Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page 21

Location:
Louisville, Kentucky
Issue Date:
Page:
21
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1 i I -jnr U. I. 0 I I 5 1 1. 1. F.

I 0 4 0 I 0 i FJ 16, 1 0 1 1 0 I roliccmanliandinuOiitTickol ni Owner (ind Hummer maiavn FAbltS FOB HEARTBURN Cprrif: i idnor i irv prove BU-ant ,1 as rr.u--ri s'or .1.1 or." 'e a rr i- leading ihiets. Get Bell-ans today (or the fastest known relief 2. congestion rciisvsd cr liilUlJU I jn Mnu DpjiiI ol iw Imiiik j0oph V. 33. of 732 W.

tomorrow at D.nuhrrty S-n. Ail ViOPX CUARASTEED milkM) LE It WHO 706 S. Shelby WA6914 AVE VVLL Ju fo drofM ConvvJ in ckh nnvtri) Mid cV-jifd unu 0frB tfd di, yrjf hi f-H tr nd df hnruim! Hrarrnv tifK iit f'J houri fomt tuntiiM no srniKt) rug, leave no handover, it mi (vel liioutth yrf p4ar are ke-d ith trmrni. tor Comew) and ei rrlwt. CuiaMe Availablt at all druiiH.

Tonight at 6:00 lu'llhovs Fare Pane! aiKionnir Ca The County grand jury yesterday indicted the owner and the manager of the Old Inn Hotel, Sixth and Main, on a charge of maintaining a nuiance. Two bellboys there were indicted for pandering for a 16-year-old girl. The first indictment charges Allen K. Cook, 1734 Fleming Road, owner of the hotel, and Stanley D. Foust, manager, with maintaining a "common, ill-governed, and disorderly house." Foust lives at the hotel.

Cook said that any statement he made might sound like "sour grapes, "but it looks to me like we are being persecuted by Cap tain (Priest) Fry and the (Lou- isville) Vice Squad. So far I kno h.is hion ell mana ihn by Mr. Kout We h.ue tried during the year an. I a half 1 have owned th hotel to operate a very respectable place. "We had no warnings from the police.

We have no control over couples properly registering for rooms and cannot monitor them. 1 am very unhappy over the whole thing." Turned Over to Court The two bellbovs are Chauncey "Goody" Ellis, 518 Finzer. and Austin Edmund Shively, 26, of 2117 Magazine. Police records show there have been 31 arrests at the hotel since January, 1954. Twenty-two of those were for prostitution, two were for pandering, and one was for a liquor-law violation.

Assistant Commonwealth's At- PAY YOUR BILLS RlinfJPT MUSMnPR wrong yrtnofeplmf9yu UUUULI UlHllHULnO d.bt with ONE paymM you caw afford. KOMI INTERVfW BY APPOINTMENT Member of American Association of Credit Counselor no et'maxag its 301-1 CoUman Bldg 309 S. 3rd U. 3237 W. Broadway, and at 9 a.m.

at H'tly Cross Church Burial will be in St. Michael's Cemetery. ADOI.PH KRAMER The funeral for Ado'ph Kramer, retired upholsterer, will be at 2 m. today at Neurath Funeral Home, 725 E. Market.

Burial will be in St. Stephen Cemetery. Kramer, of 707 Cecil, died at 3 a m. yesterday at Kentucky Baptist Hospital. He was 97.

He owned and operated the old Central Trimming Company, 225 S. Ninth, until he discontinued it and retired about 10 years ago. He is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Clyde H. Cecil: a granddaughter, Mrs.

L. P. Mills, and a great-granddaughter. Ct OPEN 'Til MONDAY Oldttt ftudfvr Srvi In LunviM Every Day Ie Thrift MICHAEL BILL O'SHEA BISHOP JMES ARA DUNN BATES Ooirft soy yy eeura" ff this on fedbiFd vot todk till ppi Laurence F. ihe uncle had brought her here from her home in Term.

In Federal Court Monda, the uncle, William Gilliam, pleaded guilty to violating the Mann Act (transporting a woman across a state line for immoral purposes). The County grand jury yesterday also indicted Gilliam on a charge of having carnal knowledge of a female. The charge grew out of testimony that he had had sexual relations with the girl, according to Higgins. The girl has been turned over to Juvenile Court authorities. The indictments were submitted directly to the grand jury by the Commonwealth's attorney's office.

Vice Squad Capt. Fry and several other Louisville police officers appeared as witnesses. Odk. was found dead in Iv.s auto-i mobile at 8 am. yesterday.

Deputy Coroner Harry Elstone said Nallv committed suicide by carbon-monoxide poisoning. City Patrolman Paul Anderson said he found NaiH's car at 8 a.m. in a no-parking zone in front of 622 E. Chestnut. The motor was running.

Anderson started to put a ticket on the car, and then saw Nally lyin? on the front seat. A rubber hose led from the car's muffler to the interior of the car, Anderson said. Nally, an employee of Donaldson Baking Company, had been ill. He was a veteran of World War II. Survivors are hi? wife, Mrs.

Mary Alberta Blair Nally; three daughters, Darlene, Sandy Lee, and Patsy Ann Nally; two sons, Joseph D. and William C. Nally; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W.

Nally, and three sisters, Mrs. Martha McDonald, Mrs. Dorothy Wilkerson, and Mrs. Doris Erwin. The funeral will be at 9:30 a.m.

tomorrow at Dougherty's Chapel, 1230 S. Third, and at 10 a.m. at St. Louis Bertrand Church. Burial will be in Zachary Taylor National Cemetery.

EDWARD SMITHEY The funeral for Edward Smithey, retired employee of the Kentucky Indiana Terminal Railroad, will be at 11 a.m. Friday at Owen Funeral Home, 2611 Virginia. Burial will be in Rest-haven Memorial Park. Smithey, 83, died at 9 p.m. Monday at his home, 4205 Vermont.

He was a member of Parkland Baptist Church. Survivors include six daughters, Mrs. D. H. Kennedy, Mrs.

Irvin Utterback, Mrs. Dell Monroe, Mrs. Walter Hazelip, and the Misses Estelle and Alma Smithey; three sons, Thomas Frank I and Gilbert Smithey; three sisters, Mrs. Nancy Ransdell, Graft- ton, Mrs. Gabe Carr, Ghent, and Mrs.

Ella Hogue; 16 grandchildren, and 14 great- grandchildren. WALTER LEE SMITH I Walter Lee Smith, an employee 1 of the Kennedy Realty Company, died at 10:55 a.m. Monday at Kentucky Baptist Hospital. He lived on Hudson Lane near Fern Creek. I Smith, 50, was a native of Horse Cave, Ky.

He had lived in the Louisville area for about 20 years. He was a member of Cedar Creek Baptist Church and the Parkland Lodge 638, F. A. M. I Survivors include his wife, Mrs.

Virginia Evelyn Smith; a daughter, Miss Elizabeth Ann Smith; two sons, Pfc. Ray Gordon I Smith, now stationed in Hawaii, and Lois Eugene Smith; two sisters, Mrs. Gillie May Smith and Mrs. Lora Hopewell, and two brothers, J. T.

and W. O. Smith. The body is at the McAfee Funeral Home in Buechel. MRS.

MINNIE L. HARTLEY Mrs. Minnie Lynn Hartley, 74, died at 11:40 a.m. yesterday at her home, 114 S. 43d.

She was a member of Willis Stewart chapter of Order of Eastern Star. Survivors are a son, Fay C. Hartley; a daughter, Mrs. William A. Tharp, and a grandson.

The funeral will be at 10:30 a.m. Friday at Schoppenhorst's Chapel, 1832 W. Market. Burial will be in Resthaven Memorial Park. MRS.

LUCILLE M. DEDDENS Mrs. Lucille M. Deddens died of cancer at 2:30 p.m. yesterday at her home, 3738 Garland.

She was the wife of Herman J. Deddens who operates a grocery store at 3919 River Park Drive. Mrs. Deddens, 56, also is survived by six sons: the Rev. Nor-bert J.

Deddens, assistant pastor of St. Brigid's Church and professor of theology at Bellarmine College; Kenneth Paul Eugene Jack and William J. Deddens; a sister, Mrs. Julius J. Miller, and four grandchildren.

The funeral will be at 8:30 a.m. I A. Dorsey Fined for Gaming Alonzo R. Dorsey, 45, was fined $100 in Municipal Court yesterday after a lottery charge was amended to disorderly conduct. He was also placed under $500 bond to stop gambling for six months.

Dorsey was arrested last Friday at his home, 535 S. 12th Police said they found lottery tickets and other lottery para phernalia there. HELP YOU WA 0835 Daf in The Classified Ade. CO -OB VALUE YOU GET I 1 1 1 ni i I.M1 1 1 iW i 0 iTrW 111 UTn i ill ii 1 iB I i i i a ul i I i i 1 1 I iff i rl I jB I 1 I Isl If I r-- i If; rn 1 (ml ilMm 1 a iwvw If' I -sy ji- fv" fntortoinmont in glamoroul Holly oodl Ro surt to tunc In tonighrl Presented by your CHRYSLER DEALER CHANNEL 3 WAVE-TV And Stilt trt tni Prompt Oelivtry Locally shipment: f.o.o. iouisviui HOSPITAL BEDS Mattresses Safety Bed Ralls Over-Bed Bars Hollywood Adjustable WALKER RUBBER SHEETING ltD PADS URINALS PATIENTS' COWNS COMMODES Everest Jennings WHEEL CHAIR Fold to 10 Inch E.

J. CHAIR COMMODE Sick fyjDJTh REID Hospital Supply 612 S. 5th 9 WA 0631 Turn Your Rent Worry to Rent Money through a Classified Ad. MANY OTHER SAVINGS LIKE THESI St. Petersburg New York City.

17.75 Chicago 6.70 Detroit I 75 Atlanta 8.55 (Plut U. S. To.) GREYHOUND BUS 0EP0T 5th and Broadway Phone WA 3331 RENTS 4351 -tfl V. ir.J'?; iOrtfOr It lowest-priced car the 188-hp Custom 2-door 6-passenger Sedan is shown above. Oilier modele are: a 4-door Sedan, a hardtop Coupe, and a new 4-door all-metal 8-passenger Station Wagon.

AND LOOK AT THE EXTRA SIZE, BEAUTY, POWER, AND If for normal driving, 4-barreI pickup for fast get aways and safer passing. Revolutionary new high-comprrssion spark plugs provide top performance at ali speeds help pra vent fouling and pre-ignition. You nave when yon buy. Compare out allowance on your present car. It'i based on high-voluma sales.

We can afford to be generous, Y'ou protect future trade-in value. Mercury coo sistently leads its field for rcsalu value. Mercury's bigger all over than the "low-price" cars', in length, width, and wheelbase. You get exclusive styling Mercury's standout styling is shared by no other car. You get high horsepower plus scpf.r-toroi V-8 performance in etcry Mercury.

(There i 38 horsepower in the Customs and Montereys, 198 horsepower in the ultra-smart Montclaira). There's a 4-harrel vacuum carburetor on every model at no extra cost. You enjoy 2-harrel economy Mercury's prices start below 0 113 models in the low-price field loid en comporiion of moiwfocroren' Kggrtd lilt fottory rttoi' pri. JcXk-: IT PAYS TO OWN A x-A-tx Mercury's in the Custom series FUTURE Don't min tho big toevinox hit, fd Suffrvan' "TOAST OF THi TOWN," Sunday tvtnmo, 7.00 to 8 00, Station WHAS-TW, dhonntl 14s MONARCH AUTO COMPANY DOWNTOWN MERCURY, INC. JOHNNY JONES MOTORS Brook and Broadway Louisville 710 West Broadway Louisville Vincennes Market New Albany, Ini STYLING.

SUPER POWER AAA- A 4aA AA.MM AAAAAAAAAAkAAA LJJlJl A ri A A AAA.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Courier-Journal
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Courier-Journal Archive

Pages Available:
3,668,266
Years Available:
1830-2024