The Lexington Herald from Lexington, Kentucky (2024)

LEXINGTON State, Society, General News And Comics Lexington, Kentucky, Friday Morning, April 21, 1967 23 2 Mercer Teen-Agers Nabbed In Fishing Equipment Larceny HARRODSBURG, Ky. moored along the banks of the which he recognized from a Mercer youths were charged lake. dent in the box. with grand larceny Wednesday A portion of the recovered He asked Neely to after their arrest in connection loot was the property of Mrs. eye" the youths and an "keep on called with the theft of fishing equip- Joseph Fister, a former resident the sheriff's office.

ment valued at between $300 of Lexington, who now lives in and $400 from several cottages Sunrise Shores, and Mr. and State Police heard the dispatch at Sunrise Shores on Lake Her- Mrs. Roy Lear of Lexington, on the radio and shortly thererington. who have in after State Trooper David Pata summer cottage Deputy Sheriff Kenneth Hour- the subdivision. terson arrived at the scene and igan reported that Mc- The took the McKinneys into cusKinney, his brother, with the teen stolen agers articles were in their tody.

Joey caught Samuel McKinney." 19, of the possession when Jack Neely, a Mrs. Fister and the Lears Bushtown section of Mercer resident of the colony, noticed identified thier share of the stolCounty, were charged with the two attempting to start a en articles. larceny and have been motor on the boat moored at the Lear said the locked house lodged in Mercer County Jail in dock of a neighbor, James Shar- float where his gear had been lieu of bond of $1,000 each. er. He called to Sharer, who stored, was broken into.

He said The youths are scheduled to asked youths what they some of the articles taken had appear before County Judge there doing. When they replied not been recovered and that Edwin Freeman Tuesday after- were "fishing" he ordered the boys had admitted after noon. them to leave. questioning that they tossed sevHourigan said the fishing gear When the boys started off eral items into the lake which had been taken from house the property Sharer noticed they is about 40 feet deep at that floats and lockers on floats were carrying his tackle box, point. Circuit Judge Rules Blue Law Void NEWPORT, Ky.

(AP) The Judge Warren dismissed 470 Kentucky law on Sunday sales indictments which the January is void because it is so vague grand jury returned against 82 "it fails to give a person of business places on the basis ordinary intelligence fair notice of evidence collected by other of what is forbidden," Campbell businessmen. Circuit Judge Fred Warren In his 72-page ruling, the judge ruled Thursday. reviewed the history of laws 18 Should Be National Voting Age, ETB Says FRANKFORT (AP) Gov. Edward T. Breathitt declared Thursday that allowing 18-yearolds to vote was beneficial to Kentucky urged that age be adopted nationally.

In a prepared speech to Webster County Young Democrats here, Breathitt said that young people in Kentucky take a greater interest in their government because they have the right to vote. "They become participants at time when their minds are open," he added, "at a time when they are establishing attitudes and philosophies that will remain with them throughout their life. Breatitt also praised the role young people are playing in state government, such as Roy Woodall, he said, who is "probably the youngest state insurance commissioner in the nation." There are approximately 3,500 persons under the age of 30 now working for state government, he noted, "many of them holding important, policy making positions." GOP Hopeful Charges No Long Range Plans Made By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ernment had been all but de- A Republican candidate for governor said Thursday the Democrats have operated the state government "crisis by crisis by crisis." Jefferson County Judge Marlow Cook said Democratic never" createrations, range programs for the state. Cook contended Democrats had created such a strong central government that local gov- stroyed. The candidate opposes Glasgow Atty.

Louie B. Nunn for the GOP nomination. Cook, in a talk in Louisville, said parts of Kentucky have been neglected by state, listing the Northern Kentucky, Ashland and Owensboro He added Democrats never proposed participating programs with local government and says the GOP stands for this kind of system. East Kentucky Educators To Meet At Lees College JACKSON, hundred educators, health and wefare workers and citizens from institutions and agencies in Eastern Kentucky will attend a meeting today at Lees College here, sponsored by the Kentucky Welfare Association. Richard Snyder, chairman of District 19, Kentucky Welfare Association, and director of the Buckhorn Children's Center, said, the theme of the meeting "What Roles Do Today's Children Play?" The objective of the ence, Snyder added, will be to determine what today's children need to prepare them for their roles in tomorrow's community.

Speakers and conference leaders will include Sen John Sherman Cooper; Mrs. Katherine Brownell Oettinger, chief of the United States Children's Bureau, Department of Health, Education and Welfare, Washington, D.C. The Kentucky Superintendent of public instruction, and commissioners of health, child welfare, economic security and mental health. 3 Covington Men Get 20 Years Each In Robbery COVINGTON, Ky. (AP) Three Covington men were convicted Thursday in U.S.

District Court of the $11,500 robbery of a Kenton County bank and Judge the time of the robbery at 8 p.m. on Jan. 6. Several bank employes and customers identified them as robbers during the trial. McHone and Robert Laswell Mac Swinford sentenced each of were arrested Jan.

10 at a Covthem to 20 years' imprisonment. ington house and William LasArnold McHone, 28; Robert well was arrested about the Laswell, 34, and his brother Wil- same time in Dayton, Ohio. liam, 33, were arrested a few All three also pleaded guilty days after the Taylor Mill earlier in the armed robbery of ence was robbed by three men. Judge Swinford said the 20-year Branch of the Bank of Independ- a Covington delicatessen and de The trio went on trial Monday sentences will run concurrently and two of them testified they with whatever sentence is handall were at Blue Licks, at'ed down in state court. Dairy Products Import Should Be Cut, ETB Says FRANKFORT (AP) Growers twice have rejected Edward T.

Breathitt Thursday a plan for acreage-poundage recommended to a federal offi- controls on burley tobacco in cial that the import of dairy place of the current acreage reproducts be restricted if they de- strictions. press prices at home. Breathitt's statement said, too, A statement from the gover- that the federal government nor was read by Haydon Tim- should create projects to help mons, his agriculture aide, at low income farmers supplement a hearing at Decatur, Ind. their income, perhaps with outAgriculture Secretary Orville side employment. Freeman presided.

The hearing is one of three being held around the nation on should farm be given policy. the de- Persecuted Gypsies "Study sirability of raising the support Gypsies have a long history level on manufacturing milk, of persecution. The Nazis, on now $4 a hundredweight," Hitler's instructions, extermiBreathitt's statement said. nated in concentration camps The governor also suggested the great majority of them in study "toward making the eastern Europe an estimated present program of (tobacco) 10 per cent of the world gypsy acreage allotments more equita- population, according to the bie to all growers." 'Encyclopedia Britannica, Talks Set By Doctor, Missionary WILMORE, Dr. Bill Jack Marshall, missionary doctor in Bolivia, and the Rev.

Jay O. Purviance, missionary evangelist in Brazil, will be guest speakers during the annual Missions Conference at the Wilmore Methodist Church today through Sunday. Services, in will be Asbury held Theologi- at 9 cal Seminary, Estes Chapel; 7:30 p.m. tonight in Wilmore Methodist Church, Clark Chappel; 8 a.m. Saturday at Asbury College, Hughes Auditorium; 7:30 p.m.

Saturday at Wilmore Methodist Church, Clark Chapel, and 10:40 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. Sunday in the Wilmore Methodist Church sanctuary. Dr. Marshall was born in Texas, attended Southwestern University and received his MD degree at Emory University, Atlanta, Ga.

In 1955 he became head of the Clinica Americana in La Paz, Bolivia. Working from the base hospital, he was a medical circuit rider, to several outposts on altiplano, a high plain. A surgeon and obstretician, Dr. Marshall has delivered 3,100 babies. The Rev.

Purivance is a tive of Iowa, a graduate of Asbury College and Asbury Theological Seminary and has done graduate work at the University of Vanderbilt and Perkins School of Theology. Going as a missionary to Brazil in 1952, he has served as pastor of several churches, been chaplain of Colegio, Americano and prior furlough was president of the newly organized John Wesley Institute in 1 Porte Alegre. The Wilmore church is trying to raise $10,000 to aid missionary projects. Last year the goal was $7,000. Dr.

David A. Seamands is pastor. trying to establish a "day of rest" and added that modern conditions are very different from the way things were when the statute was enacted. After listing the changes such as abolition of slavery, state and federal labor laws and the influence of labor unions Judge Warren wrote in part: "For the reasons stated, this court is of the opinion that Section 436.160 KRS is void because of vagueness, in that it fails to give a person of ordinary intelligence fair notice of what is forbidden by such statutes; and now find that said statute is void for such reason." Eight store operators who pleaded guilty last Feb. 2 to engaging in Sunday operations will each get a refund of $31.50 for fines and court costs, the judge ordered.

FREED FROM MUD Marvin Hilton, 39, of Covington, (far right) is shown here still trapped up to his waist in mud, but he was rescued safely minutes later by firemen who stretched ladders out JACKSON, Ky. The Department of Health Education Welfare has approved a $20,000 grant to Lees College under Title 3 of the Higher Education act, for a two program to strengthen developing institutions in a cooperative arrangement with Morehead State University. Congressman Carl Perkins made the announcement in a telegram to college officials. Grant Approved Negro Attorney Buried In All-White Cemetery HOPKINSVILLE, Ky. Flanked by a corydon of state and local police, the body of a prominent civil rights attorney was buried Thursday in an allwhite cemetery.

There were no incidents during the services for Louis Mc-, Henry, a former official of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Police were called as a precaution after a number of threatening telephone calls were made to Green Hill Memorial Gardens. John R. Spivey, manager of the gardens, said he had been swamped with protests and that some burial plot owners reportedly threatened court to block the burial. Spivey said he contacted lawyers and was informed he would be violating federal law if he had refused to sell the plot to McHenry's family.

His burial was the first integration of cemeteries here. Two other cemeteries are segregated. Workshop Scheduled FLEMINGSBURG, Ky. A six-county area workshop on housing will be held at 10 a.m. May 4 at the Fleming-Mason RECC building here, H.

Bradley Brown, area extension specialist in resource development, announced. The workshop will be for Bracken, Bath, Fleming, Lewis, Mason and Robertson counties. Topics will be financing, buildling, remodeling, repairing, im-111 proving, low-cost and public housing. Several organizations' representatives will be present to answer questions. Lending agencies will have forms for making house loan applications.

House plans will be available for study and ordering. Architects, and builders will be discuss individual problems. Chairman Peter McNeill, will preside at sessions scheduled for a.m. and 7:30 p.m. HOME-OWNED OPERATED SINCE 1913 DECORATING ASSISTANCE WITH PURCHASE.

OUR OWN BUDGET ACCOUNTS to him. Hilton was fishing in the Little Miami River near Newtown. He was trapped about hours, but apparently suffered no injuries. (Associated Press Wirephoto). Local Governor's Bases Proposed By Chandler By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Former Gov.

A. B. Chandler came up with a proposal Thursday for building permanent reception centers for the governor in all cities with large populations. "This would return government to the grass roots and the average citizen would have the opportunity to be heard," Chandler explained during a speech in Louisville. Chandler, running for a third term in office, said his platform also includes plans for legislative action on air pollution, "which is detrimental to health and welfare." He also promised to build more freeways where needed and to expand existing facilities to freeway capacity.

J. D. Buckman, another Democratic gubernatorial candidate, took his campaign to Lexington, where he called for to keep thoroughbred farm owners from moving to other states. Buckman said these farms are valuable to the state not only as an indusry but also as a tourist an indusry but also as a tourist attraction. "We should be able to offer breeders the same considerations that other states do and should encourage new ones to come into Kentucky," he added.

Gov. Harry Lee Waterfield told a rally at Paducah that he favors a law banning "speakers of communistic persuasion from addressing Kentucky colleges and universities." Waterfield said exceptions open tonight till 9 THE PARKING STORE NEAR AMPLE FREE Library In Bath Gets Shelving could be made for speakers in this country under a cultural exchange program, providing they were kept under strict surveillance. Waterfield also contended that one of his rivals for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination, Henry Ward, "is coming around to my way of thinking on enforced open housing." Waterfield announced his opposition to such law recently and Ward took a similar stand this week. Candidates Find Change In City Status Pinches LOUISVILLE (AP) Five candidates for the town council in suburban Jeffersontown might not be candidates after all, just victims of progress. The five, members of the Taxpayers' Party to which Mayor Franklin Chambers belongs, failed to file 45 days before the primary on May 23.

Jeffersontown received legislative approval last year to advance from the fifth to the fourth population class and consequently some new rules apply. "We simply failed to read the statutes on fourth class cities," said the mayor. "But we have done some research and I would that our chances of getting onto the ballot are 50-50." There also are six Republicans who are candidates for the council. OWINGSVILLE. Ky.

The final shipment of shelving has arrived at the Bath County Memorial Library here reported Mrs. Peggy Staton, librarian. who said that the equipment is being set up. The library building located on Main Street was purchased from the Farmers Bank and has been remodeled with local, state and federal funds. Plans for the library's formal opening, originally scheduled for April have been postponed until May.

ASC Applications ASC Applications Applications for reporters to measure tobacco and feed-grain farms this summer will be received from now until June 1 lat the Bath County ASC office here. League Meeting Set County Library. Property Sold An organizational meeting for leaders for the Owingsville Little Leagues has been scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Friday in the Community Room of the Bath Recent real estate transactions in the county the sale of a 74-acre farm on Prickley Ash Creek to Mr. and Mrs.

Porter Graham of Flemingsburg by Mr. and Mrs. William R. Brewer of Middletown, Ohio, for $19,000. A 234-acre farm on the Maysville and Mt.

Sterling road was sold by Ercie W. Stephens and others to Estelle C. Smith, Dorothy Oatts and Mary Smith Burton for approximately 1000. COVINGTON, Ky. A 53- year-old Winchester farmer was found dead about 9:30 a.m.

Thursday in a freight boxcar in the DeCoursey Yards here by an Railroad inspector. Kenton County Coroner Dr. Edward L. Smith said Ray Crawford of Main Street in Winchester died from exposure. He said Crawford, a Madison County native, had been dead six or eight hours when he was found and added that the man had been drinking.

He said the farmer's alcoholic intake, combined with temperatures in the 30s Wednesday night, probably caused his death and that an investigation will be made. Crawford is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Joyce A. Tergram, Winchester; a son, William R. Crawford, with the U.S.

Air Force in California; a sister, Mrs. America Green, London, and two brothers, Archie Crawford, Louisville, and Shelby Crawford, Winchester. His body is at the Edgington Funeral Home, Winchester where friends may call after 4 p.m. today. NOTHING FINER ANYWHERE THAN COLONIAL Buckwheat Hard-Rock Solid Maple Clark Man Found Dead In Boxcar open TIT TIT DIS beveled the note to of Kling Come in give our KLING solid maple its "finger Run a finger along the and turned edges of any piece, notice immaculate cleanliness of all lathed parts or how little effort it takes to open a large drawer with so little effort.

Kling is beautiful too, with classic Colonial American lines stay in style for a lifetime. Over 200 pieces furniture from which to choose! MOST POPULAR KLING 5- PC. DINETTE GROUPING. 42 in. diameter table, Formica top and filler leaf, plus best selling comb- 409 back Windsor chairs.

West Main $189 SON.

The Lexington Herald from Lexington, Kentucky (2024)

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