The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky (2024)

THE COURIER-JOURNAT, LOUISVILLE, THURSDAY MORNING. FEBRUARY 16, 1961 3 Crash Victim's Body Returned Woman Killed Near Russellville; Youth Arrested Later At Home The body of Mrs. Annette ton, who was killed in a traffic Tuesday night, was returned services at Neurath Funeral Police said the car in which Mrs. Hornback was riding collided with one which had been chased by police earlier in the evening. They said the second car, driven by Paul Martin, 18, Russellville, stopped suddenly in the road, causing the other car to hit its rear.

Martin fled. police 'said, but was arrested later at his home. 4 Others Injured The car in which Mrs. Hornback was riding was driven by Pvt. Jerry Papa, 23, Fort Knox soldier, Four other passengers in the car, including Mrs.

Hornback's daughter, Mrs. Carolyn J. Parker, 22, same address, were injured. Mrs. Parker was in serious condition in a hospital at The group was Russellvillewaw to Elkton to visit a relative.

Other survivors of Mrs. Hornback are four sisters, Mrs. Effie F. Toller, Indianapolis, Chest Studies Purchasing Old Building Negotiations To Start With Liberty National The Community Chest may buy the Liberty National Bank Trust Company's old building at Second Market. A committee of the Chest's board has been authorized to begin negotiations with the bank.

The present Chest building at 424 W. Jefferson presumably would be sold. Lyman Dawson, Chest president, stressed that "no deal has been made" and negotiations are only beginning. He said the reason the Chest is considering a move is to get more space. A larger building would permit more Chest agencies to locate there.

Part of the consideration of locating in a larger building would be the agreement of Chest agencies to rent space there. This is now being discussed. Liberty Bank's old main office became a branch when the main office moved into its new building at 406 W. Jefferson. Hornback, 51, of 1026 Lampaccident near Russellville, here last night pending Home, 725 E.

Market. Mrs. Bridget Cecil, Mrs. Mate Cissell, and Mrs. Edna Cecil, and three brothers, Jodie, Hugh, and Leonard Bartley.

The funeral will be at 10:30 a.m. Saturday at Neurath. Funeral Home. Burial will be in St. Stephens Cemetery.

In another wreck: Six persons injured in a twocar collision at Third and Eastern Tuesday night were reported in good condition yesterday. Treated at hospitals were Frederick L. Abrams, 18, of 801 Dresden, who suffered a shoulder; Miss Joyce London, 18, of 313 E. Breckinridge, cuts and a broken right leg; John R. Wicker, 16, of 556 S.

Shelby, head cuts; Lyman Goad, 17, of 644 Fehr, face and leg cuts; Fred Edmonson, 38, of 3301 Young, broken pelvis and his daughter, Bedortiblia, head cuts. Police said Abrams told them his brakes failed, causing his car to collide with one driven by Edmonson. Abrams was cited for having defective brakes and for not having a driver's license. Jesse Stuart Gets $5,000 Award For Poetry New York, Feb. 15 (P Jesse Stuart, Kentucky mountain poet, Wednesday won the annual $5,000 award of the Academy of American Poets "for distinguished poetic achievement." The award by the nonprofit organization is the largest given for American poets.

The 53-year-old Stuart, born in a log cabin in Greenup County, is now teaching at the American University of Cairo, Egypt. His bestknown works include "Kentucky Is My Home," "Alum of Destiny," and "Man With A Bull-Tongue Plow." Mrs. Torrance Dies Special to The Courier-Journal Owensboro, Feb. Mrs. Eliza Huff Torrance, 79, died Wednesday in her home Horse Branch, Ohio County.

Mrs. Annie Gott, Louisville, is a sister. Two Drivers Fined On Amended Charges Drunken-driving charges to drunkenness in a public Court Judge Thomas J. Knight. filed away a similar charge fined Arthur J.

Hardest 4400 Bank, and Steve A. Davidson, 1428 Shingo, $100 each on the amended charges. Hardy, who had a Breathalyzer reading of .22, and Davidson, who registered .24, appealed $100 fines they received for drunken driving in lower courts. (Under State law, a person with a reading of .15 or over is considered under the influence of alcohol.) 2 Men Found Guilty Hardy and Davidson agreed not to drive their automobiles until six months from the time of their original conviction. Knight said he filed away the charge against Mrs.

Evelyn F. Richardson, Shepherdsville, because the Commonwealth was unable to prove she was driving when arrested last September. She was fined $75 by Knight for permitting an unlicensed person to drive her auto. In Quarterly Court, two men were found guilty of drunken driving by Judge Arthur C. Coaplen and were fined $100 each.

4 Lose Driver Permits They are Cecil E. Westmoorland, 38, of 129 S. Wenzel, and Ronald Alvin Leachman, 24, of 4832 Redwing Way. A similar charge against Basil E. Hutcherson, 23, of Embry, was amended to drunkenness in a public place and he was fined $10.

Police said he was sitting in a parked auto when they saw him in the 7900 block of Carnation Drive Saturday. The driver's licenses of four motorists were confiscated in Traffic Court after they were fined $100 each for drunken driving. They were docketed as Wen- IF IT'S A PEST CALL LOUISVILLE CHEMICAL CO. Years' Continuous Service" Jefferson at Hanco*ck St. JU 7-8424 Lexington Office Phone 4-2755 Termite Control By Expertly Trained Servicemen LENTEN PARABLES Patches On Old Systems Won't Help Civilization By HAROLD BLAKE WALKER Once, in a church school in Korea, I saw a small boy stand up to recite.

He wore a pair of hand-me-down jeans, probably cast off by an American boy. On the seat of the pants was bright red patch clinging precariously to the frayed cloth of the worn-out jeans. The patch reminded me of the Master's parable: "No one tears a piece from a new garment and puts it on an old garment; if he does, he will tear the new, and the piece from the new will not match the old." Possibly Jesus was remembering His own patched robes garments, for He was no to poverty. But His thought moved swiftly from patchwork customs stranger, and habits of His day." Like the Master, we know from our own experience that little systems have their day" and become threadbare. Patches are no substitute for fresh visions and insights.

A bit of new cloth sewed on the old imperialism of nations cannot clothe the aspirations of men and women to be free. Intolerance can't be patched enough to cover our need for brotherhood. Hanging onto old ways and outworn attitudes that are coming apart at the seams, covering them with patches here and there, will leave our civilization threadbare in the end. Threat hurled against threat and might challenged by mightthe old ways of the world-await the vision of something new and alive with hope. Jesu came with a call to the new, "a new new heart." a new challenge to good will and love.

The hope of the world is constructive, on our old ways, but in "newness of life" grounded in the love of God and man. Gracious Father of us all, stab us awake to the possibilities of life with love and good will at its heart and steadied by faith in Him who came to make all things new. Amen. Tortoise Owners Told To Cool Pets London, Feb. 15 (P--The London Zoo warned Wednesday that Britain's unusually mild winter is awakening hibernating pet tortoises too early and this may cause them to have nervous breakdowns.

Zoo officials advised tortoise owners to cool their pets and put them to sleep again. RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL MORTGAGE LOANS BEST' FAST TERMS REPO CLOSING JAMES 4. PENCE Co. (315 South 5t St. INCORPORATED JU3-5582 as in maidenform's Aid Is Urged For A.M.E.'s Social Action Bishops of the African Methodist Episcopal Church yesterday were urged to determine the effects of integration upon the church and to aid the work of the A.M.E.

department of social action. The charge came from Bishop Joseph Gomez, Cleveland, president of the 19-member A.M.E, Council of Bishops. The group is meeting at Quinn Chapel A.M.E. Church. A committee will be formed to check the possibility of merger of the A.M.E.

with other groups church. gro Methodists, according to a spokesman. In other action, a National Council of Presiding Elders was organized, with the Rev. Jesse L. Glover, Los Angeles, chosen president, The Connecticut Council of the group elected the Rev.

J. L. Roberts, Detroit, president, He succeeds Chaplain D. bc. T.

Robinson, Asheville, N. Two Killed In Avalanches Innsbruck, Austria, Feb. 15 (P -Two persons were killed and a third presumed dead in two avalanche accidents in the Austrian Alps Wednesday. Associated Press Wirephoto STRAY AT BAY Modern transportation is combined with a rope trick from the Old West as an Animal Welfare League officer attempts to capture a stray German shepherd on the ice- floes of Lake Michigan along Chicago's lake front. The animal was chased close to shore and captured.

Editorial Proposes Changing Name Of Southern Baptist Convention Changing the name of the Southern Baptist Convention to Baptist Convention U.S.A. is proposed in an editorial in today's issue of Arkansas Baptist Newsmagazine. The Little Rock publication is edited by Erwin director L. Southern McDonald, former public relations at Baptist Theological inary here. Publication of the editorial coincides with meetings here today of the Southern Baptist Press Association and the Executive Secretaries of Southern Baptist State Conventions.

Both meetings will be at the Brown Hotel. In his editorial McDonald suggests that the executive committee of the Southern Baptist Convention appoint a special committee to make a thorough study of changing the name because "we believe it is time for a change." The editorial continues: Previous proposals to change the convention's name "have Urban-Bond Sale Brings $2,080,000 3.1559 Rate Called 'Terrifically Good' The City yesterday sold another $2.080,000 of its urbanrenewal bonds at what was described as "a terrifically good" interest rate. The sale, handled by the City's Board of Sinking Fund Commissioners, drew 15 groups of bidders. The low bid, carrying an average interest rate of 3.1559 per cent. was submitted by a New York group led by Lehman Brothers.

Will Mature Serially "On today's market the bonds drew a terrifically good interest rate," commented J. B. Frith, secretary-treasurer of the sinking fund. The bonds are to mature serially between 1967 and 1998. By the time the last one is paid off City will have paid $1,476,961 in interest.

Lawyer Found Dead Special to The Courier-Journal Ashland. Feb. Harry Frederick Riddle, 41, an Ashland attorney, was found dead in his car at 11:10 a.m. Wednesday. He had apparently suffered a heart attack.

He was a partner in the law firm of Yager, Riddle, Sinnette and Yager-Riddle Adjustment Service. Who Pays Bill? Aides Ask If Locks Are Part Of Jail Itself Are the padlocks on jail cell The question came up iff Solon F. Russell and should pay the bill for about For years the matter of who should pay for what at the County Jail has brought up points of arguments between County sheriffs and jailers and fiscal courts. Must Provide Building The is required to provide building. By a County, specific law, it "also must furnish bedding for inmates.

It is the duty of the sheriff, who now also serves as jailer, to operate the jail. He collects fees for this service and at the end of his term he turns over his surplus to the State. The State returns Mrs. Puckett Dies Special to The Courier-Journal exploded in vociferous opposition." Now it is back in the news again. This time the call comes from Wisconsin, where Southern Baptists have not long been organized.

Pastors of the Wisconsin-Minnesota Baptist Association feel that the term "Southern" tends to preserve the animosity generated during the Civil War. "The traditions of the Southern Baptist Convention are dear to the hearts of all of us. It would be easy for us to set ourselves against the name change without facing the issue fairly and squarely. But we need to realize that we have long since expanded our base of operations beyond the South. Further, we should keep before us the fact that we could change our name without changing our beliefs and practices.

"Our main consideration must always be that of winning people to Christ around the world. We are world Baptists." against two men were amended place yesterday by Criminal And in a third case Knight against another defendant. dell G. Hobbs, 53, of 1329 S. Brook, arrested December 29 on Clarks Lane; John C.

Lindsey, 26, of 513 Lilly, arrested November 27 on 38th Street: James S. McCreary, 33, of 8807 Westport Road, arrested December 26 at Seventh and Magnolia, and Freeman Young, 35, of 117 W. Kentucky, arrested January 13 in the 800 block of South First. Death Charge Filed Away Drunken -driving charges against two others were filed away, but they were fined for reckless driving. John J.

Noon, 25, of 665 Curry, arrested December 18 at Fourth and Winkler, was fined $150, and Wilbur L. Cook, 23, of 4405 Bellevue, arrested December 27 in the 3100 block of South Fourth, $100. A manslaughter charge against David R. Campbell, 52, Gadsden, was filed away. Campbell's arrest in December caused a revision of a City police policy of charging all drivers involved in traffic fatalities with manslaughter.

Now. charges are placed only after investigation. Campbell's truck was only slightly involved in the accident, police said. Munfordville, Feb. Mrs.

Hattie Pearl McCorkle Puckett, 74, died Wednesday at the home of a son, W. S. Puckett, of the nearby Mount Beulah community. Also surviving are five other sons, including Earl and Robert Puckett, both of Louisville, and Custer Puckett, Elizabethtown; four daughters, including Mrs. Ilene Skaggs, Elizabethtown, and three sisters, including Mrs.

Mollie Coats, Louisville. IT'S NOT TOO LATE TO ENROLL IN THE WEAVER REAL ESTATE COURSE IN LOUISVILLE The first organizational meeting will be held next Tuesday evening, February 21, at 6:00 P.M. in Room 309A Theatre Building, S. 4th. If you are interested in enrolling or in learning more about this course, you are invited to attend this meeting and hear the instructor, C.

Boyles, explain the opportunities in the Real Estate profession. For information and registration Call JU 4-7105. WEAVER SCHOOL OF REAL ESTATE A Division of SPENCERIAN COLLEGE doors part of the jail itself? yesterday in a discussion by Shermembers of Fiscal Court on who $100 worth of locks. a fourth of this to the County. Russell, who leaves office at the end of this year, now has a $132,000 surplus.

The sheriff said yesterday he does not believe the State would approve spending the $100 from his funds because he considers the locks necessary to the maintenance of the jail building by the County. He agreed, however, to buy the locks from his fees and submit the bill to the State to see what happens. A court member suggested that the locks are part of the jail security such as the pistols the sheriff provides his guards. INSURED SAFETY UP TO $10,000 ON EACH ACCOUNT PER ANNUM CURRENT DIVIDEND Yoo con save or invest with us by mail. We pay postage both ways.

Kentucky's Largest Savings and Loan Association. Come in or write far financiol Statement and full details Resources more than 000,000 KREATER LOUISVILLE FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION An Insured Institution 417 W. MARKET STREET 624 SOUTH FOURTH STREET 826 EASTERN PARKWAY 2350 BARDSTOWN ROAD 4021 DIXIE HIGHWAY 4510 SHELBYVILLE. ROAD 5739 PRESTON HGWY. 10800 DIXIE HIGHWAY Bra as you like it Regular Bandeau or with contoured cups.

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3.50 T.M. Stewart's Corsets and Bras, Fourth Floor.

The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky (2024)
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