a a THE POST-STAR, GLENS FALLS, N.Y., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 28, 1970 Mart Closes Lowest in Three Years NEW YORK (AP) The stock market, with investment incentive lacking, Tuesday shattered the record closing lows for about three years of nearly all stock averages. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials sank 4.89 or 0.63 per to 763.99, its lowest level since Oct. 11, 1966, when the market closed at 753.63. The New York Stock Exchange index of 1,200 common stocks, the broadest of the averages, lost 0.34 to 49.4, its poorest performances since March 25, 1968, when it closed at 48.99. NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Furnished Through the Courtesy of Spencer Trask Co.
Inc. Members N.Y. Stock Exchange CLOSING PRICES JAN. Allied Chem 25 Alcoa Amer Can earn Amer Motors Amer Tel Tel Anaconda Bard Beth Steel Cdn Pacific 66 Chrysler Continental Cp DuPont Cast Kodak 81 Flintkote Ford Gen Electric Gen Foods Gen Motors Goodyear Gt No Ry Gulf Oil Hercules Inc 25 IBM Indian Head Mills Intl Harv Intl Nickel Intl Paper Johns Many Lou Nash Nort West 79 Owens-Ill Glass Penn Central Proct Gamb Scott Paper Seabd AL Sears Roeb South Pacific South Ry Std Oil Cal Std Oil NJ 60 St Regis Paper Swift Texaco 28 Union Union Carbide Union Pacific Unit Aircraft Unit Merchant US Steel. Westg Electric Woolworth 35 Xerox MOST ACTIVE STOCKS Comp.
Vol. Close 141,100 Xerox 133,500 Boeing 125,200 Am Tel Tel 121,200 City Invest 112,100 Occident Pet 105,600 Lums Inc 103,800 Kidde 36 89,100 Colo Int Cp 31 $7,000 Chrysler 86,000 Robtsh Cont $1 77,800 Telex Cp 73,300 Gulf Oil 71,100 Fedders 04,200 Std Oil NJ 00,000 Am Hospital DOW JONES AVERAGES Industrials Railroads 168.13- Utilities 106.50- American Exch. CLOSING PRICES JAN. 27 Alaska Air Asamera Braz Lt Data Process Deltona Four Seasons Home Oil A Ltv Aerospace Airlines Mohawk Ookdep Pyle Natl Rest Assoc 19 Resort Intl A Saxon Ind Scurry Rainbow Sherwood Med Ind 3 Solitron Zale 39 LOCAL QUOTATION Bid Asked Patrician Paper Body of Woman Found at Bridge AMENIA (AP) The body of a 35-year-old woman was discovered 1 Tuesday near this community northeast of Poughkeepsie and police said they were investigating the possibility of a homicide. The cause of death has not been determined.
State Police at Dover Plains reported that the unidentified woman was found fully dressed under a small bridge by a worker. IN MEMORIAM In loving memory of our mother and brother, Nellie Barber and Clayton, who passed away seven-years-ago the 28th and 29th of January, 1963, Gone but not forgotten. Rest in peace. (adv), The Family Local Obituaries Glens Falls Hospital after a brief illness. The former Mary Elizabeth Livingston, Mrs.
Dean born June 13, 1916, in Albany, daughter of Harry Livingston and the late Ella Mariel. (Guyon operator Livingston. of She Dean's was Gro- owncery Store in West Glens Falls for the past 11 years. She was a communicant of St. Mary's Church.
Survivors in addition to her husband and her father, Harry Livingston of Albany, are a daughter, Miss Ella Marie Dean of West Glens Falls; five sons, Sp. 4 Floyd E. Dean, serving with the U.S. Army in South Vietnam; Robert Earl James and Irving Dean all of West Glens Falls; a sister, Mrs. Claude (Josephine) Shaver, South Glens Falls; a brother, Harry Livingston Jr.
of Hudson Falls; six grandchildren and several nieces and nephews. Friends may call at the Carleton Funeral Home, 68 Main Hudson Falls, from 7 to 9 tonight and from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday. The funeral will be conducted Friday at 9:45 a.m. from the funeral home and at 10:30 a.m.
i in St. Mary's Church. If desired, may contribute to the building, fund of Mrs. Irving Dean Sr. Mrs.
Mary Elizabeth Dean, 58, wife of Irving Dean Indiana West Glens Falls, died early Tuesday evening in Karen Marie Murphy Karen Marie Murphy, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Murphy of South Falls, died Tuesday at the Glens Falls Hospital, Surviving besides her parents are a sister, Kelly Ann; her maternal grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. Milford Dodge of Granville; her paternal grandmother, Mrs.
Blanche Murphy of Albany; and several aunts, uncles, and cousins. Committal services will be conducted today at the receiving vault of St. Mary's Cemetery, South Glens Falls. Interment will be in St. Mary's Cemetery.
Mrs. May Mrs. May S. Ainsworth of Fairfax, Wilmington, mother of Mrs. James G.
Sullivan of 143 Bay died Jan. 16 in Wilmington. Also surviving are two grandchildren, Miss Maureen Sullivan and Michael of Glens Falls. Funeral services conducted Jan. 20 in were, Mary's Magdalene Church in Fairfax.
Interment was in Gracelawn Cemetery, Wilmington, Mario Scarselletta Sr. Mario Scarselletta 74, 37 Rogers died early Tuesday morning in Glens Falls Hospital. He was born, "the Fumone, Italy, and United States in 1913 at the age of 16 and became a naturalized citizen. An employe of the Glens Falls Portland Cement Co. for 38 years, he was a veteran of World War I and 50-year member of Glens Falls Post, 233, American Legion.
Survivors include his wife, Isabelle Scarselletta; six sons, John, Orlando, Frank and Mario Jr. of Glens Falls, Chief P.O. Albert Scarselletta of Portsmouth, and Staff Sgt. Joseph Scarselletta, who is stationed at Sacramento Air Force Base, three daughters, Sister John Francis of the Sisters of the Atonement, Saco, Maine; Mrs. William Hefkey of Long Beach, and Mrs.
James Griffin of East Riverdale, two sisters, Mrs. Angeline Caponera and Miss Mary Scarseletta Italy; one brother, Albert, of Italy; 20 grandchildren and several nieces and nephews. Funeral services will be conducted Friday at 9:30 a.m. in St. Mary's Church.
Interment will be in St. Mary's Cemetery. Friends may call at the Funeral Home of James F. Singleton. 314 Bay today land Thursday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m, Funeral of Mr.
Smith Funeral services for George W. Smith of RD 2, Corinth who died Friday in Glens Falls Hospital, were conducted Tuesday at the Sullivan and Minahan Funeral Home, 67 Park by the Rev. James Middleton, pastor of the First Baptist Church. Interment was in Pine View Cemetery. Deep Mud Foils Would-Be Burglars BROSELEY, Mo.
(AP) Mild temperatures recorded the last few days have resulted in knee-deep mud in parts of southeast Missouri. Apparently the soggy ground is causing problems not only for farmers but for would-be burglars as well. The Missouri Highway Patrol said thieves backed their pickup truck next to the Broseley High School Monday night. The netted 48 typewriters and four heavy office copying machines. Only after the loot was loaded on the truck did the men discover the vehicle had sunk hubdeep in the black gumbo mud.
Efforts to free the truck met with no success and the thieves departed on foot. Kilmartin Succumbs at 44 Earl Kilmartin 44, of 8 James Court, Saratoga found unconscious at the wheel of his car alongside the Northway at 4 a.m. yesterday, died at the Saratoga Hospital shortly after arrival. Cause of death was given as a cerebral hemorrhage. State Police found Mr.
Kilmartin slumped over the wheel of his car, parked off the Northway near the Ballard Rd. exit, They summoned an ambulance which took Mr. Kilmartin to the hospital. Mr. Kilmartin was a veteran of of World War II and a member of the Glens Falls Marine Corps League.
Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Erika T. Kilmartin; one daughter, Mrs. Donald Burton of Wilmington, one grand-, daughter, Laurie Burton; his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Kilmartin Sr. of Glen Lake; six brothers, Alanson, Theodore, Raymond and Phillip Kilmartin of Glens Falls, Robert martin of Glen Lake and Richard Kilmartin of the Town of Queensbury; two sisters, Mrs. Eugene South of Glens Falls and Miss Roseann Kilmartin of Glen Lake, and several aunts, uncles, nieces and nephews. Funeral services will be conducted Thursday at 2 p.m. at the Potter Funeral Home, 136 Warren with the Rev.
James Middleton, pastor of the First Baptist Church, officiatInterment will be in Glens Falls Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home today from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. On Dean's List SCHUYLERVILLE of 330 students 165 freshman and 165 seniors are included on the fall quarter Dean's list anounced by officials at State University Agricultural a Technical College at Alfred. Gary A. Bullard, and Saratoga County students.
are: Mrs. James T. Coleman, 222 North Broad this village; Scott M. Tingley, son of Mr. Frank L.
Tingley of Schuylerville, RD 1, and Daniel R. Crandell, son of Mr. and Mrs. William R. Crandell of 103 Eastern Ballston Spa.
On the Line (Continued from Page 4) are now under construction or operational. "This perhaps is the most notable advancement on the Russian side in the 1962-69 period. But there are several more, to include a fastgrowing fleet of submarines (similar to the Polaris), new aircraft have been introduced which could carry atomic weapons into Europe, or on one-way missions into the United States." In his State of the Union message, President Nixon, whose words were well-applauded throughout, cast an uneasy pall over the joint session of Congress at one portion of his text. He said very bluntly, while chiding the solons for not doing anything about his an proposals for Washington, D.C., that not one of members who live within two or three blocks of the Capitol would dare leave his car parked in the Capitol's garage at night and walk to his home. It is a situation not necessar, ily confined to Washington, though the nation's capital has become each night about as insecure as the DMZ.
J. Edgar Hoover, a brave man, once told me he never walks back to the Waldorf at night after taking 1 in a nearby Broadway show. "It's just not safe," said the man who has faced countless guns. Pan American World Airways must have set some kind of aviation record for economic sophistication on the night it set the more publicized record of being the first of the world carriers to fly passengers across the Atlantic in the huge Boeing 747. The lesser-hailed record was this: The "Young America," with 352 passengers aboard, came down with trouble in one of its enormous engines.
You could drive your car into its air scoop.) After much debate and delay, the passengers were brought back to the terminal and debarked. "Bring around another someone from Pan Am said, in effect. Up purred the "Clipper Victor," loaded its cargo and people and off it went to London. Nice to have a spare $23 million- dollar vehicle in the garage, wot? Next time you see a newspaper picture of those pitifully starving children of Biafra, dyling of starvation while the victorious Nigerian forces sell the contributed food, loot, rape, imprison and murder, clip it out and send it to Thant. His address is Secretary General, United Nations, New York.
Thant, whose Burmese name, translates roughly into "Mr. Clean," gave Nigeria a clean bill, of health and good intentions, in respect to Biafra, during his bit-and-run trip there. No Compensation Benefits Due to Survivors of Man Shot in Argument at Work ALBANY, N. Y. (AP) Survivors of an employe shot to death an argument with co workers are not entitled to Workmen's Compensation benefits, the Appellate Division held Tuesday.
A 3-2 decision by the court overturned an award to Mrs. Cherry Seymour of South Ozone Park, Queens, in the shooting death of her husband, Trevor, Nov. 16, 1968. Justice Lawrence H. Cooke, writing the majority opinion, said the claimant entitled to an award "unless it can be said reasonably that the death arose out of and in the course of Cooke said Seymour's quarrel with his assailants did not arise Vote Donation For Project SCHUYLERVILLE 'A donation was authorized to the Department President's Project when Old Saratoga Unit American Legion met recently in the Legion Home, Clancy Ave.
Mrs. Ann Robinson, department president, has chosen the State Association for Retarded Children as her project, and the New York State Department of the American Legion Auxiliary has pledged $10,000 for a fund for a summer camp where these children will receive further education and training. Mrs. James Priest, local president, has asked members to write heads of state of all tions and to the press in foreign nations asking the governments "to bring pressure on Hanoi to live up to the spirit of the Geneva Convention by putting into practice the convention rules on the treatment of war prisoners." Quits Parliament BELFAST, Northern Ireland' (AP) Capt. Terence O'Neill, who was provincial prime minister during the height of last year's religious rioting in Northern Ireland, retired from the Belfast Parliament Tuesday.
He was made a life peer by Queen Elizabeth II in the new years honors. He said he intended to play a political role in Britain's House of Lords. Hearings Adjourned lout of the performance of any employment labor. The shooting occurred at the Rivera Appliance Corp. in Brooklyn when Seymour help a fellow worker involved in a quarrel.
The compensation board ordJered a death benefits award of $6,360 be paid to Mrs. Seymour and three children, plus an award of $44,673 from the insurance firm, Home Indemity Co. of New York. Rivera and the insurance company appealed the case. In the dissenting opinion, presiding Justice J.
Clarence Herlihy said that the board was right when it found that Seymour went to the aid of coworker and that the incident resulted as a hazard created by employment, Dental Aides To Meet Monday The Upper Hudson Dental Assistants will hold their February meeting Monday at the home of Mrs. Jayce Leombruno, 13 Clark South Glens Falls at 8 p.m. The program will be presented by Frank Ruot who will speak on Investments. assistants in the area are invited to attend. The March meeting will be held jointly with the dental hygienists.
This will be a dinner meeting with the program being on narcotics. The time and place will be announced. Hudson Falls Obituaries Harvey J. Smith Funeral Funeral services for Harvey J. Smith of Kingsbury, who died Sunday evening in Glens Falls Hospital, will be conducted today at 11 a.m.
at the Carleton Funeral Home, 68 Main with the Rev. George Bishop officiating. Interment will be in Kingsbury Cemetery in the spring. Mrs. Harrington Funeral services for Mrs.
Esther T. Harrington, wife of William E. Harrington, 103 Feeder will be conducted today at 10 a.m. in St. Mary's Church, where requiem Mass will be be offered.
Interment will be in Union Cemetery, Fort Edward. Hearings on two youths with burglary, third decharged gree, were adjourned until Feb. 3, at 7:30 p.m. by WarrensTown Justice Fred J. Deburg Vries last night, pending further Investigation.
Edward G. Rauch, 18, of The Bronx, and Richard L. Richenback, 16, of Thurman, were arrested Monday night on charges stemming from a break-in at the Chalet Francaise in Thurman. Deputy Warren County Sheriff Stanley Rader made the arrests. SALESMAN HONORED- Roger P.
Fowler, right, of West Mt. Sales, Glens Falls, was honored as one of the top 400 U.S. Ford tractor salesmen during a recent sales rally in Detroit, and hosted by Ford Motor Company's U.S. Tractor and Implement Operations. An outstanding performance by Mr.
Fowler in a three-month national sales contest for Ford Tractor salesmen earned him a special plaque presented by R. ment operations' industrial sales visits to Ford's Highland Park, automobile manufacturing complex. C. tractor and The rally included tractor plant and Rouge Boy, Two Women Are Hurt In Pair of Auto Accidents A. nine-year-old Queensbury Police Department boy and two Corinth women investigated.
were treated at Glens Falls Hos- Two cars were involved in a pital last evening for apparently collision at the intersection of 1 minor injuries received in two Route 9 and Quaker Rd. at 7:52 1 accidents reported by police. p.m. Mrs. Flora B.
Towers, 37, Stewart Mayotte, 9, of 134 of RD 1, Corinth, driver of one, Dixon was struck from the and a passenger, Florence rear as he was walking west on Melrose, 62, of 11 Warren right side of Glenwood Corinth, were taken to Glens the road leading from Glen St. Falls Hospital by the West near the YMCA, at 5:45 p.m. Glens Falls Emergency Squad The car was operated by Miss and treated contusions. Susan C. Dean, 21, of 40 Park- Deputy James Tucker of the view Ave.
According to the po- Warren County Sheriff's lice report, Miss Dean took the ment reported that accident balken his home and he occurred as the (Towers car, by his mother to the hos- going north on Route 9, was pital for examination and treat- making a lefthand turn and colment. He received a cut on the elided with a southbound car head and bruises of the hip and driven by Lois S. Hika, 39. Mrs. back.
Hika and her five passengers Patrolman James Ogden of the were not injured. Obituaries William Owen Mrs. Hazel I. Thomas SARATOGA SPRINGS William L. Owen, 78, died Monday night at Saratoga Hospital.
A lifelong resident of Saratoga Springs, he was graduated from Saratoga Springs High School in 1910. He retired in 1961 after serving as a mail carrier for 30 years. He was a member of Bethesda Episcopal Church; Rising Sun Lodge, 103, F. and A.M.; Old Guard Association, of the 27th Division, and Katrina Trask Garden Club and Civic League. He had served as a director of the Senior Citizens, Bethesda Men's Club and the was March of Saratoga Historical, Society.
He Dimes for more than 30 years, Survivors include a daughter, Mrs. James Sheeran, Saratoga Springs; a son, Lewis E. Owen; Portsmouth, Ohio; two sisters, Mrs. Earl C. Morris and Mrs.
William P. Colpepper, both of Caryville, six grandchildren and six great grandchildren. Funeral will be conducted 11 a.m. in services, Bethesda Episcopal Church. Interment will be in Greenridge Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Kark and Tunison Funeral Home tonight from 7 to 9. In Heu of flowers, contributions may be made to the March of Dimes or to a favorite charity. Mrs. Millie H. Gale Funeral SARATOGA SPRINGS Funeral services for Mrs.
Millie H. Gale, 88, who died Sunday at the Grandvire Nursing Home, Greenfield, will be conducted today at 2 p.m. at the and Tunison Funeral' Home. The Rev. Rollin I.
Tingley, pastor First Baptist Church, will officiate. Interment will be in Greenfield Cemetery. Eari M. Webb Funeral SALEM-Funeral services for BondaM. Webbia7 who died McClellan Hospital, Cambridge, will be conducted Thursday at 2 p.m.
in the Methodist Church. The Rev. Cass Gilbert, pastor, will officiate. Interment will be in Evergreen Cemetery in the spring. Friends may call at the Clellan Funeral Home tonight from 7 to 9.
A Masonic service will be conducted tonight at at the funeral home. Those who wish to do so may contribute to the Salem Rescue Squad in Mr. Webb's memory. Roy W. Benson Funeral LAKE LUZERNE-HADLEYFuneral services for Roy W.
Benson, 61, a resident of Hadley who died Monday in the Adirondack Regional Hospital at Corinth, will be conducted Thursday at 2, p.m. at the Brewer Funeral Home. The Rev. Clifford Burroughs, pastor of the Conklingville Community Church, will officiate. ment will be in the Conklingville Cemetery, in the Friends may call at the funeral home anytime today.
Members of Corinth Lodge 987, F. and A.M. will conduct ritualistic services tonight, at 7:30 at the funeral home. 4 Area Persons Win in Lottery 27 1 v. Chng.
763.99-4.80 .85 .57 Four area lottery ticket holders have won at least $100 in the bonus drawing for the New York State Lottery, Each holdler bonus of a draw ticket Monday drawn will during receive the $100 and be eligible for the $250,000 super-prize to be picked at noon tomorrow in New York City. Area winners who will he holding their breath tomorrow at noon are: S. Groden, Middle Grove: Newberry Employes, Ticonderoga; T. Ruane, Lake George; and C. Sivda of Glens Falls.
ADVERTIsem*nT More Security With FALSE TEETH While Eating, Talking Don't be so afraid that your false teeth will come loose or drop Just at the wrong time. For more security and more comfort, sprinkle famous FASTEETH Denture Adhesive Powder on your plates. FASTEETH holds dentures firmer longer. Makes eating easier. FASTEETH is line- sour under dentures.
No gummy, gooey, pasty taste. tures that ft are essential to health. See your dentist regularly. Get FASTEETH at all drug counters. LAKE GEORGE Mrs.
Hazel Imrie Thomas, a former resident of Lake George, died Monday morning in the Parkway Nursing Home, Trenton, N.J., after a long illness. She was the widow of John Thomas. Surviving are two sons, John of Trenton and William Imrie of Malverne, L.I.; one brother, Claude Hanchette of Syracuse, and several nieces and nephews. Funeral services will be conducted Saturday at 11 a.m. at the Graff Funeral Home, 165 Ottawa with the Rev.
G. Daniel Evans, pastor of the Caldwell Presbyterian Church, officiating. Interment will be in Evergreen Cemetery in the spring. Friends may call at the funeral home Friday from 7 to 9. Mrs.
Bessie Ellis Funeral FORT MILLER Funeral services for Mrs. Bessie Ellis, widow of Charles Ellis, who died Monday at the Indian River Nursing Home, will be conducted today at 2 p.m. at the J. T. Still Funeral Home, Schuylerville.
The Rev. Carl D. Timpson, pastor of the Wesleyan Methodist Church, will officiate. Interment will be in Greenwich Cemetery. Mrs.
Howard Weston Funeral WHITEHALL Funeral services for Mrs. Ethel E. Weston, 73, who died Monday at her home on South William will be conducted Thursday at 2 p.m. at the Jillson Funeral Home. The Rev.
William A. Lasher, pastor of the United Methodist Church, will officiate. Interment will be in Greenmount Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home today from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Mrs.
Poirler Funeral WEST HEBRON Funeral services for Mrs. Mary Campbell Poirier, who died Sunday at her home, will be conducted today at 2 p.m. in the West Hebron United Presbyterian Church by the Rev. Kenneth Parker. Interment will be in North Argyle Cemetery.
Funeral of Mrs. Hutchins CAMBRIDGE Funeral services for Mrs. Arthur Hutchins of Sixth North Troy, who died Saturday at Leonard Hospital, Troy, were conducted Funeral Home, Cambridge, and Tuesday at the D. L. McInerney in St.
Patrick's Cambridge, where a requiem Mass was offered. Interment will be in the spring in St. Patrick's Cemetery, Cambridge. Funeral of Mrs. Latham SARATOGA SPRINGS Funeral services for Mrs.
Elizabeth B. Latham were conducted Tuesday afternoon at the Kark and Tunison Funeral home. The Rev. Rollin I. Tingley, pastor of the First Baptist Church, Interment was in North Milton Cemetery.
Bearers Raymond Bennett, Charles Latham, Frederick Dake, David Samuel Little and Joseph Schultz. At least 90 per cent of Burma's industry has been nationalized. Card of Thanks offers a gracious way expressing appreciation to family members and friends for messages of condolences, floral tributes and other tokens of sympathy in time of bereavement. To place a. notice In The Post-Star The Glens Falls Times, call at the Business Office and ask for the Display Advertising Department, or Glens Falls Post Company, 100 Glen Street, Glens Falls, New York.
The PRICE CHOPPER Is Coming WEEKEND SPECIAL Stewart's ICE CREAM STORES Orange SaLE 55 GAL. 29 JAN. 28-31 WEDNESDAY-SATURDAY1.