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The Corbin Times-Tribune from Corbin, Kentucky • Page 8

Location:
Corbin, Kentucky
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

8 Corbin Times-Tribune, Sunday, May 28, 1972 Obituaries The deadline for submitting in- formation for obituary notices is 10 a.m. on the day of publication. Funeral. notices received after 10 a.m. will be in the next edition of the Corbin Times-Tribune.

Obituaries are 'published without charge by the newspaper using information supplied by funeral homes. James foreman James M. Foreman, 37, died Monday in Altamonte, Fla. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Joyce Scott Foreman; two daughters, Cathy and Karen Foreman, Altamonte; two sons, Jamie and John Foreman, Altamonte, his parents, Mr.

and Mrs. Edwin Foreman, Ohio; four brothers, Gene Gilbert, Dale and Paul Foreman, Ohio; and his mother-in-law, Mrs. Mildred Felts, North Corbin. Funeral services were con- ducted at 10 a.m. Friday at the Hart Funeral Home chapel by the Rev.

J. K. Barrineau. Burial was in the Pine Hill Cemetery. George Neal George Neal, 66, 205 16th street, died Friday morning at the UK Medical Center in Lexington.

He was a retired' electrician for Railroad Co. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Bertie Neal; two sons, Carl Neal, Corbin, and Jimmie D. Neal, Louisville; a daughter, Mrs. Janet Bowman, Louisville; three grand- children; a sister, Mrs.

Cecil RAVELINGS (Continued From Page 1) absolutely terrorized at the sight and sound of a car on the highway. It took all the driving skill of the fellow at the reins to "keep the buggy or wagon at even keel, and horseback riders had to be clever in the stirrups to stay in the saddle. It was in 1909 that Southeastern Kentucky "almost had its first Weinman said in his speech. Four business men from Lansing, i i a announced they travel by 1 a i Michigan to Florida. After negotiating the bogs of Rockcastle county and the mudholes and creeks of Laurel and Knox counties, mostly with the help of oxen ad mules, the four men reached Pineville, gave up, and loaded their wheezing car on a train and shipped it back to Lansing.

Weinman says Southeastern Kentucky got its first real tourist in 1919. He was another brave soul from Michigan. B. M. Brady arrived in Lexington October 16, 1919, and announced, when he registered at the Phoenix hotel, that he was going to drive to Florida over the Dixie Highway.

It took him a full day to drive 65 miles to Livingston, and another full day to get to Jellico. But he was the spearhead of a stream of tourists that soon built up and forced the improvement of the road system here and elsewhere in the nation. Interstate 75 is a long way from that old dirt road that was first designated as the "Boone Way" and then the Dixie Highway. That first tourist has been followed by the multiplied thousands, and the end is not yet in sight Round The Town Thursday 7 p.m.--The annual night meeting of the Women's Society of Christian Service and the Wesleyan Service Guild of the First United Methodist Church will be held in the church. At 7 p.m.

the Circles and the Guild will meet for business session, At 7:30 p.m. the group will meet in the dining room for general meeting. Mrs. Ray Hunger- burler will have the program. Circles Four and Five will be hostesses for the social hour that follows.

Court News (Continued From Page7) Kennetn Vanover, divorce granted, 5189. May 19: Roy M. Hill vs Myrtle S. Hill, divorce granted, 6160. May 19: Baylord McKeehan vs Norma McKeehan, divorce granted 6031.

May 20: Ranee E. Bowling vs Betty C. Bowling, divorce granted, 5897. Scalf, Corbin; a brother, Ledford Neal, California, and several nieces and nephews. Funeral services will be conducted at 2:30 p.m.

Sunday at the Hart Funeral Home chapel by the Rev. Wesley Shotwell and Bro. Fred Waggoner. Burial will be in the Resthaven Cemetery. Pallbearers will be his nephews.

Friends may call at the funeral home after 6 p.m. today. 'King Davis King Davis, 73, Rt. 2, Rockholds, died at 6:45 p.m. Thursday in the SEK Baptist Hospital.

He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Florence Davis; three sons, Clifford Davis, Dayton, Ohio; Paul Davis, Gallup, N. and Lester Minshall Largo, a daughter, Mrs. Dolly Silva, McDonald, two sisters, Mrs. Jewell Prewitt, Cincinnati, and Mrs.

Emma Marshall, Pasadena, two grandchildren and a great grandchild. Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Croley Funeral Home chapel by Bro. Conny Thomas. Burial will be in the Davis Cemetery at Rockholds.

Friends may call at the funeral home. Boscom Cecil Bascom B. Cecil, 66, Wyan- dotte, died at 10:20 p.m. Thursday in the Wyandotte General Hospital. Funeral arrangements will be announced later by the Croley Funeral Home.

Mrs. Stewart Mrs. Wilson Stewart, 81, North Corbin, died Friday in the local hospital. She is survived by four daughters, Mrs. J.

Russell Stansberry and Mrs. W. C. Shepherd, Corbin; Mrs. Wayne A.

Ritchie and Mrs. Paul D. Blanton, Knoxville; two brothers, Clifford Baird and Francis Baird, Corbin; a sister, Gertrude Brummett, Corbin; 10 grandchildren and 14 great grandchildren. Funeral services will be conducted at 2:30 p.m. Sunday at the O'Neil Funeral Home chapel by the Rev.

Paul Ed- monds. Burial will be in the Pine Hill Cemetery. Pallbearers will be her grandsons and nephews. Friends may call after 7 p.m. Saturday at the funeral home.

Fred Carroll Fred Carroll, 61, Rt. 1, Rockholds, died at 3:45 a.m. Saturday at the local hospital. Funeral arrangements will be announced later by the Vankirk Funeral Home. Floyd Meadors Floyd Meadors, 67, Jellico Creek, died at 10:45 a.m.

Friday in Danville. He is survived by five sons, Kyle Meadors, Knoxville; Charles Meadors, James Meadors, Cecil Meadors, and Floyd Meadors Jr. of Jellico Creek; a daughter, Mrs. Norma Jean West, Jellico Creek; four grandchildren; two sisters, Mrs. Nora Moses, Oak Ridge, and Mrs.

Rosa Brown, Jellico Creek; two brothers, Hamp and Kale Meadors, Middlesboro. Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Jellico Creek Baptist Church by the Rev. Raymond Meadors. Burial will be in the Jellico Creek Cemetery.

Friends may call at the Ellison Funeral Home of Williamsburg. Nuclear Conservatives Critical Treaty Is Signed (Continued From Page 1) presidential contender. They charged the Soviets got too good a deal, leaving the United States with less relative might than it needs. In the treaty's preface, both nations declared their intention "to achieve at the earliest pos- sible date the cessation of the nuclear arms race and to take effective measures toward re- ductions in strategic arms, nu- clear disarmament, and gener- al and complete disarmament." Nixon, through spokesman Ronald L. Ziegler, said both nations will continue their discussions on arms limitations and seek "to make new agreements." The President added: "For the first time since the advent of nuclear weapons a generation ago, the two most powerful nations in the world have taken the lead in a direc- tion away from wasteful, dan- gerous, and self-perpetuating competition in armaments and toward a mutual restraint on weapons systems." Soviet Premier Alexei N.

Ko- sygin, lifting his glass of cham- pagne to Nixon at a reciprocal banquet the Americans gave before the signing ceremony, said the agreement "will go down in history as a major achievement on the road to- wards curbing the arms race." Chess Reports (Continued from Page 7) --If Miss. Livinggood marries Mr. Farmer. What would their children be? They would be little Farmers living good on the farm. I think that we need a big airport in Knox County.

Praise Nuclear Pact By ROBERT L. CAMPBELL Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) The U.S.-Soviet arms-limitation agreement has been scorned by congressional conservatives but praised for the most part by both liberals and moderates. The agreement banning the President's Program Gets Little Action (Continued From Page 1) the powers of the President to commit U.S. military forces abroad. But it is opposed by the administration and it is unlikely the House will act on it.

Congress acted in March to avert a government fiscal emergency by raising the na- tional debt limit $20 billion to a record $450 billion. But this ceiling will expire June 30 and so further legislation is needed by then. Other bills passed and signed into law in the 1972 session in- clude measures to settle the West Coast dock strike, to pro- vide $250 million for low-cost meals for the elderly, to give the Civil Aeronautics Board power to regulate international air. fares, to set up a special federal office to co-ordinate drug abuse control programs and provide $800 million over three years to combat such abuses, to provide $115 million over three years to attack sickle cell anemia, and to establish the Gulf Islands National Seashore in Florida and Mississippi. development of new weapons but permitting the refinement of existing systems goes "to the heart of the security of the United States," said Sen.

Henry M. Jackson of Washington. Jackson, a Democratic presi- dential contender, said the pact will leave the United States with a four-to-one missile dis- advantage. Rep. John M.

Ashbrook of Ohio, a GOP challenger to President Nixon, said the agreement, announced Friday in Moscow, will "doom the United States to a decade of danger." The accord was welcomed, however, by Sens. Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota and Edmund S. Muskie of Maine, both, like Jackson, seeking the 1972 Democratic presidential nomination. Humphrey, campaigning in San Francisco for the crucial California June 6 Democratic primary, said he can't help commending Nixon for the pact, although he is the man Hum- phrey is trying to knock out of office.

Fisherman's Body Found The body of Arlo Carr, 40, Wofford, who drowned Thur- sday near Goldbug in the Cumberland River was found late Saturday morning. Carr drowned when his boat capsized, fishing at Ballard's Ford. His body was found floating near Redbird, eight miles away. Muskie, chairman of the sub- committee on arms control, also said he welcomed the agreement. But he said it was too bad the administration's earlier argument for more funds for ABM construction in the United States "has now re- sulted in the authorization of an additional Soviet ABM to match two sites for ourselves.

A total ban or at least a limit at existing levels would have been far preferable." Muskie was referring to the pact's clause limiting each side to one antiballistic-missile (ABM) site for defense of its capital and one each for the de- fense of its chief inter- continental -ballistic- missile (ICBM) site. The Soviets have been building one around Mos- cow, and now--according to Muskie presumably because the United States has authorized an ABM shield around offensive launchers--may construct one around one of its offensive sys- tems. Sen. George McGovern, a Democratic presidential aspi- rant who has said he will drastically reduce Defense De- partment spending if elected, said in Palo Alto, he is pleased with the SALT accord. However, he added, "I have to admit a certain inner anxiety about the way so-called great powers can preoccupy them- selves with arms accords and joint space efforts as important as those things are while at the same time pretending that the killing now going on in Vietnam is happening on some other planet apart from anything that's being discussed in Moscow at this moment." GILL MARKING SERVICE STREETS-PARKING LOTS-CURBS MACHINE STRIPED Pavement Lettering To Your Satisfaction--Municipal or Private JOHN GILL, OWNER--OPERATOR Rt.

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About The Corbin Times-Tribune Archive

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