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The Corbin Times-Tribune from Corbin, Kentucky • Page 11

Location:
Corbin, Kentucky
Issue Date:
Page:
11
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

'its WORLD Round Kentucky Lakes Corbiit Timts-Tribunt, Sunday, June 20, 1971 Probation Saturday-- 0 p.m. --''The monthly Sunday School conference fdr the Camp Baptist Association will be held at the, Indian 5 The topic will be "Teaching Results." The Rev. Sam will be the speaker Sunday-- 8 'A reception wjll be held at the First' United Methodist Church dining room to welcome the new minister, Dr. Johnson, and Mrs. Johnson.

Monday-- Boss fishing Is Improving I I I I of Judge Obituaries TM Ky. (AP) Both white and black bass fish- ing is improving in many Ken- tucky lakes, the Department and Wildlife Resources re- ports. The lake by lake rundown: Nolin Black bass fair on shallow runners by jump fishing in lower section; white bass by jump fishing in-upper areas; Queen 'bluegill good in all sections on 20, Order of the worms and crickets; some Tin thing I DON'T like about 'All in the Family' is the laughter when Archie says something that 1 maket sense!" Plea By Boyle Mine Strike Has Dissolved By CRAIG AMMERMAN Associated Press Writer A a (AP)-- A coal mine strike that spread-across Appalachia the past week in support of a union president disolved dramatically Friday heeded their leader's 'plea to stop the walkout. United Mine Workers Presi- dent W. "Tony" Boyle, faced with federal contempt charges if the strike isn't overby Mon- day, appealed Thursday night to his more than SO.ooo striking members to go back to work.

On but 12,500 of them returned to the mines. "For all practical purposes the strike is and by mid- night Sunday I believe all mi- ners will be back to work," said UMW District 29 President (3,000) and West Virginia The Bituminous Coal Opera- tors Association reported Fri- day in Washington that at its height the strike idled just un- der 55,000 men. The association, bargaining agent for the coal industry, said it had compiled the figure by calling every coal company in 'the country which employs union miners. Meanwhile, an Associated Press survey of every UMW district headquarters affected by the walkout showed the union claiming approximately 57,000 idle miners at the strike's peak. The coal association claimed 3.25 million tons of coal had been lost through the strike as of Friday morning.

A spokesman said that meant $1.3 million in royalties had also been lost to the Welfare and Court Amaranth, will meet for regular meeting, initiation, and pptluck supper at the Masonic' Hall. BrinR a covered dish. Tuesday-- 9.30 a.m. Circle One, First Christian Church, will meet at the church. Mrs.

Curtis Chandler and Mrs. Harry Wilder will be hostesses. i 10 a.m. The West Corbin Homemakers will meet at'the home of Daisy Davis to make fruit bowls. For further in- formation, call 528-2232 12 Noon--The John and Mary Jackson Chapter, DAR, will have their final meeting with a luncheon at the Charcoal House in London.

Mrs. G. Dyke will be Hostess and Mrs. Lilia Mason will have the program. 6.30 p.m.

The Lynn Camp Homemakers will meet with Mrs. Ernest Evoy, Lynn View road. 6:30 p.m. Circle Three, First Christian Church, will meet in the home of Mrs. Elmer Wilson This will be a family picnic.

p.m. The Nibroc Alcoholic Anonymous, will meet downstairs at Doctors Park. of rainbow trout below, dam on cheese'and worms; clear and stable at 81. Cumberland White bass good by still fishing at night and jump fishing in lower section; black bass best by fly fishing and casting artificial night- crawlers croppie fair in brushy areas; trout fair below dam; clear and stable at 80. Kentucky Some limits of black bass by casting artificial worms and surface lures in area near Tennessee line; bluegill 'fair to good; croppie and catfish fair below dam; clear and stable at 85.

Berkley Bluegill good in all sections; fair black bass; crop- pie and bluegill good below dam off rip rap; clear and stable at 82. Dale Hollow White bass fair at night at 30 feet; bluegill fair to good around willow bushes; clear and stable at 82. Herrington Bluegill good by. drift fishing along deep banks; scattered black bass by casting, mostly using artificial worms; clear and stable at 79. Rough River Lake White bass fair to good by still fishing at night and by'jump fishing; fair black bass over stump beds and around cover on artificial worms; dear and stable at 81.

'Green River Lake'-- Black bass best by casting surface plugs and deep runners; fair bluegill over nesting beds; clear and stable at 84 'Barren Lake White bass good in upper regions by trolling over mud flats; scat- tered black bass in all areas, white bass fair below dam; upper section muddy, remainder clear and stable at 76. Grayson Fair catches of bltiegill and black bass; tribu- taries murky, remainder clear and stable at 76. Buckhorn Bluegill best in shallow areas; scattered white bass and croppie at 20 feet at night; some limits of trout be- low dam; upper fourth murky and muddy, remainder clear and stable at 79. Dewey--Bluegill and croppie fair; clear and rising at 80. today's FUNNY 1J7I by TrtEWHOlf WORLDS A STAGE AHO MOST SCENES ARE Revoked i CINCINNATI (AP)--The pro- bation revocation of Louisville, Ky.

police.court judge Neville Tucker has been upheld by the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Ap- peals here. Tucker was convicted on Nov. 23,1970, on charges of failing to file income tax returns in 1964, 1965 and 1966 and was put on probation for one year. However the U.S.

District Court in Louisville revoked the probation because it said Tucker filed his 1970 income tax return "late'and improperly. Counsel for Tucker had argu- ed the case before the appeals court on June 9. Most decisions by the court are not handed down until several weeks or ev- en months after oral arguments are'heard. The decisions normally are given in the form of a printed brief, however, in the'decision handed down. Friday, it was merely typewritten.

The three-judge appellate panel, in the decision written by all three, said it was ruling only on the order revoking the probation. "It is simply a matter of whether there has been an abuse of discretion" by the district judge. Probation of a person convict- ed of a crime in a matter of grave In a revocation proceed- ing, the accused probationer is entitled to appear and explain away his accusation if he can. He is not entitled to a trial in any strict or informal sense." Tucker's attorney had told the appellate court that he had new- ly discovered evidence that Tucker had'applied for an ex- tension with the Internal Reve- nue Service to file his, 1970 tax beyond'the April IS deadline and that the IRS had granted it after his probation had been revoked. dtadlina for submitting in- formation Iw obituary notictt Is IQ publication.

Funtrai notices rtciivtd atttr.io a.m. wlirbti publlshm in Mil tuition ol tin Corbin ObltuarKs art without charga by tnt newspaper using Information supplied Wilton Price Wilson, 75, Kidd died Friday morning at the local Hospital. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Nell Wilson; a daughter Mrs. Eloise Meadors, Corbin; a son, Bill Wilson, Kettering, Ohio; three sisters, Mrs.

Ida West, Lexington; Marshall, Ratliff; and Mrs. Beatrice Roy, Flomaton, four grandsons and a great grandson. Funeral services will be conducted at 2:30 p.m. Sunday at the First Baptist Church by the Rev. John Dunaway and the 'Rev.

Raymond Lawrence Burial will be in the Resthaven Cemetery. Pallbearers will be.Vernon Asbridge, Robert Sturgill, Carl Brasher, Felix Pace, C.D. Lawson, and Earl Barfield. Honorary pallbearers will be David Ashley, Mike Alexander, Vin Hoover, Danny Rose, Carl Lewallen, and' Eddie Friends may call at the O'Neil Funeral Home after 5 p.m. Saturday.

Mary Swafford Mrs. Mary A. Fount, died Thursday at the Knox County General Hospital. She is survived by five daughters, Mrs. Lola Booher and Mrs.

Lena Randall, Cin- cinnati; Mrs. Verna Smith, Milan, Mrs. Juanita Hinkle, Dayton, Ohio, and Mrs. Ethel Smith, Piano, five sons, Arthur Swafford Gray; Creed Swafford and Marvin Swafford, Cincinnati; Earl Swafford, Fount; and 'Ernest Swafford, Piano, a half-brother, "Jeff Mammons, Somerset; three half-sisters, Mrs. Ida Burton, Corbin; Mrs.

Bertha Smith, Fount, and Mrs. Nannie Trent, Green Roa'd; 26 grandchildren and a great grandchild. Funeral services will be conducted at 2 Sunday at the Highland Park Baptist Church at Heidrick by the Rev. Tip Jordan, the Rev. Earl Mammons, and the Rev.

Don Downing 'Burial will be in the Swafford Cemetery at Fount by the Hopper Funeral Home of Barbourvillc. The body will be taken to the home on Hammons Fork at 4 p.m. today. Bombing Lulls Were Misused (Continued From Page 1) initiatives, but with priority on the latter. the same time as we are taking steps to turn the tide in South McNamara said, the United States should open a 'dialogue' with the Soviet Union, North Vietnam 'and perhaps even with the VC' (Viet Cong) to make diplomatic overtures for 'laying, the groundwork for a settlement when the time is ripe But the Post account says the study shows division between administration and military po- licymakers: It seid the Joint Chiefs of Staff were "opposed to any measures which would, even momen- tarily, reduce the pressure on Vietnam James Leeber in Beckley, the place where the walkout was in- Retirement Fund as a result of itiated Sunday at; midnight the itrike.

The walkout was sparked as a Jnadditiop; at least $6.2 mll- i protest agfflntt a federal court olion in miners' wages were'not 'order issued in April by U. S. earned during the five-'day District Judge Gerhard Gcssell walkout. in Washington which said Boyle must remove himself as union trustee the miners' $150 million Welfare and Retirement Fund. It was also Gessell who Thursday told Boyle's attorneys that the embattled miners' chieftain might face contempt charges'Monday if all was not back to normal in the coalfields.

The strike Was mainly'confin- ed to the Appalachian coalfields of Virginia, West Pennsylvania, Ohio and Ken- tucky, also spilled into Colorado, Wyoming, Alabama and Tennessee. By Friday afternoon, the only strikers were reported in Pennsylvania '(500), Alabama (200), Ohio The strike remained fairly solid Friday in southern West Virginia, where Leeber said 6,500 of his 13,500 members were still idle. However, he said he expected all of them to return to work beginning withthe midnight shift Sunday, "Let me asscrTmy firm belief that the only thing we have to fear is fear itself," said President Franklin D. Roosevelt al his first inaugural address in 1933. Anvil was the code name for the Allied landings in the south of France in 1944.

Echo was the name of the first communications a i launched from the United States in 1960. im elegant Spanish, 4-pc group Of Corbin DUE TO POPULAR DEMAND FOR FATHER'S DAY-SUNDAY Luther Wallen WILL SING "Daddy's Prayers Did Follow Me" FOLLOWED BY LUTHER TALKING FROM OLD MEMORIES "ME AND PAP AND MOTHER" OVER RADIO STATION WCH SiMDAY MOiMIMG-9 O'CLOCK Integro save! offered this week al a special price beautifully paneled antiqued oak veneers 4-piece group includes triple dresser, framed mirror, chest, and magnificent Chairback bed If you like Spanish design, you'll love our new Integro group. The pieces are elaborately paneled and fitted with original-design hardware of antiqued brass. The select oak veneers are finished a rich brown and rubbed and polished to accent the beautiful graining. The effect is one of calm elegance and serene beauty that is not often found at this low price.

Commode night tabte This Only MMS QP JOE KARNS, "CONFIDfNCE MINOS YOU IN- CORBIN SATISFACTION YOU 1ACK" S. MAIN ST. Regular only $35350.

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About The Corbin Times-Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
27,173
Years Available:
1969-1977