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The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page 2

Location:
Louisville, Kentucky
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE COrRIER-JOl'RNAL. LOUISVILLE. KY. SATI RDAY MORNING. JAM ART 10.

1970 A 7 Deaths and Funerals in the Southern Indiana Area v- MILLTOWN Mrs. Delia Fancher Baufle, 83, was fatally burned in a fire that destroyed her home near here earlv Friday. Survivors include her husband, Perry Baufle; a daughter, Mrs. Effie May Tisdle, Frenchtown; and several grandchildren. The body will be at Newkirk Funeral Home.

JEFFERSONVILLE Roman G. Kee-ton, 66, of 1501 Brigman, died at 2 p.m. Friday at his home. He was owner of Keeton's Garage, and was a member of First Baptist Church. Survivors include his wife, the former Ruth Worrall; two daughters, Mrs.

Jean Winkler and Mrs. Jane Ward, both of Clarksville; two sisters and a brother. The body will be at Scott Funeral Home after noon Saturday. i. i if 1 1-, PALMYRA Ralph Cooley 75, died at 6 p.m.

Thursday at his home here. He was a retired farmer and a member of the United Methodist Church here. Surviving are his wife, Lillian; two sons, Ralph Cooley Georgetown, and Ray Cooley, Pekin; his mother, Mrs. Emma Wilkinson, New Albany; two brothers, a sister, five grandchildren, and five great-grandchildren. Funeral, 2 p.m.

Sunday, Love Funeral Home here. Burial, Greenville Cemetery. TELL CITY Mason Esarcy, 57, died at 8:05 p.m. Thursday in Perry County Memorial Hospital here. Surviving are his wife, Clarice; a daughter, Mrs.

John M. Askins, Tell City; a stepson, Joseph B. Stephenson, West Virginia; a stepdaughter, Mrs. Goldie Foreman, Louisville; three brothers, three sisters, five stepgrandchildren, and three stepgreat-grandchildren. The body is at Zoercher-Gillick Funeral Home here.

ELIZABETH Noble P. Kingery, 70, died at 1 p.m. Thursday at his home here. He was a retired farmer, and was a member of Elizabeth United Methodist Church and the IOOF Lodge at Laconia. Survivors include his wife, the former Clara Stewart; two daughters, Mrs.

Geraldine Ferree, New Albany, and Mrs. Aliene Adams, Livonia, a sister, and five grandchildren. Funeral, 1 p.m. Sunday, Gehlbach Royse Funeral Home, and 2 p.m. at Elizabeth United Methodist Church.

Burial, Rose Hill Cemetery. JEFFERSONVILLE William Barton. 45, of 405 S. Front, Utica, died at 3:30 p.m. Friday at his home.

He was owner of Mary's Drive-In in Louisville. He was a member of Rolling Field Baptist Church. He also belonged to Crescent Hill Masonic Lodge No. 820, Scottish Rite and Kosair Shrine Temple. Survivors include his wife, Mrs.

Mary Barton; a daughter, Mrs. Jeanne Mallow, Jeffersonville; his mother, Mrs. Carrie Barber, Frankfort, and a half-sister. The body will be at Coots Funeral Home after 4 p.m. Saturday.

CHARLESTOWN Charles S. Tuttle, 75, Charlestown Rt. 1, died at 12 p.m. Friday at Clark County Memorial Hospital, Jeffersonville. He was a retired welder, and was a member of the Baptist Church.

Survivors include a son, Charles F. Tuttle, Momence, two daughters, Mrs. Jacqueline Doss and Mrs. Evelyn K. Parker, both of San Clemente, a brother, two sisters, seven grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.

Funeral, 1 p.m. Monday, Grayson Funeral Home here. Burial, Charlestown Cemetery. The body will be at the funeral home after noon Sunday. MADISON Mrs.

Dora Ellen Scroggin, 76, Madison Rt. 1, died at 4:30 a.m. Friday at her home. She was a native of Columbus. She was a member of Long Run Holiness Church.

Survivors include three sons, Orville Scroggin, Lexington, and Wallace and Norman Scroggin, both of Madison; three daughters, Mrs. Pearl Dunning and Mrs. Rosalie Warner, both of Ve-vay; and Mrs. Lvona Alexander, Bedford, a sister, 4 brothers, 41 grandchildren, 16 step-grandchildren and 31 great-grandchildren. Funeral, 2 p.m.

Sunday, Gans Funeral Home. Burial, Vevay Cemetery. The body will be at the funeral home after noon Saturday. ti 8i twlile kiv Staff Photo by James N. Keen Moving In NEW CAPRI SPINET ORGAN 2 manuals, 13 pedals just $487 EDWARD BOUVIER and four of his children move belongings into their new home at 3419 Michigan Drive, Louisville.

The house was made available to the Bouviers after a Courier-Journal story reported that the family of 10 was living in a ramshackle farmhouse in Shively. Their former residence had no running water and was heated by a kitchen range. The gas was to be turned off also. GEORGETOWN Clarence Casey, 77, Route 1, Georgetown, died at 11:15 p.m. Thursday at his home.

He was a retired farmer and a member of Indian Creek Baptist Church. Surviving are his wife, Mary; a son, Charles Casey, Valley Station, three daughters. Mrs. Elizabeth Willitt, Turner's Station, Mrs. Leila Branham, Georgetown, and Mrs.

Joyce Brandenburg. Louisville; a brother, a sister, 11 grandchildren, and 11 greatgrandchildren. Funeral, 10:30 a.m. Monday, Love Funeral Home, Palmyra. Burial, Franklin-ton, Cemetery.

The body will be at the funeral home after 6 p.m. Saturday. JEFFERSONVILLE George Dewey Stoner, 71, of 720 Watt died at 10:55 p.m. Thursday at Clark County Memorial Hospital. He was a native of Otisco and a former Jeffersonville Township assessor.

Survivors include three sisters, Mrs. Ethel Quinn, Jeffersonville; Mrs. Bertha McDonald, Louisville, and Mrs. Margaret DeCamp, Englewood, Calif. Funeral, 1:30 p.m.

Sunday, Coots Funeral Home. Burial, Sellersburg Cemetery. CANNELTON The funeral for Earl C. Kieser, 46, who died Wednesday, will be at 2 p.m. Saturday at Huber Funeral Home here.

Burial, Cliff Cemetery. NEW ALBANY Mrs. Lyda M. (Bobbie) Cromwell, 60, of 919 W. 8th died at 10 p.m.

Thursday at Green Valley Convalescent Center. She was a seamstress for New Albany Steam Laundry. She was a member of Main Street United Methodist Church and Hobart Beach Post VFW Auxiliary. Surviving are a son, Richard L. Cromwell, Clarksville; two sisters, two brothers and a granddaughter.

The body is at Mullineaux Funeral Home. CANNELTON Mrs. Julia K. Guil-laum, 83, died at 6:30 a.m. Thursday in Perry County Memorial Hospital in Tell City.

Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Leota Miller, Tell City; two sons, Theodore and William F. Guillaum, both of Cannelton; six grandchildren, and seven greatgrandchildren. Funeral, 2 p.m. Saturday, First United Methodist Church.

Burial, Cliff Cemetery. The body is at Gentry Funeral Home here. TROY Wilbert C. VanWinkle, 49, died at 12:55 p.m. Thursday in Perry County Memorial Hospital.

Surviving are his wife, Mary Louise; three sons, Dennis VanWinkle, Troy; Delbert VanWinkle, with the U.S. Navy in San Diego, and David VanWinkle, at home; two daughters, Darlene and Delia VanWinkle, both at home; a sister, and two brothers. The body is at Snyder-Hagedorn Funeral Home here. IU 'Purdue Proposal bis $2.9 Million Campus Project Rejected of a joint project to build a power plant and utility distribution system at the Fort Wayne campus. The distribution system would supply steam, cooled water, electricity and waste disposal.

The 1969 legislature authorized the project, with each university picking up half the cost. The budget for the regional campus and the bonding power approved for each university there contained no specific appropriation for the Taylor said IU has committed most of INDIANAPOLIS (AP) The State Budget Committee refused yesterday to approve a $2.9 million utilities' project at the Fort Wayne regional campus of Indiana and Purdue universities. Budget Director Thomas H. Taylor said the arrangement proposed by university officials would mean committing future state funds not yet apprppt1ated' by: the legislature. The budget committee' asked university officials to develop a revised for later consideration.

IU and Purdue have sought approval foftvi Mentally Deficient Using Birth Control Effectively its bonding authority to other projects and could only provide $475,000 in bonds and $200,000 from other funds as its share. Purdue offered to pay $2,225,000 to make up the total cost. The universities propose that IU lease its facilities from Purdue, until, IU, had repaid Purdue $775,000. "That's $775,000 that's going to be coming out of IU's operating budget presented to the legislature in future years," Taylor said. The committee said IU should revise its priorities to make funds available from other accounts.

"We're drawing a line for the first time," Taylor said. "We're not going to continue just approving things after they happen. I'm prepared to be as tough as we need to be to get some commitments." Taylor said the project is a prerequisite for construction of a $5 million classroom building and a $4.2 million library-research center, already approved by the budget committee and now in the planning stages. The committee recommended that Gov. Edgar D.

Whitcomb approve these projects: fLand purchases at Pigeon River and LaSalle Fish and Game areas and Mallard Roost, $78,660. Design of improvements at Harmonie State Recreation Area, $53,000. A lease-purchase agreement between Purdue and the Ross-Ade Foundation for parking facilities at the Lafayette campus, $894,560. Construction of mental health-mental retardation centers in Marion County, $795,255, and Howard County, $1.5 million. (Additional staff members for the Administrative Building Council, $98,554.

Construction of camp grounds at Turkey Run, McCormick's Creek, Poka-gon and Richard Lieber state parks and Salamonie and Mississinewa reservoirs, $1,277,600. Indiana Receives Anti-Trust Payment INDIANAPOLIS (AP) The state received the first installment of a settlement in an anti-trust case against brass tube and pipe manufacturers yesterday. The payment totaled $177,456. Atty. Gen.

Theodore L. Sendak said the rest of the payments will be made by 1973. A U.S. District Court in Philadelphia ordered the judgment in favor of Indiana and most other states after finding that the companies had overcharged states 18 per cent for tube and pipe sold for construction. The court has ordered the money held in trust until 1973.

Sendak said Indiana's share will be deposited in an interest-bearing trust fund until then, when it will be distributed to the state agencies that purchased the tube and pipe. INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Birth control has replaced. surgical sterilization of mentally deficient women in Indiana, although the operation is still legal, the state's acting mental health', commissioner said 1 "We haven't done a sterilization for at least a year," said Dr. Joseph D. Keating in an interview.

Procedures for sterilizations were rewritten by Dr. William F. Sheeley, the commissioner who resigned last year, Keating said. New Techniques Called Reliable "There are so many safeguards now that it's too much paperwork and no one is about to do one," he said, and. none have been requested.

Sterilization laws in Indiana and fouj other states appear to be unchallenged for the present, since the, U.S.; Supreme Court dropped from its docket Thursday a test of a Nebraska Thf5 Nebraska Legislature repealed the law retroactively. Indiana's 1907 sterilization' law was declared? tby the. Supreme Court in 1921, and a new law was passed in 1927 providing for sterilization of the feeble-minded, epileptic and, hereditary "in the best interests of the patient and society." Modern contraception techniques have proven reliable in preventing unwanted pregnancies among mentally deficient women, Keating said. At the same time, these women are being given more freedom in state institutions where men and women were once strictly segregated, he said. The decision is left to the individual patient's physician on whether she should be given contraceptives, Keating said, and intrauterine devices known as "loops" have proven successful in many cases.

sterilization Jaw was discussed at a staff meeting last fall, Keating said, but. no conclusions, were reached and the matter wasn't considered pressing. Mental-health records show 706 males and 870 females in Indiana were sterilized from 1936 to 1962. In 1964, 54 women and five men were sterilized. FrS A This week' BASKETBALL 3i SPECIAt sod I through Friday, J) 5.7 Regular rTf 1 -January 16, at U't )Mi fMl Start your savings account A PET HEALTH MESSAGE from the JEFFERSON COUNTY VETERINARY MEDICAL SOCIETY Doctors of veterinary medicine ore often asked the question by their clients "can my children get worms from our dog?" Jhis may occur but is unlikely if reasonable basic principles of personal hygiene and sanitation ore practiced.

Children should wash their hands after pioying with pet and. "avoid ingestion of pet feces (some babies like to eat dirt, etc.) which may contain worm eggs and larvae. "Your dog should be kept free of internal parasites by having a stool examination every 6 months by your veterinarian who will then prescribe specific medication to eliminate specific parasites or worms. He will also advise you as to the best methods of preventing re-infection. with any amount OPEN TONIGHT' Don't fight over your 2 Arrested, 8 Hunted at Paoli In Rustling Case Special toTh Counar-Jourrial PAOLI, Ind.

Two persons have been arrested and eight others are being sought in connection with cattle rustling in Orange County. Sheriff Farrell Fields said Connie Graham, 18; Clyde Jones, 26, and George McCarthy, 30, all of Paoli, are accused of shooting a 400-pound calf on a farm owned by Bertie Weeks, south of Paoli, loading the carcass in the back of an automobile, driving to the end of a deadend road and cutting off the hind quarters. The remainder of the carcass was discarded. Jones was apprehended by sheriff's officers and McCarthy was picked up by state police and sheriff's off icers. Miss Graham was already in the Orange Coum ty Jail on an intoxication charge.

Charges of malicious killing of animals and theft by exerting unauthorized control have been filed against each suspect, and bonds have been set at $5,000 each. Fields said seven other animals are reported missing from the Weeks farm. The original TREASURE CHEST in III Mill 113 TAX SAYIMGS It's easy to keep a sweet disposition when income tax problems get you down. Just take it to BLOCK where trained tax men know the answers. Quickly, at low cost, your tax return is done with guaranteed accuracy.

You keep smiling! BOTH FEDERAL AND STATE GUARANTEE We guarantee accurate preparation of every tax return. If we make any errors that cost you any penalty or Interest, we will pay the penalty or interest. AJo minimum deposit required Pill HR LOUISVILLE America's Largest Tax Service with Over 4000 Offices TRUST The highest interest the law allows a bank to pay Earn 5 the easy way. Interest compounded daily for the highest yield. Funds withdrawable on 90 days notice or first -1 0 days of each quarter.

12 Walk Off Jobs At Railroad Yards Twelve of about 150 railroad yard workers walked off their jobs at 5:15 p.m. yesterday at the Penn Central Jefferson-ville Yards. The yards, which handle freight traffic, are located on Ind. 31 just north of Jefferson ville. A spokesman for those participating in the wildcat walkout said the men were protesting the late arrival of paychecks, which he said were due at midnight Thursday.

He said the men are members of Local 689 of the United Transportation Workers. Trainmaster James Wicke said the missing checks had been located and were to be delivered at the yard later last night. 612 W. Broadway 5408 Preston Hwy. 8106 Preston Hwy.

3401 W. Broadway 2700 Frankfort Ave. 1857 Berry Blvd. 5503 Valley Station Rd. -7791 Dixie Hwy.

3023 Hunsinger lane 3916 Shelbyville Road 4700 So. Third St. 1912 Bardstown Rood 3933 Bardstown Road 5610 Bardstown Rd. Shelbyville, Ky. Mt.

Washington, Elizahethtown, Ky. Raddiff, Ky. Campbellsviile, Ky. I Bardstown, Ky. Shepherdsville, Ky.

Carrollton, Ky. LnGrange, Ky. Liberty, Ky. 621 astern Clorksville, Ind. I 145 E.

Spring New Albany, Ind. Glasgow, Ky. Gateway Plaza, Jeffersonville, Ind. 308 W. Main Madison, Ind.

Bowling Green, Ky. COMPANY BANK Weekdays 9 A.M.-9 P.M. Saturday 9-5587-0752 NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY Neighborhood Branches Member Fejderal Deposit Insurance'. Corporation Member federal Reserve System.

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