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Asheville Citizen-Times from Asheville, North Carolina • Page 25
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Asheville Citizen-Times from Asheville, North Carolina • Page 25

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ASHEVILLE CITIZEN-TIMES; Sept.1 10, 1966 111 Western North Carolina Deaths -And Funerals wPMy.M-M' waawwiaujarja taaawawwip www um a Lawrence Reed i LAKE JUNALUSKA Serv Miss Bradburn HENDERSONVILLE Miss Robert H. Lee HENDERSONVILLE Serv- Mrs. Dorothy Payne MARSHALL Mrs. Dorothy nounced by Morris-Hendon Funeral Home. James F.

Drake HENDERSONVILLE James Franklin Drake, 29, of El Monte. was killed in a traffic Funerals Today John Aitor Sanders p.m., Malvern Bills Presbyterian Church. McCoy Cody, i p.m., chipel ef Groce Funeral Home. Mn. Dennli E.

Barkley, p.m., chapel of Morris-Headon Funeral Home. Ernett F. Daugherty, 3 p.m., Mills Chapel Baptist Church, Black Mountain. Mrs. Allle Boyd Edwards.

4 p.m., chapel ot Groce Funeral Home. W. C. Vaughan Sr. Services for William Christian Vaughan, 89, of i Grove retired owner-operator of Vaughan Manufacturing here, who died Friday, will be held at 2:30 p.m.

Sunday In the chapel of Berryman Hall Funeral Home. The Rev. G. B. Hux and the Rev.

Hunt Comer will officiate and burial will be in Riverside Cemetery. The family suggests in lieu of Genevieve Bradburn, 80, of 820 Greenville Highway, died Friday in a local hospital after a period of declining health. Services will be at 10 a.m. Tuesday at the Grace Lutheran Church, with the Rev, John Hawn The burial will follow in Hose- mont Cemetery In Newberry, S.C. There are no known sur vivors.

Jackson Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. Fifer McKinney RUTHERFORDTON Fifer W. (Jack) McKinney, 66, of Rt. 5, Rock Springs Community, died at 5:15 p.m. Saturday at his home.

Arrangements will be an nounced by McFarland Funeral Chapel of Tryon. Mrs. Edith Laubach Mrs. Edith B. Laubach, 82, wife of Colonel James H.

Laubach of 366 Lakeshore died en route to an Asheville hospital about 11:35 a.m. Saturday after having suffered a stroke at her home. Arrangements will be an-'to BOB SUTHERLAND JA Hendersonville Youth Found Adventure In European Tour later toured that city with Dr. Bill Waddell of Chapel Hill and his family. Dr.

WaS dell has been in Sweden for a year on a pharmacology rfr search fellowship. I In Dinard, France Bob visit! 4d distant relatives who makj their home in a stone cot tage built in 1741. By contrast he was also guest of the head? master of an American school In Switzerland, at a brand new villa overlooking Lakft Geneva. For the most part he travl eled by train on a first class Eurailpass which costs $205, for three months and covers rail travel in thirteen countries, as well as Rhine steamers and ferries to Sweden. By traveling frequently at night he was able to out hotel cost and to keep his average daily expenses to $10 including transportation.

"Of course, it could be a lot cheaper if you hitch hike and stay in hostels," he remarked 'However, the train is a great way to meet people in Europe. There are six people in a compartment and they are nearly always friendly and very interested in America! And if I happened to forget to buy food, they often wduld Share with me." I Sutherland has a couple of tips for young folks who want to travel In a similar "Travel light and guard your You can't even get a hotel room without you passport." He also suggests buying a city map and guide at each place they stop. "And carry your, own toilet paper! Quoting a friend of mine," he said, "European toilet papej comes in three grades: wax, wrapping, and crepe. And often there isn't any at Payne, 65, of Marshall Rt. 5, died at 8:30 a.m.

Saturday in an Asheville hospital after a brief illness. Bowman Funeral Home of Marshall will announce the arrangements. a Mrs. Lovina Duncan BURNSVILLE Mrs. Lovina Duncan, 90, of the Bee Log community, died Wednesday night in a Yancey County nursing home after a long illness.

surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Ed Higgins and Mrs. Ella Hensley, both of Burnsville Rt. three sisters, Mrs. Mark Gooley and Mrs.

Martha Burton, both of West Asheville, and Mrs. Zeb McAlister of Baltimore, two brothers, Harold and Roy Duncan, both of Burnsville; 12 grandchildren, 21 great-grandchildren and eight great-great-grandchildren. Services were held Friday In Bald Creek Baptist Church at Bee Log. Burial was in Watts Cemetery. Pallbearers were Floyd Edwards, Harold Hensley, Dewey Fender, Arthur Edwards, Sam Wheeler and Sher-rell Flowers.

Wade Hampton Service for Wade Hampton, 70, of 144 Eagle who died Thursday, will' be held at 1:30 p.m. Sunday in St. John Bap tist Church in Arden, of which he was a member. The Rev. A.

R. Madden, pas tor, will officiate and burial will be in the church cemetery. Mr. Hampton was a lifelong resident of Buncombe County Surviving are a son, and a sister, Mrs. Eliza Jackson, both of Ashevi'le; and a nephew.

The body will remain in Wilk ins Mortuary until the service hour. The family will be at 22 Sassafras St. Buddy A. Broom SYLVA Buddy Allen Broom, four-months old son of sherlie and Sue Gaddis Broom of Sylva, died Saturday morn ing at his home. He had been ill since birth.

In addition to the parents, survivors include the paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ira Broom of Sylva, formerly of Glenville; and the maternal grandmother, Mrs. Bertha Gad dis of Waynesville. Graveside rites will be held at 2:30 p.m Sunday in the Big Ridge Cemetery with the Rev, C.

C. Welch officiating. The body is at Moody Fu neral Home in Sylva. Mrs. McDowell Services for Mrs.

Margaret Kirby McDowell, 67, of 8 Sky- land Circle, who died Friday, will be held at 2 p.m. Monday In Riverside Baptist Church. The Rev. M. H.

Jamison will officiate and burial will be in Ashlawn Gardens of Memory. Pallbearers will be Boyd Plemmons, Paul Foster, Ben H. Gurley, Mack Case, Roger Williams and Edwin G. Led-ford. The family will receive friends from 7 to 9 p.m.

Sunday in West Funeral Home, Weaverville, where, he body will remain until placed In the church an hour prior to the services. Mrs. McDowell was a native of Virginia, a Buncombe County resident five years, and a member of Piney River Baptist Church in Virginia. Surviving are the husband. Jeter E.

McDowell; two daugh ters, Mrs. Tessie Hanley and Mrs. Margaret Earls of Savan nah, three sons, Roy of Asheville, Charlie of Highlands, and George McDowell of Charlotte. Also, three- sisters, Mrs. George Kirby of Scottsvllle, Mrs.

J. J. White and Mrs. Annie Evans of Loweeville, Va. and 11 grandchildren.

Eugene B. Marshall HENDERSONVILLE Eugene B. Marshall, 77, a resident of 1029 Patton died Satur day morning unexpectedly at his home. He has been a resident of Hendersonville since 1960, and had moved here from Chicago, where he had been with Bowman Dairy Co. until his retirement.

He operated the Marshall Cottages on the Asheville high way from 1960-63. He was a member of the Hendersonville First Methodist Church. Services will be held at 2 p.m. Monday at the Chapel-in- the-Pines of Jackson Funeral Home. The family will receive friends from 7-9 p.m.

Sunday at the funeral home. Survivors include the wife, Mrs. Lola Clark Marshall; one sister, Mrs. Alice Ireland of San Dimas, and several nieces and nephews. Gilmer Caldwell WAYNESVILLE Gilmer B.

Caldwell. 72, a retired laborer, died unexpectedly at his home at 221 Smathers Street Saturday afternoon. Arrangements will be an nounced by Garrett Funeral ices for Robert Henry Lee, 55, who died Friday afternoon, will bo held at 10 a.m. Monday at the Chapel-ln-the-Pines at Jackson Funeral Home. The Rev.

Jack Bennett wilri officiate. Burial will be In Oakdale Cemetery. Pallbearers will be Steve Thomas, Smiley McCall, Rex Smart, Dr. J. L.

Gardner, Sam Padgett, L. B. Prince, ana Eugene and Larry Feagin. The family will receive frienas at Jackson Funeral Home from 7-9 p.m. Sunday.

Mr. Lee was a native ot Wilmington but had lived in Henderson County most of his life. He was a graduate of Christ School. He was a son of the late B. H.

and Katherine Beckwith Lee, and was associated with his father in the First Savings and Loan Association and had served as secretary-treasurer for 20 years. Later he established the Bob Lee Insurance Agency and was engaged in the mortgage loan business. He was a member of St. James Episcopal Church, where he served as acolyte' and a member of the vestry. He was also treasurer of the building fund.

Mr. Lee was a charter member of the Hendersonville Lions Club. Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Mary Weeks Lee; three sisters, Miss Katherine Lee of Hartsville, S. Mrs.

Ann Beckham of Columbia, S. C. and Mrs. Mary Steen of New York City; two nieces and one nephew. Mrs.

Amanda Wright HAZELWOOD Mrs. Aman da Messer Wright, 83, died in a hospital Saturday after a long illness. She was a daughter of the late Robert and Mary Gillett Messer of Haywood County, and the widow of Washington Wright who died in 1964, 1 Survivors include a son, Wal ter Wright of Waynesville Rt, two daughters, Miss Nora Wright of Hazelwood and Mrs. Fannie Sell of Guam; three brothers, George Messer of Greer, S. Clarence Messer of Greenville, S.

and Grady Messer of Travelers Rest, S. two sisters, Mrs. J. T. Styles of Greenville, S.

C. and Mrs. Charles Rogers of White Pine, Tenn. Services will be held at 4 p.m. Sunday in the Ljberty Baptist Church with the Rev.

Rufus Finger, pastor, officiating, assisted by the Rev. Ted Reeves. Burial will be in the church cemetery. Nephews will serve as pallbearers and nieces will be flower-bearers. The body will remain at Crawford Funeral Home in Waynesville until the hour of the service.

Mrs. Alice Taylor Mrs. Alice Bishop Taylor, 92, of 239 Haywood died Saturday afternoon in an Asheville hospital following a long illness. She was a lifelong resident of Buncombe County, a daughter of the late Joel and Kate Ruth Bishop, and the widow of F. Taylor, who died in 1941.

Mrs. Taylor was a former member of Sardis Methodist Church. Surviving are a daughter, Miss Ruth Taylor of the home; a son, Virgil M. Taylor of Asheville three brothers, James H. Bishop of Asheville, B.

M. Bishop of Mills River and Harvey Bishop, formerly of Ar-den; seven grandchildren; and 18 great-grandchildren. Services will be held at 4 p.m. Monday in the chapel of Groce Funeral Home. The Rev.

James Sherlin will officiate, assisted by the Rev. Billy H. Cline, and burial will be in Avery's Creek Cemetery. Pallbearers will be the following grandsons, Don Doyle Jo, Taylor and Dennis L. Ramsey, Dan T.

Ingram Fred V. Clontz and Robert M. Suttles. Family will receive friends from 7 to 9 p.m. Sunday in the funeral home.

R. A. Ammeran Richard R. Amimeran, 77, a resident of the Carolina Hotel, died at 8 a.m. Saturday in an Ashevi'le hospital following a brief illness.

The body was sent Saturday to Cynthiana, for services under the direction of the Wha-ley Funeral Home. Burial will be In a cemetery there. Morris-Hendon Funeral Home was in charge of arrangements here. WHITE MONUNMENT WORKS 4 WEAVERVILie HO. at NeWBRIDOI OENU1NB "DEEP BLUE GRANITE" Fully Ouaranlatd DIAL 1M-S14! Praa Istlmatat larvlN WTN.C.

44 Yrt. ices for Lawrence Thomas Reed, 58, of Lake Junaluska, who died Friday at his home, will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday in the Scott's Creek Baptist Church in Jackson County. The Rev. Curtis Burge, pastor of Waynesville First Baptist Church, will officiate, assisted by the Rev.

James Lambert and the Rev. B. S. Hensley. Burial will be in Old Field Cemetery.

Pallbearers will be Mike Clayton, Jimmy Ward, Charles Henry Baker, Dan Ward, Billy Ray Clayton, Millard Montieth, James Milas Ward, and Charles M. and Lewis Reed. Nieces will be flowerbearers. The Sylva Town Board will serve as honorary pallbearers. He was the son of the late Charles C.

and Sarah Harris Reed of Jackson County. He was affiliated with the Reed Oil Co. at Lake Junaluska. He was manager of the A Store at Sylva for 12 years, and at one time owned his own grocery store in Sylva. He was a former member of the Sylva Town Board, and a member of the Sylva Lions Club.

Mr. Reed was a member of the Waynesville First Baptist Church. Survivors include the wife, Mrs. Maud Baker Reed; two sons. Dr.

Charles B. Reed of Goose Bay, Labador, and Thom as H. Reed of Kingsport, three brothers, Roy and Charles Reed, both of Waynesville. and Gordon Reed of Sylva; two half-brothers, Milas and Glen Ward, both of Sylva; one sister, Mrs. Ray Clayton of Sylva; three half-sisters, Mrs.

John Montieth. Mrs. Ed Fisher and Mrs. Myrtle Dills, all of Sylva; and three grandchildren. The body will remain at Crawford Funeral Home in Waynesville until 30 minutes prior to the service, when it will be taken to the churcn to lie In state.

Mrs. Marie L. Burch CANTON -Mrs. Marie Little Burch, 67, of Lake Worth, died early Saturday in a Waynesville hospital after a brief illness. She had been visiting a stepdaughter, Mrs.

Hugh A. Matthews, for the past two months. Mrs. Burch had been married to W. C.

Sentelle, former Haywood resident, who died in 1949. She later married J. Albert Burch, formerly of Canton, who died in 1961. In addition to Mrs. Matthews, survivors include a daughter, Mrs.

Carl Mathison of West Palm Beach, a step-son, Roy A. Burch of Dunn; the step-mother, Mrs. J. W. Little of Charlotte; a brother, Yates Little of Savannah, and 10 grandchildren.

Services will be held at 2 p.m. Monday at Wells Funeral Home chapel with the Rev. Horace L. Smith officiating. Burial will be In Pleasant Hill Cemetery at Clyde.

Pallbearers will be timer Goodson, Jack and Horace Sentelle, Tom Long, Doyce Clark and Ray Cashion. The family will receive friends from 7-9 p.m. Sunday at the funeral home. Leighton Infant WEAVERVILLE Denette Leighton, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Robert Jake Leighton of Weaverville Rt. 1, died at 12:10 p.m. Saturday in an Asheville hospital. Surviving in addition to the Darents are a sister, Pamala Jean Leighton of the home; the paternal grandmother, Mrs. Dorothy Leighton of Weaver ville; and the maternal grand parents.

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Fox of Mars Hill Rt. 1. Graveside rites were conduct ed Saturday afternoon in Pen- land Cemetery on Weaverville Rt.

1. The Rev. Bill Jenkins officiat ed. West Funeral Home was in charge of arrangements. www Rev.

George Cowan, WEBSTER The Rev. George Napoleon Cowan, 98, died Friday at Rocky Mount. Services will be held at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in the Rocky Mount First Baptist Church. Survivors include two daugh ters, Mrs.

Elizabeth LeDeen of Columbia, S.C., and Miss Geor gia Cowan of Washington, D.C.; and one son, James Cowan of Atlanta, Ga. A native of Jackson County, he was a graduate of Wake Forest College and the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Ky. He was widely known in the Southern Baptist Convention, and was frequently the oldest member in attendance. In his younger years he taught school in Jackson Coun ty. He was ordained a Baptist minister at Webster.

DUNN fr 'Zr unetatneme 8S6 TUNNEL ROAD PHONE 252-2767 accident Friday night near his home. His body will be returned to Hendersonville for services and burial, Thos. Shepherd and Son will announce arrangements. a Jack C. Baldwin NEBO Services for Jack Charles Baldwin, 44, who died Friday night, will be held at 3 p.m.

Sunday In Nebo Methodist Church. The Rev. Paul Heafner will officiate and burial will be in McDowell Memorial Park. Mr. Baldwin was a machinist at Cllnchfield Mfg.

Co. for the past 15 years. Survivors, include the widow, Mrs. Grace Corpening Baldwin; a daughter, Susan, of the home, and the mother and step-father, Mr. and Mrs.

A. U. Wall of Marion Rt. 4. The body will remain at Westmoreland-Hawkins Funeral Home until taken to the churoh to lie in state 30 minutes prior the funeral.

to cross, and the peasants sit in, chairs by the road to watch the cars go by." After spending one night in a pleasant Slav hotel, they crossed back to the west at Trieste. "What a difference! The people were friendlier. The sun shone brighter and the sky actually looked bluer." The other low point in Bob Sutherland's trip came when he set down his suitcase as he looked at the altar of the famous cathedral in. Cologne, Germany. Within a few minutes it had disappeared! Fortunately the thieves did not take his small shoulder bag with all his papers and traveler's checks.

For three weeks Bob traveled with just the clothes on his back plus a windbreaker and two drip-dry shirts purchased in Switzerland. "Actually I discovered that I didn't need so many clothes Earthquake Series Brings Slide In Japan MATUSHIRO. Japan (AP) -A major landslide demolished 12 house and huts in this quake-ridden town Saturday but no casualties were reported. The 500-footwide landslide was believed caused by continuous earthquakes rocking this town for a year. One hundred forty residents 28 families were ordered evacuated after the mountain had started to move Friday.

Matsushiro, a town of 22,600 population, has been jolted by to 3,000 tremors daily since August, 1965. The town is about 100 miles northwest of Tokyo. Tivo Nations Hunt Missing Submarine HAMBURG, Germany (AP) British and German naval vessels with electronic gear searched the North Sea Satur day night for the sunken Ger man submarine Hai (Shark). The sea was calm for the first time 6ince the small World War II U-boat sank in a gale Wednesday night with 20 men aboard. One crewman surved and was rescued.

Seven bodies have been recovered. A German navy spokesman said the day-long search had failed to locate the hull, but would be continued through the night. The Hai sank on the edge of the Dogger Bank, about 200 miles off the coast of Britain. Secretaries Group Holding Convention CANDLER Some 100 members of the Carolinas Division of the National Secretaries Assn. are holding their anual convention Saturday and Sunday at Pisgah View Ranch near here.

About seven members, Including Mrs. Marie Eggert, president, of the Land of the Sky (Asheville) Chapter, are attending. GROCE FUNERAL HOME Funeral Directors 1401 Patton Ave. 252-3535 VAUGHAN lowers that donations be made to the Heart Fund or American Cancer Society. Mr.

Vaughan was a native of West Point. an Asheville resident 53 years, a member of the Men's Bible Class of the First Baptist Church, and a charter member of Asheville chapter, United Commercial Travelers. Surviving are the widow, Mrs. Clara Fallwell Vaughan; a daughter, Mrs. Herbert T.

Hotch of Richmond, two sons, Marshall of Crittendon, and William Christian Vaughan of Asheville; a aister, Mrs. C. M. Dunton of Onley, and eight grandchildren. James R.

Seller SYLVA James Robert Sellers, 50, of Sylva, died Saturday morning in Oteen Veterans Administration Hospital after a long illness. He was a World War II veteran, and a lifelong resident of Jackson County. He was a member of the William E. Dil-lard Post 104, American Legion, In Sylva. He was a sergeant at the time of his discharge from the U.

S. Army, and served in campaigns in Rome, Arno, Southern France and the Rhine-land; He was an employe of the Mead Corp. Survivors Include the wife, Margaret Dillard Sellers; one daughter, Mrs. Charles Fisher of Sylva; his father, William Sellers of Sylva; two brothers. Howell of Brevard and Clyde Sellers of Charlotte; and one granddaughter.

Services will be held at 2 p.m. Monday in the First Baptist Church in Sylva, of which he was a member. The Rev. Robert Clegg and the Rev. Oscar Beck will officiate.

Burial will be in Fair-View Cemetery. i Pallbearers will be Guy Sutton, Leo Cowan, Frank Crawford Fred Brown, Dick Green and Kenneth Revis. The William E. Dillard Post 104, American Legion, will be In charge of graveside rites. The body will remain at Moody Funeral Home until placed in the church prior to the service.

Mrs. Jessie Cairnes CANTON Mrs. Jessie Har-kins Cairnes, 86, of Canton Rt. 1, died at 6 p.m. Saturday in a Waynesville hospital, a a long illness.

Arrangements will be announced by Wells Funeral Home. Quality Granlt Manumanfi T. W. Pswin, Ownar Dili 15J-I7M POWERS MONUMENT CO. 412 Htndersanvllle Rd.

Oppnltt Blltmori School ANDERS-RICE Funeral Home FulMral DlrMtar "AIR-HIARSI" 254-3111 JS4.JS12 Ml Havana RM4 Wnl Artavllla By CONNIE CLARIS Special To Citizen-Times July 26 was a "red letter" day for Bob Sutherland, one he will never forget. He spent a good part of the day in a Communist jail. Twelve pounds thinner, his luggage stolen, arrested and jailed behind the Iron Curtain, still Sutherland calls his recent excursion to Europe "a most satisfying trip." Sutherland, a Wake Forest sophomore and. son of Mr. and Mrs.

Marvin Sutherland of Hendersonville, spent ten weeks on a solo tour of thirteen western European countries. A trip he planned and dreamed about since the eighth grade, it was Bob's high school graduation gift from his parents, "post poned a year while I studied some European history and improved my French," he explained. Bob's experience in the Communist jail began with an invitation to drive to Budapest for a weekend with Paul Esposito, a student from New Jersey who was traveling by car. "We were told in Vienna that there would be no trouble getting a transit visa, but we soon found out differently." A long line of cars was halted at the banbedwire rimmed frontier, where armed guards patrolled with rifles. After lengthy question-aires they were permitted to pass.

Scarcely inside the Hungarian border the young man made a serious blunder. About sundown they stopped to photograph a Russian factory in the small village of Masonmagyarovar. Immediately they were surrounded by guards and policemen, who seized their keys and passports and searched the car. They were escorted to a run-down station house and locked into a dingy cell with two-inch iron bars and armed guards at the door. "Scared? We were petrified! We were sure they'd line us up and shoot us!" Bob shook his head in disbelief.

"Nobody spoke any English or French," he continued," so our communication was pretty bad. Fortunately Paul spoke some German." Each boy was questioned separately and films were confiscated. Finally after four hours they were re -leased. Accommodations were impossible when they reached Budapest about 1 a.m, so they spent the rest of the night in the train station. "But we didn't actually sleep," said Bob.

"We were afraid to go to sleep since the place was so full of drunks and ruffians." A three-hour bus tour next day revealed Budapest as a drab city with a depressing atmosphere. Both boys were eager to leave. They crossed Into Yugoslavia where "main highways are like bad secondary roads, traffic Is constantly halted for animals anyway. But from then on, it was "wash-and-wear" every night," he said. Though Sutherland started his trip as a loner; he was rarely without congenial traveling companions.

There are literally thousands of young people touring Europe independently, most on very limited budgets. Bob met new friends from thirteen states and five countries. An art student from California guided his tour of Rome and through' a young Negro Peace Corps volunteer returning from Ethiopia, Bob was invited to dine with an Ethiopian family in Munich. He went sightseeing in London with Becky Alexander, a friend from Hendersonville who was engaged in an arche-ological expedition. Through a letter of introduction from an American friend, Bob was invited to tea at the U.

S. Embassy in Stockholm and Asphalt Jungle Even Tougher, Dengler Finds WASHINGTON (AP) Navy Lt. Dieter Dengler, who walked for 22 days through the jungles of Laos to escape from the Communists, had to take another walk. Saturday to get back into Washington to report to the Navy Department. Dengler, after receiving a standing ovation Friday in an appearance before the Senate Armed Services Committee, went out of town to spend the night with' friends.

Early Satur day morning the borrowed car in which he was returning broke down. Failing to get any passing cars to stop, Dengler started walking. Three hours later he found help, just in time to get him to the Pentagon for an ap pointment with his Navy super iors. "At least," Dengler said of his early morning experience, "There weren't any mosquitoes or leeches in this jungle Fire Alarms 5:15 p. Hillside steam radiator.

8:32 p. m. 2 Birch electrical short. 8:55 p. m.

School automobile blaze. Capital Punishment CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) A hen stepped on the trigger of a shotgun leaning on a wire fench and hit Mrs. Dama de Giron with a scattering of buck shot in the legs. Though It was clearly accidenta, Giron, the husband, decreed the hen must die "by immersion, in the soup kettle." GREEN HILLS CEMETERY Provldlnt Highest Tvoa al Camattry Sarvlca Slnca IMl GRANITE COMPANY MONUMENTS OlMCT ACTQRY SALES OHOCi NIXT to HOWB Ti MANKIT OVER 20 YEARS IN ASHEVILLE PHONI 234-21 CARD OF THANKS The family of the late Mrs, Lena H. Bell wishes to thatk their many friends and neigh bors for all acts of kindness shown at her death.

A special thanks for the beautiful flowers and to Rev. A. J. Johnson and the members of Hopkins Chapel Church. HAROLD JETHRO HOOPER AND FAMILY CARD OF THANKS The family of Mr.

W. F. West wishes to express their sincere thanks to the many neighbors, friends and relatives, also the doctors and ministers for the many expressions of sympathy shown them at his death. MRS. W.

Fi WEST and FAMILY IUBjCARJ no dfgfflnff, no danogo to km, sbnbs, Onmrf KEI ISTIMATH II 2S3-S241 VULCAN IASIMINT WATiR-MOOMNO SPICIAUST, INC P.O. Ia MM, Aihavlll SKYVIEW MEMORIAL PARK INC. Beautiful Cemetery HlOHWAY 1 IAST AshtvllM, N. C. TIT Homt..

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