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                  <text>New in Old French City .

12- The Daily Senllnel. Middleport-?omeroy, 0., June 11, 1971

.Beat of Bend•••
(Continued from page 1)

Tax Package Deadlock.
Holds
.

into a good playing field. The results are far from what the dads
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
hopeforeventuaUy, butatleasl the field is in use now.
OhioGeneral.A.ssembly adjournMore labor and some materials are needed to make the field ed for the weekend Thursday,
into a top diamond for the kids. Tom Grueser Is president of the apparently no closer to a solu·
little league, and ·Jim SQulsby, secretary-treasurer. If you're lion to the budget-tax problem
willing to help, do phone one of them. They'D be glad to hear from than when the week began.
you.
House Republicans were unable to get' together on a tax
TALENTED ARTIST, MRS. RUTH GOSNEY, of Middleport package to fund $1.2 billion
has regained her health after a hard winter anll)s Iooklng1orward worth of new spending, leading
to August when she Will reopen'her D'Arlillte 9allery in Mid- to increased speculation Senate
dleport to art students - men, women, teen;~gers and younger Republican leaders will step up
children - groups of eacn who will have an evening a week to efforts next week to evolve a
meet at the gallery and try their hand at the oils, charcoals and tax program of their own.
With the start of the new
what-have-you. Ruth Will advise through this column when the
initial meetings will be so that you can gel in on the ground floor. fiscal year less than three
Ruth is particularly anxious to get men into the activity since weeks away, the Holise GOP
some of the best artists have been male. ~era! already have tax package was still mired in
the Ways and Means Commitindica ted interest.
You·can look for Ruth and her group at the Big Bend Regatta lee.
Rep. E.W. Lampson, R.Jeffer·
next Saturday and Sunday. A bus owned by Mrs. Gosney will be
located on the upper parking lot with paintings hung aU over it. A son, committee chairman, said
40-loot snow fence will be wt up and this will hold other paintings. his unit would meet again next
week to consider amendments
As an added touch, artlstswillbepainting on the scene.
to the Republican tax plan, key·
Incidentally, you don't have to be a student of Mrs. Gosney to ed to a 1.75 per cent flat intake part in the show but if you do display you have to serve on the come tax collected at the state
shr,w staff at sometime during the two-day period.
or county level.
A collection box will be nearby. Proceeds will go to the
Lampson said It Is possible
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce which stages the regatta the rate will be dropped back to
weekend.
1.5 per cent if necessary to get
support for the income tax.
NINETY·YEAR.OLD JOHN SAUVAGE, a former Pomeroy
Widely circulated reports of a
businessman, was admitted to Holzer Medical Center Thursday Democratic. Republican agree·
afternoon.
ment on taxes proved unfound·
It seems that Mr. Sauvage was ezperlencing difficulty in ed as Democrats continued to
walking- a sltualion which was getting Increasingly worse. An hold firm on Gov. John J. Gil·
euminallon at llle hospital disclosed that he had suffered a ligan's I to 8 per cent graduatfractured hlp approximately five weeks ago and has been walldng ed state income tax proposal.
Irritations from the fisCal
around on it ever since. The fracture was, it is believed, suffered
when Mr. Sauvage was tearing down an old house which he owns problems appeared to be rubbing off on other matters as
nell door to his Butternut Ave. home.
Mr. Sauvage, now in tractlon,ls awaiting surgery. Meantime, members of ihe House and
Senate tangled separately
why not drop him a card. He's been a gem through the years.
Thursday on a land transfer bill,
A TYPOGRAPHICAL ERROR in Thursday's Sentinel in- special license plates and bas·
tardy actions.
dica~ that the late Frank H. Johnston had received a 50 year
In the Senate, several skeptiMalonic pin in 1969. It was the 50 year pin he was awarded by
cal senators opposed legislation
Pomeroy Lodge 164. He had been a member 52 years.
to !lfll 16 acres of.•iand on behalf of Ohio State University to
Industrial Nuclonics Corp., Col·
umbus, for $750,000. ·
The biii cleared, 22-1, and
~1 AION
.
was sent to the House after the
sponsor, Sen. Robert R. Shaw,
T!Jriig~t On IV
R.Colwnbus, assured members
Ben F. Brown, Sr., 76, the land was not. being used by
Pomeroy Route 2, a-- retired the university, the property was
Meigs County coal miner, died appraised at only $700,000 and
ALSO
Thursday
at
Veterans the proceeds would go to the
Memorial Hospital. He was a university. ·
member of the Pomeroy Church
Sen. M. Morris Jackson, D·
of the Nazarene.
Cleveland, led the opposition,
Mr. Brown is survlv:ed by his claiming it was a "private in' - - - - - - - - - - ' wife, May; three sons, Paul E., terest bill."
Garde!\ Gro:ve, c:&amp;lif.; qeorge
Jackson urged competitive
A., of Columbus, and Benjamin bidding In the sale, and comF., ..yichita Falls, Tex.; three plained one of the university
daughters, Mrs. Marie Wash- lruJiees owned stock in InTonighllhru Tuesil'ay
June 11-15
burn and Mrs. Mary Jewell, dustrial Nucleonics.
bothofYonkers,N. Y.,andMrs.
Meanwhile, the House passed,
Walt Disney's
Helen
Williams,
Colwnbus;
13
BAREFOOT EXECUTIVE
grandchildren, and ·22 greatITec:hnicotorl
Kurt Russell
grandchildren.
Heather North
Funeral services will be held
at I p.m. Sunday at the Ewing
Colorcartoons:
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Surprisln' Exerclsln'
Mrs. Bertha L. Archer, 78,
Abominable Mountaineer Clyde Henderson officiating.
Burial will be in Meigs Memory former Middleport resident,
Rock Hound
ShOi!P Dog
Gardens. Friends may can. at died Thursday afternoon at
Great Day
Lincoln Memorial Hospital in
the funeral home anytime.
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
Colwnbus.
Mrs. Archer was born Sept. 3,
1892 at Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va.
She was a member of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church and the Corinthian
Chapter, O);:S, Colwnbus.
Surviving are a daughter,
Mrs. William (Ellen Jane)
Beaver; a son, John M. MyGatt,
both of Columbus; four
brothers, Nathan, Lawrence
and Claude Denny, all of
.Colwnbus, and Arnold Denny,
in Texas; a sister, Mrs. Kenneth
.( Pearl) Skeen, of Columbus;
three . granddaughters, a
grandson, and five greatgrandchildren.
. Preceding Mrs. Archer In
death were her psrents, David
H. and Effie Jane Jordan
Denny; her fir~I husband, John
Martin MyGatl in !934; her
second husband, John M. Ar·
cher in 1952; two brothers, and a
sister.
Funeral services will be held
at noon Saturday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral HOme
with the Rev. Charles Simons
officiating. Burial will be in
Safeguard your jewelry and other valuables
Grave.! Hill Cemetery at
against fire and th~ft. For Just pennies a we~.
Cheshire. Friends may call at
'(ou'll breathe a little easier.
the funeral home anytime.

Ben F. Brown
DR!'JE·IH
..

Died Thursday

"BARQUERO"

"ONE MORE TIME"
GP

78-ll, and sent to the governor
a bill aU owing veterana: and
other service organizations to
get special parade licenses for
$2 instead of $10.
It also permits special honorary plates for commanders, adjutants and presidents of such
organizations.
Legalize• Plates
The floor manager, Rep.
Gordon M. Scherer, R • Cincinnati, said the legislation was
designed to Ieg~lize the honor·

Berlha Archer
Dies ThursdAy ·

Rent

a

Safe
Deposit
Box.

actions with the consent of an
unmarried mother if her ill~giti­
m.ate child is a welfare recipi·
ent.
The intent of the legislation,
sponsored by Rep. Donald J.
Pease, D . Oberlin, is to force
support payments from fathers
of children born out of wedlock.
An amendment' offered by
Rep. Phale D. Hale, D.Colum·
bus, to eliminate consent of the
mother, was defeated after
some debate.

But Rep. Richard M.
Chrlstiansen,D-Mansfleld,overcame opposition and inserted ,
amendments eliminating all ref·
erences to the word "bastard"
in the bill:
The House Judiciary CoJ!liililtee approved legislation requir'
TOO LATE
TO CLASSIFY
ing safety glass in storm doors,
NOTICE
tub enclosures and patio doors GARAGE
SALE, Friday and
of residences by July I, 1972. Saturday tram 9 a.m . to 7
The sponsor, Rep. George M. p.m.. Jolters Clothing Store.
Mastics, R.cleveland, said he Old Rt. 33, Pomeroy. 6-10-2tp
hopes for a floor vote next week.

GET

• ....101

Water Potability Threatened
acre Shawnee Lake was revealed Thursday after a suspect was taken into custody
and charged. Scioto County
Sheriff John Knauff then revealed that all 3,400 fish in the
lake had been killed, that steps
were being taken to prevent
human contact with the lake
towns.
The poisoning of the three- and that state and federal au-

PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (UPI )A gallon of a seif-ma,de compound o( deadly poisons, dumped Into the lake of a state for.
est near here nine days ago,
has destroyed all its aquatic
life and is threatening the
water supplies of Ohio River

argare Sa uer
Dies O :U-!J_

M,

t

R

VANDALISM REPORTED
An act of auto vandalism Is
being Investigated by the
Meigs County Sheriff's Dept.
A 1945 Ford pickup truck
belonging to Anthony Little,
parked near the Wyatt &amp; !hie
Grocery near the Hi 7 Club on
SR 7, was stolen, wrecked and
returned to its original
parking space, It was
reported. The incident oc·
curred Thursday about
midnight.

.L' nuay

Miss Margaret Elizabeth
Sauer, 82, Rutland St., Mid·
dleport, died Friday morning at
tlie Angel of Mercy Nursing
Horne In Albany.
Miss Sauer was born May 8,
1889in Middleport, the daughter
of the late George and Kathryn
Dornick Sauer. Besides ~er
parents, she was preceded 'in
death by three sisters and two
brothers.
She .was a member of the
Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church and for
many years had been a leader
of the Women's Christian
Temperance Union at the
community and county level.
Surviving are several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Sunday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
with the Rev. Russell Lester
officiating. Burial will be in
Beech Grove Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home anytime after 2:30 p.m.
Saturday.

'

MEIGS THEATRE

ary plates, which are already in
·use. He was unable to say how
many officers had been penal·
ized for using the plates in violation of the Jaw.
"I can't answer that/' he responded to Rep. James J. Flannery, D.Cleveland. "The Bureau
of Motor Vehicles wants t.ljis bill
and I told them I'd help them
out."
The House also passed, 85-5,
legislation permitting the county
proSecutor to institute bastardy

SUIT FILED
A suit for money has been
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court asklni $1025.26 and
Interest by USS AgrlChemicals, Inc., Cincinnati,
against James R. Goodrich, dba
Eagle Feed and Supply Co.,
Chester, and John H. Brewer,
Chester, for
fertilizer,
agricultural chemicals,
materials and supplies.

thorities had joined in the ex·
amination of the situation.
The poisonous compound. was
identified as a half gallon of
Endrin, a powerful pesticide,
and a half gallon of strychnine.
Knauff said the dumping ap·
parently occured June· 2.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Mrs. Orville
Clonch, Henderson; Debra
Dunn, Robertsburg; Myrtle
Bonecutter, Robert Holley, both
point Pleasant; Hiram S. Moler,
Ripley.
' DISCHARGES - Mrs. Mary
Ury, Mrs. Dennis Deal, Mrs.
Larry Rainey, Mrs. Charles
Frazier, Mrs. Danny Stanley,
Mrs. Robert Lutton, MrS!Jarnes
Edward Johnson.
·

G'll'la
Jean l l n
Died Thursday.
T.

CALL ANSWERED
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
E-R unit was called Thursday
night at 11:15 to the John
Koehler residence. Mrs.
Koehler, who had sustained a
severe laceration to her right
hand when she ran It through a
glaas in her bathroom door, was
taken to Veterans ·Memorial
Hospital where she was treated
and released.

TAGDAYSET
Tag Day for the Meigs County
Chapter of the American
Cancer Society will he Saturday
in Pomeroy and Middleport.
Conducting the sale in Pomeroy
will be Job's Daughters and in
Middleport the newly organized
Youth Against Cancer group.

parts of Endrin to one million
parts water is fatal to fish In
contrast to .01 parts per million that is harmful to humans.
The federal Environmental
Protection Agency said it was
hoped the volume of rushing
water in the Ohio River ·would
render the poison harmless.
The suspect in the poisoning
was identified as Garry Hiles,
24, Portsmouth. He was held in
the county jail on $3,300 bond
on . charges of destruction of
property, administering poison
and three counts of killing fish .
The sheriff's office would not
conunent on a motive for the
incident, or what led to Hiles'
arrest.
Hiles is to be arraigned next
Thursday nn the charges in
Portsmouth Municipal Court.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy Are Open

:=:=:~:; :::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::;:;~:::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:; :;:;::

Mrs. Jean E. Gillilan, 59,
Racine Route 2, died Thursday
at Veterans Memorial Hospital..
Mrs. Gillilan is survived by her
husband, Wesley; a daughter,
Mrs.
Carolyn
Fouty,
Charleston, W.Va .; two sisters,
Mrs. Ruby Alfred, South
Charleston, and Mrs. Madolyn
Fernett, New Hampshire, and
three brothers, Edward Kirk
and Carl Kirk, both of
Charleston, and Curtis, of
Staunton, Va. .
Funeral services will be at 1
P· m. Saturday at the Ewing
Funeral home with the Rev.
James Satterfield officiating.
Burial will be ~n the Letart Falls
Cemetary. Frtends may call at
the ~era! horn~ from 5 to 9 p.
m. Frtday.

The continuing danger of the
poison was that some of the
lake water is making its way
through a stream into the Ohio
River, endangering those who
swim in or drink river water.
"There is no known method
of diluting the compound and
there is no way to isolate it,"
said Dale ROach, enforcement
supervisor of the Wildlife Divi·
sion in the state Department of
Natural Resources.
Endrin was described as the
most toxic compound known
for aquatic life. In addition to
the fish killed in the lake, some
were found dead half a mile
below the darn. Despite efforts
to keep the lake's water level
low, officials said winds had
sprayed small amounts over.
Tests have shown that .003
•

Both Friday and Saturday Nights
(See the many new arrivals all over the store)
Jrd Floor- Furniture and Carpets
2nd Floor- Womens and girls and infants Ready To Wear .
Draperies · Curtains ~ Window Shades . Luggage ~ Dress
Material · Upholstery · Patterns . Sewing Notions . Art
Needlework· Bed Spreads· Pillows . Cushions. Small Rugs .
Porch and Lawn Furniture · Replacement Cushions. Radios .
Stereos · TV Sets · Records· Tapes· Musical Supplies.
Ist Floor- HousewarPs. Mens and Bovs Wear. Stationery.
Greeting Cards · Cosmetics · Hosiery · Harid.bags . Jewelry .
Scarves • Gloves · House Slippers . Foundation l:iarments .
Lingerie · Sheets : Pillow Cases · Towels . Table Covers .

Make Elberfelds In Pomeroy Your
Shopping Center
.

l8-FOOT BUILT -I-N KITCHEN
AND FORMICA® COUNTERTOP

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Middleport E·R unit went
to Rutland for Lawton Tern·pleton at 6:ii6 a. m. Friady.
Suffering chest pains, Templeton was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was treated and released.
SPEAKER NOTED
Denver Hill of Foster, W.Va.,

will be speaker at services to be
held over the weekend at the
Redbruah Church of Christ. The
hours are 7:30 p. m. Saturday
and 10 a. m. Sunday.

POMEROY
NATIONAL BANK.
'

POMEROY

RUliAND

Serving Meigs County

Since 1872
.

'

Member Federal Reserve Sysfem
/Mmbor Federal Depos!tlnsurance Corporation
All ACCOunts. Insured
Up To $20,000.00
.
.

The Pomeroy E-R squad went
at 5: Ii a. m. tod!IY to the home
of Mrs. Alva F~:..er in Kerr's
Run from where Mrs. Faber,
who was lU, was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
· where she YiB!' admitted.

•'
MARRIAGij: LICENSE
Eucene Spencer, 24,
Columbus, llld ·Pbyllls ~ean
~

Qark, •• Poineroy.

.

"We're here to make money, of
course, but we woulp also like the
residents of Gallipolis to become more
aware of what's happening around them,"
Horton said.
·
Hippies may come here because they
love scented candles and incense. For
housewives who like to be different, they.
should try using incense instead of air
freshener. Incense is, according to Horton,
cheaper and more exotic than air
· fresheners and is available in many dif·
ferenl fragrances .
Horton says his best customers thus
far have been women between the ages of
35 and SO. Said Horton , "Once they have
visited the store, some have ventured back
to buy a handmade candle, or if they're
bold, some have tried our clothing which is

DANNY HORTON, OWNER OF START, displays items
available in his store. These dangle earrings come in many
colors and many styles. START, holding open house this
weekend, will be open from 1-9p. m. For further details, see
page 3.

+

WEATHER REPORT

Warm -and humid through
Sunday night with chance of
showers and thundershowers.
High Sunday In 80s. Low Sunday
night from upper 50s to middle
60s. Monday partly cloudy with
chance of thundershowers,
mainly in southern sections.
High Monday from upper 70s to
mid 80s.

tmts

•

Devoted To. The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

SUNDAY, JUNE 13, 1971

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Featured events will. be the selection
of the "Miss Regatta Majorette Queen"
and her Princesses, and at the end of the
day the "Regatta Grand Champion" will
be selected on the basis of total point accumulations throughout the day. A Travel
Trophy-will.also be awarded to the twirler
travelling the farthest.
'I'he three-day Regatta Weekend will
feature a Flea Market on all three days,
. starting at . 9 a.m. in the old Pomeroy
Junior High School. Exhibit space for the
Flea Market Is open to everyone in·
terested. Reservations may he made by
contacting the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce at Box 526, Pomeroy, or Mrs.

Head Start Doing
Job with Child-ren
CHESHIRE - Head Start has resulted
in children's medical deficiencies being
detected much earlier than ever before,
Health Commissioner Francis Shane told
the Gallia-Meigs Community Action
agency Friday at the Cheshire-Kyger
· Elementary School.
Forty persons attended the aD-day
training session. They included 25 Head
Start instructors, three nurses, three
social workers, three Head Start directors
and six' consultants.
Dr. Francis W. Shane, Gallia County
~ealth Commissioner, described the
medic~! portion o~ the Head Start
program, noting that great improvements
have been made in it since the beginning of
Head Start in 1963.
In many cases, medical 'deficiencies

have been detected two to three years
sooner, Dr. Shane said. The commissioner
also gave a detaiied outline of the medical
examination of a Head Start child.
Mrs. Jean Clark, Gallipolis City School
nurse, spoke on "Medical Services from
the Nurse's Viewpoint." She explained in
detail methods and procedures she has
used as a Head Start nurse.
Richard Sayre, Gallia-Meigs CAP
executive director, described funding
procedures for the Head Start program.
Sayre also analyzed the three delegate
agency· budgets to explain the parental
aspect of the program.
Other consultants and subjects were:
"Social Worker's Role," by' Mrs.
Martha Vennari, Meigs Local School
District.

Your Invited Guest
Reaching More
Than 17,000
Families
NE~~T~ 0

15 CENTS

J·o ining o.f

Twir ers
POMEROY - Approximately 400
trophi~ will be awarded to winners In the
second annual Big Bend Regatta Baton
Twirling Championships Saturday, June
19, at·the Junior High G}m in Middleport.
This Is one of the featured events on
the $!Cond day of the Big Bend ~alta
which will be held at Pomeroy-Middleport,
tl'riday, Saturday, and Sunday, June 18, 19
and 20.
The Regatta Balon TwirUng Contest is
being directed by Mrs .. Judy Riggs for the
Chamber of Commerce. This National
Open Class "A" Contest is sanctioned by
the NatiolU!l Baton Twirling Association,
and Registered Licensed Judges with
N.B.T.A. will be emoloyed.

shipped in from Pakistan, India, Greece,
Mexico and other .foreign countries." ·
candles, incese and clplhing aren't all
il:oe store offers the bold shopper, for the
store also sells hats, purses, posters,
tapestries, earrings, necklaces, candle
holders, incense liolders, leather goods, ·
bath oil, black lights and soon, a greater ·
variety of clothing.
Potential customers should find the
owner an interesting person to· converse . ·
with. He has said that he doesn:t reaDy :
believe there Is a generation gap; there
are older folks, he believes, who are more ·
willing to chance new ideas than some
young people.
For those who are worried about
hippies and drugs, Horton said, "We don't
use drugs. We don't condone those who do.
I suppose tranquilizers and diet pills are
about the extent of drugs in Gallipolls used mostly by older people."
As of Friday, Michelle Price, daughter ·
of Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Price, joined the .
sales staff. Store hours are Sunday J-9 p.m . .
(Continued on Page 3)

THREE SECTIONS

36 PAGES
Pomeroy-Middleport

VOL VI · NO. 20

. BY DALE ROTHGEB JR.
GALUPOI.JS - Law enforcement
agencies here have received frequent
\'

3}J&amp;Es Engage
'

ADMIIIEDTO~PITAL .

commune.

Towns
Unlikely

Rita Lewis.
Other features Of the three days will'be
the parade, moving through MiddleportPomeroy at 6 p.ni. Friday evening. The
National Frog Jumping Contest will begin
at 5 p.m. Saturday with the finals being
~ld at 8 p.m.•.
Local' cQ.nteslants are
participate in the pleasure boa't .raores
under the auspicies of the American
Power Boat Assn. Boat lengths range from
13 to 16 feel with motors of 60 to 180 horsepower. There will be eight races with
two heats each. The boat races will start ot
I p.m. Sunday afternoon with the finals at
3:30p.m.

MIDDLEPORT - Virtually an
overpowering reason would have to be
1pparenl before Pomeroy and Middleport
peGille would agree to consolidate Into a
city,
This con&lt;:_lusloll was teacliell ~,
'Frld8y·evenli\a U..e ~'vJ•ri· ~ IIJ !Ill
• Ba~er following dinner IDiontl m'!ll•
•of
the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
I
Heal!l Church; Baker, fUrniture ~ apo
pllance merchant of MiddJeWr~, and ' a
member of the Mld&lt;!liport lanrling
COil!IIlission, directed his remar to the
topic, Community Unity.
•
Paul Smart, banker, predicted !hat
any move toward consoUdalio~ of the
adjacent towns should be prece ed by a
study conducted by an impartla agenoy
(Continued on Page 3)

;:;;::::::::;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:::;:;:;:::::;:;~;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:

f Bloodmobile Date
i!!
lill

..

t

~:~:

:::

POMEROY- The next visit of !j!:

~:.~~=~~~:~~06~~~~y::~~:

Pomeroy Elementary School.
Everyone expecting to use
blood within the next two months
should have donors report to the
unit or there may not be any
blood available except for
emergency purposes.

!lli

.

e~:n"ta~la~eh:00 to~:r~~e:EI; ~~~l

~l.: : : : : : : ~ :,:;,, ,: :, , : ,:~·: : : : :,: :, , J!
"Head Start from the Teacher's
Viewpoint," by Mrs. Ruby Shockley,
Hannan Trace School District.
"Head Start from the Director's
Position," by Walter W. Rife, Principal of
Cheshire-Kyger.
Two Head Start films were shown
during the day at intervals.

MEMBERS OF JOB'S DAUGHTERS collected contributions for the Meigs
County &lt;llapter of the American cancer Society in Pomeroy Saturday in a Tag
Day. Here, Mrs. Hazel Smith of Pomeroy, Route 4, contributes to Millsa Rizer,
Pomeroy, holding the cannister, and Beverly Ann WUcox, Rutland Road. In
Middleport, Tag Day wliS conducted by the newly organized Yo ugh Against cancer
group.

Accident is Fatal
GALLIPOLIS - An elderly woman of
754 Fourth Ave. died of asphyxiation about
noon Friday when a fire spread through
her singl~H~tory frame home.
According to Fire Chief James A.
Northup, Mrs. Elva Stewart, 71, was in the
kitchen fryiug bacon when apparently her
clothing caught fire from a gas burner,
A neighbor, Mrs. Anita Javins, ob·
serving smoke coming from the house,
called firemen. Mrs. Stewart's body was
found inside the door by Ptl. Gary Wallace.
There was minor fire and smoke damage

to the house.
Dr. Donald R. Warehome, Gallia
County Coroner, ruled death was caused
by asphyxiation.
Mrs. Stewart was born Feb. 10, 1900, in
Springfield Twp., Gallia County, daughter
of the late John Garnes and Hattie Smith
Garnes. She married Cecil Stewart on Feb.
14, 1922, in Gallipolis. He preceded her in
death In 1965.
Su.t;vivlng are two brothers, Ernest, of
Columbus, and Reed, of Bidwell; four
tConUnued on Page 3)

Mini-Bike Riders: Get With It

STAFF TO MEET
Teachers and helpers for titjl
Daily Vacalion Bible School of
tile Pomeroy Church of Christ
will nleet for a planning seBS!on
at 8 this evening at the church. ·

The Eastern Local School
Veterans Memorial Hospital Dlatrlct Athletic Boosters will ·
ADMITTED _ Leonard meetatS:30p.m. WedneSday at
Lunsford, Pomertn Freda ·llle high school.
Henderson, Pomeroy; Thomas
PROGRAM ON SUNDAY
Fitch, Portland; Howard
Nutter, ReedsvUie.
The . Syracuse · Nazarene
DiSCHARGED _ Randy Church Vacation Bible School
Jordan, . Bernard Raltden, prOifllll will be held at 7,p.m.
Phyllis Stone.
&amp;mday at llle church.

Children ask: 'Wul they Hurl Us?'
~ But Usually Return with · Friends! :

Until 9

Oty's Police

BOOSTERS TO MEET

Continuous Service On
Fridays 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.

BY DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
aod DIANA BROWN '
GAWPOUS .,.. An. open house is
scheduled from I to 9 p.m. t&lt;$y at
START, the old French Cit)o'~ newest and
certainly most unusual retail store.
START - announced as the start of
something "new and better" for this area
- become a reality only recently.
This store offers unique gift iterns of
all varieties to individuals in all age
groups.
Located at 84 Vine St., it has
psychedelic paintings and bright and
beautifully colored tapestry. 'Smile on
Your 'Brother", a wonden plaque, hangs
high over one of the rooms.
. Danny Horton, ~ graduate of Gallia
Academy High School, and Tom Passero,
Columbus, own the store. Horton, a
member of the "long hair" society of
today, said, "Some are calling this a hippie
store and refuse to- venture within."
It may be frequented by hippies, but it
Is a retail store, not a hippie house, or

.

.

MATCHING

R.OPIEh.

APPLIANCES AVAILABlE

$

Organized "~'' shaped cabinets arranged to meet your demands
as a busy housewife. Modern styling, plus the beauty of walnut
tone cabinets combined with easy-to-clean Formica@countertop'. Spec ja l features include nylon glides on drawe.s for smoother opening and combination hinge-catch on all base and wall
cabinet_s. Unit ln&lt;:ludes: roomy cabinets, countertop, colored
steel sonk to match appliances, faucet with spray and basket
strainer.

APPLIANCES, RANGE HOOD, AND
INSTALLATION EXTRA

•

'

f!OMEROY
.

CEM~NT
'

BLOCK CO•.

The Department Store of Buildinl Since 1915

GALLIPOLIS - Gallla County
sheriff's deputies Saturday investigated
two breaking and enterings and continued
their probe into a third which occurred late
last week.
An undetermined swn of money -was
taken from four vending machines in a
burglary of the Robbins and Myers Plant
on Bob McCormick Rd. ·
According to the report, someone
entered the building by breaking a window
•Oil the south side of the building. The
vending machines were owned by Harold
Laughlin of Athens.
Six cartons of pop and a typeWriter
were taken in a break-in -at Clark Chapel
Acres on Clark-Cit!lpel Rd. Entry was
madeby picking the lock.
Investigation continues in a burglary
at Watts Grocery at Kanauga. Peputies
said someqne entered by breal!lng through
the prage door. ~ were ael'fral
packages of cigan:tll!s and f2 in change.
I

complaints of mini-bikes and motorcycles Complaints have concerned children
being driven QY unlicensed and riding bikes piggy back, bareheaded, and
without safety equipment such as helmets,
unauthorized persons at illegal places.
Lt. E. N. Wigglesworth, commander of goggles or windshields.
Children riding mini-bikes in
the Gallia·Meigs Post State Highway
·Patrol, said paren!s apparently do pot traffic, especially heavy truck traffic,
realize what they are getting into when plainly are in great danger.
Lt. Wigglesworth and John . Taylor,
they purchase mini·bij(es for their
Gallipolis
Police Chief, have agreed that
children.
Amini-bike is not classified as a motor children apprehended riding their bikes
vehicle, since it does not meet safety illegally upon public roadways and streets
standards of horsepower, gear ratio and will be cited and their parents charged
size. Thus, it cannot be registered; and with permitting an unlicensed minor to
operate a motor vehicle.
ihus Is illegal without registration.
Lt. Wigglesworth noted that this will
Young riders are illegally operating
mini-bikes since they are not 16 years of give a child a police record atan early age.
"The blame should be put where It
age, have no motorcycle endorsement,
belongs,
on the parents, not the child," he
driver's education, or proper safety gear.
· Reports have been numerous con· said.
Several safety measw·es should be
cerning the use of mini-bikes on public
observed
while operating any two wheel
highways, county roads, streets and in
vehicles; first, drive defensively, the most
subdivisions.
Mini-bikes are designed for use on important key tO safe driving; secon~ ,
private land or areas such as strip mines .. stay back, (hal is, do not tailgate or follow
too closely; and finally, think safe, and be
alert.
TAX SUIT FILED
The rider himself - or herself GALLIPOLIS - Oty M. Stewart,
County Treasurer, Friday •filed a makes bike riding a completely 3afe form
delinquent land tax foreclosure suit of transportation by obeying the rules of
against Samuel Glover, Eureka Star Rt. safety which apply to all who use the roads
and most of aU remember, mipl.t!kes are
and Nora Glover, 35 Madison Ave.
Stewart seeks $242.99 on lot S In the not deSigned for road I travel, only for
priyate property.
Village Of Chambersbl!l'g in Clay Twp.

!HE GRAND SQ!JARES of GalllpoUs wUl pre8ellt an

exhlbllion of Western and Folk dancing a\8:30 p. Iii. Friday
at the ftrmer Pcxneroy Junior High School in' conju.nctlon
with the Pomeroy· Chamber of Commerpe's .Big Bend
Regatta Weekend. To become club members, couples must
COiilplete 2Q or more square dance lessons. State and national
convenli0111 for square dancers are held aimually and
several members of the Gallipolis group will be attending th.e

national conventioo this year at ~.... Orleans.
Front, left to rtgn• - l.)ee Ellis, Allee stover, Mary
Baldwin, Midge Ev~. Ethel Banks, Bonnie Tabor, Jeap
Runyon, Zoie Kiskls, GladYs Sheets, Mary Snowden and
Laweena Grimes, Second .row:.ctJarles Ellis, Gbarlll
Stover, Urban Baldwin, Blll G. Evans, J. B. ~. Mel
Tabor, Doug Runyon, Jim Klskis, Ronnie Sheets and llmJ
Snowden.

�a ·s ort. • •

0 Journal

Trees, Not.Dogs Man's Friend

Tribute to a Warrior,
Chief Crazy Horse, and a
'

Man, Korczak Ziolkowski

BYJ.A.McKEAN
BALLA'D For An AMERTCAN INDIAN
GALIJPOIJS - From news reports
Ibis week, it seems the Indians are
The Dakota landscape has particular gr11ce,
restless again. In South Dakota,.that is.
its beauty comes clear to the eye;
Well; it's vacation time and despite
Dark peaks and broad plains, a quiet that pains,
this, I expect a horde of folks will be
liluring the West anyway; getting
call for peace 'neat h a flawless sky.
sunburned, rained on, bee stung, and
fna bedroll drawn tight one can la y up a night
leaving pets, younguns, and gear all
and .llare at the heavenly hosts;
over the map. Have courage: it's worth
it. .
While the mind grows dim, it may fill to the brim
with tales that rise as the ghosts.
Two,Years ago it was my good fortune
w journey extensively through New
Mexico, Utah, Wyoming, and South
What of Deadwood's gold and the miners of old,.
Dakota - and other salient points Preacher Smith i:vith Bible in hand ?.
alta' a regretable absence of 1$-25
Wild Bill chaired with an ace and eight paired,
years, depending on the locale and the
incumbent sheriffs. AB always, it was a
George Cu~ter before his last stand?
refreshing experience - a delightful
Interlude - a leisurely camping,
Yes. the Indians too, fiery Cheyenne and Sioux,
lis6ing, visiting with my eldest son and
with their lands and culture in ravage;
family. Everyone east of the
Mississippi should have the opportunity
And a treaty broken- the invader's mere tokento see the West at least once.
why wonder their warfare so savage?
Magnificent country, true, but it's a
singUlar revelation how the WesterRed Cloud and Two Moon, Big Road and Bad Wound,
ners, of so varied cultural bl!ckgroullds,
'and famed Sitting Bull there, of course;
religious persuasions, economic interests, and such, have maintained
But one man stood proud, riding over the crowd,
their heritage, pride, engagingriendand his name was Chief Crazy Horse.
liness, and general level-headed
perspective to so high a degree.
A cava lry wonder who struck like the thunder,
Those who bisit South Dakota surely
will see Mt. Rushmore. But I hope those
his star gleams down through the year.1.
who do will drive the very few miles
With resolute bravery, he'd not accept sla very,
(rom Rushmore to the stupendoQ!j
but fought on and confounded his peers.
mtm~~t~ent being carved FROM ,lli
ENTIRE MOUNTAIN as a tribute to a
great warrior. Equally, it is a tribute to
Unbeaten, undaunted-though terribly haunted a fabulous man: the sculpwr, Korczak
lze countered all foes' abuse.
Ziolkowski.
.
Then a villanious thrust reduced him to dust;
His fantastic project isn't finished
entrapped by a base flag of truce.
yet, after 30 years toll. The gigantic
sculpture Is some len years from
· completion. But finished it wiU be,
Now, honor is served on a Black Hills reserve,
Including a university for American
his own marble colossus you 'II see.
Indian youths to be constructed and
Still. he gestures Attack! to his spectral pack,
supported from the state's revenues.
The monument's dimensions defy
till the dawn when his people are free.
mortal imagination: a 56().by-640 foot
stab.Je of Otief Crazy Horse, the Oglala
My!, the Dakota lands pace has particular grace,
Sioux who defeated Gen. CuSter and
its beauty com es clear to the eye;
Gen. Crook, among others, and never
Wlljl beaten I'! battle. Here, he slta
Dark peaks and broad plains, a quiet that pains,
\~Stride a wildly spirited, galloping pony
call fur peace 'neath 11 flawless sky.
with his left arm out..tret.ched on which,
Ina bedroll drawn tight one can lay up a night
the ~rm alone, 4,000 men could stand. It
and sture at the heavenly hosts;
is being carved In the round, and will be
visible from 50 miles.
While the mind grows dim, it may fill to the brim
Ziolkowski was asked In pre-World
with tales that rise as the ghosts.
War II days by a._~QAA~\t 1o(j jildi'Y\.1;, ' • N9rrJir ' · "; • "'
~..
...,
W• -~ ~~~~ ~
chiefs to accept this challenge: "Carve
-JohnAnderson·MOKean ·
· us a mountain. We wruld like ihe .
A!l!erican people wknow we, too, 1vwe,.
' .
our heroes." And in this time of
frequently voiced, pained expressions
about mis-use of Uncle Sugar's dough, approached by Governmental agencies fame, a self-taught genius is making hls
II must be emphasized that not one who would get in on the act, but he has dream a reality.
This poem most humbly expresses
dime of tax money of any sort has been firmly refused all overtures. It is his
land.
His
moQ,tatn.
And
starting
with
my feeling in night camp after having
expended on .', this work, which will
less
than
ZOO
bucks,
a
bear's
physique,
a
pondered Mr. Ziolkowski's labor and
dwarf all his~ry 's like end~avors.
vision, and some experience under dwelt on an evening by a .glowing
Gutzon
Borglum of Mt. Rushmore campfire, on Black Hills history :
To be sure Mr. Ziolkowski has been

: :· :.

IIY cliAij.LENE HOEFIJCH
POMEROY - The lree may
replace dog as man's beat
friend.
So says the A111erican
Association of Nurserymen
which urges homeowners to
create an "oxygen producing
factory" in their own backyard
by planting a tree.
Trees and other plant
materlals have pollution
lighting chara~terlstics . . They
absorb harmful carbon
monoxide from the air and
release fresh oxygen into the
abnosphere.
Everyone living in an urban
area is fully aware of the crisla
of air pollution - the tears in
their eyes, the film of chemicals
and dirt on their cars, their
homes and their clothing are
evidence enough.
·
And an increasing number of
residents of smaller com.
munities are now learnmg the
menace of air pollution on their
own doorsteps.
Man can live only a few
minutes without the oxygen that
comprises 20 percent of the air
we' breathe. An individual
inhales and exhales an average
of 23,000 times a day, taking in a
daily total of 35 pounds of
oxygen.
Man's sole source of this vital
element is plant life.
Not only do trees, plants and
shrubs give oil oxygen, but they
trap polluted particles in the air
and hold them until they are
washed into the ground.
"Green Survival" is the name
the American AP.sociation of
Nurserymen has given their
campaign to improve the environment. Even the words
convey a sense of hope, but the
hope has to be translated into
action.
And it has to begin with you.
Life a decade from now
without significant cleaning up .
of the air is depicted here in
cartoons by Shannon White and
Michael Custer, Meigs High
School art students of Mrs.
Margaret Ella Lewis.

Monday Time for Story :flours
-· .

· GALIJPOIJS - SWnnier is
almost here, the .lime once
again·for "the story h!UI',"
Th~t events-filled weekly
sessions for children of the area
begins June 15 at 3:30p.m. for
. the pre-school set. Older

CANDLES OF variot11 fOI'IIII

t.Dof Y!
I'!AV 1,

rm

•

ALSO

"loving'' ,(R)

Tender Loving Care for Your Car ~=R=ated=R::::::::
,• .

I .

Tonight thru Tuesday
June 13·15
·Walt Disney's
BAREFOOT 'EXECUTIVE
(Technicotor)
Kurt Russell
Heather North

"G"

Abominable Mountaineer
Rock Hound
Sheep Dog
Great Day
SHOW STARTS I P.M.

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

''" "''

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

car. \

Check tire pressure but do
so when the tires are cool.
Let the car stand a few hours
if you have b e e n driving
since heat builds up pressure
inside the tires.
Don't bleed air from tires
when they are hot. L~t them
cool, then check the pressure. Bleed them when they
are hot and you will find
them underinflated w h e n
they cool d0'\'.11.

Getting Straight
lays it on
the line.

-

COl.-• PoC ruttU

Elliott Gould
Plus

SUNDAY ~
TUESDAY &amp;·WEDNESDAY
Joson
Robards
Katharine
Ross

l.,.,

r~-------~-------..,..___,

CARTOON
.'

SCIENCE LADEN
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Some
600 scientists from the United
States and eight other countries
are expected to attend Ohio
State University's 26th international Symposium on
Molecular Structure and
Specl•oscopy which starts
Monday.

sisters, Mrs. Monettie Flowers, Mrs.
Dorothy Willlams and Mrs. Helen Jenkins,
all of Columbus, and Miss l&lt;Jrete Garnes
of' Bidwell. She was a member of tha
Providence Baptist Church on Buck Ridge.
Funeral services will be held at I p.m.
Monday at the Waugh-Halley~Wood
Funeral Home with Rev. Vance Watson
officiating. Burial will be in Pine Street
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home
from 7-9 today.

TURNS SELF IN
COLUMBUS
(UP!)
Thomas Philip Dee, 28,
Columbus, indicted for the theft
of more !hap $1 million in induslrial diamonds, surrendered
to police late ·Friday. Dee, a

(Continued from page 1)
which would have wproduce "some pretty
good reasons," why joining would be of
advantage. He observed:
"The people in Pomeroy aren't
exactly busting out aU over to help people
in Middleport and the people in Middleport
behave about the same way toward their
neighbors in Pomeroy." The conclusion
f,as ombthed Middletorl and Pomeroy
IS unlikely.
.
' Baker observed, In connection with his
a..tc, that it 'appears that Meigs County
people get together when there is a reason.
He cited consolidation of the Meigs School
district, and cooperation in the Big Bend
Regatta. He noted that Rotarians are
found usually in community activities that
lead to progress.
It was predicted that whereas Meigs
County's population has been declining at
the l().year censuses since 1880, that trend
apparently is certain to stop with the 1970
census.
It also was predicted that eventually
the area around Five Points, three miles
northeast of Pomeroy on Rt. 7, probably
will house more population than Pomeroy
and Middleport combined.
Ladies of the church served a steak
. dinner. President Charles Simons
presided.

Special Shows Set
POMEROY - Special art, flower and
ceramic shows are scheduled for the Big
Bend Regatta this year for the first time.
The Art Show w!U be in both Pomeroy and
Middleport with Mrs. Ruth Gosney
working on displays. The Flower Show and
Ceramics Display on Saturday and Sunday
will be in the old Senior High Building in
Pomeroy under the sponsorship of the
MeigS..Sounty Jaycees.
These shows offer everyone an outstanding opportunity to see the handiwork
of Meigs County residents.
UP TO PRESIDENT
POMEROY - Health, Education and
Welfare (HEW) bills have passe~ both
houses of congre,., thereby insuring

services to Oral Robert..
University which were really
above and beyond the call of
duty.
.
"Had it not been for your
promptacU9n in assisting in the
library during the recent severe
windstorm, much more
property might have been
destroyed. The exemplary
spirit which you demonstrated
in assisting others in a time of

FREEZER
REG.

87c EA.

Robert Hartenbach.
At 12:15 p.m. Saturday cars
driven by Joy C. Mitchell, 24,
aiut Richard A. Hysell, 17, both
of Middleport Route I, collided
on Rutland Township Road 174
J~
near Rutland. The sheriff's
ol Dept. said Hysell's vehicle,
'J
owned by the Blaettnar Auto Co.
headed north and the Mitchell
station wagon was headed
POMEROY - Robert Car- south, mel in a curve.
sey, direcwr for employment of Hysell arid a passenger in the
the Ohio Department of the Mitchell car, Elizabeth MitDisabled American Veterans, chell, 5, were taken to Veterans
installed ·new offjcers Thursday Memorial HospitaL Hysell was
night wben Meigs Chapter 53, treated for a head· injury. and
DAV, met at the DAV home on Elizabeth Mitchell for a leg
. Butternut Ave.
injury. They were released
Assisting was Eighth District following treatment. An am·
Commander James Darnell . . bulance transported them.
InstaUed ior 1971·72 were Jacob Both
vehicles
were
Turner, commander; Dale
Sisson, senior vice commander;
JACKSON AT LUKE
Earl E. ··Frecker, junior vice GALIJPOLIS - U. S. Air
cotbmander; John Bacon, judge Force T-Sgt. Clarence E.
advocate; Dale · Kennedy, Jackson of 748 Third Ave., has
chaplain; Stanley Searls, arrived for duty at Luke AFQ,
sergeant-at;~rms, arid Marvin Ariz. A weapons maintenance
L. Kelly, adjutant. The lechnicisn, He is a 1952 graduate
auxiliary served a luncheon of Galiia Academy. His wife is
following the meeting.
the former Lelia S. Grant.
·,
I

'a(X)b Turner
Com1118nder
Veterans' Unit

'

Set by Band Unit
. POMEROY -A rehearsal
lor the Big Bend Regatta
Patade will be held by the
Meigs High School band from
7 to 9 p.m. Thursday at tbe
higb school.
.
Band members will be
required to provide their own ·
transportation to the
· rehearsal but transportation
will be provided lor the
parade Friday evening,
David Bowen, diredor, said.
Buses will leave Middleport,
Pomeroy and Rutland at4:45
p:m. Band me"mbers not
catching buses should he at
the high school by 5 p.m. All
band members are urged to
attend hoth the rehearsal and
the parade.

ICED TEA SET
lARGE JUG AND
6 GLASSES $192

'
demolished.
Hysell has been
cited to juvenile court for speed
excessive for road conditions.
At 3 a.m. Saturday a car
driven by James ·H. Walker,
Portland Route 1, on county
road 32 near Racine, went out of
control and struck a hridge ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
railing. The vehicle was a total
'
loss. Walker, who was not in·
jured, was cited to county court POMEROY _ Two vehicles
on a charge of failing to driv~ on were damaged and a driver was
the nght s1de of the road.
· cited to county court after an
MILK MANAGER
accident at 4:45p.m. Friday at
A. P. Langmyer, Elm Grove, the junction of Routes 7 and 124.
W. Va ., has been appointed The department of Sheriff.
Milk, Inc. market manager for Robert Hartenbach said a
southern West Virginia. He is vehicle driven by Franklin
assuming the work conducted in Babcock, 28, AIt ms, struck the
southern West Virginia area for · rear of a car driven by Don Van
some 39 years by owen M. Coone~, 21, Pomeroy, Route 4,
Williams, who Is retiring w wh1ch was turning West onto
spend full time on his farm td Route 124. Damages w the
Greenbrier County.
VanCooney vehicle we~e minor
and moderate to Babcock's.
Made Many, Sold One
Babcock was cited to court on
. Vincent. V~n qogh in six assured clear distance charges.
years begmmng m 1884 produced ~bout 700 drawings
and ,800 oils, only one of Giant dragon lizards of
which was sold in his life· Komodo Island, h •.lr1.1esia,
time, according to Encyclo- grow 10 feet long and weigh '
up to a60 pounds.
paedia -Britannica .

Autos Damaged

WEAVE TEX

ALL PLASTIC

WINDOW SHADES

ABOVE ITEMS BOTH STORES

SALE

300 Artificial Flowers

19'

48

59'

Upper Store
ftems

TO
SELL

REG.

Stainless Steel

37

BUTTER DISHES
Girls'

LEATHER SLIPPERS

700

6

Boudoir

LAMP SHADES
Portable

6

RECORD PLAYER

Ladies Purses

24

CAR MATS

La!lies &amp; Children's

Children's • Women's

REDUCED

Pant Suits

READY TO WEAR

'f.JTO%

100 e&amp;W Record Albums

22

NAPKINS

10~

REG. 1.49

SEL

15

TABLE

Cut To Size FREE

TO

Pet

FAMILY PACK

CREME
CARAMEL
ROLLS

2FoR$1

--

· KLEENEX

Special
Ret 47' lb.

CONTAINERS

continued services without any curtailment of the Meigs County Bookmobile,
it was reported Saturday by Mrs. Vilma
Pikkoja, supervisor of the unit which also
serves in Vinton and Jackson counties.

cr1s1s certainly typified the
spirit of Christ, and it is most
reassuring w know that such
qualities exist in our students.
"Again, a special note of
thanks to you and may God's
richest blessings he with you
this summer."
The letter is signed by Robert
R. Eskridge, Vice President of
Business Affairs at the schooL

li.••••••GiiiiiliiiiiiOhiiiiloiiii••IIII,•••

Candy Dept.

GALLIPOLIS- Harold Taylor, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Taylor, Rt. 1, Bidwell,
recently received a $50 check from the
Holzer Medical Center for being named
the 1971 outslanding North Gallia High
School senior in science.
He has been accepted by Berea
College, Berea, Ky. James Oiler, North
Gallia High School science instructor,
made the presentation .

3 Automobiles Demolished
POMEROY - Three cars
were delJ.lolished in two accidenll! reported Saturday night
by the qtparbnent of Sheriff
i

last
the. Franklin
Countyweek
GrandbyJury

"THAT OLD FA5Ht0HID OCIC)DNESI"

HUNDREDS OF SPEOIAhS INSID£.•AND 'OUTSIDE· •.

Taylor is Outstanding
Senior in :;cience

Parade Rehearsal

e SHAKIS e SODAS e MALTS
t~akt t4nppr

quality control technician at the
General Electric plant 'in
suburban Worthington . was
indicted with four others earlier

AVARlETY of types of ert greet the shopper at the START swre in Gallipolis.

Student Highly Commended
SYRACUSE - Irene Cooper 1
daughter' of Mr. and Mrs. Clem
Cooper, Syracuse, has received
a highly complimentary letter
from the Oral Roberts
University where she is a
student:
"Dear Irene :
"On behalf of President
Roberts and the University
community, I want w express
sincere appreciation for your

ations of the Mid . States • - • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Terminals Inc., a grain
elevator, were expec ted to
resume Monday after striking
longshoremen agreed to a new
.,
three-year contract. The 15
members of Local 1955 of ihe
International Longshoremen
agreed w a new three-year
contract.

SIDEWALK SALE

and Tuesday

If you've been driving a
long time on a hot day let
~our engine cool off by idling
1t a few moments before.

I~L%1

'

Joining

"Getting Straighf'

especially if the weather is
hot. You can then lower the
level of the fuel by using it
instead of finding it in a
puddle around your parked

FOUR ~IN DEGREES
POMEROY - Four Meigs
Countians received degrees at
the !34th cotnn:~encement of
Marshall University recently.
They are Gary Owen Stobart,
BBA, Middleport; Don Wayne
Swisher, BBA, and Ida Yeager
'Diehl, AB, both of Pomeroy,
and Lester Paul Manuel, MA,
Racine.

Accidents
(Continued from page 1)

turning it off. This )l'ill drain
off some heat and can prevent damage to engine parts.

Colo rca rtoons: ·
Surprisin' Exercisin'

..

and weekdays 12-10 p.m. except Wednesday when it is closed all day.
Small children wandering into the
srore have asked, "Does it cost to get in?"
and, "Will they hurt us?"
Horwn admitted this is a normal attitude to anything strange . or unknown.
Otildren who have gone there have usually
returned, though, and bronght friends with
them, he said.

Leading Truck Cities
WASl-IINGTON - The
largest city trucking center
in the U.S. is Chicago, which
is home for 118 carriers.
New York ranks a close second wilh 112 carriers, and
Los Angeles is third with 'fl.9.

DO-IT-YOURSELF

POMEROY - Two defendants were bound over to the
grand jury, nine were fined and
five others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court Friday.
Bound over to the grand jury
by Judge Frank W. Porter were
Judy Landers, Pomeroy, under
$15® bond on charges of driving
while intoxicated and hit skip,
and Ronald Lee Swain, Racine,
RD, under $500 bond on charges

are dllpW)'ed 111 table at theSTARTrelailstcnoo VIDeSI.inGallipolll.
T

New
START
rContinued from page 1)

Garment-Go-Round ·
WASHINGTON-Often,
a truckload of fabric is delivered to a garment manufacturer in the morning and
leaves the same evening also by truck - in the form
of finished suits and dresses,
ready for delivery to the
Nation's department ~ tores.

,..rAf'IIFR

Fright on! Horror Films Still .Thrive

•

- Children will be introduced to the dentist", the fireman, , the
influential members of the policeman, and the poetman.
Gallipoljs community. It is . Drawing from , comrounity
hoped that the children may resources, Story Hour wlll
perceive a "trller" picture of enable the children to come into
people in various poeitions in contacl with unusual anlma\B.
their town, such as the doctor, In addition, Story Hour will
feature various · hobbies in
which children may take .in·
lerest and enjoyment. ·
Since the main empl)af~ In
the summer program is . w
create and stimulate a desire to
read within the children, a
of non-support.
cost.., $10 suspended, overload; record of the number of books
Fined were Walter King , Cleo M. Smith, Chester, and read by each child wiU be kepi.
Pomeroy, RD, $10 and costs, William C. Owens. Athens, $15 Every book a child reads will he
intoxication; James F. Kin- and costs each, speeding ; put on a secUon of our giant
nison, Hamden, $25 and costs, Orland
J.
Laudermilt, Story Hour worm. Hopefully, it.
$10 suspended, overload ; Pomeroy, $5 and costs, will grow too large for our
Thomas Huges, Jackson, Rt. 3, defective muffler; Glenver children's room. An effort to
$49 and costs, $19 suspended, Boggess, Racine RD, $10 and bring older children inw our
overload; Carl Vanover , costs, intoxication. Fined cost.. program will be made. To learn
Middleport, $25 and costs, $15 011ly were Clyde Lawrence, tl)e interests of these older
suspended, overload; Thomas Long Bottom, unable to stop children, a Hobby Day will be
L. Vititoe, Jackson, $25 and within assured clear distance, held for the children in grades
and Torrence L. Carson, no four.;;ix .
address recorded, fictitious A dale will be announced in
August.
registration.
DIVORCE GRANTED
Children will bring their
Forfeiting
bonds
were
Harold
POMEROY - Charging gross
neglect of duty , Shantilal Reeves, Albany, and Lawton hobbies to the library to display
Groadia has been granted a Templeton, Pomeroy, RD, $25 and discuss. This age group
divorce from Rupa Groadia iQ eac h posted, intoxicated; may also be of great assistance
the Meigs County Common James Priddy, Rutland, RD, in the hobby section of Story
Pleas Court. Two min or $50, assault and battery; Hour for the younger children.
children make their home with Warren J. Wise, Myerstown, A few surprises will be in store
Pa., $27, stopping on roadway; fm· all the children throughout
the defendant.
Leslie T. Lucas, Chesapeake, the summer.
See you at Story Hour.
$27.50, excessive speed.
IN BUSINESS AGAIN
TOLEDO (UP!) - Oper-

Wonian, Man are Bound Over

By MR. FIX
Ours is a nation on wheels
and the way some of us treat
our automobiles it's a won·
der that it isn't a nation
coming to a halt.
Now, not all of us are mechanics nor need we be. But
like the fellow who forgets
to check to see if an appliance is plugged in before
calling a repairman there
are certain things we forget
to check for ourselves. There
also are certain basic main·
tenance procedures that we
all can do.
'
Remember to check your
car before you travel-be it
a full vacation or just a
weekend trip. If it is time
for a professional going over
(First of two ports.)
-or anywhere near the time
By DICK KLEINER
-get it done. No point in
being stranded in strange
HOLLYWOOD- (NEA)territory later on.
The right to sc1·eam is a
Since modern autos need should be a play of a half.good old American freedom ,
and get less service because inch but no more than that.
and Hollywood k e e p s on
of self-adjusting brakes and Look for si~ns of fraying. A
making horror movies in
fewer
oil changes, there are loose belt Will result in faulty
that glorious tradition.
fewer opportunities for a generator operation and in·
trained mechanic to spot the efficient cooling. If the genBut horror, like everything else, is changing. Vambeginning of trouble.
erator is not working at full
pires have gone the way of
Check the condition of the ' capacity it will run down
all-ugh- Oesh, and today
fan be 1 t yourself There your battery.
we have more psychological
·
Check the radiator. If
h or r or, less old-fashioned
- - - - - - - - - - water is rusty or filled with
blood-drinking. T o d a y we
scum, flush out the radiator
have TV telling mild shock·
·
and replace with fresh
rated X.
ers on the home screen, so
"These are two examples water. Dirt can cause over· . horror moviemakers have to
of cheapies - they probably heating.
invent new adventures into
The air passages in the
cost $10,000 or so to make· the grisly.
which give the whole field a radiator core often fill up
The result is a split in the
bad name. But horror films . with dirt, leaves and dead
horror movie market. Some
from "Frankenstein" and bugs. When you wash your
·· ·' cheapies are being made to
"Dracula" to "Rosemary's car, take the time to direct
appeal to the lowest denom·
Baby" and the "Planet 'Of a stream of water througli
inator of sadistic audience,
the Apes" trilogy, have an the radiator core from the
wbo chortle in the balcony
honorable place in movie inside. That way the·dlrt will
while some creepy monste1.
history.
,
come out and not be sprayed
gradually . dismembers his
Curiously, A r k or" f and all over the engine.
blond victim . On the other
Nicholson say there are re- Don't overfill the radiator,
paw; there are sophisticnted
gional differences in the ac- gas tank or battery in hot
horror films - " Rosemary ·•
ceptance of horror movies. weath~r. Heat expansion will
Baby"-which allow the in·
Th ~y do well Gn both coasts cause overflowing.
-tellectual audience to scream
and . a ·1 0 n g the northern
W a t e r will evaporate
and stlll retain its self-restates,
fair in the middle of faster
a battery in hot
apect.
the country, but only so-so weatherfrom
than
in cold but re·
in the South.
In the 1/ a s t middle, be·
m e m b e r · that overfilling
tween "Rosemary's B•' _..
The market in Europe i1 causes trouble. Spilling over
and the cheapies, Is the prod·
spotty-France is poor, Eng. causes loss of electrolyte and
uct turned out by Ameri·
·
land good, the rest of the corrosion.
~an-International , the G, ..
LOOKS AREN'T EVERYTHING, as Vincent Price has found out in becoming the
continent moderate. Ratings
you fill the tank try
era! Motors of horror movmain monster u1 moderu horror movies. Here he turns a toothsome grin on Virginia
ar.e tougher in Europe, and· to When
do so while you still have
1
ies. This company has mario
North, wbo Is apparently on hls wave length In 'Dr. Phibes.''.
generally horror films are some driving ahead of you,
a very good thing out of Lluo
not allowed to be shown to
gel)re, and continues to do
House ,'. with .Shelley Winters family men, as well as movie children. S i n c e European·
-"Any
horror
picture
with
so. It is ,run by Samuel Z. an R rating suffers." To and Mark Lester, which is men, they are careful to stay horror-film makers therefore
Arkoff and James H. NICIM· come
SUNDAY
in with a GP, and yet basically the old Hansel and within the bounds of reason· do not try for a family· audi· :
&amp;On, two responsible and have enough
moments Gret~l story."
able taste. And they deplore ence, they throw in more sex I TIMESSENTINEL
cleverly commercia: """· to satisfy theshock
I lltollly
I"IIDIIUIM fWtf'\' S\111. . ., "" ,,. 011~
audience,
is
a
l'ubllshllltl C:o
"Horror I i t m s," Arkoff . the current rash of X-rated than do U.S. producers.
ducers.
I
GALLrl"oul o,;tLY TJitiUHI
·
tricky business . Too much says, "!llust be scary and pseudo-horror movies, , de·
IIJ Tl'llrcl Avl , Gllll~ten• , Of! lei, .fUll
Arkoff and Nioholson be· 1I Jlllbllltltf
...... ., Wft-o•,- "'"'"'' ••c•
. Tiley ,say mat i1o1 , .. mov· blood and gore and a GP is suspenseful, and they must signed to appeal to the sick lleve, as did Walt Disney, •1 •Seturoev . ,hc:OIICI
c .. " ,.." 11 ' ,., 111 -'
alllpoi/.!_ Oflil, ·~··
I
T"l
DAILY IINTt"ll.
:lea are a lucrative market, tough to come by; too little move. We try to have a among us.
t h a t children like to be 1 Ill Co~rt St.. ,_..,,,, 0 .. d1..
•.tad yet horror films can be and the folks stay away in shocker twice a reel."
.....,bll'ltlM htry WMkNy '""'' "' "Cf~l I
At one Los Angeles the· .. scared •. and that reasonable !I "''""II.,_.,..,,
III'GIY. Int.rN •• • • • ctdl ftlllitlnt I
Ofllo, "aal Oftlct ,
•
lllllde on a low budget. Ob· droves.
It is such a formula that, ater, a double-bill is current· horror IS healthy .
I
TlltMS Of&lt; 'UISCIUII'TtON
I
I ...!\.""''' .. M, ..,. Sun.... JOt ...... .
vlo111ly, this makes them a
"We've •, b e e n trying to when they were · planning ly being shown. The ads say
Nicholson 'says he's :~hown f MAIL IU.SCIIPTIOf!l JIATII
llood Investment. But the1·e maR our pictures in this "Dr. Phibes,'' they took all
TM Gttll'""ll Trlllun11n Olllt .,., W"t I
the
titles
are
too
horrible
to
·
·
all
his products to his six· 1I lfllrte
\l ltllnol, YHt' IIUi r Ill"'"""" l' r I
ll'a danaers.
tllltnlltl II II; ........,_ ""' ,..,
the
shock
i
terns
and
spaced
milieu a little d.ifferenl ,,
be printed. When ' you call year·old son.
I IIJ ; till "'""t" P ; """ ....:.. .., p ... I
Thl Dtllly _S.IIfttl.-,...,. .....1 ... I.
llorrOr audience, they N:\!holson say~. · ~our ndw. them out on the floor, then t~e theater, you ie~ rb the
"He's only been frightened II '""'""
11 u ; """
Tht U"ltto
!'rn1 mtn""
'"fWitatlUI
....l It .. If
jelltrelly fll'"l'le be· u~c, "Dr. Phijl~s,' is very fitted the scenes a r o u n d titles are "I Prink Y o u r by one picture he's· seen ·· I [1\IIIOfell'
,nllfllf ~till ... ,., l*.. lc:.lltn I
11 1 Eat Y o u t he says. "And that was the 101 .. t """,' dl.,.tcllft crtll!,.. to flllt .
'1111K m 1• :· n I It 'Is d1ffc:n:nl. And w•~'re now them .
Bloo~;·
and
I =·~:r.:.t:~
IKII IIIWi I
a family our.II~nce -.hwJ!ing '(fin H c r b r (~a tJ
Because t h e y are hoth Skin. They are both self· second half of "2001.' "
.(

'

children will hear the world of
stories at 3 p. ni, on Tuesday.
The Story Hour will run from
June 15 to Aug. 17.
The theme of this summer's
sessions will be communitycentered.

'

53

23

.44'

36

17.*,

ONE BARGAIN TABLE
ITEMs VALUES TO '3.99 so~

Large Size

'PLASTIC FLOWERS
Odds &amp; Ends

27 CURTAINS

Batt. Op.

12 Electric St.isiiiS

With
Radio

300

Better Quality

WASH CLOTHS
Large

185

Quality

BATH
TOWELS

s1

.so•

1f2 Price
34'

�a ·s ort. • •

0 Journal

Trees, Not.Dogs Man's Friend

Tribute to a Warrior,
Chief Crazy Horse, and a
'

Man, Korczak Ziolkowski

BYJ.A.McKEAN
BALLA'D For An AMERTCAN INDIAN
GALIJPOIJS - From news reports
Ibis week, it seems the Indians are
The Dakota landscape has particular gr11ce,
restless again. In South Dakota,.that is.
its beauty comes clear to the eye;
Well; it's vacation time and despite
Dark peaks and broad plains, a quiet that pains,
this, I expect a horde of folks will be
liluring the West anyway; getting
call for peace 'neat h a flawless sky.
sunburned, rained on, bee stung, and
fna bedroll drawn tight one can la y up a night
leaving pets, younguns, and gear all
and .llare at the heavenly hosts;
over the map. Have courage: it's worth
it. .
While the mind grows dim, it may fill to the brim
with tales that rise as the ghosts.
Two,Years ago it was my good fortune
w journey extensively through New
Mexico, Utah, Wyoming, and South
What of Deadwood's gold and the miners of old,.
Dakota - and other salient points Preacher Smith i:vith Bible in hand ?.
alta' a regretable absence of 1$-25
Wild Bill chaired with an ace and eight paired,
years, depending on the locale and the
incumbent sheriffs. AB always, it was a
George Cu~ter before his last stand?
refreshing experience - a delightful
Interlude - a leisurely camping,
Yes. the Indians too, fiery Cheyenne and Sioux,
lis6ing, visiting with my eldest son and
with their lands and culture in ravage;
family. Everyone east of the
Mississippi should have the opportunity
And a treaty broken- the invader's mere tokento see the West at least once.
why wonder their warfare so savage?
Magnificent country, true, but it's a
singUlar revelation how the WesterRed Cloud and Two Moon, Big Road and Bad Wound,
ners, of so varied cultural bl!ckgroullds,
'and famed Sitting Bull there, of course;
religious persuasions, economic interests, and such, have maintained
But one man stood proud, riding over the crowd,
their heritage, pride, engagingriendand his name was Chief Crazy Horse.
liness, and general level-headed
perspective to so high a degree.
A cava lry wonder who struck like the thunder,
Those who bisit South Dakota surely
will see Mt. Rushmore. But I hope those
his star gleams down through the year.1.
who do will drive the very few miles
With resolute bravery, he'd not accept sla very,
(rom Rushmore to the stupendoQ!j
but fought on and confounded his peers.
mtm~~t~ent being carved FROM ,lli
ENTIRE MOUNTAIN as a tribute to a
great warrior. Equally, it is a tribute to
Unbeaten, undaunted-though terribly haunted a fabulous man: the sculpwr, Korczak
lze countered all foes' abuse.
Ziolkowski.
.
Then a villanious thrust reduced him to dust;
His fantastic project isn't finished
entrapped by a base flag of truce.
yet, after 30 years toll. The gigantic
sculpture Is some len years from
· completion. But finished it wiU be,
Now, honor is served on a Black Hills reserve,
Including a university for American
his own marble colossus you 'II see.
Indian youths to be constructed and
Still. he gestures Attack! to his spectral pack,
supported from the state's revenues.
The monument's dimensions defy
till the dawn when his people are free.
mortal imagination: a 56().by-640 foot
stab.Je of Otief Crazy Horse, the Oglala
My!, the Dakota lands pace has particular grace,
Sioux who defeated Gen. CuSter and
its beauty com es clear to the eye;
Gen. Crook, among others, and never
Wlljl beaten I'! battle. Here, he slta
Dark peaks and broad plains, a quiet that pains,
\~Stride a wildly spirited, galloping pony
call fur peace 'neath 11 flawless sky.
with his left arm out..tret.ched on which,
Ina bedroll drawn tight one can lay up a night
the ~rm alone, 4,000 men could stand. It
and sture at the heavenly hosts;
is being carved In the round, and will be
visible from 50 miles.
While the mind grows dim, it may fill to the brim
Ziolkowski was asked In pre-World
with tales that rise as the ghosts.
War II days by a._~QAA~\t 1o(j jildi'Y\.1;, ' • N9rrJir ' · "; • "'
~..
...,
W• -~ ~~~~ ~
chiefs to accept this challenge: "Carve
-JohnAnderson·MOKean ·
· us a mountain. We wruld like ihe .
A!l!erican people wknow we, too, 1vwe,.
' .
our heroes." And in this time of
frequently voiced, pained expressions
about mis-use of Uncle Sugar's dough, approached by Governmental agencies fame, a self-taught genius is making hls
II must be emphasized that not one who would get in on the act, but he has dream a reality.
This poem most humbly expresses
dime of tax money of any sort has been firmly refused all overtures. It is his
land.
His
moQ,tatn.
And
starting
with
my feeling in night camp after having
expended on .', this work, which will
less
than
ZOO
bucks,
a
bear's
physique,
a
pondered Mr. Ziolkowski's labor and
dwarf all his~ry 's like end~avors.
vision, and some experience under dwelt on an evening by a .glowing
Gutzon
Borglum of Mt. Rushmore campfire, on Black Hills history :
To be sure Mr. Ziolkowski has been

: :· :.

IIY cliAij.LENE HOEFIJCH
POMEROY - The lree may
replace dog as man's beat
friend.
So says the A111erican
Association of Nurserymen
which urges homeowners to
create an "oxygen producing
factory" in their own backyard
by planting a tree.
Trees and other plant
materlals have pollution
lighting chara~terlstics . . They
absorb harmful carbon
monoxide from the air and
release fresh oxygen into the
abnosphere.
Everyone living in an urban
area is fully aware of the crisla
of air pollution - the tears in
their eyes, the film of chemicals
and dirt on their cars, their
homes and their clothing are
evidence enough.
·
And an increasing number of
residents of smaller com.
munities are now learnmg the
menace of air pollution on their
own doorsteps.
Man can live only a few
minutes without the oxygen that
comprises 20 percent of the air
we' breathe. An individual
inhales and exhales an average
of 23,000 times a day, taking in a
daily total of 35 pounds of
oxygen.
Man's sole source of this vital
element is plant life.
Not only do trees, plants and
shrubs give oil oxygen, but they
trap polluted particles in the air
and hold them until they are
washed into the ground.
"Green Survival" is the name
the American AP.sociation of
Nurserymen has given their
campaign to improve the environment. Even the words
convey a sense of hope, but the
hope has to be translated into
action.
And it has to begin with you.
Life a decade from now
without significant cleaning up .
of the air is depicted here in
cartoons by Shannon White and
Michael Custer, Meigs High
School art students of Mrs.
Margaret Ella Lewis.

Monday Time for Story :flours
-· .

· GALIJPOIJS - SWnnier is
almost here, the .lime once
again·for "the story h!UI',"
Th~t events-filled weekly
sessions for children of the area
begins June 15 at 3:30p.m. for
. the pre-school set. Older

CANDLES OF variot11 fOI'IIII

t.Dof Y!
I'!AV 1,

rm

•

ALSO

"loving'' ,(R)

Tender Loving Care for Your Car ~=R=ated=R::::::::
,• .

I .

Tonight thru Tuesday
June 13·15
·Walt Disney's
BAREFOOT 'EXECUTIVE
(Technicotor)
Kurt Russell
Heather North

"G"

Abominable Mountaineer
Rock Hound
Sheep Dog
Great Day
SHOW STARTS I P.M.

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

''" "''

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

car. \

Check tire pressure but do
so when the tires are cool.
Let the car stand a few hours
if you have b e e n driving
since heat builds up pressure
inside the tires.
Don't bleed air from tires
when they are hot. L~t them
cool, then check the pressure. Bleed them when they
are hot and you will find
them underinflated w h e n
they cool d0'\'.11.

Getting Straight
lays it on
the line.

-

COl.-• PoC ruttU

Elliott Gould
Plus

SUNDAY ~
TUESDAY &amp;·WEDNESDAY
Joson
Robards
Katharine
Ross

l.,.,

r~-------~-------..,..___,

CARTOON
.'

SCIENCE LADEN
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Some
600 scientists from the United
States and eight other countries
are expected to attend Ohio
State University's 26th international Symposium on
Molecular Structure and
Specl•oscopy which starts
Monday.

sisters, Mrs. Monettie Flowers, Mrs.
Dorothy Willlams and Mrs. Helen Jenkins,
all of Columbus, and Miss l&lt;Jrete Garnes
of' Bidwell. She was a member of tha
Providence Baptist Church on Buck Ridge.
Funeral services will be held at I p.m.
Monday at the Waugh-Halley~Wood
Funeral Home with Rev. Vance Watson
officiating. Burial will be in Pine Street
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home
from 7-9 today.

TURNS SELF IN
COLUMBUS
(UP!)
Thomas Philip Dee, 28,
Columbus, indicted for the theft
of more !hap $1 million in induslrial diamonds, surrendered
to police late ·Friday. Dee, a

(Continued from page 1)
which would have wproduce "some pretty
good reasons," why joining would be of
advantage. He observed:
"The people in Pomeroy aren't
exactly busting out aU over to help people
in Middleport and the people in Middleport
behave about the same way toward their
neighbors in Pomeroy." The conclusion
f,as ombthed Middletorl and Pomeroy
IS unlikely.
.
' Baker observed, In connection with his
a..tc, that it 'appears that Meigs County
people get together when there is a reason.
He cited consolidation of the Meigs School
district, and cooperation in the Big Bend
Regatta. He noted that Rotarians are
found usually in community activities that
lead to progress.
It was predicted that whereas Meigs
County's population has been declining at
the l().year censuses since 1880, that trend
apparently is certain to stop with the 1970
census.
It also was predicted that eventually
the area around Five Points, three miles
northeast of Pomeroy on Rt. 7, probably
will house more population than Pomeroy
and Middleport combined.
Ladies of the church served a steak
. dinner. President Charles Simons
presided.

Special Shows Set
POMEROY - Special art, flower and
ceramic shows are scheduled for the Big
Bend Regatta this year for the first time.
The Art Show w!U be in both Pomeroy and
Middleport with Mrs. Ruth Gosney
working on displays. The Flower Show and
Ceramics Display on Saturday and Sunday
will be in the old Senior High Building in
Pomeroy under the sponsorship of the
MeigS..Sounty Jaycees.
These shows offer everyone an outstanding opportunity to see the handiwork
of Meigs County residents.
UP TO PRESIDENT
POMEROY - Health, Education and
Welfare (HEW) bills have passe~ both
houses of congre,., thereby insuring

services to Oral Robert..
University which were really
above and beyond the call of
duty.
.
"Had it not been for your
promptacU9n in assisting in the
library during the recent severe
windstorm, much more
property might have been
destroyed. The exemplary
spirit which you demonstrated
in assisting others in a time of

FREEZER
REG.

87c EA.

Robert Hartenbach.
At 12:15 p.m. Saturday cars
driven by Joy C. Mitchell, 24,
aiut Richard A. Hysell, 17, both
of Middleport Route I, collided
on Rutland Township Road 174
J~
near Rutland. The sheriff's
ol Dept. said Hysell's vehicle,
'J
owned by the Blaettnar Auto Co.
headed north and the Mitchell
station wagon was headed
POMEROY - Robert Car- south, mel in a curve.
sey, direcwr for employment of Hysell arid a passenger in the
the Ohio Department of the Mitchell car, Elizabeth MitDisabled American Veterans, chell, 5, were taken to Veterans
installed ·new offjcers Thursday Memorial HospitaL Hysell was
night wben Meigs Chapter 53, treated for a head· injury. and
DAV, met at the DAV home on Elizabeth Mitchell for a leg
. Butternut Ave.
injury. They were released
Assisting was Eighth District following treatment. An am·
Commander James Darnell . . bulance transported them.
InstaUed ior 1971·72 were Jacob Both
vehicles
were
Turner, commander; Dale
Sisson, senior vice commander;
JACKSON AT LUKE
Earl E. ··Frecker, junior vice GALIJPOLIS - U. S. Air
cotbmander; John Bacon, judge Force T-Sgt. Clarence E.
advocate; Dale · Kennedy, Jackson of 748 Third Ave., has
chaplain; Stanley Searls, arrived for duty at Luke AFQ,
sergeant-at;~rms, arid Marvin Ariz. A weapons maintenance
L. Kelly, adjutant. The lechnicisn, He is a 1952 graduate
auxiliary served a luncheon of Galiia Academy. His wife is
following the meeting.
the former Lelia S. Grant.
·,
I

'a(X)b Turner
Com1118nder
Veterans' Unit

'

Set by Band Unit
. POMEROY -A rehearsal
lor the Big Bend Regatta
Patade will be held by the
Meigs High School band from
7 to 9 p.m. Thursday at tbe
higb school.
.
Band members will be
required to provide their own ·
transportation to the
· rehearsal but transportation
will be provided lor the
parade Friday evening,
David Bowen, diredor, said.
Buses will leave Middleport,
Pomeroy and Rutland at4:45
p:m. Band me"mbers not
catching buses should he at
the high school by 5 p.m. All
band members are urged to
attend hoth the rehearsal and
the parade.

ICED TEA SET
lARGE JUG AND
6 GLASSES $192

'
demolished.
Hysell has been
cited to juvenile court for speed
excessive for road conditions.
At 3 a.m. Saturday a car
driven by James ·H. Walker,
Portland Route 1, on county
road 32 near Racine, went out of
control and struck a hridge ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
railing. The vehicle was a total
'
loss. Walker, who was not in·
jured, was cited to county court POMEROY _ Two vehicles
on a charge of failing to driv~ on were damaged and a driver was
the nght s1de of the road.
· cited to county court after an
MILK MANAGER
accident at 4:45p.m. Friday at
A. P. Langmyer, Elm Grove, the junction of Routes 7 and 124.
W. Va ., has been appointed The department of Sheriff.
Milk, Inc. market manager for Robert Hartenbach said a
southern West Virginia. He is vehicle driven by Franklin
assuming the work conducted in Babcock, 28, AIt ms, struck the
southern West Virginia area for · rear of a car driven by Don Van
some 39 years by owen M. Coone~, 21, Pomeroy, Route 4,
Williams, who Is retiring w wh1ch was turning West onto
spend full time on his farm td Route 124. Damages w the
Greenbrier County.
VanCooney vehicle we~e minor
and moderate to Babcock's.
Made Many, Sold One
Babcock was cited to court on
. Vincent. V~n qogh in six assured clear distance charges.
years begmmng m 1884 produced ~bout 700 drawings
and ,800 oils, only one of Giant dragon lizards of
which was sold in his life· Komodo Island, h •.lr1.1esia,
time, according to Encyclo- grow 10 feet long and weigh '
up to a60 pounds.
paedia -Britannica .

Autos Damaged

WEAVE TEX

ALL PLASTIC

WINDOW SHADES

ABOVE ITEMS BOTH STORES

SALE

300 Artificial Flowers

19'

48

59'

Upper Store
ftems

TO
SELL

REG.

Stainless Steel

37

BUTTER DISHES
Girls'

LEATHER SLIPPERS

700

6

Boudoir

LAMP SHADES
Portable

6

RECORD PLAYER

Ladies Purses

24

CAR MATS

La!lies &amp; Children's

Children's • Women's

REDUCED

Pant Suits

READY TO WEAR

'f.JTO%

100 e&amp;W Record Albums

22

NAPKINS

10~

REG. 1.49

SEL

15

TABLE

Cut To Size FREE

TO

Pet

FAMILY PACK

CREME
CARAMEL
ROLLS

2FoR$1

--

· KLEENEX

Special
Ret 47' lb.

CONTAINERS

continued services without any curtailment of the Meigs County Bookmobile,
it was reported Saturday by Mrs. Vilma
Pikkoja, supervisor of the unit which also
serves in Vinton and Jackson counties.

cr1s1s certainly typified the
spirit of Christ, and it is most
reassuring w know that such
qualities exist in our students.
"Again, a special note of
thanks to you and may God's
richest blessings he with you
this summer."
The letter is signed by Robert
R. Eskridge, Vice President of
Business Affairs at the schooL

li.••••••GiiiiiliiiiiiOhiiiiloiiii••IIII,•••

Candy Dept.

GALLIPOLIS- Harold Taylor, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Taylor, Rt. 1, Bidwell,
recently received a $50 check from the
Holzer Medical Center for being named
the 1971 outslanding North Gallia High
School senior in science.
He has been accepted by Berea
College, Berea, Ky. James Oiler, North
Gallia High School science instructor,
made the presentation .

3 Automobiles Demolished
POMEROY - Three cars
were delJ.lolished in two accidenll! reported Saturday night
by the qtparbnent of Sheriff
i

last
the. Franklin
Countyweek
GrandbyJury

"THAT OLD FA5Ht0HID OCIC)DNESI"

HUNDREDS OF SPEOIAhS INSID£.•AND 'OUTSIDE· •.

Taylor is Outstanding
Senior in :;cience

Parade Rehearsal

e SHAKIS e SODAS e MALTS
t~akt t4nppr

quality control technician at the
General Electric plant 'in
suburban Worthington . was
indicted with four others earlier

AVARlETY of types of ert greet the shopper at the START swre in Gallipolis.

Student Highly Commended
SYRACUSE - Irene Cooper 1
daughter' of Mr. and Mrs. Clem
Cooper, Syracuse, has received
a highly complimentary letter
from the Oral Roberts
University where she is a
student:
"Dear Irene :
"On behalf of President
Roberts and the University
community, I want w express
sincere appreciation for your

ations of the Mid . States • - • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Terminals Inc., a grain
elevator, were expec ted to
resume Monday after striking
longshoremen agreed to a new
.,
three-year contract. The 15
members of Local 1955 of ihe
International Longshoremen
agreed w a new three-year
contract.

SIDEWALK SALE

and Tuesday

If you've been driving a
long time on a hot day let
~our engine cool off by idling
1t a few moments before.

I~L%1

'

Joining

"Getting Straighf'

especially if the weather is
hot. You can then lower the
level of the fuel by using it
instead of finding it in a
puddle around your parked

FOUR ~IN DEGREES
POMEROY - Four Meigs
Countians received degrees at
the !34th cotnn:~encement of
Marshall University recently.
They are Gary Owen Stobart,
BBA, Middleport; Don Wayne
Swisher, BBA, and Ida Yeager
'Diehl, AB, both of Pomeroy,
and Lester Paul Manuel, MA,
Racine.

Accidents
(Continued from page 1)

turning it off. This )l'ill drain
off some heat and can prevent damage to engine parts.

Colo rca rtoons: ·
Surprisin' Exercisin'

..

and weekdays 12-10 p.m. except Wednesday when it is closed all day.
Small children wandering into the
srore have asked, "Does it cost to get in?"
and, "Will they hurt us?"
Horwn admitted this is a normal attitude to anything strange . or unknown.
Otildren who have gone there have usually
returned, though, and bronght friends with
them, he said.

Leading Truck Cities
WASl-IINGTON - The
largest city trucking center
in the U.S. is Chicago, which
is home for 118 carriers.
New York ranks a close second wilh 112 carriers, and
Los Angeles is third with 'fl.9.

DO-IT-YOURSELF

POMEROY - Two defendants were bound over to the
grand jury, nine were fined and
five others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court Friday.
Bound over to the grand jury
by Judge Frank W. Porter were
Judy Landers, Pomeroy, under
$15® bond on charges of driving
while intoxicated and hit skip,
and Ronald Lee Swain, Racine,
RD, under $500 bond on charges

are dllpW)'ed 111 table at theSTARTrelailstcnoo VIDeSI.inGallipolll.
T

New
START
rContinued from page 1)

Garment-Go-Round ·
WASHINGTON-Often,
a truckload of fabric is delivered to a garment manufacturer in the morning and
leaves the same evening also by truck - in the form
of finished suits and dresses,
ready for delivery to the
Nation's department ~ tores.

,..rAf'IIFR

Fright on! Horror Films Still .Thrive

•

- Children will be introduced to the dentist", the fireman, , the
influential members of the policeman, and the poetman.
Gallipoljs community. It is . Drawing from , comrounity
hoped that the children may resources, Story Hour wlll
perceive a "trller" picture of enable the children to come into
people in various poeitions in contacl with unusual anlma\B.
their town, such as the doctor, In addition, Story Hour will
feature various · hobbies in
which children may take .in·
lerest and enjoyment. ·
Since the main empl)af~ In
the summer program is . w
create and stimulate a desire to
read within the children, a
of non-support.
cost.., $10 suspended, overload; record of the number of books
Fined were Walter King , Cleo M. Smith, Chester, and read by each child wiU be kepi.
Pomeroy, RD, $10 and costs, William C. Owens. Athens, $15 Every book a child reads will he
intoxication; James F. Kin- and costs each, speeding ; put on a secUon of our giant
nison, Hamden, $25 and costs, Orland
J.
Laudermilt, Story Hour worm. Hopefully, it.
$10 suspended, overload ; Pomeroy, $5 and costs, will grow too large for our
Thomas Huges, Jackson, Rt. 3, defective muffler; Glenver children's room. An effort to
$49 and costs, $19 suspended, Boggess, Racine RD, $10 and bring older children inw our
overload; Carl Vanover , costs, intoxication. Fined cost.. program will be made. To learn
Middleport, $25 and costs, $15 011ly were Clyde Lawrence, tl)e interests of these older
suspended, overload; Thomas Long Bottom, unable to stop children, a Hobby Day will be
L. Vititoe, Jackson, $25 and within assured clear distance, held for the children in grades
and Torrence L. Carson, no four.;;ix .
address recorded, fictitious A dale will be announced in
August.
registration.
DIVORCE GRANTED
Children will bring their
Forfeiting
bonds
were
Harold
POMEROY - Charging gross
neglect of duty , Shantilal Reeves, Albany, and Lawton hobbies to the library to display
Groadia has been granted a Templeton, Pomeroy, RD, $25 and discuss. This age group
divorce from Rupa Groadia iQ eac h posted, intoxicated; may also be of great assistance
the Meigs County Common James Priddy, Rutland, RD, in the hobby section of Story
Pleas Court. Two min or $50, assault and battery; Hour for the younger children.
children make their home with Warren J. Wise, Myerstown, A few surprises will be in store
Pa., $27, stopping on roadway; fm· all the children throughout
the defendant.
Leslie T. Lucas, Chesapeake, the summer.
See you at Story Hour.
$27.50, excessive speed.
IN BUSINESS AGAIN
TOLEDO (UP!) - Oper-

Wonian, Man are Bound Over

By MR. FIX
Ours is a nation on wheels
and the way some of us treat
our automobiles it's a won·
der that it isn't a nation
coming to a halt.
Now, not all of us are mechanics nor need we be. But
like the fellow who forgets
to check to see if an appliance is plugged in before
calling a repairman there
are certain things we forget
to check for ourselves. There
also are certain basic main·
tenance procedures that we
all can do.
'
Remember to check your
car before you travel-be it
a full vacation or just a
weekend trip. If it is time
for a professional going over
(First of two ports.)
-or anywhere near the time
By DICK KLEINER
-get it done. No point in
being stranded in strange
HOLLYWOOD- (NEA)territory later on.
The right to sc1·eam is a
Since modern autos need should be a play of a half.good old American freedom ,
and get less service because inch but no more than that.
and Hollywood k e e p s on
of self-adjusting brakes and Look for si~ns of fraying. A
making horror movies in
fewer
oil changes, there are loose belt Will result in faulty
that glorious tradition.
fewer opportunities for a generator operation and in·
trained mechanic to spot the efficient cooling. If the genBut horror, like everything else, is changing. Vambeginning of trouble.
erator is not working at full
pires have gone the way of
Check the condition of the ' capacity it will run down
all-ugh- Oesh, and today
fan be 1 t yourself There your battery.
we have more psychological
·
Check the radiator. If
h or r or, less old-fashioned
- - - - - - - - - - water is rusty or filled with
blood-drinking. T o d a y we
scum, flush out the radiator
have TV telling mild shock·
·
and replace with fresh
rated X.
ers on the home screen, so
"These are two examples water. Dirt can cause over· . horror moviemakers have to
of cheapies - they probably heating.
invent new adventures into
The air passages in the
cost $10,000 or so to make· the grisly.
which give the whole field a radiator core often fill up
The result is a split in the
bad name. But horror films . with dirt, leaves and dead
horror movie market. Some
from "Frankenstein" and bugs. When you wash your
·· ·' cheapies are being made to
"Dracula" to "Rosemary's car, take the time to direct
appeal to the lowest denom·
Baby" and the "Planet 'Of a stream of water througli
inator of sadistic audience,
the Apes" trilogy, have an the radiator core from the
wbo chortle in the balcony
honorable place in movie inside. That way the·dlrt will
while some creepy monste1.
history.
,
come out and not be sprayed
gradually . dismembers his
Curiously, A r k or" f and all over the engine.
blond victim . On the other
Nicholson say there are re- Don't overfill the radiator,
paw; there are sophisticnted
gional differences in the ac- gas tank or battery in hot
horror films - " Rosemary ·•
ceptance of horror movies. weath~r. Heat expansion will
Baby"-which allow the in·
Th ~y do well Gn both coasts cause overflowing.
-tellectual audience to scream
and . a ·1 0 n g the northern
W a t e r will evaporate
and stlll retain its self-restates,
fair in the middle of faster
a battery in hot
apect.
the country, but only so-so weatherfrom
than
in cold but re·
in the South.
In the 1/ a s t middle, be·
m e m b e r · that overfilling
tween "Rosemary's B•' _..
The market in Europe i1 causes trouble. Spilling over
and the cheapies, Is the prod·
spotty-France is poor, Eng. causes loss of electrolyte and
uct turned out by Ameri·
·
land good, the rest of the corrosion.
~an-International , the G, ..
LOOKS AREN'T EVERYTHING, as Vincent Price has found out in becoming the
continent moderate. Ratings
you fill the tank try
era! Motors of horror movmain monster u1 moderu horror movies. Here he turns a toothsome grin on Virginia
ar.e tougher in Europe, and· to When
do so while you still have
1
ies. This company has mario
North, wbo Is apparently on hls wave length In 'Dr. Phibes.''.
generally horror films are some driving ahead of you,
a very good thing out of Lluo
not allowed to be shown to
gel)re, and continues to do
House ,'. with .Shelley Winters family men, as well as movie children. S i n c e European·
-"Any
horror
picture
with
so. It is ,run by Samuel Z. an R rating suffers." To and Mark Lester, which is men, they are careful to stay horror-film makers therefore
Arkoff and James H. NICIM· come
SUNDAY
in with a GP, and yet basically the old Hansel and within the bounds of reason· do not try for a family· audi· :
&amp;On, two responsible and have enough
moments Gret~l story."
able taste. And they deplore ence, they throw in more sex I TIMESSENTINEL
cleverly commercia: """· to satisfy theshock
I lltollly
I"IIDIIUIM fWtf'\' S\111. . ., "" ,,. 011~
audience,
is
a
l'ubllshllltl C:o
"Horror I i t m s," Arkoff . the current rash of X-rated than do U.S. producers.
ducers.
I
GALLrl"oul o,;tLY TJitiUHI
·
tricky business . Too much says, "!llust be scary and pseudo-horror movies, , de·
IIJ Tl'llrcl Avl , Gllll~ten• , Of! lei, .fUll
Arkoff and Nioholson be· 1I Jlllbllltltf
...... ., Wft-o•,- "'"'"'' ••c•
. Tiley ,say mat i1o1 , .. mov· blood and gore and a GP is suspenseful, and they must signed to appeal to the sick lleve, as did Walt Disney, •1 •Seturoev . ,hc:OIICI
c .. " ,.." 11 ' ,., 111 -'
alllpoi/.!_ Oflil, ·~··
I
T"l
DAILY IINTt"ll.
:lea are a lucrative market, tough to come by; too little move. We try to have a among us.
t h a t children like to be 1 Ill Co~rt St.. ,_..,,,, 0 .. d1..
•.tad yet horror films can be and the folks stay away in shocker twice a reel."
.....,bll'ltlM htry WMkNy '""'' "' "Cf~l I
At one Los Angeles the· .. scared •. and that reasonable !I "''""II.,_.,..,,
III'GIY. Int.rN •• • • • ctdl ftlllitlnt I
Ofllo, "aal Oftlct ,
•
lllllde on a low budget. Ob· droves.
It is such a formula that, ater, a double-bill is current· horror IS healthy .
I
TlltMS Of&lt; 'UISCIUII'TtON
I
I ...!\.""''' .. M, ..,. Sun.... JOt ...... .
vlo111ly, this makes them a
"We've •, b e e n trying to when they were · planning ly being shown. The ads say
Nicholson 'says he's :~hown f MAIL IU.SCIIPTIOf!l JIATII
llood Investment. But the1·e maR our pictures in this "Dr. Phibes,'' they took all
TM Gttll'""ll Trlllun11n Olllt .,., W"t I
the
titles
are
too
horrible
to
·
·
all
his products to his six· 1I lfllrte
\l ltllnol, YHt' IIUi r Ill"'"""" l' r I
ll'a danaers.
tllltnlltl II II; ........,_ ""' ,..,
the
shock
i
terns
and
spaced
milieu a little d.ifferenl ,,
be printed. When ' you call year·old son.
I IIJ ; till "'""t" P ; """ ....:.. .., p ... I
Thl Dtllly _S.IIfttl.-,...,. .....1 ... I.
llorrOr audience, they N:\!holson say~. · ~our ndw. them out on the floor, then t~e theater, you ie~ rb the
"He's only been frightened II '""'""
11 u ; """
Tht U"ltto
!'rn1 mtn""
'"fWitatlUI
....l It .. If
jelltrelly fll'"l'le be· u~c, "Dr. Phijl~s,' is very fitted the scenes a r o u n d titles are "I Prink Y o u r by one picture he's· seen ·· I [1\IIIOfell'
,nllfllf ~till ... ,., l*.. lc:.lltn I
11 1 Eat Y o u t he says. "And that was the 101 .. t """,' dl.,.tcllft crtll!,.. to flllt .
'1111K m 1• :· n I It 'Is d1ffc:n:nl. And w•~'re now them .
Bloo~;·
and
I =·~:r.:.t:~
IKII IIIWi I
a family our.II~nce -.hwJ!ing '(fin H c r b r (~a tJ
Because t h e y are hoth Skin. They are both self· second half of "2001.' "
.(

'

children will hear the world of
stories at 3 p. ni, on Tuesday.
The Story Hour will run from
June 15 to Aug. 17.
The theme of this summer's
sessions will be communitycentered.

'

53

23

.44'

36

17.*,

ONE BARGAIN TABLE
ITEMs VALUES TO '3.99 so~

Large Size

'PLASTIC FLOWERS
Odds &amp; Ends

27 CURTAINS

Batt. Op.

12 Electric St.isiiiS

With
Radio

300

Better Quality

WASH CLOTHS
Large

185

Quality

BATH
TOWELS

s1

.so•

1f2 Price
34'

�'.

.

..

I

Cheshire Cats 4-H Meet with McCartys
4- TbeSullday Times-Sealine1J!"nday,June 13. 1971

Final Week of Miss·Sallie Davis to
First ·Baptist · Marry john Neiman
Church VBS

'

GAWPOUS _ The First

-

Miss. Sue Bowles
.
.

.

.

Baptist Church Vacation Bible
School will resume Monday
evening at 6:30 with classes for
kindergarten through young
teens. Last week saw 232
registered at the Baptist
Vacation Bible School with
Wednesday evening's high
attendance of 214. The school
will
be from
held again
Tuesday
evening
6,30-8, 30. Wed·
nesday evening will be the _
Vacation Bible School closing
demonstration program
beginning at 7:30 when parents,
relatives and friend of the
students are cordially jnvited to
attend.
The Baptist Church bus will
again pick up students Monday
and Tuesday evenings at the
regular time, while on Wednesday evening the church bus
will operate one hour later due
to the change in the evening
program.
Mrs. Earl Saunders has been
Miss Lora/ee Tucker
the V.B.S. Superintendent with
Mrs . Kenneth Bostic her
assistant. The
school's
missionary offerings this year
will go to the Baptist Children's
Home located in Kouts, Indiana.
The Baptist Children's Home is
one of the approved social
agencies of the General
GALUPOUS- Mr. and Mrs. L. Carmichael, son or Mr. and
James L. Tucker, Addison, are Mrs. Charles M. Carmichael, Association of Regular Baptist
Churches of which First Baptist
announcing the engagement of Bidwell.
Wedding plans are in· Church is in fellowship.
their daughter, Lor alee, to Jon
complete.

"' .....

IAII ...

ltalnltu lttll
tlllnlllvlr, 1tltld
to Ill flit.

...'

.'
':
••''

EI•Mtd time
Indicator•
EMili dill.

'

S5915

TAWNEY
JEWILERS
•

I

I
OPEN
MONDAY
TIL 8 P.M.

r---------------------------1

Dear Dotty:
Perhaps this boy has had quite enough of "experienced"
women. The only way you'll know for sure is by "talking it out,"
telling him where you stand, and letting him choose between a
demanding female and a fun (without games) teen. I think you'll

HOUR~ :

p.m.

Thursday, lOa.m.to 12
noon

Friday, 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Satu(day, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

SHOE STORE
CRAZY
MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY
JUNE 14th &amp; 15th

If.

Both by .Label 4j~. •ln green
light, navy, flashing yellOw

Panta (72% cotton;

\.

'(,~¢

26 Pullman -Spacious all-purpose oase fo r women.
High fashion interior styled for most elficient pa cking.
21 Ladles' O' Nite -Easy to pack companion-type
case. Can be used lor many short tr ips.

In Monterey Ht11e

-~ ~()
~!lA:.
.,.._,

Men 's Three-Sulter - Hoids three men's suits and
extra slac ks. Two spac1ous compartments separated

e:w: tended

in liri(/}'

ThomaS Clothiers
•
•

•

fATHER•S DA1
CARDS

Mrs. Evans Receives
OSU Master Degree
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Mary
Elizabeth Evans, daughter-Inlaw of Mrs. Reva Evans and the
late Mr. Wade Evans, Rio
Grande , has completed
requirements for a Master of
Arts degree, specializing in
education. She received her
degree at the Ohio State .
University spring commencement on June 11. Her
husband, George f!:vans, is an
administrator in the Newark
City Schools and they reside,
along with their son, Wade, at '
Granville.

MONIJAY, JUNE 14 &amp; TUESI)AY, JUNE 15 .

REMNANTS
-

CUT FROM REGULAR STOCK
PERM. PRESS
36 to 45" WIDTH

YDS

YDS

, •.

FORT Pin
SHOES

and

PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS

TUESDAY
ONLY

404 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

Reg ..$4.50
Double Knit Cotton
· · Sleeveless

T'TOPS

.•2·50

Colors: Mulfi Stripe. Sizes:
S. M . L.

VALUES TO $12.95

soc E~CH
USED .SEWING MACHINES. .
• PORTABLES &amp; CABINETS

ofrt!~~;~;· 407 area yollll8Sters had toured the

new home, Riverby, since the arrival of
Scouts, Cub Scouts, grade and high school
sl~~~::i~ Mason, Gallia, Meigs and Jackson Counties
Ill
Riverby during the past two months. The area's
cultural center offers something of Interest to
eve:ryone,i~nd the guided tours through the art gallery have
Riverby's highlights ~us far. Several area youth
in the FAC's slimmer program. Youths do not
of the FACto participate in the summer
class or club can schedule a weekday tour
thrcJuglt ~l,~erlly by contacting Mrs. John Carty, 446-1048. All
lndi&lt;vidtlls may visit River by on Saturday and Sundays from
l.:i p.rrlJ'\bove, Mrs. Gene Wetherholt, rear.-conducts a tour
for
students.

'

Fri. NIGhts- W. Do CustOm Drns Maklttt
Simplicity, o\'cCalls,l!utterick, Vogue Patterns
'2 Complete Floors of Fabrin &amp; Notions
Singer S.IH &amp; Service
-n~s
GaiH,.Iis, o.

-'

sa Court St.

------.....

BARGAIN TABLE

French A
spring.

Open 'Till p.m. Mon. &amp;

Gallipolis. Ohio

MONDAY

10 Summer Straw Hats

'5 00 SAVE NOW
FRENCH CITY FABRIC SHOPPE

SAVE UK[ CRAZY AT

FATHER'S DAY
SUNDAY, JUNE20

One Piece
Styles
Two Piece
Styles
· 3 Piece Styles

Inside Specials For Monday
and Tuesday, June 14 &amp; 15

PRICED.FROM

•377

Archie Hutchinson, 44 Olive
Street, Gallipc·'.iS.
Following the ceremony , a
reception was held at the PACC
Hall where they opened many
lovely gifts.
Miss Nibert was given in
marriage by her stepfather, ·
Theodore Galo .

~!&lt;£~ I

SINGERS &amp; OTHERS

DOZENS OF ODDS &amp; ENDS!

Second Ave.

Save
$24.05·
Usually $94.00 - Now $69.95

Gallipolis

GALLIPOLIS
The
Methodist Church of Lorain,
Ohio, was the scene of the May
29 wedding of Miss Cheryl
Nibert to Mr. Victor Toledo.
· Mrs. Nibert is the daughter of
Marshall Nibert, and Virginia
(Criner) Gala, formerly of
Gallipolis. Cheryl is the
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.

GALLIPOLIS
Miss reception will immediaiely
Patricia Jane Large, daughter follow the ceremony.
of Mrs. Mary Large Beaver and
the late G. W. Large, Porter,
has completed plans for her T
W
wedding to Maurice Andrew
WO
eek Vacation
Toler, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ch
h Sch 1S A
Andrew Toler.
UrC
00 et
t
The open church wedding will G
UM Ch r h
. take place on Sunday, June 27,
race
U C
at 2:30p.m. at the Grace United GALLIPOLIS Grace
Methodist Church. An open United Methodist Church will
open iheir Vacation Church
School classes next Monday,
June 14, from 6:30-8:30p.m. The
classes
for
preschool
youngsters aged three to six will
be staffed by Mrs. Jay Simms,
Mrs. Richard Danner, Mrs.
Gene Spurlock, Mrs. William
Brown and Mrs. Rusty Martin .
. \
First and second grade will be
taught by Mrs. John A: Nibert
and Mrs. Bryson Carter. Third
and fourth grade teachers are
Mrs. Charles Gatewood and
Mrs. John Louden. Mrs . Charles
Gatewood and Mrs. Kenneth
Kittrell will lead fifth and sixth
graders. Seventh and eighth
grade will be taught by Mrs .
James Gilliam and Mrs. Marvin
Pullins.
Classes will contlnue for two
weeks with a closing program
and open house scheduled for
SUnday, June ?Jl, the Fifth Annual GaUla County Citizen Band Radio
Sunday, June 27, at 6:30 p.m.
co{cluct:ell at the Gallia COunty Junior Fairgrounds. Another capacity crowd
a1retp this year's event. Four trophies will be awarded to participants in the
: largest caravan, caravan travelling the farthest, oldest licensed CB'er
selling the most tickets. Four grand prizes are pictured above: Browning
Scanner ,Pollee Monitor, portable TV and Mobile Stereo tape player .

Save
$22.05
Usually ·$89.00 - Now $66.95

by divider to facili tate pack1ng·
21 Men'a Companlon - Companion case for
IIIPS or by itselll01 short tr ips

Fellowship, New Jersey .
The bride-elect has chosen
her sister, Miss Louise Gergle,
as her maid. of honor. Vicki
Mitchell, Gallipolis, will be
bridesmaid. The best man will
be Gary Lee Carter, Gallipolis.
The ushers will be Joe Tighe
and Jimmy Klump, New Jersey, cousins of the bride.
After their marriage, they
will honeymoon in Atlantic City,
New Jersey. After a brie.f visit
to Gallipo~s, they will take up
residence; at the place of hls
next assignment.
'

.... "

SANDALS
PAIR

Mrs.
formerly of
now of Moorestown,
are announcing the
New
a.nd approaching
' of their daughter,
'!l~~~~Yto Pvt. Eugene D.
u
, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Canaday, 250 Stale Street,
Gallipolis. ·
The wedding will be an event
of July 3, at 2:30 p.m. at Our
Lady of Good Counsel Catholic
Church, Moorestown, New
Jersey. A reception will immediately follow the wedding at
the Fellowship Fire · Hall In

~~ ~~~

MEN'S

28% nylon) OO.QO
Tank top (83% cotton,
17% nylon) 0.00

li~·LIIJII'ULJ:S - Mr . and

YDS

,_____"'
CRAZY
SALE!

Gergle to Wed
Eugene Canaday Patricia Large Will
Wed Maurice Toler
Miss Patricia Large

$}00
3

"'~....s,('
..,0
so'f.p

are all softness and light.

•

Limited Quantity- Better Hurry! N(lW, fnr the
first time we offer the most popul11r 2-piccc
combination se t .~ nf famo u ~ Samsnnih! Luggage
for both ladies an d gent lemen ut substantial savings
This is first quality mcrchnndiSc wit h slight
modifications. Thc!&gt;e production specials have many
exclusive features incl uding strong Absolitc sides,
lightwcigllt magnesi um frames, hidden locks that
cunnot fly open by mislilkc and all nf the interior
packing fe;l turcs for which Snmsnnitc is famou.~.

Are At . ..

·cheryl Nibert Weds

Miss Maria Gerg/e

CUT FROM REGULAR STOCK
PERM. PRESS ·
36" TO 45" WIDTHS

around a tank top of lush

Machine washable.

Won't Want To Miss

REMNANTS

Terry-go-round stripes play

and white, sizes S-M-L. '

Samsonite Production Specials

YDS

velour. Stretchy pull-on pants

MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY!

$}00
2
$2002
$]00
2

FORT PITT
Monidl\1 12 Noon to8 p.m.
Tues. &amp; Wed., 10 a.m. to 5

CRAZY
SIDEWALK
DAYS
Many Bargains You

lH.e len Help Us lI

oorrv

'photography, by M¥y Stump
on flower arrangin~ and by
Ramona Amos on bias binding.
Plans were made for the June
26 Bake Sale. ·The club also
decided to accept the GeOrgia
Girls' invitation for a potluck on
June 21. .
..

_ _ ··--

RUINS DETERIORATE
ATHENS (UPI)-Air pollution has caused the Parthenon
and
other ruins ~epresenting
1
By Helen Bottel
the splendor of Ancient Greece
WHICH WAY TO GO?
to deteriorate more in the last
Dear Helen :
50 years than they did in the
I'm a 14-year~ld girl with two sets of parents. My sister and first 2,000 years of their
brother live with my mother and I live with my father and a step- existence, Greece's top archeomother who is ;weird. She doesn't want me because she and Dad logical authority said Friday.
Prof. Spyros Marinatos, inhave a family of their own. One minute she is nice and the next
spector
general of antiquities
crabby, She thinks I don't love her.
My father pries Into my social life and wants me to be a little and president of the Greek
Academy of Sciences and
angel, which no kid is nowadays.
Letters,
said both the ParthenI could go and live with my mother, but I can •t get.over her
walking out on us like she did. Besides, she doesn't understand me on and the monuments on the
Acropolis were threatened prieither.
marily
by carbon dioxide and
I guess I just don 'I like any of my fannlly well enough to live
with lhem,•anc!,l'mawfully mixed up. My mother would treat m,~ sulphuric acid ·in the ' atmosthe enct opp06ite from my dad, but maybe I don't want THAT phere.
much freedom either.
Which? -D.P.
Dear D.:
Why don't you give yourself six months to decide? Meanwhile, stop seeing all the defects and try a little real friendship on
your dad and step-mother. The results might surprise you. -H.
Dear Helen:
I'm a normal teenager. Idigboys,music, my guitar, etc. Also
peace. But I don't dig all these four-letter words the kids use.
Whatgooddoesltdo toshot:tobscenitiesata speaker just because
you drin't agree with him? Or write ugly stuff on placards, or-· · - - : = =
march along shouting words that must make the older generation
mad ?
That's a dumb way to conduct a ''protest." Don't you think?
- AGAINST BAD LANGUAGE
Dear Against:
Yes, I think! Wish the ''protesters" would agree with us!- H.
Dear Helen:
'
Ijuststarteddaling this boy and I like him a lot. But there's a
girl who won't stop trying.
He's only 18, and she is 22. He went around with her for about
six months, thinking it was big stuff, seeing an older woman, but
now she says she is going to get him back, no matter what.
Do I have a chance against this "experienced" girl? I mean,
she's loose, and at 16, I don't think this is for me just yet. -

SHARPSE~TENCE
ISLE QF GUERNSEY, En·
gland (UPI)-Magis!rate Guy
Blampied sentenced an !&amp;-yearold youth ~ eight _strol!es of a
birch branch Friday on conviction of · traffic violations,
disorderly behavior and resisting arrest:
·
Judge Blampied suggested a
sIre tch the . young man hacj
already served In r~form school
seemed to have ·done no good.
"A short, sharp sentence' ...
might do the trick," he said.

GALUP9US - Plans have of honor. Attendants will be
been completed for the Misses Cathy and Cristy
marriage of Miss Sallie Davis to Davis sisters of the bride and
Mr. John E. Neiman in the First Miss 'Ann Tolna! and 'Miss
· De Pompei, former
Presbyterian Church, Satur- Jacqueline
day, June nmeteenth. The foljl' classmates. Serving as flower
o'clock ceremony will be girl will be Tandy Sue Woodpreceded with a half-hour ward cousin of the. bride and
program of nuptial music with ring 'bearer Maste.r Mark
Miss Catherine Hayward, Welsh, .n.ephe~ of the groom.
I·
.
. organist and Mr. Bl11 Griffin, · Mr. Neiman's best man will
Eugene
Triplett,
and
Mr.
Dan
1· 1
·
80 0~ ·
.
.
be Mr. Dave Hoffsig. Other Somerville. A rec,eplion · will
MISS DaviS has chosen Miss groomsmen include Mr. Mark
Mar i1yn Sa unders as her maid Davis, Mr. Charles Carter, Mr. follow at the church.

Miss Sue Bowles to
Wed Leonard Rice Engagement
Announced
FOR DAD·
POINT PLEASANT - Mr.
and Mrs . .Hansford E. Bowles
are announcing the engagement
and approaching marriage of
their daughter, Sandra Sue, to
Leonard A. Rice, son o!Mr. and
·Mrs. Ferris A. Rice, Point
Pleasant.
The open church wedding will
lake place July 17 at 2o'clock in
the afternoon in the Christ
Episcopal Church with a
reception • afterwards at the
Moose Club.
Miss Bowles was graduated
from National Business College,
Roanoke, VIrginia, and Is
employed by City Ice &amp; Fuel
Company, Point Pleasant.
Mr. Rice attended Marshall
University and is employed by
The Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber
Company, Apple Grove.

CHESHIRE - The Cheshire
Cats 4-H Club met at the home
of Mrs. Lee McCarty r'lefntly.
Mrs. Mildred Scolt, our guest,
gave us hints on flower
arranging and also helPed us
make a few arrangemen,ts. .
Demonstrations were given
by Stephanie Minor ·

i

VALUES TO $14.00

•2.00

EACH

THE HAT SHOP
'

One piece Underwear story In th e
i lnesl Nylon T•icot that combines
a Bikin i with a M ini Skirt. Ideal
to r today s swi nging short
Fa shior s, that ride low on the hip.

428 'Second Ave, Gallipolis, Ohio

Colors: Whit e, Ice Blue,
Lemonade, Brown. Sizes:

CHARGE IT ON
BANKAMERICARD

-

XS. SM . MED.

�'.

.

..

I

Cheshire Cats 4-H Meet with McCartys
4- TbeSullday Times-Sealine1J!"nday,June 13. 1971

Final Week of Miss·Sallie Davis to
First ·Baptist · Marry john Neiman
Church VBS

'

GAWPOUS _ The First

-

Miss. Sue Bowles
.
.

.

.

Baptist Church Vacation Bible
School will resume Monday
evening at 6:30 with classes for
kindergarten through young
teens. Last week saw 232
registered at the Baptist
Vacation Bible School with
Wednesday evening's high
attendance of 214. The school
will
be from
held again
Tuesday
evening
6,30-8, 30. Wed·
nesday evening will be the _
Vacation Bible School closing
demonstration program
beginning at 7:30 when parents,
relatives and friend of the
students are cordially jnvited to
attend.
The Baptist Church bus will
again pick up students Monday
and Tuesday evenings at the
regular time, while on Wednesday evening the church bus
will operate one hour later due
to the change in the evening
program.
Mrs. Earl Saunders has been
Miss Lora/ee Tucker
the V.B.S. Superintendent with
Mrs . Kenneth Bostic her
assistant. The
school's
missionary offerings this year
will go to the Baptist Children's
Home located in Kouts, Indiana.
The Baptist Children's Home is
one of the approved social
agencies of the General
GALUPOUS- Mr. and Mrs. L. Carmichael, son or Mr. and
James L. Tucker, Addison, are Mrs. Charles M. Carmichael, Association of Regular Baptist
Churches of which First Baptist
announcing the engagement of Bidwell.
Wedding plans are in· Church is in fellowship.
their daughter, Lor alee, to Jon
complete.

"' .....

IAII ...

ltalnltu lttll
tlllnlllvlr, 1tltld
to Ill flit.

...'

.'
':
••''

EI•Mtd time
Indicator•
EMili dill.

'

S5915

TAWNEY
JEWILERS
•

I

I
OPEN
MONDAY
TIL 8 P.M.

r---------------------------1

Dear Dotty:
Perhaps this boy has had quite enough of "experienced"
women. The only way you'll know for sure is by "talking it out,"
telling him where you stand, and letting him choose between a
demanding female and a fun (without games) teen. I think you'll

HOUR~ :

p.m.

Thursday, lOa.m.to 12
noon

Friday, 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Satu(day, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

SHOE STORE
CRAZY
MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY
JUNE 14th &amp; 15th

If.

Both by .Label 4j~. •ln green
light, navy, flashing yellOw

Panta (72% cotton;

\.

'(,~¢

26 Pullman -Spacious all-purpose oase fo r women.
High fashion interior styled for most elficient pa cking.
21 Ladles' O' Nite -Easy to pack companion-type
case. Can be used lor many short tr ips.

In Monterey Ht11e

-~ ~()
~!lA:.
.,.._,

Men 's Three-Sulter - Hoids three men's suits and
extra slac ks. Two spac1ous compartments separated

e:w: tended

in liri(/}'

ThomaS Clothiers
•
•

•

fATHER•S DA1
CARDS

Mrs. Evans Receives
OSU Master Degree
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Mary
Elizabeth Evans, daughter-Inlaw of Mrs. Reva Evans and the
late Mr. Wade Evans, Rio
Grande , has completed
requirements for a Master of
Arts degree, specializing in
education. She received her
degree at the Ohio State .
University spring commencement on June 11. Her
husband, George f!:vans, is an
administrator in the Newark
City Schools and they reside,
along with their son, Wade, at '
Granville.

MONIJAY, JUNE 14 &amp; TUESI)AY, JUNE 15 .

REMNANTS
-

CUT FROM REGULAR STOCK
PERM. PRESS
36 to 45" WIDTH

YDS

YDS

, •.

FORT Pin
SHOES

and

PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS

TUESDAY
ONLY

404 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

Reg ..$4.50
Double Knit Cotton
· · Sleeveless

T'TOPS

.•2·50

Colors: Mulfi Stripe. Sizes:
S. M . L.

VALUES TO $12.95

soc E~CH
USED .SEWING MACHINES. .
• PORTABLES &amp; CABINETS

ofrt!~~;~;· 407 area yollll8Sters had toured the

new home, Riverby, since the arrival of
Scouts, Cub Scouts, grade and high school
sl~~~::i~ Mason, Gallia, Meigs and Jackson Counties
Ill
Riverby during the past two months. The area's
cultural center offers something of Interest to
eve:ryone,i~nd the guided tours through the art gallery have
Riverby's highlights ~us far. Several area youth
in the FAC's slimmer program. Youths do not
of the FACto participate in the summer
class or club can schedule a weekday tour
thrcJuglt ~l,~erlly by contacting Mrs. John Carty, 446-1048. All
lndi&lt;vidtlls may visit River by on Saturday and Sundays from
l.:i p.rrlJ'\bove, Mrs. Gene Wetherholt, rear.-conducts a tour
for
students.

'

Fri. NIGhts- W. Do CustOm Drns Maklttt
Simplicity, o\'cCalls,l!utterick, Vogue Patterns
'2 Complete Floors of Fabrin &amp; Notions
Singer S.IH &amp; Service
-n~s
GaiH,.Iis, o.

-'

sa Court St.

------.....

BARGAIN TABLE

French A
spring.

Open 'Till p.m. Mon. &amp;

Gallipolis. Ohio

MONDAY

10 Summer Straw Hats

'5 00 SAVE NOW
FRENCH CITY FABRIC SHOPPE

SAVE UK[ CRAZY AT

FATHER'S DAY
SUNDAY, JUNE20

One Piece
Styles
Two Piece
Styles
· 3 Piece Styles

Inside Specials For Monday
and Tuesday, June 14 &amp; 15

PRICED.FROM

•377

Archie Hutchinson, 44 Olive
Street, Gallipc·'.iS.
Following the ceremony , a
reception was held at the PACC
Hall where they opened many
lovely gifts.
Miss Nibert was given in
marriage by her stepfather, ·
Theodore Galo .

~!&lt;£~ I

SINGERS &amp; OTHERS

DOZENS OF ODDS &amp; ENDS!

Second Ave.

Save
$24.05·
Usually $94.00 - Now $69.95

Gallipolis

GALLIPOLIS
The
Methodist Church of Lorain,
Ohio, was the scene of the May
29 wedding of Miss Cheryl
Nibert to Mr. Victor Toledo.
· Mrs. Nibert is the daughter of
Marshall Nibert, and Virginia
(Criner) Gala, formerly of
Gallipolis. Cheryl is the
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.

GALLIPOLIS
Miss reception will immediaiely
Patricia Jane Large, daughter follow the ceremony.
of Mrs. Mary Large Beaver and
the late G. W. Large, Porter,
has completed plans for her T
W
wedding to Maurice Andrew
WO
eek Vacation
Toler, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ch
h Sch 1S A
Andrew Toler.
UrC
00 et
t
The open church wedding will G
UM Ch r h
. take place on Sunday, June 27,
race
U C
at 2:30p.m. at the Grace United GALLIPOLIS Grace
Methodist Church. An open United Methodist Church will
open iheir Vacation Church
School classes next Monday,
June 14, from 6:30-8:30p.m. The
classes
for
preschool
youngsters aged three to six will
be staffed by Mrs. Jay Simms,
Mrs. Richard Danner, Mrs.
Gene Spurlock, Mrs. William
Brown and Mrs. Rusty Martin .
. \
First and second grade will be
taught by Mrs. John A: Nibert
and Mrs. Bryson Carter. Third
and fourth grade teachers are
Mrs. Charles Gatewood and
Mrs. John Louden. Mrs . Charles
Gatewood and Mrs. Kenneth
Kittrell will lead fifth and sixth
graders. Seventh and eighth
grade will be taught by Mrs .
James Gilliam and Mrs. Marvin
Pullins.
Classes will contlnue for two
weeks with a closing program
and open house scheduled for
SUnday, June ?Jl, the Fifth Annual GaUla County Citizen Band Radio
Sunday, June 27, at 6:30 p.m.
co{cluct:ell at the Gallia COunty Junior Fairgrounds. Another capacity crowd
a1retp this year's event. Four trophies will be awarded to participants in the
: largest caravan, caravan travelling the farthest, oldest licensed CB'er
selling the most tickets. Four grand prizes are pictured above: Browning
Scanner ,Pollee Monitor, portable TV and Mobile Stereo tape player .

Save
$22.05
Usually ·$89.00 - Now $66.95

by divider to facili tate pack1ng·
21 Men'a Companlon - Companion case for
IIIPS or by itselll01 short tr ips

Fellowship, New Jersey .
The bride-elect has chosen
her sister, Miss Louise Gergle,
as her maid. of honor. Vicki
Mitchell, Gallipolis, will be
bridesmaid. The best man will
be Gary Lee Carter, Gallipolis.
The ushers will be Joe Tighe
and Jimmy Klump, New Jersey, cousins of the bride.
After their marriage, they
will honeymoon in Atlantic City,
New Jersey. After a brie.f visit
to Gallipo~s, they will take up
residence; at the place of hls
next assignment.
'

.... "

SANDALS
PAIR

Mrs.
formerly of
now of Moorestown,
are announcing the
New
a.nd approaching
' of their daughter,
'!l~~~~Yto Pvt. Eugene D.
u
, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Canaday, 250 Stale Street,
Gallipolis. ·
The wedding will be an event
of July 3, at 2:30 p.m. at Our
Lady of Good Counsel Catholic
Church, Moorestown, New
Jersey. A reception will immediately follow the wedding at
the Fellowship Fire · Hall In

~~ ~~~

MEN'S

28% nylon) OO.QO
Tank top (83% cotton,
17% nylon) 0.00

li~·LIIJII'ULJ:S - Mr . and

YDS

,_____"'
CRAZY
SALE!

Gergle to Wed
Eugene Canaday Patricia Large Will
Wed Maurice Toler
Miss Patricia Large

$}00
3

"'~....s,('
..,0
so'f.p

are all softness and light.

•

Limited Quantity- Better Hurry! N(lW, fnr the
first time we offer the most popul11r 2-piccc
combination se t .~ nf famo u ~ Samsnnih! Luggage
for both ladies an d gent lemen ut substantial savings
This is first quality mcrchnndiSc wit h slight
modifications. Thc!&gt;e production specials have many
exclusive features incl uding strong Absolitc sides,
lightwcigllt magnesi um frames, hidden locks that
cunnot fly open by mislilkc and all nf the interior
packing fe;l turcs for which Snmsnnitc is famou.~.

Are At . ..

·cheryl Nibert Weds

Miss Maria Gerg/e

CUT FROM REGULAR STOCK
PERM. PRESS ·
36" TO 45" WIDTHS

around a tank top of lush

Machine washable.

Won't Want To Miss

REMNANTS

Terry-go-round stripes play

and white, sizes S-M-L. '

Samsonite Production Specials

YDS

velour. Stretchy pull-on pants

MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY!

$}00
2
$2002
$]00
2

FORT PITT
Monidl\1 12 Noon to8 p.m.
Tues. &amp; Wed., 10 a.m. to 5

CRAZY
SIDEWALK
DAYS
Many Bargains You

lH.e len Help Us lI

oorrv

'photography, by M¥y Stump
on flower arrangin~ and by
Ramona Amos on bias binding.
Plans were made for the June
26 Bake Sale. ·The club also
decided to accept the GeOrgia
Girls' invitation for a potluck on
June 21. .
..

_ _ ··--

RUINS DETERIORATE
ATHENS (UPI)-Air pollution has caused the Parthenon
and
other ruins ~epresenting
1
By Helen Bottel
the splendor of Ancient Greece
WHICH WAY TO GO?
to deteriorate more in the last
Dear Helen :
50 years than they did in the
I'm a 14-year~ld girl with two sets of parents. My sister and first 2,000 years of their
brother live with my mother and I live with my father and a step- existence, Greece's top archeomother who is ;weird. She doesn't want me because she and Dad logical authority said Friday.
Prof. Spyros Marinatos, inhave a family of their own. One minute she is nice and the next
spector
general of antiquities
crabby, She thinks I don't love her.
My father pries Into my social life and wants me to be a little and president of the Greek
Academy of Sciences and
angel, which no kid is nowadays.
Letters,
said both the ParthenI could go and live with my mother, but I can •t get.over her
walking out on us like she did. Besides, she doesn't understand me on and the monuments on the
Acropolis were threatened prieither.
marily
by carbon dioxide and
I guess I just don 'I like any of my fannlly well enough to live
with lhem,•anc!,l'mawfully mixed up. My mother would treat m,~ sulphuric acid ·in the ' atmosthe enct opp06ite from my dad, but maybe I don't want THAT phere.
much freedom either.
Which? -D.P.
Dear D.:
Why don't you give yourself six months to decide? Meanwhile, stop seeing all the defects and try a little real friendship on
your dad and step-mother. The results might surprise you. -H.
Dear Helen:
I'm a normal teenager. Idigboys,music, my guitar, etc. Also
peace. But I don't dig all these four-letter words the kids use.
Whatgooddoesltdo toshot:tobscenitiesata speaker just because
you drin't agree with him? Or write ugly stuff on placards, or-· · - - : = =
march along shouting words that must make the older generation
mad ?
That's a dumb way to conduct a ''protest." Don't you think?
- AGAINST BAD LANGUAGE
Dear Against:
Yes, I think! Wish the ''protesters" would agree with us!- H.
Dear Helen:
'
Ijuststarteddaling this boy and I like him a lot. But there's a
girl who won't stop trying.
He's only 18, and she is 22. He went around with her for about
six months, thinking it was big stuff, seeing an older woman, but
now she says she is going to get him back, no matter what.
Do I have a chance against this "experienced" girl? I mean,
she's loose, and at 16, I don't think this is for me just yet. -

SHARPSE~TENCE
ISLE QF GUERNSEY, En·
gland (UPI)-Magis!rate Guy
Blampied sentenced an !&amp;-yearold youth ~ eight _strol!es of a
birch branch Friday on conviction of · traffic violations,
disorderly behavior and resisting arrest:
·
Judge Blampied suggested a
sIre tch the . young man hacj
already served In r~form school
seemed to have ·done no good.
"A short, sharp sentence' ...
might do the trick," he said.

GALUP9US - Plans have of honor. Attendants will be
been completed for the Misses Cathy and Cristy
marriage of Miss Sallie Davis to Davis sisters of the bride and
Mr. John E. Neiman in the First Miss 'Ann Tolna! and 'Miss
· De Pompei, former
Presbyterian Church, Satur- Jacqueline
day, June nmeteenth. The foljl' classmates. Serving as flower
o'clock ceremony will be girl will be Tandy Sue Woodpreceded with a half-hour ward cousin of the. bride and
program of nuptial music with ring 'bearer Maste.r Mark
Miss Catherine Hayward, Welsh, .n.ephe~ of the groom.
I·
.
. organist and Mr. Bl11 Griffin, · Mr. Neiman's best man will
Eugene
Triplett,
and
Mr.
Dan
1· 1
·
80 0~ ·
.
.
be Mr. Dave Hoffsig. Other Somerville. A rec,eplion · will
MISS DaviS has chosen Miss groomsmen include Mr. Mark
Mar i1yn Sa unders as her maid Davis, Mr. Charles Carter, Mr. follow at the church.

Miss Sue Bowles to
Wed Leonard Rice Engagement
Announced
FOR DAD·
POINT PLEASANT - Mr.
and Mrs . .Hansford E. Bowles
are announcing the engagement
and approaching marriage of
their daughter, Sandra Sue, to
Leonard A. Rice, son o!Mr. and
·Mrs. Ferris A. Rice, Point
Pleasant.
The open church wedding will
lake place July 17 at 2o'clock in
the afternoon in the Christ
Episcopal Church with a
reception • afterwards at the
Moose Club.
Miss Bowles was graduated
from National Business College,
Roanoke, VIrginia, and Is
employed by City Ice &amp; Fuel
Company, Point Pleasant.
Mr. Rice attended Marshall
University and is employed by
The Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber
Company, Apple Grove.

CHESHIRE - The Cheshire
Cats 4-H Club met at the home
of Mrs. Lee McCarty r'lefntly.
Mrs. Mildred Scolt, our guest,
gave us hints on flower
arranging and also helPed us
make a few arrangemen,ts. .
Demonstrations were given
by Stephanie Minor ·

i

VALUES TO $14.00

•2.00

EACH

THE HAT SHOP
'

One piece Underwear story In th e
i lnesl Nylon T•icot that combines
a Bikin i with a M ini Skirt. Ideal
to r today s swi nging short
Fa shior s, that ride low on the hip.

428 'Second Ave, Gallipolis, Ohio

Colors: Whit e, Ice Blue,
Lemonade, Brown. Sizes:

CHARGE IT ON
BANKAMERICARD

-

XS. SM . MED.

�0

including 4\2 years· furlough-· .. leave lor furloughs .
· mission work started in Martime in \he Mission Field work
She has spent a one-year Unique there for 41!. years and
sponsored - by the ·Baptist furlough In the United States since then a total of 18 years in
Evangelical Ch(!rches of United arrived last July 6,.1970. While Niger. While in · AfriCll she.
States. She boarded the bus at in the U. S. she has spent most resides in a compound with
Point Pleasant Monday evening of her time in mission camps, other missionaries and .her
for the return trip to West special lectures, conferences religious duties along with
Africa, going to New York, on to and nwnerous other activities improving health conditions
Brussels then Niamey, capitol promoting mission field work. work hand In hand.
of Niger, West Africa. Her new
Avery dedicated lady and her She leaves behind many loyal
location Of miSsion work and love for Africa people . is and devoted Christian friends
dispensary duties will be right revealed in her talk. She is a and loved ones to go forth in
in Yantala at Niger starting former resident and native of God's work. Relatives Include
about June I, she will be in Cheshire, Ohio. Graduated from Mrs. Vernon Deweese, 23iS Mt.
charge and lull time duties after Holzer Hospiial as a registered Vernon, local sister; Mrs.
July when other missionaries nurse. Her first duties ir! the William Hess, Columbus, a

GALLIPOUS ~ Miss Arlene
· Spurlock has devoted 23 years

' .:::-.::::::.::::::::::~*'-:".::::-.:::~::-;;::-.:::::--:::::w.~~

Seen and Heard

.::::::::::::::::::::~.:::i::-,;.,;.;::::::::::-.:w..&gt;..:r###/.&lt;

PFC Ralph Lusher, Jr., son of
Mrs. Maria Lusher and the late
Ralph. Lusher is stationed in
Saigon. PFC Lusher is a
graduate of GAHS and OSU
College of Engineering. Mrs.
Lusher, a resident of Mansfield,
is currently visiting Rev. and
Mrs. Charles Lusher at Mercerville.

Mrs. Caldwell -Hosts DFW

Billy Houck Addresses
'11"
li
G
d
C1
b
Ga lp·0 .s ... -ar .en .u .

Miss Arlene Spurlock, Missionary, Returns to West

(

·

sister, ·and brothers William,
Minnesota; Mark and Roger,
Washington state; Fred,
Huntington.
A highlight of this . furlougllK.~~et~J':JO·
was her trip to the West Coast to
visit qer two brothers out there.
Friends know her as just a
friend away, her letters are Bowen,
received currently to keep in Mrs.
touch and spiritual guidance to and
all that know her is most in- Mr. and
spirational to read and receive
knowing she is well and about
her activities in the mission
field. She will be expected to

~ '.

'

.

·

GALLIPOUS - The June other odds and ends to make of Mrs. !Uy Myera. Rell'alh·;;
meeting of the DFW Club was . handicraft items. The July ments were served by - llle:
~~!~~e~~~~;fw~s~~::e~ ,m.ee.u.·n_,g_w_il_lbe_h_el-da..t_the_h_om•. _e_h_os_t_es_s_.

.

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order and devotions were read
~
GALUPOI.JS _ Mr. Billy the roses last for days.
•for the Grace Methodist Church by Mrs. Caldwell. The members
;·
Houck talked to the Gallipolis In swnmary, Mr. Houck said Circle No. 2 picnic. ·
·
then preceded to make scouring
'
Garden Club June 10 at the "Do it well if you want to grow
Mrs. Bea Woods and Mrs. pad containers.
,
:Ill . ,
home of Mrs. Eugene Gross in good roses. Remember, roses Jean Gloss have placed two Secret sister birthday obHalliday Heights.
are like beautiful wO!nen - large pots at the' French Art served was Mrs. Bobby Clary.
••'
•
Mr. Houck stated that there delicate, feminine and require Colony, containing geraniums, ~ames_were then played with
. was no certain way to grow a lot of attention."
petunias and variegated vlnca. pnzes bemg won by Mrs. Larry
,•
roses. He himself is a maverick The meeting was conducted .Mrs. Woods has been caring lor Chureh and Mrs .. Tom Candee.
~ I
on the topic. He did say that the by Mrs. Donald Robinson, The these. They planted geranlwns At the next meeting, the
most important thing was members answered roll call andlvyandspreadpeatmossat members will use sponge and
Monday &amp; Tuesdav
preparation of the soil, Roses with their favorite rose.
the Chamber of Cominerce
·
should be planted on higher An invitation was extended to Building and replanted the
June 14th &amp; 15th
ground where there is good attend ·the 41st annual con- evergreens at the flag pole at
'
drainage and where the plants vention of Ohio Association of GARS. Mrs. Woods alllo scraped Milsteads Announce
Shop Qur Many
''
can get six hours of sun, Garden Clubs, August 10-12, at and painted the urns on the
preferably morning sun. The the Neil House in Colwnbus. bridge at the junction of Rt. 141
•
ground should be tilled 1&amp;-22" Nationally known Bill Thomas, and Rt. 7. Mrs. John Allison Adoption of Child
"•
•
deep. A good mixture to use is St. Petersburg, Florida, ,210 · planted lhese urns and has
.
half hwnus with half soil and feature Dower arrangements fertilized and watered them for
PI'. PLEASANT _ Mr. and
"&gt;
half sand. Cow manure is ex- and Dr. Gordon Tysel of Pine the past month.
Mrs. Phillip G. Milstead, Pt.
cellent to use as lt holds the Mount, Georgia will speak on
Mrs. Leona Dayton planted Pleasant, are announcing the
moisture and also has nutrients. "Year Around Enjoyment of marigolds at the Chamber of arrival of their three-month old
In Gallipolis. 0.
Michigan peat moss or bone Woody Plants."
Commerce building and adopted daughter, who's been
meal used at the bottom of the In July, the Garden Club will watered and pruned and named Bethany Lynn , She ls
Bargain Tables Will Be On The
Miss Kathleen Koebel
bed also holds moisture and have their annual picnic at the prepared flower beds with the being welcomed home by her
Sidewalk I
wood ashes is an excellent for Activities Building at the Gallia help of Mrs. Gloss.
three year old sister, Paige
root growth,
County Junior Fairgrounds, 6 , Mrs. Gloss also has cared for Ann.
,
Because most roses are p.m. The event will be catered. the dogwood trees at the Maternal grandparents are
'
"
surface feeders, fertilizing of The tour to Kings wood Roadside Park and the Mr. and Mrs. Samuel L, Lutton,
your rose bed should be done in a Center, Mansfield, was evergreens at the Washington 224 Lincoln Avenue, Pt.
large area surrounding the discussed and will be held in Grade School building.
Pleasant.
roses. Mr . Houck uses a fer· September.
Refreshmentswereservedby 'Paternal grandparents are
GALUPOUS-Mr. and Mrs. graduate of the Holzer Medical tilizer high in phosphate and The following is a list of ac- thehostessandco-hootess,Mrs. Mr.aodMrs,W.ReadMilstead,
John M. Koebel, Patriot Star Center School of Nursing and begins fertilizing in March and tivities that the members of the Charles Shaver.
38 Chillicothe Road, Gallipolis.
Route, Gallipolis, are an- will be associated with Grant
been parnouncing the . approaching Hospital in Columbus. Mr. does
middle·so ofeach
July.month until the garden
ticipatingclub
in have
to beautify
our · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -...
marriage of their daughter, Lewis served four years with
Do not be afraid to prune your area :
Kathl~en Marie, to Robert J. the Air Force and is currently roses. Remember your cheaper
Mrs. Jean Gloss made the two
employed
by
United
Parcel
Lewis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred
ros~s are more of a challenge lovely baskets of flowers lor the
Service in Columbus.
Lewis of Lynnfield, Mass.
and it takes longer to nurse GARS Band Concert held May
Miss Koebel is a June The Nuptial High Mass will them to health, usually two or 14.
take place at 2:30p.m. on Aug. three years. For newcomers to Mrs. Eunice Niehm and Mrs .
28 at Christ The King Catholic the hobby - select old time Maxine Rusk have planted the
Church in Colwnbus.
Am COMMISSION
roses such as the Crimson Rose, Dower boxes at the Post Office.
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Peace or Sultan's Gold Rose. June 6, the Cheshire Garden
Charles E. Stadler, immediate
When roses are watered, they Club toured the uarden of Mrs.
past president of Champaign
should be watered below the Sarah Jane Morgan on
County's Farm Bureau, has A thought for today: William foliage. Above the foliage Edgemont Drive. Mrs. Morgan
been ' named to the National Butler Yeats, born June 13, causes drooping, mildew and also helped to decorate the
Advisory Commission on 1865, said, "The years like spotting.
tables for the Shrine Camp
Grains-Wheat-Feed Grains and great black oxen tread the
Disbudding of. the side rose is when the Columbus Potentates
GALLIPOLIS; OHIO
Soybeans, which wilf meet in world, and God, the''herdsman, also good as they are robbing and wives visited in April. She
goads
them
on
behind."
Washington June ?.4
the main rose of food . The best also does the altar flowers at
time to cut your roses is around Grace United Methodist Church
..
five in the evening or in the two months of the year.
All these
early morning. Put them in Mrs. Paul Haskins has been
Bargains
warm water and refrigerate taking care of the urns in the
them lor 3-4 hours. This makes Methodist Church Sunday
and
School wing.
Mrs. Helen Galloway conducted the May meeting of the
GSI's
Nature Garden Club.
Episcopalians Host
STAMPS,
&amp;
Miss Williams and Mrs. Nellie
Scar~~ r; y , ,ha~~ pro~.lded
too,
:::::
All
Day
Picnic
flowers
Cor
the
Grace
Methodist
•'
'
' .
at Cox's! ·
·.·
Church irt May, the ·Philman"
GALLIPOLIS - On June 6,
than Club Picnic, June 10 at
the parishioners from St. Mrs. Merrill Evans' home and
Peter's Episcopal Church,
guests from Grace Church,
Pomeroy,
and
nearby
Episcopal churches attended St.
Peter's annual picnic held at the
VInton County Youth Camp
100 Percent Dllpont White Virgin
Grounds near Hamden.
Dacron Polyester Filled
A modern Community Ser.

.

SIDEWALK
· DAYS

~

Ll

sI

•'

~

I

Bargains

During

SIDEWALK DAYS

'

"ONE OF OHIO'S fi~e STORES''

•

{jallipoli6, Ohio

~

1

I

·~

Kathleen Koebel to
Marry Robert Lewis

2 DAYS- MONDAY AND TUESDAY- JUNE 14th and 1·5th

I

-BIG SPECIAL GROUP-· ....
.

!•

'
=
·=
;·:
•

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LADIES'
BmER SPRING
Mr. and Mrs. fohn R. Thomas

Wedding Anniversary
To Be Observed

·:
.:
·
:
:
'

:·:

•·
:~

A fine selection of preHy
spring dresses offered during
s•de walk days, Monday and
Tuesday at just half price.
They ' re great va lues. Shop
early for best selections.

Fine knit spring

in sty les you will like.

,

sl yle shells and

"

cotton
blou ses.
Limited quantity .

.1

Ladies' Denim and

Regular
Price

· 2

REGULA
PRICE I/\

DAYS

$2 8!b

Good Range of
Sizes • Styles
0

2

CRAZY - CRAZY

BLOUSES

Se lect a new pants sui"t now
dur ing our great sidewalk
sale . Choose from a fine
coll ecti on of new spring
st y les and save ' half .

Famous brands you' know

JunioJS • Misses
and Half Sizes

1

-Clearance Group-.
LADIES' BffiER
Fine Knit Shells AND

PANT SUITS

!

DRESSES

-A BIG SELECTIONLADIES'
FINE SPRING

DEPARTMENT
STORE

Popu lar
style
slacks in twill
and
d e nim
fabri cs ,
plain

NEW SHIPMENT

. Sizes a to

80 sq. Print • 36" Wide

ASSORTMENT

aridal~ Shower Honors

Nanette McKenzie
GALUPOLIS - Miss Nanette
McKenzie, brlde~lecl of Mr.
Rick Moody, was honored with
a bridal shower recently at the
Gun Club by Mrs . Nelson
Brumfield, Miss Yvonne
Atkinson, Mrs. Herb Smith. and
Mrs. Dannie Greene. Games'
were played with prizes going to
Miss Nancy Lease, Miss CeCe
Wetherholt and Miss Becky
Mossman. The door prize was
won by Miss Linda Crabtree.
Tbe color scheme cnosen for
the shower was pink and white,
which will be Miss McKenzie's
colors for her wedding on July 3,
The room was decorated with
white wedding bells and a pink

DAN
AND SON
••S.nln9

Jlnu 1936"
C.ofllpolt,, Ohio
)' Ou

·~I

.
.'

and white floral centerpiece,
used as the door prize and accenting the serving table.
Alter Miss McKenzie opened
and acknowledged many lovely
gifts, reireshments were served
to the following guests:
Mrs. Carroll McKenzie, Mrs.
George Moody, Miss Kathy
Moody, Miss April Moody, Miss
Becky Gibson, Miss CeCe
Wetherholt, Miss Nancy Lease,
Miss Nancy Clark, Miss Linda
Crabtree, Miss Nancy Grace,
Miss Candy Merritt, Miss
Debbie Harrison, Miss Jackie
Reynolds,
Miss
Becky
Mossman, Miss Sue Grim, Miss
Sharon Cooper, Mrs. Tom
Cooper, Mrs. Robert Heugel,
Miss Christi Smith, Miss Alisa
Smith, Master Greg Donovan
Smith, and hostesses: Mrs.
. Nelson Brumfield, Miss Yvonne
Atkinson, Mrs. Herb Smith,
yrs. Dannie Greene and the
guest of honor, Miss McKenzie.
Sending gifts were: Miss
Kathy Deckard, Mrs. Johnny
Burlile, Mrs. Norman Swindler,
Miss Pat Goeglin, Miss Debbie
Maiden, Debbie Rossiter,
Candy Merritt, Connie Carhart,
Connie Mitchell, Lena Pope and
Phyllis Pope.

..

B!~a~~~E~

\

Col orf u l tapestry r ose
pattern heavy cotton terry

Fancz;y, lmprinfed woven reed
band bags in a variety of
shapes, sizes and sty les. Side
Wal k sale values .

·I

ba th towels. b i g 22x44
stze-soft and absorbent .

assortment of pastel

•k••·•• and fancy ftorals In

n and fu ll sizes. Famous
·\&gt;eo,oer~!ll brand .

Assorted ColoJS

:·
:

2 for

,.
..

'

each

.

.f.=::::::r~Ws&gt;t'I!Si

··
..
..

100%

$§50

18".Size

$fi00

assortment of decorator colors
made of Polyester ya rn .

·u

$700
each

HAND TOWELS
Assorted
plain colors

Aoral Polyester filled Bed

and str ipes
fine
cotton

BED
PILLOWS
'
Floral cotton covered .
plump bed pillows with
Polyester lilllng. Full size.

Chiildren's

Wh~e

3

SLACKS
•'

. '6.95 VALUES

.
PIS. for
'

00
pair

2

Or Banker Billfolds with matching
KeY GAlli• . , • cases for.keys, packed in silk
lined plft box••· Popular tolors.

.

Clark's.Jewelry Store

.;J pita

tox

PILLOW CASES

Big mill assortment of fine
quality pillow cases - 42x36 size.

Values •

to '2.49

00
IIIII'

·

Window Shades
or

green supported

plastic window shades: Washable -

- remplete wllh roller..

•

-·- -

BOTTLES

~ssorterl

colors

. sl zes,

'Shapes. Tall decorator botfl..
lrom Italy.

$1,each
00

.

2

•NON

FOR

•WASHABLE

Beautiful Selection Of

CANNON

BArH TOWELS

.,

·$100
each

'2 00

·-·---------....,-----------·----·-··•
'

CANVAS BOAT SHOES
' MEN AND BOYS
REG. '5.99

'2'8

·---·-------~---------------·-

REMEMBER OUR
35th ANNIVERSARY.

·

IMPORTED TALL
ITALIAN GlASS
DEOORATOR.

36"x6' VINOCEL PlASTIC

White, tan

59'"',
'

SIDEWALK DAYS

I

set

for

Percale and No Iron

Regular 54 inch Site
Smoothco!fer,
Teflon
c~1ed
easy
ndlng pad . Fits 54"
ironing board.

:

Wh ite percale sheets In ·

full or twin sizes.

SUPER-GLIDE Pad and Coller Sets · ~
1

SHEETS
Full and Twin Sizes

Special Assortment "Pepperell"
SC::IX) UP

I•

Pepperell Brand Percale

Men's slacks and jeans in iancy
stripe and plaid patterns. Sizes
29 to 36.

Regular

IEGISTIAI 0

. LADY PRESCO Teflon Coated Ironing Board '

Choice of plain white or rose bud
pattern . Sizes 4 to 14.

Men's
Brand
·· PLAID AND STRIPE

'

19~
. ea.

Soft, absorbent waffle w~ve dish
cloths in assorted plaid patterns .

Fine knit cotton panties for girl s.

. lil L..J.!_= =::!_!:::.=:.=::..,:,

100

a

·.·:

Y2
----------------------PRICE SALE _

•

;

Stripes · Solids or Prints

2

Dan Thomas
·&amp;Son
"S~rving

You
Since 1936"
324 .Second Ave .

Gjillipolis

o.

.

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Sunday, June 13, the
!64th day of 1971.
The moon is. between its full
phase and last quarter .
,
· The morning stars are
Mercury,. Venus, Mars and
Saturn.
The evening star is Jupiter. Those born on this day are
under the sign of Gemini.
U.S. Army Gen. Winfield
Scott was born June 13, 1788.
.
.
On this day in his!Qry :
cise,,durab le, .ill-wealh!r
'in 1877 the Russo-Turkish war
stainless steel. .... ONLY $6.95.
began. ·
lllniin"• cu s l~~ crafted to make
stainless.waterpro9f watclo
look like it cost hull{jred~ · of
'
.
I
,

"SELL THE AUCfiON
WAY"

JAMES (JIMME)
SAYRE

PH. 446-3444

'1

BASEMENT

CHENILE BEDSPREADS

MUSLIN

100 Pet. Cotton•Preshrul\k•Machine Washable
No ironing ever
Full Size
Green
Pink
Blue
Lavender
FOR
Red
Gold

36" WIDE

3

FOR

CORDmE by PETITUFT

HOPE OR UNBLEACHED

AUCTION
SERVIQ

'

BIG 22"x44"

MEN'S SANDALS

.MORGAN-JONES DISH"Q.OTHS

•• Knit Panties

GIRLS

vice wasutilizing
held ina the
House
newShelter
trial
Communion Liturgy with approximately one ·hundred
persons
receiving
the
•
Sacrements. .Father AI
.
MacKenzie was the Celebrant.
A picnic lunch followed with
--·-·------------------- ,. _ hamburgers and hot dogs
cookedoveranopenfirebyJim
Evans and John Davidson.
Guests fished, swam, sunned on
the beach, or participated in a
It softball
game (the "old men"
defeated the "young men").
W1
The girl scouts provided baby
________________ ,;,. ______• sitting service so mothers could
enjoy the afternoon. By early
sundown, all were tired, happy
and ready to go home ; looking
forward toward the next outing
in wooded Vinton County Camp.
This picnic is a yearly event
designed to promote fellowship
within our Church and to
i
acquaint our membership with
VInton County Youth Camp and
its program .

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

WAFFLE WEAVE PLAID

and Rose Bud

----------------, ·LOAFERS

.\WMEN'S AND .
: QillDREN'S '

30"x60" Size

1

BED ~ PILLOWS

MON. &amp; TUES.
JUNE 14 &amp; 15

96
ABLE OF SHOES
,,,.,

27"x44" Size

15x25 COTTON TERRY ASSORTED

FULL SIZE

\ ONEI;GRQUP MEN'S,
. WOM,EN'S: I'LIILDREN'_S

24"x34" Size

yd.

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

TfN NIs' SHOES

High pile shag rugs In a great

33.!.

LATEST
FANCIES

COLORS· ,

SIZES
8"h TO 4

Plain and Variegated Colors

Fancy screen prints and
plaids in assorted pattern s
and color s.

19 inch Size Sl!50 21 inch Size

NGED

OVAL SHAG
AREA RUGS

KITCHEN
TOWELS

$500

161h'' Size

.,.

:·:: :

COTTON TERRY

LUGGAGE

'.

•'

$5

00

Pillow Cases
Pair 1111

15x25 SCREEN PRINTED r -.....

"BANTAM" TRAVELWARE
SOFT SIDE

15¥2'' Size

each

''

'•

Vinyl or floral fabri c covered
lightwei ght luggage in five
si zes . Attractive and sturdy .

PRINCE GARDNER"

TOP
VALUE

PASTEL

FlDRAL

Shop Inside our store ·for many outstanding bargains
during Sidewalk Days.

.,

2

'5

Big 24x46" Thirsty (

Cannon Towels
BATH

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE

TOWEL

24x46" size
Perfect Quality

HAND

Perfect

TOWEL

Quality

WASH

Perfect

CLOTH

Quality

3
2
4 I OO
forz-o

for.l ()()

{or

Cotton terry velour towels ond ytash cloths in matcn•
ing solid colors and stripes. Yellow, rose, blue, green.
' .
. t

342 Second Ave.

BAS~' 4 ENT

STORE . .

l'
•

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...

�0

including 4\2 years· furlough-· .. leave lor furloughs .
· mission work started in Martime in \he Mission Field work
She has spent a one-year Unique there for 41!. years and
sponsored - by the ·Baptist furlough In the United States since then a total of 18 years in
Evangelical Ch(!rches of United arrived last July 6,.1970. While Niger. While in · AfriCll she.
States. She boarded the bus at in the U. S. she has spent most resides in a compound with
Point Pleasant Monday evening of her time in mission camps, other missionaries and .her
for the return trip to West special lectures, conferences religious duties along with
Africa, going to New York, on to and nwnerous other activities improving health conditions
Brussels then Niamey, capitol promoting mission field work. work hand In hand.
of Niger, West Africa. Her new
Avery dedicated lady and her She leaves behind many loyal
location Of miSsion work and love for Africa people . is and devoted Christian friends
dispensary duties will be right revealed in her talk. She is a and loved ones to go forth in
in Yantala at Niger starting former resident and native of God's work. Relatives Include
about June I, she will be in Cheshire, Ohio. Graduated from Mrs. Vernon Deweese, 23iS Mt.
charge and lull time duties after Holzer Hospiial as a registered Vernon, local sister; Mrs.
July when other missionaries nurse. Her first duties ir! the William Hess, Columbus, a

GALLIPOUS ~ Miss Arlene
· Spurlock has devoted 23 years

' .:::-.::::::.::::::::::~*'-:".::::-.:::~::-;;::-.:::::--:::::w.~~

Seen and Heard

.::::::::::::::::::::~.:::i::-,;.,;.;::::::::::-.:w..&gt;..:r###/.&lt;

PFC Ralph Lusher, Jr., son of
Mrs. Maria Lusher and the late
Ralph. Lusher is stationed in
Saigon. PFC Lusher is a
graduate of GAHS and OSU
College of Engineering. Mrs.
Lusher, a resident of Mansfield,
is currently visiting Rev. and
Mrs. Charles Lusher at Mercerville.

Mrs. Caldwell -Hosts DFW

Billy Houck Addresses
'11"
li
G
d
C1
b
Ga lp·0 .s ... -ar .en .u .

Miss Arlene Spurlock, Missionary, Returns to West

(

·

sister, ·and brothers William,
Minnesota; Mark and Roger,
Washington state; Fred,
Huntington.
A highlight of this . furlougllK.~~et~J':JO·
was her trip to the West Coast to
visit qer two brothers out there.
Friends know her as just a
friend away, her letters are Bowen,
received currently to keep in Mrs.
touch and spiritual guidance to and
all that know her is most in- Mr. and
spirational to read and receive
knowing she is well and about
her activities in the mission
field. She will be expected to

~ '.

'

.

·

GALLIPOUS - The June other odds and ends to make of Mrs. !Uy Myera. Rell'alh·;;
meeting of the DFW Club was . handicraft items. The July ments were served by - llle:
~~!~~e~~~~;fw~s~~::e~ ,m.ee.u.·n_,g_w_il_lbe_h_el-da..t_the_h_om•. _e_h_os_t_es_s_.

.

--------v:;

,
.
.
,
.
order and devotions were read
~
GALUPOI.JS _ Mr. Billy the roses last for days.
•for the Grace Methodist Church by Mrs. Caldwell. The members
;·
Houck talked to the Gallipolis In swnmary, Mr. Houck said Circle No. 2 picnic. ·
·
then preceded to make scouring
'
Garden Club June 10 at the "Do it well if you want to grow
Mrs. Bea Woods and Mrs. pad containers.
,
:Ill . ,
home of Mrs. Eugene Gross in good roses. Remember, roses Jean Gloss have placed two Secret sister birthday obHalliday Heights.
are like beautiful wO!nen - large pots at the' French Art served was Mrs. Bobby Clary.
••'
•
Mr. Houck stated that there delicate, feminine and require Colony, containing geraniums, ~ames_were then played with
. was no certain way to grow a lot of attention."
petunias and variegated vlnca. pnzes bemg won by Mrs. Larry
,•
roses. He himself is a maverick The meeting was conducted .Mrs. Woods has been caring lor Chureh and Mrs .. Tom Candee.
~ I
on the topic. He did say that the by Mrs. Donald Robinson, The these. They planted geranlwns At the next meeting, the
most important thing was members answered roll call andlvyandspreadpeatmossat members will use sponge and
Monday &amp; Tuesdav
preparation of the soil, Roses with their favorite rose.
the Chamber of Cominerce
·
should be planted on higher An invitation was extended to Building and replanted the
June 14th &amp; 15th
ground where there is good attend ·the 41st annual con- evergreens at the flag pole at
'
drainage and where the plants vention of Ohio Association of GARS. Mrs. Woods alllo scraped Milsteads Announce
Shop Qur Many
''
can get six hours of sun, Garden Clubs, August 10-12, at and painted the urns on the
preferably morning sun. The the Neil House in Colwnbus. bridge at the junction of Rt. 141
•
ground should be tilled 1&amp;-22" Nationally known Bill Thomas, and Rt. 7. Mrs. John Allison Adoption of Child
"•
•
deep. A good mixture to use is St. Petersburg, Florida, ,210 · planted lhese urns and has
.
half hwnus with half soil and feature Dower arrangements fertilized and watered them for
PI'. PLEASANT _ Mr. and
"&gt;
half sand. Cow manure is ex- and Dr. Gordon Tysel of Pine the past month.
Mrs. Phillip G. Milstead, Pt.
cellent to use as lt holds the Mount, Georgia will speak on
Mrs. Leona Dayton planted Pleasant, are announcing the
moisture and also has nutrients. "Year Around Enjoyment of marigolds at the Chamber of arrival of their three-month old
In Gallipolis. 0.
Michigan peat moss or bone Woody Plants."
Commerce building and adopted daughter, who's been
meal used at the bottom of the In July, the Garden Club will watered and pruned and named Bethany Lynn , She ls
Bargain Tables Will Be On The
Miss Kathleen Koebel
bed also holds moisture and have their annual picnic at the prepared flower beds with the being welcomed home by her
Sidewalk I
wood ashes is an excellent for Activities Building at the Gallia help of Mrs. Gloss.
three year old sister, Paige
root growth,
County Junior Fairgrounds, 6 , Mrs. Gloss also has cared for Ann.
,
Because most roses are p.m. The event will be catered. the dogwood trees at the Maternal grandparents are
'
"
surface feeders, fertilizing of The tour to Kings wood Roadside Park and the Mr. and Mrs. Samuel L, Lutton,
your rose bed should be done in a Center, Mansfield, was evergreens at the Washington 224 Lincoln Avenue, Pt.
large area surrounding the discussed and will be held in Grade School building.
Pleasant.
roses. Mr . Houck uses a fer· September.
Refreshmentswereservedby 'Paternal grandparents are
GALUPOUS-Mr. and Mrs. graduate of the Holzer Medical tilizer high in phosphate and The following is a list of ac- thehostessandco-hootess,Mrs. Mr.aodMrs,W.ReadMilstead,
John M. Koebel, Patriot Star Center School of Nursing and begins fertilizing in March and tivities that the members of the Charles Shaver.
38 Chillicothe Road, Gallipolis.
Route, Gallipolis, are an- will be associated with Grant
been parnouncing the . approaching Hospital in Columbus. Mr. does
middle·so ofeach
July.month until the garden
ticipatingclub
in have
to beautify
our · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -...
marriage of their daughter, Lewis served four years with
Do not be afraid to prune your area :
Kathl~en Marie, to Robert J. the Air Force and is currently roses. Remember your cheaper
Mrs. Jean Gloss made the two
employed
by
United
Parcel
Lewis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred
ros~s are more of a challenge lovely baskets of flowers lor the
Service in Columbus.
Lewis of Lynnfield, Mass.
and it takes longer to nurse GARS Band Concert held May
Miss Koebel is a June The Nuptial High Mass will them to health, usually two or 14.
take place at 2:30p.m. on Aug. three years. For newcomers to Mrs. Eunice Niehm and Mrs .
28 at Christ The King Catholic the hobby - select old time Maxine Rusk have planted the
Church in Colwnbus.
Am COMMISSION
roses such as the Crimson Rose, Dower boxes at the Post Office.
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Peace or Sultan's Gold Rose. June 6, the Cheshire Garden
Charles E. Stadler, immediate
When roses are watered, they Club toured the uarden of Mrs.
past president of Champaign
should be watered below the Sarah Jane Morgan on
County's Farm Bureau, has A thought for today: William foliage. Above the foliage Edgemont Drive. Mrs. Morgan
been ' named to the National Butler Yeats, born June 13, causes drooping, mildew and also helped to decorate the
Advisory Commission on 1865, said, "The years like spotting.
tables for the Shrine Camp
Grains-Wheat-Feed Grains and great black oxen tread the
Disbudding of. the side rose is when the Columbus Potentates
GALLIPOLIS; OHIO
Soybeans, which wilf meet in world, and God, the''herdsman, also good as they are robbing and wives visited in April. She
goads
them
on
behind."
Washington June ?.4
the main rose of food . The best also does the altar flowers at
time to cut your roses is around Grace United Methodist Church
..
five in the evening or in the two months of the year.
All these
early morning. Put them in Mrs. Paul Haskins has been
Bargains
warm water and refrigerate taking care of the urns in the
them lor 3-4 hours. This makes Methodist Church Sunday
and
School wing.
Mrs. Helen Galloway conducted the May meeting of the
GSI's
Nature Garden Club.
Episcopalians Host
STAMPS,
&amp;
Miss Williams and Mrs. Nellie
Scar~~ r; y , ,ha~~ pro~.lded
too,
:::::
All
Day
Picnic
flowers
Cor
the
Grace
Methodist
•'
'
' .
at Cox's! ·
·.·
Church irt May, the ·Philman"
GALLIPOLIS - On June 6,
than Club Picnic, June 10 at
the parishioners from St. Mrs. Merrill Evans' home and
Peter's Episcopal Church,
guests from Grace Church,
Pomeroy,
and
nearby
Episcopal churches attended St.
Peter's annual picnic held at the
VInton County Youth Camp
100 Percent Dllpont White Virgin
Grounds near Hamden.
Dacron Polyester Filled
A modern Community Ser.

.

SIDEWALK
· DAYS

~

Ll

sI

•'

~

I

Bargains

During

SIDEWALK DAYS

'

"ONE OF OHIO'S fi~e STORES''

•

{jallipoli6, Ohio

~

1

I

·~

Kathleen Koebel to
Marry Robert Lewis

2 DAYS- MONDAY AND TUESDAY- JUNE 14th and 1·5th

I

-BIG SPECIAL GROUP-· ....
.

!•

'
=
·=
;·:
•

..

LADIES'
BmER SPRING
Mr. and Mrs. fohn R. Thomas

Wedding Anniversary
To Be Observed

·:
.:
·
:
:
'

:·:

•·
:~

A fine selection of preHy
spring dresses offered during
s•de walk days, Monday and
Tuesday at just half price.
They ' re great va lues. Shop
early for best selections.

Fine knit spring

in sty les you will like.

,

sl yle shells and

"

cotton
blou ses.
Limited quantity .

.1

Ladies' Denim and

Regular
Price

· 2

REGULA
PRICE I/\

DAYS

$2 8!b

Good Range of
Sizes • Styles
0

2

CRAZY - CRAZY

BLOUSES

Se lect a new pants sui"t now
dur ing our great sidewalk
sale . Choose from a fine
coll ecti on of new spring
st y les and save ' half .

Famous brands you' know

JunioJS • Misses
and Half Sizes

1

-Clearance Group-.
LADIES' BffiER
Fine Knit Shells AND

PANT SUITS

!

DRESSES

-A BIG SELECTIONLADIES'
FINE SPRING

DEPARTMENT
STORE

Popu lar
style
slacks in twill
and
d e nim
fabri cs ,
plain

NEW SHIPMENT

. Sizes a to

80 sq. Print • 36" Wide

ASSORTMENT

aridal~ Shower Honors

Nanette McKenzie
GALUPOLIS - Miss Nanette
McKenzie, brlde~lecl of Mr.
Rick Moody, was honored with
a bridal shower recently at the
Gun Club by Mrs . Nelson
Brumfield, Miss Yvonne
Atkinson, Mrs. Herb Smith. and
Mrs. Dannie Greene. Games'
were played with prizes going to
Miss Nancy Lease, Miss CeCe
Wetherholt and Miss Becky
Mossman. The door prize was
won by Miss Linda Crabtree.
Tbe color scheme cnosen for
the shower was pink and white,
which will be Miss McKenzie's
colors for her wedding on July 3,
The room was decorated with
white wedding bells and a pink

DAN
AND SON
••S.nln9

Jlnu 1936"
C.ofllpolt,, Ohio
)' Ou

·~I

.
.'

and white floral centerpiece,
used as the door prize and accenting the serving table.
Alter Miss McKenzie opened
and acknowledged many lovely
gifts, reireshments were served
to the following guests:
Mrs. Carroll McKenzie, Mrs.
George Moody, Miss Kathy
Moody, Miss April Moody, Miss
Becky Gibson, Miss CeCe
Wetherholt, Miss Nancy Lease,
Miss Nancy Clark, Miss Linda
Crabtree, Miss Nancy Grace,
Miss Candy Merritt, Miss
Debbie Harrison, Miss Jackie
Reynolds,
Miss
Becky
Mossman, Miss Sue Grim, Miss
Sharon Cooper, Mrs. Tom
Cooper, Mrs. Robert Heugel,
Miss Christi Smith, Miss Alisa
Smith, Master Greg Donovan
Smith, and hostesses: Mrs.
. Nelson Brumfield, Miss Yvonne
Atkinson, Mrs. Herb Smith,
yrs. Dannie Greene and the
guest of honor, Miss McKenzie.
Sending gifts were: Miss
Kathy Deckard, Mrs. Johnny
Burlile, Mrs. Norman Swindler,
Miss Pat Goeglin, Miss Debbie
Maiden, Debbie Rossiter,
Candy Merritt, Connie Carhart,
Connie Mitchell, Lena Pope and
Phyllis Pope.

..

B!~a~~~E~

\

Col orf u l tapestry r ose
pattern heavy cotton terry

Fancz;y, lmprinfed woven reed
band bags in a variety of
shapes, sizes and sty les. Side
Wal k sale values .

·I

ba th towels. b i g 22x44
stze-soft and absorbent .

assortment of pastel

•k••·•• and fancy ftorals In

n and fu ll sizes. Famous
·\&gt;eo,oer~!ll brand .

Assorted ColoJS

:·
:

2 for

,.
..

'

each

.

.f.=::::::r~Ws&gt;t'I!Si

··
..
..

100%

$§50

18".Size

$fi00

assortment of decorator colors
made of Polyester ya rn .

·u

$700
each

HAND TOWELS
Assorted
plain colors

Aoral Polyester filled Bed

and str ipes
fine
cotton

BED
PILLOWS
'
Floral cotton covered .
plump bed pillows with
Polyester lilllng. Full size.

Chiildren's

Wh~e

3

SLACKS
•'

. '6.95 VALUES

.
PIS. for
'

00
pair

2

Or Banker Billfolds with matching
KeY GAlli• . , • cases for.keys, packed in silk
lined plft box••· Popular tolors.

.

Clark's.Jewelry Store

.;J pita

tox

PILLOW CASES

Big mill assortment of fine
quality pillow cases - 42x36 size.

Values •

to '2.49

00
IIIII'

·

Window Shades
or

green supported

plastic window shades: Washable -

- remplete wllh roller..

•

-·- -

BOTTLES

~ssorterl

colors

. sl zes,

'Shapes. Tall decorator botfl..
lrom Italy.

$1,each
00

.

2

•NON

FOR

•WASHABLE

Beautiful Selection Of

CANNON

BArH TOWELS

.,

·$100
each

'2 00

·-·---------....,-----------·----·-··•
'

CANVAS BOAT SHOES
' MEN AND BOYS
REG. '5.99

'2'8

·---·-------~---------------·-

REMEMBER OUR
35th ANNIVERSARY.

·

IMPORTED TALL
ITALIAN GlASS
DEOORATOR.

36"x6' VINOCEL PlASTIC

White, tan

59'"',
'

SIDEWALK DAYS

I

set

for

Percale and No Iron

Regular 54 inch Site
Smoothco!fer,
Teflon
c~1ed
easy
ndlng pad . Fits 54"
ironing board.

:

Wh ite percale sheets In ·

full or twin sizes.

SUPER-GLIDE Pad and Coller Sets · ~
1

SHEETS
Full and Twin Sizes

Special Assortment "Pepperell"
SC::IX) UP

I•

Pepperell Brand Percale

Men's slacks and jeans in iancy
stripe and plaid patterns. Sizes
29 to 36.

Regular

IEGISTIAI 0

. LADY PRESCO Teflon Coated Ironing Board '

Choice of plain white or rose bud
pattern . Sizes 4 to 14.

Men's
Brand
·· PLAID AND STRIPE

'

19~
. ea.

Soft, absorbent waffle w~ve dish
cloths in assorted plaid patterns .

Fine knit cotton panties for girl s.

. lil L..J.!_= =::!_!:::.=:.=::..,:,

100

a

·.·:

Y2
----------------------PRICE SALE _

•

;

Stripes · Solids or Prints

2

Dan Thomas
·&amp;Son
"S~rving

You
Since 1936"
324 .Second Ave .

Gjillipolis

o.

.

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Sunday, June 13, the
!64th day of 1971.
The moon is. between its full
phase and last quarter .
,
· The morning stars are
Mercury,. Venus, Mars and
Saturn.
The evening star is Jupiter. Those born on this day are
under the sign of Gemini.
U.S. Army Gen. Winfield
Scott was born June 13, 1788.
.
.
On this day in his!Qry :
cise,,durab le, .ill-wealh!r
'in 1877 the Russo-Turkish war
stainless steel. .... ONLY $6.95.
began. ·
lllniin"• cu s l~~ crafted to make
stainless.waterpro9f watclo
look like it cost hull{jred~ · of
'
.
I
,

"SELL THE AUCfiON
WAY"

JAMES (JIMME)
SAYRE

PH. 446-3444

'1

BASEMENT

CHENILE BEDSPREADS

MUSLIN

100 Pet. Cotton•Preshrul\k•Machine Washable
No ironing ever
Full Size
Green
Pink
Blue
Lavender
FOR
Red
Gold

36" WIDE

3

FOR

CORDmE by PETITUFT

HOPE OR UNBLEACHED

AUCTION
SERVIQ

'

BIG 22"x44"

MEN'S SANDALS

.MORGAN-JONES DISH"Q.OTHS

•• Knit Panties

GIRLS

vice wasutilizing
held ina the
House
newShelter
trial
Communion Liturgy with approximately one ·hundred
persons
receiving
the
•
Sacrements. .Father AI
.
MacKenzie was the Celebrant.
A picnic lunch followed with
--·-·------------------- ,. _ hamburgers and hot dogs
cookedoveranopenfirebyJim
Evans and John Davidson.
Guests fished, swam, sunned on
the beach, or participated in a
It softball
game (the "old men"
defeated the "young men").
W1
The girl scouts provided baby
________________ ,;,. ______• sitting service so mothers could
enjoy the afternoon. By early
sundown, all were tired, happy
and ready to go home ; looking
forward toward the next outing
in wooded Vinton County Camp.
This picnic is a yearly event
designed to promote fellowship
within our Church and to
i
acquaint our membership with
VInton County Youth Camp and
its program .

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

WAFFLE WEAVE PLAID

and Rose Bud

----------------, ·LOAFERS

.\WMEN'S AND .
: QillDREN'S '

30"x60" Size

1

BED ~ PILLOWS

MON. &amp; TUES.
JUNE 14 &amp; 15

96
ABLE OF SHOES
,,,.,

27"x44" Size

15x25 COTTON TERRY ASSORTED

FULL SIZE

\ ONEI;GRQUP MEN'S,
. WOM,EN'S: I'LIILDREN'_S

24"x34" Size

yd.

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

TfN NIs' SHOES

High pile shag rugs In a great

33.!.

LATEST
FANCIES

COLORS· ,

SIZES
8"h TO 4

Plain and Variegated Colors

Fancy screen prints and
plaids in assorted pattern s
and color s.

19 inch Size Sl!50 21 inch Size

NGED

OVAL SHAG
AREA RUGS

KITCHEN
TOWELS

$500

161h'' Size

.,.

:·:: :

COTTON TERRY

LUGGAGE

'.

•'

$5

00

Pillow Cases
Pair 1111

15x25 SCREEN PRINTED r -.....

"BANTAM" TRAVELWARE
SOFT SIDE

15¥2'' Size

each

''

'•

Vinyl or floral fabri c covered
lightwei ght luggage in five
si zes . Attractive and sturdy .

PRINCE GARDNER"

TOP
VALUE

PASTEL

FlDRAL

Shop Inside our store ·for many outstanding bargains
during Sidewalk Days.

.,

2

'5

Big 24x46" Thirsty (

Cannon Towels
BATH

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE

TOWEL

24x46" size
Perfect Quality

HAND

Perfect

TOWEL

Quality

WASH

Perfect

CLOTH

Quality

3
2
4 I OO
forz-o

for.l ()()

{or

Cotton terry velour towels ond ytash cloths in matcn•
ing solid colors and stripes. Yellow, rose, blue, green.
' .
. t

342 Second Ave.

BAS~' 4 ENT

STORE . .

l'
•

.'

•

...

�MONDAY
&amp; TUESDAY
June 14 &amp; 15

deaths of .William J. Spencer, have been a murder-suicide.
mEORY ADVANCED
29, Columbus, and Emily 'J. Their bodies were found Friday
MARIETIA, Ohio (UPI)
The · Washing!on County Carpenter, 26, Coal Run, may · in a car parked in a secluded
spot near here. They both dierl
Sheriff's office believes the

..

'

of gunshot woundl. Oftldlla

said they believed Spenc:ei
'Mrs. Carpenier, and thell
his own life.

.

abo!
toat

•

'.

SACROPEDIC®
.
AND -SACROPEDIC IMPERIAl®

.

.·

A Money Saving Value

RECEIVE CERTIFJCATES- Employees of Lakin State
Hospital recently received certificates for five or more years
of service with Dr. A.M. Gonzales, acting clinical director,
far right, front row, and Hospital Administrator Sam L.
Nichols, Jr., far right second row, are front, left to right,
Lena .McDermitt, Norma Holcomb, Wilda Cole, Etta Hall ;
second row, Sceva Beaver, Mary Robbins, Seraphine
K&lt;lklnas, 10 years; .Jewell Johnson; third row, Bernice
Krell!!, Betty Crsw!ord, Jean Clayton; back row, Betty Sue
KauH, Freeda Hall, Pearl Hall, Hannon Casto, Anna Roach,

GOING UP BY LEAPS and bounds in Middleport is this
green metal addition to the Royal Crown Bottling Co. The 35

ASPIRIN

Darnell Jeffers, Bruce Jeffers. Others receiving certificates,
not pictured, were Reba Schwartz, 10 years; John Roach, Ira
Patterson, Mary Rogers, 15 years; Ama Lewis, 20 years;
Frances Taylor, Kenneth Show, Helen Caynor, George
Cunningham, Alvin Bowles, Orville Poar, Henry Reitmire,
Donald Roush, Leo Bush, Sarah Douglas, Audrey Pickens,
Nancy Pope, Edith Rayburn, Enatella see, Julia Sergent,
Sarah Slayton, Beatrice Smith, Florence Viers and Helen
Fitiswater, five years.

Reg, 2 BotUes Of

National Acquarium Out

100 Tablets 69'
NOW

••

apparently were prompted by
widespread speculation that the
army may be becoming too mod
and too soft in its efforts to
achieve an all volunteer status.
Changes made to remove unnecessary irritants include
permitting longer hair styles,
ending reveille formation s,
increasing
emphais
on
professionalism, and fostering
more participatory leadership.

,,

Launches Own Attack
Westmoreland, Army Chief of
Staff, launched an attack of his

11

Within our country there is

an atmosphere in which the milita ry bears the brunt of national

Sudden Beauty

HAIR S·PRAY
Reg. 98e, Now

For one thing Westmoreland
said, drug abuse is "a social
conditionwithin the United State
and not a unique milita ry problem.

Stocks Slide in Week
Of Light Turnovers

iod.

.

A Chase Manbattan bank official said the FED is likely to
continue Its expansionary policies, but at a slower rate than
in recent months.
John D. Wilson, senior vice
president of Chase, said the nation's money supply in recent

SURVIVORS' BENEFITli
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Congress has been asked by the
acjminllltraUon to pass legislatlon that would pay survivors of
any state or local pollee officer
killed In the llrie of duty $50,000.
Attorney General John N.
Mitchell sent a covering letter
·with the request, saying recent
alaylngs of offi~rs In New
York City and Washington
demonstrated "the risk of
lethal violence faced daily by
peace officers in city after city
across the country."

r.tARRIAGELICENSE
POMEROY - Wayne Eddie
'Waagooer, 2o, Sandyv!Ue, W.
V1., Route 2, and Mary Lou
~. II, l'Omeroy.

•

months has been growing at an
annual rate of 10 to 11 per cent
He said this could be inflationary if continued over any !engthy period, "so I believe the
monetary authorities will seek
to get back on a growth path
of about 6 per cent."
'
"Too Fragil"
"Your economic recovery pattern is too fragil at this point
towithstandanysledgehammer
blows from interest rates ., said
Monte Gordon of Bache'&amp; Co.
He added that the rise in mortgagerateslndlcateskeyinterest
rates are going up when they
should be easing.
Newton Zinder of J.G. Hutton
&amp; Co. said "it was primarily
interest rate fear that weighed
on the market." The analyst
noted there is a feeling the
money supply may have expanded more rapidly than necessary last month and that the
FED may have to lake some
offsetting measures which could
result in upward pressure on interes! rates .
. Saul Smerling of Standard &amp;
Poor's said he doesn 't believe
the FED is slamming the prake
on the money supply. He said
it is only trying to avoid an
upthrust in inflation.

pression given by certain people
that the drug problem in the
military overseas, particularly

"The FED has been pouring
money into the system with a
pretty open hand, and it is only
tempering the policy a bit for
an over expansive one to something closer to the frequently
mentioned target of 5 to 6 per
cent in the rate of increase ,"
Smerling concluded.
Leo Lancer of ~runs, Nordeman &amp; Co., sa1d because econom1c recovery IS not as robust
as expected there are a lot of
doubters and as a result you
have forces of selling and indecision ."
.
Lancer, however, said the
stl!ge is set for a good market
recovery. He believes economic
indicator will improve in the
months ahead and that many
people will be convinc~~ of this
durmg the summer. At that
time," Lancer concluded, more
people are hkely to lake posltions in the market."
Most of the widest moving
electt·onics were in reverse
gear. Oils and rails traded in
both directions , as did
chemicals, aircrafts. an d
motors. Steels and a~rhn es
declined.
.
.
Amencan Telephone, wh1ch
headed the active list, picked
up 1% to 46 on 692,500 shares.

Gently Relieves Pain
Due To Ear Wax

in Vietnam, is one o£ the major

causes of the national drug problem," he said.
"Such a line of reasoning is
about as accurate as saying
that the military is the ma jor
cause of dissent, racial and environmental problems within the
United States."
Army Backs Drug Program
The army, which he said pioneered among the services in
d,rug amnesty and threatment
programs, fully backs President
Nixon's new national drug program, Westmoreland said. ·
He said it is unfair to judge
the army on the basis of the
few who have failed to live up
to its high professional standard
The army welcomes constructi ve criticism, he said , but be-

lieves public understanding
must be "balanced, informed
and sympathetic."
"If the military continues to
receive indiscriminate abuse, if
it is not provided adequate resources and if it is not supported as an essential and respectable profession , we can hardly
expect to attract young Americans to serve in the numbers
and quality required, and the
consequences for our nation will

be ominous indeed," Westmoreland said.

SIDE•

Mon.

VICKS NYQUIL
Reg. '
59
'
$2.29
Auro
EAR DROPS

1(1 view with alarm the im-

MANCROFT MENS

Reg.

HANDKERCHIEFS

$2.25
Now

69

'

for
on~

MICKEY MOUSE

FELT TIP MARKERS
Reg,
5 for 51.49
Now

for

LIPSTICK
~

and
Tues.

Of the Bend

.

LOTION

-~
~

Beat••;.

Reg. 89t
Now

HAIR SffiiNG

Reg, s1.50; Special

----------------------------··

Woodbury
SHAMPOO

Max Factor

Reg. 79t, Now

TALENTED MUSICIAN, KAREN GRIFFI'Ill, daughter of
Mr, and Mi-s. Charles GrHflth of Pomeroy, has transferred from
the college of music at Ohio State University to the college of
agriculture, antmalsclence. Karen has this ambition to become a

'

and

SPRAY-A-WAVE

Select Group

DRESS SHIRTS

Dress Pants
Values
To s15oo

Button down collars in solids
and fan c ies . By B. V . D.•
Shapley and Van He usen.
sizes 14 112 to 16'12.

'

12 PRICE

20 PAIRS

Jarman Shoes
Values
To s1495

Reg, sl98 to '6.00

Now

'

yu
n E.. HU.1
!

Reg.

$1.25

HELENE RUBINSTEIN
HEAVEN SENT

.
"

G'allipolis, Ohio •

llll!l_ _ _ _ __

'

.

WHEN BIG BEND REGATTA WEEKEND rolls around,
members of St. Paul Lutheran Church tradltlonaUy take to their
Ice cream freezers.
This year Ia no exception and ·the church members will serve
the hlmemade lee cream along with sandwiches, baked goods,
beveragelandsaladsfr~ 11 a. m. to 7p. m. Friday and Saturday
in fellowship hall.
The hall ordinarily has been the -setting for t)le regatta art
show·but this year the scope of the show will be reduced. A small
shoW will be staged by Melga COunty members of the French City
Art Colony at the church hall. A.Jarger show will be staged on ihe
upper parldng lot in Pom~roy by Ruth Gosney who will covet a
COIIVerted bus wjth painllngs and will ~a 40 foot ·snow fence as

HAND &amp;BODY LOTION

:~
Now.________' _

00

Now

Currier &amp; lves
INSTANT
SHAVE CREAM
Reg.
·

$~! 79~

. another dllplay area.

DESERT
FLOWER
. '··
• .t 'I

HAND &amp; BODY .LOTION
Reg, Sl.OO '
Now ______ _:. __ _

00

Second and State

'

i

Price &amp; Sons Pharmacy

.

-.;;i.iiiiii·----11111!1-llll!l____
122 Second Ave.

MAX FACTOR

15

Mens

doctor of veterinarian medicine. She will be continuin_g her
. . private music lessons at State, however, despite the transfer from
the college of m111ic.

14

99

Gallipolis, .Qhio

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

Meigs

Property
Transfers
James E. Pape, Judy A. Pape
to Donald R. Tripplett, Mary
Tripplett, Part. Jot 461, Middleport.
Jemo Associates, Inc. to
Wanda L. Smith, Lot 15, Middleport.
Jemo Associates Inc., to
Terrence Lee Johnson, Brigitte
Johnson, Lot 12, Middleport.
Jesse Lambert to Danny B.
Brown, Cordelia C. Brown,
Lots, Pomeroy.
Howard E. Young, Betty J.
Young to Paul P. Simon, Allie
M. Simon, .60 A., Chester.
Wilbert McClain to Joseph D.
Glenn, Janice M. Glenn, 30 A.,
Orange.
Hobert Durham, Marion
Durham to Robert R. Hersman,
Ruth E. Hersman, 30 A., Salem.
William Reynolds, Florence
Reynolds to Austin William
Phillips, Maxine Marie Phillips,
Lot 174, Pomeroy .
Ron McDade, Loretta McDade to Gerald E. Hilferty,
Eli2abeth M. Hilferty, 30 A.,
Salisbury.
C. E. Austin, Lois I. Austin to
Denny W. Garnes, Bertha Jane
Garnes, 134.60 A., Rutland.
Denny W. Games, Bertha
Jane Garnes to Jaymar Coal
Co., 134.60 A., Rutland.

Save yourself a lot of money and sleepless nights.
Because right now, we're taking $40 off the price
of the Bemco Sacropedic and Bemco Sacropedic
Imperial mattress sets.
Think of it, Save $40 per set for a limited time only,
and still get the benefits of Bemco's exclusive
Unifused3 Construction, healthful support and rest-

'

,.

Collipoli&amp;·

&lt;!I••/•.{·••J·. I:• II
)
,:.
•·

H•

Makes your
Father's' Day Shopping easy.~··
DRESS SLACKS

SUMMER SUITS
Kingsridge
J&amp;F
Cricketeer

H.l. S.

from 85.00
from 59.95
from 65.00
49.95

Sewell

' ' •"

Cricketeer

from
from
from
from

Sewell
Kingsridge
rempo
\

SHOES
Freeman
Nunn Bush

45.00
29.95
65,00
55.00

June9, 1971
Double R Da l&lt;'y took 6 points
from Central Soya. l;ilgh for
Double R· Dairy was Edle
Robinette 1~6- 354. High for
Central Soya was Debbie
Howard 108-291.
Barr's Grocery look 6 points
from Erma's Aces. High for

Arrow

.

Campus
'
Arrow
'"
McGregor

from 6.00

Portis

119-322. High for Erma's
. Aces was Nancy Moeller 136·
~each

Stelson

BELTS

'

· fro~

3.98
from7.98

Paris

SWIM WEAR
Rugby
Campus
McGregor
Hang Ten

Shop Fri : Nite
'ti I 8

..

from 4.. 00
from 5.50
from 5.50

•

STRAW HATS

· Barr's Grocery was Kathl

from 16.95
from 19.95

SPORT SHIRTS

DRESS SHIRTS

HAPPY-GO-LUCKY
BOWLING LEAGUE

from7.98
from 8.98
from 23.95
from 27.50

Reston
Kingsridge
Sans-a-belt

SPORT COATS

Local Bowling

• ·
AFU!,n:R SHOW at lhia year's Big Bend Regatta activities Jlol.
11bou1i1 be aJ\added attraction. Awards for the winners are being
Stewart's Trailer Park took 6
·
th
Co 1 points• from Commercial &amp;
provided by the Meigs County Branch of tile A ens un Y sa.vlngs Bank. High for
1
. Stewart's Trailer Park was
Slvqa and LoaD Alan.
·
VIcky Adkins 218-517. High for
AGJCOOP FROM!UI(is ~· GAI.J.IA Counties wm leave ~~~~:ft~ 1~o~e~W'?&amp;. Bank
iGdlv fnlm CCIIumbul for the John F. Kennedy Airport in NeJIV
Raymond Barr &amp; Sons took 8
'
•
points from Vinton Service
Yart. fraai whete they will begin their jaunt to Europe.
station. High for Raymond Barr
Mrs. Fay Sauer IIIII Mrs. Alice Nease are hostesaes for the 22 was Doris Copley 165-433 ... High
day tour of Europe which will include visits to Amaterdam, for Vlnt011 Service Station was
Brumfield 147-378.
Amhelm, Coi!Jil18, the Rhineland, Heidelberg -area, Zurich, Doris
standi 119s:
W L
Lucerne, lnnsll'uck, Venice, ·Fl~nnce, Rome, Milan, Geneva,
27 5
Parla IIIII Loi.lon. Elgbt countrl4i&amp; are Included in the lUnerary. Stewart's Trailer Park
Raymond Barr &amp; Sons
2~ 6
. Mltlnc the trip with the holltesses are Mickey WoHe and DoubleR Dairy
16 16
15 17
Deblie Narrll, Jllclne, J~ Whitehead, Reedsville; Dick Nease Barr's Groc.
~ PoowlO) Route 3; Vicky Gaul, Olester; Lanl and Stephanie ~~kmerclal &amp; Savings
13 19
13 19
Rail, Galllpolll; Jelnnelte Smith, Addiaon, and Mary Ruth and Erma's Aces
12 20
'-811111' daucbllnofMr.andMrs. HaroldSauer.
~ntral Soya
6 26
""'
'
V1nton Serv. Sta.

Be sure to ask about the great' savings on Bemco
Sacropedic and Sacropedlc Imperial .king and
queen sizes, toQ. Sacropedic makes falling asleep
as easy as A, B, Zzzzuzzzz.
.t

Phono 446·1

Drake, Vinton; Phyllis Knopp, . ..
Mason· Ernestine Faber · &lt;::
Pomeroy; Winnie McKenzie, · ·· ··
Marietta; Debora Elkins, .., '
Albany; Ike Neal, Middleport;
Bertha Foster, Minersville;
Anna Icenhower, Portland;
Belva Fisher, Racine.
DISCHARGED - Mildred
·white, Harold Will, Edna .
Hunnell.
I

lui comfort. So restful even Rip van Winkle would
have approved its comfort. Such a terrific sale
price even Sc roog e would have praised the value.

Ul S.cond

.

June

ADAM
FELT

the merits of the considerable
research benefits it would offer~
rather than on the basis of the
political consideration of its
inception years ago.

HOSPITAL
NEWS

SUMMER COUGH

own on the "many misconcep-

tions in America (today) about
the military as an institution,
the dedicated people who fill its
ranks, and the missions with
which they are charged."

frustrations," he said .

ByHOWARDLUXENBERG
. . . .UPI Business Writer . . . .
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
stock market, suffering as
much from neglect-as from interes! ~ate {ears and monetary
uncertalnty,'moved lower on relatlvely light turnover last
week.
.
.
On Monday San Fr~nc1scoBased Bank of Amenca, the
natlon's largest bank, hik~d its
mortgage loan rate I&gt; po1nt to
1 1&gt; per cent. The action gave
rise to belle! that the prime
ballk Interest rate, from which
other rates are scaled upward,
also may be backed up soon.
In addlllon, speculation
mounted that the Federal Re·
serve Board (FED), and lnde·
pendent agency which reg~ates
credit policy, was preparmg to
tighten the screws a bit on monetary growth In order to keep
!rom rekindling the inflationary
price spiral.
Some Wall Street experts,
however, feared that a move to
slow the outflow of money may
put a crimp In the economic recovery now underway and exert
upward pressure on interest
rates.
For the week, the NYSE
Common Stock Index dipped
0.1~ to 55.80. Standard' &amp; poor's
500 Stock Index fell 0.23 to 101.
07, while the Dow Jones Indus·
trial Average Registered a loss
of ~.68 at 916.47. Declines topped advances, 1,035to 647 among
the 1,827 issues crossing the
tape.
Volwne for the five days aggregated 68,386,830 shares, up
!rom 62,875,390 shares traded
· '·the holiday week earlier, and
well above the 38,992,370 shares
traded during the year ago per-

WASHINGTON (UP!) -Tbe the Potomac lUver just south of on either side during House
·Nixon adminlstraUon has decid- the Jefferson Memorial. It ' interior approprlations hearings
ed .to l9ll plans ten years in the would have housed a research in Aprli.
lllaldJ!g for a spectacular area, library, information cen- Letiecq said he regrets the
naUonal aquarium here on the ter and galleries.
project has not been argued on
banb of the Potomac.
· ltll main feature was to be a
The,administration slapped a 100-foot high, curving, sloping
freeze ' on spending of $9.1 greenhouse. Inside reconatrucmilllon remaining of $10 million lions of the Everglades, the
appropriated for the project, Allantic Coast ancl the Pacific
and'sald It was terminaUng the Coast were to be displayed. .
plans altogether,
It would have been the
Holzer Medical Center, First
The Ini;erlor Department and nation's' largest ·aquarium in Ave. and Cedar St. General
persons in the present small- terms of water volume and the visiting hours 2-4 and 7-9 p:m.
.size National Fisheries Center only one in which research was Maternity visiUng hours 2:30 to
and ..,_quarium refused to talk a part of the program.
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
a~Jo!!t the project to reporters.
Backers liked to say it would Pediatrics Ward.
One, ·who asked not to be be more than a mere "fish
Discharges
Identified, said silence was :menagerie" since it would have
Tanuni L. Angell, Mrs. Larry
ordered by higher administra· told visitors, for inslance, that E. Bailey, Mrs. James R. Casto
tlon officials.
this particular fish Jives in. and daughter, Mrs. Walden 0.
Congreasauthorized construe- swamps on Trinidad and eats' Darst, Lawrence M. Donahoe,
tlon of a national aquarliml in mosquitos -in other words, Mrs. J. David Gregory, Mrs.
1962, largely because of the emphasizing ecology as weU as Myrna J. Hall, Robin L. Herald,
efforts of a powerful congress· fish themselves.
Melvin Jayjohn, Newton J.
man, ·Rep. Michael J. KirWan,
Project Ellmloated
Jones, Jr., Margaret L. Lewis,
OOhlo, who waa chairman of Former Interior Secretary Forrest L. Long, Michael · D.
the -Jiouse . appropriations sub· Walter J. Hickel was an Lynch, Mrs. Claude
Moore,
eommittee for the Interior enthusiastic supporter of the Mrs. Jerry L. Neal, Mrs.
Deparbnent until his death last new aquarium, .and shortly .Richard C. Pumphrey, Albert I.
year,
after he was fired, the White' Reed, Monica Lou . Ridenour,
, ''Kirwan'• Fisb Tank"
House eliminated the project Everette E. · Rinehart, Mrs.
The project became known as from the fiscal1972 budget.
Elise Sherman, Paul C. Smith,
"Kirwan's ·fish tank," but . Aone-man lobbying effort for and Mr. John D. Stanley.
aclually it wbuld have been a the new aquarium has been
Leon Angles, William
great deal more than that.
carried on by Norman LeUecq, Burleson, Mrs. Gary Campbell,
The aquarium was to be built of suburban Greenbelt, Md. He Timothy Cottrill, Helen
on Hains Point, which j~ts into was the only person to.testify, Dempsey, Mrs. Robert Ervin
and son, Mrs. Glenn Escue,
-.,
f
• Mrs . _Jesse .Frazier . and son,
'14'
-~
_,·
.
-~
.. - •
"r a
- );,.
••.
, 'i·
'
'
Mrs:&gt;Wllla[d Fulton, Mrs. Paul
.
I Higginbotham and daughter,
J
I Harold Huchison, Mrs. Viola
1·
I Johnson, Robert Jones, Brooke
I Lambert, Mrs. Harold Leach
I
I and son, Perry Lemley, Sr.,
I
I
I
I John Peters, James Rhodes,
I
I Miss Florence Rowland, Robert
I Br Bob Hoeflich
I Rutherford, Amada Sisson,
I
I
Mrs. Fred Williams, Jerry
I
I Foster, and Mrs. Julia E. Grate.
POMEROY -David J. (JOey) StephellSQn, son of William Ii.
PleasantVaUeyHospltal
Stephenson, Middleport, and Mrs. Vivian Arnott, Racine, will
ADMISSIONS: Mrs. J. E.
graduate fromMt. Vernon Nazarene College at Mt. Vernon, Ohio,
Orner, Huntington ; Richard
lhla spring.
Tolliver, Ashton; Mrs. Rosie
Activities got underway at 4 p. m. Saturday at the relatively
new two )'ear coUege. Dt. George Coulter, general superintendent Dodson, Point Pleasant; Mary
Nibert, Gallipolis Ferry; Fred
'cl.theChurchofthe Nazarene, willspeakatll a. m. today and at 2
Roseberry, Point Pleasant;
p. IIi. an open house will be held. Giving the conunencement Mrs. Roy White, Point
addreSs on Monday will be Sen. Robert A. Taft, Jr., of Cincinnati. Pleasant; Mrs. Harold Wray,
A 4 j:l. m. reception will follow.
Columbus.
FOur members of the Meigs High School's graduating class
DISCHARGES: Shirl ·CamplhlaSprtnlareplannlng to attend !be Mt. Vernon 5ch~J: They are bell, Jan Buxtoii, Mrs. Carl
Katby Moore, Gene PoweU, Gary Ellis and lUck Van Maire.
Mattox, Mrs. · Wanda Givens,
.
Philmore Hudnall, Hiram
~ IJLLY MORGAN, former Letart Falls school teacher Moles.
- s11U.11ujte active at the age of 91 - has arrived from Alberta,
BIRTHS: Son to Mr. and Mrs.
Canada, with her son, Howard, to spend a two week vacation )Vlth Roy White of Point Pleasant.
her brother, Thomas Hayman, Syracuse, aild sister, Norah
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Gorham, of East Letart. Mrs. Morgan came by car, incidentaUy.
ADMITTED - Gertrude

bots.

Army Tough as Ever·. Westmoreland
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Gen. ter of Sigma Della Chi, a proWUiiam C. Westmoreland de- fessional journalism society.
nled Friday that the U.S. Army "Our goal is a modern volunis golrig soft as a result of Its leer army, not a 'mod' army.
effort to attract more volunteers Amodern and professional army
by maklng service life more at- above all must be disciplined
tractive.
- army. An undisciplined army Is
''The army is changing inter- a threat to the society that it
nally to bUlld smaller, leaner, is sworn to defend. We shall
tougher,moreprofessional!orce not sacrifice discipline in any
Westmoreland said In a speech sense."
preparedfortheClevelandChap- Westmoreland's comments

by 70 foot addition will house office quarters and some
production operations. An influx In busines8' made the ad·
diUon necessary, company officials report.

from 1.50

Samsonite Luggage
from 23.00
Meeker Billfolds
from 4.00

from 4.00
from 2.98 ·
from
from 9.00

s.oo

E~~ro

Pajamas from 6.00
j

from 3.50
.,

Free Gill Wrapping .

, I

.

'

Bntish Sterling
from 1.011'

�MONDAY
&amp; TUESDAY
June 14 &amp; 15

deaths of .William J. Spencer, have been a murder-suicide.
mEORY ADVANCED
29, Columbus, and Emily 'J. Their bodies were found Friday
MARIETIA, Ohio (UPI)
The · Washing!on County Carpenter, 26, Coal Run, may · in a car parked in a secluded
spot near here. They both dierl
Sheriff's office believes the

..

'

of gunshot woundl. Oftldlla

said they believed Spenc:ei
'Mrs. Carpenier, and thell
his own life.

.

abo!
toat

•

'.

SACROPEDIC®
.
AND -SACROPEDIC IMPERIAl®

.

.·

A Money Saving Value

RECEIVE CERTIFJCATES- Employees of Lakin State
Hospital recently received certificates for five or more years
of service with Dr. A.M. Gonzales, acting clinical director,
far right, front row, and Hospital Administrator Sam L.
Nichols, Jr., far right second row, are front, left to right,
Lena .McDermitt, Norma Holcomb, Wilda Cole, Etta Hall ;
second row, Sceva Beaver, Mary Robbins, Seraphine
K&lt;lklnas, 10 years; .Jewell Johnson; third row, Bernice
Krell!!, Betty Crsw!ord, Jean Clayton; back row, Betty Sue
KauH, Freeda Hall, Pearl Hall, Hannon Casto, Anna Roach,

GOING UP BY LEAPS and bounds in Middleport is this
green metal addition to the Royal Crown Bottling Co. The 35

ASPIRIN

Darnell Jeffers, Bruce Jeffers. Others receiving certificates,
not pictured, were Reba Schwartz, 10 years; John Roach, Ira
Patterson, Mary Rogers, 15 years; Ama Lewis, 20 years;
Frances Taylor, Kenneth Show, Helen Caynor, George
Cunningham, Alvin Bowles, Orville Poar, Henry Reitmire,
Donald Roush, Leo Bush, Sarah Douglas, Audrey Pickens,
Nancy Pope, Edith Rayburn, Enatella see, Julia Sergent,
Sarah Slayton, Beatrice Smith, Florence Viers and Helen
Fitiswater, five years.

Reg, 2 BotUes Of

National Acquarium Out

100 Tablets 69'
NOW

••

apparently were prompted by
widespread speculation that the
army may be becoming too mod
and too soft in its efforts to
achieve an all volunteer status.
Changes made to remove unnecessary irritants include
permitting longer hair styles,
ending reveille formation s,
increasing
emphais
on
professionalism, and fostering
more participatory leadership.

,,

Launches Own Attack
Westmoreland, Army Chief of
Staff, launched an attack of his

11

Within our country there is

an atmosphere in which the milita ry bears the brunt of national

Sudden Beauty

HAIR S·PRAY
Reg. 98e, Now

For one thing Westmoreland
said, drug abuse is "a social
conditionwithin the United State
and not a unique milita ry problem.

Stocks Slide in Week
Of Light Turnovers

iod.

.

A Chase Manbattan bank official said the FED is likely to
continue Its expansionary policies, but at a slower rate than
in recent months.
John D. Wilson, senior vice
president of Chase, said the nation's money supply in recent

SURVIVORS' BENEFITli
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Congress has been asked by the
acjminllltraUon to pass legislatlon that would pay survivors of
any state or local pollee officer
killed In the llrie of duty $50,000.
Attorney General John N.
Mitchell sent a covering letter
·with the request, saying recent
alaylngs of offi~rs In New
York City and Washington
demonstrated "the risk of
lethal violence faced daily by
peace officers in city after city
across the country."

r.tARRIAGELICENSE
POMEROY - Wayne Eddie
'Waagooer, 2o, Sandyv!Ue, W.
V1., Route 2, and Mary Lou
~. II, l'Omeroy.

•

months has been growing at an
annual rate of 10 to 11 per cent
He said this could be inflationary if continued over any !engthy period, "so I believe the
monetary authorities will seek
to get back on a growth path
of about 6 per cent."
'
"Too Fragil"
"Your economic recovery pattern is too fragil at this point
towithstandanysledgehammer
blows from interest rates ., said
Monte Gordon of Bache'&amp; Co.
He added that the rise in mortgagerateslndlcateskeyinterest
rates are going up when they
should be easing.
Newton Zinder of J.G. Hutton
&amp; Co. said "it was primarily
interest rate fear that weighed
on the market." The analyst
noted there is a feeling the
money supply may have expanded more rapidly than necessary last month and that the
FED may have to lake some
offsetting measures which could
result in upward pressure on interes! rates .
. Saul Smerling of Standard &amp;
Poor's said he doesn 't believe
the FED is slamming the prake
on the money supply. He said
it is only trying to avoid an
upthrust in inflation.

pression given by certain people
that the drug problem in the
military overseas, particularly

"The FED has been pouring
money into the system with a
pretty open hand, and it is only
tempering the policy a bit for
an over expansive one to something closer to the frequently
mentioned target of 5 to 6 per
cent in the rate of increase ,"
Smerling concluded.
Leo Lancer of ~runs, Nordeman &amp; Co., sa1d because econom1c recovery IS not as robust
as expected there are a lot of
doubters and as a result you
have forces of selling and indecision ."
.
Lancer, however, said the
stl!ge is set for a good market
recovery. He believes economic
indicator will improve in the
months ahead and that many
people will be convinc~~ of this
durmg the summer. At that
time," Lancer concluded, more
people are hkely to lake posltions in the market."
Most of the widest moving
electt·onics were in reverse
gear. Oils and rails traded in
both directions , as did
chemicals, aircrafts. an d
motors. Steels and a~rhn es
declined.
.
.
Amencan Telephone, wh1ch
headed the active list, picked
up 1% to 46 on 692,500 shares.

Gently Relieves Pain
Due To Ear Wax

in Vietnam, is one o£ the major

causes of the national drug problem," he said.
"Such a line of reasoning is
about as accurate as saying
that the military is the ma jor
cause of dissent, racial and environmental problems within the
United States."
Army Backs Drug Program
The army, which he said pioneered among the services in
d,rug amnesty and threatment
programs, fully backs President
Nixon's new national drug program, Westmoreland said. ·
He said it is unfair to judge
the army on the basis of the
few who have failed to live up
to its high professional standard
The army welcomes constructi ve criticism, he said , but be-

lieves public understanding
must be "balanced, informed
and sympathetic."
"If the military continues to
receive indiscriminate abuse, if
it is not provided adequate resources and if it is not supported as an essential and respectable profession , we can hardly
expect to attract young Americans to serve in the numbers
and quality required, and the
consequences for our nation will

be ominous indeed," Westmoreland said.

SIDE•

Mon.

VICKS NYQUIL
Reg. '
59
'
$2.29
Auro
EAR DROPS

1(1 view with alarm the im-

MANCROFT MENS

Reg.

HANDKERCHIEFS

$2.25
Now

69

'

for
on~

MICKEY MOUSE

FELT TIP MARKERS
Reg,
5 for 51.49
Now

for

LIPSTICK
~

and
Tues.

Of the Bend

.

LOTION

-~
~

Beat••;.

Reg. 89t
Now

HAIR SffiiNG

Reg, s1.50; Special

----------------------------··

Woodbury
SHAMPOO

Max Factor

Reg. 79t, Now

TALENTED MUSICIAN, KAREN GRIFFI'Ill, daughter of
Mr, and Mi-s. Charles GrHflth of Pomeroy, has transferred from
the college of music at Ohio State University to the college of
agriculture, antmalsclence. Karen has this ambition to become a

'

and

SPRAY-A-WAVE

Select Group

DRESS SHIRTS

Dress Pants
Values
To s15oo

Button down collars in solids
and fan c ies . By B. V . D.•
Shapley and Van He usen.
sizes 14 112 to 16'12.

'

12 PRICE

20 PAIRS

Jarman Shoes
Values
To s1495

Reg, sl98 to '6.00

Now

'

yu
n E.. HU.1
!

Reg.

$1.25

HELENE RUBINSTEIN
HEAVEN SENT

.
"

G'allipolis, Ohio •

llll!l_ _ _ _ __

'

.

WHEN BIG BEND REGATTA WEEKEND rolls around,
members of St. Paul Lutheran Church tradltlonaUy take to their
Ice cream freezers.
This year Ia no exception and ·the church members will serve
the hlmemade lee cream along with sandwiches, baked goods,
beveragelandsaladsfr~ 11 a. m. to 7p. m. Friday and Saturday
in fellowship hall.
The hall ordinarily has been the -setting for t)le regatta art
show·but this year the scope of the show will be reduced. A small
shoW will be staged by Melga COunty members of the French City
Art Colony at the church hall. A.Jarger show will be staged on ihe
upper parldng lot in Pom~roy by Ruth Gosney who will covet a
COIIVerted bus wjth painllngs and will ~a 40 foot ·snow fence as

HAND &amp;BODY LOTION

:~
Now.________' _

00

Now

Currier &amp; lves
INSTANT
SHAVE CREAM
Reg.
·

$~! 79~

. another dllplay area.

DESERT
FLOWER
. '··
• .t 'I

HAND &amp; BODY .LOTION
Reg, Sl.OO '
Now ______ _:. __ _

00

Second and State

'

i

Price &amp; Sons Pharmacy

.

-.;;i.iiiiii·----11111!1-llll!l____
122 Second Ave.

MAX FACTOR

15

Mens

doctor of veterinarian medicine. She will be continuin_g her
. . private music lessons at State, however, despite the transfer from
the college of m111ic.

14

99

Gallipolis, .Qhio

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

Meigs

Property
Transfers
James E. Pape, Judy A. Pape
to Donald R. Tripplett, Mary
Tripplett, Part. Jot 461, Middleport.
Jemo Associates, Inc. to
Wanda L. Smith, Lot 15, Middleport.
Jemo Associates Inc., to
Terrence Lee Johnson, Brigitte
Johnson, Lot 12, Middleport.
Jesse Lambert to Danny B.
Brown, Cordelia C. Brown,
Lots, Pomeroy.
Howard E. Young, Betty J.
Young to Paul P. Simon, Allie
M. Simon, .60 A., Chester.
Wilbert McClain to Joseph D.
Glenn, Janice M. Glenn, 30 A.,
Orange.
Hobert Durham, Marion
Durham to Robert R. Hersman,
Ruth E. Hersman, 30 A., Salem.
William Reynolds, Florence
Reynolds to Austin William
Phillips, Maxine Marie Phillips,
Lot 174, Pomeroy .
Ron McDade, Loretta McDade to Gerald E. Hilferty,
Eli2abeth M. Hilferty, 30 A.,
Salisbury.
C. E. Austin, Lois I. Austin to
Denny W. Garnes, Bertha Jane
Garnes, 134.60 A., Rutland.
Denny W. Games, Bertha
Jane Garnes to Jaymar Coal
Co., 134.60 A., Rutland.

Save yourself a lot of money and sleepless nights.
Because right now, we're taking $40 off the price
of the Bemco Sacropedic and Bemco Sacropedic
Imperial mattress sets.
Think of it, Save $40 per set for a limited time only,
and still get the benefits of Bemco's exclusive
Unifused3 Construction, healthful support and rest-

'

,.

Collipoli&amp;·

&lt;!I••/•.{·••J·. I:• II
)
,:.
•·

H•

Makes your
Father's' Day Shopping easy.~··
DRESS SLACKS

SUMMER SUITS
Kingsridge
J&amp;F
Cricketeer

H.l. S.

from 85.00
from 59.95
from 65.00
49.95

Sewell

' ' •"

Cricketeer

from
from
from
from

Sewell
Kingsridge
rempo
\

SHOES
Freeman
Nunn Bush

45.00
29.95
65,00
55.00

June9, 1971
Double R Da l&lt;'y took 6 points
from Central Soya. l;ilgh for
Double R· Dairy was Edle
Robinette 1~6- 354. High for
Central Soya was Debbie
Howard 108-291.
Barr's Grocery look 6 points
from Erma's Aces. High for

Arrow

.

Campus
'
Arrow
'"
McGregor

from 6.00

Portis

119-322. High for Erma's
. Aces was Nancy Moeller 136·
~each

Stelson

BELTS

'

· fro~

3.98
from7.98

Paris

SWIM WEAR
Rugby
Campus
McGregor
Hang Ten

Shop Fri : Nite
'ti I 8

..

from 4.. 00
from 5.50
from 5.50

•

STRAW HATS

· Barr's Grocery was Kathl

from 16.95
from 19.95

SPORT SHIRTS

DRESS SHIRTS

HAPPY-GO-LUCKY
BOWLING LEAGUE

from7.98
from 8.98
from 23.95
from 27.50

Reston
Kingsridge
Sans-a-belt

SPORT COATS

Local Bowling

• ·
AFU!,n:R SHOW at lhia year's Big Bend Regatta activities Jlol.
11bou1i1 be aJ\added attraction. Awards for the winners are being
Stewart's Trailer Park took 6
·
th
Co 1 points• from Commercial &amp;
provided by the Meigs County Branch of tile A ens un Y sa.vlngs Bank. High for
1
. Stewart's Trailer Park was
Slvqa and LoaD Alan.
·
VIcky Adkins 218-517. High for
AGJCOOP FROM!UI(is ~· GAI.J.IA Counties wm leave ~~~~:ft~ 1~o~e~W'?&amp;. Bank
iGdlv fnlm CCIIumbul for the John F. Kennedy Airport in NeJIV
Raymond Barr &amp; Sons took 8
'
•
points from Vinton Service
Yart. fraai whete they will begin their jaunt to Europe.
station. High for Raymond Barr
Mrs. Fay Sauer IIIII Mrs. Alice Nease are hostesaes for the 22 was Doris Copley 165-433 ... High
day tour of Europe which will include visits to Amaterdam, for Vlnt011 Service Station was
Brumfield 147-378.
Amhelm, Coi!Jil18, the Rhineland, Heidelberg -area, Zurich, Doris
standi 119s:
W L
Lucerne, lnnsll'uck, Venice, ·Fl~nnce, Rome, Milan, Geneva,
27 5
Parla IIIII Loi.lon. Elgbt countrl4i&amp; are Included in the lUnerary. Stewart's Trailer Park
Raymond Barr &amp; Sons
2~ 6
. Mltlnc the trip with the holltesses are Mickey WoHe and DoubleR Dairy
16 16
15 17
Deblie Narrll, Jllclne, J~ Whitehead, Reedsville; Dick Nease Barr's Groc.
~ PoowlO) Route 3; Vicky Gaul, Olester; Lanl and Stephanie ~~kmerclal &amp; Savings
13 19
13 19
Rail, Galllpolll; Jelnnelte Smith, Addiaon, and Mary Ruth and Erma's Aces
12 20
'-811111' daucbllnofMr.andMrs. HaroldSauer.
~ntral Soya
6 26
""'
'
V1nton Serv. Sta.

Be sure to ask about the great' savings on Bemco
Sacropedic and Sacropedlc Imperial .king and
queen sizes, toQ. Sacropedic makes falling asleep
as easy as A, B, Zzzzuzzzz.
.t

Phono 446·1

Drake, Vinton; Phyllis Knopp, . ..
Mason· Ernestine Faber · &lt;::
Pomeroy; Winnie McKenzie, · ·· ··
Marietta; Debora Elkins, .., '
Albany; Ike Neal, Middleport;
Bertha Foster, Minersville;
Anna Icenhower, Portland;
Belva Fisher, Racine.
DISCHARGED - Mildred
·white, Harold Will, Edna .
Hunnell.
I

lui comfort. So restful even Rip van Winkle would
have approved its comfort. Such a terrific sale
price even Sc roog e would have praised the value.

Ul S.cond

.

June

ADAM
FELT

the merits of the considerable
research benefits it would offer~
rather than on the basis of the
political consideration of its
inception years ago.

HOSPITAL
NEWS

SUMMER COUGH

own on the "many misconcep-

tions in America (today) about
the military as an institution,
the dedicated people who fill its
ranks, and the missions with
which they are charged."

frustrations," he said .

ByHOWARDLUXENBERG
. . . .UPI Business Writer . . . .
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
stock market, suffering as
much from neglect-as from interes! ~ate {ears and monetary
uncertalnty,'moved lower on relatlvely light turnover last
week.
.
.
On Monday San Fr~nc1scoBased Bank of Amenca, the
natlon's largest bank, hik~d its
mortgage loan rate I&gt; po1nt to
1 1&gt; per cent. The action gave
rise to belle! that the prime
ballk Interest rate, from which
other rates are scaled upward,
also may be backed up soon.
In addlllon, speculation
mounted that the Federal Re·
serve Board (FED), and lnde·
pendent agency which reg~ates
credit policy, was preparmg to
tighten the screws a bit on monetary growth In order to keep
!rom rekindling the inflationary
price spiral.
Some Wall Street experts,
however, feared that a move to
slow the outflow of money may
put a crimp In the economic recovery now underway and exert
upward pressure on interest
rates.
For the week, the NYSE
Common Stock Index dipped
0.1~ to 55.80. Standard' &amp; poor's
500 Stock Index fell 0.23 to 101.
07, while the Dow Jones Indus·
trial Average Registered a loss
of ~.68 at 916.47. Declines topped advances, 1,035to 647 among
the 1,827 issues crossing the
tape.
Volwne for the five days aggregated 68,386,830 shares, up
!rom 62,875,390 shares traded
· '·the holiday week earlier, and
well above the 38,992,370 shares
traded during the year ago per-

WASHINGTON (UP!) -Tbe the Potomac lUver just south of on either side during House
·Nixon adminlstraUon has decid- the Jefferson Memorial. It ' interior approprlations hearings
ed .to l9ll plans ten years in the would have housed a research in Aprli.
lllaldJ!g for a spectacular area, library, information cen- Letiecq said he regrets the
naUonal aquarium here on the ter and galleries.
project has not been argued on
banb of the Potomac.
· ltll main feature was to be a
The,administration slapped a 100-foot high, curving, sloping
freeze ' on spending of $9.1 greenhouse. Inside reconatrucmilllon remaining of $10 million lions of the Everglades, the
appropriated for the project, Allantic Coast ancl the Pacific
and'sald It was terminaUng the Coast were to be displayed. .
plans altogether,
It would have been the
Holzer Medical Center, First
The Ini;erlor Department and nation's' largest ·aquarium in Ave. and Cedar St. General
persons in the present small- terms of water volume and the visiting hours 2-4 and 7-9 p:m.
.size National Fisheries Center only one in which research was Maternity visiUng hours 2:30 to
and ..,_quarium refused to talk a part of the program.
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
a~Jo!!t the project to reporters.
Backers liked to say it would Pediatrics Ward.
One, ·who asked not to be be more than a mere "fish
Discharges
Identified, said silence was :menagerie" since it would have
Tanuni L. Angell, Mrs. Larry
ordered by higher administra· told visitors, for inslance, that E. Bailey, Mrs. James R. Casto
tlon officials.
this particular fish Jives in. and daughter, Mrs. Walden 0.
Congreasauthorized construe- swamps on Trinidad and eats' Darst, Lawrence M. Donahoe,
tlon of a national aquarliml in mosquitos -in other words, Mrs. J. David Gregory, Mrs.
1962, largely because of the emphasizing ecology as weU as Myrna J. Hall, Robin L. Herald,
efforts of a powerful congress· fish themselves.
Melvin Jayjohn, Newton J.
man, ·Rep. Michael J. KirWan,
Project Ellmloated
Jones, Jr., Margaret L. Lewis,
OOhlo, who waa chairman of Former Interior Secretary Forrest L. Long, Michael · D.
the -Jiouse . appropriations sub· Walter J. Hickel was an Lynch, Mrs. Claude
Moore,
eommittee for the Interior enthusiastic supporter of the Mrs. Jerry L. Neal, Mrs.
Deparbnent until his death last new aquarium, .and shortly .Richard C. Pumphrey, Albert I.
year,
after he was fired, the White' Reed, Monica Lou . Ridenour,
, ''Kirwan'• Fisb Tank"
House eliminated the project Everette E. · Rinehart, Mrs.
The project became known as from the fiscal1972 budget.
Elise Sherman, Paul C. Smith,
"Kirwan's ·fish tank," but . Aone-man lobbying effort for and Mr. John D. Stanley.
aclually it wbuld have been a the new aquarium has been
Leon Angles, William
great deal more than that.
carried on by Norman LeUecq, Burleson, Mrs. Gary Campbell,
The aquarium was to be built of suburban Greenbelt, Md. He Timothy Cottrill, Helen
on Hains Point, which j~ts into was the only person to.testify, Dempsey, Mrs. Robert Ervin
and son, Mrs. Glenn Escue,
-.,
f
• Mrs . _Jesse .Frazier . and son,
'14'
-~
_,·
.
-~
.. - •
"r a
- );,.
••.
, 'i·
'
'
Mrs:&gt;Wllla[d Fulton, Mrs. Paul
.
I Higginbotham and daughter,
J
I Harold Huchison, Mrs. Viola
1·
I Johnson, Robert Jones, Brooke
I Lambert, Mrs. Harold Leach
I
I and son, Perry Lemley, Sr.,
I
I
I
I John Peters, James Rhodes,
I
I Miss Florence Rowland, Robert
I Br Bob Hoeflich
I Rutherford, Amada Sisson,
I
I
Mrs. Fred Williams, Jerry
I
I Foster, and Mrs. Julia E. Grate.
POMEROY -David J. (JOey) StephellSQn, son of William Ii.
PleasantVaUeyHospltal
Stephenson, Middleport, and Mrs. Vivian Arnott, Racine, will
ADMISSIONS: Mrs. J. E.
graduate fromMt. Vernon Nazarene College at Mt. Vernon, Ohio,
Orner, Huntington ; Richard
lhla spring.
Tolliver, Ashton; Mrs. Rosie
Activities got underway at 4 p. m. Saturday at the relatively
new two )'ear coUege. Dt. George Coulter, general superintendent Dodson, Point Pleasant; Mary
Nibert, Gallipolis Ferry; Fred
'cl.theChurchofthe Nazarene, willspeakatll a. m. today and at 2
Roseberry, Point Pleasant;
p. IIi. an open house will be held. Giving the conunencement Mrs. Roy White, Point
addreSs on Monday will be Sen. Robert A. Taft, Jr., of Cincinnati. Pleasant; Mrs. Harold Wray,
A 4 j:l. m. reception will follow.
Columbus.
FOur members of the Meigs High School's graduating class
DISCHARGES: Shirl ·CamplhlaSprtnlareplannlng to attend !be Mt. Vernon 5ch~J: They are bell, Jan Buxtoii, Mrs. Carl
Katby Moore, Gene PoweU, Gary Ellis and lUck Van Maire.
Mattox, Mrs. · Wanda Givens,
.
Philmore Hudnall, Hiram
~ IJLLY MORGAN, former Letart Falls school teacher Moles.
- s11U.11ujte active at the age of 91 - has arrived from Alberta,
BIRTHS: Son to Mr. and Mrs.
Canada, with her son, Howard, to spend a two week vacation )Vlth Roy White of Point Pleasant.
her brother, Thomas Hayman, Syracuse, aild sister, Norah
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Gorham, of East Letart. Mrs. Morgan came by car, incidentaUy.
ADMITTED - Gertrude

bots.

Army Tough as Ever·. Westmoreland
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Gen. ter of Sigma Della Chi, a proWUiiam C. Westmoreland de- fessional journalism society.
nled Friday that the U.S. Army "Our goal is a modern volunis golrig soft as a result of Its leer army, not a 'mod' army.
effort to attract more volunteers Amodern and professional army
by maklng service life more at- above all must be disciplined
tractive.
- army. An undisciplined army Is
''The army is changing inter- a threat to the society that it
nally to bUlld smaller, leaner, is sworn to defend. We shall
tougher,moreprofessional!orce not sacrifice discipline in any
Westmoreland said In a speech sense."
preparedfortheClevelandChap- Westmoreland's comments

by 70 foot addition will house office quarters and some
production operations. An influx In busines8' made the ad·
diUon necessary, company officials report.

from 1.50

Samsonite Luggage
from 23.00
Meeker Billfolds
from 4.00

from 4.00
from 2.98 ·
from
from 9.00

s.oo

E~~ro

Pajamas from 6.00
j

from 3.50
.,

Free Gill Wrapping .

, I

.

'

Bntish Sterling
from 1.011'

�.

10- Tile~ Times-Sentinel,Sunday, June 13,1971

..

There's a Sure Road to Our .H appiness

11- Tbe ~Times· Sentinel, SUnday. June 13.19'11

on the roof; just to be alive, and
By GOLDIE CLENDENIN work.
PORTLAND _ Happiness, Don't lose your temper. Meet put your feet on the floor and
THE HOMETOWN PAPER
Joseph Addison wrote, "Arises' others more than half way ; walk wherever you want.
By Otis Shirk
Uke missing the water when
In the enjoyment of oneself." unless we enjoy our work we
There's somelhlng aboot the most of us,
Dr. VIncent Peale tells us seldom enjoy our leisure time. the well goes dry, &amp;ne never
No matter· where we go,
"Thillk happy and you wUI ~ We need a good relationship appreciates two g,ood feet until
We
have within a longing,
happy." But happiness ~obert with the boss, to face up to our you lose the use of them.
At least I've found It so,
It's even wonderful to have.
Ingersoll says "Is ~ make responsibility. Learn to "put
To
keep In touch with loved 'ones
others so." '
out" even in his absence. Then two not so good ones; with
While wandering up and down,
Comes· now Frank Gilbreth he (or she) will listen to an hammer toes stlll wired up, you
And we love to see the paper
Jr., In his, "Time out for hap: honest complaint or criticism can still push a walker around.
From the old hometown.
pineu," with much more to say and ~ttempt ~remedy matters. Whoever thought up that conoo the what, why and how of it. If thiS doesn t work, maybe a 1raption to lean on and get
II receives a hearty welcome
around with?
Such an Illusive thing it comes change 18 in order.
As It makes lis regular round.
and slips away b;fore we No~ many jobs are too I remind myself of the man
Telling us of our old friends
reallze It's bere.
complicated to be mastered, but who worried about having no
And where they may be found.
Coprses on happiness are not getting along well with co- shoes until he met the man who
It just sort ol keeps together
taught in schools. Perhaps they workers is a big factor in the had no feet. It's good to be
Hearis1rlngs
once entwined;
s11ould be
along with success and enjoyment of reminded of our blessings and
Jl's the voice lrom oor old hometown,
"preparation' for marriage," em~loyment. It is ~ore blessed how unworthy we really are.
Where town and paper seem combiDed.
sex education,· etc. A certain to g1ve than to recetve, but one
amount of happiness comes must learn to accept a favor There's happiness in
The "On to VIctory" honor roll
remembering a sunset, dew on
naturally but more can be had graciously.
Names each lass and lad.
if we try 'tor it.
Temperance in all things; and the roses in early morning,
And shows the old town's given up
One needa to take time out of 1ry to keep the home life hollyhocks, family reunions,
The very best it bad.
and
the busy hours to recognize and satisfactory helps keep the job Mother's, Father's
We read and tbillk: Around the world
enjoy happiness, court and going. And lear_n to enjoy the Children's Days; church bell
They're scattered everywhere,
chimes, sound of the happy
pursue it, and above all, be litUe things of life.
And then, "Oh, GOO protect each one,"
grateful for 11. we make our- Wear a .smile or pleasant look. laughter of children at play; an
We breathe In sUent prayer.
selves unhappy, by being Bu: nobody loves a door mat. old rustic mlll, school days,
unkind, selfish, moody;_ afraid Think hi_ghly of yourself, and June days, the first home or
It tells us of our·fighting men
to Uve, and more afraid to die. others wdl, too, for you project child, or grandchild; a family
Prepared bJ face the brunt,
There are so many varillt!ons your image of yourself to altar, red geraniums.
·
And It carries news to cheer them on
Remember, life can really be
of happiness: Contemplation of othen.
.
News from the old home front.
past pleasures, doing 8 good Things go w~ong so~etimes beautiful if we open our eyes to
Folks
away receive it
deed every day counting .. ; Most good things don t come see aU the good things that were
And bOld It ill renown bleaslngs, a Beethoven Sym- easilr. Through G~·~ negatives meant to be:
They're glad to get the paper
phooy stamp or coin collection we diScover the positives; there Never ask of happiness
From the old hometown.
loving' God.
' Is purpose in looking back, that That you see It ,come
TheGilbrethswere the first to we may see ahead; the past 1s a Trumpet led In full parade,
lnslat on workerS' being given clue to the future, and we're all Marching to a drum.
· rest periods. They budgeted equal in the sight of heaven.
Watching least a plume pass
their time and money; these Happiness can be w~klng .up Seldom will It pass for more A drum's faint roll.
So hearken down.the least day
And you not see!
happiness minutes (fore-runner to a new day, be 11 bnght and Than fragment of the whole-Isabelle Bryan Longfellow
Whatever
It
may
be
. of today's coffee breaks) proved sunshiney or a warm, slow rain A small fiag, a brief born,
that elimination of fatigue, - -- - - - - -- - - - -- -- - - -- - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - resulted in faster, better and
safer production.
Bowling Green State UniverWe must believe In happiness,
sity, Cleveland Stale Univerconvince ourselves thst we can
sity, Kent State University,
be happy. AB Doug Mallach's
Miami University, Ohio State
poem goes:
University, Ohio University, the
"You bave to beUeve fn .
University of Akron, the
happlneu,
University of Cincinnati, and
COLUMBUS - Funding for matching funds for six electricity and electronics for the University of Toledo.
Or happfaess aever comu.
Ah, that's the reason a bird voca tiona! construction. vocational education con- 300 students from MayfiHd and
Approval will also be
preparation of vocational struction projects. Included in neighboring Beachwood, recommended for $22,464 in
can sial;
On bfl dartetl day be teachers, and student em- the total are:
Orange, and Richmond Heights federal funds for employment of
ployment - including Meigs -$1,966,633 for a new Ucking school districts. This project is students in East liverpool,
belleva Ia Sprlq.
County - Is slated to come County Joint Vocational School pending passage of a local levy Slam, and Sandusky city school
Want a new car? Save for It, before the State Board of to, serve 1,600 students in 2S on June 15 . ..
districts, and in the local school
and when you can afford to, buy Education at its regular vocational areas.
-$16,653 for a renovation to districts of Meigs and
and take good care of it; enjoy monthly meeting in Columbus -$560,765 for a vocational add cosmetology to present Strasburg-Franklin and
it. Learn to like and enjoy your on Monday.
addition to Mayfield High vocational
offerings
at Tuscarawas Valley.
Supt. of Public Instruction School (Cuyahoga County) Washington High School
work. Time will pass more
Federal funds equal to 80 pet.
swiftly and will pay rich Martin W. Essex will recom- which will provide programs in (Massillon
City
School of the cost of the program are
dividends. Live longer, mend that the board approve business and office education, District), which will ac- available under the Vocational
healthier lives and do better $4,409,670 In State Issue No. 1 auto mechanics, cosmetology, commodate 40 students.
Education Amendments of 1968.
-$1,486,54Uor an additional The districts' 20 pet. share will
facility in Montgomery County be $5,616.
Joint Vocational School District Proposed state plans for ·Title
to serve 850 students from three lll, National Defense Education
districts in Preble County which Act, and Title Ill, Elementary
have been added to the jointure. and Secondary Education Act,
The school will provide ex- as required by the U.S. Office of
tensive offerings in business Education, will also be
office education, plus child recommended for Board action.
care, food service, appliance The proposed plans contain no
repair, auto air conditioning, significant changes from
auto body, cosmetology, car- previous years.
pentry, drafting , electricity, The Board will consider
electronics, hydraulics - iransfers of territory' from
pneumatics, and welding.
Miamisburg City School
-$379,070 for additional of- District to West carrollton City
ferings at Woodland Job Center, School District, from West
Cleveland City School District. Carrollton City School District
The proposed courses are auto to Kettering City School
body repair for 50 high school District, and from Western
students ; auto-gruck main- Reserve Local School District
tenance for 125 high school (Huron County) to Norwalk City
students and 125 adults; and School District. Represengraphic arts for 50 students.
tatives of all boards of
Essex will also recommend education involved attended
that the board approve summary conferences with the
$1,787,630 for reimbursement to Department on April 28 and
universities with which the appeared before the Board at its
state has contracted for May 10 meeting.
vocational teacher preparation.
Federal legislation and the Ohio
Master Plan for Vocational
TWO KILLED
Education both give the stale BRILLIANT, Ohio (UP! l - A
Department of Education one-car smashup took the lives
responsibility for assuring an of two West Virginia men
adequate supply of vocational Saturday on Ohio 7 three miles
teacher~. The Department's· south of here. Officials iden. ' -· ..!5 ~i o; •.
Division
of
Vocational tified the victims as David W.
Education contracts for up to 50 Stouffer, 21, New Cumberland,
per cent of the cost of vocational and Gregory A. Crow, 21, New i
teacher preparation with Manchester.

Funds for Voc-Ed, Hiring
Of Students, Recommended

··

Ohio Politics

•

"252 THIRD AVE.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

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

U. S. Govt. ·Inspected

Includes: 3 Breast Quarters,
3 Leg Quarters, 3 Wings,
2 Pkgs. Giblets &amp; 2 Necks

Yle Resene The Right

To Limit Quantities~"
All Items In Thil Ad.

Prices Effective Thru
Sot. June 19, 1971.

Hone Sold To· Deolen.

•
Miller m

•
tCh
SWI
FAP

SOUND RI,PE

BANANAS
*
LOW

PRICE
SPECIAL

!

137

Pine Street

Gallipolis, Ohio
'

3-lb. Can
'STATE FARE
SLICED

WH'ITE BREAD.

*
*

'THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

ernor an\! individual lawmakers ship of the Republicans, the atmay becOme stalled in the• lernative Is giving Gilligan a
legislative process and must be budget-U~x j!lan he wiU sign. In
considered as part of the · that case, he has a victory in
trading material in the event of the fiscal arena and at least. an
k
the
a budget-tax stalemate.
even bre_a. on o r matters.
Alternative
For Gilligan, a delay means
th
d
f
While a delay pas1 e en o pressure bw'lding up on his SJ'de
governor's office in 1974. Hence, the fiscal year . inight reflect and ~ chance to ~egot!ale some
the stubborn attitude on both badly on the legiSlative leader- of his other proJects off dead
sides.
What is needed to spur action
is pressure and bargaining material. Both will become more
.
abundant as the summer wears
on.
ftem: Special interest groups
already on the warpath, will
form a withering combination
The old adage "look before you leap" was never more apwith the summer heat to ·wilt proprla~ than it Is today, as inore and more Americans head for
even the most determined poli- our coasts, lakes, and waterways in search of fun and relaxation .
tician.
'
Many of these people are Inexperienced and untaught and turnItem: The state Ap, ing them loose with small boats, scuba equipment, or water skis
portionment Board, con1rolled
3-2 by Democrats, will begin is ahnost !IS dangerous as handing a child a loaded gun.
There is a wealth of enjoyment and happy recreation to be had
formal meeting in August to
from
all kinds ol water sports. Once people know whal the
slice up legislative districts.
Republican bending on taxes dangers are, how to avoid them, how to be safe in and on the
might dull the carving knife water. These lessons must be ·teamed beforehand, and the
American Red Cross has been teaching people to safely enjoy the
poised over GPP territory.
Item: If there is no action on water since 1914.
For all those who engage in aquatic sports, whether they
a tax bill. by Sep. 1, organized
labor will be empowered to try swim in a home pool or take to the open water in a cabin cruiser,
to place on the Novembei' bal- the Red Cross has these simple suggestions:
Learn how to awlm.
lot a $5Qa million package of
Learn the safe handling of amall cra!L
new taxes aimed mainly at business and industry and including
Mlike aure your children ean swim.
no income tax. Neither side is
Learn effedve, safe. rescue tecbnlques.
anxious to see this happen.
l.,eam how to give artlflelal respiration.
Item: Pet projects of the govRed Cross free classes in swimming and lifesaving skills are
available in most Red Cross chapters. An excellent manual to
guide parents in teaching young children to swim is also
available.
Last year, nearly 3 million Americans thought it worthwhile
to earn cerUficales in these courses. Nearly 41 million people
have availed themselves of this lifeprolecting training through
the years.
Red Cross Water safety training is provided to help add to
yow family's safety and pleasure. AB yourself one question: is
A deputy said that the water your family really in, on, or about the water? "
in the wells seemed to be all
right and that the poisons had
not seeped through to the well
water. He said the residents
could use the well water for any
purpose.
A suspect in the dumping,
Garry Hiles, 24, Portsmouth,
will have a hearing next Thursday before Municipal Court Judge Charles Smith. He is being
held in ihe Scioto County Jail.
Hiles, who served four years
in a federal prison camp for
stealing a car, pleaded innocent
to three counts of killing fish.
He faces charges of destroyed
property and putting poison into
a lake.
Sheriff Knauff said he had ' 'no
idea" why the poisons were
dumped into the lake, built in
the late 193~ for a penal system honor camp which has gone
out of existence.

!''::;

"ALL PURPOSE GRIND"

*

'

.

COFF·EE

PRICE
SPECIAL

Small Craft
and
..
Water Safety

•
al
.LOCal OffICI S \_
• g tO 'Hear
Meetm
$20 Million Plan

T·HOROFARE
VANILLA

.. ,
·

ICEGallon
CREAM
Pkg.

PILLSBURY
Refrigerated Eura light

BuHermilk Biscuits

4 ~~~~ ·43c

GAIN
DETER'GENT
5-lb. 4-oz.
Pkg.

$1 • 45

will

C~RPET

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•n-

GET

~%
2

$ .95
sq. yd.

and up

INTEREST

ON YOUR
SAVINGS
On a one year $1,000
savings certificate
you'll receive a big S'12
per cent interest paid
monthly if desired.

GAI!IPOLIS
SAVINGS
&amp; LOAN CO.
Opp. Post Office
Gallipolis, Ohio
Ph. 446-3832

Padding
and Labor
INCLUDED

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

INDOOR-OUTDOOR . CARPET
NOT
.
INCLUDED IN THIS SPECIAL!
WE ALSO HAVE ...

e ARMSTRONG VINYL QUAKERTONE
LINOLEUM. 9 &amp; 12 WIDTHS
e ARMSTRONG VINYL CUSHION
FLOOR LINOLEUM

842 S.cond Ave.

Phone 446·1405
Gallipolis

'.

The day e.police ca.le..,;. _ ·us. ..

t

•
I
!·-

I

COMPUTER CENTER SITE
TOLEDO (UP!) _ Owens·
d Thursday It
1'11•mo•s
announce
has offered six to 10 acres of
Ia d to be . d
the site for
th~ North::! g~io Regional
Computer. Center .
Board Chairman Raymond H.
Mulford said the offer of land
was made to both Bowling
Green State University and the
University of Toledo, the two
schools planning the computer
te
ce~e ~id the proposed gift was
a roved by the board WednesPP
daii.e 1ract of land is located
in the firm's Levis Development
p k
ar near Perrysburg .

I

!.

TO VISIT PARK
GALLIPOLIS - Cub Scout
·Pack 203 will visit Camden Park •
Wednesday. Parents are to
contact Mrs. Julia Kirby, den
mother, at 446-2363 for further
____.....,nformation. Members must

1

KEEBL'ER•s Red Tag Sale
FIG BARS . . . . , . . . 'ti~~$
Chocolate Chip Cookies . ~~i~~- for
FA~~~oN Oatmeal Cookies ':k~~

center in the General Assembly.
Thus, it is easy to speculate
that a "continuation" budget of
fl billion with no new taxes
could be enacted by the end of
the · month, and the jockeying
could start all over again.
There are p)enty of theories
about the ultimate outcome, all
with holes In them. Two of the
more intriguing are these:
-The Republicans will send
Gilligan an expanded budget
with an income tax to finance
it. He
veto the income tax
and
corresponding

ditures without improving the numerous calls fr~m residents
efficiency and effectiveness of inquiring about the use of well
public assistance."
water.

1-lb. 'Loaf

T·RADE WI·NDS
,
BREADED" FANTAIL SHRIMP-. S:O',; 10-oz
Pkg. 89c
6-or.
BREADED OYSTEIS . . . . . . ~~ Pkg. 59c
$1
SHIIMP COCKTAIL . ....... .- 3 4-oz.
Jan

FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAViNGS!

Ih.

THOROFME

*

'

&lt;

Great for salad or eating out af hand

*
LOW

ly to push anyone intO hasty
agreements which could backfire later..
Too much is at stake. The
De mocra Is are bent on laking
con1rol of the legislature In 1972
d the Repub.licans are equallY
an
intent of regaining control of the

Poisoned .Pond
•
d
d
Maybe AVol e

LOW
PRICE
SPECIAL

Simply tell us what you would like to buy in the way of a
new Mobile home and we'll arrange for the financing in
advance. You will know exactly what you can count on and
that will help yo-u make a better deal. Incidentally, we can
save you some money on the financing if that will help.
Stop in.

aching a compromise on a budget tax package with the end of
the fiscal period less than three
weeks away.
Ohio currently has neither a
textbook situation nor a compromise in sight.
Gov. John J. Gilligan and his
POMEROY Jennifer Democraticfollowersin the GenBlakeslee Butcher, daughter of eral Assembly are adamant in
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. their belief the Buckey Stale
Blakeslee, Lincoln Heights, must spent massive amounts of
received the degree of Bachelor· new money, raising the needed
of Science In Education at the revenues through a program
97th annual commencement keyed to a graduated stale perexercises held at the Ohio State sonal income tax.
on
Friday. The majority of Republican
University
Delivering the commencement legislators are reluctant to vole
address was Neil Armstrong, for any new broad-based tax at
all, and there is widespread dispioneer explorer in space.
Following graduation, Mrs. agreement over what type of inButcher will work during the come tax should be enacted, if
summer in the Meigs Local one is enacted.
This adds up to deadlock with
Schools' remedial education
program arid has signed a a capital "D" and no June 30
con1ract to teach elementary fiscal year deadline seems likeeducation this fall in the Meigs
Local School District.
After the morning ceremony,
Mr. and Mrs . Charles E.
Blakeslee entertained with a
buffet at the home of Mrs.
Butcher's sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Melvin G. Circle. Attending
were Mr. and Mrs. James F.
PORTSMOUTH,Ohio (UPI)Butcher, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin
State
an~ federal officials hoped
G. Circle and children,
Marianne and Mark, Mrs. Oral to reachannel a stream this
Rice of St. Johns, Michigan; weekend ·around a reservoir
Mrs. Ira Butcher of Middleport, where a self made poisonous
compound had beeri dumped
and the hosts.
nearly two weeks ago.
The poison, containing Endrin
a powerful pesticide, and strychnine, has killed the aquatic
life, and threatened the water
supplies of the Ohio River towns.
Environmental Protection Agency officials planned to dwnp
1,500 pounds of activited charcoal into the reservoir, hoping
it would absorb the two deadly
. chemicals.
WASHINGTON (UP!)- U.S. . State Natural Resources DiRep. Clarence E. Miller, R· rector William B. Nye came in
Ohio, convinced the Family AB- to supervise the worlc which he
sistance Plan concept "will in- said he hoped would be comcrease the welfare expenditures pleted this weekend.
without improving the efficien- Scioto County Sheriff John
cy' and effectiveness of public Knauff said the poison had been
assistance," said Friday he dumped into the three acre
would vote against the plan Pond Uck Reservoir around
this year.
June ~· Si_nce that lime, some.
Miller voted for the Presi- 3,~00 fiSh m and near the lake
dent's plan In the last Con- have been found dead.
"Tbe
. ht
b
gress, because he thought that
. re m•g even e some
a change was needed and "al- anlDIBis that are dead because
most anything would be bet- they drank from the lake," the
ter,"
Sheriff SS!d. .
. . Is
He said he has restudied the Fed
. era l and stale off!Cia
whole welfare program and had said the compound ~d entered
time to reconsider the pro- two creeks ~~ dram from the
posal. He called the present lake. They said they. were als_o
welfare system "a natio~i trying toh~ete:;"'~ 11 the
scandal" wh1ch was badly m sons m~g ~a e :~ w:y In
need of a cc.mplete reorients- the OhiO R1ver, pu ng anger
lion and overhaul:
o~ those who swim In or drink
He said be was convinced nver water·
that the FAP concept "will Resident.: in the vicinity were
take us down the Irreversible warned to avoid contact with
road of a guaranteed annual the lake w~~r.
.
income and open the floodgates The .sheriff
s
office
late
Fn. d
for still higher welfare expen- day mght sa1'd 1.1 had rece1ve

Mr.s. Butcher
Awarded Degree.
At Ohio State

BUY YOUR

,,

No Compromise in Sight on New TaxesBy LEE LEONARD
COLID!JBUS (UP!) - it Is be- .
coming more apparent with
!!!ch passing week that a final
decision on new taxes to fund
additional state spending over
the next two years will be put off
unUllater thluumm.er..
In a textbook situation, a
Democratic governor and a Republican controlled General Assembly would be rapidly appro-

.

With The Cash In· Your Hand

I

propriation becoming a hero to in 1972, will cut the budget to
organi~ed labor and many the bone and pass no new taxes
forcing Democrats to enact an
~yers :
- Republicans, resigned to a income lax in time lor the big
.loss of control in the legislature elections in 1974. ·

CHUCK WAGON

DO·G
·FOOD
2
•:~- 49c ·
s-Ib. ·9tc ·
Bag
·~~~- . $1.79
-2:~:· :$3.99

JOY
LIQUID

'

·DEIERGENT
Qt.
Bot.

84c

.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Meet-•· Richland, Stark, Trumbull and
ings are scheduled later this Wayne counties.
month in Findlay, Wooster,
A meeting at the Tri-County
Nelsonville and Springfield to Joint Vocational School near
acquaint local officials with a Nelsonvllle on June 23 is for ofnew method of crjme planning, ficials of Adams, ·Athens, Belthe Ohio Department of Urban mont, Brown, carroll, Clinton,
Affairs announced Friday.
Coshocton, Delaware, Fairfield,
Officialswlllexplainnew fund- Fayette, Gallla, Guernsey, Harlng proceduresJor distributing rison,Highland,Hocking,Holms
more than $20 million in federal Jackson, Jefferson, Lawrence,
crime fighting lunda for Ohio. Ucking, Madison, Meigs, MooSix county wide regional plan- roe,Morgan,Musldngwn, Noble
ing units are to .be created in Perry, Pickaway,- Pike, Ross,
the six largest counties and Scioto, Tuscarawas, Union,
fouradminlstrat!veplanningdls- Vinton and Washington coun-·
tricis set up for the remaining ties.
82 counties.
·
The June ~4 meeting at WitAJune 21 meeting i~ Findlay tenberg University in Spring·
is tor officials (rom Allen, Aug- field is for officials from Butlalze, Crawford, Defiance, Erie ler,Champalgn,Clark,Clermont
Fulton, Hancock, Hardin, Hen- Darke, Greene, Logan, Miami,
ry, Huron, Mercer, Morrow, Preble, Shelby and Warren
Ottawa, Paulding, Putnam, .counties.
Sandusky, Seneca, Van Wert,
William, Wood and Wyandot
In 1944 Germany began using
coUnties.
its
~'buzz bomb" on England
On June 22 a session is·
scheduled, at Woosier Collese, during World War II.
• for officials from Ashland,l In 1967 Ohio National Guards,
Ashtabula,
Columbiana,. men were called out to put
Geauga, Knox, Lake, Loraln,l down a civil disturbance in
~onlnf!. Medina, f&gt;Qrta~e. Cincinnati.

have written permission from
their parents or guardians in
order to attend the outing.

Is
Guaranteed
To Satisfy-

A&amp;P
ASST.

FRUIT
DRINKS

At 5:20p.m., February 2,1970,
the Shaker Heights Police Station,
Shaker Heights, Ohio was leveled by
an explosion.
And a city of 38,000 was virtually cut off from police protection.
.
Communicatioo with the public
had to be resto•ed fast.
So our first order of business was
the switching of six police department
- - lines to the City Hall switchboard.
Forty-five min,Jtes after the blast it
was done. ·
,
The decision was then made to

set up an mterim police station at an
ice rink two mileq away.
A call went out for replacement
equipment. Construction men, repairmen, installers, and cable splicers
were rounded up. In all, more than
fifty Ohio Bell men responded to the
emergency.
By 9 p.m. that evening, eleven
lines served the temporary headquarters.
Working through the night, the
crews had nearly thirty Call Directors·! in and operating by morning.

By 4 p.m. the next afternoon, or
less than 24 hours later, the Shaker
Heights Police Department was
practically back in 100% operation.
At times like these, extra-hard
work and round-the-clock hours are
normal. Because normal is a tele'phone that works.
And police protection that's just
a phone call away.

,'

�.

10- Tile~ Times-Sentinel,Sunday, June 13,1971

..

There's a Sure Road to Our .H appiness

11- Tbe ~Times· Sentinel, SUnday. June 13.19'11

on the roof; just to be alive, and
By GOLDIE CLENDENIN work.
PORTLAND _ Happiness, Don't lose your temper. Meet put your feet on the floor and
THE HOMETOWN PAPER
Joseph Addison wrote, "Arises' others more than half way ; walk wherever you want.
By Otis Shirk
Uke missing the water when
In the enjoyment of oneself." unless we enjoy our work we
There's somelhlng aboot the most of us,
Dr. VIncent Peale tells us seldom enjoy our leisure time. the well goes dry, &amp;ne never
No matter· where we go,
"Thillk happy and you wUI ~ We need a good relationship appreciates two g,ood feet until
We
have within a longing,
happy." But happiness ~obert with the boss, to face up to our you lose the use of them.
At least I've found It so,
It's even wonderful to have.
Ingersoll says "Is ~ make responsibility. Learn to "put
To
keep In touch with loved 'ones
others so." '
out" even in his absence. Then two not so good ones; with
While wandering up and down,
Comes· now Frank Gilbreth he (or she) will listen to an hammer toes stlll wired up, you
And we love to see the paper
Jr., In his, "Time out for hap: honest complaint or criticism can still push a walker around.
From the old hometown.
pineu," with much more to say and ~ttempt ~remedy matters. Whoever thought up that conoo the what, why and how of it. If thiS doesn t work, maybe a 1raption to lean on and get
II receives a hearty welcome
around with?
Such an Illusive thing it comes change 18 in order.
As It makes lis regular round.
and slips away b;fore we No~ many jobs are too I remind myself of the man
Telling us of our old friends
reallze It's bere.
complicated to be mastered, but who worried about having no
And where they may be found.
Coprses on happiness are not getting along well with co- shoes until he met the man who
It just sort ol keeps together
taught in schools. Perhaps they workers is a big factor in the had no feet. It's good to be
Hearis1rlngs
once entwined;
s11ould be
along with success and enjoyment of reminded of our blessings and
Jl's the voice lrom oor old hometown,
"preparation' for marriage," em~loyment. It is ~ore blessed how unworthy we really are.
Where town and paper seem combiDed.
sex education,· etc. A certain to g1ve than to recetve, but one
amount of happiness comes must learn to accept a favor There's happiness in
The "On to VIctory" honor roll
remembering a sunset, dew on
naturally but more can be had graciously.
Names each lass and lad.
if we try 'tor it.
Temperance in all things; and the roses in early morning,
And shows the old town's given up
One needa to take time out of 1ry to keep the home life hollyhocks, family reunions,
The very best it bad.
and
the busy hours to recognize and satisfactory helps keep the job Mother's, Father's
We read and tbillk: Around the world
enjoy happiness, court and going. And lear_n to enjoy the Children's Days; church bell
They're scattered everywhere,
chimes, sound of the happy
pursue it, and above all, be litUe things of life.
And then, "Oh, GOO protect each one,"
grateful for 11. we make our- Wear a .smile or pleasant look. laughter of children at play; an
We breathe In sUent prayer.
selves unhappy, by being Bu: nobody loves a door mat. old rustic mlll, school days,
unkind, selfish, moody;_ afraid Think hi_ghly of yourself, and June days, the first home or
It tells us of our·fighting men
to Uve, and more afraid to die. others wdl, too, for you project child, or grandchild; a family
Prepared bJ face the brunt,
There are so many varillt!ons your image of yourself to altar, red geraniums.
·
And It carries news to cheer them on
Remember, life can really be
of happiness: Contemplation of othen.
.
News from the old home front.
past pleasures, doing 8 good Things go w~ong so~etimes beautiful if we open our eyes to
Folks
away receive it
deed every day counting .. ; Most good things don t come see aU the good things that were
And bOld It ill renown bleaslngs, a Beethoven Sym- easilr. Through G~·~ negatives meant to be:
They're glad to get the paper
phooy stamp or coin collection we diScover the positives; there Never ask of happiness
From the old hometown.
loving' God.
' Is purpose in looking back, that That you see It ,come
TheGilbrethswere the first to we may see ahead; the past 1s a Trumpet led In full parade,
lnslat on workerS' being given clue to the future, and we're all Marching to a drum.
· rest periods. They budgeted equal in the sight of heaven.
Watching least a plume pass
their time and money; these Happiness can be w~klng .up Seldom will It pass for more A drum's faint roll.
So hearken down.the least day
And you not see!
happiness minutes (fore-runner to a new day, be 11 bnght and Than fragment of the whole-Isabelle Bryan Longfellow
Whatever
It
may
be
. of today's coffee breaks) proved sunshiney or a warm, slow rain A small fiag, a brief born,
that elimination of fatigue, - -- - - - - -- - - - -- -- - - -- - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - resulted in faster, better and
safer production.
Bowling Green State UniverWe must believe In happiness,
sity, Cleveland Stale Univerconvince ourselves thst we can
sity, Kent State University,
be happy. AB Doug Mallach's
Miami University, Ohio State
poem goes:
University, Ohio University, the
"You bave to beUeve fn .
University of Akron, the
happlneu,
University of Cincinnati, and
COLUMBUS - Funding for matching funds for six electricity and electronics for the University of Toledo.
Or happfaess aever comu.
Ah, that's the reason a bird voca tiona! construction. vocational education con- 300 students from MayfiHd and
Approval will also be
preparation of vocational struction projects. Included in neighboring Beachwood, recommended for $22,464 in
can sial;
On bfl dartetl day be teachers, and student em- the total are:
Orange, and Richmond Heights federal funds for employment of
ployment - including Meigs -$1,966,633 for a new Ucking school districts. This project is students in East liverpool,
belleva Ia Sprlq.
County - Is slated to come County Joint Vocational School pending passage of a local levy Slam, and Sandusky city school
Want a new car? Save for It, before the State Board of to, serve 1,600 students in 2S on June 15 . ..
districts, and in the local school
and when you can afford to, buy Education at its regular vocational areas.
-$16,653 for a renovation to districts of Meigs and
and take good care of it; enjoy monthly meeting in Columbus -$560,765 for a vocational add cosmetology to present Strasburg-Franklin and
it. Learn to like and enjoy your on Monday.
addition to Mayfield High vocational
offerings
at Tuscarawas Valley.
Supt. of Public Instruction School (Cuyahoga County) Washington High School
work. Time will pass more
Federal funds equal to 80 pet.
swiftly and will pay rich Martin W. Essex will recom- which will provide programs in (Massillon
City
School of the cost of the program are
dividends. Live longer, mend that the board approve business and office education, District), which will ac- available under the Vocational
healthier lives and do better $4,409,670 In State Issue No. 1 auto mechanics, cosmetology, commodate 40 students.
Education Amendments of 1968.
-$1,486,54Uor an additional The districts' 20 pet. share will
facility in Montgomery County be $5,616.
Joint Vocational School District Proposed state plans for ·Title
to serve 850 students from three lll, National Defense Education
districts in Preble County which Act, and Title Ill, Elementary
have been added to the jointure. and Secondary Education Act,
The school will provide ex- as required by the U.S. Office of
tensive offerings in business Education, will also be
office education, plus child recommended for Board action.
care, food service, appliance The proposed plans contain no
repair, auto air conditioning, significant changes from
auto body, cosmetology, car- previous years.
pentry, drafting , electricity, The Board will consider
electronics, hydraulics - iransfers of territory' from
pneumatics, and welding.
Miamisburg City School
-$379,070 for additional of- District to West carrollton City
ferings at Woodland Job Center, School District, from West
Cleveland City School District. Carrollton City School District
The proposed courses are auto to Kettering City School
body repair for 50 high school District, and from Western
students ; auto-gruck main- Reserve Local School District
tenance for 125 high school (Huron County) to Norwalk City
students and 125 adults; and School District. Represengraphic arts for 50 students.
tatives of all boards of
Essex will also recommend education involved attended
that the board approve summary conferences with the
$1,787,630 for reimbursement to Department on April 28 and
universities with which the appeared before the Board at its
state has contracted for May 10 meeting.
vocational teacher preparation.
Federal legislation and the Ohio
Master Plan for Vocational
TWO KILLED
Education both give the stale BRILLIANT, Ohio (UP! l - A
Department of Education one-car smashup took the lives
responsibility for assuring an of two West Virginia men
adequate supply of vocational Saturday on Ohio 7 three miles
teacher~. The Department's· south of here. Officials iden. ' -· ..!5 ~i o; •.
Division
of
Vocational tified the victims as David W.
Education contracts for up to 50 Stouffer, 21, New Cumberland,
per cent of the cost of vocational and Gregory A. Crow, 21, New i
teacher preparation with Manchester.

Funds for Voc-Ed, Hiring
Of Students, Recommended

··

Ohio Politics

•

"252 THIRD AVE.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

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

U. S. Govt. ·Inspected

Includes: 3 Breast Quarters,
3 Leg Quarters, 3 Wings,
2 Pkgs. Giblets &amp; 2 Necks

Yle Resene The Right

To Limit Quantities~"
All Items In Thil Ad.

Prices Effective Thru
Sot. June 19, 1971.

Hone Sold To· Deolen.

•
Miller m

•
tCh
SWI
FAP

SOUND RI,PE

BANANAS
*
LOW

PRICE
SPECIAL

!

137

Pine Street

Gallipolis, Ohio
'

3-lb. Can
'STATE FARE
SLICED

WH'ITE BREAD.

*
*

'THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

ernor an\! individual lawmakers ship of the Republicans, the atmay becOme stalled in the• lernative Is giving Gilligan a
legislative process and must be budget-U~x j!lan he wiU sign. In
considered as part of the · that case, he has a victory in
trading material in the event of the fiscal arena and at least. an
k
the
a budget-tax stalemate.
even bre_a. on o r matters.
Alternative
For Gilligan, a delay means
th
d
f
While a delay pas1 e en o pressure bw'lding up on his SJ'de
governor's office in 1974. Hence, the fiscal year . inight reflect and ~ chance to ~egot!ale some
the stubborn attitude on both badly on the legiSlative leader- of his other proJects off dead
sides.
What is needed to spur action
is pressure and bargaining material. Both will become more
.
abundant as the summer wears
on.
ftem: Special interest groups
already on the warpath, will
form a withering combination
The old adage "look before you leap" was never more apwith the summer heat to ·wilt proprla~ than it Is today, as inore and more Americans head for
even the most determined poli- our coasts, lakes, and waterways in search of fun and relaxation .
tician.
'
Many of these people are Inexperienced and untaught and turnItem: The state Ap, ing them loose with small boats, scuba equipment, or water skis
portionment Board, con1rolled
3-2 by Democrats, will begin is ahnost !IS dangerous as handing a child a loaded gun.
There is a wealth of enjoyment and happy recreation to be had
formal meeting in August to
from
all kinds ol water sports. Once people know whal the
slice up legislative districts.
Republican bending on taxes dangers are, how to avoid them, how to be safe in and on the
might dull the carving knife water. These lessons must be ·teamed beforehand, and the
American Red Cross has been teaching people to safely enjoy the
poised over GPP territory.
Item: If there is no action on water since 1914.
For all those who engage in aquatic sports, whether they
a tax bill. by Sep. 1, organized
labor will be empowered to try swim in a home pool or take to the open water in a cabin cruiser,
to place on the Novembei' bal- the Red Cross has these simple suggestions:
Learn how to awlm.
lot a $5Qa million package of
Learn the safe handling of amall cra!L
new taxes aimed mainly at business and industry and including
Mlike aure your children ean swim.
no income tax. Neither side is
Learn effedve, safe. rescue tecbnlques.
anxious to see this happen.
l.,eam how to give artlflelal respiration.
Item: Pet projects of the govRed Cross free classes in swimming and lifesaving skills are
available in most Red Cross chapters. An excellent manual to
guide parents in teaching young children to swim is also
available.
Last year, nearly 3 million Americans thought it worthwhile
to earn cerUficales in these courses. Nearly 41 million people
have availed themselves of this lifeprolecting training through
the years.
Red Cross Water safety training is provided to help add to
yow family's safety and pleasure. AB yourself one question: is
A deputy said that the water your family really in, on, or about the water? "
in the wells seemed to be all
right and that the poisons had
not seeped through to the well
water. He said the residents
could use the well water for any
purpose.
A suspect in the dumping,
Garry Hiles, 24, Portsmouth,
will have a hearing next Thursday before Municipal Court Judge Charles Smith. He is being
held in ihe Scioto County Jail.
Hiles, who served four years
in a federal prison camp for
stealing a car, pleaded innocent
to three counts of killing fish.
He faces charges of destroyed
property and putting poison into
a lake.
Sheriff Knauff said he had ' 'no
idea" why the poisons were
dumped into the lake, built in
the late 193~ for a penal system honor camp which has gone
out of existence.

!''::;

"ALL PURPOSE GRIND"

*

'

.

COFF·EE

PRICE
SPECIAL

Small Craft
and
..
Water Safety

•
al
.LOCal OffICI S \_
• g tO 'Hear
Meetm
$20 Million Plan

T·HOROFARE
VANILLA

.. ,
·

ICEGallon
CREAM
Pkg.

PILLSBURY
Refrigerated Eura light

BuHermilk Biscuits

4 ~~~~ ·43c

GAIN
DETER'GENT
5-lb. 4-oz.
Pkg.

$1 • 45

will

C~RPET

SPECIAL

•n-

GET

~%
2

$ .95
sq. yd.

and up

INTEREST

ON YOUR
SAVINGS
On a one year $1,000
savings certificate
you'll receive a big S'12
per cent interest paid
monthly if desired.

GAI!IPOLIS
SAVINGS
&amp; LOAN CO.
Opp. Post Office
Gallipolis, Ohio
Ph. 446-3832

Padding
and Labor
INCLUDED

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

INDOOR-OUTDOOR . CARPET
NOT
.
INCLUDED IN THIS SPECIAL!
WE ALSO HAVE ...

e ARMSTRONG VINYL QUAKERTONE
LINOLEUM. 9 &amp; 12 WIDTHS
e ARMSTRONG VINYL CUSHION
FLOOR LINOLEUM

842 S.cond Ave.

Phone 446·1405
Gallipolis

'.

The day e.police ca.le..,;. _ ·us. ..

t

•
I
!·-

I

COMPUTER CENTER SITE
TOLEDO (UP!) _ Owens·
d Thursday It
1'11•mo•s
announce
has offered six to 10 acres of
Ia d to be . d
the site for
th~ North::! g~io Regional
Computer. Center .
Board Chairman Raymond H.
Mulford said the offer of land
was made to both Bowling
Green State University and the
University of Toledo, the two
schools planning the computer
te
ce~e ~id the proposed gift was
a roved by the board WednesPP
daii.e 1ract of land is located
in the firm's Levis Development
p k
ar near Perrysburg .

I

!.

TO VISIT PARK
GALLIPOLIS - Cub Scout
·Pack 203 will visit Camden Park •
Wednesday. Parents are to
contact Mrs. Julia Kirby, den
mother, at 446-2363 for further
____.....,nformation. Members must

1

KEEBL'ER•s Red Tag Sale
FIG BARS . . . . , . . . 'ti~~$
Chocolate Chip Cookies . ~~i~~- for
FA~~~oN Oatmeal Cookies ':k~~

center in the General Assembly.
Thus, it is easy to speculate
that a "continuation" budget of
fl billion with no new taxes
could be enacted by the end of
the · month, and the jockeying
could start all over again.
There are p)enty of theories
about the ultimate outcome, all
with holes In them. Two of the
more intriguing are these:
-The Republicans will send
Gilligan an expanded budget
with an income tax to finance
it. He
veto the income tax
and
corresponding

ditures without improving the numerous calls fr~m residents
efficiency and effectiveness of inquiring about the use of well
public assistance."
water.

1-lb. 'Loaf

T·RADE WI·NDS
,
BREADED" FANTAIL SHRIMP-. S:O',; 10-oz
Pkg. 89c
6-or.
BREADED OYSTEIS . . . . . . ~~ Pkg. 59c
$1
SHIIMP COCKTAIL . ....... .- 3 4-oz.
Jan

FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAViNGS!

Ih.

THOROFME

*

'

&lt;

Great for salad or eating out af hand

*
LOW

ly to push anyone intO hasty
agreements which could backfire later..
Too much is at stake. The
De mocra Is are bent on laking
con1rol of the legislature In 1972
d the Repub.licans are equallY
an
intent of regaining control of the

Poisoned .Pond
•
d
d
Maybe AVol e

LOW
PRICE
SPECIAL

Simply tell us what you would like to buy in the way of a
new Mobile home and we'll arrange for the financing in
advance. You will know exactly what you can count on and
that will help yo-u make a better deal. Incidentally, we can
save you some money on the financing if that will help.
Stop in.

aching a compromise on a budget tax package with the end of
the fiscal period less than three
weeks away.
Ohio currently has neither a
textbook situation nor a compromise in sight.
Gov. John J. Gilligan and his
POMEROY Jennifer Democraticfollowersin the GenBlakeslee Butcher, daughter of eral Assembly are adamant in
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. their belief the Buckey Stale
Blakeslee, Lincoln Heights, must spent massive amounts of
received the degree of Bachelor· new money, raising the needed
of Science In Education at the revenues through a program
97th annual commencement keyed to a graduated stale perexercises held at the Ohio State sonal income tax.
on
Friday. The majority of Republican
University
Delivering the commencement legislators are reluctant to vole
address was Neil Armstrong, for any new broad-based tax at
all, and there is widespread dispioneer explorer in space.
Following graduation, Mrs. agreement over what type of inButcher will work during the come tax should be enacted, if
summer in the Meigs Local one is enacted.
This adds up to deadlock with
Schools' remedial education
program arid has signed a a capital "D" and no June 30
con1ract to teach elementary fiscal year deadline seems likeeducation this fall in the Meigs
Local School District.
After the morning ceremony,
Mr. and Mrs . Charles E.
Blakeslee entertained with a
buffet at the home of Mrs.
Butcher's sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Melvin G. Circle. Attending
were Mr. and Mrs. James F.
PORTSMOUTH,Ohio (UPI)Butcher, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin
State
an~ federal officials hoped
G. Circle and children,
Marianne and Mark, Mrs. Oral to reachannel a stream this
Rice of St. Johns, Michigan; weekend ·around a reservoir
Mrs. Ira Butcher of Middleport, where a self made poisonous
compound had beeri dumped
and the hosts.
nearly two weeks ago.
The poison, containing Endrin
a powerful pesticide, and strychnine, has killed the aquatic
life, and threatened the water
supplies of the Ohio River towns.
Environmental Protection Agency officials planned to dwnp
1,500 pounds of activited charcoal into the reservoir, hoping
it would absorb the two deadly
. chemicals.
WASHINGTON (UP!)- U.S. . State Natural Resources DiRep. Clarence E. Miller, R· rector William B. Nye came in
Ohio, convinced the Family AB- to supervise the worlc which he
sistance Plan concept "will in- said he hoped would be comcrease the welfare expenditures pleted this weekend.
without improving the efficien- Scioto County Sheriff John
cy' and effectiveness of public Knauff said the poison had been
assistance," said Friday he dumped into the three acre
would vote against the plan Pond Uck Reservoir around
this year.
June ~· Si_nce that lime, some.
Miller voted for the Presi- 3,~00 fiSh m and near the lake
dent's plan In the last Con- have been found dead.
"Tbe
. ht
b
gress, because he thought that
. re m•g even e some
a change was needed and "al- anlDIBis that are dead because
most anything would be bet- they drank from the lake," the
ter,"
Sheriff SS!d. .
. . Is
He said he has restudied the Fed
. era l and stale off!Cia
whole welfare program and had said the compound ~d entered
time to reconsider the pro- two creeks ~~ dram from the
posal. He called the present lake. They said they. were als_o
welfare system "a natio~i trying toh~ete:;"'~ 11 the
scandal" wh1ch was badly m sons m~g ~a e :~ w:y In
need of a cc.mplete reorients- the OhiO R1ver, pu ng anger
lion and overhaul:
o~ those who swim In or drink
He said be was convinced nver water·
that the FAP concept "will Resident.: in the vicinity were
take us down the Irreversible warned to avoid contact with
road of a guaranteed annual the lake w~~r.
.
income and open the floodgates The .sheriff
s
office
late
Fn. d
for still higher welfare expen- day mght sa1'd 1.1 had rece1ve

Mr.s. Butcher
Awarded Degree.
At Ohio State

BUY YOUR

,,

No Compromise in Sight on New TaxesBy LEE LEONARD
COLID!JBUS (UP!) - it Is be- .
coming more apparent with
!!!ch passing week that a final
decision on new taxes to fund
additional state spending over
the next two years will be put off
unUllater thluumm.er..
In a textbook situation, a
Democratic governor and a Republican controlled General Assembly would be rapidly appro-

.

With The Cash In· Your Hand

I

propriation becoming a hero to in 1972, will cut the budget to
organi~ed labor and many the bone and pass no new taxes
forcing Democrats to enact an
~yers :
- Republicans, resigned to a income lax in time lor the big
.loss of control in the legislature elections in 1974. ·

CHUCK WAGON

DO·G
·FOOD
2
•:~- 49c ·
s-Ib. ·9tc ·
Bag
·~~~- . $1.79
-2:~:· :$3.99

JOY
LIQUID

'

·DEIERGENT
Qt.
Bot.

84c

.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Meet-•· Richland, Stark, Trumbull and
ings are scheduled later this Wayne counties.
month in Findlay, Wooster,
A meeting at the Tri-County
Nelsonville and Springfield to Joint Vocational School near
acquaint local officials with a Nelsonvllle on June 23 is for ofnew method of crjme planning, ficials of Adams, ·Athens, Belthe Ohio Department of Urban mont, Brown, carroll, Clinton,
Affairs announced Friday.
Coshocton, Delaware, Fairfield,
Officialswlllexplainnew fund- Fayette, Gallla, Guernsey, Harlng proceduresJor distributing rison,Highland,Hocking,Holms
more than $20 million in federal Jackson, Jefferson, Lawrence,
crime fighting lunda for Ohio. Ucking, Madison, Meigs, MooSix county wide regional plan- roe,Morgan,Musldngwn, Noble
ing units are to .be created in Perry, Pickaway,- Pike, Ross,
the six largest counties and Scioto, Tuscarawas, Union,
fouradminlstrat!veplanningdls- Vinton and Washington coun-·
tricis set up for the remaining ties.
82 counties.
·
The June ~4 meeting at WitAJune 21 meeting i~ Findlay tenberg University in Spring·
is tor officials (rom Allen, Aug- field is for officials from Butlalze, Crawford, Defiance, Erie ler,Champalgn,Clark,Clermont
Fulton, Hancock, Hardin, Hen- Darke, Greene, Logan, Miami,
ry, Huron, Mercer, Morrow, Preble, Shelby and Warren
Ottawa, Paulding, Putnam, .counties.
Sandusky, Seneca, Van Wert,
William, Wood and Wyandot
In 1944 Germany began using
coUnties.
its
~'buzz bomb" on England
On June 22 a session is·
scheduled, at Woosier Collese, during World War II.
• for officials from Ashland,l In 1967 Ohio National Guards,
Ashtabula,
Columbiana,. men were called out to put
Geauga, Knox, Lake, Loraln,l down a civil disturbance in
~onlnf!. Medina, f&gt;Qrta~e. Cincinnati.

have written permission from
their parents or guardians in
order to attend the outing.

Is
Guaranteed
To Satisfy-

A&amp;P
ASST.

FRUIT
DRINKS

At 5:20p.m., February 2,1970,
the Shaker Heights Police Station,
Shaker Heights, Ohio was leveled by
an explosion.
And a city of 38,000 was virtually cut off from police protection.
.
Communicatioo with the public
had to be resto•ed fast.
So our first order of business was
the switching of six police department
- - lines to the City Hall switchboard.
Forty-five min,Jtes after the blast it
was done. ·
,
The decision was then made to

set up an mterim police station at an
ice rink two mileq away.
A call went out for replacement
equipment. Construction men, repairmen, installers, and cable splicers
were rounded up. In all, more than
fifty Ohio Bell men responded to the
emergency.
By 9 p.m. that evening, eleven
lines served the temporary headquarters.
Working through the night, the
crews had nearly thirty Call Directors·! in and operating by morning.

By 4 p.m. the next afternoon, or
less than 24 hours later, the Shaker
Heights Police Department was
practically back in 100% operation.
At times like these, extra-hard
work and round-the-clock hours are
normal. Because normal is a tele'phone that works.
And police protection that's just
a phone call away.

,'

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•

,

II ·

·Candace Hawk Bride o Harry Carleton

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Miss Barbara Ann Kautz
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Paul W. Kautz, 586 Crescent
Rd., Columbus, are announcing the engagement and apll'Oachlng.marrlage of their daughter, Barbara Ann, Ill Mr.
Daniel Wayne Gray. Mr. Gray is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Guinan of Alpena, Michigan.
Miss Kautz, who graduated from Riverside White Cross
School of Nursing last June, is employed as Public Health
Nurse for Madison County.
Her finance, a graduate of Wittenberg University, is
cur:renUy associated with Columbus Public Schools as an
arts specialist.
The open church wedding will be an event of July 10 at
the Parkview United Methodist Church, 345 S. Brinker Ave.,
Colwnbus.

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I

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Community
Corne·r By

POMEROY - Miss Candace
Elaine .Hawk and Mr. Harry
Michael Carleton e~changed
wedding vows in a ceremony on
May 16 at thj! Tuppers Plalna
Christian Church.
The bride is the daughter Of
Mr. and Mrs. later Hawk, of
near Coolville, and the
bridegroom is the son of Mrs.
Frances Carleton, Pomeroy,
Route 3, and the late Willism
. Harry Carleton.
The Rev. John Wyatt officiated at the double ring
ceremony which was performed
at 2:30 p. m. following nupUal
music by Mrs. Lavinia Brannon. The altar was decorated
with gladioli and white daisy
arrangements.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bridewasattiredln a
white silk crepe floor-length
gown fashioned ln empire style
with full puffed sleeves, a high
neckline and an A•line skirt.
Banda of beads accented the
neckline and the sleeves. Her
elbow length veil of illusion waa
attached to a white satin bow,
and sbe car:ried a white Bible
topped with a
daisy
arrangement.
Miss Nancy Hawk, sister of
the bride, served as her maid of
honor. The other attendanta
were Mrs. Brenda Taylor,
Fostoria, and Mrs. Linda
Kaylor,
Reedsville,
bridesmaids. They wore floor
length gowns of identical
design, all made by the bride's
mother. The skirts were of

floral print dacron polyester
with tops Of solid colored silk
organza. Miss Hawk was in a
pink and green ensemble with
the bridesmaids in blue and
yellow. Their veiled headpieces
matched the skirts, and they
had hand corsages of daisies.
Mr. Jim Carleton Of

Gallipolis, brother of the
bridegroom, was best .man, and
ushers were Mr. Mike Brothers
and Mr. Virgil Dill, both of
Pomeroy, Route 3.
For her daughter's w~ding,
Mrs. ·Hawk wore a black and
white plaid suit with white
areessorles and a white daisy

90th Birthday
Is Observed

.

an
ar
it.
WI

SY

dl
he

~ VICKY SPENCER,

BARBARA and Beth Fultz, Melanie
Hackett, Jo Ellen Diehl and Mrs. George Hackett, Jr. are spending the weekend in Rome. The six are on an educational student
lllur ofE.urope and will return in about 10 days.
They left here on June 1 and traveled to Europe on a 747 Jet
ianding in Amsterdam. From there they had a grand tour of
Germany, on to SWitzerland, Austria, and now Italy. After Rome
they will return to Switzerland. From there they will go to Paris
for two days, then England, and on home.
.
For the past several months the girls have been meeting with
Mrs. Hackett for a study of the various places they are now
visiting.
JOINING CHUCK DOWNIE at Camp Robinhood in New
Hampshire this summer will be Donald Dixon, a Meigs Local
junior high school science teacher. Don Is now visiting his parents
at Baltimore, Md. and from there will go to Camp Robinhood this
week to work as a summer counselor.
THE REV. ROBERT KUHN has his work cut out for the next
couple of weeks. He was one of a few Baptist ministers In Ohio
selected to serve as a counselQr at a junior citizens camp at
Judson Hills, Loudenville. The boys attending will be borderline
delinquent.
MRS. FLOYD HARRISON, in Columbus last weekend for the
graduation of her granddaughter, Debca Scott, was most complimentary about the symphonic band directed by former Middleporter Franklin (Giny) Ginther, which played at the commencement. "I could have listened all night" was her comment.
UNITED METHODIST MINISTERS on the move include the
Rev. William Airson of the Enterprise-Morning Star charge. He
and his family expect to be assigned this week at tHe Ohio West
Uolted Methodist Conference to Union Furnace.
Scheduled to be sent here to pastor the Enterprise, Rock
Springs and Flatwoods Churches Is the Rev. Stanton J. Smith of
Zanesville. We bear, also unofficially, that the Rev. Frank
Cheese brew will be returning to Meigs County and will be living in
Racine and pastoring the churches formerly served by the Rev.
Pa~l Sellers.
However, as one minister emphasized, nothing's final until
we go to conference.

WSCS Group Meets
POMEROY - A program
entitled, New Cooperation for
World Development, was
presented by Mrs. Elizabeth
Cuckler at the Tuesday night
meeting o.f the Women's Society
of Christian Service of tbe
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church . .
Mrs. Gerald Wildermuth
presided at the meeting Which
opened with two hymns, Come
Thou Fount of Every Blessing
and My 'Hope Is Built. The 18
members present reported 87
sick visits made during April
and May.
A thank you note was read
fr•lln l/11• Ted J)uwnie family
and Mrs. Minnie Bengel fur
IO!nding food 'on the day ol the
funeral of Li•uls A. Cnl'l (If
llidUuo"''"· Md .. 11 11•1'1111!1' M!•igs
f:,muly n:shh·ul. ,
Mr.&lt;. Wiloil;rwullo ,

Robert Card, Mrs . Robert
Warner and Mrs. Harry P.
Smith reported on the recent
district meeting held in Logan.
Mrs. Wildermuth concluded
the meeting with ' prayer. A
dessert course was served by
Mrs. Gertrude !&gt;fitchell and
Mrs. Marie Custer. Roses from
the garden of Mrs. Norma
Parker centered tl)e table.
· I'ACTCONCLUDED
CIN CINNATI I UP!)
Members of Retail Cle1·ks Union
agreed to a 27.month Jl"cl
f'l"iday, end in~ a strike against
117 K1·ogc1' stoo·cs that began lute
In May . The cun!J·act called for
W.lt~.:t' .llikl!s rrum 50 'cents tO

lwur. Clco·k• hdd
l•io'kt"Lt•d tile 67 stiii'CS in

$UO

·1111

~~j IIJIJ ll'liSlt 'I'll )lid ill IIi I1 Slltttli&lt;•J'! I

Mrs . I Jl1iH wul nurlht•ru

Kt•uttw~y ,

will reside at Pomeroy, Roule 3. wedding were Mr, and Mrs.
The bride. graduated from , James Schirtzinger, Columbus;
Eastern High School in 1969 and Miss Cheryl Findling and Miss
Is a student at the Holzer Beth Findling, Car:rolf: Miss
Hospital School of Nursing. Mr. Debbie Morgan, Columbus; Mr.
Carleton is a 1970 Meigs High and Mrs. Ronald Taylor,
School graduate and is em- Fostoria; Mr. and Mrs! Halley
ployed at the Meigs County Westfall, West Union; W. Va.,
Highway Department. . .
and Mr. and Mrs. Dave Evans,
Out of county guests for the Melvindale, Mich.

::~~~~-·
-·
~~~~===--

'c

Sandals
AND WHITES FOR

CARPENTER - Three
beautiful birthday cakes, roses
from her daughters and many .
gifts were presented Mrs.
Ginevra Fosler In honor of her
90th birthday.
Enjoying a gathering in her
honor included Mrs. Zelia
Weyand, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Summer sandals &amp; whites ... they
Weyand and Wendy, Mr. and
just go together. And our collecMrs : Randy Good and Jeremy,
tion of sandals and whites, cross
Mrs. Bradley T. Martin and
Holly, Mike Shannon and Mr.
straps, buckles, T-straps, more
and Mrs. Lawrence Oxley ,
has it all together!
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Jer:ry
Huff, Dayton; Mrs . Rita
Steadman, Franklin, Ohio;
Mrs. Nellie Blum, Galion ; Enos
Peck, Nellie Hawk, Hazel Peck,
Clara McLaughlin, Ruth Jordan
and Mr . and Mrs. Lowell
Walterhouse and
Gina ,
Springfield ; Mr . and Mrs .
Howard Weyand, Hamden;
Mrs. Pauline Fosler and Mrs.
Ronnie Williams, Langsville.
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Jordan,
Columbus, Miss.; Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis Cottrill, Mrs. Bessie
Knapp, Mr. and Mrs. Kenny
Turner, Pat, Sherrie and Danny
Joe Turner, Mr . and Mrs. Joe
Turner and Tony, Albert Cone,
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Coen and
family, Mrs. Grace Hensler,
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Jorctan ,
Mrs. Nellie Vale, Mrs. Fannie
Pettit, Mrs. G. A. Radekin, and
Tina, Mrs. Faye Jordan, Miss
Kathy Gilkey and Walter
Jordan, all local area, and
Melva Crabtree, McArthur.
The honored guest also
'· •• J
••
' rJ
received 71 birthday cards and
would like to express her apprecia tion to all the many ·~ Where Shoes are sensibly Priced.
friends and relatives who
~
MIDDLEPORT, O.
. helped to make her birthday a
wonderful time .

Mr. and Mrs. Harry M. Carleton

Barnhill-Mil/hone
TUPPERS PLAINS - Mi8l .
Ruth Ann Barnhill, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Carl J. Barnhill,
Tuppers Plains, became the
bride of Larry Edward
Millbone, son of Mr. and Mra.
Vernon Millhone of Tuppers
Plains on May 22, at 2 p. m. at
the home of the bride. The Rev.
W. A. Frost officiated at the
double ring ceremony.
Prior to the ceremony, Mr.
and Mrs. Garrett Christy of
Grove Ci,ty, Ohio, provided
traditional nuptial music and
sang "Whither Thou Goest."
The home was decorated with
two large seven branch candelabra, two large vases of
while gladioli and satin covered
prayer bench. There was also a
flower arrangement on the
piano.
Given in mar:riage by ber
parents, the bride wore a floor
length gown, fashioned by ber
mother. It was made of bridal
satin and chantilly lace with a
high neck, empire waist and
Gibson Girl sleeves. Her
headpiece of lace pedals and
pearls had a shoulder length
illusion veiL She car:ried yellow
roses on a white, lace covered
Bible with streamers tied ln ·
lover's knots. Her only jewelry
was a miniature cross necklace
and matching earrings, a gift
from the groom.
Her matron of honor, Mrs.
James Stout, sister of the bride,
wore a high neckline pink gown
made of chiffon over taffeta
with an empire waist trimmed
in pink satin. She wore a white
rose headpiece. She car:ried brother. Mr. Steve Millhone of groom, registered guests.
pink and ~hlte mun,u' with Tuppers Plains was the usher. For their wedding trip to
streamers tted m lover s knots. The bride's mother wore a Cedar Point the bride changed
Miss Nancy Hawk, RFD pastel green dress with dark . to a blue and white pants suit
Coolville, bridesmaid, wore a green lace overlay. Her ac- and wore white shoes and
pink chiffon gown over taffeta cessories were while and her carried a matching purse. She
with an empire waist. Her corsage was white carnations. wore the rose corsage from her
beadptece was a white rose The bridegroom's mother wedding bouquet.
bow. She carried pink and while wore a rose double knit dress
The bride is a 1970 graduate of
mums with streamers tied ln with white accessories. Her Eastern Local High School and
lovers' knots.
.
corsage was white carnations. is presently employed by the
Mtss C~nrue Kay Stout, mo:re •Following the ceremony, a ·Columbus and Southem Ohio
of the br1de, was flower g1rl. four-\iered wedding cake Electric Company, Athens.
Her dress was IUac dotted swiss trimmed with blue roses white
The bridegroom is a 1970
over taffeta, with high neck, doves and topped with ~ bride graduate of Eastern Local High
empire waist lind puffed and groom centered the School and is presently emsleeves. She carried a white reception table. Presiding at t~e : ployrd by Milll.ane's Sohio,
basket with lilac tinted flowers . table were Mrs. Clyde Headley Tuppers Plains.
Mr. David Millhone, Tuppers and Mrs. Kenneth Griffith. Miss
The newlyweds will reside in
Plains, was best man for his Debbie Mlllhone, sisler of the Tuppers Plains.

BIG CAPACITY.

2-Door Refrigerator from

PHILCO·FORD
BIG

14.2
CU.FT.

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Look at
these Philco
features
·Freezer alone holds·.)
102 lbs. of frozen foods
-Adjustable cold control
·Twin porcelain -enamel
vegetable crispers

·2 deep door shelves
with removabl~ guards
·Enclosed butter keeper
·White. Avocado, or
Shaded CopP,er cabinet

Past Councilors Elect Officers
terlainment will be by Mrs.
Golda Frederick, Mrs. · Zona
Biggs and Mrs. Ada Van Meter.
Mrs. Mary Hayes presided at
the business meeting which
opened with the Lord's prayer,
scripture and the pledge to the
flag .
It was noted that flowers 'ha4
been sent to the grave of Mrs.
Lucille Kraeuter on DecoraUon
Day. Mrs. Elizabeth Wickham,
Lo~elland John Ridenour were
guesls for the meeting. Mrs.
Betty Roush was assisting
hostess. Refreshments were
served. '
Others altending were Mrs.
EU1e/ Orr, Mrs. Mae Spencer,
' .
.

91 1,'

PRICE!

Mr. and Mrs. larry Mil/hone

POII-JEROY- Officers for the'
1971-7~ year were elected for a
meeting Wednesday night of !he
Past Councilors Club of Chester
Council 323, Daughters of
America, held at the home of
Mrs. Pauline Ridenour.
Elected were Mrs. Opal
Hollon, president; Mrs. lnzy
Newell, vice president; Mrs.
Margaret Tullio!, ,secretary;
Mrs.
Esther
Ridenour,
11·easurer: Mrs. Sadie Tl:ussell,
~enllnel, and Mrs. Erma
Clehmd, flower chairman.
Pluns were made for a picnic
t11 be held In july at !he home of
MI'S. 'l'I'US!!ell with Mrs. Tuttle
us the U!i.~isllng hosless. En-

BOX

Mqdel R014M2

Th~

Mrs. Ada Mor:ris, Mrs. Ada
Neutzling, Mrs. Mabel 1 Van
Meter, Mrs. Letha Wood. Mrs.
Mary Showalter, Mrs. Hattie
Frederick, Mrs. Laura Mae

OUR

..

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FIGHTER
PRICE!,

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Week's
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,

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.
95
.·

PHILCO , ~ : The better idea people in refrigerators.

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
'.

OHIO

'',,

MR. AND MRS. ERNF8I' (BUD AND MAXINE) Wingett,
Racine, celebrated their 40th wedding anniversary Sallirday. The
couple, as they did 40 years ago, left for a motor trip.
Who said you couldn't have a second honeymoon. The couple
was presented with a inonetary gift recently from the De:nocrat
Acdm Club in bornir of their anniversary. Congratulations to you
both and may you have many more h!ippY years.
,
·

Stop Over
for Mr. Eddy

,

SHOE.

'~

POMEROY- All yoii folb ln ceraJlllc land are bsuii .
..
ID partldpale in the ceramic iiiHiw to be held clurbc the Big Bend·
Regalia Weekend. Displaya wiD be placed in the Pooieroy Junior
Higb SciJc* IIYDI· Sllowbtis wiD be held on Saturday and &amp;mday
!rOll\ 12 110011 to 5 p. m.
All It $Ianda to dale, Mrs. T1111 Martin of Rutland and Mra.'
Allee loJIIIa of Middleport are the only two who have committed
lllemselves to showing their wares.
The two ladles will have oo view everything from vases to
doUsand they will also be offering articles for sale. U anyone e1ae
Is Interested In pardcipatlng In the event just give Earl Ingels a,
call and he will be moat happy to help you and Rive you any informa don you may need.

Social
Calendar

POMEROY - Mr. Eddy
Educator is back from its
garage In Chlllcothe and again
SUNDAY
in good health. Repairs needed MEIGS MOTORCYCLE Club
were a muHler, a new door second moto-cross of year
glass, an oU and grease job and Sunday at clubgrounds five
a manifold was loose.
miles north of Pomeroy on
The staff is .now dividing the Route 33. Practice, 11 a. m. to 1
books and the old traveling ·p. m. racing to start 1:30 p.m.
·library books are being Trophies in all classes, refreshreturned (9,000) to the State ments available at clubhouse.
IJbrary.
'
SYRACUSE Nazarene
New books listed and card Church Bible School display, 7
!lies .have made them more p. m. Sunday, at church.
accessible to the public by . DAILY VACATION Bible
listing books by the subject for
information. The new schedule School program, 7:30 p.m.
Is being prepared. Suggestions S~y at Rutland Church of
I ed b
111n 992- Chmt.
are we com
Y ca g
·
MONDAY
3?45.New~ks:
, ·
HEATH METHODIST
Tomorrow s .Tomor:row: The Church W.S.C.S. and Class 12
1
B apk _woman, Ladn~r; picnic 6 p.m. Monday in the
'£he LJb~ral Tradi,t!on 1fl chlltch basement. Take covered
American Thought, Volk~me~. dish and o\vn table service.
The Conservative Tradition m
.
American Thought, Sigler.
. _SYRACUSE. Commumty,
PI . the Cheetah and Her Bible School begmrung June 14,
Cubs~
Monday, at First United
Washington o c . the Presbyterian Church, 9 to 11:30
Government
Bo~~on
a.m. with "Jesus Speaks to Our
Willa Cather the Woman ~d World" aa ·theme. All children
Her Works B~
and helpers welcome.
Cervan..,;· !he ·Life 0! a
1UE8DAY
Genius Dla~Piaja
RUTLAND FIREMEN'S
The Awle Dumpling Gang Auxiliary, 7:30Tuesdaynightat
Bickham
' the firehouse.
Afric~ Herdboy Bothwell GROUP II, Middleport First
Flowers for a Dead Witch' United Presbyterian Church,
B tte
th
.
' Tuesday, 7:30 p. m. home of
~:~e Eagle, Hazelton. Mrs. Paul ":&amp;ptOnstall with
Savannah Purchase, Hodge. Mrs. Myron Miller, co-hostess.
Perunarrlc, Howatch,
Hail, Hall, the Gang's All
WEDNESDAY

JANEIIAIUlm .

Surprise for Pastor Manley Given by Wife

Mr. and Mn. D(ma Hoffman Sr.
-

TUPPERS PLAJNS- Mr. and Mrs. Dana E. Hoffman,
Sr., will observe their 50th wedding anniversary with an open
house on June 20, 1971, from 2 to 4 p. m. at their home ln
Tuppers Plains. Mr. and Mrs. Hoffman were married June
22, ,1921, at Elm Grove, West Virginia. They are the parents
of three children: Dana E. Hoffman, Jr., Rutland; Mrs.
Kenneth Davldaon, Columbus; and Mra. Stanley Garey,
Clearwater, F1orida. They have six grandsons and one greatgranddaughter.

Part in Regatta
Show is Planned
POMEROY - Participation
in the Big Bend Regatta flower
show to be staged by the Meigs
County Jaycees next weekend
was planned during a meeting
of the Middleport Amateur
Gardeners Club Wed~tesday
night at the home of Mrs. Edward Burkett.
·
Read at the meeting was a
letter from Earl Ingels,
chairman of the shOw, asking
club members to participate.
Ar:rangements are to be in place
by 10 a.m. on Saturday and are
not,to be removed until after 4 p.

m.

According to the rules entries
arelimitedtooneperpersonin
each class, and are to come to
the show tagged with name,
dd
d rd
Ib f
a ress an ga en c u a filiation, If any. Ribbons for
first, second and third places
will be awarded. A best of show
and runner-up awar!ls will also
be made.
The Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs convention to be
held ln August in Cleveland was
announced by Mrs. Harry
Moore , pre side n t .
Ar:rangements were made for
Mrs. Betty Cline to furnish a
column for the "Green Thumb
Notes" of the Daily Sentinel on

city

to Murder
Russell
'
. The Three Day Alliance
'
Simpson.
On the Shady Side, Swln-

'•,

'

Adamson.

H~~~~ H:~~gh

'•

'•'·&lt;,

Middleport who Uilderwent surgery Friday at Holzer Medical
Center and Is reported to be doing very well. Those who would like
to remember her with a·card her room number Is 379.

AND UP

THE

. Sy Katie Crow

GET WElL WISHES go Ill Mrs. Isabel W'mebrenner of

399

By alARLENE UOt;~'U(ll · . Kelly Grueser. As a child, Jane worked
POMEROY - Jane ~· love of side by side with her mother In the
· flowers, ber creative flair, and a ~ flqwer beds and delighted ln gather~
·general appreciation for beauti!ul bouquets.
things made it inevitable that aesthetic Her easy pleasant . manner ·well
appeal would enter Into her selection of equipa her for ~ role of dealing with
a career.
'
·
people, on both happy and sad · ocShe became a floral designer. One casiOJlS, who choose flowers for ex. glimpse of Jane arranging single ll'essing their deepest emotions.
flowers into a bouquet of loveliness is While She says she likes all phases of
convincing that she has found her niche her work, she P!lrtlcularly enjoys
In life.
getting flowers ready for weddings.
A graduate of the Bill Hixoo School of Jane and her husband, Allan,
F1oral Design in l.ak!!wood, Jane has production manager at the Ohio VaUey
been employed for the past five years at Data Control.center at Belpre, reside
the Pomeroy F1ower Shop.
on Route 7 toward Chester.
When she deelded to take up floral With a jitb, keeping house, cooking,
design soon after her graduation frQJll and making some of her clothes, she
Pomeroy High School, it came as no says she has little time for gardening
surprise to her parents, Mr. and Mra. although she does raise a few flowers.
·

WILLIAM. (MIKE)·JONES, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Jones,
Jr. of Columbus, waa Jllimed to the Dean's Ust at Ohio University
for the winter quarter.
. Mike ill the gfandaon of Mr. and Mrs. 11:. J. Hill, Pomeroy, and
resides with his grandparenlll ·while attending school.

Summst!

Charlene Hdetlich

POMEROY - Quite a nice surprise for Pennee Williams Friday
was a telephone call from a penpal of 11 years in Manchester,
England.
Kathleen Thompson and Pennee started corresponding in the
seventh grade and have exchanged tapes and pictures but Friday
was their first telephone conversation. Kathleen works with
computers in a bank at Manchester and the plans is for the two to
get together, either here or there, sometime in the not too distant
future.

corsage. Mrs. Carletnn was in a
navy blue suit with white accessories and also wore a while
daisy corsage.
A reception was held in the
chur.ch annex Immediately
following the ceremony. Mrs.
Faye Watson, Mrs. June
Treadway and Mrs. candace
Brothers served at the refreshment table. Miss Mary carleton
registered the guests:
The couple took a wedding
!rip to the Great Smoky
Mountian National Park. They

Personality Profit~

Katie's · Korner·

June 25.
Invitations from both the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners
and the Rutland Garden Club to
open meetings this month were
read; The Friendly Gardeners'
meeting was .afmouncejl· for
June 23 at ihe Rutland Church
Of Christ while the Rutland Club
will have an open meeting on
June 28 at the Uniled Methodist
Church in Rutland.
It was reported that plantings
at the village hall has been
completed with red geraniums
and while petunias by Mrs.
Cline, Mrs. lillian Moore, and
Mrs. Jean Morgan.
Special guests at the meeting
were Mrs. John Reese, director
of Region 11, OAGC, Mrs..Grace
Bradbury of Galllpolis, and
Mrs. · Fred Blaettnar, Meigs
County contact chairman. Both
Mrs. Reese and Mrs. Blaettnar
spoke on garden club activities,
and Mrs. Bradbury talked on
rose· specimens, how to handle
them and what makes good
ones. She judged specimen
roses and arrangements giving
awards to.Mrs. Glenn Lambert,
Mrs. Burkett, and Mrs. Cline for
arrangements and Mrs.
Reynolds for specimens.
Members in response to roll

Principals Listed ·
june 26th Wedding

MIDDLEPORT - A surprise Mrs. James Hughes, Mrs. Macy
party honoring the Rev. Odell
and,Mrs.
Manley on his birtllday anniversary was given by hla wile.
·Betty, at the home Of their son
and daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Manley and
Crystal.
Cake, Ice cream, potato chips,
coffee. and orange punch were
serv.ed. Lewis smith won a door '
prize, and game prizes were
won' by Connie Manley, Opal·
Hughes, and Joann WeUs.
Guests were Mr·. and Mrs.
Wendell Eblin and Ray, Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Smith, Mrs. Wells
and' Jody, Miss Robin Rathburn, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Manley, Donna and Junior, Mr.
and Mrs. Gary Acree, Mr. and

and Mrs. Elwood P!llllipa and
. Others presenting gifts Ill Mr . and Mrs . Lawrence

Excellent
Selection .
of Famous
Name Brands

call named their favorite rose.

Mrs. Blaettnar won the door
prize. Mrs. Grace Pratt, Mrs.
Burkett and Mrs. Reynolds
were named to revise the by-.
laws. Dues are payable in
September Instead of October,
it was noted.
The dining room table
featured a mass ar:rangement
of Blaze and Paul Scarlet roses
in crystal made by Mrs.
Burkett, Mrs. Moore preside4
ai tbe punch bowl and Mrs.
Reynolda at the coffee service.
Hostesses were Mrs. Burkett,
Mrs. l..ambert and Mrs. Philip
1
Mowery.
Mrs. Reynolds gave the verse
of the month using a meditation
· entitled "The Garden."
'--~-.oii---·"'"•••••••lill••••--1111!1-liii•IIJ!I..I

BOSWORTH Council 46,
Royal and Select Master, 7:30
Wednesday' ~omeroy Masonic
LETART, W.Va. - -Wedding Max Staats, Letart; Ralph
Temple. All ntuals requested at
plans
have been completed for Meadows, Canvas, W. Va.;
thdk '
·
~~ERN Athletic Boosters, the marriage of Miss Bernitli Ralph Kelvington, Letart; Carl '
netton.
Lynn Staats, daughter of Mr. King, New Haven; Timmy
callban's Flliblll!ter, West. B:30 p. m. Wednesday at high and Mrs. Harry Staats of Meadows, Richwood, W. Va.,
school.
Letart, W. Va. Ill Donald Lee and Rick Johnson of Wbeeling,
Meadows, son of Mr ..and Mrs. ushers.
Arthur Meadows of Wharton, Organist will be Mrs. Paul
THURSDAY
l'owell of New Haven, and
UIDIU, . Uests TW1N CITY Shrinettes, 6:30 W. Va.
soloist,
Mrs. Betty Jo Evans of
The open church ceremony
p.m. Thursday at club house in
·
eil
Racine. Potluck dinner, joint will be performed at the New Charleston; Kim Meadows of
~R - Sixty meeting with Twin City Shrine Haven United Methodist Church Richwood, guest reg~trar and
alumni and )i&amp;esta made Club. Take covered dish and in New Haven, W. Va. June 26, Penny 'Meadows of Barrett, W.
at 7:'30, with the .Rev. Gerald Va. and Michelle Meadows of
reservations for 'the annual table service.
Richwood, taper lighters.
Sayre officiating.
Columbia High ScbOQI alumni
Miss Staats will be attended The · ceremony will be
banquet which was ·.held at
,
by her sister, Miss Bonnie followed by an open reception in
Albany Elementary Sc~ on 1
Staats of Gallipolis, as maid of the church- social rooms.
Saturday evening.
,J
honor. The bridesmaids will be • • • • • • • • • •
The business session was
the Misses IJnda Kelvington of
conducted by uie president,
u.t;
OOMPLETE
r1
/1
Letart,
Virginia Shrimplln and
Arthur Crabtree, asaisted by
flj ~ •
WEDDING FLOWER
Mrs. Ronald Whittington, POMEROY _ Jesse E. Vickie Shrimplin Of Mason, and
Bonnie
Ord
and
IJnda
Holbrook
secretary-treasurer. The slate
· · hi h · 1of
SERVICE
of New Haven. Christi Staats, of
of officers elected for next year Brinker Ia the new g pnes
are Wayne Turner, president; Pomeroy Chapter 80, Royal Mason wlll be the Junior Consult Our Designers for
lhe Righi Flowers For You.
Rex Shenefield, vice president, Arch Maso"'.
. bridesmaid.
and Mrs. Anna E. Turner
M,eetlng at the Masomc
Other principals will be Miss
·
' Temple recently, officers for PorJ:ha Meadows, tile groom's
Jlecretary-l{casurer ·
. . the 1971-72 year were eleeted. niece, flower girl; Master
'•
Serving : Gallipolis,
Special recognition was gaven Othe
ed besides Brinker Jeffery Staats, nephew of the
Pomeroy, Middleport, 0.
to teachers present. Prizes were
rs nam
.
&amp; Mason Ct!. W. Va.
··b W Iter Sw It Emma were Ben H. Philson, king; bride, ring bearer; , James
446·1777
992-SUO
. won y a
e ,
· · Zlrkl
'be· c J
Whittln ton d Mr nd Mrs · Danny 8•
e, sen ' · · Meadows, the groom's prother,
Haroll Robfr:son. ·s:mpathy Slnlble, secrelary;.Theodore T. Craigsville, W.Va., best man;
was extenlled to Mr. and Mrs. Reed~ Jr., treasurer: Dav•d W.
Wayne Turner ln the recentlOIS Fox, captain of the host;
Norbert W. Compton, sojour·• R' hard w. vaughan
of their son, BlaI ne. B0 th
parenta are alumni.
ner • ac
'
The bsnquet Will served by royal arch captain&gt; Dale E.
be
Smith, guard: James M. Hayes,
Alba ny Grange mem rs. third illman. Richard Sayre
Walter Swett, Marguerite . • .:;avails~· Max Manuai
· Frank and Claire Dudgeon aeJc fir t "--~.and Richard
Jurnlshed music for square r ·' s va._,.., '
The tax books are now open for the
dancing with Robert Pickett aa Vaughan, trustee.
' r
Julie or Second half collection of the
· The new officers were incaller·
stalled by Fred Blaettnar, past
1970 · Real Estate Taxes. Also for
BANQUET SET
high priest, and Norbert W.
delinquent tax.. Closing date wi II be
MIDDLEPORT - MiddiepOJ't Comptnn, marshall.
July 1, 1971.
Masonic Lodge 313. Flo:AM, will -Dag' Hammarskjold forHoward E. Frank,
bold a hlher..son Banquet at me•· secretary-general "of the
1:16 p.m. TuutWy at the hall.1 United Nations, was awarded
t.flelgs County Treasurer
Tlckelll..-. available from any the Nnho•l P&lt;~acc Prize in
lodge officer.
1961.

BAHR CLOTHIERS.
MIDDLEPORT OHIO

GREAT FATHER'S nAY

VALUE

PPENING!
... the perfect opportunity
for th~ perfect cfa(Jir
for the perfect Dad
by

Sixty Columbia
. G
Al
Att d Banquet

WI'IICII

'
"
""
SAVl'M-'41
1

14f up

FLEXS1EEL
lacll.orlhwt

Tesse Bnnker
ls ah n_..;est

the one gift
that really hits homel
Go Jlraight. to Dad'! ·htGrt with the

·. FLEX.O.LOUNGER"Reclin" ., ohe
$PACE WALKER Rocking Recliner.

. Pat~nt•d Flexstftl spri"'l tonatruc:..
tion and counter balonc" rtc:llning
mechonism auure1 lifetin\e comfort.

DUDL£Y'S FLORIST

Revolutio.nary, lree-ftaating

BPAC•llwALK•R
(Ak"'•J It's thr• choir&amp; itt'CN'Ie! A
lovnge chair, rocker, mvlti•position
rtclintr. t1ert's comfort tncf stylint
with thickly padle~ bock ~~nd arms.

LEGAL

MEIGS COUNTY
' . REAL ESTATE OWNERS

FLEXSTEEC

Luxuriously tufted bock and arm's
accenllhis FLEX-0-LOUNGE~On
tapered legs with ball casters.

I

. Traditionol style SPACE WALKER
wit.h a tufted pillow-ba~k, Lawson
arms and tailored ki~k ~leal skirt.
IHDUTRUCTIILI I LUI STilL SPAINGit'lli

BAKER
FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT OHIO
::~·/. 1: . '1l \\t/ \)}.' :·.:· . .. :·:::,: .; ::.:

�I'

•

,

II ·

·Candace Hawk Bride o Harry Carleton

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Miss Barbara Ann Kautz
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Paul W. Kautz, 586 Crescent
Rd., Columbus, are announcing the engagement and apll'Oachlng.marrlage of their daughter, Barbara Ann, Ill Mr.
Daniel Wayne Gray. Mr. Gray is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Guinan of Alpena, Michigan.
Miss Kautz, who graduated from Riverside White Cross
School of Nursing last June, is employed as Public Health
Nurse for Madison County.
Her finance, a graduate of Wittenberg University, is
cur:renUy associated with Columbus Public Schools as an
arts specialist.
The open church wedding will be an event of July 10 at
the Parkview United Methodist Church, 345 S. Brinker Ave.,
Colwnbus.

bl

pt
I

c

Community
Corne·r By

POMEROY - Miss Candace
Elaine .Hawk and Mr. Harry
Michael Carleton e~changed
wedding vows in a ceremony on
May 16 at thj! Tuppers Plalna
Christian Church.
The bride is the daughter Of
Mr. and Mrs. later Hawk, of
near Coolville, and the
bridegroom is the son of Mrs.
Frances Carleton, Pomeroy,
Route 3, and the late Willism
. Harry Carleton.
The Rev. John Wyatt officiated at the double ring
ceremony which was performed
at 2:30 p. m. following nupUal
music by Mrs. Lavinia Brannon. The altar was decorated
with gladioli and white daisy
arrangements.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bridewasattiredln a
white silk crepe floor-length
gown fashioned ln empire style
with full puffed sleeves, a high
neckline and an A•line skirt.
Banda of beads accented the
neckline and the sleeves. Her
elbow length veil of illusion waa
attached to a white satin bow,
and sbe car:ried a white Bible
topped with a
daisy
arrangement.
Miss Nancy Hawk, sister of
the bride, served as her maid of
honor. The other attendanta
were Mrs. Brenda Taylor,
Fostoria, and Mrs. Linda
Kaylor,
Reedsville,
bridesmaids. They wore floor
length gowns of identical
design, all made by the bride's
mother. The skirts were of

floral print dacron polyester
with tops Of solid colored silk
organza. Miss Hawk was in a
pink and green ensemble with
the bridesmaids in blue and
yellow. Their veiled headpieces
matched the skirts, and they
had hand corsages of daisies.
Mr. Jim Carleton Of

Gallipolis, brother of the
bridegroom, was best .man, and
ushers were Mr. Mike Brothers
and Mr. Virgil Dill, both of
Pomeroy, Route 3.
For her daughter's w~ding,
Mrs. ·Hawk wore a black and
white plaid suit with white
areessorles and a white daisy

90th Birthday
Is Observed

.

an
ar
it.
WI

SY

dl
he

~ VICKY SPENCER,

BARBARA and Beth Fultz, Melanie
Hackett, Jo Ellen Diehl and Mrs. George Hackett, Jr. are spending the weekend in Rome. The six are on an educational student
lllur ofE.urope and will return in about 10 days.
They left here on June 1 and traveled to Europe on a 747 Jet
ianding in Amsterdam. From there they had a grand tour of
Germany, on to SWitzerland, Austria, and now Italy. After Rome
they will return to Switzerland. From there they will go to Paris
for two days, then England, and on home.
.
For the past several months the girls have been meeting with
Mrs. Hackett for a study of the various places they are now
visiting.
JOINING CHUCK DOWNIE at Camp Robinhood in New
Hampshire this summer will be Donald Dixon, a Meigs Local
junior high school science teacher. Don Is now visiting his parents
at Baltimore, Md. and from there will go to Camp Robinhood this
week to work as a summer counselor.
THE REV. ROBERT KUHN has his work cut out for the next
couple of weeks. He was one of a few Baptist ministers In Ohio
selected to serve as a counselQr at a junior citizens camp at
Judson Hills, Loudenville. The boys attending will be borderline
delinquent.
MRS. FLOYD HARRISON, in Columbus last weekend for the
graduation of her granddaughter, Debca Scott, was most complimentary about the symphonic band directed by former Middleporter Franklin (Giny) Ginther, which played at the commencement. "I could have listened all night" was her comment.
UNITED METHODIST MINISTERS on the move include the
Rev. William Airson of the Enterprise-Morning Star charge. He
and his family expect to be assigned this week at tHe Ohio West
Uolted Methodist Conference to Union Furnace.
Scheduled to be sent here to pastor the Enterprise, Rock
Springs and Flatwoods Churches Is the Rev. Stanton J. Smith of
Zanesville. We bear, also unofficially, that the Rev. Frank
Cheese brew will be returning to Meigs County and will be living in
Racine and pastoring the churches formerly served by the Rev.
Pa~l Sellers.
However, as one minister emphasized, nothing's final until
we go to conference.

WSCS Group Meets
POMEROY - A program
entitled, New Cooperation for
World Development, was
presented by Mrs. Elizabeth
Cuckler at the Tuesday night
meeting o.f the Women's Society
of Christian Service of tbe
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church . .
Mrs. Gerald Wildermuth
presided at the meeting Which
opened with two hymns, Come
Thou Fount of Every Blessing
and My 'Hope Is Built. The 18
members present reported 87
sick visits made during April
and May.
A thank you note was read
fr•lln l/11• Ted J)uwnie family
and Mrs. Minnie Bengel fur
IO!nding food 'on the day ol the
funeral of Li•uls A. Cnl'l (If
llidUuo"''"· Md .. 11 11•1'1111!1' M!•igs
f:,muly n:shh·ul. ,
Mr.&lt;. Wiloil;rwullo ,

Robert Card, Mrs . Robert
Warner and Mrs. Harry P.
Smith reported on the recent
district meeting held in Logan.
Mrs. Wildermuth concluded
the meeting with ' prayer. A
dessert course was served by
Mrs. Gertrude !&gt;fitchell and
Mrs. Marie Custer. Roses from
the garden of Mrs. Norma
Parker centered tl)e table.
· I'ACTCONCLUDED
CIN CINNATI I UP!)
Members of Retail Cle1·ks Union
agreed to a 27.month Jl"cl
f'l"iday, end in~ a strike against
117 K1·ogc1' stoo·cs that began lute
In May . The cun!J·act called for
W.lt~.:t' .llikl!s rrum 50 'cents tO

lwur. Clco·k• hdd
l•io'kt"Lt•d tile 67 stiii'CS in

$UO

·1111

~~j IIJIJ ll'liSlt 'I'll )lid ill IIi I1 Slltttli&lt;•J'! I

Mrs . I Jl1iH wul nurlht•ru

Kt•uttw~y ,

will reside at Pomeroy, Roule 3. wedding were Mr, and Mrs.
The bride. graduated from , James Schirtzinger, Columbus;
Eastern High School in 1969 and Miss Cheryl Findling and Miss
Is a student at the Holzer Beth Findling, Car:rolf: Miss
Hospital School of Nursing. Mr. Debbie Morgan, Columbus; Mr.
Carleton is a 1970 Meigs High and Mrs. Ronald Taylor,
School graduate and is em- Fostoria; Mr. and Mrs! Halley
ployed at the Meigs County Westfall, West Union; W. Va.,
Highway Department. . .
and Mr. and Mrs. Dave Evans,
Out of county guests for the Melvindale, Mich.

::~~~~-·
-·
~~~~===--

'c

Sandals
AND WHITES FOR

CARPENTER - Three
beautiful birthday cakes, roses
from her daughters and many .
gifts were presented Mrs.
Ginevra Fosler In honor of her
90th birthday.
Enjoying a gathering in her
honor included Mrs. Zelia
Weyand, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Summer sandals &amp; whites ... they
Weyand and Wendy, Mr. and
just go together. And our collecMrs : Randy Good and Jeremy,
tion of sandals and whites, cross
Mrs. Bradley T. Martin and
Holly, Mike Shannon and Mr.
straps, buckles, T-straps, more
and Mrs. Lawrence Oxley ,
has it all together!
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Jer:ry
Huff, Dayton; Mrs . Rita
Steadman, Franklin, Ohio;
Mrs. Nellie Blum, Galion ; Enos
Peck, Nellie Hawk, Hazel Peck,
Clara McLaughlin, Ruth Jordan
and Mr . and Mrs. Lowell
Walterhouse and
Gina ,
Springfield ; Mr . and Mrs .
Howard Weyand, Hamden;
Mrs. Pauline Fosler and Mrs.
Ronnie Williams, Langsville.
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Jordan,
Columbus, Miss.; Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis Cottrill, Mrs. Bessie
Knapp, Mr. and Mrs. Kenny
Turner, Pat, Sherrie and Danny
Joe Turner, Mr . and Mrs. Joe
Turner and Tony, Albert Cone,
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Coen and
family, Mrs. Grace Hensler,
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Jorctan ,
Mrs. Nellie Vale, Mrs. Fannie
Pettit, Mrs. G. A. Radekin, and
Tina, Mrs. Faye Jordan, Miss
Kathy Gilkey and Walter
Jordan, all local area, and
Melva Crabtree, McArthur.
The honored guest also
'· •• J
••
' rJ
received 71 birthday cards and
would like to express her apprecia tion to all the many ·~ Where Shoes are sensibly Priced.
friends and relatives who
~
MIDDLEPORT, O.
. helped to make her birthday a
wonderful time .

Mr. and Mrs. Harry M. Carleton

Barnhill-Mil/hone
TUPPERS PLAINS - Mi8l .
Ruth Ann Barnhill, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Carl J. Barnhill,
Tuppers Plains, became the
bride of Larry Edward
Millbone, son of Mr. and Mra.
Vernon Millhone of Tuppers
Plains on May 22, at 2 p. m. at
the home of the bride. The Rev.
W. A. Frost officiated at the
double ring ceremony.
Prior to the ceremony, Mr.
and Mrs. Garrett Christy of
Grove Ci,ty, Ohio, provided
traditional nuptial music and
sang "Whither Thou Goest."
The home was decorated with
two large seven branch candelabra, two large vases of
while gladioli and satin covered
prayer bench. There was also a
flower arrangement on the
piano.
Given in mar:riage by ber
parents, the bride wore a floor
length gown, fashioned by ber
mother. It was made of bridal
satin and chantilly lace with a
high neck, empire waist and
Gibson Girl sleeves. Her
headpiece of lace pedals and
pearls had a shoulder length
illusion veiL She car:ried yellow
roses on a white, lace covered
Bible with streamers tied ln ·
lover's knots. Her only jewelry
was a miniature cross necklace
and matching earrings, a gift
from the groom.
Her matron of honor, Mrs.
James Stout, sister of the bride,
wore a high neckline pink gown
made of chiffon over taffeta
with an empire waist trimmed
in pink satin. She wore a white
rose headpiece. She car:ried brother. Mr. Steve Millhone of groom, registered guests.
pink and ~hlte mun,u' with Tuppers Plains was the usher. For their wedding trip to
streamers tted m lover s knots. The bride's mother wore a Cedar Point the bride changed
Miss Nancy Hawk, RFD pastel green dress with dark . to a blue and white pants suit
Coolville, bridesmaid, wore a green lace overlay. Her ac- and wore white shoes and
pink chiffon gown over taffeta cessories were while and her carried a matching purse. She
with an empire waist. Her corsage was white carnations. wore the rose corsage from her
beadptece was a white rose The bridegroom's mother wedding bouquet.
bow. She carried pink and while wore a rose double knit dress
The bride is a 1970 graduate of
mums with streamers tied ln with white accessories. Her Eastern Local High School and
lovers' knots.
.
corsage was white carnations. is presently employed by the
Mtss C~nrue Kay Stout, mo:re •Following the ceremony, a ·Columbus and Southem Ohio
of the br1de, was flower g1rl. four-\iered wedding cake Electric Company, Athens.
Her dress was IUac dotted swiss trimmed with blue roses white
The bridegroom is a 1970
over taffeta, with high neck, doves and topped with ~ bride graduate of Eastern Local High
empire waist lind puffed and groom centered the School and is presently emsleeves. She carried a white reception table. Presiding at t~e : ployrd by Milll.ane's Sohio,
basket with lilac tinted flowers . table were Mrs. Clyde Headley Tuppers Plains.
Mr. David Millhone, Tuppers and Mrs. Kenneth Griffith. Miss
The newlyweds will reside in
Plains, was best man for his Debbie Mlllhone, sisler of the Tuppers Plains.

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-Adjustable cold control
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vegetable crispers

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·Enclosed butter keeper
·White. Avocado, or
Shaded CopP,er cabinet

Past Councilors Elect Officers
terlainment will be by Mrs.
Golda Frederick, Mrs. · Zona
Biggs and Mrs. Ada Van Meter.
Mrs. Mary Hayes presided at
the business meeting which
opened with the Lord's prayer,
scripture and the pledge to the
flag .
It was noted that flowers 'ha4
been sent to the grave of Mrs.
Lucille Kraeuter on DecoraUon
Day. Mrs. Elizabeth Wickham,
Lo~elland John Ridenour were
guesls for the meeting. Mrs.
Betty Roush was assisting
hostess. Refreshments were
served. '
Others altending were Mrs.
EU1e/ Orr, Mrs. Mae Spencer,
' .
.

91 1,'

PRICE!

Mr. and Mrs. larry Mil/hone

POII-JEROY- Officers for the'
1971-7~ year were elected for a
meeting Wednesday night of !he
Past Councilors Club of Chester
Council 323, Daughters of
America, held at the home of
Mrs. Pauline Ridenour.
Elected were Mrs. Opal
Hollon, president; Mrs. lnzy
Newell, vice president; Mrs.
Margaret Tullio!, ,secretary;
Mrs.
Esther
Ridenour,
11·easurer: Mrs. Sadie Tl:ussell,
~enllnel, and Mrs. Erma
Clehmd, flower chairman.
Pluns were made for a picnic
t11 be held In july at !he home of
MI'S. 'l'I'US!!ell with Mrs. Tuttle
us the U!i.~isllng hosless. En-

BOX

Mqdel R014M2

Th~

Mrs. Ada Mor:ris, Mrs. Ada
Neutzling, Mrs. Mabel 1 Van
Meter, Mrs. Letha Wood. Mrs.
Mary Showalter, Mrs. Hattie
Frederick, Mrs. Laura Mae

OUR

..

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FIGHTER
PRICE!,

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Having A

Week's
Special
,

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.
95
.·

PHILCO , ~ : The better idea people in refrigerators.

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
'.

OHIO

'',,

MR. AND MRS. ERNF8I' (BUD AND MAXINE) Wingett,
Racine, celebrated their 40th wedding anniversary Sallirday. The
couple, as they did 40 years ago, left for a motor trip.
Who said you couldn't have a second honeymoon. The couple
was presented with a inonetary gift recently from the De:nocrat
Acdm Club in bornir of their anniversary. Congratulations to you
both and may you have many more h!ippY years.
,
·

Stop Over
for Mr. Eddy

,

SHOE.

'~

POMEROY- All yoii folb ln ceraJlllc land are bsuii .
..
ID partldpale in the ceramic iiiHiw to be held clurbc the Big Bend·
Regalia Weekend. Displaya wiD be placed in the Pooieroy Junior
Higb SciJc* IIYDI· Sllowbtis wiD be held on Saturday and &amp;mday
!rOll\ 12 110011 to 5 p. m.
All It $Ianda to dale, Mrs. T1111 Martin of Rutland and Mra.'
Allee loJIIIa of Middleport are the only two who have committed
lllemselves to showing their wares.
The two ladles will have oo view everything from vases to
doUsand they will also be offering articles for sale. U anyone e1ae
Is Interested In pardcipatlng In the event just give Earl Ingels a,
call and he will be moat happy to help you and Rive you any informa don you may need.

Social
Calendar

POMEROY - Mr. Eddy
Educator is back from its
garage In Chlllcothe and again
SUNDAY
in good health. Repairs needed MEIGS MOTORCYCLE Club
were a muHler, a new door second moto-cross of year
glass, an oU and grease job and Sunday at clubgrounds five
a manifold was loose.
miles north of Pomeroy on
The staff is .now dividing the Route 33. Practice, 11 a. m. to 1
books and the old traveling ·p. m. racing to start 1:30 p.m.
·library books are being Trophies in all classes, refreshreturned (9,000) to the State ments available at clubhouse.
IJbrary.
'
SYRACUSE Nazarene
New books listed and card Church Bible School display, 7
!lies .have made them more p. m. Sunday, at church.
accessible to the public by . DAILY VACATION Bible
listing books by the subject for
information. The new schedule School program, 7:30 p.m.
Is being prepared. Suggestions S~y at Rutland Church of
I ed b
111n 992- Chmt.
are we com
Y ca g
·
MONDAY
3?45.New~ks:
, ·
HEATH METHODIST
Tomorrow s .Tomor:row: The Church W.S.C.S. and Class 12
1
B apk _woman, Ladn~r; picnic 6 p.m. Monday in the
'£he LJb~ral Tradi,t!on 1fl chlltch basement. Take covered
American Thought, Volk~me~. dish and o\vn table service.
The Conservative Tradition m
.
American Thought, Sigler.
. _SYRACUSE. Commumty,
PI . the Cheetah and Her Bible School begmrung June 14,
Cubs~
Monday, at First United
Washington o c . the Presbyterian Church, 9 to 11:30
Government
Bo~~on
a.m. with "Jesus Speaks to Our
Willa Cather the Woman ~d World" aa ·theme. All children
Her Works B~
and helpers welcome.
Cervan..,;· !he ·Life 0! a
1UE8DAY
Genius Dla~Piaja
RUTLAND FIREMEN'S
The Awle Dumpling Gang Auxiliary, 7:30Tuesdaynightat
Bickham
' the firehouse.
Afric~ Herdboy Bothwell GROUP II, Middleport First
Flowers for a Dead Witch' United Presbyterian Church,
B tte
th
.
' Tuesday, 7:30 p. m. home of
~:~e Eagle, Hazelton. Mrs. Paul ":&amp;ptOnstall with
Savannah Purchase, Hodge. Mrs. Myron Miller, co-hostess.
Perunarrlc, Howatch,
Hail, Hall, the Gang's All
WEDNESDAY

JANEIIAIUlm .

Surprise for Pastor Manley Given by Wife

Mr. and Mn. D(ma Hoffman Sr.
-

TUPPERS PLAJNS- Mr. and Mrs. Dana E. Hoffman,
Sr., will observe their 50th wedding anniversary with an open
house on June 20, 1971, from 2 to 4 p. m. at their home ln
Tuppers Plains. Mr. and Mrs. Hoffman were married June
22, ,1921, at Elm Grove, West Virginia. They are the parents
of three children: Dana E. Hoffman, Jr., Rutland; Mrs.
Kenneth Davldaon, Columbus; and Mra. Stanley Garey,
Clearwater, F1orida. They have six grandsons and one greatgranddaughter.

Part in Regatta
Show is Planned
POMEROY - Participation
in the Big Bend Regatta flower
show to be staged by the Meigs
County Jaycees next weekend
was planned during a meeting
of the Middleport Amateur
Gardeners Club Wed~tesday
night at the home of Mrs. Edward Burkett.
·
Read at the meeting was a
letter from Earl Ingels,
chairman of the shOw, asking
club members to participate.
Ar:rangements are to be in place
by 10 a.m. on Saturday and are
not,to be removed until after 4 p.

m.

According to the rules entries
arelimitedtooneperpersonin
each class, and are to come to
the show tagged with name,
dd
d rd
Ib f
a ress an ga en c u a filiation, If any. Ribbons for
first, second and third places
will be awarded. A best of show
and runner-up awar!ls will also
be made.
The Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs convention to be
held ln August in Cleveland was
announced by Mrs. Harry
Moore , pre side n t .
Ar:rangements were made for
Mrs. Betty Cline to furnish a
column for the "Green Thumb
Notes" of the Daily Sentinel on

city

to Murder
Russell
'
. The Three Day Alliance
'
Simpson.
On the Shady Side, Swln-

'•,

'

Adamson.

H~~~~ H:~~gh

'•

'•'·&lt;,

Middleport who Uilderwent surgery Friday at Holzer Medical
Center and Is reported to be doing very well. Those who would like
to remember her with a·card her room number Is 379.

AND UP

THE

. Sy Katie Crow

GET WElL WISHES go Ill Mrs. Isabel W'mebrenner of

399

By alARLENE UOt;~'U(ll · . Kelly Grueser. As a child, Jane worked
POMEROY - Jane ~· love of side by side with her mother In the
· flowers, ber creative flair, and a ~ flqwer beds and delighted ln gather~
·general appreciation for beauti!ul bouquets.
things made it inevitable that aesthetic Her easy pleasant . manner ·well
appeal would enter Into her selection of equipa her for ~ role of dealing with
a career.
'
·
people, on both happy and sad · ocShe became a floral designer. One casiOJlS, who choose flowers for ex. glimpse of Jane arranging single ll'essing their deepest emotions.
flowers into a bouquet of loveliness is While She says she likes all phases of
convincing that she has found her niche her work, she P!lrtlcularly enjoys
In life.
getting flowers ready for weddings.
A graduate of the Bill Hixoo School of Jane and her husband, Allan,
F1oral Design in l.ak!!wood, Jane has production manager at the Ohio VaUey
been employed for the past five years at Data Control.center at Belpre, reside
the Pomeroy F1ower Shop.
on Route 7 toward Chester.
When she deelded to take up floral With a jitb, keeping house, cooking,
design soon after her graduation frQJll and making some of her clothes, she
Pomeroy High School, it came as no says she has little time for gardening
surprise to her parents, Mr. and Mra. although she does raise a few flowers.
·

WILLIAM. (MIKE)·JONES, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Jones,
Jr. of Columbus, waa Jllimed to the Dean's Ust at Ohio University
for the winter quarter.
. Mike ill the gfandaon of Mr. and Mrs. 11:. J. Hill, Pomeroy, and
resides with his grandparenlll ·while attending school.

Summst!

Charlene Hdetlich

POMEROY - Quite a nice surprise for Pennee Williams Friday
was a telephone call from a penpal of 11 years in Manchester,
England.
Kathleen Thompson and Pennee started corresponding in the
seventh grade and have exchanged tapes and pictures but Friday
was their first telephone conversation. Kathleen works with
computers in a bank at Manchester and the plans is for the two to
get together, either here or there, sometime in the not too distant
future.

corsage. Mrs. Carletnn was in a
navy blue suit with white accessories and also wore a while
daisy corsage.
A reception was held in the
chur.ch annex Immediately
following the ceremony. Mrs.
Faye Watson, Mrs. June
Treadway and Mrs. candace
Brothers served at the refreshment table. Miss Mary carleton
registered the guests:
The couple took a wedding
!rip to the Great Smoky
Mountian National Park. They

Personality Profit~

Katie's · Korner·

June 25.
Invitations from both the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners
and the Rutland Garden Club to
open meetings this month were
read; The Friendly Gardeners'
meeting was .afmouncejl· for
June 23 at ihe Rutland Church
Of Christ while the Rutland Club
will have an open meeting on
June 28 at the Uniled Methodist
Church in Rutland.
It was reported that plantings
at the village hall has been
completed with red geraniums
and while petunias by Mrs.
Cline, Mrs. lillian Moore, and
Mrs. Jean Morgan.
Special guests at the meeting
were Mrs. John Reese, director
of Region 11, OAGC, Mrs..Grace
Bradbury of Galllpolis, and
Mrs. · Fred Blaettnar, Meigs
County contact chairman. Both
Mrs. Reese and Mrs. Blaettnar
spoke on garden club activities,
and Mrs. Bradbury talked on
rose· specimens, how to handle
them and what makes good
ones. She judged specimen
roses and arrangements giving
awards to.Mrs. Glenn Lambert,
Mrs. Burkett, and Mrs. Cline for
arrangements and Mrs.
Reynolds for specimens.
Members in response to roll

Principals Listed ·
june 26th Wedding

MIDDLEPORT - A surprise Mrs. James Hughes, Mrs. Macy
party honoring the Rev. Odell
and,Mrs.
Manley on his birtllday anniversary was given by hla wile.
·Betty, at the home Of their son
and daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Manley and
Crystal.
Cake, Ice cream, potato chips,
coffee. and orange punch were
serv.ed. Lewis smith won a door '
prize, and game prizes were
won' by Connie Manley, Opal·
Hughes, and Joann WeUs.
Guests were Mr·. and Mrs.
Wendell Eblin and Ray, Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Smith, Mrs. Wells
and' Jody, Miss Robin Rathburn, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Manley, Donna and Junior, Mr.
and Mrs. Gary Acree, Mr. and

and Mrs. Elwood P!llllipa and
. Others presenting gifts Ill Mr . and Mrs . Lawrence

Excellent
Selection .
of Famous
Name Brands

call named their favorite rose.

Mrs. Blaettnar won the door
prize. Mrs. Grace Pratt, Mrs.
Burkett and Mrs. Reynolds
were named to revise the by-.
laws. Dues are payable in
September Instead of October,
it was noted.
The dining room table
featured a mass ar:rangement
of Blaze and Paul Scarlet roses
in crystal made by Mrs.
Burkett, Mrs. Moore preside4
ai tbe punch bowl and Mrs.
Reynolda at the coffee service.
Hostesses were Mrs. Burkett,
Mrs. l..ambert and Mrs. Philip
1
Mowery.
Mrs. Reynolds gave the verse
of the month using a meditation
· entitled "The Garden."
'--~-.oii---·"'"•••••••lill••••--1111!1-liii•IIJ!I..I

BOSWORTH Council 46,
Royal and Select Master, 7:30
Wednesday' ~omeroy Masonic
LETART, W.Va. - -Wedding Max Staats, Letart; Ralph
Temple. All ntuals requested at
plans
have been completed for Meadows, Canvas, W. Va.;
thdk '
·
~~ERN Athletic Boosters, the marriage of Miss Bernitli Ralph Kelvington, Letart; Carl '
netton.
Lynn Staats, daughter of Mr. King, New Haven; Timmy
callban's Flliblll!ter, West. B:30 p. m. Wednesday at high and Mrs. Harry Staats of Meadows, Richwood, W. Va.,
school.
Letart, W. Va. Ill Donald Lee and Rick Johnson of Wbeeling,
Meadows, son of Mr ..and Mrs. ushers.
Arthur Meadows of Wharton, Organist will be Mrs. Paul
THURSDAY
l'owell of New Haven, and
UIDIU, . Uests TW1N CITY Shrinettes, 6:30 W. Va.
soloist,
Mrs. Betty Jo Evans of
The open church ceremony
p.m. Thursday at club house in
·
eil
Racine. Potluck dinner, joint will be performed at the New Charleston; Kim Meadows of
~R - Sixty meeting with Twin City Shrine Haven United Methodist Church Richwood, guest reg~trar and
alumni and )i&amp;esta made Club. Take covered dish and in New Haven, W. Va. June 26, Penny 'Meadows of Barrett, W.
at 7:'30, with the .Rev. Gerald Va. and Michelle Meadows of
reservations for 'the annual table service.
Richwood, taper lighters.
Sayre officiating.
Columbia High ScbOQI alumni
Miss Staats will be attended The · ceremony will be
banquet which was ·.held at
,
by her sister, Miss Bonnie followed by an open reception in
Albany Elementary Sc~ on 1
Staats of Gallipolis, as maid of the church- social rooms.
Saturday evening.
,J
honor. The bridesmaids will be • • • • • • • • • •
The business session was
the Misses IJnda Kelvington of
conducted by uie president,
u.t;
OOMPLETE
r1
/1
Letart,
Virginia Shrimplln and
Arthur Crabtree, asaisted by
flj ~ •
WEDDING FLOWER
Mrs. Ronald Whittington, POMEROY _ Jesse E. Vickie Shrimplin Of Mason, and
Bonnie
Ord
and
IJnda
Holbrook
secretary-treasurer. The slate
· · hi h · 1of
SERVICE
of New Haven. Christi Staats, of
of officers elected for next year Brinker Ia the new g pnes
are Wayne Turner, president; Pomeroy Chapter 80, Royal Mason wlll be the Junior Consult Our Designers for
lhe Righi Flowers For You.
Rex Shenefield, vice president, Arch Maso"'.
. bridesmaid.
and Mrs. Anna E. Turner
M,eetlng at the Masomc
Other principals will be Miss
·
' Temple recently, officers for PorJ:ha Meadows, tile groom's
Jlecretary-l{casurer ·
. . the 1971-72 year were eleeted. niece, flower girl; Master
'•
Serving : Gallipolis,
Special recognition was gaven Othe
ed besides Brinker Jeffery Staats, nephew of the
Pomeroy, Middleport, 0.
to teachers present. Prizes were
rs nam
.
&amp; Mason Ct!. W. Va.
··b W Iter Sw It Emma were Ben H. Philson, king; bride, ring bearer; , James
446·1777
992-SUO
. won y a
e ,
· · Zlrkl
'be· c J
Whittln ton d Mr nd Mrs · Danny 8•
e, sen ' · · Meadows, the groom's prother,
Haroll Robfr:son. ·s:mpathy Slnlble, secrelary;.Theodore T. Craigsville, W.Va., best man;
was extenlled to Mr. and Mrs. Reed~ Jr., treasurer: Dav•d W.
Wayne Turner ln the recentlOIS Fox, captain of the host;
Norbert W. Compton, sojour·• R' hard w. vaughan
of their son, BlaI ne. B0 th
parenta are alumni.
ner • ac
'
The bsnquet Will served by royal arch captain&gt; Dale E.
be
Smith, guard: James M. Hayes,
Alba ny Grange mem rs. third illman. Richard Sayre
Walter Swett, Marguerite . • .:;avails~· Max Manuai
· Frank and Claire Dudgeon aeJc fir t "--~.and Richard
Jurnlshed music for square r ·' s va._,.., '
The tax books are now open for the
dancing with Robert Pickett aa Vaughan, trustee.
' r
Julie or Second half collection of the
· The new officers were incaller·
stalled by Fred Blaettnar, past
1970 · Real Estate Taxes. Also for
BANQUET SET
high priest, and Norbert W.
delinquent tax.. Closing date wi II be
MIDDLEPORT - MiddiepOJ't Comptnn, marshall.
July 1, 1971.
Masonic Lodge 313. Flo:AM, will -Dag' Hammarskjold forHoward E. Frank,
bold a hlher..son Banquet at me•· secretary-general "of the
1:16 p.m. TuutWy at the hall.1 United Nations, was awarded
t.flelgs County Treasurer
Tlckelll..-. available from any the Nnho•l P&lt;~acc Prize in
lodge officer.
1961.

BAHR CLOTHIERS.
MIDDLEPORT OHIO

GREAT FATHER'S nAY

VALUE

PPENING!
... the perfect opportunity
for th~ perfect cfa(Jir
for the perfect Dad
by

Sixty Columbia
. G
Al
Att d Banquet

WI'IICII

'
"
""
SAVl'M-'41
1

14f up

FLEXS1EEL
lacll.orlhwt

Tesse Bnnker
ls ah n_..;est

the one gift
that really hits homel
Go Jlraight. to Dad'! ·htGrt with the

·. FLEX.O.LOUNGER"Reclin" ., ohe
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. Pat~nt•d Flexstftl spri"'l tonatruc:..
tion and counter balonc" rtc:llning
mechonism auure1 lifetin\e comfort.

DUDL£Y'S FLORIST

Revolutio.nary, lree-ftaating

BPAC•llwALK•R
(Ak"'•J It's thr• choir&amp; itt'CN'Ie! A
lovnge chair, rocker, mvlti•position
rtclintr. t1ert's comfort tncf stylint
with thickly padle~ bock ~~nd arms.

LEGAL

MEIGS COUNTY
' . REAL ESTATE OWNERS

FLEXSTEEC

Luxuriously tufted bock and arm's
accenllhis FLEX-0-LOUNGE~On
tapered legs with ball casters.

I

. Traditionol style SPACE WALKER
wit.h a tufted pillow-ba~k, Lawson
arms and tailored ki~k ~leal skirt.
IHDUTRUCTIILI I LUI STilL SPAINGit'lli

BAKER
FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT OHIO
::~·/. 1: . '1l \\t/ \)}.' :·.:· . .. :·:::,: .; ::.:

�14- The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, June 13, 19'11

Four New School Buses Bought in Mason
. r. PLEASANT - Acontract months salary to Charles
to provide four buses was
awarded to the R. S. Steiner
Company and- the Superior
Coach Sales, . among other
actions, by the Mason County
Board of Education Fridaf
rughl
The board approved the
purchsslng of four 66-passenger
bus chsssis from the Soolner
Company for $6,297.40 each and
lour 66-passenger bodies will be
purchsaed from the Superior
Company fo~ $3,662.10 each.
The board, by a 4-1 vote, also
approved a budgetary transfer
of lunda ior payment of three

• •

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Chambers, as director of
secondary education . Board
meniber Harry Siders voted
. against the measure.
Though the transfer concerning Chambers_was approved by the State Depsrtrnent
·of Education, it was pointed out
In a letter from the State
Superintendent Daniel Taylor to
President Ted Stevens that "In
light of the current controversy
that any transfers or sup·plements subsequent to May 21
will not be approved." The
matter related to Chambers had
occurred prior to May 21.

Under new business, the
following items mei.with board
approval:
- Permission was granted lor
the use of two buses by the
Neighborhood Youth Corp
Program through the State
Department of Natural
Resources.
- Mrs. Maxine Lathey was
given permission to attend a
class in nutrition at Marshall
University from June 21-26.
- The board ratified Title Ill
participation for Career
Development k-Adult . This
program deals with providing
Mason County School students

with adequate career in·
formationaswellastechniques.
- Request for ·payment for
Jane Surbaugh for June 2, 3 and
4 was approved by the 'Board
pending legal ruling Of the State
Department Of Education.
-C. L. Head was granted
payment of $300for extra duties
as Chorus Director at Point
Pleasant High School.
The request by Coach
Jimmy Wedge for use of the
new Junior High Gymnasium to
conduct summer basketball
classes was tabled. This action
was taken in order that Whalen
may check the legality of

factors in the reque.!t con- transfers: Mrs.' Una Hinson
cemlng insurance and gym from Ordnance to Mt. Flower;
rental.
Sue Ann Thacker from New
Haven to Ordnance; and
The following resignatlons Suzanne Piercy from North
were accepted : Beulah Jarrell, Point Pleasant to Ordnance.
teacher at North P'~int The transfer request of
Pleasant; Jahala Anne Sci~si Elizabeth Hughes was tabled
ti~e I mus1c teacher ; Judith · for a later meeting-of the board.
Wilcox, teacher .at Sunnyside; Under the.recommendalion of
Margaret Franc1s, teache~ at Michael Whalen and Gary
North Pomt Pleasant, retlrmg ; Conley, acting superintendent
Ferron Cremean~, teacher at and assistant superintendent
Ordnance, retmng; ~udrey respectively, these teachers
Meadows, teacher at Hannan were employed: Dewetta J.
High School and Ronald Dun- Gay for North Point Pleasant.
can, not previously placed.
Sharon Lynn Hatfield fo;
The Board ratified these Junior-senior Hannan High

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Schools; Maggie Ann Dunlap
for Central School; Benjamin F.
Roush for Wahama ; Gary
Shsmblin for the vocational
school ; Doris McDaniel,
regisoored nurse i and Mrs.
Mary Volvorn for Central
School.
James Dunn was granted
permission to return to school
for two weeks, while Florence
Staats was approved for cook
for Letart School.
The action concerning
salaries for non-teaching
personnel was tabled for a
special meeting to be held
TUesday, June 15, by the Board
members.
In other business, Whalen
asked permission to continue
construction at Mason and New
Haven Elementary Schools.
This action was approved.
Members present were: Gary
Conley, Michael Whalen, Harry
Siders, Bill Withers, Charles
Eshenaur, Ray Fields, and Ted
Stevens, president of the Board.

WHERE
YOU SAVE .,

.rzcra

'

DOES
MAKE
. .A

DIFFERENCE
'We pay you to '·save
land the pay is gOOd).

4%%
fhe Athens C:,unly
Savings &amp; Lo1n Co.
296 Second 51.
Pomerov, Ohio
Member Federal
Home Loan Bank
Member Federal Savings &amp;

Loan Insurance Corporation .

All accounts Insured up to
$20,000.00

WASHINGTON (UP!) ~
Ul)daunted by a light rain that
delayed her wedding for 40
mlniltes, Tricia Nixon was
JllllTied Saturday to Edward
Finch Cox a8 she had 1[ished,
outdoors in the White House
rose.·garden before 400 guests
and a sad but proud father.
The PresldllJit kissed his 25year-old elder daughter m the
cbeek before he halided her
over to Cox, the 24-year-old
New York socialite and Har·
vard law ·student who had
courted ,Tricia for seven
years.
The couple exchanged their
vows at an altar under a
flower-bedecked white
wrought iron gazebo just
outalde the President's Oval
Room office. Cox placed a

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corporation which dlscarda, deposits or casts upon any land, public or private, trash,
rubbish, rubble, or any other like substance or substances which tends to harbour, hide,
breed or feed any rodents or Insects or is harmful to public health, shall be guilty of a
misdemeanor and shall be fined up to $100.

J' f

1

Daughter Born on 2nd Anniversary
CHESTER - Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Lee Summetiield of
Parkersburg, are announcing
the birth of their first child, a
nine pound, six-ounce daughter,
Arribfr Lee, on May 31 at the St.
Joseph Hospital in ParKersburg, on the second wedding
anniversary of her parents.
ATTEND GRADUATION
MIDDLEPORT - Carol Jean
Jones, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest A. Jones of Columbus,
and granddaughrer of Mrs.
Stanley B. Jones of Pomeroy,

Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Gail West of Parkersburg
and Mr. and Mrs . Rex Sum·
merfield, Chester. Greatgrandparents are Mrs. Edna
Summerfield, Chester, and Mr.
and Mrs. Riley Pigott, Long
Bottom.

graduated last Sunday from
Eastmoor High School. Attending the graduation were
Mr. and Mrs. Harry S. Moore,
Middleport, uncle and aunt of
Carol Jean .
. .
. :· ...

CONTINUES AT HARTLEY'S
Good selection of styles for men and women.
Our famous brands.

Open All Day Thursdays- Open Fri. Night Til9
Middle of Upper Block
Pomeroy

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SCHOLARSHIP RECEIVED - Jan Taylor, winner of a
lour-year Goodyear Merit Scholarship, receives
congratulaUons and a scholarship certificate from Michael
T. Bucci, manager of Goodyear's Point Pleasant Chemical

Plant. Observing the recent presentation are Jan's father,
Arnold E. Taylor, a maintenance mechanic at Goodyear, and
Mrs. Violet Gerlach, guidance counselor at Point Pleasant
High School. Miss 'Taylor plans to attend Marshall this fall
and pursue chemistry asher major and
In math.

minor

Surprise Layette Shower Given
By Mrs. Lyle Balderson
REEDSVILLE - A surprise
layette shower was given Mrs.
Donald Putman at the May
meeting of the Riverview
Garden Club with Mrs. Gene
Wilson and Mrs. Frank Bise
hostesses at the Wilson home
where the gifts were on a
decorated table.
The business meeting was
conducted by the vice president,
Mrs, Putman. A reading from
the Upper Room was given by
Mrs. Claremont Harris, and roll
call was answered by bringing a
wild flower and naming it.
'A donation was given to ,the
club from the birthday club.
Thanks are extended to the
birthday gals for their help.
Donald Putman is to mow
around the Riverview School
sign, which is a club project and
Dowers are to be planted in the
planoor.
Mrs. Harris is to take care of
the Dally Sentinel Green Thumb
Notes article for June 11. Plans
. were made for a progress! ve
dinner and tour of gardens for
June 24, with the salad course,
at the Harris • home, main
course at the Whitehead home,
and dessert at the Frank home.
A nominating committee was
appointed with Mrs. !!'rank Bise

as chairman; o~ serving
are Mrs. Denver Weber and
Mrs. Harliss Frank. Members
are to bring program material
for next year to the next
meeting.
Greeting cards were sent to
Mrs. Shelly Petty and Mrs.
Elinice Sprague. An Invitation
was read from the Rutland
Friendly Garden Club to a
meeting June 23.
The program consisred of a
reading, It's Cutting Time, by
Mrs. Lyle Balderson. During
the social hour, games were
conducted by Mrs. Weber .
Prizes went to Mrs. R. E.
VISIT IN COLUMBUS
RUTLAND - Mrs. Floyd
Harrison and daughoor, Mrs.
Chsrles Spi,res of Rutland, spent
several days in Columbus last
week with Dr. and Mrs. Harry
Scott and family of Upper
Arlington. They went especially
for the graduation of Mrs.
Harrison 's granddaughter,
Debra Scott, one of 643 '
graduates from the Upper
Arlington
High School.
Directing the symphonic band
for the ceremony was Robert
Franlqin Ginther, formerly of
Middleport.

Guests at Smarts ' Cabin
. MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
Mrs. Paul smsrt entertained at
their Long Bottom cabin
Tuesday night with a potluck
dinner for members of the
Hearthstone Class of the
. Middleport· First Baptist
Church.
The Rev. Charles Simons
gave the opening prayer and
David
Darst ptesented
devo.tlons using scripture
fr0111 Mark 10 and a meditation
entiiled "Joy of Service" taken

from a devoltonal booklet.
Following the dinner games
were played and the group was
taken on a · tour of the cabin
grounds. Atoondlng were Mr.
and Mrs. Gerald Anthony, Mr.
and Mrs. David Darst, Mr. and
Mrs. Milton Hood, Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Hubbard, Mr. and Mrs.
Allen Hughes, the Rev. and
Mrs. Charles Simons, Carol and
Wes, and Mr. and Mrs. John
Werner.

.

Williams, Mrs. Walter Brown,
Mrs. Balderson and Mrs .
Herman Grossnickle.
A corsage was presented to
Mrs. Putman. Refreshments of
strawberry pie, coffee, punch,
and mint cups with miniature
doll babies were served to Mrs.
Carl Buckley, Mrs. Harliss
Frank, Mrs. Walter Brown,
Mrs . Denver Weber, Mrs.
Donald
Putman,
Mrs.
Claremont Harris, Mrs. Her·
man Grossnickle, Mrs. R. E.
Williams, Mrs. Lyle Balderson,
and the hostesses Mrs. Bise and
Mrs. Wilson.

Coming
Events
SUNDAY
RIVERBY will be open!~ p.m.
Fred Gros exhibits.
RIVER Recreation Festival
boat show practice for · participants 1 p. m. along Upstream Public Use Area.
LEMLEY and Ralph Reunion ,
Poplar Ridge Church, picnic
dinner at noon .
· PAINT Creek Regular Baptist
Church, Sunday School,
Children's Day program, 7:30
p.m.

TWINS BORN
POMEROY - Mr. and
Mrs. Larry R. Lee of
Pomeroy, are anaounclng the
blrlh of twin sons, Tony and
Todd, May 30 at the Holzer
Medical Center.
&lt;
Gr;mdparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Carl E. Lee of Long
Bottom, and Mr. and Mrs.
James Cunningham of
Pomeroy, Route 3. Mr. and
Mrs. Sylvester Doughty of
Trimble, Mrs. Alma- Young
and Henry Cunalngham of
Pomeroy, Route 3 are greatgrandparents. Mr. and Mrs.
Lee have a daughter, Jen·
nHer Lynn, age two.

WITHGi SOn AIR SWEEP AIR CONDITIONERS
Don't Suffer Thru Another Summer!
How Many Rooms
Do You Want To
Cool? We Have .
These Sizes. • •
12,000, 15,000, 18,000 and 24.000.
Tell us how many rooms you want
to cool. Let us recommend .

HERE FROM WEST
SYRACUSE - Ralph Michael
of Venice, Calif., flew by jet
from California to visit over
Memorial Day weekend with his
mother, Mrs. · Hazel Michael
and his brother, Gerald Michael
and family, all of Syracuse.
SCHOOL SET
RACINE - The Racine
Baptist Church will hold a Bible
School from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Monday through Friday, at the
church. A closing p~ogram will
be held at 7:30 p.m. next Sun·
day. All children of the community are welcome.

TUESDAY
., '·
OPEN Gate Garden Club, home ,: ·
of Mrs. Faye Roberts, 7:30p.m. ..
LAFAYETTE Shrine No. 44,
MONDAY
Masonic
Temple, 8 p.m.
DAR Picnic, 5 p.m., with Mrs.
Kenneth Johnson, 632 Second
Ave. Bring own table service. WEDNESDAY'
LITTLE KYGER Ladies Aid,
CENTENARY Grange, regular Mrs.Richard Sisson 's· home,
meeting, 7 p.m. Patriot Grange potluck at 10:30 a.m.
will have the program. Mi. and GALLIA County CB Radio Club, . ~; .
M,rs. Roy Sayre will report on 7:30p.m., K of P Ha~l.
·
the National Grange, Centenary THURSDAY .
..
ladies, bring a covered dish and FIRST BAPTIST "lu.nen's .; .
culd drink.
Fellowship, Tupperware JlllftY ':''
HI LoW Can~sta Club, home of pl~~;nned for missionary cupMrs. Richard Bowman, 7 p.m. board. All women Invited.

sill)ple platinUm bsnd en· oblivious to it all.
crusted with 30 diamonds on , Smiling broadly and
Tricia's finger, alid the Rev. walking arm ·in-arm back
Dr. Edward G. Latch down the aisle with her
pronounced tbem man and husband, Tricia, who kissed
wife at 4:45 p.m. EOO'.
Cox lightly on the cheek at the
"This moment is the begin· end of the ceremo~y, paused
nlng of a new day," prayed briefly to kiss her mother on
Dr. Latch, who is chaplain of the cheek.
the
U'.S . House · of
Once the wedding party left
Representatives . "In the the glistening garden, the rain
evening of their lives together, worsened and most of the
msy they be able to look bsck guests scrambled for cover
and say how splendid the dtY with as much dignity as
has been."
possible. Some held programs
The drizzle which ended just or handkerchiefs over their
as the President escorted heads.
Tricia down a 9().foot white
The proud P,resident,
carpet to the altar began escorting his wife down the
again, accompanied by a .cool aisle, gave reporters and
breeze, when the 18-rninute cameramen II big "okay" sign
ceremony ended. But the rosy- with his fingers as they
'cheeked bride seemed headed ~ward a champagne

• through the executive man·
acj.viser, Dr . Qenry A. quite a production."
Tricia was the eighth sion.
Kissinger, said the rain was
daug)lter of a president to be
Mter they were pro~ounced
"outside my jurisdiction there are not enough con- married In the White House. man and wife, Cox gave Tricia
tingency plans and options ~rxla Bird Johnson Robb, a light kiss on the cheek and
who was the seventh, said "No she patted him on the chest.
prepared."
The
wedding
was matter what the weather is, it Then they turned to embrace
their parents, firs,t the Nixons
pronounced a success by 87· will be a lovely day."
Among the other guests and then the groom's mother
year-old Alice Roosevelt
Longworth, daughte'r of were Lynda's sister, Luci and father, Col. and Mrs.
President Theodore Roosevelt Johnson Nugent, and Mamie Howard Ellis Cox.
At 4 p.m., when the wedding .
who wore a big straw hat and Eisenhower, who was the first
was scheduled to have begun,
flowered print dress and guest to take a seat.
During the ceremony, the 5- Tricia and other members of
complained she felt as though
she had been "sitting on a foot-:1 Tricia stood on tiptoes the First Family were seen
for the kiss from her lather peeking through the curtained
gponge."
Asked whether the affair and gazed raptly up at her tall windows at the weather
reminded her of her own bridegroom as Dr. Latch led outside.
The President had told
White House wedding to House the service in a low voice.
The President greeted Mrs. reporters earlier that Tricia
gpeaker Nichdlas Loogworth
was determined to be the first
in !906, she replied: "My God, Mamie Eisenhower, "Here's
our
No.
1
guest"
as
the
of
the 16 White House brides to
no. I was married 20 years .
before Hollvwood. This was receiving line started moving be wed outdoors, even if it

reception In the White House.
Martha Mitchell, outspoken
wife of Attorney Genersl John
N. Mitchell, carried a yellow
parasol with white lace trim
and was ooe of the few women
guests whn . salvaged their
hairdos from the shower.
Evangelist Billy Graham, a
friend of the President,
chatted with comedian Red ,
Skelton as they patiently
waited In the drizzle for a
chanCjl to congratulate the
bride and groom.
The weather lightened the
mood of the occasion. Graham
quipped that it was "a bridal
shower." Television hast Art
Linkletter called It "typical
California weather." The
President's German-born
na tiona! security affairs

50 SenatOrs Supporting
President in Indochina

'

SAIGON (UP!) - Retired
Gen. Duong Van "Big" Minh
said Saturday he will challenge
President Nguyen Van Thieu In
the October election but might
withdraw his candidacy if he
decides the contest is unfair.
Vice President Nguyen Cao
Ky is the only other avowed
candidate for the presidency.
Minh, 56, led the 1963 coup
that overthrew the late President Ngo Dinh Diem but was
ousted In another coup less
than three months later. Minh
was jailed and then exiled to
Thailand for four years.
The general told UP! Saturday, "I am ready to do what I
can for my country. I will be a
candidate. But if I feel the
elections are not fair then ].
~y withdraw my candidacy
even up to the day before the
election."
Minh met with U.S. Ambassa·
dor Ellsworth Bunker Friday
and on Saturday with a U.S.
group, "The Committee for a
Political Settlement In Vietnam," which has offered to set
up a committee to Insure a fair

election. The committee is
headed by Dr. Clark Kerr,
former president of the Univer·
sity of California.
Though neither has spelled
out a campaign platform,
previous statements by Minh
and Ky have indicated they are
more ·nexible on the Issue of
negotiating with the Communista than Thieu, who has said
there should be no dealings
with them until North Vietnamese soldiers pull out of South
Vietnam.
Thieu completed a reorganization Saturday of his cabinet
that was apparently designed to
strengthen his position in the
election campaign. He fired
four cabinet officials and

STILl: VERY ACTIVE on her royal rounds, Britain's
Queen Mother Elizabeth turned up In a very nonmWtary new feathered bonnet at color presentation
ceremonies for Infantry units at Colchester, Essex.

s
•
L
sw~~:e~ao~~:~ a~~~~ob~ere ru.g0 n
IDe
w OITISorne
•

believed to be an effort by
Thieu to surround himself with
completely loyals~pporters and
to combat corruption.
Minh·has frequently criticized
Thieu and has gained support
WASHINGTON (UPI) - U.S.
among powerful Buddhist Ambassador to Saigon Ellschurch leaders and otjlers.
worth Bunker is scheduled to
arrive in Washington Sunday
for talks with President Nixon
and other officials on two issues
of increasing concern to the
administration-One of , them
political and the other, military.
Adfuinistration officials said
Saturday there is greatly
claimed for peaceful civilian increased worry here on two
points:
pursuits.
.
"This proposal is an esrnest -The possibility that the
attempt by the UNC to reduce ground rules for the October
tension on the Korean peninsu- presidential elections in South
la," Rogers said: "All that is Vietnam, approved by the
necessary is that the comman· national assembly under presder of your side agree to the sure from President Nguyen
clearing of the DMZ· and to Van Thieu, wiD so restrict the
allow its development for possible number of candidates
as to lead to widespread belief
civilian use.
that the South Vietnamese are
"If this agreement is forth- not being given a truly
coming this commission will democratic choice.
have played a significant role - The considerable Increase
In moviitg the Korean people in Communist military activity
towards peace and unity."
.in recent weeks, particularly
Maj. Gen. Han Yong Ok of the buildup of North VielllaNorth Korea, reacted angrily to mese forces in Quang Tri
the proposal, telling the UNC "I Province just south of the
reject the so~alled proposal Demilitarized Zone, as well as
you U.S. imperialist aggressors evidence that conditions in
have invented for the purpose Cambodia are deteriorating
of covering up your criminal under increased Communist
acts and deceiving the wocld pressure.
.
public."
While the national assembly

e

UNC Rebuffed
At Korea DMZ
PANMUNJOM, Korea (UPI)
- The United Nations Command
( UNC) proposfd Saturday that
the Demilltarized Zone (DMZ)
between North and South Korea
be cleared of wespons, military
installations,.,,nd soldiers as a
means of letlsening tension.
North Korea rejected the
proposal, calling it an attempt
to cover up UNC violations of
the IS-year-old armistice.
The proposal by U.S. Air
Force Maj. Gen. Fellx M.
Rugers at the 317th lull meeting
of the Korean Milltary Armistice Commission (MAC) at
Panmunjom was the first such
comprehensive suggestion by
the UNC for removing tension
from the buffer zone.
Rogers, the senjor UNC
delegate at the MAC, said after
the 2.5-mile-wide, !51-mile-long
strip was cleared of military
installations it could be re-

.

has passed the new rules
governing the eligibility of
presidential candidares, Thieu
has not yet signed it. The hope
in Washington apparently is to
persusde him to send the
measure back for liberalization
in order to avoid giving the
impression that the October
elections are rigg_ed In advance.
On the military front, admi·
nistration officials acknowledge
that they are somewhat worried
over an increase In North
Vietnam's military strength in
Quang Tri Province, where
Hanoi now has at least nine
regiments.
The continued Communist
effort to build up strength
during the rainy season has led
Thieu to anticipate an effort by
~noi to launch a major
military drive shortly before
the October elections in an
effort to discredit South Vietnam's ability to defend itself
without heavy American participation. Some high administra·
lion officials are beginning to
take the same view.
,
As for Cambodia, the considerable reverses suffered by
South Vietnamese forces in the
Snout area near the Vietnamese
border have dampened some of
Washington's optimism .

WASHINGTON (UPI )- The
McGovern • Hatfield amend·
ment
requ1rmg
U.S.
disengagement from Indochina
by the end of the year, appears
headed for a decisive Senate
defeat Wednesday.
A United Press International
survey completed Saturday
showed that 50 senators plan or are inclined - to vote against
the measure, 37 for, 10 are
undecided and three will
withhold their votes.
Backers of the amendment
have not given up . Further
revisions in the proposal prior
to the showdown - Including a
possible compromise to move
the date up to June 30, 1972 may be in store to attract
borderline votes.
But the survey indicated that
there has been little over-all
chsnge since last September's
initial 55 to 39 defeat of the
propOsal, sponsored by Sens.
George McGovern, D·S.D.,
Mark 0. Hatfield, R-Ore., and'
28 other senators.
As now written, the measure
would direct the President to
end U.S. combat In or over
Vietnam by Dec. 31 unless the
safety of withdrawing U.S.
forces would be affected or
unless North Vietnam has
refused to negotiate on the
release of U.S. prisoners of

Hilliard

Lottery Issue in Senate

I

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Rutland
Furniture
..
ARNOLD GRATE
'

742-4211

RUTJ,AND, 0.

COLuMBUS(UPI)- TheOhio
Senate Is scheduled to vote
Tuesday on a proposed consti·
tutlonal amendment elimin·
ating the current prohibition on
lotteries. '
The resolution, sponsored b)'
Sen. Ronald M. Mottl, D-Parma,
would have to be cleared by
both the Senate and House before going on the ballot for
approval by the voters.
Lotteries are currently illegal
in·Ohio, although church groups
and chatitable organizations
. conduct bingo games.
Acompanion bill sponsored by
Mottl would set up a state lottery for educational purposes,
raising an estimated $25 million
· to $30 milllon in the first year.
Some Ohio lawmakers have
. a
predicted a state lottery' IS
year or two away In the Buckeye State. Recent success of a
New Jersey lottery Ito• ""~un

to overcom'e skepticism from
early failures of lotteries In
New Hampshire and New York.
House Republicans will try
once again to move a stalled
$1.2 billion tax bill out of the
Ways and Means Committee
and onto the Ooodor a vote.
The House already has
cleared a $7.8 billion appropriations but to the Senare, and
there are reports that If a tax
bill does not follow soon, Senate
Republican leaders will present their own tax plan.
The new two-year fiscal per·
iod hegins June 30, and the
state could continue to operate
on a $7 billion budget with no
new !axes. Gov. John J. Gilllgan
has called for $1.6 blllion in net
new taxes b&lt;\sed on a 1 to 8
per cent graduated state per·
sonallncome tax.
House Republicans have pro-

posed a 1.75 per cent personal
income tax, but are sttll debating the rates and whether it
should be collected at the state
or county level.
The House has scheduled a
Wednesday vote for a Republi·
can-writoon bill raising work·
men's compensation benefits by
about 25 per cent. Maximum
~nefits would be increased in
most categories from $56 a
week to $70, and minimum
benefits from $25 a week to $35.
Gilligan has termed the proposal "wholly Inadequate" and
noted his bill, also under considerationd n the House, would
raise maximum benefits to $98
aweek.
The Senate Finance Commitree has schedulea hearings for
Monday and · Tuesday on the
appropriations bill, while other
legislative committees have set

OAKLAND, Call!. (UPI)- A
jury of seven men and five
women Saturday found Black
Panther chief of staff David
Hilliaril guilty of assault but
innocent of attempted murder
in connection with a 1968
shoo tout with pollee.
The jury returned the verdict
about 11 a.m. PDT after more
than two days of deliberation.
Hilliard had conoonded he
was not involved in the
Panther-police shootout April 6,

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SAIGON (UPI) - Reinforced
Cap1bodian troops led by a
general on a motorbike Saturday reoccupied the battered
district capital of Srang which
had been lost to the Communists
in a bloody bsttle two days
before .
In South Vietnam, Saigon
goverrirnent troops ·who were
pulled out of the A Shau Valley
on Friday moved Saturday
toward lite Demilitarized Zone
(DMZ), where the Communists
are building up for a possible
showpiece battle to lnOuence
the October elections.
And near the Cambodian
capital ol Phnom Penh, two
weeks of off-and-on fighting for
the marshlands just east of the
capital flared up again Saturday .
The Communists opened
ground attacks against Cambodian government positions a
dozen miles northeast of Phnom
Penh at dawn Saturday and

ABORTION- The House Judi·
ciary Committee will receive
additional oostirnony Tuesday
night on a pair of bills to liber·
alize Ohio's abortion laws.
CAMPUS--Th• Senate Judiciary Committee will hold an
initial hearing Tuesday on a
pair of campus dtsorde~ bills
professionalizing university P"·
licemen and barring non-university personnel from trespassing
on campuses.
LABOR- ASenaoo Commerce
and Labor subcommnt•e plans
Wednesday·work on a package
of bills permitting collective
bargaining by public employes.
j
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'

about as far as they w1ll go.''
The UP! survey indicated the
vote would foilow party llnes to
a degree. Listed for the
amendment were 31 Democrats
and six Republicans. Against or
leaning against were 32 Republicans and 18 Democrats. Sl~
Republicans and four Qemocrats were uncommitted.

Recouped

again at 2 p.m. In both cases,
allied jet fighters counterattacked in force.
Cambodian government
spokesmen claimed thst "350
Viet Cong and North VIetnamese were left on the bat·
tlefield" and ssid they apparently died in •the aertal
onslaught. Cambodian casualties were just one killed and two
wounded, spokesmen said.
Twenty .five miles south of
Phnom Penh, Cambodian
troops swept Into Srang under
Brig. Gen. Sosthene Fernandez.
He perched on the bsck seat of a
motorbike while urging his
troops forward .
The cambodian force encoun·
tered little resistance. The
Communist rear guard fought
only a token delaying action
before melting away into the
hills .
Cambodian casuslties were
"light," field officers said. By
comparison, when Communist

troops overran an outnumbered
Cambodian garrison in the
Srang marketplace on Thurs·
day they killed at least 50
Cambodians and wounded 40,
accordln&amp; to field reporta.
One vetaran obaerver of the
Indochina War daacrlbed Srang
aflllr lliat battle as "the worst
carnage I've evt;r seen."
In VIetnam, U.S. 1152 Strato.
fortresses and jet fighter·
bombers pounded COIIIII)unlst
supply trails snaking llroUilh
depopUlated areas which the
allies abandoned at the end of
their February-March Invasion
ol Laos.
,
Mllltary sources said an •
estimated five regirn~nts of ·
North VIetnamese, more than
10,000 men, had Infiltrated
through the DMZ or the Ho Chi
Minh Trial through Lsos Into
the northwestern corner of
South VIetnam.

.

Deal in Trouble

By United Press International
Israel said · Saturday that
Egyptian President Anwar Sa·
dat's recent tough speeches had
seriously diminished chances
for an agreement to reopen the
Suez Canal.
The Israel reaction to Sadat's
pronouncements ~s Arab guerrillas kept up attacks In the
occupied Gaza Strip with
another strike at local Arabs in
the heart of Gaza City.
The military command said
four Arabs were wounded in a
grenade attack on Medina

Ni'zneuplets (..f? l

1

&amp;m to
Jn AustraliJJ

hearings for these bills :
ALCOHOL-The House Highways and Transportation Committee will meet Tuesday night
to consider Senate-passed legislation lowering the blood alcohol
tOlerance in drinking drivers.

Senate Democratic leader
Mike Mansfield, Mont., said he
did not expect gponsors of the
measure to make any further
major conessions.
.
"I'm not interested In revisions," Mansfield said. "I'm
interested in getting out. You
can 'revision' a proposal to
death . I think they've gone

Loss es

The gun battle resulted In the
-death of Panther Bobby Hutton,
Wonran
the wounding of two policemen,
and criminal charges against
Panther Eldridge Cleaver,
minister of information who SYDNEY (UPI)- A 29-year·
later jumped bail and fled to old woman who had been under
Algeria.
a fertility treatment gave birth
Hilliard was charged with two to nine children Saturday, two
counts of attempted murder of them still-born, a hospital
and two of aSsault on a spokesman said.
policeman.
Four boys and three girls,
The Panther official tesllfied born more than a month
he was walking to a ljabysit- prematurely, still were alive,
oor's home when three carloads doctors at the Sydney Royal
of Panthers and a· police car Hospital lor Women said.
pulled UP) and the shooting They said the mother, Mrs.
started. ·
Geraldine Roderick, the wife of
The panel, including 11 whites a Canberra salesman; had been
and an Asian, received the case' under a fl!rtility treatment and
Thursday after final arguments had been expected to bear at
which erupted repeatedly into least six children In lare July or
shouting matclies between early August. The treatment
prosecutor Frank Vukota and did not include pills, doctors
defense attorney Vincent Hallin- said.
•
an.
The Rodericks also have two
Earlier this month, charge~ daughrers, aged four and five .
against Hiiliard of threatening Australian medical authorithe life of President Nixon ties said they believe the births
during a speech were di~- to be the biggest multiple births
missed. 1
in history.

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war.
Both of these modifications
were added to the amendment
a week ago in an effort to
attract support from wavering
senators-particularly Republicans who have been disenchanted with administration policy in
Southeast Asia . But the tactic
has not succeeded.

Partiru,Iy Canal
Innocent

1968.

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value! Pick one up today, and see what
a difference a Gibson makes.

meant a delay In startlnl!
down the aisle.
Finally, as the drizzle began
to clear, the · gilded chairs
were moved Into the rose
garden and the guests
emerged from the diplomatic
reception room to take ,their
seats.
Nixon and Tricia, clinging
lightly to his arm and chatting
smilingly, marched down the
grand staircase of the south
portico and Into the garden,
reaching the altar 40 minutes
behind schedule.
The wedding was Emily
Post traditional In every other
respect, from the tossing of
the wedding bouquet to the
cutting of a six-tiered, 350
pound cake, topped with sugar
cherrv.

SUNDAY, JUNf 1:.3,....::.
: .:. 19:..7:. . 1. . . .--------~
PA:::;,;
GE;;...;J:..:.o

VOL. VI NO. 20

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zxon,

Minh to
Run for
Top 0
'

SPEAKING OF DtlMPS- Despite the availablllty of landfill dumps In l'oint Pleasant
and Mason, some persons still persist In disposing of trash along roadsides In Mason County.
The above scenes were photographed along the road to the Clifton Cemetery. Mason County
Health Department officials Issued a reminder this week that any person, persons, firm or

••

Square, bringing the toll In
guerrilla action in the past 24
hours to two dead and 82
wounded. The guerrillas have
been seeking to intimldaoo
Arabs collaborating with or
working for the IBraelies.
Israeli Foreign Minister Abbs
Eban said prospects for a
partial Suez agreement "are
not completely out of the
question, but after President
Sadat's recent speeches It is
more complicated and doubtful
than ever before."
Ebsn's comment made In a

recorded interview over IBraeli
radio, was the first official
reply to Sadat's speech Thursday In which he said the Un.lted .
States was a partner to Israel's
occupation of the Arab lands it
captured in the 1967 war.
YRI'_ Israeli yJlliUcal" source
aijo salii:-''Tlle chances of an
agreement being reached diminish with every speech that
Sadat makes. "
Israeli newspapers said In
editorials that Ssdat "had ·
removed the mask of a
(ContiDued on Page 17)

Deckhand Wanted
In Bank Robbery
LINCOLN COUNTY, W. Va.
- FBI agents have filed a
federal bank robbery warrant
against Wendell Embry, 34, of
Jetson, Ky., a deckhand for a
barge lines firm, In connection
with the Vinton Bank robbery in
Gallia County on May 18.
Embry has not been arrested,
but faces .a detainer filed with
West Virginia authorities.
Two other men are being
sought in connection with the
bank robbery but only the
warrant against Embry has
been issued.
Acc ording to the FBI,
$2,m.B2 was taken from the
Vinton Bank by three armed
men . A fotal of $490 in dimes
had been recovered from a first
getaway car, a 1963 Chevrolet
abanrlo'ned and bur11ed on
Shiluh Rd. ·in Huntington Twp.
Four South Carolina men

were apprehended two hours
after the robbery alter th~y
crashed their 197-1 Pontiac
Grand Prix during a high speed
chase.
Charges against the four were · '
dismissed by U.S. District .
Judge Joseph P. Kinneary upor
the request of Assistant U. S. .;
Attorney · James E. Rattan,
because of lack of evidence.
Embry was also nanied in a .
state warrant chsrging armed '
robllery in connection with the
armed robbery of the Lavalette
Post Office in Wayne County
and in 'the holdup May 20 at
Keith's Key MarKet In Huntington.
Arrested with him were
Dottie Gay ' Adkins, 23, of
Griffithsville in lincoln CoWitjl
and Tresa Ellen Moore, %1, of .
Rt. I, Chesapeake.
·

�14- The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, June 13, 19'11

Four New School Buses Bought in Mason
. r. PLEASANT - Acontract months salary to Charles
to provide four buses was
awarded to the R. S. Steiner
Company and- the Superior
Coach Sales, . among other
actions, by the Mason County
Board of Education Fridaf
rughl
The board approved the
purchsslng of four 66-passenger
bus chsssis from the Soolner
Company for $6,297.40 each and
lour 66-passenger bodies will be
purchsaed from the Superior
Company fo~ $3,662.10 each.
The board, by a 4-1 vote, also
approved a budgetary transfer
of lunda ior payment of three

• •

• t!

Chambers, as director of
secondary education . Board
meniber Harry Siders voted
. against the measure.
Though the transfer concerning Chambers_was approved by the State Depsrtrnent
·of Education, it was pointed out
In a letter from the State
Superintendent Daniel Taylor to
President Ted Stevens that "In
light of the current controversy
that any transfers or sup·plements subsequent to May 21
will not be approved." The
matter related to Chambers had
occurred prior to May 21.

Under new business, the
following items mei.with board
approval:
- Permission was granted lor
the use of two buses by the
Neighborhood Youth Corp
Program through the State
Department of Natural
Resources.
- Mrs. Maxine Lathey was
given permission to attend a
class in nutrition at Marshall
University from June 21-26.
- The board ratified Title Ill
participation for Career
Development k-Adult . This
program deals with providing
Mason County School students

with adequate career in·
formationaswellastechniques.
- Request for ·payment for
Jane Surbaugh for June 2, 3 and
4 was approved by the 'Board
pending legal ruling Of the State
Department Of Education.
-C. L. Head was granted
payment of $300for extra duties
as Chorus Director at Point
Pleasant High School.
The request by Coach
Jimmy Wedge for use of the
new Junior High Gymnasium to
conduct summer basketball
classes was tabled. This action
was taken in order that Whalen
may check the legality of

factors in the reque.!t con- transfers: Mrs.' Una Hinson
cemlng insurance and gym from Ordnance to Mt. Flower;
rental.
Sue Ann Thacker from New
Haven to Ordnance; and
The following resignatlons Suzanne Piercy from North
were accepted : Beulah Jarrell, Point Pleasant to Ordnance.
teacher at North P'~int The transfer request of
Pleasant; Jahala Anne Sci~si Elizabeth Hughes was tabled
ti~e I mus1c teacher ; Judith · for a later meeting-of the board.
Wilcox, teacher .at Sunnyside; Under the.recommendalion of
Margaret Franc1s, teache~ at Michael Whalen and Gary
North Pomt Pleasant, retlrmg ; Conley, acting superintendent
Ferron Cremean~, teacher at and assistant superintendent
Ordnance, retmng; ~udrey respectively, these teachers
Meadows, teacher at Hannan were employed: Dewetta J.
High School and Ronald Dun- Gay for North Point Pleasant.
can, not previously placed.
Sharon Lynn Hatfield fo;
The Board ratified these Junior-senior Hannan High

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Schools; Maggie Ann Dunlap
for Central School; Benjamin F.
Roush for Wahama ; Gary
Shsmblin for the vocational
school ; Doris McDaniel,
regisoored nurse i and Mrs.
Mary Volvorn for Central
School.
James Dunn was granted
permission to return to school
for two weeks, while Florence
Staats was approved for cook
for Letart School.
The action concerning
salaries for non-teaching
personnel was tabled for a
special meeting to be held
TUesday, June 15, by the Board
members.
In other business, Whalen
asked permission to continue
construction at Mason and New
Haven Elementary Schools.
This action was approved.
Members present were: Gary
Conley, Michael Whalen, Harry
Siders, Bill Withers, Charles
Eshenaur, Ray Fields, and Ted
Stevens, president of the Board.

WHERE
YOU SAVE .,

.rzcra

'

DOES
MAKE
. .A

DIFFERENCE
'We pay you to '·save
land the pay is gOOd).

4%%
fhe Athens C:,unly
Savings &amp; Lo1n Co.
296 Second 51.
Pomerov, Ohio
Member Federal
Home Loan Bank
Member Federal Savings &amp;

Loan Insurance Corporation .

All accounts Insured up to
$20,000.00

WASHINGTON (UP!) ~
Ul)daunted by a light rain that
delayed her wedding for 40
mlniltes, Tricia Nixon was
JllllTied Saturday to Edward
Finch Cox a8 she had 1[ished,
outdoors in the White House
rose.·garden before 400 guests
and a sad but proud father.
The PresldllJit kissed his 25year-old elder daughter m the
cbeek before he halided her
over to Cox, the 24-year-old
New York socialite and Har·
vard law ·student who had
courted ,Tricia for seven
years.
The couple exchanged their
vows at an altar under a
flower-bedecked white
wrought iron gazebo just
outalde the President's Oval
Room office. Cox placed a

''
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corporation which dlscarda, deposits or casts upon any land, public or private, trash,
rubbish, rubble, or any other like substance or substances which tends to harbour, hide,
breed or feed any rodents or Insects or is harmful to public health, shall be guilty of a
misdemeanor and shall be fined up to $100.

J' f

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Daughter Born on 2nd Anniversary
CHESTER - Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Lee Summetiield of
Parkersburg, are announcing
the birth of their first child, a
nine pound, six-ounce daughter,
Arribfr Lee, on May 31 at the St.
Joseph Hospital in ParKersburg, on the second wedding
anniversary of her parents.
ATTEND GRADUATION
MIDDLEPORT - Carol Jean
Jones, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest A. Jones of Columbus,
and granddaughrer of Mrs.
Stanley B. Jones of Pomeroy,

Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Gail West of Parkersburg
and Mr. and Mrs . Rex Sum·
merfield, Chester. Greatgrandparents are Mrs. Edna
Summerfield, Chester, and Mr.
and Mrs. Riley Pigott, Long
Bottom.

graduated last Sunday from
Eastmoor High School. Attending the graduation were
Mr. and Mrs. Harry S. Moore,
Middleport, uncle and aunt of
Carol Jean .
. .
. :· ...

CONTINUES AT HARTLEY'S
Good selection of styles for men and women.
Our famous brands.

Open All Day Thursdays- Open Fri. Night Til9
Middle of Upper Block
Pomeroy

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SCHOLARSHIP RECEIVED - Jan Taylor, winner of a
lour-year Goodyear Merit Scholarship, receives
congratulaUons and a scholarship certificate from Michael
T. Bucci, manager of Goodyear's Point Pleasant Chemical

Plant. Observing the recent presentation are Jan's father,
Arnold E. Taylor, a maintenance mechanic at Goodyear, and
Mrs. Violet Gerlach, guidance counselor at Point Pleasant
High School. Miss 'Taylor plans to attend Marshall this fall
and pursue chemistry asher major and
In math.

minor

Surprise Layette Shower Given
By Mrs. Lyle Balderson
REEDSVILLE - A surprise
layette shower was given Mrs.
Donald Putman at the May
meeting of the Riverview
Garden Club with Mrs. Gene
Wilson and Mrs. Frank Bise
hostesses at the Wilson home
where the gifts were on a
decorated table.
The business meeting was
conducted by the vice president,
Mrs, Putman. A reading from
the Upper Room was given by
Mrs. Claremont Harris, and roll
call was answered by bringing a
wild flower and naming it.
'A donation was given to ,the
club from the birthday club.
Thanks are extended to the
birthday gals for their help.
Donald Putman is to mow
around the Riverview School
sign, which is a club project and
Dowers are to be planted in the
planoor.
Mrs. Harris is to take care of
the Dally Sentinel Green Thumb
Notes article for June 11. Plans
. were made for a progress! ve
dinner and tour of gardens for
June 24, with the salad course,
at the Harris • home, main
course at the Whitehead home,
and dessert at the Frank home.
A nominating committee was
appointed with Mrs. !!'rank Bise

as chairman; o~ serving
are Mrs. Denver Weber and
Mrs. Harliss Frank. Members
are to bring program material
for next year to the next
meeting.
Greeting cards were sent to
Mrs. Shelly Petty and Mrs.
Elinice Sprague. An Invitation
was read from the Rutland
Friendly Garden Club to a
meeting June 23.
The program consisred of a
reading, It's Cutting Time, by
Mrs. Lyle Balderson. During
the social hour, games were
conducted by Mrs. Weber .
Prizes went to Mrs. R. E.
VISIT IN COLUMBUS
RUTLAND - Mrs. Floyd
Harrison and daughoor, Mrs.
Chsrles Spi,res of Rutland, spent
several days in Columbus last
week with Dr. and Mrs. Harry
Scott and family of Upper
Arlington. They went especially
for the graduation of Mrs.
Harrison 's granddaughter,
Debra Scott, one of 643 '
graduates from the Upper
Arlington
High School.
Directing the symphonic band
for the ceremony was Robert
Franlqin Ginther, formerly of
Middleport.

Guests at Smarts ' Cabin
. MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
Mrs. Paul smsrt entertained at
their Long Bottom cabin
Tuesday night with a potluck
dinner for members of the
Hearthstone Class of the
. Middleport· First Baptist
Church.
The Rev. Charles Simons
gave the opening prayer and
David
Darst ptesented
devo.tlons using scripture
fr0111 Mark 10 and a meditation
entiiled "Joy of Service" taken

from a devoltonal booklet.
Following the dinner games
were played and the group was
taken on a · tour of the cabin
grounds. Atoondlng were Mr.
and Mrs. Gerald Anthony, Mr.
and Mrs. David Darst, Mr. and
Mrs. Milton Hood, Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Hubbard, Mr. and Mrs.
Allen Hughes, the Rev. and
Mrs. Charles Simons, Carol and
Wes, and Mr. and Mrs. John
Werner.

.

Williams, Mrs. Walter Brown,
Mrs. Balderson and Mrs .
Herman Grossnickle.
A corsage was presented to
Mrs. Putman. Refreshments of
strawberry pie, coffee, punch,
and mint cups with miniature
doll babies were served to Mrs.
Carl Buckley, Mrs. Harliss
Frank, Mrs. Walter Brown,
Mrs . Denver Weber, Mrs.
Donald
Putman,
Mrs.
Claremont Harris, Mrs. Her·
man Grossnickle, Mrs. R. E.
Williams, Mrs. Lyle Balderson,
and the hostesses Mrs. Bise and
Mrs. Wilson.

Coming
Events
SUNDAY
RIVERBY will be open!~ p.m.
Fred Gros exhibits.
RIVER Recreation Festival
boat show practice for · participants 1 p. m. along Upstream Public Use Area.
LEMLEY and Ralph Reunion ,
Poplar Ridge Church, picnic
dinner at noon .
· PAINT Creek Regular Baptist
Church, Sunday School,
Children's Day program, 7:30
p.m.

TWINS BORN
POMEROY - Mr. and
Mrs. Larry R. Lee of
Pomeroy, are anaounclng the
blrlh of twin sons, Tony and
Todd, May 30 at the Holzer
Medical Center.
&lt;
Gr;mdparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Carl E. Lee of Long
Bottom, and Mr. and Mrs.
James Cunningham of
Pomeroy, Route 3. Mr. and
Mrs. Sylvester Doughty of
Trimble, Mrs. Alma- Young
and Henry Cunalngham of
Pomeroy, Route 3 are greatgrandparents. Mr. and Mrs.
Lee have a daughter, Jen·
nHer Lynn, age two.

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HERE FROM WEST
SYRACUSE - Ralph Michael
of Venice, Calif., flew by jet
from California to visit over
Memorial Day weekend with his
mother, Mrs. · Hazel Michael
and his brother, Gerald Michael
and family, all of Syracuse.
SCHOOL SET
RACINE - The Racine
Baptist Church will hold a Bible
School from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Monday through Friday, at the
church. A closing p~ogram will
be held at 7:30 p.m. next Sun·
day. All children of the community are welcome.

TUESDAY
., '·
OPEN Gate Garden Club, home ,: ·
of Mrs. Faye Roberts, 7:30p.m. ..
LAFAYETTE Shrine No. 44,
MONDAY
Masonic
Temple, 8 p.m.
DAR Picnic, 5 p.m., with Mrs.
Kenneth Johnson, 632 Second
Ave. Bring own table service. WEDNESDAY'
LITTLE KYGER Ladies Aid,
CENTENARY Grange, regular Mrs.Richard Sisson 's· home,
meeting, 7 p.m. Patriot Grange potluck at 10:30 a.m.
will have the program. Mi. and GALLIA County CB Radio Club, . ~; .
M,rs. Roy Sayre will report on 7:30p.m., K of P Ha~l.
·
the National Grange, Centenary THURSDAY .
..
ladies, bring a covered dish and FIRST BAPTIST "lu.nen's .; .
culd drink.
Fellowship, Tupperware JlllftY ':''
HI LoW Can~sta Club, home of pl~~;nned for missionary cupMrs. Richard Bowman, 7 p.m. board. All women Invited.

sill)ple platinUm bsnd en· oblivious to it all.
crusted with 30 diamonds on , Smiling broadly and
Tricia's finger, alid the Rev. walking arm ·in-arm back
Dr. Edward G. Latch down the aisle with her
pronounced tbem man and husband, Tricia, who kissed
wife at 4:45 p.m. EOO'.
Cox lightly on the cheek at the
"This moment is the begin· end of the ceremo~y, paused
nlng of a new day," prayed briefly to kiss her mother on
Dr. Latch, who is chaplain of the cheek.
the
U'.S . House · of
Once the wedding party left
Representatives . "In the the glistening garden, the rain
evening of their lives together, worsened and most of the
msy they be able to look bsck guests scrambled for cover
and say how splendid the dtY with as much dignity as
has been."
possible. Some held programs
The drizzle which ended just or handkerchiefs over their
as the President escorted heads.
Tricia down a 9().foot white
The proud P,resident,
carpet to the altar began escorting his wife down the
again, accompanied by a .cool aisle, gave reporters and
breeze, when the 18-rninute cameramen II big "okay" sign
ceremony ended. But the rosy- with his fingers as they
'cheeked bride seemed headed ~ward a champagne

• through the executive man·
acj.viser, Dr . Qenry A. quite a production."
Tricia was the eighth sion.
Kissinger, said the rain was
daug)lter of a president to be
Mter they were pro~ounced
"outside my jurisdiction there are not enough con- married In the White House. man and wife, Cox gave Tricia
tingency plans and options ~rxla Bird Johnson Robb, a light kiss on the cheek and
who was the seventh, said "No she patted him on the chest.
prepared."
The
wedding
was matter what the weather is, it Then they turned to embrace
their parents, firs,t the Nixons
pronounced a success by 87· will be a lovely day."
Among the other guests and then the groom's mother
year-old Alice Roosevelt
Longworth, daughte'r of were Lynda's sister, Luci and father, Col. and Mrs.
President Theodore Roosevelt Johnson Nugent, and Mamie Howard Ellis Cox.
At 4 p.m., when the wedding .
who wore a big straw hat and Eisenhower, who was the first
was scheduled to have begun,
flowered print dress and guest to take a seat.
During the ceremony, the 5- Tricia and other members of
complained she felt as though
she had been "sitting on a foot-:1 Tricia stood on tiptoes the First Family were seen
for the kiss from her lather peeking through the curtained
gponge."
Asked whether the affair and gazed raptly up at her tall windows at the weather
reminded her of her own bridegroom as Dr. Latch led outside.
The President had told
White House wedding to House the service in a low voice.
The President greeted Mrs. reporters earlier that Tricia
gpeaker Nichdlas Loogworth
was determined to be the first
in !906, she replied: "My God, Mamie Eisenhower, "Here's
our
No.
1
guest"
as
the
of
the 16 White House brides to
no. I was married 20 years .
before Hollvwood. This was receiving line started moving be wed outdoors, even if it

reception In the White House.
Martha Mitchell, outspoken
wife of Attorney Genersl John
N. Mitchell, carried a yellow
parasol with white lace trim
and was ooe of the few women
guests whn . salvaged their
hairdos from the shower.
Evangelist Billy Graham, a
friend of the President,
chatted with comedian Red ,
Skelton as they patiently
waited In the drizzle for a
chanCjl to congratulate the
bride and groom.
The weather lightened the
mood of the occasion. Graham
quipped that it was "a bridal
shower." Television hast Art
Linkletter called It "typical
California weather." The
President's German-born
na tiona! security affairs

50 SenatOrs Supporting
President in Indochina

'

SAIGON (UP!) - Retired
Gen. Duong Van "Big" Minh
said Saturday he will challenge
President Nguyen Van Thieu In
the October election but might
withdraw his candidacy if he
decides the contest is unfair.
Vice President Nguyen Cao
Ky is the only other avowed
candidate for the presidency.
Minh, 56, led the 1963 coup
that overthrew the late President Ngo Dinh Diem but was
ousted In another coup less
than three months later. Minh
was jailed and then exiled to
Thailand for four years.
The general told UP! Saturday, "I am ready to do what I
can for my country. I will be a
candidate. But if I feel the
elections are not fair then ].
~y withdraw my candidacy
even up to the day before the
election."
Minh met with U.S. Ambassa·
dor Ellsworth Bunker Friday
and on Saturday with a U.S.
group, "The Committee for a
Political Settlement In Vietnam," which has offered to set
up a committee to Insure a fair

election. The committee is
headed by Dr. Clark Kerr,
former president of the Univer·
sity of California.
Though neither has spelled
out a campaign platform,
previous statements by Minh
and Ky have indicated they are
more ·nexible on the Issue of
negotiating with the Communista than Thieu, who has said
there should be no dealings
with them until North Vietnamese soldiers pull out of South
Vietnam.
Thieu completed a reorganization Saturday of his cabinet
that was apparently designed to
strengthen his position in the
election campaign. He fired
four cabinet officials and

STILl: VERY ACTIVE on her royal rounds, Britain's
Queen Mother Elizabeth turned up In a very nonmWtary new feathered bonnet at color presentation
ceremonies for Infantry units at Colchester, Essex.

s
•
L
sw~~:e~ao~~:~ a~~~~ob~ere ru.g0 n
IDe
w OITISorne
•

believed to be an effort by
Thieu to surround himself with
completely loyals~pporters and
to combat corruption.
Minh·has frequently criticized
Thieu and has gained support
WASHINGTON (UPI) - U.S.
among powerful Buddhist Ambassador to Saigon Ellschurch leaders and otjlers.
worth Bunker is scheduled to
arrive in Washington Sunday
for talks with President Nixon
and other officials on two issues
of increasing concern to the
administration-One of , them
political and the other, military.
Adfuinistration officials said
Saturday there is greatly
claimed for peaceful civilian increased worry here on two
points:
pursuits.
.
"This proposal is an esrnest -The possibility that the
attempt by the UNC to reduce ground rules for the October
tension on the Korean peninsu- presidential elections in South
la," Rogers said: "All that is Vietnam, approved by the
necessary is that the comman· national assembly under presder of your side agree to the sure from President Nguyen
clearing of the DMZ· and to Van Thieu, wiD so restrict the
allow its development for possible number of candidates
as to lead to widespread belief
civilian use.
that the South Vietnamese are
"If this agreement is forth- not being given a truly
coming this commission will democratic choice.
have played a significant role - The considerable Increase
In moviitg the Korean people in Communist military activity
towards peace and unity."
.in recent weeks, particularly
Maj. Gen. Han Yong Ok of the buildup of North VielllaNorth Korea, reacted angrily to mese forces in Quang Tri
the proposal, telling the UNC "I Province just south of the
reject the so~alled proposal Demilitarized Zone, as well as
you U.S. imperialist aggressors evidence that conditions in
have invented for the purpose Cambodia are deteriorating
of covering up your criminal under increased Communist
acts and deceiving the wocld pressure.
.
public."
While the national assembly

e

UNC Rebuffed
At Korea DMZ
PANMUNJOM, Korea (UPI)
- The United Nations Command
( UNC) proposfd Saturday that
the Demilltarized Zone (DMZ)
between North and South Korea
be cleared of wespons, military
installations,.,,nd soldiers as a
means of letlsening tension.
North Korea rejected the
proposal, calling it an attempt
to cover up UNC violations of
the IS-year-old armistice.
The proposal by U.S. Air
Force Maj. Gen. Fellx M.
Rugers at the 317th lull meeting
of the Korean Milltary Armistice Commission (MAC) at
Panmunjom was the first such
comprehensive suggestion by
the UNC for removing tension
from the buffer zone.
Rogers, the senjor UNC
delegate at the MAC, said after
the 2.5-mile-wide, !51-mile-long
strip was cleared of military
installations it could be re-

.

has passed the new rules
governing the eligibility of
presidential candidares, Thieu
has not yet signed it. The hope
in Washington apparently is to
persusde him to send the
measure back for liberalization
in order to avoid giving the
impression that the October
elections are rigg_ed In advance.
On the military front, admi·
nistration officials acknowledge
that they are somewhat worried
over an increase In North
Vietnam's military strength in
Quang Tri Province, where
Hanoi now has at least nine
regiments.
The continued Communist
effort to build up strength
during the rainy season has led
Thieu to anticipate an effort by
~noi to launch a major
military drive shortly before
the October elections in an
effort to discredit South Vietnam's ability to defend itself
without heavy American participation. Some high administra·
lion officials are beginning to
take the same view.
,
As for Cambodia, the considerable reverses suffered by
South Vietnamese forces in the
Snout area near the Vietnamese
border have dampened some of
Washington's optimism .

WASHINGTON (UPI )- The
McGovern • Hatfield amend·
ment
requ1rmg
U.S.
disengagement from Indochina
by the end of the year, appears
headed for a decisive Senate
defeat Wednesday.
A United Press International
survey completed Saturday
showed that 50 senators plan or are inclined - to vote against
the measure, 37 for, 10 are
undecided and three will
withhold their votes.
Backers of the amendment
have not given up . Further
revisions in the proposal prior
to the showdown - Including a
possible compromise to move
the date up to June 30, 1972 may be in store to attract
borderline votes.
But the survey indicated that
there has been little over-all
chsnge since last September's
initial 55 to 39 defeat of the
propOsal, sponsored by Sens.
George McGovern, D·S.D.,
Mark 0. Hatfield, R-Ore., and'
28 other senators.
As now written, the measure
would direct the President to
end U.S. combat In or over
Vietnam by Dec. 31 unless the
safety of withdrawing U.S.
forces would be affected or
unless North Vietnam has
refused to negotiate on the
release of U.S. prisoners of

Hilliard

Lottery Issue in Senate

I

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Rutland
Furniture
..
ARNOLD GRATE
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742-4211

RUTJ,AND, 0.

COLuMBUS(UPI)- TheOhio
Senate Is scheduled to vote
Tuesday on a proposed consti·
tutlonal amendment elimin·
ating the current prohibition on
lotteries. '
The resolution, sponsored b)'
Sen. Ronald M. Mottl, D-Parma,
would have to be cleared by
both the Senate and House before going on the ballot for
approval by the voters.
Lotteries are currently illegal
in·Ohio, although church groups
and chatitable organizations
. conduct bingo games.
Acompanion bill sponsored by
Mottl would set up a state lottery for educational purposes,
raising an estimated $25 million
· to $30 milllon in the first year.
Some Ohio lawmakers have
. a
predicted a state lottery' IS
year or two away In the Buckeye State. Recent success of a
New Jersey lottery Ito• ""~un

to overcom'e skepticism from
early failures of lotteries In
New Hampshire and New York.
House Republicans will try
once again to move a stalled
$1.2 billion tax bill out of the
Ways and Means Committee
and onto the Ooodor a vote.
The House already has
cleared a $7.8 billion appropriations but to the Senare, and
there are reports that If a tax
bill does not follow soon, Senate
Republican leaders will present their own tax plan.
The new two-year fiscal per·
iod hegins June 30, and the
state could continue to operate
on a $7 billion budget with no
new !axes. Gov. John J. Gilllgan
has called for $1.6 blllion in net
new taxes b&lt;\sed on a 1 to 8
per cent graduated state per·
sonallncome tax.
House Republicans have pro-

posed a 1.75 per cent personal
income tax, but are sttll debating the rates and whether it
should be collected at the state
or county level.
The House has scheduled a
Wednesday vote for a Republi·
can-writoon bill raising work·
men's compensation benefits by
about 25 per cent. Maximum
~nefits would be increased in
most categories from $56 a
week to $70, and minimum
benefits from $25 a week to $35.
Gilligan has termed the proposal "wholly Inadequate" and
noted his bill, also under considerationd n the House, would
raise maximum benefits to $98
aweek.
The Senate Finance Commitree has schedulea hearings for
Monday and · Tuesday on the
appropriations bill, while other
legislative committees have set

OAKLAND, Call!. (UPI)- A
jury of seven men and five
women Saturday found Black
Panther chief of staff David
Hilliaril guilty of assault but
innocent of attempted murder
in connection with a 1968
shoo tout with pollee.
The jury returned the verdict
about 11 a.m. PDT after more
than two days of deliberation.
Hilliard had conoonded he
was not involved in the
Panther-police shootout April 6,

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SAIGON (UPI) - Reinforced
Cap1bodian troops led by a
general on a motorbike Saturday reoccupied the battered
district capital of Srang which
had been lost to the Communists
in a bloody bsttle two days
before .
In South Vietnam, Saigon
goverrirnent troops ·who were
pulled out of the A Shau Valley
on Friday moved Saturday
toward lite Demilitarized Zone
(DMZ), where the Communists
are building up for a possible
showpiece battle to lnOuence
the October elections.
And near the Cambodian
capital ol Phnom Penh, two
weeks of off-and-on fighting for
the marshlands just east of the
capital flared up again Saturday .
The Communists opened
ground attacks against Cambodian government positions a
dozen miles northeast of Phnom
Penh at dawn Saturday and

ABORTION- The House Judi·
ciary Committee will receive
additional oostirnony Tuesday
night on a pair of bills to liber·
alize Ohio's abortion laws.
CAMPUS--Th• Senate Judiciary Committee will hold an
initial hearing Tuesday on a
pair of campus dtsorde~ bills
professionalizing university P"·
licemen and barring non-university personnel from trespassing
on campuses.
LABOR- ASenaoo Commerce
and Labor subcommnt•e plans
Wednesday·work on a package
of bills permitting collective
bargaining by public employes.
j
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about as far as they w1ll go.''
The UP! survey indicated the
vote would foilow party llnes to
a degree. Listed for the
amendment were 31 Democrats
and six Republicans. Against or
leaning against were 32 Republicans and 18 Democrats. Sl~
Republicans and four Qemocrats were uncommitted.

Recouped

again at 2 p.m. In both cases,
allied jet fighters counterattacked in force.
Cambodian government
spokesmen claimed thst "350
Viet Cong and North VIetnamese were left on the bat·
tlefield" and ssid they apparently died in •the aertal
onslaught. Cambodian casualties were just one killed and two
wounded, spokesmen said.
Twenty .five miles south of
Phnom Penh, Cambodian
troops swept Into Srang under
Brig. Gen. Sosthene Fernandez.
He perched on the bsck seat of a
motorbike while urging his
troops forward .
The cambodian force encoun·
tered little resistance. The
Communist rear guard fought
only a token delaying action
before melting away into the
hills .
Cambodian casuslties were
"light," field officers said. By
comparison, when Communist

troops overran an outnumbered
Cambodian garrison in the
Srang marketplace on Thurs·
day they killed at least 50
Cambodians and wounded 40,
accordln&amp; to field reporta.
One vetaran obaerver of the
Indochina War daacrlbed Srang
aflllr lliat battle as "the worst
carnage I've evt;r seen."
In VIetnam, U.S. 1152 Strato.
fortresses and jet fighter·
bombers pounded COIIIII)unlst
supply trails snaking llroUilh
depopUlated areas which the
allies abandoned at the end of
their February-March Invasion
ol Laos.
,
Mllltary sources said an •
estimated five regirn~nts of ·
North VIetnamese, more than
10,000 men, had Infiltrated
through the DMZ or the Ho Chi
Minh Trial through Lsos Into
the northwestern corner of
South VIetnam.

.

Deal in Trouble

By United Press International
Israel said · Saturday that
Egyptian President Anwar Sa·
dat's recent tough speeches had
seriously diminished chances
for an agreement to reopen the
Suez Canal.
The Israel reaction to Sadat's
pronouncements ~s Arab guerrillas kept up attacks In the
occupied Gaza Strip with
another strike at local Arabs in
the heart of Gaza City.
The military command said
four Arabs were wounded in a
grenade attack on Medina

Ni'zneuplets (..f? l

1

&amp;m to
Jn AustraliJJ

hearings for these bills :
ALCOHOL-The House Highways and Transportation Committee will meet Tuesday night
to consider Senate-passed legislation lowering the blood alcohol
tOlerance in drinking drivers.

Senate Democratic leader
Mike Mansfield, Mont., said he
did not expect gponsors of the
measure to make any further
major conessions.
.
"I'm not interested In revisions," Mansfield said. "I'm
interested in getting out. You
can 'revision' a proposal to
death . I think they've gone

Loss es

The gun battle resulted In the
-death of Panther Bobby Hutton,
Wonran
the wounding of two policemen,
and criminal charges against
Panther Eldridge Cleaver,
minister of information who SYDNEY (UPI)- A 29-year·
later jumped bail and fled to old woman who had been under
Algeria.
a fertility treatment gave birth
Hilliard was charged with two to nine children Saturday, two
counts of attempted murder of them still-born, a hospital
and two of aSsault on a spokesman said.
policeman.
Four boys and three girls,
The Panther official tesllfied born more than a month
he was walking to a ljabysit- prematurely, still were alive,
oor's home when three carloads doctors at the Sydney Royal
of Panthers and a· police car Hospital lor Women said.
pulled UP) and the shooting They said the mother, Mrs.
started. ·
Geraldine Roderick, the wife of
The panel, including 11 whites a Canberra salesman; had been
and an Asian, received the case' under a fl!rtility treatment and
Thursday after final arguments had been expected to bear at
which erupted repeatedly into least six children In lare July or
shouting matclies between early August. The treatment
prosecutor Frank Vukota and did not include pills, doctors
defense attorney Vincent Hallin- said.
•
an.
The Rodericks also have two
Earlier this month, charge~ daughrers, aged four and five .
against Hiiliard of threatening Australian medical authorithe life of President Nixon ties said they believe the births
during a speech were di~- to be the biggest multiple births
missed. 1
in history.

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war.
Both of these modifications
were added to the amendment
a week ago in an effort to
attract support from wavering
senators-particularly Republicans who have been disenchanted with administration policy in
Southeast Asia . But the tactic
has not succeeded.

Partiru,Iy Canal
Innocent

1968.

Serve yourself some Air Sweep. Yes,
the G1bson Air Conditioner is like ·a doll -yourself instant comfort machine.
Ha_s features like patented adjustable
air sweep, quiet efficient cooling,
sturdy, yet Ws easy to carry and you
can insta II it yourself, Gibson has so
many exclusive comfort features, you
have to enjoy one to understand the
value! Pick one up today, and see what
a difference a Gibson makes.

meant a delay In startlnl!
down the aisle.
Finally, as the drizzle began
to clear, the · gilded chairs
were moved Into the rose
garden and the guests
emerged from the diplomatic
reception room to take ,their
seats.
Nixon and Tricia, clinging
lightly to his arm and chatting
smilingly, marched down the
grand staircase of the south
portico and Into the garden,
reaching the altar 40 minutes
behind schedule.
The wedding was Emily
Post traditional In every other
respect, from the tossing of
the wedding bouquet to the
cutting of a six-tiered, 350
pound cake, topped with sugar
cherrv.

SUNDAY, JUNf 1:.3,....::.
: .:. 19:..7:. . 1. . . .--------~
PA:::;,;
GE;;...;J:..:.o

VOL. VI NO. 20

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zxon,

Minh to
Run for
Top 0
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SPEAKING OF DtlMPS- Despite the availablllty of landfill dumps In l'oint Pleasant
and Mason, some persons still persist In disposing of trash along roadsides In Mason County.
The above scenes were photographed along the road to the Clifton Cemetery. Mason County
Health Department officials Issued a reminder this week that any person, persons, firm or

••

Square, bringing the toll In
guerrilla action in the past 24
hours to two dead and 82
wounded. The guerrillas have
been seeking to intimldaoo
Arabs collaborating with or
working for the IBraelies.
Israeli Foreign Minister Abbs
Eban said prospects for a
partial Suez agreement "are
not completely out of the
question, but after President
Sadat's recent speeches It is
more complicated and doubtful
than ever before."
Ebsn's comment made In a

recorded interview over IBraeli
radio, was the first official
reply to Sadat's speech Thursday In which he said the Un.lted .
States was a partner to Israel's
occupation of the Arab lands it
captured in the 1967 war.
YRI'_ Israeli yJlliUcal" source
aijo salii:-''Tlle chances of an
agreement being reached diminish with every speech that
Sadat makes. "
Israeli newspapers said In
editorials that Ssdat "had ·
removed the mask of a
(ContiDued on Page 17)

Deckhand Wanted
In Bank Robbery
LINCOLN COUNTY, W. Va.
- FBI agents have filed a
federal bank robbery warrant
against Wendell Embry, 34, of
Jetson, Ky., a deckhand for a
barge lines firm, In connection
with the Vinton Bank robbery in
Gallia County on May 18.
Embry has not been arrested,
but faces .a detainer filed with
West Virginia authorities.
Two other men are being
sought in connection with the
bank robbery but only the
warrant against Embry has
been issued.
Acc ording to the FBI,
$2,m.B2 was taken from the
Vinton Bank by three armed
men . A fotal of $490 in dimes
had been recovered from a first
getaway car, a 1963 Chevrolet
abanrlo'ned and bur11ed on
Shiluh Rd. ·in Huntington Twp.
Four South Carolina men

were apprehended two hours
after the robbery alter th~y
crashed their 197-1 Pontiac
Grand Prix during a high speed
chase.
Charges against the four were · '
dismissed by U.S. District .
Judge Joseph P. Kinneary upor
the request of Assistant U. S. .;
Attorney · James E. Rattan,
because of lack of evidence.
Embry was also nanied in a .
state warrant chsrging armed '
robllery in connection with the
armed robbery of the Lavalette
Post Office in Wayne County
and in 'the holdup May 20 at
Keith's Key MarKet In Huntington.
Arrested with him were
Dottie Gay ' Adkins, 23, of
Griffithsville in lincoln CoWitjl
and Tresa Ellen Moore, %1, of .
Rt. I, Chesapeake.
·

�18-Tile Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, June 13, 1971

IDIFORIAL

I

Connivers·-the Wily Taxpayers, Communication-But
Really?
.
.

Sen. William Proxmire begins to look more and more
like the Ralph Nader of Capitol Hill, with his involvement
in so many controversial issues and his knack for making
startling revelations .
!n his capacity as chairman of the House-Senate Joint
Economic Committee, the Wisconsin Democrat has made
public a summary prepared by the Treasury Department
showing how tax law provisions giving preferential treatment to certain forms oi income cost the government
nearly f.44 billion in revenue last year.
The blood .leaps to a quick boil. Even for the U.S. government, '$44 billion is a massive sum to Jose. It is· more
than half the total collected in income taxes; it's equal to
about 20 per cent of all federal spending.
.Not only that but preferential treatment is-well, it's
as un-American as sour apple pie.
But wait ~ minute. What kind of preferential treatment?
·Well, for one thing, all those !at-cat oil speculators, or
people who invested all their money in tax-free municipal
bonds.
.
.
Disgusting. What other·kinds of preferential treatment?
Well, that young family man who finally raised the down
payment on a house and then nicked Uncle Sam for the
Interest on his mortgage.
,
Oh. Wei), that's legal, isn't it? Anyway, the nation needs
: family men and homeowners. Any other kinds of prefer: entia! treatment?
.
.
Lots. People .who ran up large doctor or drug bills and
then asked the government to pick up part of the tab, people who gave mon~y to churches and charities, etc., and,

of course, all those fat-cat oil speculators.
In other words, the $44 billion turns out to be nothing
more than the value of the deductions .claimed by taxpayers who itemized their returns last year.
But the way the :senator describes it, the $44 billion was
something that rightfully belonged to the government but
which it was gypped out of by slick taxpayers. It implies
that anything less than a 100 per cent tax on everybody
represents a "loss" to tne government.
ne fact is that the government is entitled to nothing
more than the people decide to give it-or, more accurately, only as much as the people's representatives in
Congress think the people will sit. still for.
Proxmire has called on his colleagues to take a closer
look at the lax provisions which grant preferential treatment.
They should . The tax laws should be subjected to scrutiny every year as a matter of routi ne. There will never
be a perfect tax system, but inequities and injustices and
oversights can and should be corrected as they become
apparent.
But let's not go off on that kick again which a few years
ago had everybody believing that the government was
being cheated out of untold billions by certain tax-sheltered groups.
·
The last time Congress overhauled the whole structure,
in 1969, those billions evaporated as each so-called loophole or preferential treatment was examined and most of
them were found to have a good reason for being written
into the law.

''Don't Fret, Dear ... If His Daddy Buys
Him a New Toy, I'll Get You One, Too!"

That overhaul netted the government an extra $2 billion
in 1970 as against 1969. ·
·
Or as Senator Proxmire might say, the government
" lost" $2 billion less to those sneaky taxpayers.

Ovenworked nvord
:·communicate" is another one of those overworked
words of our time.
·
It is usually encountered in such phrases as "the need
to communicate" or the "failure to communicate." The
latter, of course, is a tributary gully of the well-known
communications gap, and everybody knows where that
one leads-smack dab into the middle of the even wider
generation gap.
The idea is that a lot of the world's woes are due to the
simple fact that people (parents/ children; .husbands/
wives; presidents/ citizens; nations/ nations) are talking
on di£ferent wavelengths.
·
Each hears the other, but neither one really listens to
nor understands what the other is saying. They don't
communicate.
It's a myth.
What we really mean when we talk about a failure to
communicate is really a failm·e to convert the other person to our way of thinking. One expression of this is the

PERSONAL FINANCE

--

cry of young·people: " We tried to turn this country around
by,nonviolent persuasion, but nobod~ would llste11 to u.s."
They were listened to ; they were JUst not agreed With.
Consider a di scussion between a father and son that
ends iii total disagreement, suggests Cleveland Plain Dealer columl)ist Howard Preston.
'
·
Sire and offspring finally give up and go their separate ·
ways, irritated and truculent. On the bus ,to work the next
morning, the father complains ·to a friend that, "I just
can't communicate with that "kid."
But most of the time there was communication, plenty
of it. What was Jacking was a meeting of minds. The.
adult got his message across all right but the son wasn't
impressed . And the youngster communicated with the
parent just fin e, but couldn't "sell" him.
The United States and the Soviet Union have different
languages, but in governmental circles they communicate
freely and excellently. The fact that the two nations \liffer
so often and in so many ways is not a matter of understanding but of different viewpoints, not an inability to
communicate but an inability to convince.
·
A person who resists being converted to a religion usually understands the proposition perfectly ; he simply
doesn't want to accept what is offered. But the evangelist
sighs, "Alas , I couldn't communicate with him."
When we use the failure-to-communicate excuse, says
Preston, we salve our egos' by pretending our message
was superb but the medium fizzled. Thus we convince
ourselves we have a magnificent product and all we need
is a better sales technique.

BRUCE BIOSSAT

Mutual Funds
Stand the Gaff

Disbelief Rampant

Judgment Must ·
Temper Distrust

By CARLTON SMim

By BRUCE BIOSSAT

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GLOBAL VIEW

WORLD ALMANAC

Sex ~nd the Single r--::=FACTS
Proletarian: Nyet
By LEON DENNEN

NEW YORK (NEAl
Pity the Russian bachelor. The Kremlin rulers, alarmed
by the declining birth rate, have now decreed that he is
an "antisocial element" and possibly a traitor to the
Communist cause.
The single man, to be sure, is not yet an outcast in ali
Marxist-Leninist dictatorships.
For instance, the Red Chmese, Russia's neighbors and
enemies, are currently cautioning tneir young against
rushin~ into marriage until they are 25 or 30.
But China already has a population of 700 to BOO million
and Peking's problem is to control the birth rate. The
Russians, who fear Mao Tse-tung and his "clique of expansionists," have not yet reached 250 million mark.
• · Young Soviet males are now urged by the Kremlin to
marry at an earlier age and· produce more children.
If Mos~ow 's prestigious newspaper Literaturnaya
Gazetta IS to be believed, bachelorhood is harmfulu
not onr 'to society but to the individual, "causing all
sorts o neuroses because of irregular habits."
Also, "part of a person's wages is intended for the support of children," Literaturnaya Gazella writes. But the
perfidious bachelor spends that part on himself, "playing
around without sharin~ with anyone."
He therefore "simply robs others who are married and
support children."
In addition to the anti-bachelor campaign, there has
: been a marked increase in Russia in studies and articles
on sex, love and marriage. "Sex hygiene" is now the
party llne.
The scientist Igor Zabelin even warned that "love as an
emotion will play a very important role in the future in
the populating of outer space."
·.
Writing in the magazine Moskva , Zabelin predicted
that "whim · mankind fulliUs its mission of populating
. ,_ outer space, men and women will be sent in spacecraft
. . somewhere for many years."
,.
Therefore, he added, Soviet scientists " must not only
,. deeply analyze love as an emotion but also try to regu, late it properly." . ·
;:
Meanwhile, the Kremlin's educators have embarked on
•: an experimental sex program for schoolchildren on earth.
The program appears to follow the general lines of
;: similar pro~rams instituted years ago in the United States
•; and many W~stern school systems.
'·
Russian educators explain this sex education lag by
.insisting that in the Soviet Union the subject "lacks the
:· ur~ency it has in the capitalist countries."
•
Nevertheless, the Red rulers are increasin~lv haunted
;. by their earlier propaganda which endorsed "free love"
•. in an effort to undermine the "capitalist family. "
::
They have discovered belatedly that the "smart set"
•: among young Russians- and in other East' European
· Communist countries- has shaken loose from moral con~ vention, Communist or capitalist .
~·
This is $Otnething a t~talitarian society cannot tolerate.
Thus. !he belated sex education program deals with
;:
~ conditions t(1at "cement the famil.v ." It stresses the im•. portance "of spiritual harmony and common interests of
··· a happy family 'life."
.
~·
Children now hold class room discussions on "man., Jiness. femininity, the girl 's honor'' and related subj~cts. Teachers are even permitted to t~iil about the con·
sequences of marital infidelity an\! of "psychological inc
compatabilit.v" of the partners.
No wonder. According to recent statistics, Russia has
the· greatest rate of divon:c of any major nation. There
Is only one new marriage for every 10 divorces . And
. any women who remarry remain childless,
'
But It is the r&gt;oor bachelor whq has to pay the orice for
the declining hirl h rate. He is already J)enalized by
PllylnR a specild tax of six per cent of income .' Now he
Is casti~rated as a trni!c)r.

Another study of mutual ance for deduction of sales
lund performance seems to commissions (though 29 per
indicate that, over the long cent of the top performers
haul- even when stocks take were no-load funds). It also
a severe beating, as they assumes reinvestment of all
have r e c e nt 1y-an invest- distributions.
ment in equity is still your On this basis, the liquidamost e f f e c ti v e protection tion value of $10,000 worth of
against inflation.
shares owned on Jan . 1, 1961,
The average mutual fund would have been $19,734 in
treated its investors remark- the average fund, at the end
ably well, the study shows, of 1970, says FundScope.
during a 10-year period that In the best-performing
was the market 's worst in fund, $10,000 worth of shares
the past quarter of a century. would have appreciated to
.
$37,857. In the poorest, they
Th1s was the decade that would have dec J in e d to
ended Dec. 31 last year. No $8 258
one needs to be reminded ' ·
.
how disastrous the 1969-70 By companson , an equal
bear market was . But you amount of cash locked up in
may not remember that 1966 a strongbox durmg the same
saw s to c k s take a major 10 years w?uld have declined
slide, and that 1962 was just m purchasmg-power value to
as bad- a decline of 25 per $8,724.
cent or more in each year .
The study c ov ered 170
The three major bear mar· funds in existence during the
kets coming within one 10- decade. The top 10 per cent
year span made the 1961-70 m performance ranged from
decade the worst for mutual the h1gh of $37,857 to $24,737
funds in a period going back Ior No. 17 on. the top-per·
to·l946, according to a study former llst. F1ve of the 17
by FundScope, a mon t h 1Y were no-load funds .
mutual fund magazine.
In another study of f~nd
performance, the magazme
Yet the mutual fund inves- ~onclude s that not only is it
tor who held shares through- difficult for the average inout the decad e saw their vestor to pick a top pervalue double, if his fund was former but that he probably
aver age for growth, the shouldn't even try.
study shows.
This study covered a "bear
It assumes investment in market round trip"-from
a load lund and makes allow- low to low. rt started at the

loda .s FUNNY
y

market low in October, 1966;
followed the rise to the market peak at the end of 1968,
and then rode down the
1969-70 slide to its bottom in
May of last year.
~'rom the list •of f u n d s
studied, the magazine eliminated the stellar performers
of the 1966-68 bull. marketthe top 10 per cent. It also
eliminated funds that suifered worse losses than the
aver age fund, during the
1969-70 decline. This left 68
middle-of-the -road fundsneither stars on the way up
nor bums on the way down.
Figures showed that $100
worth of shares in any of the
68 funds , after the 44-month
bear - market round trip,
would have been worth at
least $121.60. That was at the
May 26 market bottom last
year. rn the best of the 68
funds, $100 worth of shares
increased to $163.50.
A good middle-of-theroader, FundScope concludes, will probably make
the cautious investor happiest-or at least, less nervous.
This means a fund that has
scored satisfactory gains in
rising markets (above average or near-average) , and,
in declining markets, average or better performance,
in terms of limiting losses.

lA ~ CROMLEY •
.
Behrnd the Kremlm facade

Moscow Loses

The Girl Scouts of . the
U.S.A. has a membership
of nearly 4 million girls
between the ages of 7 and
17. Mrs. Juliette Gordon
Low found e d the Girl
Scouts in Savannah, Ga., in
1912, The World Almanac
notes. Adult leaders supervise t~e girls •. emphasizing
good c1tizensh1p and service
to others.

Q-What is the origin oj
the expression to selL some·

Toller'• FUNNY will pay St .OO for
each origiMI "l11nny" uud. S.nd gag1
to: Todor'a FUNNY, 1200 West Third

thing " lock, stock and bar·

ret"?

St., Clneland, Ohio 4•113.

A-It stems from the fire.
arms trade. The lock, the
stock and the barrel consU
The common cold causes
tute the three essential part! the loss of about 120 million
of a . firearm and togethe1 working days each winter in
they !"ake up the whole gun the United States.

by Dick Tumer

CARNIVAL

'

1
.p
'

"I uaed to think Freddie waa realcle11, too ••• until '
I let him order for both of ua on our dinner date

lut wttkl"

By RAY CROMLEY
WASHINGTON (NEA)
Careful studies here of the recent·24th congress of the
Communist party of the Soviet Union dramatically illustrate the erosion of Moscow's influence among Asian
nations.
The analyses by government specialists are now under
top-level administration scrutiny. It is hoped they will
provide guidance for President Nixon's effort to take
advantage of splits in the world's Communist parties in
order to prevent the formation of enemy power blocs
. which could endanger U.S. security.
Historically, national Communist parties have flocked
to the Soviet party congresses, taking pride in being
part of an international movement led by the Soviet
Union .
It is no secret that with the defection of Yugoslavia,
the Peking-Moscow rivalry and with Russia's sell-out of
some parties in Africa, the preeminence of the Soviet
Union has been seriously challenged for some time.
But never before has the extent of the decline in Russian influence over local Asian parties showed so deeply
as in this 24th congress.
All the facts are not yet in, but it seems that of all
the Asian parties officially attending, only the Mongolian
delegation could be regarded by Moscow as safely proSoviet. And Mongolia is militarily a puppet state.
The Australian, Japanese and North Korean Communist
parties were represented but on their own prickly independent terms.
The Nepalese and Burmese parties reportedly declined Moscow's invitation.' The Malaysian, Thai, Cambodian and New Zealand parti~s probably did not attend.
There is considerable doubt as to whether the Afghan
and Indonesian Communist parties sent olficial delegatiOns.
The pro-Soviet faction of the Ceylonese party was probably present but, cunously, was not officially greeted at
the opening sessiOI\. The Pakistani Communist party was
not listed among the delegations ; but an East Pakistani
group did attend.
The pro-Soviet faction ~f 1\le'Filipino party sent a message •. presumably to explam Its a~sence , complaining
that 1t had been undercut by the tactics of the pro-Maoist
faction .
The pro-Soviet Indian party, one of several Communist
groups in that country. attended and had to listen to
strong praise of Prfme Minister Indira Gandhi. The interests of the Indian C.P. were subordinated to the state
interests of the U.S.S.R.
Communist China, of course, refused to attend.
In very considerable ineasure, it was made clear that
Moscow's problems. are a result of Red China's quite
successful efforts at setting up splinter groups which
hav~ dmded local Communist disciples and set member
agamst member .
Some parties, as in Malaysia and fhailand, are. reportedly unde~ the complete control of the Chinese. In
most other As1an lands the parties are divided into rival
groups or factions . In some countries there are full(ledged rival parties.
This strong f~ct' oi alism provides unusual opportunities
lor the United States and the free countries of Asia . For
the strength of the Communists in the past has not. been
their size, but their efficient internal organization and: •
the mthtaryhke regimented unity of purpose In thP midst
of peoples and parties divided in aims.
· ·

WASHINGTON (NEAl
Credibility Gap is the most striking feature of the
American landscape. But spanning this chasm is not just
a task for the politicians and other public figures who are
the showcase objects of today's massive disbelief.
Trust takes two-someone capable of being trusted, and
someone wanting to trust, willing to trust. Right now, we
don't have very many people on either side of this equation.
The Gallup poll showing that a high proportion of Americans don't believe President Nixon on the war is hardly
a surprise. Probably the doubts about his believability go
beyond the war. Some Republican experts think that may
be his biggest problem in a 1972 re-election bid.
Lyndon Johnson had the same difficulty. A si~nifica~t
question is whether a habit of disbelieving presidents IS
setting in.
.
Distrust of politicians generally, and of the whole polltical process, has been a mark of American history. Yet
it has reached epidemic velocity in the last half-decade.
The young people "turning off from the system" are
only one of the more dramatic, highlighted signs of this
eoidemic. Adults 30 and older often are just as disenchanted.
Now , nobody can or should argue that we ought to go
easy on men who actively earn our distrust. We have a
right and, indeed, a· duty to hold our public figures to
standard.
Nevertheless, many Americans, young and old, may be
contributing recklessly to the contagion of disbellef. The
great fashion today is the sweeping indictment.
rt is all so terribly simple. The easiest thing to say 1~ :
"All politicians are crooks ." Or:
don'~ believe a~Y,t.\Jing
he says."
Of course, there are chronic, total liars in public life as
elsewhere. But their numbers are not legion. To talk as
if they were is to abdicate discriminating judgment.
When I was a . freshman in this business, a seasoned
wag at a midwestern state capital told me :
"The art of covering politics is the art of eliciting information from politicians while concealing your contempt for them."
l have found that advice limited in value. For the fact
is that, in addition to being tremendously likable, many
politicians are almost totally truthful (though not always
candid) , and many others go through the gamut- some
lying just a little, some a fair amount, some a good deal
but not all the time.
The political reporter's necessity is to separate these
people out, to learn who is nearly completely trustworthy,
who is trustworthy some or most of the time, who is
beyond believing.
To disbelieve them all, all of the time. is to move about
in a self-constructed cocoon of unreallty. The reporter
with that conviction is unequipped for life as it is. Except
when dealing with total prevaricators, he is useless in the
coverage of politics.
.
The same can be said or any citizen In the land. Trusting is hard work. rt reQuires iooking at all the available
evidence, continuously. It requires making very penetratine judgments.
You have found a cop-out if you hear a man say that
his ideals, his pure principles compel him to brand all
politics as wicked.
·
rt is time to stop wearing disbelief as your badge of
acceptability. in an untrusting society. You have to find
the men to trust (they are in our midst), and find the
believable· things in men who sometimes let us down.
You have to accept the great human achievements of
the nast. and not try to negate them or distort them according to present disbeliefs. If nothing past was good,
where did you get your free voice to complain?

:·r

BERRY'S WORLD

i

"Do you hove o 'loaner?' I've got (o have something to
get clown to work." ' .

'

17 -TheSundayTlmes-Sentinel,Sunday,June 13,1971

J.

J&gt;eace, Uke
nvar?
.

.
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio parole and probation work and
(UP!) .- Peace Ccrp Director ecolot~y•elated activities.
Joseph H. Blatchford Saturday "Inevitably, we must look to
asked why the nation couldn't the universities to help,"
"do the same thing for peace Blatchford said. "But can the
that we do for war" by prepar- universities b&lt;i inducted to start
ing youth for national service. another ROTC -a peactiful one
Blatchford addressed ··the - to obtain a student to fulfill
1,931 ·graduates of Bowliqg such a commitment."
Green State University. He The Peace Corps director also
propoaed the creation of suggested the university make
p-ograms, similar to those of new efforts to get students out of
ROTC, to train young people for "campus sanctuaries" during
post graduation human service. their four years of ediiCation.
''The student should he off"We have trained young ni.en
in military science, assembled ered the chance to go out into
facilities, buildings and uni· the community, work among
forms," he said. "Why can't we the children and the aged, in
do the same thing for peace that business, in government, or in
we do for war? Why can't we some private but non-profit enfind the time, the space, the terprise to give of himself in
people and the field opportuni- service to others," be said.
ties to lrain young people for Three honorary degrees were
na tiona! peacetime service awarded to BGSU alumni at the
commencement ceremonies.
after graduation?"
Blatchford, who will head the Robert P. Hanrahan, superinnewly-created Action Corps tendent of Cook County schools
when It goes Into effect, said the in Dlinois; Donald E. Percy,
most obvious social needs of our executive vice president of the
country were health services, University of Wisconsin ; and
Richard A. Harvill, president of
tile University of Arizona, were
awarded the degrees.

Sunday Savings
1:00 P.M. - 7:00 P.M.

POINT PLEASANT STORE ONLY
~ BED

PILLOWS
HECK'S REG. 12.99

Tanker Dies
In Fire Ball Largest Field
Of· Gasoline

2

Canal Deal

BALTIMORE (UPI) - A
handwritten note and a dollar
' (Conilnued from Page 15)
bill were tacked on lbe side of
peaceseeker to reveal the true
Clly Hall near a bUll slop:
face
of a warmonger" and that
"Junior," the note said. "I
a peace agreement between the
can't walt any longer. Here is
two 'sides was as far away as
your bUll fare." It was signed
ever.
''Mother."
A former top Israeli military
Hundreds of people passed
MONITOR, w. Va. (UP!)conunander,
retired, Maj. Gen.
Argus Fitzgerald was loading
V
the note Friday, but nobody
Yeshayahu Gavish, said in a
his tank truck at an American
took the money. Television
radio interview, Israel could not
Oil Co. gas storage plant when SYRACUSE, N. Y. (UP! )- A cameras filmed It and the .
afford a witlldrawal from the
he realized one of the total of 75 crews from more than Baltimore News American
east hank of the Suez Canal. He
compartments was overflowing two dozen colleges and wrote a story about II. The
said Israel could agree to a
and ran to shut it off.
universities will be on hand for identity of the notewrlter was
thinning out of forces on both
WiUtin minutes, four huge Ute 69th Annual Intercollegiate revealed Saturday. The
banks, but under no circumstorage tanks ·exploded and Rowing Association National Baltimore News American
stances should it agree to a
Fitzgerald was dead, consumed Championships beginning said II posted the note to see
pullback.
in a ball of fire.
Thursday on Onondaga Lake. bow honest people were.
"That boy was burnin' up," Washington, which captured
said Lewis Veres, who witnes- top honors last year for the first
SUSPENSIONS LIFfED
sed the tragedy Friday night, time since the regatta was
LONDON (UP!) - The InterTWINS END SLUMP
"and he began cryin • for moved to Syracuse in 1952,
national
Lawn Tennis FederaDETROIT (UP!) - Singles
mercy. But nobody could get to looms as the top western club
tion ( ILTF) Friday lifted
him. The fire was just too entered for Ute three days of by Cesar Tovar, his fourth of the
suspensions imposed on ·four
game, and pinch-hitter Rich
intense."
racing.
tennis stars for failing to
Reese capped a two-run rally
The fires shot across u.s. 119 Navy, with victories in the which began wiUt two out in the
compete in the recent French
near this southern West Virgi- Adams Cup and Eastern ninth inning Saturday and
championships at Paris.
nia community, destroying a Sprints, is the surprise of the brought the Minnesota Twins
The players involved were
post office, four houses and East. The Middies will be out of a four-game klsing streak
Tom Okker of the Netherlands,
several parked vehicles. No seeking their first IRA title
Yugoslavian Nikki Pille, Isrnael
with a 54 win over the Detroit
injuries were reported. A since 1965.
El
Sh~fei of the United Arab
Tigers.
mobile home and two 'buses in Fifteen heats will be run
Republic and West Germany's
a state highways department during Thursday's competition,
lnge Buding.
y,arage also were destroyed. ·with the winners moving into
BROWNS SIGN FOUR
Witnesses said the flames . Saturday's championships, The CLEVELAND (UP!) - Four
FIVE WOMEN DROWN
reached as high as 100 feet atop losers will compe~ in Friday's veteran Cleveland Browns
SRINAGAR, Kashmir (UP!)
tht' storage tanks, which repechages, se_eking a second players, including tight end
- Five women drowned when
Chip Glass, have signed their
contained 20,000 gallons of high chance .to qualify.
they tried to ford the River
TALL ROCKET looks even
test gasoline 10 000 gallons of The fteld of 27 colleges and 1971 contracts.
Indus near Thiksey monastery
regular gasollne,' 10,000 gallons U?iversities is the largest in the Defensive end Ron Snidow taller reflected In the in eastern KaShmir, officials
and
linebackers
John turning basin at Cape Ken- said Saturday. The women were
of diesel fuel and 3 000 gallons history of the event.
nedy's Launch Complex 39.
of kerosene
'
Crews competing for the first Garlington and Bob Matheson Waters
mirror the Saturn leading a group of 50 Buddhists
Bill HJnsl~y manager of the time
include
Southern have signed contracts , the 5 that wlll launch the
across the river to offer prayers
plant, said h~ was unable to California, Alabama, Santa Browns said.
Apollo 15 astronauts toward
in the monastery.
the moon July 25 as the
estimate the damage. There Clara, Massachusetts and San
huge space booster leaves
was no explanation of how the D1ego State.
the
Vehicle Ass em b 1y
· NAGY PROMOTED
CLAIMS TITLE
fuel overflow which Fitzgerald
building for a 3'h-mile,
BUDAPEST
(UP!) - Janos
NORWICH, ENGLAND six-hour trip to La u n c h
tried to stop was linked to the
Nagy, Hungary's ambassador
(UP! ) Scot Bernard Pad A.
series of explosions.
to Washington, has been apGallacher shot three birdies and
SIGNED BY PHII.S
The explosives severed all
pointed deputy
foreign
an eagle in four holes enroute to
power and telephone service to PlfiLADELPifiA (UPI )
minister, the news agency MTl
GIANTS TOP METS
this village of 1,000 persons. Mike Schmidt, an Ohio a last round 67 Saturday to win ·
said.
The report did not say who
University shortstop from the 16,800 Martini International NEW YORK (UP!) - Home
Traffic also was blocked off.
runs by Dick Dietz and Bobby would succeed Nagy as envoy to
Some residents were forced Dayton, Ohio, has been signed Golf Tournament.
Bonds keyed a three-run eighth Washington.
to leave their homes until the by the Philadelphia Phillies, it
inning rally Saturday that
danger of more explosions had was announced Friday.
GAINS FINAlS
TALKS BEGIN
passed. Firemen kept hoses Schmidt was tile team's No.2
MUNICH, Gennany (UPI) - carried the San Francisco
Giants
to
a
5-l
victory
over
the
·
BELGRADE
(UPI)
choice
in
this
week's
free
agent
directed on three smaller tanks
West Germany beat Hungary 4Communist Chinese Premier
at the plant throughout the draft. He has been assigned to 1Saturday to reach the finals in New York Mets.
Chou Ental began talks In
nighi to prevent them from Peninsula of the Carolina the European Zone .group BBB
AGEE ON DISABLED LIST
Peking ' Saturday with vi.!lting
League.
catching fire .
Davis Cup competition .
NEW YORK (UP!) - The Yugoslav Foreign Minister
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - New York Mets Friday night Mlrko Tepavac, Belgrade Radio
placed outfielder Tommie Agee reported.
on the 15-day disabled list and
recalled Mike Jorgenson from
%0CHILDREN INJURED
their Tidewater Farm Club. WUERZBURG, Germany
Agee injured his knee breaking (UPI) - A U. S. Army trock
up a double play In Los Angeles skidded on a wet road Friday
last week.
and crashed Into a school bus,
Injuring 20 children, police said
.
BEARSHOT
Saturday.

GAL

Ready For 69th
Rowmg·. E ent

Ahead.Two and Back One

For 'the Jack of a better
title, "Ahead Two and Back
One" is an accurate description of the design progress
for both the half-dime and
dime in the Seated Liberty
series. It makes sense if for
no other reason than to
break the monotony.
rt all began with the introd u c ti o n ot Christian Gob·
recht's Seated Liberty design

in 1836. Once approved as an
acceptable obverse device,
the Lady on 1;1 Rock ,first ap·
peared on the half-dime and
dime in 1837 with a plain
and visually simple reverse. (Combination A)
On~ year later, 13 stars
were added to the obverse
field (Combination B) and in
1840 Liberty .was slightly upgraded in keeping with the
times. She was placed on a
smaller rock, still holding
the Union shield but this
time. in an e.xtreme vertical
position. The reverse ,.,.
malned unchanged.
Combination ·C is a lransitional pattern pie&lt;:t' struck jrr

99

$

MARTIAL MUSIC HATH CHARMS lor the friendly dolr.bln, at least for one by tbe
name of Jethro who not only comes to attention but p ants a buss on tbe bugle of
Marine Cpl. Karl Mueller. Jethro is a star attraction at Sea World In Aurora, Ohio,
where Mueller and other members of the 4th Marine Aircraft Wing Drum and
Bugle Team from Glenview, Ill., look part in season's flag-raising ceremonies.
(Photo by Sgt. William Boyd, USMC)

1859 merely to judge the .ef·
fectiveness of the new design
and not as a legitimate coin.
Although a few of these patterns are known to exist,
they were never placed in
circulation. Note that there
is no indication of the issuing
authority, "United States of
America," on either side.
While all this was going on
with the dime, the sa m e
thing was happening to the
half-dime, an obvious economy measure1 since the dies
for the half-dime and dime
could be cut from the same
master art.
As a reverse design, the
two half-wreaths of cotton,
corn, wheat and tobacco
were deemed proper and in
1860 (combination DJ , was
issued. Liberty was untouched but the required
United , States of America
suitably rep 1a c e d the 13
stars.
This design existed for 31
years,' 1860 to 1891, '\vhich
was six years l!Jnge~ than
the mandatory 25-year design service r.eriod. But in
all , Gobrecht s . Lady on a
Rock outlasted any ·other design with the exception .nf
Ihe· Lincoln head on our present cent. .
·od~ly enough , the title ,of
this "rliclc &lt;lid not end with
1

the discontinuance of the
Seated Liberty dime in 1891.
The Barber-head series issued from 1892 to 1916 dlf.
Cered only on the obverse.
The reverse in combination
D remained.
Eisenhower Dollar Orders

...

_~~~:Eb.~:c~~;~~~~
and killed in downtown
Marquette Saturday when local
authonties were unable to lure
the frightened animal out of a
tree. Police said bears are
occasionally seen in this town of
21 000 persons usually·foraging
'
'
in garbage dumps for food.

DEHUMIDIFIER

MOTOR OIL
HECK'S REG. $
37

1

1.68

HECK'S REG. 187.88

'79

.

1

88

Folding
Heck' s Reg .
$1.39

FENCE

Heck's Reg .

NO-PEST STRIPS

$1.99

Redwood

•23

Heck's
Reg .

PICNIC TABLE

$36 .88

1112 Pint

: Zippo

49~

Heck's
Reg.
79c

CIGARETTE LIGHTER

7~

Heck's
Reg.
S9c

FREEZER CONTAINERS

88 -

177 CAL

PELLET RIFLE

HECK'S REG. 114.96

'12''

SPTS. DEPT.

CAMP STOOL

Lawn Mower
PLUGS

HECK'S

REG. $1.78

HECK'S REG.

g~

:.N.ol•a•s•l l•us•1ra~d~ed. ~~De=:.___.

sr

664

Spts. Dept.

GERMANY TOPS HUNGARY
MUNICH, Germany (UP!) West Germany reached the
finals of the European Zone
Group BBB Davis Cup CompeU·
lion Friday after taking an
unbeatable 3-0 lead over
Hungary.

. .--

Order
blanks forspecimens
the proof ~--------------lllllll
and
uncirculated
of the new Eisenhower dollar
have been received by most
banks in the country and
they are available free to
anyone. However, orders will
not be accepted anywhere
except the address given on
the blank.
Although orders will not
be accepted before July 1, it
would be advisable ,to purchase a cashier's check in
the full amount of your order
at the bank when and where
you pick up your o r d e r
blanks .

PHARMACIST ·

{NEWSPAPER. ENTERII'I\ISE ASSN .)

"Cowles Compli te Encyclopt·

dio of U.S. Coin1 11 by Mort' Reed

·has just been mode o port of
the U.S. Secret,Senic:t library on
counterfeiting. To obtain· o copy,
send ·vour namt, address and
$7.95 to Coin Encyclopedia, c/o
(name newspaper), P.O. Box 419,
Dept. ~first three digits your Zip
Co(te), Radio Citv Station, New
York, N.Y. 10019.

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

FRUTH
PHARMACY

2501

Jackson
Ave.
"Point Pleasant's Leading Drug Store" ,
'·

ZEBC0202

REEL
HECKS' REG. $199
$288

NO. 37

SPIN
CASTING
REEL
Heck's
· Reg.
$1.99

SPTS DEPT.

'119

�18-Tile Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, June 13, 1971

IDIFORIAL

I

Connivers·-the Wily Taxpayers, Communication-But
Really?
.
.

Sen. William Proxmire begins to look more and more
like the Ralph Nader of Capitol Hill, with his involvement
in so many controversial issues and his knack for making
startling revelations .
!n his capacity as chairman of the House-Senate Joint
Economic Committee, the Wisconsin Democrat has made
public a summary prepared by the Treasury Department
showing how tax law provisions giving preferential treatment to certain forms oi income cost the government
nearly f.44 billion in revenue last year.
The blood .leaps to a quick boil. Even for the U.S. government, '$44 billion is a massive sum to Jose. It is· more
than half the total collected in income taxes; it's equal to
about 20 per cent of all federal spending.
.Not only that but preferential treatment is-well, it's
as un-American as sour apple pie.
But wait ~ minute. What kind of preferential treatment?
·Well, for one thing, all those !at-cat oil speculators, or
people who invested all their money in tax-free municipal
bonds.
.
.
Disgusting. What other·kinds of preferential treatment?
Well, that young family man who finally raised the down
payment on a house and then nicked Uncle Sam for the
Interest on his mortgage.
,
Oh. Wei), that's legal, isn't it? Anyway, the nation needs
: family men and homeowners. Any other kinds of prefer: entia! treatment?
.
.
Lots. People .who ran up large doctor or drug bills and
then asked the government to pick up part of the tab, people who gave mon~y to churches and charities, etc., and,

of course, all those fat-cat oil speculators.
In other words, the $44 billion turns out to be nothing
more than the value of the deductions .claimed by taxpayers who itemized their returns last year.
But the way the :senator describes it, the $44 billion was
something that rightfully belonged to the government but
which it was gypped out of by slick taxpayers. It implies
that anything less than a 100 per cent tax on everybody
represents a "loss" to tne government.
ne fact is that the government is entitled to nothing
more than the people decide to give it-or, more accurately, only as much as the people's representatives in
Congress think the people will sit. still for.
Proxmire has called on his colleagues to take a closer
look at the lax provisions which grant preferential treatment.
They should . The tax laws should be subjected to scrutiny every year as a matter of routi ne. There will never
be a perfect tax system, but inequities and injustices and
oversights can and should be corrected as they become
apparent.
But let's not go off on that kick again which a few years
ago had everybody believing that the government was
being cheated out of untold billions by certain tax-sheltered groups.
·
The last time Congress overhauled the whole structure,
in 1969, those billions evaporated as each so-called loophole or preferential treatment was examined and most of
them were found to have a good reason for being written
into the law.

''Don't Fret, Dear ... If His Daddy Buys
Him a New Toy, I'll Get You One, Too!"

That overhaul netted the government an extra $2 billion
in 1970 as against 1969. ·
·
Or as Senator Proxmire might say, the government
" lost" $2 billion less to those sneaky taxpayers.

Ovenworked nvord
:·communicate" is another one of those overworked
words of our time.
·
It is usually encountered in such phrases as "the need
to communicate" or the "failure to communicate." The
latter, of course, is a tributary gully of the well-known
communications gap, and everybody knows where that
one leads-smack dab into the middle of the even wider
generation gap.
The idea is that a lot of the world's woes are due to the
simple fact that people (parents/ children; .husbands/
wives; presidents/ citizens; nations/ nations) are talking
on di£ferent wavelengths.
·
Each hears the other, but neither one really listens to
nor understands what the other is saying. They don't
communicate.
It's a myth.
What we really mean when we talk about a failure to
communicate is really a failm·e to convert the other person to our way of thinking. One expression of this is the

PERSONAL FINANCE

--

cry of young·people: " We tried to turn this country around
by,nonviolent persuasion, but nobod~ would llste11 to u.s."
They were listened to ; they were JUst not agreed With.
Consider a di scussion between a father and son that
ends iii total disagreement, suggests Cleveland Plain Dealer columl)ist Howard Preston.
'
·
Sire and offspring finally give up and go their separate ·
ways, irritated and truculent. On the bus ,to work the next
morning, the father complains ·to a friend that, "I just
can't communicate with that "kid."
But most of the time there was communication, plenty
of it. What was Jacking was a meeting of minds. The.
adult got his message across all right but the son wasn't
impressed . And the youngster communicated with the
parent just fin e, but couldn't "sell" him.
The United States and the Soviet Union have different
languages, but in governmental circles they communicate
freely and excellently. The fact that the two nations \liffer
so often and in so many ways is not a matter of understanding but of different viewpoints, not an inability to
communicate but an inability to convince.
·
A person who resists being converted to a religion usually understands the proposition perfectly ; he simply
doesn't want to accept what is offered. But the evangelist
sighs, "Alas , I couldn't communicate with him."
When we use the failure-to-communicate excuse, says
Preston, we salve our egos' by pretending our message
was superb but the medium fizzled. Thus we convince
ourselves we have a magnificent product and all we need
is a better sales technique.

BRUCE BIOSSAT

Mutual Funds
Stand the Gaff

Disbelief Rampant

Judgment Must ·
Temper Distrust

By CARLTON SMim

By BRUCE BIOSSAT

.

:·

·',.

·.'

.•.
,.'

..'

-:
',.

.
.;,.
I'

r'

l

'·

'

•'

'·'

'

GLOBAL VIEW

WORLD ALMANAC

Sex ~nd the Single r--::=FACTS
Proletarian: Nyet
By LEON DENNEN

NEW YORK (NEAl
Pity the Russian bachelor. The Kremlin rulers, alarmed
by the declining birth rate, have now decreed that he is
an "antisocial element" and possibly a traitor to the
Communist cause.
The single man, to be sure, is not yet an outcast in ali
Marxist-Leninist dictatorships.
For instance, the Red Chmese, Russia's neighbors and
enemies, are currently cautioning tneir young against
rushin~ into marriage until they are 25 or 30.
But China already has a population of 700 to BOO million
and Peking's problem is to control the birth rate. The
Russians, who fear Mao Tse-tung and his "clique of expansionists," have not yet reached 250 million mark.
• · Young Soviet males are now urged by the Kremlin to
marry at an earlier age and· produce more children.
If Mos~ow 's prestigious newspaper Literaturnaya
Gazetta IS to be believed, bachelorhood is harmfulu
not onr 'to society but to the individual, "causing all
sorts o neuroses because of irregular habits."
Also, "part of a person's wages is intended for the support of children," Literaturnaya Gazella writes. But the
perfidious bachelor spends that part on himself, "playing
around without sharin~ with anyone."
He therefore "simply robs others who are married and
support children."
In addition to the anti-bachelor campaign, there has
: been a marked increase in Russia in studies and articles
on sex, love and marriage. "Sex hygiene" is now the
party llne.
The scientist Igor Zabelin even warned that "love as an
emotion will play a very important role in the future in
the populating of outer space."
·.
Writing in the magazine Moskva , Zabelin predicted
that "whim · mankind fulliUs its mission of populating
. ,_ outer space, men and women will be sent in spacecraft
. . somewhere for many years."
,.
Therefore, he added, Soviet scientists " must not only
,. deeply analyze love as an emotion but also try to regu, late it properly." . ·
;:
Meanwhile, the Kremlin's educators have embarked on
•: an experimental sex program for schoolchildren on earth.
The program appears to follow the general lines of
;: similar pro~rams instituted years ago in the United States
•; and many W~stern school systems.
'·
Russian educators explain this sex education lag by
.insisting that in the Soviet Union the subject "lacks the
:· ur~ency it has in the capitalist countries."
•
Nevertheless, the Red rulers are increasin~lv haunted
;. by their earlier propaganda which endorsed "free love"
•. in an effort to undermine the "capitalist family. "
::
They have discovered belatedly that the "smart set"
•: among young Russians- and in other East' European
· Communist countries- has shaken loose from moral con~ vention, Communist or capitalist .
~·
This is $Otnething a t~talitarian society cannot tolerate.
Thus. !he belated sex education program deals with
;:
~ conditions t(1at "cement the famil.v ." It stresses the im•. portance "of spiritual harmony and common interests of
··· a happy family 'life."
.
~·
Children now hold class room discussions on "man., Jiness. femininity, the girl 's honor'' and related subj~cts. Teachers are even permitted to t~iil about the con·
sequences of marital infidelity an\! of "psychological inc
compatabilit.v" of the partners.
No wonder. According to recent statistics, Russia has
the· greatest rate of divon:c of any major nation. There
Is only one new marriage for every 10 divorces . And
. any women who remarry remain childless,
'
But It is the r&gt;oor bachelor whq has to pay the orice for
the declining hirl h rate. He is already J)enalized by
PllylnR a specild tax of six per cent of income .' Now he
Is casti~rated as a trni!c)r.

Another study of mutual ance for deduction of sales
lund performance seems to commissions (though 29 per
indicate that, over the long cent of the top performers
haul- even when stocks take were no-load funds). It also
a severe beating, as they assumes reinvestment of all
have r e c e nt 1y-an invest- distributions.
ment in equity is still your On this basis, the liquidamost e f f e c ti v e protection tion value of $10,000 worth of
against inflation.
shares owned on Jan . 1, 1961,
The average mutual fund would have been $19,734 in
treated its investors remark- the average fund, at the end
ably well, the study shows, of 1970, says FundScope.
during a 10-year period that In the best-performing
was the market 's worst in fund, $10,000 worth of shares
the past quarter of a century. would have appreciated to
.
$37,857. In the poorest, they
Th1s was the decade that would have dec J in e d to
ended Dec. 31 last year. No $8 258
one needs to be reminded ' ·
.
how disastrous the 1969-70 By companson , an equal
bear market was . But you amount of cash locked up in
may not remember that 1966 a strongbox durmg the same
saw s to c k s take a major 10 years w?uld have declined
slide, and that 1962 was just m purchasmg-power value to
as bad- a decline of 25 per $8,724.
cent or more in each year .
The study c ov ered 170
The three major bear mar· funds in existence during the
kets coming within one 10- decade. The top 10 per cent
year span made the 1961-70 m performance ranged from
decade the worst for mutual the h1gh of $37,857 to $24,737
funds in a period going back Ior No. 17 on. the top-per·
to·l946, according to a study former llst. F1ve of the 17
by FundScope, a mon t h 1Y were no-load funds .
mutual fund magazine.
In another study of f~nd
performance, the magazme
Yet the mutual fund inves- ~onclude s that not only is it
tor who held shares through- difficult for the average inout the decad e saw their vestor to pick a top pervalue double, if his fund was former but that he probably
aver age for growth, the shouldn't even try.
study shows.
This study covered a "bear
It assumes investment in market round trip"-from
a load lund and makes allow- low to low. rt started at the

loda .s FUNNY
y

market low in October, 1966;
followed the rise to the market peak at the end of 1968,
and then rode down the
1969-70 slide to its bottom in
May of last year.
~'rom the list •of f u n d s
studied, the magazine eliminated the stellar performers
of the 1966-68 bull. marketthe top 10 per cent. It also
eliminated funds that suifered worse losses than the
aver age fund, during the
1969-70 decline. This left 68
middle-of-the -road fundsneither stars on the way up
nor bums on the way down.
Figures showed that $100
worth of shares in any of the
68 funds , after the 44-month
bear - market round trip,
would have been worth at
least $121.60. That was at the
May 26 market bottom last
year. rn the best of the 68
funds, $100 worth of shares
increased to $163.50.
A good middle-of-theroader, FundScope concludes, will probably make
the cautious investor happiest-or at least, less nervous.
This means a fund that has
scored satisfactory gains in
rising markets (above average or near-average) , and,
in declining markets, average or better performance,
in terms of limiting losses.

lA ~ CROMLEY •
.
Behrnd the Kremlm facade

Moscow Loses

The Girl Scouts of . the
U.S.A. has a membership
of nearly 4 million girls
between the ages of 7 and
17. Mrs. Juliette Gordon
Low found e d the Girl
Scouts in Savannah, Ga., in
1912, The World Almanac
notes. Adult leaders supervise t~e girls •. emphasizing
good c1tizensh1p and service
to others.

Q-What is the origin oj
the expression to selL some·

Toller'• FUNNY will pay St .OO for
each origiMI "l11nny" uud. S.nd gag1
to: Todor'a FUNNY, 1200 West Third

thing " lock, stock and bar·

ret"?

St., Clneland, Ohio 4•113.

A-It stems from the fire.
arms trade. The lock, the
stock and the barrel consU
The common cold causes
tute the three essential part! the loss of about 120 million
of a . firearm and togethe1 working days each winter in
they !"ake up the whole gun the United States.

by Dick Tumer

CARNIVAL

'

1
.p
'

"I uaed to think Freddie waa realcle11, too ••• until '
I let him order for both of ua on our dinner date

lut wttkl"

By RAY CROMLEY
WASHINGTON (NEA)
Careful studies here of the recent·24th congress of the
Communist party of the Soviet Union dramatically illustrate the erosion of Moscow's influence among Asian
nations.
The analyses by government specialists are now under
top-level administration scrutiny. It is hoped they will
provide guidance for President Nixon's effort to take
advantage of splits in the world's Communist parties in
order to prevent the formation of enemy power blocs
. which could endanger U.S. security.
Historically, national Communist parties have flocked
to the Soviet party congresses, taking pride in being
part of an international movement led by the Soviet
Union .
It is no secret that with the defection of Yugoslavia,
the Peking-Moscow rivalry and with Russia's sell-out of
some parties in Africa, the preeminence of the Soviet
Union has been seriously challenged for some time.
But never before has the extent of the decline in Russian influence over local Asian parties showed so deeply
as in this 24th congress.
All the facts are not yet in, but it seems that of all
the Asian parties officially attending, only the Mongolian
delegation could be regarded by Moscow as safely proSoviet. And Mongolia is militarily a puppet state.
The Australian, Japanese and North Korean Communist
parties were represented but on their own prickly independent terms.
The Nepalese and Burmese parties reportedly declined Moscow's invitation.' The Malaysian, Thai, Cambodian and New Zealand parti~s probably did not attend.
There is considerable doubt as to whether the Afghan
and Indonesian Communist parties sent olficial delegatiOns.
The pro-Soviet faction of the Ceylonese party was probably present but, cunously, was not officially greeted at
the opening sessiOI\. The Pakistani Communist party was
not listed among the delegations ; but an East Pakistani
group did attend.
The pro-Soviet faction ~f 1\le'Filipino party sent a message •. presumably to explam Its a~sence , complaining
that 1t had been undercut by the tactics of the pro-Maoist
faction .
The pro-Soviet Indian party, one of several Communist
groups in that country. attended and had to listen to
strong praise of Prfme Minister Indira Gandhi. The interests of the Indian C.P. were subordinated to the state
interests of the U.S.S.R.
Communist China, of course, refused to attend.
In very considerable ineasure, it was made clear that
Moscow's problems. are a result of Red China's quite
successful efforts at setting up splinter groups which
hav~ dmded local Communist disciples and set member
agamst member .
Some parties, as in Malaysia and fhailand, are. reportedly unde~ the complete control of the Chinese. In
most other As1an lands the parties are divided into rival
groups or factions . In some countries there are full(ledged rival parties.
This strong f~ct' oi alism provides unusual opportunities
lor the United States and the free countries of Asia . For
the strength of the Communists in the past has not. been
their size, but their efficient internal organization and: •
the mthtaryhke regimented unity of purpose In thP midst
of peoples and parties divided in aims.
· ·

WASHINGTON (NEAl
Credibility Gap is the most striking feature of the
American landscape. But spanning this chasm is not just
a task for the politicians and other public figures who are
the showcase objects of today's massive disbelief.
Trust takes two-someone capable of being trusted, and
someone wanting to trust, willing to trust. Right now, we
don't have very many people on either side of this equation.
The Gallup poll showing that a high proportion of Americans don't believe President Nixon on the war is hardly
a surprise. Probably the doubts about his believability go
beyond the war. Some Republican experts think that may
be his biggest problem in a 1972 re-election bid.
Lyndon Johnson had the same difficulty. A si~nifica~t
question is whether a habit of disbelieving presidents IS
setting in.
.
Distrust of politicians generally, and of the whole polltical process, has been a mark of American history. Yet
it has reached epidemic velocity in the last half-decade.
The young people "turning off from the system" are
only one of the more dramatic, highlighted signs of this
eoidemic. Adults 30 and older often are just as disenchanted.
Now , nobody can or should argue that we ought to go
easy on men who actively earn our distrust. We have a
right and, indeed, a· duty to hold our public figures to
standard.
Nevertheless, many Americans, young and old, may be
contributing recklessly to the contagion of disbellef. The
great fashion today is the sweeping indictment.
rt is all so terribly simple. The easiest thing to say 1~ :
"All politicians are crooks ." Or:
don'~ believe a~Y,t.\Jing
he says."
Of course, there are chronic, total liars in public life as
elsewhere. But their numbers are not legion. To talk as
if they were is to abdicate discriminating judgment.
When I was a . freshman in this business, a seasoned
wag at a midwestern state capital told me :
"The art of covering politics is the art of eliciting information from politicians while concealing your contempt for them."
l have found that advice limited in value. For the fact
is that, in addition to being tremendously likable, many
politicians are almost totally truthful (though not always
candid) , and many others go through the gamut- some
lying just a little, some a fair amount, some a good deal
but not all the time.
The political reporter's necessity is to separate these
people out, to learn who is nearly completely trustworthy,
who is trustworthy some or most of the time, who is
beyond believing.
To disbelieve them all, all of the time. is to move about
in a self-constructed cocoon of unreallty. The reporter
with that conviction is unequipped for life as it is. Except
when dealing with total prevaricators, he is useless in the
coverage of politics.
.
The same can be said or any citizen In the land. Trusting is hard work. rt reQuires iooking at all the available
evidence, continuously. It requires making very penetratine judgments.
You have found a cop-out if you hear a man say that
his ideals, his pure principles compel him to brand all
politics as wicked.
·
rt is time to stop wearing disbelief as your badge of
acceptability. in an untrusting society. You have to find
the men to trust (they are in our midst), and find the
believable· things in men who sometimes let us down.
You have to accept the great human achievements of
the nast. and not try to negate them or distort them according to present disbeliefs. If nothing past was good,
where did you get your free voice to complain?

:·r

BERRY'S WORLD

i

"Do you hove o 'loaner?' I've got (o have something to
get clown to work." ' .

'

17 -TheSundayTlmes-Sentinel,Sunday,June 13,1971

J.

J&gt;eace, Uke
nvar?
.

.
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio parole and probation work and
(UP!) .- Peace Ccrp Director ecolot~y•elated activities.
Joseph H. Blatchford Saturday "Inevitably, we must look to
asked why the nation couldn't the universities to help,"
"do the same thing for peace Blatchford said. "But can the
that we do for war" by prepar- universities b&lt;i inducted to start
ing youth for national service. another ROTC -a peactiful one
Blatchford addressed ··the - to obtain a student to fulfill
1,931 ·graduates of Bowliqg such a commitment."
Green State University. He The Peace Corps director also
propoaed the creation of suggested the university make
p-ograms, similar to those of new efforts to get students out of
ROTC, to train young people for "campus sanctuaries" during
post graduation human service. their four years of ediiCation.
''The student should he off"We have trained young ni.en
in military science, assembled ered the chance to go out into
facilities, buildings and uni· the community, work among
forms," he said. "Why can't we the children and the aged, in
do the same thing for peace that business, in government, or in
we do for war? Why can't we some private but non-profit enfind the time, the space, the terprise to give of himself in
people and the field opportuni- service to others," be said.
ties to lrain young people for Three honorary degrees were
na tiona! peacetime service awarded to BGSU alumni at the
commencement ceremonies.
after graduation?"
Blatchford, who will head the Robert P. Hanrahan, superinnewly-created Action Corps tendent of Cook County schools
when It goes Into effect, said the in Dlinois; Donald E. Percy,
most obvious social needs of our executive vice president of the
country were health services, University of Wisconsin ; and
Richard A. Harvill, president of
tile University of Arizona, were
awarded the degrees.

Sunday Savings
1:00 P.M. - 7:00 P.M.

POINT PLEASANT STORE ONLY
~ BED

PILLOWS
HECK'S REG. 12.99

Tanker Dies
In Fire Ball Largest Field
Of· Gasoline

2

Canal Deal

BALTIMORE (UPI) - A
handwritten note and a dollar
' (Conilnued from Page 15)
bill were tacked on lbe side of
peaceseeker to reveal the true
Clly Hall near a bUll slop:
face
of a warmonger" and that
"Junior," the note said. "I
a peace agreement between the
can't walt any longer. Here is
two 'sides was as far away as
your bUll fare." It was signed
ever.
''Mother."
A former top Israeli military
Hundreds of people passed
MONITOR, w. Va. (UP!)conunander,
retired, Maj. Gen.
Argus Fitzgerald was loading
V
the note Friday, but nobody
Yeshayahu Gavish, said in a
his tank truck at an American
took the money. Television
radio interview, Israel could not
Oil Co. gas storage plant when SYRACUSE, N. Y. (UP! )- A cameras filmed It and the .
afford a witlldrawal from the
he realized one of the total of 75 crews from more than Baltimore News American
east hank of the Suez Canal. He
compartments was overflowing two dozen colleges and wrote a story about II. The
said Israel could agree to a
and ran to shut it off.
universities will be on hand for identity of the notewrlter was
thinning out of forces on both
WiUtin minutes, four huge Ute 69th Annual Intercollegiate revealed Saturday. The
banks, but under no circumstorage tanks ·exploded and Rowing Association National Baltimore News American
stances should it agree to a
Fitzgerald was dead, consumed Championships beginning said II posted the note to see
pullback.
in a ball of fire.
Thursday on Onondaga Lake. bow honest people were.
"That boy was burnin' up," Washington, which captured
said Lewis Veres, who witnes- top honors last year for the first
SUSPENSIONS LIFfED
sed the tragedy Friday night, time since the regatta was
LONDON (UP!) - The InterTWINS END SLUMP
"and he began cryin • for moved to Syracuse in 1952,
national
Lawn Tennis FederaDETROIT (UP!) - Singles
mercy. But nobody could get to looms as the top western club
tion ( ILTF) Friday lifted
him. The fire was just too entered for Ute three days of by Cesar Tovar, his fourth of the
suspensions imposed on ·four
game, and pinch-hitter Rich
intense."
racing.
tennis stars for failing to
Reese capped a two-run rally
The fires shot across u.s. 119 Navy, with victories in the which began wiUt two out in the
compete in the recent French
near this southern West Virgi- Adams Cup and Eastern ninth inning Saturday and
championships at Paris.
nia community, destroying a Sprints, is the surprise of the brought the Minnesota Twins
The players involved were
post office, four houses and East. The Middies will be out of a four-game klsing streak
Tom Okker of the Netherlands,
several parked vehicles. No seeking their first IRA title
Yugoslavian Nikki Pille, Isrnael
with a 54 win over the Detroit
injuries were reported. A since 1965.
El
Sh~fei of the United Arab
Tigers.
mobile home and two 'buses in Fifteen heats will be run
Republic and West Germany's
a state highways department during Thursday's competition,
lnge Buding.
y,arage also were destroyed. ·with the winners moving into
BROWNS SIGN FOUR
Witnesses said the flames . Saturday's championships, The CLEVELAND (UP!) - Four
FIVE WOMEN DROWN
reached as high as 100 feet atop losers will compe~ in Friday's veteran Cleveland Browns
SRINAGAR, Kashmir (UP!)
tht' storage tanks, which repechages, se_eking a second players, including tight end
- Five women drowned when
Chip Glass, have signed their
contained 20,000 gallons of high chance .to qualify.
they tried to ford the River
TALL ROCKET looks even
test gasoline 10 000 gallons of The fteld of 27 colleges and 1971 contracts.
Indus near Thiksey monastery
regular gasollne,' 10,000 gallons U?iversities is the largest in the Defensive end Ron Snidow taller reflected In the in eastern KaShmir, officials
and
linebackers
John turning basin at Cape Ken- said Saturday. The women were
of diesel fuel and 3 000 gallons history of the event.
nedy's Launch Complex 39.
of kerosene
'
Crews competing for the first Garlington and Bob Matheson Waters
mirror the Saturn leading a group of 50 Buddhists
Bill HJnsl~y manager of the time
include
Southern have signed contracts , the 5 that wlll launch the
across the river to offer prayers
plant, said h~ was unable to California, Alabama, Santa Browns said.
Apollo 15 astronauts toward
in the monastery.
the moon July 25 as the
estimate the damage. There Clara, Massachusetts and San
huge space booster leaves
was no explanation of how the D1ego State.
the
Vehicle Ass em b 1y
· NAGY PROMOTED
CLAIMS TITLE
fuel overflow which Fitzgerald
building for a 3'h-mile,
BUDAPEST
(UP!) - Janos
NORWICH, ENGLAND six-hour trip to La u n c h
tried to stop was linked to the
Nagy, Hungary's ambassador
(UP! ) Scot Bernard Pad A.
series of explosions.
to Washington, has been apGallacher shot three birdies and
SIGNED BY PHII.S
The explosives severed all
pointed deputy
foreign
an eagle in four holes enroute to
power and telephone service to PlfiLADELPifiA (UPI )
minister, the news agency MTl
GIANTS TOP METS
this village of 1,000 persons. Mike Schmidt, an Ohio a last round 67 Saturday to win ·
said.
The report did not say who
University shortstop from the 16,800 Martini International NEW YORK (UP!) - Home
Traffic also was blocked off.
runs by Dick Dietz and Bobby would succeed Nagy as envoy to
Some residents were forced Dayton, Ohio, has been signed Golf Tournament.
Bonds keyed a three-run eighth Washington.
to leave their homes until the by the Philadelphia Phillies, it
inning rally Saturday that
danger of more explosions had was announced Friday.
GAINS FINAlS
TALKS BEGIN
passed. Firemen kept hoses Schmidt was tile team's No.2
MUNICH, Gennany (UPI) - carried the San Francisco
Giants
to
a
5-l
victory
over
the
·
BELGRADE
(UPI)
choice
in
this
week's
free
agent
directed on three smaller tanks
West Germany beat Hungary 4Communist Chinese Premier
at the plant throughout the draft. He has been assigned to 1Saturday to reach the finals in New York Mets.
Chou Ental began talks In
nighi to prevent them from Peninsula of the Carolina the European Zone .group BBB
AGEE ON DISABLED LIST
Peking ' Saturday with vi.!lting
League.
catching fire .
Davis Cup competition .
NEW YORK (UP!) - The Yugoslav Foreign Minister
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - New York Mets Friday night Mlrko Tepavac, Belgrade Radio
placed outfielder Tommie Agee reported.
on the 15-day disabled list and
recalled Mike Jorgenson from
%0CHILDREN INJURED
their Tidewater Farm Club. WUERZBURG, Germany
Agee injured his knee breaking (UPI) - A U. S. Army trock
up a double play In Los Angeles skidded on a wet road Friday
last week.
and crashed Into a school bus,
Injuring 20 children, police said
.
BEARSHOT
Saturday.

GAL

Ready For 69th
Rowmg·. E ent

Ahead.Two and Back One

For 'the Jack of a better
title, "Ahead Two and Back
One" is an accurate description of the design progress
for both the half-dime and
dime in the Seated Liberty
series. It makes sense if for
no other reason than to
break the monotony.
rt all began with the introd u c ti o n ot Christian Gob·
recht's Seated Liberty design

in 1836. Once approved as an
acceptable obverse device,
the Lady on 1;1 Rock ,first ap·
peared on the half-dime and
dime in 1837 with a plain
and visually simple reverse. (Combination A)
On~ year later, 13 stars
were added to the obverse
field (Combination B) and in
1840 Liberty .was slightly upgraded in keeping with the
times. She was placed on a
smaller rock, still holding
the Union shield but this
time. in an e.xtreme vertical
position. The reverse ,.,.
malned unchanged.
Combination ·C is a lransitional pattern pie&lt;:t' struck jrr

99

$

MARTIAL MUSIC HATH CHARMS lor the friendly dolr.bln, at least for one by tbe
name of Jethro who not only comes to attention but p ants a buss on tbe bugle of
Marine Cpl. Karl Mueller. Jethro is a star attraction at Sea World In Aurora, Ohio,
where Mueller and other members of the 4th Marine Aircraft Wing Drum and
Bugle Team from Glenview, Ill., look part in season's flag-raising ceremonies.
(Photo by Sgt. William Boyd, USMC)

1859 merely to judge the .ef·
fectiveness of the new design
and not as a legitimate coin.
Although a few of these patterns are known to exist,
they were never placed in
circulation. Note that there
is no indication of the issuing
authority, "United States of
America," on either side.
While all this was going on
with the dime, the sa m e
thing was happening to the
half-dime, an obvious economy measure1 since the dies
for the half-dime and dime
could be cut from the same
master art.
As a reverse design, the
two half-wreaths of cotton,
corn, wheat and tobacco
were deemed proper and in
1860 (combination DJ , was
issued. Liberty was untouched but the required
United , States of America
suitably rep 1a c e d the 13
stars.
This design existed for 31
years,' 1860 to 1891, '\vhich
was six years l!Jnge~ than
the mandatory 25-year design service r.eriod. But in
all , Gobrecht s . Lady on a
Rock outlasted any ·other design with the exception .nf
Ihe· Lincoln head on our present cent. .
·od~ly enough , the title ,of
this "rliclc &lt;lid not end with
1

the discontinuance of the
Seated Liberty dime in 1891.
The Barber-head series issued from 1892 to 1916 dlf.
Cered only on the obverse.
The reverse in combination
D remained.
Eisenhower Dollar Orders

...

_~~~:Eb.~:c~~;~~~~
and killed in downtown
Marquette Saturday when local
authonties were unable to lure
the frightened animal out of a
tree. Police said bears are
occasionally seen in this town of
21 000 persons usually·foraging
'
'
in garbage dumps for food.

DEHUMIDIFIER

MOTOR OIL
HECK'S REG. $
37

1

1.68

HECK'S REG. 187.88

'79

.

1

88

Folding
Heck' s Reg .
$1.39

FENCE

Heck's Reg .

NO-PEST STRIPS

$1.99

Redwood

•23

Heck's
Reg .

PICNIC TABLE

$36 .88

1112 Pint

: Zippo

49~

Heck's
Reg.
79c

CIGARETTE LIGHTER

7~

Heck's
Reg.
S9c

FREEZER CONTAINERS

88 -

177 CAL

PELLET RIFLE

HECK'S REG. 114.96

'12''

SPTS. DEPT.

CAMP STOOL

Lawn Mower
PLUGS

HECK'S

REG. $1.78

HECK'S REG.

g~

:.N.ol•a•s•l l•us•1ra~d~ed. ~~De=:.___.

sr

664

Spts. Dept.

GERMANY TOPS HUNGARY
MUNICH, Germany (UP!) West Germany reached the
finals of the European Zone
Group BBB Davis Cup CompeU·
lion Friday after taking an
unbeatable 3-0 lead over
Hungary.

. .--

Order
blanks forspecimens
the proof ~--------------lllllll
and
uncirculated
of the new Eisenhower dollar
have been received by most
banks in the country and
they are available free to
anyone. However, orders will
not be accepted anywhere
except the address given on
the blank.
Although orders will not
be accepted before July 1, it
would be advisable ,to purchase a cashier's check in
the full amount of your order
at the bank when and where
you pick up your o r d e r
blanks .

PHARMACIST ·

{NEWSPAPER. ENTERII'I\ISE ASSN .)

"Cowles Compli te Encyclopt·

dio of U.S. Coin1 11 by Mort' Reed

·has just been mode o port of
the U.S. Secret,Senic:t library on
counterfeiting. To obtain· o copy,
send ·vour namt, address and
$7.95 to Coin Encyclopedia, c/o
(name newspaper), P.O. Box 419,
Dept. ~first three digits your Zip
Co(te), Radio Citv Station, New
York, N.Y. 10019.

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

FRUTH
PHARMACY

2501

Jackson
Ave.
"Point Pleasant's Leading Drug Store" ,
'·

ZEBC0202

REEL
HECKS' REG. $199
$288

NO. 37

SPIN
CASTING
REEL
Heck's
· Reg.
$1.99

SPTS DEPT.

'119

�• I

'
•

18-· Tbjlkllllllay'I'Irnes ·Sentlnel,&amp;mday, June 13,1971

Minorities Hit Housing Policy
.

MARTHA fOSTER, left, retiring curator at the Our
Hwse musewn In Gallipolis, handa ke)'s of the hiatorlc
structure tohersucceasor, Mrs. Pat Houck. On the shelves at
left are period pieceS On permanent display at Our HOUBe.

Curator of
Our House·
Is Retiring
GALUPOLIS - Mter five House was a gift from the
yeats and eight months of Holzers to the state,
escorting guests through Our The Holzers furnished It
House State Memorial, Mrs. authentically for the period
Martha Foster Is retiring . (1819) and it remained as they
During thia time she has been restored It until 1965 when the
hastes&amp; to approximately 20 to Ohio Historical Society sup·
25 thousand hiatorlcally-minded plemented the existing fur·
chlldren and adults.
nlshings with other items of the
Mrs. Foster became curator same period.
of the restored tavem in 1965, 1 Mrs. Foster, a writer, plans to
replacing Mrs. Evelyn Parsons. move to Rio·Grande where she
Mrs. PanO!!S served following will complete a historical novel.
the 1~-year tenure of Mrs. She Is the author of "A Red
Winifred Switzer" 2 State St.
Carpet for Lafayette," a novel
• Reatoreiriluilng the years of with a Gallipolis setting;
1933 to 1936 by the late Dr. "Ginger Bo"'" the story of an
Cll!lrles E. Holzer Sr. and Mrs. adventurous Quaker girl, and
H01zer, lrith the assistance of articles In a variety of small
Mlss Alma McCormick, Our publications. Her fiction has

appeared in Good HoUllekeeplng
and Redbook.
A resident of Gallipolis since
1940, Mrs. Foster came to
Gallipolis when her late
husband, Dr. Paul C. Foster,
became associated with Holzer
Hospital (now the Holzer
Medical Center).
"The kitchen of Our House
has been most interesting to
young and old," Mrs. Foster
said, speaking of her years at
Our House. She also mentioned
the magnificent Sycamore tree
in the back yard. "We have
been told by a state forester the
tree was undoubtedly here when
the house was built more than
150 years ago."

House guest book.
Replacing Mrs. Foster is Mrs.
Billy Houck (Pat) who assumed
duties officially Friday. Mrs.
Houck is former Woman's Page
Editor and feature writer lor
the Gallipolis Tribune and
Sunday Times-Sentinel. She
also wrote a column, "Just
Between Us."
Mrs. Houck will be conducting tours through the state
memorial at 434 . First Ave.,
Galllpolis, each day from 9o30a.
m. to 5 p. m. excepting Mondays.

By NORMAN KEMPSTER legal authOrity to force econom- have come' here."
WASIITNGTON(UPI)..-Lead· ic integration.
The National UrbanCoalition
ers of minorities have ~lled, Carl Stokes, the black mayor said In a sta~ment issued in
President Nixon's statement of Cleveland, charged Nixon Washington N~on had shown
that the government will not had "removed the possibility of · his administration "is willing to
force communities to accept economic and racial integration abandon to local determination
unwanted public housing in thia couritry." ·
a problem that demands a
projects lor the poor as a "I don't think he needed 8,000 forthright national policy
retreat from moral convlctioli warda to say no," Stokes said backed by active national
an~ a_ "mockery of the Friday night II], a commence- leadership, Incentives and morConstitution."
ment address to the University al conviction." It dismissed his
In an 8,IJOO.word policy of Minnesota Law School. "By report as "an 8,000-word essay
statement on housing segrega- saying no, he made a mockery on the practical problems of
lion issued Friday, Nixon of the Constitution of the United public administration."
pledged vigorous enforcement States and a mockery ·of the Nixon drew a sharp distincof the 968 open housing law ideals for which so many people tion between racial and econwhich bans racial or religious
segregation. But he assured
'
·
I
OUR
BOARDING
HOUSE
with
Major
Hoop
e
jittery suburban dwellers by
saying the government has no .
~~y 1HE .
Tl PPED
TENDER, FOR DAD
OVEP. THE
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio L/1.11\P 601N'
OUT 01'1 HE
"Tenderly Yours" is the exM16.n'l'. "'-''E
pression of affection for this
/&gt;. CLEAN
year's Father's Day, June 20.
ISE.TAWI'.YI
·And what better way of saying
"Tenderly Yours" thsn with
tender juicy cuts of beef 'whether roast or steak, ask
MrS'. John Buchman, member
of the Buckeye CowBelles
Assn., and local chairman of the
" Beef for Father's Day"
campaign.

Q-Who has jurisdiction

over the seat herd on the
Pribilof Islands?

A-The seal herd is owned
by the government and pro·
tected by the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service.

\

omlc segregation. &amp; lntetpret..
ed by the PreSident, the ' open
h!JIIsing law guarantees everyone an equalr right . to live
wherever he Cl\ll afford.
·
Nixon also pointedly noted
that although 1118liy Negroes
are poor, "the temls poor and
black are notinlerchangflilble."
He said there are also·. poor
whites and affiuent blacks. '
. "By equal housing opportunity, I mean the achievement of
a ~ondition in which individuals
of similar income levels ... have
a like ~ange of housing choices
available to them regardless of
their race, color, religion or
· · "
'!a t'wna1 or1gm.
Nixon noted argwnents that
poverty perpetuates itself when
the poor are by the laws of
economics forced to live in
often overcrowded· low-&lt;!ost
neighborhoods . He said a
frequently suggested remedy is
to "scatter the poor among the
more affluent" by building
public housing projects In
rnl.ddle-and-upper-&lt;!lass neighborlloods.
The President · said his
administration would "encourage" construction of public
housing in the suburbs but he
said "a municipality that does
not want federally assisted
housing should not have it
imposed from Washington by
bureaucratic fiat." ·
The decision on whether to
accept public housing will be up
to the local community.

Prediction

en?-: Nicklaus To Wln
e

LEE MUELLER

Ar1~~~~~~~~
Pa.-( NEAJnow, the world

·o:

crying for someone
teeth into the gutless
e of predicting the
States 0 pen golf
chappi,on.
task has become unb~;~~·l}, pigeonhearted in
r&lt;
Junes. Since he won
Jack Nicklaus has

" to win every

U.S. Open. He
complied only once, in
but picking Nicklaus to
another Open has bea kind of annual copbetting on Tuesday
•
Monday .
there is always a
amount of consideragiven to the tournament
HHorses for courses,"
This time it's
June 17·20
Merion Golf
&lt;:~~:i~:n. near Philadelphia.
"
" (Golfers refer to
this manner; the way.
c k broke r s mention

The_name, ''Our House", was
applied by the community
because of the owner, Henry
Cushing's practice of inviting
patronage to "Come over to our
house."
"Tourists," Mrs. Foster
stated, "are very interested in
what belonged to the French
settlers and ask If there are any
other traces of them, partlcularly descendents. They
also ask if there is a French
restaurant In town."
The Silver Bridge• disaster
and now, the bypass, caused
some decline in the nwnber of
·visitors from' the approximate
5,000 the first year of Mrs.
Foster's tenure. Recently,
however, tourism Is on the
upswing with guests from
Sweden and Australis already
having registered In the Our

~e1cion is where Bob Jones
"~"'" ..''u his Grand Slam in

•~.

where Ben Hogan won
Open by struggling
w uu~u 90 holes in lour days

First Hit Was
'

·Tune .for. Life
By VERNON SCOTT
Sanda Hotel which loosened
UP! Hollywood Corre~pondenl Frank's teeth and his contract
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)-When with the Howard Hughes-owned
Frank Sinatra crooned his first spa.
hit, "All Or Nothing At All," he He became a chum of Sen.
didn't guess the tiUe would be a John F·. Kennedy, then not so
blueprint for hls life.
chummy.
He will make what he calls He was ruled personna non
hia final public appearance :grata by a whole country:
Sunday night for the Motion ·Mexico.
·
Picture and Television Relief In 1960 he drew the wrath of
Fund gala with Princess Grace many by hiring writer Albert
Kelly as patroness.
Maltz-one of Hollywood's ten
It is fitting thst the kid from who served a prison term for
Hoboken wiD ring ·-down the refusing to answer if he was a
M1i GRADUATE - Edcurtain on hia career for a Communist-to write a screen·
charity event: raising $1 million' play. Maltz liter was dis- ward Herman Lyncb, Jr.,
for oldtlme show folk.
missed.
Gallipolis, son of Edward H.
Nor would It be uncharacter- Sinatra had the East Coast in Lynch, Sr., Rt. 1, TburmBD, .
istic If he got In a beef In the an uproar when he hired a received bls BBA Degree In
prOCfll!l.
yacht for girlfriend Mia Farrow bwJ!nes1 adminl&amp;traUon from
The mercurial Sinatra has and several celebrities to cruise Marshall UDiverslty during
been called the best saloon the New England coast. One of COII\IDencemenl enrclses on
singer who ever lived, the the crewmen was killed In an . Sunday, May 30. Tbe degree
greatest entertainer . In the accident.
Includes 'a major In ac·
world.
His divorce from Nancy counting and mlaor In
Perhaps he is all that, and Barbato after a dozen years of ecoaomlcs. He Ia employed
something less.
marriage made headlines be· by City Ice and Fuel Co.,
A man of extremes: Sinatra cause 11 freed him to marry Polat Plea1811t. Lynch Is a
was nurtured on superlatives- glsmor girl Ava Gardner, a 1f8duate of Rio Graade High
positive and negative. II is two-year mistake.
School. He attended Rio
possible his retirement is The singer's marrlsge to Mia Grande CoUege two years. .
temporary, but he swears he Farrow lasted only 16 months.
won't perform again In public.
The worst days of Frank
At 55 the restless, charming, Sinatra's life doubtless took record albwns he cut during his
rough, · diffident, kind, insensl· place 1'n December • !...,
... when career.
.
.
tlve superstar hardly can be hi s son, Fra nk J r., waa
They represent a legacy of
faulted professionally. But his kidnaped at Lake Tahoe. the lineal popular music of the
public-private tile has oversha- Sinatra sued when a foreign mid~ Century, sung by the
dowed hia greatness as an publication called It preaa man who aang 11 best of aU.
entertainer.
agentry and won.
~ night he w111 bid
From the beginning when he In the early 19601 II wu farewell to hia singing career,
was a homely kid, sldnny and Frank s·1natra •s clan that made moilon pictures, televlalon and
wearing floppy bow lies and news: Dean Martin, Pater concerlf. But he still 011'118 two
surrounded by swooning bobby- Lawford, Sammy I)avis Jr., Joe jet planee, homes In Plllrn
soxers, the pl(bllc was more Bishop and others.
Springs, Beverly Hills, Acapul·
entranced with · his personal
At the nadir of his career In co, and New York City. He 1a
antics thsn hia voice.
19•2
• when he was •-t
.,.. kn-n
"" many 11mea a mlll101111tre.
Frank Sinatra made head· as Ava Gardner's hu.band,
He ·Ia planning to write a
lines almost every one of hia 30 Frank supposedly was waahed book about hie life. He Is In
yean In the limelight.
up. But he came back to lrin an load health, he saya, and plans
. He WIIS investigated by crime Oscar in "From Here to another yacht trip in the East
comlnlaslons ln. two states, his Eternity" in 1953.
thla•nmrner, f
native New Jertey and Nevada,
For whatever reason, tbeee Frank Sinatra 1a quitting the
where he sold out his gambling 1nd other colorful events In llmeU,h! bu! not retlrln&amp;. He'll
and bolellntereste in 111113 when Sinatra's life are what 11101! buround. And he wW continue
·lbe allte revoked his u - for people remember lrith envy,, llllkiJIIInews.
playinl h011t to San Glancana, • · tdmlratlon or outrage. I·
Mafllllsure.
But Sinatra's swath In tile
. \
There ~re more flat flghta 11111'1 eventually will pale and
lllln can be COWited, inc1udlni 1111 eoutrlbution to IIIUIIc will Kerosene is the most com·
mon fuel uaed In jet aircraft
1 lllf ona ptttdl fray wiiJJ
Generatlont ~ Amerienelnea.
P'""" Ctrl CIJben In 1M YIPI' Clllll bllve at hand - 10

» ,.....n.

Enioy a Festival
of Fun-Filled Activities
You

;t~~::~: bid(UP!)
for

~

-a third
Ken
shutout was
••
•,. s~~~;: In the seventh inning
but relief ace Ron
•&lt; S;
shut the door against
•• T~~r:~::~i
Ci
and the Chicago
•
beat the Reds, 5-2.
•
•
had given up just
•
a scratch single in the
inning in 6 1-3 innings
Johnny Bench rifled his
•
•
•

Summer Fun has just begun! Round
up the family and take in all
those big special events.
Just check with us for happenings
music, theatre, parks,
find all the listings in
your Hometown ... newspaper. Read all about it!

The Su.nd~y
Times-Sentinel

the year against loser Jim
McGlothlin. Holtzman got into
the act in th.e third when he hit
his first homer of the season and
second of his career.
The Cubs added two more
runs in the fourth inning on Ron
Santo's 12th homer, a single by
Joe Pepitone, a walk to Jim
Hickman and a single by Brock
Davis.
The Cubs added their fifth run

chers.
Dane Iorg , outfielder for
Brigham Young, finished the
season with a .507- highest for
an AU-American selection since
the first team was selected in
1947.
Also named to the outfield
were Dave Elmendorf of Texas
A&amp;M will\ a .402, and Rob Ellis
of Michigan State with a .380.
Infielders are Hlchard Varney,
Harvard ca~ her , .391; Bobby
Walts, Washington State second
baseman who stole 59 bases this
season, and Philip Still, third

End L.osz·ng

..

Ex.(}SU Sub QB

Reports Monday
For Pro Tryout

Summer

a

was hit with a pitch.
Belpre came back in the
second as Johnson singled, a
Meigs error let both runners
he safe on a fielder's choice,
another bobble on Johnson's
attempted steal of third permitted a run to score, and
another runner to go to third.
The runner on third scored mi a
long sacrifice fly.
In the third inning, Belpre
bunched three hils and three
Meigs errors to plate three
more runs and take 5 to 2lead.
Mei~s rallied in the fourth to
score two runs on Bush's triple,
but it was not enough.
Skipper Johnson, who ab·
sorbed the loss, was relieved in
the fifth with one out after he
was hi t in the knee with a line
drive. He struck out thrre.
Reliever Stan Perry came in
to strike out seven of the eight
batters he faced. Neither pit-

a

cher allowed, a walk.
Winning pitcher was Ho\vie
Caldweli, Eastern High s.iar of ·
last season. Cald\Vell struck out
four and walked seven.
Meigs hitters were Bush, a
triple, Ash a double, and Brei ·
Hart and Tim Demoskey each a
single.
Johnson led Belpre as he
stroked three singles, Takas
doubled , and Meeley and
Caldwell singled.
Meigs Legion goes to Logan
Sunday for a double header with
the Logan Legion team;
Wednesday they wiU be at New
Haven for a single game, and
return home next Saturday for a
double header with Ravenswood.
Belpre
02.1' 000 ~ 6 4
Meigs
200 200 ()-4 4 3
Caldwell
and Meeley,
Johnson ( LP), Perry , and
Perroud, Dixon (6).

SPECIAL

·

Family Pack
includes these
4 sandwiches
and 4 orders of
Tr.,,,,..h fries.

.

CHARLOTTE N. c. (UPI ) _
'
Dale Douglass, the 1969 Kemper
Champ gunning for a repeat win
at the $150,000 event, took the
third round lead Saturday with
two birdies on his first five holes
for HI-under-par.
Douglass, who burned up the
7,278-yard course Friday with a
record-tying 65 that included
nine birdies and two bogeys,
opened up with a bird on the
par-4 442-yard number one hole
and added another on the par-4
number four.
Douglas had a 36-hole total of
136, 6-under-par going into
Saturday's round.
Bob Lunn , second round
leader at 135, birdied his first
five holes for second place one
stroke back.
Dave Marrin with a round of
68 and George Archer with a 69
were tied for the clubhouse lead
for a 54-hole total of 212 ' four
under.
,y · •
~
Third at S-under-par was Rod
Funseth, and ~orge Johnson
and Miller B ber split for
fourth, three s kes back .
Johnson, a black pro from
Atlanta who won only $8,847 on

the tour last year, stormed from
the ranks with five birdies on
the front nine to make the turn
at 31, five under par.
Mason Rudolph took a bogey
on the second hole and fell into a
tie with Jim Colvert, four
strokes off the mark.
The first round leader, Tom
Weiskopf, dropped into a threeway split with Larry Hinson and
Larry Ziegler for eighth, five
strokes behind.

ILY

PICK
SALE

3 Horses

Feed tour
tor onlY

Drugged
In Stables

$

•

PHILADELPHIA (UP!)
Three thoroughbreds
were
.
.
1~f,ugged m, t~e1r s4!pl e~1 at
Liberty Bell Race track·. this
week , a track spokesman
disclosed Saturday.
The spokesman said tests
showed the horses Herbie Kay,
Shah of Morocco and Gin
Drinker
were
given
phenothieziane, a tranquilizer
which makes a horse "sleepy"
or slow-running .
The . horses were scratched
from races on Tuesday and
Thursday when the incidents
were discovered.
The other horses were tested
and scratched, but one test was
negative and results of the other
'
were incomplete.
National League Standings
Get your FAMILY PACK Here:
The spokesman said it is
By United Press International
I Night Games Nolin eluded I
believed someone administered
( Eastl
the drugs at night. The trainers
W. L. Pet. GB
Pittsburgh
36 23 .610 .. . discovered the horses' conSt. Louis
, 35 25 .583 l'h ditions in the morning and
New York
32 23 .SS2 2 notified the track veterinarian.
Chicago
29 30 ,492, 7
The Thoroughbred Racing
Montreal
24 28 .462 a•;,
Philadelph ia 22 34 .393 12'1' Protective Bureau began an
(West)
investigation Into the Incident,
W. L. Pet. GB
Sa n Francisco 40 22 .645 ... the first of its kind at Liberty .
Los Angeles 31 28 .525 1112 Bell. The track also doubled its
Houston
29 30 .492 9112 security guard, especially in the
Atlanta
28 33 .459 11'1:!
Cincinnati
24 35 .407 14'1' stable area .
San Diego , 20 39 .339 18'1'
Saturday. s Results ,
Sa n Franc1sco 5 New York 1
Chicago s Cincinnati 2
Los Angeles at Montreal (night)
San Diego at Philadelphia
(night)
Pittsburgh at St. Louis (night)
Atlanta at Houston (night )
·June 20th marks the 5th Annual Gallia County Citizens Band
Sunday's
Games
lAilT'
EDT)
Radio Jamboree.
Los Angeles ~~e~ontreal 12:15
p.m.l
San Francisco at New York (2
p.m,)
San Diego at Philadelphia (1 :30
p.m.)
Cincinnati at Chicago (2 : IS
p.m.)
Pittsburgh at St. Louis (2:15
p.m.)
At lanta at Ho.uston 13 p.m.J
Monday's Games
San Diego at Montreal (nlghl)
Los Angeles at New York
(night!
San Francisco at Philadelphia
(night!
Atlanta' at Chicago
.
Cincinnati at St. Louis (night)
Pittsburgh at Houston lnightl

.
baseman and a .360 hiller for
~~~~~i Neb. (UP! ) Mississippi State.
..,
players domina ted the
The AACBC also announced
All-America Baseball
••
th
e distr lcI coac h-{1f• th e-year
selected by the American
•
selections. They are Loyal
~:~~:l":r
of
College
Baseball
Park Harvard District I.
•'
announced Saturday .
.•
'
.
'
.•• j:&lt;J selections
Eddie Donovan, Pnnceton,
anwere
•
District II; Paul Gregory,
• tourlced by the AACBC during
Mississippi State District Ill·
college world series here for
.
'
, .'
·'
D1ck Jones, Southern Illin01s,
Chewing Gwn, which
'• lre.sents awards' to the first
Dislrict!V;; Gene Shell, Tulsa, ·
••
District V; AI Ogletree, Pan
players.
•• Arizona State University was
.
D'IS lr'1ct VI ; Glen
Amencan,
•
Tuckett, Brigham Young,
only school to place two
•• rernbeJrs
D'IS tr'IC t VII ,a nd Rod Dedeaux '
on the first team.
••
Southern Cal, District VIII.
are Roger Schmuck, first
••
The complete list of 1971
AACBC All-America selections:
••
FIRSTTEAM
•
S~eak
IB - Roger Schmuck, Arizona
State, Senior; 28 - Bobby
•
•
Waits, Washington State,
••
.,
senior; 3B- Phll Still, Mlssis• CLEVELAND (UPI) - Day streak by defeating the side and the 29-year-{lld south. sippi State, senior; 55-Alan
· d th
1 12 ~annlster , Arizona State,
••;
drove in three runs and Cleveland Indians, 4-2.
paw then retire
e nex.
sophomore; OF - Rob Ellis,
May,
who
had
driven
in
11
batters
m'·a
row.
Michigan State, junior; OF : ,.,oredanother and reliever Jon
.
d
th
f'
·
Dan lorg, Brigham Young,
;
picked up his first runs thl s season, lme e 1rst
junior; OF - Dave Elmendorf,
:· lvicllory of the season Saturday of his four singles to right field
.
.
Texas A&amp;M. senior; c ·
. Richard Varne~ , Harvard.
the Milwaukee Brewers with. the bases loaded In the
senior; f' .- urt Hooten,
lsnllPJI''d an eight-game losing second mmng to give
Texas, JUn tor ; P - Steve
. Busby, Southern Ca l, senior,
Milwaukee a 2·1 lead and
•
•
singled home Tommy Harper, .
"centdon,P- Jack Hlttson, Prln·
who led off with a double in the
SECOND TEAM
fifth . May took second on a
CHICAGO (UPI) - Ron
1B - Gary Hernande z,
•
'•
sacrifice and scored on Frank MacleJ'owski, former Ohio State California ; 28 - James Coxd.
· 1
Iowa ; 3B - Terry Wedgewoo ,
•' GALUPOUS - Final plans Teped'100 •s smg
COWBOYS SIGN FIVE
~s.
quarterback, will be among 18 Purdue ; ss - Mike Schmidt,
•
DALLAS
(UPI )- The Dallas
been made for the First ·
draft choices, five veterans and Ohio u.; .OF - Rod Boone,
Redman Fourth of July The Ipdians had ~tarter Jim several free agents 'reporting Stanford ; OF - Frank Weisse, Cowboys S;lturday announced
•• I
,,' Slow Pitch Softball Tour~ Slaton on the ropes in the first. Monday to the Chicago Bears' f~:~~:,tt~~n ~~erkan ~·en•• the signing of fiv~ players,
nament, to be held on Memorial inning but a double play with . annual pre-training camp Larry Bubla, St. John's ; P - Including their sixth, 12th and
•• Field
July 3, 4, and, the bases-loaded pulled the 28- workouts .
·
Steve Rogers ,' Tulsa , Ri ch 17th round draft choices .
ld
ki
t
f
the
j
1
d
Santa Clemson
Clara, . and The top signee was Steve
•• 5.
year o roo e ou o . am
Macie,jowski, who p aye Troedson,
Rusty Gerhardt,
Maier, a . wide receiver from
will be $25 per and the Indians led only 1.() as a behind the Buckeyes' Rex Kern
THIRD TEAM
•
••
. ~~~~~managers ln. the resultofarun-scorlngdoubleby for most of his three years at IB - John Langerhans. Northern Arizona . The other
i~
In taking part in Chris Chambliss.
Ohio State, was regarded as one Texas ; 2B - Dave Saure, draftees were · quarterback
k
. th M~ryla 1. d ; 38- David Chalk.
•
ellml·natl'on event
of the top bac up men m e Texas : ss - Phil Honeycutt . Steve Goepel of Colgate · and
Tulsa ; OF - Bill S~arp, Ohio center John Bomer of Memphis
contact Mike Allen, Slaton breezed along till the . nation.
telephone 446-1034. fifth when a pinch-homer by
The .workouts, to be held at State; OF - Pete Watseka. state
.
Cornell; OF ~ Bob Falord, New ·
·
will ~e awarded the Ken Harrelson, a walk and a the old Tam O'Shanter Golf Mexico u.: , c. _ Bob Sedlk,
Ed Berry, a southpaw from
'.
and Individual single by Roy Foster sent the Course, will consist of agility Southern· Illinois; P - RubJ!n Buffalo, and linebacker Kenny
tr~~:'~w~ll:l~be awarded to the righthander to the showers. drills, calisthenics, passing and Garcia, Texas Tech; P- Gr.ilg Price of Iowa were signed as
team. ·
Morris came in to retired the running and meetings.
Swan, Arizona State.
free agenll; .
• Cl
baseman who batted .434 and
had 12 home runs, and Alan
Bannister, shortstop who had 20
doubles and 69 runs batted in for
a .376.
Schmuck 's 80 RBI's are
believed to be a record in
college baseball, although no
official season records are kept.
First team pitchers are Burt
Hooton, 11·1 for Texas; Steve
Busby, 10·1 for Southern
California, and Jack Hillson, 8-0
for Princeton. Ties in voting
forced the naming of three,
instead of the usual two, pit-

•

Pages of
Things to
Do This

in the fifth inning on a double by
Kessinger, a sacrifice and an
infield out .
Aftet the Reds scored once in
th~ seventh they threatened in
the eighth by loading the bases
on a single by Pete Rose, a
double by Lee May and a walk
to Bench. Tompkins escaped
with just one run scoring on a
sacrifice Oy by Tony Perez.

est Dominates '71 Dream Te am

'

in and about town. Sports, fairs,

16th homer into the left field
bleachers. After Tony Perez
doubled and George Foster
walked, Tompkins replaced
Holtzman. Hal McRae singled
to short right to fill the bases but
Tompkins retired pinch-hitters
Ty Cline and AI Ferrara to end
the threat.
Don Kessinger gave the Cubs
their first run in the first inning
when he hit his first homer of

struck out two.
Meigs could muster only
·three hits, a Dixon double and a
single and a Sheets single.
·Belpre hitters were ,Lynch, a
double, and Caldwell, Johnson,
Takas, and Copen, each a
single.
Belpre ·
000 000 0-0 5 0
Meigs
200 020 x-4 3 2
Takas and Meeley. Van Maire
and Dixon.
SECOND GAME
In the second game, Meigs
again scored in the first but this
time they were unable to hold
up as Belpre picked itself off the
ground to win its first game of
the season, 5 to 4.
Rick Ash led off the first with
double, stole second, and
broke for third as the Belpre
catcherdropped a third strike.
The catcher, ignoring Ash,
threw to first to get the runner
and Ash took advaniJlge of the
lapse to score the first Meigs
run. In the confusion, Gary Har t
was safe at first.
Belpre, obviously rattled, put
Tim Iiemoskey on first as he

DougIas T ak es
3rd Round Le&amp;4"

hicubs Stop Reds, 5-2

•

•
•
•

II

"It's too easy for media
people. to go around ~redictmg wmners," he sa1d. "If
their predictions don't pan
out, well, too bad. 'Sorry
about that, Chief.' There's no
penalty.
"Writers litter the world
with predictio~s on which
they have nothmg at stake,
not even their reputations as
sports experts. Nobody real·
ly expects them to be right.
And this isn 't fair .
"Before a writer can foist
his opinion on the world, he
should wager something on
it-j ust like the gamblers do.
If he doesn't pick the right
man , he should have to eat
his left shoe or maybe swaJ.
low a couple of cue balls.
Anything to show the public
that he at least respects and
has confidence in his own
judgment."
Bedford has a point, of
course and this being the
case I would like to revise
somewhat my original pre·
diction concerning the out.come of the 1971 U.S. Open.
Let them write that Jack
Nicklaus will prevail and Jet
the world know that my left
shoe is where my mouth is .

'

••.•
•

only a year after being course.) And a lot of people
critically injured in an auto are tired of hearing it. .
accident; and where in 1960
.
.
.
(you'll hear a Jot about this) . The fact IS that ~hile Nl~k·
amateur Jack Nicklaus es- laus remams a log1cal ch01ce
tablished the course record to wm. every tournament he
of 269
plays m, he does not. Some·
:. • .
times Orville Moody wins the
Menon IS a_ short (6,550 U.S. Open , just as some·
yards, par 701 1m~gmabvely times Charles Coody or Gay
aeslgned layout With narrow Brewer wins the Masters .
fa irways, a six-inch rough
It follows , then , that if
and mirror-slick greens. It's
one
refuses the cop·out logic
a good driver's course , the y
of
a
Nicklaus triumph, the
say, and, surely, Jack Nick·
gutsy
thing to do is look for
Ia us is a brilliant driver. It's
a putter's course, too, they some fairly obscure player
say , and you know how Jack of questionable background
to bet on. But it never hapNicklaus can putt.
The only thing not exactly pens.
fashioned to Nicklaus' game,
To date, for instance, no
it would seem, are the wick· headline writer has typed,
ersticks. Merion's flagsticks boldly, "Will Homenuik Fa·
are not topped by flags , but vored in '71 Open/' or even,
.coconut-shaped wicker bas· "Eichelberger Open Choice.''
kets-a tribute to the Scot- Now let them write :
tish shepherd said to have in"Joel Goldstrand of Rt. 3,
vented golf on his lunch hour
Worthington,
Minn ., is fa.
when he grabbed a makeshift club and ball and fired vored to dethrone defending
at his staff; on top of which champion Tony Jacklin as
he had placed his lunch bas· the U.S. Open begins June
17 , , ,
ket.
But old Merion, our fear- There . Quick and simpleless prognosticators will tell which, says New York at·
you, is Jack Nicklaus' kind torney-golfer Kenneth C.
of course. (So are they all , Bedford, is the problem in
all Jack Nicklaus' kind of the first place.

Meigs Legion spilt a
doubleheader with the · Belpre
Legion Satur&lt;lay afternoon as
they took the first game, 4 to 0,
but dropped the second 5 to 4.
In the first game Meigs
scored two . runs In the first
inning to.stake shutout.pitcher
Rick Van Matre with all the
runs he needed.
Gary Hart led off the first
with a walk, ' Lonnie Bush
grounded out, Roger Dixon
knocked· in Hart with a long
double. Dixon advanced to third
on a ground out, then scored on
a wild pitch.
Meigs scored its other two
runs in the fifth as Bush walked,
stole second, went to third on
Dixon's single. Dave Boyd's line
smash was bobbled by the
rightfielder allowing Bush to
score and Dixon to go to third.
Kevin Sheets then slapped a
long single to center to knock in
Dixon'8ndmakethescore4to0.
Van Maire raised his record
to 2-0 as he went the di~tance,
fanning !Oand passing only one.
Tom Takas was charged with
the loss. He walked seven and

'

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EASTERN AVE.

GALliPOLIS, OHIO

JAMBOREE "SPECIAL"

THIS WEEK ONLY
THE COURIER TRA YELLER II

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•
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Gallipoli~. Ohio

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' .

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I

�• I

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•

18-· Tbjlkllllllay'I'Irnes ·Sentlnel,&amp;mday, June 13,1971

Minorities Hit Housing Policy
.

MARTHA fOSTER, left, retiring curator at the Our
Hwse musewn In Gallipolis, handa ke)'s of the hiatorlc
structure tohersucceasor, Mrs. Pat Houck. On the shelves at
left are period pieceS On permanent display at Our HOUBe.

Curator of
Our House·
Is Retiring
GALUPOLIS - Mter five House was a gift from the
yeats and eight months of Holzers to the state,
escorting guests through Our The Holzers furnished It
House State Memorial, Mrs. authentically for the period
Martha Foster Is retiring . (1819) and it remained as they
During thia time she has been restored It until 1965 when the
hastes&amp; to approximately 20 to Ohio Historical Society sup·
25 thousand hiatorlcally-minded plemented the existing fur·
chlldren and adults.
nlshings with other items of the
Mrs. Foster became curator same period.
of the restored tavem in 1965, 1 Mrs. Foster, a writer, plans to
replacing Mrs. Evelyn Parsons. move to Rio·Grande where she
Mrs. PanO!!S served following will complete a historical novel.
the 1~-year tenure of Mrs. She Is the author of "A Red
Winifred Switzer" 2 State St.
Carpet for Lafayette," a novel
• Reatoreiriluilng the years of with a Gallipolis setting;
1933 to 1936 by the late Dr. "Ginger Bo"'" the story of an
Cll!lrles E. Holzer Sr. and Mrs. adventurous Quaker girl, and
H01zer, lrith the assistance of articles In a variety of small
Mlss Alma McCormick, Our publications. Her fiction has

appeared in Good HoUllekeeplng
and Redbook.
A resident of Gallipolis since
1940, Mrs. Foster came to
Gallipolis when her late
husband, Dr. Paul C. Foster,
became associated with Holzer
Hospital (now the Holzer
Medical Center).
"The kitchen of Our House
has been most interesting to
young and old," Mrs. Foster
said, speaking of her years at
Our House. She also mentioned
the magnificent Sycamore tree
in the back yard. "We have
been told by a state forester the
tree was undoubtedly here when
the house was built more than
150 years ago."

House guest book.
Replacing Mrs. Foster is Mrs.
Billy Houck (Pat) who assumed
duties officially Friday. Mrs.
Houck is former Woman's Page
Editor and feature writer lor
the Gallipolis Tribune and
Sunday Times-Sentinel. She
also wrote a column, "Just
Between Us."
Mrs. Houck will be conducting tours through the state
memorial at 434 . First Ave.,
Galllpolis, each day from 9o30a.
m. to 5 p. m. excepting Mondays.

By NORMAN KEMPSTER legal authOrity to force econom- have come' here."
WASIITNGTON(UPI)..-Lead· ic integration.
The National UrbanCoalition
ers of minorities have ~lled, Carl Stokes, the black mayor said In a sta~ment issued in
President Nixon's statement of Cleveland, charged Nixon Washington N~on had shown
that the government will not had "removed the possibility of · his administration "is willing to
force communities to accept economic and racial integration abandon to local determination
unwanted public housing in thia couritry." ·
a problem that demands a
projects lor the poor as a "I don't think he needed 8,000 forthright national policy
retreat from moral convlctioli warda to say no," Stokes said backed by active national
an~ a_ "mockery of the Friday night II], a commence- leadership, Incentives and morConstitution."
ment address to the University al conviction." It dismissed his
In an 8,IJOO.word policy of Minnesota Law School. "By report as "an 8,000-word essay
statement on housing segrega- saying no, he made a mockery on the practical problems of
lion issued Friday, Nixon of the Constitution of the United public administration."
pledged vigorous enforcement States and a mockery ·of the Nixon drew a sharp distincof the 968 open housing law ideals for which so many people tion between racial and econwhich bans racial or religious
segregation. But he assured
'
·
I
OUR
BOARDING
HOUSE
with
Major
Hoop
e
jittery suburban dwellers by
saying the government has no .
~~y 1HE .
Tl PPED
TENDER, FOR DAD
OVEP. THE
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio L/1.11\P 601N'
OUT 01'1 HE
"Tenderly Yours" is the exM16.n'l'. "'-''E
pression of affection for this
/&gt;. CLEAN
year's Father's Day, June 20.
ISE.TAWI'.YI
·And what better way of saying
"Tenderly Yours" thsn with
tender juicy cuts of beef 'whether roast or steak, ask
MrS'. John Buchman, member
of the Buckeye CowBelles
Assn., and local chairman of the
" Beef for Father's Day"
campaign.

Q-Who has jurisdiction

over the seat herd on the
Pribilof Islands?

A-The seal herd is owned
by the government and pro·
tected by the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service.

\

omlc segregation. &amp; lntetpret..
ed by the PreSident, the ' open
h!JIIsing law guarantees everyone an equalr right . to live
wherever he Cl\ll afford.
·
Nixon also pointedly noted
that although 1118liy Negroes
are poor, "the temls poor and
black are notinlerchangflilble."
He said there are also·. poor
whites and affiuent blacks. '
. "By equal housing opportunity, I mean the achievement of
a ~ondition in which individuals
of similar income levels ... have
a like ~ange of housing choices
available to them regardless of
their race, color, religion or
· · "
'!a t'wna1 or1gm.
Nixon noted argwnents that
poverty perpetuates itself when
the poor are by the laws of
economics forced to live in
often overcrowded· low-&lt;!ost
neighborhoods . He said a
frequently suggested remedy is
to "scatter the poor among the
more affluent" by building
public housing projects In
rnl.ddle-and-upper-&lt;!lass neighborlloods.
The President · said his
administration would "encourage" construction of public
housing in the suburbs but he
said "a municipality that does
not want federally assisted
housing should not have it
imposed from Washington by
bureaucratic fiat." ·
The decision on whether to
accept public housing will be up
to the local community.

Prediction

en?-: Nicklaus To Wln
e

LEE MUELLER

Ar1~~~~~~~~
Pa.-( NEAJnow, the world

·o:

crying for someone
teeth into the gutless
e of predicting the
States 0 pen golf
chappi,on.
task has become unb~;~~·l}, pigeonhearted in
r&lt;
Junes. Since he won
Jack Nicklaus has

" to win every

U.S. Open. He
complied only once, in
but picking Nicklaus to
another Open has bea kind of annual copbetting on Tuesday
•
Monday .
there is always a
amount of consideragiven to the tournament
HHorses for courses,"
This time it's
June 17·20
Merion Golf
&lt;:~~:i~:n. near Philadelphia.
"
" (Golfers refer to
this manner; the way.
c k broke r s mention

The_name, ''Our House", was
applied by the community
because of the owner, Henry
Cushing's practice of inviting
patronage to "Come over to our
house."
"Tourists," Mrs. Foster
stated, "are very interested in
what belonged to the French
settlers and ask If there are any
other traces of them, partlcularly descendents. They
also ask if there is a French
restaurant In town."
The Silver Bridge• disaster
and now, the bypass, caused
some decline in the nwnber of
·visitors from' the approximate
5,000 the first year of Mrs.
Foster's tenure. Recently,
however, tourism Is on the
upswing with guests from
Sweden and Australis already
having registered In the Our

~e1cion is where Bob Jones
"~"'" ..''u his Grand Slam in

•~.

where Ben Hogan won
Open by struggling
w uu~u 90 holes in lour days

First Hit Was
'

·Tune .for. Life
By VERNON SCOTT
Sanda Hotel which loosened
UP! Hollywood Corre~pondenl Frank's teeth and his contract
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)-When with the Howard Hughes-owned
Frank Sinatra crooned his first spa.
hit, "All Or Nothing At All," he He became a chum of Sen.
didn't guess the tiUe would be a John F·. Kennedy, then not so
blueprint for hls life.
chummy.
He will make what he calls He was ruled personna non
hia final public appearance :grata by a whole country:
Sunday night for the Motion ·Mexico.
·
Picture and Television Relief In 1960 he drew the wrath of
Fund gala with Princess Grace many by hiring writer Albert
Kelly as patroness.
Maltz-one of Hollywood's ten
It is fitting thst the kid from who served a prison term for
Hoboken wiD ring ·-down the refusing to answer if he was a
M1i GRADUATE - Edcurtain on hia career for a Communist-to write a screen·
charity event: raising $1 million' play. Maltz liter was dis- ward Herman Lyncb, Jr.,
for oldtlme show folk.
missed.
Gallipolis, son of Edward H.
Nor would It be uncharacter- Sinatra had the East Coast in Lynch, Sr., Rt. 1, TburmBD, .
istic If he got In a beef In the an uproar when he hired a received bls BBA Degree In
prOCfll!l.
yacht for girlfriend Mia Farrow bwJ!nes1 adminl&amp;traUon from
The mercurial Sinatra has and several celebrities to cruise Marshall UDiverslty during
been called the best saloon the New England coast. One of COII\IDencemenl enrclses on
singer who ever lived, the the crewmen was killed In an . Sunday, May 30. Tbe degree
greatest entertainer . In the accident.
Includes 'a major In ac·
world.
His divorce from Nancy counting and mlaor In
Perhaps he is all that, and Barbato after a dozen years of ecoaomlcs. He Ia employed
something less.
marriage made headlines be· by City Ice and Fuel Co.,
A man of extremes: Sinatra cause 11 freed him to marry Polat Plea1811t. Lynch Is a
was nurtured on superlatives- glsmor girl Ava Gardner, a 1f8duate of Rio Graade High
positive and negative. II is two-year mistake.
School. He attended Rio
possible his retirement is The singer's marrlsge to Mia Grande CoUege two years. .
temporary, but he swears he Farrow lasted only 16 months.
won't perform again In public.
The worst days of Frank
At 55 the restless, charming, Sinatra's life doubtless took record albwns he cut during his
rough, · diffident, kind, insensl· place 1'n December • !...,
... when career.
.
.
tlve superstar hardly can be hi s son, Fra nk J r., waa
They represent a legacy of
faulted professionally. But his kidnaped at Lake Tahoe. the lineal popular music of the
public-private tile has oversha- Sinatra sued when a foreign mid~ Century, sung by the
dowed hia greatness as an publication called It preaa man who aang 11 best of aU.
entertainer.
agentry and won.
~ night he w111 bid
From the beginning when he In the early 19601 II wu farewell to hia singing career,
was a homely kid, sldnny and Frank s·1natra •s clan that made moilon pictures, televlalon and
wearing floppy bow lies and news: Dean Martin, Pater concerlf. But he still 011'118 two
surrounded by swooning bobby- Lawford, Sammy I)avis Jr., Joe jet planee, homes In Plllrn
soxers, the pl(bllc was more Bishop and others.
Springs, Beverly Hills, Acapul·
entranced with · his personal
At the nadir of his career In co, and New York City. He 1a
antics thsn hia voice.
19•2
• when he was •-t
.,.. kn-n
"" many 11mea a mlll101111tre.
Frank Sinatra made head· as Ava Gardner's hu.band,
He ·Ia planning to write a
lines almost every one of hia 30 Frank supposedly was waahed book about hie life. He Is In
yean In the limelight.
up. But he came back to lrin an load health, he saya, and plans
. He WIIS investigated by crime Oscar in "From Here to another yacht trip in the East
comlnlaslons ln. two states, his Eternity" in 1953.
thla•nmrner, f
native New Jertey and Nevada,
For whatever reason, tbeee Frank Sinatra 1a quitting the
where he sold out his gambling 1nd other colorful events In llmeU,h! bu! not retlrln&amp;. He'll
and bolellntereste in 111113 when Sinatra's life are what 11101! buround. And he wW continue
·lbe allte revoked his u - for people remember lrith envy,, llllkiJIIInews.
playinl h011t to San Glancana, • · tdmlratlon or outrage. I·
Mafllllsure.
But Sinatra's swath In tile
. \
There ~re more flat flghta 11111'1 eventually will pale and
lllln can be COWited, inc1udlni 1111 eoutrlbution to IIIUIIc will Kerosene is the most com·
mon fuel uaed In jet aircraft
1 lllf ona ptttdl fray wiiJJ
Generatlont ~ Amerienelnea.
P'""" Ctrl CIJben In 1M YIPI' Clllll bllve at hand - 10

» ,.....n.

Enioy a Festival
of Fun-Filled Activities
You

;t~~::~: bid(UP!)
for

~

-a third
Ken
shutout was
••
•,. s~~~;: In the seventh inning
but relief ace Ron
•&lt; S;
shut the door against
•• T~~r:~::~i
Ci
and the Chicago
•
beat the Reds, 5-2.
•
•
had given up just
•
a scratch single in the
inning in 6 1-3 innings
Johnny Bench rifled his
•
•
•

Summer Fun has just begun! Round
up the family and take in all
those big special events.
Just check with us for happenings
music, theatre, parks,
find all the listings in
your Hometown ... newspaper. Read all about it!

The Su.nd~y
Times-Sentinel

the year against loser Jim
McGlothlin. Holtzman got into
the act in th.e third when he hit
his first homer of the season and
second of his career.
The Cubs added two more
runs in the fourth inning on Ron
Santo's 12th homer, a single by
Joe Pepitone, a walk to Jim
Hickman and a single by Brock
Davis.
The Cubs added their fifth run

chers.
Dane Iorg , outfielder for
Brigham Young, finished the
season with a .507- highest for
an AU-American selection since
the first team was selected in
1947.
Also named to the outfield
were Dave Elmendorf of Texas
A&amp;M will\ a .402, and Rob Ellis
of Michigan State with a .380.
Infielders are Hlchard Varney,
Harvard ca~ her , .391; Bobby
Walts, Washington State second
baseman who stole 59 bases this
season, and Philip Still, third

End L.osz·ng

..

Ex.(}SU Sub QB

Reports Monday
For Pro Tryout

Summer

a

was hit with a pitch.
Belpre came back in the
second as Johnson singled, a
Meigs error let both runners
he safe on a fielder's choice,
another bobble on Johnson's
attempted steal of third permitted a run to score, and
another runner to go to third.
The runner on third scored mi a
long sacrifice fly.
In the third inning, Belpre
bunched three hils and three
Meigs errors to plate three
more runs and take 5 to 2lead.
Mei~s rallied in the fourth to
score two runs on Bush's triple,
but it was not enough.
Skipper Johnson, who ab·
sorbed the loss, was relieved in
the fifth with one out after he
was hi t in the knee with a line
drive. He struck out thrre.
Reliever Stan Perry came in
to strike out seven of the eight
batters he faced. Neither pit-

a

cher allowed, a walk.
Winning pitcher was Ho\vie
Caldweli, Eastern High s.iar of ·
last season. Cald\Vell struck out
four and walked seven.
Meigs hitters were Bush, a
triple, Ash a double, and Brei ·
Hart and Tim Demoskey each a
single.
Johnson led Belpre as he
stroked three singles, Takas
doubled , and Meeley and
Caldwell singled.
Meigs Legion goes to Logan
Sunday for a double header with
the Logan Legion team;
Wednesday they wiU be at New
Haven for a single game, and
return home next Saturday for a
double header with Ravenswood.
Belpre
02.1' 000 ~ 6 4
Meigs
200 200 ()-4 4 3
Caldwell
and Meeley,
Johnson ( LP), Perry , and
Perroud, Dixon (6).

SPECIAL

·

Family Pack
includes these
4 sandwiches
and 4 orders of
Tr.,,,,..h fries.

.

CHARLOTTE N. c. (UPI ) _
'
Dale Douglass, the 1969 Kemper
Champ gunning for a repeat win
at the $150,000 event, took the
third round lead Saturday with
two birdies on his first five holes
for HI-under-par.
Douglass, who burned up the
7,278-yard course Friday with a
record-tying 65 that included
nine birdies and two bogeys,
opened up with a bird on the
par-4 442-yard number one hole
and added another on the par-4
number four.
Douglas had a 36-hole total of
136, 6-under-par going into
Saturday's round.
Bob Lunn , second round
leader at 135, birdied his first
five holes for second place one
stroke back.
Dave Marrin with a round of
68 and George Archer with a 69
were tied for the clubhouse lead
for a 54-hole total of 212 ' four
under.
,y · •
~
Third at S-under-par was Rod
Funseth, and ~orge Johnson
and Miller B ber split for
fourth, three s kes back .
Johnson, a black pro from
Atlanta who won only $8,847 on

the tour last year, stormed from
the ranks with five birdies on
the front nine to make the turn
at 31, five under par.
Mason Rudolph took a bogey
on the second hole and fell into a
tie with Jim Colvert, four
strokes off the mark.
The first round leader, Tom
Weiskopf, dropped into a threeway split with Larry Hinson and
Larry Ziegler for eighth, five
strokes behind.

ILY

PICK
SALE

3 Horses

Feed tour
tor onlY

Drugged
In Stables

$

•

PHILADELPHIA (UP!)
Three thoroughbreds
were
.
.
1~f,ugged m, t~e1r s4!pl e~1 at
Liberty Bell Race track·. this
week , a track spokesman
disclosed Saturday.
The spokesman said tests
showed the horses Herbie Kay,
Shah of Morocco and Gin
Drinker
were
given
phenothieziane, a tranquilizer
which makes a horse "sleepy"
or slow-running .
The . horses were scratched
from races on Tuesday and
Thursday when the incidents
were discovered.
The other horses were tested
and scratched, but one test was
negative and results of the other
'
were incomplete.
National League Standings
Get your FAMILY PACK Here:
The spokesman said it is
By United Press International
I Night Games Nolin eluded I
believed someone administered
( Eastl
the drugs at night. The trainers
W. L. Pet. GB
Pittsburgh
36 23 .610 .. . discovered the horses' conSt. Louis
, 35 25 .583 l'h ditions in the morning and
New York
32 23 .SS2 2 notified the track veterinarian.
Chicago
29 30 ,492, 7
The Thoroughbred Racing
Montreal
24 28 .462 a•;,
Philadelph ia 22 34 .393 12'1' Protective Bureau began an
(West)
investigation Into the Incident,
W. L. Pet. GB
Sa n Francisco 40 22 .645 ... the first of its kind at Liberty .
Los Angeles 31 28 .525 1112 Bell. The track also doubled its
Houston
29 30 .492 9112 security guard, especially in the
Atlanta
28 33 .459 11'1:!
Cincinnati
24 35 .407 14'1' stable area .
San Diego , 20 39 .339 18'1'
Saturday. s Results ,
Sa n Franc1sco 5 New York 1
Chicago s Cincinnati 2
Los Angeles at Montreal (night)
San Diego at Philadelphia
(night)
Pittsburgh at St. Louis (night)
Atlanta at Houston (night )
·June 20th marks the 5th Annual Gallia County Citizens Band
Sunday's
Games
lAilT'
EDT)
Radio Jamboree.
Los Angeles ~~e~ontreal 12:15
p.m.l
San Francisco at New York (2
p.m,)
San Diego at Philadelphia (1 :30
p.m.)
Cincinnati at Chicago (2 : IS
p.m.)
Pittsburgh at St. Louis (2:15
p.m.)
At lanta at Ho.uston 13 p.m.J
Monday's Games
San Diego at Montreal (nlghl)
Los Angeles at New York
(night!
San Francisco at Philadelphia
(night!
Atlanta' at Chicago
.
Cincinnati at St. Louis (night)
Pittsburgh at Houston lnightl

.
baseman and a .360 hiller for
~~~~~i Neb. (UP! ) Mississippi State.
..,
players domina ted the
The AACBC also announced
All-America Baseball
••
th
e distr lcI coac h-{1f• th e-year
selected by the American
•
selections. They are Loyal
~:~~:l":r
of
College
Baseball
Park Harvard District I.
•'
announced Saturday .
.•
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.
'
.•• j:&lt;J selections
Eddie Donovan, Pnnceton,
anwere
•
District II; Paul Gregory,
• tourlced by the AACBC during
Mississippi State District Ill·
college world series here for
.
'
, .'
·'
D1ck Jones, Southern Illin01s,
Chewing Gwn, which
'• lre.sents awards' to the first
Dislrict!V;; Gene Shell, Tulsa, ·
••
District V; AI Ogletree, Pan
players.
•• Arizona State University was
.
D'IS lr'1ct VI ; Glen
Amencan,
•
Tuckett, Brigham Young,
only school to place two
•• rernbeJrs
D'IS tr'IC t VII ,a nd Rod Dedeaux '
on the first team.
••
Southern Cal, District VIII.
are Roger Schmuck, first
••
The complete list of 1971
AACBC All-America selections:
••
FIRSTTEAM
•
S~eak
IB - Roger Schmuck, Arizona
State, Senior; 28 - Bobby
•
•
Waits, Washington State,
••
.,
senior; 3B- Phll Still, Mlssis• CLEVELAND (UPI) - Day streak by defeating the side and the 29-year-{lld south. sippi State, senior; 55-Alan
· d th
1 12 ~annlster , Arizona State,
••;
drove in three runs and Cleveland Indians, 4-2.
paw then retire
e nex.
sophomore; OF - Rob Ellis,
May,
who
had
driven
in
11
batters
m'·a
row.
Michigan State, junior; OF : ,.,oredanother and reliever Jon
.
d
th
f'
·
Dan lorg, Brigham Young,
;
picked up his first runs thl s season, lme e 1rst
junior; OF - Dave Elmendorf,
:· lvicllory of the season Saturday of his four singles to right field
.
.
Texas A&amp;M. senior; c ·
. Richard Varne~ , Harvard.
the Milwaukee Brewers with. the bases loaded In the
senior; f' .- urt Hooten,
lsnllPJI''d an eight-game losing second mmng to give
Texas, JUn tor ; P - Steve
. Busby, Southern Ca l, senior,
Milwaukee a 2·1 lead and
•
•
singled home Tommy Harper, .
"centdon,P- Jack Hlttson, Prln·
who led off with a double in the
SECOND TEAM
fifth . May took second on a
CHICAGO (UPI) - Ron
1B - Gary Hernande z,
•
'•
sacrifice and scored on Frank MacleJ'owski, former Ohio State California ; 28 - James Coxd.
· 1
Iowa ; 3B - Terry Wedgewoo ,
•' GALUPOUS - Final plans Teped'100 •s smg
COWBOYS SIGN FIVE
~s.
quarterback, will be among 18 Purdue ; ss - Mike Schmidt,
•
DALLAS
(UPI )- The Dallas
been made for the First ·
draft choices, five veterans and Ohio u.; .OF - Rod Boone,
Redman Fourth of July The Ipdians had ~tarter Jim several free agents 'reporting Stanford ; OF - Frank Weisse, Cowboys S;lturday announced
•• I
,,' Slow Pitch Softball Tour~ Slaton on the ropes in the first. Monday to the Chicago Bears' f~:~~:,tt~~n ~~erkan ~·en•• the signing of fiv~ players,
nament, to be held on Memorial inning but a double play with . annual pre-training camp Larry Bubla, St. John's ; P - Including their sixth, 12th and
•• Field
July 3, 4, and, the bases-loaded pulled the 28- workouts .
·
Steve Rogers ,' Tulsa , Ri ch 17th round draft choices .
ld
ki
t
f
the
j
1
d
Santa Clemson
Clara, . and The top signee was Steve
•• 5.
year o roo e ou o . am
Macie,jowski, who p aye Troedson,
Rusty Gerhardt,
Maier, a . wide receiver from
will be $25 per and the Indians led only 1.() as a behind the Buckeyes' Rex Kern
THIRD TEAM
•
••
. ~~~~~managers ln. the resultofarun-scorlngdoubleby for most of his three years at IB - John Langerhans. Northern Arizona . The other
i~
In taking part in Chris Chambliss.
Ohio State, was regarded as one Texas ; 2B - Dave Saure, draftees were · quarterback
k
. th M~ryla 1. d ; 38- David Chalk.
•
ellml·natl'on event
of the top bac up men m e Texas : ss - Phil Honeycutt . Steve Goepel of Colgate · and
Tulsa ; OF - Bill S~arp, Ohio center John Bomer of Memphis
contact Mike Allen, Slaton breezed along till the . nation.
telephone 446-1034. fifth when a pinch-homer by
The .workouts, to be held at State; OF - Pete Watseka. state
.
Cornell; OF ~ Bob Falord, New ·
·
will ~e awarded the Ken Harrelson, a walk and a the old Tam O'Shanter Golf Mexico u.: , c. _ Bob Sedlk,
Ed Berry, a southpaw from
'.
and Individual single by Roy Foster sent the Course, will consist of agility Southern· Illinois; P - RubJ!n Buffalo, and linebacker Kenny
tr~~:'~w~ll:l~be awarded to the righthander to the showers. drills, calisthenics, passing and Garcia, Texas Tech; P- Gr.ilg Price of Iowa were signed as
team. ·
Morris came in to retired the running and meetings.
Swan, Arizona State.
free agenll; .
• Cl
baseman who batted .434 and
had 12 home runs, and Alan
Bannister, shortstop who had 20
doubles and 69 runs batted in for
a .376.
Schmuck 's 80 RBI's are
believed to be a record in
college baseball, although no
official season records are kept.
First team pitchers are Burt
Hooton, 11·1 for Texas; Steve
Busby, 10·1 for Southern
California, and Jack Hillson, 8-0
for Princeton. Ties in voting
forced the naming of three,
instead of the usual two, pit-

•

Pages of
Things to
Do This

in the fifth inning on a double by
Kessinger, a sacrifice and an
infield out .
Aftet the Reds scored once in
th~ seventh they threatened in
the eighth by loading the bases
on a single by Pete Rose, a
double by Lee May and a walk
to Bench. Tompkins escaped
with just one run scoring on a
sacrifice Oy by Tony Perez.

est Dominates '71 Dream Te am

'

in and about town. Sports, fairs,

16th homer into the left field
bleachers. After Tony Perez
doubled and George Foster
walked, Tompkins replaced
Holtzman. Hal McRae singled
to short right to fill the bases but
Tompkins retired pinch-hitters
Ty Cline and AI Ferrara to end
the threat.
Don Kessinger gave the Cubs
their first run in the first inning
when he hit his first homer of

struck out two.
Meigs could muster only
·three hits, a Dixon double and a
single and a Sheets single.
·Belpre hitters were ,Lynch, a
double, and Caldwell, Johnson,
Takas, and Copen, each a
single.
Belpre ·
000 000 0-0 5 0
Meigs
200 020 x-4 3 2
Takas and Meeley. Van Maire
and Dixon.
SECOND GAME
In the second game, Meigs
again scored in the first but this
time they were unable to hold
up as Belpre picked itself off the
ground to win its first game of
the season, 5 to 4.
Rick Ash led off the first with
double, stole second, and
broke for third as the Belpre
catcherdropped a third strike.
The catcher, ignoring Ash,
threw to first to get the runner
and Ash took advaniJlge of the
lapse to score the first Meigs
run. In the confusion, Gary Har t
was safe at first.
Belpre, obviously rattled, put
Tim Iiemoskey on first as he

DougIas T ak es
3rd Round Le&amp;4"

hicubs Stop Reds, 5-2

•

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•

II

"It's too easy for media
people. to go around ~redictmg wmners," he sa1d. "If
their predictions don't pan
out, well, too bad. 'Sorry
about that, Chief.' There's no
penalty.
"Writers litter the world
with predictio~s on which
they have nothmg at stake,
not even their reputations as
sports experts. Nobody real·
ly expects them to be right.
And this isn 't fair .
"Before a writer can foist
his opinion on the world, he
should wager something on
it-j ust like the gamblers do.
If he doesn't pick the right
man , he should have to eat
his left shoe or maybe swaJ.
low a couple of cue balls.
Anything to show the public
that he at least respects and
has confidence in his own
judgment."
Bedford has a point, of
course and this being the
case I would like to revise
somewhat my original pre·
diction concerning the out.come of the 1971 U.S. Open.
Let them write that Jack
Nicklaus will prevail and Jet
the world know that my left
shoe is where my mouth is .

'

••.•
•

only a year after being course.) And a lot of people
critically injured in an auto are tired of hearing it. .
accident; and where in 1960
.
.
.
(you'll hear a Jot about this) . The fact IS that ~hile Nl~k·
amateur Jack Nicklaus es- laus remams a log1cal ch01ce
tablished the course record to wm. every tournament he
of 269
plays m, he does not. Some·
:. • .
times Orville Moody wins the
Menon IS a_ short (6,550 U.S. Open , just as some·
yards, par 701 1m~gmabvely times Charles Coody or Gay
aeslgned layout With narrow Brewer wins the Masters .
fa irways, a six-inch rough
It follows , then , that if
and mirror-slick greens. It's
one
refuses the cop·out logic
a good driver's course , the y
of
a
Nicklaus triumph, the
say, and, surely, Jack Nick·
gutsy
thing to do is look for
Ia us is a brilliant driver. It's
a putter's course, too, they some fairly obscure player
say , and you know how Jack of questionable background
to bet on. But it never hapNicklaus can putt.
The only thing not exactly pens.
fashioned to Nicklaus' game,
To date, for instance, no
it would seem, are the wick· headline writer has typed,
ersticks. Merion's flagsticks boldly, "Will Homenuik Fa·
are not topped by flags , but vored in '71 Open/' or even,
.coconut-shaped wicker bas· "Eichelberger Open Choice.''
kets-a tribute to the Scot- Now let them write :
tish shepherd said to have in"Joel Goldstrand of Rt. 3,
vented golf on his lunch hour
Worthington,
Minn ., is fa.
when he grabbed a makeshift club and ball and fired vored to dethrone defending
at his staff; on top of which champion Tony Jacklin as
he had placed his lunch bas· the U.S. Open begins June
17 , , ,
ket.
But old Merion, our fear- There . Quick and simpleless prognosticators will tell which, says New York at·
you, is Jack Nicklaus' kind torney-golfer Kenneth C.
of course. (So are they all , Bedford, is the problem in
all Jack Nicklaus' kind of the first place.

Meigs Legion spilt a
doubleheader with the · Belpre
Legion Satur&lt;lay afternoon as
they took the first game, 4 to 0,
but dropped the second 5 to 4.
In the first game Meigs
scored two . runs In the first
inning to.stake shutout.pitcher
Rick Van Matre with all the
runs he needed.
Gary Hart led off the first
with a walk, ' Lonnie Bush
grounded out, Roger Dixon
knocked· in Hart with a long
double. Dixon advanced to third
on a ground out, then scored on
a wild pitch.
Meigs scored its other two
runs in the fifth as Bush walked,
stole second, went to third on
Dixon's single. Dave Boyd's line
smash was bobbled by the
rightfielder allowing Bush to
score and Dixon to go to third.
Kevin Sheets then slapped a
long single to center to knock in
Dixon'8ndmakethescore4to0.
Van Maire raised his record
to 2-0 as he went the di~tance,
fanning !Oand passing only one.
Tom Takas was charged with
the loss. He walked seven and

'

EVERY
·SU
(Ill DIJ)

1503
EASTERN AVE.

GALliPOLIS, OHIO

JAMBOREE "SPECIAL"

THIS WEEK ONLY
THE COURIER TRA YELLER II

'

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.,

"
•

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r.
••

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f

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••

1

Courier Traveller 11: 23 channels- ~II crystals includedsmallest all thannel Citizen Band Two-way Radio.

ON SALE
•99
95
REG. $139.95
•
BOB'S CITIZEN BAND RADIO EQUIPMENT
. · "Everything In Two-Way Radios, Antennas and Accessories'' ·
G,eorge's Creek ·Rd.
''Ph. 446·4517
Gallipoli~. Ohio

I •

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�------·
-

'2 0- The Sunday Times -Sentinel,Sundav . .Tune I~ 111'11

Giants Take Over To
Spot In Pony

the Sports Desk
.....

.bv Claet TaFf,nehill

--

·--~---.-----~·---...-.·
Soutneastern Ohio ·eonrerence basketball faris will see two
new coaches In action next aulurnn and winter, Albert F. Burger
at Jactaon and Richard Taylor at Logen. Both come to their new
positiona highly re&lt;!OOllllended, owning sound recorda of winning
butetball. Their arrival in the SEOAL without question should
upgrade the competition among the eight members.
· I.et.'s.look first at Coach Burger (no relation, I preswne.to the
Chief JUstice) . Although be is a Buckeye by fortune of birth and
.rearing, he comes to Jackson from Roswell, N. M. High SchooL
Some wtll remember him as Coming's varsity basketball coach
five years of ~lie 11 he speni coaching in Ohio before moving west.
· A product of Dayton Patterson High School, he gr,aduated
from Ohio State but did not. play basketball there beyond his
trealunan year. He gets his masters at Eastern New Mexico State
this swruner. Burger lettered in baseball at State. Standing 6-4
and weighing 225, he. won't be taking much lip from opposing
coaches, referees, or his players.
In those U Ohio years coaching Burger varsity basketball
teams won six league titles. At Roswell, one of his clubs got to the
state tournament.
Burger succeeds Dave Fisher who toiled 12years in Jackson,
noted for its production of hardnosed football players. Fisher
coached two championships, first diVision finishes 11 of 12 times,
having just one losing season (1910).
Only three Jackson basketball coaches of 17 in the school's
lcltg association in the SEOAL have left with winning records.
Besides Fisher, they were Bob Payne (26-20) and Bob
Burlceholder (21·17). Fisher's 12year record is a very respectable
: ~ 154-,80.
At Logan, Coach Taylor, age 30, replaces Ken Insani.
In four )iears at HopeweU-Louden High between Fostoria and
Tiffin in Seneca County (Class A), Taylor's overall record was 52'S/ including two sectional titles. A Musklngum CoUege graduate
(1962), he ~ a native of Zanesville. Prior to HopeweU-Louden,
Taylor was m the junior high program at Newark and was reserve
and varsity assistant at Mt. Healthy High near Cincinnati two
years.
Noted as defensive-minded, Taylor's teams the past four
years have averaged giving up 62.1 points in a. run-and-shoot
league, and averaging 67.0 points themselves.
Logan, with Taylor, hopefully wtll head up the long road back
to basketbaU preeminence. The Chiefs haven 'I won a title since
the 1950-51 season! The material on the court hasn't been all that
bad. Logan has had some basketbaU horses but they haven't been
putting them together for an entire generation!
Before the 501, Logan was a cage powerhouse. The Chiefs own
eight championships, tied with Pomeroy behind Athens, which
has 14.
Coach Fisher, by the way, a1thongh it is not official, is expected to be moving his locker to Ashland (Ohio) College where
former Jackson great Jerry Walke is head coach. Walke cut his
teeth In the college coaching ranks at Urbana CoUege when it
IIWltched f~om junior college status to a four year program.

Reds Rally, Nip
O.icago Cubs 4-3
-~J't&gt;)l~!d.l.i!J

•

1

~IOAGO (UP I) ":::. The . eight),\omer' oi the season.

QALLIPOLIS ~ The Giants
took over undisputed first place
In the Gallipolis Pony League
standings Friday night · by
slipping past the Braves, 2-1.
A run-producing suicide
squeeze by the Giants' Bruce

·•

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GALLIPOLIS
PONY LEAGUE
TEAM
W L R OR
Giants
2 0 7 3
Braves
1 1 9 s
Dodgers
1 1 10 12
Reds
1 1 11 15
Phlllles
o 2 14 16
TOTALS
S S Sl 51
Friday's Result:
Giants 2 Braves 1
This Week's Games:
Monday - Dodgers vs.
Braves
Tuesday -

Giants vs . Reds

Wednesday -

Phils vs .

Braves

Thursday - Dodgers vs. Reds
Friday - Phils vs. Giants
GALLI POLlS
LITTLE LEAGUE
(National!
TEAM
W L R OR
Orioles
2 0 22 8
Yankees
2 0 14 6
Cubs
1 1 22 33
. BUSINESS IS GOOD -:- Since the opening of the Gallipolis Swimming Pool on May 31,
buslness.has been good this year according to John Milhoan, pool manager. Thus far, 71
student tiCkets have been sold, along with 117 family tickets. Daily student admissions totaled
2,518as of Friday evening. Adult daily admissions totaled 52. Millioan reminded area residents
that swimming lessons wiD begin at the pool Monday. Intermediate and swim~ers classes
start at 9a.I!'·· advance beginners at 10, and beginners at 11. Senior Life Saving classes start at
6p.m. The lu-st course runs June 14 through 25. Classes are fuU for advance beginners. There is
no fee for the swimming lessons. Milhoan, however, said that adults wiD be charged a fee when
adult lessons get underway. The local tank Is open from 6-8 p.m. on Tuesdays for teenagers (25
cent fee for aU, Including season ticket holders) and from 6-8 p.m. on Thursdays for family
swmunlng. Youngsters must be accompanied by their parents on Thursday evening. There is
no extra charge for season ticket holders. The pool is closed between 5and 6p.rh. on Thursday.
Normal pool hours are from 1-6 p.m., daily.

Home Runs Decisive. In Series
'

Horse Show

Slated Today

I

I ·.~

::::==::J)

Friday~

. I .

GALLIPOLIS - The National
League Oflioles and American
League Indians scored thrilling
wins over the Red Sox and
Senators on Memorial Field
Friday evening.
By capturing their second
consecutive win against no
setbacks, the Orioles and In-

Linescores

R~~x

0 2

Tigers
TOTALS

3

9

0 2 22 27
S 5 83 83
(American!
TEAM
W L R OR
Indians
2 0 26 7
White Sox
2 o 10 3
Padres. ·
1 1 12 8
Senators
0 2 8 14
Athletics
0 2 S 29
TOTALS
S S 61 61
Fridav·s Results:

Orioles

S

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fanned eight.
Jimmy Noe ltarted for the
Braves. He
replaced by
Dave Burnett
the fourth
Inning. Burnett
the Giants
scoreless the
three in·
nings.
the
loss. The two
hurlers
fanned eight ..,......
The winners "ftagEld only
three hits off
Braves
by
hurlers.
Briggs and
Watson
had a single.
1 The Braves
four hits
by Tim
dlans tied the Yankees and off Watson, two
Roger
White Sox for top spot In the Perry, and
Little League's two division Taylor and Bob
race.
The Giants are nOI'IZ-0 on the
In Friday's first game, the year. The Braves al'\1·1.
Orioles slipped past the Red Sox
&amp;-3. Gary Warren was credited
with the win. Mark Watson was GRABS fOIURNE~,EAD
charged with the loss. The Red SUTTON M
Sox are now ~21n league play. Pressure-wise avsse,ll-,ral
The Orwles managed only Whitw th
three hi Is, and had to rally from
. or .•
a 3-1 deficit In the fifth inning to straight victory,
beat the Red S
F the three-under-par 70
to
.
.
ox. or
take over the third
in
OriOles, Keith Jackson had a the $55 000 LPGA "hllm·
double, and Bruce Woyan had . h" '
,.,
. gl f
p10ns 1p.
two sm
es or the winners only Th 31
ld
hits. . The· Red Sox had seven
the ·year-o
T
h
hits, three by Brett Woyan, a ~~A a exan 1; 67
double by Mark Watson ·and
crown m
·1~~::
triple by Bob Ki lin
the 54-hole lead from
In Friday's ~iggicap, a Kathy Ahern with a thrE!4-olllDd
leadoff single In the bottom of to~! of 214, three stroke~1p on
the sixth and final inning by the ~Iss Ahern who had
the
Indians' David Wiseman, ftrst round lead.
followed by a triple by Colin
Saunders and a Senator error
gave the Indians a thrilling 4-3
L~;~?~;~:~;t:~:l~
By United Press
I
win over the Senators. The International
W.
L.
GB
defending champions were Syracuse
34 15
...
down 3-2 going into the last Tidewater
33 23
41/ 2
rung.
Charleston
29 22
6
26 24
8112
Wiseman was credited with Rochester
Richmond
26 29
11
the victory. He fanned 14, and Louisville
25 30
12
w;,
gave up five hits. Greg Stover Whinipeg
18 32
17112
Toledo
19
35
was charged with the loss. Gary
Friday's Results
Swain started for the Senators. Tidewater
9 Louisville 4
He fanned eight in three In- Charleston 4 Richmond 0
nings. Swain had a double and Rochester 6 Toledo 2
Syracuse 6 Winnipeg 4 ( insingle for the losers.
nmgs, lsi game)
The Senators are now ~2 In Syracuse at Wlnnlpeg
game, pdd, rain)
league play.

...

;..
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~-.

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'
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"'
,.

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SUN., JUNE 20

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"Building Supplies" ·

.

CHESHIRE - Coach Dale
''Casey" Rotbgeb's Cheshire
Redlegs moved into sole
possession of first place In the
Gallia-Melgs Pony League
Associa lion here Friday night
with a 6-4 victory over previous
unbeaten Middleport.
The win pushed Cheshire's
record to 3-0. Coach Woody
CaD's Middleport nine d!:opped
to 2-J.
Middleport took a 2-0 lead in
the opening frame on a leadoff
walk to · third baseman Perk
Ault, singles by Price and Jay
Warner and a bases loaded walk
to Greg Donahue.
The Redlegs sliced the lead to

2-l,scoring a single run In their
. hall of the inning on two Infield
errors .
Cheshire \qlotted the score In
the second on a surprising twoout safety squeese.
Leftfielder Greg McC.arty
tripled leading off the Inning but
was still on third as Joe Stidham
gro1111ded out and Jim Ward
struck out. Clay Hudson then
bun led toward first and beat the
play as McCarty raced across
the plate. ·
Cheshire f_orged ahead in the
third as John Baird laced a
single to center and Orland
Cremeans, Redleg first sacker,

Athens Trips
New Haven 4-3
ATHENS - New Haven
American Legion Post 140 fell to
defeat for the third consecutive
time this year Friday evening
as Athens handed the Mason
County baseball team a 4-3 loss.
Though New Haven lost, it
once again had a strong mound
performance from righthander
Gary Hunt, who struck out 10 in
going the route. Hunt, who has
absorbed losses in his first two
legion outings this season, has
an ERA .for the season of only
1.40.
, Athens scored its first two
runs early in the game as the
first three hitters for the hoots
had a double, triple and
sacrifice fly, respectively.
Athens posted another run in

i
~

I

1971 ~ TOURJiiEY CHAMPS - The Coakley Electric softball team, sponsored by
Coakley Electric Heat of Coolvllle, captured the top spot In the Third Annual Bob Saunders
~aker State Invitational Slo-Pltch Softball Tournament over the Memorial Day weekend.
Members ofthe team are (front row ,left to right) Dick CQOksey, Don Kincade, Craig Jago, Jeff
Lenigar, Lee Bridgewater, (second row, left to right) manager Milt Cooksey, Barry West,
Owen Kisor, Max Carsey, Bob Mulligan, "Ed Kincade, Leroy Hashman, Mike Jago, Mark
Bridgewater, Dave Koslival, Larry Hunter and Larry Lee, Gallipolis, the tournament
manager.
. . ,
. ·
·

La

Griffin, Johnson
Clash On June 23
CLEVELAND (UPI)
Former Cleveland lightheav;ywelght John Griffin, who

ans Snorts
an lmpt ssive vlcto~y ~n
r
. Car Race. vT Tnderway .scored
hts last arena appearance, will

II

1'~1
LE MAN~, France (UP!) Porsche, With four cars m the
first Six, held a firm grip on the
Le Mans 24-hour sports car race
as dusk feU Saturday ni~ht.
T~e leadlna "long_-tailed"
Porsche 917, driven by Mexico's
Pedro Rodriguez and Briton
Jackie Oliver, remained In the
le~d with a similar car, driven
W SWiss Jo ~lffert and Briton
Derek BeD, In second plalc.

j

After five hours of driving·, 11
of the 49 starters had found the
pace too hot, including Mark
Donahue's Sunoco-Ferrari
which at one time lay second
before retiring with a seized
motor on the 70th lap.
•
Only Jose Juncadella of Spain
and Italy's Nico Vaccarella in
their Ferrari 512 prevenk d the
pack Of Porsches from running

away with the early stages of
ihe race which ends this af·
ternoon.
·'
Their yeUow Ferrari moved
into third spot, one lap behind
the leaders, when the Porsche
9\7 of Briton Vic Elford and
Frenchman Gerard Larrousse
t&gt;orame the first factory-backed
· German car to drop out with
engine failure.

. I

1

losing pitcher, Mark Haggerty
struck out two and passed
sev~n.
{arne was aecided
early as the Indians sent 18
batters to the plate in the first
inning.
Indian hitters were Hindy, a
double; Gleason a single, Mark
Venoy a double, Toney Venoy a
triple, and Lee, a single.
, For the Reds, Edwards had a
single and Pickens a double.
The Braves scored 12 runs In
.the fourth inning to hack the
one-hit pitching ·of Mike
Lavender in their romp over the
Mets.
For the Braves besides
Owen, Mick Davenpo~t had two ·
hits and Tim Thomas Tim
. Ebersbach, and Jack 'Hwnplfrey, each had one. Joe Justus
had the only Met hit, a single.
Braves
540 12-21 6 3
Mets
002 0- 2 I 4
Lavender and Ebersbach.
Yeager a_Qd Cunningham.

EL PASO, Tex. (UPI) AUred R. "Red" Barr, Souther11.
Methodist University's Internationally-known swim
coach, died of a heart attack in
his hotel room at dawn Saturday.
The 62-year-old Barr's death
came only five days alter that of
a brother, Glenn Barr, in
Cleveland," Ohio.
Barr had been swim coaching
at SMU since 1947 and his teams
had won 17 Southwest Con·
ference championships, in·
eluding the last 15 in a row, and
had been perennial top 10
contenders In the national
championships. He also had
serv~ as coach of the U.S. Pan
Amencan games team.
A native of Avon, Ohio, Barr
was gradu~ted from Oberlein
College in 1930 and received his
master 's degree from New
York University in 1937.

Air Command
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A complete line of. pipes to choose
from: GBD, Charatan, BBB, Savinelll,
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.

The

the seventh on a single, an error
and another single.
What ended up being the
winning run was tallied by
Athens in the bottom of the
ninth as the result of two walks,
an infield hit and swinging bunt
base hit.
New Haven, which has scored
only five runs in 23 Innings this
season, managed only four
base knocks in the outing.
The Mason Countians tallied
two runs in the fifth with two
outs as Paul Ayers and Curtis
Roush singled, followed by
Chester Roush and Brent and
Randy Clark all drawing walks.
New Haven tied the score at 33 in the top of the ninth when
Curtis Roush walked , stole
second and coasted home on a
double to right field by Chester
Roush. Randy Clark, with a
single, had the only other New
Haven hit. ·
COPS TENNIS TITLE
NOTTINGHAM, ENGLAND
(UP!) - Jaime Fillol of Chile
won the John Player Lawn
Tennis Tournament today by
defeating Austriilian ' Gregory
Perkins, 6-2, 6-3. ·
In the semi finals, FiUol had
whipped Colin Dibley of
Ausiralla 6-4, 6-6, and Perkins
had stopped veteran Frank
Sedgman of Australia, 4-6, 6-3,
7-5.
Julie Heldman of Houston,
Tex. won the women's crown by
defeating Barbara Hawcroft of
Australia, 6-4. 7-9, 6-3.

slammed a Price fastball to
deep center for a two-run
homer .
The winners came up with
two more runs In the fourth
inning on a one-out double by
MarshaU French, a stolen base,
passed baD, walk and Infield
error.on Cremeans' grounder.
Middleport cut the lead to 6-4
with a two-run uprising in the
fifth.
Price started the rally by
walking, Warner singled and
moved tosecondonanertor. He
reached third and scored on a
grounder hit by Woody Call, Jr.
Cheshire's starting hurler
Stidham was relieved in the
sixth by righthander John
Baird. Baird walked Magnotta
with one out in the Inning, but
came back with two strikeouts
to retire the side.
Middleport's Rick Stobart
tripled to left leading off the
seventh, but died there as Baird
came on with a strong , clutch
pitching performance fanning
Warner, Donahue and Call to
end the game .

In another league contest, '
Pomeroy defeated South· .:
•
western, 13-0.
Pomeroy, 2-1 moved ahead 3-G
in IIMi third on Diehl's slng.1e, a
walk, Marshall's double and · •
Mick Ash's two run single;
•
Three more runs crossed the
plate in the fifth on ~o SW ,.
errors, Ash's single and Stan
Moon's triple .
A big seven-run seventh In·
ning was highlighted by Ash's
third hit of the game, a booming
double.
David Jenkins and Jimmy
Nida collected SW's only hits.
Chaney, the winning pitcher,
fanned 10. Nida, charged with
the loss, slruckout seven.
Unescores:
Middleport
200 020 6-4 5 4 •
Cheshire
112 200 x--6 8 2
Price (LP) and CaD. Stidham
(WP) Baird (6) and Wise.
Pomeroy

003 030 7-13 7 2

sw

0000000-022
Chaney (WP) Ash (6) and
Ash, Diehl (6). Nlda, Carter (5).
and Walker; Whitt (5).

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RUNNERUP - Mills Transfer Co., o{ Gallipolis placed·second In the 1971 Quaker State
Service Center Slow Pitch double-&lt;!limination softball tournament over the Memorial Day
weekend. Forty teams participated. Mills Tr!Ulsfer won five straight to gain the finals ; then
lost twice In the finals to Coakley's Electric. Pictured above., front row ,left to right in this Dave
Tawney photo are: Grover Long, Don McDade, Ty Painter, Dane Casto, who went 30 for 33 at
the plate; and Paul Casto. Second tow . - Bob KeUy, Jerry McClanahan, Wlllle Curfman,
Chester Shamblin and Jamie Christy. Third row - Larry Lee, tourne:,&lt; manager; Marion
Caldwell, Bill Brown, Walter Taylor, Tom Pitchford and Don Wandling.

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MIDDLEPORT - Middleport's Little League Braves,
led by the big bat of Dicky
Owen, a portside swinger,
rolled to their second lopsided
victory of the new season
Thursday evening, this one 21-2
over the Mets.
The other game was about the
same sort of a meeting as the
Mark V Reds took a 19-4 lacing
from the Indians. Both contests
went only four Innings.
Owen, in probably his
greatest day at the plate, had a
double, a triple and grand
slam homerun to lead the
Braves' offense.
In the Indians-Reds game,
Ketth Lynch hurled a two hitter
and his teammates turned their
five hits into 19 runs . Lynch
fanned one and walked one. The

Grabs Lead In
•

Braves Humble
Mets, 21 To 2

Red Sox 3

Monday - Padres vs. lndlans, 6 p.m.; Yankees vs.
Orioles, 8: 15 p.m.
Tuesday - Senators vs.
Athletics. 6 p.m.; Red· Sox vs.
Cubs, 8:15 p.m .
Wednesday - White Sox vs.
lndlans. 6 p.m.; Tigers vs.
Orioles, S: 15 p.m.
Thursday - Padres vs .
Athletics. 6 p.m.: Yankees vs.
Cubs, 8:15 p.m.
Friday - White ~x vs.
Senators,6p.m .: T&lt;gersvs. R~
Sox. 8:15 p.m.

.

GALLIPOLIS
Gallla .
.
.
COWlty's flt,t 4-H Horse Fun
Show was a big succeas. Twenty
of the 'S1 4-H youth enrolled In
the horse IX"oject this · year
showed In one or more of the
events.
Five placlngs were made In
each olilsi! and an overaU high
point trophy was awarded the •
contestant receiving the highest
number of points. Steve. Short ·
and Connfe DaVis tied for this
award. Each were presented
with Identical trophies.
I
The show was sponsored by
the 4-H Horse Committee and
the Cooperative Extension
Service. The purpose of the
show was to il!ve 4-H'ers ex·
perience In showing . and a
chance to find out both their
strong points and weak points.
Duane Plymale, Area 4-H
Agent,. judged the show. As
Duane looked at the classes he
talked to each contesiant In·
dlviduaUy pointing otJt some of
their problems and things each
Individual needed to work on.
Winners In each of the ten
classes were:
Class i - Horse Showmarishlp
(Ages 15-19) -1. Steve Short; 2.
Connie DaVis; 3. Jackie Ben·
nett; 4. Valorle Sheets and 5.
Pam Mead.
Class
II
Horse
Showmanship (Ages 9-14) - 1.
DUANE PLYMALE (left) presents Connie DaVis and Steve Short with the high point
Tam! Wiseman: 2. Terri Short;
3. Kim Notter; 4. Mark trophy. (County Extension Office Photo).
Hatrison and 5. Bobbie Barcus.
Class
III
Pony
Showmanship (Ages 9-16) - 1. Tarn! Wiseman: 2. Terri Short; Short; 3. Jackie Bennett and 4. &amp; Marilyn Layne; 4. PoUy
Burger and 5. Connie Davis.
Leslie Smith and 2. Shirley 3. Kim Notter; 4. Mark Steve Short.
Class
VII
-Egg
&amp;
Spoon
I.
Class X - Trail - I. Tarn!
Harrison and 5. Debbie
Barcus.
Connie Davis; 2. Terri Short; 3. Wiseman; 2. Steve Short; 3.
Class IV · - Horse Hor· Bowling.
semanship (Ages 15-19) - 1. Class VI - Pony Hor. Polly Burger: 4. Cory Saucier Connie DaVis: 4. PoUy Burger
and 5. Debbie Bowling.
Steve Short; 2. 'Connie Davis; 3. semanship (Ages 9-16) - 1. and 5. Steve Short.
Valocle Sheets; 4. Polly Burger Leslie Smith: 2. Shirley Barcus Class IX - Drunkard's The next fun show is
Paradise - 1. Steve Short &amp; scheduled for 6 p.m., July 22 at
and 3. Cory Saucier. ,
and 5. Jackie Bennett.
Class V - Horse Hor- Class VII - English Pleasure Terri Short; 2. Jackie Bennett &amp; the Gallla County Junior
semanship (Ages 9-14) - 1. - I. Connie Davis; 2. Terri Kim Notter: 3. Debbie Bowling Fairgrounds.

~

Indians 4 Senators 3
This Week 1 s Games:

.
strmg to 351-3 before Phil StiU
hit a homer for Mississippi In
the sixth. Rogers' record is now
ll-2and Thompson's is 11).2
· ,
Tulsa was rated fourth and
Mississippi
State ' fifth
GALLIA-ME IGS
nationally going Into the series.
PONY LEAGUE
The teams had identical 32-10
STANDJNGS
recorda before Friday night) ~~e~~re
"'; ~ ~ 0 ~
game.
Middleport
2 1 36 17 '
Pomeroy A
2 1 30 21
Bidwell
1 1 13 12
Public Hearing
Pomeroy B..
1 2 25 31
Racine
I 3 26 43
Southwestern
1
3 8 45
Slated June 21
TOTALS
11 11 176 176
Last Week's
Results:
Pomeroy
8
Bidwell
7; Cheshire
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A 17 Racine 1; Middleport 18
public hearing has been slated Southwestern 2; Racine 16
here for June 21 In connection Pomeroy B 14; Cheshire 6
4; Pomeroy 13
with the prohibition of com· Middleport
Southwestern 0.
mercia! buying and seUing of This
Week's . Games:
white bass taken from the Lake Tuesday, Southwestern at
Erie Fishing , District waters, Bidwell: Pomeroy B at Midand Cheshire at
the Ohio Department of Natural dleport
Pomeroy. Friday - Middleport
Resources announced Satur· at Racine; Bidwell at Cheshire ·
and Pomeroy tat Pomeroy B.
day.
The department said the
hearing would be held to NFL SIGNS HILL
determine if the ban on taking . BUFFALO, N.Y. (UPI) white baas from Lake Erie is to · Wide receiver J.D. Hill of
be extended. A 60-day ban was Arizona State, the Number one
issued May 7 because the collegiate draft choice of the
mercury concentration in those Buffalo Bllls, has signed his
fishes was above the safe level 1971 contract with the National
for human consumption.
Football League 'club.

PIPE

TWenty Take Part In Successful Cheshire
4-H Horse Show At ·Fairgrounds

••

Orioles, Indians Win,
Share Top Spot In LL

Summer League
Standings

-

Perez' winning blow gave the
Both winning clubs also got
their second consecutive win victory to Wayne Granger who OMAHA, Neb. (UP!) -Home
Friday, the first time since May came on 1n relief of young Don 1runs proved decisive Friday strong pitching periormances,
21 ·the National League GuUett. Granger worked the ni~ht when Harva~d defeated althongh Tulsa starter Steve
champions have put two wins last three Innings for his second Brtgham Young Umverslty •.+-1: Rogers was relieved in the
together.
win against four defeats
and Tulsa smacked Misslsstppl eighth by .Cliff Butcher after he
The Reds used ,three home
But he needed help when the State, 5-2, in the first two games tired and gave up two con·
runs to edge the Chicago Cubs 4- Cubs hajl runners on second and of the 25th annual College World secutive singles.
Rogers
came
into
the
game
3 In an afternoon conies!.
third with two out.
Senes.
with 30 consecutive scoreless
The clincher In the game was Joe Gibbon came in and got
innings pitched and ran the
the home run by Tony Perez In Joe Pepitone to ground back to
the eighth inning with one out to the box to end the game.
give the loss to Blll Hands. That The Reda trailed 3-0 going into
noon. Ribbons and trophies will
loss ended Handa' six-game the sixth Inning. The Cuba got
I
be.
presented. Admission is $1.
wlnnfng streak over the Reds. that margin on Jim Hickman's
'
He is now 6-8.
eighth homer in the first Inning
GALLIPOUS - The Saddle &amp; Children under 12 will be adPerez belted a 3-2 pitch for his with Don Kessinger aboard. The Sirloin Riding Club's annual milled free .
third run came In the fifth when OVHSA Horse Show will be held Eddie Corzatt, Leesburg,
Glenn Beckert doubled, went to at the Gallia County Junior Ohio, will serve as judge.
third on Hickman's single and Fairgrounds, beginning at 9 . Ringmaster will be Robert
(Brownie) Brown, Gallipolis.
came home on a tlirowing error a.m., today.
by shortstop Dave Concepcion. There will he 15 classes in the Skip Meadows will serve as
But the Reda came up with Halter Division, and 41 classes announcer. Stewards are Peggy
back-to-hack home runs In the in the Perfonnance Division. Short, Mr. and Mrs. Dick ,
sixth. Tommy Hehns opened Afternoon activities start at 12 Roach.
the Inning by belting his first
I
\
home run of the season. Big Lee
Q05:PiiiiCPi:i1
May followed with hls 12th
round tripper.
.With two out, George Foster
Major League Leaders
By United Press lnternational singled, stole second and scored
the tying run when Hal McRae
Leading BaHers
National League
singled.
G AB R H J&gt;ct.
American League
By Uniied Press International
bavls. La
58 232 38 84 .362
Milwaukee
.
~Bowling
National
League
Brock,SI.L 59 243 51 87 .358
Cincinnati
000
003
01()4
8
1
000
001
ooo1
6
0
RAlNBOW LEAGUE
Bckrt, Chi
57 229 36 82 .358
Chicago 200 010 000;- 3 12 1 Cleveland 000 000 20x- 2 4 o
June a. 1971
Torre, St.L 60 230 37 82 .357
Gullett, Granger- (7), Gibbon
Pallin (6-6) and Root;
Citizens
Natl
.
Bank
won
all
8
Garr, All
61 256 45 91 .355
Alou Hou
47 169 13 57 .337 points from Toons Three. (9) and Bench; Hands, Tomp- Dunning, Mingorl I8L Farmer
and Fosse. WP- Dunning
Staub. -Mont 53 187 .34 62 .332 Shirley Harmon was high for kins (9) aod D. Breeden, (8)
(6-4).
HR- Chambllss (2nd).
Cannizzaro
ISL
Marlin
(7)
.
WP
Citlzens
Nail.
with
a
190
and
496
Mays, SF
53 179 36 59 .330
Granger
12-4).
LPHands
(6series.
N.ary
Luckadoo
with
a
Cash, Pitt
51 205 J8 67 .327
HRs- Hejms (1) , May 112), Chicago 000 100 202- 5 13 0
Sngln, Pit
54 207 20 67 .324 165 and 443 series was high for 8).
Perez
(8) , Hickman (8).
Baltimore 102 005 oox- 8 9 2
Toons Three.
American League
Horlen. Kealey 16), Forster
Foster
Signs
took
6
points
GAB R H Pet.
110
innings!
(7),
Eddy (9) and Egan;
from
The
Beauty
Nook.
High
tor
Oliva, Minn 50 197 35 74 .376
S.F.
000
200
000
13
6
0
.
McNally,
Dukes (7L Watt (9L
Foster's,
Ruth
Rocchi
with
a
18S
Murcer, NY 57 203 34 73 .360
N.¥.
000
000
002
()2
4
0
Richert
19)
and Hendricks. WP
and
,505
series.
Pat
Joyal
was
Kaline. Del 49 159 30 51 .321
Hamilton (5), Johnson - McNally (9-4). LP- Horlen (0Rchrdl, Chi 43 160 15 50 .313 high tor The Beauty Nook with a I9LStone,
McMahon (10) and Dietz ; 3) . HRs-Powell (9th), Melton
FRbnsn, Bal 44 154 27 48 .312 157 and 421 .serles.
Williams,
Taylor (7), Frlsella 18th L Hendricks (3rd), .Buford
Warehime
Clinic
took
6
polnts
Smith, Bos 56 222 40 69 .311
I8L
McGraw
110) and Groge. &amp;th), Reichart (6th).
from
M&amp;
R
Shopping
Center.
Rojas, KC 52 200 29 62 .310
WPMcMahon
14-3) . LP-Georgia
Martin
with
a
157
and
Howard, Wash
(3-3) . HRs- MGCovey Boston
000 300 '~ J 8 o
53 204 20 63 .309 423 series was high for McGraw
Kan City 410 001 OOx- 6 6 0
BRnsn, Bal 54 209 29 64 .306 Warehime. Garnet ·Elliott was (lOth), Marshall (3rd).
Tiant, Brett (2), Lee (8) and
high
for
M&amp;R
with
a
185
and
471
Buford, Ball 43 166 46 SO .301
San
Diego
011
ooo
ooo2
2
1
Mon
tgomery ; OaJ Ca n ton,
series.
Home Runs
000 000 Ol()- 1 8 1 Abernathy 181 and May. WPWon Lost Phlla
National League: Stargell,
Roberts (5-5) and Barton ; Dal Canton (6-2) . LP-Tlant (038
2
Pill 21 : Aaron, All 18; Bench, Citizens Nail. Bank
Lersch,
Wilson (9) and Ryan . 1) . HR- Smlth (11th), Scott
M&amp;R
Shopping
Center
24
16
Cin 15; Cepeda, All and
LPLersch
(4-5) .
18th!, Kirkpatrick l4!h).
Warehime
Clinic
24
16
Williams, Chi 14.
Toons
Three
14
26
American League: Cash, Del
100 000 003- 4 9 0 Mlnn
010 000 ooo- 1 6 2
10 30 Atlanta
13; Horton, Del, Oliva, Mlnn Foster Signs
012 010 OOx- 4 6 0
10 30 Houston 002 110 001- s 11 1 Detroit
and Jackson, Oak 12; Smith, Beauty Nook
Nash, Wilhelm (8), Priddy
Blyleven, Hall 18) and
8os and Otis, KC 11.
19)
and
Didier:
Blasingame,
Mltterwald,
Tlschlnskl (9) ;
POMEROY
LANES
Runs BaHed In
Gladding
(9)
and
Edwards.
WP
Kilkenny
(1-2)
and Freehan. LP
JUNE
4
National League: Stargell,
.Biyleven (6-8) . HRs-Horton
Pflt 54; Aaron, All 48 ; Torre, Racine Home Natlonal Bank 53 .,-Gladding (2-1). LP- Priddy -(12th,
), McAulltte 18th) . .
38 (2-31 .
SI.L 44 ; Cepeda, All 41 ; Santo: Team No.4
Evelyns
Grocery
29
Cho ,j()_
001 000 01()- 2 9 2
29 LosAng 080 000 220-12 16 0 Wash
American League: Killebrew, Team No. 5
Team
No.3
22
Montreal
000
000
0011
5
2
Calli
000
130 OOx- 4 9 0
Mlnn 48; Petrocelli, Bos 41 : Mark V
Downing
(6-51
and
Sims;
Mclain,
Shellenback
(7) and
21
White, NY and Bando, Oak 38;
Britton,
Strohmayer
(21.
Reed
Casanova;
Wright,
LaRoche
(8)
Powell and F. Robinson , Ball High lnd lvidual ga!Tle - (6), O'Donoghue (8), Raymond and Stephenson. WP-Wrlght
Eddie
Petrie
213,
Carol
Sayre
36.
(9) and Bateman. LP- Britton · (7-4) . LP-Mclaln (4-11). HRs
176.
.
·pitching
I0-1).
HRs-AIIen 2 (7th and - Howard (8th), McMullen
Second
high
Eddie
Petrie,
(INMd on most victories)
81h),
Parker
l~fhl. Staub (6th). (9th).
18.
1
,
Carol
Sayre
165.
Nail-l Leallue: Dierker,
High serie$ - 565, Eddie
Hou and carlton. St. L 10-2;
Plttsbrgh 020 400 104- 11 11 0 New York 200 000 04()- 6 9 0
Carol Sayre, 478.
Jenkins. Chi 10-5: Ellis, Pill 9- Petrie,
St.
Louis 010 020 001 - 4 9 2 Oakland 000 120 1oo- ~ 7 o
Second
high
series,
Clyde
3: Seavet, NY 8-2; Stoneman, Sayre, 490, Ellen Ebersbac~
Ellis,
Giusti 171 and Sangull- Kline, Kekich (7). Aker 18)
Mont 8-3; M41rlchal, SF 8-4.
len
;
Cleveland,
(4), and Munson; Hunter, Locker
361.
.
· American League: Blue, Oak Team high game, Team No.3, Parker (6), Sha~Taylor
(8)
,and
I8L Knowles (9) and Duncan.
12-J; Cutller, Belt 9-1; Siebert,
Simmons.
WP-EIIIs
(9-3),
LP
WP-Aker
· (2-2). LP-Hunter
.
I
llail f ·'2l Pllmer: Ball 9-3; 724,
~Cleveland (5-5). HR- Stargell 1!·4) , HRs-Jackson
Team
hlgh
series
2070,
Racine
~12th).
MciMIIII'• 81!1 1nd Hunter, Oak Home National Bank,
(21sl).
,·
·
Duncan
(81h)
.
.., - . -- -,.., t.:ollch, Del H

I

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,

. Cincinnati Reda marked up

r

,

•

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Taylor, following singles by
Leon Briggs and Dave Thomas
In the third Inning, turned out to
be the game's winning play.
Mike Watson, who went the
distanee for the Giants, was
credited with the victory. He

,,

21 - Tbe Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunrlav..June 13.1971

1

?Jeet veteran George Johnson
10
a !~rounder at tfie arena
June_23.
Grtffm, who has a 16-l.record,
defeated Billy Wagner the last
time he fought here. He now
ftgh1s out of New York. ·
Johnson, 40 • has an overall
record of 55:!Hand hB:s won 23 of
31 bouts st~ce commg out of
rehrementm 1966. The veteran
fighter retired for nine years.

Jn 3-2 Win
MASON - The New Haven
Cubs, led by the hard hitting of
Tim Davis, took at 3-2 LL vic- .
tory over the Mason Tigers
Thursday.
Davis had a single, double
and towering homer In sparking
his team to victory. The home
run broke a 2-2 tie and gave the
C~bs the win.
t'he Tigers scored one run in
th~first on singles by Lambert
and Nicewender and a throwing
error.
·
The Cubs scored twice In the
first on singles by Buzzard,
Layne and Davis.
Goldsberry was the winning
pitcher.
·

Things to do
at home in the
good old .

I

SUMMERTIME:
FIRST
Start or finish what you planned to do last Spring.
Remember that sun deck, patio, screened-in area, new
siding, aluminum storms and screens, fencing,· etc . .. ?

THEN
SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Steamin Missile won the
featured $6,000 invitational trot
at Scioto Downs Friday night,
returning $6.50, $3.40 and $2.60.
Time was 2:03 3-5. Second
place Rodney paid $3.20 and
$2.80. Third place New Glory
paid $3.40.
In the $4,000 preferred trot,
Lady Berry was the winner,
returning $3.80, $3.40 and ,2.20.
Second place Vic Arden
returned $S and $2.60. Third
place ACs Hope paid $2.40 . .
In the nighUy double, Royal
Flush and His Gal produced a
wituling 6-4 combination worth
$93.80.
The 5.-6 quinella paid tl2.60.
Attendance was 7,055 with a
handle of $3$4,950.
I

look over this check list of projects you can do now
before the ever-changing weather
would make it difficult to do later.
Add a room
Extend a room
Build 1 aun room or porch
Install picture wlndowa
Build 1 farden tool shed
Build a ch ldrtn'a play house
Put up a fence
Pant! 1 wall or 1 room or two
Gat sa Ins on thou plans you mado last wlntorl
A&amp;k about U.S. Plywood Rtmodtllngldea Folders

Come In to see us for any assistance in planninll, dtsi1nin11nd
prlclnl- •. for these or any other projects you have In mind.

Carolina Lumber &amp;Supply Co.
· 6th St.

Point Pleasant

675-1l60
•

•

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-

'2 0- The Sunday Times -Sentinel,Sundav . .Tune I~ 111'11

Giants Take Over To
Spot In Pony

the Sports Desk
.....

.bv Claet TaFf,nehill

--

·--~---.-----~·---...-.·
Soutneastern Ohio ·eonrerence basketball faris will see two
new coaches In action next aulurnn and winter, Albert F. Burger
at Jactaon and Richard Taylor at Logen. Both come to their new
positiona highly re&lt;!OOllllended, owning sound recorda of winning
butetball. Their arrival in the SEOAL without question should
upgrade the competition among the eight members.
· I.et.'s.look first at Coach Burger (no relation, I preswne.to the
Chief JUstice) . Although be is a Buckeye by fortune of birth and
.rearing, he comes to Jackson from Roswell, N. M. High SchooL
Some wtll remember him as Coming's varsity basketball coach
five years of ~lie 11 he speni coaching in Ohio before moving west.
· A product of Dayton Patterson High School, he gr,aduated
from Ohio State but did not. play basketball there beyond his
trealunan year. He gets his masters at Eastern New Mexico State
this swruner. Burger lettered in baseball at State. Standing 6-4
and weighing 225, he. won't be taking much lip from opposing
coaches, referees, or his players.
In those U Ohio years coaching Burger varsity basketball
teams won six league titles. At Roswell, one of his clubs got to the
state tournament.
Burger succeeds Dave Fisher who toiled 12years in Jackson,
noted for its production of hardnosed football players. Fisher
coached two championships, first diVision finishes 11 of 12 times,
having just one losing season (1910).
Only three Jackson basketball coaches of 17 in the school's
lcltg association in the SEOAL have left with winning records.
Besides Fisher, they were Bob Payne (26-20) and Bob
Burlceholder (21·17). Fisher's 12year record is a very respectable
: ~ 154-,80.
At Logan, Coach Taylor, age 30, replaces Ken Insani.
In four )iears at HopeweU-Louden High between Fostoria and
Tiffin in Seneca County (Class A), Taylor's overall record was 52'S/ including two sectional titles. A Musklngum CoUege graduate
(1962), he ~ a native of Zanesville. Prior to HopeweU-Louden,
Taylor was m the junior high program at Newark and was reserve
and varsity assistant at Mt. Healthy High near Cincinnati two
years.
Noted as defensive-minded, Taylor's teams the past four
years have averaged giving up 62.1 points in a. run-and-shoot
league, and averaging 67.0 points themselves.
Logan, with Taylor, hopefully wtll head up the long road back
to basketbaU preeminence. The Chiefs haven 'I won a title since
the 1950-51 season! The material on the court hasn't been all that
bad. Logan has had some basketbaU horses but they haven't been
putting them together for an entire generation!
Before the 501, Logan was a cage powerhouse. The Chiefs own
eight championships, tied with Pomeroy behind Athens, which
has 14.
Coach Fisher, by the way, a1thongh it is not official, is expected to be moving his locker to Ashland (Ohio) College where
former Jackson great Jerry Walke is head coach. Walke cut his
teeth In the college coaching ranks at Urbana CoUege when it
IIWltched f~om junior college status to a four year program.

Reds Rally, Nip
O.icago Cubs 4-3
-~J't&gt;)l~!d.l.i!J

•

1

~IOAGO (UP I) ":::. The . eight),\omer' oi the season.

QALLIPOLIS ~ The Giants
took over undisputed first place
In the Gallipolis Pony League
standings Friday night · by
slipping past the Braves, 2-1.
A run-producing suicide
squeeze by the Giants' Bruce

·•

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"

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GALLIPOLIS
PONY LEAGUE
TEAM
W L R OR
Giants
2 0 7 3
Braves
1 1 9 s
Dodgers
1 1 10 12
Reds
1 1 11 15
Phlllles
o 2 14 16
TOTALS
S S Sl 51
Friday's Result:
Giants 2 Braves 1
This Week's Games:
Monday - Dodgers vs.
Braves
Tuesday -

Giants vs . Reds

Wednesday -

Phils vs .

Braves

Thursday - Dodgers vs. Reds
Friday - Phils vs. Giants
GALLI POLlS
LITTLE LEAGUE
(National!
TEAM
W L R OR
Orioles
2 0 22 8
Yankees
2 0 14 6
Cubs
1 1 22 33
. BUSINESS IS GOOD -:- Since the opening of the Gallipolis Swimming Pool on May 31,
buslness.has been good this year according to John Milhoan, pool manager. Thus far, 71
student tiCkets have been sold, along with 117 family tickets. Daily student admissions totaled
2,518as of Friday evening. Adult daily admissions totaled 52. Millioan reminded area residents
that swimming lessons wiD begin at the pool Monday. Intermediate and swim~ers classes
start at 9a.I!'·· advance beginners at 10, and beginners at 11. Senior Life Saving classes start at
6p.m. The lu-st course runs June 14 through 25. Classes are fuU for advance beginners. There is
no fee for the swimming lessons. Milhoan, however, said that adults wiD be charged a fee when
adult lessons get underway. The local tank Is open from 6-8 p.m. on Tuesdays for teenagers (25
cent fee for aU, Including season ticket holders) and from 6-8 p.m. on Thursdays for family
swmunlng. Youngsters must be accompanied by their parents on Thursday evening. There is
no extra charge for season ticket holders. The pool is closed between 5and 6p.rh. on Thursday.
Normal pool hours are from 1-6 p.m., daily.

Home Runs Decisive. In Series
'

Horse Show

Slated Today

I

I ·.~

::::==::J)

Friday~

. I .

GALLIPOLIS - The National
League Oflioles and American
League Indians scored thrilling
wins over the Red Sox and
Senators on Memorial Field
Friday evening.
By capturing their second
consecutive win against no
setbacks, the Orioles and In-

Linescores

R~~x

0 2

Tigers
TOTALS

3

9

0 2 22 27
S 5 83 83
(American!
TEAM
W L R OR
Indians
2 0 26 7
White Sox
2 o 10 3
Padres. ·
1 1 12 8
Senators
0 2 8 14
Athletics
0 2 S 29
TOTALS
S S 61 61
Fridav·s Results:

Orioles

S

'

-~

fanned eight.
Jimmy Noe ltarted for the
Braves. He
replaced by
Dave Burnett
the fourth
Inning. Burnett
the Giants
scoreless the
three in·
nings.
the
loss. The two
hurlers
fanned eight ..,......
The winners "ftagEld only
three hits off
Braves
by
hurlers.
Briggs and
Watson
had a single.
1 The Braves
four hits
by Tim
dlans tied the Yankees and off Watson, two
Roger
White Sox for top spot In the Perry, and
Little League's two division Taylor and Bob
race.
The Giants are nOI'IZ-0 on the
In Friday's first game, the year. The Braves al'\1·1.
Orioles slipped past the Red Sox
&amp;-3. Gary Warren was credited
with the win. Mark Watson was GRABS fOIURNE~,EAD
charged with the loss. The Red SUTTON M
Sox are now ~21n league play. Pressure-wise avsse,ll-,ral
The Orwles managed only Whitw th
three hi Is, and had to rally from
. or .•
a 3-1 deficit In the fifth inning to straight victory,
beat the Red S
F the three-under-par 70
to
.
.
ox. or
take over the third
in
OriOles, Keith Jackson had a the $55 000 LPGA "hllm·
double, and Bruce Woyan had . h" '
,.,
. gl f
p10ns 1p.
two sm
es or the winners only Th 31
ld
hits. . The· Red Sox had seven
the ·year-o
T
h
hits, three by Brett Woyan, a ~~A a exan 1; 67
double by Mark Watson ·and
crown m
·1~~::
triple by Bob Ki lin
the 54-hole lead from
In Friday's ~iggicap, a Kathy Ahern with a thrE!4-olllDd
leadoff single In the bottom of to~! of 214, three stroke~1p on
the sixth and final inning by the ~Iss Ahern who had
the
Indians' David Wiseman, ftrst round lead.
followed by a triple by Colin
Saunders and a Senator error
gave the Indians a thrilling 4-3
L~;~?~;~:~;t:~:l~
By United Press
I
win over the Senators. The International
W.
L.
GB
defending champions were Syracuse
34 15
...
down 3-2 going into the last Tidewater
33 23
41/ 2
rung.
Charleston
29 22
6
26 24
8112
Wiseman was credited with Rochester
Richmond
26 29
11
the victory. He fanned 14, and Louisville
25 30
12
w;,
gave up five hits. Greg Stover Whinipeg
18 32
17112
Toledo
19
35
was charged with the loss. Gary
Friday's Results
Swain started for the Senators. Tidewater
9 Louisville 4
He fanned eight in three In- Charleston 4 Richmond 0
nings. Swain had a double and Rochester 6 Toledo 2
Syracuse 6 Winnipeg 4 ( insingle for the losers.
nmgs, lsi game)
The Senators are now ~2 In Syracuse at Wlnnlpeg
game, pdd, rain)
league play.

...

;..
·;:
~-.

"

'
•·
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·--

··

°

FATHER'S DIY

SUN., JUNE 20

GIVE HIM A

FROM TAWNEY'S

CARTER &amp;EVANS. Inc.
87 Olive St.

"Building Supplies"

I

!

ROOM AIR
I
I

Model
8P2GM

8,000 BTU-m

tJ,.,, 200
Air

i

t

I

Model

''

12JG

12,000 BTU-115

'''

A..,. scot
A big cool power unit
you can Install in
a minute or two.
• Exclusive Instant Moun1
lets you go from carton to
cooling in minutes.
• Exclusive Amana Electrocoating protecls agains1 rusl

conditioner that's
extremely quiet.
• 5 quiet zones elin,inate
absorb most dosi '""""'
sounds.
• Tilting air discharge
ber with side to direction I
and corrosion three times you control air flow.
better than other types ol • Exclusive Amana F'"''''l.
finishes.
coating protecls aaains1
• Automatic operation
' and corrosion three
• Two speed tan wilh venl better than other types
control tor exhausl of inside finishes,
air.
'• Washable filter
• Tilling air discharge cham· • Install thru lhe wall or
ber,
window
•

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•'•
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~

l
(
~
\

Ask For Daile ·- The Pipe Expert! .

Gallipolis, Ohio

I

CARTER &amp;EVANS,
"Building Supplies" ·

.

CHESHIRE - Coach Dale
''Casey" Rotbgeb's Cheshire
Redlegs moved into sole
possession of first place In the
Gallia-Melgs Pony League
Associa lion here Friday night
with a 6-4 victory over previous
unbeaten Middleport.
The win pushed Cheshire's
record to 3-0. Coach Woody
CaD's Middleport nine d!:opped
to 2-J.
Middleport took a 2-0 lead in
the opening frame on a leadoff
walk to · third baseman Perk
Ault, singles by Price and Jay
Warner and a bases loaded walk
to Greg Donahue.
The Redlegs sliced the lead to

2-l,scoring a single run In their
. hall of the inning on two Infield
errors .
Cheshire \qlotted the score In
the second on a surprising twoout safety squeese.
Leftfielder Greg McC.arty
tripled leading off the Inning but
was still on third as Joe Stidham
gro1111ded out and Jim Ward
struck out. Clay Hudson then
bun led toward first and beat the
play as McCarty raced across
the plate. ·
Cheshire f_orged ahead in the
third as John Baird laced a
single to center and Orland
Cremeans, Redleg first sacker,

Athens Trips
New Haven 4-3
ATHENS - New Haven
American Legion Post 140 fell to
defeat for the third consecutive
time this year Friday evening
as Athens handed the Mason
County baseball team a 4-3 loss.
Though New Haven lost, it
once again had a strong mound
performance from righthander
Gary Hunt, who struck out 10 in
going the route. Hunt, who has
absorbed losses in his first two
legion outings this season, has
an ERA .for the season of only
1.40.
, Athens scored its first two
runs early in the game as the
first three hitters for the hoots
had a double, triple and
sacrifice fly, respectively.
Athens posted another run in

i
~

I

1971 ~ TOURJiiEY CHAMPS - The Coakley Electric softball team, sponsored by
Coakley Electric Heat of Coolvllle, captured the top spot In the Third Annual Bob Saunders
~aker State Invitational Slo-Pltch Softball Tournament over the Memorial Day weekend.
Members ofthe team are (front row ,left to right) Dick CQOksey, Don Kincade, Craig Jago, Jeff
Lenigar, Lee Bridgewater, (second row, left to right) manager Milt Cooksey, Barry West,
Owen Kisor, Max Carsey, Bob Mulligan, "Ed Kincade, Leroy Hashman, Mike Jago, Mark
Bridgewater, Dave Koslival, Larry Hunter and Larry Lee, Gallipolis, the tournament
manager.
. . ,
. ·
·

La

Griffin, Johnson
Clash On June 23
CLEVELAND (UPI)
Former Cleveland lightheav;ywelght John Griffin, who

ans Snorts
an lmpt ssive vlcto~y ~n
r
. Car Race. vT Tnderway .scored
hts last arena appearance, will

II

1'~1
LE MAN~, France (UP!) Porsche, With four cars m the
first Six, held a firm grip on the
Le Mans 24-hour sports car race
as dusk feU Saturday ni~ht.
T~e leadlna "long_-tailed"
Porsche 917, driven by Mexico's
Pedro Rodriguez and Briton
Jackie Oliver, remained In the
le~d with a similar car, driven
W SWiss Jo ~lffert and Briton
Derek BeD, In second plalc.

j

After five hours of driving·, 11
of the 49 starters had found the
pace too hot, including Mark
Donahue's Sunoco-Ferrari
which at one time lay second
before retiring with a seized
motor on the 70th lap.
•
Only Jose Juncadella of Spain
and Italy's Nico Vaccarella in
their Ferrari 512 prevenk d the
pack Of Porsches from running

away with the early stages of
ihe race which ends this af·
ternoon.
·'
Their yeUow Ferrari moved
into third spot, one lap behind
the leaders, when the Porsche
9\7 of Briton Vic Elford and
Frenchman Gerard Larrousse
t&gt;orame the first factory-backed
· German car to drop out with
engine failure.

. I

1

losing pitcher, Mark Haggerty
struck out two and passed
sev~n.
{arne was aecided
early as the Indians sent 18
batters to the plate in the first
inning.
Indian hitters were Hindy, a
double; Gleason a single, Mark
Venoy a double, Toney Venoy a
triple, and Lee, a single.
, For the Reds, Edwards had a
single and Pickens a double.
The Braves scored 12 runs In
.the fourth inning to hack the
one-hit pitching ·of Mike
Lavender in their romp over the
Mets.
For the Braves besides
Owen, Mick Davenpo~t had two ·
hits and Tim Thomas Tim
. Ebersbach, and Jack 'Hwnplfrey, each had one. Joe Justus
had the only Met hit, a single.
Braves
540 12-21 6 3
Mets
002 0- 2 I 4
Lavender and Ebersbach.
Yeager a_Qd Cunningham.

EL PASO, Tex. (UPI) AUred R. "Red" Barr, Souther11.
Methodist University's Internationally-known swim
coach, died of a heart attack in
his hotel room at dawn Saturday.
The 62-year-old Barr's death
came only five days alter that of
a brother, Glenn Barr, in
Cleveland," Ohio.
Barr had been swim coaching
at SMU since 1947 and his teams
had won 17 Southwest Con·
ference championships, in·
eluding the last 15 in a row, and
had been perennial top 10
contenders In the national
championships. He also had
serv~ as coach of the U.S. Pan
Amencan games team.
A native of Avon, Ohio, Barr
was gradu~ted from Oberlein
College in 1930 and received his
master 's degree from New
York University in 1937.

Air Command
Apowerlul air

A complete line of. pipes to choose
from: GBD, Charatan, BBB, Savinelll,
Hilson, Jobey the Pipe and Lloyds.

.

The

the seventh on a single, an error
and another single.
What ended up being the
winning run was tallied by
Athens in the bottom of the
ninth as the result of two walks,
an infield hit and swinging bunt
base hit.
New Haven, which has scored
only five runs in 23 Innings this
season, managed only four
base knocks in the outing.
The Mason Countians tallied
two runs in the fifth with two
outs as Paul Ayers and Curtis
Roush singled, followed by
Chester Roush and Brent and
Randy Clark all drawing walks.
New Haven tied the score at 33 in the top of the ninth when
Curtis Roush walked , stole
second and coasted home on a
double to right field by Chester
Roush. Randy Clark, with a
single, had the only other New
Haven hit. ·
COPS TENNIS TITLE
NOTTINGHAM, ENGLAND
(UP!) - Jaime Fillol of Chile
won the John Player Lawn
Tennis Tournament today by
defeating Austriilian ' Gregory
Perkins, 6-2, 6-3. ·
In the semi finals, FiUol had
whipped Colin Dibley of
Ausiralla 6-4, 6-6, and Perkins
had stopped veteran Frank
Sedgman of Australia, 4-6, 6-3,
7-5.
Julie Heldman of Houston,
Tex. won the women's crown by
defeating Barbara Hawcroft of
Australia, 6-4. 7-9, 6-3.

slammed a Price fastball to
deep center for a two-run
homer .
The winners came up with
two more runs In the fourth
inning on a one-out double by
MarshaU French, a stolen base,
passed baD, walk and Infield
error.on Cremeans' grounder.
Middleport cut the lead to 6-4
with a two-run uprising in the
fifth.
Price started the rally by
walking, Warner singled and
moved tosecondonanertor. He
reached third and scored on a
grounder hit by Woody Call, Jr.
Cheshire's starting hurler
Stidham was relieved in the
sixth by righthander John
Baird. Baird walked Magnotta
with one out in the Inning, but
came back with two strikeouts
to retire the side.
Middleport's Rick Stobart
tripled to left leading off the
seventh, but died there as Baird
came on with a strong , clutch
pitching performance fanning
Warner, Donahue and Call to
end the game .

In another league contest, '
Pomeroy defeated South· .:
•
western, 13-0.
Pomeroy, 2-1 moved ahead 3-G
in IIMi third on Diehl's slng.1e, a
walk, Marshall's double and · •
Mick Ash's two run single;
•
Three more runs crossed the
plate in the fifth on ~o SW ,.
errors, Ash's single and Stan
Moon's triple .
A big seven-run seventh In·
ning was highlighted by Ash's
third hit of the game, a booming
double.
David Jenkins and Jimmy
Nida collected SW's only hits.
Chaney, the winning pitcher,
fanned 10. Nida, charged with
the loss, slruckout seven.
Unescores:
Middleport
200 020 6-4 5 4 •
Cheshire
112 200 x--6 8 2
Price (LP) and CaD. Stidham
(WP) Baird (6) and Wise.
Pomeroy

003 030 7-13 7 2

sw

0000000-022
Chaney (WP) Ash (6) and
Ash, Diehl (6). Nlda, Carter (5).
and Walker; Whitt (5).

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RUNNERUP - Mills Transfer Co., o{ Gallipolis placed·second In the 1971 Quaker State
Service Center Slow Pitch double-&lt;!limination softball tournament over the Memorial Day
weekend. Forty teams participated. Mills Tr!Ulsfer won five straight to gain the finals ; then
lost twice In the finals to Coakley's Electric. Pictured above., front row ,left to right in this Dave
Tawney photo are: Grover Long, Don McDade, Ty Painter, Dane Casto, who went 30 for 33 at
the plate; and Paul Casto. Second tow . - Bob KeUy, Jerry McClanahan, Wlllle Curfman,
Chester Shamblin and Jamie Christy. Third row - Larry Lee, tourne:,&lt; manager; Marion
Caldwell, Bill Brown, Walter Taylor, Tom Pitchford and Don Wandling.

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!

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport's Little League Braves,
led by the big bat of Dicky
Owen, a portside swinger,
rolled to their second lopsided
victory of the new season
Thursday evening, this one 21-2
over the Mets.
The other game was about the
same sort of a meeting as the
Mark V Reds took a 19-4 lacing
from the Indians. Both contests
went only four Innings.
Owen, in probably his
greatest day at the plate, had a
double, a triple and grand
slam homerun to lead the
Braves' offense.
In the Indians-Reds game,
Ketth Lynch hurled a two hitter
and his teammates turned their
five hits into 19 runs . Lynch
fanned one and walked one. The

Grabs Lead In
•

Braves Humble
Mets, 21 To 2

Red Sox 3

Monday - Padres vs. lndlans, 6 p.m.; Yankees vs.
Orioles, 8: 15 p.m.
Tuesday - Senators vs.
Athletics. 6 p.m.; Red· Sox vs.
Cubs, 8:15 p.m .
Wednesday - White Sox vs.
lndlans. 6 p.m.; Tigers vs.
Orioles, S: 15 p.m.
Thursday - Padres vs .
Athletics. 6 p.m.: Yankees vs.
Cubs, 8:15 p.m.
Friday - White ~x vs.
Senators,6p.m .: T&lt;gersvs. R~
Sox. 8:15 p.m.

.

GALLIPOLIS
Gallla .
.
.
COWlty's flt,t 4-H Horse Fun
Show was a big succeas. Twenty
of the 'S1 4-H youth enrolled In
the horse IX"oject this · year
showed In one or more of the
events.
Five placlngs were made In
each olilsi! and an overaU high
point trophy was awarded the •
contestant receiving the highest
number of points. Steve. Short ·
and Connfe DaVis tied for this
award. Each were presented
with Identical trophies.
I
The show was sponsored by
the 4-H Horse Committee and
the Cooperative Extension
Service. The purpose of the
show was to il!ve 4-H'ers ex·
perience In showing . and a
chance to find out both their
strong points and weak points.
Duane Plymale, Area 4-H
Agent,. judged the show. As
Duane looked at the classes he
talked to each contesiant In·
dlviduaUy pointing otJt some of
their problems and things each
Individual needed to work on.
Winners In each of the ten
classes were:
Class i - Horse Showmarishlp
(Ages 15-19) -1. Steve Short; 2.
Connie DaVis; 3. Jackie Ben·
nett; 4. Valorle Sheets and 5.
Pam Mead.
Class
II
Horse
Showmanship (Ages 9-14) - 1.
DUANE PLYMALE (left) presents Connie DaVis and Steve Short with the high point
Tam! Wiseman: 2. Terri Short;
3. Kim Notter; 4. Mark trophy. (County Extension Office Photo).
Hatrison and 5. Bobbie Barcus.
Class
III
Pony
Showmanship (Ages 9-16) - 1. Tarn! Wiseman: 2. Terri Short; Short; 3. Jackie Bennett and 4. &amp; Marilyn Layne; 4. PoUy
Burger and 5. Connie Davis.
Leslie Smith and 2. Shirley 3. Kim Notter; 4. Mark Steve Short.
Class
VII
-Egg
&amp;
Spoon
I.
Class X - Trail - I. Tarn!
Harrison and 5. Debbie
Barcus.
Connie Davis; 2. Terri Short; 3. Wiseman; 2. Steve Short; 3.
Class IV · - Horse Hor· Bowling.
semanship (Ages 15-19) - 1. Class VI - Pony Hor. Polly Burger: 4. Cory Saucier Connie DaVis: 4. PoUy Burger
and 5. Debbie Bowling.
Steve Short; 2. 'Connie Davis; 3. semanship (Ages 9-16) - 1. and 5. Steve Short.
Valocle Sheets; 4. Polly Burger Leslie Smith: 2. Shirley Barcus Class IX - Drunkard's The next fun show is
Paradise - 1. Steve Short &amp; scheduled for 6 p.m., July 22 at
and 3. Cory Saucier. ,
and 5. Jackie Bennett.
Class V - Horse Hor- Class VII - English Pleasure Terri Short; 2. Jackie Bennett &amp; the Gallla County Junior
semanship (Ages 9-14) - 1. - I. Connie Davis; 2. Terri Kim Notter: 3. Debbie Bowling Fairgrounds.

~

Indians 4 Senators 3
This Week 1 s Games:

.
strmg to 351-3 before Phil StiU
hit a homer for Mississippi In
the sixth. Rogers' record is now
ll-2and Thompson's is 11).2
· ,
Tulsa was rated fourth and
Mississippi
State ' fifth
GALLIA-ME IGS
nationally going Into the series.
PONY LEAGUE
The teams had identical 32-10
STANDJNGS
recorda before Friday night) ~~e~~re
"'; ~ ~ 0 ~
game.
Middleport
2 1 36 17 '
Pomeroy A
2 1 30 21
Bidwell
1 1 13 12
Public Hearing
Pomeroy B..
1 2 25 31
Racine
I 3 26 43
Southwestern
1
3 8 45
Slated June 21
TOTALS
11 11 176 176
Last Week's
Results:
Pomeroy
8
Bidwell
7; Cheshire
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A 17 Racine 1; Middleport 18
public hearing has been slated Southwestern 2; Racine 16
here for June 21 In connection Pomeroy B 14; Cheshire 6
4; Pomeroy 13
with the prohibition of com· Middleport
Southwestern 0.
mercia! buying and seUing of This
Week's . Games:
white bass taken from the Lake Tuesday, Southwestern at
Erie Fishing , District waters, Bidwell: Pomeroy B at Midand Cheshire at
the Ohio Department of Natural dleport
Pomeroy. Friday - Middleport
Resources announced Satur· at Racine; Bidwell at Cheshire ·
and Pomeroy tat Pomeroy B.
day.
The department said the
hearing would be held to NFL SIGNS HILL
determine if the ban on taking . BUFFALO, N.Y. (UPI) white baas from Lake Erie is to · Wide receiver J.D. Hill of
be extended. A 60-day ban was Arizona State, the Number one
issued May 7 because the collegiate draft choice of the
mercury concentration in those Buffalo Bllls, has signed his
fishes was above the safe level 1971 contract with the National
for human consumption.
Football League 'club.

PIPE

TWenty Take Part In Successful Cheshire
4-H Horse Show At ·Fairgrounds

••

Orioles, Indians Win,
Share Top Spot In LL

Summer League
Standings

-

Perez' winning blow gave the
Both winning clubs also got
their second consecutive win victory to Wayne Granger who OMAHA, Neb. (UP!) -Home
Friday, the first time since May came on 1n relief of young Don 1runs proved decisive Friday strong pitching periormances,
21 ·the National League GuUett. Granger worked the ni~ht when Harva~d defeated althongh Tulsa starter Steve
champions have put two wins last three Innings for his second Brtgham Young Umverslty •.+-1: Rogers was relieved in the
together.
win against four defeats
and Tulsa smacked Misslsstppl eighth by .Cliff Butcher after he
The Reds used ,three home
But he needed help when the State, 5-2, in the first two games tired and gave up two con·
runs to edge the Chicago Cubs 4- Cubs hajl runners on second and of the 25th annual College World secutive singles.
Rogers
came
into
the
game
3 In an afternoon conies!.
third with two out.
Senes.
with 30 consecutive scoreless
The clincher In the game was Joe Gibbon came in and got
innings pitched and ran the
the home run by Tony Perez In Joe Pepitone to ground back to
the eighth inning with one out to the box to end the game.
give the loss to Blll Hands. That The Reda trailed 3-0 going into
noon. Ribbons and trophies will
loss ended Handa' six-game the sixth Inning. The Cuba got
I
be.
presented. Admission is $1.
wlnnfng streak over the Reds. that margin on Jim Hickman's
'
He is now 6-8.
eighth homer in the first Inning
GALLIPOUS - The Saddle &amp; Children under 12 will be adPerez belted a 3-2 pitch for his with Don Kessinger aboard. The Sirloin Riding Club's annual milled free .
third run came In the fifth when OVHSA Horse Show will be held Eddie Corzatt, Leesburg,
Glenn Beckert doubled, went to at the Gallia County Junior Ohio, will serve as judge.
third on Hickman's single and Fairgrounds, beginning at 9 . Ringmaster will be Robert
(Brownie) Brown, Gallipolis.
came home on a tlirowing error a.m., today.
by shortstop Dave Concepcion. There will he 15 classes in the Skip Meadows will serve as
But the Reda came up with Halter Division, and 41 classes announcer. Stewards are Peggy
back-to-hack home runs In the in the Perfonnance Division. Short, Mr. and Mrs. Dick ,
sixth. Tommy Hehns opened Afternoon activities start at 12 Roach.
the Inning by belting his first
I
\
home run of the season. Big Lee
Q05:PiiiiCPi:i1
May followed with hls 12th
round tripper.
.With two out, George Foster
Major League Leaders
By United Press lnternational singled, stole second and scored
the tying run when Hal McRae
Leading BaHers
National League
singled.
G AB R H J&gt;ct.
American League
By Uniied Press International
bavls. La
58 232 38 84 .362
Milwaukee
.
~Bowling
National
League
Brock,SI.L 59 243 51 87 .358
Cincinnati
000
003
01()4
8
1
000
001
ooo1
6
0
RAlNBOW LEAGUE
Bckrt, Chi
57 229 36 82 .358
Chicago 200 010 000;- 3 12 1 Cleveland 000 000 20x- 2 4 o
June a. 1971
Torre, St.L 60 230 37 82 .357
Gullett, Granger- (7), Gibbon
Pallin (6-6) and Root;
Citizens
Natl
.
Bank
won
all
8
Garr, All
61 256 45 91 .355
Alou Hou
47 169 13 57 .337 points from Toons Three. (9) and Bench; Hands, Tomp- Dunning, Mingorl I8L Farmer
and Fosse. WP- Dunning
Staub. -Mont 53 187 .34 62 .332 Shirley Harmon was high for kins (9) aod D. Breeden, (8)
(6-4).
HR- Chambllss (2nd).
Cannizzaro
ISL
Marlin
(7)
.
WP
Citlzens
Nail.
with
a
190
and
496
Mays, SF
53 179 36 59 .330
Granger
12-4).
LPHands
(6series.
N.ary
Luckadoo
with
a
Cash, Pitt
51 205 J8 67 .327
HRs- Hejms (1) , May 112), Chicago 000 100 202- 5 13 0
Sngln, Pit
54 207 20 67 .324 165 and 443 series was high for 8).
Perez
(8) , Hickman (8).
Baltimore 102 005 oox- 8 9 2
Toons Three.
American League
Horlen. Kealey 16), Forster
Foster
Signs
took
6
points
GAB R H Pet.
110
innings!
(7),
Eddy (9) and Egan;
from
The
Beauty
Nook.
High
tor
Oliva, Minn 50 197 35 74 .376
S.F.
000
200
000
13
6
0
.
McNally,
Dukes (7L Watt (9L
Foster's,
Ruth
Rocchi
with
a
18S
Murcer, NY 57 203 34 73 .360
N.¥.
000
000
002
()2
4
0
Richert
19)
and Hendricks. WP
and
,505
series.
Pat
Joyal
was
Kaline. Del 49 159 30 51 .321
Hamilton (5), Johnson - McNally (9-4). LP- Horlen (0Rchrdl, Chi 43 160 15 50 .313 high tor The Beauty Nook with a I9LStone,
McMahon (10) and Dietz ; 3) . HRs-Powell (9th), Melton
FRbnsn, Bal 44 154 27 48 .312 157 and 421 .serles.
Williams,
Taylor (7), Frlsella 18th L Hendricks (3rd), .Buford
Warehime
Clinic
took
6
polnts
Smith, Bos 56 222 40 69 .311
I8L
McGraw
110) and Groge. &amp;th), Reichart (6th).
from
M&amp;
R
Shopping
Center.
Rojas, KC 52 200 29 62 .310
WPMcMahon
14-3) . LP-Georgia
Martin
with
a
157
and
Howard, Wash
(3-3) . HRs- MGCovey Boston
000 300 '~ J 8 o
53 204 20 63 .309 423 series was high for McGraw
Kan City 410 001 OOx- 6 6 0
BRnsn, Bal 54 209 29 64 .306 Warehime. Garnet ·Elliott was (lOth), Marshall (3rd).
Tiant, Brett (2), Lee (8) and
high
for
M&amp;R
with
a
185
and
471
Buford, Ball 43 166 46 SO .301
San
Diego
011
ooo
ooo2
2
1
Mon
tgomery ; OaJ Ca n ton,
series.
Home Runs
000 000 Ol()- 1 8 1 Abernathy 181 and May. WPWon Lost Phlla
National League: Stargell,
Roberts (5-5) and Barton ; Dal Canton (6-2) . LP-Tlant (038
2
Pill 21 : Aaron, All 18; Bench, Citizens Nail. Bank
Lersch,
Wilson (9) and Ryan . 1) . HR- Smlth (11th), Scott
M&amp;R
Shopping
Center
24
16
Cin 15; Cepeda, All and
LPLersch
(4-5) .
18th!, Kirkpatrick l4!h).
Warehime
Clinic
24
16
Williams, Chi 14.
Toons
Three
14
26
American League: Cash, Del
100 000 003- 4 9 0 Mlnn
010 000 ooo- 1 6 2
10 30 Atlanta
13; Horton, Del, Oliva, Mlnn Foster Signs
012 010 OOx- 4 6 0
10 30 Houston 002 110 001- s 11 1 Detroit
and Jackson, Oak 12; Smith, Beauty Nook
Nash, Wilhelm (8), Priddy
Blyleven, Hall 18) and
8os and Otis, KC 11.
19)
and
Didier:
Blasingame,
Mltterwald,
Tlschlnskl (9) ;
POMEROY
LANES
Runs BaHed In
Gladding
(9)
and
Edwards.
WP
Kilkenny
(1-2)
and Freehan. LP
JUNE
4
National League: Stargell,
.Biyleven (6-8) . HRs-Horton
Pflt 54; Aaron, All 48 ; Torre, Racine Home Natlonal Bank 53 .,-Gladding (2-1). LP- Priddy -(12th,
), McAulltte 18th) . .
38 (2-31 .
SI.L 44 ; Cepeda, All 41 ; Santo: Team No.4
Evelyns
Grocery
29
Cho ,j()_
001 000 01()- 2 9 2
29 LosAng 080 000 220-12 16 0 Wash
American League: Killebrew, Team No. 5
Team
No.3
22
Montreal
000
000
0011
5
2
Calli
000
130 OOx- 4 9 0
Mlnn 48; Petrocelli, Bos 41 : Mark V
Downing
(6-51
and
Sims;
Mclain,
Shellenback
(7) and
21
White, NY and Bando, Oak 38;
Britton,
Strohmayer
(21.
Reed
Casanova;
Wright,
LaRoche
(8)
Powell and F. Robinson , Ball High lnd lvidual ga!Tle - (6), O'Donoghue (8), Raymond and Stephenson. WP-Wrlght
Eddie
Petrie
213,
Carol
Sayre
36.
(9) and Bateman. LP- Britton · (7-4) . LP-Mclaln (4-11). HRs
176.
.
·pitching
I0-1).
HRs-AIIen 2 (7th and - Howard (8th), McMullen
Second
high
Eddie
Petrie,
(INMd on most victories)
81h),
Parker
l~fhl. Staub (6th). (9th).
18.
1
,
Carol
Sayre
165.
Nail-l Leallue: Dierker,
High serie$ - 565, Eddie
Hou and carlton. St. L 10-2;
Plttsbrgh 020 400 104- 11 11 0 New York 200 000 04()- 6 9 0
Carol Sayre, 478.
Jenkins. Chi 10-5: Ellis, Pill 9- Petrie,
St.
Louis 010 020 001 - 4 9 2 Oakland 000 120 1oo- ~ 7 o
Second
high
series,
Clyde
3: Seavet, NY 8-2; Stoneman, Sayre, 490, Ellen Ebersbac~
Ellis,
Giusti 171 and Sangull- Kline, Kekich (7). Aker 18)
Mont 8-3; M41rlchal, SF 8-4.
len
;
Cleveland,
(4), and Munson; Hunter, Locker
361.
.
· American League: Blue, Oak Team high game, Team No.3, Parker (6), Sha~Taylor
(8)
,and
I8L Knowles (9) and Duncan.
12-J; Cutller, Belt 9-1; Siebert,
Simmons.
WP-EIIIs
(9-3),
LP
WP-Aker
· (2-2). LP-Hunter
.
I
llail f ·'2l Pllmer: Ball 9-3; 724,
~Cleveland (5-5). HR- Stargell 1!·4) , HRs-Jackson
Team
hlgh
series
2070,
Racine
~12th).
MciMIIII'• 81!1 1nd Hunter, Oak Home National Bank,
(21sl).
,·
·
Duncan
(81h)
.
.., - . -- -,.., t.:ollch, Del H

I

•

,

. Cincinnati Reda marked up

r

,

•

---..

Taylor, following singles by
Leon Briggs and Dave Thomas
In the third Inning, turned out to
be the game's winning play.
Mike Watson, who went the
distanee for the Giants, was
credited with the victory. He

,,

21 - Tbe Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunrlav..June 13.1971

1

?Jeet veteran George Johnson
10
a !~rounder at tfie arena
June_23.
Grtffm, who has a 16-l.record,
defeated Billy Wagner the last
time he fought here. He now
ftgh1s out of New York. ·
Johnson, 40 • has an overall
record of 55:!Hand hB:s won 23 of
31 bouts st~ce commg out of
rehrementm 1966. The veteran
fighter retired for nine years.

Jn 3-2 Win
MASON - The New Haven
Cubs, led by the hard hitting of
Tim Davis, took at 3-2 LL vic- .
tory over the Mason Tigers
Thursday.
Davis had a single, double
and towering homer In sparking
his team to victory. The home
run broke a 2-2 tie and gave the
C~bs the win.
t'he Tigers scored one run in
th~first on singles by Lambert
and Nicewender and a throwing
error.
·
The Cubs scored twice In the
first on singles by Buzzard,
Layne and Davis.
Goldsberry was the winning
pitcher.
·

Things to do
at home in the
good old .

I

SUMMERTIME:
FIRST
Start or finish what you planned to do last Spring.
Remember that sun deck, patio, screened-in area, new
siding, aluminum storms and screens, fencing,· etc . .. ?

THEN
SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Steamin Missile won the
featured $6,000 invitational trot
at Scioto Downs Friday night,
returning $6.50, $3.40 and $2.60.
Time was 2:03 3-5. Second
place Rodney paid $3.20 and
$2.80. Third place New Glory
paid $3.40.
In the $4,000 preferred trot,
Lady Berry was the winner,
returning $3.80, $3.40 and ,2.20.
Second place Vic Arden
returned $S and $2.60. Third
place ACs Hope paid $2.40 . .
In the nighUy double, Royal
Flush and His Gal produced a
wituling 6-4 combination worth
$93.80.
The 5.-6 quinella paid tl2.60.
Attendance was 7,055 with a
handle of $3$4,950.
I

look over this check list of projects you can do now
before the ever-changing weather
would make it difficult to do later.
Add a room
Extend a room
Build 1 aun room or porch
Install picture wlndowa
Build 1 farden tool shed
Build a ch ldrtn'a play house
Put up a fence
Pant! 1 wall or 1 room or two
Gat sa Ins on thou plans you mado last wlntorl
A&amp;k about U.S. Plywood Rtmodtllngldea Folders

Come In to see us for any assistance in planninll, dtsi1nin11nd
prlclnl- •. for these or any other projects you have In mind.

Carolina Lumber &amp;Supply Co.
· 6th St.

Point Pleasant

675-1l60
•

•

�,_

-·
22- The Sunday Times· ~ntinel, SWlday, June 13, 1971

Insects and Disease Have Good Start in MeigS
.

BY C. 'E. BLAKESLEE
Ext. Agent, Agrl.
POMEROY - Insect and
dise•se problems are getting a
good start In Meigs CoWlty
already this ·summer. Cereal
leaf beetle on oats has been
identified on three farms.
The problem is, do you spray
and weigh the oats down, or do
you just hope that the beeUes
~on ' t consume your crop?
Spraying is not recommended
Wltil two larvae are found on
every stem. In northern Ohio, of
course, aerial spraying is used,
but with small fieldS it is difficult.
Corn samples were submitted
to the plant disease laboratory

last week but they were
negative to Southern Corn Leaf
l;llight. They did show evidence
of flea beeUe damage. Flea
beeUes usually do not damage
corn tQo much after the corn
really starts growing.
Even our recreation-minded
people may have problems. The
camping season is in full swing
with many already taking to the
rough. One of the problems
facing campers and hikers is
pests - that is, the 6- and 8legged ones. Chiggers, ticks,
wasps, and mosquitoes can be a
real problem. One of the best
ways to keep . pests away is
protection. Here are some
things you can do to protect

'

yoursell, according to Richard
L. Miller, Entomologist, Ohio
State University.
Use a repellent. It has been
known for years that oil of
citronella repels ·mosquitoes.
Si nee WW II, some real ef.
fective materials have been
developed. One of these is N, Ndiethyl-metatoluamide or OFF.
It's one of the most effective
mosquito repellents and it also
works against ticks and
chiggers. It losts longer on the

.

NEW IN FARMING .
·

nearly three times the percentage of active ingredient as
the other formulations, so it
really is the best buy but may.
not be as convenient to ·use. I
don't know about you, but I'm
looking for protection, not
convenience.
You often hear people say
repellents just don 't seem to
give them protection very long.
Could be true, because the
P.rotection period depends upon
skin and is more resis.tanl to two factors: (1) the minimum
removal by rubbing and wiping.
OFF is sold in an aerosol can,
roll-on, foam, and liquid ' forand (2) rate of loss of the
mulation.
repellent down to the minimum
The liquid formulation has effective dosage. We lose the

'•

BY }OHN COOPER
SoD Conservation SerVIce
PI'. PLE~T .:_ A. C.
Bingham, Jr., who'owns a farm
on Road Fork of Ohio Eighteen
Mile Creek, is planning tO build
a pond and do other conservation work. .
We recentlv helped him with a

Lay of the Land
conservation plan for all his
land and a feasibility study as to
the best location for a pond on
his farm. Three or four sites
were considered.
In making a selection for a
pond, the soli condition must be
examinerl carefullv and an

impervious soil is most
desirable which . is free from
rock ledges or other features
which might cause leaks. One
site which was considered was
subject to land slipping. That
makes a site Wldesirable.
CHARLES ENGEL, whose
farm is on the head of Kanawha
Sixteen Mile Creek, recently
completed 300 feet of waterway.
This waterway was made in
ocder to confine water and to
carry it to a road culvert. The
waterway' was built behind a
barn and before it was made,
water from an adjacent
watershed spread out all over
the small bottom land area and
caused flooding in the barn.

WIN AT BRIDGE

l

.

·

repellent by rubbing it off,
absorption, and ' evaporation.
The real difference between
people seems to be in the absorption l'ate. Some ~oak it up
quicker. Interesting to note that
lllere is little difference be•tween men and women.
Treating clothing is another
thing to consider. Your clothing
can be treated before going
camping and give you and the
kids tr2-3 tweekts' Hprotection with
one ea men . ere are some

:~~u~:o%~~~~~~:~~~;:;u~e:e~~ ~~n~~~~. t~ ~~~ :ew~ie~~~~

Conservation Actions Planned
The purpose of .the diversion
was to protect a crop field
below. The collected water will
empty into the waterway. This
diversion and waterway. are
part of a complete operation for
this field. The rest of the work
involved installing 1225 feet of
tile along the side of the same
waterway. Such combination of
work as this is quite often
needed in the Monongahela Silt
Loam soils such as are found in
the White Church community.
The drop inlet will be used at
HUGHES' DECISION
the
upper end of the tile line to
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Iowa
Sen. Harold Hughes still is take care of some additional
considering making the race for surface water .
the Democratic presidential
nomina tin and will make a final
decision in October.
An aide to Hughes Friday
denied a published report the
With the construction of the
waterway the water will bypass
the barn.
·
GERALD ROOD AND SON,
near White Church, have
completed a 1,000-foot ·diversion
ditch and a 1200-foot waterway
on the Walden and Don Roush
land nearby. The Roods rent
this land and use it for feed
production at their dairy
operation.

tbbesnpz. onaatephl·nthathsroeaepp;l'no~- pouftdrthye·

"'
cleaning fluid. Another formula
consists of five oz. OFF, three
pints of water and two tbsp. of
naphtha soap;·or five oz. OFF in
three pints of dry-deaning fluid.
With the soap mixtures,
dissolve the doap (don't use
detergent) in the water and add
the repellent slowly while
stirring vigorously. With any of
the formula s sa turate the
garments, w~ing them out
lightly and dry thoroughly
before wearing. Do not treat
undergarments. Drug stores
carry benzyl benzoate at around
50pct. per ounce. Three pintsof
the solution will wet an outfit of
socks, shirt, and pants.
IF YOU RAISE peonies,
chances are you've noticed that
ants seem to crawl all over the
buds. The re!ison for this is that
IJ!e ants are feeding on the tiny

droplets of sap. that exudefro~ rosesand:otherplants. You may
the buds. No control is needed . . have tried .the so&lt;alled nonHere are s,omefacts for you to toxic "hit •em with a spray of
think about!. With the help of .water" treatment, but have
DDT, malaria was eradicated foWld it to be a big disapfrom Ceylon by 1950. SUddenly, pointment. Remember, aphids
DDT was abandoned. By 1968, are winged in the early summer
500,000 cases developed and in and new ones fly into an area.
1969 there we.re one million Using the water spray will
cases. Ceylon has about 10 knock off 8 few aphids but
million people. Recently, you're also setting up Ideal
Ceylon ordered 10 million conditions for disease infection.
pounds of DDT to resume a You can solve the aphid
control program.
problem once and for all by
Aphids are still building up on using a systemic insecticide

such as Di..Syston, eyg}m, or
Meta-Systox-R, These Insecticides wiU do the job better
and save your water bill.
There are a number of Odd·
shaped structures appearing on
various trees and shrubs. These
are insect or mite galls. The
pests live Inside the structures.
In general, galls do no economic
damage to a plant, therefore
control measures are not
needed Wlless things get out of
hand. Oak has over600different
kinds of galls.

Bar 30 ·Show Saturday
•

.

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
new Bar-30 Horsemen, Inc.,
Meigs County's newest riding
club, willstagea·show Saturday
evening at its new grounds just
off state Route 7, between
Tuppers Plains and Coolville.

Geldings, 3 yrs and over, Reg.
Q.H. Geldings, 2 yrs and under,
Reg. Appaloosa Stallions, Reg.
Appaloosa Mares, Reg. Ap·
palo·osa Geldings, Non-Reg.
Stock Horse, Reg. Arab~an
Horse, Reg. Half-Arab1an
Horse, and Open All Breed
Rain or shine the events Yearling and under Foal Cla_ss.
scheduled will be held with Mrs. PERFO~CE, Begln~g
Marilyn Anders of Leesburg as at 7:30p.m., 5nbhons and pme
judge . The show is a money ($8, 6, 4, 2 and ribbon);
Southeastern Ohio Horse Show Entry fee, $2, (Youth_classes 50
Assn . approved event. The cents, trophy and 5 nbbo~s) classes:
Walk· Trot Pony Class, r1der 8
HALTER, Beginning at 5 p. yrs and under, Sh_ow Horse,
m., entry fee 50 cents, five Western Equipment;
ribbons- Western Show Horse, Registered Quarterhorse
Western Pl. Pony (Wider 48"), Pleasure; Flag Race; Western
Western PI, Pony (48" and Pleasure Pony (Wider 48")
under 56") , Reg. ~rterhorse rider 12 yrs or Wider, Western
Stallions, Reg. Q.H. Mares, 3 Arabian Pleasure Horse (halfyrs and over, Reg . Q.H. Mares, Ara!)s included), Western
2 yrs and under, Reg. Q.H. Pleasure Pony, (48" and under

.

56"), rtder undefl.6 yrs.

Western Stake Race, Show
Horse Enghsh Equipment,
Walk-Trot Horse Class, Rider 8
yrs and under, Youth Horsemanship,_13 lhru 15 years,
Egg and Spoon, Ride and Run,
Open Wes~n Pleasure Class,
Jrs . to. Ride, Youth Horsemansh1p, 12 yrs and under,
English Pleasure Horse, PickUp Race, Appaloosa Pleasure
Horse, Youth Horsemapsh\P• 16
thru 19 yrs., Open Relhlng,
WesternPieasureHor~, -Barrel

Race, W_estern Semor Horsemansh1p and Open Trail
Class.
In registered classes, proof of
registration must be show. All
classes (contest) e!ectricaUy
timed; no money paid in clasaes
wi Ill less than five entrillS.

NORTH
.63

IZ

{D)

¥J
.Q1098S2
.KQ94

EAST
.KIO

WEST
.Q98542
.K9863

.7

• 8

SOUTH

¥AQI074

.K3

.7532

.AJ7

"52

• AJ64
• AJ106

North-South wlnerable
West North Ea.t South
Pa!IS
l ¥ Dble
3¥
4•
Pass Pass
4¥
4 N.T. Dble 5 ..
Pus P88s
Dble Pa"
5¥
Pass Pass 6 •
Dble Pass
Pass Pass
Opening lead- ¥ 6
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
When today's hand was
dealt in an Arkansas dupli·
cate, the N o r t h players
passed because thmr suit
was too poor for a weak twodiamond caU. East invarIably opened with one heart,
South would double, West
would jump to three or four
hearts and the final contract

would usually be four hearts
doubled and made by East
or live diamonds doubled
and made by North.
The bidding in the box
shows how one North-South
p air scored a top. West's
jump to three hearts was a
trifle inadequate. North was
able to bid four diamonds.
This was passed to West. He
went to four hearts.
North's four no-trump was
a very unusual form of the
unusual no-trump and told
his partner that he held four
clubs in addition to five or
. six djamonds. East doubled
and South went to five clubs
because he would play the
hand and he felt the 4-4 fit
might yield an extra trick.
West bid five hearts, North
passed and South tried a
slam bid which was doubled.
A s p a d e opening would
have defeated the contract,
but West opened a heart.
South won the second trick
with the spade ace, played
dummy's nine and king of
c l u b s and noted the bad
break. Then he led a diamond, finessed with his jack,
ruffed his last heart, drew
trumps to discard dummy's
last spade and made the rest

OUR

of the tricks with the diamonds .

UN ICO

tza B;J :11~tW!&amp;Il

FIRST LINE

The bidding has been:
West
North
East South
Dblc
IN.T.
I ¥
Dble
Pass
Pass
You, South, hold:
.K 7 3 2 ¥54 .K93 .QJ6 2
What do you do now?
A-Redouble. Tell your partner you have derense against
any suit they run to.

BUY ONE TIRE .AT
REGULAR PRICE

'

Get Second
Tire At•••

TODAY'S QUESTION
You redouble. We st and
North pass and East r uns to
two diamonds. What do you
do now?

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

·-------•.•....•.• ....
,.,

In 1935 Jim Braddock decisioned Max Baer to win the
heavyweight boxing championship.

PRICED NOW
FOR A SELLOUT!

THESE ARE NOT PROMOTIONAL TIRES
. . . These are our FIRST LINE tires including
o~r wide oval glass belted- the new Dynac~rd ,
Dtrector 120 a·nd our SPD nylon. Hurry to .
Landmark Super Service Station TODAY!

Sale Starts Today!
ALL TIRES MOUNTED FREEl
SERVICE STATION OPEN 24 HOURS- 7 DAYS
.
·-----------------------------------~---------------~
'

Landmark Will Cool It For Your NoW

Air
Conditioner
·
.

Field proven in
every crop
corn stalks. You name it and there's a 400
right for the job.

PH. 992·2176

POMEROY, OHIO

RHdy •nd. 1bl1 to gii(1 you compiiJtiJ hay tool SflivlN!- -·~
•

SEE OUR BIG
SELECTON

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 conditio'ns. 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 new replaceable Swedish steel twine knife, the tungsten
carbide shearing knives, the rubber mounted
pickup teeth, and other 400 firsts.

Meigs .Equipment Co.

ltAmLEEN KOEBEl,

GALUPOLIS -Two awards were made during Holzer
Medical Center School of Nursing graduation exercises
Friday night at First Baptist Church here. Voted outstanding
student by the faculty and student body was Sharon Sheets,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Sheets, Centenery. Miss ·
!Rieelll was presented a $50 check from the Holzer Medical
Center Clinic by Holzer Medical Center Executive Vice President John W. Rafferty. Receiving llle award for the
highest scholastic average was Miss Kathle'en Koebel,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John M. Koebel of Gallipolis. She
also rectrved ·a $50 check provided by tbe Gallla CoWlty
· Medical Society frotri Rafferty.

Med Degrees
•
Just Family
To the Treats

degrees . Richard wlll do
residency at University
Hospital; wife Vicki will intern
at Children's Hospital. .
Vicki's degree began the third
generation of doctors. Her
grandfather, father, two WlCies
COLUMBUS (UPI) - For and one aunt are graduate~ of
Richard and Vicki Treat ' ' the OSU School of Med1c1ne.
. .
'
medical degrees were just Richard has two phySICians m
another family affair.
his family.
The couple, both 25, was Vicki's aunt, Dr. Mary OWen
graduated from Ohio State Whitacre , roamed · to . a
University's School of Medicine physician, is the Marietta city
Friday with their medical health commissioner.

95
and up

Cool Low Prices On All Sizes In Stock.
A site for every purpose 5,000, 7,000, , .
10,200, 12,000, 15,000, .18,000, 24,000 and .
29,000 BTU. We install!
in · whole
house air eon!litioning.
Specialists

We can cool it tor yvu - JV!obile
Home Air Conditioning and
· Central Air Conditioning ,
Factory trained service men for
proper, dependable installation.
Call,992-2181.

POMEROY O
LANDMARK
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.

Serving Meigs, Ga111a ana ~son Counties
·
Store Open Mon .• Sat. Untlt6 P.M.

PhOne 992 -2181
.

I

Killed in Hijack Attempt

NEW YORK (UPI) _ /1 young.Negro hijacked a Trans WOrld look into the passenger section
·m the cockpit throug_h a oneAtrnnes jet to New York Saturdq, but was wounded in fllghtand fro
window. While the passentaken Into custody w.hen the plane landed, Apassenger was shot to Way
ers
g were unloading, the crew
de.athwhenthehi••ckertookoverthejetinChicago.
.·
"'
caUed tbe control center.
While the hijlic;ker was COIIlliU!nd\lerin8 tbe pla:ne and or- Zlto, 39 , of Cary, Ill., who is
dering the passel)gers off at Chicago's O'Hare ~t, a ~- S. normally stationed at O'Hare to
deputy marshal crawled through the cockpit window and hid on make sure firearms are not
board the jet. Thirty minutes after the plane topk off fro!" , brought on board pilines,
Chicago, Deputy Marshal Joseph Zlto stepped out of the cockpit climbed through the cockpit
and exchanged gunshots with the hijacker. The rna~ was wounded window and waited inside the
in the shoUlder.
·pilot's cabin W1til after the
.
James,
·N.Y.,
and
stewardess
The susliect, identified as
f F d plane tool&lt; off.
·
Catharine Culver, 24, o on ·
Gregory White, 23, of Chicago,
The 727 jet was flown to New
was taken to . the Queens Dui-Lac, Wis.
York, its .original destination,
. 1 Elder said while they were on
General Hospital after arnva
h d because the hi]'acker wanted
In New· York and., was reported the ground in Chicago, he ear another plane. He told the
a girl scream "he's got_a gun."
in fair ·condition.
uld captain he did not think the 727
The three-man crew' a The pilot said the crew co
stewardess. and Zlto escaped
unharmed dowri the plane's
chute when the 727 landed at
New York's Kennedy Airport.
The hijacker slide down the
chute moments later and was
arrested when he reached the
ground.
The hijacker boarded TWA
Flight 358 at O'Hare Friday
night and demanded to be taken
to North Vietnam. In a schuffle
EVER see or/ bear of a 35-foot long sn~tk.e1
that followed he fired at least
three times, fataUy injuring one Shaffer,-Rt.l, Crown City, while in the Times-Sentinel office ~ne
day last week, showed us a 31-year-old newspaper .chppmg
passenger.
The victim, who )VaS not (Huntington Advertiser, June 'tl, 1940) telling of such a thing.
+ ++
immediately Identified, was
IT
was
an
Associated
Press
story, datelined Cincinnati. It
shot once in the head and once
read: "Great-ious ·snakes alive, and where's Frank Buck!
in the back.
"The Cincinnati zoo had a letter today from Mildred Blazer,
The rest of the passengers
were allowed to leave the Gallipolis, asking if it were 'interested' in a 35-foot rep:ile
plane, and it then took off with assertedly slithering over the hills of her parents' farm, 12 miles
the hijacker and five others south of there.
aboard.
"I was in the woods locating logs," she wrote, "when I
The crew was identified as stepped up to what I thought to be a log - until it moved off. It was
Capt. Robert E. Elder, 42, of rusty black or brown in color, about 10 or 12 inches through and
Stamford, Conn.; . Jst Officer about 35 feet in length.
Ronald J. Dupuis, 31, of
"A snake of immense size has been seen previously by my
Sparta,. N.J.; flight engineer father and several others. If you are interested, let me know:"
Don E. Welshimer of St.
"We're interested all right," commented Ned Hastings of the
zoo's public relations staff, "but I'm just a little afraid ..."

-------------------.
I

along Broadway !

. ·~
BY JACK O'BRIAN

I

+++

COACH Jim Osborne's Gallipolis Blue Devils baseball team
established a new school victory record during the past campaign. The 1971 Blue Devils, although finishing third In the final
Southeastern Ohio League standings, won 15 and lost 5 overall,
and advanced all the way to the Class AA District finals. Official'
baseball records were started at GAHS in 1941. Previous number
of wins in one season was·13 - that was last year (13-4) and in 1958
(13-4). The 1955 Blue Devils were 12-5, and the 1949 Blue Devils
were 12-3-1.

jet could .make the trans- the hijacker hid behind sepa.Pacific trip to· North Vietnam. rati ·seats inf tbe ofplane,
be' afraid
sh t
1
A 707 jet was waiting at to move or ear
tng o .
ded
z·t 'd
hots were
Kennedy in case it was nee . . 1o sa1 seven s
The hij acker sa· t WI'th M'ISS f'1red tn
· a11 , ·me luding· "three
at·
·
Culver iri the passenger section, us.'' Zlto said he and Dupuis,
but about 30 minutes out of who also came out into the
Chicago be got up to check the passenger section for a short
rear of the plane.
time, fired four shots.
When he left the stewardess,
Zito jumped out of the cabin The hijacker forced his way
and fired two shots. The onto the plane at O'Hare and
hijacker ·fired back, but Zito when asked for his ticket, he
said he believed the suspect pulled a gun. The dead
had been wounded in the passenger was apparently shot
h
when he made a move toward
exc ange.
h
d
30
the hijacker.
For the next our an
·
te
Zit
M'
Cui
d.
The crew convinced the
mmu s, o, Iss
ver an

Elder said in addition to
asking to go to Vietnam, tbe .
man. demanded $15,000 and a
machinegun with a · lot o£
ammunition.
· Police in Chicago · took a
black woman Into custody
because she had been seen •
talking to the suspeCt shcrtly
before the hijack. But she wu
released later ·when pollee said ....
she had only been a bystander.
The flight originated in
Albuquerque, N.M:, and was
scheduled to fly to New York's
LaGuardia Airport, but went to
Ke nnedy instead.

wa~

ANOTHER WEEK
COLUMBUS I UPI) - The
week of June 14-20 ,has been
proclaimed "Welc"ome a Visitor
Week" by Gov. John J. Gilligan.
Gilligan said he named the
week in support of the Society of
American T?avel Writers'
national program, ' ~be a
Sidewalk Ambassador.'' The
society has estimated some 14.3
million tourists from other
coWltries and 123.3 American
will tour the United

New Hope
Mr. Orville Cornelison from
Cincinnati called his sister-inlaw , Mrs. Gladys Cooper
Saiurday, saying he is home
and feeling good and would be
up soon.·
Mr. and Mrs. Larry C. Smith
and Ada Keels attended the
graduation of the rormer 's
daughter, Brenda Kay.
After graduation at Rio
Grande Sunday the following
were guests of Mr . and Mrs.
Larry C. Smith, daughter, and
Ada Keels: Mr . and Mrs. Lloyd
Keels and daughters, Cin·cinnati; Mr. Dewy Keels, Mr.
John Gamble, Mr. and Mrs.
Warron Skidmore, Evergreen ;
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Spence;,
daughters, Betty, Terry, Robin
and Sue from Gallipolis.
Mrs. Charles Howard from
Jackson was calling on Mrs.
Mary Howard after attending
Mrs. BWlch's funeral.

We've never seen traetors

that hold up like a Gravely •.
And so many models
.. . riders from 8 to
16.5 liP, convertibles
(which let you ride or
walk) from 7.6 to
12 HP, and attachments

professors, from murderers to Quakers .. All U.
to mow, move snow,
S. Presidents from Herbert Hoover on admitted
.,
,.
plow, cult ivate, etc.
DEATH ENDS ASHOW BUSINESS EPIC
soft spots in their funnybones for this puckish,
'I
I
Come in and test
NEW YORK - Joe E. Lewis was a semi..,;tammering, toughest-drinking star of all
Gravely's all-gear
drive today.
magnificent drunk, a lovely man who hadn't an time.
+++
enemy In the world since the one Prohibition era
Joseph p. Kennedy called us shortly after
sr AN Perry, jWlior righthander, apparently established a
InCident in which he nearly lost his life .. The Ja~k Kennedy had been chosen Democratic new school strikeout record this spring. In 11 games on the mound
ugly, evil, vicious sign of all dedicated candidate for the Presidency: 'ile had laughed (nine were complete games) -Perry whiffed 112 batters in 72 inracketeers came to the surlace in 1927 when, lhrough a Lewis show in Miami Beach several nings. That's an average of nearly 11 strikeouts per contest. Perry
while the
of Machine Gun Jack McGurn's weeks before the convention, and Joe E. had
walked 35, aUowed 21 runs and 50 hits, and gave up only 11 earned
mob-owned nightclub, he tpoKa booking at $1,000 us~d a small joke about Joe Kennedy going to
runs. Officially, he faced 257 batters .
a week ina Chicago cafe.
by arivalhood ... buy the United States for his son Jack; Joe had
+++
.
'!be lUthy McGurn told
he'd never live to taughedheartilyaboutthat - healwaysenjoyed
DON'T forget this afternoon's open house activities at the new
~ conect the $1,000 if he took e jOb, \Jut Joe took it Wlexpected emphasis on hi! fabulousJ orlune - Chamber of Commerce home, 16 State St. Visitors will be ac·
mftway ... '!be result Is weU known, of course: but now he did not wish !hat joke to be aired on cepted between 1 and 4 p.m.. .. Another reminder, the Delta
HHHCOMING
McGurn's hired filth beat and slashed Joe E. the coast-to-coast Ed Sulliv.an Show on which Joe Queen will stop along·the Upstream Public Use Area between 2
COLUMBUS
(UPI) - U. S.
In his hotel room Including slicing his throat, E. was booked for the.following Sunday; would and 5 p.m., Tuesday. Gallia CoWJtians will be able to tour the
considered the fatai final touch ... But Joe E. we ask Joe please to consider the subtle em- Queen which has been completely renovated since its last stop in Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, D.lived to become the greatest nightclub star of all barrassment it might cause if voiced outside the the Old French City in August, 1970. TUesday's stop here will be Minn., titular leader of the
Gtii.Vfll ~· Rld!n1
despite an almost impossible hurdle: his throat limited confines of the Miami Beach cafe? We the first of six this summer. Others are scheduled June 24, from . national Demoeratic Party, has
Trtoctor with
been
scheduled
to
speak
at
the
uo• Rot•ry Mower
wu slashed clear through his jugular, which by did, and Joe E. conrided he'd intended to use llle dawn ti1111 a.m.; July 13, from 2-5 p.m.; July 22, from dawn til111
Democratic state dinner here
some portentous stroke of iuck, he was able to jape without thinking of Its marginal but a.m. ; Aug, 10, from 2-5 p.m., and Aug. 19, from dawn tlilll am. June 26, it was announced
.
sunnount ... Joe E. told us one night In Marlon's thought-inciting consequences; of course he While docked here, passengers wlll visit the city and points of Saturday.
OPEN 8 TO S MON. THRU . SAT.
Cafeteria on 6th Ave., where he ate breakfast at 5 would ~nd did drop it from the routine.
interest. .
'
Open Evenings By Appointment
am. regUlarly after his final3 a.m. Copacabana
Joe's gambling was almost as legendary as
++ +
11280 GIRU! EXPECTED
shows, that hospital doctors said his semi· ' his boozing and it' led to his ultimate financial
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Dally Tribune
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Some
conscious impUlse to grasp his bloody throat had 8ecurity: He was about to open In a month at Las and weekly Galiia Times .. . Garland Nibert named chi~f ~b1,280
girls were expected at
miraculously placed the severed jugular ends Vegas. Before such jobs he always took amonth server for Civil Defense unit .. . W. L. lngerick reelected d1stnct
together.
off to rest and rehearse new material ...Huge- VFW commander ... C. R. (Mac) McGinness to head Tri-County Capital University Sunday for
Joe E. knew who had performed to job, but hearted as always, he rec'd a plea from gam- Concert Association ... Harold Bennett reports first ripe tomato the opening of the 25th session of
9.92-2975
Ohio
working In the mo!Hlriented areas, he con- bling racketeer Phil Kastel to please help him of year in Gallia County ... Carol Roush, GAHS Gallia Script Buckeye Girls States.
sidered it life insurance to keep it officiaUy his out at Ills Newport, Ky., gaming joint, The Editor for 1951-52, to attend OU journalism workshop at Athens
secret ,.. The day Machine Gun McGurn died, Beverly Club, which was, Kastel whimpered, . .. Effie Hilyard, 22, and Thad Gardner, 26, OSU journalists, join
Joe E. told us Indeed it was McGurn who had "dying and we need a good shot." ... Joe E. as
TribWle-Times editorial staff .
conunltted the espeCially Vicious trick ... We cite usual did the "favor," and in the bargain went up
the . fairly familiar foregoing simply to em· against the crap tables he'd been told frankly by
phasize that even Joe E. Lewis had one ram· otherpalswere"bust-out,"meanlngfrxed ... But
pagillg animal disguised as a htU,D811 being who be liked Kastel, as he did everyone, and didn't
OUR ESTIMATE
GILES
LEAVING
WASHINGTON (UPI)..,.. The
hated' him enough to try to kiU him ...After that, believe the mobster would bilk him; but he did COLUMBUS (UPI) - The cost of repairing March 1 bomb
it was ail happily downhill.
and Joe E.lost his entire fortune, and who knows
president of the Columbus damage to the U. S. Capitol wiU
Joe E., believe it or leave it for folks who how much that was- it was Joe's only security.
Education Association, Thomas be about $100,000, half the
heard only his latter.years' comic-croak, had Whereupon in ~gas, owner Beldon Kattleman,
A. Giles, lias announced his
beet\ a very·sweet singer of romantic as well as of El Rancho Vegas, knowing Joe's gamblin_g resignation effecUve June 22. original estimate, it was
comedy songs starting in burlesque in a day weaknesses, asked him to confine his gambling Giles, 29, who has headed the disclosed Saturday .
wherein that lowest of entertainment forms to El Rancho Vegas, and Joe E. agreed - and organization for two years, said
maintained delusions of artistry; his throat- again lapped out of his entire and huge salary. he would return to Ohio State president, was to become the
slashing ended Joe's lyric vocal sweetness, and
But as Joe was leaving for the plane at the University to work on a organization 's executive
in custollW'Y contented acceptance of th~ finish of his financial fiasco, Beldon Kattleman graduate degree .
director to head the group after
Inevitable, he turned himself into the legendary handed him his whole salary -he had had his
Jack Burgess, CEA vice Giles leaves.
l£SS 10% OF THIS PRICE
saloon entertainer of aU American time.
staff keep a complete record of Joe E.'s losses at
11 wasn't easy; he had difficulty· unto his dice,andrefusedtotakehismoney .. ."It was Joe
· final coma pronouncing many word.~ in a fashion 'E.'s final access to his own large but vulnerable
new-lound adnlil:ers considered a negative finances.
~
tribute to his humble gutter _beginnings; it was
Joe's closest friend all his life was Chicago
just tllat Joe had lost conltol of many of the Federa!JudgeAbeMarovitz(andletnooneelse
muscles and cords which the rest of Ill? take ·for take credit for being Joe E.'s "best friend" as so
granted.
many now are trying to establish - Joe loved us
· The blithest of aU public spiril:l,, Joe E. all, but Abe was lt) ... Abe. then was his lawyer
.ELEC.
STARnR
practiced and rehearsed more than anyone and decided the negative Kastel incident offset
.
'
DURING
THE
suspected ... With hls accompanist Austin Mack, by the positi~ niceness of the unexpected
affectionate butt of many of his jokes, Joe dug Beldon Kattleman gesture was too fiscaUy scary
MONTH OF
l£SS 10%
into his music and lyrics daily at his Warwick for someone as financially irresponsible as Joe.
Hotel sulte...He bought more new material than So he convinced the abrasive-voiced clown never
JUNE
Q~ THIS PRICE!
Due to mote la~orable economu;
any other comedian and he was, unexpectedly, a· to take his own paychecks again ... Abe Invested
con d •\10ns the mteres t ra te on
perceptively accurate editor of phrases and tllem wisely, gave Joe a generous allowance
F'edera l lar~d Ban~ LOilrlS has bl!(! n
wotds and ideas he ·knew he couldn't ~andle until the time came years ago when the great
lowered We haVe c~en lowered \he
3% HORSEPOWER
•r~ terest rate on o~er 4.000 ujst ·
vocally ·or philosophically · ... H~ dtd so comedian was secure for life.
'
•ng loans Just another of the
magnlficenUy well by a comic song w1th a fresh . Joe E. earned his thousands of friends, and
milny bj!nelits ol a Federal land
Bank Loan!
idea behind It that many song writers wh~ had :they were friends, and also ea~d his tragically
So - nov. YOUR rnwest should
nations for ditties apart from the ObVIOUS Tin bad healiJ!IJ!eae last,dozen years: No One we've
be grea ter In obta r n,r~g the loan
Pan Alley cliches, wrote for Joe: Frank Loesser ever known drank as much, enjoyably; even
you ·ve needed lor lar'm e~pans i on
of "Guys &amp; Dolls" fame wrote "Poo~ Uttie when he had his massive ~troke, Joe refused to
and •mproYeme r11 s
LESS 10%
Felruary" for Joe and wouldn:l take ~ c~nt.
quit despite doctors' flat orders; then when his
CaU your Federal land Bank Man·
aser tod&lt;Jy He is anxious to a55rsj
Joe E. had a far more sensitive perceptiOn of diabetes became a desperate danger, Joe
OF THIS PRICE
you wr \h your financial requirewbat made people smile than his raffish mid' wouldli't stop.
ments
WewerewithJoe in P. J. Clarke's two nights
'night companions believed ... 1Je remained loyal
to certain cerebral clownings that escaped before he went into his terminal coma ... He was
' rowdier guffaws; lh~ Joe would deliver and 'almost inarticulate butasked for the lady,in our
upon the Imperfect tribute ·of silence, would life, who, some 24 years ago, wore a hint of an
cc.nment lhrougb llle collective Sht'Ugs, "'That · Indian-princess hairdo at the Copacabana
· joke doesn't get a big laugh -just intellectual ringside one midnight, and Joe prompUy dubbed
, "Your Farm Supply Super Market"
Jlodl"; and~ was right; it also wu one of the her "Ramoni." ... "How's Ramona," Joe asked
CLYDE B. WALKER,.Mgr.
•
reuons lis fans ranged from llle bwns and bad that last midnight we ever were to see this
19 Locust Street
Gallipolis, Ohio
Gallipolis, Ohio .
ladles all the way up to pedants.
marvelo11s man who give so much laughter to
Phone 446-0203
Joe's friends .ranged from prostitutes to his own special world ... Tbe King is ~d - and
Prelltlents: froni l'qrtenders to college there Ia no succeuor.

star

'S

A 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.
A400 baler is dependable. You'll lake it for
granted as it turns out thousands of bales
without a miss. It's built right to bale right,
and stay right as _long as the crop is there.
A 400 baler Is versatile. Tested in every .
type of. crop in every part of the country, il
will handle anything you've got to bale. AI·
lalla, straw, prairie hay, sudan, cane, or even

11WWN SH£1dj

I

NEW INTERNATIONA[
PERFORMANCE·
RATED

•.

·i .Voice

concerned about a faltering
campaign. The aide said
Hughes admits he is a long shot
for the nomination but cited a
rise in public "recognition
fac tor" for Hughes from 11 per
cent in January to 48 per cent
at the present.

( NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

,.

'
~----------------------

former Iowa governor was

How Pair Scored a Top

Pa~senger

'

hijacker tu let all the ps 1 ..
gers go and while they IIIII tile
dead man were being removed,
Zito climbed Into the frail!.

;eel

.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

CHECK THESE VALUES!

•204'

26"

We

You Could

5

8 HORSE POWER

SAVE

·TRACTOR
M_OWER

10%

)2"

TRAIL BIKE

•181'

5

.CENTRAL SOYA OF OHIO -·

�,_

-·
22- The Sunday Times· ~ntinel, SWlday, June 13, 1971

Insects and Disease Have Good Start in MeigS
.

BY C. 'E. BLAKESLEE
Ext. Agent, Agrl.
POMEROY - Insect and
dise•se problems are getting a
good start In Meigs CoWlty
already this ·summer. Cereal
leaf beetle on oats has been
identified on three farms.
The problem is, do you spray
and weigh the oats down, or do
you just hope that the beeUes
~on ' t consume your crop?
Spraying is not recommended
Wltil two larvae are found on
every stem. In northern Ohio, of
course, aerial spraying is used,
but with small fieldS it is difficult.
Corn samples were submitted
to the plant disease laboratory

last week but they were
negative to Southern Corn Leaf
l;llight. They did show evidence
of flea beeUe damage. Flea
beeUes usually do not damage
corn tQo much after the corn
really starts growing.
Even our recreation-minded
people may have problems. The
camping season is in full swing
with many already taking to the
rough. One of the problems
facing campers and hikers is
pests - that is, the 6- and 8legged ones. Chiggers, ticks,
wasps, and mosquitoes can be a
real problem. One of the best
ways to keep . pests away is
protection. Here are some
things you can do to protect

'

yoursell, according to Richard
L. Miller, Entomologist, Ohio
State University.
Use a repellent. It has been
known for years that oil of
citronella repels ·mosquitoes.
Si nee WW II, some real ef.
fective materials have been
developed. One of these is N, Ndiethyl-metatoluamide or OFF.
It's one of the most effective
mosquito repellents and it also
works against ticks and
chiggers. It losts longer on the

.

NEW IN FARMING .
·

nearly three times the percentage of active ingredient as
the other formulations, so it
really is the best buy but may.
not be as convenient to ·use. I
don't know about you, but I'm
looking for protection, not
convenience.
You often hear people say
repellents just don 't seem to
give them protection very long.
Could be true, because the
P.rotection period depends upon
skin and is more resis.tanl to two factors: (1) the minimum
removal by rubbing and wiping.
OFF is sold in an aerosol can,
roll-on, foam, and liquid ' forand (2) rate of loss of the
mulation.
repellent down to the minimum
The liquid formulation has effective dosage. We lose the

'•

BY }OHN COOPER
SoD Conservation SerVIce
PI'. PLE~T .:_ A. C.
Bingham, Jr., who'owns a farm
on Road Fork of Ohio Eighteen
Mile Creek, is planning tO build
a pond and do other conservation work. .
We recentlv helped him with a

Lay of the Land
conservation plan for all his
land and a feasibility study as to
the best location for a pond on
his farm. Three or four sites
were considered.
In making a selection for a
pond, the soli condition must be
examinerl carefullv and an

impervious soil is most
desirable which . is free from
rock ledges or other features
which might cause leaks. One
site which was considered was
subject to land slipping. That
makes a site Wldesirable.
CHARLES ENGEL, whose
farm is on the head of Kanawha
Sixteen Mile Creek, recently
completed 300 feet of waterway.
This waterway was made in
ocder to confine water and to
carry it to a road culvert. The
waterway' was built behind a
barn and before it was made,
water from an adjacent
watershed spread out all over
the small bottom land area and
caused flooding in the barn.

WIN AT BRIDGE

l

.

·

repellent by rubbing it off,
absorption, and ' evaporation.
The real difference between
people seems to be in the absorption l'ate. Some ~oak it up
quicker. Interesting to note that
lllere is little difference be•tween men and women.
Treating clothing is another
thing to consider. Your clothing
can be treated before going
camping and give you and the
kids tr2-3 tweekts' Hprotection with
one ea men . ere are some

:~~u~:o%~~~~~~:~~~;:;u~e:e~~ ~~n~~~~. t~ ~~~ :ew~ie~~~~

Conservation Actions Planned
The purpose of .the diversion
was to protect a crop field
below. The collected water will
empty into the waterway. This
diversion and waterway. are
part of a complete operation for
this field. The rest of the work
involved installing 1225 feet of
tile along the side of the same
waterway. Such combination of
work as this is quite often
needed in the Monongahela Silt
Loam soils such as are found in
the White Church community.
The drop inlet will be used at
HUGHES' DECISION
the
upper end of the tile line to
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Iowa
Sen. Harold Hughes still is take care of some additional
considering making the race for surface water .
the Democratic presidential
nomina tin and will make a final
decision in October.
An aide to Hughes Friday
denied a published report the
With the construction of the
waterway the water will bypass
the barn.
·
GERALD ROOD AND SON,
near White Church, have
completed a 1,000-foot ·diversion
ditch and a 1200-foot waterway
on the Walden and Don Roush
land nearby. The Roods rent
this land and use it for feed
production at their dairy
operation.

tbbesnpz. onaatephl·nthathsroeaepp;l'no~- pouftdrthye·

"'
cleaning fluid. Another formula
consists of five oz. OFF, three
pints of water and two tbsp. of
naphtha soap;·or five oz. OFF in
three pints of dry-deaning fluid.
With the soap mixtures,
dissolve the doap (don't use
detergent) in the water and add
the repellent slowly while
stirring vigorously. With any of
the formula s sa turate the
garments, w~ing them out
lightly and dry thoroughly
before wearing. Do not treat
undergarments. Drug stores
carry benzyl benzoate at around
50pct. per ounce. Three pintsof
the solution will wet an outfit of
socks, shirt, and pants.
IF YOU RAISE peonies,
chances are you've noticed that
ants seem to crawl all over the
buds. The re!ison for this is that
IJ!e ants are feeding on the tiny

droplets of sap. that exudefro~ rosesand:otherplants. You may
the buds. No control is needed . . have tried .the so&lt;alled nonHere are s,omefacts for you to toxic "hit •em with a spray of
think about!. With the help of .water" treatment, but have
DDT, malaria was eradicated foWld it to be a big disapfrom Ceylon by 1950. SUddenly, pointment. Remember, aphids
DDT was abandoned. By 1968, are winged in the early summer
500,000 cases developed and in and new ones fly into an area.
1969 there we.re one million Using the water spray will
cases. Ceylon has about 10 knock off 8 few aphids but
million people. Recently, you're also setting up Ideal
Ceylon ordered 10 million conditions for disease infection.
pounds of DDT to resume a You can solve the aphid
control program.
problem once and for all by
Aphids are still building up on using a systemic insecticide

such as Di..Syston, eyg}m, or
Meta-Systox-R, These Insecticides wiU do the job better
and save your water bill.
There are a number of Odd·
shaped structures appearing on
various trees and shrubs. These
are insect or mite galls. The
pests live Inside the structures.
In general, galls do no economic
damage to a plant, therefore
control measures are not
needed Wlless things get out of
hand. Oak has over600different
kinds of galls.

Bar 30 ·Show Saturday
•

.

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
new Bar-30 Horsemen, Inc.,
Meigs County's newest riding
club, willstagea·show Saturday
evening at its new grounds just
off state Route 7, between
Tuppers Plains and Coolville.

Geldings, 3 yrs and over, Reg.
Q.H. Geldings, 2 yrs and under,
Reg. Appaloosa Stallions, Reg.
Appaloosa Mares, Reg. Ap·
palo·osa Geldings, Non-Reg.
Stock Horse, Reg. Arab~an
Horse, Reg. Half-Arab1an
Horse, and Open All Breed
Rain or shine the events Yearling and under Foal Cla_ss.
scheduled will be held with Mrs. PERFO~CE, Begln~g
Marilyn Anders of Leesburg as at 7:30p.m., 5nbhons and pme
judge . The show is a money ($8, 6, 4, 2 and ribbon);
Southeastern Ohio Horse Show Entry fee, $2, (Youth_classes 50
Assn . approved event. The cents, trophy and 5 nbbo~s) classes:
Walk· Trot Pony Class, r1der 8
HALTER, Beginning at 5 p. yrs and under, Sh_ow Horse,
m., entry fee 50 cents, five Western Equipment;
ribbons- Western Show Horse, Registered Quarterhorse
Western Pl. Pony (Wider 48"), Pleasure; Flag Race; Western
Western PI, Pony (48" and Pleasure Pony (Wider 48")
under 56") , Reg. ~rterhorse rider 12 yrs or Wider, Western
Stallions, Reg. Q.H. Mares, 3 Arabian Pleasure Horse (halfyrs and over, Reg . Q.H. Mares, Ara!)s included), Western
2 yrs and under, Reg. Q.H. Pleasure Pony, (48" and under

.

56"), rtder undefl.6 yrs.

Western Stake Race, Show
Horse Enghsh Equipment,
Walk-Trot Horse Class, Rider 8
yrs and under, Youth Horsemanship,_13 lhru 15 years,
Egg and Spoon, Ride and Run,
Open Wes~n Pleasure Class,
Jrs . to. Ride, Youth Horsemansh1p, 12 yrs and under,
English Pleasure Horse, PickUp Race, Appaloosa Pleasure
Horse, Youth Horsemapsh\P• 16
thru 19 yrs., Open Relhlng,
WesternPieasureHor~, -Barrel

Race, W_estern Semor Horsemansh1p and Open Trail
Class.
In registered classes, proof of
registration must be show. All
classes (contest) e!ectricaUy
timed; no money paid in clasaes
wi Ill less than five entrillS.

NORTH
.63

IZ

{D)

¥J
.Q1098S2
.KQ94

EAST
.KIO

WEST
.Q98542
.K9863

.7

• 8

SOUTH

¥AQI074

.K3

.7532

.AJ7

"52

• AJ64
• AJ106

North-South wlnerable
West North Ea.t South
Pa!IS
l ¥ Dble
3¥
4•
Pass Pass
4¥
4 N.T. Dble 5 ..
Pus P88s
Dble Pa"
5¥
Pass Pass 6 •
Dble Pass
Pass Pass
Opening lead- ¥ 6
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
When today's hand was
dealt in an Arkansas dupli·
cate, the N o r t h players
passed because thmr suit
was too poor for a weak twodiamond caU. East invarIably opened with one heart,
South would double, West
would jump to three or four
hearts and the final contract

would usually be four hearts
doubled and made by East
or live diamonds doubled
and made by North.
The bidding in the box
shows how one North-South
p air scored a top. West's
jump to three hearts was a
trifle inadequate. North was
able to bid four diamonds.
This was passed to West. He
went to four hearts.
North's four no-trump was
a very unusual form of the
unusual no-trump and told
his partner that he held four
clubs in addition to five or
. six djamonds. East doubled
and South went to five clubs
because he would play the
hand and he felt the 4-4 fit
might yield an extra trick.
West bid five hearts, North
passed and South tried a
slam bid which was doubled.
A s p a d e opening would
have defeated the contract,
but West opened a heart.
South won the second trick
with the spade ace, played
dummy's nine and king of
c l u b s and noted the bad
break. Then he led a diamond, finessed with his jack,
ruffed his last heart, drew
trumps to discard dummy's
last spade and made the rest

OUR

of the tricks with the diamonds .

UN ICO

tza B;J :11~tW!&amp;Il

FIRST LINE

The bidding has been:
West
North
East South
Dblc
IN.T.
I ¥
Dble
Pass
Pass
You, South, hold:
.K 7 3 2 ¥54 .K93 .QJ6 2
What do you do now?
A-Redouble. Tell your partner you have derense against
any suit they run to.

BUY ONE TIRE .AT
REGULAR PRICE

'

Get Second
Tire At•••

TODAY'S QUESTION
You redouble. We st and
North pass and East r uns to
two diamonds. What do you
do now?

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

·-------•.•....•.• ....
,.,

In 1935 Jim Braddock decisioned Max Baer to win the
heavyweight boxing championship.

PRICED NOW
FOR A SELLOUT!

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. . . These are our FIRST LINE tires including
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Sale Starts Today!
ALL TIRES MOUNTED FREEl
SERVICE STATION OPEN 24 HOURS- 7 DAYS
.
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'

Landmark Will Cool It For Your NoW

Air
Conditioner
·
.

Field proven in
every crop
corn stalks. You name it and there's a 400
right for the job.

PH. 992·2176

POMEROY, OHIO

RHdy •nd. 1bl1 to gii(1 you compiiJtiJ hay tool SflivlN!- -·~
•

SEE OUR BIG
SELECTON

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 conditio'ns. 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 new replaceable Swedish steel twine knife, the tungsten
carbide shearing knives, the rubber mounted
pickup teeth, and other 400 firsts.

Meigs .Equipment Co.

ltAmLEEN KOEBEl,

GALUPOLIS -Two awards were made during Holzer
Medical Center School of Nursing graduation exercises
Friday night at First Baptist Church here. Voted outstanding
student by the faculty and student body was Sharon Sheets,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Sheets, Centenery. Miss ·
!Rieelll was presented a $50 check from the Holzer Medical
Center Clinic by Holzer Medical Center Executive Vice President John W. Rafferty. Receiving llle award for the
highest scholastic average was Miss Kathle'en Koebel,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John M. Koebel of Gallipolis. She
also rectrved ·a $50 check provided by tbe Gallla CoWlty
· Medical Society frotri Rafferty.

Med Degrees
•
Just Family
To the Treats

degrees . Richard wlll do
residency at University
Hospital; wife Vicki will intern
at Children's Hospital. .
Vicki's degree began the third
generation of doctors. Her
grandfather, father, two WlCies
COLUMBUS (UPI) - For and one aunt are graduate~ of
Richard and Vicki Treat ' ' the OSU School of Med1c1ne.
. .
'
medical degrees were just Richard has two phySICians m
another family affair.
his family.
The couple, both 25, was Vicki's aunt, Dr. Mary OWen
graduated from Ohio State Whitacre , roamed · to . a
University's School of Medicine physician, is the Marietta city
Friday with their medical health commissioner.

95
and up

Cool Low Prices On All Sizes In Stock.
A site for every purpose 5,000, 7,000, , .
10,200, 12,000, 15,000, .18,000, 24,000 and .
29,000 BTU. We install!
in · whole
house air eon!litioning.
Specialists

We can cool it tor yvu - JV!obile
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Factory trained service men for
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Call,992-2181.

POMEROY O
LANDMARK
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.

Serving Meigs, Ga111a ana ~son Counties
·
Store Open Mon .• Sat. Untlt6 P.M.

PhOne 992 -2181
.

I

Killed in Hijack Attempt

NEW YORK (UPI) _ /1 young.Negro hijacked a Trans WOrld look into the passenger section
·m the cockpit throug_h a oneAtrnnes jet to New York Saturdq, but was wounded in fllghtand fro
window. While the passentaken Into custody w.hen the plane landed, Apassenger was shot to Way
ers
g were unloading, the crew
de.athwhenthehi••ckertookoverthejetinChicago.
.·
"'
caUed tbe control center.
While the hijlic;ker was COIIlliU!nd\lerin8 tbe pla:ne and or- Zlto, 39 , of Cary, Ill., who is
dering the passel)gers off at Chicago's O'Hare ~t, a ~- S. normally stationed at O'Hare to
deputy marshal crawled through the cockpit window and hid on make sure firearms are not
board the jet. Thirty minutes after the plane topk off fro!" , brought on board pilines,
Chicago, Deputy Marshal Joseph Zlto stepped out of the cockpit climbed through the cockpit
and exchanged gunshots with the hijacker. The rna~ was wounded window and waited inside the
in the shoUlder.
·pilot's cabin W1til after the
.
James,
·N.Y.,
and
stewardess
The susliect, identified as
f F d plane tool&lt; off.
·
Catharine Culver, 24, o on ·
Gregory White, 23, of Chicago,
The 727 jet was flown to New
was taken to . the Queens Dui-Lac, Wis.
York, its .original destination,
. 1 Elder said while they were on
General Hospital after arnva
h d because the hi]'acker wanted
In New· York and., was reported the ground in Chicago, he ear another plane. He told the
a girl scream "he's got_a gun."
in fair ·condition.
uld captain he did not think the 727
The three-man crew' a The pilot said the crew co
stewardess. and Zlto escaped
unharmed dowri the plane's
chute when the 727 landed at
New York's Kennedy Airport.
The hijacker slide down the
chute moments later and was
arrested when he reached the
ground.
The hijacker boarded TWA
Flight 358 at O'Hare Friday
night and demanded to be taken
to North Vietnam. In a schuffle
EVER see or/ bear of a 35-foot long sn~tk.e1
that followed he fired at least
three times, fataUy injuring one Shaffer,-Rt.l, Crown City, while in the Times-Sentinel office ~ne
day last week, showed us a 31-year-old newspaper .chppmg
passenger.
The victim, who )VaS not (Huntington Advertiser, June 'tl, 1940) telling of such a thing.
+ ++
immediately Identified, was
IT
was
an
Associated
Press
story, datelined Cincinnati. It
shot once in the head and once
read: "Great-ious ·snakes alive, and where's Frank Buck!
in the back.
"The Cincinnati zoo had a letter today from Mildred Blazer,
The rest of the passengers
were allowed to leave the Gallipolis, asking if it were 'interested' in a 35-foot rep:ile
plane, and it then took off with assertedly slithering over the hills of her parents' farm, 12 miles
the hijacker and five others south of there.
aboard.
"I was in the woods locating logs," she wrote, "when I
The crew was identified as stepped up to what I thought to be a log - until it moved off. It was
Capt. Robert E. Elder, 42, of rusty black or brown in color, about 10 or 12 inches through and
Stamford, Conn.; . Jst Officer about 35 feet in length.
Ronald J. Dupuis, 31, of
"A snake of immense size has been seen previously by my
Sparta,. N.J.; flight engineer father and several others. If you are interested, let me know:"
Don E. Welshimer of St.
"We're interested all right," commented Ned Hastings of the
zoo's public relations staff, "but I'm just a little afraid ..."

-------------------.
I

along Broadway !

. ·~
BY JACK O'BRIAN

I

+++

COACH Jim Osborne's Gallipolis Blue Devils baseball team
established a new school victory record during the past campaign. The 1971 Blue Devils, although finishing third In the final
Southeastern Ohio League standings, won 15 and lost 5 overall,
and advanced all the way to the Class AA District finals. Official'
baseball records were started at GAHS in 1941. Previous number
of wins in one season was·13 - that was last year (13-4) and in 1958
(13-4). The 1955 Blue Devils were 12-5, and the 1949 Blue Devils
were 12-3-1.

jet could .make the trans- the hijacker hid behind sepa.Pacific trip to· North Vietnam. rati ·seats inf tbe ofplane,
be' afraid
sh t
1
A 707 jet was waiting at to move or ear
tng o .
ded
z·t 'd
hots were
Kennedy in case it was nee . . 1o sa1 seven s
The hij acker sa· t WI'th M'ISS f'1red tn
· a11 , ·me luding· "three
at·
·
Culver iri the passenger section, us.'' Zlto said he and Dupuis,
but about 30 minutes out of who also came out into the
Chicago be got up to check the passenger section for a short
rear of the plane.
time, fired four shots.
When he left the stewardess,
Zito jumped out of the cabin The hijacker forced his way
and fired two shots. The onto the plane at O'Hare and
hijacker ·fired back, but Zito when asked for his ticket, he
said he believed the suspect pulled a gun. The dead
had been wounded in the passenger was apparently shot
h
when he made a move toward
exc ange.
h
d
30
the hijacker.
For the next our an
·
te
Zit
M'
Cui
d.
The crew convinced the
mmu s, o, Iss
ver an

Elder said in addition to
asking to go to Vietnam, tbe .
man. demanded $15,000 and a
machinegun with a · lot o£
ammunition.
· Police in Chicago · took a
black woman Into custody
because she had been seen •
talking to the suspeCt shcrtly
before the hijack. But she wu
released later ·when pollee said ....
she had only been a bystander.
The flight originated in
Albuquerque, N.M:, and was
scheduled to fly to New York's
LaGuardia Airport, but went to
Ke nnedy instead.

wa~

ANOTHER WEEK
COLUMBUS I UPI) - The
week of June 14-20 ,has been
proclaimed "Welc"ome a Visitor
Week" by Gov. John J. Gilligan.
Gilligan said he named the
week in support of the Society of
American T?avel Writers'
national program, ' ~be a
Sidewalk Ambassador.'' The
society has estimated some 14.3
million tourists from other
coWltries and 123.3 American
will tour the United

New Hope
Mr. Orville Cornelison from
Cincinnati called his sister-inlaw , Mrs. Gladys Cooper
Saiurday, saying he is home
and feeling good and would be
up soon.·
Mr. and Mrs. Larry C. Smith
and Ada Keels attended the
graduation of the rormer 's
daughter, Brenda Kay.
After graduation at Rio
Grande Sunday the following
were guests of Mr . and Mrs.
Larry C. Smith, daughter, and
Ada Keels: Mr . and Mrs. Lloyd
Keels and daughters, Cin·cinnati; Mr. Dewy Keels, Mr.
John Gamble, Mr. and Mrs.
Warron Skidmore, Evergreen ;
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Spence;,
daughters, Betty, Terry, Robin
and Sue from Gallipolis.
Mrs. Charles Howard from
Jackson was calling on Mrs.
Mary Howard after attending
Mrs. BWlch's funeral.

We've never seen traetors

that hold up like a Gravely •.
And so many models
.. . riders from 8 to
16.5 liP, convertibles
(which let you ride or
walk) from 7.6 to
12 HP, and attachments

professors, from murderers to Quakers .. All U.
to mow, move snow,
S. Presidents from Herbert Hoover on admitted
.,
,.
plow, cult ivate, etc.
DEATH ENDS ASHOW BUSINESS EPIC
soft spots in their funnybones for this puckish,
'I
I
Come in and test
NEW YORK - Joe E. Lewis was a semi..,;tammering, toughest-drinking star of all
Gravely's all-gear
drive today.
magnificent drunk, a lovely man who hadn't an time.
+++
enemy In the world since the one Prohibition era
Joseph p. Kennedy called us shortly after
sr AN Perry, jWlior righthander, apparently established a
InCident in which he nearly lost his life .. The Ja~k Kennedy had been chosen Democratic new school strikeout record this spring. In 11 games on the mound
ugly, evil, vicious sign of all dedicated candidate for the Presidency: 'ile had laughed (nine were complete games) -Perry whiffed 112 batters in 72 inracketeers came to the surlace in 1927 when, lhrough a Lewis show in Miami Beach several nings. That's an average of nearly 11 strikeouts per contest. Perry
while the
of Machine Gun Jack McGurn's weeks before the convention, and Joe E. had
walked 35, aUowed 21 runs and 50 hits, and gave up only 11 earned
mob-owned nightclub, he tpoKa booking at $1,000 us~d a small joke about Joe Kennedy going to
runs. Officially, he faced 257 batters .
a week ina Chicago cafe.
by arivalhood ... buy the United States for his son Jack; Joe had
+++
.
'!be lUthy McGurn told
he'd never live to taughedheartilyaboutthat - healwaysenjoyed
DON'T forget this afternoon's open house activities at the new
~ conect the $1,000 if he took e jOb, \Jut Joe took it Wlexpected emphasis on hi! fabulousJ orlune - Chamber of Commerce home, 16 State St. Visitors will be ac·
mftway ... '!be result Is weU known, of course: but now he did not wish !hat joke to be aired on cepted between 1 and 4 p.m.. .. Another reminder, the Delta
HHHCOMING
McGurn's hired filth beat and slashed Joe E. the coast-to-coast Ed Sulliv.an Show on which Joe Queen will stop along·the Upstream Public Use Area between 2
COLUMBUS
(UPI) - U. S.
In his hotel room Including slicing his throat, E. was booked for the.following Sunday; would and 5 p.m., Tuesday. Gallia CoWJtians will be able to tour the
considered the fatai final touch ... But Joe E. we ask Joe please to consider the subtle em- Queen which has been completely renovated since its last stop in Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, D.lived to become the greatest nightclub star of all barrassment it might cause if voiced outside the the Old French City in August, 1970. TUesday's stop here will be Minn., titular leader of the
Gtii.Vfll ~· Rld!n1
despite an almost impossible hurdle: his throat limited confines of the Miami Beach cafe? We the first of six this summer. Others are scheduled June 24, from . national Demoeratic Party, has
Trtoctor with
been
scheduled
to
speak
at
the
uo• Rot•ry Mower
wu slashed clear through his jugular, which by did, and Joe E. conrided he'd intended to use llle dawn ti1111 a.m.; July 13, from 2-5 p.m.; July 22, from dawn til111
Democratic state dinner here
some portentous stroke of iuck, he was able to jape without thinking of Its marginal but a.m. ; Aug, 10, from 2-5 p.m., and Aug. 19, from dawn tlilll am. June 26, it was announced
.
sunnount ... Joe E. told us one night In Marlon's thought-inciting consequences; of course he While docked here, passengers wlll visit the city and points of Saturday.
OPEN 8 TO S MON. THRU . SAT.
Cafeteria on 6th Ave., where he ate breakfast at 5 would ~nd did drop it from the routine.
interest. .
'
Open Evenings By Appointment
am. regUlarly after his final3 a.m. Copacabana
Joe's gambling was almost as legendary as
++ +
11280 GIRU! EXPECTED
shows, that hospital doctors said his semi· ' his boozing and it' led to his ultimate financial
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Dally Tribune
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Some
conscious impUlse to grasp his bloody throat had 8ecurity: He was about to open In a month at Las and weekly Galiia Times .. . Garland Nibert named chi~f ~b1,280
girls were expected at
miraculously placed the severed jugular ends Vegas. Before such jobs he always took amonth server for Civil Defense unit .. . W. L. lngerick reelected d1stnct
together.
off to rest and rehearse new material ...Huge- VFW commander ... C. R. (Mac) McGinness to head Tri-County Capital University Sunday for
Joe E. knew who had performed to job, but hearted as always, he rec'd a plea from gam- Concert Association ... Harold Bennett reports first ripe tomato the opening of the 25th session of
9.92-2975
Ohio
working In the mo!Hlriented areas, he con- bling racketeer Phil Kastel to please help him of year in Gallia County ... Carol Roush, GAHS Gallia Script Buckeye Girls States.
sidered it life insurance to keep it officiaUy his out at Ills Newport, Ky., gaming joint, The Editor for 1951-52, to attend OU journalism workshop at Athens
secret ,.. The day Machine Gun McGurn died, Beverly Club, which was, Kastel whimpered, . .. Effie Hilyard, 22, and Thad Gardner, 26, OSU journalists, join
Joe E. told us Indeed it was McGurn who had "dying and we need a good shot." ... Joe E. as
TribWle-Times editorial staff .
conunltted the espeCially Vicious trick ... We cite usual did the "favor," and in the bargain went up
the . fairly familiar foregoing simply to em· against the crap tables he'd been told frankly by
phasize that even Joe E. Lewis had one ram· otherpalswere"bust-out,"meanlngfrxed ... But
pagillg animal disguised as a htU,D811 being who be liked Kastel, as he did everyone, and didn't
OUR ESTIMATE
GILES
LEAVING
WASHINGTON (UPI)..,.. The
hated' him enough to try to kiU him ...After that, believe the mobster would bilk him; but he did COLUMBUS (UPI) - The cost of repairing March 1 bomb
it was ail happily downhill.
and Joe E.lost his entire fortune, and who knows
president of the Columbus damage to the U. S. Capitol wiU
Joe E., believe it or leave it for folks who how much that was- it was Joe's only security.
Education Association, Thomas be about $100,000, half the
heard only his latter.years' comic-croak, had Whereupon in ~gas, owner Beldon Kattleman,
A. Giles, lias announced his
beet\ a very·sweet singer of romantic as well as of El Rancho Vegas, knowing Joe's gamblin_g resignation effecUve June 22. original estimate, it was
comedy songs starting in burlesque in a day weaknesses, asked him to confine his gambling Giles, 29, who has headed the disclosed Saturday .
wherein that lowest of entertainment forms to El Rancho Vegas, and Joe E. agreed - and organization for two years, said
maintained delusions of artistry; his throat- again lapped out of his entire and huge salary. he would return to Ohio State president, was to become the
slashing ended Joe's lyric vocal sweetness, and
But as Joe was leaving for the plane at the University to work on a organization 's executive
in custollW'Y contented acceptance of th~ finish of his financial fiasco, Beldon Kattleman graduate degree .
director to head the group after
Inevitable, he turned himself into the legendary handed him his whole salary -he had had his
Jack Burgess, CEA vice Giles leaves.
l£SS 10% OF THIS PRICE
saloon entertainer of aU American time.
staff keep a complete record of Joe E.'s losses at
11 wasn't easy; he had difficulty· unto his dice,andrefusedtotakehismoney .. ."It was Joe
· final coma pronouncing many word.~ in a fashion 'E.'s final access to his own large but vulnerable
new-lound adnlil:ers considered a negative finances.
~
tribute to his humble gutter _beginnings; it was
Joe's closest friend all his life was Chicago
just tllat Joe had lost conltol of many of the Federa!JudgeAbeMarovitz(andletnooneelse
muscles and cords which the rest of Ill? take ·for take credit for being Joe E.'s "best friend" as so
granted.
many now are trying to establish - Joe loved us
· The blithest of aU public spiril:l,, Joe E. all, but Abe was lt) ... Abe. then was his lawyer
.ELEC.
STARnR
practiced and rehearsed more than anyone and decided the negative Kastel incident offset
.
'
DURING
THE
suspected ... With hls accompanist Austin Mack, by the positi~ niceness of the unexpected
affectionate butt of many of his jokes, Joe dug Beldon Kattleman gesture was too fiscaUy scary
MONTH OF
l£SS 10%
into his music and lyrics daily at his Warwick for someone as financially irresponsible as Joe.
Hotel sulte...He bought more new material than So he convinced the abrasive-voiced clown never
JUNE
Q~ THIS PRICE!
Due to mote la~orable economu;
any other comedian and he was, unexpectedly, a· to take his own paychecks again ... Abe Invested
con d •\10ns the mteres t ra te on
perceptively accurate editor of phrases and tllem wisely, gave Joe a generous allowance
F'edera l lar~d Ban~ LOilrlS has bl!(! n
wotds and ideas he ·knew he couldn't ~andle until the time came years ago when the great
lowered We haVe c~en lowered \he
3% HORSEPOWER
•r~ terest rate on o~er 4.000 ujst ·
vocally ·or philosophically · ... H~ dtd so comedian was secure for life.
'
•ng loans Just another of the
magnlficenUy well by a comic song w1th a fresh . Joe E. earned his thousands of friends, and
milny bj!nelits ol a Federal land
Bank Loan!
idea behind It that many song writers wh~ had :they were friends, and also ea~d his tragically
So - nov. YOUR rnwest should
nations for ditties apart from the ObVIOUS Tin bad healiJ!IJ!eae last,dozen years: No One we've
be grea ter In obta r n,r~g the loan
Pan Alley cliches, wrote for Joe: Frank Loesser ever known drank as much, enjoyably; even
you ·ve needed lor lar'm e~pans i on
of "Guys &amp; Dolls" fame wrote "Poo~ Uttie when he had his massive ~troke, Joe refused to
and •mproYeme r11 s
LESS 10%
Felruary" for Joe and wouldn:l take ~ c~nt.
quit despite doctors' flat orders; then when his
CaU your Federal land Bank Man·
aser tod&lt;Jy He is anxious to a55rsj
Joe E. had a far more sensitive perceptiOn of diabetes became a desperate danger, Joe
OF THIS PRICE
you wr \h your financial requirewbat made people smile than his raffish mid' wouldli't stop.
ments
WewerewithJoe in P. J. Clarke's two nights
'night companions believed ... 1Je remained loyal
to certain cerebral clownings that escaped before he went into his terminal coma ... He was
' rowdier guffaws; lh~ Joe would deliver and 'almost inarticulate butasked for the lady,in our
upon the Imperfect tribute ·of silence, would life, who, some 24 years ago, wore a hint of an
cc.nment lhrougb llle collective Sht'Ugs, "'That · Indian-princess hairdo at the Copacabana
· joke doesn't get a big laugh -just intellectual ringside one midnight, and Joe prompUy dubbed
, "Your Farm Supply Super Market"
Jlodl"; and~ was right; it also wu one of the her "Ramoni." ... "How's Ramona," Joe asked
CLYDE B. WALKER,.Mgr.
•
reuons lis fans ranged from llle bwns and bad that last midnight we ever were to see this
19 Locust Street
Gallipolis, Ohio
Gallipolis, Ohio .
ladles all the way up to pedants.
marvelo11s man who give so much laughter to
Phone 446-0203
Joe's friends .ranged from prostitutes to his own special world ... Tbe King is ~d - and
Prelltlents: froni l'qrtenders to college there Ia no succeuor.

star

'S

A 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.
A400 baler is dependable. You'll lake it for
granted as it turns out thousands of bales
without a miss. It's built right to bale right,
and stay right as _long as the crop is there.
A 400 baler Is versatile. Tested in every .
type of. crop in every part of the country, il
will handle anything you've got to bale. AI·
lalla, straw, prairie hay, sudan, cane, or even

11WWN SH£1dj

I

NEW INTERNATIONA[
PERFORMANCE·
RATED

•.

·i .Voice

concerned about a faltering
campaign. The aide said
Hughes admits he is a long shot
for the nomination but cited a
rise in public "recognition
fac tor" for Hughes from 11 per
cent in January to 48 per cent
at the present.

( NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

,.

'
~----------------------

former Iowa governor was

How Pair Scored a Top

Pa~senger

'

hijacker tu let all the ps 1 ..
gers go and while they IIIII tile
dead man were being removed,
Zito climbed Into the frail!.

;eel

.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

CHECK THESE VALUES!

•204'

26"

We

You Could

5

8 HORSE POWER

SAVE

·TRACTOR
M_OWER

10%

)2"

TRAIL BIKE

•181'

5

.CENTRAL SOYA OF OHIO -·

�21- The Sundlv Times • Sentmel, Sunday, June 13, 1971

Barg;ains, Bargains and More Bargains In The Tribune. Classifieds
Wanted

Help Wanted

t:XPERIENCED genera. " I LOVE selling Avon It
changed my whole lole "
mechanic, good benefots
That's the feeling shared by
Contact
Harold
Davis,
thousands
of
Avon
Gallipolis Motor Co Ph 446·
Representatives
You, too,
3672
103 If
can gel more out of life thos
way You'll earn good money,
won prizes, meet people, have
ACTIVE retired gentleman
fun Wrote or call Mrs Helen
desires room and board, town
Yeager, Box 172, Jackson,
or country, willing, to work so
Ohio Ph 286 4028
as to be helpful. Write P. 0
133 6
Box 453, Galllpolos, Ohio,
45631
SALESPEOPLE wanted only
138 3
people Interested m makrng
12 to $1500 per month Call
area code 304 57 4 2791
FREE USED clothing for
134 6
anyone who Is In need Church
of Christ, Bidwell Ph 388 JANITOR for publoc bulidong
8429 or 388 8787
Evenong a~d Sal work Good
138 1
working condltoons Good
pay Prefer semr retrred
BRIAR
PATCH
Kennels
couple but woll consider on
boarding all breeds, large
dovoduals Reply to Box 186,
Indoor outdoor runs Ph 446
Galllpolos, Trobune 825 Thord
4191
Ave, Gall opolis Ohoo
138 1
134 6

- - - - --

FOR LONGER wear keep
carpets clean with Blue
Lustre
Rent
_sleclroc
shampooer Sl Lowl!'i" G C
Murphy Store
138 6
~-----

17 PT Foberglas ski boat, 75 HP
Evtnrude motor, trailer and
all skiing equip oncluded Ph
446 2885
138 3
2

BEDROOM housetraoler ,
Bx37 Make an offer Ph 446
3082
138 2

GOOD quality used mobhe
homes, low down P,ayment,
bank financing Kanauga
Mobole Home Sales, Ph 446
9662
94 If

AGENCY

'
IF YOU are hulldong a new'

home cr remodeling, see us
We are builders Dostrobuto•
for Hotpoonl Apploances .
Allison Electric
'
154 tf

.- - ' - --

--

NEW 1971 ZIG ZAG Sewing
Machme m or1g1nal factory
carton Zog Zag to make
buttonholes sew on buttons,
COLONIAL Maple stereo radoo
monograms, and make fancy
combination, AM F M rad io,
desogns woth just the two st at a
songle doal Left on lay a way
four speakers, 4 speed In
termlxed changer, separate
and never been used W1!1 sell
for only $47 00 cash or credo!
controls Balance $78 60 Use
terms available Phone A46
our lime payment plan Call
446 1028
0665
134 6
138 3

- - -- - -

Office 446-3643
Evenings Call
E-M." Ike" Wiseman 446-3796
E. N. Wrseman 446-451'0
Lookmg For A
Really Nice
Bnck Home?

Very Nrce Older Home
Corner Lot In Vrnton

ONE WITH 3 LARGE
BEDROOMS WALL TO
WALL CARPET IN FOR
MAL ENTRY , D IN lNG
ROOM
AND
LARGE
LIVING
ROOM
EX
CELLEN T FLOOR PLAN

THI S IS A RE AL NI CE
QUI ET STOP WI 'T H LO T S
OF SHADE ON A LAR GE
CORNER
L OT
3
BEDR OOM HOME WITH
NEW BUILT IN KI TC HEN
CARPET ON SOME OF
THE F LO OR S, A NIC E
POR CH BAS EMENT AND
GARA GE FI RS T PE RSO N
WITH $12 900 BUY S IT

ELECTROLUX Vacuum
MODERN WALNUT stereo
Cleaner complete wlfh at
radio comblnaloon, dual
WITH 1112 BATH S, ANO
tachments. cordwmder and
volume control , -4 speakers, 4
BEAUTIFUL
K ITCHEN
pamt spray Used but m 11ke
WITH LOTS OF CABINE TS
speed changer, separate
new cond1t1on Pay $34 45
FLEA MARKET, Bog Bend 68 XL FORD, power and factory
AND BUIL T INS LARGE 2
controls Balance $63 79 Use
12x65 Mobrte Home
air AI condo lion Ph 3677268
CAR
GARAGE
HUGE
cash or budget plan avaolable
Regatta,
Pomeroy
our budget terms Call 446
FAMI
L
Y
ROOM
WHI
CH
IS
137 3
Middleport, June 18, 19, 20
Phone 446 0665
1028
HER ES A V ERY NI CE 2
VERY ATTRACTIVE AND
134 6
Spaces available Write Mrs
138 3
YR OLD 3 BE DROOM
ROOMY AND A LARGE
Rita Lewis, Rt 3, Pomeroy,
HOME WHICH IS JUS'T
FLAT LOT IN AN EX
LI K E
NE W
LARGE
GORDON setters and German 1966 HARLEY XLH Sportster
0hlo, 45769
CELLENT
NEIGH
LIVIN
G
ROOM
AND
$850. 1967 Honda Traol 90, 585
137 3 3 BEDROOM mobile home,
Short haored poonters, pet and
BORHOOD NEAR THE
K I TC HEN
M ETAL
12x60, located In Rio Grande
mo , $350 Ph 446 4895
NEW HO SPITAL
show stock Ph 446 4191
STO RAG E B L DG SK IR
Ph 245 5267
138 3
GARAGE SALE at Bill &amp;
138-1
T ING T V ANTENNA AND
138
3
Kathryn Knotts' residence on
DRA PES STA Y LO CA TED
Kerr Harmburg Rd , second ::-::-:-:-:-:-:---:--:--KEEP G-ARPET cleanong SWEET POTATO, tomato,
IN PARK L ANE ON RT 35
Acreage
For
Sale
ROOM &amp; board for men or
house on left from Kerr
problems small - use Blue
cabbage and hot pepper
152 Acres
retired gentlemen In a private
137 3
Lustre wall to wall Rent
plants Floyd Ent on Rodney ,
Baby Farm- 3A.
home near city Ph 446 9865
eleclrlc
shampooer
Sl
245 5124
T::-H-E~A-=s-=c=-s-o-=11-::lc-e-=loc-a.,..ted-:-:af 95
Modern 3 Bedroom
138 3
Central Supply Co
137 3
If~
MI L E
FRONTAGE
Sycamore Sf, Gallipolis, Ohio
138 6
SEVERAL
HOME
OR
Home
will offer for sale by bid fwo NEW 2 bedroom apartment,
1970 KAWASAKI 500 Mach 111
MOBI L E HOME SIT ES
carpeted, nice, unfurmshed 14 FT RUNABOUT, 25 HP
typewriters. Sealed bids will
EXCELLENT FOR THE
motorcycle Ph 446 1108 after
WANT TO LI VE IN TH E
Inquire at Christi Ann
S
PORTSMAN
OR
be accepted until 12 noon an
motor and tra 1ler Must see to
5 30
COU N'T RY WH ERE TH E
DEVELOPER
Restaurant
June 18, 1971 The equipment
appreciate excel cond Ph
CHI LDRE N CAN H AV E A
137 6
137 6
446 0606
PONY AND MOTHER CAN
offered Is (1) one Underwood
ENJ OY
A
L OV ELY
136 3 PING PONG table, electn c
15. 1ts1 year, one Ill Royal
M
ODERN
3
BE
DROOM
FPP16
1961 year. The 2 BEDROOM upsfaors furn
shuffle
board
bowlong
Bargarn Hunting
HOM E? TRY T HI S ONE apt , private entrance Ph
committee reserves the right
RICE'S NEW &amp;
mach one Ph 446 4416 after 6
lT S 5 Ml OUT AND I T'S A
OWner Anxtous
446-2374 or 446-0284
to reject any or all bids
1373
MOD
E RN WELL K EPT
137 If USED
136-3
To Sell
FURNITURE
HOME WI T H A VERY NI CE
THE STORE woth bargaons 19_7_
1_
H""
o~
N-D_A_3_5_
0 _S_c_r_
a_
m_bler
B UIL T IN KI TC H E N A N D
RIFE'S Queen Bee Restaurant.
L ARGE F AMILY ROOM
galore New 3 pc bedroom
Call 446 2320 alter 4 p m
HERE S
A
LOVELY
5 30 to 12 Pizza $1 60, 1 MOBILE home space, pad
SM AL L HOR SE BAR N AND
suotes $99 95 new 3 pc SOLID
137 5
MODERN
SMALL
3
RACCOO N CK
FRON
delicoous Sub Sandwoches 69c,
patio, 1 mole out Ph 446 3617
maple or cherry bedroom
BEDROOM
HOME
THA
T
TAGE
137 3
136 8
su1tes $249 95 ant1que marble HOOVER spon dryer washong
WILL SUIT YOUR NEED S
top dresser 854 Second, 446
AND
YOUR
PO CK ET
machine, loke new, $125 ,
3 Acres At Cheshrre
BOB'S MOBILE Court traoler
BOOK
VERY
CLEAN
EVELYN'S SALON OF
9523
136 It
set of
Corvette
Rally
lots,
40x70
with
patoos
located
THROUGHOUT
NICE
5 RO OM HOU SE (n eed s
BEAUTY
wheels w1th t1res $90 Ph 446KITCHEN BATH AND F
on Rt 124, Syracuse, Ohoo, 12 1957 VOLK SWAGEN wolh a lew
work) AND 3 ACRES OF
JUNE money savers per
3626
AIR FURNACE , IN AN
FL AT TO ROL L ING LA ND
miles up rover from t:heshore,
manent, tinted, bleacn and
extra parts Call446 2290 after
\373
EX CELLENT
NEIGH
GOOD
FOR
SM AL L
Ohio
Water,
electric
State
normal now $10 Reg $15
4 30 p m
BORHOOD FULL PRICE
M
OB
I
LE
HOM
E
PA RK
"R
c:
E
:-:
D
:-:
U
"
c
"
'E
=
-s
-a
""'
te
a
-n"""'
d-;f
as~
l
wolh
approved
Call
after
4
p
m
New hours 8 30 till B 30 p m
136 3
Sl3 900 AND ITS ON EDGE
$5
900
992 2951
Gobese tablets and E Vap
Operators Peggy Halley,
OF TOWN
107 It HOME by owner, located on
water polls Golllngham Drug
Evelyn Morrow and Sherry
Bargarn Hunter
124 39
Sprow at 446·9580
V1nton, 4 bedrooms kitchen ,
1366 TRAILER space 554 Jackson
Spec tal
l1vmg room dmlng room , _
P_L_A""'S-::T-:-1C
- 1
,e-,-rt,e
--rs- :f-o-r -,b
, -o-a t s
----:----Pike Ph 446 3805
ut1hty room , small basement
Brand New
Butldmg Lots
132 If
Indoor and outdoor sogns, 15c
Ca II 388 8598
SUN--VALLEY Nursery SchOoh
3 Bedroom Srrck
Rt. 141
each, buy just what you need,
134 6
577 Sun Valfey Drive, now FURN apt, 3 rooms &amp; bath , all
3"
soze
Sommons
Ptg
&amp;
W
IS
H I NG FO R A NE W
Edge Of Town
providing full day care al\d
utilities paod, adulls only Ph
HOM
E&gt; THI S ONE WI LL
Offoce
Equop
446
1396
STRAWBERRIES, pock your
chold developmerrt program
BE RE ADY N EX T WE EK 3
446·0322
104
tf
3Sc
box
Claude
Wonlers,
own,
,or pre school children In
4 ACRE S WITH
CITY
132 II
BED ROO M S
L A R GE
Rio Grande, 0
fants excluded Open 6 30 a
WATER
GAS
AND
VERY NI CE KI T CHEN
WE
speclaloze
on
porfraof
and
134 If
m ro 6 p m Monday through APARTMENT for constructoon
SCH OOLS S3 500
A N D O I N I ~ G AREA ll/2
commercoal photography ,
P.A n-1 "
ANn
?
r AR
Fridav Fees $20 for full five
men Pnvate entrance Phone
church weddings, reun1ons,
GAR AGE
ON LARGE
"day week S5 per day II less
446 0756
etc Tawney Sfudoo
F L AT LOT 3 BLO CK S
than live days $3 per day for
102 If
88 If
FR OM NE W HO SPIT AL
Wooded Acres
morning sessions. Ph 446
--=-=-..,...,~-....,--..,.­
IT'S PRIC ED FOR QUI CK
3657
Madge
Hauldren, GOOD toll~ble land - for rent.
SA L E AND OWNER WI LL
Owner . Director, John and
lease or share crop 25 acre 1967 DATSUN P U
HEL P FIN ANCE
RT 588 3 M ILE S FROM
Loredllh
Hau~dren,
tract on Bodwell Rodney Rd
1966 112 T GMC P U
NEW HOSPITAL 2 38
operators
Nearly New 2
20 acres tillable Also tobacco 1967 '" T GMC P U
ACRES OF BEAUT IFULLY
35-lt
allotment of 525 ib for lease
Sedroom Country
WOODED LAND
PER
1963 112 T Chevrolet pockup
- - - - - . , . - ' - -COUNf~Y LIVING
Phone Columbus, 268 1810
FECT
HOME
SI'TES
· ' Home
1965 1'12 T Chevrolet Truck
WOULD SPL I T IN HALF
RALPH.'S Cargel - Upholster)
136 3 1967 Whole Diesel Truck
CITY CONVENIENCES
CI TY'
SCHOOL S
AND
HE RE S A DANDY LI KE
Cleaning ._Service .
Free
YOU can , buy thos good 3 BR
1969 Chev dump truck
WATER
NEW 2 BEDRO OM HOM E
estimates r-h. 446 0294.
home
w1fh
bath
alum1num
1968
o
;,
T
GMC
P
U
ROOMS, weekly
WITH NICE KI TCHEN AND
197-11 SLEEPING
sodong , electric heat, located
1965 1 T GMC
rates Park Central Hotel
BATH ON A L ARGE LOT
on
40
acres
of
land
about
3
ABOUT J MILE FROM RIO
308 tf 1969 GMC 4 T log truck
5'h
ACRE
WOODED
PLOT
miles from Roo Grande If you
1962 'I• T GMC pockup
GR AND E F H A SHOULD
NEIGHBORHOOD
RD
don'
t want all the land fell us
GO 100 PER CEN T ON THI S
SLEEPING ROOMS weekly 1963 1 T GMC
CI
TY
SCHOOLS
53
900
how much you want and we
ON E F ULL PRIC E $12 900
rates, free garage parkong, 1965 112 T Ford P U
l&lt;t:MODELING and painton&gt;
will spill of up Pnced ac
1963 '12 T Chev P U
Good references Ed Sm lth,
Libby Hotel
cording to how much land you
74 If 1969 1 T GMC
256 6935
want
1967 '" T GMC P U
97 It
VACANT LAND
1968 Chev Suburban
15 Acre wooded tract wlfh 2 n1ce
TO CARE for old aged pen.
1962 112 T GMC P U
bu1ld1ng Sites or for mob1le
1968 whole doesel truck
sloner In my home Ph 379
homes
Located near R1o
1965 'I• T GMC P U
2228
Grande
138 3
1967 :o;, T Chevrolet pockup
Othce Phone 446 1694
1963 F600 Ford truck
Evemngs
1966
T GMC pockup
Charles
M Neal446 1546
1961 2 T GMC
J
Mochael
Neal444 1503
1964 3 T GMC
MAID to work In motel Apply
112 T Chev
1966
on person at College Hill
1966 1h T lnl P U
Motel, Rio Grande, 0
1966 '! 2 T Ford P U
136 It
1956 l'h T Chev van
There are two kmds of people who shou ld ne ver do thmg s
Tores - 10 00x20, 12 ply nylon
EXPERIENCED Income tax
lores
$90
Inc
Fed
tax
ompulsovely
Presodents and young peopl e
preparers Tax Corp of
SOMMER'S
G
M
C
America needs part lome
TRUCKS, INC
supervisor Great potent1al
Bulldozer
A person who slee ps th r ough pollf1 cal
Home &amp; Income
]33 Prne Sf
Send resume to Box 187 co
speeche s
LOOKING for a noce 6 rm home
Ph 446-2532
Gallipolis Daoly Trobune
tnqutre about our
on c oly, wolh a full dry base It
241 tf
136 10
Ju st listed 1 Modern three bedroom brock home woth
Pre-School Program
has carpel on l1v and dm rm
central a1r condtf1onmg, one year old Large fr ont room
3 n1ce bdrms , lots of cabmels
HIGH SCHOOL girl wanted lor
USED TKAILEK~
w1th new carpetmg also wood burn1ng f1 replace Pl ent y of
on
kolchenand
much
pan•long
babysitting Call 446 3308
1960 Naloonal 10 x 50, 2 br
Also
good
4
room
house
an
lot,
cabmets In ktfchen, dmmg room fa m1l y room m
1967 Homan 12 x 50, 2 br
after 4 p m
Rent
polentoal
of
$90
per
mo
basement
woth toreplace One bath upstairs an d one bath
' 137 3
1957 Gloder 45 x 8, 3 br
has
8'
x
15'
storage
bldg
Lot
on basement, two car garage, lot 100x1 50 Ha s young fruit
1966 Namco, 52 x 10, 3 br
and a bog 2 car garage Good
513 Second Ave.
1960 Van Dyke, 10 x 50 2 br
frees Proce $26.500
resident ial
ar ea
Prtce
1960 Van Dyke 10 x "50, 2 br
Galltpolts, Ohto
$21 ,000
1965 Kentuckoan , 56 x 10, 3 Br
Modern home two blocks from school woth thr ee
Phones: 446-0496
BUSINESS
1962 Calonoal 50 x 10, 2 br
2Evergreen
bedrooms, large front room w1th carpet Knott y pme
OPPORTUNITY
446-0499
1960 Van Dyke 10 x 40 2 br
paneling
on kotchen also bu ilt on ca binet s Stove,
5
YR
OLD
home
woth
compl
ete
MAN OR WOMAN
All tratlers clean and recon
ser
ot
nearly
new
furniture
r
efrogerator
and drapes go woth hou se Pn ce $1 8 500
Reliable person from this area
d1!10n ed
Ready for oc
llv
rm
12'
x
22
2
noce
bd
to service and collect from
cupancy Free Delovery and
rms, beautoful kolchen
automatic dispensers No ;,INUt:K .)ttWulg Machine Sdles
Three bedroom home on 141 across f rom Gr een sc hool
sel up Tro County Mobole
Pro ce 14,200
experience needed •
we &amp; Servoce All models on stock
Homes, 446 0175
Thos home ha s full basement with natural ga s furn ace,
establish accounts for you
Free
delovery
Service
93 It BARGAIN - 7 rm house , ?lots,
coty
water and large lot ISO front by 250 deep
full base , fuel ool fur , storm
Car, references and $995 00 to guaranteed Models priced
- - · - -- - drs and w1ndows
New
' SlaBS 00
cash
capital from $69 95 French Ci l y ALL TYPES of buoldong
Lot on Tycoon Lake w1th or without trail er
alumonum sodong, also tur
• M&lt;:essary 4 to 12 hours Fabric Shoppe, Singer ap·
materials, block, brock, sewer
Offoce 446-1066
ndure
for
k1
tchen
and
2
weekly nets excellent man· proved dealer, 58 Court 51 Ph
popes, windows, lintels, etc
bdrms Proce $12 700
Evenongs, Call Ron Canaday 446 3636
' thly Income Full lime more
Claude Winters , Roo Grande,
308 If
For local Interview, write, 446 9255
John I Rochards 446 0280
0 Ph 145 5121 alter 5
Mobile Homes
Include telephone number,
Russell D. Wood 446 4618
91 II
69 RICHARDSON , 12'x 60 ,
Eagle
Industries,
3938
GUOD CLEAN LUMP and
same as new A1r condlt1oned
Meadowbrook Road, Sl Louis
stoker coal Carl Wonters. Rio USED
Mobile
Home
$5 600
Perk, Minnesota 55426
Grande Phone 245 5115
Headquarters All s1ze mob1le 69 lmperoal 12' x 60' 3 bdrm
l
138 1
811
homes In stock B &amp; S Mobile
$4,700
Home Sales, Second &amp; Voand,
PI Pleasant, next to Heck's
Small Acreage
Ph 446 OOOH
67 If 5 RM house &amp; 3 A 5 mo fr om
~EW LISTING
town $9,000
LOW. low prlces on oe111w o11'"' 5 RM home and 2 A near Farm, Village, Coly Properly BUY yourself a good lovo~g'
Serta mattresses and bol(
Forst &amp; Olove
Gas sfall on woth all equop
Vonlon Thos IS a bog house and
sprongs Carbon &amp; Snyder
Phone
446 111119
ment, 2 apartments now bemg
nearly new The ~olchen Is nor
Furn , 955 Second Ave Ph
ren t ed ,
lov el y
12x60
completed Thos properly can 5 ~cres
446 1171
hous
elrao
ler
All
f
or
$21,000
be bought as os lor $7,000
NEW LISTING Comfortable 3
3 If
We .,, • m•1or corporation 1n the 5 b1llion dollar vend1n1 mdustry We
bed room home wolh ba t h
Farms
ht~ developed a un1que 'TALKING VENDING MACHINE that IS lak1n1
CORA
New storm doors and wm
the lndultry by storm This is 1 qutllty product d1spens1AI only
71 ACF s· - h Ra ccoon Creek
150
A
Farmer
's
farm
,
516
500
USED
FURNITURE
nttlantlly 1dvtrt1sed sntcks and Cindy
dows and sodtng Located on
bolla
&lt;Od home
76 A close City, $16,000
You thould htvt $ome free t1me and an automobile to St('IIICe and
Georg es Cree k Road Ca ll to
LIKE
new
hide
a
bed
woth
on
and buoldongo, " " I
mtlnt~•n your *QUipment Th is 11 a sound buslnns vent~n
61 A much rd frontage , $8,500
see
nersprong mattress. Electro 50 A Wood Mill Rd 57 ,500
end as sUch w1ll rtqune 1nltiat lve and respon•1b1hty but
EASTERN AVE
ofletS unuwat 1nc:ome pot1nt11l
'Hygiene lank type sweeper 39 A good bldgs $13,500
LARGE
elderly 13 r oom hom e
woth all attachmenls, good 38 A near Mercerv]lle, SS,OOO )5500
I '
In good co ndit ion La rg e
SEVEN r oom home wi th bath
cond1f1on
, enough for 3 or 4 a pi s , 2
ANY HOUR 446-1998
Ni ce porch and lois ol shade
garages
EVE John Fuller 446 3246
NEW FURNITURE
lr ~es
Garage and good
BIDWELL •
garden Alm ost an acre next LOVELY ~~ "nme on 1 A lot
SPECIAL OF THE WEEK - 25 OH 10 rovers ode lot Shade trees,
lo Rl 35
onch Admoral color console
comple,J'
I
" •d , w w
sandy beach and all uhhloes,
carpet
,
water
'
1
...
1ew fur
TV, reg proce $625, sale proce
l11vestment
or
80x380 It , oncludes 100 year
$550 Plenty of free parkong
nace
old house that could be
Busmess
Carbon - Snyder Furn , 955
SELL OR TRADE
restored Located on Mason,
HOME
wo
th
busoness
room
In
L1
KE
new brock home close to
Second Ave Ph 446 1171
W Va , Call Athens 592-1738
127 II
fron
t
PLUS
two
rental
coly
on large lot Features
1377
Ira Hers Home has six rooms
are city water &amp; gas, 2 car
woth two ba ths Located on
garage, full basement, built
busoness
actove
Rt
7
Call
for
NEW
homes
brick
front,
on kol chen , TV r oom , 2 balhs,
WHITE cemer;li , all s1zes !lle m
del
all
s
100'
•230
lot,
buollil'l
kolchen,
w
w carpet &amp; palo o
slack 12" &amp; 15" foeld tile
carpeted If you qudilfy, you
Ranny Blackburn
Ltstmgs NE'edeu
suo lable for hoghway dolchong,
Branch Manager
c '" borrow full amount Barr
concrete
blocks
Conslrucloun , 16 Pone 51, Pb, rlomes, Farms, Lands
GALLIPOLIS BLOCK CO,
4463746 Man lhruFro 91o5
Denver K Hogley, 446-0349
plo 446 2783 A bulterlly IMs rls tn • l(•
Earl Winters, 446·3828
Sa 1 B to 12
97 II
f
_ __
buds on rts (t'~f

Notice

For Sale or Trade

For Rent

- - - - -- - -

- - - - - - --

- - -,..-- - - -

--------

- - - - - -- -

- - - -- -

New GMC

Truck Headquarters

-

Real Estate For Sale

Neal Realty

Wanted To Do

- -----,-

Help Wanted

- - - -- -

USSELL WOOD
REALTOR

Instruction

PRIVATE
INSTRUCTION

PIANO
ORGAN
GUITAR

'I•

446-1066

MASSIE

Realtor. 32 State St
Tel. 446-1998

AND OTHER
INSTRUMENTS

Business Opportunities

For Sale

0. D. PARSONS
JAY SHEPPARD
REALTORS

..

0 LD

0

~

Hobart Dillon, Realtor
Olfoce 446 2674
Howard or Lucolle Brannon
Evenongs 446 1226
Robert Condee, 444 0858

p

DON' T MISS our ealy summer
sale on travel traders, truck
campers ,
campers
and
f1shmg boals Amenca 's No 1
c.qmp1ng trader Service,
qualoly and proce sells our
unlls Camp Conley Slarcralt
Sales, Rl 62, N of PI
Pleasant, W Va
135 If

Happmess
STARTS 1n th1 s electn c bn clf"
home w1th 20 ac r es of land
loca ted l mil e fr 0m c .ty A
dr eam kit chen ove n range,
di shwa sher dm1ng area
ca rpet1ng 3 BR and 1112 tile
bath Part base ment front
porch
Pnc e r educ ed to
$2 1 500 It s a real buy on
today s market

~
~
'

:.TANDARD
&amp; Heating
21 5 Thord Ave , 446 3782
187 If
- ------:--:-:::-•
CARTEI&lt;'S PUJMBING.
AND HEATING
830 Fourth Avenue
Phone 446 3888or 446 4477
155 11
----=:==c-:::-:--~
RUSSELL'S
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
Seploc tank cleanong, electric
sewer cleaning
Ph
446
4782 Gallipolis, 0

Big Acres

Insurance

Acres
LOCATE D near Gal lo po l os
wa t er an d gas ava •l ab le
Ideal fo r budd1 ng

FOR ALL yo ur lnsurMce needs
check wolh your Grange agents
at the Neal Ins Agency, 64
Stale St Agenls for auto, fire,
home owners , hospital and
genera l loaboloty
84·11
- - - -- - -- - NAIIUNWIDE, INSURANCI:
AUTO Fore, lofe, 45 State St,
Wa ldo F Brown , W R Brown,
446 1960
2~ If

l V2 Miles
FROM col y 19' ' acr es good
ro l lo ng land w oth larg e
wooded area, " " story home ,
on need of some r epaor well .
c1ste rn and r ural wat er Ime
Idea l tor mobil e hom e cou r t
or bu1ldmg s1te

L-0-0-K

Services Offered

9 M ILE S from Gallopolos

157
ac r es of good pastur e land
100 acr es f enced and m gra ss
Fa1r bar n house needs so m e
repa1 r pl en ty spnng water ,
fa rm pond 1/2 acre toba cco
base Thmk - you can own
thos fo r less t han S60 per ac r e

SWI SHER S

Plumbong
&amp;
Ele c tr~ c
contractor
We
spec 1al 12e 1n hookmg up rural
wa ter lme system to your
home Completely build your
ba thr oom Call us for com
plel e tree estomate Delb&lt;trt
Swos her, 1809 Chestnut, Ph
446 0468
135 If
'

Immediate
Possession

I'·

E. S. P.

AUTOMOTIVE AIR
CONDITION SERVICE
Rep~1t s and recharging
SMITH BUICK CO
1911 Eastern Ave

EX TR A
S P E CIAL
PR OPERT Y' a nd the pri ce IS DITCHING for water, gas,
sewer lines Russell Plum
reduced S1.500 Ran ch style 3
bong , 446 4782
BR 2 bath , family room ,
11311
formal donong spac ious LR ,
full dovoded ba sement, double
garag e on a leve l well land
scaped la wn

INFORMATION
DEADLINES
EXTERMINATING CO.
5 P M Day Before Publication
Termite &amp; Pest Control
Monday Deadline 9 a m.
WKeelersburg, Ohio
Can!;l!ilatlon &amp; Corrections
Ph 574 6112
Will be accepted until 9 a m lor
52-If
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS
D "p MARTlN &amp; ••n -arer
The Publisher reserves the
•
~
"
Dellwry
Service.
Your right to edol or reject any ads
patronage will be ap . deemed objectional.
The
preclated. Ph 446-046:1
publisher will not be responsoble
Ml for more than one Incorrect
1nsertlon
DANKS TRt:~ St.KVII.I:
RATES
FREE estomates, liability InFor W~nt Ad Service
surance. Prum"g, trimming
5 cents per Word one Insertion
and cavoty work, tree and
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three
stump removal Ph 446 4953
73-tf consecutive InSertions
18 cents per word six con.
secutlve Insertions
RAIKE'S
25 Per Cent Doscount on paid
REFRIGERATION
ads and ads paid wothon 10 days
&amp; AIR CONDITIONING
CARD OF THANKS
~ESIDENTIAL, commercial ,
&amp;OBITUARY
ondustroal. Ph 367 7200
11711
Sl SO for SO word monomum
Each addltoonal word 2c
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Adverlosement
LEGAL NOTICE
OFFICE HOURS
OF TAX FORECLOSURE
B 30 a m to 5 00 p m Dally,
Fred Blars, whose res1dence
s unknown, and cannot be 8 30 a m to 12 00 Noon
IScertalned, and the he.rs, Saturday
tev1sees, legatees and legal
epresentattves, assigns and
text ot km of Fred B1ars if they
tre deceased, will take not1ce MY MOST hearllelt thanks to
hat on the 2nd day of June,
the many friends and neigh
1971 , Oty M Stewart. Gallia
bars
who helped In so many
County Treasurer, f1led his
ways
during the Illness and al
compla•nt against them '" the
!he death of my husband,
Court of Common Pleas wlthtn
and for the County of Gallla,
Fred Special thanks lo the
and State of Oh1o, the same
nurses and medical staff of
belno cause No 16818 m said
The Athens Mental Health
Court, allegmg that on the 1st
Center,
Veterans Memorial
day of June, 1971. the County
Hospital, the Holzer Medical
Auditor of said County duly filed
Center, The Ewing Funeral
with the Prosecuting Attorney
Home, the Rev W. H Perrin
of sa1d County an Original
Delmquent Land Tax Cer
and to the ladles of Trinity
tlflcate of the followmg tract of
Church on Pomeroy lor
land to wit The following
preparing and serving a
descnbed real estate, situate 1n
dinner Lucille Leifheit
the C1ty of GallipoliS, county of
6-13 ltp
Galha and State of Ohio, to wit
Beglnn1ng in the center of
WE WISH to thank neighbors,
Garfield Avenue. State High
way No 1, on the line between
friends, Ewing Funeral
lands formerly owned by
Home, Rev Kuhn and all who
Thomas Fellure and the lands of
helped on any way during the
Bert Rob1nson, thence Yhsterly
loss of our lather, grandfather
67 feet , along the Fellure
and brother, Lee Roy Cook
Robinson line, thence North 17
Your kindness Is very much
degrees West 112 feet, thence
apprecoated Son, Charles ,
South 68 degrees East 67 feet to
the center of Garfield Avenue
daughter, Anita, grand
thence w1th the said Garfield
choldren, sisters, Anna May
Avenue, Southerly 112 feet to
and Edith, brothers, Tom and
the place ot beglnn1ng, con
Joe
tatnmg 17 acres, more or less
6 13 lip
Be1ng the same descr.bed
real estate as 1n Volume 126,
page 65, Deed Records of Gallla 1 WISH fa thank everyone who
Counly , Oh io
was so kind and thoughtful
The prayer of said pel1tion 1S
during my stay at fhe Holzer
for .an order that sa1d property
Medical Center. I especially
be sold by the Shertff of satd
wish to thank those sendong
County '" the manner provided
cards
and flowers, the doctors
by law for the sale of real estate
and
nurses,
the blood donors,
on execution
and fhe many lroends who
The persons f1rst above
ment1oned w111 further take
voslted me. Wolllam H
nottce that they have been made
Thuener
parltes defendant to satd
6 13 lip
petition and they they are
required to answer the same on
or before the 24th day of July,
1971, or the pet1tron of the
Plaintiff w1ll b~ taken as true GUN SHOOT, June 13, Sunday 1
P M Assorted meats and
and 14dgment rendered ac
free eats Racone Gun Club
cordlngly
...""\tJII\H 1 •f,
'~' '"' 694fc
Oty M Stewart.
Gall1a County Treasurer
of Gall1a County PHIL AND JIM's Restaurant
P!aml1ff
and Pozza, formerly Home
Restaurant Open at 6 a m
By Hamlin C K.ng ,
6 13 3tc
Prosecut 1ng Attorney
June 6, 13, 20
FATHER'S DAY special
Skate A Way announces free
skating Wednesday night lor
fathers accompanied by
choldren Open Wednesday,
Froday and Saturday, 7 30 to
10 30 p m Private parties
available Phone 985-3929 or
985 3585
6 13 3tc

TEAFORD

36" X 23" X ,009

SR.

Broker
110 Mechanic St.
l'omeroy, Ohoo

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

BAIRD REAL TV CO.
Oscar Baird, Realtor

Bfor$100

42 ACR ES NI CE HOME
Thr ee bedrooms bath, fur
nace heal. plent y of water. 10
acres ot bottom land, on good
coun ty roa d Pr iced roght lor
qu1ck sal e

Gallipolis
Da11y Tribune

MIDDLEPORT - 7 rooms aor
conditioned Nice living, 4
bedrooms New 2 car garage
all on large lot Asking
$14,500 00

'

825 Thord Ave.
Galllpolrs, 0.

FOUR BEDROOMS 26 ACRE S
- On Slat e Route, water tap
pa od , lull bath sox acre•
bottom , large l 1vmg room ,
famil y room

BusiDess Serv·i ces

76 ACRES - 2o nearly level,
pasture of 25 acres fenced
Large 8 room house Noce 3
baf Implement shed, other
ou buildings, several kinds of
frull, well wafer All this lor
only $13,500 00

PUBLIC
SALE

COUNTRY
HOME
3
bedrooms, bath, shallow well
water, garage, cellar and
garden A good buy at
$7,000 00 or make us an offer,
We are ready to deal

1

This coinong Wednesday
evenong, 7 30, at Knotts
Com m un oly
Auction
Barn, Corner Thord Ave,
and &lt;!lrve St , Gell/polos,
Ohoo Sale conducted by
Student Auctooneers.

fVANS

446-0404
orroct

Free Estrmates

CALL GEORGE 985-3837
OR DON 992-6883

6, 98

Plus
Parts
From the Largel»r truck or1
Bulldozer Redlalor to the
Smallest Healer Core

PHONE 992 2143

BlAEITNARS

JOHNSON MASONRY

BACKHOE AND OOZER work·
Seproc tanks Installed George
(Boll ) Pullins, Phone 9922~78
4 25 tfc

Kotchens, Baths
Room Addotoons
And Patios
Backhoe And
Endloader Work

All Weafller Roofing &amp;
Construction Co
DEXTER, 0 45726
PHONE 742 3945

-~EWING MACHINES

RePair
servoce, all makes 992-2284
The Fabric Shop,\ Pomeroy
Authco lzed Singer Sales end'
Service We Shar.pen Scissors
3 29 lie

Septoc Tanks
And Leach Beds

Insured- Experienced
Work Guaranteed

742-4902

O' BRIEN ELECTRIC SER
VI CE Phone 949 4551.
s 30 tic

What Do You Have For The SSS You Pay In Rent?

* ASlACK OF WORTHLESS RECEIPTS! ! *

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates Ph 446 4782
Gallopolos John Russell.
Owner 8. Operator
5 13 lie

You will have something of value to show lor the 55$ you
spend when you buy your home - plus, you gaon an In
come Tax benefot, 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 HomeownerWe Do The Paperwork On Farmer's Home, V A , F H. A'
And Convenloonal Loans
Come See Us AI 97th N. Second St , Mrddleporl.
PH 992-7129

EXPE RT TREE servoce Call
collect after 5 p m, Richard
Hayman Reedsville M7 30~1.
5-19-JOtp
SEPTIC tanks cleaned Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662 3035
2 12-tfc

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
Evenongs Call992 2534, Dale Dutton

NEIGLER Construction For
buoldlng or remodeling your
home, Call Guy Nelgler,
Racine, Ohio
7 31 lie

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
40 Mrnutes of Your Trme Can Well Be the Most Profitable
Trme You Ever Spent

RALPH'S
CARPET
Uphoisll!ry Cleaning Servlte
Free
estimates
Phon&lt;.
Gall ipolis 446 0294
3 12 lie

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!
f.jWINSOR
.tiiUDDY

:tCHAMPION
1i!.VAN DYKE

.. ALSO
DOUBLE-WIDES
1

,EE TOM CROW, GUY Stf{JLER OR BOB CROW

f'ARk~:RSBUR.G

MOBILE HOMES, INC.

MEMORIAL BRIDGi' TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W VA

=Ret ESl "''"TE on generao
remodeling , roofing and
painting Phone 992 7729, 9
amto6pm
6-9 6fc

- - - -- -

c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949 3821
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford
5-1-tfc

READYMIX
CONCRElE
delivered roghl to ~our
project Fast 'nd easy. Free
estimates Phone 992-3284
Goegleln Ready Mix Co ,
REGISTERED Appaloosa stud
Middlenort.
l"lhio
.~
servr~~·
$50 registered
1 ~' ~\1
~ ~ · . ,.,,... 1 ~ .JO. ' tfc
mares, any breed, $40 grade
mares Franc1s Benedum
HARRISON'S TV AND AN
Phone Coolville 61&gt;7 3856
TENNA SERVICE Phone
5 16 30tp
992 2522
, 6-10-llc
REDUCE safe and fast with

Notice

Gobese tablets and E-Vap
water polls Nelson Drugs
4-14 60tp

Pomeroy

Ph 992-2143

Complete
Remodeling

NEW &amp; OLD WORK

EXPERT lawn mower and
toller repaor Free pickup and
delivery Warren 's Mower
Shop, 248 Condor St Phone
992 7357
5 18 fie

Wo an a rapidly ._,...
tav naHonal COil/IOI&amp;dcra Ia
ued of a distributor Ia par.
cho•• end Mt.ke em uauaual product -A TALIJifQ
VENDING MACHINE. Tho,.
are many choln locatlou
GYallable la rour area awl
we are looklnt for lOla. . . .
to dn·elop lhll ractrbt.
U rou bGY• a car cmd caa
IJ&gt;CIN 01 bHio 01 Ito I ~

TOO LATE
TO CLASSIFY
NOTICE
GARAGE SALE, Friday and AWNINGS, storm doors a~d
Saturday from 9 a m to 7
windows-, carports, mar p.m , Jeffers Clothing Store,
quees , aluminum siding
Old Rl 33, Pomeroy
and raollng Carl A Jacob,
'6 10 lip
sales representative For free
DUE TO lack ot Interest the
estimates, phone Charles
Chester Township Sunday
Lisle, Syracuse
V
V
School Convenhon has been
Johnson and Son, Inc
d1scontmued
6 10 3tp ELECTRO-LUX We want
5-27 ffc
someone who has had ex·
REGISTERED quarter stud
perlence In service and sales 'O'DELL WHEEL alignment
service, Hanks Rock 209498
located at Crossroads,\ Rl 124
for our Pomeroy area. Can be
Contad Moke Jones, Rl. 3,
Complete front end service,
started on part-time basis
Pomeroy, Ohio Phone 992
tune up and brake service
This Is highest raid earning
6880
balanced
elec
Wheels
opportunity a
Its kind
6 2 12tc
Ironically
All
work
available and If you qualify,
guaranteed
Reasonable'
you cap expect to earn over
LABOR LOCAL NO 83 election
rates. Phone 992 3213
$200
per
week
In
fhls
opJune 19, 1971 , 9 a m · 3 p m
5-22 3Qic
porlunlfy No Investment
Vote for Gardner IJune)
required
For detail In
Dunham, Jr for business
formation, write Electro-Lux
agent Support hos staff Why
or
apply at 657 Seventh Street,
are local laborers loafing
W Va
Parkersburg,
when oufsode men are coming
WANTED-DISTRICT
6 13 3tc
In to our area working l
DISTRIBUTOR
promise If elected Ia work
NO
INVESTMEJoiT IN
local men In theor area first
tfNENTORY
OR FEES
LIVE
IN
companion
for
elderly
before outside laborers come
Ambitious
women
with
woman,
light
housework
mto your area A man to serve
Cooking, good wages Phone
Cosmetic
or
selling
you, not rule you Your vote
992-3S07.
background Unique program
apprecoatlfed
6
13
3ic
offers
lull 60 pet Distributor
6 8 9tp
profits All orders and paper
REDUCE safe and fast with WE'LL PUT you to worK
work for your sales group
Gobese tablets and E Vap
stamping commission clr
handled direct from our
Water polls Nelson Drugs
culars paying 50 per cent I'll
facfory For full Information
5-26-30tp
make your rubber stamp with
samples wrlfe R J Lusher,
your name and address
President. Robinette
SAVE UP lo one hall Bring
Stamp and Information, S2
Cosmetics, 8900 Aetna Rd ,
your sock TV to Chuck's TV
The Ambrose Co , 4325
Cleveland, Ohio 44105
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave ,
Lakeborn, Davosburg, Mlch
Pomeroy
48019
~ 23-tlc
6 10 6fp

•••klr, rou can

••So? a

ez:c:eU•nt eupplemtnlal ta.
come. Your ln"YHtmnt cd
1100 ••
IJI'OW
lalo a lull tlme Income.
WE !ITAitiiH ROUl!l
lfO PIRIOifAL SALEI

se.ooo -

CALLI

MACHllfEil DO THE
mLING
Voadta; 11 a .tvorouo 1$.
bUUoa ph11 rec:tlllaa proof
butlntla, Your 1a:l11 a:re
eaoh, lfo CIOdlt rllb, Tour
oqulpmonl to oa oho Job dill'

Wanted

Un•cramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each oquare, to
form four ordtnary words.

Saunders - Evans
Insurance
Inc.
,

Radiator ser-e

Blaettnar's

Roofing &amp; Carpenter
Work
Spouting, Roof
Painting

hV •I[NfH A It NOI 0 .uHIIJOII l f I

1111d alvhL ea:ralllv extra ta.
come lor you aad your
tamnr.
Wt train, CO'Unttl. plclt
cmcl help you vet tlarted llli
a bu•l•n• of your own. No
up.rihc:e DICIIICifJ'• 'ftte
work 11 ealorahlt aad '&lt;llf•
Thla Ia lht ap ol aul•
mated merehaadlsla.v. Our
oqulpmonl II rho boot quai.
lty oad out taack lltat
art aalloaally adnrtleed
bi'GIIda. U fOU wiiJ rho coupoa below we will
be " " bapPf lo dlocuo
tblll •-=ttr fOIL

•

For Rent or Sale

AVAILABLE June 15, two new
50x12 two-bedroom mobile
homes for rent or sale, on lot
LOST IN vlconlly of Hemlock
In
Mason, W Va Call Robert
Grove, black and rust
Dixon collect at 614 61&gt;7 3891
Doberman Pinscher pup
s 30-llc
Reward Phone 992 7291
676tc

Lost and Found

I 1m lntlr1st.d In """ lrdor•lltl•
1Hut nt1lln1 ~ In thl Nntll•
bu1in1ts I Mvt 1 car 1nd I I howl
Ptr wwk ..,.,.. thM
I an lnrtlt "" $900

8I Cln lnwttt Mr $9000

Insurance

Y·l

Nom•- - ------

4UTOMOBI LE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
BABYSITTER , days, on my
operator's license? Call 992·
home Phone 992 7794
29M
6 10 Stc

Adtlr~s'-------

NOTICE

437 SECOND AVE.
(OPPOSITE POST OFFICE)

CHUCK'S TV SHOP IS NOW MAKING HOUSE CAllS ON
COLOR TV, BLACK AND WHITE TV, AND STEREO SETS.

[J

~I FE-

AUTO- HOME
BUSINESS INSURANCE
OFFICE

tiKJBn
J I

446-0404
) 1

Specral
At

cUlYW®~rn; lk.J ~ttJ~&amp;t.J wtWI tJ- Wanted

L FElCAS~LTY

EXPERIENCED

seasonal

Air Conditioning
lnspectjpn and
Re.tharge

Lomestone Driveways
Septoc Tanks and Leach
Beds

CALL US, IF YOU WANT TO
SELL WE WILL DO OUR
BEST TO SELL YOUR
PROPERTY. NO SALE NO
COST 0 YOU. CAL.L 992·
3325.
REGISTERED Arabian Stud
Service Klraff No OS0481
Rich Raffles blood lines Fee
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
$50
Phone 992 6880, E J Hill,
ASSOCIATE
Pomeroy,
Ohio
992-2378
6-13-121c
6 13 6fc

LARRY

Have Your

Backhoe Senice
and Hauling

Help Wanted

iYRACUSE - 3 or 4 bedroor
nice older house with oak from
and floors, 8 rooms with bath,
dining and paneled modern
kitchen Gas furnace, nice
garden Asking only $13,000 00
·with furniture

20~

450 Se•ond Ave
Ph 446 4775

TV Antenna Sales ln slallatoon &amp;'
Servoce Estimates Ph 446
1673 or 446 9679
63 If

«ANI AU

-·---~---I
FAIN

Virgil B.

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

Lots
LOCA TE D on Plant s Sub
d1 v1S1on. sl11table for mob1h
hom es or bu1l dmg homes
Pnced reasonabl e

Services Offered

Free Estimates
Stew,rt's Hardw1re
Vinton, Ohio
,.144·1

ELECTRIC SERVICE
RESIDENTIAL &amp; lndusfrlao
Paul Knox, office Ph 446 101
or home Ph 446-~
70 If

Notice

Easy Terms. , ,
TWO sto ry home 3 BR and
ba th off street parking ,
fenced l awn
low - down,
pay m ent and reasonabl e mo
pay m ents

WE NEED LI STING S - Lo st
w1 th Ba ord Realty Co for fast
act1on on your house, farm, or
busi ness We have buyer s for
all
typ es
of
pr op erly
any wher e on Gall la County
Oscar Baord, 446 4632
Doug Wetherholt, 446 4244

-HNtlna

Card of Thanks

298 tt
DEWITT' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route160at Evergreen
Ph one 446 2735
281 II

7

Central Air Colldltlolllng

Services Offered

LEGAL NOTICE

IN CH ESHIRE Ideal for
1
commerc oal use traol er sale -;:----:::-:--:--:--:-::--l.~-tf
or court Frosty Freeze or any Brammer Plumbong &amp; Heating
300 Fourth Ave
busoness 3 small hom es,
need s some repatr 3 we ll s
Phone 446 1637
Pn ce m m1d twent 1es
Gene Plants, Owner
Sum mer Retreat
2 ACR ES w oth mobile hom e and
hom e combonaloon 5 room and
balh f urna ce deep well and
m f ern small barn, ce llar
house and work shop Full
pn ce $3 900 Now vacant

ALBERT EHMAN
Water Delivery Service
Pa,trlot Star Rt., Galllpoll$
..fh 379-2133

Services Offered

TERMITE PEF CO~TROL.
_ _ ..,.......
FREE Inspection. Call446-3245,,
Merrill O'Dell, Clperater for
Extermlnal Termite Service,
19 Belmont Dr. ,
IF YOU have a KOHLER
267-11 WATER well drilling, Myers
pumps Sale and service.
engine on' your tractor see us
for parts and service GILLENWATER'S Septic Tank
Complete water line service
and trenching C J Lemley,
Cle•nlng &amp; Repair. Ph. 446·
Superior Motor Service,
Vonton, Ohio Ph 388-8543.
9-499. Prlce Is right
Huntington, W Va
114 tf
'
134-6
174 II
- - - - -- - --

Pl~mbong

CAMP SITE and buo ldong lot s
Pl enty of shade, wafe r on
every lot electr:Jc , telephone,
boat do c ~ provoleg e some
waler fr onl lol s Located 8 mo
fr om Gallopolo s down Rt 7 to
Ra ccoon Creek Turn R on
for st road beyond the brodge,
go J/4 m 1 up cr ee k Open for
onspectoon every Sunday Call
Howa rd Br annon 4d6 122 6

10

Services Offered

DEAD STOCK

Plumbing &amp;Heating

Raccoon Creek

STROUT REALTY

,

APACHE has done If again
New tentless solid stale
models gtve yQu more
protechon, privacy and ex·
tended use And now till
Mooday June 21st, we will
gove a bog 10 per cent discount
on all new &amp; used trailers .
{Closed June 21 toll July 4 for
vacation l Amsbary's Apache
Traoler Sales, 631 Fourth
Ave , Gal l lpolos
138-tf

Dillon
Agency

THE WISEMAN

Services Offered

Caf1!ping Equipment

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For SaiP

For Sale

For Sale

25-TbP '!lundayTimes.Sentinei,Sundly,JWJe 13,19'11

mr

I 1/SUft/111 L t\ 1/ • Ill

K-t.Wtf;

Gm1 l
M 111 1n 1\. ll !•t l
IS ,,

HOW:I.RD i
SAUNDERS
1'111 I H \I II ,J K~ l~SI K.\~lHll

'YOU'RE LJ5uALLY AT
L.l~i:RTY iO

00 THI:Fl.E.

.

'

"'

:"iow arranae the circled letters

to fonn the ourpriae an1wer, u
BU ece1ted by the above cartoon.

I' ""' ..- -.. I Kl l 1( I 1 I I XI)

-~-__.._

With this Ad and

$4.00

you can get a

$6.50

House Call. This in-

cludes complete Color Adjustments that will bring your
back to new life, as it was a few years back.
Your Service Men Are
Scott Smith

an~

Chuck Humphrey

CHUCK•s TV SHOP
152 BUTTERNUT
OPEN9TIL9-6 DAYS A WEEK

,I

set

POMEROY

�21- The Sundlv Times • Sentmel, Sunday, June 13, 1971

Barg;ains, Bargains and More Bargains In The Tribune. Classifieds
Wanted

Help Wanted

t:XPERIENCED genera. " I LOVE selling Avon It
changed my whole lole "
mechanic, good benefots
That's the feeling shared by
Contact
Harold
Davis,
thousands
of
Avon
Gallipolis Motor Co Ph 446·
Representatives
You, too,
3672
103 If
can gel more out of life thos
way You'll earn good money,
won prizes, meet people, have
ACTIVE retired gentleman
fun Wrote or call Mrs Helen
desires room and board, town
Yeager, Box 172, Jackson,
or country, willing, to work so
Ohio Ph 286 4028
as to be helpful. Write P. 0
133 6
Box 453, Galllpolos, Ohio,
45631
SALESPEOPLE wanted only
138 3
people Interested m makrng
12 to $1500 per month Call
area code 304 57 4 2791
FREE USED clothing for
134 6
anyone who Is In need Church
of Christ, Bidwell Ph 388 JANITOR for publoc bulidong
8429 or 388 8787
Evenong a~d Sal work Good
138 1
working condltoons Good
pay Prefer semr retrred
BRIAR
PATCH
Kennels
couple but woll consider on
boarding all breeds, large
dovoduals Reply to Box 186,
Indoor outdoor runs Ph 446
Galllpolos, Trobune 825 Thord
4191
Ave, Gall opolis Ohoo
138 1
134 6

- - - - --

FOR LONGER wear keep
carpets clean with Blue
Lustre
Rent
_sleclroc
shampooer Sl Lowl!'i" G C
Murphy Store
138 6
~-----

17 PT Foberglas ski boat, 75 HP
Evtnrude motor, trailer and
all skiing equip oncluded Ph
446 2885
138 3
2

BEDROOM housetraoler ,
Bx37 Make an offer Ph 446
3082
138 2

GOOD quality used mobhe
homes, low down P,ayment,
bank financing Kanauga
Mobole Home Sales, Ph 446
9662
94 If

AGENCY

'
IF YOU are hulldong a new'

home cr remodeling, see us
We are builders Dostrobuto•
for Hotpoonl Apploances .
Allison Electric
'
154 tf

.- - ' - --

--

NEW 1971 ZIG ZAG Sewing
Machme m or1g1nal factory
carton Zog Zag to make
buttonholes sew on buttons,
COLONIAL Maple stereo radoo
monograms, and make fancy
combination, AM F M rad io,
desogns woth just the two st at a
songle doal Left on lay a way
four speakers, 4 speed In
termlxed changer, separate
and never been used W1!1 sell
for only $47 00 cash or credo!
controls Balance $78 60 Use
terms available Phone A46
our lime payment plan Call
446 1028
0665
134 6
138 3

- - -- - -

Office 446-3643
Evenings Call
E-M." Ike" Wiseman 446-3796
E. N. Wrseman 446-451'0
Lookmg For A
Really Nice
Bnck Home?

Very Nrce Older Home
Corner Lot In Vrnton

ONE WITH 3 LARGE
BEDROOMS WALL TO
WALL CARPET IN FOR
MAL ENTRY , D IN lNG
ROOM
AND
LARGE
LIVING
ROOM
EX
CELLEN T FLOOR PLAN

THI S IS A RE AL NI CE
QUI ET STOP WI 'T H LO T S
OF SHADE ON A LAR GE
CORNER
L OT
3
BEDR OOM HOME WITH
NEW BUILT IN KI TC HEN
CARPET ON SOME OF
THE F LO OR S, A NIC E
POR CH BAS EMENT AND
GARA GE FI RS T PE RSO N
WITH $12 900 BUY S IT

ELECTROLUX Vacuum
MODERN WALNUT stereo
Cleaner complete wlfh at
radio comblnaloon, dual
WITH 1112 BATH S, ANO
tachments. cordwmder and
volume control , -4 speakers, 4
BEAUTIFUL
K ITCHEN
pamt spray Used but m 11ke
WITH LOTS OF CABINE TS
speed changer, separate
new cond1t1on Pay $34 45
FLEA MARKET, Bog Bend 68 XL FORD, power and factory
AND BUIL T INS LARGE 2
controls Balance $63 79 Use
12x65 Mobrte Home
air AI condo lion Ph 3677268
CAR
GARAGE
HUGE
cash or budget plan avaolable
Regatta,
Pomeroy
our budget terms Call 446
FAMI
L
Y
ROOM
WHI
CH
IS
137 3
Middleport, June 18, 19, 20
Phone 446 0665
1028
HER ES A V ERY NI CE 2
VERY ATTRACTIVE AND
134 6
Spaces available Write Mrs
138 3
YR OLD 3 BE DROOM
ROOMY AND A LARGE
Rita Lewis, Rt 3, Pomeroy,
HOME WHICH IS JUS'T
FLAT LOT IN AN EX
LI K E
NE W
LARGE
GORDON setters and German 1966 HARLEY XLH Sportster
0hlo, 45769
CELLENT
NEIGH
LIVIN
G
ROOM
AND
$850. 1967 Honda Traol 90, 585
137 3 3 BEDROOM mobile home,
Short haored poonters, pet and
BORHOOD NEAR THE
K I TC HEN
M ETAL
12x60, located In Rio Grande
mo , $350 Ph 446 4895
NEW HO SPITAL
show stock Ph 446 4191
STO RAG E B L DG SK IR
Ph 245 5267
138 3
GARAGE SALE at Bill &amp;
138-1
T ING T V ANTENNA AND
138
3
Kathryn Knotts' residence on
DRA PES STA Y LO CA TED
Kerr Harmburg Rd , second ::-::-:-:-:-:-:---:--:--KEEP G-ARPET cleanong SWEET POTATO, tomato,
IN PARK L ANE ON RT 35
Acreage
For
Sale
ROOM &amp; board for men or
house on left from Kerr
problems small - use Blue
cabbage and hot pepper
152 Acres
retired gentlemen In a private
137 3
Lustre wall to wall Rent
plants Floyd Ent on Rodney ,
Baby Farm- 3A.
home near city Ph 446 9865
eleclrlc
shampooer
Sl
245 5124
T::-H-E~A-=s-=c=-s-o-=11-::lc-e-=loc-a.,..ted-:-:af 95
Modern 3 Bedroom
138 3
Central Supply Co
137 3
If~
MI L E
FRONTAGE
Sycamore Sf, Gallipolis, Ohio
138 6
SEVERAL
HOME
OR
Home
will offer for sale by bid fwo NEW 2 bedroom apartment,
1970 KAWASAKI 500 Mach 111
MOBI L E HOME SIT ES
carpeted, nice, unfurmshed 14 FT RUNABOUT, 25 HP
typewriters. Sealed bids will
EXCELLENT FOR THE
motorcycle Ph 446 1108 after
WANT TO LI VE IN TH E
Inquire at Christi Ann
S
PORTSMAN
OR
be accepted until 12 noon an
motor and tra 1ler Must see to
5 30
COU N'T RY WH ERE TH E
DEVELOPER
Restaurant
June 18, 1971 The equipment
appreciate excel cond Ph
CHI LDRE N CAN H AV E A
137 6
137 6
446 0606
PONY AND MOTHER CAN
offered Is (1) one Underwood
ENJ OY
A
L OV ELY
136 3 PING PONG table, electn c
15. 1ts1 year, one Ill Royal
M
ODERN
3
BE
DROOM
FPP16
1961 year. The 2 BEDROOM upsfaors furn
shuffle
board
bowlong
Bargarn Hunting
HOM E? TRY T HI S ONE apt , private entrance Ph
committee reserves the right
RICE'S NEW &amp;
mach one Ph 446 4416 after 6
lT S 5 Ml OUT AND I T'S A
OWner Anxtous
446-2374 or 446-0284
to reject any or all bids
1373
MOD
E RN WELL K EPT
137 If USED
136-3
To Sell
FURNITURE
HOME WI T H A VERY NI CE
THE STORE woth bargaons 19_7_
1_
H""
o~
N-D_A_3_5_
0 _S_c_r_
a_
m_bler
B UIL T IN KI TC H E N A N D
RIFE'S Queen Bee Restaurant.
L ARGE F AMILY ROOM
galore New 3 pc bedroom
Call 446 2320 alter 4 p m
HERE S
A
LOVELY
5 30 to 12 Pizza $1 60, 1 MOBILE home space, pad
SM AL L HOR SE BAR N AND
suotes $99 95 new 3 pc SOLID
137 5
MODERN
SMALL
3
RACCOO N CK
FRON
delicoous Sub Sandwoches 69c,
patio, 1 mole out Ph 446 3617
maple or cherry bedroom
BEDROOM
HOME
THA
T
TAGE
137 3
136 8
su1tes $249 95 ant1que marble HOOVER spon dryer washong
WILL SUIT YOUR NEED S
top dresser 854 Second, 446
AND
YOUR
PO CK ET
machine, loke new, $125 ,
3 Acres At Cheshrre
BOB'S MOBILE Court traoler
BOOK
VERY
CLEAN
EVELYN'S SALON OF
9523
136 It
set of
Corvette
Rally
lots,
40x70
with
patoos
located
THROUGHOUT
NICE
5 RO OM HOU SE (n eed s
BEAUTY
wheels w1th t1res $90 Ph 446KITCHEN BATH AND F
on Rt 124, Syracuse, Ohoo, 12 1957 VOLK SWAGEN wolh a lew
work) AND 3 ACRES OF
JUNE money savers per
3626
AIR FURNACE , IN AN
FL AT TO ROL L ING LA ND
miles up rover from t:heshore,
manent, tinted, bleacn and
extra parts Call446 2290 after
\373
EX CELLENT
NEIGH
GOOD
FOR
SM AL L
Ohio
Water,
electric
State
normal now $10 Reg $15
4 30 p m
BORHOOD FULL PRICE
M
OB
I
LE
HOM
E
PA RK
"R
c:
E
:-:
D
:-:
U
"
c
"
'E
=
-s
-a
""'
te
a
-n"""'
d-;f
as~
l
wolh
approved
Call
after
4
p
m
New hours 8 30 till B 30 p m
136 3
Sl3 900 AND ITS ON EDGE
$5
900
992 2951
Gobese tablets and E Vap
Operators Peggy Halley,
OF TOWN
107 It HOME by owner, located on
water polls Golllngham Drug
Evelyn Morrow and Sherry
Bargarn Hunter
124 39
Sprow at 446·9580
V1nton, 4 bedrooms kitchen ,
1366 TRAILER space 554 Jackson
Spec tal
l1vmg room dmlng room , _
P_L_A""'S-::T-:-1C
- 1
,e-,-rt,e
--rs- :f-o-r -,b
, -o-a t s
----:----Pike Ph 446 3805
ut1hty room , small basement
Brand New
Butldmg Lots
132 If
Indoor and outdoor sogns, 15c
Ca II 388 8598
SUN--VALLEY Nursery SchOoh
3 Bedroom Srrck
Rt. 141
each, buy just what you need,
134 6
577 Sun Valfey Drive, now FURN apt, 3 rooms &amp; bath , all
3"
soze
Sommons
Ptg
&amp;
W
IS
H I NG FO R A NE W
Edge Of Town
providing full day care al\d
utilities paod, adulls only Ph
HOM
E&gt; THI S ONE WI LL
Offoce
Equop
446
1396
STRAWBERRIES, pock your
chold developmerrt program
BE RE ADY N EX T WE EK 3
446·0322
104
tf
3Sc
box
Claude
Wonlers,
own,
,or pre school children In
4 ACRE S WITH
CITY
132 II
BED ROO M S
L A R GE
Rio Grande, 0
fants excluded Open 6 30 a
WATER
GAS
AND
VERY NI CE KI T CHEN
WE
speclaloze
on
porfraof
and
134 If
m ro 6 p m Monday through APARTMENT for constructoon
SCH OOLS S3 500
A N D O I N I ~ G AREA ll/2
commercoal photography ,
P.A n-1 "
ANn
?
r AR
Fridav Fees $20 for full five
men Pnvate entrance Phone
church weddings, reun1ons,
GAR AGE
ON LARGE
"day week S5 per day II less
446 0756
etc Tawney Sfudoo
F L AT LOT 3 BLO CK S
than live days $3 per day for
102 If
88 If
FR OM NE W HO SPIT AL
Wooded Acres
morning sessions. Ph 446
--=-=-..,...,~-....,--..,.­
IT'S PRIC ED FOR QUI CK
3657
Madge
Hauldren, GOOD toll~ble land - for rent.
SA L E AND OWNER WI LL
Owner . Director, John and
lease or share crop 25 acre 1967 DATSUN P U
HEL P FIN ANCE
RT 588 3 M ILE S FROM
Loredllh
Hau~dren,
tract on Bodwell Rodney Rd
1966 112 T GMC P U
NEW HOSPITAL 2 38
operators
Nearly New 2
20 acres tillable Also tobacco 1967 '" T GMC P U
ACRES OF BEAUT IFULLY
35-lt
allotment of 525 ib for lease
Sedroom Country
WOODED LAND
PER
1963 112 T Chevrolet pockup
- - - - - . , . - ' - -COUNf~Y LIVING
Phone Columbus, 268 1810
FECT
HOME
SI'TES
· ' Home
1965 1'12 T Chevrolet Truck
WOULD SPL I T IN HALF
RALPH.'S Cargel - Upholster)
136 3 1967 Whole Diesel Truck
CITY CONVENIENCES
CI TY'
SCHOOL S
AND
HE RE S A DANDY LI KE
Cleaning ._Service .
Free
YOU can , buy thos good 3 BR
1969 Chev dump truck
WATER
NEW 2 BEDRO OM HOM E
estimates r-h. 446 0294.
home
w1fh
bath
alum1num
1968
o
;,
T
GMC
P
U
ROOMS, weekly
WITH NICE KI TCHEN AND
197-11 SLEEPING
sodong , electric heat, located
1965 1 T GMC
rates Park Central Hotel
BATH ON A L ARGE LOT
on
40
acres
of
land
about
3
ABOUT J MILE FROM RIO
308 tf 1969 GMC 4 T log truck
5'h
ACRE
WOODED
PLOT
miles from Roo Grande If you
1962 'I• T GMC pockup
GR AND E F H A SHOULD
NEIGHBORHOOD
RD
don'
t want all the land fell us
GO 100 PER CEN T ON THI S
SLEEPING ROOMS weekly 1963 1 T GMC
CI
TY
SCHOOLS
53
900
how much you want and we
ON E F ULL PRIC E $12 900
rates, free garage parkong, 1965 112 T Ford P U
l&lt;t:MODELING and painton&gt;
will spill of up Pnced ac
1963 '12 T Chev P U
Good references Ed Sm lth,
Libby Hotel
cording to how much land you
74 If 1969 1 T GMC
256 6935
want
1967 '" T GMC P U
97 It
VACANT LAND
1968 Chev Suburban
15 Acre wooded tract wlfh 2 n1ce
TO CARE for old aged pen.
1962 112 T GMC P U
bu1ld1ng Sites or for mob1le
1968 whole doesel truck
sloner In my home Ph 379
homes
Located near R1o
1965 'I• T GMC P U
2228
Grande
138 3
1967 :o;, T Chevrolet pockup
Othce Phone 446 1694
1963 F600 Ford truck
Evemngs
1966
T GMC pockup
Charles
M Neal446 1546
1961 2 T GMC
J
Mochael
Neal444 1503
1964 3 T GMC
MAID to work In motel Apply
112 T Chev
1966
on person at College Hill
1966 1h T lnl P U
Motel, Rio Grande, 0
1966 '! 2 T Ford P U
136 It
1956 l'h T Chev van
There are two kmds of people who shou ld ne ver do thmg s
Tores - 10 00x20, 12 ply nylon
EXPERIENCED Income tax
lores
$90
Inc
Fed
tax
ompulsovely
Presodents and young peopl e
preparers Tax Corp of
SOMMER'S
G
M
C
America needs part lome
TRUCKS, INC
supervisor Great potent1al
Bulldozer
A person who slee ps th r ough pollf1 cal
Home &amp; Income
]33 Prne Sf
Send resume to Box 187 co
speeche s
LOOKING for a noce 6 rm home
Ph 446-2532
Gallipolis Daoly Trobune
tnqutre about our
on c oly, wolh a full dry base It
241 tf
136 10
Ju st listed 1 Modern three bedroom brock home woth
Pre-School Program
has carpel on l1v and dm rm
central a1r condtf1onmg, one year old Large fr ont room
3 n1ce bdrms , lots of cabmels
HIGH SCHOOL girl wanted lor
USED TKAILEK~
w1th new carpetmg also wood burn1ng f1 replace Pl ent y of
on
kolchenand
much
pan•long
babysitting Call 446 3308
1960 Naloonal 10 x 50, 2 br
Also
good
4
room
house
an
lot,
cabmets In ktfchen, dmmg room fa m1l y room m
1967 Homan 12 x 50, 2 br
after 4 p m
Rent
polentoal
of
$90
per
mo
basement
woth toreplace One bath upstairs an d one bath
' 137 3
1957 Gloder 45 x 8, 3 br
has
8'
x
15'
storage
bldg
Lot
on basement, two car garage, lot 100x1 50 Ha s young fruit
1966 Namco, 52 x 10, 3 br
and a bog 2 car garage Good
513 Second Ave.
1960 Van Dyke, 10 x 50 2 br
frees Proce $26.500
resident ial
ar ea
Prtce
1960 Van Dyke 10 x "50, 2 br
Galltpolts, Ohto
$21 ,000
1965 Kentuckoan , 56 x 10, 3 Br
Modern home two blocks from school woth thr ee
Phones: 446-0496
BUSINESS
1962 Calonoal 50 x 10, 2 br
2Evergreen
bedrooms, large front room w1th carpet Knott y pme
OPPORTUNITY
446-0499
1960 Van Dyke 10 x 40 2 br
paneling
on kotchen also bu ilt on ca binet s Stove,
5
YR
OLD
home
woth
compl
ete
MAN OR WOMAN
All tratlers clean and recon
ser
ot
nearly
new
furniture
r
efrogerator
and drapes go woth hou se Pn ce $1 8 500
Reliable person from this area
d1!10n ed
Ready for oc
llv
rm
12'
x
22
2
noce
bd
to service and collect from
cupancy Free Delovery and
rms, beautoful kolchen
automatic dispensers No ;,INUt:K .)ttWulg Machine Sdles
Three bedroom home on 141 across f rom Gr een sc hool
sel up Tro County Mobole
Pro ce 14,200
experience needed •
we &amp; Servoce All models on stock
Homes, 446 0175
Thos home ha s full basement with natural ga s furn ace,
establish accounts for you
Free
delovery
Service
93 It BARGAIN - 7 rm house , ?lots,
coty
water and large lot ISO front by 250 deep
full base , fuel ool fur , storm
Car, references and $995 00 to guaranteed Models priced
- - · - -- - drs and w1ndows
New
' SlaBS 00
cash
capital from $69 95 French Ci l y ALL TYPES of buoldong
Lot on Tycoon Lake w1th or without trail er
alumonum sodong, also tur
• M&lt;:essary 4 to 12 hours Fabric Shoppe, Singer ap·
materials, block, brock, sewer
Offoce 446-1066
ndure
for
k1
tchen
and
2
weekly nets excellent man· proved dealer, 58 Court 51 Ph
popes, windows, lintels, etc
bdrms Proce $12 700
Evenongs, Call Ron Canaday 446 3636
' thly Income Full lime more
Claude Winters , Roo Grande,
308 If
For local Interview, write, 446 9255
John I Rochards 446 0280
0 Ph 145 5121 alter 5
Mobile Homes
Include telephone number,
Russell D. Wood 446 4618
91 II
69 RICHARDSON , 12'x 60 ,
Eagle
Industries,
3938
GUOD CLEAN LUMP and
same as new A1r condlt1oned
Meadowbrook Road, Sl Louis
stoker coal Carl Wonters. Rio USED
Mobile
Home
$5 600
Perk, Minnesota 55426
Grande Phone 245 5115
Headquarters All s1ze mob1le 69 lmperoal 12' x 60' 3 bdrm
l
138 1
811
homes In stock B &amp; S Mobile
$4,700
Home Sales, Second &amp; Voand,
PI Pleasant, next to Heck's
Small Acreage
Ph 446 OOOH
67 If 5 RM house &amp; 3 A 5 mo fr om
~EW LISTING
town $9,000
LOW. low prlces on oe111w o11'"' 5 RM home and 2 A near Farm, Village, Coly Properly BUY yourself a good lovo~g'
Serta mattresses and bol(
Forst &amp; Olove
Gas sfall on woth all equop
Vonlon Thos IS a bog house and
sprongs Carbon &amp; Snyder
Phone
446 111119
ment, 2 apartments now bemg
nearly new The ~olchen Is nor
Furn , 955 Second Ave Ph
ren t ed ,
lov el y
12x60
completed Thos properly can 5 ~cres
446 1171
hous
elrao
ler
All
f
or
$21,000
be bought as os lor $7,000
NEW LISTING Comfortable 3
3 If
We .,, • m•1or corporation 1n the 5 b1llion dollar vend1n1 mdustry We
bed room home wolh ba t h
Farms
ht~ developed a un1que 'TALKING VENDING MACHINE that IS lak1n1
CORA
New storm doors and wm
the lndultry by storm This is 1 qutllty product d1spens1AI only
71 ACF s· - h Ra ccoon Creek
150
A
Farmer
's
farm
,
516
500
USED
FURNITURE
nttlantlly 1dvtrt1sed sntcks and Cindy
dows and sodtng Located on
bolla
&lt;Od home
76 A close City, $16,000
You thould htvt $ome free t1me and an automobile to St('IIICe and
Georg es Cree k Road Ca ll to
LIKE
new
hide
a
bed
woth
on
and buoldongo, " " I
mtlnt~•n your *QUipment Th is 11 a sound buslnns vent~n
61 A much rd frontage , $8,500
see
nersprong mattress. Electro 50 A Wood Mill Rd 57 ,500
end as sUch w1ll rtqune 1nltiat lve and respon•1b1hty but
EASTERN AVE
ofletS unuwat 1nc:ome pot1nt11l
'Hygiene lank type sweeper 39 A good bldgs $13,500
LARGE
elderly 13 r oom hom e
woth all attachmenls, good 38 A near Mercerv]lle, SS,OOO )5500
I '
In good co ndit ion La rg e
SEVEN r oom home wi th bath
cond1f1on
, enough for 3 or 4 a pi s , 2
ANY HOUR 446-1998
Ni ce porch and lois ol shade
garages
EVE John Fuller 446 3246
NEW FURNITURE
lr ~es
Garage and good
BIDWELL •
garden Alm ost an acre next LOVELY ~~ "nme on 1 A lot
SPECIAL OF THE WEEK - 25 OH 10 rovers ode lot Shade trees,
lo Rl 35
onch Admoral color console
comple,J'
I
" •d , w w
sandy beach and all uhhloes,
carpet
,
water
'
1
...
1ew fur
TV, reg proce $625, sale proce
l11vestment
or
80x380 It , oncludes 100 year
$550 Plenty of free parkong
nace
old house that could be
Busmess
Carbon - Snyder Furn , 955
SELL OR TRADE
restored Located on Mason,
HOME
wo
th
busoness
room
In
L1
KE
new brock home close to
Second Ave Ph 446 1171
W Va , Call Athens 592-1738
127 II
fron
t
PLUS
two
rental
coly
on large lot Features
1377
Ira Hers Home has six rooms
are city water &amp; gas, 2 car
woth two ba ths Located on
garage, full basement, built
busoness
actove
Rt
7
Call
for
NEW
homes
brick
front,
on kol chen , TV r oom , 2 balhs,
WHITE cemer;li , all s1zes !lle m
del
all
s
100'
•230
lot,
buollil'l
kolchen,
w
w carpet &amp; palo o
slack 12" &amp; 15" foeld tile
carpeted If you qudilfy, you
Ranny Blackburn
Ltstmgs NE'edeu
suo lable for hoghway dolchong,
Branch Manager
c '" borrow full amount Barr
concrete
blocks
Conslrucloun , 16 Pone 51, Pb, rlomes, Farms, Lands
GALLIPOLIS BLOCK CO,
4463746 Man lhruFro 91o5
Denver K Hogley, 446-0349
plo 446 2783 A bulterlly IMs rls tn • l(•
Earl Winters, 446·3828
Sa 1 B to 12
97 II
f
_ __
buds on rts (t'~f

Notice

For Sale or Trade

For Rent

- - - - -- - -

- - - - - - --

- - -,..-- - - -

--------

- - - - - -- -

- - - -- -

New GMC

Truck Headquarters

-

Real Estate For Sale

Neal Realty

Wanted To Do

- -----,-

Help Wanted

- - - -- -

USSELL WOOD
REALTOR

Instruction

PRIVATE
INSTRUCTION

PIANO
ORGAN
GUITAR

'I•

446-1066

MASSIE

Realtor. 32 State St
Tel. 446-1998

AND OTHER
INSTRUMENTS

Business Opportunities

For Sale

0. D. PARSONS
JAY SHEPPARD
REALTORS

..

0 LD

0

~

Hobart Dillon, Realtor
Olfoce 446 2674
Howard or Lucolle Brannon
Evenongs 446 1226
Robert Condee, 444 0858

p

DON' T MISS our ealy summer
sale on travel traders, truck
campers ,
campers
and
f1shmg boals Amenca 's No 1
c.qmp1ng trader Service,
qualoly and proce sells our
unlls Camp Conley Slarcralt
Sales, Rl 62, N of PI
Pleasant, W Va
135 If

Happmess
STARTS 1n th1 s electn c bn clf"
home w1th 20 ac r es of land
loca ted l mil e fr 0m c .ty A
dr eam kit chen ove n range,
di shwa sher dm1ng area
ca rpet1ng 3 BR and 1112 tile
bath Part base ment front
porch
Pnc e r educ ed to
$2 1 500 It s a real buy on
today s market

~
~
'

:.TANDARD
&amp; Heating
21 5 Thord Ave , 446 3782
187 If
- ------:--:-:::-•
CARTEI&lt;'S PUJMBING.
AND HEATING
830 Fourth Avenue
Phone 446 3888or 446 4477
155 11
----=:==c-:::-:--~
RUSSELL'S
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
Seploc tank cleanong, electric
sewer cleaning
Ph
446
4782 Gallipolis, 0

Big Acres

Insurance

Acres
LOCATE D near Gal lo po l os
wa t er an d gas ava •l ab le
Ideal fo r budd1 ng

FOR ALL yo ur lnsurMce needs
check wolh your Grange agents
at the Neal Ins Agency, 64
Stale St Agenls for auto, fire,
home owners , hospital and
genera l loaboloty
84·11
- - - -- - -- - NAIIUNWIDE, INSURANCI:
AUTO Fore, lofe, 45 State St,
Wa ldo F Brown , W R Brown,
446 1960
2~ If

l V2 Miles
FROM col y 19' ' acr es good
ro l lo ng land w oth larg e
wooded area, " " story home ,
on need of some r epaor well .
c1ste rn and r ural wat er Ime
Idea l tor mobil e hom e cou r t
or bu1ldmg s1te

L-0-0-K

Services Offered

9 M ILE S from Gallopolos

157
ac r es of good pastur e land
100 acr es f enced and m gra ss
Fa1r bar n house needs so m e
repa1 r pl en ty spnng water ,
fa rm pond 1/2 acre toba cco
base Thmk - you can own
thos fo r less t han S60 per ac r e

SWI SHER S

Plumbong
&amp;
Ele c tr~ c
contractor
We
spec 1al 12e 1n hookmg up rural
wa ter lme system to your
home Completely build your
ba thr oom Call us for com
plel e tree estomate Delb&lt;trt
Swos her, 1809 Chestnut, Ph
446 0468
135 If
'

Immediate
Possession

I'·

E. S. P.

AUTOMOTIVE AIR
CONDITION SERVICE
Rep~1t s and recharging
SMITH BUICK CO
1911 Eastern Ave

EX TR A
S P E CIAL
PR OPERT Y' a nd the pri ce IS DITCHING for water, gas,
sewer lines Russell Plum
reduced S1.500 Ran ch style 3
bong , 446 4782
BR 2 bath , family room ,
11311
formal donong spac ious LR ,
full dovoded ba sement, double
garag e on a leve l well land
scaped la wn

INFORMATION
DEADLINES
EXTERMINATING CO.
5 P M Day Before Publication
Termite &amp; Pest Control
Monday Deadline 9 a m.
WKeelersburg, Ohio
Can!;l!ilatlon &amp; Corrections
Ph 574 6112
Will be accepted until 9 a m lor
52-If
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS
D "p MARTlN &amp; ••n -arer
The Publisher reserves the
•
~
"
Dellwry
Service.
Your right to edol or reject any ads
patronage will be ap . deemed objectional.
The
preclated. Ph 446-046:1
publisher will not be responsoble
Ml for more than one Incorrect
1nsertlon
DANKS TRt:~ St.KVII.I:
RATES
FREE estomates, liability InFor W~nt Ad Service
surance. Prum"g, trimming
5 cents per Word one Insertion
and cavoty work, tree and
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three
stump removal Ph 446 4953
73-tf consecutive InSertions
18 cents per word six con.
secutlve Insertions
RAIKE'S
25 Per Cent Doscount on paid
REFRIGERATION
ads and ads paid wothon 10 days
&amp; AIR CONDITIONING
CARD OF THANKS
~ESIDENTIAL, commercial ,
&amp;OBITUARY
ondustroal. Ph 367 7200
11711
Sl SO for SO word monomum
Each addltoonal word 2c
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Adverlosement
LEGAL NOTICE
OFFICE HOURS
OF TAX FORECLOSURE
B 30 a m to 5 00 p m Dally,
Fred Blars, whose res1dence
s unknown, and cannot be 8 30 a m to 12 00 Noon
IScertalned, and the he.rs, Saturday
tev1sees, legatees and legal
epresentattves, assigns and
text ot km of Fred B1ars if they
tre deceased, will take not1ce MY MOST hearllelt thanks to
hat on the 2nd day of June,
the many friends and neigh
1971 , Oty M Stewart. Gallia
bars
who helped In so many
County Treasurer, f1led his
ways
during the Illness and al
compla•nt against them '" the
!he death of my husband,
Court of Common Pleas wlthtn
and for the County of Gallla,
Fred Special thanks lo the
and State of Oh1o, the same
nurses and medical staff of
belno cause No 16818 m said
The Athens Mental Health
Court, allegmg that on the 1st
Center,
Veterans Memorial
day of June, 1971. the County
Hospital, the Holzer Medical
Auditor of said County duly filed
Center, The Ewing Funeral
with the Prosecuting Attorney
Home, the Rev W. H Perrin
of sa1d County an Original
Delmquent Land Tax Cer
and to the ladles of Trinity
tlflcate of the followmg tract of
Church on Pomeroy lor
land to wit The following
preparing and serving a
descnbed real estate, situate 1n
dinner Lucille Leifheit
the C1ty of GallipoliS, county of
6-13 ltp
Galha and State of Ohio, to wit
Beglnn1ng in the center of
WE WISH to thank neighbors,
Garfield Avenue. State High
way No 1, on the line between
friends, Ewing Funeral
lands formerly owned by
Home, Rev Kuhn and all who
Thomas Fellure and the lands of
helped on any way during the
Bert Rob1nson, thence Yhsterly
loss of our lather, grandfather
67 feet , along the Fellure
and brother, Lee Roy Cook
Robinson line, thence North 17
Your kindness Is very much
degrees West 112 feet, thence
apprecoated Son, Charles ,
South 68 degrees East 67 feet to
the center of Garfield Avenue
daughter, Anita, grand
thence w1th the said Garfield
choldren, sisters, Anna May
Avenue, Southerly 112 feet to
and Edith, brothers, Tom and
the place ot beglnn1ng, con
Joe
tatnmg 17 acres, more or less
6 13 lip
Be1ng the same descr.bed
real estate as 1n Volume 126,
page 65, Deed Records of Gallla 1 WISH fa thank everyone who
Counly , Oh io
was so kind and thoughtful
The prayer of said pel1tion 1S
during my stay at fhe Holzer
for .an order that sa1d property
Medical Center. I especially
be sold by the Shertff of satd
wish to thank those sendong
County '" the manner provided
cards
and flowers, the doctors
by law for the sale of real estate
and
nurses,
the blood donors,
on execution
and fhe many lroends who
The persons f1rst above
ment1oned w111 further take
voslted me. Wolllam H
nottce that they have been made
Thuener
parltes defendant to satd
6 13 lip
petition and they they are
required to answer the same on
or before the 24th day of July,
1971, or the pet1tron of the
Plaintiff w1ll b~ taken as true GUN SHOOT, June 13, Sunday 1
P M Assorted meats and
and 14dgment rendered ac
free eats Racone Gun Club
cordlngly
...""\tJII\H 1 •f,
'~' '"' 694fc
Oty M Stewart.
Gall1a County Treasurer
of Gall1a County PHIL AND JIM's Restaurant
P!aml1ff
and Pozza, formerly Home
Restaurant Open at 6 a m
By Hamlin C K.ng ,
6 13 3tc
Prosecut 1ng Attorney
June 6, 13, 20
FATHER'S DAY special
Skate A Way announces free
skating Wednesday night lor
fathers accompanied by
choldren Open Wednesday,
Froday and Saturday, 7 30 to
10 30 p m Private parties
available Phone 985-3929 or
985 3585
6 13 3tc

TEAFORD

36" X 23" X ,009

SR.

Broker
110 Mechanic St.
l'omeroy, Ohoo

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

BAIRD REAL TV CO.
Oscar Baird, Realtor

Bfor$100

42 ACR ES NI CE HOME
Thr ee bedrooms bath, fur
nace heal. plent y of water. 10
acres ot bottom land, on good
coun ty roa d Pr iced roght lor
qu1ck sal e

Gallipolis
Da11y Tribune

MIDDLEPORT - 7 rooms aor
conditioned Nice living, 4
bedrooms New 2 car garage
all on large lot Asking
$14,500 00

'

825 Thord Ave.
Galllpolrs, 0.

FOUR BEDROOMS 26 ACRE S
- On Slat e Route, water tap
pa od , lull bath sox acre•
bottom , large l 1vmg room ,
famil y room

BusiDess Serv·i ces

76 ACRES - 2o nearly level,
pasture of 25 acres fenced
Large 8 room house Noce 3
baf Implement shed, other
ou buildings, several kinds of
frull, well wafer All this lor
only $13,500 00

PUBLIC
SALE

COUNTRY
HOME
3
bedrooms, bath, shallow well
water, garage, cellar and
garden A good buy at
$7,000 00 or make us an offer,
We are ready to deal

1

This coinong Wednesday
evenong, 7 30, at Knotts
Com m un oly
Auction
Barn, Corner Thord Ave,
and &lt;!lrve St , Gell/polos,
Ohoo Sale conducted by
Student Auctooneers.

fVANS

446-0404
orroct

Free Estrmates

CALL GEORGE 985-3837
OR DON 992-6883

6, 98

Plus
Parts
From the Largel»r truck or1
Bulldozer Redlalor to the
Smallest Healer Core

PHONE 992 2143

BlAEITNARS

JOHNSON MASONRY

BACKHOE AND OOZER work·
Seproc tanks Installed George
(Boll ) Pullins, Phone 9922~78
4 25 tfc

Kotchens, Baths
Room Addotoons
And Patios
Backhoe And
Endloader Work

All Weafller Roofing &amp;
Construction Co
DEXTER, 0 45726
PHONE 742 3945

-~EWING MACHINES

RePair
servoce, all makes 992-2284
The Fabric Shop,\ Pomeroy
Authco lzed Singer Sales end'
Service We Shar.pen Scissors
3 29 lie

Septoc Tanks
And Leach Beds

Insured- Experienced
Work Guaranteed

742-4902

O' BRIEN ELECTRIC SER
VI CE Phone 949 4551.
s 30 tic

What Do You Have For The SSS You Pay In Rent?

* ASlACK OF WORTHLESS RECEIPTS! ! *

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates Ph 446 4782
Gallopolos John Russell.
Owner 8. Operator
5 13 lie

You will have something of value to show lor the 55$ you
spend when you buy your home - plus, you gaon an In
come Tax benefot, 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 HomeownerWe Do The Paperwork On Farmer's Home, V A , F H. A'
And Convenloonal Loans
Come See Us AI 97th N. Second St , Mrddleporl.
PH 992-7129

EXPE RT TREE servoce Call
collect after 5 p m, Richard
Hayman Reedsville M7 30~1.
5-19-JOtp
SEPTIC tanks cleaned Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662 3035
2 12-tfc

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
Evenongs Call992 2534, Dale Dutton

NEIGLER Construction For
buoldlng or remodeling your
home, Call Guy Nelgler,
Racine, Ohio
7 31 lie

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
40 Mrnutes of Your Trme Can Well Be the Most Profitable
Trme You Ever Spent

RALPH'S
CARPET
Uphoisll!ry Cleaning Servlte
Free
estimates
Phon&lt;.
Gall ipolis 446 0294
3 12 lie

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!
f.jWINSOR
.tiiUDDY

:tCHAMPION
1i!.VAN DYKE

.. ALSO
DOUBLE-WIDES
1

,EE TOM CROW, GUY Stf{JLER OR BOB CROW

f'ARk~:RSBUR.G

MOBILE HOMES, INC.

MEMORIAL BRIDGi' TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W VA

=Ret ESl "''"TE on generao
remodeling , roofing and
painting Phone 992 7729, 9
amto6pm
6-9 6fc

- - - -- -

c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949 3821
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford
5-1-tfc

READYMIX
CONCRElE
delivered roghl to ~our
project Fast 'nd easy. Free
estimates Phone 992-3284
Goegleln Ready Mix Co ,
REGISTERED Appaloosa stud
Middlenort.
l"lhio
.~
servr~~·
$50 registered
1 ~' ~\1
~ ~ · . ,.,,... 1 ~ .JO. ' tfc
mares, any breed, $40 grade
mares Franc1s Benedum
HARRISON'S TV AND AN
Phone Coolville 61&gt;7 3856
TENNA SERVICE Phone
5 16 30tp
992 2522
, 6-10-llc
REDUCE safe and fast with

Notice

Gobese tablets and E-Vap
water polls Nelson Drugs
4-14 60tp

Pomeroy

Ph 992-2143

Complete
Remodeling

NEW &amp; OLD WORK

EXPERT lawn mower and
toller repaor Free pickup and
delivery Warren 's Mower
Shop, 248 Condor St Phone
992 7357
5 18 fie

Wo an a rapidly ._,...
tav naHonal COil/IOI&amp;dcra Ia
ued of a distributor Ia par.
cho•• end Mt.ke em uauaual product -A TALIJifQ
VENDING MACHINE. Tho,.
are many choln locatlou
GYallable la rour area awl
we are looklnt for lOla. . . .
to dn·elop lhll ractrbt.
U rou bGY• a car cmd caa
IJ&gt;CIN 01 bHio 01 Ito I ~

TOO LATE
TO CLASSIFY
NOTICE
GARAGE SALE, Friday and AWNINGS, storm doors a~d
Saturday from 9 a m to 7
windows-, carports, mar p.m , Jeffers Clothing Store,
quees , aluminum siding
Old Rl 33, Pomeroy
and raollng Carl A Jacob,
'6 10 lip
sales representative For free
DUE TO lack ot Interest the
estimates, phone Charles
Chester Township Sunday
Lisle, Syracuse
V
V
School Convenhon has been
Johnson and Son, Inc
d1scontmued
6 10 3tp ELECTRO-LUX We want
5-27 ffc
someone who has had ex·
REGISTERED quarter stud
perlence In service and sales 'O'DELL WHEEL alignment
service, Hanks Rock 209498
located at Crossroads,\ Rl 124
for our Pomeroy area. Can be
Contad Moke Jones, Rl. 3,
Complete front end service,
started on part-time basis
Pomeroy, Ohio Phone 992
tune up and brake service
This Is highest raid earning
6880
balanced
elec
Wheels
opportunity a
Its kind
6 2 12tc
Ironically
All
work
available and If you qualify,
guaranteed
Reasonable'
you cap expect to earn over
LABOR LOCAL NO 83 election
rates. Phone 992 3213
$200
per
week
In
fhls
opJune 19, 1971 , 9 a m · 3 p m
5-22 3Qic
porlunlfy No Investment
Vote for Gardner IJune)
required
For detail In
Dunham, Jr for business
formation, write Electro-Lux
agent Support hos staff Why
or
apply at 657 Seventh Street,
are local laborers loafing
W Va
Parkersburg,
when oufsode men are coming
WANTED-DISTRICT
6 13 3tc
In to our area working l
DISTRIBUTOR
promise If elected Ia work
NO
INVESTMEJoiT IN
local men In theor area first
tfNENTORY
OR FEES
LIVE
IN
companion
for
elderly
before outside laborers come
Ambitious
women
with
woman,
light
housework
mto your area A man to serve
Cooking, good wages Phone
Cosmetic
or
selling
you, not rule you Your vote
992-3S07.
background Unique program
apprecoatlfed
6
13
3ic
offers
lull 60 pet Distributor
6 8 9tp
profits All orders and paper
REDUCE safe and fast with WE'LL PUT you to worK
work for your sales group
Gobese tablets and E Vap
stamping commission clr
handled direct from our
Water polls Nelson Drugs
culars paying 50 per cent I'll
facfory For full Information
5-26-30tp
make your rubber stamp with
samples wrlfe R J Lusher,
your name and address
President. Robinette
SAVE UP lo one hall Bring
Stamp and Information, S2
Cosmetics, 8900 Aetna Rd ,
your sock TV to Chuck's TV
The Ambrose Co , 4325
Cleveland, Ohio 44105
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave ,
Lakeborn, Davosburg, Mlch
Pomeroy
48019
~ 23-tlc
6 10 6fp

•••klr, rou can

••So? a

ez:c:eU•nt eupplemtnlal ta.
come. Your ln"YHtmnt cd
1100 ••
IJI'OW
lalo a lull tlme Income.
WE !ITAitiiH ROUl!l
lfO PIRIOifAL SALEI

se.ooo -

CALLI

MACHllfEil DO THE
mLING
Voadta; 11 a .tvorouo 1$.
bUUoa ph11 rec:tlllaa proof
butlntla, Your 1a:l11 a:re
eaoh, lfo CIOdlt rllb, Tour
oqulpmonl to oa oho Job dill'

Wanted

Un•cramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each oquare, to
form four ordtnary words.

Saunders - Evans
Insurance
Inc.
,

Radiator ser-e

Blaettnar's

Roofing &amp; Carpenter
Work
Spouting, Roof
Painting

hV •I[NfH A It NOI 0 .uHIIJOII l f I

1111d alvhL ea:ralllv extra ta.
come lor you aad your
tamnr.
Wt train, CO'Unttl. plclt
cmcl help you vet tlarted llli
a bu•l•n• of your own. No
up.rihc:e DICIIICifJ'• 'ftte
work 11 ealorahlt aad '&lt;llf•
Thla Ia lht ap ol aul•
mated merehaadlsla.v. Our
oqulpmonl II rho boot quai.
lty oad out taack lltat
art aalloaally adnrtleed
bi'GIIda. U fOU wiiJ rho coupoa below we will
be " " bapPf lo dlocuo
tblll •-=ttr fOIL

•

For Rent or Sale

AVAILABLE June 15, two new
50x12 two-bedroom mobile
homes for rent or sale, on lot
LOST IN vlconlly of Hemlock
In
Mason, W Va Call Robert
Grove, black and rust
Dixon collect at 614 61&gt;7 3891
Doberman Pinscher pup
s 30-llc
Reward Phone 992 7291
676tc

Lost and Found

I 1m lntlr1st.d In """ lrdor•lltl•
1Hut nt1lln1 ~ In thl Nntll•
bu1in1ts I Mvt 1 car 1nd I I howl
Ptr wwk ..,.,.. thM
I an lnrtlt "" $900

8I Cln lnwttt Mr $9000

Insurance

Y·l

Nom•- - ------

4UTOMOBI LE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
BABYSITTER , days, on my
operator's license? Call 992·
home Phone 992 7794
29M
6 10 Stc

Adtlr~s'-------

NOTICE

437 SECOND AVE.
(OPPOSITE POST OFFICE)

CHUCK'S TV SHOP IS NOW MAKING HOUSE CAllS ON
COLOR TV, BLACK AND WHITE TV, AND STEREO SETS.

[J

~I FE-

AUTO- HOME
BUSINESS INSURANCE
OFFICE

tiKJBn
J I

446-0404
) 1

Specral
At

cUlYW®~rn; lk.J ~ttJ~&amp;t.J wtWI tJ- Wanted

L FElCAS~LTY

EXPERIENCED

seasonal

Air Conditioning
lnspectjpn and
Re.tharge

Lomestone Driveways
Septoc Tanks and Leach
Beds

CALL US, IF YOU WANT TO
SELL WE WILL DO OUR
BEST TO SELL YOUR
PROPERTY. NO SALE NO
COST 0 YOU. CAL.L 992·
3325.
REGISTERED Arabian Stud
Service Klraff No OS0481
Rich Raffles blood lines Fee
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
$50
Phone 992 6880, E J Hill,
ASSOCIATE
Pomeroy,
Ohio
992-2378
6-13-121c
6 13 6fc

LARRY

Have Your

Backhoe Senice
and Hauling

Help Wanted

iYRACUSE - 3 or 4 bedroor
nice older house with oak from
and floors, 8 rooms with bath,
dining and paneled modern
kitchen Gas furnace, nice
garden Asking only $13,000 00
·with furniture

20~

450 Se•ond Ave
Ph 446 4775

TV Antenna Sales ln slallatoon &amp;'
Servoce Estimates Ph 446
1673 or 446 9679
63 If

«ANI AU

-·---~---I
FAIN

Virgil B.

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

Lots
LOCA TE D on Plant s Sub
d1 v1S1on. sl11table for mob1h
hom es or bu1l dmg homes
Pnced reasonabl e

Services Offered

Free Estimates
Stew,rt's Hardw1re
Vinton, Ohio
,.144·1

ELECTRIC SERVICE
RESIDENTIAL &amp; lndusfrlao
Paul Knox, office Ph 446 101
or home Ph 446-~
70 If

Notice

Easy Terms. , ,
TWO sto ry home 3 BR and
ba th off street parking ,
fenced l awn
low - down,
pay m ent and reasonabl e mo
pay m ents

WE NEED LI STING S - Lo st
w1 th Ba ord Realty Co for fast
act1on on your house, farm, or
busi ness We have buyer s for
all
typ es
of
pr op erly
any wher e on Gall la County
Oscar Baord, 446 4632
Doug Wetherholt, 446 4244

-HNtlna

Card of Thanks

298 tt
DEWITT' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route160at Evergreen
Ph one 446 2735
281 II

7

Central Air Colldltlolllng

Services Offered

LEGAL NOTICE

IN CH ESHIRE Ideal for
1
commerc oal use traol er sale -;:----:::-:--:--:--:-::--l.~-tf
or court Frosty Freeze or any Brammer Plumbong &amp; Heating
300 Fourth Ave
busoness 3 small hom es,
need s some repatr 3 we ll s
Phone 446 1637
Pn ce m m1d twent 1es
Gene Plants, Owner
Sum mer Retreat
2 ACR ES w oth mobile hom e and
hom e combonaloon 5 room and
balh f urna ce deep well and
m f ern small barn, ce llar
house and work shop Full
pn ce $3 900 Now vacant

ALBERT EHMAN
Water Delivery Service
Pa,trlot Star Rt., Galllpoll$
..fh 379-2133

Services Offered

TERMITE PEF CO~TROL.
_ _ ..,.......
FREE Inspection. Call446-3245,,
Merrill O'Dell, Clperater for
Extermlnal Termite Service,
19 Belmont Dr. ,
IF YOU have a KOHLER
267-11 WATER well drilling, Myers
pumps Sale and service.
engine on' your tractor see us
for parts and service GILLENWATER'S Septic Tank
Complete water line service
and trenching C J Lemley,
Cle•nlng &amp; Repair. Ph. 446·
Superior Motor Service,
Vonton, Ohio Ph 388-8543.
9-499. Prlce Is right
Huntington, W Va
114 tf
'
134-6
174 II
- - - - -- - --

Pl~mbong

CAMP SITE and buo ldong lot s
Pl enty of shade, wafe r on
every lot electr:Jc , telephone,
boat do c ~ provoleg e some
waler fr onl lol s Located 8 mo
fr om Gallopolo s down Rt 7 to
Ra ccoon Creek Turn R on
for st road beyond the brodge,
go J/4 m 1 up cr ee k Open for
onspectoon every Sunday Call
Howa rd Br annon 4d6 122 6

10

Services Offered

DEAD STOCK

Plumbing &amp;Heating

Raccoon Creek

STROUT REALTY

,

APACHE has done If again
New tentless solid stale
models gtve yQu more
protechon, privacy and ex·
tended use And now till
Mooday June 21st, we will
gove a bog 10 per cent discount
on all new &amp; used trailers .
{Closed June 21 toll July 4 for
vacation l Amsbary's Apache
Traoler Sales, 631 Fourth
Ave , Gal l lpolos
138-tf

Dillon
Agency

THE WISEMAN

Services Offered

Caf1!ping Equipment

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For SaiP

For Sale

For Sale

25-TbP '!lundayTimes.Sentinei,Sundly,JWJe 13,19'11

mr

I 1/SUft/111 L t\ 1/ • Ill

K-t.Wtf;

Gm1 l
M 111 1n 1\. ll !•t l
IS ,,

HOW:I.RD i
SAUNDERS
1'111 I H \I II ,J K~ l~SI K.\~lHll

'YOU'RE LJ5uALLY AT
L.l~i:RTY iO

00 THI:Fl.E.

.

'

"'

:"iow arranae the circled letters

to fonn the ourpriae an1wer, u
BU ece1ted by the above cartoon.

I' ""' ..- -.. I Kl l 1( I 1 I I XI)

-~-__.._

With this Ad and

$4.00

you can get a

$6.50

House Call. This in-

cludes complete Color Adjustments that will bring your
back to new life, as it was a few years back.
Your Service Men Are
Scott Smith

an~

Chuck Humphrey

CHUCK•s TV SHOP
152 BUTTERNUT
OPEN9TIL9-6 DAYS A WEEK

,I

set

POMEROY

�26 - The SWlday Times- Sentinel, SWlday , June 13, 1971

Glen Arvin

ARCHED

Our Newest

- ~

ALU.MINUM AWNINGS

1971 BUICK

JUNE DISCOUNT DAYS

DOUBLE
WIDE

lc u ;r «

HOMES CORPORATION

s1 000 - -

--·-- ----

New 65x14 Wide
NOW ON DISPLAY
S~LE PRICE '7395

1

against chipping, cracking. peel - 1

ing, rott ing, rust, tearing apart 1
• Completely equipped - skimmer, I
filter. pump &amp; motor, main drain, I

Complete deluxe furniture package, fully carpeted, house-type door,
storms and screens, 30 gaL water heater, stainless sink and plumbed
for washer.
'
· '

inlet fitting all accessories

.

.

Loca ted on Athens
County roa~ C-64, Vanderhoff

Rd ., one ~mle from Rt. 7 and
three mil~ from Rt . 50.

Twenty mmutes to Parkers-

burg, Athens, or Pomeroy ;

20 miles (18 miles 41ane high -

•

way), 19 miles, and 18 miles,
respectively ; 31h miles from

Coolville. 1 mile from Tuppers Plain s. $14,500 by
owners , Fra nk

and

Goebel. 667-3838.

Keith Goble Mobile Hoine Sales, Inc.
Lot Ph. 992-7004
If No Answer, 992-3422
Daily 12 to 9, Sunday 1 to 6
OPPOSITE GOBLE'S USED CAR LOT

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

. -4fl

with

~---------.

I

Phone Columbus
Collect

I
Free Set- Up I

I We Service I
We Finance .JI
,I________

~-'

12' - 14' - 24' - WIDE

motor , trailer, w.ater skls,

6-9-41p

-- - - FROM WALL Ia wall , no soil at

all on carpets cleaned with
Blue Lustre. Rent eleclrlc
shampooer $1. Baker Fur-

Jemo
Associates,
· Inc· .

I

or

without

farm

mach ine ry. House with 3
bedrooms, dining room, li_ving

room, 1V&gt; baths, enclosed
back porch. wall Ia wall
carpeling. Aluminum siding,
awning, storm windows and
slarm do ors . Ci1y water .
1 Selling due to ill health. Phone
614·985-3938.
1
s-t8-3otp

ll/2

baths, enclosed

back porch, wall to wall

storm doors. City&lt; water .·
Selling due to ill heal1h. Phone
61 4·985-3938.
I
5-18·30tp

For Sale
50x10 RI CHARDSON mobile
home, 2 bedroom · with air
conditioning . Phone 992·5867.
6-11-6tc
5 POLL ED Hereford cow s.

Phone 669-4240 Wilk esv ill e
after 5 p.m.
6-1t-6tp

For Rent
HAVE nice sleeping room ,

private entrance and private
bath . Good location. Phone
992-5508.
6· 10-3tc
TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
lf2-mlie north of new Meigs
High School . Phone 992-2941 .
3-5-lfc
---:--:::--~--:­

SET OF Colliers Encyclopedia
and 12-year books. Boy Scout
uniforms. Phone 992-6529.
·
6-13-Jtc
H&amp;N DAY-OLD or · started
Leghorn pulle'-· Both floor or
ceo• grown available .
Poultry
hou1lng
and .·
automaHon. MocMrri Poultry,
3911 W. Main, Pon.-ov. Phone
f92·216f.
lie

OH 10 RIVER SIDE LOT :
Shade trees, sandy beach and
all lllilities. 80x380 feet in·
. co"t~~~~ ~~~~lNG
eludes 100-year old house that
DISTRIBUTORS
could be restored. Located in
Mason, w. Va . Call Athens,
Due to expansion In the U.S.
Ohio 614-592-1738.
weare offering an opportunity
6-11 -2tc
to supervise company secured
store accounts carrying fastselling line of popular books. Sl.o&lt; ROOM house, bath, fuli
basement, 133 Butternut Ave ..
Man or Woman. No selling .
just walking distance from
down town Pomeroy.. Contact
If you are energetic, honest•.
Ed Hedrick,. 2137 Wadsworth
can devote an hour a day, and
Drive, Columbus, Ohio, phone
are able to Invest 51.700 to
237-4334, Columbus.
$4,500 to .cover Initial InH -lfc
ventory, you can earn up to
$800 per month or more, 'HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln Hts.
depending . on effort and in·
Pomeroy . Phone 992-2293 . . ·
vestment.
10.25-!jc

Polara Custom 4 Dr. H/Top

Monaco 2 Dr. H/Top

R. H. MIDDLEPORT,
RAWLINGS0. SONS

2 Seats, runs well, local trade-ln.

992-2151 or 992-2152
Eveni
Till8:00

•

0
~•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••,!•

'1095°

YOU WILL FIND. • •

'ii ~ ~~l. •••T OP THB LOTI .

Your Datsun dealer is
the Small Car Expert. Let
him show you what makes
the 510 Sedan perfect.
• Overhead cam engine
• Reclining front buckets
More Information provided If
.•
Whitewall tires
letter contains details on self. HOUSE - 1642 Lincoln Helgh1s.
Call Danny Thompson, 992- • Vinyl upholstery
When writing. please Include
2196.
phone number.
S-26·tfc • Tinted glass
WORLD CLASSICS. INC.
Drive a Datsun...
4901 34th Stroot North
then decide.

WMP0/1390

Jl&amp;JJU!
SMitH
AUTO SALES
•

I

Upper Rt. 7

$3495

69 CHEVROLET, lmpala2 Dr. Hardtop ,$2395

Gallipolis, 0.

1963 DODGE DART, 4 door,
HARTS' USED CARS
automatic
transmission,
New Haven
West Virginia · excellent condition. $425. May
882-2793
70 FORD Pickup, custom, 6 cyl. be seen at Bob Salser's,
sI ~ridard transm Iss Ion, Iong &amp; Racine. Ohio.
6.1J.Jtc
wide bed.
69 CHEV. pickup truck, 6 cyl. - - - - - - - -

~:d~~-'r:.'d~ml,lon,long&amp;

67 CHEV. pickup, custom cab,

VB, standard transmission.
long &amp; wide bed.
65 DODGE pickup, 6 cyl..
standard transml~slon. long &amp;
· wide bed, extra nice.
68 EL CAMINO, V8, automatic
transmls ion, white with
matching Interior.
69 CAOOILAC coupe DeVIlle,
loaded with extras. Gold with
Slack Vlnr' Top.
66 CHEVEL E, Super Sport 427
engjne. Hurst shifter or 456
positive traction ·. rear. end,
wtth a· s~t of Mag wheels.
Extra sharR.
.
WIN a Sprint Mini-Bike. Stop In
and register. Drawing noon
July 3. No purchase
·necessary , need . not be
present to win.
6. 10-Jtc

68 CHEVROLET, Impala 4 D~- Sedan
'

68DODGE, Darl4 Dr. Sedan ·,,

. $1595

1-Mnslvt
6-Citrul fruit
(pl .)

aeneral

11-Pfltime

Phone 992.2288.

38--Dinnor ohto~
43- MIIat tub•

NORRIS DODGE
Upper Rt. 1

Phone 446-0605 or 1146-0842
GALLIPoLIS, OHIO

ins1ru.

guages. R.H., L.H., eye level mirrors.
rear step bumper, front stabilizer. frt.
dtsc brakes, back-up lamps, seat bells,
2-s peed wiper-washer .
List $3379.40
Inflation Fiahter Price

$2791

1971 Chevrolet 1h Ton

8ft. Fleetslde, 350 cu . ln., 8 cyl. engine,
specia l paint. dark blue &amp; wh . top. ail
mldgs.. stainless mirrors. H.D. rear
springs, Turbo Hydromatlc, power
steering, G 78 wh. wall tires, full wh.
covers, Tachometer, P.B., radio, rear

step bumper, custom sport cab, frt. disc
brakes, back-up lamps, seat bells. 2speed wiper.wash er .

$3649

List $4347.50
lnflalton F1ghter Price

1971 Chevrolet 1h Ton
6 Ft . Fleetside, 350 cu. ln. V-8, white
over red orange, specia l paint, all
mldgs .. stainless rnfrrors, Tur bo
Hydromatlc, power steering, G 78 w-w
tires, full wh . covers, P. B.• radio. rear
step bumper, guages, Cheyenne custom
sport equipped, frt. disc brakes. back·
up lamps, seat belts, 2·speed wipers &amp;
washer.

1971 Chevrolet %Ton
8 ft. Fleetslde, 350 cu. In V-8 engine,
spec. paint, yellow &amp; med. olive, body
side mldgs., stainless below eyellne
mirrors, paint stripe, h. duty leaf
suspension &amp; springs, Turbo
Hydromatlc, power steering, 750x16·6
ply frt · 8 ply rear ti res, rear step
bumper, lnstru . guages. custom
comfort cab, frt. disc brakes, B-Up
lamps, seal belts, 2-speed wiperswasher, camper special.

$3631

List $4365.00
Inflation Fighter Price

Brand New lOW El Dorado
lriquois Pickup Camper
Full equipment, sleeps 6, 11,000 B'TU
furnace, body lacks, Sanlware toilet
with holding tank, 4 cu. ft.' gas · electric
refrlg., stove with oven, hood &amp; fan.
Deluxe equipped throughout.
·
Retails Over S2800
Buy be low Cost

1971 Chevrolet lh Ton

~

lmtaJibn Fighter Price

1971 Chevrolet 1h Ton

$2718

List $3250.10
Inflation Fighter Price

1971 Chevrolet

*Ton

8 ft . Fleetslde, 350 V·8 engine, med.
gre~h finish, ·frl. disc brakes, befow
eyeline mirrors, h. duty leaf rear
spring. 750x16 6 ply frt. tires, 8 ply rear
11r.es, rear step bumper, full depth foam
_ ~eat. lnstru . guages, B-Up lamps. seat
$eJ!s. 2-speed wiper-washer.

$3224

list $.3853.30
Inflation Fig~ter Price

CAU SALESMEN
GEO. HARRIS
UOYD McLAUGHUN

BIU GRUESER

Visit Our ·Display Regatta Weekend • June 18-19-20

Pomeroy Motor
11L 8

OPEN EVES
For Sale

For Sale

For Sale .

'

POMEROY, 0.

For Sale .

REGATTA Special. 17-ft . KOSCOT KOSMETICS, wigs OLD ENGLISH Sheepdog MODERN WALNUT StereoThompson boat, dock covers. and accessories. Call us for
pupr,Jes. 5 months old. Also a
radio combination, · dual
extras, 75 HP newfy rebuilt
your needs . We deliver
whl e Peklngeae. Priced very
volume control, 4 speakers, 4
motor, trailer. Good ski boat, distributors, Brown's, Phone
reasonable. Phene Parkers-, speed changer, separate
$600 . Call 992-2003 . Will
992-Sll3.
burg 428-7545.
controls. Balance S63 .79. Use
6-2-tfc
demonstrate.
6·13-3tp
our budget terms. Call 9926·8-tfc
7085.
6- 13-6tc

eo,.:..Rellalout.
devotee
62-Exlsll"l In
n1mt only
·

for

tellurium
16-Ctnt (•bbr.l
11-"l,lrnbtrs
(-)
89-Pirt IIIP

Ot

7o-.Umbo

nlckntme
109-Malden lo...ed by
Zeus
·

110-Three·toed

59-Rttldut

~S}'mbol

37-lmltattd

95-formtr

145-0eclare
147- Title of
respect

39-Washlnl
40-Chee\1:

96--Matal

41-HIJhlander
42- Pient of pea

DOWN

retlo ' ' sloth

tht dtwn

54-Merit

91-Welrd
92-Chair
93-Shortly

birds
161-Binds

104-Seo oagto

·
6.J.tfc ' 47- EnJrtvtCt with
acid
4t-Gtomttric
S()-Btlort

tree

number

71-Dittntte ortlclo
••:. ,. ,., . 72-lemstrer
1 -11:!

111-Llquid measure

112- Yitld
114-Bone of body

1

116-Evtryone

117__:commemoratlvt
disks
119-Sults

120--::tt

122-Vullar
124-ln music, hiJh
12S-Bev•r•ae (pl .)

138. ""'""
i39-f'odlnta

seaport

5-Hit ll1htly
&amp;-Woolly
7-Repeet
8-Montht (abbr.)

9- Printtr't , '
meuurt
10- Stltch
11-Europtln
herrinl
12- Liquld

(colloq.)

48-FIIament
49- Heavenly body
50-Is mistaken

51-Sped
52-C hemlcal
compound

53-Permanent
papal
ambast1dOr

17-Sklll

18-Preli~e :

twice
·19-St•l• whisper

64-God of love
68-More

ditch
127-Stwinl
Implement
129- stoedsldt hotel

of

130-CoJnlzant

precl pltous
70- Put on one's

131--Vtntllate
132-Boa down
134-Perlod of tlmt
13~RiJIIl ln

1

75-Ancltnt

eharlot
77-Bnf animal

78-Post of
command

80-Maturtd
81--Nahoorsheep .
83-Reman bron;r,t
84-Polnt of
hemmer

87-Misttkta

113-SapllnJ
115-Vustl
116-Wooden vessels
118-Mtnd' wlth
cottOn
119-Escape
121-lntrlctable
pertons

125-A&amp;rttment
126-Protec:tlvt

58-Sowe
61- Pert of speech
63-Employs

74- Dry

107-Petitioned
111-Wan
112-Row

123-Conjunctlon

compound

1uard
71-Sees•w
73-Siuplsh

'Runlan ruler

10h$evers

46-Partnt

57-Chemical

6-13-Jip

fasteners
97-Wooden pin
99- Fish limbs
101- Made amtndt
. 105- Rhythmlcel
awinl

44-Aieerlan

2-Lasso
3-Dinll
4-lndeflnlte
article

·

family
43-0ock

5S-Siumbera
56-Contest

measure
13-Harvest
126-Middle
eoddtsi
128-lnqulre
14-Note or scale
129-Ftmalt hone
131--Genu' of m•Ples 15-Thtatrleer
132-Turf
1roup
.
16-Crat•
1U-Wtlcomt

I311-Pioco

36--Coln

1- Look
steadfastly

ft . mower semi -mounted.
Phone im.4111.'

~0-Cholce part

29-ln

142-Note of scale
1-43- Symbol for
ttntalum
144-Danlsh Island

159-Spetk slowly
160--Wtb·footed

· 108- Mon'•

15-Ltt It sttnd
51-Citulfln •

$1095 .

springs,

89- Medlcal
ln1otltution

20--Citrua frult
27-Tlme aont by
bed
31-Ceoutchouc

1!&gt;6-Burst forth
!58-Smallest

98-MutiCII
instrument

99-Give food to
fl1h
lQO-Brown kiwi
35-Fiyinl mammal 102- Varnlsh

$1795

65 DODGE, Dart, GT 2 Dr. Hardtop

premium

34-Lona, slender

67 PONTIAC, Firebird 2 dr. Hdtp., AC

66 CHEVROLET, Impala 2, Dr. Hardtop $1095

H. 0 . · rear

red

:-:-1-t-+-i--i pllclly 5~ H.P., 32 Inch cut, 7

141- Comb, form:
thrice

86-Sitve
149-Shallow vessel
88- Proflt
89-Anclent wnpon l5Q-Wlpe out
152-Repulae
90-Gave up
154-Knot In tree
92- Lances
trunk
94-Colony

notice
3o-Expel
32-NtJitiVt prefix
33-Neer

$1895

$1395

85-E~echan&amp;e

25-Grtln
2fr-Shtltl of &amp;Its•
28--Givlt ad&gt;Jance

67 DODGE, Monaco4 Dr. Sedan, AC

67 PLYMOUTH, Valiant 4 Or. Sedan

84-Equal&amp;

23-Fiut• piiYtr
24-Gtt up

51-Kttp
54-Ptrttlnln• to

•

79-Gioomlnus
82- Freshtts

16-Consplrecy
21-c11mbln1 pltnt
22-Mtkt amends

11

written

77-Piumlike fruit
78-P•y attention

4.4-Unloc:k
.45-Simltn

-,.,..,---------'

14~Muslc:

74-Shsrp
76-Confedtr.ate

ACROSS

105-Ftltlfler
106-Rall bird {pl.)

miles. Excellent condition.

finish,

SUNDAY, JUNE 13, 1971

4o-Rosttrs
.42-Ptrmlt

$2095

111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

1971
Chevrolet ~ Ton
8 fl . Fleetside, 307 V-8 engine,

$2651!U'=- J.,m.i4291.85
~3574
Inflation Fighter Price

~i~t $3~72.60

992-2126

4
20
Bfor$1.00
The
Daily Sentinel

71 cHvy Fleetside

RIDING LAWN mower, Slm-

hardtop, power steering,
power brakes, air, 18,000

68 DODGE, Coronet 2 Dr. Hardtop

HAVE
MANY USES

·s u
· NDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

lnJredlent
103--Chttr

1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2·dr :

.1'

FOR A Meyers aluminum boat
-won't rust, rot, or'leak. Call
992-6256 after 5 p.m. Also.
fiberglass 15 foot canoes.
5-16-30tc

36--SIIpper
37-FUII

---'-------

$2195
$1895
$1895

15-16 CHAROLAIS bull, 4 years
old, and Hampshire boar hog,
240 lbs. Phone 949-3835 .
6· 13-3tc

Auto Sales

68 DODGE, Polara 4 Dr. Sedan
68 FORO, Mustang,2 Dr. Hardtop

16 LAYING hens, 50 cents each.
Phone 992-3196 or 742-5829.
6-10-Jtc
COAL , limestone . Excelsior'
Sail Works. E. Main St.,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891 .
.
,
4·9-tfc

•.

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets
USED OFFSET PLATES

For Sale

WOOD 'MOTOR SALES
Auto Sales

AT NORRIS DODGE

1970 MAVERICK, standard NEW 4 fl. or 5 fl. brush hog.
Phone 992-6329.
1ransmissian, radio , 25
M.P.G. $1595. 1965 Ford
Galaxie, automatic, factory
air. $695 Coolville 667-6214.
.
6-10-6tp
36" X23" ~ .009

$1,795 .
Eastern Ave.

•"'"--------------1!111--•-.

8ft. Stepslde, 6 cyl. engine, dark blue
finish, painted r. bumper, On &amp; Off rear
tires, frt. d\sc brakes, backup lamps,
seat belts, 2-speed wlper -washe~.

8ft. F!eetside, 6 cyl. engine, white over
med. blue, h. duty R. sprlnqs, full foam
seat, rear Step bumper, frt. disc
brakes, backup lamps, seat belts, 2·
speed wipers. dual mirrors.

For Sale

Auto Sales

2 Or , hardtop, 327 cu. in. V-8 engine, radio &amp;
heater, auto. trans., p. steering, p . brakes,
gold metallic finish with matching Interior .
Fac. air cond., w -s -w tires. Ex. cond.

• Auto. trans. , P .S.. P.B., Extra Sharp. Exact low mileage. _locale
•

INTERNATIONAL

FURNISHED and unfurnished
· apartments. Close to school.
NEW 1971 zlg .zag sewing' Phone 992-5434.
. machine In original factory
10·18-lfc
car ton . Zig .zag to make
bullonholes, sew on buttons,
monograms. and ma~e fancy GOOD HILL pasture. Plenty of
St. Petersburg, Fla. 33714
designs wifh just the twist of a
water. For rent at Rutland .
single diaL Lefl in lay-a-way
Phone 742·5584.
ITEM: Morning. A
and never been used . Will sell
6-ll
-2tc
Wanted To Buy
teslful time for some
for only $47 cash, or credit
terms ayallable. Phone 992- EFFICIENCY apartment, $10 'rEiEPHONES, brass beds, people. Double dismal
5641.
per week . Phone 992-5434.
clocks. dishes, old fornilure, for others. Jim Mees
6-9·41c
.
· ·6-ll-31c etc. Write M. 0. Miller, Rt. 4, -~s.omtehow gets ··us all
Pomeroy. Ohio. Call 992-6271. I
.
ELECTROLUX vacuum
4·27-tfc
together
,every day.
deaner complete with at- 4 ROOM furnished apartment
tachments, cordwindel' a~d with beth. Reynolds Flower ---:-c----~
dlshos,
pain t spray .. Used bu1 In like Shop, MalOn, W, Va. Also 2 ANTIQUES:
telephones,
clocks,
bran
new condition, Pay $34.25 bedroom trailer. Phorie 773.
beds,
lamps,
etc.
C..
Rudisill,
cash or budget plan available. 5147.
,Phone 992-3403.
Phor e 992-5641:
6-8-tfc
5-27-JOtc
.
6-9-4tc

67 CHEV. IMPALA

. I businessman 's trade-in .

70 DODGE, Polara 4 Dr. Hardtop, AC

.

13 "COOL" REASONS TO TALK TO THE
GOOD GUYS AT RAWLINGS ... Pearl Ash,
.~.!rt~rson Jones, Hilton ~'N9.1fl,l.o W!JIIac~ Amberger, Dick Rawlings.

992-5342
GMAC Financing Available
POMEROY
"You'll Lfke Our Quaflty Way of Doing _Business"

•

1971
. Chevrolet 1fz Ton

V-8, T-Fiite, p. st., p. br., dark blue, AIR CONDITIONE'O.

E~f."' Tii"'B=-Til 5 P.M. Sat.

: 1965 FORD GALAXIE '500' 2 DR. HDTP. :

Ask the expert.

$2605

List $3107.70
Inflation 'Fighter Price

V-8, T-FIJte, p. st., p. br., turquoise, AIR CONDITIONED.

KARR &amp;.VAN ZANDT

.

Is this
the perfect
Datsun?

mirrors.

Polara Custom 2 Dr. H/Top

Buick trade-in.

'

wilhh
or · wHithoul
_ftahrm3
mac
in'l'Y
ouse
bedrooms,
dinlrlg
roomwr
, living • • • • • • • • • • car peting . Aluminum siding,
awning, storm windows and

COLONIAL Maple Stereo-Radio
combinallon, AM·FM radio,
four speakers, 4 speed lnlermixed changer. separate
controls. Balance $78.60. Use
our time payment plan . Call
992-7085.
6-13-6tc

V-8•. T-Fiite, p. st., p. br., dark bronze, AIR CONDITIONED.

3 Seats. fact. air. cond ., P.S.• P. B.• new

'1195
~ ·795 .
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

l

room,

1220 Washington Blvd.
Belpre, Ohio

Polati Custom 4 Dr. Sedan

See Them Here!

1 3 BEDROOM brick home .
1 Choice location in Middleport.
I Seen by appointment only.
Phone 992-5523 after \~:'Rc

1-------------l

MOBILE HOMES

·

6·6-lfc

61/2 ft. Stepside, 6 cyl. engine. painted
rear bumper, color med. green, backup
lamps, seat bells, 2-speed wiperwasher, front disc brakes, dual

V·8, T-Fiite, p. st., p. br., burgundy, AIR CONDITIONED.

1965 Chev. II Wagon

Bel Air Model, 3 seats. P.S., P.B.,
luggage rack.

$3399

1971 Chevrolet 1h ·Ton

V-8, T-FIIIe, p. st., p. br., dark green, ·. AIR CONDITIONED.

LOOK
OF
LEADERSHIP

.. ·- •1-295 ~

1966 Chevrolet Wagon

204 ACTON ROAD .
COLUMBUS, OHIO 432141 2:-4~A::C:::R-::E:-::F:-:A-::R7M:-,7L~on-:-g-;:B;-o1;;-lam,

niture.

MILLER

I

I
I.
( 1) 268-1810
I
one Week Installation. I
Aboullheprlceofa good car.l

14 FOOT BOAT, 40 HP Nlercury
$400. Phone 992-5532.

Pa t

i24 ACRE FARM. Long Bo11om,

For Sale

,. ~

•2695

.

List $3857.75
Inflation Fighter
Price

Polara 4 Dr. Sedan

water.

• Any shape ,or SIZe

Stop In, Call or Write or Talk to
Dan Thompson, Tom Lavender or John Ketchka

V-8, T·FIIte. buckets, p. st., light gold, AIR CONDITIONED.

THE NEW

1965 Olds Vista Cruiser

1968 Buick Sportwagon
grain applique, excellent cond ., local
executive's trade-in .

Ha II mark

Qlarger SE 2 Dr. H!Top

Polara Custom 4 Dr. Sedan

'1495

2 Seats, fact. air cond ., P.S., P. B., wood

I NI CE HOME l f\1 COUNTRYI One acre, nicely fi nis hed 1wo
I bedroom home with tireplace,
FIBERGLAs" POOLSI bu ill -in kit chen, wo_od
•15 year Fibergla,.guaranteol pan eling, carpeted, crty

V-8, T-FIIte, p. st., while, AIR CONDITIONED.

.V-8, T-Fiite, p. st.. p. br., turquoise, AIR CONDITIONED.

GREAT FOR VACATIONS

and cellar. Good location .
Phone 992-5808.
6-13-3tc

307 V-8 engine. green ~lnyl roof, lime
green color, Turbo hydramatlc1 power
steering, E-78 w-w fires, full wheel
covers, remote O.S. mirror, electric
clock, AM p. button radio, auxiliary
lighting, rear air shocks, se.a t belts.

Polara 2 Dr. H/Top

6-13-6tc

I

Coronet 8rougham 4 Dr. Sedan

PONTIAC' .
GMC ' TRUCKS .
116 Years of Continuous Business
PHONE992-2143
POME~OY, OHIO

STATION WAGONS VALUES

5 ROOMS AND bath, basement

1971 Chevrolet El Camino

V-8, T.- Fttte. o. st., dark gold, AIR CONDITIONED.

V-8, T-Filte, p. st., p. br., "318" dark green, AIR CONDITIONED.

'1695

WE HAVE SOLD MANY
HOMES THIS MONTH. LET
US SELL YOURS TODAY .

• -

Coronet Custom 4 Dr. Sedan

BUICK

2 Dr . hdtp., P.S.• red and white, Prem.
Radial tires, sharp:

r

71

V·S, p. st., p. b!·• automatic, AIR CONDITIONED.

BLAEnNARS

4-Speed trans., 4 cyl. eng., heavy duty
spring s. Bigges t little truck around .

4

Read this ad carefullyt
Nev.e r before has Pomeroy
Motor Co. had a sale like
this.
We
wi II
not
knowUngly be undersold!
These units. are on a first
come first buy basis .. , So
· hurry and buy that truck
from Pomeroy Motor Co.
now!

Ambassador Brougham 4·Dr. Sedan

. . - . 'MANY MORE

Cusf. 4-dr. hdtp., air cond ., vinyl top,
low mileage, local owner.

.A CHEVROLET TRUCK

V-8, automatic, p. st., p. br., AIR CONDITIONED.

$395

1968Skylark

TRUCK"

11

Matador 4 Dr. Wuon

$2195

65' Automobiles, most makes and body ·As low as
styles. We're loaded with '65s and will
make best deals ever.

'2495

1967 Ford Galaxie

bedrooms, basement, nice
ard. MY SELLING PRICE
S JUST $10,000. SEE ME
TODAY.

'O't'

·

2 Dr. H.T., one careful local owner, all white like new finish
with buck skin vinyl top.

1970 Datsun Pickup

I AM LOCATED ON THE
BEAUTIFUL OHIO RIVER
-I have kitchen, din ing room;

HENRY CLELAND,
REALTOR
Office 992-2259
Residence 991-2568

.

•2395

!hal's afl we' re asking .

•

·

69 PONTIAC

Or. hdtp., air cond., P.S., P.B., grey
with black vinyl top. Exact one owner
mileage .

hauling .

bath ,

2

top.

4

V-8, auto., excellent for camping or

-

68
DODGE
$1,895
V-8 Polalara dr. hardtop, beautiful gold finish with black vinyl

1968 l.eSabre

1969 Chev. Sport Van Cusl ·

worth of contentment here,

room,

'995
Wildcat Convertible, faclory air conditioning. A beautiful car at

.

IF .YOU'RE THINKING ABOUT BUYING A

You Won't Be In AHeap
Of Trouble If You Trade
W•lth u~-················~--~······
GremlinX2 S 0 L D
Six cyl,, p. st .• automatiC, root rack, AIR CONDITIONED.

4

•2895

·.•2895

'

car, only 2800 easy miles. Fully equipped.

mil es.

loca l trade-in.

CLELAND REALTY
ALMOST NEW BRICKROOMY RANCH STYLE
HOME. 3 big bedrooms with
double closets. Insulated for
exira protection. Quiet street,
no traffic. Large yard for kids
and pels . More than $27,500

living

65 BUICK

V-8, auto .. P.S., P.B., blue color, 9,000

Auto., P.S. , P. B., fa ctory air cond .,

Pomeroy

BY

VAN

12 SKYLARKS

4-Dr. Sed., air cond., radio, P.S.• P.B..
local physician's frade-in.

1970 P~. Barracuda·

608 East Main

Dan Says: "Come and See Our New, New

.

71
PONTIAC
$AVE
catalina dr. sedan. factory air conditioning, driver's training

1970 Camero

'3495

Cleland Realty

. EASTERN AVE.. 'GAWPOUS

JACKSON AVE.. PT. PLEASANT

.

10 LeSABRES

1969 Electra 225

Real Estate For Sale

K&amp;K MOBILE HOMES

catalina. 2 dr. tlardtop. one careful local owner. Extra sharp.

\I~ I\ I

HUGE USED CAR SELECTIONS

See Jim Staats or Joe Giles
Upper Rt. 7, Next Door to Auto ~uc~ion .
Phone ~46-V140
Galhpohs, Ohto

,..-·-~·-·-

I:

$2,695

a .low price. This Is one in La~r Day Parade.

MOBILE HOME SALES
K&amp;K MOBILE HOMES CAN BEAUTIFY YOUR MOBILE HOME
WITH AWNINGS • UNDER PINING

·70 PONTIAC

ESTATE WAGONS

ssoo _ _

c7md &lt;&amp;tf'

NEVER :CATCH US WITH OU.R
CHEVY TRUCK PRICES LOWER.

8 ELECTRAS

$900
$750

All you'd expect from Elcona and then some.
With 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, bay windows, rai.s ed
living room area, attractive fire place optton,
kitchen-dining area, embossed aluminum
exterior, recessed porch, fully furnished . See
this beauty today .

YOU'LL PROBaBLY

IN STOCK

DISCOUNT

stocked•
137-Shtdts

139-Encounttr

140-Cook &amp;lowly
144-Btast of burden

145-RtsOrt

146-Urt• on
147-Gh1't ntmt.

148-l:ncounttrtd
149-lmoll doC

151,-.c:ootod ,•••
1~f-T•utanlc

dtltr

155-Compnt point
U)--Sun IOd

"

·I

�26 - The SWlday Times- Sentinel, SWlday , June 13, 1971

Glen Arvin

ARCHED

Our Newest

- ~

ALU.MINUM AWNINGS

1971 BUICK

JUNE DISCOUNT DAYS

DOUBLE
WIDE

lc u ;r «

HOMES CORPORATION

s1 000 - -

--·-- ----

New 65x14 Wide
NOW ON DISPLAY
S~LE PRICE '7395

1

against chipping, cracking. peel - 1

ing, rott ing, rust, tearing apart 1
• Completely equipped - skimmer, I
filter. pump &amp; motor, main drain, I

Complete deluxe furniture package, fully carpeted, house-type door,
storms and screens, 30 gaL water heater, stainless sink and plumbed
for washer.
'
· '

inlet fitting all accessories

.

.

Loca ted on Athens
County roa~ C-64, Vanderhoff

Rd ., one ~mle from Rt. 7 and
three mil~ from Rt . 50.

Twenty mmutes to Parkers-

burg, Athens, or Pomeroy ;

20 miles (18 miles 41ane high -

•

way), 19 miles, and 18 miles,
respectively ; 31h miles from

Coolville. 1 mile from Tuppers Plain s. $14,500 by
owners , Fra nk

and

Goebel. 667-3838.

Keith Goble Mobile Hoine Sales, Inc.
Lot Ph. 992-7004
If No Answer, 992-3422
Daily 12 to 9, Sunday 1 to 6
OPPOSITE GOBLE'S USED CAR LOT

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

. -4fl

with

~---------.

I

Phone Columbus
Collect

I
Free Set- Up I

I We Service I
We Finance .JI
,I________

~-'

12' - 14' - 24' - WIDE

motor , trailer, w.ater skls,

6-9-41p

-- - - FROM WALL Ia wall , no soil at

all on carpets cleaned with
Blue Lustre. Rent eleclrlc
shampooer $1. Baker Fur-

Jemo
Associates,
· Inc· .

I

or

without

farm

mach ine ry. House with 3
bedrooms, dining room, li_ving

room, 1V&gt; baths, enclosed
back porch. wall Ia wall
carpeling. Aluminum siding,
awning, storm windows and
slarm do ors . Ci1y water .
1 Selling due to ill health. Phone
614·985-3938.
1
s-t8-3otp

ll/2

baths, enclosed

back porch, wall to wall

storm doors. City&lt; water .·
Selling due to ill heal1h. Phone
61 4·985-3938.
I
5-18·30tp

For Sale
50x10 RI CHARDSON mobile
home, 2 bedroom · with air
conditioning . Phone 992·5867.
6-11-6tc
5 POLL ED Hereford cow s.

Phone 669-4240 Wilk esv ill e
after 5 p.m.
6-1t-6tp

For Rent
HAVE nice sleeping room ,

private entrance and private
bath . Good location. Phone
992-5508.
6· 10-3tc
TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
lf2-mlie north of new Meigs
High School . Phone 992-2941 .
3-5-lfc
---:--:::--~--:­

SET OF Colliers Encyclopedia
and 12-year books. Boy Scout
uniforms. Phone 992-6529.
·
6-13-Jtc
H&amp;N DAY-OLD or · started
Leghorn pulle'-· Both floor or
ceo• grown available .
Poultry
hou1lng
and .·
automaHon. MocMrri Poultry,
3911 W. Main, Pon.-ov. Phone
f92·216f.
lie

OH 10 RIVER SIDE LOT :
Shade trees, sandy beach and
all lllilities. 80x380 feet in·
. co"t~~~~ ~~~~lNG
eludes 100-year old house that
DISTRIBUTORS
could be restored. Located in
Mason, w. Va . Call Athens,
Due to expansion In the U.S.
Ohio 614-592-1738.
weare offering an opportunity
6-11 -2tc
to supervise company secured
store accounts carrying fastselling line of popular books. Sl.o&lt; ROOM house, bath, fuli
basement, 133 Butternut Ave ..
Man or Woman. No selling .
just walking distance from
down town Pomeroy.. Contact
If you are energetic, honest•.
Ed Hedrick,. 2137 Wadsworth
can devote an hour a day, and
Drive, Columbus, Ohio, phone
are able to Invest 51.700 to
237-4334, Columbus.
$4,500 to .cover Initial InH -lfc
ventory, you can earn up to
$800 per month or more, 'HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln Hts.
depending . on effort and in·
Pomeroy . Phone 992-2293 . . ·
vestment.
10.25-!jc

Polara Custom 4 Dr. H/Top

Monaco 2 Dr. H/Top

R. H. MIDDLEPORT,
RAWLINGS0. SONS

2 Seats, runs well, local trade-ln.

992-2151 or 992-2152
Eveni
Till8:00

•

0
~•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••,!•

'1095°

YOU WILL FIND. • •

'ii ~ ~~l. •••T OP THB LOTI .

Your Datsun dealer is
the Small Car Expert. Let
him show you what makes
the 510 Sedan perfect.
• Overhead cam engine
• Reclining front buckets
More Information provided If
.•
Whitewall tires
letter contains details on self. HOUSE - 1642 Lincoln Helgh1s.
Call Danny Thompson, 992- • Vinyl upholstery
When writing. please Include
2196.
phone number.
S-26·tfc • Tinted glass
WORLD CLASSICS. INC.
Drive a Datsun...
4901 34th Stroot North
then decide.

WMP0/1390

Jl&amp;JJU!
SMitH
AUTO SALES
•

I

Upper Rt. 7

$3495

69 CHEVROLET, lmpala2 Dr. Hardtop ,$2395

Gallipolis, 0.

1963 DODGE DART, 4 door,
HARTS' USED CARS
automatic
transmission,
New Haven
West Virginia · excellent condition. $425. May
882-2793
70 FORD Pickup, custom, 6 cyl. be seen at Bob Salser's,
sI ~ridard transm Iss Ion, Iong &amp; Racine. Ohio.
6.1J.Jtc
wide bed.
69 CHEV. pickup truck, 6 cyl. - - - - - - - -

~:d~~-'r:.'d~ml,lon,long&amp;

67 CHEV. pickup, custom cab,

VB, standard transmission.
long &amp; wide bed.
65 DODGE pickup, 6 cyl..
standard transml~slon. long &amp;
· wide bed, extra nice.
68 EL CAMINO, V8, automatic
transmls ion, white with
matching Interior.
69 CAOOILAC coupe DeVIlle,
loaded with extras. Gold with
Slack Vlnr' Top.
66 CHEVEL E, Super Sport 427
engjne. Hurst shifter or 456
positive traction ·. rear. end,
wtth a· s~t of Mag wheels.
Extra sharR.
.
WIN a Sprint Mini-Bike. Stop In
and register. Drawing noon
July 3. No purchase
·necessary , need . not be
present to win.
6. 10-Jtc

68 CHEVROLET, Impala 4 D~- Sedan
'

68DODGE, Darl4 Dr. Sedan ·,,

. $1595

1-Mnslvt
6-Citrul fruit
(pl .)

aeneral

11-Pfltime

Phone 992.2288.

38--Dinnor ohto~
43- MIIat tub•

NORRIS DODGE
Upper Rt. 1

Phone 446-0605 or 1146-0842
GALLIPoLIS, OHIO

ins1ru.

guages. R.H., L.H., eye level mirrors.
rear step bumper, front stabilizer. frt.
dtsc brakes, back-up lamps, seat bells,
2-s peed wiper-washer .
List $3379.40
Inflation Fiahter Price

$2791

1971 Chevrolet 1h Ton

8ft. Fleetslde, 350 cu . ln., 8 cyl. engine,
specia l paint. dark blue &amp; wh . top. ail
mldgs.. stainless mirrors. H.D. rear
springs, Turbo Hydromatlc, power
steering, G 78 wh. wall tires, full wh.
covers, Tachometer, P.B., radio, rear

step bumper, custom sport cab, frt. disc
brakes, back-up lamps, seat bells. 2speed wiper.wash er .

$3649

List $4347.50
lnflalton F1ghter Price

1971 Chevrolet 1h Ton
6 Ft . Fleetside, 350 cu. ln. V-8, white
over red orange, specia l paint, all
mldgs .. stainless rnfrrors, Tur bo
Hydromatlc, power steering, G 78 w-w
tires, full wh . covers, P. B.• radio. rear
step bumper, guages, Cheyenne custom
sport equipped, frt. disc brakes. back·
up lamps, seat belts, 2·speed wipers &amp;
washer.

1971 Chevrolet %Ton
8 ft. Fleetslde, 350 cu. In V-8 engine,
spec. paint, yellow &amp; med. olive, body
side mldgs., stainless below eyellne
mirrors, paint stripe, h. duty leaf
suspension &amp; springs, Turbo
Hydromatlc, power steering, 750x16·6
ply frt · 8 ply rear ti res, rear step
bumper, lnstru . guages. custom
comfort cab, frt. disc brakes, B-Up
lamps, seal belts, 2-speed wiperswasher, camper special.

$3631

List $4365.00
Inflation Fighter Price

Brand New lOW El Dorado
lriquois Pickup Camper
Full equipment, sleeps 6, 11,000 B'TU
furnace, body lacks, Sanlware toilet
with holding tank, 4 cu. ft.' gas · electric
refrlg., stove with oven, hood &amp; fan.
Deluxe equipped throughout.
·
Retails Over S2800
Buy be low Cost

1971 Chevrolet lh Ton

~

lmtaJibn Fighter Price

1971 Chevrolet 1h Ton

$2718

List $3250.10
Inflation Fighter Price

1971 Chevrolet

*Ton

8 ft . Fleetslde, 350 V·8 engine, med.
gre~h finish, ·frl. disc brakes, befow
eyeline mirrors, h. duty leaf rear
spring. 750x16 6 ply frt. tires, 8 ply rear
11r.es, rear step bumper, full depth foam
_ ~eat. lnstru . guages, B-Up lamps. seat
$eJ!s. 2-speed wiper-washer.

$3224

list $.3853.30
Inflation Fig~ter Price

CAU SALESMEN
GEO. HARRIS
UOYD McLAUGHUN

BIU GRUESER

Visit Our ·Display Regatta Weekend • June 18-19-20

Pomeroy Motor
11L 8

OPEN EVES
For Sale

For Sale

For Sale .

'

POMEROY, 0.

For Sale .

REGATTA Special. 17-ft . KOSCOT KOSMETICS, wigs OLD ENGLISH Sheepdog MODERN WALNUT StereoThompson boat, dock covers. and accessories. Call us for
pupr,Jes. 5 months old. Also a
radio combination, · dual
extras, 75 HP newfy rebuilt
your needs . We deliver
whl e Peklngeae. Priced very
volume control, 4 speakers, 4
motor, trailer. Good ski boat, distributors, Brown's, Phone
reasonable. Phene Parkers-, speed changer, separate
$600 . Call 992-2003 . Will
992-Sll3.
burg 428-7545.
controls. Balance S63 .79. Use
6-2-tfc
demonstrate.
6·13-3tp
our budget terms. Call 9926·8-tfc
7085.
6- 13-6tc

eo,.:..Rellalout.
devotee
62-Exlsll"l In
n1mt only
·

for

tellurium
16-Ctnt (•bbr.l
11-"l,lrnbtrs
(-)
89-Pirt IIIP

Ot

7o-.Umbo

nlckntme
109-Malden lo...ed by
Zeus
·

110-Three·toed

59-Rttldut

~S}'mbol

37-lmltattd

95-formtr

145-0eclare
147- Title of
respect

39-Washlnl
40-Chee\1:

96--Matal

41-HIJhlander
42- Pient of pea

DOWN

retlo ' ' sloth

tht dtwn

54-Merit

91-Welrd
92-Chair
93-Shortly

birds
161-Binds

104-Seo oagto

·
6.J.tfc ' 47- EnJrtvtCt with
acid
4t-Gtomttric
S()-Btlort

tree

number

71-Dittntte ortlclo
••:. ,. ,., . 72-lemstrer
1 -11:!

111-Llquid measure

112- Yitld
114-Bone of body

1

116-Evtryone

117__:commemoratlvt
disks
119-Sults

120--::tt

122-Vullar
124-ln music, hiJh
12S-Bev•r•ae (pl .)

138. ""'""
i39-f'odlnta

seaport

5-Hit ll1htly
&amp;-Woolly
7-Repeet
8-Montht (abbr.)

9- Printtr't , '
meuurt
10- Stltch
11-Europtln
herrinl
12- Liquld

(colloq.)

48-FIIament
49- Heavenly body
50-Is mistaken

51-Sped
52-C hemlcal
compound

53-Permanent
papal
ambast1dOr

17-Sklll

18-Preli~e :

twice
·19-St•l• whisper

64-God of love
68-More

ditch
127-Stwinl
Implement
129- stoedsldt hotel

of

130-CoJnlzant

precl pltous
70- Put on one's

131--Vtntllate
132-Boa down
134-Perlod of tlmt
13~RiJIIl ln

1

75-Ancltnt

eharlot
77-Bnf animal

78-Post of
command

80-Maturtd
81--Nahoorsheep .
83-Reman bron;r,t
84-Polnt of
hemmer

87-Misttkta

113-SapllnJ
115-Vustl
116-Wooden vessels
118-Mtnd' wlth
cottOn
119-Escape
121-lntrlctable
pertons

125-A&amp;rttment
126-Protec:tlvt

58-Sowe
61- Pert of speech
63-Employs

74- Dry

107-Petitioned
111-Wan
112-Row

123-Conjunctlon

compound

1uard
71-Sees•w
73-Siuplsh

'Runlan ruler

10h$evers

46-Partnt

57-Chemical

6-13-Jip

fasteners
97-Wooden pin
99- Fish limbs
101- Made amtndt
. 105- Rhythmlcel
awinl

44-Aieerlan

2-Lasso
3-Dinll
4-lndeflnlte
article

·

family
43-0ock

5S-Siumbera
56-Contest

measure
13-Harvest
126-Middle
eoddtsi
128-lnqulre
14-Note or scale
129-Ftmalt hone
131--Genu' of m•Ples 15-Thtatrleer
132-Turf
1roup
.
16-Crat•
1U-Wtlcomt

I311-Pioco

36--Coln

1- Look
steadfastly

ft . mower semi -mounted.
Phone im.4111.'

~0-Cholce part

29-ln

142-Note of scale
1-43- Symbol for
ttntalum
144-Danlsh Island

159-Spetk slowly
160--Wtb·footed

· 108- Mon'•

15-Ltt It sttnd
51-Citulfln •

$1095 .

springs,

89- Medlcal
ln1otltution

20--Citrua frult
27-Tlme aont by
bed
31-Ceoutchouc

1!&gt;6-Burst forth
!58-Smallest

98-MutiCII
instrument

99-Give food to
fl1h
lQO-Brown kiwi
35-Fiyinl mammal 102- Varnlsh

$1795

65 DODGE, Dart, GT 2 Dr. Hardtop

premium

34-Lona, slender

67 PONTIAC, Firebird 2 dr. Hdtp., AC

66 CHEVROLET, Impala 2, Dr. Hardtop $1095

H. 0 . · rear

red

:-:-1-t-+-i--i pllclly 5~ H.P., 32 Inch cut, 7

141- Comb, form:
thrice

86-Sitve
149-Shallow vessel
88- Proflt
89-Anclent wnpon l5Q-Wlpe out
152-Repulae
90-Gave up
154-Knot In tree
92- Lances
trunk
94-Colony

notice
3o-Expel
32-NtJitiVt prefix
33-Neer

$1895

$1395

85-E~echan&amp;e

25-Grtln
2fr-Shtltl of &amp;Its•
28--Givlt ad&gt;Jance

67 DODGE, Monaco4 Dr. Sedan, AC

67 PLYMOUTH, Valiant 4 Or. Sedan

84-Equal&amp;

23-Fiut• piiYtr
24-Gtt up

51-Kttp
54-Ptrttlnln• to

•

79-Gioomlnus
82- Freshtts

16-Consplrecy
21-c11mbln1 pltnt
22-Mtkt amends

11

written

77-Piumlike fruit
78-P•y attention

4.4-Unloc:k
.45-Simltn

-,.,..,---------'

14~Muslc:

74-Shsrp
76-Confedtr.ate

ACROSS

105-Ftltlfler
106-Rall bird {pl.)

miles. Excellent condition.

finish,

SUNDAY, JUNE 13, 1971

4o-Rosttrs
.42-Ptrmlt

$2095

111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

1971
Chevrolet ~ Ton
8 fl . Fleetside, 307 V-8 engine,

$2651!U'=- J.,m.i4291.85
~3574
Inflation Fighter Price

~i~t $3~72.60

992-2126

4
20
Bfor$1.00
The
Daily Sentinel

71 cHvy Fleetside

RIDING LAWN mower, Slm-

hardtop, power steering,
power brakes, air, 18,000

68 DODGE, Coronet 2 Dr. Hardtop

HAVE
MANY USES

·s u
· NDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

lnJredlent
103--Chttr

1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2·dr :

.1'

FOR A Meyers aluminum boat
-won't rust, rot, or'leak. Call
992-6256 after 5 p.m. Also.
fiberglass 15 foot canoes.
5-16-30tc

36--SIIpper
37-FUII

---'-------

$2195
$1895
$1895

15-16 CHAROLAIS bull, 4 years
old, and Hampshire boar hog,
240 lbs. Phone 949-3835 .
6· 13-3tc

Auto Sales

68 DODGE, Polara 4 Dr. Sedan
68 FORO, Mustang,2 Dr. Hardtop

16 LAYING hens, 50 cents each.
Phone 992-3196 or 742-5829.
6-10-Jtc
COAL , limestone . Excelsior'
Sail Works. E. Main St.,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891 .
.
,
4·9-tfc

•.

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets
USED OFFSET PLATES

For Sale

WOOD 'MOTOR SALES
Auto Sales

AT NORRIS DODGE

1970 MAVERICK, standard NEW 4 fl. or 5 fl. brush hog.
Phone 992-6329.
1ransmissian, radio , 25
M.P.G. $1595. 1965 Ford
Galaxie, automatic, factory
air. $695 Coolville 667-6214.
.
6-10-6tp
36" X23" ~ .009

$1,795 .
Eastern Ave.

•"'"--------------1!111--•-.

8ft. Stepslde, 6 cyl. engine, dark blue
finish, painted r. bumper, On &amp; Off rear
tires, frt. d\sc brakes, backup lamps,
seat belts, 2-speed wlper -washe~.

8ft. F!eetside, 6 cyl. engine, white over
med. blue, h. duty R. sprlnqs, full foam
seat, rear Step bumper, frt. disc
brakes, backup lamps, seat belts, 2·
speed wipers. dual mirrors.

For Sale

Auto Sales

2 Or , hardtop, 327 cu. in. V-8 engine, radio &amp;
heater, auto. trans., p. steering, p . brakes,
gold metallic finish with matching Interior .
Fac. air cond., w -s -w tires. Ex. cond.

• Auto. trans. , P .S.. P.B., Extra Sharp. Exact low mileage. _locale
•

INTERNATIONAL

FURNISHED and unfurnished
· apartments. Close to school.
NEW 1971 zlg .zag sewing' Phone 992-5434.
. machine In original factory
10·18-lfc
car ton . Zig .zag to make
bullonholes, sew on buttons,
monograms. and ma~e fancy GOOD HILL pasture. Plenty of
St. Petersburg, Fla. 33714
designs wifh just the twist of a
water. For rent at Rutland .
single diaL Lefl in lay-a-way
Phone 742·5584.
ITEM: Morning. A
and never been used . Will sell
6-ll
-2tc
Wanted To Buy
teslful time for some
for only $47 cash, or credit
terms ayallable. Phone 992- EFFICIENCY apartment, $10 'rEiEPHONES, brass beds, people. Double dismal
5641.
per week . Phone 992-5434.
clocks. dishes, old fornilure, for others. Jim Mees
6-9·41c
.
· ·6-ll-31c etc. Write M. 0. Miller, Rt. 4, -~s.omtehow gets ··us all
Pomeroy. Ohio. Call 992-6271. I
.
ELECTROLUX vacuum
4·27-tfc
together
,every day.
deaner complete with at- 4 ROOM furnished apartment
tachments, cordwindel' a~d with beth. Reynolds Flower ---:-c----~
dlshos,
pain t spray .. Used bu1 In like Shop, MalOn, W, Va. Also 2 ANTIQUES:
telephones,
clocks,
bran
new condition, Pay $34.25 bedroom trailer. Phorie 773.
beds,
lamps,
etc.
C..
Rudisill,
cash or budget plan available. 5147.
,Phone 992-3403.
Phor e 992-5641:
6-8-tfc
5-27-JOtc
.
6-9-4tc

67 CHEV. IMPALA

. I businessman 's trade-in .

70 DODGE, Polara 4 Dr. Hardtop, AC

.

13 "COOL" REASONS TO TALK TO THE
GOOD GUYS AT RAWLINGS ... Pearl Ash,
.~.!rt~rson Jones, Hilton ~'N9.1fl,l.o W!JIIac~ Amberger, Dick Rawlings.

992-5342
GMAC Financing Available
POMEROY
"You'll Lfke Our Quaflty Way of Doing _Business"

•

1971
. Chevrolet 1fz Ton

V-8, T-Fiite, p. st., p. br., dark blue, AIR CONDITIONE'O.

E~f."' Tii"'B=-Til 5 P.M. Sat.

: 1965 FORD GALAXIE '500' 2 DR. HDTP. :

Ask the expert.

$2605

List $3107.70
Inflation 'Fighter Price

V-8, T-FIJte, p. st., p. br., turquoise, AIR CONDITIONED.

KARR &amp;.VAN ZANDT

.

Is this
the perfect
Datsun?

mirrors.

Polara Custom 2 Dr. H/Top

Buick trade-in.

'

wilhh
or · wHithoul
_ftahrm3
mac
in'l'Y
ouse
bedrooms,
dinlrlg
roomwr
, living • • • • • • • • • • car peting . Aluminum siding,
awning, storm windows and

COLONIAL Maple Stereo-Radio
combinallon, AM·FM radio,
four speakers, 4 speed lnlermixed changer. separate
controls. Balance $78.60. Use
our time payment plan . Call
992-7085.
6-13-6tc

V-8•. T-Fiite, p. st., p. br., dark bronze, AIR CONDITIONED.

3 Seats. fact. air. cond ., P.S.• P. B.• new

'1195
~ ·795 .
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

l

room,

1220 Washington Blvd.
Belpre, Ohio

Polati Custom 4 Dr. Sedan

See Them Here!

1 3 BEDROOM brick home .
1 Choice location in Middleport.
I Seen by appointment only.
Phone 992-5523 after \~:'Rc

1-------------l

MOBILE HOMES

·

6·6-lfc

61/2 ft. Stepside, 6 cyl. engine. painted
rear bumper, color med. green, backup
lamps, seat bells, 2-speed wiperwasher, front disc brakes, dual

V·8, T-Fiite, p. st., p. br., burgundy, AIR CONDITIONED.

1965 Chev. II Wagon

Bel Air Model, 3 seats. P.S., P.B.,
luggage rack.

$3399

1971 Chevrolet 1h ·Ton

V-8, T-FIIIe, p. st., p. br., dark green, ·. AIR CONDITIONED.

LOOK
OF
LEADERSHIP

.. ·- •1-295 ~

1966 Chevrolet Wagon

204 ACTON ROAD .
COLUMBUS, OHIO 432141 2:-4~A::C:::R-::E:-::F:-:A-::R7M:-,7L~on-:-g-;:B;-o1;;-lam,

niture.

MILLER

I

I
I.
( 1) 268-1810
I
one Week Installation. I
Aboullheprlceofa good car.l

14 FOOT BOAT, 40 HP Nlercury
$400. Phone 992-5532.

Pa t

i24 ACRE FARM. Long Bo11om,

For Sale

,. ~

•2695

.

List $3857.75
Inflation Fighter
Price

Polara 4 Dr. Sedan

water.

• Any shape ,or SIZe

Stop In, Call or Write or Talk to
Dan Thompson, Tom Lavender or John Ketchka

V-8, T·FIIte. buckets, p. st., light gold, AIR CONDITIONED.

THE NEW

1965 Olds Vista Cruiser

1968 Buick Sportwagon
grain applique, excellent cond ., local
executive's trade-in .

Ha II mark

Qlarger SE 2 Dr. H!Top

Polara Custom 4 Dr. Sedan

'1495

2 Seats, fact. air cond ., P.S., P. B., wood

I NI CE HOME l f\1 COUNTRYI One acre, nicely fi nis hed 1wo
I bedroom home with tireplace,
FIBERGLAs" POOLSI bu ill -in kit chen, wo_od
•15 year Fibergla,.guaranteol pan eling, carpeted, crty

V-8, T-FIIte, p. st., while, AIR CONDITIONED.

.V-8, T-Fiite, p. st.. p. br., turquoise, AIR CONDITIONED.

GREAT FOR VACATIONS

and cellar. Good location .
Phone 992-5808.
6-13-3tc

307 V-8 engine. green ~lnyl roof, lime
green color, Turbo hydramatlc1 power
steering, E-78 w-w fires, full wheel
covers, remote O.S. mirror, electric
clock, AM p. button radio, auxiliary
lighting, rear air shocks, se.a t belts.

Polara 2 Dr. H/Top

6-13-6tc

I

Coronet 8rougham 4 Dr. Sedan

PONTIAC' .
GMC ' TRUCKS .
116 Years of Continuous Business
PHONE992-2143
POME~OY, OHIO

STATION WAGONS VALUES

5 ROOMS AND bath, basement

1971 Chevrolet El Camino

V-8, T.- Fttte. o. st., dark gold, AIR CONDITIONED.

V-8, T-Filte, p. st., p. br., "318" dark green, AIR CONDITIONED.

'1695

WE HAVE SOLD MANY
HOMES THIS MONTH. LET
US SELL YOURS TODAY .

• -

Coronet Custom 4 Dr. Sedan

BUICK

2 Dr . hdtp., P.S.• red and white, Prem.
Radial tires, sharp:

r

71

V·S, p. st., p. b!·• automatic, AIR CONDITIONED.

BLAEnNARS

4-Speed trans., 4 cyl. eng., heavy duty
spring s. Bigges t little truck around .

4

Read this ad carefullyt
Nev.e r before has Pomeroy
Motor Co. had a sale like
this.
We
wi II
not
knowUngly be undersold!
These units. are on a first
come first buy basis .. , So
· hurry and buy that truck
from Pomeroy Motor Co.
now!

Ambassador Brougham 4·Dr. Sedan

. . - . 'MANY MORE

Cusf. 4-dr. hdtp., air cond ., vinyl top,
low mileage, local owner.

.A CHEVROLET TRUCK

V-8, automatic, p. st., p. br., AIR CONDITIONED.

$395

1968Skylark

TRUCK"

11

Matador 4 Dr. Wuon

$2195

65' Automobiles, most makes and body ·As low as
styles. We're loaded with '65s and will
make best deals ever.

'2495

1967 Ford Galaxie

bedrooms, basement, nice
ard. MY SELLING PRICE
S JUST $10,000. SEE ME
TODAY.

'O't'

·

2 Dr. H.T., one careful local owner, all white like new finish
with buck skin vinyl top.

1970 Datsun Pickup

I AM LOCATED ON THE
BEAUTIFUL OHIO RIVER
-I have kitchen, din ing room;

HENRY CLELAND,
REALTOR
Office 992-2259
Residence 991-2568

.

•2395

!hal's afl we' re asking .

•

·

69 PONTIAC

Or. hdtp., air cond., P.S., P.B., grey
with black vinyl top. Exact one owner
mileage .

hauling .

bath ,

2

top.

4

V-8, auto., excellent for camping or

-

68
DODGE
$1,895
V-8 Polalara dr. hardtop, beautiful gold finish with black vinyl

1968 l.eSabre

1969 Chev. Sport Van Cusl ·

worth of contentment here,

room,

'995
Wildcat Convertible, faclory air conditioning. A beautiful car at

.

IF .YOU'RE THINKING ABOUT BUYING A

You Won't Be In AHeap
Of Trouble If You Trade
W•lth u~-················~--~······
GremlinX2 S 0 L D
Six cyl,, p. st .• automatiC, root rack, AIR CONDITIONED.

4

•2895

·.•2895

'

car, only 2800 easy miles. Fully equipped.

mil es.

loca l trade-in.

CLELAND REALTY
ALMOST NEW BRICKROOMY RANCH STYLE
HOME. 3 big bedrooms with
double closets. Insulated for
exira protection. Quiet street,
no traffic. Large yard for kids
and pels . More than $27,500

living

65 BUICK

V-8, auto .. P.S., P.B., blue color, 9,000

Auto., P.S. , P. B., fa ctory air cond .,

Pomeroy

BY

VAN

12 SKYLARKS

4-Dr. Sed., air cond., radio, P.S.• P.B..
local physician's frade-in.

1970 P~. Barracuda·

608 East Main

Dan Says: "Come and See Our New, New

.

71
PONTIAC
$AVE
catalina dr. sedan. factory air conditioning, driver's training

1970 Camero

'3495

Cleland Realty

. EASTERN AVE.. 'GAWPOUS

JACKSON AVE.. PT. PLEASANT

.

10 LeSABRES

1969 Electra 225

Real Estate For Sale

K&amp;K MOBILE HOMES

catalina. 2 dr. tlardtop. one careful local owner. Extra sharp.

\I~ I\ I

HUGE USED CAR SELECTIONS

See Jim Staats or Joe Giles
Upper Rt. 7, Next Door to Auto ~uc~ion .
Phone ~46-V140
Galhpohs, Ohto

,..-·-~·-·-

I:

$2,695

a .low price. This Is one in La~r Day Parade.

MOBILE HOME SALES
K&amp;K MOBILE HOMES CAN BEAUTIFY YOUR MOBILE HOME
WITH AWNINGS • UNDER PINING

·70 PONTIAC

ESTATE WAGONS

ssoo _ _

c7md &lt;&amp;tf'

NEVER :CATCH US WITH OU.R
CHEVY TRUCK PRICES LOWER.

8 ELECTRAS

$900
$750

All you'd expect from Elcona and then some.
With 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, bay windows, rai.s ed
living room area, attractive fire place optton,
kitchen-dining area, embossed aluminum
exterior, recessed porch, fully furnished . See
this beauty today .

YOU'LL PROBaBLY

IN STOCK

DISCOUNT

stocked•
137-Shtdts

139-Encounttr

140-Cook &amp;lowly
144-Btast of burden

145-RtsOrt

146-Urt• on
147-Gh1't ntmt.

148-l:ncounttrtd
149-lmoll doC

151,-.c:ootod ,•••
1~f-T•utanlc

dtltr

155-Compnt point
U)--Sun IOd

"

·I

�r--.------------------------,
II- The SllllQyTimes :Sentinel, Sunday, June 13, 1971

Barbara McDaniel, both of
Mason; 14 grandchildren, and
30 great-grandchildren.
Funeral serv.ices will be at
1:30 p. m. today at the
' 1966.
Foglesong Funeral Home with
Ben F. Brown
· Funeral services will be held the Rev. Chester Tennant ofPOMEROY - . Funeral at 2 p. m. Monday at the Wblte ficiating . Burial will be in Beech
lei'Yicel for Ben F. Brown, Sr., Funeral Home in Coolville with Grove Cemetery.
71; Pmleroy Route 2, who died the ~v. Donald Marken ofThursday
at
Veterans ficiaUng. Burial will be in the
Memorial Hospital have been Coolville Cemetery. Friends Mrs. Seidenabel
POMEROY - Mrs. Margaret
ch&amp;nged from I p. m. Sunday to may call at the funeral home
M. Seidenabel, 75, Pomeroy,
I p. m. Monday at the Ewing anytime.
died Saturday morning at
Funeral Home.
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Gertha Elliott
Mrs. Seidenabel was a member
PT. PLEASANT - Mrs . of the Pomeroy Baptist Church,
Leota Chevalier
COOLVILLE _ Mrs. Leota Gertha Belie Noble Elliott, 78, Theodorus Council, Daughters
Sus' Che ll
82 of th of Point Pleasant, died ol America, anq the Pythian
tlevill va erd,ied F' .d
et Saturdaymorningat8:15ather Sisters Lodge.
Coo e area,
n ay a h
f
.
the cBmden.clark Hospital in · . orne o11owmg severa 1 months
Surviving are two sons,
p k b
ll
.
ilness.
ar ers urg 10 owmg an ex- Mrs Elliott was born J n 7 Howard, of Middleport Route 1,
tended illness.
·.
a · , and Jack, Pomeroy; a
Mrs Che ali . tte ded th 1893, m Mason County, a daughter, Mara Bel Frecker of
Coolville M:th~: Ch~ch an~ daughter ol the late Willia~ T. Pomeroy ; a sister, Mrs. Lydia
was a mem~r of the Fidelity- . ·and Laura Ellen Mourmng Stewart, ol Pomeroy; live
Rebecca Lodge at Coolville.
Noble. She was a member ol the. grandchildren , six greatSheiBsUrvlvedb da hter Bellemead U. M. Church.
grandchildren, and several
· Y a ug
• She Is survived by her
Mrs. N· 0 · (Alyce) Barnett, husband, Charles E. Elliott, nieces and nephews.
Mrs.
Seide.nabel
was
Belpre; two grandsons,. Robert, Point Pleasant; two daughters,
preceded
in
death
by
her
of Belpre, and Wilham, of Mrs. Marceline Hatlleld
Barrington, R. I.; a great- G . li F
d M Els' • husband, Ray, in 1950.
grandson, Bradley Barr, Rhode a11tpo s erry, an rs. •e
Funeral services will be held
•-•--~
· te Mr J L Crawford, Point Pleasant; one at 3 p. m. Monday at !he Ewing
"""'"'• a SIS r,
s. . ' . te M E 1 h W kma
Bottom SIS r • rs. u a
or
n, Funeral Home with the Rev.
( Allee) Fitch of Lon
. g
• Point Pleasant; two brothers,
::~~e::veral meces and Leonard T. Noble, P.oint Robert Kuhn assisted by the
Rev. Clillord Smith olliciatuig.
Mrs. chevalier was preceded Pleasant, and William M. Burial will be in Beech Grove
1n d th b h
ts Cha
Noble, South Charleston, and Cemetery. Friends may call at
ea Y er paren • r1es two grandchildren.
and Margaret Taylor Palmer; Funera1 serv ices wUl be held the funeral home.
two brothers, two slste rs, a Tu sd
t 2
I
th
grandson, and her husband, .e ay a
p.m. rom e ]. Trumbo Wall
Ray E. Chevalier who died in Wtlcoxen Funeral Home. The CHESAPEAKE - T. TrUmbo
•
Rev. Eugene M. Garlow w1li Wall, 86, Scottown, died Friday
,-~.......-----~ officiate and burial will be in the night at his home. He was born
Lone Oak Cemetery. Friends in Law;rence County on Oct. 1,
may call at the funeral home 1884, son ol the late Ranson and
alter 10 a.m. Monday.
&amp;!rah Hayes Wail.
He was a retired merchant,
Mr. John Lee
having owned and operated the
PT. PLEASANT - Relatives J. T. Wall Grocery Store at
were advised here Saturday ol Platlorm, Ohio. He also served
the unexpected death ol Mrs. as Platform postmaster 10
John (Mabel Knapp) Lee, of years.
Pomeroy, which occurred He is survived by his wile,
Friday while visiting members Mary Sheets Wall; two sons,
of her family In Maryland. Mrs. Paul, of Ironton and Amos, of
Chesapeake; five daughters,
Lee left Pomeroy Thursday.
Mrs. Lee has three sisters in Mrs. Maxine Waugh, Crown
Point Pleasant, Mrs. Elmer City; Mrs. Gladys Brammer,
Kapp, Mrs. Donald Stanley and Gallipolis; Mrs . Elizabeth
Wade, Scottown; Mrs. Irene
Mrs. Frank Morrow.
The body was expected to LaShure, Maywood, Calif., and
arrive Saturday at the Ewing Mrs. Jennie Pinkerman, also ol
Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Maywood; 15 grandchildren, 39
Funeral arrangements will be great-grandchildren, survive.
Two brothers, Ralph Wall,
annoUl)ced later.
Scottown, and Tom Wall ,
and two sisters, Mrs.
Mrs. Bertie Rigg Columbus,
Hazel Gornall, Columbus, and
GALLIPOlJS - Mrs. Bertie Mrs. Martha Earles, Scottown:
A.· Rigg, 85, mother of Mrs. Funeral services will be held
Frank Porter, Sr., Gallipolis, 2 p.m. Monday at Schneider
died Saturday morning at the Funeral Home In. Chesapeake
home of another daughter, Mrs. with Rev. Homer Click, Rev.
Mamie Cottingham, Hun- Wilson Hager and Rev. Clifford
Suiter olliciating. Burial will be
tington; W. Va.
The body is at the Kllngel- in the Perkins Ridge Cemetery,
Carpenter Funeral Home, 6th Scottown.
Ave., Huntington. Friends may Friends maY call at the
call at the funeral home today. funeral home after 6 p.m.,
Funeral services will be an- today.
nounced.

l Area Deaths !

Nellie Schwan
MASON - Mrs. Nellie Ellen
Krautter Schwarz, 93, lifelong
Mason resident, died Friday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Schwarz was the
daughter of the late Henry and
Mamil! Mills Krautter. Besides
her parents, she was preceded
in death by her husband,
Rhineholdt; a son, Carl, and a
daughter, Pearl Katherine.
Surviving are four sons ,
Henry, ol White Sulphur
Springs; Michael and Harold, of
Mason, and Earl ol Miami,
Fla.; two daughters, Mrs.
Virginia Grinstead and Mrs.

BEGINNING
WITH A'

JUST lHE lHING TO
. WEAR ~ROUND lHE

AOJOUNT!
.Money can't make a marriage
but If can certainly helpl 8y
saYing each week, I no maHer
how lilllo) you ·con accumulate
monor for any purpose! Open
yoyr savings occounl with us

Tf;iiS WEEKI

HOUSE
A State Farm Homeowners Polley. It's the
low-cost package policy
that provides broader
coverage for your home
and belongings_ and for
you, in case of lawsuits.
Yet, all this protection Is
yours at a rate that's 15 to
25 Per cent lower than the
same coverage
would cost
under
separate

.policies. Get

L~J
-

all the facts call me today!

Caroll K. Snowden
P1rk Control Hillel lldg.

Second Ave., Glllllpolla
PI!. 446~290, Home 446-4511

....,'lll.l.••

.....

':.f:i'CI:~......

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Weather
Outlook Monday through
Wednesday:
Turning cooler with a
chance of showers east
portion Monday. Mostly fair
and a little cooler Tuesday
and Wednesday. Highs
Monday in the low and mid
80s dropping to the 70s and
low 80s Tuesday and Wednesday. Overnight lows in !he
60s Monday morning,
dropping to the mid and
upper 50s by Wednesday
morning.

EDITORS' SEMINAR
NEW YORK (UPI)- Thirtyonenewspapereditors,including
two Ohioans, are to attend a
two-week seminar at Columbia
University to discuss newspaper
trends, including a detailed
analysis ol the content ollocal
news.
Hilbert N. Black, assistsnt
city editor ol the Cleveland
Press, and Richard L. Brown,
assistant city editor for features
· of the Dayton Daily News, are
to attend the American Press
Institute. The seminar begins
Monday .

s FUNNY

Father's Day Is Next Sunday

THIS CONVERTED SCHOOL BUS is
important to the new concept. of the annual
art show of the Big Bend Regatta Weekend.
The bus, owned by Mrs. Ruth Gosney of
D'Artiste Gallery, Middleport, will be
parked on the uwer Pomeroy parking lot
where its sides will exhibitcpaintings. A
"snQw fence" 40-feet long also will be
stretched on the lot to proyide additional
display space for art works. The show is
open not only to art students of Mrs. Gosney
but to all artists who will help staff the show
from 12 noon to 8 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Local artists will also be painting at
the scene. In addition, an art show wili be
staged at the St. Paul Lutheran Church where the entire art presentation has 'been
held in past years - by Meigs County
members, of the French Art Colony of
GallipoliS. ·

Make Elberfelds In Pomeroy your shopping center for Father's Oay Gifts. · Visit every floor- see
the fine selections of gifts you'd like to give your Dad on his day, Sunday, June 20.
::

~--------~~·~
Men's Sport

.

.

Men's Ughtweight Robes

and

.

Permanent press robes of 50 per cent polyester,
50 per cent cotton. Solid colors and stripes in
handy travel ready to wrap and give.

Dress Shirts

ii

Sizes small. medium, large and extra large.

•7.95

Short sleeve shirts In a big
array of styles . colors .

sizes.

MEN'S UMBRELLAS

Select sizes small (14-14•i 2 1
medium (15-15'12 ), large (16:
J61h ), and extra large ( 17lllf2 ) or buy dress shirt size
14lh to 17 neck. Loud stripes -

A gif.t :xtra ordinary tor rather's Day.
Large SiZe - easy self opening . complete
with zipper sheath case.

plaids - solid colors . novelty

patterns.
All shirts are permanent
press · well known makes arranged for your easy
selection and would make

1-'-------------------.-!
excellent Father's Day gilts. ·

Hallmark Father's Day Cards

-----------------------Father's Day Gift Wrapping

By Hallmark - An excellent array of gift
wrapping paper and ribbon. Select yours now.

Give Him A Box of
Fanny Farmer Candy
Fanny Farmer boxed candy will surely please
your Dad. Choose from Home Assortment .
Fancy pastel milk chocolates- assorted creams Summertime candy - Butter mints. All Father's
Day gift wrapped ready for you to give.

A big shipment of slacks
just arrived for Father's
Day giving . For your
own selection. Plaids Stripes - Solid colors .
Sizes 29 to 42 and extra
large sizes 44. to 50.

Summer weight fabrics
- Year round weights .
Trim cut models and
fuller cut styles for the
more conservative.
·
Let us help you select
the slacks you want tor
Father's Day gifts or for
yourself.

•tram the smallest Dad to
who wearS size 50
• ""'"' or size 20 shirts .

• ;.. ____ - in . look aroUnd and

Elberfeids line

of

f----~,----..,..--1:

work clothes .

NORELCO SHAVER
The popular Norelco Tripleheader Ill Model 35T
- . For faster, closer shaves. Ha·s sideburn
tnmmer - Pop up cleaner : Boxed - ready to
give .

VISIT OUR CAMERA DEPARTPI~~T
ON lHE 1st FLOOR

Special Value

MEN'S LEATHER BELTS
'1.75
Black or brown - 11/.4 inches wide - Genuine full
grain cowhide bridle leather. Sizes 32 to 50.

t--------------------1------------------------Aiso .another shipment of ·the popular

Give

Ga rnson Leather Belts. Sizes 30 to 50 .
13/4 inches wide.

Him Hanes
.Underwear
For Father's Day

ELEORIC FANS
Paris Belts For Men
'
Give him a Pari s belt and you're sure to please. A fine big
selection in black, brown, tan , Ioden. Regular width and the

popular wide belts. Look 'em over - Select a bell for your
Dad .

You'll like our selection of ·Electric Fans and we
suggest one for Father's Day. Choice of several
sizes - Portable fans and extension fans for
permanent window fit. ·
See them in the Housewares department on the
1st floor.

AI El~rfelds you' ll find a .
complete selection of Hane~
Underwear for men - Briefs ·
T shirts · undershirts · union

Select A Lawn Mower

suits - athletic shorts. And
you'll find all sizes Including'
extra large up to 54.
We'll be glad to help you find
the style you want' In your

You'll find a big. selection of Lawn Boy
Mowers including the Lawn Boy Rider
with 32 inch width cut and the famous
Toro Mowers includ1ng Toro Riders with
·
electric start.

correct size.

Binoculars

A special .value mower ·ln a 20
inch cut mower- 3 H. P. Briggs .On the 1st ffoor. See our
selection of Binoculars
and Stratton engine. Sturdily
·- complete with neck
built for just $58.00. Elberfelds
strap . and
leather
also sell Toro Roto Tillers in 3, 4
and 5 horsepower models. Be . carrying case. Sizes
7x50' - 7x35. Quality
sure to visit
Elberfelds
binoculars at
real
Warehouse. See 'the big
savings. Any Dad would
selection of Lawn Mowers.
like a pair of these .
Select yours now!

VIsit the Furniture Dep'!rtlftent on the 3rcl Floor. Select a nice easy chair .for
. Dad.

ELIEIFELDS IN PO

WASHINGTON (UPI) -The . must be open to all. Prior to
Supreme Court ruled 5 to 4 that, four had been for whites
today tha.t a.clty may close its only and one was reserved for
public swimming pools com- Negroes.
pletely rather than desegregate Jackson City authorities
them.
argued they could not be
The decision came in a case ·compelled to furnish such
!rom Jackson, Miss., which facilities if they decided Instead
closed five municipal pools in to shut them for all. They said
1963 after the 5th U. S. Circuit the pools would lose money if
Court ol appeals ruled they racially integrated 1 and use by

'

both races could lead to
violence.
Attorney William H. Goodman who represented the city,
also told the court that the
closing was not a reflection on
blacks but on "a certain class ol
white people -a lew red necks,
so to speak."
After winning the initial
integration order, the Negroes

Pago Pago, American Samoa,
to Hickam AFB near Honolulu,
apparently went into the ocean
about 700 miles south-southwest
of Hawaii near tiny Palmyra
island.
Air Force planes found a
"crash position indicator," a
radio beacon ejected from a
crippled aircraft when a crash
is imminent. However there
Continued on P&amp;l(e 8)

\

'\

00

\

ote
sought an injunction to compel
the City to reopen them. But
they lost 7 to 6 when the full
bench ol the 5th Circuit heard
the case.
Speaking for the Supreme
Court majority today, Justice
Hugo L. Black rejected the
Negroes' arguments that prior
decisions compelled a ruling in
their favor.

"The courts below found that
the pools were closed because
the city council felt they could
not be operated safely and
economically on an integrated
basis.
"There is substantial
evidence to support this conclusion .
"It is difficult to impossible
· (Continued on Page 8)

~-~Ne~~:~~i;;-Bri~f;-l Mansfield
I

·

·

I

By United Preas lilternaiiODBI

B52s in New Heavy Raids

Would
Call Cease Fire
'

WASIUNGTON (UP!) -Senate Democratic Leader Mike
Mansfield today urged President Nixon to call a cease-fire
in Vietnam, with the provision
that the Communists release
their American prisoners on a
gradual basis as U.S. troops are
withdrawn.
There should be a specific
date, Mansfield added, by when
the last U.S. soldier-and the
last POW-both leave lor home.
"Vietnam was a mistake, a
tragic mistake. To persist now
Four of Nine Living
is to ad.! outrage to the
SYDNEY- DOCTORS FOUGHT TODAY to save the lour sacrifices of those who have
survivors of the nine children bOrn to an Australian socialite. suffered and who have died In
Only J)ne of the Infanta, who weighed one to two pounds each, was
in satisfactory condition. A medical rulletin Issued at 6:10p.m.
Sydney time (4:10 a.m. EDT) said there had been no change
LONDO!'{, :Jhlo (UPI) during the day.
Tbe father of a blgb scbool
Two of the babies were stillborn Sunday and three others died sophomore bas charged In a
during the night after experiencing breathing difficulties.
court suit that the grades ol
The Nonuplets - four girls and live boys - born to Mrs. bls daughter and about 100
Geraldine Brodrick at Sydney's Royal ¥ospital for women were other Jonathan Alder
the world's largest recorded multiple birth. Octuplets were born students were lowered two
to a Mexican woman in 1967butalldied within 14 hours.
letters· as punishment for
parUclpating In a demonPiggy Bank for Identification
stration.
-CoLUMBUS- THE POlJCE DEPARTMENT is holding a
Walter Brafford said the
well stuffed piggy bank lor the owner who can.identify it. Retired grade reduction on his
railroad worker Jacob Efralm, 86, diSCovered the bank in his yard daughter Brenda's card
and gave it to police during the weekend. Officers were surprised followed a walkout April 8 at
the school to protest the
to find it held $4~.14 .
"You very rarely run across anyone as honest as Mr. "vague, arbitrary and outEfraim," said Patrolman DanielL. Wood. "A lot of people would dated" dress code Imposed on
students.
have kept the money, no matter how small the amount."
. .
'

David George Hargraves, son
of Supt. of Schools and Mrs.
George Hargtaves, Jr., 350
North Fourth Ave., Middleport,
graduated with honors - a
cumulative lour year average
of better than 3.5 - at Ohio
University sunday with a
blichelor of science degree in
Electrical Engineering.
Hargraves graduated as
valedictorian ol his class !rom
Pomeroy High,, School in 1967
where he also was Qn All·
SEOAL guard on the champton.8hip football team.
1;118 college honor societies
lhclude Phi Eta Sigman, fresh·
man honorary society; Eta
,, Kappa
Nll,
Electrical
Engineering honorary; PI Mu
E p s 11 on, ·Mathematics
honorar)'; Tau Beta PI,
EngineerlnC honoriO'. alld Phi

this conflict," the Montanan
said.
Mansfield ollered his ceasefire proposal in a commence·
ment speech prepared for
Boston College, Chestnut Hill,
Mass. His remarks were
released In Washington as
Congress moved toward a vote
this week on two pieces of
legislation designed to force the
President to end the war before
the year is out.
Both proposals, .one in the
House and the oilier .in the
:;;enate, appeared headed for
defeat.
The Senate is to vote Wed-

Blackwood in

\

nesday on a measure sponsored
by Sens. Mark 0. Halfield, R·
Ore., arid GeorgeS. McGovern,
I).,').D:, that would uit off lunda
for U.S. combat in Vietnam
after Dec. 31. The deadline
would be ' extended by two
months if North Vietnam failed
to release the POWs.
GEORGE INGELS, left, owner of Ingels Furniture In Middleport, again has donated two
A UP! poll Indicated, howevbicycles to be given to the boy and girl with the best decorated bicycles in Friday evening's Big
er, that the McGovern-Halfield
Bend Regatta Parade. Children from eight through 14 are Invited to take part. This year,
proposal was headed for defeat. . costuming of the rider will be judged as well as tbe bicycle decorations. With Ingels is Wendell
Fil,ty senators were expected to
Hoover, co-chairman of this year's parade. Bicycles should be registered for participation by
vote against it, 37 for it. Another
calling Hoover at the Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co..ln Middleport.
10 were undecided and three
will not vote.
Influential San. George D.
Aiken of Vermont, dean of · • :
,

~:~e:6::b~!::l'~u~:~~

ces Sunday wheil he announced
he would vote against it.
Aiken said the McGovern·
Hatfield plall has a loophole,
since it specifies the President
still h's the right to protect
withdrawing American troops.
"This would just require the
President to do what he Is doing
anyway. It would not prohibit
expenditures lor defensive
purposes, and that's exactly
what he says he's doing. The
revised
doesn't
the war version
to an' end
Dec. bring
31 ,..
Aiken said.

•.,.• .,••,••

Understanding Asked

·
By United Pre•slnternatlonal at Bowling Green State Univer- he wonders how proponents of
Commencement
speakers sity, called on universities to the "new morality" plan to in·
urged studenla In Ohio during create another kind of ROTC, stitutionalize their moral com·
the weekend to oppose the Viet- "one that does the same thing mibnents.
nam war by political means, lor peace that we do for war." Speaking at Wittenberg Unl·
"Why can't we find the time, versity ceremonies, Millett
try to understand the older gen•
eration and to be proud of the space, the people and the said: "I can only · express the
field opportunities to train hope based upon learning and
William Alan Blackwood, son
ROTC.
ol Mrs. Dean Blackwood and of
As colleges and universities young people lor national peace- experience that the new moralthe late Mr. Blackwood,
drew to a close their spring time service alter graduation," ity will be more tolerant and
more humane !han the author!·
Rutland Route l,isamember of
quarters, 'thousands of de' he asked.
· 1 ensembl es
one oI Iour mustca
grees were given in cere· Elsewhere ~round the state, tarian morality ol the past."
representing Bob Jones
monies !rom Bowling Green to Dr. Elden T. Smith said Sunday at Mount Union College "if Retired Ohio University .EncUniversity in the United States
Oxford to Akron
Backers of the amendment
·
this summer.
had agreed to the additional At Akron sunday, former man can be sent to the moon, llsh professor Paul Kendall told
then there are no problems on graduating students at the AlbBlackwood is a senior language In hopes
· of attracUng chief U·S· ne goti ator at the Par- earth that cannot be solved." ens campus Sunday "the real
maJ'oring in practical Christian
t's peace talks W Averell Har
more support. They claim It still
' ·
• Smith is executive associate issue of today is you."
training in the School ol would Ioree an end to Nixon's riman, urged the students to
Religion at the Greenville, S.C. "Vietnamization" progr·am.
supportlegislativemaneuversto ol the Association of American "While you have bwes and
aspirations for a good life. It
School. During a !2-week tour,
end the war and disengage Colleges.
the four groups will travel · In the _House, an amendment themselves !rom demonstra- A total ol 324 students re· must be judged in terms of
·1
d sponsored by Reps. Lucien .
"
approx lm a te1y 50 ,000 m• es an Nedzi D-Mich
d Charles W. !tons, which are now counter· ceived degrees. at Ohio North- your experience," Kendall salcl. ·
ern University Sunday and 2,- The College of Wooster schedwill conduct more than 300
•
·• an
productive "
466 at the University ol Cincin- uled its commencement today ,
religious service~.
Whalen Jr., R.Ohio, would' At ~i of Oh'10 •·t d
provide that no flUids in the
.
.,... ur ay.
with Dr. Robben W. Fll!llllnl,
Blackwood's group consists of $2l. 8 billiori military hardware anthropolgtst Dr. Margaret nati.
Wonders
At
Morality
president of the Univerl!ity ol . 1
six young people who will authorization bill could be used Mead asked youths to study
perform a wide variety ol vocal to support U.S. troops in In· their elders to lmd out why Ohio Board of Regents Chan- Michigan, addressing the grad,
Kappa Phi, honorary lor
cellor John Millett said Sunday uates.
selections including mixed dochlna after Dec. ll.
th~.Y act as they do.
students In the top 10 pet. of the
quartets, trios, duets and solos.
Nedzi has admlted p888age of
We have most of the power
graduating class.
He belongs 'to the Institute of Thomas L. Osborne Saturday Blackwood sings bass in the the measure would nOt force a an~ most of ~e money and
Electrical and
Electronics. was commissioned a second vocal group. His ensemble is ll'oop withdrawal or materially we d be very hkely to make
Engineers, was on the dean's lieutenant in the United States touring the southern sectio'l of effect the war Immediately· but you a lot of trouble if you don't
it would penni! the PresiOO:.t to take the trouble to·studr, us and
Maynard E. Autherson, corporation limila David R.
list four years and received the Army Reserve at Memorial the co~ty.
request an extenalon of tbe )earn ~ur language, ·Mrs. Racine, was charged with Wright, 26, Athens, travelln&amp;
president's Honor Award !Our Auditoriiun, Ohio University.
deadline until June 30, l972- Mead satd.
driving while Intoxicated north, attempted to overyears. He was in the Honors Osborne participated in the
MARRIAI;E LICENSES
thus prOviding the House with
Commends Cadets
following the investigation ol a and JIBSS an~ther vehicle•
College program two years.
Army Reserve Olflcers'
Jerr)' David Swartz, 18, an election year chance for a . Gen. Albert P. Clark, super- single car accident Sunday at Wrigh{lpulled to the left to J!llli I
Hargraves has been ·awarded Training Corps' program
a graduate assistantship in the (ROTC) at Ohio University and Middleport, •..td Sharon Ann symbolic vote against the war. -lntendent. of tl)e Air Force Aca- 1.2:i6 a.m., the Meigs County but at the same time the oecClDII ' j
demy, satd Saturday at the Un· Sherilf's Dept. reported.
vehicle also moved to the left. 1
Graduate College of Business completed requirements lor a Icenhower, 16, Pomeroy, Rt. 2;
Homer
Leroy
Welsh,
21,
iversity
of
Akron
that
ROTC
Autherson,
24,
was
traveling
Wright
went olf the hlgbwaJ II!
Administration at
Ohio bachelor ' of science in
Pomeroy, Rl. , . and Sarah
cadets who have stayed with on county road 30, about !.8 of a the left into a ditch. 'lbe olbir
University. He will begin work Education degree.
4
CALL
ANSWERED
the program during their col- mile northj!ast of Minersville, vehicle apparen'"' did not •.._. '
this summer on a master ol Lt. Osborne is tlie son of Mr. Catherine McDanel,
I
21, The Mldelleport E•R squad lege career despite the "heck- when he went off the highway There were w'
no in!""'•--.
ar
Business Administration and Mrs. Ronald ·E. Osborne, Albany; Kenneth Eugene
ed
ll
th
h
f
...
degree.
.
Long Bottom.,He now will take C. ld 11 23 Reed 111· Rt 1 8J1Swer a ca to e orne o llng and abuse" of (ellow stud- and struck a telephone pole. He arrests, and minor dl"llll' " · .
a we • '
sv. e, · • Charles Willian! Frazier, Jr., on ents are to be commended
sulle ed Ia
t1
f hi8 head W · bt'5 tr k
·
His areas ol specialization .in specialized training, later going and
Sue Ellen Hayes, 17• Long Story's Run Road at 10:37 a.m. Clark spoke at commlss. ionr a cera on
ng
uc .
'
electric engineering
ar~ on active duty two years in the Bottom, Rt. 1; Michael Rolis
and nose ~ut was not lm·
LOC.U. TDWI'
rl
automatic control, analog and Transportation Corps: Lt. Stewart, .20, Minersville, and · Sunday. Frazier ; who was ill, ing ceremonies lor 58 cadets at mediately treated. The cat was The te~•tute.lll c11rwn1ow11 1.
. demolished.
·
POII!eroy at 11 a. m. Mllnflllt. 1
digital design and program· OsbOrne, a graduate of Eastern Sharon Kay Glaze, 17 , Mid· was .t&amp;ken to ·veterans the university.
, .
Memorial Hospital where he Peace Corps Director Joseph
sw{day at 5:30p.m. on SR 33, under sunny akiN '1\'ll .,
ming and solid state elec· High School, is a member o' dleport.
was admitted.
I
Blatchford, 'speaking Saturday 3.6 miles north 1 of Pomeroy degnea.
Ironies.
SlgmaTheta.Epsilonlraternity.
1

Young Hargraves
Wins OU Honors

Mens Department · lsi Floor.

•

'

ose
•
lR

SAIGON-U.s. B5% BOMBERS, in the heaviest raids since
Ute Laos campaign, dropped nearly 500 tons of explosives over
jungled mountains below the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ), where
thousands of Communist troops are
massing, military
spokesmen reported today. The U.S. command said the B52s flew
!Omissions in the northwestern corner of South Vietnam In the 48hour period ending at noon today.
Military sources said li"f regiments of North Vietnamese
troops totalling more than 10,000 men had Infiltrated across the
DMZ and !rom neighboring Laos into the mountains which the
allies abandoned at the conclusion of the February·March
campaign In Laos. Sources said it appeared Communists were
preparing lor a major battle in the fall to Influence the Oct. 3
presidential election In South Vietnam. Government troops In,
eluding marines and paratroopers have been moved into the
reg I~ from the AShau Valley to counter the buildup.

You'll find a complete selection of Kodak lnstamatic Cameras - Still Cameras and Movie
Projectors - Camera Accessories and Equipment. Plus the complete line of Polaroid
Cameras including the new Polaroid Big Shot
Portrait Camera.
Ask any of the salespeople to help you find the
camera you want for your Dad.

YOU'D PLEASE DAD WITH A

-----

a·c s

Men's
Slacks

struction workers brown
duck' overalls . painters
and carpenters overalls ·
coveralls · work socks ·
suspenders - bandana
handkerchiefs . work
caps . Famous brands
such as Lee · Carhartt ·
Hanes . Wrangler, ·and a
_complete size selection

see

4~

I

jackets - Carhart! Con -

Hundreds and hundreds
of ties by Wembley. You
can pick out the tie that's
just . right for Father's
Day giving.

NO

about that."

TFN CENTS

PHONE 992·2156

MONDAY, JUNE 14, 1971

POMER9Y-MIDDLtPORT, OHIO

- - ~-

In
Elberfelds
mens
department you can buy
from a big selection of
work clothes including
matched work suits ·
short sleeve work shirts ·
Blue denim overalls and

Wembley Ties For Men

The popular new
wide ties. Some
not so wide . Big
selection
of
ready-lied ties
all
by
and
Wembley which
means that the
quality is right the look is right
and that your
gifts will please.

VOL. XXIV

~lk

The plane, on a flight from

Chance ol showers or thundershowers central and south
tonight. Lows mid and upper 50s
north in ~ and mid 60s south.
Cloudy Tuesday, chance of
showers or thundershowers
south. Highs in the low 60s.

Devoted To 1le Intere~b Of The Meigs-Maaon Area

A Practical
•
Gift
Of Work
Clothes
Is ·
Appreciated

want to

Weather

No rain has ever been
. ecorded In Calama, Chile.'•

In the Housewares Department on the 1st floor A fine selection of pocket knives in various
shapes and colors. All fine quality knives by
Camillus and Queen Cutlery. ·

You should see our big selection of· cards for
Father's Day. All arranged tor your easy
selection . You're sure to find the card that's just
right tor your Dad.

HONOLULU (UP!)- An Air
Force Cl35 jet transport
: returning from an unexplained
· mission crashed near a remote
island in the Pacific Sunday
night. Rescue planes searched
lor possible survivors.
The Air Force created an air
of mystery by refusing to reveal
the plane's mission and even .to
tell whether it was classified.
"I cannot comment on the
nature of the mission," said an
Air Force spokesman. " l don't

••

Now You Know

POCKET KNIVES

Mystery Jet
Lost' at · sea

----~~--~---·------

Universitys

Singing Group

Osborne Wins

I

His Gold Bar

ln 'Reseroes

DWI Charged to Driver

°

•

'!

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