The Lexington Herald from Lexington, Kentucky (2024)

The Lexington Herald Friday, December 12, 1958 Cultist Preached Reincarnation, Universal Love CHATSWORTH. Dec. 11 (P Who was Krishna Venta? The bearded, barefoot self-declared mystic who died Wednesday in the bombing of his cult's monastery had told inquirers: "I am Christ." To his robed, long-haired Venta lowers the cigar-puffing "The Master," "The Voice, "The One called him "a beautiful soul." To firemen he was a man likely at brush bianapwith his Spicturesque cultists, to help stem the flames. Their aid was also given at times of earthquakes and flood, in several areas of Southern California. To police Venta was a man with a long record of arrests.

And to the courts he was known for lengthy litigation involving the first of his two wives. Within rocky confines of his monastery and on lecture preached reincarnation uniplatforms over the world. Venta versal love. And most of those who revered this slender, 6-2 evangelist found no reason for weeping over his death. Why? Because they believe three minutes after their ing stopped.

the bomb's victims were born again, somewhere in the world. "That's our' belief in reincarnation," 35. said "The Brother intelligence Bill 1 Scho- life or force within the body can not be destroyed." Venta stressed the Ten Commandme is your he maintained--but he did not shun worldly things. His hobbies were Scrabble and stamp collecting. He approved of drinking and dancing in moderation.

And, in waking hours, he was almost never without a cigar in his mouth. His arrest record showed several aliases, and Krishna Venta wasn't his true name. He was born Francis Heidswatzer Pencovic in San Francisco 47 years ago. During his life he traveled over much of the world. At one time he worked in a shipyard near San Francisco.

During World War II he was an Army private. Most of his nine arrests were for vagrancy, petty larceny, bad checks. There was one white slave charge but it was dropped. (In 1941, at Phoenix, he was held WORK ON CAMP FUND CAMPAIGN- and Scouters of Troop 4, Central Christian Church, are shown as they prepared materials last night for the Camp Development Fund campaign, which begins Tuesday. The drive has as its goal $250.000 for developing a camp in Montgomery and Powell counties.

The workers are, left to right, S. W. Cole, assistant scoutmaster; Jimmy Wilkes, Life Scout and senior patrol leader; Solly Cole, Second Class Scout; Robert Milward, Second Class Scout; Randy Cooke, Tenderfoot Scout, and Dr. Adrian H. Wilkes, assistant scout- Spivey, Star Scout, another worker, is area, No.

1 quality fryers 14-16; hens heavy 14-16; light 8-11. Potatoes Fenner and Smith) Open High Low Close WHEATDec. 1.93⅝ 1.93¾ 1.92⅝ 1.93-1.93⅛ Mar. 1.97⅛ 1.97¼ 1.96¼ 1.96¾-⅞ May 1.94½ 1.94½ 1.93¼ 1.93¾-1 July 1.85¼ 1.85¼ 1.85% 1.84⅝-¾ CORNDec. 1.15¼ 1.15½ 1.15¼ 1.15½* Mar.

1.15⅞ 1.15⅞ 1.15½ 1.15½- May 1.18¼ 1.18¼ 1.17¾ 1.17⅞- July 1.20¼ 1.20¼ 1.19½ 1.19½- OATSDec. .66 Mar, .67 May .65 July RYEDec. 1.30½ 1.30½ 1.29¼ 1.29⅝-¾ Mar. 1.29% 1.29¾ 1.29 1.29⅛- May 1.25 1.25¼ 1.24¼ 1.24¾• July 1.20¼ 1.20¼ 1.19 1.19⅝- SOYBEANS Jan. 2.15⅜ 2.16⅛ 2.14⅞ 2.143-2.15 Mar.

2.19⅜ 2.19¾ 2.18½ 2.18⅝-¾ July 2.22½ 2.22½ 2.21¼ 2.21¼- May 2.22⅛ 2.22½ 2.21⅜ 2.21¼- SOYBEAN OILDec. 9.52 9.41 9.52 Mar. 9.26 9.14 9.22 May 9.24 9.13 9.21-B SOYBEAN MEALDec. 54.40 56.25 56.40 Mar. 54.50 53.35 53.35 May 52.80 52.20 52.30-20 LEXINGTON ROLLER MILLS Lexington Roller Mills Co.

today was offering $1.93 for No. 2 soft red wheat; no bid for feed wheat; $1.29 for No. 2 yellow corn; $1.32 for No. 1 white corn; $.75 for No. 3 (6 pounds) white oats and $1.00 for No.

4 (43 pounds) barley, Chicago Grain Prices (Furnished by Merrill, Lynch, Pierce, Montgomery Club Elects '59 Officers MT. STERLING, Dec. 11 (Special)-Charles Ramsey was elected president of the MontgomSportsmen at a ereeting in the Kentucky Utilities Hall. Other officers for 1959 are Jack Cassion, vice president; J. B.

Brown, secretary; A. C. Chandler, treasurer, and John M. Prewitt, Earl Neikirk, Jack Igo, Ernie Profitt and Jim Browning, directors. Joe Ragland, fish and wildlife warden of Clark County, waS aided in the elections, Union College Sets Yule Music Program BARBOURVILLE, Dec.

11 (Special) The Department of Music at Union College will present the traditional Christmas program of music Sunday afternoon, Dec. 14, p.m. (EST) in the Conway Boatman Chapel. The Union College choir under COOL, IDEA-With the temperature at 3 below zero in Pittsburgh, it seemed cold enough to freeze water pouring from a teakettle so AP Photographer Walter Stein constructed this picture by plucking an icicle from the roof of his home, planting it upside-down in the snow and enlisting Mrs. Stein and a teakettle.

The water froze, but not quite so quickly as the picture might indicate. (AP Wirephoto). Eight Men Tortured, Killed By Bandits for a time for sending a threatening letter to President Roosevelt. Such occurences meant nothing to his followers. "He had knowledge," said Schofield's wife, Ruth.

The religious movement, Fountain of the World, was founded in 1949 after Ventaas he put it -had settled Its aims: wisdom, knowledge, faith and love. "He would have been the first to one of his disciples said when asked how Venta would have felt about the mysterious visitor suspected of touching off the bomb in the pre-dawn darkness. The cultists and Venta lived on a 29-acre ranch in Box Canyon, a bare and stone-studded draw in the Chatsworth Hills 30 miles northwest of Los Angeles. There they make their own bread, their own soap, their own robes. To support the movement they solicit funds from door to door.

They live comfortably and in good health. An inseription over the gate reads: "Ye who enter here enter upon holy ground." Shoeless followers never acknowledge the cold or other disforts of weather. Women, girls and some of the boys braid their hair. At the time of the bombing Venta's second wife, Mother Ruth, was in Alaska with several other cultists. She will sueceed him as leader.

Venta 1 had six children by Ruth, two by his first wife, Geneva Lucyle, who divorced him in 1941. Support for Lucyle's children involved Venta in lengthy court action a few years ago. A follower recalled the leader may have had a premonition of danger Wednesday. One cultist asked "What is the word for today?" He replied: "Be prepared." of 140 voices, will present their annual Christmas concert at '4 p.m. Sunday in the school auditorium.

The soloists will be Doris Hall, Delores Williams, Edward MeDowell and Henry Jones. A section will be reserved for former members of Dunbar choruses. The concert is under the direction of Mrs. Joanna Offut Sewell. EVERYTHING radios.

Television, remodeling. tors, ranges, trical wiring. and expert TV and sppliance service. Terms to suit you. Call Roy Wright, 4-8609.

-Advertisem*nt For sale at a bargain, BEAUnew BRICK home in ST. MARTIN'S VILLAGE. 939 EFFIE ST. Small down payment or will take your home in trade. Call LOUIS ROSENBERG 2-1486 for a real opportunity to get a new home for Christmas.

Advertisem*nt Funeral services for Mrs. Pinkston Baker will be held at 1:30 p.m. today at the ClaughtonBrown Funeral Chapel. The Rev. Samuel Chenault will officiate.

Burial will be in the Greenwood Cemetery, GREYSTONE HOTEL MOTEL Advertisem*nt Classification Col. Notes SPIDER WEBB TEA ROOM Advertisem*nt Funeral services for Mrs. Lillie B. Roland will be held at 2 p.m. today at the residence, 413 East Fifth Street.

The Rev. H. E. Nutter will officiate. Burial will be in the Greenwood Cemetery.

412 KINKEAD Street Beautiful 3 room unfurnished apartment, separate gas and electric meters. 2-1272 days. -Advertisem*nt DANCE every Saturday nite, American Legion club room, 159 Georgetown St. Dukes Combo, Door prize Admission 50c. -Advertisem*nt.

Officers and members of the Lexington Lodge No. 27 and Blue Grass Temple No. 72 will hold a joint meeting at 8 o'clock tonight. Edward M. Anderson is general chairman, COTTON CLUB Friday Night Music by House Rockers 9 til 1 Admission 75c -Advertisem*nt RUMMAGE SALE, Friday and Saturday.

356 Georgetown St. Open Friday nite 6:30. Saturday a.m. -Advertisem*nt 235 WALTON-House, 5 rooms. Garage.

Apply 237 Walton. -Advertisem*nt. A talent show will be presented at 3 p.m. Sunday at the Jimtown Baptist Church, sponsored by Mrs. Stella Shelton.

The Rev. Felix Wilson is the pastor. MEN'S SUITS TOPCOATSLarge selection. All sizes. $4.95 and up.

Everything a bargain. BLUE GRASS STORE, 156 W. Vine near Upper. -Advertisem*nt MEN'S and LADIES' WRISTWATCHES Famous Brands: Including Bulova, Elgin, Gruen, Benrus, Longines $9.95 and up Terrifio Buys. Blue Grass Store 156 W.

Vine Near -Advertisem*nt MUST SELL AT ONCE, 424 Oak St. 5 rooms with bath. Phone 3-3978. -Advertisem*nt A joint committee meeting will be held at 7:30 o'clock tonight at the Elks Rest. Judge Unimpressed By Blackjack Story A plea that he used a blackjack in his work failed yesterday to prevent Nelson Gay Farley, 40, of 317 Nelson Avenue, from being held to the grand jury from Police Court.

Farley was arrested on a drunkenness charge on Dec. 1 and police said they found the weapon on him when they searched him. He also was charged with carrying concealed a deadly weapon. Farley testified that he had taken the blackjack to work with him day he was arrested and used it to chip ice away from the doors of trucks. He is an employee at the Wilson Freight Lines.

Police Judge Thomas J. Ready also fined Farley $10 and costs for being drunk. DURANGO, Mexico, Dec. 11 Eight men were tortured and killed in the village of El Palmillar in a bandit raid Tuesday. A band of about eight men raided and sacked the village, on the border between the states of Durango and Coahuila.

They burned homes, robbed and gutted stores, and captured eight of the village leaders. The bandits tied their hands and feet, and tortured them in an effort to force them to reveal hidden money. When the villagers refused to talk the bandits shot them in the presence of their families. The bandits fled at dawn carrying money, loot, and merchandise. A statewide search was launched.

CHILDREN LOSE PARENTS IN EXPLOSION-Bi shop Asaiah of the Foundation of the World religious cult attempts to comfort Brother Robert and Brother Freddy, right, whose parents and younger brother lost their lives in the explosion that wrecked the cult's headquarters near Chatsworth, Calif. The boys' parents were Cardinal Gene and Bishop Jane. The youngsters' long hair is done up in Federal Court Threatens To Oust Hoffa As President Of Teamsters WASHINGTON, Dec. 11 UP--A Federal Court today threatened to oust James R. Hoffa as president of the Teamsters unless he and other bosses of the giant union quit blocking and obstructing recommended reforms.

F. Dickinson Letts, 83-year-old U.S. District judge, directed Hoffa and other Teamsters chiefs to obey orders of court-named monitors to accomplish a general housecleaning of the member union. Letts, lowering the boom on Hoffa, in effect armed the threeman monitor board with power to enforce its clean-up orders. A two-member majority of the monitors had contended Hoffa was giving them the run-around.

Letts agreed in a 13-page memorandum opinion. In Miami Beach, Hoffa said after a meeting with the Teamsters international executive board: "We will appeal it all the way." He added his union had done nothing consider contrary to good ionism." Martin F. O'Donoghue, monitor chairman, said only "I'm happy with the order." Judge Letts threatened contempt punishment if Hoffa and other Teamsters officials thwart the monitors, saying: "Remedies are not lacking in our judicial process if the orders of the court are violated, disregarded or ignored." Reminding Hoffa and his fellow officials of the national union they are serving only provisionally and can be removed, Judge Letts ordered: 1. That Hoffa and the union strictly obey all outstanding monitor reform recommendations and all reasonable ones in the future. Among the unobeyed orders pending is one requiring Hoffa to bring ouster charges against one of his closest Teamsters buddies, Owen (Bert) Brennan of Detroit, a Fifth Amendment witness before the Senate Rackets Committee.

Brennan and Hoffa are accused, among other things, of maintaining a professional boxer they managed on a Teamsters union welfare fund. 2. That the union promptly cancel announced plans to hold a special Teamsters convention next March. Hoffa had called it in a move to have himself re-elected and the monitorship ended. Judge Letts agreed with Chairman Martin O'Donoghue and Godfrey P.

Schmidt, two of the three monitors, that Hoffa and the Teamsters have not acted to clean up the union sufficiently to warrant a convention that soon. He ruled none should be held until he and the monitors give their okay. 3. That Hoffa's right to the Teamsters presidency never has been determined, that it still is subject to challenge, and that the provisional status the scrappy union leader enjoys can be revoked at any time. 4.

That provisions of the Teamsters constitution-requiring members on a dues checkoff arrangement to have their dues paid for them by employers one month in 'advance in order eligible to run for union office--are discriminatory and invalid. Letts called them "a device by which incumbents are perpetuated in That ruling is diametrically opposed to one made a week ago in Cleveland by another U.S. District judge of equal status to Letts. The Cleveland judge, James, C. Connell, ruled monitor powers were only advisory.

Letts said they had implied powers and authority to "exert every known method of achieving" the basic purpose of a year-old consent order. That aim, Letts said, is to restore democratic processes to the union and free it of corrupt influences. Judge Connell had said it was just too bad, under the union constitution, if employers hapto the union dues they collected, pened to be late in turning over with the result that the members involved were not eligible for otfice. But Letts said it is illegal to require such dues payments in advance as a requirement for seeking office. Laura Irwin and Joan Logan, recent law graduates of Queen's College in Belfast, Northern Ireland, will start an agency providing advice on social problems.

Death Takes Sister Of Lexingtonian Mrs. Eulalia Jones Lay of St. Louis, sister of Mrs. Ollie Cecil, 322 Ridgeway Road, died yesterday in St. Louis.

Mrs. Lay was a daughter of the late Wellington L. and Mattie M. Jones of Harrodsburg. She was a member of the Southhampton Presbyterian Church in St.

Louis and had taught a Bible class for 32 years. Survivors, besides Mrs. Cecil, include a daughter, Mrs. John Dollan, St. Louis; two sons, Joseph Lay, Los Angeles, and Oran Lay, St.

Louis; another sister, Mrs. Edward Carey, Washington, D. and a brother, Oran H. Jones, St. Louis.

Services and burial will be in St. Louis. Dr. Preston Elected By Medical Society Jury Frees Lindsay Peel Of Drunk-Driving Charge A man who said he had been taking terpin hydrate with codeine for a sinus infection when he was arrested for driving while drunk was found not guilty of the charge by a Fayette Quarterly Couft yesterday. The defendant, Lindsay Peel, Briar Hill Pike, testified that he stopped his car on the grounds of the Bryan Station Baptist Church a few minutes before his arrest on the night of Oct.

18 because he felt "sick and dizzy." He said he was taking Sam Haley, a painter who had been working at the Peel residence all day, to his home on Oak Hill Drive when he became nauseated. "I pulled into the church he said. "I thought no one would be there but when I got in there, I found people all around. I knew I had to get out of there or somebody might call the County Patrol." He said he had driven down to the Bryan Station Pike before Patrolman James Ledger stopped him and arrested him. Haley corroborated Peel's story about becoming sick and stopping at the church.

He said Peel had they delayed the trip to town been sick, most of the day "about 30 minutes" because of Peel's condition. "On the way to town," Haley testified, "he said he was feeling worse, said he couldn't see and his eyes wouldn't focus. "We pulled into the church yard but people kept watching us and I told him somebody had spotted us and I thought we had better before something Peel said he had been suffering from a sinus infection two days before his arrest and had visited a physician, who gave him "a shot in the hip and some pills to take every six hours." On the day of his arrest, he said, he stopped at a drug store and got the terpin hydrate because his throat was getting He said he "kept taking" the medicine during the day and finished off most of the bottle before he started toward Lexington. A statement from the physician, read at the trial, stated that overdoses of terpin hydrate might cause nausea and dizziness. It did not state, however, that he had prescribed the medicine for Peel.

Ledger testified that he had started out the Bryan Station Pike to answer a complaint from people at the church when he met Peel. He said the car "was all the road, mostly on the opposite side." He said Peel was "drunk" and "needed help" to walk after he stopped him. He added that he smelled alcohol on Peel's breath. Peel's attorney, Julian Knippenberg, argued that the terpin hydrate was 42 per cent alcohol but that it did not come under the statute prohibiting operation of a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol. Jurors deliberated the case a few minutes and returned to ask for a clarification of Beck's instructions.

read the statute to the jurors, and they deliberated about an hour longer before returning the verdict of not guilty. Clark Bound Over On Robbery Count A man arrested in connection with a robbery committed more than 10 months ago was held to the grand jury yesterday following a Police Court hearing. Bound over was Roscoe P. Clark, 21, of 379 South Broadway. He was charged with armed robbery on a warrant obtained by Taylor, operator of the Mill Street Inn, 115 North Mill Street.

The complainant testified that Clark entered her place of business last Jan. 21, threatened her with a weapon and took about $88 from her cash register. She said she struck him with a bottle during the robbery and he knocked her down. The woman said Clark entered her place Wednesday, She said she had him arrested when she recognized him as the man who robbed her. Clark denied the charge.

He told the court that he could prove he was in Columbus, Ohio, when the robbery occurred. Permit Issued For Drive-In Restaurant A permit for construction of Asher's Drive- In Restaurant at 128 New Circle Road was issued yesterday by Building Inspector James L. Shea to Clyde Asher. Estimated cost the structure, which will be brick veneer of and concrete block and which 90 feet by 36 feet, is $60,000. Shea also granted Ray Mullins a permit to install a sign at the Tote-A-Poke restaurant on New Circle Road at a cost of $5,000.

STUDENT IN 'COLD WAR' WITH UNIVERSITY -University of Michigan senior Hilliard J. Goldman of Detroit squats outside his snow-covered tent on campus at Ann Arbor with temperatures near the zero mark. Goldman moved into his war surplus tent a week ago as a protest against the "overprotective and mothering attitude" of the university. He sleeps in a heavily padded sleeping bag. "He has a nice room at school," said his father, Irving Goldman, "and I intend to see that he goes back it." (AP Wirephoto).

Dr. William O. Preston will be installed as president of the Fayette County Medical Society at the January meeting of the group. Dr. Preston succeeds Dr.

Robert B. Warfield. He and the other new officers, of the society were elected the December meeting. The other new officers are Dr. Walter Frey, vice president, and Dr.

Matthew Darnell, secretarytreasurer. not shown. (Herald Photo). (Continued From Page 21) 824; good and choice stock steers 400-650 1b Caives 300; steady to weak; good and choice vealers Sheep 300; steady to 50 lower good choice wooled slaughter lambs 70-95 1b cull to good slaughter ewes few choice $7.50. Carlisle CARLISLE, Dec.

11-A total of 216 head livestock was sold Tuesday at Carlisle Stockyards. Quotations are 85. follows: Hogs-163: Packers. heifers. baby beeves, cutter cows.

fat cows, bulls, stock steers, stock helfers, COwS and calves, $200-235. Sheep and lambs-23: Top veals. $35.90: medium, heavy tops. $35.40. Winchester Butchers WINCHESTER, Dec.

11-There were 1,235 head of livestock sold today at the Winchester Stockyards. The receipts and quotations follow: Cattle-286: Steers. $21 26.85; helfers, $18 baby beeves, cows, $12621; bulls, calves, $67; top, seconds, Hogs-386: 180-240 240- 280 sOWs, shotes, $20430. Lambs 496: Good, medium, 18.90. Cincinnati CINCINNATI (AP) (USDA) Cattle 500; calves 100; most classes about steady with some canner and cutter cows weak to 50; lower; few lots good lb slaughter steers utility and standard $24; small lot good around 600 Ib $26; standard 650-750 1b utility $20 22; utility cows $17.50 canners bulls and cutters utility vealers $34 good standard $25(129; utility Hogs barrows and gilts active, steady; bulk mixed grades U.

S. No. 1-3 180-240 1b early trades No. 2 and 3 250-275 lb weights below 180 1b poorly tested; some mixed weights but averge 166 lb sows steady; mixed 8. No.

1-3 325-450 1b most No. 2 and 3 450-575 1b boars. higher; 400-550 lb. 8.50; around 200 head more uniform No. 1 and 2, 210-215 lb.

barrows and gilts in the day's trade $19.60 a 20-head lot uniform No. 2 244 lb. $19.25 and 50 head No. 2 and 3 258 lb. few head No.

3 300 1b. $18.25. Sheep steady: small lot average choice, around 90 lb slaughter wooled lambs $21; other good to low choice $19 20; cull to choice wooled ewes $4 0 few head medium and good feeder lambs $15. Cincinnati Produce CINCINNATI, Dec. 11 -Eggs, FOB Cincinnati (cases, incuded), consumer grades, S.

A large white and brown 39-41: medium 32-34; U. S. A Jumbo 38-40; large 31-34: medium 25-27: small 20-23; large 25-30; under grades 15-19. Poultry prices at farms, Cincinnati the direction of Donald J. Maxwell, chairman of the division of fine arts, will sing Come, 0 Come, "Jesu, Priceless Treasure," "The Lamb," and "I Wonder As I Miss Lydia Middleton, Jonesville, will be the soloist for the last selection.

Six Christmas carols representing different foreign nations will include favorites Wales, Sweden, Italy, Poland, England, France. An organ interlude of chorals from the "Orgelbuchlein" by Bach will be presented by William Hays, professor of organ at the college. In addition to numbers sung by the choir, Union's new 60-member chorus will present familiar carols such as "Fairest Lord Jesus," Little Town of "Little Children, Can you Tell?" and "Silent Night, Holy Night." Colored Notes Mrs. Helen Berryman, editor Phone 4-7212 Mrs. Ada Ozella Nard, 235 East Fourth Street, died Wednesday night at the Julius Marks Sanatorium after a long illness.

She was native of Cowan, and a member of the Cowen Holiness Church. Churvivors include a her daughter, husband, Mrs. Betty Joyce Watkins; father, David Nard, Cleveland, Ohio; a grandmother, Mrs. Armater Williams, Nashville, and a grandson, George Jerome Watkins. The body is at the ClaughtonBrown Funeral Home.

BIGGERSTAFF Apartment For rooms, private bath. Call in person, 221 W. Fourth. -Advertisem*nt COAL RANGES, Coal Heaters, all sizes. Coal heating stove grates.

Moores Shop, 212 Owens 659 Ellersile Ave. FOR SALE--5 rooms. bath, gas furnace. 554 Jefferson. Call 4-8444.

-Advertisem*nt Mrs. Elizabeth Lizzie Lewis, formerly of Georgetown, died Monday night in Indianapolis. Survivors include five sons, Lot and Harry Lewis, Indianapolis; Major and Willie M. Lewis, Georgetown, and Lewis, Dayton, Ohio; three daughters, Mrs. Hattie Kate Gay, Indianapolis, and Mrs.

Mattie Lee Jones and Mrs. Mary Cooper, Dayton; two sisters, Mrs. Mollie Hale and Mrs. Jennie Samuels, Georgetown; a brother, Bud Johnson, Georgetown; 10 grandchildren, and 23 great-grandchildren. Services will be held at 1 p.m.

Saturday at the Zion Hill Baptist Church. The Rev. A. L. Pearson will officiate.

Burial will be in the Stamping Ground Cemetery. Friends may call at the Gillespie Brothers Funeral Home after 3 p.m. today. FURNISHED sleeping room, use of kitchen, private entrance. Day, week.

or month. 463 Campbell St. -Advertisem*nt RUMMAGE SALE -Sixth and Upper, Friday and Saturday (Dec. 12 and 13). Open 7 to 5.

-Advertisem*nt FOR RENT-513 W. Fifth Street. 3 rooms, gas, water, electricity. $8 week. 3-3741.

-Advertisem*nt The Paesona Social Club and the Lyric Theater will sponsor their fourth annual Christmas entertainment at 9:30 a.m. Saturday for benefit of underprivileged children. Cartoons and a western picture will be shown. The admission will be a can of food or a toy. For a new home in St.

Martin Village. Phone. TOWN and COUNTRY Builders, Inc. 7-3180 7-1230 Advertisem*nt specialty. REPAIRING AND REMODELING, Sparks-Terrell Co.

3-3170. "ASK YOUR NEIGHBOR." -Advertisem*nt The Dunbar Junior and Senior High School Choruses, composed Motorists Is Fined For Drunke Driving Moss Clay Gibson, 129 eWst High Street, yesterday was fined $100 and costs on a charge of driving while drunk. The fine was meted by Trial Commissioner William Beck after Gibson admitted that he drank three bottles of beer a few minutes before his arrest. Patrolman George Mulberry testified that he arrested Gibson on the Paris Pike the night of Dec. 3.

He said Gibson "smelled strong of alcohol and staggered." Gibson said he "stopped at a little place and drank three beers" a few minutes before Mulberry stopped him. He denied, however, that he was under the influence of alcohol. "I was not he said. "I knew what I was Treated, Arrested A public drunkenness hearge was placed yesterday against a Richmond Road man who county police said was injured at a truck stop. Jesse Gray, 56, was arrested after treatment at Good Samaritan Hospital for cuts and abrasions of the face.

County Patrol Lt. Carl Powell said Bill Grider, of the Truck Stop, on the Richmond Road, stated that he hit Gray after Gray pulled a knife at the truck stop. The knife allegedly used by Gray was recovered, Powell said. Reds Execute Nine HONG KONG, Dec. 11 (P Communist China executed nine persons in Canton Monday on charges of being enemy agents and plotting subversion and sabotage.

The local Red newspaper Ta Kung Pao reported four of the executions today. The Communist Wen Wai Pao had reported five other executions Monday. And IlI-Mannered MEMPHIS, Dec. 11 (P)- The judge agreed today that Cleburne H. Hitt, 36, of Memphis, was disorderly when he sat down in a restaurant, ordered coffee, spooned in a bit of sugar and stirred it with the barrel of a pistol which he produced from under his coat.

He was fined $21. 98.7 In Rio RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil, Dec. 11 (P)-Christmas shoppers in Rio are mopping their brows. It's hot. The temperature mounted to a high of 98.7 degrees Wednesday and climbed toward that mark today.

A week ago it hit 104. Hurt In Fall A fall on a piece of broken glass at her home yesterday left Sandra Graham, 14, of 248. Willard Street, with a cut right leg. She was treated at St, Joseph's Hospital. LIQUOR LICENSE NOTICE This is a notice of an intention on the part of Abraham Machni, 223 Rand DBA Machni's Market, 500 Patterson to apply for a retail beer license under the coholic Beverage Control Law of the Commonwealth of Kentucky.

LIQUOR LICENSE NOTICE This is a notice of an intention on the part of Earnest and Eleanor Columbia, 950, Dayton DBA Plantation Restaurant, 103 W. Maxwell St. to apply for a retail beer license under the Alcoholic Beverage Control Law of the monwealth of Kentucky. LIQUOR LICENSE NOTICE This is a notice of an intention on the part of Donald R. Rocca Burgin, DBA Rocca's Restaurant, 10 mi.

south Lexing. ton on Richmond Road to apply for a retail beer license under the Alcoholic Beverage Control Law of the Commonwealth of Kentucky. 1.

The Lexington Herald from Lexington, Kentucky (2024)
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