Newspapers / The Transylvania Times (Brevard, … / Jan. 13, 1975, edition 1 / Page 3
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Rosendale Joins Olin As Chemist William L. Rosendale has joined the Technical Department of Olin Cor poration's Ecusta Paper □jiA^s a project chemist, atcer3Hp> Dr. David C. Lea, TechnicalDirector. Rosendale was with Pitney Bowes’ Monarch Marking Systems at Miamisburg, Ohio, until employed by Olin. Prior to that he worked with Proctor and Gamble Co. in Cincinnati and with Champion Paper and Fiber Co. in Hamilton, Ohio. A native of Findlay, Ohio, he attended schools in Hamilton. After one year at North Carolina State University at Raleigh, he entered the University of Cincinnati where he earned his B.S. degree in Chemistry. While at Hamilton High School he was a member of the sftydent council and par ticipated in the Junior Achievement program. He was a member of Phi Epsilon fraternity and the Forestry dub while at N.C. STate. He was also active in Indian Guides for Father and Son. ;He is married to the former Lois Ann Broerman of Deer Park near Cincinnati. The Rosendales have two children and expect to establish residence in Brevard later this month. W. L. ROSENDALE Flight Training Ground School Begins Jan, 14 A ground school for flight training is being planned by Blue Ridge Technical In stitute. The class will be for anyone who is interested in preparing for the exam necessary to obtain a private pilot’s license. The class will meet at BRTI campus from 7 to 10 p.m. on Tuesday and Thursday evenings for a period of 10 weeks beginning Tuesday, Jan. 14. All interested persons are requested to contact BRTI to preregister for the course by r.oon, January 14, at 692-3572. J. W. Townsend Named Ecusta Sales Chief Joel W. Townsend has been appointed national sales manager for fine papers in the Ecusta Paper Division of Olin Corporation, according to an announcemeitt by Harold H. Hellickson, Director of Marketing. Formerly Ecusta’s market planning manager, Townsend has been with Olin since Avgust 1962 when he was etnployed as a technical service engineer. Later appointments were as a salesman of specialty prornfo, assistant sales service manager, tobacco accounts supervisor and special projects manager. For a two-year period he was manager of the Western Region for Fine Paper Sales, located in San Francisco. Townsend worked with the General Electric Company before joining Olin. He is a graduate of Dreher High School in his native Columbia, S.C., and received his B.A. degree at the University of J. W. TOWNSEND He belongs to St. Philips Episcopal Church where he is a vestryman, senior warden and lay reader. He is a member of Glen Cannon Country Club. He and Mrs. Townsend, the former Susan Palmer of Ridgeway, S.C., have two children and live at 1 Cameron Circle in Brevard. N.C. Governor Proclaims Alcohol Awareness Week Citing the need for North Carolinians to be aware of the problems and prevalence of alcoholism in the state, Governor Jim Holshouser has proclaimed the week of January 19 - 26, 1975, as Alcoholism Awareness Week in North Carolina. At present, there are an estimated nine million alcoholics in the United States, with between 180,000 and 200,000 of them in North Carolina. Nationally, it is estimated that the cost of the alcohol problem (in lost wages,, expenses to families, cost of liquor, etc.) tops $25 billion annually. L,; Recent studies show that alcohol usage is not limited to the adult population, with half of all high school-age youths having used alcohol at one time or another and 25 per cent using alcohol on a regular basis. In announcing the proclamation, Governor Holshouser called on the Department of Human Resources to “make extra effort in that week to cause the public to become aware of the ever present threat of alcoholism and I ask the Alcoholism Reasearch Authority, recently created by the N. C. General Assembly, to sponsor research into the causes and prevention of alcoholism and to encourage participation in this research by the institutions of higher learning in North Carolina.” AUTO SERVICE a ANNOUNCES NEW HOURS STARTING JAN. 13,1975 8:00 - 5:30 MON. - FRI. Come See Us For Your Foreign Car Repairs 302 S. BROAD Brevard, N. C. J. C. Loviii Planning Director James C. Lovin has been appointed Director of Plan ning in the Ecusta Paper Division of Olin Corporation, according to an an nouncement by L.H. Staples, Vice President and General Manager. Lovin was employed by Ecusta in November 1972 as manager of Coating and Roll Finishing. Before joining Olin he was Product Manager for Coated Papers with the Mead Corp. at Dayton, Ohio. A native of Ansted, W. Va., he completed high school in Ashland, Ky., and received his B.S. degree in Chemical Engineering at Virginia Polytechnic Institute. He was a member of the Cadet Corps and was a co-op student while in college. Lovin is a member of the Technical Association of the Pulp and Paper Industry. He also belongs to the Kiwanis Club and the First United Methodist Church of Brevard. He and Mrs. Lovin, the former Alice Ann Matney of Ashland, have two children and live at 100 Morningside Drive in Brevard. Surgeon To Be Church Speaker A Hendersonville surgeon will speak at the Church of the Nazarene Sunday, Jan. 19, at 7 p.m. Dr. Gene T. Blakely of Tuxedo will be at the church on Old Highway 64. JAMES C.LOVIN Brevard Man’s Mother Taken By Death ASHEVILLE—Mrs. Carrie Jenkins Radford, 83, of 58 Larchmont Road died Sunday in an Asheville hospital after a long illness. A lifelong resident of Buncombe County, she was a member of Oakley Baptist Church and widow of Robert L. Radford and daughter of the late Julius and Harriet Lunsford Jenkins. Surviving are a daughter, three sons, including Kenneth of Radford of Brevard; three sisters, six grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. Services will be held at 11 a.m. Tuesday at Williams Funeral Service. The Rev. Raymond Shumpert will of ficiate. Burial will be in Woodlawn Cemetery. Funeral Tuesday For Mrs. Bobst Mrs. Edith Morgan Bobst, 81, of St. Philips Lane, died in a Brevard hospital Sunday after a brief illness. A native of Philadelphia, Pa., she had lived in Brevard since 1938 and was the widow of Dr. Harry R. Bobst. , ' :'f " V. . She was a member of the Brevard Music Lovers Club, the Brevard Wednesday Club and a directoress of the Alter Guild of St. Philips Episcopal Church. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Priscilla Caldwell of Brevard and Mrs. Barbara Bradford of Virginia Beach, Va.; eight grand children and four great grandchildren. Services will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at St. Philips Episcopal Church, of which she was a member. The Rev. Phillip Thomas will officiate. - Burial will be in St. Paul’s Cemetery. The family will be at the home of Mrs. Caldwell, 120 Park Ave. Memorials may be made to St. Philips Episcopal Church. Moore Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. Seven Officers At Board Meet —Continued From Page One Charles Russell, Mark Osborne, Cornelius Hunt, and Dwight Moffitt. The mayor said W. M. Melton could not be reached. “He was out of town. I tried all day to get in touch with him.” Seven officers were present to lodge complaints against Chief Rowe at the meeting. Stiles’ appointment as the acting chief was a bit of a surprise, the mayor said. L.B. Vaughan Jr., the first sergeant and top-ranking member of the department under Chief Rowe, was passed ' over. And the aldermen created the new position of acting assistant chief, named Home Fire —Continued From Page One this kerosene, then lighted the paper and tossed it into the stove. Apparently there were fumes inside. Flames shot out, startling me. 1 jumped back ward and kicked over the little container of kerosene. Sparks which had shot out of the stove fell into the spilled kerosene and ignited it,” Mr. Kowal said. “I went up stairs and got my wife and wrapped the baby in a blanket and we groped our way out, and called the fire department.” The house, which was rented, was covered by in surance. But Mir. Kowal said that he had no insurance at all on the furnishings which were be reached Everett Shipman to this post. Other than Chief Rowe there were 17 members of the department. Mayor Campbell was high in his praise of Chief Rowe. “He was the best public relations man this city ever had. And he had built the police force here into one which is respected throughout the nation. I’d like to help him in any way that I can.” Obviously disgruntled with the police force, and upset over the firing, the mayor said he had told the complaining police that now he expects them “to measure up or you’re going to have to answer to me.” EXECUTOR NOTICE Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of Vesta Mills Bednarz, late of Transylvania County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons, firms or corporations having claims against said estate to exhibit them to the undersigned, Wallo W. Bed narz, Executor, Route 1, Box 40, Lake Toxaway, N.C. on or before June 30, 1975, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This 19th day of December, 1974. Wallo W. Bednarz, Executor Estate of Vesta Mills Bednarz SHUFORDi FRUE ft SLUDER MlJ-23-4tc AARP Plans Spring Tour To Georgia A spring tour by chartered bus to points of interest in Georgia has been arranged by an AARP group, but it is not sponsored directly by the association, according to Miss Berta Marquet, publicity chairman. It will consist of four days and three nights, April 7 through April 10, with visits to Calloway Gardens, Pine r Mountain, and Stone Moun tain. The air-conditioned bus will travel through Atlanta to Pine Mountain, WArm Springs, Stone Mountain, and return to Brevard. Arrangements were made through the Brevard Travel Agency. The cost of J90 .n cludes travel, motel fees, and two box lunches. The bus will accommodate 44. Reser vations may be made by calling 884-4194. The itinerary includes leaving Brevard on April 7 at 7 a.m.; each traveler is~ to provide his own box lunch. Arrival at Pine Mountain is expected at 3 p.m. On Wed nesday the bus will leave Pine Mountain at 10 a.m.; Holiday Inn will provide box lunches for this trip. At 1 p.m. on Wednesday the group will start for Stone Mountain, expecting to arrive at 3:30 p.m. On Thursday at 11 a.m. the bus will start its return to Brevard; for this trip box lunches will be provided by the Stone Mountain Inn. When you think of prescriptions, think of VARNER’S adv. 1 {Patterson's -of jSreittw/ Annual After Christmas Sale IS NOW IN PROGRESS! Patterson’s After Christmas Sale is an annual event that many of our customers look forward to from year to year. Plan to attend thus sale and ue feel you will understand why—one good reason is that Patterson’s does not bring in specially purchased sale merchandise for these events. All of our reduced merchandise is from our regular stock of nationally known brand name clothing and accessories. This includes all our Men’s , Ladies’ and Little Shop’s seasonable Fall Clothing. Men’s, Ladies’ Since this is our regular stock, sizes and color co-ordination are sometimes broken, but you can always be sure the values are genuine and everything is first quality. The Savings Are Great — And They’re All Yours When You Shop Patterson’s Men's Fall Fashions and discontinued styles include such Famous Brands as: Pendleton Palm Beach Johnny Carson H.I.S. Sportswear Thane Arrow Jantzen Higgins Slacks Norris Shirts Beau Brummell Mr. John Ties Buxton Belts Swank Belts THERE WILL BE A NOMINAL CHARGE FOR ALTERATIONS ON SALE MERCHANDISE Some typical examples of price reductions on Men's and Ladies' Fall & Winter Fashions WERE $3.50 5.00 6.00 9.00 13.00 17.00 27.00 34.00 39.00 47.00 55.00 66.00 75.00 87.00 99.00 NOW $1.99 2.99 3.99 5.99 8.99 11.99 18.99 22.99 27.99 32.99 37.99 45.99 51.99 58.99 67.99 Ladies’ Fall Fashions and discontinued styles include these Famous Brands among others: Koret of California White Stag Act III Butte Knits Dalton James Kenrob Pendleton Country Miss Alfred Dunner Center Stage Alex Colman Bodin Knits Kay Windsor Kollection Young Innocent Garland Shadowline Vanity Fair Hollywood Vassarette Plus Many Other Items For Men And Ladies Also Reduced During This Sale — So Hurry! Use Mastercharge, Bankamericard, Or Patterson's Own Convenient Charge Plan For Easy Shopping! Shop Patterson’s For All First Quality Famous Brand Merchandise All Sales Final No Refunds *s ureurnf V !
The Transylvania Times (Brevard, N.C.)
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Jan. 13, 1975, edition 1
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