt single bunt slgri on the first two pitchtouched off the Reds' winning es Culver made to Concepcion ,"
rally.
said Rose.
Debates AI Plate
Culver's first pitch to Concepcion
was a ball . The second
"When I went to the plate,"
said Pete, "I was debating what was a pitch out for ball two.
Anderson Explains
GET THE FACTS FREE, Showing How
to do. Should I try lor a double
Simple It Is To Treat Your Home Your•
self With Arab U-Do-lt. Do It Now And
Prevent Thousondt Of Dollars In Dam·
age By Termites.
COLUMBUS -Mike Burke, Marietta, qua!Uled for the
state finals In the Class AAA 120-yard high hurdles Friday.
Other area lhlnclads reaching the stale finalS were Steve
·wnson, Chesapeake, Class AA «to-yard dash, aud Jim Rock·
check his condition dajly. Dr. well, New Lexington, Class AA JBO.yard low hurdles. North
Jose Hernandez -Rosa!, Galla's Harvey Brown failed to qualify In the Class A 100 and
Canonero's veterinarian,
:120-yard dash events, Gallipolis' Steve . Stebbins was
arrived from Caracas Friday scheduled to take pari In the Class AA long jump event
and reported that the horse's Saturday. Stebbins did not bave to take part In Friday's
675-1160
6TH ST.
"skin rash is of no consequence prellmiDBrles,
and is clearing up. The foot
infection is minor and has
responded to treatment."
Dr. Hernandez-Rosa! was the
vet whom owner Pedro Baptista
consulted prior to the purchasing Canonero and he
bought the colt on the doctor's
health recommendation.
~~

......

Stamm suffered a broken ieft
arm. He said, "Everybody was
dumped seven or eight feet to
the ground, but there was no
confusion. The first aid people
and ambulances were there
right away."
Bill Krider,
a . UP!
cameraman, said, .. i saw UJe
car coming sideways down
through the pits near· the
scoring tower. I was looking
through the view finder and
photographing it as it came
toward me.

Sears

Each

e Astros, 1-0

RedsNu

FINAL BURST TO GLORY

. '

OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 8 P.M.

I

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�.••
-

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19-The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, May :io, 1971

•

18-ThesundayTimes-Sentinel,Sunday, May 30,1971

356, Ottawa Hills with 367, and
Portsmouth East with 372.

GAHS Ninth, 43 Strokes Behind Aurora
At Hal way Point In State Tournament
.

.

COLUMBUS - Coach John
Milhoan's Gallipolis Blue Devils
trailed a hot-shooting Aurora
squad 43 strokes at the halfway
point Saturday of the 1971 Class
AA Ohio High School Golf
TOUI"Jlament.
The two-day, 36-hole affair
was to be completed Saturday.
Aurora, paced by 17-year~ld
Kim Heisler, son of Cleveland
Browns football coach Fritz
·Heisler, fired a 310 team effort
on openjng day Friday.

........ ._ ._

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..

by Chet Tannel:!ll
I
""--·~~--_.._...._._.,.._..,_,,_._..,_._.. __ ._..._....-.. ...J
A look back at the recently completed Meigs High School
varsity spring sports season shows some interesting highlights
and new records.
The basebaUers of Coach Ed Bartels won 9 and lost 5, A
highlight was the 2o.6 trouncing of Athens; another came in the
form of a loss, the ~ defeat by Portsmouth in the Cisss AAA
Tournament.
Portsmouth went on to demolish Its next Class AAA opponent
by 20 runs. The Trojans' famed piteher, Tackett, had to battle the
Marau~ers on even terms lUlU! the 6th inning to get the win. The
leading Marauder hitter on the season was Roger Dixon, with a
.375 batting average. Rick Van Maire was chosen on the all
Southeastern Ohio District aU-star team.
The lrack men of Coach John Bentley had a curtailed
schedule due to cancellations, but managed one win against four
losses and parUcpated in two invitational meets, the SEOAL
meet, and the Class AAA District meet. One new all-time
Marauder 1rack record was broken this spring when Chuck Faulk
went 18 feet 11 ~inches In the long jump,
The golfers of Coach Nolan Swackhamer ra·cked up 16 wins, 11
losses, and I tie besides participating in meets of the SEOAL and
the Clasa AAA tournament. Bill Hensler sparkled as be set a new
all-time Marauder record of the lowest individual season 9-hole
average of 40:0strokes. This broke the former record of 40.1 of Bill
Hackett set in 1968, who sUII holds the aU-time Marauder career
record of 40.1 (all years combined). Other Marauder golf records
heretofore Wlpublished are: Lowest individual9-hole score of one
match for aU-lime, 33 strokes, by Jim Anderson in 1968 against
Ironton and Point Pleasant; lowest Marauder team score in one
match, 198agalnst Ironton in 1969, and lowest team average per 9
boles In one aeason, 41.6, In 1968.
These won-and-lost records of the Marauder spring sports
added to the fall and winter sports of football, basketball, and
wresWng results in a 1970.71 varsity total of 48 wins, 37losses, and
one lie.
It's nice to have had a winning season.

Tournament Is

In Third Day
GALLIPOUS - Area slow
pitch softball teams were
scheduled to continue action
today in the Third Annual
Quaker. State Service Center
double elimination tournament
at the Kyger Creek Employees
Club field.
,
Following action today, the

·,

Cunningham and Mike Noe St. Thomas Aquinas
339 CLAYMONT (328) - Jim
carded 898, and Mike Shaver Gallipolis
353 Daberko 80, Kelly Goodrich 82,
had a 93.
Springboro
354 Mike Borekevich 86, Ron
Here's the team standings Washington CH
360 Povich 80.
and Friday's resolts of the first
Friday's results :
UPPER SANDUSKY (328) 18 holes' of action:
CLASS AA
Robert Thomas 83, Phil Marsh
TEAM
SCORE . AURORA (310) - Kim 78, Dan Kirchener 89, Kyle
Aurora
310 Heisler 71, Mark Heisler 84. Bowman 78.
Youngstown Liberty
314 Doug HaUovic 79, Tim Cour- ASHTABULA HARBOR (337)
Claymont
328 neen 76.
- Todd Crendall 75, ·Larry
Upper Sandusky
328 YOUNGSTOWN UBERTY ,Starkey 81, Chuck Sousleby 99,
Ashtabula Harbor
337 (314) - Ken Walters 78, Mike Jim Filer 82.
Kenton
338 Taylor 81, Bob Fleischer 76, - KENTON (338 ) - Art Rogers
Middletown Madison
339 Sam Santisi 79.
81, Dan Str'*'ts 79, Bruce Smith

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:;p;;za::::=::--.)
0"

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By Untied Press lnternatiolllll
Leading BaHers
National League
G. AB R. H. Pet.
Brock, St.L 45 186 43 70 .376
Davis, LA
46 182 28 68 .374
Alou. Hou
34 113 10 41 .363
Bckrt ,Chi
45 184 32 66 .359
Garr, All
47 198 35 70 .354
Torre, St.L 46 174 32 60 .345
Mays, SF
40 138 28 47 .341
Slaub, Mont 39 137 28 46 .336
Alou, St.L
43.181 17 59 .326
Slnmns, St.L 40 144 18 47 .326

.finalists will engage in battle
Monday, with the championship
tilt scheduled for 7 p. m.
Posting opening night wins
Friday were American Oil, 5-2
over Randolph 76 of Pt.
Pleasant; Barr Construction, 9·
6 o~er Wilkesville; Coakley's
Electric, 32-!i over Herb's Auto
Sales of Huntington and Athens
National Bank, 12·7 over the
Redman Inn .
American Oil had nine hits
and one error, Randolph 76 had
four hits and two errors.
Barr Construction had nine
runs on 14 hits and committed
three errors. Wilkesville had 15
hits and three errors.
Coakley's Electric rapped out
39 hits, including 12 doubles, 14
triples and two home runs, and
played errorless ball. Herb's
Auto Sales had five runs on 12
hits
·
Athens National Bank had 12
runs on 21 hits and two errors.
The Redman Inn had seven
h'ts d
d
runs, 14 I an rna e three
errors.

All-Time SEOAL

season for the first wmmng
season in six years and the third
best record in the school's
history.
Blowers shot his lowest
round, a 73, against Mt\C

Final 1971 GAHS
Batting Averages

BID PDWER IN A
SMALLTRAL I DR

Eliminated
EAST LANSING, Mich.
(UP!) Third ranked
Michigan State and Mid·
American conference champion
Ohio
University
were
eliminated in Friday's NCAA
District 4 baseball games.
Butch Albert was the big gun
in Cincinnati's victory over
Southern Illinois, blasting two
three-run homers and bringing
in another tally on a first-inning
single. It was Albert's second
round tripper which clinched
the win.
Michigan State, which took
the honors in the Big Ten this
y~ar , was tripped up by Ohio, 71, with Bobcats' pitcher Doug
Diamond chalking tip his lith
victory of the season without a
loss. The Spartans also were the
. first victims of Cincinnati,
dropping an 8-7 decision in
Thursday's opening round.
SIU came back after o~e loss
Friday to hand Ohio a 7·1 defeat
in a 13-inning contest. The
Salukis tied it 1·1 in the ninth
inning on Dan Thomas' leadoff
homer and expioded for six runs
in the 13th, with Mike Eden
sparking the rally with a leadoff
. homer.

A
al H
no U
orse
Show June 6th
GALUPOLIS _ The Gallia
County Riding Club will present
its annual horse show Sunday,
. June 6 at the Gallia County
Junior Fairgrounds. Activity
will begin at 10 a. m. for all
halter classes. A $LSO entry fee
will be charged. Ribbons will be
presented to all winners.
h
T e show classes will begin at
I p. m. with trophies and rib·
bons being presented . . Cash
awards of $5, $4, $J, $2, and $!
will be offered t'n the 17 vart'ous
classes.
Robert Arledge will serve as
judge.

GALLIPOLIS - Here's the
final 1971 batting averages for
Coach Jim Osborne's GAHS
Blue Devils, who recently
completed the campaign with
the most triumphs ever (15) in
the school's history against five
setbacks :
G-Piayer- Pos. AB R H Avg
2o-Dave Burnett, p-of.
61 11 26 .426
19- Stan Perry . p-of.
53 12 17 .311

Bank Loan!
So - now YOUR rntere~ t shou ld
be greater rn ob tarn tnB the loan
~au ' ~e needed lo r faun e~panslon
and rmpr cvements
Call vour FedNal Land Bank Man·
ager tOday He is an~rous to assrst
~ou wrth your frnancrat require;
ments

CLYDE B. WALKER.Mgr.
19 Locust Street
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 446:0203

"Bui !ding Supplies"
87 Olive - Gallipolis, Ohio

Gravely's big
16.5 HP .tractor

,

51 8 14 .274
2o-Mark Johnson. 2b.
65 13 17 .261
1o-Steve Slone. ss.
24 3 6 .250
H- Rick Boone, of.
28 4 7 .250

has the extra muscle

for the big jobs, steepest
slopes. All-gear-drive, instant ,
forward, neutral, reverse. If you have
lawn and garden jobs that cali for something
extra, the 16.5 is something else!
Call or see us for a free demonstration.

6- Howard Taylor, ss,

4 1 1 .250

2o-Gary Ballard. of,
54 5 13 .247
2o-John Davis. 3b,
49 8 12 .244
2o-Chuck Perroud. c,
41 6 8 .175
STEVE BLOWERS, a member of Gallia Academy High
School's golf team five years ago and for three years a star
golfer for the Portsmouth High School Trojans, was third
lowest scorer on the Bowling Green State University golf
team this spring.

GRAVELY 'TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

Pitchers records : Perry, 9-2;

Burnett. 6-2: Lee. 0·1: Johnson,
0-0. Totals - 15-5.

Phone 992-2975

Six Year Grid

Friday's Linescores

• OPEN 8 TO 5 MON. THRU SAT.
. ()pen Evenings By Appointment

Pack Approved

BIG 154 LB.
(4.4 CU. FT.)

Nlodel
TM17G

4

ONLY 32" WIDE

•

·YA.LUE

'

MEIGS COUNTY BRANat

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.
296W.

OHtO .t5769

Field proven in
every crop

,t,.,, ·

ICEMAitER ........................ '49·•

"This savings and loan company
will not transact business
on May 31.•

'S

PERFORMANCERATED

REFRIGERATOR
FREEZER••••••• , •••••••••••••••• *399· 95

. A . . ..

cessfully in the midwest. The
plastic pipe is corrugated to
give it extra strength and has 40
slits per foot cut in it to permit
water to enter. The manufac·
turer who furnished the pipe for
this demonstration sells 4-inch
pipe in 225-foot coils. A coil
weighs only 60 pounds. The cost
at present prices for clay tile
and plastic makes the plastic
pipe about 20 pet higher than
clay tile. However, a landowner
is able to install this tile with
less labor.
DELMER NEWBERRY of
Letart has completed a pond on
his farm on Oldtown Creek. This
pond measures 30 by 50 feet and
is estimated to hold 20,000

NEW INTERNATIONA[

ONLY FROM
·CONTINUOUS CUBES,
CONSTANT. COLD AND A FULL
FIVE YEAR WARRANTY!

.~·

BY JOHN COOPER
Soil Conservation Service
PT. PLEASANT - We attended a demonslration where
plastic pipe was used for
drainage as a substitute for tile
in Parkersburg. Mason County
people who went along were
Pirl Burris, Jesse Brown,
William McDermitt, Denver
Yoho and John Cooper, the
Ia tter two both of SCS.
· We had heard of the use of
plastic pipe for field drainage
purposes for two years or so and
knew it has been used suc·

FREEZER!

By Uniled Press International Detroit
004 ooo 002_ 6 8 0 OXFORD, MISS. (UP!) Nalionat League
Milw·
ooo 020 o1o- 3 8 3 The University of Mississippi
N.Y. at S. Diego, ppd .. wet grds Cain. Denehy (7) , Scherman
and the University of South
(7) and Freehan : Parsons, Carolina will begin a six-year
Phila
010 000 001- 2 7 0 Sanders
(B) and Roof. WP-'LosAng 100 400 01x- 6 13 0 Cain (2-0I. LP- Parsons (5-51. football series in 1972, Ole Miss
Shorl. Champion (4),' Hoerner HR- Rool (1st) .
Athletic Director Bruiser
171 and Ryan ; Downing (4-2)
and Sudakis. LP~ Short (3-71. Kan Ci ly 210 001 Olo- s 9 0 Kinard said Saturday.
HR- Brown (1st).
Washing In
Kinard said the first meeting
000 ooo ooo- o 6 1 with the newly independent
Monlreal 000 000 001- 1 4 2 Wright (1 -2) and May · GamecockswillbeatColumbia,
San Fran 010 010 lOx- 3 3 1 McLain
, Shellenbach (81 and
Renko, Marshall (8) and Casanova. LP- Mclain 14 _81. S.C., Sept. 23, 1972. No game is
Bateman; Stone, Jolmson (91 HR- Keough (1st) .
scheduled in 1973, but the series
and Dietz . WP- Stone (4-2). LP
will continue with a game either
- Renko (4-41.
Oakland
100
000
1013 60 h
. .
Boston
200 001 Olx- 4 9 0 ere or at Jackson in October,
113 mmngs)
·
Blue, Locker (8) and Duncan ; 1974.
Houston
Siebert. Bolin (9) and Jose"Th
hedul'
f S th
000 000 000 ooo o-o phson. WP- Siebert (9-01 . LPe sc
mg o • ou
Cincinnati
B
Carolina is another step in our
.
ooo _ooo ooo ooo 1- 1 ~~~he ~ 0 -~/.;l~~~c[,~'~oc(~/~ 12 program to beef up our football
Wilson, Gladding (9), Culver Duncan (61hl. Bando (7th)
' schedule," Kinard said.
1111
; Gullett,
Carroll ·
(111 and
and H1att
Bench.
WP-Carroll
• - . . - - - - - - - ··- - - - - - - - - - -...
12-11. LP- Culver (3-51.

Let us not forget those who gave
eir lives in strife to make this eart
a better place for all humanity to enjoy

Pomeroy, Ohio

'449··

SALE
.PRICE
Fu/15 year warranty on parts and rel11ted /ab~r.
M1n1 W1rr1n11 f11r 5 Vl~rl h~l11 d~te of Oll~lnB I PLifthast in U.S.. rep!mment or flpJir of parts found

defiCl~va u to worimari~~tp or m•tenaf 11n~!r normal un, Thrs 1nclu d~1 labor requrrHd tar reptacem•nr ul
~ecuve .P~!l!. 0ffecu~~ ~0111 II&amp; to b~ returned through Amana't dul~r· drll!tb~ror nr~10r1eMn. Owlltl

11 rt~ouihte 101 IrJwtceman·= trne! char~u. Icta l e~uage. re!IIICIIment cl Ra••m. rublm or DIUII c PittS
... 11~1 bulbs, Any (llodu~t 5UbJICttd ro ~mdt~t. muon. n•lhlf!ICt. 1bu1e. 'dM1ctmcrr1 ~1 1 nral 1 r
llttrlttln l~tl! WOt.lhi,Winlnt f. In C1111.1.1ht Wlrflnl}' IPPhts tt ab'"a · ~~~ ~IIIli! II dll~l ndt 1 1

,_ 400 baler is simple to operate. Easy to
· get ready, easy to keep going. Has fewer and
simpler adjustments than any other baler on
the market
A 400 baler is dependable. You'll take it for
aranted as it turns out lhousands of bales
without a miss. it's built right to bale right,
•nd stay right as long as the crop is there.
A.400 baler Is versatile. Tested in emy
type of crop in every part of the country, it
. will handle anything you've got to bale. AI·
lalla, straw, prairie hay, sudan, cane, or even

corn stalks. You name it and there's a 400
right for the job.
A 400 baler is big capacity. Up to 15, 17,
or 19 tons per hour. Here's the capacity you
need to handle many crops in many condi·
lions. The capacity to keep you on the go
while others slow down and quit.
Don't wait until your baler drops dead. Check
on a new 400 now. Ask about the nevi replaceable Swedish steel twine knife, the tungsten
carbide shearing knives, the rubber mounted ·
pickup teeth, and other 400 .firsls.

Meigs Equipment Co.
PH. 992-2176
R~yand abla

NFO's action seeks treble
damages
amounting
to
$125,052,000 and in addition the
dissolution of the cooperatives
in question.
Beatrice Foods Company and
its subsidiary, Boswell Dairy
Company were also named as
defendants as were certain
individuals in the Mid-America
and AMP! organizations.
Oren Lee Staley, President of
NFO, said that NFO's
Executive Committee had
unanimously authorized this

Plastic Tile Can
Do Job in Fields

Lay of the Land

. 47 9 13 .276

2{}-----. Tom Prose, lb,

usually lim!~ to only a few buds.
.
Norway maple leaves are falling in some yards now. It is not
that ihey .have their seasons mixed up. The leaf dropping is the
result of a tiny caterpillar called the maple petiole borer. The
young borers tunnel into the leaf petiole and apparenUy hollow it
out. The weight of the leaf blade causes the leaf to fall to the
ground. Nature provides a tree with many leaves, so I doubt that
the few you lose will be really missed.
Radish and cabbage plants that suddenly wilt leave you
the NEW in FAR MJNG
wondering what the problem is. You might pull up a plant or two
hazard. You need not fear poison food resulting from an in- and examine the roots. Maggots, active now , are eating off all the
secticide as long as you follow label directions exactly. If you're roots. This is the insect th~t makes grooves in the 3ide of the
still in doubt, don't u,se !he sprayed food; you'll be happier:
radish.
Prof. Miller made other comments this spring on hit and run
Maggots may be controllejl by applying Spectracide at one
insects. Roses are one of tbeir victims. If you have something tablespoonful per gallon of water. Direct the spray down the
eaijng large areas out of the developing buds,.chances are this is center of the plant so as to wet the stalk and soil around it.
caused by adults of grubs from turf. The adult beetles eat the ,
Bumblebees? There is a bee that looks like a bumblebee that
buds and also seem to love pin oak leaves. Tbe beetles come out at has caused some concern by its presence around the over-hang of
night I doubt that a spray will be needed, as ,the damage is houses and garages. Tbe hack part of its body (abdomen) is

CORNING ,
IOWA
(Special) - The National
Farmers Organization last
week announced the filing In
Federal Court at Kansas City 1
Mo., a civil anti-trust action
against Mid-America
Dairymen, Inc. , Associated
Milk Producers, Inc., and
Associated Reserve Standby
Pool, three milk marketing
associations. The action took
the form of a counter-daim in a
suit brought against NFO by
Mid-America and certain of its
members.

"'!!

Carter &amp; Evans Inc.

19-Kev Sheets, of,

1

..

from

day. gait, substituted for sugar In babies' f~rmulas, has resulted
in the death of several children. So you see; we must put things in
their proper perspective.
We hope all of you will realize that, to put an insecticide on a
dealer's shelf requires four to six years of scientific research at
an investment of around $S million. One phase of the research is
the establishment of a residue tolerance, which means, how much
insecticides can remain on the crop without causing a health

NFO to Press Countersuit

Due to mare favort~bl e economrc
cond r! H)nS I he rnte rest ra te or1
Federal Land Ban~ Loan~ has been
lowered We .t1ave e~en lowered the
mterest rate or1 over 4.000 uisl ·
loa ns_ ~us t arrother ot the
111 i:m~ benetifs of a Federal land

SAVINGS
.&amp; LOAN CO.

OU Bobcats

Chicago 010 021 ooo- 4 15 1
Davis Assumes
Pi llsbrgh 000 001 OlD- 2 6 2
8 aseball St aDd'mgs
Pappas (6·51 and Hundley,
Duties At LC
· Cannizzaro (6); Walker, Nekson
(51. Grant (7) and Giusti (9),
RoJas, KC
43 161 23 52 .323
ALL TIME SEOAL
EASTON,
Pa.
(UP!)
and
Sanguillen. LP- Walker (1 Rchrdt,Chi 35131 14 42 .321
EIASEBAL~ STANDINGS
Smith, Bos 44 175 33 55 .314
11941-1910
Thomas R. Davis, an assistant 6) . HR- Williams (12th).
May, Chi
40 151 19 47 .311 TEAM
W L x-C coach at American University
Atlanta
000 000 ooo- o 4 1
Kallne. Del 37 122 ·24 38 .311 Athens
124 35 12
Kllbr.w, Min, 43 159 18 49 .308 Ironton
19 8 2 for two years, was named head SL Louis 000 000 40x- 4 8 2
Reed, Jarvis (7) and Didier;
Holl, Min
41 117 12 36 .308 Gallipolis
lOS 60 8 basketball coach at Lafayette
Cleveland (5-21 and Simmons.
Tovar, Mlnn 44 183 26 56 .306 Logan
73 62 2 College on Saturday.
LP- Reed (S-3). HR-Si mmons
Home Runs
Jackson
62 69 o
Notional Leogue: Aaron, All Meigs
8 15 0 Davis, 32, succeeds Hal ( tst) .
American League
and Slargell, Pitt 15; Bench, Middleport
54 63 4 ~issei, who earlier this month
Cin 14; Cepeda, All and Pomeroy
54 71 2 took over the head coaching job Cleveland 201 001 ()()()- 4 · 8 0
Williams, Chi 12.
·
Wellston
38 71 2 at Fordham University after Chicago 000 000 ooo- o 2 o
McDowell (4-5.1 and Fosse:
American League: Cash, Del Nelsonville
16 77 0
11 ; Horton. Del and Oliva. Nelson .. York
· 1 17 0 Dick Pbelps moved to Notre Johnspn, Eddy (6), Romo (8),
Forster (8), Kealey (9) and
Mlnn 10: Smith, . Bos and Waverly
o 6 0 Dame.
Egan. LP- Johnson (4-6).
,Jackson. Oak 9.
TOTALS
. 554 554
Davis coached the University
Runs Baned In
x . Championships.
of
Maryland freshmen for one California 026 100 ooo- 9 9 0
NetloMI Ltague: Stargell, MAYO VS BELKIN
Pill 39; Torre, St.L 36; Aaron.
year before joining American New York 200 000 121- 6 10 1
Messersmith, Allen (8), LaAll and Santo, Chi 34: MEXICO CITY (UPI)-Joa· University In Washington, D.
Roche
(9) and Tor borg ; Kline,
Cardenal. St.L 33.
quin Loyo Mayo, Mexico'~ C., in 1969.
Kekich
(3), Jones (6), Aker (8),
Amerlcen Lug.. : Killebrew, national champion, meets to~
Mlnn :18: Petrocelli, 8os 34;
yWaslewskl (91 and Gibbs. WPMessersmlth· (5-51. LP- Ktine
Powell, Ball and Bando, Oak ranking Canadian Mike Belin PLAYERSSWAPPED
30; Yastrzemskl, 8os and today In a key singles match' BALTIMORE (UPI) - The (4·4). HRs-Spencer (7th), Murcer (8th).
Whtte, NY ~~clllng
when Mexico and Canada begin Baltimore Orioles Friday
tlllllnal League: Dierker, their Davis Cup tenn~ elimina· swapped relievers with the New Bal tlmore 012 000 300- 6 4 1
Minnesota
~k~&amp;~I:QI~f:~~onMar~~h~t,'s~ UonTbe. I 0f the bet'"' fi York Yankees, glv~g up Ji!TI
000 205 oox- 7 12 1
~l
LA and Stoneman,
w nner
s ""'" ve Hardin and ' receiving Bill
Jac~son (6), Dukes
- ~;.$; 2; Eilts, Pitt ..31 series, which conUnues SUnday' Burbach. Burbach was then
Watt' (Bl . and
' Corbin
•
Chi 6-5.
and Monday, will meet New sent to the minora to make
_.,,~ut:
Zealand in the 1final ol Ute room on the Baltimore roster
NorUt American Zone competi· for former Twins hurler Dave
Am1rican League'
G. AB R. H. Pet.
Oliva. Minn 38 153 30 58 .379
Murcer, NY 43 154 23 SS .357

champion Ohio University to
give him runnerup medalist
honors in a contest earlier in the
year.
Coach John Piper feels he is
one of the most dedicated

You Could

We

GALLIPOLIS

Scorer For Falcon Linksters

BOWLING GREEN - Steve
Blowers, Bowling Green Stale
University freshman from
Gallipolis, was.the third lowest
scorer on the Falcon's golf team
this spring.
Blowers, son of Mr: and Mrs.
Raymond Blowers of 545 Hilda
Drive, Gallipolis, composed a
79.4 stroke average for 21
rounds with a total of 1668
strokes.
The Falcons competed in the
MAC championship on May 21·
22 and fell to a fifth place finish.
However, they were 11·3 on the

BY C. E. BLAKF&amp;EE
· Ext. Agent, Agriculture
POMEROY- We often hear people say they are afraid to use
insecticides because they don't want to spray poisons on the food
they're going .to eat.
But R.-L. Miller, extension entomologist at O.S.U., points out
that Ute same people put salt, a deadly poison, on their food every

C~ GRAVELY 450

LOANS

-----·-·--------·-...- . ...,
the Sports Desk Steve Blowers Third Lowest·

•
·'

e

.. Gallipolis shot a 353, and held
ninth place in team standings at the halfway point.
Eleven teams are participating
in the AA session.
Heisler fired a hot one-underpar 71 on Ohio State University's Scarlet layout Friday.
Aurora held a slim four stoke
lead over second place
Youngstown Liberty at the
midway point.
GaUia's Steve Gardner shot
an 82 for the Blue Devils. John

·HOME

Insecticide Rules Must be Observed to the 'T'

Bob Herron .as, Dan Mahoney
86, Brad Crosby 94, Bill Junk 92.
In the Class AAA field,
Hubbard holds an ll..shot lead
over Stow and Findlay, tied for
Home . ownership may
second.
Hubbard's 318 total was led by be closer than you
a 77 by AI Tribby, but the
Eagles also got solid scoring think . Stop in today
from John Doughton ana Bob and talk i•:lth us . We'll
Pielon with 80s and Dan
O'Bruba with an 81.
he! p you set up a low
Columbus Watterson, led by
freshman Ralph Guarasci's 19 cost, long term loa
was fourth at 334, Cincinnati St. that's easy to pay .
Xavier and Cincinnati Moeller
tied for fifth at 335 and perennial title threat Upper Arlington
seventh at 336.
In the Class A golf, with only
five
teams
competing,
Columbus Academy · and
Mogadore shared the lead with
Opp. Post Office
golfers on his team. He con. 348 scores. They .were followed
Galli no lis, O"io
•sistently performed well by Mansfield St. Peter's with . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .
throughout the season.
AI Portsmouth High School
Blowers was conference
medalist three of his four years
on Coach Bob Doll's squad and
was selected the most valuable
player his senior year.
The 6·1, 170-pound linksman
was one of two freshmen on the
Falcons' starting six this spring
and is expected to develop into
one of the main figures in next
year's drive for the MAC crown.
He is an
industrial
management major at Bowling
Green.
91, Jeff Kinsey 87.
MIDDLETOWN MADISON
(339)- G. Pal87, M. Smith 85,
J . Rhoads 88, P. Pal 80.
ST. THOMAS AQUINAS (339)
- John Spittler 83, David Mark
84, Richard Susie 90, David
Holloway 82.
GALLIPOLIS (353) - J.
Cunningham 89, M. Shaver 93,
M. Noe 89, S. Gardner 82.
SPRINGBORO (354) - S.
Crist 91, K Pech 86, J . Hough
89, R. Dillon 88.
WASHI)IIGTON C.H. (360) -

•

POMEROY, OHIO
to giva you complete hay tool urvice.

gallons of water. He plans to
fence it and put a watering
trough below it for use of his
catUe. Denver Yoho of SCS did
the design work and checked
tbe construction. The bulldozer
of the Western Soil Con.
servation District, operated by
Rupert Sayre, did the earth~
moving . .
CLIFFORD BARNETT ,
whose farm is near Sassafras,
marked out 34 acres for farming
in alternate contour strips. He
has now marked out 46 acres
this spring for contour farming .
Denver Yoho helped him
establish the contour lines and
the strip boundaries.
RICHARD CARELLI,
correspondent for Associated
Press news service, was in
Mason County this week. He
had · read with interest our
stories of octogenarian farmers. After reading these
stories, he became interested in
one of his own with a different
slant than our stories had been
written. He was chiefly interested in comparing the way
things were done in the old days
with the way farming
operations are now carried out
and the various inventions and
innovations that are labor
saving devices which aid in the
farming operation.
The two people whom he
interviewed were Van L. Roush,
87, of Letart and Perry Sayre,
95, of Arbuckle.
We had written about Mr.
Sayre in one of our early
stories; however, our article on
Mr. Roush will appear at a later
date.
WE ARE ALWAYS interested
In nature and things in nature
that make life more interesting.
We saw something this week
that we had never seen before
and may never see again. It was
an albino robin. We saw it early
one morning in our back yard
and on first sight it appeared to
look like a small parrot.
However, upon examination
with the assistance of field
glasses, we discovered that it
was looking and listening for
worms, running a few steps,
and repeating the performance,
cocking its head sideways as it
did so and occasionally digging
in to retrieve a worm for break·
fast This robin was white on the
head, back, wings and most of
its breast. However, there was a
spot of black on its wing and a
small amount of red on part of
its breast.

black. II probably is the carpenter bee.
The female digs out a perfectly round hole in tbe wood about
as big as your little finger. She bores in about an inch and then
makes a right angle for a distance of up to a fooL This space is
chambered off into litUe bee nurseries. To control these bees, slip
a.mothball in the hole and seal it in with putty. The female bee is
capable of stinging·, so watch you.
Tree and fruit pests - Pine sawfly caterpillars are
defoliating various pine trees. The larvae feed in large groups.
Sevin or Malathion applied to the caterpillars .and the needles on
which they are feeding should take care of them.
The webs in the branches of flowering crab and wild cherry
are those of the eastern tent caterpillar. They are nearly fun:
grown and will soon be coming down out of the trees to change to
adult moths . The mass exodus will mean caterpillars all over the
place. When this happens it is ioo late to do anything.
Millipedes are boring into strawberry fruits . They have come
from the decaying mulc h. Millipedes are about I inch long, 1·16
inch in diameter, and purplish-brown in color. Sevin will reduce
the populatiOJ!, but remember to observe harvest restrictions.
Check grapes for flea beetle larvae , junipers for juniper
scale, and slugs on about everyt hing.

"•
•

•
•
•

•
•

Dow
c&gt;

ESTERON 99
LOW VOLA TILE

WEED KILLER

.ESTERON

9 t\1191

WHO

SPRAY FOR CORN

f ll

"For the control of most broadleaf
and annual weeds .

See Our Complete Line of Dow Products At

CENTRAL SOYA OF OHIO
"Your Farm Supply Super Market"

Gallipolis, Ohio

25"
STANDARD

r

Model 3254- 5 HP, 25" cut. Designed for the man
who wants a bit more in a small rider. Powered by

Briggs &amp; Stratton, 'lhis model has a single speed
transmission, 25", sing le blade mower deck with
an1i -scalp plate and Is chain dr iven . Rewind
Starter, Color: Turquoise-Black. (22-49621

Keep cool
with
•
a llnico Window Air Conditioner-

OTHER RIDERS, 340.95 to· 635.95

ECONOMY
MOWERS

Whsn it 's hot and humid outside, stay cool and comfortable inside. Steep·cooled
and refreshed, wake up ready wgo. Bigger capacity, more dehumidification abilitY. in a Unico window air conditioner. Includes an easy do -it-yourself installation

kit. a ~uick three-step mounting-no measuring, no parts to assemble. Automatic

ope'rat1on. wide. range of settings, quiet turbine, wash ·

6395
IN
CARTON
Set Up 68.95

$}7 895

._ __ -··--

able ,filter. Eight sizes to pick from.
5,000 B.TU .

--·· ·- ·

Also available at LANOMARK: 5,000-7,000- l2,000- 15,000-!8,000-24,000-

1---------..---------ol
THOSE GOOD
HOM ELITE·
and 29,000 BTU air conditioners. Ask us for prices and particulars.

BURPEE
AS LOW AS139.95 GARDEN SEEDS :
CHAIN SAWS

•

Two mowers, one hand-push and one self.

propelled. Both have 3112 HP Briggs
engines, suction-lift blades, reinforced

Charlie 'Eiush says: "When
you take delivery from our
warehouse, you get sersavings
and
vice,
satisfaction ."

decks and non -catch circu lar housings .

Self-propelled has positive fr iction drive.
SELF-PROPELLED
122-3016)
In carton $77.95
Setup$12.95

BUY Y~UR

ECONOMY
TILLER

,

tilling, beller digging-in. En-

gi ne is 31.12 HP Briggs &amp; Strat·
ton. trnes are 12" diameter
Hahn hoe t ines . 20 " wide .
Depth bar easi ly adjustable .

.(22- l 215) Reg. $149.95

....

FERTILIZER

'

and Get Early and Quantity
Has 93% of its we1ght concen·
trated over the ti nes for' easier

First Girl Scout Troop

The first Girl. Scout troop
in the United States was
formed in 1912 by Juliette
Go r d on Low of Savannah,
Ga., according to Encyclo·
paedia Britannica.

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action and had pledged all of the
organization's resources to it.
Counsel has been specially
retained to press the case.
The NFO action charges the
defendants with conspiring to
fix the price and control the
supply of raw milk in mid·
western markets and to exclude
NFO and all persons from those
markets. The case also
challenges mergers, acquisitions and consolidations
of AMP! and Mid-America .
It petitions that pursuant to a
conspiracy , the defendant
organizations have utilized
their economic power by means
of threats, boycotts and coercion to induce NFO customers
to refrain from purchasing milk .
from it; that these organizations have sought to
influence and in certain instances have influenced the
decisions of government of.
ficials to the detriment of NFO
and NFO producers; that the
defendants induced and com.
pelled producers to contribute
to political slush funds controlled by AMP! and MidAmerica which have utilized
these contributions to advance
monopolistic interests.

OLD INDIAN CUSTOM
GULBRAGA, India (UPI)Strangers to this town in
southern India were startled
Friday to see a procession of
about 80 nude women carrying
lamps on their heads file along
the banks of a stream during
the early morning hours.
Townspeople said it was an
annual event in which childless
women and. those afflicted with
diseases disrobe to march to a
temple.

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$13495
'

~ag.

DISCOUNT

Bulk and Liquid Ferlilizer, all available •e
now. Take delivery now from our area a
warehouse at

POMEROY

serving Meig&amp;. Gallia, ~san Counties
$lore ~n Mon.-Sat. Til6 p.m.
Ja~k W. Carsey, Mgr. .
Ph. "l-2111

�.••
-

. ..
19-The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, May :io, 1971

•

18-ThesundayTimes-Sentinel,Sunday, May 30,1971

356, Ottawa Hills with 367, and
Portsmouth East with 372.

GAHS Ninth, 43 Strokes Behind Aurora
At Hal way Point In State Tournament
.

.

COLUMBUS - Coach John
Milhoan's Gallipolis Blue Devils
trailed a hot-shooting Aurora
squad 43 strokes at the halfway
point Saturday of the 1971 Class
AA Ohio High School Golf
TOUI"Jlament.
The two-day, 36-hole affair
was to be completed Saturday.
Aurora, paced by 17-year~ld
Kim Heisler, son of Cleveland
Browns football coach Fritz
·Heisler, fired a 310 team effort
on openjng day Friday.

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by Chet Tannel:!ll
I
""--·~~--_.._...._._.,.._..,_,,_._..,_._.. __ ._..._....-.. ...J
A look back at the recently completed Meigs High School
varsity spring sports season shows some interesting highlights
and new records.
The basebaUers of Coach Ed Bartels won 9 and lost 5, A
highlight was the 2o.6 trouncing of Athens; another came in the
form of a loss, the ~ defeat by Portsmouth in the Cisss AAA
Tournament.
Portsmouth went on to demolish Its next Class AAA opponent
by 20 runs. The Trojans' famed piteher, Tackett, had to battle the
Marau~ers on even terms lUlU! the 6th inning to get the win. The
leading Marauder hitter on the season was Roger Dixon, with a
.375 batting average. Rick Van Maire was chosen on the all
Southeastern Ohio District aU-star team.
The lrack men of Coach John Bentley had a curtailed
schedule due to cancellations, but managed one win against four
losses and parUcpated in two invitational meets, the SEOAL
meet, and the Class AAA District meet. One new all-time
Marauder 1rack record was broken this spring when Chuck Faulk
went 18 feet 11 ~inches In the long jump,
The golfers of Coach Nolan Swackhamer ra·cked up 16 wins, 11
losses, and I tie besides participating in meets of the SEOAL and
the Clasa AAA tournament. Bill Hensler sparkled as be set a new
all-time Marauder record of the lowest individual season 9-hole
average of 40:0strokes. This broke the former record of 40.1 of Bill
Hackett set in 1968, who sUII holds the aU-time Marauder career
record of 40.1 (all years combined). Other Marauder golf records
heretofore Wlpublished are: Lowest individual9-hole score of one
match for aU-lime, 33 strokes, by Jim Anderson in 1968 against
Ironton and Point Pleasant; lowest Marauder team score in one
match, 198agalnst Ironton in 1969, and lowest team average per 9
boles In one aeason, 41.6, In 1968.
These won-and-lost records of the Marauder spring sports
added to the fall and winter sports of football, basketball, and
wresWng results in a 1970.71 varsity total of 48 wins, 37losses, and
one lie.
It's nice to have had a winning season.

Tournament Is

In Third Day
GALLIPOUS - Area slow
pitch softball teams were
scheduled to continue action
today in the Third Annual
Quaker. State Service Center
double elimination tournament
at the Kyger Creek Employees
Club field.
,
Following action today, the

·,

Cunningham and Mike Noe St. Thomas Aquinas
339 CLAYMONT (328) - Jim
carded 898, and Mike Shaver Gallipolis
353 Daberko 80, Kelly Goodrich 82,
had a 93.
Springboro
354 Mike Borekevich 86, Ron
Here's the team standings Washington CH
360 Povich 80.
and Friday's resolts of the first
Friday's results :
UPPER SANDUSKY (328) 18 holes' of action:
CLASS AA
Robert Thomas 83, Phil Marsh
TEAM
SCORE . AURORA (310) - Kim 78, Dan Kirchener 89, Kyle
Aurora
310 Heisler 71, Mark Heisler 84. Bowman 78.
Youngstown Liberty
314 Doug HaUovic 79, Tim Cour- ASHTABULA HARBOR (337)
Claymont
328 neen 76.
- Todd Crendall 75, ·Larry
Upper Sandusky
328 YOUNGSTOWN UBERTY ,Starkey 81, Chuck Sousleby 99,
Ashtabula Harbor
337 (314) - Ken Walters 78, Mike Jim Filer 82.
Kenton
338 Taylor 81, Bob Fleischer 76, - KENTON (338 ) - Art Rogers
Middletown Madison
339 Sam Santisi 79.
81, Dan Str'*'ts 79, Bruce Smith

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:;p;;za::::=::--.)
0"

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By Untied Press lnternatiolllll
Leading BaHers
National League
G. AB R. H. Pet.
Brock, St.L 45 186 43 70 .376
Davis, LA
46 182 28 68 .374
Alou. Hou
34 113 10 41 .363
Bckrt ,Chi
45 184 32 66 .359
Garr, All
47 198 35 70 .354
Torre, St.L 46 174 32 60 .345
Mays, SF
40 138 28 47 .341
Slaub, Mont 39 137 28 46 .336
Alou, St.L
43.181 17 59 .326
Slnmns, St.L 40 144 18 47 .326

.finalists will engage in battle
Monday, with the championship
tilt scheduled for 7 p. m.
Posting opening night wins
Friday were American Oil, 5-2
over Randolph 76 of Pt.
Pleasant; Barr Construction, 9·
6 o~er Wilkesville; Coakley's
Electric, 32-!i over Herb's Auto
Sales of Huntington and Athens
National Bank, 12·7 over the
Redman Inn .
American Oil had nine hits
and one error, Randolph 76 had
four hits and two errors.
Barr Construction had nine
runs on 14 hits and committed
three errors. Wilkesville had 15
hits and three errors.
Coakley's Electric rapped out
39 hits, including 12 doubles, 14
triples and two home runs, and
played errorless ball. Herb's
Auto Sales had five runs on 12
hits
·
Athens National Bank had 12
runs on 21 hits and two errors.
The Redman Inn had seven
h'ts d
d
runs, 14 I an rna e three
errors.

All-Time SEOAL

season for the first wmmng
season in six years and the third
best record in the school's
history.
Blowers shot his lowest
round, a 73, against Mt\C

Final 1971 GAHS
Batting Averages

BID PDWER IN A
SMALLTRAL I DR

Eliminated
EAST LANSING, Mich.
(UP!) Third ranked
Michigan State and Mid·
American conference champion
Ohio
University
were
eliminated in Friday's NCAA
District 4 baseball games.
Butch Albert was the big gun
in Cincinnati's victory over
Southern Illinois, blasting two
three-run homers and bringing
in another tally on a first-inning
single. It was Albert's second
round tripper which clinched
the win.
Michigan State, which took
the honors in the Big Ten this
y~ar , was tripped up by Ohio, 71, with Bobcats' pitcher Doug
Diamond chalking tip his lith
victory of the season without a
loss. The Spartans also were the
. first victims of Cincinnati,
dropping an 8-7 decision in
Thursday's opening round.
SIU came back after o~e loss
Friday to hand Ohio a 7·1 defeat
in a 13-inning contest. The
Salukis tied it 1·1 in the ninth
inning on Dan Thomas' leadoff
homer and expioded for six runs
in the 13th, with Mike Eden
sparking the rally with a leadoff
. homer.

A
al H
no U
orse
Show June 6th
GALUPOLIS _ The Gallia
County Riding Club will present
its annual horse show Sunday,
. June 6 at the Gallia County
Junior Fairgrounds. Activity
will begin at 10 a. m. for all
halter classes. A $LSO entry fee
will be charged. Ribbons will be
presented to all winners.
h
T e show classes will begin at
I p. m. with trophies and rib·
bons being presented . . Cash
awards of $5, $4, $J, $2, and $!
will be offered t'n the 17 vart'ous
classes.
Robert Arledge will serve as
judge.

GALLIPOLIS - Here's the
final 1971 batting averages for
Coach Jim Osborne's GAHS
Blue Devils, who recently
completed the campaign with
the most triumphs ever (15) in
the school's history against five
setbacks :
G-Piayer- Pos. AB R H Avg
2o-Dave Burnett, p-of.
61 11 26 .426
19- Stan Perry . p-of.
53 12 17 .311

Bank Loan!
So - now YOUR rntere~ t shou ld
be greater rn ob tarn tnB the loan
~au ' ~e needed lo r faun e~panslon
and rmpr cvements
Call vour FedNal Land Bank Man·
ager tOday He is an~rous to assrst
~ou wrth your frnancrat require;
ments

CLYDE B. WALKER.Mgr.
19 Locust Street
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 446:0203

"Bui !ding Supplies"
87 Olive - Gallipolis, Ohio

Gravely's big
16.5 HP .tractor

,

51 8 14 .274
2o-Mark Johnson. 2b.
65 13 17 .261
1o-Steve Slone. ss.
24 3 6 .250
H- Rick Boone, of.
28 4 7 .250

has the extra muscle

for the big jobs, steepest
slopes. All-gear-drive, instant ,
forward, neutral, reverse. If you have
lawn and garden jobs that cali for something
extra, the 16.5 is something else!
Call or see us for a free demonstration.

6- Howard Taylor, ss,

4 1 1 .250

2o-Gary Ballard. of,
54 5 13 .247
2o-John Davis. 3b,
49 8 12 .244
2o-Chuck Perroud. c,
41 6 8 .175
STEVE BLOWERS, a member of Gallia Academy High
School's golf team five years ago and for three years a star
golfer for the Portsmouth High School Trojans, was third
lowest scorer on the Bowling Green State University golf
team this spring.

GRAVELY 'TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

Pitchers records : Perry, 9-2;

Burnett. 6-2: Lee. 0·1: Johnson,
0-0. Totals - 15-5.

Phone 992-2975

Six Year Grid

Friday's Linescores

• OPEN 8 TO 5 MON. THRU SAT.
. ()pen Evenings By Appointment

Pack Approved

BIG 154 LB.
(4.4 CU. FT.)

Nlodel
TM17G

4

ONLY 32" WIDE

•

·YA.LUE

'

MEIGS COUNTY BRANat

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.
296W.

OHtO .t5769

Field proven in
every crop

,t,.,, ·

ICEMAitER ........................ '49·•

"This savings and loan company
will not transact business
on May 31.•

'S

PERFORMANCERATED

REFRIGERATOR
FREEZER••••••• , •••••••••••••••• *399· 95

. A . . ..

cessfully in the midwest. The
plastic pipe is corrugated to
give it extra strength and has 40
slits per foot cut in it to permit
water to enter. The manufac·
turer who furnished the pipe for
this demonstration sells 4-inch
pipe in 225-foot coils. A coil
weighs only 60 pounds. The cost
at present prices for clay tile
and plastic makes the plastic
pipe about 20 pet higher than
clay tile. However, a landowner
is able to install this tile with
less labor.
DELMER NEWBERRY of
Letart has completed a pond on
his farm on Oldtown Creek. This
pond measures 30 by 50 feet and
is estimated to hold 20,000

NEW INTERNATIONA[

ONLY FROM
·CONTINUOUS CUBES,
CONSTANT. COLD AND A FULL
FIVE YEAR WARRANTY!

.~·

BY JOHN COOPER
Soil Conservation Service
PT. PLEASANT - We attended a demonslration where
plastic pipe was used for
drainage as a substitute for tile
in Parkersburg. Mason County
people who went along were
Pirl Burris, Jesse Brown,
William McDermitt, Denver
Yoho and John Cooper, the
Ia tter two both of SCS.
· We had heard of the use of
plastic pipe for field drainage
purposes for two years or so and
knew it has been used suc·

FREEZER!

By Uniled Press International Detroit
004 ooo 002_ 6 8 0 OXFORD, MISS. (UP!) Nalionat League
Milw·
ooo 020 o1o- 3 8 3 The University of Mississippi
N.Y. at S. Diego, ppd .. wet grds Cain. Denehy (7) , Scherman
and the University of South
(7) and Freehan : Parsons, Carolina will begin a six-year
Phila
010 000 001- 2 7 0 Sanders
(B) and Roof. WP-'LosAng 100 400 01x- 6 13 0 Cain (2-0I. LP- Parsons (5-51. football series in 1972, Ole Miss
Shorl. Champion (4),' Hoerner HR- Rool (1st) .
Athletic Director Bruiser
171 and Ryan ; Downing (4-2)
and Sudakis. LP~ Short (3-71. Kan Ci ly 210 001 Olo- s 9 0 Kinard said Saturday.
HR- Brown (1st).
Washing In
Kinard said the first meeting
000 ooo ooo- o 6 1 with the newly independent
Monlreal 000 000 001- 1 4 2 Wright (1 -2) and May · GamecockswillbeatColumbia,
San Fran 010 010 lOx- 3 3 1 McLain
, Shellenbach (81 and
Renko, Marshall (8) and Casanova. LP- Mclain 14 _81. S.C., Sept. 23, 1972. No game is
Bateman; Stone, Jolmson (91 HR- Keough (1st) .
scheduled in 1973, but the series
and Dietz . WP- Stone (4-2). LP
will continue with a game either
- Renko (4-41.
Oakland
100
000
1013 60 h
. .
Boston
200 001 Olx- 4 9 0 ere or at Jackson in October,
113 mmngs)
·
Blue, Locker (8) and Duncan ; 1974.
Houston
Siebert. Bolin (9) and Jose"Th
hedul'
f S th
000 000 000 ooo o-o phson. WP- Siebert (9-01 . LPe sc
mg o • ou
Cincinnati
B
Carolina is another step in our
.
ooo _ooo ooo ooo 1- 1 ~~~he ~ 0 -~/.;l~~~c[,~'~oc(~/~ 12 program to beef up our football
Wilson, Gladding (9), Culver Duncan (61hl. Bando (7th)
' schedule," Kinard said.
1111
; Gullett,
Carroll ·
(111 and
and H1att
Bench.
WP-Carroll
• - . . - - - - - - - ··- - - - - - - - - - -...
12-11. LP- Culver (3-51.

Let us not forget those who gave
eir lives in strife to make this eart
a better place for all humanity to enjoy

Pomeroy, Ohio

'449··

SALE
.PRICE
Fu/15 year warranty on parts and rel11ted /ab~r.
M1n1 W1rr1n11 f11r 5 Vl~rl h~l11 d~te of Oll~lnB I PLifthast in U.S.. rep!mment or flpJir of parts found

defiCl~va u to worimari~~tp or m•tenaf 11n~!r normal un, Thrs 1nclu d~1 labor requrrHd tar reptacem•nr ul
~ecuve .P~!l!. 0ffecu~~ ~0111 II&amp; to b~ returned through Amana't dul~r· drll!tb~ror nr~10r1eMn. Owlltl

11 rt~ouihte 101 IrJwtceman·= trne! char~u. Icta l e~uage. re!IIICIIment cl Ra••m. rublm or DIUII c PittS
... 11~1 bulbs, Any (llodu~t 5UbJICttd ro ~mdt~t. muon. n•lhlf!ICt. 1bu1e. 'dM1ctmcrr1 ~1 1 nral 1 r
llttrlttln l~tl! WOt.lhi,Winlnt f. In C1111.1.1ht Wlrflnl}' IPPhts tt ab'"a · ~~~ ~IIIli! II dll~l ndt 1 1

,_ 400 baler is simple to operate. Easy to
· get ready, easy to keep going. Has fewer and
simpler adjustments than any other baler on
the market
A 400 baler is dependable. You'll take it for
aranted as it turns out lhousands of bales
without a miss. it's built right to bale right,
•nd stay right as long as the crop is there.
A.400 baler Is versatile. Tested in emy
type of crop in every part of the country, it
. will handle anything you've got to bale. AI·
lalla, straw, prairie hay, sudan, cane, or even

corn stalks. You name it and there's a 400
right for the job.
A 400 baler is big capacity. Up to 15, 17,
or 19 tons per hour. Here's the capacity you
need to handle many crops in many condi·
lions. The capacity to keep you on the go
while others slow down and quit.
Don't wait until your baler drops dead. Check
on a new 400 now. Ask about the nevi replaceable Swedish steel twine knife, the tungsten
carbide shearing knives, the rubber mounted ·
pickup teeth, and other 400 .firsls.

Meigs Equipment Co.
PH. 992-2176
R~yand abla

NFO's action seeks treble
damages
amounting
to
$125,052,000 and in addition the
dissolution of the cooperatives
in question.
Beatrice Foods Company and
its subsidiary, Boswell Dairy
Company were also named as
defendants as were certain
individuals in the Mid-America
and AMP! organizations.
Oren Lee Staley, President of
NFO, said that NFO's
Executive Committee had
unanimously authorized this

Plastic Tile Can
Do Job in Fields

Lay of the Land

. 47 9 13 .276

2{}-----. Tom Prose, lb,

usually lim!~ to only a few buds.
.
Norway maple leaves are falling in some yards now. It is not
that ihey .have their seasons mixed up. The leaf dropping is the
result of a tiny caterpillar called the maple petiole borer. The
young borers tunnel into the leaf petiole and apparenUy hollow it
out. The weight of the leaf blade causes the leaf to fall to the
ground. Nature provides a tree with many leaves, so I doubt that
the few you lose will be really missed.
Radish and cabbage plants that suddenly wilt leave you
the NEW in FAR MJNG
wondering what the problem is. You might pull up a plant or two
hazard. You need not fear poison food resulting from an in- and examine the roots. Maggots, active now , are eating off all the
secticide as long as you follow label directions exactly. If you're roots. This is the insect th~t makes grooves in the 3ide of the
still in doubt, don't u,se !he sprayed food; you'll be happier:
radish.
Prof. Miller made other comments this spring on hit and run
Maggots may be controllejl by applying Spectracide at one
insects. Roses are one of tbeir victims. If you have something tablespoonful per gallon of water. Direct the spray down the
eaijng large areas out of the developing buds,.chances are this is center of the plant so as to wet the stalk and soil around it.
caused by adults of grubs from turf. The adult beetles eat the ,
Bumblebees? There is a bee that looks like a bumblebee that
buds and also seem to love pin oak leaves. Tbe beetles come out at has caused some concern by its presence around the over-hang of
night I doubt that a spray will be needed, as ,the damage is houses and garages. Tbe hack part of its body (abdomen) is

CORNING ,
IOWA
(Special) - The National
Farmers Organization last
week announced the filing In
Federal Court at Kansas City 1
Mo., a civil anti-trust action
against Mid-America
Dairymen, Inc. , Associated
Milk Producers, Inc., and
Associated Reserve Standby
Pool, three milk marketing
associations. The action took
the form of a counter-daim in a
suit brought against NFO by
Mid-America and certain of its
members.

"'!!

Carter &amp; Evans Inc.

19-Kev Sheets, of,

1

..

from

day. gait, substituted for sugar In babies' f~rmulas, has resulted
in the death of several children. So you see; we must put things in
their proper perspective.
We hope all of you will realize that, to put an insecticide on a
dealer's shelf requires four to six years of scientific research at
an investment of around $S million. One phase of the research is
the establishment of a residue tolerance, which means, how much
insecticides can remain on the crop without causing a health

NFO to Press Countersuit

Due to mare favort~bl e economrc
cond r! H)nS I he rnte rest ra te or1
Federal Land Ban~ Loan~ has been
lowered We .t1ave e~en lowered the
mterest rate or1 over 4.000 uisl ·
loa ns_ ~us t arrother ot the
111 i:m~ benetifs of a Federal land

SAVINGS
.&amp; LOAN CO.

OU Bobcats

Chicago 010 021 ooo- 4 15 1
Davis Assumes
Pi llsbrgh 000 001 OlD- 2 6 2
8 aseball St aDd'mgs
Pappas (6·51 and Hundley,
Duties At LC
· Cannizzaro (6); Walker, Nekson
(51. Grant (7) and Giusti (9),
RoJas, KC
43 161 23 52 .323
ALL TIME SEOAL
EASTON,
Pa.
(UP!)
and
Sanguillen. LP- Walker (1 Rchrdt,Chi 35131 14 42 .321
EIASEBAL~ STANDINGS
Smith, Bos 44 175 33 55 .314
11941-1910
Thomas R. Davis, an assistant 6) . HR- Williams (12th).
May, Chi
40 151 19 47 .311 TEAM
W L x-C coach at American University
Atlanta
000 000 ooo- o 4 1
Kallne. Del 37 122 ·24 38 .311 Athens
124 35 12
Kllbr.w, Min, 43 159 18 49 .308 Ironton
19 8 2 for two years, was named head SL Louis 000 000 40x- 4 8 2
Reed, Jarvis (7) and Didier;
Holl, Min
41 117 12 36 .308 Gallipolis
lOS 60 8 basketball coach at Lafayette
Cleveland (5-21 and Simmons.
Tovar, Mlnn 44 183 26 56 .306 Logan
73 62 2 College on Saturday.
LP- Reed (S-3). HR-Si mmons
Home Runs
Jackson
62 69 o
Notional Leogue: Aaron, All Meigs
8 15 0 Davis, 32, succeeds Hal ( tst) .
American League
and Slargell, Pitt 15; Bench, Middleport
54 63 4 ~issei, who earlier this month
Cin 14; Cepeda, All and Pomeroy
54 71 2 took over the head coaching job Cleveland 201 001 ()()()- 4 · 8 0
Williams, Chi 12.
·
Wellston
38 71 2 at Fordham University after Chicago 000 000 ooo- o 2 o
McDowell (4-5.1 and Fosse:
American League: Cash, Del Nelsonville
16 77 0
11 ; Horton. Del and Oliva. Nelson .. York
· 1 17 0 Dick Pbelps moved to Notre Johnspn, Eddy (6), Romo (8),
Forster (8), Kealey (9) and
Mlnn 10: Smith, . Bos and Waverly
o 6 0 Dame.
Egan. LP- Johnson (4-6).
,Jackson. Oak 9.
TOTALS
. 554 554
Davis coached the University
Runs Baned In
x . Championships.
of
Maryland freshmen for one California 026 100 ooo- 9 9 0
NetloMI Ltague: Stargell, MAYO VS BELKIN
Pill 39; Torre, St.L 36; Aaron.
year before joining American New York 200 000 121- 6 10 1
Messersmith, Allen (8), LaAll and Santo, Chi 34: MEXICO CITY (UPI)-Joa· University In Washington, D.
Roche
(9) and Tor borg ; Kline,
Cardenal. St.L 33.
quin Loyo Mayo, Mexico'~ C., in 1969.
Kekich
(3), Jones (6), Aker (8),
Amerlcen Lug.. : Killebrew, national champion, meets to~
Mlnn :18: Petrocelli, 8os 34;
yWaslewskl (91 and Gibbs. WPMessersmlth· (5-51. LP- Ktine
Powell, Ball and Bando, Oak ranking Canadian Mike Belin PLAYERSSWAPPED
30; Yastrzemskl, 8os and today In a key singles match' BALTIMORE (UPI) - The (4·4). HRs-Spencer (7th), Murcer (8th).
Whtte, NY ~~clllng
when Mexico and Canada begin Baltimore Orioles Friday
tlllllnal League: Dierker, their Davis Cup tenn~ elimina· swapped relievers with the New Bal tlmore 012 000 300- 6 4 1
Minnesota
~k~&amp;~I:QI~f:~~onMar~~h~t,'s~ UonTbe. I 0f the bet'"' fi York Yankees, glv~g up Ji!TI
000 205 oox- 7 12 1
~l
LA and Stoneman,
w nner
s ""'" ve Hardin and ' receiving Bill
Jac~son (6), Dukes
- ~;.$; 2; Eilts, Pitt ..31 series, which conUnues SUnday' Burbach. Burbach was then
Watt' (Bl . and
' Corbin
•
Chi 6-5.
and Monday, will meet New sent to the minora to make
_.,,~ut:
Zealand in the 1final ol Ute room on the Baltimore roster
NorUt American Zone competi· for former Twins hurler Dave
Am1rican League'
G. AB R. H. Pet.
Oliva. Minn 38 153 30 58 .379
Murcer, NY 43 154 23 SS .357

champion Ohio University to
give him runnerup medalist
honors in a contest earlier in the
year.
Coach John Piper feels he is
one of the most dedicated

You Could

We

GALLIPOLIS

Scorer For Falcon Linksters

BOWLING GREEN - Steve
Blowers, Bowling Green Stale
University freshman from
Gallipolis, was.the third lowest
scorer on the Falcon's golf team
this spring.
Blowers, son of Mr: and Mrs.
Raymond Blowers of 545 Hilda
Drive, Gallipolis, composed a
79.4 stroke average for 21
rounds with a total of 1668
strokes.
The Falcons competed in the
MAC championship on May 21·
22 and fell to a fifth place finish.
However, they were 11·3 on the

BY C. E. BLAKF&amp;EE
· Ext. Agent, Agriculture
POMEROY- We often hear people say they are afraid to use
insecticides because they don't want to spray poisons on the food
they're going .to eat.
But R.-L. Miller, extension entomologist at O.S.U., points out
that Ute same people put salt, a deadly poison, on their food every

C~ GRAVELY 450

LOANS

-----·-·--------·-...- . ...,
the Sports Desk Steve Blowers Third Lowest·

•
·'

e

.. Gallipolis shot a 353, and held
ninth place in team standings at the halfway point.
Eleven teams are participating
in the AA session.
Heisler fired a hot one-underpar 71 on Ohio State University's Scarlet layout Friday.
Aurora held a slim four stoke
lead over second place
Youngstown Liberty at the
midway point.
GaUia's Steve Gardner shot
an 82 for the Blue Devils. John

·HOME

Insecticide Rules Must be Observed to the 'T'

Bob Herron .as, Dan Mahoney
86, Brad Crosby 94, Bill Junk 92.
In the Class AAA field,
Hubbard holds an ll..shot lead
over Stow and Findlay, tied for
Home . ownership may
second.
Hubbard's 318 total was led by be closer than you
a 77 by AI Tribby, but the
Eagles also got solid scoring think . Stop in today
from John Doughton ana Bob and talk i•:lth us . We'll
Pielon with 80s and Dan
O'Bruba with an 81.
he! p you set up a low
Columbus Watterson, led by
freshman Ralph Guarasci's 19 cost, long term loa
was fourth at 334, Cincinnati St. that's easy to pay .
Xavier and Cincinnati Moeller
tied for fifth at 335 and perennial title threat Upper Arlington
seventh at 336.
In the Class A golf, with only
five
teams
competing,
Columbus Academy · and
Mogadore shared the lead with
Opp. Post Office
golfers on his team. He con. 348 scores. They .were followed
Galli no lis, O"io
•sistently performed well by Mansfield St. Peter's with . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .
throughout the season.
AI Portsmouth High School
Blowers was conference
medalist three of his four years
on Coach Bob Doll's squad and
was selected the most valuable
player his senior year.
The 6·1, 170-pound linksman
was one of two freshmen on the
Falcons' starting six this spring
and is expected to develop into
one of the main figures in next
year's drive for the MAC crown.
He is an
industrial
management major at Bowling
Green.
91, Jeff Kinsey 87.
MIDDLETOWN MADISON
(339)- G. Pal87, M. Smith 85,
J . Rhoads 88, P. Pal 80.
ST. THOMAS AQUINAS (339)
- John Spittler 83, David Mark
84, Richard Susie 90, David
Holloway 82.
GALLIPOLIS (353) - J.
Cunningham 89, M. Shaver 93,
M. Noe 89, S. Gardner 82.
SPRINGBORO (354) - S.
Crist 91, K Pech 86, J . Hough
89, R. Dillon 88.
WASHI)IIGTON C.H. (360) -

•

POMEROY, OHIO
to giva you complete hay tool urvice.

gallons of water. He plans to
fence it and put a watering
trough below it for use of his
catUe. Denver Yoho of SCS did
the design work and checked
tbe construction. The bulldozer
of the Western Soil Con.
servation District, operated by
Rupert Sayre, did the earth~
moving . .
CLIFFORD BARNETT ,
whose farm is near Sassafras,
marked out 34 acres for farming
in alternate contour strips. He
has now marked out 46 acres
this spring for contour farming .
Denver Yoho helped him
establish the contour lines and
the strip boundaries.
RICHARD CARELLI,
correspondent for Associated
Press news service, was in
Mason County this week. He
had · read with interest our
stories of octogenarian farmers. After reading these
stories, he became interested in
one of his own with a different
slant than our stories had been
written. He was chiefly interested in comparing the way
things were done in the old days
with the way farming
operations are now carried out
and the various inventions and
innovations that are labor
saving devices which aid in the
farming operation.
The two people whom he
interviewed were Van L. Roush,
87, of Letart and Perry Sayre,
95, of Arbuckle.
We had written about Mr.
Sayre in one of our early
stories; however, our article on
Mr. Roush will appear at a later
date.
WE ARE ALWAYS interested
In nature and things in nature
that make life more interesting.
We saw something this week
that we had never seen before
and may never see again. It was
an albino robin. We saw it early
one morning in our back yard
and on first sight it appeared to
look like a small parrot.
However, upon examination
with the assistance of field
glasses, we discovered that it
was looking and listening for
worms, running a few steps,
and repeating the performance,
cocking its head sideways as it
did so and occasionally digging
in to retrieve a worm for break·
fast This robin was white on the
head, back, wings and most of
its breast. However, there was a
spot of black on its wing and a
small amount of red on part of
its breast.

black. II probably is the carpenter bee.
The female digs out a perfectly round hole in tbe wood about
as big as your little finger. She bores in about an inch and then
makes a right angle for a distance of up to a fooL This space is
chambered off into litUe bee nurseries. To control these bees, slip
a.mothball in the hole and seal it in with putty. The female bee is
capable of stinging·, so watch you.
Tree and fruit pests - Pine sawfly caterpillars are
defoliating various pine trees. The larvae feed in large groups.
Sevin or Malathion applied to the caterpillars .and the needles on
which they are feeding should take care of them.
The webs in the branches of flowering crab and wild cherry
are those of the eastern tent caterpillar. They are nearly fun:
grown and will soon be coming down out of the trees to change to
adult moths . The mass exodus will mean caterpillars all over the
place. When this happens it is ioo late to do anything.
Millipedes are boring into strawberry fruits . They have come
from the decaying mulc h. Millipedes are about I inch long, 1·16
inch in diameter, and purplish-brown in color. Sevin will reduce
the populatiOJ!, but remember to observe harvest restrictions.
Check grapes for flea beetle larvae , junipers for juniper
scale, and slugs on about everyt hing.

"•
•

•
•
•

•
•

Dow
c&gt;

ESTERON 99
LOW VOLA TILE

WEED KILLER

.ESTERON

9 t\1191

WHO

SPRAY FOR CORN

f ll

"For the control of most broadleaf
and annual weeds .

See Our Complete Line of Dow Products At

CENTRAL SOYA OF OHIO
"Your Farm Supply Super Market"

Gallipolis, Ohio

25"
STANDARD

r

Model 3254- 5 HP, 25" cut. Designed for the man
who wants a bit more in a small rider. Powered by

Briggs &amp; Stratton, 'lhis model has a single speed
transmission, 25", sing le blade mower deck with
an1i -scalp plate and Is chain dr iven . Rewind
Starter, Color: Turquoise-Black. (22-49621

Keep cool
with
•
a llnico Window Air Conditioner-

OTHER RIDERS, 340.95 to· 635.95

ECONOMY
MOWERS

Whsn it 's hot and humid outside, stay cool and comfortable inside. Steep·cooled
and refreshed, wake up ready wgo. Bigger capacity, more dehumidification abilitY. in a Unico window air conditioner. Includes an easy do -it-yourself installation

kit. a ~uick three-step mounting-no measuring, no parts to assemble. Automatic

ope'rat1on. wide. range of settings, quiet turbine, wash ·

6395
IN
CARTON
Set Up 68.95

$}7 895

._ __ -··--

able ,filter. Eight sizes to pick from.
5,000 B.TU .

--·· ·- ·

Also available at LANOMARK: 5,000-7,000- l2,000- 15,000-!8,000-24,000-

1---------..---------ol
THOSE GOOD
HOM ELITE·
and 29,000 BTU air conditioners. Ask us for prices and particulars.

BURPEE
AS LOW AS139.95 GARDEN SEEDS :
CHAIN SAWS

•

Two mowers, one hand-push and one self.

propelled. Both have 3112 HP Briggs
engines, suction-lift blades, reinforced

Charlie 'Eiush says: "When
you take delivery from our
warehouse, you get sersavings
and
vice,
satisfaction ."

decks and non -catch circu lar housings .

Self-propelled has positive fr iction drive.
SELF-PROPELLED
122-3016)
In carton $77.95
Setup$12.95

BUY Y~UR

ECONOMY
TILLER

,

tilling, beller digging-in. En-

gi ne is 31.12 HP Briggs &amp; Strat·
ton. trnes are 12" diameter
Hahn hoe t ines . 20 " wide .
Depth bar easi ly adjustable .

.(22- l 215) Reg. $149.95

....

FERTILIZER

'

and Get Early and Quantity
Has 93% of its we1ght concen·
trated over the ti nes for' easier

First Girl Scout Troop

The first Girl. Scout troop
in the United States was
formed in 1912 by Juliette
Go r d on Low of Savannah,
Ga., according to Encyclo·
paedia Britannica.

•

~

~--------------------------~

action and had pledged all of the
organization's resources to it.
Counsel has been specially
retained to press the case.
The NFO action charges the
defendants with conspiring to
fix the price and control the
supply of raw milk in mid·
western markets and to exclude
NFO and all persons from those
markets. The case also
challenges mergers, acquisitions and consolidations
of AMP! and Mid-America .
It petitions that pursuant to a
conspiracy , the defendant
organizations have utilized
their economic power by means
of threats, boycotts and coercion to induce NFO customers
to refrain from purchasing milk .
from it; that these organizations have sought to
influence and in certain instances have influenced the
decisions of government of.
ficials to the detriment of NFO
and NFO producers; that the
defendants induced and com.
pelled producers to contribute
to political slush funds controlled by AMP! and MidAmerica which have utilized
these contributions to advance
monopolistic interests.

OLD INDIAN CUSTOM
GULBRAGA, India (UPI)Strangers to this town in
southern India were startled
Friday to see a procession of
about 80 nude women carrying
lamps on their heads file along
the banks of a stream during
the early morning hours.
Townspeople said it was an
annual event in which childless
women and. those afflicted with
diseases disrobe to march to a
temple.

-•

.

'

$13495
'

~ag.

DISCOUNT

Bulk and Liquid Ferlilizer, all available •e
now. Take delivery now from our area a
warehouse at

POMEROY

serving Meig&amp;. Gallia, ~san Counties
$lore ~n Mon.-Sat. Til6 p.m.
Ja~k W. Carsey, Mgr. .
Ph. "l-2111

�%1- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Swulay, May 30, 1971

20 - The Sunday Tunes - Sentmel. Sunday, May 30, 1971

Bargains,:Bargains and More Bargains in Sunday Times-Sentinel Oassifie~s
Notice

Notice

Lost

Notice

In Memory

for construdlon
BOAT TRAIL ER CL AM P Ca ll CA LL af~er 5 p m lor Rawle tgh FREE Use d clo• mng for SUN VA LLEY Nursery School , IN LOVING memory of our APARTMENT
men
Pnvate
entrance Phone
577 Sun Valley Dnve, now
mother,, Mma Betz, Father
Products, 1924 E Ave Ph
anyone who ts tn need Church
256-6611 or 1900 Chestnut 51 ,
44607~
Charley Betz . and brother,
provtdtng full day care and
446-2089 or 446 3387
of Chri s!. Btdwell Ph 388
ask for Pht l
102 tf
127 I 842'1 or 388 8787.
Ray K. Bet z on th1 s Memonal
chtld development program
125 3
Day
"for pre school ch1ldren ln 127 I
fanfs excluded. Open 6 30 a As we walk m our Garden of TRAILER space 554 Jackson
LEG AL NOTIC E
Pike Ph 446-3805
Wanted To Buy
Memories,
m to 6 p m Monday through
The Gall1a County Board of
124 6
VE RY ola motor cycle. any Rf'\IISIOnS
There
mtdsl
the
blossoms
of
Frtday
Fees
$20
for
full
f1ve
hav e com pl et ed lhe 1r
- -.,.,.-..,.--- - -- make or cond ttton Wn te work and books ar~ now ope ned RALPtt S CarP.et - Upholster)
day wee k S5 per day if less
blue
Manon Engle. Rt l Box 19 , for •nspect•on
than f1 ve days SJ per day for We fmd m tha t beaut1ful garden SLEEPING ROOMS, weekly
Cl ean tng
Ser v1ce
F ree
rafes Park Central Hofel.
sess1 ons Ph 446
morntng
Forge t me-nots bloommg for
May 11, 18 , t9 10 2 1 2J 24 25,
Un •o n, Ohto 45322
esftmales Ph 446·029 4
127 6 26 27, 28
308 If
197-tf
3657
Madg e Hauldren ,
you
Own er -D1r ect or , John and
L o redtth
H a uo:tdren ,
operators
35 If

Iold,
But for us who love and m1ss

you,
That memory w1ll never grow

BILLY T SWAIN departed thts
l1fe Feb 6, 1968, after 21 years

old.

In the armed forces as a
sa1lor . then a soldter Born
and ra 1sed in Oh1o Twp
I look back mlo my memory
bank what most comes to
mmd tht s Memonal Day 1s

Oh, sadly m1 ssed by your
children, Marvin and Helen
Loutse, brother and SISler

127 1

Card of Thanks

For Sale

It may not have been the
sw1ftest fleet;
You stayed the htghest billows;
In the storms you had to meet;
You stood proud among the
sail ors
As your tourney wa s complete
You proved yourself a soldter
true.
Wher e the ftre and smoke were
lhtckest ,
Now the battlefield is silent
God was able to use a country
boy ltke you
By Stster Naom1, Roanoke,

technicians, and other per
sonnet who contributed to my
care 1n any way dunog my
recent hospltallzaflon at the

Montadale rams. 1 10 gal.
aquarium , tropical fish Ph.

special thank you fo !hose who
were so mce to my brother
while I was away from home

May God bless you.
Eva Northup
127-1

Instruction

IF YOU are in teres ted in
becom1ng a hatr stylist under
wh1ch
has
a program
guaranteed full government
f1nanc1ng, write Selective
Industries, Inc, Box 977,
127 I

Va

Hunltnglon , W Va

IN LOVING memory of our
Molher , Mrs Elva Pinker
man , who passed away 6

years on May 4, 1965

I

The ssalontans Chap. 4, v 1-4,
For 1f we believe that Jesus
died and rose agam, even so
them also whiCh sleep m

Jes us will God bring w1lh
Htm
All the famtly
127-1

- - - , - -- - -

IN MEMORY of my mother,
Llll1an Sealey, who passed
away May 31 , 1967.

The wor ld may chang e from
year to year ,
And fn ends frofTl day to day
Dea .. God many t1mes I long
To see her jus t once more
To hear her foot steps
To see her comma m the door
_onq lng for a smile
From a loved one gone
"Jothmq but memones. as I
tourney on,
Ni..Jne knows the depths of our
·
deep r egret.
Put I r emember , when others
fo r get
Nma S Burks

127-1
MEMORIAM of Rev and
11Ars H M Sm1th

say
That lhey are dead, fhey are
llt i,II)C:.::i

tust away'
W1th a cheery smtle, and a wave

~

SQuAA: £5~
WI-I~ ~E

of the hand,

't

They have wandered mlo an
unknown land,
And left us dreammg how very
fa1r
It needs must be, since they
linger there

lind you -

0 you, who the

Wildest yearn

' or the old-lime step and the

glad return ,
"htn k of them fanng on , as dear
n the love of There as the love
of Here ,
rhmk of them st1ll as the same
and say

rhey are nol dead - They are
tu st away!
In my Father 's house are
many mans1 ons, I go to
prepar e a place for you And
we know they are shanng that
pla ce w1t h loved ones gone
before

The Chtldren.
127 1
IN LOVING memory of our only
AFTER " Ll'-I CHEAT'EO
D~51GN 'THt:Y S"TOLE

FRO'II U5

I~ T

&amp;E "TI-lE
ANSi'JER. TO ~E
~1 1 _MI DI , MINI
IT 'AQ.It.D

~UOMMA

son

and

brother ,

Glenn

Harold Adkins, Jr , who leff
us on May 29, 1967 to be w1lh
.Jesus

God blessed us with three
children which we were more

lhan proud
L• .sa, Stephante and little

I-l OW WILL I GET

'\

TI-llS SEAL OFF" TO T.C.k E
OUT T ~E SPARKLERS
WHEN I GET TO
SWITZ ERLAND ?

,,, ~
- 7(:
I(

\ \

~

f(l

\) I

2!

; tenn to cheer our home
Bul fovr year s ago th1s very
day, our lov1ng Glenn was
called away
We thtnk of you 1n stlence
~"d make nu o•tlward show
But what it me(utt to lose you
No on e w1ll e ~ "Y know
If steps cou &lt;. oe made from
h e artache~

_By adding te; •r ps too,
We would but
_ slatrway to
heaven

And climb If every day for you.
Love

you

forever,

25713

Include
age,
schooling
completed, address and
telephone number or call

collect (304) 525-4826 between
8 30 a m and 1 45 p m Ask
for Mr Parl1er

126-6

PRIVATE
INSTRUCTION

PIANO
ORGAN
GUITAR
AND OTHER
INSTRUMENTS
tnqu1re about our
Pre-School Program

513 Second Ave.
Galhpohs, Ohio
Phones: 446-0496

446-0499

1. 1

We cann ot say , and we must not

446 2947

Wanted To Do
CUSTOM dress maktng and
altenng Ph 446-3482 or 446
3622
127-3

------

WALLPAPER hang1ng, also
mstde pamttng

Ph. 446 3631

or 446 2647

125-6

REMODELING and patnltng
Good references Ed Sm ith,
256-6935
97-11

-----Wanted
1;" acre lot

0 . Ph. 245-5121 after 5
1 WHEEL enclosed

trailer. Ph 675-2699

91 -tf

CAR1'Ek'S PLlJ'MBING
AND HEATING '
830 Fourth Avenue
Phone 446 3888 or 446-4477
155-tf
- - - - ----

,_.S;;;;er.vi;.;;.ceii s,.Oii ffeii reii id..._ ,
luggage.' p

blocks.

GALLI'POLIS BLOCK CO.,
ph 446 2783
97 If
WE specialize in portrait and

127-3

commercial photography ,
etc Tawney Sfudlo

cond, all power, auto trans.,

127-1

near

------

general

mechanic , good benefits.
Contac t
Harold
Davis,

L E PENCE Masonry Repair ,
88-tf
sand blasting, luck pointing,

- - -- - For Rent

Atr condtfioned Ph 245-5665.
man . Mommte and ()addle,
125·3
Shtrley and Harold Adkins,
sl slers, your only Pa Pa and
APARTMENT furnished, 2
Ma-l&gt;t)a .
127-1 bedrooms. second floor , air
condtltoner, adulfs $130 mo .,
uliltltes furnished 446·0208
IN MEMORY lhts Memorial
120-lf
Day of our daughter and
st ster , Ha zel M · Burton, who

passed away May 10, 1962, 2 BEOROOM trailer, 8x45, see
and of our son and brother,
Denver Higley at Red's
James N Black , who passed
Barber Shop or call 446-0349
away October 8, 1967
127-3
We do no I forge t you, nor do we
In lend,
IOX41 TRAILER in park near
We lhlnk of you offen and will
lown, utilllies paid. Ph 446Jill the end
4416 after 6
•
127·3
Gone and forgot len by some you
may be,
::-:--::----:---- -But dear to our memory you GARAGE aparlment , fur will ever be
nished, 3 rooms an~ bath 5
Parents, Mr . and Mrs Paul
m1 N of Gallipolis. Adulls
E Black Slsfers, Irene
preferred , Call 446 4170
belween 4 and 7 p m
·
Jenktns, Elsie Evans, Mary
126·3
V Burke, Norma Grooms.
127-1 - - - - - - - - --:-:-~--BOB' S MOBI~E Court trailer
IN MEMORY of Larry Michael
lots, 40x70 with paflos, located
Runnion who passed away 1
on Rf 124, Syracuse, Ohio, 12
year ago, May 30.
miles up river from Cheshire,
More and more each· day we Oh10 Water, elecfrte. State
miss htm,
approved. Call after 4 p. m.
Friends may lhlnk fhe wound 992-2951
has hea led,
_;__
107-tf

_____

apartment.
ullliltes paid, aduifs only
L1bby Holel.
118-tf

r-----------------------~---,

USED FURNITURE

free estimates
smouth 259-4253

~all

KEEP your carpels beautiful

NEW FURNITURE

1nch Admtral color console
TV, reg. price 5625, sale price

5550 Plenty of free parking.
Corbin -

Snyder Furn .1 955

Second Ave. Ph. 446-1171.
127-11

------

Homes, 446-0175.

93-11

00

~,o,O
••·
lA tto\~l'allele4
c.ar~ei~~O'"-''o'
~, 4 ,,oo.

I'll••' "~:.&amp; \'loOCII"

.-------

~It

- - - -- -

SINGER Sewing Machine Sales'
&amp; Servtce. All models In stock
Free
de livery.
Service
guaranteed . Models priced
from $69.95. French Cfjy
Fabnc Shoppe, Singer approved dealer, 58 Courf St. Ph.
446-9255.
NATIONWIDE INSURANCE'
308-tf AUTO, Fire, ltfe, 45 Stale St .,
Waldo F Brown, W R. B'own,
1970 CHEVROLET Monle Carlo 446-1960.
V-8, P S , aufo. trans., AMFM radio, vinyl top, 2400
miles, like new. Call Harold
Campint Equipment
Davts, 446-0418 after 5 30.
113-11 STARCRAFl rravel tratlers,

home cr remodeling, see us

campers, truck campers,
l1shing boats and accessories.
We serv1ce what we sell Best

deals in Tri-State area. Camp
Conley Starcrafl Sales, Rl. 62,
N of PI Pleasant, W. Va.
105-tl

T.V. RERUNS
AGAIN
TONIGHT ?
', J .

We are builders. Distributor
for Hotpoinf Appliances,
Allison Eiecfrlc.
154-ff

•ot
a
lho•• unproducth·•
Umo boun lolo a profttablo
oecoad ,....,., U you ban
a car and are wiU~ lo
udll• 8 to I houN 101 you.r

1967 DATSUN P.U
indoor and outdoor signs, 15c
1966 v, T GMC P U.
each, buy i ust whaf you need,
1967 '12 T. GMC P U.
3" size. Simmons Ptg . &amp;
1963 1/ 2 T. Chevrolet pickup
Office Equtp. 446-1396.
104-tf
1965 1'12 T. Cfievrolet Truck
1967 While Diesel Truck
1969 Chev. dump !ruck
GOOD CLEAN LUMP and
1968
T. GMC P.U
stoker coal. Carl Winters, Rio
1965 1 T GMC
Grande. Phone 245-5115
1969 GMC 4 T. log truck
'
8-11
1962 J;, T "MC plckup
1963 1 T GMC
Plumbin&amp; &amp; Heatmg
1965 v, T Ford P.U
STANDARD
1963
T. Chev. P.U.
Plumbing
&amp; Heating
1969 1 T. GMC
215
Third
Ave.,
446-3782
1
1967 12 T GMC P.U ,
187-ff
1968 Chev Suburban
1962 '12 GMC P.U.
RUSSELL'S
1968 whtte diesel truck
PLUMBING&amp; HEATING
1965 '~• T GMC P.U.
Sephc lank cleaning, elecfrlc
1967 'I• T Chevr~lel pickup
1963 F600 Ford !ruck
sewer cleaning . Ph 446·
4782 Gallipolis, 0 .
1966 J;, T. GMC pickup
1961 2 T GMC
11J.ff
1964 3 T. GMC
]966 ,,, T. Chev.
Brammer Plumbing &amp; HNtlng
1966 'n T Int. P.U
300 f ourfh ·Ave.
1966 h T. Ford P,U
Phone 4&gt;46-1637
1956 I'' T. !Chev. van
Gene Plants, Owner
298-ff
.
Ttres - 10.00x20, 12 ply nylon
fires $90 In~. Feel tax.
SOMMER'S G.M.C.
DEWITT'~ PLUMI!ING
TRUCKS, INC.
AND HEATING
m Pine St.
Route 160 af Evergreen
Ph. 446-2532
Phone4&gt;46 2735
241 -tf
211-11

lrM time. we ccm olfer you
aa opportualtr to npand
thl• •pare lime lato a
"brJthl" economle ,11111119.
Venda .Talker, lac, 11
INrthlat lor ladiYldull to
purcha11 and ••nice our
ua..ual TALIIIIQ :fENDIIIQ

New GMC
-Truck Headquarters ----PLASTIC letlers tor ooats,

'I'

'f'

:r

~and Contract

A person who sleeps through political

Just listed I Modern three bedroom brick home with
central air conditioning, one year old. Large front room

wifh new carpeting also wood burning ftreplace . Plenty of
cabinets in kitchen, dining room , family room in
basement with fireplace. One bath upstatrs and one bath
in basement, fwo car garage, lot 100x150 Has young fruit
frees. Price $26,500

s11,ooo

Modern home fwo blocks from school wifh three
bedrooms, large front room with carpet. Knoffy pine
paneling In kitchen also bullt·tn cabinefs Stove,
refrigerator and drapes go with house Price $18,500

$11,500

s,a,00° u&gt;'

Price Reduced mo
~~oe" y,.P.''~t~~ 2 A., 1Story Home
\'loOI'fl
6 Rms, &amp; B.
~
.ale4"
Possession
in 10 Days
c_aly-

Three bedroom home on 141 across from Green school.

I'•""

Th1s home has full basement w1th natural gas furnace,

city water and large lot 150 front by 250 deep.

Price Reduced
6 Room, 3 BR
2 Baths
2 Car Garage
Full Bosement

Neal Realty

$2,500
Lot 100'x300'
1 Mi.-from City

2BR&amp; B
Well &amp; Cistern
ALL BRICK
Elegant 7 Room -3 BR Rancher. Built-In appliances
highlight !he deluxe kitchen, formal DR for guests. Fines!
In electric heat &amp; air condlflonlng, outside gnll for
summer entertaining, PLUS Beautiful acreage.

BARGAIN HUNTERS
GIVE US AN OFFER
Dwelling at 109 Pine Sfreet
Needs some repair.
Office Phone 446-1694

ATTENTION
HOMEOWNERS!

Evenings

Charles M. Neal446-1546
J, Michael Neal446-1503

It's a long way from "FOR SALE" to
"~OLD". We know the shortest route!
If you want someone else to own your
home just give the Dillon Agency a
call. We need your listing now!

' NEW homt:s -

oncK tront,

IOO'x230' lot, buill in ktfchen,
carpeted. If you qualify, you
nn borrow full amoun't. Barr

Construction, 16 Pine St. Pb ,
-446-3746. Mon. thru Fri. 9 to 5.,
Sat. 8 fo 12.
19-t

TWO homes, corner location
Larger home has 7 rooms and
smaller home has 4 rooms.

Will sell oulnght or trade for
bollom farm or city property.

Summer's Here
Winters Back

SY.~~ Y.CROSSWORD, PUZZLE
(

.~~

23-Enclnt
24-SinKina voice
25--lndeflnUe
article
26-Carry
28-Piece of cut
lumber
3D-Hair or Ancora

....

32-Artiflclal
lantu•l•
35-Bfltballtt-am
37-An IPII
39-Bird's homt
4G-Obeu
41-Bun &amp;od
.U.--11 Ill
45--Fibtr pl1nt
-47-Symbot far
rhodium
48-Grtllt lake
49--FaKinatkm
52-Piuncts
54--Cte•llr
56--General
direction
57-0ccur
59-Shol¥)'
(colloq.)
61-lr~l.nd

62-Disturbance
63-Mtcaws.
64-Canlunctlon
66--Pronoun
67-Ntw Deal

SUNDAY, MAY 30, 1971

79-Myth

8J-Pref11 three
82-Saucy
83-coln
84-Certeln
85--Baspatter

87-Veaetable
89-Hindu queen
90--Decomposed
92-Mountalns of
Europe
94-Roman tyrant
95-FaHened malt
chickens
96-Concur
97-Citlzen of Crete
9!J-Preflx· thrice
too-Roman road
101-Fiawtlr
102-Rearets
103-Hale
105--Dtclues
107-Centlmeter
(lbbr)

109-Tear
110-Give food to

111-P•rmlt
113-Skldded

114-Away
115-A 11111 (abbr.)
116-Mttll

futeners
117-A state (abbr)
118-Pinc:h
12Q-Exlst
121-Th•t which
feeds fire

122-tleer

in&amp;redlent

123-Twlrl
124-Brldp term
•Pncy (lnlt)
126-Scorched
68-ChlptiUI
128-Geametnc
69-Ncte Df sc•l•
solid
7J-Aicohollc
130-Repeels
btvtrllt
132-ltt fill
72--thlll• and fever 134-Exploltl

135-AIIows
136-World
ora:anlzation
(aDbr.)
137-Leeks throush
139--Maiay d•au
141-Note of 1cate
142-MJture
1-43-Arm bane
145--VIstan
147-Siclllan volcano

20-Saund•d 1 hom 95-Municip•litln
27-Wift of Gtl'lint 97-Hinta
29-0inareement
98-Nothlna
31-Pronoun
102-Lt•••
34-8ura:tc•l ..w
104-M.. su,. of
36-laimb's ptln
welaht (pi)
name
106-Prlett's
38-trony
wstm•nt
40-P•rt of violin
107-Body of wtttr
42-Mounttins of
lOB-Farms
Europa
110-Thln co•tlna

149-Speck

44-Asllt

111-Ptaced In tine

46-Brain orific•
48-God of love
49-Rttrleves, as
a 1»111 {colloq.)
50-European

112-Feral
114-Folded
116-FrN ticket
117-51mltns
119-Reerlltlon

152-Preflx· not
l53-$howy flowers
155-Sword

157-Difflcutt
159-Brother of Odin
160-Tri•l
162-Spld
164-Movln&amp; part of
motor

166-Ached

168-Let It stand
169-Warnln&amp; device
170-Splr/ted horse
171-5coffs

DOWN
!-Bivalve
mollusk
2-Rockfls.h
3- Symbol for
sliver

4-Make IICI!I
5-Short Jacket
6--Nerve networlls

7-A state (lbbr.)
8-Mele sw•n
9-0x of Celebes
lG-Jumps
11--0/d name of
Iran
12- Symbol for
thulium
13-Gypsy
14-Soler disk
15-Stlck to
!&amp;-Rubbish
17-Distant
18--Preflx: not
19-5tretch

capilli
51-French trtlcle
53-Htlt
55-Symbol for
tellurium
56-Yuaoslav luder•
58-irrltlted by
scoldlna
60-Sibtrlan tent
62--Raae
65--Petitlan
68--Cauraseous
person
69-Kmd of fabric
7D-Poker stakes
72-Easle's nest
73-Lested
75-Worthless
Ieavins
76-Replleain kind
77-Spanlsh title
7~Entlces

80-Chellenett
82-Peels
83-sleevtless
clotkl
84-Denude
86-Fiylna
m1mmal
88-Encountered
89-Evatuated
90-couples
91-laneuap of
the Uartans

93-Sclndlnavlans

aru
121-Comeiy
122-small •mount
123-$ymbal for
.. merlum
125--Addltlon•l
127-Prlnttr's
me .. ure

128--Faldl
129--Rue
130-Fu..

131--Lence•
133-Marrow
136--Extreme
138-Woodtn shoe
1-40-Brttkl
suddenly
143-Pronoun
144-Aim• box
146--Apportlon
148-lslend off
lrel1nd
15o-Above
151-Sprt•dl for
drylna:
153-Unit af
Sl1mese
• currency
154-Welaht of India
156--Ath ens
158-Exp/re
llil-Compus point
163-0eclmeter
(abbr)
165--Road (lbbr.)
167-Compns paint

Re,~

32 ~te ~t
fel 446-19911

Home a. 1ncome
LOOKING !Of' a nlce6 rm . home
tn city, with a full dry base. It
has carpel on llv. and din . rm
3 nice bdrms., lots of cabinets

. , . _ wdlo · - ·

I ... lnltrtltlll Ht
lnt'lftUI:Iol
*"'
maW111 M0HJ1 !11 tht 'ftft4inl
....... I hM 1 uriM II htllfl
8*1

Jill' Willi IMrt litM. •
Clll lllftll MJ ltoO.
0 I un inwtll Mr ltOGp.

D I

"-- ----.......

' Y·l

· - -- -,-- ' - - -

d1n1ng room, built-in kitchen, full basement, 2 car garage

Also good 4 room house on lot,
Rent polenfial of $90 per mo
Lof has 8' x 15' sforage bldg .
and a big 2 car garage. Good

Dress Shop For Sale
Down Town

residential

area

Price

$21,000.

2- Evergreen
5 YR OLD home wllh complete
set of nearly new furndure,

liv rm . 12' x 22', 2 nice bd
rms ,

beautiful

kitchen

Pnce 14,200.
BARGAIN -7 rm house, 71ols,
full base., fuel oil fur ., storm
drs . and windows New
alumtnum stding, also fur niture for kitchen and 2

bdrms Price $12.700

Mobile Homes
'69 RICHARDSON, 12'x60',
same as new. Atr -conditioned

$5,600
'69 Imperial, 12' x 60' 3 bdrm
$4.700 .

Small Acreage
5 RM house &amp; 3 A. 5 mi from

town . $9,000.
5 RM home and 2 A. near
Vinlon. This is a big house and
nearly new. The kitchen IS not

completed This property can
be bough! as Is for $7,000

Farms
150 A Farmer's farm, $16.500
76 A. close Citv, $16,000.
61 A much rd. frontage; $8,500.
50 A Wood Mi ll Rd. $7,500.
39 A good bldgs 513,500
38 A. near Mercerville, $5,000.
ANY HOUR446-1998
EVE, John Fuller 446-3246

VE(lY. VERY GOOD
OP!&gt;ORTUNITY FOR
SOMEONE WISHING TO
EARN A GOOD INCOME
AND BE THEIR OWN
BOSS AT SAME TIME
CALL IKE WISEMAN
FQR · DETAILS
Owner Transferred
Nearly New Brick

On35
BE SURE AND SEE THIS
FULLY CARPETED 3
BEDROOM HOME WITH
FULL
BASEMENT.
LARGE BU ILT IN KIT
CHEN
WITH
MANY
CABINET S ,

NICE

DINING AREA PLUS 2
CAR GARAGE ON A
LARGE FLAT LAND
SCAPED LOT IT'S A
COOL ONE WITH CEN
TRAL AIR AND A
TERRIFIC LOCATION 2
BLOCKS FROM NEW
HOSPITAL
152 Acres Land
Several Building Or
Mobile Home Sites
LOCATED P h MILE
FROM GALLIPOLIS
RURAL WATER WILL BE
AVAILABLE

PROPERTY IS WOODED
HILLS AND VALLEYS
WITH A GOOD LAKE
SITE ,

•;..

MILE

FRON

TAGE

BAIRD REALTY CO.
~car Baird. Realtor
&gt;~3U

Second Ave,

Ph. 446-4775
B~ICKRANCH_:--Nice ttiree
bedroom brick ranch wltn full
basement, aftached garage,
Jl/2 bafhs, built-In klfchen, gas
furnace, clfy .w afer, city
schools, priced right.
TOWN COTTAGE - One story
lwo bedroom frame home on
deadend street In Gallipolis,
close to schools, churches,

VACANT LAND- 104 acres of
vacant land close to state
highway, schools, has pond,

Then are mCIIly Choice lo.

Dream By The River
This Is a very fine, well conslruct1"! 3 bedroom home on a
4 acre lot running to river's edge Carpeted living and

1n kitchen and much paneling

produdav
talldllv TOIII!Ia9 Blachtan caa ~. tbe
.,....,....., of , ... .... - eoa.al buiiHU. We Mt:UN

catloae lla thla prea, 10

-er.

and storage bldg with root cellar. The land is clean and
lays very good for large garden and enough pasture for 2
or 3 an1mals Price Includes excellent bulldtng lot. Mid
thirties

MACHIIIE8. Ao llttlo "" liDO
lo ...000 IDToolo&lt;l ' Ia proDI

all your lac:atloae aDd tully
trala 'fOil Ia be,vln •• ·
Joylat a ucond lncom.e
lmmo&lt;llalolr,

This home Is fully carpeted throughout and Is ius! like
new. Large ltving room with fireplace, formal dining,
lovely klfchen with range, oven, dishwasher, etc. built in,
1'12 baths, 1 bedroom down and 2 up. All elecfrlc heat, 2 car
garage, full dry basement on corner lot In excellent
locallon with city schools, watw and

MASSIE

and hosplfal, full bafh ,
basement, priced for quick
sale.

m

It Is DiHerent-And You'll Love H

EARL Wlnfers is back from
Europe. If you are thtnking of
buying or selling, Mr. Winters
would appreciate your call.
Denver K. Higley, 446·0349
Earl Winters, 446-3828

-

1-Mauth of
volc1no
7-Ramove top
surface
12-Pamphlet
17--Ctenchtd h1nd
21-Envoy
22-Rtclpient of

nice kitchen with range oven etc. built-ln. Full basement
with more than half of If finished In very good tasfe, 2 car
garage with automatic door located on a large flat landscaped lot clou to ._ ~Ita!. Dan'l min aeelng this.

[JAY SHE.PP~RQ
REALTORS

Farm, Village, City Property
First &amp; Olive
P!ll!pe 446.. 19
3/4 Acre
AOAMSVILLE Seven room
WEEKEND HIDEAWAY
home with wafer and balh,
15 acre wooded trac1 with two
nice porch , shade trees,
good building sites or for
corner locat1on Garden .
mobile homes . Near Rto
Grande. Pnce $3,500.
Patriot

2 A., Small Barn

74--Qrdlnary
l•nau11•
76--City In Nevada
77-Transeress
78-Steamshlp
(abbr)

bedrooms Jlh baths, entrance foyer, dining room, very

0. D. PARSONS

CITY FARMER
40 acre farm wifh 3 BR home
Aluminum siding, barn,
fobacco base, plenly water
Located 3 miles from R1o
Grande on blacktop road.

$3,900

ACROSS

A Home With A Charming
This lovely all brick 3 bedroomhome will saflsfy the most
dtscnminating It Includes a carpeted living room, 31arge

Lot on Tycoon Lake with or wtfhouf trailer
Office 446-1066
Evenings, Call Ron Canaday 446-3636
John I, Richlrds446-0280
Russell D. Wood 446-4618

1SO'x240'

33-Sman rue

FOR ALL your Insurance neeos
check with your Grange agents
al fhe Neal Ins. Agency, 64
State St. Agents for auto, fire,
homeowners, hosplfal and
general liabll fly
84-11

Bulldozer
speecheS.

Crown City
Aluminum Siding
3 BR, carpetthnlughout
1 Acre-Now Vacant

o0C11"

E. N. Wl-•n 446-451'0

There are two kinds of people who should never do things
impulsively · Presidents and young people.

$8,500

,..00""'" 11 .

Office 446-3643
Evenings Call
E-M. "Ike" Wiseman 4464796

446~1066

3 BR &amp; Bath
New Furnace
New Plumbing &amp;Wirong
Low Down Payment

1.0

I

I

Hobart Dillon, Realtor
Office 446-2674
Howard or Lucille Brannon
Evenings 446-1226
Robert Condee, 446-0858

Port -

,,nsurance

-

AGENCY

'

DEAD STOCK

SPEC IAL OF THE WEEK - 25

!
Helen
Help
Us!
THE
WISEMAN
ELL
WOOD
.
I
AGENCY
REALTOR

DILLON

caulking, water proofing. For

18 FT TRAVEL trailer self.
contatned, Ford dtsc, brush
GallipoliS Motor Co. Ph 446hog rotary culler, 12" Ford
3672
turning plows Ph 388 8443
103 If
120 tf
7
ig · lag
OF COURSE your family comes "P,.,A"'IN"'T;-;;D"'A M"'A"G"E:-;;19~71'"""Z,.,Sewmg
Machines
Still
In
f1rsl But maybe you need an
original
cartons
.
No
at
outs1de mterest. too . You. too,
tachmenfs
needed
as
our
can be an Avon Represenconfrols are built-ln . Sews
tallve and earn money for the
with
1 or 2 needles, make
" extras" you want for your
buftonholes,
sew on buftons, LOW, low pnces on Bemco ana
family Also w1n prizes, meet
Serta mattresses and box
monograms, and blind hem
people, have fun . It's easy to
springs.
Corbin &amp; Snyder
stitch Full cash price, $38.50
get slarted Write or call Mrs.
Furn.
,
955
Second Ave. Ph
or budge! plan available
Helen Yeager, Box 172,
446-1171
Phone 446 0665
123-6
Ja ckson, Ohio Ph 286 4028.
3-ff
122 6 ELECTROLUX Vacuum = =----,-,---- quality used mobile
Cleaner complete with at- GOOD
NEEDED permanent fOb in
homes, low down payment
and
tachments,
cordwlnder
Gallipolis Experience as an
bank financing Kanauga
paint spray . Used buf In like
offset prtnler and draffsman .
Mobile
Home Sales, Ph. 446
new condition . Pay $37 .45
Con lac I Don Roush, 780
9662.
cash
or
credit
terms
Savannah Dr , Manon, Ohio
94-lf
avatlable.
Phone
446-0665
43302
123-6 IF YOU are building a new
125-3

But they 11tllle know the sorrow
Lies within our hearts con- FURNISHED

RAIKE'S
REFRIGERATION
&amp; AIR CONDITIONING
RESIDENTIAL, commerctal,
tndustnal. Ph 367-7200
117-tf

3 LIVING room suites, end
58-tl
tables, desk, bed, spring &amp;
despite constant footsteps of a
mattress, roll away bed, htde
busy famtly Get Blue Lustre.
WATER we ll drtlllng, Myers
away bed, 2 dressers, chest of
Rent electric shampooer Sl
pumps Sale and service.
drawers, base ca_blnet, 2 wood
Central Supply Co
Complete water line service
d1nette sets, reclmer Rice's
127-5
and trenchtng C J Lemley,
New &amp; Used Furn , 854 Sec
Vinton, Oh1o Ph 388 8543.
446-9523.
1970 100 HONDA. 1 owner, like
114-tf
125-11
new. Ph. 446 0973
-D..,-P-..-M
-A
_R
_T
- :1:-N- &amp;...,.-:
So-::-n--:-'Na.fer
127-3
--------1970 CHRESTLINE fiberglas
Deltv-ery Service. Your
runaboul, 65 HP Evlnrude
1959 CHEVROLET 4 dr 283,
patronage
wll I ~e ap·
engme, Galor !tit trailer, fully
aulo., also 1963 Chevy II 4 dr.,
Ph.
446-0463
precialed
equtpped Ph. 446 9868.
6 cyl., 3 spd on floor . Ph. 379
7-tf
125-3
2145
127 3 - - - - - - - 1966 BUICK Electra 225, 4 dr
- - - - -hardtop, P.S, P B., rad10, air
1967 MOBILE home, 12x50,
cond , excel cond. $1495. Ph
completely furnished, auto
446-2367 affer 5 30 p m
'
washer, all new curtams,
$5.00 Service Charge
125 3
$3,200 Ph 675 1816
Wll 1removeJour dtad
127 3 - - - - - horse an cows
1965 T BIRD, 2 dr. hardtop.
Call
'Jackson 286·4531
P
S
,
P
B.,
4
new
ttres,
excel
FOR Economy!! ' Buy this 1963
cond
,
5850
Ph
.
446
231&gt;7
after
Ford Fatrlane, Reasonable
5 30 p m.
Call 446 2651
125 3 TV Antenna :,ates msra11at10n &amp;
2 127-3
Service Estimates. Ph 446·
1673 or 446-9679
?1
INCH
RCA
color
TV,
Ll VI NG room sutte, twin bed,
63-tf
Colontal
cabinet.
in
working
good spnngs and mattress,
condilion, 5225 Call 446·0720
large storage chest, set of
FAIN
after 5 p m.
double ladders Ph 446 0250
EXTERMINATING
CO.
125
3
127-3
Term lie &amp; Pest Control
Wheelersburg, Ot11o
14 GRAVE spaces 1n Ohio 67 DODGE ptekup, IJ, T Utiltne
Ph 574-6112
Ph 446 3246
Valley Memory Gardens Ph
52 If
125
3
446-2089 or 446 3387 affer 5
-pm
127-1 '63 OLDSMOBILE 88, John DITCHING for water, gas,
sewer lines Russell Plum--------Houck, 446-1697.
btng, 446-4782.
126
3
SPRING clearance on new 1
113 tf
-row cultivators D1sc - 3
'63
LINCOLN,
$300,
runs
good
potnt, 6'12 If , ltsl price $295,
Must sell Ph 446-4941
ELECTRIC SERVICE
sale pnce $185; 8ft., list price
126 3 RESIDENTIAL &amp; Industrial
$350, sale price $235, 2 semi
Paul Knox, office Ph 446-1011
loads of 4, 5, 6 If rotary -~-----1964
CADILLAC
convertible,
or
home Ph. 446-4822.
cullers, save $100 on these
70-tf
$300,
nice,
contact
Sherman
brush hogs Several model
Basham on Williams Hollow
tractors, boom, poles and
Rd off 218. Also work horse
ALBERT EHMAN
bumpers Jim's Farm Equ1p
and
work mule SlSO each.
Wafer Oellvtry. Servlc&lt;t ',
Cenfer, Rt 35, 5 miles West of
126-3
Patflof Star Rt.. Gall115olls
Gallipolis, Ohio Ph 446 97n
Ph 379-2133
,
or 446 3592
1e- - "1-i"ome
·'u-=s-=E:-:D:c---:M-:-o-:b-:1-:
. 243-tf
127·1
Headquarters All size mobile
homes
tn sfock B &amp; S Mobile TERMITE PE$T CO~TROL
BEATEN down carpel paths go
Home
Sales,
Second &amp; VIand, FREE tnspecflon. Call 446-3245, ,
when Blue Lustre arrives
Pt
Pleasant.
next to Heck's. Merri II 0' Dell , Operator for
Rent electnc shampooer Sl.
67· If Exfermlnal Termite Service,
Lower G C Murphy Sfore
19 Belmonl Dr.
127-5
USED TRAI~ERS
267-tf·
1960
Nalional
10
x
50,
2
br
1964 JEEP Wagoneer, 4 wheel
G"'"I'L7L-::E::-N::cW"'A:-:T:-:E::R:-:,::-S7Se-p"'f1:-c-:::Tan k
dnve , good condtllon Ph 446 1967 Horizon 12 x 50, 2 br.
1957 Glider 45 x 8, 3 br
Cle~ninQ &amp; Repair Ph. 446·
1556
1966
Namco,
52
x
10,
3
br.
9499.
Pnce Is right.
127-3 1960 Van Dyke, 10 x 50 2 br
174-11
1960 Van Dyke 10 x 50, 2 br
USED FURNITURE 1965 Kentuckten, 56 x 10, 3 Br
Central Air Conditioning
1962
Colonial
50
x
10,
2
br
-Heating
Ll KE new hide-a-bed with In
1960
Van
Dyke
10
x
40,
2
br
.
Free
Estimates
nersprlng mattress, Electro
All
trailers
clean
and
recon
Stewarf's
Hardwne
Hyg,ene tank type sweeper
ditioned . Ready for OC·
VInton, Ohio
w1th all altachmenls, good
cupancy. Free Oeltvery and
J44·tf
cond11ion
set up Tri-County Mobile
·-----

little MOBILE HOME In Rio Grande.

cealed
Sadly m15sed by Mom &amp;
Dad, brolher and SISters.

building

matenals, block, brick, sewer
pipes, windows, lintels, etc.
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,

$1,600 call 446 1642 ext. 264

Cheshtre, 0 Call collect 614·
483 1852 after 6 p.m
124-lf

EXPERIENCED

1

1968 CHRYSLER Newport. air

TO RENT, lease or preferably
to buy

of

church weddmgs, reuntons,

Holzer Medical Center . I wtsh
to express my grattfude to
those who sent flowers, g1fts,
cards , and vistted me durmg
my confinement. Also, a very

TYPES

concrete

10 REGISTERED Suffolk ewes,
1 to 4 years old, 3 Registered

Jhe ntght (1943) you and your I WANT to !hank Dr Charles E
classma tes sang " There's a
Holzer , the nurses, a1des,

star spangled banner wavmg
somewhere . Wav1ng o'er the
land of heroes brave and true .
There must be a place for a
country boy like me "
You served upon the ocean ,

ALL

124 6
AUTOMOTIVE AIR
----.,.------,--,--:----:
CONDITION SERVICE
REDUCE safe and fast wifh
Repa1rs and recharging
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
--'------wafer pills. Gtlllngham Drug
SMITH BUICK CO.
2 BEDROOM mobile home near
124-39
1911 Eastern Ave.
Galltpolts Ph 367-7329.
108-11 - - -- -'
3 BEDROOM home, good
localton m etly Ph 446 1144
SLEEPING ROOMS weekly
BANKS TREE SERVICE
124-6 FREE estimates, liability In
rates, free garage parking,
Ltbby Hotel
surance Pruning, tnmmlng
74-ff WHITE cemenf, ail stzes !tie in
and cavtly work. tree and
sfock. 12" &amp; 15" field tile, slump removal. Ph . 446-4953.
su1lable for h1ghway dltchmg,
73-11

You thre e left beautiful
memor1es,
And a sorrow loa great to be

In Memory

Plumbing &amp;Heatln&amp;

For Sale

For Rent

Bargains, Bargains and More Bargains in Sunday Times-Sentinel Oassifieds

pine trees, and woods.

Oscar Baird, 446-4632
Ooug Wetherholl, 446-4244

Excellent
Building Lot
$J,900 FOR 5 ACRES OF
WOODSON NtW WATER
LINE 4 MILES FROM
TOWN DANDY FOR NEW
HOME S OR 5 OR 6
MOBILE UNIT S
'

YOUTH ASKED FOR IT! This column is for young people, their problems and
pleasures, thelr troubles and fun , As with the rest of Helen Help
Us!, 1! welcomes laughs but won't dodge a ser10us question with a
brush-off.
Send your teenage quesUons to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care
of Helen Help Us! this n~paper .
TOO YOUNG TO MARRY, BUT Dear Helen :
I am 17, in love with Pere who is 23, but I don't want to marry
him. He and my parent.s insist that I do, because I'm pregnant.
I told my father I want to go away and have my baby. He said
if I dtdn't get married he'd kill me. What he means is, I could
never come back - he 'd have no daughrer. My mother s1des with
him, When I argued, he beat me,
Pere says I am acting like a child, and doesn't the two years
we have gone sready mean we'll make 11? I want time to think. I
realize I should have thought before, but why make two mistakes?
Seventeen is too young.
Please don't tell me to consult my minister, Helen, becalllle
he's my father.
NOT DESPERATE ENOUGH TO GET
MARRIED
Dear Not :
No one should be forced Into marriage agamst her will.
However, there's a possibility that, given a month or two away
from family and boy fnend,your "will" may become "I will."
If your father won't grant you a short vacation with relatlves
oc friends, so you can "think things through" he isn't my kind of
minister! - H.
Dear Helen :
Surnrnertlme, and the leavin' am't easy!
I want to be out on my own. I'm 22, have a good job, but a
possessive mother.
She says she will have a heart attack If I get an aparlrnent.
She will also leave me out of her will and will never speak to me
again.
In spite of her childishness, I love her and don't want to hurt
her, But Helen, she isn't sick, unless you can count a heart
murmur she has had since childhood. She has friends, so I'm not
abandoning her.
The doctor says, "I can't advise you, but---" and be gave me
the name of a good singles apartment complex.
What do you say? - DAROL
Dear Darol:
Follow your doctor's non-adVIce. - H.
Dear Helen:
I'm glad you told the girl whose boy friend went to jail to keep
writing.
I met my husband a year and one-half ago, five months after
he had been released from San Quentin, He'd done 10 years in Big
Q, and was 32 years old. Before that he'd been in other lnsUiutions, so most of his life has been behind bars.
It wasn't easy for him, The "oubilde" was a new world. He
cl.dn't even have a driver's license. He started from scratch, But
he also had family I frlends and good parole officer. He gQt joba,
but he had lay-offs, loo,andsomewere due lf!hiapast.
The templatlon _of ~ ,back to the old wa)'ll was great,
especially with a wHe to lltlpport, but he has proved he is a strong
man. He now has a good job, with a good future.
I've never stopped being proud of my wonderful guy, He's
"out" for good. Everyone needs a second chance to prove himself
and my husband certainly has. - LEIGH

Hardware Business
Very Good
Opportunity
-· ..
THIS STORE IS AND Hf\S
BEEN DOING AN EX
CELLENT
BUSINESS
FOR MANY YEARS
OWNER MUST SELL DUE
TO OTHER BUSINESS
INTEREST ALL YOU
PAY FOR . IS THE IN ·
VENTORY
OWNER
WILL WORK WITH YOU
UNTIL YOU LEARN THE
BUSINESS
~

~

1

By Helen Bottel

~.--

3 or 4 Bedroom Home
7 Acres
DON ' T MISS SEEING
THI S
MODERN
3
BEDROOM
HOME
!COULD
BE
41
FEATURING
HOT
WATER HEAT, FORMAL
DINING,
FIREPLACE ,
AND
BASEMENT
LARGE KITCHEN AND
SMALLBARN PERFECT
FOR CITY FARMER
WANTING TO RAISE A
F EW CATTLE AND HAVE
A HORSE FOR THE
C HILDREN
CITY
SCHOOL DISTRICT AND
RURAL
WATER
AVAILABLE
Here's One
On The River
And You Can
Afford II
IT 'S AN OLDER hJME
BUT MAN IS IT NICE
LAR GE
CARPETED
LIVING ROOM, NEW
KITCHEN, NEW BATH ,
3
BEDROOMS.
F IREPLACE . PORCH
OVERLOOKING RIVER ,
BASEMENT
AND
GARAGE
PRICED
BELOW MARKET VALUE
AT $15.900 00

1

In 196( A. J, Foy.t won the
Indianapolis 500-mile auto race,
in which drivers Eddie Sachs
and Dave McDonald were kllled
in a crash on the second lap.
In 1968 the CZech central
committee ousted former
President Antonln Novotny,
starUng a move toward
liberation for Conununist-ruled
Saturn,
CZechoslovakia. The attempt
The evening star is Juplter, later was smashed by Soviet
ThoSe born on this date are
under the sign of Gemini.
American actress Cornelia
Otis Skinner was born May 30,
The Almanac
By United Press InrernaUIIUII
Today is Sunday, May 30, the
150th day of 1971.
This is Memorial Day,
celebrated this year on May 31.
The moon is between ll.s new
phase and first quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Venllll, Mars and

Used FurnitUre .

1901.

'

On this day in h1story:
lOols, Ulshes
In 1431 Joan of Arc, Maid of Other • Miscellaneous
Orleans, was burned at the Items. We Also Buy
stake in Rouen, France, at the 1 ....... ,plete Estates.
age of 19 after being found
guilty of sorcery,
In 1937 pollee and strikers
battled at Republic Steel Corp,
1163 Second Ave.
in South Chicago. Ten pel'Sot18 I'-.:~;::.=
were ldlled and 90 wounded.

Knotts
Used Fumiture

PUBLIC AUCTION
SCHOOL
A fwo-week course If\ professional ouctioneerint will be
conducted by Knotts School of Auclloneerlng at 1163
Second Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio, starting Monday morlling,
June 7th. For lnformlfion and reservation call Cof, R. E.
Knotts, 446-2917. We are presenfly conducting cluses at
the Wheeling College, Wheeling, West Vlrginll.

.

STROUT REALTY

WOODED building lots, 110x400
fl .. lOins cify limlfs, city
"'ih, 4&gt;46'000t
water, natural gas. Call 446·
4416 after 6.
OPPORTUNITY KNOCKsir
127-5
CHANCE of a llfefime for fhe
person w1th a money-making - - . . . , . - - - - - ' - mind. One of lhe most HOUSE, 8 rooms and bafh In
proflfable Nile Clubs In Gall Ia town , Immediate possession
Call 446·4416 after 6 p.m
Co $80,000 repO&lt;'fed annual
123-6
income, excellent location,
reasonable

INEXPENSIVE ~IVING
LOVELY 5 room home In clfy,
wlfh full basemen!, gas heat,
and garage. $10,500.
FARMER'S FARM
GRADE 6 dairy set up, 120 A.
mosfly tillable, good sef of
buildings , pond, 50 A.
presently In corn with Iron.
tage on slate rd.
CITY SCHOO~S
NICELY remodeled older home
on U. S. 35, wlfh cily wafer,
new built in ktfchen, lots of
paneling and carpeflng.
LOTS OF EXTRAS!
THIS one acre flat lol contains a
ntce 2 bedroom home, with
new aluminum siding, ww
carpet, new forced air fur nace, and rural water lap.
WOULD YOU TRADE
YOUR FARM FOR CASH?
R1n~y Blackburn
Branch Mllnager

~...mal

Bowling

Frldiy Night Mixed ~eague
Standings
Teom
Points
Racine Home Bank
39
Team No. 4
32
Team No. 5
27
Evelyn's Gro
19
Mark V
15
Team No.3
12
High Individual Game- John
Tyree 194; Neacll Carsey 175.
Second High Ind. Game - VIc
Wippel 119; Keith Ann
Whlflalch 163.
High Series- Vic Wippel 503; '
Ketfh Ann Whitlatch 448.
Second High Series - John
Tyree 501: Neacll Carsey 445.
Team High Game - Racine
Home Bank 720.
Team High Series - Racine
Home Bank 2059

PUBLIC SALE
Sat. Morning, 10 o'clocl, June 5th
41 Grape St., Gallipolis, Ohio
Owner, Rev. B. E. Dunn
Mrs. H. Doepping in charge_of sale.
6 Cherry chairs, one round oak table with
chairs. 1 large pc. of glass to fit top of round
oak table, gas range, kitchen cabinet, electric
refrigerator, oak side board. kitchen utn. and
dishes, old rocking chairs, T.v. set, bedroom
suite and· other bedroom furniture. rugs.
chest, tab les. asst. chairs, lamp, living room
sofa, throw rugs, nicknacks, hand tool&amp;, plus
many other items too numerous to list.

'
R. E. Knotts and Son D!lve, Auctioneers

...

�%1- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Swulay, May 30, 1971

20 - The Sunday Tunes - Sentmel. Sunday, May 30, 1971

Bargains,:Bargains and More Bargains in Sunday Times-Sentinel Oassifie~s
Notice

Notice

Lost

Notice

In Memory

for construdlon
BOAT TRAIL ER CL AM P Ca ll CA LL af~er 5 p m lor Rawle tgh FREE Use d clo• mng for SUN VA LLEY Nursery School , IN LOVING memory of our APARTMENT
men
Pnvate
entrance Phone
577 Sun Valley Dnve, now
mother,, Mma Betz, Father
Products, 1924 E Ave Ph
anyone who ts tn need Church
256-6611 or 1900 Chestnut 51 ,
44607~
Charley Betz . and brother,
provtdtng full day care and
446-2089 or 446 3387
of Chri s!. Btdwell Ph 388
ask for Pht l
102 tf
127 I 842'1 or 388 8787.
Ray K. Bet z on th1 s Memonal
chtld development program
125 3
Day
"for pre school ch1ldren ln 127 I
fanfs excluded. Open 6 30 a As we walk m our Garden of TRAILER space 554 Jackson
LEG AL NOTIC E
Pike Ph 446-3805
Wanted To Buy
Memories,
m to 6 p m Monday through
The Gall1a County Board of
124 6
VE RY ola motor cycle. any Rf'\IISIOnS
There
mtdsl
the
blossoms
of
Frtday
Fees
$20
for
full
f1ve
hav e com pl et ed lhe 1r
- -.,.,.-..,.--- - -- make or cond ttton Wn te work and books ar~ now ope ned RALPtt S CarP.et - Upholster)
day wee k S5 per day if less
blue
Manon Engle. Rt l Box 19 , for •nspect•on
than f1 ve days SJ per day for We fmd m tha t beaut1ful garden SLEEPING ROOMS, weekly
Cl ean tng
Ser v1ce
F ree
rafes Park Central Hofel.
sess1 ons Ph 446
morntng
Forge t me-nots bloommg for
May 11, 18 , t9 10 2 1 2J 24 25,
Un •o n, Ohto 45322
esftmales Ph 446·029 4
127 6 26 27, 28
308 If
197-tf
3657
Madg e Hauldren ,
you
Own er -D1r ect or , John and
L o redtth
H a uo:tdren ,
operators
35 If

Iold,
But for us who love and m1ss

you,
That memory w1ll never grow

BILLY T SWAIN departed thts
l1fe Feb 6, 1968, after 21 years

old.

In the armed forces as a
sa1lor . then a soldter Born
and ra 1sed in Oh1o Twp
I look back mlo my memory
bank what most comes to
mmd tht s Memonal Day 1s

Oh, sadly m1 ssed by your
children, Marvin and Helen
Loutse, brother and SISler

127 1

Card of Thanks

For Sale

It may not have been the
sw1ftest fleet;
You stayed the htghest billows;
In the storms you had to meet;
You stood proud among the
sail ors
As your tourney wa s complete
You proved yourself a soldter
true.
Wher e the ftre and smoke were
lhtckest ,
Now the battlefield is silent
God was able to use a country
boy ltke you
By Stster Naom1, Roanoke,

technicians, and other per
sonnet who contributed to my
care 1n any way dunog my
recent hospltallzaflon at the

Montadale rams. 1 10 gal.
aquarium , tropical fish Ph.

special thank you fo !hose who
were so mce to my brother
while I was away from home

May God bless you.
Eva Northup
127-1

Instruction

IF YOU are in teres ted in
becom1ng a hatr stylist under
wh1ch
has
a program
guaranteed full government
f1nanc1ng, write Selective
Industries, Inc, Box 977,
127 I

Va

Hunltnglon , W Va

IN LOVING memory of our
Molher , Mrs Elva Pinker
man , who passed away 6

years on May 4, 1965

I

The ssalontans Chap. 4, v 1-4,
For 1f we believe that Jesus
died and rose agam, even so
them also whiCh sleep m

Jes us will God bring w1lh
Htm
All the famtly
127-1

- - - , - -- - -

IN MEMORY of my mother,
Llll1an Sealey, who passed
away May 31 , 1967.

The wor ld may chang e from
year to year ,
And fn ends frofTl day to day
Dea .. God many t1mes I long
To see her jus t once more
To hear her foot steps
To see her comma m the door
_onq lng for a smile
From a loved one gone
"Jothmq but memones. as I
tourney on,
Ni..Jne knows the depths of our
·
deep r egret.
Put I r emember , when others
fo r get
Nma S Burks

127-1
MEMORIAM of Rev and
11Ars H M Sm1th

say
That lhey are dead, fhey are
llt i,II)C:.::i

tust away'
W1th a cheery smtle, and a wave

~

SQuAA: £5~
WI-I~ ~E

of the hand,

't

They have wandered mlo an
unknown land,
And left us dreammg how very
fa1r
It needs must be, since they
linger there

lind you -

0 you, who the

Wildest yearn

' or the old-lime step and the

glad return ,
"htn k of them fanng on , as dear
n the love of There as the love
of Here ,
rhmk of them st1ll as the same
and say

rhey are nol dead - They are
tu st away!
In my Father 's house are
many mans1 ons, I go to
prepar e a place for you And
we know they are shanng that
pla ce w1t h loved ones gone
before

The Chtldren.
127 1
IN LOVING memory of our only
AFTER " Ll'-I CHEAT'EO
D~51GN 'THt:Y S"TOLE

FRO'II U5

I~ T

&amp;E "TI-lE
ANSi'JER. TO ~E
~1 1 _MI DI , MINI
IT 'AQ.It.D

~UOMMA

son

and

brother ,

Glenn

Harold Adkins, Jr , who leff
us on May 29, 1967 to be w1lh
.Jesus

God blessed us with three
children which we were more

lhan proud
L• .sa, Stephante and little

I-l OW WILL I GET

'\

TI-llS SEAL OFF" TO T.C.k E
OUT T ~E SPARKLERS
WHEN I GET TO
SWITZ ERLAND ?

,,, ~
- 7(:
I(

\ \

~

f(l

\) I

2!

; tenn to cheer our home
Bul fovr year s ago th1s very
day, our lov1ng Glenn was
called away
We thtnk of you 1n stlence
~"d make nu o•tlward show
But what it me(utt to lose you
No on e w1ll e ~ "Y know
If steps cou &lt;. oe made from
h e artache~

_By adding te; •r ps too,
We would but
_ slatrway to
heaven

And climb If every day for you.
Love

you

forever,

25713

Include
age,
schooling
completed, address and
telephone number or call

collect (304) 525-4826 between
8 30 a m and 1 45 p m Ask
for Mr Parl1er

126-6

PRIVATE
INSTRUCTION

PIANO
ORGAN
GUITAR
AND OTHER
INSTRUMENTS
tnqu1re about our
Pre-School Program

513 Second Ave.
Galhpohs, Ohio
Phones: 446-0496

446-0499

1. 1

We cann ot say , and we must not

446 2947

Wanted To Do
CUSTOM dress maktng and
altenng Ph 446-3482 or 446
3622
127-3

------

WALLPAPER hang1ng, also
mstde pamttng

Ph. 446 3631

or 446 2647

125-6

REMODELING and patnltng
Good references Ed Sm ith,
256-6935
97-11

-----Wanted
1;" acre lot

0 . Ph. 245-5121 after 5
1 WHEEL enclosed

trailer. Ph 675-2699

91 -tf

CAR1'Ek'S PLlJ'MBING
AND HEATING '
830 Fourth Avenue
Phone 446 3888 or 446-4477
155-tf
- - - - ----

,_.S;;;;er.vi;.;;.ceii s,.Oii ffeii reii id..._ ,
luggage.' p

blocks.

GALLI'POLIS BLOCK CO.,
ph 446 2783
97 If
WE specialize in portrait and

127-3

commercial photography ,
etc Tawney Sfudlo

cond, all power, auto trans.,

127-1

near

------

general

mechanic , good benefits.
Contac t
Harold
Davis,

L E PENCE Masonry Repair ,
88-tf
sand blasting, luck pointing,

- - -- - For Rent

Atr condtfioned Ph 245-5665.
man . Mommte and ()addle,
125·3
Shtrley and Harold Adkins,
sl slers, your only Pa Pa and
APARTMENT furnished, 2
Ma-l&gt;t)a .
127-1 bedrooms. second floor , air
condtltoner, adulfs $130 mo .,
uliltltes furnished 446·0208
IN MEMORY lhts Memorial
120-lf
Day of our daughter and
st ster , Ha zel M · Burton, who

passed away May 10, 1962, 2 BEOROOM trailer, 8x45, see
and of our son and brother,
Denver Higley at Red's
James N Black , who passed
Barber Shop or call 446-0349
away October 8, 1967
127-3
We do no I forge t you, nor do we
In lend,
IOX41 TRAILER in park near
We lhlnk of you offen and will
lown, utilllies paid. Ph 446Jill the end
4416 after 6
•
127·3
Gone and forgot len by some you
may be,
::-:--::----:---- -But dear to our memory you GARAGE aparlment , fur will ever be
nished, 3 rooms an~ bath 5
Parents, Mr . and Mrs Paul
m1 N of Gallipolis. Adulls
E Black Slsfers, Irene
preferred , Call 446 4170
belween 4 and 7 p m
·
Jenktns, Elsie Evans, Mary
126·3
V Burke, Norma Grooms.
127-1 - - - - - - - - --:-:-~--BOB' S MOBI~E Court trailer
IN MEMORY of Larry Michael
lots, 40x70 with paflos, located
Runnion who passed away 1
on Rf 124, Syracuse, Ohio, 12
year ago, May 30.
miles up river from Cheshire,
More and more each· day we Oh10 Water, elecfrte. State
miss htm,
approved. Call after 4 p. m.
Friends may lhlnk fhe wound 992-2951
has hea led,
_;__
107-tf

_____

apartment.
ullliltes paid, aduifs only
L1bby Holel.
118-tf

r-----------------------~---,

USED FURNITURE

free estimates
smouth 259-4253

~all

KEEP your carpels beautiful

NEW FURNITURE

1nch Admtral color console
TV, reg. price 5625, sale price

5550 Plenty of free parking.
Corbin -

Snyder Furn .1 955

Second Ave. Ph. 446-1171.
127-11

------

Homes, 446-0175.

93-11

00

~,o,O
••·
lA tto\~l'allele4
c.ar~ei~~O'"-''o'
~, 4 ,,oo.

I'll••' "~:.&amp; \'loOCII"

.-------

~It

- - - -- -

SINGER Sewing Machine Sales'
&amp; Servtce. All models In stock
Free
de livery.
Service
guaranteed . Models priced
from $69.95. French Cfjy
Fabnc Shoppe, Singer approved dealer, 58 Courf St. Ph.
446-9255.
NATIONWIDE INSURANCE'
308-tf AUTO, Fire, ltfe, 45 Stale St .,
Waldo F Brown, W R. B'own,
1970 CHEVROLET Monle Carlo 446-1960.
V-8, P S , aufo. trans., AMFM radio, vinyl top, 2400
miles, like new. Call Harold
Campint Equipment
Davts, 446-0418 after 5 30.
113-11 STARCRAFl rravel tratlers,

home cr remodeling, see us

campers, truck campers,
l1shing boats and accessories.
We serv1ce what we sell Best

deals in Tri-State area. Camp
Conley Starcrafl Sales, Rl. 62,
N of PI Pleasant, W. Va.
105-tl

T.V. RERUNS
AGAIN
TONIGHT ?
', J .

We are builders. Distributor
for Hotpoinf Appliances,
Allison Eiecfrlc.
154-ff

•ot
a
lho•• unproducth·•
Umo boun lolo a profttablo
oecoad ,....,., U you ban
a car and are wiU~ lo
udll• 8 to I houN 101 you.r

1967 DATSUN P.U
indoor and outdoor signs, 15c
1966 v, T GMC P U.
each, buy i ust whaf you need,
1967 '12 T. GMC P U.
3" size. Simmons Ptg . &amp;
1963 1/ 2 T. Chevrolet pickup
Office Equtp. 446-1396.
104-tf
1965 1'12 T. Cfievrolet Truck
1967 While Diesel Truck
1969 Chev. dump !ruck
GOOD CLEAN LUMP and
1968
T. GMC P.U
stoker coal. Carl Winters, Rio
1965 1 T GMC
Grande. Phone 245-5115
1969 GMC 4 T. log truck
'
8-11
1962 J;, T "MC plckup
1963 1 T GMC
Plumbin&amp; &amp; Heatmg
1965 v, T Ford P.U
STANDARD
1963
T. Chev. P.U.
Plumbing
&amp; Heating
1969 1 T. GMC
215
Third
Ave.,
446-3782
1
1967 12 T GMC P.U ,
187-ff
1968 Chev Suburban
1962 '12 GMC P.U.
RUSSELL'S
1968 whtte diesel truck
PLUMBING&amp; HEATING
1965 '~• T GMC P.U.
Sephc lank cleaning, elecfrlc
1967 'I• T Chevr~lel pickup
1963 F600 Ford !ruck
sewer cleaning . Ph 446·
4782 Gallipolis, 0 .
1966 J;, T. GMC pickup
1961 2 T GMC
11J.ff
1964 3 T. GMC
]966 ,,, T. Chev.
Brammer Plumbing &amp; HNtlng
1966 'n T Int. P.U
300 f ourfh ·Ave.
1966 h T. Ford P,U
Phone 4&gt;46-1637
1956 I'' T. !Chev. van
Gene Plants, Owner
298-ff
.
Ttres - 10.00x20, 12 ply nylon
fires $90 In~. Feel tax.
SOMMER'S G.M.C.
DEWITT'~ PLUMI!ING
TRUCKS, INC.
AND HEATING
m Pine St.
Route 160 af Evergreen
Ph. 446-2532
Phone4&gt;46 2735
241 -tf
211-11

lrM time. we ccm olfer you
aa opportualtr to npand
thl• •pare lime lato a
"brJthl" economle ,11111119.
Venda .Talker, lac, 11
INrthlat lor ladiYldull to
purcha11 and ••nice our
ua..ual TALIIIIQ :fENDIIIQ

New GMC
-Truck Headquarters ----PLASTIC letlers tor ooats,

'I'

'f'

:r

~and Contract

A person who sleeps through political

Just listed I Modern three bedroom brick home with
central air conditioning, one year old. Large front room

wifh new carpeting also wood burning ftreplace . Plenty of
cabinets in kitchen, dining room , family room in
basement with fireplace. One bath upstatrs and one bath
in basement, fwo car garage, lot 100x150 Has young fruit
frees. Price $26,500

s11,ooo

Modern home fwo blocks from school wifh three
bedrooms, large front room with carpet. Knoffy pine
paneling In kitchen also bullt·tn cabinefs Stove,
refrigerator and drapes go with house Price $18,500

$11,500

s,a,00° u&gt;'

Price Reduced mo
~~oe" y,.P.''~t~~ 2 A., 1Story Home
\'loOI'fl
6 Rms, &amp; B.
~
.ale4"
Possession
in 10 Days
c_aly-

Three bedroom home on 141 across from Green school.

I'•""

Th1s home has full basement w1th natural gas furnace,

city water and large lot 150 front by 250 deep.

Price Reduced
6 Room, 3 BR
2 Baths
2 Car Garage
Full Bosement

Neal Realty

$2,500
Lot 100'x300'
1 Mi.-from City

2BR&amp; B
Well &amp; Cistern
ALL BRICK
Elegant 7 Room -3 BR Rancher. Built-In appliances
highlight !he deluxe kitchen, formal DR for guests. Fines!
In electric heat &amp; air condlflonlng, outside gnll for
summer entertaining, PLUS Beautiful acreage.

BARGAIN HUNTERS
GIVE US AN OFFER
Dwelling at 109 Pine Sfreet
Needs some repair.
Office Phone 446-1694

ATTENTION
HOMEOWNERS!

Evenings

Charles M. Neal446-1546
J, Michael Neal446-1503

It's a long way from "FOR SALE" to
"~OLD". We know the shortest route!
If you want someone else to own your
home just give the Dillon Agency a
call. We need your listing now!

' NEW homt:s -

oncK tront,

IOO'x230' lot, buill in ktfchen,
carpeted. If you qualify, you
nn borrow full amoun't. Barr

Construction, 16 Pine St. Pb ,
-446-3746. Mon. thru Fri. 9 to 5.,
Sat. 8 fo 12.
19-t

TWO homes, corner location
Larger home has 7 rooms and
smaller home has 4 rooms.

Will sell oulnght or trade for
bollom farm or city property.

Summer's Here
Winters Back

SY.~~ Y.CROSSWORD, PUZZLE
(

.~~

23-Enclnt
24-SinKina voice
25--lndeflnUe
article
26-Carry
28-Piece of cut
lumber
3D-Hair or Ancora

....

32-Artiflclal
lantu•l•
35-Bfltballtt-am
37-An IPII
39-Bird's homt
4G-Obeu
41-Bun &amp;od
.U.--11 Ill
45--Fibtr pl1nt
-47-Symbot far
rhodium
48-Grtllt lake
49--FaKinatkm
52-Piuncts
54--Cte•llr
56--General
direction
57-0ccur
59-Shol¥)'
(colloq.)
61-lr~l.nd

62-Disturbance
63-Mtcaws.
64-Canlunctlon
66--Pronoun
67-Ntw Deal

SUNDAY, MAY 30, 1971

79-Myth

8J-Pref11 three
82-Saucy
83-coln
84-Certeln
85--Baspatter

87-Veaetable
89-Hindu queen
90--Decomposed
92-Mountalns of
Europe
94-Roman tyrant
95-FaHened malt
chickens
96-Concur
97-Citlzen of Crete
9!J-Preflx· thrice
too-Roman road
101-Fiawtlr
102-Rearets
103-Hale
105--Dtclues
107-Centlmeter
(lbbr)

109-Tear
110-Give food to

111-P•rmlt
113-Skldded

114-Away
115-A 11111 (abbr.)
116-Mttll

futeners
117-A state (abbr)
118-Pinc:h
12Q-Exlst
121-Th•t which
feeds fire

122-tleer

in&amp;redlent

123-Twlrl
124-Brldp term
•Pncy (lnlt)
126-Scorched
68-ChlptiUI
128-Geametnc
69-Ncte Df sc•l•
solid
7J-Aicohollc
130-Repeels
btvtrllt
132-ltt fill
72--thlll• and fever 134-Exploltl

135-AIIows
136-World
ora:anlzation
(aDbr.)
137-Leeks throush
139--Maiay d•au
141-Note of 1cate
142-MJture
1-43-Arm bane
145--VIstan
147-Siclllan volcano

20-Saund•d 1 hom 95-Municip•litln
27-Wift of Gtl'lint 97-Hinta
29-0inareement
98-Nothlna
31-Pronoun
102-Lt•••
34-8ura:tc•l ..w
104-M.. su,. of
36-laimb's ptln
welaht (pi)
name
106-Prlett's
38-trony
wstm•nt
40-P•rt of violin
107-Body of wtttr
42-Mounttins of
lOB-Farms
Europa
110-Thln co•tlna

149-Speck

44-Asllt

111-Ptaced In tine

46-Brain orific•
48-God of love
49-Rttrleves, as
a 1»111 {colloq.)
50-European

112-Feral
114-Folded
116-FrN ticket
117-51mltns
119-Reerlltlon

152-Preflx· not
l53-$howy flowers
155-Sword

157-Difflcutt
159-Brother of Odin
160-Tri•l
162-Spld
164-Movln&amp; part of
motor

166-Ached

168-Let It stand
169-Warnln&amp; device
170-Splr/ted horse
171-5coffs

DOWN
!-Bivalve
mollusk
2-Rockfls.h
3- Symbol for
sliver

4-Make IICI!I
5-Short Jacket
6--Nerve networlls

7-A state (lbbr.)
8-Mele sw•n
9-0x of Celebes
lG-Jumps
11--0/d name of
Iran
12- Symbol for
thulium
13-Gypsy
14-Soler disk
15-Stlck to
!&amp;-Rubbish
17-Distant
18--Preflx: not
19-5tretch

capilli
51-French trtlcle
53-Htlt
55-Symbol for
tellurium
56-Yuaoslav luder•
58-irrltlted by
scoldlna
60-Sibtrlan tent
62--Raae
65--Petitlan
68--Cauraseous
person
69-Kmd of fabric
7D-Poker stakes
72-Easle's nest
73-Lested
75-Worthless
Ieavins
76-Replleain kind
77-Spanlsh title
7~Entlces

80-Chellenett
82-Peels
83-sleevtless
clotkl
84-Denude
86-Fiylna
m1mmal
88-Encountered
89-Evatuated
90-couples
91-laneuap of
the Uartans

93-Sclndlnavlans

aru
121-Comeiy
122-small •mount
123-$ymbal for
.. merlum
125--Addltlon•l
127-Prlnttr's
me .. ure

128--Faldl
129--Rue
130-Fu..

131--Lence•
133-Marrow
136--Extreme
138-Woodtn shoe
1-40-Brttkl
suddenly
143-Pronoun
144-Aim• box
146--Apportlon
148-lslend off
lrel1nd
15o-Above
151-Sprt•dl for
drylna:
153-Unit af
Sl1mese
• currency
154-Welaht of India
156--Ath ens
158-Exp/re
llil-Compus point
163-0eclmeter
(abbr)
165--Road (lbbr.)
167-Compns paint

Re,~

32 ~te ~t
fel 446-19911

Home a. 1ncome
LOOKING !Of' a nlce6 rm . home
tn city, with a full dry base. It
has carpel on llv. and din . rm
3 nice bdrms., lots of cabinets

. , . _ wdlo · - ·

I ... lnltrtltlll Ht
lnt'lftUI:Iol
*"'
maW111 M0HJ1 !11 tht 'ftft4inl
....... I hM 1 uriM II htllfl
8*1

Jill' Willi IMrt litM. •
Clll lllftll MJ ltoO.
0 I un inwtll Mr ltOGp.

D I

"-- ----.......

' Y·l

· - -- -,-- ' - - -

d1n1ng room, built-in kitchen, full basement, 2 car garage

Also good 4 room house on lot,
Rent polenfial of $90 per mo
Lof has 8' x 15' sforage bldg .
and a big 2 car garage. Good

Dress Shop For Sale
Down Town

residential

area

Price

$21,000.

2- Evergreen
5 YR OLD home wllh complete
set of nearly new furndure,

liv rm . 12' x 22', 2 nice bd
rms ,

beautiful

kitchen

Pnce 14,200.
BARGAIN -7 rm house, 71ols,
full base., fuel oil fur ., storm
drs . and windows New
alumtnum stding, also fur niture for kitchen and 2

bdrms Price $12.700

Mobile Homes
'69 RICHARDSON, 12'x60',
same as new. Atr -conditioned

$5,600
'69 Imperial, 12' x 60' 3 bdrm
$4.700 .

Small Acreage
5 RM house &amp; 3 A. 5 mi from

town . $9,000.
5 RM home and 2 A. near
Vinlon. This is a big house and
nearly new. The kitchen IS not

completed This property can
be bough! as Is for $7,000

Farms
150 A Farmer's farm, $16.500
76 A. close Citv, $16,000.
61 A much rd. frontage; $8,500.
50 A Wood Mi ll Rd. $7,500.
39 A good bldgs 513,500
38 A. near Mercerville, $5,000.
ANY HOUR446-1998
EVE, John Fuller 446-3246

VE(lY. VERY GOOD
OP!&gt;ORTUNITY FOR
SOMEONE WISHING TO
EARN A GOOD INCOME
AND BE THEIR OWN
BOSS AT SAME TIME
CALL IKE WISEMAN
FQR · DETAILS
Owner Transferred
Nearly New Brick

On35
BE SURE AND SEE THIS
FULLY CARPETED 3
BEDROOM HOME WITH
FULL
BASEMENT.
LARGE BU ILT IN KIT
CHEN
WITH
MANY
CABINET S ,

NICE

DINING AREA PLUS 2
CAR GARAGE ON A
LARGE FLAT LAND
SCAPED LOT IT'S A
COOL ONE WITH CEN
TRAL AIR AND A
TERRIFIC LOCATION 2
BLOCKS FROM NEW
HOSPITAL
152 Acres Land
Several Building Or
Mobile Home Sites
LOCATED P h MILE
FROM GALLIPOLIS
RURAL WATER WILL BE
AVAILABLE

PROPERTY IS WOODED
HILLS AND VALLEYS
WITH A GOOD LAKE
SITE ,

•;..

MILE

FRON

TAGE

BAIRD REALTY CO.
~car Baird. Realtor
&gt;~3U

Second Ave,

Ph. 446-4775
B~ICKRANCH_:--Nice ttiree
bedroom brick ranch wltn full
basement, aftached garage,
Jl/2 bafhs, built-In klfchen, gas
furnace, clfy .w afer, city
schools, priced right.
TOWN COTTAGE - One story
lwo bedroom frame home on
deadend street In Gallipolis,
close to schools, churches,

VACANT LAND- 104 acres of
vacant land close to state
highway, schools, has pond,

Then are mCIIly Choice lo.

Dream By The River
This Is a very fine, well conslruct1"! 3 bedroom home on a
4 acre lot running to river's edge Carpeted living and

1n kitchen and much paneling

produdav
talldllv TOIII!Ia9 Blachtan caa ~. tbe
.,....,....., of , ... .... - eoa.al buiiHU. We Mt:UN

catloae lla thla prea, 10

-er.

and storage bldg with root cellar. The land is clean and
lays very good for large garden and enough pasture for 2
or 3 an1mals Price Includes excellent bulldtng lot. Mid
thirties

MACHIIIE8. Ao llttlo "" liDO
lo ...000 IDToolo&lt;l ' Ia proDI

all your lac:atloae aDd tully
trala 'fOil Ia be,vln •• ·
Joylat a ucond lncom.e
lmmo&lt;llalolr,

This home Is fully carpeted throughout and Is ius! like
new. Large ltving room with fireplace, formal dining,
lovely klfchen with range, oven, dishwasher, etc. built in,
1'12 baths, 1 bedroom down and 2 up. All elecfrlc heat, 2 car
garage, full dry basement on corner lot In excellent
locallon with city schools, watw and

MASSIE

and hosplfal, full bafh ,
basement, priced for quick
sale.

m

It Is DiHerent-And You'll Love H

EARL Wlnfers is back from
Europe. If you are thtnking of
buying or selling, Mr. Winters
would appreciate your call.
Denver K. Higley, 446·0349
Earl Winters, 446-3828

-

1-Mauth of
volc1no
7-Ramove top
surface
12-Pamphlet
17--Ctenchtd h1nd
21-Envoy
22-Rtclpient of

nice kitchen with range oven etc. built-ln. Full basement
with more than half of If finished In very good tasfe, 2 car
garage with automatic door located on a large flat landscaped lot clou to ._ ~Ita!. Dan'l min aeelng this.

[JAY SHE.PP~RQ
REALTORS

Farm, Village, City Property
First &amp; Olive
P!ll!pe 446.. 19
3/4 Acre
AOAMSVILLE Seven room
WEEKEND HIDEAWAY
home with wafer and balh,
15 acre wooded trac1 with two
nice porch , shade trees,
good building sites or for
corner locat1on Garden .
mobile homes . Near Rto
Grande. Pnce $3,500.
Patriot

2 A., Small Barn

74--Qrdlnary
l•nau11•
76--City In Nevada
77-Transeress
78-Steamshlp
(abbr)

bedrooms Jlh baths, entrance foyer, dining room, very

0. D. PARSONS

CITY FARMER
40 acre farm wifh 3 BR home
Aluminum siding, barn,
fobacco base, plenly water
Located 3 miles from R1o
Grande on blacktop road.

$3,900

ACROSS

A Home With A Charming
This lovely all brick 3 bedroomhome will saflsfy the most
dtscnminating It Includes a carpeted living room, 31arge

Lot on Tycoon Lake with or wtfhouf trailer
Office 446-1066
Evenings, Call Ron Canaday 446-3636
John I, Richlrds446-0280
Russell D. Wood 446-4618

1SO'x240'

33-Sman rue

FOR ALL your Insurance neeos
check with your Grange agents
al fhe Neal Ins. Agency, 64
State St. Agents for auto, fire,
homeowners, hosplfal and
general liabll fly
84-11

Bulldozer
speecheS.

Crown City
Aluminum Siding
3 BR, carpetthnlughout
1 Acre-Now Vacant

o0C11"

E. N. Wl-•n 446-451'0

There are two kinds of people who should never do things
impulsively · Presidents and young people.

$8,500

,..00""'" 11 .

Office 446-3643
Evenings Call
E-M. "Ike" Wiseman 4464796

446~1066

3 BR &amp; Bath
New Furnace
New Plumbing &amp;Wirong
Low Down Payment

1.0

I

I

Hobart Dillon, Realtor
Office 446-2674
Howard or Lucille Brannon
Evenings 446-1226
Robert Condee, 446-0858

Port -

,,nsurance

-

AGENCY

'

DEAD STOCK

SPEC IAL OF THE WEEK - 25

!
Helen
Help
Us!
THE
WISEMAN
ELL
WOOD
.
I
AGENCY
REALTOR

DILLON

caulking, water proofing. For

18 FT TRAVEL trailer self.
contatned, Ford dtsc, brush
GallipoliS Motor Co. Ph 446hog rotary culler, 12" Ford
3672
turning plows Ph 388 8443
103 If
120 tf
7
ig · lag
OF COURSE your family comes "P,.,A"'IN"'T;-;;D"'A M"'A"G"E:-;;19~71'"""Z,.,Sewmg
Machines
Still
In
f1rsl But maybe you need an
original
cartons
.
No
at
outs1de mterest. too . You. too,
tachmenfs
needed
as
our
can be an Avon Represenconfrols are built-ln . Sews
tallve and earn money for the
with
1 or 2 needles, make
" extras" you want for your
buftonholes,
sew on buftons, LOW, low pnces on Bemco ana
family Also w1n prizes, meet
Serta mattresses and box
monograms, and blind hem
people, have fun . It's easy to
springs.
Corbin &amp; Snyder
stitch Full cash price, $38.50
get slarted Write or call Mrs.
Furn.
,
955
Second Ave. Ph
or budge! plan available
Helen Yeager, Box 172,
446-1171
Phone 446 0665
123-6
Ja ckson, Ohio Ph 286 4028.
3-ff
122 6 ELECTROLUX Vacuum = =----,-,---- quality used mobile
Cleaner complete with at- GOOD
NEEDED permanent fOb in
homes, low down payment
and
tachments,
cordwlnder
Gallipolis Experience as an
bank financing Kanauga
paint spray . Used buf In like
offset prtnler and draffsman .
Mobile
Home Sales, Ph. 446
new condition . Pay $37 .45
Con lac I Don Roush, 780
9662.
cash
or
credit
terms
Savannah Dr , Manon, Ohio
94-lf
avatlable.
Phone
446-0665
43302
123-6 IF YOU are building a new
125-3

But they 11tllle know the sorrow
Lies within our hearts con- FURNISHED

RAIKE'S
REFRIGERATION
&amp; AIR CONDITIONING
RESIDENTIAL, commerctal,
tndustnal. Ph 367-7200
117-tf

3 LIVING room suites, end
58-tl
tables, desk, bed, spring &amp;
despite constant footsteps of a
mattress, roll away bed, htde
busy famtly Get Blue Lustre.
WATER we ll drtlllng, Myers
away bed, 2 dressers, chest of
Rent electric shampooer Sl
pumps Sale and service.
drawers, base ca_blnet, 2 wood
Central Supply Co
Complete water line service
d1nette sets, reclmer Rice's
127-5
and trenchtng C J Lemley,
New &amp; Used Furn , 854 Sec
Vinton, Oh1o Ph 388 8543.
446-9523.
1970 100 HONDA. 1 owner, like
114-tf
125-11
new. Ph. 446 0973
-D..,-P-..-M
-A
_R
_T
- :1:-N- &amp;...,.-:
So-::-n--:-'Na.fer
127-3
--------1970 CHRESTLINE fiberglas
Deltv-ery Service. Your
runaboul, 65 HP Evlnrude
1959 CHEVROLET 4 dr 283,
patronage
wll I ~e ap·
engme, Galor !tit trailer, fully
aulo., also 1963 Chevy II 4 dr.,
Ph.
446-0463
precialed
equtpped Ph. 446 9868.
6 cyl., 3 spd on floor . Ph. 379
7-tf
125-3
2145
127 3 - - - - - - - 1966 BUICK Electra 225, 4 dr
- - - - -hardtop, P.S, P B., rad10, air
1967 MOBILE home, 12x50,
cond , excel cond. $1495. Ph
completely furnished, auto
446-2367 affer 5 30 p m
'
washer, all new curtams,
$5.00 Service Charge
125 3
$3,200 Ph 675 1816
Wll 1removeJour dtad
127 3 - - - - - horse an cows
1965 T BIRD, 2 dr. hardtop.
Call
'Jackson 286·4531
P
S
,
P
B.,
4
new
ttres,
excel
FOR Economy!! ' Buy this 1963
cond
,
5850
Ph
.
446
231&gt;7
after
Ford Fatrlane, Reasonable
5 30 p m.
Call 446 2651
125 3 TV Antenna :,ates msra11at10n &amp;
2 127-3
Service Estimates. Ph 446·
1673 or 446-9679
?1
INCH
RCA
color
TV,
Ll VI NG room sutte, twin bed,
63-tf
Colontal
cabinet.
in
working
good spnngs and mattress,
condilion, 5225 Call 446·0720
large storage chest, set of
FAIN
after 5 p m.
double ladders Ph 446 0250
EXTERMINATING
CO.
125
3
127-3
Term lie &amp; Pest Control
Wheelersburg, Ot11o
14 GRAVE spaces 1n Ohio 67 DODGE ptekup, IJ, T Utiltne
Ph 574-6112
Ph 446 3246
Valley Memory Gardens Ph
52 If
125
3
446-2089 or 446 3387 affer 5
-pm
127-1 '63 OLDSMOBILE 88, John DITCHING for water, gas,
sewer lines Russell Plum--------Houck, 446-1697.
btng, 446-4782.
126
3
SPRING clearance on new 1
113 tf
-row cultivators D1sc - 3
'63
LINCOLN,
$300,
runs
good
potnt, 6'12 If , ltsl price $295,
Must sell Ph 446-4941
ELECTRIC SERVICE
sale pnce $185; 8ft., list price
126 3 RESIDENTIAL &amp; Industrial
$350, sale price $235, 2 semi
Paul Knox, office Ph 446-1011
loads of 4, 5, 6 If rotary -~-----1964
CADILLAC
convertible,
or
home Ph. 446-4822.
cullers, save $100 on these
70-tf
$300,
nice,
contact
Sherman
brush hogs Several model
Basham on Williams Hollow
tractors, boom, poles and
Rd off 218. Also work horse
ALBERT EHMAN
bumpers Jim's Farm Equ1p
and
work mule SlSO each.
Wafer Oellvtry. Servlc&lt;t ',
Cenfer, Rt 35, 5 miles West of
126-3
Patflof Star Rt.. Gall115olls
Gallipolis, Ohio Ph 446 97n
Ph 379-2133
,
or 446 3592
1e- - "1-i"ome
·'u-=s-=E:-:D:c---:M-:-o-:b-:1-:
. 243-tf
127·1
Headquarters All size mobile
homes
tn sfock B &amp; S Mobile TERMITE PE$T CO~TROL
BEATEN down carpel paths go
Home
Sales,
Second &amp; VIand, FREE tnspecflon. Call 446-3245, ,
when Blue Lustre arrives
Pt
Pleasant.
next to Heck's. Merri II 0' Dell , Operator for
Rent electnc shampooer Sl.
67· If Exfermlnal Termite Service,
Lower G C Murphy Sfore
19 Belmonl Dr.
127-5
USED TRAI~ERS
267-tf·
1960
Nalional
10
x
50,
2
br
1964 JEEP Wagoneer, 4 wheel
G"'"I'L7L-::E::-N::cW"'A:-:T:-:E::R:-:,::-S7Se-p"'f1:-c-:::Tan k
dnve , good condtllon Ph 446 1967 Horizon 12 x 50, 2 br.
1957 Glider 45 x 8, 3 br
Cle~ninQ &amp; Repair Ph. 446·
1556
1966
Namco,
52
x
10,
3
br.
9499.
Pnce Is right.
127-3 1960 Van Dyke, 10 x 50 2 br
174-11
1960 Van Dyke 10 x 50, 2 br
USED FURNITURE 1965 Kentuckten, 56 x 10, 3 Br
Central Air Conditioning
1962
Colonial
50
x
10,
2
br
-Heating
Ll KE new hide-a-bed with In
1960
Van
Dyke
10
x
40,
2
br
.
Free
Estimates
nersprlng mattress, Electro
All
trailers
clean
and
recon
Stewarf's
Hardwne
Hyg,ene tank type sweeper
ditioned . Ready for OC·
VInton, Ohio
w1th all altachmenls, good
cupancy. Free Oeltvery and
J44·tf
cond11ion
set up Tri-County Mobile
·-----

little MOBILE HOME In Rio Grande.

cealed
Sadly m15sed by Mom &amp;
Dad, brolher and SISters.

building

matenals, block, brick, sewer
pipes, windows, lintels, etc.
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,

$1,600 call 446 1642 ext. 264

Cheshtre, 0 Call collect 614·
483 1852 after 6 p.m
124-lf

EXPERIENCED

1

1968 CHRYSLER Newport. air

TO RENT, lease or preferably
to buy

of

church weddmgs, reuntons,

Holzer Medical Center . I wtsh
to express my grattfude to
those who sent flowers, g1fts,
cards , and vistted me durmg
my confinement. Also, a very

TYPES

concrete

10 REGISTERED Suffolk ewes,
1 to 4 years old, 3 Registered

Jhe ntght (1943) you and your I WANT to !hank Dr Charles E
classma tes sang " There's a
Holzer , the nurses, a1des,

star spangled banner wavmg
somewhere . Wav1ng o'er the
land of heroes brave and true .
There must be a place for a
country boy like me "
You served upon the ocean ,

ALL

124 6
AUTOMOTIVE AIR
----.,.------,--,--:----:
CONDITION SERVICE
REDUCE safe and fast wifh
Repa1rs and recharging
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
--'------wafer pills. Gtlllngham Drug
SMITH BUICK CO.
2 BEDROOM mobile home near
124-39
1911 Eastern Ave.
Galltpolts Ph 367-7329.
108-11 - - -- -'
3 BEDROOM home, good
localton m etly Ph 446 1144
SLEEPING ROOMS weekly
BANKS TREE SERVICE
124-6 FREE estimates, liability In
rates, free garage parking,
Ltbby Hotel
surance Pruning, tnmmlng
74-ff WHITE cemenf, ail stzes !tie in
and cavtly work. tree and
sfock. 12" &amp; 15" field tile, slump removal. Ph . 446-4953.
su1lable for h1ghway dltchmg,
73-11

You thre e left beautiful
memor1es,
And a sorrow loa great to be

In Memory

Plumbing &amp;Heatln&amp;

For Sale

For Rent

Bargains, Bargains and More Bargains in Sunday Times-Sentinel Oassifieds

pine trees, and woods.

Oscar Baird, 446-4632
Ooug Wetherholl, 446-4244

Excellent
Building Lot
$J,900 FOR 5 ACRES OF
WOODSON NtW WATER
LINE 4 MILES FROM
TOWN DANDY FOR NEW
HOME S OR 5 OR 6
MOBILE UNIT S
'

YOUTH ASKED FOR IT! This column is for young people, their problems and
pleasures, thelr troubles and fun , As with the rest of Helen Help
Us!, 1! welcomes laughs but won't dodge a ser10us question with a
brush-off.
Send your teenage quesUons to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care
of Helen Help Us! this n~paper .
TOO YOUNG TO MARRY, BUT Dear Helen :
I am 17, in love with Pere who is 23, but I don't want to marry
him. He and my parent.s insist that I do, because I'm pregnant.
I told my father I want to go away and have my baby. He said
if I dtdn't get married he'd kill me. What he means is, I could
never come back - he 'd have no daughrer. My mother s1des with
him, When I argued, he beat me,
Pere says I am acting like a child, and doesn't the two years
we have gone sready mean we'll make 11? I want time to think. I
realize I should have thought before, but why make two mistakes?
Seventeen is too young.
Please don't tell me to consult my minister, Helen, becalllle
he's my father.
NOT DESPERATE ENOUGH TO GET
MARRIED
Dear Not :
No one should be forced Into marriage agamst her will.
However, there's a possibility that, given a month or two away
from family and boy fnend,your "will" may become "I will."
If your father won't grant you a short vacation with relatlves
oc friends, so you can "think things through" he isn't my kind of
minister! - H.
Dear Helen :
Surnrnertlme, and the leavin' am't easy!
I want to be out on my own. I'm 22, have a good job, but a
possessive mother.
She says she will have a heart attack If I get an aparlrnent.
She will also leave me out of her will and will never speak to me
again.
In spite of her childishness, I love her and don't want to hurt
her, But Helen, she isn't sick, unless you can count a heart
murmur she has had since childhood. She has friends, so I'm not
abandoning her.
The doctor says, "I can't advise you, but---" and be gave me
the name of a good singles apartment complex.
What do you say? - DAROL
Dear Darol:
Follow your doctor's non-adVIce. - H.
Dear Helen:
I'm glad you told the girl whose boy friend went to jail to keep
writing.
I met my husband a year and one-half ago, five months after
he had been released from San Quentin, He'd done 10 years in Big
Q, and was 32 years old. Before that he'd been in other lnsUiutions, so most of his life has been behind bars.
It wasn't easy for him, The "oubilde" was a new world. He
cl.dn't even have a driver's license. He started from scratch, But
he also had family I frlends and good parole officer. He gQt joba,
but he had lay-offs, loo,andsomewere due lf!hiapast.
The templatlon _of ~ ,back to the old wa)'ll was great,
especially with a wHe to lltlpport, but he has proved he is a strong
man. He now has a good job, with a good future.
I've never stopped being proud of my wonderful guy, He's
"out" for good. Everyone needs a second chance to prove himself
and my husband certainly has. - LEIGH

Hardware Business
Very Good
Opportunity
-· ..
THIS STORE IS AND Hf\S
BEEN DOING AN EX
CELLENT
BUSINESS
FOR MANY YEARS
OWNER MUST SELL DUE
TO OTHER BUSINESS
INTEREST ALL YOU
PAY FOR . IS THE IN ·
VENTORY
OWNER
WILL WORK WITH YOU
UNTIL YOU LEARN THE
BUSINESS
~

~

1

By Helen Bottel

~.--

3 or 4 Bedroom Home
7 Acres
DON ' T MISS SEEING
THI S
MODERN
3
BEDROOM
HOME
!COULD
BE
41
FEATURING
HOT
WATER HEAT, FORMAL
DINING,
FIREPLACE ,
AND
BASEMENT
LARGE KITCHEN AND
SMALLBARN PERFECT
FOR CITY FARMER
WANTING TO RAISE A
F EW CATTLE AND HAVE
A HORSE FOR THE
C HILDREN
CITY
SCHOOL DISTRICT AND
RURAL
WATER
AVAILABLE
Here's One
On The River
And You Can
Afford II
IT 'S AN OLDER hJME
BUT MAN IS IT NICE
LAR GE
CARPETED
LIVING ROOM, NEW
KITCHEN, NEW BATH ,
3
BEDROOMS.
F IREPLACE . PORCH
OVERLOOKING RIVER ,
BASEMENT
AND
GARAGE
PRICED
BELOW MARKET VALUE
AT $15.900 00

1

In 196( A. J, Foy.t won the
Indianapolis 500-mile auto race,
in which drivers Eddie Sachs
and Dave McDonald were kllled
in a crash on the second lap.
In 1968 the CZech central
committee ousted former
President Antonln Novotny,
starUng a move toward
liberation for Conununist-ruled
Saturn,
CZechoslovakia. The attempt
The evening star is Juplter, later was smashed by Soviet
ThoSe born on this date are
under the sign of Gemini.
American actress Cornelia
Otis Skinner was born May 30,
The Almanac
By United Press InrernaUIIUII
Today is Sunday, May 30, the
150th day of 1971.
This is Memorial Day,
celebrated this year on May 31.
The moon is between ll.s new
phase and first quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Venllll, Mars and

Used FurnitUre .

1901.

'

On this day in h1story:
lOols, Ulshes
In 1431 Joan of Arc, Maid of Other • Miscellaneous
Orleans, was burned at the Items. We Also Buy
stake in Rouen, France, at the 1 ....... ,plete Estates.
age of 19 after being found
guilty of sorcery,
In 1937 pollee and strikers
battled at Republic Steel Corp,
1163 Second Ave.
in South Chicago. Ten pel'Sot18 I'-.:~;::.=
were ldlled and 90 wounded.

Knotts
Used Fumiture

PUBLIC AUCTION
SCHOOL
A fwo-week course If\ professional ouctioneerint will be
conducted by Knotts School of Auclloneerlng at 1163
Second Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio, starting Monday morlling,
June 7th. For lnformlfion and reservation call Cof, R. E.
Knotts, 446-2917. We are presenfly conducting cluses at
the Wheeling College, Wheeling, West Vlrginll.

.

STROUT REALTY

WOODED building lots, 110x400
fl .. lOins cify limlfs, city
"'ih, 4&gt;46'000t
water, natural gas. Call 446·
4416 after 6.
OPPORTUNITY KNOCKsir
127-5
CHANCE of a llfefime for fhe
person w1th a money-making - - . . . , . - - - - - ' - mind. One of lhe most HOUSE, 8 rooms and bafh In
proflfable Nile Clubs In Gall Ia town , Immediate possession
Call 446·4416 after 6 p.m
Co $80,000 repO&lt;'fed annual
123-6
income, excellent location,
reasonable

INEXPENSIVE ~IVING
LOVELY 5 room home In clfy,
wlfh full basemen!, gas heat,
and garage. $10,500.
FARMER'S FARM
GRADE 6 dairy set up, 120 A.
mosfly tillable, good sef of
buildings , pond, 50 A.
presently In corn with Iron.
tage on slate rd.
CITY SCHOO~S
NICELY remodeled older home
on U. S. 35, wlfh cily wafer,
new built in ktfchen, lots of
paneling and carpeflng.
LOTS OF EXTRAS!
THIS one acre flat lol contains a
ntce 2 bedroom home, with
new aluminum siding, ww
carpet, new forced air fur nace, and rural water lap.
WOULD YOU TRADE
YOUR FARM FOR CASH?
R1n~y Blackburn
Branch Mllnager

~...mal

Bowling

Frldiy Night Mixed ~eague
Standings
Teom
Points
Racine Home Bank
39
Team No. 4
32
Team No. 5
27
Evelyn's Gro
19
Mark V
15
Team No.3
12
High Individual Game- John
Tyree 194; Neacll Carsey 175.
Second High Ind. Game - VIc
Wippel 119; Keith Ann
Whlflalch 163.
High Series- Vic Wippel 503; '
Ketfh Ann Whitlatch 448.
Second High Series - John
Tyree 501: Neacll Carsey 445.
Team High Game - Racine
Home Bank 720.
Team High Series - Racine
Home Bank 2059

PUBLIC SALE
Sat. Morning, 10 o'clocl, June 5th
41 Grape St., Gallipolis, Ohio
Owner, Rev. B. E. Dunn
Mrs. H. Doepping in charge_of sale.
6 Cherry chairs, one round oak table with
chairs. 1 large pc. of glass to fit top of round
oak table, gas range, kitchen cabinet, electric
refrigerator, oak side board. kitchen utn. and
dishes, old rocking chairs, T.v. set, bedroom
suite and· other bedroom furniture. rugs.
chest, tab les. asst. chairs, lamp, living room
sofa, throw rugs, nicknacks, hand tool&amp;, plus
many other items too numerous to list.

'
R. E. Knotts and Son D!lve, Auctioneers

...

�-

.'.

I

'

22- The Sunday Times· sentinel, Sunday, May 30, 1971

..
&gt;

Bargains, Bargains and More Bargains .in Sunday Times-Sentinel Oassifieds
&lt;
WANT AD
IN.FORMATION
DEADLINES

' Mr. &amp; Mrs. .
Mobile Home
Customer

14' Wide
Schult

·- Monday Deadline 9a .m .
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until 9 a.m. for

NOW ON DISPLAY IN
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
AT

K&amp;K Mobile Homes
Eastern

Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio
See Paul or Gary Northup

1971 3

REGULATIONS
The Publi sher r ese rves the
right to edit or rej ect any ads
objectional.
The
dee m ed
publ is her w ill not be respon sible
for more th an one incorrect
inse r t ion

BEDROO

Specia l this Week. All

I

., "

'~me

and

Birch Paneled , Best In sulated .

For Wan t Ad Serv ice
5 cen t s per Word one insertion
Mini mum Charge75c
12 cents per word three
consecutive in sert ion s.

$4970

Set up Complete.

18 cents per word six con-

secut ive insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid wi th in 10 days.
DISCOUNT
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
To Buyers for Rentals
$1.50 for 5&amp;r"v.Jord minim um.
Each addi tiona l word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Addi tional 25c Charge per
Adver tisement.
Route 7, Tuppers Plains, O.
OFF ICE HOURS
667. 3891
8:30 o.m. to 5 00 p.m. Daily,
~===-;:::=====: · 8:3
0 a. m. to 12 : 00 Noon
Saturday.
SPECIAL

Meigs
Mobile Homes

:

UERDON 'S

II

12' · 14' · 24' · WIDE

MILLER

MOBILE HOMES
1220 Washington Blvd .
Belpre, Ohio

SALE PRICE

Complete deluxe furniture package, fully carpeted, house-t ype door ,
storms and screens, 30 gal. water heater , stainl ess s ink and plumbed
for .washer ..

of

Thanks

sx~cial

6.98

Plus
Parts

Blaettnar's
PHONE 992-2143

FLOWER SHOP
Open9Til5
Thurs . . Fri . -·Sat.
Or Phone 949-2223
RACINE, 0.

*

*

A STACK OF WORTHLESS RECEIPTS! !
You will have something of va lue tp show for the $$$ you
spend when you buy your home - plus, you gain an In·
come Tax benefit, you build an equity 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 971!2 N. Second St., Middleport.
PH. 992-7129

"l'A HEAR "

septic Tanks
And Leach Beds .

Mr . and Mrs. Frank lin
Russell of Middleport were
Saturday evening visitors of
Mr. and Mrs, Lincoln Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey
were Sunday afternoon visitors.
Mr. and Mrs . Eugene Haning
and Rhonda and Ronald were
Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
James Reeves, Linda, Robert
and Bryan.
,
Employment Wanted
Rhonda Haning spent
WOMAN wan ts housework to do
Saturday with Mrs. Brady
i n Pomeroy area. Phone
Knotts, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Chesler 985-3900.
5-27-61c
Hanin g and family and Mrs.
Anna Scott of King Hill.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Johnson
Auction
arid family were Sunday afAUCTION
ternoon callers of Mrs. Helen SATU RDAY , June 51h, 11 a.m.
The Personal Property of th e
Johnson .
Esta te of Wi lliam A. Carman
Mr. and Mrs. James Sprouse
wil l be sold at the Residence
and Kimberly of St. Louis, Mo ., · located on Bypass Route 7 and
State Rou te 124 in the Village
are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Guy
of Laurel Cliff. Pomeroy,
Sargent, also Mr. and Mrs.
Ohio, RD consis ting of
Robert Reed, Hemlock Grove.
electri c was her and dryer , 2
refr igerators, electric rang e,
Mrs. Charley Smith and Jo
Admiral T.V. wi lh sland,
were Sunday evening callers of
bed s, compl ete, Daveport.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson .
rockers and ot her chairs,
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Handley
stands, dressers, book
shelves, chests, wa ll clock,
and family of Lincoln Heights,
bo ttl e lamp, wardrobe, picPomeroy, were Saturday
tures, ca binet and ather arevening visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
ticles not listed. Edison
Hobs tetter, Execu tor.
Doyle Knapp and family.
Brad ford Auct ion Co., A. C.
Mr .andMrs. GuyTuckerman
Brad lord, manager. C. C.
of Springfield arrived Sunday
Brad ford, auctioneer. Terms :
cash.
Not respons ible for
afternoon and are spending a
acci
den
ts. Lu nc h served.
few days with his brother, Mr .
5-30-ltc
and Mrs . Fred Tuckerman and

Virgil B.

TEAFORD

1969 ~UAC ----~-----'4895

Backhoe Service
and Hauling

Cpe •• DeVille, 1.8,000 miles, local owner, air.

SR.

Free Estimates

985-3837
992-6883

GEORGE

POMEROY - 7 rooms, ba lh,
nice modern kitc hen . Slidin g
glass doors to porch from
dining . Gas forced ai r fur na ce . Double lot. Double
garage. ~2 1 ,000. 00

·--------.,

i

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Glen Arvln
0ur Newest

I

MOBILE HOME SALES

l"ke a person.

abllent~·....;

v.a.

15~71

68 FORD, Mustang,2

Dr.

68 CHEVROLET, Impala 4

Dr. Sedan

67
.67
66
65
· 65
62

0.:·

a

STOCK!

$1895
$1895
$1595

69 SWINGER

&amp; Carpenter

4 Dr., six cylinder, automatic.

1967 DODGE D10Q ______ 1 ___s1595
Swept li ne, 112 ton pick up, slant six.

1995

5

1966 DODGE OORONET. ______ _s1495
2 Dr. HT., V-8, T-FIIte, p , st .. air cond.

1966 DODGEspeed,
D200----------fJ.495
camper spec.
1966 DODGE OORONfT_______ 51095

$1788

69 v.w.

Sweptline, V-8,

' Red Beetle', black leatherette Interior, radio. white-wall
tires. 4 speed transmission, 1 owner, new car trade-in. 100
per cent warranty for JOdaysor 1,000 miles.

69 v.w.

Phone 446-0605 or 446-0842
GAlliPOLIS, OHIO

1966 DODGE OORONET. ______ 51295
4 Dr .. V-8, T-FIIte, p. st., sharp.
1967 DODGE OORONEJ_______51595

$1888

68 vw

this the pe1 feet

Wagon , V-8, T-FIIte, p. st., ready.
Also 37 new Dodge &amp; American Motors units in stock . .. ·
all styles, colors, equipment, prices ... stop In and see the
"Dependables" betore you buy anywhere, , . we'd llko a
chance to give you the best deat In the county .. . . 5
salesmen to give you the botstdealanywhere . , .

$1548

v.w.

61

'495

R. H. Rawlings Sons Co.

'Green Beetle'. Leatherette Interior, new paint, locally
owned car. Still plenty of transportation left.

Datstin?

60 International

MIDDLEPORT
Pearl, Emerson, Wallace, Hilton, Dick.

'488

4 Ton International Flat-bed'. 4 speed transmission. Runs
Good.

Blaettnarsl

DON WATIS VOLKSWAGEN,

Purchase

195 Uppor Rlvor Rd. !Cillo Itt. 7)

Golllpoll •• Ohio

Work

-

(II&lt;) - - -

BEUER BUYS

Spouting, Roof
Painting
NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
$mallest Heater Core.

BLAElTNARS

4

Wagon. V-8, T-FIIte, p. st., specia l.

White, automatic transmission, 'Beetle'. Red leatherette
Interior, radio &amp;tape player, rear gravel guards &amp; wheel
trim rings. New car tradt-l n with 100 per ce nt warranty
for 30 days or 1,000 miles.

FREE
RADIO
i
Any

1968 RAMBLER AMERICAN ____ .s1395

Dark green 2 dr. hardtop, 340 V-8, leatherette Interior.,
automatic transmission. &amp; radio, Local low mileage, 1
owner car. Very, very sharp.

· $1395
$1095
$1195
$1095
$495

Dr., slan.t six, stet trans.

1969 RAMBLER AMERICAN.____5l695

' Red Beetle'. Leatherette Interior, 4 speed transmission.
radio, vent shades &amp; trim rings . Sharp new car trade-I n,
with lOOper cent warranty for 30Qays or 1,000 miles.

Automatic and 4 speed transmission.

With

4

2 Dr., six cylinder, std. trans.

steering &amp;,brakes. radio &amp; white walls. A 11ocal owner,
new car trade-ln.

NORRIS DODGE
·IIpper Rt. 7

1968 DODGE OORONET_______ 51695

blue leatherette Interior. Automatic transmission, power

Dr, Sedan
PONTIAC, Firebird 2 Dr. Hardtop, AC $1795

Pl., YMOUTH, Valiant 4
Sedan
CHEVROLET, Impala 2 Dr. Hardtop
DOPGE, Polar 4 Dr. Sedan
DODG·E, Dart GT2 Dr. Hardtop
FORD, Falcon 2 Dr. Sedan

4 Or., less than 6,000 mlles, V-8, T-FIIte, p. st., warranty.

1988

5

'Sports Fury: 2 dr. hardtop, beautiful metallic blue with

$"2095

Hardtop

1971 DODGE OORONEI _______'2995

68 PLY.

nice for camper .

OPELS

IN

USED CAR SPECIALS

Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co .

LOADED WITH 1965
MODELS

DEXTER, 0 . 45726
PHONE 742-3945

tnsurea- E )I perienced
Work Guaranteed
BACK HOE AND DOZER work·.
Septic tanks installed. George
( Bi II) Pullins, Phone 992-2478.
4-25-tf c

.

HOBSTETTER

UNUSUAL AUCTION SALE

Stev~

1969. DIEV. --------------·'2395

40 MORE TO (H)SE FROM

WMP0/1390

Vinton

V-8, auto., P.S., P. B., 9,000 miles, like new.

&lt;

u

We talk to you

52895
1970 CAMARO-----------•

Spt. Van ., auto,,

DOUBLE
WI DE

&amp;mtde~

$kylark 2 dr. hdtp., .air cond., demonstrator,
never been titled.
.

'

POMEROY RURAL 3
bedroom elec lric heated
Stop In, Call or Write or Talk to
Ph . 992 -2143
Pomeroy
home, 2 baths, lovely kitchen
wi th dining area. Ther - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - ' mopan e windows. Dou bl e · SEPTICTANKSCLEANED
Dan Thompson, Toln' £avender or John Ketchka
O'OE~L
WHE EL a i1 Q~ml!lll
garage . Nice size lot. Reasonable rates. Ph. 446 -4782
loca ted at Crossroads, Rt. 124 .
S22 ,999 .13
Gallipolis . John Ru sse lL
Co mplete front end serv ice,
O.Vner &amp; Opera tor.
tune up and brake service.
5-13-tfc
MIDDLEPORT - 5 rooms, 2
Wheel s balanced elec .
bedrooms, bath, furnace and
troni ca ll y.
All
wor k
garage. Level lot. $4,000.00 AWNINGS, storm doors and guaran teed.
Reasonable
lot Ph . 992-7004
If No Answer, 992-3422
windows, carports, mar . rates . Phone 992-3213.
I
I
00
YOU
WANT
TO
quees,
aluminum si di ng
5-22-JOtc
Daily 12 to 9, Sunday I to 6
I Free Set-Up I
SELL CALL 992-3325
and railing. Carl · A. Jacob,
HELEN L TEAFORD,
sales represen tati ve. For free ROSE BERRY Furnace In We Service I
OPPOSITE GOBLE'S USED CAR lOT
ASSOCIATE
est
imat es, phone Char les
stalla tion. Free es timates on
We Finance :
992-2378
Lisle , Sy r ac use. V. V.
,1________ .J
new fur naces, oil or ga s.
5-28-6tc
Johnson an d Son, Inc.
Service wo rk. Ca ll Cec il
5-27-llc
Roseberry, Rac in e, Ohio .
Phone 614-843-2274.
O'BRIEN ELECTRIC SER 5-28-6tc
VICE . Phone 949-4551.
. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • - an"d daughters were recent
5-30-lfc
1
George Hobstetter, Jr.
Sunday dinner guests of his
Real Estate Broker
mother, Mrs. Jessie Houchins
T.V. RERUNS
c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Phone 98S-4186
Complete
Service
and called on her parents, Mr.
or write Box 101, Pomeroy, Ohio
Pho ne 949-3821
AGAIN
and Mrs, Victor Casto in afRacin e. Oh io
ternoon.
8 ROOMS, balh , full basement,
Critt Bradford
TONIGHT?
frame, metal roof, lot 60xl00,
5-1-llc
£He
Herbert Simms passed away oth~r relatives.
Real Estate For Sale
modern kitchen. 4 bedrooms.
Wh,- not tum a
at his home here recently. ·Miss
Jo Sm ith
wa s
Located close in lo main READY -MIX
CO NCRE TE
tho .. unproductly• apare
Funeral services were from the bridesmaid for the bride elect, HO USE ol Mrs . A. H. Bailey in
shopping cen ler of Pomeroy,
deli ve red rig ht to 'l_Our
,. ·
•
Ill
Bashan. lf interested, contact
145 Bu tt ernut St ., Pri ce
time bour• Into a profttablt
project. Fast and easy . Free
. , T4 McCoy FuntrJ I Home. Burial Miss Alice Clingman of
by letter at thi s address: Mrs.
aacond lncomel II "fOU hcrt'e
58500.00
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
HOMEs coRPORAT ION
was in Vinton Memoria l Lewisburg, W. Va. on Saturday,
A H Bailey , 5455 Urbane 51. ,
a · car and are wUUnq to
Goeg lein Rea dy -Mi x Co.,
Cemetery.
May 22. On Friday evenin g she
No., St. Petersburg , Florida 6 ROOMS, bath, 3 porches, barn
utilize 8 to 8 houra ot your
Middleport, Ohio.
h
33714.
20x30,
sma
ll
ch
ic
ken
ho
use,
free
lime. we can offer you
6-30-tfc
Free I Tac kett, Everg r een, a tte nded a picnic at t e
q .101c
storage bldg., cellar house, 1
an opportunity to expand
spent an evening with Mr. and Clingman home and was an
acre land, loca ted in the hear t
this spare time Jato a
TREE seryice. Call .
Mrs. "Doc" White.
overnight guest of Mr. and Mrs. 3 BE DRDDM brick ho me · ol Chester, Ohio, corner lot. EXPERT
"brlqht" economic future,
Very good condo"t 1·on, Pr1"ce collecl after 5 p.m., Richard
Cho'. C""" local I·on in Middleport.
Venda -Tallr:et , Ja.c . Ia
Mr . and Mrs. Lawrence Fred I.... Taylor, Bever Iy, _ Seen
Hayman,
Reedsville
667-3041.
by appoin tment only.
$12 700
aaarchi.nQ
for lndiYiduall to
5-19-30tp
Wooldridge were recent Sunday Freddy and Drema of Union, W.
Phone 992-3491 a tier 4 p. m.
G'eorge s. Hobstetter, Jr."
purchase and aen·lc• our
dinner guests of their son, Bill Va . Miss Beverly Taylor was
5-7-lfc
Real Estate Broker
HARR ISON'S TV AND ANunusual TALilNG VENDING
7·3lc
TENNA
SERV
ICE
.
Phone
and fa mily, Gallipolis.
also a bridesmaid in Miss H
-.-::0-:-U::S-::E:--,--:-:-:--:u:-n
-co
"""
ln-;-;
Hts..
_
________
5-_2
MACHINES, A1 Hille •• S!OO
16 40
992-2522.
to
$9.000 lnnaled Ia pratlt
Mr . a nd Mrs. .Willard Clingman 's wedding. On
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
HOUSE - 16 42 Lincoln He ig hts .
6·10-tfc
produclnq
VTI talklnv . .nd·
10-25-tf c Call Danny Thompson, 992·
Woodruff and Mrs. Jane Poling Saturday Misses Smith and
lnq machine• can ht the
SEPT IC tanks cleaned. Miller
called on Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Taylor attended a bridal lun2196.
btqlanlnq of your own ptrCAPTAIN KILLED
5-26-tfc
Sanita tion, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
h
h
Joncd bu•lneu. We ..cure
Swisher, Thurman, recently . c eon. They also atte nded I e
WASHINGTON (UPI ) _
· -- - - - - -.662-3035.
cin rour locollan• and tullr
Mr . Swisher is recovering from wedding of Mr. and Mrs. Mike Army Capt. Scott H. Newport, 23 ACRES, Bedford Towns hip,
2-12-tfc
train you to bevln en All you' d expect from Elcona and then so me .
Sizemore, classmates of Miss
,:, of land in ti mber, ba lance
recent surgery.
loy
l nq a ncond Income
· h spen1 son of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert C. in pasture, no structures, 25 SEWING MA CHINE S. Repair
With 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, bay windows, raised
Mr. and Mrs. Arnol Weaver, Tay lor. M1.ss Sm1t
lmmedlatelr.
Newport, Parma , Ohio, was minutes out of Pomeroy , wi ll serv ice, all makes . 992·2284
living room area, attractive fire place option,
There are many' choice loFt . Knox, spent a weekend here Saturday.evening with Mr. and ki lled in Vietnam as a result of sell for sno per acre. Cal l 992The Fabr ic Shop, Pomeroy.
callolu
In thle area, 10
kitchen -dining area, erpbossed aluminum
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. J. L. Wood and Randy of
2151, ask for Dick.
Authorized Singer Sales and
pltaH
write
now, ·
Pr"
to
W
V
hos
tile
ac
tion
,
the
Defen
se
_
fc
_
1
5 26
exterior, recessed porch, fully furnished. ~e
s·erv ice .·we Sharpen Scissors.
Stanley Davis,
mce n, , a .
Depa1·tment reported Wed- - - - - - - - - 3-29-tfc
this beauty today ,
Mr . and Mrs. Raymond
Mrs. Larry Barr and family nesday.
HOUSE , s 1ory an d ha If . 6
Reynolds
and
famil y, of Rutland were Wednesday
rooms, ba th, Rutla nd . Phone NEIGLER Construction . For
Californi a, visited his parents, visitors of Mrs. Howard Thoma
742·5613·
build ing or remodeling your
5
12
I am Interested in more Information
· ·lfc
Mr: and Mrs. James Reynolds and / Mr . and Mrs. Harley
home, Cal l Guy Neigler,
1baut m1kin1 mon1y In th1 wendln1
business. I hl't'lll e~r and 6.8 hour~
Jolmson.
Racine, Ohio.
recenII y.
.
NEW BRICK home on 112-acre
7.31-lfc
per w11k spire tlm1.
Mr. and Mrs. Garry Roush,
lot in Tuppers Plains . - - - - - - - - 0 I CIA inwetl om $!l00 .
Columbus, were recent Sunday
Fea ture s built -in kitchen , RAL PH'S
CARPET
D I c•n in"'st over $9000 .
Y-1
wall to wall carpet, bath and a
Uphol stery Cleaning Serv ice.
Nam••- - - - - - dinner guests of her granrl- PARLIAMENTARY CRISIS
I
ha iL fu ll ba sement. Ca ll
Fr ee es timates. Phone.
Addi"IU _ _ _ _ _ __
parents, Mr . and Mrs. Ray
LONDON (UP! ) - Unifor- ·
Chesler 985·3598·
Ga ll ipolis 446-0294.
.
ckle.
5-5-30tc
Qu1
3-12-lfc
· See Jim Staats or Jue Giles
CI~'--.;- S t•t•'---' lp_
med ushers marched through
Upper Rt. 7, Next Door to Auto Auction
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Stutler, the House of Commons Thurs24 ACRE FARM, Long Bottom,
Vienna, W, Va . and Mrs. Verla day nigh(scattering rat poison
wilh or wi lhout farm
Phone 446-0140
·
Gallipolis, Ohio
Knight, loca l, were re cen t after fri ghtened women MPs
machinery.
Houroom,
se wilh
bedrooms,
dining
living3
Sunday callers of Mrs. Jane reported spotting a small, gray
room, l'n baths , enclosed
and Mrs, Ray Quickie attended Poling,
mouse in the ladies' restroom.
back porch, wa ll to wal l
church at Porter Methodist · Mr. and Mrs. Lester Waugh,
car peti ng. Aluminum siding,
BY MARIE ALEXANDER Church a recentSundayevening Bidwell, and Mrs. Freel
BusineSS Qpportuniti es
:~~i:;,9· d~~~;~ c\~~o:'a~enrd
At the Old Liverpool Store in Hartford, W. Va. ; Satur.day,
Selling due lo ill hea lth. Phone
~~~~~~s19:~d ~~~~~(~~~; Items Listed Below: ,
Mr, and Mrs. George John- and heard the Hillcrest Baptist Tackett, Evergreen, were
614 "985 "3938 ·
.On, Gallipolis, Mr. and Mrs. Church choir from Columbus, recent callers of Mrs. Anna
.
Old bolfles, iugs, iars, dishes •. Carnival glass, kn ives,
3
5
18
,., Charles Shultz, Columb.us, Mr. Several from here attended Higgins.
$$$ EARN DOLLA~S . $$$
picture fram es, t hurn, scales, sil verware: beds, old coins,
" " otp
and Mrs, Harry Courtright, OES Inspection at Wilkesville
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Raines,
24 ACRE FARM. Long Bolfom.
watches. clocks, milk cans,.iron kettles, wagon wheels, oil
Laurelville, Mr. and Mrs. Eddie recently.
.
Nitro, W. Va . spent several days
NEW DISTRIBUTORSHIP
wi th or w ithou 1 farm
lamps, liling ca binels, swivel chairs, rocking chairs,
p 1 D .
machinery . Ho use with 3
china cabinets &amp; contents, 3 old wall phnnes, books by the
McGhee, Ravenna, 0., and Mr.
au
a vas, Pennsylvania, recent1y with Mr. and Mrs.
Are You interested in a genuine business opportunity with
bedr ooms, dining room, llving
box, 3 old desks. glass door cu pboard, 1 old sec'retary,
and · Mrs, Wilbur Gray, spent Mother's Day with his Chester Jones.
spare-time or full -lime income? Th is is a firs t time offer to
room, 1'n balhs, enclosed
la vatory, glass ball stand, toots, spool cabinet , luggage,~
. Marlette, were recent Sunday parents, Mr. and Mrs. Beecher
SAXBEWITHNIXON
distribu te amazing NEW home and automotive products.
back porch, wall lo wall
dr il l press, ty pewriter, lr unks, fans. anvil, records,
c11nner guests of Mrs. Cora ·Davis.
WASHINGTON (UP!)_ U, S.
LOW cost ~nd HI GH consumer demand ma ke hiQ h ear.
carpe tl ng. 1Alumtnudm siding,
wi ndow fan , food gr inder, light globes, lamp chim neyS:,
The
th
mngs poss1ble. $2,199.95 to $6,999 .95 required investment
awn1ng, s arm win ows and
pulleys, 2 sectional li ving room suites, 4 kitchen sets. Also
McGhee honGI'ink her birthday.
you of Vinton Baptist Sen . Wiliam Saxbe, R-Ohio,
secured by in ve nlory . Comj)Qny provides established
s lorm doors. City wa ler.
one lot of Re.staurant e~ui pment, and· many other Items
Mn. Anna Higgins spent a Church enjoyed a wiener roast Wednesday voted against an
accoun ts, nationa l advertisi ng, proven sales methods, and
Selli ng due to Ill heal lh . Phone
loo nu merous to mention.
day wllh Mr. and Mrs. Les!A!r attheBobE
. vans~helterH.ouse amendment for 8 $2.6 billion
field direction.
614-985-3938.
JAMES FIELD: OWNE.R
5
1
Ca
ll
or
write·
Term
s:
Cash
LunchontheGrounds
·
B
-30tp
U
th 35
I
Wa1111h, Bidwell.
ri:;en ~WI
Prfsen ·
mili tary pay raise twice what
'
Mr. Kelly
HAYMAN &amp; PICKEN·s
Mr: and Mrs. Philip Snyder,
r. and Mrs. Harold Racer,, the administratio~ asked, to
Garside Eledroni&lt;s., Inc.
· House for Sale
Complete Auction Service
GIDipnUs, Wl!l'e recetit visitors, Delaware, 0. were recent produce a volunteer Army' , The
1260 East Vine Street
4 ROOMS wi lh bath, full size
Col. Waid Hayman \ Appr,
Col. PaulS. Pickens
basem~ht l garage, lot SOx100.
Pomero y, Oh 1·o
Pt . PI easan t , W. Va. ·
Gl Mr. and Mri. James Snyder VISI to
. rs of her mother, Mrs. amendment was rejected 4z.aa
Salt Lake City , Utah 8412 1
A•ndhtCallie Lundy
·
·
,
Phooe : (8011262·3772
i · Ca ll Mason, W. Va . 773·5239
Phone 992-7693 .
Phone615-1450
ud .,._.,...
,
,.
.
.
U.S. seh. Robert Taft, R-Ohlo,
(PI ' f 1 1 h
b
aller 5 p.m .
Nol Responsibla for Accidents or Loss ol Pro,.,rty .
lfr. .w1 Mrs. G. v. Quickie -Mr. and Mrs.
Houchms was
_ _ _,____L--:-----;:::e:a:s:e: u:r:n:!\j: :::
!':'o::n:eJn:um
= e:r: &amp;
=ad:::d:r:es:s:)

Keith Goble Mobile Home Sales, Inc.

1970 BUICK------------·'3295

I

Radiator Service

$2195

68 DODGE, Dart4

Limestone Driveways
Septic Tanks and Leach
Beds

Roofing

70 CHE;VROLET, Nova 2 Dr. Sedan
68 DODGE, Coronet 2 Dr. Hardtop

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC
MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W. VA.

EXPERIENCED

$3495

' .

While 2 door hardtop, white leatherette seats with black
carpets &amp; trim, 350 V-Bengine, automatic transmission,
power steering &amp; brakll\, radio, Mag wheels With whitewall tires. This Is a beaOtllul, very sharp, 1 local owner
new car trade-in.

69 CHEVROLET," Impala 2 Dr. Hardtop $2395
.• 68 DODGE, Polara 4 Dr. Sedan
11_195

742-4902

CALL

68 FIREBIRD

. 70 DODGE, Polar a 4 Dr. Hardtop, AC

USED Ct&gt;.RS

Light metallic green 2 dr. hardtop, 307 engine, green vinyl
top, automatic transmission. power steering and brakes,
radio &amp; whlte-wall tires. A very beautiful car.

· Better Buys!

Kitcbens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios
Backhoe And
Endloader Work

VILLAGE

w·hat Oo You Have For ThP. :of.$$ You Pav In RP.nt?

IN LOVING MEMORY ol ou r
Real EstatP. For SaiP.
husba nd, father, gra ndf at her,
and brother, Francis Overturf, who left us Nov . 6, 1969.
An evening sta r shines on th e
gra ve
Of one we loved but could nat
save.
God took him home it was His
wil l;
But in ou r hearts we love him
Br'oker
sti II.
110 Mechanic St.
Sadly missed by wife, Virgin ia ;
Pomeroy, Ohio
Chi ldren, grandch ildren ,
sisters and brothers, and twin RT. 33 LOCATION - 2 acres
sister, Fanchon Overturf .
sui lable fo r a business or
5-30-ltc
residence. $2,500.00

News, Notes

New 65x14 Wide
NOW ON DISPLAY
'73 9 5

Re-Charge

Complete
Remodeling

Trade-Ins"
'2788

"LocaUy
70 MALIBU

Vacatm nme

JOHNSON MASONRY

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
OR DON
neighbors and relatives for
Evenings Caii992 ·2S34, Dale Dutton
cards, flowers, food and
prayers and the Middleport
Emergency Squad, Ewing s
Funeral Home, pa llbearers, EXPERT lawn mower and
the Rev. Charles Russell for
tiller repair. Free pickup and
ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
his comfortin g words and the
delive ry. Warren's Mower
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
1
prayers dur ing the death of
Shop, 24S Condor 51. Phone
40 Min utes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most l'rofitable
our
husban d,
Fa ther,
992-7357.
Time You Ever Spent.
Grandfathe r, Lloyd D Si n5-1S-Ifc
clair . Your kindness will - - - - - - Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!
always be remembered.
REGIS TERED quarter stud
The Sincla ir Family
service, Hanks Rock 209498.
.j,CHAMPION
-!'ALSO
icWINSOR
5-30-ltc
Contact Mike Jones, Rt . 3,
-jr
VAN
DYKE
DQUBLE-WIOE ,
-!'BUDDY
Pomeroy. Ohio. Phone 992 6880.
5EE TOM CROW, GUY 5H(JLER OR BOB CROW
In Memory
5-24-61c

Wolfpen

I

Inspection and

Artificial Flowers
Single Flowers
Arrangements
&amp;
Flowers
Cemetery
Wreaths
Also Arrangements made to
vour specification.

WE WISH to tha nk ou r friends,

see Our New, New

V·AN DYKE BY

'

Air Conditioning

RATES

Card

Dan Says:

Have Your Seasonal

oependable

Good

.

Day of Pub! icat ion

Us.

14' Wide
Schult

Business Services

5 P.M . Day Before Publicat ion

We Invite
YOur ComparisQn . Bring
You r Mobile Hom e Need s to

You AI tAme
See These

'

~

~~=~==-:_========::_5·::2:7·:6t:pJ~============:t:==="=
· ·==~~-

'69 CHEVROLET IMPALA
Cust.

Cpe., radio, heater, auto., power
-~t-"S'fe,erlng, air condition, gold finish', white top,
18,000 miles. Looks &amp; drives like
new.

'

•2695

WOOD MOTOR SALES
1 WISH to thank my many HOME sewing. Phone 992;/32(
5" .JO P
friends, neighbors and my
minister lor their visits, cards REDUCE safe and tasl with'
and flowers sent me while 1 Gobese tablets and E-Vap
was confined In Holzer water pills. Nelson Drugs.
HospitaL Also. many thanks
4-14-601p
to Dr. Walker, Dr. Harder and - - - - - - - - all the nursesand stafllor,the ·
wonderful care given me.
KDSCDT Kosmetlcs, wigs and
Melvin R, Smith
accessories. May aDd June
5-30-ltp special. Kleanslng Kreanl,
$2.25. Distributors, Br:own's.
Phone WZ-5113.
For
4-23-tfc
HORSES . Over 100 head
registered and grade, All _S_A_V_E___U-::P-to_ on_e___h_a-:
11-.-::Bring
sizes, all prices, Circle M ~our sick TV to Chuck's TV
Stables, 10 miles north of Shop, ·151 Butternut Ave.,
Athens, State Rt. 13 at Pomeroy
Millfield, Phone 725·2~·
4-23-tfc.
5-20-12tc --.....----t~---

Sale

--------:-:--

Wanted To · Buy
.-----~..-----,· YOUNG couple looking to b'li':
1\TQTlCE
farm , Contact Jim Nally. .
1 ''
D. Box 603, Athens.
5-25-12tp
THE
n;: LEPHON~S, brass beefs,
clocks, dishes, old furniture,
etc. Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271. .
·
4-27-tfc
Notice

SHOPPERS
BONANZA

·

WIU BE CLOSED
MONDAY-MAY

USED WAT'ER -pump for
cistern, with or without tank.
Phone 992.9997 '
5-25-6tp

31

---:A:-:N:;-cT:;-;--;1Q:;o;.O;;-;&lt;E-:;;-S-:-,- d:;;li:sO:h e s,
MEMORIAL DAY
telephones, Clocks . ·brass
beds, lamps, etc. Lee Rudisill,
Phone 992-3403.
REDUCE safe and fast with
5-27-JOtc
Gobese lablets and E-VapWater pills. Nelson Drugs.
'
. 5·26-JOtp Help Wanted
REGISTER Arabian standing·
to approved mares, Klrafl WAN'tmlddle-aged lady to stay
05041 . Rich Raffles blood · In with two elderly people.
Light housekeeping and
-unes, Fee $50. Eskey Hill.
cool&lt;,lng.
Phone 992·3442 alter
Pomeroy, Olllo.
. ,•. • ,.
5 p.m.
·
5-27-31c
5-28-5tc'
'
I WILL NOT be responsible lor
, any debts contracted by EARN AT home addreulng·
anyone other than myself. ,. envelopes. Rush stamped
"Signed: Lewis J. Smith.
sell-addressed envelope to the
5-27-3tp
Ambrose Company, 4325
=:-:-::::::-:-::---:---~
Lakeborn, Davisburg,
TW! N CITY Cab Co. under new
Michigan, &gt;18019.
manageme"t, Open 24 hours.
4-30-JOtp
Phone 992-3280. .
• ---------::--5-27-61p
REGISTERE-D. qual'ler s.tud BEAUTICIAN with manager's
servlc.. Hanks Rotk 209.fll. ~~~";' 50 · Phone ,:1-2~ or 992-1
, Contact Mike Jonn, Rt. 3,
·
(
5-J0.6tc
Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 992· - - - , . . - - - - - 6810,
I

----------------

s-2u1~

for Rent or Sale

stud. AVAILABLE; June 15, ~o
50x12 two-bedroom
homes for rent or

See Them Here!

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
Open Eves.

DATSUN

Til

MANY

8-- Til 5 P.M. Sat.

2 SillS
Of
QUALITY

For Sale

For Sale

2(r

8 io"r'"$i.oo

~R"'A'"'I'"'
T
L E=R-,-L"O""T'S.'B'-o~
b'~s&gt;Mi:ioblle

Court, Rt:.· 124, Syracuse ,
Dh1o. 992-2951.
·
4-2-tfc

Sale •

NORTH

Zl

.Q73
.432
+J543 2
ofoH
WEST

EAST

.KJ4 2
.1098 5
For
111 Court St.
.KQ6
.A1097
FUNKS SMALL Round 4384-N
Pomeroy, Ohio
+1076
+AS
corn, 3-50 bags, Stund
4165
4K82
resistant, O.M. Resistant,
SOUTH (D)
Phone 8-Q-2286, Rte, 338, 1 PAINT DAMAGE. 1971 zig-zag
sewing machines. Still In
mile below Ravenswood
.A6
original cartons. No at ·
Ferry.
• J85
tachments needed as our
5-30-3tp
+KQ9
· controls are built-ln . Sews
--------4AQ1093
with one or two needles.
SIAMESE KITTENS. Priced
East-West vulnerable
makes buttonholes, sew on
reasonable. Phone Chester
buttons,
monograms,
and
West
North East South
985-3565.
blind
hem
stitch.
Full
cash
lN,T,
5-30-3tp
price, $38.50 or budget plan
Pass P18S
Pass
available. Phone 992-5641 .
Opening lead-See article
1964 JOHN DEERE do zer,
5-25-6tc
winch and blade ; 1964
Chevrolet live tandem , Phone ·ELECTRDLUX vacuum
Chester 985-~132.
cleaner complete with at- By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
5-J0-6Ic
tachments, cord winder and
Board 30, the. last one ol
paint spray. Used but In like the charity game, is about
H&amp;N DAY -OLD, or started
new condition. Pay $37,45 as peaceful a hand as you
Leghorn pullets, Both floor or
cash or credit · term•
cage grown available .
cQ_Uld wish for , South opens
available. Phorie 992-56~1.
Poultry
Housing
&amp;
5-25-6tci one no-trump and, except for
Automation . Modern Poultry,
an occasional ~esperado who
399 W. Ma)n, Pomeroy 992- ELLEN'S Gift ShO(l, Reedsville. might try to compete with
2164,
Olllo, Memorial Day wreaths, the East hand, no one will
5-30-ltc
sprays,
baskets,
Ardisturb him.
rangements, 69c and up.
4-28·30tc
It will be up to West to
2500TILEBLDCK, 12x5x7'h tn. 1
find
an opening lead and his
1600 tile block 12x5x4, Phone
FOR
A
Meyers
aluminum
boat
choice
wUI make a big dif·
949-4560,
won't
rust,
rot,
or
leak.
~II
ference
in his match-point
5-28'3tc
992-6256 alter s p.m. Also.
, llberglass15 foot canoes,
score.
BESTLiNE PRODUCTS, · Cali
5· 16·301c
If he decides to open the
Myton Bailey, Phone 992-5327. - - - - - - - - '.
5-~· 3Q NEW
FT
5 11 b h h • fourth best of his longest
Ph~e 992-~29. · rus og . suit I the deuce of spades ),
HOME grown ' strawberries,
5·26-6tc South wiU prob$bly chance .
Phone 843-2281. '
. _...::..,_______
dummy's queen and hope for
5-26-6tc EXCELLENT; efflclenl, the best. The best will rna,
economical, Blue . Lustre
. and South will un1963 FORD $100, or will trade carpet eleanor. Rent electric
take ad,v antageJlf
~~;o~o~~~~r. Phone992- ~~~'":':_ooer, Sl. Baker Fur· .
to lead the
~-

[

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

H45 DODGE
$795
Dart, 6 cyl., 4 door, automatic trans ., radio, good tires,
clean Inside &amp; out.

\

"65 CHEVROLET
$595
Pickup 8' Fleetslde, V·8 engine, Deluxe ca b, runs extra
good.

1962 THUNDERBIRD
5495
Cpe., V-8, automatic with p, steering, good tires. light blue
finish . vinyl trim, radio. A nice ono.

Score Varies with Opening , '-meroy Motor Co.
will

The
Daily Sentinel

MORE

PONTIAC
GMC TRUCKS
116 Years of Continuous Business
PdONE 992-2 143
POMEROY, OHI

For Sale
Aluminum ·
Sheets

5 ROOMS and bath, gas fur·
nace. Phone 992-5176.
5-27-3tc

1

l UICK

Oh •
•-------•a•n•a•u•p,--•10-------..1 PLANTS FOR SALE , Home COAL, limestone , Excelsior
grown improved Mexican Salt Works, E. Main St .•
tomato!.lants, large smooth, Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
non-aci . Also, Heinz 1350,
~-9- tfc
For Sale
For Rent
Yellow Golden Jubilee and
TRAILE'R SPACE on old Rt. 33,
Large Supersonic. They are
ROOM house ; bath, full
112-mlle north of new Meigs
sturdy, well rooted plants. SIX
basement,
133 Butternut Ave,
High School. Phone 992-2941.
Also. hot peppers, mangos
jus!
walking
distance from
3-5-tfc
and cabbage plants, On Rt. downtown Pomeroy.
36" X23" X.009 .
Contact
1241n Syracuse, Ohio, 500 feat
Ed
Hedrick,
2137
Wadsworth
FURNlSHED· and unfurnished
above the park . Thomas Drive, Columbus, Ohio, phone
apartments. Close to school.
Hayman,
Phone 992-543.4.
5-2-JOtc 237-'!J34. Columbus. 5-9-lfc
10-18-llc_
2 BEDROOM mobile home, air
USED OFFSET PLATES
condlilonlng ." Racine area .
WIN AT BRIDGE
HAVE
Phone 992-6329.
S-25-6lc
MANY USES

·-::--:c----=-=------

5

BLAETTNARS

•

992-5342
GMAC Finoncing Avolloblo
POMEROY
"You' ll Like Our Quality Way ot Doing Business"

PRODUCT OF NISSAN

SMITHK AUTO SALES

AS, LOW AS '39

Come In And See Them

Is this the perfect Datsun for you? Try it.
Drive a Datsun,, .!hen deelde.

Notice

Card of" Thanks

THE NEW
LOOK
OF
IEAOERSHIP

Your Datsun dealer is the Small Car Expert,
Let him show you what makes the 510 4·-Door Sedan
such a perfectly great economical family car.
• Tinted glass
• Reclining front bucket seats
• Whi!A!walls
• Overhead cam engine
• Vinyl upholstery
• Safety front disc brakes
• Independent rear suspension

GAlliPOliS, OHIO

EASTERN AVE.

Uveslock

Ask the expert.

"

Phone
~=s~~~~-1 ~~-~~~~~~~~
--------------~~.J~~·~------'~------._Jb~K-----------------_]~~~~---·----------~t~~~

~~n ·

South
collect five quick ,
club tricks.
OP.EN EVI!S. 1:00 P.M.
-i'QMI!ROY, OHIO
West will probably discard l
the four of spades at his first L-~--~------------­
opportunity, so that when ·
East gets in with the ace of
diamonds, he will lead a low For Sale
Insurance
heart. The defense will collect four heart tricks to hold BEAUTIFUL selection of AUTOMOBILE Insurance bien'
South to two no-tru~p , If flowers, baskets , wreaths, cancelled?
Lost
.your
East plays a second spade and sprays for Memoria l Day
operator's license? Call.• 992·
South w.lll make four or five . Cliff Shoe Repair, Middleport: , 2966~
If West decides to open
4-21-tlc
6·1$-tfe· ·
the king of hearts, on the
theory that king from kiilg.

queen
is awill
desirable
the
defen~e
~ather lead,
m four
quick· heart tncks, After that
start a spade lead by East
wil} hold South to s e v e n
tricks and a poor score.
Wnat's the best lead ln
general? The heart was today, but It might not be &lt;tO·
morrow.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

l}J}I}~ft
fi.'-~&amp;~o;l~okl:;:~•:•~:'='::~:'~•:•:•l~~
\!:11
D ,~
.

~

UnscrambletheoelourJumbleo,
one letter to •":"h ~~quare, to
form four ordanary worda.

l FRACT
I THA.LC ·

·
The bidding has been: ·
West
North
Eut South
1•
Dble
Redble Pass
2•
Dble
Pass 2 •
3
Pass
P...
Pass
•
Pass
Dble
Pa..
?
You, South hold:
•KH •6543 +3 2 41081.5
Wh• I d0 you d0 now '·
A p
y
h
,·
- ....
ou
ov e our
trumps and • klnr., Whit more
do you won~ exeept possibly a
new partner .

rf-..

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HOW

MIDDJ.E!·OF·
"TH5 ltOAC' I'OliTIClAN
MAKE£&gt; 5NeM I E~.

I I llllftlt4
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Now · - - lhe elrcW,IIaWI
tof-lheWl .. IW.
•·•
lhe III••UII"" 11

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I r l l I )&amp;( l I I I J
a

-

-

-

TODAY'S QVF.'ITION

Again your partnoa· doubk..
one hea 1'1. This lime you hold :
• 1873 •~us +3Z 4 KMI
What do

donow~

ILANK JUICI JANOLI PIAICO
,...,....,... ,·... IJA.,........
.
• .,., .... ....,.,1Nr,.ll4li ...Hol!'lfJI.o
1

I

~ - A"PUUW'

-·

-

-

-

�-

.'.

I

'

22- The Sunday Times· sentinel, Sunday, May 30, 1971

..
&gt;

Bargains, Bargains and More Bargains .in Sunday Times-Sentinel Oassifieds
&lt;
WANT AD
IN.FORMATION
DEADLINES

' Mr. &amp; Mrs. .
Mobile Home
Customer

14' Wide
Schult

·- Monday Deadline 9a .m .
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until 9 a.m. for

NOW ON DISPLAY IN
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
AT

K&amp;K Mobile Homes
Eastern

Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio
See Paul or Gary Northup

1971 3

REGULATIONS
The Publi sher r ese rves the
right to edit or rej ect any ads
objectional.
The
dee m ed
publ is her w ill not be respon sible
for more th an one incorrect
inse r t ion

BEDROO

Specia l this Week. All

I

., "

'~me

and

Birch Paneled , Best In sulated .

For Wan t Ad Serv ice
5 cen t s per Word one insertion
Mini mum Charge75c
12 cents per word three
consecutive in sert ion s.

$4970

Set up Complete.

18 cents per word six con-

secut ive insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid wi th in 10 days.
DISCOUNT
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
To Buyers for Rentals
$1.50 for 5&amp;r"v.Jord minim um.
Each addi tiona l word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Addi tional 25c Charge per
Adver tisement.
Route 7, Tuppers Plains, O.
OFF ICE HOURS
667. 3891
8:30 o.m. to 5 00 p.m. Daily,
~===-;:::=====: · 8:3
0 a. m. to 12 : 00 Noon
Saturday.
SPECIAL

Meigs
Mobile Homes

:

UERDON 'S

II

12' · 14' · 24' · WIDE

MILLER

MOBILE HOMES
1220 Washington Blvd .
Belpre, Ohio

SALE PRICE

Complete deluxe furniture package, fully carpeted, house-t ype door ,
storms and screens, 30 gal. water heater , stainl ess s ink and plumbed
for .washer ..

of

Thanks

sx~cial

6.98

Plus
Parts

Blaettnar's
PHONE 992-2143

FLOWER SHOP
Open9Til5
Thurs . . Fri . -·Sat.
Or Phone 949-2223
RACINE, 0.

*

*

A STACK OF WORTHLESS RECEIPTS! !
You will have something of va lue tp show for the $$$ you
spend when you buy your home - plus, you gain an In·
come Tax benefit, you build an equity 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 971!2 N. Second St., Middleport.
PH. 992-7129

"l'A HEAR "

septic Tanks
And Leach Beds .

Mr . and Mrs. Frank lin
Russell of Middleport were
Saturday evening visitors of
Mr. and Mrs, Lincoln Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey
were Sunday afternoon visitors.
Mr. and Mrs . Eugene Haning
and Rhonda and Ronald were
Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
James Reeves, Linda, Robert
and Bryan.
,
Employment Wanted
Rhonda Haning spent
WOMAN wan ts housework to do
Saturday with Mrs. Brady
i n Pomeroy area. Phone
Knotts, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Chesler 985-3900.
5-27-61c
Hanin g and family and Mrs.
Anna Scott of King Hill.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Johnson
Auction
arid family were Sunday afAUCTION
ternoon callers of Mrs. Helen SATU RDAY , June 51h, 11 a.m.
The Personal Property of th e
Johnson .
Esta te of Wi lliam A. Carman
Mr. and Mrs. James Sprouse
wil l be sold at the Residence
and Kimberly of St. Louis, Mo ., · located on Bypass Route 7 and
State Rou te 124 in the Village
are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Guy
of Laurel Cliff. Pomeroy,
Sargent, also Mr. and Mrs.
Ohio, RD consis ting of
Robert Reed, Hemlock Grove.
electri c was her and dryer , 2
refr igerators, electric rang e,
Mrs. Charley Smith and Jo
Admiral T.V. wi lh sland,
were Sunday evening callers of
bed s, compl ete, Daveport.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson .
rockers and ot her chairs,
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Handley
stands, dressers, book
shelves, chests, wa ll clock,
and family of Lincoln Heights,
bo ttl e lamp, wardrobe, picPomeroy, were Saturday
tures, ca binet and ather arevening visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
ticles not listed. Edison
Hobs tetter, Execu tor.
Doyle Knapp and family.
Brad ford Auct ion Co., A. C.
Mr .andMrs. GuyTuckerman
Brad lord, manager. C. C.
of Springfield arrived Sunday
Brad ford, auctioneer. Terms :
cash.
Not respons ible for
afternoon and are spending a
acci
den
ts. Lu nc h served.
few days with his brother, Mr .
5-30-ltc
and Mrs . Fred Tuckerman and

Virgil B.

TEAFORD

1969 ~UAC ----~-----'4895

Backhoe Service
and Hauling

Cpe •• DeVille, 1.8,000 miles, local owner, air.

SR.

Free Estimates

985-3837
992-6883

GEORGE

POMEROY - 7 rooms, ba lh,
nice modern kitc hen . Slidin g
glass doors to porch from
dining . Gas forced ai r fur na ce . Double lot. Double
garage. ~2 1 ,000. 00

·--------.,

i

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Glen Arvln
0ur Newest

I

MOBILE HOME SALES

l"ke a person.

abllent~·....;

v.a.

15~71

68 FORD, Mustang,2

Dr.

68 CHEVROLET, Impala 4

Dr. Sedan

67
.67
66
65
· 65
62

0.:·

a

STOCK!

$1895
$1895
$1595

69 SWINGER

&amp; Carpenter

4 Dr., six cylinder, automatic.

1967 DODGE D10Q ______ 1 ___s1595
Swept li ne, 112 ton pick up, slant six.

1995

5

1966 DODGE OORONET. ______ _s1495
2 Dr. HT., V-8, T-FIIte, p , st .. air cond.

1966 DODGEspeed,
D200----------fJ.495
camper spec.
1966 DODGE OORONfT_______ 51095

$1788

69 v.w.

Sweptline, V-8,

' Red Beetle', black leatherette Interior, radio. white-wall
tires. 4 speed transmission, 1 owner, new car trade-in. 100
per cent warranty for JOdaysor 1,000 miles.

69 v.w.

Phone 446-0605 or 446-0842
GAlliPOLIS, OHIO

1966 DODGE OORONET. ______ 51295
4 Dr .. V-8, T-FIIte, p. st., sharp.
1967 DODGE OORONEJ_______51595

$1888

68 vw

this the pe1 feet

Wagon , V-8, T-FIIte, p. st., ready.
Also 37 new Dodge &amp; American Motors units in stock . .. ·
all styles, colors, equipment, prices ... stop In and see the
"Dependables" betore you buy anywhere, , . we'd llko a
chance to give you the best deat In the county .. . . 5
salesmen to give you the botstdealanywhere . , .

$1548

v.w.

61

'495

R. H. Rawlings Sons Co.

'Green Beetle'. Leatherette Interior, new paint, locally
owned car. Still plenty of transportation left.

Datstin?

60 International

MIDDLEPORT
Pearl, Emerson, Wallace, Hilton, Dick.

'488

4 Ton International Flat-bed'. 4 speed transmission. Runs
Good.

Blaettnarsl

DON WATIS VOLKSWAGEN,

Purchase

195 Uppor Rlvor Rd. !Cillo Itt. 7)

Golllpoll •• Ohio

Work

-

(II&lt;) - - -

BEUER BUYS

Spouting, Roof
Painting
NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
$mallest Heater Core.

BLAElTNARS

4

Wagon. V-8, T-FIIte, p. st., specia l.

White, automatic transmission, 'Beetle'. Red leatherette
Interior, radio &amp;tape player, rear gravel guards &amp; wheel
trim rings. New car tradt-l n with 100 per ce nt warranty
for 30 days or 1,000 miles.

FREE
RADIO
i
Any

1968 RAMBLER AMERICAN ____ .s1395

Dark green 2 dr. hardtop, 340 V-8, leatherette Interior.,
automatic transmission. &amp; radio, Local low mileage, 1
owner car. Very, very sharp.

· $1395
$1095
$1195
$1095
$495

Dr., slan.t six, stet trans.

1969 RAMBLER AMERICAN.____5l695

' Red Beetle'. Leatherette Interior, 4 speed transmission.
radio, vent shades &amp; trim rings . Sharp new car trade-I n,
with lOOper cent warranty for 30Qays or 1,000 miles.

Automatic and 4 speed transmission.

With

4

2 Dr., six cylinder, std. trans.

steering &amp;,brakes. radio &amp; white walls. A 11ocal owner,
new car trade-ln.

NORRIS DODGE
·IIpper Rt. 7

1968 DODGE OORONET_______ 51695

blue leatherette Interior. Automatic transmission, power

Dr, Sedan
PONTIAC, Firebird 2 Dr. Hardtop, AC $1795

Pl., YMOUTH, Valiant 4
Sedan
CHEVROLET, Impala 2 Dr. Hardtop
DOPGE, Polar 4 Dr. Sedan
DODG·E, Dart GT2 Dr. Hardtop
FORD, Falcon 2 Dr. Sedan

4 Or., less than 6,000 mlles, V-8, T-FIIte, p. st., warranty.

1988

5

'Sports Fury: 2 dr. hardtop, beautiful metallic blue with

$"2095

Hardtop

1971 DODGE OORONEI _______'2995

68 PLY.

nice for camper .

OPELS

IN

USED CAR SPECIALS

Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co .

LOADED WITH 1965
MODELS

DEXTER, 0 . 45726
PHONE 742-3945

tnsurea- E )I perienced
Work Guaranteed
BACK HOE AND DOZER work·.
Septic tanks installed. George
( Bi II) Pullins, Phone 992-2478.
4-25-tf c

.

HOBSTETTER

UNUSUAL AUCTION SALE

Stev~

1969. DIEV. --------------·'2395

40 MORE TO (H)SE FROM

WMP0/1390

Vinton

V-8, auto., P.S., P. B., 9,000 miles, like new.

&lt;

u

We talk to you

52895
1970 CAMARO-----------•

Spt. Van ., auto,,

DOUBLE
WI DE

&amp;mtde~

$kylark 2 dr. hdtp., .air cond., demonstrator,
never been titled.
.

'

POMEROY RURAL 3
bedroom elec lric heated
Stop In, Call or Write or Talk to
Ph . 992 -2143
Pomeroy
home, 2 baths, lovely kitchen
wi th dining area. Ther - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - ' mopan e windows. Dou bl e · SEPTICTANKSCLEANED
Dan Thompson, Toln' £avender or John Ketchka
O'OE~L
WHE EL a i1 Q~ml!lll
garage . Nice size lot. Reasonable rates. Ph. 446 -4782
loca ted at Crossroads, Rt. 124 .
S22 ,999 .13
Gallipolis . John Ru sse lL
Co mplete front end serv ice,
O.Vner &amp; Opera tor.
tune up and brake service.
5-13-tfc
MIDDLEPORT - 5 rooms, 2
Wheel s balanced elec .
bedrooms, bath, furnace and
troni ca ll y.
All
wor k
garage. Level lot. $4,000.00 AWNINGS, storm doors and guaran teed.
Reasonable
lot Ph . 992-7004
If No Answer, 992-3422
windows, carports, mar . rates . Phone 992-3213.
I
I
00
YOU
WANT
TO
quees,
aluminum si di ng
5-22-JOtc
Daily 12 to 9, Sunday I to 6
I Free Set-Up I
SELL CALL 992-3325
and railing. Carl · A. Jacob,
HELEN L TEAFORD,
sales represen tati ve. For free ROSE BERRY Furnace In We Service I
OPPOSITE GOBLE'S USED CAR lOT
ASSOCIATE
est
imat es, phone Char les
stalla tion. Free es timates on
We Finance :
992-2378
Lisle , Sy r ac use. V. V.
,1________ .J
new fur naces, oil or ga s.
5-28-6tc
Johnson an d Son, Inc.
Service wo rk. Ca ll Cec il
5-27-llc
Roseberry, Rac in e, Ohio .
Phone 614-843-2274.
O'BRIEN ELECTRIC SER 5-28-6tc
VICE . Phone 949-4551.
. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • - an"d daughters were recent
5-30-lfc
1
George Hobstetter, Jr.
Sunday dinner guests of his
Real Estate Broker
mother, Mrs. Jessie Houchins
T.V. RERUNS
c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Phone 98S-4186
Complete
Service
and called on her parents, Mr.
or write Box 101, Pomeroy, Ohio
Pho ne 949-3821
AGAIN
and Mrs, Victor Casto in afRacin e. Oh io
ternoon.
8 ROOMS, balh , full basement,
Critt Bradford
TONIGHT?
frame, metal roof, lot 60xl00,
5-1-llc
£He
Herbert Simms passed away oth~r relatives.
Real Estate For Sale
modern kitchen. 4 bedrooms.
Wh,- not tum a
at his home here recently. ·Miss
Jo Sm ith
wa s
Located close in lo main READY -MIX
CO NCRE TE
tho .. unproductly• apare
Funeral services were from the bridesmaid for the bride elect, HO USE ol Mrs . A. H. Bailey in
shopping cen ler of Pomeroy,
deli ve red rig ht to 'l_Our
,. ·
•
Ill
Bashan. lf interested, contact
145 Bu tt ernut St ., Pri ce
time bour• Into a profttablt
project. Fast and easy . Free
. , T4 McCoy FuntrJ I Home. Burial Miss Alice Clingman of
by letter at thi s address: Mrs.
aacond lncomel II "fOU hcrt'e
58500.00
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
HOMEs coRPORAT ION
was in Vinton Memoria l Lewisburg, W. Va. on Saturday,
A H Bailey , 5455 Urbane 51. ,
a · car and are wUUnq to
Goeg lein Rea dy -Mi x Co.,
Cemetery.
May 22. On Friday evenin g she
No., St. Petersburg , Florida 6 ROOMS, bath, 3 porches, barn
utilize 8 to 8 houra ot your
Middleport, Ohio.
h
33714.
20x30,
sma
ll
ch
ic
ken
ho
use,
free
lime. we can offer you
6-30-tfc
Free I Tac kett, Everg r een, a tte nded a picnic at t e
q .101c
storage bldg., cellar house, 1
an opportunity to expand
spent an evening with Mr. and Clingman home and was an
acre land, loca ted in the hear t
this spare time Jato a
TREE seryice. Call .
Mrs. "Doc" White.
overnight guest of Mr. and Mrs. 3 BE DRDDM brick ho me · ol Chester, Ohio, corner lot. EXPERT
"brlqht" economic future,
Very good condo"t 1·on, Pr1"ce collecl after 5 p.m., Richard
Cho'. C""" local I·on in Middleport.
Venda -Tallr:et , Ja.c . Ia
Mr . and Mrs. Lawrence Fred I.... Taylor, Bever Iy, _ Seen
Hayman,
Reedsville
667-3041.
by appoin tment only.
$12 700
aaarchi.nQ
for lndiYiduall to
5-19-30tp
Wooldridge were recent Sunday Freddy and Drema of Union, W.
Phone 992-3491 a tier 4 p. m.
G'eorge s. Hobstetter, Jr."
purchase and aen·lc• our
dinner guests of their son, Bill Va . Miss Beverly Taylor was
5-7-lfc
Real Estate Broker
HARR ISON'S TV AND ANunusual TALilNG VENDING
7·3lc
TENNA
SERV
ICE
.
Phone
and fa mily, Gallipolis.
also a bridesmaid in Miss H
-.-::0-:-U::S-::E:--,--:-:-:--:u:-n
-co
"""
ln-;-;
Hts..
_
________
5-_2
MACHINES, A1 Hille •• S!OO
16 40
992-2522.
to
$9.000 lnnaled Ia pratlt
Mr . a nd Mrs. .Willard Clingman 's wedding. On
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
HOUSE - 16 42 Lincoln He ig hts .
6·10-tfc
produclnq
VTI talklnv . .nd·
10-25-tf c Call Danny Thompson, 992·
Woodruff and Mrs. Jane Poling Saturday Misses Smith and
lnq machine• can ht the
SEPT IC tanks cleaned. Miller
called on Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Taylor attended a bridal lun2196.
btqlanlnq of your own ptrCAPTAIN KILLED
5-26-tfc
Sanita tion, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
h
h
Joncd bu•lneu. We ..cure
Swisher, Thurman, recently . c eon. They also atte nded I e
WASHINGTON (UPI ) _
· -- - - - - -.662-3035.
cin rour locollan• and tullr
Mr . Swisher is recovering from wedding of Mr. and Mrs. Mike Army Capt. Scott H. Newport, 23 ACRES, Bedford Towns hip,
2-12-tfc
train you to bevln en All you' d expect from Elcona and then so me .
Sizemore, classmates of Miss
,:, of land in ti mber, ba lance
recent surgery.
loy
l nq a ncond Income
· h spen1 son of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert C. in pasture, no structures, 25 SEWING MA CHINE S. Repair
With 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, bay windows, raised
Mr. and Mrs. Arnol Weaver, Tay lor. M1.ss Sm1t
lmmedlatelr.
Newport, Parma , Ohio, was minutes out of Pomeroy , wi ll serv ice, all makes . 992·2284
living room area, attractive fire place option,
There are many' choice loFt . Knox, spent a weekend here Saturday.evening with Mr. and ki lled in Vietnam as a result of sell for sno per acre. Cal l 992The Fabr ic Shop, Pomeroy.
callolu
In thle area, 10
kitchen -dining area, erpbossed aluminum
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. J. L. Wood and Randy of
2151, ask for Dick.
Authorized Singer Sales and
pltaH
write
now, ·
Pr"
to
W
V
hos
tile
ac
tion
,
the
Defen
se
_
fc
_
1
5 26
exterior, recessed porch, fully furnished. ~e
s·erv ice .·we Sharpen Scissors.
Stanley Davis,
mce n, , a .
Depa1·tment reported Wed- - - - - - - - - 3-29-tfc
this beauty today ,
Mr . and Mrs. Raymond
Mrs. Larry Barr and family nesday.
HOUSE , s 1ory an d ha If . 6
Reynolds
and
famil y, of Rutland were Wednesday
rooms, ba th, Rutla nd . Phone NEIGLER Construction . For
Californi a, visited his parents, visitors of Mrs. Howard Thoma
742·5613·
build ing or remodeling your
5
12
I am Interested in more Information
· ·lfc
Mr: and Mrs. James Reynolds and / Mr . and Mrs. Harley
home, Cal l Guy Neigler,
1baut m1kin1 mon1y In th1 wendln1
business. I hl't'lll e~r and 6.8 hour~
Jolmson.
Racine, Ohio.
recenII y.
.
NEW BRICK home on 112-acre
7.31-lfc
per w11k spire tlm1.
Mr. and Mrs. Garry Roush,
lot in Tuppers Plains . - - - - - - - - 0 I CIA inwetl om $!l00 .
Columbus, were recent Sunday
Fea ture s built -in kitchen , RAL PH'S
CARPET
D I c•n in"'st over $9000 .
Y-1
wall to wall carpet, bath and a
Uphol stery Cleaning Serv ice.
Nam••- - - - - - dinner guests of her granrl- PARLIAMENTARY CRISIS
I
ha iL fu ll ba sement. Ca ll
Fr ee es timates. Phone.
Addi"IU _ _ _ _ _ __
parents, Mr . and Mrs. Ray
LONDON (UP! ) - Unifor- ·
Chesler 985·3598·
Ga ll ipolis 446-0294.
.
ckle.
5-5-30tc
Qu1
3-12-lfc
· See Jim Staats or Jue Giles
CI~'--.;- S t•t•'---' lp_
med ushers marched through
Upper Rt. 7, Next Door to Auto Auction
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Stutler, the House of Commons Thurs24 ACRE FARM, Long Bottom,
Vienna, W, Va . and Mrs. Verla day nigh(scattering rat poison
wilh or wi lhout farm
Phone 446-0140
·
Gallipolis, Ohio
Knight, loca l, were re cen t after fri ghtened women MPs
machinery.
Houroom,
se wilh
bedrooms,
dining
living3
Sunday callers of Mrs. Jane reported spotting a small, gray
room, l'n baths , enclosed
and Mrs, Ray Quickie attended Poling,
mouse in the ladies' restroom.
back porch, wa ll to wal l
church at Porter Methodist · Mr. and Mrs. Lester Waugh,
car peti ng. Aluminum siding,
BY MARIE ALEXANDER Church a recentSundayevening Bidwell, and Mrs. Freel
BusineSS Qpportuniti es
:~~i:;,9· d~~~;~ c\~~o:'a~enrd
At the Old Liverpool Store in Hartford, W. Va. ; Satur.day,
Selling due lo ill hea lth. Phone
~~~~~~s19:~d ~~~~~(~~~; Items Listed Below: ,
Mr, and Mrs. George John- and heard the Hillcrest Baptist Tackett, Evergreen, were
614 "985 "3938 ·
.On, Gallipolis, Mr. and Mrs. Church choir from Columbus, recent callers of Mrs. Anna
.
Old bolfles, iugs, iars, dishes •. Carnival glass, kn ives,
3
5
18
,., Charles Shultz, Columb.us, Mr. Several from here attended Higgins.
$$$ EARN DOLLA~S . $$$
picture fram es, t hurn, scales, sil verware: beds, old coins,
" " otp
and Mrs, Harry Courtright, OES Inspection at Wilkesville
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Raines,
24 ACRE FARM. Long Bolfom.
watches. clocks, milk cans,.iron kettles, wagon wheels, oil
Laurelville, Mr. and Mrs. Eddie recently.
.
Nitro, W. Va . spent several days
NEW DISTRIBUTORSHIP
wi th or w ithou 1 farm
lamps, liling ca binels, swivel chairs, rocking chairs,
p 1 D .
machinery . Ho use with 3
china cabinets &amp; contents, 3 old wall phnnes, books by the
McGhee, Ravenna, 0., and Mr.
au
a vas, Pennsylvania, recent1y with Mr. and Mrs.
Are You interested in a genuine business opportunity with
bedr ooms, dining room, llving
box, 3 old desks. glass door cu pboard, 1 old sec'retary,
and · Mrs, Wilbur Gray, spent Mother's Day with his Chester Jones.
spare-time or full -lime income? Th is is a firs t time offer to
room, 1'n balhs, enclosed
la vatory, glass ball stand, toots, spool cabinet , luggage,~
. Marlette, were recent Sunday parents, Mr. and Mrs. Beecher
SAXBEWITHNIXON
distribu te amazing NEW home and automotive products.
back porch, wall lo wall
dr il l press, ty pewriter, lr unks, fans. anvil, records,
c11nner guests of Mrs. Cora ·Davis.
WASHINGTON (UP!)_ U, S.
LOW cost ~nd HI GH consumer demand ma ke hiQ h ear.
carpe tl ng. 1Alumtnudm siding,
wi ndow fan , food gr inder, light globes, lamp chim neyS:,
The
th
mngs poss1ble. $2,199.95 to $6,999 .95 required investment
awn1ng, s arm win ows and
pulleys, 2 sectional li ving room suites, 4 kitchen sets. Also
McGhee honGI'ink her birthday.
you of Vinton Baptist Sen . Wiliam Saxbe, R-Ohio,
secured by in ve nlory . Comj)Qny provides established
s lorm doors. City wa ler.
one lot of Re.staurant e~ui pment, and· many other Items
Mn. Anna Higgins spent a Church enjoyed a wiener roast Wednesday voted against an
accoun ts, nationa l advertisi ng, proven sales methods, and
Selli ng due to Ill heal lh . Phone
loo nu merous to mention.
day wllh Mr. and Mrs. Les!A!r attheBobE
. vans~helterH.ouse amendment for 8 $2.6 billion
field direction.
614-985-3938.
JAMES FIELD: OWNE.R
5
1
Ca
ll
or
write·
Term
s:
Cash
LunchontheGrounds
·
B
-30tp
U
th 35
I
Wa1111h, Bidwell.
ri:;en ~WI
Prfsen ·
mili tary pay raise twice what
'
Mr. Kelly
HAYMAN &amp; PICKEN·s
Mr: and Mrs. Philip Snyder,
r. and Mrs. Harold Racer,, the administratio~ asked, to
Garside Eledroni&lt;s., Inc.
· House for Sale
Complete Auction Service
GIDipnUs, Wl!l'e recetit visitors, Delaware, 0. were recent produce a volunteer Army' , The
1260 East Vine Street
4 ROOMS wi lh bath, full size
Col. Waid Hayman \ Appr,
Col. PaulS. Pickens
basem~ht l garage, lot SOx100.
Pomero y, Oh 1·o
Pt . PI easan t , W. Va. ·
Gl Mr. and Mri. James Snyder VISI to
. rs of her mother, Mrs. amendment was rejected 4z.aa
Salt Lake City , Utah 8412 1
A•ndhtCallie Lundy
·
·
,
Phooe : (8011262·3772
i · Ca ll Mason, W. Va . 773·5239
Phone 992-7693 .
Phone615-1450
ud .,._.,...
,
,.
.
.
U.S. seh. Robert Taft, R-Ohlo,
(PI ' f 1 1 h
b
aller 5 p.m .
Nol Responsibla for Accidents or Loss ol Pro,.,rty .
lfr. .w1 Mrs. G. v. Quickie -Mr. and Mrs.
Houchms was
_ _ _,____L--:-----;:::e:a:s:e: u:r:n:!\j: :::
!':'o::n:eJn:um
= e:r: &amp;
=ad:::d:r:es:s:)

Keith Goble Mobile Home Sales, Inc.

1970 BUICK------------·'3295

I

Radiator Service

$2195

68 DODGE, Dart4

Limestone Driveways
Septic Tanks and Leach
Beds

Roofing

70 CHE;VROLET, Nova 2 Dr. Sedan
68 DODGE, Coronet 2 Dr. Hardtop

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC
MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W. VA.

EXPERIENCED

$3495

' .

While 2 door hardtop, white leatherette seats with black
carpets &amp; trim, 350 V-Bengine, automatic transmission,
power steering &amp; brakll\, radio, Mag wheels With whitewall tires. This Is a beaOtllul, very sharp, 1 local owner
new car trade-in.

69 CHEVROLET," Impala 2 Dr. Hardtop $2395
.• 68 DODGE, Polara 4 Dr. Sedan
11_195

742-4902

CALL

68 FIREBIRD

. 70 DODGE, Polar a 4 Dr. Hardtop, AC

USED Ct&gt;.RS

Light metallic green 2 dr. hardtop, 307 engine, green vinyl
top, automatic transmission. power steering and brakes,
radio &amp; whlte-wall tires. A very beautiful car.

· Better Buys!

Kitcbens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios
Backhoe And
Endloader Work

VILLAGE

w·hat Oo You Have For ThP. :of.$$ You Pav In RP.nt?

IN LOVING MEMORY ol ou r
Real EstatP. For SaiP.
husba nd, father, gra ndf at her,
and brother, Francis Overturf, who left us Nov . 6, 1969.
An evening sta r shines on th e
gra ve
Of one we loved but could nat
save.
God took him home it was His
wil l;
But in ou r hearts we love him
Br'oker
sti II.
110 Mechanic St.
Sadly missed by wife, Virgin ia ;
Pomeroy, Ohio
Chi ldren, grandch ildren ,
sisters and brothers, and twin RT. 33 LOCATION - 2 acres
sister, Fanchon Overturf .
sui lable fo r a business or
5-30-ltc
residence. $2,500.00

News, Notes

New 65x14 Wide
NOW ON DISPLAY
'73 9 5

Re-Charge

Complete
Remodeling

Trade-Ins"
'2788

"LocaUy
70 MALIBU

Vacatm nme

JOHNSON MASONRY

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
OR DON
neighbors and relatives for
Evenings Caii992 ·2S34, Dale Dutton
cards, flowers, food and
prayers and the Middleport
Emergency Squad, Ewing s
Funeral Home, pa llbearers, EXPERT lawn mower and
the Rev. Charles Russell for
tiller repair. Free pickup and
ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
his comfortin g words and the
delive ry. Warren's Mower
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
1
prayers dur ing the death of
Shop, 24S Condor 51. Phone
40 Min utes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most l'rofitable
our
husban d,
Fa ther,
992-7357.
Time You Ever Spent.
Grandfathe r, Lloyd D Si n5-1S-Ifc
clair . Your kindness will - - - - - - Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!
always be remembered.
REGIS TERED quarter stud
The Sincla ir Family
service, Hanks Rock 209498.
.j,CHAMPION
-!'ALSO
icWINSOR
5-30-ltc
Contact Mike Jones, Rt . 3,
-jr
VAN
DYKE
DQUBLE-WIOE ,
-!'BUDDY
Pomeroy. Ohio. Phone 992 6880.
5EE TOM CROW, GUY 5H(JLER OR BOB CROW
In Memory
5-24-61c

Wolfpen

I

Inspection and

Artificial Flowers
Single Flowers
Arrangements
&amp;
Flowers
Cemetery
Wreaths
Also Arrangements made to
vour specification.

WE WISH to tha nk ou r friends,

see Our New, New

V·AN DYKE BY

'

Air Conditioning

RATES

Card

Dan Says:

Have Your Seasonal

oependable

Good

.

Day of Pub! icat ion

Us.

14' Wide
Schult

Business Services

5 P.M . Day Before Publicat ion

We Invite
YOur ComparisQn . Bring
You r Mobile Hom e Need s to

You AI tAme
See These

'

~

~~=~==-:_========::_5·::2:7·:6t:pJ~============:t:==="=
· ·==~~-

'69 CHEVROLET IMPALA
Cust.

Cpe., radio, heater, auto., power
-~t-"S'fe,erlng, air condition, gold finish', white top,
18,000 miles. Looks &amp; drives like
new.

'

•2695

WOOD MOTOR SALES
1 WISH to thank my many HOME sewing. Phone 992;/32(
5" .JO P
friends, neighbors and my
minister lor their visits, cards REDUCE safe and tasl with'
and flowers sent me while 1 Gobese tablets and E-Vap
was confined In Holzer water pills. Nelson Drugs.
HospitaL Also. many thanks
4-14-601p
to Dr. Walker, Dr. Harder and - - - - - - - - all the nursesand stafllor,the ·
wonderful care given me.
KDSCDT Kosmetlcs, wigs and
Melvin R, Smith
accessories. May aDd June
5-30-ltp special. Kleanslng Kreanl,
$2.25. Distributors, Br:own's.
Phone WZ-5113.
For
4-23-tfc
HORSES . Over 100 head
registered and grade, All _S_A_V_E___U-::P-to_ on_e___h_a-:
11-.-::Bring
sizes, all prices, Circle M ~our sick TV to Chuck's TV
Stables, 10 miles north of Shop, ·151 Butternut Ave.,
Athens, State Rt. 13 at Pomeroy
Millfield, Phone 725·2~·
4-23-tfc.
5-20-12tc --.....----t~---

Sale

--------:-:--

Wanted To · Buy
.-----~..-----,· YOUNG couple looking to b'li':
1\TQTlCE
farm , Contact Jim Nally. .
1 ''
D. Box 603, Athens.
5-25-12tp
THE
n;: LEPHON~S, brass beefs,
clocks, dishes, old furniture,
etc. Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271. .
·
4-27-tfc
Notice

SHOPPERS
BONANZA

·

WIU BE CLOSED
MONDAY-MAY

USED WAT'ER -pump for
cistern, with or without tank.
Phone 992.9997 '
5-25-6tp

31

---:A:-:N:;-cT:;-;--;1Q:;o;.O;;-;&lt;E-:;;-S-:-,- d:;;li:sO:h e s,
MEMORIAL DAY
telephones, Clocks . ·brass
beds, lamps, etc. Lee Rudisill,
Phone 992-3403.
REDUCE safe and fast with
5-27-JOtc
Gobese lablets and E-VapWater pills. Nelson Drugs.
'
. 5·26-JOtp Help Wanted
REGISTER Arabian standing·
to approved mares, Klrafl WAN'tmlddle-aged lady to stay
05041 . Rich Raffles blood · In with two elderly people.
Light housekeeping and
-unes, Fee $50. Eskey Hill.
cool&lt;,lng.
Phone 992·3442 alter
Pomeroy, Olllo.
. ,•. • ,.
5 p.m.
·
5-27-31c
5-28-5tc'
'
I WILL NOT be responsible lor
, any debts contracted by EARN AT home addreulng·
anyone other than myself. ,. envelopes. Rush stamped
"Signed: Lewis J. Smith.
sell-addressed envelope to the
5-27-3tp
Ambrose Company, 4325
=:-:-::::::-:-::---:---~
Lakeborn, Davisburg,
TW! N CITY Cab Co. under new
Michigan, &gt;18019.
manageme"t, Open 24 hours.
4-30-JOtp
Phone 992-3280. .
• ---------::--5-27-61p
REGISTERE-D. qual'ler s.tud BEAUTICIAN with manager's
servlc.. Hanks Rotk 209.fll. ~~~";' 50 · Phone ,:1-2~ or 992-1
, Contact Mike Jonn, Rt. 3,
·
(
5-J0.6tc
Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 992· - - - , . . - - - - - 6810,
I

----------------

s-2u1~

for Rent or Sale

stud. AVAILABLE; June 15, ~o
50x12 two-bedroom
homes for rent or

See Them Here!

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
Open Eves.

DATSUN

Til

MANY

8-- Til 5 P.M. Sat.

2 SillS
Of
QUALITY

For Sale

For Sale

2(r

8 io"r'"$i.oo

~R"'A'"'I'"'
T
L E=R-,-L"O""T'S.'B'-o~
b'~s&gt;Mi:ioblle

Court, Rt:.· 124, Syracuse ,
Dh1o. 992-2951.
·
4-2-tfc

Sale •

NORTH

Zl

.Q73
.432
+J543 2
ofoH
WEST

EAST

.KJ4 2
.1098 5
For
111 Court St.
.KQ6
.A1097
FUNKS SMALL Round 4384-N
Pomeroy, Ohio
+1076
+AS
corn, 3-50 bags, Stund
4165
4K82
resistant, O.M. Resistant,
SOUTH (D)
Phone 8-Q-2286, Rte, 338, 1 PAINT DAMAGE. 1971 zig-zag
sewing machines. Still In
mile below Ravenswood
.A6
original cartons. No at ·
Ferry.
• J85
tachments needed as our
5-30-3tp
+KQ9
· controls are built-ln . Sews
--------4AQ1093
with one or two needles.
SIAMESE KITTENS. Priced
East-West vulnerable
makes buttonholes, sew on
reasonable. Phone Chester
buttons,
monograms,
and
West
North East South
985-3565.
blind
hem
stitch.
Full
cash
lN,T,
5-30-3tp
price, $38.50 or budget plan
Pass P18S
Pass
available. Phone 992-5641 .
Opening lead-See article
1964 JOHN DEERE do zer,
5-25-6tc
winch and blade ; 1964
Chevrolet live tandem , Phone ·ELECTRDLUX vacuum
Chester 985-~132.
cleaner complete with at- By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
5-J0-6Ic
tachments, cord winder and
Board 30, the. last one ol
paint spray. Used but In like the charity game, is about
H&amp;N DAY -OLD, or started
new condition. Pay $37,45 as peaceful a hand as you
Leghorn pullets, Both floor or
cash or credit · term•
cage grown available .
cQ_Uld wish for , South opens
available. Phorie 992-56~1.
Poultry
Housing
&amp;
5-25-6tci one no-trump and, except for
Automation . Modern Poultry,
an occasional ~esperado who
399 W. Ma)n, Pomeroy 992- ELLEN'S Gift ShO(l, Reedsville. might try to compete with
2164,
Olllo, Memorial Day wreaths, the East hand, no one will
5-30-ltc
sprays,
baskets,
Ardisturb him.
rangements, 69c and up.
4-28·30tc
It will be up to West to
2500TILEBLDCK, 12x5x7'h tn. 1
find
an opening lead and his
1600 tile block 12x5x4, Phone
FOR
A
Meyers
aluminum
boat
choice
wUI make a big dif·
949-4560,
won't
rust,
rot,
or
leak.
~II
ference
in his match-point
5-28'3tc
992-6256 alter s p.m. Also.
, llberglass15 foot canoes,
score.
BESTLiNE PRODUCTS, · Cali
5· 16·301c
If he decides to open the
Myton Bailey, Phone 992-5327. - - - - - - - - '.
5-~· 3Q NEW
FT
5 11 b h h • fourth best of his longest
Ph~e 992-~29. · rus og . suit I the deuce of spades ),
HOME grown ' strawberries,
5·26-6tc South wiU prob$bly chance .
Phone 843-2281. '
. _...::..,_______
dummy's queen and hope for
5-26-6tc EXCELLENT; efflclenl, the best. The best will rna,
economical, Blue . Lustre
. and South will un1963 FORD $100, or will trade carpet eleanor. Rent electric
take ad,v antageJlf
~~;o~o~~~~r. Phone992- ~~~'":':_ooer, Sl. Baker Fur· .
to lead the
~-

[

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

H45 DODGE
$795
Dart, 6 cyl., 4 door, automatic trans ., radio, good tires,
clean Inside &amp; out.

\

"65 CHEVROLET
$595
Pickup 8' Fleetslde, V·8 engine, Deluxe ca b, runs extra
good.

1962 THUNDERBIRD
5495
Cpe., V-8, automatic with p, steering, good tires. light blue
finish . vinyl trim, radio. A nice ono.

Score Varies with Opening , '-meroy Motor Co.
will

The
Daily Sentinel

MORE

PONTIAC
GMC TRUCKS
116 Years of Continuous Business
PdONE 992-2 143
POMEROY, OHI

For Sale
Aluminum ·
Sheets

5 ROOMS and bath, gas fur·
nace. Phone 992-5176.
5-27-3tc

1

l UICK

Oh •
•-------•a•n•a•u•p,--•10-------..1 PLANTS FOR SALE , Home COAL, limestone , Excelsior
grown improved Mexican Salt Works, E. Main St .•
tomato!.lants, large smooth, Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
non-aci . Also, Heinz 1350,
~-9- tfc
For Sale
For Rent
Yellow Golden Jubilee and
TRAILE'R SPACE on old Rt. 33,
Large Supersonic. They are
ROOM house ; bath, full
112-mlle north of new Meigs
sturdy, well rooted plants. SIX
basement,
133 Butternut Ave,
High School. Phone 992-2941.
Also. hot peppers, mangos
jus!
walking
distance from
3-5-tfc
and cabbage plants, On Rt. downtown Pomeroy.
36" X23" X.009 .
Contact
1241n Syracuse, Ohio, 500 feat
Ed
Hedrick,
2137
Wadsworth
FURNlSHED· and unfurnished
above the park . Thomas Drive, Columbus, Ohio, phone
apartments. Close to school.
Hayman,
Phone 992-543.4.
5-2-JOtc 237-'!J34. Columbus. 5-9-lfc
10-18-llc_
2 BEDROOM mobile home, air
USED OFFSET PLATES
condlilonlng ." Racine area .
WIN AT BRIDGE
HAVE
Phone 992-6329.
S-25-6lc
MANY USES

·-::--:c----=-=------

5

BLAETTNARS

•

992-5342
GMAC Finoncing Avolloblo
POMEROY
"You' ll Like Our Quality Way ot Doing Business"

PRODUCT OF NISSAN

SMITHK AUTO SALES

AS, LOW AS '39

Come In And See Them

Is this the perfect Datsun for you? Try it.
Drive a Datsun,, .!hen deelde.

Notice

Card of" Thanks

THE NEW
LOOK
OF
IEAOERSHIP

Your Datsun dealer is the Small Car Expert,
Let him show you what makes the 510 4·-Door Sedan
such a perfectly great economical family car.
• Tinted glass
• Reclining front bucket seats
• Whi!A!walls
• Overhead cam engine
• Vinyl upholstery
• Safety front disc brakes
• Independent rear suspension

GAlliPOliS, OHIO

EASTERN AVE.

Uveslock

Ask the expert.

"

Phone
~=s~~~~-1 ~~-~~~~~~~~
--------------~~.J~~·~------'~------._Jb~K-----------------_]~~~~---·----------~t~~~

~~n ·

South
collect five quick ,
club tricks.
OP.EN EVI!S. 1:00 P.M.
-i'QMI!ROY, OHIO
West will probably discard l
the four of spades at his first L-~--~------------­
opportunity, so that when ·
East gets in with the ace of
diamonds, he will lead a low For Sale
Insurance
heart. The defense will collect four heart tricks to hold BEAUTIFUL selection of AUTOMOBILE Insurance bien'
South to two no-tru~p , If flowers, baskets , wreaths, cancelled?
Lost
.your
East plays a second spade and sprays for Memoria l Day
operator's license? Call.• 992·
South w.lll make four or five . Cliff Shoe Repair, Middleport: , 2966~
If West decides to open
4-21-tlc
6·1$-tfe· ·
the king of hearts, on the
theory that king from kiilg.

queen
is awill
desirable
the
defen~e
~ather lead,
m four
quick· heart tncks, After that
start a spade lead by East
wil} hold South to s e v e n
tricks and a poor score.
Wnat's the best lead ln
general? The heart was today, but It might not be &lt;tO·
morrow.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

l}J}I}~ft
fi.'-~&amp;~o;l~okl:;:~•:•~:'='::~:'~•:•:•l~~
\!:11
D ,~
.

~

UnscrambletheoelourJumbleo,
one letter to •":"h ~~quare, to
form four ordanary worda.

l FRACT
I THA.LC ·

·
The bidding has been: ·
West
North
Eut South
1•
Dble
Redble Pass
2•
Dble
Pass 2 •
3
Pass
P...
Pass
•
Pass
Dble
Pa..
?
You, South hold:
•KH •6543 +3 2 41081.5
Wh• I d0 you d0 now '·
A p
y
h
,·
- ....
ou
ov e our
trumps and • klnr., Whit more
do you won~ exeept possibly a
new partner .

rf-..

\I

e=.~=--

t

)I

K
'

"l

)I

I

1

tJ

tr-::~L':::::0:
~ 0~/:-:(:-1
1
8
b-~,r.r,:..0::.:;.---·--f'--v"""'17"""'\1

\I)I

V
X 'J__,
f...

~..(.!._....L_.L_.Jc:-''"'·~"

11YI'.41R±
I

V
r-.,.

I

~

I

HOW

MIDDJ.E!·OF·
"TH5 ltOAC' I'OliTIClAN
MAKE£&gt; 5NeM I E~.

I I llllftlt4
-·-...-bJ '-

Now · - - lhe elrcW,IIaWI
tof-lheWl .. IW.
•·•
lhe III••UII"" 11

L.=:·==-=::-~:=::::~;::;;..~';:=;;:~
r ' 11111
. _ _ .._...
..... . ~ - - -

I r l l I )&amp;( l I I I J
a

-

-

-

TODAY'S QVF.'ITION

Again your partnoa· doubk..
one hea 1'1. This lime you hold :
• 1873 •~us +3Z 4 KMI
What do

donow~

ILANK JUICI JANOLI PIAICO
,...,....,... ,·... IJA.,........
.
• .,., .... ....,.,1Nr,.ll4li ...Hol!'lfJI.o
1

I

~ - A"PUUW'

-·

-

-

-

�..

24 - The Sunday Tinies ·sentinel, Sunday, Mav 30, 1971

MeiO"s 4-H
~

Date
· Iine

:----------------------------·----------------------------~
r ··
l
·
:
I

Club
News !
ThePineGrovePals metMay·
1

20 at Nola Young's house with

1

three advisors and ll members
present. They did their last
lesson in first aid and Tammy
Fitch and Nola Young gave
demonstrations on treating cuts
and insect bites. Nola Young,
safety chairman, presented a
slide presentation, "What do
you Fall For '~ "
Sherry Epple was in charge of
recreation and Nola Young
served refreshments. The next
meeting is scheduled June 3 at
the home of June Epple, for a
cookout . Debbie Conklin , the
coun ty home economics ag~nt,
will talk about nutrition . . _
Tammy Fitch.
A NEW 4-H CLUB, th e
·Rockets, met May 18 at the
home of Daleanna Little, with
five members present. Advisors
are Mrs. Doris Woodyard and
Mrs. Jennie Little .
They elected officers, named
their .club, and decided the dues
to be paid. Project books were
distributed and discussed
briefly. Mrs. Doris Woodyard
served refreshments.
The next meeting is June 1 at
the home of Rhonda Haning.
Each girl is to bring her sewing
basket. - Rebekah Long.
4
THE
Club
metBUSY
May 22BEAVERS
at the home ·H
of
Jean Province. There were two
advisors and five members
present. They plan to buy
sweatshirts, and they discussed
entering a float in the Regatta
Parade.
Delma Karr gave the report
on the candy sales for Steven
Hoover who was absent. Jean
Province was responsible for
the refreshments which were
served by Margaret Province
and Becky King.
The next meeting will be held
at Delma Karr's home June 5.
They are planning to take a trip
to Best Photo in Coolville and to
buy Father's Day gifts. Dona ld Karr.
THE STIVERSVILLE Stitchers 4·H Club met May 22 at
the home of Mrs. Ada Van
Meter with two advisors and 11
members attending. Mrs.
Conklin, the county home
economics age nt, demonstrated
making a scarf.
Melinda Daily was in charge
ofrecreation and Sharlee Evans
in charge of refreshmen ts.
Their next meeting is scheduled
June 5 in the home of Mrs. Ada
van Meter. _ Tlna Cozart.
THE COURTHOUSE Cut Ups
4-H Club met May 25 at the
home of Vickie Gaul with two
advisors and 12 members attending. Kathy Davis gave a
special report on safety. Teresa
Wildermuth and Tammy Nice
were in charge of recreation,
playing Co-ordination, and I've
Got Your Number. Vickie Ga,ul
was in charge of refreshments.
The next meeting is to be held
on June 1 in the horne of Ka thy
Davis when there will be
demonstrations on foods and
sewing . - Linda Mye rs.
THE MEIGS PLEASURE
Riders 4-H Club met May 17 at
the home of Mrs. A. R. Knight
with two advisors and 13
members present. Matthew
Dillard gave a special report on
safety and served refreshments . Their next meeting is
June 1 in the home of E. J . Hill.
- Dave Nease .
Los An geles County . Calif ..
with an estimated 6,970,733
residents, is the most populous county in the United
States.

I

Gallia ·

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-

-

-----..

!

.

1
1

Are You Sick?

a·

c

•

I

1

BY HOBART wttl!ON, JR.

1 am sick o1 commentators and columnists canonizing
anarchisl'l, revolutionaries and criminal rapists, but condemning
GALLIA Countians will join millions across the nation lawenforcementwhensuchcrirninalsarebroughttojustice.
Monday in observance of Memorial Day. At the request of local
1 am sick of being told that pornography is the right of free
subscribers, here's two articles we feel are appropriate at this press, but freedom of the press does not include being able to read
time. One is from the Valley, Calif., News, the other was taken the Bible on school grounds.
from the Cincinnati Enquirer. Undoubtedly, the contents express
I am sick of paying more and more taxes to build schools
the feelings of millions of Americans who make up these United while I see some faculty members encouraging students either to
States.
tear them down or burn them.
++++++
1 am sick of Supreme Court decisions which turn criminals
TilE first article, from the Valley, Calif., News, was sub- loose on society - while other decisions . try to take away my
milled by State senator H. L. Richardson, Republican from means of protecting my home and family .
Arcadia . Titled, "Your Age May Be Showing - Check List of
I am sick of pot-&amp;noking entertainers deluging me with their
Senators,'' it reads:
condemnations of my moral standards on late-flight television.
Here is another of the many interesting items that came
I am sick of being told that policemen are mad dogs who
across my desk - this one from Sen. (James E.) Whetmore's should not have guns - but that criminals who use guns to rob,
office. I couldn't resist sharing it with you.
maim and murder should be understood and helped back to
It just 'may surprise you a little to find out how old you really society.
are . Can you remember:
I am sick of being told it is wrong to use napalm to end a war
When you never dreamed our country could ever lose?
overseas - but if it's a molotov cocktail or a bomb at home, 1
When you left the front door open?
must understand the provocations.
When people knew what the Fourth of July stood for?
lam sick of not being able to take my family to a movie unless
When you took it for granted that women, the elderly and the I want to have them exposed to nudity, homosexuality and the
clergy, were to be respected?
glorification of narcotics.
When. girl was a girl and a boy was a boy?
I am sick of riots, marches, protests, demonstrations, conWhen you didn't feel embarrassed to say that this was the frontations, and the other mob temper tantrums of people inbest darn country in the world'
t.ellectually incapable of working with the system.
When socialist was a dirty word?
l am sick of hearing the same phrases, the same slick
Whim taxes were only a nuisance?
slogans, the cries of people who must chant the same thing like
When the poor were too proud to take charity?
zombies because they haven't the capacity for verbalizing
When you weren't afraid to go out at night'
thought.
When ghettos were neighborhoods?
I am sick of those who say I owe them this or that because of
Wh en you 1m ew the 1aw mean t JUS
· rtee, an d you fIt
e a little thest'nsofmyforefathers-whenihavelookeddownbothendsof
shiver of awe at the sight ofa policeman?
a gun barrel to defend their rights, their liberties and their
When young fellows tried to join th'e Army or the Navy?
families.
When songs had a tune?
I am sick of cynical attitudes toward patriotism. I am sick of
When criminals went to jail?
politicians with no backbone.
When you bragged about your home state and your home
I am sick of permissiveness.
town?
1am sick of the dirty, the foul-mouthed, the unwashed.
When politicians proclaimed their patriotism?
I am sick of the decline of personal honesty , personal inWhen clerks and repairmen tried to please you?
tegrity and human sincerity.
When a Sunday drive was an adventure, not an ordeal?
Most of all, though, I am sick of being told I'm sick. I'm sick of
When you could always find someone willing and able when being told my country is sick - when we have the greatest nation
you needed something done?
that man has ever brought forth on the face of the earth. Fully
When riots were unthinkable?
fifty per cent of the people on earth would willingly trade places
When the· clergy talked about religion'
with the most deprived, themost underprivileged among us.
When you took it for granted that the law would be enforced,
Yes, I may be sick, but if I am only sick, I can get well. I can
and your safety protected?
alsohelpmysocietygetwell-andhelpmycountrygetwell.
When the Flag was a sacred symbol?
Take note, all of you ... you wiU notfind me throwing a rock or
When our government stood up for Americans anywhere in a bomb; you will not find me under a placard; you wiU not see me
the world?
take to the streets; you wiU notfindme ranting to wild-eyed mobs.
When a man who went wrong was blamed, not his mother's
But you will find me at work, paying taxes, serving in the
nursing habits or-llis father's income?
community where I live . You will also find me expressing my
When things weren't perfect, but you expected them to be? anger and indignation to elected officials.
When everyone knew the difference between right and wrong
You will find me speaking out in support of those officials,
-even college professors?
institutions and personalities who contribute to the elevation of
When college kids swallowed golfish, not acid?
society and not its destruction. You will find me contributing my
When people expected less and valued when they had more? time, money and persona.! influence to helping churches,
When people still had the capacity for indignation?
hospitals, charities and other establishments which have shown
When you considered yourself lucky to have a good job, and the true spirit of this country's determination to ease pain, sufwhen you were proud to have one?
fering, eliminate hunger and generate brotherhood.
When America was the land of the free and the home of the
But, most of all, you'll find me at the polling.place. There - if
brove ?
you listen - you can hear the thunder of the common man. There,
all of us can cast our vote - for an America where people can
HERE's the second article from the Enquirer titled, "I Am A walk the streets without fear .
Author Unknown
Sick American .... "
There are those who claim ours is a "sick" society; that our
++++++
country is sick; our government is sick; that we are sick. Well,
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily Tribune
maybe they're right. I submit that I'm sick ... and maybe you are and weekly Gallia Times ... Rent control lifted in Gallipolis ... D.
too . 1 am sick of having policemen ridiculed and called "pigs" 0. Taber to head Gallia's revised Civil Defense program ... Judge
while cop killers are hailed as some kind of folk hero.
William H. Janes named Memorial Day speaker ... Gilkey Queen
1am sick of being told that religion is the opiate of the people, Bees nip Ravenswood 6-5 in Ohio Valley Association baseball
but marijuana should be legalized.
game ... Swimming Popl readied for 1951 season.

Some

~lew

Insurance Firms
•
Steal $20 Million zn

COLUMBUS - Chairman insurance contracts as well as
of the Ohio House of any claim that such a contract
Representatives Consumer exists, yet reports he is
Problems Study Committee, receiving indicate the new law
Frank H. Mayfield, Jr., (R) has had little effect.
Cincinnati, has charged that During the past month
some new life insurance Mayfield said he has been
companies bilked Ohioans out of gathering evidence that the law
roughly $20 million during 1970. is being violated and during a
"During the past six years speech to the Ohio A.ssociation
these companies have con- of U!e Underwriters last week
vinced Ohioans to pay them in Columbus he described and
nearly $100 million through an presented the evidence to
itinerant sales force trained to Kenneth E. DeShetler, Director
-----1111!1~-~--· peddle 'units' of a so-called of the Ohio Department of In'investment plan' which buyers surance.
are told will allow tl~m to
Some of the evidence
'share in the profits' of the Mayfield has gathered is in the
company ,'' Mayfield revealed. form of documented tape
"Victims are told they've recorded sales pitches given to
been recommended to become Ohio residents as recently as
one of a limited number of the past two montha. ''The
charter contract holders in transcribed tapes demonstrate
return for their investment plus the untrue, deceptive and
the names Or several people a misleading statements being
year who might want to buy used to induce prospects to
'regular' insurar!ce, once the purchase
these
alleged
company begins selling it," 'charter' contracts,'' Mayfield
Mayfield said.
declared.
Sume charter contract buyers In one tape a salesman, in
are Ia ter shocked to discover order to demonstrate an alleged
that all they've really pur- close relationship between
chased is a high-priced par- stockholders and "charter"
ticipating life insurance policy contract buyers, claims thiit the
King -size homeowners policy
grows wilh the re'placement and many times not on the ·investment feature "is really
cost of your home as It in - breadwinner, but on )he lives of the most important part of the
creases the amoun t of your their children or grandchildren. whole contract." ije goes so far
pol icy 10 help ' kee p pa ce wit h
The salesman sometimes as to declare that "If a
infla tion . Sec me about details .
State Fa r m is all you need
recommends this procedure so stockholder wants to share in
to know about Insurance .
"the investment will last' the profits of the company, he's
longer," according to Mayfield. got to get into the (charter)
Caroll K.
Such companies trade on the program," according to
Snowden
respectability of the life in- Mayfield.
surance industry to gain the
The same salesman claims
Park Central
Hotel Bldg .
prospec!'s confidence, then sell that the charter contract
Second Av e.
"an opportunity to get in on the "owners are only interested in
Phone 446-4290
Home 446 -451t
ground floor" of a potential the profits which w1ll be paid
' .I .
gianl In the "world's most them in the form of a dividend"
profitable business,'' Mayfield and that "these profits are tax
.
said.
.
) free ," according to Mayfield.
He recalled that last year the . " If it weren't for lhe fact that
Stete' Fa r m Fire ana \.. Bsual ty Ohio General A.ssembly passed the public believes these
Comp4ny
.
Home Office ; Bloom ing ton . H.B. 242 which hans these SO• statements, they would be
Illinois
P ·C932
ealled "charter" or .'1ounders" humorous," Mayfield declared.

New
·state Farm
Inflation
Coverage .,

Clippings From Other Papers: I
Your Age May Be Sh~wing;

.Happr DaJS Are Here All The Time At Your
IGA Foodliner Store. Weekly Specials, Everyday

,,
THE ROYAL CROWN Jm'l'LING OO.In Middleport Ia havlnc ''growing pllna" ana tile
construction of an addition, 35 by 70 feet, is underway. Pi~tured is the foundation of the addition
which will house not only office quarters but production operations. The actual structure will
be ina pastel green metal. Completion is expected about July I.

automobiles and watermelons!
Tile reason the alleged 'profits'
are tax free is that they aren't
'profits,' but simply a return of
an excessive overcharge built
into the premium. Yet this
'profi't' claim recurs over and
over in these tapes," Mayfield
. said.
"And this claim that a limited
number of 'charter' contract
holders will, to the exclusion of
others, share in the total profits
of the company is a bold-faced
violation of the law we passed
last year . That law absolutely
prohibits discriminatio~ be,,ween insurance classes. 11 a
company raided . the divisible
surplus of Class A and gave
those dollars to Class B they
would he discriminating against
Class A. So what's being
promised just plain isn't legal in
Ohio," Mayfield declared.
Ohio isn 'I the only state to
declare such a scheme illegal,
according to Mayfield. Over 30
states have regulated such
plans; Texas as recently as
March.

There are more than 100
various inbred strains and
substrains of mice that are
used in cancer research. "Inbred mice are necessary to
research because they can be
genetically controlled," said
Dr. Telle. Genetic defects have
been "bred out" so the only
variables an investigator has to
be concerned with are those
included in his experiment, it
was explained.
As anti-cancer researc h
methods increase, so does the
need for mice. Inbred mice,
once maintained in very few
places, are now widely
available from national or
regional stock centers, some of
which raise approximately 2
million mice a year and
maintain over 75 strains and
substrains.
The increase in the number of
mice used became an expensive
proposition. An idea was
developed by the Florida'
Division of the American
Cancer Society to raise money
toward their purchase. Called

~~

1

MAY 31st TO JUNE 5th
•• ..,_. ______ _

•lll1'11~'-~•• •- a,.

Low, Low Prices With Personal Service.

Mice Paying Mankirrd Back
POMEROY - Six centuries
ago there was an epidemic that
wiped out more than one-third
of the European population. The
Bubonic Plague - a disease so
devastating that during its fivecentury reign it claimed 43
million lives - was primarily
caused by rats.
•'Today the rat 's closest
cousin - the mouse - is
making retribution to mankind,
and has helped to save hundreds
of thousands of lives," said Dr.
Telle, Medical Advisor of the
Meigs County Unit of the
American Cancer Society.

STARTS

At IGA We Carry Out Your Groceries.

"Send A Mouse To College" the
project has been successfully in
the Ohio Division for the past
three years. The idea is to ask
students of all ages to donate 27
cents toward the purchase of a
mouse, thereby, sending !tim to
a research center or college.
Local efforts in Meigs County
Elementary schools this year
raised $489. The financial aid
from these chifdren will ·go
toward the fight against cancer.
Why have mice risen to such
notoriety In cancer research?
Why not "Bred out" frogs or
guinea pigs instead? Dr. Telle
outlined a variety of reasons :
"Mouse
tumors closely
resemble human tumors; mice
are cheap; and due to their twoto-three year life span, their
tum'ors develop quickly,
allowing the investigator more
action time and less waiting
time.
Dr. Telle concluded, "Of all
the laboratory mammals,
probably none has contributed
more to the advancement of
knowledge . than the common

•

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OR

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SAVE ALL OF YOUR SALESLI PS
FROM

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WITH COUPON

'• ••
• i ,'
• • ,
•• • , I

"The fact is that equating life
insurance policy 'dividends'
with 'profits' is like equating

••I

t&lt;i!'{!)/GOO D LO 0 KS
~&amp; COMFORT IN
•
THE PONDEROSA

CENTER
CUT

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•

••

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.•

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provides long
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RESISTENT SOL£S.

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FROZEN

THE DEBT WE OWE
TO OUR COUNTRYMEN

,.

French Fries

FIRST LADY

Ice Cream
·~GAL

A SURE FIT WHATEVER
YOUR WORK!

Let us not forget those

"'' ~

who gave their lives
strife to make this earth

THE SHOE BOX

...

LB. BAG

CARTON

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BASKET

a· better place for all hu- ·

•

manity to enjoy.

Wh. ere ShOOS A
.re Se nSI'blY pfiCe
' d.
.

r;. ~i:d AVE.
MIDDLEPORT
'lt!I...._________________..

_ L_..:~=====:::::._

__. . _:_. ;____..______

---'----.1

'

�..

24 - The Sunday Tinies ·sentinel, Sunday, Mav 30, 1971

MeiO"s 4-H
~

Date
· Iine

:----------------------------·----------------------------~
r ··
l
·
:
I

Club
News !
ThePineGrovePals metMay·
1

20 at Nola Young's house with

1

three advisors and ll members
present. They did their last
lesson in first aid and Tammy
Fitch and Nola Young gave
demonstrations on treating cuts
and insect bites. Nola Young,
safety chairman, presented a
slide presentation, "What do
you Fall For '~ "
Sherry Epple was in charge of
recreation and Nola Young
served refreshments. The next
meeting is scheduled June 3 at
the home of June Epple, for a
cookout . Debbie Conklin , the
coun ty home economics ag~nt,
will talk about nutrition . . _
Tammy Fitch.
A NEW 4-H CLUB, th e
·Rockets, met May 18 at the
home of Daleanna Little, with
five members present. Advisors
are Mrs. Doris Woodyard and
Mrs. Jennie Little .
They elected officers, named
their .club, and decided the dues
to be paid. Project books were
distributed and discussed
briefly. Mrs. Doris Woodyard
served refreshments.
The next meeting is June 1 at
the home of Rhonda Haning.
Each girl is to bring her sewing
basket. - Rebekah Long.
4
THE
Club
metBUSY
May 22BEAVERS
at the home ·H
of
Jean Province. There were two
advisors and five members
present. They plan to buy
sweatshirts, and they discussed
entering a float in the Regatta
Parade.
Delma Karr gave the report
on the candy sales for Steven
Hoover who was absent. Jean
Province was responsible for
the refreshments which were
served by Margaret Province
and Becky King.
The next meeting will be held
at Delma Karr's home June 5.
They are planning to take a trip
to Best Photo in Coolville and to
buy Father's Day gifts. Dona ld Karr.
THE STIVERSVILLE Stitchers 4·H Club met May 22 at
the home of Mrs. Ada Van
Meter with two advisors and 11
members attending. Mrs.
Conklin, the county home
economics age nt, demonstrated
making a scarf.
Melinda Daily was in charge
ofrecreation and Sharlee Evans
in charge of refreshmen ts.
Their next meeting is scheduled
June 5 in the home of Mrs. Ada
van Meter. _ Tlna Cozart.
THE COURTHOUSE Cut Ups
4-H Club met May 25 at the
home of Vickie Gaul with two
advisors and 12 members attending. Kathy Davis gave a
special report on safety. Teresa
Wildermuth and Tammy Nice
were in charge of recreation,
playing Co-ordination, and I've
Got Your Number. Vickie Ga,ul
was in charge of refreshments.
The next meeting is to be held
on June 1 in the horne of Ka thy
Davis when there will be
demonstrations on foods and
sewing . - Linda Mye rs.
THE MEIGS PLEASURE
Riders 4-H Club met May 17 at
the home of Mrs. A. R. Knight
with two advisors and 13
members present. Matthew
Dillard gave a special report on
safety and served refreshments . Their next meeting is
June 1 in the home of E. J . Hill.
- Dave Nease .
Los An geles County . Calif ..
with an estimated 6,970,733
residents, is the most populous county in the United
States.

I

Gallia ·

-

-

-

-----..

!

.

1
1

Are You Sick?

a·

c

•

I

1

BY HOBART wttl!ON, JR.

1 am sick o1 commentators and columnists canonizing
anarchisl'l, revolutionaries and criminal rapists, but condemning
GALLIA Countians will join millions across the nation lawenforcementwhensuchcrirninalsarebroughttojustice.
Monday in observance of Memorial Day. At the request of local
1 am sick of being told that pornography is the right of free
subscribers, here's two articles we feel are appropriate at this press, but freedom of the press does not include being able to read
time. One is from the Valley, Calif., News, the other was taken the Bible on school grounds.
from the Cincinnati Enquirer. Undoubtedly, the contents express
I am sick of paying more and more taxes to build schools
the feelings of millions of Americans who make up these United while I see some faculty members encouraging students either to
States.
tear them down or burn them.
++++++
1 am sick of Supreme Court decisions which turn criminals
TilE first article, from the Valley, Calif., News, was sub- loose on society - while other decisions . try to take away my
milled by State senator H. L. Richardson, Republican from means of protecting my home and family .
Arcadia . Titled, "Your Age May Be Showing - Check List of
I am sick of pot-&amp;noking entertainers deluging me with their
Senators,'' it reads:
condemnations of my moral standards on late-flight television.
Here is another of the many interesting items that came
I am sick of being told that policemen are mad dogs who
across my desk - this one from Sen. (James E.) Whetmore's should not have guns - but that criminals who use guns to rob,
office. I couldn't resist sharing it with you.
maim and murder should be understood and helped back to
It just 'may surprise you a little to find out how old you really society.
are . Can you remember:
I am sick of being told it is wrong to use napalm to end a war
When you never dreamed our country could ever lose?
overseas - but if it's a molotov cocktail or a bomb at home, 1
When you left the front door open?
must understand the provocations.
When people knew what the Fourth of July stood for?
lam sick of not being able to take my family to a movie unless
When you took it for granted that women, the elderly and the I want to have them exposed to nudity, homosexuality and the
clergy, were to be respected?
glorification of narcotics.
When. girl was a girl and a boy was a boy?
I am sick of riots, marches, protests, demonstrations, conWhen you didn't feel embarrassed to say that this was the frontations, and the other mob temper tantrums of people inbest darn country in the world'
t.ellectually incapable of working with the system.
When socialist was a dirty word?
l am sick of hearing the same phrases, the same slick
Whim taxes were only a nuisance?
slogans, the cries of people who must chant the same thing like
When the poor were too proud to take charity?
zombies because they haven't the capacity for verbalizing
When you weren't afraid to go out at night'
thought.
When ghettos were neighborhoods?
I am sick of those who say I owe them this or that because of
Wh en you 1m ew the 1aw mean t JUS
· rtee, an d you fIt
e a little thest'nsofmyforefathers-whenihavelookeddownbothendsof
shiver of awe at the sight ofa policeman?
a gun barrel to defend their rights, their liberties and their
When young fellows tried to join th'e Army or the Navy?
families.
When songs had a tune?
I am sick of cynical attitudes toward patriotism. I am sick of
When criminals went to jail?
politicians with no backbone.
When you bragged about your home state and your home
I am sick of permissiveness.
town?
1am sick of the dirty, the foul-mouthed, the unwashed.
When politicians proclaimed their patriotism?
I am sick of the decline of personal honesty , personal inWhen clerks and repairmen tried to please you?
tegrity and human sincerity.
When a Sunday drive was an adventure, not an ordeal?
Most of all, though, I am sick of being told I'm sick. I'm sick of
When you could always find someone willing and able when being told my country is sick - when we have the greatest nation
you needed something done?
that man has ever brought forth on the face of the earth. Fully
When riots were unthinkable?
fifty per cent of the people on earth would willingly trade places
When the· clergy talked about religion'
with the most deprived, themost underprivileged among us.
When you took it for granted that the law would be enforced,
Yes, I may be sick, but if I am only sick, I can get well. I can
and your safety protected?
alsohelpmysocietygetwell-andhelpmycountrygetwell.
When the Flag was a sacred symbol?
Take note, all of you ... you wiU notfind me throwing a rock or
When our government stood up for Americans anywhere in a bomb; you will not find me under a placard; you wiU not see me
the world?
take to the streets; you wiU notfindme ranting to wild-eyed mobs.
When a man who went wrong was blamed, not his mother's
But you will find me at work, paying taxes, serving in the
nursing habits or-llis father's income?
community where I live . You will also find me expressing my
When things weren't perfect, but you expected them to be? anger and indignation to elected officials.
When everyone knew the difference between right and wrong
You will find me speaking out in support of those officials,
-even college professors?
institutions and personalities who contribute to the elevation of
When college kids swallowed golfish, not acid?
society and not its destruction. You will find me contributing my
When people expected less and valued when they had more? time, money and persona.! influence to helping churches,
When people still had the capacity for indignation?
hospitals, charities and other establishments which have shown
When you considered yourself lucky to have a good job, and the true spirit of this country's determination to ease pain, sufwhen you were proud to have one?
fering, eliminate hunger and generate brotherhood.
When America was the land of the free and the home of the
But, most of all, you'll find me at the polling.place. There - if
brove ?
you listen - you can hear the thunder of the common man. There,
all of us can cast our vote - for an America where people can
HERE's the second article from the Enquirer titled, "I Am A walk the streets without fear .
Author Unknown
Sick American .... "
There are those who claim ours is a "sick" society; that our
++++++
country is sick; our government is sick; that we are sick. Well,
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily Tribune
maybe they're right. I submit that I'm sick ... and maybe you are and weekly Gallia Times ... Rent control lifted in Gallipolis ... D.
too . 1 am sick of having policemen ridiculed and called "pigs" 0. Taber to head Gallia's revised Civil Defense program ... Judge
while cop killers are hailed as some kind of folk hero.
William H. Janes named Memorial Day speaker ... Gilkey Queen
1am sick of being told that religion is the opiate of the people, Bees nip Ravenswood 6-5 in Ohio Valley Association baseball
but marijuana should be legalized.
game ... Swimming Popl readied for 1951 season.

Some

~lew

Insurance Firms
•
Steal $20 Million zn

COLUMBUS - Chairman insurance contracts as well as
of the Ohio House of any claim that such a contract
Representatives Consumer exists, yet reports he is
Problems Study Committee, receiving indicate the new law
Frank H. Mayfield, Jr., (R) has had little effect.
Cincinnati, has charged that During the past month
some new life insurance Mayfield said he has been
companies bilked Ohioans out of gathering evidence that the law
roughly $20 million during 1970. is being violated and during a
"During the past six years speech to the Ohio A.ssociation
these companies have con- of U!e Underwriters last week
vinced Ohioans to pay them in Columbus he described and
nearly $100 million through an presented the evidence to
itinerant sales force trained to Kenneth E. DeShetler, Director
-----1111!1~-~--· peddle 'units' of a so-called of the Ohio Department of In'investment plan' which buyers surance.
are told will allow tl~m to
Some of the evidence
'share in the profits' of the Mayfield has gathered is in the
company ,'' Mayfield revealed. form of documented tape
"Victims are told they've recorded sales pitches given to
been recommended to become Ohio residents as recently as
one of a limited number of the past two montha. ''The
charter contract holders in transcribed tapes demonstrate
return for their investment plus the untrue, deceptive and
the names Or several people a misleading statements being
year who might want to buy used to induce prospects to
'regular' insurar!ce, once the purchase
these
alleged
company begins selling it," 'charter' contracts,'' Mayfield
Mayfield said.
declared.
Sume charter contract buyers In one tape a salesman, in
are Ia ter shocked to discover order to demonstrate an alleged
that all they've really pur- close relationship between
chased is a high-priced par- stockholders and "charter"
ticipating life insurance policy contract buyers, claims thiit the
King -size homeowners policy
grows wilh the re'placement and many times not on the ·investment feature "is really
cost of your home as It in - breadwinner, but on )he lives of the most important part of the
creases the amoun t of your their children or grandchildren. whole contract." ije goes so far
pol icy 10 help ' kee p pa ce wit h
The salesman sometimes as to declare that "If a
infla tion . Sec me about details .
State Fa r m is all you need
recommends this procedure so stockholder wants to share in
to know about Insurance .
"the investment will last' the profits of the company, he's
longer," according to Mayfield. got to get into the (charter)
Caroll K.
Such companies trade on the program," according to
Snowden
respectability of the life in- Mayfield.
surance industry to gain the
The same salesman claims
Park Central
Hotel Bldg .
prospec!'s confidence, then sell that the charter contract
Second Av e.
"an opportunity to get in on the "owners are only interested in
Phone 446-4290
Home 446 -451t
ground floor" of a potential the profits which w1ll be paid
' .I .
gianl In the "world's most them in the form of a dividend"
profitable business,'' Mayfield and that "these profits are tax
.
said.
.
) free ," according to Mayfield.
He recalled that last year the . " If it weren't for lhe fact that
Stete' Fa r m Fire ana \.. Bsual ty Ohio General A.ssembly passed the public believes these
Comp4ny
.
Home Office ; Bloom ing ton . H.B. 242 which hans these SO• statements, they would be
Illinois
P ·C932
ealled "charter" or .'1ounders" humorous," Mayfield declared.

New
·state Farm
Inflation
Coverage .,

Clippings From Other Papers: I
Your Age May Be Sh~wing;

.Happr DaJS Are Here All The Time At Your
IGA Foodliner Store. Weekly Specials, Everyday

,,
THE ROYAL CROWN Jm'l'LING OO.In Middleport Ia havlnc ''growing pllna" ana tile
construction of an addition, 35 by 70 feet, is underway. Pi~tured is the foundation of the addition
which will house not only office quarters but production operations. The actual structure will
be ina pastel green metal. Completion is expected about July I.

automobiles and watermelons!
Tile reason the alleged 'profits'
are tax free is that they aren't
'profits,' but simply a return of
an excessive overcharge built
into the premium. Yet this
'profi't' claim recurs over and
over in these tapes," Mayfield
. said.
"And this claim that a limited
number of 'charter' contract
holders will, to the exclusion of
others, share in the total profits
of the company is a bold-faced
violation of the law we passed
last year . That law absolutely
prohibits discriminatio~ be,,ween insurance classes. 11 a
company raided . the divisible
surplus of Class A and gave
those dollars to Class B they
would he discriminating against
Class A. So what's being
promised just plain isn't legal in
Ohio," Mayfield declared.
Ohio isn 'I the only state to
declare such a scheme illegal,
according to Mayfield. Over 30
states have regulated such
plans; Texas as recently as
March.

There are more than 100
various inbred strains and
substrains of mice that are
used in cancer research. "Inbred mice are necessary to
research because they can be
genetically controlled," said
Dr. Telle. Genetic defects have
been "bred out" so the only
variables an investigator has to
be concerned with are those
included in his experiment, it
was explained.
As anti-cancer researc h
methods increase, so does the
need for mice. Inbred mice,
once maintained in very few
places, are now widely
available from national or
regional stock centers, some of
which raise approximately 2
million mice a year and
maintain over 75 strains and
substrains.
The increase in the number of
mice used became an expensive
proposition. An idea was
developed by the Florida'
Division of the American
Cancer Society to raise money
toward their purchase. Called

~~

1

MAY 31st TO JUNE 5th
•• ..,_. ______ _

•lll1'11~'-~•• •- a,.

Low, Low Prices With Personal Service.

Mice Paying Mankirrd Back
POMEROY - Six centuries
ago there was an epidemic that
wiped out more than one-third
of the European population. The
Bubonic Plague - a disease so
devastating that during its fivecentury reign it claimed 43
million lives - was primarily
caused by rats.
•'Today the rat 's closest
cousin - the mouse - is
making retribution to mankind,
and has helped to save hundreds
of thousands of lives," said Dr.
Telle, Medical Advisor of the
Meigs County Unit of the
American Cancer Society.

STARTS

At IGA We Carry Out Your Groceries.

"Send A Mouse To College" the
project has been successfully in
the Ohio Division for the past
three years. The idea is to ask
students of all ages to donate 27
cents toward the purchase of a
mouse, thereby, sending !tim to
a research center or college.
Local efforts in Meigs County
Elementary schools this year
raised $489. The financial aid
from these chifdren will ·go
toward the fight against cancer.
Why have mice risen to such
notoriety In cancer research?
Why not "Bred out" frogs or
guinea pigs instead? Dr. Telle
outlined a variety of reasons :
"Mouse
tumors closely
resemble human tumors; mice
are cheap; and due to their twoto-three year life span, their
tum'ors develop quickly,
allowing the investigator more
action time and less waiting
time.
Dr. Telle concluded, "Of all
the laboratory mammals,
probably none has contributed
more to the advancement of
knowledge . than the common

•

FOODLIN ER

COFFEEOR 2 lb.

CANG:I~

NESCAFE INSTANT
COFFEE 10 oz. JAR
OR

mouse."

Nestea
Instant

BE THRIFTY!
SAVE ALL OF YOUR SALESLI PS
FROM

TEA

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

oz.
JAR

•

•

WITH COUPON

'• ••
• i ,'
• • ,
•• • , I

"The fact is that equating life
insurance policy 'dividends'
with 'profits' is like equating

••I

t&lt;i!'{!)/GOO D LO 0 KS
~&amp; COMFORT IN
•
THE PONDEROSA

CENTER
CUT

, J

'

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Sturdy construction
provides long
wear. OIL
RESISTENT SOL£S.

lB.
tAN

LB.

OXFORD
TO

8"

I '

g;~~~--

WITH
OOUPON
.
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FROZEN

THE DEBT WE OWE
TO OUR COUNTRYMEN

,.

French Fries

FIRST LADY

Ice Cream
·~GAL

A SURE FIT WHATEVER
YOUR WORK!

Let us not forget those

"'' ~

who gave their lives
strife to make this earth

THE SHOE BOX

...

LB. BAG

CARTON

· LB.

BASKET

a· better place for all hu- ·

•

manity to enjoy.

Wh. ere ShOOS A
.re Se nSI'blY pfiCe
' d.
.

r;. ~i:d AVE.
MIDDLEPORT
'lt!I...._________________..

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__. . _:_. ;____..______

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The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, May 30, 1971

TENDER, CRISP

FRESH DRESSED

STARTS
MONDAY
MAY 31ST ·.
. TO
JUNE
5TH

PORK LOIN ··
Y.t SLICED

16 BEST PIECES

•

4 Drumsticks

4 Thighs

1

··poRK
CtiOPS

4 Wings
4 Breasts

c

. ...

SLICED

LB.
'!,", ,

·

END

'~~LF
BACON

1 LB.
PKG.

FOCKE

WEINERS

12

9~
BOLOGNA _____
LB. HONEYDALE

~.-...;....

IN THE
PIECE

22 oz.

CANS

CANS

CAN

' GOOD MAY 31st-JUNE 5·
.ONE PER PERSON '
.
· · IGA FODDUNER . . ·· ,

J

G;

10 ciz. JAR .
1
.
. WITH THIS.COUPON
,

4

ENP

.

SLAB
IN THE 49~l8.
BACON
PIECE
-.=:;;:.:;:~_ _......_.....__ _ _ _ _

.
·

I

.

'

IGA
TOWELS

PAR KAY

64 oz.

.l

GOOD MAY 3lst-JONE 5
ONE PER, PERS08 .
' '
IGA fOODl.INER " ·

LB.
PKG.

· 10° LB.

;

'

COFFEE ·. , gg~

SINGLES

or

LB. ·

,.

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' ·~

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CHICKEN
BACKS

ROAST

.

AMERICAN

PORK LOIN RIB

oz.

15 oz.

KRAFT

BREAStS

LOIN

Cream or W. Kernel ·

LOIN

c
CHICKEN
LEG£ O,R ·· / . 5 5 -tLB.
:., ,.

PORK&amp;BEANS

15 oz.

LB.

PORK
STEAK

V CAMPS -

·DEL MONTE

APPLE
SAU·CE

"

.

.

Your
Groceries

-

-'ENTER CUTp ·

EVERY
DAY
LOW
.. PRICES

'

'

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The,Su~ay Times •SenUnel, Sunday, May 30, 19'11

Out

MUSSELMAN$

.

.

We
Carry

1

LARGE ROLL

ROLLS

DEL

FIRST LADY

IN STICKS

MONICO

QT.
. NESTEA

1h GAL ·cARTON ONLY.

ANT

T_EA
3 at J~

99~

wint

1 LB.
PKG.

·

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MACARONI .
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GOOD
MAY'31st-JUNE 5 -'
.
ONE PER PERSON
·.

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.. The Sunday TimeS. Sentinel,' Sunday, May 30, (9'/1

STARTS'

·. MONDAY
MAY 31ST

m

.

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H~LP 'S&lt;f . ,t

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NEYER' 5Aii/1.'
AN'i'TKiN~ ..

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FRENCH FRIEl&gt;
'

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POTATOES

c

tl.l~~· ~:,~;/~·,·; · . ~~w~~0w~~~~D .

LB. BAG

BAN UET

Vi
GALLON

·. &gt;·'.
.

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1 THINK L!OUR P~8LEM

.·

15 MATHEMATICAL,
CHARLIE BROWN

LITTLE REP+lA!I&lt;ED .
. GIR~ AND TALK TO
, · ~ER, BUT I JU~T ·
. · · · COU~DN'i ..

4 FLAVORS

CARTON
FOR

•t.OSE·R

\

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·b F· Ar~ SansODI. ··

~y=~.~~· ,;·rr;$ AW;~DGR . ·•.
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.. FOI&lt;~T!

.

1a:,y 1

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SHE .. DIDtir
PI~ IT TO .
M'/ ~HI~T!

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LB.

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J

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BASKEl

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NOW ....

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.. The Sunday TimeS. Sentinel,' Sunday, May 30, (9'/1

STARTS'

·. MONDAY
MAY 31ST

m

.

'

1 .'

'

\-,-

j •' ~

} ,.

.

'

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~_.; ,.·...··

JUNE'5TH

~~·.\'
... ...

.

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Fl RST of the SEASON !
~5ttd\ I'A11RIC . 1'
H~LP 'S&lt;f . ,t

F

I

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NEYER' 5Aii/1.'
AN'i'TKiN~ ..

ZEN

FRENCH FRIEl&gt;
'

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POTATOES

c

tl.l~~· ~:,~;/~·,·; · . ~~w~~0w~~~~D .

LB. BAG

BAN UET

Vi
GALLON

·. &gt;·'.
.

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1 THINK L!OUR P~8LEM

.·

15 MATHEMATICAL,
CHARLIE BROWN

LITTLE REP+lA!I&lt;ED .
. GIR~ AND TALK TO
, · ~ER, BUT I JU~T ·
. · · · COU~DN'i ..

4 FLAVORS

CARTON
FOR

•t.OSE·R

\

.

•CANTALOUPES

·b F· Ar~ SansODI. ··

~y=~.~~· ,;·rr;$ AW;~DGR . ·•.
· s~!Lt:: ~ve~

·,

ME . .

. ' LET'
.. FOI&lt;~T!

.

1a:,y 1

:

SHE .. DIDtir
PI~ IT TO .
M'/ ~HI~T!

. .

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LB.

•GREEN ONION
J

.

BASKEl

•CUCUMBERS

I

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-

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�by Prank O'Neal
.e'

oes~ERr

·COMINGUP/ ·

'AFUR A ~EEMI'-IG EiEtr:NI'I'Y
OF WAITING AFT.!:~ TH~
TEMPEST EA~D, Wi He-A~t:l .
'THE OUTJMRP ANI' THEN

'5AW l&lt;eVIN ANP
RgTU~NIN~/

11

PAY~

VOU ANP TH= IJ~CHIN5 HAVfi'

1EI..L. 1HE CHE!= 10 PLEASE ·
SliCK 10 r:our&lt;-AND-1'WEN1Y

A~HOII:T NAP··AgouT
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~ANPC;_!:ti~~J·"'N""i

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THIS IS. WHAT!. GET FOil!:
MA~~YI NI# A '6CAT /
n/I'II:P::&gt;

JOHNNY WO.NDJJ:,R

I'M TAI&lt;IN~

CAN YOU MAK~

'

A fON OU1 .o~
/01 W11'H ON\..Y
3 ~'i~AI~H1"
\..INe??

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by Dick Cavalli

'
£ HA1E ID BaiNG HO/v\E
A

NOTE FR.OM MY

f'D RATHEl&lt; BE

T~CHER.

Df2AWN AND
QUARlEP.E=D-

NATURALlY.

UH-HUH.

J'D RATHER.HAV.f;: MY

J..ll&lt;.e P'UL-1-1 NG Te:E:m~""\1
TO
Al-L- OF YOU 10
'Tf-.15 TA.~e! .

OOTONEATATIME".

..

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DENTI5T "THAN BRING ·
f-JO\\E

....-----r ,,.,6- GeT

6URE ..

FINGS&lt;NAIL"S FtJ! 1 FD

I'D RATHER GOlD ll-IF
MY T.S.O.a..lER/

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NOW YOL.l'r&lt;E GE-TTING
51L.LY!
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OUTOURWAY ·

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CAMP'US CLATTER
STO~ING
THE.M 11E~E,

WE'RE

A?M~

WOUL.t&gt;
L.IKE TO $EE OUR
T ACQUISITIONS
· FOR. THE MUSEUM'%

TEMPORARH.'r' .

,....-------.

L~· rry

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YOU COPPIN''

il-lERE'S Cl.[) MAN /'OM!&gt;
GOING INTO THAf
QUONSET 1-!UT,. WAIT
Tll.L loiE Fl NOS OUT

WE 11AVE SOMe.
WONDERFUl., NEW
ACJ()ITI'ONS FOR
OUR SPANISH
INQWSirtON

by Coker &amp; Penn

Lewis
OLJT~

(.IKE ·

WHY,MAN'i

WHAT 'WE'RE SCHEMIN'

ROOM

'

MA'T'BE HE'S THROUGH
S~APPIN' OUR WRISTS~ !F
HE'S GE.TTIN1 HEAV"f,

LOOK WHAT
HE'S GOT IN

·TJ.I eR-e. J

I'M GeT TIN' OUT1

l

J

ANDY -CAPP

ALLBY -OOP
THANKS TO TH'
WIZER I THINGS
ARE BACKlO
NORIV\AL.
· AGAIN!

Bur WE NEVER VID
SOLVE TH' MYSTERY
OFTH' KIDNAP

QUEENS!

-I

Y'MEAN THEY .JUST UP AN
WENT OFF SOMEWHERE
BY THEMSELVES?

TJ.!EY WEREN'T
KIDNA.PED,
YOUR

HIGHNESS..

DY

L.ET 15 M A t:)RINK
.. IN 'ERE -I'M ~'SPIN'

YESSIR

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OH,NO ...THERE WERE A LOT
OF WOMEN WHO .JOINED THE

OROER

'1'EAH 1 THAi'-$ T~UE -

l:&gt;IDNIT ~"'( AN~T""'IN'

T.. F'A'IIN'

· 1..18. MOVEMeNT!

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&lt;THE DROPOUT

By Howard Post"

...

DEAR 1'01 LY-~ut clamp· type clot~es·
pins on a clotkes ka nger. It makes o
wonderlul dryer lor stockings, hand
wash, etc.-M. A. S.

•

A NEW COLOSSUS!

MY MAStf~PJ!'E! .
-NOW 1liE WORLD
wI J,.L TAKE NOTICE!

•

.

HI I

.

•

Duplicat11
Mothtl ond daughter willloo~

SANDY!

nice wtatin; this pretty Style.
No. 1364 with PHOTO-GU ICE
is in Ntw Sl111 10 to 11 {bust
32"1-40). Sin 10, 32!-1 bust,

DEAR POLLY-A friend of mine worl&lt;s
hard for her wages. An· unknown culprit
dented the·back fender an her new car
while it was parked. This gal took a
plumber's {rien'd'and worked t~at dent
os n·ew. Too good a trick to
out
'

2~ ya1ds of 45-inch. No. 1365
,.ith PHOTO-GUIDE io in
Sizes 3 to I
Sitt 4, 1\4

SEPA·

.' .-·
' .

~

DEAR POLLY-To help keep my sweaters da isy-hesh I fill! lie two nylon
Slockings together, and secure lo the
clothesline with a pin over the knot in
the center. Slip o stacking th1ollgh each
sweater sleeve, from the armhole to the
cuff on each side. Pin top of the nylo.ns
coming out ol the sleeves to the line,
. being careful not 10 stretch lhe sleeves
lao much . No marks a1e left, the sweat·
er dries in no time, and needs little or
no p~es sing . - MRS . L. B,

•
•

DEAR POLLY - Our cheese cutter
broke, so we used a piece of Siting and
irwo1ks JUSt lin e.- LI SA
.
"'

.

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'

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FIVE MORE
MINUTES.
-l'M ONL'(

1 '

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• slntttl pockets and sland-up
&lt;iller. No. 1411 with PHOTO·

A SADIST,

r GUIDI is in l&gt;!ew Sim 1·18
(!Mostll\1·40~ Sire 10, 32\.i
' Nt_l~ y•~•
. of •s·i.U.

"5EC0Nt?~

.

CLASS!

DlQS ~ATTilHS 7$1 - -

•

.

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Hi1h Style

t '

' Stylo4 to pln11 tilt lady w~h tho l!lore mature fiiUIO. ltau·
tifully dotlvn&lt;ld with ~10tly yoke' ond pocket dttonl,.. No.
· 1314 witll PHOTO·GUIDE is in Sisos lllo ~. buot 'l to,.,
Sin 40, 44 ~11, 3\4 yards of 4S.ineh.

DEAR POLLY-W• came up. with the
following pointer when giving a bridal
shower for a friend: Pas~ around an
aulogtaph book and have each gu•st
sign her name and ddd some hinh for
the bride - t·o- be to llelp her have a
happy and successful marriage: Some
hints-wert worth-while trtasures Whitt
others were quite humorous and trwe.MRS', I.

NU., Inc.

11

'•

~PPL.E

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DEAR POLLY- Never throw away old
masca•a just bocause it is dty . If you
run the brush undet the water Ioucei
a few seconds it will moisten il nicely.
-T ITHA

•

DEA.R POLLY- Fat those of you who
hesitate to buy shoes with grosg•ain
bows because they get so dirty: I sp•oy
the bows with a clear silicone sp1ay
Dutch Treat
which I get in the shoe department. It
is intended for wate1prooflng boots, but . Embroider your towels with these
cha1ming Dutch Miss 'l'atl!,, Make·
has warke~ as well for my purpose.
extras
for gilt·giving . Pattern Nt,2911
Covtl th rest of the shoe wh ile spray·
ing tht bow.-MRS. F. McC. JR.
, has hol ·tlon transfer for 7 ~·it~t; '
colo• chart_
·
·

HELEN

.I ' ~------------------------~

•.,

f'E.iROLElJM JE.LL''f ~ 1 Tt\OLJ&lt;;Hf
YOLI W~I&lt;E. ~•"' ;~~~­

•

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r 1 •••
au
uu
Sltlillt, HI/II Y,., H.Y.t 111011
• ,c
• -• ,....,.,1, ... · -""'•

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DEAR POLLY- When doing any hand·
wprk that uses yarn save all the snips
and ends lhal are cut off. Drop all
/these in a pope• bo~ and so&gt;e to use
for stuffing toys 'and felt noveltiu,.;;..

~
·

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'

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J. fiRtly flortd stylo with

DEAR POLLY- When I wash my hus·
band's cap I put it over my styrofoa!')
wig head while slill wet. When dry it is
shaped and pressed very nicely.SI:IIRLEY

DEAR POLLY- I always apply a thin
coo t of petroleum jelly to candle holders before inserting the candles. The
jelly will make it cosier to remove any
wok drippings.- MRS. W. C. J .

'

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bJF. Al. verJD.eer 1

PRISCILLA'S POP
THATWAY WE'LL BE

NO,
WE'LL DO
YOURS F=IRST,
NUTCHELL, '
OLD CHUM!

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.MORE ·EXPERIENCED
WHEN . y./E GE.T
. TO. MINEI
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'IHO.W WOULD YOU LIKE TO HAVE THAT KE~~ING YOU BUSY
LOOKING UP MISSPELLED WORDS/"

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'·-~

''BOY, AM I GLAD TO SEE
THE BANK EXAMINIRS
WILL BE HERE TOMORROW !"

'·
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WE DON'T
WANT TO GET ·
OUR GEAR
MIXED

:

SO EVERY TIME WE
KNOCK OFF WE'LL
EACH TAKE OUR
OWN THINGS!!

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by NEA, Int .,

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LUNCH

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TIME~

UP. ..

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" I MAY GET TO STOP MY VIOLIN LESSONS ••• DAD'S STARTE D
TO CALL IT A ' LOUSY FIDDLE'!"

"IF YOU'D HAVE CUT THE GRASS LIKE I TOLD YOU TO,
MAYBE YOU
FIND
PA,ER!"

•."i.U' 6f &amp;lNG...YOU WANHA G~I IN IlOUJLL WITH IHmcmMW. UNIONl''
5'·30

by Ralph llein1dahl ',

.BUGS BUNNY .
MV DOG WO\I'e;R
ALWAYS HE.\..PS M~
PICK
MY SUITS ·
AND .
I

TO eACH
HIS OWN.'

l l-IKE THIS ONE/ .
IT OIVES ME. A

WAI&lt;ISH LOOK.'

WHAT-

EVER

HE'S RAPtAT!N'SUMPTH!N '

AWFUL.~'-CWCE

H£ REACHES
m' "CR!TiCALMESS"- ·~-"

THARGOTH'

WHAT DO YOU
THINK 01= II, WOVER

TH'-Gui.P!-

EARTH, HUH
MAMtvfY?

~LLGAME!!

IXJT, MAMMY

. TH' 50 ·L005H·UN
IS IN DOGPATCH WHICH WE
GOTTA CQt.JTACK
WI FOOT DELAY!!

n-1' BALL lv!EAN!N'

D EA~-WE

CA IN'T AFFOIIIO
NOLOI&lt;.IG
DISTAI\JCE
CALL!'.''

1lJRNS
YA,ON

£;1.-MER,

~r'iE~

liMP 'r!J A

..

SUMMER
)Sitt:.AW;

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CH!.APIA
Afo.J'

FASTER!!

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RIG l-IT!!·-

M·MEAN IN'
CON.JURI N' UP
ONE 0 ' YORE.

FU5T

AH DRA'iNS TH'
BLOOD OFA
INN E:RCE.t-lT
LAMB ,r.'

-S4uDDEP.!-

PE.R50"---1'DPE P.SON

VISIONS?

I DoNT CARE lF WOVE!&lt;:

OlD LAUGH AT ME.!
HE..'5 NOT ALWAYS
WIGHT:' I 'LL

TAI·&lt;c

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NoW YEK TALKIN;

FUDOSV/ 13E
VE~OWN

MAN!

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THS1

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by Crooks &amp; .Lawrence
HOLD THE EL~VATORl ANP HAVE?
PMSEIV6E~7 5TANP MCK~

DON'T SE: ALARMED~ I.'M ?LJRE Jn;;
CATCHIN6 ...WEJ...!. ,FA/RLY :7URE:!

lfHECHIL.D,
WITCH

GoOD PAY,

. HEY. MA!

M~or:z_.

f-\EFZBEIZT \5

WE

f

C~AIRM,tt..N

You

A12E &lt;SOl NG -ro A
Dl!ZECTO~S'' MEETINc;;;;; OF

MY f-\EFZS€121 HE.AD!;; 11-\EOA!=s .At-10 WAIFS DRIY6,
HE126E~T •••

'CRt;AT/J~E ·F!?OM

Ti=N TH0/17Afi/IP

Of-\ NO, NO •• -

,A NO YOU, MAtroR. '? I SUPPOSe

OF

"'fl-1€ CULTUR.6 COMMITTEE •••

. · W612€ EN !20UIE 'TO THE:
C:U L."TU~AL. GAI&lt;D~N~ • ••

"

I?- THAT THE?

FANt\1"1 DOOL~Y,
HAS&gt; TURNED
EASY'7 FEE:T
J~TO FR06MAN FL.JPPEJi?

by Ji~n Branagan

OUR BOABDING 110t1SE

1 t-IAV6
,M.OI=26

gUSINESS ••• J

,,.7ENDING A

PODIAT~I~T ' ?

PAT18NT INTO
HY5WRJC?~

f.,
NO WOND~~ EA7Y
DOE~N'T AN?W8R.! POP
·5AY? THEY'VE RU~HED
HIM TO A HO~P/TAJ..!

LikE REVER7E EVO~UT/0"-'- 'Hi9
FE:ET TAKJI\16 ON RE:PTII..IA"-' FOI&lt;M!
THE PODJATRf~T I? · ~HOWJ"-'6 HIM
AN ElU'ERTl

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f\€~ ·!4eHJ l'M FE6TIVAL-

1 ... ~fF-14\FF . .. f-\,A..Y€ \!'U~T

CONDOC.TOFZ., Al-L t:zJGHT,
IN \H€ SE.~S€ OF l'ICI&lt;e\:AI&lt;:.IE.I=Z. WHILE$ GA\eWA"TCt-(SI'
Mll'E- IS Ol'l·VACAIION!

,.O.CC.EPIED A COMMIS~IOI'l TO

·se "' ce;;uesT coNDUC1t&gt;~ AI TI-ltS
· .S'!2!-MBI..€8'US'!-I CONC6~
ATfi.ll. IHis; S{JMM€fi./

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Eastern High School's Marching

:;·-·:

IT'S

Band Came to Pomeroy Monday to

George Hargraves, a yoag
sergeant of Infantry In the
barrowlng Battle of tbe
Bulge, Cbrlstmas, 1944,
. spoke.

Participate in the Memorial Day Parade

•

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they who gave

TIME!

all honored

I'M

1.,-t)U

DRAW!

READY!

READY?

11-\E. SAME. STR.L..IGC:&gt;LE. 1

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WHAT KIND Trie BOYS AI&lt;E
OF NOISE DO EXPERIMENT- ·
YOU CALL
/N6WITH

THA

'

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MY FAVO~ITE SONGS! Wf..lY
DIDN•T
. l !&lt;!ECClGt-.liZE THEM?.

WHATWEI&lt;c
YOu JuST
PLAYI/NG ? ' , ·~·'"""'

WE WE"f&lt;'!! P/..AYIN6
ALL THREE AT THE"

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SAME liME.'

1

WHAT THEY
"""·'-' F.AR-OUT''

l'D k'IND OF LIKE
To HAVE A HAND
IN Ti-115 MYSELF (

Br::IN6 YOUR.
/NSTRUME.NTS "
AND l:LL SHOW
/OU WI-1AT 1
· · /N'· Mli-JD!

YOUR MOTAER
DOESN•T LIKE M~IC

~~

By United Press Internatlooal

"'1 ' St,;;)D THEM TO Ai-J '

• o~ncAL. .COMPAt-.JY IN

·- WNOON.

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By United Press International
Some of the thousands of
Americans who flocked to
parades, marches and speech
gatherings Monday came to
honor and praise the men who
have died in this country's
wars. Some came to protest the
wars in which the men died,
and the Vietnam War in
particular.
Adm. Bernard A. Clarey,
commander in chief of the U.S.
Navy in the Pacific, said, "as
grateful but sorrowing Americans have done for 103 years,
we are gathered here to honor
our fallen heroes for all wars."
Clarey spoke to about 200
military and civilian leaders at
services aboard the U.S.S.
Arizona Memorial in Pearl
Harbor.
At the other end of the

continent, 8,000 to 10,000 persons gathered on Boston
Common for a "celebration of
life." The convocation culmina!·
ed a four-day march through
Boston-area historic battlefields
by several hundred Vietnam
veterans.
Iowa Gov. Robert D. Ray
spoke at a National Guard
memorial building dedication at
Camp Dodge in Des Moines. He
told his audience Americans
must dedicate themselves to
the cause of peace.
"This Memorial Day serves
as a reminder as U&gt; how stupid
war really is," Ray said.
In Waterloo-Cedar Falls,
Iowa, crewmembers of a
Na tiona! Guard helicopter
dropped a wreath into the
Cedar River in memory of the
war dead. Twenty antiwar

TEN CENTS

"

marchers paraded on the
government-owned Rock Island ·
Arsenal Island in the Mississippi River.
A four-star general, a U.S.
senator and a soldier who
escaped from a North Vietnamese prison camp spoke to an
audience of 2,000 at the
Veterans Administration Ceme·
tery in Los Angeles. Gen. Lewis
W. Walt, retired assistant
commandant of the Marine
Corps, said the Vetnam War is
"probably the most moral war
our country has ever participat.
ed in. We went there to help
the people to be free."
In Milwaukee and Media, Pa.,
peace demonstrators added
their own parades to the
regularly scheduled Memorial
. Day parades. Four persons
(Continued from paie lli)

Boy Scouts step right along in the parade

Highways Up to Prediction
By Unlied Press International

The Memorial Day holiday
weekend traffic death toll
climbed into the range
predicted by the National
Safety Council · Monday as
America"" headed home from a
three-day weekend.
Safety council officials said
they feared the nwnber of

O'Neill Orders Courts Speedup

COLUMBUS (UPl)-The Ohio
Supreme Court said state Common Pleas courts are "being
swamped with a backlog of
criminal cases" and ordered all
criminal and civil cases be tried
&amp;linger with McGovern
within six month of indictment
NEW YORK -PIERRE SALINGER, a top political aide in
and grand juries to take action
the Kemedy presidential campaigns, this week will join Sen. 60 d~ys after they receive a
Ge.orge McGovern's 'bid to capture the 1972 Democratic case.
ll'~sidentlal nomination. Despite the most recent Gallup poD
"Delay in the trial courts is
showing McGovern running behind several other potential the most serious problem in the
Democratic nominees, Salinger said in an interview Mon~y he adminsitration of justice in Ohio
thinks the South Dakota Democrat can win if he does well m next today," said Chief Justice Wilyear's primaries. ·
liam O'Neill. "Crime is increas"H McGovern does well in New Hampshire, say 20 per cent ing so fast in Ohio that our
of the vote then goes on and wins in Wisconsin and Nebraska, courts are being swamped with
then I thmk he'smoving and he's got a shot at it," Salinger' said. a backlog of criminal cases."
"But 1 think he has to win one of them." The May 15 Gallup poD
The high court also ordered
showed McGovern with 5 per cent of the Democratic vote and 8 that all perso!l8 convicied of a
per .cent of the Independent vote, trailing such possible candidates crime shall be sentenced or
placed on probation by the Comas Sens. EdmundS. Muskie and Hubert H. Humphrey.
mon Pleas Court judge within
' the judge rece11&lt;es
'
15 days after
a completed probation report .
The new ruies are effective Jan.
I, i972.
NEW YORK, (UPI)-Four of The contract was signed by O'Neill said if a grand jury
five major aluminum firms Revnolds Metals, Alumlnwn fails to take action in the resigned new contracts with the Co~ of America, Kaiser quired time; ihe charges would
Orm~t be dismissed.
United Steelworkers of America Aluminum · and
O'Neill said the Chief Justice
(USW) Monday involving wage Aluminum.
increases which the White ALCOA is the largest of the would also take final appropti.a.te action if a person is not
House has inlficated in the past
(Continued
on
page
10)
!tied within six months after
are inflatl'1118ry.
I
I
,
•

Four Firms Sign

PHONE 992·2156

Some to Protest

1

WASHINGTON - TilE AGRICULTIJRE Department says
farmers have responded enthusiastically U&gt; a program that pays
them for destroying wild marijuana. Ray Hunter, a department
spokesman, said Monday prellmlnary reports on the prog:am
· '1ook pretty good." He said a pilot project had been started 1n 11
counties in 10 states.
In one area Andrew County, Mo., farmers already have
applied for mo~e than the $5,000 allocated for deatructlon of
marijuana, HlUiter said. He said the p-ogram, two weeks old, had
dem(llstrated there was more wild marijuana around than first
estimates indicated. "One of the things we're finding is that a lot
of farmers have the weed and don't know it," Hunter said. "They
think at first it's ragweed."

'· ', BUT I ' DOl

I

"*

I

Check all Ragweed Patches

THAT'S FAR-0UT-.. -- ·

THAT KID OUTSMARTS 'ME E:V~RYTIME(
Jusr ONCI: I ·D LIKE I-11M To RUN.bUT
0~

•

TUESDAY, JUNE 1, 1971

Mayor Otarles Legar, Pomeroy, left, and Rep. Ralph Welker, in the back seat where
dignitaries ride in a parade.

KART AL, TURKEY -TURKISH security forces shot it out
today with two gunmen and rescued the bruised and weeping 14year-old girl they had held as a hostage in a Karla! house since
Sunday. One gunman was killed and the other gravely wounded.
Soldiers and security agents .dragged the two fugitives from the
house and guarded them from an angry crowd th~t p~shed forward and·yelled that they be launched. One man died m an ambulance and the other was rushed to a hospital where angry Turks
demanded:
"Kill the vermin! Don't save him!"
'lbe man who died was Munir cayan, thought to be the young
leftist who shot and killed Israeli Consul General Ephraim Elrom,
~ who was beaten unconscious and abducted from his Istanbul
a~arlment last month. Elrom was found dead six days later.

T.M. ~,,.41J, '"'· Olf.

DSCOVER A
WILD NeW MLJSICAL SOUND!

1\T
1

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

LOUIS OSBORNE drives Ted Reed Jr. 's 1914 Model T Ford, recently acquired, because
. banker Reed hasn 'I learned yet how to drive it.

Bruised Girl Rescued in Shootout

~

TO

B
.
'ews .•• rn rze1 s

NO. XXIV NO. 33

r---------------------------~

MUSIC(

WE'rz't TRYING

Devoted To The lntem" Of The Meigi-Maaon Area

BY BOB HOEFUCH
Meigs Cmmty paid tribute to its dead of past wars Sunday
and Monday in Memorial Day services led by the American
Legion Posts at Pomeroy, Middleport, Rutland and Racine.
Beautiful weather prevailed both days as the scene of
tribute repeated Itself at numerous cemeteries and sites
throughout the county. Most of the services included only a
trief prayer and the firing of the traditional gun salute.
The most extensive observance was staged in Pomeroy
Monday morning when a parade moved through the business
section concluding in a program on the upper parking lot. A
fair-lllzed crowd saw the parade which included bands from
'the Meigs and Eastern High Schools, the Royal Riggs
cadettes, and the Wee Glo~ttes marching units, Boy Scouts,
Girl Scouts, some decorated bicycles, three horse mounted
riders, emergency and fire equipment from Pomeroy,
Middleport and Racine, cheerleaders of the Meigs High
School, some antique automobiles, the heart fund queen,
Gold Star Mothers, Mayor Charles Legar, Rep. Ralph
Welker, Legion Auxiliary poppy representatives, the Legion
color guard, and others. Along the parade route, the line of
march was halted for a brief gun salute at the Civil War
monument at the courthouse. Dick Vaughan was parade
marshaD.
Kenneth Harris was master of ceremonies at a speakers
platform on the upper parking lot from where short addresses were made by George Hargraves, Jr., a sergeant of
infantry in the ·Battle of the Bulge in World War II, and
recounted personal experiences there, in leading up U&gt; his
salute U&gt; the dead vf all wars; Mrs. Pearl Reynolds,
represenUng Jane HoweD Tent, Daughters of Union
Veterans, and Frank Vaughan of the Drew Webster Post who
thanked those participating in the parade.
Mayor Legar and Rep. Welker were introduced. Prayer
was by the Rev. Frank Oteesebrew. The Meigs High School
Band opened the services with the National Anthem and
played other selections,

(SIGH)
E.VERY IVIGHT IT'S

American Legion Color Guard Marches

being indicted.
"C8seloads in all our courts
are increasing so fast that it is
becoming difficult to provide
criminal defendants with the
speedy trial guaranteed them by
the constitution of the United
States and the Ohio constitution
he said.
"It is to be remembered that
the courts are created not for
the convenience or benefit of the
judges and lawyers, but to
serve the litigants and the interests of the public at large."

O'Neill said.
"When cases are wmecessarily delayed, the confidence
of the people in our judicial
system suffers," he said.
"The confidence of the people
in the ability of our system of
government to achieve liberty
and justice under law for all
is the foundation upon ·which
the American system of government is built/' he said.
The Supreme Court also proposed:
-All Conunon Pleas Courts

COLUMBUS (UPI)- Cblel Justice C. WlUiam O'Nelll of
the Ohio Supreme Court sald lolb,y doclon and lawyers who
specialize In crtmlnal defense are two ol the serious canses of
delay in cases in the common pleas courts of Oblo.
O'Nelll said doctor's are often unavaUable when tbey are
~eded 1o testify at the trial of ,personal lnjllr)' cases. He
added tbalcrlnlnalcases are often concentrated In the bands
of a few lawyers who specialize in criminal defeues and thai
other specializing lawyers receive a concentration of per··
sonal cases.
''This creates a shortage of trial lawyers and materially
delays ,the expeditious handling of the trial courts backlog of
cases," he said.
'

adopt the individual docket system.
-Selection of each multi-judge
court in the larger counties, of
an adminsitrative judge who will
be responsible for the docket,
court calander and the work of
each judge.
-Each judge submit a month·
ly report of his work to the
chief Justice of the Ohio Supreme Court. " Such reports
shall be public record," O'Neill
said. "Thus, the Chief Justice
can tell at a glance each month
whether a judge is keeping current or slipping behind in his
work.

deaths would go beyond the 470- A breakdown of accidental
550 they forecast for the period deaths showed:
that began at 6 p.m. local time Traffic
S27
Friday and extended to mid· Drownings
72
night Monday.
Planes
13
A United Press lnternattonal Other
67
count at 7 a.m. (EDT) showed Total
679
527 persons had died in traffic
California counted at least 37
accidents.
dead in traffic accidents. Ohio
had 30, New York 28, Illinois 27
E-R lfnit Went
and Pennsylvania and Texas 19
each.

To Aid of Man

Weather

The Middleport E-R unit
answered a call to Coal St. at Scattered showers tonight
and Wednesday. Highs today
8:47 a.m. Tuesday.
Manley Riggs. of near West and again Wednesday in upper
Colwnbla, W. .Va., was enroute 60s and 70s ranging to low 11(8
to the Holzer Medical Center extreme south, low tonight in
when he became ill. He stopped the SOs.
on Coal St. and the squad, which
transported him to the hospital,
CHILD HURT
was called.
Harold Imboden, five-year
At 3:20 a.m. Sunday, Mid- old son of Mr. and Mrs.
dleport firemen went to the old Clarence Imboden, 1537 Nye
Hobso~ road area ~here a car Ave., Pomeroy, was treated at
belongmg to ~eatnce Cochran Veterans Memorial Hospital
had caught ftre. near the Roy ·Saturday nlght!or a head injury
Hermann residence. Heavy suffered in a fall. at home. The
damages were reported to her youngster was taken U&gt; the
1961 model car· cause of the hospital by the Pomeroy E&gt;R
blaze was undetermined.
squad.
·
.

Frances Foster Injured

- The use of electronic
recording devices during court '
or grand jury proc~edings to RACINE- A Racine woman off a power pole, and went.over
save time.
· was 'hospitalized with injuries an 11mbankment.
-Eacli Common Pleas Court suffered in a two-vehicle ac- Miss Foster was transported
Judge review all cases in his cident on State Route 124 in to Veterans Memorial HOipital
jurisdiction every quarter and Syracuse at 1 a.m. Sundar.
by Syracuse E-lt . sq~
determine which cases should Syracuse Marshall Mtlton where she was hospitalized with
be dismissed for w'ant of Varian said Donald G: Stobart, · lacerations of the chin IIIII
prosecution.
56, Racine, driving a i968 pick- bruises of the left leg and rlbl..
- Toe judge, rather than the up truck, attempted to pass and The 1968model auto dri~ b)'
attorneys, shall be responsible collided with a ~ar operated. by M1ss Foster was demolilhld;;
for the final journal recording of Frances I. ~oster: 68, Racn~. there w.as moderate damaae ~
all verdicts decrees and '{arian sa1d l111ss Foster~ Stobart struck. Investigation af
d.edsions, ' ·
auto went out of control. broke th• ~hap is being conUn~M4
&lt;'

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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="11966">
              <text>May 30, 1971</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="59">
      <name>murray</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="336">
      <name>neville</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
