Leaf Sunday, July 20, 1975 OBITUARY NOTICES Larry D. Heflin Larry Dale Heflin, 17, drowned at 3 p.m. Thursday in Todd County Ky. He lived at Rt. 1, Elkton, Ky.
Graveside services were conducted at 4 p.m. Saturday at Smith Cemetery with the Rev. Carl Wilson officiating. He was born in Montgomery County on June 3, 1958. Survivors include his parents, William Oscar and Bessie Mae Smith Heflin; three brothers, William and Sidney Preston Heflin, both of Charlotte, and Donald Ray Heflin.
Elkhart, three sisters, Mrs. Judy McClure. Mrs. Donna Kay Hoffman, both of Elkhart, and Linda Faye Rittenberry, Woodlawn, and maternal grandmother, Mrs. Smith, Woodlawn.
Pallbearers were Ollie and Oliver Shelton, Tommy Byard, Eddie Rittenberry, Joey Nagey and Bobby Mann. McReynolds Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. Pollard Edwin Welburn Pollard, 71, of 513 Woodland Nashville, died at 10:30 a.m. Friday in a Nashville Hospital. He was a night security guard in Nashville.
The funeral was conducted at 4 Saturday at Tarpley's Funeral Chapel with the Rev. L.B. Mathews. He was buried in Greenwood Cemetery. is survived by three brothers, Elwell L.
Pollard, Nashville. Robert H. Pollard, Cedar Hill. and Herschell Pollard. Bonita Springs, and one sister.
Mrs. Hillary Marable. Erin. Morris PLEASANT VIEW Charles Stanley Morris. 31, was killed in an automobile accident Saturday morning on U.S.
41-A near the 'CheathamDavidson County line. He was an employe of the Cumberland Electric Membership Corp. in Ashland City and resided in Pleasant View. Funeral services will be at 2 p.m. Monday at Shearon Funeral Home in Ashland City with Brother Richard Smith officiating.
Burial will be in Bear Wallow Cemetery. Survivors include his wife, Bonnie Ford Morris; one son, Seth Morris. Pleasant View; his parents. Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Morris of Ashland City: one brother, Barry Morris. Ashland City; three sisters, Mrs. Carolyn Johnson, Lake City. Iowa, Mrs. Sandra Parkhurst.
Nashville, and Brenda. Odom. Woodbury. and his maternal grandmother, Mrs. Andrew Mayo.
NAVE FUNERAL HOMES, INC. 1209 MADISON ST. PHONE 647-3371 CLARKSVILLE, TENN. 11 MAIN STREET PHONE 289-4277 ERIN, TENN. Mrs.
Parker DOVER Mrs. Addie Ethelane Parker, 81, died Friday at Trigg County Manor Nursing Home in Cadiz, Ky. Funeral will be at 1:30 p.m. today at Anglin Memorial Chapel in Dover with burial in Smith Cemetery. The Rev.
Morris Lee will conduct the services. She was born in Stewart County on Jan. 9, 1894, and was a resident of Big Rock before moving to the nursing home in Cadiz. "She was the daughter of the late William L. and Elizabeth Vick Heflin.
Her husband, Carter A. Parker, preceded her death. Survivors include one son, Billy yE. Parker, Big Rock, and three grandchildren. Pallbearers will be Mike Wilson, Baxter Martin, Thomas Joiner, Tommy and Bruce Wright, and Jeff Parker.
She was a member of the Church of Christ. G. S. Johnson Mrs. Tennie G.S.
Johnson, 83, died at 2:30 p.m. Friday at Clarksville Memorial Hospital following a brief illness. She was a resident of Rt. 1, Cunningham. Funeral will be at 3 p.m.
today at the Marion United -Methodist Church with the Rev. Paul Ford and the Rev. Kail officiating. Burial will be in Marion Cemetery. She was born in Cheatham County on Jan.
6, 1892, and was the daughter of M.B. and Elizabeth Crane Groves. She was a member of Rock Springs Baptist Church. include her husband, Theo Johnson, Cunningham; three sons, E.C. Smithey, Clarksville.
Lee Smithey, Cumberland Furnace, and N.D. Smithey, New one step-son, Johnson, Clarksville; Tone step-daughter, Mrs. Marian Osborne, Mansfield, Ohio; two half-sisters, Mrs. Katherine Reynolds, and Mrs. Fanny Ross, Madison; five halfbrothers, Elmer Groves, Crofton, Jake and Garner both of Ashland City, William Groves, Clarksville, and Ervin Groves, Charlotte; -14 grandchildren, 15 step-.
grandchildren, 24 great grandchildren, and seven: step-great grandchildren, and hone great-great. granddaughter. Pallbearers will be Truman. and Carl Smithey, Johnny Dunegan, Douglas Underwood, Johnny Lee, Freddie and Joseph Johnson, and Wesley Smick. The body will be at Nave Funeral Home in Clarksville until time of service.
Tarpley's FLORISTS INC. "Say It With Flowers; Say It With Ours" P. O. BOX 826 1460 MADISON STREET TELEPHONE 648-1125 CLARKSVILLE, TENNESSEE 37040 INC. NATIONAL SELECTED MORTICIANS FUNERAL DIRECTORS Since 1916 WHAT THE CODE OF GOOD FUNERAL PRACTICE MEANS TO YOU It Means are assured of all these things because this group of dedicated people accepting their responsibility to you, have set forth in their Code of Good Funeral Practice those Principles in which they believe and which you may expect them to uphold.
(Observe and compare our facilities and service) Fourth Franklin St. 645-6488 Clarksville, Tenriessee Church Adopts Continued from Page 1 As the minister turned to A Van's background in Vietnam, he mentioned the refugee was a fireman in the navy for eight years and a physical education instructor for five. A Van also worked as a carpenter for two years, did some welding and received a degree in damage control. "He is pretty skilled in whatever he has done," Cherney said.With the obvious language barrier present, Cherney continued, "There has been trouble communicating, but their English.is coming along nicely. "There is a Vietnamese family at Ft.
Campbell which is coming over to help communicate." Cherney said the Nguyens have "fine neighbors, who are anxious to help them get settled and learn the language. After an afternoon of recovery, some women from the congregation were to take them shopping for food and clothing. On Monday, A Van is to go for a job interview at a local company. Be Thi, who was a salesgirl in a Vietnamese commissary, is interested in working in sales again, Cherney said. As he continued to explain the Nguyens compared Saturday's weather to that of Vietnam (hot and muggy), two of the Ft.
Campbell Vietnamese women arrived at their home. The Nguyens were finally able to speak freely, and Cherney able to find their needs and wants. Though before. Cherney had said the information taken at the refugee camp in Pennsylvania showed them to be Roman Catholics, he now found out, through interpretation, Nguyen was only agreeing with questions asked him. out of lack of understanding.
Now, the difference between Roman Catholic and Lutheran did not matter, and there were apparently no doubts about them attending Grace Lutheran. Through the interpretation of Mrs. Thanh Lovelace, Nguyen said he desired rice, various kinds of vegetables and tea. Asked of his impression of the United States thus far, A Van answered the experience has been strange to him, and apparently had a "hectic experience" at Indian Town Parks 6Belk Gap, as Cherney described it. Their young son, who had been brought into the living room during the conversation, was slipping in and out of a nap.
According to Cherney, A Van had" said his parents, living in Saigon, do not even know where his family is now, or whether they are alive or dead. Finally settling in Clarksville, it probably seems a tremendous distance from the rest of their family in Saigon, and a long way from the 4 a.m. departure from Pittsburgh yesterday, when they left with a small sachel, $30 and an unknown destination. Apollo Continued from Page 1 bird. Precisely firing control rocket thrusters, the men of Apollo turned their craft into a miniature eclipsing moon for the watching Soviets.
The Apollo eased outward, toward the sun, casting its shadow on the Soyuz below. Leonov and Kubasov aimed a camera at the sun, using Apollo's shadow to capuure photographs of the solar corona, an envelope of gases usually blocked from view by the fiery brillance of the sun. When the craft were separated by 160 feet, the Apollo swung back to reunion. The redocking was to retest the tulip-shaped docking collar jointly designed by the two countries. This time, the Soyuz docking device was the "active" half of the system.
It was cocked and ready to grasp and seal itself to the Apollo's retracted collar. The docking test, reuniting the craft after 32 minutes apart, was Apollo and Soyuz were together again for about three hours and Stafford gave the Soviets what he called "a little present of music." Then he played a recording of the song "Hello Darlin" sung in Russian by Conway Twitty. Apollo mission control told Stafford "that sounded like it was from far western Oklahoma, around Kiev." Then it was time for the final parting. The Soviets unlatched the docking collar and the ships swung free. The five space voyagers said little as they parted.
Continued from Page 1 and then were forced to sell, the price of beef has dropped 10-15 cents. While this may or may not mean a decline in the counter price of beef, it is seriously eroding the farmer's profits. At the Kentucky Tennessee Livestock Market in Guthrie last week, 2,800 cattle were brought in and the average weight was generally 250-500 pounds, officials report. Although the heavier cattle are still bringing good prices, the prices have dropped $2. per hundred pounds for smaller cattle.
One official at the market said the average number of cattle brought in each week during June in past years was 1,000 head. Truck stop markets and private vegetable gardens have also been hurt, although not as much because of the availability of city water. But Bumpus said he knows of only a dozen farmers with irrigation equipment in the county. He said he is doing some irrigation on tobacco crops, but pastures will remain dry throughout the county. Compounding the farmer's drought problems was the high price for fertilizer this year, as much as $200 a ton.
"Because of the high price, farmers didn't fertilize as much this year," Bumpus said, "and this is hurting. us even more now." "We've had several successful seasons with good rainfall. And now that a critical drought has hit the farmer, well we're just not: used to it it." Rain May Jr. Mrs. Morgan Herbert Wayne Heflin 14, drowned Thursday in a pond in Todd County, Ky.
He was a resident of Rt. 1, Woodlawn and was a student at New Providence Junior, High School. Funeral will be at 1 p.m. Sunday at McReynolds Funeral Home with the Rev. LaMar Smith officiating.
Burial will be in Wallace Chapel Cemetery. He was born in Montgomery County on Dec. 26, 1960. Survivors include his father, Herbert Wayne Heflin Clarksville Rt. 1, Woodlawn; his mother.
Betty Sue Darnell Sadler, and a half-brother, Paul William Sadler, Clarksville, maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. William Darnell, Woodlawn, and paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Clovis Heflin, Clarksville.
Pallbearers will be Glenn, Bobby, Billy and Jimmy Darnell. Wayne Jackson, Marty Heflin, David Oliver, Johnny Sensing and Larry Alex Ramey Alex Ramey, 60, died July 17 at 7:10 a.m. in Chicago, Illinois. He was born in Montgomery County, the son of Jonah and Obie Slayden Ramey. He is survived by his wife, Mrs.
Ann Ramey; daughter Mrs. Rrma Ellis; a granddaughter and great granddaughter, all of Chicago; a sister, Mrs. Ellen Moody and brother John Ramey, both of Rt. 1, Cunningham; and another brother, Issac Ramey of Rt. 1, Southside.
The body is at A.A. Rayner in Chicago. Threshing Continued from Page 1 and other grain was harvested before the invention of the modern combine. This show also offers: A ride on a wagon for the children. A demonstration of washday in the country kitchen of 1900 with woman using lye soap and scrubboards to clean their clothes.
A quilting bee. A display of wares by more than 25 artists and craftsmen. A display of more than a dozen antique cars including a 1902 Cadillac. An exhibit and sale of antique furniture. A demonstration of an old grist mill in operation and the sale of the meal it produces.
A demonstration of the dying art of using a lathe. The show opens at 10 a.m. today with a special union religious service at 11 a.m. There will be threshing demonstrations at 1 p.m. and 4 p.m., and a gospel singing at 2:30 p.m.
under a large tent. The show will close for another year at about 6 p.m. Admission is $1.50. To get to Adams, take Hwy. 76 to U.S.
41 and turn right. The Bell School is on the left. It is 17 miles from Clarksville. Postal Continued from Page 1 possibility of wildcat strikes or demonstrations by union me. ubers in some cities.
Leaders of some powerful union locals in several major cities, including New Philadelphia and Chicago, have threatened walkouts Monday. P.E. Continued from Page 1 and what used to be graduate courses are now undergraduate courses." "I suppose this will be what they will discuss at the meeting," Aaron said, "although I'm not sure of it." Principal reports on the agenda for the meeting include the desegregation litigation involving Tennessee State University, the University of TennesseeNashville and Middle Tennessee; the Master Plan revision; the Tuition Grant Program, which has been terminated by the state, and a review of the budget for 1975- 76. The THEC, also will be discussing degree proposals at Roane State Community College, U.T.-Knoxville, the U.T. Center for Health Sciences, and U.T.-Martin.
Members of the commission include Mrs. Richard Hawkins of Clarksville. DOVER Cathy Lewis Morgan, 23, died Friday in Clarksville Memorial Hospital, Cathy Lewis Morgan, 23, died Friday at Memorial Hospital. A resident of Clarksville, she was the operator of. Cathy's Beauty Shop, Laura Drive, Clarksville.
Funeral will be Sunday at 3 p.m. today at Anglin Memorial Chapel in Dover with burial in Fairview Cemetery. The Rev. Foster Brock will officiate. She was born in "Montgomery County in Dec.
10, 1951, and was the daughter of Nell Lewis Lehaman and the late Marion Lehaman. In addition to her mother, she is survived by her husband, James Morgan; one son, Joseph Kevin Wallace: brother, Joseph M. Lehaman, Southside, and one sister, Miss Robin J. Lehaman, Clarksville. Pallbearers are Claudie Smith, Earl R.
Keatts, Bill Bucks, Jesse and Bob Lewis, and James R. Lehaman. She was a member of the Presbyterian Church, Taylor Morrow Mr. Taylor Morrow of Guthrie died yesterday morning at Elkton County Manor. Funeral announcements will be announced later by Foston Funeral Home.
Kunkelman Mrs. Sigred J. Kunkelman, 71. died Friday morning at her residence at Lot 11, Pruett Trailor Court. Graveside services were at 1 p.m.
Saturday at Resthaven Memorial Gardens with the Rev. Virgil Allison officiating. She was born in McKeesport, on April 26, 1904. and was the daughter of the late John B. Johnson.
Her husband was the late Albert J. Kunkelman, who died in 1969. Survivors include one daughter, Mrs. Darlyn Strawser, Clarksville, and two grandchildren. McReynolds Funeral Home was in charge of arrangements.
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