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The Corbin Times-Tribune from Corbin, Kentucky • Page 7

Location:
Corbin, Kentucky
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Corbin Times-Tribune, Wednesday, January 12, 1972--7 Round The Town Wednesday 7 p.m. The Ladies Auxiliary of the Disabled American Veterans will have their first meeting at the of Hall. 7 p.m. The Disabled American Veterans will meet at the of Hall. Thursday- 9:30 a.m.

The CWF Mor- ning Book Club of the First Christian Church will meet with Mrs. C. G. O'Neil, Ford street. 9:30 a.m.

Circle One, First United Methodist Church, will meet with Mrs. Les Wyrick. 1:30 p.m.--The LWWB of the Center Street Church of God will meet in the fellowship Hall. 6:30 p.m.-The Whitley County and Corbin Chapter of the American Red Cross will meet at the Corbin Public Library. 6:30 p.m.

The Tri-County B. PW Club will meet at Yeary's Restaurant. Mrs. Lela Brooks will be program chairman. 7 p.m The Bethany Class, Central Baptist Church, will meet at the church.

Mrs. Madeline Byrd and Mrs. Virginia Trzop will be hostess. p.m.--Circle Two, Trinity Methodist Church, will meet with Mrs. Doyle Brewer, 805 Beatty ave.

Mrs. Jack Crabtree will be co-hostess. 7:30 p.m. The Wesleyan Service Guild, First United Methodist Church, will meet at the church. The hostesses will be Freda Trosper and Bea Gibson.

7:30 p.m. The Baptist Young Women, Central Baptist Church, will meet at the church. The nursery will be open. Mrs Dale Walker will be hostess. 8 p.m.

The Cumberland Falls Garden Club will meet with Mrs. Robert Daniel, 430. Engineer st. Mrs. Robert Valentino will be co-hostess.

Friday-- 2 p.m.--The Ladies Auxiliary of the U.T.U. will have the regular meeting at the of Hall. 7:30 p.m. The Corbin Garden Club will meet at Yeary's. Mrs.

Keith Smith and Mrs. G. O'Neil will be hostesses. John L. Crawford will speak on Monday-- 7:30 p.m.--The Lynn Camp.

PTA will meet in the school cafeteria. Tuesday-- 9:30 a.m.--Circle One, First Chirstian Church, will meet at Yeary's Restaurant. Mrs. Gillis Wilcox and Mrs. Charles Denham will be hostesses.

2 p.m.--Circle Two, First Chirstian Church, will meet with Mrs. James 0. Crawford. Mrs. J.E, Wilder will have the program.

Obituary Notices NEW YORK (AP) Roman Catholic bishops in the United States have been accused by a national lay organization of is- suing "incomplete and mis- leading financial reports" while spending more than $6 million lobbying for more parochial school aid. The National Association of Laity rated all 160 church dioc- eses individually and general- ized that most failed to include income and assets of individual parishes. Jack Yorke of Detroit, the as- sociation's president, said the "failure of Church leaders to disclose adequately the nature and scope of financial holdings has lowered public credibility in these leaders." A spokesman for the U.S. Catholic Conference in Wash- ington, Jack Shaw, replied that the bishops have approved a new system of diocesan finan- cial accounting and reporting. Shaw questioned the $6-mil- lion figure, called the criticism "negative carping" and said the "financial crisis of Catholic schools is overwhelmingly ap- parent with anyone with eyes to see." The lay organization said morfe than one year was spent' compiling its 111-page report which rates the dioceses from to on the com- pleteness of their financial re- ports.

The deadline for submitting in- formation' lor obituary notices is 10 a.m. on the day of publication. Funeral notices received after 10 a.m. will be published in the next edition of the Corbin Times-Tribune, Obituaries are' published without charge by the newspaper using information supplied by funeral homes. Millard Taylor Millard F.

Taylor, 87, Jellico, died at 11:25 p.m. Monday at the Sterling Nursing Home in Maryville, Tenn. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Nannie Taylor; a son, Harold Taylor, Maryville; four daughters, Mrs. Norris Ray, Columbus, Ohio; Mrs.

Mary Nixon, Woodsfield, Ohio; Mrs. Robert Johnson, Savannah, and Joyce Hinds, Ham- mond, a brother, Henry Taylor, Williamsburg; 11 grandchildren and six great grandchildren. Funeral services will be at 2:30 p.m. Thur- sday at the Ellison Funeral Home Chapel in Jellico by the Rev. Chester Dykes, the Rev.

Spurgeon McCortt, and Dr. George Naff. Burial will be in the Jellico Creek Cemetery. Friends may call Wednesday night at the funeral home. Frances Moses Mrs.

Frances Moses, 88, Rt. 3, Williamsburg, died at 12:30 a.m. Tuesday" at the SEK Baptist Hospital. She is survived by her husband, the Rev. Lewis Moses; a daughter, Mrs.

Merida Steeley, Rt. 3, Williamsburg; two grandsons, Walter Steeley, Amelia, Ohio, and Glennis Steeley, Cin- cinnati; two great grandsons, Michael Steeley, and David Steeley, Amelia; a brother, Bascom Cox, Rt. 3, William- sburg, and several nieces and nephews. Funeral services will be conducted at 11 a.m. Thursday at the Liberty Church of God by the Rev, Lee Willis and the Rev.

Joe Burnett. Burial will be in the Bryant Cemetery. Friends may call at the Ellison Funeral Home in Williamsburg after 2 p.m. today. The body will lie in state at the church for one hour before the funeral service.

Mottle Miracle Mrs. Mattie Miracle, 72, Ludlow Falls, Ohio, formerly of Corbin, died at 3:15 a.m. Tuesday in Troy, Ohio. Funeral arrangements will be announced later by the Vankirk Funeral Home. i James Overbay James Floyd Overbay, 29, Newcomb, died at 11:30 p.m.

Monday at the Jellico Clinic. He is survived by a son, James D. Overbay, Versailes; a daughter, Tina Overbay, Cincinnati; his mother, Mrs. Fannie Overbay, Newcomb; and a sister, Mrs. Anna Ruth Your Happy Shopping Store off! 'State Pride' Birds, flowers, nature's colors! Fresh white with leafy motif.

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Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p.m. Thursday at the Newcomb Baptist Church by the Rev. Roy Benson. Burial will be in the Douglas Cemetery. Friends may call tonight at the Ellison Funeral Home in Jellico.

Lora Gilley Mrs. Lora Mae Gilley, 65, widow of the late Fred Gilley, formerly of Lynch, died January 7 at her home in Chattahoochee, Fla. She is survived by three sons, Manley Clayton Gilley, DeLeon Springs, William Clifford Gilley, Chattahoochee, and James Edwin Gilley, Franklin, Ohio; three daughters, Mrs. James Ralph Stewart, Alcoa, Mrs. Cecil Henry, Middletown, Ohio, and Mrs.

Talmadge Adams, Prenliss, her mother, Mrs. Ida White, Gray; two brothers, Lawrence White, Gray and Okley White, Hun- tington, W. 16 grand- children and seven great grandchildren. Funeral services were con- ducted at 3 p.m. January 9 at the First Baptist Church in Chattahoochee by the Rev.

Robert A. Brown and the Rev. John A. Coulter. Burial was in the Mt.

Pleasant Cemetery in Chattahoochee by the Smith- Morgan Funeral Home. Obituary is courtesy of the Hart Funeral Home. Eliza Stott Mrs. Eliza Stott, 78, Savoy, died at 11:45 a.m. Tuesday in Jellico.

She is survived by her husband, William Stott; three daughters, Mrs. Christine Hart, Knoxville, Mrs. Carolyn Seals, Portage, and Mrs. Blanch Maiden, Covington; four sons, James Stott and Paul Stott, Williamsburg; John W. Stott, New Carlisle, Ohio, and Kenneth Stott, Dallas, four sisters, Mrs.

Sarah Ridener and Mrs. Evelyn North, Covington; Mrs. E.B. Siler, Jellico, and Mrs. L.M.

White, Williamsburg; a brother, Joe Bolton, Ohio; 17 grandchildren and 12 great grandchildren. Funeral, will be conducted at 1:30 p.m. Thur- sday at the Croley Funeral Home Chapel in Williamsburg by the Rev. Carl Loy. Burial will be in the Highland Cemetery.

Friends may call at the funeral home. Protection Of Falls Promised (Continued 1Y commented tnat lights on tne carnival-type rides planned for the overlook area would destroy the Falls moonbow, which he said is one of only two known in the world. Father Walter O'Donnell, a CVADD director from Clay County, said the board's only question concerning the ap- plication was over the price of the property-- $650,000 for 250 acres. He suggested, however, that the type of development Jackson plans might cause many tourists to stay away from the Falls "after the word got around that it had taken on a carnival atmosphere." Asked if the state could obtain an injunction to prevent Jackson from proceeding with his development plans until a decision concerning acquiring the land had been made, Penn replied that. Jackson has already agreed to half the work until it can be determined whether or not the state can qualify for federal funds with which to purchase the property.

The commissioner added that the department wants to prevent the rides from being erected where they will be visible from the Falls "but doesn't want to spent $650,000 to do it." Williamsburg Mayor Foster Lane, replying to the com- missioner's request for suggestions from the com- munities in the Falls area, replied, "You tell us what the Department of Parks wants and we (CVADD board) will support you." Father O'Donnell agreed with Lane but made the motion, which subsequently passed, that the CVADD support the department in its effort to protect the Falls overlook from development but urge that the state use its power of con- demnation to acquire only the necessary buffer strip rather than buy the entire Jackson property. First came the Ping-Pong tour, then President Nixon's announced trip to China. Now the Bamboo Curtain parts to reveal the Chinese influence in fashion--and in precious jewelry. Tiffany designed the diamond-paved dragon and diamond drop ear- rings to complement this high-collared slink of black crepe by Anne Klein for Designers' Melange. The Chinese turnout points to the return of ele- gance- and ooulence--today's big fashion news.

College Council Are Proposed FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) The Kentucky Council on High- er Education, long the subject of scorn because of its impo- tence, would be given substan- tial new powers if a bill in- troduced Tuesday in the Senate becomes law. In addition to reviewing budget requests of Kentucky's state colleges and universities, the council would be granted authority to approve or reject any proposed graduate or pro- fessional level prpgram.and.any capital, construction 'project costing $100,000 or more. The bill also would increase the council's lay membership from nine to 10, add the state superintendent of public in- struction as a voting member and remove statutory limita- tions from the salaries of its executive director and his staff. Sen.

William Logan, D-Madi- sonville, one of the bill's co- sponsors, said it was included to make it possible for the council to hire the best possible staff. State college and university presidents would retain non- voting status on the council. The governor would appoint the lay members to four year terms which would be stag- gered, logan said, to prevent control of the council by the ex- ecutive branch. The bill also recommended university status for Kentucky State College but set no date when it should be accomplished. Such a recommendation was put forth last year by the present council's staff, which Pensions Inspire Retirement (Continued From Page 1) mittee, who will be 68 with 20 years of House service and about 5 military; and Thomas Pelly, ranking mi- nority member of the Merchant Marine and Fisheries Com- mittee.

He will be 70 and have 20 years of House service. The list will grow as senior members weigh the benefits of good retirement pay against the rigors and uncertainties of election campaigns. Others, too, will leave the House to seek other political posts. Win or lose, most will be eligible for sizable pensions. Crucial Year Is In Store For Vietnam (Continued From Page 1) the Communists will attempt an offensive in the central high- lands to coincide with President Nixon's trip to Peking during the last week of February, their, purpose being to embarrass him by a show of strength.

These sources predict another- offensive along the DMZ in the summer or fall to hurt Nixon's chances for re-election. noted that North Carolina, Ten- nessee, Ohio and Virginia, among nearby states, already had elevated thier pre- dominantly Negro institutions to university status. Kentucky State was the only one of five state colleges not elevated to regional university status by the 1966 Legislature. Gov. Wendell Ford's office is- sued a statement after the bill was introduced saying the measure had the "total com- mitment" of the chief, execu- tive.

Ford added that he would in- clude money for the coundil's reorganization in his budget, which is expected to be pre- sented early next month. Will Safe Cigarette Be Seller? By JOHN LENGEL Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) A federal researcher says a safer, even absolutely safe, cigarette can be devised. But would it sell? "We must take out the danger and leave in the pleasure," said Dr. Gio Gori, head of the major effort in safer-cigarette research, the Tobacco Working Group at the National Institute of Health. For two years he and his col- leagues have been peering at smoke condensate applied to rat tissue and chicken tracheas.

These tests are still to be eval- uated and they will lead to more in the next two years. But Gori said the technical knowledge now exists for devel- oping a less hazardous ciga- rette. A perfectly safe cigarette to- day would filter everything from tobacco smoke. "We have the means of a 100-per-cent fil- ter, but all you would have is hot air," Gori explained. So the answer involves in no small way the reason people smoke, a relatively undefined field requiring much more study, Gori said.

For instance, a safer ciga- rette would have less nicotine. Experimental tobacco strains with little or no nicotive in them could be developed in two or three years for a commercially productive harvest, Gori said. But, he added, would smokers stick with a low-or zero-nicotine cigarette or simply smoke many more of them to make up for the loss? Surgeon General Jesse L. Steinfeld raised the same point in a report Monday calling for renewed efforts to develop safe cigarettes. The report said scientists no longer question the danger of smoking, a statement attacked by the Tobacco Institute as false and misleading.

Steinfeld called that state- ment "self-serving" and ac- cused the tobacco industry Tuesday of endangering the public health by purposely clouding the hazards of ciga- rette smoking..

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About The Corbin Times-Tribune Archive

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