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The Times Recorder from Zanesville, Ohio • 18

The Times Recorder from Zanesville, Ohio • 18

Location:
Zanesville, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
18
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1 PAGE 2-B SECTION THE TIMES RECORDER, ZANESVILLE, OHIO THURSDAY, APRIL 16, 1970 John C. Hufford Of East Pike Dies John C. Hufford, 81, of pike, a retired sales representative for John J. Madden Manufacturing Company of Indianapolis, died at 6:10 a.m. Wednesday (April 15) at Bethesda Hospital.

He had been ill the past year. He was born Dec. 17, 1888, In Greenfield, a son of John and Nancy McMichael Hufford. Mr. Hufford had been employed by Madden Company from 1927 until his retirement in 1964.

He moved to Zanesville in 1933 from Butler, Pa. Mr. Hufford was a member of Pleasant Grove United Methodist Church and taught the Rainbow Class for 24 years, He was a charter member of Cumberland, Lodge Surviving are his widow, Hazel B. Hufford; a son, Jack F. Hufford of Valley View road, two granddaughters, Rebecca Jane and Jacqueline Sue Hufford, both of Valley View road; and a brother, Harold E.

Hufford of Nashville, Ind. Friends may call at Clyde E. Thompson Funeral Home in Duncan Falls after 7 p.m. today and 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Friday.

Roberts Service Services for Mrs. Nora Elizabeth Roberts, 60, of Owens, Hill, who died Tuesday, will be held at 2:30 p.m. Friday at Blue de Avenue Chapel of Bolin Funeral Home. Rev. Charles Spangler will officiate and burial will be in Woodlawn Cemetery.

Pallbearers will be Edward. John and Greg Roberts, William Hina, Howard Bagent and Harry Kinney. Friends may call 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today at the funeral home. Mrs.

Ethel Kennedy SHAWNEE Mrs. Ethel Kennedy, 76, formerly of Shawnee, died at 8:05 p.m. Tuesday (April 14) at the Haven of Rest Nursing Home in Marion. She was born April 19, 1893, in Cannelville, a daughter of Thomas and Elizabeth Hiles Halsey. Her husband, Vernon (Dick) Kennedy, died in 1969.

Mrs. Kennedy was a member of McCuneville Church of God. Surviving are a son, William Kennedy of Marion; two daughters, Mrs. William (Florence) Cavey of Newark and Mrs. Robert (Mary) Schertzer of Morral; a sister, Mrs.

Marie Bennett of Zanesville; 13 grandchildren and 15 great grandchildren. Friends may call after noon today at Humphrey Funeral Home in Shawnee where services will be held at 2 p.m. Friday with Rev. Sam Braglin officiating. Burial 1 will be in Shawnee Cemetery.

Roberts Service Deaths and Funerals New Harmony Baptist Surviving is a daughter, Mrs. Cappie Shirkey of Columbus. Her husband, Doc, died in 1968. Services will be held at 1 p.m. Friday at McVay Funeral Home in Caldwell with Rev.

William Carter officiating. Burial will be in South Olive Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today. Brownfield Service Services for Jody Myron Brownfield, four-month-old son of Cecil and Sherry Baker Brownfield of 1252 Edwards lane, who died Tuesday, will be held at 1 p.m.

Friday at Hillis Funeral Home with Evangelist Ferrell Lowe officiating. Burial will I be in Memorial Park. Friends may call at the funeral home 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today. Mrs.

Julia Herron Mrs. Julia A. Herron, 78, of Chandlersville died at 4:20 a.m. Wednesday (April 15) at Bethesda Hospital where she had been a patient since April 8. Born Aug.

2, 1891, in Morgan County, she was a daughter the late James and Mary Roberts Stiles. From 1911 to 1960, she lived on a farm in Rich Hill Township, moving to Chandlersville in 1960. Mrs. Herron was a member of Rix Mills Presbyterian Church. She leaves a daughter, Mrs.

Samuel (Eva) Bliss; three sons, George Harold E. and Asa 0. Herron, all of Chand lersville; brother, Ellis J. Stiles of Philo; 16 grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren. Mrs.

Herron was married to Howard E. Herron Oct. 4, 1911, and he died in 1958. Also deceased are two grandchildren, Edythe Faye Bliss and Tracy W. Herron; and a son, Norris Herron.

Friends may call at Clyde E. Thompson Funeral Home in Duncan Falls 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today. Services will be held at 1:30 p.m. Friday at the funeral LM SEPARATION OF LUNAR MODULE AND SERVICE MODULE SM JETTISONED SM LM AND COMMAND MODULE LM SEPARATES FROM CM RE- ENTRY SPLASHDOWN PACIFIC OCEAN Graveside servics for Ralph M.

Roberts, 38, of Bedford Heights, a former Zanesville resident who died Saturday, will be held at 4 p.m. today at Duncan Falls Cemetery. Miller Funeral Home at MeConnelsville is in charge. Cole Service CAMBRIDGE Service for James W. Cole, 55, of Cambridge will be held at 1 p.m.

Friday in the First United Presbyterian Church in Cambridge instead of First United Methodist Church as previously announced. Rev. David Freese will officiate and burial will be in Poplar Forks Cemetery in Gratiot. Mr. Cole died Monday in Sarasota, while vacationing.

Mull Service Mull Service Service for Gordon Mull of 518 Wayne avenue, who died Tuesday, will be held at 1 p.m. Friday 'in the Blue Avenue Chapel of Bolin Funeral Home. Rev. Howard P. Spitnale will officiate and burial will be in Memorial Park.

Friends may call 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today in the funeral home. Mrs. Vesta Davis SOUTH OLIVE Mrs. Vesta Davis, 92, of South Olive died at 10:30 a.m.

Tuesday (April 14) at Marietta Memorial Hospital. She was born Sept. 26, 1877, at Dudley, a daughter of Jasper and Eunice Bucey Blake. Mrs. Davis was a member APOLLO 13 RE- UPI Telephoto Apollo 13 Reentry Plan Apollo 13's astronauts will employ new techniques to rid themselves of the lunar module and service module just prior to entering Earth's atmosphere in the command module.

The astronauts will fire a one foot per second burst of their control rockets, pushing the service module toward Earth. They cut it loose and fire another one foot per second blast in the opposite Friends In The Hospital A public-service feature available to all hospitals in this ares Bethesda ADMITTED Carroll Steele, Crooksville. Jarrett William Arnold, Roseville Route 1. Charles R. Fortney, Warsaw Route 3.

Walker Ludman Liggitt, 604 Smithfield avenue. Mrs. Rebecca Sue Addy, 2546 Maple avenue. Clyde Edgar Stoneburner, New Lexington. Mrs.

Violet Leora Lasure, Route 7. Miss Margaret L. McCann, Frazeysburg Route 1. Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Dye, McConnelsville.

Mrs. Ethel E. Stuller, Dresden. Mrs. Lula Evelyn Wright, Coshocton.

Robert Barclay, Duncan Falls. Mrs. Dollie G. Muetzel, Buckeye Lake. Mrs.

Loma Iola Dingey, McConnelsville Star Route. Mrs. Emma M. Peck, Norwich Route 1. Franklin A.

Woods, 1039 Linden avenue. Mrs. Lela S. Armstrong, Cambridge. Robert Harlan Covert, 1349 Ohio street.

Mrs. Evelyn Bernice Miller, Newark Route 4. Mrs. Effie Elizabeth Culver, 1713 Neil avenue. Mrs.

Patricia Louise King, Caldwell Route 5. Douglas Lee Darr, Fresno Route 2. Miss Edith Esther Leasure, Conesville Route 1. Richard Lee Ryan, Warsaw. Mrs.

Blanch Helser, Thornville Route 1. Richard Paul Spring, Stardust circle Route 4. Mrs. Freda Matilda Crock, Caldwell Route 4. Mrs.

Grace Isabell Campbell, Barnesville Route 1. Mrs. Virginia Fannie Lunn, 365 Sheridan street. Mrs. Lenora Shroyer, Nash- PAL-FOR-THE DAY Miss Shannon Harlow, 10 Malta Route 2 Bethesda Hospital Good Condition Donald Schuman 126 Michigan Avenue Good Samaritan Fair Condition "Be A Pal" SEND A CARD port Route 1.

Mrs. Laura Olive Castor, New Concord Route 1. Mrs. Norma Jean Anders, Route 7. Mrs.

Minnie Jones, Sonora, DISMISSED Edgar (Ray) Tilden, McConnelsville; Miss Karen T. Tracey, 147 Teakwood drive; Mrs. Betty Kreuter, Fairview drive Route Lewis Moon, New Concord; Mrs. Wilma Irene Dorland, Byesville Route 1. Mrs.

Patricia Ann Pierce, South Zanesville; Mrs. Ada E. Route Vickie Marie Bradley, Route Mrs. Karen Joan Burris, Coshocton Route 2: Mrs. Geraldine Doris Campbell, South Zanesville.

Paul Edward Chambers, Route Mrs. Lulu Fay Demster, McConnelsville; Edwin Montgomery Gensimore, Guernsey Route Sherry Diane Harris, Woodsfield; Mrs. Sondra Dianne Hindel, Dresden Route 2. Mrs. Mae Etta Lemmon, 825 Wabash avenue; Miss Mabel Martha Lycas, 2090 Whitman street; James Lester McFerren, Chandlersville Route Albert Edwin Matthew, '741 Luck avenue; Miss Sandra A.

Mick, East Fultonham. Mrs. Sandra Kaye Mitchell, 1215 Seborn avenue; Harry Wesley Moore, 723 Goddard avenue; William Joseph Newell, Frazeysburg; Mrs. Sheryl Ann Smith, 742 Leonard avenue; Jay B. Strauss, 145 Rehl road.

Good Samaritan ADMITTED Hazel Stotts, Route 7. Mrs. Lola J. Feldner, Route 3. De a a Harbaugh, Crooksville Route 1.

Jerard Rogers, 339-B Indiana street. Mrs. Linda Kaye Dodson, Ridge avenue. Mrs. Katharine K.

Clum, Thornville. Herman Charles Tipton Roseville Route 1. Mrs. Blanche Thompson, 935 Moxahala avenue. Mrs.

Delores V. Storts, Corning Route 1. Mrs. Rozella Marie Willey, Frazeysburg Route 3. Virgil W.

Binckley, Newark Route 4. Mitchell L. Pletcher, Route 7. Mrs. M.

Rosalie Hooper, New Lexington. Mrs. Ruth I. Fauley, New Lexington Route 1. James Bohn Route 8.

Mrs. Martha C. Bainter, 550 South Samuel drive. Emmett Ball, Route 3. David Starks, 112 Luck avenue.

Mrs. Ethel Boetcher, 2419 Clarendon avenue. Clarence Mullen, 443 Spangler drive. Miss Olive Rhoades, Somerset Route 1. Alva Amrine, 735 Homewood avenue.

William L. Clouse, 569 Carey street. Robert G. Elliott, Plainfield. Mrs.

Margaret C. Brooks, 1165 Roosevelt avenue. Mrs. Carol Ann Orecchio, New Lexington. President Signs Pay Raise Bill WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon signed Wednesday a $2.6 billion pay raise bill for 5.3 million government employes which was a partial outgrowth of the recent postal strike.

The measure, which is retroactive to Dec. 27, also provides salary boosts for congressional staff aides. It does not include congressmen, high government officials, federal judges or blue collar workers. The 6 per cent across-theboard hike for the government employes was viewed as the first installment of a higher increase to be given mail carriers and other postal workers. They are expected to bel voted an additional pay raise when Congress works out details of a postal reform bill.

Courthouse News William E. Richey of Norwich Route 1, who died Feb. 26, left his estate equally to his children, Mary Ruth Richey and George White Richey, and named them co executors, according to a will filed in Probate Court. The will was dated Oct. 31, 1957.

Ray W. Elliott of New Concord Route 2, who died April 9, left his estate to his widow, Martha, and named her executor. The will was dated March 10, 1950. The will of Georgeanna J. Jones of 800 Richey road, who died April 10, left her estate to her husband, Edward and named him executor.

The will was dated Feb. 25, 1967. DeLong and Baker FUNERAL HOME Concerned Service 56 So. 5th St. Phone 452-9356 H.

W. Baker Doris Delong Baker R. H. Welker TR Weather Report: Warmer home with Rev. Joseph B.

Brown officiating. Graveside services at Rich Hill Cemetery will be private. Pallbearers, all grandsons, will be Thomas and Robert Bliss, Charles, Keith, Arthur and Roger Herron. John R. Walters BARNESVILLE John Raymond Walters, 37, of 1221 Oakfield drive, South Columbus, died at 9:15 a.m.

Monday (April 13) in Grant Hospital following a brief illness. He was born Dec. 24, 1932, in Barnesville, a son of Ernest and Lura McLeish Walters of Barnesville. In addition to his parents, he is survived by his widow, Frances Walters; two sons, Michael and Daniel, both of the home: a brother, Hubert Walters of Newton Falls; and a sister, Mrs. Ruth Jones of Canton.

A brother, Robert, died in 1955. Friends may call at Linden Chapel of Schoedinger Funeral Home at 2241 Cleveland avenue, Columbus, 7 to 9 p.m. today and 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Friday. Rosary will be recited Friday.

Services will be held at 10 a.m. Saturday at St. Anthony Roman Catholic Church at 4913 Atwater drive, Columbus. Graveside services will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday at Southern Cemetery in Barnesville with Rev.

Fr. John Reardon ofofficiating. Campbell Plumly Funeral Home will be in charge of Barnesville arrangements. James Service Services for Mrs. Lulu James, 91, of 119 Kensington avenue, South Zanesville, who died Monday, will be held at 1 p.m.

today at William Thompson and Son Funeral Home in White Cottage with Rev. Frank Crofoot officiating. Burial will be in Fultonham Cemetery. Pallbearers will be Russell Yahn, Roger Yahn, Donald Yahn, Lester Clayton, Jeffrey Clayton and Jerry Miller. Albert G.

Winkler Albert G. Winkler, 86, of near Hannibal, a retired farmer, died at 3 a.m. Wednesday (April 15) at Wetzel County Hospital in New Martinsville, W. after a long illness. He was born Nov.

25, 1883, at Clarington, a son of Joseph and Mary Yaussy Winkler. He was a member of Zion United Church of Christ near Hannibal. His wife, Marty, died last June. Surviving are three sons, Herman of Hannibal, Lawrence of Caldwell cand Homer of Clarington Route nine grandchildren and 10 greatgrandchildren; two brothers, Roy of Beloit and Joseph of Wadsworth; and a sister, Mrs. Mary Straub of near hannibal.

Friends may call at Bauer Turner Funeral Home in Woodsfield where brief services will be held at 1 p.m. Friday. Additional services will be held at 2:30 p.m. Friday at Zion Church of Christ with Rev. David Williams officiating.

Burial will be in the church cemetery. Zanesville Man Takes Own Life Louis W. Steed, 51, of 148 South Sixth street, a carpenter, died at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday (April 15) in Bethesda Hospital. Dr.

S. S. Daw, Muskingum County coroner, ruled the death due to apparent suicide Dr. Daw said Mr. Steed swallowed an exterminator powder.

He was born Aug. 24, 1918, in Zanesville, a son of William and Grace Evans Steed. Surviving are his widow, Olive Steed; a daughter, Miss Ruth Steed of Louisville, two brothers, Frank Steed of Duncan Falls and Chester Steed of Chillicothe; a sister, Mrs. Hazel Mullens of Chicago, Ill. Two brothers and three sisters are deceased.

The body was taken to DeLong and Baker Funeral Home. Dance Friday Westland PTA will sponsor a round and square dance at the school south of New Concord from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday. Music will be by the Pleasant Valley Boys with Fibber McGee calling. There will be cake walks and refreshments.

By United Press International of Church. direction to separate themselves from the SM. An hour later, after shutting themselves inside the undamaged command module, they will pressurize the tunnel between the two vehicles (CM and LM) and cut loose the latches holding the two vehicles together. The air pressure will shove the lunar module and the command module apart. Ohio: Partly cloudy and warmer Thursday and Thursday night with a chance of showers.

High Thursday in the 60s north to near 70 south. Partly cloudy and cooler Friday, chance of showers east. Western Pennsylvania: Mostly sunny and warm Thursday with a chance of showers west by evening. Highs mid 60s to low 70s. Scattered Thursday night with lows mid 30s to mid 40s.

Friday a little cooler with a chance of showers north portion. West Virginia: Mostly sunny Thursday, high in the upper 50s and 60s. Partly cloudy with chance of showers Thursday night and Friday. Lows Thursday night in the 40s. Mild Friday.

Lake Erie: South to southeast winds 15 to 25 knots Thursday and Thursday night. Chance showers Thursday afternoon. PREVIEW OF ESSA WEATHER BUREAU FORECAST TO 7:00 P.M. EST 4 16 70 SEATTLE, 50 50 COLD 1 MONTREAL TORONTO DOSTON SNOW EMILD NEW YORK SHOWERS DENVER KANSAS CITY SAN FRANCISCO MILD 70 701 WARM FT. WORTH UPI WEATHER FAIR MIAMI, NATIONAL SUMMARY By United Press International Portland, Me.

Snow is expected today in parts of the High Low Portland, Ore 64 northern Plains and upper Mississippi Valley. Showers are likely throughout the mid and south Atlantic states and California. elsewhere. Mostly fair Colder weather weather should is indicated for the north central part of the nation. PREDICTED TEMPERATURES Today's Today's Wednesday's .65 Wednesday's p.m..

10 63 Noon 2 p.m... 62 10 p.m.........54 PRECIPITATION Last 24 None WEATHER ELSEWHERE Atlanta Boston Buffalo 50 Charleston S.C. c. Chicago 48 Columbus O. Des Moines El Paso Houston 76 Indianapolis 51 Kansas City 4.59 Los Angeles MI Miami Memphis Beach 83 Paul 58 New Orleans New York 48 Phoenix Pittsburgh 41 Raleigh 40 Richmond 34 St.

Louis 52 Salt Lake City 38 San Francisco 60 Seattle 44 Spokane 55 Washington 67 Wichita 43 OHIO SKIES 48 Sunset .7:07 48 Sunrise 5:49 47 Moonset 69 Full April 45 Saturn, the ringed planet, sets 52 evening 44 and it is now too near the sun to 41 easily seen. Side by side above it 40 Mercury and Venus. Contracts Total $50 Million Power System Plans Major Steps To Combat Pollution The American Electric Power System, of which Ohio Power Company is a major part, has announced another step the biggest taken, to date in its continuing fight to safeguard the environment. AEP President Donald C. Cook said that the System has awarded contracts or options totaling in excess of $50 million for new facilities to ensure the quality of air and water in the vicinity of new power plants.

The facilities will be installed in connection wth AEP's forthcoming series of four 1.3 million kilowatt, coal fired generating units. Contracts were awarded to: Research Cottrell Inc. of Bound Brook, N. for construction of the world's largest water cooling tower with options for three more just like it; and Koppers Company Inc. of Pittsburgh for four sets of six precipitators designed to remove 99.5 per cent of the combusion particles entering power plant stacks.

The first tower will be built and the first set of precipitators will be installed to serve the new Unit 3 of the AEP System's John E. Amos Plant under construction on the Kanawha River near Charleston, W. Va. This new unit will be owned by Ohio Power. The remaining towers, if options are exercised, and the remaining precipitators will be installed in connection with other new generating facilities now in the design stage and to be built at a site or sites not yet determined.

The cooling tower at Amos will be 500 feet high almost Deadly Loot EAST KILBRIDE, Scotland (UPI)-Police announced the theft bottle of Wednesday of a six gallon cyanide from chemical firm, described as a sufficient amount of poison to kill 60,000 persons. JAMES A. HILLIS DAVID E. HILLIS LOREN E. HILLIS DIRECTORS Hillis JUNERAL HOME 935 FOREST AVE.

Jody Myron Brownfield, age months, 1252 Edwards Lane. Friends may call 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today. Services 1:00 p.m. Friday.

Interment Memorial Park. as tall as the Washington Monument and 200 feet above the tallest building in the seven state area served by the AEP System. Its base diameter of 400 feet is roughly equivalent to the playing area of a baseball field. It will be of hyperbolic design, built of poured concrete, and capable of cooling 600,000 gallons of water per minute by 20 degrees. The other towers would have similar specifications.

The AEP System introduced the natural draft cooling tower into the United States and has eight of them in operation with four others under construction, another (at Amos) to be undertaken within six weeks, and three more in prospect a total of 16. Power plants use large quantities of river water to cool steam used in the electric generating process, thus raising its temperature as it flows through the plant. The tower, by creating a closed circuit water cooling system, eliminates the discharge of this warmed water back into its source. The 24 electrostatic precipitators will be designed, fabricated, erected and tested by the Metal Products Division of Koppers of Baltimore. Representing the most modern ash and dust removal system yet devised, they will have highest design efficiency of any precipitators installed on the AEP System.

Each set of precipitators is 155 feet in height, as tall as a 15 story building. Operation of the electrostatic precipitators is based on the principle that objects with opposite electrical charges are attracted to each other. Inside the precipitator, an intense electrostatic field is set up between a wire grid and a series of collecting plates, spaced a few inches apart. When the discharge gases leave the boiler, they pass through this field, which forces the particulate matter suspended in the gases onto the collecting plates through such electrostatic action. Periodically, the plates are "shaken" and the particles dislodged into hoppers below, for delivery to storage areas.

Cook pointed out that the AEP System as of the end of 1969 had spent over $113 million for facilities, methods and research in all fields of environmental protection. The latest announcement of additional facilities, coupled with others under construction, will raise that total to the neighborhood of $194 million. "This is a measure of our acceptance of a responsibility," Cook declared, "for we recognize that safeguarding the environment of our only world is of paramount importance. We take this responsibility most seriously." Included in the System total is a multi million dollar project under construction at Ohio 'Power's Muskingum River Plant, near Beverly. There, a new 825-foot stack will replace shorter stacks built during the and new electrostatic precipitators are being installed so that older, less efficient dust collecting equipment can be removed.

DIAL-A-FRIEND (A 2 minute message You are going to enjoy.) 452-5411 BRYAN Funeral Home 2318 Maple Ave. Phone 452-8466 Kenneth 0. Bolin Russell M. Bolin Bolin Richard T. Carnes Phone 452-4551 Funeral Homes 421 PUTNAM AVE.

1271 BLUE AVE. BENNETT Andrew J. Services 1:00 p.m. today at our Blue Ave, chapel. MULL Gordon.

Friends may call 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today. Services 1:00 p.m. Friday at our Blue Ave. chapel.

ROBERTS Nora Elizabeth. Friends may call 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today Services 2:30 p.m. Friday at our Blue Ave. chapel..

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About The Times Recorder Archive

Pages Available:
1,034,247
Years Available:
1885-2024