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Asheville Citizen-Times from Asheville, North Carolina • Page 14

Location:
Asheville, North Carolina
Issue Date:
Page:
14
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

14 Ashevllle Citizen Times, Sat May 82 Charles Bud' Shaney Dies; Western North Carolina Deaths And Funerals Former Pro Baseball Player HORSE SHOE Charles Mars "Bud" Shaney, who pitched the Asheville Tourists to 105 victories between 1925 and 1929, died Friday in the Asheville VA Medical Center. He was 82. Curtis Baldwin Services for Curtis Woodbury Baldwin, 90, of Apt. 1-A, Lake Shore Drive, Asheville, who died Thursday, will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday in the Asheville chapel of Penland Sons Born in New sj3? Albany, to the late Charles A.

and Nellie Mars Shaney, "Struttin' Bud," as he was known to baseball fans during his years in the Sally League, began a 22-year career in professional baseball in Sacramento, in 1921. runerai Home. The Revs Erskine Plem-mons and John Tuton will officiate. Burial will be in Calvary Episcopal Churchyard in Fletcher. Baldwin, a native of Glen-dive, was the son of the late Edward P.

and Theoda Boylan Baldwin. SHANEY BALDWIN He attended Purdue University Funerals Today STATE AND AREA Sherwood H. Smith of Mars Hill 10: 30 a.m., Capps Funeral Home, Madison County, Esther Watson Millikln of Tryon, a.m., Tryon First Baptist Church, Polk County. Cecil Harbison Sr. of Rutherford-.

11 a.m., Rutherfordton First United Methodist Church, Rutherford County. Frances Louise Cunningham of Hendersonville, graveside services 11 a Grandview Memorial Gardens, Henderson County. -Isabelle Warren Johnson of Clyde, 11 Wells Funeral Home of Canton, Haywood County. Dartha W. Weiland of Van Nuys, I p.m., Crowe's Mortuary of Rutherfordton, Rutherford County.

IBanard "Bain" Foster of Saluda, 2 p.m.-, McFarland Funeral Chapel of Tryon, Polk County. Ann Mclntyre of Rosman, 2 p.m., Moody-Connolly Funeral Home, Transylvania County. Quinton iggins of Burnsville, 2 30 p.m., Big Creek Free Will Baptist Church, Yancey County. CITY AND COUNTY Garnett Letha HaU of 31 Panola Asheville, graveside services 11 a.m., Green Hills Cemetery. Bernice K.

Jackson of 611-B Walton Street 1 p.m.. Alien Mortuary. Howard Hensley of Route 1 Bar-nardsville, 2 p.m.. West Funeral Home, Weaverville. Carre Nesbitt Boykin of Noble Road, Fairview, 3:30 p.m., Groce Funeral Home, Asheville.

and graduated from Montana State University. He was a member of the Honor Fraternity and Phi Kappa Phi Area Deaths Ezra M. Thomas of Murphy died Thursday; arrangements Incomplete. Earl D. Cogglns of Sylva died Thursday; arrangements incomplete.

Virgle W. Williams of Valdese died Friday; funeral 3 p.m. Sunday, East Valdese Baptist Church. Bessie Jordan of Hendersonville died Friday; arrangements Incomplete. Bryant Eugene Upton, formerly of Marion, died Thursday; arrangements Incomplete.

Iva Bonlsteel Splndler of Hendersonville died Thursday; no services planned. Mary Jones of Spindale died Friday; services held Friday. Vallle B. Nelms of Hayesvflle died Friday; arrangements incomplete. Alice Herbert HAYESVILLE Alice Odom Herbert, 90, formerly of Oak Forest, Hayesville, died Friday in an Asheville health care center after a long illness.

She was a native of Graham County, a daughter of the late W.G. and Mary Jane Phillips Odom and the wife of the late Ed L. Herbert. Surviving are two sisters, Mrs. Claude L.

Love of Asheville and Fannie Browne of Atlanta. Services will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday in Oak Forest United Methodist Church, of which she was a member. The Rev. Tom Beall will officiate.

Burial will be in the church cemetery. The body will be placed in the church at 12:30 p.m. Sunday. Instead of flowers, donations may be made to the church building fund. Penland Sons Funeral Home, Asheville, is in charge of arrangements.

Edna Ford Edna Ford of 97 Bartlett Asheville, died Friday in an Asheville hospital after a long illness. Wilkins-Hart Mortuary will announce arrangements. Calif. and six grandchildren. Services will be held at 4 p.m.

Sunday in Mills River Presbyterian Church with the Rev. D. Edward Re-neuar officiating. Burial will be In Green Hills Cemetery, Asheville. The family will receive friends from 7 to 8:30 p.m.

Saturday at Thos. Shepherd It Son Funeral Directors In Hendersonville. E.V. Gouge Former Principal MARSHALL Esse Vee Gouge 81, of Route 1 Marshall died Friday at his home after a period of declining health. Born in Mitchell County, he was a son of the late William and Emma Lou Hughes Gouge.

He received his bachelor's degree in science and math from North Carolina State University. In 1940, he came to Black Mountain, where he was a schoolteacher and principal in public schools and was coach of all sports, until his retirement. A 32nd-degree Mason, he was a member of Bakersvllle Masonic Lodge Surviving are his wife, Glenna Jo Ball Gouge; four daughters, Jo Ann Holt of West Palm Beach, Joy Byrd of Morganton, Reba Carter of Raleigh and Sarah Medlin of Greensboro; a son, E.V. Gouge Jr. of Asheville; a-stepson, Ashley Ball of Marshall; two brothers, BUI Gouge of Bakersvllle and Joe Gouge of San Francisco; and 15 grandchildren.

Services will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday at Black Mountain First Batist Church, of which Gouge was a member. The Rev. Edgar Ferrell will offlcl-' ate. Graveside services and Masonic rites will be held at 4:30 p.m.

Sunday in the Gouge cemetery In Bakersvllle. The family will recieve friends from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Saturday at Miller Funeral Home, Black Mountain, where the body will remain until placed In the church 30 minutes before the service hour. He was a member of Mount Herman Masonic Lodge, Veterans of World War Barracks 505, and the American Institute of Electrical Engineers. He was a former member of Big Tom Wilson Bear Hunting Club.

He served in Battery 13th Field Artillery Brigade, during World War and served as an air raid warden in the Buncombe County Courthouse during World War II. Surviving are his wife, Helen Robinson Baldwin; a son, Curtis P. Baldwin of Brandon, a daughter, Martha Gail Fairbrother of Crystal Lake, I1L; and a sister, Madge B. Sturtevant of Sonoma, and five grandchildren. The family will be at the home.

Raymond Flowers Raymond Joseph Flowers, 35, of 36 Montrose died Wednesday in a fire in West Asheville. He was born in Memphis, and was a U.S. Navy veteran of the Vietnam conflict. He was a member of the Asheville Fire Department. He had been active in a number of community children's projects.

Surviving are his mother, Ruth Johnson Flowers of St. Croix, the Virgin Islands; four sisters, Valerie of St. Croix, Martha Flowers of Chicago, Sister Christopher of Little Rock, and Mary Kakaklik of North Haven, and two brothers, Charles Flowers of Clearwater, and Sam Flowers of East Lansing, and his son, Michael Zander Blaise Flowers. Graveside services will be held at 1:30 p.m. Sunday at Riverside Cemetery.

Father Harry Woggon will officiate. A memorial scholarship fund has been set up to give needy children an opportunity to attend Camp Henry in Black Mountain. Groce Funeral Home Is in charge of arrangements. Bernice Jackson Services for Bernice K. Jackson of 611-B Walton Street who died Tuesday, will be held at 1 p.m.

Saturday in the chapel of Allen Associates Mortuary. The Rev. W.E. Simpson will officiate. Burial will be in Sunset Cemetery.

A native of Waynesville, Mrs. Jackson had lived in Asheville most of her life and was a daughter of the late Ernest Koton and Susie DeHart. She is survived by her husband, Ernest Jackson; two daughters, Yvonne Bowie and Lorraine Jackson; five sons, Larry, Melvin, Jerry, Lee Edwards and Rick Jackson, all of Asheville; and 13 grandchildren. The family will receive friends at the residence. He played in the Piedmont-League with the Charlotte Hornets for several-years and was associated with other minor league teams across the country.

In addition to his early record with the Tourists, Shaney returned to pitch for the team against KnoxvUle in 1954. At the age of 54, years after he had retired from baseball he pitched five scoreless innings in a 4-0 victory for the Tourists. Shaney was known among those on the baseball circuit as one of the most colorful of players and one who really loved baseball. "I was player, manager, umpire, grounds keeper and general manager, just about everything you can think of in the game, and I enjoyed every bit of it," he told a Citizen reporter in 1974. After his retirement from baseball, Shaney served as a deputy U.S.

marshal in Anchorage, Alaska, in 1947. Shaney, who made his home on Kimzey Road, was a member of Mills River Presbyterian Church. An Army veteran of World War he was a member of the Asheville VFW post. He was also a Shriner and member of Asheville Masonic Temple. Surviving are his wife, Alice P.

Shaney; two sons, Charles R. Shaney of Charlotte and Richard Eugene Shaney of Jeddah, Saudi Arabia; a brother, Robert Shaney of Newport Beach, and was president of the Masonic fraternity in Bozeman, Mont. While in college, he worked for Northern Pacific Railroad in Montana and North Dakota. After receiving a degree in electrical engineering, Baldwin became employed with General Electric Co. in Fort Wayne, Ind.

In 1925, he came to North Carolina, where he first worked for the North Carolina State Highway Commission and later for H.K. Ferguson Co. in Asheville, with whom he was employed during construction of the American Enka Co. plant. Baldwin then became employed by Enka, where he worked until his retirement in 1957.

He also taught at Asheville-Bun-combe Technical College and Biltmore College. Baldwin, a former member, deacon and Sunday school teacher at Calvary Baptist Church, was a member of Beverly Hills Baptist Church. A former scoutmaster of Boy Scout Troop 2, he assisted in the early organization of Cub scouting in Asheville. Ronald Priester Ronald Edward Priester, 26, of 211 Beaumont Asheville, died Thursday in an Asheville hospital. Bowman Funeral Home, Marshall, will announce arrangements.

Consumer Scorecard Where Does The Money Go? Fuiwral Home 304 Merrimon Ave. 252-1821 Kathryn Chandler Kathryn Branch Chandler, 63, of 1060 Tunnel Road, Asheville, died Friday in an Asheville hospital long illness. Groce Funeral Home will announce arrangements. Vallie Nelms HAYESVILLE Vallie B. Nelms, 74, of Route 2 Hayesville died unexpectedly Friday at his residence.

ten JfiMamn 856 TUNNEL ROAD muNt y8-bbbb CALLING ALL ELEMENTARY TEACHERS Graduate Level Course 3 Credit Hours By LOUISE COOK Associated Press Writer The federal government isn't the only one with a budget problem. Inflation and recession have left many American with their own deficits smaller in size than the national one, but often just as hard to control. While the politicians argue about how to close the gap between government spending and income, you can take steps to get your own budget in shape with something called a cash-flow chart. Businesses have long used these money-management charts as a planning tool, and economists at Citibank, the nation's second-largest commercial bank, adapted the system for individual consumers several years ago. 1 A cash-flow chart can help you make sure your daily spending doesn't eat up money that must be used to pay previous commitments.

It can show you where you have the most discretionary spending and tell you whether you must cut back immediately to avoid a deficit. And it can help you be prepared for the big expenses that come up once or twice a year. Start by getting out your financial records for the past year. Include copies of your income tax return, pay statements, bankbooks, receipts and checkbook records. The figures will provide the information for five worksheets.

List all of your income on Worksheet No. 1. Calculate the monthly and annual figures and put them both down. In- elude salary, interest, gifts, tax refunds, bonuses and miscellaneous income. The salary listing should reflect your earnings after all deductions for taxes, pension, insurance, union dues, etc.

Worksheet No. 2 is for your anticipated fixed expenses. Again, they should be calculated on a monthly and an annual basis. Include taxes that are not covered by payroll deductions, food at home and in restaurants, housing expenses, medical bills not covered by insurance, a replacement fund for. major appliances, debt payments, savings, transportation costs, insurance and miscellaneous bills.

Don't forget to take inflation into account in your estimates of future spending. The administration is estimating an inflation rate of about 7 percent this year. If the estimate is right, your expenses for this year would be 7 percent higher than last year's. Take the figures from the first two worksheets and list them on Worksheet No. 3, then subtract expenses from income.

This shows you have much you have left over, by the month and by the year. Worksheet No. 4 Is the place for variable expenses like THE NEWSPAPER IN EDUCATION EDPY693 Learn to introduce and reinforce skills by using the newspaper as an effective teaching tool. clothing, recreation, vacations, gifts, personal allowances and charitable contributions. Add up the figures to find out how much you estimate you will need for variable expenses.

Then, on Worksheet No. 5, compare the bottom line with the figures from Worksheet No. 3 which show you how much you actually have to spend. If you come out ahead, you can add to your savings or spending, as you like. If, however, you wind up with a deficit, you'U have to go back to Worksheets No.

2 and 4 and look for places where you can cut. Some items are easier to trim than others. Food, for example, cannot be eliminated, but you have more leeway on your grocery budget than you do on your rent bill or mortgage payment, for example. Make sure that your spending estimates are realistic for your family. Child care, for example, mav be a fixed expense for some families and a variable one for others.

Don't be unreasonable or too strict. You may find it impossible to live up to your expectations and you'll end up spending more not less. Look for ways you can cut back without suffering. Can you organize shopping trips to save on transportation? Can you turn household chores into a challenge to cut your home maintenance spending? Are you willing to skip a visit to a fast-food restaurant in exchange for a movie? Don't try to avoid a deficit by borrowing. You'll only have to add to your fixed expenses to cover the Increased debt repayments.

UNC-ASHEVILLE REGISTRATION: MAY 28, MAY 31, People In The News Sponsored by: WESTERN CAROLINA UNIVERSITY and ASHEVILLE CITIZEN-TIMES UNC-ASHEVILLE JULY 26-AUGUST 6 small children. "A 4 or 5-year-old can't handle all the chores," he said. "That's not fair to expect. They can't do everything for themselves, much less for a pet" A Sinking Feeling MILWAUKEE Pamela Czer-winski said she got a sinking feeling as soon as she saw the husky, gray-haired man emerge from the car she had just rear-ended. It was Police Chief Harold Breier on his way to lunch in an unmarked car with an officer at the wheel and two judges riding along.

"I thought, 'Geez, I'm In the 19-year-old woman said of the Wednesday accident. No one was Injured in the fender bender and the only damage was a broken tail light on the chief's car. Both cars were stopped at a red light when Ms. Czerwinski's car crept forward into the other auto. She said the brakes failed, and she was ticketed for driving a car with defective brakes.

"I told her, of all the cars in the city, she had to hit a squad car," the 70-year-old chief said. "She was a very frightened young lady. I felt very sorry for her. She was a nice young lady." By The Associated Press PANGUITCH, Utah With children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren watching, the 92-year-old mother of Utah's superintendent of public instruction graduated from high school. Celeste Orton Talbot and 19 other Panguitch High School students received degrees Thursday night.

In the audience was her son, Walter; D. Talbot, who retires from the state post this July. "She looked very lovely, In a pink dress and with the white cap and gown," Walter Talbot said. "She stood all the time with the graduates as the public came by. We're very proud," he said.

Mrs. Talbot was offered a diploma last year but turned it down. "I didn't think I had had enough history, so I took that this year," she said. Talbot said she had to quit high school in 1909 when her mother became sick and was unable to return until recently. Asked whether she would continue her education, now that she has graduated from high school she said: "Do you know how old I am?" Mister Roger's Pets PITTSBURGH Fred Rogers had an assortment of pets as a child, including a lamb that grew Into a butting ram.

"My parents really indulged me as far as animals are concerned," he recalled. Those experiences inspired his latest public television special, "Mister Rogers Talks with Parents About Pets," to be broadcast Saturday on the Public Broadcasting Service. "A pet can help children In so many ways," Rogers said. He recalled getting a brown-haired mongrel dog as a reward for taking "some terrible-tasting medicine." One way pets help children is by simply being there In times of stress, said Rogers. "When a child has been punished or Is frightened the pet can be comforting without being judgmental." Pets can also provide a child's first experience with death, he noted.

"We talk about how it helps children deal with death." While pets teach children to assume responaiblity, Rogers cautions parents not to expect too much from For more information contact Dr. Tom Pickering Elem. Ed. Reading Western Carolina University (704)227-7108 Joyce Franklin NIE Coordinator Asheville Citizen-Times OR (704) 252-5611 OR (800)452-2841 (N.C. TOLL FREE).

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Pages Available:
1,691,309
Years Available:
1885-2024