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The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page 11

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Louisville, Kentucky
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11
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SPORTS AND AMUSEMENTS RADIO AND TV PROGRAMS SECTION 2-12 PAGES MONDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1952 Jobs for Disabled Held Econom ica I U. S. Official Says Savings Result In Training Them for Useful Work Iff II And Wife Injured Car-Truck Collision In Indiana Fatal to Harold D. Keys; 4 Hurt A Louisvillian was killed and his wife and three other persons were injured in an automobile-truck collision on U. S.

31 just south of Edinburg, at 9:30 p.m. Saturday. Harold D. Keys, 36, of 2118 Oregon, suffered a broken neck, relatives said. He died almost instantly.

I ilk. ami 1 People interested in vocational rehabilitation are beginning to wield a two-edged sword, a national expert on the subject said here yesterday. "Get iem off relief and keep 'em off relief" has become the dual aim, said Miss Mary E. Switzer, director of the Office of Keys' wife, Mrs. Nancy Keys, ilT? filets 1 "I mnnmmi FESTIVAL OF THE HARVEST HOME was celebrated yesterday at Immanuel Evangelical and Reformed Church, 2300 Taylorsville Road.

Forty to 50 bushels of produce grown by congregation members were given later to the Protestant Orphans Home and Louisville Protestant Altenheim. Shown with the harvest of fruits and vegetables are, from left, Martha Westerman, 13, Melbourne Lane; Jean Hartman, 13, Melbourne Lane; Joyce Deibel, 7, of 3004 Spencer, and Nancy Westerman, 4, Martha's sister. Advertising-Specialty Firm's Owner, August B. Lang, Dies Water Lack Is Critical At Stanford Rationing Looms As City Rushes Plans 'for Well Stanford, Oct. 19 (JP) This Lincoln County town of 1,800 today faced the prospect of immediate water rationing as the Kentucky Water Service Company acted to augment its meager water resources.

E. Graybeal, water firm vice-president, said that unless consumption is reduced drastically water will be turned on only twice daily for 30-minute periods starting Tuesday. "We have only 50 gallons a minute coming in, which will provide only enough for drinking and toilet uses," he explained. Reservoir Is Low Today the company started piping water from a reservoir near the spring-fed pool that furnishes the town's water supply. However, the normal reservoir is down to 1,000,000 gallons.

Drilling will start Monday on a new well near the main pool. Handbills signed by Graybeal and Mayor Ed Ensslln and distributed Friday urged immediate halving of water usage. On Saturday, only 12,000 fewer gallons were used. Graybeal said residents would have to restrict usage to 50,000 gallons, and by mid-afternoon Sunday 58,000 gallons had been consumed. Normal consumption is 180,000 gallons, which by restricting residential and commercial use has been reduced to 148,000 gallons for th( past four months.

Schools To Open Today Late this afternoon, water service was cut off for about 2 hours, and Graybeal said it would be shut off again at noon Monday. The Stanford City Council at a called session voted to petition the Kentucky Public Service Commission for permission to operate a municipal water system. City school superintendent Joe P. Emery said that schools would open tomorrow, but subsequent classwork would depend on the water situation. An extra policeman was added to the police force to patrol for fires at night Oilman Jim Darst said he was rushing in a drilling rig to start the well project.

A summer-long drought has been the major contribution to the water shortage. One large user, the Stanford Creamery, today started trucking water from Lancaster. Louisville Woman Gets Harrison Hospital Post Special to Th Courier-Journal Corydon, Oct. 19. Miss Elizabeth Brown of Louisville has been employed as administrator of the Harrison County Hospital, members of the board of trustees announced today.

Miss Brown has been administrator for the Jackson County Hospital at Seymour for the past eight years. She will succeed Miss Vocational Rehabilitation, Wash-ington. Miss Switzer was in Louisville to address the annual conference of the National Rehabilitation Association at the Seelbach Hotel. Of 70,000 persons rehabilitated that is, put to work under her program last year, 12,000 had been on relief rolls, Miss Switzer said in an interview. The average cost of rehabilitation was $500 to $600, she said.

On relief, they were costing taxpayers a total of $8,500,000 a year. Now they are earning $22,000,000 a year. 768 Helped In Kentucky Kentucky figures show that 768 persons were rehabilitated under the program in 1950-51. About $250,000 was spent on the program, of which $68,000 consisted of Kentucky funds and $182,000 were federal funds. Rehabilitation is correction of physical or mental disabilities through medical, education, social, or other means.

The most common type of remedying physical handicaps such as missing arms or legs, paralysis, or blindness. The federal program of rehabilitation spends about 000 a year, of which $22,500,000 is federal money and the rest state funds. Miss Switzer's office channels the federal funds and gives advice on how they should be spent. In contrast with the expenditure for her program. Miss Switzer said, the Federal Government's annual public-relief bill is about $1,250,000,000.

And this amount is generally equalled by states or other local funds. About a third of relief cases are due directly to disability, Miss Switzer said. So if disability can be prevented, or corrected before it becomes chronic, the taxpayer is saved a large part of his relief bill. each dollar spent on rehabilitation, she said, the recipient eventually pays back $10 in taxes. "This is an investment not only in human welfare but in economics," she said.

Miss Switzer will speak this morning at a session of the States' Vocational Rehabilitation Council and tomorrow night at a conference banquet. The council, which is composed of vocational-rehabilitation directors in all states and territories. yesterday elected H. Burton Ay- cock, Baton Rouge, its new president. The New secretary- Citizens Group Invites Candidates To Speak Local candidates for political office in the November 4 election have been invited to a public meeting of the Independent and Citizens Organization at 8 p.m.

Thursday at 'the organization's headquarters at 443 S. Ninth. The candidates will be asked to express their views on civil rights. Couricr-Journal Photo MISS MARY E. SWITZER Attends conference here treasurer is Travis McCharen, Jackson, Miss.

About 125 were registered yesterday for the conference, which runs through Thursday. About 1,000 are expected. Business sessions and regional meetings will be held today. General conference meetings begin tomorrow. Discharged GI Says Woman Took His $450 Money Allegedly Stolen After Night's Celebration A 22-year-old New Albany woman was accused yesterday of stealing $450 from a man whose discharge from the Army she helped celebrate here October 10.

Miss Gladys Elenora Dugan was arrested on a warrant for grand larceny sworn to by Walter Kiwa-soki, Baltimore, Md. Kiwasoki said he met Miss Dugan and they went to several night clubs here after his release from the Army at Fort Knox. Later, he told police, they went to a hotel room. When he awoke the next morning the woman and his money were gone, Kiwasoki said. Other Thefts Reported Another woman, Mary Massro, 32, Colonial Hotel was charged with stealing $24 worth of merchandise from Stewart Dry Goods Company and the Lerner Shop Saturday afternoon.

Mrs. Alfred Hinds, 1930 Strath-moor Boulevard, told police a young boy grabbed her purse containing $11 at 7:30 last night while she was walking at Eastern Parkway and Willow. Edgar Elliott, 209 S. Second, reported a man held him and took $8 at 10 p.m. on First near Market.

37, was treated at Bartholomew County Hospital, Columbus, for cuts. Two passengers in the Keyses car, Sgt. Leroy Sawyer, 20, Camp Atterbury, and his wife, Mrs. Bet- ty Sawyer, 19, were taken to Camp Atterbury Hospital with cuts and bruises. Truck Driver Not Hurt Also treated for minor injuries was a passenger in the pickup truck, Joseph Bridges, Camp Atterbury.

The truck driver, Ray mond Bluey, Camp Atterbury, was not hurt. Indiana State police said Bluey, traveling north, crossed to the left side of the highway at Indiana State Road 79 junction with U.S. 31 and crashed into Keys' car, going south. Keys drove off the shoulder to try to avoid the collision, police said. The car was knocked about 30 feet.

The truck turned over twice. Keys was the owner of the Abode Venetian Blind Company, 936 W. Hill. Visiting Parents In Seymour He, his wife, and their two sons, Larry, 13, and Dennis, 7, were spending the week end with his parents Mr. and Mrs.

E. R. Keys, at Seymour, Ind. The sons were at their grandparents' home the time of the accident. Relatives said Mr.

and Mrs. Keys met the Sawyers, friends of theirs, in Edinburg and were going to visit Keys' sister. Mrs. Theodore Wells, North Vernon, Ind. Other survivors are a sister, Mrs.

Paul T. Snow, and a brother, Dennis Keys, both of North Vernon. The funeral will be at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Foss Funeral Home, Seymour. 1 Hopkinsville Resident And Central City Man Die Madisonville, Oct.

19 CP) Two men were killed in automobile accidents today in the Second Kentucky State Police Area. The week-end toll in the area was three including an accident at Marion yesterday in which Earl Mattox, 55, Brownsburg, was killed. Eugene Waters, 26, Hopkinsville, suffered fatal injuries early today in a crash six miles south of Hopkinsville. Wilbert D. Jagoe, 29, Central City, was killed when his automobile crashed into a bridge abutment on KY 75 near Bevier in Muhlenberg County.

Two Harlan Women, Boy In Barren, and Man Killed Frankfort, Oct. 19 (JP) Two women were killed in a traffic mishap in Harlan County yesterday. State police said the women were pedestrians. Thev were identified as Beatrice Bowman Davis, 21, and Nannie Bowman, 40, of Closplint. They were struck on KY 38, which runs from Harlan to the Virginia state line.

Police said Russell Hoover, 9, of Smiths Grove, was injured fatally yesterday in an accident on KY 90 in Barren County. The boy died IVz hours later. Police said Dave Roy Thomas, 60, of New Haven, died yesterday of injuries suffered Thursday in a traffic accident on U. S. 31-E in Nelson County.

Rosenberg Favors Legalized Gaming, Peace In Korea H. A. I. Rosenberg said last night he favors legalized gambling, immediate federal handling of the ing of a Government-financed bridge between Louisville a ad Indiana. These were among stands taken by the independent candidate for Congress from the Third District in a radio talk over WKLO.

He said he also favored socialized medicine and 'an immediate end of the Korean War. Rosenberg called for taxing off- a l- i i i i a a uatii anu ioiiery ueiung, certain types of card games, and "stock- marKet gamDiing." me proceeds to the Government would allow elimination of income taxes, he said. He urged a vote "for the man" rather than the "party label," saying other candidates in the race are puppets of political machines. 2 Cars Are Destroyed In rire Two automobiles were de- OUUTCU 111 a KdldKC 1UC XL 11117 rear of an apartment building at 1942 Shuff at 4 a.m. yesterday.

A 50-gallon tank of oil used in heat- ing the apartments exploded during the blaze, firemen said. Cause of the fire was not determined. 4 Seized as Drunk Drivers City police yesterday "arrested four men on drunken-driving charges. They were listed as John J. Gray.

26. of 2733 W. Chestnut: James L. McLaughlin, 57, of 3668 Taylor Boulevard; Jerry R. Har- nng, 21, Vine Grove, and Boleslaw E.

Wieczarek, 27, a soldier stationed at Fort Knox. 4 sister, Miss Lillian Steinmetz, and 20 grandchildren. The funeral will be at 8:30 a m. Wednesday at the residence and at 9 a.m. at St.

Vincent De Paul Church. Burial" will be in St. Michael Cemetery. MRS. SARAH TUFTS The funeral for Mrs.

Sarah Tufts, 317 Zorn, will be at 10 a.m. tomorrow in Frankfort, Ky. Mrs. Tufts, 64, died at 9 p.m. Saturday at Jewish Hospital.

A former resident of Frankfort, she had lived here several years. Survivors are two sisters, Mrs. H. Franklin, Shelbyville, and Mrs. Louis Estill, Frankfort.

MRS. VIRGINIA RUCKER Mrs. Virginia Rucker, 47, office manager for the R. C. Riebel Advertising Agency, Louisville, died at 5:30 a.m.

yesterday at St. Edward's Hospital, New Albany. Her home was in Grandview Village, near New Albany. She is survived by her husband, Ben F. Rucker; a son, Wesley J.

Rucker; a daughter, Miss Patricia Ann Rucker; parents, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Leptic, Louisville; two brothers, John and Milton Leptic, both of Dallas, and three sisters, Mrs. Malcolm D. Puckett, Louisville, and Mrs.

Ralph Allbritton and Mrs. Eileen Haag, both of Memphis. The funeral will be at 10 a.m. Wednesday at St. Paul's Episcopal Church, New Albany.

Burial will be in Graceland Memorial Park. The body is at Seabrook Funeral Home. AMZI W. KIRKHAM Amzi W. Kirkham, 80, a retired Corydon, Ind.

farmer died at 12:15 a.m. yesterday in his home, 3000 Eastern Avenue. He moved to Louisville 25 years ago. Survivors include four sons, Herman Kirkham, Corydon; Raymond Kirkham, Muncie, Maurice Kirkham, Fowler, and Ezra Kirkham; two sisters, Mrs. Marvin Buse, Jeffersonville, and Mrs.

Earl R. Baker; three brothers, John R. Kirkham and Oscar Kirkham, both of Muncie, and Osa Kirkham, Des Moines; two sisters, Mrs. Maida Shaffer, Green Point, and Mrs. Gail Shoemaker, Elizabeth, 16 grandchildren, and 14 great-grandchildren.

Funeral and burial will be at 2 p.m. tomorrow in the Pleasant Ridge E.U.B. Church at Corydon. Plane Crash Kills Three Hoosiers Pana, 111., Oct. 19 (JP) Three Evansville, residents, missing on a flight from 111., to Evansville since last Tuesday night, were found dead today in the wreckage of their plane.

The wrecked plane was spotted in thick brush about four miles southeast of Pana today by a Civil Air Patrol pilot. The bodies were removed by state police and Shelby County sheriff's officers. Dead were Mrs. Phyllis Brack-ett, 27, 301 S. Denby, wife of an Evansville police sergeant; Albert Lacy Wilson, 46, 3007 Bellemeade, vice-president of Wilson and Wilson a well-drillers' supply firm in Evansville, and the pilot, Jack Brindley, 5416 N.

Fares, Evansville. Printer Motorist Is Killed Lima, Ohio, Oct. 19 (JP) John D. Robinson, .34, Printer, was killed yesterday when his car overturned on U. S.

33 near New Hampshire in Auglaize County. about 7 o'clock. They entered the kitchen and were confronted by a man holding a gun who said, "Don't move or I'll shoot." The man left without harming them after Mr. Fahrenkamp replied, "Don't shoot; just go away." The man had entered the home by breaking a glass in the kitchen door. The entire house had been ransacked, but nothing, was stolen.

.0 Courier-Journal Photo Dique Eldred, Princeton Leader, Dies Special Th Courier-Journal Princeton, Oct. 19. Dique Eldred, Princeton busi ness and civic leader for 50 years, died today at his home here. He was 77. Eldred continued, in partnership with his brothers, the late Shelley and Charles Eldred, the hardware business established by his father.

Dique Eldred was a deacon and elder in Central Presbyterian Church here for 30 years. He served on the Princeton Board of Education for 20 years and during his service the City acquired the Princeton Collegiate Institute and turned it into a City school. He served several terms on the Princeton City Council, and dur ing his years pn that body the City installed a modern water supply system. Survivors include Marshall Polk Eldred, Louisville attorney and president of the Louisville Baf Association, a son. THOMAS J.

HUTCHISON The funeral for Thomas J. Hutchison, 76, retired switchman for the Louisville Nashville Railroad, will be at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at White Funeral Home. Burial will be in Evergreen Cemetery. He died at 8:30 p.m.

Saturday at Kentucky Baptist Hospital. Hutchison, of 113 W. Collins Court, was With the railroad for 42 years before he retired in 1947. He also was in the real-estate business in the South End several years ago. Survivors include his wife, Mrs.

Lillian Hutchison, and a son, Jess R. Hutchison. MRS. ANNE S. BAKER Mrs.

Anne S. Baker, 68, died at 12:40 p.m. yesterday at her home on Tucker Station Road, Middletown, after an illness of several months. She was the wife of J. T.

Baker, a barber at Middletown, Ky. Other survivors include a daughter, Miss Minnie Baker; a brother, Younger Smither, Paris, and three sisters, Mrs. Owen Scott, Frankfort, Miss Laura Smither, Georgetown, Ky and Mrs. Victor Crain, Versailles, Ky. The funeral will be at 1 p.m.

tomorrow at the residence. Burial will be at Versailles. Race Driver Is Killed In Fort Wayne Crash Fort Wayne, Oct. 19 (JP) Sid Bufkin, 26, Mount Carmel, 111., race driver, was. killed today in the 25-lap big-car feature race at Fort Wayne Speedway.

A car driven by Bobby King, 29, Muncie, crowded Bufkin's car to the wall on the southeast turn in the second lap. Bufkin's car flipped over and landed upside down on the guard rail. King was not hurt. In an earlier race, Vincent Le-May, veteran Fort Wayne driver; was injured seriously when he was thrown out of his car. The car went over the north wall and hit a tree.

Mission Study Class Set Here October 30 Sixty-five local chapters of The Woman's Society of Christian Service of The Methodist Church will participate in a mission study class October 30 at Fourth Avenue Methodist Church, 318 W. St. Catherine. Subject of the class will be "Home Missions and Human Rights. Miss' Dorothy Nyland, New York, who recently made a trip around the world, will be guest teacher.

Not Paying for Paper He Took Laid to Man A man who police said didn't leave payment for a newspaper he took from a sidewalk stand at Eighth and Walnut was arrested near the stand at 6:30 p.m. yesterday. Charged with petit larceny. he was listed as Melvin Murphy, no rrn 11 1 1 I vi. wo w.

wamui. August B. Lang, 58, owner of Lang Advertising Specialties, died at 2:35 p.m. yesterday in his home, 1506 Cherokee Road. Lang had not been active in.

the business, formerly located at 1508 Bardstown Road, since he became ill 10 months ago. He was a member of the Elks Club, Highland Post American Legion, and the Advertising Club of Louisville. Survivors include a brother, Karl H. Lang, and six sisters, Miss Emma Lang, Miss Caroline Lang, Mrs. John G.

Stilli, Mrs. Walter F. Heick, Mrs. Pierce Woolfolk, and Mrs. Ben O.

Ford. The funeral will be at 2 p.m. tomorrow in Maas Funeral Home. Burial will be in Cave Hill Cemetery. WILLIAM J.

YUNT, SR. William J. Yunt, 76, a retired carpenter for Philip Morris Company, died at 12:05 an. yesterday at SS. Mary Elizabeth Hospital.

He lived at 1719 Youngland. Yunt retired in 1941. He also worked at the old Axton-Fisher Tobacco Company for many years. Survivors include his wife, Mayme E. Yunt; four sons, Albert Yunt," Thomas Yunt, William J.

Yunt, and Joseph Yunt; four daughters, Mrs. Benjamin Harrington, Mrs. Lillian Allen, Mrs. Donald Calvin, and Mrs. William Maurer; three sisters, Mrs.

Ada Fink, Mrs. George Rutledge, and Mrs. Mamie Smith; four grandchildren, and three great-grandchildren. The funeral will be at 9 a.m. Wednesday at St.

Helen's Church. Burial will be in Calvary Cemetery. JOSEPH M. STEINMETZ Joseph M. Steinmetz, 61, a salesman here for Swift Si Company for the past 38 years, died yesterday noon at St.

Joseph Infirmary. He lived at 724 E. St. Catherine. Survivors are his wife, Mrs.

Margaret Steinmetz; five sons, Pvt. Raymond G. Steinmetz, in the Army in Korea; Edward J. Steinmetz, Emil II. Steinmetz, Albert L.

Steinmetz, and Kenneth J. Steinmetz; four daughters, Mrs. U. S. Whalen, Mrs.

Eugene Week-man, Mrs. Louis Clements, and Mrs. Joseph Eith: four brothers, Lawrence F. Steinmetz, William F. Steinmetz, Edward J.

Steinmetz, and Robert L. Steinmetz; a Hillbilly Singer Weds On Auditorium Stage New Orleans, Oct. 19 (JP) Hank Williams, 30, hillbilly singer and composer, was married in a public ceremony today to Billie Jones, 20, Bossier City, a girl who didn't like hillbilly music before she met Williams." The marriage was performed on the stage of the Municipal Auditorium, where Williams is appearing. The Rev. L.

R. Shelton, Algiers, First Baptist Church, performed the ceremony before an audience that packed the auditorium. Retail-Credit Group Elects Jolm Einricb John Emrich, of the Lincoln Bank St Trust Company, has been elected president of the Retail Credit Manager's Association for the coming year. He succeeded Miss Hilma Geiser. Mrs.

Lillian of Montgomery Ward St Company, was chosen vice-president and Carson L. Bard was reelected secretary-treasurer. HAROLD D. KEYS Killed in Indiana accident C.I.O. Urges 50-Cent Rise In Wage Floor Whitehouse Re-elected By Kentucky Council The Kentucky State C.I.O.

Council yesterday proposed a 50-cent increase in the federal minimum hourly wage, bringing it to $1.25 an hour. A resolution favoring the increase was among 29 passed at the closing session of the council's 13th annual convention at the Henry Clay Hotel. Other resolutions passed favored a fair-employment practices law, repeal of the Taft-Hartley Act, and federal aid to education. Sales Taxes Opposed The group expressed opposition to sales and wage taxes, discrimination against old people in hiring practices, and local option elections. Al Whitehouse, Covington, was re-elected president of the council although he did not attend any of the sessions because of illness.

Other officers re-elected: Vice-president, Henry Siebert, Newport; executive-board members, Alva Bush. Ashland; II. F. Wheeler, Fort Thomas, and John W. Tierney, W.

C. Sigler, and William B. Sebree, all of Louisville. About 200 persons attended the convention session yesterday. United States Senator Tom Underwood, Lexington, was among the speakers.

Cancer Victim, 3, Dies Two Weeks After Santa Visit Brockway, Oct. 19 (JP) Kenny "Buddy" Bundy, 3, victim of a cancer, died today, two weeks after getting his wish to see Santa Claus before seeing God. Buddy's parents told him several weeks ago that he was going to see God. Buddy accepted the fact with a smile, but he asked his parents if he'd see Santa Claus first. Two weeks ago Buddy's parents and some of their friends gave a big party for him.

Santa Claus talked with Buddy ana gave mm several presents. Before Santa left, Buddy told him to "be sure and come back Christmas and visit the other kids." McCarthy To Talk In Austin Today Indianapolis, Oct. 19 (JP) Senator McCarthy of Wisconsin will come to Indiana tomorrow to campaign for his equally controversial Republican colleague, Senator Jenner. McCarthy will address a noon meeting in Gary and then take a plane to Louisville. From Louisville he Will drive to Austin tn address a Ninth District rally tomorrow nignt.

Jenner is npacpH in a hoivi fight for re-election against Gov ernor Henry jr. Schricker, McCarthy, victor hv a hi a margin in the Wisconsin G.O.P. primary, is not considered in much danger in the Novcmhpr 4 general election. Third of Carville's Lepers Plan To Vote Carville. Oct.

19 (JP) Nearly a third of the 386 lnrnsv patients at the United States Public Service Hospital here have registered to vote in the Novem ber general election. Among the 253 nonregistrants are many living under assumed names wno did not want to disclose their identitv or fnrmr place of residence. Others do not iuuui tne two-year residence requirement and still others are not U. S. Citizens.

Nine of the 133 registered voters are Republicans. The rest are Democrats. I UJu hw Anna F. O'Grady Thursday. Miss Grady resigned to be come administrator of the Frank lin, Hospital.

She had been the administrator here since June, 1949. bottle. of water from the River Jordan in the Holy Land; water from the Lourdes shrine in France; small articles from parishes that Father Stuart has served; an American flag owned by his mother; a map of the parish and list of parishioners; an American coin and foreign currency, and copies of. The Courier-Journal, The Voice of St. Matthews, The Record, The Register, and The Sunday Visitor.

Courier-Journal Photo OFFICIATING PRIESTS at the cornerstone laying at St. Margaret Mary Church are, from left, the Rev. Ehrich Stuart, parish pastor; the Rt Rev. James H. Willett, celebrant, and the Rev.

Donald Gallagher, assistant pastor of Our Lady of Lourdes Church. Not shown is the Rev. Bernard Boone, chaplain of St. Joseph Infirmary, who also officiated. CornerstoneL aid for Catholic Church Armed Man Greets Minister And Family on Return Home school and nun's home.

Work on the church is expected to be finished next spring, and on "the school next summer. Members of the St. Margaret Mary parish now attend Mass in Holy Trinity Church. The Rev. Ehrich Stuart is parish pastor.

Among articles sealed in the cornerstone were: A Sunday missal; a Sacred Heart badge; a medal blessed by Pope Pius XII during Holy Year; a Work Expected To End In Spring The cornerstone for a new St. Margaret Mary Roman Catholic Church, on Shelbyville Road at Arterburn, was laid yesterday. Celebrant was the Rt. Rev. James H.

Willett, pastor of St. Joseph Church in Bardstown. The church is Dart of a $300,000 project which includes a new A Louisville minuter and his family were met by an armed intruder last night when they entered their home at 733 S. Western Parkway after returning from a visit in Lexington, Ky. The Rev.

Fred Fahrenkamp, pastor of St. Luke Evangelical Reformed Church, told police that he, his wife, and their 10-year-old daughter, Susan, got home.

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