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The Corbin Times-Tribune from Corbin, Kentucky • Page 16

Location:
Corbin, Kentucky
Issue Date:
Page:
16
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

16 Corbin Times-Tribune, Thursday, May 16, 1974 Deaths And Funerals The Town Israeli Jets Blast Camps Lee Hammons Lee Hammons, 79, Ham- mond, died Tuesday in the Pineville Community Hospital. He is survived by five daughters, Mrs. Mary Rose, Florence; Mrs. Rosa Mills, Hammond; Mrs. Dora Hinkle, Blue Ash, Ohio; Mrs.

Betty Smith, Bimble; and Mrs. Charity Crawford, Crab Or- chard; four sons, George Hammons, Hinkle; Ned Hammons, Cincinnati; Elijah Hammons, Columbus, Ohio, and George Hammons, Panama City, two half-brothers, Henry Gray, East Bernstadt, and Frank Gray, Ohio; three half-sisters, Ester Willis and Mrs. Troy Mills, Berea, and Bertha Gray, Chicago; 24 grandchildren and 20 great grandchildren. Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p.m. Friday at the Hopper Funeral Home chapel by the Rev.

Earl Hammons and the Rev. Aaron Cupp. Burial will be in the Carnes Cemetery. Pallbearers will be his a a pallbearers will be Dr. C.

B. Stacy, Dr. Buell Mills, Dr. Jerry Woolum, Edd McDonald, Troy Hampton, John C. Dixon, Don B.

Mills, G. R. Hampton. Friends may call at the funeral home. Wells Tinsley Wells, 52, Heavy, died Wednesday in Berea, Ohio.

Funeral arrangements will be announced later by the Bowling Funeral Home of London. Earl Henson Sr, Earl Henson 71, Rt. 1 Corbin, died at 3:40 p.m. Wednesday at the SEK Baptist Hospital. He is survived by a son, Earl Henson Middletown, Ohio; two grandchildren; three double cousins, Roy H.

Skinner, Corbin; John A. Skinner, Williamsburg, and Raymond Skinner, Woodbine. Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p.m. Friday at the Vankirk Funeral Home Chapel by the Rev. Wesley Shotwell.

Burial will be in the Pine Hill Cemetery. Pallbearers will be J.C. Hodge, Arnold Croley, David Myers, Claude Skinner, Phil Hutspn, and Bob Leddington. Friends may call at the funeral home after 5p.m. today.

6 WATE Knoxville 10 I Knoxville 13 Asheville 18 WLEX Lexington 27 WKYT Lexington Programsare listed in this newspaper as received from the station, and are subject to late changes. THURSDAY P.M. 5:00 10 13 18 6 News 5:30 27 10 CBS News 18 6 NBC News 13 Andy Griffith 6:00 6 Andy Griffith 10 13 Truth or Con- sequences 27 18 News 6:30 6 Let's Make A Deal 27 Dusty's Trail 10 To Tell The Truth 18 Wilburn Brothers 13 Jimmy Dean 7:00 13 Chopper One 27 10 The Waltons 18 6 Flip Wilson 7:30 13 Firehouse 8:00 13 Kung Fu 27 10 Movie "Bachelors 4 Comedy" 18 6 Ironside 9:0018 6 Music Country U.S.A. 13 Streets of San Fran- cisco 10:00 18 13 6 News, Weather, Sports 27 Bold Ones 10:30 18 6 Johnny Carson 13 Dick Cavett 10 Movie "Who's Got The Action?" 11:00 27 News 11:30 27 Movie "Act One" 12:00 18 6 Tomorrow 13 News 11:55 18 6 News 12:00 10 TatUetales 6 Jackpot! 13 All My Children 27 News 27 Bulletin Board 12:3010 27 As The World Turns 13 Let's Make A Deal 18 6 Three On A Match 1:0027 10 Guiding Light 13 Newlywed Game 18 6 Days of Our Lives 1:30 27 iO Edge of Night 18 6 The Doctors 13 Girl In My life 2:00 27 10 New Price Is Right 18 6 Another Work! 13 General Hospital 2:30 18 6 How To Survive A Marriage 13 One Life To Live 27 Match Game 10 Bewitched 3:00 18 6 Somerset 13 To Tell The Truth 10 Movie "Don't Raise the Bridge, Lower the River" 27 TatUetales 3:30 6 Beverly Hillbillies 18 Merv Griffin Show 13 Mod Squad 27 I Dream of Jeannie 4:00 6 Bonanza 27 Virginian 4:30 13 News 18 The Beverly Hillbillies Aggie Mrs. Aggie B.

Nelson Irick, 89, formerly of Keavy, died -Wednesday in Kokomo, Ind. She is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Grace Minze, West Chester, Ohio, and Mrs. Beatrice Tate, Peru, three sons, Ellis Nelson, SharpsviUe, Marshall Nelson, Milford, Ohio, and Charles Nelson, Kokomo. Funeral services will be conducted at 10a.m.

Friday at the Long Funeral Home in Kokomo. Burial will be at 10 a.m. Saturday at the Locust Grove Cemetery at Keavy by the O'Neil Funeral Home. Samanrha Mrs. Samantha Parkey, 92, West Corbin, widow of the late George A.

Parkey, died Wed- nesday afternoon in the SEK Baptist Hospital. She is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Bert Walker, Corbin, and Mrs. Ruby Johnson, Richmond, a William F. Parkey, Newport Richie, 15 grandchildres, 35 great grandchildres, and five great great grandchildren; a brother, Ran Worley, Corbin.

Funeral services will be conducted at 1:30 p.m. Saturday at the Hart Funeral Home Chapel by the J.K.Garrineau. Burial will be in the McFarland Cemetery in West Corbin. Pallbearers will be Jennings Parkey, Luther Gibbs, John Bill Gibbs, Ed Ellison, Otis Walker, and Kenneth Walker. Rob erf Suffon Rev.

Robert Luster Sutton, 45, New Zion community, died at Thursday at his home. Funeral arrangements will be announced later by the Ellison Funeral Home of Williamsburg. Road Repairs Requested Thursday-- 6:30 p.m.--The Cortin Book Club will meet at Yeary's. Husbands are invited. 7:15 p.m.--Group Nine of Centra! Baptist Church will leave from the church at 7:15 p.m.

to go to Debbie Oaks, 401 Ford for the meeting. 7:30 p.m.--The Forsythia Garden Club will meet at Howard Johnson's. The hostesses will be Mrs. W. C.

Rollins, Mrs. L. R. West, and Mrs. C.

B. McCall Sr. 7:30 p.m.-The Alpha Lambda Chapter of the Beta Sigma Phi will meet at the home' of Alice Lynch, Scenic View Heights. Bring a "Do Your Own Thing" item. 7:30 p.m.--The Ladies Missionary Circle of the 17th Street Christian Church will sponsor an old fashion lemon squeeze in the Fellowship Hall.

Everyone bring a lemon. Friday-- 2:30 p.m.--The Friday Af- ternoon Book Club will meet with Mrs. Charlie Watson, Tanglewood Drive. i 7 p.m.--The Past Councilors Club 124, of will meet at the home of Mrs. W.

D. Braffora, Mastertown pike. 6 p.m.--The National Association of Retired Railroad Employes will have a covered disn dinner and business meeting at the of Hall. Saturday-- (Ctmlinvttf From the building and all those in- side. Mrs.

Meir was awakened at 6 a.m. with the news. Her cabi- net met at 9 and stayed in emergency session all day. Blood plasma and fleets of ambulances were dispatched to Maalot. Hospitals in the district were cleared for action.

At 11:40 the terrorists said they wanted to negotiate with French Ambassador Jean Her- ly, but the diplomat needed a code signal by radio from agents of the guerrillas in Paris before they would talk to him. The signal never arrived. The same thing happened to Roma- nian Ambassador Ion Covici. "The coded password could not arrive in time," said Infor- mation Minister Shimon Peres. "The terrorists refused to ex- tend their deadline to kill the children." At 2:15 p.m., the Israeli gov- ernment announced that, for the first time in its history, it would comply with the guer- rillas' demands.

"On the bodies of children, we do not fight wars," said Mrs. Meir. The state radio broadcast the news in Hebrew, and the hos- tages translated it for their captors. "We thought we would be freed," said a blonde schoolgirl as she was carried to an ambulance later. Twenty prisoners were taken from prison and sent to an airport where a United Nations plane waited to take them to Damascus.

The gunmen shouted that they would free half the children when the' prisoners reached their destination. The rest of the hostages would be taken with the gunmen on another plane to the Syrian capital and freed there. The government reluctantly agreed. The other three Arab prison- ers whose freedom was de- manded were brought to Maa- lot. Blindfolded, they talked with the guerrillas through loudspeakers.

The French and Romanian ambassadors await- ed nearby. But no code word came from Paris or Bucharest. "There was no doubt that the terrorists intended to carry out their plans and use their ex- plosives by 6 o'clock," said Mrs. Meir. "So at 5:30 the Is- raeli Defense Forces went in." The attack was heard all over Israel, broadcast by the slate radio.

"A lot of firing now," said the radio reporter. There's an explosion. They're moving up. more automatic weapons." Shouts in Hebrew from run- ning soldiers were heard. Shots.

Crashes. "The wounded are coming out. Some are crying." Gunfire. Shouts of "Stretch- ers! Stretchers!" The howl of ambulance sirens. "More soldiers are moving up.

It's all over. An endless stream of stretchers is coming out. Smoke is pouring from the school. An angry crowd is shouting at Dayan." The WhitJey County fiscal court took action on improving roads at their Tuesday meeting. The court approved a motion to request the state to widen, grade, and blacktop the Corinth Cemetery Road and the Spruce Creek Road.

Another request the court will send to the state is to have Wolf Creek changed to stop the Wolf Creek Road from overflooding. The court also agreed to have the state work to get Hwy. 626 in good condition. 7 p.m.--The Sunday School Conference for the Lynn Camp Baptist Association will be held at the Keck Baptist Church. The topic will be The Rev.

Jesse Strieker from Middletown, Director of Stewardship for the Southern Baptist Convention, will bring the message. Sunday-- 5 p.m. The Xi Alpha Alpha Chapter of the Beta Sigma Phi Sorority and their guests will meet for dinner at the Barn Dinner Theatre in Winchester. GA.sand the R.A.3 of Central Baptist Church will have a recognition service in the church fellowship hall. Monday-- 7:30 p.m.--Queen Victoria Court, Order of the Amaranth, will meet at the Masonic Hall.

Tuesday-- The court approved a motion n. to have Buck Creek Road and 016 the. Mountain Ash Road Christian Church wUl meet at repaired by the state. Mrs. Bill Smith and Mrs.

GUlis In financial matters, the court approved funds to pay the election officers and they ap- proved transferring $7500 in revenue sharing funds from the public safety budget to the road and bridges budget. The court also decided to have $22,789.70 in surplus funds from the previous year allocated to the Wilcox will be hostesses. Mrs. Jack Cover will have the program. 1 p.m.--The Oak Grove Homemakers Club will meet at the Housing Project Com- munity Room.

FRIDAY A.M. 4:30 10 Sunrise Semester 5:00 6 Today In Tennessee 10 Farm and Home 5:25 13 You 5:55 13 News for Farmers 6:00 10 CBS News 6 Today 13 Mr. Bill 6:55 27 Law of the Land 7:00 27 10 Captain Kangaroo 13 Sesame Street 18 Today 8:00 10 Match Game 6 Corner Pyle, USMC 13 I Love Lucy Town Talk 8:30 6 Dating Game 13 Green Acres 10 Carol Utley 9:00 27 10 Joker's Wild 18 6 Dinah's Place 13 Brady Bunch 9:30 27 10 Gambit 18 6 Jeopardy 13 Perry Mason 10:00 27 10 Now You See It 18 6 Wizard of Odds 10:30 27 10 Love of Life 18 6 Hollywood Squares 13 Move Closer To Your World 10:50 13 News 10:55 10 News 11:00 6 News 10 27 The Young and The Restless IS Jackpot 13 Password 11:30 It 6 Celebrity Sweep- stakes 27 10 Search for Tomorrow 13 Split Second 5:00 10 18 6 News, Weather, Sports 13 ABC News 5:30 10 27 CBS News 18 6 News 13 Andy Griffith 6:00 6 Andy Griffith 10 13 Truth or Con- sequences 18 27 News 6:30 6 Hollywood Squares 10 To Tell The Truth 13 Other People, Other Places 27 Wild Kingdom 7:00 18 6 Sanford Son 27 10 Dirty Sally 13 National Geographic 7:30 10 27 Good Times 18 Cincinnati Reds at Houston 6 Lotsa Luck! 8:00 27 Movie "Wild In The Country" 10 Movie "Captain Nenro and the Un- derwater City" 13 Six Million Dollar Man 6 Girl With Something Extra 8:30 6 Brian Keith 9:00 13 Toma 6 Dean Martin 10:00 13 18 6 10 News 27 Bold Ones 10:30 18 6 Tonight Show 13 Elton John 10 Movie "The Disorderly Orderly" 11:00 27 News 11:30 27 Movie "Saratoga Trunk" 12:00 116 Midnight Special 13 News fund for meeting existing emergencies. Unlikely Alliance From Page 1)' process would end. Watergate prosecutions would but there is no way to foresee whether they would provide a final judgment on the innocence or guilt of the President.

It would be up to the prosecutor 2: p.m. Circle Two, First Christian Church, will meet at the home of Mrs. John L. Crawford. Mrs.

John Hammons will be co-hostess and Mrs. Jack Day will give the program. Correction The Knox county court statistics published in yester- day's edition of the Tiroes- Tribune incorrectly stated Dillard L. Taylor had filed a divorce suit against Donna Taylor. Rather than a divorce and the grand jury to decide -action, the attorney for the whether Nixon, as a private couple said the suit was a joint citizen, should face trial and petition by agreement for verdict in Watergate.

dissolution of the marriage. WCTT PROGRAMS Southeosfern Kentucky's Most Powerful Fulltime Station 680 On Your Dial THURSDAY P.M. 6:00 News 6:15 Sports 6:20 Ed Alan Show-News 11:00 Sign Off FRIDAY A.M. 5:00 Phil Taylor Show 5:55 U. K.

Farm News 6:00 News 6:25 Farm It Home News 6:30 News 6:45 Trading Post 7:00 News 7:10 Sports 7:15 Johnny Reeves Show 8:00 News 8:15 Changing World 8:30 Bailey Boys 9:00 News 9:05 Obituary Column 9:10 Devotion 9:28 Weather Watch 9:30 l-uther Martin 9:45 Campmeeting Hour 10:00 News-Morning Snow 12:00 News 12:15 Weather 12:20 Sports 12:30 Church of Christ 12:45 World Missionary Evang. 1:00 David Scott Show-News 3:00 Alan Onksl Show-News 6:00 News 6:15 Sports 6:20 Ed Alan Show 7:30 11:00 News Sign Off For WCTT-FM Dial 107.1 NYLON STRETCH LAMES'NYLON TANK "OLD DUTCH" CLEANSER FOR ALL OCCASIONS! SPECIAL! MEMORIAL DAY WREATHS SWIMSUITS WIDE VARIETY SAVE SAVE SOLID COLORS I PRINTS Hor-coumASTic FOAM CUPS SHORT SETS FAMOUS BRAND ElASTK WAIST SmCMCMAK AnotnocoiOK MO. 1 MIMYTO MKSS KNIT I SPORT SHIRTS AMT smts, coiott.

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About The Corbin Times-Tribune Archive

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