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Asheville Citizen-Times from Asheville, North Carolina • Page 3
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Asheville Citizen-Times du lieu suivant : Asheville, North Carolina • Page 3

Lieu:
Asheville, North Carolina
Date de parution:
Page:
3
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

a i Deaths And Funerals Thomas V. Thomas V. Bernhard, 68, of Jacksonville, died Monday an Asheville hospital after a long illness. Surviving is the widow, Mrs. Lillian Smith Bernhard.

The body will be returned to Jacksonville for services and burial. Mrs. Laura Hunter CULLOWHEE Mrs. Laura Frederick Hurler, 80, a resident of Cullowhee for the past seven years, died at the home of a daughter, Mrs. Paul Tuttrup, on Long Branch Road Thursday after a long illness.

Services will be held at 10:30 a. m. Tuesday at St. John's Episcopal Church. Ralph A.

Baier HENDERSONVILLE Ralph A. Baier, 70, of Hendersonville, died Monday in a hospital here after a short illness. Services will be held at 2:30 Wednesday in the Hendersonville First Congregational Church, of which he was a member. T. A.

Bartlette BLACK MOUNTAIN Thomas Andy Bartlette, 66, retired carpenter of Cragmont Road, died unexpectedly in a hospital Monday after a period of illness. He was a native of McDowell County who had lived here for the past 48 years. For many years he was a maintenance man at WNC Sanatorium. Surviving are the widow, Mrs. Elsie Morrow Bartlette; four daughters, Mrs.

Leonard Ball and Mrs. James Wright of Black Mountain, Mrs. Fred Silvers of Huntsville, and Mrs. L. Black of Sawyer AFB, six sons, James, Lawrence, and Lewis Bartlette of Black Mountain, George of Old Fort, Ralph of Boston, and William C.

Bartlette of Jackson, a sister, Mrs. Etta Bradley of Black Mountain, 32 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Services will be held at 2 p. m. Wednesday at Vance Avenue Baptist Church, of which he was a member.

The Rev. Jim Frizzell and the Rev. Franklin Justice will officiate and burial will be in Mountain View Memorial Park. Pallbearers will be Louis Kilby, Frank Harris, Jack and Jim Raines, Arnold Jones, and Hugh Brandon. The is at Harrison Funeral Home, where the family will receive friends from 7 to 9 p.

m. Tuesday, and will be placed in the church one hour prior to the service. Warren Moody WAYNESVILLE Services for Warren Kiefer Moody, 67, of Waynesville, who died Sunday 1 in a Buncombe County hospital after a long illness, will be held at 3 p.m. Tuesday, in the chapel of Garrett Funeral Home. The Rev.

Horwood P. Myers will officiate burial will be in Green Hill Cemetery. Pallbearers will be Dale Howell, Kenneth Rathbone, Finnie Timbs, J. H. Howell Guy Arrington and Muriel Eggen.

Mr. Moody was a native of Waynesville, a son of the late James M. and Margaret Hawkins Moody. He was a veteran of World War I. Surviving are three sisters.

Mrs. Mary Mebane of Asheville, Mrs. Fred Carey of West Hartford, and Mrs. Margaret Harville of Alexandria, Va. MORRIS HENDON-BLACK 16 FUNERAL HOME FINEST FACILITIES MODE RATE COST AMBULANCE SERVICE 140 Merrimon Ave.

Dial AL-2-1821 BERRYMAN-HALL Funeral Home Air Conditioned AMBULANCE 138 Charlotte St. AL 2-1536 Lewis M. Morris Services for Lewis M. Morris, 63, of Asheville Rt. 3, who died Saturday in his home after a heart attack, will be held at 11 a.

m. Wednesday in Sardis Methodist Church, of which he was a memeber. The Rev. Randall Lanier and the Rev. Ernest Strickland will officiate and burial will be in the church cemetery.

Pallbear. ers will be Robert Crowder, James Sutton, Bronson Johnson, Rex Hensley, Austin Brown and Lester Buckner. Honorary ballbearers will be employes of the Trailways and Greyhound Bus Lines. Mr. Morris was a native of Buncombe County, and was a son of the William C.

and Lillian Cole Morris. He was baggage agent at Union Bus Station. Surviving are the widow, Mrs. Essie Taylor Morris; a son, Charles L. Morris of Waco, Texas; a step-son, William E.

Davis of Candler; two stepdaughters, Mrs. Pauline Hurst of Wabasso, Fla. and Margaret Vickery of Dundee, and 12 grandchildren. The body will remain in Groce Funeral Home until placed in the church for services. The family will receive friends from 7 to 9 p.

m. Tuesday in the funeral home. Dorsey A. Bivens MORGANTON Dorsey Albert Bivens, 57, of Morganton Rt. 3, died Sunday in a hospital here after a short illness.

Services will be held at 2 p. m. Tuesday in the Kirksey Funeral Home Chapel. Goleman V. Buchanan SPRUCE PINE Services for Goleman V.inson Buchanan, 59, who was killed Sunday in an automobile accident at Crossnore, will be held at 11 a.

m. Wednesday in Berry Chapel Baptist Church. Miss Ruby Thompson NEWLAND Miss Ruby Jean Thompson, 18, of Newland, died Sunday night in an automobile accident on U. S. 221 near Crossnore.

Services will be held at 2 p. m. Tuesday in Blevins' Creek Presbyterian Chapel on Elk Park Rt. 1. Nelson Glaze BREVARD Nelson Eddie Glaze, 22, of Brevard, died Sunday morning in a Chapel Hill hospital following a period of declining health.

Services will be held at 2 p. m. Thursday. in Bethel A. Baptist Church in Brevard.

Frank L. Franz HENDERSONVILLE L. Franz, 77, of Hendersonville. Rt. 5, died unexpectedly Sunday in his home.

Arrangements are under the direction of Thos. Shepherd's Funeral Home. Mrs. Agnes Todd Mrs. Agnes Manning Todd, 48, of 120 Swannanoa West Asheville, died at 1:30 p.

m. Monday in an Asheville hospital following a lingering illness. Funeral arrangements will be announced by West Funeral Home. William Messer CLYDE-William Riley (Will Messer, 83. of Rt.

1, died in a Waynesville nursing home Monday after an extended ness. Services will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at Rock Springs Baptist Church. Mrs. McInturff BAKERSVILLE Services for Mrs.

Carrie Alice McInturff, 82, of Bakersville, Rt. 1, who died Saturday in a Hendersonville hospital will be held at 2 p. m. Tuesday in Glen Ayre Baptist Church, of which she was a member. Groce FUNERAL HOME ASHEVILLE, N.C.

Dear friends, We thank our community the people of eration for the they give to funeral considprocessions. It is stood that generally undercars should through procession. not pass procession approaching the a opposite funeral When reduce speed it but is respectful direction, to (unless do not so directed), stop cars behind as the might collide. Respectfully, fired Grus The Asheville Citizen 1965 3 Aug. 3, David S.

Lawter David S. Lawter, 67, of 180 Barnard died at 6:55 p.m. Monday in a Buncombe County hospital following a brief illness. Arrangements will be announced by Berryman-Hall Funeral Home. Miss Singleton Miss Fredie N.

Singleton, 42, formerly of Asheville, died Saturday in Chicago, following a brief illness. Arrangements will be announced by Berryman-Hall Funeral Home. Smith Child MORGANTON Lorie Ann Faye Smith, three-year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray A Smith of Morganon Rt.

2, died Monday in a Winston-Salem hospital after a short illness. Graveside services will be held at 11 a.m. Tuesday in Lake James Baptist Church Cemetery. Mrs. John Carlson BOONE Mrs.

Loretta Magnolia Carlson, 59, of Boone Rt. 3, died in Wautaga Hospital Sunday night of a .22 pistol wound through the temple. Services will be conducted at 2 p.m. Tuesday at Boone Presbyterian Church. Zeb V.

Angel MARS HILL Zeb V. Angel, 88, of Mars Hill Rt. 2, died Monday in an Asheville hospital after a short illness. He was a native of Madison County and a retired farmer. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs.

Jerome Metcalf of Mars Hill Rt. two sons, Fred of Waynesville and Arnold Angel of Asheville; a sister, Mrs. Nelly Hampton of Asheville; a brother, Willard Angel of Mars Hill Rt. 2: eleven grandchildren and 12 great grandchildren. Services will be held at 2 p.

m. Wednesday in Paint Fork Baptist Church. The Rev. Willard Coffey, the Rev. Frank Blalock and the Rev.

Lyman Rich will officiate and burial will be in Gillis cemetery. Pallbearers will be J. G. and Robert Gardner, Paul Carter, Virgil Metcalf, Joe Chandler, and Grover Gillis. The body will remain in Holcombe Funeral Home, Mars Hill, until placed in the church 30 minutes prior to services.

Skeletons Are Found In Old Room NEW YORK (AP) Sometime in the 18th or early 19th century, more than a score of bodies were sealed in a 12-by-20foot room under what is now Washington Square Park. The grim room was sealed a second time Monday leaving its meaning as much a mystery as ever. The Consolidated Edison which brought the mystery to light, made a slight alteration in the location of a new electrical transformer it was installing in the area. A power company crew was sinking a shaft for the transformer Friday when workmen encountered a concrete dome. Breaking through the concrete, they discovered a brick and mortar dome under it.

When they broke through the brick, they found themselves looking into a brick-walled room full of skeletons. "The room was whitewashed, dry and odorless," a spokesman for the said. "Stairs led upward, as if it had been a cellar, but the stairs had been completely sealed off by the dome. "There were the outlines of coffins the wood had disin-and one of the skeletons was lying in or near the outline of a coffin. Other skeletons were piled in a corner." The whole Washington Square area was a city cemetery or "Potter's field" from the 1770's to 1823, and some 2,000 persons, most of them paupers, were buried there in unmarked graves.

One speculation was that the bodies sealed in the cellar were those of victims of a plague which struck the city during the 18th century. City officials offered no clues. The health department merely said the skeletons were not a health hazard and no action would be taken if the workmen resealed the room. To remove and rebury the skeletons, a spokesman said, would require a special order, and a report from an undertaker on the condition of the remains to avoid later legal action by 'irate relatives." So the dome was covered over, the hole was refilled with dirt, and the skeletons were buried again along with the mystery of how they got there and why. Suspected Killer Seen By Student CHAPEL HILL (AP) Police investigating the murder of UNC coed Suellen Evans said Monday they had talked to a university student who stated he saw the unidentified suspect in the case enter and leave the Coker Arboretum scene of the slaying last Friday.

Police Chief W. D. Blake called the evidence "the most promising lead" in the case to date. He noted that the new description matched that given earlier by a university janitor. The janitor said that shortly after the crime occurred he saw a blue-shirted Negro youth coming in his direction on the opposite side of the Arboretum from the crime scene.

When the youth saw him, the janitor said, he suddenly turned and ran north toward the Morehead Planetarium and toward the direction of the town's main street. Police declined as usual to identify the witness. Chief Blake said the latest witness saw a Negro youth wearing a button-down Carolina-blue shirt enter the Arboretum from the Planetarium side about noon. The witness reported next seeing the same person crossing the town's main street going from the Arboretum away about 1:15 p.m., about 30 minutes after the slaying. June Allyson Gets Allowance From Estate LOS ANGELES (AP) Actress June Allyson was granted a family allowance Monday for one year from the estate of her late husband, actor-producer Dick Powell.

Miss Allyson, 39, had petitioned Superior Court that she is "without adequate estate" of her own. The allowance will be for support of her and the couple's two children, Pamela, 17, and Richard, 14. Powell, 58. died of cancer Jan. 2, 1963, leaving an estate valued at $2.8 million.

His will left Miss Allyson her legal share of community property and half of his separate property. in trust. The will also set up a trust fund for their children. The estate is still being settled. Since Powell's death Miss Allyson married and divorced Glenn Maxwell, once Powell's barber.

Mrs. Cone Dies GREENSBORO (AP) Mrs. Herman Cone whose late husband was president of sprawling Cone Mills Corporation, died late Sunday night in a Greensboro hospital. Mrs. Cone became ill at her summer home at Blowing Rock last week and entered Moses Cone Hospital in Greensboro.

She had a permanent residence in Greensboro. Herman Cone Sr. died in 1955. Mrs. Cone's survivors include two sons, Herman Cone manager of the Revolution Plant of Cone Mills, and Alan Wolf Cone, who is with the Blue Gem Manufacturing Co.

in Greensboro. The funeral will be held Tuesday at 3 p.m. at Murray-Carter Funeral Chapel in Greensboro. Burial will be in the family cemetery at White Oak. Make Yours Vacation Traveling BY SHIP BY AIR ANYWHERE We're ready to hanale your itinerary to any part of the country or the world.

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