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The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page 9

Location:
Louisville, Kentucky
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SECTION 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 THE JOURNAL, LOUISVILLE, 1 1 1 MORNING, 6, 1963 9 Combs To Tell How State Honored Tobacco Accord By ERNEST L. CLARK Courier Farm Editor Frankfort, Feb. 5 Governor Bert T. Combs said Tuesday that he will lead a delegation to Washington to explain to Agriculture Department officials, congressmen, and "maybe" the White House, how Kentucky has more than fulfilled its agreement with the Federal Government on tobacco research. Combs made the statement while meeting University of Kentucky, farm, and business leaders who expressed concern that, as the result of a bill introduced recently in the House of Representatives, the National Tobacco Research Laboratory at U.

K. may become a regional facility for burley and dark tobaccos only. Offered By Cooley The bill, introduced by Representative Harold Cooley N. chairman of the House Agriculture Committee, called for establishment by the United States Department of Agriculture $2,500,000 flue-cured tobacco, research center at Raleigh, N. C.

Support for the center has come from a number of sources in the North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia fluecured belt. Congress established the National Tobacco Research Laboratory at U. of K. in 1960 and voted $250,000 to help equip it and hire personnel. This was after Representative William H.

Natcher, Bowling Green, a member of the House agriculture appropriations subcommittee, explained that the Kentucky General Assembly had just voted $1,000,000 for such a center. Center Being Built The laboratory is be housed primarily in the 000 center now being built on Payneville Man Dies Of Trash-Fire Burns Special to The Brandenburg, Feb. 5- Roscoe Smith, 78, Payneville, died at 3:45 p.m. Tuesday in the emergency room of St. Joseph's Infirmary, Louisville.

Chief Deputy Coroner Don Shader said Smith died of burns over 95 percent of the body. Shader said he learned Smith's clothing caught fire while he burned trash i in the yard of his home. James B. Hovius Dies Special to The Courier Campbellsville, Feb. 5.

-James Blaine Hovius, 78, retired farmer of Casey Creek Route Adair County, died Tuesday. Mrs. Joseph Crouch, Louisville, is a daughter. WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY COURIER 40 1 44 06 Associated Press Wirephote Air Force Gets Modified Navy Jet Plane NEW PUNCH FOR AIR FORCE Lt. Gen.

Gabriel P. Disosway displays in the Pentagon in Washington a model of the newest addition to the Air Force arsenal, the F-4-C Phantom II jet fighter, a modified version of the fighter plane used by the Navy for two years. The Air Force will use the plane as a tactical fighter. Deaths Elsewhere Mrs. Fannie Hertz, Owner Of Derby Winners, Dies Miami Beach, Feb.

5 (P- Mrs. Fannie Hertz, 82, widow of multimillionaire transportation executive John D. Hertz, died Monday at the home of a a daughter here. The Hertzes owned two Kentucky Derby winners, Reigh Count in 1928 and Count Fleet in 1943. Count Fleet, who also won the Preakness Stakes and the Belmont Stakes, was raised at Stoner Creek Stud Farm near Paris, which the Hertzes bought in 1939.

Hertz, an Austrian immigrant who founded Yellow Cab Company the Hertz car-rental system, died in 1961. At that time it was estimated that the 37 Donate Blood For Bullitt Teacher Special te The Courier -Journal Mount Washington, Feb. Bullitt County educator received a tribute from citizens of this community Tuesday when 37 of them answered an appeal and went to Kentucky Baptist Hospital Louisville, where he is a patient, to donate blood for him. William H. McFarland, teacher at Mount Washington High School, a principal of Mount Washington Elementary and School and a former Bullitt County superintendent of schools, was the recipient.

The group filled a school bus and one private automobile. Robert Diehl Takes Sewer Board Oath Robert I B. Diehl, 50, of 1908 Tyler Lane, was sworn in yesterday as a member of the Metropolitan Sewer Board. He succeeds the late William G. Dabney.

The term will end July 1, 1966. Diehl is president of the Diehl Pump Supply Company. Hertzes' horses had won 2,955 races with earnings of $9,088,406. Set Up Foundation Hertz, a partner in the New York investment firm of Lehman Brothers, established a foundation In' 1957 to train engineers. He and his wife also had philanthropic interests in Paris.

Mrs. Hertz is survived by a son, John D. Hertz, and a daughter, Mrs. Paul L. Hexter, both of Miami Beach.

Lord Samuel, 93, a leader of the British Labor Party from the Edwardian reform era early in the century until a few years ago; in London. His death leaves Sir Winston 1,000 Animals Are Entered In Barrow Show A few more than 1,000 animals are entered in the fourth annual Louisville Barrow Show starting today at Kentucky Fair and Exposition Center. The animals will compete for $5,000 in prizes. The show winds up Saturday with a sale. Lonnie D.

Tomes, cochairman of the show, said the animals will be received today and the barrows judged tomorrow. Friday carcasses will be judged, as well as' breeding stock. A banquet at the center will be held Friday night. The show is sponsored by the Kentucky Agriculture Department, Fischer Packing and Bourbon Stock Yards, in cooperation with the University of Kentucky and Kentucky Swine Growers Council. Mrs.

Lottie Smith Dies Special to The Courier-Journal Burkesville, Feb. Mrs. Lottie Mae Smith, 56, died at Danville hospital Monday. Mrs. Rose Clark, Louisville, is a sister.

Son, Daughter Get Grossman Estate Mrs. Pauline. Loevenhart tional Bank Trust Company Grossman, president of were appointed co-executors. Loevenhart's clothing store, Mrs. Grossman, Commodore left her $290,000 estate Apartments, was 72 when she equally to a son and daughter died January 21.

by her will probated here yes- By another will probated, terday in County Court. Mrs. Verona G. DeGaris, 1238 They are Lee L. Grossman, Garvin Place, left her $80,000 executive vice-president of the her son, Bruce M.

Wolfson, Maywood, N. J. organ teacher for company, and Mrs. Joseph Mrs. De Garis, a Grossman and the Liberty Na- 60 years, died December 26.

CONTROLS COUGHS DUE TO COLDS UP TO 6 FULL HOURS Special formula with blocks cough impulse Proved fully as effective as codeine! Yet safe, ST.JOSEPH non-narcotic. St. Joseph Cough Syrup For ChilCOUGH SYRUP to dren block with cough Supressin impulses acts from through brain. blood Controls stream for CHILDREN way coughs not in a new possible scientiflo with. ordinary cough syrups.

Cools, soothes irritated throat, loosens sticky for easy ration; helps to open NOW' SIN breathing passages. Child gets sleep to speed quick recovery, brand of 4-Motherphan Hydrebremide ONLY ON SALE WALGREEN DRUG AT ALL STORES MAY I HELP YOU? MRS. I. R. MILLER NOW AT OUR BACON'S SHIVELY SHOPPING CENTER STORE PHONE 447-6230 UNION MADE GLASSES UNION OPTICAL PLAN 101 Theatre Bldg.

318 W. Market So. 4th JU 3-8236 JU 3-2652 Nicholasville Road near the U. K. Medical Center.

000 has been made available for the center. Since that appropriation Congress voted an additional 000 for the center in 1961 and $210,000 in 1962. Natcher Defends Grant University officials pointed out Tuesday that they have not been waiting for the completion of the center to start research. Already basic and fundamental research with all types of tobacco has been going on in the agronomy department and in the agricultural engineering department. Congressman Natcher is known to be dissatisfied with progress of the center, and at each hearing on Agriculture Department budget has strongly defended the research grant.

Combs told the 20 leaders meeting here that he, too, has not been satisfied with progress of the center. He promised all help possible to Natcher and other congressmen to make the Agriculture Department see that Kentucky's part has been more than fulfilled. Chelf Revives Custom Of Party Luncheons By ELMER HALL Courier-Journal and Times Bureau Washington, Feb. old custom of the Kentucky Democratic Congressional delegation- discussion luncheons for its members-was revived Tuesday. Representative Frank Chelf, Lebanon, the dean of the group, was host.

"We used to have these luncheons years ago and I felt we had a better communion, a better camaraderie for them," he said. "Now that there are only five of us Democrats left, I thought it would be a good idea to reestablish the custom. After all, it's loaded with the spirit of Kentucky, with hospitality, and sociability." Chelf said conversation at the luncheons would range widely, but "if anyone has a problem this will be a good time to bring it up." He added that he didn't want the Republican members of the House delegation, Eugene Siler and Gene Snyder, to think the Democrats were being exclusive. "It's just that something about politics might--and probably will -come up and we wouldn't want them to be embarrassed," Chelf said. Representative William H.

Boy, 15, Admits Slaying Of Mother Bloomfield Township, Feb. 5 UR-A 15-year-old boy admitted to police Tuesday that he was the mystery sniper who killed his mother in the kitchen of their $35,000 home January 25. Oakland County Prosecutor George Taylor said Douglas Godfrey, 15, said he fired through a kitchen window his mother, Mrs. Mary Godfrey, 38, "because she was mean to me." a Service Mark of American Airlines, Inc. Los Angeles is an American city.

Churchill as the sole survivor of Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman's famous Government, which in 1906 laid the foundation for the modern welfare state. He was one of the principal strategists in World War II and was leader of the House of Lords from 1944 to 1955. He played a leading role in the drafting of child-labor and workmen's establishment laws the of National Health Service. Barnum Brown, 89, known as the "father of the in New York. In his 66 years as curator of fossil reptiles at the American Museum of Natural History he is believed to have collected and reassembled more dinosaur bones than any other natural historian, Dr.

Theodore Wilmot Gayer, 82, former president of the Louisiana Baptist Convention; in Alexandria, La. Princess Daria Olsoufieff Borghese, 53; in a collision on the Rome-Naples superhighway. The Russian-born princess married Prince Valerio Borghese, a World War II naval hero, in 1931. Main Street (1882) AND BANK le 14 tal 1 American flies the only direct jets there: Astrojets. Most of the people on the streets of Angeles at 3:05 p.in., local time.

This Los Angeles in 1882 had just arrived. is the only direct (no change of planes) And more have been coming in every jet service there. day ever since. Of course, there have Another convenience: American been certain refinements. offers you a choice of First Class or One Is the way people get there.

Coach service. For reservations, see Today you can board an American your travel agent or phone American. Astrojet at 11:50 a.m. and be in Los The number is EM 8-1633. AMERICAN AMERICA'S LEADING AIRLINES AIRUNE (A) HAPPY OANS HOME AMPLE FUNDS AVAILABLE TERMS UP TO OF VALUE TO TO 30 YEARS QUALIFIED BUYERS PORTLAND 539 W.

MARKET ST. FEDERAL PHONE 583-2881 SAVINGS 111 FREE S. 6th PARKING St. AND LOAN ASSOCIATION CONTINUOUS SERVICE SINCE 1889 PORTLAND FEDERAL MAKES HOME IMPROVEMENT LOANS, TOO Don't Call Anything Lost Until You Have Used a "Lost" Ad. Natcher, Bowling Green, will be host for the next gathering Thursday.

Attending Tuesday's luncheon were Representatives Chelf, Natcher, Carl D. Perkins, Hindman, and Frank A. Stubblefield, Murray. Representative John C. Watts, Nicholasville, was ill.

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