The Roanoke Times from Roanoke, Virginia (2024)

two ROANOKE TIMES, Tuesday, September 19, 1972 News of Deaths and Funerals in Virginia AP Photo Bellringer at 90 Canvassing Voters At 90 Years Old SEATTLE (AP) Among the doorbellers and canvassers spreading the word for their favorite candidates is a worker a little more experienced than most. Adeline Ekenstedt tromps up and down Queen Anne Hill, perhaps a bit slower than most, but no less enthusiastically. Her enthusiasm has had 90 years to mellow. "I like people," she explains her self-appointed chore. "It's lots of fun and I hope I can help my She has been doorbelling for the past 10 years around election time and has been active in precinct politics for more than 25 years.

With the state Former School Chief In Wythe Dies at 81 John H. Crowgey, 81, of 3141 Round Hill NW, died Monday in a Charlottesville hospital. He was a retired superintendent cf schools in Wythe County and was associated with the Roanoke City School System in a supervisory capacity for several years. Surviving are his wife, Pearl Elliott Crowgey; four sons, Dr. Junius E.

Crowgey, James L. Crowgey, Roanoke, Hugh C. Crowgey, New Orleans, 5. John Crowgey Wytheville; four daughters, Mrs. E.

M. Leidholdt, Virginia Beach, Mrs. Martin E. Janess, Illinois, Mrs. William T.

Borthwick Gaffney, S. Mrs. James E. Sheppard, St. Petersburg, two brothers, R.

R. Crowgey, Wytheville, Dr. Frederick R. Crowgey, Salem, Ohio. The funeral will be Wednesday at 2:30 p.m.

at Huntington Court United Methodist Church with burial in Blue Ridge Memorial Gardens. The family suggests that memorial gifts may be made to the Heart Fund. 0 a key's North Chapel is handling arrangements. Philip H. Moore Sr.

Philip Henderson Moore 52, of Charlottesville died at his home. Survivors include a daughter, Mrs. Carolyn Moore Mack, Roanoke. The funeral will be today at 2 p.m. at Belmont Baptist Church with burial in Rock Springs United Methodist Church Cemetery in Faber.

Hill Irvin Funeral Home, Charlottesville, is handling arrangements. Mrs. Lewis H. Rhodes Sr. Elizabeth McCool Rhodes, 82, of 2220 Orange NW, died Sunday in a Roanoke nursing home.

She was the widow of Lewis H. Rhodes Sr. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Irene R. Du Lany, Mrs.

Fannie Lou McDaniel, Roanoke, Mrs. Violet McRoy, Vinton; a son, Lewis H. Rhodes Roanoke. Oakey's Roanoke Chapel is handling arrangements. James 0.

Joiner The funeral for James. 0. Joiner of 207 Water Salem, will be Wednesday at 11 a.m. at Fizer Funeral Chapel with burial in Williams Memorial holding a primary. Tuesday, she's been especially busy lately.

Mrs. Ekenstedt, a widow of 40 years, mother of 12 (seven still alive), grandmother of 16. and great of 14, says she feels "we are supposed to be our brother's helper." How does she choose for whom she'll doorbell? "The best man I think," she said. "I used to be involved in Democratic politics, but now I see something of the other she added. "I see both sides have done some good things." Emmett Viers RADFORD- -Virginia Harris Hodge Viers, 71, died Monday in a Radford hospital.

She was the widow of Emmett Viers. Surviving are four daughMrs. Thelma terers, Mrs. Goldie Snider, Mrs. Frances Tickle, Radford, Mrs.

Ethel Ellers, Baltimore, a son, Mark Hodge, Baltimore; a sister, Mrs. Ethel McGraw, Roanoke; two half sisters, Mrs. Gertrude Hillsman, Jacksonville, Mrs. Mary Knoles, Wheaton, a brother, Lee Harris, Roanoke; two half brothers, Curtis Harris, Kyle Harris, Radford. The funeral will be Wednesday at 2 p.m.

at Bane's Chapel with burial in the Bane family cemetery. DeVilbiss Funeral Home is handling arrangements. James H. Stacy RICHLANDS- The funeral for James Howard Stacy, 31, will be Wednesday at 11 a.m. at Hurst-Scott Funeral Chapel with burial in Arms Cemetery, Baptist Valley.

Surviving are his wife, Mary Katherine Shelton Stacy, Ellicott City, four daughters, Miss Mary Grace Stacy, Miss Tina Lynn Stacy, Miss Cassandra Kay Stacy, Nias: his Teresa mother Stacy, and Bel stepfath- Air, er, Mr. and Mrs. Howard T. Rasnake, Richlands; five sisters, Mrs. Ruby Osborne, Mrs.

Frances Lawson, Mrs. Ruth Simpkins, Miss Vickie Mae Stacy, Richlands, Mrs. Nancy Dunford, Havre De Grace, a stepsister, Mrs. Hester Dye, Abingdon; two stepbrothers, Winford asnake, Bluefield, Carlos Rasnake, Tazewell. Lon M.

Thomas SPEEDWELL Lon Mack Thomas, 82, died Sunday at his home. Surviving are his wife, Julia Taylor Thomas; three daughters, Mrs. Frank Rice, Speedwell, Mrs. W. F.

Akers, Wytheville, Mrs. Glen Pickle, Greensboro, three sons, Forrest Thomas, James H. Thomas, Speedwell, Lawrence Thomas, Elk Creek; a sister, Mrs. Nola McCoy, Speedwell. The funeral will be Wednesday at 2 p.m.

at Grubb Funeral Chapel, Wytheville, with burial in Groseclose Chapel Church Cemetery. Mrs. Frank H. Wade LEXINGTON-A graveside service for Estelle Miller Wade, 80, of Lexington, will be Tuesday at 2 p.m. at Stonewall Jackson Cemetery.

She was the wife of Frank H. Wade. The family suggests that memorial gifts may be made to the Lexington First Aid Crew. Harrison Funeral Home is handling arrangements. Wiley P.

Freeman WISE-Wiley Parker Freeman, 77, died Sunday in a Norton hospital. Surviving are his wife, Lavinia Bevins Free man: two daughters, Mrs. Lillian Guenther, Kingsport, Mrs. Leola Rowe, Wise; three brothers, Charles M. Freeman, Lynchburg, Walter E.

Free man, Flatwoods, William F. Freeman, Salem. The funeral will be Tuesday at 11 a.m. at the Church of God. Sturgill Funeral Home is handling arrangements.

Herman O. Lee -Herman O. Lee, 75, of Rt. 2, Troutville, died Monday in a Roanoke hospital. Surviving is his wife, Lura Mayberry Lee; a daughter, Mrs.

Annabelle Staples, Roanoke; seven sons, Harlis N. Lee, Bedford, Ray E. Lee, Vinton, Jennings W. Lee, Loraine, Ohio, Fred C. Lee, Saiem, Herman A.

Lee, Fincastle, Eugene Lee, Troutville, Jerry Lee, Roanoke; three brothers, Russell Lee, Carl Lee, Ralph Lee, Fincastle; two sisters, Mrs. Ethel Britt, Eagle Rock, Mrs. Effie Marple, Washington, D. C. Radar Funeral Home is handling arrangements.

John C. Lester RICHLANDS Alliefair Elizabeth Lester, 92, of Seaboard died Sunday at her home. She was the wife of John Crockett Lester. Also surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Harris, San Fernando, a son, Robert B.

Vencill, Seaboard; a sister, Mrs. Minnie Lowe, Belfast. The funeral will be Wednesday at 2 p.m. at Hurst-Scott Funeral Chapel with burial in Greenhills Memory Gardens, Claypool Hill. Social Security Checks Said Safe From Cuts WASHINGTON (AP) Two Nixon administration officials Monday promised that Social Security payments will not be cut to comply with a federal ceiling on spending.

However, Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz and Budget Director Caspar Weinberger said that if federal budget cutting is needed, defense is "not Testifying before the House Ways and Means Committee, they said President Nixon would shy away from an inflexible, across-the-board budget cut if Congress approves his proposed $250-billion ceiling on federal spending during the current fiscal year. In response to questions from committee members, officials said that the question of cutting Social Security is academic since the President would not consider Hospital Attack Promised By IRA If British Remain BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) The outlawed Irish Republican Army announced Monday it will attack major Belfast hospital if British troops encamped around it do not withdraw by midnight Tuesday. The IRA ultimatum was issued as- a press handout with instructions for it to be withheld from publication until midnight Monday 24 hours before the treatened attack. The statement said "hostilities" would then begin against the Royal Victoria Hospital, a center for dealing with both guerrilla and army wounded.

Issued by the 2nd Belfast Battalion of the IRA's nationalist Provisional wing, the statement said: "If the British persist in using the Royal Victoria Hospital as a base for raids and attacks we will destroy (1) all army-occupied buildings, (2) their route in and out of the hospital and (3) shoot on sight armed soldiers or Royal Ulster Constabulary special branch within the confines of the hospital." The statement claimed the hospital basem*nt was being used for security meetings. The IRA had already warned British troops it will attack and the statement went on: Albert L. Anderson Albert L. Anderson, 86. of 1601 Tazewell SE, died Monday at his home.

He was a retired employed of the American Viscose Corp. Surviving are his wife, Bessie Loyd Anderson; a son, J. Curtis Anderson, t'vo daughters, Bioanoke: McLemore, Mrs. Gertrude Bayse, Roanoke; a brother, Everett Anderson, Roanoke; a sister, Mrs. Annie Harler, Roanoke.

The funeral will be Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. at Oakey's Roanoke Chapel with burial in Fairview Cemetery. Mrs. John H. Williams Willard Ruben Williams, 55, of 23 10th SW, died Monday in a Roanoke hospital.

She was the wife of John H. Williams. Also surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Gloria Bolden, Roanoke; her stepfather, Eddie Fitch, Roanoke; a sister, Mrs. Lillie Camphell, Philadelphia, a brother, Walter Ruben Philadelphia.

Hamiar-Curtis Funeral Home is handling arrangements. Jermaine L. M. Martin The funeral for Jermaine La juane Morris Martin, 1- son of Joyce Ann Martin of 1108 Gilmer NW, will be Wednesday at 2 p.m. at Fizer Funeral Chapel with burial in Williams Memorial Park.

Obituaries ALBERT L. ANDERSON Mr. Albert Anderson, age 86, of 1601 Tazewell SE, passed away at his home Monday. He was a retired employee of American Viscose Corp. Mr.

Anderson was a Charter Member and former Deacon of Waverly Place Baptist Church. Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Bessie Loyd Anderson; a son, J. Curtis Anderson; two daughters, Mrs. Joyce McLemore Mrs.

Gertrude Bayse; a brother, Everett Anderson; and a sister, Mrs. Annie Harler, all of Roanoke. Also surviving are four grandchildren, H. Wayne Jamison, Wallace D. Jamison, Martha Elaine Bayse and Bethany Lorna McLemore; and three great grandchildren, Mark Jamison, Holly Jamison and Randy Jamison.

Funeral services will be conducted at Oakey's Roanoke Chapel, Wednesday, at 2:30 p.m. by The Reverend Marvin Jacobs with interment in Fairview Cemetery. Friends may call at Oakey's Roanoke Chapel. In Memoriam BOLDING In loving memory of dear husband and father, William my W. Bolding who passed away Sept.

19, 1969. I have lost my soul's companion A life linked with my own: Day day miss you more As I walk through life alone. The face loved is now laid low, His loving voice is stilled: The hand so often clasped in mine Lies now in death's cold chill. I often sit and think of him When I am alone, For memory is the only thing That grief can call its own. Wife, Elizabeth and son, Thomas.

-In loving memory of our dear husband, father, and grandfather, B. D. Cooper, passed away seven years ago September 16, 1965. The call was sudden, the shock severe; We little thought such grief was near. The ones who have lost can only tell The pain of parting without farewell.

No trasure on earth can replace youIt's sorrow 100 great to be told, But to us who have loved and lost you Your memory will never grow old. SADLY MISSED by wife, son, daughter, grandchildren and great grandchildren. GAY--In remembrance of our dear mother, Mrs. Louise Anna Gay, The happy memories and love for you Will continue, dear mother, Our whole life through, You are So sadly missed by daughter, Mrs. A.

E. Orange; Husband, William J. Gay and the Gay family. ORANGE- -In memory of my beloved husband, Aubrey E. Orange, who departed this life 4 years ago today, Sept.

19th, 1968. My broken heart is lust the same As it was 4 years ago. The grief and pain still linger As the day God called you Home. The lonliness without you is So very hard to bear. God grant you peace and happiness Until we meet there.

Scandal sister, missed by Mildred L. wife, Orange. Eula H. OrSTONE- In loving memory of our, husband and father, Benjamin Stone, who passed away twenty three years ago today, September 19, 1949. We miss him here so very much, His presence off seems nigh But we all hope in Heaven to meet Where no one says goodbye.

Wife, Mrs. Ruth L. Stone daughters, Mrs. Jaunita Milhoan Mrs. Madaline Joyce.

Card of Thanks HUBBARD-We wish to thank our many friends, relatives and neighbors for the flowers, cards, food and other acts of kindnesses shown us following the sudden death of Lester Hubbard. The family TORN. MG KEY SALEM FUNERAL HOME Serving Since 1866 Boulevard at College Increasingly Preferred LOTZ Funeral Homes HAVE THE LARGEST AND MOST BEAUTIFUL CHAPEL THE ROANOKEVALLEY James L. Davis DAMASCUS- -James Luther Davis, 37, of Wyoming, died Sunday in a Dover, hospital. Surviving are two sons, William Davis, Wyoming, Ronday Davis, Damase us daughter, Miss Joanne Davis, Damascus; a brother, Kelly Davis, Wyoming; two sisters, Mrs.

Isabelle Ryder, Wyoming, Mrs. Katherine Scofield, Delaware. The funeral will be Wednesday at 2 p.m. at Green Cove Baptist Church with burial in the church cemetery. Wright Funeral Home is handling arrangements.

Fred R. Kegley WYTHEVILLE Fred Rhudell Kegley, 46, died Monday in Wytheville. Surviving are his wife, Helen Shinault Kegley, WinstonSalem, N. two daughters, Mrs. Judy Maranille, Winston-Salem, Mrs.

Caroline Anders, Bedwell, N. his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. M.

Kegley, Wytheville; three sisters, Mrs. Elsie Cline, Mrs. Leona Kincer, Wythe ville, Mrs. Agnes Arritt, Covington; six brothers, Floyd Kegley, Erwin, George Kegley, J. C.

Kegley, Douglas Kegley, Wytheville, Cecil Kegley, Elkton, Peyton Kegley, Charleston, W. Va. The funeral will be Wednesday at 2 p.m. at PorterfieldMinnick Funeral Chapel with burial in Galilee Cemetery. Fred H.

Martin Sr. TROUTVILLE Fred Herbert Martin, 77, of 3, Troutville, died Sunday at his home. Surviving are his wife, Dora Dillard Martin; six daughters, Mrs. Evelyn Ferris, Blue Ridge, Mrs. Margaret Rock, Troutville, Mrs.

Mary Heffron, Riverdale, Mrs. Martha Pugh, Mrs. Rachel Boitnott. Mrs. Edna Jarrells, Roanoke; five sons, Tyree F.

Martin, Placerville, Lewis W. Martin, John W. Martin, Fred H. Martin Roanoke, Calvin C. Martin, Troutville; three sisters, Mrs.

Vera Echols, Baltimore, Mrs. Bessie Zimmerman, Troutville, Mrs. Ruth Spickard, Blue Ridge; a brother Cline H. Martin, Troutville. The funeral will be Wednesday at 2 p.m.

at Rader Funeral Chapel with burial in Laymantown Cemetery. Evans S. Price CHRISTIANSBURG Evans Shermon Price, 63, of Christiansburg died Sunday in a Salem hospital. Surviving are his wife, Laura Lou Shealor Price; a son, Parker Gray Price, Lanham, a foster daughter, Mrs. Mary L.

Brown, Rome, N. three brothers, Parke P. Price, Fred Price, Roanoke, Lawrence Price, Pearisburg; two sisters, Mrs. Vieginia Young, Mrs. Florence Shanks, Roanoke.

The funeral will be Wednesday at 2 p.m. at Hoy Funeral Chapel, Blacksburg, with burial in New Mount Zion Lutheran Church Cemetery, Sunnyside. Carrol Y. Paderick TROUTVILLE Carrol Y. Paderick, 84, of Kinston, N.

died Sunday in a Kinston hospital. Survivors include a son, E. L. Paderick, Troutville. The funeral and burial will be Tuesday in Kinston.

Howard N. Carter Funeral Home, Kinston, is handling arrangements. AP Photo Old Act, New Face Riding the wing of a biplane went out of style years ago with the passage of the planes themselves. But 19- year-old Ann Elliot of Frederick, revived the art Sunday over. Pocono International Wings of Hope Air Show.

the plane made loops, dives upside down. Raceway during the While Ann was atop the wing, and flew over the raceway Brandt Will Seek Confidence Vote He Can't Carry such a move. They indicated that Nixon's hands were also tied in cutting in other areas. But as for defense, Shultz said, "I would expect we could find a nickel or two in defense." Both Shultz and Weinberger appeared in support of Nixon's request to raise the national debt limit from $450 billion to $465 billion to carry the administration's deficit financing through next June 30. The federal debt is now about $437 billion.

Weinberger disclosed that the President still considers the appropriations measure for the Health, Education and Welfare Department inflationary and is inclined to veto it if it comes to him in its present shape, about $835 million over Nixon's proposal. Nixon vetoed an earlier HEW bill that was more than $1 billion over the amount he recommended. Shultz repeated Nixon's statement against raising taxes in a second term. "He has no intention of coming forth with a proposal to increase taxes of the American people," Shultz said. Most of the hearing centered on the spending ceiling, and chairman Wilbur Mills, as well as several other committee members indicated they supported Nixon's proposal.

A few members noted that the federal budget would still be in deficit on a employment basis even with the ceiling and said it would be inflationary. A full-employment budget pegs spending at the amount of money the economy would produce in federal taxes if there was only 4 per cent unemployment. Both officials declined to give details on what programs they would recommend for cutbacks. Weinberger said that if these recommendations were announced beforehand, interest would shift from cutting spending to debating the merits of each program. Chess Match Filmed BELGRADE, Yugos la via (AP) The official Yugoslav news agency, Tanjug, reported that a Belgrade television crew made a movie of parts of the last game of the Bobby Fischer Spassky world championship chess match.

BONN, Germany (AP) Chancellor Willy Brandt cleared the decks Monday for a risky November re-election bid by announcing he will toredpo his own government this week in raising a parliamentary vote of confidence he cannot win. Four months after defecting government lawmakers scuttled Brandt's ruling majority and left government and opposition in a permanent parliamentary stalemate, Brandt newsmen he will call for the vote of confidence Wednesday immediately after the Bundestag returns from summer vacation. The showdown vote will come two days later, on Friday, and result in the certain, calculated fall of the government allowing President Gustav Heinemann to dissolve the Bundestag and call Nov. 19. elections, a year before their original scheduled autumn 1973 date.

Brandt's long expected announcement came after his government, its legislative powers clipped, had maneuvered for months to avoid just such a showdown while it sought to complete outstanding issues. That delay may cost Brandt many votes, Bonn politicians predicted as they awaited the shortest--and one of the bitterest election campaigns i in West Germany's 23-year history. Brandt's popularity, at its peak last May when he pushed his popular Moscow and Warsaw friendship treaties through the Bundestag, waned as his shaken government wavered through a series of new political blows including: -The June walkout of Economics and Finance Minister Karl Schiller, one of Brandt's best vote-getters in the 1969 elections. -Opposition charges of economic mismanagement fueled by Brandt's failure to get his 1972 budget through the deadlocked parliament. -The "Quick Affair" press freedom scandal triggered when legal authorities raided opposition magazine Quick's offices to plug government security leaks.

-The resignation of two junior ministers discovered on the payroll of the same magazine. -And the bloody ruin of what Brandt had hoped would be the "joyous Olympics" amid charges that both security precautions and the bid to rescue 11 Israeli sportsmen from terrorists were bungled. Latest opinion polls gave Brandts' Social Democrats and their Free Democrat junior coalition partners about an even chance to win re-election against the opposition Christian Democrats in November. The Bundestag session starting Wednesday is expected to give the opposition the chance to hammer away on all these issues in the few days left before parliament is dissolved. And the two sides of the 496-vote house, each able to muster at most 248 ballots.

prepared to whip supporters into line for a voting showdown on rival pension reform packages before the confidence vote comes up. Defeat for Brandt's pension reform draft could cost him votes in November and give the opposition credit instead. French Scandal Principal Arrested "The time limit has expired, the hospital authorities have ignored our warnings and hostilities begin from midnight tomorrow." The statement charged that British troops raced armored cars out of the hospital grounds to "make dozens of arrests, harass the local population and cause widespread suffering before returning to this hitherto safe haven." An army spokesman said the army had not received a copy of the handout but added: "We are taking it seriously." A third person died, meanwhile, as a result of Thursday's bomb blast at Belfast's Imperial Hotel. She was Anne Murray, 53, who had gone to the hotel to fix drapes. She had only been there five minutes when the explosion 0C- curred.

One man was killed immediately and a 91-year-old woman living nearby died the following day. The blast also injured 49 persons. The IRA disclaimed responsibility. A British soldier who was shot by a guerrilla gunman in Londonberry on Sunday night died Monday. These latest fatalities increased to 563 the toll in three years of sectarian strife in Northern Ireland.

In Belfast, troops fired rubber bulletsto disperse 50 children blocking their route as they chased a gunman who had fired four shots at an Army patrol in Crumlin Road. In London, the government announced that an all-party conference to discuss ways of ending Northern Ireland's sectarian problems will take place Sept. 25-27 at Blackwell Grange Hotel at Darlington in northern England. Northern Ireland's Protestant-based Unionist party, the Interdenominational Alliance Group and the Labor, party have said they send representatives. But the Social Democratic and Labor party, main political voice of the province's 500,000 Catholies, and the Protestant Democratic Unionist party have said they will not.

The former insists that William Whitelaw, chief minister for Northern Ireland, release all persons interned without trial as suspected guerrillas. The latter, led by the Rev. Ian Paisley, wants an urgent government inquiry into allegations of brutality by British paratroops dealing with Protestant rioters. PARIS (AP) Gabriel Aranda, the former French civil servant who claimed he possessed copies of documents involving 48 top political figures in influence peddling and corrupt financial deals, was arrested Monday night and charged with theft of official papers. He was released in his own recognizance by Judge Pierre Galmiche.

He had gone voluntarily to a meeting with the judge at the Palace of Justice and told reporters earlier that he had no reason to expect he would be arrested. "I came to bring all the Controversy Heavy BRAMALEA, Ont. (AP) This community's new cedar statue of a a nude male has developed crack in its back. One civic official says it probably was the weight of moral controversy over the nudity rather than the weather that broke the statue's back. Early Alaskans Lions, camels, elephants and 12-foot-tall mammoths roamed Alaska 12,000 years ago.

documents that I have to the judge," he said. He once was press attache in the Equipment and Housing Ministry. Although he has not made his documents available to the press, they are known to involve figures in the Gaullist hierarchy in real estate deals and alleged influence peddling. The burgeoning scandals have had wide political repercussions and could affect scheduled legislative elections next spring. A former Cabinet minister, Christian Fouchet, said President George Pompidou should general elections immediately to "clear the air." Pompidou is expected to minimize the affair in a scheduled news conference on Thursday.

Premier Pierre Mesmer said he saw no reason to advance the election date. "This succession of scandals, like a black tide, is the end of the system," said Jacques Duclos, a former Communist presidential candidate. Other opposition figures also were taking shots at the Gaullist regime, now in power for 14 years. Aranda, a former television journalist, has maintained he never stole anything, asserting he only made photo copies of the documents, as any outraged citizen might. Advertisem*nt EVERYDAY TENSION? SLEEPLESS NIGHTS? Are you edgy and always having to be "understood" by even your friends? Well, when simple nervous tension is bothering you and causing sleepless nights you should either try B.T.

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