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The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page 33
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The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page 33

Location:
Louisville, Kentucky
Issue Date:
Page:
33
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SECTION 1 THE COURTERJOURNAL, LOUISVILLE, KYV SATURDAY MORNING, JANUARY 30, 1965 9 Kentucky Deaths Of QUALITY Sturgis To Revise Plan-Zone Board Lexington Parking Lot Gains'IndeecT Sentencing Of Slayer Authorized By MARTIN K. PEDIGO CMTitf-Jwrml Irtc Ihrar artf Sturgis, Ky. The city of Sturgis Planning and Zoning Board soon will include residents of the nearby rural area, it was decided Thursday night at a City Council meeting here. About a week ago the city advertised plans to pass a apply only to subdivisions and zoning ordinance regulating developments in the future and construction of subdivisions did not apply to present within five miles of the city properties. They also explained limits an area that takes in that Sturgis as a fourth-class part of neighboring Crittenden city has the right by Ken' County.

tucky statutes to zone an area Many rural residents pro- within five miles of the city testing an indicated regulation limits, of their land by a official body Wesley said the explanation over which they had no con- cleared up many questions but trol, attended the council residents stiU were unhappy meeting Thursday night with over lack of representation on an attorney, J. Quentin Wesley the city unit The council of Morganfield. agreed to reorganize the corn-Mayor Charles Pryor Jr. and mission to include represents-Ralph Alexander, commission tives of the rural community chairman, explained that the to give them a voice in regulat-zoning regulations were to ing the area where they live. SUPER RIGHT nWfl, -VI II II Cleatas Ernest Briaklry, 69, a retired Christian County fanner and grocer, Thursday while en route by ambulance to Jennie Stuart Hospital, HopkinsviUe.

His widow. Mrs. Grace L. Brinkley, survives. Funeral, 2 p.m.

Sunday at Judge's Chapel Baptist Church, Christian County. The body is at Fuqua Funeral Home, HopkinsviUe. Mrs. Jeaaette Hughes Taemp- tea, 59, widow of Cecil Thompson, Friday at her home at Raywick. Funeral, 10 a.m.

Monday, at St. Francis Xavier Catholic Church, Raywick. The body is at Bosley Funeral Home in Lebanon. Mrs. EUa J.

Pultt, 89. Dawson Springs, in a Madisonville nursing home Friday. Funeral, 2:30 p.m. Sunday at Beshear Funeral Home, Dawson Springs. Monday the body will be Uken to Belleville, 111., for burial James W.

Manley, 57, Bowling Green, Friday at Bowl-pital. A native of Allen County, he was foreman for the Bowling Green sanitation department. Funeral, 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Pentecostal Holiness Church. Surviving is his widow, Vada Moseley Manley.

The body is at J. C. Kirby Funeral Home, Bowling Green. Mrs. Erma Peters, 60, Brandenburg, at 5:10 p.m.

Friday in St. Joseph Infirmary, Louisville. She was the wife of Charles Alva Peters, a fruit market operator. The body is at Sturgeon Funeral Home, Brandenburg. Ernest J.

Warner, 48, Friday at his home, Shepherds-ville Route 2. He was a Bullitt County native. Survivors include his mother, Mrs. Anna Mae Taylor Warner, Shepherdsville Route 2. The body is at McFarland's Funeral Home, Mount Washington.

Funeral arrangements are pending. loin I cr rpL Lexington, Ky. A group of Lexington businessmen that plans to construct a downtown parking faciUty here has completed formal for incorporation and land acquisition. A deed filed in Fayette County Courthouse yesterday transferred the property on which the Ben Ali Theater had formerly stood to the Ben Ali which the businessmen incorporated Tuesday. The articles of incorporation filed Thursday listed Percy H.

Speed, T. J. Brandenburg, William Embry, Joseph C. Graves Jr. and Leonard G.

Cox as incorporators of the Ben Ali Co. Speed, Brandenburg and Embry are the men who announced early this month they had purchased the Lexington Laundry Main Street property at an approximate cost of $500,000. $75,000 Figured The deed filed yesterday transferred the adjoining property to the company from Speed and Brandenburg and their wives. It was estimated about $75,000 was involved in the transaction. The theater is being razed, while the adjoining laundry is to continue operations until it can be relocated.

That will take considerable time, however. Governor Names Danville' Man ToEcononiyUnit Frankfort, Ky. A Danville Republican, Pierce Lively, has been named by Gov. Edward T. Breathitt as a member of the Commission on Economy and Efficiency.

The governor made the appointment Wednesday. Lively, 43, will fill the unexpired term of Ben Fowler, a Frankfort attorney who resigned. Fowler also is a Republican. Lively, an attorney, was Boyle County campaign chairman for U. S.

Sen. Thruston B. Morton in 1962. 4 Negroes At Furnian Greenville. S.C.

UTi Joseph Allen Vaughn, 18, of Greenville yesterday became the first Negro undergraduate to enroll at Furman University. Three Negroes registered as graduate students Tuesday. lHhale ib.53c I Air Mttli I aihc C7C ILUII hVilia ID.sV Rib Half Loins ib 47 Country Ribs. ib 43c Scholarships, 'To Be Given At Science Fair Special TtM Curir-Jurnl Williamsburg, Ky. Scholarships totaling more than $6,750 and a free trip in May to the National Science Fair-international at St.

Louis, will be awarded to high-school students at the third annual Southeastern Kentucky Science Fair at Cumberland College March 26 and 27. Grand champion boy and girl in the senior division (Grades 10-12) will win a trip to St. Louis, college scholarships and medals worth $50 each. Alternate grand champions will receive loving cups and handbooks of chemistry and physics. Murder Suspect, 53, Is Held To Jury Richmond, Ky.

() Carlos Kearns. 53, Richmond, was ordered held to the grand jury yesterday after a preliminary hearing in Madison County Court on a murder charge. Kearns, accused in the fatal shooting Jan. 20 of Bobby Dean Renfro, 29, was released on $5,000 bond. Renfro, of Richmond, was shot at Kearns' apartment with a 32-caliber revolver.

He died later at the Pattie A. Clay Memorial Jury Praises Mental-Health Hospital-School Frankfort, Ky. The Franklin County Grand Jury said yesterday the Frankfort Hospital and School "is a very well managed instituion, moving forward with great enthusiasm toward a goal of progress in the field of mental health." Some previous grand juries have been critical of conditions at the state institution for mentally retarded. This jury said, "History dictates that this is a tough one for any grand jury." It said, "This community can take pride in the fact that there is a very fine school here with a small but well qualified staff of teachers. "There is no doubt it has a clear-cut program aimed directly at improving conditions of all residents there." U.K.

To Sponsor Nursing Program Lexington, Ky. The University of Kentucky Medical Center will be host to a five-day conference on management for nursing care next week, with about 40 supervisors and head nurses from Kentucky and surrounding states expected to attend. The meeting will be the second of four related conferences in a series begun last year. Pbrk CENTER CUT FIRST CUTS zst 17 mrri rm 7 RIB CUT Clbps ib. 39 mf' CONCENTRATE CANS ST100 D0Z.

II fnlA BVJ 1 I MM MT Wible Fryers U.S.D.A. INSPECTED Sarah To Attend Service, Not Burial London (UPD Miss Sarah Churchill, one of Sir Winston's daughters, has influenza but will attend her father's funeral today, the earl marshal's office said last night. Miss Churchill will ride with her mother in the funeral procession to St. Paul's Cathedral, but will return home immediately after the service. She canceled plans to attend the burial at Bladon.

CUT-UP, SPLIT OR QUARTERED lb. The funeral for Mergaa Pedige, 66, retired Cave City painter who died Thursday, will be at 2 p.m. C.S.T. Sunday, Gardner Funeral Home, Cave City. Jaanes Asms "Jack" Nickels, 86, a retired fanner of Madi-sonville Route 2, Thursday at Hopkins County Hospital He was a retired fanner.

Funeral, 2:30 p.m. Sunday at Harris Funeral Home, Madisonville; burial in Odd Fellows Cemetery. The funeral for Mrs. Ernie G. Guess, 52, Riverside, Warren County, will be at 2 p.m.

Sunday at Mt. Pisgah Methodist Church. She died Thursday. Surviving are her husband, Asher Guess; a daughter, Mrs. Irene White, and two sons, Ralph and Asher Guess, all of Louisville.

The body is at J. C. Kirby Funeral Home, Bowling Green. Miss Juanita Hill, 74 deaconess of the Methodist Church and a former mission worker in Muhlenberg County, Friday at Bowling Green after a short illness. Funeral, 2 p.m.

(EST) Sunday at Barnett Funeral Home, Campbellsburg. Before retirement 12 years ago, Miss Hill, a graduate of Scarrit College, Nashville, had done mission work in Kentucky, Arkansas, Texas, West Virginia and Mississippi. She was a sister of James M. Hill. Bowling Green, president of Hill-Motley Lumber and vice president of the Bowling Green Bank tc Trust Co.

Rapist Attacks Policeman's Wife Washington (UPD The 22-year-old wife of a city policeman was beaten and raped yesterday after being dragged from a heavily traveled business thoroughfare. Her husband was in one of the first police cars to arrive at the scene in downtown Washington. The attack occurred shortly before 9 a.m. while hundreds were going to work in nearby office buildings. The woman, a receptionist, had just unlocked the outside door to her ground-level office when a young man grabbed her around the throat from behind and wrestled her into the building.

He punched her in the left eye, knocked her to the floor and raped her, investigators said. Former Casino To Be Auctioned At Newport Newport, Ky. UV The Yorkshire Club, one of the best-known former gambling casinos of this Ohio River city, will be sold at auction next month. Master Commissioner Edward J. Blau of Campbell Circuit Court said yesterday the club will be auctioned Feb.

16 to satisfy recent court judgments against the Yorkshire Equity Co. The Yorkshire was closed after George Ratterman's election as sheriff on a reform ticket in late 1961. Its 11 operators were later fined on gambling charges. The club was briefly reopened last year as a plush supper club but closed when it failed to get a liquor license. Blau said the two buildings and their contents will be sold separately.

European, Pacific Staff Chiefs Named Washington Oft Army Lt. Gen. John W. Bowen, commander of the 18th' Airborne Corps at Ft. Bragg, N.

will succeed Lt. Gen. Russell L. Vittrup as chief of staff in the European Command, the Pentagon announced yesterday. Vittrup will retire June 1.

i The Pentagon also announced that Air Force Lt. Gen. Paul S. Emrick will become chief of staff in the Pacific Command. Emrick is director of plans and policy on the joint staff here.

He succeeds Lt. Gen. Verdi E. Barnes of the Army, who is retiring. Madisonville Paper Moves To Neiv Plant Special Tht Curir-Jurnl Madisonville, Ky.

TJie Madisonville Messenger, which has been located on North Main Street for the past 4X years, moved yesterday to it new building at 221 S. Main. The first lsne of Tb Mesenipr will bp printed i the new location I v. the new cold-type o'fvrt nil ing operation. All in the new building is part of a $300,000 expand-program.

Edgar Arnold Jr. is edii of The Messenger, which ei ploys 40 persons. NO LIMIT NONE SOLD TO DEALERS Fryer Parts Sale! g. WHOLE WITH Whole lb. 55' Gizzards Wings 1.

Livers Orange Juice HopkinsviUe, Ky. The State Court of Appeals finally cleared the way Friday for the formal sentencing of Willie Barker, 43. in the fatal tire-tool beating of the semiinvalid wife of a Christian County livestock dealer nearly seven years ago. The high court refused to grant the HopkinsviUe man a rehearing of his appeal of a life-in-prison sentence returned by a Christian Circuit Court jury in October 1963. Faces Second Charge Barker's conviction on a murder charge was for the slaying of Mrs.

Orlena Denton, 79. He still faces another murder count for the death of H. M. (Pat) Denton. Both were killed in a robbery attempt at their home in July 1958.

Barker appealed on the grounds the testimony of Silas Manning, who testified as an accomplice, was not sufficiently corroborated. Judge' Ira D. Smith said Barker will be sentenced to prison as soon as the Court of Appeals mandate is received here, probably in a few days. Barker has been confined to Christian County jail since his conviction. Manning.

45, also of HopkinsviUe. is now serving two life terms in prison for the Denton deaths after standing trial six times in the murder cases. Manning was twice sentenced to death but the verdicts were later reversed by the Court of Appeals. Seven Students To Join U.K. Evaluation Unit SMIi Tht C.url.r-J.urn.l Lexington.

Ky. A seven-member student committee has been appointed to work with a faculty committee to study and suggest improvements in the faculty-evaluation system at the University of Kentucky. Frank Bailey, a junior political science major from Winchester, has been named chairman of the student group. Other members are David Hawpe, Louisville, vice chairman and senior adviser; Phillip R. Grogan, Bowling Claudia Dale Jeffrey and Linda Mills, Avondale Estates, L.

E. Johnson, Lexington, and Stephen T. Miller, Benton. Dr. John E.

Barrows, director of institutional studies, is chairman of the faculty consultants who will work with the student committee on the program. Steel Union 'Won't Be Forced Into Shutdown' Philadelphia Of) David J. McDonald, confident that he will be re-elected international president of the United Steel Workers, said yesterday the union is going to continue to negotiate labor contracts "honorably and peacefully, and we are not going to let the steel industry, the can industry, the aluminum industry or any other industry force us into a shutdown." McDonal shared the platform though not simultaneously with I. W. Abel, who is opposing him for the presidency in the steelworkers election Feb.

9. Both spoke at the seventh annual conference of the Steelworkers Legislative Committee of Pennsylvania. Afterward, at separate news conferences, each predicted he would win the presidency. Abel, secretary-treasurer 12 years, has charged that McDonald has lost touch with the workers. Teen Sons Gave Beer Party; Parents Jailed Redwood City, Calif.

Wi A Redwood City couple has been sentenced to 10 days in jail and a year's probation for allowing their teen-age sons to give a beer party New Year's Eve. They were charged with contributing to the delinquency of minors. "You are an example of the worst type of parents this country has," Municipal Court Judge Roy Seagraves told Mr. and Mrs. James R.

Melton during sentencing Thursday. San Mateo County sheriff's deputies said mothers of two girls reported their daughters were served beer at the party given by the Meltons' sons, aged 16 and 18, at their home. Deputies said at least IS of the 20 persons at the party were underage. The couple denied they had seen the young persons drinking beer. A FROZEN V37' 7 11 '200.

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