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                  <text>Problems? Never.Much too Busy
•

~)

PAULINE AND VIRGIL ATKINS have long worked as a team. Their courtship goes back to the first grade at the Harrisonville School. Always a hard worker,
Mrs. Atkins has pitched in to pull up a great deal of slack since her husband's
serious illness which began in November, 1968. Operating a 325-acre farm plus a
multitude of other activities keeps the couple busy.

(wEATHER REPORT]
Paruy cloudy north mostly
sunny south Sunday. Highs mid
30s to low 40s north ranging to
low 50s extreme south. Lows
Sunday night mostly in the 20s.
Monday generally fair high in
the 40s north and 50s south.

VOL. VI

NO. 5

unbau ~imts
~

IJaughter Sharon stepped beautifully into
the picture to cope with the birds until her
parents could resume their duties.
The Atkins are still under contract to
produce turkeys although not by Purina.
They have 3,000 on hand now. Mrs. Atkins
takes care of the jobs which must be
carried out in the two buildings where the
turkeys are housed . Of course, again
Sharon is often on hand to lend an able
assist. It's a bit of a chore as Mrs. Atkins
points out because "you almost have to
live with the turkeys the first two weeks."
The Atkins have had wonderful luck
with their flocks. Disease has never
broken out.
Dizzy with the activity yet? Well, to
further add to a busy day, the Atkins keep
13 head of cattle including four cows which
must be milked two tunes a day. There are
100 head of sheep to be cared for. The land
is put out on a share basis so they will have
corn and hay to feed their livestock.
Somehow, Pauline works into her
schedule serving as coordinator of the
speech program held each Saturday at the
Pomeroy Elementary School, being
president of the Lend-a-Hand Society of
the church, president of the Meigs County
Extension Council, and membership m the
Rutland and Star Garden Clubs.
Small wonder that Virgil and Pauline
work so well as a team. Their courtship
goes back to the first grade at Harrisonville. It was during that school year that
Virgil sent Pauline her first valentine.
(Continued on page 2)

entintl

Your Invited Guest
Reaching More
Than li,OOO
Families

THREE SECTIONS
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1971

Pomeroy-Middleport

"'

In 1962, Virgil, having suffered his first
heart attack, became production herd
tester of the Meigs Dairy Service Unit. He
was serving in that capacity - had won
honors, in fact - when the second attack
came in late 1969. However, his illness
made it impossible for him to travel the
estimated 20,000 miles a year required for
the job. Being well-versed with the
requirements of the work and with dairy
cattle due to her own life on the farm, Mrs.
Atkins took over as production tester and
currently travels to the numerous farms
across the county collecting samples and
the detailed information required.
After gathering all of the data, she
turns it over to her husband who is able to
do the paper work which is then forwarded
to Ohio State University which runs it
through a computer for results of the
testing program.
Mr. and Mrs. Atkins are also in the
turkey business. In 1956, they entered the
broiler business and built their first block
house for chickens. In 1966, an addition
was constructed onto the house making it
120 feet by 220 feet. Then they switched to
raising turkeys and in 1967 constructed
what is known as the growing house, 40 by
250 feet. They went under contract with
Purina operating in Wellston at the time
and have raised about 12,000 turkeys a
year ever since.
In fact, there was a new batch of
turkeys scheduled to arrive during one of
Virgil's illnesses. They had to take the
birds or their contract would be broken.

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

36 PAGES

•

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

NE'ff~T~D

15 CENTS

Bentz Has Had
It Right to. • •

•

POMEROY - Garbage collection
service for 500 Pomeroy homes and
businesses will be discontinued after
Friday, March 5, Walter Bentz, collector
the past 22 years in the community, said
Saturday.
Discontinuance of service by Bentz 1s
another development in the garbage
disposal problems which have bugged
Meigs County - as well as other places in
Ohio - the past couple of years.
In a public letter dated Feb. 19, it was
pointed out that Bentz was the only hauler
who purchased a packer truck two years
ago when it was ruled that garbage trucks

/

Pennies no
Good Now

•

•

BY BOB HOEFLICH
be "put down.'' He was fitted for an arPOMEROY -When Lady Luck turns tificialleg and now walks with a cane.
her back, you can bask in self sympathyHis illness, however, did have an efan attitude which wears pretty thin around fect since there were long periods when he
the edges in short order - or you can take could not work. His wife, Pauline, always
the bull by the horns and meet the problem ambitious, took up much of the slack.
head-an.
Friends and neighbors were good to help
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Atkins, of near and the Atkins' daughter, Mrs. Sliaron
Harrisonville, have chosen the latter Jewell, who lives in Harnsonville- about
course and are so busy - a family trait a mile from the home place - has been
through the years- that they haven't time more than a blessing to the couple.
to worry about any problem.
Despite his illness which does confine
Mr. Atkins- known to about everyone him to the home a great deal, Virgil is
as Virgil- suffered a mild heart attack in . president of the Meigs County Board of
1962. However, in November, 1968, he Education having served on the board
suffered a serious attack 'and was taken to since 1954. He is vice president of the
Meigs General Hospital. He was confined Meigs County Health Board, a member of
seven weeks, discharged for a few days that group for something llke 15 years. He
and promptly suffered a blood clot which and Pauline are Deputy State Grange
affected his vision. He was hospitalized Masters responsible for arranging all
again at Meigs General Hospital following
visitations and conducting the inspections
an eye examination in Gallipolis and then of local granges. Virgil is in his 22nd year
was moved to University Hospital in as advisor for the Harrisonville Honor
Columbus.
Boys 4-H Club. Incidentally, Mrs. Atkins
A massive clot had developed in his leg holds a record of a mere 27 years as adand he remained in the hospital until visor of the Harrisonville Honor Girls 4-H
March 7_, 1969, as doctors fought to avoid Club.
amputation of his leg. In July and August,
Virgil and his wife are members of
1969, he was again hospitalized at the Mary Shrine, White Shrine of Jerusalem,
Columbus hospital and this time am- both being past officers. He is an elder at
putation of the left leg was necessary. the Harrisonville Presbyterian Church, a
Virgil was hospitalized again at the member of Harrisonville Masonic Lodge
University Hospital for five weeks last 411, F&amp;AM, a past master and is a 32nd
year.
degree Mason. He and Mrs. Atkins have
Used to being extremely active not served as matron and patron of
only around the 325 acres farm but in Harrisonville Chapter, Order of Eastern
community affairs, Virgil was not one to Star 255.

FIRST OONATION - The first donation to the French Art Colony permanent
reference library was Norman Rockwell's "Artist and Illustrator," made by Dr.
and Mrs. Donald Thaler. The library will be housed in Riverby, 530 First Ave., the
former Alma Holzer home, which the colony is converting to a gallery and studio.
Donations of other books toward a library of reference books will be welcomed.
Jeffrey Roth, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Roth, and Ellen Wetherholt, daughter of
Atty. and Mrs. Gene Wetherholt, get an advance look at the large Rockwell
volume.

POMEROY - Starting Monday
morning, parking meters in Pomeroy's
business section - silver headed ones will not give any time for penny deposits.
Chief of Police Jed Webster said the
replacements in the meters will be made
so that new charges embodied recently by
legislation passed by Pomeroy Council wil
go into effect. The new charge for parking
under the legislation - for silver head
meters in the business section and copper
head meters along the railroad track of the
parking lot will be five cents per half hour
and 10 cents an hour.
Meters will accept pennies but will not
give any credit of time on the meter.

Gallia-Meigs Lose P op ulation
Gallia population
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County's official population in the
1970 census was 25,239, down 3.4 per cent from the 1960 figure of
26,120, the Bureau of the Census, U. S. Department of Commerce, reported Saturday.
The official population of the state was 10,652,017, up 9.7 per
cen tfrom the 1960 population count. which was 9'706,397.
The 1970 census counted 24.106 white persons in Gallia
County, 95.5 per cent of the total; 1,057 Negroes, and 76 persons
of other races. In 1960, 95.2 per cent of the population was white.
There were 1,725 children under 5 years, 6,343 in ages 5 through
17; 14,292 people 18 through 64; and 2,879 who were 65 and older.
The population 14 years and over included 11,208 married
people, 1,456 who were widowed, 574 divorced, and 5,933 never
married.
Gallia County 's 1970 population was classified as 29.7 per
cent urban, and 70.3 per cent rural.
There were 7,407 households, with 22,732 persons, including
1,303 one-person households. In addition 2,507 persons were
living in group quarters. There were 8,226 housing units, 5,436 of
them occupied by owners, 1,971 occupied by tenants, and 819
vacant. These included vacant units for seasonal use. The
proportion occupied by owners in 1970 was 66.1 per cent, compared with 64.2 per cent in 1960.
Among year-round dwelling units there were 6,969 single
family houses, 631 housing units in multi-unit buildings, and 594
mobile homes or trailers. The percentage of occupied unils with
more than one persr11 per room was 8.3, compared with 12.3 in
1960. Of all the occupied housing u.lits, 5, 721 had piped water,
toilet, and bath, while 1,686 lacked some or all plumbing. The
median value of owner-occupied houses m Gallia County was
$12,400, compared with $7,800 in 1960. The median rent paid by
tenants in 1970 was $54 per month, compared with $56 in 1960.
Half were over and half b"low the median figures

~

had to be covered.
Attempts to provide a county landfill
dumpmg area went down the drain, and
Bentz had been using a dump at Mason, W.
Va. However, he purchased a plot of over
, 0 ar (''&gt; known as the :Dark Hollow Coal
property on old Route 7, and on Dec. 1, 1970
began using that area for a dump. Complaints were filed, however, by residents of
the area, and Bentz was cited to county
court on a charge of failing to secure a
license to use the Dark Hollow area for a
dump.
Bentz said Saturday he applied to the
state for a permit to operate the Dark
Hollow dump but that he had not received
it. He said he has been notified that a
representative of the Ohio Department of
Health will come here to confer about the
matter.
Bentz commented that he has grown
weary of fighting the problem and has
decided to give up the Pomeroy collection
service. Pickups will be made at the affected homes and businesses through this
coming Friday. After that Bentz said
garbage and waste in Pomeroy will be an
individual problem.
$10,000 SUIT FILED
POMER@Y - A suit for $10,000 plus
costs has been filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by Nellie Romaine
Frederick and Milford Frederick,
Minersville, Rt. 1, against Ronald L.
Miller, Jr., and the City Ice and Fuel,
Middleport. The suit is the result of injuries alleged suffered by Mrs. Frederick
in an automobile accident on Pomeroy's
West Main St. June 4, 1970.

COMPETING IN ART CONTEST- Dermis VanSickle, of Kyger Creek High
School, pupil of Sarah Moshier, art instructor, displays the oil painting he is entering in the Permy Art Scholarship Contest sponsored by the Federated Women's
Clubs of America. See page 10 for account Junior Women's Club art project.
NO ONE INJURED
GALLIPOLIS- No one was injured or
cited Friday in a minor two vehicle accident at 7:54 p.m. on Second Ave. City
police said Alice Lewis, 61, Jackson, pulled
from a parking space into the path of a car
operated by Constance J. Cotton, 16,
Gallipolis.

Meigs population
POMEROY - Meigs County's official population in the 1970
census was 19,799, down 10.7 per cent from the 1960 figure of
22,159, the Bureau of the Census, U. S. Department of Commerce, reported Saturday.
The official population of the state was 10,652,017, up 9.7 per
cent from the 1960 population count, which was 9,706,397.
The 1970 census counted 19,549 white persons in Meigs County,
98.7 per cent of the total; 223 Negroes, and 27 persons of other
races. In 1960, 98.5 per cent of the population was white. There
were 1,542 children under 5 years; 5,183 in ages 5 through 17;
10,343people 18 through 64; and 2,731 who were 65 and older. The
population 14 years and over includes 9,810 married people, 1,444
who were widowed, 412 divorced, and 3,079 never married.
Meigs County's 1970 population was classified as 27.6 per
cent urban, and 72.4 per cent rural.
There were 6,465 households, with 19,723 persons, including
1,130 one-person households. In addition 76 persons were living
in group quarters. There were 7,329 housing units in Meigs
County, 4,876 of them occupied by owners, 1,589 occupied by
tenants, and 864 vacant. These included vacant units for
seasonal use . The proportion occupied by owners in 1970 was 66.5
per cent, compared with 63.1 per cent in 1960.
Among year-round dwelling units there were 6,383 single
family homes, 460 housing units in multi-unit buildings, and 434
mobile homes or trailers . The percentage of occupied units with
more than one person per room was 7.2, compared with 11.5 in
1960. Of all the occupied housing units, 4,881 had piped water,
toilet, and bath, while 1,584 lacked some or all plumbing. The
median value of owner-Occupied houses in Meigs County was
$8,000, compared with $5,200 in 1960. The median rent paid by
tenants in 1970 was $44 per month, compared with $50 in 1960.
Half were over and half below the median figures.

$682,822 in
Taxes Paid
POMEROY - Real estate taxes in
Meigs County for the collection perind just
ended totaled $682,822.13, County
Treasurer Howard Frank said Saturday.
Although completed this month, the
period covered taxes paid in the first half
of 1970.
Collections from the various subdivisions were: Bedford, $27,538.44;
Chester, $49,121.55; Chester-Salisbury,
$2,080.49; Columbia, $66,927.43; LebanonEastern, $3,805.89; Lebanon-Southern,
$33,183.34; Letart, $20,050.30; Olive,
$29,882.41; Orange, $22,270.86; Rutland,
$30,723.93; Rutland Village, $17,056.15;
Salem, $34,978.35; Salisbury, $46,373.83;
Middleport Village, $89,142.79; Pomeroy
Village, $115,268.47; Scipio, $20,683.33;
Sutton, $38,456.35; Sutton-Pomeroy,
$880.78; Racine Village, $14,378.57;
Syracuse Village, $17,212.84; Rutland
Water, $2,125.71; Racine Water, $190.65;
Syracuse Water, $19.81; Middleport sewer,
$469.86.

Two Youths Arrested
ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAM - Eight boys were named to the All-Tournament
Team following Saturday afternoon's championship game of the First Annual
Meigs Eighth Grade Invitational Basketball Tournament in the old Middleport
High School gym. Six of the eight honorees are pictured above . Kneeling, left to
right, are Greg Donahue, Meigs, and Max Pitts, Nelsonville-York; rear, Jimmy
Justice, Gallipolis; Brad Burke, Marietta; Bob Gebczyk, Marietta and Jimmy
!'iiday, Gallipolis. Not pictured were Stewart Patton, Glouster and Dc&gt;r. Walker
F'ederal-Hocking. Marietta won the championship with a 45-41 wm over Galhpoh:;.
Nelsonville-York beat Meigs 49-24 for third place honors. See details r.nd additinur.J
pictures on page 21.

GALLIPOLIS - Two youths were
anested here Friday by city police officers on warrants charging disorderly
conduct and destruction of property.
Preston Coughenour signed affidavits
l:lgainst Lewis Truman Bowman, 18, Rt. 1,
c;a\lipolb. and Charles H. Tackett, 18,
Patnot Star Rt. The charges involve the
breaking of six window panrs in the Julia
Hammond residcnee, 250 Fourth Ave.
They were released on $86 bonds each.

�2- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Feb.

28 Cases Land

Atkinses
~Continued

from page 1)
They went through school together.
graduating the same year at Scipio
(Harrisonville) High School and then both
entered Ohio University.
Following their marriage, they moved
into the attractive eight-room brick home
of her parents, Mrs. Frank Halliday- and
the late Mr. Halliday- really only a long
stone's throw from his parents, the late
Mr. and Mrs. E. V. Atkins. They still
reside on the 325 acre farm which was
known as the Hiram Chase farm when it
was purchased in 1918 by Mrs. Halliday
and her late husband .
Walls in the home are unbelievably
thick of bricks molded for the structure by
Chase. At the time it was purchased by the
Hallidays, it was owned by W. A. Dye.
Nobody had lived in the home 16 years
prior to the purchase. An addition was
built onto the old residence by the
Hallidays and it has undergone
remodeling over the years.
Active in grange work, Pauline and
Virgil joined the Harrisonville Grange
when they were both 14. Besides taking
active roles in the local grange, Pauline
served as lecturer of the Meigs County
Pomona Grange over 20 years and Virgil
served as master of Pomona for a span of
10 years.
Interested in rural type organizations.
Virgil was president of the Meigs County •
Farm Bureau three terms and a trustee
many years. He operated a milk route·
from 1947 to 1958, overseeing the picking
up of milk from farms for city markets and
taught a G. I. class on farming for four
years following World War II.
Really on the go these days, Pauline
works about 12days a month on her part of
the dairy herd testing. She doesn't worry
about what the future will bring. She's
much too busy.
Incidentally, Pauline will be observing
her 57th birthday Sunday, March 7. In
celebration, maybe she'll get a day off
from the cows, and the chickens and the
apple trees shady." I hope so. She's earned
it!

GALLIPOLIS - Twentyeight cases were filed in
February in the Small Claims

MRS. PAULINE ATKINS .AND her daughter, Mrs. Sharon Jewell, also of
Harrisonville, are caring for some 3,800 turkeys as a part of the Atkins farm
operations which are continuing as Virgil and Pauline Atkins squarely face
problems incurred by Virgil's illness.

Cecil White Sentenced
GALLIPOLIS - Common
Pleas Court Judge Ronald R.
Calhoun Friday afternoon
sentenced Cecil E. White, 49,
Kanauga, to a 1-l&gt; year term in
the Ohio Penitentiary in connection with the shooting incident involving his son-in-law,
Harry F. Johnson, 29, 1813
Chatham Ave., Feb. 2.
White, who had been charged
with assault with a dangerous
weapon, entered a guilty plea
Feb. 17 when arraigned in
Common Pleas Court on a bill of

Keep Fido Tied
RUTLAND - Rutland residents must
keep dogs confined or tied up effective
March 1, Mayor Eugene Thompson said
Saturday.
Numerous reports have been received
that dogs are creating nuisances running loose in the town. The community
has an ordinance prohibiting it. Dogs
running loose will be caught and taken to
the county dog pound. Owners can and
will be prosecuted if their animals are
picked up, Mayor Thompson said.

en·
Is Missing
GALLIPOLIS Gallia County
Sheriff's deputies Friday investigated a
breaking and entering and vandalism
incident reported by Dugan Adkins, of

THESPIANS PREPARE FOR illMEDY- Members of the Gallia Academy
High School Thespian Club are rehearsing daily for their performance of "Father
of the Bride" to be presented in the high school auditorium on March 13. Seated left
to right are Linda Fraley, Joyce Young and Pat Gingerich. Standing are Mike
Wolfe, Doug Lease, Hubert Harder, CeCe Wetherholt, Shelly Lintala, Bob McCulty, Debbie Bingham, Bev Bennett, Ed Lewis and Paul Schopis.
Dayton.
Adkins said someone entered his barn
located on Davis Rd., near Centerpoint.
Missing were a corn sheller, a corn

Athens Man Hurt
GALLIPOLIS - An Athens
resident, Leonard I. Hansen, 22,
was treated and released at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Friday following a traffic accident at 5:15 p.m. on Rt. 7,
north of the Gallia-Meigs
County line.
According to the Gallia-Meigs
Post State Highway Patrol,
Hansen's auto struck the rear of
a tractor - trailer driven by
Richard Eugene Elliott, 32, Rt.
2, Gallipolis. There was slight
damage to the trailer and heavy
damage to Hansen's car.
A second accident occurred at
10:15 p.m. on county road, CH
and D, one and three tenths
miles south of Rt. 233. Officers
said Zona K. Burbett, 46,

Big Things
Happen
.
1n a
Small Space!

Tax

\l.:.:~

Services to
Be United

j.··:;:rl:;:

THE SUNDAY
TIMES-SENTINEL

POMEROY
Pomeroy
ministers have united to hold
Lenten services.
Services will be held at 7:30
each Wednesday beginning
March 3 through March 31. The
schedule for the services and
presiding ministers included:
Wednesday, March 3, Grace
Episcopal Church, the Rev.
Arthur Lund and the Rev.
Stanley Plattenburg; Wednesday, March 10, First Baptist
Church, the Rev . Father Bernard Krajcovic and the Rev.
Robert Card; Wednesday,
March 17, United Methodist
Church, the Rev. Bill Perrin
and Envoy Ray Wining ; March
24, St. Paul Lutheran Church,
the Rev . Mr. Plattenburg and
DIVORCE ASKED
the Rev. Mr. Lund ; March 31,
GALLIPOLIS - Charging
Sacred Heart Church, the Rev.
Mr. Robert Kuhn and the Rev . extreme cruelty, Virginia
Chapman, Rt. 2, Crown City,
Father Krajcovic.
The ministers will also filed a divorce suit in Common
conduct Good Friday services
from 12 noon to 3 p.m . at Trinity 1
SUNDAY
Church. All mmisters of the :
Tll\1ES-SENTI~EL
ministerial associaton will I Pub! 1,ne&lt;J every Sundey by fht Ot-110
I va lley PvbliJh1no Co
IPOLIS DAILY _TRIBUNE
participate and a complete II e2SGALL
ThlrG Av•. G allipOliS.. OhiO . 43UI
Pubi1Shed
wttkctay
schedule will be announced I Saturday
Second Clan Pot.tagf! Paul aw
I C.alhpot''· Otuo . •S631
later .
I
Ill C~~r~ ~~-IL ~o~Ee~:~.N~L' 4S769
~vtn•nQ e~erepl

P ubl·$htd tlltry weekday tv~n1nQ ~•c~pt
Saturday Entere-d as second clan ma l•n9
matte-r at Pomeroy, Oh•o . Pot.t Oll1ct

Behind every
"successful" man is an
understa nd ing woman •.•
or two ••. or three!

ELLIOTT
GOULD
IN A DAVID l WOLPER Production

"I LOVE MY•••
WIFE"
A UNIVERSAL PICTURE • TECHNtCOLORIJ ~E:}it

CA RTOON
No one under 17 y rs. of
age admitted.

•

IN COLUMBUS

POMEROY - Mrs. Vilma
Pikkoja, supervisor of bookmobile operations in Meigs,
Vinton and Jackson Counties, is
in Columbus attending the
library standards and planning
workshop of the Ohio State
Library at the Ohio State
University
Center.
The
'workshop began today and will
run through Tuesday. John A.
Humphry, assistant commissioner for libraries of the
state of New York, will discuss
library development in the
1970s.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight, Mon. &amp; Tues.
Feb. 28 - Mar. l-2
Elvis Presley
in
THAT'S THE WAY
IT IS
(Technicolor)
Plus
Colorcartoons:
Dr. Ha! Hal

•
thl

JQNES BOYS'

FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!

Gems from Gemini
Champ Chump
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

137 Pine Street
Gallipolis, Ohio

~;:::;:~.f:.:~:~;s

Since 1859

~

Everything Is
Guaranteed
To SatisfyOr Money Back

Luck's
Pinto or
Great Northern '

1

e l!;twh er~. on~

Stn t1n~1.

mon•h~

~~~~

..

Newspapers outsell tv
The first real comparison of newspaper-radio-television effectiveness for a
retail advertiser has been completed in Atlanta and the results show that
newspapers deliver more than three times the efficiency per advertising dollar.
This isn't news to newspaper admen. But it ought to raise a few eyebrows in
the retail business where broadcasters have been spreading their tales of blue
heaven in an attempt to get a piece of the retail advertising pie.
The beauty of the Atlanta study is in its impartiality and its believability
because all four parties to the argument participated in it: Newspapers, radio and
television stations, and a large retailer .
Newspaper ads totalling 11.6 pages were run in Sunday's paper and in morning
and evening editions Monday and Tuesday prior to a large sale. On the same days
438 thirty-second spots were run - 177 on five television stations and 261 on five
radio stations making more than eight commercials for every hour of broadcast
time.
From 2,176 interviews in the departments which sold the advertised items, the
retailer found that newspapers which received 38 per cent of the total ad budget
developed 71 per cent of the advertising influence, television which received 49 per
cent of the budget produced 28 per cent of the ad influence, and radio accounted for
12per cent ofthe budget and only 9 per cent of the ad influence.
This is the. most convincing argument for retail use of newspaper advertising
in lieu of other medi

Beans

9y

:a~~.=-~ d~~v s~n~si~~:.TYIO~Dc per
MARRIAGE LICENSES
wee~
POMEROY - Joseph Ray 1 Th~t"~~~ioY.~\&lt;;~':n! 4~1,h~: !:d~ We~t
1 V1r()•n1a . one vtar Ul 00 . ,,,. manths 17
Gilkey, 24, Middleport, and tl ftHI't
month\ U so.
l"tar
\I) , \ix month\ S7 . thru ""onrh" S!. DO
one year \I• 00 )IX
Wilma Lee Hunter, 21, Mid- I Tht Da•lv
\7 7\ thre-f'! months \4 'lO
The \Jn1ltd Pren tnternatoon41 ••
dleport; Gary Roger Cooper, 18, 1I ch.tt.lvf'ly
tnt . tltCIIO the use tor publ!(:d1•0n
l all nt'wS
crtd1lf'd to th s
and atw tne local 1\PW\
Portland, and Marilyn Ruth I onPw'!.paper
I p~,~bt ~htd h~r•,..
I
Engle, 17, Middleport, Rt. 1.
L----------- -- -- --- ~
d11opatche~

Ca II 4q6.2342

ONE W E EK
Tonight thru
Wednesda y

Two Calls

Clarence ·McCoy, Pomeroy, had
... fallen . He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital for
POMEROY A Meigs treatment of a head laceration.
County Tax Structure Workshop
At 10 :35 a.m. the squad went
will be held Tuesday, March 9, to the Billy Spires home on
from 9:51a.m. to 3:11p.m. at Route 124 near Salem Center.
Trinity Church in Pomeroy.
Mrs. Spires was taken to
The present tax structure, Veterans Memorial Hospital for
how it meets present needs, and medical treatment.
ways of handling future needs
will be studied.
Presenting the information
will be experts in their field with Pleas Court against Richard
a broad background in state and Chapman, same address. They
were married Sept. 22, 1969 and
local taxation.
A luncheon will be servej at have one child.
the church for $1.50. Reservations must be made by
Thursday, March 4, through the
Meigs County Extension Office.
The committee assisting in
developing the program includes Robert Bowen, the Rev.
Robert Card, William D. Childs,
Earl F. Ingels, Jr., Roy Miller,
the Rev. Stanley Plattenburg,
William Shaw and Paul
Thomas.

I
I
1
I
I

TlzNIIre

Is Mar• 9 .~.=:~.:

~~~ery

Make your s'ales climb

f:OI~Ol\ \'

at 10:07 a.m. to East Main St.
:::: near the Landmark Store where

,-------------------·

with a small space ad.

Swisher Implement Co., Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, vs Elva Hayes,
Cheshire, $40.65; Swisher
Implement Co. vs Charles
Bowen, Vinton, $44.09; Swisher
Implement Co. vs Charles
Lambert,
Patriot,
$52;
Spaulding's Grocery, Rt. 1,
Bidwell vs Tom Young,
Cheshire,
$40.01;
and
Spaulding's Grocery vs Johnny
Conkle, Bidwell, $84.23.

Pomeroy E -R Unit

Studyll~l Makes

·.•.:i:workshop

Proctorville, lost control of her
auto, ran off the east edge of the
roadway and traveled over an
embankment. She was charged
::::
with OWL Moderate damage
..
resulted.
...

Court

grinder, one set of tractor discs, a mowing
machine and car radiator. The equipment
was valued at $615. The intruders also
caused considerable damage, Adkins said.

:fx=:=:=:=:=:::::=::::.&lt;:::::=:=:=:=:=:=,:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::

!jij

CLEVELAND (UPI) Workers erecting a 20-story
office building here painted a
message reading "would
Nixon do our work for less
money?" on the exposed 19th
floor girders of the building
Friday.
The message, signed "The
Ironworkers,"
was
in
response to the President's
recent suspension of the
Davis-Bacon Act which
requires the federal government to pay prevailing wages
on its construction jobs.
The building which carries
the message is next door to
the federal building. Ironworkers here make a base
wage of $8.10 an hour.

ID

Division of Gallipolis Municipal January, to hear cases inCourt, a division reactivated by volving amounl&lt;; up to $150.
According to Mrs. Marilene
Judge Robert S. Betz in
Settle, deputy clerk, 19 cases
were still pending as of Friday,
Feb. 26. They were:
Vest&lt;l's TV Service, Cheshire,
vs Floyd Avis, Cheshire, $10;
Williams Market, Crown City,
Pomeroy, Rt. 3, $10 and costs, vs Bob Rutherford, Crown City,
expired operators license; $120.19; Gallipolis Motor
Donald Joseph, Parkersburg, Company vs Russell Taylor,
$100 and costs, selling hearing Eureka Star . Rt., $46.35;
a ids without a license; Charles Gallipolis Motor Company vs
Aeiker, Racine, Rt. 1, and Paul Lena Bell Williams, Crown City,
Herbert Ken t, Pomeroy, Rt. 3, $47.10; Reese Furniture, Second
$150 and costs each, three days Ave. and Sycamore St., vs Sam
confinement, license suspended Bennett, Gallipolis, $36.56;
for six months, driving while Reese Furniture, Second Ave.
intoxicated.
and Sycamore St. vs Stella
Forfeiting bonds were David Hanson, Gallipolis, $34.92;
A. Rowe, Lakewood, Ohio, Reese Furniture vs
Arthur
$27.50, left of center; Jesse Casey, Rt. 1, Gallipolis, $12.98;
Arnold, no address recorded, Valley Bell Dairy, Pt. Pleasant,
$25, disturbing the peace; Gary vs Tom Masters, Gallipolis,
Lee Hanning, Athens, $27.50, $14.11; Valley Bell, Pt.
defective vehicle; Robert J. Pleasant, vs Kyle Donnally,
Smith, Pennsylvania, $32.50, Eureka, $34.11; Two River
speeding.
Motor Co., Pt. Pleasant vs
Milfred Sheets, Gallipolis,
$62.25;
Lonnie
Burger,
Gallipolis, vs Charles Lambert,
Gallipolis, $47.39; Lonnie
Burger vs Clifford Wood,
information.
Johnson was admitted to the Centenary, $50.63; Lonnie
Holzer Medical Center after Burger vs C. E. Adkins,
suffering a severe wound to the Gallipolis, $140.26; William
left elbow. The incident, police Ramey, Gallipolis vs Eugene
said, apparently derived from Walters, Gallipolis, $84.95;
family difficulties.

12 Draw Fines
Twelv~
POMEROY
defendants were fined and four
forfeited bonds in Meigs County
Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Frank W.
Porter were David M. Layne,
Gallipolis, Steven R. Finlaw,
Main St., Pomeroy, $10 and
costs each, speeding; Franklin
' E. Beach, Bidwell, and Jeffrey
D. Howell, Pomeroy, Rt. 2, $10
and costs each, following too
close; Robert R. Darst, Main
St., Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
passing on yellow line; Carl E.
Moore, and Wayne A. Hubbard,
both of Syracuse, $5 and costs
each, reversed parked; Vandorn Mullins, Pomeroy, Rt. 3,
$10 and costs, public intoxication; Wendell Williams,

•

4

17 oz.
cans

~unlkau ~imts - ~tntintl
~

•

�Stocks Mixed
NEW YORK (UP!) -The stock market,
sandwiching three advances between
aggressive selling Monday and Friday,
finished mixed in heavy trading this week.
Standard &amp; Poor's 500 stock index posted
a gain of 0.01 at 96.75. The Dow Jones industrial average, barometer of 30 selected
blue chips, edged up 0.27 to 878.83.

.

the Wall Street Report

M. HAROLD BROWN, fonner principal of Gallia
Academy High School, is pictured from the audience at Ohio
University's Convocation Center at the half-time ceremony
of the Toledo game Saturday afternoon. He stands alone back
of Bill Rohr, athletic director, who is at the microphone. Rohr
called 10 members of the 1931 team to the floor in
alphabetical order, and the Gallipolitan, newly returned
from Vietnam, was the first to come forward. (Photo by J.
Sterman Porter).

Tinte Not
Ripe for
• Controls
COLUMBUS (UPI) - U. S.
Sen. William B. Saxbe, R-Ohio,
says across-the-board wage and
price controls should be used
only as a last resort to curb
inflation.
Saxbe told a news conference
Friday he feels inflation is
slowing down, but the idea of
wage and price controls should
not be discarded.
"I think we shouldn't dispose
of them if there is no other
way," Saxbe said. "The queslion is whether it's too late."
"If we were going to use
them, they should have been invoked in 191 .5," Saxbe said.
"We had the 1 during World
War ~ and during Korea.
there~ no reason why we
couldn't have used them when
this war (Vietnam) began to

..I

exp~d."

•

•
•
•

The senat
it as a
rrustake of th::'
administration to a
of "guns or b
y ttempting to give Am ncans both.
Saxbe said he believes there is
danger of the United States
being drawn into a invasion of
North Vietnam.
"I believe there is a danger
of an invasion of North Vietnam,
and I think we'd be drawn into
it," he said. "The danger for us
is that we'd be committed when
we're trying to get out of
Southeast Asia."
Saxbe is co - sponsor of a
Senate resolution which would
forbid any American invasion of
North Vietnam or support of a
South Vietnamese invasion without congressional approval.
On other matters, Saxbe said:
- He is concerned about incarsions into Laos but is sticking
by President Nixon .
- He favors Nixon's plan for
general revenue sharing.
- He does not believe polls
thus far indicate Nixon will be
a one-term President.
- He believes the federal
government should take over
welfare programs.

START MONDAY
POMEROY - Paul Simon,
one of the two new motor
vehicle registrars in Meigs
County, announced Saturday
reservations for special license
tags may be made Monday. The
license bureau is located at
Simon's Pick a Pair Shoe Store
on Pomeroy's East Main St.

However, the NYSE common stock index
dipped 0.01 to 53.19. Declines led advances,
930 to 697 on 1,812 issues crossing the tape.
Turnover for the five days aggregated
80,336,440shares,upfrom 74,597,890shares
traded during the year ago period.
Unsettling investors at the outset was
concern over the degree of support the
Federal Reserve Board will provide in the
administration's drive to stimulate the
economy.
Arthur F. Burns, chairman of the
Federal Reserve, said "an aggressive rate
of monetary expansion now could destroy
our nation's chances of bringing about a
gradual but lasting control over inflationary forces."
The item most disturbing to Wall Street
Friday was a report that Libya, the largest
single oil exporter in the world, is
preparing to seize foreign oil companies
there. However, a later comment by

Extended Ohio weather
outlook Monday through
Wednesday:
Fair and cold Monday.
Chance of snow north and
rain or snow central and
south Tuesday and Wednesday. Daily high readings
averaging in the 30s north to
the low 40s south. Lows at
night 15 to 25 north and from
the 20s to the lower 30s central and south portions.

•
Ill

Occidental Petroleum, which has a big
slake in Ubyan Oil, cast doubt on the
report attributed to diplomatic sources,
and helped relieve some of the market's
selling pressure.
No Local Substantiation
Occidental said it had been in constant
telephone communication with its Ubyan
subsidiary which reported there was no
truth to the reports that the Ubyan
government is preparing to seize 51 per
cent of all foreign companies.
In New York, a spokesman for all
companies involved in the Tripoli talks,
said "there has been no indication in our
discussions with the Ubyan government of
any intention to nationalize the oil
producing properties in Ubya."
In the middle of the week sentiment was
helped by President Nixon's mild stand
against the inflationary spiral in the construction industry. One Wall Street analyst
said any steps to establish controls would
be bearish for business and for the
economy generally.
Nixon, in proclaiming an emergency in
the construction industry, suspended a
depression-era law originally enacted to
prevent pay-cutting in the building trade.
It now means federal or federally assisted
contracts let ~ill not require contractors to
pay local umon wage rates.
In taking this action, the President
stopped short of imposing a widely

ALARM ANSWERED
GALLIPOLIS - Volunteer
firemen answered an alarm at
11:40 a.m. Friday to the
Economy Cleaners, Second
Ave., and Locust St. According
to the report, there was no
blaze. Resident fireman
Lawrence Barry said a radiator
hosehadburstonanautoowned
by Audrey Stewart causing
steam to seep out from under
the hood.

rumored freeze on construction wages and
prices.
The Commerce Department reported a
rise in the government's index of leading
economic affairs, said the Commerce
Department's report suggests the
economy will continue to expand in the
months ahead.
The index is a combination of eight
business statistics which usually
foreshadow future changes in the overall
economy. Six of the eight improved last
month while two declined.
Wholesale prices registered their largest
two-month increase in 15 years in January
and February, although most of it was due
to an unusual jump in livestock prices.
Prices in the key industrial commodities
index, however, rose only 0.3 per cent,
about average for the past year. "This is
the most important part of the index and
could be viewed as an indication that
Washington's anti-inflation campaign is
paying off," one analyst commented.
ffiM, the week's strongest feature,
gained 8¥.&amp;. White Motor, the softest spot,
tumbled 6.
White Consolidated, which edged up 3!4,
said it was studying a Federal Court order
temporarily enjoining its merger with
White Motor.
Federal National Mortgage, the most
active issue, eased Ph to 63% on 1,253,800
shares.

.
L.ICense T ag H OurS N0 t e d
GALLIPOLIS Vaught
(Doc) Smith, newly-appointed
deputy registrar, Saturday
announced hours in which 1971
auto and truck license tags will
be sold this year.
Gallipoli tans and Gallia
Countians may purchase their
new tags between 9 a.m., and

3 Arrested
Three persons were lodged in
the Mason County Jail Friday
night after arrests were made.
Point Pleasant City Police
arrested Elias Hatfield, 42,
Gallipolis, on a DWI charge;
Tom Murry Smith, 19, 409 Lewis
Street, Point Pleasant, was
charged with army desertion
and Harry Lucas, 506 23rd
Street, Point Pleasant, who was
arrested by the Sheriff's
Department, was charged with
intoxication.

'

DAN THOMAS
AND SON
"Serving fOU since 1936"
C.ollipolis, Ohio

.-

._.._.._.._.1

,..-----..-._.._.._.._____._.._..___..._.'"_..
l)
s~
......

-..

The finest sandwich obtainable

~

Overstuffed u·ith a quarter pound of U.S
choice beef. freshly xround and grilled, with a
most skillful blend of melted cheese, crisP
xreen lettuce, tomato. onion, p~ek/e slices 11nd
Shake Shoppe speetal dressinx_. Served on a
cigantic toasted bun

~
~
~

i

l

IKK

:;::::::::::::::::::;.::::::::~:~:::::::::::*.:::::::::::N:::::~

NJT Bids
Go

o u t on

111
1 ,~arc

h 2n d

NEW YORK (UPI) - The
NCAA basketball tournament
gets the vintage teams, and the
National Invitation Tournament
gets what is left.
·• That's the way it has been for
many years, and that's the way
it will be this season- although
for the first time in quite a spell
the dregs will be a bit sweeter.
Bids ·to the 34th annual NIT,
which will be held at Madison
Square Garden March 20-27,
will go out at 11:30 am EST
Tuesday, March 2, approximately one hour after the
NCAA extends its initial bids.
Since the NCAA always has
first crack at the majo~ independents, the NIT is not likely
to land the likes of Marquette,
Fordham, Villanova, Duquesne,
Notre Dame and Jacksonville.
The NCAA is obligated to
choose the top 10 independents
to complete its 26-team field and
those six seem assured of early
invitations.
The NCAA automatically gets
the winners of 16 major conferences, also, and this will
include another major portion
of the nation's top-ranked
teams.
What does that leave for the
NIT? Not much in the way of
top-ranked independents, but it
could get lucky as far as conferences go. Several major
conferences allow their runnerup team to go to the NIT, and
this year for the first time the
Big Ten and the Ivy League will
follow that pattern.
That means the NIT could
land either Michigan, currently
ranked loth in the nation, Ohio
State or Indiana from the Big
Ten and either Columbia or
Harvard from the Ivy League.
The NIT also is guaranteed a
good pick from the Atlantic
Coast Conference, which boasts

Selective Service Set
A pending reorganization of
the Ohio Selective Service
System was announced today
by the Ohio Selective Service
Director, Colonel Thomas S.
Farrell.
'J:he reorganization is part of a
nationwide plan designed to
reduce costs and improve efficiency. This move is seen as a
reflection of support of
President Nixon's pledge of
lower draft calls and the
eventual establishment of an
all-volunteer force.
Colonel Farrell pointed out
that the plan calls for the
establishment of 18 administrative support sites in the
state. Work functions now being
performed in 90 offices
throughout the state will be
consolidated into the 18 support
sites during the next fuur

!i.. hurricane is the highest
designation in the Beaufort
Wind Scale.

4:30 p.m., weekdays at the
Smith Buick Co., located at 1911 1
Eastern Ave., and between 9 1
~~ ~....
Q.~OtltU
a.m., and 12 noon on Saturdays. l
J;?
J;V ·~ r~The new licenses will go on
~
sale on Tuesday, March 16.
"THAT OLD FASHIONED GOOD~ESs.''
~
Deadline for purchase of the
.._.__._.._...._.__._.._..____..._...___...._...__.._..._._._..__..5
1971 plates is April 16.

TOM CASSELL
MIDDLEPORT - Tom
Cassell, manager of the
Middleport
Office
for
Columbia Gas Company and
Local Scouter, is announcing
the start of Boy Scout leader
training Monday, March 1, at
7 p.m. at the Columbia Gas
Office in Middleport. Tom has
accepted the job of Senior
Patrol Leader for the entire
training session each monday
in March thru April 5. He is
well qualified, holding Wood
Badge training, local leader
training, long time scouter,
and holder of the Silver
Beaver Award.
two of the nation's top ranked
teams in South Carolina and
North Carolina. The ACCused a
post-season tournament to
determine
its
NCAA
representative so the NIT will
be left with either the seventhranked Gamecocks or the 13thranked Tar Heels.
The NIT also will get the
runners-up in the Southeastern
Conference, probably 16thranked Tennessee; the Big
. Eight Conference, either
Nebraska,
Missouri
or
Oklahoma; the Missouri Valley
Conference,
most likely
Memphis State; and the
Western Athletic Conference,
possibly 18th-ranked Arizona
State.
Another good catch will come
from Philadelphia in either
13th-ranked LaSalle or St.
Joseph's. The two teams will
play off for the Middle Atlantic
Conference championship next
month with the winner going to
the NCAA and the loser
probably getting an NIT bid.
The NIT's best bets among
the independents are St.
Bonaventure (17-4), Hawaii (223), Syracuse (17-6), and Denver
(17-8), which has won 13 in a
row ..

YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO
MISS THESE BIG BUYS!
~-------.......

'

I
l

3

SPECIAL PRICES

DAYS ONLY

MON.

I

TUES.

•

2

WED.

•

3

'

I
J

'-------_./

A

MEN'S FINE
SPORTSWEAR
(AJ

OUR

OWN,~ SLACKS

PAIRS
REGULAR

$7.43

SJJ

OUR OWN BRAND

months. The local boards will
continue to meet in the same
cities as presently and the
board membership will continue to be residents of the
counties concerned.
A collocation of local boards
will result in the loss of some
personnel who are unable to
move. For those employees who
will be released, Colonel
Farrell, complying with the
request of National Selective
Service Director , Dr. Curtis W.
Tarr, has initiated an
aggressive counseling and
information program. Those
having difficulty securing other
suitable employment will be
invited to utilize this special
program. ''We will endeavor to
find suitable employment for all
who are released because of this
reorganization." he staten.

~!ia~

BOYS' LIGHT,
TRIM JACKET

$5 . 57 PAl R

~~4

Ivy style tro pica l weight or medium weight styles. No. iron polyester blends. Sizes 29·42.

REG.

&lt;Bl NYLON JACKET

65% Dacron® polyester/
35% cotton. Zipper front,

$4.98 ~

OUR

slant p o c k e t, umbrella
yoke. Yellow, blue,
Sizes 8- 18.

PRICE

te DuPont Reg. TM

Versatile water repellent nylon
taffeta. Hidden hood, zipper front.
Solid colors. S, M, L, XL.

SAVE $4.89 3 H.P. ENGINE

ROTARY MOWER
REGULAR
" $44.88
Briggs Easy Spin engine. 20"
cut. Reinforcing wheel pads.
Heavy deck. Smooth cut vac·
uum lift blade. Baffled deck.

GIRLS' &amp; JUNIORS' SIZES

Nylon Taffeta

Jackets~

Upper Store Only
GIRLS'
S, M, L

198

JUNIORS'
S, M. L
$2.98

"CHARGE IT"
Snappy white jackets have navy and red
piping trim . Mandarin collar with ties. Elasticized long sleeves. Zip pocket.
'At Most Murp hy Stores

3 DAYS ONLY

SLIDING GLASS

MAR. 1-2-3
WHILE THEY LAST

BOOKCASES
REG. $18.H

..

ratings in the Class A (state
level) event.
Approximately 150 Gallia
Academy
High
School
musicians in grades 7 through
12 participated. Gallipolis had
the largest delegation in the
district according to Mrs
Fischer.
Complete details will be
announced Monday.

ATHENS- Gallia Academy
H1gh School received 25
superior ratings in Saturday's
annual District Solo and Ensemble Contest of the Ohio
Music Education Association
held at Ohio University's School
of Music here.
The GAHS soloists received
superiors, and two GAHS ensembles received superior

~

· Reorganization of Ohio
J

25 Superior Ratings Won

Heavy Trading

HOME

$!o~olf ~~;
able. 12" d eep, 30"
32" hiqh.

1

· . BOOKCASES

LOANS

Only

Home ownership may
be closer than you
think.

Stop in today

\
- 1~

and talk with us. We' ll

Lower Store Only

he I p you set up a low
cost, long term

loan

that's eas y to pay .

GALLIPOLIS
SAVINGS
- .
&amp; LOAN CO.
~

~

Opp. Post Office
Gallioolis, Ohio

BEAUTIFUL L:ACES
Chantilly. C luny, eye·
let, ruffling, bra i d ,
many t ri ms.

JU ST S AY

"CHARGE IT"
AT MURPHY' S

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2 $3

3'x6' VINYL RUG
REG. $1.99

C ushio nflor®.
Vinyl runner.

$1 57
'

EACH

for

8-PC. PARTY SET
REG. $4 .95

SAVE $1.96

4 thermo plastic mugs, 4
matching plates.

299

Delicious MILK CHOCOLATE

HERSHEY KISSES

74~0UND

SHOP MURPHY'S DURING OUR VALUE PACKED PRICE BUSTER DAYS
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Guaran'l'eed o r

your

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cheer*ully

re*unded

�The Nation: Week in Review

President Defines HiS
Vietnanlization Policy

PLAN SCOUT DRIVE - Planning the Gallia County
Scout Fund Drive, around the table, from left, are Chadds

By C. W. ORR
United Press International
President Nixon, in his State
o{ the World address this week,
said the Vietnamization policy
is not intended to bring a hasty
end to the war-anly to reduce
the U.S. role . The United States
would not be hurried into
moving out of Indochina, he
said, but the blake for fighting
after the withdrawal must be
blamed on the enemy.
Nixon was not optimistic
about the Paris talks. "We
have made little progress

Hall, MGM executive; John Allison, Gerald A. Ramsey,
chairman ; Byron McNeeley, Huntington executive; Mrs.
June Lee, Bruce Curtis and Larry Lee.

Scout Drive Chairnten Plan Drive
RIO GRANDE - Community
Chairmen for the Annual Gallia
County Boy Scouts of America
Sustaining Membership Drive
met Thursday afternoon with
Drive Chairman Gerald A.

Big Things
Happen
.
1n a
Small Space!

Make your sales climb
with a small space ad.

THE SUNDAY
TIMES-SENTINEL
Call

4

Ramsay, assistant to the
president at Rio Grande
College, and Scout executives
Byron McNeely and Chadds
Hall.
Plans for the annual drive
were discussed, including a
Victory Banquet, March 29, for
all participants in the Gallia
County Drive and the erection
of a thermometer in the
Gallipolis City Park to show the
drive's
progress.
The
Sustaining Membership Drive
begins March 15 with a 7 p.m.
Kick-Off Meeting in the College
Dining Hall, and ends with the
March 29 Banquet.
The Thursday meeting, the
first for this year's drive, was
held in the Rio Grande College
Board of Trustees Room. There
will be a meeting of drive
captains Thursday, March 4, at
4:30 p.m. in the board room.
Among the Community
Chairmen attending the Thurs$15.8 MILLION CALLED
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
State Board of Deposits will
meet Monday and is expected to
recall $15.8 million in state
bonds from banks in Cleveland,
Cincinnati, Dayton, Akron and
Toledo. State Attorney General
William Brown ruled Friday
that such bank deposits are
illegal under a law passed 67
ears ago.

day meeting were: John
Allison , Roger Barron , Dr .
Bruce Curtis, Arden Dobson,
Roger Hood, Mrs. June Lee,
Larry Lee and Richard Ray .
Ramsay , who moved to Gallia
County last year, stated that
anyone in Gallipolis or Gallia
County interested in scouting

and in helping an execellent
cause should call him at Rio
Grande College or at home, or
come to the Kick-Off Meeting
Mar ch 15. Ramsay 's home
number is 446-9274, while he can
be reached a t Rio Grande
College by calling 245-5353, ext.
79.

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

HOSPITAL NEWS

!.

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m .
Maternity visiting hours 2: 30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. David A. Acree,
Long Bottom, a daughter ; Mr.
and Mrs. Jerry D. Darst,
Gallipolis, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
James S. Dabney, Southside, a
son; and Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
Deweese, Gallipolis Ferry, a
son.
Discharges
Merle M. Bethel, Jr., E rnest
Criner, Mrs. Clyde Doles, Jr.,
Mrs. Cora Hartley, Mrs. James
T. Lemaster, Mrs. Billie Lipps,
Mrs. Alanzo Morris, Mr s.
Harold L. Preston and infant
daughter, Mr s . Paul A.
Rickard, James E. Roush,
Johnny Roush, Mrs. Danny
Sayre and infant daughter, Mrs.
Martin J. Schneider, Mrs. Keith

Mrs. Dale Saunders, Mrs.
Reace Shanes, Mrs. Anna E.
Sims, J erry Lee Smith, Mrs. C.
Irwin Smittle, Sherry H. Southworth, Deborah Tackett,
Kenneth D. Welch, Mrs. Merlin
R. Wineka, Mrs. Stephen C.
Erwin, and Miss Ruth Ann
Saunders.

\

Snyder, Mrs. Claude Souders,
Mrs. Herbert E . Thompson,
Mrs. J ohn Waugh, Sr., Lannes
J ames
E.
Williams on ,
Yates, Mrs. Bernard Rollins,
Mrs. Milo B. Hutchinson, and
John G. Isom .
Helen L. Anderson , Mrs .
Perr y E ugene Beebe and infant
daughter, Mrs. Ronald P . Clagg
and infant da ughter, Mrs. Gary
T. Douglas and infant daughter,
Mrs. Earl B. Eubanks, Clarence
J . Fairchild, Robert J . Fisher ,
Julie A. Hineman, Mrs. James
F. Imes, Henry G. Kisor,
Richard 0 . Knapp II, Miss
Eliz;:~be th D. Lawrence, Mrs.
J oseph W. Leach, Vivian
Maxey, Mrs. Michael L.
McGhee and infant daughter,
Lawrence Milhoan, Curtis R.
Newsome, Jr., Miss Mary L.
Ramsey, Mrs. Roger D. Randolph and infant daughter, Mrs.
Lenley Roush, Jr., Ross R.
Roush, Mrs. Ronald A. Safford,

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Robert Craig,
Middleport; Cynthia Coffman,
Middleport; Joseph Rudolph,
Jr., Middleport; Erma Haynes,
Middleport ; Ruth Hames,
Parkersburg ; Howard Jeffers,
Pomeroy .
Reese
DISCHARGED Williams, Kevin Powell, Kellie
Powell, Linda Reeves, Jack
Baxter, Ruby Hollow.

Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS: Rilla Lewis,
West Colwnbia; Mrs. Robert
Swartz, Gallipolis Ferry ; Mrs.
Frances Brooks , Louisville,
Ky.; J ohnny Lynch, Mrs.
Charles
Turner,
Point
Pleasant ; Teresa Mullins ,
Gallipolis; Edward Layton.
DI SC HARG E S : Mrs.
Winifred Hoffma n, Mrs. Gary
Enos and son, Mrs. Ernest
Rainey, Randy Westmoreland,
Mrs. Ronnie Robertson, Dianne
Browning, Mrs. Bernard
Wallace, William Richard.

toward a negotiated peace," he
said.
The President also :
-Proposed more trade with
Red China and hinted at a seat
for it in the United Nations.
-Said any arms limitation
agreement would have to
include both offensive and
defensive missiles.
-Offered assistance in the
Mideast, but said the United
States would not seek to impose
a solution of its own.
Before Nixon's address, Russia warned that the stepped-up
fighting in Indochina would
affect U.S.-Soviet relations.
Capture Hill
Communists in Laos took Hill
31, a South Vietnamese post
near the border of South
Vietnam after heavy fighting.
The Communists had captured
another South Vietnamese post
the week before.
Sen. George S. McGovern, DS.D., who is trying to get the
Democratic Presidential nomination next year, called for a
total U.S. withdrawal from
Southeast Asia. He said the
North Vietnamese represent the
nationalistic aspirations of the
Indochinese more than Americans do.
Nixon this week suspended
the requirement that workers
on federal construction projects
receive union scale wages-a
s tep to fight inflation in the
building industry. Labor leaders
said this would not have much
effect on inflation but would
hurt non-union employes.
The President asked that
federal safety standards be
made mandatory for all consumer products. He also created
an office of conswner affairs in
the White House with Mrs.
Virginia H. Knauer as its head.
The Federal Communications
Commission approved a change
in the way the government
notifies radio stations of a
national emergency after a
teletype operator at the North
American Defense Command in
Colorado Springs. Colo. sent a
real alert ins :ead of a test The

government will now notify the
wire services, United Press
International and the Associated Press, and will not have
direct access to their broadcast
wires. Some radio stations left
the air during the false alert,
but there was more concern
that some that should have did
not.
Jews Confer
Jewish organizations held a
conference in Brussels on Jews
in the Soviet Union. They would
not allow a speech by Rabbi
Meir Kahane , leader of the
controversial Jewish Defense
League, and Kahane then was
deported by Belgian officials.
The day before Kahane had
been convicted in New York of
disorderly conduct in connection with a demonstration at
the Soviet Mission to the United

Nations.
A Jewish physicist, Leonid G. ..
Rigerman, and his mother,
Mrs. Esther Michel-Rigerman,
were allowed to emigrate to the
United States from Russia. He
said more Soviet Jews would
leave if they were ·not
intimidated when applying for
visas.
Lt. William L. Calley Jr.,
accused of murder in the
alleged massacre at My Lai, '
testified at his trial in Fort
Benning, Ga ., he believed the
civilian victims were all enemy.
He admitted he shot some
civilians who were forced into a
ditch, but that he was under
orders.
More than 80 persons were
killed as tornadoes hit parts of
Louisiana, Mississippi and Ten- I
nessee.

r ...........................

~

:

the APPLE TREE

f

RT. 35 - HENDERSON, W. VA.

i* HOT PANTS

BERMUDAS
:
SAILOR PANTS
J
f* PEASANT ~LOUSES SKIRTS j
i* SKIRTS * VESTS * CULOTTES~
i* GIFTS FROM DENMARK i

f*

and many more items i
f that will make your visit i
: to the Apple Tree-a very L
t
enJoyable one~
:
:

I

I

I

•

t

I

•

............................J.

.t

LIBBY LASLEY DAVID, POSSESSOR 675-1265
TUES.-SAT . 11 -5-SUN.1- 4- CLOSED MONDAY

• • •

,

TIHI
IN THIS LOCATION.
Casby Meadows, Jr. is celebrating his 25th year with the Empire Furniture Co.

LARGE SIZES
Cas by Meadows, Jr.

READY-MADE DRAPES

Come

and
see
Deenie Wagner in
person. The Chatter
Box
Show will
originate from the

75", 100", 150" WIDE

1h

REG. PRICE

RECLINERS
~6·~

____!7995

~16t;!~----~9995
MANY OT HE R BARGAINS

BEDROOM FURNITURE

$19995
at 10:30 a.m.
$21995
OCCASIONAL TABLES
$58995
s5995
3
$41995
s3495
2
$58995
$200
3
$44995
$150
s3 7995
$125
s47995
3
~~~v5~~;!~:~ -~~~-s~~: _____ _
$45000
s4oooo
Empire on Feb. 26,
March 1, 2, 3, 4 &amp; s

1 LAN E CONTE MPORAR Y
3 P I ECE SUI TE, WA S $399.95 - - - - - - - -

1 BASSETT MOD E RN
4 P I ECE SUI TE, WA S $269.95- - - - - - - -

1 BASSETT SPANI S H
4 P I ECE SU ITE, WAS $699. 9 5 - - - - - - - -

BASSETT SPANISH COMMODE
TABLES, WAS $119.95 _ _ _ _ _ _ - -

1 BASSETT IT ALIAN
4 P IECE SUI TE, WAS $539.95 - - - - - - - -

LEECK SPAN ISH END
TABLES, WAS $69.9 5 - - - - - - - - ·
LANE MODERN
TABLES, WAS $389.9 5 - - - - - ·

Group
Only

LANE MODERN
TABLES, WAS $250.00-----

Group
On ly

LANE MODERN
TABLES, WAS S180.oo _ _ _ _ _

g~~:p

LAMPS
•AT A BIG
REDUCTION

ALL LANE
CEDAR CHESTS

1h PRICE

1 NORWALK E ARLY AMERICAN
ROC KING LOV E S E AT, WAS $269.9 5 - - - - - -

1 Ba ssett Suite, Early American,
~9995
Table &amp; 6 Chairs, 1 Corner Hutch, 1
Wate r Bench. Wa s $899.95 - - - - - - ·

1 STRATOLOUNG E R COUCH,
TRADIT IONAL, WAS $329.95-- - - - - - - - 1 BA SSE TT CONTEMPORARY
COUCH &amp; CHAIR, WAS $329.95 - - - - - - - -

1 EAR LY AM E RI CAN CH E RRY
4 P IECE SUI TE, WAS $569 . 9 5 · - - - - - - - -

1 NORWALK MODERN
COUCH &amp; CHAIR, WAS $519.95--- - - - - - -

1 BASSETT CONTE M PORAR Y
3 P I ECE SUIT E, WA S $589.95 - - -- - - - - 1 BASSETT ITALIAN

4 P I ECE SUI TE, WAS $499.95 . - - - - - - - - -

In celebration of our 25th
Anniversary we will give
away FREE your choice
of any $500.00 regular
retail Bedroom Suite
March 31, 1971. Come in
and register, no purchase
necessary.

1 D. M. I. Mode rn Suite with Table, 4

1 NORWALK TRADITIONAL
COU CH &amp; CHAIR, WAS $549.95 - - - - - - - - -

1 BASSETT WHI TE FRE NCH

BEDROOM SUITE

1 TWO PI E C E LONG MODERN RED
COU CH &amp; CHAIR, WAS $259.9 5 - - - - - - - - ·

1 KIN CA I D M E DI TE RRAN EA N
4 P IECE SUI TE, WAS $699.95 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

1 BASSETT ITA LI A N
4 P I ECE SUI TE, WAS $499. 9 5 - - - - - - - -

FREE

LIVING ROOM FURNITURE
DINING ROOM FURNITURE
$19995
$16995
$19995
$16995
$16495
$34995
$28995
$42495
$44995
$59995
$46995
$39995
$42495
$57995
$24995
$25000
$4}995
$32495

1 NORWALK EARLY AMERI CAN
COU CH, WAS $339.95 - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Cha irs, Hutch. Was $339.95_ - - - - -

1 Bassett Maple Suite, Table &amp; 4 Swivel
Captains Chairs. Was $369.95

1 Bassett Su ite, Glass Top Conte mporary with 4 Cha irs, Was
$499.95 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

1 Bassett Modern Suite, Table,
Hutch, 6 Chairs, Wa s $499.95 _ _ _ _ _ ,

1 Bassett Contemporary Suite ,
Hutch , Ta ble , 6 Chairs, Was $699.95 __ _

1 NORWALK MODERN
COU CH &amp; CHAIR, WAS $499.95 - - - - - - - - -

1 Bassett Spanish Suite, Hutch ,
Table, 6 Chairs, Was $499.95 _____ _

1 NORWALK M E DITE RRAN E AN
COU CH &amp; CHAIR, WAS $679.95· - - - - - - - -

1 Ba sse tt Conte m p o rar y Suite,
Table, 4 Chai rs, Was $299.95 _ _ _ _ _ ,

1 BA SSETT MOD E RN
COUCH, WAS $329.95 - - - - - - - - - - - - -

1 NORWALK COU CH,
T RADITIONAL, WAS $499.95 - - - - - - - - - 1 NORWALK COU CH,
SPANI S H, WAS $479.95.- - - - - - - - - - - -

~

:*

THE EMPIRE FURNITURe CO. IS CELEBRATING ITS.

and is making this the greatest sale in the history of the Empire!

i
i

:

�,

•
By Anchor Hocking

Starts Sunday
At 12· Noon

.

And On Sale All Week Long

16 oz.

ANCHOR HOCKING

FIRE KING

GLASSES
~6

•

-

DINNERWARE
(32 PIECE SET)
6 DINNER PLATES
6 TEA CUPS
6 SAUCERS
6 DESSERTS
6 CEREAL BOWLS
2 BOWLS (MEDIUM SIZE)

FOR

.

LIBBY'S 8 OUNCE
ROOT BEER

.MUGS
.....
-~

ALL FOR ONLY

5.44

FOR

WITH HANDLE

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

OPEN STOCK
SPECIALS
DINNER PLATES ............. 39~
TEA CUPS ................•••.•. 29~
COFFEE CUPS ................. 29~
CEREAL BOWLS•...•..•....... 25e
DESSERTS ..•••.•.•.....••...•. 19e
SAUCERS •..•........•........ 15e
MED. SIZE BOWLS .......... 39'

REFLECTION

A FANTASTIC BUY!

.•
•
•••

•
=

GOBLETS

PITCHE.RS

RUBY SPRAY
GREEN SPRAY
BLUE SPRAY
AVOCADO

c

"Soreno" 64 oz.

~-------------------

You Will Pay 1.00 or
More Anywhere

.

.
'.
.

@t

•
•

••

1.99

SIZE 24x48

PICTURES
$

c

40 Scenes
To Choose From

I

..
..•

Reg.

AVOCADO OR WHITE

__ ...... _

.BEVERAGE
GLASSES
(9 OUNCE)
FOR

IN 4 COLORS

GIGANTIC SPECIAL PURCHASE

OUTDOORSMAN

: Wild Turkey and Ring
: Neck Pheasant Design
•
r
or Your P·oison Glasses :.. Arsenic, Vitriol Designs

10'' COMPOTE

Anchor Reflection

White

Oven Proof

PUNCH
BOWL SET

CHOP
PLATES

MEAT
PLATTER

Regular 4.95

large 12"

Fire King
Oven ware

Now Only

2lfz Qt. Bowls

SpeciRl Purchase

SpeciRl Purchase
savzngs.
. ,

VEGETABLE
BOWLS
7 3!8" Size

Anchor Hocking

Aquamarine
ASH TRAYS
4 5/8" Size

ONLY277 ONLY17e ONL~ 9e ONLY33e ONLY22&amp; ONLY12 t.

�6- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday' Feb. 28, 1971

ANQUE
BUFFET
SUPPERS

2

LB.

1

CIRCLE F R~~l
USAGE

3CJe

CUT UP

FRYERS

lb.

e
GOLD
SWEET
AR OW

SLICED BACON

80 LOG NA

1 LB. LAYERS

A
- ON

�7

6'01..

c\\tl\

14

FRESH

I

oz.

PKG.

LO KALE

EN RIPE

·ANAS

U.S. NO . 1

WHITE
OTATOE
20 LB. BAG

'

LB.

HOLSUM

PA
ROLLS

The St....1Jay Time~- SPntinel, Sunday, Fe b ZH, J:JI J

�8- The SWlday Times- Sentinel, S\U\day, Feb. 28, 1971

...You Don't
pay more for
Quality Foods !

..

•

.

Th is Ad Good All
Week Long •
S.
IGA
a/tine C
, La

racke~~

. ao~

·~

•
IGA

FLOUR
25 LB. BAG

PINK
OR
WHITE

GRAPEFRUIT

KRAFT

DINNERS
MACARONI &amp; CHEESE

DELUXE
SIZE

49

~~t
¥

�9- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 28, 1971

• Steinbeck-Ball Vows Read
GALUPOUS- A traditional
Christmas
candlelight
ceremony was performed
Saturday, December 19, in the
Grace United Methodist Church
when Rebecca Steinbeck,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry
L. Steinbeck, became the bride
of Darrell Ball, son of Mrs.
• Eloise Ball, and of the late Mr.
Glenn Ball. The double-ring
ceremony, which began at 7:30
p.m., was performed by Rev.
Paul Hawks.
The altar was decorated with
lighted tapers and two vases of
white poinsettias and greenery.
The front of the altar was
decorated with ropes of pine.
Th~ pew~ were decorated with
• white satm bows and hurricane
lamp and candles which gave
the effect of candlelight.
Mrs. Anne Fischer provided a
half hour of wedding selections
with Dr. John Markley singing
"Whither Thou Goest," and
"One Hand, One Heart." "The
Lord's Prayer" was sung
during the ceremony.
•
Mrs. Roger Vanco registered
the guests.
Seating the guests were Mr.
Edward Jacobs of Wellston;
Mr. Dennis Gilfilen of
Coshocton, and Mr. Dennis Ball
of Amesville, brother of the
groom.
The bride was escorted to the
altar and given in marriage by
her father, Mr . Henry L.
•Steinbeck. She wore an empire
A-line wedding gown of
delustered bridal satin, styled
with rose patterned chantilly
lace bodice, victorian neckline,
and bishop lace sleeves with
french cuffs. Her A-line skirt
was completed with chapel
train, detailed with chantilly
lace appliques and covered
buttons.
•
A camelot lace headdress,
detailed with dainty seed
pearls, secured her chapel
length veil of English silk
illusion.
The bride carried a long
cascade of white miniature
carnations and rosebuds, ac-

BECAUSE YOU
WANT THE FINEST

Carved Beauty $195

•
9 Diamond Tri $230

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
422 Second Ave.

•

Gallipolis, Ohio

cented with white staphanotis.
A white orchid served as the
center of the arrangement
which was mounted on a white
Bible. Her only jewelry was a
white pearl necklace, a wedding
gift from the bridegroom.
Attending the bride were Miss
Jane Ann George of Columbus,
serving as maid of honor; Miss
Robin Robinson of Gallipolis;
Miss Debbie North of
Gallipolis; and Mrs. Judy
Rankin of Gallipolis, all serving
as bridesmaids.
Mr. Jerold Ball of Athens,
brother of the bridegroom,
served as best man.
Miss Lisa Ball and Miss
Deanna Ball, nieces of the
bridegroom, served as flower
girls. Their attire consisted of
Christmas green velvet floorlength dress with victorian
necklines and puff sleeves.
Beige velvet sashes accented
the waistlines, neckline, and
sleeves.
Their headpieces were
Christmas green velvet head
bands trimmed with beige
velvet. They carried wicker
baskets of white rose petals,
accented with green velvet
ribbon.
Attendants wore A-line floorlength gowns of Christmas red
velvet bottoms with beige lace
bodices featuring victorian
necklines and long bishop
sleeves with french cuffs. Their
headpieces were red velvet
bows.
Maid-of-honor wore a floorlength gown with Christmas
green velvet bottom with beige
lace bodice featuring a victorian neckline and long bishop
sleeves with french cuffs. Her
headpiece was a green velvet
bow.
The maid of honor carried an
old-fashioned lovers' knot which
consisted of red pompon mums,
accented with holly and a white
gardenia with long beige lace
streamers.
The attendants wach carried
a nosegay of red and peppermint carnations accented
with holly and white staphanotis
with long beige lace streamers.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Steinbeack chose a navy
blue dress and coat ensemble
trimmed in white. She wore
matching accessories. Her
corsage was a white cymbidium
orchid with navy blue ribbon
trim. Mrs. Ball wore a turquoise
blue swt ensemble. She wore
and carried a white cymbidium
orchid with powder blue ribbon
trim.
Immediately following the
ceremony, a reception was held
in the church dining room. The
four-tier wedding cake was
decorated all in white accented
with doves and wedding rings
and was topped with two doves
backed with a lace gate. Silver
candelabras and red poinsettias, with a Christmas flower
arrangement completed the
table decorations.
Serving as hostesses were
Miss Meda Edelblute,Miss
Patty Forgey, and Mrs. Gary
Smith.
For her honeymoon trip, the
new Mrs. Ball wore a mint
green long sleeve dress with a
gray and mint green long vest to
match. She chose gray accessories for her ensemble.

The bride is a graduate of
Nationwide Beauty Academy.
Mr. Ball will graduate in May
from Rio Grande College. They
are residing at Rio Grande.
Out of town guests at the
wedding were Mrs. Flossie Ball,
grandmother
of
the
bridegroom, Amesville, Ohio;
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Ball and
Rhonda; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Ball, Mr. and Mrs. Danny
Simons, Mrs. Joyce Kirk, Mrs.
June Hensley and Connie, Mrs.
Peggy Carpenter, Amesville,
Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Melvin
Libby Steve and Kathy; Mr. and
Mrs. Rothbe Barron, Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Matheney,
Lucinda and Jack, Hamden;
Miss Eleanor Smith, Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Miller, Glouster; Mr.
and Mrs. William Dunnette,
Miss Linda Sturgeon, Miss
Linda McKinney, Mr. Gary
Madden, Mr. Stephen Madden,
Mr. and Mrs. John Mathais,
Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Orville Barron
and Connie, McArthur;Mrs.
Phyllis Koons, Jacksonville;
Mr. Chris Stiverson, Logan;
Mr. Jerry Stepelton, Ashville;
Miss Linda Shimmel, Circleville; Mr. Joseph Weller and
Susan
Stegmiller,
Miss
Columbus.

Salem Baptist
Women to
Serve Dinner
GAGE - Plans for a dinner
they will be serving were made
by the Ladies Missionary
Society of Salem Baptist Church
recently in the church
basement.
In the absence of Lena Wood,
president, vice president,
Bernice Wood conducted the
business meeting. The group
sang "Love Divine" and Hettie
Trout had prayer. Bernice
Wood read scripture.
Each answered roll call by
nammg the thmg they were
most thankful for since the last
meeting.
Bible questions were asked
:md the ladies then discussed
the dinner they will serve to the
Chillicothe area Beef Cattle
Association dinner at Southwestern High School March 19. ·
It was decided that other ladies

Miss Hutsinpiller Reviews Golden Book

Coming
Events

MONDAY
GRACE Guild dinner meeting
6:15 p.m., bring table service.
AMERICAN
Red
Cross
Volunteer Gray Ladies luncheon at 12:20 at the Holzer
Medical Center cafeteria.
HI-LO Canasta Club will meet
with Mrs. Robert Young 7 p.m.
DAR Meeting 2 p.m. at the
home of Miss Catherine
Hayward.
TUESDAY
WAYSIDE Garden Club open
meeting at 7:30 p.m. at the
Cheshire Baptist Church.
Members, bring dessert.
PEMBROKE Club will meet
with Mrs. Jack Knight 8 p.m.
TUESDAY

RIVERSIDE Study Club will
meet with Mrs. Garland EIHott
at 1 p.m.
MERCERVILLE
Grange
meeting, 7:30p.m.
PATRIOT Grange, 7:30 p.m.
Potluck lunch.
KYGER CREEK Athletic
Boosters at KC High School,
7:30p.m.
WEDNESDAY
GALLIA County Citizens Band
Radio Club 7:30p.m. at the K of
P Hall.
SATURDAY
CHILDREN'S Poster Workshop
from 10 a.m. to 12 at the Grace
United Methodist Church.
Sponsored by the French Art
Colony.

Sea Grasses
Turtle grass is a true
grass closely rela_ted to ~elgrass bu~ foun~ m tropical
waters, mcludmg southern
Florida. Like eelgrass beds,
turtle grass shelters its own
special community of animal
life.
of the church and community
would be asked to donate pies
and green beans again this
year.
A get-well card was signed
and sent to Golder Daily at
Veterans Hospital in Huntington, W. Va.
The group was then dismissed
by praying the LOrd's Prayer in
unison. Attending were Mrs.
Anna Davis, Mrs. Hettie Trout,
Mrs. Alice Salisbury, Mrs.
Kirby Oiler, Mrs. Alice Mantz,
Mrs. Bernice Wood, Mrs.
Shirley Hudson and Toby
Hudson and Mrs. Rosalie Lakin.

GALLIPOLIS
Miss Edith
Hutsinpiller reviewed "So Long
as You're Healthy'' by Harry
Golden for Philomathean Club
Thursday. Mrs. Nellie Scarberry was hostess for the
meeting.
"So Long As You're Healthy"
or Jewish title "Abee Gezundt"
was written and published by
Harry Golden, a Jew, who was
born on the Lower East Side of
New York City and later in life
moved to Charlotte, N. C.,
where he was owner and editor
"Carolina
of bi-monthly
Israelite." Though not a
Southerner, he has Carolina
vantage point, which gives
insight and perspective there,
that few outsiders have.
A few years ago his paper was
discontinued but Golden travels
throughout the country with a

discerning eye and lectures at
colleges, five of them in
California.
He is a keen observer, an
accomplished journalist, and a
serious, social historian. His
book writings are spiced with
witty observations that cut
through prejudice, and a golden
thread running through them,
extolls the human virtues
wherever they appear. There
are no favorites in his
description of the anatomy of
multri-racial, multri-religious,
multri-idealogical nation of
ours.
The materials for "So Long
As You're Healthy" were taken
from the 1962-1968 issues of the
Carolina Israelite, which had
approximately 14,000 subscribers. Several of his fifteen
books were on the best-seller

Patriotic Theme Used
For Bible Class Meet
GALLIPOLIS - The meeting
of the Ann Judson Bible Class of
the First Baptist Church was
held in the fellowship room with
Mrs. William Urwin presiding.
The meeting was opened with
the group singing, "My Country
Tis of Thee' accompanied by
Mrs. Herman Condee followed
with prayer by Mrs. Uda Clark.
Mrs. David Sneller was in
charge of the program. Mrs.
Don Teal gave devotions
reading an article titled
"George Washington, A Giant
on His Knees." Mrs. Tel also
read scriptures from the sixth
chapter of Daniel after which
. .
she _offered pray~r. Patnohc
Sentunents were giVen by Mrs.
Charles Steger.
A contest was conducted by
Mrs. Leona Boster with prizes
being awarded to Mrs. Earl
Saunders, Mrs. Uda Clark and
Mrs. Faye Rose. An interesting
Bible quiz was conducted by
Mrs. Augustus Steele. The
meeting was closed with the
Lord's Prayer given in unison

by the group.
Attractive and delicious
refreshments were served by
the committee, Mrs. David
Sneller, chairman; Mrs. Don
Teal, Mrs. Charles Steger, Mrs.
Leona Boster and Mrs.
Augustus Steele.

The review has many
humorous subjects but "What it
means to be a humanist" is a
very serious conclusion to the
book.

list.
Numerous essays in the book
include: Anecdotes of Jewish
Family Life, with his mother's
shopping in New York City
during early years, so different
from today; integration of
Negroes in Southern states and
lynching of them, which word
was derived from Col. Charles
.Lynch, an American Revolutionary Soldier who helped found Lynchburg, Virginia; libraries which are
our most precious possessions;
religious traditions and Jewish
"Christmas Every Friday";
Free Music Lessons in New
York Institutions; The Future
of Civil Rights; United States
Constitution and its comparison
to English Parliament's Magna
Carta; Making of Chaplains,
when, in later years, Jews were
finally accepted with the
Gentiles.
Some articles include friends
and well-known persons: Carl
Sandburg, Winston Churchill,
Billy Graham, Lyndon B.
Johnson, Richard Nixon, W. C.
Fields, Adlai, Stevenson,Fannie
Hurst, Nancy Dickerson, Adam
Clayton Powell, Martin Luther
King, and many others worth
reading. Carl Sandburg said,
"Harry Golden has written the
most interesting pro-Semitic
book I have ever read, barring
possibly the Old Testament."

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404 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

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Gallipolis

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long point collar blouse
ruffled lace bib, dyed to match
lace trimm ed collar and cuffs.
Sizes 32-38 White only

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10-The SWlday Times- Sentinel, SWlday. Feb. 28, 1971

GAHS Participates
1n Ohio OES Contest

~~----------~---

! Just Between , ~·
·

Us

GALLIPOLIS- Region V of
The Ohio Cooperative Office
By Pat Houck
Education Club, with Gallia
-"
Academy High School and 34
~
Vintonian Mrs. C. W. Daft sent me letter about Vinton in the other clubs participating, will
old days. With the letter she included a poem printed in 1894. The hold their Regional Contests on
paper on which the poem was written was so brown and brittle it Saturday, March 6, at Central
High School, Columbus.
could not be mailed, so Mrs. Seth Huntley typed it up for Mrs.
The Gallia Academy Club
;Daft. (An excellent job too!)
under the direction of Mrs.
' Mrs. Daft included in her letter facts about the mill, and
Elsie Lusk, Cooperative Office
because of the interest the mill story stirred up, I'm including Education Coordinator, will
much of Mrs. Daft's letter in today's column.
participate in contests in such
First of all the poem:
areas as account clerk, clerk
VINTON
He is jolty, clever, fat .
typist, general clerical I and II,
•In the county of old Gallia,
communications and
And in Ohio state,
We also have a dentist.
stenographic. In addition,
There is a town called Vinton Ed . Beggs is hard to beat;
.Whose advantages are great. He'll make you a good set of students compete in contests for
\
teeth,
essay, extemporaneous
And in our grand old county
And do it very cheap.

.

-·

Our town cannot be beat,
Altowing one exception
That is our county seat.

We have a first-class flouring
mill
That runs the year around,
G. W . Shack is proprietor
And can easily be found .

And
if
you
want
good
photographs
Mr . Whealdon is the man,
He will make you as good
pictures
As any body can.

speaking, scrapbooks, display,
queen, and the outstanding COE
student.
The winners of these contests
will compete at the State
Convention to be held in
Columbus, March 26 and 27 at
the Sheraton Columbus Motor
Hotel.
Cooperative Office Education
students are senior business
students included in the
Cooperative Office Education
program, a vocational program
providing actual work experience in an office. These
students attend school for onehalf day and work in office
positions in the afternoon.

Atty. T. S. Moulton Is
JWC Guest Speaker

Larry Tate, Student of Mrs. Moshier

Mrs. George Bush Gives Thursday Club Review
GALLIPOLIS- Mrs. George

drove hard for the vote. Here,
too, are the outstanding first
As a livestoc k-dealer,
"Sons of Adam, Daughters of ladies, some of whom were
Geo. Eagle' s hard to beat ;
Shack also owns the woolen mill He w ill buy your hogs and cattle Eve," for Thursday Club's unashamedly ambitious, two or
Where he will spin your yarn, And also buy your sheep.
meeting at the home of Mrs. three who bedeviled their
And if you bring to him your
Charles Holzer.
husbands, and a handful of
wool
The Hocking Valley agent
You will r eceive no harm .
Is always at his post,
· The author tells of the outHis name is William Porter;
standing women who have
Of stores of general mer- Of fr iends he has a host.
influenced men and events in
chandise
Our town can boast of three,
We al so have a notary,
politics, in the professions, in
Owned by Feltm an, Wei l and Who is fa t and saucy, too,
business and in the home from
Hartsook ,
His name is E. G. Shaner,
the early days of the republic to
With a No. 11 shoe.
As you ma y plainly see.
the present.
We also hav e a hardware
Our bridge contractors are the
Miss Ross shows us Anne
And tinware st ore combined
Scotts,
Hutchinson,
who split the
And pr oprietor's na m e is An· They ' r e workmen tried and
GALLIPOLIS - Nature 's
churches in the days of the Garden Club met at Cottage 7,
derson
true.
As you are sure to find .
T he bridges that they've built Puritans; Susan Anthony, who
February 25, at 1 p.m. with Ye
around
And al so of good d rug stores
Are not a very few.
Olde Village Garden Club
We surely have our shar e,
serving as hostess.
Run by Ham i lton and Dust in, In societies and orders,
The business meeting was
And they wil l trea t you fair .
Our town is not behind;
RUMMAGE SALE
We've Free Masons and Odd
conducted by Mrs. W. Donald
The harness shop at Vinton
Fellows
GALLIPOLIS - The Poplar Galloway of the Gallipolis
Is run by J oe McGhee,
And G.A. R. you'll find.
Ridge Free Will Baptist youth Garden Club. Gardener 's
If you wan t to buy good ha rness
group is sponsoring a rummage Pledge was repeated. An
Jest call on him a nd see.
We also have two ministers,
You may have heard before ; sale March 4 and 5 in the Fry original poem was read by the
The tannery's r un by Matthews, That one is Wm . Harkins,
Building at Middleport.
secretary. A get-well card was
Who m akes good leather, too, T he ot her H . Devore.
E. Bush reviewed the book,

dazzlers, Dolley Madison, Julia
Tyler and Jacqueline Kennedy .
Officers for the coming year
were elected, Mrs. John Brown,
Jr., president; Mrs. George E.
Bush, vice-president, and Mrs .

Sigismund Harder, treasurer.
Mrs. Holzer served dessert
course from a tea-table
decorated with a red, white and
blue drum filled with fresh red
and white flowers.

Hostess for Nature's Club
Ye Olde Village Garden Club

And our shoemaker, Glassburn ,
Ca n m ake a sp lendid shoe.

The b l acksmlfh's na m e i s
Pa tton;
He is g ood as can be found
If you would search the country
For f orty miles around .
We also have two barber s;
If you want to kn ow their
na mes,
One is Will1 am J ack son
T he other Bax ter Ja mes.

Of hotels w e have plenty,
Thei r number being two;
Only s top and try them
And they ' lt deal square by you.
Of la borers and teamsters
We have about a score.
Of toughs and bum s and loafers
We have as many more.

Oh , yes; there's our town of
f icer s,
Of t hose we have a few,
George Koontz is our town
Vi nton has a bakery
M ar shalWher e you .,ay buy your b r ead Our Mayor' s name is Pugh.
A!"d also ~'&gt;
c" room
~~er~ oe~
r ~
We have a splendid council,
,..heir nuiT'ber being s ix;
Bull
TfJey can pass the ord inances
votJ war
And keep the streets in fix.
J - call
And he w1
So now, to lake it all in all ,
I think you wi ll agree
We are wet blessed with doc· We have as f ine a I ittle town
tor s,
As you wou ld wi sh to see.
We ha ve a full quartette;
If y ou should have a broken Now if you 've r ea d my story
bone
through
You ca n get it safely set.
And did not find a· yarn .
I h ope if if has done no good,
Of cour se w e have a post-office, It surely did no harm?
Kep t by a Dem ocrat;
A Vintonite
His na me is Charley Rob inson,

I overheard this conversation Friday between the coach of a
team with an 0-18 record who was scheduled Friday night against
North Gallia, a team with a 14-3 record and a team which had
defeated them in a previous game with a 100 plus score, and an
interested spor ts fan.
"Coach, how do you think you'll do tomorrow against North
Gallia?"
" Not even show up," was the reply.
I ca n understand his response, can't you?
WHAT COULD BE worse than losing a contact lens two
minutes before the end of a basketball game? A tournament game
at that! A J ackson girl had that experience Saturday night at the
Jackson-Lancaster game at Rio Grande.
ODD TURNINGS of fate are something to muse on. A story I
was told this week bears that out. A woman named Inez Mays lost
$40 recently in a downtown stor e. It was found and turned in by
another woman. Her name also was Mayes (Kathryn).
ONE KIND of happiness is going ahead and using a certain
metaphor, (overriding your fears of sounding corny) and having
your teacher say it was good.
ANOTHER IS HAVING a friend call you and ask if you wrote
a cer tain ar ticle in a certain magazine. " It reads exactly like the
article you wrote several years ago and read to me," she says.
You get a warm feeling all over because of her thoughtfulness and
an extra glow that she actually remembered the article these
several years .
THE BIRDS woke me up Saturday morning and when I got up
I saw the sun was shining and the water was going down in
Chickama uga Creek and I felt the first twinge of spring fever. Is it
ge tting to you too?

YOUTH MEET SET
ADDISON - The youth
groups of the Addison Free Will
Baptis t Churc h wtll be
reorganized Monday evening.
Parents are welcome.

All interested youth are asked
to meet at the church at 7 p.m.
The group will be under the
direction of Mr. Carroll Sheets
and Rene Broyles.

SALE! JUMBO SIZE

BATH TOWELS
If Perfect s1.99 Value
Slight Irs.!

$1 49

:tarnbrough's
DEPT. STORE

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

!Helen Help Us!
I

:

I
I

By Helen Bottel

YOUTH ASKED FOR IT!
This column is for young
people, their problems and
pleasures, their troubles and
fun . As with the rest of Helen
Help Us !, it welcomes laughs
but won 't dodge a serious
question with a brush-off.
Send your teenage questions
to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT,
care of Helen Help US! this
newspaper.
STAND-INS GET
STEPPED ON
Dear Helen:
Last year I met a guy I liked
very much. He asked me out
twice and then I didn't hear
from him for a month. I felt
terrible because, at age 21,
when you're out of school, great
guys are hard to find.
Then suddenly he came back
and gave me a big rush - for
exactly three weeks. Mter that
he disappeared again.
I fould out later that he is
trying to get over a married
woman. That's what he told me
last week. He stops calling me
when her husband is away, as
she gets in touch with him then.
Now her husband is home for a
month, so I'm number one.
Do you think there's any
future in this relationship?
DOUBTFUL
Dear Doubtful :
What future would you want
with a man who uses you for a
stand-in (to avoid an irate
husband)? Keep doubting ! - H.
Dear Helen:
I am a man of 23, and not
liable to change . I find the
thought of married life
repulsive, yet I'm already being
pressured to conform and look
for a wife. It will get worse as
time goes on.
My argument? Women are
dull, have no real zest for life.
They are only interested in
feathering their own nests. The
examples are endless : Mter a
week of ma rriage my cousin
was told by his bride that she
had no intention of either
working or caring for the house.
They lasted six weeks.
Anotper man I know pays half
his salary into alimony and
child support to an "ex" who is
using the money for her new boy
friend's booze .
My parents despised each
other. Dad, having got nothing
out of married life (but bills)
had an affair with the lady down
the street, for which I didn't
blame him . Mter he died, my
mother married a man she
didn't give an Indian coin about,
so she would be supported. She
is s till anti-sex.
There is a man at work who
tells m e every day I should get
married. Yet HIS "great love"
ended in divorce and, believe it
or not he's going to take the
plunge again! I try to tell him
how crazy he is, but he thinks
I'm the crazy one.

1
I

I am also told that if I make
ldts of money I can have my
pick of great women, even when
I 'm 80. Who wants to buy a
wife? Am I really " crazy" for
deciding sex on a regular basis
isn't worth the price? - STEVE
Dear Steve:
Marriage isn't for everyone.
Until your ideas about women
change, it definitely isn't for
you! Don't get pressured into
something you'll regret, for you
might make your wife as
unhappy as you are sure she
would make you. - H.
Dear Helen:
What do you think about the
new "short-shorts " fashion?
I'm glad to see we won the
battle of the midi (it flopped)
but I don't think I'll get used to
wearing real brief shorts for
"dress." - NO E!XTREMIST
Dear N. E.:
It's amazing what' girls and
women "get used to" if it gives
them a chance to show a well
turned leg.
Brief shorts? They're great
for tennis (if you have a well
turned leg). - H.

sent to Mary Henry of O.T. who
has been ill. Mrs. Galloway
introduced her mother, Mrs.
John McGraw of St. Clairsville,
Ohio, who had visited the club
before. She then introduced
members of the hostess club Mrs. Bill Davis, Mrs. Charles
Almond, Mrs. John Britton and
Mrs. John Reese.
Mrs . Almond gave the
devotions, Man's Destruction of
Nature , followed by a prayer.
Mrs .
Reese,
Regional
Director of O.A.G.C, introduced
Mrs. Britton, who presented the
program
" Pollution and
Destruction of Nature." She
suggested that members write
to Congress to request action
being taken to stop polluting the
air we breathe. A flannel board
was used to show examples of
pollution. Avoid plastics when
possible, also disposable bottles
to help the pollution problem.
When burned, the plastics

pollute the air. Be concerned in
all areas, watch pesticides and
insecticides as harm can be
done to wild life, air and water.
Daffodil
bulbs
were
distributed to memhers, who
planted them in a plastic cup
filled with gravel and water.
Instructions were to leave in
dark until the bulb is three
inches tall. Then, gradually
move to the light and then to
sunlight. Spray with water
every second, or third , day.
Pictures were
used
to
demonstrate the growth.
Mrs . Davis distributed
pamphlets to each member
" Help Keep Our Beautiful
Land."
Mrs. Garnet Wood of Occupational Therapy distributed
magazines, courtesy of Mr.
Leedy, A&amp;P Store.
Delicious refreshments were
served by the hostes s club and
door prizes were a arded.

6free

~i~of

Mrs. Sarah Moshier, have sent
their paintings to be judged at
the district meeting. Two
scholarships of $250 will be
given to students from Ohio .
Guests at Tuesday night'if.
meeting were Wilma Mullin~
and Judy Evans.
Pat Martin announced a new
award the club will be making ~
to one of its own members. A
"Club Woman of the Year"
award will be given to the
Junior Woman's Club member
who tabulates the most points of
service to the community
through her philanthropic wor.
and her willingness to serve
others.
It was announced that Susie
Allen will be chairman of the
city Cancer Crusade by Cancer
Chairman Pat Mills. It was also
announced that Jane Yocum
will be this year's city chairman
for the Mothers March of
Dimes.
A nominating committee wa.
formed to select a slate of officers for next year. The
members of the committee are:
Gwen Carter, Bev Walker, and
Pat Mills. The slate will be
presented at the next meeting
and will be voted on in April.

F-SV ClubMeets atSamplesHome
GALLIPOLIS - The Fairview-Spring Valley
Homemakers
Club
met
Thursday evening in the home
of Mrs. Howard Samples with 22
members and one guest
present.
Mrs. Samples opened the
meeting with devotions. Mrs.
Bill Schoonover announced the
Spring Rummage Sale on
March 29 and 30, and asked for
members to volunteer time.

A spontaneous singing of
Happy Birthday to president
Mrs. Herman Dillon was led by
Mrs. Paul Wagner.
Betty Newton (Columbia Gas
of Ohio) presented a program
on ways to make food have
(Fabulous Finishes! )
Dessert was served by c?W
hostesses, Mrs. Charles KnottS
and Mrs. Paul Wagner.
The next meeting will be
March 25with Mrs. M. T. Bucci.

Popes Announce Birth of Child
GALLIPOLIS- Mr. and Mrs.
Jeff Pope, Rt. 2, Gallipolis,
announce the birth of their first
child, a daughter, on Feb. 21 at
Holzer Medical Center.
The baby weighed eight
poWlds and 61k ounces and has
been named, Holly Ann.

412-414

o•

Maternal grandparents aria
Mr. and Mrs. Orville Jones,
Hill, and paternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Paul Pope,
Patriot.
Great-grandmother is Mrs.
Ethel Pope, Patriot.

Second Ave.

maternity
fashions
• Slips
• Panties
• · Bras
• Girdles
• Panty Hose

It' s the most wonderful time of your life and
today ' s new fashions for ladies-in -waiting
he lp make it so! Come see our collection
of dresses, sportswear, and foundations designed
just for you.

Slacks $9
Dresses - $6· 50 &amp; Up
Tops - $5 &amp; up
Skirts $7

'l:osl

Nothing to buy!
You c;ao ""''" 1ht p aln1 g l beautiful MoJud Panty
Hose on ou r l w1ngmg M&amp;try-Go-Roundl So hu r ry on
dOwn . •lUll lOt you r fr&amp;t ent ry blank . 1111 it out
&amp;'ld d rop II •n theeont&amp;at box. Yoil don't have to buy a

thlng-llut you just

m1gh~

want to when you SH IIII

,our tevouteetyles and colors in Motu~ P11nty HDSe.

.........
Jlll«WA"

,..,,~,lopiiMI

G.tll-h., O

Gallipolis

looking
pretty
while
you
wait

To Address Legislature
WASHINGTON (UPI )
President Nixon will address a
joint session of the Iowa
Legislature during his one-day
trip to Des Moines Monday to
promote his revenue sharing
plans. The President will also
meet the governors of Iowa ,
Illinois, Missouri and Wisconsin
during his visit. The White
House announced Nixon will
visit Rochester, N. Y. , next
Friday to discuss his domestic
programs with area officials.

Win

GALLIPOLIS - Attorney
Thomas S. Moulton gave the
program for the Gallipolis
Junior Woman's Club Tuesday.
Atty. Moulton stressed the
importance of making a will,
even for the young married
couple. If no will is made, the
surv1ving spouse and children
are given predetermined
percentages of the estate in
accordance with the law of the
state in which the family lives.
A will may be changed at any
time but a new will must be
witnessed by two persons other
than the writer in order for it to
be valid in a court of law.
The meeting was held at the
home of Saundra Koby. The
Home Life committee was in
charge of the program and the
refreshrnen ts.
Penny Moore, of the Fine Arts
Committee, announced the
names of the competitors from
our area entering the Penny Art
Scholarship Contest. Two
students from Kyger Creek
High School have submitted
entries for the art scholarships
given each year by the
Federated Women's Clubs of
America. Mr. Dennis VanSickle
and Mr. Larry Tate, students of

fine STORES''
(jaltipolu, Ohio

"ONE OF OHIO'S

•

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