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

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

Corbin Times-Tribune, Sunday, September 30, 1973 TL Wildcats Round The Defeat Obituaries Monday-- 7 p.m.-Tlic Lily PTA will meet at the school. 7:30 p.m.-Thc Felts Ilomcmakcrs will meet at the Norlhside Baptist Church. There will be an election of officers. Tuesday-- 6:30 p.m.-The Alpha 1-ambda Chapter of the Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will liave a dinner meeting at the Holiday Inn. If unable to attend, call 528- 2514 by noon Monday.

7:30 Mary's Altar Society will meet at the home of Mrs. Joe Karns, 1204 Forest Circle Drive. Mrs. Thomas Davis will present a program of piano selections. 8 p.m.--The Corbin La Leche league will begin a new series of four meetings at the home of Mrs.

Robert Ballou on John street. Wednesday-- 12 Noon-The CWF of the First Christian Church will meet in the Fellowship Hall for a luncheon. Circle Two will be the hostess and have the program. There will be an executive meeting at 11:30 a.m. Thursday-- 12 Noon-The United Methodist Women of the First United Methodist Church will meet in the church for luncheon and general meeting.

Hostesses will be Circle One and the Guild Circle. Circle Two will have the program. 1:15 p.m.-Circle Two, Kirst United Methodist Church, will meet at the church. 7:30 p.m.--Circle Four, First United Methodist Church, will meet with Mrs. Tom Ttiurston, Fourth street.

Miss Nancy Deweesc will be co-hostess. Mrs. C. C. Ray will give Ihe program.

7:30 p.m.-Circle Five, First United Methodist Church, will meet with Mrs. Ralph Reasor, Heasor street. Mrs. Lloyd Siler will give (lie program. Terrorists Force Closing Of Center ll'imliiiiird I'nmi Page I I to Israel at the rate of 2,650 a month recently.

The conditions of the three Jewish hostages, described as an older couple and an am- putee in his 30s, were not known immediately. An Austri- an radio report said the wom- an, believed to be 68, was suf- fering from shock after being held at gunpoint in the small van. The 62-year-old border guard was taken to his home. The three Jews were believed taken to Schoenau Castle. Rockcastle (Continued From I'atfe l' (run failed) EC--Freeman 52 pass from Bud Erwin (Krwin pass from Lisle) WC-Ilicky a i 7 run (Martin run) fOC-C.

T. Williams 8 run (Williams pass from Lisle) WC-Richard Mack 35 run (Jeff Walters pass from Greg Helton) Pinevllle 0 20 0 1--21 Harlan 4 0 0 0--4 HAH--Louis McKee 4 run (run failed) PIN-Mark Engle 15 run (pass failed) PIN--Bo Goodwin 2 run (Eddie Bishop run) PIN--Bishop 10 run failed) PIN--Goodwin 2 run (Butch Sams pass from Doug Adams) MADISON CENTRAL 7 0 0 0 7 RICHMONDMADISONO 0 7 13 Madison Central: Touch- downs-Mike Russell (8, pass from George Ginter). Con- version--Jerry Noland (kick). Richmond Madison: Touch- downs--Clarence Gentry (81, pass from Ijary Winkler); Kenny Turner (1, run). Con- version--Winkler (kick).

Trie fw mbmithnt lornutlon lor obituary nollco 11 10 Funpril noNcei received after lo t.m. wltl be pvblitnni In Ihe nel pdmon ol ih Cflrbln Tlmei'Tribune. tit: published wiirwul charge by IK.I newspaper kiting Information luppllti by lunenl homes. Wage and salary rates rose about 7 per cent in 1972, and food prices went up about 6 per cent. Alabama growers planted 540,000 acres of cotton, in 1973, down 60,000 acres or 10 per cent from last year.

Chilton County, with 150 pro- ducers and about 4,000 acres of trees, accounts for 90 per cent of the commercial peach pro- duction in Alabama. Josh Terrell Josh Terrell, 76, Rt. 2, Rockliolds, died Thursday night at the SEK Baptist Hospital. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Nodie Terrell; a son, George H.

Terrell, Hollywood, two daughters, Mrs. Deleie Cox and Mrs. Lucille Paul, Woodbine; seven grand- children, 13 great grand- children, and a great great granddaughter; three brothers, Jim Terrell, Uslie Terrell, and Kay Terrell, Rockholds. Funeral services will be conducted at 11 a.m. Sunday at the Meadow Creek Baptist Church by the Rev.

Lee Helton and the Rev. L. B. Croley. Burial will be in the Hart Cemetery at Meadow Creek.

Pallbearers will be his grandsons. Friends may call at the Hart Funeral Home after 6 p.m. Friday. Alice Stephens Alice Stephens, Mariemont, Ohio, formerly of Whitley, died Friday in Our lady of Mercy Hospital in Cincinnati. She was the widow of the late Hesco Stevens of Jellico Creek and the daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Ben Chinn. Funeral arrangements will be announced later by the Croley Funeral Home of Williamsburg. Bessie Wanti Mrs. Bessie Wanlz, 58, for- merly of Whitley county, died Wednesday In Ihe Mesa General Hospital In Mesa, Ariz.

She Is survived by her husband, Vcrnon Wantz; her mother, Mrs. Sara Creekmore, HI. 3, Williamsburg; three sisters, Mrs. Hazel White, Mesa; Amanda Reynolds, Joes, and Mrs. Dorothy Hill, Hodgensville; a brother, Elaine Creekmore, Williamsburg.

Funeral services will be conducted at 1 p.m. Sunday at the Croley Funeral Home Chapel by the Rev. Bill Childress. Burial will be in the Jellico Creek Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral Itome.

Wrong Woman Is Arrested By Bondsmen ('Continued From Page I) names of relatives didn't And also I could sense she was telling the truth." Miss attorney said he has not decided what action, if any, he will take. She could not be reached ment. Shott said he didn't believe his company was liable. "All over the country everyday Vm sure there are police who make several false arrests and then release them," he said. "We didn't do this maliciously." city State Schools Face Cutback City Judge Hen- del-light placed Dwlght Griffin, 21, Falls Road, under a $1,500 bond for charges of driving while under the influence of intoxicating beverages and for petit larceny.

A petit larceny charge on Griffin was brought against him wlien lie allegedly got into a car in lite Forest Lanes Bowling Alley parking lot which belonged to someone else. Griffin pleaded guilty to a disorderly conduct charge and was fined $67 and sentenced to 10 days In jail by Judge Hen- derlight, Griffin also was charged with destroying private property at the Wing Drive-in which led Judge Henderlight to place him under a $540 ap- pearance bond. A Jellico man pleaded guilty to charges of driving while under the influence of In- toxicating beverages and driving without an operating license. Paul Fusion, 21, Rt. 1, Jellico, was fined $142 for both charges.

Judge Henderlight also fined Ernest Reed, 204 Walden Corbin, $33.50 for resisting arrest. Two fines of $33.50 were given to Paul Roux, 17, Rt. 3, Corbin and to Coil Steely, 25, Rt. 2, Corbin. Roux was charged with driving without an operating license and Steely was driving 45 m.p.h.

in a 25 m.p.h. zone. The sharpest increase in farm real estate values since 1051 was recorded for the year ending Nov. 1, 1972 average value per acre jumped 10 per cent nationally. WASHINGTON (AP) Sen.

Walter (Dee) Huddleston, D- has sharply protested an amendment that would slash federal aid for education of the disadvantaged In Kentucky by almost $10 million. Huddleston said Friday that the amendment, passed by the House and pending before the Senate, would result In the lay- offs of 1,000 Kentucky teachers and deprive up to 80,000 chil- dren of special education pro- grams. Huddleston, In a letter to the chairman of the Senate Appro- priations Committee, said the proposed amendment would have a strongly disruptive ef- fect on education in Kentucky. Kentucky's junior senator told Sen. John L.

MeClellan, D- that the need for Title 1 funds "remains great In Ken- tucky." He said 17 per cent of the entire student population In Kentucky comes from families with incomes below $3,000 a year. The amendment, passed by the House 286-94 this week, would set Kentucky's federal education aid for the dls- advantaged at about $28 million this year compared with $38 million state education officials had planned for their programs. The amendment was offered by Rep. Albert Quie, and approved when a contin- uing resolution on Title I educa- tion funds for the disadvantaged came up for an extension beyond its Sept. 30 deadline.

Huddleston said he would fa- vor any move that would assure Kentucky school' districts the same amount they received in the 1973 fiscal yew ended June 30. That was about $33 million. Prior to passage of the Quie amendment, the Title I financ- ing resolution proposed that Kentucky would receive $38 same amount of Title I funding received In 1971- 72 fiscal year. But the resolution would have redistributed the amount with urban counties and Louisville gaining several million dollars, while 61 rural counties would have lost $3 mil- lion. John Bruce, director of Ken- tucky's Title I program, has been in Washington tills week lobbying against the Quie amendment.

Error In Story Is Corrected An error was reported in yesterday's story about the armed robbery at the Texaco station hear the 1-75 in- terchange. Larry Boggs was the service station attendant, not Steve Proffitt, the owner and operator of the gas station. The robbery occurred Friday morning, not Thursday evening as reported. The nation's agricultural ex- ports in the current fiscal year ending next June 30 are ex- pected to total about $10 billion. Alabama's lop 10 agricultural income counties are Cullman, DeKalh, tawrencc, Baldwin, Madison, Jackson, Blount, Mar- shall, Mobile and Limestone.

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About The Corbin Times-Tribune Archive

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