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The Advocate-Messenger from Danville, Kentucky • Page 6
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The Advocate-Messenger from Danville, Kentucky • Page 6

Location:
Danville, Kentucky
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THURSDAY, J96 r- DANVILLE ADVOCATE-MESSENGER, DANVILLE, KENTUCKY I rt 1 Social Security Earnings Report 5-Year Prison Term For Robbery BOWUENG GREEPT AP) A Warren-Ciraiit jury has set a five year prison term for waiter Lee York, Bowling Green," woo admitted taxing, fzv in Oct 23 robbery. Workers Under 72 ipw-f 1 MMm iMfw-niKmmmmmmmm '12 jV1 "Wli ri X. WSJ York said be took the. money rom Elmer Stinson, 26, of ScottsvBle, wbose body -waM later found beside a road near here. York denied using any weapon or force and; said be had been drinking.

said Stinson apparent-" ly was killed and dumped on the highway to be left as an aip- 1 By HAL BOYLE HI Hi i V'4 the worst things that can hap- ir -J-f -r By HAL BOYLE NEW YOPX (AP) One of the worst things that can XL I Pen in me is io reireai i i i in life is the retreat of earn more than $125 or does not render substantial services in self-employment. Cain said that all beneficiaries who had earn ings of oyer $1,500 In 1966 and attained age 72 In .1966 must file the report. Beneficiaries Notified On March, 3, 1967; benefl. claries receive notice, that, if they earned over $1,500 In 1966, they should request.a re port form or contact the nearest Social Security office. The office servicing Boyle County is located at Ill West Main Street, Campbellsvllle.

The office is open Mondays through Thursdays from 8:45 a.m. to 5 p.m. On Friday the office is open from 8:45 to 8 p.m. The telephone number is 465-4164. WEEKEND Clarer Sweet Briar BACON Stock In At Fresh Lean GROUND BEEF Southern.

Star Slim Jim LU Morton POT PIES Hunt's No. 2V2 Can TOMATOES THE NATION'S YOUNGEST GOVERNOR, 35-year-old Kenneth M. Curtis, faces the' camera in Augusta, Maine, with his family. Mrs'. Curtis celebrated 'her 31st birthday the day of his inauguration.

Children are Susan, 8," and Angella, 5. happen memory, What a salvation, a glory and a citadel memory is to mankind How meaningful it makes themarch of existence. In the midst of present wonders, it re minds us. of the wonders, before. But of memory isn't just the prisoner of the elderly.

The first fierceness of a child's groping is' to find -4 something worth remembering and coming back to. And' you probably have the flavor of many- dear memories in your own heart if -you can look back and remember when Houses were built so that ev erybody kissed each other good nighfe on the ground floor and then they went to bed upstairs. No one could pretend they were older or younger than they were because their birth date was written down in the family Bible, the big book with the dust on it. The only people who came into the house through the front were encyclopedia sales- men or insurance collectors. At that time, for i0 cents a week.

you could buy enough insurance to bury a child but not to edu cate him. "Irish-people from iPhiladel pnia vg uriMi re-iiv A wnsas uijv VH an iv am my wuwu nave -i. grope their way "through dam gerous Indians In anv big town in America you could give a nickel to the street car conductor and get anywhere that was worth going to. Due from Some LLinvella Cain, Social Sec-1 urity representative for Boyle County stated today that Social Security- beneficiaries under 72 earning over $1,500 in 1966 are required to file, an annual report of earnings with the Social Security Administration before Aprl 15,1967. The Social Security payment centers-will mail-a report form to those beneficiaries who received some, but not ail, their benefits during 1966.

Social Security beneficiaries, who did not receive any benefits because of their estimated earnings for 1966, -should file the report If their actual earnings were less than the estimate. Cain. said, that, In cases where family" benefits were involved, it would be possible for a work er to earn over $5,500 and still be due some benefits for 1966. The report must be filed before the Social Security Administra fion can determine- the amount owed to the worker. For Those 72 in '66.

Regardless of the total 1966 earnings, a worker is entitled to a check for the month he attains age It and all succeeding months, and for any month he fails to Burley Houses Have Full Sale Wednesday The Burley Tobacco Ware house, holding the full day's sale Wednesday on the Danvilie To bacco arket, disposed of 694 pounds of the 1966 leaf crop for which growers were paid $.334,436.31, an average of $61.17 per hundred pounds. The average was donw $1.65 per cwt. from Tuesday's aver age. A 'sell-around was scheduled for. the Danville market today, with buyers starting at Farmers Tobacco Warehouse and moving from there to Peoples and Burley Tobacco Warehouses, In that order.

A similar schedule, probably with a changed rotation, Is ex pected for Friday to end the week's business here. THE MUDDY MEKONG Marines slosh along one of the thousands of waterways interlacing the Thanh Phu area of Mekong Delta. 'A full-scale amphibious assault against the Viet Cong In thje region is underway. (Radiophoto) Hearing Set For Woman In Rifle Slaying Of Mate BOWLING GREEN AP) A preliminary hearing has been set for Friday for Dorothy Evans Durbin, 25, who is being iareatJrifcMiliLYlctiro charges have been filed in connection with the death. NEW BRIUNSWXK, N.JT AP) Dr.

Margery Somers dean of Hollins College in Virginia, has been named dean of Douglass College, the women's division of Rutgera the state of New Jersey -r SPECIALS lb. This low Price (3 $1.45) pkg. 4 cans $1.00 3 cans $1.00 2 lids. 29tf a Phone 236-5447. Purdue POPCORN 2-lb.

bag 190 Tropical ORANGE. DRINK 64-oz. jar 290 Bama 18-Oz. Jar -r- STRAWBERRY PRESERVES jar 490 Unhappy Pappy Gets New Job VOVBSVWUE AP) Homer Sizemore worked in the hills of Perry County with the federal Happy Pappy program but he wis an Unhappy (Pappy. But Wednesday, Sizemore started a new job and a new life bere and he says lie's out of the hills for good.

Sizemore is the first Eastern Kentuckian to be brought yoder a federal demonstration project to move jobless men to the state's urban centers. When Sizemore arrived Tuesday be was hired toy a farm equipment manufacturing firm at $1.80 an hour. Within a few days, he will be joined by his wife and their 6-year-old-4aughterniek jurnl-. ture will be moved from the federal government's expense. (Before thenew job and op portunity, Sizemore was one of tile so-called Happy Pappies, held under $10,000 bond" in the rifle slaying of her husband, whose body bore about two dozen wounds.

--7 Police said they found the body of Charles James Durbin, 27, in a hallway outside the family, apartment after: a caller told them "I have shot my husband." Officers said Mrs. Durbin was advis4 of her rights msH or to remain quiet, but she talked freely about the shooting. She said she was tired of her husband "mistreating me and the children." The couple had a 5-year-old daughter and a 3-year-old! son. Police said Durbin was shot numerous under both arms in Jhe chest and pelvic area. Sheriff hnstjTWattsrThe.

acting-coroner, said any of several wounds could have been The- height of sophisticationll6, 1965. law specifies that, Hunt's Nor2' Can -J FRUIT COCKTAIL. Large Crisp LETTUCE Holland; 1CE CHEAM i2 gal. 59)! gal. .03 STEARMAN'S FOOD STORE 1310 Huston viile Road h-Yoar Friendly Bank' V0UR SAVINGS 6R0W WITH II ON ALL A I jobless men who are paid sala ries by.

the federal government in return for their services on public works jobs. They also mustattend adult education classes the evening. Sizemore went back to school, enjoyed it, and finished about "the 11th grade." He didn't like the work was required to do; The project was seven miles from home so he bought a car anl went fur ther in debt. "Any man with as much as ILsixtb-grade education oughtn't to be happy about a situation like lhat back there, flt's day- to-day, hand-to-mouth living." Finally, the (government wrote him a letter, advising him of the demonstration project which would help pay his way to the city. He accepted.

"Uncle Sam helped me "get out and I feel pretty good' about it," he said. "'He won't have to take me back to them hills." SHOP THE WANT ADS FOB BEST RESULTS For Breakfast Treats Enioy a delicious coffee cake sweet rolls: i SWEET ROLLS Cinnamon Danish With Jelly Caramel Twists-Cherry Pecan Pershing OFF I II Reproduction I gftf 1 Hearings Set On Acreage-Poundage Quotas For Burley Hearings to determine attitudes of Burley" tobacco producers and other interested persons concerning acreage-poundage marketing quotas have been set for Jan. 16-19 in the Burley tobacco-producing area, 'the S. De- partment of Agriculture an- today mrougn Kelly Klfkland, manager of the Boyle A SCS office, Greenleal Shopping Center, Lexington Road, Danville. The hearings will be held in.

accordance with acreage-pound age legislation approved April before acreage-poundage quotas may be extended to any kind of tobacco, other than fluecured. hearings must be held in the producing area, after which a referendum may be scheduled. More than two-thirds of Burley growers voting in the referendum must approve, the" new system before it can be placed in operation. -In a referendum held March 10, 1966, 57 per cent of the burley growers voting favored acreage-poundage quotas over the acreage allotment program, which has been in effect since 1940. Although a majority of the growers voting favored the new program, less than the required two-thirdSj favored the change.

The'nearest hearings for residents of Danville and Boyle County will be held at 9 o'clock (local time) Monday morning, Jan-4 GTatthe.GorgeLl ogets Clark High School, Winchester, and at the same hour Tuesday morning, Jan. 17, at the Community College on College Street, filizabethtown, local AS CS spo- kesmen said. Other hearings are set in cookeviile, andAshevUle, N. C. All will be presided over by a representative of the Agri- servation Service of the U.

S. me Agriculture and Pen to all persons interested 4 1 lUArt Y'' Interested persons may also submit views in writing, niese may be submitted at any of the hearings or mailed to the Director, Policy and Program! jAppraisal Division, Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service S. Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C. 20250,.

All such letters must be postmarked not later than Jan. 20 to be considered. Burley tobacco is. grown principally: in Kentucky, Tennessee Western, North Carolina, Southwestern Virginia, West Virginia, Ohio, Indiana and Missouri. FORT Ky, AP)-.

Workers repairing iths wall of the bus station here found a bill- fold and turned it over to a ter mitial official. Cards in the wallet identified the owner a Gerald. F. Rains of Peoria. 111., who had been a robbery victim at the terminal in 1947.

Officials, said the rebbers apparently punched a hole in the wall' and dropped the billfold into it after stripping it of money- W. L. PRUITT AND SONS FUNERAL HOME CALL i Moreland, Ky. i no answer, call 346-2603 or 346-2604 1 Early American I 1 Swinging Lamps 1 for One Week Only Beginning SKS I mmm 111 Chesnut-Salter-Best I HAkOWAKE INC. 231 W.

Main Phone 236-4144 HI was to see a vaudeville comedi-j an a year after the first time you-saw- that you could chuckle at thestart of his familiar joke. -Old men, after 'the labor of their manhood was done, would sometimes turn' 'their restless fingers "to the intricate making of quilts anything to do that kept andrideful Most arguments in lAmerica were about the interpretation of the Bible and what the weather would be next. You could always be a local intellectual if you- spread the rumor around that you were taking a correspondence course in any subject. If you got a lot of mail, even the mailman had a higher opinion of you? One.of the ways a homely girl got attention was to "tell fortunes through hand-reading. So often hep-heart was embalmed -in her judgment cf the outstretched male palm.

In every block in America there' was a mentally unbalanced person, by birth or later circumstance, but everybody else, in the block knew was, and that was part of life, and it was better to keep him at home where he was. known than to send him- away to where he wasn't known. He belonged to the neighborhood. greatest family fun was, to sit thoughtful before the fire ace and hear mother play t- XmW neh-s "Come merV My love Lies Dreaming." Showdown Looms In Pike County School Dispute PFKEVTLLE (AP A showdown is looming between Superintendent H- C. Farley sand his' opponents on the Pike School Board.

The new school board, which is agaihst Farley 3-2, wants repeal the board's bylaws and replace them with new ones, including a brovision that, would strip Farley of his power to" hire, fire, and assign teachers. Farley objects. He says that under the law, the board can act in such matters only-on advice of. the superintendent. He' argues.

that the state' Depart ment of Education could ex pected to reject the bylaws in their 'proposed form. At the board's meeting this week. Farley asked a delay, in votin? pn the proposed change ifttil the February meeting. "This would give us thne to go to Frankfort and make sure we have a legally correct instrument," Farley said. "We have come together under 'cir-i cumstances are a bit tense and I tfeel that nobody' wants to be too hasty." At the board's meting this I week.

Ruisell Johnson insisted i that the matter be pu to a vote. Alvery Potter, board however; ruled that a stalemate existed and recessed the 1 I WEEKEND SPECIAL Pineapple Upside-Down CAKE 'FULL' SfTBANK WATC 1 ONE St YEAR CERTIFICATES yfv. wm Interest Payable Each Six J. 0 ON PASSBOOK COFFEE CAKI Caramel Nut FilUd i. HwnaaricM) Fullaparl Butter feean Oerman Chocolate 1 Frw Kudien SAVINGS ACCOUNTS Months Frorri Date KENTUCKY yum For the freshest best, buy where it's baked! Burke's Bakery Delicatessen PHONE 235-5GS1 cocx to the danyiui cafetejlla DANVILLE, MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM AND F.

D. 1 C. meeting until Jan. 19,.

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Years Available:
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