ALEXANDRIA DAILY TOWN TALK, ALEXANDRIA-PINEVILLE, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1972 A-PAGE FOUR Roy Reynolds Dies at Age of 69 Lee Roy Reynolds, 69, of the Polland community died at 12:20 a.m. today in an Alexandria hospital. He was a retired carpenter and farmer and a member of Riverview Baptist Church. Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Effie Burke Reynolds of Polland; a son, J.
D. Reynolds of Shreveport; three daughters, Mrs. Lula M. White and Mrs. Clarence Filipi, both of Alexandria, and Mrs.
John Guillot of Pineville; four brothers, Lonnie Reynolds of Bunkie, John Reynolds of Cheneyville, and Guy Reynolds and Barron Reynolds, both of Alexandria; and Guy Reynolds and Barron Reynolds, both of Alexandria; two sisters, Mrs. Eva Bernard of Effie and Mrs. Ester Aymond of Alexandria; and his mother, Mrs. Lottie Reynolds of Polland, and eight grandchildren. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m.
Wednesday in the chapel of Hixson Bros. in Alexandria. Burial will be in Alexandria Memorial Gardens. Elmer L. Sowell Elmer L.
Sowell, 69, of Alexandria died at 8:17 p.m. Saturday in Veterans Administration Hospital here. He was a retired plumber. He is survived by one sister, Mrs. Myrtle Lonidier of Alexandria.
Funeral services will be held at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday in the chapel of Hixson Bros. in Alexandria. Burial will be in National Cemetery. Sam L.
Dunn, 60 (Special to the Town Talk) WINNFIELD, La. Sam L. Dunn, 60, of Winnfield died Sunday. Survivors include, his wife, Mrs. Zelma Dunn of Winnfield; three sons, Jimmy Dunn, Sam R.
Dunn and Bobby Dunn, all of Winnfield; one daughter, Mrs. Linda Barton of Atlanta; three brothers, Seldon Dunn and Roy Dunn, both of Winnfield and Jake Dunn of Atlanta; four sisters, Mrs. Bertie Shows, Mrs. Myrtis Shirely and Mrs. Lilly Frederick, all of Winnfield, and Mrs.
Nettie Grice of Dodson, and seven grandchildren. Funeral services were held at 10 a.m. today in the Southern Funeral Home chapel. Burial was in Zion Hill cemetery under direction of Southern. Marcellus Brevelle Marcellus Brevelle, 84, of Marksville died at 3:55 a.m.
Monday in an Alexandria hospital. He was a retired lumber hauler. Survivors are four daughters, Mrs. Milton Morris and Mrs. Koran Guillot, both of Marksville, and Mrs.
Bernice Cammarata of Port Arthur, and Mrs. Moran Bonstaff of New Orleans; 19 grandchildren, 52 great grandchildren and six great, great grandchildren. Funeral services were to be held at 2 p.m. today in St. Joseph Catholic Church.
Burial was to be in the church cemetery under direction of Hixson Bros. of Marksville. Mrs. Thera Stovall (Special to the Town Talk) WINNFIELD, La. Mrs.
Thera Stovall, 81, of Winnfield died Monday at 4:30 a.m. in Winnfield General hospital. She was a member of the Methodist church. Survivors include, two daughters, Mrs. L.
L. Brewton Sr. of Winnfield and Mrs. Troy Stearns of East Lansing, one sister, Mrs. Ar- Commercial WASH-ROOM ACCESSORIES Open all day Saturday HILL, HARRIS Lee at 13th mand Daspit of Rouge, and two grandchildren.
Funeral services were to be held at 2 p.m. today in the First United Church of Winnfield with Rev. J. C. Skinner officiating.
Burial was to be in Garden of Memories cemetery under direction of Southern Funeral Home. Mrs. Plauche, 85 (Special to the Town Talk) MANSURA, La. Mrs. Maria Armand Plauche, 85, of Kenner, a native of Plaucheville, died at 4:40 a.m.
Monday in a Metairie hospital. She washe widow of Alvie Plauche. She is survived by five sons, Hansen Plauche, Lee Roy Plauche, Donald Plauche, all of Kenner, Tracey Plauche of Plaucheville and Rudy Plauche of Chalmette; six daughters, Mrs. Odessa 0'Quinn of Miss Ruth Plauche of Kenner, Mrs. Harold Jeansonne of Plaucheville, Mrs.
Howard Lemoine of Plaucheville and Mrs. Lou Allen Lemoine of Plaucheville; two brothers, Mason Armand of New Orleans and Gibbon Armand of Cottonport; two sisters, Mrs. Thomas Billiodeaux of Cottonport and Mrs. Wiltz Mayeux of Cottonport, 43 grandchildren and 36 great-grandchildren. The remains are at Escude Funeral Home at Cottonport where rosary will be recited at 8:30 p.m.
today. Funeral services will be at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday in Mater Dolorosa Catholic church at Plaucheville. Msgr. Marcel Anderson will officiate.
Burial will be in the church cemetery. Clyde A. Dykes (Special to the Town Talk) FERRIDAY, La. Clyde Alexander Dykes, 71, of Ferriday died Monday in Concordia Parish Hospital. He was a native of Strong, and had lived here for 42 years.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Mary Alice Dykes of Ferriday; a son, Bruce Dykes of Ferriday; three brothers, Chester Dykes of Camden, Charlie Dykes of Glenmora and Carlisle Dykes of Natchez, and a sister, Mrs. Coleen McDonald of Shreveport. Funeral services were held at 10 a.m. today in the chapel of Young's here.
Burial was to be in Arlington cemetery in El Dorado, at 3 p.m. Mrs. Bonstaff, 77 (Special to The Town Talk) HESSMER, La. Mrs. Olivia (Doone) Bonstaff, 77, of Belledeau died at 7:50 a.m.
Monday in a Marksville hospital. She was a native of Echo. Survivors are two daughters, Mrs. Irma Dupuy of Belledeau and Mrs. Dallas Dauzat of LaPorte, a sister, Mrs.
Florine Lachney of Marksville, 17 grandchildren and 31 great grandchildren. Funeral services were to be held at 1 p.m. today in St. Martin Catholic Church at Belledeau. Burial was to be in the church cemetery under direction of Hixson Bros.
of Marksville. Lee A. Lasyone (Special to the Town Talk) ATLANTA, La. Lee A. Lasyone, 82, of Route 1, Atlanta, died Monday at his residence after a short illness.
He was a member of the Baptist church and worked with the U.S. Forest Service for many years. Survivors include, his wife, Mrs. Zula Lasyone of Atlanta; four sons, J.D. Lasyone and Elwood Lasyone, both of Atlanta, Earl Lasyone of Pineville and Arlon Lasyone of Ball; four daughters, Mrs.
Willie Low of Montgomery, Mrs. Murphy Foster of Winnfield, Mrs. Ora Lee McKay of Alexandria and Mrs. Mary L. Simmons of Deville; two brothers, Ed Lasyone of Dry Prong and E.H.
Lasyone of Atlanta; 20 PRE-HOLIDAY SAVINGS AT Pineville's ONLY MEN'S STORE SHOP DUGAN'S SQUIRE SHOP 1610 Military Hwy. Pine Plaza Shopping Mall Phone 445-2131 Open 9 to 6 Thursdays Til 9 grandchildren and 16 greatgrandchildren. Funeral services were to be held at 2:30 p.m. today in latt Baptist church near Colfax. Burial was to be in the church cemetery under direction of Southern Funeral Home of Winnfield.
Thomas J. Miles (Special to the Town Talk) FERRIDAY, La. Thomas Jeff Miles, 72, of Sicily Island, died Monday i in Concordia parish hospital after a long illness. He was a native of Sicily Island and was retired from the Louisiana Dept. of Highways.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Ethel Miles of Sicily Island; three sons, R. D. Miles of Magnolia, W. C.
Miles and E. D. Miles, both of Baton Rouge; three daughters, Mrs. Lucille Rogers and Mrs. Lillie Mae Pittman, both of Sicily Island, and Mrs.
Rose Lee Roccafort of Baton Rouge; five brothers, three sisters, 14 grandchildren and two great -grandchildren. Funeral services were held at 10 a.m. today in Pine Hill Baptist church near Sicily Island with Rev. Clois Cole officiating. Burial will be in the new Pine Hill cemetery under direction of Comer Funeral Home of Ferriday.
Theresa Eastwood (Special to The Town Talk) ELIZABETH, La. Theresa Ann Eastwood, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Eastwood of Sulphur, died at 5:30 a.m. Monday in a Lake Charles hospital after a long illness.
Survivors also include a sister, Melissa of Sulphur; maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Stapleton of Elizabeth; and paternal grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Marcus Eastwood of Sulphur. Funeral services will be held at 2p.m. today in the First Baptist church at Elizabeth with Rev. C.
A. Smithson officiating. Burial in charge of Ardoin Funeral Home, Oakdale, will be in Hampton Memorial cemetery. Ulis M. Welch (Special to The Town Talk) CALCASIEU, La.
Ulis Murphey Welch, 69, died at his home here at 6:10 p.m. Monday. He was a carpenter, a farmer, a native of Elmer, and a Mason. Survivors are his wife, Ruthie H. Welch of Calcasieu; two sons, Ottis D.
Welch of Calcasieu and Jimmy E. Welch of Alexandria; daughter, Mrs. Bobbye L. LaJaunie of Plano, a brother, Ottis M. Welch' of Opelousas; two sisters, Mrs.
Naomi Lightfoot of Shreveport and Mrs. Tessa Gill of Glenmora, 11 grandchildren and two great grandchildren. Funeral services will be in the church cemetery under direction of Hixson Bros. of Alexandria. The body will be at the church until time for services.
16 MILLION-POUND KING NEW YORK (UPI) The hamburger is still king among American lunch crowds, according to a national food and refreshment service firm. Chefs of Servomation Corp. report the hamburger is the allaround favorite noontime meal at business, education and Red Barn drive-in restaurant locations. The firm, which operates in 40 states, estimates it serves 270,000 hamburgers a day-a whopping 16 million pounds of meat a year. WE'LL TALK TURKEY with READY CASH LOCAL LOAN Company 2nd floor Commercial Bldg.
(Johnston St. Between 3rd and Main) 442-8821 WORLD ALMANAC 3 Area Men Plead Not Guilty to Theft Charge Ten American Presidents were chosen under the Electoral College system without winning a majority of the popular vote, The World Almanac notes. Those who won by a plurality vote were John Q. Adams, Taylor, Buchanan, Lincoln, Hayes, Cleveland, Benjamin Harrison, Wilson, Truman and Nixon. Most of these Presidents were elected when several candidates competed.
Copyright 1972 Newspaper Enterprise Assn. Funerals THOMAS GILDERSLEEVE Funeral sevices for Thomas D. Gildersleeve were held at 2 p.m. Monday in the chapel of John Kramer and Son Funeral Home. Rev.
Robert Ratelle officiated. Graveside services in Greenwood Memorial Park, Pineville, were conducted by Worshipful Master Ray Stubblefield, Chaplain Dan Hicks, and Bearer of Great Lights Louis Rasbury, of Marksville Masonic Lodge. Pallbearers were Joseph T. Simms Raymond J. Dunn, Thomas C.
David, Charles H. Kammer, Prentiss Young, Rolando Alonzo, Howard Meeker and James Gilchrist. MISS CORA CARBO Funeral services for Miss Cora Carbo were held at 3 p.m. Three Central Louisiana men charged with breaking into a truck involved in interstate commerce pleaded not guilty in U. S.
District Court here Monday. The three Carl Wayne Guillory, Johnny Edward Savant and Eldridge Fuselier, were allowed 10 days to file pre-trial motions and their bonds continued by Dist. Judge Nauman Scott. The charge involves the theft of cases of tuna fish from a truck belonging to the Piggly Wiggly food market chain. Guillory, 32, was operator of the Trade Winds Motel at Chambers when arrested.
Savant, 37, operated the Colonial Lounge adjacent to the motel, and Fuselier, 65, is a resident of Mamou. Dr. Charles J. Andrews was sentenced by Judge Scott to 10 years in a federal penitentiary on a conviction for drugs distribution. The Eunice optometrist was meted 10 years on the first count, one year on the second and five years on the third with all to run concurrently.
This means the doctor will only have to serve the longer of the three on 10 years. Judge Scott also imposed a special parole of six years on Andrews. Andrews' attorney Camille Gravel, said he will appeal the sentence, and Judge Scott continued the bond pending the appeal proceedings. Andrews was convicted by a federal jury in Opelousas in Probe Continues in Skeleton Find The identity of a human skeleton found in a pasture west of Alexandria Sunday afternoon remained undetermined today. Rapides Parish Coroner Dr.
Ronald Tischler examined the badly decomposed skeletal remains Monday afternoon but said the examination was unproductive. Tischler said he thought the skelton was that of a male, but he is basing this assumption on the fact that it was shrouded in tattered men's clothing. Monday in Our Lady of Prompt Succor Catholic church with Rev. Warren Cooper officiating. Burial was in Greenwood Memorial Park under direction of John Kramer and Son.
Pallbearers were Albert Carbo, Bert Carbo, Larry C. Carbo, Joe Carbo George Rabalais and Roy Craft. September on charges of distributing drugs raning from heroin to benzedrine. He is already on three years probation under a suspended sentence handed down by a Brownsville, state court. He was given the suspended sentence and fined $1,000 on similar distribution charges.
He is married and in his 30s. la Scott, noting that he seldom commented on the cases before him, said that he was aware of the "evidence to show the many good things" which Andrews had in his community. "But the crime with which you are charged is a singular problem to society in incarceration must be a part of the sentence," Judge Scott said. Asked Clemency The defendant, standing before the judge prior to sentencing, asked for clemency from the court. Also before the court Mon- day was 29-year-old Alvin Moore of Opelousas, charged with the armed robbery of branch of the St.
Landry Bank and Trust Co. in May of this year. Moore pleaded guilty to the charges and was sentenced to seven years in a federal institution. He had completed seven-year sentence in Angostate prison on similar charges shortly before the robbery in Opelousas. Moore was also convicted of transporting a vehicle across state lines before the most recent conviction.
FBI agents testified that $16,600 was taken in the robbery but that only $16,481 was recovered. Moore was captured two hours after the robbery. The skeleton is reportedly being shipped to the FBI's National Crime Lab for further analysis. Sheriff's Dept. Chief Deputy Walter Reynolds said detectives are compiling a list of missing persons and checking with mental institutions, military installations, and hospitals in the area in an effort to identify the remains.
Skull and rib cage was found by Sam Lewis of 2124 Texas Avenue about 5 p.m. Sunday next to a barn on his property off Cooper's Road about one mile north of La. Hwy. 28. Sheriff's deputies searched the scene and eventually collected the remainder of the skeleton.
The Capuchin monkeys, common in South America, are sometimes called 1 ringtailed monkeys because they often carry their tails rolled into a tight coil. What do doctors recommend for patients in pain? Doctors all over the country dispense over 50,000,000 of these tablets to their patients each year. There are many medications a tors recommend most than any physician or dentist can pre- other leading tablet. scribe for pain. Some are nar- Headache and dental pain is cotic, many are available only relieved incredibly fast; minor on prescription.
But there is one pains of arthritis are dependpain reliever, available without ably eased for hours; even the prescription, doctors dispense aches and pains of colds and flu again and Anacin, respond to Anacin. So the tenEach year, doctors give over sion and depression that can be 50,000,000 Anacin tablets to caused by such pain will be retheir patients in pain. If doctors lieved too. And millions take think enough about Anacin to Anacin without stomach upset. dispense all these tablets, what When you're in pain, why better recommendation can you don't you follow the practice of ask when you are in pain? so many doctors and take the You see, Anacin contains tablet a doctor might give you more of the pain reliever doc- in his own office.
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