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The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page 6

Location:
Louisville, Kentucky
Issue Date:
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6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

4 1Q.U8UXESDAY. JULY 1, 1986 ail cell drives home a hard lesson Earl Landgrebe dies; was Nixon supporter tickets in Lexington 1 si In a 1979 interview, Landgrebe said, "I struggled with Nixon (on the Watergate issue) for a year. I studied. I delved into it I searched my soul." He decided to stand by Nixon because "he had not committed a treasonable offense." Landgrebe was one of the 42 men who gathered in the White House with Nixon before Nixon's televised resignation in August 1974. "It was the low point because this dumb truck driver realized an era had ended," Landgrebe said.

His support for Nixon, against the advice of Republican leaders, may have cost him re-election. He lost the general election by 35,000 votes to Floyd Fithlan, the first Democrat to win the 2nd District in more than 40 years. Landgrebe returned to Valparaiso, where he was president of Landgrebe Motor Transport Inc. Survivors include his wife, Helen Field Landgrebe; two sons; two doubt that the chance of being arrested on parking-ticket violations has risen. The system was inspired in part by a backlog of outstanding summonses for all kinds of cases, including about 1,000 for delinquent parking tickets.

At the beginning of each shift's role call, Roney said, a sergeant distributes batches of warrants. The officers are instructed to serve as many as possible during their shift. As a result he said, there are "all kinds of warrants out there on the streets," including warrants for those who have failed to pay their tickets. Pratt then an area manager of Central Parking Systems and now company manager, said his former job required him to make many rapid trips around town to company lots. The company has no parking lots near its downtown office.

Instead of searching for a parking place every time he returned to the office, Pratt said, he often pulled into a nearby loading zone, turned on his car's emergency blinkers and put a business card on the dashboard to indicate he was stopped on business. For a while, the officer who patrolled the area allowed him to do that Then she began to issue him tickets. "I kept getting these tickets and tickets and tickets," he said. At one point he had $100 worth of tickets due on one day. When he was arrested, it was because he failed to pay three tickets by a March court date.

Pratt said he was so busy with work that week that the court date slipped his mind until the day before. He said he put a check in the mail to cover the tickets but it apparently did not arrive in time. On March 25, a plainclothes policeman showed up at Pratt's office and took him to jail. "I thought I'd seen daylight for the last time," said Pratt whose wife bailed him out within hours. Pratt said that he, like many downtown business people he knows, never gave parking tickets much thought.

"Being from Morehead I'd take those suckers and I'd chuck them in the back seat or I'd throw them Into the circular file," he said. "I just didn't pay much attention to them, because where I'm from nobody does." He said be would pay attention from now on. a dies as tractor overturns on him KENTUCKY DEATHS near Athertonvllle while pulling two wagons. Peake is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs.

James Peake of Route 4, Hodgenville; six brothers, James Kirby Peake of Richmond and John Nathan Peake, Jason Boone Peake, Jesse Matthew Peake, Justin Michael Peake and Jeffrey Wayne Peake; four sisters, Elizabeth Nun-nelee of Houston, Anne Vlttitow of Culvertown, Mary Pauline Peake representative, Lavey Floyd, dies 174 AP Phete Earl F. Landgrebe Three-term congressman brothers; one sister; and several grandchildren. The funeral will be at 2 p.m. Thursday at Our Shepherd Lutheran Church in Crown Point, with burial in Blachly Cemetery near Valparaiso. and Martha Jane Peake; his maternal grandparents, Mr.

and Mrs. Bar-nett Crepps of Deatsvllle; and his paternal grandmother, Mrs. Helen Peake of Route 4, Hodgenville. Visitation begins at 1 p.m. today at Joseph L.

Greenwell Funeral Home in New Haven. The funeral will be at 10 a.m. tomorrow at St. Catherine Catholic Church in New Haven, with burial in St Thomas Cemetery near Bards-town. ty Maybrien 28 grandchildren; and 16 great-grandchildren.

The funeral will be at 2 p.m. tomorrow at Pulaski Funeral Home, with burial in Lakeside Memorial Gardens. Visitation will be at the funeral home after 5 p.m. today. The family requests that expressions of sympathy take the form of contributions to the American Cancer Society.

s-t i VrlitSgUW II1UII UlfS alter mOtOrCVCle ns off highway Frem Stoff and Special Dispatches TOMPKINSVILLE, Ky. A 37-year-old Glasgow man was killed Sunday when his motorcycle ran off KY 214 about nine miles west of Tompkinsville and overturned. Gary W. England was pronounced dead at the Monroe County Medical Center shortly after the 4:45 p.m. accident police said.

Survivors include his wife, Char-lene England; two sons, Greg and Gabe England; a brother, David R. England of Indianapolis; and two sisters, Anita Mclntyre of Indiana and Gloria J. Leggitt of California. The funeral will be at 2 p.m. today at A.

F. Crow Son Funeral Home in Glasgow, with burial In Glasgow Municipal Cemetery. ASSOClOted PTOSS VALPARAISO. Ind. Funeral services will be held Thursday for Earl F.

Landgrebe, a former U.S. representative from Indiana's 2nd District who was a staunch support-' er of President Richard M. Nixon during the Watergate era. 1 Landgrebe, 70, died Sunday night, apparently from a heart attack at his home. He was elected to the U.S.

House in 1968, after serving 10 years in the Indiana Senate. He was re-elected in 1970 and 1972, but was defeated in 1974. When politicians were abandoning Nixon after the Watergate incident. Landgrebe stood firm. in early August 1874, when Nixon admitted he had tried to thwart the Watergate investigation, Landgrebe saia, "wnai ne am Me aaaea that he did not want to listen to the laterui tapes or read transcripts of l.

IJI. tt I .1. wiin me lacis. i ve goi a ciosea mind." LaRue boy, 13, The CMril Kentucky Bureeu A 1.1-vnnr-nlri I nRnp Tnnntv vnllth was killed Sunday afternoon when a tractor he was driving turned over on him. Joseph Edward Peake of Route 4, Hodgenville, died at 5 p.m., LaRue County Coroner Bobby Brownfield said.

Brownfield said Peake was crushed under his tractor's right wheel when it ran off a gravel road Four-term state Prom Staff and Special Dispatches SOMERSET, Ky. Former state Rep. Lavey L. Floyd died Sunday at his home in the Pointer community. He was 80.

Floyd was a state representative from Pulaski County's 2nd District for four terms before retiring in 1978. He had also been a member of Pulaski County Fiscal Court, a farm Murder suspect -m nein in Ainanv mi 1 The South Kentucky Bureau ALBANY, Ky. An Indiana man was beins held in the Clinton Countv Tall VAatorrinv nn nn TnHlftna mnr- der charge. Clinton County Sheriff Gordon Speck said Doyle Guffey, 33, of New Castle, was arrested without in-Z cident about 10 p.m. Saturday after Deputy Sheriff Shorty Daniels saw the suspect walking on old KY 90.

iiunev. a iormer Liinion iuumv resident, is believed to have been in the area about a week, Speck said. A warrant was Issued June 23 in Ixplosion, fire Associated' frost PARIS, Ky. A chemical reaction caused an explosion and fire yesterday at the Malllnckrodt Inc. i chemical manufacturing plant in 'Paris, authorities said.

Z'- A woman employee injured an an- kle when she jumped from a loading dock during evacuation of the plant, said a spokeswoman for Mallinck- rodt which has headquarters in St Louis. The spokeswoman said the plant suffered minor damage and will be reopened today. Hoosier killer's Associated Press WASHINGTON Donald Ray Wallace convicted for killing four members of an Evansville, family, yesterday lost a U.S. Supreme Court appeal in his at- tempt to overturn his death sen- tence. I The justices refused to hear Wallace's arguments that the judge who Cumberland passes Associated Press CUMBERLAND, Ky.

The Cum-, berland City Council yesterday approved two revenue-producing ordinances to keep the city from having to declare bankruptcy. The ordinances require an auto-sticker fee and raise sewage-service rates. "The council also gave first reading to a regulatory licence fee on the sale of alcoholic beverages. on parking Associated Press LEXINGTON, Ky. Parking violators in Lexington can check with Mark Pratt about taking their tickets seriously.

He learned the hard way from the Inside of a jail cell. Pratt, who said he has a "squeaky clean record," was not the first Lex-ingtonlan jailed for problems arising out of parking violations. Deputy District Court Clerk Roy Vanhoozer said. District Judge Michael B. Roney, who issued the warrant, said Pratt won't be the last, either.

Roney said a new warrant-serving system Involving police leaves no Steams man's drug trial is continued By ANNE PARDUE Staff Writer LONDON, Ky. The trial of a McCreary County I to 1 McCreary County businessman manufactur- has been continued to Aug. 18 in U.S. District Court The trial had been scheduled to begin yesterday. Herbert "Butch" Spencer, 46, was indicted in March on four counts in connection with the alleged manufacture and distribution of metham-phetamlne, which goes by the street names speed and crank.

Assistant U.S. District Attorney Michael Murphy and defense attorneys sought a delay for several reasons. They included a death in the family of one of the lawyers, the holiday weekend, the out-of-state arrest and jailing of a material government witness, and the entry over the weekend of a new lawyer to assist Spencer's defense. Spencer's lawyer, Julius L. Echeles of Chicago, filed a motion yesterday seeking dismissal of three of the counts, contending the chemical is a Schedule III drug, not Schedule II as described in the indictments.

(Drugs are classified in various schedules, depending on their danger.) A federal drug agent said in March that agents from state and federal law-enforcement groups who searched a commercial garage on Spencer's property In Stearns found enough equipment and ingredients to manufacture 5,000 pounds of methamphetamine, with a wholesale value of $50 million. Authorities have called the operation "the largest clandestine laboratory in the United States" for manufacturing methamphetamine. Agent James Malone of the federal Drug Enforcement Administration said yesterday that the investigation is continuing, but no one else has been arrested. Spencer was denied bail in March by U.S. Magistrate James Cook because of "the incredible amount of evidence available in this case." U.S.

District Judge Eugene Siler Jr. set Spencer's bond at $200,000 yesterday after government and defense lawyers agreed to it. Murphy said he is that the bail is sufficient to insure Spencer's appearance in court if he is released from the Laurel County Jail. pendence was hit by part of the stand. She was taken to Booth Hospital, where her condition was listed as stable.

Officials said the stand was moved about 35 feet by the winds, which gusted to nearly 50 mph. Cherokee Road. Funeral, 10 a.m. Tuesday, Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Church, 512 Breckinridge Lane. Ratterman's, 3711 Lexington Road, is in charge of arrangements.

Mrs. John M. Klnser, 69, of 4125 Browns Lane. Funeral, 11 a.m. Tuesday, Arch L.

Heady Hikes Point Funeral Home, 4109 Taylorsville Road. Courtland Ragland, 87, of 716 W. Woodlawn a native of Morgan-town. Funeral, 11 a.m. Wednesday, Arch L.

Heady Southern Funeral Home, 3601 Taylor Blvd. Mary Katherine Johnson Reno, 74, a native of West Point Funeral, 2 p.m. Tuesday, W. G. Hardy Shively Funeral Home, 4101 Dixie Highway.

Naoma R. Albert Richmond, 71, of 9802 Vleux Carre Drive. Funeral, 10 a.m. Tuesday, St Margaret Mary Catholic Church, 117 Arttrburn Drive. Heady Fern Creek Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

Carrie M. Sweazy Sageser, 54, of 8019 Edsel Lane, a native of Spencer County. Funeral, 2 p.m. Tuesday, Heady Fern Creek Funeral Home, 5406 Bardstown Road. Edgar Walter Steinbrook, 69, formerly of 1449 S.

Second St The funeral was held Monday at Schoppenhorst Underwood Funeral Home, 1832 W. Market St. Mark Stepp, 74, of 805 Hazel St Funeral, 2 p.m. Wednesday, A. D.

Porter Sons Funeral Home, 1300 W. Chestnut St Visitation will be after noon Tuesday. Woodrow W. Taylor, 71, of 9401 Bardstown Road, a native of Whites-burg. Memorial service, 11 a.m.

Tuesday, Cedar Creek Baptist Church, 7709 Bardstown Road. Girl hurt as winds down fireworks stand Wednesday, Harrod Bros. Funeral Home. HAZARD Alex Allen, 68, Combs, died here Monday. His wife, Rethia, survives.

Funeral, 1 p.m. Wednesday, Engle Funeral Home. Visitation will be after 6 p.m. Tuesday. HAZARD Oris Dlckeraon, 77, Busy, died there Monday.

His wife, Nannie, survives. Funeral, 2 p.m. Wednesday, Yerkes (Ky.) Baptist Church. Visitation at Engle Funeral Home will be after 6 p.m. Tuesday.

HODGENVILLE Martha Sights Lobb, died Monday in Elizabethtown. Bennett-Bertram Funeral Home Is in charge of arrangements. HOPKINSVILLE Lee Denton, 73, died here Saturday. Funeral, 11 a.m. Tuesday, Bandy Funeral Home in Nor-tonvllle.

HOPKINSVILLE Qulntie Wyatt Simmons, 86, died here Monday. Funeral, 10 a.m. Wednesday, Henninger Funeral Home. Visitation will be after 5 p.m. Tuesday.

HORSE CAVE Iva Arnold, 81, Route 1, Island, died there Sunday. Funeral, 2 p.m. Tuesday, Winn Funeral Home. Burial, Houk Cemetery in Metcalfe County. HYDEN James "Buck" Roberts, 44, formerly of Leslie County, died Friday in Westerville, Ohio.

His wife, Joan, survives. Funeral, 3 p.m. Tuesday, Stinnett Pentecostal Church of God in Essie. Visitation is at the church. Dwayne Walker Funeral Home is In charge of arrangements.

HYDEN Evelyn Ruth Wilson, 61, Helton, died there Sunday. Funeral, 2 p.m. Wednesday, Upper Beechfork United Methodist Church in Helton. Visitation is at the church. Dwayne Walker Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

KONA Carl Bullion, 70, died here Sunday. Funeral, 11 a.m. Thursday, Polly Craft Funeral Home in Jenkins. Visitation will be after noon Wednesday. LIBERTY Ethel Cundiff, 73, died Monday in Danville.

Her husband, Carson, survives. Funeral, 2 p.m. Wednesday, McKinney-Brown Funeral Home. Visitation will be after 5 p.m. Tuesday.

MAYFIELD T. J. Mason, 60, died here Sunday. Funeral, 10 a.m. Tuesday, Byrn Funeral Home.

MAYFIELD Rob Moses, 96, died here Sunday. Funeral, 2 p.m. Tuesday, Byrn Funeral Home. MOUNT STERLING Marie Ginn Redmond, 68, died here Monday. Funeral, 10 a.m.

Wednesday, Eastin-Taul Funeral Home. Visitation will be after 6 p.m. Tuesday. PADUCAH Betty Freeman, 90, died here Sunday. Funeral, 2:30 p.m.

Wednesday, Lindsey Funeral Home. Visitation will be after 5 p.m. Tuesday: PADUCAH Lawrence Grimm, 57, died here Monday. Graveside service, 1 p.m. Wednesday, Darks River Cemetery.

Visitation at Lindsey Funeral Home will be after noon Tuesday. PINEVILLE Pearl Hubbard, 67, Kettle Island, died here Saturday. Funeral, 2 p.m. Tuesday, Durham Funeral Home. PRINCETON Ralph Overfleld, 68, died here Monday.

His wife, Martha, survives. Morgan's Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. RUSSELL SPRINGS Alger Wilson, 69, died here Sunday. His wife, Reba, survives. Funeral, 2 p.m.

Tuesday, Bernard Funeral Home. SCIENCE HILL Cecil Vaught, 81, Beech Grove, died Sunday in Somerset His wife, Bessie, survives. Funeral, 2:30 p.m. Tuesday, Morris Hlslope Funeral Home. SPRINGFIELD Sally Montgomery Young, 74, died Sunday in Louisville.

Funeral, 11 a.m. Wednesday, Holy Rosary Catholic Church. Visitation at Hale-Polin-Robinson Funeral Home will be after 11 a.m. Tuesday. STANFORD James Wilson Hill, 82, died Sunday In Lancaster.

Graveside service, 11 a.m. Tuesday, Buffalo Springs Cemetery. Fox Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. VINE GROVE Bronlslawa Z. Wells, 63, died Monday In Fort Knox.

Funeral, 11 a.m. Wednesday, St. Brigtd Catholic Church. Visitation at Stovall Funeral Home will be after 9:30 a.m. Wednesday.

WEST LIBERTY The funeral for Sarah M. Day, 81, will be at 2 p.m. Tuesday at Potter Funeral Home. She died Sunday. ft BARDSTOWN Austin A.

Lewis, 63, died here Sunday. Funeral 1 p.m. Wednesday, St John AME Zion Church. Visitation at the church will be after 8 a.m. Wednesday.

Mann Greenwell Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. BEAVER DAM Thomas D. Baker, 69, formerly of Ohio County, died Sunday in Evansville, Ind. Funeral, 1 p.m. Wednesday, William L.

Danks Funeral Home. Visitation will be after 2 p.m. Tuesday. BEDFORD Sid Cooke, 82, died Sunday in Madison, Ind. Funeral, 2 p.m.

Tuesday, Ransdell Funeral Home. Burial, Carrollton IOOF Cemetery in Carroll County. BEREA Raymond Hines, 39, died here Sunday after an illness. His wife, Lois, survives. Funeral, 2 p.m.

Tuesday, Wray Funeral Home. BOWLING GREEN Sandra Kay Harp, 32, died Sunday in Lexington after an illness. Her husband, Dallas, survives. Funeral, 2 p.m. Wednesday, Johnson-Vaughn Funeral Home.

BOWLING GREEN Helen E. Robinson, 81, died here Saturday. Funeral, 2:30 p.m. Tuesday, J. Kirby Son Funeral Home.

BOWLING GREEN Ethel Pack, 77, Brownsville, died here Monday. Funeral, 10 a.m. Wednesday, J. Kirby Son Funeral Home. Visitation will be after 1 p.m.

Tuesday. CADIZ Henry Wllkerson Jr, 54, died here Sunday. His wife, Darlene, survives. Babbage Funeral Home in Hopkinsvllle is in charge of arrangements. CADIZ Robert Vernon Herndon, 71, died here Sunday.

His wife, Mary, survives. Funeral, 2 p.m. Wednesday, Goodwin Funeral Home. Visitation will be after 4 p.m. Tuesday.

CAMPBELLSVILLE Llllle Ble-vins, 93, died here Sunday. Funeral, 2 p.m. Tuesday, Parrott Ramsey Funeral Home. CANEYVILLE Catherine Taylor, 96, died here Sunday. Funeral, 11 a.m.

Wednesday, Dermitt Funeral Home. CARROLLTON Thomas F. Craig, 66, formerly of Carrollton, died Monday in Louisville. His wife, Lavern, survives. Funeral, 2 p.m.

Wednesday, Graham Dunn Funeral Home in Carroll-ton. Visitation will be after 5 p.m. Tuesday. DANVILLE Ruth Eliza Tucker, 83, died here Sunday. Funeral, 2 p.m.

Wednesday, First Christian Church. Visitation at Stith Funeral Home will be after 2 p.m. Tuesday. DANVILLE LV. Poynter, 68, died here Monday.

Funeral 1 p.m. Wednesday, Preston-Pruitt Funeral Home. Visitation will be after 8:30 a.m. Wednesday. DANVILLE Katie Melvin Rankin, 93, formerly of Danville, died Saturday in Dade City, Ha.

Graveside service, 11 a.m. Wednesday, Lancaster Cemetery. Stith Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. EDDYVILLE Elizabeth Elder Hardin, 67, died Monday in Paducah. Her husband, C.

survives. Graveside service, 11 a.m. Wednesday, Mapleview Cemetery in Marion. Visitation at Morgan's Funeral Home in Princeton will be after 7 p.m. Tuesday.

ELIZABETHTOWN Blanche Eunice Dobson, 95, died here Sunday. Funeral, 11 a.m. Wednesday, Brown Funeral Home. Visitation will be after 1 p.m. Tuesday.

ELIZABETHTOWN Everett E. Tharp, 73, died here Monday. His Mfe, Gerry, survives. Funeral, 2 Wednesday, Round Top Baitist Church. Visitation at Brown Fur eral Home will be after 2 p.m.

Tuesday. EMINENCE James Preston Paul, 80, died Monday in Shelbyville. His wife, Edith, survives. Funeral, 2 p.m. Thursday, Thomas Funeral Home in Pleasureville.

Visitation will be after 3 p.m. Tuesday. Joseph L. Greenwell Home in New Haven is in charge of arrangements. FOUNTAIN RUN Depp Wheet, 79, died Monday in Bowling Green.

Funeral, 2 p.m. Wednesday, Hughes Funeral Home. Visitation will be after 6 p.m. Tuesday. FRANKFORT Lois Mabel Cox Cummins, 81, died here Monday.

Funeral, 10 a.m. Thursday, Harrod Bros. Funeral Home. Visitation will be after 6 p.m. Tuesday.

FRANKFORT Melvin V. Jones, 60, died Monday in Lexington. His wife, Lucy, survives. Funeral 2 p.m. i Associated Press FLORENCE, Ky.

A 15-year-old girl was injured yesterday when strong winds from a thunderstorm blew down a fireworks stand along U.S. 42 at Florence. Police said Gina Mattioli of Inde er and a public-relations employee of People's Tobacco Warehouse. Survivors include his wife, the former Lola Garner; six sons, James Garner of Westchester, Ohio, Hobert Garner of Lincoln, Louie Floyd of Science Hill, Lee Gossett of Pointer, and Paul and Clarence Floyd; four daughters, Faye Hall of Klngbee, Geneva Hubble of Jackson, Linda Branscum of Pointer and Bet Henry county, cnarging uuiiey with murder in the June 14 slaying of Daniel Storms of Muncie, Henry County Prosecuting Attorney Malcolm Edwards said yesterday. the back of the head with a shotgun and placed in a car that was then burned.

Jeffery Gulnn, 25, of Clinton County, has been charged with aiding in the commission of a murder in the case and Is being held without bond in the Henry County Jail in New Castle, Edwards said. He said police are seeking another New Castle man as a suspect in the case. Speck said he expected authorities to take Guffey back to Indiana today. hit Paris plant Mallinckrodt dismissed the workers on the first shift after the 8 a.m. explosion.

Nearby residents were not evacuated, but were asked to stay inside their homes for several hours after the fire, said Bourbon County Deputy Sheriff Vickie Moon. Gordon Nichols, a spokesman for the state Division of Disaster and Emergency Services, said a mixture of nitric acid and hydrogen peroxide reacted and caused the explo- sion. He said the state fire marshal's office is investigating. appeal rejected sentenced him considered a legally improper factor in choosing between death or life in prison. Wallace was convicted of the Jan.

14, 1980, murders of Patrick and Teresa Gilligan and their two children, ages 4 and 5. Police said the Gilligans surprised Wallace in a burglary at their home. revenue measures The possibility of bankruptcy was raised last month by Mayor Glen Shepherd, who said the city needed additional revenue for $93,000 in bills that came due yesterday. The council's action will permit Shepherd to borrow $45,000 to make payment on a 1963 bond issue for the sewer and water plant The city will also refinance a $50,000 loan obtained in January. roof vent shortly after 12:30 a.m.

yesterday. Commonwealth's Attorney Mike Ward said Wofford had recently been sentenced to 25 years in prison for first-degree manslaughter and theft in the death of Howard Neal Allen of Calloway County. on Indiana town's square said Boonvllle police officer Scott McKain. McKain said he covered the shell's firing pin and moved the shell to a garage outside the sheriffs department. LOUISVILLE AREA FUNERALS Paul Jefferson Aldridge 75, of Hickory Hill Road, a native of Franklin.

Funeral, 11:30 a.m. Wednesday, Pearson's, 149 Breckinridge Lane. Visitation will be after 2 p.m. Tuesday. Shelby Bell, 84, of St Matthews, a native of Shelby County.

Funeral, II a.m. Tuesday, Ratterman's, 3711 Lexington Road. Harry E. Boyd, 50, of Macon, formerly of 415 Wampum Ave. Funeral, 10 a.m.

Wednesday, McDaniel Funeral Home, 4339 Park Blvd. Elizabeth Hall BridwelL 64, of Star Route, Shepherdsville. Funeral, 1 p.m. Tuesday, Hardy-Close Funeral Home in Shepherdsville. Charles Henry Buschemeyer, 79.

Funeral, 10 a.m. Tuesday, St. John Vlanney Catholic Church, 4841 South-side Drive. Joseph E. Ratterman Son South End Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

Herman David Dukes, 78, of 957 Homeview Drive, a native of Muhlenberg County. Funeral, 10 a.m. Tuesday, Arch L. Heady Southern Funeral Home, 3601 Taylor Blvd. Essie Lashley Duvall, 74, of 2209 Cleveland a native of Grayson County.

Funeral, 10 a.m. Wednesday, Schoppenhorst Underwood Funeral Home, 1832 W. Market St Edward Godbey, 80, of 920 Long-field a native of Marion County. Funeral, 1 p.m. Wednesday, Arch L.

Heady Southern Funeral Home, 3601 Taylor Blvd. Ozie Omy Oldham Hay, 91, of 4333 Tuscarora Way. Funeral, 2 p.m. Tuesday, O. D.

White Sons Funeral Home, 2727 S. Third St Isabelle L. Howell, 92, formerly of Calloway County Jail escapee is sought Associated Press State police and local officials were searching yesterday for a prisoner who fled the Calloway County Jail at Murray. Police said Michael Wofford, 25, of Paris, escaped through a Live artillery shell found BOONVILLE, Ind. (AP) A live 20-mm artillery shell was found on a sidewalk near Boonville's public square, police said.

Carl Behagg, an Army Reserve member, found the shell between a hardware store and a restaurant.

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